Monday, February 28, 2011

Will Charlie Sheen ever work again?

Mon Feb 28, 2011 9:57pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Charlie Sheen says he is ready to return to acting, but the real question is whether anyone would hire the troubled sitcom star -- and how much would it cost to insure him.

Warner Bros. and CBS have had enough of Sheen, announcing late last week that they were shutting down production of his TV top-rated comedy, "Two and a Half Men."

Now, Sheen is claiming that the move will free him up to take other roles. But the man whose recent publicity tour features such highlights as "The run I was on made Sinatra, Flynn, Jagger, Richards look like droopy-eyed, armless children" has the town asking not what will he do next, but rather will he ever work again?

If history is any indication, the answer is yes, assuming he can clean up his act.

Hollywood, which counts Eddie Murphy, Russell Crowe and Hugh Grant among its crop of scandal-tarred celebrities, loves a comeback story. Take Robert Downey Jr., whose past includes stints both in jail on drug charges and in a treatment facility for substance abuse. Like Sheen's, Downey's behavior once had the industry questioning his career viability, with many arguing nobody would be willing to insure his films. A decade later, he's the star of the blockbuster "Iron Man" films.

In Sheen's case, CBS and Warner Bros. have decided that they don't think he's well enough to continue and have actively tried to get him to seek treatment. "But until you see the doctor reports, who really knows whether it's a problem or not," says Lorrie McNaught, vp at insurance brokerage firm Aon/Albert G. Ruben. "Making comments doesn't make him uninsurable." (While Sheen doesn't currently have a morality clause in his contract, one could be added to void the studio's obligations if he acts out again.)

Nevertheless, getting back to work won't come easy. Already, Morgan Creek Prods. CEO James Robinson has voiced his concerns about casting Sheen in the planned "Major League" update. "I'm not going to risk putting Charlie in the movie if he continues messing up," he told TMZ. "If Charlie doesn't straighten up ... I unfortunately can't put him in the movie."

In the same interview, Robinson cited his experience working with another troubled star, Lindsay Lohan, whom he once famously blasted for erratic behavior. "When an actor doesn't show up for work," he said, "you can lose half-a-million dollars a day paying the 250 other people there for the shoot and the costs for the set."

If you poll those in the business of insuring stars, however, the answer is consistent: Wayward stars can become very -- and in some cases, prohibitively -- expensive, but are never uninsurable. "Everyone and anything, or almost anything, is insurable," says McNaught, "it just comes down to price."

Ross Miller, a partner with New York-based insurance brokerage firm D.R. Reiff, agrees, adding, "What it can come down to is whether you can present terms and conditions to a production company or a financier that they will accept."

Such terms often include higher deductibles, which can range from $25,000 to $250,000, depending on things like the project's budget, the shooting schedule and the cast's history. (For TV stars, rates are revisited at the end of every season.)

In certain cases, the stars themselves can also be asked to put their salaries in escrow, making them personally accountable if their actions end up causing delays. If their troubles are drug related, conditions can include regular testing or having chaperones placed on set.

According to underwriting experts, rates can be anywhere from one to five percent of a project's production budget. Of course, McNaught argues all an errant star needs is an incident-free next act to get his rate back down.

"It's a really forgiving industry," she says, "and everybody loves a comeback."



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Actress Jane Russell dead at 89

LOS ANGELES | Mon Feb 28, 2011 7:36pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" star Jane Russell, who became a controversial Hollywood sex symbol, died Monday at the age of 89, her family said.

Russell, best known as the buxom star of 1940s and 1950s movie, died of respiratory problems at her home in Santa Maria, central California, according to Etta Waterfield, her daughter-in-law.

Russell, who later in life was the "full-figured girl" in television brassiere ads, was at her best in comedies that, subtly or not, spoofed her sexpot image and focused on her figure.

Multimillionaire producer-industrialist Howard Hughes discovered Russell and put her in her first movie, "The Outlaw," which stuck her with the sexpot image based on her chest, which reportedly was size 38-D.

In the photos, the sultry Russell languished on a bed of straw, looking petulant as her tight-fitting peasant blouse slipped off one shoulder. Censors held up "The Outlaw" for almost three years before a limited release in 1943.

"Except for comedy, I went nowhere in the acting department," Russell said in her autobiography. "The truth is that, more often than not, I've been unhappy about the pictures I've been in."

The promotional material was so striking that in one poll Russell was voted "favorite actress" before the voters had even seen her act. Reviews of "The Outlaw" and many of her films were less kind with one critic calling her "the queen of motionless pictures."

In 1978, she made headlines by being jailed for four days for drunken driving and began her successful battle against alcoholism.

At the age of 60, Russell's figure once again gained the attention of millions -- this time on television screens advertising a brand of brassieres for "full-figured" women.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Charlie Sheen escalates war of words with TV bosses

NEW YORK | Mon Feb 28, 2011 6:56pm EST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Actor Charlie Sheen escalated his war of words with his former "Two and A Half Men" employers on Monday, demanding a pay rise as his lawyer threatened legal action over canceled episodes of the top-rated comedy.

Sheen, whose erratic behavior has put the future of his show in jeopardy, boasted on Monday morning chat shows about his partying lifestyle and said he was tired of pretending he is not "a total frigging rock star from Mars."

Hours later, his long time Los Angeles publicist quit, saying he could no longer do his job.

"I have worked with Charlie Sheen for a long time and I care about him very much. However, at this time, I'm unable to work effectively as his publicist and have respectfully resigned," Stan Rosenfield said in a statement.

Sheen, the highest paid actor on U.S. TV, launched several expletive-filled rants last week against "Two and A Half Men" creator, Chuck Lorre, causing the CBS network and series producer Warner Bros. Television to cancel production for the rest of the season.

Sheen's attorney on Monday sent letters to CBS and Warner Bros. demanding that the actor be paid for the eight episodes that will now no longer be made, the companies said.

According to celebrity website TMZ.com, the letter claims that Sheen was ready and able to go back to work, and is owed payment of roughly $16 million because of the shutdown.

Sheen said in an interview aired on "Good Morning America" that he would defend himself through "violent hatred" aimed at him, and he felt let down the show was stopped.

"I was actually disappointed," Sheen said. "People misinterpret my passion for anger."

Speculation has been rife about the future of "Two and A Half Men" would continue next season, with or without Sheen's leading role as a womanizing bachelor -- a part that seems to mimic the actor in real life.

He told NBC's "Today" show on Monday that returning would require a pay rise, saying the roughly $2 million per episode he makes now is too low. "I am a man of my word, so I will finish the TV show. I'll even do Season 10, but at this point, (because of) psychological distress, oh my God, it's 3 mil an episode. Take it or leave it," he said.

"I'm tired of pretending like I'm not special," Sheen added. "You can't process me with a normal brain."

Production of "Two and a Half Men" was first suspended in January when Sheen, 45, was persuaded to seek help after a 36-hour cocaine-fueled party at his home.

ABC News and celebrity website Radaronline had Sheen's blood and urine tested, and revealed no drugs in his system for the past 72 hours. "I am on a drug. It's called Charlie Sheen. It's not available because if you try it once, you will die," he said in the ABC interview.

The last time he took drugs, which he estimated to be about a month to six weeks ago, Sheen said he was "banging seven gram rocks and finishing them because that is how I roll."



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Oscar king Colin Firth says time to turn to comedy

LONDON | Mon Feb 28, 2011 6:57am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Oscar winner Colin Firth said he wanted to play a comic role after winning widespread critical acclaim and a best actor Academy Award for his portrayal of the stammering King George VI in "The King's Speech."

"I want to do comedy," he told BBC radio early on Monday after winning his Oscar late on Sunday.

"I think gravitas is hugely over-egged and I would like to do something that amuses me now, change the pace, change the tone and I think it's time to continue my long tradition of making a fool of myself."

The 50-year-old Briton has already enjoyed success in lighter roles, notably as Mark Darcy -- the top human rights lawyer who is hapless at love in the "Bridget Jones" series.

That role was a nod to his breakthrough as an actor, playing the aloof Mr. Darcy in a 1995 television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel "Pride and Prejudice."

Asked whether his Oscar might help him shake off some of the associations with that role, Firth replied:

"I think Mr. Darcy will be alive and well for the rest of my life. I'd be rather sad to see him go. I think there's a bit of a misconception that I'm disgruntled about the Darcy thing and I'm not remotely bothered by it.

"I would hate to see that tag leave me, so I'm very happy for it to follow me around."

He described the feeling of being on stage to receive the highest movie accolade as "reeling backwards through space."

"I realized when I got up there why some people completely fall apart," he said.

"You're reeling backwards through space. People don't really want to see that, so you have to do your best to do your job with as much as grace as you can possibly muster."

Firth was nominated for an Oscar last year in the same category, for his role as a closeted gay professor in the drama "A Single Man."

Firth's rivals this year were previous Oscar winners Javier Bardem for "Biutiful" and Jeff Bridges for "True Grit"; Jesse Eisenberg for "The Social Network"; and Oscars host James Franco for "127 Hours."



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Colin Firth wins Oscar for "King's Speech"

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Christian Bale wins Oscar for "The Fighter"

LOS ANGELES | Sun Feb 27, 2011 9:33pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Welsh-born actor Christian Bale won the Academy Award on Sunday for his supporting role as a washed-up former boxing champ in "The Fighter."

Bale, 37, dominated the various awards shows leading up to the Oscars, but pundits had said he might face some strong competition from Geoffrey Rush for "The King's Speech."

It marked the first win and first nomination for Bale, who lost 30 pounds (13.5 kg) to play the real-life role of Dicky Eklund, a former regional Welterweight boxing champion who succumbs to a cocaine addiction.

Bale is perhaps best known for his title role in the latest Batman films, though he was often overshadowed by co-stars such as posthumous Oscar-winner Heath Ledger. With "The Fighter," he stole the thunder of headliner Mark Wahlberg who played Dicky's pugilist younger brother, Micky Ward.

He becomes the third Welsh actor to win the best actor Oscar, after Ray Milland and Anthony Hopkins.

Besides Rush, Bale's other rivals were John Hawkes for "Winter's Bone," Jeremy Renner for "The Town" and Mark Ruffalo for "The Kids Are All Right."

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Sandra Maler)



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Hollywood's A-list lights up Oscar red carpet

LOS ANGELES | Sun Feb 27, 2011 8:20pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood's top stars began their annual parade up the red carpet and into the world's top film honors, the Oscars, on Sunday where "The King's Speech" and "the Social Network" will vie for best picture.

The ceremony features two youthful co-hosts, actors James Franco, 32, and Anne Hathaway, 28, marking the first time a man and woman have presided the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences's big night.

Hathaway is the youngest host ever for one of the most-watched TV specials in the United States that also is broadcast live in more than 200 countries worldwide.

She arrived on the carpet in a strapless, red Valentino gown alongside nominees such as Melissa Leo, who is up for best supporting actress in "The Fighter", and 14-year-old Hailee Steinfeld, also nominated for supporting actress in "True Grit," who similarly dazzled fans in glamorous gowns.

Leo chose designer Marc Bouwer to dress her in a structured dress and bold print, and Steinfeld was fashioned by Marchesa in a light pink tea dress that designer Randolph Duke, who was watching events unfold, called "50s redux."

Steinfeld, he said, showed "the perfect balance between being a young girl and a young woman."

Brash comedian Russell Brand, who will present an Oscar, turned up with his mother. He said Helen Mirren told him to "express myself creatively and not worry about censors" who will be watching the live program for any verbal slip-ups.

Later, A-list stars such as Natalie Portman, Javier Bardem and Colin Firth will parade up the carpet outside the Kodak Theater where Hollywood's biggest event takes place.

Producers say the ceremony, at which 24 awards will be given out in just over three hours, is meant to connect movie fans to the Hollywood of old, while also giving a nod to the future with web cams and Twitter feeds.

THE OSCAR SWEEPSTAKES

Already in the months ahead of Sunday's big awards, a stream of honors have come from industry groups such as the New York Film Critics Circle, Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Directors Guild of America and Screen Actors Guild.

Where Oscar is concerned, fans saw "Social Network," which tells of the rise of Facebook from college-oriented website to global phenomenon, scoop up many early critics awards.

But as the season played out, "The King's Speech," which tells of a stuttering British king facing his personal demons, was embraced by numerous movie professional groups.

Now, the two will face-off for the Oscars with "King's Speech" tipped as the favorite.

Colin Firth, in the starring role of King George VI in "King's Speech," is widely expected to win best actor because he has claimed most honors from both critics and industry groups. Similarly, Christian Bale and Melissa Leo, both in boxing drama "The Fighter," are front-runners in supporting categories.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Hollywood shines up for the Oscars

LOS ANGELES | Sun Feb 27, 2011 1:38pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood polished up its golden boy statue, the Oscar, for its glittery awards ceremony on Sunday with "The King's Speech" and "The Network" leading the field for the world's top movie honors.

The presentation will feature two youthful co-hosts, actors James Franco, 32, and Anne Hathaway, 28, marking the first time a man and woman have presided over the Oscars. Hathaway is the youngest person to emcee what is annually the second most-watched TV show in the United States and broadcast live in more than 200 countries worldwide.

"The King's Speech" and Facebook film "The Social Network" are widely considered front-runners to be named best movie by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Best actress and actor nominees including Nicole Kidman, Natalie Portman, Javier Bardem and Colin Firth will parade up the red carpet outside Hollywood's Kodak Theater in fashionable gowns and tuxedos ahead of the ceremony on Sunday night.

Producers say the ceremony, at which more than 20 awards will be given out in just over three hours, is meant to connect movie fans to the Hollywood of old, while also giving a nod to the future with web cams and Twitter feeds.

The show's best moments occur when Oscar winners give emotional acceptance speeches.

"(Audiences) want to see when people are moved or touched," producer Don Mischer said.

THE OSCAR SWEEPSTAKES

For months ahead of Sunday's big awards, a stream of honors have come from industry groups such as the New York Film Critics Circle, Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Directors Guild of America and Screen Actors Guild.

Where Oscar is concerned, fans saw "Social Network," which tells of the rise of Facebook from college-oriented website to global phenomenon, scoop up many early critics awards.

But as the season played out, "The King's Speech," which tells of a stuttering British king facing his personal demons, was embraced by numerous movie professional groups.

Now, the two will face-off for the Oscars with "King's Speech" tipped as the favorite.

Colin Firth, in the starring role of King George VI in "King's Speech," is widely expected to win best actor because he has claimed most honors from both critics and industry groups. Similarly, Christian Bale and Melissa Leo, both in boxing drama "The Fighter," are front-runners in supporting categories.

The race for best actress is close between "Black Swan" ballerina Natalie Portman and A-lister Annette Bening playing a lesbian mother with family issues in "The Kids Are All Right." The category of best director is tight between "Facebook" veteran David Fincher and "King's Speech" newcomer Tom Hooper.

Will there be a surprise? Oscar watchers think not.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

"Gnomeo & Juliet" climbs to top of box office

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Saturday, February 26, 2011

"Black Swan" sweeps independent film awards

LOS ANGELES | Sat Feb 26, 2011 8:45pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Black Swan," a ballet melodrama that struggled to get made despite an A-list cast and director, swept the independent film world's version of the Oscars on Saturday, a day before it competes for five prizes at the Academy Awards.

The film picked up four Spirit statuettes, including best feature and best female lead for Natalie Portman, who starred as a childlike ballerina consumed by fear and paranoia.

Darren Aronofsky was named best director for his work on the movie, two years after he was honored for "The Wrestler." It also took the cinematography prize for Matthew Libatique.

All three will compete for Oscars on Sunday, with Portman the favorite to win her race. The film will also vie for best picture and editing.

"Winter's Bone," which led the Spirits field with seven nominations, ended up with two prizes. John Hawkes and Dale Dickey won for their supporting roles as threatening characters in a rural American community ravaged by methamphetamines.

The male lead prize went to Oscars co-host James Franco for his role as a hiker forced to amputate his own arm in the true-life tale "127 Hours."

"The Kids Are All Right," with five nominations, received a solitary win in the screenplay category, for director Lisa Cholodenko and co-writer Stuart Blumberg.

HOLLYWOOD REJECTION

The victory for "Black Swan" is a testament to the risks and rewards of independent filmmaking. Aronofsky and Portman first discussed making "Black Swan" about a decade ago, and when they finally started shooting, the film was on shaky financial ground.

The script also went through dozens of revisions, a financier pulled out, and several Hollywood studios rejected it, including its eventual distributor, Fox Searchlight.

"Any time you try to do something that's not in a box it's a challenge," Aronofsky said of the constant challenge of raising film financing despite his success with such films as "The Wrestler" and "Requiem for a Dream."

Nascent private equity fund Cross Creek Partners came to its rescue, offering to split the $15 million budget in a worldwide deal with News Corp's Fox Searchlight. It turned out to be a lucrative investment. The film has grossed more than $200 million at the worldwide box office to date.

Cross Creek principal Brian Oliver told Reuters he was drawn to Aronofsky's involvement. "I really liked the script and I saw the thriller part of it and I thought it could be one of those movies that could really break out," he said.

The film was also a challenge for Portman and co-star Mila Kunis, who plays her rival in a New York production of "Swan Lake" and a Sapphic fantasy interest. Neither actress is a ballerina, and they trained for months and dieted religiously to get in shape.

The Spirit Awards honor low-budget American films based on such criteria as original, provocative subject matter and the degree of independent financing.

"The King's Speech," which leads the Oscars field with 12 nominations, was named best foreign film at the Spirits. As a British movie, it was not eligible for consideration in the major categories.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

Foreign films navigate rough waters to reach Oscars

BEVERLY HILLS, California | Sat Feb 26, 2011 7:26pm EST

BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) - Acclaimed Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez-Inarritu knew he was in a bad way when the film critics who loved his drama "Biutiful" kept calling it bleak, dark and depressing.

Those adjectives scared off distributors, particularly in the United States, where the director said "everyone was really afraid of the film" about a dying man played by Javier Bardem.

It took four months to find a U.S. distributor, but now "Biutiful" is playing in major cities and is a front-runner

for best foreign language film at Sunday's Oscars, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Bardem, the Spanish Oscar winner, is nominated for best actor.

But the director of "Babel and "21 Grams" still said it was "very tough."

Gonzalez-Inarritu is the most well known of the five directors who met Saturday for a pre-Oscar symposium, but like his fellow nominees he suffers the stresses of making films far from the comforts of the Hollywood studio system.

Whether it is hard-to-digest subject matter or shoestring budgets, these directors fought some epic battles on their way to Hollywood's biggest night.

The Greek director of bizarre family drama "Dogtooth," Yorgos Lanthimos, works on a laughably low budget but now can't get state financing because of Greece's debt crisis.

Algeria's Rachid Bouchareb of "Outside the Law" had to fight to get his film screened at Cannes due to political opposition in France to his depiction of the Algerian fight for independence.

Susanne Bier, the Danish director of "In a Better World," about young boys battling bullies and split families, used her financial limitations to get a sharper focus on the boys.

Canada's Denis Villeneuve, director of the dark drama "Incendies" filmed partly in the Middle East, edited before he shot to reduce waste on the cutting room floor.

PARTICULARLY GRIM YEAR

Every year, the Oscars briefly shine their spotlight on the exotic world of foreign-language films, which often provide a departure from mainstream commercial movies and the widely palatable productions of the United States.

This year is no different. The foreign-language films up for Oscar contention are indeed bleak, dark and depressing.

In fact, of the 66 films submitted to the Academy, only one was a comedy. The day Sweden's "Simple Simon" screened for the selection committee, it was met with loud cheering, but no nomination, alas.



Powered By WizardRSS - Full Text RSS Feeds

"Winter's Bone" seeks indie film honors

LOS ANGELES | Sat Feb 26, 2011 12:50pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Winter's Bone," the grim saga of a 17-year-old girl searching for her father in drug-ravaged middle America, could find plenty of acclaim on Saturday at the art-house world's version of the Oscars.

The drama goes into the 26th annual Spirit Awards with seven nominations, leading a field that includes several films with which it will compete at the Academy Awards on Sunday.

The lesbian family comedy "The Kids Are All Right," the ballerina melodrama "Black Swan," and the mountain misadventure "127 Hours" also have multiple bids at both events.

Each year, a handful of Spirit winners usually goes on to earn Oscars thanks in part to the success of low-budget films in the mainstream arena. But the awards ceremonies otherwise could not be more different.

The Oscars take place at a theater in a Hollywood shopping mall. Black tie is obligatory, and everyone is supposed to be on best behavior at an event oozing with seriousness.

The Spirits, famed for their relaxed and boozy atmosphere, are returning to their traditional locale on Santa Monica Beach after an ill-fated switch to a downtown Los Angeles parking building last year.

The stars dress casually, and deliver alcohol-fueled acceptance speeches inside a big marquee. But a cold snap could dampen spirits a little. The two-hour event begins at 2 p.m. PST.

MEAT ON THE 'BONE'

The Spirit Awards honor low-budget American films based on such criteria as original, provocative subject matter and the degree of independent financing.

"Winter's Bone" will go head-to-head for best feature and director against "The Kids Are All Right" (five nominations), "Black Swan" (four) and "127 Hours" (three).

Critics raved about director/co-writer Debra Granik's depiction of a rural mountain community dotted with methamphetamine labs, and it also picked up four Oscar nominations.

In a career-making role, 20-year-old actress Jennifer Lawrence plays a woman who struggles to care for her disabled mother and two younger siblings. When they face eviction after her father fails to make a court appearance, she must confront her violent neighbors to find out what happened to him.

Lawrence will compete for female lead prize at the Spirits and the best actress race at the Oscars. Indeed, all four of her Oscar rivals received Spirit nominations. "Black Swan" star Natalie Portman is the Oscar favorite.

Among the male headliners, only "127 Hours" star James Franco will compete at both events for his role as a trapped hiker forced to amputate his own arm. He will also co-host the Oscars with Anne Hathaway.

The Spirit Awards make a point of honoring up-and-coming filmmakers with categories for best first feature and first screenplay. This year, Lena Dunham is competing in both races with "Tiny Furniture," a black comedy that grossed a grand total of about $400,000 at the box office.

But her portrayal of a freshly minted college graduate entering adulthood armed only with a useless degree and self-esteem issues caught Hollywood's attention. She is now developing a series at cable channel HBO.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Vicki Allen)



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

Friday, February 25, 2011

Oscar producers say show comes with youthful edge

LOS ANGELES | Fri Feb 25, 2011 8:17pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When the curtain comes up on the 83rd Academy Awards on Sunday, the show's producers hope to reconnect movie fans with Hollywood history as well as use technology and imagery to engage younger fans of the future.

Producers Don Mischer and Bruce Cohen hired James Franco, 32, and Anne Hathaway, 28, to host the show and all week, the pair have put out teaser videos on the Web of them "training" for their hosting duties and avoiding a "wardrobe malfunction." In one, they mimic John Travolta and Olivia Newton John in a song-and dance number from the musical "Grease."

It is the first time in Oscar history that a man and woman have been co-hosts, and Hathaway is the youngest ever emcee for the show, beating out Donald O'Connor who was a co-host in 1954, Cohen told a news conference on Friday.

He and Mischer insisted that when they first thought about bringing Franco and Hathaway on board as co-hosts, they hadn't thought about trying to appeal to younger audiences. But as they developed the show, their hosts' youth naturally lent itself to ideas that would appeal to younger audiences.

"As we've been putting the show together, we've naturally come up with things that go that way," Cohen said. "We all feel it's a real exciting thing. This is the next generation of moviegoers," he said.

In recent years, viewership has been eroding for the Oscars telecast, which is annually the second most popular TV show in the United States. Last year's telecast was the most-watched in five years with about 42 million viewers, but a large part of that was due to the popularity of best film nominee "Avatar," which had scores of younger fans.

The telecast generally sees viewership increase when popular movies are up for awards. The high-water mark was 1998 when 57 million people tuned in to watch smash hit "Titanic" win best film. The low was 2008 when about 32 million tuned in for a victory by adult drama "No Country for Old Men."

The producers and the show's organizers at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences generally only provide a few glimpses of what will be staged, and on Friday, they were characteristically quiet on details.

One element they did discuss was the lack of elaborate sets on stage, and the use of contemporary technology -- Twitter, Facebook and cameras backstage and on the red carpet streaming video on the Web.

Cohen said one aim was to connect audiences with what made them love movies in the first place. For instance, when the award for best animated film is given, the show will hearken to the winner of the first animated Oscar, "Shrek" in 2001, by showing images of that film's fairy tale landscape setting.

"Hopefully," added Cohen, "it gives a fun, exciting context to the Oscars."

One element the producers hope to avoid are the long, boring acceptance speeches with many "thank yous" read word-for-word from stars looking at notes on pieces of papers.

Mischer said those speeches cause viewers to turn the TV channel, but when stars get excited or speak from the heart, audiences stay tuned. "They want to see when people are moved, or touched," Mischer said.

The Oscars air live in the United States on the ABC TV network on Sunday, February 27 at 8 p.m. est/5 p.m. pst, as well as in some 200 countries worldwide.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

Dior suspends Galliano after booze-fuelled bar spat

PARIS | Fri Feb 25, 2011 10:40am EST

PARIS (Reuters) - Christian Dior suspended star fashion designer John Galliano on Friday pending an inquiry into drunken insults he hurled at a couple in a bar.

Just a week before Galliano was due to present Dior's catwalk collection, Paris police were called to a bar in the fashionable Marais district on Thursday evening where they found Galliano barking insults at a couple after a drinking session, a police source told Reuters.

Galliano was taken to a police station for a sobriety test that revealed he was over the legal limit. Police then escorted the Dior star home, the source said, without specifying the nature of the alleged insults.

"Dior affirms with the utmost conviction its policy of zero tolerance toward any anti-Semitic or racist words or behavior," Dior Chief Executive Sidney Toledano said in a statement.

"Pending the results of the inquiry, Christian Dior has suspended John Galliano from his responsibilities," the fashion house, part of billionaire Bernard Arnault's LVMH luxury empire, added.

Christian Dior, which hired Galliano as its star designer more than a decade ago, is due to present its autumn-winter collection in Paris next Friday, March 4.

A spokeswoman for the group declined to comment on whether the show would go ahead as planned.



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

UK royal couple visit university where love bloomed

ST ANDREWS, Scotland | Fri Feb 25, 2011 7:14am EST

ST ANDREWS, Scotland (Reuters) - Prince William and fiancée Kate Middleton returned to the university where they met and fell in love on Friday with an official visit to St Andrews on the east coast of Scotland.

It was at the picturesque university that they got to know each other in 2001 as undergraduates studying art history. They went on to share a house on the outskirts of town, and their romance blossomed.

Ten years on, and the royal pair are one of the world's most famous couples, their every move scrutinized by the international media as preparations are made for their wedding in London's Westminster Abbey on April 29.

Friday's visit to mark the university's 600th anniversary follows their first official outing as a couple on Thursday, where Middleton's apparently nerveless appearance was lauded in the royalty-obsessed British media.

"Glamorous Kate Middleton sparkled at her first official engagement," wrote the Mirror tabloid's royal reporter Victoria Murphy, reflecting the media's generally gushing tone.

PREPARATION FOR FUTURE

This week's visits, which follow several months of relative anonymity on the Welsh island of Anglesey where the couple have been living, will go some way to preparing 29-year-old Middleton for life as a prince's bride, and eventually queen.

On Friday she wore a red coat with black trim and belt and the prince, 28, donned a dark blue suit. Middleton's hair was down, rather than tied back as it had been on Thursday when she also wore a feather fascinator.

William, second in line to the British throne, is patron of the 600th Anniversary Appeal which aims to raise 100 million pounds ($160 million) to secure the future of University of St Andrews and fund scholarships making it accessible to all "regardless of background or circumstance."

The new scholarship, worth up to 70,000 pounds ($112,800), will meet the costs of tuition, accommodation and living expenses for a four-year undergraduate degree in science, the arts, medicine or divinity.

It will be presented as a wedding gift to the couple during their visit.

St Andrews enjoys a reputation for being Britain's "top matchmaking university" -- around one in 10 students meet their spouses there, officials say.

With no nightclubs, students tend to socialize at dinner parties or "society" balls, contributing to its reputation as a peculiarly upmarket seat of learning.

The 600th anniversary marks the formal charter granted by Bishop Henry Wardlaw in February 1411 and the achievement of full university status conferred by Pope Benedict XIII by Papal Bull in 1413.



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

Thursday, February 24, 2011

"Hall Pass" on track to win weekend box office

Thu Feb 24, 2011 10:31pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - The Farrelly brothers' R-rated comedy "Hall Pass" is on track to win the weekend box office race, while Paramount's Insurge Pictures releases an updated version of "Justin Bieber: Never Say Never" in a maverick move designed to encourage repeat viewing.

"Justin Bieber: Never Say Never Director's Fan Cut," boasting 40 minutes of new footage, will only play in 3D theaters. Movie's gross ticket sales are a healthy $52.9 million as it heads into its third weekend in U.S. and Canadian theaters. The original version will continue to play in regular theaters.

Box office tracking figures show "Hall Pass," starring Owen Wilson and Jason Sudeikis, opening in the mid- to high-teens, a solid start for the siblings. Warner Bros. debuts the New Line film in 2,950 theaters.

There's less interest in Nicolas Cage's supernatural action picture "Drive Angry 3D."

Summit Entertainment is releasing "Drive Angry" in the U.S. for Avi Lerner's Nu Image/Millennium Films. The film goes out in 2,061 locations in the U.S., of which 2012 are 3D runs.

Both "Hall Pass" and "Drive Angry" should draw a heavily male audience, although "Hall Pass" is showing some traction among younger females.

"Hall Pass" also starring Jenna Fischer, Christina Applegate and Richard Jenkins is the Farrellys' first movie since "The Heartbreak Kid" in 2007 and tells the story of two men whose wives give them permission to go on vacation from their marriage for one week.

Also starring Amber Heard, "Drive Angry" stars Cage as a man who breaks out of hell to prevent the cult that murdered his daughter from sacrificing his infant granddaughter.

"Drive Angry" could end up in a battle for No. 2 with holdovers "Unknown," "Gnomeo & Juliet" and possibly "I Am Number Four."

Summit is projecting an opening gross in the high single digits, or low teens, for "Drive Angry."

With the Academy Awards on Sunday, Oscar contenders could see healthy business on Friday and Saturday as moviegoers rush to see films they've missed. (The Oscar ceremony itself could take a bite out of the box office Sunday evening.)

A healthy number of award movies have prospered at this year, both domestically and overseas.

"The King's Speech" has grossed $236.2 million worldwide, followed by "The Social Network" at $222.8 million. "Black Swan" has earned $203.7 million, while "True Grit" should jump the $200 million mark this weekend ("True Grit's" global ticket sales through Wednesday were $198.3 million).

Among specialty openers, Sony Pictures Classics debuts acclaimed French drama "Of Gods and Men" in 33 theaters in New York, Los Angeles, Toronto and Montreal. Film, which premiered at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, has grossed $31.7 million overseas, including more than $27 million in France.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

CBS axes "Two and a Half Men" for season

LOS ANGELES | Thu Feb 24, 2011 9:50pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Television network CBS on Thursday canceled production of its top-rated comedy "Two and A Half Men" for the rest of this season because of actor Charlie Sheen's "statements, conduct and condition."

"Based on the totality of Charlie Sheen's statements, conduct and condition, CBS and Warner Bros. Television have decided to discontinue production of "Two and a Half Men" for the remainder of the season," the network and the show's makers said in a statement.

The statement followed an expletive-filled attack by Sheen on Thursday against the producer of the comedy, just days before he was due to return to work after a month in rehab.

In an interview on a syndicated radio program and in remarks to celebrity website TMZ.com, Sheen called "Two and A Half Men" producer and co-creator Chuck Lorre a "charlatan (who) chose not to do his job," a "piece of shit" and a "stupid, stupid little man ..."

"I was told if I went on the attack, they would cancel the show," Sheen said of his bosses on the Alex Jones Show, a radio program based in Texas that airs on more than 60 stations across the United States.

Lorre could not be reached for comment.

"Two and a Half Men" is a huge money generator for the broadcaster and production company, and earlier this year the network said it was "highly concerned" about Sheen. CBS is a unit of CBS Corp and Warner Bros. Television is part of the Warner Bros unit of Time Warner Inc.

Production of "Two and a Half Men" was shut down last month after Sheen was persuaded to seek help following a wild 36-hour party at his home that ended with him being hospitalized for abdominal pains.

Throughout much of 2010, he was involved in a series of drug and alcohol-related incidents, and in August pleaded guilty to an assault on his now ex-wife.

Sheen, the highest paid actor on U.S. television, was scheduled to return to the set on Tuesday. Four of the remaining eight episodes for the current TV season, which ends in May, had already been axed due to the unexpected hiatus.

CBS and Warner Bros said in January they were "profoundly concerned" about Sheen's health and supported his decision to begin rehab.

Audiences for "Two and a Half Men" have remained strong despite Sheen's well-publicized personal problems. The show attracts about 15 million U.S. viewers.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Todd Eastham)



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

CBS axes "Two and a Half Men" for season

LOS ANGELES | Thu Feb 24, 2011 9:50pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Television network CBS on Thursday canceled production of its top-rated comedy "Two and A Half Men" for the rest of this season because of actor Charlie Sheen's "statements, conduct and condition."

"Based on the totality of Charlie Sheen's statements, conduct and condition, CBS and Warner Bros. Television have decided to discontinue production of "Two and a Half Men" for the remainder of the season," the network and the show's makers said in a statement.

The statement followed an expletive-filled attack by Sheen on Thursday against the producer of the comedy, just days before he was due to return to work after a month in rehab.

In an interview on a syndicated radio program and in remarks to celebrity website TMZ.com, Sheen called "Two and A Half Men" producer and co-creator Chuck Lorre a "charlatan (who) chose not to do his job," a "piece of shit" and a "stupid, stupid little man ..."

"I was told if I went on the attack, they would cancel the show," Sheen said of his bosses on the Alex Jones Show, a radio program based in Texas that airs on more than 60 stations across the United States.

Lorre could not be reached for comment.

"Two and a Half Men" is a huge money generator for the broadcaster and production company, and earlier this year the network said it was "highly concerned" about Sheen. CBS is a unit of CBS Corp and Warner Bros. Television is part of the Warner Bros unit of Time Warner Inc.

Production of "Two and a Half Men" was shut down last month after Sheen was persuaded to seek help following a wild 36-hour party at his home that ended with him being hospitalized for abdominal pains.

Throughout much of 2010, he was involved in a series of drug and alcohol-related incidents, and in August pleaded guilty to an assault on his now ex-wife.

Sheen, the highest paid actor on U.S. television, was scheduled to return to the set on Tuesday. Four of the remaining eight episodes for the current TV season, which ends in May, had already been axed due to the unexpected hiatus.

CBS and Warner Bros said in January they were "profoundly concerned" about Sheen's health and supported his decision to begin rehab.

Audiences for "Two and a Half Men" have remained strong despite Sheen's well-publicized personal problems. The show attracts about 15 million U.S. viewers.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Todd Eastham)



Powered By WizardRSS - WizardRSS.com For Sale

Ricky Gervais offers Oscar hosts "a little opening"

Thu Feb 24, 2011 2:38pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Controversial Golden Globes host Ricky Gervais has no plans to attend the Oscars, but he has written a snarky opening monologue for Anne Hathaway and James Franco.

"Good luck to James Franco and Anne Hathaway at The Oscars on Sunday. I know how nervous they must be right now...They will do an absolutely fantastic job and don't need my help, but I've written a little opening in case they have a few minutes to fill," The British comedian wrote in a blog post.

In Gervais' fake script, Franco says: "Usually they hire comedians to host The Oscars, but tonight, instead, you get us!"

Adds Hathaway, "No comedians tonight. And do you know why? Because comics are ugly."

"Especially that rude obnoxious one who played the Steve Carell part in the English remake of 'The Office'," says Franco.

"But you can all relax because Ricky Gervais is in London…" adds Hathaway. "He's doing some charity work. Yeah, he's visiting orphans with cancer. He's telling them what bald little losers they are…."

Gervais also includes an exchange in which Franco tells Hathaway, "Oh Anne you are naughty. In a respectful, wholesome way...That Ricky Gervais should do more for charity...Ricky Gervais is now worth $80,000,000. The obnoxious Brit confirmed the figure, adding, 'Yes and my dentist hasn't seen a penny.'"

Answers Hathaway, "Yeah, why doesn't he get his teeth straightened and bleached like everyone else in Hollywood?"

Says Franco, "It's a good question Anne. For the same reason he doesn't have Botox or suck up to important producers -- there's something wrong with him."

Gervais also takes digs at Franco's Oscar-nominated movie "127 Hours" ("You probably know me from '127 Hours' where I play a man trapped in an enclosed space who decides he would rather cut his own arm off than stay where he was. Now that sounds "way out" but wait till half way through this .... ceremony and you'll start to identify with him.")

And he riffs on Hathaway being cast as Catwoman ("And I'm the new Catwoman. The first white woman to play that role since Michelle Pfeiffer. I want it to be an inspiration to all white people everywhere. Your dreams can come true in Hollywood too.")

And presenters ("Presenting awards tonight will be a string of Hollywood legends and some other actors who have a film out in March or April.").

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



Powered By WizardRSS

Tweeting moms, Web cams. Oscar gets geeky

LOS ANGELES | Thu Feb 24, 2011 3:13pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When Oscar organizers unveiled their promotional campaign, "You're Invited," they weren't kidding -- at least where Web audiences are concerned.

This year, more than ever, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has loaded up its Facebook page, Twitter account and website with ways people can watch the world's top film awards and all the festivities that take place around it.

The goal, Academy members say, is to make the glitzy Hollywood telecast feel more inclusive of everyday moviegoers and capture the attention of younger fans with one hand on their cellphone and the other on a laptop computer.

"We know that, more and more, people watching television are also engaging with some other device. We want that second device to have related, complementary content on it," said Ric Robertson, executive administrator at the Academy and the man behind the Oscar show's social media outreach.

"The idea is to pull back the curtain, and let viewers get a real sense of what Oscar night is," said Robertson.

It is no secret that in recent years, viewership has been eroding for the Oscars telecast, which is annually the second most popular TV show in the United States, as well as movies, in general. Younger audiences are finding more ways to entertain themselves -- social networking, video games, texting, etc. -- than going to movies.

The total number of tickets sold in U.S. and Canadian theaters fell 5 percent in 2010 to 1.34 billion. Box office revenues were flat compared to 2009 at $10.6 billion, and average movie ticket prices rose to $7.89 from $7.50

Where the Oscar telecast is concerned, last year's show was the most-watched in five years with just under 42 million viewers, but a large part of that was due to the popularity of best film nominee "Avatar," the biggest box office hit ever.

The telecast generally sees viewership increase when popular movies are up for awards. The high-water mark was 1998 when 57 million people tuned in to watch smash hit "Titanic" win best film. The low was 2008 when about 32 million tuned in for a victory by "No Country for Old Men."

OSCAR ON THE WEB

So, in an effort to put more eyes on Hollywood's A-list movie stars, the Academy has adopted an aggressive approach to showing scenes of stars on the red carpet, backstage after the TV cameras are no longer following them, and even offering a glimpse of their personal lives with Oscar's tweeting moms.

On Twitter, not only will the Academy's website be active (@TheAcademy) and various nominees be tweeting, but James Franco's mom (@Francosmom) and grandmom (@Grandmamitz), "The Fighter" director David O. Russell (@Orussellsmom) "Toy Story 3" director Lee Unkrich's mother (@EmilieUnkrich) and others, are expected to tweet.

On Facebook, the Academy will be posting photos of stars at the awards or unexpected events that happen off camera, as well as what is upcoming on the telecast.

For fans wanting to watch just about everything Oscar, the show's website Oscar.com is selling an "All Access Pass" where people can watch live Web streaming of what is taking place from 24 cameras along the red carpet, backstage, in the press rooms and at the Governors Ball dinner after the show.

Finally, there is even an Oscars viewing app that can be downloaded for iPads and iPhone users.

"We have totally rebooted Oscar.com with these user selected video streams," Robertson said. "We've just blown it up completely."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



Powered By WizardRSS

Bidding is hot in Justin Bieber hair auction

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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.



Powered By WizardRSS

Royal couple in spotlight at first official visit

TREARDDUR BAY, Wales | Thu Feb 24, 2011 11:57am EST

TREARDDUR BAY, Wales (Reuters) - Prince William and bride-to-be Kate Middleton performed their first official engagement as a couple on Thursday, giving them an early taste of the life in the spotlight that awaits them.

International media and hundreds of local well-wishers descended on Trearddur Bay, on the Welsh island of Anglesey, to greet the couple as they attended the launch of a new lifeboat.

Middleton, 29, had her hair pulled back in a ponytail on a blustery but sunny afternoon and wore a beige, knee-length coat with dark brown trim, dark scarf, gloves and a feather fascinator.

The couple shook hands with local officials ahead of a service of dedication for the new boat.

Middleton poured champagne over the bow of the "Hereford Endeavour," Trearddur Bay lifeboat station's new inshore lifeboat for the RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution).

They then went on a walkabout, looking relaxed as they greeted well-wishers who turned up to catch a glimpse of the young celebrities, and spoke to members of the lifeboat crew.

Although a relatively minor ceremony, for Middleton it offered a brief glimpse of the kind of official duties she will have to perform first as princess, and eventually as queen.

RELATIVE PRIVACY

The event is close to where William, 28, has been working as a search and rescue pilot for the Royal Air Force, and is seen as the couple's way of thanking the community for respecting their privacy while they lived there together in recent months.

The period of grace is unlikely to last, however, despite tabloid reports that Queen Elizabeth, William's grandmother, has told the couple they would be allowed to remain out of the spotlight for the first two years of their marriage.

The issue of their exposure to the media is a sensitive one, given that William's mother Diana died in a Paris car crash in 1997 after being pursued by photographers. She was 36.

The couple marry on April 29 in Westminster Abbey in a ceremony expected to be watched by hundreds of millions of people around the world. They are expected to settle in Anglesey following the wedding.

Anglesey locals generally welcomed the couple's presence.

"I think their effect on Anglesey is wonderful," said Karen Knight who works in a village store.

"He's (William) been seen out and about and they say he's fabulous and mixes with all the locals," she told the WalesOnline website. "My sons have seen him a couple of times out having a meal in a local pub."

Middleton and William travel to Scotland on Friday for the 600th anniversary celebrations at St Andrews university where they first met as students in 2001.



Powered By WizardRSS

U2 to play Glastonbury festival

LONDON | Thu Feb 24, 2011 6:36am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Irish rockers U2 will perform at the Glastonbury music festival this year, joining Britain's Coldplay and U.S. singer Beyonce as the main headline acts.

The band had to cancel their scheduled appearance at one of the world's biggest outdoor music events last year when lead singer Bono injured his back.

U2 will play the Pyramid stage, which can be seen by tens of thousands of fans standing on a grassy slope, on Friday, June 24.

"After the disappointment of U2 being unable to play last year, we're now doubly excited at the prospect of the Friday night supergroup breaking the sound barrier," said Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis.

U2 guitarist the Edge added: "It's more a way of life than a festival. I made it last year to the Friday show -- got to play with Muse, got to hang out, ate a veggie burger and fries, and got to play on the Pyramid Stage.

"I have to say there is something really special and iconic about that stage. So we're all looking forward to coming back to pick up where I left off. And we're so excited to get to play in front of the world's greatest festival audience."

Eavis, an English dairy farmer now in his 70s, has developed Glastonbury from a small, free music festival into a major event in the pop calendar attracting some of the biggest acts and around 150,000 paying fans living on site in tents.



Powered By WizardRSS

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

"King's Speech," "Social Network" lead Oscar picks

Wed Feb 23, 2011 9:29pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Who will take home Oscar statuettes on Sunday. Based on behind-the-scenes info, The Hollywood Reporter picks the winners in the key races.

BEST PICTURE - "The King's Speech"

Three factors favor the Weinstein Co. film over its only serious rival, "The Social Network":

Precedent: "Speech" scored wins at the producers, directors and screen actors guild awards. True, it lost to "Social Network" at the Golden Globes, but the Globes are hardly a litmus test for the Oscars anymore.

Voters' Ages: Academy members average out at 57, meaning they're far more likely to identify with "Speech's" middle-aged heroes than "Social's" young cast.

The Voting System: In the Best Picture race, voters rank the 10 nominees in order of preference; if no movie gets more than 50 percent of first-place votes, the bottom vote-getters are eliminated and their votes transferred. So it's important to be placed second and third on lots of ballots, rather than just be No. 1. Being widely liked counts more than being deeply loved. And a whole lot of voters really like "Speech."

ACTOR - Colin Firth, "The King's Speech"

A year after he lost to Jeff Bridges (Firth was up for "A Single Man," Bridges for "Crazy Heart"), the two are in competition again. This time, Firth is a lock. He has scooped all the major awards so far, and there's little chance he'll lose when the Oscar envelope is opened. Among the other nominees, Javier Bardem is too dark in "Biutiful," Jesse Eisenberg too young in "Social Network" and James Franco's actions in "127 Hours" just too plain gruesome.

ACTRESS - Natalie Portman, "Black Swan"

Many insiders believe Annette Bening will win for "The Kids Are All Right," thanks to the support of the Academy's older voters. She'll be helped by her place on the board of governors, respect for her body of work and sympathy for three previous losses. But other veterans have lost to fresher faces: Remember Marion Cotillard's win over Julie Christie in 2008 and Juliette Binoche's over Lauren Bacall in 1997? It's a close race, but Portman has the showier role; that and the fact that she won the SAG Award get her the Oscar.

DIRECTOR - David Fincher, "The Social Network"

He lost at the DGA, but he's our pick for the Oscars. Why? The DGA has a huge TV contingent; they respected Tom Hooper's craftsmanship on "Speech," but Fincher's visual mastery means more with the Academy. Bad sign for Hooper: Even BAFTA opted for Fincher over his British rival.

SUPPORTING ACTOR - Christian Bale, "The Fighter"

Play ugly, play period and play with an accent. Bale does all three in "The Fighter." Add the fact that he's won nearly every other award, except BAFTA, and he's a lock. "Speech's" Geoffrey Rush won in 1997 for a more memorable lead role in Shine, but that will work against him as the Academy rarely gives actors a second Oscar.

SUPPORTING ACTRESS - Melissa Leo, "The Fighter"



Powered By WizardRSS

Judge tells Lindsay Lohan guilty plea means jail

LOS ANGELES | Wed Feb 23, 2011 7:55pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Lindsay Lohan was warned on Wednesday that any plea bargain on her jewelry theft charge would involve jail time, but the troubled actress seemed set on rejecting any deals and opting instead to risk a trial.

Lohan, 24, was given until March 10, to consider a plea deal offered by prosecutors on a charge that she walked out of a Los Angeles jewelry store in January without paying for a $2,500 necklace.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed at Wednesday's hearing -- the latest in a series of trips to court that have halted Lohan's once promising movie career.

But celebrity website TMZ.com, citing unnamed sources connected to the case, said prosecutors want Lohan to plead guilty and serve six months in jail to avoid a possibly longer sentence if convicted at trial of stealing the necklace.

Lohan and her lawyers had been hoping for an arrangement that would avoid any more time behind bars. The actress spent two weeks in jail last summer on a probation violation in a 2007 drunk driving and cocaine conviction.

But Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Keith L. Schwartz told her sternly that "this case does involve jail time. Period. If you plead (guilty) in front of me and the case is resolved in front of me, you are going to jail, period."

Lohan pleaded not guilty to grand theft at an initial hearing earlier in February, and has told friends she believed the necklace was on loan.

Schwartz said on Wednesday he doubted Lohan and her lawyers would accept a plea deal. "I get the impression you are not going to accept the (prosecutors') offer, okay. I don't have a crystal ball, and I'm not privy to any inside information, but that is the feeling that I got."

TMZ.com reported that Lohan told a friend after leaving the courtroom she was not guilty and would not accept going back to jail. She has until March 10 to consider her response.

"I don't care that you are Lindsay Lohan versus John Doe," Schwartz lectured the "Mean Girls" actress. "You will be treated exactly the same as anyone else, no better or worse."

Lohan, dressed in cream pants and a low-cut black blouse, said little during Wednesday's hearing, conferring quietly with her attorney and answering the judge, "yes, your honor," when asked if she understood what he said to her.

Lohan faces a separate court hearing before a different judge in her 2007 drunk driving conviction. She remains on probation in that case and in January completed a court-ordered three month stay in rehab -- her fifth stint in treatment in three years.

Schwartz said he would recommend psychological counseling for Lohan as part of her sentence, telling her "I don't want you to be a repeat offender....I want you to get on with your life and move on."

Lohan made her name as an 11-year-old in the Disney movie "The Parent Trap" and went on to have hits with "Freaky Friday" and "Herbie Fully Loaded".

But she lost her lead part in a movie about 1970s porn actress Linda Lovelace while she was in rehab last year.

(Editing by Christine Kearney and Bob Tourtellotte)



Powered By WizardRSS

Paltrow to join Coldplay husband in UK charts

LONDON | Wed Feb 23, 2011 3:42pm EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Actress Gwyneth Paltrow looks set to enter the British music charts when the weekly ranking is confirmed, entering a domain normally dominated by husband and Coldplay lead singer Chris Martin.

Boosted by her appearance on the "Glee" television series aired this week in Britain, the 38-year-old Oscar winner is at number 24 with her version of "Singing in the Rain/Umbrella" and at number 29 with a cover of Cee Lo Green's "Forget You."

Combined with a third song which she performs on the TV show, tracks featuring Paltrow have sold more than 10,000 copies, according to midweek data provided by the Official Charts Company. The final chart positions are confirmed on Sunday.

Elsewhere, Grammy-winning British singer Adele looks set to retain her position at number one in the singles chart with "Someone Like You," the song she performed at last week's Brit awards.

And she looks set to top the album chart too with "21," so far outselling the rest of the top five combined.

Official Charts Company managing director Martin Talbot said: "The impact of Gwyneth Paltrow and the continuing Brits effect demonstrates how powerful TV can be in influencing music tastes and interests in the digital world.

"The Brits downloads started selling immediately after they were performed on TV, and the instant impact of this week's 'Glee' performances underlines the same power."

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)



Powered By WizardRSS

Lindsay Lohan warned of jail time in jewelry case

LOS ANGELES | Wed Feb 23, 2011 1:09pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Troubled actress Lindsay Lohan on Wednesday was given two weeks to consider a plea deal in her jewelry theft case and warned by a judge that she faced jail time if she decided to plead guilty.

Lohan was told to return to a Los Angeles court on March 10 to either accept a plea deal offered by prosecutors, or go ahead with a full trial.

"We are not going to be able to resolve the case today," Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Keith L. Schwartz said after meeting behind doors with attorneys for the two sides.

But he warned Lohan, 24, that if she accepted a plea deal on the grand theft charge "this case does involve jail time. Period. If you plead in front of me and the case is resolved in front of me, you are going to jail, period."

Lohan is accused of walking out of a Los Angeles jewelry store in January without paying for a $2,500 necklace. She pleaded not guilty at an initial hearing earlier in February.

Schwartz did not give details of the plea deal offered to Lohan, nor indicate how much jail time prosecutors want her to serve.

"I don't care that you are Lindsay Lohan versus John Doe," he told the "Mean Girls" actress sternly. "You will be treated exactly the same as anyone else, no better or worse."

Lohan, dressed in cream pants and a low-cut black blouse, said nothing during Wednesday's hearing.

If she rejects the plea deal offered by prosecutors, she will move ahead with a formal trial on the necklace theft charge, which would result in prison time if she was convicted.

Lohan faces a separate court hearing before a different judge on Friday for her 2007 drunk driving and cocaine possession conviction, which has halted her once promising Hollywood movie career.

She remains on probation for that conviction and in January completed a court-ordered stay in rehab -- her fifth stint in treatment in three years.

Schwartz said that if the jewelry theft charge is resolved in his court, he would recommend psychological counseling for Lohan as part of her sentence.

"I don't want you to be a repeat offender," he told her. "I want you to get on with your life and move on."

Lohan made her name as an 11-year-old in the Disney movie "The Parent Trap" and went on to have hits with "Freaky Friday" and "Herbie Fully Loaded".

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Jill Serjeant and Christine Kearney)



Powered By WizardRSS

Oscar is golden, but film business shows some tarnish

LOS ANGELES | Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:54am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oscar week is upon Hollywood and the champagne is flowing freely at numerous parties celebrating the world's top movie honors, but when the film industry wakes up with a hangover from Sunday's awards, it faces a cold reality.

Digital technologies are rapidly changing the way movies are delivered to consumers. DVD sales are continuing their multi-year decline with no end in sight. Theater attendance is off a whopping 23 percent so far in 2011 compared to the same point one year ago. And not even 3D is saving it, anymore.

Financial and analysts say movie makers and distributors need to keep up with rapidly changing consumer behavior in an era when entertainment is cheap and readily available on the Internet. Many in Hollywood agree, and are working to change. But profitable new ways of doing business have been slow to come, and the consequence could be an industry on the decline in much the same way as music industry was in the 2000s.

"The trends that we see today are similar in many ways, although I don't think we're the same as the music industry," said Mitch Singer, chief technology officer for Sony Pictures Entertainment, a division of Sony Corp. "Revenues are declining, people are finding other ways to access our content," he said.

Attendance at U.S. and Canada theaters so far this year is down to 173,000 tickets sold compared to 225,000 for the same time period in 2010 -- a decrease of 23 percent, according to tracking firm Hollywood.com Box Office.

Worse, consumers bought only $10 billion in home video entertainment products in 2010, compared to $14 billion in 2004 when the DVD market was booming, reports IHS Screen Digest.

'ARE STUDIOS DEAD?'

Jeffrey Korchek, vice president of legal and business affairs at Mattel Inc, recently wrote an opinion piece for The Huffington Post titled "Are Studios Dead?" in which he argued movies are becoming low-value commodities because companies such as Netflix and Coinstar's Redbox make renting so cheap.

Redbox rents movies for $1 a day at kiosks, a price studios grumble about, and Netflix, with some 20 million subscribers, lets consumers stream all the movies they want for $7.99. Amazon.com this week rolled out a streaming movie service for customers who pay $79 a year for free shipping on other items.

Overall spending in home entertainment rentals has declined to $6.3 billion last year from $8.6 billion in 2001, according to IHS Screen Digest.

"Where is the movie business' Steve Jobs, the person who knows what people want to see before they do, knows that giving content away for free on the Internet isn't such a good idea and who creates excitement, brand loyalty and an enduring corporate culture?" Korchek wrote.

But if there is no single superhero leading the industry, the studios are taking some steps to secure the future.

They have invested in 3D and looked at ways consumers can receive movies in homes faster, as well as created systems for selling digital copies of films directly to customers.

There are now 8,455 screens with 3D technology in the United States, accounting for over 20 percent of all screens, according to the National Association of Theater Owners.

Thanks in part to higher ticket prices of $3 or more, 3D movies could account for 30 percent of box office results in 2011, said Eric Wold, an analyst with Merriman Curham Ford.



Powered By WizardRSS

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Chris Brown allowed near Rihanna, 2 years after attack

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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.



EnvisionStar Hosting

Oscar fashion goes bold. Thank Lady Gaga!

LOS ANGELES | Tue Feb 22, 2011 3:01pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Taking a tip from music stars Lady Gaga and Nicki Minaj, Hollywood's A-list actresses are expected to turn up on Oscar's red carpet in many bold, futuristic designs, fashion experts predict.

The eye toward the future marks a turnaround from recent years in which styles at Hollywood's biggest awards shows have featured vintage gowns, subdued designs and colors, and less jewelry in a nod to the world's economic woes.

But with consumer confidence up, Hollywood's top female actresses will be wearing distinctive gowns highlighted by draping and accented shoulders and sleeves. Expect a wide array of colors, from pale shades and skin tones to bold purples, oranges, midnight blues and classic black.

Designer Marc Bouwer said this year's futuristic fashions are influenced by some of the "out-there" costumes of pop music superstars like Lady Gaga, Minaj and now Britney Spears as seen in her latest video, "Hold It Against Me."

"Artists are starting to dress much more crazy, more out there and it has a ripple effect on fashion," said Bouwer. "While you won't see a Lady Gaga outfit necessarily on the Oscar red carpet, you will see more architectural styles -- an expanded shoulder, a pronounced sleeve. The stronger power woman has emerged, and you cannot ignore that trend."

Styles on the red carpet ahead of the world's top film honors are expected to be similar to those debuting last month at Hollywood's Golden Globe Awards.

At that show, "Glee" star Lea Michelle dazzled fashionistas in a pink asymmetrical Oscar de la Renta gown, and other actresses such as Nicole Kidman, Michelle Williams and Scarlet Johansson turned up in skin tones and pale shades of rose.

JEWELRY IS BACK

This year Bouwer, who famously dressed Angelina Jolie in a white satin halter dress for the 2007 Oscars, is working with nominees including "The Fighter" star Melissa Leo on the trend he calls, "futuristic architectural minimalism."

It is a look that he and others said not only takes into consideration the dress, but accessories that come with it.

"We're going to see statement pieces," said Greg Kwiat of Kwiat Diamonds. His jewels previously were worn at the Oscars by past nominees such as Anna Kendrick and Natalie Portman.

"A bracelet, a necklace. There will be everything from classic diamonds to lots of colors like yellow gold or aquamarine," Kwiat said.

If the dresses and jewels are bold, then the hair has to be simple and "not so overly complicated" according to celebrity hair stylist Anthony Morrison.

"Whether the hair is up or down, it's more about having a finished look, not frizzy or disheveled," he said. "We've been using a lot of smoothing products to make sure hair is glossy, shiny and polished."

Hair color is also expected to be big and bold this year.



EnvisionStar Hosting