Tag Archives: tv guide

The Trailer for Limitless Wants Us to Believe Bradley Cooper is a Dirty Writer

Here’s a Hollywood truism for Dec. 16: No matter how stringy the wig you put on Bradley Cooper looks, he’s still Bradley Cooper . Translation: He’s really good looking! Yet the trailer for Limitless would have us believe that Cooper was a dingy old writer (with John Cusack’s wig from Being John Malkovich ) and that only some crazypants clear pill — which has some deadly side effects, as we’ve learned — could make him look like “Bradley Cooper.” Riiiiight.

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The Trailer for Limitless Wants Us to Believe Bradley Cooper is a Dirty Writer

REVIEW: Jack Abramoff is More Folk Hero Than Scoundrel in Casino Jack

Until he was convicted in 2008, Jack Abramoff was a wearer of many hats: Washington lobbyist supreme, bedfellow of right-wing creeps like Tom DeLay and Ralph Reed, bilker of Indian nations, sometime film producer, restaurateur, observant Jew. Within the past year, he also became the star subject of two movies: First the sharp, complex Alex Gibney documentary Casino Jack and the United States of Money, and now the more straightforwardly titled Casino Jack , directed by the late George Hickenlooper and starring Kevin Spacey in the title role. If Abramoff fancies himself a charming scamp, he’ll be a lot happier with how he’s portrayed in the latter movie — and that’s the problem with it.

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REVIEW: Jack Abramoff is More Folk Hero Than Scoundrel in Casino Jack

George Clooney Set for Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity

Well, then! Warner Bros. announced today that George Clooney will replace Robert Downey Jr. in Alfonso Cuaron’s highly anticipated — and perhaps actually happening — Gravity . Clooney will co-star alongside Sandra Bullock in the space drama, though his part is of the supporting variety. What does this mean for that report about Clooney’s involvement in The Man from U.N.C.L.E. with Steven Soderbergh? Perhaps another addition to the Ridiculous Casting/Development Rumors list is needed. [ Deadline ]

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George Clooney Set for Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity

REVIEW: John Cameron Mitchell’s Rabbit Hole Is Sensitive But Not Bloodless

Perhaps the only thing harder than making a movie about young parents riven by grief after losing a child is sitting through one. And for that reason alone, Rabbit Hole won’t make for a particularly cheery night out. But director John Cameron Mitchell — adapting David Lindsay-Abaire’s play — has a surprisingly deft touch with this admittedly downbeat material; he builds dramatic intensity in subtle layers, rather than slapping it on with a trowel. Rabbit Hole is so unassuming, in fact — it’s filled with delicately calibrated performances and nuanced moments of connection and disaffection — that the cumulative effect is a bit underwhelming. But you can’t fault Mitchell’s instincts; he’s adamant about understating this material rather than sending it over the top, and that makes all the difference.

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REVIEW: John Cameron Mitchell’s Rabbit Hole Is Sensitive But Not Bloodless

Bad Movies We Love: S.F.W.

Fine vulpine Stephen Dorff is perfect in Sofia Coppola’s new film Somewhere , so it’s only right that we revisit his most shameful work for this week’s Bad Movie We Love: 1994’s S.F.W. No, it doesn’t stand for “Safe for Work.” Yes, it stands for something just as annoying.

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Bad Movies We Love: S.F.W.

Late Night Highlights: Watch Vintage Paul Rudd Dance in a Yellow Half-Tux

Before “making it,” Paul Rudd earned money on the Bar Mitzvah circuit by dancing in a yellow half tux. No kidding! And David Letterman produced the video to prove it. Elsewhere, Stephen Colbert officially won Twitter (and told off Matt Damon), Jon Stewart slammed Jay Leno and Jack Black revealed the secret to his rock solid marriage.

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Late Night Highlights: Watch Vintage Paul Rudd Dance in a Yellow Half-Tux

REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

A hanging statement rather than a question, the unpunctuated title of James L. Brooks’s How Do You Know is an apt reflection of the film’s amble toward a theory, in lieu of an answer. The subject, needless to say, is love: What’s the secret? Is there an algorithm yet? How, when one meets a new person, is it possible to separate emotional temperatures — where circumstance, experience, and need have led each of you to be in that exact moment — and access what true baseline there might be between you? And if it is possible, is it useful? Abandoning analysis for instinct hardly seems like the thing: The rhetoric of instant connections — clicking, chemistry, sparks — feels random and unreliable; the more acquisitive approach — involving checklists, potential, dealbreakers — is bloodless and overdetermined. To be a vampire, and at least have a few clear guidelines about letting the right one in!

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REVIEW: How Do You Know Has Moments of Genius — But Too Many Cell Phones

Sundance Adds 3 New Films Including a Feature-Length Acid Trip

The Sundance Film Festival has announced three late additions to its lineup, and they all sound pretty exciting, especially Alex Gibney and Alison Ellwood’s documentary Magic Trip . Apparently in the 60’s, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Author Ken Kesey and friends took an LSD -fueled road trip to the New York World’s Fair and filmed the entire thing. Ellwood and Gibney have assembled this footage, along with photos and audio recordings into, I presume, something coherent. It could be hilarious, enlightening or really stupid, but I personally can’t wait to find out which. The rest of the announcement includes new work from Miranda July ( Me and You and Everyone we Know ) and Ashley Judd. Read on for the full synopses.

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Sundance Adds 3 New Films Including a Feature-Length Acid Trip

A Somewhat Gentle Man Trailer: Stellan Skarsgård Tries to Play Nice with the Mob

It seems like the Gangster-comedy sub-genre should be scraping the bottom of a dry well by now, but they just keep coming! And while A Somewhat Gentle Man indeed looks like rehash of dark comedy we’ve seen before, the fact that character actor and Lars Von Trier regular Stellan Skarsgård ( Breaking the Waves , Mamma Mia! ) plays the lead offers hop that maybe this Swedish import has more to offer than the trailer suggests.

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A Somewhat Gentle Man Trailer: Stellan Skarsgård Tries to Play Nice with the Mob

Christian Bale Sings the Powerpuff Girls Theme and a Split Second of Newsies