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‘Dark Knight Rises’ Trailer: Batman Isn’t Afraid, He’s Angry

Bane disturbs, Catwoman flips out and other key scenes from new clip. By Kevin P. Sullivan and Josh Wigler Tom Hardy as Bane in ‘Dark Knight Rises’ Photo: With ” The Dark Knight Rises ” so close and scalpers asking for upwards of $150 for tickets , anticipation for the conclusion to Christopher Nolan ‘s Batman trilogy just reached a fever pitch, and now a new trailer has debuted on a Nokia mobile app, showing off new footage and effectively pushing us past our maximum capacity for excitement. Warning: The article contains minor spoilers. Here are five key scenes from the new “Dark Knight Rises” trailer: An Army Rising It was never a secret that Bane intended to amass an army once he reached Gotham City, since most of the ad campaigns have focused on the final, epic battle between the mercenaries and the police. The new shot featured in the trailer, however, showing a full-fledged army storming the streets of Gotham, gives a better sense of the scale of the uprising. This is going to be a war — not just a big fist fight. Bane actually does have an army at his command, and they’re sacking Gotham, as another villainous group had once discussed doing. ‘I’m Not Afraid. I’m Angry.’ In the last trailer, Selina Kyle suggested that John Blake should be as afraid of Bane as she is. Bruce, on the other hand, is not taking her advice. With so much of the promotional material focusing on what’s new to “The Dark Knight Rises,” Batman gets a little lost in the shuffle. This single line gives us an interesting insight into the mind of Bruce, something that has pretty much remained a mystery. Bane blows stuff up, and Selina Kyle steals things, but what’s going on with the Batman? ‘Mr. Wayne’ Given that Bane has been seen parading around with Batman’s shattered mask in his hands in numerous teasers and trailers gone by, it makes sense that the venom-fueled terrorist would eventually learn the Caped Crusader’s secret identity. Still, hearing Bane utter the words “Mr. Wayne” accomplishes the goal of sending shivers directly down the viewers’ spine. This monstrosity of a man knows Bruce’s greatest secret, and he’ll wield that information with the same painful precision we assume he’ll bring down upon our hero’s back later in the film. Catwoman Flips This might not be so relevant to the story, but Selina Kyle does a backflip … out of sight … in a maid’s outfit. In the battle to make Anne Hathaway’s Catwoman a more imposing and badass character, the backflip certainly helps her case. She’s come a long way since the day when the Internet openly mocked her costume design. Now she’s fighting alongside Batman, stealing Ferraris and backflipping in a maid’s outfit. Touch

Emma Glover is hot

Here’s a damn awesome set of pictures tweeted by British bombshell, Emma Glover. Continue reading

Russell Brand: Katy Perry Divorce Worked Out, Sorta

Russell Brand is fairly zen about his divorce from Katy Perry. In an interview with the Lorraine show on the UK’s ITV1 while doing publicity rounds for Rock of Ages , the British funnyman offered up a rather sanguine view. “Well, it did work out in a way because you are married for some time, and that’s really good, and then you’re not married, and that’s really good,” he said. Right??!? Profound yet simple. Best spin on a divorce ever! The 37-year-old Brand and the 27-year-old Perry swapped vows in October 2010 in a lavish ceremony in India only to see their marriage unravel in 14 months. While divorce is never easy, he’s come to terms with it. “You just have to have acceptance of things . She is a person I love, but now this is a new time. I suppose divorce is difficult, isn’t it, because of the admin! There’s a lot of admin!” Seriously. On a different level of love, Brand gushed over … Alec Baldwin. “He’s like sort of a big powerful, hairy, sexy uncle,” he said of his Rock of Ages co-star. “Which in the wrong circumstances could be a terrible thing.” “But in the circumstances that I found myself in, it was really lovely. He’s really friendly, and he’s really clever, and really sweet and gave me wonderful advice.” Random, hilarious bromance alert?

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Russell Brand: Katy Perry Divorce Worked Out, Sorta

Andy Samberg Lands New TV Gig

‘SNL’ alum will play title character on BBC series ‘Cuckoo.’ By Jocelyn Vena Andy Samberg Photo: Jesse Grant/ WireImage It’s been less than two weeks since Andy Samberg announced his departure from “Saturday Night Live,” and he’s already got plans to return to the small screen. The “That’s My Boy” star will appear in a six-part comedy series on the BBC titled “Cuckoo,” the network announced. British funnyman and “The Inbetweeners” actor Greg Davies will also star in the show, filming this summer. The series will follow parents who are stunned to meet their daughter’s new husband, “a self-appointed spiritual ninja,” played by Samberg. Samberg’s Cuckoo is “a slacker full of outlandish, New Age ideas” who is taken in by the Thomas family as he embarks on newlywed life with his bride. Davies plays the father, Ken Thomas. The cast is filled out by Helen Baxendale, playing mom Lorna, and Tamla Kari, who plays their daughter. The series will air later this year on the network. “BBC Three continues to break new comedy. ‘Cuckoo’ is both original and unique,” BBC Three executive Zai Bennett said in a statement, also showing love to the show’s writers, Robin French and Kieron Quirke. “We’re delighted to be announcing this exciting new sitcom with such an illustrious cast from two of my favorite new writers.” Executive producer Ash Atalla added, “The best of British meets the toast of Hollywood. We hope ‘Cuckoo’ cements the special relationship between our two great countries. I imagine Obama and Cameron will be watching closely.” When MTV News caught up with Samberg shortly after he announced he was leaving “SNL,” he opened up about the things he’ll miss most about working on the series. “I’ve been saying it a lot — I’m going to miss all of my friends and the people I work with,” he said. “I love them all so much, and I’m hoping to stay in touch with them.”

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Andy Samberg Lands New TV Gig

Fifty Shades of Grey: Bret Easton Ellis Dream Casts Ryan Gosling, Lena Dunham

American Psycho writer Bret Easton Ellis made clear via Twitter who he’d pick as potential leads in Fifty Shades of Grey , the best-selling erotic drama by E. L. James that he claims he’s hoping to adapt for the big screen. If it ever comes to pass, Ryan Gosling and Girls creator/actress Lena Dunham are clear favorites — or so he insists. What would rumored potential director Angelina Jolie say? Reporting on Ellis’ Tweets — which should be taken with a sizable grain of salt, obviously — Orange UK noted that the Less Than Zero author speculated that Scarlett Johansson or Kristen Stewart would be the likely victors to play the novel’s Ana opposite a theoretical Gosling as Christian Grey. “I would love it if we lived in a world where [ Girls actress] Lena Dunham could be Ana in Fifty Shades of Grey but I don’t think we do,” Ellis wrote. “Hope E.L. James doesn’t think I’m being a prankster. I really want to adapt her novels for the screen. Christian Grey is a writer’s dream…” The novel’s Christian Grey is a wealthy man tormented by demons and a need for control who begins a BDSM affair with college grad, Ana. Ellis has additional thoughts on a director too, should the Jolie thing not work out — or is just an elaborate rumor — or both: “I think David Cronenberg is a great idea for directing Fifty Shades of Grey and we worked together on American Psycho in its initial phase.” He gave a shout out to his supporters and a nudge to the powers that, well.. “BEE”: “Thanks to everyone supporting BEE adapting Fifty Shades of Grey : the response has been huge and amazing. Hope E.L. James feels the same way.” [ @breteastonellis via Orange UK ]

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Fifty Shades of Grey: Bret Easton Ellis Dream Casts Ryan Gosling, Lena Dunham

Inessential Essentials: Danny Boyle’s Shallow Grave Gets the Criterion Treatment

The film: Shallow Grave (1994) Why It’s an Inessential Essential: Today, Danny Boyle is commonly known as “the director of Slumdog Millionaire .” (Or: Olympian designer !) After that, he’s usually “the director of Trainspotting ,” or 127 Hours or even Millions . So it’s nice to see that the Criterion Collection’s first DVD/Blu-Ray release of a Boyle film is Shallow Grave , an early film by Boyle but an especially worthy one. Scripted by regular collaborator John Hodge ( Trainspotting , A Life Less Ordinary ), Shallow Grave is a nasty little neo-noir about three apathetic yuppies that cover up a crime involving a dead body and a bag full of cash. Juliet (Kerry Fox), Alex ( Ewan McGregor in his second film role), and David ( Doctor Who ‘s Christopher Eccleston) are a trio of casually petty young things that are equally bored, cruel and self-absorbed. They tentatively sublet the fourth bedroom in their Edinburgh flat to a stranger, who promptly dies and leaves a suitcase full of money beside his corpse. A decision is hastily made: they’ll keep the money and dispose of the body. The consequences of that decision naturally haunt and subsequently push the film’s group of sociopathic friends over the edge. How the DVD/Blu Ray Makes the Case for the Film: During his audio commentary soundtrack, Boyle behaves exactly how you’d think he would based on his films. He’s a reactive filmmaker, one that prioritizes sensationalism over moralism. That totally suits a film like Shallow Grave , a movie that Boyle, according to film critic Philip Kemp’s liner notes, originally conceived of as being similar to Blood Simple . During the director’s commentary (there’s also a separate commentary track that features Hodge in conversation with producer Andrew Macdonald), Boyle professes to have great reverence for British social realists like Ken Loach and Mike Leigh. But he also talks about how the film’s bright, lurid color palette, which he characterizes as “swathes of color,” were his way of getting away from “British realism,” which he said had “become very standard” at the time. Shallow Grave is about the perils of being young, British, materialistic and without a moral compass. But like Trainspotting , Boyle’s follow-up feature and breakthrough film, Shallow Grave , is a young filmmaker’s way of trying to, “just smash it up a bit, if we could.” Left to his own devices, Boyle tellingly only mentions the film’s political subtext infrequently and mostly in passing. He’s much more interested in talking about trick shots, effect-driven photography and the sense of visual “perspective” he achieved by making his antiheroes’ apartment, the film’s central location, built with an elevated foundation. Boyle did this for the same reason he had his cast lug around a crash test dummy when they simulated carrying a body down a flight of stairs. Boyle knew even then that to properly push buttons, he had to achieve a hyper-real effect. And he did: Boyle jokes that the dummy made his three lead actors mad at him, but that that an air of tension on-set is, “always a good thing.” Other trivia: Boyle is a great talker and goes on a number of funny tangents during his audio commentary, like when he warns anyone unfamiliar with The Wicker Man , which is playing in the background in one scene in Shallow Grave , not to watch the remake. His anecdote about gauging the success of Shallow Grave on the attendance of a single matinee screening in Hamilton, Scotland is especially funny. Boyle says that his contacts at Polygram Filmed Entertainment, the film’s distribution company, informed him that four people showed up to Hamilton’s first screening, but that that was a very good sign. “If there’s one person there,” Boyle recalled, “it’s going to be ok. If there’s nobody there, they don’t know. It’s bizarre, it’s all statistics, of course.” Previously: Inessential Essentials: Revisiting Joe Eszterhas’s Telling Lies in America Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice , Time Out New York , Vulture and Esquire . Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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Inessential Essentials: Danny Boyle’s Shallow Grave Gets the Criterion Treatment

Common Eyes Truffaut Re-make, Universal Eyes Same Time, Next Year Re-make: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday afternoon’s round up of news briefs, Magnolia Pictures and Strand Releasing each pick up a 2012 Tribeca Film Festival title, while Monique Gabriela Curnen and Kathy Baker join an indie thriller. Marina Abramovic nabs a French festival prize, Mark Cuban gives his two cents at a producers conference over the weekend and what to do about those pesky website responses… The British have an answer. Magnolia Pictures Nabs U.S. Rights to Évocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie The documentary about the seminal talk show host is directed by Ironbound Films’ Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger. Downey exploded made a splash onto the late ‘80s talk show circuit, uprooting the traditional format by turning debate of current issues into a brouhaha, earning the title “Father of Trash Television.” The film, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year, will be released theatrically by Magnolia in the first quarter of 2013. Tribeca’s Yossi Heads to Strand Releasing North American rights to Tribeca Film Festival debut Yossi are going to Strand Releasing. The follow up to the successful Yossi & Jagger , the film follows the main character, Yossi played again by Ohad Knoller as he lives a solitary existence as a workaholic doctor in Tel Aviv. Strand’s Jon Gerrans negotiated the deal with Films Distribution’s Nicolas Brigaud-Robert. Monique Gabriela Curnen and Kathy Baker Join Model Home The actresses have joined indie the indie thriller to be directed by Patrick Cunningham. Cunningham co-wrote the screenplay, which marks his feature debut, with William Frank. The story explores the little-known practice of “live-in staging,” where recently evicted families are recruited to live in unsold properties. Marina Abramovic Takes Top Prize at 1st Champs-Elysées Film Festival The Sundance world premiere won the audience prize for feature-length film from the U.S. The audience prize for best short film from the U.S. went to Motherland by Shariq Siddiqui while best French short went to It’s a Miracl’House by Stéphane Freiss. Created by Sophie Dulac, the festival programmed some 50 films enabling Parisian audiences to discover the variety of productions available from France and the United States. Around the ‘net… Universal Talks with Duplass Bros for Same Time, Next Year Re-do The studio along with producers Walter Mirisch and Scott Rudin plan a remake of the 1978 romantic comedy and are negotiating with Mark and Jay Duplass to write the script with the possibility to direct the feature, Deadline reports . Common to Star in New Version of Truffaut’s The Man Who Loved Women He will lead the cast in an “urban update” of Francois Truffaut’s 1977 romantic comedy classic The Man Who Loved Women for writer and director J. Kevin Swain. Swain’s version will be set in Buenos Aires, Shadow and Act reports . 9 Best Things Mark Cuban Said at Producers Guild Conference Produce as long as you can market; TV triumphs over online in revenue; Online numbers are deceiving and so is Facebook… Indiewire details some of the mogul’s proclamations. Websites to be Forced to Identify “Trolls” by Brits Websites will soon be forced to identify people who have posted defamatory messages online. New U.K. government proposals say victims have a right to know who is behind malicious messages without the need for costly legal battles, BBC reports .

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Common Eyes Truffaut Re-make, Universal Eyes Same Time, Next Year Re-make: Biz Break

Olympic Opener Plans, Darren Aronofsky May Have Noah’s Nemesis: Biz Break

Also happening in (mostly) film news Tuesday morning, Roger Corman to lead a festival jury, Alfre Woodard to star along with Brad Pitt and Michael Fassbender in a slave epic, projections for worldwide entertainment are up, though less so in North America and former Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash gets ready for his star… Roger Corman to Lead Tokyo Film Festival Corman will serve as president of the 25th Tokyo International Film Festival taking place October 20 – 28 in the Japanese capital. Corman has produced more than 550 films and directed fifty others in a career spanning nearly 60 years. Around the ‘net… Danny Boyle Unveils Olympics Opening Details The Olympic Stadium will morph into an idealized version of the English countryside complete with farm animals and recreations of British landmarks. The $42 million event will take place July 27th, Variety reports . Worldwide Spending for Theatrical and Home Video to Hit $100B PwC’s Global Entertainment and Media Outlook gave its annual five-year forecast, saying theater tickets and home video will increase by 3.1 per cent per year to nearly $100 billion by 2016. Box office will rise 6.3 per cent per year while home video will only rise by 0.5 per cent. Most growth will come from abroad, with North America poised for a less than 1 per cent rise, Deadline reports . Ray Winstone Set to Play Noah’s Nemesis The actor has been offered the role of Noah’s enemy in the Biblical story of the man who built the arc, directed by Darren Aronofsky. Winstone would play opposite Russell Crowe in the epic which also stars Logan Lerman, Douglas Booth and Emma Watson, Deadline reports . Alfre Woodard Boards Steve McQueen’s Latest The actress will join Chiwetel Ejiofor, Brad Pitt and Michael Fassbender in Twelve Years a Slave a New Regency production based on an autobiography written in 1853 by Solomon Northup, a free black man who became enslaved, THR reports . Slash to Get His Star in Hollywood The former Guns N’ Roses guitarist will get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame next month. He is the first of the former band members to receive the star, which will be unveiled July 10th on Hollywood Blvd., BBC reports .

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Olympic Opener Plans, Darren Aronofsky May Have Noah’s Nemesis: Biz Break

Justin Bieber Breaks Out British Accent

Look out, One Direction . Justin Bieber is totally gunning for your fan base. The teenage icon conducted an interview with Capital radio station in England Saturday… and he did it entirely in a British accent! The chat took place backstage of the Summertime Ball 2012 in London, during which Justin appeared on stage with protege Carly Rae Jepsen and danced along to the Song of the Decade, “Call Me Maybe.” Watch the Biebs do his best Prince William impression below, as he discussed Carly Rae, losing his Rolex and winning a Grammy someday: Justin Bieber British Accent Interview

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Justin Bieber Breaks Out British Accent

Moguai Talks Revved-Up ‘In N’ Out’ Collabo With Tommy Trash

German DJ tells MTV News of creating big new sound on song’s re-edit to play for summer festival crowds. By Nick Philippou Moguai Photo: Thomas Niedermueller/ Getty Images EDM fans worldwide know Moguai as one of the most diverse and prolific music-makers on deadmau5’s Mau5trap label, an epicenter of EDM creativity. MTV News caught up with the German DJ recently, and he gave us all the details on his latest album, MPire, and on his synth-centric collaboration with Tommy Trash called “In N’ Out,” including their revved up re-edit that’s available on iTunes and is hovering high up on the Beatport charts. “We did [the track] three and a half years ago in Germany. I know him only from touring of Australia, and in Germany or Europe nobody knew him at that time,” Moguai told MTV News. “We did it, but it never came out. So I put it on the album, and right now it fits perfectly in the time.” Moguai said that “In N’ Out” landing on his album is the kind of happy coincidence that always happens when DJs tour together. He added that including the track on his album was even more exciting after Trash had a huge year in 2011, with tracks like “The End” and “Cascade” becoming staples in DJ sets around the world. “In N’ Out” works well with MPire ‘s melting pot of sound, which ranges from the quintessential progressive sound in “Lyme” to electro-house euphoria on the album’s title track. Moguai told MTV News that they wanted to have a really big new sound on their edit of “In N’ Out” for the huge festival crowds over the summer. Moguai’s adding more U.S. tour dates this summer. He’ll be making his first summer tour stop on June 8 at Level in Kelowna, British Columbia. Then he’s off to Chicago on June 9 to play Vision before hitting a plethora of festivals and nightclubs. “I think EDM has found a new home here in America, but it’s like the beginning, like hip-hop and R&B,” he said. “It’s a cultural thing right now. It won’t disappear anymore.” Moguai has seen EDM grow into the mainstream in his native Germany, and he sees many parallels between the explosion of EDM in America and what Europe experienced nearly two decades ago. “We had it in Germany,” Moguai told MTV News. “We’re still having it, but it feels like back in the days, back in the early ’90s, you know, when we started with Love Parade and with the Mayday. It began with 500 people around Berlin, around Brandenburg, and from there the next year it was 5000, then 50,000, then 500,000, then 1.5 million, then 2 million, you know, and it grew up. [It] feels quite the same [energy] here.” Related Artists Moguai

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Moguai Talks Revved-Up ‘In N’ Out’ Collabo With Tommy Trash