Tag Archives: stallone

Even ‘Expendables’ Lose Their Shirt on Wall St.

Filed under: Jason Statham , Sylvester Stallone , Dolph Lundgren , Terry Crews , Hot Bodies ” The Expendables ” stars Jason Statham , Sylvester Stallone , Dolph Lundgren and a shirtless Terry Crews could barely contain themselves as they rang the opening bell of the New York Stock Exchange this morning. It’s obvious Crews has invested a lot …… Read more

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Even ‘Expendables’ Lose Their Shirt on Wall St.

‘The Expendables’ Stars Talk Sequel

‘I would love to come back. Thank god I don’t die,’ laughed Terry Crews. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Sylvester Stallone in “The Expendables” Sylvester Stallone knows exactly where he’s going to take the Expendables, his band of grizzled mercenaries , now that their flick has grossed $35 million over its opening weekend: back to the multiplex for a sequel. And Sly’s “Expendables” co-stars are primed and ready to go, as they told MTV News when we caught up with them at Comic-Con last month. “I would love to come back. Thank god I don’t die,” laughed Terry Crews. “I’m ready to come back and do another.” Dolph Lundgren also expressed his desire to return for a second installment, which Stallone has said is already plotted out in his mind. Sly is hoping that with Arnold Schwarzenegger leaving the California governor’s mansion early next year, the action hero will return to “Expendables” territory, perhaps for a meatier role this time. “If this works, I would love to get him in the next one,” Stallone told us. “I really think so. He’s been out of the limelight a long time, and I think this is the kind of film that would be a nice intro.” Sly convinced Arnie to do it once; there’s no reason to think he can’t do it again. There’s just something magnetic about Stallone, as interviews with his co-stars made clear. Again and again during our Comic-Con chats, the cast spoke effusively about Sly’s leadership skills on-set. “With all this testosterone and all this adrenaline walking around, he kept it all in check,” laughed Steve Austin. Added Crews, “There’s no other person on the planet who could have put something like this [together] except for Sylvester Stallone. He created the whole summer tent pole as we know it. To be involved and to be with these guys, these legends, the whole thing, I’m just honored.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Expendables.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘The Expendables’ Stars Talk Sequel

Sylvester Stallone height bio

Biography for Sylvester Stallone Born Sylvester Gardenzio Stallone July 6, 1946 (1946-07-06) New York, U.S. Height:5 feet 10 1/2 inches Occupation Actor, director, screenwriter Years active 1970–present Spouse(s) Sasha Czack (m. 1974–1985) Sylvester Stallone, nicknamed Sly Stallone,is an American actor, filmmaker and screenwriter. Stallone is known for his machismo and Hollywood action roles. Two of the notable characters he has portrayed include boxer Rocky Balboa and soldier John Rambo

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Sylvester Stallone height bio

Eli Manning injury picture

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning wipes his bleeding head after having his helmet knocked off during the second quarter of their preseason NFL game against the New York Jets at New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey August 16, 2010. Eli Manning#39;s head was dripping blood, an unsettling sight for the New York Giants and their franchise quarterback. Manning was forced out of the Giants#39; 31-16 victory over the Jets after suffering a 3-inch gash to the left side of his f

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Eli Manning injury picture

LA Times To Hollywood: Please Ignore the Box Office Success of ‘The Expendables’

Last week, film writer extraordinaire  Christian Toto  fell under the delusion that yours truly was interesting enough to interview, and if you’re under the same delusion you can read the two-parter  here  and  here . Among other things, Toto asked me about the clout critics wield and the most common mistakes they make. Here’s a combination of my answers: Critics aren’t dumb, they know the public doesn’t much care which way their thumbs point. But critics do know that based on their opinions and reviews they can enjoy an influence over what kind of films get made. And that’s not a small amount of power. Culture is upstream from politics, after all. If you have 95 percent of critics savaging a faithful retelling of the Gospels as anti-Semitic, no matter how successful “The Passion” is, no one’s going to go near that subject matter again. And that’s the goal. Same with anything that comes close to patriotism or conservatism. Such cinematic rarities are frequently labeled “jingoistic, fascist or simple minded.” This is all done consciously and for a desired effect. You have to understand that when I look at the critical community I only see it for what it really is: a journolista cabal of left wingers deeply engaged in a cultural and ideological war, deeply committed to shaping the powerful messaging of sound and fury that emanate from our pop culture masters. As if to prove my point, this very morning Left-winger Steven Zeitchik of the L.A. Times ran  this propaganda piece ; a not very subtle attempt on his and the paper’s part to tamp down any enthusiasm development execs might have to copycat what made “The Expendables” such a box office success and cultural phenomenon: [emphasis mine] But the Stallone picture –  with its hard-charging, take-no-prisoners patriotism unbothered by the vagaries of the real world  (it takes place in a fictional country, for starters) and its caricature of freedom-hating enemies (“We will kill this American disease,” as the TV spot enticed us) – planted itself squarely in the old-school genre. And this weekend, the movie showed that there’s life in that category yet. … On one hand, it’s understandable that a movie of easy American heroism (OK, first-world Western heroism) would catch on. In fact, it’s surprising it didn’t happen sooner. Apple-pie-patriotism already is behind the success of a cable news network and supports large sections of the contemporary country music industry. Why not a film hit too? …. Political eras are, of course, rarely just one thing or another, and the movies we want to see in a given period are hardly monolithic.  But as tempting as it is to infer that the success of “The Expendables” shows a deeper cultural need, it may well be the wrong inference. When times are confusing, we want movies to reflect that confusion, and even to make sense of it. But we probably don’t want to pretend that confusion doesn’t exist. If you’re wondering why Hollywood is so out of touch with the 80% of their audience who aren’t liberal, part of the reason is certainly because much of the industry takes pride in being so, but you also have this kind of constant pressure from cultural enforcers like Zeitchik who disguise themselves as journalists. What Zeitchik’s quite purposefully doing here is toxifying “The Expendables” by ridiculing its simple worldview – as though the nihilism found in the moral equivalency preached by the likes of George Clooney and Paul Haggis is somehow “complicated.” He’s essentially sending out the message that whoring yourself to the movie-going rubes and their desire to see good conquer evil makes you dumb, uncool, and unsophisticated. So don’t do it. And the timing is perfect. Zeitchik wants to slap some of the excitement out of a box office success and affect the narrative before the Monday morning development meetings begin. He’s also offering talking points to his fellow travellers who attend those meetings. Therefore, even though Zeitchik is factually wrong, facts won’t much matter. No one wants the L.A. Times calling their movies uncool and simple-minded, and regardless of how big the hit, no one wants to have to defend “hard-charging, take-no-prisoners patriotism unbothered by the vagaries of the real world.” Not in this town. But again, Zeitchik is simply wrong. From an artistic point of view, “The Expendables” is a much more impressive achievement than the likes of the flood of “Syrianas” that have been bombing one after another at the box office over the past few years. A simple straight-forward story that’s actually about something is much more difficult to successfully craft than a confusing and muddled story that’s believes in absolutely nothing. Paint-by-numbers might not be Rembrandt but it takes more skill than throwing monkey shit at a canvas. The other false narrative Zeitchik tries to poison the development well with, is the false one that says the success of “The Expendables” is something of a fluke: Until this weekend, old-school action movies – defined, for argument’s sake, as films with a slew of explosions, a shortage of moral ambiguity and a triumph of physical effects over digital ones – had seen better days. It’s been nearly two decades since pictures of this sort were produced with any regularity by the studio system, and a lot longer since they were stateside successes. “Until this weekend?” Ah, no. Laughably, to bring home this point, after mentioning Stallone’s most recent “Rambo” and “The A-Team,” Zeitchik then offers up Jean-Claude Van Damme’s “JVCD” as further proof that films lacking in moral ambiguity “have seen better days.” Really? The one-location, self-referential piece of crap  that is ” JVCD ” is Zeitchik’s Exhibit C in this closing argument? But this is what happens when you’re in possession of a laughably biased theory in search of proof – especially when the surprise successes of  “300″ and “Taken,” not to mention “Salt,” the first “Transformers,” and “Gran Torino” – make a total fool of that moral ambiguity theory. That would be like me ignoring the “Bourne” trilogy while making some sort of argument that un-American, shaky-cammed action films starring hardwood don’t make money. There’s plenty of room at the multiplex and plenty of box-office cash for everyone’s worldview. Unfortunately for our side, the Zeitchik’s of the media world will stoop to pulling the “JVCD” Card in order to remove our seat at that table. UPDATE:  A commenter quite correctly points out that in his closing paragraph, Zeitchik talks about action films with heavy CGI effects and explosions, not just moral ambiguity – and that my counter-examples of “300,” “Transformers,” and “Gran Torino” don’t refute that point. Though I close my paragraph to explain that I’m specifically refuting Zeitchik’s moral ambiguity statement (which is most of the overall argument of his write up, and where I was most focused in my response), I could’ve been much clearer in that regard. As far as Zeitchik’s  full  argument, “Salt” and “Taken” are still better examples than “JVCD.” I would also add the hits “Man on Fire,” “Vantage Point,” and “Inglourious Basterds.” Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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LA Times To Hollywood: Please Ignore the Box Office Success of ‘The Expendables’

‘Expendables’ Prove Dependable At Weekend Box Office

Sylvester Stallone’s throwback action flick takes #1 spot over ‘Eat Pray Love,’ ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.’ By Josh Wigler Jason Statham, Sylvester Stallone and Randy Couture in “The Expendables” Photo: Lionsgate #1 “The Expendables” ($35 million) #2 “Eat Pray Love” ($23.7 million) #3 “The Other Guys” ($18 million) #4 “Inception” ($11.4 million) #5 “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” ($10.5 million) Sylvester Stallone has still got it. The aging actor and filmmaker, most popular for his starring roles in the “Rocky” and “Rambo” franchises, brought the pedal-to-the-metal, blood-pumping (and spewing) antics of 1980s action cinema back to theaters this past weekend with “The Expendables,” taking home first place during a very crowded box-office session. A star-studded affair featuring various macho men from Jason Statham to Dolph Lundgren, “The Expendables” won over audiences nationwide for a grand total of $35 million in its opening weekend. Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Stallone described the success of “The Expendables” as the “proudest moment” of his career, second only to “Rocky Balboa” in 2006 — and with box-office success currently in the palm of his hand, Stallone is using that energy to dream up an “Expendables” sequel. “It’s plotted out in my mind’s eye,” the “Expendables” actor/director/writer told THR. “I believe this group has to continue to evolve; it just can’t become the same people. So how do you get new people introduced into the group, and how do you have some of the other people leaving? Those are the challenges.” Landing in second place was “Eat Pray Love,” the Julia Roberts-starring flick with a target audience considerably less bloodthirsty than those who saw “The Expendables.” Directed by “Glee” creator Ryan Murphy and with an all-star cast that includes James Franco and Javier Bardem, Roberts’ latest earned $23.7 million over the weekend, a modest success given the film’s tough competition and relatively lackluster reviews . Indeed, reviews weren’t too important for this most recent box-office frame as the critically acclaimed “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” premiered in fifth place with only $10.5 million to its name. Based on the widely adored comic book series created by Bryan Lee O’Malley, “Scott Pilgrim” draws inspiration from various areas of popular culture — video games especially — to create a hilarious and action-packed tale of a young misguided soul’s quest to win his dream girl’s heart. Some fans have argued that numerous free screeners prior to the film’s release assisted in “Scott Pilgrim” ‘s box-office demise, though it’s very likely that the comic book adaptation will have a long life on DVD, Blu-ray and other formats, thanks to its cultish fanbase. Upcoming Releases : Another crowded weekend looms with the Ice Cube-starring “Lottery Ticket” and blood-soaked “Piranha 3D” leading the pack. Jason Bateman and Jennifer Aniston try their luck at love in “The Switch,” while Emma Thompson returns as “Nanny McPhee.” On Wednesday, the “Twilight” franchise gets a stake in the heart from parody flick “Vampires Suck.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Expendables,” “Eat Pray Love” and “The Other Guys.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Opening Night: Summer Movie Premieres Related Photos ‘Eat, Pray, Love’ Premieres In New York

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‘The Expendables’: Blasts From The Past, By Kurt Loder

Sylvester Stallone, back in action. Dolph Lundgren and Sylvester Stallone in “The Expendables” Photo: Millennium Films “The Expendables” isn’t a parody of an ’80s action movie, you’ll be relieved to hear. No, “The Expendables” actually is an ’80s action movie, its cast groaning with back-in-the-day authenticity. Sylvester Stallone, who also directed, leads a team of mercenaries that includes such vintage marquee names as Dolph Lundgren and Jet Li, with Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger passing through in don’t-blink cameos, Jason Statham adding whippersnapper appeal, and a real-life action man — ex-wrestler Steve Austin — playing a stone-cold character called (inevitably) Paine. The picture opens with an appetizer of modern-day-pirate carnage in the Gulf of Aden before zipping back to the States for a quick breather at the team’s headquarters, a seedy tattoo shop run by retired teammate Mickey Rourke (peekabooing beneath stringy streaked hair, as usual, but also smoking a thoughtful pipe). After receiving a new assignment from a tight-lipped CIA agent (Willis), the boys relocate to Vilena, an island country so remote we never quite figure out where it’s supposed to be. (The sequences were shot in Brazil.) Here we meet the plot: A corrupt general (David Zayas) is oppressing his people at the behest of a rogue, coke-dealing CIA agent (Eric Roberts, heavily armed with smirks and snarls), and their only opposition is the general’s rebellious daughter (Giselle Iti

TMZ Live: Jackson, Stallone and Mariah Carey

Filed under: Michael Jackson , John Gotti Jr. , Sylvester Stallone , TMZ Live , Michael Jackson Memorial , Movies , Rachel Uchitel , Tiger Woods , Devon James We’re took your questions on everything — including The one year anniversary of Michael Jackson’s death on Friday, Sylvester Stallone partnering up with a member of the Gotti family … and Mariah Carey ‘s unpaid vet bills.… Read more

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TMZ Live: Jackson, Stallone and Mariah Carey

Sylvester Stallone Is ’99 Percent’ Sure ‘Rambo’ Franchise Is Done

‘That really was the legitimate finale,’ star says of 2008’s ‘Rambo.’ By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Sylvester Stallone Photo: Getty Images John Rambo has escaped death too many times to count. He’s survived bloody assaults from Vietnamese, Russian and Burmese soldiers, plus all manner of aggression from nefarious local law enforcement. Shoot, the guy healed his own bullet wound with nothing but a knife, a flame and some booze. So who’s to say that after four movies Rambo is done, never to return to the big screen with a truck-mounted .50-caliber machine gun blazing? Well, Sylvester Stallone, who burst our pie-in-the-spy “Rambo” dreams at the Spike Guys Choice Awards this past weekend. “I think so,” he said when MTV News asked if we’d seen the last of “Rambo.” That means the rumored plans for “Rambo V: The Savage Hunt” will likely never become a reality. Word was that the film would feature Rambo battling human traffickers and drug lords to save a girl kidnapped near the U.S.-Mexico border. Stallone was said to be gearing up both to direct and star in the flick, which would begin production in this spring. But by May, Stallone started backpedaling from not only that timeline but the stance that another “Rambo” was even necessary. Thus it seems like the conclusion of 2008’s “Rambo” — when the headband-wearing badass leaves Southeast Asia and is seen presumably returning to his family home in the U.S. — probably represents the final image in Rambo’s theatrical arc. And Sly is fine with that. “When he walked home, looked down the road, then looked straight ahead at the ranch, that really was the legitimate finale,” Stallone said. Yet he was reluctant to completely seal Rambo’s big-screen coffin. “Could anything happen?” Stallone said. “I’m 99 percent sure no. But …” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Artists Sylvester Stallone

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Sylvester Stallone Is ’99 Percent’ Sure ‘Rambo’ Franchise Is Done

And on Your Left … It’s Sylvester Stallone!

Filed under: Sylvester Stallone The highlight of most celebrity tours is a house that once belonged to a famous person’s cousin … but yesterday one group of tourists got to see an actual celeb in the wild (aka Bev Hills) — Sylvester Stallone ! Best. Tour. Ever. Read more

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And on Your Left … It’s Sylvester Stallone!