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REVIEW: A Surprise Twist Steals the Show from the Heroine in Bold, Unusual Brave

Pixar is at its best when it’s making movies about rats working in restaurants and families of superheroes with not-so-super powers; not so much when it’s spinning cautionary environmental tales with robots-in-love subplots and sentimental weepers about grumpy codgers “learning to love again.” Somewhere at the more golden end of that yardstick is Brave , in which a peppery redheaded Scottish princess from days of yore named Merida – her voice is provided by the wonderful Glasgow-born actress Kelly Macdonald – decides she doesn’t want to marry from the selection of gents her parents have chosen for her and would much prefer traipsing through the forest with her trusty bow-and-arrow. Note: This review includes spoilers. Except Brave doesn’t go where you’re probably expecting it to. (And if you’re sensitive to spoilers, you may not wish to read further.) There isn’t an ultimate prince, a swain of Merida’s choice who steps in to offer her everlasting happiness, while letting her be herself, of course. This is a story about mothers and daughters and the ways they clash over basic, seemingly simple things, only to find their ultimate connection in the very things they can’t change about each other. Even that oversimplifies Brave a little too much, but you get the idea. Brave has a marvelous secret weapon in Emma Thompson, who provides the voice for Merida’s mother, Elinor, a queen with a sense of propriety and a desire to keep her daughter from making bad decisions. But this is a queen who turns into a bear, a big growly girl with a pear-shaped body and a most unladylike manner when it comes to eating fish. The quivering, multi-hued strands of Merida’s curly mane notwithstanding — and they are a sight to behold – the character design of Bear Elinor, coupled with the personality Thompson gives her, steals the show. You might be wondering how a queen turns into a bear. Why, via a witch’s spell, of course. Merida is at the age where she hates her parents, Thompson’s Elinor and the scruffy, burly, affectionate Fergus (Billy Connolly), chiefly because they’re intent on marrying her off, and she wants none of it. She hurls hurtful words at her mother — if you’ve ever been either a teenage girl or the mother of one, the sting will be familiar — and stalks off into the forest on her trusty horse, only to stumble upon the cottage of a witch (Julie Walters), who sells Black Forest-style carved-wood gewgaws as a front for her real trade. Merida, frustrated by her mother’s directives to always behave like a proper lady, and by her insistence that she knows what’s best for her daughter, gives the witch vague, exasperated instructions to “change” her mother. The witch gives her a little magic cake to bring back to the kingdom, and Merida is off and gone before she receives instructions for its proper use. Merida gives the cake to her mother as a wily peace offering, only to watch in dismay as Elinor first falls ill and then awakens as a half-clumsy, half-dainty she bear: Elinor Bear, horrified when she discovers her changed form, reaches instinctively for the delicate crown she wore as a human — it perches on her enlarged, furry head like a lady’s cocktail hat, giving her an aura of ridiculous elegance. But aside from the fact that Elinor simply does not like her new shape, bears are simply not welcome in her kingdom: Years earlier, when Merida was just a sprout, Fergus lost his leg to a great warrior bear and has always hoped to avenge this wrong. What would he do if he found a girl-bear in his own castle, not realizing it was his own wife? Both Elinor and Merida know the scene wouldn’t be pretty. The best part of Brave is the section in which Merida and Bear Elinor head out into the wilderness, hoping to find the witch and learn how to break the spell. The grudging camaraderie that forms between them is more like what might happen on your stereotypical father-son camping trip: Elinor Bear scavenges for berries that she believes are edible, only to be told by her more knowledgeable daughter that they’re poisonous. Unable to speak, she points to Merida’s bow, suggesting her daughter will have to be the one to feed them. Later, Bear Elinor learns to catch her own fish in her paws, gulping the shiny wriggling things with unbridled glee. But Bear Elinor will also do anything to protect her child, and she has the physical strength to do so. The newfound symbiosis between Elinor and her daughter could be a metaphor for lots of things, among them the way we switch from child to caretaker when our parents get older. But Brave doesn’t get too hung up on deep meanings. The story is a simple one, told with agility and grace — a little surprising, considering the movie is credited to three directors (Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman and, as co-director, Steve Purcell) and four writers (Andrews, Purcell, Chapman and Irene Mecchi, from a story by Chapman). Perhaps it’s a wonder that Brave hangs together at all, but the picture’s charms just keep mounting in its favor: Merida has three mischievous redheaded triplet brothers, who of course love cake, especially magic cake – their transformation into miniature Three Stooge-style cubs is one of the movie’s silliest delights. And Macdonald makes Merida a likable but not overbearing heroine: At one point she utters the line “It’s just my bow,” and it comes out “It’s just m’ boe,” an adorable and hilarious niblet of Scotspeak. But my heart belongs to Bear Elinor, whose movements and mannerisms are a tender echo of Human Elinor’s – her character is designed and drawn just that carefully. Bear Elinor becomes more and more bearlike as the spell wears on, and if she and Merida can’t reverse the witch’s handiwork, she will be a bear forever. You can see why she doesn’t want that fate: Bear Elinor is embarrassed by her furry clumsiness, by the way she devours whole fish – live ones, no less! – instead of nibbling away at them with a knife and fork, as her human self would do. Yet she’s a marvel of bearlike grace, almost ballerina-like even in her rotund ursine form. It’s inevitable that Elinor will have to return to human form at some point, but her bear form is so much more memorable. It’s the beast in her that’s really the beauty. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: A Surprise Twist Steals the Show from the Heroine in Bold, Unusual Brave

Inessential Essentials: Revisiting Live Action Hero Dolph Lundgren in Red Scorpion

The film: Red Scorpion (1988) Why It’s an Inessential Essential: Co-scripted and produced by Jack Abramoff, Red Scorpion is a starring vehicle for Sweden’s own living action hero, Dolph Lundgren. Being the modest gentle giant that he is, Lundgren has nothing but good things to say about the film during the interview segment he shot for Synapse Films new release of the movie. But that says more about Lundgren’s personality than it does the crackerjack B-movie. As self-styled Lundgren expert Jeremie Damoiseau remarks in his annotated(!) liner notes, Red Scorpion nearly ruined Lundgren’s career (more on this shortly).  Lundgren plays Lieutenant Nikolai Rachenko, a Russian “killing machine” that is tasked with murdering the leader of a group of rebel insurgents leading a coup in Africa. The Russians want the rebels stopped so they hire Rachenko to cozy up to the rebel leader’s advisor, now imprisoned by the Russians. In spite of repeated warnings from a smug, four-letter-word prone American journalist (M. Emmett Walsh, scowling up a storm), the rebel leader’s advisor grows to trust Rachenko, who in turn starts to see the murder and destruction caused by his comrades. Rachenko inevitably changes sides and becomes a hero, but only after being tortured by needles, attacked by scorpions, shot at, assaulted by a tank, thrown onto a moving motorcycle and berated repeatedly by the inimitable Walsh. How the DVD/Blu Ray Makes the Case for the Film:  In his liner note, Damoiseu gives a stirring and comprehensive history of Red Scorpion that reveals how the film’s freaky production history helped to make it a memorable role for the charismatic–look at him pout!–athletic–thighs as big as a Rob Liefeld comic book character!–and smart–has a master’s degree in chemical engineering!–Swede. According to Damoiseau, Red Scorpion was a vanity project for Abramoff, who Lundgren describes during his supplementary interview as “patriotic,” and, “fiercely anti-Soviet.” Case in point: the film’s budget more than doubled from its original $8 million. Furthermore, production on the film continued even after the New York Times reprinted a story that revealed Abramoff and director Joseph Zito were disrespecting the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986 by shooting in South Africa. That article stirred up considerable controversy, like when, to quote Damoiseau, “Sweden’s own Isolate Africa Committee called for a boycott of all films starring Dolph Lundgren.” The controversy surrounding Red Scorpion, which got a meagre first-run domestic release in America of 1,200 screens and grossed $4 million in its first two weeks, also made it difficult for the Lundgren-starrer The Punisher to be released in American theaters one year later in 1989. But at the same time, what makes Red Scorpion so fun is the fact that everyone was clearly throwing caution to the wind when they made it. The film could have been shot anywhere but instead it was shot in the desert, causing the film’s shooting schedule to distend from its original 2 1/2 months to 4 1/2 months. The film’s crew similarly used real guns and real dynamite for stunt-work. And while Tom Savini’s make-up effects certainly wasn’t real, Lundgren did many of his own stunts. Several live black scorpions were let loose on his back in one scene (their stingers had rubber tips put on them) while a P.O.ed hyena took a bite out of Lundgren after the filmmakers shot a deleted scene that’s not featured in Synapse’s release but is alluded to in Damoiseau’s essay. Other Trivia: Lundgren is such a generous and kind raconteur that it’s pretty funny listening to him reflexively trying to defend some things that any other star else would either conveniently gloss over or dismiss. He praises Sylvester Stallone’s detail-oriented direction of Rocky IV but also commends Red Scorpion director Zito for his zeal: “Zito was very postitive and had full momentum all the time rather than focussing on the individual scenes.” Furthermore, Lundgren’s not even sure why he did some of the stunts that he did for Red Scorpion , saying about a stunt where he jumps onto a speeding motorbike: “I don’t know if I was just stupid or if Zito wanted it.” He added, “Crazy! I would never do that today.”

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Inessential Essentials: Revisiting Live Action Hero Dolph Lundgren in Red Scorpion

‘The Expendables 2′ Theatrical Trailer

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We’ve seen two teaser trailers for Simon West’s sequel to The Expendables — well, one teaser, and one trailer for this trailer. But now we’ve got an actual trailer, with actual footage showing some of what happens when you put Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Terry Crews, Randy Couture, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 03/05/2012 19:00 Number of articles : 2

‘The Expendables 2′ Theatrical Trailer

Bruce Willis, Emma Heming-Willis Welcome Baby Girl

Mabel Ray Willis is Bruce’s fourth daughter and his first child with second wife Emma. By Kara Warner Bruce Willis and Emma Heming-Willis Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ FilmMagic Bruce Willis is a proud new poppa for the fourth time. The “Die Hard” star and his model/designer wife Emma Heming-Willis welcomed baby girl Mabel Ray Willis into the world Sunday in Los Angeles. A rep for the happy new parents told People they “are overjoyed about the newest member of their family. Both mother and baby are healthy and doing beautifully.” This is the first child for the couple, who have been married for three years and met through mutual friends. Their 2009 ceremony was an intimate affair attended by Willis’ three daughters — Rumer, 23, Scout, 20, and Tallulah, 18 — along with ex-wife Demi Moore and her then-husband Ashton Kutcher. Since their divorce in 2000, Moore and Willis have maintained a close friendship. Willis attended Moore’s 2005 nuptials to Kutcher and they are often seen in public together with their daughters. In addition to his daddy duties, Willis will be back on the big screen in a slew of highly anticipated films. First, we’ll see him flexing his military muscle alongside the Rock in “G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” which opens June 29. In August, we’ll watch Willis get his action-star on in “Expendables 2,” in which he stars alongside a group of fellow action vets like Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Chuck Norris, Randy Couture, Terry Crews, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger. In late September, Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt will “make us think” with their time-traveling action flick “Looper.” And somewhere in between, Willis will star in his fifth film as rebel cop John McClane in “A Good Day to Die Hard,” which is currently slated for a February 14, 2013, release.

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Bruce Willis, Emma Heming-Willis Welcome Baby Girl

Masters of the Universe Receives Definitive 84-Word Oral History

“All I did was write the press notes and visit the set, once. I remember very little because I knew it was a cheeseball enterprise from the get-go and I didn’t give a shit about any of it. The idea of the Golan & Globus machine attempting to arouse the geek/comic-book fanbase was hopeless from the start… pathetic. Everyone knew it was a tank early on so there was this air of funereal resignation all through production and post-production… everyone just going through the motions.” [ Hollywood Elsewhere ]

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Masters of the Universe Receives Definitive 84-Word Oral History

Dolph Lundgren shops at The Grove

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Dolph Lundgren was spotted today doing some shopping at popular LA hotspot, The Grove. Catch Dolph this summer along with an all-star cast in “The Expendables 2”!

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Dolph Lundgren shops at The Grove

Karen Sjoden Arrested for Trespassing at Ellen’s, Obsessed with Hillary Clinton and Dolph Lundgren

Karen Sjoden, a 49-year old who claimed she was working as a private investigator, was arrested early yesterday morning for trespassing on the property of Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi. Police say the woman was discovered hiding under cushions on the couple’s deck at approximately 5 a.m., with a spokesman adding: “She was placed under private person’s arrest and was transported and booked at BHPD for trespassing and prowling.” Bail has been set at $200,000. Why such a high figure? Because Sjoden appears mentally unstable. Authorities found a “rambling letter” on her person, one that referenced Hillary Clinton, Dolph Lundgren, Warren Buffet, telepathy and aliens. Said Sjoden’s daughter, Kayle, to Radar Online : “It doesn’t surprise me about Ellen DeGeneres because she’s mentioned people in her conspiracy theories before… no one took it seriously because she was never a harm to anybody. Now, it’s obvious that she needs treatment for her mental issues.” In court yesterday, Sjoden told a judge “this is a set up,” while claiming she worked for the investigation firm Blue Moon. That company says it has never heard of her, however. Sources say Sjoden is “a drifter” who has been living with an aunt in Los Angeles. Kayle had not spoken to her mother in a couple of weeks when this incident occurred, but says “delusions” have played a role in her life for years. “My aunt and I tried to help her, but every time we try she has run away because she doesn’t think she’s crazy. She’s very convincing with what she believes.” Sjoden is due back in court on March 7.

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Karen Sjoden Arrested for Trespassing at Ellen’s, Obsessed with Hillary Clinton and Dolph Lundgren

Dolph Lundgren BOA Steakhouse 012511 YT

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Dolph Lundgren BOA Steakhouse 012511 YT

Hailee Steinfeld Jimmy Kimmel Live 012511 YT

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Hailee Steinfeld Jimmy Kimmel Live 012511 YT

‘The Expendables’ Stars Want Justin Bieber For Sequel

Dolph Lundgren also suggests first-film holdout Jean-Claude Van Damme for the next film — as their victim. By Eric Ditzian Sylvester Stallone and Terry Crews at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday Photo: Devan Pratt/MTV News Where does “Expendables” star Sylvester Stallone turn now, after his cinematic smorgasbord of ’80s action giants fire-bombed the competition and won the weekend box-office title ? Can you hear the collective cry of $35 million worth of ticket-buyers? They’re calling for a sequel! Sly has plans to give the people what they want — he already has a second flick plotted out in his head — but for now, he’s waiting on even greater box-office bucks and the chance to see which co-stars will return and which fresh faces he can entice to join the crew of gun-totting mercenaries. Stallone’s fellow Expendables have some strong ideas about who they want to see in a sequel. “Justin Bieber!” Terry Crews suggested to MTV News as the actors took over the New York Stock Exchange to ring the opening bell. “I want Justin Bieber! I want Justin Bieber’s ass!” Ya hear that, Bieber? Perhaps before you hop in front of the 3-D cameras for your upcoming biopic , you can hang with some old dogs like Stallone, Dolph Lundgren and Crews. Lundgren, meanwhile, has his eye on a different guy to join the second installment — one who actually turned down a part in the first flick. “I’d like to kill [Jean-Claude] Van Damme, please!” Lundgren said. “He’s hunting Van Damme down!” Stallone laughed. Added Jason Statham: “I’ll be the cut man for that!” Two guys Stallone wants to reprise their roles are Arnold Schwarzenegger and Bruce Willis. In fact, Sly revealed he’s already been in contact with them about returning for a sequel. “The main thing is to find out who’s available, who wants to be in it,” he said. “I’m talking to Arnold and Bruce [about] different schedules and other actors. Then you have to bring in some new guys, some young blood. “I haven’t had an opening like this,” Stallone added. “To me, it’s miraculous. And what sunk in finally is, in this day and age, it’s all about concept, it’s not about the actor. No one actor can open a movie anymore, so you need the help of your friends. This was a group effort. I had the biggest opening because they helped. That’s the name of the game.” Who do you want to see join the Expendables crew for a sequel? Share your thoughts in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Expendables.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Artists Justin Bieber

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‘The Expendables’ Stars Want Justin Bieber For Sequel