Tag Archives: sarah-silverman

Mr. Skin’s Top Ten Nude Scenes of 2012

With another year of outstanding celebrity nudity drawing to a close, Mr. Skin has made the skinifinitive decision on the hottest, sexiest, and greatest nude scenes from the past 12 months. So raise your glass and pop your cork to bountiful boob tube babes like Sophie Rundle and silver screen sirens like Olivia Munn . See the Top Ten Nude Scenes of 2012 after the jump!

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Mr. Skin’s Top Ten Nude Scenes of 2012

Kelly Soo Park, "Female James Bond," Accused of Juliana Redding Murder

Juliana Redding, a slain Maxim model who died in 2008, was done in by hired “muscle” contracted by her father’s business partner, according to prosecutors. Kelly Soo Park, a.k.a. the female James Bond, was allegedly that muscle. Prosecutors charge that Juliana Redding , 21, was strangled by Kelly Soo Park, 47, who “has a history of threatening and intimidating individuals.” Her targets are those who “have an ongoing dispute with” Dr. Munir Uwaydah, a California doctor and businessman. She was allegedly hired by him several times. Park was arrested in 2010 for the murder and is now free on $3.5 million bail. She is awaiting trial early next year for the killing of Redding for years ago. Redding had moved to Los Angeles from Arizona, hoping to pursue a career in modeling and acting. She was employed as a waitress when she was killed. Park’s previous history as “debt collector” for Uwaydah was detailed in court papers filed by prosecutors. Two months after Redding’s murder in 2008, she allegedly traveled to Kentucky to intimidate one of Uwaydah’s ex-business partners into paying a $350,000 judgment. Two years later, she applied the same tactics to a California bank manager after he attempted to back out of a business venture, prosecutors allege. Uwaydah, who fled to Lebanon shortly after Park’s 2010 arrest, once dated Redding and was preparing to start a “pain cream” business with her father Greg. When her father learned that Uwaydah was married and had children, he advised his young daughter to end her relationship with the physician. Not long afterwards, Greg Redding pulled out of the business venture after growing increasingly suspicious of Uwaydah, according to prosecutors. Three days later, Park – who prosecutors claim Uwaydah once boasted was a female “James Bond” – began stalking Juliana Redding, officials argue. She eventually showed up at Redding’s bungalow on March 15, 2008, in an attempt to “intimidate and threaten” the model, according to the DA filings. Redding had been attempting to call 911 when her cellphone was yanked from her hands; she was murdered shortly afterwards, investigators believe. When police discovered her the next day, the bones in her neck had been crushed and her gas stove was on, possibly an attempt to blow up the apartment. Park’s attorney insists she had nothing to do with Redding’s murder.

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Kelly Soo Park, "Female James Bond," Accused of Juliana Redding Murder

Wreck-It Ralph Sets Box Office Record

Wreck-It Ralph soared to the top of the box office this weekend, setting a record in the process. The cartoon – which features the voices of such acting heavyweights as John C. Reilly, Jane Lynch, Jack McBrayer and Sarah Silverman – earned $49.1 milllion on Friday and Saturday, the highest debut ever for a flick from Disney Animated Studios. For the most up-to-date movie news , remember to visit our friends at Movie Fanatic – and check out the top five from the weekend below: Wreck-It Ralph – $49.1 million Flight – $25 million Argo – $10.2 million Man with the Iron Fists – $8.2 million Taken 2 – $6 million  

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Wreck-It Ralph Sets Box Office Record

Cloud Atlas Star Halle Berry Goes Sunny Side Up

Nude in theaters, Halle Berry stars in the sci-fi mindbender Cloud Atlas (2012) . But she doesn’t go nude, so to see Halle’s berries bare, check out her topless sunbathing scene in Swordfish (2001) instead. And nude this week on Blu-ray, we’ve got two of the biggest nude debuts of the year: Olivia Munn topless in Magic Mike (2012) and Sarah Silverman’s full frontal shower scene in Take This Waltz (2012) .

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Cloud Atlas Star Halle Berry Goes Sunny Side Up

Sarah Silverman naked shower

Sarah Silverman is pretty funny comedian in our opinion, even though she likes to shock and do stuff that most people would probably find annoying or distasteful we think that because she is quite cute at the same time Continue reading

Movie Nudity Report: Magic Mike, Ted, Take This Waltz [PICS]

You’ve got some decisions to make if you’re looking for big-screen nudity this weekend, as we’ve got a trio of titillating titles to choose from: first, Olivia Munn ‘s nude debut (as well as magical mams from Mircea Monroe and Riley Keough ) in Magic Mike (2012); then, an anonymous topless party-goer provides the best ten seconds of Ted (2012); and finally, Take This Waltz (2011) finally hits theaters so you can see Sarah Silverman and Michelle Williams go full-frontal on the big screen. More after the jump!

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Movie Nudity Report: Magic Mike, Ted, Take This Waltz [PICS]

REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

Take This Waltz is an unusually kind film about infidelity — not because it sidesteps or shortchanges heartbreak, but because it doesn’t let any one of its characters bear the full burden of blame. That such a thing needs to or should even be assigned in this scenario is beside the point, as the film defers to the vagueries of the human heart and the way we can, despite our better judgment, form a connection with someone that can’t easily be set aside. It’s tempting to glibly connect this clear-eyed empathy with the fact that  Take This Waltz is Canadian and somehow inherently prone to niceness — it’s set in a rosy version of Toronto in which the characters all live in charmingly shabby chic houses and sporadically work in quirky jobs. But what it actually comes from, I think, is that the film is the sophomore feature of actress-turned-director Sarah Polley, who constructs her central love triangle with a determinedly feminine perspective and places all of the choice on her female protagonist Margot, played with typical grace by Michelle Williams. Margot wants anything but to have to make a difficult call, especially one that will result in someone getting hurt. One of the film’s first scenes finds her visiting the living history museum of the Fortress of Louisbourg for work and getting pulled in front of a crowd by costumed, in-character staffers to help with a flogging. “Put your back into it!” yells a man from the crowd when she ineffectually flails at the prisoner, clearly mortified. Later, she ends up sitting next to the heckler on the plane. His name is Daniel (Luke Kirby), and he’s just watched her board in a wheelchair despite not having needed one before, leading her to confess that she pretends at airports because of her terror of missed connections, something born not out of a need not to miss a flight but because, as she puts it, “I’m afraid of wondering if I’ll miss it. I don’t like being in between things.” Margot will, however, spend the movie in between things — between Daniel, who turns out to live across the street (“Shit!” she mutters when she finds out), and Lou (Seth Rogen), the husband of five years with whom she shares a loving if childlike and seemingly no longer passionate relationship. Margot loves Lou — the two tussle like kids and talk adoring about the terrible violence they’re going to do one another (“I’m going to put your spleen through a meat grinder,” Lou sighs) — but she may not be in love with him any longer, and she has an undeniable heated spark with Daniel, an artist who pulls a rickshaw and who watches her with guarded longing. Take This Waltz , which was also written by Polley,   has moments of overdetermined dialogue — the line about airport connections is one, and another finds Margot describing Lou, who’s a cookbook writer, as “a really good cook, if you like chicken.” It’s stronger in its moments of wordless sensuality, from its opening scene in which Margot makes muffins, the camera drifting to her bare feet and then her face as she leans it against the over glass. Daniel offers to take Margot and Lou downtown in his rickshaw when they’re headed out to celebrate their anniversary, and we track her gaze across the muscles of his arms and back, catching his eye in the side-view mirror. The draw of the flesh is not inconsiderable, and  Take This Waltz doesn’t make it so easy as being a kind of passing temptation, an indulgence to be resisted. Margot and Lou have a stable and relatively happy life together — we see them at home and in the company of their friends and family, including Lou’s sister Geraldine (a memorable Sarah Silverman), a recovering alcoholic. It’s a lot to trade for attraction, no matter how significant, but the film feasibly puts the two on a level, leaving Margot to navigate the decision with growing distress as she tries to avoid Daniel, only to go out of her way to run into him, and then flees back to Lou professing her love and fear. Kirby makes his improbable swain just dangerous enough, the embodiment of the promise of the new, while Rogen shows off his dramatic chops as a man who’s obviously never given thought during his time with Margot of what things would be like without her. But the weight of the film rests on Williams, and she finds a poignant and quiet agony in her character as she realizes she’s the only one who can make this decision and must deal with the consequences either way, after time and again trying to push it off or onto other people. It’s a world of bittersweet sophistication from Polley, and one that accepts that, as a stranger reminds Margot at a swim class, “new things get old,” but that doesn’t make them any less appealing.

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REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

Take This Waltz is an unusually kind film about infidelity — not because it sidesteps or shortchanges heartbreak, but because it doesn’t let any one of its characters bear the full burden of blame. That such a thing needs to or should even be assigned in this scenario is beside the point, as the film defers to the vagueries of the human heart and the way we can, despite our better judgment, form a connection with someone that can’t easily be set aside. It’s tempting to glibly connect this clear-eyed empathy with the fact that  Take This Waltz is Canadian and somehow inherently prone to niceness — it’s set in a rosy version of Toronto in which the characters all live in charmingly shabby chic houses and sporadically work in quirky jobs. But what it actually comes from, I think, is that the film is the sophomore feature of actress-turned-director Sarah Polley, who constructs her central love triangle with a determinedly feminine perspective and places all of the choice on her female protagonist Margot, played with typical grace by Michelle Williams. Margot wants anything but to have to make a difficult call, especially one that will result in someone getting hurt. One of the film’s first scenes finds her visiting the living history museum of the Fortress of Louisbourg for work and getting pulled in front of a crowd by costumed, in-character staffers to help with a flogging. “Put your back into it!” yells a man from the crowd when she ineffectually flails at the prisoner, clearly mortified. Later, she ends up sitting next to the heckler on the plane. His name is Daniel (Luke Kirby), and he’s just watched her board in a wheelchair despite not having needed one before, leading her to confess that she pretends at airports because of her terror of missed connections, something born not out of a need not to miss a flight but because, as she puts it, “I’m afraid of wondering if I’ll miss it. I don’t like being in between things.” Margot will, however, spend the movie in between things — between Daniel, who turns out to live across the street (“Shit!” she mutters when she finds out), and Lou (Seth Rogen), the husband of five years with whom she shares a loving if childlike and seemingly no longer passionate relationship. Margot loves Lou — the two tussle like kids and talk adoring about the terrible violence they’re going to do one another (“I’m going to put your spleen through a meat grinder,” Lou sighs) — but she may not be in love with him any longer, and she has an undeniable heated spark with Daniel, an artist who pulls a rickshaw and who watches her with guarded longing. Take This Waltz , which was also written by Polley,   has moments of overdetermined dialogue — the line about airport connections is one, and another finds Margot describing Lou, who’s a cookbook writer, as “a really good cook, if you like chicken.” It’s stronger in its moments of wordless sensuality, from its opening scene in which Margot makes muffins, the camera drifting to her bare feet and then her face as she leans it against the over glass. Daniel offers to take Margot and Lou downtown in his rickshaw when they’re headed out to celebrate their anniversary, and we track her gaze across the muscles of his arms and back, catching his eye in the side-view mirror. The draw of the flesh is not inconsiderable, and  Take This Waltz doesn’t make it so easy as being a kind of passing temptation, an indulgence to be resisted. Margot and Lou have a stable and relatively happy life together — we see them at home and in the company of their friends and family, including Lou’s sister Geraldine (a memorable Sarah Silverman), a recovering alcoholic. It’s a lot to trade for attraction, no matter how significant, but the film feasibly puts the two on a level, leaving Margot to navigate the decision with growing distress as she tries to avoid Daniel, only to go out of her way to run into him, and then flees back to Lou professing her love and fear. Kirby makes his improbable swain just dangerous enough, the embodiment of the promise of the new, while Rogen shows off his dramatic chops as a man who’s obviously never given thought during his time with Margot of what things would be like without her. But the weight of the film rests on Williams, and she finds a poignant and quiet agony in her character as she realizes she’s the only one who can make this decision and must deal with the consequences either way, after time and again trying to push it off or onto other people. It’s a world of bittersweet sophistication from Polley, and one that accepts that, as a stranger reminds Margot at a swim class, “new things get old,” but that doesn’t make them any less appealing.

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REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

See Sarah Silverman and Michelle Williams Full Frontal in Take This Waltz [PICS]

Oh, how we’ve looked forward to this day! We’ve been eagerly awaiting pictorial evidence of Sarah Silverman ‘s full-frontal nude debut in Take This Waltz (along with more frontal flesh from skin veterans Michelle Williams and Jennifer Podemski , we mustn’t forget them) ever since our Skin Skout reported the nudes from Toronto last fall. Now, at last that day is here, and it is glorious. Three hot actresses having a long, leisurely chat while soaping up their fully nude forms in the shower, unhurried, unashamed and baring all. This is how you kick off a long weekend. See more pics of Sarah Silverman , Michelle Williams and Jennifer Podemski full frontal after the jump!

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See Sarah Silverman and Michelle Williams Full Frontal in Take This Waltz [PICS]

Sarah Silverman takes stepmom for a Mothers’ Day date! – Hollywood.TV

http://www.youtube.com/v/2VdC6xxjXzo?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Hollywood.TV is your source for celebrity gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Mother’s Day isn’t until this Sunday on the 13th, but Sarah Silverman is already on it out at The Grove Shopping Center in Hollywood. On this Friday afternoon, Sarah is taking her stepmother for some shopping at the outdoor mall arena as on the actual date of Mother’s Day, this Sunday, she’ll be busy with her biological mother. The way Silverman has structured her calendar seems swell, as she’ll have Saturday to rest up between matronly celebrations. Smart thinking. Happy Mother’s Day! Hollywood.TV is the global leader in capturing celebrity breaking news as it happens. Launched in 2008, we capture all the latest news, exclusive celebrity interviews, star videos and hot celebrity gossip from around the world every minute of everyday. HTV is on the streets 24/7, at all the industry events and invited by the stars to cover their every move in Hollywood, New York and Miami. Hollywood.tv is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and like us on Facebook! CCD20B3B

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Sarah Silverman takes stepmom for a Mothers’ Day date! – Hollywood.TV