Thursday, December 31, 2009
As the end of the decade grows super-near – just a few more hours – I thought it was time to declare Moulin Rouge! as my pick for top film of the 2000s.
Baz Luhrmann’s masterpiece, robbed of a Best Picture Oscar back in 2002, is an energized piece of art and the musical that single-handedly revitalized the genre.
(I’d say Evita from a few years earlier was it had it not been so overlooked, mostly because Madonna was in it, I’m sure.)
Moulin Rouge! made a leading lady out of Nicole Kidman, who earned her first Academy Award nomination for her turn as Satine, the Moulin Rouge’s Sparkling Diamond,…and who – yeah, I’ll say it! – hasn’t looked any more naturally beautiful since.
The film also turned us on to cutie patootie Ewan McGregor as a singing talent, and put the world on shuffle long before Apple ever did (en masse, I mean) with its eclectic soundtrack featuring a sexy and divarrific revamp of “Lady Marmalade” by Christina Aguilera, Lil’ Kim, Mya, and Pink, as well takes on David Bowie, Nirvana, Elton John, Madonna, and the Police, not to mention the gorgeous “Come What May.”
The film’s pièce de résistance, though, is the “Elephant Love Medley,” which you can watch and enjoy herewith:
A film about Truth, Beauty, Freedom, and Love, the ever-inspiring Moulin Rouge! is definitely in a genius league of its own.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Nathan Lane and Bebe Neuwirth will be starring as Gomez and Morticia Adams on a Broadway production of The Addams Family next spring.Tuesday, December 29, 2009
The new trailer for next summer’s Inception is out – and I’m still puzzled.
Why can Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page bring down buildings just by looking at them?
And what does Leo mean when he says he has to “steal” an idea?
And while we’re at it, why is Page yelling “Wake me up!” with such fright?
Monday, December 28, 2009
After five seasons on the air, spent mostly talking about herself, Tyra Banks is pulling the plug on The Tyra Show.
DJ Paul Oakenfold has gone on the record to remember her late collaborator, actress Brittany Murphy, as “a great vocal.”Friday, December 25, 2009
It’s definitely been the year of the hunk, as you’ll soon see...but that, I’m afraid, is the first thing that pops into my head when I look back on the past 12 months, and it just doesn’t seem right.
There were a great many things, delightful things (like Meryl Streep as Julia Child in Julie & Julia) up on the big screen, but nothing that really, really stood out.
But, nevertheless, here’s a look-see at what I liked most about the year that was. I hope 2009 was everything you wanted it to be and more.
Have great new year, and an even better new decade.
Best Anna Wintour Overshadower: The September Issue’s Grace Coddington.
Best Bodies: The cast of X-Men Origins: Wolverine (Hugh Jackman, Ryan Reynolds, Taylor Kitsch, will.i.am, and Liev Schreiber)
Best Cameo: Bill Murray in Zombieland
Best Chemistry: Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds in The Proposal
Best Comeback: Sandra Bullock (The Proposal, The Blind Side)
Best Documentary: Valentino: The Last Emperor
Best Dress: Ali Larter’s little red dress in Obsessed
Best Ensemble: The cast of Star Trek
Best Look: Bradley Cooper halfway through The Hangover
Best Quotable: “Are we f---ups?” (Away We Go)
Best Trailer: Where the Wild Things Are
Biggest Scene-stealer: The Hangover’s Zach Galifianakis
Can't Get Enough – Female: Emily Blunt (Sunshine Cleaning, The Young Victoria)
Can't Get Enough – Male: Rupert Friend (Chéri, The Young Victoria)Can’t Wait to See You Again on the Big Screen – Female: Precious’ Gabourey Sidibe
Can’t Wait to See You Again on the Big Screen – Male: Star Trek’s Chris Pine
Could Have Gotten More: Michelle Pfeiffer (Chéri)
Most Beautiful: Ginnifer Goodwin (He’s Just Not That Into You, A Single Man)
Most Disappointing: Jennifer Aniston, who followed up the success of 2008’s Marley & Me and last winter’s He’s Just Not That Into You with the bombastic Management and Love Happens.
Most Doing the Most Out of a Very Small Role: Chris Hemsworth (Star Trek)
Most Handsome: Up in the Air’s George Clooney
Most Promising: (threeway tie) directors Neill Blomkamp (District 9), (500) Days of Summer’s Marc Webb, and Tom Ford (A Single Man)
Most Romantic: (500) Days of Summer’s Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Most Underwatched: Observe and Report
Most Welcome to the A-List: Ryan Reynolds
Most Enjoyable: Australian imports such as Hugh Jackman, Sam Worthington, and Chris and Liam Hemsworth.
Least Enjoyable: The Twilight Saga, and pretty much all it entails.
Breakthrough Performance – Female: Maya Rudolph (Away We Go)
Breakthrough Performance – Male: Sam Worthington (Terminator Salvation, Avatar)
Best Supporting Actresses: Anna Kendrick (Up in the Air), Mélanie Laurent (Inglourious Basterds), Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air), Julianne Moore (A Single Man), Mo’Nique (Precious)
Best Supporting Actors: Matt Damon (Invictus), Anthonie Mackie (The Hurt Locker), Zachary Quinto (Star Trek), Stanley Tucci (Julie & Julia), Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds)
Best Directors: Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker), James Cameron (Avatar), Pete Docter (Up), Jason Reitman (Up in the Air), Quentin Tarantino (Inglourious Basterds)
Best Animated Film: Up.
10 Best Films of the Year: (in alphabetical order)The Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
I’ve seen a few pictures of England’s Queen Victoria (thanks, Wikipedia!), and lemme tell ya, she was no Emily Blunt (whom I know you remember from The Devil Wears Prada), an actress so lovely and modern, she’s almost too so for the role of The Young Victoria...but she works in the role, and I could not picture anyone else filling her petticoat.
The movie, directed by Jean-Marc Vallée and written by Jullian Fellowes (Gosford Park), is told at an unrushed pace and feels longer than it actually is, an irony since by the time it ends you’ll want to see more.It is a thoroughly entertaining account of the early period in Victoria’s reign, from her contentious-with-her-closest pre-coronation months to her naïve, bumbling first few years at the throne.
When we first meet her, Victoria is all of 17, and although, yes, she was a child of privilege, as the only legitimate heir of King William, her upbringing was hardly a thing of getting her way at every turn, for she led a most sheltered life.
It was lonely and controlled.
She grew up in a palace and she had a governess at her beck and call, but she also had an overwhelming mother, the Duchess of Kent (Miranda Richardson), who in turn had a manipulative advisor, Sir John Conroy (Mark Strong), calling the shots. Together, the two wanted Victoria to sign a regency order, which she refused.
She knew she would be queen of England no matter what anyone had to say. It was her duty and her destiny, and even though she knew she was unprepared, she would not relinquish her right.
At the same time, though, her Belgian uncle’s scheming to arrange a marriage between Victoria and her cousin Prince Albert of Germany (Rupert Friend, looking every bit regal), the man who would become the love of her life.
Also scheming? Lord Melbourne (Paul Bettany), a trusted advisor of Victoria’s who eventually would put his agenda aside in order to do right by her.
The Young Victoria is a greatly told tale, one that, surely, has taken liberties for the sake of drama, so, as I often say, just enjoy it for what it is, which is not a history lesson.
More importantly, get with the program, already, and admire Blunt, who plays The Young Victoria with a combination of vulnerability and strength that’s just delicious.
My Rating ***
Photo: Apparition Films.
Just for the record: I saw The Hurt Locker last weekend when it was re-released in Miami Beach, and thought it was superb.Y’ know, I wanted to like Rob Marshall’s Nine.
No…I wanted to love it.Instead, I kinda could’ve lived without it.
The movie, which I anticipated so because of its A-List cast (there’s Marion! Penélope! Fergie! Kate! Nicole! Sophia!), is based on a Broadway musical that’s in turn based on Federico Fellini’s 8 ½…so it’s not like, something new.
You could say that Marshall’s Oscar-winning Chicago wa’n’t anything new, either, but at least that film featured classic, catchy songs – I have the soundtrack that proves it.
Name one song from Nine.
Yeah – I didn’t think so. You may be able to after you see the movie, but the irony will be the one you remember will probably be “Cinema Italiano,” a new original song written for Kate Hudson’s character. But more on that later.
In Nine, Daniel Day-Lewis plays Guido Contini, a “Maestro” of Italian cinema suffering of a big bad case of the writer’s block that’s rendered him unable to begin production on his ninth film, an ambitious epic called Italia. He has no script, no outline, no anything, you see. All he has is a title, a supportive, if pushy producer, and his longtime muse, Claudia (Nicole Kidman, looking statuesque in that peculiar way of hers these days...but softer) attached to star.
Looking to escape all the pressures of an industry that awaits with breath that is bated, Guido leaves the famed Cinecittà studios in Rome for a ritzy spa on the coast where he is to indulge in some semblance of anonimity...and the comfortable care of his mistress, Carla (Penélope Cruz, all effective fire and smolder).
Tom Ford, one of the many men in this world everyone can agree should be given the business (if you know what I mean) and the man who once upon a time revitalized the Gucci and YSL brands as fashion powerhouses, always wanted to make the transition to the film world.
You know, like many a model before him.But Ford, who with A Single Man makes a promising and super-stylish debut as a feature film director, wanted to make “something that meant something to me.” He decided to co-write and helm an adaptation of a “Christopher Isherwood book I read when I was 20 [because] it spoke to me…it’s such a beautifully drawn character story.”
More elaboration on the reasons why Ford wanted to bring this particular project to the silver screen is available his most revelatory Advocate cover story, so get.
Set in 1962, A Single Man tells the story of college professor George Falconer (beyond-outstanding and exquisitely played by an award-worthy Colin Firth), a 52-year-old man who cannot see his future – in Ford’s own words – after the death of his longtime partner, Jim (Matthew Goode).
On a fateful November Friday morning many months after the car accident that claimed Jim, we meet George, and we see him go about the excruciating routine of getting on with his life now that his beloved is gone.
There’s anguish everywhere, and, from simply awaking to getting ready for work to seeing his neighbors live, everything hurts.
To say that George is grief-stricken would be an understatement. Through a series of flashbacks, Ford shows us important moments in George and Jim’s lives together.
We see them meet and we see them living in love and, ultimately, we see them share one of their last evenings at home together.
We also see George receive the call that unravels his world, and Firth, sitting in his chair looking at the camera (but then again, not), letting it all wash over him, is a triumph. Subtle and beyond-powerful, his handsome face is a careful study in disbelief and pain and despair.
It’s a heartbreaking thing to witness.
But back to that fateful November Friday…. George has planned a full day that includes a gun and doesn’t include a tomorrow.
But – there’s always a but….
On that day, with emotions running rather high (as evidenced by Ford’s deliberate alteration of the film’s color palette to reflect George’s mood), and with George more weighed down by the past than ever, we also meet one of his closest friends, a socialite and fellow British expat named Charley (played by Julianne Moore, looking exquisitely boozy).
Charley, who’s always wanted George and sort of resents him for choosing Jim, is also unable to see a future, especially one without him, so she doesn’t serve as a comfort to him as much as a confirmation of what he needs to do.
There’s also Kenny (About a Boy’s Nicholas Hoult, all grown up), though, a student of his coming to terms with his true self, and a new and unexpectedly hopeful presence in George’s life.
A Single Man explores the conundrum George finds himself in by day’s end with both style and substance. It may not be a perfect film – although I quite appreciated the cruel irony of the ending – but it’s a good, solid one. Ford should be proud, and if he can tame his obvious aspirations, he’ll continue to do well in Hollywood.
The success story out of this one, of course, is Firth, who’s never been better. To watch the film is to watch him, and that’s just swell.
My Rating ***
Photo: The Weinstein Company.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Carrie & Co. are going global next summer.
The trailer for Sex and the City 2 hit the Web last night, and as expected, there’s fashion, men, and a little getaway scheduled for Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie, Kim Cattrall’s Samantha, Kristin Davis’ Charlotte, and Cynthia Nixon’s Miranda:
I heart it because, as Carrie says, “Sometimes, you just have to get away with the girls,” who are headed to Morocco, where, perhaps, our gal will find herself a most-welcome-by-me surprise?
SATC 2 hits screens on May 28.
Urgh, to be a widely read magazine instead of a tiny blog….Whatever, Vanity Fair – I’ve been singing the hot praises of Australian import Chris Hemsworth ever since I first saw him make the most out of a very small role in last summer’s Star Trek.
And I’m guessing the only reason you finally decided to pay attention is because his younger brother Liam (right) is dating Miley Cyrus. Or something asinine like that.
But, I guess, it’s all good. Now more people know about the brothers Hemsworth, and the world’s a better, sexier place because of it.
Photo: VanityFair.com.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Mary J. Blige, whose latest, Stronger with Each Tear, was release this week, says “a lot of blood, sweat and tears” went into the making of the album.Uh, can we take a (long) moment to talk about Starz’s upcoming Spartacus: Blood and Sand, especially about its lead, Aussie model-turned actor/all around hot stud Andy Whitfield?
I mean – hello:
Sooo loving the shades of HBO’s Rome – sexy swords-and-sandals stories do it for me. The highly anticipated original series, will on Jan. 22.
I’ll be watching.
Update: How’s this for a vote of confidence: Starz already has gone and renewed the show for a second, 13-episode season.
Production will begin early next year.
You know what this means, right? More Whitfield in barely there outfits!
At last I know what Jennifer Lopez’s upcoming The Back-up Plan is all about.Monday, December 21, 2009
Here’s more proof that Matt Davis’ mysterious character on The Vampire Diaries is quite likely bad, bad news.Oh, if you don’t know what that means…tough. You should’ve caught the show’s rerun of the first 10 eps last week.
L Word alumna Mia Kirshner is joining the CW hit show as Isobel, the sweet-yet-dangerous wife of Davis’ history teacher, Alaric. She’ll make her first appearance in Mystic Falls next month.
Mmm, and totally unrelated: I wonder if Kirshner will ever show up on 24 again. Her Mandy isn’t dead, right?
Photo: BuddyTV.com.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
It’s taken me all day long to get around this, because I was shocked, yet not all that...surprised when I heard the news: Clueless scene-stealer Brittany Murphy died this morning at age 32, reportedly of cardiac arrest.Saturday, December 19, 2009
The Bounty Hunter, the new Jennifer Aniston and Gerard Butler comedy due out next spring, just got a trailer, and it looks amusing in a sorta generic kinda way.
Oh, Jen….
Take a look-see:
I sooo was beyond-hoping this movie, about a man (Butler) hired to track down his bail-skipping ex (Aniston), would be a bit darker…or that it would at least have had more bite. Or personality.
A brand new trailer for the Sam Worthington – oh, how I love him – vehicle Clash of the Titans has been released, and it is hitting all the right notes.Building on the tease that was released last month, this latest preview reveals more of what we can expect, such as...Medusa, more action, and what the something called “the Kraken” Zeus (Liam Neeson) orders be released.
But back to Worthington, who can be seen becoming a bigger star in this weekend’s Avatar. Why isn’t he more heavily featured? Isn’t his Perseus the star of the movie?
I guess I’ll find out on March 26.
Photo: LiveForFilms.wordpress.com.
Friday, December 18, 2009
The wait for Iron Man 2, the continuing adventures of billionaire industrialist Tony Stark and his alter ego, Iron Man, just got a little shorter.
The first trailer for the awesomely fun-looking sequel was released this week, and the Robert Downey Jr.-starrer promises to kick off summer 2010 with a Whiplash.
Whiplash, of course, is the new villain Iron Man will face – and he’s played by Mickey Rourke.
The preview doesn’t reveal whether Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow will be good or bad – yeah, I don’t know my Iron Man lore…don’t judge me – but it offers a cheeky moment between Downey and return player Gwyneth Paltrow, as well as an action-packed first look at Don Cheadle’s (in for Terrence Howard) War Machine:
Iron Man 2 opens on May 7.
Boris Kodjoe (formerly of Showtime’s Soul Food) will star as one of the leads in J.J. Abrams’ new husband-and-wife spy drama for NBC, The Undercovers.
In: Mom-and-daughter fashion (Dolce & Gabbana, hello!) as worn by Madonna and 13-year-old Lourdes Leon to the New York premiere of Nine earlier this week.Thursday, December 17, 2009
I thought he said he wanted to take a break from the whole taking his shirt off thing, but I guess Taylor Lautner knows he’s gotta give ’em what they want.
The Screen Actors Guild announced today its list of nominees for the upcoming 16th Annual SAG Awards, which will be handed out on Jan 23.On the movie front, the biggest surprise was the omission of Up in the Air for Best Cast, although stars George Clooney, Vera Famiga and Anna Kendrick did pick up individual nods.
Meanwhile, The Hurt Locker (which I totally plan on catching when it’s re-released in Miami Beach this weekend) and Precious continued gaining momentum.
On the TV front, Lost got completely shut out (although Evangeline Lilly, a.k.a. Kate on the show, will be at the party as a Best Cast nominee for The Hurt Locker), so I’m done talking about the SAGs.
I’m thrilled about all the love for The Good Wife, though.
Photo: PopTower.com (The Good Wife).
2010 is shaping up to be a good year a bunch of up-and-comers, like Mia Wasikowska (Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland) and Garrett Hedlund (who’ll star in TRON: Legacy), among others.Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Madonna looks positively Lorenesque in her new ads for Dolce & Gabbana, the first look-sees of which appear in the new Italian Vanity Fair.For all intents and purposes, you could say that Jason Reitman’s adored-by-all Up in the Air belongs to Anna Kendrick, an actress whose claim to fame was a minor role in The Twilight Saga (she plays Bella’s human friend).
Kendrick plays Natalie Keener in Reitman’s take on Walter Kirn’s 2001 novel of the same name – which, btw, opened at a single Miami movie theater last Friday and is now expanding.Fresh out of college, she’s bright and ambitious and tightly wound – when George Clooney (what? Clooney’s in this?) asks if she’s mad at her keyboard in one scene, she simply says she types with purpose. She’s also the catalyst to the story, but more on that later.
Ah yes, to answer my own question, George Clooney’s very much in the film, which is, natch, why Up in the Air belongs to him – and rightfully so.
I distinctly remember thinking shortly after I saw the film three months ago that Clooney’s the last Old Hollywood-style movie star.
As Ryan Bingham, a corporate downsizing expert, a.k.a. a firer, who cherishes his solitude (he takes pride in having spent 322 days on the road in one year), and especially the hundreds of thousands of frequent flyer miles he’s accumulated (he’s reaching 10 million, a feat about which only a handful others can boast), Clooney’s all efficiency smoothness and, surprisingly, vulnerability.
Here’s a man who likes to think he’s surrounded, but he’s alone…a nomad with nowhere and everywhere to call home, provided that everywhere comes with room service.
When Natalie enters the picture, she threatens Ryan’s entire existence, effectively putting into question his very relevance when she introduces an innovative fire-online pilot program at their company. Suddenly, he’s obsolete.
They take to the friendly skies to travel from city to city together (including the Magic City!), firing people along the way (in a strike of current affairs-tapping genius, Reitman featured real people in those scenes, for extra zeitgeist value). The exercise serves two goals: Ryan shows her how it’s done old school, and Natalie tests out the new tech.
The most unexpected result is they both teach and learn more about each other, and about life, but there’s no hanky panky involved at all – because “he’s old” as he overhears her say.
That department is taken care of by Alex Goran (the wonderful Vera Farmiga), a fellow frequent flyer miles-obsessed traveler Ryan meets at an airport bar (or was it a hotel?).
Their courtship is quick and sexy since they turn each other on by elite status. When they get to talking, to considering doing it again and each other’s feelings, she (sorta) shocks him when she says, “Think of me as yourself, with a vagina.” He knows what that means, and they play their budding relationship ever so cool.
He is hers after that, which surprises him. She’s making him want to land. But ultimately, Alex makes him – gasp! – crash.
The strength of Up in the Air comes from its being real – everything you want it to be (funny, sad, depressing, uplifting, a realization...). All wrapped into one without a ribbon on it. It’s a rare cinematic treat, and like Ryan you will make a connection.
First came the teaser, and now here’s the first full trailer for Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland.
Herewith, the U.K. version of it:
March 5 can’t get here quick enough! I just hope the movie won’t be typically Burtonian, you know…great at first, lully in the middle, and fun to see end.
Twilight Saga star Kellan Lutz is the new crot…uh…body of Calvin Klein Underwear.“He’s going to be their new Mark Wahlberg,” an insider reportedly said. “Kellan has been signed to Calvin Klein for a huge campaign that will feature him in his skivvies all over billboards and in magazines.”
The folks at CK have yet to confirm the news, but I, for one, would get behind their choice.
And under it, on top of it, and next to it…. Especially because Lutz could not have been cooler when I met him earlier this month.
Photo: SocialiteLife.CeleBuzz.com.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Early this morning, Sandra Bullock got a couple of Globes – that is, of course, Golden Globe nominations, which were read by John Krasinski, Diane Kruger from Inglourious Basterds (also a multiple nominee), and Justin Timberlake:
The actress, who’s had quite a big year, received two nominations from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, one for Best Actress in a Drama for The Blind Side, and another for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical for The Proposal.
“I am beyond stunned,” she said. “Just to be included in the company of these amazing women I have so admired through the years has left me slack-jawed with awe.”
I was hoping Bullock would get recognized, so I’m very happy for her.
Meanwhile, Glee star Matthew Morrison, nominated in the Best Actor in a Television Series - Comedy or Musical, reacted to the news by saying, “Well, we just won sectionals, and now Glee’s going to the Golden Globes. It’s been a good week for us.”
Said Morrison’s co-star, Jane Lynch, of her own nod in the supporting category, “This is really a lovely dream. It was so fun to come to work this morning. The kids are beside themselves with excitement [the show’s up for Best Television Series - Comedy or Musical]. It’s great.”
Others like Marion Cotillard, Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical nominee for Nine, were awakened with the good news. “I got a phone call that woke me up and heard ‘Congratulations,’ and I knew what it was about. “I’m just so happy! How couldn’t I be?”
For her part, A Single Man’s Best Actress in a Supporting Role nominee Julianne Moore said, “I am so honored and thrilled to be among the Golden Globe nominees this year. I am happy for everybody – particularly my friend Colin Firth [who’s up for Best Actor in a Drama]!”
Newcomer Carey Mulligan (An Education), a Best Actress in a Drama nominee, thanked “the Hollywood Foreign Press for making my mum cry in the grocery store. I’m honored and completely speechless.”
For a complete list of nominees, click here for the movie categories, and over here for the ones in TV.
Oh, and for more starry reactions…get on the Google. I’m a little pissed Lost got pretty much ignored. The awards will be handed out on Jan. 17.
Here comes the man in tights.
Get ready to see Russell Crowe take on the legendary Robin Hood in Ridley Scott’s blockbuster opening on May 4:
Robin Hood follows our hero from his early days in King Richard’s army to his return to Nottingham to his creation of a band of mercenaries who challenge the sheriff and eventually try to prevent civil war.
Cate Blanchett co-stars as Maid Marian.










