Tag Archives: editing

For Discussion: Mark Twain’s Classic ‘Huckleberry Finn’ Is Going To Be Re-released Minus The “N-Word”

This year a new version of the literary classic ‘Huckleberry Finn’ will have the racial epithets removed from its text, including “nigger” and “Injun”. Seems a little late…the book as been out since 1885, but hey better 126 years late than never… Huckleberry Finn is uniquely marvelous because it is of its time yet manages to transcend it. In spite of the limitations of vocabulary, cultural expectations, and racial stereotypes, it lays bare the inhumanity of slavery through the power of satire. To remove it from this context is to strip it of its power — and to needlessly whitewash a period that deserves no whitewashing. There is nothing quite parallel to this sort of change. It’s not about avoiding an awkward classroom moment, or they would have removed the word “ejaculate” from Victorian novels, where everybody is always ejaculating about everything. It would be like renaming 1984 2084, “because the current title does not reflect how pleasant life was under the Reagan administration.” This is like changing War and Peace to Peace, because war is unpleasant to remember, or removing World War I from All Quiet on the Western Front. If we keep updating things to reflect our current sensitivities, where do we stop? Do you support the editing of books that may contain offensive material based on the time period that we live in now? Source

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For Discussion: Mark Twain’s Classic ‘Huckleberry Finn’ Is Going To Be Re-released Minus The “N-Word”

‘Black Swan’ Racks Up 12 Critics’ Choice Movie Awards Nominations

‘True Grit’ and ‘The King’s Speech’ score 11 nods for show, which airs live on VH1 on January 14. By Gil Kaufman Natalie Portman in “Black Swan” Photo: Fox Searchlight While most of the country is still waiting to get its first glimpse of “Black Swan,” the ballet drama starring Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis has already pirouetted into awards season with a record 12 nominations for the 16th annual Critics’ Choice Movie Awards . The show air live on VH1 on January 14 at 9 p.m. ET from the Hollywood Palladium. Darren Aronofsky’s dance thriller wasn’t the only film racking up serious love, with the Coen brothers’ remake of “True Grit” and the stammering royal drama “The King’s Speech” each picking up 11 nominations as well. One of the year’s other critically acclaimed hits, “Inception,” got 10 nominations, while “The Social Network” snagged nine. Among the nods picked up by “Swan” were nominations for Best Picture, Best Actress (Portman), Best Supporting Actress (Kunis), Best Director (Aronofsky), Best Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, Best Editing, Best Costume Design, Best Makeup, Best Sound and Best Score. The Best Picture race was packed with solid contenders, including “127 Hours,” “Black Swan,” “The Fighter,” “Inception,” “The King’s Speech,” “The Social Network,” “The Town,” “Toy Story 3,” “True Grit” and “Winter’s Bone.” Competition was also tight in the Best Actor and Best Actress categories, which pit Jeff Bridges (“True Grit”) against Robert Duvall (“Get Low”), Jesse Eisenberg (“The Social Network”), Colin Firth (“The King’s Speech”), James Franco (“127 Hours”) and Ryan Gosling (“Blue Valentine”), as well as Annette Bening (“The Kids Are All Right”) against Nicole Kidman (“Rabbit Hole”), Jennifer Lawrence (“Winter’s Bone”), Portman (“Black Swan”), Noomi Rapace (“The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”) and Michelle Williams (“Blue Valentine”). The actress bid was the record seventh acting nomination for Kidman, who won the award 15 years ago for “To Die For.”

‘Cowboys & Aliens’ Director Jon Favreau Offers Trailer Play-By-Play

Favreau sits down with MTV News to talk about opening scene, villainous Harrison Ford and a ‘mistake’ fans found in the sneak peek. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Jon Favreau Photo: MTV News “Iron Man” director Jon Favreau sure knows how to cut a trailer. Going back to his sneak peek for the first “Iron Man” — which brought down the house at that year’s San Diego Comic-Con — to the debut of the highly anticipated “Cowboys & Aliens” trailer last week, Favreau seems to be an expert at getting fans into a frenzy. Due in large part to the response from the trailer, and our own excitement for Favreau’s upcoming flick, MTV News caught up with the man himself at his editing bay in Santa Monica, California, for a play-by-play look at his titillating teaser. “This is new for me,” Favreau said of commenting on his trailer. “I’m already doing a commentary track on a [trailer]. I’m in the middle of [editing] my director’s cut.” Beginning with the first shot — in which a rough-and-tumble Daniel Craig wakes with a start to discover a mysterious metal band on his arm — Favreau addressed the challenge of melding two genres: western and sci-fi. “When you’re doing a mash-up of two genres, if you play with either of them tongue-in-cheek, the combo is not going to be what’s special,” he said. “It allowed us to play western pretty dead straight.” Also, that opening shot will likely be the film’s opening sequence too. “It’s the first shot — I’m in my director’s cut, but right now, this is essentially how the movie starts,” Favreau revealed, adding that the credit for that opening goes to executive producer Steven Spielberg. “The writers told me when Spielberg was developing the script, this was one of his big ideas, this [opening] image.” Another arresting image in the teaser is iconic actor Harrison Ford looking not-so-Harrison-Ford-like but rather grizzly and villainous. Favreau explained that he wants fans to see another side of their favorite actor, with shades of Han Solo and Indiana Jones. “When Harrison comes into the movie, how do you separate him from everything he’s done? How do you present him in a way that I, as a fan, would want to see him?” Favreau said of the challenge in having Ford portray a seemingly villainous character. “He was always this bastard with a big heart; that’s the archetype I like for him. “Everybody’s got kind of a rough edge,” Favreau added. “This is a genre film.” One more aspect to touch on, via hundreds of comments on the Internet, is a certain shot in which fans claimed that they could see a wire pulling an actor into the air; Favreau said that was no accident. “When you see more about the way the aliens work, there is a device that they abduct people with that that is a practical element of,” he explained. “It’s not a mistake — we didn’t miss the paint-out — but thanks to the people playing at home. If you could catch that, I’m very proud.” Favreau ended his first trailer play-by-play with a good-natured “thank you” to all the fans. “We’re working hard. Thanks to all of you for putting wind in our sails,” he said. “I’m glad you liked what we put out there.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Cowboys & Aliens.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos Jon Favreau’s ‘Cowboys & Aliens’ Director’s Commentary Related Photos ‘Cowboys & Aliens’

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‘Cowboys & Aliens’ Director Jon Favreau Offers Trailer Play-By-Play

VMA Winners List: Lady Gaga, Eminem And More

Miss any of the MTV Video Movie Awards? Here’s the rundown of the winners. By Rochell D. Thomas Lady Gaga accepts the award for Video of the Year at the 2010 VMAs Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images In a move that surprised, well, no one, voters went goo-goo for Lady Gaga , crowning her the queen of MTV’s 27th Annual Video Music Awards. Gaga was nominated for 13 Moonmen but she took home only eight (largely because she was up against herself in a few categories), including statues for the heavy-hitter categories of Video of the Year, Best Pop Video and Best Female Video. The artist who opened the show, Eminem , came in a distant second with hardware for Best Hip Hop Video and Best Male Video. Unfortunately, Em had to leave the ceremony to catch a red eye to New York so he missed out on his own awards. Did you miss any of the VMA action? Just in case, here’s a list of night’s big winners. Best Dance Video: Lady Gaga, “Bad Romance” Best Collaboration Video: Lady Gaga featuring Beyonc

Howard Kurtz Smacks Down Bill Press for Comparing Glenn Beck to Al Qaeda

Howard Kurtz on Sunday smacked down liberal talk radio host Bill Press for saying the Park Service allowing Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” event at the Lincoln Memorial was like “granting al Qaeda permission to hold a rally on September 11th at Ground Zero.” Towards the end of the opening segment of CNN’s “Reliable Sources,” Kurtz surprisingly brought up last Friday’s disgraceful editing job by ABC’s “Good Morning America” that Beck himself said was like something Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels would have done. When finished with this admonishment, Kurtz went right after Press who was seated directly in front of him (transcript follows with commentary, video pending):  HOWARD KURTZ, HOST: All right. I want to talk about that, but first I want to play this clip that we didn’t have earlier. This is the “Good Morning America” piece that Beck specifically criticized. Let’s take a quick look at it. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) BECK: Blacks don’t own Martin Luther King. (END VIDEO CLIP) (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Glenn Beck is no Martin Luther King. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: Here’s what Beck actually said: “Whites don’t own the founding fathers. Whites don’t own Abraham Lincoln. Blacks don’t own Martin Luther King.” Was that deceptively edited? JANE HALL, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, AMERICAN UNIVERSITY’S SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION: Well, I think that it should have had the context. I mean, you cannot accuse one side of not including context and not including the context — KURTZ: Somebody makes a statement involving both races — HALL: If somebody says two things, you’ve got to say two things. KURTZ: — and you just show one, I think that was deceptive. I applaud Kurtz for bringing this up. However, maybe he could have put a finer point on this issue if he reminded his guests and viewers of the recent furor involving the editing of former USDA official Shirley Sherrod’s NAACP speech. After all, what ABC and Shipman did Friday was actually far more reprehensible as it was intentionally done and aired on national television. By contrast, Andrew Breitbart wasn’t the person who did the editing of the Sherrod video which was posted at a website reaching far fewer viewers than “Good Morning America.” But Kurtz wasn’t finished, for he next set his sights on Press for what the liberal talker  said and wrote  in June:   KURTZ: You, Bill Press, said that for the Park Service to allow this rally was like “granting al Qaeda permission to hold a rally on September 11th at Ground Zero,” Isn’t that way over the top? BILL PRESS, RADIO TALK SHOW HOST: I think the rally was a stick in the eye to any — KURTZ: I don’t know. But answer my question. You wrote a book about toxic talk. PRESS: No, I said it and I’ll stand by it because — KURTZ: You’re invoking a terrorist analogy for a talk show host. Why is that not over the top? PRESS: No, what I’m comparing are sacred places. We have very few of them in this country. To me, the Lincoln Memorial I think for all Americans is one of our sacred places. Again, it should not be politicized, in my opinion, at Ground Zero. KURTZ: I’m talking about your language, your language in bringing al Qaeda into it. Why is that appropriate? PRESS: I think it is just as outrageous to have the people who offended — I mean, who carried those attacks out at Ground Zero on 9/11, to give them that sacred site, to give a political huckster the Lincoln Memorial, yes. (CROSSTALK) HALL: I think it points to the dilemma, because the left hasn’t known how to respond. And so now we are getting more response from the people. MATT LEWIS, BLOGGER: But this is the toxicity of politics in our nation, where good folks like Bill, who are liberal, believe the conservatives, their political adversaries, not enemies, are worse than terrorists. KURTZ: I’ve got to go, but let me ask you before we — PRESS: That is not true, by the way. KURTZ: All right. Denial registered. Nice job, Howie. We on the right would love to see you tear into hypocritical liberals far more often.

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Howard Kurtz Smacks Down Bill Press for Comparing Glenn Beck to Al Qaeda

‘Scott Pilgrim’: Inside The Creation Of The Six Fights

Visual-effects supervisor Frazer Churchill gives us behind-the-scenes scoop on the technology used in the film. By Eric Ditzian Mark Webber and Michael Cera in “Scott Pilgrim vs. The World” Photo: Universal Pictures “It was all pretty tricky.” That’s how “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” visual-effects supervisor Frazer Churchill describes the film’s imitable look — part manga, part 16-bit video game, exploding on every frame with bright colors and pulsing graphics. That’s also a crazy understatement. Each of the film’s fight scenes offers a master class in the very latest in moviemaking technology, from the use of cutting-edge CG software to on-the-ground practical effects work. “Tricky” is putting it lightly. It was damn hard work, and although “Scott Pilgrim” performed disappointingly at the box office this weekend — opening to just $10.5 million in ticket sales — what director Edgar Wright and his team managed to pull off on the screen is deserving of wide acclaim. Last week, Churchill called up MTV News to chat about the film’s six fight scenes — each one a battle as Scott (Michael Cera) attempts to defeat the evil exes of his true love, Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) — and reveal the secrets about each one’s creation (Beware of spoilers below). First Fight: Matthew Patel Of the six fights, this one was the most challenging. It begins when Pilgrim’s band is playing a concert only to be interrupted by a very angry and acrobatic Patel. From a technical standpoint, the difficulty came from merging so many elements: kung fu choreography, a CG Bollywood dance routine, women hurling fireballs and more. “It’s the most piecemeal in its construction,” Churchill said. “Lots of blue-screen photography, matte painting, stunt work and CG. When Scott jumps off the stage into that manga-esque vortex, that’s made up of motion picture photography done on-set, digital still photography, and graphics and speed lines drawn by hand from what Edgar’s brother, Oscar Wright, who was the concept designer, gave us. I shot with the second unit DP for an entire day just to get the scrolling backgrounds.” “When you put it together, you have these very high-tech images with a very low-fi feel, which is part of the appeal of ‘Scott Pilgrim’ and its camp, manga, 16-bit feel,” he explained. Second Fight: Lucas Lee Throughout the shoot, Wright placed an emphasis on stage craft, always wanting there to be a physical manifestation of an effect that would be added in post-production. Perhaps at no time did that emphasis become more intricate than during Pilgrim’s battle with Lee (Chris Evans). “That was such a complex set of challenges,” Churchill said. “We were shooting with actors and a lot of stunt performers. We shot a lot of high-speed stuff in front of a blue screen. Whenever the image flashes in the finished shots — every punch, sword clash or something — those were actually flashes that we had on-set with photo flashbulbs. We got through over 7,000 bulbs — you can only use them once — and then we add our own flash with CG. When someone dies and bursts into coins, we’d empty buckets of silver Mylar so the actors had something to react to. You get that marriage of digital and physical effects.” Third Fight: Todd Ingram Todd (Brandon Routh) is a rival musician whose superpowers emanate from his vegan diet. In the graphic novels on which the film is based, those powers are represented by just a series of rings. That sort of simplicity wouldn’t work for the movie. “We needed something more sophisticated,” Churchill explained. “Our reference for it was that old logo for RKO Pictures with the radio transmitter. We made the rings feel uneven and have these optical aberrations with color bursts.” “There’s also this complicated shot where Scott gets thrown through a brick wall,” he continued. “One pass is shot with a camera close to Todd and then the action is shot again with a wide shot, so that when Scott is thrown and the shot snaps back from tight to wide, that’s actually a morph from two different camera positions. Michael is there on a rig being thrown across the room, and then we take over with a digital version of Michael to go through the pre-made hole in the wall, and then there’s a stunt person on a rig flying through the wall, and we add digital debris.” Fourth Fight: Roxy Richter Roxy (Mae Whitman) is a ninja capable of disappearing into thin air. The trick for Wright and Churchill was to make those disappearances visually compelling. “When she disappears, we bring in a blue screen so then we can erase her in the shot,” Churchill said. “We add in black CG smoke and we also wanted something more, so there’s white smoke too, which was a practical effect that we did on-set, as well as those flashbulbs. Plus we did a lot of lens flares and movement graphics. We spent a whole day just flashing different lights at the camera so we’d have a lot of stuff to work with.” For her fight scene, Whitman didn’t have to mess around with any dangerous weaponry. “She’s actually fighting with a pink ribbon,” Churchill said. “She learned to ribbon dance. Then we replaced the ribbon with a CG razor belt.” Fifth Fight: Kyle and Ken Katayanagi The fifth fight again takes place during a concert, as Scott’s band and the Katayanagi twins battle with their music: Sound waves cause physical destruction and giant monsters eventually appear to help in the fight. To get those effects right, filmmakers actually had to create an entirely new computer program. “Wherever the band plays, there’s visualized music. We wanted that to feel like it was happening in time to the music,” Churchill explained. “Our CG supervisor, Andrew Whitehurst, wrote this piece of software that we called the Wave Form Generator. Nigel Godrich, the music supervisor, would break down the tracks into their separate components, give us the rhythm, the base, the drums, the vocals, and we would use them to drive the animation. The software would convert these sound stems into animation data, so when the band is playing, the graphics and the dragons are moving in time with the music.” “For the dragons, I had these weather balloons on-set so that people would have something to react to,” he added.” I’d raise them up however high they needed to be. Whenever we did the fights, we’d have music playing back on-set. It was like a music video.” Sixth Fight: Gideon Gordon Graves This climactic fight, which takes place in a nightclub with a “Super Mario Brother”-style brick pyramid in the middle, was an exhausting affair. “Oh my god — we were on that pyramid for weeks,” Churchill said. “The heat rises. It was intense. Again we had physical manifestations of the digital effects — a lot of photo flashes, and Scott’s sword had red LEDs and we added flames and the sword. All the stuff that looked like manga was shot on a blue screen. There was a ton of choreography and stunt work. There are just all these additional layers of craziness.” The fight ends with Scott triumphant and Gideon flickering as if caught in some kind of computer glitch. While Wright storyboarded each scene well in advance, this flickering effect was something he came up with in the editing room. “That wasn’t planned. That came up in post,” Churchill said. “When Edgar was cutting the scene, he wanted a suitable end for Gideon. He came up with this idea of him glitching and malfunctioning. He’s breaking down.” “The thing about the film is each fight is completely different,” he continued. “It’s not like you establish one thing and then you redo it over and over. Each fight required us to create a whole new set design, a whole new look, a whole new way of doing things.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ Clips ‘Scott Pilgrim’ Takes Over The World Related Photos ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’

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‘Scott Pilgrim’: Inside The Creation Of The Six Fights

Snooki Says Miami Girls ‘Threw Themselves’ At The ‘Jersey Shore’ Guys

‘Even in Seaside, before [anyone] knew who we were, the guys got a lot of girls,’ Snooki explains. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Audrey Kim Snooki Photo: MTV News Anyone who’s seen the first couple of episodes of the new season of “Jersey Shore” can tell that all the club-hopping, game-kicking action we witnessed last season in Seaside Heights has been ramped up exponentially with the crew down in Miami Beach. With greater public exposure, so it seems, comes greater temptation. But as Snooki told MTV News, the lure of the MTV cameras was evident back in Jersey too. “Even in Seaside, before [anyone] knew who we were, the guys got a lot of girls,” she explained. “The girls were throwing themselves at them. It was just 10 times more in Miami.” While Ronnie flirted with Jell-O shot girls and enjoyed a few three-way kisses at South Beach clubs , Snooki and her girls kept the gawking dudes at bay — well aware of their true, I-wanna-be-a-star motives. “And the guys, for us, it just wasn’t a good time, because we knew why they were throwing themselves at us,” she said. “I was just like, ‘No, not having it!’ ” Nor were they or “Shore” producers having any of the constant attention of tabloid photographers, who trailed the kids from gym to tanning salon to laundry to their jobs at a local gelato shop . “Miami, it was very overwhelming,” Snooki said. “Right when we got to the house, there was paparazzi everywhere. But the fact that the producers and the editing crew, they made it look like there was nothing there — made it so much better. Because we tried to avoid them so much, and you know the paparazzi — they’re going to follow us anywhere. We did what we could and we were still ourselves, no matter what.” “No money or fame can change us,” she added. Watch “Jersey Shore” Thursdays at 10 p.m. ET on MTV. Related Videos Jersey Shore (Season 2) | Ep. 3 | Sneak Peek Related Photos Jersey Shore (Season 2) | Ep. 2 | Flipbook Jersey Shore (Season 2) | Cast

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Snooki Says Miami Girls ‘Threw Themselves’ At The ‘Jersey Shore’ Guys

James Franco To Star In ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Prequel

‘Rise of the Apes’ begins filming this summer and hits theaters in June 2011. By Kara Warner James Franco Photo: Steve Granitz/ Getty Images Hot on the heels of the recent announcement that James Franco will return to “General Hospital” for another run, Variety reports that the “Pineapple Express” and “Spider-Man” alum has signed on to star in the “Planet of the Apes” prequel, “Rise of the Apes.” Franco reportedly beat out a “number of Hollywood’s young elite actors for the coveted role” in the prequel, which is said to be an origin story set in present-day San Francisco. According to the industry publication, the plot centers on the aftermath of man’s experiments with genetic engineering that lead to the development of intelligence in apes and the onset of a war for supremacy. Franco is set to play a young, driven scientist who becomes a crucial figure in that war. The production is scheduled to begin filming July 5 and will be released June 24, 2011. As one of the many successful “Freaks and Geeks” alums, Franco has made a slew of creative career choices of late. In 2008, he enrolled in Columbia University’s MFA Writing Program and New York University’s film school. In March of this year, it was announced Franco had been admitted into Yale’s Ph.D. program in English. Acting-wise, his second run on “General Hospital” (the first of which was met with plenty of raised brows and questions) begins airing June 30. He returns to the soap as a creepy artist/ alleged murderer named Franco. He was recently seen in the Steve Carell/ Tina Fey comedy “Date Night.” This summer, he appears in the movie “Eat Pray Love,” starring Julia Roberts, and the upcoming Danny Boyle movie “127 Hours.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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James Franco To Star In ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Prequel

‘Lost’ Writers Talk ‘Enormously Satisfying’ Series Finale

‘The closer we got [to the end], the more confident we became that it was the right ending,’ Damon Lindelof says. By Kara Warner “Lost” co-creators Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse Photo: MTV News Even with the series’ end so near in sight, “Lost” executive producers and writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse are particularly careful to not reveal too much about the finale of their hugely popular TV show. Especially when it comes to talking with fans and, most importantly, the media. When MTV caught up with Lindelof and Cuse recently, they equated finishing and finally watching the series finale to buying someone a birthday present too early and having to wait for them to open it. “By the time their birthday rolls around you’re sort of like, ‘Are they even going to like this anymore? Do they already have one?’ But that never happened with us,” Lindelof revealed. “The closer we got [to the end], the more confident we became that it was the right ending. We probably watched the last scene of the show 40 or 50 times in the editing room, trying to cross every ‘T’ and dot every ‘I.’ It was enormously satisfying for us.” Lindelof wisely emphasized the “us” aspect, knowing that with the end of such a popular, theorized and agonized-over show, there is no way to please everyone. ABC begins its “Lost” series finale celebration/send-off on Saturday, May 22, when it will re-air the original two-hour pilot from 2004 from 8-10 p.m., including a “pop-up” version with enhanced trivia and facts about the $10 million episode directed by J.J. Abrams (“Star Trek”). The two-and-a-half hour “Lost” series finale airs Sunday, May 23, from 9-11:30 p.m.

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‘Lost’ Writers Talk ‘Enormously Satisfying’ Series Finale

The ‘Full Version’ of The Wikileaks Video Is Missing 30 Minutes of Footage [Editing]

Wikileaks ‘ most compelling aspect is its ability to dig up the raw data behind the scandals it exposes. You can’t argue with documents produced by the culprits themselves! That’s why 30 minutes of missing footage in their helicopter video matters. More