Chloe Grace Moretz is just 15 years old but you wouldn’t know it by watching the new trailer for Hick. Written and directed by Derick Martini, Moretz stars as a teenager escaping her small-town life by heading off to Las Vegas. The film also stars Blake Lively and Eddie Redmayne and will hit theaters and VOD on May 11, 2012.
The Plot:
Small-town teenager Luli (Moretz) escapes to Las Vegas, leaving behind her alcoholic and abusive parents. Armed with her smarts, a pistol and pocket money, she hitchhikes her way west. Along the way, Luli crosses paths with Eddie (Redmayne), an unstable rebel with questionable motives and Glenda (Lively), a cocaine-snorting drifter on the run. Adapted from the critically acclaimed novel by Andrea Portes, this powerful story pulls you into a provocative world of drugs, seduction and murder.
Turner Classic Movies (TCM) and the American Film Institute (AFI) announced TCM Presents AFI’s Master Class – The Art of Collaboration: David O. Russell and Mark Wahlberg will premiere on Tuesday, May 8th, at 10pm (ET). Russell and Wahlberg worked together on Three Kings (1999), I ♥ Huckabees (2004), and The Fighter (2010) and they’ll be discussing their collaborations “in front of an audience comprised of AFI Fellows studying filmmaking at the world-renowned AFI Conservatory.”
In addition to talking about their films, Wahlberg and Russell will discuss the movies that inspired them. “Wahlberg reveals that one of his favorite activities as a child was watching movies like The Roaring Twenties (1939) with his father, a teamster who would come home each afternoon between routes. Russell talks about his taste for movies that show both the light and dark sides of family life, as in It’s A Wonderful Life (1946).
The pair also discuss the themes and visual poetry of Francois Truffaut’s The Four Hundred Blows (1959). AFI’s Master Class is packed with clips from these films, as well as memorable scenes from the artists’ own movies,” says TCM and AFI.
TCM’s complete schedule for the night of May 8:
8 p.m. – The Roaring Twenties (1939)
10 p.m. – TCM Presents AFI’s Master Class – The Art of Collaboration: David O. Russell and Mark Wahlberg (premiere)
11 p.m. – Man of a Thousand Faces (1957)
1:15 a.m. – TCM Presents AFI’s Master Class – The Art of Collaboration: David O. Russell and Mark Wahlberg (encore)
2:15 a.m. – TCM Presents AFI’s Master Class – The Art of Collaboration: Steven Spielberg and John Williams (encore)
3:15 a.m. – Spartacus (1960)
President George H.W. Bush (Photo Provided by HBO)
Written and directed by Jeffrey Roth and executive produced by a long-time friend of the Bush family, Jerry Weintraub, 41 is – according to HBO – the first documentary to “tell George Herbert Walker Bush’s story in his own words.” Filmed between September 2009 and February 2011, the documentary team was granted unprecedented access to the 41st President who talks about the high and low points of his life while relaxing at his summer home in Kennebunkport, Me. and while at the presidential library in Texas.
HBO’s set a June 14th premiere for the documentary, just days after President Bush’s 88th birthday on June 12th.
“I am so proud to be a friend of George H.W. Bush and his wife, Barbara Bush,” stated producer Weintraub. “And so proud that our friendship includes this wonderful film about two wonderful people.”
41 Details [Courtesy of HBO]:
One of the most experienced politicians ever to achieve the presidency, George H.W. Bush shares anecdotes from his childhood, family, service in World War II and political career, including his roles as U.S. envoy to China, director of the CIA and vice president of the United States in the Reagan administration, as well as his term as president.
41 captures the personal side of a very public figure who cherishes his family life, in particular wife Barbara, his spouse for 67 years, a record among presidential marriages. President from 1989 to 1993 and father of the 43rd president, George W. Bush, the elder Bush continues to make public appearances today and spends much of his time on his boat or with children and grandchildren. An avid fisherman, Bush last parachuted on his 85th birthday and swears he will do it again on his 90th, which he says proves that “old guys can still do fun things.”
Born June 12, 1924, George H.W. Bush spent much of his childhood at his family’s summer home, built by his grandfather in 1902, at Walker’s Point in Kennebunkport, Me. His close-knit family was fortunate to avoid the hard times of the Great Depression, with George attending boarding schools, where he excelled in sports, serving as captain of the soccer and baseball teams and playing basketball. At 17, he met 16-year-old Barbara Pierce at a Christmas dance. “We fell in love. Old fashioned, falling in love,” he recalls.
After Pearl Harbor was bombed, the 18-year-old Bush became a naval aviator. He describes the events of Sept. 2, 1944, when his plane was shot down by anti-aircraft fire; he ejected and parachuted into the sea, and was rescued by a sub. Bush went home and married Barbara, and when the war ended a short time later, like many G.I.s, he entered college – at Yale – where they had a son, George Walker.
Following the advice of a family friend, he went to work in the oil fields of West Texas. Their family continued to grow with the birth of daughter Robin, who died of leukemia at age three. Robin’s death remains an emotional subject for Bush. Though they had three more sons and another daughter, he admits he couldn’t talk about losing her for years.
In Texas, despite the fact that the state at the time was overwhelmingly Democratic, Bush decided to run for Senate. He lost, but rebounded by running for the House of Representatives and won, becoming a rising star in Washington. President Nixon subsequently appointed Bush ambassador to the U.N. and later, chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Then came Watergate. “I wanted to believe Nixon as long as I possibly could,” he notes, but with evidence mounting that the White House lied, he wrote a memo suggesting the president resign. In hindsight, Bush has mixed emotions about Nixon, reflecting, “On the one hand you can never get over the lie. On the other, in many ways, he was a very good president.”
After serving as U.S. envoy to China and director of the CIA, Bush ran for president unsuccessfully, but became Ronald Reagan’s vice president. Ascending to the presidency in 1989, his years in office were marked by numerous historic events, including the fall of the Berlin Wall, the end of the Cold War and the protests in Tiananmen Square.
When Iraq invaded Kuwait, Bush says he knew America would have to act. He considered Iraq’s invasion an “overt, crystal-clear wrong,” and despite opposition, felt the war was just. Bush was heartened when Saddam Hussein was driven out of Kuwait.
After losing his bid for reelection to Bill Clinton, George returned with Barbara to a “normal” life in Houston and Kennebunkport. He calls his beloved summer home the “anchor” to his “windward.” It’s where the memories are, where his family comes to visit and where he’s been coming his whole life. “And where,” he says, “I will remain until my last days.”
The president, who to this day has not written a memoir telling his life story, agreed to participate in the documentary after meeting Roth and seeing his first film, The Wonder of It All, a documentary about the Apollo moon walkers. 41 is Roth’s second documentary film.
Find out more about General Aladeen in this minute and a half video from The Dictator starring Sacha Baron Cohen. The set-up: The world is in crisis mode as UN representatives are denied entry into Wadiyan by General Aladeen, so everyone wants to know who this madman really is.
Paramount Pictures’ The Dictator opens in theaters on May 16, 2012.
The Beach Boys have just released their first single off of their upcoming album, That’s Why God Made The Radio, their 29th studio production. They’ve also announced the album, part of their 50th-anniversary celebration, will be released on June 5th by Capitol/EMI.
“Radio was my whole education,” stated Brian Wilson. “Chuck Berry, Rosemary Clooney, The Four Freshmen, Phil Spector, Little Richard … To hear ‘That’s Why God Made The Radio’ on the radio would be a thrill beyond belief, it really would. It would be a thrill beyond belief.”
“I got a lot of my appreciation for all of the creativity in the world, in terms of music, through the radio,” added Mike Love. “For all of us who grew up in the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s, and beyond, the radio has played such a huge, important part in our lives. When we were kids, we’d sneak out of the house and go and sit in Brian’s car and listen to the local radio stations on his car radio.”
“We’ve come full circle,” said Al Jardine. “Sharing our memories and our present in the studio has been really remarkable. I can especially feel it when we’re all singing around the mic together because we all hear each other, and we really lock in.”
“We have reunited as a band, but we never ‘un-reunited’ as friends,” Bruce Johnston revealed. “To be back in the studio with these guys is like a prayer that’s been answered and I am thrilled to be sharing it with everybody.”
“This is more like a family reunion than anything,” says David Marks. “When we’re together, we get along great. The chemistry always works the same as the last time we were together, and the five of us become a single element.”
In support of the new album and their golden anniversary, The Beach Boys – Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston, and David Marks – are also currently out on the road on an international tour that kicked off in Tucson.
Tracks on the album include “That’s Why God Made The Radio” (the first single), “Think About The Days,” “Isn’t It Time,” “Spring Vacation,” “Private Life Of Bill And Sue,” “Shelter,” “Daybreak Over The Ocean,” “Beaches In Mind,” “Strange World,” “My Life Suite,” and “Summer’s Gone.”
Here’s a collection of some of the funniest lines from the 2009 R-rated record-breaking comedy The Hangover starring Ed Helms, Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, and Justin Bartha.
The Hangover Quotes:
Alan (Zach Galifianakis): “Whatever happens tonight, I won’t ever ever speak a word of it. Seriously. I don’t care what happens. I don’t care if we kill someone. You heard me – it’s Sin City.”
Sid (Jeffrey Tambor): “Remember, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Except for Herpes. That shit’ll come back with you.”
Alan: “That’s right. You better walk on. I’ll hit an old man in public.”
Doug (Justin Bartha): “Tracy did mention we shouldn’t let him gamble. Or drink too much.”
Phil: “Jesus, he’s like a gremlin. Comes with instructions and sh-t.”
Alan: “It’s not illegal, it’s frowned upon, like masturbating on an airplane.” (commenting on the legalities of counting cards)
Alan: “Hey, guys. You ready to let the dogs out?”
Alan: “I tend to think of myself as a one-man wolf pack.”
Alan: (Responding to finding a baby in the closet) “Check its collar or something.”
Stu (Ed Helms): “I look like a nerdy hillbilly.”
Alan: “Tigers love pepper…they hate cinnamon.”
Dr Valsh (Matt Walsh): (Phil asks the doctor if he knows how to get to the chapel) “I do. It’s at the corner of get a map and f–k off.”
Alan: (Talking about burning the cop car) “Easy. You just pour kerosene over a ferret, light it on both ends, put it in.”
Stu: “We’re in a stolen cop car with what is sure to be a missing child in the back. What part of this is cool?”
Alan: “I think the cop car part’s pretty cool.”
Phil: “Thank you, Alan!”
Alan: “It would be so cool if I could breastfeed.”
Stu: “You f–king calm down. He drugged us. I lost a tooth. I married a whore!”
Stu: “You are literally too stupid to insult.” (to Alan)
Black Doug (Mike Epps): “I always wondered why they were called ruffies. Cause you’re more likely to end up on the floor than the roof. They should call ’em floories.”
Alan: “Oh, you know what? Next week’s no good…the Jonas Brothers are in town. But any week after that, it’s totally fine.”
Mel Gibson talks about Get the Gringo director Adrian Grunberg, the film’s tone, and what audiences can expect in this brief video from the film’s premiere in Austin, TX.
Get the Gringo – a film you probably haven’t heard about unless you’re a big Mel Gibson fan – was produced and co-written by Gibson who also stars in the film along with Kevin Hernandez (The Sitter).
The Plot:
During a high-speed car chase with the US Border Patrol and a bleeding body in his back seat, Driver (Mel Gibson) violently crashes his car into the border wall as he tries to outrun them. Driver survives the crash only to land inside a hard-core Mexican prison where he enters the strange and dangerous world of “El Pueblito.” He finds unlikely guidance from a 10-year-old kid who shows him the ropes.
Demi Lovato will be kicking off a 21 date North American tour on June 12th in Del Mar, CA. Hot Chelle Rae and Owl City will be special guests on some of the tour dates, with the final concert set for September 1st in Salem, Oregon.
Lovato’s single “Skyscraper” was just certified platinum (over 1 million in sales), and the music video for her latest single, “Give Your Heart a Break,” has over 10 million views on YouTube. Her album, Unbroken, features guest artists Missy Elliot, Timbaland, Dev, and Jason Derulo.
Demi Lovato Tour Dates
June 12 Del Mar, CA The Grandstand Del Mar Fairgrounds
June 22 Holmdel, NJ The P.N.C. Bank Arts Center
June 23 Hershey, PA Star Pavilion at Hersheypark Stadium
June 24 Vienna, VA Filene Center at Wolf Trap
June 26 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center
June 30 Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun Arena at Mohegan Sun Resort & Casino
July 1 Canandaigua, NY Constellation Brands-Marvin Sands Performing Arts Center
July 3 Toronto, ON Molson Canadian Amphitheater
July 5 Boston, MA Bank of America Pavilion
July 6 Camden, NJ Susquehanna Bank Center
July 12 Salt Lake City, UT Energy Solutions Arena
July 13 Phoenix, AZ Comerica Theatre
July 14 Las Vegas, NV Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino – Theatre for Performing Arts
July 15 Bakersfield, CA Rabobank Arena Theater & Convention Center
July 17 San Jose, CA San Jose Events Center
July 18 Los Angeles, CA The Greek Theatre
August 4 Highland Park, IL Ravinia Festival
August 1 Springfield, IL Illinois State Fair
August 2 Essex Junction, VT Champlain Valley Exposition
August 30 Monroe, WA Evergreen State Fair
September 1 Salem, OR Oregon State Fair Pavilion
The Australian group Oceanics had “Chinatown (is not Newtown)” off of their upcoming Bright People EP featured on MTV Iggy today, with the EP set for release on May 15th. Described by Australia’s Time-Off as a mix of “Jeff Buckley meets The Kooks,” the Aussie quartet is made up of Elliot Weston (guitar and vocals), Jackson Haswell (guitar and vocals), percussionist Andy Geisel, and Tom Garnett (bass).
Commenting on the upcoming release of Bright People, Haswell said, “Bright People has marked change and maturity to not only our sound but as a band as a whole, it’s the real beginning of Oceanics.”
Bright People Track List:
01. Jukebox
02. Chinatown (is not Newtown)
03. American Honey
04. Indigo Lane
05. Girl Don’t Tell Me
The cast of Truck Stop has expanded by one as Hacienda Film Co. announced Matthew Ziff will be joining the film currently in production. Juno Tempo (Killer Joe) and Evan Peters (American Horror Story) star in the action thriller from writer/director Tony Aloupis.
“This is a great story that will strike chords with teens, parents and anyone who loves movies,” stated Ziff in the official announcement. “I’m thrilled to be working with such a top-notch cast and crew.”
The Plot: Truck Stop is set in the 1970’s and follows the coming-of-age relationship of a disturbed runaway (Temple) and a high school kid with cerebral palsy (Peters), who is the object of Kyle’s bullying.