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Hey Freddie Quell! Put Down The Torpedo Juice And Try A (Not So) Slow Boat To China!

When the credits rolled on The Master , I found myself thinking two things: Joaquin Phoenix is going to be nominated for an Oscar , and damn, I could use a drink!   Watching Phoenix as feral Freddie Quell make moonshine from torpedo fuel, paint thinner and what appeared to be darkroom chemicals garnished with a mangy citrus fruit reminded me how inspiring it is to see a good mixologist at work. And that spurred me to find one who could invent a proper high-alcohol homage to Paul Thomas Anderson’s movie and Phoenix’s character that would not require masterminding a heist on The U.S.S. Curtis Wilbur. My search led me to Rachel Sergi (right), who first caught my attention with Dario Argento-inspired The Suspiria , a potent little number she worked up using grain alcohol, which, by the way, was used as torpedo fuel by the U.S. Navy during World War II.   Sergi, who studied film at San Francisco State University, is Beverage Director at Jack Rose Dining Saloon in Washington D.C., and, after seeing The Master , she created the (Not So) Slow Boat to China exclusively for Movieline.  She says the also-powerful cocktail, pictured at top, was inspired by the movie’s maritime references and that weird little moment at the end of the movie where Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Lancaster Dodd sings Frank Loesser’s  “(I’d Like to Get You on a) Slow Boat to China” to Freddie. Without further adieu, here is Rachel’s most excellent recipe, complete with instructions on how to make the Pink Peppercorn tincture and White Pepper Syrup used in the drink. Now, get out your cocktail shakers and enjoy one. (NOT SO) SLOW BOAT TO CHINA  1.5 oz. Smith & Cross “Navy Strength” Rum – 57% alcohol by volume (abv) .75 oz. Kronan Swedish Punsch .5 oz. Lime Cordial .25 oz. Pink Peppercorn Tincture (made with El Dorado 151 white rum) .25 oz. White Pepper Syrup Build drink in mixing glass with all ingredients and ice.  Stir to incorporate.  Pour into rock glass with fresh cubed ice and garnish with lime peel (not flesh). Pink Peppercorn Tincture 1.5 cups pink peppercorns – lightly smashed 3 bottles 151 White Rum (El Dorado red label) Add the peppercorns to the 151 (in a plastic container) and stir. Allow to sit for 5 days, agitating each day to incorporate. After 5 days, strain the liquid into clean, glass bottles with either a cork or screw top. For use: Pour tincture into small tincture bottles for service. Yield: approximately 75 ounces White Pepper Syrup 1 cup white peppercorn – cracked 1 dry, large saucepan 6 cups sugar 4.5 cups water Bring saucepan to med-high and add peppercorns. Toast lightly…do NOT overtoast or burn. Take off heat. Add sugar and water. Bring to boil, then reduce by 1/4. Be careful doing next step: Strain syrup through chinoise into clean container. Allow to cool then place in quart containers marked with the item’s name and date. Keep in fridge. Yield: approximately 30 oz. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.  Follow Rachel Sergi on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Hey Freddie Quell! Put Down The Torpedo Juice And Try A (Not So) Slow Boat To China!

WATCH: The Cults of Celebrity: Famous Faces at The Master Screening in New York Reveal What They Worship

An advance screening of Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master brought out the glitterati to New York’s Ziegfeld Theater on Tuesday night. Walking the red carpet before show time were cast member Amy Adams , actors Adrien Brody and Edward Norton , plus a few of our favorites from everyone’s latest HBO obsession, Girls . During the frenzied step-and-repeat, reporters referenced the film’s story — which involves an L. Ron Hubbard-like cult founder — to pose questions about Scientology. This didn’t exactly go over well, and a lot of those questions went unanswered. Given the film’s title, Movieline decided to let our interview subjects be the, um, masters of their own domains and asked them a single question: if you were going to start a cult, what would be its core idea or principle? Read on for responses from Master cast member Madisen Beaty  – who plays the object of  Joaquin Phoenix’s  affection, Doris  – fashionista Derek Blasberg and Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington. Also, make sure to check out the video of Movieline pal Grace Randolph’s interviews with Adams, who talks about playing Lois Lane in next year’s Superman movie,  Beaty, and Across the Universe director Julie Taymor. Madisen Beaty Dylan Baker, actor: “Peanut-butter-and-jelly Fridays. Maybe chips, if you’d insist.” Geoffrey Fletcher, screenwriter: “Tolerance.” Madisen Beaty, actress (Doris in The Master ): “To accept people as they are. I know that might sound cliché but, a lot of times today, it’s all about your looks and what you do. I think it should be more about who we are as individuals. Whatever you believe, everyone should be accepting.” Olivia Culpo, Miss USA 2012: “A cult?! Confidently beautiful. It would be a cult of people trying to make everybody feel as beautiful as they can — not because of how they look but because of how they feel.” Derek Blasberg, writer/author: “ I’d make everyone dress up. I spend so much time in airports, so I get to see the really poorly dressed subsets of American culture. So, I’d ban sweat suits in airports. That would be the basis of the cult.” Emily Meade, actress: “Any ideas I would have would go against starting a cult, but maybe the cult would be anti-cult, finding your own inner path and whatever you feel is right is right. So, it’d be a very ironic cult.” Jennifer Missoni Albert Maysles, filmmaker: “Direct cinema!” Arianna Huffington: “It would be about reducing stress in our lives. I think we’re all too stressed out. It would be about unplugging and recharging.” Thomas Matthews, actor: [Guttural/maniacal laugh] “Metropology*: the worship of a city. You know how pantheism is the worship of nature? This would actually be worshipping somebody like Frank Lloyd Wright. So, you could actually pray to the city gods, for, like, the subway to come sooner and that kind of stuff.” *an invention of Matthews, we presume. Josh Hamilton, actor: “I’d start a cult of my son.” Jennifer Missoni, actress: “It would be about acceptance. Acceptance to surrendering to whatever is. But, then again, I could never define anything that I would do in terms of being in a cult because I believe in ‘to each his own’ and whatever makes anyone happy. But, for me, it would be generally about acceptance and allowing what is to just be.” Nell Alk is an arts and entertainment writer and reporter based in New York City. Her work has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Manhattan Magazine, Z!NK Magazine and on InterviewMagazine.com, PaperMag.com and RollingStone.com, among others. Learn more about her here . Follow Nell Alk on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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WATCH: The Cults of Celebrity: Famous Faces at The Master Screening in New York Reveal What They Worship

TRAILER: Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master — Is Scientology on Blast?

A war veteran (Joaquin Phoenix) with a “nervous condition” finds himself entrenched in a cult — if not a religious cult, at least a cult of personality — built around a charismatic leader (Philip Seymour Hoffman) in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master . At long last, after a series of enigmatic teases, the first full trailer has hit the web offering more than just abstract , beguiling peeks at the rumored Scientology drama. So how much L. Ron Hubbard is there in Hoffman’s Master? The trailer alights on Phoenix’s Freddie Sutton as he wanders into the world of writer, doctor, nuclear physicist, and theoretical philosopher Lancaster Dodd, whose Hubbard-esque writings are glimpsed. (The way Dodd pens the dedication of his novel — “As a gift to Homo Sapiens” — is a bit of scripting brilliance that hints at Dodd’s grandiose, bombastic personality in just a single glance.) Things seem innocent enough as Dodd and his wife (Amy Adams) welcome his new charge into the fold. “We’ll urge you toward existence within a group, a society of family,” Dodd says. Like Scientology, this group promises self-improvement through community, though suspense kicks in as an accuser drops the c-word — “cult” — sending Dodd’s group onto a more sinister path. “The only way to defend ourselves is to attack,” Adams spits. It all certainly seems to be calling out Scientology and its founder, moreso the unflattering public image of its followers in the eyes of the outside world — organized faith-peddlers masking dubious claims behind their eccentric figurehead, desperate to protect themselves against scrutiny or worse. It might not seem so Scientology-esque if the tales of ex-members exiting the group weren’t so dramatic , or if Katie Holmes hadn’t reportedly been followed by a gang of Church members following her separation from Tom Cruise, the kind of crazy story that highlights the organization’s more bizarre characteristics. But does The Master really seem to be about Scientology at its core? Not much is apparent so far. The parallels are there – the author-turned-spiritual leader, the cult-like tendencies, the insular power dynamic within and without, not to mention the suggestion that it’s all a sham — and maybe Anderson’s taking an overt jab at the Church by using the bones of Scientology’s story to set up his own. But Anderson’s films explore larger human themes within narrow, specific worlds; it feels reductive to call The Master a Scientology movie just yet, though how much specific criticism can be drawn from the story remains to be seen. So forget the Scientology ties for a moment. This trailer looks fantastic, and though it hints at much more of the plot than we’ve seen previously, it’s still tantalizingly mysterious. Most surprising is Amy Adams, who commands attention as Dodd’s wife with glimpses of a mousy-to-Lady Macbethian arc throughout the trailer. Watch the trailer debut via Yahoo : The Master will be released on October 12. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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TRAILER: Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master — Is Scientology on Blast?

The Trailer For The Master Is Appropriately Creepy For A Movie (Maybe) About L. Ron Hubbard And Starring Joaquin Phoenix

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Joaquin Phoenix returns to acting as a Navy officer who can’t remember a mysterious “episode” that occurred, in The Master . More » Post from: Crushable Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Crushable Discovery Date : 21/05/2012 09:38 Number of articles : 3

The Trailer For The Master Is Appropriately Creepy For A Movie (Maybe) About L. Ron Hubbard And Starring Joaquin Phoenix

Joaquin Phoenix Shoots a Scene

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Joaquin Phoenix shoots a scene for a movie in New York.

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Joaquin Phoenix Shoots a Scene

John Witherspoon Arrives at Ed Sullivan Theater

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John Witherspoon arrives at Ed Sullivan Theater.

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John Witherspoon Arrives at Ed Sullivan Theater

Twitter Chatter: Paul Thomas Anderson Shooting The Master on 65MM

Paul Thomas Anderson diehards have gossiped for months over reports that the filmmaker is shooting an undisclosed portion of his next film, known as The Master , on 65mm — the IMAX film format used recently, and to great effect, by the likes of Christopher Nolan and DP Wally Pfister on The Dark Knight and Brad Bird and DP Robert Elswit on Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol . In a Twitter exchange yesterday, Pixar veterans Bird, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich geeked out over the joys of 70mm film, dropping a bit of confirmation that Anderson is indeed shooting in the format. In a conversation about 70mm exhibition and 65mm film shooting, Stanton — who just finished his first live-action foray, John Carter , for Disney — Tweeted: ” The Master is indeed in 65. They nearly lost a camera shooting in the Bay.” You’d think Bird would’ve known seeing as Ghost Protocol DP Elswit is Anderson’s longtime cinematographer, but… there you have it. Assuming Stanton is indeed in the know, this would confirm a report earlier this year by the Anderson-watchers at Cigarettes and Red Vines that Anderson was shooting The Master in 65mm with DP Mihai Malaimare Jr., who lensed Youth Without Youth , Tetro , and the forthcoming Twixt for Francis Ford Coppola. Though many speculate that the plot of The Master has ties to Scientology, all that is known officially is that it’s a post-WWII set drama revolving around a charismatic leader of a faith-based organization (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and a drifter who becomes his right-hand man (Joaquin Phoenix). In any case, it promises to be an unusual use of 65mm/70mm than what modern audiences are used to since the scope and visual detail that the format can achieve hasn’t really yet been employed in non-action usage. Surely cause for excitement — right, Anderson fans? (And for you Pixar fans — how amazing was it to witness the Tweet circle between Bird, Stanton, and Unkrich? So nerdy. So awesome.) [@ AndrewStanton , CinemaBlend , Cigarettes and Red Vines ]

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Twitter Chatter: Paul Thomas Anderson Shooting The Master on 65MM

Tim Burton’s Sad Thanksgiving Balloon, and 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Happy Friday! Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: Catherine Zeta-Jones is getting Broken … The Bible is hot in Hollywood!… The only Akira takedown you’ll ever need… and more.

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Tim Burton’s Sad Thanksgiving Balloon, and 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Jennifer Lopez Speaks About Split From Marc Anthony

Lopez tells Vanity Fair she ‘remain[s] an eternal optimist about love’ in first interview since separation. By James Montgomery Jennifer Lopez Photo: Getty Images Jennifer Lopez tells Vanity Fair that she still “believe[s] in love,” in her first interview since announcing that she and husband Marc Anthony were ending their seven-year marriage. “Sometimes it doesn’t work, and that’s sad. But I remain an eternal optimist about love,” Lopez said. “It’s still my biggest dream. I am positive — determined — to move forward with my life, bring up my babies and do the best job I can as a mother, entertainer and person. I now look forward to new challenges. I feel strong.” Lopez appears on the cover of the magazine’s September issue (on newsstands nationwide August 9), and she spoke openly not only about her marriage to Anthony, but her previous high-profile relationships with P. Diddy and Ben Affleck. Calling herself “a hopeless romantic … [a] passionate person when it comes to love,” she added that, until recently, she rarely loved herself, a revelation she says lead to her decision to split with Anthony. “It’s not that I didn’t love myself before. Sometimes we don’t realize that we are compromising ourselves,” Lopez said. “To understand that a person is not good for you, or that that person is not treating you in the right way, or that he is not doing the right thing for himself — if I stay, then I am not doing the right thing for me. I love myself enough to walk away from that now.” But Lopez adds that she remains close to Anthony, whom she married in June 2004 and with whom she has two children , telling the magazine, “I will always respect Marc as a singer and a performer. … We actually work great together, and he was always very supportive. … He will always be in our lives. He will always hold a special place in my heart as the father of my children.” Related Artists Marc Anthony Jennifer Lopez

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Jennifer Lopez Speaks About Split From Marc Anthony

‘Change-Up’ Stars Jason Bateman, Ryan Reynolds Ponder Career Swaps

‘I would like to be Robert Redford,’ Olivia Wilde says at movie’s Hollywood premiere. By Kara Warner Jason Bateman, Ryan Reynolds and Olivia Wilde at the “Change-Up” premiere Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images HOLLYWOOD — The stars stepped out in fine form on Monday night to support Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman’s R-rated body-swap comedy, “The Change-Up.” Reynolds and Bateman were joined on the red carpet by their lovely lady co-stars Olivia Wilde and Leslie Mann, along with surprise guest, Reynolds’ pal Sandra Bullock. In the spirit of the life-swapping element in the film, MTV News asked the attendees what other actor they’d like to swap careers, if not bodies, with, if given the opportunity. “I would like to be Robert Redford,” Wilde said. “I think being Robert Redford would be really nice. And also directing as well as acting, and doing Westerns as well as all sorts of movies, then living a really good life, starting a film festival. I would take Robert Redford. I wouldn’t miss a day of my Robert Redford life.” Mann settled on Oscar winner and Hollywood legend Shirley Maclaine. “That’s a good one, right?” she said, adding that Maclaine’s film classics “The Apartment” and “Terms of Endearment” are two of her favorite movies of all time. “I think Jeremy Renner has got a nice thing going right now,” Bateman said of “The Avengers” and “Hurt Locker” actor. “Joaquin Phoenix is working with Paul Thomas Anderson then Spike Jones, not too shabby,” he added, seemingly torn between the two. “Ryan, top that.” “Wow. You just nailed it, man,” Reynolds admitted. “I’d take Quentin Tarantino, that guy makes some fantastic films.” “That’s a good one,” Bateman said. “Can I change mine?” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Change-Up.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos ‘The Change-Up’ Premiere

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‘Change-Up’ Stars Jason Bateman, Ryan Reynolds Ponder Career Swaps