Tag Archives: tribeca-film

Ron Howard celebrates Tribeca with Vanity Fair – Hollywood.TV

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Hollywood icon Ron Howard helped Vanity Fair celebrate the Tribeca Film Festival. Robert De Niro, Anna Wintour and America Ferrera were among the other famous guests. Hollywood.TV is your…

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Ron Howard celebrates Tribeca with Vanity Fair – Hollywood.TV

Orange You Glad To See Heather Graham?

OK, sure, that’s a pretty bad joke, but it’s got nothing on this terrible outfit Heather Graham wore to the Tribeca Film Festival for the premiere of some movie called Goodbye To All That . I mean, where’s her trademark cougar cleavage ? See, this is what happens when you get too famous and you’re surrounded by nothing but yes men who won’t tell you when you’re about to make a huge mistake, like not dropping any cleavage for a movie premiere. Which is why Heather needs to hire me as her red carpet wardrobe consultant. I promise I’d never let her leave the house in something like this. Although if I had my way, we’d never leave the bedroom either. » view all 21 photos Photos: WENN.com

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Orange You Glad To See Heather Graham?

Quote Of The Day: Nas Describes The State Of Rap Music As “A Lot Of Jingles” And Says Grammy’s “Will Never Get It Right”

Nas ain’t never lied… Except to Kelis , right? Via Page Six reports : Nas, who’s had 13 Grammy nominations and no wins, says he doesn’t see it as an snub. “I like that the Grammys nominated me,” he said at the Paley Center for Media during a panel for VH1’s “The Tanning of America.” “I know the hugest platform for music is the Grammys, it matters . . . but something that huge is never gonna get it right. So it’s OK. It gives me the opportunity to wear a nice suit on a red carpet.” He also says, “As far as the state of rap music, it’s a lot of jingles . . . And that’s cool . . . I see a lot of young black kids making money, and I’m very happy with that.” LOL @ “it’s a lot of jingles”

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Quote Of The Day: Nas Describes The State Of Rap Music As “A Lot Of Jingles” And Says Grammy’s “Will Never Get It Right”

Penn Badgley and Imogen Poots at Tim Buckley Premiere – Hollywood.TV

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Penn Badgley and Imogen Poots hit the red carpet at the premiere of their new movie Greetings from Tim Buckley at the Tribeca Film Festival. the film is a bi…

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Penn Badgley and Imogen Poots at Tim Buckley Premiere – Hollywood.TV

Kate Hudson stuns in white at Tribeca Film Festival – Hollywood.TV

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Kate Hudson stunned at the premiere of her film Reluctant Fundamentalist at the Tribeca Film Festival. Kate was joined by her co-star in the film Kiefer Suth…

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Kate Hudson stuns in white at Tribeca Film Festival – Hollywood.TV

UPDATED: ‘Top Gun 2’ Tweet − Is Val Kilmer Ahead Of Or Behind The Curve Here?

Back in November, the New York Times reported that a planned sequel to Top Gun , with Tom Cruise aboard, had fallen apart in the wake of director Tony Scott ‘s suicide last August. So, I did a double take a few minutes ago when I read this Tweet from what is supposedly Val Kilmer’s official account: I've got a great title for the TOP GUN SEQUEL: DOG FIGHT— Val Kilmer (@ValEKilmer) April 24, 2013 Time will tell whether the Tweet is a joke, a leak or a sign that the actor has awakened from a long contemplative slumber that resulted in him missing months of pop-culture news. If a Top Gun sequel is back in play and an Iceman cameo beckons, Kilmer should invest in one of those P90X cross-training videos that former vice presidential Paul Ryan favors. In the most recent pictures I’ve seen, the six-pack that the actor sported in Top Gun had evolved into a full keg. UPDATE:  Five hours after Kilmer posted his idea for a Top Gun 2  title, he returned to Twitter to explain himself:  Before the “Dog Fight” tweet, he had posted a photo of him and Tony Scott talking on the set of the original movie.  Here’s what he had to say: I am fully aware that we have lost one of the most considerate kind directors and that everyone involved in this project has put it on hold.— Val Kilmer (@ValEKilmer) April 24, 2013 I posted a photo of me and Tony and thought of the last time we talked about the sequel and wrote you all what I told him.— Val Kilmer (@ValEKilmer) April 24, 2013 In fairness to Kilmer, I’d also like to point out the comment below from “Chris” who saw the actor channel Mark Twain in Dallas and noted that Kilmer has lost weight. Judge for yourself here . Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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UPDATED: ‘Top Gun 2’ Tweet − Is Val Kilmer Ahead Of Or Behind The Curve Here?

WATCH: ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ Japanese Trailer − Does Spock Die In The Volcano?

If you simply must Hoover up any new footage of Star Trek Into Darkness footage that’s out there, then have a look at this Japanese trailer .  There are a few new morsels to be found in the footage, including a shot of Spock in the volcano looking perilously close to becoming one with the magma churning around him.   There’s also a scene of Peter Weller’s character, Admiral Marcus , telling someone to “run this bastard down.”  Presumably, he’s talking about Benedict Cumberbatch ‘s mayhem-causing character John Harrison, who’s getting high marks for his performance in early reviews of the J.J. Abrams -directed movie.  Here’s what  Lucy O’Brien wrote  on IGN : “Cumberbatch himself has never been better. While he’s proven his ability at volatile emotional-detachment with his role in Sherlock, he is, here, a true snake; an expressionless, sliver of a man whose mask only slips when he lunges for his prey. The Enterprise crew look trivial against him, their uniforms retro and goofy against his men’s magazine sleekness. Even Spock, quite the regal figure, looks small next to him.” Nice description, although in this clip, Spock doesn’t look small. He looks very, very hot: I’m not too worried about him though given this photo, which surfaced a few weeks ago: New ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ Photo: Cold Chillin’ With Mr. Spock? What do you think? Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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WATCH: ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ Japanese Trailer − Does Spock Die In The Volcano?

INTERVIEW: Ethan Hawke & Richard Linklater Discuss ‘Before Midnight’ At Tribeca Film Festival

“I’ve been acting since I was 13 years old, so I love playing around with different genres of movies…It keeps my profession fresh for me,” Ethan Hawke   told me on the red carpet at the Tribeca Film Festival . Hawke is here to make the rounds for  Before Midnight , the third entry in writer/director Richard Linklater ‘ s popular indie franchise.  It’s been 18 years since the actor starred opposite Julie Delpy in the first film,  Before Sunrise ,  but Hawke still remembers that initial experience fondly.  “Richard Linklater was the first person of my generation who I felt like, was, a grown-up artist.” As for Linklater, he’s happily surprised that new audiences are discovering this third entry.  “It’s really cool!  Young people like this one too…It really stands on its own.  I would like people would see this and then go back and see the others.  It moves you in a different way.” Check out my full interview below: More on Before Midnight : TRIBECA: ‘Before Midnight’ − Richard Linklater Hints That A Fourth Film Could Happen Follow Grace Randolph on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter . 

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INTERVIEW: Ethan Hawke & Richard Linklater Discuss ‘Before Midnight’ At Tribeca Film Festival

REVIEW: ‘Iron Man 3’ Proves Its Mettle Despite Symptoms Of Franchise Fatigue

The third time is neither a particular charm nor the kiss of death for Marvel Studios ’ robust Iron Man   series, which has changed studios (from Paramount to Disney) and directors ( Shane Black subbing for Jon Favreau ) but otherwise toyed little with the formula that has so far generated more than $1.2 billion in global ticket sales. The inevitable franchise fatigue ― plus a markedly unmemorable villain ― may account for the feeling that Iron Man 3   is more perfunctory and workmanlike than its two predecessors, but this solid production still delivers more than enough of what fans expect to earn its weight in box office metal. Part of the rich appeal of the first Iron Man  (2008) came from the inspired casting of Robert Downey Jr . , who brought loads of impish charisma and insouciance to the part of defense contractor turned iron-plated superhero Tony Stark . It was particularly fun to watch Downey  becoming  Iron Man, bobbing and weaving about in his space-age rocket suit like a novice surfer trying to stand up on a wave. You can only do an origin story once, alas, and some of the magic was already gone from 2010’s Iron Man 2 , which pitted our hero against a stock Russian heavy ( Mickey Rourke ) in a standard-issue revenge narrative, but still found ample time for Stark and romantic foil Pepper Potts ( Gwyneth Paltrow ) to do their very passable Tracy-Hepburn routine . There was also a sly running commentary on the celebrification of American culture ― and, in Stark’s effort to rid himself of the shrapnel slowly poisoning his body, a deft analog for Downey’s own widely publicized battle with various forms of addiction. Most of that is absent at the start of Iron Man 3 , which finds Stark in fine physical shape ― if a bit mentally unhinged from the events of The Avengers  ― and living in relative domestic bliss with the comely Ms. Potts. All of which leaves little for Black (and co-screenwriter Drew Pearce ) to do other than summon up the latest villain from the Marvel dugout: A bearded, bin Laden-esque baddie who calls himself the Mandarin ( Ben Kingsley ) and who claims credit for a series of terror bombings, one of which, a frightening attack in front of Hollywood’s historic Chinese Theatre, has landed Stark security honcho Happy (Favreau) in a coma. (Although clearly unintentional, the movie’s recurring images of severed limbs and burning bodies can’t help but strike a queasy note in light of the recent events in Boston.) Spewing his boilerplate anti-American rhetoric in a series of crudely made videos that mysteriously jam the television airwaves, the Mandarin promises that “the big one is coming,” just in time for Christmas no less. If we’ve learned anything from fantasy villains ranging from Darth Vader to the Dark Knight  trilogy’s Ra’s al Ghul , first appearances can be deceiving. Suffice to say that the Mandarin is in some kind of cahoots with a couple of blasts from Tony Stark’s past: an experimental botanist ( Rebecca Hall ) and her wealthy benefactor, Aldrich Killian ( Guy Pearce ), whose prize project, Extremis , involves “hacking” into the human DNA chain to cure the sick, heal the lame and pretty much do anything else you might desire. Upon hearing Killian’s pitch, Pepper notes that the technology sounds like it could easily be weaponized. She doesn’t know the half of it. As an A-list screenwriter in the ’80s and ’90s, Black practically defined a certain brand of sardonic Hollywood action spectacle (his credits include Lethal Weapon, The Last Boy Scout  and The Long Kiss Goodnight ), then disappeared for most of the 2000s, surfacing briefly in 2005 with his directorial debut, the self-referential neo-noir Kiss Kiss Bang Bang  (which featured Downey in a crucial comeback role). Iron Man 3  reps a huge step up in terms of scale, and Black largely acquits himself well, keeping the pace brisk, deploying a couple of modest surprises and staging a few undeniably impressive, super-sized setpieces. Among them: an end-of-first-act raid that reduces Stark’s swank Malibu pad to smithereens, and a mid-film, mid-air rescue that draws upon some truly spectacular skydiving acrobatics. The entire package is never less than professional, enhanced by ace tech contributions from cinematographer John Toll, production designer Bill Brzeski (replacing the late J. Michael Riva) and editors Peter Ford and Jeffrey S. Elliot. Yet the movie suffers from separating Downey from three of his best verbal sparring partners ― Favreau, Paltrow and Paul Bettany (as the voice of the uber-computer Jarvis) ― for much of the pic’s running time. And from top to bottom, Favreau’s handcrafted touch is conspicuously absent, particularly his affection for retro, Ray Harryhausen-esque visual effects. (This is by far the most digital-looking series entry.) Perhaps fittingly for a movie that introduces a new generation of remote-guided Iron Man suits, Iron Man 3  all too often feels as if it were assembled by a machine. Though advertised as Iron Man 3  in all promotional materials, the pic’s full onscreen title reads as Iron Man Three .

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REVIEW: ‘Iron Man 3’ Proves Its Mettle Despite Symptoms Of Franchise Fatigue

INTERVIEW: Zac Efron & Dennis Quaid Stick With Independent Film ‘At Any Price’

The studios want him, but, these, days Zac Efron only has eyes for indie film.  After making a splash at the New York Film Festival with  The Paperboy last fall , Efron is back in the Big Apple, at the Tribeca Film Festival, with  At Any Price .  What’s the deal? “Y’know, Dennis [Quaid] says that the only rule he sort of had for himself in his career is to do as many different types of movies as possible, and never stop stretching and trying something new,” Efron told when I talked to him about the project. I also talked to Quaid who said that he and At Any Price  director Ramin Bahrani drew inspiration from Arthur Miller’s classic play:  Death of a Salesman . “We talked about Death of a Salesman and the Willy Loman character a lot…[my character] is a man who’s really trying to do the best for his family but he’s corrupted himself in the process,” the actor told me. The buzz on At Any Price is that Efron will get you into the theater, but you’ll leave it talking about Quaid. Check out my full in-depth interview below: Follow Grace Randolph on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter . 

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INTERVIEW: Zac Efron & Dennis Quaid Stick With Independent Film ‘At Any Price’