Friday, January 14, 2011

Broadcast critics click on "Social Network"

LOS ANGELES | Sat Jan 15, 2011 12:58am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Facebook film "The Social Network" became a big friend of broadcast critics on Friday when it won several top Critics' Choice Awards, including best film, in the race toward Hollywood's Oscars.

The movie, which traces the history of the popular website from its founding in a college dormitory to its first million users, also earned a best director trophy for David Fincher and adapted screenplay for writer Aaron Sorkin, among others.

Fincher was not on hand to accept his award, but in claiming his trophy, Sorkin made a point of mentioning Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who had not cooperated with the making of the fictional film.

On stage, Sorkin called Zuckerberg "an extraordinary leader" and "altruistic" and said, "we all owe you a debt of gratitude" for creating the website that has become ingrained in much of society.

Colin Firth was named best actor for his role as stammering King George VI who must prove to the United Kingdom that he can be a leader in the dark days ahead of the World War Two in "The King's Speech," which also claimed best original screenplay.

Backstage, Firth told reporters King George's tale was "a story of quiet dignity ... set again a very broad stage -- something very, very personal against a very broad backdrop."

Natalie Portman, who recently revealed she was pregnant and engaged to be married, took home the trophy for best actress portraying a young ballerina who grows into a mature woman and a dancer in drama "The Black Swan."

"I feel great," Portman told reporters about her pregnancy "It's been really calm and good."

"FIGHTER" PACKS A PUNCH

The night's other big winner was boxing drama "The Fighter," which earned awards for best ensemble performance for its cast, best supporting actress for Melissa Leo as a headstrong mother, and supporting actor for Christian Bale playing a boxer whose career is ruined by drugs.

The Critics Choice honors are given out by the Broadcast Film Critics Association, which includes some 250 TV, radio and online critics and is the largest group of film and TV reviewers in the United States and Canada.

Its awards come only two days before the Hollywood Foreign Press Association hands out Golden Globe trophies, and both events come a little more than a week before nominations for Oscars are handed out on January 25.

Taken as a whole, critics awards often provide hints about which films, actors, actresses and others will compete for Oscars when they are given out by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, this year on February 27.

Last year's winner of Critics' Choice honors for best film and director, for instance, were war drama "The Hurt Locker" and its maker Kathryn Bigelow. Both went on to win Academy Awards in their respective categories.

Other winners of Critics Choice honors included director Christopher Nolan's thriller "Inception," which was named best action movie. It is widely expected to compete for Oscars.



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

Steven Tyler talks "American Idol"

Fri Jan 14, 2011 7:58pm EST

NEW YORK (Billboard) - No one would have faulted Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler for hanging up his colorful scarves and taking a nice long vacation earlier this year. After all, he'd recently completed rehab, finished a lengthy tour, and mended fences with his bandmates following a 2009 war of the words.

Instead, Tyler signed up to be a judge on "American Idol," a show better-known for melisma and makeovers than hard rock. Despite questions about how the motley crew of Tyler, Jennifer Lopez and Randy Jackson would breathe new life into the show, Tyler says he's having a great time as a judge and convinced he'll discover the next music legend.

Billboard: So you weren't a fan or a regular viewer of "American Idol" in the past.

Tyler: I didn't watch "American Idol" a lot, and my feelings about it back when were, "How can you get anything out of this?" It wasn't that I wasn't a fan of "Idol." I just believed that the only way that you could make it was to work hard in the clubs, smell the sweat, sing in smoke and do the grind. Some of these kids I saw singing -- I wanted to say, "Wait a minute. So, where have you sung before?"

Billboard: Did anything in particular change your impression?

Tyler: The more I saw the content of "American Idol," I realized that some of them sang in church. Well, guess what? So did I. And they sang off-Broadway. So did I. That would've been all the groups before Aerosmith. That was my thing, though: "They haven't trained, and how dare they?" And you know what? I was wrong, because what inspired me? Church, and the lunchroom in high school. I got beaten up for having long hair, spit at, peed my pants and all that stuff. But I'd show them in the lunchroom. And this is America's lunchroom. Everyone turns on after dinner and watches "American Idol."

Billboard: When did you first have an inkling that being an "Idol" judge might be an option?

Tyler: I spoke with my manager a year ago and told him, "This is something I'd like to do," so he started looking into it. But meanwhile, I checked into Betty Ford for three months, and when I came out the wormhole, I met with Marti Frederiksen and Kara to write this song for this Japanese flick.

Billboard: What was the next step?

Tyler: I got a text from Kara sometime around July, when we were on tour in France, asking, "Did you ever think of being a judge on 'Idol'?" And I thought, "I'm in front of no less than 80,000 people a night now. Could I do that? Would I want to do that?" Half the things in life I've done, I just jumped into blindly.

Billboard: How did you reply to that text?

Tyler: I responded, "How were the ratings?"

Billboard: What kind of advice did Kara give you?

Tyler: and Marti said, "You'd be perfect for this." I figured, "I can get up there, and I certainly would know when someone comes on for real. I could hear their soul and their hearts -- their putting-it-forth like a madman, the star quality. Because I'm a peripheral visionary, you know? I don't usually look straight on at something. I like to savor what I don't see.

Billboard: What do you want to see in a prospective "Idol" contestant?



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

Pair arrested in false claim against actor Gary Busey

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 14, 2011 7:30pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Call them amateur paparazzi. A picture happy couple tried unsuccessfully to catch actor Gary Busey on camera in the wrong place at the wrong time, but police arrested the pair instead.

Mark Abel, 52, and Patrice Karst, 51, on Thursday flagged down officers in the celebrity-filled community of Malibu, California, to report they had seen Busey driving his car "erratically" and appeared drunk, said the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department.

Police located Busey's car and stopped the star of 1978 movie "The Buddy Holly Story." While officers were questioning him, they noticed Abel and Karst had pulled up in their own car. The pair began taking pictures of actor, police said.

It seems an obvious attempt to catch a star in trouble with the law but the problem was, Busey was completely sober and in no trouble.

Officers told the pair to move back, but they refused -- falsely claiming they had press identification, police said.

Abel and Karst were arrested on suspicion of obstructing a peace officer. They were released after posting bail of $10,000 each, police said.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

Doctors to amputate actress Zsa Zsa Gabor's leg

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 14, 2011 2:28pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor, a fixture on Hollywood's social scene for decades, will have most of her right leg amputated on Friday to fight a gangrene infection, her spokesman said.

Gabor, 93, has been gravely ill since last summer when she fell and broke her hip. She has been in and out of UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center in Los Angeles since July.

In November she was hospitalized when doctors feared a blood clot in her leg might move to her heart. On January 2, she returned to the medical center when an infected lesion developed into gangrene.

Her spokesman John Blanchette said doctors only recently told Gabor of a possible amputation, and that this week they told her husband, Frederic Prinz von Anhalt, that her chance of survival was "50-50."

Blanchette said doctors on Wednesday discovered the gangrene had penetrated her bone and they would have to amputate three-quarters of her leg to a point above her knee.

"They (doctors) said it was very dangerous, but they had no other option. It would kill her otherwise," Blanchette said of the operation.

The Hungarian-born Gabor is well known for her roles in 1950s movies "Moulin Rouge" and "Lili," but perhaps even more famous for her lavish lifestyle and a string of wealthy husbands over the years.

Along with her sisters Eva and Magda, she was a constant presence on Hollywood's social circuit and on TV talks shows where she called everyone "dah-ling" in her thick accent.

She has been married nine times and earned a degree of infamy in 1989 when she served a three-day jail term for slapping a Beverly Hills policeman who had pulled her over while she was driving.

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Xavier Briand)



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

CBS has "high concern" about Charlie Sheen

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 14, 2011 1:07pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - CBS entertainment chief Nina Tassler said on Friday the TV network has "high concern" over the personal life of its "Two and a Half Men" star Charlie Sheen, and she called his situation "very complicated."

But Tassler stopped short of saying the network might take any action because Sheen shows up for work, does his job well and his show is a hit.

"We have a high level of concern. How could we not?" Tassler told television journalists, responding to questions about persistent reports of drinking and partying by Sheen.

"On a basic human level, there is concern that this man is a father, he has children, he has a family. But you can't look at it simplistically. Charlie is a professional, he comes to work, he does his job extremely well. It is very complicated," Tassler said.

"He does his job, he does it well, the show is a hit, and that's all I have to say," Tassler added.

"Two and a Half Men" is the top-rated comedy on U.S. television with an average weekly audience of some 15 million viewers, and Sheen is the industry's highest-paid star with a reported salary of $1.8 million an episode.

But the actor has barely been out of news headlines this year after a conviction last year for attacking his wife, followed by reports of an incident in New York in which he smashed up a hotel suite while partying with a porn star.

This weekend, celebrity website TMZ.com reported that Sheen was in Las Vegas and again partying hard.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

Adam Sandler and Andy Samberg teaming on "Dad" film

Fri Jan 14, 2011 2:32pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Adam Sandler and Andy Samberg are in talks with Columbia Pictures to star in "I Hate You Dad," a comedy that Sandler's Happy Madison banner is producing.

The story centers on a father who moves in on the eve of his son's wedding and promptly begins feuding with the bride-to-be.

Sandler would play the dad, with Samberg as the son, even though less than 12 years separate the two in real life.

"Dad" is still in the development stages, and no director is on board, but the two actors are attached. The project is one of several in development at Happy Madison as possible starring vehicles for Sandler. Columbia initially picked up the project in August 2008.

Sandler is a "Saturday Night Live," alum while Samberg is among the current cast's stars. He has made ventures into film, starring in 2007's "Hot Rod" and playing supporting characters in such comedies as "I Love You, Man." Co-toplining a Sandler pic would give Samberg his biggest movie break yet.

Sandler, one of Hollywood's few reliable hitmakers, will next be seen in "Just Go With It," which opens February 11. Samberg will next be seen in "Friends With Benefits," Screen Gems' take on the sex-with-buddies genre that stars Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis.

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum

Jude Law returns to London stage in "Anna Christie"

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.



Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum