Friday, September 10, 2010

Seacrest, others star in Stand Up To Cancer AP

LOS ANGELES Adam Sandler, Seth Rogen and Neil Diamond were among the more than 100 celebrities to appear on all four broadcast networks for the "Stand Up To Cancer" telethon.

Ryan Seacrest, Jay Leno and George Clooney also showed up to help raise money at the hourlong fundraiser that was simulcast commercial-free Friday night by ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, a number of cable channels and the Armed Forces Network.

The event was hosted by news anchors Diane Sawyer, Brian Williams and Katie Couric and produced by Film and TV producer Laura Ziskin, a cancer survivor.

Donations to the telecast will go to fund innovative cancer research. The first telethon, in 2008, helped raise more than $100 million. Numbers for the 2010 telethon were not immediately available.

___

Online:

http://www.standup2cancer.org



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Irwin Silber, Sing Out magazine co-founder, dies AP

LOS ANGELES Irwin Silber, who as founding editor of the small but influential magazine Sing Out became a towering figure in the 1960s American folk music renaissance that brought Bob Dylan, Arlo Guthrie and numerous others to prominence, has died at age 84.

Silber died Wednesday at an extended care facility in Oakland, his stepdaughter Nina Menendez told The Associated Press on Friday. She said the cause of death was complications related to Alzheimers disease.

Silber founded Sing Out in 1950 with legendary folk singer Pete Seeger and musicologist Alan Lomax. He also published more than a dozen books, wrote for several other publications and produced numerous folk music concerts.

At Sing Out, he worked on a shoestring budget, noting in 2001 that most of the time he collected only half of his $50 weekly salary. Nonetheless, he built the magazine into a bible of American folk music, reporting on such seminal figures as Seeger, Guthrie, Leadbelly, and Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.

As a result, when a new generation of folk singers burst onto the music scene in the early 1960s, he was perfectly positioned to cover them. Sing Out carried some of the earliest reports on Dylan, Phil Ochs, Joan Baez, Judy Collins and others.

"He was a giant in folk music as the editor of Sing Out," said Barry "the Fish" Melton, half of the folk duo Country Joe and the Fish before it expanded into a four-piece rock group. "Really, Irwins legacy in the music community was spreading songs everywhere."

Melton said he last saw Silber three months ago when Melton sat in with one of Silbers stepsons, Jesse Cahn, at a music club.

"I know Jesse told me he had Alzheimers, but we had a very delightful conversation and he recognized me," Melton said.

Before starting Sing Out, Silber was executive director of Peoples Songs, an organization created by Seeger and others to promote the music of the American labor movement.

Because of his ties to left-wing causes and his association with the Communist Party in the 1950s, he was called before the House UnAmerican Activities Committee in 1958. Silber said in a 2005 interview that he was asked by a committee member if he had ever taught at a New York City school said to have Marxist ties.

When asked what he taught at the school, Silber said he replied "square dancing" and the questioning ended.

As editor of Sing Out, he also sometimes became embroiled in controversy within the folk music world.

When Dylan abandoned folk music in the mid-1960s to perform rock n roll, Silber was one of his harshest critics, writing a scathing open letter to Dylan in Sing Out. In later years, however, Silber said he had come to accept Dylans evolution.

"My open letter was written at a moment when I was really disappointed," Silber told Sing Out in 2001. "I think what I wrote, Id stand by, but if I had to do it all over again I dont think I would write it in the same tone and in the same way."

Among Silbers books were "Lift Every Voice," "Songs of the Cil War," "Songs of the Great American West" and "Songs of Independence." He also edited the landmark folk song publication "Hard-Hitting Songs for Hard-Hit People" and published such non-music books as "Socialism: What Went Wrong?" and "A Patients Guide to Knee and Hip Replacement."

In addition to his stepson and stepdaughter, Silber is survived by his wife, jazz singer Barbara Dane.

Other survivors include a stepson, Pablo Menendez, and children Nina Silber, Fred Silber and Josh Silber.



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Brandon Flowers summons desert spirits on "Flamingo"

Fri Sep 10, 2010 8:25pm EDT

NEW YORK Billboard - While embarking on a solo career, Brandon Flowers has made it clear that his band, the Killers, isnt breaking up.

In fact, the singer says that the point of "Flamingo," due September 14 on Island Records, was to deliver these songs to the public so that his group could eventually return to creating as a cohesive unit.

"Of course, some of "Flamingo" could have made for great Killers songs," Flowers says, "but I wanted the next Killers record to be a very strong collaboration. Thats when were at our best."

Instead of a vanity project or a means of separating Flowers from his platinum alt-rock act, "Flamingo" is the sound of the frontmans creative juices flowing while the rest of the Killers -- guitarist Dave Keuning, bassist Mark Stoermer and drummer Ronnie Vannucci Jr. -- took a break from the studio.

From the haunted stomp of "Only the Young" to the lonely falsetto of "Playing With Fire," "Flamingo" named after Vegas Flamingo Road sounds like a more personal riff on the Killers sound. Flowers, however, sees the album as an homage to his hometown and its barren surroundings: He says he wanted to "summon the spirits of the desert" on the album.

"That where Im from and thats what I want to represent," Flowers says, "so I feel like its my duty to conjure the spirits up with the music, and I do the best that I can."

He might downplay the solo effort as an intimate experiment between Killers discs, but fans of the band are certainly taking notice of the stopgap. The singer sold out his first solo show at the Hiltons Shimmer Room in his hometown of Las Vegas on August 15, and first single "Crossfire" is No. 16 on Billboards Rock Songs chart.

After the Killers finished their third album, 2008s "Day & Age," Flowers started writing new songs intended for the group. Throughout the next 18 months of touring, including headlining slots at Coachella and Lollapalooza in 2009, Flowers says he would "duck into the studio every now and then and record ideas" during brief breaks on the road.

As the Day & Age tour continued, however, seven years of nonstop work had left Flowers bandmates craving some downtime. The decision that the singer use the songs for himself after the tour seemed to work for everyone, and Flowers approached Island about a solo album during the summer of 2009.

"The songs were just there, and I decided that Id be the delivery man," Flowers says, adding that the band was very supportive of the idea.

Flowers brought the new songs to his Battle Born studios in Las Vegas early this year, with "Day & Age" collaborator Stuart Price signing on to produce along with Daniel Lanois and Brendan OBrien. All three producers helped make up Flowers backing band, and Rilo Kileys Jenny Lewis stopped by for the midtempo pop duet "Hard Enough."

After a European run, Flowers will return stateside in November for a national tour. And when the buzz around "Flamingo" dies down, Flowers will return to his refreshed bandmates and work on album No. 4.

"Its inevitable," he says. "2011 is going to be the time that Im sure it will happen."

Editing by Sheri Linden



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Lady Gaga and jilted producer drop legal dispute

NEW YORK | Fri Sep 10, 2010 7:25pm EDT

NEW YORK Reuters - A legal battle between pop sensation Lady Gaga and her former producer and lover has ended, a Gaga spokeswoman said on Friday.

Producer Rob Fusari had sued his one-time protege for more than $30 million 19 million pounds claiming he was instrumental to her success but unable to profit from it when their romance ended.

He contended in his March lawsuit that he was a key figure in transforming the ambitious young woman named Stefani Germanotta into the pop phenomenon she is today, even helping coin her moniker, Lady Gaga.

Gaga countersued days later alleging the early agreement she had with Fusari was illegal and that she did not owe him one cent.

Both suits were dismissed by the New York State Supreme Court in late August and the decision was made public this week.

A spokeswoman for Lady Gaga said in a statement on Friday the double Grammy-award winner and Fusari "have agreed to end their dispute amicably and wish each other well."

"Rob Fusari is a Grammy award winning producer and co-writer of Paparazzi and a number of other songs on Lady Gagas debut album The Fame," the statement said.

An attorney for Fusari did not immediately return calls for comment. It was not clear whether any money had exchanged hands.

Lady Gaga has cultivated a rabid fanbase with her performance art shows and hits such as "Bad Romance" and "Alejandro". She has sold more than 10 million albums worldwide.

Fusaris lawsuit detailed how the singer met Fusari in March 2006 through a mutual friend. Initially unimpressed by her appearance, he asked her to sing and was "within seconds" blown away.

"Fusari thought Germanottas songs were brilliant but lacked commercial appeal. He pushed her to explore different musical genres," his lawsuit said.

Reporting by Basil Katz; Editing by Jill Serjeant



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Lady Gaga, producer withdraw dueling NY lawsuits AP

NEW YORK They may have had a bad romance, but now theres a cordial professional split between Lady Gaga and a music producer who said she ditched him as both a collaborator and a boyfriend after he helped launch her career.

Court papers filed this week show the Grammy Award-winning "Bad Romance" singer and songwriter-producer Rob Fusari agreed to dismiss the lawsuits each filed against the other in March in a Manhattan court.

Hed sought $30.5 million, but its unclear whether they made any monetary deal.

"Lady Gaga and Rob Fusari have agreed to end their dispute amicably and wish each other well. There will be no further comment by either of them," the singers camp said in a statement. A lawyer for Fusari didnt immediately respond to phone and e-mail messages Friday.

Fusari had said the pop-meets-performance-art sensation shoehorned him out of her lucrative career after he co-wrote such Gaga hits as "Paparazzi" and "Beautiful, Dirty, Rich," came up with her stage name and helped get her record deal.

Fusari � who has a producing credit on Lady Gagas 2008 debut album, "The Fame" � met the singer two years before when she was still Stefani Germanotta, according to his lawsuit. He has a studio in Parsippany, N.J.

He said they forged both a romantic and a business relationship, both soured, and he was denied money their contract had entitled him to, including a 20 percent share of her song royalties. He said hed gotten about $611,000 but was due far more.

"All business is personal," his lawsuit said. "When those personal relationships evolve into romantic entanglements, any corresponding business relationship usually follows the same trajectory so that when one crashes they all burn. That is what happened here."

Lady Gagas lawyers had said Fusari was just an agent for her and got the then-inexperienced singer to sign an unfair agreement in 2006. Her lawsuit asked a court to void the "unlawful arrangement," or at least declare that Fusari wasnt owed what he claimed.

Lady Gaga won two Grammys in January: best dance recording, for "Poker Face," and best electronic/dance album, for "The Fame." She leads the field of nominees with 13 nods for this years MTV Video Music Awards; the awards broadcast is set for Sunday.

Besides his work with Lady Gaga, Fusari has credits on such hits as Will Smiths "Wild, Wild West" and Destinys Childs "Bootylicious."



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Sarah Ferguson to rebuild life in TV show

LOS ANGELES | Fri Sep 10, 2010 6:37pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters - Britains Duchess of York is to make a six-part documentary show for U.S. television about her struggle to rebuild her life after a scandal over selling access to the British royal family.

The Oprah Winfrey Network OWN -- a new cable channel due to launch in January -- said on Friday the documentary would be called "Finding Sarah" and would debut in the first three months of 2011.

"Sarah Ferguson, The Duchess of York, will share with our viewers her personal struggle to rebuild her life," Lisa Erspamer, chief creative officer of OWN said in a statement.

"With the help of experts Dr. Phil McGraw, Suze Orman, Martha Beck and others, the Duchess will open up about her recent public troubles and explore her lifelong battles with weight, relationships and finances. She will look to put the past behind her and move forward to a positive future," Erspamer said.

Ferguson, 50, is the ex-wife of Britains Prince Andrew, the second son of Queen Elizabeth II. She was caught in an embarrassing British newspaper sting in May in which she was filmed appearing to ask for, and accept, $40,000 in cash in exchange for access to Prince Andrew, who is also a British trade envoy.

The couple divorced amicably in 1996 after 10 years of marriage, and have two grown children.

Ferguson swiftly apologized and appeared on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in June, saying that her own self-hatred, mounting debts and "gross stupidity" had led her to fall for the sting.

Ferguson said she was doing the TV documentary "because I need to heal my mind, body and spirit."

"After 22 years of raising my two amazing daughters, its time for me to mother myself. My hope is that sharing my journey will help someone else."

Ferguson has spent much of the past 10 years in the United States, becoming a weight-loss spokeswoman, writing childrens books, appearing on TV and in magazines. She founded the charity Children in Crisis in 1992.

OWN, a joint venture between influential talk show host Winfrey and Discovery Communications, launches in January 2011 and is expected to reach some 80 million homes.

Reporting by Jill Serjeant, editing by Christine Kearney



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Bono says writing "Spider-Man" easier than for U2

NEW YORK | Fri Sep 10, 2010 5:32pm EDT

NEW YORK Reuters - U2 frontman Bono said on Friday the songs composed for the most expensive show in Broadway history were simpler to write than the more personal songs he has written for the Irish rock band.

The songs for the eagerly anticipated $60 million production of "Spider-Man:Turn Off the Dark," turned out to be surprisingly less challenging than conjuring up melodies for U2, the singer told TV show "Good Morning America."

"The real question for us was, could we do it? Could we write songs that drove a story inspired by characters?," Bono told the TV show via satellite from U2s world tour. "It turns out it is actually harder to write songs about yourself than it is to write about other people."

The long-awaited musical inspired by the Marvel Comics hero with music by Bono and The Edge, will open on Broadway in December after being caught in financial problems and delayed from a February opening.

One of the songs played on the show, "Boy Falls From The Sky," sounded similar to U2s rock sound, but Bono said there would be variety in the music.

"It swerves all over the road," Bono said about the sound. "Thats the fun of it from a U2 perspective, you have got the big rock-n-roll tunes, melodrama, big melodies, theres orchestral stuff too."

Producers have promised a new take on the story of teenage science geek Peter Parker, who is bitten by a genetically-altered spider and wakes up the next morning clinging to the ceiling.

"We are interested in it because it is a really quintessential New York story and we are all kind of wannabe New Yorkers," said Bono. "Its not so serious, but post-9/11 this idea of everyone being capable of being a hero kind of caught our imaginations...hes a mythological character."

It was late Hollywood producer Tony Adams who approached The Edge and Bono with the idea for the Spiderman musical.

"He didnt know that Bono and I had been talking about doing something on Broadway for a long time," The Edge said. Adams died on the day U2 signed the musical deal.

Director Julie Taymor said Broadway newcomer Reeve Carney, who will play the title character, had the acting and singing prowess to pull off the role in a production which promises to have elaborate costumes and actors flying over the audience on cables.

Carney will be backed up in the musical by his band of the same name, who will play live, which The Edge said would give the show an "authentic" sound. Tickets for the show go on sale on Sunday.

U2 resumed their tour last month following a two-month absence while Bono recovered from a back injury.

Reporting by Christine Kearney, editing by Jill Serjeant



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Schwarzenegger-Shriver daughter writes first book AP

LOS ANGELES Katherine Schwarzenegger is following in the footsteps of her high-achieving parents, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver.

The 20-year-old college student has written a book coming out next week thats aimed at helping girls gain confidence in their bodies and themselves. Its titled "Rock What Youve Got: Secrets to Loving Your Inner and Outer Beauty" Hyperion.

Schwarzenegger says part of the motivation for the book was overhearing her preteen cousins talk about their desire to be thin and "sexy." Shes also faced her own battle with self-esteem as a teenager in the public eye.

The book is the first for Katherine Schwarzenegger, a junior at the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism. Her mother, a former NBC News correspondent, also is an author.



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DiCaprio "wife" told to keep away for three years

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NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



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Roger Ebert to appear on movie review show AP

CHICAGO Film critic Roger Ebert, who lost his ability to speak and eat after cancer surgeries, said Friday that he is returning to television on a movie review show that he is producing for public television.

And, Ebert says, the thumbs up and thumbs down reviews made famous with his late partner Gene Siskel will return.

"This is the rebirth of a dream," Ebert said in a statement.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning Chicago Sun-Times film critic is producing "Roger Ebert Presents At the Movies" with his wife, Chaz Ebert. The weekly, half-hour review program will debut in January and be syndicated nationally on public television stations.

The show will feature co-host Christy Lemire of The Associated Press and contributing critic Elvis Mitchell of National Public Radio and former movie critic for The New York Times. Ebert will have his own segment on the show called "Rogers Office," during which he will use his computer voice to review new movies or talk about the state of film.

In a pilot of the new show, Ebert is shown sitting behind a desk, typing his review of a documentary. The computer voice says his words as he discusses the film. As Ebert finishes his review, he says: "I think its a real discovery on DVD and I give it a big thumbs up." And he does.

"Roger Ebert felt that theres still a need for a straight forward movie review show to tell you whether or not a critic thinks the movies are worth seeing," Chaz Ebert said in an interview. "Christy and Elvis sat in for Roger at various times in his absence and we thought they were smart and vibrant and exciting critics."

Earlier this year, Disney-ABC Domestic Television announced the cancellation of "At The Movies," the successor to Eberts review programs with Siskel of the Chicago Tribune and later with the Sun Times Richard Roeper.

The new show features Lemire and Mitchell sitting in red movie theater seats debating back and forth about a movie before issuing a thumbs up or thumbs down review, not unlike Siskel and Ebert years before.

Lemire said Siskel was an inspiration when she was starting out as a film critic and she finds it humbling to be on the same show as Ebert.

"Hes better than ever," she said. "Viewers who love the show and watched it for decades will be thrilled to see him back."

She also says her goal is to expose viewers to movies they might not have heard of before.

"Were elated that Christy has been picked to help lead this new show," said Lou Ferrara, APs managing editor for entertainment. "Christys insightful reviews are read by millions worldwide � movies still matter � and we believe she is a great match for this program."

Rich Moskal, head of the Chicago Film Office, said Eberts return to the small screen will be welcomed by his loyal fans and followers.

"He has forged new territory with film criticism throughout his career and taken it places it hasnt been before in popularizing it and making it accessible," Moskal said. "This is just another step in that direction."

___

Online: http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/



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Foxy Brown pleads not guilty to NY court violation AP

NEW YORK Rapper Foxy Brown has pleaded not guilty to charges of violating a court order stemming from a 2007 confrontation with her neighbor in New York City.

Brown, whose real name is Inga Marchand, entered the plead Friday to a charge of criminal contempt. She could face up to one year in jail.

Prosecutors say Brown violated the order in July by screaming at neighbor Arlene Raymond before bending over, baring her buttocks and showing her underwear while shouting an obscenity.

The 31-year-old Brown was issued the order of protection after pleading guilty in 2008 to menacing Raymond with her cell phone.

The two had been in a dispute over Brown blasting her car stereo outside their Brooklyn building.



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Arsonist gets prison in Philly record company fire AP

PHILADELPHIA A man has been sentenced to prison after drunkenly breaking into a famous Philadelphia recording companys headquarters and starting a fire.

Twenty-eight-year-old Christopher Cimini was sentenced Friday to 1 1/2 to 10 years in prison for the crime at Philadelphia International Records in February.

The label was home to Teddy Pendergrass, Patti LaBelle, Lou Rawls and the OJays. Sound of Philadelphia producers Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff lost much of their memorabilia to fire, smoke or water damage.

Cimini pleaded guilty in July to arson and related charges, although his attorney says he was too drunk to remember starting the fire.

Investigators say Cimini had a blood-alcohol content of 0.27 percent. He was rescued by firefighters.



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Taymor: Spider-man about story despite effects AP

NEW YORK Bono and the Edge wrote the music for the upcoming Broadway production "SPIDER-MAN Turn Off the Dark," and a new song previewed from the production Friday sounds like it could be part of the U2 catalog.

But the musicals director, Julie Taymor, says the pair drew from many different genres to create a sound that is more than a typical rock concert.

"They have gone way beyond what I thought any rock musicians would do because theyre really serious storytellers and they get it, and they get the world of music that they can draw from. Theyre not frightened of it," Taymor said.

"Its not like they have to put their U2 stamp on everything. Theres real orchestral, ballads and ancient music and its just drawn from many sources to support the story. Its amazing."

Bono and the Edge previewed the song "Boy Falls From the Sky" from "SPIDER-MAN" on ABCs "Good Morning America" via satellite while on tour. The song was performed by the rock band Carney at the Hudson Theatre; its lead singer, Reeve Carney, stars in the musical as Spider-man and the rest of his band is part of the musical as well.

"Im so honored that Bono thought that I could sing songs that he wrote," said Carney afterward.

The musical based on the superhero has been in the works at least seven years. Though it had delays and other setbacks, Taymor said the idea that it has been a tortured road to Broadway has been overblown.

"People made more of that than it was. It stopped, but we all had things to do and our heart was still with this project," said Taymor, whose vision brought the Tony-award winning "Lion King" to Broadway. "Now Ive got a fabulous cast, unbelievable people on the technical side, and its mind boggling because its so ambitious, but we believe the material supports the ambition. Its a beautiful story."

Taymor said the story of this Spider-man is different than what many grew up reading in comic books, including a love triangle involving Spider-mans alter-ego Peter Parkers girlfriend, Mary Jane: "There are many familiar things that people will know, but on the other hand, were bringing a new angle.

"Bono and Edge were ... very integral to the creation of these characters and the story because the songs have to deliver the story."

The musical is set to open on Broadway in late December. Taymor said its the most ambitious project shes done and promises never-before-tried theatrics, including battle scenes that will take place over the audience and in the balcony, and cyber-villians for a mix of theater and film. But she said the special effects do not overshadow the plot.

"Im not there to just do circus or do visual effects for their own sake," she said.

Although there are a wealth of comic-book characters from which to base a musical on, Taymor said she chose Spider-man because hes someone everyone can identify with.

"He is the everyman, hes the boy from Queens, the high school kid, who gets bitten by a genetically altered spider and now has to contend with how to keep his life on balance," she said. "Thats very different form the other ones, where theyre just fighting evil and battling evil and theyve got everything given to him."

___

Online:

http://spidermanonbroadway.marvel.com/



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Multiple love blooms in films at Venice festival AP

VENICE, Italy Its not clear whos more daring, the German threesome or the French foursome.

In any case, multiple love is in the air at the Venice Film Festival.

Tom Tykwer presented his new film "Three Drei" here Friday, the story of a married couple who fall in love with the same man. French filmmaker Antony Cordier told a different tale earlier in the festival in his new film "Happy Few," about two couples who form an immediate bond, which easily leads to switching sexual partners.

Both movies are in competition for the coveted Golden Lion, to be awarded Saturday evening at the festivals end.

Cordier called his movie a search for "conjugal utopia" by todays thirty-somethings who were raised with sexual freedom.

"They are trying to develop new chimeras as a result of this new sexual freedom. It is not bourgeois adultery lived in secret," said Cordier, whose last film, "Cold Showers," won Frances Prix Louis Delluc in 2005.

"It is an experience that happens to many people, it happens in many social brackets. We looked at this story because it is so ordinary and banal," Cordier said.

In the film, Rachel meets Vincent when he works on a website for her jewelry business. She invites him and his wife for dinner with her husband, and before the friendship is cemented they all fall in love. Between the trysts, they keep up normal activities, going away together and out with their children.

But their attempt to have love without rules eventually is tested. Jealousies emerge and the couples need to confront the emotional price of their mutual, consensual affairs.

Marina Fois, who plays Rachel, said she agreed with Cordiers preference not to analyze the characters in advance.

"He didnt really want to talk about it beforehand, which is quite sweet because his characters arent people who premeditate things," Fois said.

Cordier said he shot the love scenes without interruption, and cut them later.

He said the women were the engines in the movie, driving the relationships, organizing the normal life around the trysts.

"They make love 100 times in the movie, but one more time and everything becomes impossible," Cordier said. "Reality is not as nice as the utopia they were dreaming of, which brings them to the end of the story."

Tykwers "Three," set in Berlin, peppers the Hollywood romantic comedy format with a bit of drama when a happy married couple, Hanna, played by Sophie Rois, and Simon Sebastian Schipper separately meet and fall for the same guy, Adam Devid Striesow.

Its Hanna who takes the plunge first, spending the night with Adam after running into him on more than one unexpected occasion.

Later in the film Simon meets Adam and sparks fly between them as well.

"Its obvious that this film is full of romantic moments because the three actors fall in love with each other. So the fact that it became a comedy was just a coincidence," Tykwer said at a news conference Friday.

Like Cordier, Tykwer sees the story as something that could happen to anyone.

"Its a strange situation, but a bit banal if you wish, and there are some dramatic moments and extreme events and from this tension stems the comedy," he said.

Such moments include the unexpected death of Simons mother his undergoing emergency surgery. While recovering, Simon meets a nurse with whom he had had a relationship 20 years earlier and who gives him some startling news. Amid all this, regular life, including unexpected love affairs, goes on.

The film reaches a resolution but Tykwer says its not aiming "to sell a new idea or a new institution. Its not about deciding how we should be or in which way we as a society should be moving."

In portraying Hanna, Rois said the question of marriage was also on her mind.

"I wanted to see with what stubbornness we try to stick to the idea of conventional families," she said.

Tykwer debuted at the Venice film festival with his breakout film, "Run Lola Run" and returned with "The Princess and the Warrior," his last German language film until "Three."

____

Associated Press reporter Colleen Barry contributed to this report from Venice.



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Director: Barneys Version took 10 years AP

VENICE, Italy Barneys Version, which made its debut at the Venice Film Festivals last main day, spans four decades in the life of a flawed man and took 10 years to reach the screen.

Richard J. Lewis directs the film adaptation of Canadian author Mordecai Richlers comic novel, with Paul Giamatti playing Barney Panofsky and Dustin Hoffin as the characters father, Izzy.

Producer John Landis was friends with Richler, who died in 2001, and said a decade was needed for turning the 400-page book into the movie.

"He was the enfant terrible of the Jewish community in Canada because he made fun of them," Landis told reporters of Richler. "He perfected the art of satirical wit, but he is making fun of them with a soft glove."

Director Lewis said he felt pressure "every day" in adapting the much-loved book to film. "There was a lot of pressure to be sure the essential nature of the book was translated to the screen and to be sure the love story was succinct," he said.

That love story involves Panofskys third wife and true love Miriam, played in the film by Rosamund Pike. The relationship serves to transform Panofsky from a rather reprehensible and obnoxious individual into someone human and generous.

Giamatti plays Panofsky as essentially a self-depreciating, self-destructive, low-grade television producer with a foul mouth who is also a possible murderer, and often drunk to boot. "I just followed the script and I tried not to get in the way of it and screw it up," he said.

Perhaps most notable among the films on-screen antics were the scenes between Giamatti and Hoffman.

"If he needs to get deeper in the scene, he turns it inside out. It becomes like a Picasso painting, and you follow him. He knows what he is doing," Giamatti said of working with Hoffman.

Giamatti described one key scene where Hoffman corrected Giamattis misinterpretation of a scene in which Panofsky wants to tell his father he is getting a divorce and ask his advice on doing that.

"I said a line, and he said I dont believe you. He pulled it out of me. What the scene was really about is that I wanted to tell him about the woman I was in love with. And I didnt know it."

The festival ends Saturday evening with the awarding of the top Golden Lion and other prizes.



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DiCaprio granted 3 years protection from woman AP

LOS ANGELES A judge has granted Leonardo DiCaprio a three-year restraining order from a woman who he said claims to be his wife and carrying his baby.

During a brief hearing Friday, a Los Angeles judge ordered that Livia Bistriceanu stay 100 yards away from the actor. Court filings state Bistriceanu traveled from Chicago to Los Angeles and acted aggressively when she showed up at DiCaprios home and business offices recently.

Bistriceanu, who has been twice placed on psychiatric hold, was notified of a temporary restraining order but did not appear in court.

The Academy Award-nominated actor did not attend Fridays hearing.

DiCaprio stated in court filings that he was frightened of the 41-year-old woman and that she presented a threat to his personal safety.



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Halo: Reach aims to grab gamers again AP

LOS ANGELES Since fans lined up at midnight nearly three years ago for the release of the last "Halo" video game, a recession struck the economy, President Barack Obama took office and "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2" became the best-selling shooter game of all time. When the prequel "Halo: Reach" debuts Sept. 14, it will land on a very different world.

"Halo" achieved status as a cultural phenomenon in 2007 with Master Chief, the armored hero of the original trilogy, adorning french fry wrappers, soda cans and a race car. The sci-fi shoot-em-up saga became a cash cow for Microsoft Corp., spawning novels, toys and apparel, and boosting sales of Xboxes, the only consoles where "Halo" can be found.

"Its among the elite video game franchises," said NPD gaming industry analyst Anita Frazier. "Its among the Top 20 of all video game properties with relatively few releases compared to some of the other franchises. Halo 2 and Halo 3 are both among the Top 20 games ranked on total unit sales, and the original Halo is among the Top 50 games."

However, in the three years since Master Chief was put to bed by Bungie Studios, much has changed along the gaming landscape, especially in the popular shooter genre. "Call of Duty," the aging war simulator from Activision Blizzard Inc., reclaimed hardcore gamers attention with the contemporary "Modern Warfare" series from developers Infinity Ward.

"The game thats going to suffer from fatigue the most is Call of Duty because everybody played that a year ago," said Wedbush Morgan gaming industry analyst Michael Pachter. "They havent seen a brand new Halo game in three years. I think three years between iterations is actually just enough time to get people excited about playing Halo again."

It probably wont be enough to gun down the latest chapter in the recharged "Call of Duty" franchise though. Pachter anticipates that over 6 million copies of "Reach" will be sold this year, on par with the 2007 sales of "Halo 3," while he predicts that over 12 million copies of developer Treyarchs "Call of Duty: Black Ops" will be sold by years end.

"This is the first time weve ever had a Halo game with any real competition," he added.

"Reach" is slated to be the last "Halo" entry developed by Bungie Studios, which signed an exclusive 10-year deal earlier this year with Activision to publish and distribute a series of games for various platforms. The deal marks Bungie Studios first partnership since breaking off in 2007 from Microsoft, who retains the rights to the "Halo" universe.

"It couldve been a game we phoned in," said Marcus Lehto, creative director at Bungie Studios. "It couldve been our last game, and we just said, OK This is our last "Halo." Goodbye We didnt want to do that. Youd think were crazy, because we went back and decided that the Halo 3 engine wasnt capable of accommodating the vision we had for Reach."

Lehto and his team have slipped into a different, more personalized direction with "Reach." Instead of personifying genetically enhanced Spartan super-soldier Master Chief, players become Noble Six, a mysterious new member of the Noble Team, a group of hardened Spartans tasked with deterring The Covenant alien force from obliterating the planet Reach.

"One of the things we wanted to do with Reach is to allow players to truly invest themselves in their Spartan character, and make their own unique Spartan," said Lehto. "When you first put in the disc to play Reach, you will be prompted to begin that customization process and continue to customize your character as you continue to play."

Noble Six can be a man or a woman and outfitted with hundreds of different armor, color and emblem combinations, as well as grab special gadgets like jet packs, invisible camouflage and holograms along the way. Lehto hopes that more chances for players to fashion their character means this "Halo" game will reach beyond just young male shooter fans.

The intergalactic protagonist also has a past as a pilot, providing players with the opportunity to take to the skies � and beyond � for the first time in a "Halo" game. Lehto said the team at Bungie Studios packed as many such dramatic moments into the single-player campaign and amped up the multiplayer mode knowing that this would be their last "Halo."

"We really never anticipated it becoming this big," said Lehto. "There was so much responsibility on our shoulders to make sure that Reach is the best of all the Halo games. We put every bit of effort we could into this game. While were happy that its done, and were proud of what we created, were really sad to say goodbye to the Halo universe."

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Online:

http://halo.xbox.com



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Director: Spider-man musical doesnt have U2 sound AP

NEW YORK Director Julie Taymor is giving high marks to U2s Bono and the Edge for their work on the new Broadway production "Spider-man: Turn Off the Dark."

The pair wrote the songs for the musical. They previewed a tune from the show on ABCs "Good Morning America" via satellite on Friday, performed by the band Carney at the Hudson Theatre.

Taymor says the pair were integral in creating the characters in the musical. She also says the songs dont all have a U2 stamp but draw from a variety of musical genres.

The show will open in December.

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Online:

http://spidermanonbroadway.marvel.com



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Yoko Ono installation seeks healing amid violence AP

BERLIN At the center of Yoko Onos new installation is a perfectly round bullet hole shot through a large pane of glass that John Lennons widow says challenges viewers to confront "incredible violence and abuse" in the world today.

Titled "Das Gift" � a play on the words meaning in English, a present, and German, poison � the exhibit opened in Berlin Friday. The 77-year-old artist told The Associated Press she hoped it would force viewers to confront violence without losing hope.

"I want all of us to understand what is going on in the world now, which is incredible violence and abuse," Ono said. "Instead of just putting that reality under the rug and just forget about it, we have to face it."

The centerpiece of the installation is called simply "The Hole," the oversized bullet hole in the window that Ono said she made with the idea of the violence that takes place daily around the world.

"There are many, many holes in many, many windows in our world. And I was thinking about that," Ono said.

But it then took on a larger, more personal meaning as a tribute to her late husband, slain outside their New York City home 30 years ago in December.

"When I made it, I though, ah, I remember," Ono said.

In addition, the installation features seven overcoats that were worn by people who were shot at point-blank range, and a wall where viewers shadows are projected and intermingle.

There is also a series of German army helmets suspended from the ceiling and filled with pale-blue puzzle pieces � pieces of "sky" that viewers can take home with them.

In an upstairs room, people are invited to smile into a computer fitted with camera, allowing their happy images to be added hundreds of others that Ono has collected in a database � some of which are flashed onto an adjacent wall.

Ono said she wanted to show the installation in Berlin, where it runs at the Haunch of Venison gallery until Nov. 13, because the citys turbulent history paralleled the turmoil that touched her own life.

"I felt all the time that I was making this that people in Berlin would understand me," Ono said.

She said her ultimate aim is to spread a message of hope and peace.

"Theres a dream of hope, and I think that this century that just started now, started very badly, but it is going to be very beautiful," Ono said.



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MTV hoping to move on from West debacle at VMAs AP

LOS ANGELES Dont expect a duet between Kanye West and Taylor Swift at the MTV Video Music Awards.

Jesse Ignjatovic, the executive producer of Sundays show, flatly declared theres no chance of the pair reuniting in song a year after West interrupted Swifts acceptance speech for best female video to proclaim that Beyonce should have instead won the prize. Ignjatovic hopes that West, whos slated to perform, wont be interrupting anyone this time.

"The beautiful thing about Kanye is hes not one to repeat himself," said Ignjatovic.

The outspoken rapper took to his Twitter account last week to again apologize for last years on-air fiasco, acknowledging that he was wrong for lunging on stage at Radio City Music Hall and grabbing the microphone away from then-teen country crooner Swift, whos again nominated for best female video but isnt confirmed to attend this years show.

"I am getting the feeling from him and his tweets over the last couple of days that he wants to get rid of that," said bawdy late-night host Chelsea Handler, who is hosting the ceremony for the first time. "That is a good place for him to be. He should move on, so he can have something else to talk about."

West, who is readying his next album, has kept a lower profile since the incident and subsequent public backlash. His moment in the spotlight Sunday could provide the perfect opportunity to seek redemption from MTV viewers. In his series of tweets last week, he revealed that he wrote a song for Swift, and "if she wont take it, then Ill perform it for her."

"I hope that we move on from it," said Ignjatovic. "It feels like its time. It was a year ago."

Producers have made no accommodations for a potential West ambush with this years stage, a space-age paradise inspired by mid-century modern architecture thats almost completely open to the crowd. The sweeping stage design, dreamed up by German designer Florian Wieder, required about 2,000 orchestra seats to be removed from the Nokia Theatre.

"Its very accessible," said Ignjatovic while peering at the set from the audience.

Videos of nominees will blast on two giant screens enveloping the theater, as well as a massive rotating billboard rising up from a smaller oval stage. Deadmau5, the shows house disc jockey, will perform from his trademark cube booth hoisted above the crowd. Hell be joined by the likes of Robyn, Travie McCoy and Jason Derulo on a nearby curvy catwalk.

"When the audience sees it for the first time, its going to look like no other show theyve ever seen," said MTV general manager Stephen Friedman. "I promise you that. Our team has transformed it. Ive never seen a set quite like this in the history of the VMAs. The way that its configured enabled us to mold it to exactly the way we wanted it."

Lady Gaga leads this years nominees with 13 nods behind the eight nominations for Eminem, who will open the ceremony. Other acts scheduled to perform include Drake, Mary J. Blige, Swizz Beatz, Bruno Mars, Florence and the Machine, Usher, Paramore, Linkin Park, B.o.B. and Justin Bieber, the teen sensation who is set to take his routine outside the theater.

Ultimately, as with all VMAs, spectacle trumps substance. This is the show where Madonna swapped spit with Britney Spears, and Eminem fought a puppet. Whether an invitation to attend this years festivities is accepted by Swift or not, all eyes will certainly be on West. If hes on his best behavior, what will everyone be talking about the next day?

"In a million years, we couldnt have predicted it last year," said Friedman. "I think this years the same. Well have the guys from Jackass, the cast from Glee and some of the True Blood cast there. I dont know. What we try to do is bring the most entertaining talent and artists together, and that brew always creates fascinating moments for us."

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Associated Press writer Natalie Rotman contributed to this report.

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MTV is owned by Viacom Inc.

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Online:

http://vmas.mtv.com/



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Representatives say Glenn Beck to donate fee AP

ANCHORAGE, Alaska Representatives say Glenn Beck will donate his speaking fee from his upcoming appearance with Sarah Palin in Anchorage.

Christopher Balfe, president of Becks media company, says the fee from Saturdays event at the Denaina Civic and Convention Center will go to the Special Operations Warrior Foundation. The organization provides scholarships and services to families of military members.

The amount is not being disclosed.

Balfe says Palin is not receiving a fee for introducing the Fox News Channel personality at the event, taking place on the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.

Tickets range from $73.75 to $225. Therin Ferrin, with a private contractor that operates the citys convention centers, says all but 800 of 4,500 tickets had been sold.



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"Barneys Version" makes it from book to big screen

VENICE | Fri Sep 10, 2010 9:40am EDT

VENICE Reuters - A bittersweet comedy premiering at the Venice film festival brings to the big screen the cult book "Barneys Version," the witty story of a politically incorrect Jewish man spanning four decades and three marriages.

The film, the last to screen in the main competition at the festival ahead of Saturdays awards ceremony, casts Paul Giamatti as Barney Panofsky, the irreverent hero of Canadian author Mordecai Richlers 1997 prize-winning novel.

Stung by accusations that he murdered his best friend, Barney decides to tell "the true story of my wasted life" and does so by dividing it into three parts, each corresponding to one of his wives.

Barneys caustic humor -- his TV company is called Totally Unnecessary Productions and he drinks his whisky at Grumpys Bar -- and the candid tone of his memoir made for an entertaining end to the festival.

"Hopefully hes a jerk who is likeable," Giamatti told Reuters in an interview after a press screening of the film, a Canadian-Italian co-production.

"I dont think of him as like a Woody Allen character but he has the humor definitely, that kind of dark, self-deprecating, pessimistic Jewish humor which I like, which I think is great."

Producer Robert Lantos spent more than a decade turning the book, which won Canadas most prestigious literary award, into a film and struggled to find the right screenplay writer after Richler died in 2001.

"Making, at least in the English-speaking world today, any film that is not designed for teenagers is a path full of hurdles which I dont recommend to anyone," Lantos said.

"This was particularly complex because the screenplay was going to be written by Mordecai Richler. He had written the screenplays for all previous films made from his novels and he began to write Barneys Version and then he became ill and then he left us ... That became the major hurdle."

"TRUE TO THE BOOK"

For Lantos and director Richard J. Lewis the biggest challenge was to do justice to the novel, which also plays with the idea that this being Barneys point of view, it is not totally reliable.

"People are expecting a movie that feels true to the book and thats my job," Lewis said.

"I think the most important thing is that the characters be in sync, that Barney Panofsky in the book and Barney Panofsky in the film feel the same and the wives feel right."

Minnie Driver is Barneys second wife, a wealthy Jewish woman who talks endlessly, while Rosamund Pike is cast as his third wife Miriam, the true love of his life.

Some of the novels characters have either been eliminated or condensed in the film, which also sets Barneys bohemian years in Rome rather than Paris -- a choice producers said had been made in agreement with Richler.

Conversely, the character of Barneys father -- an older version of the protagonist played by Dustin Hoffman -- has been beefed up.

"Thirty years ago he would have played this part way better than I did," Giamatti said of Hoffman, who did not make the trip to Venice.

Additional reporting by Hanna Rantala, editing by Paul Casciato



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Star-light Venice film festival lacks magic moment

VENICE | Fri Sep 10, 2010 7:48am EDT

VENICE Reuters - The 2010 Venice film festival nears its end lacking the buzz which a standout movie provides and the A-list star power on which such events thrive.

The 24-strong competition lineup, featuring the youngest group of directors in memory, has been seen by critics as solid and varied, providing everything from French comedy to Polish existential minimalism to effects-heavy Chinese costume drama.

But unlike 2009, when the harrowing war movie "Lebanon" was a popular winner, and 2008, when "The Wrestler" launched the surprise comeback of Hollywood outsider Mickey Rourke, this year has lacked a defining moment that unites audiences.

With no clear frontrunner now all of the movies have been screened, jury president Quentin Tarantino has the tough task of deciding who wins the coveted Golden Lion award for best picture at the closing ceremony on Saturday.

"The film average is very good, but theres been nothing to fall in love with," Il Foglio said in a recent editorial, although the Italian daily did later identify "Venus Noire" as a worthy contender for awards.

Add to that a cinema complex resembling a building site, wet weather, the closure of the historic Hotel Des Bains and strong competition from the Toronto film festival which overlaps with Venice, and 2010 may not linger long in the memory.

CHINESE, RUSSIAN FILMS FANCIED

Among the favorites are Chinese entry "The Ditch," about the plight of political prisoners deported to labor camps in 1950s China, and Russian film "Silent Souls," a contemplative look at a fading minority culture and obsessive love.

"It is quietly eloquent on both counts, showing how the cinema can sometimes achieve a kind of poetry as well as prose," British film critic Derek Malcolm wrote in a four-star review of Silent Souls.

Venus Noire, the true story of a woman brought from South Africa to Europe in 1810 and turned into a freak show, could touch a chord given director Abdellatif Kechiches argument that its themes of intolerance and racism are still relevant today.

"Post Mortem" looks at Chiles military coup of 1973 through the eyes of a man working in a morgue, and "Meeks Cutoff" is a retelling of the Hollywood western through the eyes of a group of women stranded in the American desert.

French comedy "Potiche," starring French veterans Catherine Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu, was popular, while Spains "Balada Triste de Trompeta," about a love triangle set in a circus, divided audiences but had some fervent admirers.

Bearing in mind Tarantinos debt to Asian cinema and the martial arts genre in particular, Takashi Miikes "13 Assassins" is regarded as an outsider, as is "Black Swan," a psychological thriller in which Natalie Portman shines as a disturbed dancer.

Portman is a strong contender for best actress, as is Venus Noire star Yahima Torres with her big screen debut.

Among leading actors, Vincent Gallo as a suspected Taliban fighter on the run in "Essential Killing" and Paul Giamatti in book adaptation "Barneys Version" are in the running for a prize.

Outside the main competition, Joaquin Phoenix documentary "Im Still Here" provided the main talking point, with viewers unsure whether the disturbing and unflattering portrait of an artist in crisis was genuine or an elaborate hoax.

Director Casey Affleck, Phoenixs brother-in-law, insisted there was no hoax, but nagging doubts remain.

Robert Rodriguezs "Machete," about an aging former Mexican cop out for revenge against the killers of his family, had audiences laughing out loud, while "The Town," directed by and starring Ben Affleck, won mixed reviews.

Editing by Paul Casciato



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Oscar hopefuls look to make splash in Toronto

Fri Sep 10, 2010 7:28am EDT

TORONTO Hollywood Reporter - Like debutantes at a cotillion, movies that harbor Oscar hopes are about to be presented to the world at the Toronto International Film Festival, which got underway Thursday night.

At first blush, many of them sport the kind of credentials that automatically get the attention of Academy voters: Danny Boyle, whose "Slumdog Millionaire" swept the Oscars in 2009 after winning the Peoples Choice Award in Toronto, is back with his newest film, "127 Hours"; double Oscar winner Hilary Swank will stake her claim for further consideration with the crusading legal drama "Conviction"; and Colin Firth, who was nominated last year for "A Single Man," is auditioning for back-to-back nods for his latest, "The Kings Speech," in which he plays a stammering King George VI.

Still, while Toronto audiences are famously film-friendly -- tickets are made available to the general public, which almost always enthusiastically applauds the visiting cinema dignitaries -- the festival also can be treacherous. The concentration of press from around the world can create a deafening echo chamber that can kill an Oscar campaign before it even gets started. For every movie that has charmed moviegoers at this sprawling fest, theres another that slunk out of town after leaving viewers cold.

In 2006, for example, Steven Zaillians adaptation of the Robert Penn Warren novel "All the Kings Men" arrived with an impeccable pedigree: It was based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning book, and Sean Penn promised to deliver a barn-burner of a performance. But after the Toronto crowd delivered a collective thumbs-down, and general audiences stayed away after its release, the film quietly fell off the awards radar.

The same thing happened several years earlier to Robert Bentons adaptation of Philip Roths critically lauded novel "The Human Stain," starring Anthony Hopkins. After finding no love in Toronto, the movie fell by the wayside.

This year, Fox Searchlight is fielding one of the most high-profile playbills: Along with "127 Hours" and "Conviction," its Toronto entries include Mark Romaneks "Never Let Me Go," an adaptation of the Kazuo Ishiguro novel that features rising young actors Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield and Keira Knightley, and Darren Aronofskys "Black Swan," which left audiences at the Venice International Film Festival -- where it had its world premiere -- chattering about Natalie Portmans portrait of a fiercely ambitious ballet dancer.

Whatever awards attention might await the respective films, Fox Searchlight said thats not the primary reason for bringing them to Toronto.

"This may sound naive, but the decision to come to Toronto had less to do with awards and more about building buzz for four films that should get good audience reaction in a festival setting, and all have real playability in their different ways," said Michelle Hooper, executive vp marketing at the 20th Century Fox arthouse unit. "If you dont feel you have the goods with a film, you wouldnt take it to the festival. It is taking a risk, but we think its a risk thats worth it."

Certainly, when the klieg lights all align, a successful Toronto bow -- especially if it follows similarly upbeat reactions at either Venice or Telluride -- can boost a movies visibility almost overnight.

Oscar handicappers already had included Tom Hoopers "Speech" on their lists simply because it looked as if it would fit into the niche of well-mannered costume dramas, but after it earned a standing ovation at Telluride last weekend, the Weinstein Co. release was immediately promoted to Oscar favorite and is looking to its Toronto screening to maintain that momentum.

During the next few days, critics also will be passing judgment on a number of films -- like Clint Eastwoods supernatural-tinged "Hereafter," starring Matt Damon, which Warners is readying for an October 22 release after its makes a stop at the New York Film Festival.

But even after all the films screen and their relative awards merits are debated, theres the added suspense of whether those movies that are arriving without distribution will even make it to the starting line for the 2010 race.

Among the films looking for a deal is director Robert Redfords period courtroom drama "The Conspirator," in which James McAvoy plays a lawyer reluctantly defending a woman Robin Wright accused of plotting to assassinate Abraham Lincoln.



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Runway stars, Siriano kick off NY Fashion Week AP

NEW YORK New York Fashion Week brought its cutting-edge style uptown on Thursday, opening its spring-collection previews in a new location at Lincoln Center.

Gone are the tents at Bryant Park where hundreds of designers had launched runways since 1993. Instead, an estimated 100,000 buyers, editors, stylists and celebrities will visit the new home of Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week.

While most shows will still be in tents, located just southwest of the landmark fountain that usually welcomes opera and ballet lovers, the facilities and the faux marble facade have a feeling of permanence.

It was time for fashion to take its place at a New York institution of fine arts, said Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, a former Vogue employee who now is serving as Lincoln Centers liaison to this new community.

"Fashion designers are truly creative people. Its not just a business when it comes to these collections," she said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg visited the site on Wednesday, taking the newly christened No. 1 "Fashion Line" subway there. The new name is temporary, lasting only through the eight days of fashion shows from designers such as Diane von Furstenberg, Zac Posen, Tommy Hilfiger, Carolina Herrera and Vera Wang.

"Project Runway" and one of its alumni, Christian Siriano, were the marquee shows on opening day.

New York Fashion Week, which extends into other neighborhoods, "creates major excitement that ripples through the city," Bloomberg said. He noted that fashion is responsible for 175,000 jobs in New York, and that the two fashion-show seasons have a $750 million impact on the local economy.

Bloomberg then reported that he bought his tie at Hermes, shirt at Paul Stuart and underwear at Bloomingdales.

CHRISTIAN SIRIANO

Christian Siriano fans know from his "Project Runway" days that he has a flair for the dramatic, but whats winning him praise with the sometimes tough-to-please crowd at New York Fashion Week is his sense of his customer. He successfully juggled the two on Thursday.

First out on the runway was a buttery caramel-colored safari jacket with slim-fit white trousers � an appropriately luxe, chic outfit for women of many ages and many climates � while the finale gown was a bright-red, one-shoulder tulle gown that looked like a walking bed of roses.

Every look was paired with crazy platform shoes with cone-shaped heels that will be offered by the mass-market Payless.

Leather looks, especially a cognac wing-sleeve jacket and thick belt worn over a strapless organza pleated gown, were a highlight, and so were his modern treatments of metallic tweed, giraffe-print taffeta and snakelike embossing. A red-print cocktail dress with draped sleeves was a pretty, refreshing alternative to the usual little black dress.

Asymmetrical flounces � reminiscent of a pageant sash � were less contemporary, though.

PROJECT RUNWAY

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. Extra designers needed to participate to keep secret the winners and losers of episodes that havent yet aired on Lifetime.

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.

Johnson said she saw "sparks of talent" among the designers when she judged a challenge to turn party supplies into wearable clothes. "It was not up my alley, but there definitely was talent."

RICHARD CHAI

Richard Chai was feeling the vibe of Lincoln Center, turning out a spring collection for his Love label that mimicked styles favored by professional dancers and the students at the Juilliard School.

Layers, hardly new as a trend, were tweaked and freshened with sheer, sand-colored underpinnings, ribbed cummerbunds and soft, silky running shorts with contrast piping. The silhouettes were loose and flowy, but decidedly feminine thanks to the soothing neutral palette and strategic draping.

In his notes left for the stylists, editors and retailers, Chai quoted Martha Graham: "All that is important is this one moment in movement. Make the moment important, vital and worth living. Do not let it slip away unnoticed and unused."

Loose leggings were worn under shorts and dresses as the new take on tights, and a silk-poly-metal fabric blend used for jackets and a pair of chic trousers was stiff yet slouchy. Chai also brought back the wide-leg palazzo pant, an easy choice for a warm-weather vacation, often pairing it with an appropriately crinkled jacket or gathered top.

This could be a further evolution of the trouser trend that has taken hold among the fashion-forward set for fall.

VENA CAVA

The Vena Cava girls took a tour through the 80s with inspiration from Memphis, an Italian design movement dating back to the 1980s known for bold colors and geometric shapes.

Designers Lisa Mayock and Sophie Buhai showed a collection heavy on black, red, aquamarine green, rust and bright yellow. Beige culottes were paired with a black zip-up jacket. Netting was used on the back of a beige romper and on a cream cotton dress, tied with a rope belt and worn under a beige blazer.

"They are almost like disco silhouettes, some of them. Theyre clothes that you could just dance all night in, that you feel totally comfortable doing anything in," said Mayock.

Some dresses had asymmetrical hemlines: longer on the sides and short in back and front.

"We also have a lot of day gowns. We are kind of sick of seeing of the LBDs little black dresses. We liked the idea of girls wearing floor length things really casually," Buhai said.

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AP reporter Lisa Orkin Emmanuel contributed to this report.



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Lane, Cross join Stand Up To Cancer telethon AP

LOS ANGELES Diane Lane, Marcia Cross and Mark Harmon are set to join more than 100 celebrities for Fridays "Stand Up To Cancer" telethon.

Kyra Sedgwick, Jay Leno and Ryan Seacrest also have been added to the list for the hourlong fundraiser, to be simulcast commercial-free by ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and a number of cable channels.

Other previously announced stars include Sally Field, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and George Clooney.

Donations to the telecast are intended to fund innovative cancer research. The first telethon, in 2008, helped raise more than $100 million.

"Stand Up to Cancer," hosted by news anchors Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer and Brian Williams, will air at 8 p.m. EDT Friday. It also will be seen on the Armed Forces Network.

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Online:

http://www.standup2cancer.org



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