Tag Archives: oliver-stone

Scarface Limited Edition Blu-Ray Will Cost $999.99; Cocaine Not Included

If you’ve been wanting to prove your masculinity by dropping $999.99 on Scarface , you’re in luck: As of Sept. 6, Universal Studios Home Entertainment is releasing a limited edition package of the film for nearly $1,000 which includes everything except a real-life Cuban drug lord and a pile of cocaine big enough to correct your inferiority complex.

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Scarface Limited Edition Blu-Ray Will Cost $999.99; Cocaine Not Included

Cops Raid Waka Flocka’s House, Gucci Mane Cuffed

Filed under: Gucci Mane , Waka Flocka Flame TMZ has learned … a gaggle of cops raided rapper Waka Flocka Flame ‘s Georgia home this AM on suspicion of prostitution — and Waka’s mom tells us, fellow rapper Gucci Mane is in cuffs. Law enforcement sources in Henry County tell TMZ, cops are… Read more

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Cops Raid Waka Flocka’s House, Gucci Mane Cuffed

Mel Gibson Doesn’t Make Anti-Semitic Cut of 2010!

Filed under: Mel Gibson , Helen Thomas , Oliver Stone Mel Gibson has just been snubbed by the premier Jewish organization in America — he’s nowhere to be found on the 10 most anti-Semitic list. The Simon Wiesenthal Center just released its “2010 Top Ten Anti-Semitic Slurs” list: Topping this year’s list… Read more

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Mel Gibson Doesn’t Make Anti-Semitic Cut of 2010!

Matthews: Businesses Sitting on Trillions of Dollars to ‘Screw’ Economy and Obama

Chris Matthews thinks American businesses are refusing to spend money in order to intentionally harm the economy as part of a long-term plot to “screw” President Obama. Such political paranoia was actually uttered on Monday’s “Hardball” as the host chatted with Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post and Charles Mahtesian of Politico. Readers are strongly advised to prepare themselves for the kind of conspiracy theory normally reserved for the likes of Michael Moore, Oliver Stone, and members of the far-left who actually believe George W. Bush and Dick Cheney had a hand in the 9/11 attacks (video follows with partial transcript and commentary):  CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: You know, a great question, Charles, that wasn’t on my list to ask but I’m going to ask you because you seem like a sophisticated guy of many parts. You think business can sit on those billions and trillions of dollars for two more years after they screw Obama this time? Are they going to keep sitting on their money so they don’t invest and help the economy for two long years to get Mr. Excitement Mitt Romney elected president? Will they do that to the country? Yeah, Chris, business owners and corporate executives across the fruited plain are intentionally undermining their companies and their personal fortunes in order to impact an election that is 25 months away. Certainly, they’re not keeping stockpiles of cash out of fear of: rising taxes, increased healthcare costs, the creation of carbon emissions targets, a double-dip recession, or the next regulatory shoe to drop from the current administration. No. They’re just remaining uncharacteristically liquid to harm the man that gives you a thrill up your leg.  Now that we’ve settled that Mr. Matthews, could I interest you in some waterfront property in southern Florida? 

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Matthews: Businesses Sitting on Trillions of Dollars to ‘Screw’ Economy and Obama

Buzz Break: Lost’s Hurley Leaves the Island to Sing with Weezer

Brett Ratner or Oliver Stone: Who’d Courtney Love Rather?

It’s lunchtime on the East Coast, and I don’t know about you, but I’m starving. Want half of my auteur sandwich — stacked high, sloppy and tall with lady meat Courtney Love? It’s delicious! Click through and dig into Love’s touchy-feely exploits from last night’s Wall Street 2 premiere and last week’s You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger debut in NYC.

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Brett Ratner or Oliver Stone: Who’d Courtney Love Rather?

Who Should Direct the Just-Announced Ronald Reagan Biopic?

Hollywood is giving Ronald Reagan’s life the big-screen treatment with a just-announced film based on not one, but two biographies of the former president. No director has yet to be signed, but if this take is really going to depart from the 2003 mini-series The Reagans we need to think outside the box. And so, I propose five directors to take on The Gipper’s life after the jump.

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Who Should Direct the Just-Announced Ronald Reagan Biopic?

After ‘Inception,’ What’s Next For Leonardo DiCaprio?

With two 2010 box office hits to his credit, the in-demand actor has his pick of pictures from helmers like Oliver Stone and Ridley Scott. By Eric Ditzian Leonardo DiCaprio at the “Inception” premiere Photo: Robyn Beck/ Getty Images The 2010 box office has been very kind to Leonardo DiCaprio. In February, “Shutter Island” delivered his biggest opening to date, with $41 million in ticket sales, and went on to gross $128 million domestically. This past weekend, “Inception” performed even better , grossing $60.4 million, likely setting itself up to rake in even more dough in coming weeks. Where does the 35-year-old actor, now clearly at the top of his Hollywood game, go from here? He’s got a slew of projects lined up, all in various states of development. Let’s take a look at some of his most high-profile potential films and see how Leo’s cinematic future might shake out.

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After ‘Inception,’ What’s Next For Leonardo DiCaprio?

Oliver Stone Lauds Hugo Chavez, Criticizes Action Against Iran on ABC’s GMA

Liberal director Oliver Stone revealed his anti-American bent on Monday’s Good Morning America, praising the rise of mainly left-wing leaders across South America and even went so far to support Brazilian President Lula da Silva for “trying to strike to deal with Iran,” wildly predicting ” it’s going to be like North Vietnam again ” if the U.S. pursued sanctions against the country. Anchor George Stephanopoulos interviewed the Oscar-winning director 44 minutes into the 8 am Eastern hour. Stephanopoulos referenced how Stone has “tackled war, Wall Street, and the Kennedy assassination” and is now “taking on South America. He says our neighbors to the south haven’t gotten a fair shake from the American media, and, armed with a camera, he’s set out on a road trip to try to change that.” Before asking about Chavez, Stephanopoulos played a clip from Stone’s documentary “South of the Border,” which included a sound bite from CNN’s John Roberts that gave the impression that the anchor was condemning the Venezuelan leader: “He’s more dangerous than Bin Laden, and the effects of Chavez, his war against America, could eclipse those of 9/11.” Actually, Roberts, in the January 15, 2009 segment from his American Morning program, actually was reading a quote from a book by his guest, Doug Schoen: “Right off the bat, in the very front of the book, you quote Otto Reich, who was the former ambassador to Venezuela back in the 1980s, as saying that he’s more dangerous than bin Laden and the effects of Chavez, his war against America could eclipse those of 9/11.” Earlier, the ABC anchor asked, “Why take this on?” The director characterized the left-wing trend in leaders in South America as a “march towards reform” and praised these favorite leaders on the continent without naming them: STONE: They have democratically-elected leaders who look like the people who elected them. They have a priest in Paraguay. They have a woman in Argentina. They have an Indian leader- the first Indian- in Bolivia. They have an economist in Ecuador and they have a soldier who’s poor- comes from a poor family- who was elected three times in Venezuela- that’s Hugo Chavez. These are good people. When you look in their eyes, you see it, and you see it on film. That’s why you have to do a  film because on paper, it sometimes it didn’t come across, you know? The leader of Paraguay, Fernando Lugo, is actually a former Catholic bishop who admitted that he fathered a child with a woman in her 20s when he was still a bishop. Lugo led a mainly left-wing coalition into office when he was elected in 2008. Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, nationalized $30 billion in private pension funds late in 2008. Bolivian President Evo Morales and Ecuador’s executive, Rafael Correa , are both avowed socialists. The ABC anchor later pressed the director on his endorsement of his Venezuelan “soldier:” STEPHANOPOULOS (live): Do you believe Hugo Chavez is a good person? STONE: Yes, I do- absolutely . STEPHANOPOULOS: But even the United Nations has said that Hugo Chavez has not been a paragon of free speech- his crackdown on the media in his own country. STONE: I have not seen that report. I know that- you know, there’s no pattern of censorship in this country . I’ve been there. So, you can see it. You can go down to South America, spend three days, and you’ll see the most vibrant opposition in the world . STEPHANOPOULOS: One of the reasons the United States has put a lot of pressure on Chavez is over oil, you believe, and there was particular opposition from the Bush administration. How do you think the relationship may change, now that President Obama is in office? STONE: Well, I hope it changes because America seems to want to control every oil-producing nation in the world, whether it’s Iraq or Iran or Venezuela. Since Stone named Iran, Stephanopoulos mentioned how “the president of Brazil [is] trying to strike a deal with Iran, counter to what the Obama administration is looking for.” The director replied that this move as a ” good thing .” When the anchor asked why, Stone made his “North Vietnam” comparison: STONE: Because- well, the march to sanctions in Iran. We want sanctions. We want- it seems to me, once they start intercepting their ships, we’re going to be in a- it’s going to be like North Vietnam again. We’re going to get into a position where we’re going to get closer to war. There’s no reason for to us go to war in Iran, any more than there was a reason to go in Iraq – STEPHANOPOULOS: Even if they want to build a nuclear weapon? STONE: Hmm? STEPHANOPOULOS: Even if they want to build a nuclear weapon? STONE: I think that has to be discussed. So the Oscar winner not only acted as a left-wing apologist but also vouched for inaction against a nation who has nuclear ambitions and has made threats against its neighbors. Stephanopoulos and Stone concluded by briefly discussing how the director was also releasing a sequel to his acclaimed 1987 movie, “Wall Street.” After thanking his guest, the ABC anchor noted that “‘South of the Border’ is open in New York now” as a title graphic for the movie flashed on screen. But, in a parallel to Stone’s edit of Roberts, the graphic that ABC used for the movie was actually cropped from its movie poster which emulated left-wing propaganda art . Eagle’s talons represented United States’s power in South America on the poster, which were mounted on top of South America which was appropriately painted red.

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Oliver Stone Lauds Hugo Chavez, Criticizes Action Against Iran on ABC’s GMA

NYT Movie Critic: Venezuelan Dictator Hugo Chavez a ‘Good-Hearted Man of the People’

Stephen Holden, the New York Times’s most left-wing movie critic (and that’s saying something) admires Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez almost as much as left-wing conspiracist/movie director Oliver Stone does. Stone’s new documentary, ” South of the Border ,” features informal interview sessions with several left-wing Latin American leaders, but the screen-time is dominated by Chavez, who Holden holds up as a humorous, ” good-hearted man of the people .” Political documentaries shadowed by paranoia and apocalyptic foreboding are so commonplace nowadays that “South of the Border,” Oliver Stone’s celebration of the leftward tilt of South American politics, comes as a cheerful surprise . As anyone who remembers “JFK,” his 1991 film about the Kennedy assassination, can attest, Mr. Stone has his own paranoid tendencies, but they are muted in this provocative, if shallow, exaltation of Latin American socialism. During “South of the Border” Mr. Stone schmoozes with several left-wing political leaders, including his good buddy the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez; he takes Mr. Stone to his childhood home, where Mr. Chávez mounts a children’s bike that collapses under him. Mr. Chávez comes across as a rough-hewn but good-hearted man of the people whose bullheaded determination is softened by a sense of humor . At a corn-processing factory, he jokes: “This is where we build the Iranian atomic bomb. A corn bomb.” Ho, ho, ho. Such “humor” is especially hilarious given that, as Forbes reports, Venezuela under Chavez harbors terrorists and weapons from the anti-Israel groups Hezbollah and Hamas via Tehran. Mr. Stone’s visit with Mr. Chávez is the movie’s longest interview with a Latin American statesman during what feels like a whirlwind tour of South American capitals. Instead of the saber-rattling, America-hating tyrants often depicted on American television (especially Fox News, several of whose extreme fulminations are excerpted for comic effect) , Mr. Stone finds sensible, plain-spoken men (and one woman, Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner). They are well aware of how power works in the global arena. Those who have it use it for their own advantage; it’s the way of the world. The two demonic influences named in the movie are the American-controlled International Monetary Fund and the “private media.” Mrs. Kirchner recalls resisting pressure to keep borrowing from the fund rather than pay back what was owed. Mr. Chávez repeatedly triumphs despite the almost unanimous hostility of Venezuela’s privately owned media. Holden brought up the anti-Chavez hostility of the “private” media without reporting that earlier this year Chavez arrested the owner of the independent TV network Globovision for “comments offensive” to Chavez. Holden left Chavez criticism to a single sentence: There are no serious interviews with the poor to determine how everyday lives have changed under these socialist governments, and there is no mention of the human rights abuses in Venezuela reported by Amnesty International. Holden left out plenty. Chavez arrested Judge María Lourdes Afiuni for a ruling that displeased him (she had freed a businessman who had supported opposition politicians), as the Times itself reported on April 4, ” Criticism of Chavez Stifled by Arrests .” Reporter Simon Romero added: Twenty to 30 Venezuelans, including Judge Afiuni, are now imprisoned here because of their political activity or for reasons connected to publicly contradicting Mr. Chávez’s wishes, said Rocío San Miguel, a legal scholar here who leads a nongovernmental group that monitors Venezuelan security. Holden argued that “South of the Border” “is a valuable, if naïvely idealistic, introductory tutorial on a significant international trend.”  Ever the socialist idealist , Holden concluded: “It ultimately proffers the vision of a pan-South American union that is economically and politically strong enough to realize the Bolivarian dream.”

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NYT Movie Critic: Venezuelan Dictator Hugo Chavez a ‘Good-Hearted Man of the People’