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‘The Beaver’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics find it difficult to separate Mel Gibson’s personal life from troubled character. By Kara Warner Mel Gibson in “The Beaver” Photo: Summit Entertainment After release date changes and several other unrelated misfortunes, “The Beaver” is finally bowing in New York City and Los Angeles, with other cities to follow May 20. Starring Mel Gibson, Anton Yelchin, Jodie Foster (who also directed) and Jennifer Lawrence (in a supporting role), the film revolves around Walter Black, a once stellar CEO suffering from severe depression, until he discovers a Beaver puppet he uses as a therapeutic tool to help him reclaim his former self. So what do the critics think? Of the 70-plus reviews up on Rotten Tomatoes , 51 deemed it “fresh,” giving it a 70 percent fresh rating. The most interesting aspect is how each reviewer chooses to address the subject of the “Gibson drama.” The Story ” ‘The Beaver’ is almost successful, despite the premise of its screenplay, which I was simply unable to accept. I concede it is possible that a man in depression might be able to heal himself by projecting his personality into a hand puppet. I am not sure it is possible, or even advisable, to make a serious movie about that. We go through the movie with Mel Gibson wearing a toothy beaver on his left hand, and that creates a whole lot of disbelief for us to suspend. — Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun Times The Performances “So what’s to recommend in ‘The Beaver’? First but not least, Jennifer Lawrence playing Norah. I wish this hadn’t been her first released film since ‘Winter’s Bone’; the role doesn’t deserve her. Still, she fills every moment of it — even a manipulative graduation speech — with warmth and graceful intelligence. Then there’s the man to the right of the puppet, by turns tortured, morose, animated or charming. When I first met Mel Gibson in Sydney almost 35 years ago, he was a handsome young actor with an open face, a winning smile, an abundant gift and a bright future, although no one could have imagined the extent of his success, or the depth of his fall. The gift remains.” — Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal Tiptoeing Around the Gibson Drama “As someone observes in the movie, ‘People love a train wreck when it’s not happening to them.’ How strange that this movie should seem to be commenting on Gibson himself, when it was filmed before his recent public scandals. Further, how strange that the movie should seem like an apology, recorded in advance — or that we should feel like accepting the apology, when we weren’t the ones who were wronged.” — Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle “I know I shouldn’t allow my feelings about a performer in ‘real life’ to affect my view of him or her on film, but that’s like a judge telling a jury to ignore damning evidence they’ve already heard. Gibson has always excelled at playing men on the edge — apparently for good reason — and this part takes that to an extreme, a place he’s perfectly willing to go.” — Leonard Maltin, for IndieWire The Director “Foster clearly knows she’s telling a very messy, unmanageable story. The puppet seems to know it too: Sometimes its face looks cute and cheerful; other times, you catch a demented gleam in its eyes. Foster has crept out on a limb here, showing us a grown-up human being who’s in terrible pain, and for whom there are no easy answers. And if ‘The Beaver’ isn’t as effective as it ought to be, at least there’s integrity in Foster’s approach. She doesn’t work the movie like a puppet; she lets it speak for itself.” — Stephanie Zacharek, MovieLine The Final Word, Pro-Con-Pro Style “It’s hard to imagine anyone other than Gibson, with his wounded gaze and eloquent variations of posture, bringing such resonance to this character. At one point Walter says, ‘People seem to love a train wreck, as long as it’s not them’ — and the real-life overtone is unmistakable. The redemption the movie most strongly suggests is Mel Gibson’s own.” — Kurt Loder, Reason.com “Maybe Ms. Foster thought she was doing Mr. Gibson a favor by showing that he could play a troubled man who simply needs help. The problem is that, as an actor, Mr. Gibson doesn’t do normal anymore and is at his best playing men on the verge, as in ‘Edge of Darkness,’ a thriller about a cop hunting his daughter’s murderer. It was a suitably blunt character for an actor who has become a blunt instrument and has a lock on loony tuners and angry patriarchs. That should make Walter a fine fit for Mr. Gibson, except that there’s no there there to the character, just a puppet with a bad attitude and good timing. A raggedy rage-aholic, it steals the show, handily. Take away his puppet, and the man disappears.” — Manohla Dargis, The New York Times “Foster merits praise for putting her energy into a movie about mental illness that goes beyond the slickness of ‘As Good as It Gets,’ in which a happy ending can be spun from a patient’s mere promise to take his medication. There is one element of ‘The Beaver’ that does reflect a Hollywood sensibility: Walter’s breakdown never threatens the family financially. The narrative would have more tension if they didn’t appear so comfortably padded in a Nancy Meyers-like milieu. (Meyers directed Gibson in 2000’s ‘What Women Want,’ a feel-good movie that now seems very far in his past.) But despite that and the ludicrousness of the puppet prop, ‘The Beaver’ is serious about portraying mental illness. And whatever your opinion about Gibson the man, so is Gibson the actor.” — Mary Pols, Time Check out everything we’ve got on “The Beaver.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Mel Gibson’s ‘The Beaver’ Clips

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‘The Beaver’: The Reviews Are In!

Lady Gaga’s ‘Judas’ Video: The Final Scene Explained

‘The video is so good, it’s an individual interpretation,’ co-director Laurieann Gibson tells MTV News. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Matt Elias Lady Gaga Photo: Getty Images There are many memorable moments in Lady Gaga ‘s “Judas” video , but perhaps none is as unexpected as the final scene . Gaga, dressed in a very big wedding dress, is stoned to death. Gaga has done religion before; her “Alejandro” video was filled with religious iconography, causing quite a hubbub last year. Now, perhaps her most moving statement in this religious-themed video is her own death at the end. “The video is so good, it’s an individual interpretation, and as for me, personally, the dress, the wedding dress, you’re the bride, Christ is the bridegroom, and to marry hope, faith, inspiration is ultimately the idea that no matter what anybody says, your purity is in your heart,” co-director Laurieann Gibson told MTV News about the finale. “There’s always tomorrow. There’s always an opportunity to find peace, and it’s pure. She’s pure. You’re pure. I’m pure. And the stones, they’re just from people who judge, and if you’re gonna throw one, then make sure your closet is clean.” The video was shot last month in Los Angeles , and Gibson shared some of the inside details of the shoot with MTV News. “We actually shot the video on the Universal lot, which was amazing,” she recalled. ” … To be theater rats and dance kids from New York, for us to get to a [studio] lot was really magical. We art-directed it, so it was actually bare, and we were able to create ‘New Jerusalem’ and inspire the idea of the biblical inspiration but create it new. “Never stop moving the lens, never lock off, complimenting her with the way she moves,” Gibson added about directing the video. “Making it graceful when she’s strong in her movement, and I particularly loved the stoning scene.” Gibson revealed that there was a concert scene that didn’t make the final cut of the video and said they ended up with an overwhelming amount of material. “There’s so much in the video,” she said. “We got everything we wanted. We actually got more than we could edit. It was very difficult to decide the direction of the edit.” So how does the video fit in to Gaga’s evolution as an artist? “It’s the beginning of another journey,” Gibson offered. ” I think it’s the start of a more powerful and effortless execution and design of a girl with a huge destiny.” What did you think of the “Judas” video? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Videos Lady Gaga’s ‘Judas’ Video Premieres Related Photos Lady Gaga’s ‘Judas’ Video: Decoded Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga’s ‘Judas’ Video: The Final Scene Explained

Watch the Red Band Trailer for 30 Minutes or Less with Jesse Eisenberg and Danny McBride

Is releasing red band trailers before actual trailers a new Hollywood thing? Just one day after Universal unveiled a scatological look at The Change-Up , here comes an R-rated peek at Sony’s 30 Minutes or Less , the follow-up action-comedy from Zombieland director Ruben Fleischer that stars Jesse Eisenberg as a pizza boy. Click ahead to see if this one — wait for it — delivers.

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Watch the Red Band Trailer for 30 Minutes or Less with Jesse Eisenberg and Danny McBride

Watch the Red Band Trailer for 30 Minutes or Less with Jesse Eisenberg and Danny McBride

Is releasing red band trailers before actual trailers a new Hollywood thing? Just one day after Universal unveiled a scatological look at The Change-Up , here comes an R-rated peek at Sony’s 30 Minutes or Less , the follow-up action-comedy from Zombieland director Ruben Fleischer that stars Jesse Eisenberg as a pizza boy. Click ahead to see if this one — wait for it — delivers.

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Watch the Red Band Trailer for 30 Minutes or Less with Jesse Eisenberg and Danny McBride

Theater Owners Say They Won’t Prevent You From Seeing Summer Blockbusters

On Wednesday, it was reported that the National Association of Theatre Owners would protest the planned Home Premiere on-demand service that Warner Bros., Universal, Sony and Twentieth Century Fox are participating in by limiting the screen space offered to those studios during the busy summer months. Apparently, those reports weren’t exactly correct.

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Theater Owners Say They Won’t Prevent You From Seeing Summer Blockbusters

Brad Pitt’s Zombie Movie World War Z Gets a DP

It may have taken over two years of development and some serious finance scrambling , but Brad Pitt’s $125 million zombie apocalypse movie World War Z has finally secured a DP. The cinematographer is Oscar winner Robert Richardson, who worked with Pitt on Inglourious Basterds . Marc Forster ( Monster’s Ball ) will direct the adaptation of Max Brooks’ bestseller, which is rumored to begin filming this month. Now if only Brad Pitt could jump start production on those five other in-development projects that are clogging his IMDB page. [ Slashfilm ]

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Brad Pitt’s Zombie Movie World War Z Gets a DP

That’s What I Am Trailer: How Many Coming-of-Age Tropes Can You Spot?

Poor Ed Harris. Poor Amy Madigan. Poor WWE Superstar Randy Orton. They’re all pawns in the surf-music-laden nostalgia of the ’60s in the new trailer for That’s What I Am . The coming-of-age movie concerns an eighth-grade boy’s formative experiences with change, a wonderful teacher, and an outcast named Stanley whose sad soundbites — for some reason — are making me cry with laughter. Let’s count up the cliches!

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That’s What I Am Trailer: How Many Coming-of-Age Tropes Can You Spot?

X-Men: First Class Sequels Could Explore Hippie-Era ’60s, ’70s and ’80s

Everyone seems to love the retro ’60s vibe of Matthew Vaughn’s X-Men: First Class . But do we really want to see Professor Xavier, Magneto, and Co. slogging through the not-quite-as-fashionable 1970s and 1980s in potential sequel story lines? (Think hard about this. On the one hand: Magneto in bellbottoms doing lines with Emma Frost at Studio 54. On the other: Dazzler.)

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X-Men: First Class Sequels Could Explore Hippie-Era ’60s, ’70s and ’80s

Ellen Page, Jesse Eisenberg Confirmed for Woody Allen’s Untitled Rome Film

Looks like Woody Allen is taking advice from our very own Louis Virtel, who just last week suggested the prolific director cast Ellen Page in one of his next projects. Page will join Jesse Eisenberg, Alec Baldwin, and Penelope Cruz in Allen’s untitled Rome-set film , to begin production this summer. The film will be Allen’s 42nd feature film. Will Page play a Mariel Hemingway-type, as Louis suggests, with Eisenberg as Allen’s neurotic onscreen stand-in? Cast your own speculations below.[ Variety ]

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Ellen Page, Jesse Eisenberg Confirmed for Woody Allen’s Untitled Rome Film

Will Theater Owners Make It Hard for You To See The Hangover Part II and Other Summer Blockbusters?

When the news about Home Premiere — the DirecTV service that will allow subscribers to watch relatively new movies in their homes 60 days after release for the totally reasonable price of $30 — leaked during CinemaCon two weeks ago, the National Association of Theater Owners was predictably upset: “[We] repeatedly, publicly and privately, raised concerns and questions about the wisdom [of early on-demand movies],” said the group in a statement . “These studios have made their decision in what they no doubt perceive to be their best interests. Theater owners will do the same.” So they have — and now it affects you.

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Will Theater Owners Make It Hard for You To See The Hangover Part II and Other Summer Blockbusters?