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Posts Tagged ‘Con’

Disney’s achy breaky hearts

If you’re easily devastated, do look away now. Our business this week is with the internecine struggles at the House of Mouse.

Remember when Disney stars had names like Donald and Daisy, and the worst thing that could happen to them was three mischievous nephews coming to stay? Those days are long gone. Today’s Hannah Montanas and Jonases must negotiate altogether more complex perils, such as prescription painkillers, the leaking of wet T-shirt cameraphone photos, and deciding what technically constitutes virginity.

In seeking a significant other, then, it is no surprise that many of these gilded teens turn to fellow indentured players in Uncle Walt’s repertory company. I believe the never under- rehearsed interview line is, “We’re just taking things really slowly, but it’s great to be able to share a chaperoned milkshake with someone who can relate to all the craziness.”

Frankly, Disney prefers its craziness to be relatable. It works better that way. If High School Musical star Vanessa Hudgens had been chastely betrothed to her co-star and current boyfriend Zac Efron since she was 11, there wouldn’t have been a sleazebag ex-boyfriend to leak her nude photos to the gazillion-strong armies of perverts that stalk the internet. And the corporation wouldn’t have had to issue a creepy public rebuke to their teenage star. “Vanessa has apologised for what was obviously a lapse in judgment,” this ran. “We hope she’s learned a valuable lesson.”

Much better to date a co-worker, thereby knitting yourself into a Disney heritage that includes the erstwhile union between fellow Mouseketeers Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears. Unfortunately, sometimes even Mouse-endorsed love turns sour, and the Magic Kingdom echoes to the sound of anguished OMGs and WTFreaks.

This week, just such a romantic sundering seems to have occurred between Trace Cyrus, brother of Hannah Montana star Miley, and Demi Lovato, another Disney star with a TV show and recording deal. Should you care to know more about them, Trace is in a band with the brother of a Hannah Montana cast member (when are this lot going to get their own dedicated volume of Rock Family Trees?), and is soon to open for Miley on her world tour, despite appearing to violate several of Disney’s body art statutes.

Right now, Demi is the Salieri to Miley’s Mozart, but if Miley’s controverisal semi-nude Vanity Fair shoot last year showed us anything, it is that child marketing prodigies oxidise heartbreakingly quickly. As Gina Gershon remarks in the Lost in Showbiz movie classic that is Showgirls: “There’s always someone younger and hungrier coming down the stairs after you.”

Anyway, back to our star-cross’d lovers, Trace and Demi. We lay our scene in fair Los Angeles, where our tale is of two households if not alike in dignity, then certainly as undignified as the other. Needless to say, the fallout from the break-up is taking place on Twitter.

“I know there’s such thing as a Mr Right,” tweets Demi. “But can there be such thing as a Mr Not Right Now . . . ?” Alas, it is not long before she is musing “Ur So Gay, Katy Perry – such a well written, relatable song. ;) HaHaHaHa.”

“Another storybook ending,” declares Trace sarcastically, before posting a picture of the girlfriend before Demi.

“I’m sorry, was that supposed to hurt?” responds Demi. “Hmm. Oh well.”

Yes, think of it as Dangerous Liaisons for heavily sexualised, abstinence-ring-wearing teens. After all, Twitter is basically the epistolary novel for the ADD generation. How you allot parts is up to you, although I’m afraid the Glenn Close/Marquise de Merteuil role must go to Miley and Trace’s mom, Tish, who wades right on in with a mother-loving salvo.

“It really makes me sad that most people find it so easy to hurt other people,” tweets Mommytish, whose bio reads, “I love cupcakes, butterflies, my beautiful kids, my gorgeous husband and of course JESUS.” “Why is that?” she continues menacingy of the love split. “I never want to hurt anyone . . . EVER.”

Enter Miley. “We can’t control the path of their wicked hearts mama,” she tweets back somewhat unsettlingly. “All we can do is shine a light & guide their way back home. Smile mommy.”

“I wish I was the one hurting,” Tish tells her son – and his 186,000-odd followers. “I wish I could switch places with you right now, because I would. You love so deeply, you deserve that back . . .”

I love the sound of Old Mother Cyrus, don’t you? (Free life rule for you, kids: never go out with one of those boys or girls who says “My mother’s my best friend”. They have all kinds of things wrong with them – and don’t even start Lost in Showbiz on the mothers.)

Thus far, the silence of formerly be-mulleted paterfamilias Billy Ray is deafening. But if he painstakingly divides his line-dance classic Achy Breaky Heart into 140-character instalments, then your week will be complete.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Fantasy and comic convention opens

Comic-Con opened last night with a preview of some of the hottest new genre TV shows – but which stand the greatest chance of reaching British screens?

The first night of Comic-Con is not really the first night: it’s preview night, when fans catch an advance look at some of the big genre TV pilots that American networks will try to seduce audiences with in coming months. And might even get picked up by British broadcasters too. The three pilots premiered on Wednesday: The Human Target, based on a DC Comics character and produced by McG (yes, McG) and starring a cast of other SF cast-offs – Fringe’s Mark Valley is the lead, with a guest spot from Tricia Helfer – better known as the sexiest Cylon in the galaxy.

And, frankly, that’s enough about that one – it came off, for what it’s worth, like any other adventure-of-the-week action series. It may come to the UK … but may prove unmemorable and short-lived when it does.

Next up was V. For those who don’t remember the 1983 original, this is, like Battlestar Galactica, a re-imagining of something old – but with the extra shininess and topical references that the intervening 25 years have given it.

Aliens come to Earth, proclaiming their wish for peace and seeking help from humans. Turns out they are not quite so nice (in fact, it involves a great deal of stabbiness, reptilian scales and general carnage).

What’s going to be revealing is how much the show is dictated by budget. Large floating cockroaches above cities are not cheap things to provide, CGI-wise. The fact that the aliens take human form helps, of course, since anything more complicated gets ever so pricey. The likelihood of coming to British screens? Medium to good: it’s got more chance of long-lasting appeal.

And then there’s The Vampire Diaries. “I’m a vampire: and this is my story …” it began, and proceeded to collect unimaginable numbers of tortured-teenage-TV cliches in a pile and then roll around in them for 42 minutes.

Audiences like Gossip Girl and 90210, right? And they also like Twilight. That, basically, sums up the whole conversation the producers had when talking about this adaptation. “So you know what would be great? …” And then they proceeded to go precisely where you think this is going, even though there must have been voices of reason. But they have a point: there’s a Twilight panel at Comic-Con this week, and the queue for it started around 24 hours before, by people who’d brought tents. And air mattresses.

All I know is, yes, it’s probably likely to make it to British screens, because some buyer, somewhere, is going to say: “90210 hot teens, but also bloodsuckers? My God, they’ll love it”. And if it does get bought in, it’s worth getting some friends round and conducting some kind of drinking game – because judging by the reaction of the preview audience, this series is promising to be funny in all the wrong places.

There were groans, there was laughing, and there was one cheer … when someone from Lost turned up on screen. But perhaps this wasn’t the core audience: if they’re really reaching out to Twilight fans, the ones who would otherwise be watching and getting excited about it here at Comic-Con were already bedding down for the night outside the convention centre.

So just in case the powers that be are reading, and your casting vote makes the difference: Which would you prefer? The Lizard v Humans Struggling With Destruction of Humanity Saga? Or Hot Vampire Teens Struggling With Lust-based Angst Soap? Or just a standard comic-book action thriller?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


“Alice In Wonderland” Trailer! Depp, Burton & More

UPDATE: The video was stripped but may still play below. The trailer is being presented Thursday at Comic-Con and should be back online after that.

PREVIOUSLY:A few weeks after the first official stills came out comes the teaser trailer for t…

Thom Hartmann: The Great Tax Con Job

High top marginal tax rates on rich people actually stabilize the economy, prevent economic bubbles from forming, prevent economic crashes, and lead to steady and sustained economic growth.

Michael Conniff: Con Games: End of Story In Vegas

Vegas, man-made and juiced-up, is where our story as a country has come to an end.

Michael Conniff: Con Games: Conservatism In Reality

Two out of every three Republicans believe news of global climate change is “exaggerated” — the same margin as those who want Sarah Palin to remain “a major national political figure.”