BREAKING NEWS: The Spanish and French-language media is reporting that Spanish sexploitation star Lina Romay has died of cancer at the age of 57. The longtime companion of director Jesus (aka Jess) Franco , Lina appeared in 118 European horror/exploitation films (many of them directed by Franco), most notably The Female Vampire (1973) and Mansion of the Living Dead (1985), and bared it all in 25 of them; she was known for her smouldering sexuality and magnetic onscreen presence. Lina was unapologetic about her skin-filled career, and told reporters that “I will not change anything. I never had problem neither for nudity, nor for the scenes of sex. This level, I will not change absolutely anything.” Lina was a beloved cult figure around the world, and will be missed by her many fans as well as Franco, her lover of nearly 40 years, who referred to her as his “muse.” Celebrate skinema legend Lina Romay right here at MrSkin.com
It’s nice to see that life goes on after The X Factor, as Nicole Scherzinger continued her European Killer Love tour at London’s Hammersmith Apollo last night. “Thank you to all my #killerlovers for coming out tonight. Means the world to share my music with you!” the former reality show judge tweeted following her performance. … More » Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Idolator Discovery Date : 20/02/2012 12:43 Number of articles : 2
My name is Victoria. I’m from a really small European country, Hungary. I’ve been a huge Belieber since 2009. This year I bought every single German newspapers that talked about Justin, and with my friend, Begi, made the first Hungarian fan site for Justin. Working on our site was like breath taking for me. I wrote like 10-20 articles about Justin every day, and I really wanted to show the Hungarian teenagers, who, and how incredible Justin is. In the summer of 2010, I’ve begun to work alone on the site, and I had like 2400 visitors every day. In August, I’d got a message from Jayme, he told me, that he wants me to be the news-writer of the Official Hungarian Justin Bieber Fansite, and I said yes. Here begins my Bieber Experience. On the 1st April of 2011 my dad drove 15 hours for me, to see Justin in Berlin, Germany. The next day I went to the O2 Arena, and Jayme (he flew to Germany too) told me, that he’s got a M&G ticket for me, for my hard work on the site. I thought, that I only gotta see Justin at the show so I freaked out. Before the meet & greet, I met DJ Tay James and saw Dan Kanter with Fredo too. There’s a video of fans running to Dan on Youtube, fortunately I have some screenshots of me with Dan. During the meet & greet, Justin was behind a black curtain. I first saw Kenny, then Justin. He said hi to us, then talked a little with Jayme (they already met in 2010). I was standing next to Justin, just staring at his face, and realizing that I wasn’t dreaming. Then came the best 2 seconds of my life. Justin grabbed my waist, pulled me closer and we looked in the camera. I just wanted to stay forever next to him. Jayme, and the another girl already left the room, but I was still standing there with Justin. We’ve been the last group with meet & greet tickets, so Kenny looked at me with a, “move bitch face” (LOL), so I took a step and looked back to Justin. Really slowly, but I left the room. I wasn’t crying/fan-girling like the others though. I remember the first phrase I said after the meet & greet was like, “Oh my f**king God, that kid is beautiful.” After the amazing show, I was hanging out with Jayme, and the dancers, Aja, Mike and Nick for a little bit. We forgot to take some pictures. The next day I realized, that I’m the first Hungarian girl who met Justin, well, this time I was crying. My 2nd Bieber Experience was on the 15th November, 2011. My dad drove this time 17 hours to Cologne, Germany. My friend, Fanny and I had 2 tickets for the German X-Factor . Before the show, we bought 2 Under The Mistletoe CDs, then went to the X-Factor studio. We’ve just standing behind the fences with some fans, and then we saw a huge black car at the parking place. Justin, Fredo, Moshe (white Kenny), Kenny, and Dan ran into the studio. After like a half hour they came back, and Justin waved to us, but he had no time to greet us , and stuff like that. That night Justin performed at 2 German TV shows, so after the first one he came back to the X-Factor, and sang Mistletoe on stage. It was awesome, my German friends, Mandy and Vanessa helped us a lot, they are the reason why we had seats on the first row. I just want to tell you guys, that I’m really blessed because my dad is awesome, without him, I had no chance to meet, or see Justin. I’m still writing news about Justin on http://justin-bieber.hu , and organizing fan-meetings, buyouts, and competitions for Beliebers, I really love it. I never thought, that someday my dream will come true, and I feel really blessed, cause I’m still the only one girl, who met Justin from my country. I reached the only thing, I wanted with hard work,and cool parents. Never Say Never guys! -@VictoriaKanter See the original post here: My name is Victoria. I’m from a really small European…
The first American trailer for the sci-fi thriller Lockout makes eminently clear what the hard-boiled European original elided a bit: This is as close to an Escape From New York remake as any of us are likely to get. Snake Plissken in space! Except now he’s called Snow. And he has two eyes, both belonging to Guy Pearce in full wisecracking action-hero mode. He’s the best! But a loose cannon. And Maggie Grace is the president’s daughter. Held hostage in a prison riot. In a prison orbiting Earth. Before it plunges to Earth. Naturally. Whatever! It looks all right.
Tectonic pacing builds to a series of imperceptible and yet earth-moving moments in Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia , a habeas corpus procedural stretched across two and a half discursive hours. The setup — a policeman, a lawyer, and a doctor head into the Turkish countryside — has the ring of an old joke, something Ceylan never forgets as their long night and next day together wears on. A mix of mordant wit and metaphysical waxing carry the men toward their respective fates, each having more to do with the buried body they are seeking than it first appears. Technically, the search for the body of a local garage-owner named Yasar is led by a decent but fraying police commissioner named Naci (Yilmaz Erdogan). Sawing Naci’s last nerve is the tormented murder suspect, Kenan (Firat Tanis), whose claim of forgetting exactly where his victim is buried keeps the caravan moving from spot to remote spot all through the night. Prosecutor Nusret (Taner Birsel) is tagging along in case the body actually turns up, as is Doctor Cemal (Muhammet Uzuner). Despite Turkish genes and enigmatically scarred cheeks, everyone eventually agrees that the former bears a resemblance to Clark Gable; the latter enjoys the consensus that he is still a young man with his whole life ahead of him, though he wears the weight of a recent divorce in his handsome face. The only shared opinion about driver Arab Ali (Ahmet Mumtaz Taylan) is that he should probably talk less and drive more. When he does speak, however, it becomes clear that the comically rotund Arab is the only one of the men with an untroubled perspective on life, a viable blend of rural pragmatism and a lyrical sense of life’s story. The first half of the film comprises scenes of casual en route quibbling — the dialogue is permeated by the narcissism of small differences in tribal communities — about who makes better yogurt, who is peeing too often, and who knows the fastest way where. At each hopeful juncture the men pile out of their cars and fall into new configurations. In one of the first stops the doctor and the driver compare moods — where one sees the seemingly pointless night as a Beckett play, the other finds a fairy tale. Later, when the men stop for the night at the compound of a local Mukhtar (Ercan Kesal), the prosecutor tells the doctor the story of a young woman who predicted her own death -— a cherished allegory with logical gaps the doctor immediately points out. But if he’s right, the question lingers: What meaning is left in the rational world? The answer, or one possible answer, or maybe just a refusal of the question, arrives in the form of a woman. The appearance of the Mukhtar’s beauteous teenage daughter (Cansu Demirci) breaks the film’s all-male filibuster, and to welcome her Ceylan rolls out a brocaded cinematic carpet. In contrast to the previous hour’s lighting scheme of cold-beamed, dueling headlights, the girl’s singular, incandescent approach is framed as a celestial moment. Balancing an oil lamp on a platter of brimming teacups, she lowers the glasses before the innocent and condemned alike. Despite not getting a line (or even a credit in the press notes), she’s meant to embody everything that’s worth living for in a low-down, dirty world. Such a pity, the men remark, that it will all be wasted on a backwater town like her father’s. It’s a literal spotlight of a sequence, and I suspect if Ceylan weren’t so expert at stretching his weakness for the obvious across such a vast and blissfully well-composed canvas, it would make a splotchier impact. For this skill he is often compared to Bresson and Antonioni, and if Ceylan shares his characters’ hopes for Turkey’s acceptance into the European Union, I imagine his inclusion in the tradition Pauline Kael called “Come-as-the-sick-soul-of-Europe parties” would be flattering on geographical terms alone. He’s too funny and multi-faceted to be trapped by Euro-arthouse cliché, though, too interested in the absurdist flipside of existential dread. When the sun comes up and the body is finally, dreadfully unearthed, Anatolia (from the Greek for “sunrise”) is only half over. The more details the men collect and record, the less they seem to know — or want to know — and the further their minds drift to women, who are mentioned often and without warning, as if to confirm the heart of every moody silence. Silence and sound are deployed as artfully as Ceylan’s sweeping master shots are. In lieu of a soundtrack he contrasts near and far noises, interior voices and exterior perspectives, a layering effect that either culminates or terminates in the final scene, where the music of children playing outside a hospital mingles with the visceral notes of a body being broken down like a roast chicken. It becomes impossible to hear one without the other, hard as you might try. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
‘I think they will watch this film and say, ‘That could be me’ and ‘What would I do?’ ‘ director/writer tells MTV News. By Kevin P. Sullivan Angelina Jolie Photo: MTV News Angelina Jolie lives her life in front of cameras. Even when she’s off the job and not starring in action films like “Salt” or “Wanted,” paparazzi follow her every move. But in the last three years, Jolie has only appeared onscreen in two films, representing a dialing back on her profile as an actress. Now Jolie has returned in a big but unexpected way. Her feature-film directorial debut, “In the Land of Blood and Honey,” follows the relationship of a man and a woman during the Bosnian War, and Jolie is nowhere to be found in front of the camera. Her work remains entirely behind the camera as the film’s writer and director, leaving the acting to people native to the countries portrayed in the film. At the New York premiere of her film, Jolie spoke with MTV News about why the movie is especially important for a younger audience, who may not have even been alive or remember the Bosnian War of the early 1990s. “This young audience will be interested because [of] the characters — they’ll identify with them,” Jolie said. “This is the ’90s. They may have been children or not alive during that time, but they’re watching people who were 18 years old, 10 years old in a European cosmopolitan society, and it’s what would have happened if they went to war.” It’s this identification that Jolie believes will ultimately draw younger viewers to the film and will make them question how the same conflict would affect their own lives. “I think they will watch this film and say, ‘That could be me’ and ‘What would I do?’ and ‘How would I handle this situation?’ ” she said. “So I think it will become very personal to them, and I think they will identify with it. And it’s war in our generation, so we must pay attention.” Check out everything we’ve got on “In the Land of Blood and Honey.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .
‘He’s gonna be here forever and I’m gonna be here forever,’ Wiz tells MTV News of Juicy J signing. By Rob Markman Wiz Khalifa Photo: MTV News Wiz Khalifa has always been a fan of Three 6 Mafia, and what’s not to love? With a rowdy rap catalog that includes the hits “Tear da Club Up,” “Sippin’ on Some Syrup” and “Stay Fly,” Three 6 has grown to become one of hip-hop’s most iconic groups. And the Pittsburgh hitmaker will be working with the Mafia’s Juicy J closely now that he has signed him to his Taylor Gang label. “Yeah that’s official, that’s good to go,” Khalifa confirmed with MTV News on Wednesday night before he took the stage with Snoop Dogg at Terminal 5 in New York. Juice, who just released his latest mixtape, Blue Dream & Lean, on November 29, revealed the signing during an interview with Hood Rich Radio. “Juicy J is now with Taylor Gang, we goin’ in this year, man. 2012, we goin’ in,” he said. Longtime Taylor Gang artist Chevy Woods is looking forward to adding the rapper/producer to the crew. “It’s fun for me, because I really just sit back and watch,” he told MTV News. “[Wiz is] always doin’ somethin’ different.” For Wiz, this is an opportunity to link up with an artist that he has looked up to for a long time. “Well, I’ve always been a huge fan of Juicy J and Three 6 Mafia and what they brought to the game,” he said. “As far as their music, as far as their consistency, as far as just if you’re in that mood and you know what you wanna hear, they brought it and I respected that. And they brought it for years, since I was young.” “I remember when ‘Tear da Club Up’ first came out and I remember when ‘Stay Fly’ came out, and those are two huge songs from the same group of people who never fell off or lost it at all. And I really look up to that and respect that.” Turns out, according to Khalifa, Juice was a fan of Wiz as well. “It was like, ‘Man we might as well bridge the gap and takeover,’ because he’s gonna be here forever and I’m gonna be here forever.” What do you think of Juicy J joining Taylor Gang? Tells us in the comments! Related Artists Wiz Khalifa Juicy J
Castmates return to New Jersey after Italian vacation for the new season, which premieres January 5 at 10 p.m. ET/PT. By James Dinh “Jersey Shore” castmates celebrate their return to Seaside Photo: MTV After spending some fish-out-of-water time across the pond in Italy, the “Jersey Shore” gang is heading back to their Seaside Heights stomping ground for the fifth installment of the MTV series , premiering Thursday, January 5, at 10 p.m. ET/PT. And after a quick glimpse at the just-released trailer , it appears as if the GTL crew is ready for tons of partying, booze and, of course, drama. “Shore” is expected to pick things up where the season-four installment ended, as the eight housemates bid farewell to Florence, Italy, and prepare for their New Jersey return. In the two-minute teaser, the fist-pumping crew toasts to yet another crazy summer and is later greeted to what looks like a surprise welcome-home party. “We’re back in our habitat and I’m ready to tear the speakers off this joint,” Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino yells. Despite Snooki and Deena’s meatball escapades, the usual club dance battles and pranks galore, it isn’t all fun times for the gang — especially when Vinny decides to depart the Seaside Heights house. “This is real. This is a reality right here. Vinny’s out of here,” Pauly D says during a confessional after his castmate’s departure. As teased during the previous season, the battle between Snooki and the Situation shows no signs of slowing down. With his badgering comments about the pint-size guidette’s boyfriend, the Situation doesn’t appear apologetic about playing the part of an instigator, saying, “I do have that secret and I’m blowing it wide open.” While one scene depicts the two castmates in the middle of a food fight, another scene shows the Snookster swatting a plastic baseball bat at the womanizer. MTV News caught up with Deena earlier this year, who spoke about her time back in the States. “All of us became so close,” she said of their European vacation. “So here, it really was like we were brothers and sisters. You get annoyed with each other, then you’re fine. But you’ll see, we had a lot of fun in Jersey; we had so much fun. We were home, we were comfortable.” The fifth season of “Jersey Shore” premieres Thursday, January 5, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV. For continuing “Shore” coverage, be sure to check in with MTV’s Remote Control blog. Related Videos Jersey Shore (Season 5) | Trailer
A physically and mentally exhausted Rihanna recently solicited words of wisdom from none other than Beyonce, the wife of her frequent collaborator Jay-Z. B’s advice was simple: Rest. According to the UK’s Daily Mail , Rihanna had a near “meltdown” on the European leg of her 101-date tour and turned to Beyonce to help her stay strong. Beyonce, in turn, told the 23-year-old singer to consider taking a year off from show business altogether after the culmination of her massive tour to res. Whether the headstrong star actually follows through on that is another story, but if RiRi’s weekend tweet is any indication, Beyonce’s words resonated. “I’m so light-headed! WTF!!!!!” Rihanna wrote on Twitter after a performance in Dublin, which was nearly canceled due to her fragile, over-worked state. So could 2012 be a light one for Rihanna pictures and songs? Although it’s hard to imagine such a thing, Beyonce is always right. Don’t cross the queen. [Photo: WENN.com]