Peter Jackson as the next “Star Wars” director? It’s unlikely, but not totally impossible.read more: http://www.accesshollywood.com/the-hobbits-peter-jackson-could-he-go-from-middle-earth-to-star-wars_article_73529
Asked by an Access Hollywood producer on Friday if “Star Wars” is a universe he’d ever consider playing in, “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” director didn’t completely rule it out.
“’Star Wars’? I dunno. I’ve never really thought about it. I’m busy for the next couple of years (laughs). So I’m off the cards for the next ‘Star Wars’ film unfortunately,” he said, referring to his work finishing the next two installments in “The Hobbit” trilogy.
“But, I’ve got huge admiration for what George [Lucas] created. He did what [J.R.R.] Tolkien did, really,” Peter continued. “He created a mythology. I don’t know. Someone would have to ask me and I’d have to have a very serious think about it.”
Returning to Middle Earth for “The Hobbit’s” first installment, which opens in theaters on December 14, was a treat for the director, and there were some magical moments off set too.
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At just age 20, the ‘New Girl’ lands herself on another cover of ‘Vogue’. Doesn’t she look beautiful?read more: http://hollywoodlife.com/2012/12/06/kate-upton-vogue-uk-magazine-cover-photo/ don't forget to see more on this site http://www.squidoo.com/traditional-contemporary-large-area-rugs Shop January Jones, Jennifer Aniston and Victoria Beckham's Looks From Yesterday's CFDA Fashion Show10/28/2012 Last night, tons of stars convened at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles for a fashion show and tea party held in honor of 2012's CFDA Fashion Fund finalists. But although guests were able to see looks from each of the 10 competing designers up-close and in motion, some of the evening's best clothes were found on the attendees.read more: http://www.luckymag.com/blogs/luckyrightnow/2012/10/Shop-January-Jones-Jennifer-Aniston-and-Victoria-Beckhams-Looks-From-Yesterdays-CFDA-Fashion-Show#slide=1 also, see rain boots for women Cloud Atlas is one of my favorite films this year, but I’m not ready to declare the best film I’ve seen this year. Even though 2012 isn’t over, there have been other films that I enjoyed more and worked slightly better for me. But Cloud Atlas is definitely the most important film I’ve seen this year in terms of what it represents from an industry perspective. It is an independent film with a major budget. The film had the technical resources to meet its grand ambition. The Wachowski Siblings and Tom Tykwer have been able to successfully craft their vision and do so outside the Hollywood system, which is good because Hollywood never would have made a movie Cloud Atlas. And if Cloud Atlas tanks, they never will.
You have the power to change that. read more: http://collider.com/cloud-atlas-editorial/205989/ Who cares about what’s happening in the swing states — the burning question is who will Homer Simpson vote for? We’ve got the answer.
In an online clip promoting “The Simpsons” new season on Sept. 30, Homer Simpson casts his ballot for Mitt Romney. Weighing his options in the voting booth, Simpson says, “Barack Obama, I don’t know. I already got one wife telling me to eat healthy. And, plus, he promised me death panels and grandpa is still alive. Mitt Romney? I hear he wears magic underpants. I expect the leader of the free world to go commando. Plus, his horse totally choked at the Olympics. On the other hand, he did invent Obamacare.” Read more (here): http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81511.html According to Comic Book Resources, DC will launch a digital comic book series based on new CW show Arrow this October. Priced at $0.99 an issue, it will debut on October 10th - the same day as the series premiere - and will be written by executive producers, showrunners and comic scribes Marc Guggenheim and Andrew Kreisberg with art from legendary artist Mike Grell and later Sergio Sandoval and Jorge Jimenez. The series will sell at $0.99 a chapter online, while monthly print editions collecting several installments will start on November 28th for $3.99.
"We've been working like mad," Guggenheim told the site about balancing work on the TV series and comic book. "It was a little while after the free comic we co-wrote with Geoff Johns for San Diego Comic-Con [when DC approached us]. We loved the idea because (a) we love comics and (b) we sensed the opportunity to do something that struck us both as unprecedented. We come up with a lot of stories in the writers room, but only have 42 minutes each week to tell them. That leaves a lot of story and backstory left over that we like having the opportunity to tell. To our knowledge, nothing's ever been attempted on a scale like this before." Read more at http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/JoshWildingNewsAndReviews/news/?a=67257#LwrR0UbgLoFd6qt9.99. Also, see http://www.squidoo.com/temporary-fake-tattoos-for-kid She was cast as Dr. Miranda Storm in Sex and Death 101, a black comedy, which was released direct-to-video in 2007. She appeared as a Vanity Fair reporter named Christine Everhart in the 2008 action film Iron Man. In an interview, Bibb said about her character in the film: "she has a very strong sense of right and wrong, of good and evil, and I loved her passion."[7] Iron Man received generally favorable reviews[8] and grossed over $ 585 million worldwide.[9] That same year, she portrayed the character of Maya in the horror–thriller The Midnight Meat Train, opposite Bradley Cooper. The film was promoted at the 2007 Comic-Con International, however, received a limited release in 2008. She also had the role of Emma in the direct-to-video horror film Trick 'r Treat, which was released in late 2008. source: Wikipedia. I would love an aerobed review with this woman. William Gibson, one of science fiction’s most visionary and distinctive voices, maintains that he and his fellow writers don’t possess some mystical ability to peer into the future.
“We’re almost always wrong,” said Gibson in a phone interview with Wired. Gibson coined the term cyberspace in his 1982 short story “Burning Chrome” and expanded on the concept in his 1984 debut novel, Neuromancer. In that book, which quickly became a classic, inspiring pop culture and science fiction for decades to come, Gibson predicted that the “consensual hallucination” of cyberspace would be “experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation” in a global network of “unthinkable complexity.” Yet Gibson says he simply got lucky with his prescient depiction of a digital world. “The thing that Neuromancer predicts as being actually like the internet isn’t actually like the internet at all!” said the writer, who has since penned numerous critically acclaimed novels, including Count Zero (1986), Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988), The Difference Engine (co-authored with Bruce Sterling, 1990), Pattern Recognition (2003) and Zero History (2010). Gibson’s most recent book, a collection of nonfiction called Distrust That Particular Flavor, was published this year; he is currently working on a new novel, tentatively titled The Peripheral. read more: http://www.wired.com/underwire/2012/09/interview-with-william-gibson/ That headline is a bit redundant, isn’t it? Obviously the upcoming reboot/remake/pseudo-sequel of the Evil Dead series should share many plot points with the 1981 original. Otherwise it wouldn’t really be a reboot/remake/whatever, right? Yes, we certainly agree with you, but in lieu of of any actual novel information on the upcoming Evil Dead film, fans are forced to bear with Sam Raimi, Bruce Campbell, et alia while they attempt to put together a film that is equally popular among the legions of hypothetical new Evil Dead fans and those who have loved the horror/comedy series for over three decades.
Thus, a synopsis, courtesy Bloody Disgusting and whichever PR person is in charge of homogenizing these sorts of things for public consumption: In the much anticipated remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote cabin. When they discover a Book of the Dead, they unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival. So, yeah, it’s basically The Evil Dead. For that matter, it’s also The Evil Dead II, but if we could avoid a prolonged discussion of the bizarre, complex, remake-pocked history of the Evil Dead franchise, we might just be able to finish this article before the heat death of the universe. Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/movies/the-evil-dead-remake-sounds-a-lot-like-the-evil-dead/#ixzz25i2iKQ43 Everything I can’t stand about our society can be found in most reality TV shows. I don’t get these shows. They are, by far, the shittiest thing on television. I get that sometimes you just want to sit and let your brain numb itself into oblivion. What I don’t understand is when great shows like “Firefly” or “Arrested Development” are canceled due to poor ratings. Yet “Keeping up with the Kardashians” is on its 7th fucking season. I had to Google that and now I’ve got vomit in my mouth.
What the fuck, world? Wendy happens to be one of the smartest people I know. I’m not trying to score points with her here, just being frank. She really is. She’s a smarty pants when it comes to school and has earned her masters at some random school called Stanford. So for her to pick up the remote (which she usually controls because TV is just not my thing) and of her own volition change it to the Kardashians is mind boggling to me. She finds keeping up with these sets of tools interesting. read more: http://www.thewhatblog.com/2012/09/05/reality-tv-is-the-devil/ |