A Perfect Getaway
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
CBS repeats impress on Tuesday
Fox had mixed results with its first night of a four-comedy Tuesday block, edging ahead of the competition on the night among young adults. Still, even a night of repeat dramas had CBS competitive in 18-49 while the net won easily in its core categories.According to preliminary national estimates from Nielsen, Fox rested ''Glee'' to form a two-hour comedy block, faring best as expected at 9 p.m. with ''New Girl'' (3.0/8 in 18-49, 6.0 million viewers overall), which was low but not bad given its soft lead-in from ''I Hate My Teenage Daughter'' (1.6/4 in 18-49, 3.8 million viewers overall), a first-year half-hour that aired on four Wednesdays in late fall. Best news for the net had to be the time-period premiere of ''Raising Hope'' at 8 (2.1/6 in 18-49, 4.8 million viewers overall), which did about the same as it had been at 9:30 p.m. following ''New Girl.'' And closing out the block was ''Breaking In'' (1.7/4 in 18-49, 3.6 million viewers overall), the Christian Slater show that aired seven times in spring of last year; it ran third among the broadcasters in 18-49, retaining 57% of its 18-49 lead-in from ''New Girl'' and outperforming its final original episode last May (1.3/3 in 18-49).CBS impressed, tying Fox for the 18-49 lead in their common hours and easily topping the night among adults 25-54 and total viewers. In the opening hour, ''NCIS'' (2.4/7 in adults 18-49, 14.4 million viewers overall) won its timeslot with an 18-49 score that was higher than all but two firstrun hours on ABC, NBC and Fox last week. It was followed by ''NCIS: Los Angeles'' (1.9/5 in 18-49, 11.9 million viewers overall) and ''Unforgettable'' (1.4/4 in 18-49, 8.2 million viewers overall), both of which led their time periods in 25-54.At NBC, ''The Biggest Loser'' hit a low (1.9/5 in 18-49, 5.7 million viewers overall), though the network disrupted its lineup in multiple cities for coverage of Super Tuesday, and some stations aired the weight-loss competition from 9 to 11; it's expected that ''Loser'' should improve a tick or two in the nationals. Also murky was the performance of the NBC News special ''Decision 2012,'' which aired at 10 p.m. in much of the country but at 8 p.m. in the West.ABC aired a repeat ''Last Man Standing'' (1.4/4 in 18-49, 5.5 million viewers overall), followed by ''Cougar Town'' (1.5/4 in 18-49, 4.4 million viewers overall), which was in line with Fox's ''Teenage Daughter'' in 18-49 at 8:30. Drama ''The River'' seems to have found its core audience (1.5/4 in 18-49, 4.2 million viewers overall), holding steady vs. last week, and the night wrapped with a repeat ''Body of Proof'' (0.9/2 in 18-49, 4.7 million viewers overall). For the night, ABC had to settle for a fifth-place finish among the broadcasters in 18-49, falling a tick short of fourth-place Univision.At CW, ''90210'' returned with its first original episode in a month (0.7/2 in 18-49, 1.3 million viewers overall), followed by ''Ringer'' (0.5/1 in 18-49, 1.2 million viewers overall), which posted its best women 18-34 score (0.8/2) since late November.Preliminary 18-49 averages for the night: Fox, 2.1/6; CBS, 1.9/5; NBC, 1.6/4; Univision, 1.4/4; ABC, 1.3/4; CW, 0.6/2.In total viewers: CBS, 11.5 million; NBC, 4.9 million; ABC, 4.6 million; Fox, 4.5 million; Univision, 3.3 million; CW, 1.3 million. Contact Rick Kissell at rick.kissell@variety.com
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Frankenweenie Bow Includes IMAX 3D
Los Angeles, CA Mar. 6, 2012 IMAX Corporation (NYSE:IMAX; TSX:IMX) and The Walt Disney Studios today announced that Tim Burtons stop-motion, animated film, Frankenweenie will be digitally re-mastered into the immersive IMAX 3D format and released in IMAX digital theatres worldwide day-and-date on Oct. 5, 2012. The film marks the first black and white Hollywood feature and first stop-motion animated movie to be presented in IMAX. From Disney and directed by Tim Burton, Frankenweenie: An IMAX 3D Experience features the voices of Catherine OHara, Martin Short and Winona Ryder. The film is a remake of the live-action short directed by Tim Burton in 1984.
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Closes storm B.O., sans SAG card
Toplined by real-existence Navy Closes, 'Act of Valor' brought the domestic box office.
Give them a call heroes, heroines as well as box office stars. Just don't give them a call stars. Although the eight active-duty Navy Closes who topline "Act of Valor," which snapped up $24.5 million within the February. 24-26 frame, shipped scripted dialogue, they were not included in SAG's collective negotiating agreement. Actually, the mere reference to SAG place the project's uniformed participants in defense mode. "We are not getting into that whatsoever," states the film's co-producer, Capt. Duncan Cruz, when requested when the recently minted celebrities have grown to be SAG people. "These were representing themselves. They were not playing service station mechanics or school instructors. These were playing Navy Closes dealing with training. We labored with SAG. This is the way these males works inside a Navy ad. Same situation." Still, it's not uncommon for any policeman who plays a police officer from the law inside a Hollywood production to concurrently hold a badge and SAG card. But "Valor's" filmmakers explain that unlike their film's uniformed gamers, SAG-covered cops are this is not on duty throughout production and therefore are needed to consider a compensated leave throughout lensing. "(These Closes are) not playing a component,Inch describes Scott Waugh, who directed the Relativity action thriller with Mike (Mouse) McCoy. "They are playing themselves. They're government employees. It might be illegal to allow them to take another contract and become compensated." SAG was not able to explain why the Closes were granted an exemption. So rather than taking conferences at CAA or WME, the mono-monikered Closes -- who dropped their last names for that film's credits because of Navy protocol -- say they immediately accompanied their 18-month "Valor" stint with increased dangerous (and clandestine) projects. Meanwhile, the filmmakers were equally cryptic about budget issues. Waugh rejected to go over "Valor's" cost, that your source called at $12 million. Distributor Relativity, that was not involved with financing the pic, set up just north of $30 millionfor P&A.
"We funded a great deal from it ourselves," notes McCoy, who rejected to title additional traders. "This can be a true indie film. We did not possess a studio are available in and also have us ensure changes." The origin adds that Legendary also set up gold coin and nixed any notion the government funded "Valor," which some experts have compared to some feature-length recruitment video with Hollywood production values. McCoy states the Navy's participation was limited. "The Navy gave us complete creative control around the story," he adds. "However they needed to (ensure) that people did not hand out any classified information." Waugh, who choose McCoy includes a background like a stunt coordinator as well as in docus, describes the film like a hybrid -- part narrative feature, part quasi-documentary. He notes that unlike most action films, "Valor" eschews CG and stunt doubles, giving a feeling of real effects. "We are certainly starting unchartered territory," notes Waugh, who'll next team with McCoy around the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle "Black Sands." Contact the range newsroom at news@variety.com
Friday, March 2, 2012
First John Carter Reviews: A Problematic But Useful Epic?
Negative speculation and prognostication continues to be brewing for several weeks for Disney's sci-fi actioner John Carter because of dismal monitoring and gossips of bloated budgets, but Disney's finally launched their review embargo for that March 9 would-be blockbuster. So what is the early buzz in the first critiques of Andrew Stanton's undertake the Edgar Grain Burroughs saga, in regards to a Civil War veteran named John Carter (Taylor Kitsch) who lands in the center of a civil fight against Mars? Because of the naysaying hype, the very first batch of comments are remarkably... positive. Well, mixed positive, typically -- experts agree with most of the film's talents, in the well-crafted CG realm of Barsoom (that's Mars, to us humans) towards the spirited action sequences Pixar veteran Stanton has drawn off. (Search for Movieline's John Carter review to publish in a few days.) "A few of the items that Stanton pulls off in John Carter is mind-coming," enthuses Badass Digest's Devin Faraci. "You will find a couple of sequences that feel simply classic, like very well be mentioning for them for many years. Theres one scene, where John Carter stands alone (well, with Woola) against a rampaging military of nine feet tall, four armed Tharks, that's an exciting-timer." Talking about individuals Tharks -- the 4-armed eco-friendly Martian players that first enslave John Carter and pressure him to battle on their behalf -- Stanton's CG background pointing Finding Nemo and Wall-E appears to possess assisted him create credible, dimensional figures with a mix of CG animation and gratifaction capture. HitFix's Came McWeeney was particularly astounded by the CG-heavy figures. "The Tharks, brought here by Tars Tarkas (Willem Dafoe), are compelling masterpieces," he creates. "With a couple of moments to their time onscreen, I ended taking into consideration the technical trick involved with getting these to existence and just recognized them just as real.Inch Meanwhile, actress Lynn Collins came kudos on her portrayal of Martian princess Dejah Thoris, a science-minded warrior princess who can serve as Carter's romantic foil while holding her very own together with her inteligence and her sword. "Lynn Collinss feisty Dejah Thoris is the greatest kick-ass sci-fi princess since Leia, and she or he looks stunning too together with her Martian tats," states SFX Magazine. Additionally to potentially starting youthful teenage boys into adolescence together with her sensual, revealing costumes (the skimpiness which Dejah a minimum of appreciates having a wink), she's among the finest-written and abnormally strong female figures in the future along in genre filmmaking shortly. Or, as Faraci declares: "Dejah Thoris is the greatest female character in sci-fiOrdream cinema since Ripley." However the experts also agree where John Carter's defects are worried -- for example, the sprawling, frequently-unwieldy scope of their story and also the clumsy means by which Stanton and Co. filter it lower to some dense (maybe too-dense) feature-length runtime. Area of the problem is based on compacting Burroughs' Princess of Mars novel lower to 1 feature-length script while juggling the numerous moving parts -- John Carter's Civil War past, the mechanics of his Mars-assisted forces, the political machinations between your two warring city-states of Zodanga and Helium, the all-powerful Tharks who walk included in this tugging the strings, the warrior culture from the Tharks, as well as an Earth-bound framework device including Carter's nephew, Edgar Grain Burroughs, phew! -- while furthermore trying to create happens for sequels in the future. "Amongst the CGI conditions and constant plot machinations, the storyline veers between interesting, boring and borderline incomprehensive," stated Fan the fireplace Magazine. "You will find moments once the film soars, simply to stall and sputter on the well-meaning but extraneous - or overlong - character moment," gripes SFX Magazine, adding that "extended exposition moments and Martian politics are hampered by cod pomposity and also the dreaded 'silly-made-up-sci-fi-words' disease." Ultimately, if audiences react as CinemaBlend's Sean O'Connell did, Disney's greatest problem on March 9 will reflect its early monitoring worries from days ago: Viewer indifference. "The majority of Carter [is] a difficult slog, despite some decent performances and also the admirable introduction of the tough-as-nails action heroine in Collins," O'Connell creates. "Arid, barren Barsoom is really a dull atmosphere for any sci-fi blockbuster, and also the effects from the conflicts happening on the watch's screen are small. John Carter never drawn me in." Find out more on John Carter here.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Jonah Hill Telling A True Story
Along with James FrancoSince Moneyball saw him A) switching successfully to drama, B) working with Brad Pitt, and C) scoring an Oscar nomination, it's no surprise to learn that Jonah Hill is planning a combo of at least the first two elements for an upcoming film. He'll star alongside James Franco in True Story.The script was adapted from Michael Finkel's memoir, and will find Hill playing Finkel, who was working for the NY Times magazine back in 2002 when he sniffed out a likely story. The FBI had captured criminal Christian Longo (Franco) after he'd spent a few years on the FBI's Most Wanted List for killing his family.So far, so standard crime tale, right? But here's the twist: Longo had been using Finkel's identity while on the run. And to add one more wrinkle, the NYT fired Finkel the day after Longo was nabbed after deciding he'd falsified chunks of a recent investigative article. But when Longo declared that Finkel was the only journalist he'd talk to, and that he wanted to prove his innocence, a weird relationship grew with Finkel looking into the mystery and trying to redeem himself as a writer...So where does Pitt factor into it, we hear you ask... Well, he's producing the movie via his Plan B company, having won the rights to the project back from Paramount. Rupert Goold is directing, and while there's no financing in place you, you've got to figure the combo of Oscar nominees would be enough to make investors ready to jump aboard.
Friday, February 17, 2012
Because Of Due To Jimmy Kimmel Locks Within The famous host the famous host oprah, Jason Bateman For Publish-Oscars Special
Late evening talk show host Because Of Due To Jimmy Kimmel is yanking out all the stops for his publish-Oscars special, airing around the month of the month of january 26. Up to now hes handled to book the very best The famous host the famous host oprah Winfrey, among a sea of several other A-listers set to avoid by. Jessica Biel, Jason Bateman, Qq Abrams, Steven Tyler, Tyler Perry, Edward Norton, Colin Farrell and Ryan Philippe happen to be confirmed, People.com reviews. The annual publish-show fete, Because Of Due To Jimmy Kimmel Live: Following a Academy awards, may even include looks from Meryl Streep, George Clooney and Martin Scorsese, additionally to some performance from Coldplay, EW.com adds. Oscar host Billy Very may even create a feel and look. Thinking about the show has launched such viral smashes like "F*@#ing Film Clip,Inch "Handsome Men's Club," "Hottie Body Difficulty Club" and "Tom Hanks's Young children in Tiaras, shenanigans are needed and due to the standard of talent Mr. Kimmel has reserved for your party (which will air on ABC right after news which will air right after the Academy awards next Sunday), we expect those to go hard or return home. Kimmel recently tweeted he needs This yr medicine best yet, and Vulture blog got their at work some funny posters spoofs that tease so what can happen through the show this year. Posters featuring gun and weapon-transporting Helen Mirren, Clooney and Tom Hanks tease the spoof M:TM, also called Movie: The Film. While little is well known in regards to the plot in the action film, it will include Charlize Theron, Don Cheadle, John Krasinski, Emily Blunt, Cameron Diaz, and Samuel L. Jackson. Are you currently presently excited for Kimmel's publish-Oscar special? Reveal inside the comments and also on Twitter!
Friday, February 10, 2012
'Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace': The Reviews Were In!
"Star Wars: Episode I" returns to theaters today, in 3D. But lets flash back for a few moments to May 19th, 1999 the day The Phantom Menace was originally released. If you were a die-hard Star Wars fan, like I was, you were going to see this movie regardless of what the critics wrote about it. You ached to hear, once again, that familiar yet exciting 20th Century Fox fanfare before reading the opening crawl. You may have camped out on a dirty sidewalk for hours, days, weeks even, just so you could be one of the first to experience it. But if you werent one of those fans, you might have waited and checked out the reviews before making the decision to see The Phantom Menace. The following is a sampling of what youd have read. The Story The plot has something to do with a trade embargo being waged against a small planet called Naboo, an embargo that turns out to be a disguise for a planned full-scale invasion. Were never told what this tiny planet could possibly be worth to the enormous Trade Federation (the way we understand, in the first Star Wars, what the baddies stand to gain from the elimination of the rebel forces), so the storys basic conflict has no weight. Charles Taylor, Salon.com The Look There are new places here--new kinds of places. Consider the underwater cities, floating in their transparent membranes. The Senate chamber, a vast sphere with senators arrayed along the inside walls, and speakers floating on pods in the center. And other places: the cityscape with the waterfall that has a dizzying descent through space. And the other cities: one city Venetian, with canals, another looking like a hothouse version of imperial Rome, and a third that seems to have grown out of desert sands. Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times The Gungan Yoda puts in a cameo, but the film's designated alien is Jar Jar Binks, a rabbit-eared ambulatory lizard whose pidgin English degenerates from pseudo-Caribbean patois to Teletubby gurgle. (Although Jar Jar can be construed as grotesquely Third World and the fish faces talk like Fu Manchu, the most blatant ethnic stereotype is the hook-nosed merchant insect who owns young Anakin.) Jar Jar and his fellow Gungans suck the oxygen out of every scene; their human costars seem understandably asphyxiated. J. Hoberman, The Village Voice The Kid Based on what we see here, it doesn't seem like such an ineffable mystery that this kid will end up a wheezing, intergalactic power-mongering control freak. A slave boy who already fashions himself a Jedi knight, Anakin is a precocious brat -- the kind of kid who, in our own galaxy, might commandeer a playground and run everybody else off the jungle gym. If the psychological richness of the Star Wars movies is grounded in Darth Vader's movement in and out of the light, then it may be high time to create a new myth -- i.e., a new franchise. Peter Rainer, NY Magazine The Final Word Nothing could live up to the hype of this film. Nothing. "Star Wars, Episode I: The Phantom Menace" is a movie. It's not the Second Coming. It's not even the First Coming, depending on your religious stance. It's just a movie. ... And while I'm saddened to report that it's a deeply flawed film in terms of both story line and character development, I'm happy to note that visually it's a marvel. Paul Clinton, CNN.com "Phantom Menace" discussed this week in Talk Nerdy!
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