Tuesday, September 21, 2010

"Baywatch" star Hasselhoff first 'Dancing' victim

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 22, 2010 1:30am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Maybe David Hasselhoff should have sported a Speedo on the dance floor.

The former "Baywatch" lifesaver was the first celebrity contestant cut from the new season of ABC's "Dancing with the Stars" on Tuesday after performing an arthritic cha-cha.

The judges variously described his turn during Monday's performance round as "very bizarre" and "a potpourri of insanity disguised as dance."

Hasselhoff went into the elimination round tied at last place with unsteady comedian Margaret Cho and under-rehearsed MTV reality star Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino.

Viewers declined to come to his rescue when it was their turn to supplement the judges' scores.

Afterwards, the 58-year-old actor described his brief tenure on the show as "a great ride," while his daughters attributed his poor performance to bad knees.

The dance continues for singers Brandy and Michael Bolton, political progeny Bristol Palin, reality starlet Audrina Patridge, retired sportsmen Kurt Warner and Rick Fox, former Disney Channel child star Kyle Massey, "Brady Bunch" mom Florence Henderson, and "Dirty Dancing" veteran Jennifer Grey.

"Dancing with the Stars" was the second-biggest show on TV last season, behind "American Idol," averaging 20 million viewers. Reigning champ is Pussycat Dolls singer Nicole Scherzinger, who teamed with pro dancer Derek Hough.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; editing by Todd Eastham)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Hoff the show: David Hasselhoff leaves 'Dancing' (AP)

LOS ANGELES � He was king of the beach on "Baywatch," but David Hasselhoff didn't fare so well on "Dancing With the Stars."

The 58-year-old entertainer was the first celebrity voted off the new season of "Dancing With the Stars." Hasselhoff and his professional partner, Kym Johnson, were ousted from the program Tuesday after performing just one dance.

They landed in last place on Monday's episode for a cha-cha that judges roundly criticized.

Hasselhoff took the dismissal in stride, saying, "Hey, we tried," when his name was called.

Back to dance another week will be singer-actress Brandy; Jennifer Grey, Florence Henderson and Kyle Massey; athletes Rick Fox and Kurt Warner; reality stars Audrina Patridge and Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino; singer Michael Bolton; comedian Margaret Cho; and political daughter Bristol Palin.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Drug case delays Paris Hilton from entering Japan (AP)

NARITA, Japan � Japanese officials delayed Paris Hilton at Narita International Airport while they decide whether she will be admitted to the country after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge in Las Vegas.

The 29-year-old celebrity was stopped by immigration authorities upon her arrival in Japan on Tuesday, one day after her plea, according to an e-mailed statement by Hilton's representative, Dawn Miller.

Hilton was scheduled to appear at a news conference in Tokyo on Wednesday to promote her fashion and fragrance lines, but that appearance was canceled.

Immigration authorities questioned Hilton "for undisclosed reaons," and she was not allowed to enter the country, Hidekazu Akai, an immigration official at Narita, said early Wednesday.

The officials adjourned questioning and asked Hilton to stay at a hotel in the airport so they could continue immigration procedures Wednesday, Kyodo News agency reported. The front desk at her hotel said calls to her room could not be connected.

Under Japanese law, immigration authorities are empowered to deny entry to those who have been convicted of drug-related offenses.

Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo declined to comment.

Tokyo was the first stop on Hilton's planned Asia tour, during which she planned to visit Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and open a new retail store in Jakarta, Indonesia. Both countries have strict anti-drug laws and immigration procedures, and it was unclear whether Hilton would continue her travels.

Miller's statement said Hilton was disappointed with the scrutiny by Japanese authorities.

"Paris was contractually bound to her business trip and didn't want to let down her brands and many Asian fans," the statement said. "She intended on fulfilling her contract and is trying hard to do the responsible thing, but this is beyond her control. She is very disappointed by tonight's events."

Hilton appeared with Nicole Richie on the series "The Simple Life" and has since starred in another reality series and minor films.

The Asia trip had been planned before Hilton's arrest last month in Las Vegas, when an officer found a small amount of cocaine in her purse. She pleaded guilty Monday to drug possession and obstructing an officer and was placed on informal probation for one year.

The terms of her sentence did not restrict travel overseas.

"We have no legal basis to restrict her from traveling throughout the United States or throughout the world," Clark County District Attorney David Roger said.

Hilton's sentence also requires her to complete a drug program, pay a $2,000 fine and serve 200 hours of community service. Her attorney said Monday that she planned to complete the service by volunteering with animal advocacy groups and children's hospitals.

Hilton served 23 days in a Los Angeles-area jail in 2007 after she was found to have violated her probation on an alcohol-related reckless driving case.

She also was detained in South Africa in July during the World Cup on suspicion of marijuana possession, but the allegation was dropped when another woman in her group pleaded guilty to carrying the drug.

___

Associated Press Writers Anthony McCartney in Los Angeles, Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas and Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

"Social Network" a mesmerizing, must-see movie

By Kirk Honeycutt

Tue Sep 21, 2010 7:39pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "The Social Network" has as its protagonist a character drawn in a Shakespearean mode, a high-achieving individual who carries within him the seeds of his own destruction. This would, of course, be young Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg), the man behind the social-network phenomenon Facebook.

As the movie makes abundantly clear, the facts behind its founding are in dispute but, without a doubt, Zuckerberg did create Facebook. Yet far from celebrating this feat, the movie examines how a man who cares little about money became the world's youngest billionaire yet lost his one true friend. At least that's what the movie says happened.

The film, written by Aaron Sorkin, is based on Ben Mezrich's book "The Accidental Billionaires" and Sorkin's own research yet neither writer, predictably, was able to talk to Zuckerberg to get his point of view. So it is as a fictional construct -- based on ample public sources, however -- that "Mark Zuckerberg" achieves its Shakespearean dimension. He gains the whole world but loses his most meaningful asset because of a fatal flaw on view in the very first scene.

"Social" has the potential to be that rarity -- a film that gains critical laurels and award mentions yet also does killer box office. Certainly, Sorkin, the film's director, David Fincher, and its heavyweight producers have crafted a smart, insightful film that satisfies both camps. The hook is the film's of-the-moment topic but the payoff is its hero. Or antihero or villain or whatever.

The very first scene? Harvard undergrad Mark and his girlfriend, Erica (Rooney Mara), are trying to have a dinner date at a noisy Cambridge brew pub. Or at least she's trying. He's talking a mile a minute with every syllable screaming egocentricity and dripping with sarcasm and defensive insecurity. She can't even change the topic. Indeed, she can't even tell what the topic is. After one insult too many, it's easier for Erica to break up with Mark. So the flaw is most ironic -- the guy who will revolutionize the way people communicate can't communicate himself. He is virtually blind to anyone else's perspective.

Annoyed, Mark jogs home to get drunk, hit his computer and, to take his mind off Erica, accidentally invents Facebook. Okay, it's not Facebook; it's Facemash, a stupid idea that only a genius computer hacker/scientist would dream up in which he hacks into Harvard's computer system, downloads all photos from the "facebooks" of the university's houses and asks students to vote on which girls are the hottest.

The contest goes viral, crashes Harvard's computer system, earns Mark a reprimand from authorities but attracts the attention of Harvard twins Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss (Armie Hammer and Josh Pence). These are wealthy and privileged scholar-athletes trying to develop an inner-campus website to create a place for students to meet, greet and perhaps score dates. They approach the anarchist-hacker, who is intrigued by their idea but prefers to go to his best friend and fellow Jew, Eduardo Saverin (Andrew Garfield), to finance a social network that contains elements of the Winklevosses' idea but transforms it into what we now know as Facebook.

Then the rest of the movie, in an inspired move by Sorkin, takes place at legal depositions. Because a few years later, Facebook is a billion-dollar miracle and lawsuits are flying everywhere: The twins and their Indian-American partner Divya Narendra (Max Minghella, who doesn't look or act Indian), and Eduardo, who has been frozen out of Facebook thanks to the Svengali-like efforts of Napster creator Sean Parker (Justin Timberlake), are all suing Mark.

As everyone recollects his version of events, the film flashes back to these developments. You understand no one's testimony is reliable but Sorkin tries to sort out the possible scenario that lands everyone in this legal soup. The story thus becomes a tale of power, fame, betrayal, revenge and responsibility.

Under Fincher's astute direction the characters fairly pop out at you. Even in a one-scene performance, famed Harvard president Larry Summers (Douglas Urbanski) startles the viewer with his abrupt impatience and sterling wit as he dismisses the twins' heavy-handed attempt to enlist the school in their cause. Fincher also places events in milieus that ring true. His portrait of campus life among America's elite is pitch-perfect, every bit as much as the drug-and-party excesses of Silicon Valley and the war rooms of corporate attorneys.

There have been complaints from early screenings that no one is very likable in this movie. You'll get no argument here but that's beside the point. "Mark Zuckerberg" is thoroughly unlikable but he is an original. Ask yourself: How many truly original characters show up in American movies? Mark exists in his own world. He dresses like he just rolled out of bed and doesn't relate to people half as well as he does to computers, algorithms and user databases. He finds people, at best, helpful to his creations or, at worst, annoying. He cannot speak civilly to anyone yet has the verbal skills to hone in on sore points with his acquaintances. His oral jousting with the deposing attorneys is brilliantly rendered in dialogue Sorkin presumably lifted from transcripts.

About the only character that comes off well is Garfield's Eduardo. The guy seems to care genuinely about his ex-friend and is bitterly unhappy about his treatment by Mark. Everyone else is borderline manic, such as Eduardo's sweet-and-sour girlfriend, played by a Brenda Song.

The production is the best studios can offer with Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross' hypnotically repetitive score, Jeff Cronenweth's fluid, sparkling cinematography and Donald Graham Burt's pinpoint-accurate production design all major pluses. There's no flaw here. So the film comes down to a mesmerizing portrait of a man who in any other age would perhaps be deemed nuts or useless, but in the Internet age has this mental agility to transform an idea into an empire. Yet he still cannot rule his own life to the point he doesn't lose what's important to him. At least that's what the movie says.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Holder: 'Mockingbird' has lessons for terror fight (AP)

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. � U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday Harper Lee's famous novel about racial injustice in the South, "To Kill a Mockingbird," still holds lessons for authorities who seek to fight terrorism while preserving the rights of innocent Muslims.

Speaking at the University of Alabama for a ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of Lee's only published book, Holder described how Lee's novel illustrates that a system can "grind innocent people into the ground," something he said was important to remember in dealing with innocent Muslim citizens in the United States.

While many people recall the heroism of Lee's fictional hero, attorney Atticus Finch, in defending a black man wrongly accused of rape, Holder said they often forget that Finch's client was still convicted and, ultimately, killed.

"It's a book about injustice, a cautionary tale, but at the same time it's a book about courage," said Holder, speaking in a crowded lecture hall in the law school.

Later, answering questions, Holder defended President Barack Obama's decision to ban torture in the fight against terrorists.

"I do not think that in making that determination President Obama has weakened us in the least in our ability to be effective in that war," Holder said.

Lee, who is from the south Alabama town of Monroeville, wasn't at the ceremony. She attended law school at Alabama in the 1940s and never published another novel after "To Kill a Mockingbird" came out in 1960. It was turned into a movie starring Gregory Peck as Finch.

Describing Obama's commitment to civil rights enforcement, Holder said the Justice Department has asserted itself in the protection of disabled people, workers, students and religious groups and has prosecuted civil rights-era slayings across the South.

"As we have seen in recent decades � and, unfortunately, in recent days � the world has not yet run its course of intolerance and bigotry. Injustice remains. Divisions and disparities remain. Bias- and hate-fueled violence persists," Holder said.

"Although life may, in some ways, feel easier today than ever before, and although the doors of opportunity may be open wider than they were 50 years ago, the truth is that there is nothing easy about 2010," said Holder. His wife, Sharon Malone, is the sister of the late Vivian Malone Jones, one of the first black students to integrate the University of Alabama.

To commemorate the publication of "Mockingbird," the university is establishing the Harper Lee Prize of Legal Literature for fictional books that show the positive effects attorneys can have on society. Dean Kenneth Randall said Lee's book set the tone for generation's of lawyers.

"She help to redefine the scope of the legal profession," Randall said.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Mark Burnett set to produce a talk show for OWN (AP)

NEW YORK � TV producer Mark Burnett is creating a weekday talk show for Oprah Winfrey's forthcoming cable channel.

The network said Tuesday that the show will have a panel format and feature multiple hosts. The show doesn't have a name yet and is scheduled to premiere in January.

The talk show was first reported by The New York Post.

Burnett, who can count "Survivor" and "The Apprentice" among his many credits, was already signed by the new network to produce a show that will search for the next big TV personality.

Winfrey's cable network will launch on Jan. 1. Its full name is OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network. A joint venture of Winfrey's Harpo Inc. and Discovery Communications Inc., it will replace the Discovery Health channel.

___

Online:

http://www.oprah.com/own



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

'Dancing With the Stars' TV's opening night winner (AP)

NEW YORK � Forget Bristol Palin and The Situation. It's the folks at ABC who are dancing.

The 21 million people who watched Monday's two-hour "Dancing With the Stars" made it the clear winner on the opening night of a new television season, the Nielsen Co. said on Tuesday. After a long, slow summer, CBS and NBC had some good news, too.

The "Dancing With the Stars" debut was up 18 percent over last season's opener, Nielsen said.

Veteran shows usually aren't growing like that at this stage of their career, said Marc Berman, an analyst for Media Week Online. "They put together a very good cast of characters," he said.

CBS' remake of "Hawaii Five-0" dominated in the 10 p.m. hour, with the night's second biggest audience at 13.8 million people. ABC's "Castle" at that hour had a strong showing with 11.2 million people, Nielsen said.

NBC's much-hyped mystery "The Event" also had 11.2 million viewers, a strong sampling that nearly doubled the audience for "Heroes" at the beginning of last season.

Curious viewers also gave a good start to the new CBS comedy "Mike & Molly." Its audience of 12.2 million people is considered strong retention out of the season premiere of "Two and a Half Men, which had 14.5 million viewers.

The night's biggest loser � and we're not talking about excess weight � was probably Fox's new "Lone Star," which may be on life support after getting only 4.5 million viewers and losing more than half the audience that watched "House" in the time slot before it.

"Lone Star" "declined significantly in the second half hour," Berman said. "Whoever did tune in didn't stay with it."

Only two days after its premiere on Sunday, HBO announced that it was ordering a second season of the prohibition-era drama "Boardwalk Empire." The show was seen by 4.8 million people on Sunday, the biggest debut of an HBO series in six years, Nielsen said.

Behind the one-two punch of pro football and "America's Got Talent," NBC won the final week of the summer TV season, averaging 8.9 million viewers (5.5 rating, 10 share).

CBS averaged 8 million viewers last week (5.0 rating, 9 share), ABC had 5.2 million (3.3, 6), Fox had 3.9 million (2.4, 4), the CW had 2.2 million (1.4, 2) and ION television had 1.3 million (0.3, 1).

Among the Spanish-language networks, Univision led with 3.8 million (1.9 rating, 3 share), Telemundo had 790,000 (0.4, 1), TeleFutura had 690,000 (0.3, 1), Azteca h ad 150,000 and Estrella 130,000 (both 0.1, 1).

NBC's "Nightly News" topped the evening newscasts with an average of 7.8 million viewers (5.2, 12). ABC's "World News" was second with 6.9 million (4.7, 10) and the "CBS Evening News" had 5.2 million viewers (3.5).

A ratings point represents 1,159,000 households, or 1 percent of the nation's estimated 115.9 million TV homes. The share is the percentage of in-use televisions tuned to a given show.

For the week of Sept 13-19, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: NFL Football: N.Y. Giants vs. Indianapolis, NBC, 23.1 million; "Sunday Night NFL Pre-Kick," NBC, 18.46 million; "America's Got Talent" (Wednesday), NBC, 16.46; "America's Got Talent" (Tuesday), NBC, 14.6; "60 Minutes," CBS, 13.54 million; "Football Night in America," NBC, 13.48 million; "Survivor: Nicaragua," CBS, 12.23 million; "Outlaw 9/15," NBC, 10.68 million; "NCIS," CBS, 10.4 million; "Undercover Boss," CBS, 8.71 million.

___

ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co. CBS is owned by CBS Corp. CW is a joint venture of Warner Bros. Entertainment and CBS Corp. Fox and My Network TV are units of News Corp. NBC and Telemundo are owned by General Electric Co. ION Television is owned by ION Media Networks. TeleFutura is a division of Univision. Azteca America is a wholly owned subsidiary of TV Azteca S.A. de C.V.

___

Online:

http://www.nielsenmedia.com



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Wyclef Jean drops presidential bid in Haiti

PORT-AU-PRINCE | Tue Sep 21, 2010 5:07pm EDT

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Hip-hop star Wyclef Jean said on Tuesday he was abandoning his attempt to run in Haiti's November presidential election, one month after his candidacy was formally rejected by Haitian authorities.

"After weeks of quiet but painstaking reflection with my wife and daughter, I have chosen to end my bid for the presidency of Haiti," the singer-songwriter said in a statement.

"This was not an easy conclusion to reach; but it is one that was thoughtfully made," Jean added.

The Haitian-born Jean, who has lived most of his life in the United States, said he would now focus on his music. He said he planned to release a new album next year titled "If I were President, the Haitian Experience."

Haiti's electoral council ruled last month that Jean failed to meet a requirement that presidential candidates maintain five consecutive years of residency in the country before running.

Days after the electoral court's decision, Jean released a song on Haiti's radio airwaves accusing outgoing President Rene Preval of engineering his rejection as a candidate.

Jean had said he would appeal the decision, but officials said the electoral body's ruling was definitive under Haitian law.

Popular among Haiti's youth, Jean faced questions whether a celebrity with no political experience was the best person to govern the country, which is struggling to recover from a January earthquake that killed as many as 300,000 people.

"Though my run for the presidency was cut short, I feel it was not in vain," Jean said.

Jean left Haiti with his family to live in New York at age 9 and launched his music career in the United States.

(Reporting by Kevin Gray; Editing by Peter Cooney)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

D'Onofrio back on `Criminal Intent' for season 10 (AP)

LOS ANGELES � "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" is coming back for its tenth � and possibly last � season with former star Vincent D'Onofrio on board.

USA Network said Tuesday that D'Onofrio, who left the series after season eight, will return as police Detective Robert Goren.

"Criminal Intent," part of the "Law & Order" franchise created by Dick Wolf, started on NBC.

Eight new episodes will air in 2011 and are intended to wrap up the series, USA Network said. But a USA executive and Wolf indicated that might change.

An air date for "Criminal Intent" wasn't announced.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Lohan satisfied after settling NYC E-Trade lawsuit (AP)

NEW YORK � A lawyer says Lindsay Lohan is "satisfied" to have resolved her $100 million New York City lawsuit over an E-Trade television commercial featuring talking babies.

Lawyer Anand Ahuja said Tuesday the "Mean Girls" movie star reached a settlement with the brokerage before withdrawing the lawsuit a day earlier. Ahuja and an E-Trade Financial Corp. spokeswoman say the terms of the agreement are confidential.

Lohan had claimed E-Trade was referring to her in a Super Bowl ad that featured babies talking about a "milkaholic" named Lindsay.

Lohan spent two weeks in jail in California this year for violating her probation in a 2007 case involving drug use and driving under the influence.

E-Trade called Lohan's claims meritless. It said Lohan isn't the world's only Lindsay.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Cher ending Vegas show Feb. 5 after some 200 shows (AP)

LAS VEGAS � Cher's final curtain on her headline show on the Las Vegas Strip is set for Feb. 5 after about 200 shows.

Officials at the Caesars Palace hotel-casino said Tuesday that tickets for Cher's final run of shows starting Jan. 11 will go on sale Saturday.

The last show ends a three-year residency for the iconic singer known for over-the-top costumes, elaborate showmanship and hits spanning several decades.

Cher's departure from the 4,300-seat Colosseum theater will come about one month before Celine Dion returns March 15 to start her second engagement. Her first five-year run grossed more than $400 million.

"Cher at the Colosseum" features dancers choreographed by Doriana Sanchez and costumes designed by Cher's longtime designer, Bob Mackie.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Wyclef Jean leaves Haiti politics to promote album (AP)

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti � Wyclef Jean has officially ended his bid for Haiti's presidency.

A statement sent Tuesday by his publicist says the singer is leaving Haitian politics to promote a new album.

Jean's candidacy ended last month when the Caribbean country's eight-member provisional electoral council left him and more than a dozen other hopefuls off the ballot. Nineteen candidates were approved.

No official reasons were given for the exclusions. Jean is presumed not to have met constitutional requirements including living in Haiti. He lives in New Jersey.

The announcement ends speculation the singer would contest the disqualification, though the council does not allow appeals.

The election is slated for Nov. 28.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Japanese authorities detain Paris Hilton at airport

LOS ANGELES | Tue Sep 21, 2010 2:06pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Celebrity socialite Paris Hilton was held for questioning by officials at Tokyo airport on Tuesday where she had flown for business one day after pleading guilty to possessing cocaine in Las Vegas.

Immigration officials at the Narita International Airport detained Hilton for hours after her chartered plane landed there, and then asked Hilton to stay overnight at an airport hotel for more questioning on Wednesday before allowing her to enter the country, according to Japanese media reports.

"Paris Hilton was delayed by immigration authorities at a Japanese airport this evening after arriving for business obligations planned many months earlier," Hilton's Los Angeles-based spokeswoman said in a statement.

"Paris was contractually bound to her business trip and didn't want to let down her brands and many Asian fans. She intended on fulfilling her contract and is trying hard to do the responsible thing, but this is beyond her control," the statement said, adding Hilton was "very disappointed."

On Monday in Las Vegas, Hilton pleaded guilty to cocaine possession following a recent arrest in which she was found to have 0.8 grams of the drug in a purse. She was given a one-year suspended sentence, fined $2000 and ordered to complete community service.

The 29 year-old former star of reality TV show "The Simple Life" is a member of the family that founded the Hilton hotel chain, and she has parlayed her notoriety into a successful career endorsing products in fashion, fragrances and other industries.

Hilton had been scheduled to appear at a fashion show on Wednesday in Tokyo's high-end Roppongi district that is filled with restaurants and nightclubs, but the show was canceled.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

'Wall Street' sequel shows greed can still be good (AP)

Oliver Stone was making a statement on the glibly money-hungry times when his "Wall Street" came out in 1987 and, with it, the iconic figure of Gordon Gekko declaring that greed, for lack of a better word, was good.

Twenty-three years later, greed is still getting a lot of people into a lot of trouble. The entire country, in fact. And so Stone's latest, "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps," is the rare sequel that not only feels relevant but necessary.

Of course, his hindsight is 20/20. Everyone's is. But here, Stone takes the economic collapse of 2008 and places Gekko � played masterfully by Michael Douglas, returning to the role that earned him an Academy Award � in the middle of it. Having been released from federal prison after serving time for securities fraud, money laundering and racketeering, Gekko is now free to swim among even more dangerous sharks than he ever dreamed of being himself. The question becomes: How will he react? Will he use his shrewdness to try and beat them at their game, or will he actually have found a moral center during his time behind bars?

That story line alone could have provided the basis for one meaty, worthwhile movie. "Money Never Sleeps" also crams in a father-daughter story, a few different mentor-protege stories and a romance. It's big and loud and brash in an almost operatic way � and knowingly, joyfully so. For a movie about a depressing topic that we're all-too familiar with, "Money Never Sleeps" is surprisingly entertaining.

The dialogue from Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff is biting and propulsive, and the hugely esteemed ensemble cast is a kick. Besides Douglas, who's better than ever even as a toned-down snake, Shia LaBeouf is solid as an ambitious young trader � he feels like a grown-up, finally � and the two stars have a couple of electric exchanges.

But there are plenty of showy supporting roles, as well. A beefed-up, suspendered Frank Langella provides both gravitas and humor as founder of the powerful Keller Zabel Investments; he also serves as a father figure to LaBeouf's Jacob Moore. Susan Sarandon chews up the scenery as Jacob's tacky, talkative mother, a former nurse who's been enjoying the good life as a high-end Long Island real estate agent. And Josh Brolin is a formidable villain as Bretton James, a billionaire partner at a rival investment bank who ruins Keller Zabel with rumors of debt, then arranges a brutal takeover. Just listening to him describe why he has a particular Goya painting in his office is intimidating.

Most of the time, simply through the sheer enormity and force of this juggernaut, it all works. "Money Never Sleeps" looks fantastic � the work of Oscar-nominated cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto ("Brokeback Mountain," "Broken Embraces") � with its shimmering aerial shots of Manhattan. The place rises from the Hudson River like Oz, an idealized, bustling city of endless possibility (although Stone didn't need to add split screens and tickers running through skyscrapers to magnify the sense of movement). Every sleek high-rise office and modern loft offers dazzling views; every character is expensively dressed. As if there weren't enough ego and testosterone bursting through, Jacob and Bretton even race Ducati motorcycles through the fall foliage to escape the reality of the stock market plummeting.

Yes, it's over-the-top like that. But fun � for a while. Eventually, "Money Never Sleeps" goes soft and loses its way. The romantic subplot between Jacob and Gekko's estranged daughter Winnie, of all people, feels needless, even though it does allow for the radiant presence of Carey Mulligan. It also raises some questions: As Gekko himself so astutely wonders, if Winnie hates her father so much, why would she get involved with a man who does the exact same thing, which she found so reprehensible? Jacob's dream of funding an alternative-energy company is intended to redeem him somewhat, but really, he gets that same gleam in his eyes when it comes to the prospect of getting rich.

And what happens in the last couple of scenes especially stands as a stark and almost laughable contrast to where these characters began and what they're supposedly made of. Then again, as the song goes, money changes everything.

"Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps," a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG-13 for brief strong language and thematic elements. Running time: 133 minutes. Three stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:

G � General audiences. All ages admitted.

PG � Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

PG-13 � Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.

R � Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

NC-17 � No one under 17 admitted.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Japan officials delay Paris Hilton from entering (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Japanese officials delayed Paris Hilton's entry into the country a day after she pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in Las Vegas, the socialite's spokeswoman said.

An e-mailed statement by Hilton's rep, Dawn Miller, said the 29-year-old was delayed by immigration authorities upon her arrival Tuesday in Japan.

She was scheduled to appear at a news conference in Tokyo on Wednesday to promote her fashion line, but that appearance was apparently canceled.

It was unclear where Hilton was or whether she will continue with her promotional tour. She was scheduled to visit several other countries, including Indonesia and Malaysia.

The trip had been planned before Hilton's arrest last month in Las Vegas after an officer found a small amount of cocaine in her purse. She pleaded guilty Monday to drug possession and obstructing an officer and was placed on informal probation for one year.

The terms of her sentence did not restrict travel overseas.

"Paris was contractually bound to her business trip and didn't want to let down her brands and many Asian fans," the Miller's statement said. "She intended on fulfilling her contract and is trying hard to do the responsible thing, but this is beyond her control. She is very disappointed by tonight's events."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

US informant testifies in Buju Banton drug trial (AP)

TAMPA, Fla. � A U.S. government informant has testfied that Jamaican reggae star Buju Banton introduced him to a friend who the musician said had contacts to sell kilograms of cocaine.

The four-time Grammy nominee is on trial in Tampa federal court. Authorities say that Banton, whose real name is Mark Myrie, tried to buy cocaine from an undercover officer in Sarasota last year.

Recordings of phone calls and other conversations between Banton and the informant, Alexander Johnson, were played in court Tuesday.

Johnson testified that Banton introduced him to Ian Thomas. Thomas pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine. He faces up to life in prison.

Banton's attorney says Johnson entrapped his client.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Colin Quinn's 1-man show is Broadway bound (AP)

NEW YORK � Colin Quinn's one-man show directed by Jerry Seinfeld is moving up to Broadway.

The comedians' satirical take on the history of the world is headed to the Helen Hayes Theatre for an 11-week run beginning Oct. 22. The show debuted off-Broadway this summer.

"Colin Quinn: Long Story Short" is a daffy, 75-minute journey about mankind from the dawn of civilization to the tech age. Quinn, a former "Saturday Night Live" star with a raspy, jerky delivery, previously was on Broadway in "Colin Quinn: An Irish Wake" in 1998.

Seinfeld, making his stage directing debut, has paced the show as a series of self-contained, 10-minute or so routines, helping provide a base for Quinn's path through time and space.

___

Online:

http://www.colinquinnlongstoryshort.com



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

UK spies spill secrets in official history of MI6 (AP)

LONDON � It's James Bond, with bureaucracy and cramped office space.

The first-ever official history of MI6 reveals that Britain's foreign spy agency debated assassinating Nazi leaders, landed a spy wearing a wetsuit over his tux at a casino by the sea and experimented with exploding filing cabinets � but also wrangled with other government departments and had to make do on a shoestring budget.

The book, published Tuesday, tells a story of plots, paperwork, duplicity and derring-do that takes in fears of a Nazi anthrax attack, cross-dressing secret agents and worries about the safety of the prime minister's milk supply.

"The real James Bonds are more interesting than the fictional James Bond," said author Keith Jeffery, a historian at Queen's University Belfast, who had access to previously secret files in the MI6 archive. "They are male and female. They are real people. They have real frailties and real courage."

They are, often, larger than life: figures like Wilfred "Biffy" Dunderdale, a Russian-speaking MI6 agent in Paris between the world wars, whom Jeffery said had "a well-known penchant for pretty girls and fast cars, and terrific savoir-faire."

He was a friend of James Bond creator Ian Fleming, and a possible model for the suave secret agent. In old age he became "an incorrigible raconteur" who would claim to recognize his own exploits in the 007 stories.

There is also Dudley Clarke, an agent arrested in Madrid in 1941 "dressed, down to a brassiere, as a woman." The Spanish fascist authorities, confused about whether he was a spy or simply a cross-dresser, eventually released him. Jeffery says he "went on to have a brilliant career in deception."

There is also agent Pieter Tazelaar, put ashore beside a Dutch seafront casino one night during World War II, "in full evening dress and smelling of alcohol, wearing a specially designed rubber oversuit to keep him dry while landing."

On the beach, a colleague "sprinkled a few drops of Hennessy XO brandy on him to strengthen his 'party-goer's' image."

The book tells the story of an agency founded in 1909 with a staff of one, Mansfield Cumming, who recorded his first day in his diary: "Went to the office and remained all day, but saw no one, nor was there anything to do there."

It quickly got more interesting, although Jeffery writes that for decades, MI6 "had to operate on a shoestring" and was perennially short of office space.

The book reveals that its agents included well-loved authors W. Somerset Maugham, Graham Greene and Arthur Ransome, who spied in the Soviet Union and whose mistress was Leon Trotsky's secretary.

It recounts how MI6 spied actively on the U.S. during the 1930s before deciding that "it was more productive to be friends with the United States than continue to treat it as an intelligence target."

Around the same time, MI6 was worried about looming war with Germany, particularly the possibility the Nazis would use biological weapons, possibly exposing anthrax on the London Underground. A memo also asked whether the prime minister's milk supply was secure, as "milk bottles on doorstep can be tampered with."

Some of the revelations are sensitive even now. The book includes an account of Operation Embarrass, in which British agents blew up ships in Italian ports to deter postwar Jewish refugees from sailing to Palestine, then under British control.

The book deflates some cherished myths. MI6 agents do not have a "license to kill," although the agency compiled a list of possible Nazi assassination targets before the D-Day landings. It was judged that the plan was too risky and might spark bloody reprisals.

More happily for spy buffs, Q � the gadget-making super-scientist from the Bond films � is based on reality. After World War II, MI6 researchers worked on silent weapons, knockout tablets, safecracking tools and exploding filing cabinets that could destroy secret documents at short notice.

The book follows the publication last year of an official history of MI5, Britain's domestic intelligence service.

Jeffery said he struck a "Faustian pact" when he agreed to write the book. He could look at everything in the archives, but MI6 retained the power to censor what was published.

The book stops abruptly in 1949, but still represents a change of policy for an agency whose existence was only officially acknowledged in the 1990s.

John Scarlett, the former MI6 chief who commissioned the book, said it is intended to "promote well-informed understanding and public debate about MI6," without compromising current operations or living agents.

There is unlikely to be a sequel.

"For MI6 this is an exceptional event," said Scarlett, who stepped down last year as "C," code-name for the agency's head. "There has been nothing like it before and there are no plans for anything similar in the future."

The book is published in Britain by Bloomsbury as "MI6" and in the U.S. by Penguin as "The Secret History of MI6."

___

Online:

MI6: http://www.sis.gov.uk



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Screenwriter Irving Ravetch dies in Los Angeles (AP)

LOS ANGELES � The family of Irving Ravetch says the screenwriter-producer has died at age 89 in Los Angeles after a lingering illness.

A statement from the family says Ravetch died Sunday at Cedars Sinai Hospital.

Ravetch and his wife, Harriet Frank Jr., received Oscar nominees for writing adapted screenplays for 1963's "Hud" and 1979's "Norma Rae."

The couple also collaborated on "The Long, Hot Summer," "Hombre" and "Conrack," among other films.

The family says Ravetch is survived by his wife, a sister and a brother.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

After risky campaign, "Town" courts Oscar voters

By Gregg Kilday

Tue Sep 21, 2010 9:28am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Warner Bros. took a risk. Its poster for "The Town," Ben Affleck's new movie about a gang of Boston bank robbers, featured a startling image: gun-wielding, masked nuns in front of an armored van.

If it hadn't beaten expectations and opened as the weekend's No. 1 movie, the Monday-morning quarterbacks probably would have dismissed the marketing move as a misguided effort that looked more like "Nuns on the Run" by way of screaming-man artist Edvard Munch.

But in the wake of "Town's" $23.8 million bow, Warners scored a genuine hit, Affleck buffed up his bona fides as a director, and the debate has begun over whether the movie will develop the momentum that will take it into Oscar season.

Prognosticators last week suggested that the movie would open with about $15 million, coming in at No. 2 behind fellow rookie "Easy A."

But during the past two weeks, "Town" was busy building momentum, which isn't always easy to measure. Affleck accompanied the drama to the Venice International Film Festival, where it had its world premiere September 8; three days later, the director and his cast moved to Toronto where they chatted it up to the North American press; then it had its U.S. premiere September 14 at Boston's Fenway Park, where the movie's climactic heist is set.

Affleck also found time to work the morning TV shows and their late-night counterparts.

"In the past 10 days, you could feel everything coming together," said Sue Kroll, Warners president of worldwide marketing. "It's a movie that's both appreciated by the critics and that audiences like. And the campaign and the cast was everywhere. When the results come together like that, it's all very gratifying. Ben and the cast did everything we asked of them."

Kroll had been a fan of Affleck's first directorial effort, "Gone Baby Gone," which Miramax released in 2007. Another Boston-set crime thriller, the movie earned good reviews -- and an Oscar nomination for Amy Ryan -- but it opened to just $5.5 million, ultimately grossing $20.3 million domestically.

However, when Affleck first showed Kroll an early cut of "Town" on his editing bay in Santa Monica, she sensed that the new movie -- which Warners co-produced with Legendary for slightly less than $35 million -- could reach a wider audience. The trick was to concoct a dual-track campaign, wooing critics on one hand while staging an aggressive consumer campaign on the other.

To attract the latter, Warners went out early with TV spots, with an emphasis on sports programing, hitting NBA games during the summer and then booking the first wave of NFL games closer to release.

It also benefited by attaching the first trailer for "Town" to Christopher Nolan's "Inception." Said Kroll, "I got as many calls about that trailer as I did about 'Inception' itself."

To reach the critics, the studio accepted invites to Venice and Toronto, and held plenty of critics screenings in recent weeks.

"With 'Gone Baby Gone,' there was a sense among the critics that Ben was a terrific new director," Kroll said, "so we wanted to put his second effort out there, to show that he is an interesting director with an interesting point of view. And that the movie was also commercial."

As for that poster, which borrows an image from the movie: Kroll's marketing team mocked up several versions -- some of which took a more conventional route, featuring the stars' head shots -- that she had displayed around her office. But it was the image of the bank-robbing nuns that caught the attention of passersby.

Meanwhile, Warners distribution chief Dan Fellman targeted the movie's September 17 release date. Affleck's film bears a passing similarity to Martin Scorsese's "The Departed" -- same town, similar accents -- which Warners opened on October 6, 2006, and rode to four Oscar wins, including best picture, plus a $132 million domestic gross.

Although there was no avoiding comparisons with "Departed," Fellman opted for a release date a few weeks earlier on the calendar, right on the heels of "Town's" festival bows.

"We knew there would be a lot of upscale films in the fall, a lot of pictures coming out of Toronto, so we wanted to give the movie its own identity at the festivals and then let it open in a noncompetitive atmosphere and give it time to grow," Fellman said. "We also wanted to distance it a little bit from the 'Departed' date."

"Town" isn't expected to achieve the same grosses as "Departed," which used its marquee names of Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jack Nicholson, Matt Damon and Mark Wahlberg to bow to $26.9 million while hanging in at the box office for weeks on end.

But now the question is whether "Town" can duplicate some of "Departed's" awards glory.

The movie played to Academy members on Saturday night, and one audience member reported that though a few thought the movie was derivative of other crime tales, "it was well received, and Ben got nice applause."

With 10 best picture slots up for grabs, "Town" could prove a contender.

As one rival Oscar consultant said, "Actors are always loony about actors who write and direct a movie, so they could give it up for Ben" -- though when the Academy has honored such actors-turned-directors as Robert Redford, Kevin Costner or Mel Gibson, they were all somewhat older than Affleck, who is a relatively young 38.

Still, "Town" is on the awards-circuit radar. In Toronto, talk focused particularly on Jeremy Renner, last year's best actor nominee for "The Hurt Locker," who could score a supporting nomination for playing an out-of-control member of Affleck's gang.

The Warners team, while celebrating the weekend's win, aren't breaking out the Champagne about the movie's awards potential just yet, though.

"At this stage," Fellman said, "what we have to do is enjoy the weekend, see how it holds in Week 2 and then decide how to go forward."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Aretha Franklin's son severely beaten in Detroit (AP)

DETROIT � A spokeswoman for Aretha Franklin says the singing legend's son has been severely beaten at a gas station in Detroit.

Gwendolyn Quinn says in a statement that Eddie Franklin was attacked Monday night and was undergoing surgery at a Detroit-area hospital. The statement says three people may have been involved in the beating.

Quinn says she didn't have any additional information beyond the statement.

A message was left Tuesday morning with Detroit police.

The Queen of Soul is one of the most honored musicians in American history, having won numerous Grammys; the National Medal of Arts; the Presidential Medal of Freedom and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Lohan again faces jail after arrest warrant issued (AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. � Another warrant, another court hearing for Lindsay Lohan.

Lohan has been ordered to appear at a hearing on Friday after a judge issued an arrest warrant for failing a drug test less than a month after she was released from inpatient rehab.

Superior Court Judge Elden Fox revoked Lohan's probation in her three-year-old drug case Monday and issued a bench warrant which was immediately stayed, allowing her to remain free until the hearing to determine if she violated her probation.

Previously, Fox had threatened the actress with 30 days in jail for each violation. He must now decide whether to send her back to jail or into treatment.

Lohan confirmed on her Twitter page last week that she failed the court-ordered drug and alcohol screening.

"Regrettably, I did in fact fail my most recent drug test," she tweeted.

She also said, "substance abuse is a disease, which unfortunately doesn't go away over night. I am working hard to overcome it."

Lohan often posts updates on her verified account.

A message left with Lohan's attorney Shawn Chapman Holley was not immediately returned.

Lohan was released from jail on Aug. 2 after serving 14 days of a 90-day sentence for violating her probation in the 2007 case involving drug use and driving under the influence.

Fox took over the case last month and laid out a path paved with therapy sessions and 12-step meetings that could have finally brought Lohan's drug case to an end.

Another judge had required her to begin a three-month stint in rehab at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Fox, however, agreed on Aug. 25 to release her from inpatient rehab after reviewing reports by her doctors and medical records from a three-year period.

Despite ordering an intense regimen of counseling and therapy, Fox gave Lohan some incentives to succeed. He dismissed two drug counts to which the actress pleaded guilty in 2007.

Lohan also dropped her $100 million lawsuit over a Super Bowl ad for E-Trade that featured a "milkaholic" baby named Lindsay, according to documents filed Monday in a Manhattan court.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Paris Hilton pleads in Vegas arrest, avoids jail (AP)

LAS VEGAS � Just a few years ago, Paris Hilton claimed her lawless days were behind her after she served 23 days in jail for violating probation.

These days, however, it's unclear exactly what the celebrity socialite learned from her time behind bars.

Hilton, whose partying brought her worldwide notoriety, acknowledged in a court appearance Monday that she stashed cocaine in her purse and lied to police during her arrest last month at a Las Vegas resort.

Under the terms of a plea deal, the 29-year-old Hilton pleaded guilty to drug possession and obstructing an officer, both misdemeanors. She must serve a year of probation, complete a drug program, pay a $2,000 fine and serve 200 hours of community service.

If she violates her probation, she could get a year in jail.

"Treat this very seriously," Justice of the Peace Joe M. Bonaventure cautioned Hilton. "The Clark County Detention Center is not the Waldorf-Astoria."

Hilton's attorney David Chesnoff said she would attend an outpatient substance abuse treatment program.

"I know Ms. Hilton is contrite and accepts the responsibility for her actions," Chesnoff said.

It was Hilton's latest encounter with the law since 2006, when she was arrested in Los Angeles on suspicion of driving under the influence. She later pleaded no contest to alcohol-related reckless driving and was put on probation, which she later violated by driving with a suspended license. Hilton served 23 days in jail because of the violation.

"It was a pretty traumatic experience, something that I really have grown from," Hilton told CNN's Larry King.

In July, she briefly faced a marijuana case after a FIFA World Cup game in South Africa, but the allegation was dropped when a woman who was with her pleaded guilty to carrying the drug.

Hilton was arrested again on Aug. 26 inside the Wynn resort on the Las Vegas Strip. Police said a small bag containing 0.8 of a gram of cocaine fell from her Chanel purse as she reached for a tube of lip balm in front of a police lieutenant.

Hilton told police the purse and cocaine were not hers.

"I asked Hilton whose cocaine it was, and she said she had not seen it but now thought it was gum," Las Vegas police Lt. Dennis Flynn wrote in his report.

Hilton had been pulled aside by police after her boyfriend, Las Vegas nightclub mogul Cy Waits, 34, failed field sobriety tests given by a motorcycle officer, the report said.

The couple was stopped in a black Cadillac Escalade after the officer smelled what the report called a "vapor trail" of marijuana smoke.

Waits was arrested on suspicion of misdemeanor driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. A toxicology report is pending.

Hilton was banned from two Wynn resorts after the arrest, and Waits was dismissed as a partner in the venue's nightclub.

At the Las Vegas Justice Court, a gaggle of photographers and onlookers followed Hilton as she climbed into a black Cadillac Escalade after the hearing.

Hilton, wearing a champagne-colored blouse, black pencil skirt and black platform heels, did not address the crowd when she went in or out of court, mouthing "thank you" only after a fan yelled, "You're beautiful, Paris."

Hilton won't have to report to a probation officer under the plea agreement.

She originally faced a felony cocaine possession charge that also would not have resulted in jail time but could have brought up to three years probation.

Hilton's attorney and a Clark County prosecutor both stressed that a legal red carpet had not been rolled out for the hotel heiress.

"She was treated like anybody else would be treated under the circumstances," Chesnoff said.

Hilton plans to continue volunteering with animal advocacy groups and children's hospitals to complete her community service hours, he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Oskar Garcia contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds