Monday, October 18, 2010

Mel Gibson to play tattoo artist in "Hangover 2"

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Songwriters today "pretty awful," says Elton John

LONDON | Mon Oct 18, 2010 8:15pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - British singer Elton John described today's songwriters as "pretty awful," pop music as uninspiring and talent shows like "American Idol" as boring in an interview published on Tuesday.

The 63-year-old singer of "Your Song" and "Candle in the Wind," one of the most successful pop artists of all time, added that the instant fame which talent shows can bring was not the way to become a genuine star.

"It's important they (pop stars) write their own songs, so they're not at the mercy of anyone," John, whose real name is Reginald Dwight, told Britain's Radio Times magazine.

"Songwriters today are pretty awful, which is why everything sounds the same. Contemporary pop isn't very inspiring."

He said he was a fan of young female pop acts Lily Allen, Amy Winehouse and Lady Gaga, before adding:

"I'm not a fan of talent shows. I probably wouldn't have lasted if I'd gone on one. I was asked to judge 'American Idol'. I couldn't do it because I won't slag anyone off.

"Also I don't want to be on television. It's become boring, arse-paralysingly brain crippling."

He said "X Factor" judge and music producer Simon Cowell had discovered some talented acts through his TV shows, "but the only way to sustain a career is to pay your dues in small ... clubs.

"I was in a band at 17, became a songwriter with Bernie Taupin and wasn't successful until we'd had six years of hard graft and disappointment, as well as great times.

"TV vaults you to superstardom and then you have to back it up, which is hard. (British 'X Factor' winners) Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke are at the mercy of the next song they can get.

"('Britain's Got Talent' runner-up) Susan Boyle was an endearing phenomenon, but I fear she might not understand the rigors of showbusiness."

John is releasing a new album this week, "The Union," a collaboration with his musical hero Leon Russell, and plays the BBC Electric Proms in London on October 28.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Steve Addison)



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Homer Simpson is Catholic, Vatican paper declares

LOS ANGELES | Mon Oct 18, 2010 10:18pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "The Simpsons" just got a blessing from the Vatican.

The official Vatican newspaper has declared that beer-swilling, doughnut-loving Homer Simpson and son Bart are Catholics -- and what's more, it says that parents should not be afraid to let their children watch "the adventures of the little guys in yellow."

"Few people know it, and he does everything to hide it. But it's true: Homer J. Simpson is Catholic", the Osservatore Romano newspaper said in an article on Sunday headlined "Homer and Bart are Catholics."

The newspaper cited a study by a Jesuit priest of a 2005 episode of the show called "The Father, the Son and the Holy Guest Star". That study concludes that "The Simpsons" is "among the few TV programs for kids in which Christian faith, religion and questions about God are recurrent themes."

The Simpsons pray before meals, and "in its own way, believes in the beyond," the newspaper quoted the Jesuit study as saying.

It's the second time the animated U.S. TV series, which is broadcast in 90 countries, has been praised by the Vatican.

But executive producer Al Jean told Entertainment Weekly on Monday he was in "shock and awe" at the latest assertion, adding that the Simpsons attend the "Presbylutheran" First Church of Springfield.

"We've pretty clearly shown that Homer is not Catholic," Jean said. "I really don't think he could go without eating meat on Fridays -- for even an hour."

In December 2009, the Osservatore Romano described the show as "tender and irreverent, scandalous and ironic, boisterous and profound, philosophical and sometimes even theological, nutty synthesis of pop culture and of the lukewarm and nihilistic American middle class."

"The Simpsons", which introduced the catch-phrase "D'oh", is the longest-running prime-time TV series in the United States and is now in its 22nd season.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Indie film group unveils Gotham award nominees

LOS ANGELES | Mon Oct 18, 2010 3:46pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Two movies with different views of the modern American family led nominees for the independent film world's Gotham Awards on Monday with "Winter's Bone" collecting three nods including best breakthrough actor for Jennifer Lawrence.

"Winter's Bone," which follows a teenage girl as she searches for her father amid a secretive community in rural Arkansas, picked up three nominations overall, including best film and best ensemble performance for Lawrence and co-stars such as John Hawkes, Dale Dickey, Lauren Sweetser, and others.

"The Kids Are All Right" picked up two nominations, best film and ensemble cast, with its comedic tale of two lesbian parents whose children were conceived by artificial insemination and who want a relationship with their father. It stars Annette Bening and Julianne Moore as the mothers.

Another film, "Tiny Furniture," also pulled in two nominations for breakthrough director, Lena Dunham, and for its ensemble cast that includes Dunham, Laurie Simmons and others.

The Gotham Awards are given out each year by the New York-based Independent Filmmaker Project, an organization that supports and promotes mostly low-budget movies that are funded and produced outside Hollywood's major studios.

Movies and performances singled out at the Gotham awards are often similar to those nominated for Independent Spirit Awards, another set of key set of honors for indie movies that is organized by Los Angeles-based group, Film Independent.

The Gothams and Spirits focus on low-budget movies, some of which will compete for more prestigious awards such as the Oscars. Annette Bening in "The Kids Are All Right," for one, is being talked about as a possible Oscar contender.

Other Gotham nominations for best film went to "Black Swan," director Darren Aronofsky's tale of a ballerina (Natalie Portman) who looks to sabotage a rival, and "Blue Valentine," which stars Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams as a married couple whose relationship is unraveling. Rounding out the list of five best film nominees is thriller "Let Me In."

"Life During Wartime" and "Please Give" joined "Winter's Bone," "The Kids Are All Right" and "Tiny Furniture" among nominees for best ensemble cast.

Movies competing for the award for "Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You" were "Kati with an i," "Littlerock," "On Coal River," "Summer Pasture" and "The Wolf Knife.

A full list of nominees can be found at gotham.ifp.org.

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Jill Serjeant)



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Jolie wins permit back for Bosnian film

SARAJEVO | Mon Oct 18, 2010 10:20am EDT

SARAJEVO (Reuters) - Hollywood star Angelina Jolie has won back a permit to shoot parts of a film in Bosnia after a government minister saw the script, a local producer said on Monday.

Permission to film had been withdrawn last week, with the government citing incomplete paperwork.

"I can now start preparations for the shooting, which I had to stop last week," Edin Sarkic, an executive with the movie's Sarajevo-based Scout Film, told Reuters by telephone.

"It's a big thing for Bosnia that such a mega, mega star is coming to Sarajevo."

The Oscar-winning actress is shooting the film in Budapest. Her production company said it was a love story between a Serbian man and a Bosnian Muslim woman who meet on the eve of the Bosnian 1992-95 war, which killed 100,000 people.

The outgoing culture minister of Bosnia's Muslim-Croat federation, Gavrilo Grahovac, has now approved the filming after being given a script and a list of locations, his ministry said.

Last Wednesday, Grahovac had canceled a permit.

That decision, made after he met an association of female victims from the Bosnian war who had objected to what they said were details of the plot, caused a public outcry in Bosnia.

Bakira Hasecic, president of the Women Victims of War association, had urged Bosnian authorities to ban the shooting of the film, saying the script distorted the truth about female war victims.

Jolie has said the film would not meddle in politics and has tried to reassure the victims about its content.

"There are many twists in the plot that address the sensitive nature of the relationship between the main characters and that will be revealed once the film is released," she said last week. "My hope is that people will hold judgment until they have seen the film."

Bosnian filming should start in November, Sarkic said.

(Reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic; Editing by Steve Addison)



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Jackass 3D makes $50m chart debut

Jackass 3D, the third film outing for stunt master Johnny Knoxville and friends, has topped the US box office with debut takings of $50m (�31.4m).

It is the third consecutive number one opening for the franchise.

It follows 2002's Jackass: The Movie, which opened with $22.8m (�14.4m) in 2002, and 2006's Jackass Number Two, which opened with $29m (�18.3m).

Jackass 3D set a record for the biggest October debut, beating the $48.1m opening for Scary Movie 3 in 2003.

The TV series of Jackass, which launched the career of actor Knoxville, was originally shown on MTV and featured the cast performing potentially self-harming stunts and pranks.

Paramount vice-president Don Harris said 3D lent itself perfectly to the Jackass concept.

"When some guy gets hit in the crotch with a baseball in 2D, it's one thing, but when he's kind of up in your face and it happens, it's another experience," he said.

Action comedy Red, starring Bruce Willis, Helen Mirren, John Malkovich and Morgan Freeman, opened at number two with $22.5m (�14.2m).

Facebook film, The Social Network, dropped to third spot after spending two weeks at number one.



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Holocaust art database launched

A new online database lets Holocaust survivors and their relatives search details of more than 20,000 artworks stolen from Jews during World War II.

The database of works stolen from occupied France and Belgium between 1940 and 1944 includes Monet paintings.

It is a joint project of the Conference of Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Art collectors, galleries and museums can also make use of the free service.

Hundreds of thousands of artworks were seized by Germany's forces during World War II.

The Nazis often photographed their spoils and meticulously catalogued them on typewritten index cards.

Some of these records, which show what was seized and from whom, have now been digitised and made searchable.

The database combines records from the US National Archives, the German Bundesarchiv and records on repatriation and restitution held by the French government.

According to the Claims Conference - which helps Holocaust survivors and their relatives reclaim looted property - nearly half of the objects may never have been returned to their rightful owners, their descendants or their country of origin.

Chairman Julius Berman said it was "now the responsibility of museums, art dealers and auction houses to check their holdings against these records to determine whether they might be in possession of art stolen from Holocaust victims".



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Daybreak viewers down to 600,000

Viewing figures for ITV1's flagship morning show Daybreak fell to about 600,000 last week, it has emerged.

The show has seen ratings slip after opening audiences of one million to settle at about 700,000 - lower than viewing figures for predecessor GMTV.

Daybreak was launched in September with former The One Show presenters Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley hosting.

ITV said it had "made a long-term investment in new breakfast programming".

"After over five years of decline for GMTV, Daybreak is already closing the gap in year-on-year decline after just one month, with housewives and children, male and younger audiences," a spokesman added.

The broadcaster looked forward "to building on this start and welcoming new audiences", the spokesman added.

ITV reportedly spent more than �1m rebranding and revamping their morning show with new sets and hefty promotion.

It also wooed Chiles and Bleakley from the BBC in the hope they would replicate their popular partnership from The One Show.

Friday's edition of the BBC's Breakfast programme attracted an audience of 1.5 million.

The show is set for an overhaul itself next year following a decision to relocate the programme to the corporation's new northern headquarters in Salford.



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