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Donald Trump: The CNN Interview You Must Hear to Believe-

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He likes Drudge. He doesn’t like anyone else. Megyn Kelly, especially. My question is, if Trump isn’t going to make peace with Fox, what does he have?

“Fantastic Four” Heads to $27 Mil Opening Weekend Disaster–Half of What Last Two Did

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Fox, Marvel and a lot of other people are bemoaning Friday’s $11.3 million opening for “Fantastic Four.” The weekend looks like $27 million, about half of what either of the first two “FF” movies did in 2005 and 2007.

“Fantastic Four” carries Fox and Marvel logos. No matter what Marvel fans think, this is is poor reflection on everyone. And Fox didn’t make a bad movie on purpose, and Marvel didn’t root for failure. Everyone wanted a success.

It’s no fault of the cast, and I don’t know about fault regarding the director. It’s just a mess.

Michael Moore’s Secret New Documentary Is the Real Opening Night Event at Toronto Film Festival– First Doc Ever to Do So

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EXCLUSIVE Where to invade next? How about Toronto? I’m told that Michael Moore’s stealth documentary of that name is the real opening night film for the 2015 Toronto Film Festival.

TIFF had previously announced Jean Marc Vallee’s “Demolition” starring Jake Gyllenhaal as its opener. But that film will play at 6:30pm. And it’s filling the spot reserved for Canadian filmmakers. Also, “Demolition” won’t open until next March 2016.

But I’m told TIFF has scheduled “Where to Invade Next” (no question mark) for the coveted 9:30 spot. No one can recall a documentary ever getting this appointment. Of course, a Michael Moore movie about the military industrial complex is sure to grab headlines. And it will be a hot hot ticket. No one knows what it’s really about, and so far there’s no announced distributor.

I’ll have some more news on Monday about TIFF2015, which may be the best TIFF of all time. Tell my pals at Mercurio’s restaurant on West Bloor to get the pasta started now!

Cilla Black, Liverpool’s First Lady, Had Ties to the Beatles and Dionne Warwick

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The Beatles’ close friend – Cilla Black – who became one of Britain’s most successful singers and most beloved TV personalities over the past 52 years, passed away this week.

Our friend, producer/writer Martin Lewis, has written this tribute to Liverpool’s First Lady.

The world has lost Cilla Black at a very young 72. Under the loving guidance of Beatles manager Brian Epstein, she was a hugely popular singer in the 1960s – both in her native Britain and in most of the world (except sadly for the USA.) And – instigated by Epstein’s belief in her talents and vivacious personality – she then had a four-decade run as a top TV personality in Britain. She hosted her own variety show, several game shows and dating shows and became one of the nation’s most beloved entertainers. As cherished in the UK as (by way of comparison) Carol Burnett is in the US.

Famously she was discovered by the Beatles. She was the cloakroom attendant at Liverpool’s Cavern Club in the very early 1960s where they first made their name. She was adored by all four Beatles as a pal and as a singing talent. It was John who encouraged Epstein to manage her. Until then Epstein had only managed groups and one or two male singers. Cilla was the only girl he ever managed, and she rapidly became second only to the Beatles in his affections.

Epstein arranged for her recordings to be produced by George Martin. Like several of the Epstein stable of artists, she had the benefit of receiving original Lennon-McCartney tunes to record. Two of Paul’s early ballads that did not suit the Beatles’ own musical style – “Love Of The Loved” and “It’s For You” – showcased her vocal skills and gave her UK chart hits.

Cilla with John and Paul 1965

Cilla Black with her songwriting buddies Paul and John in November 1965

Shortly before Epstein died of an accidental overdose in August 1967, he set up for Cilla to have own BBC TV variety show. (Ringo was one of many guest stars on the show). Paul McCartney immediately crafted the perfect theme song for her – “Step Inside Love” – which captured her warmth and infectious Liverpudlian charm. It became her signature song.

Her vocal skills also attracted the respect and affection of Burt Bacharach. In late 1963, Epstein and producer George Martin had encouraged Cilla to cover the Bacharach-David song “Anyone Who Had A Heart” which was just breaking big in the US. It took off like a rocket in the UK trouncing Dionne Warwick’s original to top the UK charts and eventually sell over a million singles. (In a nation of just 53 million.) Which did not please Warwick. However Bacharach was more sanguine about it:

cilla with Dionne

Cilla Black and Dionne Warwick meet up in 1964!

“There weren’t too many white singers around, who could convey the emotion that I felt in many of the songs I wrote but that changed with people like Cilla Black…”

The extent of that respect manifested itself in late 1965. There was a new British film due to be released in 1966 titled “Alfie”. The movie had a superb jazz score by Sonny Rollins. But the distributors shrewdly felt that a title song might help promote the film and commissioned Bacharach & David to write what became the iconic song – albeit played under the end credits rather than the opening. Burt and Hal naturally thought of their pal Dionne Warwick to record the song but understood that such a quintessentially English film demanded an English vocalist and so Cilla Black was engaged. She and Epstein then requested Bacharach’s active participation in the recording and Burt made the trip to London for the session. He played piano on the track, created the orchestral arrangement and conducted the 48-piece orchestra while George Martin produced.

CILLA BLACK, BURT BACHARACH & GEORGE MARTIN RECORDING “ALFIE” in 1965 plus soundbites 30 years later

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No disrespect to Dionne Warwick’s later superb version or to the numerous other covers – but Bacharach is right about Cilla: “There are moments in that song that she really grabs your heart…” Nothing else quite touches the sensitivity of Cilla’s stunning delivery of that lyric and its expression of the feelings of the many girls beguiled and wounded by Michael Caine’s “Alfie” character… (One of whom incidentally was portrayed by McCartney’s then girlfriend, actress Jane Asher.)

(For the film’s US release, the distributors disregarded Bacharach’s opinions, callously junked Cilla’s recording, then chose Cher to record the song for the closing credits! “Using Cher was done over my dead body!” Bacharach told me in a private conversation 25 years ago.)

I was fortunate to have a few encounters with Cilla over the years, and she was as engaging and vivacious in-person as she appeared on the screen.

In October 1990 I was bringing Cilla to Los Angeles to perform at a tribute dinner to Michael Caine that I was co-producing. My idea had been to have the song “Alfie” rewritten as a tribute to Caine. I asked Michael if he would be happy to have Cilla perform for him and he was most enthusiastic about that.

(At that time Burt was having a bit of a ‘bumpy patch’ in his relationship with Hal David so he requested that I didn’t involve Hal in the pastiche rewrite. I asked him I could approach Sammy Cahn to come up with a new lyric. Burt agreed and I managed to persuade Sammy to undertake the honors. Sammy of course wrote wonderfully funny lines for Cilla to sing about Michael. Cilla was – using a very Liverpudlian expression – “dead chuffed” [extremely happy] that she would be singing new lyrics by Sammy Cahn.)

Alas – the day before Cilla was due to fly out for the event, her eldest son Robert was in a car accident and Cilla phoned to say that she couldn’t make the trip. Michael and I were very disappointed but of course we understood. (In the end I managed to draft in a couple of my other pals at very short notice – the delightful Patti Austin accompanied on piano by dear, sweet Dudley Moore – and they did an outstanding job). But Michael and I both missed Cilla on that grand occasion. It would have been her first performance in the USA since a short cabaret season at New York’s Plaza Hotel that Brian Epstein had arranged for her in 1965.

‘Anyone Who Had A Heart’ fell in love with Cilla. She entranced with her singing, embraced and enchanted with her personality and girl-next-door charm. She was a worthy successor to Gracie Fields as Britain’s sweetheart and national treasure.

Incidentally – Cilla was also a full-throated champion of the world remembering and honoring Brian Epstein’s huge contributions to the success that she and the Beatles enjoyed. And she fully supported my 15-year campaign to have Brian Epstein inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame – which the Hall very belatedly did last year – a mere 28 years after he became eligible.

Here’s an ultra-rare unplugged demo of Cilla singing Paul McCartney’s song “Step Inside Love” with Paul playing acoustic guitar (and occasional background vocals). The lyrics – written in September 1967 – just a few days after Brian Epstein’s tragic death by accidental overdose – assume a greater poignancy now…

CILLA BLACK & PAUL McCARTNEY RECORDING DEMO OF “STEP INSIDE LOVE”

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when you leave me, say you’ll see me again
for I know in my heart, we will not be apart
and I’ll miss you ’til then
we’ll be together now and forever
come my way
step inside love – and stay…

Marvel Braces For a Real Box Office Disaster with the “Fantastic Four,” Director Disowns It

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Bad news is unusual for Marvel, home of “The Avengers,” “X Men,” and “Spider Man” series at Disney, Fox, and Sony respectively. The comic book movie company has had an extraordinary run of successes, even making “Ant Man” into a hit when its launch was a little shaky last month.

But today Marvel braces for a bad weekend with the new “Fantastic Four.” Coming from Fox, “FF” had promise. It stars a bunch of current young actors who are all doing great– Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara. Jamie Bell, and so on.

However, “Fantastic Four” has a staggering 87 negative reviews and only a 9% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Pretty much everyone who’s seen it, hates it.

Director Josh Trank didn’t like it much, either. He Tweeted this, spelling “received” wrong:

 

Trank isn’t having a very good summer. Last month he left the new Star Wars stand alone movie at Disney/LucasFilms.

Now we wait and see all the stats on how badly “Fantastic Four” does this weekend…

UPDATE: I’m getting a lot of email that this isn’t a Marvel movie. Well, Stan Lee is listed as executive producer, and the Marvel logo appears at the front. Fox does a lot of business with Marvel because of X Men and Wolverine. They are in business together. Marvel wouldn’t let this movie out without its own approval.

Fantastic Four Costume Evolution
Infographic Created by HalloweenCostumes.com

Broadway: Brilliant “Hamilton” Opens with a $30 Million Advance and A-List from Mariska to SJP to Rosie

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Forty five years ago, “1776,” a brilliant buoyant musical about our Founding Fathers opening to raves at the 46th Street Theater on Broadway. It won the Tony Award for Best Musical in 1970. Last night, “Hamilton” a brilliant new musical about the founding fathers told in hip hop, rap and R&B, opened at the Richard Rodgers Theater. No one remembered that the Richard Rodgers used to be the 46th Street Theater. That’s synchronicity.

Lin-Manuel Miranda‘s musical about Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, George Washington, et al is like the sequel to “1776.” But in recasting the revolutionaries with black and Hispanic actors, bringing in wildly melodic music and hypnotic rap, Miranda has turned “1776” on its head. Now white actors only play Brits and seem foolish. King George is turned into a kind of snarky Mel Brooks character. The revolution is a hoot.

Miranda based his show on Ron Chernow’s serious biography of Hamilton, and it took him five years to break the whole thing down into a musical. The characters are finely tuned and delineated, with many plots, facts, and figures of historical value punctuating the non stop entertainment. Don’t get me wrong– “Hamilton” is funny and fun, but it’s also smart and moving.

Alexander Hamilton was born in the West Indies. He was an immigrant, although the NY Post portrays him every day on their cover in a drawing that makes him look patrician. He was an outsider who wanted to be like Adams and Jefferson, yet fought against them. His friendship with Burr is itchy-scratchy. They are “fremenies.”

“Hamilton” already has $30 million in advance sales from its Public Theater run. Its reputation is so high that Miranda, appearing on stage as Hamilton the first time, got a wild cheering ovation for almost three minutes before the show began last night. In the audience were luminaries upon luminaries: the Public Theater’s Oscar Eustus, Samuel L. Jackson and actress wife LaTanya Richardson, Mariska Hargitay and Peter Hermann, Spike Lee and wife Tanya Lee, Jake Gyllenhaal, Salman Rushdie, Rosie O’Donnell, Tatum O’Neal, Jon Bon Jovi and wife Dorothea, Al Roker and Deborah Roberts, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker, Charlie Rose, Susan Sarandon, Judith Light, Dan Lauria, Lucy Liu, Sally Field, playwright John Patrick Shanley, Ana Gasteyer, producer Cameron MacKintosh, and Raven-Symone.

Following the performance, the entire audience headed downtown to Chelsea Piers for fireworks on the Hudson River (as good as Macys, same outfit), and a performance by The Roots. This was quite unlike anything we see for even the biggest Broadway show opening. Extraordinary.

But this is “Hamilton,” a show that can’t be overhyped. Everything about it screams genius. Tony, Pulitzer– it’s all coming. Why wait? Hand them all out now. Every single cast member is a rock star, from Manuel himself as Hamilton (and you realize he wrote the book, music and lyrics) to Leslie Odom Jr (whose showstopper in Act II last night was mesmerizing) to Renee Elise Goldsberry, Phillipa Soo, Christopher Jackson, Jonathan Groff, and the remarkable Daveed Diggs as Lafayette in act I and Jefferson in Act II.

The soundtrack album is being recorded this weekend for Atlantic Records by my old pal, Pete Ganbarg. We should hear it in a few short weeks. I can’t wait. I’m already humming “The Room Where it Happened” and “Helpless” among Miranda’s two dozen pop gems. Forget some of these other shows that are “hard to get into.” Put all your focus on seeing “Hamilton.” Now.

Scorsese-Jagger HBO Rock and Roll Show Gets Title, Trailer (Watch Here)

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“Vinyl” is the name of Martin Scorsese-Mick Jagger-Terry Winters’ rock and roll show starring Bobby Cannavale. It’s set around 1973, and there will be appearances by actors playing Lou Reed, Elton John, and Alice Cooper among others. This is all about how the mob ran the music business and radio was paid to play the hits we now call classic rock. (Thank god that worked out!) There will be lots of sex and drugs and rock and roll, and it already looks better than that terrible thing on FX.

“The Office” Star Rainn Wilson Stars in “Chilling, intimate portrait of a 9-year-old sociopath’s growing fascination with death”

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I’m really looking forward to this: comic actor Rainn Wilson, best known as Dwight in “The Office” is starring in a new movie called “The Boy.”

It’s described in a press release as a “chilling, intimate portrait of a 9-year-old sociopath’s growing fascination with death.”

More: “It’s the summer of 1989. Nine-year-old Ted Henley (Jared Breeze) and his father John (David Morse) are the proprietors of The Mtn. Vista Motel, a crumbling resort buried in the mountains of the American West. Since Ted’s mother left, John has drifted into despondency—becoming a living ghost, haunting the motel—leaving Ted to fend for himself. In this isolation, unchecked by the bounds of parenting, Ted’s darker impulses begin to manifest. The arrival of a mysterious drifter, William Colby (Rainn Wilson), captivates young Ted and the two form a unique friendship – setting the stage for Ted’s final, unnerving metamorphosis.”

“The Boy” will be released by NBC Universal to video on demand and in very limited and sort of obscure release in New York on August 18th.

Here’s the trailer. Looks like fun! Elijah Wood is listed as a producer. The little boy, Jared Breeze, should be in therapy soon by the looks of things.

Kevin Spacey Exec Producing “Assisted Living” with Debra Winger and Macy Gray

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Debra Winger is not old enough for actual ‘assisted living’ but I am glad she’s agreed to be in any movie! I can tell you her new project is called “Assisted Living,” and her co-stars are the very talented Aidan Quinn, and, strangely enough, the great pop singer Macy Gray. (I hope she sings in the movie!)

Kevin Spacey is executive producer. Why, you ask? The director is Dianne Dreyer, long referred to in press reports as his ‘girl friend.’ She’s also, professionally, been a script supervisor on dozens of films including, most recently, Warren Beatty’s untitled Howard Hughes movie (for which we are waiting with baited breath). I met her years ago during the “American Beauty” period, and she was smart, smart, smart. Her bio says she’s also from Lynbrook, Long Island, so I like her even more!

“Assisted Living” is written by first timer Audra Gorman and produced by Ben Cox. I’m told it has something to do with the postal service. In that case I would call it “Going Postal.”

PS Debra Winger is very picky about her roles. So let’s encourage this film to be a success!