RUSSELL Crowe is tipped to have signed to star in a new kung-fu movie.

The rest is here:
New kung-fu movie for Russell Crowe
RUSSELL Crowe is tipped to have signed to star in a new kung-fu movie.

Posted in Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb list, celeb news, crowe, Entertainment, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, new-kung-fu, TMZ
Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: Weinsteins push back Company Men (mere days before opening)… Russell Crowe (sort of) attempts to stir a Master and Commander sequel campaign… A former publicist wrestles with the Ronni Chasen case… Shaaaaaarrrrk! … and more…

Visit link:
Emma Stone Goes Blond, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today
Comments Off on Emma Stone Goes Blond, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged actor, before-opening, broadsheet, celeb news, crowe, films, Hollywood, james franco, mma, newswire, ronni chasen, russell crowe, survivor
Folks, did we learn nothing from the James Avery death hoax? Stars’ mothers cry over this stuff. Here’s hoping Russell Crowe’s mum is holding up OK after her Oscar-winning son…

Continue reading here:
No, Russell Crowe’s Not Dead, Either
Posted in Celebrities, TV
Tagged crowe, death-hoax, from-the-james, James, james-avery, learn-nothing, mothers-cry, oscar, oscar-winning, russell, russell crowe, stars, stuff, TMZ
Yes, here at Cannes we have the rich and beautiful and their yachts (and Lindsay Lohan slinking away from said yachts at all hours…but that’s another story). Aside from hyping…

See the original post here:
Cannes Notebook: Do-Gooders Galore!
Posted in Celebrities, TV
Tagged another-story, bennyhollywood, crowe, from-said, lindsay, rich, russell crowe, stars, story, their-yachts, TMZ, yachts
Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott’s gritty re-telling gets points for historical accuracy, but not much else. By Eric Ditzian Russell Crowe in “Robin Hood” Photo: Universal Pictures Robin Hood and his band of merry, arrow-slinging thieves who steal from posh landowners and enrich the mud-caked, poverty-stricken masses are nowhere to be found in Russell Crowe and director Ridley Scott’s version of the centuries-old folktale. In their place is an entirely new take on Robin, a gritty origin of story of sorts, grounded in medieval social and economic history and seeking to explain, through storytelling and vicious bloodletting, just how the iconic title hero came to be known as a champion of the English people. Was it a wise choice to give Robin Hood a “Gladiator”-style makeover? How does this dark version hold up, both as a contemporary action movie and when compared to past, often merrier takes on Robin? With the film hitting theaters on Friday (May 14), the reviews are in. Let’s see what the critics are saying about Crowe and Scott’s fifth big screen collaboration. There’s no doubting the effort that filmmakers made to create a realistic, historically accurate world in which Robin would exist. Whether that world lends itself to a first-rate movie experience is, however, up for debate. “Scott’s approach to the legend becomes persuasive,” Mick LaSalle argued in the San Francisco Chronicle. “Instead of the usual romantic adventure, Scott and screenwriter Brian Helgeland offer a gritty drama, using the Robin Hood story to depict the birth pangs of liberty. They ground the film in the details of medieval life. We see how wars were fought — the various strategies and weaponry — and how news traveled. We see the attempts at pomp and splendor, the church bells and trumpets greeting the arrival of the king. Mainly we see harshness and ugliness.” Less impressed with how Scott brought this history to life is our own Kurt Loder . “Much research has gone into getting all this medieval backstory right (or somewhat right),” he wrote. “But the heavy scholarship turns the movie into what seems like a very long history lesson in a loud, dark and unusually muddy lecture hall. The endless battles, skirmishes and castle-stormings, accompanied by the usual arrow storms, head-axings and downpourings of boiling oil, are nothing we haven’t seen before. (Although in one seaside battle, with enemy ships crashing up onto the beach and much slaughter in the water, we half-expect Tom Hanks to come wandering through in search of Private Spielberg.) Even more dated are the inevitable roistering peasants, with their campfire rabbit roasts and sloshy revels. (‘More wine!’)” In place of Hanks, of course, we have Crowe as Robin. The obvious comparison here is to Crowe’s sword-swinging general in “Gladiator.” Most critics find the contrast of his Maximus to his Robin an unflattering one. “[T]he way Crowe plays Robin, which is heavily, without ever once modulating his impassive, minimalist squint, he’s far too even-keeled to inspire us,” Entertainment Weekly ‘s Owen Gleiberman wrote. “He’s like the hero of ‘Gladiator,’ only without a vengeful mission — or a slave to fight.” And about the fights in “Robin Hood.” Quite a few critics found them disappointing — or worse. “[T]he battles are so bland, the action so transparently choreographed and the characters so interchangeable, it’s never clear who to root for or what to care about,” Andy Lowe said on TotalFilm.com . “The choice mostly comes down to either ‘Bad guy hit by an arrow. Good!’ or ‘Good guy hit by an arrow. Bad!’ ” We’ll give the final word to The Oregonian ‘s Shawn Levy. “The story lines pile up, like the characters, needlessly: the struggle to impose a charter of rights on the king; the treacheries of the French; the secret past of Robin’s father; the melding of Robin’s troupe (with an utterly superfluous tribe of poaching orphan boys); the love story … None of it comes together, and none of it makes you root for a second go-round in which, presumably, our hero would get on with the robbing-of-the-rich-and-giving-to-the-poor for which he’s celebrated.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Robin Hood.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Robin Hood’ Related Photos “Robin Hood”

The rest is here:
‘Robin Hood’: The Reviews Are In!
‘Robin’s not a grandiose bloke,’ Crowe says of his everyman character. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Todd Gilchrist Russel Crowe Photo: MTV News Russell Crowe gives good speech. Throw on a DVD of “Gladiator” or “Master and Commander” and see for yourself: The dude can give such a killer pep talk, he’ll have you rising out of your La-Z-Boy to join whatever crusade he’s hyping. His rousing speech as the title character in “Robin Hood,” however, was of an entirely different nature and required a sufficiently distinct approach on Crowe’s part. Not that everyone around him, including director Ridley Scott, initially agreed with Crowe’s plan. “Robin’s not a grandiose bloke,” Crowe told MTV News. “Everybody around it was thinking that, ‘You have to take this one to the bank, man. You have to nail it. This has got to be like the moment from “Gladiator” when you said such and such.’ I was like, ‘Well, he’s not that guy.’ That guy was a general. He’s used to being in control and he can’t help but stamp himself on a moment. Robin’s just a bloke.” That is to say, Crowe’s Robin Hood does not begin the film as some steal-from-the-rich-give-to-the-poor superhero. In fact, this Robin is more concerned with self-preservation than anything approaching public altruism. What changes him is falling in love with a woman — the ethereal Cate Blanchett as Maid Marion — and learning the secret history of his father. And so when it comes time for Robin to confront the nefarious King John, who’s gone off on a quest to tax almost every last penny from his indigent subjects, Crowe brings a sort of everyman attitude to his speech. “You’ve got to be real in this moment,” he explained. “You are talking to a king, so you can only go so far. He’s got to know his place. It’s not interesting if he takes a contemporary attitude and goes, ‘I don’t f—ing care if you’re a king.’ You’ve got to stay in that pocket. “Take the cape off him, take the mask, he’s just a man,” he added. Check out everything we’ve got on “Robin Hood.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Robin Hood’ Related Photos “Robin Hood”

Read more:
Russell Crowe Takes Us Inside Robin Hood’s Climactic Speech
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Music
Tagged crowe, dvd, film, grandiose-bloke, like-the-moment, mma, Mtv, news article, Photos, ridley-scott, speech, stars
Russell Crowe robs rich white dudes on the subway of their used books. He'll probably give them to the poor. The poor love Jon Krakauer. (Thanks Brian) View
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged brian, crowe, Hollywood, hot trends, poor-love, robs-rich, russell crowe, subway, the-subway, TMZ
He’s used to unleashing hell. But this time, Russell Crowe’s unleashing concrete. The Oscar-winning New Zealand-born actor was feted with today with the 2,404th star on the Hollywood Walk…

Follow this link:
Now You Can Step on Russell Crowe Without Fear of Retaliation
Posted in Celebrities, TV
Tagged bennyhollywood, crowe, dance, dancing, gosselin, Hollywood, oscar-winning, russell, russell crowe, stars, time, TMZ, zealand-born
Robin Hood is screening to the rich and hoping good word of mouth trickles down to the (comparatively, by Hollywood standards) poor. The Russell Crowe-starring, Sherwood…

The rest is here:
Russell Crowe’s Robin Hood a Cannes Opener
Posted in Celebrities, TV
Tagged bennyhollywood, crowe, mouth-trickles, robin hood, russell, russell crowe, russell-crowe-starring, the rich