Ryan Reynolds and Denzel Washington star in the action thriller Safe House, directed by Daniel Espinosa and set for release on February 10, 2012. And in support of the film’s upcoming opening in theaters, Universal Pictures released this video interview with Reynolds discussing real CIA agents, the fight training for the film, and working with Denzel Washington.
The Plot:
Denzel Washington plays the most dangerous renegade from the CIA, who comes back onto the grid after a decade on the run. When the South African safe house he’s remanded to is attacked by mercenaries, a rookie operative (Reynolds) escapes with him. Now, the unlikely allies must stay alive long enough to uncover who wants them dead.
For the past year, Matt Weston has been frustrated by his inactive, backwater post in Cape Town. A “housekeeper” who aspires to be a full-fledged agent, the loyal company man has been waiting for an opportunity to prove himself. When the first and only occupant he’s had proves to be the most dangerous man he’s ever met, Weston readies for duty.
Tobin Frost has eluded capture for almost a decade. One of the best ops men that the CIA’s known, the ex-intelligence officer has given up assets and sold military intel to anyone with cash since he turned. From trading secrets to North Korea to aiding splinter cells, the damage he’s done to the U.S. is immeasurable. And he’s now back on the reservation with a secret.
As soon as Frost is brought in for debriefing, mercenaries come and tear apart Weston’s safe house. Barely escaping, the unlikely partners must discover if their attackers have been sent by terrorists or someone on the inside who will kill anyone standing in the way. Now it’s up to Weston to figure out who he can trust before they’re both eliminated from the game.
This year’s Grammy Award show – the 54th – is breaking new ground. The Recording Academy revealed that for the first time ever, dance/electronica music will be represented by a live performance during the broadcast. Chris Brown, deadmau5, Foo Fighters, David Guetta, and Lil Wayne are collaborating on a special performance highlighting dance/electronica music at the February 12, 2012 event.
According to The Recording Academy, the artists will perform in “a special outdoor tent adjacent to STAPLES Center on the Nokia Plaza at L.A. LIVE. Consulting and participating on this special segment is renowned hospitality company The Light Group’s HAZE Nightclub at ARIA Resort & Casino in Las Vegas.”
Also set to perform at this year’s Grammys are Adele (in her first live performance since undergoing vocal cord surgery last fall), Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson, Tony Bennett and Carrie Underwood, Chris Brown, Glen Campbell with The Band Perry and Blake Shelton, Coldplay and Rihanna, Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt, Bruno Mars, Paul McCartney, Nicki Minaj, Katy Perry, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, and Taylor Swift. Presenters include Marc Anthony, Dierks Bentley, Jack Black, Drake, Fergie, Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ryan Seacrest, Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson, and Ringo Starr.
Writer/director Richard Bates, Jr’s first feature film, Excision, has been acquired by Anchor Bay Films for North American distribution. Excision, starring AnnaLynne McCord, Traci Lords, Ariel Winter, Roger Bart, Jeremy Sumpter, Malcolm McDowell, Matthew Gray Gubler, Marlee Matlin, Ray Wise and John Waters, debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in February and is based on Bates, Jr’s short film of the same name.
Kevin Kasha, Executive Vice President, Acquisitions and Co-Productions for Anchor Bay Films stated, “We are pleased to be adding Excision to our slate this year. It has an amazing cast and we know Anchor Bay fans will love it!”
“I have been influenced my entire life by the films which Anchor Bay has brought to audiences. I could not be more excited that they have chosen to take my film out in North America,” added writer/director Bates.
The Plot:
Excision is the story of Pauline (McCord), a delusional teenage outcast. Pauline picks scabs. Pauline dissects road kill. Pauline fantasizes about performing surgery on strangers. Her fascinations disturb her schoolmates and her parents, Phyllis (Lords) and Bob (Bart). No one understands Pauline except for Grace (Winter), her younger sister who suffers from cystic fibrosis. An outcast at school and at home, Pauline is convinced that the best way to repair her estranged relationship with her family is to perform a risky operation to save her sister’s life.
City and Colour, Dan Mangan, Drake, Feist, Hedley and Nickelback lead the list of 2012 Juno Awards nominees with four nominations each as announced today by the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS). The annual awards (Canada’s version of the Grammys) will be held on April 1, 2012 with William Shatner serving as host.
Hedley, Nickelback, Blue Rodeo, City and Colour, deadmau5 and Feist have been announced as performers at this year’s event.
2012 JUNO AWARD NOMINEES
JUNO FAN CHOICE AWARD
Arcade Fire
Avril Lavigne
City and Colour
Deadmau5
Drake
Ginette Reno
Hedleyl
Justin Bieber
Michael Bublé
Nickelback
SINGLE OF THE YEAR
City and Colour – “Fragile Bird”
Hedley – “Invincible”
Johnny Reid – “Let’s Go Higher”
Nickelback – “When We Stand Together”
The Sheepdogs – “I Don’t Know”
INTERNATIONAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY HMV CANADA)
Adele – 21
Coldplay – Mylo Xyloto
Lady Gaga – Born This Way
LMFAO – Sorry For Party Rocking
Rihanna – Loud
ALBUM OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY MUSIC CANADA)
Avril Lavigne – Goodbye Lullabye
Drake – Take Care
Justin Bieber – Under the Mistletoe
Michael Bublé – Christmas
Nickelback – Here And Now
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
City and Colour
Deadmau5
Drake
Feist
Michael Bublé
GROUP OF THE YEAR
Arkells
Down With Webster
Hedley
Nickelback
Sam Roberts Band
NEW ARTIST OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY FACTOR AND RADIO STARMAKER FUND)
Alyssa Reid
Dan Mangan
Diamond Rings
JRDN
Lindi Ortega
NEW GROUP OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY FACTOR AND RADIO STARMAKER FUND)
Braid
Hey Rosetta!
Mother Mother
The Rural Alberta Advantage
The Sheepdogs
SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY SIRIUSXM CANADA)
Dallas Green – “Fragile Bird”, “We Found Each Other”, “Weightless” LITTLE HELL – City and Colour
Dan Mangan – “About As Helpful As You Can Be Without Being Any Help At All”, “Post-War Blues”, “Oh Fortune” OH FORTUNE – Dan Mangan
Feist – “How Come You Never Go There”, “Graveyard” – co-songwriters Mocky & Chilly Gonzales, “The Circle Married The Line” METALS – Feist
Jim Cuddy – “Everyone Watched The Wedding”, “Skyscraper Soul”, “Watch Yourself Go Down” SKYSCRAPER SOUL – Jim Cuddy
Ron Sexsmith – “Get In Line”, “Believe It When I See It”, “Middle of Love” LONG PLAYER LATE BLOOMER – Ron Sexsmith
COUNTRY ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Doc Walker – 16 & 1
High Valley – High Valley
Jason McCoy – Everything
Jimmy Rankin – Forget About the World
Terri Clark – Roots and Wings
ADULT ALTERNATIVE ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Cuff The Duke – Morning Comes
Feist – Metals
Jenn Grant – Honeymoon Punch
Jim Cuddy – Skyscraper Soul
Ron Sexsmith – Long Player Late Bloomer
ALTERNATIVE ALBUM OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY LONG & MCQUADE)
Braids – Native Speaker
Dan Mangan – Oh Fortune
Destroyer – Kaputt
Fucked Up – David Comes To Life
Timber Timbre – Creep On Creepin’ On
POP ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Avril Lavigne – Goodbye Lullaby
Down With Webster – Time To Win Vol. II
Hedley – Storms
Lights – Siberia
Marianas Trench – Ever After
ROCK ALBUM OF THE YEAR (SPONSORED BY RECORDING ARTISTS’ COLLECTING SOCIETY – A DIVISION OF ACTRA)
Arkells – Michigan Left
Matthew Good – Lights of Endangered Species
Sam Roberts Band – Collider
Sloan – The Double Cross
The Sheepdogs – Learn & Burn
VOCAL JAZZ ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Diana Panton – To Brazil With Love
Fern Lindzon – Two Kites
Sonia Johnson – Le carré de nos amours
Sophie Milman – In The Moonlight
The Nylons – Skin Tight
CONTEMPORARY JAZZ ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Chris Tarry – Rest of the Story
Colin Stetson – New History Warfare Vol. 2: Judges
François Bourassa Quartet – Idiosyncrasie
Hilario Duran & Jane Bunnett – Cuban Rhapsody
Phil Dwyer Orchestra feat. Mark Fewer – Changing Seasons
TRADITIONAL JAZZ ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Dave Young Quintet – Aspects of Oscar
David Braid – Verge
Kirk MacDonald Orchestra – Deep Shadows
Mike Murley Septet – Still Rollin’
Oliver Jones – Live In Baden
INSTRUMENTAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Andrew Collins – Cats & Dogs
Colin Stetson – New History Warfare Vol. 2: Judges
L’Orkestre des Pas Perdus – L’Âge du cuivre
MAZ – Télescope
Stretch Orchestra – Stretch Orchestra
FRANCOPHONE ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Catherine Major – Le désert des solitudes
Coeur de Pirate – Blonde
Fred Pellerin – C’est un monde
Jérôme Minière – Le vrai le faux
Malajube – La caverne
CHILDREN’S ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Bobs & Lolo – Connecting the Dots
Charlie Hope – Songs, Stories and Friends: Let’s Go Play!
Eddie Douglas – Sleepy Sky Lullaby
Music with BRIAN – Everyone
Vocal Paint – My Butterfly/A Capella Lullabies
CLASSICAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR: SOLO OR CHAMBER ENSEMBLE
Canadian Brass – Brahms On Brass
Louis Lortie – Louis Lortie Plays Liszt
Marc-André Hamelin – Liszt Piano Sonata
New Orford String Quartet – Schubert & Beethoven
Susan Hoeppner – American Flute Masterpieces
CLASSICAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR: LARGE ENSEMBLE OR SOLOIST(S) WITH LARGE ENSEMBLE ACCOMPANIMENT
Alexandre Da Costa/Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal – Daugherty : Fire and Blood
James Ehnes – Bartók Voilin Concertos
Jean-Guihen Queyras – Vivaldi Cello Concertos
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Orchestre Métropolitain – Bruckner 4
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Orchestre Métropolitain – Florent Schmidt- La tragédie de salomé
CLASSICAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR: VOCAL OR CHORAL PERFORMANCE
Jane Archibald; Orchestre Symphonique Bienne; Thomas Rösner – Haydn Arias
Karina Gauvin – Marie-Nicole Lemieux – Handel: Streams of Pleasure
Le Nouvel Opéra – Caldara : La Conversione di Clodoveo
Marie-Josée Lord; Orchestre Métropolitain; Giuseppe Pietraroia – Marie-Josée Lord
Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra & Daniel Taylor – J.S. Bach: Cantatas 70 & 154; Concerto 1060; Orchestral Suite No. 2
CLASSICAL COMPOSITION OF THE YEAR
Ann Southam – “Glass Houses #5”
Derek Charke – “Sepia Fragments”
Heather Schmidt – “Piano Concerto No. 2”
Jacques Hétu – “String Quartet No. 2”
Jeffrey Ryan – “Fugitive Colours”
RAP RECORDING OF THE YEAR
Classified – Handshakes and Middle Fingers
D-Sisive – Jonestown 2: Jimmy Go Bye Bye
Drake – Take Care
Kardinal Offishall – Anywhere (Ol’ Time Killin’ Part.2)
Swollen Members – Daggermouth
Reid, Kimberly and Neil Perry. Photo credit: Justin Nolan Key
“We’re still childlike,” confessed multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Neil Perry of The Band Perry. “We romanticize the business and the stuff that goes into it. But there’s a place where …“
“… You’re not naïve,” picked up lead singer/pianist/guitarist/big sister Kimberly Perry without missing a beat. “One of the reasons we are what we are – especially if you’d seen some of the early shows we’d done – is our wonder and that attitude that nothing is impossible.”
That easy back-and-forth, finishing each other’s sentences without any sense of interrupting, comes naturally to these three siblings. In each other’s pocket since Kimberly enlisted her younger brothers to “roadie” for her at the tender age of 15, that familiarity is organic.
But The Band Perry isn’t just some down-home brother-and-sister proposition. Since landing the decidedly pop “Hip to My Heart” (written by all three Perrys with Brett Beavers) on Country radio, they’ve become a force.
“If I Die Young” (Kimberly Perry) was perhaps the breakout song of 2011. A No. 1 at both Country and AC radio, it went on to win Song of the Year and Single of the Year honors at the CMA Awards. Kimberly sings it with an earthy smokiness that helps present “If I Die Young” as a classic song of hope, acceptance and the embrace of life as well as the inevitable.
Their organic collaboration helped elevate their self-titled debut album on Republic Nashville to Platinum status, powered by an exceedingly fresh sound strewn with a strong sense of the South. Honest, raw and as emotionally transparent as 20-somethings coming into their own can often be, the philosophical “If I Die Young” also helped The Band Perry take home CMA’s New Artist of the Year Award.
“It’s like Christmas started really early for us,” said Reid, 23, the bassist. “It’s not what you think it’s gonna be like. It’s so much more.”
So much more and then some. Appearances on every major awards show, “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” and even at the November “In Performance at the White House” series were complemented by tour dates with Alan Jackson, Tim McGraw and Keith Urban.
Brian O’Connell, President of Nashville Touring, Live Nation, laughs when asked about the group’s live shows and touring ethic. “Knowing when a band is gonna break happens long before they’re on the radio,” he insisted. “It’s all those gigs before anyone knows who you are that create solid performers. The Band Perry isn’t about the hit singles so much as their musicianship, the way they play together and bring the audience in. There’s no pretense when they take the stage, and they draw fans in, be it Tim McGraw’s fans or Luke Bryan’s, which are very different. And The Band Perry connected with both sets on the Emotional Traffic Tour.”
O’Connell was so impressed with them on McGraw’s tour that he locked them in as the middle act on Brad Paisley’s Virtual Reality World Tour in 2012. “To be honest,” he said, “they can’t get enough time to play and sing for people, ever. Fans can sense that.”
That urgent buzz surrounding this trio is fanned as much by their desire to make music as the momentum they’re building. In fact, they laugh about their work ethic and love for playing. Kimberly observed, “Perseverance and hard work are characteristics we all have in common.”
“It’s always been our life course,” Reid added. “This wasn’t a hobby. We took it very seriously. That’s what kind of tipped the boat for us.”
“Half of our success,” Kimberly finished, “is about outlasting the process. We’re all competitive. We want to make better music every day. That’s how we were raised. But even if we were strangers, we would have gravitated to each other. We all love the same music and we all apply ourselves completely.”
Much has been said about their mother rocking them to Loretta Lynn while their father played them the Rolling Stones. That raw feel of instruments, in their most unprocessed state, is inherent to both artists. The same quality permeates The Band Perry.
But another element, not so obvious, exerts an equally powerful influence.
“Southern Gothic literature,” Neil said. “We love the words in those stories, the images and elements …”
“There’s a real edge to it,” Kimberly agreed. “Flannery O’Connor has a lot of beautiful elements, but there are lots of grotesque elements too – the romance of the way those things stick together.”
Reid made it even more literal. “We took family vacations to New Orleans, watching street performers. You can feel those things everywhere. And now we live in Appalachia.”
“That’s the thing about the South,” Kimberly reflected. “There’s a certain struggle to it, but there are lots of very special elements too.”
Neil jumped in. “Listening to all those old bluegrass nursery rhymes and lullabies … the stuff they sing about?”
This provoked more laughter. “There’s this lullaby about a little girl who fell in a river and drowned,” Kimberly said. “And they made a fiddle out of her bones. That’s the same kind of contradiction to ‘If I Die Young.’ I wrote it about the life I’ve lived and how I’d feel if I was to die. There’s a little Southern Gothic to ‘If I Die Young.’ It’s a little tragic, but there’s also something romantic about it. It’s kind of like Bobbie Gentry, who always raised more questions than answers.”
Matraca Berg, who wrote her first No. 1 at 18 (“Faking Love,” recorded by T. G. Sheppard and Karen Brooks), recognizes the spark of originality that ignites The Band Perry. Berg, whose “You & Tequila,” written with Deana Carter, lost 2011’s CMA Song of the Year recognition to “If I Die Young,” has recently written with Perry.
“Her mind is just different,” Berg said. “She works from a place of such creativity. Writing with her is a lot about recognizing that when you’re working with her – protecting that instead of making her more like everything else out there.”
Though their debut was produced by Nathan Chapman, with additional tracks by Matt Serletic and Paul Worley, the trio has enlisted Frank Liddell for their follow-up. “They’re young and they have definite ideas,” said Liddell, whose other credits include Miranda Lambert, David Nail and The Pistol Annies. “But they’re young enough that they’re not chasing the business, they’re chasing the music and reaching for something that can be theirs. It’s exciting to see, in that they’re all so creative. They play, they write and they just want to get better, push their music and be great.”
“He has romance about him as a producer,” said Neil of Liddell. “He loves the process too.”
“To have done it as long as he has,” Kimberly expanded, “and have all the wisdom he has about songs and making records, he somehow still has the wonder about it all. He’s like us. We want to write and record an album that, if it’s the last one we make, we’d be OK with knowing people would think that was us.
Musically, we’ve grown. As human beings, we’ve grown. But we’re like anyone figuring out their life at this age.
“So we want to write songs that are true to what we know,” she continued, “things that represent those aspects of our life so it represents what our fans are experiencing too.”
“We’re getting it on a lot of levels,” Reid said. “We’re in our 20s, but we’re pulling out gray hairs! We’re having so much fun, but there’s a lot of work to do too.”
The Alabama-born-and-raised group is thrilled that there is a pace to keep up, given the standard they set with their first album. The notion of accordion, fiddles reeling and acoustic instruments pushed to their limits thrills them, as does the response their music has received. “I’d hope this music gives voice to someone who doesn’t have the words,” Reid said.
And, again jumping in to elaborate, Kimberly noted, “You’d like it to touch people and hopefully make a difference, encourage or challenge them, answer or ask questions, because songs can mean a hundred different things to people — even different things to the same person over time. I know (the Beatles’) ‘Let It Be’ meant so much to me at different times and it’s always perfect for that time. I’d love for us to be like that too.”
With time blocked to write, The Band Perry is steeping in the creative process as they’re basking in the glow of their three CMA Awards. Given the creativity shown on their debut, and the work they put in to support their music, it’s likely the group, equal parts sunshine and Spanish moss, will find solid footing in Country Music.
The Recording Academy announced current three-time Grammy nominee Chris Brown (Best R&B Album for F.A.M.E., Best Rap Performance, and Best Rap Song for “Look At Me Now”) has been added to the lineup of performers set for the 54th Annual Grammy Awards. Also just added to the roster are nominees Tony Bennett and Carrie Underwood who will perform a duet, as well as Grammy winners Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt. Marc Anthony, Lady Antebellum, and Ryan Seacrest will present at the star-studded event to be held on February 12, 2012 at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles.
LL Cool J is hosting the event which will air on CBS from 8-11:30pm ET/PT.
Already announced to perform are Adele (in her first live performance since undergoing vocal cord surgery last fall), Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson, Glen Campbell with The Band Perry and Blake Shelton, Coldplay and Rihanna, Foo Fighters, Bruno Mars, Paul McCartney, Nicki Minaj, Katy Perry, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, and Taylor Swift.
Previously announced presenters are Dierks Bentley, Jack Black, Drake, Fergie, Miranda Lambert, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson, and Ringo Starr.
Following up on her successful Super Bowl halftime appearance and the release of the single “Give Me All Your Luvin,” Madonna and LiveNation have announced the dates for her 2012 World Tour. The tour will kick off on May 29, 2012 in Tel Aviv, Israel and will include 26 European cities including London, Paris, Milan and Berlin. Madonna’s tour will also hit 26 cities in North America. Included on Madonna’s 2012 World Tour schedule is a stop in Australia which will mark her first performance there in 20 years.
Tickets go on sale February 10th in Tel Aviv and the United Kingdom, followed by the sale of North American tickets beginning February 13th.
“Madonna’s track record as a world class entertainer and touring artist speaks for itself. Her artistry, talent and creative productions get bigger and better with each tour and Madonna 2012 will be no exception. We are thrilled to have her back on the road and know her fans feel the same,” stated Arthur Fogel, CEO Live Nation Entertainment Global Touring and Madonna tour promoter.
Madonna 2012 World Tour Itinerary
EUROPE
——
29-May Tel Aviv, Israel Ramat Gam Stadium On Sale Feb. 10
3-Jun Abu Dhabi Yas Arena On Sale Feb. 27
7-Jun Istanbul, Turkey Turk Telecom Arena On sale soon
11-Jun Zagreb, Croatia Maksimir Stadium On Sale Feb. 17
14-Jun Milan, Italy Stadio San Siro On Sale Feb. 13
16-Jun Florence, Italy Stadio Franchi On Sale Feb. 13
20-Jun Barcelona, Spain Palau Sant Jordi On Sale Feb. 16
24-Jun Coimbra, Portugal Estadio Cidade de Coimbra On Sale Feb. 11
28-Jun Berlin, Germany O2 Arena On Sale Feb. 13
2-Jul Copenhagen, Denmark Parken Stadium On Sale Feb. 13
4-Jul Gothenburg, Sweden Ullevi Stadium On Sale Feb. 17
7-Jul Amsterdam,The Netherlands Ziggo Dome On Sale Feb. 11
12-Jul Brussels, Belgium Stade Roi-Baudouin On Sale Feb. 17
14-Jul Paris, France Stade De France On Sale Feb. 14
17-Jul London, UK Hyde Park On Sale Feb. 10
21-Jul Edinburgh, UK Murrayfield Stadium On Sale Feb. 10
24-Jul Dublin, Ireland Aviva Stadium On Sale Feb. 17
29-Jul Vienna, Austria Ernst-Happel-Stadion On Sale Feb. 24
1-Aug Warsaw, Poland National Stadium On Sale Feb. 17
7-Aug Moscow, Russia Olimpiski Arena On sale soon
8-Aug St. Petersburg, Russia SKK Arena On sale soon
12-Aug Helsinki, Finland Olympic Stadium On Sale Feb. 14
15-Aug Oslo, Norway Telenor Arena On Sale Feb. 20
18-Aug Zurich, Switzerland Stadion Letzigrund On Sale Feb. 24
21-Aug Nice, France Stade Charles-Erhmann On Sale Feb. 14
NORTH AMERICA
————-
28-Aug Philadelphia, PA Wells Fargo Center On Sale Feb. 13
30-Aug Montreal, QC Bell Centre On Sale Feb. 18
1-Sep Quebec City, QC Plains of Abraham Site On Sale Feb. 17
4-Sep Boston, MA TD Garden On Sale Feb. 13
6-Sep New York, NY Yankee Stadium On Sale Feb. 13
10-Sep Ottawa, ON Scotiabank Place On Sale Feb. 13
12-Sep Toronto, ON Air Canada Centre On Sale Feb. 13
15-Sep Atlantic City, NJ Boardwalk Hall On Sale Feb. 27
19-Sep Chicago, IL United Center On Sale Feb. 13
23-Sep Washington, D.C. Verizon Center On Sale Feb. 13
29-Sep Vancouver, BC Rogers Arena On Sale Feb. 13
2-Oct Seattle, WA Key Arena On Sale Feb. 13
6-Oct San Jose, CA HP Pavilion On Sale Feb. 13
10-Oct Los Angeles, CA Staples Center On Sale Feb. 13
13-Oct Las Vegas, NV MGM Grand On Sale Feb. 27
16-Oct Phoenix, AZ US Airways Center On Sale Feb. 27
20-Oct Dallas, TX American Airlines Center On Sale Feb. 27
24-Oct Houston, TX Toyota Center On Sale Feb. 27
27-Oct New Orleans, LA New Orleans Arena On Sale Mar. 5
30-Oct Kansas City, MO Sprint Center On Sale Mar. 5
1-Nov St. Louis, MO Scottrade Center On Sale Mar. 5
3-Nov St. Paul, MN Xcel Energy Center On Sale Feb. 27
10-Nov Cleveland, OH Quicken Loans Arena On Sale Mar. 5
15-Nov Charlotte, NC Time Warner Cable Arena On Sale Mar. 5
17-Nov Atlanta, GA Philips Arena On Sale Mar. 5
TBC Miami, FL To Be Confirmed On Sale Soon
Source: Live Nation Entertainment – February 7, 2012
Australian singer Cody Simpson just kicked off his almost sold out “Welcome To Paradise Tour” on February 2, 2012 at Boston’s Paradise Rock Club, and he’s also working on his first full-length album. Simpson released his Coast to Coast EP last summer and it immediately hit #12 on the SoundScan/Billboard 200, and he made it to #13 on Billboard’s annual “21 Under 21” ranking.
Welcome To Paradise Tour 2012
FEBRUARY
2 Boston, MA Paradise Rock Club – SOLD OUT
3 Pottsville, PA Goodfellas
4 New York, NY Gramercy Theater – SOLD OUT
5 Philadelphia, PA Theater of Living Arts – SOLD OUT
7 Toronto, ON Phoenix Theater – SOLD OUT
8 Montreal, QC Corona Theatre – SOLD OUT
10 Albany, NY Northern Lights
11 Cleveland, OH Grog Shop – SOLD OUT
12 Pontiac, MI The Crofoot Ballroom
14 Chicago, IL House of Blues
16 Milwaukee, WI Rave II
17 Cincinnati, OH Bogarts
18 Indianapolis, IN Egyptian Room
20 Silver Springs, MD The Fillmore (Matinee Show)
21 Norfolk, VA The Norva
23 Atlanta, GA Center Stage
24 Tampa, FL Ritz Theatre
25 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Revolution Room
26 Orlando, FL House of Blues
The 27th Annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival had its awards ceremony on February 5, 2012, honoring a wide variety of exceptional films that had screened over the 11 days of the festival. Announcing the winners, SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling stated, “Each year, SBIFF strives to feature film from all ranges of the ‘cine-spectrum’. Successfully building upon this tradition of excellence, the lineup for the 27th edition of the festival showcased a particularly captivating yet challenging collection of works. With even more broadly accessible crowd pleasers and premiere films distinguished by their master of storytelling, theaters filled to the brim screening after screening.”
The SBIFF Winners [Descriptions Courtesy of the Festival]:
The Panavision Spirit Award for Independent Cinema, given to a unique independent feature that has been made outside mainstream Hollywood, went to Up There, directed by Zam Salim, about Martin, whois stuck in a dead-end job, welcoming the newly departed into the afterlife. All he dreams of is going “up there,” and he attempts to cope with his death by keeping his nose clean and minding his own business. But all this is thrown into disarray when, in order to track down an errant lost soul. Winner received a Panavision camera package worth $60,000.
A special Jury Prize for Artistic Distinction was awarded to Barrymore, directed by Erik Canuel and starring Christopher Plummer, to acknowledge Mr. Plummer’s superb performance, Mr. Luce’s remarkable play and Mr. Canuel’s adaptation and uncanny ability to capture the play (originally directed by Gene Saks) in a completely original piece of cinematic art.
The Best International Film Award went to Free Men, directed by Ismael Ferroukhi about an Algerian Muslim immigrant who joins the French Resistance to save Algerian Jews.
The Nueva Vision Award for the best Spanish/Latin American film was awarded to Found Memories, directed by Julia Murat. A young photographer finds a forgotten ghost town where only a handful of old people live, and changes their lives forever.
The jury awarded an Honorable Mention to The Rumble of the Stones (El Rumor de las Piedras), directed by Alejandro Bellame Palacios. Venezuela’s official submission for the Academy Awards, Rumble of the Stones is a heartfelt and compelling portrait of the enduring power of a mother’s love against the backdrop of the social problems of modern-day Venezuela
Best Documentary Film Award went to Pretty Old, directed by Walter Matteson. Pretty Old follows four diverse women, ages 67 to 94, competing in the 30th year Anniversary of the Ms. Senior Sweetheart Beauty Pageant in Fall River, Massachusetts, exploring what it truly means to “age beautifully.”
The Cinema Nouveau Award went to Heat Wave (Apres Le Sud),directed by Jean-Jacques Jauffret. Based on a true story, Heat Wave offers up a story from intersecting points of view where different destinies cross paths and are reunited by a tragic event.
Bruce Corwin Award for Best Live Action Short Film Under 30 Minutes went to L Train, directed by Anna Musso. Executive produced by Alexander Payne, L Train is the story of Sunny, a teenaged African American girl commuting through an inner city winter – an existence that injects a negativity into her long days.
Bruce Corwin Award for Best Animation Short Film went to The Missing Key, directed by Jonathan Nix. In a richly re-imagined Venice of the early 1920s, young composer Hero Wasabi must compete against the unscrupulous Count Telefino in the prestigious Abacus Scroll musical competition.
The Fund for Santa Barbara Social Justice Award Sponsored by The Fund for Santa Barbara for a documentary film that addresses social justice issues also went to Dirty Energy, directed by Bryan Hopkins, which tells the personal story of those directly affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill and who are now struggling to rebuild their lives amidst the economic devastation and long-term health risks. Winner receives $2500.
The Audience Choice Award, sponsored by the SB Independent, went to Starbuck, directed by Ken Scott, about a former sperm donor who discovers he’s the father of 533 children, 142 of whom have filed a class action lawsuit to determine the identity of their biological father, known only by the pseudonym Starbuck.
You think of the board game Battleship and automatically you think of aliens, right? No? Agreed – the game had nothing to do with aliens. But, Universal Pictures and director Peter Berg are hoping that won’t matter when they launch Battleship the movie in theaters on May 18, 2012.
Battleship is inspired by the Hasbro game of the same name and stars Taylor Kitsch, Brooklyn Decker, Alexander Skarsgård, Rihanna, Asano Tadanobu, and Liam Neeson.
Watch the Super Bowl trailer:
The Plot:
Peter Berg (Hancock) produces and directs Battleship, the epic-scaled action-adventure that unfolds across the seas, in the skies and over land as our planet fights for survival against a superior force.