Jump to January 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... 8
  • Exclusive clip: Bernie Mac tribute movie

    Image Entertainment

    Bernie Mac on stage.

    Comedian Bernie Mac died over three years ago, but his influence is still felt by comics and actors alike.

    A new documentary about the late comic, "I Ain't Scared of You: A Tribute to Bernie Mac," will air on Comedy Central Feb. 19, with the accompanying DVD out Feb. 21.

    The documentary looks at Bernie Mac's personal and professional life, including movie clips, early footage and never-before-seen performances.

    Our exclusive clip below showcases numerous celebrities, from Chris Rock to Cameron Diaz to Zoe Saldana, remembering the comedian and what he meant to them.

    "His number's in my phone right now," says Rock. "I won't get rid of the number. There's only one Bernie."

    Bernie Mac died of complications from pneumonia in 2008. He was just 50.

    Watch the exclusive clip and let us know what you think on Facebook.

    Watch our exclusive clip from "I Ain't Scared of You: A Tribute to Bernie Mac," featuring many of the stars the late comic worked with, including Chris Rock and Samuel L. Jackson.

    More Entertainment content:

    Show more
  • Comedian convinces 13 celebs to let him sleep over

    Fish and visitors overstay their welcome within three days; New York-based comedian Mark Malkoff only wanted to see if he could take advantage of random celebrities' good nature by staying over at their homes for a single night.

    Malkoff got 13 celebs to say "yes," including Justine Bateman, who lets him stay in her treehouse; Camryn Manheim, who lets him snooze with her Emmy; Kate Walsh, who put on her own matching P.J.s and crawled in bed with him (he called his wife to give her the heads-up and Walsh assures her it's OK because "I'm not attracted to him at all"); and "Bridesmaids" director Paul Feig, who gives him the patio, then refers him to Rob Corddry, who turns him down.

    "You're really good, actually, at napping at celebrities' homes," Steven Weber tells him.

    As Malkoff sums up, "Most celebrities with the exception of Rob Corddry are really nice people. I also learned that annoying persistence can get you a free place to crash."

    OK, your turn! What celebrity would you want to have a sleepover with? (Strictly platonic, of course: They're not attracted to you at all, remember.) Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

  • For Oscar nominee Michelle Williams, parenting success 'matters most'

    Hard to imagine, but on the morning Oscar nominations were announced, Michelle Williams had blanked on the significance of the day and was in the midst of her daily routine: Getting 6-year-old daughter Matilda up and ready, putting on her snowsuit -- the usual mom things. She was visiting a friend's house for breakfast, standing outside and looking around when the friend opened the door and leaned out, saying, "Michelle, they just called your name on TV."

    As Williams told TODAY's Ann Curry on Thursday, "It was a very sweet way to hear that news."

    She added, "It slipped my mind, which is something that's so great about having a kid. You get really absorbed."

    Williams, whose nomination comes from playing Marilyn Monroe in "My Week with Marilyn," has a very close relationship with her daughter (Matilda's dad is the late Heath Ledger), and even thanked her from the stage at the Golden Globes this year.

    "She gives me balance, and I know that any risks that I take in my work are actually safe, because nothing really bad can happen there. My success as a parent is what matters most to me," explained Williams.

    Not to say that Williams doesn't give it all to prepare for a role; for Marilyn, she said she spent at least 10 months preparing to play both Marilyn Monroe, the celebrity, and Norma Jean, the person inside. On top of all of that, she even sings in the film. The prep, she said, "felt endless! In some ways, I feel like I'm still doing it. You know, so much information that comes out about Marilyn, more information every day it seems like ... I was steeping in information. There's no end to it."

    Yet with all of that research, and for all of the accolades she's received from the portrayal, Williams says compliments still give her "a sense of shock." She may be up for an Oscar in February (this is Williams' third nomination) but as she said, the truth is, "There were so many days I just didn't know what I was doing. But I feel like I never really know!"

     More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Can Demi Moore really be suffering from exhaustion?

    Why do celebrities such as Demi Moore say they are being admitted for "exhaustion" when there is no insurance company in the world that will pay for someone to "rest up" and no one really believes the diagnosis of "exhaustion" anyway? Why say anything at all? -- Mallie K., via Facebook

    I've interviewed a range of doctors, from straight-up M.D.s to addiction specialists, and they all agree with you: If you think insurance is going to reimburse you for weariness, good luck with that. Celebrities aren't fooling anybody with that old saw, either. But there's a good reason why they use the same unbelievable language time and again ...

    Moore is the latest in a long line of celebrities to announce treatment for exhaustion. Tracy Morgan's rep claims that the comedian's recent out-passing at Sundance was partially exhaustion-related. Lady Gaga has claimed a bad romance with the same problem. Mariah Carey, Dave Chapelle -- the list goes on and on.

    It would all make a lot of sense, except, medically, it doesn't.

    "Exhaustion is a symptom," confirms Andrew Spanswick, founder of the KLEAN Treatment Center in West Hollywood.

    In saying this, Spanswick echoes the conclusions of many kinds of health experts I have spoken with, including Steven Krems, a doctor at the Centinela Freeman Regional Medical Center, who told me several years ago that "It's not a medical diagnosis. It's a symptom ... Exhaustion is how they are feeling, [not] whatever it causing it, whether that is drugs, anemia, pneumonia, whatever."

    MORE from E!: Where's Ashton? Brazil!

    In other words, saying that you're seeking treatment for exhaustion is like saying you're seeing a doctor for sneezing. You're sick with something else. The sneezing is the sign.

    So why do stars keep using the term? Because, in Hollywood, at least, it's a kind of code. It's shorthand for "Feeling Like Garbage, None of Your Business."

    "The celebrities are balancing between an obligation to disclose things to the public versus protecting their rights to privacy," Spanswick says. "Smart publicists will use words like 'exhaustion' to minimize potential damage or gossip within the media but also protect a star's privacy rights."

    That is, assuming that anyone even believes that word anymore. And assuming that the star even knows what she's suffering from in the first place.

    "They may not know what the problem is yet," Spanswick very reasonably points out. "Or they may be in denial of what their problem might be."

    As for exactly what Moore is suffering from, well, this is Hollywood. We'll find out on "Ellen" eventually.

    MORE: Heidi Klum &Seal: Romance Rewind

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • 'Idol' ticket? Who cares! Singer gets kiss on the lips from Steven

    Fox

    Steven Tyler gave fan Jenni Schick what she wanted.

    It's time for auditions in Colorado, which should be a little snowy but will not feature an airplane hangar. Darn it! I just hope we get to see Steven ski. That would be worth it. 

    8:00 p.m. EST Finally, "American Idol" is getting away from it all. By going to Colorado. I'm not sure how everyone in Colorado feels about this designation, as Ryan has made an entire state sound like a remote corner of nowhere, but okay. 

    8:01 p.m. The "Idol" family is going on vacation in the mountains. Except they're not going on vacation. But they are going to Aspen. They make snowballs. And Steven has a good vibe.

    8:03 p.m. Jenni Schick (24) is overly energetic and teaches music to grade school kids. And she thinks Steven Tyler is gorgeous. She'd also like to kiss Lady Gaga and Adam Levine. So would her boyfriend. I think Jenni needs to take a closer look at her relationship. She's singing Pat Benatar's "Heartbreaker." She misses a few notes, but she's strong. She gets three yeses and she may kiss Steven, because Randy said so. Steven follows order. Quick, girl, get an antiseptic. 

    More from HitFix: Interview with Liam McIntyre of 'Spartacus'

    8:09 p.m. A clip montage. Oh, wait, one clip is important. Curtis Gray is a singer in a five-piece group, and of course he can sing, and even though he looks like someone who'd belt out some Creedence Clearwater Revival, he applies his talents to Boyz II Men. And does it remarkably well. Three yeses.  

    8:12 p.m. Montage! Richie Law has an extremely deep voice for a guy who looks like a bit like a pipsqueak. Devan Jones can hit some impressive high notes. Mathenee Trego has a breathier quality but he does have range. Still, weakest of the three. Doesn't matter, because they're all going to Hollywood. 

    8:13 p.m. Tealanah Hedgespeth has a sister. And her twin sister is her best friend. Even though she's sick of people telling her how great her sister is. This is her chance to shine alone! She sings "Bring Me Some Water." Oops. She can't really sing. Great. Randy tells her she's funny. She smiles, as she doesn't realize this is his way of breaking up with her. Steven tells her she needs to listen to a recording of her voice. Steven says no, Jennifer says no, and Randy says no. We also see a clip of Tealanah singing with her sister -- who seems to have a stronger voice. Oh, I feel so sorry for Tealanah. Back to the shadows, girl. 

    More from HitFix: Watch Evanescence's new video for 'My Heart Is Broken'

    8:22 p.m. Haley Smith loves nature. She has three jobs. And she's a vegetarian working in the meat department. She seems very hippy. She'll be singing Rufus and Chaka Khan's "Tell Me Something Good." It seems to be a good audition, except that Slingbox craps out and so you'll have to fill me in.

    8:32 p.m. Shelby Tweten credits singing for helping her through, I think, bipolar disorder (Slingbox came back in the middle of this, so apologies if that's not accurate). Anyway, she sings, and Jennifer gets weepy. Randy thinks she's fearless as a singer. Big yes from Jennifer, big huge yes from Randy. They don't even bother with Steven, but he loves her, too. 

    8:38 p.m. A montage of lousy auditions. Some joke avalanche footage. Ha, ha. Because they're in Aspen! 

    8:39 p.m. Jairon Jackson will be performing his own song, "So Hard." And wowza, he can really sing. The song isn't bad, either. Randy thinks he's ready for the charts already. And I can't disagree. That was strong. Three yeses. He gets so excited his pants almost come down. I hope he makes it into the top, just so he can work with a costume designer who will burn those awful denim shorts of his. 

    More from HitFix: Handicapping the 'Project Runway All Stars' cast

    8:46 p.m. Angie Zeiderman wants to open for Lady Gaga and be her best friend. She sings ... something. OK, I don't know this song, but it's a show tune. Maybe from "Gypsy"? Anyway, I don't think the judges do, either. But it's about showing the boys your birthday suit. The thing is, she can sing. But Randy hates show tunes. He's ready to kick her to the curb. Jennifer quickly intercedes and asks her to sing something else. She chooses "Blue Bayou," and she really does have a gorgeous voice. That changes Randy's mind. Randy just couldn't see past the show tune. Really, Randy? It was pretty apparent she could sing, my God. Three yeses. Remember when there used to be actual disagreements on this show and the people auditioning didn't automatically know one yes meant three yeses? Ah, those were the days. 

    8:54 p.m. It's party central in the audition room! But the party pooper is Magic Cyclops from Davenport, Iowa. Where he picked up an English accent. No one talks to him because he looks scary and homeless. He's a master of air guitar. He will not reveal his age, because it's not polite to ask a lady her age. I kind of like Magic Cyclops. He sings Neil Diamond and Jimmy Buffet, and not horribly, really. But Randy is appalled. Randy has to go to the bathroom. Magic Cyclops launches what seems to be a confetti firework, and everyone leaves, dismissing him as  joke. Which he is, but Randy didn't have to be so cranky about it. 

    Tomorrow night, "American Idol" heads to Texas. And it seems the judges actually disagree about something! Shocker!

    Do you think Aspen yielded some promising talent? And would you have voted yes or no on Angie? Tell us on our Facebook page!

    Related content:

  • 'Teen Mom' Leah Messer suffers miscarriage

    MTV

    Leah Messer and baby Aleeah on "Teen Mom 2"

    It was only two weeks ago when reports surfaced that "Teen Mom 2" star Leah Messer was pregnant again.

    And already, there's sad news for the 19-year-old reality personality and her new fiance, Jeremy Calvert. Her beau reveals in the new issue of OK! that the young mother has miscarried.

    "It's a devastating experience, but all I can do is support Leah and take things day by day," Calvert told the magazine. "It's hard, but we will get through it."

    "She was having bad cramps for the past two weeks, and then she miscarried," an insider revealed to the magazine.

    Messer is already a mother to 2-year-old twin girls Aleeah and Aliannah, whom she had with ex-husband Corey Simms. MTV has followed the young family since Messer first appeared on "16 and Pregnant" with Simms, and now features them on "Teen Mom 2," as the pair continues to cope with Ali's health issues and issues surrounding the couple's marriage. Simms and Messer tied the knot in October 2010, but she filed for divorce six months later.

    "Teen Mom 2" airs on MTV at 10 p.m. on Tuesdays.

    Should MTV air her miscarriage on "Teen Mom 2"? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

     

     

    Related content:

     

  • Brad Pitt reveals why he quit 'smoking way too much dope'

    Try to set up an interview with Brad Pitt, and you instantly plunge into his almost Dada-esque world. After all, where do you go? A restaurant rendez-vous would devolve into a scrum of gawkers and gapers; his suggestion that we meet at this publication’s office creates such a stir among jaded journalists, it is rapidly nixed; and Pitt’s house in the Hollywood Hills is apparently out of bounds, reserved for his partner, Angelina Jolie, and their six kids.

    The Hollywood Reporter

    So, The Hollywood Reporter executive editor, features, Steven Galloway found himself feeling like a participant in the witness protection program, ensconced in a 14th-floor-suite at Hollywood's W Hotel Jan. 20, because Pitt’s Cadillac Escalade can make a quick in-and-out to avoid the paparazzi thirsting to behold him.On this particular morning media reports surfaced revealing that police had interviewed his bodyguard about human limbs scattered near the Hollywood sign. Andd, he can’t help being bemused. “I was watching CNN, and they said, ‘Brad Pitt’s home!’ and, ‘Brad Pitt’s bodyguard!’ ” he laughs in disbelief. “I’m like: ‘Why? Why?’ ”The report is nonsense, of course: His security chief happened to pass a policeman who asked if Pitt’s surveillance cameras had recorded anything strange, which led to CNN’s proclamation: “Police interview Brad Pitt’s bodyguard, search Hollywood Hills for more body parts.”

    PHOTOS: Brad Pitt's THR Cover Shoot: The Outtakes

    Still Pitt remains unfazed. During an afternoon together, Pitt was thoughtful, pensive and discussed everything from his politics  (supports President Obama) and religion (he veers between agnosticism and atheism), to his relationship with parter of over six years, Angelina Jolie and their six kids. 

    As for his two (maybe three depending on what the Academy decides his producer status is for "Tree of Life") Oscar nominations for "Moneyball" (both for acting and producing), "It's a great honor," Pitt tells THR. 

    Some of the other personal details he shared in THR's cover story: 

    PHOTOS: The Hollywood Reporter Cover Stories

    WHY SCOTT RUDIN CREDITS HIM AS 'MONEYBALL'S' SAVIOR
    The project began its long journey five years ago, when Sony Pictures co-chairman Amy Pascal showed Pitt Michael Lewis' 2003 nonfiction book about baseball team GM Billy Beane and the statistics wunderkind who helped him transform the Oakland Athletics. At the time, writer Stan Chervin and director David Frankel ("The Devil Wears Prada") were developing it with a decidedly comedic touch. Pitt looked at the screenplay, and at Beane himself, and wanted to go in a different direction: "I read the book, and this idea of second chances and how we sometimes let ourselves be rated too much by others -- we put so much emphasis on a paycheck or what a magazine says -- made me think, 'Oh my God, there's something much bigger here.' "

    He offered to leave the film with Frankel, but the director graciously departed, allowing Pitt to develop the story as he saw fit. Not a baseball fan (though he says he loves sports, especially football and soccer), it was the nuances of Beane's character that intrigued him. And so, working with producers Michael De Luca and Rachael Horovitz, he brought on Steven Zaillian ("Schindler's List") to script and asked his friend Steven Soderbergh ("Ocean's Eleven") to direct.

    PHOTOS: Brad Pitt's Most Memorable Movies

    Sony had second thoughts. "We were supposed to leave on a Sunday to start shooting, and Steven handed it in on a Wednesday or Thursday, and the studio was not feeling good," says Pitt. "It's not that they didn't like the idea; they did not like the price" -- about $60 million. What happened next has been amply recounted: how Pascal pulled the plug; how she gave Soderbergh and Pitt several days to shop the project; how everybody passed. "Nobody wanted to buy disgraced goods," he adds. "It was dead."

    But Pitt refused to let it die, calling Pascal and urging her to stick with the movie. "There would be no 'Moneyball' without him," says producer Scott Rudin. "He saved it single-handedly, and he deserves the credit for its existing at all."

    PITT ON POLITICS
    Jodi Kantor’s new book "The Obamas" describes Pitt as "awkward" in a meeting with the president. "I probably was -- you don’t want to impose on a busy man," he says. But, he’s more interested in Obama himself, particularly whether the commander in chief has stopped smoking, as Pitt would dearly like to do. While backing Obama, he nonetheless was glued to the Republican debate Jan. 19. "I’m an Obama supporter, no question," he says. "But it doesn’t mean there’s nothing to learn from the other side."

    PITT ON RELIGION
    All his life, Pitt has learned from the other side. That’s what led him to make a leap of non-faith when he rejected his Southern Baptist upbringing. “I grew up very religious, and I don’t have a great relationship with religion,” he reflects. “I oscillate between agnosticism and atheism.” Pitt says differences over religion make his parents, William and Jane, "sad, but I have parents that love me unconditionally."

    PHOTOS: Behind the Scenes of 'Moneyball' With Brad Pitt

    DEPRESSION, POT AND HOW HE GOT THROUGH IT
    While Pitt’s star ascended with 1992’s "A River Runs Through It," 1994’s "Legends of the Fall" and 1995’s "Seven," his personal life declined. "I got really sick of myself at the end of the 1990s: I was hiding out from the celebrity thing; I was smoking way too much dope; I was sitting on the couch and just turning into a doughnut; and I really got irritated with myself," he says. “I got to: ‘What’s the point? I know better than this.’ ” Pitt wrestled with dark thoughts: “I used to deal with depression, but I don’t now, not this decade -- maybe last decade. But that’s also figuring out who you are. I see it as a great education, as one of the seasons or a semester: 'This semester I was majoring in depression.’ I was doing the same thing every night and numbing myself to sleep -- the same routine: Couldn’t wait to get home and hide out. But that feeling of unease was growing and one night I just said, ‘This is a waste.'

    PHOTOS: 'Moneyball' Premiere in Oakland

    A trip to Casablanca, Morocco, in the mid-to-late 1990s, "where I saw poverty to an extreme I had never witnessed before, and we talked about inequality and health care, and I saw just what I felt was so unnecessary, that people should have to survive in these circumstances -- and the children were inflicted with a lot of deformities, and things that could have been avoided had become their sentence. It stuck with me.” Almost overnight, he decided something had to give. “I just quit. I stopped grass then -- I mean, pretty much -- and decided to get off the couch."

    GETTING MARRIED: 'WE'D LIKE TO' 
    He oscillates, too, on the subject of whether he’ll get married, and it’s clear Pitt has shifted from his promise that this won’t happen until gay marriage is legalized. "We’d actually like to," he says of his seven-year partner, Jolie, "and it seems to mean more and more to our kids. We made this declaration some time ago that we weren’t going to do it till everyone can. But I don’t think we’ll be able to hold out. It means so much to my kids, and they ask a lot. And it means something to me, too, to make that kind of commitment." Has he asked Jolie to marry him? "I’m not going to go any further," says Pitt. "But to be in love with someone and be raising a family with someone and want to make that commitment and not be able to is ludicrous, just ludicrous."

    VIDEO: Q&A with 'Moneyball' actors Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill

    MAYBE MORE KIDS -- EVEN IF THEY STEAL HIS CANE
    Having children, he says, has been "the most grounding thing." Would he have more? "We haven’t closed the book on it. There’s a really nice balance in the house right now, but if we see the need and get that lightning bolt that says, 'We can help this person; we could do something here,' then absolutely." It was while carrying Vivienne -- one of his children, many adopted, whose ages range from 3 to 10 -- that Pitt fell and hurt his knee, causing him to walk with the cane his friend George Clooney spoofed during the Golden Globes. It wasn’t a skiing accident, contrary to reports. "I think George went down the line, making things up," Pitt laughs. "I was just walking in our backyard, on a hill, carrying my daughter, and I slipped -- and it was those parental instincts: me or her. And she’s fine." The cane is nowhere to be seen today, and he jokes about how his children kept stealing it until he gave them canes of their own.

    STORY: Pitt as Producer: When the Oscar Nominated Actor Goes Off Camera

    HIS NEXT BIG PROJECTS
    "World War Z," based on the Max Brooks book about a global zombie war -- and the first of a planned franchise -- drew him because "I thought it was an interesting experiment. I thought, 'Can we take this genre movie and use it as a Trojan horse for social-political problems?' "

    "Twelve Years a Slave," to be filmed by "Shame" helmer Steve McQueen, tells the story of "a free black man in the north who is kidnapped and sold into slavery in the South. I’m only doing a small cameo, but it stars Michael Fassbender and Chiwetel Ejiofor and there’ve been very few movies about slavery, certainly that had the impact of 'Roots.' "

    Read the cover story in full here.

    Related slideshows:

  • Neil Young reunites with Crazy Horse for album

    Victoria Will / AP

    Neil Young

    Neil Young is recording a new album with Crazy Horse, according to a post on Young's fansite Thrasher's Wheat -- and now confirmed by Rolling Stone: "It's looking good," a representative for Young says. 

    According to the fansite report, Young shared the news over the weekend at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, at an event with Jonathan Demme to promote their new movie "Journeys."

    The audience "erupted in applause" when Young said that he was working with Crazy Horse again. Multiple fans subsequently posted on Crazy Horse drummer Ralph Molina's Facebook wall to ask if the news was true. His response: "Yes!" 

    Young began playing with the garage rock band in 1968 and they back him on many of his greatest albums, including "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere," "Zuma," "Rust Never Sleeps" and "Ragged Glory." Their last album was the 2003 rock opera "Greendale," though it didn't feature guitarist Frank "Poncho" Sampedro. The band (including Poncho) toured with Young in 2003 and 2004 to support the disc, though they haven't played together since the tour ended March 21st, 2004 at the Mullins Center in Amherst, Massachusetts. This has been the longest time Young has gone without performing with the group since their formation, though Crazy Horse drummer Ralph Molina played with Young on his 2007 disc "Chrome Dreams II" and the first few legs of the supporting tour. He was replaced by drummer Chad Cromwell in the summer of 2008 for unknown reasons.

    The full line-up of Crazy Horse hasn't backed Young on an album since "Broken Arrow" in 1996, though they did record an LP in 2000 called Toast that Neil opted to shelf. "It's great rock & roll, very moody, kind of jazzy," Young told Rolling Stone in 2008, who was then contemplating a release of the disc. "It's really dark. It's got everything that the best Crazy Horse albums have had. It won't be the most commercial Crazy Horse album ever out."

    In that same interview, we asked Neil if he had any desire to work with Crazy Horse again. "I'm not thinking about that right now," he said. "We'll just see what happens. Something might happen. You never know. Or something else we don't even know about could happen, and that would be really good, rather than go back. But if the vibe's right to go back and grab what's back there and yank it into the future, that's a big job."

    According to the report on Thrasher's Wheat, Young said that he's already recorded one album with Crazy Horse and another is in the works. It's unclear if Toast is the finished album. There's word of a spring release for the album, but don't get your hopes up too high. Things change very quickly in the world of Neil Young. Remember that 30-date Buffalo Springfield that was supposedly happening this year

    Are you glad Young is reuniting with Crazy Horse? What's their best song? Tell us in the comments or on Facebook.

     

    More from Rolling Stone:

  • Miley, step away from the penis cake

    It's time for Miley Cyrus to either stop eating cake or to party in a world where no cameras or recording devices of any kind are allowed. This is starting to feel like scrolling through the Facebook feed of your most clueless friend.

    Danny Moloshok / Reuters

    The 19-year-old singer's latest sweet treat was unveiled Saturday night at a birthday party for boyfriend Liam Hemsworth, 22. Because every silly move she makes is apparently caught on camera, Cyrus can be seen over at TMZ posing provocatively with a giant penis cake.

    Any bachelorette who has ever set foot in an erotic bakery has seen one of these cakes. Cyrus is an adult and she can eat what she wants. But it surprises us how poorly she manages to either control herself at her parties or manage the oversharing people she invites.

    Just days before Thanksgiving we were asking the same thing when Cyrus celebrated her own birthday and was feted with a Bob Marley cake. "You know you're a stoner when your friends make you a Bob Marley cake," Cyrus was quoted as saying. "You know you smoke way too much f---ing weed!"

    Back then, Miley's rep offered this limp defense: "It's all been taken out of context. The cake was a joke and Miley's response was intended to be sarcastic."

    Just last week we were reading reports of how Cyrus allegedly spent $50,000 to lose 15 pounds to get bikini-ready for Hemsworth (there's no cake in that diet!) And at the People's Choice Awards earlier this month, the former Disney star won raves for her fashion-forward look (she's turned a corner!)

    Oh well. As we wait for reps and friends to jump to Cyrus' defense again, we'll just have the ice cream, thanks.

    Related content:

  • Exclusive peek: 'In Tahrir Square' reveals Egypt's historic revolution

    Jon Alpert / HBO

    On Jan. 25, 2011, Egyptians took to the streets of their country to demand that President Hosni Mubarak step down. He had been in power for 30 years, and his countrymen were not happy with the way things were going.

    What started as a peaceful gathering in the streets of Cairo's Tahrir Square turned into 18 days of protests by more than a million citizens and resulted in more than 800 deaths.

    On the one year anniversary of the beginning of Egypt's revolution, HBO2 debuts "In Tahrir Square: 18 Days of Egypt's Unfinished Revolution." The documentary's cameras followed Egyptian-American journalist Sharif Abdel Kouddous as he reported from the protests, giving viewers an intimate, street-level view of what the Egyptians experienced.

    "Mubarak stole money. He stacked up the money. The people have nothing to eat," one woman angrily told the cameras.

    Things quickly turned ugly when on the fourth day of protests, Mubarak sent forces to attack the demonstrators. Watch how the violence begins to escalate in this sneak peek provided to msnbc.com by HBO:


    Despite the danger and violence, the cameras continued to roll and followed the Egyptians' fight through to the very end, when the people finally got what they wanted on Feb. 11, 2011: Mubarek's resignation.

    "In Tahrir Square: 18 Days of Egypt's Unfinisihed Revolution" airs at 8 p.m. on Jan. 25 on HBO2.

    Related content:

    More in msnbc Entertainment:

  • 'Pirates' scene changed after lepers protest

    Columbia Pictures

    This scene, showing a leper's arm falling off, has been cut from the upcoming movie "Pirates."

    In a funny, if shocking, scene in the trailer for the upcoming stop-action movie, "The Pirates! Band of Misfits," the pirate captain acrobatically swings onto a ship, unsheathes his sword, and announces (in Hugh Grant's plummy British accent) that he plans to plunder the ship's gold.

    "Gold? Afraid we don't have any gold, old man" a sailor tells him. "This is a leper boat." And then -- THUNK -- his arm falls off.

    But you won't be seeing that scene when the 3-D movie hits theaters April 27.

    The British organization Lepra Health in Action wrote on its website, "Leprosy is not an easy disease to catch, it is curable, those affected should live within mainstream society and no – limbs don’t just fall off. Not even for comic effect."

    Aardman Animations, the makers of "The Pirates!," listened to the group and issued a statement saying "after reviewing the matter, we decided to change the scene out of respect and sensitivity for those who suffer from leprosy. The last thing anyone intended was to offend anyone."

    Lepra Health in Action responded by saying the group was "genuinely delighted that Aardman has decided to amend the film."

    It's unclear if the movie cut the entire scene or just altered it. You can still watch the scene in the attached trailer.

    Do you think the scene was offensive? Should it have been changed? Tell us on Facebook.

     More from movies:

  • Sheen: 'Men' should end after this season

    CBS

    Has "Two and a Half Men" run its course?

    Charlie Sheen thinks his former CBS hit, "Two and a Half Men," has run its course, and needs to end after its current season.

    "I don't think they should go on past this year," Sheen told the New York Post. "I just think that people are there because there's nowhere else to go yet."

    Sheen also claimed the show's quality has declined, getting in a dig at his former boss, Chuck Lorre, who famously fired him in 2011.

    "I don't think that [replacement Ashton Kutcher] is working with the best writing because Chuck is doing too many shows," he told the Post. "He and Jon [Cryer] and Angus [T. Jones] deserve better material."

    Sheen had kind words for his replacement, Ashton Kutcher, saying that he himself once replaced a popular actor when he took over for Michael J. Fox on "Spin City," and knows the difficulty.

    "It's so f---ing hard you can't believe it," he told the newspaper. "It's all you're thinking about, and you're surrounded by these ghosts. So hats off to him for doing the best job that he can."

    Earlier this month, Sheen told Us Weekly that he "was kind of impressed" by Kutcher's reported dalliance with another woman while still married to Demi Moore.

    Whatever Sheen thinks of the show, it's unlikely to be canceled. Ratings are apparently up, and earlier this month, Kutcher said he is eager to film more seasons.

     

    Should this be the last season for "Two and a Half Men"? Vote in our poll and tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

  • Oscar nominee Close shows off her manly side in 'Albert Nobbs'

    Glenn Close has six Oscar nominations, three Emmy Awards and three Tonys. She revealed another, slightly less grand honor she received once to TODAY's Matt Lauer on Wednesday: "I was Queen of the New York Car Show!" she laughed. "One of the more humiliating moments of my life."

    Well, no one ever said Close lacked drive, and these days she's steering her course back to the Oscars, thanks to a Best Actress nomination on Tuesday for her gender-bending role as the title character in "Albert Nobbs."

    "It feels like my first (nomination)," she said. "It really does. Because I've never been this involved in anything I've done so far."

    "Nobbs" is almost in Close's blood at this point: She played the role onstage in the early 1980s, and can now take credit for not just starring in, producing and writing the screenplay of the film -- but she even wrote lyrics for a song that appears in it, "Lay Your Head Down."

    "Nobbs" focuses on the title character, a 19th Century waiter in Dublin who has been hiding her gender for 30 years. It is the only way she is able to obtain work as an unmarried woman of no other means. Close wore a small amount of prosthetics and studied Charlie Chaplin to get the right gait for Nobbs.

    "I always felt that Albert was somebody who wasn't comfortable in her skin, and that there was something almost comic about the way she would move, even though now it has become natural," said Close. "So I studied Charlie Chaplin films and how he walked, how his feet were, how long his pants were, how long his shoes were, so Albert is just pushing that envelope a bit."

    Close isn't the only star of "Nobbs" getting Oscar attention -- her co-star Janet McTeer, who also plays a woman in disguise, earned a Supporting Actress nod. But after six nominations but no wins, Close is hoping this is the year Oscar gives her some love.

    "It would be phenomenal," she said. "At this point in my career, having believed in this for so long, having fought -- it's still hard for me to believe we pulled it off."

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Jon Stewart knows what Mitt Romney did last tax quarter

    Jon Stewart is still AWOL.

    On "The Colbert Report," a distressed Stephen Colbert called it Day 2 of the Super PAC Hostage Crisis, since "Daily Show" host Stewart refuses to give back the uncoordinated organization. To comfort the "scared money" currently held up in a blimp with the villainous Stewart, Colbert wants the PAC supporters to send more money.  

    He also pointed out that Monday's debate happens to be the 18th one. And that no one cares.  

    But then, in a candid conversation with occasionally controversial author Maurice Sendak, Colbert contemplated the complexity of children, the simplicity of Newt Gingrich and announced that he will be writing a children's book ... despite not liking children at all.

    On "Jimmy Kimmel Live," host Kimmel got into the Oscars spirit with a nice little movie montage of Monday's GOP debate. It was completely silent and in black and white, just like leading Oscar contender "The Artist."

    Kimmel also pointed out that we've known all along that Mitt Romney is rich, so it shouldn't come as a surprise now that his tax returns have confirmed it -- a topic that Jon Stewart also talked about.

    In fact, Stewart spent nearly seven minutes examining Mitt Romney's tax releases, and how he justifies making nearly $57,000 a day -- more than the average American family makes in a year -- paying a tax rate on the level of "the guy who shines your shoes at the airport."  

    Ouch. Forget the 1%, Romney has to explain being in the 0.006% of Americans to Florida primary voters.

    Related content:

  • How far can Steven Tyler go with icky comments on 'Idol'?

    Michael Becker / Fox

    Steven Tyler's had a number of memorable moments already this season as a judge on "American Idol," mostly related to the ridiculous hats he's been wearing at auditions.

    But the one that was most notable was when 15-year-old Shannon Magrane showed up for the Savannah tryouts. Her parents and sisters were brought into the room, and her dad asked Tyler how it was going. "Hot, humid and happening -- just like your daughter," Tyler replied.

    And the show stopped.

    Granted, it did so because of editing and creative sound effects, but also because it was easy to see the thoughts going through Mr. Magrane's head -- and those thoughts were that his daughter would never be allowed near Tyler again without armed guards. It also was the first moment of the season that got an “ewwww” reaction from the audience, or at least those viewers with daughters of their own.

    Magrane shouldn't have been surprised by Tyler's response, and viewers shouldn’t have been either. One of the reasons for hiring Tyler as an "Idol" judge was his status as a rock icon, and Tyler plays the part well. The Aerosmith frontman has the swagger that causes women of all ages to swoon before him on the "Idol" stage, adulation he strongly encourages.

    The crowd usually meets him more than halfway.  For example Jennifer Dilley didn't show up to her San Diego audition in a bikini because she sings best without a shirt on, and Erica Nowak didn’t call him “my future ex-husband” and make a grab for his rear end because it would help her vocals.  Plenty of dreamers of both genders use whatever tools they have to give themselves a tiny edge.

    But when Tyler hits on teens it leads to some uncomfortable but logical questions: What's the line that he can't cross? And how close is he to reaching it? When does he cease being the wacky comic relief and become the creepy old guy leering at girls young enough to be his granddaughters?

    The show encourages such behavior -- as long as it remains chaste. Judge Jennifer Lopez is always getting songs dedicated to her by awestruck male contestants, and who can forget the Kara DioGuardi-Casey James “cougar” storyline of a couple of years ago?

    And to be clear, there’s no sense that anything untoward is happening, or that Tyler is doing anything more than playing a role. He’s engaged to be married to 38-year-old Erin Brady, and there haven’t been rumors of him doing anything more than exchanging risqué puns with anyone on “Idol.”

    But there’s something a little ... well, off-putting about watching Tyler leer at attractive young women as they audition. He is, after all, 63 years old. He has a grandson who was born in December 2004. It won’t be long until the little guy’s eligible to try out for the show as well.

    As a rock star, what he’s doing is entirely within character. (After all, Mick Jagger is older than he is and still going strong.) But as a reality show judge? That's the big question.

    Should there be a line drawn for Steven Tyler? If so, what's OK and what's not? Tell us what you think on our Facebook page.

    Related content:

  • 'Final Countdown' actor Farentino dies at age 73

    Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images file

    James Farentino and his wife Stella in Los Angeles in August 2011.

    A family spokesman says actor James Farentino, who appeared in dozens of movies and television shows, has died in a Los Angeles hospital. He was 73.

    Family spokesman Bob Palmer says Farentino died of heart failure after a long illness at Cedars-Sinai Hospital on Tuesday.

    Farentino starred alongside Kirk Douglas and Martin Sheen in a 1980 science fiction film "The Final Countdown."

    Farentino also starred opposite Patty Duke in 1969's "Me, Natalie."

    He also had recurring roles on "Dynasty," "Melrose Place," "The Bold Ones: The Lawyers" and "ER," playing the estranged father to George Clooney's character.

    A four-time divorcee, Farentino's tumultuous personal life made headlines, too.

    In March 1994 he pleaded no contest to stalking his ex-girlfriend Tina Sinatra, daughter of Frank Sinatra.

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Demi Moore seeking treatment for exhaustion

    Updated 8:26 a.m. ET: Moore's publicist has also confirmed that the actress has dropped out of her small role in "Lovelace," in which she had been set to play Gloria Steinem.

    TODAY's Savannah Guthrie quoted Moore from an upcoming issue of Harper's Bazaar as saying, "I would say that what scares me is that I'm going to ultimately find out at the end of my life that I'm really not lovable, that I'm not worthy of being loved, that there's something fundamentally wrong with me."

    Original Access Hollywood story: Demi Moore is seeking treatment for her health and exhaustion issues, her rep said in a statement to Access Hollywood on Tuesday.

    “Because of the stresses in her life right now, Demi has chosen to seek professional assistance to treat her exhaustion and improve her overall health,” the rep’s statement read. “She looks forward to getting well and is grateful for the support of her family and friends.”

    PHOTOS from AH: Hollywood’s Favorite Leading Ladies: Then & Now

    TMZ reported Moore was taken to the hospital on Monday night, after paramedics went to her home, following a 911 call at 10:45 p.m.

    Paramedics reportedly treated the actress for around 30 minutes after which they took her to a hospital, law enforcement sources told TMZ.

    PHOTOS from AH: Hollywood’s Hottest Moms & Their Loveable Little Ones

    When speaking with Access Hollywood on Tuesday, Los Angeles City Fire Department spokesman Matt Spence confirmed the department responded to a 911 call on Monday night at around 10:49 p.m. to an address in Beverly Hills.

    He could not confirm it was Moore’s address.

    The spokesman told Access the call was for an “unknown illness.”

    PHOTOS from AH: Sexy Screen Star Demi Moore

    One ambulance and one fire engine arrived at the scene and one individual, who the spokesperson did not name, was transported to a local hospital.

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Hospital must pay Garth Brooks $1 million

    Updated at 6:30 p.m. PT

    An Oklahoma hospital in Garth Brooks' hometown must pay $1 million to the country singer because it failed to build a women's health center in honor of his late mother, jurors ruled Tuesday evening.

    Jurors ruled that the hospital must return a $500,000 donation to Brooks plus pay him $500,000 in punitive damages in Brooks' breach-of-contract lawsuit against IntegrisCanadian Valley Regional Hospital in Yukon. Brooks said he thought he'd reached a deal in 2005 with the hospital's president, James Moore, but sued after learning the hospital wanted to use the money for other construction projects.

    The hospital argued that Brooks gave it unrestricted access to the money and only later asked that it build a women's center and name it after his mother, Colleen Brooks, who died of cancer in 1999.

    "Obviously we are disappointed, particularly with the jury's decision to award damages above and beyond the $500,000," Integris spokesman Hardy Watkins said. "We're just glad to see the case come to a resolution."

    Brooks called the jurors "heroes" and said he felt vindicated by their verdict.

    "I no longer feel like I'm crazy," he said.

    Jury member Beverly Lacy said she voted in favor of Brooks because she thought the hospital went back on its word. As far as the punitive damages, she said: "We wanted to show them not to do that anymore to anyone else."

    During the trial, Brooks testified that he thought he had a solid agreement with Moore. Brooks said the hospital president initially suggested putting his mother's name on an intensive care unit, and when Brooks said that wouldn't fit her image, Moore suggested a women's center.

    "I jumped all over it," Brooks told jurors in tearful testimony. "It's my mom. My mom was pregnant as a teenager. She had a rough start. She wanted to help every kid out there."

    His attorney told the jury during closing arguments that Brooks kept his end of the agreement.

    "This case is about promises: promises made and promises broken," lawyer John Hickey told jurors shortly before they started deliberating. "Mr. Brooks kept his promise. Integris never intended to keep their promise and never built a new women's center."

    But hospital attorney Terry Thomas said Brooks' gift initially came in anonymously and unrestricted in 2005. He also noted that Brooks couldn't remember key details of negotiations with the hospital's president — including what he'd been promised — when questioned during a deposition after filing his lawsuit in 2009.

    "At most, it was a misunderstanding between these two," Thomas told jurors during his closing argument. "Am I calling Mr. Brooks a liar? Absolutely not. It's perfectly understandable that he does not remember these events."

    The jury began deliberating Tuesday afternoon in Rogers County District Court, and the judge told jurors she wanted them to work as late as midnight to come to a decision.

    Before the verdict was read, Brooks said the day had been emotional. The country music star said he was simply trying to honor his mother.

    "This little pistol, she deserves nothing but good," Brooks said.

    More on msnbc Entertainment:

  • Tim Gunn: I haven't had sex in 29 years

    Craig Sjodin / ABC

    "Project Runway" mentor Tim Gunn is a good-looking, stylish guy with tons of charm. But, as he shared on his new ABC daytime lifestyle show "The Revolution" on Tuesday, he's been celibate for quite awhile.

    When therapist and co-host Tiffanie Davis Henry turned the subject to sex and how "15 to 20 percent of people are in no sex and low-sex relationships,"  the style guru dropped his bomb. "I will share with all of you ... I haven't had sex in 29 years," he revealed. "Do I feel like less of a person for it? No!"

    The reaction? Stunned silence from the studio audience.

    Gunn, who is openly gay, went on toexplain why he's abstained for so long, and basically, it comes down to a bad breakup. "I was in a very intense relationship for a long time and my partner ended it." Gunn said. "Quite frankly, he was impatient with my ... sexual performance. ... It was at the cusp of AIDS, and I think a lot of people simply retreated because they were concerned about their health. I certainly was. I'm happy to be healthy and alive, quite frankly."

    Though he is choosing to not have sex, Gunn is quite satisfied with how things are. "I'm a perfectly happy, fulfilled individual," he said.

    "The Revolution" airs on ABC at 2 p.m. ET and 1 p.m. PT weekdays on ABC.

    Are you surprised that Gunn shared such a personal detail about his life? Tell us what you think on our Facebook page.

     

     

     

    Related content:

  • West Memphis victims' families protest 'Paradise Lost' Oscar nod

    Danny Johnston / AP

    Jessie Misskelley Jr., James Baldwin and Damien Echols were released in August, which caps the third film in the "Paradise Lost" documentaries.

    "Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory" received an Oscar nod on Tuesday from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for best documentary feature, but not everyone is happy about the honor.

    The film, the third in HBO's series about three boys who were brutally murdered nearly 20 years ago in West Memphis, Ark., and the three teens who were convicted on questionable evidence, shows the state ultimately releasing Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley Jr. from prison last August. But parents of two of the boys killed are not pleased with the publicity the latest film has received or its Oscar nomination.

    Todd and Diana Moore, the parents of victim Michael Moore, had previously asked the Academy to not consider the film. The pair, along with victim Stevie Branch's father and stepdad, sent a letter to reporters and the Academy after the nominations were announced to express their feelings.

    "This film should be exposed as a fraud, not rewarded with an Academy Award nomination," the letter stated.

    That Branch's stepfather would object to the film is no surprise. "Paradise Lost 3" brings up the question as to whether or not Terry Hobbs, who married Stevie's mom, could have been the killer. (The upcoming film "West of Memphis" also suggests Hobbs may be a suspect.) The filmmakers interviewed neighbors who placed Hobbs with the three boys the day they were murdered, though Hobbs has claimed that he did not see the children that day.

    The films have been widely credited with raising doubts about the convictions of Echols, Baldwin and Misskelley Jr., collectively known as the West Memphis 3. After 18 years in prision, the men were freed in August after taking the Alford plea, which allowed them to maintain their innocence while pleading guilty in exchange for their freedom.

    When msnbc.com talked to Baldwin earlier this month, he said it was "hard to watch the films" and to see "the boys' families go through all of the anguish of that." He noted that tough as it was, "it's necessary to shed light on what happened."

    As for the film's Oscar nod, Baldwin told msnbc.com he'd love to see filmmakers Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky win the trophy. "They went above and beyond the call of duty as filmmakers to keep this case alive and keep it in the public eye," he said. "They deserve some type of award for their efforts, whether it be an Oscar or a Nobel Peace Prize. ... They put everything they had into these films against a lot of opposition."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

     

     

    Related content:

    More on the Oscars:

  • Cynthia Nixon: I'm gay by choice

    Getty Images file

    Cynthia Nixon in 2009

    Former "Sex and the City" star Cynthia Nixon is holding firm to her statement that she has chosen to be homosexual, although her comments have sparked controversy in the gay and lesbian community.

    "For me, it is a choice," Nixon says in a New York Times Magazine profile. "I understand that for many people it’s not, but for me it’s a choice, and you don’t get to define my gayness for me."

    Her statement hasn't gone over well with gay activists. Writing in AMERICAblog Gay, John Aravosis says that Nixon, who had a long relationship with a man that produced two children before coming out as gay in 2004, is actually bisexual. "She needs to learn how to choose her words better, because she just fell into a right-wing trap, willingly," he writes, "When the religious right says it's a choice, they mean you quite literally choose your sexual orientation, you can change it at will, and that's bull."

    He went on to say, "Every religious right hatemonger is now going to quote this woman every single time they want to deny us our civil rights."

    Nixon seemed to anticipate the controversy when she gave her interview to the New York Times, saying then "Why can’t it be a choice? Why is that any less legitimate? It seems we’re just ceding this point to bigots who are demanding it, and I don’t think that they should define the terms of the debate."

    Some saw a humorous side. Jack Cullen, who writes for Gay Times, tweeted: "Putting Cynthia Nixon to one side. Let's hear from some famous bisexual men who chose to be straight, starting with EVERYONE IN HOLLYWOOD."

    Nixon came out as gay in 2004, and is in a relationship with Christine Marinoni. The two have a son together in addition to Nixon's children from her previous relationship. She is currently starring as a woman undergoing cancer treatement in the Broadway play "Wit." Nixon herself discovered she had an early stage of breast cancer in 2006.

    More from Entertainment:

  • Was 'Bridesmaids' deserving of Oscar nod?

    AP

    Debate continues over whether "Bridesmaids" deserves its Oscar nominations.

    Did "Bridesmaids" get left behind at Oscar's Best Picture altar? Or are the raunchy comedy's two nominations already more than it deserves?

    Some early buzz suggested that Kristen Wiig's R-rated wedding-disaster hit was a contender for the Academy Awards' top prize, especially now that the field is open to more than just five films. That didn't happen, but "Bridesmaids" did score a supporting-actress nod for Melissa McCarthy, who played the endearingly obnoxious and sexually voracious Megan, and an original screenplay nomination for writers Wiig and Annie Mumolo. 

    Best Picture was always going to be a long shot. The fact is that the Oscars have never been kind to comedies, as a look at recent years makes clear. Of the nine movies nominated for Best Picture this year, only Woody Allen's "Midnight In Paris" is considered a comedy, and of the 10 nominations in 2010 and 2011, only the animated movies  "Toy Story 3" and "Up" qualify. 

    Another thing to note is that all three of those films lean more toward the heartwarming than the edgy side, and the Oscars don't tend to favor that kind of tone unless it's in a serious, weighty drama. The bold use of gross-out humor in "Bridesmaids" surely didn't work in its favor for the big nomination. Instead, it was honored in traditionally safe, relatively minor categories for envelope-pushers — supporting actress and script.

     

    But in any case, along with successful showings for "Moneyball" and "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," the nominations for "Bridesmaids" are a victory for mainstream, populist entertainment in a race that usually leans too heavily toward the self-consciously serious. 

    Some fans were thrilled for Melissa McCarthy.

    McCarthy in particular makes an unusual Oscar choice — her character is neither the long-suffering martyr or dainty model that usually gets picked. Megan is brassy, bawdy, and confidently sexual — a testament to McCarthy's fearless improv-comedy skills. But she's much more likely, in the end, to be a crowd-pleasing favorite who's mobbed on the red carpet, but who doesn't walk down the aisle at the Kodak Theater. 

    Still, her nomination is winning acclaim among mainstream filmgoers — based on a totally unscientific scan of Twitter, popular sentiment is solidly, maybe 80/20, in her favor. One commenter compared McCarthy's performance to Nicole Kidman's in "The Hours," pointing out what the Oscars often miss: "Great comedy is harder than sticking on a prosthetic nose & looking morose." Another took the opposite view, encapsulating the unease many feel about "Bridesmaids" and its raunchy, body-fluid-heavy humor being honored among the best achievements in cinema: "Dear God: Please don't let Melissa McCarthy win an Oscar for pooping in a sink."

    Is "Bridesmaids" Oscar material? Does Melissa McCarthy have a chance in the supporting actress category? Tell us on Facebook.

     Related links:

     

  • McConaughey 'Dazed and Confused' again in new music video

    Alright, alright, alright indeed.

    Matthew McConaughey may be getting older, but just like high school girls, his character Wooderson from "Dazed and Confused" stays the same age.

    McConaughey reprises his role from Richard Linklater's 1993 film with a starring spot in the new music video for "Synthesizers" by Butch Walker and the Black Widows.

    Check out Wooderson in slow-mo, lip syncing as he walks through a club: "I can still get down like, Duran Duran in 1985" and "I can still get down like, Frank Poncherello on a motorbike." Sporting his signature white tee, shaggy blond hair and mustache, the video practically recreates Wooderson's Emporium entrance scene (below) from the stoner cult classic.

    The song's chorus asks, "Once in your life, won't you do what feels right?" We're glad McConaughey did what felt right by signing on to make this video.

    Here are a couple clips from "Dazed" to refresh your memory about the greatness that was Wooderson. And feel free to discuss it all further over on Facebook.

  • Why no Oscar love for 'Drive'?

    FilmDistrict

    Ryan Gosling's "Drive" was snubbed by the Academy.

    Sure, everyone's got a film they feel the Oscars snubbed. But not one major nomination for "Drive," Ryan Gosling's dark and stylish look at a wheelman who thinks he can shut out the world outside his car?

    No nomination for best picture, nothing for Gosling himself, no supporting actor nod for Albert Brooks? Did the Academy members think this was a "Fast & Furious" film, like the Michigan woman who sued over it?

    At least Brooks took it in stride in his witty Twitter feed. After the nominations came out, he Tweeted "I got ROBBED. I don't mean the Oscars, I mean literally. My pants and shoes have been stolen" and followed up with 'You don't like me. You really don't like me.'" (We do, Albert! Think of the Academy as crotchety old Statler and Waldorf from "The Muppets." Real people do like you.)

    As was made clear by that woman who sued, "Drive" was not marketed clearly. It's a dark picture, not a fun-filled race. It's full of ponderous silences and bleak landscapes, giving you the sense of a man who's completely in control inside a car, and lost when he's not behind the wheel. There are shockingly violent scenes and one elevator attack that comes seemingly from nowhere and sets your nerves on edge.

    Gosling and Brooks play it pitch-perfect -- when they meet, Gosling tells Brooks he can't shake hands because his are dirty, and Brooks, a movie producer with a secret criminal life, pounds out every bit of the double meaning when he says, "So are mine."

    "Drive" feels like one of those 1970s movies, where the hero isn't clean and there's more talking than fighting, where spaces left in coversations sometimes say as much as the words. We don't get many of those films in a world with movies like "Jack and Jill" and "Battle: Los Angeles," and watching one is a refreshing change, like settling in to an air-conditioned theater after a day of partying at the beach. Brooks was right the first time -- he, and "Drive," did get robbed.

     Do you think "Drive" deserved at least one Oscar nomination? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

     

  • Party on, Garth! Carvey up for 'Wayne's World 3'

    Getty Images file

    Garth is ready to party on with a third "Wayne's World" movie, but is Wayne too busy with life as a spy?

    Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey) did briefly reprise their seats in Wayne's basement on a 2011 episode of "Saturday Night Live." But would the two get together for a third "Wayne's World" movie? Garth says "party on," though we're not betting this will actually happen.

    TMZ stopped Dana Carvey on the street last week in New York and the comedian admitted he'd be willing to sign on for another film featuring the goofy friends. Such a film couldn't be made without Myers, though, and Carvey admitted "he's pretty busy." In December, the New York Post reported that Myers was working on both a fourth Austin Powers film and a Broadway musical about the fictional British superspy.

    At least he had a good sense of humor about the fact that the two Aurora, Ill. pals are getting a wee bit old to be hosting a cable-access show from Wayne's mom's basement. ""If they want, we can play 'em in their 50s," Carvey joked. "'Wayne! My prostate's enlarged!'"

    Should "Wayne's World" rest in peace, or would you go to a third film in the series? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

Jump to January 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... 8