Tag Archives: Law and Order: SVU

Exclusive: ‘Law & Order: SVU’ Actress ‘Kept It Real’ As ‘Rihanna’

Tiffany Robinson talks to MTV News and says Chris Brown-inspired episode tackled the seriousness of domestic violence. By Jocelyn Vena Tiffany Robinson on “Law and Order: SVU” Photo: NBC

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Exclusive: ‘Law & Order: SVU’ Actress ‘Kept It Real’ As ‘Rihanna’

Chris Brown, Rihanna-Inspired ‘Law & Order: SVU’ Takes An Unexpected Twist

Star-studded ‘Funny Valentine’ episode serves as a cautionary tale for abusive relationships. By Jocelyn Vena Tiffany Robinson on “Law and Order: SVU” Photo: NBC

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Chris Brown, Rihanna-Inspired ‘Law & Order: SVU’ Takes An Unexpected Twist

Oscars Red Carpet: The Best Moments You Didn’t See

MTV News’ memorable run-ins with Kristen Stewart, Jennifer Lawrence and other A-listers — with co-host Al Roker? By Josh Horowitz Kristen Stewart at the 2013 Oscars Photo: Getty Images

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Oscars Red Carpet: The Best Moments You Didn’t See

Rihanna, Chris Brown Inspired ‘SVU’? You Be The Judge With Exclusive Preview!

MTV News has an exclusive first look at Wednesday’s episode, which is rumored to be based on Brown’s 2009 assault of Rihanna. By Jocelyn Vena Tiffany Robinson on “Law and Order: SVU” Photo: NBC

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Rihanna, Chris Brown Inspired ‘SVU’? You Be The Judge With Exclusive Preview!

REVIEW: Diane Keaton Loses Her Dog — and the Plot — in Darling Companion

There’s too much people and not enough dog in Lawrence Kasdan’s Darling Companion , and even if you prefer people to dogs, that’s a serious problem. It would be bad enough that Kasdan squanders the gifts of two of his lead actors, Diane Keaton and Kevin Kline, in this aimless, tedious and sometimes downright ridiculous comedy-drama about a fractured family brought closer by unusual circumstances. But he does a disservice to an even more striking face: That of a mutt whom Keaton’s character rescues from the edge of the highway, an elegant, spirited creature she dubs — what else? — Freeway. I had high hopes for Darling Companion in its early moments, particularly a scene in which Keaton’s Beth gives Freeway a bath. She’s just returned from getting him checked out at the vet’s, but hasn’t yet broken the news to her uptight surgeon husband Joseph (Kline) that the dog is going to stay. Watching Keaton as she kneels by the bathtub massaging shampoo into the pup’s fur — the attention clearly sends him straight into seventh heaven — brings with it a certain elemental joy. For this moment at least, Keaton’s expressive radiance has met its match: There’s so much life in both of them that you’d never imagine how far downhill things could go from there. But boy, do they. Written by Kasdan and his wife, Meg Kasdan, the script for Darling Companion dispatches with the dog early on (temporarily) to clear the way for a picture filled with husband-and-wife squabbling, the constant nattering of annoying future-in-laws, the airing of various neuroses and, I kid you not, heaps of faux-mystic wisdom from a beautiful Romany psychic. This is how it all plays out: As Joseph and Beth are recovering from the wedding of their daughter (Elisabeth Moss) to the vet who treated Freeway after his rescue (Jay Ali), Joseph takes the dog for a walk on a trail near the couple’s rustic-luxe Rocky Mountain retreat (as if we didn’t already have enough reasons to hate them). Freeway spots a deer and takes off in pursuit; distracted by one of his Very Important Surgeon cell-phone calls, Joseph fails to coax the dog back. Spoiler alert: Dog lovers will want to know that Freeway does come back, but not until practically the very last frame of the movie, by which time even his exuberant wagging tail is too late to save it. Most of Darling Companion is used up in the search for the dog, during which time the poor fellow becomes completely beside the point. Joseph and Beth are forced to get to know their future brother-in-law, Russell (Richard Jenkins), who has greatly charmed his fiancée-to-be, Joseph’s sister, Penny (Dianne Wiest), but who also seems to be a bit of a wheeler-dealer. Meanwhile, Bryan (Mark Duplass), Joseph’s nephew, who also works with him in his surgical practice, becomes entranced with the caretaker of Joseph and Beth’s vacation house, the exotic, with a capital E, Carmen (Ayelet Zurer). Carmen keeps getting psychic visions of Freeway’s whereabouts, and she sends the family out, in various permutations, based on the locations derived from this rather faulty sixth-sense GPS system. And in the end, guess what? Everybody likes and understands one another better, thanks to a lost dog and a Gypsy Mary Poppins. Darling Companion is all about how we need to keep changing and growing as we get older, which is somewhat ironic considering that as a director, Kasdan seems frozen in time – although we desperately need more movies for grown-ups, lukewarm reheats of The Big Chill aren’t going to do it. Most of a potentially terrific cast is wasted here: Wiest plays the same sweet, neurotic eye-crinkler she’s portrayed so many times she could do it in her sleep. Kline, generally wonderful at playing only semi-likable characters, doesn’t illuminate any corners of Joseph’s personality that might make you feel anything for the guy. Only Keaton, waving her arms and exhorting all those around her to please help her find her dog, makes any sense. Beth’s priorities are unquestionably sound. It’s the movie around her that loses its way. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Diane Keaton Loses Her Dog — and the Plot — in Darling Companion

The Sly, Underrated Greatness of Roger Corman’s Night Call Nurses

The Film : Night Call Nurses (1972), available on DVD in the new set Roger Corman’s Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection via Shout! Factory . Why it’s an Inessential Essential : The respectability gap between director Jonathan Kaplan’s recent and early-career work is pretty striking. Today, Kaplan works primarily in TV: He served as a co-executive producer for both E.R. and Without a Trace , and has also directed eight episodes of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit , two episodes of Brothers and Sisters and 40 episodes of E.R. But when Kaplan started his filmmaking career, he made sleazy but surprisingly sturdy exploitation pics like Truck Turner (1974), in which Isaac Hayes plays a bounty hunter that is very attached to beer and his cat, and The Slams (1973), a prison flick starring Jim Brown. Now Night Call Nurses , Kaplan’s 1972 directorial debut, has just been reissued in a new collection highlighting four nursesploitation pics produced by schlockmeister Roger Corman. Kaplan’s film is easily the best one in the set — and also a good indicator of Kaplan’s then-nascent talent. Make no mistake, the longevity of Night Call Nurses — a natural moneymaker for Corman — is largely attributable to Kaplan’s experimental direction. As Kaplan explains in the featurette “Anatomy of a Nurse Film,” Nurses ‘ plot is a variation on a formula that Corman swiped from Valley of the Dolls , another film that follows three female protagonists. A trio of nurses test their respective comfort zones: Barbara (Patty Byrne) has a unfulfilling affair with her group therapy psychiatrist while Janis (Alana Stewart) has a fling with a speed-addicted former patient and Sandra (Mittie Lawrence) helps a Black Panther-type convict meet up with his fellow radicals. All three girls are defined via exploitation-friendly character types: Barbara’s the uptight one, Janis is the flirty and free-spirited blonde and Sandra’s the politically motivated black girl. I hesitate to call these girls walking stereotypes, because Kaplan does a good job of contextualizing their titillating and character-defining concerns. One guy trips balls and imagines that he has mirror tiles for hands while a woman kneels before a big red crucifix before throwing herself off a roof (upon impact, we see a porcelain doll’s head crack open). Through these dynamic and trippy scenes, both of which were shot using handheld cameras, Kaplan vividly and quickly the hallucinatory, drug and sex-fueled haze that his characters are trying to define themselves in. Night Call Nurses is atmospheric and visually accomplished, making it a satisfying morsel of junk-food cinema. How the DVD/Blu-ray Makes the Case for the Film : Kaplan’s very forthcoming about the production history of Night Call Nurses in an interview featurette called “Anatomy of a Nurse Film.” He insists on discussing the film as collaboration between Corman and himself. He explains that Corman called Kaplan late one night and offered him the directing gig based on Martin Scorsese’s recommendation. Once he’d accepted the job, Corman was apparently very loose with Kaplan. The only rules Corman laid down was that the picture should be done shooting in 13 days and that T&A must be shot in a certain way, presumably to get past censors. “‘Frontal nudity from the waist up, total nudity from behind (no pubic hair),'” Kaplan says for Corman. Kaplan also explains that working with Corman was a great filmmaking education: “That was the last guy I worked with who ever understood what a director really does.” Which doesn’t mean that Kaplan glosses over Corman’s infamous tendency of cutting budgetary corners. According to Kaplan, Corman’s advice to him was: “‘Ask your cinematographer how long to make it beautiful, how long to make it passable and how long to get an image? And then just get the image.” Kaplan clearly settled for something between “passable” and “beautiful.” And he did it all on a microscopic budget of $75,000, too! Other Interesting Trivia : One of the funnier anecdotes Kaplan relates about working with Corman is his story about trying to convince Stewart to do her big nude scene after she became tentatively skittish. Corman apparently told Kaplan to go to the stretch of Sunset Boulevard called “The Stroll” and hire the “skankiest hooker” that he could find. Kaplan was then told to introduce the prostitute to Stewart as the actress’s body double with the expectation that Stewart would then volunteer to do her own stunts. Kaplan was uncomfortable driving, however, and he failed to convince Roger’s wife Julie Corman to accompany him to the Stroll. So they just talked Stewart into doing the nude scenes without hiring a professional sex worker. It’s probably safe to assume that Kaplan’s never had to do anything so risque for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. PREVIOUS INESSENTIAL ESSENTIALS The Last Temptation of Christ The Sitter Citizen Ruth The Broken Tower Dogville Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice, Time Out New York, Vulture and Esquire. Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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The Sly, Underrated Greatness of Roger Corman’s Night Call Nurses

VIDEO: Here’s Every Time Arnold Schwarzenegger Screamed in a Movie

Vampire Diaries First Look: Law & Order: SVU’s Michaela McManus Invades Mystic Falls

The spirit of the late Mason Lockwood will loom large on The Vampire Diaries in early December when Law & Order: SVU ‘s Michaela McManus shows up searching for her missing friend. In this exclusive first look image from the Dec. 9 episode (the show’s midseason cliffhanger), Damon and Alaric grill the new girl, Jules, about her connection to Mason. Click ahead for the full image.

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Vampire Diaries First Look: Law & Order: SVU’s Michaela McManus Invades Mystic Falls

Watch Law and Order: SVU Season 12 Episode 1 – Locum

Watch Law and Order: Special Victims Unit S12E1: Locum Another one of our favorite crime drama show is back from their long months break. Law & Order: SVU now returns and continues to give us it’s flavor crime and suspense that have always kept us hook and waiting week afte week. The new season will kick off with Stabler and Benson being called to investigate the case of a missing 10 yearl old girl who was last seen at her adoptive parents house. Later on with the investigation, they discovers that the girl actually ran away to meet someone she got friends with online on the internet. Now, suspicion arises towards the online friend who was in fact a graphic artist. As the investigation goes further, the mysteriouis past of the parents is being slowly revealed that makes everything on the case null. The premiere installment of the new season of Law & Order: SVU, which is entitled “Locum” is the hit drama TV series’ 1st episode of the 12th season that aired last 09/22/2010 Wednesday at 9:00 pm on NBC. Watch Law & Order: SVU 12×01(1201) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link: HERE

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Watch Law and Order: SVU Season 12 Episode 1 – Locum

Thespians, Take Note: Chris Klein was Spellbinding in Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li