Tag Archives: writers

‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

The venerable comic-book cowboy comes to life … sort of. Josh Brolin in “Jonah Hex” Photo: Warner Bros. “Jonah Hex” is about as anti- as a hero can get. It’s not just his chewed-up cowboy hat, his bullet-riddled duster and his perma-surly disposition. It’s the melted skin running down one side of his face and the ugly hole torn in the flesh next to his mouth (which makes whiskey-drinking a messy enterprise, but not — as we see just before he shoots up a barroom full of bad guys — an impossible one). In cooking down 38 years’ worth of DC comics for “Jonah Hex,” the new movie, director Jimmy Hayward and his writers have produced a lumpy soup of western action and supernatural shenanigans, heavily spiced with narrative confusion. The story leaps back and forth in time, and while the picture is sometimes funny, possibly intentionally, at some points it’s anybody’s guess what’s going on. In playing Jonah, Josh Brolin is stuck with a character whose facial constriction reduces him to little more than a walking bad attitude — he’s like Clint Eastwood’s old Man with No Name in the Sergio Leone westerns but without the warmth. The time is just after the Civil War (at least when it’s not during the Civil War). We learn that Jonah was framed for the betrayal of his Confederate battle unit, which resulted in the death of his friend, Jeb Turnbull (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). Jeb’s demented father, Quentin (John Malkovich in full cuckoo mode), retaliated by killing Jonah’s wife and son, and disfiguring his face with a red-hot branding iron. Now (or sometimes now) Jonah roams the West as a bad-ass bounty hunter, his only love connection a beautiful whore named Lilah (Megan Fox). When Ulysses S. Grant (Aidan Quinn), president of the newly reunited States, learns that Turnbull is creating a “super-weapon” that will be a “nation-killer,” he recruits Jonah to stop him. Our battered hero is well-equipped to do so. After a close call with death some years back, Jonah was left with one foot in the spirit world; and so while he spends much of the movie being shot and beaten, he appears to be unkillable. He’s attended by a pack of hellhounds (“I wouldn’t try to pet ’em if I was you”) and has the useful gift of bringing dead men back to life with a touch of his hand. (“I’m sorry I killed you,” he tells one corpse, after raising him from the grave. Says the dead guy: “I’d better be getting back under ground.”) Jonah also has a taste for esoteric weaponry — saddle-mounted Gatling guns, dynamite-firing crossbow pistols — and a talent for dodging bullets by simply leaning back a bit to let them fly by (past our madly rolling eyes). The lovely Lilah is no slouch in the slick department, either: When she and Jonah are handcuffed to an overhead rod, the cuffs suddenly snap free, and she brandishes a lock pick. “My mama didn’t raise no fool,” she says. (To which we reply, “What the hell … ?”) Despite the picture’s wall-to-wall uproar — train-jackings, bullet storms, incessant detonations — there’s little excitement to it. The action is furious from the outset and remains at that level throughout, increasingly diluting its intended effect. And the dialogue, which I take to be satirical, never quite meshes with the film’s heavy violence. Like its half-dead protagonist, the movie never comes completely alive. Check out everything we’ve got on “Jonah Hex.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos Exclusive ‘Jonah Hex’ Clip MTV Rough Cut: Megan Fox In ‘Jonah Hex’ Related Photos ‘Jonah Hex’

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‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

What Obama’s Oval Office Speech Could Have Sounded Like (Video)

Photo via the NY Times …According to Rachel Maddow Plenty of people felt let down by Obama’s oval office speech on the BP Gulf spill , and believed it was as a lost opportunity to rally for more progressive energy policy in a meaningful way. I was one of them, admittedly. But one pundit did more than complain about what was left unsaid — Rachel Maddow and her writers drafted up their version of a superior speech; one that included taking a hard line on the oil industry, f… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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What Obama’s Oval Office Speech Could Have Sounded Like (Video)

The Fiver | Footballing Rod Hulls; and An Adequately Resourced Pele Museum | Paul Doyle and Barney Ronay

Click here to have the Fiver delivered direct to your inbox every weekday at 12pm(ish), or if your usual copy has stopped arriving SWISS OF LIFE Phew! It’s a good thing that celebrated, squat, slightly penguin-shaped pillar of moral rectitiude, Sepp Blatter, was at Durban Stadium yesterday. Because if Above-Board Blatter hadn’t been personally supervising events, many folks might have suspected that jiggerypokery was responsible for the defeat of seemingly invincible Spain by Switzerland, the country of Above-Board’s birth and home to Fifa HQ. How else, such folks might have asked, to explain that a side universally hailed as the best in the world could be beaten by a team who began their qualifying campaign by losing at home to Luxembourg? How else could a free-scoring machine that went into the match having won 19,754 consecutive matches be shut out by a defence led by Philippe Senderos? Ottmar Hitzfeld knows how else. “We concentrated and were organised from the start,” yodled the manager whom the Swiss now worship as Gottmar. “We didn’t allow any chances for Spain in the first half and that gave us self-confidence. In the second half, Spain rolled one attack after another and we knew they would open their defence. After we took the lead, we gained even more confidence.” Simple, see? Especially as Spain could not adapt their approach to overcome Hitzfeld’s tactics, suggesting, perhaps, that the most feted team on the planet are mere one-trick ponies, nothing more than footballing Rod Hulls. Or, if you prefer, the international equivalent of Arsenal or Barcelona. Spain manager Vicente Del Bosque thinks otherwise. That, of course, confirms they are the international equivalent of Arsenal. ”I feel [the win] is an excessive prize for them considering the football they displayed,” harrumphed Del Bosque in tones familiar to anyone used to hearing Arsene Wenger suggest that any defeat for his team means not that there is something wrong with that team, but that there is something wrong with football itself. SIGN UP FOR OUR FANTASY FOOTBALL GAME You can still sign up now and play daily competitions with the most exciting fantasy game on the web (oh, it’s free too) . QUOTE OF THE DAY “How did you manage to muck it up?” – Telecinco touchline reporter Sara Carbonero, Spain’s very own version of Nick Collins, asks the question on everybody’s minds to Iker Casillas – her other half – after yesterday’s game. LIVE ON GUARDIAN.CO.UK TODAY Join Paul Doyle for MBM coverage of Argentina 1-1 South Korea at 12.30pm, Barney Ronay for Greece 0-1 Nigeria at 3pm and Barry Glendenning for France 1-1 Mexico from 7.30pm . GAUCHO GARDEN GNOME The Fiver is astonished to detect, sifting through its daily media monitor portfolio of yellowing free-sheet newspapers, eavesdropped stairwell conversations and the Text Maniacs section of the Daily Star, a sense out there that this might, in fact, be quite a boring World Cup so far. Not enough goals they say. Where’s the drama, they ask. WOT U MUPPET WENGA NO WAY FERGIE LOL WC INNIT SORT IT AWT, they rage. This is all news to the Fiver, for whom the World Cup has so far been an intoxicating ride, a feast of the senses, a palm-drenchingly humid sensory journey of sounds and smells – and particularly smells, given that the Fiver has observed the entire tournament from its prime vantage point in the inside suit jacket pocket of Diego Maradona, previously a star of the World Cup, and currently shaping up as its saviour from the sidelines. Not content with capering wildly, with performing furiously sweaty touchline man-hugs, with roughing up his players, and with appearing in public displaying a peculiar gaucho garden gnome facial hair arrangement, Maradona has now decided to enter into a full-combat joint comedy roast of two of his fellow old-style WC hall-of-famers, the invariably wrong Pele and the invariably sniffy Michel Platini, incumbent Uefa chief blazer and outspoken critic of all things non-Michel Platini. “Pele should go back to the museum,” Maradona opined at yesterday’s knockabout press session, responding to criticism of his “coaching” “style” by the man who once attempted to defeat a crack Nazi XI with a selection that included Sylvester Stallone in goal and the aged Michael Caine in a kind of strolling EBJT role. And to be fair to Maradona this isn’t actually a bad idea. The Fiver would be among the first to visit a properly kitted out, adequately resourced Pele museum, with its Pele waxwork hall, its stuffed and cured Pele exhibit, its Pele fossils and interactive Pele experience with the sounds and smells of Pele through the ages, not to mention its Pele gift shop crammed with Pele lavender biscuits and bracing Pele throat lozenges. Platini, meanwhile, thinks he “is better than all the rest”. “I’ve always had a very distant relationship with him, it’s always just hello and goodbye, nothing more than that,” Maradona shrugged, producing a sheathe of unanswered RSVP invitations to a cigar-smoking, burger-cramming, shark-fishing speedboat expedition in Cuban territorial waters. He also had a pop at the ball, fingering it for the dearth of non-Maradona-related thrills. “I’m having a wonderful time, to me a World Cup is something that’s quite amazing,” he gurgled, taking the first steps in a small, capering improvised dance and balancing a goldfish bowl on his nose. “I don’t want to go into the ball again because everyone is talking about it, but it is important and it does play a part and I would ask Pelé and Platini to go out there and play with the ball and take a closer look at it to see if it’s a good one or bad one, and to stop talking rubbish about me.” Which is something the Fiver, for one, would be willing to pay a lot of money to witness, in a kind of blazered, sweating, ankle-hacking middle-aged great dream three-and-in tournament sense. As for the rubbish-talking, keep it coming. Right now it’s pretty much all we’ve got. WIN! WIN! WIN! Enter our ridiculously easy competition and you could win a shirt signed by one of the World Cup’s biggest names. Is it Maxim Kalinichenko? Wouldn’t you like to know. £66 HAT-TRICK OF FREE BETS WITH BLUE SQUARE Click here to find out more. FIVER LETTERS “It may have taken longer than originally anticipated, but kudos to the Fiver. The World Cup in South Africa proves that the Stop Football campaign has indeed succeeded beyond anyone’s wildest dreams” – Central Park Rangers. “I’m no expert but surely fans attacking power distribution centres to protest against power outages during World Cup games (yesterday’s bits and bobs) is not going to help” – Ian Manning. “Re: Robbie Earle asking for tickets to a match being played in a city he doesn’t live in, between two countries he doesn’t come from (yesterday’s Fiver). Surely it worked in the past for Jamaica matches?” – Gareth Deeble. Send your letters to the.boss@guardian.co.uk . And if you’ve nothing better to do you can also tweet the Fiver now. BITS AND BOBS The fixtures for The Best Tournament In The World That Sky Does Have Rights To have been announced and Liverpool will host Arsenal on the opening day of the season. Click here for the fixtures from across the leagues . World Cup chief Danny Jordaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan hopes South Africans will retain an interest in the competition when … sorry, if the hosts crash out, following their defeat to Uruguay. “[The fans] were dragged along in silence and pain, not a sound from the vuvuzela,” he said a tad dramatically. “What is important now is that the fans embrace the tournament beyond the Bafana team.” Fifa has handed Tim Cahill just a one-game ban for his red card during the Sheilaroos’ opening defeat to Germany. Chris Evans, the man who spawned TFI Friday and is therefore directly responsible for James C****n’s World Cup Live, has apologised for posting a joke about poverty in Africa and the World Cup on Twitter. “Apologies for last retweet didn’t read it properly,” he said. “Never meant to offend. Not funny at all.” A frozen pitch caused Ghana’s training session to be postponed by two hours today. “We were informed early this morning that we had to reschedule training due to the freezing conditions,” chattered a chilly Ghana FA suit. Darlington boss Simon Davey has quit the club, handing in his resignation to the Conference club via email. “I’m off XOXO,” he didn’t write, while Stockport boss Gary Ablett has also left his position. And Peter Andre has somehow, somehow prised the Celebrity Dad of the Year title away from England’s Brave John Terry. Wayne Rooney was ninth and $tevie Mbe 10th, both finishing behind Ronan Keating. Hmm … THE FIVER FANS’ NETWORK: HAVE YOUR SAY! In the spirit of mutualisation (ie this and this and this ), we’re offering this space to one Fiver reader a day to have their say on whether or not it’s a good idea to let football fans have their say. Here’s Phil West: “Better for a football fan to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to have their say and remove all doubt.” Send your efforts – in 140 characters or less – to the.boss@guardian.co.uk with ‘My say on people having their say’ in the subject heading and we’ll publish … something. STILL WANT MORE? Jonathan Wilson is so obsessed with tactics that he thought the Jackson 5 were an experimental defensive formation. So listen up when he says attacking full-backs could be vital at the World Cup . James Richardson and his pod chums discuss Spain’s defeat and today’s fixtures on the latest edition of Football Weekly World Cup Daily . Rob Smyth is a registered tacticphile himself and has pored over Opta’s stats to tell you why the World Cup has been a little on the flat side so far . Finally 44 years of hurt are over: an article about 1966 without one mention of England. Richard Williams says the current North Korea side could emulate their illustrious predecessors . And Fabio Capello has got all sorts of problems ahead of the England-Algeria game: our writers have put their heads together to try to solve them . SIGN UP TO THE FIVER Want your very own copy of our free tea-timely(ish) email sent direct to your inbox? Has your regular copy stopped arriving? Click here to sign up . WE ALL KNOW WHOSE RADIO ROCKS Paul Doyle Barney Ronay guardian.co.uk

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The Fiver | Footballing Rod Hulls; and An Adequately Resourced Pele Museum | Paul Doyle and Barney Ronay

Does Glee Need New Characters When It Already Has These Two?

Now that Glee’s wrapped up its freshman season, everyone wants to know what the writers have planned for season two. Executive producer Ryan Murphy has promised that the show will add three more characters to its already overstuffed cast: love interests for both Kurt and Mercedes, as well as a Christian moralist who’ll go toe-to-toe with Rachel. My question is, do they really need to add new actors when some of those roles could go to its two most underserved actors?

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Does Glee Need New Characters When It Already Has These Two?

Watch Patrick Stewart Take Things from Zero to Awkward at Warp Speed

If you were blown away by Salma Hayek’s overreaction to a slithering snake, then get ready for something even more out-of-hand: Patrick Stewart stone-cold losing it on stage because some fattie dared to put his hands in his pockets, or something. I’m paraphrasing! Still, this Glamour Awards spat between the knighted actor and British comedian James Corden is just so, so cringe-inducing that the writers for The Office might as well hang up their hats, confident it will never be topped. And then Zoe Saldana comes onstage and sells out her Star Trek predecessor! Man, if you need me, I’ll have cringed myself into a fetal ball like a sawbug under attack.

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Watch Patrick Stewart Take Things from Zero to Awkward at Warp Speed

EXCLUSIVE: Here’s the Major Plot Twist Cut from the 90210 Finale

So have you kids kept watching the 90210 reboot? It got kind of fun and cotton candyish this year and the writers made some interesting decisions, like giving more screentime to AnnaLynne McCord, eliminating the original stars altogether (a decision Shannen Doherty is fine with ) and saddling putative lead Shenae Grimes with a season-long downer of a plot. E! broke the news that this year’s finale was supposed to resolve Grimes’s storyline with a major twist, but only Movieline can reveal what the twist actually was before it got cut from the episode.

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EXCLUSIVE: Here’s the Major Plot Twist Cut from the 90210 Finale

SATC 2 Backlash Hits France

It was only a matter of time before Sex and the City 2 hit France in a sort of perfect storm of privilege, and now this: Warner Bros. reportedly recruited a dozen French authors to speak at a Parisian café as part of a promotional event, but the company to which WB outsourced the promo “didn’t mention the authors in media alerts, stuck them in a small, dark, back room, and didn’t provide a microphone or turn down the music during the talk and, worse, said nothing when the café made the writers pay for drinks.” Sacre bleu! When even the French are going to war with you, that is trouble. [ NYP ]

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SATC 2 Backlash Hits France

Crystal Bowersox And The Amazing Metaphorical Dreamcoat

‘American Idol’ runner-up is determined to push the envelope even farther than Adam Lambert did, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Crystal Bowersox performs on “American Idol” Photo: Michael Becker/ Fox Crystal Bowersox stood just off camera, looking slightly perturbed. A publicist tugged on the zipper of her brand-new leather jacket, a fashionably cut, butter-soft thing that had been given to her as a gift, presumably after finishing second on “American Idol.” It was a very nice jacket. The problem was with the zipper. “Man, you would think this thing would work better,” Bowersox said to no one in particular, tugging on the tab, sticking her fingers in the metal teeth of the contraption. “If people want to give me nice stuff, that’s cool. I’m going to Goodwill.” Ultimately, she and her publicist managed to force the zipper three-quarters of the way up the jacket, Bowersox smiled, sat down, and our interview began. At the time, it seemed like little more than an inconsequential wardrobe matter — and maybe it still is — but in retrospect, the situation seems to have taken on added meaning, at least for me. It was, after all, a pretty handy (not to mention fashionable ) metaphor for Bowersox’s entire life, post-“Idol.” She’s not exactly comfortable with this newfound fame, and you get the feeling that the zipper’s just gonna keep on sticking, but she’ll be damned if she’s not going to keep forcing the thing up. Because over the next 40-something minutes, Bowersox seemingly delighted in making it clear to me that she was “a fighter,” someone hell-bent on forging her own career path — her own songs, her own sound, her own way — despite overwhelming evidence that what she wants might very well be impossible (see the post-show bows of folks like Allison Iraheta or Diana DeGarmo for proof of this). She hasn’t even begun recording her first album, but she already knows how she doesn’t want it to sound: like an “American Idol” album. “I’d like to do the songs that I’ve been doing for years. … I’m not opposed to working with other writers and producers, but my goal is to put out an album I really enjoy,” she said. “I’m aware of it, I’m a fighter, I’m a passionate person, I believe in certain things very strongly and I don’t go down easy. I’ll take everything into consideration, but it’s my CD, it’s my music. I’m not going to put something out that I’m not proud of.” And that’s the tip of the iceberg. Bowersox said she doesn’t care about money or fame (“I have everything I need in my life right now. I don’t need a fancy house, big cars or bling or anything like that. My son’s healthy, and life is good”), doesn’t see the point of keeping her private life private, and not only freely admits to Googling herself, but reading the nasty comments too (“It gives you the outside perspective you don’t get within the ‘Idol’ bubble”). She rarely watches television. She thinks kids should read more books. She is blissfully unaware of the cultural import of Justin Bieber (“He was on the show, right?”). Oh, and she maintained that, despite what her “Idol” handlers might say, she plans to speak out against things that she deems are unjust. Because she wants to use her fame to bring about change. In other words, Bowersox is probably the least “American Idol” contestant in “American Idol” history: a willful, delightfully stubborn throwback to a bygone era when music meant something and musicians stood up for their beliefs. Sure, Adam Lambert may have spat out the “Idol” ball gag — or, you know, used it in his American Music Awards performance — but Bowersox seems determined to make his bid for independence seem positively childish. She’s focused on bigger things than just shock and awe: She really, truthfully wants to be an individual, a singular star, and she wants it on her terms only. Of course, whether she succeeds in that endeavor is largely up to her. Is she strong enough to stay on her own path, to fight off the creeping insurgence of her “Idol” handlers and to still remain unchanged by fame? Is she willing to keep tugging on that zipper, no matter how uncomfortable things get? I wouldn’t bet against her. But whatever happens, one thing’s for certain: After meeting Bowersox, I can safely say I never knew anybody like her at the juice bar, despite what I may have written more than a month ago in this very column. No one had a jacket as nice as hers. Metaphorical or not. Questions? Concerns? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com . Related Photos Crystal Bowersox’s ‘American Idol’ Experience

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Crystal Bowersox And The Amazing Metaphorical Dreamcoat

Chloë Sevigny Disses Big Love Writers Again, For Old Time’s Sake

With Katherine Heigl off Grey’s Anatomy for good, which actress will be brave enough to take up her very specific mantle of insulting her television show’s writers, apologizing, and then insulting them again? Consider this Chloë Sevigny’s very public audition. You may remember back in March, shortly after winning the Golden Globe for her work on Big Love , Sevigny told the AV Club, “It was awful this season, as far as I’m concerned.” The actress then recanted her dis to EW , saying, “If [the writers] said something about me, if they made a statement that they were disappointed in my work, I would feel awful.” Now, the cycle begins anew!

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Chloë Sevigny Disses Big Love Writers Again, For Old Time’s Sake

What’s Next For The ‘Lost’ Creative Team?

Team Darlton splits up as Damon Lindelof chases ‘Cowboys & Aliens’ and another ‘Star Trek’ film. By Josh Wigler “Lost” co-creators Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse Photo: MTV News From compelling characters to expertly crafted set pieces, there’s no shortage of reasons why “Lost” tapped into the public consciousness with all the ferocity of a black smoke monster. But one of the biggest reasons the recently concluded series was such a pop-culture phenomenon is the caliber of the creative team behind the show’s scenes. Even as devout “Lost” fans mourn the passing of the series, life goes on in the form of new creative endeavors from the folks responsible for the critically acclaimed jungle mystery. Co-executive producers and show-runners Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse have repeatedly told reporters that they aren’t planning too far ahead beyond concluding “Lost,” but that’s not entirely true … at least not in Lindelof’s case. Alongside “Transformers” collaborators Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, Lindelof co-wrote the screenplay for “Cowboys & Aliens,” director Jon Favreau’s upcoming comic book adaptation about an alien invasion during the days of the Wild West. Daniel Craig, Harrison Ford, Olivia Wilde and Sam Rockwell star in the feature. Lindelof is also in the process of co-writing a sequel to last summer’s “Star Trek” alongside returning writers Kurtzman and Orci. Plot details remain under wraps, though rumors persist that longtime “Trek” villain Khan will make his return in the sequel, with many fans pointing to “Lost” star Nestor Carbonell as a suitable actor for the role. The rumor remains unconfirmed. Additionally, it’s not known whether original director J.J. Abrams will helm the sequel. Speaking of Abrams, the “Lost” co-creator has plenty of plans up his sleeve, though he admittedly distanced himself from the ABC series in recent years due to a multitude of other commitments. In addition to the “Trek” sequel, Abrams is the director of the recently announced “Super 8,” an enigmatic science-fiction project produced by Steven Spielberg and Amblin Entertainment. Abrams is also planning a small-screen return with “Undercovers,” a new NBC television series about a married couple retired from the espionage game. Abrams and Lindelof aren’t the only ones with post-“Lost” plans, as co-writers Adam Horowitz and Eddie Kitsis collaborated on the screenplay for director Joe Kosinski’s “Tron Legacy,” which arrives in theaters in December of this year. Last month, it was reported that Horowitz and Kitsis have been hired to write a sequel to “Legacy.” Beyond the writers’ room, “Lost” composer Michael Giacchino is keeping himself busy as well. Fresh off his Academy Award victory for his work on “Up,” Giacchino will reunite with Pixar to supply the score for “John Carter of Mars,” the space-spanning science-fiction epic starring Taylor Kitsch in the title role. Even though the creative team behind “Lost” is moving on, fans haven’t seen the last of their work on the already sorely missed franchise. Lindelof and Cuse confirmed to MTV News that there’s one last bit of “Lost” business to take care of: a DVD feature in which Team Darlton will explain some of the most compelling mysteries left unanswered in the series finale. Tell us which post-“Lost” project you’re most excited to see from the creative team in the comments! Related Photos Spin-Offs For The Characters Of ‘Lost’

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What’s Next For The ‘Lost’ Creative Team?