Tag Archives: project

Another Resident Evil Sequel on the Way, This Time with Your Input

Since Resident Evil: Afterlife wiped the floor with the box office competition this weekend, it’s not a huge surprise that Milla Jovovich confirmed plans for yet another sequel. Only this time, it’s going to be an interactive process, with Director Paul W.S. Anderson discussing the project with fans on “twitter and stuff” to get ideas for the movie. No word yet on whether they will take posts like “make a good movie for once” into account. [ Vulture ]

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Another Resident Evil Sequel on the Way, This Time with Your Input

Kanye West’s ‘Runaway’ Movie Trailer: Watch An Exclusive Clip!

A deer, a dancer and a feathered woman appear in mysterious preview from ‘Ye’s upcoming ‘companion’ film. By Kelley L. Carter A scene from Kanye West’s “Runaway” Photo: Universal/Def Jam After much tweeting, posts on gossip blogs and speculation about a possible movie, fans finally got to see what Kanye West has been up to when the trailer for his film project premiered during the MTV Video Music Awards pre-show on Sunday (September 12). The opening shot of the clip shows a long look down a paved road in a wooded area; then there’s a quick shot of several deer in the woods. The next image is that of a dancer dressed all in black followed by a feathered woman. West holds the feathered woman, carrying her to safety as a fiery explosion happens in the background. Later in the clip, a title card flashes that reads “Runaway,” which we can only assume is the title of the Chicago MC’s upcoming flick. In addition to finishing up his album, West had hinted that he was working on a “movie companion” to the LP. Photos from the set of his movie first appeared on blogs earlier this month. A source with knowledge of the project first told MTV News about it last week. West tweeted about the project, writing in one post, “on set of the movie. This doe just refuses to sit still. … I told the deer … ‘what would Bambi do?’ & she looked at me like I was crazy.” The rapper apparently shot the footage while overseas. “Last day in Prague,” he recently wrote . “We’ve shot some good stuff so far … really good … NO! I mean REALLY GOOD! “Just wrapped for the day,” he continued later. “Been shooting 16 hour days. … I’m so excited. … It’s like a child’s delusions become reality!” The 27th annual MTV Video Music Awards are happening live, right now at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles! Keep it locked on MTVNews.com for the latest behind-the-scenes scoop, red-carpet interviews, photos, winner reactions and more. Related Videos VMA Exclusives

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Kanye West’s ‘Runaway’ Movie Trailer: Watch An Exclusive Clip!

Judith Miller Smacks Down Alan Colmes For Saying 9/11 Shouldn’t Be Commemorated

Alan Colmes on the ninth anniversary of 9/11 said America shouldn’t commemorate these attacks every year, and was nicely smacked down by Judith Miller for his smarmy efforts. Discussing the anniversary coverage on “Fox News Watch,” Colmes said, “Every 9/11 it’s become like a national day of remembrance, which I understand from an emotional standpoint, but I wonder if it’s such a good idea that every year we make such a big deal on the media of it being 9/11.”   Miller shot back, “The reason you do it is to remember why we have the counter-terrorism policies we have…We need to be reminded why we’re doing this.”   Colmes pathetically replied, “9/11 should not be revered as some kind of national almost holiday.” “It’s not revered. It’s commemorated,” said Miller (video follows with transcript and commentary):  ALAN COLMES: The set up to your question I have an issue with which is that the media actually does focus on 9/11. Every 9/11 it’s become like a national day of remembrance, which I understand from an emotional standpoint, but I wonder if it’s such a good idea that every year we make such a big deal on the media of it being 9/11. The terrorists, those who would like to attack us, and those who already have attacked us, must go, “See, they’re commemorating us again.” I’m not sure that this contingent every single year on 9/11 is such a good idea. JUDITH MILLER: I think it’s a really difficult call, but I don’t see how this country cannot do it, and wait until next year, wait until the tenth. But we must remember. The reason you do it is to remember why we have the counter-terrorism policies we have. Remember why we’re spending the money… COLMES: That’s not something just for 9/11, though. I think we need to remember that all the time. MILLER: We have ADD as a nation. We need to be reminded why we’re doing this. COLMES: 9/11 should not be revered as some kind of national almost holiday… MILLER: It’s not revered. It’s commemorated. COLMES: …because the terrorists I’m sure are saying, “Look, they are remembering what we did.” Although I loved Miller’s smack down, it would have been nice to see someone challenge Colmes further concerning his pathetic position. After all, he certainly isn’t opposed to 9/11 commemorations out of concern that terrorists enjoy them. Instead, like so many liberal media members, Colmes wishes America would totally forget 9/11 so we can leave Iraq, leave Afghanistan, and stop concerning ourselves with the war on terrorism. To people like Colmes, any reference to 9/11 or terrorism undermines their dovish view of foreign policy and national security.   Beyond this, what likely most bothered Colmes about this year’s commemorations was that they increased the resolve of folks opposed to the building of the Ground Zero mosque.  Liberal media members across the fruited plain must be hating these commemorations occurring in the middle of the controversy surrounding this Islamic center, for they might increase the likelihood this project will be cancelled.  For folks like Colmes, that would represent a terrible defeat. 

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Judith Miller Smacks Down Alan Colmes For Saying 9/11 Shouldn’t Be Commemorated

Zaishu Stool: Eco-Friendly Flat-Pack Furniture As Social Art Project

Images: Zaishu Design Studio Designed with economy of materials, transportation and assemblage in mind, we’re big fans of flat-pack furniture that’s done well, especially when it’s got a bit of pizzazz to it. The Zaishu Stool by Australian design duo Matthew Butler and Helen Punton scores on all these points, but goes even further: it’s conceived not only as an eco-friendly product but also as a wider, participatory social project and collaboration with artists and non-profits around the world. How can a simple stool do so… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Zaishu Stool: Eco-Friendly Flat-Pack Furniture As Social Art Project

‘Resident Evil: Afterlife’ Lives At Box Office

The latest film in the sci-fi franchise takes top spot at theaters Friday. By Mawuse Ziegbe “Resident Evil: Afterlife” Photo: Sony Pictures The Box-Office Top Five #1 “Resident Evil: Afterlife” ($10.9 million) #2 “The American” and “Takers” ($1.8 million) #4 “Machete” and “Going the Distance” ($1.3 million) The “Resident Evil” series proves it’s still filled with life at the box office. The latest installment in the undead-packed sci-fi franchise, “Resident Evil: Afterlife” pulled in $10.9 million during its first day on screens, according to reports . Moviegoers checking out the return of zombie-fighter Alice (Milla Jovovich), who scours a bleak planet for survivors in the wake of a vicious virus that ravaged the globe five years before, placed the film at the top of the box office. Since its 2002 debut, the series has been reinvigorated with 3-D effects and, as Jovovich told recently MTV News , “In this movie, I have a lot more guns, that was fun too.” George Clooney’s turn in “The American” as a hitman on the run after an assignment goes south, continued to draw action fans during its second week in the theaters. Although the flick opened at #1 last week, the film was far behind Friday’s box-office victor “Resident Evil,” scoring $1.8 million in ticket sales. “Takers” continued to maintain a strong presence in theaters, tying with “The American” for second place with an estimated $1.8 million in ticket scans. Moviegoers are still heading to multiplexes to catch the slick heist flick crammed with stunts that star and producer T.I. has called “outstanding.” “I think all of this is just a result of the hard work that was put into the project. Everybody gave 150 percent. Nobody laid back, nobody took off — everybody went hard. This is the result of that,” the rapper and actor told MTV News in August. The Robert Rodriguez-directed “Machete” upholds the action-heavy trend among Friday’s box-office winners. Touting a diverse ensemble that includes Jessica Alba, Don Johnson and Lindsay Lohan, the flick scored $1.3 million. The sunny rom-com “Going the Distance” kicked off its second week in theaters in a tie for fourth place, boasting the same estimated haul as “Machete.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Resident Evil: Afterlife” and “The American” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com. Related Videos ‘Resident Evil: Afterlife’ Clips

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‘Resident Evil: Afterlife’ Lives At Box Office

Slate Affiliate Equates Newt Gingrich With Koran Burner Jones

Imagine for a moment you were the editor of a magazine owned by the Washington Post and Newsweek. Would you a day before the ninth anniversary of 9/11 publish an article with the following headline: The Talibanization of America Viewed from Pakistan, the rise of U.S. Islamophobia looks depressingly familiar.  Seems rather inflammatory hours before such a solemn day in America, don’t you think? Yet, such was published Friday by Foreign Policy magazine, an affiliate of the Slate Group.  Sadly, the contents  – which in paragraph three equated former House Speaker Newt Gingrich with prospective Koran burner Terry Jones – will likely be even more offensive to the vast majority of Americans  especially  on September 11: In Pakistan, “Talibanization” is a label used to describe regressive and parochial conservatism, not just the political ascendancy of Mullah Omar and his extremist disciples. When we use the label “mullah,” it is not the same thing as honoring someone by calling him “Father” or “Reverend.” Instead, we’re most likely referring to a person’s narrow-mindedness, bigotry, and possible racism. So when we try to explain to fellow Pakistanis how the United States is much grander than the pettiness of Quran-burning circuses or mosque-defying extremists, we don’t use the same labels that Americans would. Describing the ideological kith and kin of opponents of the Park51 project — including the fringe element of folks like Terry Jones and his flock at the Dove World Outreach Center — with terms like the moral majority, far-right evangelicals, or even neocons is useless. Instead, when we try to explain what is happening in America, we simply say that a great country is going through a kind of Talibanization — led by mullahs like Newt Gingrich, Pamela Geller, and the occasional Terry Jones. Isn’t that special? So, as far as this author is concerned, the highly-esteemed former Speaker of the House is the same as a nutty Pastor in Florida that up until a few weeks ago almost nobody in America ever heard of. But that was just the beginning of the nonsense on display at this Slate affiliate: What if we didn’t present the Quran-burners and mosque-attackers as part of a fringe movement of ideologically driven extremists? Then of course, the only other possibility is for us to accept that International Quran Burning Day and the controversy over the Park51 community center both in different ways signify mainstream America’s growing discomfort with Islam. Simply put, if the Islamophobia of an American fringe is in fact not on the fringes, but in the mainstream, then the United States has an Islamophobia problem. But therein lies the problem, for this whole idea of Islamophobia is a fiction created by America’s press that’s been negligently presented as a mainstream fear rather than a fringe sentiment in a dishonest attempt to change the public’s view of the Ground Zero mosque. If the media had done a better job of describing what this issue was really about when the Islamic center was first proposed rather than taking sides and presenting a distortion that impugned the overwhelmingly large percentage against the project, this wouldn’t have resulted in as significant a controversy here or abroad. That our press, as they have been doing at almost every turn lately, championed the minority view against the very citizens they serve is at the heart of this so-called Islamophobia. As it pertains to Jones, had these same media outlets completely ignored his attention-getting stunt, this too wouldn’t have represented a problem either here or throughout the Arab world. Unfortunately, that’s not the way this FP op-ed contributor saw things: In the places where the 9/11 attacks were planned, financed, and conceived, meanwhile, the warm and fuzzy Islam of America’s suburbs is a nonexistent fantasy. On the Muslim Main Street, in Saudi Arabia, in Afghanistan, and in flood-ravaged Pakistan, Muslims can’t see past the Talibanized narrative of the U.S. mid-term election. Just as the mainstream news media in America cannot be held responsible for transforming Terry Jones from a walking punch line into an international celebrity, mainstream media in a country like Pakistan can hardly be blamed for reporting Jones’s shenanigans to 180 million — mostly Muslim — Pakistanis. On Sept. 10, as Afghans celebrated Eid, many decided to protest against the Islamophobic events planned in Florida. During the protests, NATO troops, surrounded by angry protesters, opened fire, killing at least one person in Badakshan province. It is easy to become partisan in assigning blame for this death. Many will blame Terry Jones. Others will blame the media. Many others will blame the mullahs who stoked Afghan anger. No doubt, some pundit at Fox News will blame the protester himself, and most people in Afghanistan will blame NATO. It barely matters anymore who pulled the trigger in Badakhshan. The point is that progressive thought is being lost in the places where it would matter the most. In the nine years since 9/11, there has not been a single domestic Muslim reawakening in any of the Organization of the Islamic Conference’s almost 60 Muslim-majority countries. In countries like Pakistan, mosque leaders still make the same anti-American references. They still exhibit the same resistance to change. They still get treated with kid gloves by governments that are run by culturally dislocated Muslims. Is this America’s fault? The United States today is a nation deeply divided along political lines. It’s currently impossible to generate a consensus view on how to stimulate our economy, how to bring down healthcare costs, or how to solve the looming crises involving the unfunded liabilities associated with Social Security and Medicare. In fact, we can’t even create a consensus as to whether or not Social Security and Medicare are looming crises. But we should be held responsible for what foreigners think when we can’t even get our own people to agree on simple matters facing our own country? This seems especially absurd when one considers the number of things many Americans are deeply confused about. As Newsweek humorously noted  a few weeks ago:  21 percent of Americans believe in witches 20 percent believe the sun revolves around the earth 41 percent don’t know Judaism is older than Christianity Less than 25 percent can name two members of the Supreme Court 63 percent of young Americans can’t find Iraq on a map; 90 percent can’t find Afghanistan 60 percent can’t identify the three branches of our government With all of our money, media, and education, we can’t properly inform our own people. Yet we should be responsible for controlling the thought processes of foreigners thousands of miles away with governments employing their own methods of propaganda to reach their own goals? Preposterous!  With this in mind, maybe this FP op-ed contributor should look at himself for answers, for he is more a part of the problem than the solution. After all, nowhere in his article did he mention the facts concerning the canard that is American Islamophobia. Maybe if he informed his readers that FBI statistics show hate crimes against Muslims in this country are a rarity compared to those against blacks, Jews, and gays, they’d realize that this really isn’t the problem the media are making it out to be. And maybe if he ignored Terry Jones, rather than mentioning him six times in this piece, the exploits of this fringe Pastor wouldn’t be a propaganda tool in the Arab world. At the very least he and his ilk should go to great lengths telling their readers that a tremendously small percentage of Americans support Koran burning as a protest against Islam. What this FP op-ed contributor and virtually all our liberal media don’t seem to understand is that America’s enemies abroad are looking to conflate anything that happens here or involves us internationally to foment anti-American hatred in their countries. This has been going on for decades and didn’t start after 9/11.  As such, if this FP op-ed contributor and all liberal press members would more accurately report events here rather than sensationalize everything in order to paint the most negative picture of the average American citizen, our enemies would have less fuel to add to their propagandist fires. I would say this was pretty darned obvious if not for that Newsweek presentation previously mentioned. 

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Slate Affiliate Equates Newt Gingrich With Koran Burner Jones

Ted Danson’s Surprising New Role, Edward Norton’s Big Goal, and More

Photo via Oceana Actor Ted Danson , who recently joined Morgan Freeman and Oceana to support the organization’s study of oil plumes in the Gulf of Mexico, has signed on for another project: playing against type as an unsympathetic oil baron in “Everybody Loves Whales.” … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Ted Danson’s Surprising New Role, Edward Norton’s Big Goal, and More

Hollywood Ink: Y Tu Padre Tambien? Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal Join Will Ferrell in Spanish-Language Comedy

Also in this morning’s Hollywood Ink: Jeremy Renner circles another project… John McTiernan lines up his next film (possible jail sentence be damned!)… and slightly more ahead.

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Hollywood Ink: Y Tu Padre Tambien? Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal Join Will Ferrell in Spanish-Language Comedy

Reforestation Helps Revitalize Crisis-Stricken Armenia

A villager in the Getik River Valley with tree seedlings growing in a backyard plot. Photo by Adrineh Der-Boghossian via the Armenia Tree Project . The series of calamities — a massive earthquake, energy shortages, and military conflict — that hit the small Caucasus nation of Armenia in the late 1980s left much of its population uprooted and unemployed, and its environment impoverished as well. At the current rate of deforestation , the country c… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Reforestation Helps Revitalize Crisis-Stricken Armenia

Help Design, Build an Ultra-Low Footprint Apartment: The LifeEdited Project (Slideshow)

TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily on less money with less space, less stuff and less waste — but with more design. He calls it ” LifeEdited .” Graham wants to find the best ideas and suggestions from readers. Using “social co-creation” or crowdsourcing on the Jovoto competition platform, he’s launching a design competition of ideas — with prizes for the best ones, which will then be implemented in the renovation. TreeHugger is proud to be a media sponsor of the project — and now, the Jo… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Help Design, Build an Ultra-Low Footprint Apartment: The LifeEdited Project (Slideshow)