Sunday 29 July 2012

Charlie Sheen's 'Anger' expected to endure

Charlie Sheen's 'Anger' expected to endure

Charlie Sheen and father Martin Sheen star in the FX sitcom "Anger Management."
Charlie Sheen's rebirth on FX sitcom "Anger Management" is likely to have staying power. And his dad Martin's guest-starring turn will turn into a recurring role for the bulk of the show's run, where he plays Charlie Goodson's dad Martin.
"He did an episode of 'Spin City' with me, and 'Two and a Half (Men),' and we figured he should be on this," Sheen says. "He brings a whole different energy," Sheen says.
In an unusual arrangement, "Anger" will trigger a 90-episode renewal if an undisclosed ratings threshold is met in the final eight episodes of its current 10-episode season. Based on current numbers (six have aired), "the odds are overwhelming that it will ultimately earn that renewal," says FX chief John Landgraf. The series will film at the very brisk pace of about two episodes a week: "There's literally no rehearsal," says executive producer Bruce Helford. "It's all gut."
Asked again to reflect on the turmoil that led to his firing from CBS' "Men," Sheen said he was tired of revisiting the subject. But "life's different now; I'm not insane anymore."

Have you seen 'Call Me Lochte' parody?

Have you seen 'Call Me Lochte' parody?


Ryan Lochte won gold in the 400 IM on Saturday, while teammate Michael Phelps finished fourth.

Have you seen 'Call Me Lochte' parody?

Remember everyone was talking about the U.S. Olympic swimming team putting together a music video for Carly Rae Jepsen's song Call Me Maybe?
That was so two days ago.
The hilarious people at The NOC, who have been providing us with Steve Nash's latest movie parodies, have put out this brand new gem.
As the actor mimes himself some Subway sandwiches and bong hits, we're serenaded with what one could imagine is inside Ryan Lochte's mind as he tries to overcome his biggest obstacle, teammate Michael Phelps.
The lyrics:
I'm in a personal hell
I kind of hate Michael Phelps
I wish he'd drown in a well
That dude is in my way
When I first saw that guy swim
He got nothing but wins
I could've sworn he had fins

Rude Movies: It doesn’t get Bat-ter than this

Rude Movies: It doesn’t get Bat-ter than this

So we know how it ends. Batman retires and Christopher Nolan’s trilogy, which began with the magnificent Batman Begins, draws to a majestic close. I’ve been a Batman fan almost from the time I learnt how to read and have loyally followed the character through good (Frank Miller’s re-invigoration  the legend; the first Tim Burton movie; Nolan’s Batman Begins; the death of that nasty little creep, Jason Todd, who was the second Robin etc.) and bad (the 1960s TV show; Batman and Robin, possibly the worst movie in the history of cinema; and the introduction of Aunt Harriet as a character in the Wayne household). But never has the myth of The Batman seemed as potent as it does now, after Nolan’s trilogy.

BatmanSpoiler alert: if you have not seen The Dark Knight Rises and intend to see it, then you should stop reading here lest I give away too much. There are broadly two kinds of Batman fans: those who know him from the comic books and those who know him from movies and TV. Even within those categories, there are subdivisions. If you liked the Batman TV show, then you are probably not considered cool by fans of the later movies. If you liked the Sixties and Seventies comics when Batman and Robin came across as a pair of boy scouts (or like scout master and scout), then ‘real’ comic fans don’t see you as cool. If you like the graphic novels that have populated the Batman universe over the last two decades, then you are so cool that you might as well be a nerd. (The line between fanatical graphic novel fans and geeks is a thin one.)

I’m not sure which of these categories and sub-categories I fit into. I got into Batman through the Sixties comic books and though they seem pretty lame now (at one stage there was a whole Batman family of Batwoman, Batgirl, Batmite and even Bat-Hound), they appealed to kids of my age. And many of the elements that we thrilled to: Batman’s secret identity as playboy billionaire Bruce Wayne, the Batmobile, the Batcave and such villains as the Joker and Catwoman have stood the test of time. What I did not know, when I first read the Sixties comics, was that they were sanitised takes on the original Batman. Created in May 1939 as a masked avenger along the lines of Zorro and the Phantom (who predates Batman and was clearly an inspiration), the character was first called The Bat-Man, tended to appear only at night, was on bad terms with the cops, wore a mask as much to avoid the police as to protect the people he loved, and had no hesitation in dispatching criminals to their death.


Michael Keaton played Batman
But within a year, DC Comics had begun to soften The Bat-Man by giving him a young sidekick called Robin. And soon, when Batman’s original creator Bob Kane failed to come up with enough comics, a platoon of new writers and artists, each of whom had his own vision of the character, took over: Dick Sprang, Carmine Infantino, Mort Meskin, Jim Mooney etc. Almost as influential as Kane himself were writer Bill Finger and artist Jerry Robinson who created the Joker. Kane, however, insisted that his byline always appear and was reluctant to share credit.

Even in this softer form, Batman went on to become an international rage, was featured in two movies in the 1940s and got his own hit TV show in the 1960s. The dark Bat-Man of the original comics was more or less forgotten for over 40 years till Frank Miller wrote The Dark Knight Returns. This was a series of comics set outside the normal continuity which imagined a future where a middle-aged Batman came out of retirement to fight crime. In Miller’s world, the public had turned against superheroes, TV was full of the same idiots debating the same issues every night. And corruption had seized control of society.


Jack Nicholson as Joker
Almost all retellings of the Batman legend have drawn from Frank Miller’s version of the character. The idea of a dark and dangerous Batman intrigued Hollywood and a Dark Knight movie with Mel Gibson (playing Batman as an anti-Semitic midget, presumably) was planned but never got off the ground. Eventually the project went to director Tim Burton, known for his weird and fantastic view of life. Burton took a dark Frank Miller-like Batman and placed him in an imaginatively designed Gotham City which was described in the script as looking “as if hell had erupted through the sidewalk.” Because the studio was not sure that Michael Keaton (who Burton cast, against type as Batman) had enough star quality, Jack Nicholson played the main villain, the Joker, and stole the movie. Burton made one more Batman-in-a-weird-Gotham-City movie, costarring Danny DeVito as a depraved, sewer-dwelling Penguin. By then the comics had also decided to focus entirely on grown-up themes and a much darker Batman. Bane, a muscle-bound villain, was introduced and in 1995, in the long-running Knightfall series of comics, he actually beat Batman, breaking his back across his knee.

Even as the public thrilled to a darker Batman, the movies lost the plot. A new director, Joel Schumacher, made the comic book-like Batman Forever (with Val Kilmer as an excellent Batman) and then followed it up with the disastrous, campy Batman and Robin which even the casting of George Clooney as Batman could not save. That movie, as Clooney often admits, sunk the franchise.


Heath Ledger as Joker
When the Batman movie series was revived, the British director Christopher Nolan agreed to direct only after he could start afresh, wiping out memories of the last dud picture. The studio agreed and Nolan’s reboot of the franchise Batman Begins starred another Brit, Christian Bale, as Batman and told the story in a more realistic, matter-of-fact manner. (The movie was packed with Brit and Irish actors: Michael Caine, Gary Oldman, Liam Neeson etc.). But Nolan went back to the idea of a Dark Knight, abandoning the comic book persona of the last two Batman pictures.

Batman Begins, a terrific movie, was followed by a film actually called The Dark Knight which most people (except me: I thought it went on for too long) regard as the finest Batman movie at least partly because Heath Ledger played a Joker who was as dark and dangerous as Bale’s Batman. (Jack Nicholson had gone over-the-top with his portrayal).
But Nolan also introduced topical themes. At many levels, the Dark Knight was an allegory for the America of the post 9/11 era, fighting a battle against terrorists whose motivation it could not understand. The end was morally ambiguous: Batman beats the Joker but pays a terrible price. And serious contemporary subtext kept cropping up.

Christopher Nolan

The Dark Knight Rises begins eight years after the events of The Dark Knight and freely borrows from the Frank Miller series and from Knightfall. Batman has retired. He has not been seen for eight years. The villain is Bane who wants to take over Gotham and who releases all of the city’s criminals. Bane is in league with Ra’s al Ghul (as in the comics), the villain from Batman Begins. There is even a reprise of the famous scene where Bane breaks Batman’s back across his knee.
Christian Bale played Batman in Christopher Nolan's series

From my perspective, it is the best comic book movie ever made partly because it is tightly plotted, well-acted, (Anne Hathaway almost steals the picture) and well put-together. And once again, Nolan taps into America’s current concerns: Wall Street is bad; Bruce Wayne is cheated out of his fortune through bogus futures trades. America is no longer the land of opportunity and the cracks beneath the surface are coming to the fore – in this movie literally – right after the Star-Spangled Banner is sung at a football game!
I won’t give more away. But even if you have no previous interest in Batman, go and see this picture. For once, every element in the Bat pantheon is brilliantly integrated. And the end has an emotional power that is unusual for comic book pictures. What a pity it is the last movie in this trilogy!

TCA 2012: Homeland, Louie Win Big at TCA Awards

TCA 2012: Homeland, Louie Win Big at TCA Awards

Kent Smith/SHOWTIME
Kent Smith/SHOWTIME
Claire Danes (with Mandy Patinkin) won at the TCAs, as did her show Homeland.
Last night at the Beverly Hilton, the Television Critics Association gave out the annual TCA Awards for the best in television at our annual summer meeting. And it may not surprise you that, since critics like me were voting, the big winners were shows that critics like me love.
Showtime’s freshman psychological thriller Homeland was named Outstanding New Program, while Claire Danes won for individual achievement in drama (our unisex best actor/actress category). FX’s eccentric comedy Louie, just picked up for a fourth season, won as best comedy, and Louis CK for individual achievement in comedy. The other winners included Breaking Bad (best drama), whose star Bryan Cranston hosted the awards, Downton Abbey (miniseries) and Game of Thrones. (The awards are given out in the Beverly Hilton ballroom, home to the Golden Globes; but the TCA’s are, ironically, nontelevised and off-the-record, which makes for good attendance by the awardees, who can have a good time without an audience.)
The latter show won Program of the Year, a sort of overall-best-show category, the reasons for whose existence I am still not entirely clear on, but I’m happy enough that it won. (Best show on TV the whole past season? Nah, but close enough for me.) Likewise ABC Family’s Switched at Birth—I’m pretty sure I checked my ballot for Phineas and Ferb, but it’s a very well-done young-adult show with a sophisticated take on diverse themes. And our TV-legacy-focused categories honored David Letterman and Cheers (while 60 Minutes, no spring chicken itself, won the news-and-information category).
The nominees we had to choose from are listed in this earlier post. Like any awards, the critics’ can be vulnerable to vote-splitting and categories dominated by usual suspects. (A lot of my colleagues don’t watch a lot of reality TV, for instance, and in my opinion the nominations overlooked many better non-competition reality shows like No Reservations.) But all in all, I’d put this list up against any TV awards I’ve seen handed out in the past year. Look at the list and tell me what you’d change:
·     Individual Achievement in Drama: Claire Danes (“Homeland,” Showtime)
·     Individual Achievement in Comedy: Louis C.K. (“Louie,” FX)
·     Outstanding Achievement in News and Information: “60 Minutes” (CBS)
·     Outstanding Achievement in Reality Programming: “So You Think You Can Dance” (Fox)
·     Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming: “Switched at Birth” (ABC Family)
·     Outstanding New Program: “Homeland” (Showtime)
·     Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries and Specials: “Masterpiece: Downton Abbey” (PBS)
·     Outstanding Achievement in Drama: “Breaking Bad” (AMC)
·     Outstanding Achievement in Comedy: “Louie” (FX)
·     Career Achievement Award: David Letterman
·     Heritage Award: “Cheers”
·     Program of the Year: “Game of Thrones” (HBO)

Bristol, Sarah Palin’s daughter, to make second appearance on ‘Dancing with the Stars’

Bristol, Sarah Palin’s daughter, to make second appearance on ‘Dancing with the Stars’



The Capitol Column | Staff | Sunday, July 29, 2012

Bristol, Sarah Palin’s daughter, to make second appearance on ‘Dancing with the Stars’

Bristol Palin, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin’s daughter, likes being a reality TV personality. ”You’re going to talk about me if I’m in my little life in Alaska or if I’m in L.A., so I might as well just have fun with it,” Bristol told reporters Friday during the Television Critics Association summer, according to People.
ABC said Friday that the former vice presidential candidate’s daughter will return to “Dancing with the Stars” in September. Bristol appeared on the show in 2010 and finished in third. Former “Baywatch” star Pamela Anderson, Drew Lachey, Kirstie Alley, Shawn Johnson and others will join Ms. Palin on ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars.”
“I just think that god provides opportunities like this, and you can either go out and do them or not do them,” Bristol added.

Katie Holmes goes for dinner date with her lawyer

Katie Holmes goes for dinner date with her lawyer


Katie Holmes sent the rumour mill spinning when she was spotted in Manhattan Friday night with a mystery dinner date — but the guy turned out to be her lawyer.

The 33-year-old actress wore minimal makeup, and was wearing a green maxidress and black leather jacket for dinner at the superposh NoMad Hotel in the Flatiron District.

According to the People magazine, the 'Dawson's creek' star was dining with her attorney Jonathan Wolfe and his wife, Renee, the New York Daily News reported.

Holmes was all smiles as she kissed Wolfe goodnight before climbing into a cab.

When asked how she enjoyed her night out without her former husband or daughter Suri.

Kristen Stewart - Kristen Stewart Affair Went On For Months, Sanders' Brother-In-Law Claims

Kristen Stewart - Kristen Stewart Affair Went On For Months, Sanders' Brother-In-Law Claims

29 July 2012 12:39
Kristen Stewart picture

Picture: Kristen Stewart Schiaparelli and Prada 'Impossible Conversations' Costume Institute Gala 2012 at The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City, U....


News that the alleged 'momentary indiscretion' between Kristen Stewart and RUPERT SANDERS was much more than that, as his Brother-in-law has come forth to claim that the affair went on for months, after he spoke to The People magazine.
The Snow White and the Huntsman director and star are believed, by a number of Sander's wife's family, to have begun their fling well into the filming of the fairytale-twist movie.
Sanders' actress/model wife Liberty Ross, who plays Kristen's mother in the Snow White movie, believes the fling started during filming last year and carried on until 2012. She has also mentioned how she saw the pair looking admirably at one-another during the premier of the film, further fuelling her suspicions. She has since gone on to forgive her husband for his part in the affair, however Robert Pattinson may not be so forgiving.
Tension between the Twilight-lovers emerged in 2009 when Robert became close to Australian actress Emilie De Ravin while filming Remember Me. They stayed friends and remain in touch to this day, apparently, and he was a shoulder to cry on when her marriage to actor JOSH JANOWI hit the rocks.
Liberty's younger brother Leopold insisted: "It was from the last half of filming and all through post-production, clear into last week."