In Friday afternoon’s THG Caption Contest , we asked you to come up with the best one for this fun pic of Justin Bieber sitting down with Barbara Walters. You all had plenty of material to make up quality captions, and you delivered. Our winner is justine bieber … who we’re gonna guess is using an alias. Either way, nice work! The winning entry appears below . Honorable mentions go out to Alyssa and TaraJo47807 . Thanks to all of you for playing as always, and best of luck in our next Caption Contest! JB: One word about the sixteenth chapel and I will ruin your career. BW: Bitch please.
Welcome, readers, to another edition of THG’s Caption Contest ! We just came across this picture, and well, we’d love to have been a fly on the wall. But we can imagine what was said at least – in the form of your captions! What are Justin Bieber and Barbara Walters thinking or saying? You tell us! Just leave comment(s) below with the best caption(s) for the photo! Go to it! We will announce a winner Monday . Best of luck!
Congrats to the Taviani Bros. ( who? ), the inveterate sibling filmmakers whose Shakespeare-in-prison semi-doc Caesar Must Die has claimed the top prize at this year’s Berlinale. Stephanie Zacharek has more about the Golden Bear winner in her review from Berlin — along with more about Barbara , whose own helmer, Christian Petzold, won the festival’s Best Director award. ( Tabu and Sister nabbed hardware as well.) As Stephanie predicted, Caesar Must Die secured U.S. distribution in this week in Berlin and will be Stateside later this year; stay tuned to Movieline for details about how and when you can see it, and read on for the complete list of winners. Congrats to all! GOLDEN BEAR FOR THE BEST FILM Cesare deve morire (Caesar Must Die) by Paolo & Vittorio Taviani JURY GRAND PRIX-SILVER BEAR Csak a szél (Just The Wind) by Bence Fliegauf SILVER BEAR FOR BEST DIRECTOR Christian Petzold for Barbara (Barbara) SILVER BEAR FOR BEST ACTRESS Rachel Mwanza in Rebelle (War Witch) by Kim Nguyen SILVER BEAR FOR BEST ACTOR Mikkel Boe Følsgaard in En Kongelig Affære (A Royal Affair) by Nikolaj Arcel SILVER BEAR FOR AN OUTSTANDING ARTISTIC CONTRIBUTION Lutz Reitemeier for the photography in Bai lu yuan (White Deer Plain) by Wang Quan’an SILVER BEAR FOR THE BEST SCRIPT Nikolaj Arcel, Rasmus Heisterberg for En Kongelig Affære (A Royal Affair) by Nikolaj Arcel ALFRED BAUER PRIZE, awarded in memory of the Festival founder, for a work of particular innovation: Tabu by Miguel Gomes SPECIAL PRIZE-SILVER BEAR L’enfant d’en haut (Sister) by Ursula Meier BEST FIRST FEATURE AWARD, endowed with 50,000 Euros, funded by GWFF Kauwboy Kauwboy by Boudewijn Koole (Generation Kplus) SPECIAL MENTION Tepenin Ardı Beyond the Hill by Emin Alper (Forum) PRIZES OF THE INTERNATIONAL SHORT FILM JURY GOLDEN BEAR Rafa by João Salaviza THE JURY PRIZE – SILVER BEAR Gurehto Rabitto The Great Rabbit by Atsushi Wada SPECIAL MENTION Licuri Surf Licuri Surf by Guile Martins EFA SHORT FILM NOMINEE BERLIN Vilaine Fille Mauvais Garçon Two Ships by Justine Triet DAAD SHORT FILM PRIZE: The Man that Got Away The Man that Got Away by Trevor Anderson PRIZES OF THE JURIES GENERATION Children’s Jury Generation Kplus CRYSTAL BEAR FOR THE BEST FILM: Arcadia by Olivia Silver SPECIAL MENTION: Just Pretended To Hear by Kaori Imaizumi CRYSTAL BEAR FOR THE BEST SHORT FILM: Julian by Matthew Moore SPECIAL MENTION: BINO by Billie Pleffer Youth Jury Generation 14 plus, CRYSTAL BEAR FOR THE BEST FILM: Night of Silence by Reis Çelik SPECIAL MENTION Kronjuvelerna The Crown Jewels by Ella Lemhagen CRYSTAL BEAR FOR THE BEST SHORT FILM: Meathead Meathead by Sam Holst SPECIAL MENTION 663114 by Isamu Hirabayashi International Jury Generation Kplus THE GRAND PRIX OF THE DEUTSCHES KINDERHILFSWERK FOR THE BEST FILM: Kauwboy Kauwboy by Boudewijn Koole SPECIAL MENTION: GATTU by Rajan Khosa THE SPECIAL PRIZE OF THE DEUTSCHES KINDERHILFSWERK FOR THE BEST SHORT FILM: BINO by Billie Pleffer SPECIAL MENTION: L by Thais Fujinaga Competition Panorama Forum Cesare deve morire (Caesar Must Die), by Paolo & Vittorio Taviani Rebelle (War Witch), by Kim Nguyen Die Wand (The Wall), by Julian Roman Pölsler Parada (The Parade), by Srdjan Dragojevic La demora (The Delay), by Rodrigo Plá Tabu (Tabu), by Miguel Gomes L’âge atomique (Atomic Age), by Héléna Klotz Hemel (Hemel), by Sacha Polak PRIZE OF THE GUILD OF GERMAN ART HOUSE CINEMAS: À moi seule (Coming Home), by Frédéric Videau C.I.C.A.E. PRIZE: Death For Sale (Death for Sale), by Faouzi Bensaïdi Forum Kazoku no kuni (Our Homeland), by Yang Yonghi LABEL EUROPA CINEMAS: My Brother The Devil (My Brother The Devil), by Sally El Hosaini Special Mention: Dollhouse (Dollhouse), by Kirsten Sheridan TEDDY AWARDS Keep The Lights On (Keep The Lights On), by Ira Sachs Call Me Kuchu (Call Me Kuchu), by Malika Zouhali-Worrall, Katherine Fairfax Wright Loxoro (Loxoro), by Claudia Llosa Jaurés (Jaurés), by Vincent Dieutre INDEPENDENT JURIES PRIZES OF THE ECUMENICAL JURY MADE IN GERMANY – PERSPEKTIVE FELLOWSHIP, endowed with 15,000 Euros, funded by Glashütte Original Annekatrin Hendel for Disko (Disco) DIALOGUE EN PERSPECTIVE, funded by the German-French Youth Office This Ain’t California (This Ain’t California), by Marten Persiel CALIGARI FILM PRIZE Tepenin Ardı (Beyond the Hill), by Emin Alper Special Mentions Bagrut Lochamim (Soldier / Citizen), by Silvina Landsmann Escuela normal (Normal School), by Celina Murga Jaurès (Jaurès), by Vincent Dieutre NETPAC PRIZE Paziraie Sadeh (Modest Reception), by Mani Haghighi PEACE FILM AWARD Csak a szél (Just The Wind), by Bence Fliegauf AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL FILM PRIZE Csak a szél (Just The Wind), by Bence Fliegauf CINEMA FAIRBINDET PRIZE Call Me Kuchu (Call Me Kuchu), by Malika Zouhali-Worrall, Katherine Fairfax Wright READERS’ JURIES AND AUDIENCE AWARDS Panorama Audience Award PPP – fiction film: Parada (The Parade), by Srdjan Dragojevic Panorama Audience Award PPP – documentary film: Marina Abramovic The Artist is Present (Marina Abramovic The Artist is Present), by Matthew Akers BERLINER MORGENPOST READERS’ PRIZE Barbara (Barbara), by Christian Petzold TAGESSPIEGEL READERS’ PRIZE La demora (The Delay), by Rodrigo Plá SIEGESSÄULE READERS’ AWARD Parada (The Parade), by Srdjan Dragojevic Special Mention Call Me Kuchu (Call Me Kuchu), by Malika Zouhali-Worrall, Katherine Fairfax Wright PRIZE OF THE BERLINALE TALENT CAMPUS SCORE COMPETITION Christoph Fleischmann (Germany) BERLIN TODAY AWARD Rafael Balulu (Israel) for Batman At The Checkpoint (Batman At The Checkpoint) Special Mention David Lalé (United Kingdom) for White Lobster (White Lobster) [via Deadline ]
There were many happy faces among critics on Saturday, the third day of the Berlinale. Because despite what I wrote yesterday about the criticism the festival has faced in recent years, particularly in terms of the films chosen for competition, nearly everyone I’ve spoken to thinks this year’s festival is off to a promising start. Of the six competition films that have been screened so far, not one has set any of my random sampling of critic friends howling with derision, or walking around wearing a perpetual scowly-frowny face. When the festival lineup was announced, friends who had to write pregame assessments had a hard time finding even one or two movies that, sight unseen, had the potential to stand out. But on the strength of what we’ve seen so far, it appears that the best of this festival, whatever that might be, will again come from left field, as it did last year with Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation . Not every edition of every festival starts out that way, with a sense of adventure and anticipation. Don’t quote me yet, but we may be onto something special here. We can attribute part of the buoyant mood to the reception of the screening of Paolo and Vittorio Taviani’s Caesar Must Die on Saturday morning. In the late 1970s and early 1980s the Taviani Brothers rode high, on an internationally cresting wave, with pictures like Padre Padrone and The Night of the Shooting Stars . But in recent years, mentioning their name would be likely to elicit a blank stare or a “Taviani Who?” Even though the brothers have been steadily making films in Italy since then, they’ve dropped off the map in the United States, and even at home their profile hasn’t exactly been blazing. But Caesar Must Die may reignite the fortunes of this octogenarian directing team. The picture is stark and alive in its simplicity; rendered mostly in black-and-white, it’s gorgeous to look at — you could practically use it as an illustrated textbook on framing and composition. Caesar Must Die is a sort-of documentary that tells the story of a group of prison inmates — incarcerated at Rome’s maximum security Rebibbia — who mount a production of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Footage from the actual performance frames the picture: In the opening scene, we see a bunch of stubbly, rough-looking guys, wearing simple, stylized costumes that give the whole affair the aura of a children’s holiday pageant, doing some pretty interesting things with Shakespeare’s language. Not all of those things are, in the strict sense, good. But even the “bad” actors among this bunch — and remember, they’re not just nonprofessionals but convicted criminals, for Christ’s sake — contribute to the intense, quiet power of the final work. Most of Caesar Must Die is devoted to watching these men work their way through the material during rehearsal, learning its ins and outs, its dips and dives, and teasing out nuances and details that mean something to them. Sometimes the Tavianis draw the parallels between art and life a little too starkly. We don’t really need to hear the inmates reflecting on how Julius Caesar speaks to them when we can see how, in their proto-method-acting way, they bring every scrap of their experience to rehearsal: They touch each other warily but tenderly; when it’s time for a character to draw a knife, you can tell the actors respect it as both a weapon and a symbol, even though it’s presumably made out of plastic. You can bet these guys know a lot about duplicity and betrayal and power struggles, and they bring all of that to bear as they tangle with this challenging material, and with each other. The most wonderful sequence in this overall very fine picture may be the montage of the actors’ auditions, as they meet with the play’s director – a professional brought in from the outside – and try to impress him with their swagger and capacity for pathos. Many of them have both in spades. Some are awkwardly touching; others come off like they’ve spent too much time channeling Robert De Niro; and some are simply naturals, able to summon that deep-rooted whatever-it-is that makes magic happen in live performance. The picture also features a lovely, haunting Bernard Herrmann-inflected score — in places I could hear shadows of Taxi Driver . When Caesar Must Die eventually shows up in American theaters — and it will — it’s going to be easy as pie for marketing people to sell: An uplifting story about prison dudes finding meaning in art can pretty much sell itself. But even though that line essentially describes what happens in Caesar Must Die , it doesn’t come close to capturing the simultaneously joyous and mournful resonance of the picture. Caesar Must Die is really just about the way art lives on through people, sometimes in unlikely ways. There’s no way to keep it behind bars. Saturday’s press screening of Barbara, from German director Christian Petzold, didn’t draw the same kind of rapturous audience affection that Caesar Must Die did. But then, it’s a very different type of movie. In Barbara , a beautiful but rather blank-faced young doctor – played by the superb German actress Nina Hoss — arrives in a small East German town to take a new job at a tiny hospital. She doesn’t seem too happy to be there, though clearly the doc in charge – Ronald Zehrfeld, who somewhat resembles Brendan Fraser and is equally charming — takes an immediate shine to her. It’s 1980, as the movie’s press notes tell us, though if you go in cold, you probably won’t be able to immediately discern when and where the action is taking place. That’s probably intentional, and the approach works. This isn’t The Lives of Others, where the East-West divide is practically a major character; instead, it’s just a story about people living in constrained (and at times dangerous) circumstances and yearning for something more. Barbara is a drama and a romance, and it’s also laced with dry, delicate humor. There were times when the German members of the audience would laugh at a joke that I couldn’t quite get, and yet Petzold — the director behind the 2007 drama Yella, also featuring Hoss — is such a master of tone and mood that I could feel the vibrations of the movie’s subtle humor, even if I’d be hard-pressed to articulate it. Barbara starts out slow and then moves even slower — but by the end, somehow, it got me in its gentle clutches. 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Katy Perry is the fucking worst…She must die…. I have hated Katy Perry and her scam since day one….her look, her clothes, her hair, her body, but most importantly her music….Every time it comes on…little girls get brainwashed and buy all the stuff she subliminally promotes….hence why she even has a career….a corporate vehicle to make other money…and that was before I saw part of her Barbara Walters interview last night…see I cuz I had never heard her talk before…turns out she’s even more retarded, annoying, full of shit than her shitty brand of music….she went on about nothing, canned answers, has no personality, has no real concept of what’s up and for that someone needs to plot her murder… The amazing thing…is that she was even dumpy at 18…big tits can’t fool me…now check out her period bloat, over-eating, garbage of human in some Nazi pose…cuz she is the devil….that’s why she’s all religion based. DEVIL.
Victoria Jackson never played Barbara Walters on “Saturday Night Live.” Now, via this sweepingly offensive take on “The View,” she gets her chance: Pure camp. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Good As You Discovery Date : 14/11/2011 22:50 Number of articles : 2
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Starting this spring, Queen Latifah will produce and star in several AOL web series about sports, entertainment and entrepreneurialism, according to The Hollywood Reporter . Top 9 Music Videos Of The 1980s Top 15 Black Supermodels Of All Time [PHOTOS] Latifah is particularly interested in a sports-themed talk show for women. Her production company Flavor Unit will produce the shows and though she may not host she promised to have a regular role. “I’m kind of the Barbara Walters,” she added. “I’ll definitely float in and out.” “It’s great having a company that’s supportive of doing the same kinds of things and looking to the future, as opposed to trying to hold on to how things were in the past,” Latifah tells THR. Queen Latifah Becomes “Little Mermaid’s” Ursula For New Disney Ads [PHOTOS] Stacey Dash & LisaRaye Star In Queen Latifah’s New Show “Single Ladies” [TRAILER]
A new report states that Vanessa Hudgens is getting close and cozy with Josh Hutcherson . But that’s nowhere near as scandalous as the claim made by The National Enquirer against Vanessa’s ex: this tabloid quotes a source who says Zac Efron was holding hands with a male at an NBA All-Star Game party at The W Hotel on February 18. “‘I was shocked at how relaxed and open Zac was with this guy,” says the anonymous witness. “He walked around talking to him, smiling and holding his hand right in front of everyone, including Vanessa. People were wondering if maybe it was a stunt to make Vanessa jealous. But, truthfully, Zac really seemed into the guy.” With no photos, no named onlookers and no reliable reputation for the Enquirer , we question the validity of this story. Then again, Efron is best known for starring in a musical…
After a bitter custody war with her own mom, Teen Mom 2 star Jenelle Evans decided to capitulate. For the sake of her 19-month-old son if nothing else. “When he is older, I’ll tell him I was really young and I couldn’t put a roof over my own head, let alone his,” says Jenelle of relinquishing custody of Jace. The oft-at-odds mom and daughter tandem is working together to raise Jace, with Barbara Evans calling the shots, since Jenelle blows at parenting . Jenelle, Barbara and Jace Evans. [Photos: Us Weekly] While Jenelle takes few film-studies classes at a local community college, Barbara cares for the boy after working her full-time job at a department store. As badly as Jenelle, 19, wants Jace back from her relentlessly critical mom, she realizes she’s just not there yet. Dumping Kieffer Delp was a good start. “Once I get a job, save money and have my own place for three months, I’ll bring my mom to court,” Jenelle says of her confrontational plan of attack. At least they’re getting along well enough to pose for Us Weekly . “Jace wasn’t asked to be born,” Barbara says. “Somebody has to take care of him, and it’s going to be me. I don’t resent it. I love him to death.”