‘When it started off, it was Justin’s record,’ Twist tells MTV News of his collaboration with Bieber and Miley Cyrus. By Rob Markman, with reporting by Chris Kim
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Lil Twist’s ‘Twerk’ Started As A Justin Bieber/Miley Cyrus Duet
‘When it started off, it was Justin’s record,’ Twist tells MTV News of his collaboration with Bieber and Miley Cyrus. By Rob Markman, with reporting by Chris Kim
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Lil Twist’s ‘Twerk’ Started As A Justin Bieber/Miley Cyrus Duet
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Tagged appid, bieber, celeb news, chris, collaboration, detected, invalid, live, markman, miley cyrus, missing, Mtv, News, show, TMZ
Winnie Cooper, we hardly knew ye! An all-grown-up Danica McKellar, rocking fishnets and an apocalyptic-superhero look, makes out with Avril Lavigne in the music video for her latest single, “Rock N Roll.” Check out the collaboration below: Avril Lavigne – Rock N Roll Part cartoon, part comedy and part girl-on-girl action ,”Rock N Roll” is all girls-just-want-to-have fun antic. But the kissing is all the buzz on the ‘nets. “It was the first kiss for both of us. We never really talked about it afterward,” Avril says of kissing Danica in a deadpan voice-over after the fact. “But,” the newly-married rocker singer concludes, “I think about the events of that day again and again, and somehow I know that Winnie does, too.” Wonder how Kevin Arnold feels.

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Avril Lavigne, Danica McKellar Make Out in "Rock N Roll" Music Video
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Tagged after-the-fact, avril-lavigne, celeb news, collaboration, danica, danica mckellar, invalid, News, news update, rocker-singer, winnie, winnie-cooper
Miley Cyrus hints at the possibility of a Justin Bieber collaboration in her upcoming album set to be released later this year while at the 2013 Billboard Aw… http://www.youtube.com/v/FvdSSrzwmTg?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Continue reading here: Miley Cyrus Talks Justin Bieber Collaboration – 2013 Billboard Awards

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Miley Cyrus Talks Justin Bieber Collaboration – 2013 Billboard Awards
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Tagged billboard, collaboration, Hollywood, invalid, Music, Taylor Swift, the-rest, Year
Collaboration is due out on May 6. By Gil Kaufman
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Mariah Carey And Miguel Tease ‘Beautiful’ Music Together
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Tagged appid, collaboration, david, detected, jocelyn, kaufman, news article, update
With Kelly Marcel tapped to pen the script, we look at the obstacles in adapting E L James’ best-selling novel. By Amy Wilkinson “Fifty Shades of Grey” book cover Photo: The Writer’s Coffee Shop

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‘Fifty Shades Of Grey’: Screenwriter’s Five Biggest Challenges
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Tagged book-cover, coffee-shop, collaboration, context, fifty-shades, Hollywood, invalid, jason, kelly-marcel, missing, news article, script, TMZ, writer
Pharrell says he ‘can’t wait’ for fans to hear his collaboration with Hov and the Odd Future singer/songwriter. By Rob Markman Jay-Z Photo: Jason Kempin/ Getty Images

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Jay-Z, Frank Ocean And Pharrell Hit The Studio
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Tagged collaboration, context, detected, getty, jason, jason-kempin, markman, music-news
It says something about how the LAPD tends to get portrayed in the movies that when Officers Brian Taylor (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Mike Zavala (Michael Peña) are introduced on screen at the beginning of the surprising cop drama End of Watch , it feels like it’s only a matter of time before they plant evidence on someone, steal drugs or money, beat or kill someone without warrant or let loose with something terribly racist. The film is, after, the latest from David Ayer, who wrote and directed Street Kings and scripted Training Day , two features that portrayed Los Angeles law enforcement as morally compromised at best and violently corrupt at worst. That sense of apprehension carries through an opening scene in which Taylor and Zavala shoot two suspects down in what appears to be legitimate self-defense. (They’re cleared of any wrongdoing and roll back onto the street on patrol.) The two cops are cocky and funny and young, and it still takes a good half hour to accept that they may be as forthright and dedicated to their jobs as they appear to be. End of Watch is a Millennial police drama. It’s a generation or two removed from Rodney King and the Rampart scandal, and Ayer manages to give a startling sense of a changing of the LAPD guard as well as the forces they’re up against. Its main characters are tough but not yet jaded cops who bicker with affectionate familiarity about race and make obligatory gay jokes that lack the sting of homophobia. The longstanding L.A. battle against gang violence is ongoing, but lurking behind it is a new and more frightening enemy: the Sinaloa Cartel, onto whose ominous dealings Taylor and Zavala stumble more times than is good for their health. The film’s found footage aesthetic also speaks to its refreshing next-gen spirit. Taylor and Zavala blithely record themselves on the job — even though fellow officer Orozco (America Ferrera) warns them their footage can be subpoenaed and used against them should something go wrong — for the night school film class that Taylor’s taking for a pre-law program arts requirement. Both he and his partner pin cameras to their uniforms and mount the camcorder on the front of their black and white (and we witness some stomach-churning car chases from that perspective). It’s a pretty standard police drama technique, but like Chronicle earlier this year, the conceit that most of what we’re seeing was filmed by the characters on screen is only a loose one, allowed to drop away when it might interfere. Mostly, the self-documentation is a way of letting us get to know the central pair, who sometimes offer asides or explanations to the camera and who don’t feel they have anything to hide. End of Watch is fond of Taylor and Zavala almost to a fault — a scene early on in which the latter puts his weapons aside to fistfight a belligerent gang member, earning his respect in the process, feels ridiculous even as it establishes the partners’ frat-boy delight in their work. Fortunately, the two characters are easily likable — Gyllenhaal looks more comfortable on screen than he has in years — whether they’re busting each other’s balls or discoursing on marriage. Zavala is married to his high-school sweetheart Gabby (Natalie Martinez) while Taylor is getting serious about Janet (Anna Kendrick). The film is shaped around the two cops rather than around much of a plot and offers a heightened slice of the contemporary lives of law-enforcement officers assigned to a rough area of the city. It’s a depiction that includes some stirringly tense encounters with a cracked-out mother unable to find her children, and an ex-con whose encounter with fellow cop Van Hauser (David Harbour) and his rookie partner goes gruesomely wrong. Taylor and Zavala aren’t the only ones with access to recording equipment. One of the film’s most interesting aspects is that it also includes the self-documentation of the Curbside Gang, who are run by Big Evil (Maurice Compte) and kept in line by the swaggering female thug La La (Yahira Garcia). Everyone’s the star of their own movie, particularly when they’re holding the cameras, and End of Watch depicts a gang-on-gang drive-by from both sides: While the primarily black Bloods barbecue and commiserate about getting driven out of their neighborhood by the growing Mexican community, the Latino Curbsiders roll up and open fire on them. It’s only the cartel point of view that goes unrepresented, and its appearances provide End of Watch with its most memorably haunting yet bothersome scenes: stacked body parts in a darkened house, jewel-encrusted handguns, people locked away behind chicken wire like animals. When we see the cartel handiwork through Taylor and Zavala’s eyes, it looks demonic, apocalyptic and incomprehensible compared to the street skirmishes that they’re used to tamping down. And though the real-life cartels have shown themselves to be capable of all this and worse, the near-supernatural way in which they’re depicted in End of Watch doesn’t mesh with the film’s otherwise matter-of-fact sensibility and its warts-and-all adoration of the cops it portrays. Unlike the gang members, addicts and vicious ex-cons, who are all shown to be vividly human, the cartels are left to be symbolic — a metaphor for dread of terrible things coming that even the most devoted enforces of order won’t be able to handle. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Millennial Cop Drama End of Watch Pits Tough, Likable Gyllenhaal & Peña Against Scary New Enemy
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Tagged cartel, collaboration, films, Hollywood, michael pena, taylor, tv guide, work
Also in Thursday afternoon’s round-up of news briefs, upcoming New York Film Festival debut Frances Ha gets a buyer. The Rome Film Festival will debut a new section with a film by a quartet of auteurs. Any Day Now and Alex Gibney ‘s The Last Gladiators heads to theaters. And Focus Features welcomes a new executive vice president. Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln To Close AFI Fest The world premiere of the forthcoming film will close the AFI Fest November 8th at Grauman’s Chinese Theater. Starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, Tommy Lee Jones, David Strathairn and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, the drama focuses on the tumultuous final months in office of the 16th President of the United States. DreamWorks Pictures/Twentieth Century Fox title (in association with Participant Media) will open in limited release November 9th and go wide November 16th. The 26th AFI Fest will take place November 1 – 8 in Los Angeles. For the fourth year, AFI Fest will off free tickets for all its screenings, though only package holders will be able to reserve seats for the Lincoln closing night gala. Robert Redford to Fete Roger Ebert The Sundance Institute founder will honor film critic Roger Ebert with the Vanguard Leadership Award in “recognition of his advocacy of independent cinema.”The award presentation will take place at the third annual ‘Celebrate Sundance Institute’ benefit, chaired by Institute Trustee Lyn Lear and her husband, Norman, on June 5, 2013 in Los Angeles. “Among the many things I admire about Roger Ebert is how he has long supported freedom of artistic expression,” said Redford in a statement. “When I started Sundance in 1980, and when few would support us, Roger was there. This was one of the ways he communicated his forward-thinking outlook. He was one of the first to support our artists. His influence and reach is as meaningful as his personal passion for cinema, and he certainly deserves this award.” Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig’s Frances Ha Heads to Theaters in the Americas Ahead of its U.S. premiere at the New York Film Festival, IFC Films picked up rights to the Telluride/Toronto debut Frances Ha , starring Greta Gerwig. The film centers on Frances, a New Yorke dance apprentice without her own apartment. She splits with her best friend Sophie, but throws herself into her dreams even as her possibilities dwindle. The film is a modern-comic fable that explores New York friendships, class, ambition, failure and redemption. Arianna Bocco negotiated the deal for Frances Ha from UTA on behalf of the filmmakers. Rome Film Festival to Debut Centro Histórico by European Auteurs The world premiere of the collaboration by Aki Kaurismäki, Pedro Costa, Victor Erice and Manoel de Oliveira will open the Cinema XXI, the new section of the festival that spotlights “new trends and new languages in international cinema.” The film explores the stories for modern-day Guimarães, the founding city of Portugal. Any Day Now Heads to North American Theaters Based on a true story and starring Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt, the film is set in the late 1970s about a mentally handicapped teen who is abandoned and is taken in by a gay couple. Music Box Films acquired the title and plans a release this December. Louis Phillips Joins Focus Features Phillips joins the specialty distributor as Executive Vice President, Physical Production. Based in the company’s West Coast office, he’ll oversee physical production and post-production on all in-house film productions and outside acquisitions. Alex Gibney’s The Last Gladiators Heads to U.S. & Canadian Theaters Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney’s The Last Gladiators , which explores “the goon,” Ice Hockey’s players who have only one mission: to protect the star players at any price. Phase 4 Films which picked up rights to the documentary, will roll out the film in Canada in October, followed by a U.S. release in early 2013. Phase 4’s Larry Greenberg and Sam Posner with Josh Braun from Submarine and Anne Atkinson from Pryor Cashman LLP on behalf of the filmmakers.

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Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln To Close AFI Fest; Robert Redford To Fete Roger Ebert: Biz Break
Maybach Music Group celebrated the 2012 BET Awards via an after party thrown by their record label, Warner Music Group, at Cecconi’s restaurant in West Hollywood, Calif. Sunday (July 1) night. The rap collective had lots to be happy about last night, as Wale took home the Best Collaboration trophy for “Lotus Flower Bomb,” featuring Miguel. MMG is also fresh off the release of their Self Made Vol. 2 compilation which is projected to sell 80-90,000 units in its first week… Continue

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Maybach Music Group Celebrates After 2012 BET Awards
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Tagged black celebrity news, collaboration, dropped-during, Ghostface, hip hop wired, Hollywood, home-the-best, maybach-music, Music, News, rap-collective, record