Tag Archives: New Movie

Trial Begins In Detroit Police Officer Shooting Death Of Lil Aiyana Stanley-Jones [Video]

wxyztvdetroit youtube Continue reading

“The Narcissist”: Theme Music From Movie Let Me Explain With Kevin Hart [Video]

youtube Continue reading

Struggle or Swag?: Snoop Dogg Makes Whacked Out Cameo On WHAT Soap Opera? [Video]

View original post here:
Struggle or Swag?: Snoop Dogg Makes Whacked Out Cameo On WHAT Soap Opera? [Video]

Family Matters: Will And Jaden Smith Cover New York Magazine, Talk Thoughts On Kardashian-Style Fame Sloring, “Family Secrets”, And After Earth Flick [Photos]

The Fresh Prince and his skinny-jeaned seed talk all things Smith-related Will And Jaden Smith Cover The New Issue Of New York Magazine Via Vulture Will Smith came up with the story for M. Night Shyamalan’s postapocalyptic drama After Earth, which opens May 31, while watching his son Jaden, 14, film The Karate Kid in China. The premise: A father is a best-in-class soldier who crash-lands with his son on a hostile planet Earth a thousand years in the future. The father, wounded, must watch from the sidelines as the son navigates treacherous terrain and fights terrible creatures in order to escape. The parallels to their adventures in Hollywood, Will says, are obvious. The father-son duo covered a lot of ground during the interview, check out some of the excerpt below. Okay. Who would you say is the biggest star in your family? Will and Jaden: [in unison] Willow! (Willow is Jaden’s 12-year-old sister.) Jaden: She just knows who she is, so she just is. Will: She has a magic power in the family. She absolutely demands the most attention, and there’s ­something really incendiary about a 12-year-old girl who says and does what she wants. “Incendiary” is one way to put it, some would call it piss-poor parenting. Hit the flipper to read more of Will and Jaden had to say in their interview.

Originally posted here:
Family Matters: Will And Jaden Smith Cover New York Magazine, Talk Thoughts On Kardashian-Style Fame Sloring, “Family Secrets”, And After Earth Flick [Photos]

‘Aftershock’ Red-Band Trailer: A Body Count

The deaths keep coming in the red-band trailer for Eli Roth ‘s earthquake gorefest Aftershock . I count seven distinct deaths in this clip, which is just shy of two minutes, but with all the lootin’ and a stabbin’ going on in the background,  I’m  clearly being conservative. Roth gets to preside over his own frightfest, too. He’s front and center in this video as Gringo, a sensitive-sounding guy who just wants to meet a nice girl at an underground Chilean disco. Alas, as the old Nazareth song goes, ” Love Hurts .”  Here’s my tally of the grisly deaths (and one amputation) that take place in the trailer. I left out the very last scene because, no matter how bad things look, it’s no fait accompli. *Death by nightclub speaker *Death by cement pillar *Amputation by falling shelving unit *Death by immolation *Death by falling concrete slab *Death by Ax *Decapitation by  speeding truck Can anyone out there tell me whether that large crucifix that falls over in the movie has an actual human body nailed to it?  I’ve paused it a few times, and I think it’s just a life-size facsimile of Jesus, but I’m not entirely sure.  That would up the body count to eight. If The Earthquake Doesn’t Kill You… Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter.

See the rest here:
‘Aftershock’ Red-Band Trailer: A Body Count

TRIBECA: Clint Eastwood Tells Darren Aronofsky It Would Be ‘Great’ To Be A 100 Year-Old Filmmaker

“I met you once for a handshake and I was terrified,”  Darren Aronofsky  told Clint Eastwood during their Tribeca Talks Directors Series discussion on Saturday. “I’m still a little terrified.” The two men chatted (fittingly, in directors’ chairs) following the Tribeca Film Festival premiere of Eastwood Directs: The Untold Story , a 60-minute documentary about the actor-turned-filmmaker’s career behind the camera. Although the 82-year-old Eastwood is almost double the age of Aronofsky, it was The Wrestler director who walked with a cane. He lowered himself into his seat while Eastwood gestured to the applauding crowd and, with a smile on his face, told them to “knock it off.” The man who once played Dirty Harry  kept up the charm offensive throughout the conversation and didn’t address any empty chairs. The Academy Award-winning director and Academy Award-nominated one discussed a number of topics, including directing children, working with actors, working with digital cameras and sustaining a passion for filmmaking. On that last subject, Eastwood said, “I don’t think you ever lose it.” He then referenced 104-year-old Portuguese director and screenwriter Manoel Cândido Pinto de Oliveira . ( The Strange Case of Angelica ). “That’s always everybody’s dream,” Eastwood said. “Wouldn’t it be great to be 105 and still be making films?” He dubbed this hope “the ultimate optimism.” More wisdom and anecdotes from Eastwood include: “You have to fight for what you want, for what you believe in.” “A director has to be the most malleable person on set.” “Directing is having your hands on everything. It’s the ultimate power trip.” “If [filmmaking] was that painful, I’d consider myself somewhat of a masochist.” When Aronofsky asked Eastwood the first thing he does upon arriving at a new set or location, the movie-making veteran replied, “I was thinking of throwing up . For some reason that came into my mind. We won’t print that.” Too late. For more from Eastwood and Aronofsky, check out their discussion in its entirety below: More on Clint Eastwood:  Clint Eastwood Sounds Like High Plains Grifter At Republican Convention WATCH:  Harold & Kumar ‘s Kal Penn Kicks Clint Eastwood’s Ass at Democratic Convention 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.

More:
TRIBECA: Clint Eastwood Tells Darren Aronofsky It Would Be ‘Great’ To Be A 100 Year-Old Filmmaker

TRIBECA REVIEW: ‘Mistaken For Strangers’ − Sibling Rivalry Plays Out On The National’s Stage

Mistaken for Strangers , a documentary about indie group the National , comes off like an exercise in self-deprecation. As much a diary film as a rockumentary, it almost compulsively veers away from its ostensible subject, the band’s world tour, probing the relationship between lead singer Matt Berninger and his kid brother Tom (who helmed the film) as though worrying a sore tooth.  It remains ambiguous to what extent the director’s screen persona, which raises schlubbiness to an art form, is legit.  But with its wry humor and fantastic mix of music and images, this seemingly odd choice for Tribeca’s opening-nighter could carve out a solid theatrical niche.   Tom has been invited by Matt to join the National’s world tour as a working roadie. The documentary, shot solo on a small camera, is apparently strictly Tom’s idea. A veteran of a couple of schlock horror videos, Tom portrays himself as being woefully unprepared for the job, plunging in, to Matt’s dismay, with no prepared questions, no organization and not even a notebook as he asks hilariously lame questions like, “Do you ever get sleepy onstage?” or “Where do you see the National in 50 years?” About three-quarters of the way through, Tom finally manages to ask, albeit briefly, about the process of songwriting, and Matt speaks fleetingly of the difficulty of early tours, when nobody showed up.  But generally few subjects of substance arise – aside, of course, from the deathless Matt/Tom dynamic. “It sucks being Matt’s brother,” the director says. “He’s a rock star and I am not.” A darling of critics, the National only really achieved commercial success shortly before the featured tour, during which they play to President Obama in Washington and thousands in Paris, London and Warsaw.  Though granted little opportunity to discuss its music, the band is given ample room to perform it, and Matt’s penchant for physically interacting with concert-goers, writhing onstage and screaming into the mic lends the live shows plenty of drama.  Meanwhile, Tom quietly proves himself a whiz at sound/image counterpoint. But when not documenting concerts and occasional rehearsals, the film reverts back to the misadventures of Tom as he screws up his “other” job as assistant to the road manager. This gives the director the chance to crosscut between the band’s triumphant road trip and his own eventual, ignominious return to his parents’ Cincinnati home, where he plies Mom and Dad with anxious queries comparing himself to his brother. Ensconced in Matt’s Brooklyn home six months later, Tom begins to edit the docu, with chaotic results that nearly threaten to derail the film en route to its upbeat finish. More on Mistaken For Strangers :  WATCH: Tribeca Film Festival Rocks Out On Opening Night With The National & ‘Mistaken For Strangers’ Follow Movieline on  Twitter . 

Read more:
TRIBECA REVIEW: ‘Mistaken For Strangers’ − Sibling Rivalry Plays Out On The National’s Stage

INTERVIEW: Rob Zombie Says ‘The Lords of Salem’ Is ‘Pretty Out There’ But ‘The Walking Dead’ Is Not

What horror fan doesn’t watch  The Walking Dead ?  Musician and filmmaker Rob Zombie jokes it’s because he needs to catch up on  Cheers first, but the reality is he’s a horror purist who takes the genre very seriously.  That dedication led to Bob Weinstein handpicking him to relaunch the  Halloween   franchise back in 2007, and  Paranormal Activity   and  Insidious  producers Jason Blum and Oren Peli seeking out Zombie to direct an original horror flick. They certainly got one in The Lords of Salem . Blum and Peli gave Zombie complete creative control over the feature, and he marvels at what that freedom allowed him to accomplish.  “I remember the first time I watched this movie with an audience.  The whole last chunk of the movie I was like ‘Wow. This really could only be made without studio meddling,” Zombie told me, adding: “‘ Cause it’s pretty out there .” How out there?  Zombie said friends have told him “Man, it’s weird.  No, it’s weirder than that…No, it’s still weirder than that!” But Zombie says he doesn’t worry about his work being accepted by the mainstream.  “I really just do what I like,” he explained. “I don’t understand what the general public likes sometimes.” In fact, Zombie feels there’s only two things you can count on with universal appeal: Coca-Cola and the Beatles . Check out my full in-depth interview below: More on The Lords of Salem :  WATCH: Rob Zombie’s ‘The Lords Of Salem’ Trailer Looks Like A Crust-Punk ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ WATCH: ‘The Lords of Salem’ Video − Rob Zombie Channels Rodgers & Hammerstein

‘Only God Forgives’ − The Top 5 Bad-Ass Moments From The New International Trailers

Two new international trailers have dropped for Only God Forgives ,   Drive director Nicolas Winding Refn’s  next film with Ryan Gosling , and they’re sinewy, tense numbers that do an effective job of ratcheting up anticipation for the picture. Audiences at the Cannes Film Festival will get to see the movie on May 22, while U.S. moviegoers will have to wait until July 19.  The two trailers below aren’t that much different.  Both employ a lightning-fast cutting pace that left me unsettled and disoriented, which, I suspect, is exactly what an American would feel while seeking to avenge his brother’s death in murky Bangkok. If I have to choose a favorite, I prefer the first, French trailer because, like rare steak and a good Bordeaux,  brutal cinematic violence pairs nicely with French subtitles, The second clip is a little less frenetic and drops a clue as to why Gosling’s brother  (Tom Burke) met with a grim end. ( If you aren’t familiar with the plot of Only God Forgives , you can read about it here . ) Taken together, the trailers add up to a handful of key moments, some of which were established in the red-band trailer that dropped earlier this month . Here are the five most bad-ass moments from the trailers (in ascending order). If you disagree, leave your list in the comments section below. 5. Vithaya Pangsringarm plunging knives through the forearms of a bearded guy and making him scream. Really loud. 4. Ryan Gosling smashing a drink glass into a guy’s face . Colossal velocity! 3. Gosling dragging a guy by the roof of his mouth . That cannot end well. 2. Gosling saying: “Wanna Fight?” in the French trailer. (Because it’s subtitled.) 1. Kristin Scott Thomas , who play Gosling’s mother, telling him:  “If the tables were turned, your brother would have found your killer — brought me his head on a fucking platter!   I can’t wait to find out what Daddy was like. More on Only God Forgives :  ‘Only God Forgives’ Red Band Trailer: The Zen Of Ryan Ryan Gosling Don’t Look So Pretty In ‘Drive’ Director Winding Refn’s ‘Only God Forgives’ Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter. 

See the article here:
‘Only God Forgives’ − The Top 5 Bad-Ass Moments From The New International Trailers

Robert Downey Jr. Confirms He’s The $50-Million ‘Iron Man’ − And Loving It

In March, I wrote about how Robert Downey Jr. is about as close to indispensable as you can get to Marvel Studios ‘ lucrative superhero movie franchise — and now here’s proof from the man himself. In a very entertaining profile of the Iron Man 3 star in the May issue of GQ , Downey confirms to writer Chris Heath that his payday on The Avengers  was in the $50-million ballpark. The exchange between the actor and the writer is a thing of beauty:  $50-Million Iron Man “Whatever contract Downey signed when he agreed to appear in multiple movies as Iron Man allowed him a share of The Avengers’ payday far bigger than anyone could have anticipated. The Hollywood Reporter recently suggested that the true figure was around $50 million . It’s not the kind of thing most actors are prepared to talk about, but I ask Downey anyway. “Yeah,” he says, smiling. Is that number about right? “Yeah.” A broader smile. That’s amazing. “Isn’t that crazy?” he says. “They’re so pissed. I can’t believe it. I’m what’s known as ‘a strategic cost.’ ” Strategic cost! I bet that term was invented by the Nathan Thurm -like lawyer or public-relations consultant who came up with the term “collateral damage.”  In other words, Downey is so valuable to Marvel that it’s better to swallow hard and open up the Disney coffers rather than attempt to hardball him into accepting to a less-than-mindblowing figure. In other words, Disney is not going to risk losing him. One of the Best Why does that make me smile? It’s partly because Downey is one of the great Hollywood comeback stories of all time, and I want to see that narrative arc continue trending upward. But I wouldn’t care so much about his personal story if he weren’t so damn compelling on screen. He knows it, too. Downey says he’ll be ” shocked ” (italics, courtesy of GQ ) if he doesn’t win at least one Oscar during his career and comparing himself to the current generation actors, he tells the magazine:  “I’m probably one of the best. …But it’s not that big a deal. It’s not like this is the greatest swath or generation of actors that has ever come down the pike.” I don’t find that cocky. I find it authentic and true. Besides, as Downey also points out: “Nothing pleases me more than when somebody who was awe-inspired to be working with me realizes I’m just another schmuck that they’re bored of hanging out with on a set. I love that moment. I like it when that persistent illusion is smashed.” Okay, well, he’s probably being modest there. More on Robert Downey Jr.: Which ‘Avengers’ Cast Members Are Most Expendable? [ GQ ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter.  

Follow this link:
Robert Downey Jr. Confirms He’s The $50-Million ‘Iron Man’ − And Loving It