Amanda
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Just kidding around
Bryan Batt and Alan Cumming have the drinks.
Jonah Hill, Jack McBrayer and Paul Rudd are smiles near the top of the traditional party.
Christy Turlington and Erection dysfunction Burns
Jennifer Westfeldt and Adam Scott
Kristen Wiig ignores Jon Hamm's point.
People in the NBC comedy family came through the SVA Theater on Monday evening for just about any Cinema Society screening of Lionsgate's "Pals With Kids," which reunites "Bridesmaids'" cast people Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Chris O'Dowd and Jon Hamm for author-thesp Jennifer Westfeldt's directorial debut. "It absolutely was really merely a tapestry of watching many people inside our existence get this seismic, profound transition to being a parent and the way everyone handled it in different ways,Inch Westfeldt mentioned. With this particular many comedy stars area, there has been a few shenanigans on set, but no pranks according to Adam Scott, people went while using 1990's. "In my opinion Mel Gibson and Joe Pesci managed to get happen round the 'Lethal Weapon 3' set which involved it," Scott mentioned. Near the top of the traditional afterparty, where the "SNL" gang hung out together, Wiig tossed a cheeseburger with a partygoer alongside her, sang along for the music and spoken with Paul Rudd and Jonah Hill. Contact the number newsroom at news@variety.com
Monday, March 5, 2012
Winter lull for Broadway
'The Road to Mecca'Broadway suffered its worst week since the first week of 2012, with overall Rialto box office tumbling more than $3.4 million and attendance down by nearly 25,000, despite the addition of two new previewing productions.The bad B.O. mojo was spread pretty evenly among the 27 shows on the boards, with only smash hit "The Book of Mormon" ($1,493,754 -- up 2% and setting yet another house record at the Eugene O'Neill) and just-shuttered "The Road to Mecca" ($250,244 -- a 14% uptick in its final week) increasing their haul over last week. Among the hardest hit were the recently recast revival of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" ($530,319), and tourist magnets "The Phantom of the Opera" ($621,644) and "Mary Poppins" ($627,330), all of which were down more than 30% against last week. One-man show "Shatner's World: We Just Live In It" didn't inspire the final week rush that rose to meet "The Road to Mecca," as the renowned actor and Priceline spokesmodel ended his three-week Broadway run with a $295,534 take (albeit for only six performances), down 6%, though that was still enough to beat out "Godspell" ($279,527, down 22%). If there is a silver lining for legiters in this week's numbers, it is in the performance of the previewing productions. The Philip Seymour Hoffman-toplined revival of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" ($661,262 in seven perfs) cracked the top 10 list ahead of its March 15 opening and suffered the least decline compared to last week, down only 4%. Tuners "Once" ($525,050) and "Jesus Christ Superstar" ($370,699 for four perfs) also opened strong, playing to nearly full houses. Overall Broadway cume was $16,890,525, an increase of almost $2 million against the same time last year, when 26 shows were running. Attendance stood at 192,998, or 75.7% capacity. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Broadcasters sue Aereo startup service
The broadcast networks and a host of stations and studios have filed suit against Aereo, a service seeking to provide customers with Internet streams of major broadcast stations in the NY area. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, is seeking to halt Aereo, set to go public on March 14, as well as unspecified damages. The station plaintiffs -- which include WNET, Tribune's WPIX, the Fox Television Stations and Univision O&O groups -- say that the company's plans infringe on their right to public performance, and that the streams of the signals would represent unfair competition. A separate suit was also filed by ABC, Disney, CBS, NBCUniversal and WNJU, also seeking an injunction and damages.
Federal courts have shut down the web streaming of TV station signals by companies like FilmOn and ivi, but Aereo has suggested that it could overcome the legal hurdle by setting up a service in which signals are captured by a tiny antenna for each individual subscriber, rather than the traditional one-to-many transmission The broadcasts are converted to a digital format and sent out over the Internet and to mobile devices. Aereo is charging $12 per month, and investors include Barry Diller's IAC. The problem for broadcasters is such streaming services undercut the lucrative retransmission fees they receive from cable operators. "It simply does not matter whether Aereo uses one big antenna to receive ...broadcasts and retramsmit them to subscribers, or 'tons' of 'tiny' antennas, as Aereo claims it does," the WNET-Fox suit stated. "No amount of technological gimmickry by Aereo -- or claims that it is simply providing a set of sophisticated 'rabbit ears' -- changes the fundamental principle of copyright law that those who wish to retransmit plaintiffs' broadcasts may do so only with plaintiffs' authority." In the other suit, the networks said that Aereo's "miniature antenna scheme is an artifice," and noted that it "digitally transcodes, converts and compresses the programs so they can be retransmitted through the Internet to its subscribers." A spokesman for Aereo said the company had no comment. Contact Ted Johnson at ted.johnson@variety.com
UTA Signs Oscar-Winning Director Asghar Farhadi
EXCLUSIVE: Asghar Farhadi, the Iranian director who won the Best Foreign Language Academy Award for A Separation, has signed with UTA. The family drama set in Tehran has earned critical and popular support throughout the international film community after its world premiere a year ago at the Fajr Film Festival in Tehran, where it earned Farhadi the Best Director award. It won the Golden Bear Award at the Berlin Film Festival and landed Sony Pictures Classics as distributor before making its U.S. debut at the Telluride Film Festival Film. That is where the agents began courting Farhadi. The film also won both a Golden Globe award and a Cesar awards before winning the Oscar. UTA is Farhadis first agency representation.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Weekend Receipts: Act of Valor Blows Away Competition
Hollywood's finest individuals who win a couple of days ago weren't limited only to the Kodak Theater (or what they have to think of it as now). A completely new-release frame well-recognized for its particularly aromatic qualities nevertheless had its success tales, introduced with a top-notch squad of Navy Shuts and our old friend Tyler Perry. Naturally. Your Weekend Receipts are here. 1. Act of Valor Gross: $24,700,000 (new) Screens: 3,039 (PSA $8,128) Days: 1 As predicted, bad reviews couldn't keep the flag-waving faithful away. Meanwhile, proceed and predict the second-week percentage visit should be genuine. I'll say 62 percent. 2. Good Deeds Gross: $16,000,000 (new) Screens: 2,132 (PSA $7,505) Days: 1 Clearly needed more headshots - ideally with Madea doing the shooting. 3. Journey 2: The Mysterious Island Gross: $13,475,000 ($76,731,000) Screens: 3,350 (PSA: $4,022) Days: 3 (Change: -32.1%) 4. Safe House Gross: $11,400,000 ($98,100,000) Screens: 3,052 (PSA $3,735) Days: 3 (Change: -51.8%) Both Journey 2 and Safe House still hold remarkably well after 72 hours of release. Which is always to say: Who's still seeing these? Especially round the weekend everyone's allegedly creating ground on Oscar competitors? 5. The Vow Gross: $26,600,000 ($88,527,000) Screens: 2,958 (PSA $8,993) Days: 2 (Change: -35.4%) Seriously, I'm asking. 8. Wanderlust Gross: $6,600,000 (new) Screens: 2,002 (PSA $3,297) Days: 1 It could always worsen, Jennifer Aniston! You may have been... 9. Gone Gross: $5,000,000 (new) Screens: 2,186 (PSA $2,287) Days: -..Amanda-m Seyfried. Or even it couldn't worsen? That's fine, though: Box office aside, I realize a specific distinction that nobody might take from either of individuals bottom citizens. Champion! [Figures via Box Office Mojo] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Pilot Season: Mira Sorvino In Final Predicts Star In CBS' Trooper
Charlie Sheen's ex-wife, Brooke Mueller, remains charged with legal cocaine possession with intent to distribute, TMZ reviews. Mueller, 34, remains charged with one count of having greater than four grams of cocaine on her behalf account then one count of having under four grams. The expense stem from Mueller's 12 ,. 2 arrest in Aspen, Colo. She's also charged with attacking a girl earlier... Discover More > Other Links From TVGuide.com Charlie SheenBrooke Mueller
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Exclusive Mad Males Sneak Look: Will Don Cheat Again?
Chris Colfer Glee's Chris Colfer is an extremely busy guy. He stars around the hit Fox musical, is delivering a children's book in May, and makes his screenwriting - and leading guy - debut later this season at nighttime senior high school comedy Struck By Lightning. Within the film, Colfer plays Carson Phillips, a higher school student who blackmails his peers into adding to his campus literary magazine after which will get - yup - struck by lightning. Chris Colfer makes leap to giant screen with Struck By Lightning The film also stars Modern Family's Sarah Hyland, Mad Men's Christina Hendricks and Allison Janney as Carson's mother. Watch the very first trailer: Are you going to see Struck By Lightning?
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