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  • 30
    Dec
    2012
    12:28pm, EST

    Best bets: America storms 'Downton Abbey'

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    It's time, at last, to return to that towering English manor house known as "Downton Abbey." This season, America meets England, as Shirley MacLaine muscles her way into the mansion, playing Cora's mother. Also this week: The chilling and engrossing "Zero Dark Thirty" opens, and the fascinating "Looper" hits home video.

    Slideshow: 'Downton Abbey' season 3

    Launch slideshow

     

    MONDAY: 'Looper' on home video
    "Looper" put a chilling twist on time travel. In the future, it exists, but is only used by mobsters looking to dump enemies into the past and have them shot by "loopers." Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a looper who's pretty good at his job, until the inevitable day when the mob sends his own future self (in the form of Bruce Willis) back for the fatal shot. It's a twisty, tricky film that's fun to watch. (On DVD and Blu-ray Dec. 31.)

    FRIDAY: 'Zero Dark Thirty'
    If you're in New York or Los Angeles, "Zero Dark Thirty" may already be playing, but the rest of us get a chance to see this early favorite for best picture this week. It's not for everyone. As you may have heard, the film opens with raw phone conversations from 9/11, and moves on quickly to detainees being tortured at CIA black sites. If you get through that, Kathryn Bigelow's film rewards with perhaps the best final hour put on film this year, as Navy SEALs pour into the Abbottabad, Pakistan, compound looking for Osama bin Laden. Jessica Chastain shines as a CIA agent who's determined to find the terrorist mastermind, and Jason Clarke, who plays a fellow agent, has come a long way from "Brotherhood." (Opens Jan. 4 in many cities.)

    SUNDAY: 'Downton Abbey'
    Finally! The Brits have been watching season three ("series 3" to them) for months now, but we Yanks can finally get caught up. (Hope you've avoided the Internet spoilers!) It's certainly not a spoiler to say that Shirley MacLaine is sweeping in as the mother of Cora, Countess of Grantham, and is sure to have more than one run-in with the imposing Dowager Countess. And Lady Mary and Matthew are preparing for their wedding. Here's to the bride -- and the grandmother-in-law-to-be.

    Related content:

    • Review: 'Looper' gives audiences a thrill
    • Acting CIA director shoots down 'Zero Dark Thirty' accuracy
    • 'Downton Abbey' talks about new faces

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: looper, featured, downton-abbey, best-bets, zero-dark-thirty
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    10:37am, EDT

    'Looper' takes audiences out for a thrill and a twirl

    Sony Pictures

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt in "Looper."

    By Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

    REVIEW: "Looper" is a clever, entertaining science fiction thriller that neatly blurs the line between suicide and murder. An existential conundrum wrapped in a narrowly conceived yarn about victims sent back in time to be bumped off by assassins called loopers, Rian Johnson's third and most ambitious feature keeps the action popping while sustaining interest in the long arc of a story about a man assigned to kill the 30 years-older version of himself.

    A lively, high-profile choice to open this year's Toronto International Film Festival, this Sony release co-starring Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the same role should chalk up sizable returns in the wake of its Sept. 28 theatrical bow.

    VIDEO: "Looper" star Joseph Gordon-Levitt on getting kicked in the head by Bruce Willis

    Probably the shakiest aspect of Johnson's original screenplay is what it asks the viewer to buy about the future: A mere 62 years from now, in 2074, time travel has become possible, but such a momentous breakthrough is limited to serving as a body-disposal system. Under the prevailing authority, time jumping is strictly outlawed because of its potential for messing with history. A large criminal mob, run by an overlord called The Rainmaker, defiantly uses it but only as a vehicle for assassination, with “loopers” -- disreputable gunmen living in 2044 -- laying in wait for people to execute so no bodies or other evidence can be found in the future.

    Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt chat about playing a younger and older version of the same character in "Looper."

    But the premise is established in nifty fashion; the doomed, hooded with hands bound behind them, suddenly materialize in an empty field, and the looper immediately blows him away with his blunderbuss. One such executioner is Joe (Gordon-Levitt), a retro-looking hipster who drives a very old red Miata and wears ties, “a 20th century affectation” that offends his crankily genial boss, Abe (Jeff Daniels). If he can get out of this racket, he says he'd like to go to France, which earns him further scorn from the older man; “I'm from the future, you should go to China,” he scolds.

    PHOTOS: Movies with different actors in the same role

    Backed by a cynically confessional voice-over track from Joe that is not as self-consciously hardboiled as the commentary Gordon-Levitt read for Johnson in "Brick" seven years ago, Looper mostly is set in a seedy metropolis that doesn't look all that different from sketchy neighborhoods in some big cities today; there are derelicts, bombed-out buildings, ruined cars and enough other signs of urban ills to suggest that, in Johnson's view, things will just gradually decline over the next three decades.

    Joe hangs out in clubs, sees a sexy woman (Piper Perabo) who works in one of them and tries to help a friend and fellow looper, Seth (Paul Dano), who's imminently endangered by a new development that's come down from on high: They're “closing all the loops,” meaning they're sending the “future selves” of all the loopers back to be killed.

    Almost immediately, Joe is in the same jam. When, a half-hour into the film, he goes to the field to do his next job, the guy who pops up to be shot is not hooded. Joe's hesitation allows the older man to escape, and it's clear who he is: It's Joe as his older self. And, for his failure to kill him, young Joe is in a pile of trouble with Abe and his “gats,” first-class hired guns.

    STORY: "Looper" interactive trailer reveals new interviews, behind-the-scenes footage 

    When the two Joes finally sit down -- across from each other in a diner in the middle of nowhere -- there's no doubt they're working at cross purposes: Young Joe is determined to kill his older self, while old Joe is dead set on tracking down and taking out The Rainmaker, who would be a little kid in 2044, so his late wife won't die at his hands after all.

    The biggest problem facing the makers of "Looper" is how to make the audience believe that the trim, long-faced Gordon-Levitt could somehow change so much in 30 years that he would look like the thicker-built and shorter-nosed Willis. The solution lay in altering the younger actor's appearance, imperceptibly at first, but gradually to morph his dark eyes into Willis' gray-green and to reshape his nose and eyebrows, either with makeup or digitally or perhaps both. At first, the effect is a bit odd, and you can't quite put your finger on what's off; then it feels downright weird to be looking at a version of Gordon-Levitt who is no longer the actor you've known for a few years now.

    This is especially noticeable during the film's second half, much of which takes place at young Joe's place of refuge, the isolated home of feisty young farmer and single mom Sara (Emily Blunt), who has an unusually gifted son, Cid (Pierce Gagnon). Even as the temperature is kept at a low simmer, the film's pace deliberately is slowed here to develop some intimacy between these two isolated people and give some screen time to the kid, who pretty obviously will provide the reason for old Joe to eventually head for the farm. The eventual ending is great, the resolution to the tricky time maneuvering very impressively worked out.


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    VIDEO: "Looper" trailer puts Joseph Gordon-Levitt in a tough spot: Killing Bruce Willis

    Shot mostly in Louisiana, with a bit done in Shanghai, the film looks tightly made on a budget but sacrifices nothing for that; the world depicted looks dirty, dangerous and ramshackle, with a few high-tech touches here and there.

    Their physical disparity notwithstanding, Gordon-Levitt and Willis both come across strongly, while Blunt effectively reveals Sara's tough and vulnerable sides. Daniels is particularly amusing as the garrulous old enforcer holding down the future's outpost in the past.

    Related content:

    • VIDEO: Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt talk 'Looper'
    • VIDEO: Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Emily Blunt talk 'Looper'

    Also in NBC Entertainment:

    • Inconceivable! The irresistible 'Princess Bride' turns 25
    • 'Toy Story' toys burn up in family's evil prank on mom
    • Crew member drowns on set of 'Lone Ranger' movie

     

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  • 23
    Sep
    2012
    4:30pm, EDT

    Best bets: Favorites return to the ballroom for more 'Dancing With the Stars'

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    This week, fan favorites will return to the "Dancing With the Stars" ballroom to compete for the world's ugliest trophy, a comedy favorite from your childhood pops up on DVD, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt makes time travel look terrifying.

    MONDAY: 'Dancing With the Stars'
    It's all-star time for "Dancing With the Stars," with 13 returning celebrities who've previously competed on the show returning in a new quest for that ugly mirror-ball trophy. Highlights from the cast include Kirstie Alley, Shawn Johnson, Drew Lachey and headline-making Bristol Palin. It should be a tough race -- six returnees are past champions. Johnson, Lachey, Apolo Anton Ohno, Emmitt Smith, Kelly Monaco and Hélio Castroneves have all claimed the title before. (Sept. 24, 8 p.m., ABC.)

    Slideshow: 'Dancing With the Stars: All Stars'

    Launch slideshow


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    TUESDAY: 'Carol's Favorites'
    They don't make comedy shows today like they did in Carol Burnett's day. And get those kids off my lawn. "The Carol Burnett Show" ran from 1967 to 1978, and those of us who were around during that time remember it fondly. Carol's Tarzan yell. The questions from the audience. Her TV commercial parodies. "Went with the Wind," featuring Carol as "Starlet" O'Hara, wearing a curtain gown complete with curtain rod.  A six-DVD set, "Carol's Favorites," comes out this week and features 17 complete episodes, and yes, it includes "Went With the Wind." She just saw it in the window and couldn't resist it. (Out on DVD Sept. 25.)

    .

    Watch on YouTube

    FRIDAY: 'Looper'
    Time travel never quite works out in movies. We think we'll just zip back in time, kill Hitler, save the dinosaurs, pick the right lottery numbers, but no such luck. "Looper" takes place in a future where time travel is illegal but used by criminals, who often send someone back into the past as a way of getting rid of them. Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a "looper," a man whose job is to kill those travelers, but one day, the man who appears is his own future self (played by Bruce Willis). "Looper" is getting mostly rave reviews, and Gordon-Levitt is one of the hottest actors on the screen these days.  This one looks like a must-see. (Opens Sept. 28.) 

    Related content:

    • Olympian Shawn Johnson joins TODAY.com to blog 'Dancing With the Stars'
    • Join our 'Dancing With the Stars' live chats
    • 'Dancing' fans vote Sabrina Bryan into 'All Stars'
    Show more
    Explore related topics: dancing-with-the-stars, looper, featured, carol-burnett-show, best-bets
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    9:29am, EDT

    Kristen Stewart steals limelight as Toronto film fest opens

    George Pimentel / Getty Images

    Actress Kristen Stewart attends the "On the Road" premiere during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday.

    By Christine Kearney, Reuters

    TORONTO -- The Toronto film festival opened on Thursday with action movie "Looper" starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, but it was "Twilight" star Kristen Stewart who attracted the biggest buzz on the red carpet at the star-studded festival scattered with Oscar hopefuls.

    Anticipation was high for one of the world's premier film festivals that coming off Venice helps mark the beginning of Hollywood's awards season. Filmmakers see it as crucial launching pad and Toronto has previously propelled such films as "The King's Speech" to go on to success at the Academy Awards.

    Ben Affleck, Selena Gomez, Halle Berry, Tom Hanks and rapper-turned reggae wannabe Snoop Dogg, now known as Snoop Lion, are all among a lineup of top stars due to appear.

    But it was Kristen Stewart who wowed the red carpet Thursday, signing autographs to streams of cheering fans in her first media appearance since issuing an unusual public apology for cheating on long-term boyfriend and "Twilight" co-star Robert Pattinson with British film director Rupert Sanders.

    Without directly referring to the scandal, Stewart, 22, told Reuters she was thankful "to know that everyone is here" and the support she described as "amazing" before she walked into the premiere of "On The Road" based on Jack Kerouac's seminal book of the postwar Beat Generation.

    At a nearby theater, "Looper," a futuristic action blockbuster featuring Gordon Levitt and Bruce Willis about an assassin haunted by his time-traveling future self, officially kicked off the 11-day festival that will screen more than 280 films.

    It was the first U.S.-China co-production to open the festival, but is not one of the films being keenly watched by Oscar observers. It was chosen as the opening film due to its perceived broad entertainment appeal in a slot once mostly reserved for Canadian productions or filmmakers.

    Director Rian Johnson told reporters Thursday that following China's input into the production, a Paris location was switched to Shanghai and that even a joke was later inserted into the script - when Gordon-Levitt's character dreams of France he is warned by his future self of China's influence: "I'm from the future; you should go to China."

    In a sign of Hollywood's possible future, the festival's co-director Cameron Bailey backed that up speaking to a packed premiere audience about China's part in the movie, "It's not that common yet but this is the future of filmmaking."

    "Cloud Atlas" ahead
    Johnson and the film's stars said they believed the film had more emotional appeal than pure blockbuster entertainment value.

    Asked about the violence in "Looper" and the wider movie world coming off the Colorado movie house massacre where during a screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in July a gunman killed 12 people, Willis defended violence in the movies as a part of their integral, emotional pull.

    "Violence is one of the hard, bad things that exist in the world. It's not just in films; it exists anywhere," he told reporters. "And to pick one thing out and say 'Well, you shouldn't have violence in films or you shouldn't make violence a part of a film, would be like taking the emotion out of it."

    The movie's themes also prompted questions for the two stars about time travel and what they might change in the past. Gordon-Levitt said he would like to see the future - "I consider myself an optimist" - while Willis reflected: "I would remind myself every couple of minutes not to take myself seriously."

    By Friday, the festival will quickly turn toward some of the more anticipated films already gaining Oscar buzz, including Ben Affleck's "Argo," based on the story of how the CIA smuggled six Americans under the cover of a Hollywood production during the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.

    Also competing for critics and audience attention will be Paul Thomas Anderson's "The Master," David O. Russell's "Silver Linings Playbook" and "Cloud Atlas", an adaptation of the best-selling novel directed by Tom Tykwer and "Matrix" co-directors Andy and Lana Wachowski and starring Tom Hanks and Halle Berry.

    Optimism by sellers and buyers added to the festival's excitement, with its reputation as a hot marketplace for its ability to grab media attention and attract quality productions.

    Summing up why Toronto has quickly risen from its launch in 1976 to become one of the world's most desirable film destinations, Gordon-Levitt noted its reputation for low-key serious moviegoers.

    "This is a festival that is full of cinephiles," he said. "It doesn't have the air of glitz and glamour and I really like that about it. It's more about the films."

    Related content:

    • VMA host addresses Stewart's affair: People make mistakes
    • Kristen Stewart slideshow
    Show more
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Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Gael Cooper is the movies editor for TODAY.com and a pop-culture junkie. She is the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?" and "The Totally Sweet '90s."

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