That DGA snub smarts all the more this morning: “IN CONCLUSION: This is a standard horse movie about projecting human ideals, emotions, and symbolism onto animals, with a decent war movie sandwiched in the middle. There are about four ‘pretty horsey runs really fast’ scenes, so I give it 4 out of 5 horseshoes!” [ The Hairpin ]
“It’s got Ben Affleck as a big, dumb mook, and, well, he’s pretty good at it. And it’s got Jennifer Lopez playing her most interesting character since Out of Sight But those two are the reason that Gigli arrived with such built-in hostility from moviegoers and critics, because this was the film where the duo met and fell into the PDA-heavy romance that become such a constant, unceasing annoyance in the months that followed. It was a classic example of buyer’s remorse — through tabloids and entertainment ‘news’ programs, we couldn’t get enough Bennifer coverage, and then, in the blink of an eye, we’d had enough, we were done with them, and we didn’t want to see anything that had anything to do with them.” Yeah! Sheesh. Actually, no , but still. [ Flavorwire ]
We review Blink’s long-awaited, decidedly dark comeback album, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Blink-182 Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Sometime around 2003, Blink-182 decided it was time to tack their dirty joke doctorates to the wall (presumably in their respective offices, which is where everyone’s degree eventually ends up) and press on as a more serious-minded outfit. The reasons behind that decision were many — the new perspective that comes with fatherhood, a decade spent on the road, recording with Robert Smith — though, truth be told, their somber new suits never seemed to fit, mostly because, at that point, they were best known for putting porn stars in their videos and giving their albums titles like Take off Your Pants and Jacket and Enema of the State . Of course, in the eight years since their last album, a whole lot has changed. Blink-182 splintered in 2005 , subsequently sparred in the press , attempted to conquer the world with non -Blink projects , endured the deaths of longtime producer Jerry Finn and close friend Adam “DJ AM” Goldstein , and in late 2008, drummer Travis Barker was seriously injured in a plane crash that killed four, including two of his associates. Needless to say, they’ve earned the right to be serious. And on their long-awaited Neighborhoods album (due September 27), they take full advantage, cramming the past 96 months of doubt, darkness and death into just 49 minutes — that’s the running time of the deluxe edition — and doing so quite convincingly. For the first time in their career, Blink seem comfortable in those somber suits. Sadly, it’s because they’ve worn them to so many funerals. Lyrically, Neighborhoods is the bleakest thing Blink have ever done, haunted by specters both real — depression, addiction, loss — and imagined. Death is a near constant, showing up in songs like the thundering “Natives” (“Maybe I’m better off dead”), the crunching “After Midnight” (“Standing close to death”), and the snarling “Hearts All Gone” (“Let’s drink ourselves to death”). Shoot, even first single “Up All Night” is highlighted by a corker of a chorus: “All these demons/they keep me up at night.” There’s a reason the first song on the album is called “Ghost on the Dancefloor”: Neighborhoods feels less like a rock record than it does an exorcism. Sonically, it’s practically nocturnal, melding the electronic flourishes of Mark Hoppus and Barker’s +44 project and the laser-light grandeur of Tom DeLonge’s Angels & Airwaves into a sound that recalls nothing so much as dark streets and black expanses, mostly of the suburban variety (the field behind the 7-Eleven, the cul-de-sac illuminated by the single streetlight, etc.). Even the chords — and there are a lot of them — are dark, as if DeLonge has dipped his Epiphone in ink. Hoppus’ bass booms ominously and Barker’s backbeats are skittering, scraping and downright scary in parts. That said, it’s not all doom and gloom. Blink still know how to write a walloping chorus, and, much like the chords, there are a lot of them on Neighborhoods. In most instances, they provide brief respites from the general bleakness: “Wishing Well” has DeLonge going “la-da-da-da-da,” the hook to “Love Is Dangerous” is practically buoyant, and, of course, there’s the aforementioned “Up All Night,” which booms and crunches like the Blink of old. And speaking of the old Blink, well, they’re largely gone here (the synthy, star-smattered opening of “Ghost on the Dancefloor” serves notice of that fact). But given everything that went into Neighborhoods lengthy gestation — it’s the rare album that took so long to come out that it actually contains a song, “Kaleidoscope,” about how long it took to come out — you can certainly understand that transformation. Blink have grown up, mostly because life forced them to, and willing or not, that maturity fits. Neighborhoods is a deep, dark, downright auto-biographical effort, and when Hoppus sings “Hold on, the worst is yet to come” (on the bopping “MH 4.18.2011”), you don’t really believe him. The worst is over. It’s all good from here on out. Related Artists blink-182
Bassist says upcoming project reflects the band’s past and even gets a bit dark. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Jim Cantiello It’s already been described as “ambitious” and “weird,” and now Mark Hoppus is tossing another adjective onto the ever-growing pile of descriptives used for Blink-182’s upcoming album : “expansive.” That’s what he told MTV News backstage at Z100’s Jingle Ball in New York, but he didn’t stop there. Hoppus also hinted that the band’s forthcoming disc will also be an all-encompassing affair, one that not only harkens back to Blink’s past, but also touches on the dark days they’ve had in the present, including the deaths of longtime producer Jerry Finn and friends Chris Baker and DJ AM . “We’ve gone through a lot of really heavy stuff over the past few years. … There’s plenty of heavy stuff to write about,” Hoppus said. “I think in moments it will [be dark]. We’re still just barely getting into the whole writing process. We have about three or four songs done. I wouldn’t say it’s going to be a dark record; I think it’s really an expansive record. There’s stuff that sounds like what we were doing on the last Blink record, and there’s stuff that sounds like what we were doing 10 years ago and stuff that we’ve never done before.” Of course, whether all that equates to a “mature” album is a matter of debate, one Hoppus wants no part of. Because after a lengthy hiatus and several dark days, he and his Blink mates are now focusing on the future — and it looks bright indeed. “There’s going to be a new record, tours, the whole deal,” he said. “We’re in the studio pounding it out right now, and it’s going really good. It’s been so great to be back in the studio with Tom and Travis creating a new album. We can’t wait to get it out there.” What are you expecting from a new Blink album? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Blink-182: A Career Retrospective Related Artists blink-182
Posted onSeptember 29, 2010byBenny Hollywood|Comments Off on Krackoon Trailer: Because What the World Needs Now is a Crack-Addicted Raccoon Splatter Flick
In a world where everything from tires to mad cows can turn fiercely homicidal in the blink of an eye, it was always kind of comforting to think that raccoons always stopped just short of murder — that the worst we could expect from them was a nocturnal trashivore binge or some medium-grade campsite ravaging. Damn you, Krackoon , for snuffing out that comfort with your nightmare visions of crack-addled, gut-munching critters terrorizing the Bronx. Like we didn’t have enough problems with steroidal bedbugs .
‘We decided it’s time to get back in the studio and do what we do,’ he tells MTV News. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Larry Carroll Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus Photo: Ethan Miller/ Getty Images Mark Hoppus has heard all the talk about the Blink-182 album not coming out until 2011 , and he’s determined not to let that happen
Wentz tells MTV News the track ‘sounds nothing like Blink or Fall Out Boy.’ By James Montgomery Pete Wentz and Mark Hoppus Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images Over the past week, Mark Hoppus and Pete Wentz have rekindled their Twitter relationship (the same passionate affair that gave us the famed “Octo-Drive” last year), penning a series of odes to one another that mentioned “crazy-ass sandwiches” and, more notably, some mysterious new songs the two were collaborating on.
Dyrdek brings back R&B alter ego Bobby Light for Blink’s reunion tour. By Eric Ditzian Travis Barker and Rob Dyrdek (as his alter-ego “Bobby Light”) Photo: MTV Rob Dyrdek is a man with big dreams and deep resources. On Thursday’s (October 8) episode of MTV’s “Fantasy Factory,” the pro skater-turned-reality-TV star decides it’s time to indulge his live-music pipe dream and sets his sights on one of the biggest acts in rock music to make it come true: Blink-182 .
Mark Hoppus of Blink 182 shaves Pete Wentz's hair on stage at Madison Square Garden, proclaiming the death of the Emo Haircut. No more greasy sideswipe! I guess it's better to get rid of it now before it inevitably becomes Neil Hamburger hair . Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment