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Jimmy Fallon Bans Dancing and Kevin Bacon Gets Footloose

Kevin Bacon Dances to Footloose on the Tonight Show
After Jimmy announces that The Tonight Show has banned dancing, Kevin Bacon breaks the rules with an epic entrance on March 21, 2014 (Photo by: Lloyd Bishop/NBC)

On the March 21, 2014 episode of The Tonight Show, host Jimmy Fallon proclaimed dancing has been banned on the late night series. Why? To set up an epic Footloose-inspired dance number by Kevin Bacon. Bacon was on the show to talk about his series The Following and to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Footloose and, of course, his response to the ban on dancing was to perform “Footloose.”

He even ended the performance wearing a red tuxedo!

Game of Thrones Shooting in Belfast Behind the Scenes Video

Game of Thrones season four Location Manager Robert Boake provides insight into the challenges of shooting this upcoming season in Northern Ireland in this short-but-informative new video from HBO. Boake says that the scope increased with this new season requiring more snow, bigger sets, and more time spent at each location. Boake and his team were even responsible for making little roads to each location, according to producer Chris Newman, which allowed the crew to shoot in places that were little traveled and far off the beaten path.
 
HBO’s premiering season four of Game of Thrones on April 6, 2014 at 9pm ET/PT.
 
Watch the video:
 

 
-Posted by Rebecca Murray

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‘Filth’ Shows Off a Restricted Trailer with James McAvoy

Filth Movie Poster and Trailer with James McAvoy

Twisted, warped, crazy, and absolutely, positively NOT for anyone but adults who aren’t offended by crude language, sex scenes, and other R-verging-on-NC-17 material. The red band trailer (restricted: adult audiences only) for Filth could leave you speechless – or at the very least wondering what you watched.

Starring James McAvoy as you’ve never seen him before, Filth will debut on iTunes/OnDemand on April 24, 2014 followed by a theatrical release on May 30th.

Seriously, this trailer is for adults only and not for viewing at work.

Jon S. Baird directed the film, which also features Jamie Bell, Eddie Marsan, Jim Broadbent, and Imogen Poots.

The Plot: Detective Sergeant Bruce Robertson wants a promotion. He is clearly the best man for the job – the rest of his colleagues are just idiots. Annoyingly, there’s been a murder and Bruce’s boss wants results. No problem for Bruce. He’s in control and when he solves the case and wins the promotion, his wife will return to him. No problem. But is life that simple? Is Bruce the man he really thinks he is? The tragic, hilarious and memorable answers unfold in FILTH

Theo James Talks About ‘Divergent’

Is Theo James prepared to have his photo hung in bedrooms across the planet following his starring turn in Divergent? That’s not one of the questions he answers in this interview video courtesy of Summit Entertainment, but it’s one inquiring minds want to know.

What Theo does discuss is the film’s plot, what’s the Dauntless faction, and what it means to be divergent in this world created by author Veronica Roth.

The Plot: Divergent is an action-adventure film set in a world where people are divided into distinct factions based on human virtues. Tris Prior (Shailene Woodley) is warned she is Divergent and will never fit into any one group. When she discovers a conspiracy by a faction leader (Kate Winslet) to destroy all Divergents, Tris must learn to trust in the mysterious Four (Theo James) and together they must find out what makes being Divergent so dangerous before it’s too late.




Exclusive Interview with Steve Messina from Blow Up Hollywood

Steve Messina Blow Up Hollywood Interview

Steve Messina says Blow Up Hollywood’s latest album, Blue Sky Blond, is the most personal record he’s ever recorded. The songs are based on his personal experiences and reflect a difficult period in his life. Pouring his emotions into the tracks that make up Blue Sky Blond was a cathartic experience, with the end result being an album that’s complex yet accessible to listeners.

Exclusive Steve Messina Interview

“Shine” is my favorite song off of your latest album. Do you have favorites? Do you pick favorites among your work?

Steve Messina: “The cliché is you hear musicians/songwriters/artists always go, ‘Well, you know, they’re like my children,’ but I do have some favorites. Yeah, I do. I think there are some songs that are better than others. Sometimes it’s the song I like better in general, and then sometimes it’s just the song the way it was recorded that particular day when we recorded it. ‘Shine’ is one of my favorites and I’m not surprised that it’s one of your favorites because it seems to be a fan favorite. It’s one of the big reasons that we put it on the record is because so many people respond to it when we play it live.”

I know it’s cathartic for you to be able to write down your feelings and to express yourself, but then is it also a slight bit painful to sing it each time because you’re reliving those emotions?

Steve Messina: “Yeah, it can be – that’s a great question. Because when you’re really focused on the song and you’re performing it, you are kind of reliving the experience. It can be. Sometimes once you have some distance from a song that’s very personal, you have a little more distance, it takes on a different meaning to you too, even as the writer. It’s like I’m always fascinated by how songs I wrote 10 years ago with a certain personal meaning…you know, I wrote a song about my cousin passing, but as time has gone on that song, it becomes about the world and it becomes less mine and more everybody’s. Yeah, so that happens. I mean when it’s really fresh, yes, sometimes it can be very painful.”

Like ripping off a scab?

Steve Messina: “Yeah, picking at it. Yes.”

Do you mind if people interpret your songs wrong? They’re based on your personal experiences, however, they could mean something completely different to the audience than what you intended. Does that bother you?

Steve Messina: “No. Actually, I like it. Yeah, I think it’s great when somebody has their own interpretation of a song. I think I also find it very interesting when I find out that somebody interpreted it not completely but different than I was intending.”

Is there any song in particular that somebody has given a different meaning to that you never would have attached to that song?

Steve Messina: “On our very first record there’s a song called ‘Floating.’ I think it’s the second track. The whole record is this concept album about dying and passing from this life into the next and searching for heaven. The song ‘Floating’ is about this. The meaning I had for it, it’s very simple, simple lyrics, so it’s like there’s not much there. I mean if you listen to it, the lyric is super simple. I intended it to be about a guy kind of coming out of his body and floating and seeing his body, his spirit seeing his body. Then one day, this is maybe five or six years ago, I just happened to see there was this site and they were talking about, ‘Pick your favorite Valentine songs.’ Somebody chose ‘Floating’ by Blow Up Hollywood. I was like, ‘That’s such an interesting take!’ I started thinking about the simple lyric and I said, ‘Wow, I didn’t think of it. She say it as a love song.'”

It was really interesting. When I step back, on its own, if you haven’t listened to the whole album, if you don’t understand the concept of the album on its own, I can see how somebody can say, ‘I’m so in love that I’m floating over you,’ and that kind of a thing. It was interesting.”

Are there ever any feelings or any situations that are basically too personal to put down in a song?

Steve Messina: No. I don’t always admit that a song, that if somebody asks me – even if a friend or a family member or somebody I know might ask me about a song – I won’t admit what it’s about. ‘Oh no, that’s just a story about something I heard.’ You know? I’ll do one of those.”

Steve Messina Blow Up Hollywood Interview

That’s kind of taking the easy way out, isn’t it?

Steve Messina: [Laughing] “Yeah, yeah. ‘That’s not about you, Rebecca. You’re misinterpreting that song, Rebecca. It’s about somebody else.'”

What’s it like when you’re performing live versus being in a studio recording your music?

Steve Messina: “I like both recording and performing live, but the great thing about performing live is that you have an opportunity, one, to have the energy of the audience almost, to my mind, play a big part in how the music gets delivered. If you have a great audience, the music is almost always better. There’s just a different energy, a different vibration in the room, you know? I love it. Sometimes in the studio…some people think the studio can be really stale. It kind of can be, and it’s funny you mention that because the last couple of times I’ve been in the studio recording I always think to myself, ‘I want to invite an audience to watch us record,’ just because it puts a little different twist on it. There’s an energy, there’s people listening, you feel like you’re performing more as opposed to just recording.”

What’s the process like for you when you write? Do you have to be totally alone, locked in a room? Or does the inspiration come anywhere?

Steve Messina: “Yeah, you just nailed it. I have to be completely alone. I have to have lots of silence and lots of time. Usually, more often than not for me … I mean it can come at any time, but it’s in the middle of the night. I’m a bad sleeper so I’ll get up in the middle of the night and I’ll often go outside and just kind of gaze up at the stars. It’s so quiet I just imagine that I’m the only one up in the world. Then I get really inspired.”

Does it come to you all at once or do you just get little bits of a lyric and then eventually it comes together?

Steve Messina: “You know, it’s different. A bunch of different ways. Sometimes it’s all at once. Then sometimes I’ll have a musical idea that I just love, but I don’t have a lyric for it. Then one day it just kind of appears, you know? Believe it or not, another interesting thing, I’ve often … I shouldn’t say often, sometimes I can write a song and if I let myself go a little more stream of conscious, and let myself not be so judgmental of what I’m doing, I’ll write something and I won’t be sure what it means until it’s done. Then I go, ‘That’s what that means to me.'”

Is there a song on the new album like that?

Steve Messina: “Believe it or not, ‘Shine.’ ‘Shine’ was one of the easiest songs I’ve ever written. I remember writing that song, I was coming back from seeing a performance of one of my favorite singer/songwriters and I was just really moved by the performance, and I loved how much the crowd was moved by it. When I came back, it was the impetus to write that song. Kind of just got down, it kind of wrote itself.

‘Marjorie’ on the new album, I was getting ready to go out to lunch with my wife on a Saturday afternoon and while I was waiting for her to get dressed and ready, I just started playing the chords and humming that melody almost immediately. I knew there was something there and I said, ‘I can’t go to lunch. I’m sorry, I have to finish this.’ She went out, brought lunch back. In literally 20 minutes she was gone, the lyrics just came. I didn’t change anything. The lyrics are as I wrote it. It’s based on a true story, a real person.”

I would imagine that getting it right the first time is a thrilling experience, when you know that that is exactly what the song is supposed to sound like.

Steve Messina: “Yeah. Again, it’s really cliché, but I guess it is because it’s so true that sometimes you feel like more like a vehicle to this other dimension, to a spirit world, to a higher source, where you kind of just feel like it’s writing itself and you’re just the pen. That does feel really amazing.”

How many years is it going to take to get the next album?

Steve Messina: [Laughing] “You know, we’re actually, as we speak, we’re here on the West Coast. We rented this little cottage in Venice for a week before we head up to San Francisco. We’ve been doing some recording. On April 8, back in New York, we’re going into the studio to do some recording. It’s not going to be as long. Sometimes the time it takes between records, sometimes it’s because we’re really pondering the music and the record and what we want to do. Sometimes, personally, if I’m not inspired by anything or if I don’t have anything to say, then I just want to keep my mouth shut.”

That makes sense.

Steve Messina: “I think if we were more in it for … not that we’re not in it for the money, you want to make a living, this is what we do, but if I was more concerned with stardom or making more money and how much we’re selling, then I would probably force myself to do it, but I don’t do that.”

Do you normally have a lot of songs to pick and choose from for an album, or is it normal that there’s just barely enough?

Steve Messina: “You know, I love songwriting. I do a lot of producing and I write with a lot of other people for their records. Sometimes I’ll even write a song myself and I’ll be like, ‘Wow, I really like this song I wrote, but it’s not Blow Up Hollywood.’ One of the reasons I like to record, and the band records, and for me as the main writer is once I have a bunch of material I have trouble writing more until it’s put down. It’s like I actually have to get rid of it. It’s almost like, ‘All right, I’ve got to get rid of this. I have to empty out.'”

You have to purge that material and then you’ve got room to work on something else.

Steve Messina: “Exactly. My head is filled with it until it’s done.”

Talking about releasing singles and albums, it seems with social media and YouTube and all these outlets now available, new artists have more of a chance to be heard. Has that affected the music industry, do you think?

Steve Messina: “Oh, absolutely.”

For better or worse?

Steve Messina: “I don’t think there’s a better or worse, I think it’s just made it very different. I think it’s made it very different. In some ways, the music industry is a mess. It’s just so all over the place. What’s great about it is anybody has an opportunity to get out there now. [Laughing] What’s bad about it is anybody has an opportunity to get out there now.”




‘The Walking Dead’ Season 4 – Behind the Scenes of “That” Scene

The Waking Dead Season 4 Episode 14
Lizzie (Brighton Sharbino), Carol (Melissa Suzanne McBride) and Walker in 'The Walking Dead' season 4 (Photo Credit:Gene Page/AMC)

You know the scene I’m talking about, right? If so, you’ve got to watch this 5 minute behind-the-scenes of The Walking Dead video that focuses on that scene. And if you read the headline and said, “What scene?” then you’re not caught up on this season and shouldn’t click the play button. You’ve been warned!

The details: Season 4, Episode 14 – Carol is forced to make another difficult decision for the greater good.

‘Captain America: The Winter Soldier’ New “Conspiracy” Video and IMAX Posters

Marvel’s Captain America: The Winter Soldier has premiered a new TV spot titled “Conspiracy” featuring Chris Evans as Captain America being declared a fugitive and on the run. Coming to theaters on April 4, 2014, this second Captain America film was directed by Anthony and Joe Russo and features Scarlett Johansson, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Cobie Smulders, Frank Grillo, Emily VanCamp, Hayley Atwell, Robert Redford, and Samuel L. Jackson.

In addition to showing off the new video, Disney’s also unveiled new stylized IMAX posters of the key characters.

The Plot:

After the cataclysmic events in New York with The Avengers, Marvel’s Captain America: The Winter Soldier finds Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, living quietly in Washington, D.C. and trying to adjust to the modern world. But when a S.H.I.E.L.D. colleague comes under attack, Steve becomes embroiled in a web of intrigue that threatens to put the world at risk.

Joining forces with Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow, Captain America struggles to expose the ever-widening conspiracy while fighting off assailants sent to silence him at every turn. When the full scope of the villainous plot is revealed, Captain America and the Black Widow enlist the help of a new ally, the Falcon. However, they soon find themselves up against an unexpected and formidable enemy—the Winter Soldier.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier Chris Evans IMAX Poster

Captain America: The Winter Soldier Scarlett Johansson IMAX Poster

Captain America: The Winter Soldier Sebastian Stan IMAX Poster

Behind the Scenes of ‘Noah’ – Tubal Cain Featurette

Noah Tubal Cain Video
Russell Crowe and Ray Winstone in 'Noah' (Photo © MMXIV Paramount Pictures Corporation and Regency Engtertainment USA, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

This minute-long video explores the character of Tubal Cain (played by Ray Winstone) in Noah. Actor Russell Crowe, who handles the title role in the Biblical epic, and director Darren Aronofsky discuss the character, and the new featurette also includes scenes featuring Winstone in character.

Paramount Pictures is opening Noah in theaters on March 28, 2014.

The Plot:

Noah is a close adaptation of the Biblical story of Noah’s Ark. In a world ravaged by human sin, Noah is given a divine mission: to build an Ark to save creation from the coming flood.

Watch the video:

‘Divergent’ Movie Review

Divergent Movie Review
Shailene Woodley and Theo James star in ‘Divergent’ (Photo: Jaap Buitendijk ©2013 Summit Entertainment)

Director Neil Burger obviously would belong to the Dauntless faction if he existed in Veronica Roth’s Divergent world. Young adult franchises haven’t performed well at the box office recently and other than the current Hunger Games franchise, it’s tough to point out a young adult adaptation that satisfied both fans of the source material and moviegoers whose only knowledge of the make believe world on the screen came from trailers and clips supplied by a movie studio. Sure, Twilight made a ton of money but the majority of that was due to Twihards going to multiple screenings and dragging along family members/significant others. That tidy sum Summit Entertainment made off the sparkling vampire series certainly wasn’t due to critics promoting the movie or to the average male moviegoer suddenly deciding to cast his vote (via his wallet) for Team Edward or Team Jacob.

With the release of Divergent, Summit’s hoping to end the string of young adult box office failures by appealing to Roth’s readers as well as action and/or sci-fi movie junkies of both sexes and all ages. The dystopian world Roth created certainly isn’t meant solely for a female audience, and getting that message out was one of the major challenges of the film’s pre-release advertising campaign. Divergent, the book series and the film, centers on a strong, independent female character played by Shailene Woodley who surrounds herself with like-minded individuals intent on rebelling against the authorities over the span of three books. And it’s those supporting players, led by Theo James as Four, who are in large part responsible for drawing in the male audience.

In a nutshell, Divergent is set in a future in which Chicago’s walled off from the world and inside those walls people live in factions. Those factions reflect the main personality traits of their members, and in the first film of the series the three factions most in play in the story are Abnegation made up of people who live to serve; the Erudite faction consisting of the intellectuals; and the Dauntless faction with members who would feel right at home in Sylvester Stallone’s Expendables film franchise. The Dauntless are brave, strong, into fighting, shooting, knife-throwing, and Parkour. They’re this walled-off Chicago’s security force.

At 16, each member of the community must decide which faction they will belong to for the remainder of their lives. Most stick with the community they grew up in, but some switch to factions that better reflect their personalities and attitudes. They’re helped along in the decision process by the administration of a special test which should indicate where they belong. Beatrice ‘Tris’ Prior (Woodley) is a faction-switcher, choosing Dauntless over Abnegation after being told by the test administrator, Tori (Maggie Q), that her results were inconclusive. Tris is confused as she’s never heard of an inconclusive test result and further disturbed when Tori tells her she’s Divergent and that she must keep that fact a secret from everyone – including her family.

Once in the Dauntless compound, Tris makes friends with other new initiates and finds herself drawn to her fighting trainer, Four (Theo James). There’s something different about Four that sets him apart from the other leaders of Dauntless and Tris soon learns she’s not the only Dauntless member guarding a secret.

Divergent would be dead in the water if it weren’t for the superb job of casting that director Neil Burger did with the leads and supporting players (including Zoe Kravitz, Kate Winslet, Miles Teller, Christian Madsen, Ben Lloyd-Hughes, and Mekhi Phifer). Shailene Woodley is already an indie darling following starring turns in The Descendants and The Spectacular Now, but Divergent marks her entry into mainstream Hollywood films. Woodley is more Jennifer Lawrence in The Hunger Games than Kristen Stewart in Twilight both in character and in acting ability, and her Tris is basically Veronica Roth’s Tris come to life on the screen. Fans of the book series should embrace her performance as she delivers a fully-rounded, fully fleshed-out Tris. At 22, she’s older than the book’s Tris, but that’s about the only negative mark on her attachment to the film series and it’s certainly not jarring enough to take fans of the book out of the film version. James, at 29, is slightly too old to be her love interest but their chemistry is solid enough to make the ages a non-issue.

Burger does an impressive job of delivering the action scenes, although he doesn’t make them nearly as brutal as described by Roth in her debut novel. The sets, costumes, makeup, and overall look and tone of Divergent adhere faithfully to Roth’s descriptions. From the major Ferris Wheel scene to the zip line strung from high rise rooftops, Divergent the movie is a close match to the book. Some characters and scenes have been omitted, most likely to keep the film at a manageable running time, which, at two and a half hours still runs a good 15 minutes or so too long. And that leads to the one real complaint I have about Divergent: the pacing over the first half of the film is too sluggish. It’s imperative the story be set up and the world of Divergent be explained, but it’s done a little too thoroughly.

Pacing issues aside, Divergent should satisfy fans of the book series while allowing moviegoers unfamiliar with Roth’s books to understand the world she created and which Burger faithfully delivered to the big screen.

GRADE: B

MPAA Rating: PG-13 for intense violence and action, thematic elements and some sensuality

Release Date: March 21, 2014

Spike TV Orders Up More ‘Bar Rescue’

Bar Rescue Renewed for Season 4
Jon Taffer in 'Bar Rescue' (Photo © Spike TV)

You don’t have to drink, enjoy going to bars, or have any interest in ever owning one to get into Spike TV’s Bar Rescue. The addictive series finds “nightlife expert” Jon Taffer visiting bars in deep financial trouble and, over the course of just a couple of days, providing the ideas and supplies to turn them around. And because the series is so popular, Spike TV has renewed it for a fourth season.

The fourth season will consist of 20 brand new episodes and will air sometime this coming fall.


According to the network, the series is averaging 1.8 million viewers and season three has just gotten underway (as of March 9th). In fact, Taffer’s proved so popular with viewers that he’ll also be featured in a new Spike TV series titled Hungry Investors. Teaming up with celebrity chef John Besh and Top Chef All-Star Tiffany Derry, Taffer will attempt to find “diamonds in the rough” establishments and help them achieve success.

The Bar Rescue Plot:

In Bar Rescue, Taffer travels nationwide, targeting a different failing establishment in each episode. His approach may ruffle feathers along the way, but Taffer pulls no punches and values bottom lines above hurt feelings. Owners and employees he believes are standing in the way of success are urged to check their egos at the door while he employs a proven scientific approach to solving the problems befalling bars.

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