Katy Perry came out during halftime of Super Bowl XLIX like the girl on fire. But while the public continues to talk about Perry’s impressively-staged halftime performance , few are comparing her to Katniss Everdeen. Instead, they’ve taken a close look at her flame-based attire and conjured up the image of… Bam Bam Bigelow?!? It’s not as outlandish as it sounds. Compare Perry’s opening outfit on Sunday night to the ring attire typically donned by this former wrestler and decide: WHO WEARS IT BETTER? Fashion Face-Off! Katy Perry Click Here To Vote for Katy Bam Bam Bigelow Click Here To Vote for Bam Is it hot in here? Or is it this fashion feud between Katy Perry and former wrestler Bam Bam Bigelow? Who looks better in flames? View Poll » Perry has received mixed reviews for her halftime show. Some have praised the artist for such creative looks and sets, while others have come down hard on her for a lack of a strong singing voice and a lack of dancing throughout the performance. But two things remain clear: Katy Perry’s cleavage depiction was a win-win in Las Vegas. Everyone loves Missy Elliott! What did you think of Perry at halftime? Of the comparison made above? Or the Super Bowl in general? Crazy ending, huh?!? Relive all Katy Perry had to offer via the following gallery of GIFs: Katy Perry Halftime Show: See the GIFs 1. Katy Perry ROARS! THIS is how you make an entrance! Katy Perry roared on to the Super Bowl halftime show stage on the back of a giant fake lion.
Even as the U.S. Senate continues to inquire about what it says are misrepresentations of the use of torture in the successful hunt for Al Qaeda mastermind Osama Bin Laden in 2011, filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal defended their Oscar hopeful Zero Dark Thirty at the New York Film Critics Circle Monday night. “I thankfully want to say that I’m standing in a room of people who understand that depiction is not endorsement, and if it was, no artist could ever portray inhumane practices,” Bigelow is quoted as saying in Huff Post, while accepting the organization’s Best Director award. “No author could ever write about them, and no filmmaker could ever delve into the knotty subjects of our time.” Senator John McCain of Arizona and Diane Feinstein of California have criticized the pic as showing water-boarding and extreme isolation among other tactics as being instrumental in the U.S. government’s decade-long search for Bin Laden. “We believe the film is grossly inaccurate and misleading in its suggestion that torture resulted in information that led to the location of [Osama] bin Laden,” Feinstein, McCain and Michigan Senator Carl Levin wrote to Zero Dark Thirty ‘s studio, Sony in December. Writer/producer Mark Boal said he was proud of the film Monday night and is unmoved by criticism which has also come from Oscar-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney. I stand here tonight being extremely proud of the film we made,” he said Monday, while accepting the prize for Best Picture with Bigelow and producer Megan Ellison. “In case anyone is asking, we stand by the film. I think at the end of the day, we made a film that allows us to look back at the past in a way that gives us a more clear-sighted appraisal of the future.” He added jokingly, “Apparently, the French government will be investigating Les Mis .” Jessica Chastain, who plays the CIA operative who tracks down Bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan, which lead to the Navy Seals raid on the compound that resoled in the Al Qaeda head’s death, told David Letterman in a recent appearance that she believes in the film’s accuracy, though acknowledged they had to shorten a decade-long hunt into a feature-length movie “Mark Boal is the investigative journalist so he’s the one who got all the information and I just went and did my job and did my research,” said Jessica Chastain to Letterman who joked that she’s not going to be arrested. “I’m afraid to get called in front of a Senate committee…” laughed Chastain. “In my opinion, this is a very accurate film… I think it’s important to note the film is not a documentary. So of course, there has been some things…We took 10 years and put it in two-and-a-half hours…” [ Sources: Huffington Post , THR ]
Director Kathryn Bigelow and her screenwriting partner Mark Boal are reported to have ended their romantic relationship, according to Buzzfeed.com, making promotion of their new movie a little tricky. Although the Hollywood power couple have never publicly acknowledged their relationship, Buzzfeed says that: “In countless stories since 2010, Boal has been described as Bigelow’s boyfriend.” Indeed, during Monday#39;s Hollywood premiere of the film, Boal and Bigelow were not pictured standing ne
Running a dense two hours thirty, before credits, Zero Dark Thirty reunites director Kathryn Bigelow with reporter-turned-scenarist Mark Boal in re-creating the hunt for Osama bin Laden , rejecting nearly every cliche one might expect from a Hollywood treatment of the subject. Far more ambitious than The Hurt Locker , yet nowhere near so tripwire-tense, this procedure-driven, decade-spanning docudrama nevertheless rivets for most of its running time by focusing on how one female CIA agent with a far-out hunch was instrumental in bringing down America’s most wanted fugitive. Spinning the pic as a thriller, Sony could beat the 9/11-movie curse when the Dec. 19 limited release goes wide in January. Opportunely held for release until after the presidential election had played out, Zero Dark Thirty arrives shrouded in nearly as much mystery as bin Laden’s whereabouts before news broke that a team of Navy Seals had successfully terminated his life on May 2, 2011. The title, military-speak for half-past midnight, refers to the Al Qaeda leader’s time of death, theoretically promising a flashy first-hand account of the raid itself. But Bigelow and Boal reduce the spectacular assault on bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, to the last half-hour in order to dedicate the rest of the film to the lesser-known backstory. By forcing partisan politics into the wings (President George W. Bush goes entirely unseen, while auds’ only glimpse of President Obama is during a 2008 campaign interview), the filmmakers effectively give gender politics the whole stage: The pic presents the highest-profile U.S. military success in recent memory as the work of a single woman, “Maya” ( Jessica Chastain ), inspired by a real CIA analyst Boal discovered during his research, and presented here as the only government official convinced that bin Laden wasn’t “hiding in some cave” (Bush’s words), but somewhere she could find him. Stepping up from a year busy with supporting roles, Chastain may at first seem an unusual choice for the lead. But she shows she has the chops to embody the pic’s iron-nerved protag, holding her own in the testosterone-thick world of CIA black sites and top-level Washington boardrooms. She first appears as witness to a military interrogation in which a colleague resorts to extreme measures to force information from an Al Qaeda money handler (Reda Kateb). Compared with her wild-eyed cowboy of a colleague, Dan (Jason Clarke), Maya’s body language suggests a little girl, clearly uncomfortable with the waterboarding and sexual humiliation that were common practice in the morally hazy rendition era. When Dan leaves the room for a moment, the desperate prisoner tries to appeal to her humanity. She wavers for only a moment before firing back, “You can help yourself by being truthful.” Unlike, for instance, Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling in The Silence of the Lambs , Chastain plays Maya as fragile on the outside, Kevlar-tough beneath the skin. After narrowly surviving one terrorist attack and seeing another promising lead literally blow up in a female colleague’s face, Maya grits her teeth and swears, “I’m gonna smoke everybody involved in this op, and then I’m going to kill bin Laden.” Like Bigelow herself, Maya realizes that actions — or action movies, in the director’s case — are the surest way to combat a tradition in which society doesn’t believe women to be capable of getting the job done, and Zero Dark Thirty follows the character through every significant step along her 10-year journey to hold bin Laden accountable for 9/11. The film opens with audio of a terrified victim of the World Trade Center attack playing over a black screen and uses the emotional power that clip dredges up to fuel everything that follows. The result is neither particularly entertaining nor especially artful, as the filmmakers take a lean, All the President’s Men -style approach to dramatizing an investigation that took nearly a decade to bear fruit. But Boal has clearly constructed this as a more journalistic alternative to a generic gung-ho approach. The script’s blood runs thick with observational detail and military jargon, skipping forward years at a time between scenes to focus on one of two types of incident. The first concerns the slow but steady progress in Maya’s investigation, which hinges on her conviction that any clues they can discover about bin Laden’s courier will eventually lead them back to UBL (the military acronym for bin Laden) himself. The second type involves an ongoing series of terrorist attacks that continue to claim lives as long as bin Laden goes free (never mind that they will not stop once he’s dead). Bigelow keeps her audience on its toes by alternating between the two, allowing virtually no room for subplots or superfluous character baggage beyond what’s needed for the task at hand. With its handheld camerawork, naturalistic lighting and dialogue-drowning sound design (especially heavy on ambient helicopters), the film reflects the latest fashion in cinematic realism, compromised only slightly by the bare-minimum mood setting from Alexandre Desplat’s Middle East-inflected score. Chastain’s presence reminds us we’re watching a movie, and yet, this slight degree of self-consciousness serves to reinforce the point that it’s a woman pushing the process forward. Maya may not be made of the same stuff as her male colleagues, but that’s essential to the operation’s success. While those around her equivocate and refuse to take action, she sticks to her guns and keeps track, in dry-erase marker, of the bureaucratic delays since they’ve located bin Laden. Finally, when the off-camera Obama gives her mission the green light, Maya stares down a pair of cocky Navy Seals (Chris Pratt and Joel Edgerton) and tells them in no uncertain terms that she has no patience for their macho B.S. Only then does Bigelow offer auds what they paid to see: a re-construction of the raid on bin Laden’s compound. Virtuoso as the sequence is to behold, it lacks both the detail of Matt Bissonnette’s bestselling insider memoir No Easy Day and the visceral immediacy of this year’s earlier Seals-supported indie, Act of Valor , as well as the satisfaction of seeing the dead bin Laden’s face (also withheld by the U.S. goverment). Dramatically speaking, the raid feels almost anti-climactic — an epilogue to a personal crusade that ends the moment Maya is taken seriously. Still, considering how seldom female storytellers have been given a chance to operate on this scale, it’s fair to let Bigelow overturn narrative expectations to some degree. The ultra-professional result may be easier to respect than enjoy, but there’s no denying its power, both as a credible reimagining of what went down and a welcome example of distaff resolve prevailing in an arena traditionally dominated by men. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
Filed under: Luna , R.I.P. , TMZ Sports Former WWE superstar Gertrude ” Luna ” Vachon died this morning in Florida. She was 48. Luna wrestled for the WWE from 1993 to 2000 … and had gained notoriety as Bam Bam Bigelow ‘s “main squeeze.” So far, no cause of death has been determined. Story… Read more
Kathryn Bigelow made Oscars history today by becoming the first woman to win the best director award, describing her victory as “the moment of a lifetime”.
Best Pic ture The Hurt Locker Kathryn Bigelow, Mark Boal, Nicolas Chartier and Greg Shapiro Actor in a Leading Role Jeff Bridges Crazy Heart Actor in a Supporting Role Christoph Waltz Inglourious Basterds Actress in a Leading Role …
James Cameron made box-office history this year, but ex-wife Kathryn Bigelow made Oscar history. Her tense Iraq war drama, The Hurt Locker, was named Best Motion Picture of the Year, and…
Best Picture: The Hurt Locker Kathryn Bigelow, Mark Boal, Nicolas Chartier and Greg Shapiro Actor in a Leading Role:Jeff Bridges Crazy Check out NEW MOVIES LIST for New Movies, New Movies Trailers, Watch New Movies, Latest Movies List.