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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    6:13pm, EST

    'Avatar' star Sam Worthington arrested for disorderly conduct

    By Peter Gicas, E! Online

    Atlanta City Detention Center

    Sam Worthington in Georgia.

    "Clash of the Titans" star Sam Worthington apparently clashed with a doorman at a restaurant in Atlanta on Saturday. As a result, he wound up getting arrested, E! News confirms.

    The 36-year-old actor was supposedly not allowed to enter Vortex because he appeared highly intoxicated, according to the police report obtained by E! News. 

    Worthington is said to have then pushed the doorman twice and spoken to him using profane language. The doorman proceeded to pepper spray Worthington and handcuff him until police arrived, the report states. 

    View the police report 

    Authorities subsequently took Worthington into custody, and he was charged with disorderly conduct. 


    Follow @TODAY_ent

    On Monday, though, the City of Atlanta Municipal Court confirmed to E! News that the charges against Worthington were dismissed. However, it could not confirm that the charges were dismissed because the doorman failed to appear in court. 

    Celebrity mug-shot mania 

    A manager at Vortex had "no comment" when E! News reached out for a statement on the matter. 

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  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    9:45am, EDT

    Gods really are crazy in action-packed, story-light 'Wrath of the Titans'

    By Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

    Warner Bros.

    Sam Worthington in "Wrath of the Titans" gets to skewer a lot of monsters, and even ride Pegasus.

    REVIEW: If the Greeks think things are tough in their country right now, "Wrath of the Titans" can provide ample solace that things were once a whole lot worse. Serving up more action and better visual effects and 3D than the 2010 "Clash of the Titans," along with a barely-there screenplay that merely functions to notify Perseus which enemy or monster he should hack or skewer next, this is a relentlessly mechanical piece of work that will not or cannot take the imaginative leaps to yield even fleeting moments of awe, wonder or charm. But the elements, as they say, are present to produce a sequel that should approach the Olympian box office heights of its predecessor, which erupted for more than $493 million worldwide, a notable $330 million of which was generated outside the United States.

    PHOTOS: "Wrath of the Titans" posters revealed

    Greek mythology would amount to little were it not for abundant father-son conflict and this tale features two mighty generations of it. Buried deep and out of sight in particularly unfashionable part of the underworld called Tartarus is Kronos, imprisoned there by his sons Zeus, Hades and Poseidon (Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes and Danny Huston, all back and bearded for another nice payday).

    Nothing if not unreliable, however, Hades has a change of heart and, allied with Zeus' vicious son Ares (Edgar Ramirez, replacing Tamer Hassan in the role), captures Zeus and proceeds to begin transferring the latter's considerable powers to their restless dad. Enter Zeus' half-human son Perseus (Sam Worthington), who for a decade has been recovering from his battle with the Kraken by modestly working as a fisherman and being an exemplary single dad to son Helius (John Bell).

    As so many versions of Greek myths and the gods' actions existed even in ancient times, one can't take issue with the way they're employed by screenwriters Dan Mazeau, in his debut, and David Leslie Johnson ("Red Riding Hood") and co-story writer Greg Berlanti ("Green Lantern"), other than to note that the gods here, claiming undue neglect by humans, behave like petulant mercenaries as anxious to fight as some kid might be to play a video game.

    PHOTOS: Hollywood's A-List redefined


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    After a mettle-testing battle with the marauding Chimera, a notably aggressive flying, fiery-mouthed beast with two large heads and snapping snake's head at the end of its tail, Perseus sets out to rescue Zeus along with Andromeda (Rosamund Pyke, so delectably decked out in a snug-fitting leather outfit as to look like Katniss Everdeen's older sister), and Poseidon's wayward son Agenor (Toby Kebbell, resembling a Russell Brand clone). They in turn are joined by one-time god of craftsmanship Hephaestus (Bill Nighy), who, as its designer, is the only one capable of negotiating the complex labyrinth leading to the underworld.

    The amusingly cranky Hephaestus represents a welcome relief from the other, uniformly self-serious sojourners, but he's unaccountably knocked off almost as soon as he shows up, a major blunder by the filmmakers. If you've got Bill Nighy, for a god's sake use him; the narrative could easily have accommodated keeping him on the journey for far longer until, say, Hephaestus might have misremembered some detail of his design, leading to a comically resigned demise.

    Instead, things just keep getting heavier. While the relentless Ares tortures his chained father, whose arms are slowly consumed by fire, Perseus must fight off Cyclops triplets, an only glancingly-viewed Minotaur and, perhaps weirdest of all, some wild fighting machines called Makhai, which have four weapons-wielding arms and twin twisting bodies atop two legs (and, yes, Perseus does get to ride Pegasus).

    VIDEO: "Wrath of the Titans" debuts new trailer featuring bigger, badder battles

    When he finally emerges with the intention of laying the world to waste, Kronos could legitimately be considered the original mountain man; formed out of burning rock, he towers over all and can set fire to anything in sight with the wave of an arm. Shrewdly designed, he cuts, arguably, a pretty awesome figure, and his destruction presents Perseus with a challenge more or less on a par with what Bruce Willis faced in "Armageddon." The aftermath strongly suggests that the twilight of the gods has arrived, with humans now left to their own devices to make their way in the world without divine intervention.

    As most of the dialogue is shouted or bellowed, it's rather beside the point to speak of the performances, other than to say that Sam Worthington looked marginally more at home on Pandora than he does in the Greece of myth. Effects work is not only abundant but sharp and some imagination enhances the production design. At the screening caught, image brightness was diminished only slightly through the 3-D glasses.

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  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    11:14am, EST

    'Man on a Ledge' takes a tumble into predictability

    Summit Entertainment

    Jamie Bell (left) and Sam Worthington have a high-flying discussion in "Man on a Ledge"

    By Michael Rechtshaffen , The Hollywood Reporter

    REVIEW

    When dealing with a movie called "Man on a Ledge," there are certain inescapable expectations that should go with the territory.

    First of all, unless the intended meaning is a figurative one, it ought to involve an actual man perched somewhere on a ledge.

    Secondly, there should be a palpable, edge-of-your-seat peril; that at any moment the individual and his ledge could part company.

    To his credit, director Asger Leth ("Ghosts of Cite Soleil") gets right to the business at hand where the set-up is concerned, but it’s in the execution that this would-be thriller falls flat.

    There’s never the feeling that wronged cop Sam Worthington is in any real danger despite spending most of the film’s 103-minute running time clinging to his windswept Roosevelt Hotel roost, some 200 feet above 45th Street.

    That’s not to say the talky picture is a complete letdown, thanks mainly to a colorful cast that has its energetic way with the B-movie dialogue (courtesy of screenwriter Pablo F. Fenjves, ghostwriter of the infamous O.J. Simpson book, "If I Did It: The Confessions of the Killer") it has its entertaining moments, but it never lives up to that nail-biting potential.

    The promise of something more could initially lure the thrill-seekers, but this Summit Entertainment release will likely perform best in its ancillary life.

    Having recently escaped from prison, disgraced NYPD detective Nick Cassidy (Worthington) checks into the midtown Manhattan hotel, and, after ordering room service, promptly climbs out of his window and onto that tight ledge.

    Is he really suicidal?  Or is this his one shot to proclaim his innocence to the quickly-swarming crowd below?  And just what is his relationship to the piranha of a businessman (Ed Harris) who’s about to unveil his new real estate venture?

    It should come as no surprise that not everything is quite what it seems to be in "Man on a Ledge," but the various reveals would have been more effective if the audience had been too distracted to figure out the "Mission: Impossible"-type machinations so far in advance.

    What was needed was the skill of a Sir Ridley or Tony Scott, the sort of filmmakers who can deliver on the sort of tightly-calibrated action sequences required here, constantly ratcheting up the tension.

    And while much of the plot logic also appears to have been tossed out that window and the corny dialogue does Aussie Worthington and his unconvincing New York accent no favors, others in the cast, including Elizabeth Banks as a jaded NYPD negotiator and Jamie Bell as Worthington’s younger brother, manage to keep things lively.

    Looking to be particularly enjoying herself is Kyra Sedgwick as a tough cookie of a New York TV reporter named Suzy Morales who elicits chuckles each time she rolls the “r” in her last name.

    Sam Worthington plays an ex-con who threatens to jump from a high-rise ledge, but who is also participating in an operation to prove his innocence and bring down the man responsible for his imprisonment. Opens Jan. 13.

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