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‘Straight Outta Compton’ Crew Sued By Ex N.W.A. Manager

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According to Deadline Hollywood, Jerry Heller (Ex Manager of N.W.A.) is suing NBC Universal, members of N.W.A, and director F Gary Gary for copyright infringement and defamation of character. Jerry Heller is seeking a total of 110 Million dollars in damages plus restitution of profits and gains from N.W.A. Mr. Heller’s attorney is claiming that he never game permission to have his likeness in the film and that Straight Outta Compton is filled with falsehoods that deter people from ever wanting to work with him. NBC had no comment on the lawsuit.

Photo Credit: Jaimie Trueblood

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The Cast Of ‘Inside Out’ Watch The ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Trailer

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Unless you have been living under a rock for the last couple of months, I’m sure you have heard about a little movie called Star Wars: The Force Awakens. As December approaches, the marketing for this highly anticipated film is reaching epic status. I think that by far my favorite promotional tool has been the commerical involving the characters from Inside Out. Check it out !

Star Wars: the Force Awakens

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First Look: AMC’s ‘Preacher’ Teaser Trailer

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AMC Network released a teaser trailer to Preacher, the full trailer will premiere on Sunday, November 1, during the 90-minute episode of The Walking Dead.

AMC’s Preacher is an adaptation of the comic book series of the same name created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, and published by DC Comics’ Vertigo imprint.

Preacher is one of the most celebrated graphic novels of all time, the story of a man of God in a small Texas town who sets out to avenge the decimation of his hometown by supernatural forces.

The plot of the show revolves around Jesse Custer, a conflicted preacher in a small Texas town who merges with a powerful creature that has escaped from heaven. Along with his ex-gal, Tulip, and an Irish vampire named Cassidy, the three embark on a journey to find God.

AMC’s Preacher stars Dominic Cooper as Jesse Custer, Joseph Gilgun as Jesse’s Irish vampire best friend Cassidy, Ruth Negga as Jesse’s girlfriend Tulip O’Hare, Ian Colletti as Arseface, and W. Earl Brown as Arseface’s father Sheriff Hugo Root. There is no firm date for when Preacher will hit the airwaves, but mid-2016 looks to be the target.

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Netflix Renews ‘Longmire’ For A Fifth Season

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The modern-day Western drama Longmire announced on their Facebook page that the series was renewed for a fifth season by Netflix. The fourth season ended on a cliffhanger and there was doubt that the series would return.

We’ve never been one to back down from a fight. Longmire will return to Netflix for Season 5.

Longmire was the highest rated scripted (non-reality) show on A&E and was abruptly canceled by the Network after its third season. Netflix then picked up the series for the fourth season.

A Wyoming sheriff struggles to cope with his wife’s death as he attempts to move on with his life and career. Based on the ‘Walt Longmire’ mystery novels by Craig Johnson.

Longmire stars Robert Taylor, Katee Sackhoff, Lou Diamond Phillips, Cassidy Freeman, Adam Bartley, Louanne Stephens, and A Martinez.

We've never been one to back down from a fight. Longmire will return to Netflix for Season 5.

Posted by Longmire on Friday, October 30, 2015

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AMC Renews ‘The Walking Dead’ For A Seventh Season

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A no brainer by AMC! Zombie puns.

AMC announced Friday afternoon that The Walking Dead would return for a seventh season. The October 25th cliffhanger of an episode brought 18.2 million viewers to the table. The network also renewed The Talking Dead.

We are so proud to share these shows with fans who have been so passionate, communicative and engaged,” said Charlie Collier, president of AMC, SundanceTV and AMC Studios today. “We are grateful for and continually impressed by the talent, effort and excellence on continuous display by Robert Kirkman, Scott Gimple, Chris Hardwick and the many people with whom we partner to make these unique shows possible. The result: More Walking and Talking. Hooray.”

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The Walking Dead’s Steven Yeun Still M.I.A. On Social Media

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The Walking Dead universe was rocked last Sunday night as it looked like Glenn, played Steven Yeun appeared to be eaten alive by the walkers! Social media exploded with reaction and theories about Glenn, and if there was a chance that he survived. One person has been strangely missing on social media, Yeun didn’t appear on Talking Dead after show and the last time he posted to his Twitter account was just before the episode.

A few of Yeun’s costars have tweeted, but not much information to speculate a theory.

One can only hope fans get answers during the 90-minute episode of The Walking Dead on AMC this Sunday night.

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‘The Brothers Grimsby’ Red Band Trailer – Sacha Baron Cohen’s O-Face

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Sony Pictures released the first teaser for The Brothers Grimsby Friday morning. The film stars Sacha Baron Cohen as an obnoxious soccer hooligan brother who must go on the run with his estranged brother, an elite black-ops agent (played by Mark Strong). Louis Leterrier who directed Unleashed, The Incredible Hulk, Now You See Me, The Transporter, Clash of the Titans; directs Phil Johnston, Peter Baynham, and Cohen’s screenplay.

The Brothers Grimsby will be in theaters on March 4, 2016.

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Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt Fight it Out in Melodramatic New Trailer for ‘By The Sea’

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The new trailer for Angelina Jolie’s By The Sea, starring both her and husband Brad Pitt, is absent of dialogue but it makes up for it in steep melodrama.

Here is the trailer:

And here is the official synopsis:

By the Sea follows an American writer named Roland (Pitt) and his wife, Vanessa (Jolie Pitt), who arrive in a tranquil and picturesque seaside resort in 1970s France, their marriage in apparent crisis.  As they spend time with fellow travelers, including young newlyweds Lea (Laurent) and François (Poupaud), and village locals Michel (Arestrup) and Patrice (Bohringer), the couple begins to come to terms with unresolved issues in their own lives.

By the Sea looks incredible depressing and difficult to handle, but I enjoy those emotionally overwrought films if they’re done well. Jolie appears to be channeling classic foreign filmmakers – there is a hint of Bertolucci here, especially with the old Universal logo – and the main draw will be seeing her with her hubby in such an intense film. It hits theaters November 13.

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REVIEW: “Our Brand is Crisis” – Bullock, Thornton have fun playing dirty, but “Crisis” still lacks punch

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Our Brand is Crisis ambitiously attempts to balance political satire, character drama, and comedy, and the results are decidedly mixed. Yes, there’s fun to be had here watching Sandra Bullock and Billy Bob Thornton’s characters match wits as rival political strategists on opposite sides of a heated presidential election, pulling one underhanded, manipulative move after the next to undermine one another and deliver their candidates the election. But the film’s characters feel entirely too stock, and as a whole the plot’s progression is far too predictable — you know more or less where the film is going from start to finish, which robs it of any meaningful impact. Is it terrible? No. But the talent involved here is capable of far better.

Bullock plays Jane Bodine, who at the start of the film has voluntarily retired from her one-time rock star career as a highly sought-after political campaign consultant. Despite her having been away from the game for six years, she finds herself courted by an American management team in the employ of Castillo (Joaquim de Almeida), a Bolivian presidential candidate badly lagging in the nation’s polls, hoping her insight and tactics can help them turn the election around. Unimpressed by the challenge, Jane only agrees to join the team once she learns that her old professional nemesis, Pat Candy (Thornton), who ran the opposition during her last disastrous campaign, the one that sent her into self-imposed exile and in which she earned the nickname “Calamity Jane”, is in Bolivia as a consultant to the current front-runner’s campaign.

Once in country, Jane finds herself equally unimpressed by Castillo, who with his wealth, power, and spotty history in the nation’s politics seems ill-equipped to appeal to an electorate clamoring for populist polices such as wealth redistribution and more balanced ethnic representation in the government. It’s only when Candy, all soft-spoken smarm and sly innuendo, starts going out of his way to psyche her out that she wakes up and gets in the game, declaring to Castillo and the team that they’re at war and that its time they get their hands dirty.

Jane’s tactics, which include negative TV attack and print ads, leaked misinformation to parties both in and out of the country with interests in the election’s outcome, and even outright sabotage of the front-runner’s campaign events, are all plays that come straight from the same playbook that Candy’s tactics do. They’re sneaky, manipulative, and borderline illegal, but they’re effective, and soon they start getting results. But even as Castillo’s poll numbers climb and Jane sees Candy and his client start to sweat, something still doesn’t feel right. She feels it the most when she looks at Eddie (Reynaldo Pacheco), a young volunteer in Castillo’s campaign office, who sees none of what Jane sees in their candidate and fully believes in him as someone who can truly lead the nation to prosperity. For Eddie, it’s about faith in Castillo and hope for his people, while for Jane it’s about beating Candy, no matter what that may mean for the people who have to live with Castillo as their president. Or, at least, that’s what it would have been all about for Jane before “Calamity.” Now, in the wake of past failures and seeing in Candy’s work the things she’s come to hate about herself? Maybe it might become about something else for Jane, after all.

Our Brand is Crisis one-sheet

Our Brand is Crisis is actually a remake of sorts — the film’s fictional characters and plot were “suggested by” a 2005 documentary of the same name which covered the participation of American political strategists in a real-life Bolivian presidential campaigns during an election in 2002. But even if that weren’t the case, and this new film as it is was a wholly original political satire, its themes and elements of satire would certainly still feel familiar to American audiences. After all, the power of focus group-influenced advertising, smear campaigns, negativity, misinformation, the dastardly lengths political image consultants will go to in order to make at times the most unlikable politicians likable, or at least simply electable, is certainly nothing 21st Century America hasn’t seen before. Thus, the tactics employed by Jane Bodine and Pat Candy in this film, while occasionally subversively funny in and of themselves, aren’t likely to take anyone by surprise. It’s just American politics as usual, just put into practice in arguably the worst possible place, a nation on the brink of revolution and desperately in need of fundamental change.

It falls then to the leads to give audiences something worth their while, something nuance and depth to the characters at the heart of Our Brand is Crisis to make the film a worthwhile experience, and here they’re only partly successful because they’re hamstrung by a thin script. For her part, Bullock gives it her all, projecting vulnerability, self-loathing, and fragility even when Jane’s calling the shots and doing what she does best. The haunted look in her eyes is reminiscent of what she gave us in Gravity, and it draws you in, even if you can sense the direction in which her character arc is heading. Thornton does his best with what he’s given, and as Candy he’s a likable presence sparring with Jane, even when what Candy’s doing and saying is downright awful. But unfortunately he, like all the other supporting players here such as Anthony Mackie (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Avengers: Age of Ultron), Scoot McNairy (Gone Girl, Argo), and Joaquim de Almeida (Fast Five, Desperado), is tasked with working with what is essentially a one-note character. Their sole function, though they accomplish it in different ways, seems to be to serve as foils to Jane. That they do, but that’s not enough to make them interesting or compelling.

As for the “comedy” in Our Brand is Crisis, it’s few and far between, and a great deal of it either springs from the aforementioned political satire or the pranks and mind games Jane and Candy play on and with one another in the course of the campaign. It’s in the sequences involving the pranks that Bullock, always so good with physical comedy on the occasions she’s had to run with it, manages to inject some maniac fun into the otherwise super-serious proceedings. Watch for a particularly fun scene involving an impromptu bus race along a narrow mountain road that’s almost as scary as it is funny. The only way it could have been more entertaining was if Bullock had reached back to her Speed days and taken the wheel herself. It’s too bad there wasn’t more of this type of material in the film — yes, it may have dulled the impact of the film’s satire or further muddied its tone, but then again, it might have helped by adding an element of the unexpected to balance out the otherwise “been there, seen that” feel of the political and personal dramas that make up the balance of the running time.

Our Brand is Crisis
Starring Sandra Bullock, Billy Bob Thornton, Anthony Mackie, Joaquim de Almeida, Ann Dowd, Scoot McNairy, Zoe Kazan, and Raynaldo Pacheco. Directed by David Gordon Green.
Running Time: 107 minutes
Rated R for language including some sexual references.

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Review: Sakurako-san Episode 4 – An Improvment

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Sakurako-san episode 4 tries something new this week, and it pays off immensely, so far anyway.

Spoilers

 

Rather than a single episodic story, episode four of Sakurako-san is the first half a two-part mini-arc, and it was far better than the previous episodes.

My theory as to why this episode was better than those that went before it is due to how much build up there was. The biggest flaw with the other episodes was the focus on Sakurako explaining everything. The reason episode two was the best episode, until now that is, was because there was a lot more build up than the other two episodes.

sakurako-san body 1
Ooh, such an ominous shot. Surely it doesn’t mean that he’s secretly bad, right? Right?

This episode was nothing but build up. The entire episode was nothing but a set up for the conclusion coming next week, this slower pace really helped the show as a whole. It allowed the atmosphere to develop, and the hints we got were greater in number, but smaller and subtler, something Sakurako-san hasn’t done up till now.

Perhaps the greatest strength this episode had been its unique set up, unlike the previous Sakurako-san episodes this mystery doesn’t involve a corpse or bones. This move simultaneously gives us a break from its gimmick and shows us that Sakurako-san can and will go beyond what it’s comfortable with.

The only question that remains is the quality of next week’s episode. By far the weakest aspect of this show is the explanations from Sakurako, and if this episode was all build up, it’s likely that next week will be all explanation. However, this episode has built up enough good faith for me to give next week the benefit of the doubt.

Sakurako-san body 2
You know, cop or not, that guy is pretty annoying.

That said, this episode still hasn’t reached the level of a great episode. While it’s far better than it’s peers (the other Sakurako-san episodes) it wasn’t good enough to overcome the previous episodes. So, while I look forward to next week, I still wouldn’t recommend this show to anyone yet, I can only hope that over the next few weeks the quality will continue to improve, and we might have a good show on our hands by the end of it.

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