Monday, October 31, 2011

Demi Lovato goes back on tour, year after breakdown

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Teen star Demi Lovato is going back out on the road, a year after entering treatment for bulimia and other emotional problems.

Lovato, 19, will start a 10-city U.S. tour in November to celebrate the success of her latest album "Unbroken" and its debut single "Skyscraper", her spokesman said on Friday.

Lovato, the former star of Disney Channel's "Sonny with a Chance", suffered an emotional breakdown in November 2010 when she pulled out of a concert tour with the Jonas Brothers and entered a three month treatment program.

She has since spoken openly about her 10 year battle with eating disorders and said she started cutting herself at the age of 11.

Lovato has since quit the TV series that made her one of Disney Channel's biggest international teen stars, saying she wanted to focus on her music career.

Lovato has performed recently in New York and Los Angeles to promote the September release of "Unbroken". The new mini-tour will start in Detroit on November 16 and end in Chicago on December 3.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant)


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Warrant frontman Jani Lane died of alcohol poisoning

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Jani Lane, the once energetic blond lead singer and songwriter for heavy metal band Warrant, died from alcohol poisoning, the Los Angeles County coroner said Wednesday.

Lane was found dead in a Los Angeles motel room on August 11. He was 47.

His official cause of death was listed as "acute ethanol intoxication," according to Lt. Larry Dietz of the coroner's office.

Lane, best known for singing lead vocals and writing the Hollywood glam band's hits such as "Cherry Pie" that led them to success in the late 1980s and early 1990s, was discovered in a budget motel in suburban Woodland Hills.

At the time of his death, celebrity website TMZ reported that a half empty bottle of vodka and prescription medication had been found in his motel room.

The Ohio-born Lane left Warrant left the band several times before returning for a series for concerts in 2008, after which he left the band permanently.

Lane also pursued a solo career and appeared on a reality TV series about celebrities aiming to lose weight. He had been arrested several times for drunk driving.

Warrant's other hits included "Heaven," and "Sometimes She Cries" and the rock anthem "Down Boys." Along with other '80s Los Angeles bands such as "Poison," Warrant was a part of the heavy metal subgenre known as "glam" or "hair" metal for their ability to combine flamboyant hair, antics and outfits with a heavy rock musical style filled with power chords.

(Reporting by Mary Slosson; Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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Alicia Keys will write music for Broadway show

NEW YORK (AP) — Not content simply to follow Jay-Z and Will Smith into the world of Broadway producers, Alicia Keys will also compose original music for the upcoming production of "Stick Fly" on the Great White Way.

Producers said Tuesday that the musician and singer, whose hits include "Fallin'" and "A Woman's Worth," will offer her songwriting to the play by Lydia R. Diamond. Performances begin Nov. 18 at the Cort Theatre.

The work is a contemporary comedy of manners revolving around an affluent black family whose insecurities gradually unravel during a vacation. The cast includes Dule Hill ("Psych," ''The West Wing") and Tony Award-winner Ruben Santiago-Hudson.

Keys already had signed on to help produce the work. Previously, Jay-Z, Will Smith and wife Jada Pinkett Smith helped produce the musical "Fela!"

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Online:

http://www.StickFlyBroadway.com


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Flaming Lips record 6-hour song for animals, music

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Oklahoma City-based alternative rock band Flaming Lips has recorded a six-hour song to raise money for the Central Oklahoma Humane Society and the University of Central Oklahoma's Academy of Contemporary Music.

The band said Monday that the project has raised about $20,000 with fans donating $100 each to hear their names spoken by Sean Lennon — the son of John Lennon — in the song.

Lead singer Wayne Coyne said the project will reduce the number of homeless animals in Oklahoma City and invest in equipment and technology for the music academy.

The song will only be available within a toy called a "Strobo Trip," which the band describes as a "multi-sensory phenomenon" including music and lights, via the band's website. No release date has been announced.


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Black Eyed Peas drop out of Jackson tribute concert

LONDON (Reuters) - The Black Eyed Peas will not take part in a Michael Jackson tribute concert being held in the Welsh city of Cardiff at the weekend, organizers said.

The band was one of the biggest draws in the lineup for the show on Saturday.

"Due to unavoidable circumstances, the Black Eyed Peas will be unable to perform at this Saturday's Michael Forever event," said Chris Hunt, head of Global Live Events which is staging the concert.

"It is with regret that we announce the removal of Black Eyed Peas from the Michael Forever bill, but I look forward to a great night with other earth shattering artists.

"The event is really getting into gear and is going to be a fantastic evening for all."

Performing on the night will be artists including Jackson's sister La Toya, some of his brothers, Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Gladys Knight and Smokey Robinson.

Among the British stars will be Leona Lewis, Alexandra Burke, JLS and Diversity, while Beyonce will appear in a video performance.

The concert has divided Jackson's family, with brothers Marlon, Tito and Jackie and sister La Toya defending the event and Jermaine and Randy opposing it, partly because it coincides with the U.S. trial of the late singer's doctor Conrad Murray.

The Jackson estate has also voiced concerns about where the proceeds from the Michael Forever Tribute Concert eventually go.

Jackson died in Los Angeles in June, 2009, while rehearsing for a comeback series of tours in London. He was 50.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Jackson children dance to his music at tribute gig

CARDIFF (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of fans rocked to the hits of Michael Jackson on Saturday at a tribute concert his brothers hoped would put the spotlight on his musical legacy after so much controversy.

The late singer's children -- Prince, 14, Paris, 13 and "Blanket," 9 -- appeared on stage briefly to address the crowd and at the end joined other family members dancing to "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough."

"We're very happy to be here on this special night to honor our father," said Paris, dressed in a red jacket similar to the one worn by Jackson in his groundbreaking "Thriller" music video.

The "Beat It" star, one of the most successful yet troubled artists of the pop era, died in 2009 aged 50 while rehearsing for a series of comeback concerts.

The "Michael Forever" tribute in Cardiff, Wales, coincides with the involuntary manslaughter trial of the singer's doctor in Los Angeles, drawing criticism from some fans and members of his family.

Brothers Jermaine and Randy boycotted the event because of the timing, while sister Janet said it would be too painful to perform in Cardiff during the trial.

But it had the blessing of his mother Katherine, who was at the gig, and Michael's older brother Marlon said it should be seen as a celebration of Jackson's music.

"They (the fans) have the right to (protest)," he said backstage. "I think they have the right to do whatever they feel, but we're celebrating the positive side of our brother's life.

"We know our brother better than anybody else and he would love that we are doing this for him and remembering him in that way."

"MICHAEL SUFFERED"

U.S. musician Ne-Yo kicked off the four-hour extravaganza at the Millennium Stadium with the tight beats of "Billie Jean" before slowing the tempo in "The Lady In My Life."

"It's not about the controversy, it's not about the trial, it's not about his death. It's about celebrating his life, it's about celebrating his music," Ne-Yo said from a stage shaped like a giant glove.

British boy band JLS sang "The Way You Make Me Feel" before being joined by three of the original Jackson 5 -- Marlon, Tito and Jackie -- in a rendition of "Blame it on the Boogie."

"Can you feel his spirit in the room tonight?" called out Marlon, and the mostly young crowd screamed "Yes!"

Jackson's sister La Toya performed live in public for the first time in nearly 20 years, while three of his nephews appeared in their band 3T.

"I had absolutely no intention of performing," La Toya told Reuters. "I was hesitant about this and at the last minute I said you have to do it for him ... and I did, so I'm happy that I did. It's worth honouring him this way."

The lineup also featured Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Beyonce on video and Jamie Foxx, and among British stars appearing were Leona Lewis and Diversity.

Toward the end, pictures of Jackson were beamed on to giant screens as "empress of soul" Gladys Knight, accompanied by a gospel choir, sang "Gone Too Soon."

Earlier, her powerful rendition of "Believe in Yourself" was a highlight, and she was joined in a duet of "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" by Motown great Smokey Robinson.

Robinson told Reuters: "There will be many mimics, but there will never be another Michael Jackson.

"He got to the point where he had no private life whatsoever," he added.

"When you are in a business that you love and you are doing what you love, however you can't go out and just get in your car or go to the store or go to the movies -- that's got to be rough. That's what he suffered."

Reaction was mixed among people streaming out of the arena after the gig, with many ecstatic but some underwhelmed by "under-rehearsed" numbers and long gaps between some songs.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Andrew Heavens)


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Bjork: New album fuses music, tech, and nature

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — As a child growing up in Iceland, Bjork would compose music in her head as she walked to school.

The cadence of her footsteps became the rhythm. The dramatic landscapes of her homeland became the inspiration.

In her new album, Bjork says she fuses that natural world with iPad apps to invent a music genre she calls an "appbox."

"Biophilia" — and a host of applications representing tracks on the album — were released Monday and are meant to immerse listeners in a complete audiovisual experience.

Speaking to The Associated Press ahead of the launch, Bjork said she sees "the structure and shapes of songs" during the creative process. That led her to work with a team of iPad app designers and musicians to chart out visual representations of the songs.

The beauty of Bjork's stark volcanic homeland courses through the new work, and the singer said the link between the environment and music is "effortless and natural."

"My accompaniment has always been nature" Bjork said during a recent interview in a boho Reykjavik theater attic.

In addition to traditional album form, Biophilia is being released as "mother app" for iPad, and within it, individual apps give a new dimension to tracks on the album with interactive visuals.

But Bjork assured fans that they don't need an expensive iPad to enjoy the work, describing the app technology as "more like an accessory."

"The music on Biophilia has to be able to stand on its own."

And despite the iPad twist, Biophilia's music is vintage Bjork.

With titles like "Virus," ''Crystalline" and "Solstice," the album embeds nature at its very heart — an enduring feature of Bjork's work.

"For me, to connect nature to music is a very effortless and natural connection" Bjork said.

Her homage to lightning, "Thunderbolt," is "almost sort of superhero macho, about the thirst for miracles which we all have."

She described "Moon" — one of the standout tracks — as "slightly melancholic, slightly possessed. That idea about death and rebirth which maybe the ladies feel more than the gentlemen."

The songs, when mapped out as algorithms for iPad users, also function as basic music lessons. "I kept thinking that this project would be for children, like music school" said Bjork.

So "Thunderbolt" has a written structure that resembles arpeggios, while "Mutual Core" contains allusions to Iceland's volcanic rock strata that teach simple chord progressions when viewed on an iPad.

"It sounds really complicated" Bjork said, "but I've seen some kids play with the apps and once you touch them and play with them it's actually quite simple."

Biophilia's Icelandic identity has been infused with international touches.

Bjork called on musicians like London-based duo 16bit; Germany's Current Value; Spain's El Grinch and long time collaborators Matthew Herbert and Iranian-born Leila Arab — whom Bjork describes as "an incredible sonic sculptor" — to finish the beats on the album.

Many of the sounds on the album have been created as a fusion of old and new, with a decidedly low-tech pipe organ and gamelan getting a 21st century upgrade to make them compatible with Bjork's writing process.

"They can receive digital information, you can plug them into a touch screen" she says.

The inclusion of a giant Tesla coil to generate not only shocking electricity bolts but also a distinct musical crackling, was a particular hit during what Bjork describes as a "low budget" version of her Biophilia show in Manchester, England this summer.

The full version of the show will play at Reykjavik's stunning new Harpa music hall in October and November.

Biophilia's music-meets-nature theme, the reinvented instruments, the iPad app and the music lessons for an wired, environment-loving audience — all of that's in line with Bjork's reputation for eccentricity.

She describes some of the rhythms on Biophilia as "magnetic liquids, almost like planets rolling out of orbit," then giggles "if that makes any sense."

"I'm not your normal troubadour".

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iPad is made by Apple Inc.

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Follow David MacDougall on Twitter at (at)davidmacAP


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"Dirty Girl" Juno Temple charms Hollywood

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British starlet Juno Temple looks set to become Hollywood's hot new export, with four upcoming films set to hit theaters in the next year, including blockbusters "The Three Musketeers" and "The Dark Knight Rises".

Temple, 22, the daughter of film director Julien Temple and his producer wife, Amanda, made her big screen debut alongside Cate Blanchett and Judi Dench in the 2006 drama "Notes on a Scandal," but it was her performance as the precocious Lola in the 2007 Oscar-nominated film "Atonement" that put her on the map.

After roles in the British franchise "St. Trinian's" and U.S. prehistoric comedy "Year One," the young actress made the move to Los Angeles three years ago and has found new projects in the U.S. independent film scene.

"I think people are making such extraordinary independent films right now, sending such amazing messages, and this new talent that's just emerging, it's really cool to be a part of that," said Temple.

Temple went the indie film route for her latest film, "Dirty Girl", released in U.S. theaters on Friday, where she plays promiscuous Southern schoolgirl Danielle, who revels in being the subject of high school gossip in a small Oklahoma town.

"What young woman wouldn't want to play that role?" said Temple, with a mischievous grin.

The "Atonement" actress, who grew up in southwest England in the 1990s, immersed herself in the sights and sounds of Oklahoma in the 1980s in order to become the character of Danielle, a feat that she credits the film's director, Abe Sylvia, for helping her achieve.

"He really took the time to explore Danielle with me, and really figure out who she was," said Temple. "It was definitely a ballsy thing for him to cast an English girl."

In "Dirty Girl," Danielle finds herself partnered on a school project with Clarke (Jeremy Dozier), an overweight closeted teenager.

The two strike up an unlikely friendship and when Danielle's mother (Milla Jojovich) gets engaged to a Mormon man and Clarke is bullied by his homophobic father (Dwight Yoakum), the pair go on the road to find Danielle's father in California.

RISING TALENT

Amid a new wave of young talent emerging from Britain -- some of them from the "Harry Potter" franchise -- The Hollywood Reporter in June selected Temple as one of 12 "new leading ladies."

With a spotlight on her career, Temple made sure to master the nuances of the Oklahoma accent for the role of Danielle.

"I thought the dialogue was priceless," said Temple, with her clear cut southern English accent, occasionally slipping into a soft California drawl. "Really figuring out the accent, really making it become second nature, was very important."

Temple's "Dirty Girl" performance has garnered positive reviews. Variety's Peter Debruge praised her ability "to project a real wit burning beneath the layers of makeup and dumb-blonde shtick her character affects around others."

Temple is also emerging in the mainstream film market and was picked by director Christopher Nolan to play Catwoman's sidekick Holly Robinson in the summer 2012 "Batman" installment "The Dark Knight Rises."

"I'm not allowed to talk about it," Temple said about her "Dark Knight" role. "I can say that I had an amazing experience making it."

Temple lists Michelle Williams and Oscar-winner Kate Winslet among her inspirations for being "mesmerizing, such chameleons," and she also admires her "Dirty Girl" and "Three Musketeers" co-star Jojovich.

"She's definitely a woman who's not afraid to take a challenge," Temple said of Jojovich.

While Temple has been identified by The Hollywood Reporter as "an indie actress to watch," the starlet has no interest in being a celebrity, preferring a quiet private life in Los Angeles.

"I don't think I'm a celebrity," said Temple. "I want people to see me being all these different characters and have no idea who I am. It's movie magic; it's what movies are about. And I want to be a great actress."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Hank Williams Jr. lashes out at media in new song

NASHVILLE, Tenn (Reuters) - Country singer Hank Williams Jr., whose theme song was pulled from "Monday Night Football" after he compared President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler, lashed out at the media on Monday with a topical song called "Keep the Change."

The track, which borrows its title and certain themes from another song released by Williams' daughter, Holly, in 2009, was offered as a free download on his website.

Williams sparked an uproar when he appeared on the Fox News Channel show "Fox & Friends" on October 3 and said Obama's pairing with Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner in a June golf summit was "like Hitler playing golf with (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu."

He also referred to Obama and Vice President Joe Biden as "the enemy." That day, ESPN publicly rebuked Williams and dropped his "All My Rowdy Friends" song as the opening theme for its weekly "Monday Night Football" broadcast.

He subsequently issued a statement saying he was sorry for anyone who took offense, but the Disney-owned sports channel and Williams later said they were parting company after an association of more than 20 years. Williams had introduced "MNF" since 1991 on both ABC and ESPN.

In his new song about the controversy, Williams took aim at both ESPN and Fox News.

"So 'Fox & Friends' want to put me down/Ask for my opinion/Twist it all around/Well two can play that gotcha game," he sings on the track.

Williams, a longtime supporter of Republican causes, also sings that the United States is becoming "socialist" and takes a dig at Obama's 2008 campaign theme of "change."

"I'll keep my freedom, I'll keep my guns/Try to keep my money and my religion too ... Keep the government out of my business/ and y'all can keep the change," he sings.

The song ends with the 62-year-old Williams, nicknamed Bocephus by his country music legend father, urging fans to join him in a boycott.

"Yeah you can keep 'Fox & Friends' and ESPN out of your homes too. 'Cause Bocephus and all his rowdy friends and his song is out of there," sings Williams, who is selling "Hank Jr. for President" T-shirts on his website.

Fox News declined to comment on the song, and a representative from ESPN could not be reached for comment.

The new Williams track borrows its title from a song called "Keep the Change," which released by his daughter, Holly Williams, in 2009.

While Holly Williams did not write the song, her version gained solid radio play with lyrics that present a more subtle but still biting critique of the Obama administration.

Hank Williams Jr. is slated to hit the TV talk show circuit on Tuesday, including appearances on the ABC daytime program "The View" and the conservative Fox News show "Hannity."

(Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Steve Gorman)


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Friday, October 28, 2011

Film trailer: Winslet and Waltz in 'Carnage'

Following up the teaser, the second trailer for Roman Polanski's Carnage starring Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz, Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly was released October 10.

The story follows two sets of parents meeting to discuss their sons' schoolyard fight. What begins as awkward but polite discussion gradually turns into verbal sparring.

As the discussion falls apart over victim and bully roles, truths are revealed as the couples unravel and the civil meeting culminates in chaos with Kate Winslet asking, "What are we still doing in this house?" The acting performances are considered as possible Oscar contenders.

The film played at the Venice International Film Festival and just opened the New York Film Festival on September 30.

Polanski's film is an adaptation of the Tony-winning play Gods of Carnage by Yasmina Reza, which starred James Gandolfini, Jeff Daniels, Hope Davis, and Marcia Gay Harden in the New York production.

Carnage opens in Spain, Germany and Greece in November, France and Russia December 7-8, North America and Turkey on December 16, Sweden on December 24 and other markets to follow.

Trailer: http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1810196560/video/26881765

http://www.carnagemovie.com

RC


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"Enlightened" premiere: why you should watch

By Kimberly Potts

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Enlightened" opens with health and beauty buyer Amy Jellicoe's (Laura Dern) spectacular workplace meltdown, a frightening outburst so emotional and so public that no one else who unleashed it would ever dare to face any of her co-workers again, let alone ask for her job back.

But that's just one of the things that sets Amy apart, and one of the reasons why "Enlightened," a dramedy that is going to very slowly unfold its story, is so amusing and endearing.

For three months after her breakdown, Amy unwinds at a New Age-y Hawaiian therapy center, where she swims with giant turtles and winds herself back up to return home and get her old job back ... or try to, anyway.

Amy's full of positivity and a determination to be "an agent of change," but her old corporate cohorts think she's still a big can of crazy.

No one, least of all her old boss, the married guy she had an affair with, is happy to see her.

Rejuvenated, but still savvy, Amy hints at legal action, and she is rehired by the company … to work in a basement data entry center that would send any sane person running back to the turtles in Hawaii.

Vowing to make changes in her own life and the lives of those around her, Amy forges onward, despite getting the brush-off from her old assistant (who now has Amy's office), her philandering, drug-addicted ex-husband (Luke Wilson) and her pessimistic mama (Dern's real-life mom, Diane Ladd).

No one is going to burst her bubble, but continuing doses of reality are going to test her commitment to making a difference in the world, like the starting salary she's offered when she considers taking a job at a homeless shelter.

That's the biggest mystery of "Enlightened," and it remains one at least four episodes into the premiere season: can Amy hold on to her new world view when the rest of the world is trying to so hard to smash it, or, worse yet, to ignore her altogether?

And is she really enlightened, or is her new approach just a way of trying to avoid dealing with the problems and realities of her life?

Maybe the mystery won't unfold at all, and the series will continue to let viewers decide for themselves, something TV shows are rarely restrained enough to do.


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The fine lines of motion-capture animation films

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Should a film made using the motion-capture technique qualify as an animated movie at the Oscars, or is it something else?

Does the answer to that last question change if Steven Spielberg is the guy making the movie?

Those are two of the questions facing the Academy at a time when the expanding use of performance capture has the potential to wreak havoc in the Best Animated Feature category.

And it's also confusing the acting category, where voters have to figure out if a performance can be awards-worthy even if the actor's face is never seen onscreen.

"I think there still needs to be a lot of education, because there's still a reasonable amount of fear," said actor Andy Serkis, who's delivered several of the most compelling performance-capture performances and who appears in two of the films in the thick of this year's discussion, "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" and "The Adventures of Tintin."

The performance-capture process, in which a performer's movements and facial expressions are recorded and then translated by computer into the movements and expression of an onscreen character, has been used to great effect in the "Lord of the Rings" films, in "Avatar," and more recently in "Rise of the Planet of the Apes."

It has also given rise to a whole genre of films that skirt a middle ground between live-action and animation, from Robert Zemeckis's "The Polar Express" and "A Christmas Carol" to the Oscar-winning "Happy Feet."

The Short Films and Feature Animation Branch has been grappling for years with the question of whether films based in motion capture are truly animated. In 2010 the branch added specific language covering motion capture to its rules for qualifying for the Best Animated Feature Oscar.

The rules point out that motion capture "by itself is not an animation technique" and stipulate that "a significant number of the major characters must be animated, and animation must figure in no less than 75 percent of the picture's running time," requiring that "movement and characters' performances are created using a frame-by-frame technique."

Three films that could potentially qualify this year are affected by this rule: Simon Wells's March release "Mars Needs Moms," George Miller's upcoming "Happy Feet Two" and Spielberg's "The Adventures of Tintin."

The makers of all three films have been asked by the branch to supply explanations of their intent. The studios behind "Tintin" and "Happy Feet," meanwhile, are adamant that those films are animated and should be in contention for the award.

(Jon Bloom, a governor in the short films and feature animation branch, declined to comment any further on the process to TheWrap.)

The consensus among those who closely watch the animation category is that the branch will either rule that all three films qualify or that all three don't -- and virtually everyone TheWrap spoke to is expecting them to qualify.

One reason: "Happy Feet Two" is the sequel to a 2006 film that won the Oscar for Animated Feature; to say that it isn't animated would be to cast retroactive doubt on a previous winner.

(Not that the use of motion capture in "Happy Feet" wasn't noticed: Pixar's Oscar-winning "Ratatouille" took a sly shot at Miller's movie in end credits that read, "100% Genuine Animation! No motion capture or any other performance shortcuts were used in the production of this film.")

"Tintin," meanwhile, comes from one of the most powerful directors in Hollywood -- someone the committee could be disinclined to cross.

"Spielberg is going to say what he needs to say -- and my question is, who on that committee is going to call him a liar if they don't believe him?" asked one animation insider.

The third motion-capture film, "Mars Needs Moms," is a tricker (but perhaps more inconsequential) case. Zemeckis, its producer, has made a string of films using the technology but in the past has sometimes resisted entering his films in the Animated Feature race.

"To call performance capture animation is a disservice to the great animators," Zemeckis said in 2007, before his motion-capture version of "Beowulf" was originally ruled ineligible by the Academy. But AMPAS later changed its mind about "Beowulf" (which wasn't nominated), and Zemeckis has allowed his films to be entered in the category.

Still, "Mars Needs Moms" was such a commercial and critical flop that it'll likely serve only to pad out the category, without any real chance of landing a nomination.

Padding out the category could prove to be crucial: if the three performance-capture films are deemed eligible, that appears to bring the number of competing films to 15. One more entrant is all that'd be needed to bump the number of nominees in the category from four to five.

On the acting side, the problem isn't eligibility, it's that actors are typically disinclined to view performance capture as being worthy of a nomination,

"You don't physically appear on screen as yourself, and I guess some actors would probably object to that," Serkis, who portrayed the ape Caesar in "Rise of the Planet of the Apes," told TheWrap in August. "Because they feel that their greatest tool is their face, and that's that."

In fact, he added, performance-capture acting is "incredibly subtle and very pure" -- and no more diluted by outside factors than any other kind of acting. "Every single actor's on-screen performance is enhanced to some degree by what you wear, by the makeup team that works on your face, by the shot size, by the way the director moves the camera around what you're doing.

There is not a single actor's performance on-screen that is not enhanced by other things."

James Cameron made some of the same points two years ago when "Avatar" came out, insisting that the actor who played the alien Na'vi characters were not animated, and that the actors deserved full consideration for acting awards.

None were nominated -- and, indeed, no actor in a performance-capture film has ever been nominated by the Academy.

"I'd like to think it could happen," said Serkis. "I'd like to think it could be understood as being no more than acting. I don't think there should be any kind of special category or anything. The visual effects side of it is the visual side of it, and the performance is acting.

"And if some directors want to enhance or slightly animate, that's moving into something else."

In other words, this is a world in which fine lines are everywhere: the lines between acting, enhancement and animation, between a motion-capture film and an animated one.

Good luck, Academy.


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Korea's Busan stakes claim as Asian film hub

BUSAN, South Korea (Reuters) - With a new name, a new venue and an emphasis on actors and directors from lesser-known parts of Asia, this South Korean port city is moving decisively to assert its status as the region's pre-eminent film industry destination.

The 16th annual Busan International Film Festival (BIFF), Asia's largest, kicked off earlier this week at the new Busan Cinema Center, an eye-catching, $140 million complex designed by Austria-based architectural collective Coop Himmelblau.

Over 300 movies from 70 countries will be screened at the festival, including 89 world premieres.

Organizers have spared no expense on infrastructure and expanded the festival to include industry forums and educational activities as the number of competing regional events grows.

Beijing launched its own international film festival this year, and similar events have emerged in such seemingly unlikely places as Luang Prabang, Laos.

Even South Korea's hostile northern neighbor is getting in on the act, with the next edition of the biennial Pyongyang Film Festival slated for September next year.

Organizers expressed hopes the 30,000 square foot venue, topped by a sprawling, LED-covered roof that resembles a pair of wings taking flight, would become a "symbolic structure" representative of the region's burgeoning film business.

One of the jury members, Australian director Gillian Armstrong, said of the venue at a news conference earlier this week that she was "very, very jealous. I want to take it home."

Among the most anticipated films are local director Song-il Gon's "Always," which chronicles the romance between a troubled boxer and a young woman losing her eyesight, and "Chronicle of My Mother" by Japan's Masato Harada, about an author coming to terms with his elderly mother's progressive dementia.

European and North American film luminaries are also well-represented, with France's Luc Besson visiting to promote his latest work "The Lady," a biography of Myanmar democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi starring actress Michelle Yeoh.

"What makes the Busan festival special is the city itself, it's by the sea," said Vincent Sung, creative director at Seoul-based communications agency Visual Sponge and a longtime festival-goer.

"You have glamour mixed with the normal Busan inhabitants, it's casual and relaxed but still keeps a very chic air ... it also gets really amazing lineups of directors and actors, this year is one inch up compared to the other years."

Veteran French actress Isabel Huppert also attended, announcing on Friday a new collaboration with Korean director Hong Sang-soo and praising the region's "alive, vivid" film culture.

The festival will culminate October 14 with the "New Currents" prize, which awards $30,000 to two outstanding films by first or second-time Asian directors.

Among those competing for the title this year are Sri Lanka's Aruna Jayawardana, whose "August Drizzle" chronicles a power struggle in a remote village, and Indonesia's Kamila Andini, who details a young girl's efforts to accept her father's death in "The Mirror Never Lies."

The festival's focus also appears to be shifting westwards, with several works from Central Asian and Iranian filmmakers figuring prominently on the agenda, including "Cut," a Japan-set crime fable from exiled Iranian director Amir Naderi.

Streets around the center and the towering luxury hotels of nearby Haeundae Beach were awash with red carpet over the weekend, with police cordons struggling to hold back energetic fans determined to catch a glimpse of one of the festival's many high-profile guests. Formerly known as the Pusan Film Festival, the event also adopted the BIFF moniker for the first time to fall in line with the official name for the city.

Sung had guarded praise for the changes.

"The new venue is really impressive, the design is amazing ... but compared to past festivals it lost the human touch, it's huge and you can get lost really easily," he said.

"(But) it's very futuristic and shows Busan wants to go forward in terms of design."

(Editing by ELaine Lies)


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"Sunday Night Football" continues to score in ratings

By Lucas Shaw

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - "Sunday Night Football" continues to bring in big ratings for NBC, propelling the network to its fifth consecutive Sunday night win.

With the defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers playing the Atlanta Falcons, a team it bounced from the playoffs last year, the game notched a 14.0 overnight rating. That is up 20 percent from last year's week five game and up 30 percent from 2009.

Total viewer numbers and national numbers will be released later.

Winning the night is nothing new for "Sunday Night Football," it did so 18 consecutive weeks last year. However, that is also the best overnight rating for the broadcast since NBC bought the property six years ago.

The next closest was in 2007, when the Packers lost to the Chicago Bears.

The show has increased its dominance each year on air, taking nine of 16 Sundays its first year, then 11 of 16, then 13 of 16, then 15 of 16 and finally, going 18 for 18 last year.

It seems viewers in Milwaukee did not tire of sports after watching their Milwaukee Brewers win game one of Major League Baseball's National League Championship Series Sunday afternoon.

Milwaukee, in the heart of Packer country, led all metered markets for "Sunday Night Football."


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Hungarian police seize weapons from Brad Pitt film

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungarian police have seized a stockpile of weapons that was shipped to the Hungarian capital for the production of a film about zombies starring Brad Pitt, a film crew member said on Tuesday.

Weapons expert Bela Gajdos, who has worked on the filming of zombie movie "World War Z" to ensure the safe handling of the weapons used, told national news agency MTI that each firearm had been converted to restrict its use to blank ammunition.

Gajdos added that the weapons were completely harmless and had already been used on a shoot in London.

World War Z, a big-budget horror film directed by Marc Forster and slated for release in 2012, recently shifted filming to Hungary from Britain.

"We had a police permit to bring these guns into the country," Gajdos told MTI, adding that the production had contracted arms experts to establish whether the guns complied with Hungarian laws.

But the guns were seized before experts could inspect them.

Adam Goodman, the producer of the film, was not immediately available for comment.

Janos Hajdu, the chief of the Hungarian Anti-Terrorism Center on Monday said the agency seized a large stockpile of weapons, which arrived from England on a chartered plane. He could not confirm whether the weapons were intended for the World War Z shoot.

The National Bureau for Investigation, which took over the case, said in an emailed reply to Reuters questions that it was conducting an investigation for abuse of arms and ammunition, but would not release any further details.

The weapons included hand guns, machine guns, high-precision sniper rifles, hand grenades and a large quantity of high-caliber ammunition, according to photos and a video released by the Anti-Terrorism center.

According to the video, some weapons could be re-converted to use live ammunition by removing a single screw.

Hajdu said the firearms had not been properly disabled and could not be allowed into the country less than two weeks before a national holiday commemorating the 1956 uprising, MTI reported.

(Reporting by Marton Dunai, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Thursday, October 27, 2011

"Breaking Bad" season finale ends best season yet

By Kimberly Potts

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Here's the dilemma about Sunday night's "Breaking Bad" season finale: We can't wait to see it. But once we do, we won't get any more "Breaking Bad" episodes for...well, a long time.

The show's fourth season has cemented its status as one of the best TV dramas ever, and, we might even argue, the best TV show ever, period. Fans of "The Wire" and "The Sopranos" and "Mad Men" will make their own arguments, but we challenge anyone to honestly point to another series that, episode after episode, season after season, entertains as much as this one.

Series creator Vince Gilligan, the writers, the crew, and the Emmy-winning cast have built a sometimes unbearable amount tension into season four, with payoffs both subtle (Hank's theory about the industrial laundry operation!) and shocking (poor, dumb Ted Beneke).

They've also managed an astonishing amount of humor in a show about a chemistry teacher who starts cooking meth with his slacker former student after a terminal cancer diagnosis. Much of the credit goes to comic mastermind Bob Odenkirk (Better call Saul) -- but everyone gets their licks in.

Everything so far comes to a head in Sunday's season ender, as the inevitable showdown between Walt and his drug boss Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) plays out. Jesse and Walt's entire family are caught in the middle.

We can't wait to see how it unfolds. Even though we'll have to wait -- until the summer of 2012, most likely -- to check back in with our favorite Albuquerque residents for the show's fifth and final season.

Sunday's finale airs at 10/9c on AMC.


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"American Horror Story" has solid premiere

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The much-hyped Ryan Murphy/Brad Falchuk drama "American Horror Story" had a solid premiere Wednesday night, FX said Thursday.

The premiere airing of the series scored a respectable 3.2 million total viewers, 2 million of them in the cherished adults 18-49 demographic.

When all three airings of the premiere are taken into account, the program took in just over 5 million total viewers, 3.2 million of them in the demo.

To put those numbers in some perspective, "Horror" matched the series premiere of Murphy and Falchuk's last effort for FX, "Nip/Tuck," in the adults 18-49 demographic, and out-performed the series premiere of "Sons of Anarchy" in the demo by 33 percent -- and those series are the network's two most-watched series.

"Horror" stars Dylan McDermott and Connie Britton as a married couple going through relationship difficulty who move from Boston to Los Angeles in search of a fresh start, only to be plagued by seemingly supernatural occurrences in the home they've just purchased.


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'The Muppets' soundtrack features Feist, Bird and the cast

The list of songs on the upcoming soundtrack album for The Muppets film was released October 10 by Billboard magazine and features a combination of Muppet performers, the actors and guest musicians.

The film's music supervisor, Bret McKenzie of Flight of the Conchords, wrote four songs which feature guest artists Feist and Joanna Newsom.

Also, Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" is covered by The Muppets Barbershop Quartet and Cee Lo Green's "Forget You" is sung by Camilla and the Chickens.

The Muppets update their classic, "Rainbow Connection," and the entire cast of actors and Muppets sing "Life's A Happy Song."

Cast members perform much of the music including songs, such as "Life's a Happy Song" with Jason Segel and Amy Adams, "Man or Muppet," a duet between Segel and new Muppet Walter, "Me Party," by Amy Adams and Miss Piggy, and the finale, "Let's Talk About Me," with actor Chris Cooper (The Town) singing.

Other tracks on the soundtrack include Paul Simon's "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard," "We Built This City" by Starship and Andrew Bird's "The Whistling Caruso."

The soundtrack also includes bits of film dialogue, and Christophe Beck composed the score.

The film marks the return of The Muppets to the big screen with their biggest fan, Jason Segel, and his girlfriend, played by Amy Adams, rallying to help save the Muppet Theatre, about to be razed by oilman Tex Richman.

Walt Disney Records will release the soundtrack November 21 and the film opens November 23 in North America, followed by Brazil, France and Singapore in December, Australia in January and other markets worldwide in 2012.

RC


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Film festival comes to Kabul on war anniversary

KABUL (Reuters) - A father desperately searches for his son, who has been sent on a suicide bomb mission. After losing everything, he ends up homeless and insane on the dusty streets of Kabul.

Tragedy can seem all too common in war-torn Afghanistan, but fortunately, this time, the story of Yacoub is not true.

Instead it is the center of a movie, one of 50 screened during the first Autumn Human Rights Film Festival. The event provides a central Asian stage for directors from Afghanistan and abroad who are tackling human rights issues, and a window for the public to explore challenges many have faced themselves.

"This film festival is special compared to other festivals I have attended, because it's about human rights," said Homayun Morowat, the Kabul-born director of the film about Yacoub, An Apple from Paradise.

The festival takes place at the tenth anniversary of the start of the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan, a time when the human rights achievements and abuses of the last decade are in sharp focus.

Amnesty International said on Wednesday the Afghan government and its international supporters have failed to keep many of the human rights promises they made to the Afghan people.

But media freedoms are still better than in almost all the surrounding countries, according to the Press Freedom Index compiled by Reporters Without Borders, making the Afghan capital a logical choice to host a central Asian film festival.

Organizers say the festival has been years in the planning and the dates chosen were practical, not political.

"This event is not related to any political issues, and we started to plan it three years ago," said Malek Shaf'ii, the chief executive of Afghanistan Cinema Club.

BIGGEST CHALLENGE

Instead he said they fixed on the human rights theme because over 90 percent of movies and documentaries made by Afghan independent film makers touch on human rights problems.

"Human rights issues are one of the biggest challenges for Afghanistan," Shaf'ii told Reuters in the heavily-guarded French Cultural Institute in central Kabul, where many films were shown.

Afghanistan struggles with desperate poverty and three decades of war that has killed thousands of civilians and maimed or traumatized tens of thousands more. There are also strict restrictions on women, who traditionally have limited rights.

"The first step we can take to improve human rights is just let the people know the problems and challenges, and we are doing this to make a connection between film makers and the public audience," Hassan Zakizadeh, a festival spokesman said.

The film festival, which includes 32 Afghan movies and 18 from other countries, lasts seven days, with screenings in a downtown cinema and a auditorium at the French Cultural Center.

For Morowat, who now lives outside Afghanistan, the making of his film -- which features a despairing father, an innocent son, a corrupt police system and a holy site occupied by gamblers -- helped lift his sadness at the fate of his homeland.

"Now I am relaxed as the experiences are transferred to my audience," he told Reuters after the show.

(Additional reporting by Martin Petty and Omar Sobhan, Editing by Emma Graham-Harrison and Elaine Lies)


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"All My Children" alum moves to "Young and the Restless"

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Don't worry too much about the cast members of the recently axed "All My Children" -- the ones who aren't signing on for the online version of the show appear to be finding work at other soaps.

CBS confirms to TheWrap that Melissa Claire Egan -- better known to "AMC" fans as Annie Novak -- has signed on as a regular on "The Young and the Restless." Though CBS was tightlipped about the role she'll play, the network noted that episodes featuring Egan will begin airing on November 11.

The actress had left "All My Children" in January, but returned in the final episodes of the series in order to wrap up her character's storyline.

Egan will have some familiar company on the set -- fellow "AMC" alum Debbi Morgan, who played Dr. Angie Hubbard on the ABC soap, also recently signed on to "The Young and the Restless." She will portray Yolanda Hamilton, who had previously been played by Chene Lawson on the series.

Meanwhile, the "All My Children" faithful are holding their breaths until January, when The Online Network begins airing online episodes of the soap. Cameron Mathison and Lindsey Hartley are among the castmates returning to the series for its digital reincarnation.

News of Egan's jump to "Young and the Restless" was first reported by EW.com.


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Tunisia station apologizes for airing 'Persepolis'

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — The owner of a Tunisian television station has apologized for showing parts of the animated film "Persepolis" considered blasphemous by some ultra-conservative Muslims.

Nabil Karoui of Nessma TV said in a radio interview Tuesday that he never meant to attack the "sacred values of Tunisians."

Hundreds of religious hardliners, known as Salafists, tried to attack the station Sunday and were beaten back by police.

"Persepolis," Marjane Satrapi's adaptation of her graphic novels about growing up during Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, contains a scene showing a character representing God. Depictions of God are considered sacrilege in Islam.

The incident raised fears of the influence of Islamists in Tunisia after the uprising that ousted its dictator.


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The old "Twilight" movies get November theatrical run

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The three already released "Twilight" movies are coming back to movie theaters for special screenings in November.

The screenings will lead into the November 18 release of the Summit Entertainment franchise's latest installment, "Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn (Part 1)."

The movies will show at 7:30 p.m. local time in more than 730 theaters across the country.

NCM Fathom, which specializes in such theatrical events, is handling distribution for Summit. The campaign starts November 1 with the release of "Twilight." The next Tuesday, November 8, theaters will show "The Twilight Saga: New Moon"; and the next Tuesday, November 15, they'll present "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse."

"The Twilight Saga" is Summit Entertainment's immensely successful werewolf-and-vampire franchise based on Stephanie Meyer's novels.

The movies star Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson. They've grossed more than $1.7 billion worldwide.


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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

"Simpsons" actor offers to take 70 percent pay cut

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - One of the actors on animated comedy "The Simpsons" said on Friday he had offered to take a 70 percent pay cut in order to save the long-running Fox TV series from a threat of cancellation.

But Harry Shearer, who voices evil entrepreneur Mr. Burns, and God-fearing neighbor Ned Flanders, said he and other voice actors wanted a share of the profits from the show in return for a hefty pay cut.

Shearer spoke out publicly after Fox Television said earlier this week it could no longer afford to continue making "The Simpsons" under current conditions unless all the cast and crew took 45 percent cuts in their $8 million annual salaries.

The satirical story of Homer Simpson and his working class family has been a pop culture staple since 1990. Now in its 23rd season, it is the longest running comedy series on U.S. television.

Shearer said Fox executives had turned down his proposal for a share in profits from syndication, licensing and merchandising.

"There were, the Fox people said, simply no circumstances under which the network would consider allowing me or any of the actors to share in the show's success.

"I find it hard to believe that this is Fox's final word on the subject. At least I certainly hope it isn't, because the alternative is to cancel the show or fire me for having the gall to try to save the show by helping Fox with its new business model," Shearer said.

Industry website The Wrap reported earlier this week that even if it cuts the show's budget, Fox is only interested in producing one more season of "The Simpsons".

The Wrap said a new deadline of Friday had been set to reach an agreement. Fox could not be reached for comment on Friday.

"The Simpsons" helped establish the fledgling Fox network as a major player in the TV industry in the early 1990s.

The show is also seen in some 90 countries but U.S. audiences have dropped off steadily in recent years. The show is currently watched by about 7.1 million Americans, down from an average 12.4 million 10 years ago, according to ratings data.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant, editing by Christine Kearney)


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"Sunday Night Football" awards NBC win, "Pan Am" drops

By Lucas Shaw

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - "Sunday Night Football" continues to bring in big ratings for NBC, propelling the network to its fifth consecutive Sunday night win, while ABC's airline drama "Pan Am" dropped 27 percent in the coveted adults 18-49 demographic versus last week.

With the defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers playing the Atlanta Falcons, a team it bounced from the playoffs last year, the game notched a 14.0 overnight rating. That is up 20 percent from last year's week five game and up 30 percent from 2009.

In terms of the all-important adults 18-49 demographic, Sunday's game was also up, climbing 8 percent over last week with a 7.9 rating/19 share, and 19.4 million total viewers. Combined with back-to-back episodes of "Football Night in America" at 7:30 and 8, NBC pulled an average 6.5/16 in the demographic and 16.2 million total viewers.

Winning the night is nothing new for "Sunday Night Football," it did so 18 consecutive weeks last year. However, that is also the best overnight rating for the broadcast since NBC bought the property six years ago.

The next closest was in 2007, when the Packers lost to the Chicago Bears.

The show has increased its dominance each year on air, taking nine of 16 Sundays its first year, then 11 of 16, then 13 of 16, then 15 of 16 and finally, going 18 for 18 last year.

It seems viewers in Milwaukee did not tire of sports after watching their Milwaukee Brewers win game one of Major League Baseball's National League Championship Series Sunday afternoon.

Milwaukee, in the heart of Packer country, led all metered markets for "Sunday Night Football."

Meanwhile, ABC had an evening of downturns. "America's Funniest Home Videos" at 7 and "Extreme Makeover" the following hour experienced minor dips, taking a 1.4/4 and 2.0/5 respectively, with 6.6 and 7.3 million total viewers. "Desperate Housewives" at 9 dropped 10 percent, tying its series low with a 2.7/6 and 8.4 million total viewers. The network's new series "Pan Am" closed out the night on a grim note, dropping 27 percent versus last week for a 1.9/5 and 6.4 million total viewers.

CBS' primetime roster began with NFL overrun at 7, which had a 6.9 rating/21 share and 20.9 million total viewers (which made it the night's most-watched bit of programing). "60 Minutes" followed at 7:30 with a 3.6/10 and 13.7 million total viewers, while "Amazing Race" at 8:30 took a 2.7/7 and 9.6 million total viewers. "The Good Wife" at 9:30 received a 2.2/5 with 9.8 million total viewers, while "CSI: Miami" finished the night with a 2.0/5 and 9.7 million total viewers.

Due to the rain postponement of ALCS Game 2, which will take place Monday at 4 p.m. EDT, Fox ran repeats throughout the evening.


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Gov. Brown extends filmmakers tax credit through 2015

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - California will continue offering filmmakers a 25 percent tax credit under a program Gov. Jerry Brown extended on Sunday.

The California Motion Picture Tax Credit was created in 2009 and is meant to keep production jobs in California. It authorizes a total of $100 million in tax credits.

Members of the state Assembly passed the bill by a 74-1 vote on September 10. The state Senate passed it by a 34-2 vote the same day.

Assemblyman Felipe Fuentes, a Democrat from Sylmar, sponsored the bill, which former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger first signed.

The credit was set to expire in 2014.

According to the California Film Commission, "the new one-year extension provides added continuity and certainty to a program that has proved very successful."

Elizabeth Ashford, a spokeswoman for the governor, said that entertainment "is a backbond California industry and we have a responsibility to keep film and television production here. Extending the credit, she said, "will create new jobs and keep Californians employed."

Labor unions opposed the bill.


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Summit pushes "Man on a Ledge" release to January 27

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Man on a Ledge" is getting some room to jump.

Summit Entertainment has moved the release date of its thriller, starring Sam Worthington and Elizabeth Banks, from January 13 to January 27.

With the earlier release date, the film would have been up against Universal's "Contraband," a thriller starring Mark Wahlberg and Kate Beckinsale. It would have also had to compete with Sony's "Premium Rush," a thriller starring the always-strong Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Michael Shannon.

Also set for release that weekend: Disney's "Beauty and the Beast 3D," Warner Bros.' musical drama "Joyful Noise" and The Weinstein Company's period drama "Coriolanus."

On January 27, "Man on a Ledge" will be up against Dimension's horror sequel "The Amityville Horror: The Lost Tapes," Open Road's action-drama "The Grey" and Lionsgate's action comedy "One for the Money."

"Man on a Ledge" is about an ex-cop-turned criminal, played by Worthington, who threatens to kill himself by jumping from the top of a hotel in New York City. Police send a police psychologist, played by Banks, to talk him down. The police don't know, however, that the suicide attempt is a ploy to cover up a diamond heist.

The movie also stars Jamie Bell, Anthony Mackie, Genesis Rodriguez and Ed Harris.


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Weapons reportedly meant for Pitt film seized

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Nearly 100 live weapons to be used in Brad Pitt's "World War Z" film were confiscated by Hungarian authorities, local media reported Tuesday. The weapons included machine guns, rifles and pistols, security officials said.

The weapons arrived from London to Budapest's Ferenc Liszt Airport on Saturday and were discovered at a nearby duty free zone, Janos Hajdu, head of Hungary's Counterterrorism Center, said. He said he could not confirm they were meant for the film.

"It's possible that all the weapons were brought in for the film, but this would not be allowed by Hungarian law," as the weapons had not been fully deactivated and could easily be used to fire live ammunition, Hajdu said on Neo FM radio. "This is a very complicated case."

Hajdu said the weapons had been shipped to a Hungarian company, whose representative was being questioned by investigators.

Hajdu explained that in Hungary weapons were considered to be deactivated only if the process "was irreversible," while the weapons seized could still be fired even though screws had been used to fill the end of the barrels.

Adam Goodman, whose company is providing production services for "World War Z," said he had been advised not to comment on links between the seized weapons and the film.

"We are preparing as planned. We are not changing our schedule," Goodman told The Associated Press. He added that media reports claiming the film set had been raided by police to confiscate the weapons were "not true."

Hungary's National Investigation Office said it had launched a probe in the case, but spokesman Laszlo Bartha said they had no additional information for now.


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"Free Agents" canceled by NBC

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - NBC has canceled the Hank Azaria comedy "Free Agents," an individual familiar with the series confirms to TheWrap.

The series, which debuted this season, had been struggling in the ratings. Last Wednesday, the series slipped 23 percent from its second-week numbers, posting just a mere 1.0/3 and 3.1 million total viewers. The last episode, airing on Wednesday, failed to improve on those numbers, running flat with last week.

Seeing the writing on the wall, series star Azaria mounted a Twitter campaign to save the series Tuesday, writing to the show's fans, ""Okay, it's do or die time for my show Free Agents -- we need eyeballs tonight at 8:30 on NBC!! Watch tonight or we may go away."

The series starred Azaria and Kathryn Hahn as co-workers who explore a relationship together after he's divorced and her fiance dies.

The cancellation of the series compounds Azaria's employment woes. As reported on Wednesday, voice talent for "The Simpsons" -- for which the actor provides several voices -- were asked to take a major pay cut on the series. An executive told TheWrap that Fox is only interested in running one more season of the long-running animated series -- and that's only if the voice talent agrees to the cut.

NBC has not yet decided on a replacement series, the individual told TheWrap.


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"Dowton Abbey" star Rose Leslie joins "Game of Thrones"

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Game of Thrones" has found its Ygritte.

Rose Leslie, who played Gwen in the Emmy-winning British series "Downton Abbey," has been cast for season two of the epic swords-and-dragons series, HBO confirmed to TheWrap.

Described as "a wilding woman and spearwife," Ygritte is known for her fiery red hair, which is considered to be a sign of good luck among the wildings.

In "A Song of Fire and Ice," the George R.R. Martin book series that "Game of Thrones" is based on, she becomes the lover of Jon Snow.

As reported earlier, HBO has added a number of newcomers for Season 2, including Gwendoline Christie, who'll play Brienne, Maid of Tarth.

The second season of "Game of Thrones" premieres in spring 2012.

News of Leslie's casting was first reported by EW.com.


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Even Hugh Jackman can't save clanky "Real Steel"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Cross watered down versions of "Rocky" with "Terminator 2" and "Transformers" and you get "Real Steel," a clanking yarn about a man, a boy and their boxing robot.

Really? Is this what mass appeal movies have come to?

Even Fred, my 11-year-old consultant on family fare who would seem to be the target audience for the film, took a pass on accompanying me to a screening. Having viewed the trailer, he pronounced, "It looks cheesy and sentimental."

He got that right.

Which is not to say that "Real Steel" doesn't have its charms, cheesy though it may be. Chief among these is the talented Hugh Jackman -- is this guy ever going to star in a movie worthy of him? -- who plays Charlie Kenton, a down on his luck boxing promoter.

The movie is set in the near future and Charlie, who was a boxer himself before robots took over for humans in the ring, now barnstorms around the country, pitting his rock 'em-sock 'em robot against other pugilistic piles of metal.

Charlie is pretty much down to his last dollar and busted robot when he finds himself unexpectedly saddled with custody of his 11-year-old son, Max (Dakota Goyo), after the boy's mother dies. Being a dad is the last thing Charlie wants but -- you get a gold star if you can guess where this is going -- father and son begin to grow close as they work together to repair a rusted, old school robot and position him for a title match.

Shawn Levy ("Date Night") directs this emotionally gooey and acoustically jangling tale with workman-like competence. The movie moves along at a respectable clip, slick action scenes alternating with those full of honey-drenched sentiment, but never once does what's happening on screen feel anything other than prefabricated.

Jackman, speaking with a gruff American drawl, hits all the right notes but there's not an authentic character here for him to play. Evangeline Lilly ("Lost"), cast as Charlie's on-again, off-again girlfriend and the owner of a gym in Dallas where he sometimes bunks, has what sadly has become the prototypical women's role in this kind of movie.

She shows up periodically, dressed in a skimpy tank top, to recalibrate the hero's moral compass and remind him that he's a good guy at heart. These are thankless parts and Lilly does what she can with it, which isn't much.

There's nothing real about "Real Steel" except its shameless desire to please by going where better and more successful movies have gone before.


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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

"X Factor" retains big audiences as Fox wins ratings night

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - ABC's "Modern Family" took the evening's top ratings on Wednesday, while Fox grabbed an overall win for the night based largely on the strength of "The X Factor," according to preliminary numbers.

"Modern Family" at 9 p.m. performed on a par with last week's episode, drawing a 5.6 rating/14 share in the adults 18-49 demographic and 13 million total viewers. ABC started the night with "The Middle" at 8, which had a 2.7/9, taking 9 million total viewers. "Suburgatory" followed at 8:30, slipping 9 percent from its series premiere last week with a 3.0/8 and 9 million total viewers. At 9:30, "Happy Endings" received a 2.9/7, with 6.9 million total viewers. The night closed with "Revenge" at 10, which had a 2.5/7 and 7.6 million total viewers.

At Fox, "The X Factor" from 8 to 9:30 pulled even with last Wednesday's airing, taking the second-highest ratings of the night with a 3.9/11 in the demographic and 11.5 million total viewers. "Raising Hope" at 9:30 closed out the evening with a 2.3/6 and 6.1 million total viewers. Combined, the series handed Fox an overall win for the night, with an average 3.5/10 and 10 million total viewers.

On CBS, "Survivor" at 8 had a 3.1/9 and 10.5 million total viewers. "Criminal Minds" the following hour received a 3.8/10 and 13.3 million total viewers, which made it the most-watched program of the evening overall. "CSI" followed at 10, drawing a 2.9/8 and 11.8 million total viewers.

NBC's night was a mixed bag, with the new series "Up All Night" at 8 growing 5 percent with a 2.2/7 and 5.6 million total viewers. "Free Agents" at 8:30 was flat with last week with a 1.0/3 and 3.2 million total viewers. "Harry's Law" at 9 tied with last week's series low, taking a 1.2/3 and 8.2 million total viewers. "Law & Order: SVU" finished the night at 10, pulling even with last week for a 2.1/5 and 7.9 million total viewers.


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London film festival to honor Cronenberg, Fiennes

LONDON (Reuters) - The BFI London Film Festival will honor Canadian director David Cronenberg and British actor/director Ralph Fiennes with fellowships at the end of this year's event, organizers said on Tuesday.

They also announced the nine-strong shortlist for best picture which included opening movie "360" and "Faust," which won the Golden Lion for best picture at the Venice film festival.

Cronenberg has made acclaimed films crossing a number of genres including "The Fly," "Naked Lunch," "Eastern Promises" and "A History of Violence."

His latest picture "A Dangerous Method" is included in this year's festival lineup.

Fiennes is a respected stage actor who has won plaudits for big screen performances in "The English Patient," "Schindler's List" and the "Harry Potter" movies in which he plays evil Lord Voldemort.

His directorial debut "Coriolanus" has a gala screening in London.

The best film prize, to be announced at an awards ceremony on October 26, will be decided from:

* 360, Fernando Meirelles, UK/Austria/France/Brazil

* The Artist, Michel Hazanavicius, France

* The Deep Blue Sea, Terence Davies, UK

* The Descendants, Alexander Payne, USA

* Faust, Alexander Sokurov, Russia

* The Kid With a Bike, Luc & Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Belgium/France/Italy

* Shame, Steve McQueen, UK

* Trishna, Michael Winterbottom, UK

* We Need to Talk About Kevin, Lynne Ramsay, UK/USA

The London film festival runs from October 12-27.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Penny Marshall has book deal with Amazon.com

NEW YORK (AP) — Filmmaker-actress Penny Marshall has a book deal with a fresh twist: The publisher is Amazon.com.

Marshall's agent, Dan Strone, announced Tuesday that the online retailer would release Marshall's memoir "My Mother Was Nuts" in Fall 2012. Marshall starred in the 1970s sitcom "Laverne and Shirley" and went on to direct such big screen hits as "Big" and "A League of Their Own." According to Strone, Marshall will also write about her marriage to Rob Reiner, her friendship with John Belushi and her fight against lung and brain cancer in 2009.

"I can't say I'm excited about the Yankees losing, or there not being a basketball season yet, but I am excited about writing this book," Marshall said in a statement. "People have always asked me how I got from the Bronx to Hollywood, so I thought it was time to tell how it all happened. I have had many lives (not in the Shirley MacLaine sense) and you will hear about them all. Just don't expect any recipes. I don't cook."

Strone told The Associated Press that several publishers bid for the book, but that Amazon "won the auction." He declined to offer financial details, but said that Amazon's offer was "a lot" and that it also offered a much higher royalty on e-books than the 25 percent traditionally given by publishers.

"It was a decision whether to go with old school or new school," said Strone, CEO of Trident Media Group.

Amazon, which has been steadily expanding its publishing operations, recently signed a deal with best-selling self-help author Timothy Ferris. Rival booksellers, worried about helping a competitor, have expressed strong reservations about selling books released by Amazon.


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Kellan Lutz, Mickey Rourke, star in "Java Heat"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Immortals" rivals Kellan Lutz and Mickey Rourke are at it again, this time in the action thriller "Java Heat."

The movie is now shooting in Indonesia.

According to producer Margate House Films, "Java Heat" is about "an unlikely friendship between a mysterious American who teams up with a Muslim cop on the trail of a new breed of klepto-terrorists in Southeast Asia."

Lutz plays Jake, a young man who goes to Southeast Asia to fight Islamic terrorists. There, he partners with a cerebral Muslim detective, and the two go after a jewel thief, played by Rourke, "who masterminds bombings and kidnappings to collect art, jewels, even little boys and a princess -- all in a desperate search for the faded beauty of his own lost youth."

Conor Allyn wrote, produced and directed the movie. Allyn's father, New York Times best-selling author Rob Allyn ("Revolution of Hope") co-wrote.

The younger Allyn directed "Blood of Eagles" and "Hearts of Freedom" and co-wrote and produced a trilogy of Indonesian war epics.

Adding to the project's heft is one of its executive producers: Lee Roy Mitchell, chairman of Cinemark Theaters.

Mark Williams and Ryan Daly -- Lutz's manager -- also are executive producing.

Lutz is best known for the role of Emmett Cullen in the "Twilight" movies. Rourke, of course, is the film veteran who was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance in the 2008 "The Wrestler."

They star together in Universal's "Immortals," an epic story about Zeus, the Titans and the power-mad King Hyperion. The film opens November 11.


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"Zoolander" drops in on SNL's "Weekend Update"

By Tim Molloy

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - Cold Coffee is the new Blue Steel.

"Saturday Night Live" Weekend Update correspondent Stefon still hasn't figured out how to recommend family friendly tourist spots in New York City -- but at least he's found a friend.

Bill Hader's idiosyncratic character welcomed Derek Zoolander, the male model from host Ben Stiller's 2001 "Zoolander." He's spent the last 10 years coming up with a new look that will make you forget you ever stared longingly at his old one.

You can see the video here: http://www.thewrap.com/tv/column-post/snl-watch-zoolander-and-stefon-weekend-update-31673


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"Simpsons" deadline for voice actors looms

By Tim Molloy

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - With hours to go before a noon Friday deadline to decide whether they'll accept dramatic pay cuts, the "Simpsons" voice actors are still talking among themselves about how to respond.

"There's six different people and six different personalities," a person familiar with the actors' position told TheWrap on Thursday.

The actors have been asked to decide whether they will accept cuts from their present $440,000 per episode, each, down to $250,000 per episode, the amount the studio wants to pay them if the show continues past its current, twenty-third season. The actors offered last week to accept cuts to $300,000 per episode, in exchange for back-end payments they don't currently receive, but 20th Century Fox TV rejected the offer.

If the actors don't agree to accept pay cuts by noon Friday, the studio could decide to stop making new episodes of the show after its current season.

But the studio has already extended two past dates it set to resolve the salary issues, which could leave open the possibility that it will do so again, said the person familiar with the actors' positions. The person said the studio hasn't budged from offering the actors' $250,000 with no back end.

A studio rep did not immediately respond to requests for comment. But on Wednesday, a studio executive told TheWrap that new episodes of the show are no longer profitable for the network, and that Fox wants to pay 25 to 30 percent less for a twenty-fourth and final season.

The executive said many on the show have been asked to accept salary cuts, and that producers have already agreed to them, as they try to reduce the licensing fee that Fox pays to air the show.

The person familiar with the actors' position dismissed the idea that Fox wants no more than one more season as "pure spin" and a negotiating tactic. The person said the offer now on the table for the actors would include a guarantee of two more seasons and the option of a third.

TheWrap also reported Wednesday that, as ammunition in their salary dispute, the actors have commissioned a study estimating the show has made $1 billion in profits over its run. The study projected that the studio will eventually make about $2.9 billion from the show.


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Ready for movies in the cloud? Studios bet you are

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood is making a major bet this coming holiday season that consumers will buy movies, instead of renting, and view them on the go.

Facing the steady decline of physical disc sales, studios from Warner Bros to Sony will launch their UltraViolet cloud-based movie storage -- or "digital locker" -- service.

The studios are making a push to jump-start movie sales by attracting consumers to the cloud. The new digital lockers keep purchased copies of films on remote servers for viewing any time on various devices, a move to make movie ownership more appealing.

Renting movies, far less profitable for studios, has dominated the home entertainment scene since Netflix Inc made unlimited monthly rentals cheap and convenient.

Starting this month, consumers can buy the first film discs offered with UltraViolet, a format designed to allow instant streaming or downloading on devices ranging from videogame consoles to tablets and Web-ready televisions.

Walt Disney Co, the only major film studio not backing UltraViolet, plans to kick off a similar option in the coming months called Disney Studio All Access.

With a "buy once, play anywhere" message, studios hope consumers see more benefits to owning movies. Backers are pitching flexibility for multiple devices, the promise of owning rights to a movie for a lifetime, and the advantage of a cloud-stored copy not hogging hard-drive space.

UltraViolet offers "more value for digital ownership. You can stream wherever you are," said John Calkins, executive vice president of global digital and commercial innovation at Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.

PRESERVATION MODE

But will consumers embrace the idea, or has renting movies become too ingrained as the top choice for home entertainment?

While renting remains more popular than buying, interest in digital lockers as a movie-storage option has increased in the past year, according to a recent survey by accounting and consulting firm PwC. That likely stems from Apple Inc's plans to offer cloud storage for music.

"Consumers are starting to understand the benefit of storing other types of content in the cloud," said Matthew Lieberman of PwC's entertainment, media and communications practice.

Others are not sure cloud storage of movies will take off.

Apple sells movies through iTunes and has not backed UltraViolet, a fact some industry analysts said would hurt adoption.

Ownership also remains a tough sell now that consumers can stream rented movies any time to a wide range of Internet-connected devices, which has caused a steady march downward for physical movie disc sales.

"We are in a preservation game," said James McQuivey, media technology analyst at Forrester Research. "We are trying to preserve an eroding base of DVD and Blu-ray spend. I don't see any way in which this is going to reverse this slide."

To be sure, digital lockers are in their early days. Three of Hollywood's major studios have announced titles that will come with an UltraViolet option. Time Warner unit Warner Bros is selling DVD and Blu-ray discs with UltraViolet rights for adult comedy "Horrible Bosses" starting on Tuesday and superhero flick "The Green Lantern" beginning Friday.

Sony Corp jumps into the mix in early December with comedy "Friends with Benefits" and family film "The Smurfs" as the holiday shopping season gets in full swing. Also in December, Universal Pictures will offer an UltraViolet option with sci-fi Western "Cowboys & Aliens."

Paramount and 20th Century Fox have signed on to UltraViolet but not yet announced films for the format.

Mark Teitell, general manager of the consortium that developed UltraViolet, said the initial titles are "really the beginning phase of this. It will be a ramp up."

Discs of Walt Disney and Pixar films will start coming with Disney Studio All Access rights in the next few months, said Lori MacPherson, executive vice president of global product management at Walt Disney Studios.

But films from Disney-owned Marvel Studios are not currently part of the effort.

Cloud storage "gives the benefit of ownership without the issues of long download time, storage constraints and the lack of interoperability," MacPherson said.

"It will be a game-changer for digital ownership," she said.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; editing by Matthew Lewis, Bernard Orr)


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Monday, October 24, 2011

Oscar nominee Diane Cilento dies: report

LONDON (Reuters) - Australian actress Diane Cilento, nominated for an Oscar in the 1960s for her role in "Tom Jones" and ex-wife of James Bond star Sean Connery, has died after a long illness, local media reported on Friday. She was 78.

She died at the Cairns Base Hospital in Queensland, Australia late on Thursday, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).

Cilento was born into a medical family in Mooloolaba, Queensland, in 1933 and went on to train at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London in the 1950s.

She secured work on stage and in film, and earned a supporting actress Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of Molly in the 1963 picture Tom Jones.

The movie won best picture and best director for Tony Richardson.

In 1962 she married Connery, her second marriage, and had a son Jason with him before the couple divorced in 1973.

Cilento married for a third time in 1985 to Anthony Shaffer, who wrote "Sleuth" and "The Wicker Man," a film in which she also appeared. Shaffer died in 2001.

In the 1980s she established the outdoor theater the Karnak Playhouse and wrote an autobiography "My Nine Lives" in 2006.

ABC quoted friend and playwright Michael Gow as saying he was with Cilento at a dinner party last weekend.

"She was a performer to the end, and she put on a great display for all the guests at that dinner," he was quoted as saying.

"She kept us all hugely entertained until the day before yesterday, when she just couldn't manage anymore and we took her to hospital."

No cause of death was given.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Shirley MacLaine to be honored by AFI

The actress Shirley MacLaine will be the 40th recipient of the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award at a celebration in Los Angeles on June 7, 2012.

The honor will pay tribute to her many roles, including her 1955 debut in Alfred Hitchcock's The Trouble With Harry and her appearances in The Apartment, the original Oceans Eleven, Irma la Douce, Being There, and most recently Valentine's Day. In 1984, the 77-year-old actress won the Oscar for Terms of Endearment.

"From ingenue to screen legend, Shirley has entertained a global audience through song, dance, laughter and tears, and her career as writer, director and producer is even further evidence of her passion for the art form and her seemingly boundless talents," said Howard Stringer, chair of the AFI's board of trustees, in the announcement on October 9.

In her latest film, Bernie, MacLaine stars with Matthew McConaughey (The Lincoln Lawyer) and Jack Black (Kung Fu Panda 2) in a crime dramedy directed by Richard Linklater and based on true events about a small-town Texas murder.

During her career, she has won seven Golden Globe Awards. As an author, she published I'm Over All That - And Other Confessions in April.

Her brother, Warren Beatty, also received the AFI honor in 2008. The awards ceremony will be telecast at a date to be announced.

RC


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Review: "Toast" all appetizer, no entree

By Alonso Duralde

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - While the United Kingdom has finally joined the rest of Europe in first-class dining -- just look at all the mouth-watering dishes Steve Coogan puts away in "The Trip" -- the old joke was that airplane food was the national cuisine of England. And it's that world of tinned vegetables and pork pies that made a foodie out of chef and author Nigel Slater, whose memoir is the basis for "Toast."

Watching the film, unfortunately, is like going to a restaurant where they fill you up with tasty appetizers and delicious bread but then kick you out before the main course is served; it looks great and features some terrific performances -- and there's never a bad time to hear the hits of Dusty Springfield -- but by the time something resembling a plot gets going, the movie's over.

In the 1960s, young Nigel (Oscar Kennedy) reads cookbooks under his covers at night, and oohs and aahs over the idea of Spaghetti Bolognese and other exotic dishes that his gourmet-challenged Mum (Victoria Hamilton) will never, ever make. She fears fresh produce and store-made pies, choosing instead to boil veggies in the can until they're limp and tasteless. When all else fails, she makes a great slice of toast.

After she dies, Nigel's father (Ken Stott) gets carried away by trashy cleaning lady Mrs. Potter (Helena Bonham Carter), who soon proves she knows her way around both the kitchen and the bedroom. Over Nigel's objections, the still-married Mrs. Potter joins the family and they all move far out of town to avoid any scandal.

As Nigel becomes an adolescent (where he's now played by Freddie Highmore, making very good use of his tall-and-gawky phase), he learns to cook in an attempt to edge Mrs. Potter out of the picture, but she's not so easily replaced.

"Toast" does a lot right, from capturing the grim grays of a 1960s British grocery store to portraying young Nigel's crush on the family gardener (Matthew McNulty) with the grace and good humor that a movie would normally devote to a heterosexual boy's infatuation with his pretty schoolteacher. And once the people in the movie start eating good food, it's all gorgeous, from Mrs. Potter's sage-stuffed turkey to the competing stepmother and son's lemon meringue pies.

If only "Toast" didn't meander so much -- it seems like the film is going to be about the culinary competition between Nigel and Mrs. Potter, but that really never goes anywhere, and Nigel himself doesn't emerge much as a character outside of his love for cooking and for boys, so the movie never works as a coming-of-age tale either.

If you're a fan of food movies, this one's nowhere near classics like "Babette's Feast" on the movie menu, but "Toast" is a tasty enough diversion for fans of Slater's writing or Bonham Carter's skill at wearing unflattering wigs.


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Romantic Kazakh epic film aims to woo the young

ALMATY (Reuters) - The biggest film to come out of Kazakhstan in a decade aims to get the country's younger generation excited about its ancestry and history.

"Myn Bala" (meaning 'a thousand boys' in Kazakh), tells the tale of 18th century Kazakh legend Sartay with a budget of just $10 million.

An orphaned young warrior who faces battle, betrayal and first-time love, Sartay has to rally troops to fight fearsome Mongol warriors known as the Dzhungars, who are descended from Genghis Khan.

"The main thing for me is that the young generation should know the cost that our ancestors paid for our current independence and our freedom," the film's director Akan Satayev told Reuters at the Kazakhfilm studios in Almaty.

Exploring the history of the world's ninth largest country, Myn Bala was shot in more than eight different locations around the Tien-Shan mountains which form the southern edge of the Kazakh Steppe.

The changeable weather of the mountains proved even more challenging than the feat of directing battle scenes with up to a thousand people, Satayev said.

Meticulous research went into creating a film which depicts the battle of Anyrakay in 1729, where the Kazakhs finally defeat the Dzhungars and take control of their land for the first time in their history.

"Cinema is a myth-making industry and although we focus on the accuracy of the historical background the main thing for us is the legend - Sartay, the legendary hero," said Ermek Amanshayev, head of Kazakhfilm which funded the project, and the man usually associated with saving the local film industry in the post-Soviet era.

"Robin Hood lives in Sherwood Forest and Sartay lives in the Steppe, so he is a kind of Steppe Robin Hood."

Recreating the early 18th century involved historians from Kazakhstan, China and Mongolia, creating sets that reflected the past and costumes including furs, armor and weaponry that were sourced from around the globe.

"We made sure we didn't have nails for example because they didn't have nails at that time," said Kuat Tleubayev, the film's art director.

"The focus was that nothing should look new, it should look as if it came from that time."

After 40,000 hopefuls auditioned, the teenagers who made it through to the leading roles shot the movie after only two months of stunt-training, horseback riding and learning to speak in the old Kazakh dialect.

A global team of scriptwriters and editors were enlisted to help shape the characters and more importantly appeal to younger audiences both nationally and internationally.

"It is a romanticized epic of historic characters, because this is a story about teenagers similar to teenagers worldwide, it will be interesting to the young generation," Amanshayev said.

The film is due for release in 2012

(Edited by Paul Casciato)


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CBS' "Big Bang Theory," Fox win ratings night

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - CBS' "The Big Bang Theory" was Thursday's highest-rated show, while "Grey's Anatomy" hit a series low and "Charlie's Angels" plunged 20 percent. "The X Factor" pushed Fox to an overall win for the night, according to preliminary numbers.

While down 10 percent versus last week, "The Big Bang Theory" at 8 p.m. on CBS posted a 4.4/13 in the adults 18-49 demographic, giving it a win for the night, with 13.6 million total viewers. The sophomore episode of "How to Be a Gentleman" followed at 8:30, taking a 2.5/7 and 7.8 million total viewers. "Person of Interest" at 9 received a 2.5/6 and 11.4 million total viewers, while "The Mentalist" closed the night at 10 with a 2.7/7 and 12.8 million total viewers.

Fox aired "The X Factor" at 8, which was the second-highest rated show of the evening with a 3.8/10 and 11.2 million total viewers. The strong showing gave the network an overall win for the night.

ABC experienced an evening of dips, starting with "Charlie's Angels" at 8, which plunged 20 percent from last week to a 1.2/4 and 5.9 million total viewers. "Grey's Anatomy" the following hour also brought grim news, dropping 17 percent to a series low with a 3.0/8 and 8.5 million total viewers. The night closed with "Private Practice" at 10, which fell 21 percent for a 2.2/8 and 6.2 million total viewers.

NBC also took its lumps Thursday night. "Community" at 8 slid 17 percent to a 1.5/5 in the demographic and 3.3 million total viewers, followed by "Parks & Recreation" at 8:30, which was down 10 percent with a 1.9/5 and 4.1 million total viewers. "The Office" at 9 dropped 11 percent to a 3.1/8, making it the lowest-rated episode since April 2005, with 5.7 million total viewers. (It debuted in March 2005.) "Whitney" at 9:30 dipped 8 percent for a 2.3/6 and 4.8 million total viewers, while "Prime Suspect" at 10 had a 1.5/4 and 4.9 million total viewers.


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"How to Be a Gentleman" pushed to Saturday Night

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The new Kevin Dillon sitcom "How to Be a Gentleman" just got rude treatment from the network.

CBS announced Friday that the series -- which stars Dillon and David Hornsby as a pair of odd-couple pals -- is being bumped to Saturdays at 8:30 p.m., a relative no-man's land, effective October 15.

"Rules of Engagement" will be taking "Gentleman's" time slot of Thursdays at 8:30 when it returns with its season six premiere on October 20. In the meantime, a repeat of "The Big Bang Theory" will run in the timeslot on October 13.

The former "Gentleman" timeslot is particularly desirable, coming as it does after the very popular "The Big Bang Theory."

"Gentleman" premiered on September 29 to lukewarm ratings, losing 33 percent of the lead-in from the series premiere of the short-lived series ""$#*! My Dad Says" last fall. For its sophomore episode Thursday, the series slid seven percent, to a 2.5 rating/7 share in the advertiser-friendly adults 18-49 demographic.

In its new timeslot, "Gentleman" will be sandwiched between repeats of "Two and a Half Men" and "CSI: Miami."


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"How to be a Gentleman" production shut down

By Tim Molloy

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - After moving "How to Be a Gentleman" from Thursday to the TV wasteland of Saturday night, CBS has also halted production on new episodes of the show.

While it hasn't been canceled, the show's prospects don't look good. "Gentleman" premiered on September 29, earning lower ratings than the now-canceled "$#*! My Dad Says" did last fall. For its sophomore episode Thursday, "Gentleman" slid seven percent, to a 2.5 rating/7 share in the coveted 18-49 demographic.

The remaining seven episodes of the series will air Saturday nights between repeats of "Two and a Half Men" and "CSI: Miami."

"Rules of Engagement" will move from Saturdays to "Gentleman"'s highly desirable time slot of Thursdays at 8:30, which follows the very successful "Big Bang Theory." "Rules" will claim the time slot on October 20; a repeat of "The Big Bang Theory" will run in the time slot on October 13.

The comedy was created by "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" vet David Hornsby, who stars with Kevin Dillon.


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"Breaking Bad" finale scores 1.9 million viewers

By Daniel Frankel

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - AMC's season-four finale of "Breaking Bad" averaged 1.9 million viewers Sunday for its initial run -- and 2.9 million for the night -- ending a campaign that was up 24 percent in the ratings over season three.

It was the best season yet for the critically acclaimed drama, with the show up 24 percent in adults 18-49 and 21 percent in adults 25-54.

Viewership among 18-34-year-olds increased 42 percent.

AMC has already greenlit 16 more episodes of the show.


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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Sony picks up movie rights for Steve Jobs bio

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Sony has picked up the movie rights to Walter Isaacson's upcoming biography of Steve Jobs for Mark Gordon to produce, TheWrap has confirmed.

Simon & Schuster is pushing up the publication of the book about Apple's co-founder, who died on Wednesday of cancer.

It's a MG360 project. MG360 is the film production partnership between Gordon and Management 360.

Simon & Schuster had initially planned to publish "Steve Jobs" on November 21, but moved the publication date to October 24 after Jobs's death.

Isaacson worked closely with the otherwise extremely private and elusive Jobs on the book. He interviewed Jobs as recently as last month.

Isaacson, the former chairman of CNN and former managing editor of Time magazine, is a renowned biographer who has written about Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein.

Jobs approached Isaacson to write the book, reportedly to give his children a better idea of who he was.

Sony declined to comment.

Deadline first reported the news.


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