Tag Archives: how do you know

About That Time Paul Rudd Met President Obama

“He asked about my character in How Do You Know , and I told him I’m a guy who gets into some hot water, and though his intentions are good he gets indicted by the government for possible violations. And Obama says, ‘Oh, so you’re playing a congressman.’ And I was like, ‘No, actually I work for my dad in this corporation.’ I’m trying to explain, and Obama interrupts me and says, ‘It was a joke.’ I just felt so stupid. Of course it was a joke, and it’s actually a pretty good one. I’m normally pretty good at catching them. If you’re not the fucking President of the United States, I can usually identify when you’re joking.” Now you know. [ Playboy ]

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About That Time Paul Rudd Met President Obama

Slideshow: The 10 Biggest MPAA Debacles of 2010

Ah, another year, another series of enigmatic clues as to how the MPAA ratings board actually makes its decisions. And then an equal number of films try to challenge the mystifying organization to gain free publicity. 2010 was no exception, with a wide variety of contradictions, exceptions and just completely baffling decisions, and so in our grand year-end tradition, let’s take a look at the 10 biggest MPAA debacles of 2010.

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Slideshow: The 10 Biggest MPAA Debacles of 2010

REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

A hanging statement rather than a question, the unpunctuated title of James L. Brooks’s How Do You Know is an apt reflection of the film’s amble toward a theory, in lieu of an answer. The subject, needless to say, is love: What’s the secret? Is there an algorithm yet? How, when one meets a new person, is it possible to separate emotional temperatures — where circumstance, experience, and need have led each of you to be in that exact moment — and access what true baseline there might be between you? And if it is possible, is it useful? Abandoning analysis for instinct hardly seems like the thing: The rhetoric of instant connections — clicking, chemistry, sparks — feels random and unreliable; the more acquisitive approach — involving checklists, potential, dealbreakers — is bloodless and overdetermined. To be a vampire, and at least have a few clear guidelines about letting the right one in!

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REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

A hanging statement rather than a question, the unpunctuated title of James L. Brooks’s How Do You Know is an apt reflection of the film’s amble toward a theory, in lieu of an answer. The subject, needless to say, is love: What’s the secret? Is there an algorithm yet? How, when one meets a new person, is it possible to separate emotional temperatures — where circumstance, experience, and need have led each of you to be in that exact moment — and access what true baseline there might be between you? And if it is possible, is it useful? Abandoning analysis for instinct hardly seems like the thing: The rhetoric of instant connections — clicking, chemistry, sparks — feels random and unreliable; the more acquisitive approach — involving checklists, potential, dealbreakers — is bloodless and overdetermined. To be a vampire, and at least have a few clear guidelines about letting the right one in!

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REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

The Self-Defenestrating Director, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: Ben Affleck editorializes… @Vincent_Gallo wants a fake (?) word with you… You’ll probably never see Leslie Nielsen’s final movie… David Simon is optimistic so not optimistic about the future… Picassos found… and more…

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The Self-Defenestrating Director, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Late Night Highlights: Ben Affleck Jokes About Gay Sex With Matt Damon

It is always a warm reunion when Ben Affleck visits his former faux-lover Jimmy Kimmel on the ABC late show. Last night, the two lamented their lost relationship and expensive Disneyland tickets, before The Town director made an unfortunate joke about the positions that he and Boston buddy Matt Damon take in bed. Elsewhere, John Stamos remembered (almost) sleeping with Cloris Leachman, Stephen Colbert apologized for his wrongful interpretation of “Black Friday” and Judah Friedlander taught Jon Stewart how to beat up Bigfoot.

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Late Night Highlights: Ben Affleck Jokes About Gay Sex With Matt Damon

When Twitter Marketing Goes Wrong: How Do You Know Hashtag Causes Confusion, Derision

As Twitter has become a legitimate source of news, opinions and even a place for television pitches , movie studios have warmed to its other feature: Promotion. Toy Story 3 was the first film to buy “ad time” in the trending topics section , but many others have partaken in this bit of nuevo-marketing madness since then. The latest is How Do You Know , the James L. Brooks dramedy scheduled for release next month. Too bad that particular promoted hashtag isn’t going as well as Columbia Pictures probably hoped.

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When Twitter Marketing Goes Wrong: How Do You Know Hashtag Causes Confusion, Derision

REVIEW: Two Out of Three Isn’t Bad For Gorgeous, Globetrotting Eat Pray Love

There are three kinds of women in the world: Those who refuse to read Elizabeth Gilbert’s mega-girly, mega-best-seller 2006 memoir Eat Pray Love; those who will damn well read it if they want to, even on the subway, and don’t care what anyone else thinks; and those who, wanting or needing to see what all the fuss is about before seeing the movie, send their husbands into the bookstore to ask for it, lest they be marked as a woman who might be interested in reading “that” book.

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REVIEW: Two Out of Three Isn’t Bad For Gorgeous, Globetrotting Eat Pray Love

The How Do You Know Trailer Forgoes Question Mark in Favor of Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd and Owen Wilson

How do you know it’s almost the end of the summer? Because the trailer for How Do You Know has arrived. The question mark-less James L. Brooks romantic comedy — featuring a murderer’s row cast of Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd, Owen Wilson and Jack Nicholson — doesn’t hit theaters until Christmas, but that doesn’t mean its too early to start the hype machine on the first film from the Oscar-winner in six years. Besides, it already looks better than Spanglish .

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The How Do You Know Trailer Forgoes Question Mark in Favor of Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd and Owen Wilson