Gym Class Heroes (Photo Provided by Fueled by Ramen)
Gym Class Heroes has hit #1 at CHR/Top 40 radio outlets with “Stereo Hearts (Featuring Adam Levine)” and has reached #3 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, according to the group’s label, Decaydance/Fueled By Ramen. “Stereo Hearts” is the first single off the group’s upcoming album, The Papercut Chronicles II, dropping on November 15th.
Hiro Murai directed the “Stereo Hearts” music video which has reached the #1 spot on the VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown and has 30 million views and counting.
Upcoming Appearances [Courtesy of Fueled by Ramen]:
“Gym Class Heroes will herald The Papercut Chronicles II — due in stores and at all digital retailers on November 15th — with a number of high profile TV appearances. First up, GCH frontman Travie McCoy will team up with Adam Levine and Maroon 5 for a very special performance of “Stereo Hearts” on the Saturday, November 5th installment of NBC’s Saturday Night Live (check local listings). Travie and Gym Class Heroes are then scheduled to perform the chart-topping track on NBC’s The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, slated for Thursday, November 17th. As if all that weren’t enough, GCH will hit NBC’s Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on Thursday, December 8th for the debut TV performance of “Ass Back Home (Feat. Neon Hitch),” the upcoming second single from The Papercut Chronicles II. That song will be available tomorrow for sale exclusively tomorrow on iTunes.
Gym Class Heroes — who recently performed “Stereo Hearts” with Levine on NBC’s blockbuster singing competition, The Voice — are currently in the midst of a major North American tour. The dates — which see the band co-headlining alongside The Dirty Heads — continue through mid-November (see itinerary below). GCH will then spend the season celebrating at an array of upcoming holiday radio concerts, including Z100’s annual Jingle Ball extravaganza, slated for Friday, December 9th at New York City’s world-famous Madison Square Garden. For up-to-the-minute information, please visit http://gymclassheroes.com.
The current itinerary follows Gym Class Heroes’ summer stint as one of the top acts headlining Vans Warped Tour ’11, as well as at September’s sold-out FBR15 series of multi-artist concerts at New York City’s Terminal 5. The band was also among the artists who took part in AT&T’s recent “Music For You” concert series. Their live performance from Dallas will be presented to fans starting November 15 through a range of AT&T multimedia platforms, including AT&T U-verse TV On Demand, U-verse Online, and U-verse Mobile App.
The Papercut Chronicles II sees Gym Class Heroes continuing to push the envelope with their trademark fusion of rock, pop, and alternative hip-hop. The exhilarating collection finds the band collaborating with a stellar line-up of studio talents and special guests, including such top stars as Adam Levine, Ryan Tedder, Oh Land, and Neon Hitch. Fans are invited to check out such new tracks as “Martyrial Girl$” and “Life Goes On (Feat. Oh Land)” — which is also on sale now at iTunes — via Fueled By Ramen’s official YouTube channel. Another track from the album, “The Fighter (feat. Ryan Tedder),” will become available on 11/8 exclusively on iTunes.”
NOVEMBER
1 Columbus, OH Newport Music Hall
2 Chicago, IL House of Blues
4 Milwaukee, WI The Rave
5 Columbia, MO The Blue Note
6 Kansas City, MO The Midland Theatre
7 Park City, KS Hartman Arena *
8 Denver, CO Ogden Theatre
9 Salt Lake City, UT The Complex
10 Boise, ID Knitting Factory
11 Seattle, WA Showbox SODO
12 Portland, OR Roseland Theatre
14 San Francisco, CA The Regency Ballroom
15 West Hollywood, CA The Roxy Theatre *
16 San Diego, CA House of Blues
18 Las Vegas, NV House of Blues
19 Anaheim, CA The Grove
DECEMBER
1 Sacramento, CA 107.9’s Jingle Ball *
2 Phoenix, AZ Johnjay & Rich Present Phooson *
4 Minneapolis, MN KDWB’s Jingle Ball 2011 *
6 Buffalo, NY Kissmas Bash*
7 Philadelphia, PA Q102’s Jingle Ball*
9 New York, NY Z100’s Jingle Ball 2011 *
10 Miami, FL Y100’s Jingle Ball 2011*
15 San Antonio, TX Kidd Kraddick’s Not So Silent Night*
Michael Cudlitz, Ben McKenzie, Regina King and Shawn Hatosy star in TNT’s ‘Southland’ (Photo by Greg Williamson / TNT)
TNT announced filming has begun on the fourth season of the critically acclaimed gritty drama Southland. The cast and crew are once again filming on the streets of LA, with Michael Cudlitz, Shawn Hatosy, Regina King, and Ben McKenzie returning in starring roles.
TNT also announced Lucy Liu will be guest starring on this season’s Southland.
Southland will return on Tuesday, January 17, 2012 at 10pm ET/PT.
The Plot:
Redefining the police drama with its raw, authentic look at the lives and work of Los Angeles detectives and beat cops, Southland centers on four main characters: Officer John Cooper (Cudlitz), a seasoned cop who will have to prove himself again after recovering from surgery; Officer Ben Sherman (McKenzie), who still has much to learn after recently completing his training rotation; Detective Lydia Adams (King), who seems to take every case personally; and Sammy Bryant (Hatosy), a former detective who decided to go back to being a uniform cop after the traumatic death of his partner.
This season on Southland, Detective Adams will take on another new partner, this time a former Marine (guest star Dorian Missick), while also facing a major upheaval in her personal life. Cooper will be back on the job after surgery to repair the back problems that led to his drug addiction. He will be teamed up with a new partner, Jessica Tang (Liu), who will bring her own set of emotional baggage to their patrol car. Cooper’s former trainee, Sherman, is now a full-fledged cop, partnered with Bryant, who continues to struggle with the trauma of the past.
Long-time Oscar show producer Gilbert Cates has died at the age of 77. According to TMZ, Cates’ body was discovered in a UCLA parking lot on October 31, 2011 (Cates was a UCLA professor). The cause of his death is under investigation.
Cates holds the record for producing the most Academy Awards shows, tackling the tough job 14 times between 1990-2008. Among the Oscar hosts Cates brought in to liven things up were Billy Crystal, Whoopi Goldberg, David Letterman, Steve Martin, Chris Rock, and Jon Stewart.
Statement from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences:
“Gil was our colleague, our friend and a former governor of the Academy,” said Academy President Tom Sherak. “He was a consummate professional who gave the Academy and the world some of the most memorable moments in Oscar® history. His passing is a tremendous loss to the entertainment industry, and our thoughts go out to his family.”
Turner Classic Movies (TCM) just revealed their list of the 10 favorite Marilyn Monroe moments in feature films, topped by a scene from 1950’s The Asphalt Jungle. The list was released as the network gears up for its “Battle of the Blondes” programming event planned for November 2011.
The “Battle of the Blondes” will feature movies starring Marilyn Monroe, Lana Turner, Jayne Mansfield, Jean Harlow, Judy Holliday, Ursula Andress, Marlene Dietrich, Betty Grable, Doris Day, Carole Lombard, Mae West, Janet Leigh, Brigitte Bardot, Grace Kelly, Kim Novak, and Veronica Lake.
TCM’s 10 Favorite Marilyn Moments:
Marilyn looks up at “Uncle Lon” when he sees her lying on the couch in The Asphalt Jungle (1950)
Hollywood’s censors, the Production Code Administration, won a lot of concessions from director John Huston as he filmed this realistic crime drama (the first big studio crime picture filmed in almost documentary detail): leading lady Jean Hagen was never referred to as a prostitute, and criminal mastermind Sam Jaffe’s fascination with young women was depicted as nostalgia rather than perversion. But the bluenoses were helpless in the face of Marilyn Monroe’s smoldering glances. Although crooked judge Louis Calhern introduced her character Angela as his “niece,” every time she looked up at him, usually from a reclining position, the audience knew exactly what kind of uncle he was.
Huston had pretty much settled on casting Lola Albright in the role, but as a favor to agent Johnny Hyde, he agreed to read Monroe. Her audition was terrible, and he was prepared to dismiss her when she asked to read again, something unheard of in Hollywood. When she finished, he watched her walk away and got a look at the “Marilyn wiggle.” Huston was hooked and convinced the MGM brass to let him cast the untried actress. Her success in the role and the power of her final dramatic moment, when she rats out her “uncle” to the police, convinced 20th Century-Fox head Darryl F. Zanuck to start giving her better parts.
Marilyn works on her “punctuation” in Monkey Business (1952)
For his fifth (and last) film with Cary Grant, director Howard Hawks gave the debonair actor one of his sexiest co-stars, Marilyn Monroe. The blonde bombshell more than held her own as a farceur opposite Grant, Ginger Rogers (cast as Grant’s wife), Charles Coburn and a mischievous chimp. Even before the comic business really gets rolling, she proves her talents with one of her best “dumb blonde” one-liners ever: “Mr. Oxley’s been complaining about my punctuation, so I’m careful to get here before nine.”
When the chimp accidentally perfects the fountain of youth formula chemist Grant has been working on, it gradually turns the rest of the cast into overgrown, hyperactive adolescents, leaving Monroe the one person unaffected. At that point, she proves herself the perfect straight woman, accompanying the now impetuous Grant on a madcap day on the town as he buys a new sports car and takes her swimming. Hawks, who would help Monroe perfect the dim-witted beauty act in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), had originally tried to cast Ava Gardner as Grant’s wife. Instead, studio executives forced him to cast Rogers, with whom he did not get along. Years later, film critic turned director Peter Bogdanovich would praise the chemistry between Grant and Monroe and suggest the one thing that would have made Monkey Business the perfect film would have been casting her as the wife.
Marilyn establishes her trademark walk on the way to a bus station in Niagara (1953)
Sex, murder and spectacular scenery were the selling points for this Technicolor film noir – with Marilyn Monroe providing all three. Rose, the dissatisfied wife out to lure jealous husband Joseph Cotten to his death, was her most evil character ever, but Monroe was so beautiful she seemed worth dying for. From the moment she wakes up, staring at the camera as she lounges in bed, her performance offers the promise of forbidden pleasures. The film exploits her beauty in a series of low-cut, bright dresses and a surprisingly provocative shower scene, with Monroe’s figure clearly outlined against the translucent shower curtain. And her sultry walk from the camera, the longest in cinema history, established the “Marilyn walk” as one of her trademarks.
Niagara was originally planned as a vehicle for Anne Baxter, cast as a young wife caught up in the sexual tension between Rose and her husband. When she withdrew, 20th Century Fox beefed up Marilyn’s role and bumped her to star billing. She paid them back with a surprisingly powerful performance, particularly in her death scene, expertly paced by Monroe, Cotten and director Henry Hathaway to build both tension and a surprising level of sympathy for Rose. Although Niagara Falls was supposed to be the film’s focus, Marilyn demanded equal attention, making an impact that still holds audiences. When Andy Warhol created his famous silk screen Marilyn Diptych the week after she died, the image he used was a close-up from Niagara.
Marilyn sings “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend” from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)
Although she was second-billed to established sex symbol Jane Russell, Marilyn Monroe – in the role of ultimate gold digger Lorelei Lee – came out of this film a first-rate star by proving that as a dumb blonde, “I can be smart when I need to be.” Belting “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” and trilling, “I just love finding new places to wear diamonds,” she created one of the screen’s most endearing images of greed. But her character went far beyond that; Lorelei had the smarts to know that any man with “and valet” after his name in the ship’s register had a bankroll that made him worth pursuing. And she had the warmth to attract women as well as men.
Her friendship with fellow showgirl Dorothy Shaw (Russell) is one of the best buddy relationships ever put on screen by director Howard Hawks – an expert on that type of dynamic. In the midst of her big ode to diamonds, she takes a moment to share her wisdom with a group of chorus girls, adding a surprising level of humanity to her glittering performance. Even though some of her vocals were dubbed (by Marni Nixon), the timing was all Marilyn, giving her the chance to prove she had the smarts to sell a great comic role. Years later, her performance of “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” would inspire the video for Madonna’s “Material Girl,” but the original performance remained unmatched.
Marilyn takes her glasses off in How to Marry a Millionaire (1953)
Marilyn Monroe has one moment in this early CinemaScope film (the first to finish production using the process but the second released, after The Robe) that cemented her star appeal. As nearsighted fashion model Pola Debevoise, she lives by the rule “Men aren’t attentive to girls who wear glasses,” a hilarious mangling of Dorothy Parker’s famous poem. At one point, she sneaks on her glasses to check herself out in a ladies’ room mirror. Then the sumptuously gowned Marilyn hides the glasses, prepares to make a grand entrance and walks right into a wall.
Like her big-screen predecessor Jean Harlow, Monroe became a star by adding a touch of humanity to her sex appeal. She plays one of three down-on-their-luck models (the other two are Betty Grable and Lauren Bacall) who pool their resources to rent a luxury penthouse in hopes of snaring rich husbands. Do they get what they want? Not completely, but each finds her true love. Monroe’s pairing with the very normal David Wayne, rather than some big-screen hunk who would rival her beauty, further humanizes her.
When he convinces her to put on her glasses and face the world, it’s one of the silliest and also most romantic moments in her career. Industry insiders expected fireworks when 20th Century Fox teamed Monroe with blonde bombshell Grable, but the two became friends, and Grable was happy to end her studio contract with a hit.
Marilyn sings and dances to “Heat Wave” in There’s No Business Like Show Business (1954)
As the chorus warns, “hot and humid nights can be expected” – especially when Marilyn Monroe tackles the Irving Berlin classic “Heat Wave” in this all-star musical extravaganza. Ostensibly about a family of vaudevillians headed by Ethel Merman and Dan Dailey, the film becomes all about sex when Monroe takes the stage as determined rising star Vicky – a performance that puts her character on the road to the top. Off screen, Marilyn was already big enough that she could hold out on making the film (20th Century Fox almost cast Sheree North) until studio head Darryl F. Zanuck promised her the lead in The Seven Year Itch (1955). He also agreed to give Monroe the “Heat Wave” number originally assigned to Merman, who had performed it almost 20 years earlier in Alexander’s Ragtime Band (1938).
Though some critics carped about Monroe’s sexier, slowed-down version of the standard, fans consider it one of the film’s highlights. Choreographer Jack Cole had learned how to set her famous “wiggle” to music when working on Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953). He had no problem convincing audiences that Monroe’s performance could indeed raise temperatures, particularly when she started moving her hips. This and two of her other numbers, the teasing “After You Get What You Want (You Don’t Want It)” and “Lazy,” show just how witty a performer she could be. At the end of “Heat Wave,” she even makes fun of herself, over-enunciating the lyrics in imitation of her own overdeveloped diction.
A subway breeze blows Marilyn’s white dress in The Seven Year Itch (1955)
With one scene, Billy Wilder and Marilyn Monroe created an innocent image of sensuality that would become indelibly linked with her name, and also inadvertently contributed to the end of her marriage to Joe DiMaggio. As every married man’s dream, she combined sexiness and naïveté, moving effortlessly between reality and neighbor Tom Ewell’s fantasies. But she also brought a surprising depth and maturity to her “dumb blonde” role, helping Ewell realize how much he still loves and needs his family. Her performance proved she was more than just a pinup queen, while at the same time establishing that image forever when she stops over a subway grating in the midst of a hot New York summer to let the breeze from a passing train lift her skirts and cool her off.
Wilder originally shot the scene on location at 52nd and Lexington, but the wolf calls and other crowd noises as Monroe flubbed her lines through 40 takes made that footage unusable. They also made DiMaggio, who had accompanied her on location, furious. Wilder had to redo the scene on the 20th Century Fox backlot, as Monroe continued to blow her lines. The extra takes were worth it, however, when the film, spurred by an ad campaign prominently featuring that particular scene, became a big hit with everybody except her husband. By the time they finished The Seven Year Itch, the Monroe-DiMaggio marriage was over.
Marilyn sings “That Old Black Magic” in Bus Stop (1956)
Fans saw a new Marilyn Monroe when she starred as Cherie, the movie-star wannabe kidnapped by an amorous cowboy in this adaptation of William Inge’s hit play. Determined to prove herself as a dramatic actress, she had taken a year off from the movies to study at the Actors Studio. She returned to Hollywood as head of her own production company and with a new studio contract. Then she broke from her glamorous image to create the right look for Cherie, wearing pasty white makeup to play a woman who never got outdoors, the tackiest clothes the costumer could find and a tousled hair style. She even insisted on playing a bedroom scene naked (under the sheets, of course).
From the very beginning of the film, she branded this as a different kind of performance. When Cherie sings “That Old Black Magic” in a seedy Phoenix bar, the number is a far cry from Monroe’s more polished performances of “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” and “Heat Wave” in earlier films. Cherie may insist that she’s a “chanteuse,” but her singing is irritatingly off-key, her staging is pure amateur and the costumes are tattered and threadbare. Where on-screen audiences in the past had responded with rapturous applause, the crowd at the Phoenix dive laughs derisively. It was a huge gamble, but it paid off with glowing reviews, strong box office and one of the most memorable moments in Monroe’s career.
Marilyn talks to Tony Curtis about always getting “the fuzzy end of the lollipop” in Some Like It Hot (1959)
If there’s a role most fans think should have brought the never-nominated Marilyn Monroe an Oscar®, it’s Sugar, the softhearted singer in this comedy classic. It’s not just that she’s funny, though her attempt to seduce a backwards millionaire (Tony Curtis in disguise) is one of the sexiest and funniest scenes ever filmed, and her reaction when he claims to be heir to Shell Oil is comic perfection. Rather, it’s the sensitive heart she gives the character. Instead of playing her big confessional (in which she complains about always getting “the fuzzy end of the lollipop”) for laughs, she captures a lifetime of heartache behind the sexy exterior.
Originally director Billy Wilder had wanted Mitzi Gaynor as his female lead, but he needed a bigger marquee name than Curtis or Jack Lemmon, so he signed Monroe for 10 percent of the gross. Though her personal issues, particularly her problems remembering lines, are estimated to have cost the film as much as half a million, the results were so good that nobody watching could have noticed or would have cared. Her three musical numbers, which represent the full range of her talents, are a special treat. The raucous “Runnin’ Wild” carries her trademark wiggle to new heights. “I Wanna Be Loved by You” is about as sweet as her sexuality ever got. And the final “I’m Through with Love” provides the perfect moment of heart in the midst of the comic chaos, helping make this one of the screen’s greatest performances.
Marilyn gets into a fight with Clark Gable in the desert in The Misfits (1961)
In her last performance, Marilyn Monroe went fully dramatic. Working for the only time with a script written by then-husband Arthur Miller, she captures the soul of a woman who has no trouble attracting men but can never get them to look beyond her face and body. The Monroe sizzle is still there, particularly in a kinetic scene in which she plays Ping-Pong wearing a tight, white, polka-dotted dress.
But it’s the raw passion of her performance that drives the film, whether rejecting the husband (Kevin McCarthy) she’s come to Reno to divorce, suddenly giving all her money to a religious fanatic, comforting a brain-damaged rodeo rider (Montgomery Clift) or, in one of her most searing dramatic scenes, telling off lover Clark Gable (also in his last film) for taking on a job capturing wild horses for a dog food company. Her work at that moment suggests the kinds of powerhouse dramatic performances she might have delivered had she lived longer, while also helping provide an emotional grounding for a film that never quite makes up its mind what it’s about. Monroe caused the usual delays on the set, but instead of carrying her problems to new levels when she shot her scene with the equally troubled Clift, the two bolstered each other, creating a simple, touching scene that’s among the film’s best. It’s matched by the final moment, as she and Gable drive off to “that big star straight on” – a poetic coda to two dazzling careers.
Bradley Cooper and Zoe Saldana in 'The Words' - Waterfall Media & Benaroya Pictures
Bradley Cooper and Zoe Saldana look, well, comfortable and gorgeous in this first photo from The Words, a dramatic film from writer/directors Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal. Joining Cooper and Saldana in The Words are Ben Barnes, Jeremy Irons, Dennis Quaid, and Olivia Wilde.
The Plot:
The story follows a famous author reading from his first and most acclaimed novel at a university reading. The novel written many years ago launched his career, it suspiciously tells the story of a younger writer who, at the peak of his literary success, discovers the price he must pay for having stolen another man’s work in order to have launched his own career.
Universal’s just started filming a werewolf movie which, just to make it difficult to write about, is currently being referred to as just Untitled Werewolf Thriller. The straight-to-DVD thriller is shooting in and around Bucharest, Romania and set for a Halloween 2012 release.
“Universal introduced the movie-going public to the ‘creature feature’ more than a half-century ago,” stated Glenn Ross, General Manager and Executive Vice President, Universal 1440 Entertainment. “Today, audiences are once again enthralled by supernatural creatures in books, on television and in movies. Audiences young and old will enjoy this completely new take on a timeless story that is an essential part of Universal’s legacy.”
Stephen Rea, Steven Bauer, Ed Quinn, Nia Peeples, Guy Wilson, Adam Croasdell, and Rachel DiPillo star in the untitled horror film directed by Louis Morneau. Michael Tabb, Louis Morneau, and Catherine Cyran wrote the script.
The Plot:
A monstrous creature terrorizes a 19th Century European village by moonlight and a young man struggles to protect his loved ones from an unspeakable scourge in Untitled Werewolf Thriller, Universal Studios’ all-new addition to its time-honored legacy of supernatural thrillers. During his studies with the local doctor (Stephen Rea), Daniel (Guy Wilson) witnesses the horrific consequences of werewolf attacks. Watching as the beast’s fearsome reputation draws bounty hunters, thrill seekers and charlatans to the tiny town, Daniel dreams of destroying the ruthless predator.
So when a mysterious stranger (Ed Quinn) and his team of skilled werewolf hunters (Stephen Bauer, Adam Croasdell) arrive to pursue the monster, he offers to join them, despite his mother’s (Nia Peeples) protests. But it soon becomes clear that this creature is stronger, smarter and more dangerous than anything they have faced before. As casualties mount and villagers see their neighbors transformed into ravening monsters, the townsfolk take up arms against each other to find the true identity of the werewolf. Amid the hysteria, Daniel begins to suspect he’s closer to his target than he ever dreamed.
Dylan McDermott and Denis O'Hare in the 'American Horror Story' "Murder House" episode. Photo Credit: Ray Mickshaw / FX
FX will be bringing American Horror Story back for a second season, announcing the renewal – appropriately enough – on Halloween. Created by Glee‘s Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, the horror series has become a major draw for the network, posting its highest ratings so far with the Halloween-themed episode.
The 13-episode season two of what could possibly be the most bizarre (and also one of the most addictive) show on television will air in the fall 2012.
Commenting on the renewal, FX President Jon Landgraf said, “It’s one thing to have the ambition and guts to reinvent a genre in a way that makes it captivatingly fresh for a broad audience — it’s something else entirely to have the craft to back that ambition up. Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk have hit the trifecta with Nip/Tuck, Glee, and now American Horror Story, which will be scaring FX’s viewers to death for many years to come.”
American Horror Story debuted on October 5, 2011 and stars Dylan McDermott, Connie Britton, Jessica Lange, Frances Conroy, and Taissa Farmiga.
American Horror Story “chronicles the lives of Ben and Vivien Harmon (McDermott and Britton) who relocate from Boston to Los Angeles with their daughter in an attempt to put the dark memories of their past behind them. Their new residence in an old mansion hides dark secrets, as do next-door neighbor Constance (Lange), the home’s housekeeper, Moira O’Hara (Conroy), and Larry, a former resident of the estate (Denis O’Hare).”
In honor of Halloween, CBS Films has just launched a new viral website for the horror/thriller The Woman in Black starring Harry Potter‘s Daniel Radcliffe. The Woman in Black won’t be scaring audiences in theaters until next February, but this new website hopes to make you jump away from your computer screen as it offers up a look inside the ‘Eel Marsh House’ from the film and answers the question, “What did they see?”
Per CBS Films, “by using motion recognition with the computer’s webcam, visitors to the site can shift their perspective within the room by simply moving right & left in front of their own computer to see what lurks behind the door and in the shadows. No matter how scared you get, expect to receive your own customized photo, compliments of The Woman in Black.”
Prepare for more blood, guts and gore Cabin Fever-style. The Indomina Group is gearing up for two more Cabin Fever films – Cabin Fever: Patient Zero and Cabin Fever: Outbreak – which will be shot back to back next year in the Dominican Republic.
The Cabin Fever: Patient Zero synopsis: “When a cruise ship in the Caribbean collides with an abandoned research vessel, a deadly virus is unleashed. Passengers must find a way to survive before the flesh eating disease consumes them all.”
And the Cabin Fever: Outbreak synopsis: “In this film a doctor and his family travel to a remote Caribbean island to investigate a minor flu outbreak, only to discover a vicious flesh-eating virus that threatens everyone on the island. The family is faced with responsibility to prevent a worldwide epidemic.”
Adam and Deborah Marcus (Leatherface 3D, I Walked With a Zombie) are working on the script.
Announcing the rebirth of Cabin Fever, Indomina Group Vice Chairman and CEO Jasbinder Singh Mann stated, “We see tremendous potential with the Cabin Fever franchise. We are committing to two new Cabin Fever films because there is a real demand from a devout fanbase – not just Cabin Fever diehards but a large and vocal group of horror fans around the world. Indomina is excited to take the reigns of the franchise and deliver on these next two films.”
Other projects from the Indomina Group include the comedy A Fantastic Fear of Everything starring Simon Pegg, the thriller Life Without Principle, and a live action Afro Samurai film with Samuel L Jackson.
Keith Urban - Photo Courtesy of Sony Music Nashville, Universal Music Group Nashville, and Capital Records Nashville
Vince Gill, Brad Paisley, and Keith Urban will play tribute to Country Music Hall of Fame member and former CMA Entertainer of the Year Glen Campbell at the 45th Annual CMA Awards, as announced today by the Country Music Association. CMA says the “three guitar virtuosos’ performance saluting the legendary singer/musician will be a highlight of Country Music’s Biggest Night.'”
Paisley and Carrie Underwood will return as hosts and perform their duet, “Remind Me,” at the star-studded country music event which will take place in Nashville, Tennessee. The show will air live on November 9, 2011 from 8-11 pm ET on ABC.
Additional performers include Jason Aldean, The Band Perry, Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Sara Evans, Faith Hill, Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Martina McBride, Scotty McCreery, Sugarland, Taylor Swift, Thompson Square, Keith Urban, Chris Young, Zac Brown Band, Kenny Chesney & Grace Potter, Rascal Flatts & Natasha Bedingfield, Lionel Richie & Little Big Town, Rascal Flatts, and Darius Rucker.
More on Glen Campbell [Courtesy of Country Music Association]:
Campbell was named both CMA Entertainer and Male Vocalist of the Year in 1968 and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2005. The legendary performer has sold more than 45 million albums and recorded such classic hits as “Wichita Lineman,” “Gentle On My Mind,” “Galveston,” “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” “Southern Nights,” and “Rhinestone Cowboy.” As a musician, Campbell was part of the much-heralded Wrecking Crew that performed on a variety of artists’ albums.
His guitar prowess is featured on the Beach Boys’ seminal album Pet Sounds and on Frank Sinatra’s megahit “Strangers in the Night,” among others. He acted alongside John Wayne in the movie True Grit, and hosted The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour on television from 1968-1972. Earlier this year, Campbell announced he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. He is in the midst of his successful Goodbye Tour after releasing his final album, the critically-acclaimed Ghost on the Canvas.