Marvel Announces Black Panther Movie, Slew of New Sequels


Marvel Studiosannounced a slew of new superhero movies to bereleased over the next five years, including two Avengers flicks, the next installments of the Captain America and Thor franchises, and brand new adaptations of Black Panther, Inhumans and Captain Marvel, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

TheBlack PantherandCaptain Marvel films in particular find the comics juggernaut moving inexciting new directions. Black Panther was the first mainstream comic to feature a black superhero, and the new film willbe anchored by rising starChadwick Boseman(42, Get on Up), who will reportedly make his first appearance as the superheroin the upcoming Captain America: Civil War.And Captain Marvel will center around the adventures of Carol Danvers, making it Marvelsfirst female-centered superhero movie (no word yet, however, on who will play Danvers).Black Panther is scheduled for release on November 3rd, 2017, while Captain Marvel will open on July 6th, 2018.

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Marvel Studios Phase 3 plan will also include an Inhumans film scheduled for release on November 2nd, 2018, as well as previously announced movies Ant-Man starring Paul Ruddand out on July 17th, 2015 and Doctor Strange, which is now scheduled to see release on November 4th, 2016 (the studio has yet to confirm whether Benedict Cumberbatch will take on the titular role after negotiations with Joaquin Phoenix dissolved).

The latest additions to Marvels current blockbuster franchises, naturally, are a big part of their upcoming schedule as well, including Avengers: Infinity War, Parts 1 and2, the first opening on May 4th, 2018, the second following in May 2019.Captain America: Civil War will see release on May 6th, 2016 and will feature Robert Downey Jr. alongside Chris Evans. Thor 3: Ragnarok is scheduled to come out on July 28th, 2017, while James Gunn will officially return to direct the sequel to this summers hit, Guardians of the Galaxy, out May 5th, 2017.

Watch Woody Harrelson, Emma Stone Return for More Undead Mayhem in Zombieland 2 Trailer


Woody Harrelson, Emma Stone, Jesse Eisenberg and Abigail Breslin return as the most fearsome team and dysfunctional makeshift family of zombie hunters in the first trailer for Zombieland 2: Double Tap, out October 18th.

The new clip cheekily opens by teasing the Oscar bonafides of the films core cast before hard-cutting to a sequence in which the quartet lays waste to a horde of zombies gathered outside the White House. While Tallahassee (Harrelson), Wichita (Stone), Columbus (Eisenberg) and Little Rock (Breslin) briefly use the White House as their home base, the four are eventually pulled back into the post-apocalyptic wasteland where they encounter other survivors and try to fight off a more fearsome and evolved kind of zombie.

The Zombieland 2 trailer is packed with the same sharp humor and gruesome violence that made the 2009 original a cult classic. The clip even closes with a great doppelgnger gag as Harrelsons Tallahassee meets his double in a character played by Luke Wilson and comedian Thomas Middleditch emerges as the mirror image to Eisenbergs Columbus.

Ruben Fletcher returned to direct Zombieland 2, while original screenwriters Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick teamed with Dave Callaham to write the script. The cast of the new film also features Zoey Deutch, Rosario Dawson and Alvan Jogia.

Rolling Stones Give Conan OBrien Satisfaction as Tonight Books Neil Young for Last Show


Conan OBriens tenure as host of The Tonight Show has come to an end. As CNN reported this morning, OBrien and NBC agreed on a roughly $45 million payout for the redheaded host and his staff in a deal that will permit OBrien to return to TV in September 2010. However, before his run concludes, CoCo turned to the Rolling Stones to exact a small slice of expensive revenge against his soon-to-be-former network. On last nights show, OBrien told the audience he had used NBCs budget to introduce a new character to the show, the Bugatti Veyron Mouse, also known as one of the worlds most expensive cars with a pair of rodent ears. As you can hear, the mouses theme song is the original master recording of the Rolling Stones classic Satisfaction, OBrien said.

He added, Let me ask you a question: Is this appropriate music for a car that looks like a mouse? No. Does it add anything at all to this comedy bit? No, it doesnt. Is it crazy expensive to play on the air, not to mention the rights to re-air this clip on the Internet? Hell yeah, OBrien said, noting that this comedy bit cost NBC a cool $1.5 million. If the Stones opt to go after NBC like they sued the Verve for using their music in Bittersweet Symphony, the clip could potentially cost NBC a whole lot more. The network apparently isnt taking any chances, as this sketch isnt included among the videos streaming on the Tonight Shows official site.

Tomorrow nights episode is Conans last as host of The Tonight Show, and Neil Young and not Jimmy Fallons Neil Young will be the last musical guest of the OBrien Tonight Show era. As Rolling Stone reported last year, the White Stripes ended their hiatus for Conans farewell from his Late Night show.

Update: It just dawned on us that Conans final episode might be bumped out of its usual time slot and into later in the evening depending on how long tomorrows Hope for Haiti telecast, which will run on NBC as well as a multitude of other channels, runs. If you were planning on simply recording Conans last Tonight Show as opposed to spending your Friday night indoors, maybe set the DVR for a couple hours past the shows usual 12:35 a.m. end time.

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Q&A: David Duchovny on the Rocking New Season of Californication


David Duchovnys Hank Moody, the protagonist of Showtimes hit series Californication, may be a writer by nature, but there is arguably no bigger rock star on episodic TV than the wild-living author. Hes been shot at by RZA, propositioned by more women than Gene Simmons and woken up in jail, in the hospital and on the streets, all while chasing his on-again, off-again true love Karen (Natascha McElhone).

On the shows upcoming sixth season, which premieres January 13th, creator Tom Kapinos embraces Moodys rock star nature, having the character write a rock opera and run in circles that include Marilyn Manson (playing himself in two episodes) and Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones (who plays a bodyguard).

Duchovny spoke with Rolling Stone recently about the new season, his dreams of having a Beatle on the show, why Moody is a true romantic and the rock star he patterned Moody after.

With Hank writing a rock opera, this year has more of a music vibe than any season since the second.
Oh, sure. Even though with RZA Hank was kind of in the rap world, he was kind of an interloper. But this is more of a rock & roll year, and thats where Hank lives. One of the fun things for me is I started to teach myself guitar last year, and Tom Kapinos knows that I was learning, so he threaded through the year little bits where Hank had to play guitar so I had to keep getting better and taking lessons.

What was the first song you learned on guitar?
I think Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.

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And now you get to bring this skill to the stage in the season finale, where Hank joins others onstage at L.A.s Greek Theater.
You were there, so you saw we got up there and we played, but I wouldnt call it a skill. I made sure my amp was turned way down. If in Spinal Tap it goes to 11, my amp goes to negative one.

Will we ever see you in a musical?
I may be learning guitar, but Ill never be able to sing. So I would say no, there are some things that God has prohibited from the beginning.

Tell us about the musical guest stars on this season.
I really enjoyed meeting Steve. He was on for a lot of the year, so he was kind of a fixture, and he was great. And Manson is a really bright guy, really interesting guy, and I guess hes a huge fan of the show and signed into hotels as Hank Moody. Somehow that came to the attention of Tom Kapinos, and they started talking, and he ended up doing a few episodes with us.

If you could have one musician guest star on the show in the future, who would it be?
There are so many. Id wanna say Keith Richards, but hes kind of like Pirates of the Caribbean now. McCartney I gotta have a Beatle.

You could go Paul or Ringo.
Yeah, Ill take them both.

Is there a rock star that Hank is modeled after?
When we were beginning the show I got into Warren Zevon at the time. Lyrically and in terms of consciousness and attitude, I thought Zevon was really close to what I wanted Hank to be, and Zevon wrote a lot about California and really understood Hanks love-hate with California. So Zevons always been my musical touchstone for Hanks rock & roll alter ego.

What three Zevon songs would you recommend to people as an introduction to his music?
Desperados Under the Eaves, Mohammeds Radio and Genius. I think every list has to have Desperados Under the Eaves.

We talked about the musical guest stars. In general, youre in a great situation on the show, where you have this remarkable core cast of the five of you and every year you get to bring in new talented people to work with. How much fun is that for you as an actor?
Ive really loved getting to know and also working with the five people youre talking about for the past six years. I love working with Natascha, Evan [Handler], Pam [Adlon] and Maddie [Martin]. But every year Hank ends up in a new situation, and there are new guest stars and every year Ive enjoyed our guest stars in a different way, going back to Peter Gallagher and Kathleen Turner and then RZA and then this past year Tim Minchin, who I didnt know at all before the show, but just an amazing performer. And Maggie [Grace] was great. So every year its a gift to be able to reinvent the five of us in relation to the new people coming in.

One of the keys to this season is the relationship between you and Madeline Martin, who plays your daughter Becca. It becomes almost more like peers. When you see someone develop the way she has as an actor, I imagine its both very rewarding personally and fun for you, because it allows you to add a whole new dynamic to Hanks personality.
We can change guest stars every year but we cant really change our characters. Thats always kind of the dissolution of a bond between an audience and a show, when all of a sudden, because the writers get tired or the actors get bored, were gonna give them a French accent this year or send him deep undercover to go bust the drug mob this year. We always try and remain the core people that weve established that we love. Having said that, only Maddie can change, because Maddie is changing as a person, and Becca changes as a person because she is growing up, and thats a natural and honest change. Then its a great gift to me playing Hank, who has to change how he deals with his daughter, and I, David, have to change how I act with Maddie in that way. And thats a great challenge to come to every year.

The show has really turned out to be as much about a father/daughter relationship as a love story.
Yeah, well, its both those things, and theyre both sentimental. The sentimentality of the show is it believes in true love in a way, even though the nuts and bolts and the comedy of the show is what gets in the way of true love. But the true love between Hank and Karen is for real, and then theres the relationship between Hank and Becca, which is a different kind of true love between a father and a daughter. You wouldnt think of Hank as being a guy with family values, and yet I would put him forward as a guy who really does have family values in a sense thats stronger than a lot of what passes for family values on television or in movies.

You say the comedy is what gets in the way, and it seems like this season the show has gone to crazy extremes, with Evans character Charlie pretending to be gay to book a client, for example. Do you feel like this season is more extreme than in past years?
I always feel like were pretty extreme. Im often quite shocked myself when I get a script, and it feels that the last couple of years Charlie, Evans character, has really gone off the deep end in terms of the craziness. Ive really enjoyed what Evans done, and I think hes such a great actor and so great in this part. Youve got to keep trying new things. Im amazed that Tom Kapinos continued to not only keep it funny, but try to keep it real at the same time. Its a difficult balancing act that hes doing, because the show does get extreme, it does get absurd. And yet the heart of the show, which is what we just talked about, you cant go too far, or else youll destroy that heart. So I think hes really tiptoed a balance, or whatever the metaphor is, on those two things.

How have you seen Hank evolve since season one, and where would you like to see him end up?
Ive always wanted to know when we were ending the show, because Ive always wanted it to end with Hank back home where I feel he belongs, with Karen and Becca nearby, however old she might be. So I guess his development would be more like doubling back to the beginning. In terms of how its been working out in the show, what I found interesting is in the first year or two, or three, maybe, Hank is really the loose cannon and the guy who goes into a situation and creates chaos, and the comedy of it ensues from the chaos. But whats been interesting over the last couple or two or three years is that Hank has kind of matured into the voice of reason, and those around him have become as crazy as Hank was in the beginning, like Charlie and Marcy and even Karen sometimes, or the guest stars that come in. And Hank has to be the most mature voice, which, to me, is very funny, when Hank is the guy thats trying to be the most logical or mature.

Game of Thrones Recap: No One Man Should Have All That Power


Heres one Game of Thrones thats already got a winner: Peter Dinklage now takes top billing in the shows opening credits. Gone is Sean Bean and his heroic, honorable, doomed leading character Eddard Stark; in his place is Dinklages Tyrion Lannister, a diminutive antihero whose weapon is his wit rather than his sword, played by an actor whose size would relegate him to comic relief on nine shows out of ten. The message is clear: This isnt your average heroic fantasy, and this isnt your average show. No, its Game of Thrones, and in case you had any doubt what that means, someone dies not 15 seconds after those credits finish rolling. That sets the tone for the whole affair. Game of Thrones episode 11 is fast, crisp, confident, relentless, and above all intense.

From those opening seconds on, characters coming to grips with their newfound power often over life and death provide as much of a connecting thread for this episode as the blood-red comet streaking across the sky; both elements, and the effortless direction of Alan Taylor, seamlessly link the shows many settings and scenes. The architect of that first death and current ruler of Westeros, the boy king Joffrey Baratheon, is every bit as nasty, brutish, and short as the lives of his subjects. Played with impeccable insufferability by Jack Gleeson, Joffrey is increasingly ungovernable by his adult relatives, even threatening his mother Queen Cersei (Lena Headey) with death when she slaps him after he insults her.

Then along comes Joffreys uncle Tyrion, appointed Hand of the King by his powerful dad and rolling deep with bodyguard Bronn (Jerome Flynn), secret prostitute-girlfriend Shae (Sibel Kekilli, who injects so much sex into lines like Cities make me want to fuck that you should probably wear protection), and an army of whats-in-your-wallet-style barbarians. For the first time since the series started, Tyrions up against the realms real power-players and smooth-operators: His own ruthless sister Cersei, backstabbing moneyman and pimp Littlefinger (Aidan Gillen), polite but lethal spymaster Varys (Conleth Hill). Watching character and actor alike raise their game accordingly ought to be one of the seasons great pleasures. Were off to a good start as is. Tyrion nails Cersei with one of the episodes best lines: You love your children. Its your one redeeming quality. That, and your cheekbones. Simply watching his face as he processes Cerseis revelation that the Starks wild-child younger daughter Arya (Maisie Williams) escaped her clutches was worth half a dozen Walking Dead episodes. (Ditto our all-too-brief shot of taciturn badasses Bronn and the Hound (Rory McCann) standing next to each other. Dare we hope for a scene between those two?)

To the north, rebel King Robb Stark (Richard Madden) has mommy issues of his own. She wants him to trade the captured Kingslayer, Jaime Lannister (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) for the missing, presumed kidnapped Stark sisters. But hes riding high off a string of victories over the Lannisters, so hes not above Joffing it up a bit himself, as we see when he pays a sneering visit to the imprisoned Jaime. Coster-Waldau plays Jaime as a man going through the motions of bravado, as though learning what its like to lose is even more frightening to him than getting menaced by Robbs massive pet direwolf. Which looks great, by the way: The effects department uses CGIs inherent uncanny-valley slickness as a feature rather than a bug, making Grey Wind truly feel like a creature from another world.

Robbs upwardly-mobile right-hand man and foster brother Theon Greyjoy (Alfie Allen) has been tasked with recruiting his ex-rebel familys fleet for Robbs assault on Kings Landing. Allens joli-laid Jaggerface and goggle-eyes give him the perpetual appearance of a man who vehemently disagrees with whatever it is he just heard, and his hunger to earn recognition (if not redemption) is palpable. At the Stark stronghold of Winterfell, Robbs kid brother Bran (Isaac Hempstead-Wright) alternates tedious meetings with the lords he now commands with listening to ominous prophecies from his wildling helper Osha (Harry Potters Natalia Tena, who apparently got her hurr did between seasons). When a brief POV sequence starring Brans direwolf Summer cuts directly to a sleeping Bran, however, we get the sense that the boy may have a different sort of power altogether.

The most interesting up-and-comer is Stannis Baratheon (Stephen Dillane), the late King Roberts warrior brother and rightful heir (Joffrey is Cersei & Jamies twincestuous bastard, while Roberts other brother Renly is the baby of the family). The problem? It seems like only two people in Westeros like him enough to fight for him. The first is former smuggler Ser Davos Seaworth (Liam Cunningham), fiercely loyal but also brutally honest, a tough combination given Stanniss precarious situation. Then theres Melisandre (Carice Van Houten), a red-headed priestess who looks like Tori Amos at the Renaissance Fair and who eggs Stannis on by casting him as her religions long-awaited messiah figure. Its to the shows great credit that this brand-new trio and the dark, fossil-encrusted island fortress of Dragonstone where they live hold their own against people and places and plotlines weve all waited a year to revisit. Stannis and Davos in particular, never the most charismatic of characters in the books, greatly benefit simply by becoming living breathing actors rather than lines on paper. Hearing Dillane growl his way through Stanniss declaration of kingship, refusing to call his brother beloved (not by Stannis he wasnt) while insisting that Jaime Lannister be referred to as Ser Whatever else he may be, the mans still a knight makes his black-and-white personality pop.

Powers a slippery thing, though. Case in point: season one ended with the triumphant, transcendent image of a nude, fireproof Daenerys Targaryen (breakout star Emilia Clarke) encircled by freshly-hatched dragons and worshipful followers. But the show zigs where others would zag: She and her people are now slowly starving to death in a desert wasteland, outnumbered by and on the run from forces that could destroy her and her tiny band, dragons or no. Even her horse drops dead by the episodes 15-minute mark, proving once again that yes, this is Game of Thrones.

Cutting from fire to ice, we catch up with Ned Starks bastard son Jon Snow (Kit Harrington), now a Sworn Brother of the Nights Watch, the ragtag black-clad fighting force tasked with guarding the realms northern border. Beyond the Wall that marks it he encounters the deeply creepy Craster, whose wooden stronghold is staffed exclusively by his inbred daughter-wives and used as an outpost by the Watch. Played by Robert Pugh, who looks like a feral Dick Van Patten, Crasters a leering, sneering fuck who puts his own medieval spin on the live-free-or-die rhetoric of the Tea Party. Knowing when to shut the fuck up is a lesson of leadership Jons dad never quite learned, and it could lead Jon into trouble here. He marries his daughters whats he do with his sons? Jon asks. Dun dun dunnnnn!

Jons half-sister and Joffreys fiance-cum-hostage Sansa is also struggling to keep her feelings in check. The impressive young actress Sophie Turner plays Sansa with the thousand-yard stare and flat-affect voice of an abuse victim living from beating to beating. Sansa gets a lot of grief from fans of the show and the books alike shes stupid, shes insipid, shes prissy, shes gutless. Bullshit. Shes doing what she needs to do to survive, as the episodes opening scene demonstrates. She instinctively plays to Joffreys narcissism and cruelty, convincing him to spare a drunken knights life while dropping enough Your Graces on him to make him think it was his idea. If shed been less courteous, like the other Starks would have been, shed be dead.

Even the ever-slick Lord Petyr Littlefinger Baelish finds himself on the wrong end of the sword, attempting to bigfoot Cersei with rumors of her relationship with Jaime and nearly getting his throat cut for it. Knowledge is power, he tells her; Power is power, she retorts, her obedient goons knife at his neck. Its a killer exchange for Headey and Gillen, in the shows grand wordplay-into-swordplay tradition. But as the venerable fan site Westeros has pointed out, its also too clumsy by half for Littlefinger, a master manipulator whose motives remain far more mysterious in the book than they do for his openly power-hungry TV incarnation.

Taking the power theme to its absolute power corrupts absolutely extreme, the episode concludes with a move out of King Herods playbook: The City Watch massacres the late King Roberts bastard children before they can grow into rivals for Joffreys crown, quite literally killing babies in the process. It is, frankly, excruciating to watch and to hear; gods know I never want to listen to a babys cries silenced by the draw of a knife and the wet sound of a blade through flesh ever again. That scene took place off-screen, as it were, in the books, where we learn about it in passing during a conversation between an outraged Tyrion and Lord Commander Janos Slynt. In choosing to show rather than tell, writers and showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss tap into imagery as old as the Bible, as intimate as a mothers nightmare, and as powerful as both. Theyve laid down their latest and boldest marker yet that Games will go places most dramas, let alone most fantasies, wouldnt dare. And they speak directly to George R.R. Martins conception of war as an engine of careless cruelty and wasted human potential. But its also unbelievably grim and uncomfortable television. I know thats the point, but Id imagine many casual viewers (and some die-hards as well) ended up wishing they were on that oxcart with runaway Arya Starkand bull-helmeted bastard boy Gendry (Joseph Dempsie) in the episodes final shot, fleeing the horrors of Kings Landing, hoping never to return. Until this time next Sunday, that is.

Vince Gilligan on Final Season of Breaking Bad: There Will Be Blood


Vince Gilligan promises in a new interview that the upcoming final season of Breaking Bad will feature plenty of blood, tension and psychological unraveling.

There will be antagonistic relationships aplenty, the creator and showrunner told Entertainment Weekly recently, adding that the shows protagonist, meth king Walter White (Bryan Cranston), has plenty of fight left in him. And hes got plenty of forces to fight. You met some of them. Others you havent.

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Gilligan didnt drop any spoilers about who Walt will face off against, though we know his DEA agent brother-in-law Hank Schrader (Dean Norris) will be chasing him after he found some damning evidence in Walts bathroom.

As for Walt himself, Gilligan hinted that the anti-hero will finally have to grapple with the consequences of his greatest power: his ability to lie, especially to himself. So in these final eight episodes, perhaps the lies will cease to find traction and the scales will start to fall away from Walts eyes, Gilligan noted. And when that happens, will Walt really begin to realize who he is? Thats a question that we asked ourselves a lot in the writers room this year.

Though Gilligan pointed out there will be blood, the creator is more excited for the seasons many emotional moments. I have surprised myself at how much story there was left to tell and how quickly we tell it, Gilligan said. You need to really settle down on the couch and pay close attention because its going to come at you fast and furious in the final eight episodes.

Some nerves underscore Gilligans excitement for Breaking Bads final season, which he hopes will provide fans with a satisfying conclusion. I am guardedly optimistic that we have achieved just that, he said. And furthermore, trying to be as coy as possible, trying to give away as little as possible, I feel like this ending represents on some level, however small, something of a victory for Walter White. Read into that what you will. And try to be as open-minded as possible when you watch this episode, because it may not indeed feel like a victory. Or maybe it will.

Disobedience Review: Forbidden-Love Romance Is Scorching and Feast For Its Stars


Yes, everyones set to watch the Avengers chase evil to infinity and beyond this weekend. But you might want to check out Disobedience a gorgeously acted, written and directed spellbinder set so far outside the Marvel universe that it thinks the problems of real people are far more compelling than a superhero mash-up. Ronit (Rachel Weisz, who also produced) is a British expat whos been working as a photographer in New York. Years later, she returns home to London and the Orthodox Jewish community from which shes exiled herself, to attend her estranged fathers funeral. Despite the fact that shes the offspring of the local rabbi, Ronit receives a chilly reception from everyone she comes into contact with even her childhood friend Dovid (the excellent Alessandro Nivola), whos been mentored over the years as the late patriarchs spiritual successor.

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Theres another hitch: Dovid is now married to Esti (Rachel McAdams), a timid schoolteacher who was also once the lover that Ronits father caught her with as a teenager and thus the partial cause behind our heroines pariah status. The two women approach each other cautiously. Over the next few days, however, their buried feelings begin to recklessly re-emerge. This is a religious community that prohibits any physical contact outside of marriage between a man and a woman. Same-sex relationships arent just fodder for scandal; theyre definite deal breakers.

And so begins a tale of forbidden love set against an atmosphere of repression that only adds fuel to the fire. Based on the 2006 novel by Naomi Alderman, Disobedience like all meaningful movies about the mysteries of love never tips its hand to indicate where its going. Director and co-writer Sebastin Lelio, the Chilean filmmaker fresh from his Foreign-Film Oscar win for A Fantastic Woman and working for the first time in English, lets action define character. Ronit and Esti exchange glances that are a roadmap to complex emotions and clashing worlds. The formers bohemian lifestyle is a rebuke to everything her father taught her, and Weisz gives a blazing performance that nails every subversive impulse in a character who only thinks she has it together. McAdams, for her part, is quietly devastating as a wife trying to measure what would be lost if she broke free to follow her heart.

The two women sneak off to a hotel in a scene that is already causing a stir for its unabashed frankness Ronit spitting in Estis mouth seems to have caused a few timid souls to break out in a sweat. The scene is erotic, but its not the spittle or the nudity that gives the encounter its impact. What electrifies is the sight of two people expressing a fervor that runs deeper than sex. Weisz and McAdams, two extraordinary actresses at the top of their game, cut so deep into their characters you can almost feel their nerve endings. And Lelio lets their feelings play out, not in romantic fantasy, but in a real world where honesty comes at a price. Nivolo, as the pious husband, caught between flesh and spirit and searching for answers he cant find in the Torah, tears at the heart.

Disobedience is a film that never preaches or judges. Without dialogue, Lelio creates a whole world that can be read eloquently and movingly on the faces of two superb actresses who give unstintingly to its creation. May you live a long life, are the words exchanged frequently in this insular community. But for Esti and Ronit, its ultimately the question of how you live a life that gives the film its soulful resonance. Their scenes together achieve a stabbing pathos that never crosses into sentimentality or sham. No one who sees the groundbreaking trail that the movie blazes is going to shut up about it. And why should they? You can discover a lot about yourself by getting lost in such a transcendent ode to passion. Surrender to it.

Mildred Pierce


What can you say in a few words about a five-hour HBO miniseries adapted from James M. Cains landmark 1941 novel that follows the rise and fall of an independent Los Angeles woman during the Great Depression? Lets try perfection, which is what director Todd Haynes (Far From Heaven) achieves in his loyal, lyrical adaptation. Apply magnificent to the tour de force Kate Winslet delivers in the title role, a divorced mother who climbs from waitress to tycoon. Joan Crawford won her only Oscar playing Mildred in the 1945 film version. But Haynes and co-writer Jon Raymond hunt bigger game by dropping the murder plot to re-create a time and place that uncannily reflect our own.

Get more news, reviews and interviews from Peter Travers on The Travers Take

The acting is as good as it gets. As Mildreds daughter Veda, born with musical talent but no soul, Evan Rachel Wood is scary fine, as is Morgan Turner as the younger Veda. Melissa Leo and Mare Winningham shine as Mildreds female allies. And Brian F. OByrne, James LeGros and the amazing Guy Pearce play the men Mildred substitutes for the love she craves from Veda. This is classic filmmaking.

The Complete Archive: Over 20 Years of Peter Travers Movie Reviews Now Online

At The Movies With Peter Travers: Hes Just Not That Into You


Peter Travers cant review another chick flick alone, so he brings in RollingStone.coms Erica Futterman to explain why women want to see movies like Hes Just Not That Into You (starring Jennifer Aniston, Big Loves Ginnifer Goodwin, Scarlett Johannson, Ben Affleck, Drew Barrymore, Justin Long, Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Connelly and Entourages Kevin Connolly), a new film based not on a novel, but a self-help book. Her explanation: its the type of film groups of girls go to together, to laugh at the screen and cast their friends in the roles. Her biggest gripe with the film? Johannsons character is a caricature. His largest issue? The women are only defined by their relationships to slimy men. Want to hear the whole debate? Watch the video above and read Travers one-and-a-half-star review here:

Read Review: Hes Just Not That Into You

Travers was so preoccupied with the female psyche, he didnt have time for a Scum Bucket or to discuss 3-D film Coraline. Director Henry Selick, the man behind The Nightmare Before Christmas, handles the films dazzling stop-motion animation, but some moviegoers may be turned off by the plot in which an 11-year-old brat (voiced by Dakota Fanning) is forced to move to a remote part of Oregon by her neglectful parents (Teri Hatcher, John Hodgman). Read Travers three-star review here:

Read Review: Coraline

Smash Recap: Marilyn Monroe Is Broadway-bound


smash

Call it Glee for grown-ups: NBCs new scripted series Smash peeks behind the Broadway curtain to reveal what it takes (hypothetically) to launch a musical based on the legendary Marilyn Monroes life.

The Peacock Network certainly Smash-ed us over the head with an unrelenting advertising campaign. It seemed like everywhere I turned the cast was staring me down. So, whether you tuned in or not, everyone who watches TV, surfs the Web or reads the paper most likely heard of the show before its Monday night premiere.

But in case youve been living under a rock, heres a quick summary of Smashs premise: A struggling small-town girl season 5 American Idol runner-up Katharine McPhee as Karen Cartwright moves to the Big Apple with dreams of becoming a star. Yes, Glee, your coattails are officially being ridden. Watch your back, Rachel Berry.

The pilot kicks off with Karen basking in the spotlight while singing the classic Over the Rainbowa not-so-subtle reminder of McPhees stint on Idol, on which she made a splash (yes, I know, it rhymes with smash) singing the exact same song.

But Karen quickly crashes back to reality when a ringing cell phone ruins her A Star Is Born moment. Shes not really standing on a Broadway stage. Shes actually in a drab room auditioning in front of a panel of less-than-impressed judges whod rather talk on the phone than listen to her sing. Le sigh.

Karen leaves in a huff, unknowingly walking by her soon-to-be competition: Ivy Lynn (played by real-life Broadway babe Megan Hilty), a busty blonde bombshell also auditioning for the unspecified part. Neither gets the role. But theyre set on a path where theyll soon meet again.

Enter former Will & Grace star Debra Messing as Julia and Tony Award-nominee Christian Borle as Tom, best friends and writing partners. While lounging on a couch and scarfing down mac and cheese trying their hardest to think about anything but the indoor scarf attacking Julias neck, the pair dreams up Marilyn: The Musical. And, duh-da-da-dah, theyre off and running with the idea. Easy peasy, right?

Not so fast. Back at Julias home, there are hints of trouble in paradise when its revealed that she told her hubby shed take a year off from work to focus all her attention on adopting a baby. Its a seemingly out-of-place storyline that will most likely either mysteriously disappear over the next couple of episodes or become an area of contention between the couple for the duration of the season. (Please, let it be the former.)

Either way, Julia has already made up her mind: Shes not letting Marilyn: The Musical pass her by. She and Tom soon pluck experienced chorus girl Ivy from ensemble obscurity to prime her for stardom, and they start churning out ideas like including a baseball number, titled The National Pastime, focusing on Ms. Monroes marriage to the Yankees Joe DiMaggio. It turns out to be one of the most memorable performances in the premiere (particularly when it comes to original tunes) with references to peanuts and hot dogs as Ivy does her best Marilyn impression while stroking baseball bats and humping dancers donning uniforms.

When a video of Ivy rehearsing an unfinished song hits YouLenz a terribly named YouTube knock-off (and the same fictional video site from the Law & Order universe) creators Julia and Tom freak out thinking their unpolished product will be ripped to shreds a la Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark. To their surprise, its labeled a smash you know, just in case you have an attention span of a hamster and had somehow forgotten the name of the series.

Enter Oscar-winning actress Anjelica Huston as Eileen, a tenacious Broadway producer going through a messy divorce from her husband-slash-business partner. Determined to prove shes still relevant, she aggressively inserts herself into Julia and Toms project. And she knows just the director to bring onboard Toms archenemy, Derek (English actor Jack Davenport). That wont prove to be a problem somewhere down the road, will it? Nah.

When auditions to cast the lead roll around, Karen and Ivy once again cross paths. The age-old battle of the dark-haired girl-next-door versus the fair-haired sexpot is officially on.

In a sea of women mimicking Marilyn, Karen is deemed refreshing because of her frumpy clothes and unbleached locks. Karen and McPhee herself shine during her rendition of Christina Aguileras Beautiful. I never thought Id say this, but the more McPhee the better, if you ask me. She has a doe-eyed likability that gives the show some warmth.

And the panel of Great White Way judges agrees. Her Plain Jane pipes raise eyebrows and turn frowns upside down in the audition room, nabbing her a callback. Phew, didnt see that coming, what with her being the series star and all!

While co-writer Tom thinks Ivy should be a shoo-in for the role, his frenemy Derek is gunning for Karen . . . in more ways than one. She gets a late-night text from the director, asking her to meet him at his apartment which she dumbly does. If she had taken the time to Google the term casting couch she wouldve known what to expect next. (Dont be shy, you can Google it too.)

After discussing how she may not be sexy enough to play the original blonde bombshell, Derek creepily asks Karen to show him what shes got. She runs into the bathroom a scared bird ready to cry but emerges a confident swan wearing nothing but one of his white button-down shirts while singing a breathy rendition of Happy Birthday.

He wanted sex and he got it well, not exactly. Despite straddling him, she wont give up the goods. Instead she storms off when he leans in for a kiss. Sorry, Mr. Director.

When her callback audition rolls around, though, the experience seems to have rubbed off on her, as she puts more effort into looking the part by slipping into a form-fitting, cherry-patterned dress. But, of course, Ivy also goes out of her way to get all dolled up. Its clearly time for a musical theater version of a smackdown.

Both women own the audition room by belting out a tune called Let Me Be Your Star. But were left wondering who will be picked to play Marilyn. Call it a hunch, but I have a feeling well find out in the coming weeks . . .

Arnold Schwarzenegger Praises Eliza Dushku After True Lies Molestation Accusation


Eliza Dushku penned a detailed Facebook post Saturday that claimed Joel Kramer, one of Hollywoods leading stunt coordinators, sexually molested her during the filming of True Lies, when she was just 12 years old.

Her former costars Jamie Lee Curtis, Tom Arnold and Arnold Schwarzenegger have all spoken out in support of Dushkus story, with Schwarzenegger in particular taking a pointed stand defending the actress.

Tom, you bet your ass all of us would have done something, he tweeted Monday after Arnold noted that he, Curtis, Schwarzenegger and director James Cameron would have taken action had they known at the time. Im shocked and saddened for Eliza but I am also proud of her beyond being a great talent and an amazing woman, she is so courageous.

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In her Facebook post Saturday, Dushku alleged that Kramer, then 36, groomed her and methodically built my and my parents trust for months before he invited her to his Miami hotel room on the pretense of taking her for a swim and a first sushi dinner.

I remember vividly how he methodically drew the shades and turned down the lights; how he cranked up the air-conditioning to what felt like freezing levels, where exactly he placed me on one of the two hotel room beds, what movie he put on the television (Coneheads); how he disappeared in the bathroom and emerged, naked, bearing nothing but a small hand towel held flimsy at his mid-section, she wrote, adding that Kramer then wrapped me with his gigantic writhing body, and rubbed all over me.

Dushku wrote that at the time, she recounted the horrific events to her parents, two adult friends and one of her older brothers, but no one was entirely sure what to do. When she told one of her tough adult female friends what had happened shortly afterward, and the friend confronted Kramer on set, Dushku remembered that by no small coincidence, [she] was injured from a stunt-gone-wrong on the Harrier jet.

Whereas he was supposed to be my protector, he was my abuser, Dushku wrote. On Monday, Deadline reported that two other women had come forward with accusations of sexual misconduct against Kramer, including one woman who was 16 when she and the stunt coordinator allegedly engaged in sexual activity.

Kramer has denied all allegations of wrongdoing.

In an essay published on Huffington Post Monday, Curtis revealed that Dushku had shared the story with her privately a few years ago, but noted that the details are no less shocking now that they are out in the open.

We have all started to awaken to the fact that the terrible abuses now commonplace in daily news reports have been going on for a very long time, Curtis wrote. Unconscionably, those reports frequently come along with claims by the perpetrators that, as adults, those perpetrated against had some part in it.

Elizas story has now awaked us from our denial slumber to a new, horrific reality, she continued. The abuse of children.

Best of Enemies: The Roots of the Cable-News Shoutfest


In one corner sat Gore Vidal, author and liberal bon vivant; in the other was William F. Buckley Jr.,talk-show host, conservative blowhard and founder of the far-right publication National Review.It was 1968, and ABC News, desperate for ratings, had decided to throw a hail-Mary pass by inviting the duo to debate the two presidential conventions over 10 nights. The network was hoping for some fireworks and gotthem. By the time Vidal called Buckley a crypto-Nazi and Buckley threatened to sock his queer opponent inthe face on live TV, ABC realized it had struck gold.

That infamous moment is the centerpiece of Best of Enemies,Robert Gordon and Morgan Nevilles documentary on the broadcast-news experiment that suggests this clash of celebrity-intellectual titans gave birth to the partisan shouting matches that dominate todays political punditry. Both filmmakers remember reading about that particularly vitriolic exchange long after the fact, even if they knew little else about the debates as a whole. It wasnt until Gordon was slipped a bootleg DVD of the entire 10-night run from a friend in 2010 that he realized just how prescient these verbal spats were. As soon as I was about two-and-a-half minutes into the first one, I thought, My God, its like they saw the future, he says. They saw the culture wars were living through now and battled them then.

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Gordon then contacted his colleague Neville, the Oscar-winning director behind 2013s backup-singer doc 20 Feet From Stardom and a former fact-checker for Vidal telling him, Im going to send you something I think you need to watch. Soon, the two were combing through ABCs archives, uncovering the behind-the-scenes stories on what had been dubbed the networks Unconventional Convention Coverage and drawing connections between the twos tense tte--ttes and our current cable-news shoutfest.

Whats interesting is that ABC set up a situation that they thought might cause some friction, Gordon claims, while his partner chimes in to finish the thought. But they werent expecting a conflagration, Neville continues. I think they were worried theyd gone too far by the time the crytpo-Nazi comment happened in Chicago on Night Nine. Whereas most news shows today, they cant seem to go far enough. But the ratings were high, the concept attracted attention, and here we are.

Using talking-head testimonials and brief histories of the respective participants, Best of Enemies offers a quick contextual history lesson as to how the stage had been set and why the result had caused such a furor. But its the archival footage of the broadcasts themselves, with Buckley and Vidal trading highbrow witticisms and lowbrow insults as Miami seethes and Chicago burns, that shows how their rivalry turned into an epic battle of political-ideology one-upmanship. I think thats why they pissed each other off, Neville says. They both realized they were dealing with equals, regardless of who won that round. But we didnt want to pick sides. We wanted to make a film about how we argue now, because its a much important discussion.

The funny thing is, during the five years we were trying to make the movie, the most common comment we got was, Is this even relevant?' Neville continues. And then, after the film premiered at Sundance last January, those same folks came up to Robert and I, and said, Oh, wow, Im so sorry. I cant believe how relevant this is.

Tangled Up in Dylans


The year is 1966, and someone who looks a lot like Bob Dylan is holding court at Club Silver, a swinging nightspot with a stark, all-white dcor. His hair is an overgrown bush of brown curls; hes wearing Ray-Bans and a polka-dot shirt. And when he speaks, the nasal cadences are unmistakable, even if the voice sounds a little higher than it should: It takes a lot of medicine to keep up this pace,he says, gesturing with a cigarette.

Underneath the shades and wig is Australian actress Cate Blanchett, who spends an hour each morning in a makeup chair to undergo the most extreme transformation of her career. Shes playing the just-gone-electric, Highway 61 Revisited-era Dylan in Im Not There, an unconventional biopic by Far From Heaven director Todd Haynes, whose previous music movie was the 1998 glam tribute Velvet Goldmine. Haynes named the movie, due next year, after the Basement Tapes rarity Im Not There (which will see its first official release on the soundtrack). Its so perfect for this person who keeps moving forward and discarding who he was, Haynes says. The minute he seems in grasp, hes not there anymore.

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Blanchett is just one of six Dylans in the film, which splits him into separate characters, each representing a different part of his life or legend. Christian Bale plays the young folkie Dylan, who is later seen again as a fiery born-again Christian; Richard Gere embodies a mythical Dylan in the Old West; and Heath Ledger is a movie-star Bob. Two newcomers round out the Dylans: Twelve-year-old Marcus Carl Franklin plays a fantasy version of him as an (African-American) child and British stage actor Ben Whishaw plays him as a teen.

In the scene-in-progress on the Club Silver set inside a grimy factory turned studio in a Montreal suburb Blanchetts Jude (each Dylan has a different name) encounters Michelle Williams, playing a character based on Sixties It girl Edie Sedgwick, with whom Dylan reputedly had a brief affair. After watching her kiss another man, Jude mocks the couple: True love, he drawls. In the age of Charles Atlas and the bomb! (Dylan fanatics will find some of the dialogue familiar: The medicine line is straight from a 1966 interview with biographer Robert Shelton.)

For Haynes, dividing Dylan into multiple characters was the only way to tell his story. Im very interested in artists like David Bowie who play with notions of identity, Haynes says. I hadnt thought of Dylan exactly in that way until I started to really read about the events of his life more closely. And Dylans changes which maybe look more subtle than someone like Bowies were much more powerful and had huge cultural repercussions.

Im Not There Photos: Heath Ledger and Richard Gere as Bob Dylan

The innovative approach helped persuade Dylan and his management to authorize the film. I dont think Bob Dylan would have allowed anyone to do a regular biopic, says producer Christine Vachon. Having a woman portray the dandified Dylan of the mid-Sixties, Haynes says, is meant to capture the strange androgyny of that persona. Blanchetts performance made an immediate impression, according to veteran character actor Bruce Greenwood, who plays Judes nemesis, Mr. Jones a square journalist straight out of Ballad of a Thin Man. The body language just had me stunned with how evocative it was of Dylan at that time, he says. And the crew was standing around with their hands on their mouths.

Haynes will use a distinct visual style for each section of the film (the Jude segment is black-and-white), but he says the movie wont feel like a collection of short films. Each story reaches a point at which the person cant go on without becoming something else, he says. It solves the problems of the prior story to change into a new thing and discard it.

Along the way, a number of familiar characters pop up: Charlotte Gainsbourg plays a Sara Dylan-like wife; David Cross will play a character based on Allen Ginsberg; and Julianne Moore is a Joan Baez-inspired character.

The movies soundtrack is still taking shape, but it will mix Dylans own recordings with new covers. My Morning Jackets Jim James has already recorded Going to Acapulco for the movie, and ex-Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus sang Ballad of a Thin Man and Maggies Farm backed by a band that includes current Dylan bassist Tony Garnier. Malkmus performances, recorded in sessions produced by Sonic Youths Lee Ranaldo, will score the segment based on Dylans 1965 Newport Folk Festival set.

Ultimately, Im Not There will be a meditation on the 1960s, a decade Haynes feels still hasnt been captured correctly on film. It was such an incredibly complex and fascinating period, he says. I want it to be the best film about the Sixties anyone has ever seen.

This story is from the October 19, 2006 issue of Rolling Stone.

Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds to Be Buried Together


Carrie Fisher and her mother Debbie Reynolds will have a joint funeral and be buried together at the Hollywood Hills Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

My mother and my sister are together right now, Todd Fisher said Friday after the Los Angeles Coroners Office released Carrie Fishers body back to the family following an examination into her cause of death; the results of initial tests were inconclusive, TMZ reports.

The actress who portrayed Star Wars Princess Leia died December 27th, four days after suffering a massive cardiac episode aboard a Los Angeles-bound plane. A day after Fishers death, Reynolds, the Fifties icon best known for her role in Singin in the Rain, died following what Todd Fisher described as a severe stroke.

She said, I want to be with Carrie,' Todd Fisher said (via The Associated Press). And then she was gone. In an interview with 20/20 set to air Friday night, Fisher added of his mothers death, She didnt die of a broken heart. She just left to be with Carrie.

Todd Fisher did not reveal when the funeral will take place but added that it would be private. The family is also discussing a public memorial, but no plans have been made. Fans nationwide have held lightsaber vigils for Fisher since her death.

According to TMZ, Reynolds chose Forest Lawns Hollywood Hills location where stars like Bette Davis, Lucille Ball, Buster Keaton, Florence Henderson and Paul Walker are interred because she loved Liberace, who also rests at the memorial park; Reynolds portrayed Liberaces mother in the 2013 biopic Behind the Candelabra.

Earlier Friday, HBO announced that the network has pushed up the broadcast date of Bright Lights, a documentary about Reynolds and Fishers relationship, to January 7th.

Get Hard


Team upWill Ferrell and Kevin Hart for the first time in anything and its got to be funny, right? Youd think. But Get Hard, with Ferrell as James King, a hedge-fund manager railroaded into prison for fraud, and Hart as Darnell Lewis, a car washer James hires to prep him for 10 years in San Quentin, commits the cardinal sin of comedy: It lets us see the sweat, the backbreaking effort of trying to breathe life into a farce based on racial and gay stereotyping. These two comic wizards huff and puff to keep the laughs airborne. But theres no helium in this balloon. Its one joke stretched beyond endurance. The joke being that James thinks Darnell has done time because hes black, but Darnell is really a straight-ass family man with no record. Burn.

Which brings us to the dick gags. Get Hard takes a swing at getting doughy James in physical shape to act gangsta behind bars. But the DOA script, which first-time director Etan Cohen co-wrote with Jay Martel and Ian Roberts, revels most in gay panic. James must learn to suck cock. In a toilet stall, James contorts his mouth to make contact with the penis of a stranger (Matt Walsh of Veep). No go. James finds it easier keister-ing, which means shoving objects a gun, a shiv up his ever-expanding anus. These are the laughs, folks. Cohen, who shared credit on the script for the excellent Tropic Thunder, cant seem to get a rhythm going scenes drag out or end abruptly. Its not easy hanging talents like Ferrell and Hart out to dry. But Get Hard gets the job done. Its one limp noodle.

SeaWorld Condemns Blackfish Documentarys Critical Take on Captivity


SeaWorld has condemned the new documentary Blackfish, calling the film about orcas in captivity inaccurate and misleading. The controversial film focuses on Tilikum, a killer whale who has been linked to the deaths of three people, including SeaWorld Orlando trainer Dawn Brancheau. Brancheau was killed in 2010 when Tilikum attacked her and dragged her underwater. Blackfish, directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, asserts the deaths could have been prevented by not keeping the whales in captivity, where, the film maintains, they could be driven to extreme behavior.

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Blackfish is billed as a documentary, but instead of a fair and balanced treatment of a complex subject, the film is inaccurate and misleading and, regrettably, exploits a tragedy that remains a source of deep pain for Dawn Brancheaus family, friends and colleagues, SeaWorld said in a statement reported by Variety. To promote its bias that killer whales should not be maintained in a zoological setting, the film paints a distorted picture that withholds from viewers key facts about SeaWorld among them, that SeaWorld is one of the worlds most respected zoological institutions, that SeaWorld rescues, rehabilitates and returns to the wild hundreds of wild animals every year, and that SeaWorld commits millions of dollars annually to conservation and scientific research.

SeaWorld continued, Perhaps most important, the film fails to mention SeaWorlds commitment to the safety of its team members and guests and to the care and welfare of its animals, as demonstrated by the companys continual refinement and improvement to its killer whale facilities, equipment and procedures both before and after the death of Dawn Brancheau.

Director Gabriela Cowperthwaite had her own response to SeaWorld. I think SeaWorld is just looking to sow a seed of doubt because they have to, Cowperthwaite told Canada.com. There were so many things I didnt include because they took us away from Tilikum, but they were very disturbing and could have easily loaded the film and turned it into a piece of activism which was never my intent.

She added, I never started out thinking I wanted to shut SeaWorld down. Im not an activist. I am a storyteller. And to me, this was a classic narrative with a 12,000-pound protagonist swimming right at the center.

Blackfish opens today. This eye-opening doc contains sights and sounds that are stuff of nightmares,Rolling Stone movie critic Peter Travers writes in his review. Forget The Conjuring, Blackfish may be the scariest movie around.

Kings Speech, True Grit, Social Network Lead Oscar Nominations


The nominations for the 83rd Academy Awards were announced today. The Kings Speech led with 12 nominations, followed by True Grit with 10 and The Social Network and Inception with eight each. Though there were no great surprises among this years nods, there are some exciting first-time nominations, including Nine Inch Nails leader Trent Reznor for his score for The Social Network in collaboration with Atticus Ross, 15-year-old Hailee Steinfeld for her breakout supporting actress role in True Grit and John Hawkes for his supporting performance in Winters Bone. There was also a notable omission: Chris Nolan was not nominated in the Best Director category for Inception.

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These are the nominations in the top categories.

Best Picture
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids Are All Right
The Kings Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winters Bone

Best Direction
Darren Aronofsky for Black Swan
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen for True Grit
David Fincher for The Social Network
Tom Hooper for The Kings Speech
David O. Russell for The Fighter

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Actor in a Leading Role
Javier Bardem in Biutiful
Jeff Bridges in True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg in The Social Network
James Franco in 127 Hours
Colin Firth in The Kings Speech

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Actress in a Leading Role
Annette Bening in The Kids Are All Right
Nicole Kidman in Rabbit Hole
Jennifer Lawrence in Winters Bone
Natalie Portman in Black Swan
Michelle Williams in Blue Valentine

Actor in a Supporting Role
Christian Bale in The Fighter
John Hawkes in Winters Bone
Jeremy Renner in The Town
Mark Ruffalo in The Kids Are All Right
Geoffrey Rush in The Kings Speech

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Actress in a Supporting Role
Amy Adams in The Fighter
Helena Bonham Carter in The Kings Speech
Melissa Leo in The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld in True Grit
Jacki Weaver in Animal Kingdom

Adapted Screenplay
Danny Boyle and Simon Beaufoy for 127 Hours
Aaron Sorkin for The Social Network
Michael Arndt, story by John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich for Toy Story 3
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen for True Grit
Debra Granik & Anne Rosellini for Winters Bone

Original Screenplay
Mike Leigh for Another Year
Screenplay by Scott Silver and Paul Tamasy and Eric Johnson. Story by Keith Dorrington and Paul Tamasy and Eric Johnson for The Fighter
Christopher Nolan for Inception
Lisa Cholodenko and Stuart Blumberg for The Kids Are All Right
David Seidler for The Kings Speech

Animated Feature
How to Train Your Dragon
The Illusionist
Toy Story 3

Documentary (Feature)
Exit through the Gift Shop
Gasland
Inside Job
Restrepo
Waste Land

Music (Original Score)
How to Train Your Dragon: John Powell
Inception: Hans Zimmer
The Kings Speech: Alexandre Desplat
127 Hours: A.R. Rahman
The Social Network: Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross

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Music (Original Song)
Coming Home from Country Strong Music and Lyric by Tom Douglas, Troy Verges and Hillary Lindsey
I See the Light from Tangled Music by Alan Menken Lyric by Glenn Slater
If I Rise from 127 Hours Music by A.R. Rahman Lyric by Dido and Rollo Armstrong
We Belong Together from Toy Story 3 Music and Lyric by Randy Newman

The Nominees for the 83rd Academy Awards [Oscar.go.com]

The Walking Dead Sisters Get Mournful on The Parting Glass Premiere


The post-apocalyptic carnage begins anew on Sunday with the Season Three premiere of The Walking Dead at 9 p.m. on AMC, and it promises to be an intense ride; as series creator Robert Kirkman recently told Rolling Stone, We havent even really gotten to the good stuff from the comic book yet. Before the episode airs, though, you can hear the new song The Parting Glass from the characters Beth and Maggie Green, which will factor into the premiere.

The half-sisters Beth and Maggie (played by Emily Kinney and Lauren Cohan, respectively) harmonize in mournful unison on this cover of the Wailin Jennys Irish folk dirge. Its spectrally beautiful tone suggests heartrending times ahead this season for the band of survivors, and will be available on iTunes after the premiere airs. You can stream it below now.


Pet Sematary: Watch Bone-Chilling First Trailer of Stephen King Remake


Thirty years after Stephen Kings Pet Sematary was first adapted for the big screen, the beloved horror novel will receive a fresh cinematic reimagining in 2019.

The preview opens with a jump scare that harkens back to the King novel the threat of speeding trucks down a rural road before unleashing a series of bone-chilling imagery highlighted by a parade of children wearing creepy animal masks walking deep into the woods toward the titular Pet Sematary.

The remake follows Dr. Louis Creed (Jason Clarke), who, after relocating with his wife Rachel (Amy Seimetz) and their two young children from Boston to rural Maine, discovers a mysterious burial ground hidden deep in the woods near the familys new home, the synopsis states. When tragedy strikes, Louis turns to his unusual neighbor, Jud Crandall (John Lithgow), setting off a perilous chain reaction that unleashes an unfathomable evil with horrific consequences.

Its Lithgows character that delivers the ominous warning in Pet Sematary trailer. There was a myth. Kids used to dare each other to go into the woods at night. They knew the power of that place. They feared it. Those woods belong to something else, Crandall says. The ground is bad. Maybe its just some crazy folktale, but there is something in the woods. Something that brings things back. Sometimes dead is better.

Pet Sematary reanimates itself in theaters on April 5th, 2019.

Girls Trip Review: Comedy About Four Besties in NOLA Hits All the Right Notes


Call me surprised with a cherry on top. Girls Trip is not what it looks like on the surface a black-demo take on Rough Night, Scarlett Johanssons recent whiteish-girls-gone-wild romp in Miami which hit a wall of critical apathy and audience indifference. Not this time. In all the ways ScarJo & co.s film went wrong (the dead male stripper ugh!), Malcolm D. Lees comedy goes hilariously right. Starring Regina Hall, Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah and Tiffany Haddish as former college besties doing the reunion thing in New Orleans, Girls Trip knows how to let giggles bubble out of character instead of blunt-force farce. It makes all the difference.

The writing team, headed by Black-ish creator Kenya Barris, stays refreshingly alert to racial and class issues that raise the bar on the usual silliness, though theres still plenty of that. And director Lee (The Best Man) actually treats the ladies as real people instead of props. Lets hope its a trend. The plot may be standard issue, but this quartet of stars is off-the-chain irresistible. Hall is outstanding (no surprise) as Ryan, a self-help author and budding Oprah with a marketable knack for balancing or pretending to balance a career and a marriage to an NFL hero (Luke Cages Mike Colter). Shes set to speak at the Essence Festival in the Big Easy, the perfect excuse for lots of starry cameos. (Is that you, P. Diddy? It is!)

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So why not use the occasion to reconnect with her ex-sorority sisters the infamous Flossy Posse whove grown apart with the years. Latifah brings her sass and class to Sasha, a hard journalist whos gone the gossipmonmger route. Pinkett Smith hits all the right notes as Lisa, a nurse and single mom who overcomes her shyness with a hunky stranger Malik (Kofi Siriboe). And get ready for Haddish a Category 5 hurricane of laughs who turns wild child Dina into a catalyst for raunch unleashed. To hear Haddish explain the meaning of grapefruiting youll never get that out of your head.

Complications ensue when Ryan thinks Sasha might be responsible for a leaked photo of her cheating husband engaged in something kinky with a so-called Instagram model. Yes, its stale stuff, but in the next minute these four actresses spin us back to the funny and with a warmth and appeal that Hollywood, try as it might, cant manufacture. Latifah, Hall, Pinkett Smith and Haddish are the real deal, side-splitting dynamos who are also women of heart and mind. They make naughty feel like a trip to comedy heaven.

Notorious


You can almost hear the Notorious B.I.G. sneering his trademark get a grip, motherfuckers at those who think the big thing about his life is the unsolved 1997 murder that ended it. Notorious is not a whodunit. The LAPD, having famously screwed up the case, still hasnt nailed the killer in the Chevy who pulled up alongside the SUV that chauffeured the 300-pound Biggie from a Los Angeles party and pumped four bullets into his chest. At 24, the Brooklyn kid who morphed from crack dealer into rap icon was dead, just 10 days before the debut of his second CD, Life After Death.

Its the spirit that Biggie Smalls, born Christopher Wallace, put into inventing himself and his music that ignites Notorious, a biopic that sees the flaws in the man but cant help accentuating the positive. Why? Check the producer credits, which include Biggies teacher mom, Voletta Wallace (she called him Chrissy Pooh), his Bad Boy Records mentor, Sean Puffy Combs, and his managers Wayne Barrow and Mark Pitts. Hell, Biggies 11-year-old son, Christopher Jordan Wallace, movingly plays his dad as a boy. You cant fight that. And you may not want to. What keeps you riveted to Biggies official story is the actor who plays him. A new star is born in Jamal Woolard, who defines what it means to hypnotize. Woolard, a Brooklyn rapper known as Gravy, has no previous acting experience. Yet his portrayal amounts to a Biggie resurrection. Its all there the waddle, the head tilt, the swagger that drew women to his honey long before he had the bling. And when Biggie raps, Woolard gets his flow down to the uh in the its all good, baby, bay-bee, uh on Juicy. Rapping seems to order Woolards features, drawing life into his eyes. Hes a knockout.

The movie is forced to rush things, but Biggie biographer Cheo Hodari Coker, who co-wrote the script, gets in the essentials, starting with young Chris on the streets dealing despite warnings from his single mom (a vivid Angela Bassett). Gun possession, prison, the daughter he has with baby mama Jan (Julia Pace Mitchell) all put steel in Biggies music. His freestyle rap tape gets him tight with hip-hop honcho Combs (Derek Luke, limited by a sanitized role). Woolard and Luke are a kick trading raps on Party & Bullshit, but director George Tillman Jr., who sweetened Soul Food, goes soft when he should go for the jugular.

Notorious calls Biggie on his relationships with women, notably his protg Kimberly Lil Kim Jones (Naturi Naughton), who had to put up with ho lessons to reach an erotic ideal Biggie never imposed on himself. The turbulence continued with R&B singer Faith Evans (a terrific Antonique Smith), who married and divorced Biggie and bore a son, Christopher, as rumors swirled she was catting around with Biggie friend-turned-archenemy Tupac Shakur (Anthony Mackie).

The Tupac-Biggie feud intensifies when Tupac is shot in a 1994 New York robbery and blames Biggie. This relationship is the bruised heart of the movie, and Mackie (8 Mile) is outstanding, uncovering the fears that drove this complex man. The film brushes off conspiracy theories that Biggie was involved in Tupacs 1996 murder, and it sees the East Coast vs. West Coast rap wars as a media ruse. Notorious leaves Biggie on the verge of a maturity that plays like wishful thinking. But even when this authorized movie biography makes you long for the explicit version, Woolards tour de force finds the human details that forged an artist and lets Biggie fly.

Bob Odenkirk and David Cross Reunite for Tour


David Cross and Bob Odenkirk will embark on a short tour this fall along with fellow comedian Brian Posehn.

Cross and Odenkirk were the minds behind the mid-1990s HBO cult favorite Mr. Show, and have since gone on to have impressive careers: Cross has become a successful stand-up act and everyones favorite cut-offs-wearing analrapist, Tobias Fnke, on Arrested Development. Odenkirk, meanwhile, portrays the scheming Saul Goodman on Breaking Bad (and it looks like the character will get his own spin-off).

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Dubbed an Evening with Bob and David (and Posehn), the tour isnt technically a Mr. Show reunion, Consequence of Sound notes. During an interview on the Comedy Bang! Bang! podcast, Odenkirk said that the shows will include stand-up bits, sketches and plenty of absurdity.

The tour starts on September 12th at Town Hall in New York and finishes up at Tenacious Ds Festival Supreme in Los Angeles on October 19th. You can check out the full itinerary below; pre-sale tickets are currently on sale at all venues with the password Evening.

09/12 New York, NY Town Hall
09/13 Boston, MA Citi Performing Arts Center
09/20 Chicago, IL Vic Theatre
09/27 San Francisco, CA Palace of Fine Arts
09/28 Portland, OR Portland Center for Performing Arts
10/19 Los Angeles, CA Tenacious Ds Festival Supreme

Waltz with Bashir


A potent and profound document of war and its aftermath done as a cartoon whats that all about? Watch and learn, cynics, even if you think animation is strictly for kung-fu pandas and you know squat about assassinated Lebanese president Bashir Gemayel. For whats on view in Ari Folmans Waltz With Bashir, submitted for Oscar consideration by Israel as both foreign-language film and animated feature, is hallucinatory brilliance in the service of understanding the psychic damage of war.

Folman, a former Israeli soldier who served during the 1982 Israeli-Lebanese war, has repressed his memories of the invasion of Beirut more specifically, the massacre of Palestinian civilians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. Though the killings were committed by the Christian Phalangist militia as payback for the murder of their leader, Bashir, the Israeli army stood by and reportedly sent up flares to aid the slaughter of men, women and children. In the years since, Folman cut off ties to the men he served with. The movie is his attempt to make some kind of sense of what happened by interviewing those involved. Folman took a graphic-novel approach because, in his words, animation functions on the border between reality and the subconscious.

From the first haunting scene a combat survivors recurring nightmare of 26 barking dogs he was forced to shoot to keep an element of surprise the movie grips you and wont let go. Folman cuts deep with images of his young self, of naked boys emerging from the sea to pull on uniforms, of a crazed soldier dancing with his rifle as he fires randomly at unseen snipers, and a final glimpse of devastating reality. Get ready to be knocked for a loop.

Trailers of the Week: Shaft, Dumbo, Childs Play


Whats shakin regarding our brand new trailers this week? Weve got the return of Disneys airborne pachyderm; the return of a Stephen King fan-favorite and a pint-sized slasher-flick icon; and the return of one of Blaxploitation mother sorry, were now being told by a trio of back-up singers to shut our mouth. (Does Hollywood have any new ideas? No. No, it does not.) To be fair, theres also a peek of a fresh animated franchise thats coming soon to a theater new you. Heres your weekly trailer round-up.

Childs Play
Welcome back, Chuck! Everyones favorite two-foot tall plastic killer returns for a reboot, now terrorizing a young man (Gabriel Bateman) and his mom (Aubrey Plaza). We have no idea whether this is going to be the least bit good, but 50 bonus points for an ingenious use of the theme from The Courtship of Eddies Father (People, let me tell you about my beeeeeeeeest friennnnnd ) and 10,000 bonus points for including Brian Tyree Henry. Opens June 21st.

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Dumbo
Its a nice, slightly more extended look at this live-action take on the Disney animated classic, coming straight from the imagination of Tim Burton. We meet a few more of the surrounding circus folk, get a better sense of Lil Dumbos massive earspan, a tad more Michael-Keaton-being-evil and an overall sense of what the Alice in Wonderland director is bringing to the table here. It hits theaters on March 29th.

Pet Sematary
Stephen Kings genuinely unnerving 1983 novel has already been adapted for the screen once, and folks seem to be up in arms about some of the changes this new version is applying to the source material. Well let you see the trailers reveal of the switcheroo and regardless, were still curious to see how this 2019 take on a family, a tragedy and burial ground that doesnt exactly count as a final resting place will play out. Due date: April 5th.

Shaft
Its a Shaft for all seasons! One John Shaft Jr. (Jessie T. Usher) shows up at the doorstep of his Pops, i.e. Samuel L. Jacksons John Shaft from the 2000 remake of the 70s Blaxploitation classic. Soon, father and son are getting involved in gunplay and fisticuffs (Are there no nonviolent people in Harlem?! the kid asks after getting socked in the jaw). Then guess who else shows up? Richard Roundtree, a.k.a. Original Recipe Shaft! Holy shit, we have ourselves a Shaftiverse!!! (Technically this movie should be called Shafts, but, er, that sounds a tad nasty.) Also Regina Hall shows up as Juniors mother, and you know how we feel about Regina Hall. Opens June 14th.

Wonder Park
Suburban kids make their own amusement park with a few planks, some shopping carts and good old-fashioned moxie and verve. Then the head engineer of this endeavor stumbles across an actual abandoned theme park in the woods near her house and apparently its overrun with chimpanzombies? Also some talking animals show up and the trailer tells us that if you can imagine it, you can ride it, which translates to a rollercoaster known as the Skyflinger and a fish carousel. Jennifer Garner, Matthew Broderick, Kenan Thompson, John Oliver, Mila Kunis and Ken Jeong lend their voices. Your kids will love it. Hopefully. March 15th.

Flatliners Review: This Thriller Remake Is a Fright Free-Fiasco


Im dumbfounded by the idea of remaking a movie that was no damn good in the first place. Is it the possibility of making it better? The exact opposite happens with Flatliners, an update of the 1990 Joel Schumacher film that became a hit by corralling hot young talent of the day (Julia Roberts, Kiefer Sutherland, Kevin Bacon) into a trippy premise about medical students experimenting with stopping their hearts for a few minutes to see what death is like. Credit Flatliners 2.0, with a script by Ben Ripley of Source Code, for being even more witless and stupefyingly dull than the original. Thats really saying something. Sutherland, his hair gone steel gray, is back for the retread, this time playing an old-fart doctor riding hard on the younguns. Ellen Page is stuck with the role of Courtney, a med student obsessed with life after death because she killed her kid sister during a texting-while-driving incident. Maybe shell see her again in the great beyond before Courtneys brain goes dead after four minutes. Courtney persuades four fellow students to help her. She cant just stop her own heart in a hospital basement, she needs a team to revive her.

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Though skeptical, Marlo (Nina Dobrev of The Vampire Diaries), Jamie (James Norton of Grantchester), and Sophia (Kiersey Clemon, of Dope) say yes. The older and wiser Ray (Diego Luna of Rogue One) is dragged in to assist in case the others fuck up, which they invariably do. They also go flatlining themselves, except for Ray. The scariest thing in this fright-free fiasco is thinking medical schools are producing doctors this clueless (its like a flash-forward to a world where Trump gets his way on health care). At one point, Marlo suggests that they should bottle flatlining and sell it as a club drug. Bummer idea, since the only fun side effect is getting a brain boost, helpful in exam taking. Mostly, these flatliners just have nightmares about the people theyve sinned against and then get all crazy and suicidal until they figure out that temporary death is the next best thing to a 12-step program. Director Niels Arden Oplev, of the excellent Danish version of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, appears to have lost his ability to create tension, much less sustain it. The dream sequences of the afterlife all look like cheap ripoffs from last-century vidgames (for the real deal in sci-fi splendor, check out next weeks Blade Runner 2049). Flatliners isnt a total washout. After watching endless, repetitive scenes of actors simulating death, sleepy audiences will experience a nerve-deadening helplessness very close to coma. At least it ends the agony of listening to flatliners preach about the need to forgive ourselves. Note to the makers of this film: youre unforgiven.

Watch Ice Cube, Charlie Day Spar in Fist Fight Trailer


Most everyone has witnessed fights break out while in school, but teachers are supposed to potentially keep the peace. However, thats not the case in the forthcoming Fist Fight, where teachers played by Ice Cube and Its Always Sunny in Philadelphias Charlie Day gear up to kick each others asses in whats built up in the trailer to be an epic battle at the school where they both teach.

Ali vs. Frazier, 2Pac vs. Biggie, Batman vs. Superman flash across the screen in the trailer clip. Thats clearly hyperbole judging from the video, which emphasizes comedy over any trained brawn or long-built tension with world-threatening repercussions.

Still, Ice Cubes character Ron Strickland is ready to throw down with Days Andy Campbell on the last day of class when Campbell accidentally crosses his much tougher and deeply feared colleague, as the videos description details. Days character seems rather meek and woefully unprepared for the endeavor.

Im gonna fight you, Ice Cubes Strickland threatens. Parking lot, after school. Its on. With those menacing words, Days Campbell sets out to prepare, but his fight day advisers dont seem to be too encouraging. Tracy Morgans character doesnt find the way Campbell forms a fist very impressive. Meanwhile, Campbell is also told that maybe hed be better off playing dead like a possum or anything thats, like, a pussy animal.

The film also stars Jillian Bell, Dean Norris, Christina Hendricks, Dennis Haysbert and JoAnna Garcia Swisher.

Its Always Sunny in Philadelphias Richie Keen directs the film, which hits theaters on February 17th.

The Assassination of Richard Nixon


True story: six months before Richard Nixon resigned, in 1974, screw-up husband, father and salesman Samuel Byck tried to take him out, in a prescient 9/11 scenario, by hijacking a jet and crashing it into the White House.

Byck failed but died trying. This prototypical little-guy loser felt betrayed by his family, his job and his country. He viewed Tricky Dick as the symbol of his torment. First-time director and co-writer Niels Mueller saw Byck (called Bicke to allow for fictional finagling) as a means to investigate the psychological underpinings of the American dreamer betrayed. Its a fierce and noble quest that Mueller doesnt quite pull off.

No matter. The reliably brilliant Sean Penn does. Penn gets the look right (the mustache, the polyester suits) and the halting speech. But the beauty of this astonishing performance, a worthy follow-up to his Oscar role in Mystic River, is the way Penn finds the loneliness that isolates Bicke from his waitress wife (Naomi Watts), his friend (Don Cheadle), his boss (Jack Thompson), his brother (a superb Michael Wincott) and, ultimately, the world. It isnt easy to watch Bicke deteriorate into madness this riveting film qualifies as the anti-crowd-pleaser but Penn makes it unthinkable to turn away.

Hollywood Weighs Impact of Dark Knight Rises Shooting


Grief may have weighed heavily on the minds of Hollywood executives on Friday afterthe massacre at a midnight screening ofThe Dark Knight Rises, but so must have money. After all, the latestBatmansequels release this weekend was supposed to be one of the biggest movie openings of all time, and tens (maybe hundreds) of millions of dollars were at stake.

Before the Friday morning tragedy,The Dark Knight Riseshad been on track to rival the record-breaking $207 million opening ofThe Avengersearlier this summer. Midnight screenings (which took place before the news of the Colorado shooting broke) yieldedan estimated $30.6 million, according to distributor Warner Bros., a figure second only to the $43.5 million earned at midnight screenings of the finalHarry Pottermovie last summer. Still, wouldnt escapist moviegoers prefer to see something other than the film the victims were watching, a picture whose grim tone and relentless violence would serve only as further reminders of the real-life horror?

Warner Bros. has already taken some steps to avoid insensitive reminders. On Friday morning,the studio yanked the trailers for its upcoming releaseGangster Squadwhich contains a sequence in which gunmen shoot up a cinema from theaters (including some where it preceded screenings ofThe Dark Knight Rises) and from the Internet. The studio also canceled a premiere for TheDark Knight Risesin Paris, a move that underscores the fact that the films potentially massive overseas take is also at risk.

In America, many theater chains showing the movie were preparing to beef up security with additional personnel. Of course, the extra cost to exhibitors and the added hassle for viewers may dampen the weekend box office as well.

Families will be much more cautious about bringing their brood to the theaters this weekend, Jeff Bock,senior box office analyst at Exhibitor Relations Co, tells Rolling Stone.The reality of what happened in Aurora cannot be overlooked or placated. The violence inherent toThe Dark Knight Risesmay just be too much for people looking for simple escapism this weekend, considering the reality of what happened. And for potential moviegoers that were wary about seeing it in the first place, they may just skip it altogether.

Gitesh Pandya, editor ofBox Office Guru, believes the killings wont have much effect on the films opening take.Its an awful and senseless tragedy and the opening weekend may see a minor impact, Pandya says. Those now resisting the film and those even more curious may end up canceling each other out.

Beyondits implications for opening weekend, however, the Colorado rampage sent quite a shockwave down Hollywoods backlots, Bock says. He predicts that the tragedy would force the MPAA ratings board to be less lenient about violence. (The Dark Knight Risesis rated PG-13, not R.) This shooting may have far-reaching ramifications as far as the MPAA is concerned, he says. It will certainly fuel conservatives fire about violence in movies, now that they have a horrific incident to fall back on.

Not that stricter ratings will stop Hollywood from making violent entertainment. Darker action films and comic movies will continue to get made, Pandya says.They are not at fault here.

The immediate impact is still hard to gauge. Late Friday, Warner Bros. issued astatementsaying itwouldnt release box office estimatesuntil Monday, out of respect for the Aurora victims. Nonetheless, Deadlineestimated that the film had earned $77 million on Friday(including the tally from midnight screenings and presold tickets), putting it on track for a weekend total of about $170 million. That would fall well short of theAvengersmilestone but would still set a record for a 2D movie. (Based on estimates from rival studios, Varietyis putting Fridays earnings at $75 million.)

At least one theater figured out how to encourage people to seeThe Dark Knight Riseswithout appearing insensitive. That was Hollywoods ArcLight Cinema, which put up a collection box for donations to the victims families.

Watch Fan-Shot Recording of N.W.A Biopic Trailer


Earlier this month, an enterprising Ice Cubefan in Australia uploaded a bootleg recording of the trailer for the upcoming N.W.A.biopic, Straight Outta Compton, which the rapper showed during a concert in Sydney.

Though the video quality isnt the best, the clip offers a clear look at what the movie has in store. Over a montage of a DJ cutting records, LAPD officers patrolling the block and a low-rider bouncing through a crowd, Paul Giamatti, who plays Jerry Heller N.W.A.s manager and the co-founder of Ruthless Records sets the scene. Let me tell you what I see here: A lot of raw talent, swagger, bravado. People are scared of you guys, they think youre dangerous, but you have a unique voice the world needs to hear it.

The rest of the clip focuses on the key players, Eazy-E (Jason Mitchell), Dr. Dre (Corey Hawkins) and Ice Cube (OShea Jackson Jr., the rappers actual son), and shows the turbulence surrounding the bands rise to fame. Amidst shots of Dre during a prison stint and Eazy-E telling off Heller (Youve got your way of dealing with it, Ive got mine), the trailer boasts footage that capturesthe torrid conditions of South Central Los Angeles, which informed the groups game-changing sound.

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During an interview with radio station KCRW in April, director F. Gary Gray who was then holding open auditionsfor the five members of N.W.A. spoke about the importance of making a movie that solidified the bands cultural importance by placing them in the proper historical context. Its not unlike Social Networkor American Graffiti where you take a place and time in America, especially as it relates to popular culture, and you see the shift, and they were right there and created part of the pivot that America took in entertainment, he said.

After initially being announced in 2009, Straight Outta Compton is scheduled to open in theaterson August 14th.

Watch Meryl Streep Sing and Shred in Ricki and the Flash Trailer


Meryl Streep shows off her honed rock and roll chops in the new trailer for Jonathan Demmes forthcoming film,Ricki and the Flash. The family drama starsStreep as the titular Ricki, a rocker who returns home to make amends with her estranged children after finding out her daughter Julie (played by Streeps real life daughter, Mamie Gummer) has been unceremoniously dumped.

The film draws inspiration from one of rocks greatest tropes choosing the guitar over the family and the trailer finds Ricki grappling with her own choices while battling a torrent of righteous disappointmentfrom herkids, ex-husband (Kevin Kline) and new wife (Audra McDonald). Amidst theintensity, the clip offers short bursts of rock and roll redress, as well as screenwriter Diablo Codys wicked sense of humor.One day youre gonna wake up and find a gray hair and I dont mean on your head, Ricki tells Julie with a classic embarrassing mom cackle.

As Demme told Entertainment Weeklyin April, the soundtrack for Ricki and the Flash was recorded in front of a live audienceand includes Streep performing classic Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty cuts (My Love Will Not Let You Down and American Girl, respectively), plus a rendition of Lady Gagas Bad Romance. The film also featuresan original track, Cold One, written by Jenny Lewis and Jonathan Rice.

Committed actress she is, Streep practiced guitar for six months in preparation for the film.One day on set, Demme remembered, She goes, Jonathan, look! Blood! Meryl had shred so fiercely, a little blood had spattered on her baby blue dress.

Ricki and the Flash opens on August 7th.

Creed Bratton Dishes on Season Eight of The Office

A few months ago, Creed Bratton sat down with the entire cast of The Office to read through the script of last seasons penultimate episode ...