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Posts Tagged ‘Bill Murray’

10 Hottest Celebrity Lips in History

Sensuously sexy lips on a woman are enough to entice any hot-blooded male. Kissable, pouty ladies have for decades been thrust into the limelight as movie stars, singers and models. Blond or brunette, curvaceous or skinny, it doesn’t matter – as long as she boasts a super hot pout. The crème de la crème have [...]

Mornin’ Crunch Crumbs

-Megan Fox joins Mickey Rourke and Bill Murray in Mitch Glazer’s drama Passion Play, opening at next month’s Toronto Film Festival…. -Forbes Magazine has named Jay Z Hip-Hop’s Cash King. The lyricist earned $63 million in 2009. Diddy came in second and Akon landed in third place…. -And while we’re on the subject of rap: 20 Hip-Hopsters [...]

Bugs Bunny Movie In The Works

What’s up, Doc? Bugs Bunny back on the big screen?!Warner Bros. is in chats to produce a new feature length Bugs Bunny movie, Deadline.com divulged in a scoop last week. Studio bosses have commissioned Elf screenwriter David Berenbaum to write the planned live action/CG feature film. The production would be the first time that Bugs has [...]

Taylor Swift inducted into bowling Hall of Fame

American singer Taylor Swift has landed a bizarre accolade – she has been inducted into a bowling Hall of Fame. The 20-year-old singer was chosen over nine other stars including Justin Bieber and funnyman Bill Murray to enter into the International Bowling Museum and Hall of Fame. The Crazier hitmaker has been photographed bowling with [...]

Justin Bieber Taylor Swift Up For Bowling Hall Of Fame

Forget The Grammys: Justin Bieber and Taylor Swift are going head-to-head for a spot in the Bowling Hall of Fame.For the first time ever, fans have been invited to vote for the latest celebrity inductee into the Celebrity Hall of Fame for the Bowling Proprietors Association of America (BPAA), the organization said this week. A [...]

Billy Murray Injured In Skiing Accident

Bill Murray will spend the next several weeks hopping around on a crutch after injuring himself in a skiing accident on the slopes of Park City, Utah on Sunday.
The Lost In Translation star hurt his leg just one day before the Sundance Film Festival world premiere of his new film, Get Low. Bill was in [...]

Phoenix/Passion Pit | 09.26 | Central Park

Words by: Dan Ettinger | Images from: myspace.com/wearephoenix

Phoenix & Passion Pit :: 09.26.09 :: Central Park SummerStage :: New York, NY

Phoenix

Perhaps it was the magic of an early fall night in the Big Apple, or the mysticism of Central Park, or the intimate, wooded enclave offered by the Central Park SummerStage, or the fact that Phoenix lead singer Thomas Mars has a child with Sofia Coppola that had me thinking about the themes in Lost in Translation. Coppola’s movie is so human, in that it portrays a confused and alienated Bill Murray and a vulnerable Scarlett Johansson struggling to identify with their loneliness. The film suggests that some of us consistently experience a sort of existential ennui that can only be overcome through personal connections.

Having recently started a new job in a new city (unfortunately NOT New York City), I was trying to forget any alienation or loneliness that was going on in my own life and enjoy the second night of Phoenix and Passion Pit‘s recent sold out shows. With some tickets selling on StubHub for upwards of $300, I was curious to see whether or not the two bands could live up to the accruing hype.

The Emerson graduates that comprise Passion Pit are a classic example of social networking wildfire. Just two years young, the group skyrocketed to success on the heels of lead singer-songwriter Michael Angelakos‘ Valentine’s Day present-turned-2008-EP Chunk of Change. After cracking a few obligatory Red Sox/Yankees jokes that can accompany any musical group from Boston playing in New York, Pit proceeded to wind through their frenetic, poppy, and concise songs with notable joy.

Laurent Brancowitz – Phoenix

As the area continued to fill with eager Phoenix fans, Passion Pit burst into their gem of the night, “Moth’s Wings” > “Sleepyhead,” which highlighted the band’s incredibly hectic breakdowns, their impressive handle on indie-pop-snyth rock sound, and most of all, Angelakos’ helium-balloon falsetto. Closing with “The Reeling,” the group posed an introspective question to the young crowd that seemed especially pertinent considering my earlier Lost in Translation musings: “Look at me, oh look at me/ Is this the way I’ll always be/ Now I pray that somebody will quickly come and kidnap me/ Everyday I lie awake and pray to God today’s the day/ Here I am, here I am/ When will someone understand?”

Before I had too much time to get carried away with any sort of metaphysical inner dialogue, Phoenix had already quietly ascended to the stage; their backdrop was a simple banner of the Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix bomb shaped artwork. The band that has recently appeared on Saturday Night Live, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, a Cadillac commercial, The Late Show with David Letterman, and most recently The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien had plenty of reasons to be cocky. But for such widespread recent recognition, their stage presence was humble and Mars warmly thanked the audience multiple times both in English and in French for making it to the show. They were impressive in their ability to connect with the crowd and draw in any doubters.

Phoenix

Any skeptics listening to the recorded versions of these songs and wondering how they would translate live would be blown away. In fact, one of the most enjoyable and surprising elements about Phoenix’s set was how flawlessly they integrated their well rehearsed, in-studio tightness with the necessary expansion that accompanies any talented band’s live show. There were moments where I wasn’t sure if I was seeing some sort of Radiohead/Animal Collective/Pink Floyd prototype; their lengthier songs such as “Love Like a Sunset” and “Funky Squaredance” possessed the intensity of Thom Yorke and co., the ambience of Animal Collective, and the “x-factor” that so often accompanied Floyd’s jams (think “Have a Cigar,” but without as many shearing Gilmour solos).

Powered by Mars’ smooth vocal delivery and Thomas Hedlund‘s acrobatic drumming, Phoenix was energetic to say the least. A well-orchestrated light show deftly accented everything from the band’s lightest, sauntering tunes (“If I Ever Feel Better” and “Girlfriend”) to their dance party, Daft Punk-like electronica influenced (“Rome” and “1901″) moments during the hour and a half set.

Another notable moment – which fully convinced me Phoenix is ready for superstardom – came when Mars and guitarist Laurent Brancowitz played the first two songs of the encore acoustic, including a conglomerate of spotlights focused on the lead singer’s head that created a halo effect.

As the last notes of “1901″ resonated into the City that Never Sleeps, I was again drawn back to those aforementioned Lost in Translation themes. Roger Ebert described the film in his 2003 Chicago Sun-Times article as “sweet and sad at the same time as it is sardonic and funny.” These comparisons can just as easily apply to many of Phoenix’s songs, which can be lyrically introspective and melancholy, yet musically vibrant. Just as Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson found a little solace in each other, Phoenix seemed to offer solace that everything really will work out because it’s all predetermined anyways: “Past and present they don’t matter… Now the future’s sorted out.”

Isn’t that escape and distraction music offers part of its inherent beauty?

Passion Pit Setlist:
I’ve Got Your Number, Eyes As Candles, Make Light, Let Your Love Grow Tall, Little Secrets, To Kingdom Come, Folds In Your Hands, Moth’s Wings > Sleepyhead, Smile Upon Me, Better Things, The Reeling

Phoenix Setlist:
Lisztomania, Long Distance Call, Lasso, Run Run Run, Fences, Girlfriend, Armistice, Love Like a Sunset, Too Young, Rally
Consolation Prizes, Rome >Funky Squaredance >Rome

E: Everything is Everything (acoustic; Thomas and Laurent), Playground Love (acoustic; Thomas and Laurent), If I Ever Feel Better, 1901

Phoenix is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Bittersweet
Go See Live Music!


Havana ceremony honours del Toro

Benicio del Toro

Oscar-winning actor Benicio del Toro has been presented with an award by the Cuban government in Havana, in recognition of his body of work.

The inaugural Tomas Gutierrez Alea prize was presented at a ceremony attended by US actors Robert Duvall, James Caan and Bill Murray.

Their visit is seen as a sign of warming Cuban-US relations.

Puerto Rican-born del Toro played revolutionary hero Ernesto "Che" Guevara in two films out last year.

Named after prolific Cuban filmmaker Alea, the new award was voted for by the National Union of Writers and Artists of Cuba.

Del Toro – who won a best supporting actor Oscar for Traffic in 2001 – said it was "an honour" to receive the award and thanked Che director Steven Soderbergh.

The director’s two-part, four-and-a-half hour biopic on the Argentine revolutionary who helped Fidel Castro take power in Cuba in 1959, was a big hit on the island.

Murray sang songs to union members packed into a room behind the group’s main headquarters.

He then jokingly passed around a baseball cap to collect tips for the pianist who accompanied him.

"This is a show that will never be able to be repeated," del Toro said.

"Bill Murray singing, Robert Duvall with his flowers, James Caan sitting here next to me, with [Cuban actors] Jorge Perugorria and Mirta Ibarra.

"It will stay in history forever."

Because of the long-standing US trade embargo against communist Cuba, Americans have been forbidden – with some exceptions – from visiting the island, which is 90 miles (145km) away from Key West, Florida.

Hollywood stars such as Robert Redford, Arnold Schwarzenegger and director Steven Spielberg have visited in the past but cultural exchanges slowed down because of restrictions imposed by former US President George W Bush.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The web’s best film clips on: rebirth

A last post from me as my time on this column comes to an end, but fret not – the revival, the reboot, the revamp is already under way

I didn’t want to get all Sinatra on you for my last Clip joint. The blog is – I hope – moving on to bigger things, and so I thought it was best to finish with the most mysterious and striking, the downright raddest, of story shapes: rebirth. Seeded in our psyches through the seasons, it winds its way down to us via the ancient Greeks’ valet of vegetation, Dionysus, then was cranked up to the very top of the metaphysical rollercoaster by our Christian friends: petite mort followed by glorious return. It’s a toughie to use now without self-regarding messianic hints – nice for A-listers with airs, annoying for everyone else – but don’t lose patience yet.

I have a feeling the rebirth archetype will claw back credibility very soon. Things are edgy on planet Earth: distended seasons, curdling economies, environmental “stress”. There seem to be two choices: hubris and The End, or hope. Art-wise, there’s been a bit too much cheap hubris going around for a while now – and I can only afford two or three cinema tickets a month. So how about something new?

1) The triumph of individual feeling over the mechanical: Neo’s return to life at the end of the first Matrix is really an instant of realisation, rewarded with an effect that is truly special – Agent Smith’s bullets hanging in mid-air.

2) A simple kiss finally brings light through the prison bars to Martin LaSalle – the “strange path” he must follow in Robert Bresson’s Pickpocket, Dostoevsky in miniature.

3) “The preacher said that all my sins is washed away, including that piggly-wiggly I knocked over in Yazoo.” If wronging pigs is high on Tim Blake Nelson’s fret-list in O Brother Where Art Thou?, I have a lifetime of bacon sandwiches to atone for.

4) Hauling a stone Buddha to the top of a snowy mountain is one way of gaining spiritual enlightenment; you have to wonder if Kim Ki-Duk was totting up extra karma points by playing the monk himself (and making an excellent movie) in 2003′s Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter … and Spring.

5) A certain Dickensian cocklewarmer has seen a fair few rebirths itself, but it seems like the screenwriter for 1988′s Scrooged had a few lines before adapting A Christmas Carol: Bill Murray’s redemption-by-telecast (very 80s) goes on and on.

I’m swivelling the spotlight on everyone who strutted on the red carpet for last week’s lead character roll call. This was our A-list:

1) “I done something new for this fight. I done wrestled with an alligator … ” Norman Mailer thought he was scared, but Muhammad Ali finds a star performance in adversity, drunk on his own humour and eloquence in When We Were Kings.

2) An entire universe emanates from one man, always 8° out of true, perpetually in need of light rearranging: Jacques Tati as Monsieur Hulot.

3) I found the final scenes of This Is England so intense and unmediated, it really felt like Shane Meadows was almost channelling something. Having a performer on board as charismatic as Thomas Turgoose, vulnerably whippersnapping, was a big help.

4) Boris Karloff is magnificent in The Bride of Frankenstein, learning the rudiments of language and gentleness from his new, blind friend. (I have visions of Arnie being much the same in his first acting lessons in LA: “Smoke – good!”)

5) And this week’s winner is … chris7572, for selecting Gena Rowlands as Gloria in her husband John Cassavetes’s 1980 thriller. I’ve never seen it, but this clip from the start – in which Gloria makes a snap decision on behalf of a Puerto Rican street kid carrying a heavy load – sank straight in like a chamber full of lead. And 99% of it is her presence: totally self-assured and indomitable, with a hint of world-weariness around her eyes that plays straight into the 70s high-civic-tragedy mode Cassavetes lays on from the start. A tone itself passing out of favour, as brasher stars, synth soundtracks and 80s glibness were beginning to take over town. Chris7572, don’t forget to email catherine.shoard@guardian.co.uk to claim your prize.

Thanks to AJBee, frogprincess, steenbeck and greatpoochini for the rest of this week’s picks

Thanks also to all those who’ve emailed her to enquire about writing Clip joint in the future, as we’re handing over to you, the people, to keep things going. Are you up to the challenge? Might you fancy getting paid – in gold bullion (oh, all right – pounds sterling) – every so often to pick your favourite clip on a particular subject? The floor is open – email Catherine if you’d like to get involved.

I want to say a massive thanks to everyone who’s helped build up Clip joint and made it a most excellent forum during my two-and-a-bit years writing it. I’ve learned an awful lot, and it’s been great trading film knowledge and divining the tastes behind those unsettling monikers. Of course, I’m looking forward to being a gamekeeper-turned-poacher, and posting comments on Clip joint discussions to come. I have to give a special mention to the hardcore (in order of appearance): earbud, frogprincess, MrDNA, ShatterFace, timthemonkey, Owlyross, Tombo, sotac27, doravale, iainl, ElDerino, phaine, daredavid, StevieBee, steenbeck, drbendyspoogun, quipu, mike65ie, SOMK, AJBee, MrWormold, leroyhunter, nilpferd, davidabsalom, jamie12, MsSauerkraut, Si27, Benj, TheDudeAbides, chris7572, greatpoochini, metalmicky, pompeyplayup. And anyone else with their hand on the DVD remote.

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Bettany & Connelly’s Darwin Movie To Open Toronto Film Festival

TORONTO — Real-life couple Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany will kick off the Toronto International Film Festival with the life story of Charles Darwin.

Bettany stars as the theory-of-evolution pioneer and Connelly plays his wife in “…