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January 22nd, 2008

Maybe drugs. Maybe suicide. What a goddamned waste. The Times city desk has the latest, but it's a whole bunch of nothing at this point. He was 28.
This was a guy who was growing further and further into himself as an actor. His performance in "Brokeback Mountain" trumped anything he had done up to that time -- it remains one of the most daringly internalized things I've ever seen. The trailers alone of his turn as The Joker had me excited about the prospect of seeing another "Batman" movie, something I didn't think was possible.
All the things he could have done, and now we'll never see them. Stupid, stupid, stupid. My deepest condolences to his family.
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January 22nd, 2008
Like The Goonies, The Monster Squad congers up memories of my childhood. I remember the first time I saw it, when I was around 8 or 9 years old, and thought how awesome it was that you had all these classic movie monsters on one screen AND have a group of kids fight them. So when I finally got the chance to watch it again after nearly two decades, I was enthusiastic as ever. It was like opening up a time capsule, now encased in a two disk DVD. Yet, after about half-way through I realized that like Pop Rocks and Santa Claus, I had outgrown The Monster Squad. (more…)
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January 22nd, 2008
Heath Ledger has died at the age of 28. The Australian born actor was found dead by his housekeeper this afternoon in his New York apartment. As yet the precise cause of death has not been determined.
The former Home and Away star’s career was launched by the hit teen romantic comedy, 10 Things I Hate About You. He went on to earn an Oscar nomination for his role in Brokeback Mountain in 2006 and his latest performance was as a version of Bob Dylan in ‘I’m Not There.’ The late actor is due to appear later this year in ‘The Dark Knight’ in which he plays Batman’s nemesis, The Joker. He had been in the middle of shooting The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus with Terry Gilliam when he died.
It’s is an immense tragedy to see such a talented actor pass away at such a young age. May he rest in peace.
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January 22nd, 2008
OK, I’ll keep this short : what a load of shite! Good God, it’s been a while since I watched such a crap film. Annabelle (Erin Kelly), the seventeen-year-old daughter of a senator, is packed off to a Catholic girl’s boarding school after being expelled from her two previous schools. Pretty girls in uniform, stuck on campus and feeling rebellious is a promising arena for some forbidden love and steamy sex scenes, but boy did they f*ck this one up.
(more…)
Technorati tags: chokingonpopcorn movie Reviews Loving Annabelle
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January 22nd, 2008
ADVISORY, Jan. 22, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) --
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January 22nd, 2008
Britney Spears’s deposition at the hands of Kevin Federline lawyer Mark Vincent Kaplan has been an emotionally difficult experience that has only just begun, Kaplan says.
“We are going over things that are very, very gut-wrenching,” Kaplan said Monday night, speaking outside of Katsuya restaurant in Brentwood. He declined to discuss specifics of the questioning, but said, “Just to revisit them even in your own mind would not be pleasurable.”
“It’s not something anyone would enjoy,” he says.
Spear has a spotty record with past deposition dates in the custody case, missing numerous appointments and sitting for only 14 minutes on Jan. 3. Kaplan is expected to be grilling Spears, 26, about past drug and alcohol use, her failure to comply with court orders and any other subject relating to her fitness as a parent.
After a meltdown and brief forced hospitalization, Spears lost visitation rights with sons Preston, 2, and Jayden, 1. Ex-husband Federline, 29, has sole legal and physical custody.
Even Monday’s session was in doubt.
“She was about 50 minutes late,” he says. “After an hour I would have been over it. I was prepared to terminate had she not showed at that time.”
Spears was spotted biting her fingernails when arriving to Kaplan’s Century City Plaza office. After spending more than two hours there, Spears appeared tense and lit up a cigarette behind the wheel of her Mercedes before driving through Beverly Hills listening to Madonna on the stereo.
The deposition on a national holiday Monday was booked after the shortened deposition on Jan. 3. The holiday booking was done to accommodate busy lawyer schedules, says Kaplan, and it “did dovetail into allowing this to be a low-profile appearance.”
Kaplan says there will further depositions in the unspecified future, claiming that he has only worked through “2 percent” of his questions.
“There is a lot of work to be done,” he says. But he adds he was heartened by the idea of even having the meeting in the first place.
“She came for her deposition, that’s great,” says Kaplan. “Showing up is form over substance.”
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January 22nd, 2008
Heath Ledger was found dead at his Manhattan residence, a police spokesman confirms to the Associated Press. He was 28.
Police say the death may be drug-related. The NYPD spokesman tells AP that Ledger had a massage appointment at his Soho apartment. When the housekeeper went to alert Ledger the masseuse was there, she found him dead at around 3:26 p.m.
The Perth, Australia, native was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar for 2005’s Brokeback Mountain, on whose set he met – and began a romantic relationship with – Michelle Williams. Theirs was described by others on the film as love at first sight.
Their daughter, Matilda Rose, was born in New York on Oct. 28, 2005. Ledger and Williams, who shared a brownstone together in Brooklyn, split in September 2007.
Ledger began his acting career in 1996, when he was 17, in an Australian TV series called Sweat.
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January 22nd, 2008
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 22, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- DGA President Michael Apted announced today that Carl Reiner will return as host for the 60th Annual Directors Guild of America Awards. This year will mark the 21st time Reiner has hosted the DGA Awards, which will take place on Saturday, January 26, 2008 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles.
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January 22nd, 2008
There may or may not be an Oscars show, but there will be blood. Paul Thomas Anderson?s not-that-bloody, critically adored film about the self-destruction of a California oil magnate and ?No Country for Old Men,? Joel and Ethan Coen?s grisly chase thriller, led this morning?s Academy Award nominations with eight apiece, including one each for best picture.
Their fellow nominees are equally swept up in bad news or tragedy. ?Michael Clayton,? Tony Gilroy?s story of a serious corruption involving a New York law firm, was right behind ?There Will Be Blood? and ?No Country? with seven nominations. ?Atonement,? a romantic wartime epic about nosiness, gossip, and remorse, had six. And ?Juno,? America?s favorite teen-pregnancy comedy, got four, including a surprising nod for its director, Jason Reitman.
Reitman joins Anderson, the Coens, Gilroy, and Julian Schnabel, for ?The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,? which along with ?Ratatouille,? ?Into the Wild,? and ?American Gangster,? didn?t make the best-picture cut. Joe Wright, who made ?Atonement,? was left off the directing list (maybe that five-minute tracking shot bugged the Academy?s directors branch, too). So was Sean Penn for ?Into the Wild,? which got just two nominations, one for Hal Holbrook?s performance and another for editing.
Before a foxy Kathy Bates and a tired-looking Sid Ganis made the televised announcements today, ?Atonement? was considered a front-runner. But with no directing nomination, the picture race is slightly more open. Neither of the movie?s leads, James McAvoy and Keira Knightley, was nominated.
That?s too bad. McAvoy?s miserable soldier would have fit right in with the five actual best-actor nominees since none one of the men they played had much to smile about. George Clooney was a stressed-out lawyer in ?Michael Clayton.? Daniel Day-Lewis was a mad oil baron in ?There Will Be Blood.? Johnny Depp played an undead, heart-sick, throat-slashing serial killer in ?Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.? Viggo Mortensen was a sour Russian mobster in ?Eastern Promises.? And Tommy Lee Jones, the morning?s happiest surprise, was the stoic military dad looking for his AWOL son in ?In the Valley of Elah.? The Academy?s acting branch clearly didn?t know what to do with either of Philip Seymour Hoffman?s blazing performances in ?The Savages? and ?Before the Devil Knows You?re Dead,? nominating him instead in the supporting actor category for ?Charlie Wilson?s War.?
In the best actress category, it?s a bunch of indomitable women ? Cate Blanchett as the Virgin Queen in ?Elizabeth: the Golden Age,? Julie Christie living with Alzheimer?s in ?Away from Her,? Marion Cotillard as Edith Piaf in ?La Vie en Rose,? and Laura Linney playing a slacking intellectual narcissist in ?The Savages? ? squaring off against one sardonic 19-year-old. That would be Ellen Page as a teen mother-to-be in ?Juno.? Notably absent are Angelina Jolie for playing Marianne Pearl in ?A Mighty Heart? and Amy Adams for playing a fairy-tale princess stranded in Manhattan in ?Enchanted.?
Joining Hoffman?s porcine CIA agent and Holbrook?s teary codger in the supporting-actor category are Casey Affleck as a proto-celebrity stalker in ?The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford,? Javier Bardem as the killer with the kooky haircut in ?No Country for Old Men,? and Tom Wilkinson as a high-powered who believes himself Shiva the Goddess of Death in ?Michael Clayton.?
Blanchett appears again, more expectedly, in the supporting actress category for playing a pseudo-Bob Dylan in Todd Haynes?s ?I?m Not There.? Her fellow nominees are 13-year-old Saorsie Ronan, the budding playwright with the destructive imagination in ?Atonement,? Amy Ryan as the mother of the year in ?Gone Baby Gone, Tilda Swinton as a high-strung attorney in ?Michael Clayton,? and, holy of holies, Ruby Dee as Denzel Washington?s momma (and the only person with any common sense) in ?American Gangster.?
The two screenwriting categories are remarkable because they include four women (it shouldn?t have to be noteworthy, but it is). For adapted screenplay, the nominees include actress-director Sarah Polley for ?Away from Her." She joins Paul Thomas Anderson, the Coen brothers, Christopher Hampton for ?Atonement,? and Ronald Harwood for ?The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.? For original screenplay, Diablo Cody (?Juno?), Tamara Jenkins (?The Savages?), and Nancy Oliver (?Lars and the Real Girl?) are up against Brad Bird (?Ratatouille?) and Tony Gilroy.
The documentary feature category continues to remain credible after a few adjustments in the nominating process. This five films on this year?s slate include: Charles Ferguson?s unhappy Iraq-invasion assessment, ?No End in Sight?; Richard E. Robbins?s ?Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience,? recollections of soldiers who?ve fought in Afghanistan and Iraq; Michael Moore?s moving health-care farce, ?Sicko?; ?Taxi to the Dark Side,? Alex Gibney?s look at the murder of a cab driver at Bagram Air Force Base; and ?War/Dance,? Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine?s film about children in a Ugandan dance competition.
Now that the documentary category seems OK, maybe the Academy can work on straightening out the foreign-language-film nomination process, which some years is fine and other years is mysterious. With all due respect to the actual nominees, this year is a mysterious one, mostly for the superb submitted films that were snubbed: ?4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days? (Romania), ?Silent Light? (Mexico), ?Secret Sunshine? (Korea), ?The Edge of Heaven? (Germany), and, from France, ?Persepolis,? which, miraculously, did make the animation cut, along with ?Ratatouille? and ?Surf?s Up.?
In any case, this year?s foreign-language-film nominees are: ?Beaufort? (Israel); ? The Counterfeiters? (Austria); ?Katyn? (Poland); ?Mongol? (Kazakhstan); and Nikita Mikhalkov?s Chechnya-bound ?12 Angry Men?-remake, ?12? (Russia).
This year?s most flagrant omission was by the music by Radiohead?s Jonny Greenwood for ?There Will Be Blood,? which probably wasn't orchestral enough for voters in the best score category. The nominees for original score are Dario Marianelli for ?Atonement,? Alberto Iglesias for ?The Kite Runner,? James Newton Howard for ?Michael Clayton,? Michael Giacchino for ?Ratatouille,? and Marco Beltrami for ?3:10 to Yuma.?
This a good year for fun Oscar history: Cate Blanchett is the first woman to be nominated for playing a man who isn?t a cross-dresser or transsexual. She?s also the second actor to be nominated two different times for the same character. (Her first-ever nomination was for 1998?s ?Elizabeth.?) Paul Newman was twice nominated for his work as Eddie Felson in ?The Hustler? and ?The Color of Money,? for which he won an Oscar. And ?No Country for Old Men? marks only the second time two people have been nominated for directing the same movie. (Warren Beatty and Buck Henry shared a nomination for 1978?s ?Heaven Can Wait.?) And at 83, first-time nominee Ruby Dee is the second-oldest nominee, after 87-year-old Gloria Stuart of ?Titanic.?
Of course, the only Academy Awards history that really matters right now is whether this will be the first year the telecast won?t go on. Will the Writers Guild of America?s strike and the actors? refusal to cross the picket line result in a canceled event? Will negotiations heat up at the last minute, meaning a postponed broadcast? Or will there just be a sad little Golden Globes-style press conference presided over by, say, Ryan Seacrest and Star Jones? Stay tuned. This could be the first year Oscar is a loser at his very own show.
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January 22nd, 2008
Filed under: Celebrities and Controversy, Obits  Cinematical's staff would like to take a moment to share our thoughts on Heath Ledger, who passed away today after an apparent overdose.Although Heath Ledger's best known film to date is Brokeback Mountain, my favorite of his films was Candy, in which he starred opposite fellow Australian Abbie Cornish. His performance in Candy, as an artist and heroin addict in a mutually destructive relationship with Cornish's nice middle-class girl, was so riveting and raw, and it's one of those fest films that I've thought about often since I saw it. Like most everyone who's here working Sundance, I was deeply shocked by the news of his tragic death today. He touched us through his films, and we are saddened by the loss of his life, and the films he would have made in the future. His family, especially his young daughter Matilda, will be in our thoughts and prayers. -Kim Voynar My original feeling about Heath Ledger -- after films like The Patriot, A Knight's Tale, and 10 Things I Hate About You -- was that he was yet another handsome and likable matinee idol ... but not much more than that. But over the last several years, I was proven wrong ... several times. My favorite performance of his was the lead role in the underrated Casanova -- and I'll be giving that film a second spin as soon as I get home from Sundance. He was a very fine actor who clearly took a lot of pride in his work, and I believe that the movie world has just lost a good soul. My heart goes out to his friends, his family, his fans, and also to the departed Heath Ledger; (If his death is ruled a suicide) I'm deeply sorry that he was so unhappy. (Regardless of the reason for the actor's death, it's a stunning tragedy.) -Scott Weinberg Like most young actors, Heath Ledger starred in his share of mediocre movies, yet he always appeared to take his work seriously, giving solid, professional performances regardless of the project. He knew he had to pay his dues before he got the prestige projects -- and when prestige finally arrived in the form of Brokeback Mountain, he was prepared for it. I had occasion to re-watch the last 20 minutes of that film just last week, and I was struck again by how much he does with so little. There are no tantrums or obvious "Oscar-bait" scenes. The character is reserved and unemotional; somehow, Ledger managed to convey so much about him anyway. He was a talented actor, and his death is a blow to the film community. -Eric D. Snider Many people finally came to respect Heath Ledger after his Oscar-nominated performance in Brokeback Mountain. But I honestly became a fan after 10 Things I Hate About You, a Shakespeare-inspired teen comedy that deserves a lot more credit than it receives. Ledger was a great actor, because he could do just about any kind of movie well. After 10 Things, he could have simply been a heartthrob. After The Patriot, a movie I guiltily admit I enjoy a lot, he could have easily gone further into action territory. And in The Brothers Grimm, he showed us that he had a decent knack for comedy, too. Even when everybody in the blogosphere was shocked to hear he'd be playing The Joker in The Dark Knight, he proved that he had the goods to pull it off. Now his performance in the Batman sequel is one of the most eagerly anticipated of the year. After watching the recently released trailer, I even felt like he could be nominated for a second Oscar for the role. It could still happen, I guess, but it won't be as exciting without Ledger himself to accept the honor. -Christopher Campbell When Monika sent me an Instant Message with the news, it hit me like a claw hammer to the forehead. I knew she wouldn't joke about something like that, but, on a day of supreme cinematic reflective self-love, as the indie world obsesses over a snowy resort town in Utah, as Hollywood celebrates nominees for an award that doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things, it's very sobering. Heath Ledger wasn't my favorite actor, but he was definitely one to watch, and the thought that his light has been extinguished at such a young age, leaving behind a young daughter ... it's so sad it makes me want to cry, and I never cry about celebrities. -Peter Martin Permalink | Email this | Comments
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