Actress is pregnant with her first child. By Katie Byrne Will Kopelman and Drew Barrymore Photo: Stephen Lovekin/ Getty Images Drew Barrymore wed her fianc
Actress has been dating the art consultant since February of last year. By Jocelyn Vena Drew Barrymore and Will Kopelman Photo: Steve Granitz/ WireImage Three times might be the charm for Drew Barrymore. The actress is engaged to art consultant boyfriend Will Kopelman. Sources tell People magazine that the couple got engaged in Sun Valley, Idaho, where they had been vacationing over the holiday. The source added, “They are very happy together.” Kopelman reportedly asked the actress to marry him with a colorless, radiant-cut diamond ring designed by Graff. The newly engaged couple, who began dating last February, spent 10 days in the area and were spotted by locals at various restaurants, including Vintage and Kiki’s Caf
We break down the first sneak peek of Tom Cruise’s fourth ‘Mission.’ By Eric Ditzian and Josh Wigler Tom Cruise in “Mission Impossible – Ghost Protocol” Photo: Paramount The first “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol” trailer begins in classic fashion for this epic spy franchise: with a ridiculously destructive explosion. It’s been almost six years, after all, since the previous installment hit theaters, and so this new footage, which popped up online Tuesday evening, delivers the fiery goods early and often. Hit play on the embedded video as we walk through some of the key moments in the trailer, then read on for a deeper exploration of what’s going on in the “Ghost Protocol” footage. The J.J. Abrams Conspiracy Early on, as Tom Wilkinson explains the unachievable mission Tom Cruise and his team will confront, we see Wilkinson flip through a series of digital profiles of the IMF agents. Josh Holloway’s character, it seems, is “disavowed.” Now if you’re a fan of the franchise, you’ll remember that in the third film, Keri Russell (a veteran of producer J.J. Abrams’ “Felicity”) is killed surprisingly early in the action. Our working theory is that we’re in for a similar treat for Holloway, who starred in Abrams’ “Lost.” We don’t see a lot of him in the rest of the trailer, and when you do see him, he’s usually alone. All signs point to Holloway getting an unfortunate, and quite possibly bloody, exit in “Ghost Protocol.” The Brad Bird Comparison Midway through the trailer, we get a moment that clearly harkens back to the first “M:I” movie. As Jeremy Renner flies down into a silo-like structure and the camera follows him from above, we can’t help but think of the moment in the original film in which Cruise, secured via harness, swooped down into a secure CIA facility. While J.J. Abrams has told us “Ghost Protocol” will carry the unmistakable signature of director Brad Bird , who is making his live-action debut after animated fare like “The Incredibles,” it’s hard to see any Birdian touches here. This looks like a “Mission” movie, not a Brad Bird one. And we wonder if, in the finished film, that will still be the case. One of Bird’s signature stylistic traits is action (and interactions) infused with humor, and “M:I” is hardly a franchise that goes for laughs. The Tom Cruise Marathon It would not be a Tom Cruise movie, let alone a “Mission” movie, without a shot of the action star running like the wind. There’s a hilarious YouTube video about this, which is definitely worth watching. But all jokes aside, let’s give Cruise some serious credit: We tend to take him for granted, but the guy is almost 50 years old, and here he’s running, jumping, diving and nearly dying. That’s impressive stuff. The Jeremy Renner Possibility Renner, of “Hurt Locker” fame, is a new face in the franchise; last year, he told MTV News he was being groomed to take over the franchise from Cruise . But that’s not at all the sense we get from the trailer, especially when Cruise suggests Renner is hiding something. First off, Renner is reportedly the front-runner to take over the “Bourne” franchise from Matt Damon, and it’d be odd to have the guy be the face of two separate spy series. And second, based on some of the dialogue in the trailer, there just might be a twist with Renner’s character in “Ghost Protocol.” Is he a villain? Is the trailer just trying to throw us for a loop? Can we possibly have a “Mission” movie in the future that doesn’t feature Cruise himself? The IMAX Grandeur The trailer wraps up with an epic scene in which Tom Cruise scales the Burj Khalifa building in Dubai, the tallest building in the world. This scene is compelling for two reasons. One, it was shot with IMAX cameras, and for all the technical mumbo-jumbo you can get into when talking about this technology, the fact is that watching something shot in IMAX delivers a singularly breathtaking visual scope. “Ghost Protocol” will be worth seeing in an IMAX theater just for this scene. And second, Cruise clearly stole the gloves he wore in “Minority Report” to scale this building, “Spider-Man”-style. Hey, can you blame a guy for trying to sneak a swarm of blockbusters into one film? Check out everything we’ve got on “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Analyzing The ‘Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol’ Trailer
Third installment of the Shia LaBeouf-starring ‘Bot franchise is getting the best notices yet. By Eric Ditzian Sentinel Prime in “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” Photo: Paramount Pictures We’ve now seen “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” — during a raucous pre-release IMAX screening that left our ears ringing and our senses tingling — and can vouch for the consensus critical opinion surrounding the summer blockbuster: It’s the finest film in the franchise. That’s the overall take. But how do the three films — including the 2007 original and 2009’s “Revenge of the Fallen” — stack up when you’re gauging various cinematic elements? To get to the bottom of that question, we have to dive back into the historical record. The Story “T1” : “The screenwriters, Alex Kurtzmann and Robert Orci, don’t bother to explain as they go along; they just pile up the bang-crash action sequences and, when things get too confusing, screech to a halt for some plodding explanatory dialogue.” — Dana Stevens, Slate “T2” : “There is much absurd backstory and crammed-in explanation for what is going on and despite much of it being voiced by the thunderous Peter Cullen … it still gets annoying.” — Jordan Hoffman, UGO “T3” : “Writer Ehren Kruger … had script duties all to himself, and he has fashioned a narrative of ornate silliness — which is to say, pretty good pulpy fun.” — Kurt Loder, Reason The Visuals “T1” : “The visuals are the real stars here. Though they grow repetitive, the robots’ transforming scenes — joints bending, appendages stretching, gears whirling — are too cool to ever become boring.” — David Germain, The Associated Press “T2” : “The battle scenes are bewildering. A Bot makes no visual sense anyway, but two or three tangled up together create an incomprehensible confusion.” — Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times “T3” : “By showing a measure of restraint and using 3-D to excellent effect, Bay finally enables the Transformers to emerge as players in their own right, with hopes and dreams, declaiming their philosophies of fate, humankind and the universe in grand Shakespearean style.” — Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times The Performances “T1” : “LaBeouf has the hefty job of single-handedly injecting the action with personality, and he brings it off, though without offering much variation on his nervous, hipster-squirt charm.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly “T2” : “Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox, who are definitely the stars as far as how much of the movie they’re in compared to anyone else, both throw themselves into the physical demands of the film with admirable zeal, which is good, since there’s nothing else to the roles.” — Drew McWeeny, HitFix “T3” : “LaBeouf is highly physical and crowd-pleasingly jerky as the little man and the franchise’s centerpiece, Sam Witwicky. If all Tom Cruise consumed were juice boxes of Red Bull, LaBoeuf is who he’d be.” — Wesley Morris, Boston Globe The Bottom Line “T1” : “We knew it would be dumb. But we had no idea it would be so much dumb fun.” — Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinal “T2” : “[Though] it has plenty of popcorn moments that can be big, dumb fun (alien secrets under a pyramid, sexy girls who sprout mechanical tails at the worst moments), director Michael Bay’s sequel is louder and more illogical than the megasuccessful 2007 original.” — Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News “T3” : “‘Dark of the Moon’ is hardly a fleet production, but here Bay makes his best, most flexible use yet of all the flamboyant bigness at his command: computer-drawn characters and human actors seem to occupy the same narrative for once.” — Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly Check out everything we’ve got on “Transformers: Dark of the Moon.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos ‘Transformers: Dark Of The Moon’ ‘Transformers: Dark Of The Moon’ Crashes Into New York City