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Exclusive Book Excerpt: How A Terrible Script for Prince’s Purple Rain Became The Best Rock Musical Ever Made

It’s been called the greatest rock musical ever made, the movie that launched Prince into the mainstream consciousness: 1984’s Purple Rain . The semi-autobiographical story of a Minneapolis musician known as The Kid and his struggles with success, love, and an abusive father — told as much through Prince’s tortured swagger as through iconic chart-topping songs like “When Doves Cry” and the titular “Purple Rain” — struck a chord with audiences and earned Prince an Oscar for Best Score to boot. But, as recounted in an exclusive excerpt from John Kenneth Muir’s book Purple Rain: Music on Film , the film was headed for the rocks until neophyte director Albert Magnoli dared to tell Prince the truth about the film’s initial script: “Well, I think it sucked.” Muir chronicles the history and lasting impact of Purple Rain in his new tome, on shelves today, from Prince’s early quest to find the right film vehicle for himself to his collaboration with director Magnoli in making drastic changes to screenwriter William Blinn’s original script (then called Dreams ) — a script that, Magnoli and producer Robert Cavallo say had been passed over by countless directors. Also included: What happened when Prince subsequently put himself in the director’s chair for Under the Cherry Moon (1986) and Graffiti Bridge (1990), Tipper Gore’s infamous shock over the lyrics to “Darling Nikki,” and considered analysis of the themes and symbolism that make Purple Rain resonate. In Movieline’s exclusive excerpt, Magnoli recounts his first, insightful encounter with Prince and how he pitched the shy artist on the story that would become Purple Rain . The film’s lore has long held that Purple Rain ‘s story originated from Prince himself — but according to Magnoli, it was destined to be a much different film before he stepped in. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Limelight Editions, an imprint of Hal Leonard . ======= Meeting His Majesty, Prince The next task at hand was to introduce Magnoli to Prince , and simultaneously, for Magnoli to further familiarize himself with the artist, his background, and his works. Magnoli knew and had liked the 1982 Prince hit singles “1999” and “Little Red Corvette.” He held a powerful image of the artist as “a loner” and “iconoclastic,” but more research was still necessary to get an authentic feel for the man and the performer. So, while he finished an editing job on a Wednesday and Thursday and prepared for a flight to Minneapolis on Friday to meet his movie’s star, Magnoli wanted to learn everything he could about the musician. “I didn’t know his early career,” Magnoli acknowledged. “‘Send to the editing room every video and any foot¬age you have on Prince, so I can see the visuals,’” Magnoli remembers saying to Cavallo on the phone. “So he sent me all of this video of Prince in concert in Minneapolis, and it was during his bikini-wearing, high-heel wearing, long coat days. This was prior to the 1999 album, where I think he had his self-titled album Prince . . . I think that’s what it was called. He was wearing a jacket on the cover [of the album] with a bikini bottom, with his chest sticking out, looking very androgynous. “So now I’m watching all this video that supports this androgyny, and I’m thinking, Wow . . . okay. . . . I realized trying to bring Prince to the public—and I always knew I wanted to cross over from an urban base to a wider one—was going to be difficult,” Magnoli explains. “So I’m watching all this imagery, but I do see the vulnerability under all that crap, and I think, Okay, I need to focus on that,” he notes. “That’s where this is coming from anyway.” An encounter on the way to the airport didn’t exactly quell Magnoli’s concern that the visuals surrounding Prince might have difficulty playing in Peoria. He asked his African American cab driver on the way to LAX if he knew of the performer/songwriter Prince. The man did know of him, so Magnoli next pressed the gentleman on what he thought about him. The man replied that Prince was gay, and furthermore, couldn’t imagine that Prince was not gay. “Don’t forget,” admonishes Magnoli, “we’re back in 1983 now. Nowadays it’s not even an issue. We’ve come a long way, baby. But now I’m thinking, All right . . . more . . . stuff. But when I later met him, I realized, no, this is not even an issue. This is just the noise. This is just the chatter. I never factored it in, ever — ever — from that point on. The frills didn’t bother me. The purple coats didn’t bother me. This was all the stuff, all the chatter, that anybody who didn’t know the soul would just latch on to. And they were going to do that anyway. As long as I could stay focused on the heart and soul, I knew I would be fine.” Albert Magnoli, from the archive of John K. Muir When Magnoli arrived in Minneapolis late in the evening, he met Steve Fargnoli, who promptly informed him that his new story was off and the Blinn story was back on. Fargnoli — whom Magnoli sometimes jokingly referred to as “the second part of a three-part series,” approached him with grave seriousness. “The first words out of his mouth are: ‘Understand this: I don’t give a damn about the story you told Bob [Cavallo]. We’re doing the story that’s already written.’ And I said, ‘Uh huh.’” Then Magnoli was taken to actually meet with Prince. In a hotel lobby, Magnoli first met Chick, Prince’s legendary, Nordic bodyguard, whom Magnoli described as a very “tall, Viking-looking person,” and then went off to a corner to observe the dynamics of the situation. “To my right were the elevator doors,” Magnoli explains. “To my left, across the lobby, was the front door of the building, where Steve [Fargnoli] and Chick were positioned. Then the doors opened at the crack of midnight sharp and out walks Prince by himself. “Because he didn’t know who I was, he didn’t see me. He saw Chick and Steve at the end of the hall and walked to them, which allowed me to do a right-to-left pan with Prince, unencumbered by him knowing I was looking at him. As a result, I ended up filling [in] the whole story based on him walking across the lobby. Because what I saw was extreme vulnerability, in spite of all the bluster and the costume and the music. This was a vulnerable young man. I saw all the heart and soul. I saw all the emotional stuff. I saw the tragedy of his upbringing. I just saw stuff and felt stuff that filled in the three-act story.” Together, Prince, Magnoli, Cavallo, Fargnoli, and Chick went to a working dinner. “I was looking at Prince and I could tell he didn’t like being looked at,” Magnoli says. “He’s very shy. Everybody ordered food, and as soon as the waitress left, Prince looked at me and said, ‘Okay, how did you like my script?’ “I realized a few things there. One, he said, ‘my script,’ which meant that he had personally invested himself in whatever it was that William Blinn had written. And two, that he hadn’t been told anything that I felt about it.” “The words that came out of my mouth were the following: ‘Well, I think it sucked.’” Magnoli pauses for dramatic effect. “At that moment, Steve dropped his head, Chick leaned closer to me, and Prince looked startled. Then I could see him thinking and what he was thinking was: ‘I wasn’t told this before this meeting was to take place. Why wasn’t I told?’ Then he looked toward Steve, because obviously Steve had told him nothing. That look to Steve took about three seconds, but it was telling to me, because now I saw how the operation worked. He had been kept in the dark about this.” “So then Prince looked back to me and said, ‘Why does it suck?’ And I said, ‘You know what, it’s not important why, but here’s what we can do about it. Let me tell you the story.’ So now, with even more passion, because I have more information now that I’m looking at this kid, I told this story. “There was five seconds of silence. Then he looked at Steve and said, ‘Why don’t you take Chick and go home.’ Then he looked at me and said, ‘Why don’t you come with me?’ ‘I’m just going to take Al for a ride.’” Not knowing exactly what was going to happen, Magnoli remembers feeling a little uncertain. Had he offended Prince? Had he made him angry? “We got in his car; he got behind the wheel, I got into the passenger’s seat, and he took off fast,” Magnoli notes. “The next thing I knew, we were driving in pitch-black darkness, [with] not a light in sight. I had no idea where we were. It looked like we were driving in a black tube. A day later I realized we were in horizon-to-horizon farmland, but there were no lights. So I was thinking, He didn’t like the story . . . and now I’m dead. I can die right now. and no one will know. . . .” This nighttime ride was not the beginning of a murder plot, however, but the start of a very fruitful working relationship for Magnoli and Prince. Even though the story Magnoli had recounted involved the lead character (Prince himself, hereafter called “The Kid”) being at odds with his parents, his bandmates, and even his girlfriend, Prince never once flinched from a warts-and-all, three-dimensional presentation. “The thing about Prince is that he wasn’t concerned about his image,” Magnoli reveals. “He was concerned about whether the film would communicate. Would the music communicate? “I said to him, ‘If you’re willing to let me have your father in the movie give you a kick in the face on a certain page and get thrown across the room — if you’re willing to take that hit — we can make a great movie.’ “And he said, ‘I’m willing to take that hit.’ So that was it, metaphorically, realistically, and literally. Because he does get smacked by his old man in the movie. “And then I jokingly said to him, ‘There isn’t a person on the planet who wouldn’t want to hit a rock star in the face,’” Magnoli continues. “And he laughed and said he understood that. We both understood that the image of these people as entitled and selfish was a target. We understood that. “We never discussed warts and all. It just became part of the script and it was totally embraced,” Magnoli explains. When interviewed some time later, Prince reflected on the seemingly biographical aspects of the Magnoli script. “We used parts of my past and present to make the story pop more, but it was a story,” he emphasized. Purple Rain: Music on Film is available in stores today. Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Exclusive Book Excerpt: How A Terrible Script for Prince’s Purple Rain Became The Best Rock Musical Ever Made

The 10 Hottest Musicians We Would Love To Put A Ring On It! (Brace Yourself Ladies…)

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The 10 Hottest Musicians We Would Love To Put A Ring On It! (Brace Yourself Ladies…)

My Heart Will Go On — But Not For These 9 Other Unbearable Theme Songs

Kate Winslet broke a PR commandment earlier this week while promoting the release of Titanic 3D : She dismissed the movie’s Oscar-winning theme song, claiming that Celine Dion’s overplayed ballad “My Heart Will Go On” makes her ” feel like throwing up .” Citing the inescapability of fans serenading her with the massive hit wherever she goes, Winslet’s sentiments are understandable. Frankly, I heard that song enough times 15 years ago to never hear it again, no matter how riveting and powerful Dion’s vocals are. To say that song never once gave you chills is probably a lie. But be that as it may, the song hasn’t given anyone chills since post-Oscars April 1998, when we’d all had just about enough of it. All we have left for it now is just a reflexive groan of antipathy. When it comes to much maligned movie theme songs inducing cringing during the end credits, we’re generally more than familiar with such usual suspects as Bette Midler and Bryan Adams. As such, consider this alternative list of nine musical offenders whose disastrous contributions to soundtracks deserve “a massive internal eye roll” from Kate Winslet — or anyone else with discerning musical taste. 9. “Too Close to Paradise” by Sylvester Stallone, Paradise Alley Sylvester Stallone set out in 1978 to become a quadruple threat: After his success with Rocky in 1976, Stallone wrote, directed, and starred in the period film Paradise Alley about blue-collar brothers who turn to professional wrestling to make something of themselves in New York. Stallone also sang the theme song, “Too Close to Paradise,” and thus accomplished his goal — in that this little Neil Diamond-like ditty was a threatening assault upon the ears. Most nauseating : All of it. 8. “Batdance” by Prince, Batman In 2004, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost approved Prince’s Batman soundtrack for use as a weapon against zombies, because what other use can you get out of it? Although “Partyman” is a true musical highlight, Prince’s most offensive contribution to the album is the “Batdance” track, which blends house music with a funked-up version of the 1966 Batman theme. Ultimately a mash-up of several existing pieces of music written for the soundtrack, the “song” is 90 percent movie dialogue samples — including Jack Nicholson exclaiming that “this town needs an enema” and Kim Basinger repeating her character’s name, “Vicky Vale.” Inexplicably, this messy hodgepodge of music styles and Joker one-liners made it to number one in the U.S in 1989. Most nauseating lyric : The repeated 1966-style chant of “Bat-maaaan” throughout. 7. “The Morning After” by Maureen McGovern, The Poseidon Adventure On first listen, this Oscar-winning theme strikes tedious, AMPAS-approved notes of inspiration and hope that match the film’s messages of perseverance and communal survival aboard a foundering cruise liner. On second listen, McGovern’s schmaltzy folk vocals help distinguish the song as a true product of its time, with possible subtextual reflections on the Vietnam War and the political upheaval of the times. On third listen, the repetitive lyrics set your mind adrift and thinking about the morning-after pill. On fourth listen, you suspect Amnesty International opposes this song for its usefulness as a form of torture. Most nauseating lyric : “It’s not too late, we should be giving / Only with love can we climb” 6. “Brothers” by Patrick Swayze and Larry Gatlin, Next of Kin Patrick Swayze always got a lot of flak for having the time of his life with Jennifer Grey and suggesting “she’s like the wind” in the power ballad of the same name on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack. But that’s hardly a misdemeanor compared to Swayze’s collaboration with Larry Gatlin on the 1989 country-styled song “Brothers” featured in Next of Kin . Liam Neeson, one of Swayze’s kin in the film, was into punching things early in his career just as much as he is today, but it’s a shame he didn’t knock some sense into Swayze to avoid such a syrupy theme as “Brothers.” Most nauseating lyric : “No one will ever keep us from standing / Shoulder to shoulder against all others” 5. “Will You Be There” by Michael Jackson, Free Willy It’s a dreadful fact that I was born in 1988, and was thus eventually introduced to the King of Pop late through the bombastic, toothless theme song to Free Willy . Early memories of the “Will You Be There” music video on MTV amount to flashes of Jackson’s outstretched arms with his white shirt billowing grandly behind him in the breeze onstage. Gaudy stuff. Jackson preaches a positive message about cooperation and compassion, and needs a full choir to do so, but the song is undone by a lyrical hollowness that doesn’t come close to matching the emotional oomph of the song’s instrumentals. Most nauseating lyric : “Hold me / Like the river Jordan” 4. “The Neverending Story” by Limahl and Beth Anderson with Kajagoogoo, The Neverending Story This classic movie theme, positively dripping with 1980s guitar, electro-pop and androgynous vocals from Kajagoogoo lead Limahl, is equal parts whimsy and monotony. More reminiscent of an obnoxious children’s television theme song than a sweeping soundtrack single, “The Neverending Story” is a form of parental torture. Most nauseating lyric : “And there upon the rainbow is the answer / To a neverending story” 3. “Can’t Fight the Moonlight” by LeAnn Rimes, Coyote Ugly You know when you’re drunk and you hear a song — or maybe you’re just young and impressionable — and you hear a song, and you think, “Yeah, that’s catchy, I like that”? And then years later when you’re sober and/or older and you have better taste in music, you hear that same song again, and suddenly you’re embarrassed you ever liked it? Well, that’s what I call “coyote ugly”: In 2000, LeAnn Rimes needed a poppier single to cross over from gospel and country into the mainstream, so she recorded this movie single penned by the reliably mainstream Diane Warren (writer of the odious Armageddon theme “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing,” and multiple other pop hits). Most surprisingly, “Can’t Fight the Moonlight” has never been repackaged for a werewolf movie. Most nauseating lyric : “Deep in the dark / You’ll surrender your heart.” (This is code for sex, kids.) 2. “Die Another Day” by Madonna, Die Another Day There is writing a good song, and writing a good James Bond song, and Madonna failed at both tasks with this unmemorable electronic club remix masquerading as a Bond theme. Maybe Madonna thought she was making an innovative creative statement by bucking the system and writing a flat tune without any tangible thematic relation to the film it’s based on, but we all know Madonna hasn’t been associated with innovation in quite a while. Madonna’s disjointed auto-tuned vocals with bondage-y undertones and lack of storytelling in the chorus and verse writing make for a lifeless theme too restricted to a musical style of the time. Most nauseating lyric : The words “another day” repeated 27 times in absence of an actual melody hook. 1. “Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman” by Britney Spears, Crossroads Since Spears’s long-forgotten and misguided 2002 starring vehicle Crossroads , the singer has recovered from a notorious nervous breakdown, hospitalization and baldness to reign as queen of the dance remixes. But long before she started auto-tuning the hell out of her vocal cords, Spears was a confused 21-year-old struggling with the same existential question every female asks: At what point do we stop being a girl and become a woman? For Spears, we’re thinking somewhere closer to 2009. Most nauseating lyric : “All I need is time / A moment that is mine / While I’m in between” Most truthful lyric : “But now I know / Life doesn’t always go my way, yeah…” Michelle Welch is a freelance writer who has also contributed at The A.V. Club and PopMatters . She tweets her pop culture ramblings as @stayfrostymw .

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My Heart Will Go On — But Not For These 9 Other Unbearable Theme Songs

Jenelle Evans: Hooked on LSD and Ecstasy?

Trouble continues to find Teen Mom 2 wild child Jenelle Evans … at least according to Star magazine (we know, we know), which claims she’s on drugs. Like a lot. Tori Rhyne, a close pal of the Oak Island, N.C., native, tells this week’s Star that Evans is dabbling in LSD , “thinking it helps her, but it really doesn’t.” “She does it a lot … she fell in love with it,” Tori said. “It’s just a little sheet she puts on her tongue and waits for it to hit her. Then she gets all weird.” Hilarious quotes aside, it’s somewhat unlikely that Evans is dropping acid – or Ecstasy tablets, or Xanax, or Adderall – as the celebrity gossip magazine also claims. Former boss James Duffy has made similar clams, but she’s currently being drug tested as a condition of her probation. Speaking of which, once probation’s over … “After she gets off, she’s going to smoke a fat blunt, that’s what she told me,” Tori says. “She’s only worried about getting off probation, so she can smoke weed!” Jenelle’s lawyer Dustin Sullivan, who appeared on the most recent season of Teen Mom 2 (obvi), said, “The allegations against my client are absolutely false.” Probably. But with this particular client, you can only be 70-80 percent sure.

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Jenelle Evans: Hooked on LSD and Ecstasy?

Prince William and Kate Middleton "Ready For a Baby," Sources Insist

Their first royal wedding anniversary is on April 29. They just shelved plans for a trip to Africa later this year. Their friends are having kids, being in their late 20s/early 30s and all. They’re making family-friendly renovations to their home at Kensington. All of this means absolutely nothing, but just the same, it’s enough for many to assume that babies are on the brain for Kate Middleton and Prince William. People ‘s new cover story is devoted entirely to this topic, as a matter of fact. The fast-approaching anniversary and Palace’s recent sensitivity to the subject have led to a new round of Kate Middleton pregnancy rumors , and veteran royal watchers believe the couple is poised to start a family sooner rather than later. When the time comes, “they are ready for a baby,” an insider says. Although they are unlikely to announce a pregnancy before the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee celebration (marking 60 years on the throne) this summer, like any couple, “they will let nature and life take its course,” adds a royal source. In particular, watching their friends become parents “does help” boost William and Kate’s decision to follow suit, a family insider says. So … who’s got November 15 in the Kate pregnancy announcement pool? Mark it down, baby. [Photo: WENN.com]

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Prince William and Kate Middleton "Ready For a Baby," Sources Insist

‘Mirror Mirror’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics agree the Snow White adaptation is ‘not the fairest of them all.’ By Fallon Prinzivalli Lily Collins in “Mirror, Mirror” Photo: Relativity Media Before it even hit the box office, “Mirror Mirror” was viewed with a critical eye as two Snow White adaptations had announced their release dates a month apart. But with the release of the trailers, it was clear that the two movies were very different. The Tarsem Singh film is a quirky comedy from the vantage point of the Evil Queen ( Julia Roberts ) over the traditional Snow White ( Lily Collins ), while “Snow White and the Huntsman” is about the epic battle Snow White ( Kristen Stewart ) must fight for her life. Unfortunately for those involved in the former, as the reviews pour in, it’s obvious the movie is making critics grumpy. The Story ” ‘Mirror Mirror’ begins with an impressively animated recap of Snow White’s predicament: Banished to her castle by a wicked stepmother after her father the king disappears, and being played by such a vacantly pretty ingenue as Lily Collins. Collins conveys a properly Audrey Hepburn princess look and the acting range of a runway model. The damsel’s role is always distressed. The queen has run the kingdom into the ground, funding a lavish lifestyle with escalating taxes. After sneaking out for a tour of the squalor, Snow sides with the other 99 percent. Their relationship is further strained with the arrival of handsome Prince Alcott.” — Steve Persall, Tampa Bay Times The Laughs ” ‘Mirror Mirror’ is unfair to people expecting more than a few good laughs. Scenes proceed lethargically, with pauses after punch lines where Tarsem must hope for audience laughter. Anachronistic gags (as when the Prince tells Snow White that he has to be the hero because ‘it’s been focus-grouped — it works’) break whatever luscious spell the art direction and costumery might create. On their first meeting in the woods, the Prince tells the dwarfs, ‘You’re short, and it’s funny.’ Well, the film is shortish (106 mins.) but it’s also epically unfunny. The producers should have handed the script to an actual clever person like Paul Rudnick (‘In & Out,’ ‘Jeffrey’) and told him to send it back in a week, with solid jokes and a buoyant spirit.” — Richard Corliss, Time Julia Roberts “Roberts has had exactly one high point (‘Duplicity’) since winning her Oscar in 2000, and she acts here as if simply appearing in a floofy dress is high hilarity. Her ‘playfulness’ seems like work and her cartoony maliciousness is dull. (Charlize Theron, who plays the queen in this summer’s more serious ‘Snow White and the Huntsman,’ needn’t fret.)” — Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News The Visuals “Singh, whose eye-popping tribute to the Silent Era, ‘The Fall,’ was several years ahead of ‘The Artist’/’Hugo’ curve, never lets his attention waver from the production design — those beautiful, snowy, birch tree forests; the parapets; cliffs; and opulent palace digs. He lets his stars deliver their lines — some with more flourish and wit than others (among the dwarfs, Jordan Prentice and Danny Woodburn get off the best) — but his eye is mostly on the gilt and the silk, the CG-ed skies, and the eerie, iced-over lake that separates the castle from the town.” — Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer The Final Word “The whole thing lacks tonal cohesion, lurching from Tim Burton-style comic grotesquerie to underpowered action set pieces to a gratuitously self-referential Bollywood production number on the end credits. The impression is that of a director constantly fighting to put his stamp on material that’s foreign to him, and unable to figure out what that stamp should be.” — David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter “Not the fairest of them all.” — Matt Stevens, E! Online Check out everything we’ve got on “Mirror Mirror.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Mirror Mirror’

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‘Mirror Mirror’: The Reviews Are In!

‘American Idol’: Who Didn’t Get A Standing O?

Five contestants received standing ovations on a night Steven Tyler called ‘a magical mystery tour of over-the-top talent and emotion.’ By Adam Graham Joshua Ledet on “American Idol” Photo: Fox The Idols took on songs by their own personal idols on Wednesday (March 28), and time and again they brought the judges to their feet. Five singers — more than half the field — earned standing ovations from the judges, and if that isn’t technically a record, it certainly felt like one. And while several contestants surged forward — most notably Colton Dixon, whom Randy Jackson dubbed “a contender for the title” for the first time — it was Heejun Han who seized the opportunity to wipe the slate clean after last week’s flub and realign himself in the “Idol” ranks. The night kicked off in an odd fashion, with host Ryan Seacrest telling the contestants, “Hunger Games”-style, “may the odds be ever in your favor.” And from there it was a veritable bloodbath, with each contestant giving their all and making the “Idol” landscape as difficult to survey as ever. Han, who was criticized last week for not taking the show seriously following his goofball performance of Billy Joel’s “My Life,” dialed himself way down Wednesday and gave a straightforward reading of Donny Hathaway’s “A Song For You.” The result: a standing O, along with praise from the judges who felt he was finally done mocking the proceedings. “You did it man, you turned it around,” Steven Tyler told him, while Jennifer Lopez backed his performance and dispelled any notion he was a fluke contestant by telling him, “You don’t make it this far by mistake.” Jackson agreed the performance represented a major turnaround for Han. “Finally the Heejun that we selected came back to us tonight,” the Dawg said. “Welcome back.” Also bringing the judges to their feet were Joshua Ledet (singing Mariah Carey’s version of “Without You”), Phillip Phillips (taking on Johnny Lang’s “Still Raining”), DeAndre Brackensick (doing Eric Benet’s “Sometimes I Cry”) and Elise Testone (who closed the show with Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love”). The praise was flying around so fast and furious it was almost hard to keep track of; at show’s close, Tyler called the evening “a magical mystery tour of over-the-top talent and emotion.” (We’re not 100 percent sure what that means, but we’re pretty sure it’s good.) Ledet’s performance was perhaps the evening’s most emotional; afterward, Lopez told the Louisiana native, “you’re a phenom, you are an absolute angel from Heaven!” Phillips, meanwhile, was told he “owned” his performance of “Still Raining.” “You’ve got big things in front of you,” Jackson told him. Testone wasn’t the first “Idol” to take on “Whole Lotta Love”; Adam Lambert memorably upped the song’s sexual mojo back in Season 8. Her version didn’t have Lambert’s same oomph , but Tyler told her, “you made Robert Plant proud tonight” while Lopez said, “that was some real rock star stuff.” Brackensick, meanwhile, earned comparisons to Prince for the high falsetto he delivered while singing “Sometimes I Cry.” “You gave Prince a run for his money, man,” Tyler told him, while Jackson gave him one of his customary “DeAndre’s back in the house!” declarations. Lopez pleaded with America to vote for the curly-haired singer. “People, pick up your phones and vote for DeAndre!” she said. “Please, I need to hear this voice some more!” Though he didn’t get a standing O, Dixon opened the show with Lifehouse’s “Everything” and was called “a dream come true” by Tyler. “You sing a song like it should be sung. You make it bleed, you have perfect pitch, and you’ve got star quality.” And with Jackson officially welcoming him into the potential winner’s circle, the playing field was again shifted. Jessica Sanchez, another of the field’s leaders, slowed down Beyonc

The Hunger Games Tallies $68.3 Million Opening Day

Fans around the country enjoyed a very happy opening day of The Hunger Games yesterday. In its first 24 hours of release, the very well-received Jennifer Lawrence blockbuster earned $68.3 million, taking fifth place on the all-time single day revenue chart. It actually ranks first, however, for all non-sequels. What grade would you give The Hunger Games ? In fact, The Hunger Games is the only non-sequel to occupy a spot in the top 10 opening days in history, as you can see below: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 , $91.1 million The Twilight Saga: New Moon , $72.7 million The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 , $71.6 million The Twilight Saga: Eclipse , $68.5 million The Hunger Games , $68.3 million The Dark Knight , $67.2 million Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen , $62 million Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 , $61.7 million Spider-Man 3 , $60 million Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince , $58.2 million

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The Hunger Games Tallies $68.3 Million Opening Day

‘Hunger Games’ Fans ‘Blown Away’ At Midnight Showing

Early reports predict midnight box-office totals of more than $18 million. By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Stacey Sommer Josh Hutcherson in “The Hunger Games” Photo: Lionsgate With midnight showings of “The Hunger Games” sold-out for weeks in advance, expectations for the highly anticipated film were even higher for those brave enough to journey to theaters in the middle of the night. Thankfully, Katniss Everdeen and the rest of the tributes did not disappoint. Early reports for the midnight box-office totals predict returns north of $18 million, according to Variety . Those figures put “The Hunger Games” in contention with “The Dark Knight” and “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” which earned $18.5 million and $22.2 million at midnight, respectively. Early predictions for the weekend total estimate “The Hunger Games” earning $125 million . MTV News caught some rabid fans on their way out of the first showings of “The Hunger Games” in New York City, and most of them couldn’t have been more pleased. Joanna Cruz said she was left “speechless” and was “on the edge of my seat the whole time.” Some took their praise ever further. Judith Cruz called it the “the best movie ever.” “I can’t wait to see it again,” she said. “It was awesome. I cried at certain parts.” Though most of the people we interviewed expressed their love of the movie as a whole, a few couldn’t help but point out that they missed some scenes that ended up on the cutting-room floor. “I loved it. I thought it was awesome,” Elena Lerner said. “It wasn’t completely true to the book — they left out a few scenes — but overall, we were both freaking out in our seats. It was so good.” Josh Solomon felt similarly. “I thought the film was very good, well done,” he said. “It missed a couple scenes from the book. It missed spots, but I thought it was done pretty well.” But for one fan in particular, the movie could never live up to the book. “I don’t know how I feel about it. When I read a book, I get very in-depth, and I felt like they missed a lot of what was in the book,” Samantha Cohen said. On the other hand, Esther Portyansky said that the movie was a reminder of why she liked the book so much in the first place. “It was incredible. I was absolutely blown away by it,” she said. “I read the books last summer, and I think I’d almost forgotten how amazing they were, frankly. The movie more than did it justice.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Hunger Games.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Hunger Games’ Related Photos ‘Hunger Games’ Cast Hits NYC The Hunger Games

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‘Hunger Games’ Fans ‘Blown Away’ At Midnight Showing

VIDEO: How Deep is Morgan Freeman? Let Us Count the Ways

The team at NextMovie today offers this stirring mash-up of deep thoughts proffered by Morgan Freeman — or at least characters played by Morgan Freeman. Even the guy in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves! Incredible. Not bad! Honestly, though? Needs more Fast Black. [ NextMovie ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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VIDEO: How Deep is Morgan Freeman? Let Us Count the Ways