Tag Archives: Humor

It’s CRAZY! I never thought in my life, that I ever would write…

It’s CRAZY! I never thought in my life, that I ever would write my own Bieber experience. My name is Christina, I’m 16 years old and from Denmark. I’ve been a belieber since it all started. I remember being just a little kid watching this amazing boy on Youtube, and I couldn’t even understand English at that time. Justin has taught me so much! I fell in love with him immediately, his personality, his hair, his humor, his amazing charisma, yeah – everything about him. I love what he stands for: to BELIEVE. I’ve always been one of these girls who had never believed in myself. Sometimes I would actually cry because everything felt hopeless, like I no future. I feel like I know Justin, and to know that he didn’t even know I existed made me so depressed. But boys and girls, dreams DO come true. I’m from the little country of Denmark and I’ve been that person who could only dream about meeting Justin. The world seemed too damn big, and I would never meet him. On April 20 th my dream came true on the Believe tour. The concert took place in Denmark’s national stadium in Copenhagen. I was one of the lucky people who got a VIP ticket, out of 45,000 people! I can’t describe how lucky I felt, it was surreal. My parents were really sweet to drive me 5 hours to see his concert, since we live far from Copenhagen. We arrived at ‘Parken’ (where the concert took place) at 9 a.m and we were waiting for 8 hours before we were let in. All of us, who had VIP, were let in to a big room, where we got a lot of information. We were all really excited and time went by fast. Suddenly there was only about 5 minutes before we got to meet Justin. While we were standing there, I was thinking about how long I had been waiting for this moment, I couldn’t believe it. I was led to a black carpet. One of Justin’s bodyguards stood there and he asked me, “Are you ready?’’ I said, “I think so..” and then he said, “Take a deep breath,” and he pulled the black carpet to the side. There Justin stood. So perfect. He was so cute and so grown up. I went over to him and gave him a fast hug before we took a picture. It was so surreal, like I was flying, and watched my body standing beside Justins. We had no time with him, which was sad, but it was still amazing, a dream come true. And the concert – OMG it was beyond words! I will use the opportunity to write something more. I know that Justin has had a difficult time at the moment, and that was definitely something I could feel at the meet and greet. I don’t blame Justin. I just hope that he knows how much we love him, and that we will always support him. Paparazzi and people who hate on him without reason are disrespectful. They forget that Justin is also a human, a human with feelings like everyone else. I hope I get the opportunity to meet him again. Maybe I’m lucky. Never say Never. -@christinachd The rest is here: It’s CRAZY! I never thought in my life, that I ever would write…

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It’s CRAZY! I never thought in my life, that I ever would write…

Gay Games Go Astray For Priest Forcing Him To Call 911 Cuffed And Gagged In Church (Audio Of Call) [Video]

Raw Story Reports : A gagged priest at Springfield’s St. Aloysius church called 911 late last year and asked them for help because he had been “playing” with handcuffs and he got stuck. Audio of Father Tom Donovan’s Nov. 28 911 call was published by the Illinois Times on Thursday. “I’m stuck in a pair of handcuffs and I’m going to need help getting out before it becomes a medical emergency,” Donovan tells the dispatcher in a muffled voice. RawStory youtube

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Gay Games Go Astray For Priest Forcing Him To Call 911 Cuffed And Gagged In Church (Audio Of Call) [Video]

What An Idiot: Oregon Teen Popped For Facebook Status That Reads “Drivin’ Drunk Classic :) Sorry For Hitting That Vehicle”

How motherfawking stupid can one be?!? Via ABC News: The Oregon teen who was arrested after he posted a ‘Drivin drunk’ status update on his Facebook page New Year’s Day says it was all a misunderstanding. Jacob Cox-Brown, 18, of Astoria, Ore., about 100 miles west of Portland, was with friends when, police say, he posted the status update on his Facebook page: “Drivin drunk… classsic but to whoever’s vehicle i hit i am sorry. ” In an interview with ABC affiliate KATU-TV in Portland, Cox-Brown says the post was meant as a joke. But his friends who spotted the update didn’t see the humor behind it. Instead, one friend sent a private message to an Astoria police officer’s personal Facebook account while another friend called police Sgt. Brian Aydt. “When you post ‘Drivin drunk… classsic but to whoever’s vehicle i hit i am sorry. ’ on Facebook, you have to figure that it is not going to stay private long,” Brad Johnston, Astoria deputy chief of police, said in a news release. “Astoria Police have an active social media presence.” Johnston told ABCNews.com that Cox-Brown’s friend sent the Facebook message to officer Nicole Riley’s personal Facebook account. Dumbazz. Facebook/ABC NEWS

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What An Idiot: Oregon Teen Popped For Facebook Status That Reads “Drivin’ Drunk Classic 🙂 Sorry For Hitting That Vehicle”

WATCH: David Fincher’s Kickstarter Campaign For ‘The Goon’ Has A Trailer Just For You!

David Fincher  can’t help but direct. The Social Network  and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo  helmsman does what he does best and bosses around a couple of guys from Blur Studio in this Kickstarter campaign video for an animated adaptation of Eric Powell’s very cool comic-book series  The Goon .  Fincher, who’s teamed up with Powell, Goon publisher Dark Horse Entertainment  and Blur directors, Tim Miller and Jeff Fowler,  joins those last two men in the clip to attempt to raise $400,000 so that they can produce a finished first reel of the film.  And he’s not about to leave the driving to them. After Miller and Fowler begin their appeal, Fincher bigfoots the two guys and decides that a series of niche spots are the way to go. He then proceeds to sell Powell’s world of  zombies, vampires, fish-men and giant squid to Little Orphan Annie fans, liberals (“Put a caring man back in the White House”), conservatives (“Put the right man in the White House”) and arch conservatives (“Put a white man back in the White House”) as well as fans of hip hop, R-rated movies and movie trailers. Okay, so the humor is pretty lame, but the footage included in the Kickstarter clip (via FirstShowing.net )  is beautifully bad-ass and features voice work by Clancy Brown as the Goon and Paul Giamatti as Franky’s swashbuckling pupil-less friend Franky. (Now do you get the Little Orphan Annie reference? )  The airborne car scene with Franky spraying machine-gun fire from the hood of a sweet convertible muscle car is dreamy. [ FirstShowing.net ] There’s also this “proof of concept” video. Good stuff. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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WATCH: David Fincher’s Kickstarter Campaign For ‘The Goon’ Has A Trailer Just For You!

Take a Gander at Ang Lee’s Life of Pi

Oscar-winning director Ang Lee’s upcoming 3-D adventure Life of Pi is based on the 2001 novel of the same name by Yann Martel. The fantasy-adventure follows “Pi,” an Indian boy who survives a shipwreck and is stranded on a boat in the ocean with a Bengal tiger along with some other charming critters. Tobey Maguire plays Martel in the film, which stars newcomer Suraj Sharma as the young Pi. The shots are ethereal and fantasy 3-D may be Lee’s next calling card post Taking Woodstock and Lust, Caution (not to mention his award-winning Brokeback Mountain ), which were decidedly less illusionary as this latest film appears to be. And, who wouldn’t want to make friends with a cuddly Bengal tiger anyway? Lee began shooting Life of Pi , which also stars Irrfan Khan, Gérard Depardieu, Shravanthi Sainath, Suraj Sharma and Tabu, in Taiwan and India earlier this year. 20th Century Fox will release Life of Pi November 21st.

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Take a Gander at Ang Lee’s Life of Pi

Friedkin Calls ‘Bullshit!’ on Exorcist TV Adaptation, Talks Killer Joe: McConaughey Could ‘Charm the Mustard Off a Hot Dog’

If William Friedkin ’s adaptation of The Exorcist  left you feeling a tad jumpy, just wait until you see Killer Joe . After a six-year absence from the Cineplex, the 76-year-old Friedkin returns to the big screen on Friday with arguably the most disturbing film of his 45-year career.  The ultra-violent and twisted black comedy stars Matthew McConaughey as Joe, a Dallas detective who moonlights as a hitman. After a client (Emile Hirsch) stiffs him on a job, Joe takes his sister (Juno Temple) as a retainer. A blood-soaked finale ensues, and, along the way, the picture is so brutal and grotesque at times that it earned an NC-17 rating, in part because of a scene in which McConaughey’s character forces Gina Gershon to perform fellatio on a chicken leg that he dangles from his crotch. Friedkin refused to cut the picture to earn an R rating, and it’s that uncompromising spirit that permeates his body of work. One of the most compelling directors to emerge from the easy riders-and-raging-bulls era, Friedkin broke through in 1971 — and won a Best Director Oscar — with the police thriller The French Connection . Two years later he would direct the white-knuckle horror masterpiece, The Exorcist , solidifying his standing in the pantheon of ’70s filmmakers that includes Coppola, Lucas, Cimino and Scorsese. Friedkin has not since matched the critical and box office heights of The French Connection and The Exorcist , although he showed glimpses of his greatness with such films as Sorcerer — an intense remake of Henri-Georges Clouzot’s The Wages of Fear set to a Tangerine Dream soundtrack — and To Live and Die in L.A..   He has, however, worked steadily.   Killer Joe is his second collaboration with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tracy Letts.  Friedkin first adapted Letts’ play Bug  for the screen in 2006. Over the last six years he has also directed opera and episodes of CSI  and worked on his autobiography. As bold with his words as he is with his filmmaking, Friedkin had a frank discussion with Movieline about the ratings board, his disinterest in today’s studio films, why making The Exorcist into a TV show is “bullshit” and that Twitter photo of him as Ali G. Had you and Tracy been discussing Killer Joe since making Bug ? No, we only casually discussed it then, but a couple of years after Bug he sent me a screenplay.  I read it and thought it was great. I called him back and I said, “Look if I can cast this and find somebody to finance it I’d love to do it,” and that was it. It took about a year to put together. What are the challenges of adapting a stage play to the screen? Films come from many different places. They come from plays, they come from actual events, from novels, from people’s own experiences. I’ve made 16 films in 45 years and they came from all those places. Some of the greatest films ever made were originally plays. Casablanca was a play called Everybody Comes to Rick’s.    A Few Good Men was a play. Cabaret was a play—  But aren’t there things that work on stage that need to be tweaked in order for them to work on film ? Not in a great piece of writing, like Streetcar Named Desire . The entire play takes place in the Kowalskis’ house in New Orleans. But you don’t think of it as a play. What you remember is Brando and Vivien Leigh and Karl Malden and how touching and emotional the situation is. The major challenge in making Killer Joe was to cast it properly. After that the writing is so good you just had to do it. You had to cast it with people who could understand it and reach down into their own life experiences to make it live. What did you see in Matthew McConaughey? He was being interviewed on one of those Larry King-type television shows and I saw him as himself, not as a guy in a romantic comedy. I thought this guy is really interesting and smart and very self-knowledgeable. He’s not this guy in the rom-coms. He’s from East Texas and he had the right accent and all of those things went well. I was originally going to go to some grizzled old warhorse to play Joe. But after watching this interview I thought, “This would be interesting: A good-looking guy who could charm the mustard off a hot dog.”  I thought, “This is the way I want to go.” So I sent the script to  [McConaughey], and when we first met he told me that he didn’t get it. He didn’t understand it and he just tossed it. And then he started to think about it, and he thought, “Well Jesus, this is funny. This is absurdly funny.” So he read it again, and he saw the humor in it as well as the danger. And he decided to take control of his own career and challenge himself with this. We met a couple of times to make sure we were on the same page and then I cast him.  It’s certainly a role that will surprise people that know him from his Hollywood titles. Along with the comedy, I was surprised by how sincere his character could be¾especially the monologue he gives about East Texas. Well, it starts with the writing, and that’s what attracted the cast and me. [Letts’] people are real. They jump off the page. And I know all these people. None of them are strangers to me. Letts actually got the idea from a news article he read of a situation similar to this that happened in Florida.  A big cloud hanging over the film is its NC-17 rating. This isn’t your first time having to fight the ratings board. Cruising was originally given an X rating. I had to go back 50 times to the ratings board with that film.  Did that experience play a factor in how you handled the decision to stick with the NC-17 rating? Yeah. That’s basically what I thought, and I had to get the support of my distributor LD Entertainment. They were with me. They didn’t want to cut this film up into toothpicks. I think the rating is correct, by the way, although my view of the ratings board is very cynical and critical.  I think they’re an arbitrary board with arbitrary standards. They’ll never give a major studio an NC-17. Never. What will happen is, behind closed doors, a major studio will make little nods and bows to them by cutting frames or shots here or there. Do you see yourself ever making another studio film? I doubt that I’ll ever work for a major studio again.  Are you even interested in the kinds of movies they make now-the comic-book adaptations and raunchy comedies? Absolutely not. I don’t watch them and I certainly don’t want to make them. I’m not into Spandex. [Laughs] I’ve only done 16 films in 45 years. I look for stuff all of the time, but every film I’ve done took at least two years of my life. The Exorcist took three after all the press was done.  Since the ‘90s you’ve been directing operas such as Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi  for the Washington National Opera. Have you always been interested in them? No. I don’t go to operas. I listen to them on recordings sometimes. Zubin Mehta got me into directing operas. He’s a friend, and a great conductor, and we used to talk about music and movies. One day he said, “Why don’t you do an opera with me?” And I said, “Geez Zubin, I’ve never seen an opera.” And he said, “No, I think you’d be very good.” And he talked me into doing an opera. My first one was in 1998 in Florence and recently I did another opera in Florence. How many have you done? I haven’t counted, but I think I’ve done more than 12 since 1998. I just did Tales of Hoffmann in Vienna. Do these bring as much satisfaction to you as filmmaking? Definitely. It’s live musical theater and you’re dealing with material that’s 100-150 years old which means it has stood the test of time. The operas I’ve done are all classics.   The Exorcist is closing in on its 40 th anniversary. Hard to believe. It’s been in the news lately. Have you seen the play in LA? I haven’t seen that yet, I’m going to see it at the end of the month. And there’s a TV adaptation in the works. That’s bullshit. They don’t have the rights. [ The Exorcist  novelist] Bill Blatty still has the rights and he doesn’t want to see an exorcism on TV every week. I wouldn’t watch it-not even out of curiosity. It would just be total bullshit. But they’re going to rerelease The Exorcist in the late fall at the Smithsonian in Washington and then there will probably be some more theatrical and then a brand new Blu-ray that I just finished a few months ago. You’ve recently joined Twitter, are you enjoying it? Yeah. I think it’s a lot of fun. I take a half hour a day and read what people have to say and occasionally I think it’s worth a response.  I see you’re very big on posting photos. And one in particular grabbed my attention— Me as Ali G?  Yeah! I lost a bet to Sir Evelyn de Rothschild of the Rothschild family. The loser had to dress up as Ali G and I lost the bet. I wasn’t going to do it, but he bought me the costume. And I said ok. So he bought me all the bling and the costume and his wife took the picture. What’s the latest with you trying to get the rights to Sorcerer ? I’m in the 9 th District Court of Appeals suing Paramount and Universal because they both claimed they don’t own the film anymore and they don’t know who does. So I had to sue them to try to find out so I can get it back in release to the people who want to see it, which are largely film society and universities and people like that who are being denied the right to see that and many other films. The studios want to get rid of all 35mm [prints] and not even have any bookkeeping around by them. By November 26 there’s a settlement conference and if we can’t settle it by then there’s a trial in March of 2013. And I’ll go all the way with it, if it costs me every penny I have. What are you doing next? I don’t have any plans other to finish my autobiography. It will be out by the spring of next year. I’m not considering any other films right now. Is that because there’s nothing out there that interests you? I’m busy, but I haven’t seen anything I’m really interested in filming. Killer Joe is in limited release this Friday.

‘Avengers’ Fans Rave About ‘Unbelievable’ Film At Midnight Screening

‘My mind was just blown,’ one moviegoer tells MTV News in Times Square. By Fallon Prinzivalli Chris Evans as Captain America In “The Avengers” Photo: Walt Disney Studios The long-awaited “Avengers” finally assembled Thursday night at theaters throughout North America with one of the biggest midnight openings since “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2.” We were on the scene in New York’s Times Square, where fans dressed as Loki and the Hulk donned their RealD “Avengers” collector glasses and couldn’t stop raving about Earth’s mightiest heroes. “I was really worried that it was gonna be just subpar, if not even at all good. But then I saw it. I just had to sit there for a minute and just take it in. It was amazing!” said Akil Vichus Davis, who was skeptical that director Joss Whedon could take on such a hefty project. But he was pleasantly surprised and said he’s very happy with the outcome. “It was solid. It was good. The stories were good. They had great moments. The cinematography, the directing, it was off the chain. It was good.” Marvel fan Justin Silver agreed, saying, “My mind was just blown. I was just like, ‘Oh my God!’ It was crazy. It was unbelievable!” The ensemble cast includes Marvel newcomer Mark Ruffalo as the Hulk and many actors reprising their roles, including Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson and Chris Evans, who plays Captain America. Anand Kodamanchili was thrilled with how much the legendary First Avenger was featured in the film. “I’m a huge fan of Captain America, and just watching him kick some serious ass again, again and again was pretty awesome,” he gushed. With its earlier overseas release, “The Avengers” has raked in more than $300 million internationally so far, according to Deadline Hollywood . When box-office expert Jeff Bock said, “This isn’t just a movie, it’s an event,” he wasn’t kidding. AMC Theaters held the daylong “Ultimate Marvel Marathon,” screening “Iron Man,” “The Incredible Hulk,” “Iron Man 2,” “Thor” and “Captain America” back-to-back leading up to the “Avengers” midnight release. The screenings sold out in numerous major theaters in North America more than a month ago. Deadline also reports that the film grossed a total of $281.1 million through its first eight days overseas and is slated to hit over $160 million in the U.S. through Sunday. With a rise in ticket prices, especially 3-D and IMAX, there’s a strong chance it could top the current record, held by “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2,” of $169.2 million. If you include the opening weekend in Russia and China, the film could potentially make close to $585 million worldwide through Sunday. A studio mogul told Deadline, “It’s tracking off the charts. Biggest in every category and with everyone — men, women, young, old. Any way you slice and dice it. It’s just a mega-movie.” So what’s the secret? We certainly noticed a mix of men and women at the premiere release last night. Moviegoer Kelly Burbrink enjoyed the comedic parts of the film. “[I] absolutely loved the one-liners of the humor,” she said. “They were fantastic and I’m sure we missed a bunch because everyone was just dying laughing after them that you couldn’t hear what came right after. They were just hysterical.” There’s something in it for everyone. Action, comedy, an insanely attractive cast — and when you mix that with the directing talents of Joss Whedon, it’s no wonder fan Nicole DeBonis screams, “Oh my gosh! No words can describe it.” Daniel Vives agrees and highly recommends the film for all audiences, saying, “Joss Whedon did an excellent job with directing and writing the movie. Everyone needs to go see this movie.” “The Avengers” is currently in theaters nationwide. Check out everything we’ve got on

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‘Avengers’ Fans Rave About ‘Unbelievable’ Film At Midnight Screening

New Supercut Collects TV Freudian Tits- Uh, Slips. Slips. [VIDEO]

You know what a Freudian slip is, right? It’s when you mean to say one thing, but another, altogether filthier, thing comes out of your mouth instead. For example: You might mean to tell your assistant, “Ms. Fredrickson, we need to sit down and talk,” but instead you say “Ms. Frederickson, you need to sit on my cock.” Freudian slip! TV news anchors are especially prone to these hilarious slips of the tongue, as demonstrated in this supercut from the humor website WorldWideInterweb.com . Keep fucking that chicken…uhm, we mean, enjoy.

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New Supercut Collects TV Freudian Tits- Uh, Slips. Slips. [VIDEO]

Chris Pine Leaves Action For Drama In ‘People Like Us’

‘I was interested in doing a film that was smaller scope than the films I had done previously,’ actor tells MTV News. By Kevin P. Sullivan Olivia Wilde and Chris Pine in “People Like Us” Photo: DreamWorks Pictures Chris Pine and first-time director Alex Kurtzman have a few things in common. Both made names for themselves with large action movies like J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” and “Transformers” (Kurtzman as a writer and producer), and the upcoming film ” People Like Us ” marks a distinct change for both men. “People Like Us” is the story of a young man who falls on hard financial times just as he learns that his recently deceased father has left a small fortune to a sister he doesn’t know. MTV News spoke with Pine about the change of pace for him and what it was like working with co-star Elizabeth Banks. MTV News : What was it that attracted you to the script originally? Chris Pine : What attracted me to the film was just the quality of the writing. I was really interested in doing a film that was smaller scope than the films that I had done previously in the past couple years. This one was an intimate family drama, and I thought even the anomalous experience of someone finding out that their father had a completely separate family, everybody’s got family dramas of their own. Certainly, though I can’t relate to that specific experience, I can relate to having stuff in the family. This one takes place in the moment where all the stuff that’s been brewing for years and years and years finally comes to a head and has to be dealt with. MTV : How does making the film’s central relationship a brother-sister one affect the overall movie? Pine : Clearly it’s going to progress in a way that can’t be a love story between a sister and brother. It is in a sense that these two people get to know one another and find that they love one another because they’re the only two people that can relate and understand the experience of living in that family with that father and that mother. And because they’ve been so traumatized by the lies that their family has told for so many years, they find solace in one another’s mutual understanding. I think it’s refreshing because I don’t think people have seen something like this specific story in cinema before, at least in the States. There’s a quality of the film that kind of reminded me of one of my favorite films, “Kramer vs. Kramer,” and it kind of has the depth of something like “Ordinary People” and the humor of a comedy. It’s just — for the lack of a better term — very human. MTV : Did it strike you as interesting that the film lacks the central romance that drives most dramas? Pine : Not really because there are many stories in your own life that you lead that have nothing to do with a romantic other, whether it be work or dealing with your family. Oftentimes, many of the most pivotal stories that we play out in our own life don’t have anything to do with a girlfriend or a lover or a husband or a wife. That didn’t pose a problem for me because I thought that this was a story more about a man really becoming an authentic adult and learning how to deal honestly with those people in his life, his father and his mother and his girlfriend and his newfound sister. MTV : With the relationship with Elizabeth Banks’ character being so central, what was your relationship with her like on set? Pine : It was a pretty intense filmmaking experience. We had a lot of fun on set, and I love Elizabeth to death. She’s incredibly smart and doesn’t suffer fools. I appreciated her work ethic and just shooting the sh– on set. It was a film that demanded a lot of our attention and a lot of protecting our respective characters. I felt very protective of Sam. The piece, as it progresses forward, clearly because of the lies Sam tells along the way, there’s a lot of resentment from Elizabeth’s character. There were times when we would have these blowout discussions on set among Alex, myself and Elizabeth about what we felt the scene needed to be in the context of the arc of our characters. MTV : Alex Kurtzman has said in the past how important this movie was to him. Was there a sense of that on the set? Pine : From what Alex told me, this is a very important story that was very important for him to tell, and we both bonded over the fact that our careers had taken a particular path toward making larger films, while in our beginnings, we both thought we’d be making different kinds of films. It was nice to finally make one that we both really, really had a lot of investment in. Not that I don’t have investment in the films I do now — I’m saying it was nice to do something that we always wanted to make. I think it is exciting that Alex gets to show his fans that he is capable of doing a different kind of film entirely. It’s Summer Movie Preview Week, and MTV News will be bringing you exclusive interviews, clips and photos for the most anticipated summer movies . Get ready to gorge on inside looks at “The Avengers,” Robert Pattinson’s “Bel Ami,” Kristen Stewart’s “Snow White,” “The Amazing Spider-Man” and more! Related Videos Summer Movie Preview 2012 Related Photos Get Psyched For Summer Movie Flicks 2012!

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Chris Pine Leaves Action For Drama In ‘People Like Us’

Twitter Loves The Avengers! [UPDATED: Follow the Press Conference with @Movieline!]

The Avengers premiered last night in Los Angeles, where luminaries, cognoscenti and unalloyed geeks took in the Marvel megaspectacle as one, big nerdy family. Afterward, with tweets permitted by Disney reps (and full reviews embargoed until the first week of May), many of those viewers took to Twitter to exhort director Joss Whedon, the nonstop action, the humor, the Hulk, and basically anything that wasn’t the ” worthless ” 3-D. Read on for a brief round-up. [ UPDATE 2:10 p.m. PDT : And starting now you can follow Jen Yamato’s Avengers press conference livetweet over at @Movieline !] Movieline’s own Jen Yamato was there, and it was Renneriffic: Avengers was big, messy, fun. More importantly there’s now nothing but Hawkeye fanfic swimming around in my head. #mmmrenner — jen yamato (@jenyamato) April 12, 2012 And what of the others, fans and press alike? ‘The Avengers’ is a big tub of popcorn heaven. A huge grin on my face throughout and much applause from the crowd too. Well done Mr. Whedon. — edgarwright (@edgarwright) April 12, 2012 So that was AMAZING. Like, double plus awesome. Thank you Joss Whedon for giving us all the #Avengers movie we deserve. #OnlyYou — Seth Green (@SethGreen) April 12, 2012 The Hulk we have been waiting for has at last arrived. #AvengersFuckYeah — Damon Lindelof (@DamonLindelof) April 12, 2012 The Avengers is pretty epic. There is probably more action in this film’s climax than all the other Marvel movie combines! — Peter Sciretta (@slashfilm) April 12, 2012 Just saw #Avengers !Holy crap!!! #HULKSMASH !!!! — JennaBusch (@JennaBusch) April 12, 2012 The Avengers – Epic. EPIC! Everyone fights everyone, but it does deliver. Marvel’s movies get better every single one. Hulk! HULK!! — Alex Billington (@firstshowing) April 12, 2012 That’ll do, Joss, that’ll do. — Devin Faraci (@devincf) April 12, 2012 …and so on and so forth. Expect the fanboy equivalent of David Denby to snap the review embargo sometime in the days ahead, no doubt. Movieline’s full review will run closer to The Avengers ‘ May 4 release date. Stay tuned! Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Twitter Loves The Avengers! [UPDATED: Follow the Press Conference with @Movieline!]