Meaghan Garvey on The Divine Feminine
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Love And Happiness: Mac Miller Opens His Heart
Meaghan Garvey on The Divine Feminine
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Love And Happiness: Mac Miller Opens His Heart
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Music
Tagged appearance, bennyhollywood, break, celeb news, details, divine, his-appearance, Hollywood, massacre, Music, music-news, spring-break, stars, TMZ
Pauly D is hitting the big screen thanks to his appearance in ‘Spring Break Zombie Massacre’ — get the details!
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Pauly D Is Battling Zombies In Epic New Horror Flick
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Music
Tagged appearance, break, celeb news, details, his-appearance, hitting-the-big, Hollywood, massacre, music-news, show, spring-break
The Side Eye: Presidential Candidate Jeb Bush on Gun Violence “Stuff Happens” You’d think a presidential candidate would be a little more careful with his words, but not Republican candidate Jeb Bush. As he spoke on the deadly shooting in Oregon that killed 9 people and wounding 7 others, he described the tragic incident as “heartbreaking”. Just there after though, he made a jaw dropping comment, minimizing gun violence to “stuff happens…” He adds, “theres always a crisis and the impulse is always to do something and it’s not always the right thing to do” — in regards resorting to more strict gun laws. Considering gun violence is a common occurrence you’d think he’d find it a topic of importance but apparently not. Will you be voting for Mr. Bush?? Watch the clip from CNN and decide for yourself.
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Gun Violence, No Problem: Jeb Bush On Oregon Massacre “Stuff Happens”
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The Confederate flag has long been known as a symbol of hatred and racism in the United States. Defenders of the historically prejudice mindset that…
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged #removetheflag, black-church, cutest, historic, Hollywood, massacre, national, News, south-carolina, stars, terrence howad, TMZ
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The Confederate flag has long been known as a symbol of hatred and racism in the United States. Defenders of the historically prejudice mindset that…
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged confederate, emmanuel ame, hatred, historically, massacre, prejudice, prejudice-mindset, racism
Demi Lovato has come out with a special new single. Almost two weeks after 26 individuals lost their lives at the hands of Adam Lanza , The X Factor judge has dedicated a version of “Angels Among Us” to those affected by the massacre. Demi Lovato – “Angels Among Us” “We can never imagine what the families in Newtown, CT are experiencing right now,” the video says in its opening. “And while there is nothing we can do to replace their loss, we can stand together and support them during this difficult time. This song is in honor of those angels we lost on December 14.” It’s a beautiful gesture, a lot more uplifting than Jesse James’ gun rant . Thank you, Demi, for striking the perfect note with this song.

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Demi Lovato Dedicates Song to Newtown Shooting Victims
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip
Tagged celeb news, confirm-the-big, janet, lovato, massacre, moon, perfect, replace-their, song
The great Fifth Generation filmmaker Zhang Yimou has gone from having films like Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern banned in his homeland of China to directing the lavish opening and closing ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics, his more recent work taking place in the safer territory of the grandiose historical melodrama of Curse of the Golden Flower and the Nicholas Sparks-worthy sentimentality of Under the Hawthorn Tree . Zhang has insisted that he’s not interested in politics, a tack that certainly seems to have its benefits: With an estimated budget of around $90 million, The Flowers of War is one of the most, if not the most, expensive Chinese production to date, it stars Christian Bale and it’s China’s Oscar submission. But that doesn’t mean that Zhang’s latest output should be dismissed offhand as nationalist propaganda. That the accusation’s been tossed at The Flowers of War , a big, button-pushing, brutally effective World War II-era drama, may be due to unfamiliarity with the atrocity during which it’s set — the Nanjing Massacre, during which hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed and tens of thousands raped by Japanese soldiers after the capturing of the city in December of 1937. It’s a horrific incident that remains relatively unexplored in popular culture, though Iris Chang’s bestselling book The Rape of Nanking , Bill Guttentag and Dan Sturman’s 2007 documentary Nanking , and Lu Chuan’s excellent City of Life and Death , which played in a few U.S. theaters last year, have brought it recent attention. Given that the massacre remains a painful point in China-Japan relations, and that certain far-right Japanese ultranationalists (like Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara) like to claim the massacre never took place and was invented to tarnish the image of Japan, it’s surprising that the Japanese soldiers don’t come off even less one-dimensional in Zhang’s film. The Flowers of War starts off with less context than I’ve given above, offering up a title card about “an especially dark chapter in human history” before dropping right into a destroyed Nanjing through which a scattering of schoolgirls runs, looking for shelter. Also scurrying through the wreckage and the piles of bodies is John Miller (Bale), an American mortician hired to bury the head of the local Catholic cathedral. While the ragged remains of the Chinese forces, led by Major Li (Tong Dawei), exchange fire with the Japanese troops, John discovers to his dismay that only students remain at the church — a group of adolescent convent girls and George (Huang Tianyuan), the orphan boy trying to serve as their caretaker. Finding no money for his fee, John settles into the late Father Engleman’s quarters to get trashed on Communion wine when a group of prostitutes arrives at the gates, having been promised sanctuary by the church’s cook, long since fled. Bale’s presence in the film is a kind of misdirect, a calculated element intended to better its international commercial prospects — his character makes a clumsily predictable journey from cynical drunken expat to hero willing to sacrifice a chance to escape the country in order to care for the children who’ve ended up in his charge. It’s the relationship between the famous “women of the Qinhuai River” and the frightened, sheltered girls that’s the stealthy heart of the film, the prostitutes sauntering in like brightly plumed birds and taking over the basement despite the protests of the cathedral’s scandalized remaining inhabitants, settling in to gamble and gossip. Yu Mo (Zhang discovery Ni Ni), the “top girl,” sets out to seduce John, knowing that as a Westerner he’ll be spared by the invading troops and might be able to help them escape. Meanwhile, the girls’ experience is filtered through Shujuan (Zhang Xinyi), who refused to leave the city without her schoolmates, and whose father (Cao Kefan) is now working for the Japanese in order to stay nearby. Despite the church’s supposedly being protected, Japanese soldiers break down the door (“We’re got virgins!” one yells), and it’s only due to the intervention of Major Li, hiding nearby, that the girls are spared gang rape and that only two are left dead. The Flowers of War never errs on the side of the overly nuanced — a soaring chorus accompanies moments of grace, and beyond a setup based on the looming threat of sexual violence to 12-year-old girls, the film features multiple characters sacrificing themselves to protect the youngsters, from Major Li, who fends off a platoon singlehandedly in an over-the-top but masterfully shot action sequence, to John, in his trek toward redemption, to the prostitutes, who end up offering themselves in the place of the children. A particularly harsh digression in which two of the latter travel back to their brothel to retrieve precious items they left there seems included only to reinforce the terrible fate awaiting any women who fall into the hands of the Japanese soldiers. Colonel Hasegawa (Atsuro Watabe), is the lone Japanese officer who’s not portrayed as a complete savage, though he’s still bound to follow orders, no matter how distasteful. But while it’s as blunt as any typical big-budget war epic would be, the film finds plenty of moments in which Zhang’s skill as a filmmaker and his deft handling and interest in female characters shines, from the way Shujuan serves as a far-too-young witness to these horrors, the camera often closing in on her gaze through a fracture in the cathedral’s rose window, to a sequence in which John cuts the prostitutes’ hair as they sleep (he knows how to work on people only when they’re lying down), so that they rise fresh-faced, with schoolgirl bobs. The enchantment with which the film views the Qinhuai ladies goes beyond any simple hookers-with-hearts-of-gold conceit — an imagined moment in which they sing while strolling through the church finds in them a magic that circumvents the victimization of their circumstances, a vision of lost decadence amidst the devastation. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
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REVIEW: Christian Bale May Be the Star, But Zhang Yimou Puts Women at Heart of Flowers of War
Vote for the best and scariest movie murderer in our Killer Halloween matchup. By Kara Warner Leatherface in “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” Photo: Vortex MTV’s Killer Halloween continues! We’re on a mission to find out who the best and scariest movie murderer is based on your votes, and we’re ranking these ghastly guys on their most deadly attributes. We’ve got matchups between Freddy Krueger and Ghostface, Jason and Leatherface. Check out our latest killer profile, for “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” crazy man Leatherface, and be sure to visit us every day this week to see the latest matchups! Name : Leatherface Occupation : Taxidermist, cannibal, serial killer Weapons : Chainsaw, meat hooks, butcher’s hammer, family baggage Archenemy : Sanity, vegetarians, syphilis (the reason Leatherface doesn’t have a nose) Profile : What’s not to love about a killer who wields a chainsaw and wears a mask made of human skin? Not to mention that bloody butcher’s apron — it is a killer getup, pun intended. Leatherface made his terrifying debut in 1974’s beloved slasher classic “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” The backwoods cannibal’s gruesome appeal is enhanced by the involvement of his totally twisted, psychotic, inbred family members, who own and operate the Last Chance gas station and use it to find new victims to torture, kill … and barbecue. Horror movie expert Brian Collins of Horror Movie a Day attributes Leatherface’s appeal to his simplicity and consistency. “They never really screwed him up like the other guys. Freddy [Krueger] turned into a cartoon, Michael [Myers] was ret-conned into a henchman for some druid cult, but Leatherface was always just a simple cannibal with a chainsaw and a mask made of human skin,” Collins told MTV News. “He always had a group of other killers to play off of, making him a little more three-dimensional than the others who worked alone.” Leatherface and his family, along with their creepy cannibalistic ways, were featured in several other films following the original: “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2,” “Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III,” “Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation,” the 2003 Michael Bay-produced remake, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” and a 2006 prequel, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning.” Their appalling adventures also inspired several comic books: 1991’s four-issue series, “Leatherface,” 1995’s three-issue “Jason vs. Leatherface,” and one-off special issues like “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Special” and “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Cut!” “Leatherface is up there with Freddy, Jason and Michael as far as the die-hard horror fans are concerned,” Collins said of the chainsaw wielder’s place among favorite horror movie killers, adding that the hankering for human flesh and hacking through it is an unforgettable combo, even if he isn’t as mainstream as the likes of Freddy and Jason. “I don’t think he’s as iconic to the casual moviegoer as the others, since there haven’t been as many movies,” he said. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos Killer Halloween: Greatest On-Screen Villains

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Leatherface Makes The Cut For MTV’s Killer Halloween
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Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, Family, halloween, Hollywood, massacre, Mtv, music-news, News, Photos, show, stars, update
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Trey Songz has been romancing the ladies since 2005 and the sexy singer has been hard at work since! With no major break since “Invented Sex” Trigga Trey doesn’t plan on stopping. The title of his fifth album is “Chapter 5.” Rap-Up.com reports that the album will be dropped next year instead of 2011. Trey Songz Covers Drake’s “Headlines” Trey Songz To Star In Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged dropped-next, hard-at-work, invalid, ladies-since, massacre, News, texas, TMZ, trey-songz, year-instead
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J. Cole taps Trey Songz for a collaboration on “Can’t Get Enough.” It is not certain if the track will be on J. Cole’s Cole World: The Sideline Story album but he did speak with VIBE magazine about the Trey Songz collaboration. Check out the audio below. Recent Post: Wale ft. J. Cole “Bad Girls Club” [NEW MUSIC] Trey Songz To Star In Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged audio, context, detected, girls-club, j.cole, massacre, missing, Music, national, sideline-story, songz, texas-chainsaw, trey-songz