Tag Archives: flight

Denzel Washington On Michael Jackson Coming Over For Fried Chicken

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Grantland caught up with Denzel Washington and during their convo, the Academy-Award winning actor — who is generating new Oscar buzz with his latest hit,…

Denzel Washington On Michael Jackson Coming Over For Fried Chicken

‘Wreck-It Ralph’ Smashes The Box Office; ‘Flight’ Soars

Fallout from Hurricane Sandy may have kept some crowds away from theaters over the weekend, but that did not stop Disney animated feature Wreck-It Ralph from packing a wallop at the box office. Box office in the top 12 headed northward to $124.6 million, 20 per cent higher than the previous week. 1. Wreck-It Ralph Gross: $49,038,712 Screens: 3,752 (PSA: $13,070) Week: 1 The Disney animation had a terrific bow, cashing in on great reviews and a solid marketing campaign. The feature also made $12 million internationally, making the title Disney’s top animated pic The $49 million plus domestic total compares to $40.1 million for Chicken Little in 2005. The opening compares to Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted , which brought in over $60 million when it opened in June. But Ralph helped bring up an overall box office which eclipsed the previous weekend. 2. Flight Gross: $24,900,566 Screens: 1,884 (PSA: $13,217) Week: 1 Flight cruised with strong results in its opening weekend, even edging out the weekend’s number one box office winner, Wreck-It Ralph in terms of per screen average. The results were stronger than expected and shows Denzel Washington, who is tipped to be a force this Awards Season due to his performance, is an audience draw. This is Washington’s fifth best debut. 3. Argo Gross: $10,209,103 (Cume: $75,860,240) Screens: 2,774 (PSA: $3,680) Week: 4 (Change: – 16%) The Ben Affleck-directed feature in which he also stars is continuing to show very solid momentum now one month into its theatrical life. Word-of-mouth is propelling the feature’s box office prowess and it will likely hit the $100 million mark in the next few weeks. 4. The Man With the Iron Fists Gross: $7,910,980 Screens: 1,868 (PSA: $4,235) Week: 1 The gross is in line with what was expected, but it’s still a bit of a downer. It should reach a lucrative overseas market. 5. Taken 2 Gross: $5,919,493 (Cume: $125,586,929) Screens: 2,639 (PSA: $2,243) Week: 5 (Change: – 23%) The film dropped 356 theaters in its fifth weekend, though it actually managed to climb the chart one notch compared to the previous weekend. Its 23% drop is also a sign of momentum and it should top out at $145 million.

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‘Wreck-It Ralph’ Smashes The Box Office; ‘Flight’ Soars

Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

Documentary nominees take the deserved spotlight with 2012 non-fiction nominations unveiled by organizers of the Cinema Eye Honors Friday at AFI Fest with The Imposter and Searching for Sugar Man each receiving five nominations. Six films will compete for Cinema Eye’s Outstanding Achievement in Non-fiction Feature Filmmaking prize. Included are Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi’s 5 Broken Cameras , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s Detropia , Bart Layton’s The Imposter , Matthew Akers’ Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims’ Only the Young and Malik Bendjelloul’s Searching for Sugar Man . The 6th Annual Cinema Eye Honors will take place January 9 as Cinema Eye at New York City’s Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi Produced by Christine Camdessus, Serge Gordey, Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Detropia , directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady Produced by Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady and Craig Atkinson   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton Produced by Dimitri Doganis   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers; Produced by Jeff Dupre and Maro Chermayeff   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims Produced by Derek Waters   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul Produced by Simon Chinn Outstanding Achievement in Direction Detropia , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady   The Law in These Parts , Ra’anan Alexandrowicz   Only the Young , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Planet of Snail , Seungjun Yi   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross and Turner Ross   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Production Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , Alison Klayman and Adam Schlesinger   Big Boys Gone Bananas!* , Margarete Jangård   The Imposter , Dimitri Doganis   Searching for Sugar Man , Simon Chinn   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Heino Deckert Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography Chasing Ice , Jeffrey Orlowski   The Imposter , Erik Alexander Wilson & Lynda Hall   Only the Young , Jason Tippet & Elizabeth Mims   Samsara , Ron Fricke   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Editing 5 Broken Cameras , Véronique Lagoarde-Ségot & Guy Davidi   Detropia , Enat Sidi   How to Survive a Plague , T. Woody Richman, Tyler H. Walk & Jonathan Oppenheim   Room 237 , Rodney Ascher   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross Audience Choice Prize 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Beauty is Embarrassing , directed by Neil Berkeley   Bully , directed by Lee Hirsch   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton   Jiro Dreams of Sushi , directed by David Gelb   Kumaré , directed by Vikram Gandhi   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   Trash Dance directed by Andrew Garrison Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , directed by Alison Klayman   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Room 237 , directed by Rodney Ascher   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   The Waiting Room , directed by Peter Nicks Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score Detropia , Dial.81 The Imposter , Anna Nikitin   Into the Abyss , Mark De Gli Antoni   Room 237 , Jonathan Snipes, William Hutson, The Caretaker (James Kirby)   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Alexander Popov Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation Beauty is Embarrassing , Neil Berkeley, Anthony Maiuri   Herman’s House , Nicolas Brault, Tom Hillman   Indie Game: The Movie , James Swirsky   Room 237 , Carlos Ramos   Searching for Sugar Man , Oskar Gullstrand, Arvid Steen   Urbanized , Brooklyn Digital Foundry/John Szot Spotlight Award Argentinian Lesson , directed by Wojciech Staroń Bestiaire , directed by Denis Côté   Downeast , directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin   Meanwhile in Mamelodi , directed by Benjamin Kahlmeyer   Vol Special (Special Flight) , directed by Fernand Melgar Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking Cutting Loose , directed by Finlay Pretsell and Adrian McDowall   Family Nightmare , directed by Dustin Guy Defa   Good Bye Mandima (Kwa Heri Mandima)  , directed by Robert-Jan Lacombe   Into the Middle of Nowhere , directed by Anna Francis Ewert   Paradise (Paraíso), directed by Nadav Kurtz

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Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

REVIEW: ‘Flight’ Soars Then Nosedives Despite Denzel Washington’s Acting Aerobatics

Flight , the first non-motion-capture feature Cast Away  and  Forrest Gump filmmaker  Robert Zemeckis has directed in over a decade, is the kind of movie that, people like to bemoan, the industry doesn’t make anymore. It’s a solid, burnished work made about adults for adults and anchored by  Denzel Washington in a role that calls for some classic star gravitas. It’s a mainstream film, but a consciously meaningful one, occupying that increasingly perilous mid-budget middle ground in a world continually drifting toward the opposing poles of massive blockbusters and scrappy indies. There’s not a superhero in sight and not a trace of nuance either — it’s the straightforward drama of a man forced by circumstances out of his control to confront the destructive way he’s been living his life. That  Flight  turns out to be a disappointingly standard addiction story in its second half also serves as a reminder that Hollywood tends to be more invested in these types of self-serious movies than most actual audiences. In its need to reach a smug, by-the-book end goal of redemption and recovery, the film sheds much of the life and complexity it shows in the beginning, devolving from a morally ambiguous story to a story all about its moral. Based on a screenplay by John Gatins ( Real Steel ),  Flight ‘s opening sequences are a dazzling display of studio filmmaking at its limber heights. The camera follows Captain Whip Whitaker (Washington) out of a night-long bender and through the start of what should be a quick, routine Orlando to Atlanta flight. Halfway through, however, the plane malfunctions and things go wrong with terrifying rapidity. In the wake of the crash, friends and family mourn the lost while the press and public clamor for someone to blame, and we learn that Whip may be a great pilot — he’s his best self in the air — but he’s also a functional alcoholic in deep denial. It’s not Whip’s fault the plane starts to go down, but when it does he proves himself capable of grace under pressure in a situation the film portrays through some hair-curling images: people flipped and scrabbling around the ceiling of the plane’s fuselage, tearful panic, plummeting altimeters, flaming engines and the ground rushing up at an angle one never wants to see in real life. The dreamlike way in which Whip watches the wing of his plane take out a church spire in the seconds before impact, like a later shot in which a bloody tear trickles out of his damaged eye as he recovers in the hospital, presents a sliver of lyricism to the sequence and its stunned aftermath, in which Whip isn’t sure whether he’s a hero or a failure. Flight is so sensorially sharp and electrically present in its initial gambit that the movie’s descent into a trudging tale of a problem drinker in the second half brings the film to ground literally and symbolically. Washington turns in a smart, ego-free performance here that goes some way toward making Whip into a character whose fate we might care about. He’s a man who’s been ignoring his issues for so long we don’t at first grasp the depths of them ourselves — but his later cycle of self-abuse feels as familiar and repetitive as the flight scene itself feels fresh. Watching Whip sober himself up with some blow after a boozy dalliance with a flight attendant before traveling to the cockpit, we get the squirmy, tightrope-act sensation of observing someone disturbingly good at getting by while hammered. He’s experienced enough as a pilot and drinker to take off smashed and thread his plane through tricky, stormy weather. Watching him tempt fate again and again as he is investigated in te aftermath of the crash is far less compelling. Whip is looking for someone or something to force him to stop, and apparently a brush with death while transporting more than 100 people in his care isn’t enough. Characters invested in Whip not being held responsible for the accident, for professional reasons or friendship — including Don Cheadle as his attorney, Bruce Greenwood as his union representative, Tamara Tunie as a flight attendant colleague and an amusing John Goodman as his drug dealer — try to protect him, but Whip doesn’t seem that committed to protecting himself. The forced spirituality of the film, which attaches a lot of meaning to the phrase “act of God,” is revealed in the weight it gives to the coincidences that trigger behavior. A smack addict named Nicole (Kelly Reilly), who eventually befriends Whip, reneges on her promise not to inject drugs after knocking the box containing her works onto the floor. Whip himself has temptation thrown in his face at the worst possible moment thanks to a neighboring door not being locked. Washington does find interesting sides to and knotty conflicts in Whip. His charisma, charm and competence don’t quite cover up a sharp and sometimes frightening edge, and it’s painful to watch the way he drinks, like it’s his duty to finish up all the alcohol in sight long after he’s stopped enjoying it. But the film isn’t as willing to push the character as much as the actor playing him, and the lack of mystery attached to whether Whip could be even partially at fault for what happened is ultimately as contrived as the big finish, which gives his character an unearned and unnecessary nobility. In the context of the film, the crash becomes the biggest and most distasteful act of god of them all, an elaborate, bloody way to get a guy to an AA meeting. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: ‘Flight’ Soars Then Nosedives Despite Denzel Washington’s Acting Aerobatics

Denzel Admits Watching Slizzard Peeps Online For Movie Research

Youtube , ‘drunk trip’, and flight simulators. Those are just a few of the tips Denzel dropped in an interview during the premiere of his new movie, ‘Flight’. According to Hollywoodscoop: Denzel Washington has a couple of Oscars under his belt and is one of the most respected actors in Hollywood, so what’s his secret? Studying YouTube videos, apparently. Denzel’s new film Flight tells the story of a rogue pilot who saves a plane from crashing. After an investigation is launched, they discover that he was drunk the entire time. To channel his best “inner drunk” Denzel turned to the expert in drunk-people-doing-things: the Internet. “You can YouTube drunks, there are thousands, they are amazing,” Denzel told Hollyscoop at the Los Angeles premiere of Flight. “There’s this one guy that’s trying to open a door and it takes about a half hour or something.” He gives us this tip, “YouTube ‘drunk trip.’” Denzel also researched how to play an alcoholic pilot the old-fashioned way – get drunk and fly a plane. “I just drank a lot,” Denzel joked to HS, “[but for] the flying stuff, we got the flight simulator.” But this is Hollywood after-all, and not everything you see is real. Denzel says it wasn’t so much flying as “acting like I was flying. We never actually flew, we flew the flight simulators, but to feel like a pilot is a cool feeling.” Denzel told us why he was attracted to role, “It’s a very good script, it’s a unique role that I haven’t played before. Got a lot of demons.” Sounds like he had a good time getting his research in. Are you happy to have Denzel back in the box office? Images via retna

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Denzel Admits Watching Slizzard Peeps Online For Movie Research

Dancehall Hoodrat Queen Goes Mad Because She Didn’t Win “I Got A Nine Year Old Daughter Who Can Do Headstands On Chairs!” [Video]

Can that 4-year old spell her name? But she can win a dancehall contest? What hoodrat behavior… youtube

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Dancehall Hoodrat Queen Goes Mad Because She Didn’t Win “I Got A Nine Year Old Daughter Who Can Do Headstands On Chairs!” [Video]

Kimmy Cakes Cozies Up To A Sleepy Yeezy On Surprise Birthday Roman Vacay, Take A Look Back At KimYe’s Best Swirl Loving Moments [Photos]

Looks like Kimmy Cakes is wearing Kanye out… Kim Kardashian Celebrates Birthday In Rome With Kanye West The reality star couldn’t resist posting a precious photo of Kanye sleeping on the flight out to Europe. The boo’d couple are still in the honey moo-phase, as Kanye whisked her away to Italy to begin her birthday festivities. The pictures come after Kim displayed her appreciation on Twitter by saying: “Whisked away for a birthday surprise! Before tweeting “Italy is so beautiful! Best Birthday ever!!!” Rumors have been swirling the attention slorin’ couple were getting engaged during their romantic weekend away, as executive producer of ‘Keeping up with Kardashians’, Ryan Seascrest reported that Kim was expecting a ring in time for her birthday celebrations . Well there has been no hints so far as to an engagement, but until Monday we will have to wait and see. Until then, help Kimmy Cakes celebrate her birthday with Yeezy and check out their most attention sloring/PDA filled moments…

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Kimmy Cakes Cozies Up To A Sleepy Yeezy On Surprise Birthday Roman Vacay, Take A Look Back At KimYe’s Best Swirl Loving Moments [Photos]

Skyfall Tops With Critics; Jim Carrey Eyes Action-Comedy: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday morning’s round-up of news briefs: Paramount hosts an interactive event for its Oscar hopeful; Sony sets new release dates for Robocop and Elysium ; And over in India, two of Bollywood’s biggest stars tie the knot. Skyfall is James Bond Back to His Best Say Critics Critics have hailed the latest James Bond film, Skyfall , as one of the best in the series in years, a brave and stylish if occasionally sentimental entry which revives Daniel Craig’s standing as one of the greatest 007s four years after the disappointing Quantum of Solace . The movie, directed by Sam Mendes and with cinematography from Roger Deakins, has a 100% “fresh” rating on the review-aggregator site rottentomatoes.com, The Guardian reports . Jim Carrey Eyes Loomis Fargo for Napoleon Dynamite Director Carrey will star in the action-comedy based on the real-life $17 million theft of an armored car. Jared Hess is directing from a script by Danny McBride and Jody Hill. Carrey would play the ex-military leader of a band of Southern armored car guards who pull off the theft, THR reports . Paramount Mounts Flight Interactive Events for Its Oscar Hopeful Taking place the day after the film’s world premiere as the closing-night attraction of the 50th New York Film Festival, director Robert Zemeckis, writer John Gatins and several cast members including John Goodman, Don Cheadle, Bruce Greenwood, and Melissa Leo took part in the interactive post-screening Q&A that featured tweeted questions from the California venues and live queries from the New York audience, many of whom appeared to be industry voters, Deadline reports . Sony Moves Robocop to 2014, Sets Elysium to Summer 2013 Sony/TrisStar moved up Neill Blomkamp’s Elysium , the follow up to the director’s District 9 , from March 1 to August 9. The sci-fi pic set on a space station stars Matt Damon, Jodie Foster and Sharlto Copley. The pic is taking the spot previously occupied by Robocop which is being pushed back to February 7, 2014, THR reports . Two Top Bollywood Stars Tie the Knot Hugely popular Bollywood stars Saif Ali Khan and Kareena Kapoor were married in the Indian city of Mumbai. The pair are known as Bollywood’s “first couple,” BBC reports .

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Skyfall Tops With Critics; Jim Carrey Eyes Action-Comedy: Biz Break

Heya, I’m Lindi and when it comes to Justin, I like to…

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Heya, I’m Lindi and when it comes to Justin, I like to just go for it and try my hardest. Once news came out that Justin was returning to the UK to do some more promotion, I told myself I wouldn’t let anything stop me from meeting him. When Justin was set to come to London (Wed 11th Sept) we headed straight to his hotel before he had even arrived. After hours of waiting and his flight being delayed, he finally arrived at the hotel. However since he had just came from a flight he didn’t come out to see us yet addressed us with a wave from the lobby. This was enough to start my week off as one extremely happy girl. The following day (Wed 12th Sept) was his book signing and I was extremely lucky to be able to get a wristband, after serious stress, and confusion. The atmosphere was amazing and it was so exciting knowing Justin was just around the curtain. Once behind it, we greeted Kenny was a handshake before moving over to Justin, the whole thing went by so fast, I can hardly remember it. I Just remember him saying “Hello”, and seeing his beautiful face before I squeaked out a “Thank you” when he gave me my book. I was very grateful for that moment cause i knew if all else failed I still had that memory. However the next day (Thurs 13th Sept) we spent the whole day outside his hotel, with a detour to The Jonathan Ross Show, where we was able to see him run past the gate to greet everyone. Once we knew he was in filming we decided to return to his hotel and await his return. More hours of waiting went by and still now show. Come around 10pm Justin arrived back, and met some fans/my friends at the back door, however I was round the front and missed him. We carried on waiting and waiting hoping he would pop out to come see us all. Come some time around 12am we heard commotion at the front, and Justin had in fact come out for photos. Lots of people were trying to get close and get their photos not wanting to miss the opportunity. But even after Justin asked for everyone to get in line multiple times, people didn’t cooperate and so he went in. To say I was disappointed was an understatement. We were all positive after that he wouldn’t come back out and we’d all blown our chance.  We decided to stick it out in hope and after even more hours, and a few chants up to his hotel window to say how sorry we were, Justin re-appeared around 2am (Fri 14th Sept) coming out of his hotel on Alfredo’s shoulders shouting “I AM LORD BIEBER.” We all headed over to him, the time making sure to stay behind the barriers. I handed my camera over to Alfredo and it was finally my time for my photo. My face in my photo pretty much explains my emotions at that moment in time. I was over the moon! Justin then moved to my friend Jess next to me, however her camera was not ready, so I offered to take the photo, but Justin told me not to worry, and that he would take it himself. Somehow he managed to hit the view button on my camera, and as I was trying to sort it out for him, he noticed a photo I had taken of him. He instantly laughed and told me to delete the photo. It was a cute adorable photo of him with his tongue sticking out. So cute I even asked him if I could keep it just for myself (only now I realize how creepy that sounded), but he insisted I deleted it cause he didn’t like it. Justin and Jess then took their photo and I jumped in. Once Justin was making his way back down the line I stopped him again and asked if I could have 1 more photo and he was like “Of course.” He then took the photo of me and him, before looking at it and apologizing that his eyes were closed. I couldn’t believe that I’d actually spoken to Justin. It was the best feeling in the world.  I then moved round to Alfredo to have a chat while everyone else was with Justin. He was cute saying how tired he was and couldn’t wait to sleep. We got a photo together and then I decided to just go for it and asked him to follow me on Twitter and he told me to tweet him and he would, so then I asked what should I tweet? He then said “Give me your phone, I’ll do it.” Alfredo then processed to tweet off my phone to himself saying, “Omg I love @AlfredoFlores so much. He is my everything in life. #Rockstarshit” He was laughing like crazy and all I could think was that Alfredo just tweeted ON MY ACCOUNT! We were all so grateful Justin had taken the extra time to come out and taken photos with every single ones of us, it was so sweet, especially after his long day. It was incredible. Shortly after while we were all still on our Justin high, I got a twitter notification telling me Alfredo had just followed me . I just couldn’t believe that he’d actually followed me, so quickly as well. My happiness at that point was through the roof. Everything that happened in those early hour of Friday morning is something i will never forget. Everything was perfect. I couldn’t of asked for a better ending to Justin’s visit to the UK. Even after the knock backs, you have to remember everything happens for a reason, and NEVER give up!  -@LindiCraddock Go here to see the original: Heya, I’m Lindi and when it comes to Justin, I like to…

Heya, I’m Lindi and when it comes to Justin, I like to…

Lacefront Livin: NYC Hoodrats Women Popped In The Airport For Stashing 2 Kilos Of That Yayo In Their Weave

This is what happens when you agree to do hoodrat things with your friends…. NYC Women Arrested For Trying To Smuggle Narcotics Through Airport Security Two NYC women were arrested at JFK airport yesterday after a failed attempt to smuggle some “booger sugar” through the security checkpoint by hiding it in their luxurious lady locks. via The Grio Kiana Howell and Makeeba Graham came in to New York through a Caribbean Airlines Flight 526 from Georgetown, Guyana on Sunday. The nervous demeanor of the pair alerted airport security officers, which prompted them to search the two women. The officers discovered conspicuous bumps on their scalps, and proceeded to take them to the airport’s medical center. Health workers at the medical center found and removed 996 grams of “booger sugar” from Howell’s weave, and another 1,046 grams from Ms. Graham’s weave. Ladies….(and we use that term very loosely)……let’s do better. SMH.

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Lacefront Livin: NYC Hoodrats Women Popped In The Airport For Stashing 2 Kilos Of That Yayo In Their Weave