Tag Archives: brendan-fraser

Katy Perry: Taylor Swift Tried to Destroy Me!

The are plenty of sequels no one cares about this summer: You’ve got Tom Cruise picking up where Brendan Fraser left off (sadly, not in Encino Man 2 ); Johnny Depp trotting out the same sea-faring Keith Richards schtick he’s been working since 2003; and of course, More Motherf–king Minions .  But not even the stalest of movie franchises can compete with eyeroll-inducing tedium that comes with yet another round of the endless  feud between Katy Perry and Taylor Swift . If you saw her cringe-inducing dabs during her recent SNL performance, you know that Katy has been waging a non-stop war against coolness, but she’s taken time out from that tireless campaign to fire more shots at her lanky, blonde rival. The beef began anew when Katy released “Swish, Swish,”  a single in which she took some pretty blatant digs at Taylor. It continued when Katy challenged Taylor to “finish” their feud during an appearance on The Late, Late Show with James Corden .  It’s still not totally clear what she meant by that comment (fingers crossed for a West Side Story -esque dance-fight), but one thing is abundantly apparent: Katy has no intention of letting this thing go. Asked about her comments to Corden in a recent interview with NME, Perry elaborated – but kept it cryptic: “Well, James Corden makes me and the whole world feel very safe,” Perry said. “No one has asked me about my side of the story, and there are three sides of every story: one, two, and the truth.” That may sound like a fairly Zen take on the matter, but Katy says she’s no ancient Eastern ascetic: “I mean, I’m not Buddha — things irritate me,” she told the magazine. “I wish that I could turn the other cheek every single time, but I’m also not a pushover, you know? Especially when someone tries to assassinate my character with little girls [her fans]. That’s so messed up!” Yeah, she kinda upped the ante with the character assassination comment. Perhaps a bit melodramatic, since this is a woman who was often by Hillary Clinton’s side on the campaign trail, and has therefore seen the consequences of true character assassination firsthand. Speaking of which, we’re surprised Katy never reminds her fans of those rumors that Taylor voted for Trump . You want to make sure your predominantly under-30 audience stays on your side, we can’t think of a better method that pointing out that your rival might be in league with the Orange Menace. View Slideshow: 21 Celebrity Feuds We Never Saw Coming

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Katy Perry: Taylor Swift Tried to Destroy Me!

Berlinale Dispatch: The Taviani Brothers — Who? — Return with a Great Shakespeare-in-Prison Movie

There were many happy faces among critics on Saturday, the third day of the Berlinale. Because despite what I wrote yesterday about the criticism the festival has faced in recent years, particularly in terms of the films chosen for competition, nearly everyone I’ve spoken to thinks this year’s festival is off to a promising start. Of the six competition films that have been screened so far, not one has set any of my random sampling of critic friends howling with derision, or walking around wearing a perpetual scowly-frowny face. When the festival lineup was announced, friends who had to write pregame assessments had a hard time finding even one or two movies that, sight unseen, had the potential to stand out. But on the strength of what we’ve seen so far, it appears that the best of this festival, whatever that might be, will again come from left field, as it did last year with Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation . Not every edition of every festival starts out that way, with a sense of adventure and anticipation. Don’t quote me yet, but we may be onto something special here. We can attribute part of the buoyant mood to the reception of the screening of Paolo and Vittorio Taviani’s Caesar Must Die on Saturday morning. In the late 1970s and early 1980s the Taviani Brothers rode high, on an internationally cresting wave, with pictures like Padre Padrone and The Night of the Shooting Stars . But in recent years, mentioning their name would be likely to elicit a blank stare or a “Taviani Who?” Even though the brothers have been steadily making films in Italy since then, they’ve dropped off the map in the United States, and even at home their profile hasn’t exactly been blazing. But Caesar Must Die may reignite the fortunes of this octogenarian directing team. The picture is stark and alive in its simplicity; rendered mostly in black-and-white, it’s gorgeous to look at — you could practically use it as an illustrated textbook on framing and composition. Caesar Must Die is a sort-of documentary that tells the story of a group of prison inmates — incarcerated at Rome’s maximum security Rebibbia — who mount a production of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Footage from the actual performance frames the picture: In the opening scene, we see a bunch of stubbly, rough-looking guys, wearing simple, stylized costumes that give the whole affair the aura of a children’s holiday pageant, doing some pretty interesting things with Shakespeare’s language. Not all of those things are, in the strict sense, good. But even the “bad” actors among this bunch — and remember, they’re not just nonprofessionals but convicted criminals, for Christ’s sake — contribute to the intense, quiet power of the final work. Most of Caesar Must Die is devoted to watching these men work their way through the material during rehearsal, learning its ins and outs, its dips and dives, and teasing out nuances and details that mean something to them. Sometimes the Tavianis draw the parallels between art and life a little too starkly. We don’t really need to hear the inmates reflecting on how Julius Caesar speaks to them when we can see how, in their proto-method-acting way, they bring every scrap of their experience to rehearsal: They touch each other warily but tenderly; when it’s time for a character to draw a knife, you can tell the actors respect it as both a weapon and a symbol, even though it’s presumably made out of plastic. You can bet these guys know a lot about duplicity and betrayal and power struggles, and they bring all of that to bear as they tangle with this challenging material, and with each other. The most wonderful sequence in this overall very fine picture may be the montage of the actors’ auditions, as they meet with the play’s director – a professional brought in from the outside – and try to impress him with their swagger and capacity for pathos. Many of them have both in spades. Some are awkwardly touching; others come off like they’ve spent too much time channeling Robert De Niro; and some are simply naturals, able to summon that deep-rooted whatever-it-is that makes magic happen in live performance. The picture also features a lovely, haunting Bernard Herrmann-inflected score — in places I could hear shadows of Taxi Driver . When Caesar Must Die eventually shows up in American theaters — and it will — it’s going to be easy as pie for marketing people to sell: An uplifting story about prison dudes finding meaning in art can pretty much sell itself. But even though that line essentially describes what happens in Caesar Must Die , it doesn’t come close to capturing the simultaneously joyous and mournful resonance of the picture. Caesar Must Die is really just about the way art lives on through people, sometimes in unlikely ways. There’s no way to keep it behind bars. Saturday’s press screening of Barbara, from German director Christian Petzold, didn’t draw the same kind of rapturous audience affection that Caesar Must Die did. But then, it’s a very different type of movie. In Barbara , a beautiful but rather blank-faced young doctor – played by the superb German actress Nina Hoss — arrives in a small East German town to take a new job at a tiny hospital. She doesn’t seem too happy to be there, though clearly the doc in charge – Ronald Zehrfeld, who somewhat resembles Brendan Fraser and is equally charming — takes an immediate shine to her. It’s 1980, as the movie’s press notes tell us, though if you go in cold, you probably won’t be able to immediately discern when and where the action is taking place. That’s probably intentional, and the approach works. This isn’t The Lives of Others, where the East-West divide is practically a major character; instead, it’s just a story about people living in constrained (and at times dangerous) circumstances and yearning for something more. Barbara is a drama and a romance, and it’s also laced with dry, delicate humor. There were times when the German members of the audience would laugh at a joke that I couldn’t quite get, and yet Petzold — the director behind the 2007 drama Yella, also featuring Hoss — is such a master of tone and mood that I could feel the vibrations of the movie’s subtle humor, even if I’d be hard-pressed to articulate it. Barbara starts out slow and then moves even slower — but by the end, somehow, it got me in its gentle clutches. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Berlinale Dispatch: The Taviani Brothers — Who? — Return with a Great Shakespeare-in-Prison Movie

Stephen Baldwin Always Brings His Favorite Knife to Movie Premieres

And now for unsurprising news that you’ll still be shocked to hear: Stephen Baldwin carries a knife to movie premieres. Sigh! If Alec is the august Baldwin, William is the functional, competent Baldwin, and Daniel is the downtrodden Baldwin, Stephen is certainly the wild card. (Those of us who watched both of his seasons on Celebrity Mole know this best.) Let an intrepid reporter tell you her story of interviewing Stephen and encountering his four-inch blade.

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Stephen Baldwin Always Brings His Favorite Knife to Movie Premieres

Paul Haggis and Brendan Fraser Win Crash Lawsuit Against Producer Bob Yari

In long forgotten lawsuits news today, a judge has ruled in favor of Crash director Paul Haggis and star Brendan Fraser who allege that the film’s producer Bob Yari relied on “creative accounting” as part of an intentional ploy to withhold money from Haggis, Fraser and co-writer Bobby Moresco. More details about the four-year-old lawsuit surrounding the Academy Award-winning film below.

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Paul Haggis and Brendan Fraser Win Crash Lawsuit Against Producer Bob Yari

Empty Theaters, 0% Positive Reviews Greet Sarah Palin Documentary

Customarily on Fridays, when a new movie reaches theaters over the howling, nose-pinching, and often very funny protests of the critical establishment, the saltiest of those responses are gathered here for your browsing pleasure. That’s given that there is enough of a sample, or that the stinker in question is intended for a broad enough audience for us to advise viewers of the open manhole in their path. And then… there’s the Sarah Palin documentary.

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Empty Theaters, 0% Positive Reviews Greet Sarah Palin Documentary

Blockbustus Profoundum! Potter Finale Draws Record-Shattering $43.5 Million at Midnight

We all saw it coming , and not just because of the lines of cape-wearing, wand-waving fans stretching into half the world’s local horizons: The franchise-ending cocktail of anticipation, hype and 3-D also known as Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 earned $43.5 million from midnight showings nationwide. And yes, that would be a record. Handily .

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Blockbustus Profoundum! Potter Finale Draws Record-Shattering $43.5 Million at Midnight

‘Stupidly Busy’ Vanessa Hudgens Gets Downcast Makeover for Gimme Shelter

What’s up in Vanessa Hudgens’s world? “I have been so stupidly busy working on Gimme Shelter . I’m so excited and proud of the work I’ve been doing and let me tell you, you all are going to be SHOCKED with how I look in this movie,” she wrote on Facebook. In the film, Hudgens plays a pregnant teen runaway who goes looking for her father (Brendan Fraser). “It’s crazy sauce.” And how! We’re not in Sucker Punch anymore. [ Facebook via People ]

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‘Stupidly Busy’ Vanessa Hudgens Gets Downcast Makeover for Gimme Shelter

NY Jets Secret Weapon — Zesty Jalapeño

Filed under: Rex Ryan , TMZ Sports , NFL With the NY Jets preparing for this weekend’s playoff battle with the Patriots — TMZ has learned the NYJ coaching staff is drawing their strength from a very familiar place … the snack drawer. Our Jets sources tell us Rex Ryan and company have given… Read more

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NY Jets Secret Weapon — Zesty Jalapeño

Brendan Fraser Drops HUGE Tip After Pedicure

Filed under: Brendan Fraser , Beauty Brendan Fraser takes care of those who take care of his feet … in fact, the actor just got a pedicure in L.A. and hooked up his cuticle pusher with a MONSTER tip! Brenden took his tootsies in for a foot job on Wednesday — and was so impressed with… Read more

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Brendan Fraser Drops HUGE Tip After Pedicure

Brendan Fraser Drops HUGE Tip After Pedicure

Filed under: Brendan Fraser , Beauty Brendan Fraser takes care of those who take care of his feet … in fact, the actor just got a pedicure in L.A. and hooked up his cuticle pusher with a MONSTER tip! Brenden took his tootsies in for a foot job on Wednesday — and was so impressed with… Read more

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Brendan Fraser Drops HUGE Tip After Pedicure