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REVIEW: Gulliver’s Travels Is Silly, Sweet and Not Too Oversized

Lilliputian light and unconcerned about it, Gulliver’s Travels clears enough antic elbow room for its liberal adaptation of Jonathan Swift’s classic novel to do its thing without too much offense and then pretty much disappears. Directed by Rob Letterman ( Shark Tale and Monsters vs. Aliens ), the film turns Swift’s hero into the male comedic mainstay of the day — a schlubby, pop culture-obsessed man-child with no prospects and tics and references where a personality should be. Which is to say: Jack Black. The joke is obvious, and Black has used his maniacal, delusional grin to make it for years: I think I’m way bigger than I am. And yet Gulliver’s journey yields a little more than the basic, bland yuk of a mail-room jockey who can barely look his comely co-worker (Amanda Peet) in the eye becoming a terrifying and potent giant in cargo shorts and Chucks.

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REVIEW: Gulliver’s Travels Is Silly, Sweet and Not Too Oversized

REVIEW: Gulliver’s Travels Is Silly, Sweet and Not Too Oversized

Lilliputian light and unconcerned about it, Gulliver’s Travels clears enough antic elbow room for its liberal adaptation of Jonathan Swift’s classic novel to do its thing without too much offense and then pretty much disappears. Directed by Rob Letterman ( Shark Tale and Monsters vs. Aliens ), the film turns Swift’s hero into the male comedic mainstay of the day — a schlubby, pop culture-obsessed man-child with no prospects and tics and references where a personality should be. Which is to say: Jack Black. The joke is obvious, and Black has used his maniacal, delusional grin to make it for years: I think I’m way bigger than I am. And yet Gulliver’s journey yields a little more than the basic, bland yuk of a mail-room jockey who can barely look his comely co-worker (Amanda Peet) in the eye becoming a terrifying and potent giant in cargo shorts and Chucks.

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REVIEW: Gulliver’s Travels Is Silly, Sweet and Not Too Oversized

Late Night Highlights: Jack Black and Jimmy Fallon Top David Bowie and Bing Crosby’s ‘Little Drummer Boy’ Duet

First, Jack Black and Jason Segel starred in an animated “Little Drummer Boy” duet. Then Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly cranked out their own Funny or Die version . Unwilling to be topped, Jack Black performed a new rendition of the holiday classic with Jimmy Fallon while wearing swim goggles and covering himself in paint on last night’s Late Night . Elsewhere, Emma Stone recalled her Easy A sex mishap, Reese Witherspoon remembered the drunken flight she took with Chelsea Handler and Kristen Schaal talked about the joys of jumbo checks.

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Late Night Highlights: Jack Black and Jimmy Fallon Top David Bowie and Bing Crosby’s ‘Little Drummer Boy’ Duet

‘Gulliver’s Travels’ Cast Responds: Would You Rather Be Taller Or Shorter?

Jack Black, Jason Segel and Emily Blunt star in film, coming Saturday. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Jack Black in “Gulliver’s Travels” Photo: 20th Century Fox In discussing the important subject matter involved in “Gulliver’s Travels” — the film (coming to theaters Saturday) based on the classic Jonathan Swift tale, and starring Jack Black, Jason Segel and Emily Blunt — MTV News thought it prudent to ask the cast members a hard-hitting, yet totally appropriate question: Would you rather be 2 feet taller or 2 feet shorter? Black, who plays the titular curious explorer (in this case, a curious travel writer), had to think long and hard about it. “Wait a minute, 7′ 7″ or 3′ 7″? That’s an amazing question,” he replied. “Hmm … I’m going to go short. I’m going to go 3′ 7″,” he decided. “Because some of the greats are shorties. There are some great tall-y tall-ies, but I think the life expectancy is longer for the shorties,” Black philosophized. “I think those super tall-ies are breakable.” Blunt decided to take a different track. “Two feet taller, not 2 feet shorter,” she responded. “I wouldn’t like to be that small.” The “Devil Wears Prada” star went on to say that she would prefer the power that comes with being taller. “They would stare at me if I was small as well,” Blunt said. “At least if I was tall, I could crush people if they stare at me.” Segel, who is already 6′ 4″, unsurprisingly selected the same option as Black. “So, I’m either 8′ 4″ or I’m 4′ 4″?” he said. “I guess I’ll go with 4′ 4″ because there are people of that height, they’re managing, and there’s things that are made for them,” he reasoned. “8’4″ is rough. And everybody — well, I guess they’re staring at you either way — [but] they might not see you if you’re 4’4″,” he added. “They’re definitely going to see you if you’re 8’4″. OK, so I’m going to go with 4’4″.” Would you choose to be two feet taller or two feet shorter? Tell us in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “Gulliver’s Travels.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Gulliver’s Travels’

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‘Gulliver’s Travels’ Cast Responds: Would You Rather Be Taller Or Shorter?

Nicole Kidman on Rabbit Hole and How the Oscars Changed Her Life

Nicole Kidman didn’t have to search far to find a visceral connection to the character she plays in Rabbit Hole , a woman rendered utterly devastated by the accidental death of her young child. She had given birth to daughter Sunday Rose while the film was being developed from David Lindsay-Abaire’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play and knew the timing was right precisely because of how much the material scared her.

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Nicole Kidman on Rabbit Hole and How the Oscars Changed Her Life

Late Night Highlights: Justin Timberlake Wants to Join Saturday Night Live, Seriously

Attention Lorne Michaels: Last night on Lopez Tonight , perennial Saturday Night Live guest star Justin Timberlake admitted that he would love to join the cast for an entire season of the show. This could be the Christmas miracle SNL fans were praying for. Elsewhere, Matt Damon taught David Letterman how to talk funny, Jason Segel fired his 65-year-old dialect coach, Jay Leno and Jimmy Fallon sang Christmas carols, and Amy Sedaris showed Stephen Colbert how to turn dryer lint into art.

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Late Night Highlights: Justin Timberlake Wants to Join Saturday Night Live, Seriously

Mark Zuckerberg And Facebook Were All Over Pop Culture In 2010

The Time Person of the Year and his company popped up in movies, on TV and in music all year long. By Eric Ditzian Mark Zuckerberg Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Of all the stats splashed across Time ‘s Person of the Year profile of Mark Zuckerberg , the most noteworthy might be that one out of every 12 people on the Earth has a Facebook account. The social networking service, in other words, is everywhere . And outside of the site’s web-enabled walled garden, nowhere was Facebook’s impact felt more significantly in 2010 than in pop culture. From an impromptu concert by one of hip-hop’s biggest names to a movie that has been tearing up the awards circuit and beyond, Facebook kept coming up again and again in the entertainment conversion du jour. It’s a big step up from 2009, which didn’t exactly end well for the company. When “30 Rock” wasn’t mocking Facebook with its fictional creation of YouFace, the world’s most inane social networking site, the dotcom was enraging its users with a whole-scale reconfiguring of its privacy settings. Sony, meanwhile, was gearing up plans to make “The Social Network,” a film that would expose Facebook’s controversial founding and was based on a script that made the year’s vaunted Black List of Hollywood’s finest unproduced scripts. At the same time, Facebook approached the 550 million-member mark, the company seemed suddenly vulnerable, with the public increasingly concerned that the site which had become an integral part of the social experience was now some sort of Web 2.0-assisted Big Brother. And what about that Net-based social experience? Was this really the direction in which we wanted the culture to travel? “It’s not normal,” said comedian Ricky Gervais in a Web chat in January, going on to skewer the site’s discourse. “My name is Charlie. This is my cat. I live with my mum.” But Facebook wasn’t just about basement-dwelling cat lovers, was it? A grassroots Facebook campaign materialized around the idea of getting Betty White to host “Saturday Night Live.” And it worked. Kanye West chose Facebook’s Palo Alto headquarters, of all places, as the venue to perform a mini-set of new material. (Of course, video of the performance made its way to YouTube.) In the fall, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert utilized Facebook to promote their Washington, D.C., rallies, attracting almost 300,000 “definite” attendees. And don’t forget about Facebook’s role in the short-lived tradition of “icing,” in which young drinkers photographed their friends pounding Smirnoff Ice, then posted pics on their pages. It wasn’t just those types of photos that swept through Facebook in 2010: There was a nude Courtney Love, Vice President Joe Biden and conservative commentator Laura Ingraham hanging out, and much more. Plus the site became Sarah Palin’s go-to platform for hitting back against critics and causes. All this pop-culture promotion, though, couldn’t silence ceaseless criticism about Facebook’s reportedly lax attitude about keeping its users’ personal info private. The company revamped its privacy policy in May, but that hardly quieted the fuss. And then there was “The Social Network.” After months of hype and the recruitment of a cast that included Jesse Eisenberg and Justin Timberlake, the film’s first teaser trailer dropped in June. The buzz on the flick still hasn’t quieted. Virtually sweeping critics associations awards and nabbing six Golden Globe nominations this week, “Social Network” has established itself as a front-runner to win all manner of Oscars. It is, simply put, a truly excellent movie. It just might not be entirely based in reality. Producers of the film and Facebook have been duking it out in the media about how accurate a picture the film presents of the social network’s creation at Harvard in 2004, including accusations that Zuckerberg stole the idea from classmates and screwed over one of its founding members. Competing claims aside, Facebook once again found itself on the defensive. Zuckerberg jumped into damage-control mode. The 26-year-old CEO appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to announce a $100 million donation to the Newark, New Jersey, public school system. He sat down for a wide-ranging, largely softball interview with “60 Minutes.” He recorded his voice for a cameo in “The Simpsons.” And this month, he joined Bill Gates and Warren Buffett’s Giving Pledge , a consortium of billionaires who commit to giving the majority of their wealth to charity. “People wait until late in their career to give back. But why wait when there is so much to be done?” Zuckerberg said in a statement. “With a generation of younger folks who have thrived on the success of their companies, there is a big opportunity for many of us to give back earlier in our lifetime and see the impact of our philanthropic efforts.” Zuckerberg even took his staff to see “The Social Network,” and told everyone who would listen that he actually enjoyed the film. High road, taken. And so the year is ending just as it began, with Facebook at the epicenter of the pop-culture universe. The haters will remain, many of them still among the site’s 550 million users. Time ‘s Person of the Year would expect nothing else. “I mean, people write all kinds of different things, from ‘It’s the greatest thing that’s ever existed’ to ‘It’s the worst thing that’s ever existed,’ ” he said. The only thing he seemingly might wish to change in 2011 is for his name to be a less frequent topic for conversation than his company’s. As he told the magazine, “I usually don’t like things that are too much about me.”

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Mark Zuckerberg And Facebook Were All Over Pop Culture In 2010

‘Muppets’ Star Jason Segel ‘Hoping’ For Lady Gaga Cameo

Actor and co-writer weighs in on Michael Cera rumor, 3-D for 2011 movie. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Jason Segel Photo: Jason LaVeris/ FilmMagic Will Lady Gaga reunite with Kermit the Frog after their red-carpet dalliance at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards? Will Michael Cera kick it with some felt friends? Will the creative minds behind “The Muppets” give in to the 3-D craze and deliver the first franchise film since 1999 in three dimensions? These are just a few of the questions surrounding Jason Segel’s resurrection of the Muppets in a flick set to hit theaters next November. And while promoting “Gulliver’s Travels” recently, Segel touched on all these Muppet topics and more. “We are hoping to get Lady Gaga, but we hadn’t heard anything yet,” Segel told MTV News of the much talked-about cameo. “I literally don’t know.” We’ll file this bit of casting gossip under “wait and see.” On to the question of Cera. Earlier reports suggested Paul Rudd was being recruited for a cameo, but the actor told us a few weeks ago that it wasn’t going to happen. Cera had been rumored to be up for the same part, and Segel issued something of a non-denial denial about the rumor, going on to explain that the role in question concerns a new Muppet named Walter. “That part was never to play Walter,” Segel said. “The puppeteer who’s playing Walter is called Peter Linz, who’s an absolute genius, amazing puppeteer, brilliant actor and a great singer. There was a bit where Walter imagines himself as a human. All the puppeteers play their characters. There are no celebrity voices of the puppets.” Again, we’ll wait and see on Cera. One thing we most certainly won’t be seeing in “Muppets” is 3-D. Segel, who stars in the film and wrote the script along with Nicholas Stoller (“Get Him to the Greek”), envisions the movie as a throwback to previous series installments like “The Great Muppet Caper.” “No, I don’t think so,” he said of the 3-D question. “Maybe you’ll play this back in a year and see I was wrong. My goal is make it like the 1970s, early ’80s Muppet movies, so I don’t want there to be any 3-D, personally.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Muppets.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘Muppets’ Star Jason Segel ‘Hoping’ For Lady Gaga Cameo MTV Rough Cut: ‘Gulliver’s Travels’

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‘Muppets’ Star Jason Segel ‘Hoping’ For Lady Gaga Cameo

Can Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly Top Jack Black and Jason Segel’s ‘Little Drummer Boy’ Duet?

Last week, comedy icons Jason Segel and Jack Black sat down at the ol’ Black family piano to duet on the holiday classic “Little Drummer Boy,” and we here at Movieline HQ couldn’t help but wonder if they out Bing Crosby and David Bowie’d Bing and Dave. (Final verdict: They didn’t.) Now, it’s Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly’s turn. The comedy twosome got together with Funny or Die to film a fairly straightforward remake of the iconic (and comfortably bizarre) pairing, only stopping to add a few flourishes. Like this exchange: “It’s Bowie. It’s David F***ing Bowie!” / “And it’s Bing F***ing Crosby, pal.” Click ahead for some holiday cheer.

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Can Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly Top Jack Black and Jason Segel’s ‘Little Drummer Boy’ Duet?

Does Anyone Like How I Met Your Mother Anymore?

It looks like you can add Neil Patrick Harris to the list of people who disagreed with my impassioned plea on behalf of How I Met Your Mother ‘s sixth season . The Emmy nominated star of stage and (small) screen booked a three-night stint leading the Stephen Sondheim musical Company earlier today , and he used the occasion to somewhat bury the veteran sitcom.

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Does Anyone Like How I Met Your Mother Anymore?