Tag Archives: Universe

Jim Sturgess Picks Up Survival Tips Filming ‘The Way Back’

‘We skinned rabbits, we did all kinds of crazy stuff like that,’ he tells MTV News. By Kara Warner Jim Sturgess Photo: MTV News When a film shoots “on location,” there is an added air of glitz and glamour. Thoughts of far-off exotic countries and stars getting pampered in fancy trailers come to mind. That was not the case on the set of “The Way Back,” however. Because the film is based on the real-life story of a group of inmates who escape the Siberian Gulag during World War II and must walk more than 4,000 miles to freedom, the actors were put through similar trials and tribulations (or as close as they could get to the real suffering, without endangering themselves) during production. When MTV News caught up with Jim Sturgess (“21,” “Across the Universe”), we asked him if he and his castmates (including Colin Farrell and Ed Harris) managed to pick up any survival tips throughout the process. “Don’t eat yellow snow,” he joked. “No, there were loads. We were really lucky. We were able to be put in touch with a guy who had actually done the walk for real. A French expeditionist, a guy called Cyril Delafosse-Guiramand. He was an amazing guy. He basically read the book [on which the film is loosely based] ‘The Long Walk,’ and after reading that book decided he was going to take the trek from Siberia to India himself. He had his own food — he didn’t just survive off the land — but he was just an amazing man to have around.” Before they started filming, Sturgess said the cast got together and learned a few basic survival skills, none of which he mastered. “It was just building fires and how to find dry moss in snowy conditions and the best way to construct a fire, where to do it,” Sturgess recalled. “We skinned rabbits, we did all kinds of crazy stuff like that, we felled trees, and he was teaching me lots of navigational techniques, how to navigate yourself north and south using shadows from sticks, from the sun rising. It was cool. We all enjoyed it.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Way Back.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Jim Sturgess Picks Up Survival Tips Filming ‘The Way Back’

Little Monster: David Lynch Loves Him Some Lady Gaga

The Friday fun rolls on ! Here’s Movieline hero-cum- pop superstar David Lynch discussing what musical performers he really admires: “My son played me Pink Floyd performing ‘Comfortably Numb’ at some giant arena with a light show and I don’t think it gets much better than that. There’s this girl Lissie, she does a cover of Gaga’s ‘Bad Romance.’ Gaga is amazing too but this is stripped down man, it’s raw — Lady Gaga is much more about production but still cool.” Just throwing this out to the universe: Can David Lynch direct Gaga’s next music video? [ ShortList ]

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Little Monster: David Lynch Loves Him Some Lady Gaga

Julie Taymor’s Public Appearances Latest Spider-Man Casualty

Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark painmaster Julie Taymor was set for an interview appearance at a New York Times Arts & Leisure weekend next month, but her PR just released the following regret: “With the changes in the ‘Spider-Man’ production schedule, Julie will be deep in rehearsals and will not be available to participate.” The seclusion begins? She should’ve tried this technique when Across the Universe garnered that Golden Globe nomination for Best Picture . So silly! [ NYT ]

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Julie Taymor’s Public Appearances Latest Spider-Man Casualty

New Robert Pattinson Photo: Why Not?

Photographer Stewart Shining has presented Robert Pattinson lovers with the best holiday gift of all: the actor himself! Sort of. Shining, who shot the star for a recent issue of Italian Vogue , Tweeted the following outtake with a note that reads: “I was just thinking this would be my motto for the new year, and a nice Xmas present for the RPatt fans.” Why just post a picture of Robert Pattinson without any breaking news on the actor? As the image itself asks: Why not?!?

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New Robert Pattinson Photo: Why Not?

Rupert Everett Lambasts Hollywood, "Tasteless" Jennifer Aniston Movies

Actor Rupert Everett is not shy about expressing himself … or naming names if he’s bitter enough about who becomes a star and who doesn’t. Speaking to BBC Radio 4 about how homosexuals fare in Hollywood, the interview eventually turned to the question of audience perception. Rupert argued that no matter what fans may think, the industry decides who will become A-list. How else to you explain Jennifer Aniston?! The Switch? The Bounty Hunter?! Come on! “If you look and analyze the careers of many, many, many stars, you’ll find that they’re mostly sustained by the business,” he said. “I’m not going to start naming names of people whose films have not succeeded at the box office, but you’ll find lots of women and lots of men that the powers that be determine are right and they’ll stand with them for quite a long time.” “Jennifer Aniston will have so many absolute flops, but she’s still a member of that club, and like a star forming in the universe, things will swirl around her and it will suddenly solidify into another vital tasteless rom-com.” Oooookay … Rude? Bitter? You bet. Although The Switch , The Bounty Hunter, Love Happens and Management were pretty terrible, we’ll give him that. Marley & Me was a big hit, though, and Friends? One of the most popular shows in history. Plus, she married Brad Pitt and has that hair. In the end, you don’t have to be a professional critic to observe correctly that Jen has made some bad movies. But there is an audience. If they weren’t profitable, why would they continue to be made? Rom-coms may be tasteless, but they’re cheap to produce. Cha. Ching. Maybe she’s riding her past successes a bit these days, but does she really deserve to be singled out like this? Go get a life, Rupert! Just don’t even get near her .

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Rupert Everett Lambasts Hollywood, "Tasteless" Jennifer Aniston Movies

‘Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark’ To Resume Performances After Injury

Following fourth injury, the Broadway musical is canceling only its Wednesday matinee. By Terri Schwartz “Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark” Photo: Marvel After a fourth person was injured during the Broadway preview run of “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” the Wednesday matinee show has been postponed, but all subsequent shows will proceed as scheduled, a spokesperson for the production told MTV News. Stunt double and aerialist Christopher Tierney, 31, was hurt on Monday during the final moments of a preview performance. The cable he was attached to snapped, and he fell approximately 8 to 10 feet. He was taken to New York’s Bellevue Hospital with multiple broken ribs and substantial bleeding, BroadwayWorld.com reported. He is being held in serious but stable condition. Rick Miramontez, the spokesperson for the $65 million musical, told MTV News that representatives from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Actors Equity and New York State Department of Labor met with the “Spider-man” company on Tuesday (December 21) to discuss additional safety protocols to prevent more injuries. “It was agreed that these measures would be enacted immediately,” he said. That agreement prevented the show from being delayed anymore than it already has been. Producers for “Turn Off the Dark” recently announced the opening of the musical would be delayed from January 11 to February 7. Previous injuries on the set included actress Natalie Mendoze being hit on the head with a rope and suffering a concussion. The musical, a creative brainchild of “Across the Universe” director Julie Taymor and U2 band members Bono and The Edge, involves telling the story of Spider-man in a musical fashion and incorporates acrobatics and cable work so the actors can fly across the stage like Spidey with his web. The Edge explained to MTV News last month that “it’s elements of rock and roll, it’s elements of circus, it’s elements of opera, of musical theater. It is so many different things, and when we started the process, we promised we’d do something that hasn’t been done before. And really, we, I think, have managed to do that.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.

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‘Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark’ To Resume Performances After Injury

2010 In 60 Seconds: Comebacks By Kanye, Eminem, Betty White And More

MTV News’ pop-culture expert Jim Cantiello takes a look back at the year that was: all in a minute. By James Montgomery Kanye West Photo: Jean Baptiste Lacroix/ WireImage Well, 2010 is nearly in the books, and if you’re a fan of octogenarians on the comeback trail, “California Gurls” gone wild and swoop-haired Canadian teenagers, congratulations on the best year of your life! Yes, it was quite a ride … Kanye West returned to top form, Eminem recaptured his old magic, Taylor Swift moved a million, Rihanna proved to be unstoppable, Katy Perry proved the doubters wrong and Ke$ha, well, she just proved to be Ke$ha. Lady Gaga dared to speak out, Weezy went away, and a host of new stars — everyone from Drake to Justin Bieber to Willow Smith — stepped up to the plate. In pop culture, we were mesmerized by the exploits of everyone from Amber Portwood to Zac Efron, obsessed with the likes of Antoine Dobson and the “Pants on the Floor” guy, cheered on Betty White and vilified Mel Gibson (and probably Miley, too). We watched as our favorite couples went their separate ways, said goodbye to “Lost,” “The Hills” and Jay Leno (whom we then said hello to all over again), and went absolutely crazy for the iPad. Oh, and everything in the universe was made in 3-D. And all of that was just the tip of a rather sizeable iceberg. It’s pretty difficult to sum up 2010 in any way, so let’s just say it was the “most” year in recent memory. The most stars, the most scandals, the most use of the word “vuvuzela.” There were more shake-ups, breakups and comebacks than we can even remember … so it’s a good thing we’ve got MTV News’ pop culture expert Jim Cantiello to do it for us. Here’s his look back on the year that was … in 60 seconds, of course. Ready? Go. Related Videos 2010 In 60 Seconds Related Artists Kanye West Eminem

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2010 In 60 Seconds: Comebacks By Kanye, Eminem, Betty White And More

Are we putting enough resources into scientific exploration?

How many stars are in the night sky? More than we think. Scientists reported on Wednesday that the stars may be undercounted, which could alter theories about how galaxies are created and grow, as well as changing perceptions about the universe. Then, in an announcement more down to Earth, NASA scientists announced that they had trained a bacterium found in Mono Lake to survive on arsenic, thus expanding the notion of what is necessary to support life. Yet at the same time, NASA's budget is under pressure in light of budget concerns in Congress. New information and discoveries clearly suggest that there is still much of the universe unexplored–and more to discover closer to home. Are we putting enough resources into scientific exploration? Or should this type of experimentation and research be shifted to the private sector rather than government? added by: sgwhites

Radiation ripples show the Big Bang may not have been the first, and there could be more to come

THE Big Bang might not have been the beginning of the universe, but just the start of a new chapter. Scientists have found rings of radiation in the cosmos that may be older than the Big Bang, suggesting that event was just the latest in a series of rebirths, Wired reports. The theory was proposed by Sir Roger Penrose, a theoretical physicist at Oxford University, and Vahe Gurzadyan of the Yerevan Physics Institute in Armenia, in an article on arXiv.org. The circles of radiation appear in concentric circles made up of below average temperature in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), which is the leftover glow of the Big Bang. The CMB — which dates back to 300,000 years after the Big Bang — is a consistent temperature, indicating the density. According to the mathematical research, pulses of energy created a uniform region of dark matter, seen as circles. These pulses were the result of gravitational waves from previous eons running into the current one. The researchers posit that a single Big Bang would release huge gravitational energy bursts, not in uniform waves as the circles indicate. Sir Roger interprets the circles as ripple-like evidence of collisions between multiple supermassive black holes that occurred during the Universe's previous life, or eon, suggesting that there were and will be many more. “What would normally be regarded as a probable entire history of our universe, starting with its Big Bang… is taken to be but one aeon in a (perhaps unending) succession of such aeons (sic),” the scientists say. Sir Roger says these circles cannot be explained by the current “inflation theory” which posits that the universe grew rapidly from the size of an atom in the first nanoseconds of the Big Bang. Inflation would most likely iron out these patterns, or not create them in the first place. Princeton University cosmologist David Spergel told Wired that “the existence of large-scale coherent features in the microwave background of this form would appear to contradict the inflationary model”. However he added that there was not enough detail to assess the reality of the circles yet. http://www.news.com.au/technology/radiation-rings-show-big-bang-may-have-been-ju… added by: bundlebear

Proof of extra dimensions possible next year: CERN

GENEVA (Reuters) – Scientists at the CERN research center say their “Big Bang” project is going beyond all expectations and the first proof of the existence of dimensions beyond the known four could emerge next year. In surveys of results of nearly 8 months of experiments in their Large Hadron Collider (LHC), they also say they may be able to determine by the end of 2011 whether the mystery Higgs particle, or boson, exists. Guido Tonelli, spokesman for one of the CERN specialist teams monitoring operations in the vast, subterranean LHC, said probing for extra dimensions — besides length, breadth, height and time — would become easier as the energy of the proton collisions in it is increased in 2011. Other CERN physicists say the success so far of the world's largest scientific project suggests that some great enigmas of the universe they have in their sights could be at least partly resolved much sooner than they thought. “One year ago, it would have been impossible for us to guess that the machine and the experiments could achieve so much so quickly,” said Fabiola Gionotti, spokeswoman for another research team in the surveys, issued on CERN's website ( www.cern.org ). RESULTS ALL THE TIME “We are producing new results all the time,” she added. The existence or otherwise of the Higgs, never yet spotted but believed to provide the glue giving mass to matter, should be settled one way or another by the end of next year. The $10 billion LHC, whose operation and monitoring involves scientists and research centers in 34 countries, went into full operation on March 31, smashing protons together at near the speed of light with increasing energy. These collisions have been creating millions of simulations of the Big Bang which 13.7 billion years ago brought into existence the primordial universe from which stars, planets and life on earth — and perhaps elsewhere — eventually emerged. The LHC operations have been so trouble-free that at the start of this month CERN scientists were able to switch to colliding lead ions, creating temperatures a million times hotter than at the heart of the Sun. The ion collisions, creating an amalgam dubbed a quark-gluon plasma, give the research teams another way of looking at what happened within a nano-second of the Big Bang and at the first matter produced by that mighty explosion. CERN scientists say they have already taken research with ions further than those with gold at the long-established Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at the U.S. Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island. These experiments have shown the power of the link-up of 140 computing centers around the world known as the Grid which processes the vast amounts of information that ion collisions produce. On December 6, the LHC will be shut down for servicing and to avoid draining electricity in the depths of winter from the energy networks of France and Switzerland along whose border CERN lies. It will start up again in February, then run at full blast, with protons, until the end of the year, when it will close down again until 2013 while engineers prepare it for running at double the energy to the end of the decade and beyond. added by: Vierotchka