Tag Archives: seven-pounds

Venice Film Festival Officially Adds The Master & 3 More To Lineup

After much speculation, the Venice Film Festival officially said Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master will join the event’s Competition as its 18th title. Organizers of the 69th annual event taking place August 29th to September 8th, added four more titles in all Wednesday to the festival’s roster. Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams and Laura Dern, the 1950s-set drama that has been dubbed Anderson’s “Scientology movie.” The feature follows the relationship between a charismatic intellectual (aka, “the Master), whose faith-based group begins to gain a following in America, and a young drifter who becomes his right-hand man. Also joining the Venice Film Festival lineup out of competition (with descriptions provided by the festival): Como voglio che say il mio future? (To Know My Future?) by Ermanno Olmi and Maurizio Zaccaro (Special Screening) – The film offers a significant cross section of the expectations, hopes, disappointments and fears of young people today. Convitto Falcone (Collateral Event) by Pasquale Scimeca – The film is dedicated to Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino on the 20th anniversaries of their death, but it also remembers the thirtieth anniversary of the death of Pio La Torre, of Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, and many others. The story is set in the present day, and the plot centers on young people who must come to terms with their sense of justice, even in their small everyday gestures. Du Hase es Versprochen (Forgotten) the feature-length directorial debut of German director Alex Schmidt. The Midnight Horror centers on two childhood friends, Hanna (Mina Tander) and Clarissa (Laura de Boer) who meet after 25 years. They decide to return together to an island where they had once spent their vacations, but they will be haunted by the ghosts of the past.

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Venice Film Festival Officially Adds The Master & 3 More To Lineup

Venice Film Festival Officially Adds The Master & 3 More To Lineup

After much speculation, the Venice Film Festival officially said Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master will join the event’s Competition as its 18th title. Organizers of the 69th annual event taking place August 29th to September 8th, added four more titles in all Wednesday to the festival’s roster. Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams and Laura Dern, the 1950s-set drama that has been dubbed Anderson’s “Scientology movie.” The feature follows the relationship between a charismatic intellectual (aka, “the Master), whose faith-based group begins to gain a following in America, and a young drifter who becomes his right-hand man. Also joining the Venice Film Festival lineup out of competition (with descriptions provided by the festival): Como voglio che say il mio future? (To Know My Future?) by Ermanno Olmi and Maurizio Zaccaro (Special Screening) – The film offers a significant cross section of the expectations, hopes, disappointments and fears of young people today. Convitto Falcone (Collateral Event) by Pasquale Scimeca – The film is dedicated to Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino on the 20th anniversaries of their death, but it also remembers the thirtieth anniversary of the death of Pio La Torre, of Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, and many others. The story is set in the present day, and the plot centers on young people who must come to terms with their sense of justice, even in their small everyday gestures. Du Hase es Versprochen (Forgotten) the feature-length directorial debut of German director Alex Schmidt. The Midnight Horror centers on two childhood friends, Hanna (Mina Tander) and Clarissa (Laura de Boer) who meet after 25 years. They decide to return together to an island where they had once spent their vacations, but they will be haunted by the ghosts of the past.

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Venice Film Festival Officially Adds The Master & 3 More To Lineup

Jimmy Fallon Not Hosting Oscars: ‘It’s An Honor To Be Asked’

Rumors had swirled that late night host Jimmy Fallon could host the 2012 Oscars telecast, with none other than SNL / Late Night producer Lorne Michaels potentially coming aboard to produce the annual extravaganza. Speaking with Matt Lauer Wednesday on the Today show, Fallon seemed to corroborate the speculation but revealed that he will not be hosting. “No, I’m not going to do the Oscars,” Fallon said. “It’s an honor to be asked by the Academy, but it’s not my year.” So wait — Fallon was asked to host, and he turned them down? Semantics, etc. Between the departure of ex-Academy president Tom Sherak and the new tenure of his successor Hawk Koch, the reported objections ABC had to hiring NBC figure Fallon, and the fact that Fallon’s late night rival Jimmy Kimmel is already hosting the Emmys — which Fallon did in 2010 to positive reviews — who knows why the Academy and Fallon couldn’t make it happen this year. If the gig’s still open, who, if not Fallon/Michaels, could finally make the Oscars telecast great again? (Put your hand down, Ratner .) Sound off, Oscarwatchers! [ THR ]

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Jimmy Fallon Not Hosting Oscars: ‘It’s An Honor To Be Asked’

Jimmy Fallon Not Hosting Oscars: ‘It’s An Honor To Be Asked’

Rumors had swirled that late night host Jimmy Fallon could host the 2012 Oscars telecast, with none other than SNL / Late Night producer Lorne Michaels potentially coming aboard to produce the annual extravaganza. Speaking with Matt Lauer Wednesday on the Today show, Fallon seemed to corroborate the speculation but revealed that he will not be hosting. “No, I’m not going to do the Oscars,” Fallon said. “It’s an honor to be asked by the Academy, but it’s not my year.” So wait — Fallon was asked to host, and he turned them down? Semantics, etc. Between the departure of ex-Academy president Tom Sherak and the new tenure of his successor Hawk Koch, the reported objections ABC had to hiring NBC figure Fallon, and the fact that Fallon’s late night rival Jimmy Kimmel is already hosting the Emmys — which Fallon did in 2010 to positive reviews — who knows why the Academy and Fallon couldn’t make it happen this year. If the gig’s still open, who, if not Fallon/Michaels, could finally make the Oscars telecast great again? (Put your hand down, Ratner .) Sound off, Oscarwatchers! [ THR ]

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Jimmy Fallon Not Hosting Oscars: ‘It’s An Honor To Be Asked’

WATCH: Gerard Butler Coaches Kids, Woos Soccer Moms in Playing For Keeps

It takes about ten seconds to guess how the latest Gerard Butler vehicle Playing for Keeps will most likely end (Is that Jessica Biel as Butler’s harried ex, who still looks a bit mooney-eyed for her rascally baby daddy? And she’s about to get married to someone else? A classic Rom-Com 101 recipe for love! ) but that won’t stop the target demo from swooning come December 7. And let’s be real: I will so watch this movie, predictable or not. It’s not that Butler is all that swoon-worthy as a middle-aged loser athlete clinging to his past greatness. (Gross.) It’s not that Playing for Keeps , with its groan-worthily on the nose sports-themed title, feels fresh in any way whatsoever. (It doesn’t. But how great would it be if this was a remake of the Weinstein-directed 1986 rock ‘n’ roll hotel comedy of the same name?) And don’t get me started on how Uma Thurman and Catherine Zeta-Jones, both 42 and exactly the same age as Butler, have become Hollywood’s go-to cougar-types while the 12-years-younger Jessica Biel is positioned as Butler’s fresh-faced leading lady. Whatever. I’ll go see this Playing for Keeps because it vaguely reminds me of those ’90s rom-coms that used to star Michelle Pfeiffer and Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks and John Cusack, the kind of movies about grown-ups of a certain age dealing with parenting and careers and their own crippling failings while still falling in love. (Like I said: A vague reminder. Let’s just all blow off work and go Netflix One Fine Day , shall we?) Also, those brief soccer-tot scenes remind me of Ladybugs . And The Big Green . And I kinda want to see Gerard Butler juggle a few balls and shoot a Gatorade bottle off a goalpost with a soccer ball. For that matter, forget Butler: I’d like to see Biel, reportedly a soccer ace in real life, dribble circles around Butler on the pitch. Give me that movie, Hollywood. Verdict: Feels predictable, familiar… and mindlessly watchable. Eh, why not? Playing for Keeps hits theaters on December 7 and is directed by Gabriele Muccino ( The Pursuit of Happyness , Seven Pounds ).

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WATCH: Gerard Butler Coaches Kids, Woos Soccer Moms in Playing For Keeps

Connor Cruise Scores Role in Red Dawn

What is a nice, adopted teenager to do when a press-hungry whack job named Claire Elisabeth Fields Cruise (the last name is not a coincidence) tries to say she’s his real mother – and that Michael Jackson was his biological father? For Connor Cruise, all you can do is focus on your career. The 14-year-old budding thespian (and adopted son of Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman, despite what Michael’s insane, wannabe baby mama says in court) is signed on for his second big-screen offering, a remake of Red Dawn , the ’80s action flick

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Connor Cruise Scores Role in Red Dawn