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‘Home’ Soundtrack Details: Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna, and Charli XCX Contribute Songs

Home Movie Soundtrack List with Jennifer Lopez and Rihanna

The soundtrack to the animated alien movie Home will feature songs by Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna, Charlie XCX, Kiesza, and Jacob Plant. The DreamWorks Animation and 20th Century Fox release will be hitting theaters on March 27, 2015 with the soundtrack dropping on March 24th.

Directed by Tim Johnson (Antz, Over the Hedge), Home is based on the book The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex and features the voices of Lopez, Rihanna, Jim Parsons, and Steve Martin.

The Plot: “Home is the story of Oh (voiced by Jim Parsons), a loveable misfit from another planet who lands on Earth to find himself on the run from his own people.  He forms an unlikely friendship with an adventurous girl named Tip (voiced by Rihanna) who is on a quest of her own to find her mother Lucy (voiced by Jennifer Lopez). Through a series of comic adventures with Tip, Oh comes to understand that being different and making mistakes is all part of being human. And while he changes her planet and she changes his world, they discover the true meaning of the word HOME.”

Home Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Track List

“Towards The Sun” – Rihanna
“Run To Me” – Coffee
“Cannonball” – Kiesza
“As Real As You And Me” – Rihanna
“Red Balloon” – Charli XCX
“Dancing In The Dark” – Rihanna
“Drop That” – Jacob Plant
“Feel The Light” – Jennifer Lopez

  

The 10 Best Mockumentaries – Beatles, Beatles Wannabes, and Vampires

Top 10 Mockumentaries - Vampires, Beatles, and Spinal Tap
The cast of ‘What We Do in the Shadows’

Perhaps credit needs to be given to Orson Welles and his 1938 broadcast of War of the Worlds for planting the seeds for the modern mockumentary film. Welles created false newsbreaks to fool listeners into thinking that their regular radio show was being interrupted for reports of an alien invasion. The brilliant conceit gained fame and notoriety for Welles, and he would create fake newsreels when he made his film directing debut with Citizen Kane three years later.

Although Merriam-Webster cites the first use of the word in 1965, the term did not gain widespread popularity until the ’80s with This Is Spinal Tap and a string of fake documentaries masterminded by Christopher Guest. Here is a list of the best mockumentaries, including a couple of overlooked gems. The films here all boast a satiric tone, which is key to the mockumentary. A mockumentary is all about using the tropes of the documentary for comic effect. This – along with not limiting the film to a first person camera point of view — is what differentiates these films from the found footage film, which shares a fake cinéma vérité style but not the satiric edge.

1. A Hard Day’s Night (1964)
Richard Lester’s exuberant romp with the Beatles might be the reason “mockumentary” entered the lexicon the following year. The Fab Four essentially played themselves in a film that offered us an exaggerated look at their professional and not too private lives. A Hard Day’s Night followed them through a day and a half of press conferences, rehearsals, running from fans, and a TV performance. Still wildly fresh and inventive, and it serves a few absurd, comic non-sequiturs.

This is Spinal Tap Mockumentary

2. This is Spinal Tap (1984)
This is Spinal Tap created a fake rock band in order to follow the careers of the band members and send up the rock documentary — if you will, “rockumentary” — films of the ’70s (specifically The Song Remains the Same about Led Zeppelin and to a lesser extent Let It Be about The Beatles). This film is pure comic genius. Directed by Rob Reiner and written by Reiner and performers Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer, this film simply got everything pitch perfect. The music, the shooting style, the pretentiousness of rock stars, the crassness of the industry, the backstage melodrama – it’s all here and lovingly sent up. The notion of taking things to “eleven” comes from this film, as does the infamous song title “Lick My Love Pump.” The music was so fun that the fake band went on tour and made albums. Guest went on to make a career out of mockumentaries with a string of hilarious but not quite as perfect films: Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, A Mighty Wind, and For Your Consideration. I will let This is Spinal Tap represent the oeuvre.

3. Forgotten Silver (1995)
This little gem from Peter Jackson is too often overlooked and too rarely screened. What makes this mockumentary extra sweet is that it was originally screened as a real documentary on TV to an unsuspecting New Zealand public; the hoax was only revealed later. So Jackson, actor Sam O’Neill, and film historian Leonard Maltin all appear perfectly strait-faced as themselves in a “documentary” about unsung auteur Colin McKenzie. MacKenzie, born in New Zealand in 1888, is credited in the film as having pioneered talking pictures, color film, and tracking shots. However, his supreme bad fortune left his films M.I.A. and his reputation in obscurity. Jackson sets off on an investigative journey – a la Indiana Jones — to unearth McKenzie’s lost biblical epic Salome, and to try and restore his fellow countryman to his proper place in cinematic history. Jackson meticulously mimics the public broadcasting documentary style — from the subdued seriousness of the voice-over narration to the talking head interviews — so that his film is indistinguishable from the real thing. The fake archival footage is an absolute delight.

Real Life Mockumentary

4. Real Life (1979)
This is Albert Brooks’ masterpiece. Before “reality TV” became a standard, there was a PBS documentary called An American Family. For twelve weeks, TV audiences were invited into the home of the Loud family and watched the mom ask for a separation and the son embark on a gay lifestyle in New York. It is this show that Brooks set as his satiric target and he hit a bulls eye. Brooks plays a pushy, egotistical filmmaker who convinces a Phoenix family to let him and his crew into their lives for a TV show. He promises to be unobtrusive but he can’t help but interfere in everything in order to make his show better. He even creates a ridiculous camera rig – that looks like some alien space suit – to make his crew seem less obtrusive. Of course it only does the opposite. Reality TV (and the reason it’s silly) hasn’t changed a whole lot since the ground-breaking PBS show, so this mockumentary still has wicked bite to it.

5. Take the Money and Run (1969)
Woody Allen’s directorial feature debut (What’s Up Tiger Lily? doesn’t really count because it is a repurposed film by someone else and not one he actually made) was a mockumentary about petty criminal Virgil Starkwell (played by Allen). Allen would return to this format in Bananas, Zelig (playing extensively with special effects and adding himself as the character of Zelig into real historical footage), and Sweet and Lowdown. So as with Guest, I will let one film represent Allen’s particular skill at creating fake documentary footage. Take the Money and Run is less polished than what followed but it is goofily charming.

6. What We Do in the Shadows (2014)
Jemaine Clement was one of the co-creators of the deadpan HBO comedy Flight of the Conchords and Taika Waititi directed Clement in the indie comedy Eagle Vs. Shark. Together they have created a mockumentary that ranks as one of the best ever. Their subject: The modern day vampire living in Wellington, New Zealand. The genius of their approach is not to focus on the fantastical aspects of being a vampire but rather the mundane – like bloodsucking roommates who don’t do their chores for centuries or how to dress properly when you have no reflection. What’s amazing and satisfying is that Clement and Waititi display a better knowledge of vampire lore than most serious horror films do. Sink your teeth into this one for a truly tasty treat.

7. All You Need Is Cash: The Rutles (1978)
Okay this is a bit of a cheat because technically it is a TV movie but this Beatles-inspired mockumentary conceived by Monty Python’s Eric Idle is so fun that I could not leave it off the list. The Rutles began as a sketch on Idle’s British show Rutland Weekend Television. When Idle hosted Saturday Night Live, producer Lorne Michaels aired clips of the TV show including a clip of The Rutles. This eventually led to the TV movie being made. The Beatles’ alter egos in the film are Dirk (Eric Idle), Barry (John Halsey), Stig (Rickey Fataar), and Nasty (Neil Innes). George Harrison supported the film from the start and even makes an uncredited appearance as an interviewer. John Lennon reportedly adored it, Ringo Starr liked it to a lesser degree, and Paul McCartney maintained a “no comment” response although Idle reports that he has since warmed up to the film. The songs are great and the parody is so close to reality that Beatles fans will love pointing out all the real things the film is riffing on.

Man Bites Dog Mockumentary

8. Man Bites Dog (1992)
This nasty piece of work comes from the creative team of Rémy Belvaux, André Bonzel, and Benoît Poelvoorde (who plays the lead character). The film is a savage attack on how far a journalist/filmmakers will go to get a story. In this case the story is a portrait of a serial killer. The camera crew follows their criminal around, and let him rant and rave about art and life as he executes murders on camera with the crew doing nothing to prevent him from committing his crimes. In fact, they eventually become accomplices and by implication so too do we as viewers. There is dark, vicious humor to this and the film is included to show the extreme to which this genre has been taken. It’s a brutal and disquieting film but one that’s expertly crafted.

9. Bob Roberts (1992)
Actor Tim Robbins makes his writing-directing debut with this mockumentary about the senatorial campaign of Bob Roberts, a conservative folk singer turned politician. The openly liberal Robbins is clearly targeting the extreme right with his film. He not only stars as Roberts but also wrote all the songs for the film. No list of mockumentaries would be complete without at least one political one. The best political mockumentary is Robert Altman’s 1988 Tanner ’88 but that was a TV show and so technically not fit for this list. But it’s genius was to run a fake candidate (played by Michael Murphy) for president and have real political figures like Pat Robertson, Bob Dole, Jesse Jackson, and Gary Hart playing themselves. But Bob Roberts has Gore Vidal delivering a brilliant cameo as a senator.

10. Bruno (2009)
Sacha Baron Cohen specializes in a mockumentary approach in much of his work, starting with his British TV shows. His feature film debut was Borat, a mockumentary about a Kazakh TV personality who comes to the U.S. with a camera crew. But I prefer the second feature film he created, Bruno, about a flamboyant fashionista from Austria. Both characters were taken from ones he had created on British TV. Cohen’s specialty is to create a character that he presents to the world as real and so his footage relies on unsuspecting real people ending up as actors in his films. Bruno takes more risks and has more of a point than Borat but both display something inventive – a kind of mockumentary meets Candid Camera — in terms of approach to the mockumentary format.

Honorable Mentions: Peter Greenaway’s The Falls, Incident at Loch Ness (with Werner Herzog – a man who confesses to not understanding irony – brilliantly mocking himself), Finishing the Game, Strictly Ballroom (it’s just the opening but it’s hilarious), and Series 7.




‘American Sniper’ Sets Another Box Office Record

American Sniper Sets Another Box Office Record
BRADLEY COOPER as Chris Kyle and SIENNA MILLER as Taya in Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Village Roadshow Pictures’ drama ‘AMERICAN SNIPER.’ (Photo © 2014 Warner Bros Entertainment)

The R-rated action movie American Sniper has just made it past the the $500 million mark at the box office and is now the top grossing domestic release of 2014. Based on the true story of America’s most lethal sniper Chris Kyle, American Sniper pulled in $337.2 million domestically, $163 million internationally, and is still going strong in theaters worldwide.

The film also has earned the distinction of being director Clint Eastwood’s biggest box office success as well as actor Bradley Cooper’s biggest movie. In addition, Warner Bros Pictures reports American Sniper is the highest-grossing war movie of all time.

American Sniper has become a cultural touchstone that people want to share, discuss and remember. We are thrilled that the movie is still filling theatres, not only in the United States but around the globe, as filmgoers everywhere experience the power of the story of Chris and Taya Kyle,” said Sue Kroll, President of Worldwide Marketing and International Distribution, Warner Bros Picture.

“From its record-breaking Christmas opening, American Sniper has been a box office phenomenon,” stated Dan Fellman, President of Domestic Distribution. “The film’s A+ CinemaScore in every category has translated into enthusiastic word-of-mouth that continues to generate both first-time and repeat business. We could not be happier for Clint Eastwood, Bradley Cooper, Sienna Miller and everyone on the incredible filmmaking team on this remarkable achievement.”


-By Rebecca Murray

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‘SNL’ Video: Chris Hemsworth Celebrates Avengers Victory Over Ultron

Chris Hemsworth in Thor Costume on SNL
Chris Hemsworth as Thor during the “Avengers News Report” skit on March 7, 2015 (Photo by Dana Edelson / NBC)

The Avengers are victorious in their battle with Ultron and Thor’s ready to party in this skit from the March 7, 2015 episode of Saturday Night Live. Chris Hemsworth hosted the episode so of course there had to be an Avengers skit, and in the fake news report Thor (Hemsworth), Iron Man (Taran Killam), Bruce Banner (Pete Davidson), Nick Fury (Jay Pharoah) and Captain America (Beck Bennett) talk with a reporter on the street after defeating their latest enemy.

Watch the video:

‘HAPPYish’ Shows Off a Full Trailer and New Poster

Happyish First Trailer and Poster

Showtime’s premiered the first full trailer along with a poster for the upcoming new comedy series HAPPYish starring Steve Coogan, Kathryn Hahn, and Bradley Whitford and premiering on April 26, 2015 at 9:30pm ET/PT. The new show was created and written by author Shalom Auslander with Ken Kwapis (He’s Just Not That Into You, The Office) directing the first episode and serving as an executive producer. The cast also includes guest stars Ellen Barkin, Carrie Preston, Molly Price, and Andre Royo.

The Plot: Steve Coogan stars as Thom Payne, a 44-year-old man whose world is thrown into disarray when his 25-year-old wunderkind boss arrives, saying things like “digital,” “social” and “viral.” Is he in need of a “rebranding,” or does he just have a “low joy ceiling?” Maybe pursuing happiness is a fool’s errand? Maybe, after 44 years on this ludicrous planet, settling for happyish is the best one can expect.

Watch the trailer:

‘Veep’ Season 4 Trailer with President Selina Meyer

Veep Season 4 Full Trailer
Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Sam Richardson in ‘Veep’ season three (Photo: Paul Schiraldi / HBO)

President Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) says she needs to show that she’s a “lone, fierce, she-wolf” as she takes over the highest office in America in the new full trailer for HBO’s Veep. The always faithful Gary Walsh (Tony Hale) stands ready to serve the new POTUS, telling Selina he’s her calendar, Google, and Wilson the volleyball. Meanwhile, her other support staff appear to be losing their minds as they transition to being the assistants to the world’s most powerful woman.

Veep kicks off season four on Sunday, April 12 at 10:30pm ET/PT on HBO.

‘Hannibal,’ ‘Aquarius,’ and ‘AGT’ Summer Premiere Dates Announced

NBC Announces the Summer 2015 Premiere Dates
Emma Dumont as Emma Karn, Tara Lynne Barr as Katie, Ambyr Childers as Sadie, and Gethin Anthony as Charles Manson in ‘Aquarius’ (Photo by: Vivian Zink / NBC)

Hannibal will return for season three on June 4, 2015 at 10pm ET/PT as just announced by NBC. The network also revealed the dramatic series Aquarius starring David Duchovny will debut on May 28th at 9pm ET/PT, and America’s Got Talent will return for its 10th season on May 26th at 8pm. And the athletic competition series American Ninja Warrior has a May 25th at 8pm slot for its new season.

In releasing the premiere dates, NBC also provided details on the upcoming season of each series:

American Ninja Warrior – The action-packed series follows competitors as they tackle a series of challenging obstacle courses in both qualifying and finals rounds across the country. Those who successfully complete a course in their designated region move on to the national finals round in Las Vegas, where they face a stunning four-stage course modeled after the famed Mt. Midoriyama in Japan. Matt Iseman serves as host, along with former NFL player Akbar Gbaja Biamila (NFL Network).

America’s Got Talent – NBC’s top-rated summer series America’s Got Talent celebrates its landmark 10th season with the hottest performers from across the country competing for America’s vote. Howard Stern, Heidi Klum, Mel B and Howie Mandel return as judges and Nick Cannon returns as host. With the talent search open to acts of all ages, America’s Got Talent has brought the variety format back to the forefront of American culture by showcasing unique performers from across the country. The series is a true celebration of the American spirit, featuring a colorful array of singers, dancers, comedians, contortionists, impressionists, jugglers, magicians, ventriloquists and hopeful stars, all vying for their chance to win America’s hearts and the $1 million prize.

Last year, for the first time in the show’s history, America chose a magician as their winner: Rhode Island native Mat Franco, who went on to headline the “America’s Got Talent Live” stage show in Las Vegas.

Aquarius – It’s 1967 and the era of free love, drug experimentation and Vietnam is in full effect. When Emma (Emma Dumont), the teenage daughter of a respected lawyer, goes missing, LAPD Sgt. Sam Hodiak (David Duchovny) starts asking around. He soon discovers that the hippie kids he’s questioning don’t take kindly to cops, especially a cop with hair as short as his.

Needing the help of someone to trust, he partners with young undercover cop Brian Shafe (Grey Damon), a law-abiding officer who struggles with his own demons. He also begins to rely on Charmain Tully (Claire Holt), an ambitious rookie cop who’s anxious to prove herself in a male-dominated profession. It’s not long before they stumble upon a small-time cult leader seeking out vulnerable women to join his cause. From there, they follow this man’s trail down a rabbit hole of drugs, sex, murder and a cultural revolution. Little could they know, however, the guy they’re hunting will eventually become the killer we now recognize as Charles Manson (Gethin Anthony) — a lost soul who desperately wanted to get into the music scene of the ’60s until something snapped.

Aquarius will explore the cat-and-mouse game between Manson and the police in those turbulent years leading up to the infamous Tate-LaBianca murders.

Hannibal – After the shocking events of the season finale, Hannibal (Mads Mikkelsen) is on the run in Europe — accompanied by his psychiatrist Bedelia Du Maurier (Gillian Anderson) — sporting a new identity, but servicing the same insatiable appetite. As the lives of Will (Hugh Dancy), Jack (Laurence Fishburne) and Alana (Caroline Dhavernas) converge toward Hannibal again, their deadly dance turns in startling and unexpected ways, and nothing will ever be the same again.

‘Supergirl’ Debuts First Photos of Melissa Benoist

Supergirl First Photos of Melissa Benoist in Character
Melissa Benoist as Supergirl (Photo Credit: Bonnie Osborne / © 2015 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc)

CBS has revealed the Supergirl costume in two official photos for the upcoming superhero series. Production just began on the series based on the DC Comics characters, with Melissa Benoist in the lead role as Kara Danvers/Kara Zor-El and Supergirl. The costume was designed by 11-time Oscar nominee/three-time Oscar winner Colleen Atwood who also created the costumes worn on The Flash starring Grant Gustin and Arrow starring Stephen Amell.

“In designing Supergirl, I wanted to embrace the past, but more importantly, thrust her into the street-style action hero of today,” explained Atwood.

Supergirl‘s pilot was written by Greg Berlanti, Ali Adler, and Andrew Kreisberg, with the trio also executive producing. Glen Winter is directing the pilot episode.

The Plot: Born on the planet Krypton, Kara Zor-El escaped amid its destruction years ago. Since arriving on Earth, she’s been hiding the powers she shares with her famous cousin. But now, at age 24, she decides to embrace her superhuman abilities and become the hero she was destined to be.

Supergirl First Photo of Melissa Benoist
Melissa Benoist in her ‘Supergirl’ costume (Photo Credit: Bonnie Osborne © 2015 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved)

Chris Hemsworth, Hugh Jackman, and Jimmy Fallon Play Musical Beers

Chris Hemsworth, Hugh Jackman, and Jimmy Fallon Play Musical Beers
Bobby Moynihan, Jimmy Fallon, DJ Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Kate McKinnon, Hugh Jackman, Colin Jost and Chris Hemsworth play Musical Beers (Photo by Douglas Gorenstein / NBC)

Think Musical Chairs but with beer…that’s the idea behind the game of Musical Beers on the March 5, 2015 episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. Fallon was joined by Hugh Jackman, Chris Hemsworth, and SNL stars Bobby Moynihan, Colin Jost, and Kate McKinnon for a rowdy game in which whoever didn’t end up at a stack of red cups filled with beer was out of the competition. The game disintegrated after a couple of rounds, and in the end it was Thor vs. Fallon for the title of Musical Beers Champion.

Watch the video:

‘Unfinished Business’ Movie Review – Best to Leave This One Unwatched

Unfinished Business Movie Review
Company chief Dan Truckman (Vince Vaughn) tries to inspire his two employees – young Mike Pancake (Dave Franco) and Timothy McWinters (Tom Wilkinson) in ‘Unfinished Business’ (Photo by Nicole Rivelli © 2015 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation)

There are more penises on display in Unfinished Business than there were in Fifty Shades of Grey. Just let that sink in for a minute… That fact is one of the few interesting things there is to say about the new R-rated comedy starring Vince Vaughn, Dave Franco, and Tom Wilkinson.

Why so many penis jokes? Because in a comedy that has no idea what it’s trying to be, has no clue how to effectively incorporate a storyline about bullying, and thinks that making one of the leads a person with a developmental disability whose inability to understand complex words is a running punchline, throwing in a few penises is a way to get an easy laugh.

Unfinished Business is a throw-away late-night cable movie that somehow, most likely because of Vince Vaughn in the starring role, was given a theatrical release despite the fact it’s a disjointed mess. There’s a feeling of incompleteness about the film, and that’s not just an easy reference to the movie’s title. Is it a road-trip comedy similar to The Hangover, which it seems to attempt to be at times? Or maybe a sweet family film with gross-out jokes thrown in for good measure? What it’s not is a comedy with many laughs.

The film finds Vaughn, Franco, and Wilkinson’s characters taking on a much bigger corporation as they attempt to book clients for their fledgling business. Don’t ask what the company actually does because it’s not important, just know that it was formed after Vaughn’s character, Dan, had a Jerry Maguire moment, quit his job, screamed at his boss (Sienna Miller), and stormed out of the office asking anyone who wanted to forge a new path to follow him.

His only takers were Timothy (Wilkinson), who was actually just fired because of his age, and Mike Pancake (Franco) who’s lugging around a box of belongings not because he wanted to follow Dan but because he took the box with him to the office to interview for a job he didn’t get.

A year into their new venture, they still haven’t scored a big client but hopes are high that they’re just a handshake away from being able to pay their bills. And what will they do with that money if it comes through? Dan will send his son, who’s being bullied because of this weight, to a private school because, apparently, that’s how you deal with bullying.

Mike’s motivations aren’t quite so straightforward, while Timothy wants to divorce his wife (who he compares in physical appearance to a vending machine) so he can have sex with lots of women in different positions (the ‘wheelbarrow’ option is a running gag, along with Mike’s breakfast food last name). So off the threesome head to various locations, including Berlin during Oktoberfest, the G8 Summit, and a huge gay festival that leaves the hotels booked and the guys scrounging for rooms. Will they sign the deal and earn enough money to save the company and fulfill their dreams? The cheats incorporated in the script to even give the guys a chance to do so are so outlandish and manipulative that they completely negate everything the film’s laid out about the main characters over it’s first hour.

The Bottom Line:

Why anyone thought it was a good idea to reveal Dave Franco’s character was developmentally disabled and living in a group home and then continue to use him as the butt of jokes about his inability to comprehend what other characters are saying is beyond me. It’s also difficult to understand how that character can’t tell the difference between a square and a rectangle but later is able to pull together spreadsheets and budget projections that save the company. It would have been better to leave the character as naive and innocent instead of making the audience uneasy by continuously poking fun at this earnest guy who just wants to be included in the group.

Unfinished Business is all over the place, never finishing any one storyline as it careens aimlessly toward a predictable ending. The scatter-shot approach to this R-rated comedy leaves little room for any character to develop while, unfortunately, weaving running gags throughout that don’t deserve repeated attention. Given the low bar this one sets, you won’t have to look far for a smarter road trip comedy worthy of your time and attention.

GRADE: D

MPAA rating: R for some strong risqué sexual content/graphic nudity, and for language and drug use

Release date: March 6, 2015

Running time: 91 minutes

Directed by: Ken Scott




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