Archive: May 2009 (291-300 of 467)

May 12 2009 03:40 PM ET

Rotten Tomatoes' Best Reviewed Movies of All Time: You won't believe what's No. 1

Categories: Lists-o-rama!, Movies

15829__hard_lRanked lists of pop cultural phenomena are an exercise fraught with peril — nobody knows that better than we here at EW do, as it is half of our job. But Rotten Tomatoes boldly, bravely compiled the "50 Best Reviewed Movies of All Time" anyway. And, well, come to think of it, it’s not all that brave, since they can’t really take the blame for the way things turned out — it’s simply a mathematical averaging of the critical responses to the ranked films. Maybe that’s exactly why it’s so oddly fascinating — you can’t really argue with it as much as you can conscientiously object.

For starters: No Casablanca? (That might fall under the caveat that also prevented Jaws from making the cut — no film with fewer than 20 reviews qualified.)  Risky Business better than All the Presidents’ Men? (Maybe an apples and oranges situation, but still.) A Hard Day’s Night (pictured) better than The Wizard of Oz? Better, in fact, than any other movie ever? (Spoiler Alert!: Yes, the Beatles’ rock-and-roll romp is No. 1.)

The latter two bring up the inherent problem in such a ranking: Critics usually grade on a curve. And they should — you simply can’t judge, say, Hannah Montana The Movie the same way you’d judge The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Thus, reviews might be kinda positive for Hannah – as in: hey, this wasn’t nearly as painful as we’d expected! — while critics could spend time picking apart the nuances of pacing, writing, and acting in Button if it didn’t live up to inflated expectations. And voila! Suddenly A Hard Day’s Night far outranks the beloved Citizen Kane. Though that last one gave me a little jolt of pleasure — I’ve never totally gotten what all the fuss is about over Kane, though maybe that’s because I knew the whole sled thing before I saw it. Maybe critics did, too?

What do you think, PopWatchers? Which rankings surprise you? What movies have critics wildly misjudged — or overpraised — over the years? Is A Hard Day’s Night really the greatest movie ever?

May 12 2009 03:19 PM ET

'House' finale: Drugs are bad, mmmkay?

Housefinale_lOh, you know what, House…in the words of Dana Whitaker, bite me so hard for that. This post contains total spoilers about last night’s House season finale, so if you haven’t watched yet, well, here be dragons.

My first reaction to last night’s finale was "eeeefffffff." My second was, "How far away is this psychiatric hospital? It’s sunny and summertime at Chase and Cameron’s wedding, and apparently it’s a Tim Burton movie where House and Wilson are." In any case, last week’s sexual shenanigans were all a dream. Or a hallucination. Or a drug-induced fantasy. A mental breakdown. An…obnoxious plot contrivance the show has already done — recall the unhinged "No Reason," or the journey through House’s subconscious in last season’s finale. I guess it’s a matter of fool me three times, shame on all of us. Shame on me, obviously, for buying it when in retrospect my "this couldn’t happen!" reaction was totally on-point. But shame on the show for claiming that Cuddy’s reaction to House shouting to everyone that they’d slept together would be to run to her office and cry, and not to shout back "ugh, no we didn’t, he’s on drugs, the end." She’s the most accomplished eighth-grader ever.

The one moment I did like — begrudgingly — was the brief return of Kutner. Ostensibly, his suicide is what set House’s breakdown in motion, and seeing him join Amber in House’s ghost-o-vision helped heighten what for me is a pretty static I-See-Dead-People problem. But that didn’t make up for the emotional bankruptcy of the rest of the episode for me.

What about you, PopWatchers? What did Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital teach you last night?

May 12 2009 03:16 PM ET

Which pilot passing will hurt you the most?

Chenowithgraham_lA little piece of me died this morning when I read the Variety headline NBC passing on ‘Legally Mad.’ Not because I’m the world’s biggest Kristin Chenoweth fan, but because I wanted to see if David E. Kelley’s scripts would be even crazier when he had the word mad right there in the title. God I miss Boston Legal….But then I read further, and saw that "insiders" told the trade that Lauren Graham’s ABC comedy "is believed to be dead" after the pilot, which cast the Gilmore Girls alum as a self-help guru obsessed with her ex-boyfriend, reportedly screened to crickets. If true, this is the passing that would hurt me the most. Or at least as much as if CBS doesn’t pick up either the medical drama starring Alex O’Loughlin or the medical drama starring Jeremy Northam.

What’s your worst-case scenario? For a refresher on what the networks have cooking, click here for PopWatch’s pilot season coverage and check out Michael Ausiello’s bubble show cheat sheet. (I just realized how much I’m pulling for The CW’s Vampire Diaries to not suck.)

May 12 2009 03:10 PM ET

'Twilight Saga: New Moon' script found in trash...and returned

Categories: Movies, New Moon, Twilight

Pattinsonnewmoon_lWhat would you have done? Casey Ray, a beauty salon owner, found the scripts for two Robert Pattinson films — The Twilight Saga: New Moon and the romantic drama Memoirs, another Summit Entertainment production expected to film this summer — in a trash bin in St. Louis. (No one’s said how they ended up there. They were found outside a hotel housing actors working on the George Clooney movie Up in the Air. That cast includes Anna Kendrick, who plays Bella’s friend Jessica in the Twilight films, but her rep has insisted that the actress would not be so careless.) Though Ray considered leaking the scripts to the tabloid press, her lawyer tells the Associated Press that she didn’t really want money. So she returned them to the studio and was offered tickets to the movies’ premieres. She’ll also receive the scripts back after the films have hit theaters.

How would you have handled the find? Since I can’t even sit in someone else’s seat at a concert without getting nervous that I’ll be found out, I’m confident that I would have done the right thing as well and returned them — after I read them, of course. And took them to my editor.

More on ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’:
‘Twilight’: Robert Pattinson wants to disturb us in ‘New Moon’. Bring it.
‘Twilight’: ‘New Moon’ set footage with Pattinson and Lautner (plus Mary Hart says ‘woof’!)
‘Twilight Saga: New Moon’: First look at the Wolf Pack!
‘Twilight’: 15 New Faces in ‘New Moon’
‘Twilight’: Full ‘New Moon’ Volturi cast revealed!
‘Twilight’: Does the Michael Sheen ‘New Moon’ casting win you over (or back)?
‘Twilight’ sequel ‘New Moon’ casts Michael Sheen as Aro
‘Twilight’ sequel ‘New Moon’ casts Caius
‘Twilight’: The wolf pack is cast
‘Twilight’ poll: Dakota Fanning is Jane, who should be Alec?
‘Twilight’: Dakota Fanning will star in ‘New Moon’
‘Twilight’ star Robert Pattinson talks ‘New Moon’ at the Oscars
‘Twilight’ stars, Dakota Fanning talk ‘New Moon’
‘Twilight’: Taylor Lautner keeping Jacob role
‘Twilight’ sequel: New details on ‘New Moon’
‘Twilight’ sequel: Chris Weitz to direct ‘New Moon’
‘Twilight’ sequel: Who would you recast?
EW’s ‘Twilight’ Headquarters (featuring photo galleries, video interviews, and more)

May 12 2009 02:51 PM ET

Elizabeth Edwards: Why so much hate from the media?

Categories: Books

I have been following the whole flap over the new Elizabeth Edwards book, Resilience: Reflections on the Burdens and Gifts of Facing Life’s Adversities — you know, the one where she talks about her death of her son, her cancer, and the affair of her husband, John — and I’m stunned by the negative media reaction to it. Maureen Dowd wrote in the New York Times, "Now Saint Elizabeth has dragged [John] back into the public square for a flogging on Oprah and in Time and at bookstores near you. The book is billed as helping people ‘facing life’s adversities.’ But it’s just a gratuitous peek into their lives, and one that exposes her kids by peddling more dregs about their personal family life in a book, and exposes the ex-girlfriend, who’s now trying to raise the baby girl, a dead ringer for John Edwards, in South Orange, N.J." Then, in response to Edwards’ appearance on the Today Show yesterday (embedded below), Daily Beast editor Tina Brown wrote a piece under the headline "Elizabeth Edwards fed herself to the Vultures" that said, "If she had stuck with her health and her loss, Edwards might have held on to our sympathy. But her insistence on belittling to Oprah the dreaded ‘other woman,’ Rielle Hunter, was so embarrassingly self-righteous it almost made me feel sorry for the Democratic twinkie John." Huh?

I guess I’m not sure I understand all this venom. And I certainly don’t agree with it. Elizabeth Edward’s reasons are her own, and she’s justified to make them. Who are we to sit in judgment? When Gloria Allred and Tina Brown appeared on the Today Show this morning to discuss the whole thing, Brown said at one point that she didn’t think Elizabeth needed “to parade her lack of resolution to the cameras.” Meredith Vieira seemed visibly annoyed, saying at one point, “Why is she the one being judged when she’s the victim in all this?” I never thought I’d find Gloria Allred the voice of reason, but I sure agreed with her when she said, “I think she was giving an honest reaction that she has every right to give. She is looking at the good and the bad and the ugly, and giving weight to all of that.”

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

What do you think?

May 12 2009 01:00 PM ET

'Russell Brand in New York City: Extended & Uncensored' exclusive clip

Categories: DVD/Video

Hmmm. We were excited to present an exclusive clip from the DVD release of Russell Brand’s Comedy Central stand-up special until we realized that we couldn’t actually post most of what he says. Below, you’ll find his G-rated take on Google, which comes after he shares why fame is so important to him — "Without fame, this haircut just looks like mental illness" — and before he details his experience hosting the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards (which he refers to as a "bloodbath"). You’ll just have to buy the DVD on May 19 to watch the deleted scene of Brand, currently reprising his Forgetting Sarah Marshall role for the follow-up Get Him to the Greek, handling a drunk female heckler.

More Russell Brand:
EW Spotlight on Russell Brand: VMA Host Brings Anarchy From the U.K.
Russell Brand to star in remake of ‘Drop Dead Fred’
BBC fined for Russell Brand prank
My Booky Wook by Russell Brand makes EW’s Must List
Russell Brand tapped for ‘Arthur’ remake

May 12 2009 12:00 PM ET

Clip du Jour: 'Where the Wild Things Are' 'focus group'

Categories: Clip du Jour

I for one really, really hope fans dress up in bizarre-ass awesome costumes for the opening night of WTWTA. [Via The Daily What]

May 12 2009 11:00 AM ET

Slap Chop: Could this informercial breakout be the next Snuggie?

Just when I thought I couldn’t love this infomercial for the Slap Chop any more (look how easy it dices!!), the spokesperson (Vince Shlomi of the ShamWow! infomercials, among other things) uttered these words: "You’re going to love my nuts." (It’s at about the 37-second mark.) Is he for real?! All right, you guys watch it. I’m going to keep thinking about whether or not I can fit it in my overflowing kitchen cabinets.

May 12 2009 10:00 AM ET

Quote of the Day: 'Dinosaurs' edition

"I’m the baby! Gotta love me!" — Baby Sinclair (voice of Kevin Clash, who’s also the voice of Elmo) on Dinosaurs

May 12 2009 01:45 AM ET

Emmy Awards changes: Wait, no more Stephen Colbert vs. Barry Manilow?

Categories: Emmy Awards, Television

No longer must we live in a world where Stephen Colbert is forced to compete against Barry Manilow for a coveted Emmy Award. Today’s changes to the Emmys’ Variety, Music or Comedy Program categories, separating comedy talk shows and TV specials left me thinking: It’s about time! After all, I’ve never understood why the Television Academy lumped these three genres together in the first place. A nightly series versus a one-time deal? Come on! I’m glad the people in charge finally came around to realize the likes of Jon Stewart shouldn’t be competing against the likes of Sting.

Then again, the decision does have its drawbacks. I mean, if Colbert hadn’t "lost to the Copacabana," we would have missed out on his unforgettable reaction on live TV only minutes later (watch below!). Not to mention the fact that The Colbert Report went to town and got material out of Colbert’s friendly feud with Manilow for months.

While this adjustment may deprive us of some future comedic moments, I’m still glad it’s happening — these diverse entertainers will have a fairer shot. And you, PopWatchers? Are you pleased with the change? And what other ridiculous groupings do you recall? Try to top this one: Ellen DeGeneres versus Cirque Du Soleil.

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