Monday, August 16, 2010

Hilary Duff And Mike Comrie Are Married!


Normally I'm up to date with all the latest celebrity news, but this one caught me off guard! i knew they were engaged, but last night as i was watching Kourtney and Khole take Miami, and i read the E! marquee at the bottom of the page, it completely shocked me ! i was happy for her! congrats!]

Looks like "Cinderella Story's" Hilary Duff lived out her own fairytale this weekend, when she tied the knot in an intimate (but tres romantic!) ceremony with beau, 29-year-old Canadian hockey player Mike Comrie in Montecito, California.

According to US Weekly, Hilary (who btw is only 22!), rocked a strapless Vera Wang gown down a candle lit aisle with sister Haylie as her maid of honor.


"Mike held his arm around Hilary for most of the romantic, candlelit ceremony, and they both looked extremely happy," an eyewitness told People magazine. Cute!

The pair dated for about two years before making it official in front of about 100 guests. In fact, when we caught up with Hilary in the months leading up to the wedding she said that the couple was hoping to have a small wedding — even though Mike was pretty much up for everything. She said he was far from a groomzilla.

"I think that If I had it all figured out tomorrow, he'd be like 'Great! Let's go!'" Hilary told Hollywood Crush in April. You never know! I could always turn into a bridezilla later on!"

Well, even if that was the case, all the zilla-ing tactics definitely paid off because the wedding sounds gorg!

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Monday, August 9, 2010

'Entourage' Series Finale in 2011: How Should It End?


LOVVEE LOOVVEE this show and im sad to see it coming to an end. I will admit i haven't been watching the new season so i have a lot to catch up on. Vince and the boys will be missed.

Over the weekend HBO announced that Entourage will officially come to an end next year. The show, currently in its seventh season, will end after season 8 during the summer of 2011. However, movie possibilities beyond that, similar to what HBO did with Sex and the City, are still a possibility.

During the Television Critics Association press tour, HBO programming president Michael Lombardo revealed that the current plan is to have one more shortened final season, possibly limiting season 8 to as few as six episodes.

With the possibility of a film, it will be interesting to see how Entourage decides to end so that it's a satisfying conclusion while still leaving the door open for more stories. Currently Entourage is heading now a surprisingly topical path with movie star Vincent Chase pulling a Lindsay Lohan, going off the rails.

The character is getting drunk in the morning, passing out naked by his pool and dating a porn star. The show also seems oddly prescient with a storyline where one of Ari's former agents is blackmailing him by releasing tapes of his offensive rants to the media. These scenes were filmed prior to the Mel Gibson debacle, which makes the show very up-to-date.

Ideally, I'd like to see Entourage go out on either a huge high or a deep low. Vincent should either win an Oscar or go to jail, a la Robert Downey Jr. Or both. The most refreshing part of the season 7 storyline is that Vincent's life has always been a little too picture-perfect, and showing that the excesses of fame and fortune can lead to your downfall is a lot more entertaining than seeing a happy-go-lucky, good-looking, rich movie star.

But more importantly, Johnny Drama needs to win something. There is no more pathetic character on TV than Drama, a constantly frustrated second banana who has everything taken away from him at the last possible second.

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Monday, August 2, 2010

'Inception' Destroys The 'Schmucks' At The Weekend Box Office


LETS TRY THIS AGAIN. HAHAHA AND HOPEFULLY THIS TIME YOU GUYS HAVE SEEN THE MOVIE AND HAVE ALREADY CREATED YOUR OWN OPINION OF THE MOVIES.

The Box-Office Top Five

#1 "Inception" ($27.5 million)
#2 "Dinner for Schmucks" ($23.3 million)
#3 "Salt" ($19.3 million)
#4 "Despicable Me" ($15.5 million)
#5 "Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore" ($12.5 million)

July faded away and August roared into view this past weekend, and judging by the weekend's relatively low box office numbers moviegoers apparently had summer plans that didn't involve heading to the local cinema. Surrounded by three soft openings from newcomers, Christopher Nolan's "Inception" once again proved that successful original action films this summer are more than just a pipe dream.



The fourth movie of the year to spend three weekends in first place, "Inception" earned an estimated $27.5 million at the domestic box office this weekend, raising its total gross to $193.3 million after opening 17 days ago. Having already cleared its reported production budget of $160 million with domestic dollars alone, "Inception" is also a success abroad; overseas performances add up to a $363.3 million worldwide total.

Beyond "Inception," three new movies premiered at the box office with varying degrees of disappointment. "Dinner for Schmucks" was the best-performing of the three, arriving in second place with $23.3 million. A remake of the 1998 French film "Le Dîner de Cons," the Jay Roach-directed "Schmucks" marked a personal best opening for Paul Rudd in a leading role.

"Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore" didn't fare nearly as well, drawing a mere $12.5 million fifth-place finish, with slightly over half of that total earned from 3-D screenings. "Kitty Galore" was a significant step down from its "Cats & Dogs" predecessor, which arrived in theaters to the tune of $21.7 million in 2001.

Rounding out the weekend's major releases was "Charlie St. Cloud," the Zac Efron-starring drama from Universal Pictures. The movie amassed $12.1 million this weekend for a respectable but unremarkable sixth-place finish.

The weekend's third and fourth place slots were occupied by "Salt" and "Despicable Me," respe

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Monday, July 19, 2010

inception!


AMAZING MOVIE! I LOOVEED IT QAND I WOULD WATCH IT OVER AND OVER AGAIN. HAHA SO IM NIT SURE WHAT THIS REVIEW SAYS BUT I RECOMMEND YOU WATCH IT. I LOVED IT ITS BASICLLY TOP 5 MOVIES ALREADY.

It was one the greatest movies of all time, until it wasn't.

Several weeks before it appeared in theaters, Christopher Nolan's "Inception" picked up some of the most flowery hosannas bestowed on a film in many months. A select mix of critics, film awards columnists and online movie bloggers who'd seen early advance screenings rained down unanimous compliments.

But as the film neared its public debut Friday, that unanimity crumbled. Several influential mainstream critics declared themselves less than enthralled.



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Ambitious films — and as a wholly original concept sprung from the fertile mind of writer-director Nolan, "Inception" is indisputably ambitious — frequently divide critics. But the swing here was sharper than usual and was enough to perplex the average filmgoer.

"There seems to be a tidal phenomenon going on — the wave went one way, and then it went another," says Salon critic Andrew O'Hehir, who with a lukewarm review was part of the second wave. "I almost want a social scientist to come in and analyze it, because those of us in the middle of it would like to understand it."

Anticipation for "Inception" had been building for months. It is Nolan's first feature since the hugely popular and critically lauded Batman film "The Dark Knight" in 2008, and in an era in which studio movies increasingly stick to familiar subject matter, here was a storyline — a tortured hero named Dom Cobb ( Leonardo DiCaprio) leads a team of dream invaders on a risky mission — that defied convention.

In that first wave of reviews, Kirk Honeycutt at the trade paper Hollywood Reporter said "Inception" puts Nolan "at the top of the heap of sci-fi all-stars." Online columnists were even more frothy, canonizing the film with the likes of the Alfred Hitchcock classic "Vertigo" and Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey."

"A film like nothing you have ever seen before.... This could be the film to solidify the director's place among the modern masters," proclaimed pundit Kris Tapley on the film-awards site In Contention. A "Kubrickian masterpiece with heart," declared Anne Thompson at Indiewire.

But as critics from large consumer outlets began weighing in last week, the current shifted. Reviewers from the Wall Street Journal, Salon, New York Magazine, Slate and the New York Times all registered deep reservations about the film, criticizing, among other things, its triumph of the technical and conceptual over the narrative and the emotional. "For the most part, 'Inception' is a handsome, clever and grindingly self-serious boy-movie, shorn of imagination, libido, spirituality or emotional depth," wrote O'Hehir in Salon. "[T]hough there is a lot to see in 'Inception,' there is nothing that counts as genuine vision," tweaked A.O. Scott in the New York Times. "The emperor's new bed-clothes," declared the Wall Street Journal's John Anderson.

There were also a number of mainstream critics who exalted the film. The Los Angeles Times' Kenneth Turan and the Chicago Sun-Times' Roger Ebert were among those who were warmly enthusiastic, with Turan calling it "a tremendously exciting science-fiction thriller that's as disturbing as it sounds." (Audiences also embraced "Inception"; the movie grossed a studio-estimated $60.4 million over its opening weekend.)

But overall, the film lost a good fraction of its cachet. A 100% "fresh" rating on the review-aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes early last week had, by the weekend, fallen to 83%. It's telling, too that the site's "Top Critics," which tend to represent the most influential reviewers, were a number of points off that mean — they approved only at a rate of 76%. Those are enviable figures for most films but a notch below the best-reviewed movies of the summer, such as "Toy Story 3" and "The Kids Are All Right."

The polarity between the first and second group of reviews, experts say, may in part reflect the differences between Web and print culture. "There's a tendency in the blogosphere and maybe in American culture at large to take anything new and either detest or adore it," says Chicago Tribune film critic Michael Phillips, who gave the movie a qualified endorsement of three stars stars out of five. "What I think some of the critics are trying to do is bring an element of nuance."

"We live in an era when there's a tendency to overvalue anything that's even slightly good. In another era I don't know if we'd see gushing enthusiasm," says David Ansen, the longtime Newsweek critic and current artistic director of the Los Angeles Film Festival.

The schedule of the pre-release rollout may have also played a part in the shift. The constituencies for which a studio advance screens a movie, and at what intervals, are as calibrated a part of a movie's release strategy as on which television program to buy advertising time.

In a series of tiered screenings, the studio showed it first to many of the online columnists who rightly or not are often characterized as not bringing the same level of scrutiny to a film as more veteran critics, judging it instead by the standard of whether it's smarter than many of its summer-movie counterparts. (One of the few print critics of note to see the film in this first tier was Rolling Stone's Peter Travers, known for being one of the more generous of print reviewers. He went on to proclaim "Inception" "the mind-blowing movie event of the summer," a quote Warner Bros. promptly used in its television spots.)

But such a strategy also poses risks. Too much early buzz can stir contrarian feelings in those who see it later — even perhaps rigorously independent critics. "Any individual critic is going to say they're evaluating the movie on its own terms," O'Hehir says. "But I think in the aggregate this larger phenomenon does come into play, especially with a Chris Nolan or Jim Cameron [writer-director of "Avatar" and "Titanic"] who can divide critics. I don't know if it's conscious or unconscious, but I think there is this thing where some of us go into a movie spoiling for a fight."

Ansen put it this way: "I think many of the observations would have been the same, but the tone might have been different."

Indeed, one of the unusual characteristics of the "Inception" debate has been critics evaluating the film in the context of other reviews. "I truly have no idea what so many people are raving about. It's as if someone went into their heads while they were sleeping and planted the idea that 'Inception' is a visionary masterpiece," wrote David Edelstein in his New York Magazine review, adding "Slap! Wake up, people! Shalalala! Slap!"

Among other factors, say pundits, many of those in the early wave might have also been using a weaker frame of reference.

Ansen says the people who see it first "maybe feel like they want to help make a movie, and then critics come in later and grade that down."

Many students of film criticism point out that this cycle isn't new — it's just faster.

"Dwight Macdonald noticed this phenomenon years ago: The daily critics say the obvious thing. The weekly critics feel inspired to correct them. The monthly critics set themselves up as adjudicators," Ebert said in an e-mail, citing the 20th century editor, critic and essayist. "Of course, with the Internet, this process takes only a weekend."

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Monday, July 12, 2010

PROMISE this will be the last eclipse post.


Okay so this weekend i went to watch eclipse, let me tell you the first time i saw twilight i LOVVEED it, i couldn't wait for new moon and when new moon came out, i was ultra super excited.. and then ended up being extremely disappointed. anyways when eclipse came around i was" whatever" about watching it.. if i saw it cool if not then i wasnt going to stress over it.. well i saw it and i LOVVEEDD it! i felt all didn't emotions in that movie just like a movies should be.

. “Despicable Me” (Universal): Opened to $60.1 million. $5 million overseas in four foreign markets.

2. “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” (Summit): $33.4 million on its second weekend, down 49%. $81.1 million overseas in 63 foreign markets. Domestic total: $237 million. International total: $219 million.

3. “Predators” (Fox/Dune): Opened to $25.3 million. $18 million overseas in 22 foreign markets.

4. “Toy Story 3” (Disney/Pixar): $22 million on its fourth weekend, down 27%. $39.1 million overseas in 39 foreign markets. Domestic total: $340.2 million. International total: $213.1 million.

5. “The Last Airbender” (Paramount): $17.2 million on its second weekend, down 57%. Domestic total: $100.2 million. [12:27 p.m.: Debuted in four countries overseas with $10 million.]

6. “Grown Ups” (Sony/Relativity): $16.4 million on its third weekend, down 14%. $1.6 million in five foreign markets. Domestic total: $111.3 million. International total: $7.9 million.

7. “Knight & Day” (Fox/New Regency/Dune): $7.9 million on its third weekend, down 25%. $10.4 million overseas in 30 foreign markets. Domestic total: $61.9 million. International total: $38.5 million.

8. “The Karate Kid” (Sony/China Film Group): $5.7 million on its fifth weekend, down 29%. $12.3 million overseas in 27 foreign markets. Domestic total: $164.6 million. International total: $42.1 million.

9. “The A-Team” (Fox/Dune): $1.8 million on its fifth weekend, down 44%. $1.4 million overseas in 27 foreign markets. Domestic total: $74 million. International total: $57.8 million.

10. “Cyrus” (Fox Searchlight): $1.4 million on its fourth weekend, up 78% as it expanded from 77 to 200 theaters. Domestic total: $3.5 million.


12:05 p.m.: An earlier version of this update had an inaccurate percentage change for "Cyrus."]

-- Ben Fritz

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

'Eclipse' Lights Up July 4th Weekend Box Office


The Box-Office Top Five

#1 "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" ($82.5 million)
#2 "The Last Airbender" ($53.3 million)
#3 "Toy Story 3" ($42.2 million)
#4 "Grown Ups" ($25.9 million)
#5 "Knight and Day" ($13.8 million)

Whether you're on Team Edward or Team Jacob, "Twilight" fans of all shapes, sizes and loyalties flocked to theaters this weekend to award the supernatural franchise's latest installment, "Eclipse," with the first-place prize at the Fourth of July holiday weekend box office.

"Eclipse" took an estimated $82.5 million from Friday through Sunday, resulting in a $175.3 million cumulative total since opening on Wednesday (June 30). Having established new Hollywood records for widest-ever opening release, best midnight debut and single greatest Wednesday premiere, "Eclipse" was unable to eclipse its own predecessor's success — "New Moon" remains the "Twilight" franchise's champion with an opening weekend total of $178 million. Despite this, there's no denying that "Eclipse" is already a huge hit, having surpassed its own production budget by more than $200 million thanks to the $100.2 million earned from foreign locations.

Even as "Eclipse" easily took first place, director M. Night Shyamalan's "The Last Airbender" managed a solid second-place finish worth $53.3 million, resulting in a cumulative total of $70.5 million since opening on Thursday. Those opening numbers aren't as impressive when measured against the film's reported $150 million production budget, but given the massive amount of critical backlash levied at "The Last Airbender," the movie actually performed rather well under the circumstances.

"Toy Story 3" landed in third place with $42.2 million, bringing Pixar's latest to a massive $451.9 million worldwide total after only three weeks in theaters. Fourth and fifth place went to last weekend's newcomers "Grown Ups" and "Knight and Day" with $25.9 million and $13.8 million, respectively.

Upcoming Releases

Adrien Brody tries his hand as an action hero this coming weekend in producer Robert Rodriguez and director Nimrod Antal's "Predators," while Steve Carell and Jason Segel battle it out in superhero comedy "Despicable Me."

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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

'Eclipse': The Reviews Are In!


SOOO who went to watch Eclipse last night at midnight?? i was going to go but the truth was that i was just too tired.. i had been traveling all day and didn't make the trio with my sister"s i got their reviews this morning .. and they LLOOVVED it and said they would see it again. soo now i didn't read this article but i mean I'm sure we all have out opinions.


Would it be an exaggeration to say "Eclipse" is the most polarizing film of the year so far?

In one corner, you have the Twilighters lining up outside theaters across the country to be among the first to check out the latest romance-laden adventure starring Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner. Those fans will line up again and again before the weekend is over, likely bringing "Eclipse" an opening box-office haul to match, if not exceed, the $142.8 million that "New Moon" grossed in November. In the other corner, you've got the skeptics, the who-watches-this-crap haters and the bloggers taking to the Web to spew vitriol at every moment of teen romance "Eclipse" has to offer.

There will be no détente for these two camps; the gap between them as unbridgeable as anything on today's pop-culture landscape. Critics on both sides of the Twi-divide have weighed in on the third installment of the vampire franchise, and MTV News checks out what some of them had to say.

Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly does an excellent job of trying to get the fans and the haters to see eye to eye. "The 'Twilight' movies, like the books on which they're based, are often mocked," he wrote. "But that's only because we're still, on some level, getting used to the novelty of a highly contemporary blockbuster saga that's this rooted in old-fashioned, borderline masochistic girlish romantic rapture. The movie version of 'Eclipse,' with its dueling boy-monster hunks — a chaste orgy of male gazing — revels in the power that Bella experiences by giving herself over to the powerlessness of love. The movie is about a girl's primal dream of being desired. That may well be corny, but it's also an essential antidote to summer-movie hardware."

Of course, not all reviews are as generous about what they see as the film's abundant shortcomings. Take MTV News' own Kurt Loder: "[N]ew director David Slade is still stuck with the story — which, deriving as it does from the paceless goop of Stephenie Meyer's books, and having been wrestled into a script by Melissa Rosenberg, is a threadbare quilt of pre-teen romantic clichés padded out unconscionably with long character flashbacks and rambling dialogue that's deader than any of the vampires in attendance," Loder said. "(The picture runs two hours, and might have been more enjoyable — and certainly less exasperating — if it had been cut down into a one-hour TV special.)"

Salon.com's Andrew O'Hehir approached the film with an open mind and found some fanboy pleasure to be had up onscreen. "It's a geek-friendly genre flick, with plenty of CGI effects and fight sequences, along with extended detours into the back stories of rural Washington's undead and shape-shifter populations, and the tense relationship between them," he offered. "Melissa Rosenberg's screenplay even has a few flashes of comedy, and develops an emotional power that goes far beyond the depressive, lovesick languor of 'New Moon.' "

What of the castmembers' performances? Opinion, predictably, is split, with some slamming the big three and others applauding the young actors for giving their best effort yet in the series.

"There is a new tenderness and sweetness that Stewart brings to her relationships — more playful with Pattinson, more affectionate with [Billy] Burke (especially when Charlie tries to have 'the sex talk'), and more intense with Lautner," wrote Betsy Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times. "Bella doesn't want to let down anyone, and Stewart makes sure she doesn't. But it's Lautner, in particular, who has grown, giving Jacob an emotional interior nearly as hard-packed as those abs, which are very much on display."

We'll give the final word to one of the film's true fans. "Sure, the book itself is a fan favorite," a reviewer wrote on TwilightMoms.com. "How could its visual counterpart not be entertaining with the leg hitch, the tent scene, and all the grandiose displays of outrageous vampire and werewolf skills? I must say, however, that it wasn't just those scenes that blew me away, it was the film in general. The Cullens are cooler, the wolves wolfier and the acting supreme. This visual experience is not just a fan treat, it's a full-on dessert potluck of Twilight movie-goodness. And you will walk away feeling like you just feasted."

Now that you've seen "Eclipse," tell us what you thought of the movie. Share your reviews in the comments!


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