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‘Boyhood’ and ‘Birdman’ Win Big at the Satellite Awards

2015 Satellite Awards Winners
Michael Keaton as “Riggan” in BIRDMAN. (Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures)

The International Press Academy’s 19th annual Satellite Awards found Oscar favorites Birdman and Boyhood topping the list of winners in the film categories while Olive Kitteridge, Penny Dreadful, The Knick, and Transparent were recognized in the TV categories. Special awards were also given out this year to Ellen Burstyn, writer/director Martyn Burke, producer Shlomi Elkabetz, and Industrial Light & Magic.

Satellite Awards Winners


Actress in a Motion Picture
Julianne Moore
STILL ALICE
Sony Pictures Classics

Actress in a Supporting Role
Patricia Arquette
BOYHOOD
IFC Films

Actor in a Motion Picture
Michael Keaton
BIRDMAN
Fox Searchlight

Actor in a Supporting Role
J.K. Simmons
WHIPLASH
Sony Pictures Classics

Motion Picture
BIRDMAN
Fox Searchlight

Motion Picture, Animated or Mixed Media
SONG OF THE SEA
GKids

Motion Picture, Documentary
CITIZENFOUR
RADiUS-TWC

Motion Picture, International Film
TANGERINES
Estonia

Screenplay, Original
NIGHTCRAWLER
Dan Gilroy
Open Road

Screenplay, Adapted
THE IMITATION GAME
Graham Moore
The Weinstein Company

Director
Richard Linklater
BOYHOOD
IFC Films

Original Score
BIRDMAN
Antonio Sanchez
Fox Searchlight

Original Song
We Will Not Go
VIRUNGA
Netflix

Visual Effects
DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, Matt Kutcher
Fox

Cinematography
MR. TURNER
Dick Pope, BSC
Sony Pictures Classics

Film Editing
DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
William Hoy, ACE, Stan Salfas, ACE
Fox

Sound (Editing and Mixing)
WHIPLASH
Thomas Curley, Ben Wilkins, Craig Mann
Sony Pictures Classics

Costume Design
THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
Milena Canonero
Fox Searchlight

Art Direction & Production Design
THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
Adam Stockhausen, Stephan Gessler, Anna Pinnock
Fox Searchlight

Miniseries Made for Television
OLIVE KITTERIDGE
HBO

Motion Picture Made for Television
RETURN TO ZERO
Lifetime

Actress in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television
Frances McDormand
OLIVE KITTERIDGE
HBO

Actor in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television
Mark Ruffalo
THE NORMAL HEART
HBO

Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television
Sarah Paulson
AMERICAN HORROR STORY
FX

Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television
Rory Kinnear
PENNY DREADFUL
Showtime

Television Series, Drama
THE KNICK
Cinemax

Television Series, Genre
PENNY DREADFUL
Showtime

Actress in a Series, Drama
Keri Russell
THE AMERICANS
FX

Actor in a Series, Drama
Clive Owen
THE KNICK
Cinemax

Television Series, Comedy or Musical
TRANSPARENT
Amazon

Actress in a Series, Comedy or Musical
Mindy Kaling
THE MINDY PROJECT
Fox

Actor in a Series, Comedy or Musical
Jeffrey Tambor
TRANSPARENT
Amazon

Outstanding Mobile Game
XCOM: Enemy Within for Mobile
2K Games

Outstanding Platform Action/Adventure Game
Forza Horizon 2
Microsoft

Outstanding Youth Blu-Ray / DVD
How to Train Your Dragon 2
Fox Home Ent.

Outstanding Overall Blu-Ray / DVD
The Swimmer
Box Office Spectaculars Inc., CAV, Grindhouse Releasing, Sony Pictures

Complete list of 2015 Satellite Awards nominees

-By Rebecca Murray

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Netflix’s ‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’ Shows Off a Motion Poster

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Poster Featuring Ellie Kemper

Netflix’s new series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, set to premiere on March 6, 2015 at 12:01am PT, has unveiled a new motion poster for the comedy series. Created and executive produced by Tina Fey and Robert Carlock (30 Rock), Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt stars The Office‘s Ellie Kemper along with 30 Rock‘s Jane Krakowski and Tituss Burgess. The cast also includes Carol Kane, Lauren Adams, Sara Chase, and Sol Miranda.

The Plot:

After living in a cult for fifteen years, Kimmy (Kemper) decides to reclaim her life and start over in New York City. Armed with just a backpack, light-up sneakers, and a couple of way-past-due library books, she’s ready to take on a world she didn’t even think existed anymore. Wide-eyed but resilient, nothing is going to stand in her way. She quickly finds a new job (Krakowski), a new roommate (Burgess), and a new beginning.

‘Bosch’ Exclusive: Titus Welliver Interview

Titus Welliver Exclusive Interview on Bosch
Titus Welliver stars in ‘Bosch’

Now that Bosch has premiered on Amazon, you can watch the entire first season of the series. But I had only seen the pilot when I interviewed Titus Welliver after Amazon’s Television Critics Association panels. After Amazon’s pilot season, Bosch was chosen to go to series.

Based on the Michael Connelly books, Welliver plays Harry Bosch, a grizzled detective solving a homicide and also on trial for the shooting death of a suspected serial killer. It is a combination of the books City of Bones and The Concrete Blonde.

Have you gotten to explore any parts of L.A. that you wouldn’t normally visit living here?

Titus Welliver: “Not really, because I’ve lived here off and on for so many years. I had friends who lived in Boyle Heights and I’ve lived in Los Feliz, Silverlake and Hollywood so I’ve been all around.”

Do these lines come straight from the book: “On a day like this, who wouldn’t want to live?” “Humor us and check out the humerus.”

Titus Welliver: “The humerus is. I’m not sure if ‘on a day like this who wouldn’t want to live’ is. I don’t remember. That would be from City of Bones and I don’t recall that line.”

Do you find a lot of lines from the book end up in the script?

Titus Welliver: “Yeah, there’s definitely stuff in there. Michael writes really, really good dialogue. That banter that he has stays in there for a reason because it’s good.”

Was the scene in the rain very intense to do because it’s such a pivotal establishing moment for Bosch?

Titus Welliver: “That physically was one of the most unpleasant things to shoot in memory. First of all, it was in December. We had several rain machines that were going. I had a wetsuit on underneath but you get drenched, totally soaked through. We had heat lamps but at a certain point, I think the sun was coming up at around five in the morning. By three in the morning, I was starting to get hypothermic and it was really difficult because we’re doing medium shots, closeup shots where I’m holding the weapon, but I couldn’t stop my hands from shaking. But it sure does look cool, doesn’t it?

It is worth it and also if there was just one version of that, it would’ve been a much shorter evening. Because we have to shoot Money Chandler’s version of the story, then we shoot Jerry Edgar’s version of the story and then we shoot Bosch’s version of the story. You have all those different perspectives of that.”

I’m always fascinated by the actors who play the dead bodies. With the actor who played the body in the car, would you coordinate a lot with her in between takes? “This is when I’m going to lift your head up…”

Titus Welliver: “No, not really. First of all, she had the sun beaming in her face and the inside of that car, it was a very hot day. So she was getting microwaved in the car. And to try to keep your eyes open for a sustained period of time, she had a really, really tough job. The other thing is that at a certain point, hours after one dies, there’s a certain amount of lividity that happens so sometimes you’re having to loosen the joints by kind of breaking them apart. All that I said to her is, ‘I won’t drop your head on the steering wheel. Don’t worry about it.’ So that was the extent of that dialogue.

That scene also played out a little bit longer originally. There was more of Harry assessing the crime scene. But I think they did a great job of editing it because it’s more succinct and it also speaks to how Harry can read a scene and go, ‘Yeah, suicide.’ It was a hard day for her but she was a trooper. It’s no fun.”

Will readers expect the same outcome of the trial from The Concrete Blonde or could it go in different directions since it’s merged with City of Bones?

Titus Welliver: “No, no, I think the outcome of it, to my knowledge, would remain the same. It’s just an interesting way of telling it the same way it’s told in the book. J. Edgar is not completely 100% sure. Nobody’s really 100% sure even though Bosch was exonerated as it being a righteous shooting by the department. It’s unclear.

It’s unclear if he did it just because he wanted to kill this guy and didn’t have enough evidence to just arrest him. So did he just take the position of he’s doing society a service? The guy’s a serial rapist and a murderer. He doesn’t really belong in society so let’s save the tax payers money and time by just getting rid of this guy. Or, did Flores actually have a gun? Did he go for a weapon? A lot of different versions of it. It’s that Rashomon sort of thing.”

Does Bosch have his own code?

Titus Welliver: “Yeah, I think because of his military background, it’s an interesting sort of journey for him having come from being in two wars where your job is there’s people trying to kill you and you kill them before they can kill you. Now he’s back in society and ultimately if there’s someone doing wrong, it’s sort of the same combat scenario. But now you have these rules of engagement. LAPD has a very clear shoot/don’t shoot policy. How do you do that when he’s a special forces operator, so he’s totally trained to take them out.”

Have there been a few significant turning points for you in your career? Was Lost one, and Gone Baby Gone another, and even Deadwood?

Titus Welliver: “They’re all kind of different and they have merit on their own. Deadwood came at a period, David Milch called me up and I was really disenchanted with the business. I was feeling bored and restless and thinking this isn’t so interesting anymore. David called me up and said, ‘I’m writing something. Are you interested in coming back to L.A. to do this show?’ So I got on a plane, flew out and sat with David in his office for a couple of hours. He told me what the character was so I jumped in and it ended up being great.

Lost was another thing. Elizabeth Sarnoff had been one of the writers on Big Apple which is another show I’d done with David Milch, and on Deadwood. She called me up and said, ‘I don’t know if you’ve ever watched Lost.’ I said, ‘Yeah, I’ve watched the first season but I’m kind of behind.’ She said, ‘I have a great character for you but I can’t really tell you what it is unless you say you’ll do it because of the secretive nature of the show.’ Because I was close friends with her and knew that she was a great writer worth her word, I signed on to do that completely blindly, and was greatly rewarded even though if you think about it in terms of actual episodes that I did it was only four.

But that character in the mythology of Lost is from the first pilot episode all the way through to the end, the smoke monster. Ignorance was bliss. They would try to tell me things about the character and I would say, ‘I don’t want to know.’

Gone Baby Gone was an opportunity that came up. I read that script and I had read the book before, but I thought I would not get the part because I was considerably younger than the way the character was written in the book, as well in the script. It was just one of those things where a great leap of faith on Ben [Affleck’s] part to cast me in that role. That was the beginning of my working relationship with Ben, and a tremendous experience, a really interesting character in a fabulous film. And a wonderful experience working with Morgan Freeman, Ed Harris and everybody, Casey [Affleck] and Amy Madigan. Stop me if I name the entire cast.”




‘Furious 7’ New TV Spot with Vin Diesel and Paul Walker

Furious 7 TV Spot with Vin Diesel and Paul Walker
Roman (TYRESE GIBSON), Letty (MICHELLE RODRIGUEZ), Brian (PAUL WALKER) and Tej (CHRIS “LUDACRIS” BRIDGES) are back for ‘Furious 7’ (Photo © 2014 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.)

Universal Pictures has made a new TV spot available featuring a few new clips from Furious 7 starring Vin Diesel and Paul Walker. The seventh Fast and Furious film was directed by James Wan and also features Dwayne Johnson, Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson, Chris “Ludacris” Bridges, Elsa Pataky, Lucas Black, Djimon Hounsou, Tony Jaa, Ronda Rousey, Nathalie Emmanuel, Kurt Russell, and Jason Statham.

“Vengeance hits home”

Universal is releasing Furious 7 in theaters on April 3, 2015.

Watch the video:


-By Rebecca Murray

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Kevin Hart Announces the What Now? Tour

Kevin Hart What Now 2015 Tour Dates

Comedian/actor Kevin Hart will be hitting the road for a 45 city tour kicking off on April 9, 2015 in San Antonio, Texas. Concert promoter Live Nation says Hart’s upcoming North American arena tour is the biggest comedy tour in history, and tickets will go on sale on February 20th at whatnowtour.com.

KEVIN HART WHAT NOW? TOUR DATES

Thu, April 09, 2015 San Antonio, TX AT&T Center

Fri, April 10, 2015 Little Rock, AR Verizon Arena

Sat, April 11, 2015 Oklahoma City, OK Chesapeake Energy Arena

Fri, April 17, 2015 Buffalo, NY First Niagara Center

Sat, April 18, 2015 Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun Arena

Sun, April 19, 2015 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena

Fri, April 24, 2015 Orlando, FL Amway Center

Sat, April 25, 2015 Jacksonville, FL Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena

Sun, April 26, 2015 Birmingham, AL BJCC Arena

Fri, May 01, 2015 Raleigh, NC PNC Arena

Sat, May 02, 2015 Charlotte, NC Time Warner Cable Arena

Sun, May 03, 2015 Richmond, VA Richmond Coliseum

Fri, May 08, 2015 Tampa, FL Amalie Arena

Sat, May 09, 2015 Miami, FL American Airlines Arena

Fri, May 15, 2015 Minneapolis, MN Target Center

Sat, May 16, 2015 Auburn Hills, MI The Palace of Auburn Hills

Sun, May 24, 2015 Las Vegas, NV Mandalay Bay Events Center

Fri, June 05, 2015 Boston, MA TD Bank Garden Arena

Sat, June 06, 2015 Baltimore, MD Royal Farms Arena

Fri, June 12, 2015 Atlanta, GA Philips Arena

Sun, June 14, 2015 Augusta, GA James Brown Arena

Fri, June 19, 2015 Indianapolis, IN Bankers Life Fieldhouse

Sat, June 20, 2015 Cincinnati, OH US Bank Arena

Sun, June 21, 2015 Cleveland, OH Quicken Loans Arena

Thu, June 25, 2015 Los Angeles, CA Staples Center (BET Experience)

Thu, July 02, 2015 New Orleans, LA Mercedes-Benz Superdome (Essence Festival)

Fri, July 03, 2015 Memphis, TN FedExForum

Tue, July 07, 2015 New York City, NY Madison Square Garden

Sat, July 11, 2015 Newark, NJ Prudential Center

Thu, July 16, 2015 San Jose, CA The SAP Center at San Jose

Fri, July 17, 2015 Sacramento, CA Sleep Train Arena

Sat, July 18, 2015 Oakland, CA Oracle Arena

Fri, July 24, 2015 Montreal, QC Bell Centre (Just For Laughs Montreal)

Thu, July 30, 2015 Chicago, IL United Center

Sat, Aug. 01, 2015 Toronto, ON Air Canada Centre

Thu, Aug. 06, 2015 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center

Fri, Aug. 14, 2015 Dallas, TX American Airlines Center

Sat, Aug. 15, 2015 Houston, TX Toyota Center

Thu, Aug. 20, 2015 Louisville, KY KFC Yum! Center

Fri, Aug. 21, 2015 St. Louis, MO Scottrade Center

Sat, Aug. 22, 2015 Kansas City, MO Sprint Center

Wed, Aug. 26, 2015 Syracuse, NY Oncenter War Memorial Arena

Thu, Aug. 27, 2015 Albany, NY Times Union Center

Fri, Aug. 28, 2015 Wantagh, NY Nikon at Jones Beach Theater

Sun, Aug. 30, 2015 Philadelphia, PA Lincoln Financial Field

Channing Tatum, Ansel Elgort and Nicole Kidman Join the Oscars Presenters List

Channing Tatum, Idris Elba, Nicole Kidman Join the 2015 Oscar Presenters List
Channing Tatum presents during the 86th Academy Awards (Photo Credit: Michael Yada / ©A.M.P.A.S.)

The 2015 Academy Awards producers Neil Meron and Craig Zadan announced additional presenters set to take the stage during Hollywood’s biggest event of the year. Channing Tatum, Ansel Elgort, Nicole Kidman, Jason Bateman, Idris Elba, Liam Neeson, and Gwyneth Paltrow have been confirmed as presenters at this year’s Oscars.

They’re joining the list of previously announced presenters Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston, Cate Blanchett, Jessica Chastain, Marion Cotillard, Benedict Cumberbatch, Viola Davis, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Chris Evans, Kevin Hart, Josh Hutcherson, Scarlett Johansson, Dakota Johnson, Jennifer Lopez, Jared Leto, Shirley MacLaine, Matthew McConaughey, Sienna Miller, Chloë Grace Moretz, Eddie Murphy, Lupita Nyong’o, David Oyelowo, Chris Pine, Chris Pratt, Margot Robbie, Zoe Saldana, Octavia Spencer, Meryl Streep, Miles Teller, John Travolta, Kerry Washington, Naomi Watts, Oprah Winfrey and Reese Witherspoon.

Confirmed to perform during this year’s Oscars are Jack Black, Common, Jennifer Hudson, Lady Gaga, Anna Kendrick, John Legend, Adam Levine with Maroon 5, Tim McGraw, Rita Ora, and Tegan and Sara with The Lonely Island.

Neil Patrick Harris hosts the 2015 Oscars, which will be held on February 22nd and will air live on ABC.

Complete list of 2015 Oscar nominees




‘Backcountry’ New Trailer – Lost Hikers vs. a Hungry Bear

Backcountry Movie Trailer Starring Missy Peregrym
Missy Peregrym in a scene from ‘Backcountry’ (Photo Courtesy of IFC Midnight)

IFC Midnight’s released a new trailer for the dramatic movie Backcountry directed by Adam MacDonald and heading to theaters on March 20, 2015. The thriller’s based on a true story and stars Missy Peregrym, Jeff Roop, Eric Balfour, and a very angry bear.

The Plot:

Backcountry follows an urban couple who go camping in the Canadian wilderness – where unimaginable beauty sits alongside our most primal fears. Alex (Roop) is a seasoned outdoorsman while Jenn (Peregrym), a corporate lawyer, is not. After much convincing, and against her better judgment, she agrees to let him take her deep into a Provincial Park to one of his favorite spots – the secluded Blackfoot Trail.

On their first night, deep in the forest, they have an unsettling encounter with Brad (Balfour), a strange alpha male with eyes for Jenn who may or may not be following them. Alex’s desire to quickly reach Blackfoot Trail only intensifies. They push further and further into the woods, Alex stubbornly insisting that he remembers the way. After three days their path disappears; they are hopelessly lost. Without food or water, they struggle to find their way back, the harsh conditions bringing out the best and worst in them, pushing their already fragile relationship to the breaking point. When they realize they have entered a bear’s territory, being lost suddenly becomes the least of their problems. Terror, horror, will, and survival become paramount.

Watch the trailer:


-By Rebecca Murray

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Kody Keplinger Exclusive Interview: ‘The DUFF’ and ‘Lying Out Loud’

Kody Keplinger Interview on The DUFF and Lying Out Loud
Poster for ‘The DUFF’ starring Mae Whitman and Robbie Amell

Kody Keplinger is one of the youngest published authors around, let alone published author with a movie adaptation. The DUFF is based on Keplinger’s first book, with ‘DUFF’ standing for Designated Ugly Fat Friend. Mae Whitman stars as Bianca, the girl who learns that she is the DUFF for her popular friends.

I got to speak with Keplinger when she came to L.A. for the film’s press junket. We had fun discussing alternatives to DUFF and learning about her next book called Lying Out Loud. The DUFF opens Friday, February 20, 2015 in theaters.

Kody Keplinger Interview:

I’m sure everyone’s asked you how you wrote a book at age 17. I’m going to take the opposite perspective and ask you what took so long?

Kody Keplinger: [Laughs] “I know, right? Just damn middle school and high school getting in the way. Yeah, I wrote a lot actually all through middle school and high school. The DUFF was just the first project I actually got published. But I wrote a lot before that, but I would never finish things. The DUFF was one of the first projects, I think the second project I ever actually finished because I got distracted very easily as a writer.”

The movie really captures social media in a visual way. How did the book deal with social media?

Kody Keplinger: “So, there’s a little less social media used in the book because I wrote it in the late 2000s. While there was social media happening, it wasn’t quite as big as it is now. So that’s one thing I really like about the movie. I think they brought it more into the modern context and they’ve done a really great job of incorporating the themes of the book but using modern social media to really make it a little more present, which I thought was really a smart choice.”

Have you incorporated more social media in subsequent books?

Kody Keplinger: “Yes, I have actually. The book that I have coming out in April is called Lying Out Loud, so LOL, haha. There’s a catfishing storyline so it definitely incorporates social media through instant messaging and texting and stuff like that. So I’ve definitely started including it more in my books.”

It seems like teenagers know that saying fat or ugly are mean, but they came up with the term The DUFF to pretend they’re not really saying it. But it’s still not nice, right?

Kody Keplinger: “The thing about the word DUFF is I actually learned the word when I was in high school. It was a word being used when I was a teenager. That’s why I got the idea for the book. I did some research afterwards though. I found out that it really originated via some reality dating show in the early 2000s. That’s where it apparently became a thing people were saying.

My interpretation of the word DUFF is not about being fat or ugly. It’s about feeling less than, about feeling like you’re the least adequate person in the group whether it means you are the most overweight or that you’re just the least intelligent or not the smartest. You just feel awkward in your own skin. I don’t think it has anything to do with what you look like. I think that that word is just kind of the odd one out in a way.

What’s funny about it is when I was in high school, I started asking my friends about this word because I was sure I was the DUFF. I was convinced. When I started asking my friends about it I realized everyone thought it was them. Everyone thought they were the DUFF in the group. I realized again it has nothing to do with what you look like. People just interpret that word as being the odd one out, the least something in the group and everybody can relate to that.”

Right, it’s comparative to who your other friends are.

Kody Keplinger: “Mm-hmm. What’s funny is if you ask pretty much anybody if they have a DUFF, their response is going to be, ‘No, I am a DUFF,’ no matter what they look like which is why I thought it was so badass that Kylie Jenner wore the ‘I’m somebody’s DUFF’ T-shirt. I thought that was so cool because if someone that famous and that beautiful can say, ‘Yeah, I felt like somebody’s DUFF before,’ and I’m sure she has. She’s got a lot of famous beautiful sisters as well. If someone can say that, it kind of shows that anybody can feel this way. It’s not necessarily what you look like.”

Do you think each sequel could maybe add an F, so the next one can be The DUFFF, and then The DUFFFF?

Kody Keplinger: [Laughs] “So the Designated Ugly Fat Friend Forever?”

I was thinking another mean adjective. I should’ve come up with some other F adjectives for you.

Kody Keplinger: “I’ll have to think about it. Last night, I was coming up with alternatives to DUFF, so one I came up with is Dangerously Unstoppable Fashionable Friend. I haven’t thought about adding more Fs. That’s tricky. I’ll have to think on that.”

Was the mom riding the lawnmower with a glass of wine in your book?

Kody Keplinger: “No, but I thought that was amazing. I saw that clip in the trailer and almost died. I think we can all relate to that moment in life when we’ve got to get stuff done but we’re also kind of a mess. I think Allison Janney is just perfect. She’s absolutely hilarious and beautiful and just amazing. I think she brings so much heart to everything she does. I’m so glad that she was cast as the mom.”

She really sells it. Did your mom have those sort of self-help philosophies?

Kody Keplinger: “My mom in real life? No, actually. The mom in the book and the movie is very different from my mom. My mom was kind of the rocker mom. I had to be able to identify AC/DC and Led Zeppelin just by the first few chords of a song by the time I was six. That was my mom’s hobby, so it was less self-help and more like I’m going to educate you in the art of classic rock. That was more my mom.”

Was the language as edgy in the book, or is the movie even toned down from the book?

Kody Keplinger: “The movie’s a little more toned down from the book. Bianca has a little bit of a potty mouth in the book, but if the book was translated exactly as is, it probably would’ve gotten rated R, so I’m glad that they toned it down a little bit so that the message can reach a wider audience. It’s still pretty edgy PG-13 though which I love.”

Why is granola a topping mistake?

Kody Keplinger: “Oh, I have been wanting to know that forever. After I saw the movie, I specifically sought out one of the producers. I was like, ‘Tell me why this is a topping mistake.’ I can’t remember if she told me the answer or not. I’m going to say it’s a topping mistake because instead of granola, you could also have chocolate chips which are always better.”

So that wasn’t from the book? That was new?

Kody Keplinger: “No, that was definitely new and I thought it was hilarious. It was funny, in the early screening that I saw I was with a lot of teenagers and when the yogurt guy appears on screen, I don’t know what it was but the teenagers freaked out. They all screamed. They loved him and I love that little moment. It was really fun.”

Getting into publishing at a young age must have been a big deal. Was then negotiating movie rights a whole other ballgame?

Kody Keplinger: “It was really interesting because the movie rights sold before the book even came out, shortly after the book sold it was optioned. So I was really excited about it. I was excited that someone wanted to make it, but I didn’t want to get my hopes up too much. So I told myself, ‘You know what, this is fun, someone is interested but I’m not going to believe it’s really happening until it starts happening.’

And then last year, things started happening. There was casting and Mae Whitman has always been my dream Bianca. Since I wrote the book, I’ve always wanted her to be Bianca so when she was cast it blew my mind. It was just one of the most exciting moments of my life and that’s when it started to feel real to me. It was very strange but then went from this idea of it’ll probably never happen to suddenly everything was happening at once. I’m still kind of reeling I think.”

Now that you’re in your 20s are you starting to write about different things?

Kody Keplinger: “I’m not really. I think my writing has matured as all writers do after they’ve written a few books but I’m still really interested in writing books about teenagers. I’ve actually started writing some books for middle schoolers as well, so am I regressing, going backwards in time somehow?”

It might be that you’ve gained perspective on those years.

Kody Keplinger: “I think so. High school was tough but I think middle school was tougher for me. Middle school were some hard years and looking back on it as an adult, it’s interesting to re-evaluate things that I didn’t understand at that age. So writing about it has been really, really interesting. I guess I feel that way about high school in some ways too now that I’m in my 20s and have a little bit of distance from high school.

Like I said, I think some of my writing has changed but I’m still interested in the same content. I still love to write about teens. I still love meeting my teenage fans. I still feel very much a part of that group in a way. Maybe I haven’t grown up quite enough.”

How did it feel the first time you signed one of your books?

Kody Keplinger: “It was kind of mind-blowing I think. I first signed one of my books at Book Expo America in New York City a few months before the book came out. It was an advanced copy of the book and I had a signing line I had to do because the book was getting some promotion. So I didn’t just get to sign one and revel in it. I had to then go and sign I don’t remember how many copies, probably 100 copies back to back to back. So it was really exciting but it also gave me some carpal tunnel.”

Are you going to college?

Kody Keplinger: “I left college a few years ago, actually. I went to Ithaca College right out of high school in upstate New York. I was a writing major. I’ve been living in New York City now a few years. Ithaca’s a great, great school. I love that town. It’s one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been in my life and it was very much an inspirational place to be. It’s stunning up there.”

What’s next for you?

Kody Keplinger: “As I mentioned before, I have a new book coming out in April called Lying Out Loud which is a companion to The DUFF. The characters from The DUFF do appear in the book and I’m so, so excited. It was fun to revisit those characters a few years later and to introduce some new characters that I’m really happy about and I’m really hoping that readers will love.”

What’s your process for writing? Do you start with characters or an outline of the story?

Kody Keplinger: “I always start with characters when I’m starting a new book. I’m really drawn to characters and character development, so I usually have the characters in my head, a voice in my head, and then slowly the plot or a scenario will come into my mind. With Lying Out Loud, I realized I had this character of Sunny in my head and I wanted to do something from the point of view of a catfish, of the girl who’s catfishing someone. I started taking notes and piecing it together and making a plot out of that. Eventually I had a storyline and then I outlined and then I wrote the book.”

How involved were you with the adaptation of The DUFF?

Kody Keplinger: “I wasn’t involved directly with the movie but I did get to go to set when they were filming, which was probably one of the most fun days of my life because I got to meet the director and some of the cast. It was so cool to actually get to meet Mae in person and actually tell her face to face that I’d always wanted her to be this role. It was such a fun experience to get to go to set and see it coming together and to talk to the cast and answer their questions and ask my own. That was one of my favorite things about this whole process.”

Andy Samberg and Adam Sandler Sing “That’s When You Break” – ‘SNL’ 40th Anniversary Special

Andy Samberg and Adam Sandler SNL That's When You Break Song

Andy Samberg and Adam Sandler teamed up to pay tribute to all of those Saturday Night Live cast members who couldn’t keep themselves from breaking character and laughing during skits in a new song “That’s When You Break.” The song poked fun out the countless times cast members couldn’t keep it together (with multiple clips of Jimmy Fallon and Horatio Sanz cracking up), and Samberg even included a line in the new ’80s rocker-styled digital short acknowledging the box office bomb (That’s My Boy) he and Sandler co-starred in back in 2012.

Watch the Andy Samberg and Adam Sandler video:

‘Jadotville’ Starring Jamie Dornan Will Premiere on Netflix

Jamie Dornan will star in Jadotville
Jamie Dorman in ‘The Fall’ season 2 (Photo courtesy of Netflix)

Netflix picked up the thriller Jadotville starring Fifty Shades of Grey‘s Jamie Dornan at the Berlin Film Festival and will premiere it in 2016. The war drama will be directed by music video director Richie Smyth from a screenplay by Kevin Brodbin (Constantine).

According to Netflix, Jadotville will start shooting in April and will film in Ireland and South Africa.

“The story of how Pat Quinlan led his troops against an overwhelming force without losing a single man is one of the great stories of the 20th century, and we are proud to be working with such a talented and committed team to bring it to life,” said Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos. “This film will be an amazing addition to our global original films initiative.”

“As filmmakers, we are constantly looking for new ways to bring a movie to the largest possible audience. Netflix has already reinvented the TV market and is now moving front and center into the film business. We are proud and excited to be part of their story and innovation,” said Parallel Films’ Alan Moloney.

The Plot:

A gripping true story of incredible bravery against impossible odds, the film thrillingly depicts the 1961 siege of a 150-strong Irish UN battalion under Commander Patrick Quinlan (Dornan) by 3,000 Congolese troops led by French and Belgian mercenaries working for mining companies. Guillaume Canet plays a French commander who sought to defeat Quinlan and his men.




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