The stakes were higher than ever on The Voice Monday night, as the top eight took the stage competing your votes and five spots in next week’s installment. That’s right, THREE singers are going home tonight, and while there will clearly be some dissent no matter who goes home, the favorites did shine Monday. Let’s break down the performances we saw, shall we? The Voice Top 8 Performances Open Slideshow 1. Christina Grimmie – How to Love (The Voice) Christina Grimmie gives her best to Lil’ Wayne’s “How to Love.” View As List
I don’t know about you guys, but as hot as it was, yesterday’s video didn’t do much to satisfy my Xenia Deli fix. If anything, it just made it worse. Because that’s the thing about Xenia, you see her in a bikini once, and you immediately want more. But luckily I was able to find another great set of pictures from the hottest model on the planet. I figure these ought to tide me over at least until after lunch. » view all 21 photos
Sorry for not being able to cut Sam Worthington out of these pictures of Aussie model and socialite Lara Bingle at the Sabotage premiere in LA. But can you really blame him? If I was lucky enough to be dating a busty hottie like this, I wouldn’t want to let go of her either. Although if it were me, I’d probably have my hands a few inches higher and to the right, but I guess they must already be past the honeymoon phase by now. » view all 15 photos Photos: WENN.com
Sorry for not being able to cut Sam Worthington out of these pictures of Aussie model and socialite Lara Bingle at the Sabotage premiere in LA. But can you really blame him? If I was lucky enough to be dating a busty hottie like this, I wouldn’t want to let go of her either. Although if it were me, I’d probably have my hands a few inches higher and to the right, but I guess they must already be past the honeymoon phase by now. » view all 15 photos Photos: WENN.com
The star of Terminator Salvation, Clash of the Titans and Avatar was arrested for fighting on Saturday in Atlanta. He was charged with disorderly conduct, but the charge was dismissed in court Monday morning, according to news reports. The actor, 36, tangled with a doorman at the Vortex bar and grill when he was turned away for being verbally abusive and apparently intoxicated, according to a police report obtained by Celebuzz.com. The doorman, Jerry Link, told police the actor, identified as
Sam Worthington probably wishes he could jet off to a faraway land right about now. The Avatar actor was arrested on Saturday night following a drunken incident at an Atlanta night club, as law enforcement officials tell TMZ Worthington was so wasted that he was denied entry into Vortex. Also lacking ID to get into the establishment, Worthington allegedly grew unruly and pushed the doorman at the entrance. This individual responded by pepper spraying the star and placing him in handcuffs until the police arrived. At that point, the Australian was detained and charged with disorderly conduct. The confrontation was reportedly caught on surveillance video and THG will post it as soon as it hits the Internet. UPDATE : The charges against Sam Worthington have already been dismissed because the complaining witness was a no-show in court this morning.
The 10 years that we are told at the beginning of Wrath of the Titans have passed since Perseus (Sam Worthington) defeated the Kraken may not seem like long enough, especially when you consider that it’s only been two since the Clash of the Titans remake was released, Kraken-like, on an unsuspecting populace. It was sufficient time, anyway, for Worthington to grow out his hair, so that in Wrath of the Titans he sports a soft cap of curls to go with his peaceful life among the humans. He’s lost a wife but gained a son and another pretext to propel a franchise whose fate was sealed once Avatar ’s numbers started rolling in. That it was going to happen was certain; how it happened was of secondary concern. Greek mythology feels particularly ill-used as a framework for narrative standards this low. Wrath (and who knows the source of the titular rage, they’re just mad , OK?) uses some of the names we now know third- or fourth-hand (I’m not sure where I’d be without The Mighty Hercules , which feels like an AP Classics course by comparison) and adds a few faintly recognizable accoutrements — Zeus’s thunderbolt, Pegasus — in what plays out as a generic “save the world” plot. Demigod Perseus is being called back to the realm of the gods by his father, Zeus (Liam Neeson) to help stem the weakening of his powers caused by waning human devotion. Perseus’s jealous brother Ares (Édgar Ramírez, from Carlos ) had turned to the dark side and Hades (Ralph Fiennes) is still rotting in hell, along with his (and Zeus’s) father, Kronos, who is threatening to unleash his wrath on the world, presumably because his “voice” is indistinguishable from that of an 8-year old burping the alphabet. I’d be mad too. The set-up is put across in the strictest expositional terms. The real progression here is one of firepower — specifically the movement from fireballs that streak across the screen to fire clouds that fill the heavens and everything below. Director Jonathan Liebesman ( Battle: Los Angeles ) brings his signature frenetic pacing to the table, starting the CGI thrashings immediately and growing less and less concerned about whether the story keeps up. The animating theme — Perseus’s ambivalence about his father and his powers — is dispatched in perfunctory doses between disorienting battles with fire-breathing beasts. When he expresses doubts about helping his father, the raffish Agenor (Toby Kebbell), son of Poseidon (played, briefly, by Danny Huston), clears them up with this reply: “Yesterday I was in chains, today I’m here, trying to save the universe. Jump in.” An action/effects showcase like this one is not the place to turn for nuanced characterization, but the script (by Dan Mazeau and David Leslie Johnson, story by Greg Berlanti) seems to defy even the few opportunities it has to make us care. Even the occasional swipes at campy self-awareness (“Don’t give me the big speech,” Agenor says at a critical moment; “Eh, I wasn’t planning to,” Worthington replies) feel tossed off, rather than part of developing an actual tone. It would be a real shame, with this much money and this many effects artists, if there were not a few purely visual wows. Wrath manages exactly two, and not where you might expect. The first is in the form of Rosamund Pike, who plays Andromeda (re-cast since the previous film), warrior queen of the whatever. With her bluebird eyes and regal bearing, Pike manages to telegraph human warmth and pull off a sculpted boob plate at the same time. And it is a welcome surprise that rather than the usual stamping, earth-shuddering, many-mouthed thingies inevitably dreamed up in computer bays to terrorize heroes like this one, the most frightening is basically a giant, one-eyed dude. A showdown with a Cyclops and his pals is genuinely thrilling and proceeds with relative coherence. After that the gang finds the dotty fallen god Hephaestus (Bill Nighy), a sort of vintage arms dealer, and for a few minutes Wrath starts to cruise along like it’s actually going somewhere. That feeling is brief, and before long we’re back to a few anodyne exchanges (Neeson and Fiennes seem particularly glib, swinging their beards around in a movie they’ll never watch) between fetishized explosions. “This is where people used to come to worship the gods,” Perseus says to his franchise-extending young son (John Bell) as they pick through a temple in disarray. Yeah, my thoughts exactly. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Sam Worthington was spotted at the “Wrath Of The Titans” New York premiere held at AMC Loews Lincoln Square Theater. Sam was spotted with his girlfriend Crystal Humphries at the premiere.
I’ll say this for Jonathan Liebesman‘s Clash of the Titans sequel Wrath of the Titans: the movie really doesn’t look to skimp on the creatures and mythical monsters. Not only that, but it gives the returning Sam Worthington a haircut that is really worthy of the legacy of Harry Hamlin’s style from the 1981 Clash Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 23/02/2012 18:51 Number of articles : 2