Tag Archives: writers

Exclusive: Elijah Wood Opens Up About His ‘Hobbit’ Role

‘The way that it will fit in will not infringe upon the integrity of ‘The Hobbit,’ ‘ actor tells MTV News at Sundance. By Eric Ditzian Elijah Wood Photo: MTV News Elijah Wood has long maintained that he’d never suit back up as Frodo Baggins — the role he pioneered in the Oscar-winning “Lord of the Rings” trilogy” — in an adaptation of “The Hobbit” unless the appearance avoided gimmickry and fit within the larger context of J. R. R. Tolkien’s legendary creation. Well, now Wood is officially returning to Middle-earth, and in what might be his first public comments about the upcoming project, the 29-year-old actor told MTV News that, although Frodo was never in Tolkien’s “Hobbit,” the character’s appearance in the movies makes sense for Jackson’s adaptation. “It’s a very small piece, and I think that’s the most appropriate,” Wood said when we caught up with him at the Sundance Film Festival , where he was promoting “Fight for Your Right Revisited,” a short film by Beastie Boys MC Adam Yauch. “Obviously, Frodo’s not alive within the context of ‘The Hobbit’ piece. So I jumped at the chance to be a part of it and see everyone and have a little reunion. It’ll be surreal.” While Wood didn’t delve into detail about the exact nature of his role — rumor has it he’ll appear in the beginning of each of the two films — he emphasized that Tolkien fans should not be worried. “I’d heard about it a little while ago,” he explained of the concept. “It’s an idea that Fran [Walsh] and Peter and Philippa [Boyens], the writers, came up with. The way that it will fit in will not infringe upon the integrity of ‘The Hobbit.’ It’ll fit and it’ll be appropriate. “It’s just a gift,” he added. “It’s a gift to be able to go back to New Zealand. It’s largely the same crew, the same creative team. It’s seven years since we finished on the last film, and it’s an opportunity to go back and have a reunion with everyone.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Hobbit, Part 1.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: 2011 Sundance Film Festival 2011 Sundance Film Festival Video Highlights Related Photos Meet The Cast Of ‘The Hobbit’ Celebrities Hit The Ground At The 2011 Sundance Film Festival

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Exclusive: Elijah Wood Opens Up About His ‘Hobbit’ Role

New Paranormal Activity 2 Clip Will Scare The Crap Out Of You In Under 20 Seconds

Fresh from the Fantastic Fest down in Austin comes this tantalizing little nugget of terror from the upcoming Paranormal Activity 2 . All that we know so far is that the spooky-ass hauntings appear to be directed at a young family rather than a couple. Take a look at this itsy-bitsy little clip and see how scared you get.

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New Paranormal Activity 2 Clip Will Scare The Crap Out Of You In Under 20 Seconds

New Flash Movie To Be Like Silence Of The Lambs & Seven And Other Horrible News

Greg Berlanti, the man who shot to fame because he decided that Joey should kiss Pacey on Dawson’s Creek , is one of the writers of the forthcoming Green Lantern movie and is also putting together the story for its sequel and for the new Flash movie. But based on his ideas for them, I’m not sure he’s really read the comic books in question.

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New Flash Movie To Be Like Silence Of The Lambs & Seven And Other Horrible News

Rick Sanchez Book ‘Conventional Idiocy’ Is Tanking

Steve Krakauer at Mediaite reported CNN anchor Rick Sanchez has been on the air promoting his new book (badly titled Conventional Idiocy) – 36 times in the last three weeks. “So how did the book sell? According to numbers Mediaite obtained from Bookscan, Sanchez’ book sold 802 copies in its first week.” As of Saturday, it ranked #5,920 on Amazon  and #13,287 on Barnes & Noble. Perhaps Sanchez and his publishers at Penguin didn’t realize that the title doesn’t sound like a critique of someone else. It sounds like “Come buy 272 pages of idiocy.” That might work for a comedian, but not for an anchorman. The shot at left is actually meant a publicity shot to promote the book , not Sanchez’s lack of savvy around electric cords. The Smoking Gun  relayed that photo and their take on Sanchez’s titanic ego: Sanchez — who can’t stop reminding viewers that he is somehow “pioneering” a new way of reporting the news by reading aloud hours-old Twitter posts — was once the subject of a marvelous June 1991 Miami Herald profile back when he was a controversial local news anchor. Since the nearly 8000-word story by Juan Carlos Coto is, sadly, not online, we’re going to reprint some random moments of Chez. We’ll start with Sanchez addressing his ability to extricate himself from sticky situations, which makes powerful guys swoon…. “Everybody admires it. Other men, and especially men who seem to be powerful men, I notice — I’m talking like a dime or nickel psychologist here, if you’ll permit me — will always come up to me and that’s always the thing they say. They admire in me the fact that I’ve been in some battles and I’ve won them . The admiration isn’t translating into book sales. Krakauer added: Sanchez has talked about his book dozens of times during his three hours each day on CNN, but he has also shown up on American Morning to talk about it and The Situation Room. Every day last week, Ali Velshi had Sanchez on to talk about the book as well (and there was the Larry King exchange  last month ). Sanchez can console himself that it could be worse (or it soon might be) MSNBC host Ed Schultz’s book is now at #40,134 on Amazon.

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Rick Sanchez Book ‘Conventional Idiocy’ Is Tanking

CBS’s Stahl to Jimmy Carter: ‘You Blame Teddy’ for Killing Universal Health Care?

Saturday’s The Early Show on CBS showed a preview clip of correspondent Lesley Stahl interviewing former President Jimmy Carter for 60 Minutes in which Carter blamed former Senator Ted Kennedy for derailing his universal health care plan in 1979. Stahl referred to former Senator Kennedy as “Teddy” as she asked Carter if he held Kennedy responsible. Stahl: “And you blame Teddy for the failure?” A clip of the interview can be found on the CBS News Web site. Below is a transcript of the segment, introduced by Whit Johnson, from the Saturday, September 18, The Early Show on CBS: WHIT JOHNSON: Former President Jimmy Carter says Americans could have had a national health care plan years ago had it not been for the late Senator Ted Kennedy. Mr. Carter spoke with 60 Minutes correspondent Leslie Stahl. FORMER PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER: The fact is that we would have had comprehensive health care now had it not been for Ted Kennedy’s deliberately blocking the legislation that I proposed in 1978 or ’79. LESLEY STAHL: And you blame Teddy for the failure? CARTER: Exactly. STAHL: Health care, his issue. CARTER: Exactly. It was his fault. Ted Kennedy killed the bill. JOHNSON: There you have it. Catch Leslie Stahl’s entire 60 Minutes interview with former President Jimmy Carter tomorrow night at 7 Eastern right here on CBS.

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CBS’s Stahl to Jimmy Carter: ‘You Blame Teddy’ for Killing Universal Health Care?

Joy Behar: Christine O’Donnell ‘Needs to Watch Some Porn and Get Some Tips’

On Wednesday’s Joy Behar Show on HLN, after playing a clip of Delaware Republican Senate nominee Christine O’Donnell when she spoke out against masturbation on MTV in 1996, host Behar cracked that, “She needs to watch some porn and get some tips, is what she needs,” as Republican strategist Leslie Sanchez tried to argue that O’Donnell’s religious beliefs should not be held against the Delaware Republican. Sanchez had to argue against two liberals in the form of host Behar and fellow guest Roy Sekoff of the Huffington Post. Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the segment from the Wednesday, September 15, Joy Behar Show on HLN: JOY BEHAR: That’s her platform? Look, mom, no hands. That was on Rachel Maddow’s show last night. Go ahead, Roy. LESLIE SANCHEZ, REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST: You know, I’m surprised talking about the bad choice there, and that was in the spiral perm. I did that in the ‘90s. It was just really the wrong way to go. ROY SEKOFF, HUFFINGTON POST: I mean, this was obviously, this was not a good day for masturbators, Joy. Clearly, this is, you know, the biggest opponent to masturbation since your seventh grade science teacher told you about the, you know, the hair on your palms. Not a good day for the self-pleasurer. SANCHEZ: Let’s put it in perspective. I don’t think it’s fair, I think it’s really sad to be criticizing someone for their religious beliefs. Rachel Maddow may not agree with that. SEKOFF: No, no, no, that’s not, Leslie, Leslie- SANCHEZ: She created an abstinence video for MTV for youth. I mean- BEHAR: She needs to watch some porn and get some tips, is what she needs.

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Joy Behar: Christine O’Donnell ‘Needs to Watch Some Porn and Get Some Tips’

Former Mr. Sharon Stone Obama ‘Crack’ Humor Attempt Backfires

As your humble correspondent has learned, writing humor can be very dangerous since it can easily backfire. Such was the case with a story written by the former Mr. Sharon Stone aka Phil Bronstein, Editor-at-Large of the San Francisco Chronicle. Just from the very title of his piece, “Should Obama have smoked crack?” you just know Bronstein was going to run into trouble. Some readers didn’t know he was trying to be funny and were outraged. Other readers realized he was attempting to write humor but felt it was really lame. So here is Bronstein’s backfiring humor attempt: …His druggie past is not helping him shape the overarching grit of his public character nearly as much as it could be. Weed and cocaine? Who’s going to be impressed with that, when his hugely successful contemporaries like Oprah Winfrey have the truly dark and evil specter of crack in their background? … He needed some rock in that pipe of his youth. If he’d had a crack addiction then instead of an effete taste for powdered cocaine and pot, people might be a little more respectful of him now. It would have been an even tougher journey to the top. The big dog bite needs teeth sharpened by real adversity. Okay, what’s really funny here is not Bronstein’s humor which is lame and heavy-handed but the way it has backfired so embarrasingly. However, Bronstein’s amateur attempt at humor gets worse. Much worse: Crack could have helped put some color back into the Obama narrative. It is a drug that disproportionately haunts African American communities. Think coke and its Paris Hilton or some no-brainers on The Hills. Crack is the gutter drug. As you can imagine, many of his readers probably wish that L.A. Zoo Komodo Dragon had bitten another part of Bronstein’s body than just his foot. Some sample comments: Another useless editorial from sfgate’s do nothing editor. Don’t you have some copy to read?   This is probably the most vapid observation of Obama’s past I have ever read. I’ll never get back the 2 minutes it took to read this. Bronstein should resign. This is a new low for the Chronicle and embarrassment to San Franciscans. Bronstein should have taken heed of Tip #9 of Hot Tips For Op-Ed Writers : 9. Avoid op-ed backfire. Humor is hard to project in an opinion piece. Satire can bite the writer. P.J. Gladnick wrote a tongue-in-cheek satire about harmful cartoons for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. He showed Snow White exploiting short people, Scrooge McDuck engaging in the capitalistic duck-slave trade, the Three Little Pigs abusing the Big Bad Wolf, and more. That article made him the hero of the National Coalition on Television Violence, who used it to justify censoring Saturday morning TV.  And, Phil, if you really want to write a truly funny piece, then recount for us how you managed to stay married to supreme egomaniac Sharon Stone for six whole years.

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Former Mr. Sharon Stone Obama ‘Crack’ Humor Attempt Backfires

‘Zombieland 2’ Director Giddy About 3-D Zombie Splatter

“I think it’s cool to see stuff fly at your face. The idea of zombies splattering into the lens is exciting for me,” Reuben Fleischer tells MTV News. By Eric Ditzian Jesse Eisenberg in “Zombieland” Photo: Sony Pictures When MTV News caught up with Reuben Fleischer last week, he was hanging out in a dusty junkyard outside downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan. It was hardly a glamorous day on the set of a studio picture, but that was where Fleischer had chosen to make “30 Minutes or Less,” his follow-up to the $75.6 million-grossing “Zombieland.” But, as he oversaw some wacky pyrotechnic displays at the junkyard, he was thinking about the direction for “Zombieland 2” and shared some of his thoughts with us. First off, Fleischer confirmed he’ll shoot the sequel with 3-D cameras, rather than use a controversial post-production process. “When it comes to 3-D, I feel pretty strongly that you should shoot it in camera,” he said. “I feel like it just looks so much better. If you’re going to make a 3-D movie, go ahead and make a 3-D movie. I would definitely, if we do ‘Zombieland 2,’ make it in 3-D and want to shoot it in 3-D.” While no stars yet have deals in place, Fleischer said “all the cast is excited to return,” including Woody Harrelson, Emma Stone, Abigail Breslin and Jesse Eisenberg, who also stars in “30 Minutes.” Writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick are currently at work on the script, and Fleischer said they’re exploring multiple scenarios, from a plot that picks up shortly after the conclusion of the first film to one that begins further into the future. Regardless, though, “Zombieland 2” will likely explore pre-zombie days as well. “One of the fun things about ‘Zombieland’ is it jumps all over the place in terms of the storyline,” Fleischer said. “It’ll go to before zombies to after zombies and all around those worlds. What’s fun about the sequel is we have freedom and flexibility to show different periods. We might have scenes before the zombies, or we might have some months after, or potentially stuff further down the road. Through the voice-over and the way the movie is structured, we can really explore all different sides of it.” “Zombieland 2” was announced as a 3-D film back in December, when the heady glow of “Avatar” began to consume all of Hollywood. In the months since, many 3-D films have failed to connect with audiences and a sort of 3-D fatigue has set in among many moviegoers. Yet, Fleischer is not worried about backlash, nor does he agree with what James Cameron said recently about how “Piranha 3-D,” a new horror movie, “cheapen[s] the medium.” “I love 3-D” Fleischer said. “I have a hard time saying when it’s not done well, because I have almost a childlike experience watching 3-D. It’s just so cool to me when stuff comes out of the screen. That may sound na

Will ‘Avatar’ Sequels Shoot Back-To-Back? James Cameron Weighs In

Director also talks about getting ‘inside the characters’ heads’ for his ‘Avatar’ novel. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz James Cameron Photo: MTV News It’s not enough that “Avatar” is now the biggest movie of all time, winning three Oscars and grossing unprecedented box-office dollars . To better serve the film-going public, the powers that be at Fox will be re-releasing the film in 3-D and 3-D IMAX on August 27. MTV News was lucky enough to steal a few moments of maestro James Cameron’s time to talk about the reported “Avatar” novel and whether he’ll shoot the proposed two sequels back-to-back. “We’re still working on deals [for ‘Avatar 2′],” Cameron told MTV News. “We don’t start the movie until we get the deals worked out.” Fair enough. But what about the rumored sequel “scriptment”? “I’m making notes. I’m not sitting idle,” Cameron said. “But really, what I’m working on primarily is the novel. I never had a chance to get the novel done while we were making the movie, and I always intended to. I didn’t want to do a cheesy novelization, where some hack comes in and kind of makes sh– up. I wanted to do something that was a legitimate novel that was inside the characters’ heads and didn’t have the wrong culture stuff, the wrong language stuff, all that.” Cameron went on to say that the novel will serve as a “bible” for other writers to come in and riff on for their own “Avatar”-based stories. “I don’t mind opening the universe, but I just don’t want that to happen until I’ve got more meat on the bones,” he said, adding that he’d like to fill in some of the specific details about the company, what’s happening on Earth and Grace and Jake’s backstories. “That all needs to be filled in before other writers can come in and run with it.” Regarding his plans and discussions about two proposed sequels, we asked if he’ll shoot them back-to-back. “We’re actually talking about that. That’s not a decision yet,” Cameron revealed. “That is something that makes a lot of sense, given the nature of these productions, because we can bank all the [motion] capture and then go back and do cameras over a period of time.” He added that the nature of their filmmaking process lends itself more naturally to a back-to-back shooting schedule, versus that of other live-action productions. “The way these back-to-back productions fall apart is that you’re trying to do two live-action films back to back, and you’re working on it for a year and a half, shooting. Everyone is dead. It’s not humanly possible,” Cameron said of live-action shoots. “This type of film, it absolutely would work.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Avatar.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Will ‘Avatar’ Sequels Shoot Back-To-Back? James Cameron Weighs In

‘The Other Guys’: Idiots Delight, By Kurt Loder

Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg score a comic bull’s eye. Will Ferrell, Steve Coogan and Mark Wahlberg in “The Other Guys” Photo: Sony Pictures “The Other Guys” is that rare thing, a goofball summer buddy comedy that actually delivers. The movie is a return to form for Will Ferrell, who finally reins in the idiot frenzy he’s so often deployed in the past (most recently in last year’s dismal “Land of the Lost”) and — an added blessing — shows no skin, either. It’s also a breakthrough for Mark Wahlberg, who dipped a toe into the comedy waters of “Date Night,” but here makes a sizeable splash. Wahlberg isn’t an all-out clown in the Ferrell style, but his careful restraint in this picture — his comic simmering and his lag-timed reactions — is just as funny in a different way. The stars play Allen Gamble and Terry Hoitz, two New York City police detectives stuck in the paper-pushing backwaters of their department while a pair of more charismatic cops (Dwayne Johnson and Samuel L. Jackson in fleeting cameos) get all the action, and the headlines. Allen (Ferrell) is a forensic accountant — he loves paperwork. His partner Hoitz (Wahlberg) hates it — but his career was sidelined after he accidentally shot Yankees star Derek Jeter one night. (“You shoulda shot A-Rod,” another cop snipes.) Then these two stumble onto a big Wall Street financial scam — a Ponzi scheme being run by an English investment mogul named Ershon (Steve Coogan). If Allen and Terry can crack this case, career resuscitation will surely follow. This thicket of financial shenanigans is the movie’s most strained element — it’s essentially a platform for the filmmakers to lecture the audience about the evils of capitalism. (Addressing a business audience, Ershon cackles, “Live for excess — it is the American way.”) As always, though, this rote Hollywood moralizing sits awkwardly in a big-budget film, especially one starring a man who reportedly makes $20-million a picture. The high-finance plot is in any case a distraction that’s generally obscured by the laugh-bombs going off all around it. Allen is endlessly castigated by his fellow cops as an overgrown sissy (drives a Prius, loves the Little River Band), but he’s also, inexplicably, a major chick magnet. (Taking Terry to his home, he warns that his wife is something of a dog: “She’s a big old broad.” Then she turns out to be played by the definitively un-doglike Eva Mendes.) He has also written a downloadable app called Faceback — scan in the back of someone’s head and it shows you the face. The script, by director Adam McKay and Chris Henchy, also provides some nifty business for the boys’ boss, Chief Mauch (Michael Keaton), who moonlights as a sales clerk at Bed, Bath & Beyond, and is prone to converse in TLC lyrics (a joke that’s milked a little too much). It’s good to have Keaton back in the big-time, and in solid comic form; he’s been away too long. The movie is a full-throated parody of the urban action genre: many cars crash, many bullets fly, and a whole lot of stuff blows up. But even the pandemonium has a comic shape. (The sequence in which a helicopter attack is repelled by a blizzard of golf balls is explosively funny.) And the ricocheting one-liners rise above even the most clamorous mayhem. When Terry erupts in frustration over being a desk-job drone — “I’m a peacock! You gotta let me fly!” — the movie earns the highest possible praise for this sort of project: It’s a truly ridiculous picture. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Other Guys.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Other Guys’ ‘The Other Guys’ Clips

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‘The Other Guys’: Idiots Delight, By Kurt Loder