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‘The Expendables’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics have mixed reactions to Sylvester Stallone’s homage to ’80s action movies. By Eric Ditzian Sylvester Stallone in “The Expendables” Photo: Lionsgate Three high-profile flicks debut this weekend, and they couldn’t be more different from one another — few people would confuse the globe-trotting vision quest of “Eat Pray Love” with the comic-influenced landscape of “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” or the shoot-first-ask-questions-never action of “The Expendables.” Nor should anyone be confused about which of these films will end up winning the weekend box office. “The Expendables,” Sylvester Stallone’s fireball-enveloped ode to ’80s action flicks, is poised to blast away the competition despite decidedly mixed reviews. Some critics have lamented the film’s soggy storyline and over-the-top dialogue, while others have celebrated the full-tilt action sequences and the spectacle that results from Stallone, Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger sharing the screen. A sampling of reactions is below. The Story “In the rousingly explosive ’80s-pulp climax of ‘The Expendables,’ Sylvester Stallone’s old-tin-soldiers-of-action mercenary thriller, the director-star and his right-hand lug, Jason Statham, lead a band of commandos in an assault on the island fortress of a corrupt general. The funny thing is, they don’t really have a plan. The ‘plan’ is this: They show up and attack the general’s men with fists, knives, and very big guns. The way that Stallone directs, though, every machete thrust and relentless round of bullet spray is staged with a certain undeniable … conviction.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly The Performances “What makes ‘The Expendables’ bearable and even enjoyable is that Stallone and most of the cast maintain exactly the right attitude toward this nonsense. There’s a certain lumbering grace to the movie that comes with age and experience and the urge to not take oneself too seriously. There’s also an awareness of when he-man posturing crosses the line into genuine moral ugliness on the part of the villains.” — Ty Burr, Boston Globe The Action “Stallone has an eye for spectacle and stages some truly insane set pieces — a dock explosion and Statham shooting bullets from the top of a seaplane comes about 30 minutes in, and it’s fantastic — but not only does none of it fit into a coherent story, but you’ve got no reason beyond nostalgia to care about this group of self-satisfied roughnecks and their desire to track down a criminal, even one as sleazy as Eric Roberts (who is probably the film’s acting MVP, though that doesn’t say much).” — Katey Rich, CinemaBlend The Effects “Featuring pyrotechnic displays over-the-top enough to alter the planet’s orbit, the aesthetic here is very much in keeping with the ’80s action pics that established Stallone’s career, save for the use of digital blood in lieu of old-school squibs. When the Expendables shoot anonymous evil henchmen, they don’t just die, they erupt, sending a shower of virtual viscera across the screen — a distractingly artificial way of rendering violence presumably intended to appear more realistic (for those who’ve wondered what a knife to the throat or a mini-cannon to the head might look like).” — Peter Debruge, Variety The Final Word “The movie is a good-humored affair, and it delivers exactly what the action audience wants (or once wanted, anyway): maximum damage. In the production notes, the star emphasizes his avoidance of CGI in rendering the fiery mayhem, and he claims the actors did their own stunts (although in one furious beat-down scene in which he takes part, you have to wonder). This dedication to a faded action-flick ideal is rather touching, and you wonder how long Stallone, now 64, can keep carrying the old-school flag. When he pops up unexpectedly in the midst of one of the film’s many conflagrations, the general’s daughter turns to him and says, ‘How are you here?’ Says Sly: ‘I just am.’ Welcome back, champ.” — Kurt Loder, MTV News

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‘The Expendables’: The Reviews Are In!

Buzz Break: Helen Mirren’s Tempest in a Teapot

Piranha 3D Not Sexist, Includes Flying Penis

After following the marketing campaign for Piranha 3D and then watching the Comic-Con footage of a wet-T-shirt-contest-turned-blood-bath that features — among other atrocities — a busty woman getting her hair caught in a boat propeller (it doesn’t end well), a busty woman getting cut in half by an errant wire, and a busty woman getting bitten on the ass by a giant killer piranha, you would have been well within your rights to assume the entire film was going to be some sexist exploitation of the female body. Not so! And the proof is in a flying penis.

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Piranha 3D Not Sexist, Includes Flying Penis

What’s On: Stand-Up Showdown on Last Comic Standing

One comic will stand at the end of tonight’s Last Comic Standing , and a disco legend will commemorate that victory with an anthem about survival. At first you were afraid, now you’re petrified.

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What’s On: Stand-Up Showdown on Last Comic Standing

Brandon Routh and Anna Kendrick

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World costars Brandon Routh and Anna Kendrick get their coffee to go Thursday, strolling around Toronto before the film#39;s Canadian premiere. Actor BRANDON ROUTH had no problems with the stunts on new movie SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD – because his daredevil antics for SUPERMAN RETURNS were much scarier. The star plays an evil ex-boyfriend of Mary Elizabeth Winstead#39;s character in the comic book-inspired movie and was required to fly through the air with a guitar. B

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Brandon Routh and Anna Kendrick

‘The Other Guys’: The Reviews Are In!

Check out what critics have to say before you head out to the theater this weekend. By Eric Ditzian and Jeremy Kaplan Will Ferrell, Steve Coogan and Mark Wahlberg in “The Other Guys” Photo: Sony Pictures Leonardo DiCaprio’s fevered dreams have dominated the multiplex for three straight weeks. Now it looks like the “Inception” supremacy is coming to an end, with Leo’s reveries soon to be overtaken by Will Ferrell’s wackiness. The curly-haired comedian stars in “The Other Guys,” an action-comedy that marks his fourth big screen collaboration with writer/director Adam McKay, following “Anchorman,” “Talladega Nights” and “Step Brothers.” Co-starring Mark Wahlberg as Ferrell’s reluctant NYPD partner and fellow desk-jockey, “Other Guys” could easily outdo the $30 million “Step Brothers” took in back in 2008. Helping in that quest are the flick’s strong critical reviews. Before you head to the cinema this weekend, check out what the critics have to say. The Story “This latest gambit stars Ferrell as Det. Allen Gamble, a NYPD forensic accountant, and Mark Wahlberg as his rogue cop partner, a reluctant and raging Terry Hoitz. These flat-footed flatfoots get lots of razzing from the other boys in blue, but in typical don’t-count-Ferrell’s-underachievers-out fashion, they just might derail a $32-billion stock market rip-off if they can follow the paper trail and stop bickering long enough to figure it out.” — Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times The Cast “Mr. Ferrell’s Allen is a genuinely sweet guy as well as a crazed one: As evidence, his time-out for a surreal folk ballad, along with his mad reminiscence about being a pimp in college. (Jon Brion did the music, which includes the lullaby ‘Pimps Don’t Cry.’) Mr. Wahlberg provides counterpoint to his co-star’s nuances by declaiming his lines at the top of his voice: here again, the results can be hilarious when they aren’t silly. Michael Keaton is a police captain who moonlights at Bed Bath & Beyond. Steve Coogan, a reliably funny actor, isn’t funny as a bad guy scheming to defraud the city. He seems to think he’s in a drama.” — Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal The Jokes ” ‘The Other Guys’ gets you chuckling at the little details of Allen’s stick-up-the-butt patheticness, like the way he hums while typing, or argues with Terry about how a school of tuna could whip a lion, or blasts Little River Band CDs in his sad, dinky red Prius. (Terry: ‘I feel like we’re literally driving around in a vagina.’) A few of the jokes are sly, many are quite obvious, but what knits the laughs together is the nearly confessional conviction with which Ferrell delivers them. He’s not playing just another geek idiot — as, say, Rob Schneider does. He digs into some elemental side of himself, a side that craves order and niceness and civility, that shrinks from danger and violence.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly The Buddy Cop Genre “Adam McKay and co-writer Chris Henchy (‘Land of the Lost’) have overloaded the narrative, stretching it 20 minutes beyond its practical use and mistaking bigger and more explosive with funnier. From ‘Freebie and the Bean’ to ‘Running Scared’ to the ‘Lethal Weapon’ franchise, the challenge with cop-centric action comedies has remained essentially the same: How to balance straightforward adrenaline-rush material with bits you’d never find in a real cop film? This one begins buckling under its own weight around the midpoint; on the other hand, I’m already looking forward to catching certain asides and riffs again on cable.” — Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune The Final Word ” ‘The Other Guys’ is that rare thing, a goofball summer buddy comedy that actually delivers. The movie is a return to form for Will Ferrell, who finally reins in the idiot frenzy he’s so often deployed in the past (most recently in last year’s dismal ‘Land of the Lost’) and — an added blessing — shows no skin, either. It’s also a breakthrough for Mark Wahlberg, who dipped a toe into the comedy waters of ‘Date Night,’ but here makes a sizeable splash. Wahlberg isn’t an all-out clown in the Ferrell style, but his careful restraint in this picture — his comic simmering and his lag-timed reactions — is just as funny in a different way.’ — Kurt Loder, MTV News Check out everything we’ve got on “The Other Guys.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘The Other Guys’ Clips MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Other Guys’

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‘The Other Guys’: The Reviews Are In!

How Did Kenneth Branagh Get ‘Thor’ Job? Marvel Chief Explains

‘He chased it pretty hard,’ Kevin Feige tells MTV News at Comic-Con. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Chris Hemsworth in “Thor” Photo: Paramount Pictures When Marvel Studios announced it was making a live-action movie about its god of thunder, “Thor,” fans of the comic books were mostly excited. But when the studio revealed its choice of director, seasoned Shakespearian thespian Kenneth Branagh, the reactions were surprised, and decidedly mixed. Now that the trailer is out and the cast and crew have made the rounds at San Diego Comic-Con, however, it seems the buzz is mostly positive for Branagh. When MTV News caught up with Marvel chief Kevin Feige during our live-stream show at Comic-Con, he revealed how Branagh landed the gig. “He chased it pretty hard,” Feige said. “We had a number of good meetings. He flew himself over to meet with me. We had a number of phone calls, a number of sessions — more meetings than I’ve ever had with a director before we’d brought them on.” Feige added that through those first meetings with Branagh, he quickly learned that the actor had a lot more invested in the character than Feige originally realized. “He’s a big, giant ‘Thor’ fan,” Feige said. “He clearly is a very literate guy when it comes to Shakespeare, and when it comes to almost anything, including Marvel’s ‘Thor,’ which was a surprise to us. “Also, just talking about movies,” he continued. “We love the same kind of movies, we love the same kind of things, and when you have someone who’s as talented as Ken is in one arena and bring him into another one, he is going to succeed.” Feige went on to say that Marvel was fully behind Branagh in every step of his filmmaking process. “We have the department heads, we have the great resources to help him,” he said. “What he brings to us is bringing our characters to life in a big way.” For breaking comic book movie news, columns and more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com .

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How Did Kenneth Branagh Get ‘Thor’ Job? Marvel Chief Explains

‘Inception’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

MTV News has tracked every hidden layer of this film since word of it first dropped. By Eric Ditzian Leonardo Dicaprio in “Inception” Photo: Warner Bros. “Inception” is defined as a beginning — the act of commencement — but in Hollywood these days, “Inception” might just be shorthand for what happens when you make two immensely profitable movies and a studio backs up a truckload of cash onto your front lawn and says, “Thanks, man! Now go make the movie you’ve always dreamed of making.” Because that’s essentially what went down between Warner Bros. and director Christopher Nolan, who helmed “Batman Begins” and “The Dark Knight,” which grossed a combined $1.4 billion worldwide and resurrected one of the comic world’s most beloved film franchises. Nolan took his pile of cash — a rumored production budget of $200 million — and put together a film about a band of dream thieves, led by Leonardo DiCaprio, that can infiltrate another person’s sleep-time reveries and swipe coveted secrets. Their task in “Inception” is to implant an idea rather than steal one — a task so monumental they’re forced to construct dreams within dreams within dreams. What follows is nearly three hours of hallucinatory imagery, killer performances and story lines that unfold like origami to reveal hidden layers you never even thought existed. MTV News, however, has been tracking every hidden layer of this production since word of the movie first dropped. Before you hit the theater this weekend, check out our “Inception” cheat sheet for everything you need to know about what is thus far 2010’s coolest flick. Gotham Will Have to Wait In February 2009, a few weeks before Heath Ledger won a posthumous Oscar for his turn as the Joker in “The Dark Knight,” word leaked that Nolan would not immediately return to the world of the Caped Crusader for “Batman 3.” Rather, he’d be embarking on “Inception,” which was described at the time as a “contemporary sci-fi actioner set within the architecture of the mind.” Aside from that rather vague description, precious few plot details about the new movie would arise for months. Instead, we stood back as the cast came together. DiCaprio signed up in March , and in April, “Dark Knight” vet Michael Caine told us he’d be joining up as well. Joseph Gordon-Levitt , Marion Cotillard, Ellen Page, Cillian Murphy, Ken Watanabe and Tom Hardy eventually rounded out the cast. “I can’t wait to talk to you about it, but I’ve been very specifically asked not to talk about it,” Gordon-Levitt told us that June. “I want to respect [Nolan’s wishes], because I love his movies, and I’m so honored and grateful to be working with him.” “Inception” Commencement By the middle of summer, key details about plot points had begun to spring up on the Web, but we still didn’t really know what the heck this movie was about. And after the teaser trailer popped up online, well, we didn’t know a whole lot more — except that it looked freaking amazing. The cast continued to reveal almost nothing about the film during interviews. “It’s conceptual. It doesn’t fit into any genre,” Murphy told us . “There are elements of different types of things in it, but it is all from Chris’ imagination. I’ve never read anything close to it before.” Nolan’s “Inception” was shrouded in secrecy , but as 2010 rolled around, he had to begin telling the world just a little bit more about the movie. “I think it’s really a balance between creating intrigue about the movie, getting people excited to see something original, something different that they don’t know what they’re going to get,” the director explained to us in March. “We have to start giving people a little bit of information, a little bit about what ‘Inception’ is.” Then in April, he let loose in a spoiler-filled interview with the Los Angeles Times, shortly before a full trailer appeared on the Web . Welcome to Our Shared Dream As the film’s July 16 release date approached, Nolan, DiCaprio and the rest of the “Inception” crew began to make the press rounds. Murphy and Watanabe took us inside one of the film’s craziest scenes, Nolan explained how the movie builds on his “Dark Knight” experiences and DiCaprio highlighted the epically layered story line. “It’s a very rare occurrence where you can do a movie that exists on four different planes simultaneously,” DiCaprio said of the film’s various dreamscapes . “That was the immediate intrigue: delving into the world of the subconscious with Chris Nolan.” For his part, Nolan had one specific goal in mind when he decided to take a detour from Gotham City and head straight into “Inception.” “I think, for me, my whole career in making films, really every time I set out to make a film, I want to try and give somebody in the audience the experience I had watching [‘Star Wars’], where it really felt like anything was possible in that world,” he said. “That’s a really extraordinary experience to have as a moviegoer. I think that’s the highest aspiration of the Hollywood blockbuster.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Inception.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘Inception’ Clips MTV Rough Cut: ‘Inception’ Related Photos Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, More Premiere ‘Inception’ In L.A.

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‘Inception’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

Meet ‘Inception’ Breakout Star Tom Hardy

The Brit actor gets another shot at stardom with a role in Christopher Nolan’s latest blockbuster. By Eric Ditzian Tom Hardy in “Inception” Photo: Warner Bros. In the midst of all the visual complexity and storytelling wizardry in “Inception,” the weekend’s big box-office winner with a $60.4 million opening, one performance in particular shines through. Tom Hardy plays Eames, a forger on Leonardo DiCaprio’s team of fantastical bandits who is capable of impersonating other people within a shared dream state. From the very first time we meet him in a dusty Kenyan cafe, Eames comes across as an erudite ass-kicker, if such a thing is possible — a guy who can discuss intricate psychological issues at a PhD-level and then turn around and bust a few skulls. Hardy slips into Eames’ sweaty skin for an effortless performance in which… well, it just never seems like he’s acting.

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Meet ‘Inception’ Breakout Star Tom Hardy

‘The Walking Dead’ Zombies Take Over Atlanta, Then Your TV

‘I’d like to do 20 years of zombie TV,’ executive producer Frank Darabont says on the set of new AMC series. By Rick Marshall A Zombie on the set of “Walking Dead” Photo: MTV News ATLANTA — There is carnage on the streets of the ATL. At least there was, when MTV News went down South, to visit the set of “The Walking Dead.” There we found a horde of living dead prepared to bring Frank Darabont’s live-action adaptation of the hit comic books to life when the series premieres on AMC in October. We also found Darabont, “Walking Dead” comic creator Robert Kirkman , and many of the creative minds behind the show. “We have blocks of Atlanta shut down here, and there’s a tank behind me, if you can’t see it,” said Kirkman, who also serves as the series’ executive producer and a screenwriter for two of the first six green-lit episodes. “Just the scale of everything,” he marveled. “Everything is being done exactly the way I would’ve wanted it. And it’s better than I could have ever envisioned it. The whole thing is just amazing.” “The Walking Dead” follows a small group of human survivors in a world overrun by flesh-hungry zombies. Unlike zombie stories of the past, however, the comic book series and its small-screen adaptation focus on the effects a zombie apocalypse would have on the people who survive it. Instead of the zombie outbreak, it’s the zombie aftermath. And what an aftermath it is, as the project’s team brought the devastation of a zombie plague to the streets of downtown Atlanta — complete with overturned vehicles, scattered debris and yes, even a tank. “We’re going to follow the Robert Kirkman narrative pretty closely, but we’re giving ourselves permission to veer off path and find the interesting detours,” Darabont told MTV News. “We’ve got hundreds of zombies. We’ve got a downed helicopter; it just goes on and on. It’s crazy — all on a TV budget.” “The cool thing about it is, Frank Darabont, everything that he’s doing is him looking at the book and going, ‘I think there’s something here that would make it better,’ ” said Kirkman. “And I’ll be damned if he’s not right every time.” During our visit to the set, Darabont gave direction to series lead Andrew Lincoln, who plays police officer Rick Grimes, as hundreds of extras in full zombie makeup waited in the wings, ready to crawl, shamble and drag themselves into action. Given the 95-degree temperature on the day of our visit, the performance of the zombie horde was impressive. “There’s a certain look that we’re going for,” makeup effects supervisor Greg Nicotero told MTV News. “We want real gaunt, real thin features. … Tall, so that then we can make it look like they’re malnourished. So far, we’ve had some great performers, and they bring the makeup to life.” Darabont said he’d love to make the series a regular part of his career well beyond the first six episodes, much like Kirkman himself has done with the long-running comic book series. “I’d like to do 20 years of zombie TV,” he laughed. “Every day I’m at the monitors, and I’m going, ‘This is really, really cool.’ ” Much of the show’s team will also be attending this year’s Comic-Con International in San Diego and will host a “Walking Dead” panel on Friday at 11:30 a.m. in Room 6BCF. Related Videos ‘Inception’ Clips

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‘The Walking Dead’ Zombies Take Over Atlanta, Then Your TV