New BURLESQUE Belts Out Clip and Trailers!

Welcome to the magical world that is BURLESQUE! Here’s a new clip of Christina Aguilera belting out “Something’s Gotta Hold on Me.” Everyone get up and start dancin’!

Wow! Girl has some pipes…

“What happened to all the great dancers in LA?….They’re all dancing with the stars.” BAhahahaha!! Are Tucci and Cher just acting gods or what? Oscar nods…yes? no? maybe? Cher? Tucci? or even Aguilera? or just good Thanksgiving musical fun?

Enough with the Oscar talk. It’s only August for petesake. Just for grins, I threw in the international trailer.

Directed by Steve Antin and from a script by Antin, Susannah Grant (THE SOLOIST), and Keith Merryman, BURLESQUE centers on Ali, an ambitious small-town girl with a big-town voice (Aguilera) who finds love, family and success in a neo-burlesque club. Ali meets Marcus, a charming, successful businessman who offers to buy Tess (Cher) out of the burlesque club and vies for Ali’s heart.

Sony Pictures and Screen Gems, BURLESQUE will be in theaters on November 24, 2010. You can find BURLESQUE on Facebook or visit the official site here.

A Sneak-Peek At Cher & Aguilera In BURLESQUE

Susan Wloszczyna of USA Today has the first photos from Sony/Screen Gems upcoming BURLESQUE due in theaters November 24, 2010. The musical stars Cher, in her first major role in over a decade, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane,Cam Gigandet, Julianne Hough, Peter Gallagher, Alan Cumming with Kristen Bell and Stanley Tucci. The thought of seeing Cher back on the big screen after all these years makes me giddy. And together with Stanley Tucci makes me downright delirious!

Directed by Steve Antin and from a script by Antin, Susannah Grant (THE SOLOIST), and Keith Merryman, BURLESQUE centers on Ali, an ambitious small-town girl with a big-town voice (Aguilera) who finds love, family and success in a neo-burlesque club. Ali meets Marcus, a charming, successful businessman who offers to buy Tess (Cher) out of the burlesque club and vies for Ali’s heart.

Read Susan Wloszczyna’s interview with BURLESQUE’s director Steven Antin here. You can find BURLESQUE on Facebook or visit the official site here.

All photos by Stephen Vaughan, Screen Gems

Dominic Cooper Joins CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER Cast as Howard Stark

More casting news on CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER

Press Release from Marvel:

Get ready for a Stark revelation!

Marvel Studios has announced that Dominic Cooper has been cast to star as Howard Stark in the studio’s highly anticipated movie “Captain America: The First Avenger” opposite Chris Evans, Tommy Lee Jones, Hugo Weaving, Hayley Atwell, Sebastian Stan and Stanley Tucci. In the film, Cooper will portray the younger version of Howard Stark, the character which John Slattery portrayed in “Iron Man 2.” Joe Johnston will direct the film penned by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely.

Marvel Studios’ Kevin Feige will produce “Captain America: The First Avenger.” Alan Fine, Stan Lee, David Maisel, Nigel Gostelow and Louis D’Esposito will executive produce. The film will be released in the U.S. on July 22, 2011 and distributed by Paramount Pictures.

“Captain America: The First Avenger” will focus on the early days of the Marvel Universe when Steve Rogers volunteers to participate in an experimental program that turns him into the Super Soldier known as Captain America.

Cooper will soon be seen in Stephen Frears’ “Tamara Drewe” and Lee Tamahori’s “The Devil’s Double.” He was most recently seen in the Oscar® nominated “An Education” as well as “The Duchess.” Cooper is also well known for his roles as Sky in the movie musical “Mamma Mia!” and Dakin in both the stage and screen adaptations of “The History Boys.”

In addition to “Captain America: The First Avenger,” Marvel Studios most recently released the highly anticipated sequel, “Iron Man 2,” starring Robert Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow on May 7, 2010, and will release a slate of films based on the Marvel characters including “Thor” on May 6, 2011 and “Marvel Studios’ The Avengers” on May 4, 2012.

Source: Marvel

Stanley Tucci Cast as Dr. Eskine in CAPTAIN AMERICA


Marvel has announced another big bit of casting news, this time adding another familiar face to the lineup for CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER. Stanley Tucci (THE LOVELY BONES, JULIE & JULIA) has been selected to play the role of Dr. Erskine, the man responsible for the top secret serum that turned the average soldier Steve Rogers into the super soldier known as Captain America, a hero who would eventually lead The Avengers. Tucci joins a cast already including Chris Evans, Sebastian Stan, Hugo Weaving, and Hayley Atwell. CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER is set to open in theaters nationwide on July 22, 2011.

Source: Marvel

Review: THE LOVELY BONES

Deep inside every piece of rock, inside every slab of wood, lies a masterpiece waiting to be whittled out and uncovered.  Sometimes, more often than many realize, a film maker doesn’t quite know when they have either cut off too much or not chiseled away at that piece of rock until their work has been polished to perfection.  Such is the case for Peter Jackson and THE LOVELY BONES, an incredible and moving story of a family’s loss and the aftermath that is mired by tedious and lackluster moments of unnecessary computer imagery.

At the center of THE LOVELY BONES is the Salmon family, father Jack, played by Mark Wahlberg; mother Abigail, played by Rachel Weisz; two daughters, Lindsey, played by Rose McIver, and Susie, played by Saoirse Ronan; and a son, Buckley, played by Christian Thomas Ashdale.  Susan Sarandon steps in once in awhile as Grandmother Lynn, as well.

The gist of the story comes when Susie, fourteen years old and curious of the world, is viciously murdered.  Her spirit moves on to the afterlife, made up of vibrant fields and fantastical imagery.  But her afterlife is not peaceful, as her killer, played by Stanley Tucci, goes about his life, biding his time until his thirst for murder rears its ugly head again.  Susie seeks vengeance, and her family, who is having a difficult time of their own coping with the loss, seeks justice.

It is unfortunate that Alice Sebold’s original novel was so full of Susie’s viewpoint, that the heaven laid out in the novel was so detailed and meticulous.  Having that much weight on this aspect throughout the novel meant this couldn’t have been excised from the film, and that would have made this film head and shoulders above what it is.  Susie’s aferlife in THE LOVELY BONES is not weighty, it’s not powerful or engaging, and it sure isn’t imperative to what is going on in the rest of the story.  It looks beautiful, don’t get me wrong, and the creativeness of it all almost outweighs how poorly executed it is.  Almost.  This is Weta Digital we are talking about, and the people there have done far better work than this.

Fortunately for us, but unfortunately for the fantastical moments of the film, the cutting back to the real world and the real, emotional struggle Susie’s family is going through makes those moments feel even more afterthought than afterlife.  In fact, much of the real world, much of the dichotomy between the family coping and the neighbor just down the street who may or may not be the killer is incredibly engaging.  There are moments of sheer power coming from the actors and the situations playing out.  Really the most powerful scenes are the one here and there where Susie’s presence has a physical effect on our world, as when Wahlberg’s Jack sets a candle in front of a window, and the reflection of the flame begins dancing about while the flame itself sits perfectly still.  It’s a minute scene, but the small bit of special effects used within it are far more moving than seeing giant ships in giant glass bottles being smashed on rocks.

The notable performances in THE LOVELY BONES don’t hurt the family drama half of the film, either, with Weisz, Sarandon, and the children doing their job satisfactorily.  Michael Imperioli shows up here and there as the lead investigator on Susie’s murder, and he also gives a slightly more than adequate performance.  Much has been touted about the work Tucci does here.  He is, to note, better than everyone else in the film.  He makes you smirk and puts you slightly at ease even in the scenes where you know he is about to do something horrendous.  His performance here is the best in this film, but it’s far from the best of the year.  Saoirse Ronan gives her performance her all.  Unfortunately, she just doesn’t have the talent just yet to convince us she is actually seeing all of these exquisite images.  Most of her scenes, I’m sure, were shot on a green screen  sound stage, and it’s regrettable that that is exactly what her performance feels like.

Someone else who just doesn’t seem to fit in here is Wahlberg, who is fine as an actor in certain roles.  However, he just doesn’t have what it takes to cut it in a drama such as this.  Much of his delivery is given with the same resonant pitch, as if this multi-dimensional character just wanted to keep it simple at one.  A lot was said in the early development stages of THE LOVELY BONES about Ryan Gosling and why he stepped away from this role.  Gosling has the capabilities to pull off this role of a father obsessed with his daughter’s murder, a man who pushes everyone else in his family aside to dwell on the one who was lost.  You’ll find it difficult knowing he came this close to filling this role not to dwell on the hole he left behind here.

Peter Jackson has become, thanks to LORD OF THE RINGS and KING KONG, so ingrained in people’s minds as this director who creates fantastical worlds, it may have seemed like a step backwards to make a family drama with minimal effects.  That step backward would have made all the difference in the world for THE LOVELY BONES, a film that could have been so much more if it has just used so much less.  That piece of rock that I mentioned in the opening still has quite a bit left on it to break away before the true work of fabulous art emerges, and, aside from a few lackluster performances, that is precisely what we would have had with THE LOVELY BONES without the nuisance of afterlife.  Sometimes it’s better just to put thoughts of the afterlife in the closet and deal with the real world.  Peter Jackson should have taken this advice to heart.

Who Wants to See THE LOVELY BONES With The Movie Geeks?

It’s Peter Jackson’s return to the film world after 2005’s KING KONG, and it is hitting St. Louis on January 15th.  However, lucky for you, we have passes to give away for a showing of THE LOVELY BONES three days earlier.

Here’s all you have to do to get one of these, sweet, admit 2 passes, shoot us a comment below telling us what aspect of this movie you are most looking forward to.  Is it Jackson’s directing?  Is it the brilliant visual effects courtesy of Weta?  Is it Stanley Tucci’s performance, which, evidently, is being deemed Oscar worthy?  Let us know you opinions in that little comment section below, and we’ll be picking our favorites for the tickets Sunday night.

Remember, the screening is in the St. Louis area, so don’t enter unless you’re planning on driving in from out of town or you’re one of the lucky ones who lives in this fine city.

And, if you’re not one of the winners, be sure to check out THE LOVELY BONES, which is in limited theaters now and hits wide on January 15th.

Review: ‘Julie & Julia’

julie & julia

524 recipes.  365 days.  123 minutes.  A 3 out of 5 star movie.  Those are just some of the numbers that pertain to ‘Julie & Julia,’ Nora Ephron’s biopic/dramedy that has way of entertaining in fits and starts.

Presented in back-and-forth fashion, the film tells two true stories.  One pertains to Julia Child, played by Meryl Streep, and her husband, Paul, played by Stanley Tucci.  Paul works for the US embassy, and, as soon as the couple arrives in Paris, he and his wife take to the culture, particularly the food.  It’s the ’40s and ’50s, and Julia has yet to become the famed chef.  This half of the film centers on her working on her first book, an encyclopedia-sized book of recipes that would eventually become Mastering the Art of French Cooking.

Intercut with this is the story of Julie Powell, played by Amy Adams.  Julie is a frustrated secretary living in 2002 New York City.  She likens herself to an author, though she has not published anything, yet.  Once her husband, played by Chris Messina, introduces her to the world of online blogging, Julie decides she is going to take Julia’s book.  In one year, she plans to have created every recipse in the book.  Writing about it on the internet helps Julie find her own level of success.

Much like one of Julia Childs’ recipes, the ingredients for a first-rate film are all there.  The cast is exquisite.  Ephron’s writing, though she hasn’t had a critical hit in quite a long time, does justice to each narrative.  It moves between the two stories effortlessly, giving just enough time with one that you begin to wonder what is going on with the other.

Of course, this level of smooth transition between the two would be even greater had the same level of care in direction and the details for one story been given to the other.  The Julia Child section of the film is dynamically entertaining.  Streep embodies the character, perfecting the voice and the mannerisms of the great chef, so that you begin to forget what the real Julia Child looked like.  Ephron emerses her audience in Julia’s world, a world of fine cuisine and the imminent threat of McCarthyism.  Don’t worry, though.  The politics the film conveys are definite, but they are never overbearing or seem force-fed.  At least, not in this half of the movie.

There’s a loss of joy in the way Ephron directs the Julie Powell storyline.  Some of this is quite deliberate.  Ephron creates a bright, livelier than life feeling in the Julia Child segments, and you begin to wonder if this is her vision of what actually happened or is this all going on in Julie’s head.  By the end of the film, you begin to wonder if the Julia Child half of the film is Julie’s romanticized vision of what Julia and Paul Child’s life must have been like.  However, there are other aspects, other directional choices that just makes the audience feel like Ephron’s heart wasn’t in it to tell Julie Powell’s story the best way she knew how.  Each up and down in Julie’s path to getting through all 524 recipes comes with a forced hand, a mandatory second act of obstacles and unavoidable detours.

The men in each woman’s life are also given the same level of care the rest of their respective stories are given.  Great for Stanley Tucci.  Not so great for Chris Messina.  Tucci, who always delivers a resounding performance, is excellent here.  His character is immensely likeable, but Tucci brings the character to life, giving just enough decibels that he never overpowers Streep.  How could anyone steal a scene from Streep?  However, you almost feel as if Tucci could if given the chance, but he knows not only what his own character needs.  He knows exactly what is needed for the entirety of each scene.  Ephron gives short change care to Messina’s Eric Powell.  As Julie’s spouse and supporter in her year-long task, we aren’t really given much to work with.  We know he works in the city, and he likes to eat.  That’s about it, and Messina doesn’t seem to want to do anything that makes up stand up and take notice.  Unfortunately, we are forced to watch Messina eat, and that’s tasking at best.

The ups of Julia Child’s story and the downs of Julie Powell’s story are not 100%.  There are moments in the period segments of the film that seem to drag a bit.  The amount of time given to Julia’s sister visiting Paris and her eventual marriage was unnecessary.  Julia is working on the book with two, French women, played by Linda Emond and Helen Carey.  The screen time given to two of them considering ousting the third from the project grows redundant and unessential.

Likewise, there are moments in Julie Powell’s story that keeps it from being a total wash.  One cannot deny how talented Amy Adams is as an actress.  She never reaches out and takes hold of the part, but, for the most part, she plays the part as best as it probably could have been played.  A scene involving Julie having to kill lobsters is quite entertaining, and Ephron’s decision to have Talking Heads’ “Psycho Killer” playing on the soundtrack is inspired.  For better or for worse, the most entertaining segment of the Julie half of the film comes when she and her husband are watching Dan Aykroyd’s impression of Julia Child on an episode of SNL.  It’s a shame that this half of the film didn’t have more to offer, but you have to give Ephron credit for including this skit at all.

For all of its ups and downs, however, Ephron is capable of creating chemistry between the two actresses.  I won’t say whether Streep or Adams ever actually share any screen time.  That would be getting into spoiler territory.  However, you know that, even if they do have scenes together, they are very limited.  The chemistry comes when the actresses are in completely separate scenes, divided by 50 years or more.  This is to Ephron’s credit, but it is also to the credit of Streep and Adams.

At one point, after Julie has created Julia’s recipe for Beef Bourginon.  Her husband, clueless as he is to the skills of fine culinary, begins sprinkling salt on it.  “Is it bland?” asks Julie.  “Not now,” he replies.  Perhaps if Ephron would have sprinkled some spice into Julie’s world, this half of ‘Julie & Julia’ would not have been such a frustration on the film as a whole.  There is plenty of story in Julia Child’s life that a full feature could have been made.  In fact, you begin to wonder why no one has ever taken the task to put her life to film before.  Unfortunately, the other half of ‘Julie & Julia’ never quite lives up to it.  Much like Julie Powell working her way through the works of someone else, her half of this story seems to be deriving any level of enjoyment off of the half that follows Julia.  The entire film is left half-alive, and you cannot help but think how much more interesting ‘Julie & Julia’ had been had it only been called ‘Julia.’

Full Trailer for ‘The Lovely Bones’

lovely bones

It’s a day earlier than expected, but the full trailer for Peter Jackson’s ‘The Lovely Bones’ is available for viewing.   Paramount has debuted the trailer for the film starring Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Susan Sarandon, Stanley Tucci, and Saoirse Ronan over at Apple and on the film’s official site.

The visual style is incredible, and, judging how powerful the novel by Alice Sebold, this is going to be one emotional powerhouse come the end of the year.

‘The Lovely Bones’ is set for release on December 11th.

Early Footage for ‘The Lovely Bones’

the lovely bones

Working backwards from the end of the week to today, we know that the trailer for ‘The Lovely Bones,’ Peter Jackson’s latest film, will be attached to prints of ‘Julie & Julia’ this Friday.  Anyone heading out to scope out Meryl Streep’s latest Oscar-nominated performance will have that treat before the film starts.  This means that, likely, the trailer will be debuting online one day prior.

However, Entertainment Tonight will be featuring the trailer on their program Tuesday night.  I don’t consider this the debut, because they’ll probably be talking over the beginning and end, and won’t let the entire thing play out as it should.

To get prepared for this footage being shown, ET has this 30-second promo clip for their Tuesday night show, which features our first look at footage from the film.

Check it out:

‘The Lovely Bones’ is set for release on December 11th.

Source: YouTube