Tag Archives: zac efron

Sony Classics Says Oui to No, Django Unchained Peak: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday morning’s news round up: Icon will produce Lee Daniels’ next project, James McAvoy and Jessica Chastain team for a double-feature, Zac Efron and Seth Rogen will pair for a new project, and more… Sony Classics Nabs Cannes’ No North American rights to Pablo Larraín’s Cannes Directors’ Fortnight feature No have been picked up by Sony Classics. The film is based on a true story: When Chilean military dictator Augusto Pinochet, facing international pressure, calls for a referendum on his presidency in 1988, opposition leaders persuade a brash young advertising executive, Rene Saavedra (Gael García Bernal), to spearhead their campaign.  Icon to Produce Lee Daniels’ The Butler The Oscar-nominated Precious filmmaker’s next project will be the first for the Icon UK Group under its new management. Starring Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey, the story is inspired by Eugene Allen, a White House butler who served eight American presidents over the course of four decades. The historical fiction revolves around a father and son pulled apart by the changing tides and civil unrest that swept through the US in the 1960s. Daniels is currently in Cannes for The Paperboy , which is screening in competition this week. Alister Grierson to Direct Mary Mother of Christ Australian director Alister Grierson ( Sanctum ) will direct Mary Mother of Christ , which is being styled as the Biblical prequel to the story of The Passion of the Christ . Benedict Fitzgerald and Barbara Nicolosi wrote the screenplay. Israeli actress Odeya Rush ( The Locals ) will play Mary. Houston-based mega-church pastor Joel Osteen will executive produce. Filming begins this summer in the Middle East and Lionsgate will release in North America and Hyde Park is handling international sales in Cannes. Around the ‘net… Cannes Gets Django Unchained Peak The Weinstein Company showcased three clip packages from its fall 2012 slate, with Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained shoring up huge buzz along with P.T. Anderson’s The Master and David O. Russell’s The Silver-Linings Playbook . The Guardian reports . James McAvoy and Jessica Chastain Double Up For Disappearance The two will star opposite each other in the double feature projects The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Him and The Disappearance of Elanor Rigby: Her for Myriad Pictures. The film, by writer-director Ned Benson ( In Defiance of Gravity ), is a love story about a married NYC couple who deal with a life-altering emotional experience showing it from both their perspectives, Deadline reports . Nicholas Stoller to Direct Seth Rogen & Zac Efron in Townies Stoller, who most recently directed The Five-Year Engagement for Universal, is in negotiations for Townies , which the studio picked up in a July bidding war. The film features Rogen as a family man who lives near an alpha-male fraternity house and has to contend with a frat member (Efron) whose raucous behavior wreaks havoc on his life. THR reports .

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Sony Classics Says Oui to No, Django Unchained Peak: Biz Break

TWC Nabs Cannes’ Sapphires, Student Academy Award Winners, Fellini in LA: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday afternoon’s Biz Break, Exclusive Media takes rights to Zac Efron/Dennis Quaid starrer; Universal picks up rights to Kathryn Bigelow’s untitled bin Laden film; and with the initial craze over 3-D fading comes scrutiny over the medium. Weinsteins Take Rights to Cannes’ The Sapphires Starring comedian Chris Dowd and Deborah Mailman, The Sapphires will screen at the 65th Cannes Film Festival this Saturday. Wayne Blair directed the feature which is inspired by a true story about four young and talented Australian Aboriginal girls from a remote mission as they learn about love, friendship and war when their all girl group The Sapphires entertains the U.S. troops in Vietnam in 1968. 10 Win 39th Student Academy Awards The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ 39th Annual Student Academy Awards were unveiled; the organization will host an awards ceremony June 9th. The winners in the Narrative category: Nani , Justin Tipping (American Film Institute); Narcocorrido , Ryan Prows (American Film Institute); Under , Mark Raso (Columbia University). Documentary: Dying Green , Ellen Tripler (American University); Hiro: A Story of Japanese Internment , Keiko Wright (NYU); Lost Country , Heather Burky (Art Inst. of Jacksonville). Animation: Eyrie , David Wolter (Calif. Institute of the Arts); The Jockstrap Raiders , Mark Nelson (UCLA); My Little Friend , Eric Prah (Ringling College of Art and Design). Alternative: The Reality Clock , Amanda Tasse (USC). Exclusive Media Nabs Rights to Dennis Quaid, Zac Efron Starrer At Any Price The film, directed by Chop Shop director Ramin Bahrani, also stars Kim Dickens and Heather Graham and revolves around rebellious Dean Whipple (Efron), who wants nothing more than to pursue his dream of becoming a professional race car driver, whilst trying to avoid the obligations to his family’s farming empire. But Dean’s ambitious father Henry (Quaid), whose manic pursuit of expansion has alienated the whole family, sets his sights on Dean’s succession. Around the ‘net… How 48 Hours at Large in L.A. Turned Fellini into a Maestro Fellini Black and White is set to explore what may have happened when the celebrated Italian film director Federico Fellini disappeared for 48 hours on his first visit to America, where he was due to attend the Oscar awards. Instead of a smooth trip to the 1957 ceremony, the man who was to make such classics as La Dolce Vita and 8½ almost missed the awards gala after going missing for two days somewhere in Los Angeles, The Guardian reports . Universal Takes International Rights to Kathryn Bigelow’s Untitled Bin Laden Film Universal took select international rights to the true story about the team that hunted and killed Osama bin Laden last year. Sony Pictures will release the film starring Jessica Chastain, Joel Edgerton, Jason Clarke, Mark Strong and Edgar Ramirez in the U.S., Deadline reports . 3-D Comes into Sharper Focus Despite the format’s troubles, 2011 marked another record year for 3-D, with total box office revenue from 3-D movies hitting $6.9 billion, an 18 percent jump, according to provisional figures from Screen Digest, THR reports .

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TWC Nabs Cannes’ Sapphires, Student Academy Award Winners, Fellini in LA: Biz Break

REVIEW: Zac Efron Muscles Up in Disposable The Lucky One

Nicholas Sparks. The name alone conjures up images of a romantic connection leaping between two people like an electric current, of fireworks illuminating the sky behind a couple canoodling at the side of a silvery lake somewhere and swearing they’ll never be parted — except that she’s dying of terminal amnesia and he has to leave tomorrow for an 50-year deployment in the Middle East, oh no! Love means never having to say “I wasn’t crying, my allergies just got really bad all of a sudden!” in Sparks’s world, and that remains true for the latest adaptation of his work, The Lucky One , directed by Shine ‘s Scott Hicks and starring Zac Efron and Taylor Schilling in a story as gauzily soft and disposable as the tissues the susceptible might need to pack. Efron plays Logan, a Marine home after three tours of duty and struggling through a sense of displacement and jolts of PTSD. One morning after a raid while he was still in Iraq, he spotted a photo on the ground and went to pick it up. The act took him out of the path of a bomb that exploded a few seconds later, one that would have killed him if he’d stayed put. After surviving a few more brushes with death, he came to believe that the picture, of a blond woman, was his lucky charm, and he vowed to find her in order to thank her. He does this by packing up a duffel and heading out on foot with his dog, walking from Colorado to Louisiana in search of the (fictional) small town of Hamden, Louisiana, located in that region of the South — I’m sure you know it — in which it’s perpetually golden late afternoon. He matched a lighthouse there to one in the background of the photo, and after a little asking around, he finds his way to a dog kennel owned by the cheery Ellie (Blythe Danner) and her granddaughter Beth (Taylor Schilling), a skittish single mom with a bullying ex-husband — and, of course, the “guardian angel” from the photo. The Lucky One is filled with talk of destiny, much of it done by Efron in the opening and closing voiceover, but like any movie romance, it needs a complication to potentially keep its fated leads apart. In this case, it’s the seemingly easily surmountable (it’s no terminal amnesia) quirk that Logan “can’t find the right words” to tell Beth why he’s really there, and so instead takes a job at the kennel and begins winning her over with his kindness and rippling biceps. What will Beth do when she finds out? She’ll get mad, but I’m honestly not sure why — maybe if he’d been carrying around a nude photo of her, or been keeping locks of her hair and smelling them compulsively, it’d be something to get creeped out about, but his explanation is pretty legitimately sappy. Efron and Schilling play a Disneyland version of a traumatized veteran and an emotionally abused spouse, their emotional wounds salved by their time together during a courtship that consists of a lot of mutual ogling through windows and fixing of boats (not a metaphor). Logan also bonds with Beth’s son Ben (Riley Thomas Stewart), a boy whose love of chess and playing the violin doesn’t sit well with his demanding, tough-guy father Keith (Jay R. Ferguson). Efron isn’t plausible as a battle-scarred soldier, but even without the fake tattoos he’s no longer built like a tween heartthrob. While Schilling — in cutoffs or floral dresses, her hair in a messy ponytail — is treated with chaste deference by the camera (she first appears walking out of the light like a near-death vision), the film has no problems lovingly objectifying the newly buff physique of its male lead. The Lucky One aspires to but never reaches the grandly melodramatic heights of the über-Sparks adaptation The Notebook , though a reconciliation embrace in an outdoor shower of some sort seems deliberately staged to evoke the earlier feature. The film can’t with any conviction portray this as a great love, even on simplified and schmaltzified scale (“You should be kissed every day, every hour, every minute,” Logan tells Beth) — Efron and Schilling simply look like two pretty people who are bound to get together because they both have the big blue eyes of a porcelain doll. Their problems are made to appear so mild, and the setting in which they live so idyllic that  The Lucky One becomes numbingly pleasant, a cinematic anesthetic. It may not be The Notebook , but  The Lucky One does unintentionally evoke another cable-TV standard in its story of a zen-like wanderer, trying to leave behind a violent past, who comes to a small town, rents a run-down place to live and falls in love with a girl whose jealous ex has a lot of local power. It’s  Road House without, well, the road house. And instead of doing tai chi out by the water, Efron’s character prefers, sensibly but less interestingly, to just walk. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Zac Efron Muscles Up in Disposable The Lucky One

Taylor Swift and Zac Efron: Spotted! Giggling!

Might we soon need to Tac a new young power couple in Hollywood on to the board? According to the latest issue of Us Weekly , Taylor Swift and Zac Efron (aka Tac, according to certain opening sentences) dined together at an Italian restaurant in Los Angeles. Witnesses say the superstar singer and former High School Musical star “were deep in conversation and very giggly,” even arriving together in the latter’s Audi. A source shoots down dating rumors between this pair, simply saying Taylor and Zac “were in L.A. doing press stuff together, and after they were done, they decided to grab dinner.” And, yes, it is true that they are starring in The Lorax together. But what fun is that? Two professionals exchanging career-oriented talk and mere friendly banter? It’s far more enjoyable to play this out in our minds and imagine Swift penning her next heartbreaking album about Efron, isn’t it? [Photos: WENN.com]

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Taylor Swift and Zac Efron: Spotted! Giggling!

Zac Efron at the Staples Center

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Hollywood Tv. caught Zac Efron and friends heading to a Lakers game Follow Hollywood.TV on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Zac Efron at the Staples Center

Zac Efron to Star in The Paperboy: First Poster

Zac Efron really is all grown up. The former High School Musical actor will anchor his most mature movie to date in 2012, starring alongside Nicole Kidman, Matthew McConaughey, John Cusack and others in The Paperboy, an upcoming drama based on a 1995 novel by Pete Dexter. Check out the first official poster now: The film focuses on a Miami Times reporter who comes back to his Florida hometown to investigate a case involving a death row inmate. It’s not the only film to star Efron in the new year, either. Check out The Lucky One trailer now!

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Zac Efron to Star in The Paperboy: First Poster

10 Harrowing Stills From the Set of New Year’s Eve

Are you really sure that you want to spend $10 this weekend on a ticket to see Garry Marshall’s bloated holiday rom-com New Year’s Eve ? (That’s $10 plus the cost of whatever fast food therapy you seek immediately afterward to numb the pain and emptiness you feel after seeing Robert De Niro play a dying man whose only wish is to see the ball drop one more time.) If you think you are, then click through these 10 distressing stills from the set of the ensemble film as a last-minute test. If you get through them without breaking into dry heaves or mild sweats, you’re ready to see New Year’s Eve at the multiplex. Good luck!

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10 Harrowing Stills From the Set of New Year’s Eve

Zac Efron, Ashton Kutcher, and Lea Michele attend the NEW YEAR’S EVE premiere.

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New Year’s Eve premiered tonight in Los Angeles. The film, which [seemingly] stars every actor in Hollywood, debuted at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on Monday night. In attendance were the film’s stars: Zac Efron, Ashton Kutcher, Lea Michele, Katherine Heigl, Abigail Breslin, Sofia Vergara, Josh Duhamel and wife Fergie! Follow Hollywood.TV on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Zac Efron, Ashton Kutcher, and Lea Michele attend the NEW YEAR’S EVE premiere.

The Lucky One Trailer: Zac Efron Meets Nicholas Sparks

What do you get when you cross an attractive young actor with one of the best-selling authors of his generation? The Lucky One . In this upcoming drama, the former High School Musical star takes on the role of a Marine who travels to North Carolina after serving multiple tours in Iraq because he believes a woman there (played by Taylor Schilling) was responsible for his well-being overseas. Watch an extended trailer/featurette for the film now, which comes out on April 20, 2012: The Lucky One Featurette

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The Lucky One Trailer: Zac Efron Meets Nicholas Sparks

Which Would You Rather (Not) See: New Year’s Eve or Human Centipede 2?

In the brand new trailer for New Year’s Eve , Garry Marshall’s holiday-themed movie event that promises to give the phrase “ensemble romantic comedy” a bad name, Robert De Niro wonders what could possibly beat “New York on New Year’s Eve.” I’ll tell you what: Not throwing all of your actorly credibility out the window confetti-style to appear alongside Zac Efron, Jon Bon Jovi and Ludacris in a movie that features Ashton Kutcher trapped in an elevator with the annoying girl from Glee . You know what other moviegoers might also consider better than seeing Garry Marshall’s vision of NYC on New Year’s Eve? Tom Six’s Human Centipede 2 , which inspires similar nausea but for different reasons.

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Which Would You Rather (Not) See: New Year’s Eve or Human Centipede 2?