Tag Archives: colin-firth

VIDEO: The Assassination of Yogi Bear by the Coward Booboo

Help Movieline Caption the First-Look Still From The Beaver

You’ve seen the paparazzi photos , and you’ve seen the market poster . And now, as Summit finally corners the troubled Mel Gibson/Jodie Foster effort The Beaver into a vague but reassuring spring 2011 release “date,” along comes the first official still from the film. You’ll never guess who’s in it!

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Help Movieline Caption the First-Look Still From The Beaver

New Poster for The King’s Speech Focuses on Old Timey Microphone, Colin Firth’s Pores

When Movieline asked The King’s Speech director Tom Hooper about his film’s horrible excuse for a movie poster , the candid Oscar contender summed it up like so: “I hate it. I hate it. And it is not going to ever be on any cinema walls. It will be replaced. It’s a train smash. It’s a train smash.” With that in mind, it’s time to take a look at The Weinstein Company’s replacement poster for The King’s Speech , which dispenses from shady Photoshopping techniques for a microphone and Colin Firth’s skin. Progress?

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New Poster for The King’s Speech Focuses on Old Timey Microphone, Colin Firth’s Pores

Discuss: This Man is Actually Co-Hosting the Oscars

In all sincerity, I am excited about James Franco co-hosting the Oscars with Anne Hathaway. I like him, I like her, and surely we can all agree is that the show will either rock in completely fresh, unprecedented ways, or it will explode in a spectacular, Chernobyl-esque ball of radioactive flame and debris, polluting its Hollywood environs for decades to come. Regardless, we’re going to have ourselves a memory! That said, I’m not sure on which scenario I’d bet after seeing Franco’s bit in the awards-season actor’s roundtable after the jump. Help?

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Discuss: This Man is Actually Co-Hosting the Oscars

Helena Bonham Carter on King’s Speech, Fight Club and Why She Doesn’t Belong to Tim Burton

Considering the intense security I had to wade my way through recently to visit Helena Bonham Carter at her Manhattan hotel, for a few moments it actually did feel like I might be visiting the Queen of England. (As it turned out, it was just the Israeli Prime Minister’s security detail.) Alas, no — just screen royalty, as proven in her latest effort, The King’s Speech .

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Helena Bonham Carter on King’s Speech, Fight Club and Why She Doesn’t Belong to Tim Burton

The Every Day Trailer: Indie Movies Head to the Lifetime Channel

Because not enough indie movies tackle martial ennui, here comes the trailer for Every Day , a dysfunctional family dramedy designed to remind you how dysfunctional families operate, just in time for Thanksgiving. Pass the cranberry sauce!

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The Every Day Trailer: Indie Movies Head to the Lifetime Channel

Oscar Index: King’s Speech Will Be Heard; Jacki Weaver in Peril?

Welcome back to another week of Movieline’s Oscar Index, a comprehensive survey of hype, hubris and other standard-issue awards-season happenings. This week it’s The King’s Speech ‘s turn in the spotlight — but the competition isn’t so far behind. Let’s break it down.

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Oscar Index: King’s Speech Will Be Heard; Jacki Weaver in Peril?

‘King’s Speech’ Star Colin Firth Talks Awards-Season Love And ‘Dumb Luck’

2010 best actor nominee looks poised for another Oscar nod. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Colin Firth in “The King’s Speech” Photo: The Weinstein Company For the second year in a row, Colin Firth finds himself at the center of awards-season chatter. And after losing out on a best actor Oscar for “A Single Man,” the 50-year-old actor has again established himself as one of the frontrunners in that category, thanks to his turn as the stammer-afflicted King George VI on the verge of Britain’s entry into World War II in “The King’s Speech.” It seems Firth is an actor at the top of his game, but to hear him tell it, it’s as much a matter of good fortune as it is great talent. “It’s just dumb luck,” he told MTV News at the Toronto film festival in September. “That’s all: Just getting a crack at it. Sometimes you just take roles to stay in the game or pay bills and hope the good ones are going to come along. “I was never in a world of perfect choice, and now I feel like I’ve had a couple of real plums landing in my hand,” he added. It was at fall film festivals in Toronto and Telluride, Colorado, as critics first began to catch screenings of “King’s Speech,” that it became clear we’d still be talking about Firth’s performance come awards season. He’s been faithfully making the publicity rounds ever since, and as he told us when we chatted earlier this month in New York, he’s not bored with the experience. “Funnily enough, I find it easier than many things,” he said. “There are so many angles you can approach it from, to do with the way people are reacting to it to the surprises we’ve had along the way to nuances about the actual history itself. I think this has a lot of mileage in it. “It’s been very gratifying for audiences to have howls of laughter and be open to crying,” he continued. “To see that happening in the same film is a triumphant feeling. When you’re in Telluride, you can put it down to altitude — one glass of wine amounts to 10. So we had to test it at sea level as well to see if people enjoyed it, and they did.” Did you see Firth’s performance as King George VI? Give us your review in the comments below.

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‘King’s Speech’ Star Colin Firth Talks Awards-Season Love And ‘Dumb Luck’

Tom Hooper on Directing The King’s Speech, Oscar Buzz and Working with Right Said Fred

Tom Hooper isn’t ready to talk about his Oscar chances just yet. As he points out, The King’s Speech , already a critical darling, has yet to make a dollar at the box-office. But that hasn’t stopped the prognosticators from predicting at least some Oscar gold for The King’s Speech — not a bad situation at all for a guy who got his start directing a Right Said Fred Sega commercial (yes, that Right Said Fred).

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Tom Hooper on Directing The King’s Speech, Oscar Buzz and Working with Right Said Fred

‘A World Without Dioramas’: Community Recapped

Community has gotten to the point where every critic on the Internet will bend over backward to give the show glowing praise. As Emily Nussbaum just wrote on Twitter, “I laughed at literally every line of that episode of Community . Exhaustingly excellent.” Well, that’s one way to put it. Another way would be to say that while funny, “Conspiracy Theories and Soft Defenses” was a pale imitation of an Arrested Development episode, with a B-story that might as well have been left to an online deleted scene. Annie might have had a gun, but Community fired some blanks last night.

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‘A World Without Dioramas’: Community Recapped