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The second I heard that Justin was coming to Sydney for his…

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The second I heard that Justin was coming to Sydney for his Believe Promo Tour , I began to freak out. Justin rarely comes here, and I knew I had to utilize this incredible opportunity. There were many competitions to win tickets to see Justin perform live – but unfortunately, I didn’t win any, despite entering daily for all of them. I began to DM and tweet the member’s of Justin’s crew on Twitter, asking if they could help me in any way. And, unbelievably, I got a response from one of them. He DM’d me “I can get you tickets to Justin’s show in Sydney.” I immediately began to cry, and I phoned my best friend in shock to tell her the exciting news. I couldn’t believe that I actually had tickets to see Justin perform live for the first time. The day finally arrived, and my friends and I spent the entire morning stalking Justin ALL over Sydney, but unfortunately, with no luck. But we didn’t mind too much – we were going to be seeing Justin perform that night, and we met so many lovely beliebers! In the late afternoon, we went to the meeting point and boarded the buses, which took us to the secret location where Justin would perform. We finally arrived, and walked across a red carpet, inside the venue.  My friends and I ran to the very front of the area and we managed to get standing spots at the very front of the pit!  After a reasonable wait, Justin came on stage. I couldn’t believe how flawless he looked in person, and when he began to sing, I was so overwhelmed to be hearing Justin’s incredible voice, in person. I took videos and photos of Justin performing, and  during “Die In Your Arms,” I yelled out “I’LL DIE IN YOUR ARMS” and Justin looked in my direction, and gave me a huge grin (I caught it on video). In the middle of his performance, I saw Alfredo Flores, and I managed to catch his attention. My friends and I gave him our gift for Justin – a cowbell. Alfredo laughed, and put it in his bag, promising that he would give it to Justin. Later on, he tweeted me that Justin had it, and he had been playing with it all night. And after that –  Dan Kanter threw his guitar pick into the crowd, and I caught it!  After Justin’s INCREDIBLE acoustic performance, my friends and I rushed to the side of the hall, and found Scrappy and Moshe, whom we got photos with. We also found Kenny, and had a short conversation with him. Two of my friends had meet and greets to see Justin and I accidently called one of them during the session. And, just my luck, she handed the phone to Justin, who said to me “Hey Abi, how are you?” I started to freak out, I recognized the voice but I didn’t understand HOW it could actually be Justin… I put the phone on loudspeaker so my friends could hear, and he told me, “Yes, this is Justin Bieber…” and shortly after, we hung up. It was incredible. Justin Bieber said my name and I managed to speak to him, even though it was brief. It was an incredible night – the best night of my life infact, and I am so thankful that I got to finally see my idol perform live. I hope that one day I will be able to meet him, and tell him just how much he means to me.  -@KidrauhlYolo Excerpt from: The second I heard that Justin was coming to Sydney for his…

The second I heard that Justin was coming to Sydney for his…

Friedkin Calls ‘Bullshit!’ on Exorcist TV Adaptation, Talks Killer Joe: McConaughey Could ‘Charm the Mustard Off a Hot Dog’

If William Friedkin ’s adaptation of The Exorcist  left you feeling a tad jumpy, just wait until you see Killer Joe . After a six-year absence from the Cineplex, the 76-year-old Friedkin returns to the big screen on Friday with arguably the most disturbing film of his 45-year career.  The ultra-violent and twisted black comedy stars Matthew McConaughey as Joe, a Dallas detective who moonlights as a hitman. After a client (Emile Hirsch) stiffs him on a job, Joe takes his sister (Juno Temple) as a retainer. A blood-soaked finale ensues, and, along the way, the picture is so brutal and grotesque at times that it earned an NC-17 rating, in part because of a scene in which McConaughey’s character forces Gina Gershon to perform fellatio on a chicken leg that he dangles from his crotch. Friedkin refused to cut the picture to earn an R rating, and it’s that uncompromising spirit that permeates his body of work. One of the most compelling directors to emerge from the easy riders-and-raging-bulls era, Friedkin broke through in 1971 — and won a Best Director Oscar — with the police thriller The French Connection . Two years later he would direct the white-knuckle horror masterpiece, The Exorcist , solidifying his standing in the pantheon of ’70s filmmakers that includes Coppola, Lucas, Cimino and Scorsese. Friedkin has not since matched the critical and box office heights of The French Connection and The Exorcist , although he showed glimpses of his greatness with such films as Sorcerer — an intense remake of Henri-Georges Clouzot’s The Wages of Fear set to a Tangerine Dream soundtrack — and To Live and Die in L.A..   He has, however, worked steadily.   Killer Joe is his second collaboration with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tracy Letts.  Friedkin first adapted Letts’ play Bug  for the screen in 2006. Over the last six years he has also directed opera and episodes of CSI  and worked on his autobiography. As bold with his words as he is with his filmmaking, Friedkin had a frank discussion with Movieline about the ratings board, his disinterest in today’s studio films, why making The Exorcist into a TV show is “bullshit” and that Twitter photo of him as Ali G. Had you and Tracy been discussing Killer Joe since making Bug ? No, we only casually discussed it then, but a couple of years after Bug he sent me a screenplay.  I read it and thought it was great. I called him back and I said, “Look if I can cast this and find somebody to finance it I’d love to do it,” and that was it. It took about a year to put together. What are the challenges of adapting a stage play to the screen? Films come from many different places. They come from plays, they come from actual events, from novels, from people’s own experiences. I’ve made 16 films in 45 years and they came from all those places. Some of the greatest films ever made were originally plays. Casablanca was a play called Everybody Comes to Rick’s.    A Few Good Men was a play. Cabaret was a play—  But aren’t there things that work on stage that need to be tweaked in order for them to work on film ? Not in a great piece of writing, like Streetcar Named Desire . The entire play takes place in the Kowalskis’ house in New Orleans. But you don’t think of it as a play. What you remember is Brando and Vivien Leigh and Karl Malden and how touching and emotional the situation is. The major challenge in making Killer Joe was to cast it properly. After that the writing is so good you just had to do it. You had to cast it with people who could understand it and reach down into their own life experiences to make it live. What did you see in Matthew McConaughey? He was being interviewed on one of those Larry King-type television shows and I saw him as himself, not as a guy in a romantic comedy. I thought this guy is really interesting and smart and very self-knowledgeable. He’s not this guy in the rom-coms. He’s from East Texas and he had the right accent and all of those things went well. I was originally going to go to some grizzled old warhorse to play Joe. But after watching this interview I thought, “This would be interesting: A good-looking guy who could charm the mustard off a hot dog.”  I thought, “This is the way I want to go.” So I sent the script to  [McConaughey], and when we first met he told me that he didn’t get it. He didn’t understand it and he just tossed it. And then he started to think about it, and he thought, “Well Jesus, this is funny. This is absurdly funny.” So he read it again, and he saw the humor in it as well as the danger. And he decided to take control of his own career and challenge himself with this. We met a couple of times to make sure we were on the same page and then I cast him.  It’s certainly a role that will surprise people that know him from his Hollywood titles. Along with the comedy, I was surprised by how sincere his character could be¾especially the monologue he gives about East Texas. Well, it starts with the writing, and that’s what attracted the cast and me. [Letts’] people are real. They jump off the page. And I know all these people. None of them are strangers to me. Letts actually got the idea from a news article he read of a situation similar to this that happened in Florida.  A big cloud hanging over the film is its NC-17 rating. This isn’t your first time having to fight the ratings board. Cruising was originally given an X rating. I had to go back 50 times to the ratings board with that film.  Did that experience play a factor in how you handled the decision to stick with the NC-17 rating? Yeah. That’s basically what I thought, and I had to get the support of my distributor LD Entertainment. They were with me. They didn’t want to cut this film up into toothpicks. I think the rating is correct, by the way, although my view of the ratings board is very cynical and critical.  I think they’re an arbitrary board with arbitrary standards. They’ll never give a major studio an NC-17. Never. What will happen is, behind closed doors, a major studio will make little nods and bows to them by cutting frames or shots here or there. Do you see yourself ever making another studio film? I doubt that I’ll ever work for a major studio again.  Are you even interested in the kinds of movies they make now-the comic-book adaptations and raunchy comedies? Absolutely not. I don’t watch them and I certainly don’t want to make them. I’m not into Spandex. [Laughs] I’ve only done 16 films in 45 years. I look for stuff all of the time, but every film I’ve done took at least two years of my life. The Exorcist took three after all the press was done.  Since the ‘90s you’ve been directing operas such as Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi  for the Washington National Opera. Have you always been interested in them? No. I don’t go to operas. I listen to them on recordings sometimes. Zubin Mehta got me into directing operas. He’s a friend, and a great conductor, and we used to talk about music and movies. One day he said, “Why don’t you do an opera with me?” And I said, “Geez Zubin, I’ve never seen an opera.” And he said, “No, I think you’d be very good.” And he talked me into doing an opera. My first one was in 1998 in Florence and recently I did another opera in Florence. How many have you done? I haven’t counted, but I think I’ve done more than 12 since 1998. I just did Tales of Hoffmann in Vienna. Do these bring as much satisfaction to you as filmmaking? Definitely. It’s live musical theater and you’re dealing with material that’s 100-150 years old which means it has stood the test of time. The operas I’ve done are all classics.   The Exorcist is closing in on its 40 th anniversary. Hard to believe. It’s been in the news lately. Have you seen the play in LA? I haven’t seen that yet, I’m going to see it at the end of the month. And there’s a TV adaptation in the works. That’s bullshit. They don’t have the rights. [ The Exorcist  novelist] Bill Blatty still has the rights and he doesn’t want to see an exorcism on TV every week. I wouldn’t watch it-not even out of curiosity. It would just be total bullshit. But they’re going to rerelease The Exorcist in the late fall at the Smithsonian in Washington and then there will probably be some more theatrical and then a brand new Blu-ray that I just finished a few months ago. You’ve recently joined Twitter, are you enjoying it? Yeah. I think it’s a lot of fun. I take a half hour a day and read what people have to say and occasionally I think it’s worth a response.  I see you’re very big on posting photos. And one in particular grabbed my attention— Me as Ali G?  Yeah! I lost a bet to Sir Evelyn de Rothschild of the Rothschild family. The loser had to dress up as Ali G and I lost the bet. I wasn’t going to do it, but he bought me the costume. And I said ok. So he bought me all the bling and the costume and his wife took the picture. What’s the latest with you trying to get the rights to Sorcerer ? I’m in the 9 th District Court of Appeals suing Paramount and Universal because they both claimed they don’t own the film anymore and they don’t know who does. So I had to sue them to try to find out so I can get it back in release to the people who want to see it, which are largely film society and universities and people like that who are being denied the right to see that and many other films. The studios want to get rid of all 35mm [prints] and not even have any bookkeeping around by them. By November 26 there’s a settlement conference and if we can’t settle it by then there’s a trial in March of 2013. And I’ll go all the way with it, if it costs me every penny I have. What are you doing next? I don’t have any plans other to finish my autobiography. It will be out by the spring of next year. I’m not considering any other films right now. Is that because there’s nothing out there that interests you? I’m busy, but I haven’t seen anything I’m really interested in filming. Killer Joe is in limited release this Friday.

Stars, Tequila & Philosophy at Killer Joe Gala

David Dinerstein (President, LD Entertainment), William Friedkin, Matthew McConaughey, Gina Gershon, Tracy Letts, Mickey Liddell (CEO, LD Entertainment). Photo by Nick Hunt/Patrick McMullan Co. Killer Joe had a gala screening Monday night in New York with stars Matthew McConaughey and Gina Gershon on-hand along with Oscar-winning director William Friedkin who had some choice words about gun violence, the law and their relationship to movies. His film, which will be released this weekend, described by its official website as a “Totally twisted deep-fried Texas redneck trailer park murder story” received an often-dreaded NC-17 by the MPAA for “graphic disturbing content involving violence and sexuality and a scene of brutality.” McConaughey and Friedkin weighed in on violence and its sources post- TDKR tragedy at the event, hosted by the Cinema Society. “Well, it’s a lot longer answer than I can give you now, but I will just say that is, one thing that we shouldn’t be saying in society when something like that happens anymore, we shouldn’t be saying ‘unbelievable,'” McConaughey told THR at the event. “It happens, and we don’t know the answer to it right now, but there’s definitely, people now more than ever, people can make a very murky line between reality and illusion.” Continuing he added, “They can make a very murky line between the games that are played and civilization, without any thought of consequences at times…” But Friedkin gave a more emphatic response to the violence that took place at the final installment in Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy, saying the Joker references made by the accused gunman James Holmes was simply an act. “He was not insane. He premeditated that. He bought 6000 rounds of ammunition, he was eligible to buy guns and ammo, he set it up, he booby trapped his room…” Violence, insanity pleas and societal ills aside, the event, which was also co-hosted by Bally and DeLeón for LD Entertainment’s Killer Joe was a typically pleasant affair. The after-party took place at nightspot No. 8 and DeLeón tequila flowed. Also attending the event were Tracy Letts who wrote the play and screenplay for the film and other brass from the movie including producers Christopher Woodrow and Molly Conners, Mickey Liddell (CEO, LD Entertainment), David Dinerstein (President, LD Entertainment). Among the other notable guests in attendance were: Mélanie Laurent, Alan Cumming, Ethan Coen, Roseanne Barr, John Stamos, Graham Nash (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), Camila Alves, S. Epatha Merkerson, Courtney Love, Rinko Kikuchi (Babel), Michael Shannon (Boardwalk Empire), Isiah Whitlock (Law & Order SVU), Tony Danza, Russell Simmons, Tiki & Traci Barber, Billy Magnussen, John Cameron Mitchell, Alex Karpovsky (Girls), Stavros Niarchos, Jessica Hart, Rachel Roy, Nicole Trunfio, Dan Abrams, Debbie Bancroft, Daniel Benedict, David Zinczenko, Nicky Hilton and Cinema Society founder Andrew Saffir. Movieline will have a full interview with director William Friedkin soon. [ Source: THR , Cinema Society ] [Photo: Nick Hunt/Patrick McMullan Co., courtesy of Cinema Society]

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Stars, Tequila & Philosophy at Killer Joe Gala

Who Are Today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars?

If you thought you were getting any work done during the second part of the day, think again. The good people at Vulture have apparently teamed up with the RAND Corporation and NASA to devise a series of charts with endless permutations that rank today’s most valuable movie stars . But, we ask: Who are today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars? How does one determine who is most valuable? Vulture is more than willing to pull back the curtain on their methodology . (Oh, if only the folks at Diebold could learn a thing or two from celeb-obsessed journalists!) They may have their nifty algorithms, but we’ve got our gut instincts. Using those and those only, we’d like to devise a highly unscientific list of the most valuable indie actors working today. 6. Michael Shannon He’s got many more credits than you might think ( Kangaroo Jack! ) but he first came to our attention as an unusual leading man in Jeff Nichols’ Shotgun Stories . His turn in Werner Herzog’s My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done? secured him a lifetime of indie cred, and this was before Boardwalk Empire and Take Shelter . By my algorithm, he can appear in Man of Steel and two sequels and still be considered an indie star. 5. Mathieu Amalric It isn’t crazy to call this French import a next gen Steve Buscemi. Amalric’s worked with a number of top level international directors like Julian Schnabel, Alain Resnais and Arnaud Desplechin. When he works in Hollywood it’s in top tier material like Munich and Quantum of Solace , which, you must remember, looked like it was going to be good on paper. 4. Michelle Williams From Dawson’s Creek to Synechdoche, NY , Michelle Williams is such a beloved indie star we’ll put up with her breaking our hearts ( Blue Valentine ), forgive her, then let her do it again ( Take This Waltz .) No trip to the Park Slope Food Co-op is complete without thinking you see her in the loose tea aisle. 3. Michael Fassbender From his indistinguishable accent to the phallic puns about his last name, it’s impossible not to give this guy a high ranking. I was hesitant to see Hunger because we’d already seen the Bobby Sands story in Some Mother’s Son , but when I realized it was one of the shirtless dudes from 300 we got curious. Since then he’s put in remarkable turns in Inglourious Basterds , A Dangerous Method , Jane Eyre and Haywire . Even when he does a major studio picture it is with an provocateur in the director’s chair like Matthew Vaughn or Ridley Scott. Fassbender is one of the few actors out there that elite moviegoers will follow from project-to-project indiscriminately. 2. Tilda Swinton …and in that regard, he’s right alongside Tilda Swinton. Who else out there has punk rock cred from her early Derek Jarman years and is also the descendant of medieval landed gentry? From the films of the Coen Brothers to Jim Jarmusch to Lynne Ramsay to Wes Anderson to oddball gems like Julia and I Am Love , Swinton strikes me as someone who doesn’t need to work, to the point that she’s very selective about what she does. As such, anything she’s involved in is very much worth your time. 1. Paul Giamatti If you’ve missed Michelle Williams in Brooklyn, maybe you’ve seen Paulie G around. A gifted comic, and uncannily sympathetic, Giamatti brings a level of excellence to everything he does. Barney’s Version is, I hate to say it, not a good movie. Yet Giamatti’s performance made me literally laugh and cry – oftentimes in the same moment. What’s more, Giamatti is quick to use his Hollywood clout to champion far-flung indie films, which was made abundantly clear during this year’s Sundance with the ultra-niche John Dies at the End . Those are our indie-world MVPs. Have more to add? Make your case below!

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Who Are Today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars?

Rihanna in Some Staged Bikini Pics of the Day

I saw Rihanna post these pictures to Intagram, cuz Instagram has become my new social life, it is where I flirt with hot girls all fucking day and every once in a while one will repsond, making me feel like I’ve made it, before remember I have to fuck my fat wife cuz it was afternoon and that is her day to get herself off all covered in chicken grease and whatever else her pig self got into that day and didn’t wash off her cuz she’s a fucking pig…..but at least the internet brings some fantasy back like this was a chat room and you didn’t know the 18 year old virgin you were jerking off with was a 50 year old lonely man…. Either way, Rihanna works her instagram hard, I guess she likes all the attention, because if I was famous at her level, the extent of my posting pics to anything for the public would be dick pics saying “who cares that it’s small, I’ve made it”….and instagram would just end up banning me….you know cuz unlike Rihanna, I wouldn’t pussyfoot around the smut I produce, I would jsut bring it… What it comes down to is really how long it took her to get these in this pose….and how many filters did they run it through…cuz I’m sure Rihanna doesn’t actually look like this in a bikini….but I’ll go along with it. TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICS FROM THE PAPARAZZI FOLLOW THIS LINK

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Rihanna in Some Staged Bikini Pics of the Day

Kristen Stewart Craved "Animal" Sex in Breaking Dawn Part 2

Kristen Stewart. Robert Pattinson . Animal sex. Do we have your attention? At Comic-Con last week, Stewart addressed the lovemaking she and her real-life boyfriend do on screen in Breaking Dawn Part 2 , comparing it to the hot honeymoon action between Bella and Edward in the first film. “The ratings, man! [It’s] a tricky thing … because we’re supposed to have mind-boggling, otherworldly … sex,” Stewart said. “In the first one, ‘Breaking Dawn 1,’ we really … this is weird … tried to keep the first one sweet. It’s about self-discovery. Nothing about this series is raunchy. And I know that. … But in the second one, we just wanted to be animals.” Alas, there’s only so much skin and so many sounds you can make while keeping the flick PG-13. Sorry, Twihards.

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Kristen Stewart Craved "Animal" Sex in Breaking Dawn Part 2

Some Coco Ass for Twitter of the Day

COCO is pretty incredible in so many ways…. The simple fact that she does not have to do this, you know she does not have to strip or post her tits on the internet, or in public for any fucking reason at all, she is married to a dude who is worth a lot of money and who can give her all she needs…..yet she does it anyway….and if that isn’t hero status, I don’t know what is…. I guess it is one of those, once a stripper always a stripper cuz stripping is all she fucking knows situations….you know trying to take her out of the sex trade and give her the luxurious life normal girls are in the sex trade to get, but she just can’t let go… I guess she likes the attention….and I don’t mind giving it to her…even if I find her sloppy, fat and designed for a different demographic…she’s still an inspiration to girls everywhere and that’s what matters… Follow Coco’s Lead.

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Some Coco Ass for Twitter of the Day

CoCo’s Breasts Are Equally Impressive

CoCo normally gets all her attention by flashing her big round booty, and well deserved attention, but her breasts often go unnoticed. Poor things. Well not today. Here they are spilling out of her dress while she hits the town. The woman just has some awesome curves and she loves to show them off. Look at that cleavage, it’s like an avalanche of boobs. Awesome. I wouldn’t mind being buried alive in those things. Don’t come looking for me, I’ll be fine.

Arianny Celeste & Friends Get All Sexy

As you may or may not know by now, I really enjoy pictures of hot nobodies. So why wouldn’t I post these pictures of Arianny Celeste , Brittney Palmer and Kenda Perez getting all hot and bothered together on the cover of Inside Fitness ? Obviously they’re not all from the magazine, the hotter ones are from Arianny’s Twitter feed. I like the airbrushed bikini pictures, but nothing beats some candids of a couple of hotties touching each other in their bikinis. Hot.

Jessica Alba Twitter Bikini Pic of the Day

I woke up and turned on my instagram cuz I am only following hot girls who seem to post all kinds of bikini pics of themselves in a way that would make me wonder if they ever sleep or if they are in perpetual sun in a bikini, if I wasn’t too busy masturbating to their pics….and these Alba shots of her being a drunk in a bikini dropped that I decided to comment saying I can see your boner….no wait that’s mine To which she responded by blocking me.

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Jessica Alba Twitter Bikini Pic of the Day