Archive: September 2009 (51-60 of 437)

Sep 26 2009 11:00 AM ET

The softer side of Clive Owen: Can you dig it?

clive-owen_lEver since I saw Croupier while visiting London with my folks years ago, Clive Owen has been one of my very favorite actors. No one does that British brooding thing quite like he does (see: Gosford Park, CloserInside Man), and when he’s bad-ass (i.e. King Arthur, Children of Men, Shoot ‘Em Up), he’s thrilling. But in his latest movie The Boys Are Back (directed by Shine‘s Scott Hicks), Owen sheds that stoic persona to play Joe Warr, a father of two sons who, following the death of his second wife, is faced with raising both of them on his own. He adopts a laissez-faire attitude towards parenting, which makes for some lighthearted scenes (the younger kid cannonballs into the bathtub—splash!), but what hooked me is how beautifully tender Owen is with these kids. Now, I never doubted the guy could do pretty much anything with his terrific talents, but when you’re so accustomed to seeing an actor in certain roles, wow is it ever a kick to see them play against type as fantastically as Owen does in The Boys Are Back. (Here’s the trailer, which IMHO, makes the movie seem far sappier and run-of-the-mill than it actually is.) I sure hope the Academy recognizes Owen for his work here.

Check out my colleague Dave Karger’s recent interview with Owen (after the jump) about unveiling his softer side in The Boys Are Back.

Photo Credit: Matt Nettheim; Jaap Buitendijk READ FULL STORY »

Sep 26 2009 11:00 AM ET

ShePop: Is going to 'Cougar Town' really that empowering?

Jenna-Elfman-Courtney-Cox_dlSo cougars are everywhere these days — most notably in fall TV, baked right into the premise of Accidentally on Purpose and into the very title of Cougar Town. But also, partly because of said shows, in trend pieces and web sites and themed cruises and reasoned calls to quit using the darn term altogether. We got it: Ladies are now more often than in the past dating males who were born after them. Viva la post-feminism. I’ve given up trying to argue against cougarism as a concept — that is, as an anomaly worth naming and dissecting, as if it’s akin to the oddity of being a freegan or the genuine progress represented by, say, growing acceptance of interracial marriage. Salon’s Broadsheet even had a good argument for just going with the cougar thing.

What concerns me more is the portrayal of coug-ing. Even though it’s almost always presented wrapped in glossy “you-go-girl” empowerment (the kind that’s just as fake and outdated as the phrase “you go girl”), the two new sitcoms wallow in pathetic details: Jenna Elfman’s paramour has doofy friends who use her mother’s cremation urn to smoke up. Courteney Cox flashes a kid in the street to prove she’s still got it and makes the same peanut butter crackers for her one-night-stand that she makes for her teenage son. (Okay, the peanut butter crackers were a little funny, and the episode as a whole had good moments, as noted by my colleague Michael Slezak.) READ FULL STORY »

Sep 26 2009 10:00 AM ET

'Californication' season 3 preview: Kathleen Turner, Ed Westwick, and an homage to 'Shampoo'

Filed under: Television and tagged: , ,

californication_lCalifornication returns to Showtime Sunday (10 p.m. ET) for a new season in which David Duchovny’s Hank is effectively a single dad, and, less effectively, a creative writing professor at a local university. While Karen (Natascha McElhone) is away working in New York, Hank will play with three women in what show creator Tom Kapinos calls an homage to Shampoo: He’ll juggle relationships with a talented twentysomething student/stripper (Saved!‘s Eva Amurri); his level-headed thirtysomething TA (Numb3rs‘ Diane Farr); and the fortysomething chair of the English department (Bridget Jones’s Diary‘s Embeth Davidtz), who happens to be the mother of his daughter’s best friend and the wife of the college’s dean (Peter Gallagher).

Other guests this season include Gossip Girl‘s Ed Westwick, who stops by Hank’s classroom for episode 2. “He’s this gay, creative writing student who has a crush on Hank and he wants to know what Hank thinks of his writing,” Kapinos says. ”Hank gives him the brutal truth, as only Hank can, and of course, the kid tries to commit suicide.” Rick Springfield will appear as a twisted version of himself in four episodes, beginning Oct. 11. He’ll become one of Charlie’s clients, as Mr. Runkle (Evan Handler) gets back in the agent business. Charlie and his wife, Marcy (Pamela Adlon), will end up living together in their home as they go through a divorce à la War of the Roses, which inspired our favorite bit of casting: Kathleen Turner plays Charlie’s razor-tongued boss, Sue Collini, who sticks around all season. “It seemed like such a long shot,” Kapinos says of nabbing Turner, “but we went out to her, and literally, the deal closed within a day. Sue’s just this ballsy, sexually free woman who’s still hanging on to the Easy Rider, Raging Bull view of Hollywood. Charlie essentially, in a very pleasant sort of way, ends up sexually harassed by her. There’s nothing evil about it — it’s not Demi Moore in Disclosure or something like that. He just haplessly becomes a victim of sexual harassment.” To quote Sue, “Oh, you can play hard to get all you like Runkle. But Sue Collini always gets the weenie.” That, for the record, is just about the only thing that she says that we can actually quote on this blog. It’s going to be a fun season.

Who’s psyched for the new season now?

Photo credit: Jordin Althaus/Showtime

Sep 26 2009 08:36 AM ET

'Réalité' series premiere: Your guide to the week in 'DWTS,' 'Top Model,' 'Idol,' 'Runway,' and Kris Allen!

Because Kathy Ireland and Macy Gray aren’t afraid to respectively liken Dancing With the Stars to a religious experience and virginity loss. Because the girls of the latest cycle of America’s Next Top Model are so tragique that they’re inspiring the disturbingly silent disdain of a nine-year-old girl named Diva Davanna. Because Project Runway truly, badly, deeply needs the return of Nina “Why do I have to see ugly?” Garcia and her patented brand of bitchery. Because Ellen DeGeneres’ addition to the American Idol judges’ panel is making us look to Kara “the Terrible” DioGuardi for hope and inspiration. (Okay, not really.) And especially because Kris Allen remains adorably, harmoniously, subversively awesome — and because he granted us an early-morning interview after premiering his new single, “Live Like We’re Dying,” at New York’s Z100 radio station earlier this week…we now present to you what critics are calling the most important series in the Internet right this very second our new video series Réalité. Press play below, and enjoy! (Bear in mind that we’ve interspersed Idol‘s season 8 champ throughout the duration of our video, because we’re sneaky benches.) And if you’ve got a favorite reality show (or two) that aren’t on our pre-selected roster (So You Think You Can Dance and The Amazing Race will also wind up on Réalité‘s radar in the coming weeks) do share ‘em in the comments section below, or make your demands via Twitter. You can follow me @EWMichaelSlezak. Holla! Hey-ayy! (And if you get that heinous “video unavailable” message, you can also watch our premiere here.)

Sep 26 2009 02:50 AM ET

'Ghost Whisperer' poll: Let's hear it for the boy?

Filed under: Television and tagged: , ,

While I think we can all agree that the Kate Bush song “This Woman’s Work” will never be used as effectively as it was in She’s Having a Baby, the season 5 premiere of CBS’ Ghost Whisperer — which brought the complicated delivery of Melinda’s son, Aiden, then a five-year time jump has divided fans. Which side are you on? Discussion and poll after the jump!

READ FULL STORY »

Sep 26 2009 01:00 AM ET

'Dollhouse' premiere: Lies within lies and hot geek-chic sex

dollhouse-wedding_lThat sound you hear outside is a geek nation’s head exploding. Why? Because Apollo and Faith just totally had the sex! Well, okay, not really. But the Dollhouse season premiere did have Battlestar Galactica alum Jamie Bamber playing a super-smooth arms merchant who gets married to Eliza Dushku’s Echo, so there was some inter-nerdverse smooching going on. As for the premiere itself, I’m kinda of two minds about it. READ FULL STORY »

Sep 25 2009 07:37 PM ET

Megan Fox on 'SNL': Will she be funny or crazy? Will you be watching to find out?

Tomorrow’s the night. Megan Fox brings the crazy to Saturday Night Live. Think we’ll see a Michael-Bay-Is-Hitler sketch, something making fun of her Marilyn Monroe tattoo, or a skit about her overexposure/crazy interviews? On that last tip, Foxy’s revelations this week include telling Jimmy Fallon that she’s scared of touching paper and telling Nylon that she’d rather kiss females than males on screen.

She’s not exactly laugh-out-loud funny in the show promos below, but she certainly doesn’t embarrass herself (or maybe we’re too busy crushing on Andy Samberg to notice).

Are you going to tune in for the season premiere to see if Fox does anything unhinged in Studio 8H? Think she can make the switch from action to comedy? Or will you just watch for U2?

Sep 25 2009 06:57 PM ET

Breaking: Jedi knights don't like babies

Now, what did that infant do to you, Obi-Wan? Steal your lunch money? Leave some Dark Side of the Force in his diapers?

I swear: I could — and have — been watching that all day.

Sep 25 2009 06:45 PM ET

'The Amazing Race 15': Should it stop being so darn Emmy-winning?

Filed under: Television and tagged:

At last Sunday’s Emmy Award ceremony, Survivor host (and two-time Emmy winner! ) Jeff Probst told reporters that The Amazing Race should pull itself out of the kudos competition so other reality shows like, well, Survivor, could win for a change. Later, Probst told EW that he was joking (“Everybody always asks me what I think about how Amazing Race dominates. I have no answer. They do dominate.”) But he makes an interesting point: After seven consecutive wins, has Race won too darn much? Few would argue it’s the gold standard of reality TV; the show pulls off an amazing feat each season with its picture-perfect coverage of a heart-stopping, round-the-world race. Further evidence of the show’s greatness? It’s about to start its 15th season – 15th! – this Sunday on CBS.

Asking Race to withdraw from the Emmy competition wouldn’t be entirely unprecedented: Candice Bergen did it after winning a boatload of times for Murphy Brown, as did Oprah Winfrey for her daytime chatfest. And it would even spare Race executive producer Bertram Van Munster from having to think up something clever to say when he accepts his award! Last Sunday, Van Munster used his time at the mic to actually utter how “speechless” he was (though to his defense, he really was. Van Munster told EW afterwards that he thought Dancing with the Stars would prevail. Go figure).

For his part, Van Munster has no intention of pulling a Winfrey in the future and dropping out of the Emmy competition. “It’s not likely,” he told EW. “I’m a hardworking producer. As long as I have an opportunity to work and have my team happy, we should go for it. We set a very high standard, and I’ve spent my entire life working really hard on the genre. If I was as rich as Oprah, then maybe then I would do it.”

What do you think? Do you think Race deserves to win year after year? Is it time to give Project Runway a shot at the gold?

More Amazing Race and reality-TV from EW:
Amazing Race 15: Exclusive reveal of this season’s map, plus teases from series boss
Realite, EW’s new weekly roundup of reality-TV, debuts with special guest Kris Allen

Sep 25 2009 05:32 PM ET

Alynda Wheat's Beat Cop: In which Wentworth Miller, Cromartie, and Benjamin Button crash our sets

Wentworth-Miller_lCome on, people, you never leave the perp with Wentworth Miller! That’s Article 96, Section 242, Clause 3 of the Procedural Code! Wait, wait. Before we get too shouty about last night’s Law & Order: SVU, let’s call the meeting to order and go over some Beat Cop business.

At our last meeting, commenter Judy Woodruff (let’s just assume that’s an alias, and the PBS anchor is way busy with actual news) asked if we’re going to loop Southland (tonight at 9 on NBC) into our discussions. This brings up an excellent point, Coppers: What counts as a procedural? The matter is open to a vote, but these are the general guidelines we’ll work under:

The series is typically one hour long.

The series is on a nationally recognized TV network (e.g., ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, The CW).

The series typically concludes with the resolution of a mystery (crime, court case, medical diagnosis, etc.).

The series is primarily focused on said mystery, rather than the personal lives of those involved.

The series is ghost-free.

What does that mean? That Southland totally counts, because it’s all about catching bad guys, just more cinematically. That Medium, Ghost Whisperer, and Supernatural all solve mysteries, but bite it on the ghost clause. That House weasels its way in because the show treats sick people more like Sudoku than soap opera. (So suck it, Grey’s Anatomy!) And that we’re going to talk about Castle, even though it’s arguably weighted as much on the charm and talents of one Nathan Fillion as it is on dead people, because Fillion is one of our many imaginary boyfriends. (Though apparently, we’ve got competition for his affection.)

Now that our Cop business is concluded, let’s get to it!

Law & Order: SVU

We begin with another man in our imaginary boyfriend stable, Wentworth Miller, late of Prison Break. I dug the episode, but here’s the quibble: You saw (nearly) all that coming, right? Once I got past the idea that there actually was someone employed by the NYPD that was ragier, jerkier, and more unstable than Stabler (Chris Meloni—and don’t you roll your eyes at me, you know it’s true!), Miller’s backstory unfolded like origami. He’s a jackass, but a tragic one! He’s terrible to women, but wonderful to kids! He believes in the law, but God forbid if you’re too stupid to realize he shouldn’t be taking a confessed rapist/murderer to the john. I admit, I thought it was going to be a “You know what? He totally slipped and smashed his head into the porcelain sink…twice,” kind of thing. But they got me on the defenestration. I imagine they got all of us on that sick little legal twist that keeps the innocent dude in prison. And will somebody please get Diane Neal’s Casey Novak back here before we do something unspeakably hinky to vicious new ADA Christine Lahti? It is SVU—we can get creative. READ FULL STORY »

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