The documentary Marley is an in-depth look at the late musician Bob Marley made with the support of the Marley family. The film’s set to have its North American premiere at the 2012 SXSW Festival on March 11th, followed by a release in theaters and on VOD on April 20th, and in support of Marley‘s upcoming premiere, Magnolia Pictures has just released a new video clip to check out.
Watch the clip:
The Synopsis:
Bob Marley’s universal appeal, impact on music history and role as a social and political prophet is both unique and unparalleled. Marley is the definitive life story of the musician, revolutionary, and legend, from his early days to his rise to international superstardom. Made with the support of the Marley family, the film features rare footage, incredible performances and revelatory interviews with the people that knew him best.
From Academy Award-winning director Kevin Macdonald (One Day In September, The Last King of Scotland) comes the story of a towering figure of musical history, whose music and message has transcended different cultures, languages and creeds to resonate around the world today as powerfully as when he was alive.
Jeff Ross stars in 'The Burn' - Photo Courtesy of Comedy Central
Jeff Ross, Andrew Daly, and Nathan Fielder will be headlining three new shows just given the green light by Comedy Central. Ross will star in The Burn, Daly is set for Review with Forrest MacNeil, and Fielder will star in Nathan For You for the network. Production on The Burn will begin this spring, with Comedy Central planning to premiere the show this summer.
Comedy Central Kent Alterman, Head of Original Programming and Production, made the announcement and had this to say about Jeff Ross: “Jeff embodies comedy past and comedy future simultaneously, and we are excited to be in the present with him.”
To which Ross responded, “Thank you, Comedy Central. My mission is clear. To rip the world a new a**hole one crack at a time. I can’t wait to get started.”
The Burn Plot:
In The Burn, Ross will be joined by a group of fellow comics to skewer the week’s hot topics and head into the field to take aim at public figures and current events. Known as the “Meanest Man in Comedy” by New York Magazine and “an heir apparent to such old-school masters as Buddy Hackett and Rodney Dangerfield,” by The New York Times, Ross has appeared in the last nine Comedy Central Roasts and authored the book, I Only Roast the Ones I Love: Busting Balls Without Burning Bridges, that was released in 2009.
Review with Forrest MacNeil Plot:
Review with Forrest MacNeil is a half-hour comedy starring Daly as “Forrest MacNeil.” Unlike typical critics who review boring things like films, food or art, MacNeil reviews the most intense experiences of life itself…by living them. He reviews anything his TV audience throws at him: the adrenaline rush of stealing, the trauma of divorce, the harrowing effects of murder, the wonder and joy of anonymous sex and stops at nothing to show us what any and every experience in life feels like.
And, for our convenience, he rates every adventure on a scale of zero to five stars. MacNeil’s unwavering commitment to his work means his answers to life’s most challenging questions often come at the expense of his wife, his children, his co-workers and humanity in general.
Nathan For You Plot:
Nathan For You is a half-hour comedy starring Canadian writer-comedian Nathan Fielder (Jon Benjamin Has A Van, Important Things with Demetri Martin). Armed with a business degree and drawing from his limited life experiences, Nathan gives advice to real people and struggling businesses each week. Thinking that his business background gives him carte blanche to help real businesses and people in all walks of life, Nathan’s unorthodox approach usually does more harm than good. Nathan is to small businesses what Gordon Ramsay is to floundering restaurants. Only much, much worse.
Lucasfilm just unveiled a clip from this week’s episode of Star Wars: The Clone Wars titled “Brothers.” The episode will air on March 9th at 8pm PT/ET on Cartoon Network, and here’s the official synopsis:
“In ‘Brothers,’ the dark warrior Savage Opress is on a quest to find his long-lost brother. Could Darth Maul truly be alive, after more than a decade since his gruesome bisection at the blade of Obi-Wan Kenobi? Savage voyages into the depths of a twisted planet to find whatever became of the fallen Sith Lord.”
The cast of The Challenger has just increased by two, with Oscar nominee Michael Clarke Duncan (The Green Mile) and Emmy Award winner S. Epatha Meckerson (Lackawanna Blues) coming on board the boxing drama. They join a cast that includes Justin Hartley, Ernie Sabella, and Lindsay Hartley.
Kent Moran wrote, directs, and stars in the drama, with his Wishing Well Pictures production company producing The Challenger. Shooting is expected to begin this month in New York City.
The Plot: When he and his adopted mother are evicted from their home, struggling Bronx auto mechanic Jaden Miller (Kent Moran) is forced back into the one thing he’s run from his entire life: fighting. With the help of a legendary trainer (Michael Clarke Duncan), Miller will do everything in his power to save his family from living on the streets.
Nickelback "Here and Now" - (PRNewsFoto/Roadrunner Records, Travis Shinn)
Nickelback’s 2012 North American tour just expanded by nine stops, bringing the total to 49 cities the multi-platinum group will be performing over the next few months. New cities getting to see the band in concert include Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Virginia Beach, and Raleigh, with Bush joining Nickelback for the entire tour (including the new dates).
Tickets for the shows will go on sale on March 16th and 17th at Ticketmaster.com and LiveNation.com.
In addition to the tour, the band will perform on CTV’s broadcast of THE 2012 JUNO AWARDS on Sunday, April 1st.
New Nickelback Tour Dates with Special Guests Bush
July 14, 2012 Hershey, PA Hersheypark Stadium On Sale 3/17
July 18, 2012 Cleveland, OH Blossom Music Center On Sale 3/17
July 20, 2012 Cincinnati, OH Riverbend Music Center On Sale 3/17
July 21, 2012 Indianapolis, IN Klipsch Music Center On Sale 3/17
July 24, 2012 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center On Sale 3/17
July 25, 2012 Darien Center, NY Darien Lake Performing Arts Center On Sale 3/17
July 27, 2012 Charlotte, NC Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre On Sale 3/16
July 28, 2012 Virginia Beach, VA Farm Bureau Live On Sale 3/17
July 30, 2012 Raleigh, NC Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion On Sale 3/16
NBC has released the schedule for the second season of The Voice, with live episodes scheduled to begin on Monday, April 2 (8-10 p.m. ET) followed by live elimination rounds beginning on April 3rd (9-10 p.m. ET). The final live performance between the last competitors still standing will be broadcast on Monday, May 7th, with season two’s winner crowned on May 8th.
According to NBC, the latest episode of The Voice improved 15% over last week’s adult 18-49 audience and was up 13% week-to-week in total viewers (16.8 million vs. 14.9 million). The Voice is averaging a 7.5 in 18-49 and 19.3 million viewers overall.
Once The Voice finishes up its second season, America’s Got Talent – with Howard Stern joining judges Sharon Osbourne and Howie Mandel – will kick off its seventh season. The two-hour premiere will air on Monday, May 14th.
The Voice Synopsis: The hit vocal competition series features the four superstar coaches who recently hand-picked their favorite vocalists in a blind audition and will guide them through an intense competition that ultimately crowns one winner. The show’s innovative format showcases the live performance shows that follow the blind auditions and the current battle phase.
Oscar nominee Sigourney Weaver is set to make her series TV debut with USA Network’s Political Animals, a six-hour original series from producers Greg Berlanti (Brothers & Sisters) and Laurence Mark (Julie & Julia). Berlanti also wrote and will direct the pilot episode.
The Plot:
Pulling back the curtain on persuasive public speeches and stirring campaign ads, the fictional look at a former first family exposes a dynasty weakened by political ambition, lust and greed.
Weaver stars as Elaine Barrish, the divorced former First Lady and newly appointed Secretary of State who throws herself into the job after recovering from the dissolution of her marriage and losing the presidential nomination. Barrish relies heavily on her son Doug (James Wolk, Happy Endings), an ambitious politico who serves as her chief of staff, but is tormented by his twin brother’s struggles with addiction.
With a philandering ex-husband who is still as much in love with her as the office he once held, she attempts to keep her family together, while simultaneously dealing with crises of the State Department and a hungry DC journalist bent on destroying her career. Through it all she knows that the only way to survive is to do things her own way, even if that means bending the rules. Brittany Ishibashi (Parenthood) also stars as Doug’s fiancée.
I’d watch this just because it’s Danny Trejo and he’s kicking ass! Trejo stars in Bad Ass as a Vietnam vet given the nickname of Bad Ass after he takes on street punks and kicks some serious butt. Directed by Craig Moss, Bad Ass is heading to theaters on April 13th.
Bad Ass stars Trejo, Charles S. Dutton, Joyful Drake, and John Duffy. The cast also includes Patrick Fabian, Shalim Ortiz, Harrison Page, Richard Riehle, Danny Woodburn, and Ron Perlman.
The Plot:
“A Decorated Vietnam hero Frank Vega returns home only to get shunned by society leaving him without a job or his high school sweetheart. It’s not until forty years later when an incident on a commuter bus (where he protects an elderly black man from a pair of skin heads) makes him a local hero where he’s suddenly celebrated once again. But his good fortune suddenly turns for the worse when his best friend Klondike is murdered and the police aren’t doing anything about it.”
The 2012 TCM Classic Film Festival will celebrate the career of actress Kim Novak with a series of events, including a hand and footprint ceremony at the historic Grauman’s Chinese Theater on April 14th. Novak is also set to join TCM host Robert Osborne on Friday, April 13th for an “in-depth conversation to be taped in front of a live audience for airing on TCM later.”
In addition, Novak will be introducing a screening of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 critically acclaimed film, Vertigo.
“From thrillers like Hitchcock’s Vertigo, to romantic dramas such as Picnic, noirish classics like The Man with the Golden Arm, comedies such as Bell, Book and Candle and musicals like Pal Joey, Kim Novak has made us fall in love with her time and time again,” stated TC host Osborne. “Our celebration of Kim Novak and her career is certain to be one of the highlights of the 2012 TCM Classic Film Festival.”
The TCM Classic Film Festival will be held Thursday, April 12 through Sunday, April 15th in Hollywood.
Kim Novak Biography [Courtesy of TCM]:
Audiences have always understood and loved Kim Novak, yet many critics misjudged her work as too simplistic when compared to actors whose stylized performances are now viewed as outdated. In retrospect, Novak’s work is receiving more acclaim with the passage of time. She is being recognized and honored for her acting ability. Novak’s most recent awards include the prestigious Golden Bear for lifetime achievement at the Berlin International Film Festival. In 2003 Novak was presented with the Eastman (Kodak) Archives Award for her major contribution to film (prior honorees include Greta Garbo, Audrey Hepburn, James Stewart, Martin Scorsese and Meryl Streep).
Novak was also the recipient of a special tribute from the American Cinematheque in Hollywood where her films were shown at the Egyptian Theatre in January 2004. She made a rare personal appearance with a Q&A onstage between the showings of Bell, Book & Candle (1958) and Vertigo (1958).
In 1956 Novak became the No. 1 box office star in the world, and held that position for three solid years of outstanding filmmaking. Knowing that nothing lasts forever, and not wanting to fall prey to the tragic endings that often resulted when stars and sex symbols got lost in identity crises, Novak made a decision to walk away from Hollywood. It took great courage to turn her back on a successful and lucrative career when she was at her peak, but she felt the need to go in search of herself to learn what she really wanted out of life. Novak moved to a cliffside dwelling along the wild coast of Big Sur, Calif., with the purpose of creating a new lifestyle in harmony with nature while combining it with her love of painting and writing poetry. One of her poems was made into a song and recorded by the Kingston Trio and Harry Belafonte.
Born Marilyn Pauline Novak in Chicago, Illinois, she was the daughter of a history teacher who, during the Depression, became a railroad freight dispatcher.
Her mother was a factory worker. Novak and her older sister, Arlene, were raised in a close-knit, lower middle-class family of Czech descent. As a teen she won several scholarships to the prestigious Art Institute of Chicago, and was following that path when it made a detour. Novak was fully intent on exploring her painting in different mediums, and had never thought about being an actress.
In her mother’s attempt to help Novak overcome her shyness and become more outgoing, she encouraged her daughter to join a teenage club where she soon began modeling. It was during her summer vacation from her first semester at Wright Junior College that she won the title of “Miss Deepfreeze” and traveled across the country showing refrigerators. When the tour ended in California, she stayed for the rest of the summer and signed with a local modeling agency. They got her a job appearing in two movies along with 20 other models when she was discovered by an agent and signed to a contract at Columbia Pictures. She earned her Associate Arts degree while studying at the studio during her first year in Hollywood.
Harry Cohn, the studio head at the time, decided to mold his most recent starlet, Novak, into a new “Love Goddess” to challenge his superstar, Rita Hayworth, as well as to compete with the already-established sex symbol, Marilyn Monroe. Novak was in the right place at the right time, but felt insecure because of her lack of acting experience. She began to study day and night with the studio’s acting coaches Benno Schneider and his wife, Batami. Novak never forgot Benno’s advice: “Don’t try to act,” he would plead. “Let the other actors show off their technique. You should just be yourself, real. Never be ashamed to expose your soul and share your feelings. Let the world experience your pain, your joy, and your passion. The camera will become your best friend. You have good instincts—trust them.” She did just that, and she did it her way.
Her first assignment was opposite Fred MacMurray in Pushover (1954), a moody film noir directed by Richard Quine. She was the breakout performer and that film and it led to her second film, playing a beautiful Broadway playgirl in the George Axelrod comedy, Phffft (1954), opposite Judy Holliday and Jack Lemmon. 5 Against the House (1955) followed, after which she was loaned to independent producer-director Otto Preminger for The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) in which she played the compassionate concerned girlfriend of a drug addict, played by Frank Sinatra.
Even more spectacular were her starring roles as the small-town country girl in the film version of William Inge’s Picnic (1955), directed by Joshua Logan, and as the socialite wife of Tyrone Power in The Eddy Duchin Story (1956).
In Jeanne Eagels (1957), opposite Jeff Chandler, she portrayed the title role of the tempestuous Broadway star of the 20s. In the Rodgers and Hart musical, Pal Joey (1957), she starred with Rita Hayworth and Frank Sinatra. In 1958 she starred with James Stewart in Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, a film the Library of Congress named as a national treasure, picked the first time the National Film Registry decided to start adding 25 films a year to the Library. She followed Vertigo with a comedy Bell, Book & Candle, again opposite Stewart and Jack Lemmon. In her next film, Middle of the Night (1959), she played a much less glamorous love interest of her aging employer, Fredric March, and she really shone as an actress. Her films in the early 1960s displayed her versatility in Strangers When We Meet (1960), with Kirk Douglas, and the off-beat comedy The Notorious Landlady (1962),with Jack Lemmon again.
In a landmark move for all the actors to come after her, Novak was the first actor (and woman) to negotiate an ownership deal of her own product, as soon as her original Columbia contract ended. The deal was negotiated by her long-time agent, Norman Brokaw, now chairman of William Morris/Endeavor. She formed her own production company and did Boys Night Out (1962), and then flew to Ireland to star in the third version of Somerset Maugham’s novel, Of Human Bondage (1964), with Laurence Harvey. Her next film, Billy Wilder’s Kiss Me, Stupid (1964), shocked the Legion of Decency when it was released, but it was rediscovered and acclaimed for its forward thinking in 2001, and has been playing special engagements in art houses ever since to rave re-reviews, particularly for Novak’s performance as “Polly the Pistol.”
Novak returned to England to star in The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965), and married her co-star Richard Johnson. In The Legend of Lylah Clare (1968), Novak again played a dual role (which seemed to be a theme in her work) as an early day screen star and the younger actress chosen by an obsessed director to recreate her. Following The Great Bank Robbery (1969), Novak returned to Big Sur.
In 1976, divorced Novak married equine veterinarian Dr. Robert Malloy, and to this day aids in the care of horses and other animals alongside her husband. They also spend time exploring the Oregon mountains and forests on horseback. This has afforded Novak the opportunity to capture special moments and moods of the wilderness and its wildlife through the lens of her digital camera.
Though Novak’s first priority is her private life, she has never lost the love of acting because she views it as another expression of her art. She has occasionally left “the wilds” for a project such as Just a Gigolo (1978) opposite David Bowie, or The Mirror Crack’d (1980), with Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor and Tony Curtis. Several years later she worked with Ben Kingsley on The Children (1990), then later on appeared in Mike Figgis’ Liebestraum (1991).
Novak and Malloy’s home burned to the ground in 2000, destroying much of Novak’s artwork, 10 years of writing her autobiography, and priceless artifacts of her film career. After absorbing the shock, Novak viewed it as a new beginning, and for the past three years turned the work of building a new home into a challenge to take on another art form. She not only designed the home from out of the ashes of the last, but she herself painted the walls with murals, and sculpted a portion of the entry with her verse to represent their lifestyle, their animals, and her dreams.
Over the past few years, Novak has chosen to express herself through her art. Her paintings are primarily impressionistic and extraordinarily emotional. She has never publically exhibited them, but she is currently planning an art show in San Francisco next year.
Novak has always possessed a magic that enables her to endure the test of time. She is luminescent both on and offscreen, a quality of stardom that can’t be bought or taught. That is what makes a legend.
Nowhere but Up: The Story of Justin Bieber’s Mom will hit stores on September 18, 2012, complete with a forward by Pattie Mallette’s famous pop star son. Revell just picked up the worldwide rights to the memoir which includes details on their lives never before shared with the public.
“Pattie’s story is a powerful example of courage and determination that will inspire anyone who has faced struggles in life,” states Jennifer Leep, editorial director for Revell. “She’s living proof that even in the darkest of places, there is always room for hope.”
Mallette hopes her story can help and inspire others. “I want them to see that no matter how desperate their circumstances may be, they can have hope for a better future,” says Mallette.
Details on Nowhere but Up [Courtesy of Revell]:
“In Nowhere but Up, written in collaboration with A.J. Gregory, Mallette shares heartbreaking details about the trauma, abuse, and addiction that marked her early childhood and young adult years. She reflects on a desperate search for love and acceptance that led to teenage rebellion and a suicide attempt at seventeen. And she recounts the remarkable way her life finally turned around when she found herself pregnant and facing an uncertain future as a single mom.”