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Thursday, December 12, 2013

'SNL' Recap: 'Anchorman 2' Cast Battles One Direction

SNL Paul Rudd Anchor Man Cast - H 2013

Saturday Night Live and Paul Rudd delivered in a big way during the actor's opening monologue, which featured a showdown between Rudd, his Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues costars and musical guest One Direction.

Rudd started off the monologue by saying he was glad he wouldn't be overshadowed by the musical guest this week as he had when Beyonce and Paul McCartney performed during his episodes. But to his dismay, One Direction came on stage and stole his thunder.

So Rudd called in the big guns.

"You've got your boy band, well I've brought my man band,' Rudd said as Will Ferrell, Steve Carell and David Koechner took the stage.

PHOTOS: 10 Stars You Forgot Were 'Saturday Night Live' Castmembers

"Why don't you beat it Menudo," Ferrell said to the British quintet.

"Why don't you kids go sit on Santa's lap and ask for a pair of balls," Carell added.

But soon the men made peace with the boys, and all nine of them sang "Afternoon Delight."

"We are Nine Direction," Rudd declared afterward to big applause.

Ferrell and Koechner stuck around for a revival of the classic Bill Brasky sketch, which Ferrell and Anchorman 2 director Adam McKay wrote during their time on SNL. For the unfamiliar, it centers on extremely drunk men sitting at a bar and telling stories of a legendary mutual acquaintance Bill Brasky. (McKay tweeted Saturday that he was working on the sketch.)

PHOTOS: From Live TV to the Big Screen: 12 'SNL' Sketches Made Into Movies

Among Ferrell's lines about Brasky:

-- "He was the best man at my wedding. By best man I mean he got drunk, took a dump on the wedding cake, and made love to my wife on a water fountain."

-- "Brasky gave AIDS back to the monkeys."

- "His urine steam is so strong it can cut through an uncooked steak."

Gross, but funny.

During its cold open, SNL took on NBC's The Sound of Music Live!, which delivered big ratings for the network Thursday. SNL presented a "condensed" version of the musical, which saw alum Kristen Wiig play a very strange von Trapp child who fondled Maria (Kate McKinnon) and sang inappropriate lyrics. Wiig's fellow SNL alum Fred Armisen also popped up at the end.

In what will surely be among the most-talked about moments of the night, SNL unveiled a trailer for White Christmas, which was billed as "Everything you'd expect from a black holiday movie, but with white people." Rudd played several characters – including an old grandmother ala Tyler Perry's Madea. A fake review from Essence called it "The Macklemore of movies."

PHOTOS: Steve Carell's 10 Best Roles

Earlier, Rudd hilariously played a grown man obsessed with One Direction who camped out among tween girls to wait for the boy band to emerge. When one girl said she would like to marry Zayn, Rudd dissed her, saying "I absolutely hate to tell you this, but you're not. I know what Zayn's into, and it's definitely not you."

Rudd also played the model whom Michelangelo used as the inspiration for David. The problem? Rudd's character was unhappy with the rather – ahem – diminutive penis size the master artist's David statue.

"You gave me the world's tiniest penis. It's like a baby's pinky," Rudd said.

So what'd you think of the episode? Are you happy with the Anchorman appearances or do you wish Ferrell had gone full Ron Burgundy? Let us know in the comments!

SNL is new next week with host John Goodman and musical guest Kings of Leon.

Saturday Night Live airs at 11:30 p.m. ET/PT on NBC.

Email: Aaron.Couch@THR.com
Twitter: @AaronCouch


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Danny Glover Feted in Bahamas, Recalls Nelson Mandela

Danny Glover Headshot - P 2013

NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) — Actor Danny Glover has received a career achievement award in the Bahamas as he reflected on the role he played as Nelson Mandela while the South African leader was still in prison.

The 67-year-old actor says he was moved by Mandela's political writings as a student in the 1960s and acknowledged he was the only U.S. actor who portrayed him in a film before the publication of his biography and release from prison in 1990.

STORY: Nelson Mandela Dies at 95 

"There's a great deal that comes back over a period of time, those great moments when you thought you were doing something of value, and that the work you were doing as an artist was changing the world," Glover said.

Glover received his award late Friday at the Bahamas International Film Festival a day after Mandela's death. He earned an Emmy nomination for portraying him in the 1987 TV film Mandela.

"I think this is particularly special because it comes the day after the transition of someone who I never in my lifetime thought I would get the chance to meet, and someone who became a friend. He used to affectionately call me, 'Danny boy'," Glover recalled. "It allows you ... to reflect on this absolutely wonderful opportunity I've had, what are the elements that went into that, to not only allow me to be the artist I've hopefully grown to be, but also the human being and the citizen, which is much more important."

Glover has campaigned globally for humanitarian causes and is best known for playing Los Angeles police Sgt. Roger Murtaugh in the Lethal Weapon movies.


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Actress Kate Williamson Dies at 82

Kate Williamson - P - 2013

Actress Kate Williamson, whose film and television career spanned more than two decades, died Friday evening at her home in Encino, her manager, Judy Fox, confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. She was 82. 

Williamson died mere weeks after her husband, veteran character actor Al Ruscio, 89,  died Nov. 12. "She had been in failing health for quite some time," Fox said in a statement. 

The actress is perhaps best known for her role in Ellen DeGeneres' 1990's sitcom Ellen as opinionated teacher Mrs. Rodgers, a member of Ellen's quirky book club.

Her film résumé includes Racing With the Moon (1984), Disclosure (1994), Bye Bye Love (1995), Touch (1997), The Last Time I Committed Suicide (1997), The Hi-Lo Country (1998) and Dahmer (2002).

In addition to Ellen, she was on such TV series as Police Story, JAG, NYPD Blue, Murder, She Wrote, Profiler, Home Improvement, The Paper Chase and 7th Heaven.

Williamson's birth name was Robina Jane Sparks. She married Ruscio in 1954. "They were the epitome of true and forever sweethearts," Fox said. 

In theater, Williamson performed at such stops as the South Coast Repertory, the La Jolla Playhouse, the San Jose Repertory Theatre, the Arizona Theatre Company, L.A. TheatreWorks, Ensemble Studio Theatre L.A. and the Victory Theatre in Burbank.

She received a Dramalogue Award for her performance in Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party.

Williamson and Ruscio also held workshops to train actors.

Survivors include their children Elizabeth, Michael, Nina and Maria. The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, donations would be made to The Actors Fund.

Mike Barnes contributed to this report. 


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Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Franchise (Analysis)

Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark Film Still - H 2012

The other shoe has finally dropped. Disney and Paramount have come to an agreement over the other big franchise most people connect with Lucasfilm: Indiana Jones. More important than the actual deal, however, is what's implied by the terms -- that we'll be seeing another Indiana Jones movie before too long.

After all, surely that's the only reading to take away from the notion that Disney will control "all future films" in the franchise, with Paramount retaining the rights to the four existing movies (Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull). For that deal to be in any way productive to Disney, there has to be future films to have control over.

STORY: Disney Takes Control of 'Indiana Jones' Franchise for Future Films

Far more than the prospect of Star Wars continuing without George Lucas, the idea of more Indiana Jones is something for fans to feel conflicted about. At their best, the Indiana Jones movies offer a particular kind of fun that is unique in modern cinema -- something at once uncomplicated but not unsophisticated, funny and exciting at the same time. Thrills, spills and even chills are there, as posters would have promised, in days of yore. The idea of more movies that could offer that is something that it's difficult not to feel excited about.

But then, there's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. As much as the Star Wars prequels are held up as a sign of "ruined childhoods," it was Crystal Skull that really reinforced the idea that you can't go home again. It was, for the most part, everyone from the first three movies back doing what they do, but it felt… off, somehow. The magic was gone, for any number of reasons -- the story was too convoluted, too ridiculous; Harrison Ford being 66 instead of 47 (or 39, as he was for Raiders) and therefore being less convincing -- less comfortable -- in the action scenes; the idea of Indy as a father in the first place, never mind to a rebellious teen, which therefore turns him into an authority figure after a career of being just the opposite.

Whereas the idea of a Star Wars offers a chance to redeem the franchise after the lackluster prequels -- the prequels having already set the idea of legacy characters and, more importantly, new characters and situations in place, allowing for a turnover and sense of renewal -- imagining a new Indiana Jones movie at this point is basically imagining more of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, with the disappointments that brought in tow, because you can't de-age Ford. You can't just reset the clock and make a movie like the first three again, anymore, at least not with Indiana Jones as we know him now.

There's the reboot option, of course. I'd be surprised if that's not been considered by this point, if only for the prospect of allowing stories to be told with a young(ish) Indy and some Nazi bad guys again. Bring Nathan Fillion in as a new Indiana, with Stephen Fry as a replacement for Denholm Elliott's Marcus Brody, and start the whole thing over again. But even that seems "wrong," somehow -- a move too cynical for original movies' spirit, in some strange, inexplicable way. It spoils the purity of intent, if that's the correct term for a series of movies that were close to pastiche to begin with.

That there'll be some kind of new Indiana Jones movie before too long feels almost definite after today's news, despite the lack of anything close to an announcement of same. Hopefully, before such a project does get announced, Lucasfilm and Disney can work out how to make it happen in such a way that it seems like an exciting, good idea instead of another attempt to revive a fan-favorite franchise that, like so many of the artifacts that Indy has uncovered throughout the years, would be best left undisturbed.


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Marrakech Fest: Paolo Sorrentino Reacts to European Film Awards Wins

Paolo Sorrentino Headshot - P 2013

MARRAKECH, Morocco – Paolo Sorrentino was 1800 miles away in Morocco when his three European Film Award wins for The Great Beauty were announced Saturday in Berlin.

The Great Beauty took home the best film, director and actor prizes at the film awards, but Sorrentino was absent. He had been in Morocco for the past week serving as a main competition juror at the Marrakech International Film Festival, and he had just handed out the best director trophy in the festival’s closing night when his own wins occurred.

EARLIER: 'The Great Beauty' Takes Top Prize At European Film Awards

“We were at the dinner after the ceremony with all the jury members and my wife called me to tell me it had won best actor. Then the martinis arrived and she called me and said you also have best movie!” Sorrentino told The Hollywood Reporter at the closing night party in an ancient villa on the outskirts of town here.

“So I told everyone and they gave a cheers and a long clap and I said thanks, so it was very fun and very nice,” he said. “I am sorry to not be in Berlin with my friends, but I am happy to be in Marrakech. I was with Martin Scorsese when I received the news and we did a toast, so it’s an unbelievable thing.”

Sorrentino said that he didn’t expect to win. like many others, he had expected Cannes’ Palme d’Or winner Blue is the Warmest Color to dominate the awards.

“I didn’t expect it because the competition was very tough and I was pretty sure that [Blues is the Warmest Color director Abdellatif] Kechiche would win everything. But it didn’t happen, so I am very happy,” he said.

He said he thought the win would send a strong message to his compatriots in Italian cinema. “I think it’s a good thing for Italian cinema. I think my movie you can like it or dislike it, but it’s a brave movie. I think this [win] is a suggestion to Italian producers and Italian filmmakers to be brave. Because when you are brave in language and in movies, you can fail but if you do a good movie you can have a huge success.”


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Wednesday, December 11, 2013

European Film Awards: 'The Great Beauty' Takes Top Prize

BERLIN -- Paolo Sorrentino's Italian drama The Great Beauty, a sort-of-update of Federico Fellini's classic La Dolce Vita, was the great winner of the 26th European Film Awards, taking best film, director and actor trophies. The film, which premiered in Cannes, is Italy's candidate for the 2014 best foreign language Oscar.

Blue Is the Warmest Color, the erotic Cannes Palme d'Or winner about two woman in love from Tunisian-French director Abdellatif Kechiche, was snubbed, going home empty-handed.

Sorrentino, who took the European Director honor, was unable to attend this year's EFAs, as he is currently sitting on the jury for the Marrakech international film festival. But his lead actor, Toni Servillo was on hand to accept his European Actor trophy for his role as an aging and cynical society reporter cutting his way through Rome's great and powerful.

FILM REVIEW: The Great Beauty

The biggest upset of the night came in the actress category, when Belgian star Veerle Baetens won the European Actress trophy, beating out bigger names -- including Keira Knightley, Naomi Watts and Barbara Sukowa  -- for her portrayal as a tattooed bluegrass singer in Felix van Groeningen's sleeper hit The Broken Circle Breakdown.

Though The Great Beauty ran away with the 2013 EFAs, there was no clear favorite going into this year's awards. If there was any single thread connecting the diverse selection of nominees, it appeared to be nostalgia. Features as diverse as Sorrentino's The Great Beauty Kechiche's Blue is the Warmest Color, the black and white silent drama Blancanieves from Spain's Pablo Berger and Oh Boy from German first-timer Jan Ole Gerster, all seemed to look back to the roots of European cinema for their stylistic and thematic inspiration.

Romanian producer Ada Solomon, winner of this year's European co-production prize, the Prix Eurimages, commented on the trend when she accepted her award, saying it was time to drop the nostalgia and look forward.

"We look to our parents, and honor them, but we have to look to our kids, to the future of cinema," she said. "A new cinema is coming up and we have to look forward and not so much backwards."

Among the more cutting-edge films honored at the EFAs were Joshua Oppenheimer's ground-breaking documentary The Act of Killing, which took the European Documentary honor. The acclaimed non-fiction film, in which members of Indonesian's death squads reenact their mass-killings in the cinematic genres of their choice, recently made the Oscar shortlist and is considered one of the front runners for the Academy Award next year.

Best animated feature also went to the most innovative title nominated, The Congress from Israeli filmmaker Ari Folman. Folman noted the anti-Hollywood sci fi satire, which stars Robin Wright, was a "true European co-production" with the animated work done by hundreds of animators in 9 European countries.

The inaugural European Comedy honor went to Susanne Bier for her romantic comedy Love is All You Need.  Lead actress Trine Dyrholm accepted on behalf of Bier, who is currently on location shooting her next feature, A Second Chance.

German director Gerster took home the European Discovery award, the Prix Fipresci for best first feature for Oh Boy, a black-and-white dramedy which traces a single day in the life of a 30-something slacker in Berlin.

French director Francois Ozon took the best screenplay honor for the script to his literate thriller In The House, about a precocious high school student who infiltrates and disrupts the life of his French teacher.

The gala event, held Saturday night at the classy Berliner Festspiele arts center in western Berlin, was a suitably swanky and star-studded affair. In addition to the prize-winners and nominees, Euro cinema VIPs including Diane Kruger, Noomi Rapace, Paz Vega, Christophe Lambert, Kristen Scott Thomas, Wim Wenders and Agnieszka Holland graced the red carpet.

The evening's emotional high point came when Oscar-winning Spanish director Pedro Almodovar received this year's EFA honor for European Achievement in World Cinema. Swedish actress Noomi Rapace (Prometheus) presented the Oscar-winner with the award, joined on stage by a whole troupe of Almodovar's Spanish actors including Paz Vega, Rossy de Palma, Elena Anaya, Carlos Areces, Raul Arevalo, Javier Camara, Hugo Silva, Miguel Angel Silvestre, Blanca Suarez and Leonor Watling. The Spaniards broke into an a cappella version of The Pointer Sister's I'm So Excited, a reference to the title of Almodovar's latest feature.

The Spanish director dedicated the prize to his brother and producer Agustin Almodovar Caballero and to the women of his mother's generation.

"I grew up surrounded by woman. They inspired me with their strength, their sense of humor the lack of prejudice," he said.

Almodovar then took aim at the Spain's current conservative government, attacking them for slashing spending on social programs and the arts. He said he dedicated his prize to "the victims of  a government that is absolutely deaf and insensitive to the problems of my country."

The lifetime achievement prize went to French living legend Catherine Deneuve. European Film Academy president Wim Wenders presented Deneuve with the honor, calling her "a goddess, the queen of European cinema...the most beautiful woman on the earth."

STORY: South Korea's 'Han Gong-Ju' Takes Top Prize at Marrakech Fest 

The EFA People's Choice Award, voted on by European cinema goers, went to French comedy The Gilded Cage from director Ruben Alves.

The EFA Young Adult's honor, picked by hundreds of 12-14 year-old European fans in cities across the continent, was awarded to The Zigzag Kid from Dutch director Vincent Bal.

Winners in the technical categories were not voted on by European Academy members but picked by a seven-person expect jury and announced earlier.

They included the European Composer prize for Oscar-winner Ennio Morricone for his score to The Best Offer; the cinematography award going to Asaf Sudry for the lensing of Rama Burshtein's Fill The Void and Cristiano Travaglioli taking the European Editor 2013 honor for his work on The Best Offer. Sarah Greenwood won best production design for Anna Karenina; Paco Delgado took best costume design for Blancanieves and the sound design award went to Matz Muller and Erik Mischijew for their work on Ulrich Seidl's Paradise: Faith.


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Earth Wind & Fire Bassist: Robin Thicke's 'Blurred Lines' Doesn't Sound Like Marvin Gaye

Verdine White Grammy - H - 2013Verdine White along with Robin Thicke playing the Grammy nominations concert on Dec. 6.

Earth Wind & Fire bassist Verdine White, a contemporary of late singer Marvin Gaye, says he doesn't think Robin Thicke's summer smash "Blurred Lines" borrows from Gaye's repertoire, including, most notably, the 1977 song "Got to Give It Up." 

Since October, Thicke and the Gaye estate have been trading legal barbs, with the former launching a preemptive suit insisting that "Blurred Lines" is entirely original, while the latter has increasingly taken the offensive, claiming Thicke may have copied as many as four songs from the R&B singer, who died in 1984.

In fact, the Gaye estate contends that Thicke has a "Marvin Gaye Fixation" that informs much of his music.

STORY: Complete List of Grammy Nominations

For his part, White, who performed the song with Thicke and rapper T.I. on Friday's Grammy nominations concert (broadcast on CBS), disagrees with the family's claim, telling The Hollywood Reporter he didn't think much of it.

"If you listen to it, it's in a totally different key," he said following the CBS special. "I think the fact that the public liked it a lot it maybe started a little controversy but it went away as fast as it came."

Digging further into its cultural relevance -- despite the fact that Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield just named the tune "The Worst Song of This Year or Any Other Year," White added that its success signals a return to the dance floor.

"It reflects the fact that people are ready to dance, because we haven't danced in a while," White said, adding: "It's also bringing in a wave of good soul music that we haven't had in a long time."

White cites the success of Justin Timberlake and Daft Punk as "opening up the doors" to more rhythm-based R&B music, adding that his band since 1970 is also keeping the funk flame alive, releasing its most recent album, Now Then & Forever, in Sept. 2013.

Twitter: @THR_Earshot


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Parfumerie: Theater Review

Parfumerie - H - 2013

Heartwarming, surefire curio makes for apt debut of theater performance at the new Wallis complex in Beverly Hills. 

Bram Goldsmith Theater at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Beverly Hills (runs through Dec. 22)

Richard Schiff, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Deborah Ann Woll

Miklos Laszlo, adapted by E.P. Dowdall from the English translation by Florence Laszlo

Mark Brokaw

Miklos Laszlo, a Jewish émigré from Hungary, penned his play Illatszertar in 1936 before he fled Europe in 1938 for New York City. Acquired by producer-director Ernst Lubitsch and brilliantly adapted for the screen as The Shop Around the Corner (1940) by the immortal Samson Raphaelson (who wrote nine screenplays for Lubitsch including Trouble in Paradise, The Merry Widow and Heaven Can Wait), the sublime cast included James Stewart, Margaret Sullavan, Frank Morgan, Joseph Schildkraut and Felix Bressart. It represents perhaps the very pinnacle of transcendent romantic comedy in cinema: precise, subtle, intricately intimate. The material was remade as a 1949 movie musical (In the Good Old Summertime with Judy Garland), a far better 1963 Broadway musical (She Loves Me with Barbara Cook and Daniel Massey), and most recently 1998’s dated update You’ve Got Mail, starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.

Yet however pilfered, plundered and imitated, the original material remained otherwise invisible. Apparently never produced in English, Laszlo and his wife Florence collaborated on a translation in 1956, which has now been lovingly adapted by their nephew E.P. Dowdall and first produced in 2009. It remains a sturdy piece of dramatic invention, sentimental yet surprisingly socially aware of workplace dynamics and the class system. The era of the single proprietor store and of extravagant petit bourgeois manners was irrevocably going to be swept away by the juggernaut of fascist war, and in its own time was essentially already as much a memento of the past as the exchange of letters to post office boxes is considered today.

For those familiar with the adaptations, encountering Laszlo’s original concept can be endlessly interesting, though inevitably one remains aware how it had been extensively improved by Raphaelson (and that Lubitsch touch). For much of the play, the marital stresses on owner Mr. Hammerschmidt (Richard Schiff, Emmy winner for The West Wing) take central attention, crowding the parallel hate-love romance between his employees George Horvath (Eddie Kaye Thomas) and Amalia Balash (Deborah Ann Woll) into an ill-proportioned subplot until the Third Act. Laszlo makes numerous narrative missteps, such as recapitulating the First Act curtain climax right after intermission as a witness repeats to another employee at length what we had just experienced.

Nevertheless, the now well-worn concept still hits its fundamental sweet spot with just enough tartness to avoid the saccharine. It’s good to see a show of this provenance get a production worthy of its pedigree. The cast is good indeed, so long as not pitilessly compared to their forebears. Just as in the film William Tracey stole his every scene, so too does Jacob Kemp as the upwardly mobile bicycle delivery boy Arpad. Schiff can often seem like an incongruously Ibsenesque player amidst the brittle charm of the ingenues and the vigorously interpreted types of the elderly mousy employee Mr. Sipos (Arye Gross) and the oily opportunist Steven Kadar (Matt Walton).

The former Beverly Hills Post Office has been felicitously converted into, among its other spaces, an attractive new midsize house for legitimate theater, with precise acoustics for speech and an ample stage that boasts room for a sumptuous store set by Allen Moyer. And, appropriately, residing in the lobby for the balance of the run, is a historical exhibit on perfumes and a popup Salvatore Ferragamo shop. 

Venue: Bram Goldsmith Theater at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Beverly Hills (runs through Dec. 22)

Cast: Richard Schiff, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Deborah Ann Woll, Arye Gross, Jacob Kemp, Matt Walton, Cheryl Lynn Bowers, Jayne Taini, Jacob Kemp, Tony Pasqualini

Director: Mark Brokaw

Playwright: Miklos Laszlo, adapted by E.P. Dowdall from the English translation by Florence Laszlo

Music: Peter Golub

Scenic designer: Allen Moyer

Lighting designer: David Lander

Costume designer: Michael Krass

Sound designer: Jon Gottlieb


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'Star Trek 3' Beams Up Trio of Writers

Payne McKay Press Photo - P 2013

J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay have been tapped to write Star Trek 3 for Paramount and Skydance Productions.

The duo will join Roberto Orci, who co-wrote the first two installments of the reboot with partner Alex Kurtzman and Damon Lindelof. Orci is working without Kurtzman on this one.

The next Star Trek film is untitled and unscheduled, but Paramount and Skydance are hoping to have a film in time for the franchise to celebrate its 50th anniversary in 2016. Stars Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto and Zoe Saldana are expected to return.

STORY: Damon Lindelof on Having Power as a Writer and His Agony Over 'Lost'

J.J. Abrams will not be helming the movie due to him directing Star Wars: Episode VII, but he will still be involved as a producer.

Star Trek 3 has no director at this stage, although Joe Cornish, who helmed the geek-favorite movie Attack the Block, is high on the wish list.

Payne and McKay already have a relationship with Abrams. The duo wrote the script adapting Boilerplate, the graphic novel by husband-and-wife comics team Paul Guinan and Anina Bennett.

The duo are repped by UTA and Kaplan/Perrone Entertainment.

Email: Tatiana.Siegel@THR.com
Twitter: @TatianaSiegel27

Email: Borys.Kit@THR.com
Twitter: @Borys_Kit


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Dubai Film Fest: Cate Blanchett Dishes Out IWC Filmmaker Award

Cate Blanchett Dubai Film Festival - P 2013

DUBAI – The second day of the Dubai International Film Festival concluded Saturday evening with the IWC Filmmaker award and its jury headed by Cate Blanchett. The event was a collaboration with Swiss watch makers IWC Schaffhausen.

The awards saw $100,000 presented to one of four nominated Arab film projects as Blanchett presided for the second year running, having done so in 2012 for IWC’s inaugural event in Dubai.

"We had such a robust collection of submission," said the actress at the award’s red carpet opening, held away from the festival’s main center in the plush The One & Only Royal Palm resort.

STORY: Dubai Film Fest Turns 10 

"The short list was very sophisticated, unique and diverse. It was a terribly hard decision."

The decision eventually went to UAE filmmaker Waleed Al Shehhi for his family drama Dolphins, written by local author and poet Ahmed Salmeen. The title beat out Kuwaiti project How I Got There by Zeyad Alhusaini, Hussein Al-Riffaei’s Bahraini feature Siege and U.S.-based film A Reverence For Spiders, by Saudi director Faiza Ambah.

Al Shehhi said that with the funding he hoped to start work on his film early next year.

Coming just 24 hours after the 10thedition of the film festival kicked off, the IWC Filmmaker Award welcomed many of the same faces that had graced the opening ceremony the night earlier.

Martin Sheen -- recipient of the festival’s lifetime achievement award -- provoked arguably the second biggest hail of flash bulbs after Blanchett, while Fruitvale Station star Michael B. Jordan again hit the front of the cameras banks and talked his sudden rise to stardom.

"I can’t even put into words how it feels receive such attention," he said. "I’ve been tweeting Oprah! Who gets to do that? It’s crazy."

Other notable figures in attendance included Saudi producer Mohammed Al-Turki and Oscar-nominated Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad, whose thriller Omar opened the festival Friday and is the Palestinian Territories entry to the Academy Awards next year.

Later in the evening following the IWC awards winner announcement, X-Factor U.K. runner up and million-plus album selling singer songwriter Rebecca Ferguson performed for the crowds.

"I think Dubai is the nicest city I’ve ever been to. Apart from Liverpool," said the Liverpool-born crooner.


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Marrakech Fest: South Korea's 'Han Gong-Ju' Takes Top Prize

Han Gong-Ju - H - 2013

MARRAKECH, Morocco – The curtain closed on the Marrakech Film Festival with the awards being handed out Saturday evening by jury president Martin Scorsese and jurors Fatih Akin, Patricia Clarkson, Marion Cotillard, Amat Escalante, Gloshifteh FarahaniAnurag Kashyap, Narjiss Najjar, Park Chan-Wook, and Paolo Sorrentino.

The top prize, the festival’s Golden Star, went to Korean Lee Su-Jin for Han Gong-Ju. In his speech, the first-time director thanked the jury offering up his “deep respect” for the panel.

“I will never forget when they were all watching my movie just in front of me,” he said.

STORY: IDA Awards: 'The Square' Wins Top Prize, Gets Standing Ovation

The multi-cultural jury made it a point to speak this week about how they had very intense discussions about the films. In the end, it seems they had a tough time making a decision, with both the jury prize and the best actor prize being co-awarded.

The Jury Award was given to both Jeremy Salunier’s crowd-funded revenge tale Blue Ruin, and to Cuba’s The Swimming Pool from first time director Carlos Machado Quintella. “I just want to share this award with my colleagues that I’ve met here during the festival and the other filmmakers in the competition," said Quintella.

Salunier, who also took home the FIPRESCI prize for his director’s fortnight entry at Cannes earlier this year, was not on hand to accept his award.

Italian director Andrea Pallaoro was awarded the best director prize for his tale about a dairy farmer’s struggle to keep his family from falling apart. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart,” he said. “From this extraordinary jury it is such an honor, and to be included in a competition with films I really truly respect and admire that moved me so much.”

Swede Alicia Vikander took home the best actress prize for Hotell, the story of young woman who moves from hotel to hotel in an effort to become a new person each time. Vikander was presented the award by the actresses on the panel, Cotillard, Clarkson and Farahani.

“Thank you to all the actresses that moved us,” said Cotillard before announcing the winner. “The one we choose to honor tonight touched our hearts deeply.”

A visibly moved Vikander accepted the award, thanking director Lisa Langseth for their second collaboration. “It’s really an honor to get this award because this film meant so much to me. Something else that means a lot to me and that’s you, Lisa,” she said. “It feels like you’ve given me the tools to evolve as an actress. It feels like I’ve matured, I’ve grown up. My career started with you and thank you forever for that.” Vikander is starring in the upcoming The Man From U.N.C.L.E. 

The best actor prize was co-awarded to the father-son duo of French-Moroccan co-production Fevers, Didier Michon and the young Slimane Dazi. The award was presented by Moroccan director Najjar.  “Tonight we are celebrating the hope, the hope of a free cinema, and more particularly, the hope of a country,” she said, to huge applause from the audience.


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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Box Office: 'Out of the Furnace' Bombing; 'Frozen,' 'Catching Fire' Vie for No. 1

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire Lawrence Hutcherson - H 2013'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire'

Scott Cooper's gritty thriller Out of the Furnace is having trouble igniting interest at the North American box office despite its strong ensemble cast, led by Christian Bale, Woody Harrelson and Casey Affleck.

Out of the Furnace -- set in Pennsylvania's Rust Belt and earning a problematic C+ CinemaScore -- took in an estimated $1.9 million Friday to come in No. 3 behind holdovers The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and animated entry Frozen. For the weekend, Out of the Furnace may have trouble hitting $6 million, marking the worst opening for a Bale film debuting in more than 2,000 theaters.

A winter storm moving its way up the Ohio Valley is hindering moviegoing on what's already one of the slowest weekends of the year as consumers recover from Thanksgiving.

STORY: Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio Finally Open Up About 'Wolf of Wall Street' 

Receiving generally good to mixed reviews, Out of the Furnace cost $22 million to make, minimizing Relativity's financial risk (Red Granite was Relativity's partner on the project). The thriller stars Bale as a blue-collar worker in Pennsylvania who must rescue his brother (Affleck), an Iraq War veteran caught up with a ruthless crime ring. Forest Whitaker, Willem Dafoe, Zoe Saldana and Sam Shepard also star. Cooper (Crazy Heart) wrote the script with Brad Ingelsby.

Scott and DiCaprio, via his company Appian Way, produced Out of the Furnace alongside Jennifer Davisson Killoran, Relativity chief Ryan Kavanaugh and Michael Costigan.

Elsewhere, Catching Fire and Frozen are in a close fight for No. 1, with each expected to earn in the $28 million range for the weekend (many are giving Frozen a slight edge).

Lionsgate's Catching Fire topped its third Friday with an estimated $7.7 million, putting its domestic total at $317.4 million.

Frozen, a sizeable victory for Walt Disney Animation Studios title, grossed $6.8 million Friday for a North American total of $109.5 million. The family film, opening over Thanksgiving, is expected to catch up with Catching Fire on Saturday.

STORY: Pixar vs. Disney Animation: John Lasseter's Tricky Tug-of-War 

At the specialty box office, Joel and Ethan Coen's latest outing, Inside Llewyn Davis, is doing sizeable business as it opens in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles. The film, named best picture earlier this week at the Gotham Awards, could end the weekend with a theater average north of $87,000, the best showing in months for a specialty title and on par with The Fighter and The King's Speech.

On Friday, Llewyn Davis grossed $123,340 for a location average of $30,835. For the weekend, the pic is expected to gross $320,000 to $350,000.

Produced by Scott Rudin, Inside Llewyn Davis stars Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake, John Goodman and Garrett Hedlund.

Among holdovers, biopic Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom saw a relatively small dip on its second Friday, one day after Nelson Mandela died in South Africa. From The Weinstein Co., Mandela is playing in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles and stars Idris Elba as the iconic civil rights leader.


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'Croods' Parody Featurette Reveals Sloth Script Doctor Saved the Film (Exclusive Video)

It turns out an unconventional script doctor is responsible for the success of DreamWorks Animation's The Croods.

In a tongue-in-cheek "making of featurette," which The Hollywood Reporter is pleased to exclusively premiere, cowriter/codirectors Kirk DeMicco and Chris Sanders say that after a disastrous test screening, DreamWorks studio chief Jeffrey Katzenberg chewed them out and ordered them to fix the film.

The pair turned to an unconventional script doctor (an actual sloth), who is shown writing at a snail's pace on a typewriter.

"I was about to walk," says voice star Nicolas Cage in the video, adding he decided to stay when  Katzenberg said Sloth would be reworking the script.

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"I was just like, 'where do I get the clay of which to build a statue of you right now in my living room? Because Sloth is my favorite director of all time."

The video comes as DreamWorks Animation is making an aggressive push for its best animated feature Oscar contender The Croods, leaving no stone unturned in its effort to bag the studio its tenth nomination and third win in the category since it was first introduced in 2001. Indeed, everyone from the film's cowriter/codirectors to its voice stars Cage and Emma Stone to Katzenberg are taking active roles in the campaign, as demonstrated by the above video

The Croods, a $135 million 3D computer-animated adventure-comedy about a family living in prehistoric times, premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in February before opening wide in the U.S. on March 22. It was greeted with mostly positive reviews and grossed $587 million worldwide, and was released on DVD and Blu-Ray, in 2D and 3D, on Oct. 1.

PHOTOS: 25 of Fall's Most Anticipated Movies

On Monday, the film received nine Annie Award nominations from the International Animated Film Society, including recognition in the category of best animated feature. (Only Disney's Frozen and Disney-Pixar's Monsters University landed more noms, with 10 each.)

A studio spokesperson tells me that this video, entitled "Sloth," was put together by DeMicco and Sanders -- a famously fun and energetic duo who are obsessed with sloths -- over a period of months, without any clear intention about how or even if it would be made public. Then, after the Annie nominations, they decided to celebrate the film's strong showing by sharing it with others.

Twitter: @ScottFeinberg


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Elton John Condemns Russian Anti-Gay Law at Moscow Show

Elton John at AIDS Foundation Benefit - H 2013

MOSCOW -- Elton John devoted a Dec. 6 Moscow concert to a Russian man killed for being gay and condemned discrimination against the local gay community onstage.

The singer became the first major Western artist to speak against the legislation since it was enacted last June.

During the show held at Moscow’s Crocus City Hall, John said that he was "sad to learn" about the adoption of the national law banning the "propaganda of homosexuality among minors," a legislation that many see as a crackdown on Russia’s gay community.

"In my opinion, it is inhumane and it is isolating," he was quoted as saying by BBC News. The British singer also said that he dedicated the show to Vladislav Tornovoy, a 23-year-old man murdered in the southern city of Volgograd last May allegedly for being gay.

STORY: Madonna Joins Campaign to Support Russian LGBT Community 

John added that he felt obliged to come to Russia and show support for the local gay community, although some friends and colleagues tried to dissuade him.

Earlier this week, there were rumors that the Moscow show and another one, scheduled to be held in the Central Russian city of Kazan on Dec. 7, could be canceled under the anti-gay law, but the promoters denied the rumors.

The law against gay propaganda was adopted on a national scale several months after a similar local legislation was enacted in the city of St Petersburg. Madonna and Lady Gaga, who performed in the city last year, also used their concerts to voice support for the local gay community. The both singers’ show stirred controversy and led to lawsuits.


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Palm Springs Film Fest: 'American Hustle' to Receive Ensemble Performance Award

American Hustle Cast - H 2013

The star-studded cast of David O. Russell's dramedy American Hustle -- which includes Oscar winners Christian Bale and Jennifer Lawrence and Oscar nominees Amy Adams, Bradley Cooper and Jeremy Renner -- will receive the Ensemble Performance Award at the Palm Springs International Film Festival, it was announced Friday.

PHOTOS: American Hustle's Character Posters

The award will be presented on Jan. 4 at the Palm Springs Convention Center as part of the festival's 25th edition, which runs from Jan. 3-13.

“Russell has created a viscerally powerful film,” said festival chairman Harold Matzner. “American Hustle grabs you from the start and is populated by a group of eminently believable characters as brought to life by this brilliant cast. The Palm Springs International Film Festival is proud to present the entire cast of American Hustle with our 2014 Ensemble Performance Award.”

Past recipients of the award include last year's eventual best picture Oscar winner Argo, as well as Babel (2006) and The Social Network (2012) before that.

The fest previously announced that it will honor 12 Years a Slave's helmer Steve McQueen with its Director of the Year Award; Dallas Buyers Club's Matthew McConaughey with its Desert Palm Award, Actor; Gravity's Sandra Bullock with its Desert Palm Award, Actress; August: Osage County's supporting actress Julia Roberts with its Spotlight Award; and Nebraska's Bruce Dern with its Career Achievement Award. Additional announcements are expected shortly.

Twitter: @ScottFeinberg


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How 'Mandela' Royal Premiere Audience Reacted to News of Leader's Death (Exclusive Video)

Gasps were audible throughout the packed cinema for Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom's royal premiere on Thursday when the film's producer Anant Singh announced the death of South African leader Nelson Mandela to the London audience. 

As the credits rolled, Singh took to the stage along with Mandela actor Idris Elba, who was visibly emotional, to address the crowd, which included Britain's Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. The Hollywood Reporter obtained the first footage of the announcement, seen above.

"I wanted to advise you that President Zuma of South Africa has announced the passing of Madiba at 9:30 tonight." Singh said, "He stated that Madiba had departed and was at peace. 'Our nation has lost it's greatest son.' Zindzi and Zenani [two of Mandela's daughters who were seated inside the theater when the Mandela film began] are at the hotel -- they wanted the movie to continue -- and our hearts and prayers go out to everybody. Can I call for a minute of silence?"

STORY: Nelson Mandela Dies at 95

Moments later, Prince William, with Duchess Catherine by his side, broke royal protocol and briefly addressed the press on his way out of the theater: "I just want to say it's obviously extreme and tragic news. We were just reminded of what an extraordinary and inspiring man Nelson Mandela was, and my thoughts and prayers are with him and his family right now."

The film's after-party was canceled and I'm told that Elba was heard tearfully telling people that he felt like he was reliving the death of his father, which occurred earlier this year right after the film's world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, not because he knew the man but because he had "walked in his shoes."

On Friday morning, news cameras captured video and audio of a conversation that Britain's Queen Elizabeth had in which she described the evening: "It was extraordinary 'cause William and Catherine were at the film last night -- you know, the film about his life." Another woman asked, "And the news came halfway through?" The Queen replied, "I think so. Well, it came right at the end." She continued, "Well, I heard about it at 10 o'clock. I supposed it must have been at the end of the film. They were clapping like mad, you know? And then somebody came on and said, you know, 'Could you just listen? We've just heard he's died.' It was amazing, wasn't it? First night of the film."

Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom was pulled out of South African theaters on Friday, the first day after the news broke, but resumed screening on Saturday. Back stateside, where the film is currently receiving a platform release, the New York Times speculated in a Dec. 7 article about how the news might impact the prospects of the film -- which was tightened considerably after its Toronto premiere and has earned rave reviews from the Los Angeles Times and New York Times -- in this unusually competitive Oscar season. My response to their query: “Voters only have time to watch so many of these movies. In terms of motivating Academy members to at least see the movie, this can only help.”)

On Saturday, an official period of mourning commenced throughout South Africa. Mandela will be lying in state in Pretoria, the administrative capital of the country, until the funeral takes place next Sunday in his hometown of Qunu. It is expected to the largest funeral for a statesman in history.

Twitter: @ScottFeinberg


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Monday, December 9, 2013

'SNL' Mocks 'Sound of Music Live!' With Special Guests

SNL Sound of Music Cold Open - H 2013

Saturday Night Live took on NBC's other live show of the week during its cold open.

SNL presented a "condensed" version of its three-hour The Sound of Music Live!, going through the highlights with Kate McKinnon playing Maria, and Taran Killam playing Captain von Trapp.

It was all going pretty well, until Kristen Wiig showed up to play a weird member of the von Tramp clan, a child with tiny plastic hands (which she used to feels Maria's breasts).

The children were pretty slow to learn but quick to tell Maria they didn't understand her when she suggested "Let's sing a song."

PHOTOS: 10 Stars You Forgot Were 'Saturday Night Live' Castmembers

"What's a song?" one asked?  "What does sing mean?"  asked another, while a third said "What does 'let's' mean?"

Wiig's character ruined " Do-Re-Mi," singing that "re" is "the guy in the bar that tries to lay on me."

Soon von Trapp returned and ordered his children to go stare at the sun as punishment for singing in the house. He and Maria share a moment and fall in love, and then it was time for another musical number, with Wiig's character singing about fording a river and a fish swimming up her skirt "liking" how it felt.

SNL alum Fred Armisen showed up at the end to ask "wasn't that wonderful and moving and still way too long for anyone to bare?"

PHOTOS: From Live TV to the Big Screen: 12 'SNL' Sketches Made Into Movies

We'll post video as soon as it's made available online. Read a full recap of the episode, which was hosted by Paul Rudd with musical guest One Direction.

Saturday Night Live airs at 11:30 p.m. ET/PT on NBC.

Email: Aaron.Couch@THR.com
Twitter: @AaronCouch


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Universal Wins Bidding War for 'Unicorn Executions' (Exclusive)

Unicorn Executions

Universal Pictures has won a bidding war for the film rights to a comedy package based on Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Steve Breen’s upcoming book of illustrations, Unicorn Executions and Other Crazy Stuff My Kids Make Me Draw.

Rawson Thurber, who directed New Line's hit comedy We're the Millers, is attached to direct while Simon Rich attached to write the script. CAA packaged the project.

The project drew interest from several studios on Thursday and Friday before finally going to Universal, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter.

Scott Stuber (Ted, Identity Thief, A Million Ways to Die in the West) will produce the film under his Universal-based Bluegrass Films banner. Nick Nesbitt brought the project to Bluegrass and will oversee on behalf of the company.

Senior vp of production Erik Baiers and creative executive Sara Scott will oversee the project for the studio.

PHOTOS: 11 Biggest Book-to-Big Screen Adaptations of the Last 25 Years

Unicorn Executions is a collection of illustrations drawn by Breen, an editorial cartoonist, who caved in at the outlandish demands of his children. They range from "Betty White punching out a silverback gorilla" to Disney princesses aged 40 years.

The book, set to be published May 2014, has no narrative but Rich, an experienced writer for Saturday Night Live, came up with a take that brings the pictures together. 

Breen, Thurber and Rich are all represented by CAA. Breen is also represented by Teresa Kietlinski of Prospect Agency. Thurber is also repped by attorney Gretchen Rush and Stuber is represented by Craig Jacobson, both of Hansen, Jacobson, Teller, Hoberman, Newman, Warren, Richman, Rush & Kaller, L.L.P. Rich is also represented by Lee Eastman of Eastman & Eastman.

E-mail: Rebecca.Ford@THR.com
Twitter: @Beccamford


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Grammy Nominations: 10 Big Shockers and Snubs

Macklemore Grammy Nominations - H 2013

This story first appeared at Billboard.com

This year's Grammy nominations -- unveiled live Friday night during the "Grammy Nominations Concert Live!! -- Countdown To Music's Biggest night" show in Los Angeles -- included a whole lot of expected names; let's just say that no one leapt out of their chair when Taylor Swift, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis and Daft Punk scored nods in the major categories, after dominating mainstream music for much of the past year. Like always, however, the 56th annual Grammy Awards offered a fair share of surprising inclusions, as well as flabbergasting omissions. From Lorde's unexpected snub to Kendrick Lamar's across-the-board triumph, check out the five biggest surprises and five biggest snubs of the 2014 Grammy nominations.

FIVE BIG SURPRISES

1. Sara Bareilles' 'Blessed' Album Of The Year Nod

Released last summer following a three-year break since her last album, Sara Bareilles' The Blessed Unrest continued to display the 33-year-old's reliability as a pop singer-songwriter, with a No. 2 debut on the Billboard 200 chart and a durable radio hit with "Brave" (which just reached a new Hot 100 peak, at No. 26, in its 28th week on the chart). However, very few expected Bareilles' third studio effort to be in the running for album of the year and edge out heavy favorites like Justin Timberlake's The 20/20 Experience and Bruno Mars' Unorthodox Jukebox in the process. Bareilles -- who scored a song of the year nomination with her breakout hit "Love Song" at the 2009 Grammys -- will compete against Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Taylor Swift, Daft Punk and Kendrick Lamar in the category, while "Brave" is also up for best pop solo performance.

STORY: Grammys: Jay Z, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Kendrick Lamar Lead Nominations

2. Kendrick Lamar's Big Night

Speaking of K. Dot, the Compton MC managed a massive haul with seven nominations, including a coveted album of the year nod. Lamar's lauded debut, good kid, m.A.A.d city, was expected to land him a best new artist nod, but a gritty rap opus is by no means a sure thing in the album of the year category, no matter how well it's reviewed or how much it sells (ask Drake, whose Take Care and Nothing Was The Same albums were shut out of the top album category in back-to-back years). Along with the album of the year, the 26-year-old will compete for best new artist, best rap album, best rap/sung collaboration (for "Now or Never" with Mary J. Blige) and best rap performance (for "Swimming Pools (Drank).") If good kid, m.A.A.d city snags the top album prize, the LP would be the first debut full-length to come out on top since Norah Jones' Come Away With Me in 2003.

3. James Blake Sneaks Into The Best New Artist Running

James Blake's Overgrown album surprisingly snagged the U.K.'s Mercury Prize in October, edging out artists like David Bowie, Disclosure and the Arctic Monkeys. The soul-influenced electronic artist just pulled off another unlikely nod in the best new artist category at the Grammys, joining more mainstream-accepted artists like Lamar, Kacey Musgraves, Ed Sheeran and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. Blake's "new artist" nomination arrives after the release of his sophomore album, and while the 25-year-old has commanded large audiences at U.S. festivals like Coachella and Lollapalooza, his sumptuous arrangements have yet to bowl over U.S. retailers, as Overgrown only peaked at No. 32 on the Billboard 200 chart.

4. Smaller Artists Are Recognized In Big Categories

Among the Taylor Swifts and Justin Timberlakes in this year's crop of Grammy nominees are artists like Australian psych-rockers Tame Impala, whose best alternative album nod for second album "Lonerism" is a major coup for the band and its label, Modular Recordings; U.K. electro-funk siblings Disclosure, who will compete against their idols, Daft Punk, in the bets dance/electronica album category with debut LP "Settle"; and Mack Wilds, the 24-year-old hip-hop artist who played Michael Lee on "The Wire" as a teenager and now has a Grammy nod for best urban contemporary album for his debut, "New York: A Love Story." This set of nominations ensures that the little guys will have a big voice come Grammy night.         

STORY: Katy Perry, Sara Bareilles Songs: Separated at Birth?

5. Ariel Rechtshaid Joins Heavy Hitters In Producer Of The Year Running

Competing for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical -- along with veteran maestros Rob Cavallo, Lukasz "Dr. Luke" Gottwald, Jeff Tweedy and Pharrell Williams -- is Ariel Rechtstaid, a California-born producer who has not-so-quietly reshaped indie-pop music over the past year. The 34-year-old contributed to projects like Vampire Weekend's Modern Vampires of the City, Charli XCX's True Romance, HAIM's Days Are Gone and Solange's True EP, among others, and could receive a huge honor next month because of it. Fun fact: Rechtshaid already owns a Grammy for co-writing Usher's "Climax," which won the best R&B performance award last year.

FIVE HEAD-SCRATCHING SNUBS

1. Justin Timberlake Gets Shut Out Of The Big 4

JT will still be donning a suit and tie come Grammy night, with seven total nominations tying the pop superstar with artists like Macklemore & Ryan Lewis and Kendrick Lamar (Jay Z leads all nominees with nine). Still, The 20/20 Experience was considered a heavy favorite for an album of the year nod, while "Mirrors" looked like a safe bet for both record of the year and song of the year. Timberlake's first two albums, Justified and FutureSex/LoveSounds, were each nominated for the album of the year, and the blockbuster "20/20 Experience" earned JT some of the best reviews of his career. Heads: continue getting scratched.

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2. Lorde Will Not Rule The Best New Artist Category

The 17-year-old has enjoyed one of the biggest breakout years out of any artist after being a complete unknown to U.S. listeners in 2012, thanks largely to "Royals," her nine-week Hot 100 champ. "Royals," which Lorde performed at the "Grammy Nominations Concert Live!!" on Friday night, scored nominations for record of the year and song of the year, but the New Zealander could not extend her reign to the best new artist category. Despite prognosticators putting her as a favorite in the best new artist pool, Lorde will not be able to live that fantasy.

3. Florida Georgia Line Can't "Cruise" To Major Nods

Another best new artist snub was Florida Georgia Line, the captivating country-pop duo who scored a Top 5 Hot 100 hit with the summer anthem "Cruise." Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard couldn't slide into the category (Kacey Musgraves will have to represent the genre), while perhaps even more surprisingly, the group's debut LP, "Here's To The Good Times," couldn't muster a best country album nod.

4. Bruno Mars' "Jukebox" Stops Playing In Album of the Year

Two years ago, Bruno Mars' debut album Doo Wops and Hooligan was nominated for the album of the year Grammy; his follow-up, Unorthodox Jukebox, spawned two more No. 1 singles ("Locked Out of Heaven" and "When I Was Your Man") and made the singer-songwriter and Super Bowl-ready artist thanks to a slew of slickly produced pop tracks. So where's the AOTY love for Unorthodox Jukebox? This year, Mars will have to be satisfied with record of the year and song of the year nods for "Locked Out of Heaven."  

5. J. Cole Left Outside Of Major Rap Noms

There were so many strong hip-hop contenders this year -- Kendrick Lamar, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Drake, Jay Z -- that J. Cole, who snagged a best new artist nomination two years ago and released a hit album last June, seemed to be the odd man out this year. Born Sinner surprisingly did not make the grade for best rap album, and although his Top 20 smash "Power Trip" earned a best rap/sung collaboration nomination, Cole was unable to make the leap into categories like album of the year or record of the year.


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Let the Right One In: Theater Review

LONDON -- In 2008, a little before that other, better-known teen-vampire movie saga began, Swedish director Tomas Alfredson’s film Let the Right One In debuted to rapt reviews. As dark and glittery as a jet necklace, the film, underneath its surface horror tropes, touches with stealthy, near-silent feet on bullying, AIDS anxiety, urban alienation and pedophilia, among other things. Unlike Twilight, it didn’t spawn a billion-dollar franchise. But it did inspire a U.S. remake (2010's Let Me In, with Chloe Grace Moretz), won dozens of awards, and created a tiny, passionate cult following, especially amongst emo kids of all ages.

That fan base will be more than pleased with the National Theatre of Scotland’s ingenious stage adaptation, now virtually sold out at London’s Royal Court Theatre and rumored to be moving to the West End soon. (It's to be assumed that New York producers also will be flying in to check out the show's transfer potential.) Directed by John Tiffany and associate directed by movement maven Steven Hoggett (whose collaborations have included the globally acclaimed military drama Black Watch, Tony-winning musical Once, and the current Broadway revival of The Glass Menagerie), this play is a sinuously fluid, technically audacious work that builds to a gasping, bravura climax.

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Adapted for the stage by Jack Thorne (best known for TV work including The Fades, Skins, This is England), the text nimbly braids together some of the best ideas from the three other versions of the story: John Ajvide Lindqvist’s source bestseller; his own adaptation for Alfredson’s film; and the U.S. remake, which was co-written by Lindqvist and director Matt Reeves. The latter film had its fair share of felicities but for the most part neither satisfied fans of the first film nor drew in many newcomers.

Although the core plot skeleton is still visible under the play's latest blood-stained skin, the stage version’s biggest departure from its predecessors is to make hero Oskar (19-year-old discovery Martin Quinn, excellent) not a pubescent 12-year-old but a strapping full-grown teenager. Presumably it was a decision dictated by the extreme physical challenges of the role, especially in the heart-stopping climax where Oskar has to hold his breath underwater for seemingly minutes at a time.

Some things are lost by this choice, such as a sense of the character’s vulnerability and befuddlement with the adult world. But the rejig also makes gains, notably a more palpable undercurrent of teenage sexuality, and a greater sense of just how much damage the bullies who torment Oskar could do with their man-sized bodies. Moreover, Quinn injects an unexpectedly happy-go-lucky quality into the role, a touch one would think wouldn’t work but that adds a pleasant, needful warmth to the gory, nightmarish proceedings. Certainly he couldn’t be more different from Kare Hedebrant’s white-blond space child from the first film.

Likewise, the role of Eli, the strange girl who lives next door to Oskar, who only comes out at night, and never seems to feel the cold despite the fact that there’s snow everywhere (hint: she’s a vampire), is also played by an older actor, in this case Rebecca Benson, 24. That said, with her dinky frame, wide eyes and mop of unruly doll’s hair, Benson could just about pass for 12, which perfectly resonates with her character’s arrested physical development. (At one point in the 2008 film, she admits that she’s been 12 for a very long time.)

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Adopting a predatory gracefulness according to Hoggett’s movement direction, Benson conveys Eli’s animalistic nature with horrifying skill, especially when her whole body undulates and heaves while feasting on her victims. Her voice, however, is a little too monotone at times, even accounting for the fact that she’s meant to sound a bit stilted, like someone born hundreds of years ago.

As in the other versions, Eli lives with a much older man, Hakan (Ewan Stewart), whom other characters wrongly assume to be her father. Out of love for Eli he murders strangers in the local woods, and drains them like stuck pigs to provide the blood she needs to survive, the instigating acts that drive the plot forward. Both films draw an ambiguous veil over how long Eli and Hakan have been together and what exactly is the nature of their relationship, but Lindqvist’s book makes it clear Hakan is a pedophile and Thorne follows that lead here. The gambit more starkly draws out the theme of shameful secrets and desires, of abuses that go on – like the bullying of Oskar – when no one’s looking.

In a story where the characters do a considerable amount of sleeping, Christine Jones’ sparse set suggests the landscape of dreams or perhaps Grimm-style fairy tales. Dominated by soaring white birch trees that serve as ladders or stories-high eyries for wall-scaling Eli and a moveable, multiple-use jungle gym, as lit by Chahine Yavroyan it’s a lonely, Gothic place. A couch or a shop counter are wheeled on by the cast as needed for scenes in different locales, but the transitions are butter-smooth, prompting along the way little bits of stage business that add atmosphere rather than just set up the next scene.

A similar flexibility has been applied to the casting, using just a small corps of actors who play multiple parts. Stephen McCole (a familiar face with numerous U.K. stage, screen and TV credits), for example, incarnates both the lead police investigator and a kindly gym teacher, two types of authority figures out of their league and getting it in the neck, in every sense.

PHOTOS: Before They Were Stars: A-Listers Who Survived Their Horror-Movie Past

To English or American ears, it may at first seem a little odd that everyone speaks with their own native Scottish accents, especially since the characters are still hailed by their original Swedish names. But audiences will let it slide since the accents are at least redolent of a general sense of Northernness, or somewhere remote and cold. Somehow it also suits the 1980s time frame in which the story is set, in all versions. (One quibble: did teenagers use "bitch" as a term of abuse back then? It strikes the right misogynistic note for the context, but still sounds anachronistic.)

A piped-in score by Icelandic composer Olafur Arnalds feels appropriately melancholy, but is maybe deployed a touch too often, especially since its gloomy cellos of doom verge on cliché. It meshes ruthlessly well, however, with Gareth Fry’s sound design, which at one point creates a sonic shock that jumps people out of their seats, even those who might know from the film and book versions what’s about to happen.

Extra honors are due to FX designer Jeremy Chernick for working out ways to render on stage several of the story’s most challenging moments involving blood seeping out of skin and that aforementioned underwater climax, which takes place at a swimming pool. On stage, it would obviously be impossible to match literally the horror Alfredson is able to achieve in the first film with this sequence on a real-world set. Instead, the company has devised here a Harry Houdini-like contraption that works just as effectively in its own way. It’s an appropriately magic moment for an enchanting production.

Venue: Royal Court Theatre, London (runs through Dec. 21)

Cast: Martin Quinn, Rebecca Benson, Ewan Stewart, Graeme Dalling, Paul Thomas Hickey, Stephen McCole, Angus Miller, Cristian Ortega, Martin, Susan Vidler

Playwright: Jack Thorne, adapted from the novel and screenplay by John Ajvide Lindqvist

Director: John Tiffany

Associate director: Steven Hoggett

Set & costume designer: Christine Jones

Lighting designer: Chahine Yavroyan

Sound designer: Gareth Fry

Special FX designer: Jeremy Chernick

Music: Olafur Arnalds

Presented by the National Theatre of Scotland by arrangement with Marla Rubin Productions, Bill Kenwright, in association with the Royal Court


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French Director Edouard Molinaro Dies at 85

Edouard Molinaro OBIT - P 2013Edouard Molinaro in September 2013

French director Edouard Molinaro has died. He was 85.

The filmmaker moved from crime flicks to comedies, and among his most notable films was 1978's La Cage aux Folles, about a gay couple trying to pass themselves off as straight.The film earned him a best director Oscar nomination and was remade in the U.S. as The Bird Cage. The 1996 film starred Robin Williams and Nathan Lane.

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French President Francois Hollande praised Molinaro's work, according to a BBC report.

"Edouard Molinaro possessed the talent for attracting a broad public to quality films," a statement from the president said. "This film-maker, who had a rich and varied career, directed the greatest actors of French cinema while winning over the public, and winning the admiration of his peers, at the same time."

Molinaro's other works included 1967's Oscar, which starred longtime collaborator Louis de Funes, and 1969's My Uncle Benjamin.

Molinaro died in the hospital of lung failure.


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Peter and the Starcatcher: Theater Review

The steely durability of J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan mythology gets mightily flexed in this willfully imaginative fantasia of Victorian music hall tropes, modern mash-up gestures, Story Theater techniques and period nancy humor. Shameless puns, alliteration, spoonerisms and daft nonsequiturs abound.

Molly (Megan Stern), a preternaturally precocious pre-adolescent, accompanies her father Lord Aster (Nathan Hosner) on a secret mission for the Queen, conveying a trunk full of starstuff, potentially catastrophic should it fall into the possession of evil hands, of whom there are no shortage during their voyage to the Kingdom of Rundoon. The ever resourceful Molly endeavors to save a trio of misbegotten orphans bound to be slaves and snake meat, one of whom, the charismatic Boy (Joey deBettencourt), so downtrodden as to lack even a proper name. Molly finds herself seized first by the treacherous Captain Slank (Jimonn Cole) of the ship Neverland, who is then himself set upon by the pirate band commanded by the posturing menace Black Stache (John Sanders), all of them after the elusive riches in the wayward trunk. Eventually everyone ends up shipwrecked on an island inhabited by the tribe of Mollusks, led by the fearsome Anglophobe, Fighting Prawn (Lee Zarrett).

The whimsy splashes about without abandon whether on the high seas or on land. One can readily infer that the concept of the production preceded the writing of its text: this salmagundi of a pirates’ feast proceeds almost entirely from the driving desire to mix as many theatrical elements and effects into its singular stew. The means may adopt a patina of minimalism (mostly artfully deployed props), but the comic goal is a relentless maximalism, throwing every gag, stratagem and quip at the wall in sufficient quantity to ensure that at least some of them stick. It can be twee, arch or naughty, reveling in outlandish anachronisms and pop culture references from the past century plus, inhabiting that inconceivable Neverland that exists in the fantastic intersection of Gilbert & Sullivan on the one (ahem) hand and Abbott & Costello on the other.

If, in the first act, the wit varies so vertiginously that it flirts with the tiresome, then in a deliriously delicious opening musical number of the second act, the entire cast sings and dances in delectable drag as fish mutated by the pollution of the ocean with starstuff into cross-dressing mermaids. This sort of ineffable sublimity illustrates the show’s highest aspirations, only intermittently achieved, and such a showstopper that any multitude of groaners may be forgiven. The jumble grows more gleeful and merry throughout the island hijinks, and ultimately the climactic invocation of the origin story behind the Barrie play settles into comfortably clever sentiment rather than the deeply touching accomplishment of the original master himself.

For better or worse, the production itself often seems as much a burlesque on the seminal early 1980s David Edgar Nicholas Nickleby in which co-director Roger Rees starred than a set of riffs on Pan themes. The stagecraft, while unimpeachably smart, seamless and fluid, offers more of an encyclopedic treasure chest of recycled theatrical allusiveness than inspired triggers for the audience’s imagination.

The cast of 12, per the program, essays over 100 characters, and despite the encouragement to chew the scenery (particularly the proto-Hook of Sanders, more Bert Lahr than Cyril Ritchard), all of them are impeccably spot-on from each frenzied moment to the next. The pertly boisterous Stern in particular makes her irreverent flouting of ingenue conventions rousing, and among all the accomplished out-of-towners it’s encouraging to see fine local stage talent like Edward Tournier among their number. 

Venue: Ahmanson Theatre, downtown Los Angeles (runs through Jan. 12)

Cast: Megan Stern, Joey deBettencourt, John Sanders, Harter Clingman, Jimonn Cole, Nathan Hosner, Carl Howell, Benjamin Schrader, Luke Smith, Ian Michael Stuart, Edward Tournier, Lee Zarrett

Directors: Roger Rees & Alex Timbers

Playwright: Rick Elice, based upon the novel by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson

Music: Wayne Barker

Movement: Steven Hoggett

Set designer: Donyale Werle

Lighting designer: Jeff Croiter

Costume designer: Paloma Young

Sound designer: Darron L. West

Music Supervisor: Marco Paguia

Music Director: Andy Grobengieser


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Sunday, December 8, 2013

Grammys: Jay Z, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Kendrick Lamar Lead Nominations

Macklemore Grammy Nominations - H 2013

Last year’s Grammy Awards (held in February, 2013 but recognizing albums mainly from 2012) felt a lot like an elementary school contest where everyone walked away with something. Album of the Year was awarded to Mumford & Sons’ Babel, Song of the Year went to Fun. for “We Are Young,” while Record of the Year was the one-hit wonder that wouldn’t go away (and then, thankfully - finally --  did), Gotye’s “Somebody I Used to Know.”

A year later, it seems there’s more consensus among music industry voters -- or maybe it’s just that Taylor Swift released a new album during the eligibility period. After all, the country star is up for four noms, including album of the year and best country album for Red.

Swift’s nods, however, paled in comparison to Macklemore and Ryan Lewis’ impressive showing on Friday night, when nominations for the 56th annual Grammy Awards were announced at Los Angeles’ Nokia Theatre. The hip-hop duo collected nine noms including the highly coveted “Song of the Year” for their equality anthem “Same Love.” That was one of three major hits for the Seattle duo in 2013 -- “Thrift Shop” and “Can’t Hold Us” round out the trio of smashes -- all of which were recognized by the Recording Academy.

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Although the two collaborators must have known the accolades were coming their way, the two seemed dumbstruck during the CBS broadcast. Calling the moment “surreal,” Macklemore added, “It’s like we’re not supposed to be here, but we’re here.”

Others who weren’t present for the live reveal but scored their share in the running include Jay Z with nine nominations, Kendrick Lamar with seven, Pharrell Williams with seven (including collaborations with Daft Punk and Robin Thicke), Justin Timberlake with seven (though noticeably not Album of the Year), Drake with five and Lorde, Bruno Mars, Kacey Musgraves and Swift each with four.

Competition is stiff in the rap categories, with the biggest names in the game -- Jay Z, Kanye West, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, Kendrick Lamar and Drake -- battling for best rap album. Also worth noting: that two of the album of the year nominees are also rap albums, Lamar's Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City and Macklemore's The Heist.  

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Among the head-scratchers: Lorde’s absence from the Best New Artist race and Sara Bareilles’ surprising acknowledgement for Album of the Year for her Blessed Unrest release.

And, of course, it wouldn’t be the Grammys without a mention of Adele. The British chanteuse scored one nomination for Best Song Written for a Visual Media for “Skyfall" from the James Bond film of the same name.

Other noteworthy appearances include Dave Grohl, who’s nominated in three categories including best soundtrack for his documentary Sound City: Real to Reel and best rock song for “Cut Me Some Slack,” also from that project. Australia’s Tame Impala scored a mention for best alternative album and Regina Spektor nabbed a nom for “We’ve Got Time,” the theme from the Netflix hit Orange is the New Black.

Click here for the full list of nominees.

Twitter: @shirleyhalperin


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IDA Awards: 'The Square' Wins Top Prize, Gets Standing Ovation (Analysis)

The Square (El Midan)

The International Documentary Association presented the 29th IDA Awards at the DGA Theatre in Hollywood on Friday night, providing some of the best insight yet -- along with the best documentary feature Oscar short-list, which was announced on Dec. 3 -- into how the doc community feels about this year's top contenders. The IDA, after all, consists of over 20,000 members, a portion of which whittled down a list of 275 eligible films to nominees of five per category, at which point the entire membership voted online to determine the winners.

The IDA's top prize, best documentary feature, went to Egyptian-American director Jehane Noujaim's The Square, a visually stylish and emotionally powerful on-the-ground record of the political revolutions that have unfolded in Cairo's Tahrir Square over the last few years, as seen through the eyes of activists on all sides of the debate. Having previously won audience awards at the Sundance and Toronto film fests, it received a standing ovation from the audience after it was announced as the winner.

STORY: Scott Feinberg Sizes Up the Oscar Best Picture Race 

The Square, which is being distributed by Noujaim Films, Netflix and Participant, prevailed over Joshua Oppenheimer's The Act of Killing (Drafthouse Films), Gabriela Cowperthwaite's Blackfish (Magnolia and CNN Films) and Sarah Polley's Stories We Tell (Roadside Attractions), which were also Oscar short-listed. The doc also prevailed over Jason Osder's Let the Fire Burn (Zeitgeist Films), which received a field-leading four IDA noms -- and won for best film editing -- but was not among the Academy's finalists.

Accepting the prize, Noujaim, whose prior credits include Startup.com (2001) and Control Room (2004), called The Square, "The most deeply personal film of my life," stating that the revolution that took place during the making of it was "both on the ground and for me on the inside." She acknowledged the film's editors, who had to recut the film several times to reflect new developments in Tahrir, and one of the film's executive producers, Geralyn Dreyfous, a champion of female doc filmmakers who had been honored earlier in the evening with the Amicus Award for career achievement, which has only been presented on three prior occasions. (Dreyfous also EP'd another of this year's short-listed docs, Lucy Walker's The Crash Reel).

Noujaim also noted her disappointment that The Square was blocked by censors from being screened in Cairo, where it was to have had its Egyptian premiere on Thursday night, but noted that the film's principal subject had told her to remain optimistic. Producer Karim Amer added, "This award should really go to the young brave Egyptians" and dedicated it "to all the squares around the world that have stood for freedom and democracy... and that will come in the future."

Earlier in the evening, two other pre-announced IDA awards were bestowed upon directors of other Oscar short-listed docs.

Zachary Heinzering, the young director of Cutie and the Boxer received the Jacqueline Donnet Emerging Documentary Filmmaker Award, which highlights a filmmaker who has made a significant impact at the beginning of his or her career in documentary film and carried with it a prize of $50,000 in post-production services. Cutie, which documents the complicated relationship between two long-married Japanese artists who live in New York, was Heinzerling's first feature doc and was awarded the U.S. documentary directing award at Sundance, where it premiered. "It's exciting to be a part of the next generation of documentary filmmakers who are charged with continuing the greatness of this art form I love," Heinzerling said. He also cited filmmaking advice from the legendary doc filmmaker Albert Maysles that he says he has taken to heart: "Get close and stay close."

Veteran director Alex Gibney, meanwhile, was presented with the Career Achievement Award by Frank Marshall and Matt Tolmach, two of the producers of his latest film, The Armstrong Lie, which looks into the doping and lying of champion bicyclist Lance Armstrong. Tolmach described Gibney as "a simple man with a camera who's just trying to save the world" through his films about abuses of power, which include the Oscar-winning Taxi to the Dark Side (2007), as well as Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2005), Casino Jack and the United States of Money (2010), Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer (2010), Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God (2012) and this year's We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks. Gibney, who is only 60, half-jokingly called the recognition "a brush with mortality." He said that "to be a documentarian is to be a little bit nutty, but also to have a sense of wonder," and laughed that The Armstrong Lie, which he began shooting before Armstrong admitted to cheating, forcing him to change his film, "went from Breaking Away to Breaking Bad."

STORY: 'American Hustle' to Receive Ensemble Performance Award at Palm Springs Film Fest

Also of note: Laura Poitras, the documentary filmmaker whose credits include the Oscar-nominated My Country, My Country (2007), was presented with the Courage Under Fire Award, which has been given only three others times over the last 10 years. Following an introduction by government whistleblower William Binney, Poitras appeared on a big screen at the front of the room via online video from Berlin, prompting a large portion of the audience to give her a standing ovation but a noticeable chunk of others to remain seated and not applauding. Poitras became a particularly controversial figure over the past year thanks to her association with Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who made public hundreds of thousands of classified documents. Poitras jokingly included the NSA among her thank-yous, suggesting that they were certainly watching her speech, and said, "Receiving an award for courage is interesting because it's the people who I film who have courage." She also thanked Snowden, saying his courage "is extraordinary and breathtaking," and dedicated the award to whistleblowers the world over.

Twitter: @ScottFeinberg


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Fox Trims 'Dads' Episode Order

Giovanni Ribisi Tonita Castro Seth Green Dads - H 2013Fox is cutting its back order for freshman comedy Dads.

After picking up a back-nine for the live-action comedy from executive producer Seth MacFarlane in October, the network has trimmed that order by three episodes, bringing the first-year show's total order to 19 as Fox re-evaluates its needs amid a crowded midseason schedule.

The news comes after Fox announced that Dads -- along with Tuesday sophomore comedy The Mindy Project -- was being shelved for midseason.

PHOTOS: Faces of Fall TV 2013

In place of both Tuesday comedies, Fox will move Glee back to its former home at 8 p.m. on the night starting Feb. 25.

Dads will run through Feb. 11 and may return at a later date as the network evaluates its midseason schedule, which includes dramas The Following and Rake as well as rookie comedy Enlisted.

The news comes as Dads has been the lowest performer among Fox's freshman class.

Email: Lesley.Goldberg@THR.com
Twitter: @Snoodit


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'Out of the Furnace' Star Christian Bale on His 'Love-Hate' Relationship with Acting (Q&A)

Out of the Furnace Christian Bale - H 2013Christian Bale in "Out of the Furnace"

There are few actors of Christian Bale's generation whose talents are more widely respected than his. The 39-year-old, who has been appearing in films since the age of 12, has given unforgettable performances in Steven Spielberg's Empire of the Sun (1987), Mary Harron's American Psycho (2000), Brad Anderson's The Machinist (2004), Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy (2005, 2008, 2012) and The Prestige (2006) and David O. Russell's The Fighter (2010), the last of which brought him a best supporting actor Oscar.

This December, Bale is outstanding in leading performances in two terrific and totally different sorts of films: the higher-profile one is Russell's period piece dramedy American Hustle, which opens Dec. 13; but the one in which Bale is even better -- perhaps as good as he has ever been, in my view and apparently in his own, from what I have heard through the grapevine -- comes in Scott Cooper's contemporary dramatic-thriller Out of the Furnace, which opened Friday. It is truly a landmark achievement.

In the film, Bale plays Russell Baze, a steel mill worker in Braddock, Pa., an old industrial town that once represented the heart of America but has been driven into decline by globalization and the recession. Like his younger brother, Rodney (Casey Affleck), Russell has lived in Braddock for his entire life and has no plans to go anywhere else, even when the going gets tough. He tries to conduct his life in an honorable way, but a litany of setbacks force him to compromise his principles and endanger his survival.

AFI REVIEW: Out of the Furnace

There are several scenes in this dark film that capture this actor operating at levels of excellence few others have ever even approached: reacting to a tragic accident, celebrating a reunion with his brother, receiving devastating news from his ex-girlfriend (Zoe Saldana), etc. They are truly something to behold.

I recently sat down with Bale -- one of the more intense but soft-spoken and hypnotizing people I have ever met -- to discuss his complicated life and career and to discuss Out of the Furnace. What follows are highlights of our conversation, throughout which he spoke candidly about a number of personal topics he has rarely discussed -- his unhappy experience as a child actor supporting his family, his resulting love-hate relationship with his profession, the thought-process that led him to accept the role of Batman, his feelings about fame and much more.

The Hollywood Reporter: I had the opportunity to visit the set of Out of the Furnace in Braddock while you guys were still shooting the film, and it is truly a place unlike any other I have ever seen. Do you think this movie could have been shot anywhere else or was it really essential to be amongst the places and people that you were making a film about?
Bale: I think there are many industries, cities and towns throughout America that are going through similar circumstances, but I do believe that Braddock was actually declared the most bankrupt -- or something like that -- town in America, the most in debt. And [in the film] we can really see what Braddock is -- the fact that there was this heyday and there were these glory days when it was thought to be the absolute place to be and then whew, it was just gone. What’s fascinating is the people there today said, “I don’t care. I don’t care that everyone’s deserted. The houses are being sold for a buck. That storefronts are boarded up everywhere. That there's no apparent hope." They’re staying. They’re saying, “No, no, no. This is where I come from. These are my roots. This is where I belong." You know? I saw something recently -- it was very interesting -- about these old Russian babushkas who lived in the Chernobyl area and were evacuated, were forced to leave, and snuck back in because they said, “I don’t care. Something’s going to kill me. If it’s radiation, so be it. This is where I belong. This is my land." And that connection to the land is just phenomenal. And the interesting thing is that those people who snuck back in are actually living longer than people who got uprooted and left, because those people are depressed and sad and that’s killing them quicker than any radiation sickness. For me, this notion of people who absolutely identified with the location where they were brought up and were staying there? That's who Russell is. He’s going to do the right thing; he’s going to stay. And I find people like that really fascinating, very much because that’s not been my life. I’ve moved around a lot of times -- all the time -- so I just find that really, really intriguing.

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Because you had to move around so much as a kid, I suppose that, by the very nature of that, you had to reinvent yourself each time. Is that something that you think drew you to acting?
Yeah, inevitably, because you’re kind of doing it, you’re kind of doing that the whole time. But back to your point, I think that there would’ve been no better place than Braddock to do that; you have people there like the mayor, who’s a phenomenal man, who is just devoting his life to the revival of Braddock. The point is you don’t have to act as much when you’re in the place. When it’s all happening all around you, you don’t feel like you have to compensate for things, to sort of broadcasting your acting, and that makes it so damn easy. That makes it really easy because it’s just there, you know? You just do it.

I went back and read early interviews of yours, and you talked about how you had seen your sister acting one time and wanted to do it. What appealed to you about what she was doing?

Honestly, I didn’t really give a shit about that; it was more just suddenly people asking me. It was money, you know? "Christ, my family can do with that!" So sure, all right, I did it; there was no reason not to do it. And everybody kept asking me to do it, and then it became sort of a thing of, "Oh, I could actually really provide with this," and there’s a pride in being able to do that -- but there’s also a prison, you know, at such a young age. I certainly wouldn’t have my daughter do anything like that because it becomes a necessity and, in that case, it killed it -- it actually killed my drive of acting because it became something I felt like I had to do. You know, you can't enjoy something when you’re actually -- not being forced to do it, but you feel that duty and obligation that if you don’t a lot of people are going to suffer. And so it became that, and it’s always been a love-hate thing for me because of that, you know? When I love it, I love it. When I hate it, I just can’t. It’s just disgusting, this vanity-fueled profession. I mean, I just can’t stand it. I can’t stand the people and I hate them all, and I hate the films and I don’t want to see a film again in my life. And then I’ll find something and I’ll go, "Yeah, forget everything I just said. I want to go back in. I want to go back into it." But it’s always like that for me. It’s a very black-and-white thing.

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After Empire of the Sun, I believe you did stop acting for a while. What convinced you to come back that first time?

I actually didn’t really stop because I recognized that-- Just circumstances I don’t have to explain, but things that I said [previously about having to support my family]. I couldn’t live with myself for not doing it, with the possibility of provisions for the loved ones and stuff like that. But then, you know, something went off and I started actually enjoying it again and getting a kick out of it and getting obsessed with it. I can’t quite identify why, but it slowly started to come back. And it disappeared again at moments, you know? You’ve only gotta look back at some of the films I’ve done and, "Holy shit, what was he thinking with that?!" And you know what I was thinking with that. [laughs] But then you’ve got these opportunities where it truly can be something that’s higher than any of that. Storytelling -- it’s just an absolutely wonderful thing. You know, why are we storytellers? There’s way too much business in this [movies] to really, truly call myself any kind of an artist, but I just find that to be such an incredible thing to call yourself. I don’t call myself that at all, but I admire the people who unequivocally are.

When have you felt that you were most able to transcend the B.S. and get as close to doing what you aim to do as possible? Please tell me if these are incorrect examples, but your performances that seem to generate the most admiration from people certainly include American Psycho, The Machinist, The Fighter, and now this one...

Yeah. I would add Rescue Dawn to that, as well. I hope I’m not forgetting anything else. I enjoyed working with Todd Haynes [on I'm Not There], as well. But yeah, you kind of called it.

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It seems like those were the parts that required the most total commitment from you...

Right, which is what you want, you know what I mean? You want to immerse yourself. I mean, for me, the thing about life is, "What are you searching for?" I can’t speak for anybody else, but for me personally, you cannot allow yourself to think about anything else but that one thing that you’re doing, you’re so immersed in that one thing. You can’t allow yourself any distractions. And when you can hit that point, whatever it be in-- I had a bad fucking motorcycle accident and I kind of stopped doing that because it was all fucking touch and go, but that was something-- That’s why that enthralls me so much. It’s that edge, it’s that thing. If you stop concentrating for one second, oh, my God, the consequences are going to be disastrous. Now, with films, not the same consequences, but the disappointment? You know, I always question, "What the fuck are we making films for? What’s the point? Aren’t they useless? Who gives a shit?" You know? People ask me, "Why should I watch this film?" I go, "I’ve got no fucking clue. I don’t know. Answer that for yourself. I can’t tell you why you should watch a film." But you just occasionally get those moments where you go, “I love this. This is good. This is really telling a story." And I love hearing stories. I love watching stories. I love listening to stories and the music to stories.” You know? And in those few moments when you feel like you’re actually doing something that you would admire yourself, you go, “Wow, all right. That’s it. That’s why I keep on being intrigued by this whole thing and keep coming back to it.”

What I find interesting is that for somebody who is as serious about this as you obviously are, who is as much about the artistic and creative pursuit as you are and who does not really respond well to working within "the system" and doing the crap that comes with it—

But recognize, I have done that, you know, because life is life. There are realities to it, bills to pay and everything like that, you know? And I’m a fucking fortunate guy that anyone’s asking me to work on anything. Holy shit! On anything. I’m lucky that they’re asking to have me. Have you seen some of the shit I’ve made? Oh, my God.

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[laughs] Well, I guess what I'm saying is that I'm somewhat surprised, in light of what you've said, that when you were pitched the Batman movies -- which I, like most people, think turned out great -- you went for it, because they seem like the antithesis of what you are looking for...

I did see potential in that as something that was not what would be expected. Movies like that take an enormous amount of stamina; that’s not my great thing, you know? I love making a film in 30 days if we can do it. And inevitably, hey, look-- There’s a lot of business in those films, and that’s why I say you can’t really call yourself an artist when there’s that amount of business involved. Having said that, I'm grateful as anything for those films because you know what? Firstly, Chris Nolan really did everything that he said he wanted to do. You know, you look at the symbolism and that kind of thing, you look at this "Batkid," you know, you look at the different things, you know -- oh, my God, what an honor to have been involved in any of that, you know? I will never complain about that whatsoever, you know what I mean? To play that kind of a meaningful and iconic role to the whole culture, especially within America, was just a mind-boggling thing. And so, I do actually appreciate those movies very greatly because it was so stunning to me that I would be asked to do that, you know? I do find that stunning. I go, “I was asked to do that? What were they thinking? All right, really?” And so I did actually say, “No, you know what? I will never take that for granted. I will bust my ass every single day for that.” And not only with the extra satisfaction of playing that role, and the consequent knowledge of the repercussions and the symbolism of it, and looking at "Batkid" and the number of other people who feel that way about it -- you know, just a phenomenon -- but in a very basic survival-mode, with what it has afforded my family and myself. Because, prior to that, I'd just fucking make it through each film without going, “Oh my God, if I don’t work within another month, everything’s gone.” That afforded me some time. It afforded me to be able to sit and wait. I’m not in those dire straits where you’re just knowing that your house is going to be taken out from under you. Unlike American Psycho. I finished doing that and it was like, “Oh, my God, I’m getting repossessed" and everything, you know? "Everything’s being taken." That gave me the ability to plan a little bit as an actor. Holy shit, you never expect that to happen, because you’re not a businessman if you become an actor.

My last question: one of the things that’s always struck me as interesting is that a lot of actors seem to not particularly like talking about themselves or their own lives -- and yet they’ve chosen a profession that inherently makes them a public person. And so I wonder, for you to do what you like to do, is it worth having to deal with that sort of thing, the loss of anonymity, the loss of the ability to just walk down the street, the loss of other things that most people take for granted?

It depends which day you catch me on, you know? It really does. I think that it is different from a lot of other things where you’re in the public eye. Look, there are some people who play themselves, and they are fantastic, and they’re so charismatic and charming that you want to keep watching them. And then there are other people who don’t have those qualities, so they have to create very different characters. Now, if you’re doing that -- creating different characters -- it doesn’t help your cause if you’re letting people know who you are; it’s a very practical thing, you know? Also, people can be very surprised to learn that, actually, a lot of actors can be very shy people; that happens an awful lot as well. It doesn’t make sense to most people, but if you actually did it [acting] you might understand it. The thing is that while the loss of anonymity will allow you to get films made, you know, you hope to God that you’re not losing touch, because that’s what’s giving you the ability to play those characters. If you can no longer go and just be anywhere, socialize anywhere and mix with people, then you’re losing something, you know? You’re losing that information. I’m not a film buff at all. Dare I say, I don’t give a shit about films whatsoever. When I see a good one, fuck it, I appreciate it. But, you know, you ask me to talk about the history of film and I’ll just sit there looking at you dumbly. I like people and I like to investigate people, you know? I like looking at it as a kind of a detective’s work -- a detective’s work which brings a whole lot of heart and soul to it, as well. And so if you can no longer mix with people, then you’re lost; you’ve screwed yourself because you can no longer do the job the way that you want to do it. So yeah, it’s always a tossup.

Twitter: @ScottFeinberg


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