Christina Hendricks – Golden Globes 2010 Red Carpet

January 18, 2010 at 2:45 am | Posted in Entertainment News | Leave a comment
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Mad Men hottie Christina Hendricks shows off her own golden globes on the red carpet at the 2010 Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday (January 17) in Beverly Hills, Calif.

Christina, 34, wore a peachy champagne dress by Christian Siriano and jewels by Loree Rodkin — triple double open leaf earrings on omega posts and prong set bangles.

Mad Men is up for Best Television Series – Drama. Big Love, Dexter, House and True Blood are also nominated.

via Christina Hendricks – Golden Globes 2010 Red Carpet.

Coroner’s preliminary finding: Jackson overdosed on propofol

August 25, 2009 at 12:34 am | Posted in Entertainment News, U.S.News, World news | Leave a comment
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A search warrant filed in court showed toxicology reports found propofol in Michael Jackson's body.(CNN) — The Los Angeles coroner has concluded preliminarily that singer Michael Jackson died of an overdose of propofol, a powerful sedative he was given to help him sleep, according to court documents released Monday.

 A search warrant filed in court showed toxicology reports found propofol in Michael Jackson’s body.

Los Angeles’ coroner Dr. Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran reached that preliminary conclusion after reviewing toxicology results carried out on Jackson’s blood, according to a search warrant and affidavit unsealed in Houston, Texas.

The affidavit outlines probable cause for search warrants of the offices of doctors who are believed to have treated Jackson.

Continue Reading Coroner’s preliminary finding: Jackson overdosed on propofol…

The lure of the R-rated comedy

August 6, 2008 at 2:47 am | Posted in Entertainment News | Leave a comment
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LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — In comedy, Hollywood has learned that raunch sells.

Tropic Thunder

Ben Stiller and Robert Downey Jr. are among the stars of “Tropic Thunder.”

Studios prefer their funny flicks in the benign PG-13 mold, a rating that keeps the audience broad to fill as many seats as possible. More and more, however, they are taking chances on R-rated comedies that ratchet up the rawness, allowing the “Sex and the City” gal pals to strut their stuff, Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly to expose body parts in “Step Brothers,” or Tom Cruise to swear like a sailor.

“He was willing to go for it,” “Tropic Thunder” star and director Ben Stiller said of Cruise, who is almost unrecognizable as a bald studio executive with a colossal talent for cussing. “I think the audience will really enjoy him letting loose like that.”

While Hollywood executives usually soft-pedal comedy, figuring the PG-13 rating offers the best return on their investment, racier hits such as “Wedding Crashers,” “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” and “Knocked Up” prove there’s a place for R-rated humor.

With $56.8 million over opening weekend in May, “Sex and the City” had the best debut ever for an R-rated comedy. The movie has racked up a total of $151 million, ranking among the top-50 highest-grossing comedies ever.

Close on that movie’s high heels comes a rare late-summer surge of saltier fare, led by Ferrell and Reilly’s “Step Brothers,” which delivered a solid $30.9 million opening weekend, big bucks for an R-rated romp.

“Pineapple Express,” with Seth Rogen and James Franco as stoners on the run, and “Tropic Thunder,” about pampered actors caught in real combat with drug-runners while shooting a Vietnam War picture, have great buzz from advance screenings, arriving in theaters over back-to-back weekends with prospects of joining the R-rated hit parade.

Both comedies are loaded with violence, coarse language and outrageous gags that the filmmakers could never have touched in a PG-13 movie.

At least a couple of racier comedies follow this fall. Kate Hudson, Dane Cook and Jason Biggs’ romantic comedy, “My Best Friend’s Girl,” comes with an R rating. Filmmaker Kevin Smith pushes the boundary even further: He’s trying to talk his way down to an R rating for “Zack and Miri Make a Porno,” starring Rogen and Elizabeth Banks, after the movie was slapped with an NC-17 designation that would bar anyone younger than 17 from theaters.

Of the 100 top-grossing comedies ranked by box-office tracker Media By Numbers, 47 were rated PG-13, 32 were PG and eight had G ratings. Only 13 were rated R, with 1984′s “Beverly Hills Cop” still the leader with $234.8 million.

Stiller’s breakout role came with 1998′s R-rated “There’s Something About Mary,” but his biggest hits are milder — the blockbusters “Meet the Fockers” (rated PG-13) and “Night at the Museum” (rated PG).

Hollywood has scored occasional comedy hits with R-rated flicks such as “National Lampoon’s Animal House” and “Porky’s.” But studios became more emboldened to venture into R territory in the last decade with the “American Pie” comedies and the early “Scary Movie” spoofs.

The wave of R-rated hits over the last few summers includes “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” and “Superbad.”

“If you look at most of these R-rated movies that found an audience, it’s because they were really good,” said producer Peter Safran, whose credits include “Scary Movie” and the upcoming PG-13 comedy “Disaster Movie.” “The R rating allows the filmmakers to truly realize their vision. There’s just a freedom that comes with it. There’s no way ‘Wedding Crashers’ could have been ‘Wedding Crashers’ if you inhibit what it was that Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn were able to do in that movie.”

PG-13 comedies are not likely to lose their dominance. It’s simple number-crunching for Hollywood: An R rating means anyone younger than 17 must be accompanied by an adult, while a PG-13 movie is open to anyone, including teens who make up a huge segment of weekend audiences and might balk at having to tag along with their parents to the theater.

“Step Brothers” director Adam McKay said studio executives offered a precise math lesson on what they would be losing by doing an R-rated movie rather a PG-13 one. The studio accurately forecast an opening weekend in the $30 million range, as opposed to the $40 million it might have brought in as a PG-13 comedy.

R-rated comedies have to be priced accordingly, the studios willing to put up $50 million to $60 million to make the movies instead of the $90 million they might shell out for one with a broader rating, McKay said.

It was a sacrifice McKay and Ferrell were willing to make after doing two PG-13 movies together, “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.”

“We were like, gosh, everyone’s getting to have their cake and eat it, too, with ’40-Year-Old Virgin’ and `Wedding Crashers,”‘ Ferrell said. “Just this little opening seemed to happen with the way the studios were willing to go, ‘OK, R-rated movies seem to be profitable, so we’ll maybe open that door a little bit.’ “

“It also just comes down to leverage,” Ferrell said. “You luckily have some hit movies, and then you kind of go, ‘OK, you want us to do another one? We’d love to do it R.’ ‘Oh, really? Well, let’s see …’ ‘Otherwise, we’ll go somewhere else.’ ‘OK, OK, we’ll do it R.’ “

For “Sex and the City,” it was a matter of staying true to the bawdy TV show, with its nudity and explicit dialogue as a foursome of randy women slept around Manhattan then gathered to talk about their flings.

While the characters had settled into monogamous relationships in the movie, the leap to the big-screen had to come tagged with an R rating, said star Sarah Jessica Parker.

“There was no talk of toning it down. There was no intention of making a conventional movie in an attempt to reach a mass audience,” Parker said. “We wouldn’t have wanted to do something that didn’t reflect the show and didn’t respect the audience’s investment in the show and what made it different and unique.”

“Step Brothers” star Reilly said the R rating gave him, Ferrell and their collaborators the liberty to take their comedy improvisation to extremes.

“Anything’s possible, and so more than wanting to make it an R-rated movie, we just wanted the freedom to make it whatever it’s going to be,” Reilly said. “Also, comedy’s job is to push boundaries. We didn’t make the boundaries. We didn’t move the last boundary, but here we are. People are expecting something a little crazier than the last thing they saw.”

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/08/05/film.rrated.comedies.ap/index.html

‘Dark Knight’ actor Bale denies assault allegations

July 23, 2008 at 2:05 am | Posted in Entertainment News | Leave a comment
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LONDON, England (CNN) – “Dark Knight” star Christian Bale has denied allegations by his mother and sister that he assaulted them, and he is cooperating with police, Bale’s publicists said Tuesday.

Christian Bale leaves a central London police station after being arrested and questioned by police.

Christian Bale leaves a central London police station after being arrested and questioned by police.

Bale has not been charged with any crime, his publicists said.

“Christian Bale attended a London police station today, on a voluntary basis, in order to assist with an allegation that had been made against him to the police by his mother and sister,” the statement said.

British media reported that police questioned Bale over an allegation that he assaulted his mother and sister at a London hotel a day before the European premiere of “The Dark Knight.”

Asked about the reports, a spokeswoman for London’s Metropolitan Police said a 34-year-old man was arrested in connection with an allegation of assault but would not divulge his name.

The statement from Bale’s publicists did not say whether an arrest had been made.

“Mr. Bale, who denies the allegation, cooperated throughout, gave his account in full of the events in question and has left the station without any charge being made against him by the police,” it said.

Bale would have no further comment, the statement said.

A records check turned up no criminal record for Bale in Los Angeles, according to The Associated Press.

A woman believed to be Bale’s sister Sharon said “it’s a family matter” from her home in Corfe Mullen, 110 miles southwest of London, according to the AP. A man who answered the door at the home of his mother, Jenny Bale, in nearby Bournemouth said she did not want to comment, the AP reported.

Bale is in London after the British premiere of “The Dark Knight,” the latest Batman movie and a Warner Brothers film. Warner Brothers is owned by Time Warner, also the parent company of CNN.

Bale plays Bruce Wayne/Batman in “The Dark Knight,” which co-stars the late Heath Ledger as the Joker. Video Watch Bale talk about playing Batman »

The film cashed-in with a record-breaking $158.4 million at the box office in its opening weekend.

Bale reprised the role of Gotham’s superhero, which he played in “Batman Begins.”

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/07/22/bale.questioned/index.html

Batman is top superhero at box office

July 21, 2008 at 12:13 am | Posted in Entertainment News | Leave a comment
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LOS ANGELES, California (AP) – Batman has sent Spidey packing as king of Hollywood’s box-office superheroes.

Heath Ledger as the Joker and Christian Bale as Batman are breaking box office records with "The Dark Knight."

Heath Ledger as the Joker and Christian Bale as Batman are breaking box office records with “The Dark Knight.”

“The Dark Knight” took in a record $155.34 million in its first weekend, topping the previous best of $151.1 million for “Spider-Man 3″ in May 2007 and pacing Hollywood to its biggest weekend ever, according to studio estimates Sunday.

“We knew it would be big, but we never expected to dominate the marketplace like we did,” said Dan Fellman, head of distribution for Warner Bros., which released “The Dark Knight.” The movie should shoot past the $200 million mark by the end of the week, he said.

Hollywood set an overall revenue record of $253 million for a three-day weekend, beating the $218.4 million haul over the weekend of July 7, 2006, according to box-office tracker Media By Numbers.

“This weekend is such a juggernaut,” said Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal, whose musical “Mamma Mia!” debuted at No. 2 with $27.6 million.

Factoring in higher admission prices, “Spider-Man 3″ may have sold slightly more tickets than “The Dark Knight.”

At 2007′s average price of $6.88, “Spider-Man 3″ sold 21.96 million tickets over opening weekend. Media By Numbers estimates today’s average movie prices at $7.08, which means “The Dark Knight” would have sold 21.94 million tickets.

BOX OFFICE TOP 10

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. “The Dark Knight,” $155.34 million.
2. “Mamma Mia!” $27.6 million.
3. “Hancock,” $14 million.
4. “Journey to the Center of the Earth,” $11.9 million.
5. “Hellboy II: The Golden Army,” $10 million.
6. “Wall-E,” $9.8 million.
7. “Space Chimps,” $7.4 million.
8. “Wanted,” $5.1 million.
9. “Get Smart,” $4.1 million.
10. “Kung Fu Panda,” $1.8 million.

Revenue totals for “The Dark Knight” could change when final numbers are released Monday.

The movie’s release was preceded by months of buzz and speculation over the performance of the late Heath Ledger as the Joker, Batman’s nemesis. Ledger, who died in January from an accidental prescription-drug overdose, played the Joker as a demonic presence, his performance prompting predictions that the role might earn him a posthumous Academy Award nomination.

“The average opening gross of the last five `Batman’ movies is $47 million. This tripled that, and for a reason,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Media By Numbers. “A big part of that was the Heath Ledger mystique and a phenomenal performance that absolutely deserves the excitement surrounding it.”

“The Dark Knight” reunites director Christopher Nolan with his “Batman Begins” star Christian Bale, whose vigilante crime-fighter is taunted and tested by Ledger’s Joker as the villain unleashes violence and chaos on the city of Gotham.

Overseas, “The Dark Knight” added $40 million in 20 countries where it began opening Wednesday, including Australia, Mexico and Brazil. The film opens in Great Britain this weekend and rolls out to most of the rest of the world over the next few weeks.

“The Dark Knight,” which cost $185 million to make, also broke the “Spider-Man 3″ record for best debut in IMAX large-screen theaters with $6.2 million. “Spider-Man 3″ opened with $4.7 million in IMAX cinemas.

“Every single show is sold out,” said Greg Foster, IMAX chairman and president. “We’re adding shows as much as we can, but we’re at 100 percent capacity.” iReport.com: Did you see ‘Dark Knight’?

On opening day Friday, “The Dark Knight” also took in more money than previously counted, Fellman said. The film pulled in a record $67.85 million, up nearly $1.5 million from the studio’s estimates a day earlier.

The previous opening-day record also had been held by “Spider-Man 3″ with $59.8 million.

Women accounted for most of the audience for “Mamma Mia!”, which Universal opened as counter-programming to the male-dominated audience for “The Dark Knight.”

“With the crowded summer, we knew we would have to find the right weekend, and this seemed like the perfect one considering three-quarters of our audience was female,” Rocco said.

Based on the stage musical set to the tunes of ABBA, “Mamma Mia!” features Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth, Stellan Skarsgard, Julie Walters and Christine Baranski.

The weekend’s other new wide release, 20th Century Fox’s animated family flick “Space Chimps,” opened at No. 7 with $7.4 million.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Monday.

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/07/20/boxoffice.ap/index.html

Review: ‘Dark Knight’ a stunning film

July 18, 2008 at 12:54 am | Posted in Entertainment News, Movies News | 3 Comments
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(CNN) — According to a Russian proverb, God makes the priests. Jesters come from the devil.

Heath Ledger dominates as the Joker in "The Dark Knight" in a performance already garnering raves.

Heath Ledger dominates as the Joker in “The Dark Knight” in a performance already garnering raves.

You won’t have any trouble believing that aphorism when you see Heath Ledger’s mesmerizing performance as the Joker in “The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan’s hotly anticipated and often brilliantly executed follow-up to “Batman Begins.”

His face caked in cracked white greasepaint, his smile a grotesque red lipstick scar, kohl rimming his eyes, the Joker is a cruel kind of clown, the kind that is only interested in the last laugh.

Slouched in his purple suit, Ledger gives him a lopsided shuffle, a permanently craning neck and an insinuating, deceptively neighborly voice. But there’s something reptilian about the way his tongue flicks through his pursed lips like a pickpocket. He’s hungry for trouble, a maniac for mayhem — and in Gotham City, where crime is still running wild, he can make himself right at home.

Ledger dominates this movie as a living presence, a live wire, dangerous and unpredictable. It’s an astonishing performance, as extravagant and free (“deranged” might be a better word) as his Ennis Del Mar in “Brokeback Mountain” was inhibited and tongue-tied. Video See how Ledger made the Joker his own »

And “The Dark Knight” takes him — and its world — very seriously.

Even more than Batman himself, the Joker would usually scream “camp” (and has in the TV series and other movies) but Nolan refuses to go there. His Gotham is cement and glass, a “real” city not so different from what we might find in any contemporary action thriller. (Chicago doubles for Batman’s metropolis.)

Unlike Tim Burton or Joel Schumacher, who directed previous Batman films, Nolan favors location work over studio artifice, and he seems determined to keep the computer-generated imagery within the bounds of gravity. Even the fetishistic attention to Batman’s toys — his suit, his weaponry and transport — emphasizes utility and design; this is not a superhero in the supernatural sense. (He may not be a hero, either, according to the serious-to-a-fault script by Nolan and his brother Jonathan.)

“Batman Begins,” which came out in 2005, was about the politics of fear, the power of nightmares. Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) overcame his own phobia to turn fear back on the fear mongers and restore hope to Gotham.

In “The Dark Knight” (Nolan must have been tempted to add “of the Soul” to the title), the Joker might be his shadow or his evil twin. In some sick way, they need each other.

“You complete me,” the Joker lisps to Batman, mimicking (mocking?) “Jerry Maguire.” Video Watch co-stars defend Ledger »

The word is nowhere stated, but this Joker is unmistakably a terrorist — he blows up hospitals, rigs bombs to commuter ferries, burns his own ill-gotten gains. (He even manages to put Gotham’s crime syndicates under his thumb.) That makes Batman a kind of one-man Department of Homeland Security. And if he has to ride roughshod over civil liberties to get the job done — eavesdropping on the entire city’s cell phone data, for example — then so be it.

To their credit, neither Nolan nor Bruce Wayne is comfortable with this glorified vigilante figure. However, the only legitimate alternative turns out to be a civic crusader, District Attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart).

Dent, who carries around a double-headed coin, may seem honorable, but he was once known as “Two-Faced Harvey.” With whom will he cast his lot? That’s the movie’s ultimate ideological battleground. iReport.com: Lining up for ‘Batman?’ Send photos, video

Unfortunately, if Dent gives the movie a classic character arc, Eckhart’s disappointingly bland performance fails to nail the narcissism that must be the flip side to his zeal, making his ultimate about-face hard to accept.

That’s the film’s most obvious flaw. Whenever the Joker and Batman are in the vicinity, the movie hums with finely tuned dread and anticipation. But the longer it goes on (and yes, it does go on too long), Dent triangulates the equation, ultimately pulling it out of whack.

Still, for the most part, “The Dark Knight” is an exceptionally smart, brooding picture with some terrific performances. In a summer when action overwhelms intelligence (and even good sense), here’s a movie that works on many levels. It even features the single most awesome truck stunt I’ve ever seen.

And though Ledger’s tragic death in January can’t help but cast a morbid pall over the proceedings — and that’s saying something, given some of the film’s plot points — when he’s on the screen the movie lights up. It’s a bravura turn. I’ll be surprised if Ledger doesn’t get a posthumous Oscar for it.

“The Dark Knight” runs 152 minutes and is rated PG-13. For Entertainment Weekly’s take, click here.

Review: ‘Wall-E’ is a classic

June 29, 2008 at 2:11 am | Posted in Entertainment News | 2 Comments
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(CNN) — The most consistent production unit in Hollywood just hit another home run.

Wall-E

Wall-E ponders a Rubik’s Cube in the Pixar film “Wall-E.”

Over the last decade, Pixar has become a byword for quality, combining cutting-edge digital animation with depth of character, slapstick comedy and rich, engrossing storytelling that appeals equally to kids and adults. “Wall-E” has all of that and more.

Written and directed by Andrew Stanton (“Finding Nemo”), it’s Pixar’s most ambitious movie and an instant classic.

Wall-E is a solar-powered garbage drone, the last one still operating on an abandoned toxic planet that looks an awful lot like — well, is — Earth. A rusty box sitting on caterpillar tracks, with a retractable binocular-shaped head, he compresses junk into building blocks and then piles them up into towers that are shadow-skyscrapers of waste in the ruins of an unidentified city.

Electronic billboards still plug defunct products and bring us up to speed handily: Having polluted the planet with more waste than it could handle, globo-corporation Buy N Large evacuated its customers on a five-year space cruise (“The final fun-tier,” promises the president, played by Fred Willard), leaving the robots to clean up the mess. Only their calculations were a little off. It’s been 700 years, and Wall-E is still at work. Video Watch the cast talk about the plucky robot »

The opening half-hour is a delectable demonstration of visual storytelling. Although his vocabulary is limited to a bare handful of words, Wall-E, we gather, has developed more than a trace of consciousness. He’s a hoarder, curious enough to collect unusual bric-a-brac: a whisk, an electric light bulb, bubble wrap. His most treasured item is a VHS tape of “Hello, Dolly.”

His systems are scrambled when he bumps into Eve, a gleaming research pod from the mother ship whose sleek, egg-like design and distinctive start-up chime must be a wink to Pixar (and Apple) boss Steve Jobs.

At any rate, Eve is the apple of Wall-E’s eye. He’s so smitten, he’d follow her anywhere — even outer space.

There’s something special about Wall-E and his pursuit. Robots have been routinely humanized in sci-fi movies: in “Blade Runner,” “A.I.” and “Metropolis,” for example. And “Wall-E” also isn’t alone in implying that human beings are becoming more mechanistic ourselves, though the obese overgrown babies Stanton imagines reclining in hover chairs — pampered and cocooned from birth — is a more scathing caricature of consumer over-dependency than we’d expect to find in a Hollywood family film. iReport.com: Share your view on ‘Wall-E’

Indeed, Stanton’s most obvious touchstones are Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film “2001: A Space Odyssey” (at one point he treats us to a parodic blast of “Also Sprach Zarathustra” to signal a small baby step for man that’s also a huge leap for mankind) and Douglas Trumbull’s 1972 eco-parable “Silent Running”: philosophical sci-fi films made only four years apart at another point of environmental sensitivity.

But the animating spirit here goes back much further, to the sentimental reveries and delightful improvisatory dexterity of Charlie Chaplin. In “Modern Times,” made more than 70 years ago, Chaplin made play with the degrading effects of industrialized society. In “Wall-E,” Stanton pitches us between a post-industrial wasteland embalmed in smog and the sterile, artificial atmosphere of a giant floating life-support system.

These aren’t attractive prospects, but they are transformed by the little lovelorn robot, a lonely soul who seeks companionship anywhere he can get it … in a cockroach, an old movie and a trigger-happy search robot.

“Wall-E” isn’t a perfect movie; some business involving a team of rogue robots is unduly scrappy. But, mostly, this is a film filled with remarkable moments: a pas de deux in front of the Milky Way (with Wall-E propelled by a fire extinguisher), Eve’s maternal glow as she carries out her primary directive, the fleeting moment when first-time space traveler Wall-E turns back, sees the Earth and tries to share his joy in the discovery.

Grace, beauty, joy, laughter and love. A wonderful combination for any movie. “Wall-E” is easily the best film of the year so far.

“Wall-E” is rated G and has a running time of 97 minutes. For Entertainment Weekly’s take, click here

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/06/27/review.walle/index.html

‘Get Smart’ debuts at No. 1 at box office

June 23, 2008 at 1:14 am | Posted in Entertainment News | 2 Comments
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LOS ANGELES, California (AP) – Audiences still get Maxwell Smart.

Steve Carell and Ann Hathaway star in Warner Bros. Pictures' "Get Smart."

Steve Carell and Ann Hathaway star in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “Get Smart.”

Steve Carell and Anne Hathaway’s “Get Smart,” the Warner Bros. big screen update of the 1960s spy sitcom, raked in $39.2 million to debut as the No. 1 weekend movie, according to studio estimates Sunday.

But movie-goers did not get Mike Myers’ “The Love Guru,” the weekend’s other new wide release. The Paramount Pictures comedy about a self-help mentor took in just $14 million to open at No. 4.

In limited release, “Kit Kittredge: An American Girl” opened strongly with $222,697 in five theaters, averaging $44,539 a cinema, compared with $10,012 in 3,911 theaters for “Get Smart.”

“Kit Kittredge,” released by Picturehouse and based on the popular line of American Girl dolls, stars Abigail Breslin as a 9-year-old aspiring newspaper reporter during the Depression. The film expands into wide release July 2.

The weekend’s No. 2 spot was a photo finish between DreamWorks Animation and Paramount’s “Kung Fu Panda” and Universal’s “The Incredible Hulk.”

BOX OFFICE TOP 10

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. “Get Smart,” $39.2 million.
2. “Kung Fu Panda,” $21.7 million.
3. “The Incredible Hulk,” $21.6 million.
4. “The Love Guru,” $14 million.
5. “The Happening,” $10 million.
6. “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” $8.4 million.
7. “You Don’t Mess With the Zohan,” $7.2 million.
8. “Sex and the City,” $6.5 million.
9. “Iron Man,” $4 million.
10. “The Strangers,” $1.9 million.

In its third weekend, “Kung Fu Panda” pulled in $21.7 million, raising its domestic total to $155.6 million. “The Incredible Hulk” was right behind with $21.6 million in its second weekend to lift its total to $96.5 million.

“Panda” and “Hulk” were close enough that their rankings could change when final numbers are released Monday.

Hollywood’s summer surge continued, with total revenues climbing for the fourth straight weekend compared to last year. The top 12 movies took in $136.9 million, up nearly 10 percent from the same weekend in 2007, when Carell’s “Evan Almighty” opened at No. 1 with $31.2 million.

The industry is on track to beat the revenue record set last summer, when receipts topped $4 billion for the first time.

“While the country may be suffering with a so-called recession, people are finding movies a fairly inexpensive way to get their entertainment,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. “This proves the conventional wisdom that, during tough economic times, the movies flourish.”

In “Get Smart,” Carell re-creates the bumbling Max Smart character created by Don Adams, with Hathaway playing the capable Agent 99 as the duo try to stop a plot to arm unstable governments with nuclear bombs. Dwayne Johnson co-stars as a superstar spy colleague.

Critics picked apart the movie for emphasizing action over the crisp verbal comedy of the TV show, but Warner Bros. figures that was a wise commercial move. While 60 percent of the audience was 25 or older, that still meant a sizable younger crowd that was more keen on the movie’s action, said Dan Fellman, the studio’s head of distribution.

“We were very pleased to have 40 percent under 25, because they did not grow up on the television show,” Fellman said. “The filmmakers did a great job in making that happen. They broadened the audience and brought it into a modern-day bent.”

Myers — who dreamed up the “Love Guru” character, co-wrote the script and was a producer on the movie — has been accustomed to blockbuster openings with the three “Shrek” flicks and his two “Austin Powers” spy sequels.

“Mike Myers, the master of the spy spoof, opens his movie against a spy comedy, and the spy movie genre was obviously a lot more appealing to audiences,” Dergarabedian said.

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/06/22/boxoffice.ap/index.html

Review: ‘Get Smart’ funny, some of the time

June 21, 2008 at 3:21 am | Posted in Entertainment News | 2 Comments
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(CNN) — Forty-three years ago, Mel Brooks and Buck Henry hatched a show about a not-so-smart intelligence agent constantly confounded by his own incompetence.

"Get Smart," starring Anne Hathaway and Steve Carell, opens nationwide Friday.

“Get Smart,” starring Anne Hathaway and Steve Carell, opens nationwide Friday.

If that was considered funny a few years after the Bay of Pigs invasion, there’s no reason to suppose it wouldn’t be funny today.

And it is, too, but only some of the time.

If “Get Smart” the movie isn’t on a par with those fondly remembered reruns, it’s not because the Cold War is over or spy spoofs have been done to death, but because 25 minutes of inspired silliness doesn’t automatically stretch to 110 minutes of sustained pleasure.

On the other hand, there is no question that Steve Carell is a natural for Maxwell Smart. He steps into Don Adams’ phone shoes and square-shouldered suits as if clothes really do make the man.

But this incarnation is more than just a stuffed shirt. The new Max is still naïve and accident-prone (an intelligence analyst, he is promoted to field work after CONTROL’s best agents are compromised by KAOS), but he can also surprise us with his ingenuity and expertise, even his physical prowess.

Somewhere along the line, “Get Smart” got smarter.

Presumably, this more heroic spin is intended to put some clear blue water between Agent 86 and incorrigible British super spy Austin Powers. Not that it would be difficult to pick either of them out of a lineup.

Powers is the swingin’ love child of Sean Connery and Peter Sellers, whereas Smart is a far more prosaic American composite of Jack Benny, Jack Webb and Lou Costello.

By coincidence, Carell finds himself going head-to-head with Mike Myers’ “The Love Guru” this weekend. Video Watch the stars of ‘Get Smart’ go unscripted »

Carell doesn’t imitate Adams’ sidelong diction. The old catchphrases are there, but you might easily miss them — “by that much.” He hits his groove for a handful of slapstick sequences: a surprisingly graceful mambo with a large Russian woman, and a rather belated parody of Catherine Zeta-Jones’ laser-evasion gymnastics in “Entrapment” (with the mischievous addition of a rodent down his trousers).

As Agent 99, Smart’s better half, Anne Hathaway, rolls her eyes a lot. She resembles Barbara Feldon — for a while she even sports a Feldon bob and an elegant evening gown — but with a modern twist.

She’s a spikier customer than the old 99; less tolerant of Max’s screw-ups. Hathaway gets to show brains and beauty and a mean karate kick, but she’s essentially playing the straight man here; I guess it would be asking too much to allow her to be funny, too. iReport.com: Share your reviews of ‘Get Smart’

Director Peter Segal and screenwriters Tom Astle and Matt Ember scarcely bother to link the set pieces together. “How did we get here?” asks Max, scratching his head. “It’s not important,” deadpans 99. Unfortunately, she is mistaken.

That stuff is important if you want to hold an audience for nearly two hours. Just because we’ve seen this story a hundred times before — and we know you know we know it — doesn’t let you off the hook from telling it like you mean it.

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More surprising is that Segal, a veteran of three Adam Sandler movies, is a pretty good action director. A climax involving a small plane, a runaway SUV, a train, and a nuclear bomb in the Walt Disney Concert Hall makes you wonder if John Woo was moonlighting on the second unit.

Too bad the satire isn’t remotely as sharp. Lame potshots at the current administration are so stale the election can’t come soon enough. “Get Smart” is an affectionate and fairly funny entertainment, but a thoroughly routine assignment.

Ref :: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/06/19/review.get.smart/index.html

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