Archive: June 2009 (11-20 of 438)

Jun 30 2009 06:40 PM ET

'2012': Will it be the next 'Transformers'?

As Michael Bay's critic-proof Transformers sequel, Revenge of the Fallen, zoomed past $200 million in its first week in theaters, all eyes were immediately set on what might become the next smash-and-grab, things-go-boom blockbuster. And frankly, the horizon seemed pretty bleak. That is, until we saw the trailer for Roland Emmerich's 2012.

You remember Emmerich as the middlebrow, Hollywood-by-way-of-the-Rhine auteur who brought you such ear-shattering trash spectacles as Independence Day, Godzilla, and The Day After Tomorrow. To be honest, the guy has yet to make what anyone would call a "decent movie." For starters, he doesn't have a subtle bone in his body. But quality and a light touch aren't what's called for with this task. What's required is a staggering amount of money thrown at the screen in an attempt to cause as much digitally-rendered mayhem as humanly possible. And looking at his latest disaster-porn teaser, all signs indicate mission accomplished — not to mention a huge box-office hit when the thing finally steamrolls into multiplexes in November.

For anyone hip to Emmerich's ouevre, you'll notice some very familiar ingredients here. The global panic and chaos. The presence of a star (in this case John Cusack) whose career won't suffer too much from appearing in such a transparently commercial endeavor. Beloved monuments of the world getting smashed to smithereens (St. Peter's in the Vatican, the Washington Monument). Adorable kids in peril. Stirring speeches about fighting back. A smattering of cryptic sci-fi allusions. And, of course, a bombastic, over-the-top score to goose the bloated thing past the finish line.

In other words, where do we sign up? Check out the trailer and tell us what you think.

Jun 30 2009 05:26 PM ET

Marshall Fine's open letter to Zach Galifianakis: The woes of the funny man

Zach-Galifianakis_l On his Hollywood & Fine blog, Marshall Fine wrote an open letter to The Hangover's Zach Galifianakis urging him to stay focused and not be lured into starring in scripts that Seth Rogen, Jack Black, and Steve Carell turned down. It's good advice, because Fine is right: Someone is going to want to turn him into a comedy commodity, and "Invariably, it leads the comedian to abandon his instincts — or compromise his vision — in pursuit of a massive payday. Or it leads the comic to believe that, in fact, his flatulence is vanilla-scented – and that every idea that comes to his mind or bursts from his lips is pure genius, deserving of the aforementioned buttload of cash."

Fine then runs through the actors whose careers went off-course or are threatening to. Comedy is subjective, yes, but do you agree with his analysis? A few highlights:

• He says Chevy Chase "went on to an undistinguished movie career notable for its lack of memorable films (possible exceptions: National Lampoon's Vacation and Caddyshack)." Since when are those films only possible exceptions?

• He says Dan Aykroyd never headlined a movie that didn't costar Jim Belushi that was worth the price of admission: What about Ghost Busters, Spies Like Us, Dragnet, The Great Outdoors, and My Girl?

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Jun 30 2009 05:13 PM ET

'Make It Or Break It': They'll tumbling pass your ass!

ABC Family has a crazy new gymnastics series called Make It Or Break It. On the second episode, which aired last night, Payson (the blonde) and Emily ("some indie aging Hannah Montana type," according to her hot Pizza Shack coworker, who gives me a Christian-from-Clueless vibe but less gay) thwarted a group of scary gas station hecklers merely by tumbling towards them. It's officially ABC Family's best action scene in recent history…unless you're partial to the recent sorority dodgeball showdown on Greek.

Anyone else watching Make It Or Break It? Candace Cameron Bure (TV's Deej) plays the brattiest gymnast's dad's girlfriend, and Peri Gilpin (Roz from Frasier) is another girl's mom. And Payson practices her arm flourishes — complete with "I'm so jazzed" facial expressions — while lying in bed. I do believe you may need to tune in.

Jun 30 2009 04:38 PM ET

'The Bachelorette': Which guy is right for Jillian?

Jillian-bachelorette_l After seven episodes of The Bachelorette: Vancouver Tourism Edition, it’s pretty clear our leading lady, Jillian, is an abysmal judge of character with low (and ever-plummeting) self-esteem.I mean, seriously, when you’re dating a man who spends all your time together performing his “first imaginary single” while failing to straightforwardly reassure you he actually is single, it’s a good sign that (in reality TV-speak) he is “not here for the right reasons.” And while I was psyched to see Jillian give a rose to hot and level-headed Argyle Ed — I respect a guy who values his day job over a 1-in-10 chance at televised love…sue me! — I think it’s clear she’d be better off leaving her romantic fate to a group of blog-reading strangers than to continue making decisions for herself. To that end, let’s get together and decide the woman’s future with a handy PopWatch poll! Ready, set, vote (FOR ED)! (Also: Read Kristen Baldwin’s hilarious episode recap, check out Chris Harrison’s behind-the-scenes blog, and watch the latest installment of The Doll Bachelorette, because you cannot get enough of this sick, addictive series!)

Jun 30 2009 04:20 PM ET

Vintage Michael Jackson video clips: 'Ed Sullivan Show,' rocking with James Brown and Prince, and more...

Want more video of the King of Pop? Here's a sampling of some priceless clips available online:

The Ed Sullivan Show in 1969

Fronted by an unbearably adorable and self-possessed Michael, the Jackson 5 performs "I Want You Back."

Michael Jackson sings Frank Sinatra in 1971

In a skit for a TV special, a pint-sized Jackson channels Ol' Blue Eyes and lets Diana Ross down easy.

More after the jump…

READ FULL STORY »

Jun 30 2009 03:54 PM ET

Three Michael Jackson books you've got to read

Michael-Jackson-book

If you're looking for something to read about Michael Jackson that will give you some insight into the man's talent and life, I recommend these three very different books:

1. The Michael Jackson Story, by Nelson George. First published in 1984 as a paperback quickie, The Michael Jackson Story is actually a first-rate cultural study by the journalist-critic-historian Nelson George. George draws on his deep knowledge of soul and rhythm & blues, along with lots of original reporting, to place Jackson in the history of popular music in a lively, exciting way.

2. Trapped: Michael Jackson and the Crossover Dream, by Dave Marsh. A 1985 book by the well-known rock critic that argues that Jackson's background as an abused child and his subsequent attempts to live in a safe, self-contained world of Peter Pan-like surroundings, trapped him in an artistically limiting way. Despite being critical of many of Jackson's decisions and those of the people surrounding him, Trapped also brims over with love and knowledge of Jackson's music, and offers some of the finest analyses ever about what made Jackson's hits work, and why his best music is so brilliant.

3. Moonwalk, by Michael Jackson. This 1988 autobiography was a typical bit of non-music Jackson product. Which is to say, it was marketed as a revealing tell-all but published mostly to promote his then-new album Bad, while trying assiduously to reveal as little as possible. Filled with banalities such as "The price of fame can be a heavy one" and "It hurts to be mobbed," Moonwalk ultimately cannot help but disclose more than its author intended. His chronicles of his upbringing under the brutal hand of his father Joe are far more poignant and painful than he alluded to in the TV documentary Life With Michael Jackson. And Michael's discussions of his show-biz models — what he calls "the real showmen: James Brown, Sammy Davis, Jr., Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly" — are fascinating. The book also captures Jackson's contradictions, such as when he speaks of his muscial achievements and his multi-million-dollar contracts for Pepsi-Cola commercials with equal pride. It's a rare peek into the way Jackson's mind worked.

Have you read any of these? Are there other books about Jackson you'd recommend?

Jun 30 2009 03:25 PM ET

Why are we still bananas for 'Arrested Development'?

Banana-stand_l Two recent college grads in Austin, Texas opened their very own frozen banana stand, inspired by the Bluth family. (Theirs is called Bananarchy. Cute.) Two obsessed fans made a documentary about the show (so far, no distributor, alas). And it seems like we're never more than a few days away from gossip and wishful thinking about an Arrested Development movie.

I say this as a huge fan of the show, as someone who's seen every episode multiple times and profoundly admires the series: Why is this the enduring, ever-prominent cult series of the decade? The show went off the air three years ago, and even when it aired, was an abject ratings failure. Though popular on DVD and online, it's not the most popular — heck, Planet Earth has been on Amazon's best-seller list for over two years; Family Guy and American Dad are both more popular on Hulu. And yet it's the Bluths we come back to time and again.

There are other shows that got canceled before their time, other instances of brilliance, other comedic gems. But Arrested Development is in a pop culture category all its own. What is it that keeps this show in the zeitgeist, PopWatchers?

Jun 30 2009 03:18 PM ET

Rick Astley also not dead

Rick-astley_l No one knows better than EW that this week that, as Jon Stewart said on last night's Daily Show, anyone who ever meant anything to anyone is dead. Or at least it seems that way. The inevitable effect in the Internet age? Crazy death hoaxes! The most recent: Rick Astley, who, for the record, is alive and well.

Are people always trying to start these rumors, but simply succeeding thanks to this celebrity-death-filled week? I don't know, but that makes sense: Ed McMahon, Farrah Fawcett, Michael Jackson, Billy Mays…like any truly random combination of celebrities, their juxtaposition makes it feel all that more surreal. The combination of true legend and pitchman, of beauty icon and early-TV fixture, of tragic tabloid targets (Fawcett and Jackson) and onetime punchlines (Jackson and Mays)…it all seems like a crazy celebrity Mad Lib and makes it feel like hey, if those four people can go in the same week, anything's possible. If you'd showed us, say, this week's forthcoming issue of EW two weeks ago, we'd have thought it was some sick joke. So naturally, this has all made fertile ground for, well, sick jokes.

Presumably born of people's dark musings as they watch endless hours of Fawcett/Jackson coverage — can you imagine if George Clooney died now, too? could Natalie Portman be dead? — and the rumor power of the blogosphere, the death hoaxes have been coming fast and furious this week. The first, from what I can tell, was Jeff Goldblum — whose rumored death hit while news outlets were only just reporting Jackson's shocking demise. That choice of celebrity seemed almost eerily well-planned: He's just the right level of fame (Madonna or Britney Spears at that moment would've seemed too big to be true). And because we don't follow his every move so religiously in the gossip pages, anything happening to him without much warning seemed plausible, from a movie-set accident to an unforeseen illness. For the record, we are thrilled and relieved and grateful to report that all of these talented, rumored-dead folks are still with us.

What do you think, PopWatchers? Why so many rumored deaths to go along with our devastatingly real ones this week? Have any of the rumors upset you more than the others? Will we ever figure out a way to control the Internet's growing rumor mill?

Jun 30 2009 01:59 PM ET

Chris Kattan's first post-'SNL' series: Will you watch?

Chris-Kattan_l Chris Kattan has joined the cast of ABC's new fall comedy The Middle — a solid, if hardly life-changing, family sitcom starring Patricia Heaton. The pilot is actually pretty funny: Heaton makes a great harried mom, the wonderfully deadpan Neil Flynn (of "Janitor" fame on Scrubs) plays her husband, and they nail the quirky-family vibe. Kattan will play one of Heaton's coworkers at a car dealership (here's to hoping their dealership doesn't go under like, um, all the rest of them in the United States). To me, this is exactly the right use of Kattan, or any moderately funny Saturday Night Live alum — small doses, in supporting roles that can play to their strengths.

Post-SNL roles used to be something of a joke — and enterprises like Kattan's own Night at the Roxbury have never helped the sketch comics' reputations as anything resembling actors. (But, hey, Will Ferrell was there, too, and he survived nicely, Land of the Lost notwithstanding.) These days we've got more successful SNL alums than we can handle, from Jimmy Fallon to Maya Rudolph, who's getting good reviews even in a dramatic role in Away We Go. The key is actually thinking before giving these folks a part: As far as I'm concerned, Tina Fey deserves an Emmy just for Perfect Use of Tracy Morgan. I like that guy more now that he's on 30 Rock than I ever did on SNL.

What do you think, PopWatchers? Are you excited to see Chris Kattan again? Will his casting make you want to watch The Middle more or less? Can you ever forgive him for Night at the Roxbury?

Jun 30 2009 12:00 PM ET

'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince': Will you reread it before the film's release?

Half-blood-prince_l I've read all the Harry Potter books. Once. I don't understand the people who are rushing to reread Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince before the July 15 film release. The fact that I haven't read the book since 2005 means that the movie might still have a chance of surprising me. Perhaps I'm so against "the rereading" because I hadn't read any of the series when I went to see the first film, and I ended up enjoying it more than the friends who were already hardcore fans… What's your MO when it comes to preparing for Harry Potter movies? Tell us in the poll below. (And explain in the comments section. There's still time to sway me…)

More Harry Potter:
Jeff Jensen on the set of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
New Harry Potter posters: Love! Jealousy! Betrayal!
Stephen King on J.K. Rowling's Ministry of Magic (Deathly Hallows spoilers)

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