Tag Archives: transformative

J. Cole And The Expectations Game

Why can’t the internet make up its mind on J. Cole?

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J. Cole And The Expectations Game

Alessia Cara Grows Up In Front Of Our Eyes in ‘Seventeen’ Video

Alessia Cara ages in her transformative “Seventeen” video.

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Alessia Cara Grows Up In Front Of Our Eyes in ‘Seventeen’ Video

Anne Hathaway’s Fat Hard Nipple of the Day

If ever there has been someone who proves the Oscars are a fucking scam, it’s Anne Hathaway…because she won for cutting off her hair..when everyone knows the transformative roles the Oscars want of you is to play a play a retarded person, or a lesbian…not some candy coated musical hooker.. I guess she also proves that once you win an Oscar, you pretty much have peaked, and it’s time to let yourself go…unless she’s prepping for her next Oscar win, where she plays a skinny girl who gains 20 lbs over the holidays… All this to say, hard nipples. TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICS CLICK HERE

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Anne Hathaway’s Fat Hard Nipple of the Day

Anne Hathaway’s Fat Hard Nipple of the Day

If ever there has been someone who proves the Oscars are a fucking scam, it’s Anne Hathaway…because she won for cutting off her hair..when everyone knows the transformative roles the Oscars want of you is to play a play a retarded person, or a lesbian…not some candy coated musical hooker.. I guess she also proves that once you win an Oscar, you pretty much have peaked, and it’s time to let yourself go…unless she’s prepping for her next Oscar win, where she plays a skinny girl who gains 20 lbs over the holidays… All this to say, hard nipples. TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICS CLICK HERE

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Anne Hathaway’s Fat Hard Nipple of the Day

‘The Hobbit’ 3-D Early Review: Back Again, But Not Quite There

As beloved and popular as J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit has been in the seventy plus years since its publication, the simple adventure story has never been much more than prologue, a light and sunny rain compared to the epic hurricane force of Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings , the transformative high fantasy quest narrative which C.S. Lewis once said contained “beauties which pierce like swords or burn like cold iron.” The worst thing that could be said about Peter Jackson ‘s fourth cinematic foray into Middle Earth, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey , is that it follows suit, being merely good when greatness was anticipated or expected. As with Lord of the Rings , but perhaps never more so than in The Hobbit , Jackson brings a plain earnestness to the material which matches Tolkien’s direct and straightforward narrative voice. There’s awe and wonder to be found beyond The Shire as the eponymous hobbit, Bilbo, (Martin Freeman) and a band of fierce but merry dwarves led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage), embark on their adventure towards the dragon Smaug’s stronghold deep within The Lonely Mountain, but never any slyness or irony, no winks at the audience behind cynical detachment. (One earnest sequence in particular, in which Bilbo takes his leave of Gollum and then talks of what home means to the dwarves, recalls Sam’s speech at the end of Two Towers and will leave viewers’ hearts aching.) Jackson’s unwillingness to embrace anything other than earnestness in his original Lord of the Rings trilogy is in part what made those films resonate so strongly with early 21st century audiences. They contain silliness and laughter, but a silliness and laughter always carefully calibrated to service a delicate tonal balance. In those films, as in Tolkien’s original works, the story begins in Fellowship with the comical idea of an old hobbit’s birthday party, gradually elevating its register until, by the end of Return of the King , it becomes one of the greatest quest narratives ever filmed (or written). The problem with The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey as quest narrative, however, is that, for Tolkien, who wrote the story long before he ever put pen to paper on Lord of the Rings , that register never changes or elevates. Although in later years he would go back and make minor corrections to the original text to reflect updated plot points or characters, what starts with “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit” ends quite matter-of-factly in the same style, never going much beyond a simple and unpretentious adventure story for children. Jackson, taking on the task in reverse (creating his Hobbit after his Lord of the Rings ) occasionally missteps in his desire to combine the two stories into a tonally consistent whole, bringing silliness to moments that should be of great portent, and vice versa. For example: Many will point to Radagast the Brown (Sylvester McCoy), with his jackrabbit sled and bird poop-bespotted hair, as an example of comic relief that goes too far. It doesn’t, but the general dottiness of the character comes at a moment in the film of great peril, when it is revealed for the first time that the villainous Necromancer who is troubling the borders of Mirkwood might, in fact, be the villain — the evil Sauron. Tolkien could avoid the confluence, but not Jackson, who in his fierce desire to make The Hobbit as tonally consistent with Lord of the Rings as possible mixes the two and finally pushes his finely-tuned and hard-earned cart over, unbalancing the film in this and other parts as he tries too hard to align it with his earlier work. Where Jackson might occasionally misstep tonally, he takes the reigns from the episodic original and runs with generally fantastic results through several narrative additions, all of which give the characters more agency in their own affairs. After the film’s somewhat meandering first half (which includes two separate dwarf musical numbers), Bilbo and Thorin succeed in, for instance, escaping the trolls and wargs with actual actions and choices, instead of a Deus Ex Gandalf . Though hardcore fans might scoff at the blasphemy of adding anything to the source material, even those things written by Tolkien himself in the appendixes, Jackson succeeds cinematically in pulling off the Orc/Dwarf Battle of Nanduhirion and the fleshing out of Azog as a dominant and recurring adversary. Less successful are scene additions consisting of actors reprising their roles from Lord of the Rings . While the stuff with Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) and Sarumon (Christopher Lee) at the White Council works like gangbusters, an early scene where Frodo (Elijah Wood) stands around and does nothing smacks of prequel-itis. Even with all these additions, or perhaps because of them (the film clocks in at a staggering 166 minutes, or about a minute for every two pages of text in the original — and there are two films left) An Unexpected Journey feels less like a self-contained narrative and more like a partial installment, in ways the Lord of the Rings films never did. Like Bilbo reflecting on his long path from The Shire and what it means to fight for a place to call your own, however, returning to Middle Earth feels right . And if it doesn’t quite soar as high in transformative joy or ecstasy as we thought it might… it’s still home. Note : I saw the film in 3-D at 24 fps. The 3-D adds nothing to the film, and is a surcharge to be avoided. READ MORE ON THE HOBBIT (In theaters December 14): ‘Hobbit’ First Review: 48 FPS Is ‘Eye-Popping,’ But Watch Out For The Jar Jar Binks Of ‘LOTR’ WATCH: Peter Jackson’s Hobbit Video Reveals Over Ten Minutes of Behind the Scenes Footage Shawn Adler is a film writer and interviewer based out of NYC. For his in-depth writing on genre films, Shawn was once called “The Harold Bloom of superhero trailers” by the “Hollywood Reporter.” It would be a mistake to simply think that nobody cares about that now. Nobody cared about it then either. You can follow him on Twitter @Lethrup . Follow Shawn Adler on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘The Hobbit’ 3-D Early Review: Back Again, But Not Quite There

VIDEO: Just Stop What You’re Doing and Watch This Amazing Rear Window Time-Lapse

Some guy who should probably be running the space program instead focused his efforts on producing a time-lapse video of the goings-on in Rear Window , as seen from the eponymous vantage point in Jimmy Stewart’s apartment. I don’t really have any words for this beyond that. Just stop what you’re doing and have a look. Even the music is perfect! I’d like to nominate creator Jeff Desop for a Genius Grant, if anyone out there can help with that. [ Vimeo via AICN ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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VIDEO: Just Stop What You’re Doing and Watch This Amazing Rear Window Time-Lapse

Woody Allen’s To Rome With Love: How Do You Say ‘Neurotic’ In Italian?

Woody Allen continues his cinematic Eurotrip with To Rome With Love , which aims to repeat the formula of pitting navel-gazing privileged Americans against Old World locales with charming results. While it doesn’t go for the transformative magic of Midnight in Paris , will Woody’s Rome outing capture something special in Italy? Watch the first trailer below. To Rome With Love is comprised of four vignettes; one features Allen (in his first onscreen turn since 2006’s Scoop) and Judy Davis as a married couple; another stars Greta Gerwig, Jesse Eisenberg, Alec Baldwin and Ellen Page as Americans in Rome; a third features Penelope Cruz; and the fourth follows Roberto Benigni. While the trailer gives little away in terms of plot, it does provide a peek at how Allen’s brand of neurosis-comedy will play set against the streets and countryside of Italy. (Answer: Pretty much the same as it does in France, Spain, and New York.) Via Yahoo! : To Rome With Love debuts on June 22.

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Woody Allen’s To Rome With Love: How Do You Say ‘Neurotic’ In Italian?

Deepak Chopra Interviews Howard Falco – Spiritual Teacher & Author of I AM

World renowned teacher Deepak Chopra interviews Howard Falco, spiritual teacher and author of “I AM: The Power of Discovering Who You Really Are” www.thebookiam.com The interview covers Howard’s journey to his massive awakening that produced the transformative information in his book I AM. Also covered are several of the concepts and ideas covered in I AM including a path to peace and the great power within. I AM was published by Penguin/Tarcher and is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and everywhere books are sold. http://www.youtube.com/v/7KadLyGrp2U?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Originally posted here: Deepak Chopra Interviews Howard Falco – Spiritual Teacher & Author of I AM

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Deepak Chopra Interviews Howard Falco – Spiritual Teacher & Author of I AM

Amy Winehouse’s Dad Gives Her Clothes To Fans

Friends and family gathered at Amy’s favorite jazz club on Thursday night. By Gil Kaufman Amy Winehouse Photo: Carlos Alvarez/ Getty Images Amy Winehouse ‘s father, Mitch, made another trip to the late singer’s Camden, England, apartment this week, where fans have kept vigil since the news broke on Saturday that the “Rehab” singer had passed away at age 27. After greeting those supporters on Monday and thanking them for their kind words and offerings to his troubled daughter’s memory, Mitch , along with Amy’s mother, Janis, brother Alex and boyfriend Reg Traviss, came by on Thursday to remove some of the singer’s private effects from her apartment. Read what experts say about the negative effects of the type of instant fame Winehouse received. Mitch surprised some of those gathered outside by handing out a few of Amy’s clothes and accessories, including several tank tops, sunglasses and other trinkets, according to The Sun. “There are Amy’s T-shirts. This is what she would have wanted — for her fans to have her clothes,” he told the stunned fans, as he walked away with a pair of Winehouse’s signature ballet shoes in his back pocket. “God bless Amy Winehouse,” he said before hopping into a taxi. The family also carted off some other possessions, including Amy’s guitars and her lyric books. We explore what Winehouse’s musical legacy will be, beyond “Rehab.” Some of Winehouse’s pals and family got together to celebrate her life at her favorite jazz club on Thursday night. Her divorced parents were joined by Traviss and friends that included Kelly Osbourne and Eliza Doolittle at the Jazz After Dark club in London’s Soho district. Also on hand was producer Mark Ronson, who paid tribute to his muse during a concert the night before, when he performed a selection of Amy’s songs. Related Videos Amy Winehouse Remembered Related Photos Amy Winehouse’s Friends And Family Attend Her Funeral Amy Winehouse: A Life In Photos Related Artists Amy Winehouse

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Amy Winehouse’s Dad Gives Her Clothes To Fans

‘Cowboys & Aliens’: Jon Favreau Talks Creating Creatures

Steven Spielberg and Guillermo del Toro advised director, who aimed to ‘maintain some mystery and surprises.’ By Eric Ditzian Daniel Craig in “Cowboys & Aliens” Photo: Universal Pictures How do you surprise someone who’s seen it all — aliens who snatch bodies and aliens with dreadlocks and aliens who bloodily birth themselves from your stomach and aliens who phone home and aliens who eat cat food and great big blue aliens with tails they use for sex? Forget about the decades of classic extraterrestrial flicks that stream daily on TV, tablets and desktops. This year alone, movies like “Battle: Los Angeles,” “Super 8,” “Green Lantern” and “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” have hit the big screen, each trying to deliver not only eye-popping visuals but the post-credits comment between friends, “Damn, dude, have you ever seen something like that?” The answer, all too often and quite understandably, is, “Yes, yes, I have.” That’s the challenge “Cowboys & Aliens” director Jon Favreau faced as he sought to bring alien baddies to the Old West for a genre mash-up that hit theaters Friday (July 29). Favreau, though, counts himself lucky that he was able to lean on some of the most-established sci-fi players in Hollywood for help. The cinematic result is a race of aliens that land in a down-on-its-luck mining town, start to kidnap residents and eventually reveal themselves as extraterrestrial superfreaks on par with anything we’ve seen at the theater in recent years. Earlier this month in Montana, Favreau talked with MTV News about what makes a great big-screen alien , the special-effects decisions that helped his filmmaking process and the advice Steven Spielberg and Guillermo del Toro gave him along the way. (Beware of spoilers below.) “When you set out to make a movie like ‘Cowboys & Aliens,’ if you just play it as one joke for the whole movie, you’re in trouble,” Favreau explained. “You run out of gas after about the length of an ‘SNL’ sketch. So we really wanted to find an approach that could bear out a whole story. Part of it was identifying what kind of alien movie to make and what kind of cowboy movie to make.” The answer to the alien question was to reach back to classics of the ’70s and ’80s, before CG glam overtook practical effects as the preferred method of creating otherworldly creatures. “The alien movies I like the most are the ones I grew up with,” he said. “It was the pre-CG, almost verging on horror versions of alien films, like ‘Alien,’ ‘Aliens,’ ‘Predator’ and all the Spielberg stuff, and I include ‘Jaws’ in that, too. They were all the same kind of movie. “It was before you had computer effects, so you had to, through lighting and mystery and music, slowly reveal the creature. That technique has some somewhat been lost now, thanks to CGI. Even though we have CGI creatures eventually, we do use animatronics and we do use lighting and all the old techniques to reveal them.” The aliens in “Cowboys” have landed in an Arizona town to mine for gold — a metal as precious to humans as it is to these space travelers. What’s truly cool about them is their transformative quality: Their faces move and shift to expose layers below, and their bodies open up to unleash hidden, gooey hands. Gross and fascinating and scary, all at once. That’s exactly what Favreau was hoping to accomplish. ” ‘Predator’ and ‘Alien’: What was fun about those films is, as you saw the creatures, more and more layers were revealed, whether it was armor coming off with ‘Predator’ [and] weaponry, or in the case of ‘Alien,’ with the second set of teeth or the metamorphosis that it did from its egg state to the face-hugger to whatever that larval phase was when it busts out of your chest and finally into the big [creature],” he said. “It’s the shape-shifting quality of the aliens that I thought was really cool. We wanted to maintain some mystery and surprises with our creature.” To create those surprises, Favreau not only depended on his team of artists and effects masters, but on Spielberg and del Toro. “[Spielberg] was very involved with certain aspects of it preproduction, and one of those aspects was the alien design, because he’s been involved with so many,” he said. “And now seeing ‘Falling Skies’ and seeing ‘Super 8,’ I see that he was not just involved with his own films, but other films and projects he’s been producing and overseeing. He had a lot of specific insight into what things were important. “And Guillermo del Toro, I also know him, and he’s masterful,” Favreau added. “He always said you’ve got to get the silhouette right first and then you got to get the color right and then you got to get the detail right, in that order. He’s actually somebody who helped out and came in the editing room. I was showing him our animatronic work, because he’s very picky about that stuff, and when I knew it passed his muster, I felt very good.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Cowboys & Aliens.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Cowboys and Aliens’ Related Photos ‘Cowboys & Aliens’

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‘Cowboys & Aliens’: Jon Favreau Talks Creating Creatures