Saturday, August 27, 2011
5 Leading Ladies Fall Into Line to Woo Tom Cruise
Oh that lucky Tom Cruise. Not just has he behaved opposite a number of Hollywood's most attractive leading ladies, he's dated and married a number of them too (See Cruise Ladies, Past and offer: Oh, the Horror!). Despite the fact that his career may wax and wane, the boyish actor still draws the women. Witness his latest endeavor, the Universal sci-fi thriller formerly entitled 'Oblivion' that's now known as 'Horizons.' A group of hot Hollywood stars are arranging to co-star with Cruise within the Frederick Kosinski ('Tron: Legacy') project. Based on Variety, Jessica Chastain, Olivia Wilde, Brit Marling, Noomi Rapace and Olga Kurylenko are testing Saturday -- though other medication is still in mind. The film happens inside a future by which an alien race has basically destroyed humanity. Cruise plays Jack, a drone repairman who lives within the clouds over the Earth and periodically travels towards the planet to correct the robots that safeguard human remains from further attacks. You will find two female leads within the story -- Julia, Jack's girlfriend prior to the alien invasion, and Victoria, Jack's right-hands lady and lover who watches his when he's on repair missions. Cruise is keeping busy: His 'Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol' opens this holidays, he's just wrapped a supporting role in 'Rock Of Ages' and he's on the point of begin focus on the crime thriller 'One Shot.' William Monahan and Karl Gadjusek authored the 'Horizon' script according to Kosinski's approaching graphic novel Michael Arndt ('Little Miss Sunshine') lately did a polish. Universal has set a This summer 19, 2013, release date for that film.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Dan Aykroyd Still Pushing Ghostbusters 3
'We have an excellent script.... 'You have to hand it to Dan Aykroyd... The man is tenacious. Just when you thought the Ghostbusters 3 info-grapevine had shrivelled again, up he pops with some new details and a hint that the movie might finally have its cameras cranking by next spring. Talking on Dennis Miller's radio show, Aykroyd admitted that the big sticking point (the world knows him as Bill Murray) might have to be sacrificed if the new GB outing is to move forward. Unless he can be convinced, of course.... "Yes, we will be doing the movie and hopefully with Mr. Murray," he said. "That is our hope. We have an excellent script. What we have to remember is that Ghostbusters is bigger than any one component, although Billy was absolutely the lead and contributive to it in a massive way, as was the director and Harold (Ramis), myself and Sigourney (Weaver). The concept is much larger than any individual role and the promise of Ghostbusters 3 is that we get to hand the equipment and the franchise down to new blood. And he wasn't just talking about the apparently active status of development. He also dropped a few extra details about the storyline, though admittedly nothing you couldn't have figured out from all the talk of a new generation. My character, Ray, is now blind in one eye and can't drive the Cadillac, he says, He's got a bad knee and can't carry the packs.... Egon is too large to get into the harness. We need young blood and that's the promise. We're gonna hand it to a new generation. So, given how many rumours have floated out there about possible new recruits, does he have anyone in mind? I like this guy Matthew Gray Gubler from the Criminal Minds show. But there's going to be a casting. We're going to see everyone that wants to do it. We're going to need.... three guys and a young woman. Though Aykroyd is a man in a position to know more about the movie's status than many others, there's still the small matter of zero official announcements and few other rumblings having turned out to be anywhere near accurate. And until there's actually a press release out there confirming that the Ghostbusters really are back, we'll leave all this locked up in the Rumour Containment Facility for now, and hope Walter Peck doesn't happen along to make us turn the power off...
Thursday, August 25, 2011
David
A David the Movie production. Produced by Julian Schwartz, Joel Fendelan, Patrick Daly, Maz Jobraini. Executive producer, Stephanie Levy, Andrew Cohen, Jason Dubin. Co-producer, Yuta Silverman. Directed, edited by Joel Fendelman. Screenplay, Fendelman, Patrick Daly.With: Maz Jobrani, Muatasem Mishal, Binyomin Shtaynberger, Dina Shihabi, Gamze Ceylon, Michael Golden, Daniel Luttway, Markus Goldberg, Jared Kirsch, David Mandelbaum, Noam Wienberg. (English, Arabic, Hebrew dialogue)Bridging one of the world's defining sociopolitical rifts one 11-year-old at a time, quietly engaging indie "David" brings charm, sympathy and understatement to its microcosmic story of a young Muslim Brooklynite whose circumstances lead him to pass as Jewish. First feature for director/co-scenarist Joel Fendelman is a middleweight drama that wears its modesty to its advantage, lending a potentially contrived tale a solid grounding in docu-style location capture and the protag's naive p.o.v. Sole U.S. entry in Montreal's main competition has upbeat prospects for further fest travel, limited theatrical exposure and home-format sales. Daud (Muatasem Mishal) is fortunate, perhaps, but also rather burdened in being the only son of devout, conservative imam Ahmed (Maz Jobrani), who takes his community and family responsibilities equally seriously. As a result, Daud is expected not just to do well in school, but also to tutor other children at the mosque. He has no apparent playmates, or any playtime for that matter. Taking his little sister to the park one day, he notices a group of kids who accidentally leave a book behind. They follow the group to a yeshiva, where Daud balks, scared by his father's casual pronouncement that "Jews don't like Arabs." Rather than enter, he simply drops the book in a mailbox outside, later realizing to his horror that he's swapped his grandfather's precious Koran with the other boy's Talmud. Stealing back into the school another day, he spies the tome on a rabbi's desk, but before he can grab it, he gets swept into class as a presumably tardy student. Identifying himself as "David," he keeps coming back, awaiting another opportunity to access the rabbi's frequently locked office. Meanwhile, he's fascinated by the boisterous, participatory methods of the teacher (Noam Wienberg) and delighted when some of the kids introduce him to basketball, and he soon gains his first best friend when an assignment pairs him with Yoav (Binyomin Shtaynberger). Inevitably, however, this innocent ruse is going to be exposed, and look very bad. On another conflicted front, Daud's older sister, Aishah (Dina Shihabi), wins a scholarship to study computer engineering at Stanford. But Ahmed is hardly about to let a daughter traipse off into a secular world 3,000 miles away. Script by Fendelman and Patrick Daly has a few credibility gaps: Given how closely his time and responsibilities are monitored, it seems unlikely Daud's parents (Gamze Ceylon plays the warm mother) wouldn't notice his long absences much sooner. And it's a bit of a stretch that outgoing Yoav would choose a best mate who's fairly withdrawn and must be introduced to every game or pastime. Nonetheless, "David's" many small virtues add up to a winning whole, its message of cultural reconciliation presented sans preachiness, melodrama, easy answers or sweeping generalities. Non-pro juvenile performers are very good, while comedian Jobrani (best known as co-founder of the Axis of Evil Comedy Tour) is excellent as the rather mirthless but well-intentioned dad. Kid's-eye view of Gotham life is just right, design and tech contributions apt in their crisp simplicity.Camera (color, HD-to-DCP), Robbie Renfrow; music, Gil Talmi; production designer, Shruti Parekh; sound designer, Rick Secen; assistant director, Kevin Hartmann. Reviewed at Montreal World Film Festival (competing), Aug. 19, 2011. Running time: 80 MIN. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
VIDEO: Ryan Gosling Street Fight Videographer Vividly Recalls the Actor's Heroic Act
On Monday, the Internet learned that real human being Ryan Gosling had joined the ranks of hero after breaking up a New York City street fight. (“Street fight.”) Many questions remained after watching the shaky video evidence, though, and the guys over at OMGICU.com tracked down Gosling street fight videographer Valerie Herrera to get to the bottom of the incident. “There were guys fighting over a painting,” Herrera said when asked how things started. “One guy just kinda walked up to the other one and just took the painting and walked off. So he was like, ‘You’re going to have to pay for that.’ They started fighting and then they started fighting in the middle of the street.” Per the crafty camerawoman, the incident took place on June 24, nearly one month before Gosling co-starred in Crazy, Stupid, Love. “Yeah, I kinda forgot about the video and then I just posted it,” she said of the time lapse. “I’ll be honest. I didn’t exactly know who [Ryan Gosling] was.” Despite the fact that the camera cut off abruptly when the men walked out of the middle of the street, Herrera says the incident didn’t end there. “Ryan took [the two men] to the corner and asked them what happened. [The artist] explained to him, ‘This guy stole my painting.’ So [Ryan] said, ‘Okay, how can we fix this? How much was the painting?’ [The artist] said, ‘It’s $10.’ So [Ryan] dug into his wallet, took out a twenty, gave it to [the artist] and said, ‘Will this settle his debt now?’ [The artist] said, ‘Yeah, he’s free to go.’ […] They all walked their separate ways and that’s it.” As for whether it was staged, the videographer didn’t think so. “No, you can literally tell that he did that out of the kindness of his heart.” Aww. [OMGICU.com via Vulture]
Miramax Starting Movie Streaming Service on Facebook
Who's prepared to take more time on Facebook? Miramax is starting a film streaming service, known as Miramax eXperience, for Mark Zuckerberg's company. Based on paidContent, the studio intentions of initially delivering 20 game titles that Facebook customers will have the ability to rent for 48 hrs (10 game titles is going to be open to people within the U.K. and Poultry). Obviously, the service will not be free. You'll have to dole out 30 credits (the same as $3) to look at films like 'Chicago,' 'Cold Mountain' and 'Good Will Hunting.' Facebook also wanted to really make it obvious this deal might not be only at Miramax, and much more galleries might be jumping about the streaming bandwagon. "We are speaking to any or all the film galleries," stated Serta Rose, Facebook Vice president of Close ties and Platform Marketing. "One thing Miramax contacted us about was the idea of having the ability to buy on Facebook watching on other platforms." Additionally for their desktop computer, customers will have the ability to stream movies via iPad as well as on Google TV. Would everyone watch streaming movies on Facebook? [via THR and paidContent]
Thursday, August 11, 2011
David Yates to direct The Stand
Laurel and Sturdy, Bogey and Bacall, Pacino and P Niro... all can be viewed as great Hollywood double functions, but none of them have quite the cash-spinning pedigree of David Yates and Steve Kloves.Getting partnered to record-breaking impact on the final three Harry Potter films, the happy couple are actually set to tackle another weighty tome as Stephen King's The Stand.Warner Bros want to determine the horror maestro's apocalyptic epic converted into a multi-film franchise, and therefore are presently in talks with Yates and Kloves to consider over as director and film writer correspondingly.Clocking in in a whopping 1,472 pages in paperback form, The Stand is just one of King's most ambitious books. It informs the storyline of the global disaster including the accidental discharge of a flu-like virus that leaves a persons population absolutely decimated. Within the barren remains of the items used to be America, various children make their way meticulously towards the couple of remaining metropolitan areas offering shelter.It's interesting to determine Warner pressing ahead with that one, especially given that they have been expected to get another King adaptation, The Dark Tower, following the project's collapse at Universal.Nevertheless, The Stand would provide a more workable proposition (considering the fact that it's one book, instead of seven) and would still fit multi-film hole left through the departing Potter.Source: HitFixAre Kloves and Yates a great fit for that Stand? Tell us below.
Friday, August 5, 2011
Kesler cast in 'Weeds' season finale
Ian Reed Kesler has been cast in the season finale of Showtime's "Weeds." Actor, who has appeared in bigscreen pic "500 Days of Summer" and FX laffer "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia," will play an offbeat hoodlum with a military bent. "Weeds" is currently in its seventh season and Kesler would have a role in an eighth season, if the show goes forward. Michael Trim is directing the episode. Kesler is repped by Abrams Artists Agency and Main Title Entertainment. Contact Variety Staff at news@variety.com
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Watch Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess Re-Meet-Cute in This '80s-Set One Day Clip
If you haven’t yet decided whether to accompany your girlfriend to One Day — the decades-spanning romance adaptation from An Education director Lone Scherfig — then maybe the following clip will help inform your choice. In it, a mousy Anne Hathaway lays on some thick, British-accented sarcasm when re-meeting a drunken Jim Sturgess. Just the briefest of brief clips, but: Does it seem like the chemistry between Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess peaked with the awesome promotional artwork for the film? One Day is in theaters on Aug. 19. [via Yahoo!]
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