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“Django Unchained” Wins Best Original Screenplay And Other Oscar Highlights [VIDEO]

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After months of infighting amongst the black community over 2012′s most controversial movie, Quentin Tarantino was the clear winner when he walked away with an…

“Django Unchained” Wins Best Original Screenplay And Other Oscar Highlights [VIDEO]

Oscars 2013 Predictions: Best Screenplay Categories

With ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ and ‘Django Unchained’ packing heat, who will win for Original Screenplay? By Kevin P. Sullivan “Zero Dark Thirty” Photo: Columbia Pictures

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Oscars 2013 Predictions: Best Screenplay Categories

Cruel Winter: Celebs Already Having The Worst 2013 Ever

2013 is only 22 days old and everyone on this list is already having the worst year ever. Who knew you could squeeze a dead imaginary girlfriend, epic sports scandals and multiple arrests into three weeks? We didn’t, but it all happened, and it’s only January. Here are the ten celebs already having the worst 2013 ever. Take a look.

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Cruel Winter: Celebs Already Having The Worst 2013 Ever

Red Carpet Beauty: Kerry Washington Dons Another Classic Look At The Django Unchained Premiere In London [Photos]

Hate it or Love it?? Kerry Washington ‘s been on one red carpet after the other while promoting Django Unchained and she’s been a showstopper in each country the cast has visited. For the London premiere of Django, Kerry opted for a more classic look. Donning a white and gray, horse print ball gown by Giles Deacon for the event, Kerry looked stunning as she rocked a berry-stain on her famous lips. Hit the flip for more and check out some of Kerry’s other looks from the promotional tour!

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Red Carpet Beauty: Kerry Washington Dons Another Classic Look At The Django Unchained Premiere In London [Photos]

Selena Gomez: Done with Justin Bieber!

With Justin Bieber smoking weed making all the headlines this week, another major development in this singer’s life has practically gone unnoticed: He and Selena Gomez have broken up again. And sources tell Us Weekly this time, the split will stick. Bieber and Gomez cut their vacation short in Puerta Vallarta, Mexico around New Year’s because they had a “huge fight,” an insider tells this tabloid, adding ominously: “Selena won’t forgive him.” It’s unclear what caused the argument, but Selena spent December 31 with friends in Los Angeles, while Bieber rang in 2013 with Lil Twist , reportedly flirting with girls and, as we all know, smoking some pot a couple days later. But Justin is “really down about the breakup,” a source admits, though that doesn’t mean he’ll get another chance: “Selena is done with him.” Sad stuff. But at least Bieber knows how to make his mood to from low to high… if you know what we mean!

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Selena Gomez: Done with Justin Bieber!

BAFTA Nominations: Lincoln Leads the Way

It’s that time of the year, movie fans. Yesterday, the 2013 Razzie Award nominations were announced. Tomorrow morning, we’ll learn who is up for an Oscar. And now, it’s time to turn our attention overseas, as Great Britain’s answer to the Academy Awards – the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) – will take place on February 10 and its nominees include… Best Film Argo Les Misérables Life of Pi Lincoln Zero Dark Thirty Outstanding British Film Anna Karenina The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel Les Misérables Seven Psychopaths Skyfall Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director Or Producer The Imposter, Bart Layton (Director), Dimitri Doganis (Producer) McCullin, David Morris (Director), Jacqui Morris (Director/Producer) Wild Bill, Dexter Fletcher (Director/Writer), Danny King (Writer) The Muppets, James Bobin (Director) I Am Nasrine, Tina Gharavi (Director/Writer) Director Amour, Michael Haneke Argo, Ben Affleck Django Unchained, Quentin Tarantino Life of Pi, Ang Lee Zero Dark Thirty, Kathryn Bigelow Documentary The Imposter Marley McCullin Searching For Sugar Man West of Memphis Original Screenplay Amour, Michael Haneke Django Unchained, Quentin Tarantino The Master, Paul Thomas Anderson Moonrise Kingdom, Wes Anderson, Roman Coppola Zero Dark Thirty, Mark Boal Adapted Screenplay Argo, Chris Terrio Beasts of the Southern Wild, Lucy Alibar, Benh Zeitlin Life of Pi, David Magee Lincoln, Tony Kushner Silver Lings Playbook, David O. Russell Film Not In the English Language Amour, Michael Haneke, Margaret Ménégoz Headhunters, Morten Tyldum, Marianne Gray, Asle Vatn The Hunt, Thomas Vinterberg, Sisse Graum Jørgensen, Morten Kaufmann Rust and Bone, Jacques Audiard, Pascal Caucheteux Untouchable, Eric Toledano, Olivier Nakache, Nicolas Duval Adassovsky, Yann Zenou, Laurent Zeitoun Leading Actor Ben Affleck, Argo Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln Hugh Jackman, Les Misérables Joaquin Phoenix, The Master Leading Actress Emmanuelle Riva, Amour Helen Mirren, Hitchcock Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty Supporting Actor Alan Arkin, Argo Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained Javier Bardem, Skyfall Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln Supporting Actress Amy Adams, The Master Anne Hathaway, Les Misérables Helen Hunt, The Sessions Judi Dench, Skyfall Sally Field, Lincoln Original Music Anna Karenina Argo Life of Pi Lincoln Skyfall Cinematography Anna Karenina Les Misérables Life of Pi Lincoln Skyfall Editing Argo Django Unchained Life of Pi Skyfall Zero Dark Thirty Production Design Anna Karenina Les Misérables Life of Pi Lincoln Skyfall Costume Design Anna Karenina Great Expectations Les Misérables Lincoln Snow White and the Huntsman Sound Django Unchained The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Les Misérables Life of Pi Skyfall Special Visual Effects The Dark Knight Rises The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Life of Pi The Avengers Prometheus Make Up & Hair Anna Karenina Hitchcock The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Les Misérables Lincoln Short Animation Here To Fall I’m Fine Thanks The Making of Longbird Short Film The Curse Good Night Swimmer Tumult The Voorman Problem EE Rising Star Award Elizabeth Olsen Andrea Riseborough Suraj Sharma Juno Temple Alicia Vikander

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BAFTA Nominations: Lincoln Leads the Way

‘Love & Hip Hop 3’ Premieres Tonight (Get A Sneak Peak At The Cast’s Style)

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‘Love & Hip Hop 3’ Premieres Tonight (Get A Sneak Peak At The Cast’s Style)

Hate It Or Love It?!?! “Django Unchained” Slave Action Figures Go On Sale

Slaves for sale! Django Unchained Slave Action Figures Released Via NewsOne reports: The criticism levied at Quentin Tarantino for his so-called humorous take on slavery in “ Django Unchained ” has been intense as critics claim that he is exploiting a traumatic, ugly period in this nation’s history so far reaching, that the effects are still felt today. Last fall, the National Entertainment Collectibles Association, Inc. (NECA), in tandem with the Weinstein Company, announced a full line of consumer products based on characters from the movie. First up are pose-able eight-inch action figures with tailored clothing, weaponry, and accessories in the likeness of characters played by Foxx, Kerry Washington, Samuel L. Jackson, Leonardo DiCaprio, James Remar and Christoph Waltz. The dolls are currently on sale via Amazon.com. Do you find these action figures off the chain or just plain ole’ offensive??

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Hate It Or Love It?!?! “Django Unchained” Slave Action Figures Go On Sale

Quentin Tarantino ‘Annoyed’ By NPR Question About Sandy Hook

The lessons of Quentin Tarantino’s interview with Terry Gross on NPR?   He has a high tolerance for “viscera” and a low tolerance for questions that attempt to connect Sandy Hook and other incidents of actual violence to the kind found in movies. The Django Unchained director became audibly peeved when Gross asked him the question that every reporter feels compelled to ask filmmakers in the wake of the Connecticut shootings. Here’s NPR’s transcript of the awkward, testy exchange. I’ve taken the liberty of putting Tarantino’s comments about how linking Sandy Hook to violence in movies is “disrespectful” to those who died. I agree with Tarantino. Connecting the shooting to movie-making trivializes what happened in Connecticut, which, as Ross A. Lincoln pointed out in his post on The Hollywood Reporter ‘s poll on media violence, doesn’t bring this country any closer to figuring out how to prevent tragedies like Sandy Hook and Aurora from happening. GROSS: So I just have to ask you, is it any less fun after like the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary, like, do you ever go through a period where you lose your taste for movie violence? And movie violence is not real violence, I understand the difference. But still, are there times when it just is not a fun movie experience for you – either to be making it that way or to be in the audience for something like that? TARANTINO: Not for me. GROSS: So it’s so completely separate, that the reality of violence doesn’t affect at all your feelings about making or viewing very violent or sadistic… TARANTINO: Sadistic? I don’t know. I do know what, I don’t know. I think, you know, you’re putting a judgment on it. GROSS: No, no, no… TARANTINO: You’re putting a judgment on it. GROSS: The characters are sadistic. The characters are sadistic. I’m not talking about, you know, the filmmaker. I’m talking about the characters. I mean, the characters are undeniably sadistic. TARANTINO: Mm-hmm. When you say after the tragedy, what do you mean by that exactly? GROSS: Well, like… TARANTINO: Do you mean like on that day would I watch “The Wild Bunch?” Maybe not on that day. GROSS: Or in the next few days, like while it’s still – while it’s still really fresh in your – while the reality – yeah. TARANTINO: Would I watch a kung fu movie three days after the Sandy Hook massacre? Would I watch a kung fu movie? Maybe, ’cause they have nothing to do with each other. GROSS: You sound annoyed that I’m… (LAUGHTER) TARANTINO: Yeah, I am. GROSS: I know you’ve been asked this a lot. TARANTINO: Yeah, I’m really annoyed. I think it’s disrespectful. I think it’s disrespectful to their memory, actually. GROSS: With whose memory? TARANTINO: The memory of the people who died to talk about movies. I think it’s totally disrespectful to their memory. Obviously, the issue is gun control and mental health. Although it’s not in the transcript t hat NPR posted, at an earlier point in the interview, Tarantino explained that he did tone down some of the violence in Django Unchained . As Samuel L. Jackson mentioned during my interview with him  in December, his favorite scene in the movie, which was cut, involved his character burning off the captured Django’s nipples with a hot poker. The Playlist  also points out that another scene that was briefly glimpsed in the trailer but excised from the movie, involved the rape of Broomhilda. (You can find these scenes in Tarantino’s script for the movie, which the Weinstein Company has posted here .) When Gross asked Tarantino, “What are your limits for..what’s your sensibility for how much splatter, how much violence, how much sadism” in a movie “feels right, like it’s part of the genre” and how much feels like “exploitation,” the filmmaker replied: “I could handle a lot more than I put in this movie,” adding: ” I have a tolerance for viscera, more than the average person.”   But, he explained that after screening earlier, more brutal cuts,  “I traumatized the audience” when his goal was to have them “cheering Django” at the movie’s end.  “If you don’t cheer at the end, I haven’t done the job,” he said.

Oscar Index: PGA Propellant And The N-Word (Nominations!) For ‘Django Unchained’

After a momentary holiday lull, it’s back on! Or as Calvin Candie says in Django Unchained . “We got us a fight going on that’s a good bit of fun.” Academy voters were given one extra day to mull over their Oscar nomination ballots, thanks to a voting deadline extension necessitated by complaints and concerns over the Academy’s first-ever electronic voting system. They could use that 24 hours to digest the Producers Guild Award nominations , which were announced Wednesday, a day early. From here, the awards season proceeds at 48 frames per second , bringing the Oscar race into sharp focus. The Director’s Guild of America nominations for Best Director will be announced Jan. 8, with Oscar nominations announced on the 10th,in advance of the Golden Globes, which will be handed out on the 13th. The PGA ceremony will be held on the 26th, followed by the SAG awards the following night. Feb. 2 brings the DGAs, one of the most reliable Oscar indicators, followed by the Independent Spirit Awards (and the Razzies) on the 23rd and the Oscars on the 24th. This is the earliest Oscar voting in history, Variety’s Jon Weisman noted, and he feared for the “dark horse” candidates as voters race to catch up to the big ticket films such as Django Unchained and Les Miserables that were released at the end of the year. “We’ll never quantify the impact… on the coming Academy Award nominations, but I’m thinking negative,” he writes. The Best Picture race was most impacted this week. So, let’s consult the Gold Linings Playbook to see which films benefited from the PGA bump. Best Picture Since 1990, the winner of the PGA’s Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures -winner was denied on Oscar night only seven times, most recently in 2006, when The Departed took Best Picture honors instead of the PGA’s choice, Little Miss Sunshine . Its 10-film field included most of the expected nominees from A ( Argo ) to Z ( Zero Dark Thirty ). Django Unchained ’s n-word – nomination – only accelerated its momentum, while Beasts of the Southern Wild , a non-union production, deemed ineligible for SAG consideration, and also denied Golden Globe nominations, saw its own Oscar cred strengthened.  (Apparently, Hollywood Foreign Press Association members would rather party with Nicole Kidman than Quvenzhane Wallis ) biggest surprise was the nomination of  Skyfall , which may be poised to do for Bond films what Beauty and the Beast did for animated films; be the first to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar. But Skyfall shouldn’t press its Oscar-night tux just yet. Last year, Bridesmaids , The Ides of March and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo did not parlay their PGA nominations into Best Picture bids. The Master , Flight , and The Dark Knight Rises , each snubbed by the PGA, have their advocates, and should not be counted out. 1. Lincoln 2. Zero Dark Thirty 3. Argo 4. Silver Linings Playbook 5. Django Unchained 6. Les Misérables 7. Life of Pi 8. Beasts of the Southern Wild 9. Moonrise Kingdom 10. Skyfall Ones to watch: The Dark Knight Rises, Flight, The Master Best Director The heat is still on Zero Dark Thirty , now officially the target of a Senate Intelligence Committee investigation over alleged contact between the filmmakers and CIA officials, but Kathryn Bigelow’s nomination is inevitable. Quentin Tarantino is riding taller in the saddle with Django Unchained ’s PGA nomination, but it’s a tight field and Life of Pi  and Silver Linings Playbook are safer, far less controversial films. Still, it helps to have Samuel L. Jackson in your corner. The PGA snub of The Master sees Paul Thomas Anderson’s  Oscar hopes further recede. 1. Steven Spielberg ( Lincoln ) 2. Kathryn Bigelow ( Zero Dark Thirty ) 3. Ben Affleck ( Argo ) 4. Ang Lee ( Life of Pi ) 5. David O. Russell ( Silver Linings Playbook ) Ones to watch: Quentin Tarantino (Django Unchained). Michael Haneke (Amour), Tom Hooper (Les Miserables), Paul Thomas Anderson (The Master)

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Oscar Index: PGA Propellant And The N-Word (Nominations!) For ‘Django Unchained’