It looks like Jamie Foxx may join the second round of The Amazing Spider-Man , joining Andrew Garfield and director Marc Webb . Variety reports the Django Unchained star is in early talks to play Electro in the follow-up set for 2014. The character is a Spider-Man nemesis who acquires the ability to control electricity after he’s struck by lightning. The character first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #9 back in 1964. Lightning figures prominently in a post-credit sequence scene in The Amazing Spider-Man , hinting at the likelihood that Electro may appear in the sequel. Along with Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone is set to reprise her role, while Shailene Woodley is in talks to play Spidey love interest Marty Jane Watson. The Amazing Spider-Man took in over $262 million domestically and over $750 million worldwide this year. [ Source: Variety ]
Flight , the first non-motion-capture feature Cast Away and Forrest Gump filmmaker Robert Zemeckis has directed in over a decade, is the kind of movie that, people like to bemoan, the industry doesn’t make anymore. It’s a solid, burnished work made about adults for adults and anchored by Denzel Washington in a role that calls for some classic star gravitas. It’s a mainstream film, but a consciously meaningful one, occupying that increasingly perilous mid-budget middle ground in a world continually drifting toward the opposing poles of massive blockbusters and scrappy indies. There’s not a superhero in sight and not a trace of nuance either — it’s the straightforward drama of a man forced by circumstances out of his control to confront the destructive way he’s been living his life. That Flight turns out to be a disappointingly standard addiction story in its second half also serves as a reminder that Hollywood tends to be more invested in these types of self-serious movies than most actual audiences. In its need to reach a smug, by-the-book end goal of redemption and recovery, the film sheds much of the life and complexity it shows in the beginning, devolving from a morally ambiguous story to a story all about its moral. Based on a screenplay by John Gatins ( Real Steel ), Flight ‘s opening sequences are a dazzling display of studio filmmaking at its limber heights. The camera follows Captain Whip Whitaker (Washington) out of a night-long bender and through the start of what should be a quick, routine Orlando to Atlanta flight. Halfway through, however, the plane malfunctions and things go wrong with terrifying rapidity. In the wake of the crash, friends and family mourn the lost while the press and public clamor for someone to blame, and we learn that Whip may be a great pilot — he’s his best self in the air — but he’s also a functional alcoholic in deep denial. It’s not Whip’s fault the plane starts to go down, but when it does he proves himself capable of grace under pressure in a situation the film portrays through some hair-curling images: people flipped and scrabbling around the ceiling of the plane’s fuselage, tearful panic, plummeting altimeters, flaming engines and the ground rushing up at an angle one never wants to see in real life. The dreamlike way in which Whip watches the wing of his plane take out a church spire in the seconds before impact, like a later shot in which a bloody tear trickles out of his damaged eye as he recovers in the hospital, presents a sliver of lyricism to the sequence and its stunned aftermath, in which Whip isn’t sure whether he’s a hero or a failure. Flight is so sensorially sharp and electrically present in its initial gambit that the movie’s descent into a trudging tale of a problem drinker in the second half brings the film to ground literally and symbolically. Washington turns in a smart, ego-free performance here that goes some way toward making Whip into a character whose fate we might care about. He’s a man who’s been ignoring his issues for so long we don’t at first grasp the depths of them ourselves — but his later cycle of self-abuse feels as familiar and repetitive as the flight scene itself feels fresh. Watching Whip sober himself up with some blow after a boozy dalliance with a flight attendant before traveling to the cockpit, we get the squirmy, tightrope-act sensation of observing someone disturbingly good at getting by while hammered. He’s experienced enough as a pilot and drinker to take off smashed and thread his plane through tricky, stormy weather. Watching him tempt fate again and again as he is investigated in te aftermath of the crash is far less compelling. Whip is looking for someone or something to force him to stop, and apparently a brush with death while transporting more than 100 people in his care isn’t enough. Characters invested in Whip not being held responsible for the accident, for professional reasons or friendship — including Don Cheadle as his attorney, Bruce Greenwood as his union representative, Tamara Tunie as a flight attendant colleague and an amusing John Goodman as his drug dealer — try to protect him, but Whip doesn’t seem that committed to protecting himself. The forced spirituality of the film, which attaches a lot of meaning to the phrase “act of God,” is revealed in the weight it gives to the coincidences that trigger behavior. A smack addict named Nicole (Kelly Reilly), who eventually befriends Whip, reneges on her promise not to inject drugs after knocking the box containing her works onto the floor. Whip himself has temptation thrown in his face at the worst possible moment thanks to a neighboring door not being locked. Washington does find interesting sides to and knotty conflicts in Whip. His charisma, charm and competence don’t quite cover up a sharp and sometimes frightening edge, and it’s painful to watch the way he drinks, like it’s his duty to finish up all the alcohol in sight long after he’s stopped enjoying it. But the film isn’t as willing to push the character as much as the actor playing him, and the lack of mystery attached to whether Whip could be even partially at fault for what happened is ultimately as contrived as the big finish, which gives his character an unearned and unnecessary nobility. In the context of the film, the crash becomes the biggest and most distasteful act of god of them all, an elaborate, bloody way to get a guy to an AA meeting. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
Details On Deadly Plane Crash In Nigeria Via CNN: The pilot of the Dana Air plane that crashed into a densely populated neighborhood in Lagos, Nigeria, radioed that the plane was having trouble just minutes earlier, an airline official told CNN on Monday. The details emerged as search and rescue crews worked to recover bodies from the wreckage, while authorities searched for the flight data recorders to try to piece together what brought down the plane Sunday, killing all 153 people aboard and at least 10 on the ground. The death toll will probably rise as crews search the rubble of a two-story residential building that the McDonnell Douglas MD-83 plane struck. It was unclear how many people were inside the building and on the street outside at the time of the crash, Mohammad Sani Sidi, the emergency management director, told CNN from the crash site. The pilot declared an emergency as the plane was on final approach to Murtala Muhammed International Airport, and witnesses said it appeared the plane was having engine trouble, said Oscar Wason, Dana Air’s director of operations. Wason identified the pilot as an American, but did not release his name or hometown. The co-pilot was from India, and the flight engineer from Indonesia, Wason said. Among the dead are six Chinese citizens who were on board the flight, the Chinese Embassy in Nigeria said Monday. According to witnesses, the passenger plane appeared to be coming in high with its nose up when it crashed, hitting the ground tail first, Wason said. The flight, bound from the Nigerian capital of Abuja, crashed at 3:43 p.m. (10:43 a.m. ET) in the neighborhood of Iju Ishaga, just north of the airport, according to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority. The crash site was 11 miles from the runway, Wason said. The Nigerian aviation authority has not asked Dana Air to ground its planes, though the airline canceled all its flights Monday as show of respect for the victims of the crash, he said. Dana Air, which is privately owned and based in Lagos, began operations in 2008. Nigeria’s deadliest air disaster came in July 1991, when all 261 on board a Nigerian Airways airliner were killed when the plane crashed shortly after takeoff in Saudi Arabia. On Saturday, a Boeing 727 cargo plane operated by Nigeria-based Allied Air from Lagos overshot the runway in Accra, Ghana, and hit a passenger bus, killing 10 people, officials said. Dana Air set up a 24-hour hotline to provide information about the Sunday crash. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of guests who were involved in the Dana Air mishap,” the airline posted on its website. “May the souls of the deceased rest in peace.” Lagos, with a population of more than 7.9 million people, is one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. It is Nigeria’s commercial hub. Wow. The plane went down just 11 miles from the runway. R.I.P. to those lost in this disaster.
‘iCarly’ star facing her own series finale tells MTV News being on ‘Saturday Night Live’ set for Wiig’s last day was ‘sad.’ By Jocelyn Vena Miranda Cosgrove Photo: MTV News Miranda Cosgrove is just weeks away from filming the final episode of her hit Nick show, “iCarly,” but the actress got a sense of what it might feel like to say goodbye when she recently hit the set of “SNL.” Cosgrove was on hand as Kristen Wiig departed “Saturday Night Live” over the weekend, and she couldn’t help but wonder if the end of her show will be as emotional. The teen star was in town taping an episode of “iCarly” with Jimmy Fallon when she and her castmates decided to stop by the “SNL” set to watch the Mick Jagger-hosted finale, which also happened to be Wiig’s farewell . “I’m a huge Kristen Wiig fan,” Miranda told MTV News this week. “I love her. I was super-excited to go to see her last episode ’cause I’ve never been to ‘SNL’ before and it was a pretty cool one to get to go to. … It was sad it was her last episode and I was kind of thinking in the back of my mind that we’re about to finish [our show]. So it was definitely a sad kind of moment, but I’m glad I got to go with the whole cast and we got to have such a good time.” The trip to New York City created a lot of fond memories that Cosgrove said she’ll take with her. “It was so much fun, like, getting to be on the plane with everybody. Jerry [Trainor], he met Sean Penn on the plane and he had him sign his Vans,” she recalled. “I don’t know; it’s kind of like an ‘iCarly’ episode being out here. We all took a carriage ride the other day, we went to FAO Schwarz; we went to ‘SNL,’ the finale. We’ve had the best time together here.” With New York City behind them, the “iCarly” crew will film their last episode in June, marking the end of a super successful five-season run on Nick. The series finale airs in November. Are you sad “iCarly” is coming to an end? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Miranda Cosgrove
The Dallas Mavericks finally received their championship rings for winning the 2011 NBA Finals last night. Mark Cuban says he paid $1.4 million for the rings , and now we can see why. The rings are enormous and blingy, with a diamond-encrusted Mavs logo on the face. Each player’s ring also has his name on the side, which is a nice touch. Here’s Shawn Marion’s (via @DallasMavs ): A promo shot of the… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Business Insider Discovery Date : 26/01/2012 03:32 Number of articles : 3
Governor Jan Brewer discussed her confrontation with Obama today at the Phoenix airport. Brewer told Greta Van Susteren that Obama ambushed her when he got off the plane about a book she wrote. This upset her and that is when … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 26/01/2012 04:59 Number of articles : 2
Maybach Music boss hit Twitter after reports he suffered a seizure; crew confirms to MTV News that MC is OK. By Rob Markman Rick Ross (file) Photo: Akshay Bhansali After reports surfaced on Friday (October 14) that Rick Ross suffered from a seizure that rendered him unconscious, MTV News has learned that the Bawse is OK. The Teflon Don even sent out a message via Twitter downplaying the incident. TMZ broke the news on Friday, reporting that at 12:55 p.m. ET, Rozay — who was traveling from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Memphis perform a show — fell unconscious just after his plane took off. According to the site, the plane had to make an emergency landing while a doctor onboard administered CPR. Several members of Ross’ Maybach Music Group camp have confirmed with MTV News that Rozay is doing better now. None would confirm that the rapper had suffered a seizure, however, saying only said that he was “good.” Wale, who is signed to Ross’ label, took to Twitter to end online speculation that Rozay may not pull through, even getting in a bit of promotion for the Miami MC’s upcoming God Forgives, I Don’t LP. “I just talked to Ross…he’s 100 pct ok…@tmz #dontpanic #dontpanic #mmg !!!! #gfid dec 13th!,” he wrote. Ross DJ Sam Sneaker, also hit Twitter, writing , “I’m wit @rickyrozay now he good.” MMG’s videographer SpiffTvFilms also weighed in with a tweet : “Just Got Off The Phone With My Brother @rickyrozay He’s Good Don’t Believe The Hype #Godforgivesidont Dec 13Th.” In response to Rap Radar founder’s Elliott Wilson’s tweet pleading, “@rickyrozay Don’t scare a n—a like that. Thanks,” Ross himself fired back “@elliottwilson never dat homie..we ouchea #mmg powercircle!!!!” At press time, MTV News had not heard back from representatives at Def Jam Records, where Ross is signed as an artist. Stick with MTV News for more on Rick Ross as the story develops. Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Rick Ross Related Artists Rick Ross
When Gérard Depardieu’s gotta go, Gérard Depardieu’s gotta go. The passengers and crew of an Air France flight from Paris to Dublin learned that the hard way today when the legendary French actor, denied entry to one of his plane’s locked lavatories, proceeded to empty his bladder on the floor.
When Gérard Depardieu’s gotta go, Gérard Depardieu’s gotta go. The passengers and crew of an Air France flight from Paris to Dublin learned that the hard way today when the legendary French actor, denied entry to one of his plane’s locked lavatories, proceeded to empty his bladder on the floor.