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Billy Ray Cyrus Teases Trio of Miley Cyrus Weddings

Billy Ray Cyrus debuted on Broadway Monday night, coming on board the latest production of Chicago. And the singer was in a joking mood afterward when asked by Us Weekly about his daughter’s engagement to Liam Hemsworth . “Liam asked if he could have my daughter’s hand in marriage, and I said yes if I could be in his brother’s next movie,” Billy Ray said , referring to Chris Hemsworth and his very successful run of Thor , The Avengers and Cabin in the Woods . The country star then continued to play around, but revealed something very real and interesting in the process: “Now, they [Miley and Liam] are going to have three weddings, so I’m thinking one movie with Chris, then we got the sequel to Liam’s new movie [ Hunger Games: Catching Fire ] coming out. They have got three weddings, that has to be three movies for me.” Three weddings?!? Who does Miley think she is, Kim Kardashian ? In all seriousness, though, Cyrus said he was recently inspired by Indianapolis Colts Coach Chuck Pagano , who is battling cancer and whose locker room speech last week went viral. Said Billy Ray: “He told his team he wanted another Super Bowl trophy and he had two daughters he wanted to walk down the aisle. When I saw that last night, this guy that’s battling Leukemia, and the fact that he is talking to his team saying, ‘I want to hoist that trophy and walk my daughters down the aisle.’ I immediately texted Miley and said, ‘I just want you to know, whenever you’re ready, I’m going to be very proud to walk you down that aisle.’ She was like, ‘Daddy!’ with two smiley faces! That coach and that moment touched me.” Okay. Now we need a Kleenex.

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Billy Ray Cyrus Teases Trio of Miley Cyrus Weddings

The Bachelor vs. Chuck Lorre: Bad TV Feud Alert!

Two and a Half Men and The Big Bang Theory creator / former Charlie Sheen nemesis Chuck Lorre has been bashing ABC’s The Bachelor for some reason. Naturally, the popular reality franchise is responding in kind. Inspired by unknown factors, Lorre called the dating show “idiotic” on one of his trademark vanity cards after a recent episode of The Big Bang Theory . Which is a little like Nadya Suleman calling someone irresponsible or Kim Kardashian labeling another wannabe star a shameless fame whore, or … you get the idea. This led Bachelor producer Elan Gale to tweet: “Someone has been freebasing crushed up copies of Dharma & Greg DVDs … Two and a Half Men. Zero salient points.” Host Chris Harrison retweeted Gale’s response, while Bachelor producer Robert Mills noted: “It’s ironic that Chuck Lorre decides to bash #Bachelor and one of his stars Kaley Cuoco is a card carrying member of #Bachelornation” Indeed. On an unrelated note: Kaley Cuoco bikini photos are unreal. Whose side are you on? Team Bachelor or Team Chuck?

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The Bachelor vs. Chuck Lorre: Bad TV Feud Alert!

Lincoln Sneak Offers 19th Century Intrigue And 21st Century Oscar Contender

“This has been a journey for me that’s unlike nothing I’ve done before. It’s been a real ride and it’s still unfinished.” So said Steven Spielberg Monday night as he introduced the New York Film Festival ‘s “Surprise Screening,” Lincoln , though most everyone in the jammed unruly line(s) getting into the Alice Tully Hall all but knew the film starring Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln and Sally Field as Mary Todd Lincoln, would be the ‘surprise.’ The general consensus about the film is that it is a serious contender for Oscar glory, though with the likes of Day-Lewis and a stunning performance by Tommy Lee Jones as radical Republican Congressional leader Thaddeus Stevens, as well as a script by Tony Kushner and director Spielberg, how could it not be? The powers that be at DreamWorks and Touchstone were careful that no footage or anything of a digital nature would escape the 1000-plus seat theater. Everyone had to check anything that so much had an on/off button (through a quick scan through the crowd, one could see a few cameras/iPhones at the end of the screening). The film’s official world premiere will take place as the closing night gala of the upcoming AFI Fest in Los Angeles. The movie opens with a rain-soaked hand-to-hand battle between north and south. The gruesome scene is reminiscent of Spielberg’s past war battles in all its tragic detail. But that is the only war scene in the two-hour-plus pic (there was confusion at the screening exactly how long it was in its current state). “I already did Saving Private Ryan ,” joked Spielberg following the screening. The bulk of the film centers on the period after Lincoln’s re-election in 1864 in the months leading up to his death in April of the following year, when he struggled to get the 13th Amendment passed by the House of Representatives. The Amendment abolished slavery once and for all in the United States. Though he had ordered the Emancipation Proclamation earlier, Lincoln feared the provision would only be held up as a “war power” and would become redundant after the war’s end — meaning, those legally freed would be immediately sent back into servitude. “When Steven [Spielberg] and I started talking about doing this, we knew we’d only do part of [Lincoln’s] administration — not all of it,” said Oscar-nominated screenwriter Tony Kushner. “The whole thing got delayed during the writers’ strike, so I didn’t do anything with it — but I did think about it.” Kushner initially wrote a 500-page screenplay but then whittled it down to 100 pages after suggesting that Spielberg particularly look at the political drama that lead up to the passage of the 13th Amendment, which plays out like a 19th century political drama. Day-Lewis channels the steely determined sage of a still young country on the brink of disintegrating. Spielberg and Day-Lewis relied on historical documents to pattern the 16th President’s voice which goes against stereotype for a national patriarch who is known to have been a great orator. “Research talks about his high shrill voice,” said Spielberg. “I think we’d be criticized if we did it the way he’s heard by Disney’s Epcot Center with a low-tenored voice.” Tommy Lee Jones will undoubtedly get an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for portraying the sharp-tongued Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, who spearheaded equal rights against a venomous opposition in the House. He argues spectacularly against a pack of Democrats who vehemently oppose the 13th Amendment, fearing its passage would portend future implications — namely the vote and equal rights. Spielberg pointed out the historical fact that the Republicans were considered the “progressive” party of the day while the Democrats were generally in favor of the status quo, though some did cross party lines in a case of political brinksmanship — which is at the center of this film argues to pass the 13th. Authenticity played a central role in crafting Lincoln , and the looks of the day as portrayed in the film sometimes came off as comical. The costumes are something phenomenal, especially those worn by David Strathairn, who plays Secretary of State William Seward, and Sally Fields as Mrs. Lincoln, who argues at moments to chuckles from the audience (but yes, Mrs. Lincoln did wear those massive poofy dresses). “We used Lincoln’s own watch in the movie,” said Spielberg. “The watch ticking in the movie is Lincoln’s own watch. It was wound for the first time in 50 years. There was a high bar to reach and we brought that to Richmond where we shot the movie.” “This was one of the most pleasant experiences [filming] I’ve ever had,” he added. “Daniel Day-Lewis is a consummate artist and that marriage with Tony [Kushner’s] words was momentous.” [ Photo by Godlis/Film Society of Lincoln Center ] Follow Brian Brooks on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Lincoln Sneak Offers 19th Century Intrigue And 21st Century Oscar Contender

‘My Mother Was Nuts’ Book Excerpt: How Robert De Niro, Not Tom Hanks, Almost Starred In Penny Marshall’s ‘Big’

Actress and funny lady Penny Marshall made her name in television ( Laverne & Shirley ) before making an unexpected leap into directing with 1986’s Jumpin’ Jack Flash . But it was her sophomore feature, a fantasy about a boy transformed into a 30-year-old by a wish, that launched a career behind the camera — and made her the first woman director to gross $100 million. But as Marshall tells it in her wry, vivid memoir My Mother Was Nuts , everyone in Hollywood had passed on Big , Tom Hanks included — until, that is, an unlikely actor threw his hat into the ring: Robert De Niro . Marshall recalls the struggle to cast Big ‘s leading man — and the names who went out for the part, from Sean Penn to Gary Busey to John Travolta (“at the time he was box office poison”), in Movieline’s exclusive excerpt from My Mother Was Nuts . In the release (in stores today) the 69-year-old Marshall writes her life story, from her childhood growing up in the Bronx alongside sister Ronny and brother Garry, to her introduction to Hollywood and famous friends, colleagues, and lovers including John Belushi, Carrie Fisher, Rob Reiner, Art Garfunkel, Joe Pesci, Steven Spielberg, and many of the brightest talents of New Hollywood, to her successful second career directing films like Big , Awakenings , and A League Of Their Own . Stay tuned for Movieline’s exclusive interview with Marshall. ===== Jim Brooks and I both had offices on the Fox lot and one day while I was in post-production on Jumpin’ Jack Flash he came into my office and put a script on my desk. “This is your next movie,” he said. It was Big . What he didn’t tell me was that everyone in the world had turned it down. From Chuck Shyer to Steven Spielberg. Because I didn’t read the trades or follow the business, I had no idea. Nor did I know there were three similar movies in the works: Like Father, Like Son ; Vice Versa ; and an Italian version. But Jim was a mentor and friend. He knew that I had liked directing and making things up. He also knew that I wanted to do it again. I was grateful for his help because I probably wouldn’t have known how to look for a project on my own. Luckily I didn’t have to. I read the draft and liked the story. Twelve-year-old Josh Baskin can’t get the girl he likes; she’s interested in an older boy who can drive. He wishes he were bigger and wakes up the next morning as a thirty-year-old. He gets a job at FAO Schwarz, rises up the corporate ladder, and becomes the object of affection of a beautiful executive. It was a theme that everyone could identify with: When I’m big I’m gonna . . . To make the high concept work, I wanted it to be real and believable. The biggest challenge would be casting the lead. I went straight to the three big box-office stars at the time: Tom Hanks, Kevin Costner, and Dennis Quaid. All of them passed. Everyone passed. I tried a different approach. I looked for the kid who would be Josh’s best friend, and I picked Jared Rushton. He had the most spunk of those I saw. He worked well as I brought in actors, including Sean Penn, who was terrific but too young, and Andy Garcia, who was also great, though one of the studio executives said, “We don’t want to spend eighteen million on a kid who grows up to be Puerto Rican.” That was how they talked. “He’s Cuban,” I said. I also read Gary Busey, who had the energy of a child, but I didn’t think he could pull off playing an adult. John Travolta was dying to do it, but at the time he was box office poison and the studio didn’t want him. I started to get worried. Despite not having a lead actor, we were in pre-production in New York. I met with Robert Greenhut, one of our executive producers. This was our first film together. He was a slick line producer who had come up through the ranks and done all of Woody Allen’s films. He had excellent ideas, and he turned into an ally and confidant when I decided to take my search for a lead actor in a different direction. I went to Robert De Niro. Bobby — or Bobby D. as I called him — was in the middle of making The Untouchables , playing Al Capone. Although I knew he didn’t ordinarily read other material when he was in the middle of a project, I called him anyway. That’s where I’m not at all shy or hesitant. I will call anyone. What’s the worst they can say? “Bobby, there’s a script,” I said. “I want you to read it, see if you like it.” I got him the material and called him back. “Did you read it?” “Yeah.” “What do you think? “I like it.” It turned out that he wanted to make a commercial film. He had done all of Marty Scorsese’s movies, but hadn’t broken out in a film the whole family could watch. I told Jim and Scott Rudin, who was running production at the studio, that De Niro was interested. They were surprised and somewhat intrigued. They were also skeptical. Besides having a hard time envisioning him in the role, they’d heard stories about him. They told me to get him to commit. The way they said it was like a challenge. I called Bobby. “What do I tell them when they ask me?” I asked. “Do you want to do it or not? I’ve got to give them an answer.” “Yeah, tell them I’ll do it,” he said. I hung up. I had Bobby. I told Jim and Scott, and I guess word spread. The next day I flew to Los Angeles to go to an event celebrating Paramount’s seventy-fifth anniversary and posed for a photo with everyone who ever worked at the studio. Word had spread about Bobby D. and a handful of actors who had turned me down, including Kevin Costner, now asked about Big . Bobby had given me validity. As work began on the script, Bobby told me to look at his movies and tell him what I wanted and didn’t want. What I wanted was the energy he had in Mean Streets in the scene when he was first in the bar and coming out around the car. That’s exactly what I got when he came to my house one day. I got him on tape with Jared. They skateboarded, shot baskets, and rode bicycles in my driveway. Bobby doesn’t give you much until the cameras are on. Jared yelled, “Come on, De Niro. Move it!” It was exciting. I didn’t know exactly where the process was leading, in terms of the script, but it was moving in a good direction. I would have paid to see Bobby dance on piano keys. Barry didn’t want Bobby, though. I said, “Counter me.” He said, “How about Warren Beatty?” To me, Warren was the same as De Niro, but different. He had already done something similar in Heaven Can Wait. But the two of us had dinner in New York and then we went up to my apartment. I asked if he would listen to me if I directed him. In the nicest way, he said no. Well, that was thrilling. Why bother? At least Warren was being honest. That’s all I ever ask. Just tell me the truth. I’ll deal with it. But I can’t deal unless I know the truth. Bobby was taken aback when I told him the studio had wanted me to meet with Warren. It’s never easy to hear that you aren’t someone’s top choice, even at his level. But that was only a small part of what became an even bigger problem. An article came out in the papers about how much money Chevy Chase, John Candy, and other people were paid for movies, and all were getting a hell of a lot more than Fox was going to pay Bobby. To be blunt, they were going to pay him shit and they weren’t budging. They just didn’t want him. Jim Brooks suggested I give Bobby my salary. I offered. Bobby didn’t want it. “We’re working together,” he said. “You and me, you know? I’ll take Jim’s.” However, he had second thoughts and called the next day. Apologetic, he explained he couldn’t do the movie anymore. He’d be too angry. I understood. But now I was back to square one. Sort of. Excerpted from “My Mother Was Nuts” by Penny Marshall. ©2012 by Penny Marshall. To be published by Amazon Publishing/New Harvest September 2012. All Rights Reserved. My Mother Was Nuts is available today in stores and on Amazon . Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘My Mother Was Nuts’ Book Excerpt: How Robert De Niro, Not Tom Hanks, Almost Starred In Penny Marshall’s ‘Big’

Chuck Norris Warns of "Thousand Years of Darkness" if Obama Reelected

Chuck Norris stars in a new ad urging citizens to unite and vote against President Obama and prevent a Doomsday scenario that would inevitably follow his reelection. “If we look to history, our great country and freedom are under attack,” the 72-year-old Expendables 2 star says in his dire appeal to Republican voters. “We’re at a tipping point and, quite possibly, our country as we know it may be lost forever if we don’t change the course in which our country is headed.”

Dax Shepard Compensates For Crappy Hit And Run Box Office By Dissing Age Of The Expendables 2 Cast

Speaking of old…. Dax Shepard deployed one of the oldest marketing tricks in the book on the Conan show on Monday when he diverted attention from the lame box-office performance of his movie Hit and Run by poking fun at the aging action stars who kicked his cinematic ass, the cast of  The Expendables 2 . Shepard told host Conan O’Brien that the cast of the Sylvester Stallone-directed The Expendables 2 were “all show and no go” when it came to their collective well-muscled appearance.   “It looks like the zombie apocalypse is saving the earth,” Shepard said in reference to the veteran ensemble. Alas, Hit and Run might have benefited from scenes of a zombie apocalypse, or something that would have raised moviegoer interest. The picture, which also starred Bradley Cooper and Shepard’s real-life girlfriend Kristen Bell grossed just $5.9 million in its initial five-day opening. The movie ranked 10th for the weekend, well behind The Expendables 2 , which saw a $13.5 million weekend and a 15-day domestic box-office take of $52.3 million. Feeling a little insecure there, Dax? Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Dax Shepard Compensates For Crappy Hit And Run Box Office By Dissing Age Of The Expendables 2 Cast

Rihanna Was ‘More Concerned’ About Chris Brown After 2009 Assault

‘As angry as I was … I just felt like he made that mistake because he needed help,’ singer tells ‘Oprah’ in episode airing Sunday. By Jocelyn Vena Rihanna gets emotional while talking to Oprah Winfrey Photo: OWN

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Rihanna Was ‘More Concerned’ About Chris Brown After 2009 Assault

‘Expendables 2’ Cast Decides: Who Took The Hardest Hit?

Chuck Norris, Jason Statham and more weigh in on who they think got roughed up the most. By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Kara Warner Jean-Claude Van Damme in “Expendables 2” Photo: Lionsgate

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‘Expendables 2’ Cast Decides: Who Took The Hardest Hit?

Of Course Jean-Claude Van Damme Went Method On The Set Of Expendables 2

Some time after turning down a role in 2010’s Expendables (the part he was offered lacked substance, legend has it) Jean-Claude Van Damme thought better of opting out of the Sylvester Stallone throwback, which went onto become a hit. But perhaps things worked out for the best: In this week’s Expendables 2 , Van Damme steals away with the spotlight as the eccentric and hilariously disdainful uber-villain Jean Vilain (yes, really) with an over-the-top performance that called for full commitment to character on set. At least, Van Damme believed his turn as Vilain required cultivating an icy rapport with his fellow action veterans on set. And so as Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger , Bruce Willis and Co. chummed it up during filming , the Muscles from Brussels stayed in character so well he only made nice after the bulk of filming wrapped. “I said to [Sylvester] Stallone, ‘How do you want me as a villain? Do you want me, like, an extravagant villain, or do you want a guy who’s completely serious and believes in what he’s doing and why he’s doing that,'” Van Damme recalled to journalists recently in Los Angeles. “Then I said, ‘By the way — why am I doing that?’ and he said, ‘Because you love money.’ I said, ‘Fine.’ So, I became that type of villain.” So committed was Van Damme to Vilain’s persona, he even found himself sneering at the crew. “When I saw all those cameras around me, I said, ‘Who are those bunch of clowns looking at us with those lenses and the lights and everything?’ I was really into the atmosphere of Expendables .” When it came to treating his peers and personal heroes like enemies, Van Damme didn’t hold back. “I’ll tell you what, those guys were like role models for me, because we have to be honest, we need to look at something to have a goal,” he recalled. “I saw Rambo . I saw Rocky . I saw Conan . I saw Die Hard . So to me, they were like heroes. I was back in Belgium watching them on the screen, buying tickets and dreaming of becoming like them. I wanted to be an actor since I was eleven, twelve years old, and now here I am and they’re chasing me.” Van Damme credits his acting skills to having worked with directors like Ringo Lam ( City on Fire ), who directed him in Maximum Risk (1996), Replicant (2001), and In Hell (2003). He counts Kirk Douglas and Charles Bronson among his screen idols and emphasizes the importance of finding truth within a scene, though his proclivity for doing something different in each take gave producer Stallone and director Simon West a challenge and a boon in the editing room. “If you do a good take,” Van Damme said, “you cannot repeat the same one.” His chilly treatment of his on-screen rivals was an extension of that truth-seeking imperative. “When I came on the set I didn’t talk to nobody,” Van Damme remembered. “I didn’t want to see them because, you know, Arnold is like bop, bop, bop and I was talking more to Stallone about the part than anything else. So, I believe, and I felt when I was looking at them, it was like, ‘Who are you?’ Nothing [in] the eyes. I felt like I didn’t like them. I took it very seriously.” “Of course, when the movie was finished I was like, ‘Hey, guys, I really admire you, but I didn’t talk to you in the beginning because I wanted to have that type atmosphere, that type of tension.’ I think you can see that when you look at the lens, when I look at all them and I’m like, ‘Go down to the floor, guys, bark all of you like dogs.’ It’s hard for me to say that to my heroes, but it was the only way, and then when the movie was going to end, that’s when I started to knock on trailers and say hello to everybody. ‘Hey, Chuck [Norris], how are you?’” Stay tuned for more from The Expendables 2 , which hits theaters Friday. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Of Course Jean-Claude Van Damme Went Method On The Set Of Expendables 2

Galleries: Magic Johnson And The Fam, Coco & Ice-T, NeNe Leakes, Ciara, And More! [Photos]

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Galleries: Magic Johnson And The Fam, Coco & Ice-T, NeNe Leakes, Ciara, And More! [Photos]