When Solange and Rihanna stepped on the red carpet at the CFDA Awards in their retro-inspired gowns, you could’ve easily confused them for Diana Ross and Josephine Baker. Now…
Okay so what do you get when you mix Lil’ Kim , Yandy Smith and a brand spankin’ new health care law together? The #GetCovered tour! The expectant rapper and the Love & Hip Hop reality TV star — plus a slew of other celebrities — are taking the Affordable Care Act on the road to get the public psyched to get covered by Obamacare. For Yandy, the #GetCovered tour is quite personal — she stresses that Obamacare helped provide Amir, her son, cost-effective health insurance for his kidney complications.
Well, we’re a little worn out from watching Nymphomaniac Vol. 1 all weekend, but the breast of Blu-ray/DVD this week would be sorely missed, if you know what we mean. The original series Rogue premiered to a limited audience on DirecTV, but now it’s out on DVD so everyone can enjoy all the uncovered moments from the undercover detective drama. Star Thandie Newton shows T&A throughout, plus we get full frontal from Kira Clavel l and pressed mams from Leah Gibson ! Elsewhere, the classic crime drama Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974) is now available on Blu-ray, bringing along the retro rackage of Isela Vega . The Belgian drama The Broken Circle Breakdown (2012) is a doomed love story with the uplifting bare B’s of Veerle Baetens . Finally The Patience Stone (2012) has Golshifteh Farahani – who was banned from her native Iran after posing topless- showing off more of the same. You’re welcome here, Golshifteh! See pics after the jump!
I come to praise Lindsay Lohan , not to bury her. Yes, you read that right. Just a few months ago, I had declared the 26-year-old actress a lost cause who had swapped a promising career for a rap sheet. And then Paul Schrader let me see The Canyons . ‘The Canyons’: A Porn Star & A Miniscule Budget Before I focus on Lohan, let me say this about the film: Despite the drawbacks of working with a miniscule, crowd-sourced $250,000 budget, and a cast that included porn star, James Deen , as its leading man, Schrader has made a taut, visually gripping movie that says some really smart things about the movie business and the Los Angelenos in their 20s who populate it today. It’s an unsentimental West-Coast Girls , done as tragedy instead of comedy. Lindsay Lohan In ‘The Canyons’: A Career-Saving Role? Anchoring the movie is a performance by Lohan that should mark the beginning of the 26-year-old actress’s path to professional redemption. Lohan plays Tara, a former struggling model/actress who’s made a Faustian bargain for a more comfortable life, and under Schrader’s shrewd direction, she gives an acrid, wounded performance that is going to change the minds of quite a few people who have written her off. “A lot of people are going to be asking, ‘What happened to the girl from Parent Trap ‘?” Schrader told me. “It’s really tough with young performers. By the time they’re 16 or 17, they have been taught that they are perfect and that everything in the world belongs to them. And then about three years later, somebody comes to them and says, ‘Okay, you have to start over again. And nothing you earned before is going to help you.’” Lohan has endured a lot of misery — much of it self-inflicted — since the giddy heights of her America’s Sweetheart days in Freaky Friday and Mean Girls, and, like Tara, she’s made some regrettable compromises, too, but her performance in The Canyons shows that she is really good at using the drama from her life to inform the character she’s playing onscreen. Her performance in The Canyons is more than a reminder that she’s got real talent: it’s an announcement that she’s ready to play complicated women instead of older ingénues. Paul Schrader Compares Lohan To Ann-Margret “This is her Ann-Margret Moment,” Schrader told me, referring to the 1960s bombshell who graduated from fizzy romantic comedies and musicals by portraying a woman in an abusive relationship in Carnal Knowledge (and earned an Oscar nomination in the process.) “When we were working, I kept noticing that Lindz was this blowsy, tough girl who, at times looked like Gena Rowlands, who, at times, looked like Ann-Margret and at times looked like Angie Dickinson.” That’s quite a compliment from the writer of Taxi Driver , The Last Temptation of Christ and the director of Auto Focus and Affliction (which he also adapted from Russell Banks’ novel) — especially since Schrader was reluctant to cast Lohan in the first place and then, as a lengthy piece in The New York Times Sunday Magazine r eported, the actress behaved like a diva on the set. But Schrader’s praise is leavened with some tough love: After noting that Lohan has got the the chops and a “mesmerizing” quality that can’t be taught in acting school, he adds: “Unfortunately, you also have to have self-discipline. And so, if she can organize her life better, I don’t see why she can’t have a career. A lot of people want to hire her. It’s just that she’s not helping them do that.” Is A Career Comeback Out Of The Question For Lindsay? In other words, it doesn’t matter who’s rooting for Lohan to make a comeback. It ain’t happening unless she gets her act together. And her track record is not exactly encouraging. As Schrader knows too well, there’s also a very loud and distracting contingent of blogosphere voices that envision only failure for Lohan. Their caustic response to Times story, which was snarkily titled Here Is What Happens When You Cast Lindsay Lohan In Your Movie , almost dashed his attempts to secure a distributor for the picture. Schrader says the cruelty of the comments leveled at Lohan and his movie surprised him. “I think that largely because of the Internet, it is now possible to publicly say things that used to be said in bars and locker rooms. We’re seeing a manifestation of vindictiveness and a viciousnessa cruelty — that’s also become evident in our political rhetoric, by the way — that was not acceptable at an earlier time.” The filmmaker says he feels “vindicated and legal” now that IFC Films has acquired rights to the picture and will release it theatrically and via VOD in the summer. Lohan could end up feeling vindicated, too. Nothing speaks louder than asses in seats, and if The Canyons finds an audience — and Lohan’s new lawyer Mark Heller keeps Lohan from going back to jail — Schrader will have given the actress her last best hope of resuming an acting career worthy of her talents. The rest is up to Lohan. And I’d like to offer this quote from the America’s original Sweetheart, the late Mary Pickford, for inspiration: “What we call failure is not the falling down but the staying down.” [ TMZ , The New York Times ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . More On Lindsay Lohan & ‘The Canyons’: Lindsay Lohan In ‘The Canyons’ — The Preview Looks Pretty Terrible Lindsay Lohan: ‘The Canyons’ NY Times Piece On Making Of Paul Schrader’s Film Lindsay Lohan In ‘The Canyons’ Teaser Trailer — LiLo & James Dean Get Retro
Still got it, Milian. Adorably hot singer and TV personality Christina Milian has teamed up with Nicolita Swimwear to design a glamorous new swimwear collection, “Havana Nights”, that’s perfect for being photographed in by paparazzi on the beach. Nicolita’s designer Nicole Di Rocco and Christina both have Cuban roots, and this sultry collection picks up on the retro 1940′s Cuban vibe. Check out Christina’s beautiful bikini collection, which debuted at Mercedes Benz Fashion Show Swim Week in Miami, and think about which other celebs you would like to see in one of these swimsuits! youtube
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 .
I’m not one hundred percent sure about this, and I don’t have any evidence to really back this up, but I’m pretty sure this is exactly why those nerds invented Twitter . Here’s Sara Jean Underwood and her sexy bikini clad friends hanging out in their bikinis drinking mimosas. Thank you Twitter nerds, thank you.