Tag Archives: immortals

Twit Wit: The 5 Best Tweets About J. Edgar, Immortals, and the Dreaded Jack and Jill

Three mockable movies, five prolific Twitter stars: Who most effectively skewered the achronological, bizarrely unlit J. Edgar , the gauzy Immortals , and the downright insulting Jack and Jill ? Join us for a rundown of Twitter’s best quips about the weekend box office .

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Twit Wit: The 5 Best Tweets About J. Edgar, Immortals, and the Dreaded Jack and Jill

Immortals Fights Way to Box Office Crown

Phew. That was close. Immortals fought its way to the top of the box office this week, narrowly saving us from a world in which Adam Sandler’s Jack and Jill actually earned more money than anything other film in Hollywood. The Immortals Trailer The Henry Cavill-led action flick was the only movie to break $30 million on Friday and Saturday, as we’ve posted the top five weekend box office results below: Immortals : $32 million Jack and Jill : $26 million Puss in Boots : $25.5 million Tower Heist : $13.2 million J. Edgar : $11.4 million

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Immortals Fights Way to Box Office Crown

THE 2011 3RD ANNUAL HBCU ALL-STAR BOWL [EVENT]

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THE 2011 3RD ANNUAL HBCU ALL-STAR BOWL [EVENT]

Five Greek Tales That Deserve To Be On The Big Screen

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Immortals starring Henry Cavill, Freida Pinto and Mickey Rourke opens in theaters nationwide today. Director Tarsem Singh offers a visually stunning retelling of the story of Theseus (Cavill),  a heroic young man who must save the world against the bloodthirsty and power hungry King Hyperion (Rourke). Watch trailer below: With Hollywood’s everlasting love affair with epic “sword and sandal” stories   The Urban Daily offers five classic Greek tales that deserve the silver screen treatment. Lysistrata Written by the playwright Aristophanes, Lysistrata takes a comedic look at one woman’s mission to end the Pelopennesian War.  Lysistratra rallies the women of Greece together to withhold all sexual favors from the men in order to force them to negotiate peace with their enemy. Lysistrata holds the distinction of being one of the earliest pieces of literature to explore sexual politics in a patriarchial society. The “Real” Clash of The Titans Although we’ve seen Zeus lording over the fate of mortals below  in countless movies,  the story of how he came to claim the throne of the gods, is chock full of  Freudian overtones.   Zeus was the youngest child of Rhea and Cronus, then ruler of Olympus. Due to a prophecy  from his own father, Uranus (who Cronos had overthrown as ruler) that he would be usurped by one of his offspring, he devoured his five children.  Rhea secretly gave birth to Zeus in a hidden cave, and when Cronos came to claim the newborn, Rhea handed him a stone wrapped in a blanket, which Cronos quickly swallowed.  When Zeus was a young man, he confronted Cronos and emptied the contents of his father’s stomach, freeing his five older siblings, including Hades and Poseidon. Medusa Known as one third of the Gorgon sisters, Medusa is one of the most feared and reviled monsters in Greek mythology. While we know her fearsome appearance was a curse from the gods, the question is, did the punishment fit the crime?  In some accounts, Medusa was a beautiful maiden  punished by the goddess Athena for having sex with Poseidon in one of her temples. Other stories claim Medusa was raped by the sea god and even though she asked for mercy, was transformed into the snake-haired monster, regardless. The Odyssey Shocking that one of the most epic tales in Greek mythology has never made it to the big screen. While there have been two TV miniseries, Odysseus’ tale of loss and perseverance has yet to fall into the hands of an A-list director.  Odysseus is credited with coming up with the genius idea of the Trojan Horse, which helped to bring the war against Troy to a glorious end. The character did get some shine, portrayed by Sean Bean in 2004′s Troy . Bean is one of Hollywood’s underrated actors, as witnessed by his terrific turns in Lord of The Rings and “Game of Thrones.”  Playing a king is clearly in his acting DNA–let’s give him a project worthy of his talents. Medea No, not to be confused with the gun-toting, weed smoking character from Tyler Perry plays and movies. Medea probably has the distinction of being the most tragic female character in Greek mythology.  The granddaughter of the sun god Helios, Medea fell in love with Jason (yes of the Argonauts).  In exchange for helping Jason get the Golden Fleece, Medea made Jason promise that he would take her away and marry her.  When the time came for them to escape, Medea distracted her father by killing her brother, dismembering his body and scattering his parts throughout the country so her father would have to stop and retrieve them for proper burial.  Jason kept his part of the bargain by marrying Medea and they had two sons together. Unfortunately the course of true love never runs smooth–when Jason dumped Medea for another woman, she killed her own children, and escaped in a chariot driven by dragons, sent courtesy of her grandfather.  Medea gives new meaning to the saying, “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.”

Five Greek Tales That Deserve To Be On The Big Screen

Another Steve Carell Project, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Happy Friday! Also in this edition of The Broadsheet: Hysteria coming to theaters… Your one-stop Shame sex-talk shop… Another Spider-Man stage player takes a tumble… Lou Reed and Metallica explore the outer limits of unlistenability… and more.

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Another Steve Carell Project, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

REVIEW: Immortals Wants to Be 300 So Bad It Hurts

As cool-looking, dumb and deadly serious as you could desire, Immortals openly aims to be the heir to 300 , and succeeds in at least being a reasonable facsimile that hits many (too many) of the same testosterone-driven beats. The battles are just as imaginatively bloody, the abs painstakingly chiseled, the dialogue tin-eared, only this time around the stakes are not just the fate of the historic(esque) world, but of the divine one as well. There are gods in this film, beautiful, gold-cloaked ones who watch worriedly from atop Olympus as Greece is overrun by the armies of the wicked King Hyperion (Mickey Rourke), a man who wants nothing less than to bring about the destruction of their divine order, though they’re forbidden to interfere in the world of man for…oh, who knows why? Also, it’s in 3-D — dark, dark 3-D I’d avoid if given the option.

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REVIEW: Immortals Wants to Be 300 So Bad It Hurts

Henry Cavill on Immortals, Man of Steel, Surviving Tough Times and Inspiring Twilight’s Edward Cullen

Much has been made of British actor Henry Cavill ‘s abs in this week’s Immortals , or the strange, logic-defying Superman beard spied on the set of Man of Steel . Never mind that the 28-year-old actor turns in a persuasive dramatic performance in Tarsem ‘s stylized fantasy myth, playing the classic hero Theseus as an honorable peasant battling a sadistic god-hating tyrant (Mickey Rourke) with the aid of a comely priestess (Freida Pinto) and supernatural bow and arrows. But therein lies the surprise: Go to Immortals for the bloody action, or the mythological spin, or the wonderment of Tarsem’s visuals, and you’ll also get the pleasant revelation that Cavill wears leading man status like a natural.

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Henry Cavill on Immortals, Man of Steel, Surviving Tough Times and Inspiring Twilight’s Edward Cullen

Mickey Rourke out to dinner in LA

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Mickey Rourke out to dinner at Katsuya – LA Live. Follow Hollywood.TV on Facebook @ facebook.com/hollywoodasithappens

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Mickey Rourke out to dinner in LA

REVIEW: Hong Kong’s Tsui Hark Makes a Grand, Loopy Spectacle with Detective Dee

When I saw Hong Kong producer-director Tsui Hark’s Detective Dee and the Mystery of Phantom Flame at the Venice Film Festival last year, I lamented that although American viewers would probably be able to track the movie down on DVD or online, the picture wasn’t likely to get a U.S. theatrical release. Happily, I was wrong, and if you’re lucky enough to live in one of the cities where Detective Dee is playing, you too will now have a chance to witness Tsui’s glorious and somewhat unhinged vision as he tackles an episode in the real-life history of China — the ascent of the first female emperor to the throne — adding fanciful touches like spontaneous human combustion and mysterious creepy-crawlies with dangerous powers. It’s the kind of ambitious, loopy spectacle that begs to be seen on the big screen if at all possible.

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REVIEW: Hong Kong’s Tsui Hark Makes a Grand, Loopy Spectacle with Detective Dee

The New Class vs. the Old Guard: Predicting the Breakout Action Stars of the Season

The fall movie season may coincide with the start of Oscar season, but this year there’s an unusual number of spy thrillers, flying fists, leaping hardbodies, and weapons masters on deck for your viewing pleasure. Some of these fall action pics feature your favorite adrenaline-pumping stars — Tom Cruise ! Jason Statham ! Helen Mirren ? — but just as many are anchored by a younger generation of performers making their first forays into the genre. ( Jessica Chastain , you can do it all!) Take a look at the action-packed fall slate and make your predictions: Who will own action at the box office this fall, the new class or the old guard?

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The New Class vs. the Old Guard: Predicting the Breakout Action Stars of the Season