Friday, October 11, 2024
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Cannes Hot Buzz Party Era Over as Vanity Fair Partners with Saudis, Charles Finch Draws Scant Crowd for Columbia Pictures

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You know it’s a bad sign if the Vanity Fair home page isn’t featuring pictures from its party in Cannes on Saturday night.

Even worse, when you search Vanity Fair and Cannes on Getty Images, you get pictures of Graydon Carter. Ouch!

Carter used to throw the hottest party in Cannes, always on the first Saturday night, and at the lavish Hotel du Cap Eden Roc. Everyone came, there were lines of limos stretching down to the sea and the hottest A-listers inside.

This year, Richard Gere and Uma Thurman were the big gets, followed by Eva Longoria, Michelle Rodriguez, Naomi Campbell, and Naomi’s boy friend Mohammed El- Turki. He runs the Red Sea Film Festival, funded by the Saudi royal family, and a sponsor of the party (as well as the Cannes Film Festival).

It was a pretty sad showing, going by the pictures on WireImage.com. And no one seems to mind the Red Sea-Saudi royal family connection. The Saudis have no rights for women or gays, and chopped up Jamal Khasoggi. But it’s a free meal!

Same deal at Friday night’s Columbia Pictures 100th anniversary party, thrown annually by self promoting London movie publicist Charles Finch. In its heyday, the Finch party offered Mick Jagger, the late Paul Allen, Jane Fonda, famous producers and directors. This year, Greta Gerwig, Woody Harrelson, Lawrence Fishburne, and Noor Alfallah — Al Pacino’s baby mama — were the highlights. The published guest list included publicists and executives. Oh my!

There used to be such a buzz in the air at these gatherings. But the air has gone out of the tires on both buses. The movies throw their own after parties now, and fashion houses — like Kering, Chopard, L’Oreal — pick up the slack.

What’s left? amFAR of course, this Thursday, with Cher performing (who’s paying for that?), Demi Moore — who’s become the unlikely center of attention all week — on the invite and no Sharon Stone.(The original amFAR cheerleader has washed her hands of this gang.) More on that annual catastrophe later!

Ryan Gosling-Emily Blunt “Fall Guy” Going to Home Video Tomorrow After Very Short Run, Just 19 Days in Theaters

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Well, this is a sad surprise.

Universal Pictures is throwing in the towel on “The Fall Guy.” The Ryan Reynolds – Emily Blunt action comedy will hit VOD and streaming tomorrow, May 21st. That’s just 19 days after it opened to a lot of fanfare.

“The Fall Guys” has made just $62.8 million in that time, and there doesn’t seem potential for much more. Total worldwide is $127 million. “The Fall Guy” got very good reviews and had two hot stars. But audiences didn’t connect with it. That’s too bad because the budget is pegged at $140 million.

Universal’s marketing department is one of the best, so this whole thing doesn’t make sense. What’s worse is that audiences are becoming accustomed to movies coming to their living rooms in just three weeks. Theater owners must be very disappointed and angry.

Will this be a trend? Unfortunately, I think so. “Civil War” is coming on Friday after six dragging weeks and $67 million. “Challengers” isn’t far behind.

But what if a film is a hit in theaters? Richard Linklater’s “Hit Man” is going to theaters on Friday, but just for two weeks. Then it goes to Netflix. The difference is that “Hit Man” is so good it should be very big in theaters. I don’t think that will matter to Netflix. I wish it did.

“The Fall Guy” on video will come with extra material.

“American Idol” Finale: Will Moseley Loses But Sends 1st Single to Top 3, Over Winner Abi Carter, Plus Katy Perry Throws Pizza at Audience

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Last night’s three hour “American Idol” finale was a spectacle.

The winner was Abi Carter, a pop singer in the mode of Sara Bareilles. For her final song she didn’t sing “This Isn’t Over,” her own composition, but Billie Eilish’s “What Am I Made For?”

Runner up was country singer Will Moseley, who performed his “Good Look Bad.”

The result is that Moseley today has the number 3 song on iTunes, and Carter is at number 10.

The big winner is Cece Winans, whose “Goodness of God” is number 13. Winans was easily the best performance of the night. Her voice is a gift from God! Her whole number was incredibly moving.

The loser of the night was Jon Bon Jovi. I’m sure someone told him the publicity would help him, but his new song, “Legendary,” is lodged at number 100.

Embarrassing performance of the night: New Kids on the Block. They are the New Residents of the Nursing Home.

Worst moment: Katy Perry eating a slice of pizza while a few of the girls in this year’s competition sang a shrill medley of some of her hits. Katy threw the remained of the slice into the audience. Katy looked unimpressed with her farewell episode, and there wasn’t much emotion shown about it. She’s made her money there. Now it’s time to get back to her music career. Pronto.

“American Idol” long ago became like Velveeta or Spam. The contestants are unimpressive. No one would idolize them. The best of the winners are long ago, like Fantasia — who was there last night — and Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, and Jennifer Hudson (who didn’t win at all but got the best revenge).

Who will succeed Katy at the judge’s desk? Maybe Fantasia’s appearance last night was a test. She’d be great, and at least not part of the white bread gestalt that permeates this show. It’s kind of amazing that “Idol” has no white finalists, just three bland All Americans. Very disappointing.

Review: HBO’s Two Night Stax Records Doc Celebrates Great Music of Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, Carla Thomas, Booker T & the MGs

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It’s hard for me to be completely objective about Jamila Wignot’s two part documentary, “Stax: Soulsville, USA.” I made a film that included a lot about the fabled Stax Records (started in 1959 by Jim Stewart and his sister Estelle Axton) with Chris Hegedus and DA Pennebaker back in 2002. I know a lot about the subject and have a lot of opinions.

Two hours of the series air tonight on HBO, and two more on Tuesday this week. If you don’t know as much as I do, you should watch this film if only to see that Motown was not the only center of historic R&B greatness in the 1960s. They were the beacon of the south, even more than Sam Phillips’s Sun Records. Unlike Motown way up north in Detroit, Stax, however, faced financial problems from the beginning. They closed for good in 1975.

But look at this roster of artists: Sam & Dave, Rufus and Carla Thomas, Otis Redding, Isaac Hayes, Booker T and the MGs, Eddie Floyd and William Bell are just the tip of the iceberg from the 60s. When Atlantic Records’ legendary producer Jerry Wexler realized what was going on in Memphis, he went down there and made a deal. Suddenly the border between Stax and Atlantic was open, which was good and bad since Stax was had to fight to keep its identity. (After a time, Wexler moved to Muscle Shoals, Alabama, but that’s another story.)

In 1971, Stax started a new chapter apart from Atlantic. They had two or three years of huge hits with songs like The Staples Singer’s “I’ll Take You There,” the Dramatics’ “What You Is What You Get,” and Isaac Hayes’s “Shaft,” not to mention the still played “Mr. Big Stuff” by Jean Knight.

Columbia Records took them over after that, when Clive Davis wanted to add Black music to the label. (He already had Earth Wind & Fire, and Santana.) He gave them a fairly liberal contract, but when he was scapegoated and fired by management (a long story — we know the heights he went on to climb) the Columbia board ripped up the deal and Stax was over.

Episodes 1 and 2 tonight do offer comprehensive pieces on Redding, Sam Moore of Sam and Dave, Carla Thomas, and Booker T. Jones.  Carla and Booker were at the premiere screening held in New York by HBO last week, and it’s clear that Wignot had a lot of affection for them in the making of her film. You can’t not love them. Plus their music has a lasting resonance in history, as much as Motown or Memphis’s Hi Records (also not in this conversation).

When we filmed at the old Stax studios in 1999, the original building had been leveled long ago and was just a lot of weeds. Well after that visit, many years later, the Stax Foundation and Academy were built on the site to resemble the old headquarters. You’d think that new edifice — which is brimming with recording and students — would have been the cherry on the top of this documentary. But it’s not. That’s a disappointment. The story would have had a happy ending.

That’s where frustrating omissions begin: missing from this series are a lot of artists important to Stax. William Bell, Eddie Floyd, Jean Knight, the Dramatics, and most importantly the Staples Singers are nowhere to be found. (There are plenty of others also lost including the Soul Children and the Mad Lads.)

Bell, in particular, still very much alive, had the first Stax hit with “You Don’t Miss Your Water.” Knight’s “Mr. Big Stuff” overnight revitalized the label. There’s also no mention of Wilson Pickett, who was cousined into Stax via Atlantic. There’s not a lot on Rufus Thomas, Carla’s dad, no “Walking the Dog” or any indication of his importance to the label as a performer or as a deejay on WDIA, where he played Elvis for the first time on Black radio.

A lot of “Stax: Soulsville USA” centers on race. Memphis, after all, was where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. But as Carla Thomas remembers it to me, Stax Records was really about the music. It was about Black and white musicians working together in harmony. In the 60s, Stax remained mostly in a bubble. They didn’t have a political song until “I’ll Take You There,” which was written by the label’s famed PR man, Al Bell. (He’s in the film, but the connection to the song isn’t made.)

Wignot’s series is well worth watching. But then listen to Stax (there’s plenty of it on Spotify and on CD) music. There’s also a terrific book by Graham Betts. But kudos to Wignot and her company for even having the desire to showcase these wonderful musicians and their accomplishments.

Ex Rapper Shyne Barrow Denounces “Repugnant Behavior” of Sean Diddy Combs, Went to Jail for Him in 2001 After Shooting Incident

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Shyne Barrow, the rapper who went to jail in 2001 in Sean Combs’s nightclub shooting incident, is speaking out at last.

In the recent past Barrow had been publicly supportive of Diddy, which was surprising. But tonight he posted a message about Combs’s CNN obtained video that showed him beating girlfriend Cassie Ventura in 2016.

“I vehemently denounce the repugnant behavior of Sean Diddy Combs captured on the video in which he is seen physically assaulting Mrs Cassie Ventura-Fine.

“There is no place for Violence against Women anywhere on the planet. As a father of a precious daughter, a global citizen and the next Prime Minister of Belize I want absolutely nothing to do with people who engage in this pattern of diabolical behavior.

“My prayers are with Cassie and all the other victims who have come forward with horrendous allegations against Mr Combs.”

He signed it: Hon. Dr. Shyne Barrow ,Opposition Leader BELIZE

Barrow — who’s real name is Moses Michael Levi Barrow — has distinguished himself post-incarceration as a leader, politican, and philanthropist in Belize.

Back in 1999, Barrow was with his mentor, Combs, and Jennifer Lopez when they wound up in a shootout in a New York nightclub. Combs managed to walk free, but Barrow served 9 years in prison after being found guilty two counts of assault and of reckless endangerment, and criminal possession of an illegal weapon. He was acquitted on charges of attempted murder, on a third count of intentional assault in the first degree of a third victim, and one other count.

Barrow returned to Belize and became a productive, respected citizen. Over the years he’s been seen at Diddy events, making it seem like they’d buried the hatchet. So it’s interesting that he’s speaking now. Obviously, he knows a lot about Sean Combs. I guess he’s finally had enough. Or, possibly, his NDA with Combs — if he had one — has expired.

Review: “Mad Max Furiosa” Lives Up to the Hype with Anya Taylor Joy and Chris Hemsworth Picking Up the Torch

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Thunderous motorbikes, Chris Hemsworth, and a post-apocalyptic desert setting starts the wildly chaotic “Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga,” directed by George Miller.

Our heroine, Furiosa, is ruled by revenge; the story tells the saga of her troubled history. Newly minted star Ana Taylor Joy plays Furiosa as the full on raging badass: she is steely eyed with burning determination. Alyla Browne as the young Furiosa is luminous. Chris Hemsworth, moving on from Marvel’s “Thor,” is terrific as the perfectly named Dementus, the magnetic but cruel leader who chatters endlessly.

The visuals are extraordinary, non-stop and jaw dropping. At a recent press screening, the ‘fan boys’ aka grown men, lamented that it was too much CGI for them. Comparing it to the ‘masterpiece’ they explained that was Miller’s “Mad Max: Fury Road’” — a multiple Oscar winner. With that said, they were still massive fans of this film.

The plot points do coalesce in a seamless way. Kudos to the cinematographer, Simon Duggan, for his otherworldly, extraordinary visuals. The composer Tom Holkenborg’s score is grand and powerful. George Miller’s vision and his unique style of filmmaking is what he does so well and so differently from anyone else. He has a specific voice which appeals to a worldwide audience. Action packed Miller’s dystopian take is precise, and sprawling.

The “Mad Max” franchise has made over 540 million, with “Fury Road” being by far the most successful. Will “Furiosa” beat that? Who knows? But this film, with its non-stop madness and mayhem, is mighty compelling. Epic, chaotic and over the top “Furiosa” is a mayhem filled, perfect popcorn escapist movie!

Kevin Costner Civil War Epic Three Hour “Horizon” Panned in Cannes — Star Doesn’t Arrive in Film For an Hour! (UPDATED RT Score)

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MONDAY UPDATE Six reviewers have posted to Rotten Tomatoes. Five have panned the film. The rating now is 17%. Keep refreshing…

SUNDAY Kevin Costner debuted the first of his four “Horizon” movies tonight in Cannes. Despite a 7 minute standing ovation, not everyone was crazy about it.

Remember, “Horizon” was supposed to be a mini series. Costner left “Yellowstone” to make it. Then New Line/Warner Bros announced it as a movie series. Reviewers are saying that Chapter 1, unveiled tonight, is not a movie, but a mini series.

Apparently, Costner — the star of the film — doesn’t appear in it for the first hour!

David Rooney writes in the Hollywood Reporter:

“Kevin Costner has been in the saddle long enough to know the difference between a big-screen feature Western like Dances With Wolves, a miniseries like Hatfields & McCoys or a longform like Yellowstone. All those projects have done well by him and he’s done well by them. His connection to the quintessential Americana genre and the rugged lands it calls home is indubitable. So why is his sprawling new frontier tale, Horizon: An American Saga, such a clumsy slog? It plays like a limited series overhauled as a movie, but more like a hasty rough cut than a release ready for any format.”

Screen International:
Horizon: An American Saga is still suffering from an identity crisis. Beautifully shot, with a deft command of period detail and a starry ensemble cast, Costner’s Civil-war set epic offers an old-fashioned celebration of the pioneer spirit – and a clutch of storylines that never quite have time to engage before the film moves on.”

The Playlist:
“There is nothing wrong with a three-hour movie. There have been absolute masterworks longer than 180 minutes. It sorta helps, however, if the film is, well, a movie. After watching Kevin Costner’s 181-minute-long “Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1,” we can’t argue its classification as a film, artist’s prerogative, but we’re still not sure it should be constituted as one by anyone else. And that’s for a multitude of reasons.”

Variety:
“A few of these characters are interesting; none of them are memorable. “Horizon” is no “Lonesome Dove,” though Costner tries, and mostly succeeds, at setting aside Western clichés about what towns really looked like, and how frontier life worked. The real problem is the script (by Costner and Jon Baird), which is shapeless. It doesn’t weave these stories together; it stacks them next to each other like a series of cabooses.”

Keep refreshing…

Box Office: Star Loaded “If” Surprises with a $35 Mil Weekend After Unexpected Saturday Surge

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John Krasinski’s “If” didn’t look so promising on Friday morning.

The family friendly, star packed comedy made just $1.75 million on Thursday in previews.

Friday’s receipts were ok, bringing the total up to $10.3 million.

It did seem like “If” was iffy, around $25 million for the weekend. Some box office prognosticators said it was supposed to do $50 million, which seemed grossly exaggerated.

In the end, $35 million is predicted, a lot better than anyone thought. Word of mouth must have been good since Saturday zoomed up to $14 million, and today is supposed to come in at $10 million.

Meanwhile, the Amy Winehouse movie “Back to Black” is dead, just $2.8 mil starting Thursday night. That film is going to “Rehab.”

Otherwise, it was Planet of the Apes at $26 million.

For some reason, Sony still has “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire” in 819 theaters. It made $435,000 over three days. Total is $112 million. This series is over.

In a couple of weeks Sony is releasing the new “Bad Boys” movie with Will Smith and Martin Lawrence. I’m hearing a lot of chatter about the publicity junket re Smith, and also Lawrence’s appearance. Stay tuned…

Diddy Admits He Did It, Breaks Silence on Cassie Assault Video, Says He was “A Different Man,” “Truly Sorry” (Watch)

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BREAKING
Sean Diddy Combs has posted a one minute, thirty second video apologizing for the video released by CNN two days ago.

In the video, Combs is seen viciously attacking his girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, in a Los Angeles hotel. The video is so frightening that the LA DA’s office had to comment on it, saying it was too old — from 2016– for them to do anything.

Now Combs says in the posting that he’s truly sorry, was “A different man,” went to therapy.

He says, “I was fucked up. I hit rock bottom My behavior on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility for the actions on that video. I went to therapy, I went to rehab. I’m so sorry. I’m committed to being a better man each and every day. I’m not asking for forgiveness. I’m truly sorry.”

UPDATE: Shyne Barrow Denounces P Diddy

Ventura obviously didn’t believe him. Last year she sued him for years of torture and he settled quickly.

Diddy is in a financial free fall because of accusations and lawsuit from many others. His empire has fallen apart. The CNN video is the last straw, so this apology — which is lame by any standards — could be his final undoing. The rapper turned entrepreneur has a history of violence including a famous shootout in a NYC nightclub that involved singer Jennifer Lopez. He was acquitted at a trial but one of his underlings took the rap and went to jail.

https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/diddy-cassie.pdf


JLo May Be Vacationing In Italy, But Broadcaster Sister Lynda Lopez Shows Up for Real Causes

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Lynda Lopez could not be more different than her sister, Jennifer. I really enjoy listening to the hard working Lynda, a local New York broadcast on stations NewsRadio 88 and WINS.

So I’m not surprised Lynda turned up recently — as she always does — the MAG Gala here in New York. The event is produced by the Luisa Diaz Foundation, and named MAG for (Mi Amor Graciousness Gala), which is a “celebration of kindness.” This year, Lynda was joined by heavy hitters like cosmetics guru Peter Thomas Roth, designer Nicole Miller, “Sex and the City” creator Candice Bushnell and philanthropists like Jean Shafiroff and Consuelo Vanderbilt, as well as performer Pamela Morgan and DJ Chloe Jane.

These events raise money and awareness for organizations that support survivors of domestic violence and human trafficking and their families. Luisa worked directly with the survivors in coaching and helping them build their self-esteem to walk the “Runway of Hope” (Walking Towards the Light, where fashion meets compassion).

The night started with an introduction from special host Consuelo Vanderbilt, the Runway of Hope show featured the survivors as the focal point of the evening.  Pamela Morgan, star of her one-woman Broadway show sang and after dinner the celebrations were put into high gear by singer and DJ Chloe Jane. Eyewitness News Kristin N. Thorne introduced the charities that were beneficiaries of this year’s Gala.

Three Kindness is Cool Awards were given to honorees Roth — presented by Candace Bushnell, Beatriz Gasca — presented by Lynda Lopez, and — Jovani Fashions presented by Juliia Faist.