วันอาทิตย์ที่ 10 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2556

Baftas: Argo wins best film award



Argo has continued its award-winning streak, picking up three Baftas including the top prize for best film.
Ben Affleck was named best director for his film about the rescue of American hostages in Iran, following its success at the Golden Globes last month.
Daniel Day-Lewis won the award for best actor for his role in Lincoln, while French actress Emmanuelle Riva was the surprise best actress winner for Amour.
James Bond film Skyfall won the award for outstanding British film.
'Second act'
Argo beat Les Miserables, Life of Pi, Lincoln and Zero Dark Thirty to win the best film award and Affleck triumphed over Kathryn Bigelow, Michael Haneke, Ang Lee and Quentin Tarantino for the director honour.
Accepting his best director award on stage, Affleck made reference to his career of the past decade, when he fell out of favour in Hollywood.
"This is a second act for me - you've given me that and I'm so grateful and proud. I want to dedicate this to anyone that's trying to get their second act because you can do it," he said.
He added later it was a "wonderful, warm surprise" to win the best film award, while producer George Clooney praised the star, saying "you are remarkable at what you do".
Argo also picked up the award for best editing.
During his acceptance speech, Day-Lewis paid tribute to his fellow nominees who included Affleck, Bradley Cooper, Hugh Jackman and Joaquin Phoenix.
"I don't know if I deserve this, but I do know that every single one of you deserve it at least every bit as I do," he said.
Despite going into the awards with 10 nominations, Day-Lewis was Lincoln's sole success.
'Sublime experience'
Anne Hathaway was named best supporting actress for her role in Les Miserables, while Christoph Waltz won best supporting actor for Django Unchained.
An emotional Hathaway said she was "so honoured" to receive her award and paid tribute to her fellow cast members and director Tom Hooper.
Backstage, the actress said taking part in the film was "the most sublime experience - I don't know how I got so lucky".
Waltz put his win down to director, Quentin Tarantino - who won an award himself for best original screenplay for Django Unchained - calling him a "silver-penned devil".
David O Russell won the award for best adapted screenplay for Silver Linings Playbook, which he also directed.
Accepting the award on stage, Russell said: "This film is about emotions and this is for every family that face those emotions every day."
It was the only award the film received though, despite its stars Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence being nominated for best actor and actress.
Skyfall beat Anna Karenina, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Les Miserables and Seven Psychopaths to win best British film.
It is the first Bafta a Bond film has won since 1964 when From Russia With Love was awarded a cinematography prize. Skyfall also received the award for best original music.
"We all had high expectations for this film and this is really the icing on the cake," director Sam Mendes said.
Backstage, Mendes said the fact Skyfall star Daniel Craig had not nominated for an award was due to "the curse of Bond".
"It was an incredible performance but because Bond is the spine of the movie... you take it for granted."
Lifetime achievement
Tom Hooper's adaptation of stage musical Les Miserables came away with the most honours on the night, winning four awards.
In addition to Hathaway's award, the film also picked up prizes for best sound, make-up and hair and production design.


Ang Lee's 3D epic Life of Pi - which went into the awards with nine nominations - picked up two awards for cinematography and special visual effects.
Amour won best foreign film, although its director, Michael Haneke, and Riva were not at the ceremony to collect their prizes.
Joe Wright's adaptation of Anna Karenina came away with the award for best costume design, while Disney Pixar film Brave was named best animation.
Searching for Sugar Man - the true story of 1970s rocker Rodriguez - won best documentary.
Director Sir Alan Parker, whose works include The Commitments and Bugsy Malone, was honoured with a British Academy Fellowship - the highest accolade the Academy can bestow.
There was also a special prize for Channel 4 film boss Tessa Ross, who received a lifetime achievement award.
The awards, held at London's Royal Opera House, were hosted by Stephen Fry.

Report by : Jaronchai R.
Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-21387802
What's Zapp Entertainment Show


Rihanna Accompanies Chris Brown to Court


rihanna_chris_brown_081212_360.jpg

Rihanna Accompanies Chris Brown to Court

February 06, 2013
Rihanna is standing by her man.
The controversial pop star, who recently reconciled romantically with Chris Brown, accompanied her boyfriend to a probation hearing in Los Angeles, reports The Associated Press.
Brown visited the courthouse briefly on Wednesday to oppose a motion to revoke the singer's probation stemming from his 2009 assault on Rihanna. Prosecutors claim Brown did not show sufficient evidence that he completed his required community labor sentence.
The AP reports Rihanna blew Brown a kiss before entering the court room, and when the hearing was over, the two left the courthouse together.
Judge James Brandlin has asked for additional reports regarding Brown's community service and scheduled a new hearing date for April 5.
reported by Warittha A. 5455218
source http://www.etonline.com/news/130208_Rihanna_Accompanies_Chris_Brown_to_Court/index.html

What Legendary 'Superhero' Inspired Stan Lee?





What Legendary 'Superhero' Inspired Stan Lee?

By ALLEN DI BENEDETTO
February 05, 2013
Comic book legend Stan Lee, creator of such beloved superheroes as Spider-Man, the Hulk, the Fantastic Four, Iron Man, Thor, the X-Men, and nearly countless others, shared with ET his own love of one hero in particular on Saturday at the Giggles N’ Hugs children's center in Century City, CA. So, who was it? 
Lee, who was there to support his newly launched children's publishing company Stan Lee's Kids Universe, spoke to ET of spending his childhood idolizing a man who, in his eyes, was nothing shortof a superhero, revealing, "When I was a kid, my favorite superhero was Errol Flynn, the actor. He played Robin Hood, he played Captain Blood… He was the best guy in the world with two guns, but he was always smiling and cheerful and rescuing women. I can think of nothing more fun than spending your life rescuing women."
The event, which was hosted by film and television actress Jaime Pressly, included several exciting children's games and activities, along with a fun, spirited reading by Lee of Kids Universe's newest children's book, Monsters vs. Kittens.
Stan Lee's Kids Universe is a newly minted multi-media children's publishing company whose goal is to provide children with entertaining, imaginative content on a variety of different platforms, everything from more traditional, hard-copy comic and picture book fare to digital, child-orientated mobile apps and games.
For pictures from the event, click here and here. And for more on Stan Lee, including his thoughts on the state of comics today, click the video above!
reported by : Dhai P. 
source:http://www.etonline.com/news/130141_What_Legendary_Superhero_Inspired_Stan_Lee/index.html

Taylor Swift Shares Her Valentine's Day Plans



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Taylor Swift Shares Her Valentine's Day Plans


By ANTOINETTE BUENO
February 07, 2013
Taylor Swift called in Thursday morning to On Air with Ryan Seacrest, where the newly single superstar was game enough to talk Valentine's Day plans.
"I'm probably going to be with my friends or rehearsing … I'll be like working on the lighting rig and like, the lighting cues," she told Seacrest. "And I don't think I'd rather be anywhere else to be honest."
Swift split from her latest boyfriend, One Direction's Harry Styles, in early January, but it looks like she has her upcoming tour and Grammy performance to focus on, and of course, her famous besties which include Selena Gomez and Emma Stone.
"I'd say I have like 15 best friends," she said. "I'd much rather have more friends, rather than put up all these walls around your life and not trust people. I've trusted people more and more as this [her career] has gotten thankfully, bigger."
As for her Grammy performance Sunday, she revealed that she'll be the opening act!
"What's interesting is we presented this performance to the Grammy committee … and they said, 'Okay, cool you have a performance spot.' And then like a week ago they call us and are like, 'Oh, by the way, you're opening the show.' It's not like they approach you … It just surprised me I was going to go first."
And despite all her recent highly publicized relationship drama, Taylor said that it's felt like "the best year" ever.
"Hands down it's just been the best year. It's been amazing, it's been exciting," she said. "I got to make a record that was different than anything I'd ever done before ... That stuff really surprises me, the fact that I was able to branch out and everybody is really embracing it. It feels like the best year I've had so far. It's been really wonderful."
reported by Dhai P. 5455227

source : http://www.etonline.com/news/130245_Taylor_Swift_Talks_Valentine_s_Day_Plans/index.html

'Stand-alone' Star Wars films planned

Yoda statue outside Lucasfilm's San Francisco offices
It is rumoured the first stand-alone film will focus on Jedi master Yoda

 

Films built around existing characters from the Star Wars universe are being developed alongside the new trilogy of films, the Disney studio has revealed.

"We are working on a few stand-alone films... derived from great Star Wars characters," Disney CEO Bob Iger told the CNBC channel on Tuesday.
The films, written by Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg, will be released between 2015 and 2021, he continued.
The seventh Star Wars film, directed by JJ Abrams, is due out in 2015.
Disney bought George Lucas's Lucasfilm company for $4.05 billion (£2.58 billion) last year, saying it was committed to at least three new films.
The first of these, Star Wars: Episode VII, will be scripted by Michael Arndt, the Oscar-winning writer of Toy Story 3 and Little Miss Sunshine.
Mr Iger outlined the studio's plans with CNBC ahead of a call with analysts to discuss the Disney company's latest financial results.
Despite seeing a slight dip in its quarterly earnings, the CEO said the studio was "confident about the year ahead, as well as our ability to create continued long-term growth".
While speaking to CNBC, Mr Iger admitted there had been "speculation" about "some stand-alone films" that would not form "part of the overall saga".
"We still plan to make Star Wars 7, 8 and 9 roughly over a six-year period of time starting in 2015," he went on.
"But there are going to be a few other films released in that period of time too."
Kasdan has a long association with Lucasfilm, having worked on the scripts of The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi - the second and third instalments of the first Star Wars trilogy.
Kinberg's own screenwriting credits include comic book sequel X-Men: The Last Stand, Mr & Mrs Smith and Guy Ritchie's 2009 Sherlock Holmes film.
Tuesday's announcement was preceded by a report on the Ain't It Cool News site that the first stand-alone film would focus on the diminutive Jedi master Yoda.
"Word is Yoda is first," wrote website founder Harry Knowles in a posting that also mentioned such other Star Wars staples as bounty hunter Boba Fett and slug-like gangster Jabba the Hutt.


Reported by : Wit S.

source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-21349152

Grammys a welcome change from stiff film awards shows

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, 10/2/12
Adele won six Grammy Awards last year


Got that awards-show hangover? Can't remember who won the People's Choice, Critics' Choice, or Golden Globes, and it's still two weeks until the Oscars? Here's your splash-in-the-face cure: The Grammys.

Even before the bizarre "no side boob" memo from CBS, the Grammys were the one bright pre-Oscar light in the endless wintery deluge of awards shows. Sick of Anne Hathaway and Ben Affleck speeches and that same montage of scenes from "Lincoln"? We can promise you none of that will drift over into the Grammys. Instead, expect wild clothing choices (don't think that memo's going to hold anyone back), lively performances and almost inevitably, some off-screen or red-carpet or other event that overshadows the actual handing out of the awards
Jennifer Lopez's plunging dress from the 2000 show is so famous, it has its own Wikipedia page. The shirtless Soy Bomb guy weirded out Bob Dylan -- no easy feat -- in 1998.
 
Recent years have seen two disturbing events take place right before the awards and affect the show. In 2009, singer Rihanna canceled a planned Grammy appearance after her boyfriend, singer Chris Brown, beat her up during an argument in a car the night before the awards. And just last year, legendary singer Whitney Houston died in her bathtub at the Beverly Hilton Hotel the night before the Grammys, which hastily put together a tribute to the Grammy- and Emmy-winner.
Makes you look fondly on the awards of 2011, where the big news was that Lady Gaga arrived inside a giant egg.
It's hard to say what will make headlines at this year's award. Maybe a good old-fashioned musical feud? Taylor Swift and Carrie Underwood are reportedly avoiding each other. Frank Ocean and Brown recently clashed in a parking lot. If all four attend, can we settle this with a Sharks-and-Jets style rumble?
With six nominations, Ocean is tied for the most nods -- but the Grammys give out so many awards that he's tied with five other artists. That's why the Grammys always result in photos of people like Adele and Norah Jones holding armloads of the little gramophones.
The Grammys' generosity, and its many perplexing choices, have helped make the honor the butt of many jokes. In 1988, Jethro Tull famously beat Metallica for the hard rock/metal honor -- Jethro Tull is many things, but two of those things are not "hard rock" and "metal."
Even Homer Simpson's barbershop quartet once won a Grammy. Homer gave his to the bellhop as a tip, and as soon as the bellhop realized it was a Grammy, he tossed it off a balcony in disgust. "Hey, don't throw your garbage down here!" yelled another guest.
They may not get any respect, but the Grammys still know how to throw a party -- and make headlines.

Reported by: Pratyaporn S. What's Zaap!
Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/02/08/16899330-grammys-a-welcome-change-from-stiff-film-awards-shows?lite