
Paramount Pictures’ revealed the winners of the ‘Tweet to See It First’ campaign, and 20 cities were selected to see Paranormal Activity 3 on October 18th, three days before the film officially opens in theaters. And the 20 top vote-getting cities were:
Houston, TX
Vancouver, BC Canada
Phoenix, AZ
San Antonio, TX
Melbourne, VIC Australia
Fresno, CA
Ciudad de Panama, Panama
Los Angeles, CA
New York, NY
Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico
Orlando, FL
Dallas, TX
Toronto, ON Canada
Tel Aviv, Israel
Chicago, IL
Sao Paulo, Brazil
Austin, TX
Miami, FL
London UK
Sheffield UK
“‘The response to the ‘Tweet to See it First’ campaign proved to us the immense global strength of the franchise, with fans from as far as Panama and Tel Aviv to San Antonio and Vancouver competing to see this film first. The 3rd installment is as scary and entertaining as the first and we’re confident that these advance screenings will spark strong social conversation around the world in advance of the film’s opening.” stated Rob Moore, Vice Chairman of Paramount Pictures, in the press release announcing the winning cities.
If you live in one of the above mentioned cities – or don’t mind traveling because you really, really want to see Paranormal Activity 3 a little early – visit www.ParanormalMovie.com for ticket details.
Source: Paramount Pictures
Paranormal Activity 3 Screens Early in 20 Cities
Tribes Announces December 2011 Tour Details

The British rock band Tribes is invading America in December, kicking off a short US tour in Boston on December 7, 2011. And in conjunction with the tour, Tribes’ EP We Were Children will debut on the band’s website on November 29th.
From the Universal Republic Records Press Release:
Tribes’ title track “We Were Children” is not an apology, but a call to action, a celebration of influence, and an acknowledgement that we are what we love. The Fly (UK) recently praised the music, “…the best bits of 90s guitar music (from both sides of the pond) into raw rock’n’roll stories full of regret and nostalgia… as ramshackle as it is brilliant… fantastic.” The theme of youth and influence of the raw power of Sonic Youth, the buzzing urgency of The Pixies, and the melodic swoon of Blur are musically evident.
Proved when the band drew more than a thousand people to Camden High Street in London for the video shoot of the title track, the appeal and rising success of Tribes has always originated in the most credible way—word-of-mouth. Crowding the streets with a mere 4 hours notice, the band and its fans managed to create a video, as well as a fair amount of mayhem, prior to getting shut down by police.
It’s word of mouth that has audiences — fans, curious music lovers, and other fellow artists alike — intrigued with the band’s music and live performance. “Sometimes you walk into a gig and it’s like a secret society. A band you have heard mumblings of and it’s packed full. Dingwalls is like this tonight for Tribes,” stated punk website Louderthanwar on a recent performance.
With a sold-out crowd at the legendary Electric Ballroom and supporting a string of UK powerhouses (Kaiser Chiefs, The Kooks, Mystery Jets), including heroes, The Pixies, under their belt, NME’s “Radar Band of the Week,” is poised to make a statement stateside. NYLON Magazine says “This Camden four-piece is breaking out in a big way…we can’t get enough!”
Tribes 2011 Tour Dates
December 7 Boston, MA Great Scott
December 8 New York, NY Mercury Lounge
December 9 Brooklyn, NY Glasslands
December 10 Toronto, ON The Drake
December 11 Chicago,IL Schubas
December 12 Los Angeles, CA The Echo
Milla Jovovich Shares a ‘Resident Evil: Retribution’ Set Video

Milla Jovovich is fantastic at keeping her fans up-to-date on her film projects, and Twitter> is one of her favorite ways to reach out to fans. She answers questions, shares behind-the-scenes details, and even makes her own on-set videos. Her most recent video shows off destruction on the set of Resident Evil: Retribution which stars Jovovich, Shawn Roberts, Boris Kodjoe, Kevin Durand, Michelle Rodriguez, Colin Salmon, and Sienna Guillory.
Resident Evil: Retribution arrives on September 14, 2012.
The Plot: In Resident Evil: Retribution, the Umbrella Corporation’s deadly T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the global population into legions of the flesh-eating Undead. The human race’s last and only hope, Alice (Jovovich), awakens in the heart of Umbrella’s most clandestine operations facility and unveils more of her mysterious past as she delves further into the complex.
Without a safe haven, Alice continues to hunt those responsible for the outbreak; a chase that takes her from Tokyo to New York, Washington, D.C. and Moscow, culminating in a mind-blowing revelation that will force her to rethink everything that she once thought to be true. Aided by newfound allies and familiar friends, Alice must fight to survive long enough to escape a hostile world on the brink of oblivion. The countdown has begun.
‘Dexter’ Season 6 Episode 3 Preview

I wasn’t a fan of season 5 of Dexter, however, Showtime’s won me back as a devoted Dexter fan with season 6. Here’s what’s in store for episode three:
“Dexter is confronted with a sobering glimpse of his own potential future when a serial killer from his past makes a startling reappearance; Debra is uncomfortable in her new job; Travis struggles to keep his mentor happy, as he and Gellar prepare a new twisted tableau, ensuring Debra’s next task will be a daunting one.”
Watch the preview:
Say Goodbye to ‘Charlie’s Angels’

Charlie’s Angels will air a few more times and then they’ll disappear forever – or until some studio/network decides audiences really need another helping of Angels. ABC’s pulling the plug on the show, deciding to air the remaining episodes that have been shot before hanging up their Angel wings and calling it quits.
Minka Kelly, Rachael Taylor, and Annie Ilonzeh star in this revamp of the 1970s series, but unlike the original show, this version failed to catch on with audiences. It did have a minor bump up in numbers this week, but that wasn’t enough to save these Angels from joining The Playboy Club, Free Agents and How to Be a Gentleman in cancellation heaven.
‘Footloose’ Movie Review (2011)

Where, oh where, to begin. Part of the freakish, seemingly unstoppable Hollywood remake train, Footloose is now having its legacy tarnished with a hip, fresh, updated version nobody but the people pulling the financial strings wanted to see made in the first place.
The core elements are all rehashed intact. A city boy (this time from Boston instead of Chicago) gets shipped off to a small town. That town has outlawed dancing and loud music, all in an attempt to keep its teenagers safe from their own natural temptations. Of course, there’s a Preacher (Dennis Quaid steps up to John Lithgow’s pulpit) and a Preacher’s daughter (bye-bye Lori Singer, hello Julianne Hough), who’s not quite the virtuous girl Daddy would like to think she is. The Boston rebel with a heart of gold (Kenny Wormald fills the dancing shoes of Kevin Bacon) falls for the slutty not quite Snow White of a tired cliché and the movie perfunctorily hits the beats of its predecessor (all with a countryfied twist).
The acting is what one would expect from a film of this caliber; that is, no one’s going home with a statuette unless it has an MTV or Blockbuster logo on it. Wormald actually does okay, his Boston accent is natural but still seemed thicker in some scenes than others. Most of his dancing was more like a bad cross between krumping and gymnastics, but I’ll throw some of that blame on the choreographers. Hough has ridiculously piercing blue eyes and sure knows how to dance, but most of her confrontational scenes were more like cinematic pouts than something that felt sincere and/or didn’t elicit unintentional guffaws.
Then there’s Dennis Quaid. He’s a good actor and easy for audiences to sympathize with – what with his amazingly frequent teary-eyed looks and speeches. However, there was something missing in the performance that just seemed to come effortlessly from Lithgow in the original. Casting Andie MacDowell as his wife isn’t doing anyone any favors but the bottom line is that while Quaid has always done a nice job of playing the protective father, adding the religious component just felt a little hollow, and it was difficult to buy him as the spiritual leader of the town.
Anyone filling in for Sarah Jessica Parker (for any reason) is an improvement, so Ziah Colon’s take on the character of Rusty felt fine. Perhaps most surprising though is Miles Teller’s performance as Willard – a role so iconically done by the late Chris Penn. There are some key differences in how the role plays out (as part of the appeal to Penn’s take was that he didn’t look like someone who could dance), but Teller helps to alleviate the general blandness of his co-stars and steals nearly every scene he’s in.
Now, as for the music, the big hits are repackaged in the new soundtrack. “Footloose,” “Let’s Hear It For The Boy,” “Almost Paradise” and “Holding Out For A Hero” all get updated with a country twang and feature prominently in the film. They even use the original Kenny Loggins version of the titular song, which helped prevent a full aneurysm. However, the revamped renditions almost unilaterally induced internal and occasional external groans from this over-30-year-old critic. But then again, this whole concept of altering an essentially sacred film (not that it doesn’t have its own faults) and bringing it to a new generation rather than simply re-releasing the original only raises my blood pressure.
So, sure, Footloose (2011) does what’s expected/required and will do fine with anyone born after 1990, but since that’s still no excuse to remake it in the first place and it takes 113 minutes to get to the end, there’s no way in the fiery pits of Hades that I’ll give it quite the passing grade. All you young whippersnappers will probably eat this up like a packet of Go-Gurt while you listen to your pirated mp3 of Panic at the Disco but for anyone who holds the original near and dear, trust your instincts and just re-watch Kevin Bacon do his thing. Your soul will thank you.
Grade: C-
Footloose hits theaters on October 14, 2011 and is rated PG-13 for some teen drug and alcohol use, sexual content, violence and language.
Bennett Miller Earns Directing Award for Moneyball

Announcing his selection, Hollywood Film Festival Founder and Executive Director Carlos de Abreu stated, “With Moneyball, Bennett Miller has given us a beautiful film, from what many called an ‘unfilmable’ book, and we’re thrilled to honor him as our Hollywood Director. Bennett found the heart in this story of baseball statistics and guided the remarkable performances of Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill and Philip Seymour Hoffman. Capote was a masterful debut, and Moneyball further proves that Miller has a real gift for breathing life into complex material.”
Miller earned both an Oscar nomination and a BAFTA David Lean Award for Direction nomination for his work on 2005’s Capote.
In addition to Miller, this year’s Hollywood Film Festival honorees include George Clooney, Glenn Close, Michelle Williams, Christopher Plummer, Carey Mulligan, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Felicity Jones, and the cast of The Help.
Source: Hollywood Film Festival – October 14, 2011
Posted by Rebecca Murray
‘Trespass’ Movie Review

“What do you want from us?” “I don’t know. Why don’t we start with everything you got.” That’s Kyle Miller (Nicolas Cage), a fast-talking businessman, asking the leader of three intruders who’ve just taken over his private estate and are holding him and his wife, Sarah (Nicole Kidman), hostage in the thriller Trespass.
Elias (Ben Mendelsohn), the leader of the criminals, has been planning the home invasion for some time now and seems to know almost everything about the Millers except that their rebellious teenage daughter has slipped out to go to a party that her parents said no to. Loud, violent, and desperate, Elias and his crew threaten and beat Kyle to try to convince him to open his unbreakable wall safe.
Convinced that if he gives into the thugs’ demands, he and Sarah will be murdered, Kyle begins a series of negotiations and mind games with Elias trying to buy time and find a way to get the upper hand on his captors and save his family.
Trespass is a chaotic, dramatic thriller that’s a loud, noisy, preposterous mess of a film. It’s horribly written with some of the most ridiculous dialogue to hit the big screen in the last few years. The audience at the press screening was laughing out loud at the unbelievably silly and moronic lines being shouted by the actors. Joel Schumacher’s direction has reached a new low point in his career with this film, never knowing when to cut a scene, and becoming repetitious with the same crude, vulgar, and sadistic torture of the family.
Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman give what just might be considered the worst performances of their careers in this sham of a thriller. When Cage isn’t screaming his lines and overacting all over the screen, he seems bored and uninterested in anything going on around him, much like the audience will be. Kidman, playing a bored, desperate, wealthy housewife who longs to be desired by her husband, once again seems stiff and uncomfortable in the early scenes with Cage. Not once are they believable as a married couple. Later in the film, Kidman makes a solid effort to seem truly terrified by the intruders, but it’s too little too late.
Pointless and uninspired, Trespass is a horrible film that makes the movie-going experience painful and is a perfect example of why some movie theaters give refunds to audience members who leave before the film is half over. Please save yourself some time and money and don’t bother going into the theater to see it to begin with.
GRADE: F
Trespass was directed by Joel Schumacher and is rated R for violence and terror, pervasive language and some brief drug use.
Kenny Wormald Talks ‘Footloose’

Kenny Wormald steps into Kevin Bacon’s dancing shoes – not literally, of course – for the 2011 remake of Footloose, directed by Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow, Black Snake Moan) and co-starring Julianne Hough as the small town girl Wormald’s Boston-born character falls for. And in this video courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Wormald talks about putting his own spin on ‘Ren,’ working with Julianne, the dance scenes, Craig Brewer’s vision for the film, and why Footloose is still relevant today.
The Plot: Ren MacCormack (Kenny Wormald) is transplanted from Boston to the small southern town of Bomont where he experiences a heavy dose of culture shock. A few years prior, the community was rocked by a tragic accident that killed five teenagers after a night out and Bomont’s local councilmen and the beloved Reverend Shaw Moore (Dennis Quaid) responded by implementing ordinances that prohibit loud music and dancing. Not one to bow to the status quo, Ren challenges the ban, revitalizing the town and falling in love with the minister’s troubled daughter Ariel (Julianne Hough) in the process.
Watch the video:
More on Footloose:
—Photo gallery
—News, trailer and cast list
Revenge and Suburgatory Get Full First Season Orders

ABC is seeking more Revenge and is ready to spend more time visiting the residents of Suburgatory. The network’s picking up both shows for a full 22 episode season, which makes sense as both new shows are doing well ratings-wise.
Suburgatory has the benefit of airing in the time slot between The Middle and Modern Family, and last night the rookie comedy drew 8.75 million viewers. Meanwhile, Revenge is proving to be a force to be reckoned, winning the 18-49 demo in its time slot.
ABC also showered some love on Happy Endings, ordering six more episodes of the show’s second season.
Posted by Rebecca Murray – Oct 13, 2011


