Tag Archives: film

REVIEW: Step Up Revolution Pops (and Locks) in 3-D But Turns Out to Be Real Wallflower in the Story Department

Although the proliferation of talent shows on TV is proof of just how much audiences have come back around to watching dance on screen,  Step Up Revolution  suggests Hollywood is still conflicted about how to film it. On one hand, the fourth movie in the  Step Up franchise was shot in eye-popping 3-D. In choreographed numbers that grow crazier and more extravagant as the film proceeds, breakdancers kick their legs out toward the camera and hold gravity-defying poses; tracking shots glide across the pavement between cars as kids stride out in time to music; performers on bungee cords leap down a ramp toward us only to snap back. As spectacle, it is resoundingly cool. On the other hand, these sequences tend to be edited to bits, as if the filmmakers were afraid their audience would get bored if either the camera or point of view weren’t constantly in motion. Directed by Scott Speer (of the web series “The LXD”) with cinematography by Karsten Gopinath, the film’s best shots, both in terms of dancing and the 3-D, are usually the ones in which the camera sits directly in front of the performers as their main audience, so that we can see their full bodies as they’re used in impossible, athletic feats of movement. But the film rarely maintains this perspective for more than a few seconds before cutting to a reaction shot, a close-up, then up and overhead, then off to the side. While the editing creates a sense of frantic momentum, it’s also dizzying and disorienting. Step Up Revolution is also not a movie you watch for its incredible story and dialogue. The film doesn’t even share much connective tissue with its predecessors save for an appearance from Adam Sevani as Moose. The plot features a boy, Sean (Ryan Guzman), and a girl, Emily (Kathryn McCormick) — who are both making their feature-film debuts. (McCormick was a finalist on the 2009 season of “So You Think You Can Dance.”) Sean is from the most adorably Epcot Center-worthy “gritty” Miami neighborhood ever, while she’s the daughter of a wealthy real estate developer Bill Anderon (Peter Gallagher) with plans to knock the place down and build skyscrapers on top of it. They meet cute at the beach club attached to the hotel that Emily’s father owns. Sean, who works at the hotel, and Emily form a mutual admiration society after facing off in a deliciously over-the-top dance duel that’s filmed like a fight scene. Emily flings sand at the camera and maneuvers Sean under the outdoor shower so that they can both have clingy wet outfits. As you might expect, both have dancing aspirations. When not waiting tables, Sean and his friends make up a flash-mob dance troupe called The Mob. Emily is auditioning for a place in the prestigious Wynwood Dance Company. Guzman, McCormick and the rest of the cast have generic good looks right out of an Abercrombie catalog and enough range to convincingly project the three sentiments for which the script (written by Jenny Mayer) calls — happy, sad and “dance face.” Guzman is particularly gifted at committing to howlers without a wince or trace of irony. “I can’t just do whatever I want,” Emily says. “There are rules.” Sean gets up close and breathes: “Break the rules.” At first, The Mob stages its elaborate pop-up routines as part of a YouTube competition — the first page to reach 10 million hits wins a cash prize. But when the neighborhood in which Sean and his best friend Eddy (Misha Gabriel) grew up is threatened, Emily suggests they use their growing internet fame to draw attention and build opposition to the development plan (without her father’s knowledge). It’s protest art! It’s the 99 percent! And it’s brutally phony, especially when picture pretends to be about the preservation of local culture. The Mob has essentially been formed out of a broad Google search for subcultures. There’s the DJ, the videographer from the SoCal skate scene, the hacker, the street artist, the parkour dudes. The only Miami-specific concession is that the group hangs out at a salsa bar called Ricky’s. Step Up Revolution is, at least, shot on location in Miami, which looks golden and gorgeous in 3D helicopter shots and ridiculously, stiflingly pretty as a backdrop in others. When Sean and Emily practice a duet on the beach, you expect an “Obsession by Calvin Klein” logo to appear next to their faces in their final pose. And it wouldn’t seem that out of place. The film is such a slick product that its vague anti-corporate ideas keep sliding right out of sight — it takes some effort to situate that Au Bon Pain logo so prominently in the middle background of a dance sequence. The movie ends with a never-explicated, and, frankly, insulting compromise. (Spoiler alert!) The Mob — who, three songs earlier, ended a performance with the declaration, ‘We’re not for sale!” — triumphantly sign with Nike as part of a marketing firm plan. Way to stick it to the man, y’all. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Step Up Revolution Pops (and Locks) in 3-D But Turns Out to Be Real Wallflower in the Story Department

‘The Watch’ Premieres at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre! – Hollywood.TV

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Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! : Hollywood.TV was on the red carpet to cover the premiere of ‘The Watch’ Starring Ben Stiller and Vince Vaughn. On the red carpet, we caught interviews with Doug Jones, Jen Lilley, and Kendra Wilkinson. Kendra reveals that she herself has had a real-life alien encounter, and that’s why she’s interested in the film! Hollywood.TV is the global leader in capturing celebrity breaking news as it happens. We cover all the major Hollywood events including The Golden Globes, The Oscars, The Screen Actors Guild Awards, The Grammy’s, The Emmy’s and the American Music Awards, as well as all the red carpet movie premiers in Los Angeles and New York. HTV is on the streets 24/7, at all the industry events and invited by the stars to cover their every move in Hollywood, New York and Miami. Hollywood.TV is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on www.youtube.com YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and http like us on Facebook!

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‘The Watch’ Premieres at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre! – Hollywood.TV

Keep The Lights On Takes Outfest Jury Nod; Mosquita Y Mari Wins Audience Award

Ira Sachs’ Keep The Lights On won the the Grand Jury Award for Best U.S. Dramatic Feature as well as the prize for Screenwriting, capping the 30th Outfest, the Los Angeles LGBT Film Festival. Starring Thure Lindhardt and Zachary Booth, the film centers on doc filmmaker Erik Rothman who meets Paul Lucy a handsome but closeted lawyer in the publishing field. What begins as a highly charged first encounter soon becomes something much more, and a relationship quickly develops. As the two men start building a home and life together, each continues to privately battle their own compulsions and addictions. In other juried nods, Alan Cumming won the best actor award for Any Day Now , while Fenessa Pineda won for her role in Mosquita & Mari . The film also won the Audience Award for Outstanding First U.S. Dramatic Feature Film. The Audience Award for Outstanding Dramatic Feature Film went to Any Day Now , directed by Travis Fine. 30th Outfest Prize Winners Jury Awards : Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Documentary Short Film Sponsored by Greenhouse Studios The Devotion Project: More Than Ever , Directed by Antony Osso. For its sensitive portrayal of enduring love that spans seven decades, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Documentary Short Film goes to The Devotion Project: More Than Ever directed by Antony Osso. Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Short Film Sponsored by CRE – Computer Rentals & AV Solutions Dol (First Birthday) , Directed Andrew Ahn For its honest exploration of the complexities of culture, family and relationships, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Short Film to Dol (First Birthday) , directed by Andrew Ahn.   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Documentary Feature Film Sponsored by Avalon Wildness , Directed by Wu Tsang With beautiful cinematography, a vibrant score and poetic storytelling, this year’s winning documentary succeeded in taking on the complexities of class, culture and difference in a most timely and brave fashion. The Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Documentary Feature Film goes to Wildness , directed by Wu Tsang.   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding International Dramatic Feature Film Sponsored by The Los Angeles Athletic Club My Brother The Devil , Directed by Sally El Hosaini For its taut narrative, sensitive interrogation of masculinity, excellent performances by an ensemble cast, and intense cinematic experience, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding International Dramatic Feature Film goes to My Brother The Devil , directed by Sally El Hosaini.   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Actress in a Feature Film Sponsored by The Avenue Hollywood Fenessa Pineda , Mosquita Y Mari   This actress brought nuance and subtlety to a fresh coming of age story. For beautifully capturing the fleeting moments of transition from innocence to curiosity to self-discovery, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Actress in a Feature Film goes to Fenessa Pineda in Mosquita Y Mari .   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Actor in a Feature Film Alan Cumming , Any Day Now For bringing depth, humor, fierce wit, and emotional integrity to a moving portrait of a man who unexpectedly finds a family and the strength to fight for it, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Actor in a Feature Film goes to Alan Cumming in Any Day Now .   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Screenwriting Sponsored by Yellow Cab Ira Sachs & Mauricio Zacharias , Keep The Lights On For masterfully constructing an emotionally honest portrait of a relationship that spans the better part of a decade and artfully weaving the mundane and the momentous, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding Screenwriting goes to Ira Sachs and Mauricio Zacharias for Keep The Lights On .   Grand Jury Award for Outstanding U.S. Dramatic Feature Film Sponsored by Saks Fifth Avenue Keep The Lights On , Directed by Ira Sachs   This film resonated with us for its confidence, complexity, and emotional intelligence. For taking us on a challenging but poetic journey through the landscape of a long-term relationship, the Outfest 2012 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding U.S. Dramatic Feature Film goes to Keep The Lights On , directed by Ira Sachs. Audience Awards Audience Award for Outstanding Documentary Short Film Sponsored by Ramada Plaza Hotel West Hollywood A Force of Nature , Directed by Barbara Kopple   Audience Award for Outstanding Dramatic Short Film Sponsored by Wolfe Video The First Date , Directed by Janella Lacson   Audience Award for Outstanding Documentary Feature Film Sponsored by Greenhouse Studios I Stand Corrected Directed by Andrea Meyerson   Audience Award for Outstanding Dramatic Feature Film Sponsored by Innovative Artists Any Day Now , Directed by Travis Fine   Audience Award for Outstanding First U.S. Dramatic Feature Film Sponsored by HBO (cash prize of $5,000 from HBO) Mosquita Y Mari , Directed by Aurora Guerrero

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Keep The Lights On Takes Outfest Jury Nod; Mosquita Y Mari Wins Audience Award

Twilight Breaking Dawn Among Teen Choice Winners; Police Patrol Multiplexes Nationwide: Biz Break

Also in Monday morning’s round-up of news briefs, Magnolia Pictures’ The Queen of Versailles debuted strong in the specialty box office. Emile Hirsch in talks for Navy role and the Teamsters set contract with producers. Twilight: Breaking Dawn Among Night’s Big Winners at 2012 Teen Choice Awards Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner picked up the event’s “surf board trophies” as well as its version of a “lifetime achievement award,” THR reports . The Queen of Versailles , Hara-Kiri , Well Digger’s Daughter Debut; Beasts Expands: Specialty Box Office Magnolia Pictures’ Sundance doc from lauren Greenfield, The Queen Of Versailles, opened by cashing in among the specialties, grossing $54K with a regal $18K average in 3 theaters over the weekend. has picked up a good amount of attention from morning TV and other shows. The documentary’s subjects — a mega-wealthy couple called “1-percenters” who live a life of reckless luxury but then face a day of reckoning — appear to be the film’s best marketers, perhaps inadvertently, Deadline reports . Emile Hirsch in Talks to Play Final SEAL Role Hirsch would play Navy SEAL Danny Dietz in Lone Survivor , a drama set to be directed by Peter Berg. Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch and Ben Foster are also set to play the other main roles in the drama centered around four Navy SEALs. Universal Pictures, which developed the movie, will distribute, Deadline reports . Police Patrol Multiplexes Across U.S. Police in communities throughout the country made their presence known at multiplexes as audiences headed to The Dark Knight Rises . Their presence is expected to be in place for a couple of weeks in some areas, Variety reports . Teamsters Local 399 Ratifies 3-Year Contract with Producers The union ratified a contract with the Association of Motion Picture & Television Producers. The vote was the latest in a series of ratifications by various unions covered under the new contract with producers, Deadline reports .

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Twilight Breaking Dawn Among Teen Choice Winners; Police Patrol Multiplexes Nationwide: Biz Break

Report: Mass Shooting at Midnight Screening of The Dark Knight Rises [UPDATED]

At least one gunman opened fire at a midnight screening of The Dark Knight Rises early Friday morning in Aurora, Colorado, injuring as many as twenty people. An early report from local radio station 850 KOA cites witness reports that a shooter, possibly wearing a mask, opened fire and set off tear gas during a shoot-out scene in the film. Various reports cite at least ten people dead, although details are still emerging with at least one suspect in custody . Developing… UPDATE: NBC News ( @NBCNews ) and AP ( @AP ) report 14 people are dead, with 50 others wounded in the attack. UPDATE: Video purported to show the scene at the Aurora Century 16 following the shooting has hit YouTube (below). Be warned – it’s unverified (although at least one fan in full Batman costume can be seen) and contains footage of an apparently bloodied cinemagoer exiting the theater. UPDATE: Aurora Police Chief Dan Oates shared details of the shooting via press conference : The violence erupted about 12:30 a.m. MDT as the gunman stood at the front of one of the Century 16 theaters at the Aurora Mall. “Witnesses tell us he released some sort of canister. They heard a hissing sound and some gas emerged and the gunman opened fire,” Oates said at a news conference. One suspect is in custody and there’s no evidence of any additional shooters, Oates said. [ KOA , Reuters , MSNBC ]

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Report: Mass Shooting at Midnight Screening of The Dark Knight Rises [UPDATED]

E-Meters and Liquid Schisms: Auditing the First Poster for The Master

In the latest installment of One-Sheet Wonder , a column going deep on the best, worst, weirdest and other milestones of contemporary movie-poster art, Movieline takes a look at the new poster for Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master . — Ed. The Master , Paul Thomas Anderson’s enigmatic follow-up to There Will Be Blood , has been trailed by speculation and assumption for months — Is it about Scientology? Is Philip Seymour Hoffman portraying L. Ron Hubbard in a biopic capacity? — and every question has been met with denials and mystery. But each new marketing piece sheds more light on what we’ll get. After two beautiful , beguiling teaser trailers, a beautiful, beguiling one-sheet for Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master debuted today over at Ain’t It Cool News . But like the clips before it, the poster tells us almost nothing about the movie. (Or do they?) The first trailer was peppered with Scientology-ish personality questions, and this poster seems based on an abstraction of an e-meter, the device used in Scientology auditing. The close-up of a barreled piece of silver metal seems like an unfinished soda can. But take a look at the tubes in this photo (pictured right) and it’s not a far leap to see the poster as a macro view of one of those e-meter tubes. But then what’s that dirty, flat-champagne-like liquid draining out of the poster (notice the drops at the top)? It could reference Hubbard’s Naval background and his life on a yacht, and there’s a vague nautical element to the fonts. Or it could refer to the flushing of alcohol that comes with the Scientology auditing process. Whatever the case, it creates a nice refraction in the word “MASTER,” bisecting it and putting the halves increasingly off kilter as you go from left to right, a reflection of the schism hinted at in the second trailer (” Just say something that’s true! “). This probably won’t be the only poster for The Master , but don’t expect a second one-sheet to bathe the plot in sunlight. There Will Be Blood had two domestic one-sheets, and while the teaser was far more engaging than the final art neither gave the game away. Time will tell whether The Master follows suit, but like with TWBB the mystery surrounding the film — encapsulated in this excellent first poster — makes the wait to see it interminable. Dante A. Ciampaglia is a writer, editor and photographer in New York. You can find him on Twitter , Tumblr , and, occasionally, his blog .

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E-Meters and Liquid Schisms: Auditing the First Poster for The Master

Christopher Nolan Defends Fans’ Irate Response to Dark Knight Rises Reviews

The Dark Knight Rises director Christopher weighed in about the brouhaha that flared this week after some passionate Batman fans threw a fit after a spattering of negative reviews, resulting in aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes’ decision to disable user comments for the time being. Nolan’s final stint in the trilogy is expected to fetch box office records this weekend and so far reviews have been mostly positive, but a few critics gave TDKR a thumbs down and some fans went ballistic. Wednesday night at the film’s London premiere, Nolan appeared to defend fans’ emotional response. [ GALLERY: Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway & Co. at the Dark Knight Rises premiere ] “I think the fans are very passionate about these characters the way a lot of people are very passionate. Batman’s been around for over 70 years and there’s a reason for that,” A.P. reported Nolan as saying. “He has a huge appeal, so I think you know people certainly respond to the character.” RT’s editor-in-chief Matt Atchity said in an open letter on the site that the venomous push-back may alter their policies going forward, changing its commenting system so that it no longer allows for anonymity. “You’ll have to stand by your comments, just like a critic does. So you’ll still be able to argue about a movie you haven’t seen, but people will know it was you,” wrote Atchity. In an unrelated bout of TDKR mini-controversy, Nolan also offered up his take on conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh’s opinion that the pic’s villain, “Bane” is a not so-subtle reference to presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney’s former employer Bain Capital, decrying the movie and its makers for maligning the former Massachusetts governor who continued to hold a major investment in the company after departing its day to day operations. Liberals have accused Romney and Bain of “outsourcing American jobs overseas.” “I’m not sure how to address something that bizarre, to be honest,” said Nolan. “I really don’t have an answer for it, it’s a very peculiar comment to make.” Morgan Freeman, who plays Lucius Fox in Rises called the whole thing “ridiculous.” The Bane character originated back in 1993, first appearing in DC Comics’ Batman: Vengeance of Bane #1 , according to Wikipedia. [Source: A.P. , Rotten Tomatoes , Wikipedia ]

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Christopher Nolan Defends Fans’ Irate Response to Dark Knight Rises Reviews

Batman Villain Named ‘Bane’ to Hurt Romney: Rush Limbaugh; Hugh Hefner Biopic In the Works: Biz Break

Also in Wednesday morning’s round-up of news briefs, Kino Lorber Films picks up a Tribeca Film Festival doc that spotlights the culture wars in the Texas school system. Juliette Lewis is in talks to star opposite Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts in an upcoming pic, while Diane Kruger is set for a role of a 19th century Kentucky stepmom to a U.S. president. Tribeca’s The Revisionaries Picked Up for North America Kino Lorber Films acquired the documentary for the U.S. and Canada. The Revisionaries spotlights how public education has become the latest battleground in a new wave of cultural, religious and ideological clashes, with local Texas education board members advancing agendas of Creationism and other religious issues in public schools. The film exposes how their tactics have had the effect of rewriting key aspects of U.S. democracy and are affecting educational policies at the national level. The New York-based distributor will open the feature nationwide in October and PBS’ Independent Lens will broadcast the feature in early 2013. Around the ‘net… Rush Limbaugh: Batman Villain Named ‘Bane’ to Hurt Mitt Romney The right-wing radio host said that the group behind Warner Bros’ The Dark Knight Rises are trying to brainwash audiences by naming the pic’s villain “Bane.” Bain Capital is Romney’s former employer, which has been criticized for outsourcing American jobs overseas, Deadline reports . Producer Jerry Weintraub Developing Hugh Hefner Biopic Peter Morgan is in negotiations to write the Hefner story that Weintraub is developing with Warner Bros. The Oscar-nominated screenwriter met with Hefner Tuesday, THR reports . Juliette Lewis Eyes August: Osage County Lewis is in negotiations to join the cast of the film. She’d play Karen, the self-deluding youngest daughter in the dark family comedy being financed and released by The Weinstein Company. She would join Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts, Deadline reports . Diane Kruger Set for Lincoln’s Stepmother in Green Blade Rising Terrence Malick is producing Green Blade Rising , about the 16th U.S. president’s youth in Kentucky. Kruger will play his stepmother, the woman who encouraged him to read,” Movie Nation reports .

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Batman Villain Named ‘Bane’ to Hurt Romney: Rush Limbaugh; Hugh Hefner Biopic In the Works: Biz Break

Miley Cyrus: Pushing for a Baby Liam Hemsworth?!?

Miley Cyrus has a new hair color and a new tattoo . But sources say the 19-year old is pushing for one more new addition to her life: A BABY! “Miley and Liam really want to have a baby quickly ,” a Cyrus family source tells Us Weekly of the engaged couple. And while the respective ages of the two involved may give most readers pause, this insider swears “both mature and ready for this,” adding: “Miley is 19 going on 40.” Still… what’s the rush?!? What do you think of Miley and Liam becoming parents before the former is legally old enough to drink?

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Miley Cyrus: Pushing for a Baby Liam Hemsworth?!?

Emma Roberts and Evan Peters are Dating!

Things are long over with Chord Overstreet, and now Emma Roberts has a new beau! Who’s the lucky guy? American Horror Story star Evan Peters. The two were seen together at the wedding of stylist Emily Current. Minka Kelly, Mandy Moore, and Ashley Tisdale were also in attendance. Roberts and Peters have reportedly been dating for a few months now, after shooting the film Adult World together. The film also starred John Cusack and Shannon Woodward. Roberts, who is Julia Roberts ‘ niece, is only 21 years old, while Peters is 25.

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Emma Roberts and Evan Peters are Dating!