Thursday, September 9, 2010

Joaquin Phoenix not quitting acting just yet

Fri Sep 10, 2010 1:10am EDT

TORONTO Hollywood Reporter - Is he or isnt he? Quitting acting, that is.

Friday night, the maddeningly enigmatic Joaquin Phoenix will be in the spotlight as the Toronto International Film Festival unveils Casey Afflecks "Im Still Here," the is-it-real-or-is-it-an-elaborate-put-on documentary about Phoenixs self-proclaimed retirement from acting to focus on a hip-hop career.

Cutting through all the fog, one thing is clear: Hollywood has not given up on Phoenix, and he has not turned his back on Hollywood. Any talk of his retirement definitely is premature.

Although Phoenix has not signed up for his next role, he recently was in negotiations to star with Jeremy Renner in "The Raven," an indie period thriller centering on Edgar Allan Poe. Phoenix would have played Poe to Renners police detective, but the deal fell through last month when Renner moved on to do "Mission: Impossible 4." The Poe role went to John Cusack.

"Raven" was the closest Phoenix has come to boarding a movie, but there have been other close calls. He was in talks to star with Sean Penn in "Genius," which centers on the relationship between literary editor Max Perkins and young novelist Thomas Wolfe. Phoenix was eyeing the showy role of Wolfe.

He also circled "The Sitter" and even got a real offer from Fox to play a drug dealer in the Jonah Hill comedy about a college student who is talked into baby-sitting the three misfit kids next door.

Why Phoenix never went for the roles is unclear, though if there are germs of truth in "Im Still Here," his complicated relationship with the craft of acting and its attendant celebrity could be a factor. The whole mystery took on an extra layer of complexity Thursday when word circulated that an impostor was tricking fans by hitting the fests red carpets and pretending to be Phoenix. The only problem with the reports is that there had been no independent sightings of the impostor because no red-carpet events had taken place.

When reached for comment, a publicist for the impostor -- yes, even impostors are required to have publicists -- responded, "You be the judge"; he said his client claims to be the real Phoenix; and he predicted that there would be "a showdown" at the movies screening when the two Phoenixes come face to face.

While his camp would not comment on projects he has not signed for, some speculate he could be waiting for the release of the documentary, which Magnolia opens Friday in select North American theaters, before jumping back into his acting career with both feet.

Speaking of feet, there is one role to which Phoenix is attached: that of a foot and shoe fetishist who also is an amazing footwear designer in the indie "Big Shoe." Those who have read it describe the script, which combines dramatic and comedic elements, as "out there but cool." The project -- to be directed by Steven Shainberg, who tackled fetishism with 2002s "Secretary" -- has not assembled financing, so who knows whether Phoenix will do more than dip his toe in it.



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Are zombies the new vampires in Hollywood?

Thu Sep 9, 2010 10:52pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Hollywood Reporter - Whats that shambling over the curb toward the local theater? No, behind the vampires. Could it be a stampede of the undead about to take over Hollywood?

Cable channel AMCs new drama series "The Walking Dead" debuts on Halloween, and more than a half-dozen zombie-related feature projects are on their way to theaters -- including Fridays "Resident Evil: Afterlife" -- or in development at the studios. With this many flesh-rotting grave-jumpers on tap, could zombies be making a run -- or, perhaps, a very slow, clumsy walk -- at the pop culture crown?

"Zombie movies, much like zombies, could become this horde that just marches across the world," said Rhett Reese, who co-wrote last years breakout hit "Zombieland" with Paul Wernick.

The movie, TV and publishing industries have been feasting on vampires for material the past few years. But like every profitable trend, the obsession with bloodsuckers must eventually head back into the coffin for a nap the last "Twilight" adaptation opens November 2012. Staring down that inevitability, the networks and studios may be turning to zombies to step up from understudies to stars.

But can zombies compete at that level? With "Twilight" and "True Blood" as pop cultures current twin hundred-million-dollar genre powerhouses, does Team Undead have that strong or deep a bench?

Zombies have always been part of the B-cinema mix, and George A. Romero showed how the rising hordes could stand in for any number of political or social scares when he unleashed his 1968 shocker "Night of the Living Dead." Now 70, Romero has explored variations on the themes racism, consumerism, conformity with "The Crazies" 1973, "Dawn of the Dead" 1978, "Day of the Dead" 1985, "Land of the Dead" 2005 and "Diary of the Dead" 2008. But these films have never been hits, and his most recent, "Survival of the Dead," was relegated to a VOD offering in 2009.

But a couple of recent developments have hinted at new potential for zombies on the big and small screens. Sonys "Zombieland," a comedic take on the material, scrambled into theaters in October and grossed $76 million domestically on a budget less than a third of that, making it the highest-grossing zombie movie ever. Naturally, Reese and Wernick -- who intended to make a TV series with "Zombieland" -- are deep into writing a sequel for Ruben Fleischer to direct, perhaps next year.

The higher-budget "Resident Evil" movies, based on a video game about a virus turning people into zombies, have done well for Screen Gems since the franchise launched in 2002. The three films the fourth will be in 3D have grossed $378 million worldwide.

The other big recent development was the critical success of Danny Boyle and Alex Garlands 2003 twist on the genre, "28 Days Later." Notably, Garland and Boyle proposed the first real evolution in the mythology of the undead in some time: What if instead of being brainless, slow-moving hordes they were rabidly quick and showed some intelligence?

The film grossed $83 million globally on a budget of about $10 million, and its 2007 sequel, "28 Weeks Later," grossed about three-fourths of that. Around the same time, Zack Snyder remade Romeros "Dawn of the Dead" in 2004 with some name cast Ving Rhames, Sarah Polley and pulled in more than $100 million in worldwide grosses.

So there is money to be made, but, so far, not vampire money. And thats because zombies are at a disadvantage in a number of ways.

Number one? Lack of sex appeal. Werewolves and vampires have an animal recognition that allows for treatment of hybrid sexuality and even -- as "Twilight" has shown -- teen romance. Brad Pitt or Robert Pattinson wanting to suck your blood is kind of a turn-on. But zombies by invention are dead, or undead, and thus far no one has found a way to make necrophilia hot surely the CW is hard at work on this.

And this may speak to its second disadvantage: lack of appeal with women. While horror tends to draw strong numbers from the female ranks, zombie films are some of the least attractive to women and girls. Slashers, serial killers, demonic forces, sure, but the undead, and the rampant gore that tends to be endemic to cinematic forays into the zombie world, have been a serious turn-off.

"Theres a gross-out factor," Reese said. "It could be that zombies never entirely get over that bar with women. Theyre afraid of the gore, theyre afraid of the splatter. But theres a long tradition of women loving horror movies once they get in there and see it -- if they can just get convinced to go. We used comedy and romance as our hook to get women into theaters."

As well as strong female characters, which may be part of the reason the "Resident Evil" films, with Milla Jovovich kicking so much zombie ass, appeal so widely. Wernick jokes that the way to widen the female demo is as simple as casting: "You just find the next Taylor Lautner and Rob Pattinson and put them in zombie makeup."

Adds Sean McKittrick, producer of the upcoming adaptation of "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies": "Vampires wouldnt be as successful if they werent attractive. Vampires are objects of desire. Zombies, so far, are not."

Not yet.

Summit Entertainment, which has produced and distributed the billions-grossing "Twilight" franchise, is developing a project with "The Wackness" filmmaker Jonathan Levine based on Issac Marions novel "Warm Bodies." Its a story that takes the rare romantic tack in telling the story of a zombie who falls in love with a human woman whose boyfriend hes killed.

"Zombies have fallen into a very narrow sub-genre, the post-apocalyptic zombie genre, and it limits the kinds of stories can you tell," said Chris Roberson, author of the DC/Vertigo comic "I, Zombie." In the comic, Roberson tries a "romantic dramedy" approach that follows a female zombie with a conscience that needs to eat brains once a month but seeks out the freshly dead instead of the living. In a twist that adds depth to the story, she absorbs that cadavers life memories and finds herself on a journey to explore the hows and whys of the persons death.

"Its about getting into the head of your protagonist and imagining what it would be like to be a zombie thats a hero and not a sociopath," Roberson explained.

This may be what the zombie trope needs: a new take along the lines of what Boyle and Garland created for "28 Days Later." Zombies have always been pretty one-dimensional, constantly reinforcing the image of gray-faced goons stumbling forward awkwardly with their arms out while groaning, "Brains

..."

"Its going to take somebody to break that mold," McKittrick said.

Just like shows such as "True Blood" and "The Vampire Diaries" have tweaked the rules for vampires, the zombie playbook needs a rewrite, something that pushes zombie evolution forward to open up new possibilities. The obvious target is their intelligence. Aside from their typically lethargic pace, zombies have traditionally been mindless killing machines that could fairly easily be dispatched.

This also happens to be part of their appeal, even as it sets them apart from vampires.

"The appeal of zombie movies is quite the opposite," Reese said. "You wouldnt want to be a zombie, you wouldnt want to fall in love with a zombie, you just want to kill a zombie. Zombies stand in for all of the fears that we face in our everyday lives. And theres a vicarious thrill in the idea of taking a baseball bat to the head of your fears, metaphorically."

What zombies most often offer in a universal sense taps into humans baser desires: to rule the world and to kill without remorse or repercussion. "Theres a wish-fulfillment to the world of zombies and the postapocalypse," Wernick said. "This idea that you can do anything you want, you can kill without consequence, you can drive the fanciest cars without paying for them. I do think theres a wish fulfillment in this world that isnt necessarily in the world of vampires that really taps into peoples wants and desires. In that respect, I do think it could be as big as vampires."

Independent and mainstream filmmakers alike look to be taking a swing at deepening the zombie context and tweaking the approach. In addition to AMCs adaptation of Robert Kirkmans graphic novel "The Walking Dead," about a police officer trying to help humans survive in a world taken over by zombies, Paramount is developing "World War Z," an adaptation of the epic post-zombie apocalypse Max Brooks novel, with Marc Forster directing and Pitt starring.

"Sphere" director Barry Levinson is developing a zombie eco-thriller called "The Bay" previously "Isopod" that entails a viral outbreak in a small town in the southeast. Meanwhile, "Black Swan" star Natalie Portman is developing an adaptation of Seth Grahame-Smiths best-selling comic novel "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" at Lionsgate.

Warner Bros. has "Army of the Dead" developing with Snyders Cruel & Unusual Films; "Dude, Wheres My Car?" director Danny Leiner is working on "The Corporate Zombie Killers"; and Romeros "Night of the Living Dead" co-writer John A. Russo has "Escape of the Living Dead" planned.

The Toronto International Film Festival will screen "L.A. Zombie," a German-French "pornographic art film" in which "corpse-eating meets poverty politics" in the story of an alien zombie wreaking havoc in L.A. with, reportedly, no dialogue. And the Deagol Brothers independent horror film "Make-out With Violence," a kind of sick love story that has been screening at festivals for more than two years, just got a limited release.

The third thing zombies need, then, is a wider palette, since most of zombie cinema is used to symbolize the breakdown of society or the scary conformity of the McCarthy era. Comedy and romance are genres that zombie filmmakers havent often tried.

There are examples, from the 1985 Romero rip-off "Return of the Living Dead" to Edgar Wright and Simon Peggs "Shaun of the Dead" in 2004. Early 80s comedy-schlock kings Sam Raimi and Peter Jackson delivered classics such as "Evil Dead II" 1987 and "Dead Alive" 1993. The 1984 joker "Night of the Comet" pitted Valley Girls against some comet-infused zombies, and last years "Dead Snow" featured Nazi zombies terrorizing some Norwegian medical students on a ski holiday.

Writer-director Takao Nakano "Sexual Parasite: Killer Pussy" has apparently put together a 3D horror comedy called "Big T-ts Zombie" that should break the mold a bit when it premieres in London in two weeks.

Given where the zombie film came from -- the ghoulish depravity of such classics as Del Tenneys 1964 flick "Zombies" aka "I Eat Your Skin", Edmond Kelso and Jean Yarbroughs 1941 feature "King of the Zombies" or Frank Martins 1980 filth-fest "Zombie Holocaust"/"Doctor Butcher M.D." -- zombies finally could be on their way to embracing their full potential, creatively and financially.

Roberson points out that the modernizing arc of monsters throughout literary history shows that creators looking for a fresh take eventually begin to humanize creatures originally designed purely to provoke fear.

"With Anne Rice and everything after, vampires have come out of the shadows and become more like us," Roberson said. "Zombies are still scary monsters in the shadows. But Im doing my part to get them out."



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"Virginity Hit" a bawdy crowdpleaser

Thu Sep 9, 2010 9:58pm EDT

NEW YORK Hollywood Reporter - Essentially the first feature-length YouTube video, "The Virginity Hit" updates the horny-teenager movie to the Internet era.

Its not surprising that Will Ferrell and Adam McKay are among the films producers, as the comedy essentially plays like an elongated version of something you might see on their "Funny or Die" website. Director-screenwriters Andrew Gurland and Huck Botko are no strangers to the mockumentary format; their credits include the cult film "Mail Order Wife" and the screenplay for "The Last Exorcism," in theatrical release.

The Columbia release opens Friday.

Inspired by the endless sorts of routinely humiliating online videos that probably have scarred innumerable fragile psyches, this relentlessly vulgar and profane comedy revolves around the efforts of a group of teens to help their nebbishy buddy Matt Matt Bennett lose his virginity after an ill-fated attempt with his sexually frustrated girlfriend Nicole Nicole Weaver. The friends have a personal motivation since having unfortunately chosen to document the experience -- including Matts horrendous bout with explosive diarrhea -- the ensuing video inadvertently becomes an Internet sensation.

The chief novelty and conceit is that the story is told entirely through shaky, hand-held video footage, giving the proceedings a by now all-too-familiar "Blair Witch Project" feel. The results are only partially successful. While no doubt younger, electronically weaned audience members will embrace the stylistic approach, the screenplay lacks the wit necessary to distinguish the film from the countless randy-teenager movies that have preceded it. And one would-be comic high point, depicting an episode of man-on-man scrotum grooming, is an exact retread of a similar gag from the recent "Shes Out of My League."

Still, the film offers enough raucous laughs to please its target audience, and for once the youthful ensemble cast actually look and act like real gawky teens. With the proper careful handling and careful astutely targeted marketing, "Virginity" might attain the cult status it so clearly seeks.



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Sole new entry "Resident Evil" to top box office

Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:21pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Hollywood Reporter - "Resident Evil: Afterlife" should set a new opening record for the zombie fright franchise when the 3D film opens Friday as the only new wide release at the weekend box office in North America.

The fourth entry in the Screen Gems/Sony video game-spawned series is set to earn at least $25 million during its first three days. Franchise originator Paul W.S. Anderson directed "Afterlife", with his wife Milla Jovovich again starring.

The most recent film, "Resident Evil: Extinction," opened to $23.7 million in September 2007 en route to a $51 million total. The final tally was in line with that of 2004s "Resident Evil: Apocalypse" and bigger than the $40 million haul of 2002s "Resident Evil."

"Afterlife" also will debut in most international territories during the next two weeks. German producer Constantin Films financed the reported $60 million production, with Sony acquiring distribution rights for most of the world.

"Were feeling good," Sony distribution president Rory Bruer said. "This is a global play for us, and there is a lot of heat for the film throughout the world."

Last weekends No. 1 picture, the George Clooney assassin drama "The American" should grab the silver medal if it can ring up half as much as its $16.7 million first weekend. Its older-skewing audience profile should translate into a leggier run than the normal thriller, a genre that often shows good playability.

Two other pictures also enter sophomore sessions this weekend -- Foxs crime actioner "Machete" and Warner Bros. romantic comedy "Going the Distance." "Machete" is unlikely to do more than 40% of its $14.1 million opening take. "Distance," which disappointed with $8.8 million, will look to add about $5 million to its total.

Also this session, Summit will rerelease "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse," a move sure to push the vampire threequel past the $300 million mark. The film has collected $298.8 million to date.



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Box Office Preview: Evil to scare away others AP

LOS ANGELES Its going to be a particularly evil weekend as Sony-Screen Gems "Resident Evil: Afterlife 3D" goes for the best debut in the history of the horror franchise with a 3-D powered gross that is likely to top the $25 million mark.

Star Milla Jovovich reprises her role as Alice, the kick-ass patron saint of the undead who takes no prisoners and shows no mercy to her enemies. In 2002, the first "Resident Evil" film opened at No. 2 with a solid $17.7 million. This was followed by "Apocalypse" in 2004 with a No. 1 debut of $23 million and in 2007 by "Extinction" with yet another No. 1 debut at a franchise-topping $23.7 million.

The lack of fresh wide-release competition, the continued appeal of the horror-action genre, and the general hotness of Jovovich should make this film the weekend winner by an apocalyptic mile.

Second and third place should be occupied by Focus Features "The American" and Foxs "Machete," with grosses between $5 million and $6 million and drops of more than 50 percent on their second weekend. The two films have had solid midweek grosses, but the difference between these two movies and the No. 1 film will provide one of the biggest gaps between the top two films that weve seen in a long time.

The young guns of Sonys "Takers" will likely end up fourth, although the film has shown incredible staying power since its release and could shoot for third or even second place in its third weekend of release.

This leaves fifth place in a fight between the devil and Miss Barrymore as the third weekend of Lionsgates "The Last Exorcism" and the sophomore session of Warner Bros. "Going the Distance" each eek out between $2.5 million to $3 million.

___

Paul Dergarabedian is president of the Box Office Division of Hollywood.com. and has been providing box office information to The Associated Press for nearly two decades.

___

Online: http://www.Hollywood.com/boxoffice



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Biel, Mendes and Weisz go behind the camera for Glamour

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 9, 2010 6:19pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters - Look out Hollywood Three actresses are delving into movie directing for the first time, thanks to Glamour Magazine.

Jessica Biel, Eva Mendes and Oscar-winner Rachel Weisz are each directing a short film for the magazines annual "Glamour Reel Moments."

The films are based on real stories written by Glamour readers about a personal story of a moment where they helped out or gave back. Thousands of submissions poured in to the magazine and Glamour narrowed them down to those most adaptable to a short film format.

Weisz, Mendes and Biel were presented with the finalists and each actress selected her story. Mendes and Biel have already shot theirs, while Weisz is scheduled to go into production this month.

All three films are centered around car sponsor Hyundais theme of "doing good" and will get a showcase in Los Angeles in October.

Biels short, "Sodalis," focuses on two little girls who are best friends. "For this film its do good for your loved one, your best friend. Do good for yourself," said Biel, seen most recently in Hollywoods summer action movie "The A-Team".

On Mendes film, "California Romanza," the director enlisted the help of Christina Ricci, Daniel Stern, Kathy Najimy and Troy Garity to appear.

"This whole project is so inspiring because I never thought I could do this," Mendes said. "It has been the most fulfilling experience of my career today."

Glamour Reel Moments, now in its fifth year, was designed to empower women in film by creating opportunities for them to get behind the camera to tell the stories of real women.

The magazine works with production company Freestyle to develop and produce the films.

The shorts will benefit a womens program for FilmAid International. The organization uses the power of film to help displaced refugees around the world.

Past actresses who got behind the camera for Reel Moments include Jennifer Aniston, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Hudson, Demi Moore and Dakota Fanning.

Over the years, the films have also made the rounds at over 25 film festivals including Sundance and Tribeca.

Editing by Jill Serjeant



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Co-owner of missing painting charged with fraud AP

NEW YORK A con man carried out an "inartful fraud" when he fooled an art collector into thinking they were partners in the $1.1 million purchase of a missing painting but was actually ripping the investor off, a federal prosecutor said Thursday.

Thomas Doyle, 54, was arrested on charges of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud in the dealings over a century-and-a-half-old painting by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot entitled "Portrait of a Girl."

Doyle took advantage of an investors enthusiasm for the painting by arranging in June for the investor to pay $880,000 for an 80 percent ownership share of a painting that was worth $500,000 to $700,000, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said.

"Doyles alleged efforts turned out to be an inartful fraud," Bharara said.

If Doyle decorates walls with fine art in the future, the walls "may be the inside of a prison cell," said Janice K. Fedarcyk, head of New Yorks FBI office.

A criminal complaint in U.S. District Court in Manhattan said Doyle persuaded an investor in Japan to pay him the $880,000 for the circa 1857 painting, which he was supposed to then buy for $1.1 million. Authorities said Doyle had already bought the painting for $775,000 and pocketed an extra $105,000 by charging the investor too much. The investors identity was not released in court papers.

The FBI began investigating after Doyles girlfriend, Kristyn Trudgeon, filed a lawsuit alleging that she had been a victim of fraud in the disappearance of the painting when a man entrusted with helping to sell it claimed he lost the art in New York City in July when he was intoxicated. The lawsuit, which alleged she was a part owner of the masterpiece, has since been withdrawn.

The FBI said in court papers that Doyle misrepresented the sale price of the painting to the co-purchaser in Japan and to the operator of an art gallery in Vancouver, Canada, who acted as the co-purchasers broker.

Doyles lawyer, Kevin Keating, portrayed his client as a victim as he spoke to reporters before Doyle made an initial appearance in federal court.

"This appears to be a squeeze play designed to get at the location of the painting. The problem is theyre going after the wrong guy. He doesnt have it. He doesnt know where it is," Keating said.

After a prosecutor asked that Doyle be held without bail during Doyles initial court appearance, Keating agreed that his client could remain detained at least until he offers a bail package sometime next week. Trudgeon watched the proceeding and left court immediately afterward.

Keating said Doyle has lived in Manhattan for the last nine months, working as a salesman at a travel agency.

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this story.



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Japanese cult director in Venice with samurai film AP

VENICE, Italy Japanese cult director Takashi Miike says he remade the 1963 classic "Thirteen Assassins" to help Japans younger generation learn about the past.

The film is set about 150 years ago, toward the end of the samurai period. An esteemed samurai, Shinzaemon Shimada, played by Japanese superstar Koji Yakusho � best known to international audiences for his roles in "Babel" and "Memoirs of a Geisha" � calls on 12 other elite warriors to end the sadistic rule of Lord Naritsugu.

"I wanted the audience to realize that this story is not taking place in the remote past, but rather in a recent past when our grand-grand parents lived," the director told a news conference Thursday ahead of the films premiere in competition for the Golden Lion. "It is our story, the story of our everyday life. In Japan, contemporary history is something children do not know very well."

The movie is a remake of Eiichi Kudos black-and-white classic of the samurai genre.

Stylish and intricately choreographed, the story line presents the noble ideals often associated with samurai, for example, when early in the film Shimada says the greatest honor he could achieve as a samurai would be to die a "noble death."

"Fate smiles on me," he says when the opportunity to face off against Lord Naritsugu comes his way.

The film also relies on Miikes trademark use of violence. He also gives each samurai a distinctive personality, deepening interest in the characters.

The film comes to Venice competition with a strong production pedigree behind it. Jeremy Thomas, the projects executive producer who met Miike in Venice a few years ago, worked on Bernardo Bertoluccis 1987 Oscar-winning film "The Last Emperor."

The films other executive producer, Toshiaki Nakazawa, was behind the film "Departures," which won the best foreign film Oscar.

Miike was last in Venice with the 2007 film "Sukiyaki Western Django," in which actor and director Quentin Tarantino had a cameo.

Tarantino, a big fan of Miikes films, is president of this years jury, which will decide the winner of the Golden Lion on Sept. 11.



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Hokey hockey musical kicks off Toronto film fest

TORONTO | Thu Sep 9, 2010 3:28pm EDT

TORONTO Reuters - "Score: A Hockey Musical", the movie that opens the Toronto Film Festival on Thursday, is both a departure and a return to tradition for one of Canadas signature cultural events.

The festival, seen as a starting point for the race for the Oscars, raised the ire of the local arts community last year when it ditched its tradition of showcasing a Canadian film on opening night and chose British evolutionist drama "Creation".

This year the pendulum has swung back with the force of a hockey slapshot with a hokey musical about Canadas favorite sport -- think the musical TV show "Glee" on skates -- as the festivals gala opening show.

That more than adequately fulfills the made-in-Canada mandate. But "Score"s inclusion has also sparked a debate over giving low-brow subject matter such plum placement.

"This is a movie that will divide opening night audiences, when dour important Canadian movies are usually on display," wrote Jim Slotek of QMI Agency.

"The Oscar-bait fare that usually comes to Toronto is usually morbid, high-toned affairs with lots of grieving , angst and broken families," wrote Susan Wloszczyna of USA Today. "This one is just pure fun."

Fun is a theme that festival organizers want to promote as they cut the ribbon on the festivals new permanent home in downtown Toronto this weekend. The complex houses five public cinemas, galleries, learning studios, and several restaurants.

"We thought this is a year for celebration. Lets find a film that fits that same mood," said Cameron Bailey, a co-director of the Toronto festival.

Directed by Toronto-born filmmaker Michael McGowan, "Score" stars Olivia Newton-John as a hockey mom to a small-town player who becomes an overnight sensation. Walter Gretzky, father of hockeys Great One, Wayne Gretzky, and former hockey player Theo Fleury, make cameos as themselves.

"Its a romp. I think its a great way to start off a festival where youre going to get a lot of dark, depressing stuff," said McGowan, who has previously screened two other critically acclaimed films at the Toronto festival, Saint Ralph 2004 and One Week 2008.

But there is a serious tone to the festival too, including David Schwimmers "Trust", about a childs online predator. Betrayals, relationships and fidelity are topics for French film "Little White Lies" and the closing night gala "Last Night", starring Keira Knightley and Eva Mendes.

Stories based on true events get red carpet treatment with "Casino Jack", starring Kevin Spacey as former high-powered lobbyist Jack Abramoff, and "The Bang Bang Club", following four young photographers whose pictures capture the last bloody days of apartheid in South Africa.

OSCAR SEASON GETS UNDERWAY

This years festival could grab an even bigger share of attention as a result of the financial crisis has crimped the prestigious Venice Film Festival, which overlaps with Torontos show.

With the entertainment industry still in cost-cutting mode, the Toronto festival was seen as a cheaper option for studios keen on starting their awards season campaigns.

Strong buzz already surrounds Natalie Portmans portrayal of a ballerina in the psychological thriller "Black Swan", while Danny Boyles "127 hours" is the directors highly anticipated follow-up to his 2008 hit "Slumdog Millionaire", which ran away with eight Oscars.

The festival ends on September 19 after screening 339 films from 59 countries.

Editing by Janet Guttsman



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A Minute With: Milla Jovovich in "Resident Evil"

SAN DIEGO | Thu Sep 9, 2010 1:49pm EDT

SAN DIEGO Reuters - Actress Milla Jovovich returns to movie theaters with "Resident Evil: Afterlife," the fourth installment of the successful video game-to-film horror franchise -- only this time she is in 3D.

Jovovich, who met her husband director/producer/writer Paul W.S. Anderson on the set of 2002s original "Resident Evil," teams with him again for the latest film in which her character, Alice, helps save survivors of a virus that has ravaged Earth and turned some people into zombies and other creatures.

At the recent Comic-Con pop culture convention in San Diego, the model-turned-actress spoke to Reuters about what makes the "Resident Evil" movies successful and the challenges of kicking zombie butts in 3D.

Q: The "Resident Evil" films have generated over $378 million at global box offices. What is it about these films that have succeeded where so many Hollywood video game adaptations have failed?

A: "Resident Evil has always been an independent movie, which I think is very special about it. Its not a studio concoction. We started as a tiny, little European action film, and everybody involved, Paul, myself and Michelle Rodriguez, were into the game. That was the birth of this franchise. It was just people who really love the games, who really love the characters, and love to kick butt and take no prisoners, and girls enjoying taking on these tough parts.

"I think that translates to people. People are smart today. They know when youre lying to them. They know when youre trying to pull one over on them, and were not trying to pull anything over on anybody. Were just trying to make the best movie we can with the budget we have and have a great time doing it so that people have a great time watching it."

Q: Many action-oriented video games have male heroes, but with the "Resident Evil" and the "Tomb Raider," women have been the strong ones and theyve done well as films, too. Why?

A: "Its always great for women to be given strong parts and be believable in them. The fact that we are promoting the fourth film is a real testament to the passion we put into the movies and to the love, and the hard work, and the excitement we have filming them. Its just been such a fun ride.

Q: How have you seen women from different cultures react to the "Resident Evil" films over the past decade?

A: "In Japan, literally 95 percent of the viewers are girls that go see these movies, and in America its the opposite. Girls in Tokyo really, really need these strong role models, where I think women in America think the films are too violent. Japanese girls are normally so polite and so quiet that they need that outlet."

Q: What did having a larger budget with this fourth film open up creatively?

A: We were able to film in Tokyo, Los Angeles, Alaska and Toronto, which really gives the movie this big feeling that we never had in any of the films. All the other films always took place in one location. Because we were able to go to all these different places, its very different visually and the stunts are just bigger, and the characters are just wonderful. You get a chance in this movie to take some time with characters. Its not just action, action, action."

Q: What were the challenges of filming in 3D?

A: Well, I got punched quite a few times on this one because you have to get closer because you can see now the distance and the depth. The viewer can see the fake punches in 3D.".

Q: Youre known for doing most of your own stunts. What stood out for you in this movie?

A: "Theres a lot of great wire work, which I love. I love to fly, to feel weightless. I love to get into the stunt rig and just be hoisted up into the air and just fly around. I love to jump off high places, so theres a lot of that going on in this film because it is so good in 3D to be jumping off things.

Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Patricia Reaney



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Viewers are Oprahs focus during 25th, last season AP

CHICAGO The 25th and final season of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" starts airing Monday and the talk show host says she plans to focus on the people she thinks are responsible for the shows success: the viewers.

"This year you will see lots of surprises for other people, dreams coming true for other people, really honoring the essence of what has made this show work for the past 25 years and thats the viewer," Winfrey said in an interview with The Associated Press.

"The last season is a celebration of the past 24 years. For me, it is about holding a place of reverence and honor for the people who made this possible for me: that would be the viewers."

Harpo Productions has released a schedule highlighting the first week of new shows, but Mondays season premiere remains "top secret" with only hints of celebrity guests and a surprise musical performance.

During the remainder of that first week, Winfrey will host country music stars The Judds and revisit the city of Williamson, W.Va., where she filmed a town hall episode about AIDS in 1987. During a live Friday show, she will announce her first book club selection in nearly a year.

So what else can fans and longtime watchers expect over this season? A-list celebrities? More makeovers? An outdoor extravaganza similar to Winfreys show that shut down Chicagos Michigan Avenue last season?

"I would anticipate that theyre going to pull out all the stops," said Bill Carroll, an expert on the daytime television market for Katz Television in New York. "If any production team has that ability and certainly the Oprah folks, the folks at Harpo, have proved that over the years."

Winfreys departure from a daily talk show on broadcast television is akin to host Johnny Carsons departure from "The Tonight Show," Carroll said.

"People of a certain era remember Johnny Carsons last show," Carroll said. "This generation is going to, in a bittersweet way, say goodbye to this chapter of Oprahs story."

But this farewell isnt a final goodbye. Winfrey is set to launch her Oprah Winfrey Network, or OWN, on cable Jan. 1. The end of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" will be featured on that network with "Behind the Scenes: Oprahs 25th Season," a one-hour series giving viewers a look at the making of the last season of Winfreys talk show.

Winfrey describes her show, which is syndicated to 145 countries, as having a cultural impact on her viewers around the world.

"Im learning more about that and being more accepting of what that has been as I look over these 25 years and prepare to go into the last season � hearing stories about how the show has affected peoples lives over the years," Winfrey said.

Jennifer Todd, 43, of Dothan, Ala., says she has watched Winfrey for at least the last 20 years. Todd expects Winfreys last season to be huge and filled with charity efforts.

On her 19th season premiere in 2004, Winfrey gave a car to the nearly 300 people in her studio audience. It was a $7 million giveaway during which she famously exclaimed, "You get a car You get a car You get a car Everybody gets a car"

"I think shes going to be full of surprises this year," Todd said after stopping in Chicagos West Loop neighborhood to snap photographs of Harpo Studios. "Shes such a giver. I think shes going to use this as a last chance to give even bigger than before."

Janice Peck, author of "The Age of Oprah: Cultural Icon for the Neoliberal Era," foresees Winfrey filling the season with giveaways, flashbacks and visits from past guests "who can come in and talk about how theyve been affected by her."

She has hosted high-powered celebrities as Michael Jackson, Julia Roberts and John Travolta. Tom Cruise famously jumped on Winfreys sofa to proclaim his love for wife Katie Holmes.

Winfreys sofa has been the go-to seat for many caught up in controversy, too.

Last season, Rielle Hunter, the mistress of former U.S. senator and presidential candidate John Edwards, told Winfrey her story. And an apologetic Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson, told Winfrey what was behind an offer to sell access to her former husband, Prince Andrew.

"Shes going to hit the nostalgia button very strongly," Peck said.

Last November, when Winfrey made a live emotional statement announcing she would end her show after a quarter-century, she touched on her final season, too, saying, "We are going to knock your socks off."

But what does that mean for a billionaire often described as one of the most powerful women in the world? Peck thinks it will be a season filled with the kind of top-notch shows that only air during viewer-wooing sweeps periods.

"Thats what knocking the socks off is," Peck said.

Kathleen Rooney, author of "Reading With Oprah: The Book Club that Changed America," said for many Winfrey fans, come Monday, it wont be the beginning of the end.

"Its not goodbye. Its see you over here in a minute," Rooney said. "Theres a generation of people who dont know what its like to live in a world without Oprah � and theyre not going to find out anytime soon."

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Online: http://www.oprah.com

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Associated Press reporter Kathleen Miller in Washington contributed to this report.



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Willow Smith, 9, signs record deal with Jay-Z

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 9, 2010 2:12pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters - Willow Smith, the nine-year-old daughter of actor Will Smith, has signed a record deal with rapper Jay-Z and her first single is already kicking up a storm on the Internet.

Jay-Z told radio host Ryan Seacrest in an interview on Thursday that he thought Willow had a superstar career in front of her based on her first hip-hop single "Whip My Hair."

"I heard the record first before I knew that it was recorded by a nine year old and I was like, man that records a smash," the performer and record producer told Seacrest. "I believe in superstars. I believe on big records on superstars and I think she has both."

"Whip My Hair" had been viewed more than 100,000 times on YouTube after just a day of being released.

"She has a childs innocence but she has a clear vision of who she is and who she wants to be," Jay-Z said, comparing Willow to a young Michael Jackson.

Jay-Zs record label Roc Nation said in a statement that Willow "has an energy and enthusiasm about her music that is truly infectious...Willow is about to embark on an incredible journey and we look forward to joining her as she grows in all aspects of her career."

Jay-Z, one of the most influential artists in the U.S. music industry, signed R&B artist Rihanna when she was a teenager. Willows distinctive lop-sided hair cut and debut single have both been compared to Rihannas.

Jay-Z brushed aside suggestions that Willow may be too young at nine years old to launch a music career.

"When you have that sort of talent, there is no such thing as too young," he said on Thursday.

Willow, the daughter of "Men in Black" actor Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith, follows her brother Jaden in an early start to a high profile career. Jaden Smith, 12, starred in the movie "The Karate Kid" earlier this year.

Reporting by Jill Serjeant, editing by Christine Kearney



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Former LFO member Rich Cronin dies at 36 AP

NEW YORK Former LFO band member Rich Cronin has died at age 36.

Former bandmate Brad Fischetti fih SHET ee tells The Associated Press that Cronin died in a Boston hospital on Wednesday.

The band is best known for its hit "Summer Girls."

Cronin had leukemia but Fischetti said he had beaten it. However, he suffered other health setbacks in recent years including a stroke.

Fischetti says he last saw Cronin last summer when the group performed for a reunion tour. He said there had been hope theyd all be able to perform together again this year.



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Jessica Simpson is `Project Runway finale judge AP

NEW YORK Jessica Simpson took her seat as guest judge at Thursdays "Project Runway" show at New York Fashion Week in a super-short, sparkly silver minidress, but she had nothing on the models, who wore an extraordinary number of hot pants.

Ten aspiring designers showed their collections to Simpson, Heidi Klum, Michael Kors and Nina Garcia, although several knew they already didnt make the cut and wont be the Season 8 winner. But because the Lifetime show takes advantage of the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week backdrop for its finale, extra designers needed to participate to keep secret the winners and losers of episodes that havent yet aired.

"Project Runway" was one of the big events on the days roster at Lincoln Center, the new home for the seasonal fashion previews. Christian Siriano, an alum of the show, was to show his spring styles later in the day.

Opening the show, Klum, wearing a bright red menswear-style pantsuit and blouse, said she was particularly fond of this group. "I have never gotten so emotional or attached to the designers."

She promised the audience, which included singer Jordin Sparks and designer Betsey Johnson, that theyd see color and fantasy on the catwalk. The crowd also saw an uneven mix of runway-ready, masterful looks and gimmicky ones � especially those micro mini shorts that dont typically garner the best reviews when top-tier designers bring them back.

Sparks, now starring in Broadways "In the Heights," said before the show that she couldnt imagine what was running through the designers heads even though she was essentially in the same position on "American Idol." The difference, she said, was that she felt in control of her destiny because she was being judged on her voice.

In fashion, there were other players, including models, makeup artists and hairdressers, all contributing to the final product.

"I wish them all luck," Sparks said.

Johnson, a guest judge this season, said she saw "sparks of talent" among the designers but none of them quite captured her own signature flirty-girl look when they went off on a challenge to incorporate party supplies into wearable clothes. "It was not up my alley, but there definitely was talent."



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Correction: ABC-Westin story AP



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Sothebys to sell rare Audubon Birds of America AP

LONDON A rare copy of John James Audubons "Birds of America," billed as the worlds most expensive book, is up for sale alongside a first edition of Shakespeares plays at an auction to set book lovers pulses racing, Sothebys said Thursday.

One of only 100 or so remaining copies of "Birds of America" is valued at between 4 million pounds and 6 million pounds $6.2 million and $9.2 million, while a Shakespeare First Folio from 1623 is expected to fetch at least 1 million pounds $1.54 million.

Sothebys books expert David Goldthorpe said the two tomes are "the twin peaks of book collecting." The books come from the estate of the 2nd Baron Hesketh, an aristocratic book collector who died in 1955. The auction house is selling them in London on Dec. 7.

Another complete copy of "Birds of America" was sold by Christies for $8.8 million in 2000, a record for a printed book at auction.

It is one of the most significant � and beautiful � published works of natural history, and rarely comes up for sale. Only 119 copies remain, and all but a handful are in museums, libraries and universities.

The collection of 435 hand-colored prints, made from engravings of Audubons illustrations, measures more than 3 feet by 2 feet 90 centimeters by 60 centimeters because Audubon wanted to paint the birds life size.

"Thats all very well with weed warblers, but when you come to bald eagles youre going to need a big book," Goldthorpe said. "Audubon himself described the size as a double elephant folio."

A pioneering French-American ornithologist and entrepreneur whose business ventures took him across the expanding United States, Audubon came to Britain in 1826 after failing to raise money to print his book in America. His outdoorsman image and vivid illustrations made a strong impression.

"He caused a sensation," said Goldthorpe. "It was as if someone in a James Fenimore Cooper novel had ended up in a Jane Austen novel."

Audubon sold the book on a subscription basis to wealthy collectors. The copy for sale was No. 11, bought by paleontologist Henry Witham.

The December sale also includes medieval illustrated manuscripts, work by William Caxton, Englands first printer, and letters written by Queen Elizabeth I and her ministers about the imprisonment of Mary, Queen of Scots.

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Online: http://www.sothebys.com



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Britney Spears denies bodyguard harassment claims AP

LOS ANGELES Britney Spears denied a bodyguards accusations that she sexually harassed him and abused her children, saying Thursday in a statement on her website that authorities looked into his claims but found no reason to act.

The statement said the pop singer and her attorney expect Fernando Flores sexual harassment and intentional infliction of emotional distress lawsuit to be dismissed.

"This lawsuit is another unfortunate situation where someone is trying to take advantage of the Spears family and make a name for himself," the statement read. "The Department of Children and Family Services conducted a proper investigation surrounding Mr. Flores accusations and have closed the case without further action."

Spears did not say when the investigation was conducted and the department doesnt release details of its inquiries.

Flores claimed in his lawsuit that Spears repeatedly exposed herself to him and made other unwanted sexual advances. He also claimed she used his belt to discipline her young sons, Sean Preston and Jayden James, and acted inappropriately in front of them.

The bodyguards employment with Spears appeared to be brief � his court filings state he started working for her in February, and by June he was no longer on her security detail.

Flores also sued his former employer, Advanced Security Concepts Corp. A woman who answered the companys phone Wednesday declined to comment and refused to be identified.

Flores is seeking unspecified damages.

Spears ex-husband, Kevin Federline, has also denied through his attorney that any abuse occurred and called Flores accusations "baseless."

Attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan told The Associated Press on Wednesday that if Federline believed the children were in danger, he would have stepped in already.

"He is satisfied that the allegations are a product of economic motives," Kaplan said. "They are as baseless as they seem."

Federline has custody of the former couples sons, but Spears has substantial visitation with the boys.

Spears remains under a court-ordered conservatorship in which her personal and financial affairs are controlled by her father and an attorney, and monitored by a judge. The conservatorship has prevented Spears from being deposed or testifying during previous cases in which she was sued.

Despite a high-profile custody battle, Spears and Federline reached an agreement in 2008 and neither side has sought changes to the custody arrangement in nearly a year, court records show.

The first hearing in Flores case is scheduled for January 25.

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Online:

http://www.britneyspears.com/



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Italian films get mixed reaction at Venice festival

VENICE | Thu Sep 9, 2010 10:55am EDT

VENICE Reuters - The four Italian films in competition at this years Venice film festival have failed to generate much buzz, with none seen as a serious contender for the top Golden Lion prize that will be awarded on Saturday.

Most applauded by the domestic press was "We Believed" by Mario Martone, is a 3-1/2 hour historical epic about the years that led to the unification of Italy as a single state in the 19th century.

But despite casting some of the countrys most respected actors, and handing out some clues about how that period influenced contemporary Italy, it cut no ice with foreign critics.

Hollywood Reporter, a trade publication, called it an "arid, anonymous made-for-TV film" that plays "like a disjointed, rhetorical Wikipedia entry."

Another film that was much talked about in the run-up to the festival, once the showcase of great Italian cinema, was Saverio Costanzos "The Solitude of Prime Numbers," the coming-of-age story of two awkward, traumatized teenagers.

An adaptation of a novel which won Italys most prestigious literary prize and has sold more than a million copies worldwide, it had a lukewarm reaction at a press screening on Thursday.

"The Black Sheep," comedian Ascanio Celestinis directorial debut, was praised both by Italian and foreign critics for its personal tale of the world of mental institutions.

But neither of those themes seem likely to impress the head of the festival jury, Quentin Tarantino, who had the domestic film industry up in arms three years ago when he called new Italian cinema "depressing."

"Recent films Ive seen are all the same. They talk about boys growing up, or girls growing up, or couples having a crisis, or vacations of the mentally impaired," he said then.

The only pure Italian comedy in competition, "The Passion" by Carlo Mazzacurati, is not in the "depressing" category but, judging by early reviews, it did not go down well either.

"This is an unrefined and almost deliberately provincial comedy that is designed to comfort at home rather than challenge abroad," wrote Lee Marshall of Screen Daily.

This years festival was heavy on Italian titles, with 43 films screening in various sections, so the general lack of enthusiasm will be all the more disappointing for an industry holding high hopes after the success of "Gomorrah" and "Il Divo" in Cannes two years ago.

Director Costanzo candidly summed up the pressure he had felt presenting his film in the main line-up as the festival starts to wind down, and sought to play down expectations.

"I read in the papers it was eagerly anticipated. But then one goes to the movies and expects to see God knows what, a new The Leopard. Instead its just a normal film," he told reporters.



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Will and Jadas daughter makes her record debut AP

NEW YORK Call her the Fresh Princess.

Will and Jada Pinkett Smiths 9-year-old daughter, Willow Smith, is making her debut as a recording artist.

She has signed a deal with Jay-Zs label, Roc Nation.

Her first song was released this week. Its called "Whip My Hair."

Jay-Z says its rare to find an artist with such talent and creativity at Willows age.

Will Smith first gained fame as a rapper, but unlike her father, Willow is singing on her record.

Like her father, shes a double threat: Willow appeared in the movie "I Am Legend," with her dad.

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Online:

http://rocnation.com/home/



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Bowersox finds out her files were checked in Ohio AP

COLUMBUS, Ohio "American Idol" runner-up Crystal Bowersox has learned that personal information on her was improperly checked in her home state of Ohio.

The Columbus Dispatch reported Thursday that the State Highway Patrol discovered in May that more than a half-dozen people with access to confidential records looked to see what the state had on Bowersox.

The Ohio Department of Public Safety apologized for the breaches in a July 1 letter, which Bowersoxs father shared with her only recently, when she returned home to the Toledo area.

Bowersox told The Blade of Toledo on Wednesday that shes "disgusted" but does not plan to sue.

The snooping has led to the firing of an Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles clerk and the forced resignation of a northern Ohio court employee.



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No place like home: Toronto film fest opens new HQ AP

TORONTO The overseers of the glossy new home of the Toronto International Film Festival have two key aims: to infuse their building with the spirit of cinemas future and the ghosts of its past.

The festival, which gets under way Thursday for an 11-day run, opens the doors this weekend to the Bell Lightbox, a $181 million headquarters housing theaters, film lab facilities, art gallery space, restaurants and offices for its staff.

Located a few blocks from Roy Thomson Hall, a huge auditorium where the festivals key premieres take place, Bell Lightbox is meant to provide a focal point for a cinema showcase whose events and screenings are spread throughout the city.

The festival began in the 1970s as a local celebration of Canadian film but has grown into a world-class spot for major Hollywood releases and premieres from around the world.

"When we were much smaller, everything used to take place within a few square blocks. It gave the festival kind of a communal feel," said festival co-director Cameron Bailey. "Were going back to that in a way this year."

This years festival presents more than 300 feature-length and short films, including dramas starring Nicole Kidman, Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Helen Mirren, Hilary Swank and Will Ferrell.

While the festival focuses on new films, the Bell Lightbox is stepping back to the past with an exhibit called Essential Cinema, featuring posters, images and props from 100 old and modern films that include "The Passion of Joan of Arc," "The Wizard of Oz," "Citizen Kane," "The Godfather," "Amelie," "The Third Man," "Raging Bull" and "Slumdog Millionaire."

Among artifacts on display are the lens used to create the HAL 9000 computers perspective in "2001: A Space Odyssey," the bulky camera that shot the Italian masterpiece "Bicycle Thieves" and an elaborate gown worn by Claudia Cardinale in "The Leopard."

Even the site on which the facility is built has a cinema connection. The land was provided by the family of "Ghostbusters" filmmaker Ivan Reitman, whose father ran a car wash there.

Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin � whose films, including "The Saddest Music in the World," have the look and feel of relics from cinemas early years � created two attractions for Bell Lightbox called "Hauntings."

The first features 11 screens on which Maddin projects film segments he shot inspired by lost or uncompleted films by such directors as Fritz Lang and Josef von Sternberg, attempting to resurrect images from celluloid long since destroyed and forgotten. The second features images of people projected at night on the upper windows of the five-story building, ghostly sirens beckoning passers-by into the facility.

When he met with Bell Lightbox executives, "I told them, `Your building is so brand new and so beautiful, but its just not haunted by anything. It doesnt have any spooks," Maddin said. "I offered in a reverse ghost-busting mode to haunt the place for them."

Other works at Bell Lightbox include Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyans homage to Federico Fellinis "8 1/2," which deconstructs the editing room scene near the films end and projects the various characters on different screens, and artist Douglas Gordons transformation of Alfred Hitchcocks "Psycho," with the horror classic running both forward and backward on side-by-side screens and slowed to a duration of 24 hours, the two versions meeting on a single image once a day.

"We hoped it would be the shower scene, but its actually not. Wouldnt it be great if it were on Janet Leighs eyeball on both screens at the same time?" said Noah Cowan, artistic director of Bell Lightbox.

After Bell Lightbox opens Sunday, some of its theaters will be used for premieres and other screenings for the remaining week of the festival.

The theaters, ranging from 78 to 530 seats, will then be used for screenings of new and classic films and other year-round events.

Maddin said some high-minded building projects fail to live up to their utopian design, but the festivals home does.

"I think this utopia has been very well thought out. There are theaters of every possible, different size. Its like going into a boutique shoe store for big- and small-footed people," Maddin said. "You know how every movie has exactly the right size audience? This venue will have exactly the right size theater for every movie coming in."

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Online:

Toronto International Film Festival: http://tiff.net



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Designs for living well on Nate Berkus new show AP

NEW YORK After a taping of his new weekday talk show, Nate Berkus stuck around to chat up his studio audience. Did they have a good time? Did they like what they saw? Did they have any suggestions?

Grinning, Berkus drank in the audiences overall approval, but listened closely as one woman called for more decorating tips.

Will do, he promised, thanking her.

Then he had to go. He had to prepare for another taping in a couple of hours.

Besides the new demands of "The Nate Berkus Show" which premieres Monday; check local listings for time, he must also juggle other enterprises like his design firm, nationally distributed home products line and schedule of personal appearances.

He arrives full-time on the syndicated scene fresh from an 8-year recurring run with the queen of daytime TV, Oprah Winfrey, on whose show he made dozens of guest appearances as her designated design expert.

There he established his zesty style "Ive never played anything else but myself on television," he says, while he charmed viewers with his all-embracing vision of design.

Berkus believes that transforming your physical surroundings is a way to change your personal story. He likes stories of self-realization as much as he likes the furniture and window treatments that get you there.

"Im as passionate about design as people who watched me on Oprah for all these years think I am. But the focus of my show is living well," says Berkus, munching a salad during a backstage interview between tapings. "We want the viewer left with something they didnt know, after every show. And also to have a good time."

The set for "The Nate Berkus Show" is clear evidence of how hes tailoring the show to his sensibilities.

"When we started designing it, I understood that a set for a talk show could either look like a fake living room with a staircase leading nowhere � or a nightclub. Instead, I wanted something fresh and clean and serene. I wanted the set to be its own way of sharing inspiration without even saying it."

The colors are soft � sands, grays, taupes, blues � with the audience seated at several levels, including one section in a so-called sunken mosh pit.

"Most of the furniture is vintage. All of the accessories we found in different flea markets. The books are all real books that Ive read," he says proudly. "Its definitely a big reflection of me."

And maybe most notable are the living plant walls � two verdant panels of pothos, pileas and more.

"For the boy who cant keep a single house plant alive," says Berkus, psyched by this home away from home, "its such a great thing"

And Berkus just might offer some good gardening advice, because practical tips are part of the shows mix. Hint from "The Nate Berkus Show": Clean your kids marker or crayon scrawls off the wall with hairspray or toothpaste Who knew?

The show wont be particularly celebrity-driven, Berkus says, but celebs are welcome "who will have something to say, something to share. I want to see a side of them that works for my show."

Examples: Julianne Moore, who "is totally passionate about design." And Jamie Lee Curtis, "an organizational expert" whose home "looks like a Virgos fantasy"

On Friday of premiere week, Berkus guest is Elizabeth Edwards. She, of course, is the wife of former North Carolina Senator and presidential candidate John Edwards, from whom she separated after his acknowledgment that he had an affair and fathered a child with a videographer who had worked on his 2008 presidential campaign.

"I talked about what happened to her YESTERDAY, but I mainly wanted to talk about whats happening for her TOMORROW," Berkus says.

He visited her new venture in Chapel Hill, N.C. � a furniture store where she sells quality items at below wholesale.

"Shes created a family within the furniture world in North Carolina," he says.

Berkus, who turns 39 on Sept. 17, is a boyish, buoyant force of nature.

Growing up in suburban Minneapolis, he was a youngster who preferred finding bargains at flea markets to loitering in left field for nine innings, a kid who pressed his chums into helping rearrange his bedroom layout when they came for a sleepover.

At 24, he formed the Chicago-based Nate Berkus Associates design firm. Then, a few years later, a chance meeting with a producer from "The Oprah Winfrey Show" led to an assignment to make over a tiny residential space for a segment on her program.

Soon, he was not only an acclaimed designer, but also a TV star.

Then tragedy struck. He and his partner, photographer Fernando Bengoechea, were vacationing in Sri Lanka on Dec. 26, 2004, when the tsunami that killed more than 200,000 washed away their hut.

Three weeks later, the bereaved Berkus appeared on "Oprah Winfrey" to tell of losing his partner and to appeal for donations to rebuild the devastated village they had been visiting. He raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from viewers. "That was the moment of crystallization for me about the power of TV," he says.

Now hes eager to harness that power on his new TV series, though hes beginning to appreciate the difference between being a guest on someone elses show and hosting your own.

"Already for me," he says, "its been a process of self-discovery."

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Co-produced by Harpo Studios and Sony Pictures Television.

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Online:

http://www.thenateshow.com



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Final 4 acts advance on Americas Got Talent AP

LOS ANGELES Three very different singers and a group of special-effects wizards got talent � and votes.

Soulful 30-year-old crooner Michael Grimm, flashy 32-year-old showman John "Prince Poppycock" Quale, 10-year-old opera phenom Jackie Evancho and 13-man performance troupe Fighting Gravity are advancing to the "Americas Got Talent" finale. The four acts were revealed Wednesday to have received the most viewer votes on the NBC variety competition.

"It feels like a dream come true," beamed Evancho after the show Wednesday.

Evancho, the sprightly singing sensation who displays more natural effervescence offstage than any Nickelodeon or Disney Channel star, reached Susan Boyle status online this summer with her surprisingly classical opera style. The Pittsburgh native doesnt know what shell sing in next Tuesdays finale but hopes to wear a "bigger, prettier dress."

The 13 fraternity brothers of Pi Kappa Alpha from Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., that make up Fighting Gravity plan to top their space-themed routine from Tuesdays episode with a new performance which promises to be "beyond space." The team, reminiscent of the Blue Man Group, utilize black lights and other props to create illusions within darkness.

"Its a tremendous amount of pressure," said 22-year-old member Danny Kang, one of three members that are actually visible in their routines. "We really, really want to step it up this time and just blow people away. We dont want to play it safe. We are going to take some risks this time. There are going to be some safety concerns in this routine."

Michael Grimm, the soft-spoken singer from Waveland, Miss., isnt sure about what hell do for the finale after performing Tuesday for the first time on "Americas Got Talent" without his guitar. Grimm, who collects stamps when off stage, said hes considering delivering a ballad with his guitar then taking it off for the rest of the performance.

"I dont know," he said. "I didnt think I was going to make it through tonight."

There are already several ideas for the next routine from Prince Poppycock, the outlandish operatic creation of Quale, whose previous spectacles include belting out "Bohemian Rhapsody" while smashing blue-and-white china and chirping "Yankee Doodle Dandy" in front of leggy backup dancers sporting U.S. flags and a replica of the Capitol building.

"Im going to bring more of an emotionally connected performance than perhaps youve seen in the past," teased Quale. "I feel its a strength that I have as a performer that hasnt really been showcased as much because Ive been focused so much on spectacle. Ill still bring spectacle, but hopefully an emotionally resonant performance as well."

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NBC is owned by NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.

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Online:

http://www.nbc.com/agt/



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"BP Spillcam" deemed top TV word."Guido" close behind

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 9, 2010 7:39am EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters - The Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the success of the TV show "Jersey Shore" made words like "BP Spillcam" and "Guido" among the most used words of the 2009-2010 TV season, according to a global language survey released on Thursday.

"BP Spillcam" topped the list by the Global Language Monitor due to the live camera feeds of the ruptured deep sea well that caused the worlds biggest offshore spill. The murky pictures of the well were watched by millions of viewers on television, the Internet and mobile devices.

In second place was the term "dysfunctional" thanks to the success of the Emmy-winning television comedy "Modern Family."

"Guido" -- the popular but largely pejorative slang word for young Italian-Americans -- came in third due to New Jersey-centric TV reality shows such as MTVs pop culture hit "Jersey Shore."

"The Top TeleWords of 2010 encompassed an unintended up-close-and-personal view to an unparalleled natural disaster, resonating sitcoms detailing the contradictions, foibles and joys of post-Modern life... and more Guidos and Guidettes and one might encounter in a lifetime," said Paul JJ Payack, president of the Global Language Monitor.

The Texas-based Global Language Monitor uses a math formula to track the frequency of words and phrases in print and electronic media.

Other words on the list include "Lady Gaga," "rude," in reference to departing "American Idol" judge Simon Cowell, and "Aspergers Syndrome" , the autism disorder seen on the Emmy Award-winning HBO film, "Temple Grandin."

The 2010 list is the seventh annual analysis by the Global Language Monitor. Last years Top Teleword was "Obamavision".

Editing by Jill Serjeant



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Japanese samurai movie pokes fun at tradition

VENICE | Thu Sep 9, 2010 7:33am EDT

VENICE Reuters - Prolific Japanese filmmaker Takashi Miikes "13 Assassins" is a surprisingly conventional remake of a 1963 samurai movie, but he injects enough horror and humour to win over viewers at the Venice film festival.

The film, one of 24 in the festivals main competition lineup, is based on Eiichi Kudos black-and-white picture of the same name, and it could appeal to Venice jury president Quentin Tarantino, a martial arts enthusiast.

Set in 1844, the film follows a band of 12 samurai and one hilarious hanger-on as they seek to bring down the cruel Lord Naritsugu, who rapes and kills at will in the knowledge that his status as the Shoguns brother will protect him.

Led by the noble Shinzaemon Shimada Koji Yakusho, the rebels know they are on a suicide mission against vastly superior numbers, but that does not deter them as they prepare for battle using elaborate traps and expert swordsmanship.

In one early scene, an eerie-looking and emaciated girl who has had her arms and lower legs severed by Naritsugu is brought before Shinzaemon.

She cannot tell him what happened to her family because her tongue has been cut out, but when she writes the words "total massacre," the hero keeps them close to his heart as he sets out on his path for revenge.

Most of the laughs come from Koyata Yusuke Iseya, a wild mountain man who fights alongside the more formal samurai using stones and a sling and who criticizes them for their arrogance.

RECENT PAST

Miike said his main aim in making 13 Assassins was to educate young Japanese people about their recent past.

"This is not taking place in the remote past, but rather in the quite recent past, when our great-grandparents lived," he told reporters in Venice on Thursday.

"It is our story, the story of our everyday lives. It is not total imagination, although certainly it is a fictional story.

"Young Japanese today should not forget what the reality was that our families were experiencing," he added, speaking through an interpreter.

"I hope that young Japanese looking at this movie might reflect on the recent past, 50, 100 years ago, and think how Japan was different from what it is today."

Critics were surprised mostly by the lack of surprises in 13 Assassins, a well-produced, carefully made picture from one of the worlds fastest filmmakers.

Since starting out in motion pictures in the early 1990s, Miike has made over 80 films, including 1999 horror "Audition" and 2004 superhero movie "Zebraman." A sequel, "Zebraman 2: Attack on Zebra City," premieres in Venice out of competition.

The competition also features Hong Kong director Tsui Harks "Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame," an effects-laden epic set in China in 690 AD as Chinas first female emperor, Wu Zetian, is about ascend the throne.

Andy Lau plays the lead.

Editing by Paul Casciato



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Left for dead by MTV, music videos rebound on Web AP

NEW YORK It wasnt long ago that the music video was on life support.

MTV � which will hold its 27th annual Video Music Awards on Sunday � phased out videos in favor of reality programming and other shows that attracted better ratings. At the same time, the music industry was collapsing and slashed budgets no longer had room for elaborate clips.

But recently, the music video has had a revival. Watching music videos has become central aspect of Internet usage. Music blogs and social media have greased the channels, facilitating the quick, easy spreading of videos, especially those with arresting or controversial visuals. People even buy clips on iTunes.

Lady Gaga and Beyonce go on a scantily clad murderous rampage with the nearly 10-minute "Telephone"; MGMT wanders through the dessert with a digitally created creature in "Congratulations"; Erykah Badu strips while strolling the path of President John Kennedy assassination in "Window Seat"; MIA depicts a war on terror against redheads in "Born Free."

All of these videos exploded on the Internet and became water-cooler moments. Cee-Los recent and unprintable hit titled "Forget Me" for radio went viral with a video of only its lyrics. And Beyonces "Single Ladies" became so iconic is spawned countless imitators and even had then President-elect Barack Obama imitating the hand choreography.

"Were entering another golden era for music videos," says Saul Austerlitz, the author of "Money for Nothing: A History of the Music Video from the Beatles to the White Stripes. "Theyve become part of the cultural discourse again in a way thats reminiscent of the heyday of the music video, from the early `80s to the mid `90s."

Todays audiences can be enormous. Shakira, who last year debuted a music video on Facebook, was "blown away" when her video for the official song of the World Cup, "Waka Waka This Ones for Africa" � a colorful mix of dancing and soccer star cameos � was nearing 100 million views on YouTube.

"It can take on a life of its own online," says Shakira. "And it inspires us artists to be even more creative. With access to so many videos, we need to challenge ourselves to surprise our fans."

The video, which was distributed by the music video and live music website Vevo, has gone on to be watched by more than 173 million people, good enough for the fourth most-viewed video ever on YouTube.

In fact, four of the five most-viewed clips on YouTube are music videos released in the last year. Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga top the charts. Though thats partly because Vevo which shares a small percentage of advertising revenue with YouTube tabulates view counts across platforms, its still a striking example of the music videos dramatic comeback. Its a long way beyond the novelty videos of OK Go that followed YouTubes debut in 2005.

"If it wasnt for YouTube, the online video space would not be where it is today," says David Kohl, executive vice president of sales and customer operations at the Sony and Universal co-owned Vevo.

At the center of music videos earlier, headier times was Hype Williams, who � often with his trademark fisheye lens � created much of the iconography of hip-hop. Several of his videos are typically considered among the forms best, like Missy Elliotts "The Rain Supa Dupa Fly" and Busta Rhymes "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See."

But he grew disillusioned with the commercialization of music videos and the recycling of imagery. Williams was coaxed back into music video by Kanye West and has remained active, including recently directing the Jay-Zs "Empire State of Mind," watched by nearly 60 million and nominated for three VMAs.

"Its a different time," says Williams. "Its an opportunity to find it all over again. I didnt really think that was possible until recently, seeing things like this Arcade Fire clip. It shows you that it can be more."

Released last week, the Arcade Fire video is titled "The Wilderness Downtown" and set to the bands song "We Used to Wait." Its a new kind of video, a kind particularly suited to the medium of the Web.

"It speaks volumes about where music video is going," says Williams, whos happy to pass the torch. "Its a young mans game."

At the website dedicated to the film http://www.thewildernessdowntown.com, a viewer inputs his or her childhood home address. The film starts with a hooded figure running down golden suburban streets. Another browser window opens full of fluttering birds. Others pop open, too, that use Google Street View and Google Maps to show the old neighborhood. At the end of the film, the viewer is urged to write a letter to his or her young self.

Within days, the site received some 20 million hits and 3 million unique views.

The video, made possible by the Web programming language HTML5, was directed by Chris Milk, who has previously done more traditional videos for Gnarls Barkley, West and others. He has been thinking about using the interactivity of the Web for music videos and earlier this year released "The Johnny Cash Project," a Web-only video that gathers portraits of Cash submitted by fans and sets them to the song "Aint No Grave."

"Because were in this transitional moment, weve all been making music videos as if were making them for a television broadcast," says Milk. "But really the Web is a totally different canvas from broadcast. It allows for a whole different set of rules."

Many of the new, Web-oriented videos are made possible financially because of advancements in technology, especially DSLR cameras, which are relatively inexpensive and provide excellent production value. The comedian Tom Sharpling used such a camera to shoot the recent Ted Leo and the Pharmacists video for "Bottled in Cork," a parody of jukebox musicals made for less than $7,000.

The video premiered not on a music blog, but the comedy site Funny Or Die. Its been watched by more than 105,000, which Leo notes is several times more those who have bought his latest album, "The Brutalist Bricks."

"People are actually able to present images that to them relate to the music that theyre making, as opposed to feeling like they need to present images with quick cuts, flashy, hi-fi performance shots and pose-y things that for a while were dictated by wanting to get played on MTV," Leo says.

Music videos havent completely vanished from television. They can still be seen on Fuse, VH1, MTV and Palladia, the high-definition channel owned by MTV Networks. Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks Music and Logo Group, says MTV networks together play more videos � about 600 hours worth a week � than MTV did in its video heyday.

MTV puts its focus on blending music video into its programming, and having its online properties � which brought in more than 53 million unique visitors in August � work in tandem with its broadcast.

"The notion of infamy on multiple screens has given music videos a shot in the arm," says Toffler.

Williams goes further: "I dont know why anyone would watch a music video anywhere other than the Internet."

___

Online:

http://www.thewildernessdowntown.com/

http://www.chrismilk.com/

http://www.thejohnnycashproject.com/

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/3cbac7e38c/

http://www.vevo.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/shakira

http://www.mtv.com/ontv/vma/2010/



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