Tag Archives: actor

The Expendables 2 Opens Solid With The Bourne Legacy And Paranorman Ranking 2nd & 3rd

The Expendables 2 bumped last week’s number one film The Bourne Legacy to number two over the weekend. The latest installment of the action pic grossed over $28.7 million in its first roll out, averaging a solid $8,670 screens. Bourne dropped 55% in its second round, while Focus Features’ Paranorman rounded out the top three in its initial run. 1. The Expendables 2 Gross: $28,750,000 Screens: $3,316 (PSA: $8,670) Week: 1 The first round of The Expendables opened with $34,825,135 when it debuted in theaters in August 2010, averaging $10,650 in 3,270 theaters. The second round is decidedly less heavy-hitting in terms of box office, but nevertheless a solid start for the action title starring Sylvester Stallone, who gave the director’s chair over to Simon West for the latest installment. 2. The Bourne Legacy Gross: $17,019,855 (Cume: $69,580,935) Screens: 3,753 (PSA: $4,535) Week: 2 (Change – 55%) The Jeremy Renner starter added just eight theaters in the U.S. and its drop from its first weekend roll out was a fairly acceptable 55%, though the pic landed in the second spot in the overall box office. The Bourne Legacy debuted in 3,745 theaters, averaging $10,752. Internationally, Legacy added five international territories, bringing the title to 18 abroad. it’s worldwide gross is now at $97.7 million. 3. Paranorman (3-D, Animation) Gross: $14,008,498 Screens: 3,429 (PSA: $4,085) Week: 1 The stop-action animated feature landed in the third place in the overall box office with just over $14 million with a so-so $4,085 average in 3,429 screens. The pic was produced by Coraline creators Laika and their latest effort performed similarly, grossing $16.8 million in a third place bow in February, 2009. 4. The Campaign Gross: $13,385,000 (Cume: $51,694,000) Screens: 3,255 (PSA: $4,112) Week: 2 (Change: – 50%) The comedy added 50 locations in its second weekend and its 50% drop was in the realm of acceptable. Internationally, The Campaign has added another $2.1 million so far. 5. Sparkle Gross: $12 million Screens: 3,255 (PSA: $5,348) Week: 1 With a $14 million budget, the film had a solid debut, landing in the top five of the overall box office. 6. The Dark Knight Rises Gross: $11,140,000 (Cume: $409,916,000) Screens: 3,157 (PSA: $3,529) Week: 5 (Change: – 41%) TDKR hit the $400 million milestone on Friday after 29 days of release. Overseas, the pic has grossed nearly $489 million bringing its worldwide total to just under $900 million. 7. The Odd Life of Timothy Green (opened Wednesday) Gross: $10,909,000 (Cume: $15,187,000) Screens: 2,598 (PSA: $4,199) Week: 1 The feature debuted Wednesday in 2,551 theaters with a head-start total of $2.3 million ahead of the weekend. It is the weekend’s fourth debut in the top 10. 8. Hope Springs Gross: $9.1 million (Cume: $35,051,000) Screens: 2,361 (PSA: $3,854) Week: 2 (Change: -38%) The comedy opened in the fourth spot when it debuted in theaters last weekend. The title stayed in the same number of locations, averaging a decent $3,854 vs its $6,607 opener. 9. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days Gross: $3,850,000 (Cume: $38,762,321) Screens: 2,737 (PSA: $1,407) Week: 3 (Change: – 52%) The title lost 664 locations in its third weekend, averaging $1,407 vs $2,411 in its second round last week when it placed fifth in the overall box office. 10. Total Recall Gross: $3.5 million (Cume: $51,782,000) Screens: 2,434 (Average: $1,438) Week: 3 (Change: – 56%) This is likely the final weekend for the title in the top ten. Total Recall lost 1,167 screens compared to its second round last week. Watch the full video on YouTube . [ Sources: Box Office Mojo , Hollywood.com ]

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The Expendables 2 Opens Solid With The Bourne Legacy And Paranorman Ranking 2nd & 3rd

Remembering Tony Scott: Five Movies By The Late Director That You Must See

As Hollywood processes the apparent suicide of filmmaker Tony Scott  reports — included a report that he jumped to his death wearing the lucky (faded) red baseball cap that he first donned on the set of his blockbuster his Top Gun — I prefer to dwell, not on Scott’s tragic death, but his life in movies. In Roger Ebert’s review of Scott’s essential True Romance , the critic wrote: “This is the kind of movie that creates its own universe, and glories in it.” I actually think that assessment applies to most of Scott’s work and is what made him special as a filmmaker. Even when his movies weren’t cohesive — Domino or The Hunger come to mind— they were still worth watching and impossible to dismiss because they were filled with provocative ideas, images and themes that amounted to something more than a collection of scenes, acts and dialogue. Below, my list of Scott’s best movies.  If you have a different list in mind, check out our Movieline poll where you can vote for your favorite Scott movie.   1.   True Romance   (1993): Quentin Tarantino usually gets the lion’s share of the credit for this adrenaline-stoking orgy of action and violence because he wrote the script, but it was Scott who shaped QT’s words and the performances of  a killer cast — Christian Slater (at his peak), Patricia Arquette, Dennis Hopper and Christopher Walken (both memorable), Brad Pitt and an undiscovered James Gandolfini — into a sexy, bloody rocket ride that, almost 20 years later, still thrills and still influences filmmakers. 2. Top Gun  (1986):  Arguably the movie that defines American confidence — and cockiness — during the Reagan era.  Full of hard bodies, fast aircraft and Tom Cruise’s beautifully aerodynamic smile, Top Gun makes you feel, as the line goes, “the need for speed.” Scott was working on a sequel before his death, and Cruise was supposed to play a role in it.  I was looking forward to seeing where Scott was going to take this idea. 3. Crimson Tide  (1995):  This movie has been given short shrift in the obituaries of Scott that are accruing, but it is not to be missed.   Crimson Tide is that rare thing: an intelligent popcorn movie.  Like the U.S. nuclear sub Alabama on which the movie is set,   Crimson Tide runs fast and deep–and yet inside its sleek Hollywood hull are a lot of smart and thorny ideas about leadership, compliance and the ramifications of nuclear war. Scott makes the most of Michael Schiffer’s screenplay and memorable performances by Gene Hackman and Denzel Washington. 4. Enemy of the State (1998):   A prescient film and a fine example of Scott’s fascination with the technological — and by extension, social and cultural — revolution that took place during his career as a filmmaker. Almost three years before the Bush administration’s reaction to 9/11 had Americans questioning how much of their First Amendment rights they were willing to sacrifice for national security, Scott gave us this over-the-top look at our surveillance society run amok. Technology is as much the star here as Will Smith, but the actor who steals the show is Gene Hackman, who pays  clever homage to his performance as surveilliance-expert Harry Caul in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1974 film, The Conversation. 5 . The Hunger  (1983):  Scott’s first feature film is a mess, but it’s worth watching again, if only for the memorable opening scene (below) in which ultra-hip vampire couple David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve catch Goth pioneers Bauhaus performing “Bela Lugosi Is Dead” at a nightclub, where they pick up their next meal: Ann Magnuson. The concert-to carnage sequence plays like the creepiest MTV video ever. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Remembering Tony Scott: Five Movies By The Late Director That You Must See

Remembering Tony Scott: Five Movies By The Late Director That You Must See

As Hollywood processes the apparent suicide of filmmaker Tony Scott  reports — included a report that he jumped to his death wearing the lucky (faded) red baseball cap that he first donned on the set of his blockbuster his Top Gun — I prefer to dwell, not on Scott’s tragic death, but his life in movies. In Roger Ebert’s review of Scott’s essential True Romance , the critic wrote: “This is the kind of movie that creates its own universe, and glories in it.” I actually think that assessment applies to most of Scott’s work and is what made him special as a filmmaker. Even when his movies weren’t cohesive — Domino or The Hunger come to mind— they were still worth watching and impossible to dismiss because they were filled with provocative ideas, images and themes that amounted to something more than a collection of scenes, acts and dialogue. Below, my list of Scott’s best movies.  If you have a different list in mind, check out our Movieline poll where you can vote for your favorite Scott movie.   1.   True Romance   (1993): Quentin Tarantino usually gets the lion’s share of the credit for this adrenaline-stoking orgy of action and violence because he wrote the script, but it was Scott who shaped QT’s words and the performances of  a killer cast — Christian Slater (at his peak), Patricia Arquette, Dennis Hopper and Christopher Walken (both memorable), Brad Pitt and an undiscovered James Gandolfini — into a sexy, bloody rocket ride that, almost 20 years later, still thrills and still influences filmmakers. 2. Top Gun  (1986):  Arguably the movie that defines American confidence — and cockiness — during the Reagan era.  Full of hard bodies, fast aircraft and Tom Cruise’s beautifully aerodynamic smile, Top Gun makes you feel, as the line goes, “the need for speed.” Scott was working on a sequel before his death, and Cruise was supposed to play a role in it.  I was looking forward to seeing where Scott was going to take this idea. 3. Crimson Tide  (1995):  This movie has been given short shrift in the obituaries of Scott that are accruing, but it is not to be missed.   Crimson Tide is that rare thing: an intelligent popcorn movie.  Like the U.S. nuclear sub Alabama on which the movie is set,   Crimson Tide runs fast and deep–and yet inside its sleek Hollywood hull are a lot of smart and thorny ideas about leadership, compliance and the ramifications of nuclear war. Scott makes the most of Michael Schiffer’s screenplay and memorable performances by Gene Hackman and Denzel Washington. 4. Enemy of the State (1998):   A prescient film and a fine example of Scott’s fascination with the technological — and by extension, social and cultural — revolution that took place during his career as a filmmaker. Almost three years before the Bush administration’s reaction to 9/11 had Americans questioning how much of their First Amendment rights they were willing to sacrifice for national security, Scott gave us this over-the-top look at our surveillance society run amok. Technology is as much the star here as Will Smith, but the actor who steals the show is Gene Hackman, who pays  clever homage to his performance as surveilliance-expert Harry Caul in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1974 film, The Conversation. 5 . The Hunger  (1983):  Scott’s first feature film is a mess, but it’s worth watching again, if only for the memorable opening scene (below) in which ultra-hip vampire couple David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve catch Goth pioneers Bauhaus performing “Bela Lugosi Is Dead” at a nightclub, where they pick up their next meal: Ann Magnuson. The concert-to carnage sequence plays like the creepiest MTV video ever. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Remembering Tony Scott: Five Movies By The Late Director That You Must See

Robert Pattinson Rings Stock Exchange Bell, Relaxes on Hotel Roof Deck

Apparently all it took to put a big smile on the face of Robert Pattinson was a trip to The Big Apple. As previously reported, the actor Robert Pattinson laughed through an appearance on The Daily Show last night. He even ate some ice cream with host Jon Stewart. He then attended the red carpet premiere of Cosmopolis . Today, meanwhile, Pattinson rang the opening bell of the New York City Stock Exchange alongside director David Cronenberg. Watch them do so here:

Robert Pattinson Insists He’s ‘Just A Pawn’ In ‘Cosmopolis’

Hear more from the actor during ‘MTV First: Robert Pattinson’ on Thursday at 7:49 p.m. ET on MTV and MTV.com! By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Robert Pattinson attends the New York City premiere of “Cosmopolis” Photo: Getty Images

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Robert Pattinson Insists He’s ‘Just A Pawn’ In ‘Cosmopolis’

Actor Bob Hoskins To Retire Following Parkinson’s Diagnosis

U.K. born actor Bob Hoskins said Wednesday he is retiring following a diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease. A representative announced the actor’s retirement. His career spanned four decades, most recently appearing in Snow White and the Huntsman . “Bob Hoskins wishes to announce that he will be retiring from acting, following his diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease last autumn,” his representative said in a statement. “He wishes to thank all the great and brilliant people he has worked with over the years, and all of his fans who have supported him during a wonderful career. Bob is now looking forward to his retirement with his family, and would greatly appreciate that his privacy be respected at this time.” Hoskins received a Best Actor Oscar-nomination in 1987 for his starring role in Neil Jordan’s crime-drama Mona Lisa . He won the BAFTA and a Golden Globe nomination for that role in addition to wins ranging from Cannes to the Boston Society of Film Critics and the European Film Awards. He also received nods the following year for his role in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) and later for parts in Made in Dagenham (2010), Mrs. Henderson Presents (2005), Twenty Four Seven (1997) and The Street (2006). He also appeared in Hook (1991), Brazil (1985) and Enemy at the Gates (2001). [ Which is your favorite Bob Hoskins film? ] [Source: Hollywood Reporter ]

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Actor Bob Hoskins To Retire Following Parkinson’s Diagnosis

Macaulay Culkin: Out, About, Not on Drugs

In the aftermath of what he called “impossibly, ridiculously fictious” reports that Macaulay Culkin is a heroin addict , the actor surfaced in LA this week. A not-as-frail Culkin was seen at the celebrity hot spot Chateau Marmont Friday, not long after his rep’s denying of the reports that he’s a junkie. He was reportedly in good spirits. The actor also attended Natalie Portman’s wedding, though he said, “I have no comments on his activities over the weekend or otherwise. Thank you.” The former child actor made numerous headlines last week after tabloids reported his alleged drug problems and claimed he had only six months to live. He was also seen looking frail and gaunt earlier this year. Hopefully it’s all just talk and he’s in good health. [Photo: Fame/Flynet]

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Macaulay Culkin: Out, About, Not on Drugs

Robert Pattinson Schedules First Post-Scandal Interview

Sorry, Today Show . But we have a feeling Good Morning America will beat you in the ratings once again next week. At least on August 15. Robert Pattinson has booked his first interview since Kristen Stewart confirmed to the world that she cheated on him earlier this year with director Rupert Sanders . He’ll sit down with the CBS program next Wednesday in promotion of the film Cosmopolis . It seems highly unlikely that the actor will be asked any questions about his personal life, but the interview will be conducted live and it may be too difficult to the show to resist throwing some Stewart-related question Rob’s way. We’ll certainly be tuning in to find out. Sources say Pattinson was out at a bar in California Friday night, looking sober and mostly in good spirits. However, an insider tells Us Weekly that “Rob’s a total mess, trying to figure out why Kristen did this.” Will we get any insight at all into his mental state next Wednesday? Or will be in full-on movie promotion mode? Viewers around the country are already counting down the seconds until we can see for ourselves.

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Robert Pattinson Schedules First Post-Scandal Interview

Robert Pattinson: Sober, In Good Spirits at Western-Themed Bar

It looks like Robert Pattinson has Kristen Stewart beat in at least one regard: the actor most likely showered on Friday. Amidst reports that Stewart is an unkempt mess , sources say that Pattinson actually made a public appearance over the weekend, stopping by The Deer Lodge in Ojai, California on Friday night with a few friends. An employee of the cowboy-themed establishment confirms that he heard the same, telling Radar Online that he was not working that evening, but “several people” informed him ” Pattinson was here enjoying the music” and seemed to be in “good spirits.” The bar is located about 90 minutes from the home Rob and Kristen shared in Los Angeles and would make sense as a locale for Rob to frequent at the moment, considering he’s rumored to be residing in Reese Witherspoon’s vacation home . It’s situated in Ojai. An unnamed patron also confirmed the handsome sighting, Tweeting afterward: “Awesome night in Ojai. Got to hang with a rowdy bunch of Brits & one of them happened to be Edward… He wasn’t moping and the girls were definitely just his friend… I stood next to them at the bar. He wasn’t drunk. Just taking in the scene. Smoked next to him outside.” The countdown, meanwhile, is on for Pattinson first official public appearance: it will take place August 13 in NYC at the premiere of Cosmopolis .

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Robert Pattinson: Sober, In Good Spirits at Western-Themed Bar

Kasey Kahl: Arrested For Paint Thinner-Fueled Assault!

Former Bachelorette hopeful Kasey Kahl is back behind bars after police charged him with assault stemming from the guy (and girl) he beat up this year. While under the influence of PAINT THINNER, allegedly. More than half a year after the January 15 incident, TMZ says prosecutors finally decided there was evidence to charge Kasey Kahl with felony assault. Charges were filed and Kahl was arrested early Friday: Officials say Kahl was drunk and on drugs when he attacked a man, Richard Cheney, at a Fresno, Calif., club, after which Cheney says Kahl bashed his girlfriend’s face . Kahl, who also starred on 2011’s Bachelor Pad 2, has been charged with felony assault, battery with serious bodily injury, and drunken disorderliness . Police believe Kahl was under the influence of both alcohol and a drug called toluene – an inhalant associated with paint thinners – during the attack. Reps for the ex of Vienna Girardi have maintained he’s innocent and say the victims are “antagonizing” him in a bid to get “15 minutes of fame.”

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Kasey Kahl: Arrested For Paint Thinner-Fueled Assault!