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Stephen King’s Shining Sequel Doctor Sleep Gets A Release Date

Three decades and change after publishing his 1977 classic The Shining (which made its way into horror movie history a few years later courtesy of Stanley Kubrick), Stephen King has set a release date for his Shining sequel, Doctor Sleep . “Scribner and Hodder & Stoughton have established September 24, 2013 as the official first publication date,” King’s official website announced today. In Doctor Sleep , King catches up with little Danny Torrance, who’s now in his forties and uses his abilities to help the terminally ill in his work as a hospice caregiver. Also: Vampires are involved! Because of course. Last fall, King gave a surprise reading from Doctor Sleep at George Mason University: Stephen King returns to the characters and territory of one of his most popular novels ever, The Shining, in this instantly riveting novel about the now middle-aged Dan Torrance (the boy protagonist of The Shining) and the very special twelve-year-old girl he must save from a tribe of murderous paranormals. On highways across America, a tribe of people called The True Knot travel in search of sustenance. They look harmless—mostly old, lots of polyester, and married to their RVs. But as Dan Torrance knows, and tween Abra Stone learns, The True Knot are quasi-immortal, living off the “steam” that children with the “shining” produce when they are slowly tortured to death. Haunted by the inhabitants of the Overlook Hotel where he spent one horrific childhood year, Dan has been drifting for decades, desperate to shed his father’s legacy of despair, alcoholism, and violence. Finally, he settles in a New Hampshire town, an AA community that sustains him, and a job at a nursing home where his remnant “shining” power provides the crucial final comfort to the dying. Aided by a prescient cat, he becomes “Doctor Sleep.” Then Dan meets the evanescent Abra Stone, and it is her spectacular gift, the brightest shining ever seen, that reignites Dan’s own demons and summons him to a battle for Abra’s soul and survival. This is an epic war between good and evil, a gory, glorious story that will thrill the millions of hyper-devoted readers of The Shining and wildly satisfy anyone new to the territory of this icon in the King canon. With the book hitting shelves in 2013, how long until we hear of movement on a Doctor Sleep film? That should go interestingly with the Shining prequel reportedly in the works , no? [ Stephen King official website via Allie is Wired ]

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Stephen King’s Shining Sequel Doctor Sleep Gets A Release Date

Taylor Kitsch Brings Exclusive ‘John Carter’ Clip To ‘MTV First’

Tune in to MTV at 7:56 p.m. on Thursday, March 1, to see the sneak peek, and then watch Kitsch answer your questions on MTV.com. By Kara Warner Taylor Kitsch in “John Carter” Photo: Disney Taylor Kitsch is making a major leap from small-screen sports hero Tim Riggins in “Friday Night Lights,” to potential blockbuster action-movie star via three big-budget films: Disney’s sci-fi fantasy “John Carter,” “Battleship” and crime thriller “Savages.” And just before he officially catapults to superstar status, he’s answering your questions. On Thursday, March 1, Kitsch will sit down with MTV News’ Josh Horowitz to present a clip from his upcoming action adventure during “MTV First: John Carter.” At 7:56 p.m. ET on MTV, Kitsch will introduce the clip, followed by a 30-minute interview that will continue on MTV.com, where Kitsch will answer more of your questions. To get your question answered, all you have to do is send it via Twitter, using @MTVNews and the hashtag #MTVFirst or #AskKitsch. “MTV First” will give you a chance to see a never-before-seen clip from “John Carter,” eight days before it hits theaters on March 9. Set on the mysterious and exotic planet of Barsoom (Mars), “John Carter” is the story of a war-weary former military captain (Kitsch), who is inexplicably transported to Mars, where he becomes reluctantly embroiled in a conflict of epic proportions among the inhabitants of the planet, including Tars Tarkas (Willem Dafoe) and the captivating Princess Dejah Thoris (Lynn Collins). “There’s kind of that stigma with big movies that it’s just action,” Kitsch told MTV News .”But with this, it’s really just the core of this guy and his journey of reinventing himself and finding himself again.” “John Carter” is based on Edgar Rice Burroughs’ classic novel “John Carter of Mars.” The film will be released on March 9 in digital 3-D and IMAX 3-D. Catch Taylor Kitsch Thursday, March 1, on MTV at 7:56 p.m. ET, when he’ll debut an exclusive, never-before-seen clip from “John Carter.” Then head over to MTV.com for our 30-minute chat with Rudd and Aniston. Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: Taylor Kitsch

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Taylor Kitsch Brings Exclusive ‘John Carter’ Clip To ‘MTV First’

Taylor Kitsch Brings Exclusive ‘John Carter’ Clip To ‘MTV First’

Tune in to MTV at 7:56 p.m. on Thursday, March 1, to see the sneak peek, and then watch Kitsch answer your questions on MTV.com. By Kara Warner Taylor Kitsch in “John Carter” Photo: Disney Taylor Kitsch is making a major leap from small-screen sports hero Tim Riggins in “Friday Night Lights,” to potential blockbuster action-movie star via three big-budget films: Disney’s sci-fi fantasy “John Carter,” “Battleship” and crime thriller “Savages.” And just before he officially catapults to superstar status, he’s answering your questions. On Thursday, March 1, Kitsch will sit down with MTV News’ Josh Horowitz to present a clip from his upcoming action adventure during “MTV First: John Carter.” At 7:56 p.m. ET on MTV, Kitsch will introduce the clip, followed by a 30-minute interview that will continue on MTV.com, where Kitsch will answer more of your questions. To get your question answered, all you have to do is send it via Twitter, using @MTVNews and the hashtag #MTVFirst or #AskKitsch. “MTV First” will give you a chance to see a never-before-seen clip from “John Carter,” eight days before it hits theaters on March 9. Set on the mysterious and exotic planet of Barsoom (Mars), “John Carter” is the story of a war-weary former military captain (Kitsch), who is inexplicably transported to Mars, where he becomes reluctantly embroiled in a conflict of epic proportions among the inhabitants of the planet, including Tars Tarkas (Willem Dafoe) and the captivating Princess Dejah Thoris (Lynn Collins). “There’s kind of that stigma with big movies that it’s just action,” Kitsch told MTV News .”But with this, it’s really just the core of this guy and his journey of reinventing himself and finding himself again.” “John Carter” is based on Edgar Rice Burroughs’ classic novel “John Carter of Mars.” The film will be released on March 9 in digital 3-D and IMAX 3-D. Catch Taylor Kitsch Thursday, March 1, on MTV at 7:56 p.m. ET, when he’ll debut an exclusive, never-before-seen clip from “John Carter.” Then head over to MTV.com for our 30-minute chat with Rudd and Aniston. Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: Taylor Kitsch

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Taylor Kitsch Brings Exclusive ‘John Carter’ Clip To ‘MTV First’

Detachment Poster Debut: Adrien Brody’s Class is in Session

Nearly a year on from its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival, director Tony Kaye’s ensemble drama Detachment is readying to make its debut on VOD and in theaters. This calls for a poster! Movieline’s got your first look at the one-sheet — featuring leading man Adrien Brody and a high school classroom in desperate need of a janitor — after the break. From this site’s Tribeca review : Detachment follows substitute teacher Henry Barthes (Brody) through his extended stay at a Queens high school, a borderline war zone where students would sooner drop a loogie than an apple on an instructor’s desk, and where city administrators openly link plunging property values to plunging test scores. This is where contemporary education has gone to die, slowly and painfully. Henry swims through an ensemble-cast cosmos of lifers Their banter — about a dead colleague here, a popped pill there — keeps them sane and human enough amid the savagery. They’ve all but given up on the kids, defecting to the private sector when the hopelessness of teaching public school finally becomes one humiliation too many. After a while, in fact, Detachment feels as though Kaye is telling a ghost story — a novel, really, with characters and back stories fluttering through magic-hour prisms and saturated nocturnal light, their yelps and groans and pleas and dins and salutations and whispers hand-stitched into narrative breaths, their memories folded into daydreams and pummeled into nightmares, these fluorescent-lit cathedrals of learning dismantled before their inhabitants’ eyes, finally windblown into oblivion. The film demands being taken seriously even as it testifies to its own futility, like the obituary of some household name you loved as a kid. It’s point-blank blame and benediction of teachers themselves, resolving only to leave you wondering how things got so bad while also wondering why no one told you sooner how bad they’d been getting. Resolving, that is, when it’s not suggesting you never listened in the first place and most definitely aren’t listening now. Bam. Also check out Movieline’s interview with Brody about the film; Tribeca Film will uncork Detachment on Feb. 24 via Movies On Demand, iTunes, Amazon Watch Instantly, VUDU and other platforms before opening it theatrically in select cities beginning March 16. Visit detachment-film.com for more info.

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Detachment Poster Debut: Adrien Brody’s Class is in Session

Times Watch: Obama, Bringing His Hope to the Paris Slums

His poll numbers over here may be falling, but the New York Times found a place where Barack Obama is still very popular and bringing the hope: The slum-like “banlieues”outside Paris dominated by Muslim immigrants, in Thursday’s “ Feeling Slighted by France, And Respected by the U.S. ” by France-based reporter Scott Sayare. The residents of this poor, multiracial Paris suburb say they have been abandoned. For 30 years, they say, the French authorities have written off Bondy and neighborhoods like it, treating their inhabitants as terminal delinquents and ignoring their potential. Obama evidently has the French slum vote locked up: Begun in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks as part of an effort to bolster the image of the United States within Muslim communities across the globe, American outreach in these hard neighborhoods — often referred to collectively as the “banlieues,” or suburbs — has grown in scale and visibility since the election of Barack Obama. France is home to five million to six million Muslims, Europe’s largest Muslim population, and the banlieues have long been considered potential incubators for religious extremism. But anti-American sentiment, once pervasive in these neighborhoods, seems to have been all but erased since the election of Mr. Obama, who has proved to be a powerful symbol of hope here and a powerful diplomatic tool. Many suggest the Americans’ warm reception is a measure of these communities’ sense of abandonment. Others say it is the presence of Mr. Obama in the White House. Whatever the case, the United States is now more popular in the banlieues than at any other time in recent memory, say French and American officials. And as the banlieues go, so go the banlieues! In contrast, Times reporters had extremely harsh words for tough-on-crime French President Nicholas Sarkozy , who dared to criticize the violent behavior of the slum residents: Mr. Sarkozy has often taken a ruthless us-against-them attitude…He also struck a conciliatory note, reaching out to the huge swath of French people who seem to fear him, especially in the country’s ethnically and racially mixed suburbs, where he is accused of fueling tensions with his provocative language and an aggressive police presence.

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Times Watch: Obama, Bringing His Hope to the Paris Slums