Happy Oscar week! Time for another one of Movieline’s virtual awards roundtables , this time featuring nominated filmmakers behind this year’s contenders for Best Foreign-Language Feature. Meet our distinguished panel:
Happy Oscar week! Time for another one of Movieline’s virtual awards roundtables , this time featuring nominated filmmakers behind this year’s contenders for Best Foreign-Language Feature. Meet our distinguished panel:
With the Valentine’s Day weekend upon us many folks will be looking for a flick to cuddle up with. But what are the choices? The sad fact is that seeing two Black people in love (or even lust) on the big screen is becoming more and more rare. Remember when it felt like we had another movie filled with beautiful brown skinned people coming out several times a year? A lot of you fifteen-year-olds owe your existence to a date night where Love Jones was shown. Trust. But we want to hear from you. We’ve collected a sweet 16 of Black romance movies for you to vote on and tell us which is #1. Is it Boomerang ? Why Did I Get Married ? Love & Basketball? Well.. . CLICK HERE TO VOTE and tell us! Each week the tournament will face off the survivors until YOU pick a winner in the finals. May the best movie win! If you need a refresher, here are some of our favorite clips from the competing movies: Boomerang Love Jones Love & Basketball Poetic Justice Brown Sugar CLICK HERE TO VOTE
Britnee Kellogg auditioned for American Idol in Portland last night and the backstory she shared with us shed a great deal of light on Jennifer Lopez’s divorce from Marc Anthony . Wait… what?!? The 27-year old hopeful told the judges she was married for a long time to a basketball player, giving up her dreams so that he could follow his own… only for him to then cheat on her and tear their family apart. Cue to a close-up of J. Lo and a comment from her later on of “I am feeling you!” Are you feeling Kellogg’s cover of “You’re Bo Good?” Does she deserve a spot in Hollywood? View now: Britnee Kellogg American Idol Audition Keep an eye on Britnee in Hollywood, along with refugee camp survivor Romeo Diahn . He has an amazing story.
The Teen Dating Violence Summit presented by Verizon Wireless will feature keynote speaker Johanna Orozco, the nationally recognized survivor of teen dating violence. Johanna has appeared on Oprah, ABC’s 20/20 and The View. The Teen Summit strives to raise awareness about the dangers of dating violence, bullying and exploitation. Attendees will hear real stories from teens about today’s dating experiences and how parents and loved ones can best support them. Teens will participate in workshops focused on healthy relationships, bystander intervention, texting responsibility and how all of this can affect their health. The day will wrap up with exciting giveaways and prizes. The summit is for teens but adults are welcome, there are only 100 slots left, register now ! Thanks to Kaiser Permanente for helping make this possible!
The craziest, most unstable girls I know are Jewish. I don’t know if it is a cultural thing, a bi-product of being rich and spoiled, or if it has something to do with the holocaust, but for some reason the biggest, out for themselves, bratty cunts I know are Jewish…. They are all guilt ridden about being bad jews….or living a life the community will deem not ideal all while letting me fuck the up the ass without a condom when they are engaged to good Jewish boys who are sitting at home planning the wedding and investing in their future kids college fund day traing….cuz no one is ever ready for the miserable, yet picture perfect futures their controlling families have planned for them….. All are self serving, with nothing but self interest, walking all over everyone they encounter….in a spoiled child way….I figure they have this power cuz they know they’ll always find a husband, cuz Jewish guys only marry Jewish girls and decent looking Jewish girls are not easy to find…even the ugly jewish girls get married…. It’s like he husbands are used to jewish cunt insane behavior cuz their moms are Jewish too and act the same way….and they really don’t mind settling with lying, cheating whores, because they know they’re going to lie and cheat as soon as the wife gets pregnant, ideally with french girls, cuz they take it up the ass on the first date, while their wife’s only take it up the ass for grimey low life fucking bloggers…and that the marriage is all for show…to make grandma holocaust survivor happy before she dies…you know cuz she worked so hard to give you the life you have…. So it only makes sense that Tila Tequila a money grubbing, self involved, spoiled cunt who is totally nuts would convert….and more importanlty that the jewish people will embrace her for the nutcase she is, because she’s been one of them, but more importantly because she’s been on TV and that’s a good story to tell at temple when bragging about your son’s new fiance….because all that matters is that she can pump out some jew baby…. Here he is showing off her jew implants on a jew beach in jew Miami like the jew that she is. TO See The Rest of the Pics FOLLOW THIS LINK
Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton covers the latest issue of Scouting, a U.K. magazine dedicated to promoting … scouting. And specifically volunteer work! The 30-year-old is now the February/March cover girl on the publication, a fitting choice after she performed some private volunteer work with the scouts. “Part of her role as volunteer is to help below the radar,” says a source of Kate’s work with girl and boy scouts and their younger counterparts, the Beavers. The scouts hope the duchess will help Kate Middleton run a variety of activities relevant to her skills and interests, and she’s likely to be popping into some groups’ regular meetings near her home on Anglesey, North Wales, and elsewhere. Inside the magazine, adventurer-broadcaster Bear Grylls pays tribute to Kate: “It is how we change our society, many people doing a little bit,” he says. The scouts are one of five charities she chose to patronize in her royal role. Kate is set to start officially touring some of them next month. She and husband Prince William are due back from vacation in Mustique soon. William then heads to the Falkland Islands for military duty next month.
Cher is not dead. Not even a little bit. The music legend, 65, became the latest notable name to fall victim to an Internet death hoax when “RIP Cher” became a Twitter trend late Thursday night . The rumor apparently started when a user by the name @Lorraine_Star created a BS tweet that was made to look like a retweet from CNN’s real account. Plenty of regular people and idiot stars alike bought it. The message, likely concocted just so people will buy it, read: “RT @CNN: American recording artist Cher dies at 65 years old. Found dead in Malibu home.” “Did I just hear Cher has passed away? Is this real? OMG,” Kim Kardashian tweeted, never one to sit back and not insert herself into anything trending. Terrible matchmaker Patti Stanger of Millionaire Matchmaker fame was also quick to weigh in: “Is this for real? I don’t see it anywhere. Can’t be!” Kim Kardashian is never one to refrain from Tweeting. Or use spellcheck . While it’s true that Cher hasn’t been active on her Twitter since January 22, her good friend, jewelry designer Loree Rodkin, set the record straight: “Whoever started that stupid rumor needs to have their face dragged across concrete. It’s a hoax. She’s fine. She’s so NOT dead. She’s just a busy girl.” Here’s welcoming Cher – along with recent death hoax survivors Jackie Chan, Justin Bieber, Will Smith, Jim Carrey and Jon Bon Jovi – back from the fake dead!
Film shows what happens when an oil-drilling team goes missing, and no one comes looking for them. By Kevin P. Sullivan Liam Neeson in “The Grey” Photo: Open Road Films In most movies where the main characters find themselves stranded after a shipwreck or a plane crash, the survivors take solace in the fact that someone must be looking for them. “The Grey” isn’t like most movies. In the new film, which hits theaters Friday, Liam Neeson plays a member of an oil-drilling team that gets into a plane crash somewhere near the Arctic Circle during their journey home. Many die in the incident, and the remaining members soon realize that no one is coming for them. Unless you count the wolves. Neeson told MTV News that the rougher edges of the characters in “The Grey” are what make the film something new and resonant. “They’re definitely flotsam and jetsam of society. One of them says after the mishap with the airplane that ‘Nobody’s going to care about us,’ ” Neeson said. “Nobody’s going to send out reconnaissance planes to try and find these guys because who cares? You know?” During the course of the film, one of the characters makes reference to “Alive,” the Ethan Hawke film about a rugby team stranded in the Andes. Neeson’s co-star Frank Grillo described how their film and co-writer/director Joe Carnahan took a different road. “The element of survival is different because these are just much different men, as opposed to being civilized,” he said. “They’re not real civilized guys, and I think that’s what Joe [Carnahan] tries to show you in the beginning of the film.” Even if the realization that no one will look for these men is devastating, Neeson believes that’s ultimately what keeps the characters going. “It’s from that sadness that they realize who they are and what they are and how they’re just a speck of dust in society,” Neeson said. “But that somehow empowers them to continue on with this crazy journey for freedom and solace and to get out of this predicament. It actually gives them strength, the fact that they’re nondescript.” Will you see “The Grey” this weekend? Leave your comment below!
Wolves, like most animals, know a lot of things that humans don’t. When bad white men move onto their turf to do bad white-man stuff – like drilling for oil – they instinctively know something’s amiss in the balance of nature, and damned if they’re going to just sit back in their dens and fuhgeddaboutit. In The Grey, wolves unleash their fury at mankind in a bloody yet tasteful flurry of stamping paws and gnashing teeth; mankind fights back as best he can, which in this particular case, is not very well. What’s not surprising about the picture, considering it was directed by the guy behind movies like Smokin’ Aces and The A-Team, Joe Carnahan, is how absurdly macho some of the dialogue is. (My favorite line, uttered by a character after he’s witnessed one too many wolf-inflicted deaths: “This is fuck city, population 5 and dwindling.”) What is surprising is how poetic the movie is, partly thanks to its high-lonesome sound design and the desolate beauty of its visuals, but mostly because of its star, Liam Neeson. He knows what the wolves know, only he’s not telling. Neeson plays Ottway, a sharpshooter stationed at an Alaskan oil refinery, where hard men work even harder shifts, toiling for five weeks straight before being freed for two weeks of vacation. It’s Ottway’s job to pick off the bears and other assorted critters who might prey on the men as they work. He’s good with a gun for sure, but he also takes the killing part of his job seriously: In the movie’s early moments, he approaches a wolf he’s just shot — it lies in the snow, bloodied but hardly drained of its dignity — and places his hand on the animal’s flank as it draws its last breath. Ottway may be good at his job, but he doesn’t derive any pleasure from it. And we learn early on that something is deeply amiss in his personal life as well: We see him scratching out a desperate letter to a loved one — with a fountain pen, no less — even though he knows it can’t possibly bring her back. We also see him draw back from the brink of taking his own life: Ottway is one unhappy guy, but what happens shortly thereafter galvanizes him. He and a bunch of the oil workers board a plane bound for civilization. The craft goes down somewhere in sub-Arctic territory. A handful survive the crash — they’re played largely by a cache of actors you’ve vaguely heard of, people like Dallas Roberts, James Badge Dale and Frank Grillo; Dermot Mulroney, mildly disguised by thick glasses and unruly hair, is the one immediately familiar face. But it’s only after the group has managed to pull themselves from the wreckage and patch themselves up that they face the real threat: A group of wolves who stalk them with an almost mystical zeal, not for food but seemingly for sport. Or revenge. Ottway, being the guy who knows all about wolves, urges the men — whose numbers, predictably, dwindle as the story tramps through the snow to its half-rousing, half-bittersweet ending — to fight back, using home-made weapons like improvised bang sticks fashioned from sharpened sticks and bullet casings. (If you’re like me, you probably have no idea what a bang stick is; but if you watch The Grey, you will.) Carnahan has fashioned a movie that’s largely an endurance test. Some pretty awful things happen to some characters we come to care about, and the picture carries you along on a wave of vaguely sickening feelings: You keep watching, wondering what bad thing is going to happen next. But The Grey also offers plenty of moments of grace and beauty, moments that are less pure hokum than pure movie. Just before that plane goes down, as the sleepy travelers doze, we sense that the cabin has suddenly become very cold: The men’s breath hangs in the air, taking wispy forms that just might be — wolf ghosts? Later, after the men have trekked across a broad swath of blank, snowy terrain toward a stand of trees, they peer into the darkness of the forest only to see multiple sets of glowing pin-dot eyes staring back at them. The Grey is all about man vs. nature, and how. There’s also some man vs. man and a lot of man vs. himself mixed in there too. You can bet that the most obnoxious crash survivor — the one every other character not-so-secretly despises, and the one you really wish had died early on, played with cranky effectiveness by Grillo — will redeem himself spectacularly by the end. There are many instances, perhaps too many, of men speaking sentimentally of their families, or of their lack of family. But the picture — which was written by Carnahan and Ian Mackenzie Jeffers, from a short story by Jeffers — keeps working, almost in spite of itself, partly because of its despairing, gorgeous visuals. The picture was shot on location in damn-cold British Columbia. (The cinematographer is Masanobu Takayanagi, whose credits include the recent underground stealth hit Warrior. ) And the very quietness of the movie is a big selling point. There’s gore here, but it’s the artful sort, consisting of things like tableaus of half-glimpsed bloody carcasses nestled in sparkly-white snow. And Carnahan is smart enough to know what not to show. When those largely unseen wolves start hooting and moaning, the sound goes right through you: It’s a howl of existential pain from nature’s peanut gallery. No wonder Ottway feels that pain so keenly. And yet Neeson keeps him from becoming a caricature. Even though the role demands a significant amount of action and physical derring-do, most of Ottway’s struggle is happening inside, and Neeson reveals his character’s suffering gradually, in small bursts of light and shadow. I can’t imagine what it’s like for an actor who has only recently lost his wife to play a man who feels kinship, anger and exquisite loneliness in the company of wolves. Whatever Neeson’s private thoughts and feelings are, you can’t escape the suspicion that he’s channeling them here, placing them before us in muted, unspoken form. It doesn’t hurt that Neeson looks more handsome and noble than ever, particularly with that defiantly regal nose: The Romans, supposedly, never took up residence in Ireland. So how, then, did Neeson’s profile find its way onto their coins? You can take or leave most of the dialogue The Grey requires Neeson to utter, perfunctory stuff along the lines of “They weren’t eating him –- they were killing him” and “We’re a threat –- we don’t belong here.” But it’s hard to ignore the shifts of dusky feeling that play across his face. It’s as if those vaporous wolf ghosts have taken up residence there, in a place where macho posturing is only a small part of what the movies are about. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .