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REVIEW: Apatow Grows Up, Takes A Step Back With Messy ‘This Is 40’

This is 40 ends with a title card saying that it’s “Based on characters created by Judd Apatow .” While this is true — the film’s about Debbie ( Leslie Mann ) and Pete ( Paul Rudd ), who were supporting figures in Apatow’s 2007 hit  Knocked Up — it also feels like it might be more accurate for it to declare “Based on Judd Apatow.” It doesn’t just star his wife Mann, it features their daughters Maude and Iris as her children, and it’s not hard to read Rudd’s character as an Apatow proxy who’s struggling through the world of music instead of, these days, riding high in comedy. It’s shot on the same block on which director/writer/producer lives with his family, and includes what are clearly many of his thoughts and experiences on relationships, parenting and getting older. It’s Apatow’s most personal film yet, even more so than  Funny People , and it benefits from the closeness of this material to its creator as much as it suffers for it, though its weakest points are when the film strives for the angle indicated in its tile —  This is 40 — and tries too hard to be about the universal (“This is everyone’s story,” the trailer boldly declared). Its more general observations on aging and marriage aren’t just familiar, they can take on the well-meaning but blithely entitled sensibility of a college sophomore who’s finally lost his or her virginity and now feels qualified to hold forth about sex with the authority of Dr. Ruth. When Debbie forgets which year she’s lied about being born in to avoid dealing with the big four-O and yells at Pete for needing a Viagra for their morning birthday hookup, or when we watch a montage of the pair getting different orifices checked out by the doctor during a physical, the film feels like a recycled Erma Bombeck column with some added iPad etiquette discussions to modernize jokes about bodies no longer working and looking like they used to. This thing is, Debbie and Pete aren’t like everyone — they’re leading lives of comparable privilege and glamour, existing in an upper middle class world of gluten-free diets and spandex-clad road bike riding groups, of getting hit on by professional hockey players at a nightclub and throwing a concert to which Billie Joe Armstrong comes. They aren’t an everycouple, which is fine — it’s actually the specifics of their marriage and careers that, as the film unfolds at an overlong 134 minutes, make it compelling if more rooted in drama than domestic comedy. There’s an underlying terror guiding their lives, one not just related to getting older but to the possibility of failing to hold on to their economic rung and their concept of a happy, healthy family. Debbie and Pete smile so hard, like they can will away their unhappinesses, which surface instead in bickering. There’s a lot of bickering in  This is 40 . Debbie badgers Pete and feels unappreciated by him while he sneaks cupcakes, loans money to his dad Larry (Albert Brooks) and hides the growing financial difficulties his retro record label is facing. An always perplexing aspect of Mann’s place as Apatow’s on-screen muse as well as his real-life partner is that the characters she’s played in his films, particularly Debbie, tend to be so shrill you wonder if there’s some concealed antagonism coming through. That’s a tendency that  This is 40 directly addresses, with both Debbie and Pete having joking conversations about the fantasies they’ve had about murdering one another. The openness of that discussion of how you can genuinely if temporarily hate the one you love, and how it’s balanced by the easy unity Debbie and Pete have when defending themselves from another parent (Melissa McCarthy) at a school conference (the film’s funniest scene), is a minor but welcome improvement from the director’s past tendency to paint female characters as martyred nags impatiently dragging their men toward adulthood. This is 40  is notably messy, with narrative threads about which of the two employees (played by Megan Fox and Charlyne Yi) at Debbie’s store has been stealing and about Pete’s not very successful attempt to release a new album by Graham Parker and the Rumour drifting away rather than arriving at an end point. Sometimes that untidiness works for the film — both Pete’s relationship with Larry and Debbie’s with her largely absentee dad Oliver (John Lithgow) suggest lifetimes of complications that can’t be resolved in a side plot — but the questions about artistic integrity and business that are raised in the collapsing of Pete’s label are interesting and half-formed and could do with more exploration. Other elements, including older daughter Sadie’s (Maude Apatow) constant burrowing into her phone and tablet, the revelation of a character’s pill addiction and Jason Segel’s presence as a self-congratulating personal trailer, don’t really fit into any larger scheme. Apatow’s film comes across as overstuffed and understructured, a collection of elements that hasn’t really been assembled into a story and could do with the backbone. Rather than set out to make a feature about middle age and marriage and family, it feels like Apatow would have been better served to focus on making a film about Debbie and Pete and their journey, one that would naturally touch on all those themes. When they have a very funny fight about their relationship in terms of who’s Simon and who’s Garfunkel, the potential of this material is clear, but the end product feels like a step forward in terms of maturity of subject matter and a step back in terms of filmmaking. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Apatow Grows Up, Takes A Step Back With Messy ‘This Is 40’

Four Reasons To Be Excited About ‘The 7 Wonders Of Crysis 3’

Game developer Crytek has hired director Albert Hughes to bring its Crysis gaming franchise to the big screen. Half of the Hughes brothers team behind Menace II Society and T he Book of Eli , Albert is directing The 7 Wonders Of Crysis 3 ,  an online series set in a reforested future New York 2047.  Behold the teaser: Production companies often have trouble converting video game properties to film, which is why Crytek isn’t bothering — with the production companies. Using no actors or movie cameras, Hughes is directing the game engine itself, rendering his cinematic vision with the same software players will use to shoot each other in the face. And here are four reasons to look forward to it. 1.  The Greatest Graphics The Crysis series has always been famous for its stunning visuals. While other games worry about the mass-market, Crytek’s approach is “Bring us your most powerful and expensive computers and we will make them cry gorgeously detailed tears with realistic fluid dynamics.” Its  CryEngine  is the heart of the entire company, rendering massive, fantastically detailed worlds. In fact, Crytek’s first game, Far Cry, began as a technology demo which impressed people so hard it was developed into a full game. The engine has been constantly updated every since. The latest iteration, CryEngine 3, eats supercomputers and spits out state-of-the-art graphics cards. 2. A True Video-Game Movie It was only a matter of time until someone saw video games and asked “Wait a minute, why do we even still need people?” The answer is lots of reasons.  But when most of the people in your film are extras designed to catch the heroes’ bullets, those reasons become less important. The technology for vactors — “virtual actors” — simply isn’t ready yet. But computers have been better than reality at special effects for years. Live-action movies already use computers for all the difficult bits. So when you’re setting the entire movie inside a computer, the whole world’s a stage: a special-effects stage loaded with pyrotechnics. And when you consider that Crysis 3 is about a nanosuit-enhanced soldier battling corrupt security forces, like the guy above, whose name is “Psycho,” and aliens, which do you think will be a bigger part of that story: facial expressions or explosions? Big-name videogames have become more like movies every year. Where once the player was a roving character exploring a maze of hallways, now they’re a single cog in a vast cinematic machine. Carefully guided from set piece to set piece by invisible walls and an omnipresent director, distributing cutscenes between every 10 explosions. Setting the game to “play” itself by hiring a director to say what happens instead of a gamer is just the logical next step in that evolution. 3. The Product Is The Advertisement Calling The 7 Wonders of Crysis 3 a fusion of video games and cinematics would be incomplete. It’s really a combination of video games, cinematics, and advertising. And that’s no bad thing. Sure, it’s blatantly designed to show off the proprietary Crytek graphics, but video games, movies, and adverts are the three fields most based on showing off amazing visuals and compelling stories that completely capture our attention. The resulting cinematic chimera has great promise. After all, Guy Ritchie has already directed an ad for Black Ops II . When the guy behind the Sherlock Holmes franchise is directing the star of that franchise in a video-game commercial, anyone who doubts they’re just as big as movies simply hasn’t been paying attention. Besides, any product is meant to be its own advertisement. Here that advice is literally true. Games As Art (And New Ideas) Hybridization always creates new ideas. And the only people still arguing about whether video games are art were eligible to retire before we started playing them. Even the most violent shooter can be stuffed with artistic flourish and deeper meanings. Bioshock was a beautiful steampunk fantasy which turned a generation onto  Atlas Shrugged . The “soldier shoots other soldiers, also aliens” might not sound like a vehicle for quite as much content, but it’s beautiful. Crysis has always been about binaries, and not just in the 1s and 0s that make it happen. Every aspect of the games has a duality. You fight armed human soldiers, then inexplicable aliens. You’re outfitted with state-of-the-art technology but find yourself enmeshed in nature. You’re encased in a nanotechnological miracle of body-enhancing armor and you find yourself wielding a bow and arrow. And it looks awesome. And it looks awesome. The series started on Dec 12. You can watch the first episode right now on the Crysis YouTube channel . (Be sure to choose max HD quality for the full effect.) Luke McKinney loves the real world, but only because it has movies and video games in it. He responds to every tweet . Follow Luke McKinney on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Four Reasons To Be Excited About ‘The 7 Wonders Of Crysis 3’

Evelyn Lozada on Kenyon Martin: F–k Him!

Evelyn Lozada has two words for NBA veteran Kenyon Martin following his criticism of her reality show Basketball Wives. Those two words, if you hadn’t guessed: F–k Him K-Mart blasted the VH1 hit recently, saying the show was “toxic” and a ” total misrepresentation ” of the lives of married NBA players. That didn’t sit well with Ev. It’s true … there are very few actual wives on the show. Baby Mamas would be more accurate. Still, the former Mrs. Chad Ochocinco bristled at Martin’s criticism, saying “I don’t think Kenyon knows what he’s talking about. As far as saying it’s toxic, fine.” Evelyn Lozada adds, “Don’t f**kin’ watch the show then. It’s as simple as that.” Hard to argue with her there. What fun would that be, though? Sure, we could all simply ignore Basketball Wives, Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta and all those other classic programs, but it’s more of a love-to-hate situation. You know, as opposed to just plain hating.

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Evelyn Lozada on Kenyon Martin: F–k Him!

Brandon Marshall on Viagra Use in the NFL: Common!

We all know Viagra can help men score. But can that little blue pill make a difference when an NFL running back needs to cross the goal line in a very difference sense? Chicago Bears wide receiver Brandon Marshall made headlines today when he told reporters of a certain performance enhancing drug: “I’ve heard of some crazy stories. I’ve heard guys using like Viagra, seriously. Because the blood is supposedly thin… some crazy stuff.” However, the company behind this magic medicine says any athlete popping its drug should be aware: The pills “indicated solely for the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED),” Pfizer tells TMZ, adding: “Pfizer has not examined the safety of Viagra in men without ED and does not promote or encourage the use of Viagra for any use but the treatment of ED.” Well, okay then. Perhaps if the players just relax and put a little less pressure on themselves, the yards will come easily on their own.

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Brandon Marshall on Viagra Use in the NFL: Common!

Hear Kevin Durant Rap [AUDIO]

Following in the tradition of Jason Kidd, Allen Iverson, and many, many other basketball players who managed to find their way inside of a studio,…

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Hear Kevin Durant Rap [AUDIO]

Hear Kevin Durant Rap [AUDIO]

Following in the tradition of Jason Kidd, Allen Iverson, and many, many other basketball players who managed to find their way inside of a studio,…

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Hear Kevin Durant Rap [AUDIO]

Midday Motivation | Dreams Need Wings And Landing Gear

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“Dreams need wings AND landing gear.” – Author Unknown In the game of life, there are 2 types of people, players and spectators. And if…

Midday Motivation | Dreams Need Wings And Landing Gear

Marvin Miller dies at 95

Legendary Baseball Union Chief Marvin Miller Dies at 95. Miller was 95, and died at his Manhattan home months after being diagnosed with liver cancer. Marvin Miller, the man who changed the face of baseball, oversaw a series of work stoppages and ultimately led the players#39; union through the dawn of free agency, died Tuesday after a long bout with cancer. As executive director of the Players Association from 1966-84, Miller waged many battles with old-school owners, who had their own rules

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Marvin Miller dies at 95

Pump It Up: 10 Rap Songs That Accidentally Turned Into Sports Anthems

Where would sports be without music? Seriously, if there were no bands, chants, fight songs, inspirational tracks or personal music for players to get motivated to during pre-game, you would see a whole different product on the field, court and in the ring…. Continue

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Pump It Up: 10 Rap Songs That Accidentally Turned Into Sports Anthems

THG Presents: The 10 Biggest Turkeys of 2012!

Happy Thanksgiving to all from The Hollywood Gossip! What would this holiday be without family, food, football and reflection upon the things we appreciate most … in the case of THG, that means turkeys of a different sort. On this 22nd of November, we’re paying tribute to stars we had the honor and the burden of covering in 2012. We are talking fowl individuals here … real bird brains. Without further ado, THG’s Top 10 Turkeys of 2012 … Who will win the Sixth Annual Spencer Pratt Thanksgiving Turkey Award!? 10. Mitt Romney and Courtney Stodden (tie) . One’s a relentless fame whore married to a man three times her age. The other cost himself a good shot at the presidency thanks to 47 percent -style gaffes and never deciding what kind of candidate he felt like being. Really, we just wanted to make web history with the first-ever use of Mitt Romney and Courtney Stodden in the same sentence. 9. Taylor Armstrong and Lance Armstrong (tie) . Two Armstrongs, each shameless in their own way. 8. Hulk Hogan . Previously best known for body slamming opponents to the mat, the man with the self-proclaimed largest pythons in the world continues to make headlines for having body pumped Heather Clem to the bed on video with his elderly one-eyed snake. We know: EWWW. 7. Kris Humphries . As if marrying Kim Kardashian were not deplorable enough, he refuses to officially pull the plug on the union, alleging he was somehow duped into falling for the talent-free reality star. Seriously, this guy sucks. 6. Chris Brown . For some reason, people can’t move past his 2009 assault on Rihanna. NOTE: That reason is Chris Brown’s continued obnoxiousness. 5. NHL Players . Ah, the segment of the 1% that elects not to work. Idiots. The only thing worse than being locked out? No one noticing or caring. 4. Kris Jenner . Call her an entertainment mogul. Call her a mom-ager. Call her a she-pimp for her own evil spawn. By any name, she’s an embarrassment. 3. Jenelle Evans . Setting a new high water mark for TV fights, tumultuous relationships (Kieffer Delp, Gary Head, Courtland Rogers ) and crazy arrests earns a top three spot. 2. Lindsay Lohan . Girl gets into legal jams like it’s her job. Anyone else with a rap sheet that long would be getting a good stuffing today … IN JAIL!! 1. Donald Trump . The king of PR stunts and Obama rants wins the top turkey trophy because of his repeated attempts to insert himself into the national political discourse, and the complete and utter rejection of his “ideas” by Americans across the political spectrum. Who said the electorate was always polarized? Everyone’s signing the Dump Trump Macy’s petition ! Happy Thanksgiving from all of us at THG!!!!

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THG Presents: The 10 Biggest Turkeys of 2012!