Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Lost's Sonya Walger Joins USA's Common Law

Sonya Walger Sonya Walger has grew to become an associate of USA's approaching buddy cop drama Common Law, Entertainment Weekly reviews. The Lost alum may have Dr. Emma Ryan, a wise and attractive Beverly Slopes mental health expert who splits her time writing pill medicines on her behalf wealthy clients and offering low-cost group therapy within the neighborhood center. It's here that Dr. Ryan meets two homicide detectives, carried out by Michael Ealy and Warren Kole, that are sent into couples counseling by their captain. USA can get betrothed to Common Law The role marks a reunion for Walger and Ealy, who labored together round the short-were living FlashForward. Walger has furthermore starred inside the Cinemax dramas In Treatment and Tell Me You Prefer Me. Common Law starts production the next month and may premiere on USA in 2012.

Friday, 23 September 2011

ABC Buys Steven Bochco Drama and a Conspiracy Series

Steven Bochco Steven Bochno is at it again. ABC has bought Legal Affairs, a legal drama from the man behind L.A. Law, NYPD Blue and Raising the Bar. In the drama written by Bochco and Jonathan Abrahams, partners and associates at a prestigious L.A. law firm balance their personal lives and high-profile cases. Gary Fleder will also executive-produce. Check out our fall preview for galleries, scoop, premiere calendars and more! ABC has also bought a one-hour adventure drama from Lorenzo DiBonaventura and Paul Schering. In Zero Hou,r a skeptical everyman gets swept up in one of history's greatest conspiracies that surrounds the Twelve Apostles. Dan McDermott will also executive-produce. Which projects sound interesting to you?

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Wednesday, 21 September 2011

NBC Buys Family Comedy Project Created By John Legend

EXCLUSIVE: After extended discussions, NBC has closed an offer for Mixed Benefits, just one-camera comedy project executive created by singer-songwriter John Legend and former NBC executive Teri Weinberg. Take advantage of Pearlstein (Medium) will write and co-executive produce the comedy, which received interest from multiple systems before entering exclusive discussions with NBC, getting back Weinberg using the network where she offered as EVP under Ben Silverman. John Legend and Mike Jackson are executive creating though their Get Lifted Film Co. and Weinberg’s through her Yellow Brick Road banner. Universal Television will produce. Inspired by Jacksons childhood becoming an adult in suburban Philadelphia, Mixed Benefits focuses on a prominent, black, street-bred stylish-hop artist taking pleasure in his single existence who finds out he includes a teenage boy and decides for connecting with him and his whitened suburban family. The show explores the culture clash and also the complicated journey of the father and boy beginning their relationship because the father soon finds out that fame, talent, and wealth enable you to get nowhere if this involves raising a child. Pearlstein is writing feature comedy True North for Warner Bros with Imagine creating and Erectile dysfunction Helms mounted on star. He'll direct his original comedy script Someone Marry Craig in 2012. Before her stint NBC, Weinberg labored at then-upstart Reveille and created numerous series, including Ugly Betty and also the Tudors. She is constantly on the function as a co-executive producer around the Office. This marks the very first major foray into TV for Legend and Jackson’s Get Lifted Film and also the second high-profile comedy project at NBC this year which has a b-level singer attached like a producer. The network also offers a karaoke comedy within the works, that is executive created by Adam Levine. Mike Kasdan is mounted on direct the possibility pilot from the script by Gene Hong for 20th TV and Chernin Entertainment. Mixed Benefits was packed by CAA.

Monday, 19 September 2011

Gerhard Richter Painting

A Zero One production in co-production with Terz Film, WDR, MDR, in cooperation with Arte, with the support of Media, Filmstiftung NRW, BKM, DFF. (International sales: the Match Factory, Cologne, Germany.) Produced by Thomas Kufus. Directed, written by Corinna Belz.With: Gerhard Richter, Norbert Arns, Hubert Becker, Sabine Moritz-Richter, Konstanze Ell, Marian Goodman, Benjamin Buchloh, Kasper Konig, Ulrich Wilmes, Sandy Nairne, Paul Moorhouse. (German, English dialogue)An art film in the literal sense, German helmer Corinna Belz's intelligently assembled observational docu "Gerhard Richter Painting" offers fascinating insight into the working process of the famed contemporary artist as he prepares a series of abstract canvases. Shooting over three years, Belz eschews voiceover narration, supplementing her perceptive lensing of Richter's studios with new and old footage of the media-shy painter discussing his career with art historians, curators and the press; conversations with his assistants; and a mesmerizing survey of his complete oeuvre. Cerebral pic is a natural for the museum, cinematheque and educational circuit as well as specialized broadcast. Although Richter, born in the former East Germany, has been one of the world's most significant artists for nearly five decades, it has been nearly 15 years since he agreed to participate in a documentary. When it comes to expressing himself in words, Richter prefers written ones; thus, Belz focuses on his process of applying paint to canvas, observing keenly but without question or comment unless he speaks to her first, giving a whole new meaning to the old saw "watching paint dry." Alone except for his two assistants (Norbert Arns and Hubert Becker), who mix paint when he works on large canvases, Richter paints in a vast, high-ceilinged, white-walled studio that has the hushed feeling of a high-end gallery. Like Belz's handheld camera, which shoots the canvases in closeup and long shot, the viewer becomes a silent observer as the artist paints, contemplates and sometimes destroys what he has done previously. Apart from a sparely used modernist score, the main sounds are birdsongs from the garden; Richter's echoing footsteps as he treads to and fro, considering the work from various angles; and the slap of a brush or the scrape of a giant squeegee across the canvas, the paint below forming unexpected colors and patterns. "Painting is another form of thinking," Richter tells the offscreen Belz. Even though he may have something else planned, he claims that his abstract canvases "do what they want." Arns and Becker spend considerable time documenting Richter's finished works in photos at a scale of 1:50 and making models of how they will be displayed. As the camera pans across these thumbnail shots against a white background in extreme closeup, it mimics the feeling of a viewer at an endless exhibition. We also see actual exhibitions of Richter's work in Cologne, Munich, London and NY. A stickler for detail when it comes to the display of his work, he is involved in almost every aspect, and pays particular attention to the exhibition lighting. With Belz's film itself a gorgeously rendered work of art, Richter should have no reason for complaint.Camera (color, DV), Johann Feindt, Frank Kranstedt, Dieter Sturmer; editor, Stephan Krumbiegel; sound (Dolby Digital), Gerrit Lucas, Sven Phil Lengzen, Andreas Hildebrandt; sound designer, Dominik Schleier. Reviewed at Toronto Film Festival (Real to Reel), Sept. 11, 2011. Running time: 97 MIN. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

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Friday, 16 September 2011

Toronto 2011: Magnolia Pictures Acquires 'The Hunter' With Willem Dafoe

Because the Toronto Worldwide Film Festival winds to some close, Magnolia Pictures has acquired U.S. privileges The Hunter, a mental drama from Australian that bowed in the fest.our editor recommendsWillem Dafoe, Mike Neill, Frances O'Connor Starring in 'The Hunter'The Hunter: Toronto Review Directed by Daniel Nettheim and compiled by Alice Addison, modified in the novel by Julia Leigh, the film stars Willem Dafoe like a mercenary hired with a bio-tech firm to find an uncommon animal within the Tasmanian backwoods. Mike Neilland Frances O'Connor also star.Porchlight Films' Vincent Sheehan created. Magnolia, that is planning for a 2012 theatrical through its Ultra VOD program for that Hunter, also acquired Michael Dowse's Goon and Bob Goldthwait's God Bless America only at that year's festival. The offer was discussed for Magnolia's SVP of purchases Dori Begley, director of purchases Peter Van Steemburg and mind of legal and business matters Chris Matson. UTA Independent Film Group and eOne, that is handling sales outdoors of Australia, discussed with respect to the filmmakers. Related Subjects Toronto Film Festival

Thursday, 15 September 2011

Report: Cyber-terrorist Leak 'Seductive' Photos of Justin Timberlake From Mila Kunis' Phone

Note to celebs: Buddies (even individuals with benefits) don't allow buddies take "sexy" photos of on their own their mobile phone. Moviefone's Most sexy Lady from the Summer time Mila Kunis is allegedly the most recent superstar victim to possess her phone compromised, and today photos of her and 'Friends With Benefits' co-star Justin Timberlake have leaked. Based on TMZ, four pictures from Kunis' phone, including a couple of Timberlake, are allegedly in play. In a single, he's apparently lounging shirtless inside a mattress in another Timberlake has a set of pink panties on his mind. Additionally, there are, allegedly, an "explicit" photo of the mystery guy and more discreet among Mila inside a bath tub that shows only her mind. What is the news comes only one next day of Scarlett Johnansson had her phone compromised, which boosts the apparent question: Isn't any sexy celebrity safe? Plus there is that whole British phone hacking scandal, which appears less about nude photos and much more about titillating head lines. Like that one. (Cough.) [via TMZ] photo: OHPIX/bauergriffinonline.com

Wednesday, 14 September 2011

IFC Night time buys 'The Incident' for U.S.

"The Incident"IFC Night time is obtaining United States privileges to Alexandre Courtes' thriller "The Incident" and intends to release it the coming year.Offer was introduced Wednesday in the Toronto Intl. Film Festival. ''The Incident'' opened Monday within the Night time Madness selection.The film, having a script by Jereme Fansten, stars Rupert Evans, Kenny Doughty, Frederick Kennedy, Dork Legeno, Marcus Garvey, and Richard Brake.Producers are Wassim Beji, Yannick Bollor and Emilie Chatel. Roy Lee and Doug Davison professional created.Story concentrates on three band people battling to record their first album and carrying out small gigs between changes cooking for that inmates from the high-security asylum where all of them work -- using the average workday needing little interaction using the disturbed males, who veer between violent reactions and near catatonia. This banal routine is interrupted right before dinner one evening, whenever a storm knocks the energy within the hospital, trapping the 3 teenagers with the cooking and crippling the safety systems that have them protected from the precarious lunatics.The offer was discussed by Shaun Deutchman, Manager of Purchases and Productions for Sundance Chooses/IFC Films with Paradigm and Charlotte now Boucon, Sales Director at SND M6, with respect to the filmmakers.IFC Night time is really a sister division to IFC Films and Sundance Chooses, and it is possessed and operated by AMC Systems. Contact Dork McNary at dork.mcnary@variety.com

Exclusive: Next Round of Emmy Presenters Includes Bryan Cranston, Claire Danes

Bryan Cranston, Claire Danes Bryan Cranston is taking a break from the Breaking Bad superlab to present a category at this Sunday night's Primetime Emmy Awards. Cranston joins the next wave of Emmy presenters to be selected by the TV Academy. Also on tap to hand out awards: Claire Danes (Showtime's upcoming Homeland), Jon Cryer (Two and a Half Men), Scott Caan (Hawaii Five-0), Jason O'Mara (Terra Nova) and Kerry Washington (ABC's midseason Scandal). Boardwalk Empire Cleans Up at the Creative Arts Emmys Cryer is nominated for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series. His new Men co-star Ashton Kutcher had already been confirmed as a presenter. Others previously announced include Will Arnett, Don Cheadle, Kaley Cuoco, Zooey Deschanel, Rob Lowe, Julianna Margulies, Melissa McCarthy, Lea Michele, Amy Poehler, Ian Somerhalder and Sofia Vergara. Another wave of presenters will be announced in the coming days. The 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards, hosted by Jane Lynch, air Sunday, September 18 at 8 pm/ET, 5 pm/PT on Fox. Subscribe to TV Guide Magazine now!

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Tuesday, 13 September 2011

USA orders group of comedy aircraft aircraft pilots

USA Network is continue concerning the comedy affiliate using the greenlight of two aircraft aircraft pilots, including one vulnerable to star Nathan Lane. The untitled Doug McGrath laffer, formerly known to as "On We Go," can be a half-hour singlecam a great unlucky actor whose Broadway aspirations ought to be positioned on hold when he returns to his Texas hometown upon his father's health taking a turn for your worse. Lane is presently in discussions for your role.McGrath, who written the pilot, will professional produce with Lane. Project originates from Universal Cable Prods."Paging Dr. Freed," from Fox 21, can be a half-hour comedy about two brothers and sisters taking inside the reins from the father's medical practice after his untimely dying. Script originates from Michael Feldman, who'll professional produce. Katy McCaffrey and Kaira Manley are situated as producers.Cabler is coming initially from off a effective summer season where it where it defeated other cablers in general audiences as well as the 18-49 demo. Internet was aided with the solid debuts of dramas "Necessary Roughness" and "Suits.""The get of individuals half-hour comedy aircraft aircraft pilots underscores our persistence for broadening the advantage of USA's entertainment brand," mentioned co-presidents Chris McCumber and Rob Wachtel. "We're excited being working with most likely probably the most distinct voices available after we available to new genres." Contact Stuart Levine at stuart.levine@variety.com

Below-the-inserts result in the fest scene

FierbergSteven Fierberg, the d.p. who shot "Ten Year" and "The Oranges," both screening in Toronto, includes a fantasy: "There is a brilliant director within the audience watching my movie. He pops up in my experience right later on and states, 'Oh my god, which was so perfect. You need to shoot my next picture.'"But that is not necessarily the way in which things work, stated Fierberg, who visited Toronto on Friday to assist promote both films. While festivals are only for creating buzz for films and pedestals for stars and company directors, below-the-line talent benefits less directly."I'm able to think about occasions when I have questioned having a director who stated, 'I saw that movie inside a festival also it looked great. I'll hire you.' However it did not matter which i was in the festival," Fierberg stated.Yet many d.p.'s, production designers along with other crew trek to Toronto, Sundance along with other fests -- most frequently by themselves cent -- not just in promote films they have done but to network and advance their careers."Everybody's there and so i attempt to meet as numerous people when i can," stated editor Mike Pushinsky, who also done "Ten Year," an ensembler that stars Channing Tatum, Kate Mara and Rosario Dawson. He can't make Toronto this season, but he's traveled to Sundance and Tribeca."It is all about marketing yourself," he stated. "That's generate an income remain in e-commerce. I even met my agent at Sundance."Indeed, below-the-line agents frequently use fests for his or her own type of recruiting. Through the years "I cut back several clients from Sundance, a lot of whom I still repetition," stated one agent.Editor Annette Davey, who visited Toronto this season to tubthump "Brooklyn Siblings Beat the very best,Inch attends fests to network -- and also to possibly repeat her 2007 Sundance experience: After "Waitress" tested there, "I acquired a require a job throughout the festival. Being there boosts your profile."D.p. Bobby Bukowski regrets he can't reach Toronto, where Oren Moverman's "Rampart," that they shot, is getting its premiere. Nevertheless, "I have never found likely to festivals serves to secure new jobs," he stated. "Let me think a director really wants to collaborate beside me according to my body system of labor, not my personality."Another d.p. who will not maintain Toronto is Martin Ruhe, who shot the fest's "Page Eight," helmed by David Hare. Ruhe did attend Cannes when "Control" opened up, and visited the London fest for that premiere of "The American." But Ruhe does not positively promote themself at fests. "I like the parties, but I am bad at walking as much as people," he stated.Mark Dornfeld's vfx shingle Custom Film Effects done two photos screening in Toronto -- Alexander Payne's "The Descendants," with George Clooney, and "Butter," starring Olivia Wilde, Hugh Jackman and Jennifer Garner -- but he sees no reason in attending. "I am during my studio, working," he stated. "We obtain business mostly through existing associations, as with Alexander and the editor Kevin Tent." "Descendants" is his third pic with Payne.Reservations & SigningsJonathan Silverman, with Global Artists Agency, has introduced onboard d.p. Jeffrey Kimball ("The Expendables") and production designer Maria Caso ("Deadwood").Paradigm signed producers Dean Johnson ("The AssistanceInch) and Mark G. Mathis ("Precious") second unit director Clay Staub ("300") editor/director Steven Sprung ("Community") and production designer James Philpott ("Smallville"). Agency reserved producers Bill Beasley on Allen Hughes' "Damaged City," Ken Ornstein, coming back, on ABC Family's "Melissa and Joey" and Scott Lumpkin on Malik Bader's "Crush" second unit director Stephen Woolfenden on Jonathan Levine's "Warm Physiques" editors Niven Howie on Paul W.S. Anderson's "Resident Evil: Retribution" and Anne McCabe on Stuart Blumberg's "Thank you for Discussing" and costume designer Wendy Chuck on Akiva Schaffer's "Neighborhood Watch."Innovative Artists signed editor Michael Andrews (all of the "Shrek" films). Agency reserved line producer Butch Kaplan on Craig Levinson's "Gotti: Three Decades" d.p.'s Shawn Maurer on John Whitesell's "Crossover" and Alex Nepomniaschy on D.J. Caruso's "The Goat's" production designer Doug Kraner on TNT pilot "Gateway" and costume designers Ruth Carter on Salim Akil's "Sparkle" and Genevieve Tyrrell on Andy Fickman's "Us and Them."Eastern Talent reserved editors Pat McMahon on the&E's "Bag of Bones" and Peter Devaney Flanagan on Ernie Barbarash's "Six Bullets" costume designer Soyon An with an untitled Benson Lee project and first a.d. Craig Borden on "Six Bullets." Contact Peter Caranicas at peter.caranicas@variety.com

Monday, 12 September 2011

Machine Gun Preacher

Gerard Butler stars in Relativity Media's 'Machine Gun Preacher.'A Relativity Media release presented in association with Virgin Produced of a Safady Entertainment, Apparatus, GG Filmz production, in association with 1984 PDC, Mpower Pictures, ITS Capital and Merlina Entertainment. Produced by Robbie Brenner, Gary Safady, Deborah Giarratana, Craig Chapman, Marc Forster. Executive producers, Gerard Butler, Alan Siegel, Michael Corso, Kyle Dean Jackson, Myles Nestel, Louise Rosner, Adi Shankar, Spencer Silna, Bradford Simpson. Co-producer, Douglas Saylor Jr. Directed by Marc Forster. Screenplay, Jason Keller.Sam Childers - Gerard Butler Lynn Childers - Michelle Monaghan Donnie - Michael Shannon Daisy - Kathy Baker Deng - Souleymane Sy Savane Paige - Madeline CarrollPeddling humanitarian outrage and stomach-churning violence with roughly equal fervor, Marc Forster's "Machine Gun Preacher" is a blunt, morally confused portrait of Sam Childers, the Philadelphia ex-con who found Jesus and has since devoted his life to rescuing children in war-torn Sudan. While the result is yet another story of African suffering told from a white do-gooder's perspective, this particular do-gooder is intrinsically fascinating enough to warrant attention, albeit more nuanced attention than he receives here. Inspirational trappings and decent action elements aside, this Relativity release leaves a medicinal aftertaste that will likely serve as a commercial deterrent, though some Christian audiences might respond. Just released from prison, Philly native Sam (Gerard Butler) returns home to his wife, Lynn (Michelle Monaghan), and their young daughter, Paige (Ryann Campos), and quickly sinks back into a life of substance abuse, compulsive violence and armed robbery along with his old bar buddy Donnie (Michael Shannon). But Lynn, who became a Christian during Sam's incarceration, urges her husband to go to church with her; after a near-fatal skirmish, Sam agrees and is forever changed by the experience. Adopting a rudimentary approach to complex developments, Jason Keller's screenplay is content to observe Sam's Damascus moment from the outside, displaying minimal interest in the mystery of his sudden faith. Within months, Sam has gone from hardened thug to God-fearing missionary; having started his own construction business, he decides to put his skills to meaningful use on a relief trip to Uganda. But when Sam makes a dangerous detour into neighboring Sudan, escorted by Sudanese People's Liberation Army soldier Deng (Souleymane Sy Savane, "Goodbye Solo"), he witnesses firsthand the atrocities perpetrated by the Lord's Resistance Army, a vicious renegade militia that turns children into soldiers, often by forcing them to kill their own parents. Moved by the plight of countless young refugees, Sam provides them with temporary shelter and eventually decides to build a local orphanage. Soon, what was intended to be a short-term mission has become a life-consuming project, leaving his wife and daughter (now played by Madeline Carroll) feeling abandoned, and making him a sworn enemy of the LRA. The generally simplistic beats of the storytelling can't entirely smooth over the fascinating edges and contradictions that make Sam so compelling a figure, one who prizes actions over words and becomes increasingly fed up with the life of Western privilege, where the cost of every petty extravagance could put a serious dent in famine or disease worldwide. Sam's increasingly fanatical devotion to his cause even outweighs his allegiance to God, and in the interests of protecting his flock (and distracting moviegoers with some well-choreographed shootouts), he doesn't hesitate to take up firearms; not for nothing does he earn the nickname "Machine Gun Preacher." Butler infuses the role with the red-blooded energy and robust physical presence it requires, and his performance grasps the essential insight that Sam, whether ne'er-do-well or born-again believer, is a consummate man of action whose past lust for violence and present desire for positive change spring from the same impulse. Still, neither the script nor Butler's tendency to bellow leaves much room for subtlety; for that, there's Shannon, who delivers a quietly anguished turn as a forgotten sidekick whose own hard-won redemption hasn't been accompanied by nearly as much fanfare. As Sam's supportive wife, Monaghan is bracingly level-headed and sympathetic. Partly shot in South Africa, the film is technically well mounted, and Forster isn't inclined to prettify the dry, brushy landscapes or make them look vibrantly exotic in the manner of some Africa-set studio productions of recent years. The film is rather less sensitive, however, in its depiction of the children, who are frequently presented in the emotional equivalent of money shots; the camera has an irritating habit of discovering them cowering together in the back of a truck or lying dead in an artfully staged pile by the road, almost always accompanied by Asche & Spencer's sobering score. By the time an orphan boy steps forward to earnestly articulate an uplifting message for Sam's benefit and ours, it's clear Forster is venturing into territory covered with far more artistry and political awareness, and fewer commercial compromises, in films like Claire Denis' "White Material" and particularly Jean-Stephane Sauvaire's "Johnny Mad Dog," with its insight into the psychology of child soldiers. "Machine Gun Preacher" views these kids as many things -- statistics, mouthpieces, lucky beneficiaries of Western compassion -- but never do they become people in their own right.Camera (color, widescreen, Super 16), Roberto Schaefer; editor, Matt Chesse; music, Asche & Spencer; music supervisors, Season Kent, Happy Walters; production designer, Philip Messina; art directors, Jonathan Hely-Hutchinson, Paul Richards; set decorator, Jay Hart; costume designer, Frank L. Fleming; sound (Dolby Digital/Datasat), Mark Weingarten; supervising sound editors, Gregory King, Darren King; re-recording mixers, Gregory King, Lora Hirschberg; special effects coordinators, Russell Tyrrell, Cordell McQueen; visual effects supervisor, Jeremy Hattingh; visual effects, BUF, With a Twist Studio, Condor Cape Town; associate producer, Jillian Kugler; assistant directors, Aldric La'Auli Porter, David Webb; casting, Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee. Reviewed at Toronto Film Festival (Gala Presentations), Sept. 11, 2011. MPAA Rating: R. Running time: 127 MIN. Secondary Cast: Young Paige - Ryann Campos(English, Acholi, Arabic dialogue) Contact Justin Chang at justin.chang@variety.com

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Sunday, 11 September 2011

Nelsan Ellis Shocked By Dying Of Beloved Character In True Blood stream Season Finale

By Jolie LashLOS ANGELES, Calif. -- On Sunday, in the bloody and emotional episode, True Blood stream ended Season 4 in a really dramatic fashion that incorporated saying goodbye to a lot of Bon Temps faces including Lafayette Reynolds soul mates, Jesus Velasquez. Because they never expected his character, Lafayette, to reside in happily ever after with Jesus, Nelsan Ellis told Access Hollywood he used to be thrown with the twist that needed the nurse and brujo, carried out by Kevin Alejandro, in the land in the living. I wasnt surprised, because I heard [creator] Alan [Ball] say a couple of occasions that, you understand, happy occasions in associations dont last, however was shocked they destroyed him which i had been shocked they me kill him, Nelsan told Access Hollywood. I used to be like, Why are you able to? After which it I came across Kevin requested [it]. He was like, I'd like Nelsan to kill me. Which I had been like, Why perhaps you have request that, dude? Getting shot the scene several days ago the one that saw Lafayette, possessed with the witch Marnie, stab a tied-up Jesus to think about his brujo forces Nelsan mentioned he understood why Kevin wanted his character to go to out at Lafayettes hands. I kind of realise why he requested that. It absolutely was just he and [I] that started which he which i that type of went in bloody flames, the actor told Access. Filming people final moments involving the two males was painful, according to Nelsan, who recognized Kevin and just what the former Southland star introduced for the small screen. It absolutely was painful because weve become good pals. Thats my dude. Hes one of the better individuals who Ive showed up at know and also the wife I merely love his family and also the energy, Nelsan mentioned. I'm not gonna have that any longer, so that it was painful which we now have this kind of good rapport, the most effective rapport Ive ever suffered with another actor. While Jesus existence was very ended weekly episode, Nelsan mentioned he needs that Lafayettes recently found medium abilities can make future options for your two for hooking up. He certainly will probably be coming back. Next season, as Lafayette finds out using his energy, you have to will definitely see Jesus, Nelsan mentioned. True Blood stream wont return until June 2012 on Cinemax, and fans are actually clamoring for your return of one other character Denis OHares Russell Edgington. Nelsan too, is encouraging in the idea, which was recommended at while using uncovered concrete and silver chains Alcide Herveaux (Joe Manganiello) discovered in Sundays season finale. I'd love Denis OHare to come back, Nelsan mentioned. Which he should could go back to become my boyfriend. The king of Louisiana as well as the new medium of Bon Temps? In my opinion that could be an excellent combination, certainly a effective combination, he added. Filming the next several weeks continue to be several days away and Nelsan is presently in the office on Gods Acting Badly, a film about Greek Gods dwelling in current day New You'll be able to City, who encounter trouble after being discovered having a human couple, carried out by Alicia Silverstone and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. I am shooting it nowadays, Nelsan, who plays Dionysus inside the film, told Access Hollywood. Its fun. Copyright 2011 by NBC Universal, Corporation. All rights reserved.These elements is probably not launched, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Saturday, 10 September 2011

5 top Steven Soderbergh Movies

5 top Steven Soderbergh Movies By Christy Lemire September 9, 2011 Photo by Universal Galleries/Bob Marshak "Erin Brockovich" La (AP) Steven Soderbergh makes every type of film imaginable, from fizzy comedies to penetrating dramas, from experimental indies with tiny budgets to star-studded extravaganzas. But he always appears prepared to try anything, and that is why is him so vital and exciting.Soderbergh's latest, "Contagion," follows a deadly virus because it propagates worldwide, declaring millions of sufferers. It provides for us an opportunity to roll-up our masturbator sleeves and clean our hands and pick five from the director's best films: "Traffic" (2000): Soderbergh won the Academy Award for the best director despite the fact that he was competing against themself with another film on this list, "Erin Brockovich" for his sprawling depiction from the worldwide drug trade. Not really a moment of the 147-minute epic rings false. Soderbergh juggles several complex, connected story lines along with a huge, large-title ensemble and causes it to be all look easy. Becoming their own cinematographer as always underneath the title Peter Andrews, Soderbergh explores the pervasiveness of medication and also the futility of government efforts to prevent them via a hyperreality, one that is raw and edgy sometimes, dreamy and almost hallucinatory at others. Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Johnson, Don Cheadle as well as an Oscar-winning Benicio Del Toro are probably the top-notch cast. "From Sight" (1998): Soderbergh captures the perfect tone each time, even while he includes a number of genres. According to the Elmore Leonard novel, this story from the improbable connection that forms from a career bank thief (George Clooney) and also the federal marshal who's after him (Jennifer Lopez) ranges from buddy comedy to gripping suspense to sexy, noir-style romance. Clooney and Lopez have crazy, sexy chemistry because they exchange banter in Scott Frank's script that could not be tight or snappier. They are each in the height of the charisma, and together they are irresistible. The superb supporting cast includes Ving Rhames, Albert Brooks, Cheadle (again), Steve Zahn and Catherine Keener. "The Limey" (1999): Terence Stamp is simply a complete bad-ass like a British ex-disadvantage who travels to La to research the dying of his daughter. His performance is effective and undoubtedly, but Soderbergh has an intriguing contrast by telling the storyline in fragments, in overlapping wisps of reminiscences and dialogue, which adds towards the air of mystery and keeps us speculating. Stamp prowls a blistering, bleached-out LA, a mixture of downtown warehouses and cheap flats, twinkling beaches and staggering hillside mansions. He's hunting a clever, laid-back record producer, performed perfectly by Peter Fonda, who had been associated with that much-more youthful girl when she died. Soderbergh effortlessly blends these actors' aura of '60s awesome together with his own contemporary style. "Erin Brockovich" (2000): Soderbergh requires a daunting and apparently dry subject the real story from the industrial pollution of a town's water supply and turns it into an uplifting tale of redemption that's warm, human, funny as well as sexy. That largely has related to Jennifer Aniston, who gained a best-actress Oscar for playing the title character, a single mom of three who assumes an enormous class-action suit while being employed as personal files clerk for her lawyer (Albert Finney). Roberts radiates sass and inteligence with her clingy clothes and dirty mouth, and she's a complete hoot. Aaron Eckhart counters that, getting sweetness and tenderness to the film because the biker nearby who cares for Erin's kids. "Ocean's 11" (2001): His remake from the 1960 Rat Pack caper is perfect escapist entertainment: fun and fast-paced, clever and spontaneous, light and filled with laughs. Clooney, Roberts, Matt Damon and Kaira Pitt are clearly getting a ball bouncing off one another, never taking themselves too seriously despite their Hollywood heavyweight status. Clooney stars within the Frank Sinatra role as Danny Sea, who amasses a rag-tag crew of cons to drag off his latest heist: a robbery of Las Vegas' greatest casinos about the evening of the heavyweight championship fight, when they know our prime paint rollers come in town and also the vault holds about $150 million. The proven fact that this really is crazy, yet goes so easily, is just part of why it's this type of kick.Copyright 2011 Connected Press. All privileges reserved. These components might not be released, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. 5 top Steven Soderbergh Movies By Christy Lemire September 9, 2011 "Erin Brockovich" PHOTO CREDIT Universal Galleries/Bob Marshak La (AP) Steven Soderbergh makes every type of film imaginable, from fizzy comedies to penetrating dramas, from experimental indies with tiny budgets to star-studded extravaganzas. But he always appears prepared to try anything, and that is why is him so vital and exciting.Soderbergh's latest, "Contagion," follows a deadly virus because it propagates worldwide, declaring an incredible number of sufferers. It provides for us an opportunity to roll-up our masturbator sleeves and clean our hands and pick five from the director's best films: "Traffic" (2000): Soderbergh won the Academy Award for the best director despite the fact that he was competing against themself with another film about this list, "Erin Brockovich" for his sprawling depiction from the worldwide drug trade. Not really a moment of the 147-minute epic rings false. Soderbergh juggles several complex, connected story lines along with a huge, large-title ensemble and causes it to be all look easy. Becoming their own cinematographer as always underneath the title Peter Andrews, Soderbergh explores the pervasiveness of medication and also the futility of government efforts to prevent them via a hyperreality, one that is raw and edgy sometimes, dreamy and almost hallucinatory at others. Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Johnson, Don Cheadle as well as an Oscar-winning Benicio Del Toro are probably the top-notch cast. "From Sight" (1998): Soderbergh captures the perfect tone each time, even while he includes a number of genres. In line with the Elmore Leonard novel, this story from the improbable connection that forms from a career bank thief (George Clooney) and also the federal marshal who's after him (Jennifer Lopez) ranges from buddy comedy to gripping suspense to sexy, noir-style romance. Clooney and Lopez have crazy, sexy chemistry because they exchange banter in Scott Frank's script that could not be tight or snappier. They are each in the height of the charisma, and together they are irresistible. The superb supporting cast includes Ving Rhames, Albert Brooks, Cheadle (again), Steve Zahn and Catherine Keener. "The Limey" (1999): Terence Stamp is simply a complete bad-ass like a British ex-disadvantage who travels to La to research the dying of his daughter. His performance is effective and undoubtedly, but Soderbergh has an intriguing contrast by telling the storyline in fragments, in overlapping wisps of reminiscences and dialogue, which adds towards the air of mystery and keeps us speculating. Stamp prowls a blistering, bleached-out LA, a mixture of downtown warehouses and cheap flats, twinkling beaches and staggering hillside mansions. He's hunting a clever, laid-back record producer, performed perfectly by Peter Fonda, who had been associated with that much-more youthful girl when she died. Soderbergh effortlessly blends these actors' aura of '60s awesome together with his own contemporary style. "Erin Brockovich" (2000): Soderbergh requires a daunting and apparently dry subject the real story from the industrial pollution of the town's water supply and turns it into an uplifting tale of redemption that's warm, human, funny as well as sexy. That largely has related to Jennifer Aniston, who gained a best-actress Oscar for playing the title character, a single mom of three who assumes an enormous class-action suit while being employed as personal files clerk on her lawyer (Albert Finney). Roberts radiates sass and inteligence together with her clingy clothes and dirty mouth, and she's a complete hoot. Aaron Eckhart counters that, getting sweetness and tenderness towards the film because the biker nearby who cares for Erin's kids. "Ocean's 11" (2001): His remake from the 1960 Rat Pack caper is ideal escapist entertainment: fun and fast-paced, clever and spontaneous, light and filled with laughs. Clooney, Roberts, Matt Damon and Kaira Pitt are clearly getting a ball bouncing off one another, never taking themselves too seriously despite their Hollywood heavyweight status. Clooney stars within the Frank Sinatra role as Danny Sea, who amasses a rag-tag crew of cons to drag off his latest heist: a robbery of Las Vegas' greatest casinos about the evening of the heavyweight championship fight, when they know our prime paint rollers come in town and also the vault holds about $150 million. The truth that this really is crazy, yet goes so easily, is just a part of why it's this type of kick.Copyright 2011 Connected Press. All privileges reserved. These components might not be released, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Thursday, 8 September 2011

U2 doc sets tone as Toronto opener

The high-profile Bell Lightbox is ready for this year's fest kickoff. "From the Sky Down" Juliette Binoche in "Elles" Despite gloomy gray skies, Irish eyes are smiling as the 2011 Toronto Film Festival launches tonight with the world preem of Davis Guggenheim's U2 docu "From the Sky Down" on the Gala screen. It's the first time a nonfiction pic will have opened the fest, bucking the trend of recent years to open with a Canadian title or Canuck co-prod."We wanted to establish a more open policy in terms of the kind of films we look for to open the festival and really kick things off," commented festival co-director Cameron Bailey. "Last year the Bruce Springsteen documentary was one of the biggest films of the festival, and that same kind of energy propels 'From the Sky Down.' The film explores and celebrates the creative process, and we're all about the same thing."Earlier this week, the fest announced that an onstage discuswith Guggenheim, U2's Bono and the Edge will take place Friday afternoon. And the music docu note is sustained with the world preems of Cameron Crowe's "Pearl Jam Twenty" and Stephen Kessler's buzzing "Paul Williams Still Alive" also unspooling this weekend.The Canuck contingent, spread throughout fest programs, hits a high note Saturday with the world preem of Sarah Polley's sophomore feature "Take This Waltz" and the North American preem of David Cronenberg's cerebral drama "A Dangerous Method" on the Gala screen. Other hot domestic titles in play include Randall Cole's "388 Arletta Avenue," Guy Maddin's "Keyhole" and Dylan Akio Smith and Kris Elgstrand's "Doppelganger Paul."As sunnier skies beckon for Friday and the preem and party-packed weekend, record numbers of industryites (up 10% over 2010's headcount at this juncture, with larger numbers from China, Japan, Korea and Argentina) roll into town expecting greater U.S. buyer heat for the abundance of available titles, especially given the larger competitor field."Toronto is like the first day of school" said IFC Films/Sundance Selects exec Arianna Bocco. "It's the first fall festival with significant new titles, but despite being a screening-heavy festival, it's an important part of the ongoing conversation with sales agents we haven't seen since Cannes and a time to catch up because AFM is literally around the corner."In addition to festival title action, market activity in Toronto will see discussions ignite for 2013-timed projects, with sales of non-fest titles also in play. For instance, Submarine screens docu "Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel" early Thursday evening to anxious buyers unable to catch the docu at its well-received Venice and Telluride screenings and expects to close a deal Friday.This year the fest is fully ensconced in its downtown hub, with action radiating around the five-story TIFF Bell Lightbox at the corner of King and John Streets after a full year of programming to work out logistical kinks.On Wednesday the Lightbox was abuzz with the launch of the four-day Talent Lab as 24 emerging filmmakers primed for creative development entered sessions led by governors Jason Reitman and Bingham Ray. Wednesday morning, winners of the Emerging Filmmakers Competition (shorts helmed by Canadian 2010 Talent Lab participants) were announced, with Montreal's Kara Blake nabbing the juried top prize for "Next of Kin," Gabriel Taraboulsy landing second prize for "My First Movie" and Jared Raab's "The Revenge Plot" winning for fan favorite.Friday night the festival anoints a new red-carpet venue with the world preem of Polish helmer Malgoska Szumowska's "Elles," starring Juliette Binoche, at the Princess of Wales theater, a 2,000-seater (less 500 to make room for the removable high-tech projection booth) located across from Roy Thomson Hall (Gala central)."We're running films there from Friday through to Monday, which is when we have the highest demand for bigger films that can fill that size of house," said Bailey, adding that the fest hopes to use that venue for more days in future editions depending on the response. "I think 'Elles' sets the tone for what we want the Princess of Wales to showcase, which is high-profile films with prominent talent but subject matter more challenging that what we might program as a Gala."Travel time for media and buyers is reduced with press and industry screenings split between the Scotiabank theaters and the Lightbox, while official press conferences will be held in the Lightbox's sixth-floor (elevator access only) Malparte event space. And most U.S., Canadian and foreign PR companies are with the program, setting up shop either at the fest's official industry hub, the Hyatt Regency (one block from the Lightbox) or at the Intercontinental on Front Street, a stone's throw from the hub. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

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Tuesday, 6 September 2011

George Harrison: Residing in the fabric World: Telluride Film Review

It's a question how he is doing it, but in some way between making The Departed and Shutter Island and Boardwalk Empire and Hugo and all sorts of his assorted other projects, Martin Scorsese finds time for you to create another epic music documentary. Similar to his 2005 No Direction Home: Bob Dylan long, scope and comprehensiveness, George Harrison: Residing in the fabric World proves nearly equally rewarding, even when its subject doesn't always compel exactly the same kind of automatic anticipatory excitement. Remarkable footage from both Beatles era and publish-ླྀs period, together with revelatory, frequently beguiling commentary from a number of intimates along with a treasure chest of musical delights, mix to produce a personality portrait of welcome depth in regards to a musical giant who frequently appeared to face a little within the shadows of his more exuberant peers. After festival exposure in Telluride and New You are able to, this highly satisfying, two-part, experience is going to be open to audiences on Cinemax beginning March. 5.our editor recommendsCANNES: Martin Scorsese and Olivia Harrison discuss their in-progress documentary about George HarrisonTelluride Selection Features 'A Harmful Method,' 'The Descendants' and 'Shame' Scorsese doesn't try to create a situation because of Harrison being being an important a painter as Dylan or his band mates John Lennon and Paul McCartney, or his getting been somewhat neglected. But the film entirely instructions full attention for 209 minutes is itself testimony not just to its quality but to the concept that the general public might have undervalued this old schoolmate of Paul's whose voice wasn't exceptional, who wasn't as cute because the other two original Beatles, didn't lead many tunes in the beginning and also got into that strange Indian sitar stuff but had possibly probably the most different and unusual existence journey of them. PHOTOS: Telluride Film Festival: 12 Movies to understand Opening with fantastic The Second World War British victory celebration footage that's new a minimum of to American eyes, the film zooms with the subject's Liverpool youth ("He was cocky," among his siblings avers) to the stage where George, at 17, visited play in divey Hamburg clubs using the original configuration of the items ended up being to get to be the Beatles. Wonderfully intimate interviews with Klaus Voorman and, especially, his then-girlfriend Astrid Kirchherr, who required striking early photographs from the lads, bring individuals grubby, heady days poignantly alive. Then Beatlemania hits, with first-hands explanations by Ringo Starr supplying an internal feel to some cascade of the items, again, isn't excessively familiar footage. Joan Taylor, wife from the group's press officer, amusingly describes the boys' first acidity trip-done, per Paul, within an atmosphere of "controlled weirdness"--although George claims with an excerpted Dick Cavett Show appearance they didn't know these were taking LSD the very first time they'd it. Whereas India, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and also the sitar were basically passing fancies for that other Beatles, for George they grew to become staples of his existence, with Taylor recommending that, for him, spirituality and meditation provided a path to meaning and also the inner self beyond chemicals. Musically, the Eastern diversion, which occupies a reasonable quantity of screen time, still appears that, a kind of experimental stalemate when grafted onto Western pop, but George's sincere dedication into it is unquestionable. The Beginning, which runs 94 minutes, finishes with Yoko Ono making her entrance upon the scene and tension mounting to some extent that, per Harrison, "was stifling us. It needed to self-destruct." Nothing under "My Guitar Lightly Weeps" would caused by bring this chapter to some close. For a while, George had silently been stockpiling tunes (most of which have been declined by John and Paul), which describes how, following the Beatles split up, he could so rapidly come forth with a triple album, "Everything Must Pass," packed with great material. Below within the 115-minute Part Two is variously exhilarating (the Concert for Bangladesh, The Traveling Wilburys), bizarre (Eric Clapton's dependence on George's wife Pattie, whom he eventually married, an interlude referred to by Clapton in rather defensively jokey fashion), idiosyncratic (George's acquisition of a massive Victorian estate) and illustrative of his progressively diverse interests (his outlay of $4 million to save Monty Python's Existence of John from cancellation and the roll-out of the enterprising Hand crafted Films, his close friendship with Formula 1 driver Jackie Stewart). PHOTOS: Venice Film Festival: 10 Movies to understand One major coup is really a rare, nicely tried interview with Phil Spector, clearly made before his 2009 murder conviction. A producer on "Allow It To Be," "EverythingInch and "A Concert for Bangladesh," Spector may also be amusing and much more frequently informative, a genuine plus for that documentary. George's second wife Olivia progressively makes its way into the frame (she's one the film's three producers), then comes the troubled finish, with recurring ailments irritated through the shocking home invasion and physical assault that could have substantially reduced his existence. Editor David Tedeschi, who also cut the Dylan film, surely shouldered a massive share from the responsibility for organizing the voluminous and diverse material that comprises this huge tapestry, for an finish result that's consistently engaging and vital. Some construction appears puzzling--no sooner would be the youngsters in Liverpool introduced in the start compared to film jumps momentarily towards the Beatles splitting up, there's scarce reference to the lads' film work (might this not have access to assisted spur George's later entry in to the film business?) and family along with other personal particulars are sketchily presented at best. But, then, if you would like every i dotted and t entered, you need to read a biography this is actually the guy themself, reticent, cagey but available to existence, his mind occupied with lots of things, and the music and buddies too, all on the screen. It's not really a film one particularly likely to be produced however it's a greatly welcome one. Venue: Telluride Film Festival Opens: October 5-6 (Cinemax) Production: Spitfire Prods., Sikelia Prods., Grove Street Prods. Sales: Exclusive Films Intl. Cast: Eric Clapton, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, George Martin, Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, Tom Petty, Phil Spector, Ringo Starr, Jackie Stewart, Harry Harrison, Pete Harrison, Klaus Voorman, Astrid Kirchherr, Joan Taylor, Pattie Boyd, Ken Scott, Jane Birkin, Neil Aspinall, Mukunda Soswami, Billy Preston, Jim Keller, Olivia Harrison, Ray Cooper, Dhani Harrison Director: Martin Scorsese Producers: Olivia Harrison, Nigel Sinclair, Martin Scorsese Executive Producer: Margaret Bodde Editor: David Tedeschi 209 minutes Martin Scorsese Telluride Film Festival