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REVIEW: Meaty ‘Texas Chainsaw 3D’ Gives The Horror Franchise A Leatherfacelift

The makers of Texas Chainsaw — or Texas Chainsaw 3D , as it’s being widely advertised — would like to you forget all about nearly 40 years’ worth of sequels, prequels, remakes and reboots, and pretend that only a couple of decades or so have passed since the events depicted way back in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974). Helmer John Luessenhop ( Takers ) and a small army of scripters go back to the bloody roots of the long-running franchise to concoct a better-than-average horror-thriller that relies more on potent suspense than graphic savagery or stereoscopic tricks. Don’t be surprised if it scores a B.O. killing. Pic begins quite literally where Tobe Hooper’s ’74 original left off, with a shrieking, blood-splattered beauty fleeing the homestead of a psycho-killer clan, pursued by a masked and humongous brute wielding a chainsaw. The new plot kicks off when angry locals arrive on the scene, torch the home of the fiendish family, and prematurely celebrate as they rashly assume they’ve destroyed Leatherface, the chap with the chainsaw, and all his creepy kinfolk. Flash-forward about 20 years: Lovely young Heather Miller (Alexandra Daddario) is thrown for a loop when she’s informed that the white-trash couple she’s always known as mom and dad really are her adoptive parents. Truth to tell, however, this revelation doesn’t appear to strike her as bad news. Besides, she’s perked up by what she thinks is good news: A recently deceased grandmother she never knew she had has bequeathed her a palatial home near a small town in Texas. Accompanied by her boyfriend (R&B artist Tremaine “Trey Songz” Neverson ), another fun couple (Tania Raymonde, Keram Malicki-Sanchez) and a too-friendly hitchhiker (Shaun Sipos) they pick up along the way, Heather drives deep into the heart of Texas to check out her inheritance. Unfortunately, the house isn’t entirely empty. Even more unfortunately, the sole, secretive inhabitant is a masked maniac with a penchant for heavy-duty garden tools. Luessenhop occasionally springs a wink-wink allusion to Hooper’s original pic — most notably during a scene involving a well-stocked freezer — and sprinkles a few darkly comical touches into the mix. (Heather, it should be noted, is introduced carving steaks in the meat department at a supermarket.) For the most part, however, Texas Chainsaw is deadly serious as it goes about the business of sustaining tension and generating shocks. And while Luessenhop and his writers respectfully adhere to many genre conventions (rest assured that, during the first two-thirds of the story, just about everyone you’d expect to get killed does), they’re surprisingly clever when it comes to subversively shifting audience sympathies during the final 30 minutes of their briskly paced 92-minute pic. Daddario — who’s given ample opportunity to flaunt the flattest stomach of any scream queen in recent memory — makes an impressively resourceful heroine. Standout supporting players include Thom Barry as a sheriff who disapproves of vigilantism; Paul Rae as a mayor who only thinks he knows where all the bodies are buried, and Dan Yeager as the still-crazy-after-all-these-years Leatherface. Sharp-eyed movie buffs may notice Gunnar Hansen, the original Leatherface, and Marilyn Burns, the heroine of Hooper’s ’74 pic, in cameo roles. To his credit, Luessenhop doesn’t linger on the gore in intensely violent moments. (What he does show is more than adequately effective.) Nor does he exploit the 3D gimmickry to startle auds with gushers of blood or severed body parts. On the other hand, the helmer can’t resist the urge to make it appear, every so often, that a chainsaw blade is jutting off the screen, understandably enough for a pic with this particular pedigree. Read More on Texas Chainsaw 3D : Trey Songz On His ‘Texas Chainsaw 3D’ Debut (And R. Kelly’s ‘Trapped In The Closet’) Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Meaty ‘Texas Chainsaw 3D’ Gives The Horror Franchise A Leatherfacelift

REVIEW: Crazy Eyes Traces the Travails of a Rich, Self-Absorbed, Self-Pitying Angeleno. Do We Care?

The rich, F. Scott Fitzgerald famously (and much overabusedly) wrote, “are different from you and me,” and  Crazy Eyes tests just how much an audience will be able to care about their problems despite this fact. Wealth isn’t the explicit topic of the film, but it colors everything about it, from the swank house in the hills in which Zach (Lukas Haas) lives to the women who trail after him with dollar signs in their eyes to the way that he seems to have nothing to fill his time with except alcohol. The privilege isn’t the problem so much as how it has shaped our protagonist — a self-absorbed, self-pitying Los Angeles asshole who happens to be in a self-destructive phase. The motivating factor of the film is Zach’s pursuit of something, for once, he isn’t easily able to have — Rebecca (Madeline Zima), to whom he’s given the nickname “Crazy Eyes,” a girl who’ll drink herself into oblivion at his side but who won’t sleep with him. Crazy Eyes is the third directorial effort from Adam Sherman, and is, like his 2010  Happiness Runs , based on his own personal experiences, suggesting he either has a staggering sense of self-laceration or a just as noteworthy lack of awareness about audience empathy. The close of the film would seem to indicate the latter, as it finds Zach murmuring in his periodic noir-style voiceover that “I could tell you pleasing details, like maybe I quit drinking or ended up with a beautiful girl, but I don’t feel like telling you stuff like that, because if I told, and it was true, then I’d probably mess it up like everything else.” Until that point, the film has done so little to make you hope for or invest in any way in Zach’s redemption that the moment is eyebrow-raising — were we supposed to be rooting for this jerk the entire time? Zach’s malaise is due in part to his recent divorce and in part to some lingering parental resentment. Between bouts with booze we see him neglect his adorable, lisping urchin of a son and deal with his folks as his father (Ray Wise) tries to recover from a stroke. His days bleed into his nights in a slurry series of drunk scenes blending into bleary daylight — one thing Crazy Eyes  does do well is to offer a feel for the elasticity of time when you’re in the middle of a bender, the messy burnt ends of disastrous evenings followed by the characters groaningly waking up in the late afternoon with little sense of mooring (“Oh, man, is it the weekend?” Zach asks, dismayed, when he pulls up to an art exhibit on a date and sees the length of the line outside). We never see where Zach met Rebecca, but at first she’s not even at the top of his list of girls to call when he wants company for the evening. She gets Zach’s attention by refusing it — by letting him take her back to his home and then pushing him away when he tries to make a move on her, saying that she has a boyfriend. This pattern comes to define their relationship, as do attempts at what Zach fondly refers to as a “struggle-fuck.” She comes over and often ends up in Zach’s bed, but his attempts at anything physical generally end, unpleasantly, with her fighting him off, sometimes violently. Despite Zach’s name for her, how crazy Rebecca actually is is something of an open question. The film is a measure of Zach’s subjective experience, from his narration to the way it visually echoes his less-than-sober outlook with jittery editing and close camerawork, and so presumably she’s being seen through his biased personal filter, as is his snippy ex-wife (Moran Atias), “lingerie designer” Autumn (Tania Raymonde) and the girl in New York (Regine Nehy) who keeps calling him to profess her love and insist “I just want your dick so bad it hurts.” All the women in Zach’s world are beautiful and want his money, and Rebecca is something of an anomaly because she resists, though we start to feel this may be part of a calculated game for her to keep him in the chase. Sherman co-wrote  Crazy Eyes with Rachel Hardisty, the real-life inspiration for Rebecca, along with Dave Reeves, who’s presumably the rough equivalent to Zach’s bartending/coke-dealing best friend Dan (Jake Busey) — another relationship based, at least in part, on an underlying monetary enticement. The film seems to aim for a gritty and real depiction of a drug- and drink-fueled not-quite romance, but it’s in fact just your worst fears about the kinds of people who populate L.A. brought to ugly, misogynistic and sometimes maudlin life. “You’re a rich asshole with no feelings — you don’t even know what it’s like to struggle!” Rebecca yells at Zach right after we’ve seen him get, and not share with her, terrible news about his family. But it doesn’t feel like she’s wrong — it’s all just fodder for his eventual movie. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Crazy Eyes Traces the Travails of a Rich, Self-Absorbed, Self-Pitying Angeleno. Do We Care?

Alexandria Daddario and Tania Raymonde to be Chainsaw Fodder in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D [PICS]

Following in the frightening footsteps of Halloween , Friday the 13th , and A Nightmare on Elm Street , Tobe Hooper ’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) is the newest horror franchise that studio heads are hoping to bring back from the dead. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D will hit theaters next year with a new and (maybe) improved spin on the classic B-movie tale of chainsaws and the cannibal rednecks who love them. The main course on this diabolical menu is Alexandra Daddario , who flashed a sexy peek at her panties in Hall Pass (2011). Alexandria will play Heather, a young woman who is summoned to a small Texas town to collect the inheritance left to her by a distant relative. When she arrives, Heather finds out the estate includes a live item…her cousin Leatherface . Tania Raymonde , who bared lip-smacking seat meat in Elsewhere (2009) and Wild Cherry (2009), co-stars as Heather’s BFF, who almost certainly will be Texas Chainsaw Massacred before the end credits roll. Gas up your power tool with sexy pics of Alexandria Daddario and Tania Raymonde after the jump!

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Alexandria Daddario and Tania Raymonde to be Chainsaw Fodder in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D [PICS]

Killer Nudity News from Manson Girls Tania Raymonde and Brit Morgan

Last month on the Mr. Skin blog we reported on the titillating thespians, Taryn Manning and Monica Keena , who have been cast as two of Charlie’s naked angels in the upcoming killer hippie epic Manson Girls . Now Lost babe Tania Raymonde , who is playing Leslie Van Houten , and True Blood alum Brit Morgan , making her nude debut as Patricia Krenwinkel , are talking Helter Skelter with Manson Girls director Susanna Lo on horror site Stay Thirsty, and it looks like Tania and Brit will be getting nude as well! Susanna Lo: You are both young and upcoming actresses on the big and small screens. Some of your older and more experienced co-stars have admitted to avoiding nudity and strong sexuality early in their careers. Do either of you have a concern about doing the girl-on-girl sex scenes between your characters or the group sex scenes at such an early stage of your career? Tania Raymonde: You can’t make a movie about the Manson girls without showing how the girls related to one another. They shared sexual connections as well as emotional ones. They were coerced and brainwashed into group sex situations that they more or less enjoyed. Sex was the glue that held their family together. It’s important to show how these girls lived. I’m only portraying a character as accurately as I can, as I would with any role. As far as the nudity is concerned, I’ll get over it. Brit Morgan: I have been avoiding nudity, for almost everything, so far in my career as well. So the sex scenes are new territory for me, but I am not as concerned as I imagined I’d be. Probably because this is one of the only films I’ve read where it seems like it’s necessary and integral to the authenticity of the story. Sexuality was such an important factor in the 1960’s and in the lives of these girls, so I am willing to express that part of myself. Girl-girl sex scenes? Group sex? Manson Girls is shaping up to be the grooviest love-in since the dawning of the Age of Aquarius! Until all the, uhm, brutal murders, of course. Stay tuned right here on the Mr. Skin blog for all the newest, nudest news on Manson Girls and other nude movies currently in development!

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Killer Nudity News from Manson Girls Tania Raymonde and Brit Morgan

‘Lost’ Star Michael Emerson Will Miss ‘Exotic Adventure’ Of The Island

The man behind Ben Linus has bittersweet emotions about this week’s finale By Adam Rosenberg, with reporting by Josh Wigler Photo: MTV News On Tuesday night’s “Lost,” Michael Emerson’s Benjamin Linus was pulled in two directions. On the Island, the always-devious former Other recovered from his recent efforts to repent, killing Charles Widmore and allying himself with the malevolent entity that fans have come to know as the Smoke Monster. Meanwhile, in the sideways timeline, a kinder, gentler Linus was introduced by favorite student Alex (Tania Raymonde) to her mother, the long-departed Danielle Rousseau (Mira Furlan). Similarly, Emerson finds himself pulled in opposite directions as the much-beloved series that he is a fundamental part of approaches its two-and-a-half-hour finale this Sunday. While there are certainly some things that he won’t miss, he told MTV News that it’s a bittersweet parting. “I guess I’ll miss the exotic adventure of the process,” Emerson said. “I don’t think I’ll ever again go to work in jungles or on cliffs or in majestic valleys where you cannot help but be in character and in the place where these events happen, because they’re overpowering.” “Lost” started, and will very likely end, on a mysterious island in the Pacific. Though the show has featured action (in the past, future and “sideways” universe) in other parts of the world, the remote island setting has always been a fundamental focus, an oddity in television programming today. “Most of the time you work on TV, it’s in courtrooms and precincts and offices and stuff like that,” Emerson said. “[‘Lost’ is] like old school, like making movies in faraway places. It had that exoticism about it.” What the soft-spoken actor won’t miss is the time away from his family. His wife, Carrie Preston, is a star on HBO’s vampire series “True Blood,” which shoots in Los Angeles, quite a distance away from the “Lost” set in Hawaii. As Emerson said, “I’m happy that I’ll never again have to figure out what to do on a Sunday night in Honolulu.” Head over to the MTV Movies Blog to vote for the “Lost” Awards from now through the finale.

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‘Lost’ Star Michael Emerson Will Miss ‘Exotic Adventure’ Of The Island

Rielle Hunter: Cheating on John Edwards with Jeff Goldblum?

John Edwards is a bad person. He knocked up some weird videographer while married to his lovely, cancer-stricken wife, the mother of his three children. He then tried to lie his way out of this, engaging in a huge cover-up potentially aided by funds donated to his campaign for President of the United States. That’s hard to top, but perhaps what goes around comes around. At the same time Rielle Hunter was sleeping with him, she too was having an affair … … with Jeff Goldblum! The Law & Order: Criminal Intent star met Rielle in 2006 at the Playhouse West acting school and repertory theater in N. Hollywood, where he teaches. “Jeff said he was in love,” a source says , and at this point, you can’t discredit anything. “They were extremely close – totally, 100 percent, a major item.” This is the weirdest love triangle ever. They were so serious that when the blonde nut job got pregnant in 2007, Jeff naturally assumed the baby was his – and Rielle Hunter even led him on. “He asked her,” says the source. “She would only say, ‘Maybe.’ She kept him guessing.” THG NOTE : Why the hell would anyone get involved with her? When it clear he was not the dad, Jeff, who now dates Tania Raymonde (a.k.a. Ben’s daughter on Lost ) ended the affair. Rielle was hardly heartbroken. “Rielle really didn’t care that she lost Jeff,” says a source close to the bat$h!t crazy woman. “She knew he was just a fling. She cared more for John.”

Goldblum’s New Chick — 35 Years Younger

Filed under: Hook-Ups , Paparazzi Video , Wacky & Weird Jeff Goldblum, 56, scored himself a new GF — one who was barely a fetus when “Earth Girls Are Easy” came out.The girl is 21-year-old Tania Raymonde, who played Ben’s daughter on “Lost” … and probably gets confused for Jeff’s daughter whenever they … Permalink

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Goldblum’s New Chick — 35 Years Younger