Tag Archives: sheik

‘Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time’: Boys Town, By Kurt Loder

Jake Gyllenhaal, swashbuckler Jake Gyllenhaal Photo: MTV News Okay, Jake Gyllenhaal’s sudden, suntanned muscularity suggests Malibu Beach more than it does ancient Persia; and one wonders if ancient Persians said things like “Watch your back” and “I need a drink.” Still, “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time” seems (I’m guessing) like a pretty great Arabian-adventure movie for kids. It’s made in the classic Disney style: no sex, no swearing, and lots of action with very little blood. So if you know a kid — of the male persuasion, ideally — you might want to take him to see it. You might also want to wait at a bar while he does so. The movie is based on a long-evolving video game created by Jordan Mechner, who came up with the story for the film, too. It’s the sort of story whose hazy details could only be ignored by a kid waiting impatiently for the next eruption of swordplay, rope-swinging and bad-guy noggin-conking. Gyllenhaal plays Dastan, a commoner who was adopted as an urchin, for reasons we can hurry right past here, by the good King Sharaman (Ronald Pickup), who raised the boy along with his two sons, Garsiv (Toby Kebbell) and Tus (Richard Coyle). Also lurking about is the lads’ uncle, Nizam (Ben Kingsley, wearing enough eye shadow to put him in danger of drawing harem duty). As the tale gets underway, Nizam brings news that the holy city of Alamut (the names in this picture might have been concocted from random grabs of Scrabble tiles) is supplying weapons to Persia’s enemies. The now-grown Dastan is heroically helpful in storming Alamut’s battlements, and once inside draws the attention of the resident Princess Tamina (Gemma Arterton). After some preliminary squabbling (the traditional prelude to a chaste Disney kiss), she eventually informs him that Alamut is the repository of “the beating heart of all life — the sandglass of the gods.” You’d never guess it from the outside. The sandglass turns out to be located in the handle of a golden dagger, of which Dastan, for some typically hazy reason, is in possession. Pressing a button on this magical artifact summons a fiery wind that allows the dagger’s wielder to go back one minute in time and undo whatever terrible things may need to be undone. Such a thing soon ensues: King Sharaman dons a robe that someone has given him as a gift and … it kills him. (The haze thickens.) Dastan is quickly fingered as the malefactor and must flee into the desert with Tamina. Out among the dunes they encounter a character named Sheik Amar (Alfred Molina), who presides over a desert settlement where he stages ostrich races “every Tuesday and Thursday.” (As you always suspected of ostrich races, they’re fixed.) When the duplicitous Amar learns that there’s a reward out for Dastan’s capture, the prince and his princess are forced to flee again, this time under cover of an ostrich stampede, which I must say is something to see. Dastan now rashly decides that the time is right to return home to attend the funeral of his father, and to try to determine who is responsible for his death. (Men with an overabundance of eye shadow are of course always prime suspects.) Various trials must be endured along the way — a trudge through the Valley of the Slaves, an onslaught of black-clad, whip-flicking Hassassins (the hashish-stoked killers of legend, but here — this being a Disney film — apparently drug-free). In the end, Dastan and Tamina make it back to his native castle and … so forth and so on. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer really knows his way around this sort of great big money-stuffed movie, and here he delivers everything you might expect. The action is excitingly staged (some of the wild roof-leaping suggests that the urban acrobatics of parkour were devised far earlier than we’d thought), although the CGI varies from beautiful (the hilltop city of Alamut) to whatever (that fiery wind). There are some funny touches, too — Molina in particular seems to be having a ball. Most amusing, though, is the fact that, in the grand tradition of Hollywood movies about long-ago foreigners, all the main parts are played by Brits — except for that of Gyllenhaal, of course, who nevertheless affects a British accent in solidarity with his fellow Persians. Despite his tanned buffness, however, Gyllenhaal is a little too laid-back for serious swashbuckling; and Arterton, a good actress in other pictures, here falls back on her basic gorgeousness, occasionally inflected with a curious lip twitch that she really ought to have looked at. But then if you feel that acting quality is a serious concern, you’re not the target audience for this hard-charging fantasy epic. Fortunately, the bar’s right down the street. Check out everything we’ve got on “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time’ ‘Prince Of Persia: Sands Of Time’ Clips Related Photos ‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’ Red Carpet ‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’ Official Stills

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‘Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time’: Boys Town, By Kurt Loder

‘Sex And The City 2’ Stylist Patricia Field Describes Her Desert Inspiration

‘Well, they were in a new location and it was a fabulous vacation,’ stylist says of her over-the-top looks. By Jocelyn Vena Photo: MTV News It’s been 12 years since “Sex and the City” premiered on HBO, and franchise stylist Patricia Field is as skilled as ever at having fans scramble to get the latest looks worn by Carrie, Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte . And while the women seem more settled in their personal lives in “Sex and the City 2,” their looks have gotten almost more over-the-top than before. When Field sat down to dream up the looks for the second movie, in which a lot of the action takes place in Abu Dhabi (by way of Morocco), she knew she’d have to up the fashion ante. “Because there’s a new script, and the script is my first inspiration, and hopefully in the script I will get the strike,” Field told MTV News at the movie’s premiere on Monday, where Kristin Davis dished that her favorite “SATC 2” look was the black Oscar de la Renta ball gown she wore to Anthony and Stanford’s wedding . Though the show and the first movie have featured adventures in Mexico, L.A. and Paris, Field knew that venturing to a place as glamorous and opulent as Abu Dhabi meant something completely different. “Well, they were in a new location and it was a fabulous vacation, so when you’re going on a fabulous vacation — I don’t know if you ever have, but I have — [and when I have], I’m anticipating the most fabulous vacation,” she said. “I pack my clothes [thinking], ‘Wow, I’m gonna be, like, the guest of the sheik and [in] the palace with butlers and limos and private planes and camels and the desert.’ So, I imagine where I’m going and get all excited and run and get all my wardrobe together, so that when I’m in the desert [it’s like], ‘Ahhhh!’ ” While the first movie saw the return of Carrie’s famous tutu from the series’ opening credits, this sequel will show Carrie in the Galliano/Dior newspaper dress that sparked a trend back in season three. So, why that dress? “Do you have a better one?” she challenged. “So, that’s the answer!” What do you think of the fashions in the new flick? Which look is your favorite? Tell us in the comments! It’s “Sex and The City 2” Week at MTV News! Check out everything we’ve got on the film! For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos It’s ‘Sex And The City 2’ Week! MTV Rough Cut: ‘Sex And The City 2’ Related Photos ‘Sex And The City 2’ Premieres In NYC

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‘Sex And The City 2’ Stylist Patricia Field Describes Her Desert Inspiration

Woman opens fire on religious police in "unprecedented outburst"

FROM THE ARTICLE: A married woman shot at several officers in a patrol car after she was caught in an “illegal seclusion” with another man in the province of Ha'il on Tuesday. “She shot at the officers to distract them and allow the man to escape instant detention,” said Sheik Mutlak al Nabet, a spokesman for the religious police in Ha'il. He added that the unnamed woman's husband has filed an official report, asking for his wife to be punished and stripped of her Saudi nationality. Saudi law forbids women to socialize with unrelated men or walk in public without a male guardian, other than her husband, father or brother. Members of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, known as the religious police, are tasked with segregating the sexes. Saudi media report that the woman is Syria-born and recently obtained Saudi citizenship after living for years in the kingdom. Her male compatriot is still at large. The incident occurred only few days after the Saudi daily newspaper, Okaz, reported that a religious cop was taken to hospital with bruises after being punched by a woman in her 20s in the city of Al Mubarrazz. “People are so fed up with these religious police, and now they have to pay the price for the humiliation they put people through for years and years,” she said. “This is just the beginning and there will be more resistance.” http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2010/05/saudi-arabia-woman-opens-f… added by: grassroutes