Uma Thurman is pregnant with her third child! This will be the first for the actress and boyfriend Arpad Busson … who called off their engagement in 2009, but recently got back together. In a big way, it appears! “She’s excited,” a Thurman pal said. “She’s happy; just a few months along right now.” The 41-year-old actress already has two children, 13-year-old daughter Maya and 10-year-old son Levon, with her former husband, Ethan Hawke. Her ex-spouse also has two children with his second wife, Ryan. Congratulations to Uma and Arpad “Arki” Busson! [Photo: WENN.com]
A couple of lovely ladies looking ravishing in red comprise our latest style showdown. Red was a popular color on last night’s Academy Awards red carpet, with Natalie Portman opting for the color along with Emma Stone and Michelle Williams (below). The Help actress looked radiant in a red bow necked Giambattista Valli dress, while the My Week With Marilyn star – bested by Meryl Streep for Best Actress – may very well win best dressed after donning a cute coral/red gown by Louis Vuitton. Have at it: Vote for your favorite style star in THG’s Fashion Face-Off:
In case you still weren’t convinced that Taylor Swift is totally awesome… The singer was invited last week to attend the prom of Kevin McGuire, an 18-year old from New Jersey who has suffered a relapse of leukemia. The invitation was set up by Kevin’s sister, Tori, who created a “Taylor Swift Take Kevin McGuire to Prom!” Facebook page that has nearly 100,000 followers and on whose profile it reads: Kevin is the kindest, most noble 18 year old a person could even fathom meeting, and throughout his ups and downs Kevin never even questioned ‘why me?’ Nothing, and I mean NOTHING brightens Kevin’s day more than Taylor Swift. Kevin DESERVES more than anyone a special event in his life. Taylor agrees. On her Facebook page , the superstar responded to this request with: “Kevin, I’m so sorry but I won’t be able to make it to your prom. But I was wondering, the ACM Awards are coming up… Would you be my date?” The Academy of Country Music Awards will take place on April 1 in Las Vegas and Swift is nominated for several big ones, including Entertainer of the Year, Female Vocalist of the Year and Video of the Year. Said McGuire, who is being treated at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, to USA Today : “Obviously I said yes. [The CMAs are] a lot better than the senior prom.”
Jim Rash posing like Angelina Jolie was a highlight of Oscar night. But it was far from the only Jolie-related subject to be buzzed-about Sunday and today. The star’s weight has become a hot topic after she exercised her right to bare arms while presenting an award at the year’s top Hollywood extravaganza. Rash may have been expressing affection for Jolie with his mock pose, but many fans have been less kind . Watch the clip of the actress and tell us below … Angelina Jolie Presents at Oscars Is Angelina Jolie too thin??
We literally cried tears of joy when Octavia Spencer’s name was called for Best Actress In A Supporting Role at the Academy Awards. Congratulations to her. Do you think that it takes anything away from the honor that she won for playing the role of a maid in the South??? Diddy also gets big props for the film he executive produced “Undefeated” winning an Oscar as well. WENN More On Bossip! Smackdown! The Chris Brown/CM Punk Feud Is Getting Pretty Intense! “I Will Choke You” And Breezy Responds! Can’t Get It Up: 10 Foods That Might Be Choking The Life Out Of Your…Libido Tell ‘Em Why You Mad: Janet “Aunt Viv” Hubert Writes An Open Letter To Wendy Williams Blaming Her For Whitney Houston’s Downfall Cake Cake Cake Cake! The Stars With The Wildest Birthday Parties
Meryl Streep and Jean Dujardin won us over, while Bret McKenzie made a critical omission during his acceptance. By Kevin P. Sullivan Meryl Streep wins at the 84th Annual Academy Awards Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images One of the most essential parts of any Oscar night is the speeches. If you win, your job is only halfway done. Now you have to get up onstage in front of a billion people and practice your public speaking. Some are heartfelt, some are funny, and some will go down in history — for better or worse. With so much of the ceremony dedicated to acceptance speeches, it’s important to look back and decide who owned the night and who fell on their face. Here are our best and worst speeches of the 2012 Academy Awards: Best Octavia Spencer for Best Supporting Actress For as predictable as Spencer’s win for Best Supporting Actress was, her speech ended the long road to Oscar night in style. She went with the time-tested acceptance-speech traditions of emotion and honesty. Plus, she thanked the state of Alabama, the only state to get a shout-out during the night. Meryl Streep for Best Actress It came as a big surprise, and no one knew that better than Streep. Her “whatever” attitude almost had us forget the upset win over Viola Davis. It may not have been the most just outcome, but at the very least we got a funny speech instead. Christopher Plummer for Best Supporting Actor As the oldest person to ever win an acting Oscar, Plummer outdid most everyone younger than him and delivered one of the most memorable speeches of the night. It was class all the way for Plummer, who sincerely thanked his wife, daughter and co-star Ewan McGregor. He joked that, in his mother’s womb, “I was already rehearsing my Academy acceptance speech, but it was so long ago, mercifully for you, I’ve forgotten it.” Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash for Best Adapted Screenplay You have to admit that Angelina Jolie was standing a little oddly, with her right leg out of the high slit in her dress, as she read the names of the nominees. Jim Rash, known for his role on “Community,” also took note and mimicked the strange posture after he won the award for his work on the “Descendants” screenplay. Jean Dujardin for Best Actor A good way to score points as a Frenchman winning an Academy Award in America is to open your speech with, “I love your country!” Dujardin read the rest of his speech to help with his English, but it was the outburst in French at the end of his acceptance that really won us over. Worst Bret McKenzie for Best Song Listen, Bret. We love you, and we’re so happy you won. But there would be no Muppets movie without Jason Segel. He may not have written any of the songs, but he co-wrote the film, put his name on the line and sang “Man or Muppet,” the winning song. At the very least, you should have given the man a simple “thanks.” Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall for Best Editing It’s understandable that you were caught off guard — “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” didn’t get a whole lot of nominations — but you need to be a little more prepared than you were. You’re still expected to give a speech. You won just a year ago, so you have enough experience with this kind of thing. Mark Coulier and J. Roy Helland for Best Makeup It’s OK if you write your speech down before you head onto the stage to accept your award. It’s even OK if you read your speech directly from the cards you wrote them on. But please make sure that the speech is a good one if you’re going to do so. The MTV Movies team has the 2012 Oscars covered! Keep it locked at MTV.com all night and beyond for updates on the night’s big winners and the best red-carpet fashion . Join the live conversation by tweeting @MTVNews with the hashtag #Oscars. Related Videos Oscars 2012: The Main Show Oscars 2012: Show Highlights Related Photos Oscars 2012: Winners Oscars 2012: The Main Show Oscars 2012: Parties
It only took about 20 years from conception to writing to development to shooting to the most notoriously protracted post-production saga in recent memory, but Kenneth Lonergan’s embattled epic Margaret finally had the festival premiere it deserved Saturday night in Manhattan. In its own way, even that event was chronologically vexed. The special screening — part of the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s annual Film Comment Selects series — came a few months after distributor Fox Searchlight gave the tale of an Upper West Side teenager transformed by her role in a fatal bus accident the most cursory release possible: One week in Los Angeles and New York, then out of theaters entirely before a critical groundswell rallied on its behalf in the heart of awards season. The campaign yielded the occasional fruit — Best Actress consideration for leading lady Anna Paquin here , Best Supporting Actress consideration for Jeannie Berlin there — but more than anything, it spotlighted Margaret ‘s breathtaking range of fascinations and flaws , a spectrum stretched over the film’s contractually mandated 150-minute running time (pared down from a rumored maximum of four hours) and a six-year behind-the-scenes drama that was once said to involve as many lawyers as it had editors. On Saturday, though, Lonergan — accompanied onstage afterward by lead editor Anne McCabe and every available cast member including Jean Reno, J. Smith-Cameron (pictured above with Lonergan) and Lonergan’s best friend (and eventual post-production patron) Mathew Broderick — had no intention of dwelling on Margaret ‘s tortured route to the screen. Not that Film Comment editor Gavin Smith didn’t give the writer-director his best shot, asking Lonergan to recount Margaret ‘s evolution from a 167-page script to the film we saw Saturday night. “I know that’s a long story,” Smith said, “but I think there’s a chance for you to correct some misinformation about the project.” “Well, I don’t really want to correct any misinformation about the project,” Lonergan replied, his voice pitched barely above a mumble. “Maybe you could narrow it down a little bit, because from writing the script to casting it to shooting it to editing it, there are so many steps involved. Is there any particular element?” “Well,” Smith said, “at a certain point in the process — and maybe this is a question for Anne, your editor — you arrived at a cut that was considerably longer than the cut that other parties involved with the project wanted it to be.” “No, uh…” Lonergan began. “Actually, the fact is we had a lot of cuts of the film. We did a lot of screenings. This is the cut that we ended up with and that we got released. I’m very pleased with this cut. It’s part of any normal process to go through a series of cuts, and you try to make it shorter or you try to make it longer or you try to emphasize this or that element of the process. And a lot’s been written about it — none of it accurate — and I don’t want to deflect the question too much, but I’m frankly more interested in talking about the actual content of the film and the script and all that. I think that it’s just more in the nature of movies. It’s like writing a script: You have a lot of different versions and you settle on [one]. Rembrandt said [when asked], ‘How do you know a painting’s finished?’ ‘It’s when you can’t think of the last brushstroke,’ he said. In this case, the version that got released is the version that got completed in… I think 2008? And I think it’s wonderful. I’m very proud of it. I think Anne is, too, as far as I know.” “Definitely,” McCabe said from the far end of the stage. “I don’t think she’s ashamed of it. So I think I…” Lonergan paused. “I’m much happier talking about the film itself, or the script or the actors or the process of shooting or anything, anything, anything but that, for God’s sake. The rest of it is so boring, and it’s all wrong anyway. I don’t even know what happened. But I’m very glad it’s here now, and I’m very, very proud of it.” Anyway, Margaret ‘s drawn-out post-production has nothing on a gestation period that commenced decades ago — in 11th or 12th grade, to hear Lonergan tell it, when a classmate of his confided having witnessed an accident much like the one that sets off the film’s cataclysm of guilt, shame, shattered innocence and debilitating self-absorption. “It always stayed with me, and I always wanted to write about it,” Lonergan said. “It always cropped up in various things that I was writing over the years, and I finally had the idea for the whole film sometime around 1990… in the early ’90s. But I had other things lined up first to write, and I probably ended up writing it around 2000. It was just the idea of something that big happening to someone that young. The idea of having to deal with something that adult struck me as being a very compelling and interesting idea that stayed with me for… Well, I don’t want to tell you exactly how old I am, but then I was in high school and now I’m 49.” Other youthful, semi-autobiographical callouts crept out of that foundation as well. One of Margaret ‘s more contextually confounding scenes involves a classroom debate over the implications of a passage in King Lear ; playing one of the main character’s teachers, Broderick drew on his and Lonergan’s NYC high-school days in squaring off with not Paquin, but rather with her young castmate Jake O’Connor. The fierce sparring culminates in (spoiler alert?) the consumption of orange juice and a sandwich — just one of Margaret ‘s many tongue-in-cheek digressions borrowed from memory. Asked by O’Connor himself about the scene, Broderick demurred. “I don’t really have any thoughts,” he said. “I just say the thoughts that Kenny wrote. I think its pretty clear, that scene. It’s funny to me that people take your side. It’s also interesting because that really happened. Kenny and I both sat there while pretty much precisely that argument happened.” “That’s true,” Lonergan said. “That actually happened. That’s as best as I can remember the actual conversation. I’m pretty sure it’s pretty close.” “Even the sandwich?” Smith-Cameron asked. “There was a teacher we had — whom this was very loosely based on — who was hypoglycemic,” Broderick explained. “And he had a bad temper, sort of, and every now and then he’d be mad at somebody, and he’d take a sip of juice and have a bite of a sandwich.” “It was not in the script,” Lonergan said. “Matthew remembered that, and he brought orange juice and a sandwich for the scene. I had not remembered that. Yeah, we went to high school together. That scene on the rock where they’re smoking pot? Those two little girls are also Matthew and I.” The audience cracked up. “We didn’t intend to change the world,” Broderick said, “We just wanted to smoke pot.” The overall high spirits in the theater belied the reason many of its standing-room only crowd members attended: to hear Lonergan’s definitive take on how and why Margaret became the ” film maudit ” cited in the Film Comment Selects program guide . His reluctance to contribute to its mythology feels like his most telling directorial stroke; in a film as sporadically brilliant as it is rife with showy, uneven performances and blunt-force moral grandstanding, the only thing left for Lonergan to control is the texture of its history. We may never know how he and his collaborators settled on the Margaret we’ve gotten to know in recent months, which is exactly how Lonergan must have it for any chance to preserve its soul. Nevertheless, a telling insight into that soul came at the end of Saturday’s discussion as Lonergan elaborated on his depiction of New York City itself — long, panoramic views of Midtown Manhattan and the Upper West Side, headlights in its veins, the heavens thrumming with the skyscraper buzz of private lives and random aircraft watching over it all. The best, the worst, the unknown happens unceasingly all around us. Margaret deals with one young woman’s enlightenment — and resistance — to that physical reality, perhaps reflecting Lonergan’s own confrontation with creative compromise. “At the time I think it was always in the back of my mind about 9/11,” Lonergan said. “It was shot much closer to 9/11; in 2002, 2003, 2004, even 2005, you may remember, it was very hard to see an airplane go by and just look at it without getting a little nervous or without it having an extra reverberation. That’s faded now, I’d say. So that’s why we shot a lot of footage of airplanes. But the reason we shot so much footage of the city itself was because I just wanted her to be one [person]. That’s what she’s up against. It’s not evil, but just everybody else having their own lives. That is the inertia — the tremendous inertia — that she is unable to move in the direction that she feels is right.” Whether or not Margaret itself ever fully succeeded in moving in that direction for its filmmaker and its principals may never be known. But judging by the reaction of Lonergan’s audience on Saturday night — and the expansion of his audience as Margaret finds champions in film culture and beyond — the institutional inertia from whence Margaret came may yet succumb to a wave of curiosity and passion not unlike that of its creator. The kind that, paradoxically, we never see coming until the lights go down. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . [Top photo of Kenneth Lonergan and J. Smith-Cameron: WireImage]
MTV News compiles our guesses for who will win — and our opinions on who should win. By MTV News staff Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images Will “The Artist” dominate the 2012 Oscars ? Should “The Artist” dominate the 2012 Oscars? Might wonderful films like “Hugo” get shut out in the major categories? Can the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honestly not bestow a single statuette on “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2”? These are the sorts of questions that have been preoccupying the MTV Movies team as of late. For the last two weeks, we’ve been doing our best to predict the Oscar winners — and oftentimes pointing out that the one that will win isn’t always the one that should win. Below, we’ve gathered together all our predictions. With just hours to go until show time, take a look at our picks and see how they stack up against your own: Best Music (Original Score) Who will win : “The Artist” Who should win : “The Artist” Best Animated Feature Film Who will win : “Rango” Who should win : “The Adventures of Tintin” (even though it’s not nominated) Best Visual Effects Who will win : “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” Who should win : “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay) Who will win : Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, “The Descendants” Who should win : Bridget O’Connor and Peter Straughan, “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” Best Writing (Original Screenplay) Who will win : Woody Allen, “Midnight in Paris” Who should win : Asghar Farhadi, “A Separation” Best Supporting Actress Who will win : Octavia Spencer, “The Help” Who should win : Octavia Spencer, “The Help” Best Supporting Actor Who will win : Christopher Plummer, “Beginnings” Who should win : Christopher Plummer, “Beginnings” Best Actor Who will win : Jean Dujardin, “The Artist” Who should win : Gary Oldman, “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” Best Actress Who will win : Viola Davis, “The Help” Who should win : Viola Davis, “The Help” Best Director Who will win : Martin Scorsese, “Hugo” Who should win : Woody Allen, “Midnight in Paris” Best Picture Who will win : “The Artist” Who should win : “Tree of Life” The MTV Movies team has the 2012 Oscars covered! Stick with us for everything you need to know leading up to the awards show, and head to Next Movie for a printable Oscar ballot . On Sunday, tune into MTV.com at 5 p.m. ET for our two-and-a-half-hour red-carpet live stream and updates on the night’s big winners. To join the live conversation, tweet @MTVNews with the hashtag #Oscars. Related Videos 2012 Oscar Nominees
Many people watch the Oscars for the glitz and glamour and care more about who’s wearing who than the movies themselves. Not Mr. Skin. We don’t care what the stars are wearing. In fact, we prefer them wearing nothing at all! So if your mind wanders during tonight’s telecast and you start wondering what those gorgeous nominees would look like nomi nude , there’s only one place to turn…and it’s right here at the Mr. Skin blog. Get the rubdown on this year’s nominees for Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress after the jump!
From ‘Shakespeare in Love’ to ‘Crash,’ a look back at the Academy Awards’ most memorable upsets. By Kevin P. Sullivan Gwyneth Paltrow and Joseph Fiennes in “Shakespeare in Love” Photo: Miramax Not every Academy Awards winner is met with praise and cinematic glory. Some past winners have come as surprises and even major disappointments to the audience, and among these, a handful will go down in history as outright injustices. Though a surprise victory on Oscar night can be thrilling, it can also deeply upset the viewers at home who’ve picked their favorites. As we gear up for the 2012 Oscars, here’s a look back at some of the most controversial wins in Academy Awards history. “How Green Was My Valley” Upsets “Citizen Kane” (Best Picture) Even though “Citizen Kane” has been touted as the greatest American movie of all time by the American Film Institute, back in 1942, it couldn’t even win the Academy Award as the year’s Best Picture. John Ford’s tale of a family struggling to make ends meet in a Welsh mining town beat Orson Welles’ masterpiece to take the honors and become the foremost example of Oscar injustice. “Ordinary People” Upsets “Raging Bull” (Best Picture) It upsets people when the film they feel is the best of year doesn’t win the top prize on Oscar night, but when the supposed film of the decade doesn’t win in its respective year, that’s a thing of controversy. Martin Scorsese’s gem about troubled boxer Jake LaMotta earned Robert De Niro an Academy Award for Best Actor in 1981, but Robert Redford’s family drama took the top honor. “Ordinary People” has since gone down in history as the film that stole the Oscar from the best movie of the 1980s. Marisa Tomei Wins for “My Cousin Vinny” (Best Supporting Actress) One of the most famous Oscar controversies in recent years came at the 1993 ceremony, when Jack Palance presented the award for Best Supporting Actress to Marisa Tomei. Many theorized Palance had misread the card, mistakenly giving the Oscar to Tomei. In the years since, the actress has gone on to earn two additional Academy Awards nominations. “Shakespeare in Love” Upsets “Saving Private Ryan” (Best Picture) The film that ushered in the era of Miramax domination in the awards scene, “Shakespeare in Love,” stole away Oscar glory from the one pegged as the odds-on favorite. Steven Spielberg’s sprawling World War II epic was heavily favored heading into the 1999 Academy Awards, and even though Spielberg took home the award for directing, many still hold onto the disappointment from the top category. “Crash” Upsets “Brokeback Mountain” (Best Picture) One of the best examples of the power of Best Picture backlash, the 2006 Academy Awards saw the tides turn away from Ang Lee’s tragic love story “Brokeback Mountain” and toward Paul Haggis’ “Crash” in the weeks leading up to the ceremony. If you need to better understand the shock that occurred, go back and watch Jack Nicholson announce “Crash” as the winner, throw his hands up and say, “Wow.” The MTV Movies team has the 2012 Oscars covered! Stick with us for everything you need to know leading up to the awards show, and on Sunday, February 26, tune into MTV.com at 5 p.m. ET for our two-and-a-half-hour red-carpet live stream and updates on the night’s big winners. To join the live conversation, tweet @MTVNews with the hashtag #Oscars. Related Videos 2012 Oscar Nominees Related Photos Oscars’ Most Controversial Winners