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REVIEW: Hit and Run Stalls Because Dax Shepard Is Mostly In Love With His Cars

There’s a lot of “auto” in Dax Shepard ‘s debut as an auteur. Shepard (who previously co-directed the mockumentary Brother’s Justice ) wrote, co-directed and stars in the action comedy  Hit and Run ; he even cast real-life love Kristen Bell to play the role of his cherished girlfriend, but their romance is not at the center of this movie — rather, it’s the deep love between Shepard and the many cars that populate the film that drives Hit and Run . It’s only when these machines rev their engines that the soundtrack fills with sultry ballads and the camera switches to slow mo — all the better for us to admire the sleek undercarriages and sexy lines of the movie’s many four-wheeled stars. But this is far from a good thing. The movie’s human stars can’t compete with such auto-erotica; cartoonish characters and a thin plot are mostly vehicles to get from one stretch of highway to another, in a chase through the kind of cinematic America where fleabag motels have parking lots filled with easily-stolen luxury sports cars and roadways are always adjacent to abandoned airports that provide plenty of space for nifty driving tricks. Shepard stars as Charlie Bronson, a likeable guy living in a non-specific American everytown. Although Charlie doesn’t have a job, he does have a devoted girlfriend, Annie (Bell), and a bumbling U.S. Marshal (Tom Arnold, looking increasingly like a nerdy version of Meat Loaf) to watch over him. Charlie, you see, is in the Witness Protection Program, a fact that is supposed to prevent him from leaving his safe provincial town. But when Annie has the opportunity to interview for a big job at a university in Los Angeles, Charlie decides to chauffer her towards her dreams and away from his own safety. The fact that he decides to do this not in Annie’s inconspicuous sedan but rather in his highly noticeable 1967 Lincoln Continental (complete with expired plates registered to his former identity) is only one of many questionable moments in the thin plot. It’s the plates on the car that allow Gil (Michael Rosenbaum) Annie’s meticulously groomed and spiteful ex-boyfriend, to uncover Charlie’s former identity. And thanks to the wonders of Facebook, where one assumes all dangerous criminals have easily-searchable profiles, Gil is able to track down Charlie’s former bank-robbing associates and tip them off as to his whereabouts. The chase is on, with Annie and Charlie trailed by Marshal Randy and Gil, picking up extra characters (including a pair of extraneous cops and Beau Bridges in a cameo as Charlie’s father, who keeps a fleet of monster ATVs in his big red barn, of course) along the way. Will the baddies from Charlie’s former life catch up with him? Will Annie make it to her interview? Will she discover that Charlie’s story, of only being an innocent witness to a crime, isn’t the whole truth? Will they stay together in the face of shock revelations and inevitable car sickness? ( Will that ATV get to climb a giant staircase?? ) The movie kicks up no real tension in the search for the answers to any of these questions, and when plotlines do swing back around, they come with more of an “Oh right, remember that ?” than with a satisfying snap. One senses that the movie doesn’t quite have the chutzpah to be what it wants to be — a Fast and Furious -like sequence of balletic car chases — so it periodically halts to wedge in some romance. (The charming Bell and Shepard don’t have much to do but enjoy a lovely on-screen chemistry, a rarity for offscreen couples, that rises above their underwritten characters.) Jokes stay mostly in the range of the strictly puerile (naked old people!) with occasional forays into the mystifyingly icky (an extended joke has Charlie obsessed with the nationality of the man who raped Bradley Cooper’s bank-robbing baddie in the prison shower.) The talented cast is game and deserves better, especially Cooper, who is saddled with a dreadlocked fright wig that gives the impression he is performing all his scenes with a spongy blond octopus sitting on his head. But at least he gets to drive, swerving around in his little red car like he’s in a bumper car ring. From this we know his character is unpredictable but ultimately in control, because the movie’s most complete character developments come through the cars the characters drive. It’s a cinematic stand-in for masculinity that would make Freud proud: We know Arnold’s U.S. Marshal is a mess because he drives a minivan that he can’t even park competently (he also wildly fires off his gun all the time, in case one mishandled phallic symbol wasn’t enough). Dax Shepard’s Charlie, as befits the hero and the part played by the writer/director, gets the broadest spectrum of vehicles, from the kickass black Lincoln to a shiny ATV. It looks like he’s having a great time up there, getting to drive them around. If only he had brought the audience along for the ride. Anika Chapin is an NYC-based dramaturg and writer. She has contributed pieces to The New York Times , and blogs about theater and pop culture at http://bloggledygook.wordpress.com . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Hit and Run Stalls Because Dax Shepard Is Mostly In Love With His Cars

Quentin Tarantino to be Honored at MoMA; Harvey Weinstein Asks for Violent Movies Summit: Biz Break

Also in Friday morning’s round-up of news briefs, the San Sebastian Film Festival unveils its roster of Spanish-language films for its September event. Sex and Sunsets production rounds out its cast; and a look at the coming weekend’s new specialty releases including Killer Joe , Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , Ruby Sparks and more. Museum of Modern Art to Fete Quentin Tarantino New York’s MoMA will honor the writer/director at its 5th annual Film Benefit December 3rd. Tarantino’s latest film, Django Unchained will be released by The Weinstein Company December 25th. “As a celebrated auteur director, Tarantino has leveraged his deep knowledge of cinema history to engage, entertain, and inform a new generation of movie fans,” said Rajendra Roy, Chief Curator of Film at MoMA. “Honoring him is a small way to pay homage to the important service he has done to propel and promote the art form.” Sara Canning and Catherine O’Hara Join Sex and Sunsets Canning ( Vampire Diaries ) and O’Hara ( Frankenweenie ) will join Ryan Kwanten in in the Serendipity Point Films production. Sex and Sunsets revolves around Leo Palamino (Kwanten), a failed writer-cum-dishwasher made famous for his many flaws and shortcomings in a blog called “Why You Suck,” written by his ex wife. He meets Colette, the girl of his dreams on the day she is marrying the perfect man. And so the ultimate underdog love story begins. Around the ‘net… Harvey Weinstein Wants Summit on Violent Movies The TWC chief told the Huffington Post that Hollywood “can’t shirk our responsibilities” for depicting violence. “I think, as filmmakers, we should sit down – the Marty Scorseses, the Quentin Tarantinos, and hopefully all of us who deal in violence in movies – and discuss our role in that,” he said, Deadline reports . San Sebastian Film Festival Reveals Spanish Film Lineup Among the highlights is new work from Oscar-winner Fernando Trueba with The Artist and the Model , Antonio Bayona’s Thailand-set The Orphanage with Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts based on the 2004 tsunami and Sergio Castellitto’s Twice Born with Penelope Cruz who escapes war-torn Sarajevo with her newborn, but returns to rediscover the father of her child, THR reports . A Preview of New Specialty Releases this Weekend… Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , Killer Joe , Ruby Sparks , Big Boys Gone Bananas!* will roll out this weekend. LD Entertainment is attempting to make proverbial lemonade out of its NC-17 rating for Killer Joe , which has had audiences clamoring for tickets at festivals and other events, more at Deadline .

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Quentin Tarantino to be Honored at MoMA; Harvey Weinstein Asks for Violent Movies Summit: Biz Break

‘Game Of Thrones’: George R. R. Martin Dishes On Season Three

Writer talks casting Mance Rayder, Theon’s return and season three’s expectedly epic finale. By Kara Warner Alfie Allen in “Game of Thrones” Photo: HBO

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‘Game Of Thrones’: George R. R. Martin Dishes On Season Three

‘Ted’ Stars Explain: How Do Teddy Bears Have Sex?

‘He’s a wild one, that boy,’ Mark Wahlberg tells MTV News. By Kara Warner Ted as voiced by Seth McFarlane and Mark Wahlberg in “Ted” Photo: Give “Family Guy” mastermind Seth MacFarlane his first R-rated, live-action feature film about a “living” foul-mouthed teddy bear co-starring Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis and things are going to get rather inappropriate rather quickly. Like teddy bears doing sexual things with vegetables, for example. When MTV News sat down with the cast of “Ted” recently, we asked them to provide detailed explanations for how warm, fuzzy and filthy-minded Ted manages to have sex without the aid of any of the familiar tools, as it were. “Well, he does a lot with the lips and tongue. A lot. Almost to the point that he’s definitely going to get tongue cancer,” Wahlberg deadpanned. “Yeah, he’s a freak. He does freaky things with vegetables. … He’s a wild one, that boy.” Kunis started her explanation off with a more audience-friendly description. “Kids these days like to do what I think is called ‘dry hump,’ so maybe the bear does that. He uses tools,” she offered innocently. As it turned out, MacFarlane provided the most straightforward-yet-slightly censored answer, possibly because he has to take all “Ted”-related subjects more seriously as the writer/director/voice of “Ted.” “We haven’t ever really explained that. There’s a scene where you see him having sex with [girlfriend] Tammy-Lyn in the back of the grocery store. We don’t explain what’s going on in there,” MacFarlane said. “They are in a grocery store, there is a lot of produce and vegetables available, which, depending on what kind of imagination you have, could be a part of the process. I like to keep it sort of vague.” Check out everything we’ve got on ” Ted. ” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Ted’

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To Woody With Love: Woody Allen’s 9 Most Entertaining On-Screen Surrogates

Woody Allen has cemented an historic onscreen legacy by managing to play a grand total of one single character for the last 47 years. (What versatility!) Needless to say, it’s been one hell of a character: Allen’s extreme version of himself, trading on some of the most base cultural stereotypes out there about New Yorkers, Jews and intellectuals, has, logically or not, repeatedly held mainstream America’s interest. Yet, in a halfhearted nod to the idea of variety, Allen hasn’t always played the character himself – due to the constraints of age, style, and physical type, he’s occasionally enlisted actors to come in and do their best Woody Allen imitation over the years. With a new addition to the coterie coming in To Rome With Love – Jesse Eisenberg is a neo-Woody if ever there was one – it’s worthwhile to take a look back at Allen’s nine most entertaining surrogates. Kenneth Branagh, Celebrity Could the staid, withdrawn nature of British mores and culture – or those of the Irish, for that matter – be any further from the traits needed to play the Woody character effectively? It seems like a counterintuitive choice, but going with Branagh for the Woody surrogate in Celebrity (one of Allen’s more underappreciated films) was a smart choice; Branagh’s natural composure collides in an interesting way with the foregone conclusion of the character’s neuroses and tics. The result is a performance where Branagh is restrained on the surface while seemingly jittery and anxious underneath – a more subtle and surprisingly effective way of making Allen’s comedy work. Jason Biggs, Anything Else One of Allen’s most maligned pictures, it’s this writer’s contention that Anything Else has received an undeservedly bad rap. Sure, the chemistry between Biggs and Christina Ricci is closer to producing liquid nitrogen than hot sparks, but there’s plenty of great one-liners, and Allen himself steals the show. Biggs, one of the least skilled actors to portray a Woody alter ego, is nevertheless entertaining in a performance that paints the character in even broader, more direct strokes than Woody’s on-the-nose performances normally do. It’s as far from subtle as can be, but the broadness and directness of Biggs’ choices sometimes serves to let the delivery of Allen’s bon mots swing for the fences. Larry David, Whatever Works Could there be a more appropriate Allen surrogate under the sun than uber-neurotic Larry David? The cultural connection between the two couldn’t be more apparent; Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm could never have been seen as potentially viable in mainstream America without Allen’s career success. Giving his performance far more vitriol than what Allen is capable of, David revels in the misanthropy that is present, but often more subtly disguised, in Allen’s films. John Cusack, Bullets Over Broadway This is what happens when a talented, popular actor really uses their likability to channel the Woody character well. As famous as Allen is, his character’s narcissism (as well as his personal transgressions later in life) can make him difficult for audiences to root for at times. Cusack blended the typical Woody persona with his own undeniable charm to create a character who, when in a tough spot, you can’t help but empathize with. That would be good if this was a simple relationship film, but when Cusack’s character is getting into danger by dealing with gangsters, it’s more than good – it’s great.

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To Woody With Love: Woody Allen’s 9 Most Entertaining On-Screen Surrogates

Meet Harry Potter: Alan Moore’s Magical Antichrist

The Boy Who Lived gets a hellacious makeover in the pages of Moore’s latest ‘League of Extraordinary Gentlemen’ comic book. By Josh Wigler Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter in “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” Photo: “Harry Potter” is not for everyone. Some people do not like fun. Some people do not like magic. Some people do not like fun and magic together. I get it, and I accept it. Harry hate isn’t something I’m into, but if that’s your position, have a ball. You’ll get no killing curses out of me. But killing curses are flying, it seems, from the wand of Alan Moore. The critically acclaimed and famously reclusive “Watchmen” writer is drawing a harder line against the boy wizard than even the staunchest “Potter” hater could dream up as the latest installment of Moore’s “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century 2009,” out in stores Wednesday (June 20), features Harry Potter as the Antichrist. Well, almost, at least. There’s an undeniable resemblance between Potter and Moore’s Antichrist. How startling are the similarities, you ask? Let’s count the ways: Moore’s character has a notable scar, a mentor named Riddle (the real last name of Potter’s lifelong nemesis, Lord Voldemort) and travels to a magic school by way of a magic train hidden in King’s Cross station, just like the Boy Who Lived. There is no mention of the words “Harry” or “Potter,” but the result is clear: Moore has cast an analogue of J.K. Rowling’s globally renowned hero as his very own Antichrist. Discuss: Did Alan Moore Say Harry Potter Is the Antichrist? But don’t start shipping Howlers off in Moore’s direction just yet, “Potter” heads, at least not until you get the full meaning of what the writer is going for here. In an early review of the new issue of “Century 2009,” the Independent ‘s Laura Sneddon analyzes Moore’s choice as follows: “The headlines almost write themselves — ‘Alan Moore says Harry Potter is the Antichrist!’ — yet they miss the point. When the Antichrist is met, overgrown and high on anti-psychotics, raging at the education system that let him down and sounding peculiarly like Harry Enfield’s teenage Kevin, he is surely no stand-in for one particular character but of the current obsession for replacing stories with money-generating franchises. Today, film rights are bought before publication, comics are written as storyboards, and teenage celebrities are given memoirs.” “What better representative of modern pop literature than J K Rowling’s boy wizard?” Sneddon continues. “Moore’s distaste for modern culture is made obvious, in keeping with his stance on the comics publishers he feels betrayed him.” Indeed, it certainly doesn’t go unnoticed that “Potter” is a part of the Warner Bros. family, the very same company backing DC Comics’ controversial “Before Watchmen” prequel series against Moore’s wishes; turnabout is fair play, after all. Moore’s choice of Potter as an Antichrist figure isn’t necessarily directed at that character or franchise itself, then — instead, he’s using the most famous, most recognizable and most relevant face possible to get his anti-franchise point across the table. “Before Watchmen” Confirmed: Will More Movies Follow? Is Potter the best option to make such a point? At first, I didn’t think so. Haters are going to hate, but the “Potter” books, if not excellently written, are compelling stories with compelling characters who have introduced new readers the entire world over to the fantastic realm of literature. The films, too, aren’t just commercial juggernauts, but critically acclaimed ones boasting top-tier talents such as Ralph Fiennes, Alan Rickman, Michael Gambon — the list goes on and on and on. There is strong craftsmanship on display in the “Potter” series on numerous levels. Why target something that’s actually good rather than, say, a series that hinges on hollow, vampire-obsessed protagonists? (Hate mail can be sent this way , FYI.) But in truth, “Potter” doesn’t end with the stories. The books are closed, the theaters are empty. (For now.) But there’s a whole new wizarding world out there: theme parks, online encyclopedias, unofficial off-Broadway shows and countless other parodies, toys, candy, more. I wouldn’t go as far as saying “Potter” replaces story with money-generating greediness, as Moore seems to believe. But there’s no denying that “Potter” really is more than just a collection of books and films: It’s a lifestyle, not just for fans, but for flesh-and-blood, real-world muggles who keep the Rowling-manufactured train rolling ahead full steam. If you’re looking for an instantly recognizable face to hang your broader anti-franchise sentiments upon, then? Well, I suppose you really don’t need to look any further than Hogwarts’ finest. As a “Potter” fan, I don’t like seeing Harry used as a symbol of what’s wrong in the world today. I’d like to think that there are better examples out there. But if you’re looking at what Moore’s trying to say here, maybe there really isn’t a better example for him to use. Harry isn’t just the Boy Who Lived anymore, after all; he is, inarguably, the Boy Who Lived Luxuriously. How do you feel about Moore’s depiction of “Potter” in the latest “League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” comic? Give us your reactions in the comments below, or let me know on Twitter @roundhoward! Related Videos Before Watchmen | Alan Moore

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Meet Harry Potter: Alan Moore’s Magical Antichrist

REVIEW: Lynn Shelton Mines Gold from Small Moments in Your Sister’s Sister

In the opening scene of Lynn Shelton’s fourth feature we join a conversation in progress. Or a few conversations: Voices overlap, rise and fall, fade in and out; it’s a party, small enough to sustain a few low-volume simultaneous conversations, large enough to fill the room with chatter. As in Shelton’s previous films, My Effortless Brilliance and Humpday , in Your Sister’s Sister we join the central characters at a moment of convergence, after a period of separation or crisis and before it becomes clear things can’t go on as they were before. In this case it is Jack (played by Shelton’s frequent collaborator Mark Duplass) whose voice cuts through the room where a small memorial is taking place on the first anniversary of his brother’s death. A friend’s rose-colored remembrance (Mike Birbiglia cameos) puts Jack on edge; he counters it with an anecdote that begins with a viewing of Revenge of the Nerds and ends with a description of his brother’s inherent cruelty and calculated transformation into a “good” person. Having killed the room, a drunken Jack is hauled aside by Iris ( Emily Blunt ), an ex-girlfriend of his brother’s, who stages a brisk intervention. Jack’s life is in a holding pattern — his current condition precludes a job and a girlfriend, he admits — and Iris suggests a week away at her family’s summer home on an island off the Seattle coast. Their shared loss having tugged them closer, Iris and Jack relocate their friendship into the gray zone between romance and platonic comfort. It’s a sweet spot for Shelton, one familiar from her previous films as a safe place to question the integrity of the roles we set up for ourselves and in our most personal relations. Rejuvenation is also associated with a retreat to some wooded corner of the Pacific Northwest in Shelton’s films — a literal gray zone courtesy of a snug skullcap of clouds — with the action triggered when one character unexpectedly turns up at another character’s door. Finally, the writer-director has become known for effacing a high concept plotline with naturalistic performances and shooting styles. At times — as with the contrast of Joshua Leonard the dissolute hipster and Duplass the young fogey in Humpday — Shelton’s more schematic choices form a kind of challenge: The engaging naturalism of the performances defies you to dismiss her characters as tool-and-die types; the higher the concept, the more desperately human her characters appear. Certainly the former is true of Hannah, a vegan-lesbian, lapsed painter, baby-seeking thirtysomething who has the good fortune of being played by Rosemarie DeWitt. The adored older sister of Iris, Hannah is recently split from her girlfriend of seven years and already installed in the cabin when Jack (Duplass is excellent as a certain kind of shaggy, flirty, low-level operator) shows up there late one night. After the misunderstanding is resolved, the two embark on an overnight drunk, throwing back a few getting-to-know-you tequilas before essentially daring each other into bed. Like many of Shelton’s scenarios, on paper that scene shouldn’t work. It’s too cute, too contrived, and too close to a terrible romantic comedy. And yet you watch it begin to breathe despite itself, in the faces and behavior of the actors and the spaces and silences built around them, until the interaction takes on a convincing energy of its own. Shelton reassembled her team of cinematographer Ben Kasulke and editor Nat Sanders for Your Sister’s Sister , and as in her previous films the three establish a striking observational style and pace along with a story told almost exclusively through conversations. They also draw a welcome freshness from the lead actresses: DeWitt keeps the poignancy behind Hannah’s aloof, pragmatic persona close to the surface, and Blunt gives one of her most delicate performances as the open-hearted Iris. Iris’s sudden arrival at the cabin completes an awkward triangle that is drawn and redrawn over a night and the next day. Secrets are confided, kept, leaked, and then blown open; Iris and Jack’s latent feelings for each other encounter an obstacle before they even have a chance to emerge. A series of lovely, revealing scenes play out in the cabin before that point, the sparely distributed score (by Vince Smith) set off by the aching hollow tones of a big empty house. But the climactic scene itself and the over-long montage that follows upsets Shelton’s slight but satisfying dramatic balance. Nuanced touches continue to form and present themselves on the way to a speechy and then coy resolution, but they feel diminished by the loss of the previous hour’s tightly configured, inter-character tension. It’s a mark of Shelton’s ability to create living characters from seemingly minor shared moments — the ones that wind up meaning everything — that Iris, Jack, and Hannah remain vivid while the film’s disappointing finish quickly fades. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Lynn Shelton Mines Gold from Small Moments in Your Sister’s Sister

The Dark Knight Tix Ready for Monday, $100M San Andreas Disaster Movie: Biz Break

Also in Wednesday morning’s news round up, Warner Bros. is taking a cue from Marvel’s Avengers with its own superhero lineup, a J.D. Salinger adaptation is in the make for the big screen, a Frozen thriller pick up for North America and the rising fortunes of non-U.S. actors as big budget films target international markets. ARC Picks The Frozen for North America Psychological thriller The Frozen has been picked up by ARC Entertainment. The directorial debut of Andrew Hyatt and starring Brit Morgan, the film centers on two people who take an ill-advised winter camping trip.  “After a snowmobile accident, the couple is left stranded in the woods where they are forced to survive the elements while waiting for help to arrive.  In a twist of fate, Mike disappears and Emma is left on her own not only to battle the weather, but also to elude a mysterious man (Segan) who has been tracking her through the forest.” Around the ‘net… Dark Knight Rises Ticket Sales Set for Monday The Batman movie still has 45 days before it hits screens, but for those wanting to make extra sure they’re in a theater opening night for the final Christopher Nolan epic can get reserve their tickets via the internet at noon June 11th, EW reports . Hot Writer Pushing Justice League at Warner Bros. The Avengers is a punch out for Disney and Marvel, but Warner Bros is stealthily getting its own superhero brass, with Will Beall set to write Justice League based on the WB-held series of DC Comics, Variety reports . My Salinger Year Set for Adaptation River Road Entertainment has optioned screen rights to Joanna Smith Rakoff’s My Salinger Year and Emma Forrest will adapt the novel. The story centers on the author’s own experience when she took a clerical job at an agency that represented The Catcher in the Rye author J.D. Salinger and their unexpected relationship, Deadline reports . Journey 2 Director Ponders Disaster Movie San Andreas 3D Brad Peyton is in talks to direct New Line’s San Andreas 3D . The plot is secret, but San Andreas is the name of California’s biggest fault lines, so let your imagination go wild… The budget is said to be in the $100 million range (now it can go really wild), THR reports . A Brave New World for non-U.S. Film Stars Noomi Rapace, Idris Elba, Gael García Bernal. Those are some of stars who could capitalize as big-budget filmmaking increasingly targets new markets, The Guardian reports .

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The Dark Knight Tix Ready for Monday, $100M San Andreas Disaster Movie: Biz Break

The Dark Knight Tix Ready for Monday, $100M San Andreas Disaster Movie: Biz Break

Also in Wednesday morning’s news round up, Warner Bros. is taking a cue from Marvel’s Avengers with its own superhero lineup, a J.D. Salinger adaptation is in the make for the big screen, a Frozen thriller pick up for North America and the rising fortunes of non-U.S. actors as big budget films target international markets. ARC Picks The Frozen for North America Psychological thriller The Frozen has been picked up by ARC Entertainment. The directorial debut of Andrew Hyatt and starring Brit Morgan, the film centers on two people who take an ill-advised winter camping trip.  “After a snowmobile accident, the couple is left stranded in the woods where they are forced to survive the elements while waiting for help to arrive.  In a twist of fate, Mike disappears and Emma is left on her own not only to battle the weather, but also to elude a mysterious man (Segan) who has been tracking her through the forest.” Around the ‘net… Dark Knight Rises Ticket Sales Set for Monday The Batman movie still has 45 days before it hits screens, but for those wanting to make extra sure they’re in a theater opening night for the final Christopher Nolan epic can get reserve their tickets via the internet at noon June 11th, EW reports . Hot Writer Pushing Justice League at Warner Bros. The Avengers is a punch out for Disney and Marvel, but Warner Bros is stealthily getting its own superhero brass, with Will Beall set to write Justice League based on the WB-held series of DC Comics, Variety reports . My Salinger Year Set for Adaptation River Road Entertainment has optioned screen rights to Joanna Smith Rakoff’s My Salinger Year and Emma Forrest will adapt the novel. The story centers on the author’s own experience when she took a clerical job at an agency that represented The Catcher in the Rye author J.D. Salinger and their unexpected relationship, Deadline reports . Journey 2 Director Ponders Disaster Movie San Andreas 3D Brad Peyton is in talks to direct New Line’s San Andreas 3D . The plot is secret, but San Andreas is the name of California’s biggest fault lines, so let your imagination go wild… The budget is said to be in the $100 million range (now it can go really wild), THR reports . A Brave New World for non-U.S. Film Stars Noomi Rapace, Idris Elba, Gael García Bernal. Those are some of stars who could capitalize as big-budget filmmaking increasingly targets new markets, The Guardian reports .

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The Dark Knight Tix Ready for Monday, $100M San Andreas Disaster Movie: Biz Break

Pete Rock Open To Working With Lupe Fiasco

‘I would love to work with him, and I wouldn’t turn my nose to it,’ veteran producer tells MTV News. By Nadeska Alexis, with reporting by Sway Calloway Pete Rock Photo: MTV News Pete Rock made headlines last week for getting into a little tiff with Lupe Fiasco over Rock’s classic 1992 track “They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.),” but the veteran producer has put the drama behind him, and now he’s focused on his upcoming projects, including a possible collaboration with the Chicago rapper. “If the artist doesn’t like something I did or said, then we could work through it with a conversation. That’s always my goal — it’s never to add fuel to the fire,” Pete Rock told MTV News of the falling out with Lupe. “I would love to get in the studio and work with him if his management team can respect me as a man, and the label can respect me as a man, and Lupe himself can respect me as a man. I would love to work with him, and I wouldn’t turn my nose to it.” While the dust settles and we wait to see if a collaboration between the two comes to fruition, Rock is prepping for his joint LP with DJ Premier, which is set to debut next year. “We’re gonna do a 20-city European tour to announce our project that we’re working on for the spring of 2013,” he explained. “I’m working with Young Money artist Cory Gunz, who grabbed 15 of my beats and he likes them all, but I’m telling him, ‘Lil homey, take your time, do whatever your process is.” Other projects in the works include an official remake of “T.R.O.Y.,” which will commemorate the 20th anniversary of Rock and C.L. Smooth’s 1992 debut LP, Mecca and the Soul Brother , rolling around June 3. “I’m bringing C.L. Smooth back out to redo ‘Reminisce’ with a couple of today’s artists,” Rock explained, although he declined to name the artists he had in mind. He did, however, share a few of his favorite contemporary producers, including Nottz, DJ Khalil, Alchemist and Hit-Boy. Are you excited for Pete Rock’s return? Tell us below! Related Videos Lupe Fiasco Addresses Pete Rock

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Pete Rock Open To Working With Lupe Fiasco