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Marvel charts new frontier with Guardians of the Galaxy

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Juli 2014 | 22.20

Marvel's latest movie Guardians of the Galaxy isn't even in theatres and yet it's already generating predictions that it's going to be the movie of the summer.

Marvel is known for drawing massive audiences to the theatre with its blockbuster fare but Guardians is different.

Unlike Iron Man, Thor, The Avengers and Captain America, the satirical sci-fi adventure features lesser known characters from the Marvel roster, and the action is entirely set in space. With Marvel's recent revelations of a female Thor and a black Captain America, the comic empire continues to hint at major changes going on behind the scenes.

Marvel's first movie written by a woman

Guardians of the Galaxy is also the first Marvel movie to be written by a woman, screenwriter Nicole Perlman.

In a recent interview with TIME magazine, Perlman described the trouble she had persuading studios to trust a woman to write sci-fi:

Nicole Perlman

Guardians screenwriter Nicole Perlman says it was hard to convince studios she could write sci-fi. (Alberto E. Rodriguez/Disney/Getty Images)

"I was noticing that I was having trouble convincing people, when I was pitching on projects, that I would be capable of doing this. There was a little bit of an attitude of, 'Well, you're a woman, you're not writing romantic comedies, we'll give you the Marie Curie biopic."

In the same interview, Perlman also fuelled speculation that Marvel is developing a movie around a female superhero.

Space for strong female characters

The studio currently has five unannounced titles planned for release between now and 2019, and there is a growing demand from fans who want to see a female superhero in the lead role.

In Guardians of the Galaxy, Zoe Saldana plays lethal, butt-kicking Gamora alongside Dave Bautista's muscle-bound Drax the Destroyer.

In an interview with CBC News, Bautista says he's pleased to see strong female characters like Gamora in movies today, especially because he was raised by a single mom.

Dave Bautista

Dave Bautista stars along side co-star Zoe Saldana in Guardians of the Galaxy. Raised by a single mom, he says he's pleased to see strong female characters like Saldana's in movies today. (CBC News)

"It was just me and my mom and my sister growing up, and it really feels good to see that strong woman. She's not just sitting in the background" he says. "She's got that sweet side to her but she's definitely, I mean she's strong, intelligent, independent. She's a character within herself. She stands out."

Guardians of the Galaxy opens in theatres this Friday, and Marvel is banking on it being a hit.

The film's sequel is already slated to come out July 28, 2017.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Quentin Tarantino, J.J. Abrams lobby to save Kodak film: report

A team of big-name Hollywood directors — including Quentin Tarantino, Christopher Nolan, J.J. Abrams, and Judd Apatow — has reportedly succeeded in breathing new life into the faltering future of celluloid.

The group lobbied a number of Hollywood studio heads into striking a deal with Eastman Kodak to buy a quantity of film stock every year for the next several years, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Most television shows and feature films are now shot on digital video, resulting in a 96 per cent drop in motion picture film sales at Kodak.

Not only would the deal help save the future of traditional film, it would also save Kodak's factory in Rochester, N.Y.

'I don't think we could look some of our filmmakers in the eyes if we didn't do it.'- Bob Weinstein, speaking to the Wall Street Journal 

Bob Weinstein, the co-chairman of Weinstein Company, told the Wall Street Journal that he was personally approached by Tarantino to agree to the deal:

"It's a financial commitment, no doubt about it," Weinstein is reported as saying. "But I don't think we could look some of our filmmakers in the eyes if we didn't do it."

It's not clear when the deal will be formally announced, as Kodak is reportedly still hammering out commitments with executives at Warner Bros., Universal, Paramount and Disney.


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'Rob Ford' makes cameo, promptly killed off in Sharknado 2

How does the sequel to SyFy's instant campy classic Sharknado meet the unexpected success of last summer's original?

By sticking to the formula, says Ian Ziering, who stars in the film as Fin Shepherd.

"We didn't set the bar too high in the first one," the former Beverly Hills, 90210 actor said in a phone interview from New York.

Sharknado 2: The Second One, which premiered Wednesday on Space, moves the action from Los Angeles to New York, where a tornado full of bloodthirsty sharks touches down on the city. Luckily, Fin and his ex April (Tara Reid) have survived this freak weather system before and are able to share their shark-fighting techniques — in which chainsaws play a key role — with locals.

Some of these locals are quite recognizable — Ziering said celebrity cameos from those "clamouring to be eaten by a shark" add to the fun of the film.

One such celebrity is Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, or more accurately, an actor playing Rob Ford. The character makes an appearance in the Canadian version of the film at a press conference pledging Canadian help for the city under siege, only to be killed off seconds later as a baby shark tears through his body.

Other cameos include NBC's Today show hosts Matt Lauer and Al Roker, Kelly Osbourne and Billy Ray Cyrus, not to mention Vivica A. Fox and Mark McGrath as part of the actual cast.

Ziering was considering passing on the role originally but took it at his wife's urging.

"My pregnant wife with our oldest daughter on her hip told me I need to go to work and I realized I needed to take one for the team," he said. "She doesn't miss any opportunity to tell me I told you so."

Ziering couldn't have predicted that the "so bad it's good" film would become a hot topic in the Twitterverse last summer, piquing interest that translated into larger audiences tuning into SyFy during repeat airings than the premiere.

The plot of the first film sparked an online conversation that has resurfaced with the arrival of the latest instalment: Could a sharknado really happen?

Ziering's co-star Tara Reid weighed in on the debate in GQ, saying "the chances of it happening are very rare" but that sharks could in fact "be stuck in tornadoes."

Thunder Levin, who penned the script, also touched on the subject in an interview with website the Verge by asking: "Why are people laughing at our very important documentary about global warming?"

For those wondering, Mother Jones definitively settled the question last year — going as far to consult the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — and predictably concluded the scenario basically impossible.


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Tommy Hunter, Shania Twain, k.d. lang, Hank Snow, Renée Martel stamps released

Tommy Hunter, Canada's Country Gentleman, is one of five Canadian country music artists commemorated in a new series of stamps from Canada Post.

Renée Martel, Hank Snow, k.d. lang and Shania Twain are also recognized in the collection, which salutes Canada's contribution to county music history and became available Thursday.

The five stamps come in a number of sets, including booklets of 10 domestic stamps for $8.50.

Hunter, now 77, first played guitar on a London, Ont., stage at age nine and is best known for his country music variety series The Tommy Hunter Show, which ran for 27 years on CBC-TV starting in 1965.

Hunter's farewell tour in 2012 gave fans an opportunity to enjoy songs such as I'll Fly Away, Daisy A Day and Travellin' Man for a final time.

Hunter is in London, Ont., on Thursday morning, along with Canada Post representatives, for a special stamps unveiling ceremony, and CBC News is there.

Watch for coverage on CBC News Network beginning at 11 am. E.T.


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Emily Hampshire to play Brad Pitt's role in TV's 12 Monkeys

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Juli 2014 | 22.19

The Montreal-born actress will play Jennifer Goines, a female version of Pitt's mental patient character

CBC News Posted: Jul 30, 2014 10:24 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 30, 2014 10:24 AM ET

Emily Hampshire will play Brad Pitt's character in the television adaptation of Terry Gilliam's sci-fi thriller 12 Monkeys.

It's an exciting role for the 32-year-old from Montreal, who is probably best known for playing opposite Robert Pattinson in David Cronenberg's Cosmopolis.

Brad Pitt and Bruce Willis in 12 Monkeys

James Cole (Bruce Willis) and Jeffery Goines (Brad Pitt) in Terry Gilliam's 1995 sci-fi thriller 12 Monkeys. Pitt won an Golden Globe for the role. (Universal Pictures)

In a intriguing bit of casting, Hampshire will play Jennifer Goines, a female adaptation of the character Jeffery Goines.

Brad Pitt's iconic interpretation of the erratic mental patient in the 1995 movie won him a Golden Globe. 

Aaron Stanford (X-Men) will play James Cole, the role originated by Bruce Willis, in the small-screen adaptation.

The 13-episode series is slated to air on the American cable channel Syfy this January.

12 Monkeys begins filming next month in Toronto.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

Listen to Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett's new single Anything Goes

Lady Gaga is a bona fide pop star, but the singer says recording jazz music was easier than pop.

Gaga has spent two years recording an album of jazz standards with Tony Bennett called Cheek to Cheek, to be released Sept. 23.

Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga

Gaga, 28, and Bennett, 87 – seen here in New York on Monday – first collaborated on his Grammy-winning, platinum-selling 2011 album, Duets II. (Andy Kropa/Invision/AP)

"You know, it's funny, but jazz comes a little more comfortable for me than pop music, than R&B music," Gaga said in an interview Monday. "I've sung jazz since I was 13 years old, which is kind of like my little secret that Tony found out. So this is almost easier for me than anything else."

Gaga made the comments with Bennett by her side ahead of the duo's taped performance at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City for PBS, which will air in the fall. The album's first single, a cover of Cole Porter's Anything Goes, was released Tuesday. Other selections from the Great American Songbook that appear on Cheek to Cheek include It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)Sophisticated LadyLush Life and the title track.

'They're going to say we had no idea she sings that well'- Tony Bennet on his singing partner Lady Gaga

The 28-year-old and 87-year-old Bennett first collaborated on his Grammy-winning, platinum-selling 2011 album, Duets II. Bennett said fans will be impressed with Gaga's vocal performance on the upcoming album.

"They're going to say we had no idea she sings that well," he said.

"And they're gonna say they had no idea that Tony dressed so crazy," Gaga added, as Bennett smiled. "When you come out in your meat dress Tony, nobody is going to know what's going on."

Cheek to Cheek is Gaga's first release since last year's Artpop. Bennett released a collaborative album with Latin singers in 2012 called Viva Duets.

The duo performed at the Montreal Jazz Festival earlier this month and surprised high school students at Bennett's Frank Sinatra School of Arts in Queens last month.

Gaga, who is currently on her Artrave: The Artpop Ball tour, says she is "actually happier than I've ever been."

"There's 60 years between us, and when we sing, there's no distance," she added about working with Bennett.

Watch the video for their new single Anything Goes in the video above.


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Michael Cohl, Jesus Christ Superstar producer, sued over cancelled tour

The abrupt cancellation of this summer's North American arena tour of Jesus Christ Superstar is apparently not being forgiven.

The Really Useful Group, the London-based production company of Superstar composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, said Tuesday that it was taking legal action against Canadian music and theatrical producer Michael Cohl for the "unilateral decision" to scuttle the tour, which was to star punk legend John "Johnny Rotten" Lydon and Michelle Williams of Destiny's Child.

cohl_michael050621

Canadian concert promoter, and producer Michael Cohl was also a lead producer on the ill-fated, aerial-effects laden Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.

In a statement, The Really Useful Group said it "has no option but to proceed with legal action to recover its costs associated with the project and in turn, satisfy outstanding payments to suppliers and contractors."

Cohl's S2BN Entertainment had no immediate comment Tuesday.

The tour was to start June 9 in New Orleans and include stops in Detroit, Los Angeles, Chicago, St. Louis, Phoenix, Seattle, Las Vegas, Denver, New York City, Boston and Philadelphia.

It was to star Lydon as King Herod, Williams as Mary Magdalene, Brandon Boyd of Incubus as Judas and JC Chasez of `N Sync as Pontius Pilate. Ben Forster, the winner of the U.K.'s prime-time contest show Superstar, was to play the son of God.

The guitar- and keyboard-driven rock musical, which debuted on Broadway in 1971, includes such songs as What's the Buzz? SuperstarEverything's Alright and I Don't Know How to Love Him.

Cohl, who was also a lead producer on the ill-fated, aerial-effects laden Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, declined to talk too much about the tour's financing when it was unveiled in April, but he said the new show's total costs were in the "eight figures" and needed to pull in "several hundred thousand dollars" each night to keep it on the road.


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Opera uses Google Glass to share onstage views

Ever wonder what an opera looks and sounds like from the stage?

You can find out this afternoon, when an Italian opera company shares a new perspective of Giacomo Puccini's Turandot through a special pair of opera glasses – Google Glass.

On Wednesday night, the Teatro Lirico di Cagliari on the Italian Island of Sardinia will debut its "Glass Opera Interactive" performance of Turandot. Performers and crew will wear Google's internet-connected, computer-equipped glasses to stream video and images to the public from their own points of view – "from the soprano's to the stagehand's," the opera house announced in a news release.

The performance begins at 9 p.m. local time (3 p.m. ET, noon PT) and the streams will be available in real time on the Teatro Lirico's Facebook page and Twitter feed.

The show, considered by the company to be an experiment, will run until Aug. 16. 

Mauro Meli, general manager of the opera house. told the Wall Street Journal that the performance aims to attract younger audiences that have not been traditionally interested in going to the opera.

Since Google Glass became available to some users last year, it has been used in a number of other different performances, including:

  • Cornell University classical conductor Cynthia Turner has used music displayed on the screen to replace music stands, and to project a conductor's eye view of the performance onto a screen above the orchestra.
  • The U.S. a capella group Pentatonix has used it to share their perspective from the stage.

22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

12 Years a Boy: Ellar Coltrane on growing up in Richard Linklater's film Boyhood

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Juli 2014 | 22.19

The 19-year-old actor was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie

CBC News Posted: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET

Ellar Coltrane was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie Boyhood.

Now, after having spent more than half his life filming the movie, the 19-year-old actor is talking about the process.

The fictional coming-of-age story follows Coltrane's character, Mason over 12 years as he transforms from a sensitive first-grader into a college freshman. 

The film is drawing rave reviews from critics who applaud Linklater's skill at capturing the seemingly real and intimate passage of time as Mason, and his family (played by Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette) grow, change and age before the audience's eyes. 

Boyhood is currently playing in theatres across Canada.

In the above video, Coltrane explains to CBC Arts reporter Eli Glasner, the process behind Linklater's movie magic.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies trailer is out

The first trailer for Peter Jackson's The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies has hit the Internet after making its premiere at San Diego Comic-Con last weekend, and the final film in the series looks action-packed, and grim.

Martin Freeman's Bilbo Baggins is shown bracing himself for war, proclaiming, "One day I'll remember, remember everything that happened here: the good the bad, those who survived and those who did not."

Lee Pace abd Cate Blanchett

Many Hobbit cast members came out to promote the film at San Diego Comic-Con including Lee Pace and Cate Blanchett seen here at the festival on July 26, 2014. (Robyn beck/AFP/Getty Images)

The preview, which declares the movie to be the "the defining chapter of the Middle-Earth saga," shows an elfin Cate Blanchett kissing a fallen Gandalf (Ian MacKellen).

Other familiar faces from the Tolkien-inspired epic are back, including Orlando Bloom, Evangeline Lilly, Richard Ameritage and Lee Pace.

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies arrives in theatres on Dec. 17.


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Matthew Santoro brings his YouTube fame to Just For Laughs

YouTube has become the biggest comedy club in the world – just ask YouTube superstar, Canadian Matthew Santoro.

With more than 2-million subscribers to his comedy channel – featuring such videos as 10 Apocalyptic Events That Could End the World and 50 AMAZING Facts to Blow Your Mind – Santoro can boast to being one of YouTube's biggest stars.

It's for that reason that Santoro, and other big YouTube comedians, have been invited to a special comedy project on the sidelines of Montreal's Just for Laughs comedy festival.

David Brown

Google Canada's David Brown says the project is about forming mutually beneficial partnerships between traditional and digital comedians. (CBC News)

For the first time ever, YouTube, in partnership with Just for Laughs, has set up a special pop up lab to bring YouTube stars and traditional comedians together to create new video content.

Some of the results will be showcased in a special digital comedy event Saturday night at Just For Laughs.

Google Canada's David Brown says it's about forming mutually beneficial relationships.

"When Matthew Santoro, for instance, uploads a video and it goes out to the some 2 million people that are subscribed to his channel, that is a great opportunity for both himself as well as some of the traditional comics to take advantage of." 

Santoro, it seems, has enough fortune to spread around. In an interview with CBC News he revealed that he makes more money posting one video a week than he did as a full-time accountant.

In the above video, he and comedian Sabrina Jalees reveal how much money YouTube stars can make.

Deana Sumanac will have the whole story Saturday on The National.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

George Miller reveals explosive first look at Mad Max: Fury Road trailer at Comic Con

A dynamic new lead and an epic-scale chase will be at the center of the new Mad Max reboot, as Australian director George Miller reignites his explosive action thriller franchise as the fight for survival in the wasteland rages on.

Mad Max: Fury Road, the fourth instalment of the Mad Max franchise that began in 1979 with Mel Gibson in the lead role, saw a post-apocalypse dystopian Australia where police officer Max Rockatansky battles hardened criminals of the outback.

Time Warner Inc-owned Warner Bros' Fury Road, due in theaters next year, is set 45 years in a post-apocalyptic future, and Miller said the whole film is a "105-minute chase scene through the wasteland."

"Everyone in the story is either a villain or a good guy; this is a very dangerous world and everyone you encounter could be out to kill you to simply to take what you have. So it's all survival," the director told Reuters.

Mad Max: Road Fury

Comic Con fans got an exclusive preview of George Miller's Mad Max: Road Fury Saturday. Warner Bros. later released a shorter trailer online. (Warner Bros.)

The film has been about 15 years in the making, and Miller said that initially he was working with Gibson, but after 9/11, the project was scrapped. By the time the director picked it up again, Gibson was past the age he wanted Max to be.

"It's not about an old Mad Max, it's about the same Mad Max," he said.

British actor Tom Hardy picks up the mantle of Max, and Miller said he embodies many of the qualities he first felt with Gibson.

Not much is known about the plot, but fans at San Diego's annual Comic Con were treated to exclusive footage on Saturday, which showed leading characters including Max and Nux, played by Nicholas Hoult, in action and explosion-filled clips."They are (both) the guys who are very lovable, and at the same time they've got their dark side, and that contrast is at the core of their charisma."

Much of the first three films centred on the battle for energy resources and fuel, a conversation that was just beginning to gain traction at the time. Three decades later, Miller said, the same issues remain pertinent.

"I'm beginning to realize that's the nature of the world and humankind, and we're always fighting these kind of struggles, these tensions," Miller said.

"In many ways, the world is getting a lot better, but there's still lots of stuff out there that could go wrong."

Tom Hardy as Mad Rockastansky

British actor Tom Hardy stars as Mad Rockastansky, the role originated by Mel Gibson. (Warner Bros.)

Max, who becomes a lone, hardened warrior in his journey, will find himself once again caught up in other people's journeys and problems in Fury Road.

Joining Hardy is actress Charlize Theron, who plays Imperator Furiosa, a character that Miller described as an "equal" to Max, and who leads a slew of female actresses in the film franchise that was previously male-dominated.

"She's just a hardcore warrior with a purpose and it's really the engagement of the two that is the central conflict that helps the story unfold," Miller said.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

12 Years a Boy: Ellar Coltrane on growing up in Richard Linklater's film Boyhood

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Juli 2014 | 22.20

The 19-year-old actor was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie

CBC News Posted: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET

Ellar Coltrane was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie Boyhood.

Now, after having spent more than half his life filming the movie, the 19-year-old actor is talking about the process.

The fictional coming-of-age story follows Coltrane's character, Mason over 12 years as he transforms from a sensitive first-grader into a college freshman. 

The film is drawing rave reviews from critics who applaud Linklater's skill at capturing the seemingly real and intimate passage of time as Mason, and his family (played by Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette) grow, change and age before the audience's eyes. 

Boyhood is currently playing in theatres across Canada.

In the above video, Coltrane explains to CBC Arts reporter Eli Glasner, the process behind Linklater's movie magic.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Matthew Santoro brings his YouTube fame to Just For Laughs

YouTube has become the biggest comedy club in the world – just ask YouTube superstar, Canadian Matthew Santoro.

With more than 2-million subscribers to his comedy channel – featuring such videos as 10 Apocalyptic Events That Could End the World and 50 AMAZING Facts to Blow Your Mind – Santoro can boast to being one of YouTube's biggest stars.

It's for that reason that Santoro, and other big YouTube comedians, have been invited to a special comedy project on the sidelines of Montreal's Just for Laughs comedy festival.

David Brown

Google Canada's David Brown says the project is about forming mutually beneficial partnerships between traditional and digital comedians. (CBC News)

For the first time ever, YouTube, in partnership with Just for Laughs, has set up a special pop up lab to bring YouTube stars and traditional comedians together to create new video content.

Some of the results will be showcased in a special digital comedy event Saturday night at Just For Laughs.

Google Canada's David Brown says it's about forming mutually beneficial relationships.

"When Matthew Santoro, for instance, uploads a video and it goes out to the some 2 million people that are subscribed to his channel, that is a great opportunity for both himself as well as some of the traditional comics to take advantage of." 

Santoro, it seems, has enough fortune to spread around. In an interview with CBC News he revealed that he makes more money posting one video a week than he did as a full-time accountant.

In the above video, he and comedian Sabrina Jalees reveal how much money YouTube stars can make.

Deana Sumanac will have the whole story Saturday on The National.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Aretha Franklin gets no respect at Niagara Falls restaurant

First Lady of Soul denied service by 'a new and very young employee'

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 26, 2014 3:44 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 26, 2014 3:44 PM ET

Close

EXCLUSIVE Aretha Franklin one-on-one 6:09

EXCLUSIVE Aretha Franklin one-on-one 6:09

Aretha Franklin has some harsh words for a server who told the First Lady of Soul she wasn't allowed to eat her takeout order inside the Niagara Falls, Ont., restaurant where she had ordered it.

A spokesman for 71-year-old Franklin, who is an American, says the situation unfolded Tuesday at a Johnny Rockets restaurant on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls.

The spokesman said Franklin ordered a hamburger after performing a sold-out show, but the server screamed at Franklin, saying she couldn't sit down to eat because she had ordered takeout.

In a statement, Franklin said the restaurant worker was "very rude, unprofessional and nasty."

A Johnny Rockets spokeswoman says the franchise owner is sorry for the actions of "a new and very young employee." She said the owner has spoken with the employee and has clarified his takeout policies.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

George Miller reveals explosive first look at Mad Max: Fury Road trailer at Comic Con

A dynamic new lead and an epic-scale chase will be at the center of the new Mad Max reboot, as Australian director George Miller reignites his explosive action thriller franchise as the fight for survival in the wasteland rages on.

Mad Max: Fury Road, the fourth instalment of the Mad Max franchise that began in 1979 with Mel Gibson in the lead role, saw a post-apocalypse dystopian Australia where police officer Max Rockatansky battles hardened criminals of the outback.

Time Warner Inc-owned Warner Bros' Fury Road, due in theaters next year, is set 45 years in a post-apocalyptic future, and Miller said the whole film is a "105-minute chase scene through the wasteland."

"Everyone in the story is either a villain or a good guy; this is a very dangerous world and everyone you encounter could be out to kill you to simply to take what you have. So it's all survival," the director told Reuters.

Tom Hardy as Mad Rockastansky

British actor Tom Hardy stars as Mad Rockastansky, the role originated by Mel Gibson. (Warner Bros.)

The film has been about 15 years in the making, and Miller said that initially he was working with Gibson, but after 9/11, the project was scrapped. By the time the director picked it up again, Gibson was past the age he wanted Max to be.

"It's not about an old Mad Max, it's about the same Mad Max," he said.

British actor Tom Hardy picks up the mantle of Max, and Miller said he embodies many of the qualities he first felt with Gibson.

Not much is known about the plot, but fans at San Diego's annual Comic Con were treated to exclusive footage on Saturday, which showed leading characters including Max and Nux, played by Nicholas Hoult, in action and explosion-filled clips."They are (both) the guys who are very lovable, and at the same time they've got their dark side, and that contrast is at the core of their charisma."

Much of the first three films centred on the battle for energy resources and fuel, a conversation that was just beginning to gain traction at the time. Three decades later, Miller said, the same issues remain pertinent.

"I'm beginning to realize that's the nature of the world and humankind, and we're always fighting these kind of struggles, these tensions," Miller said.

"In many ways, the world is getting a lot better, but there's still lots of stuff out there that could go wrong."

Charlize Theron in Mad Max: Fury Road

Charlize Theron stars as Furiosa in George Miller's Mad Max: Fury Road. (Warner Bros.)

Max, who becomes a lone, hardened warrior in his journey, will find himself once again caught up in other people's journeys and problems in Fury Road.

Joining Hardy is actress Charlize Theron, who plays Imperator Furiosa, a character that Miller described as an "equal" to Max, and who leads a slew of female actresses in the film franchise that was previously male-dominated.

"She's just a hardcore warrior with a purpose and it's really the engagement of the two that is the central conflict that helps the story unfold," Miller said.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Aretha Franklin gets no respect at Niagara Falls restaurant

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Juli 2014 | 22.19

First Lady of Soul denied service by 'a new and very young employee'

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 26, 2014 3:44 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 26, 2014 3:44 PM ET

Close

EXCLUSIVE Aretha Franklin one-on-one 6:09

EXCLUSIVE Aretha Franklin one-on-one 6:09

Aretha Franklin has some harsh words for a server who told the First Lady of Soul she wasn't allowed to eat her takeout order inside the Niagara Falls, Ont., restaurant where she had ordered it.

A spokesman for 71-year-old Franklin, who is an American, says the situation unfolded Tuesday at a Johnny Rockets restaurant on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls.

The spokesman said Franklin ordered a hamburger after performing a sold-out show, but the server screamed at Franklin, saying she couldn't sit down to eat because she had ordered takeout.

In a statement, Franklin said the restaurant worker was "very rude, unprofessional and nasty."

A Johnny Rockets spokeswoman says the franchise owner is sorry for the actions of "a new and very young employee." She said the owner has spoken with the employee and has clarified his takeout policies.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

Canadian hip-hop festival unites fresh talent and big stars

Toronto is the centre of Canada's hip-hop universe this weekend as the Unity Festival celebrates the culture's music, art and dance.

The four day festival is the marquee event for the Unity Charity, an Ontario-based program that uses rap, dance and graffiti as a way of empowering teens.

Thursday night's breakdance battle attracted some of North America's best young talent to the dance floor.

The mostly teenaged crowd went crazy as the 19-and-under competitors twisted, contorted and spun to the beat.

Caerina Abrenica

18-year-old Caerina Abrenica started breakdancing in high school. She says dancing helped her get through some tough times. (CBC News)

For participants like 18-year-old Caerina Abrenica, dancing has become a way of life.

​"I started breakdancing in high school," she says. "It was kind of a hard time to get through, so I feel like once I started dancing it really gave me a different personality in a way, in a good way because it really helped me get through things."

Check out Caerina's moves and some of the other competitors at Thursday's battle in the video above.

The Unity Festival wraps Saturday with a free outdoor concert in Toronto's Yonge-Dundas Square featuring American rap star Biz Markie and Canada's Maestro Fresh Wes.


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Matthew Santoro brings his YouTube fame to Just For Laughs

YouTube has become the biggest comedy club in the world – just ask YouTube superstar, Canadian Matthew Santoro.

With more than 2-million subscribers to his comedy channel – featuring such videos as 10 Apocalyptic Events That Could End the World and 50 AMAZING Facts to Blow Your Mind – Santoro can boast to being one of YouTube's biggest stars.

It's for that reason that Santoro, and other big YouTube comedians, have been invited to a special comedy project on the sidelines of Montreal's Just for Laughs comedy festival.

David Brown

Google Canada's David Brown says the project is about forming mutually beneficial partnerships between traditional and digital comedians. (CBC News)

For the first time ever, YouTube, in partnership with Just for Laughs, has set up a special pop up lab to bring YouTube stars and traditional comedians together to create new video content.

Some of the results will be showcased in a special digital comedy event Saturday night at Just For Laughs.

Google Canada's David Brown says it's about forming mutually beneficial relationships.

"When Matthew Santoro, for instance, uploads a video and it goes out to the some 2 million people that are subscribed to his channel, that is a great opportunity for both himself as well as some of the traditional comics to take advantage of." 

Santoro, it seems, has enough fortune to spread around. In an interview with CBC News he revealed that he makes more money posting one video a week than he did as a full-time accountant.

In the above video, he and comedian Sabrina Jalees reveal how much money YouTube stars can make.

Deana Sumanac will have the whole story Saturday on The National.


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12 Years a Boy: Ellar Coltrane on growing up in Richard Linklater's film Boyhood

The 19-year-old actor was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie

CBC News Posted: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 26, 2014 6:00 AM ET

Ellar Coltrane was just six when he started filming Richard Linklater's new movie Boyhood.

Now, after having spent more than half his life filming the movie, the 19-year-old actor is talking about the process.

The fictional coming-of-age story follows Coltrane's character, Mason over 12 years as he transforms from a sensitive first-grader into a college freshman. 

The film is drawing rave reviews from critics who applaud Linklater's skill at capturing the seemingly real and intimate passage of time as Mason, and his family (played by Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette) grow, change and age before the audience's eyes. 

Boyhood is currently playing in theatres across Canada.

In the above video, Coltrane explains to CBC Arts reporter Eli Glasner, the process behind Linklater's movie magic.

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Canadian hip-hop festival unites fresh talent and big stars

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 26 Juli 2014 | 22.19

Toronto is the centre of Canada's hip-hop universe this weekend as the Unity Festival celebrates the culture's music, art and dance.

The four day festival is the marquee event for the Unity Charity, an Ontario-based program that uses rap, dance and graffiti as a way of empowering teens.

Thursday night's breakdance battle attracted some of North America's best young talent to the dance floor.

The mostly teenaged crowd went crazy as the 19-and-under competitors twisted, contorted and spun to the beat.

Caerina Abrenica

18-year-old Caerina Abrenica started breakdancing in high school. She says dancing helped her get through some tough times. (CBC News)

For participants like 18-year-old Caerina Abrenica, dancing has become a way of life.

​"I started breakdancing in high school," she says. "It was kind of a hard time to get through, so I feel like once I started dancing it really gave me a different personality in a way, in a good way because it really helped me get through things."

Check out Caerina's moves and some of the other competitors at Thursday's battle in the video above.

The Unity Festival wraps Saturday with a free outdoor concert in Toronto's Yonge-Dundas Square featuring American rap star Biz Markie and Canada's Maestro Fresh Wes.


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FILM REVIEW: Scarlett Johansson's Lucy is missing something

CBC's film critic calls Luc Besson's new action flick ridiculous and ridiculously ambitious

CBC News Posted: Jul 24, 2014 9:21 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 24, 2014 9:21 PM ET

Lucy​, starring Scarlett Johansson and Morgan Freeman, is the latest action-thriller from The Fifth Element director Luc Besson. He's the director behind some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in movie history. 

So, expectations are high when you pair Besson with the butt-kicking Scarlett ​Johansson (The Avengers, Iron Man and Captain America).

In Lucy, Johansson plays a woman who, after getting mixed up with some Taiwanese bad guys, is accidentally transformed into a hyper intelligent warrior.

But according to CBC film critic Eli Glasner, the film itself is none too smart.

Glasner says Besson leaves out Lucy's humanness, so Johansson's heroine comes across as little more than a robotic blonde in a dress.

Lucy, which also stars Morgan Freeman, is in theatres now.

Watch Eli Glasner's full review in the above video.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Robert Downey Jr. film The Judge to open 2014 TIFF

Robert Downey Jr. and Robert Duvall in The Judge

The Judge, starring Robert Downey Jr., Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Vincent D'Onofrio, Jeremy Strong, Dax Shepard and Billy Bob Thornton will have its world premier as the opening film at 2014 TIFF. (TIFF)

The Judge, starring Robert Downey Jr., Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Billy Bob Thornton, will open the 39th Toronto International Festival.

Organizers announced the selection Friday morning, three days after they revealed the first batch of films, including the closing night selection, Alan Rickman's A Little Chaos​.

It's not clear what caused the delay, but it is unusual that a previously announced gala film would then be revealed as the opener.

TIFF's director and CEO Piers Handling said he is thrilled to have David Dobkin's The Judge kick off the event:

"Dobkin has delivered a moving, textured story about family, duty and the way we remember our past. We couldn't have asked for a better start."

The family drama stars Robert Downey Jr. as a big city lawyer who returns to his childhood home where his estranged father (Duvall), the town's judge, is suspected of murder. 

Other stars with films in this year's festival include Jennifer Aniston, Andrew Garfield, Kevin Costner, Octavia Spencer, Denzel Washington, Anthony Michael Hall, Steve Carell, Tina Fey, Vanessa Redgrave, Channing Tatum, Mark Ruffalo, Jason Bateman, Julianne Moore and Benedict Cumberbatch.

The 2014 Toronto International Film Festival runs Sept. 4 to 14.


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Matthew Santoro brings his YouTube fame to Just For Laughs

YouTube has become the biggest comedy club in the world – just ask YouTube superstar, Canadian Matthew Santoro.

With more than 2-million subscribers to his comedy channel – featuring such videos as 10 Apocalyptic Events That Could End the World and 50 AMAZING Facts to Blow Your Mind – Santoro can boast to being one of YouTube's biggest stars.

It's for that reason that Santoro, and other big YouTube comedians, have been invited to a special comedy project on the sidelines of Montreal's Just for Laughs comedy festival.

David Brown

Google Canada's David Brown says the project is about forming mutually beneficial partnerships between traditional and digital comedians. (CBC News)

For the first time ever, YouTube, in partnership with Just for Laughs, has set up a special pop up lab to bring YouTube stars and traditional comedians together to create new video content.

Some of the results will be showcased in a special digital comedy event Saturday night at Just For Laughs.

Google Canada's David Brown says it's about forming mutually beneficial relationships.

"When Matthew Santoro, for instance, uploads a video and it goes out to the some 2 million people that are subscribed to his channel, that is a great opportunity for both himself as well as some of the traditional comics to take advantage of." 

Santoro, it seems, has enough fortune to spread around. In an interview with CBC News he revealed that he makes more money posting one video a week than he did as a full-time accountant.

In the above video, he and comedian Sabrina Jalees reveal how much money YouTube stars can make.

Deana Sumanac will have the whole story Saturday on The National.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

Priscilla Presley helps kick off Canada's biggest Elvis Festival

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 25 Juli 2014 | 22.19

Priscilla Presley has made a trip to Ontario this week, to take part in the annual Collingwood Elvis Festival.

This year marks the event's 20th anniversary. It's also the first time that Priscilla – once married the King of Rock and Roll — will participate.

"I don't even know what to expect I really don't so even though people tell me 'you're not going to believe it' I'm not, I'm sure I'm not, but I'm really excited about going," she told CBC News in an interview.

It is the world's biggest tribute festival to Elvis.

This year the fest also comes with an exhibit of photographs from Priscilla Presley and Christopher Ameruoso — promoting their new book, Shades of Elvis

Click on the video above to see a full report from the CBC's Nil Koksal.


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FILM REVIEW: Scarlett Johansson's Lucy is missing something

CBC's film critic calls Luc Besson's new action flick ridiculous and ridiculously ambitious

CBC News Posted: Jul 24, 2014 9:21 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 24, 2014 9:21 PM ET

Lucy​, starring Scarlett Johansson and Morgan Freeman, is the latest action-thriller from The Fifth Element director Luc Besson. He's the director behind some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in movie history. 

So, expectations are high when you pair Besson with the butt-kicking Scarlett ​Johansson (The Avengers, Iron Man and Captain America).

In Lucy, Johansson plays a woman who, after getting mixed up with some Taiwanese bad guys, is accidentally transformed into a hyper intelligent warrior.

But according to CBC film critic Eli Glasner, the film itself is none too smart.

Glasner says Besson leaves out Lucy's humanness, so Johansson's heroine comes across as little more than a robotic blonde in a dress.

Lucy, which also stars Morgan Freeman, is in theatres now.

Watch Eli Glasner's full review in the above video.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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CBC is luring funny Canadians with $500K TV show prize

The CBC is searching for the next great Canadian comedic talent — with the hefty incentive of a $500,000 half-hour TV special.

CineCoup Media and Just for Laughs Television are joining forces with the CBC to launch what they call a "digital comedy accelerator."

Starting in August, aspiring creators can submit a two-minute video that shows their comedic chops to CBC ComedyCoup.

Teams will then have 10 weeks to use social media and digital platforms to build a fan following while participating in weekly challenges.

'CBC ComedyCoup is a launch pad for the funniest talent Canada has to offer, no matter where they live.'- J. Joly, founder, CineCoup Media 

Then, the teams will be narrowed down to a top 10 that will get a chance to pitch their final presentations to a jury.

The winners will get to produce a $500,000 half-hour TV special that will air on CBC Television during the 2015 prime-time schedule.

The accelerator aims to provide unknown comedy creators with a crucial "foot in the door" and a "platform to hone their skills and discover new audiences," said a press release.

CineCoup Media uses a similar model to help independent creators develop and market their original film and TV projects.

"Our studio model is about reducing barriers to entry, doing away with gatekeepers and letting the audience in early to support the content they want to see get made," said founder J. Joly.

"CBC ComedyCoup is a launch pad for the funniest talent Canada has to offer, no matter where they live. We put fans at the centre and we strive to be as transparent and democratic as possible."


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Hemlock Grove's Famke Janssen on loving villainous moms

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 24 Juli 2014 | 22.20

Famke Janssen has been a Bond girl, and Wolverine's love interest, Dr. Jean Grey in X-Men.

But in the Netflix original series Hemlock Grove, the actress has really found something to sink her teeth into.

The series, shot in and around Toronto, is based on the popular vampire/werewolf novel of the same name by Brian McGreevy. It's executive produced by gore master Eli Roth (Hostel).

In the fictional town of Hemlock Grove, everyone has secrets, but no one more than Janssen's character Olivia Godfrey. 

The matriarch of a wealthy family, Godfrey is an ageless beauty for a reason: she's a upir, a particularly powerful vampire of Eastern European origin.

While the character is essentially a villain, her devotion to her son Roman is unquestionable – a theme explored in other TV characters, like Cersei Lannister on Game of Thrones (played by Lena Headey), or Vera Farmiga's Norma Bates in The Bates Motel.

In an interview with CBC Arts reporter Deana Sumanac, Janssen says the maternal instinct gives the audience a reason to care for these characters – even if they dislike them at the same time.

"I think at the core of most women who are mothers is this urge to, no matter what it takes, you protect your child. I mean, that's sort of a given and it's what everybody can relate to."

Janssen says roles like these show why television – not film – offers some of the juiciest roles for actresses these days.

"My favourite time in film was the 1920s, 1930s," says Janssen of the roles available to women in movies. 

"Since then, it just started to go down and down and down, to the nineties and two-thousands, until it just really stopped. So I think it's fantastic that there are more and more great female parts that we can turn to on places like Netflix."

Watch Deana Sumanac's interview with Famke Janssen in the above video.

Hemlock Grove Season 2 is now available on Netflix.


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Is the National Gallery's flagship summer exhibit a bust?

What was meant to be the National Gallery of Canada's summer blockbuster exhibition, featuring the works of 19th century artist Gustave Doré, is struggling to attract visitors.

Over the past five years, summer exhibitions have attracted between 60,668 and 230,146 visitors.

The Doré exhibition is more than a third of the way through its June 12 to Sept. 14 run but has only drawn 16,777 visitors.

The director of communications for Ottawa Tourism says she doesn't think tourist numbers are to blame for the lower turnout.

"June and July have really been good from a hotel occupancy point of view, as well as from festivals and outdoor outfitters. We've been hearing good things," said Jantine Van Kregten.

"There's different issues that have an impact on museum attendance. It depends on their exhibits, definitely — whether it's from of-the-moment or a recognizable name, people like Renoir or Van Gogh, that's a brand that people know.

"Gustave Doré ... I think he's less well-known, but in terms of critics, art critics writing about the exhibit, they rave about it. It really is unique."

Josée-Britanie Mallet, a spokeswoman for the National Gallery, said construction nearby on Sussex Drive has detracted visitors.

She hopes more visitors will come to the gallery to learn about Doré — whose artwork includes large-scale canvases, huge Baroque sculptures, ink drawings and intricate engravings  — even if he isn't a household name.

"Until they see the artwork, they don't know who Gustave Doré is," said Mallet. 


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Neil Young, Feist, Margaret Atwood enlisted for David Suzuki tour

Award-winning scientist, environmentalist and CBC broadcaster David Suzuki is enlisting the talents of Canadians like musicians Neil Young, Feist, and Barenaked Ladies and author Margaret Atwood in a campaign and speaking tour to change Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

In what is being billed as possibly Suzuki's last national speaking tour, The Blue Dot Tour will bring a changing lineup of homegrown performers, artists and leaders to 20 Canadian communities starting this September.

The goal of the concert/speaking series —​ as expressed in this promotional video — is citizen engagement and the ultimate aim of having "the right to breathe fresh air, drink clean water and eat healthy food" added to the Charter.

Among those joining Suzuki on the tour are Blue Rodeo singer and guitarist Jim Cuddy, celebrated humanitarian Stephen Lewis and children's entertainer Raffi.

The complete roster is here:

Neil Young

Neil Young has been an outspoken critic of the federal government's role in the development of Northern Alberta oil sands. (Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)

atwood_cp_5141114

Margaret Atwood is known for addressing social, political and environmental matters in her fiction.

  • Margaret Atwood
  • Robert Batemen
  • Barenaked Ladies
  • Bruce Cockburn
  • Jim Cuddy
  • Cris Derksen
  • Feist
  • Jeremy Fisher
  • Grimes
  • Emily Haines from Metric
  • Jenn Grant
  • Greg Keelor
  • Chantal Kreviazuk
  • Shane Koyczan
  • Stephen Lewis 
  • Joe MacInnis 
  • Raine Maida 
  • Joel Plaskett 
  • Jimmy Shaw from Metric 
  • Kinnie Star 
  • Raffi 
  • Royal Wood 
  • Neil Young

Tickets range in price depending on the venue, but prices for the Nov. 9 show in Vancouver — featuring Neil Young, Feist, Shane Koyczan, Raine Maida and Raffi — start at $51.25 and go as high as $175.75, according to Ticketmaster.

A complete list of tour dates can be found on The Blue Dot website.


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Weird Al's wonderful week: 8 videos in 8 days equal Billboard glory and viral success

Mandatory Fun sells 104,000 copies in first week, videos garner more than 46 million views

CBC News Posted: Jul 24, 2014 9:49 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 24, 2014 9:49 AM ET

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'Weird Al' Yankovic is laughing all the way to the top of the charts after his new album Mandatory Fun​ sells 104,000 copies in its first week, making him No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard charts and No. 3 in Canada.

That's a personal best for the Grammy-winning parodist, who's been making comedy albums for more than 30 years.

His renewed relevance was no doubt boosted by his clever "8 videos in 8 days"​ campaign which released daily Vevo and YouTube videos parodying top hits like Happy and Royals.  The collection garnered huge media attention and racked up more than 46 million views online. 

Viewers have clicked on Yankovic's Word Crimes video – a grammatically correct send-up of Robin Thicke's Blurred Lines – more than 10 million times alone.

'Weird Al' Yankovic is the biggest-selling comedy recording artist in history with over 12 million albums sold.


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No pictures, please: singer Adele's toddler son gets five-figure sum in settlement

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 23 Juli 2014 | 22.19

Photo agency pays damages to singer's son for capturing private family moments

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 23, 2014 8:22 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 23, 2014 9:26 AM ET

British singer Adele's toddler son has won a five-figure sum in damages after paparazzi photographed private family moments.

Adele's lawyer Jenny Afia said Wednesday that the Grammy-winning performer was adamant her son Angelo must never become "public property."

She said: "It is a matter of profound sadness that many of his milestone moments, such as his first family outing and his first trip to playgroup, were photographed and published worldwide expressly against his family's wishes."

Afia said Adele accepts her public profile, but the family never encourages routine photos that intrude on their privacy.

The damages from the settlement with photo agency Corbis Images UK will be held in a trust for Angelo, who turns two in October, and the agency agreed not to use the photos again.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Peaches Geldof died of heroin overdose, U.K. coroner says

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 23, 2014 6:40 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 23, 2014 6:41 AM ET

A British coroner has concluded that model and TV personality Peaches Geldof died from a heroin overdose.

Coroner Roger Hatch said Wednesday that Geldof had taken a fatal dose after a period of trying to come off the drug.

The 25-year-old daughter of Live Aid organizer Bob Geldof was found dead at her home south of London on April 7.

An inquest heard that Geldof was a heroin addict and had been taking the drug substitute methadone in the two and a half years before her death.

Her husband, Thomas Cohen, said Geldof had started using heroin again in February, and had hidden drugs in the loft of their home.

Inquests are held in Britain to determine the facts in sudden, violent or unexplained deaths.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Rod Stewart to open Commonwealth Games with Canadian-written song

A catchy tune with Canadian roots will help open today's 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. 

Most people probably think the song Rhythm of my Heart was written by the 69-year-old rock singer who made it popular -- Rod Stewart. But the wordsmith behind the 1990 recording is a Canadian: Toronto-based songwriter Marc Jordan.

"It's an amazing feeling when one of your songs has a life beyond," says Jordan. "It's like a child going out into the world. They say a billion and a half people are going to be watching. That's a lot of people!" 

Jordan says the song, which was written in 1983, was initially inspired by his father's collection of Maritime folk music.

Rod Stewart

Rod Stewart made Marc Jordan's song Rhythm of My Heart a hit when he recorded it for for his album Vagabond Heart. Jordan is in Glasgow to hear Stewart sing the song at the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony. (Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images)

The chorus came into his head as he was playing the piano one day.

According to Jordan, it has an anti-war sentiment because of global unrest in the 1980s. The song sat on the shelf for several years before Stewart recorded it.

Jordan is in Glasgow to watch Stewart perform the song during the Games opening ceremony, which is being broadcast by the CBC and streamed live on CBCSports.ca at 3:30 p.m. ET.

Rhythm of my Heart has been popular in Scotland since it was released, partly because Stewart has Scottish roots. Jordan, who had never visited Glasgow before, says he was asked to change a few verses and part of the melody to better reflect the host city and its streets.

"I Google-mapped it! I looked for areas and I pulled out street names. Just from Google maps, I flew over the city and I got a feel for it," said the songwriter. "I made a few changes and it all came together."

Jordan has also written for other major artists including Cher, Josh Groban, Joe Cocker and Diana Ross.

"Songwriters are in the background for sure," says Jordan, who splits his time between Toronto, Nashville and L.A. "I'm totally fine with that. It's not about me. Songwriting is something between the listener and the song so I'm happy to be in the background."
 


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No Canadians in the running for 2014 Man Booker Prize

Not a single Canadian author has made the list for Britain's prestigious 2014 Man Booker literary prize, but American authors are out in force.

U.S. writers hold four of the 13 slots on the long list announced on Wednesday, the first year the award has been open to all authors writing in English and published in the United Kingdom.

arts-ferris-584

U.S. author Joshua Ferris is one of four Americans who've made the 2014 Man Booker Prize long list. ((Nina Subin/Hachette Book Group Canada))

The change that scrapped the old rule limiting the 46-year-old prize, which carries a $85,200 US award, to novels written by citizens of Britain, Ireland and the Commonwealth, has been criticized on grounds that Americans would come to dominate it, squeezing out other talent.

But in announcing the long list, Jonathan Taylor, chairman of the Booker Prize Foundation, said that by making the change, "the Man Booker Prize is reinforcing its standing as the most important literary award in the English-speaking world".

Eleanor Catton

Canadian-born New Zealand author Eleanor Catton won last year's Man Booker Prize for her novel The Luminaries. (Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images)

The prize committee said 154 books had been entered for this year's prize, which will be further whittled down to a short list of six books to be announced on Sept. 9. The winner will be named on Oct. 14.

The books on the long list are:

Joshua Ferris (American) To Rise Again at a Decent Hour

Richard Flanagan (Australian) The Narrow Road to the Deep North

Karen Joy Fowler (American) We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves

Siri Hustvedt (American) The Blazing World

Howard Jacobson (British) J

Paul Kingsnorth (British) The Wake

David Mitchell (British) The Bone Clocks

Neel Mukherjee (British) The Lives of Others

David Nicholls (British) Us

Joseph O'Neill (Irish/American) The Dog

Richard Powers (American) Orfeo

Ali Smith (British) How to be Both

Niall Williams (Irish) History of the Rain


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Billy Joel honoured with Gershwin prize for pop music

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Juli 2014 | 22.19

The Gershwin Prize honours a living artist's lifetime achievement in music

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 22, 2014 8:24 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 22, 2014 8:24 AM ET

The Library of Congress is honouring Billy Joel with its Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.

Librarian James Billington said Tuesday the singer-songwriter, whose hits include Piano Man and Uptown Girl, will receive the prize in Washington in November.

The Gershwin Prize honours a living artist's lifetime achievement in music. Previous recipients include Paul Simon, Stevie Wonder, Sir Paul McCartney, the songwriting duo of Burt Bacharach and the late Hal David, and Carole King.

Joel is among the world's most popular recording artists. He has said his piano-driven compositions spring from personal experiences, and that he strives to write songs that capture and transcend those moments.

With a career spanning 50 years in the entertainment industry, Joel is the sixth top-selling artist of all time.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Monty Python performs last show ever at London's O2 Arena

John Cleese, Michael Palin, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle and Terry Jones took their final bows as Monty Python last night in London after 50 years of performing as the iconic comedy troupe.

The emotional finale was the last of their farewell stage shows in London's O2 Arena, and the surviving pythons said it would be their final performance together ever.

Michael Palin

Michael Palin performs the famed lumberjack song on the closing night of Monty Python Live (Mostly) at The O2 Arena on July 20, 2014 in London, England. (Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)

The men, who are all in their 70s, performed some of their best-loved material including their famous lumberjack song and the dead parrot sketch.

Surprise guests included self-professed Python fans like British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking and Canada's own Mike Myers.

On the red carpet before the show, Myers told Reuters how he was influenced by the famous funnymen:

"Python are the mack daddy of comedy. I mean if there was a periodic table of elements of comedy Python would have Pythonium...everybody who does anything, you know, are influenced by Python."

About 15,000 people watched the sold-out show from the O2 Arena, but the festivities were also simulcast to thousands of movie theatres around the world, including a cinema in Calgary.

When weather knocked out their satellite feed, the audience carried on the finale themselves singing Always Look On the Bright Side of Life.

Monty Python

Michael Palin, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, John Cleese and Terry Jones perform on the closing night of Monty Python Live (Mostly) at The O2 Arena on July 20, 2014 in London, England. (Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)


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Orange is the New Black popularity forces jail to change jump suits

A Michigan sheriff says he's trading his inmates' orange jumpsuits for black-and-white stripes, in part due to pop culture.

Saginaw County Sheriff William Federspiel tells The Saginaw News that all-orange jumpsuits are increasingly viewed as fashionable, especially because they're seen on popular TV shows such as the Netflix smash hit Orange Is the New Black.

Federspiel says "some people think it's cool to look like an inmate of the Saginaw County Jail ... wearing all orange jumpsuits out at the mall or in public." He says inmates sometimes work in public, and he doesn't want there to be any confusion.

The jailhouse fashions come relatively cheap. The sheriff says the jumpsuits, which last for about two to three years, cost $11.73 US apiece


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TIFF 2014: Films, stars at 39th annual event to be unveiled today

Updated

Details of opening-night gala revealed at 10 a.m. ET news conference, CBC.ca is streaming it live

CBC News Posted: Jul 22, 2014 8:51 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 22, 2014 10:46 AM ET

Organizers of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) will do the big reveal — including announcing the film lineup and stars expected at September's 39th event — when they address a 10 a.m. ET news conference today.

CBC.ca is streaming the news conference live from the TIFF Bell Lightbox in downtown Toronto.

TIFF, with its reputation as a key launching pad for Hollywood and international movies, attracts thousands of celebrities, filmmakers and cinephiles to the city each year.

Last year's festival attracted 432,000 visitors and an array of stars, including Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock, Benedict Cumberbatch, Julia Roberts, Hugh Jackman, Jennifer Aniston, and Scarlett Johansson to name a few.

As far as movies go, TIFF's coveted People's Choice Award is often touted as bellwether for the Academy Awards. 

Last year's winner 12 Year's a Slave went on to win three Oscars, including for best picture.

The 39th film festival will be held Sept. 4 to 14.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Maverick star James Garner dead at 86

Written By Unknown on Senin, 21 Juli 2014 | 22.19

Actor James Garner, whose whimsical style in the 1950s TV Western Maverick led to a stellar career in TV and films such as The Rockford Files and his Oscar-nominated Murphy's Romance, has died, police said. He was 86.

He was found dead of natural causes at his home in the Brentwood area of Los Angeles Saturday evening, Los Angeles police officer Alonzo Iniquez said early Sunday.

Police responded to a call around 8 p.m. PT and confirmed Garner's identity from family members, Iniquez told The Associated Press.

There was no immediate word on a more specific cause of death. Garner had suffered a stroke in May 2008, just weeks after his 80th birthday.

SAG lifetime achievement award

Although he was adept at drama and action, Garner was best known for his low-key, wisecracking style, especially with his hit TV series, Maverick and The Rockford Files.

His quick-witted avoidance of conflict provided a refreshingly new take on the American hero, contrasting with the steely heroics of John Wayne and the fast trigger of Clint Eastwood.

James Garner dead

James Garner, pictured in 1989, starred in Maverick, which made its debut on Sept. 22, 1957. (Wyatt Counts/The Associated Press)

Well into his 70s, the handsome Oklahoman remained active in both TV and film. In 2002, he was Sandra Bullock's father in the film Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood. The following year, he joined the cast of 8 Simple Rules ... For Dating My Teenage Daughter, playing the grandfather on the sitcom after star John Ritter, who played the father, died during the show's second season.

When he received the Screen Actors Guild's lifetime achievement award in 2005, he quipped, "I'm not at all sure how I got here."

But in his 2011 memoir, The Garner Files, he provided some amusing and enlightening clues, including his penchant for bluntly expressed opinions and a practice for decking people who said something nasty to his face — including an obnoxious fan and an abusive stepmother. They all deserved it, Garner declared in his book.

Used legal loophole to escape Maverick gig

It was in 1957 when the ABC network, desperate to compete on ratings-rich Sunday night, scheduled Maverick against CBS's powerhouse The Ed Sullivan Show and NBC's The Steve Allen ShowMaverick soon outpolled them both.

At a time when the networks were crowded with hard-eyed, traditional Western heroes, Bret Maverick provided a fresh breath of air. With his sardonic tone and his eagerness to talk his way out of a squabble rather than pull out his six-shooter, the con-artist Westerner seemed to scoff at the genre's values.

James Garner dead

James Garner won a Screen Actor's Guild lifetime achievement award in 2005. (Reuters)

After a couple of years, Garner felt the series was losing its creative edge, and he found a legal loophole to escape his contract in 1960.

His first film after Maverick established him as a movie actor. It was The Children's Hour, William Wyler's remake of Lillian Hellman's lesbian drama that co-starred Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine.

He followed in a successful comedy with Kim Novak, Boys Night Out, and then fully established his box-office appeal with the 1963 blockbuster war drama The Great Escape and two smash comedies with Doris Day — The Thrill of It All and Move Over Darling.

Throughout his long film career, Garner demonstrated his versatility in comedies (The Art of Love, A Man Could Get KilledSkin Game), suspense (36 HoursThey Only Kill Their Masters, Marlowe), Westerns (Duel at DiabloHour of the GunSupport Your Local Gunfighter).

In the 1980s and 1990s, when most stars his age were considered over the hill, Garner's career remained strong.

He played a supporting role as a marshal in the 1994 Maverick, a big-screen return to the TV series with Mel Gibson in Garner's old title role. His only Oscar nomination came for the 1985 Murphy's Romance, a comedy about a small-town love relationship in which he co-starred with Sally Field.

His favourite film, though, was the cynical 1964 war drama The Americanization of Emily, which co-starred Julie Andrews.

'I had no lines,' he says of theatre role

Unlike most film stars, Garner made repeated returns to television. Nichols (1971-72) and Bret Maverick (1981-82) were short-lived, but The Rockford Files (1974-80) proved a solid hit, bringing him an Emmy.

Among his notable TV movies: Barbarians at the Gate (as tycoon F. Ross Johnson), Breathing LessonsThe PromiseMy Name Is Bill W.The Streets of Laredo and One Special Night.

'I'm not at all sure how I got here.'- Actor James Garner

He said he learned about acting while playing a non-speaking role as a Navy juror in the 1954 Broadway hit play The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, starring Henry Fonda and Lloyd Nolan.

"I had no lines, and I had trouble staying awake," Garner recalled.

After Caine Mutiny, Garner found work in Hollywood as a bit player in the Cheyenne TV series. Warner Bros. gave him a screen test and signed him to a seven-year contract starting at $200 a week.

The studio cast him in supporting roles in three minor films, followed by the important break as Marlon Brando's sidekick in Sayonara. When Charlton Heston declined a war movie, Darby's Rangers, because of a money dispute, Garner assumed the role.

Maverick, which co-starred Jack Kelly as brother Bart Maverick, made its debut on Sept. 22, 1957.

Garner was born James Scott Bumgarner (some references say Baumgarner) in Norman, Okla. His mother died when he was five, and friends and relatives cared for him and his two brothers for a time while his father was in California.

In 1957, Garner married TV actress Lois Clarke, and the union prevailed despite some stormy patches. She had a daughter Kimberly from a previous marriage, and the Garners had another daughter, Gretta Scott. In the late 1990s, the Garners built a 12,000-square-foot house on a 400-acre ranch north of Santa Barbara.

"My wife and I felt ... we'd just watch the sunset from the front porch," Garner said in 2000. "But then the phone started ringing with all these wonderful offers, and we decided, 'Heck, let's stay in the business for a while."'


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Crowdfunding: Why easy money doesn't always add up to a hit

Crowdfunding has been heralded as a game changer for the movie industry – a saviour for filmmakers who don't want to compromise their art. 

Instead of going to Hollywood studios for backing, and giving up creative control of their project, more directors are getting funding directly from their fans by using websites such as Kickstarter.  

But as some prominent crowd-funded flicks finally hit the big screen, it's time for a reality check to see what happens when the usual production process is subverted.

Filmmaker Zach Braff raised over $3 million to make his long awaited sophomore movie Wish I Was Here.

Zach Braff

Zach Braff, wrote, directed, produced and stars in Wish I Was Here. The movie hit Canadian theatres this weekend. (CBC )

On a recent promotional tour, he told CBC News "this movie would not exist in any way I would be proud of if it was not made this way. The financiers who wanted to make it were trying to dictate a different cast, they were trying to dictate script changes, they wanted to not shoot in LA where the film takes place. Most importantly, they would not give me, the filmmaker, final cut of the film."

So, Braff made his movie his way.

But as Wish I Was Here is released this weekend, the critical response has been underwhelming.  

Asking for their money back

A reviewer in the Miami Herald wrote: "If I were one of the generous and optimistic contributors to Zach Braff's Kickstarter campaign to fund Wish I Was Here, I'd ask for my money back. All of it."

At the same time, Spike Lee's Kickstarter-funded film Da Sweet Blood of Jesus raised over $1 million and is now doing the festival circuit before getting released into cinemas. Early reviews, such as the influential industry publication Variety, have called it "oddly bloodless." 

Then there's Veronica Mars.  The feature film project, based on the cult TV show, broke records on Kickstarter last year, raising $5.7 million. But when it was released in March, the response wasn't so enthusiastic. The film only earned slightly more than half its budget at the box office.

Martin Katz

Canadian film producer Martin Katz warns that crowdfunding films has its downside. (CBC News)

Canadian producer Martin Katz warns that crowd funding films has its downside.

"If everyone who wants to see your movie is part of the pool of people who gave you money online and you were able to raise $1 million or $2 million, that's a fantastic story. But if those are the only people who are interested in your movie, that's a big disaster."  

Bypassing the usual gatekeepers

Katz, who has produced several of David Cronenberg's films including the latest Maps to the Stars, says "for passionate filmmakers the idea of being able to make your movie and deliver it directly to your fans without the interference of producers or distributors or sales agents is a great romantic notion. It gives you absolute creative authority and freedom. The challenge is that all of those intermediaries in our business, it's their job to figure out what a largish audience is looking for."

In other words, the movie business has evolved for a reason as a collaborative art form.  If writers and directors bypass the usual gatekeepers, they may find creative satisfaction, but at the cost of winning a larger audience for their movie, something that they may have also dreamed of.

Then again, if they got their movie made at all, thanks to their fans, in this day and age that's an accomplishment worth celebrating.


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Philip Seymour Hoffman didn't want children to be 'trust fund' kids says court filing

Late actor rejected his accountant's suggestion he put aside money for Willa, Tallulah and Cooper

The Associated Press Posted: Jul 21, 2014 8:09 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 21, 2014 8:09 AM ET

Court documents show late actor Philip Seymour Hoffman rejected his accountant's suggestion he set aside money for his three children because he didn't want them to be "trust fund" kids.

The New York Post says the children's court-appointed lawyer recently interviewed the actor's accountant, David Friedman.

In a July 18 filing in Manhattan Surrogate Court, Friedman recalled conversations with Hoffman where the topic of a trust for his children was raised. He said Hoffman wanted his estimated $35 million fortune to go his longtime partner and the children's mother, Mimi O'Donnell.

According to the filing, Friedman said Hoffman treated O'Donnell "in the same manner as if she were a spouse."

The court-appointed attorney says the actor's will should be approved by the court because there isn't anything suspicious about it.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Casey Kasem's remains sent to Montreal

The head of a Washington state funeral home that had initial responsibility for radio personality Casey Kasem says he personally made sure his remains were put on a flight to Montreal last Monday.

​Corey Gaffney, the president of Gaffney Funeral Home of Tacoma, says he confirmed the remains arrived in Montreal and media reports suggesting they have disappeared are not true.

Some U.S. media outlets quoted Kasem's daughter Kerri as saying her father's remains were missing.

Family battles over radio star's welfare

In the months before his death June 15, Kasem's daughter has been embroiled in a battle with his wife of the past 34 years, Jean Kasem, over the welfare of the legendary radio star.

A death certificate filed in a Washington State court July 15 listed Montreal funeral home Urgel Bourgie as the place of disposition, and July 14 as the date of disposition.

The Montreal funeral home told the Canadian Press on Saturday it had no record of Kasem's remains as being at the facility or that they were supposed to arrive.

Phil Fredette, head of the Funeral Service Association of Canada, said in an email that funeral homes don't generally release such information "due to privacy and the Privacy Act in Canada."

There was no immediate explanation for why Kasem's remains would have gone to Montreal. Gaffney said he couldn't comment on why Kasem's wife picked Montreal.

"What we did was made sure that Casey got to the airport, we released custody of Casey to the airline," Gaffney said in an interview Saturday night.

"The airline signed for that and acknowledged that and then at that point we returned to our office, tracked his flight to Montreal, confirmed that he had arrived, reported that to Mrs. Kasem."

"When he landed in Montreal, I ceased being the funeral director in charge."

Missing body reports draw international attention

Teruyuki Olsen, a lawyer for Kasem's wife, refused to comment Friday or provide any information about what happened to Kasem's body.

Kasem, the radio host of "American Top 40" was 82 when he died last month.

The story has created an international stir with mainstream and entertainment media outlets as far away as the United Kingdom running stories on the latest developments.

"Location of Casey Kasem's Body Suddenly Unknown," said the headline on Rolling Stone's website.

"Casey Kasem body missing," said TMZ.


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Crowdfunding: Why easy money doesn't always add up to a hit

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 20 Juli 2014 | 22.19

Crowdfunding has been heralded as a game changer for the movie industry – a saviour for filmmakers who don't want to compromise their art. 

Instead of going to Hollywood studios for backing, and giving up creative control of their project, more directors are getting funding directly from their fans by using websites such as Kickstarter.  

But as some prominent crowd-funded flicks finally hit the big screen, it's time for a reality check to see what happens when the usual production process is subverted.

Filmmaker Zach Braff raised over $3 million to make his long awaited sophomore movie Wish I Was Here.

Zach Braff

Zach Braff, wrote, directed, produced and stars in Wish I Was Here. The movie hit Canadian theatres this weekend. (CBC )

On a recent promotional tour, he told CBC News "this movie would not exist in any way I would be proud of if it was not made this way. The financiers who wanted to make it were trying to dictate a different cast, they were trying to dictate script changes, they wanted to not shoot in LA where the film takes place. Most importantly, they would not give me, the filmmaker, final cut of the film."

So, Braff made his movie his way.

But as Wish I Was Here is released this weekend, the critical response has been underwhelming.  

Asking for their money back

A reviewer in the Miami Herald wrote: "If I were one of the generous and optimistic contributors to Zach Braff's Kickstarter campaign to fund Wish I Was Here, I'd ask for my money back. All of it."

At the same time, Spike Lee's Kickstarter-funded film Da Sweet Blood of Jesus raised over $1 million and is now doing the festival circuit before getting released into cinemas. Early reviews, such as the influential industry publication Variety, have called it "oddly bloodless." 

Then there's Veronica Mars.  The feature film project, based on the cult TV show, broke records on Kickstarter last year, raising $5.7 million. But when it was released in March, the response wasn't so enthusiastic. The film only earned slightly more than half its budget at the box office.

Martin Katz

Canadian film producer Martin Katz warns that crowdfunding films has its downside. (CBC News)

Canadian producer Martin Katz warns that crowd funding films has its downside.

"If everyone who wants to see your movie is part of the pool of people who gave you money online and you were able to raise $1 million or $2 million, that's a fantastic story. But if those are the only people who are interested in your movie, that's a big disaster."  

Bypassing the usual gatekeepers

Katz, who has produced several of David Cronenberg's films including the latest Maps to the Stars, says "for passionate filmmakers the idea of being able to make your movie and deliver it directly to your fans without the interference of producers or distributors or sales agents is a great romantic notion. It gives you absolute creative authority and freedom. The challenge is that all of those intermediaries in our business, it's their job to figure out what a largish audience is looking for."

In other words, the movie business has evolved for a reason as a collaborative art form.  If writers and directors bypass the usual gatekeepers, they may find creative satisfaction, but at the cost of winning a larger audience for their movie, something that they may have also dreamed of.

Then again, if they got their movie made at all, thanks to their fans, in this day and age that's an accomplishment worth celebrating.


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

Maverick star James Garner dead at 86

Actor James Garner, whose whimsical style in the 1950s TV Western Maverick led to a stellar career in TV and films such as The Rockford Files and his Oscar-nominated Murphy's Romance, has died, police said. He was 86.

He was found dead of natural causes at his home in the Brentwood area of Los Angeles Saturday evening, Los Angeles police officer Alonzo Iniquez said early Sunday.

Police responded to a call around 8 p.m. PT and confirmed Garner's identity from family members, Iniquez told The Associated Press.

There was no immediate word on a more specific cause of death. Garner had suffered a stroke in May 2008, just weeks after his 80th birthday.

SAG lifetime achievement award

Although he was adept at drama and action, Garner was best known for his low-key, wisecracking style, especially with his hit TV series, Maverick and The Rockford Files.

His quick-witted avoidance of conflict provided a refreshingly new take on the American hero, contrasting with the steely heroics of John Wayne and the fast trigger of Clint Eastwood.

James Garner dead

James Garner, pictured in 1989, starred in Maverick, which made its debut on Sept. 22, 1957. (Wyatt Counts/The Associated Press)

Well into his 70s, the handsome Oklahoman remained active in both TV and film. In 2002, he was Sandra Bullock's father in the film Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood. The following year, he joined the cast of 8 Simple Rules ... For Dating My Teenage Daughter, playing the grandfather on the sitcom after star John Ritter, who played the father, died during the show's second season.

When he received the Screen Actors Guild's lifetime achievement award in 2005, he quipped, "I'm not at all sure how I got here."

But in his 2011 memoir, The Garner Files, he provided some amusing and enlightening clues, including his penchant for bluntly expressed opinions and a practice for decking people who said something nasty to his face — including an obnoxious fan and an abusive stepmother. They all deserved it, Garner declared in his book.

Used legal loophole to escape Maverick gig

It was in 1957 when the ABC network, desperate to compete on ratings-rich Sunday night, scheduled Maverick against CBS's powerhouse The Ed Sullivan Show and NBC's The Steve Allen ShowMaverick soon outpolled them both.

At a time when the networks were crowded with hard-eyed, traditional Western heroes, Bret Maverick provided a fresh breath of air. With his sardonic tone and his eagerness to talk his way out of a squabble rather than pull out his six-shooter, the con-artist Westerner seemed to scoff at the genre's values.

James Garner dead

James Garner won a Screen Actor's Guild lifetime achievement award in 2005. (Reuters)

After a couple of years, Garner felt the series was losing its creative edge, and he found a legal loophole to escape his contract in 1960.

His first film after Maverick established him as a movie actor. It was The Children's Hour, William Wyler's remake of Lillian Hellman's lesbian drama that co-starred Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine.

He followed in a successful comedy with Kim Novak, Boys Night Out, and then fully established his box-office appeal with the 1963 blockbuster war drama The Great Escape and two smash comedies with Doris Day — The Thrill of It All and Move Over Darling.

Throughout his long film career, Garner demonstrated his versatility in comedies (The Art of Love, A Man Could Get KilledSkin Game), suspense (36 HoursThey Only Kill Their Masters, Marlowe), Westerns (Duel at DiabloHour of the GunSupport Your Local Gunfighter).

In the 1980s and 1990s, when most stars his age were considered over the hill, Garner's career remained strong.

He played a supporting role as a marshal in the 1994 Maverick, a big-screen return to the TV series with Mel Gibson in Garner's old title role. His only Oscar nomination came for the 1985 Murphy's Romance, a comedy about a small-town love relationship in which he co-starred with Sally Field.

His favourite film, though, was the cynical 1964 war drama The Americanization of Emily, which co-starred Julie Andrews.

'I had no lines,' he says of theatre role

Unlike most film stars, Garner made repeated returns to television. Nichols (1971-72) and Bret Maverick (1981-82) were short-lived, but The Rockford Files (1974-80) proved a solid hit, bringing him an Emmy.

Among his notable TV movies: Barbarians at the Gate (as tycoon F. Ross Johnson), Breathing LessonsThe PromiseMy Name Is Bill W.The Streets of Laredo and One Special Night.

'I'm not at all sure how I got here.'- Actor James Garner

He said he learned about acting while playing a non-speaking role as a Navy juror in the 1954 Broadway hit play The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, starring Henry Fonda and Lloyd Nolan.

"I had no lines, and I had trouble staying awake," Garner recalled.

After Caine Mutiny, Garner found work in Hollywood as a bit player in the Cheyenne TV series. Warner Bros. gave him a screen test and signed him to a seven-year contract starting at $200 a week.

The studio cast him in supporting roles in three minor films, followed by the important break as Marlon Brando's sidekick in Sayonara. When Charlton Heston declined a war movie, Darby's Rangers, because of a money dispute, Garner assumed the role.

Maverick, which co-starred Jack Kelly as brother Bart Maverick, made its debut on Sept. 22, 1957.

Garner was born James Scott Bumgarner (some references say Baumgarner) in Norman, Okla. His mother died when he was five, and friends and relatives cared for him and his two brothers for a time while his father was in California.

In 1957, Garner married TV actress Lois Clarke, and the union prevailed despite some stormy patches. She had a daughter Kimberly from a previous marriage, and the Garners had another daughter, Gretta Scott. In the late 1990s, the Garners built a 12,000-square-foot house on a 400-acre ranch north of Santa Barbara.

"My wife and I felt ... we'd just watch the sunset from the front porch," Garner said in 2000. "But then the phone started ringing with all these wonderful offers, and we decided, 'Heck, let's stay in the business for a while."'


22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More
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