• Ryan Gosling's gory film earns boos at Cannes Film Festival

    RADiUS-TWC

    Ryan Gosling's violent new film earned some boos at Cannes.

    Can Ryan Gosling be forgiven? At the Cannes Film Festival on Wednesday, the actor's new film, "Only God Forgives," premiered to poor reviews.

    Gosling, 32, stars in the Nicolas Winding Refn-directed thriller as Julian, a drug-smuggler in Bangkok who is pressured by his mother (Kristin Scott Thomas) to avenge his brother's death. According to a review by Vulture, the press screening of the very violent film at Cannes ended with boos from the audience.

    PHOTOS: Cannes Film Festival 2013 red carpet

    "When one painfully long torture sequence concluded with eye and ear mutilation, the audience revolted. When one character stuck his hand inside a woman's slashed body, the audience locked and loaded its boos," Vulture writes. "Gosling doesn't have much to say in this movie, but the auditorium sure did."

    PHOTOS: Ryan Gosling's best movie romances

    Gosling himself did not attend the premiere. The actor is currently working on "How to Catch a Monster" in Detroit, which is his directorial debut. During a press conference on Wednesday, Cannes director Thierry Fremaux read a letter from Gosling apologizing for missing the festival.

    "Can't believe I'm not In Cannes. I was hoping to come but I'm on week three shooting my film in Detroit," he wrote (via The Associated Press ). "Miss you all. Nicolas, my friend, we really are the same persons in different dimensions. I'm sending you good vibrations."

    PHOTOS: Ryan Gosling's hotness evolution

    "Only God Forgives" is Gosling's second film with Refn. They worked together in the equally violent film "Drive," which won the award for Best Director at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival.

    Boos have become common at the annual event. Last year, Zac Efron and Nicole Kidman's "The Paperboy" received mixed reviews from the audience. In 2011, Brad Pitt's "The Tree of Life" also got a few boos mixed in with applause.

  • Ranking the 'Hangover' craziness, from teeth to tigers

    The “Hangover” franchise is all about the Wolf Pack getting into and out of a lot of trouble in a short period of time. But everything's relative. Some of the movie trouble (head-shaving) is relatively minor, but other events (stealing Mike Tyson's tiger?) are crazy. With "Hangover Part III" opening May 23, here's a ranking of the trouble the boys got into in the first two installments.

    Crazy ranking 1: Dumb college-kid decisions

    Shaving your head
    Alan isn't  thrilled by his reflection when he wakes up and sees his buzzed scalp in "Hangover Part II." Then again, he probably shouldn't be surprised. Even a preschooler knows that a knocked-out sibling and a pair of scissors or clippers is a dangerous combination.

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Ed Helms really has a missing tooth, and he usually wears an implant, but his dentist took it out for the movie.

    Removing your own tooth
    Ouch. But since Stu is a dentist, it’s not surprising that he’d know how to do it when challenged in the first film. And how many others have dreamed of yanking their own tooth under the influence of nothing more than the dread of a dental appointment?

    Having sex with someone inappropriate
    Stu definitely wanted to forget about his sexual encounter in Bangkok, especially when he saw his conquest disrobed. That discomfort aside, waking up regretting the previous night’s romantic exploits doesn’t always require tricked-up marshmallows. Often alcohol is enough to do the trick.


    Crazy ranking 2: You're gonna regret this in the morning
     

    Leaving a friend on the roof of Caesar’s Palace
    To leave one of your wingmen behind after a night on the town is bad enough. But to leave the guest of honor at a bachelor party -- a groom whose wedding day is looming -- on the roof of a Vegas hotel? Not cool. Not cool at all.

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Stu wasn't supposed to be the groom, but he found himself falling for a hooker in the city where getting married is as easy as getting a sandwich.

    Marrying a hooker
    Please. We’re supposed to think Stu marrying Jade (Heather Graham) is something crazy? Hasn’t everyone seen “Pretty Woman?” Richard Gere wound up with Julia Roberts long before the Hangover guys embarked on their bachelor party.

    Stealing a police car
    In most parts of the United States, swiping a police car is a one-way ticket to jail. In Vegas?  Apparently not so much. The Wolf Pack were just forced to demonstrate a taser’s effects, the type of thing that a radio disc jockey might do on a dare.

    Whose baby is this?
    Waking up to an unfamiliar baby is a shock to the guys in the first "Hangover." Then again, anyone with kids who goes out with the guys for a late night on the town can't be shocked when his spouse tells him that the children are all his in the morning. 

     

    Crazy ranking 3: Death-defyingly loony

    Kidnapping a gangster and locking him in the trunk of the car, or hiding his presumed dead body in an ice chest
    With most modern cars now including some kind of interior trunk-release lever, it’s a outdated idea to try and trap someone there. As for using the ice chest to hide the body … come on. Anyone familiar with the horror-movie genre knows that’s an obvious place for corpses to turn up.

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Cute as it may be, do not steal a monkey from drug dealers.

    Swiping a monkey from drug dealers
    Considering that the gang plans on leaving Thailand as soon as possible anyway, and probably can’t take their furry friend back to the States with them, this could be something that just gets laughed about in future reunions/sequels. Besides, that monkey would be tough for anyone to resist swiping, even though its cigarette bills would be huge.

    Starting a riot
    It doesn’t take a drug cocktail to inspire a violent confrontation with police, like the one the crew instigates in Bangkok. A lot of time, all it takes is a sporting event with a controversial ending.

     

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Facial tattoos are kind of permanent, Stu.

    Crazy ranking 4: Off-the-charts nuts

    Getting the Mike Tyson facial tattoo
    The decision to get a tattoo isn’t a big deal. Plenty of people have gotten inked in similar circumstances.  But something that elaborate? On the face? The day before that person’s wedding? Stu’s right … that’s one serious demon right there.

    Kidnapping a silent, wheelchair-bound monk from a holy place
    It doesn’t matter what substances have been ingested … that’s some serious bad karma. And in this case, it led to a well-deserved beatdown when he was returned.

    Stealing Mike Tyson’s tiger
    Forget the fact that the Wolf Pack broke into Mike Tyson’s house, which was dumb enough. How crazy is it to steal a tiger? What are they supposed to do with it once they get it? What if the kidnappers aren’t as smart as Alan and know that tigers love pepper but hate cinnamon? That would end any Vegas adventure real quick.

  • Writer admits 'Star Trek' lingerie scene was 'gratuitous,' 'mysogynistic'

    "Star Trek Into Darkness" co-writer Damon Lindelof has kind of, sort of apologized for anyone offended by the gratuitous display of Alice Eve's nearly-naked body in movie theaters (and the movie's marketing) around the world. 

    Paramount Pictures

    Alice Eve strips down for no apparent plot-based reason in "Star Trek Into Darkness."

    "I copped to the fact that we should have done a better job of not being gratuitous in our representation of a barely clothed actress," Lindelof wrote on Twitter on Monday night. 

    Given the fact the image in question was featured in numerous trailers leading up to last week's release, moviegoers knew Alice Eve's character, Dr. Carol Marcus, was stripping down at some point.

    But when the moment finally arrives, viewers were left wondering why it was ever written or shot, other than possible blatant attempt to inject the Paramount franchise with some sex appeal.

    Lindelof didn't ease any crtics' suspicions when trading emails with MTV's Josh Horowitz.

    "I feel like I have to start with the biggest mystery/conversation that's surrounded the film from the get go," Horowitz wrote. "Why is Alice Eve in her underwear at one point?"

    "Why is Alice Eve in her underwear, gratuitously and unnecessarily, without any real effort made as to why in God's name she would undress in that circumstance?" Lindelof responded. "Well there's a very good answer for that. But I'm not telling you what it is. Because... uh... MYSTERY?"

    In the film, Marcus undresses behind Kirk (Chris Pine) while changing into a suit more appropriate for the climate outside of the Enterprise. Even though she tells Kirk to turn around, the curious womanizer can't help but sneak a peek at the scientist's bod.

    While addressing the issue to his Twitter followers, Lindelof compared the scantily-clad scene to others in both "Star Trek" movies where Kirk was in his skivvies.

    "We also had Kirk shirtless in underpants in both movies. Do not want to make light of something that some construe as mysogenistic," Lindelof continued to tweet. "What I'm saying is I hear you, I take responsibility and will be more mindful in the future."

    "Also," he added. "I need to learn how to spell "misogynistic." 

  • Zach Braff raises money -- and ire -- with Kickstarter campaign for new film

    David Livingston / Getty Images file

    Former "Scrubs" star Zach Braff says he'd return to television if he really wanted to make money, not "passion project" indie films.

    The "Scrubs" theme song, "I'm no Superman," has a line that goes, "You gotta work to feed the soul but I can't do this all on my own." The show's former star, Zach Braff, apparently has taken that to heart and in so doing has sparked one of the biggest Hollywood controversies of the year.

    Four years after the show that made him a star went off the air, the actor-writer-director is part of the cultural conversation again -- thanks to his successful and polarizing crowd-funding campaign to fund his next movie.

    Braff’s goal was to raise $2 million on Kickstarter for "Wish I Was Here," his indie film follow to 2004's "Garden State." He has maintained that the movie's $5 million budget will be financed through a combination of his own money, foreign pre-sales, and Kickstarter. With the May 24 deadline to donate on the horizon, he’s already amassed over $2.7 million from more than 40,000 supporters. He's also gotten a ton of grief. 

    Accused of being everything from a "carpetbagger" to a "douchebag," Braff's critics charge that someone with plenty of money of his own and direct access to Hollywood resources has no business playing in the kiddie pool that is supposed to be Kickstarter.

    Braff declined to be interviewed by NBCNews.com, but he told the Los Angeles Times that he had tried to make his second movie for nearly a year but was confronted with skepticism from traditional financiers who wanted a say in the movie's final edit and demanded that he cast specific actors. Because Braff didn't want to compromise, and because he had previously backed other projects on Kickstarter, he turned to crowd-funding, just like some celebrities before him.

    Danny Moloshok / AP file

    Actress Kristen Bell helped raise funds for a "Veronica Mars" movie via Kickstarter.

    Whoopi Goldberg and musician Amanda Palmer used Kickstarter to fund movies and albums. In March, "Veronica Mars" creator Rob Thomas set a new Kickstarter record when he and star Kristen Bell launched a campaign to raise $2 million to make a movie based on the canceled TV series. In 10 hours, their goal was met and, at nearly $6 million, it became the most successful Kickstarter film campaign to date. Warner Bros. has agreed to distribute it.

    Unique to Braff's Kickstarter, though, is the accompanying outrage and spotlight it's put on celeb funding campaigns. Case in point: It made actor-writer-director Kevin Smith think twice about turning to crowd-funding for his own pet project, "Clerks III."

    "Unlike back when I made 'Clerks' in '91, I've GOT access to money now -- so I should use that money and not suck any loot out of the crowd-funding marketplace that might otherwise go to a first-timer who can really use it," Smith wrote on Reddit. "So if I can get away with it, I’m gonna try to pay for 'Clerks III' myself. As much as I love the crowd-funding model, that's an advancement in indie film that belongs to the next generation of artists. I started on my own dime, and if I'm allowed, I should finish on my own dime."

    Braff encountered even more criticism when The Hollywood Reporter reported on May 15 that Worldview Entertainment will provide "gap financing" for "Wish I Was Here." He took to his Kickstarter page to defend himself, writing that Worldview is "essentially a bank ... loaning us the 'gap' between what we’ve raised together and what we need to actually make the movie."

    Well, right. But banks earn interest from loans and part of the backlash levied against Braff is that his Kickstarter investors will never earn a dime. Although Braff is not to blame for Kickstarter’s policy that the platform cannot be used to offer investors equity or profits, he stands to keep more money in his pockets if the film is successful since there are fewer people to share in the winnings. (Incidentally, Kickstarter keeps 5 percent of all contributions).

    Fox Searchlight

    Zach Braff and Natalie Portman in the 2004 indie film "Garden State."

    Through it all, Braff insists that like "Garden State," his second film is a "passion project" and "if I wanted to make a lot of money, I'd return to a television show with Bill Lawrence. Making a tiny personal art film is not where people go to make a lot of money." But as the International Business Times points out, that other personal project, "Garden State" pulled in $35.8 million on a $2.5 million budget.

    Co-written with Braff's brother, Adam, "Wish I Was Here" is the story of a struggling actor and father (played by Braff) who is forced to make drastic changes when he learns his father is terminally ill. Kate Hudson has reportedly signed on to play his wife; Mandy Patinkin ("Homeland") and Josh Gad ("1600 Penn") have been cast as the father and brother. Anna Kendrick ("Pitch Perfect") is also onboard.

    To his Kickstarter "financiers" whose donations hit certain benchmarks, Braff has offered incentives such as personal copies of the script, access to his personal production diary and roles as unpaid extras. Of course, the trip to Los Angeles to be in the film is on you and so is your movie ticket when you actually want to see it at your own convenience.

    Braff, who won a Grammy for the soundtrack he put together for "Garden State," might now be listening to one of the hits on that compilation: "New Slang," by The Shins. "Turn me back into the pet I was when we met. I was happier then with no mind-set."

  • Dave Grohl is latest guest to rock with Rolling Stones

    The Rolling Stones continued with the high-profile guest performers Monday night at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., when Dave Grohl joined the rockers onstage to play guitar and sing on "Bitch."

    As Charlie Watts lit off the quick fill that starts the song, Grohl strutted out from the shadows between Watts' drums riser and the organ rig. After swapping a quick lick or two with Ronnie Wood, Grohl joined Mick Jagger at center stage, where he played guitar and sang lead on a verse from the 1971 "Sticky Fingers" tune.

    The Rolling Stones offer plenty of surprises in Los Angeles tour kickoff

    Grohl, the Foo Fighters frontman, is the latest in a string of guests who have joined the Stones onstage on their ongoing "50 and Counting" tour. Gwen Stefani and Keith Urban sat in during the band's tour opener in Los Angeles earlier this month, and Tom Waits and Katy Perry have appeared as well.

    The Stones' brief run last year in London, New York and New Jersey also included a roster of all-star collaborators, including Eric Clapton and, in a tour-ending blowoutLady Gaga and Bruce Springsteen. The 50 and Counting tour continues through June 24 in the U.S. before the band heads to England for a handful of shows at Glastonbury and in Hyde Park in London.

  • Zach Galifianakis' 'Hangover' ends, but the comedic party keeps rolling

    By Kurt Schlosser
    NBC News

    Zach Galifianakis warned Brian Williams that viewers would turn off a long interview piece with the actor if it aired on "Rock Center." But after watching several candid minutes with the comedian and "Hangover" star on Friday night, it was hard not to be left wanting more.

    Galifianakis, the bearded comic turned reluctant big-time star, opened up to Williams about more than just the buddy-movie trilogy that has made his extended Greek moniker a household name.

    They talked about life on the North Carolina farm where Galifianakis, 43, and his wife Quinn Lundberg spend part of each year. "I have donkeys. I have blueberries," Galifianakis said. "But enough about your Brooklyn apartment," Williams countered. "I asked about North Carolina."

    NBC News

    Cue the whistling: Galifianakis says a 6th grade visit from the man behind the iconic theme song of "The Andy Griffith Show" convinced him he should go into show business. "I remember being affected by that whistler, thinking I could maybe try to do something like that with my life. Not whistling ... but telling diarrhea jokes."

    But it's no joke that life at home on the farm has framed Galifianakis' view of Hollywood and all that comes with being a celebrity. "It's not for me. I'm not into that scene," he said. "It's so stupid. It's all so dumb. It's so weird to me."

    And for a man with the last name Galifianakis, there's a punchline waiting in the wings. "If I've always wanted to have my name up in lights I would have changed it to Don't Walk." Nod. Wink. Cheers.

    Starring roles on television aside, it's the "Hangover" movies which did put Galifianakis' name in lights. Alan -- the portly, man-purse carrying sidekick to Bradley Cooper's Phil and Ed Helms' Stu -- is back in theaters May 23 in the third and final movie.

    And any interview with Galifianakis wouldn't be complete without actually being interviewed with ferns for a backdrop, something he's turned into comedic art with his fake Internet talk show "Between Two Ferns." Williams brought the two ferns to the interview and Galifianakis was game for a lengthy chat among the plants.

    "This is the longest conversation I've had with anyone in, like, seven years," Galifianakis said, contradicting his earlier directive to Williams to "do a couple of jokes and then get out."

  • Which 'Star Trek' crew wins out -- TV or movie?

    Casting any movie is tough, but try casting a "Star Trek" movie, knowing that the original television characters are already dearly beloved by millions of devoted fans. Few actors are as associated with their roles as William Shatner as Captain Kirk and Leonard Nimoy as Spock. Yet when Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto took over those roles in the 2009 film "Star Trek," reviews were mostly quite positive. As Pine, Quinto and co-stars prepare to beam down to theaters once again in "Star Trek Into Darkness," let's take a look at how the new actors fill out their Starfleet uniforms.

    James T. Kirk
    Classic:  William Shatner
    New: Chris Pine

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    Chris Pine plays Capt. Kirk in the new "Star Trek" movies, but he can't beat the classic William Shatner.

    The Shat has built a fine post-“Trek” career -- once he accepted with good humor that he would never, ever be forgotten as Kirk. But that aside, Classic Kirk has to rule over New Kirk. Classic Kirk had a twinkle in his eye, was never afraid to bare a chest, and had a way with a universe’s worth of ladies. We haven’t seen that yet in New Kirk, who’s more of a tomcat than a ladies’ man and far from an unquestioned leader. Plus, only Classic Kirk has proven he can create a bazooka out of a log, dirt and gemstones.

    Advantage: Classic Kirk

     

    Leonard 'Bones' McCoy
    Classic: DeForest Kelley
    New: Karl Urban

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    Karl Urban and DeForest Kelley both have their good points as Bones, but the new guy, Urban, is a handsome bad boy.

    Okay, so Classic Bones wasn’t afraid to smack a hoity-toity pregnant lady if he needed to do an examination. But something about his eternal grumpiness and pointed Spock-like eyebrows made Kelley's version of the doctor a little hard to like. New Bones is good looking enough to give Kirk a run for his money (if you like ‘em dark and mercurial), he rocks a beard and swigs from a flask when necessary. New Bones is a bad boy as well as a doc, and that is the wave of the future.

    Advantage: New McCoy

     

    Spock
    Classic: Leonard Nimoy
    New: Zachary Quinto

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bro

    Bravo, Zachary Quinto! The actor has taken on Leonard Nimoy's famed Spock and given him a modern update.

    The old neck-pincher is one of the toughest decisions to make, particularly since Classic Spock (or rather, Spock Prime) makes an appearance in the rebooted series. The casting of Quinto as a youthful Nimoy is spot-on, unlike many of the other cast choices – and the 2009 film even showed a pre-adolescent Spock on top of everything else. In a way, this is the best blended character with some of the series’ most memorable personality quirks and special powers. How can we choose just one?

    Advantage: Both Spocks

     

    Montgomery 'Scotty' Scott
    Classic: James Doohan
    New: Simon Pegg

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    Simon Pegg isn't quite as devoted to the Enterprise as the original Scotty, James Doohan -- and that's a good thing.

    You know, Classic Scotty really, really loved the Enterprise. Possibly a bit too much. Sure, he was the engineer and knew all of the inner workings of the ship, but sometimes you had to wonder if it made him a little touched in the head, being stuck down in the boiler room all the time. (No wonder he could outdrink an alien.) No such issue with New Scotty, who is still getting to know the big old girl and may take a long time to find his love connection. And that’s good for tension and comedy.

    Advantage: New Scotty

     

    Hikaru Sulu
    Classic: George Takei
    New: John Cho

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    Which Sulu rules, John Cho or George Takei? It's a tie!

    In the 2009 film, Sulu got a few big moments –- such as when he had to skydive from space and parachute onto a drilling platform, then fight off some Romulans. But the sword battle part of that scene was really an homage to one of Classic Sulu’s greatest scenes: When his inner swashbuckler comes to light and he runs around waving an epee. At the moment, there’s just not enough information on New Sulu to warrant leaving Classic Sulu behind, so we’d tend to lean toward Classic Sulu (oh, myyyy!) – but let’s consider this the wild card in the bunch.

    Advantage: Tie

     

    Pavel Chekov
    Classic: Walter Koenig
    New: Anton Yelchin

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    New Chekov Anton Yelchin is a real Russian, unlike Walter Koenig from the classic series.

    First off, if you’re gonna have a Russian on the Enterprise, hire a dang Russian. All due respect to Classic Chekov, but a Monkee look-alike from Chicago doesn’t hold much of a candle to New Chekov, whose portrayer hails from Leningrad and plays him as more delightfully impulsive than the originator. Plus, he was able to save Spock’s father thanks to some fantastical manipulation of the transporter. And he’s a navigator!

    Advantage: New Chekov

     

    Nyota Uhura
    Classic: Nichelle Nichols
    New: Zoe Saldana

    Paramount via Getty / Warner Bros

    Zoe Saldana's Uhura serves mostly as eye candy, whereas Nichelle Nichols juggled many roles.

    Here’s a surprise: A show that began in the 1960s is better at handling its one regular female crew member than one in the new millennium. New Uhura served largely as eye candy and as a sex object for New Kirk, even if she could kick more butt and talk dirty. Classic Uhura managed to juggle all of her subspace frequencies far better -- and of course was the shared co-conspirator in one of TV’s first interracial kisses, when she and Classic Kirk locked lips.

    Advantage: Classic Uhura

    Final tallies: Four classics and five from the new bunch (though Spock and Sulu bridge both categories). Surprise! It turns out that the new franchise has managed to improve on the old -- though we sense there will be some disagreement on this issue. Tell us who your favorite newcomer is in our poll.

     

  • Jolie news sparks interest in film about breast cancer gene researcher

    decodingannieparkerfilm.com

    Helen Hunt stars as Mary-Clare King, a geneticist who spent years researching the breast-cancer gene, in the film "Decoding Annie Parker."

    Angelina Jolie's revelation in Tuesday's New York Times that she had a preventive double mastectomy stirred many to think about something they may be mostly unfamiliar with: The existence of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes that reveal an increased risk of breast cancer.

    But a group of actors and filmmakers were already immersed in that realm. Oscar-winning actress Helen Hunt stars in "Decoding Annie Parker," an upcoming film about the discovery of BRCA1. 

    Hunt plays geneticist Mary-Claire King, who spent years researching families with histories of cancer and identified BRCA1 in 1990.

    The film's trailer shows that it wasn't an easy road for King. In its opening scene, King is asked, "You believe there may be a genetic link to some breast cancers?"

    "I do," she says.

    "Even though virtually no one else believes this to be true?"

    "That's correct," King responds.

    The film tells not only King's story, but that of Annie Parker (played by Samantha Morton) who lost her mother and sister to cancer before being diagnosed herself at age 29.

    "Your family did have a bit of bad luck, but there are many complex factors--" a doctor in the film tells Parker.

    "It's not bad luck," she responds from her hospital bed.

    The film's topic may make it a hard sell for some when other screens are showing light entertainment such as "Iron Man 3" and "Fast and Furious 6," but the filmmakers knew that going in.

    "We knew there were going to be serious obstacles to getting people to watch (the film)," director Steven Bernstein said at the Dallas International Film Festival. "People's first reaction would be 'Oh, it's a film about cancer, I don't want to see it.' So we had to get the word out the film was about something bigger than that -- although cancer's a very, very big thing indeed -- but it's something about the human condition that we were trying to express. Something that people could actually come and see and feel uplifted by rather than depressed by."

    "Decoding Annie Parker" has been playing at film festivals around the nation and will be screened at the Cannes Film Festival in France this month, with a general release expected in the fall. Aaron Paul, Rashida Jones, Bradley Whitford and Maggie Grace also star in the movie.

  • Survey confirms a hunch: Americans love Adele, don't like Justin Bieber

    Getty Images file

    Adele and Justin Bieber.

    Americans may buy Justin Bieber's music, but that doesn't mean they like him much. According to a recent survey from Public Policy Polling, the pop idol is just not considered very likable: He received 54 percent unfavorable ratings and only 20 percent likable ones in the poll, which surveyed 571 voters on May 6 and 7 across the U.S. 

    PPP was testing the favorability ratings of some of today's biggest music stars, and -- perhaps unsurprisingly -- a Brit earned the most accolades: Adele had 54 percent likability; close on her heels were Taylor Swift (53 percent), Justin Timberlake (52 percent) and Beyonce (51 percent). But breaking that 50 percent mark was hard for virtually everyone else -- including Jay-Z (25 percent), Lady Gaga (29 percent) and Rihanna (30 percent). 

    No surprise: Chris Brown's likability rating? A mere 13 percent. (And only 8 percent said that Rihanna should get back together with Brown; 67 percent say forget about that relationship.)

    Bieber's numbers were the only ones that ran across party lines -- Democrats, Republicans and Independents all said they had negative views of him. Meanwhile, given the choices of Adele, Bieber, Beyonce, Brown, Jay-Z, Timberlake, Lady Gaga or Rihanna, as President of the U.S., 34 percent chose Timberlake. 

    That said, when asked if Timberlake should keep making music, acting, reuniting with N'Sync or playing golf, the biggest group said stick with the songs (40 percent).

    PPP surveyed 571 voters nationwide on May 6th and 7th. The margin of error is +/-4.1%. This poll was not paid for or authorized by any campaign or political organization. PPP surveys are conducted through automated telephone interviews.

  • Angelina Jolie's mother Marcheline Bertrand taught daughter about living and survival

    AFP-Getty Images file

    Marcheline Bertrand and Angelina Jolie in 2001.

    Just two days after Mother's Day, Angelina Jolie made a shocking announcement. The actress revealed in the New York Times that she underwent a preventive double mastectomy. The timing seems apt: Losing her own mother, Marcia Lynne "Marcheline" Bertrand, to ovarian cancer in 2007 spurred Jolie's decision to have the operation.

    "My mother fought cancer for almost a decade and died at 56," Jolie wrote in her New York Times op-ed column on Tuesday. "We often speak of 'Mommy's mommy,' and I find myself trying to explain the illness that took her away from us."

    While Jolie's mother acted in numerous films, including a role in former husband Jon Voight's 1982 comedy "Lookin' to Get Out," she left acting after her two children were born and never returned.

    "I will never be as good a mother as she was," Jolie said of Bertrand on 60 Minutes in 2011. "I will try my best, but I don’t think I could ever be. She was grace incarnate, the most generous, loving --  she’s better than me."

    Jolie was estranged from her father for most of her life, but clearly carried her mother's influence with her wherever she went: During the filming of 2008's "Changeling," Jolie told the Times that she kept photos of her late mother in the purses her character carried. 

    Splash News

    Marcheline Bertrand, center, in an undated photo with her children Angelina Jolie, left, and James Haven.

    After leaving acting, Bertrand ran her own production house, Woods Road Productions. She executive-produced the 2005 documentary "Trudell," about her partner, Native American poet and activist John Trudell. She claimed Native American ancestry herself, and she and Trudell founded the All Tribes Foundation to benefit Native Americans. Her humanitarian leanings clearly transferred to her daughter, who was appointed as a Special Envoy for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in 2012.

    After Bertrand was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the late 1990s, she and Trudell founded the Give Love Give Life organization to raise awareness of ovarian and other gynecological cancers through music. After a long battle with her own cancer, she died on Jan 27, 2007. 

    "She held out long enough to meet the first of her grandchildren and to hold them in her arms," Jolie wrote in the Times piece about her own mastectomies. "But my other children will never have the chance to know her and experience how loving and gracious she was.

    Three of Jolie's six children were born before Bertrand passed away, and since then, she and partner Brad Pitt have had three more children. A year and a half after she died, Jolie had twins Knox and Vivienne, and gave Vivienne the middle name of Marcheline in her mother's honor.

    "There are no words to express what an amazing woman and mother she was," Jolie and Haven told People Magazine upon the death of their mother. "She was our best friend."

    A best friend who sadly fell victim to a family curse: "There is no longevity on my mother's side of the family," Jolie told Esquire in 2010. "My grandmother also died young, so my mother always thought it could happen to her. But she lived to see her grandchildren, lived to see both me and my brother in a nice place. She was a real mother that way. She waited till everyone was okay. Then she closed her eyes."

  • Remixed 'Gatsby' trailer matches 1974 film with 2013 music

    The new Baz Luhrmann-directed film adaptation of "The Great Gatsby"made a big bang over the weekend at the box office with a $50 million take domestically, but it wasn't the first time the F. Scott Fitzgerald classic had been made for the big screen, Back in 1974, the book was adapted with stars Robert Redford (as Gatsby), Mia Farrow (as Daisy) and Sam Waterston (as Nick Carraway).

    While critics have had mixed opinions about the current musically-modernized version, they were far less kind to 1974's take (written by Francis Ford Coppola and directed by Jack Clayton) -- the late critic Roger Ebert called it a "superficially beautiful hunk of a movie with nothing much in common with the spirit" of the novel.

    But what if Clayton's adaptation had been Luhrmannized? What if you could take jazzed-up modern tunes and a score by Jay-Z and slap them on a hyper-cut trailer of the old film -- would the movie have seemed more exciting?

    Film fan Richard Sandling (aka "That Awesome Movie Guy") wanted to find out, and cut a trailer from the 1974 film in the style of today's movie (see below).

    Whatever you think of the new "old" film's trailer, the box office battle is still being waged: "Gatsby's" 1974 earnings of $26.5 million would be $121.7 million adjusted for inflation today.

    Here's the "remixed" 1974 "Gatsby" trailer:

    And here's the current "Gatsby" trailer it riffs from:

    And for you completists, here's the original 1974 trailer, de-Luhrmannized:

     

  • Angelina Jolie: I had double mastectomy because of high breast cancer risk

    In a surprising revelation, the actress wrote in the New York Times that she underwent a double mastectomy after learning she had a high likelihood of being diagnosed with breast cancer. NBC's Dr. Nancy Snyderman reports.

    Angelina Jolie says she has undergone a preventive double mastectomy after being told that she had an 87 percent risk of breast cancer, along with a 50 percent risk of ovarian cancer.

    In an article published in the opinion section of Tuesday's New York Times, Jolie said her decision was informed by her mother's long fight against cancer. Marcheline Bertrand died in 2007 at age 56.

    Jolie said she hoped that other women would find encouragement from her story. 

    "I choose not to keep my story private because there are many women who do not know that they might be living under the shadow of cancer," Jolie said in the Times article. "It is my hope that they, too, will be able to get gene tested, and that if they have a high risk they, too, will know that they have strong options." 

    Jolie, an Oscar-winning actress and activist, said she carries a gene, BRCA1, that increases the risk of breast and ovarian cancer. According to Jolie and a fact sheet from the Cancer Institute at Stanford Medicine, women with the BRCA1 gene have an average of a 65 percent lifetime risk for breast cancer, along with heightened risk of the cancer at an early age. Jolie is 37. 

    Jolie said three months of medical procedures that the mastectomies involved were completed April 27. She said the surgery included implants to reconstruct her breasts.

    She said that her partner, Brad Pitt, was present for the surgeries. She said her six children, who range in age from 11 to 4, saw nothing that made them uncomfortable.

    "They can see my small scars and that’s it," Jolie wrote. "Everything else is just Mommy, the same as she always was. And they know that I love them and will do anything to be with them as long as I can."

    Other famous women with the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes have undergone preventive double mastectomies, including reality star Sharon Osbourne, wife of rocker Ozzy.

    "I've had cancer before and I didn't want to live under that cloud," Osborne said in an interview last fall.

    In January, Miss America contestant Allyn Rose, representing the District of Columbia, announced that she carries another genetic mutation -- not BRCA1 or BRCA2 -- and plans to have a double mastectomy after her year of serving as Miss D.C.

    Friends and fans were quick to support Jolie via messages on Twitter. Actress Marlee Matlin called her "brave, honest (and) strong." And "Veronica Mars" star Kristen Bell praised Jolie's article as "admirable."

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Highlights from her Oscar-winning acting career, family life with Brad Pitt and worldwide humanitarian efforts.

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