Julio Cesar Castillo and Terisa Griffin prove that opposites attract with their duet of Gloria Estefan’s ‘Conga’ on Monday night. By Natasha Chandel Benji and Sam James on “The Voice” Photo: NBC
In what is being described by many as The Greatest News The World Has Ever Received, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler will co-host the 2013 Golden Globe Awards. The close friends and former Saturday Night Live co-stars appeared together in Baby Mama and will forever be remembered for their dueling impressions of Sarah Palin and Hilary Clinton in 2008. “Having both Tina Fey and Amy Poehler on board to host this year’s festivities is a major coup,” says Paul Telegdy, President of Alternative and Late Night Programming at NBC Entertainment. “Tina and Amy have a proven chemistry and comedic timing from their many years together on SNL to their successful co-starring roles in Baby Mama .” The pair replaces two-time hosts Ricky Gervais and the ceremony will take place on January 13. Dare we bother to ask: Will you be tuning in for it?
The Voice delivered another wildly entertaining night of Battle Round performances Monday night, with 12 contestants singing for survival – or at least another coach’s lifeline. Who advanced? Who lived to fight another day via the steal? Let’s find out! Julio Cesar Castillo vs. Terisa Griffin – “Conga” (Team Blake) Julio Cesar Castillo vs. Teresa Griffin – Conga (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Julio! Steal: Cee Lo! Dez Duron vs. Paulina – “Just the Way You Are” (Team Christina) Dez Duron vs. Paulina – Just the Way You Are (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Dez! Benji vs. Sam James – “You Give Love a Bad Name” (Team Adam) Benji vs. Sam James – You Give Love a Bad Name (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Sam! Nicholas David vs. Todd Kessler – “She’s Gone” (Team Cee Lo) Nicholas David vs. Todd Kessler – She’s Gone (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Nicholas! Lelia Broussard vs. Suzanna Choffel – “Dog Days Are Over” (Team Blake) Lelia Broussard vs. Suzanna Choffel – Dog Days Are Over (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Suzanna! Joselyn Rivera vs. Sylvia Yacoub – “Best Thing I Never Had” (Team Christina) Joselyn Rivera vs. Sylvia Yacoub – Best Thing I Never Had (The Voice Battle Round) Winner: Sylvia! Steal: Joselyn! Which battle was your favorite? Who of this group of singers do you think is best? Do you like the new steal rule? Which coach’s team do you think is best?
Aye, aye, aaaa-aye… Oregon, Colorado, Washington Vote On Mary Jane Legalization Next Month According to Huffington Post On a Monday teleconference call, former Drug Enforcement Agency administrators and directors of the Office of National Drug Control Policy voiced a strong reminder to the U.S. Department of Justice that even if voters in Colorado, Oregon and Washington pass ballot measures to legalize Mary Jane use for adults and tax its sale, the legalization of Mary Jane still violates federal law and the passage of these measures could trigger a “Constitutional showdown.” The goal of the call was clearly to put more pressure on Attorney General Eric Holder to make a public statement in opposition to these measures. With less than 30 days before Election Day, the DOJ has yet to announce its enforcement intentions regarding the ballot measures that, if passed, could end Mary Jane prohibition in each state. “Next month in Colorado, Oregon and Washington states, voters will vote on legalizing Mary Jane,” Peter Bensinger, the moderater of the call and former administrator of the DEA during President Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan administrations, began the call. “Federal law, the U.S. Constitution and Supreme Court decisions say that this cannot be done because federal law preempts state law.” Bensinger added: “And there is a bigger danger that touches every one of us — legalizing Mary Jane threatens public health and safety. In states that have legalized medical Mary Jane, drug driving arrests, accidents, and drug overdose deaths have skyrocketed. Drug treatment admissions are up and the number of teens using this gateway drug is up dramatically.” Really?? So everyone starts smoking the gan-jay and gets violent and reckless?? Sounds like the opposite of what we see most folks doing while lifted, but ok… Here’s how the sticky-icky would be taxed of these legalization measures are voted to life. In Colorado, if Mary Jane is legalized it would be taxed and regulated similar to alcohol and tobacco. It would give state and local governments the ability to control and tax the sale of small amounts of Mary Jane to adults age 21 and older. According to the Associated Press, analysts project that that tax revenue could generate somewhere between $5 million and $22 million a year in the state. An economist whose study was funded by a pro-pot group projects as much as a $60 million boost by 2017. In Washington, a 25 percent excise tax would be in place if the state passes Initiative 502, which state revenue experts say could generate as much as $1.9 billion over the next five years, The Seattle Times reported. If passed, the initiative would allow adults 21 and older to buy up limited amounts of Mary Jane or Mary Jane-infused food products and would create state-licensed growers and retailers. The Associated Press reports that if Washington’s I-502 passes: Public use or display of Mray Jane would be barred. No Mary Jane facilities could be located near schools, day cares, parks or libraries. Employers would still be able to fire workers who test positive for pot. It would remain illegal to privately grow Mary Jane for recreational use, though medical patients could still grow their own or designate someone to grow it for them. It would be illegal to drive with more than 5 nanograms of THC, the active ingredient of cannabis, per milliliter of blood, if the driver is over 21; for those under 21, there would be a zero tolerance policy. That’s a LOT of money that states could earn for allowing a lil’ dojia smoke. Considering how tight some state budgets are for schools, roads, and other public needs, an few extra million bucks could go a long way. Would you vote for legalization? Why? Hit the comments section and let your voice be heard.
Bond isn’t bi. At least that’s what I took away from Daniel Craig and Javier Bardem’s separate but equally vague responses to the erotically charged scene they share in Skyfall . On Monday, the actors took part in separate press conferences to promote the latest installment of the Bond franchise and, in both cases, questions about sexuality arose. In a piece I posted earlier this morning offering my early reaction to the picture , I noted that in the scene where Bond and the villain Silva meet, the latter caresses the bound MI6 agent’s chest. In response to Silva’s attentions, 007 replies, “What makes you think this is my first time?” Since there’s been speculation on the web for a years now now about whether Bond will ever pump more than hot lead into another man, I asked Craig at the press conference if his character was bluffing when he used this line with Bardem’s Silva. “What are you going to do?” Craig replied breezily, getting a nice laugh from the crowd, but then he added: “I don’t see the world in sexual divisions.” He then changed the subject from Bond to to Bardem’s wonderfully flamboyant character, Silva. “Someone suggested that Silva may be gay,” Craig said with a big smile. “And I’m like, I think he’ll f*** anything.” As Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson sat silently onstage with Craig, the actor, natty in a form-hugging suit and skinny tie, then downplayed the scene as “a great flirt. It’s a game of cards,” adding: “It the right thing to say, and that way that Javier plays it is so great. He plays it for real, and he plays it to the limit. He never forgets that he’s playing a Bond villain.” Finally, Craig offered his final assessment: “I love that scene,” he said “It makes me laugh. I hope it makes you laugh.” Earlier in the day, Bardem dropped some hints about his character that may shed a little more light on the scene. Asked how Silva’s “sexuality informed [Bardem’s] interpretation of the character, the actor responded; “It was part of the game, but it’s not entirely the game.” Bardem explained that his “main goal” as Silva was creating “uncomfortable situations” for anyone who crossed his path. “Within that, you can read anything that you want or wish,” Bardem said. “But it was more about putting the other person in a very uncomfortable situation where even James Bond doesn’t know how to get out of it.” In other words, that scene between Bond and Silva isn’t about sex. It’s about power. Right? Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
AFI Fest rounded out its 2012 program with films screening in its World Cinema, Breakthrough, Midnight and Shorts sections. Festival favorites The Angels’ Share , Greatest Hits , Laurence Anyways , Nairobi Half Life , Pieta , White Elephant and Zaytoun are among the titles set to screen at the L.A. festival, taking place November 1 – 8. As previously announced, the festival will kick off with the world premiere of Hitchcock and will close with the the world premiere of Lincoln . The World Cinema, Breakthrough and Midnight selections follow. Information provided by AFI Fest. World Cinema Section: A Royal Affair : DIR Nikolaj Arcel. SCR Rasmus Heisterberg, Nikolaj Arcel. Denmark/Sweden/Czech Republic/Germany Amour : DIR/SCR Michael Haneke. Austria/France/Germany. The Angels’ Share : DIR Ken Loach. SCR Paul Laverty. UK/France/Belgium/Italy. U.S. Premiere. Barbara : DIR/SCR Christian Petzold. Germany. Berbarian Sound Studio : DIR/SCR Peter Strickland. UK. Beyond the Hills (DUPÃ DELAURI): DIR/SCR Cristian Mungiu. Romania/France/Belgium. Blood of My Blood (SANGUE DO MEU SANGUE): DIR/SCR João Canijo. Portugal. Caesar Must Die (CESARE DEVE MORIRE): DIR Paolo Taviani, Vittorio Taviani. SCR Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, Fabio Cavalli. Italy. Everybody In Our Family (TOATA LUMEA DIN FAMILIA NOASTRA): DIR Radu Jude. SCR Radu Jude, Corina Sabau. Romania/The Netherlands. Greatest Hits (LOS MEJORES TEMAS): DIR/SCR Nicolás Pereda. Canada/Mexico/The Netherlands. U.S. Premiere. The Hunt (JAGTEN): DIR Thomas Vinterberg. SCR Tobias Lindholm, Thomas Vinterberg. Denmark. In Another Country (DA-REUN NA-RA-E-SUH): DIR/SCR Hong Sang-soo. South Korea. Kon-Tiki : DIR Joachim Roenning, Espen Sandberg. SCR Petter Skavlan. Norway/Denmark/United Kingdom. Kuma : DIR Umut Dag. SCR Petra Ladinigg, Umut Dag. Austria. Laurence Anyways : DIR/SCR Xavier Dolan. Canada/France. U.S. Premiere. Leviathan : DIR Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Véréna Paravel. UK/USA/France. Like Someone in Love : DIR/SCR Abbas Kiarostami. France/Japan. Our Children (A PERDRE LA RAISON): DIR Joachim Lafosse. SCR Joachim Lafosse , Mathieu Reynaert, Thomas Bidegain. Belgium/France/Switzerland. Paradise: Faith : DIR Ulrich Seidl. SCR Ulrich Seidl, Veronika Franz. Austria/France/Germany. Paradise: Love : DIR Ulrich Seidl. SCR Ulrich Seidl, Veronika Franz. Austria/Germany/France. Pieta : DIR/SCR Kim Ki-duk. South Korea. U.S. Premiere. Post Tenebras Lux : DIR/SCR Carlos Reygadas. Mexico/France/Germany/The Netherlands. Reality : DIR Matteo Garrone. Italy/France. The Sapphires : DIR Wayne Blair. SCR Keith Thompson, Tony Briggs. Australia. Something in the Air (APRÈS MAI): DIR/SCR Olivier Assayas. France. Tabu : DIR Miguel Gomes. SCR Miguel Gomes, Mariana Ricardo. Portugal/Germany/Brazil/France. Tey (AUJOURD’HUI): DIR/SCR Alain Gomis. Senegal. War Witch (REBELLE): DIR/SCR Kim Nguyen. Canada. White Elephant : DIR Pablo Trapero. SCR Alejandro Fadel, Martín Mauregui, Santiago Mitre , Pablo Trapero. Argentina/Spain/France. U.S. Premiere. Wrong : DIR/SCR Quentin Dupieux. France/USA. Zaytoun : DIR Eran Riklis. SCR Nader Rizq. UK/Israel. U.S. Premiere. Breakthrough Selections: Everybody’s Got Somebody…Not Me (TODO EL MUNDO TIENE ALGUIENE MENOS YO): DIR/SCR Raúl Fuentes. Mexico. Kid : DIR/SCR Fien Troch. Belgium. North American Premiere. The Last Step : DIR/SCR Ali Mosaffa. Iran. The Most Fun I’ve Ever Had with My Pants On : DIR/SCR Drew Denny. USA. Nairobi Half Life : DIR David Tosh Gitonga. SCR Serah Mwihaki, Charles ”Potash” Matathia, Samuel Munene, Billy Kahora. Kenya/Germany. North American Premiere. Oh Boy : DIR/SCR Jan Ole Gerster. Germany. North American Premiere. Midnight Selections: ABCs of Death : DIR Kaare Andrews, Angela Bettis, Adrián García Bogliano, Bruno Forzani and Hélène Cattet, Ernesto Díaz Espinoza, Jason Eisener, Xavier Gens, Jorge Michel Grau, Lee Hardcastle, Noboru Iguchi, Thomas Cappelen Malling, Anders Morgenthaler, Yoshihiro Nishimura, Banjong Pisanthanakun, Simon Rumley, Marcel Sarmiento, Jon Schnepp, Srdjan Spasojevic, Timo Tjahjanto, Andrew Traucki, Nacho Vigalondo, Jake West, Ti West, Ben Wheatley, Adam Wingard, Yudai Yamaguchi. USA/New Zealand. Come Out and Play : DIR/SCR Makinov. Mexico. Here Comes the Devil (AHI VA EL DIABLO): DIR/SCR Adrián García Bogliano. Mexico/Argentina. John Dies at the End : DIR/SCR Don Coscarelli. USA.
Also in Monday afternoon’s round-up of news briefs: Hip-hop artist Kid Cudi is joining a romantic comedy; Ben Stiller teases Zoolander ; Snow White and the Huntsman director Rupert Sanders gets a new gig; And Shiloh Fernandez joins Gregg Araki ‘s latest. R.I.P. John Clive John Clive, who appeared in films including A Clockwork Orange , the Pink Panther and The Italian Job , has died at the age of 79. The actor and author, who was also the voice of John Lennon in Yellow Submarine and went on to become an international bestselling author, passed away following a short illness, his family said on Monday, The Guardian reports . Mike Epps to Play Richard Pryor in Nina Simone Biopic Mike Epps will play Richard Pryor in Nina , the Nina Simone biopic starring Zoe Saldana. In a supporting role, Epps will play Pryor, who opened for the singer when they two were starting out in the early 1960s. Pryor had terrible stage fright and Simone, in her autobiography, recalled how she regularly rocked him into calmness, THR reports . Kid Cudi Boards Romantic Comedy Two Night Stand Hip-hop artist Scott “Kid Cudi” Mescudi has joined the cast of Two Night Stand , the indie romantic comedy starring Analeigh Tipton and Miles Teller. The story centers on two people who meet online and get together for a one-night stand. The couple get snowed in the next morning and are forced to spend more time together, THR reports . Ben Stiller Reprises Zoolander Role The actor, 46, showed up alongside designer Tommy Hilfiger and Daily Show host Jon Stewart at Comedy Central’s Night of Too Many Stars: America Comes Together for Autism Programs at New York City’s Beacon Theater. Stiller announced earlier this year that a Zoolander sequel is in the works, Yahoo reports . Rupert Sanders to Direct The Juliet Sony Pictures and New Agency have tapped the Snow White and the Huntsman director to lead The Juliet , an adaptation of the Alfred Bester short story, Deadline reports . Shiloh Fernandez Joins Gregg Araki’s White Bird The Red Riding Hood actor will play a lead part in the film which revolves around a young woman who sees her life spin out of control after her mother disappears. Fernandez will star opposite Eva Green and Shailene Woodley, Deadline reports .
David Correy has a message for Diamond White and Carly Rose Sonenclar : Not so fast, ladies! With praise (rightfully) reigning down on these very young women, the X Factor contestant stepped up to the microphone in front of L.A. Reid, Justin Bieber and Scotter Braun last night and delivered an impressive cover of “Domino.’ Between his voice, his look and his story of seeking out his birth mom, it’s hard to believe Corry won’t be a factor on Season 2… David Correy – “Domino”
Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, Bruno Mars, ?uestlove, and Will.i.am will all lend their voice talent to the first episode of “The Cleveland Show’s” 4th season.…
Hollywood veteran Martin Landau earned an Oscar in his first collaboration with Tim Burton , 1994’s Ed Wood , and for Burton’s latest and most personal picture, Frankenweenie , the filmmaker cast his erstwhile Bela Lugosi as the eccentric but inspirational Mr. Rzykruski — the science teacher who nurtures young Victor Frankenstein’s budding talents and encourages him to forge his own path. It’s a fitting role for the 84-year-old Landau, who lit up as he discussed Frankenweenie and his longtime parallel career as an acting coach to the likes of Jack Nicholson, Anjelica Huston, and many more Hollywood greats under Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio. Tim Burton cast you as Mr. Rzykruski, Victor’s teacher and he’s quite the character: At first imposing and foreboding, he’s revealed to be one of Victor’s only kindred spirits. What did you make of him at first and how did you find his quirks? It’s a fun character, and the thing that amazed me is that I saw an arc and if I could play it on camera I’d play it exactly the same. I did [the voice recording] first and the animators animated after. It was just my voice, but Tim sent me pictures of the character and it looked like me years ago, or Vincent Price and me mixed up, a caricature of me with dark hair and such. I saw him as a loving man, but eccentric as hell and passionate! And also, European – but not specifically from a country. It said that; it said it’s a generic accent. It’s not German, it’s not Russian, it’s not Hungarian, but it’s European. [In Mr. Rzykruski’s voice] So I lowered the voice . The relationship between Victor and Mr. Rzykruski is the best child-adult relationship in the film, and probably the most important one. He’s the one who inspires the kid, with science and the frog! He’s somewhat outlandish and certainly not a diplomat. If you’re a teacher you don’t call your students’ parents stupid. It’s a great line, though. It’s a funny line, and I knew it. But again, the movie is funny, moving, and scary in equal parts and I love that. This is a movie Tim wanted to make three decades ago and couldn’t. He made a short live-action version of it, but the one blessing is that if he had done it then it wouldn’t be in 3-D. But it’s not stuck on 3-D, things coming at you to shock you. You also happen to be a teacher off-screen, having spent many years with the Actors Studio where so many talents passed through over the decades. It was a different time. A lot of my contemporaries have passed away, which is sad, but I still run the Actors Studio on the West Coast with Mark Rydell – [Al] Pacino, [Harvey] Keitel and Ellen Burstyn run the New York Actors Studio so we’re in touch with each other all the time. And I work with a lot of young actors and help them. Why did you first begin teaching? I started teaching when I was in my 20s because Lee Strasberg asked me to, and he didn’t do that with a lot of people. Why do you think he did? At the Actors Studio when I got in, he’d ask for comments and I’d raise my hand and critique the actors succinctly and helpfully, and I think he noticed that. One day he said “I want you to teach – I’ve got a waiting list and I’m going to send some of my people to you.” He sent me off, teaching. Jack Nicholson was my student for three years, and Harry Dean Stanton, Anjelica Huston; a lot of people have studied with me. It’s paying my dues, because as a young actor I benefited from getting in. The year I got into The Actors Studio, Steve McQueen and I were the only two accepted that whole year. Two people, Steve and me. It’s still tough to get in. Lifetime membership. Who was your favorite student? That’s hard – they’re all my kids. I’ve got two daughters and it’s impossible for me to say one of them is a favorite. Fair enough! Was there one actor who surprised you the most over the years? Nicholson did, but he had some problems. He would kind of surround a moment that he didn’t want to embrace. I found that those things were probably the richest part of his talent, which he was avoiding because it was very hurtful. But I wanted him to know that it wasn’t going to hurt him. You can’t perish because of your own feelings, you have to embrace those things as an actor because it’s part of your palette. How did you help him? I had him do a bunch of exercises that would connect his voice, his body, and emotions. A lot of actors lead with their voices and their bodies follow; they’re split, they’re not together. The instrument is not working as a unit. To get them to become good actors… all an audience wants to believe is that what’s going on up there is happening for the first time ever. You don’t want to see the rehearsals, you don’t want to see the work. You want to see two people in conflict or people connecting, but I don’t see a lot of that. There are some movie stars who are considered good actors who put me to sleep. I’m not going to mention their names! You could be talented but if you don’t use that talent well you’re depriving yourself. Craft is about talented people who shut down easily because they’re vulnerable, they’re hypersensitive, where your talent actually short-circuits you. People who are less vulnerable are usually not that interesting. [Laughs] So when your own talent acts as a deterrent, you’ve got to pay attention to that. How do you open that up? How do you create relaxation when you start getting tense because you’re sensitive to a situation? Tension will shut you down. Your sphincters will all close up. Talented actors have problems; it’s like a violin playing a violinist, where the instrument itself shuts the talent down. It’s a matter of managing that, then. Getting the actor to trust his talent and trust his instrument. No one tries to cry. Bad actors try to cry. Good actors try not to cry. How a character hides his feelings tells us who he is. No one shows their feelings except bad actors! No one tries to laugh! If I tell you a racial joke and you laugh, you’re telling me something about yourself – you’re revealing something. A drunk doesn’t try to be drunk; he wants another drink! One of the most studied things is a drunk picking up a full glass of booze [affects drunken mannerism, grabbing an invisible glass]… and bringing it to his mouth. It’s not sloppy. [Slurring] It’s ve-rrry … concentra-aated . Anyway, I never met two people who were alike so I’ve never approach a character as the same character. They’re physiologically different, environmentally different, emotionally different – they’re all different, and that’s what makes it exciting, still, for me. What’s your relationship with Tim like, after years of working together? Well, we kind of understand each other. He doesn’t have to say a whole lot to me. But I’m rarely directed by anybody. I really haven’t been directed by anybody in 30 years. A good director hires good actors and creates a playground, and you play. You come up with stuff that no one could quite envision. I saw this character not only vocally but physically, behaviorally, and to my pleasure what they came up with was exactly as I would have done it if I’d been acting and it wasn’t animation. That thrilled me, because it was like, wow – they caught it from the voice and it’s exactly as I saw it! Because I saw the arc. There was an arc; he gets fired and gives the kid advice, but it’s sad in a certain sense. He doesn’t restrain himself, this guy. Rzykruski seems to understand why his progressive thinking doesn’t fly in the suburbs. He is who he is, and I love that about him. He’s a zealot. He loves science, and the fact that people don’t understand it in the way that they need to upsets him. He sees this kid and he immediately thinks, “This kid’s okay.” He doesn’t know what the kid’s doing, because from the frog’s reaction the kid channels lightning… but Tim loved Frankenstein. He loved Dracula as a kid. This has been festering in him all these years. He never lost this movie, and you think about that – it’s three decades later and this is probably the most Tim Burton film. Edward Scissorhands was as well but he wanted to do that as an animated film and couldn’t, but that was fortuitous in that it introduced him to Johnny Depp, and that became very important to him and to Johnny – and to me too, in a way, because I loved working with Johnny and Tim in Ed Wood . Ed Wood is fantastic. The relationship between you three on that project really jumps off the screen. It’s a fun movie. We had a good time. A great time, actually. Johnny and I hit it off, Tim and I hit it off. You also started out as a cartoonist early in your career. Do you think that had something to do with you and Tim getting on so well? You kind of see things visually, and maybe that’s a little bit of it. Tim and I draw differently; I have a bit of an Art Deco style. Do you still draw? Oh, all the time! I’ve got thousands of what I call doodles, although they’re not doodles. Tim’s seen them. But yes – the visualization is there for me too, in a way. I see the character, and then I work on all of those things into a subjective form. They’re objective, and I make them part of me. We’re all capable of it. Where do you go from here? The next thing I know I’m doing is I’m going to London to do more work for Frankenweenie . I’d like this picture to do well. And the BFI is giving me a lifetime achievement award. How does that feel, to receive an honor like that? Well I’ve got a lot of those now. I keep saying, “I’m not done!” Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .