Saturday, July 31, 2010

Zac Efron Says 'Charlie St. Cloud' Is Not 'Sappy'

Zac Efron's new movie "Charlie St. Cloud," out Friday, is certainly a far cry from his shiny, sugar-coated "High School Musical" trilogy. But judging from the film's trailers, there are some similarities to a few other recent films with an emotional/romantic theme, namely "Dear John," "Remember Me" and "The Last Song." When MTV News spoke with Efron, we asked him why this film is different, and how the story toes the line between sappy and sentimental.

"I didn't think it was going to be sappy," Efron said. "Because [director Burr Steers] doesn't do sappy, you know what I mean? Burr is very grounded. He is all about story and dialogue and plot and all about real."

Efron added that Steers, whom he also worked with on "17 Again," will quickly put the kibosh on superficiality if he sees it in an actor's performance. "If he sees [superficial] acting, he would come in and just, psshhhhh [ He pantomimes an explosion with his hands ]. So I've really had to trust him with that. And we all do, we all did. And you know, it turned out right."

The 22-year-old went on to say that he doesn't think "Charlie St. Cloud" gets too sentimental. "But at the same time, I wanted to make sure the audience got what they needed from it," he said. "Hopefully they are fulfilled and leave asking some cool questions."

It will be interesting to see how well fans receive Efron in his "St. Cloud" role, especially since it was recently announced that Efron has been pegged to star in "The Lucky One," the film adaptation of Nicholas Sparks' novel about an American marine who credits his survival in the Iraq War to a photograph of a woman he's never met. "Lucky One" adds to the already lengthy list of projects to which Efron is reportedly attached.

What do you think of Efron taking on different, more grown-up roles? Will you go to see "Charlie St. Cloud" and "The Lucky One"? Tell us in the comments.

Check out everything we've got on "Charlie St. Cloud."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



Nicolas Cage ‘Excited’ To Get Started On ‘Ghost Rider’ SequelUnderworld return

50 Cent 'Studied' Robert De Niro Before His Extreme Weight Loss

Much was made about 50 Cent's dramatic weight loss earlier this year for an acting role that required the muscle-bound rap star to lose more than 50 pounds. But there's been little information about how the fit G-Unit head managed to put the weight back on.

Fif sat down with the women of "The View" on Tuesday and revealed to the hosts what his very first meal was post-production.

"I remember specifically what the first thing was, because I was starving," he laughed. "I had a steak. It was 12 ounces, but I got about four ounces in before I started getting sleepy."

The rapper shocked his fans and followers when Us Weekly got a hold of a still image from the upcoming movie "Things Fall Apart," featuring 50 Cent, Mario Van Peebles, Lynn Whitfield and Ray Liotta. Fif appeared gaunt and sickly in the picture. On the chat show, he drew comparisons to famous method actors who embraced almost tortuous acts to delve deeper into character.

The rapper also revealed he'd studied interviews of actors who attempted similar transformations. "I read [Robert] De Niro's interviews during 'Raging Bull,' Christian Bale's during 'The Machinist,' and Tom Hanks with 'Philadelphia,' " 50 said.

Earlier this year, 50 told a Cleveland newspaper why he went to the lengths he did for the part and movie.

"It's a project that I wrote, produced and financed myself," he said of the film. "It's about a Heisman hopeful who could possibly be going to the league and everyone is assuming he's gonna make it, and then he's hit with an illness. I had a friend of mine who actually experienced cancer, and it's what motivated me to write this screenplay. You don't have to make everything personal, but that project was. That's why I committed to playing a role where I lost 54 pounds. I had to discipline myself enough until I achieved it but ... I got it."

Do you think you could go to the same extremes 50 Cent did to get what you want? Talk about it in the comments.



Jennifer Hudson still confused over parenthood‘Batman 3′ Can Go In ‘Any Direction,’ ‘Dark Knight’ Star Aaron Eckhart Says

Friday, July 30, 2010

Leonardo DiCaprio Pulls Out of Mel Gibson Viking Movie

As the controversy over Mel Gibson's rage-fueled rant tapes and domestic violence probe continue to unfold, the site that has leaked those shocking recordings, RadarOnline.com reported that one of the "Lethal Weapon" actor's upcoming projects has lost its leading man.

"Inception" star Leonardo DiCaprio has reportedly withdrawn from a planned movie chronicling the exploits of Viking warriors that Gibson was slated to direct. "Not a chance," said an unnamed source close to DiCaprio.

The site claimed that the latest setback to Gibson's once-blockbuster Hollywood career — he was dropped by his longtime talent agency in the wake of the tape scandal — is another signal that the actor/director may have difficulty bouncing back from his latest scandal and regain his once high-flying star status.

The Viking film would have been DiCaprio's first project with Gibson, but the unnamed source said that the meticulous actor — who has avoided a major public scandal during his nearly 20-year long career in movies — did not want to risk his reputation by being associated with Gibson.

"Leo has earned the right to pick and choose who he works with, and Mel Gibson is not one of them," the source reportedly said. A spokesperson for DiCaprio could not be reached for comment at press time. The untitled Viking movie was being co-produced by Gibson's Icon Productions and was slated to begin shooting in the fall.

DiCaprio recently spoke to MTV News about his desire to make a Viking epic with Gibson saying, "I've always wanted to do Viking Story. I'm a big history buff and I don't think there's been a really fantastic Viking film ever made. Those were some of the most barbaric people ever in history. I'd love to see Mel Gibson's version of that. Certainly with 'Apocalypto' and some of the other films he's made he's been able to transport me back in time unlike very many filmmakers have been able to ... I'd love to see what he does with that subject matter."

In addition to the embarrassment over the racist, sexist and violent language on the tapes, Gibson is being investigated for alleged domestic violence and child endangerment over claims that he struck ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva while she was holding the couple's then two-month old baby. Detectives from the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department are also looking into claims that Grigorieva attempted to extort money from Gibson by threatening to release the tapes.

Gibson's spokesperson could not be reached for comment on the DiCaprio news; the spokesperson also has not denied that the breathless, rage-fueled voice on the tapes is Gibson.

The meltdown of Gibson's personal life has had a major impact on his public one as well, putting his upcoming projects into limbo. Among the movies currently in a holding pattern is the Jodie Foster-directed "The Beaver," a $20 million PG-13 dramedy in which Gibson plays a depressed CEO who can only communicate with his family through a beaver hand puppet. According to E! Online, the film just recently got a rating from the MPAA, but the studio behind it has not yet decided on a release date.

Also unknown is the fate of "How I Spent My Summer Vacation," which his still in production and features Gibson portraying a career criminal who survives in a Mexican prison thanks to the help of a young boy. Gibson is credited as the script author and producer on "Summer," which reportedly began filming in April, but has not gotten a release date yet.

Do you think Gibson's career can survive this scandal? Would you go see a new movie from Mel? Leave your comments below.



‘Thor’ Star Chris Hemsworth Talks About His Title RoleCheryl Cole to throw divorce party

'Captain America' Star Chris Evans Researched 'Origin Stories' For Lead Role

Chris Evans has made no secret of his unfamiliarity with "Captain America" lore — a fictional historythat dates back to World War II and continues to this day. And some of the more huffy Marvel aficionados on the Web have made no secret of their displeasure with this gap in Evans' pop-culture knowledge.

Leaving aside the rather curious notion that an actor needs to be an expert on a given subject before he takes on a role, fans will be pleased to know that Evans has plunged into the Captain's past since he signed on for the big-screen adaptation in April.

"Absolutely, the comic books have been fantastic," he told MTV News at San Diego Comic-Con last week. "Personally, when I was going through the comic books, the ones that were most intriguing were the origin stories. I just wanted to get as many different takes on how this guy started out."

Evans has concentrated on the origin stories — which follow Steve Rogers' transformation, via the army's Super-Solider serum, from average Joe to American superhero — because that is the tale Marvel is set to establish with "Captain America: The First Avenger."

"That's the story we're telling," Evans explained. "I want to know who he was prior to this happening to him, and I think if that character is someone the audience can relate to, we win."

Evans also confirmed that Peggy Carter, the Captain's love interest to be played by Hayley Atwell (AMC's "The Prisoner"), will have a meaty part in the new flick, which hits theaters on July 22, 2011.

"Oh yeah, she's got a lot to do in this one, absolutely," he said.

For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

'Avengers' Heroes All Have 'Big Egos,' Chris Hemsworth Says

After debuting to a raucous crowd at San Diego Comic-Con over the weekend, the key players comprising "The Avengers" gang are now set. What's not yet clear is which of the superheroes in this Marvel all-star team will assume the leadership role. According to comic book lore, Captain America is the guy who unites many of the heroes — including Thor and Iron Man — but the man who will hold Thor's hammer on the big screen next year is not so sure the Captain is assured the boss role.



Twin Atlantic join Belladrum Tartan Heart Festival‘Thor’ Star Chris Hemsworth Talks About His Title Role

'Thor' Star Says Vikings' 'Fearlessness' Inspired His Portrayal

Chris Hemsworth is no stranger to TV and film — he appeared in last summer's mega-hit "Star Trek" — but in tackling the starring role in Marvel's 2011 superhero film "Thor," the 26-year-old enters a whole new category of leading man. When MTV News caught up with Hemsworth, he revealed that "Thor" director Kenneth Branagh had helped in his superhero education by giving him some pre-shoot homework.

"I read so many different books and comic books," Hemsworth told us at San Diego Comic-Con. "Ken, when I got the part, gave me a stack of things and said, 'Look, read what you want, I'm not going to test you at the end of it.' "

Hemsworth revealed that Branagh told him not to stress too much about boning up on Thor's entire history, but to use the books as tools for whatever inspiration he might gain, be it a stance, costume, etc. "He said, 'If you can get something from it, great, it might only be one look.' "

The actor said he found the most useful information in books about Norse mythology, specifically those that referenced Vikings and their belief systems and ideals regarding fate and death. Hemsworth cited the Vikings' attitude toward destiny as one quality he drew from in preparing to play the God of Thunder.

"Their fatalistic attitude, how everything was preordained: the day of their death, the way they're going to die has already been fated long ago," he explained. "They live with this fearlessness, which for me, was a lot of the angle I came at Thor with," Hemsworth revealed. "He does reckless sort of things but his heart is in the right place. He believes it's right. He's not just a madman."

What do you think of Chris Hemsworth playing Thor? Tell us in the comments!

For breaking comic book movie news, columns and more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



‘Thor’ Star Chris Hemsworth Talks About His Title RoleTaylor Swift loves Lady Gaga

Monday, July 26, 2010

'Thor' Trailer, 'Avengers' Teaser Are Marvel Highlights At Comic-Con

SAN DIEGO - Marvel Studios stole the show at San Diego Comic-Con with their Hall H panel on Saturday. After kicking things off with a teaser for and an unfinished scene from "Captain America," Marvel unveiled the "Thor" trailer, and then a teaser for "The Avengers," seemingly pulling out all of the stops to show off their Marvel Universe film series.

The biggest news to come out of the "Avengers" reveal was in regard to the cast lineup: Jeremy Renner will play Clint Barton a.k.a. Hawkeye and Mark Ruffalo replaces Edward Norton as Bruce Banner a.k.a. the Hulk. On hand on Saturday was the "Avengers" principal cast thus far, including Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Clark Gregg, Chris Evans and Chris Hemsworth, as well as producer Kevin Feige and director Joss Whedon.



‘Thor’ Star Chris Hemsworth Talks About His Title RoleHanson and Drake gig ends in riot

Seth Rogen 'Might Direct' 'Jay And Seth Vs. The Apocalypse'

SAN DIEGO — While fans are excited that a big-screen adaptation of "Jay and Seth vs. the Apocalypse" is on the way, it's still unclear exactly when the full-length flick — based on the hilarious 2007 short starring Seth Rogen and Jay Baruchel — will actually hit theaters.



‘Batman 3′ Can Go In ‘Any Direction,’ ‘Dark Knight’ Star Aaron Eckhart Says

Nicolas Cage 'Excited' To Get Started On 'Ghost Rider' Sequel

SAN DIEGO -- Nicolas Cage seems to have an infatuationwith the devil. His forthcoming film "Drive Angry 3D" involves himescaping from hell, and he tangled with Mephistopheles in the 2007film "Ghost Rider." He was more than willing to chat with MTV Newsabout the upcoming "Ghost Rider" sequel, even though the movie is inits very early stages.

"I'm going to have a meeting with [directors Mark Neveldine and BrianTaylor] in the next few days. I'm excited to talk with them about it,"he said. "I'm very hopeful that with their enthusiasm and energy, thiswill be an exciting movie as well."

Cage said he's looking forward to seeing how Neveldine and Taylor, whoare best known for their work with the "Crank" films, plan to puttheir stamp on the film, which is tentatively titled "Ghost Rider:Spirit of Vengeance."

"My excitement about them is they're brilliant with the camera," hesaid. "They make movies look new. They have a way with camera that isunquestionably unique and a signature for them. I think that kind ofenergy for this style of film will take it to the next level."

He added that the film is slated to be shot in Romania, which happensto be the country where Dracula's castle is located. Although therearen't any plans to film at the castle yet, Cage said he hoped therewould be a scene where the Ghost Rider drives his motorcycle up to itsentrance.

Earlier this month, in the sequel. "It's adifferent trajectory," he said, "but it's still the same guy. That'sall I can talk about!"

MTV News and MySpace are live at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con! FromSeth Rogen and Michael Cera to Anna Kendrick and Bruce Willis, we'retalking to some of the world's biggest stars during our daily livestreams. So tune in to MTV.com at 6p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT on Saturday to watch the fun unfold. And don'tforget to check in for exclusive interviews, movie clips and muchmore!

For breaking comic book movie news, columnsand more -- updated around the clock -- visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



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'Thor' Star Chris Hemsworth Talks About His Title Role

SAN DIEGO — Actor Chris Hemsworth is relatively unknownto the greater public — but quite a few movie fans have knownHemsworth's name for a while, thanks to his being cast The God of Thunder is one of the most iconiccharacters in the Marvel Universe, and MTV News was curious to findout Hemsworth's path to the role.

"The very first audition I had was one of those things in amongstseveral other auditions you get," Hemsworth told MTV News at San DiegoComic-Con. "You know nothing about it, there's no script or anything— it's very secretive. You might quickly rip through a couple ofcomic books, but it's also based on instinct."

Hemsworth went on to say that he later met with director KennethBranagh, and that his brother (actor Liam Hemsworth, also known asMiley Cyrus' current squeeze) was up for the same role.

Was competing with his flesh and blood awkward?

"No, it's great," he laughed, making it clear that there is nobrotherly rivalry. "The majority of the time in this business, we'resort of pinching ourselves."

Hemsworth added that the family support goes both ways. "I'm excitedfor him and vice versa. Through that process, I was giving him adviceon what I thought Ken wanted — and then when I was in theretesting, he was doing the same."

How do you think Chris Hemsworth will fare as Thor? Tell us in thecomments!

For breaking comic book movie news, columnsand more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



Jennifer Hudson still confused over parenthood‘Batman 3′ Can Go In ‘Any Direction,’ ‘Dark Knight’ Star Aaron Eckhart Says

Saturday, July 24, 2010

'Batman 3' Can Go In 'Any Direction,' 'Dark Knight' Star Aaron Eckhart Says

SAN DIEGO — Any news that will come out of Comic-Con about Christopher Nolan's upcoming "Batman 3" project will most likely be presented at Saturday's Warner Bros. panel, but that didn't stop MTV News' Josh Horowitz from trying to get some information from "The Dark Knight" star Aaron Eckhart. The actor who played Batman villain Harvey "Two-Face" Dent stopped by to chat with MTV about his 2011 flick "Battle: Los Angeles," and talk quickly turned to his upcoming projects.

Turns out, Eckhart doesn't have anything on the docket for March or April of next year, when "Batman 3" is allegedly set to begin filming.

"I'll give Chris a shout-out. You know, I'm available," Eckhart said, earning a laugh from his "Battle: Los Angeles" co-star Michelle Rodriguez. "Or [James] Cameron. Ridley Scott. ['Battle: Los Angeles' director] Jonathan [Liebesman]; I don't know what he's doing. I'm available."

Since Two-Face was last seen dead at the end of "The Dark Knight," it isn't a big surprise that Eckhart isn't the most knowledgeable about Nolan's plans, but any comic book fan will say that "death" is never the end for villains. The loss of Heath Ledger, whose Joker was supposed to return in "Batman 3," however, did mean Nolan had to find a new villain to be the centerpiece of the final installment in the rebooted franchise.

"Obviously, the script was meant to bring back Heath, and unfortunately that can't happen, so I think starting over is a good thing," Eckhart said. "I'm excited to see. Chris is up against it, because he made such a good movie with 'The Dark Knight,' that he's got to really come up with something good."

Speculation about the "Batman 3" villain started immediately after "The Dark Knight" was released, and the latest rumor pins "Inception" star Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the Riddler. Eckhart couldn't speak to that rumor specifically but said he thought that the opportunity to start fresh was good for the film.

"Chris, he's an exceptional filmmaker from start to finish," he said. "Whenever I hear stuff like that [Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the Riddler], if Johnny Depp's going to play the Riddler, I'm into it. I feel like he can go in any direction."

When asked if he thinks his time is done in the franchise, Eckhart avoided the question by giving a shout-out to Rodriguez being in the film. Horowitz asked if she should play Catwoman, Poison Ivy or Harley Quinn, but Rodriguez wasn't having it.

"I say we come up with our own superheroes," she said. "I think it's time for something new, man."

MTV News and MySpace are live at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con! From Seth Rogen and Michael Cera to Anna Kendrick and Bruce Willis, we're talking to some of the world's biggest stars during three daily live streams. So tune in to MTV.com at 3 p.m. ET/ noon PT on Friday and 6 p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT on Saturday to watch the fun unfold. And don't forget to check in all week for exclusive interviews, movie clips and much more!

Check out everything we've got on "Batman 3."

For breaking comic book movie news, columns and more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



Black Eyed Peas welcome Tom Cruise on stage

'Tron Legacy' Stars Get Comic-Con Crowd Involved In The Movie

The new "Tron Legacy" trailer that arrived with Disney's San Diego Comic-Con panel Thursday (July 22) showcased the company's forward-thinking approach to applying new visual effects to vintage properties.

Despite the fact that actor and comedian Patton Oswalt took the microphone to moderate, the film's cast and surprise "Haunted Mansion" director Guillermo del Toro emphasized new technologies and serious approaches to their projects.

"It was pretty wild, pretty psychedelic," "Tron" star Jeff Bridges told the San Diego Convention Center audience. "You can play yourself at any age, whether it's an old man or an infant. To be in this groundbreaking movie where the idea for that has really been born is really an exciting thing."

Bridges referred to the fact that he plays two roles in "Tron Legacy" — that of his original character Kevin Flynn and Clu 2.0, who is meant to look like Bridges from the original "Tron" in 1982.

"I was attracted to this one for the same reason I was to the first one," he said. "It appealed to the kid in me."

Bridges, along with Olivia Wilde, Garrett Hedlund, Michael Sheen and Bruce Boxleitner, sat on while Disney unveiled eight minutes of "Legacy" in 3-D, which director Joseph Kosinski and "Tron" creator Steven Lisberger were also onboard to present.

"There's a lot of intensive training that went into this," said Hedlund, who plays Bridges' son in the movie. "I think I started the first week of January, and we didn't start filming until April 6."

The panel went on to involve audience members in a recording session that technicians from Skywalker Sound plan to use for the film's final cut. The actors watched as the crowd shouted "Disk Wars," "Rinzler" and "Derez" aloud and stomped their feet for effect.

Further surprises came toward the end of the "Legacy" discussion when two other Disney properties appeared in the spotlight. A release date for "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" was confirmed for May 20, 2011, and Oswalt announced del Toro as the director of a new "Haunted Mansion" movie to be filmed in live-action 3-D.

"To me, the Haunted Mansion is the most precious real estate on earth," del Toro said, revealing that he's been to the Disney attraction every year since he was 3 years old. "This is a place where I go to when I need to think or I need to relax.

"We're making the Haunted Mansion the most haunted place on earth," the director stated, declaring that his film would part ways from the comedy in Rob Minkoff and Eddie Murphy's 2003 film of the same name. "We are not making it a comedy. We are making it scary and fun at the same time, but the scary will be scary."

In that respect, del Toro will be taking the Haunted Mansion name into the style of filmmaking that has defined his career — with quirky effects and chilling themes throughout movies like "Pan's Labyrinth," "Mimic" and "Hellboy II: The Golden Army."

He'll also be taking on something with a great deal of personal meaning. "This, to me, is a dream come true, and I hope to steal as many props as possible," he said.

MTV News and MySpace are live at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con! From Seth Rogen and Michael Cera to Anna Kendrick and Bruce Willis, we're talking to some of the world's biggest stars during three daily live streams. So tune in to MTV.com at 3 p.m. ET/ noon PT on Friday and 6 p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT on Saturday to watch the fun unfold. And don't forget to check in all week for exclusive interviews, movie clips and much more!

Check out everything we've got on "Tron Legacy."

For breaking comic book movie news, columns and more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



Black Eyed Peas welcome Tom Cruise on stage

Comic-Con Live Stream Kicks Off With Bruce Willis, Seth Rogen, More

SAN DIEGO — Comic-Con coverage kicked off in full force Thursday (July 22) as the MTV News team attended the hottest panels and spoke with the biggest stars. One of the major highlights was our live-stream broadcast with MySpace, in which we received such illustrious guests as Bruce Willis, Karl Urban, Seth Rogen, Robert Rodriguez and Danny Trejo.

Willis and Urban were on hand to talk about their movie "Red," the star-studded live-action adaptation of Warren Ellis and Cully Hamner's 2003 comic series. At one point during the interview, Willis and Urban got into an in-depth conversation about how many bodies pile up in the film (they couldn't agree on a number). Willis also talked a bit about "Die Hard 5", while Urban expressed enthusiasm about being considered for the lead in the new "Judge Dredd" film.

Comic book fan (and now comic book movie star) Seth Rogen was full of energy and excitement when he stopped by to discuss "Green Hornet." Asked whether the film really was as difficult to pull together as it seemed form the outside, Rogen seemed to imply that, indeed, it was — but the cast and filmmaking team pulled together to make it happen.

"Yeah, it was exponentially more difficult, but the fact that we all hung in there and kept working on it is a testament to the fact that we really like it and that ultimately we all kept thinking it was worthwhile and the idea was good enough to keep plowing forward with," he said.

Last but not least, MTV News and MySpace welcomed "Machete" director Robert Rodriguez and star Danny Trejo to talk about the film that started as a "fake" trailer in Rodriguez's "Grindhouse" segment. The director mentioned that he felt he had to write the film backward in a sense, in order to incorporate all the footage from the trailer and have it make sense in a full-length feature. Another highlight was Rodriguez giving an update on his upcoming projects, which might include the "Deadpool" movie.

And this is just day one! Check back Friday at 3 p.m. ET/ noon PT for another Comic-Con live stream.

MTV News and MySpace are live at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con! From Seth Rogen and Michael Cera to Anna Kendrick and Bruce Willis, we're talking to some of the world's biggest stars during three daily live streams. So tune in to MTV.com at 3 p.m. ET/ noon PT on Friday and 6 p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT on Saturday to watch the fun unfold. And don't forget to check in all week for exclusive interviews, movie clips and much more!

For breaking comic book movie news, columns and more — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.



Cheryl Cole is to appear in a comic bookComic-Con 2010 Preview: ‘Green Lantern,’ ‘Harry Potter’ And More

Megan Fox To Film Eminem, Rihanna Video Cameo Thursday

From shots taken at the "Love the Way You Lie" music video shoot, we know that Rihanna and Eminem are burning down the house in the clip. And according to E! News, Megan Fox and Dominic Monaghan will be burning up the bedroom in the steamy clip.

The video's couple, reportedly played by Monaghan and Fox, will be on-set Thursday and Friday. "Things start off with a sex scene between Megan and Dominic," a source tells E! Online about the "gritty" video. "Then they fight but end up having sex again."

The relationship between the pair will reportedly also have "lots of passion." Sources say it will play out the way Eminem's relationship with ex-wife Kim played out in real life. While some photos show Rihanna standing in hot pants and a tank top and leather jacket in front of a burning house, reports also say that Eminem "was later seen ... performing together with Rihanna in front of the burning house."

And while on set Wednesday, where photos of the shoot leaked to the media, the video's director, Joseph Kahn, took to Twitter to express his frustration with the photographers who were taking pictures of the video shoot. "Paparazzi, stop trying to ruin my shots," he wrote. "Thank you."

No word yet on when the video will be released, and Fox's cameo in the clip has yet to be confirmed. However, Kahn tweeted about Monaghan's appearance in what is turning out to be a very fiery clip. "First choice: Charlie from Lost. Dom, let's do this," he wrote.



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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Comic-Con 2010 Preview: 'Green Lantern,' 'Harry Potter' And More

Fluff the fur on your Wookiee costume. Put the final touches on that homemade Wonder Woman outfit and make sure your Batman suit isn't that embarrassing one with the nipples on it. That mecca of pop-culture geekery known as San Diego Comic-Con is once again upon us.

The festival kicks off with a preview on Wednesday evening (July 21), followed by four-straight days of sneak-peek looks at celebs, movies, comics, games and much more. MTV News will be right in the thick of the madness, bringing you daily live-streams from the Con.

Get ready for heady chats with Seth Rogen ("The Green Hornet") and Robert Rodriguez ("Machete") on Thursday; the casts of "Tron: Legacy" and "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" on Friday; and lots of surprise appearances on Saturday.

Of course, we'll also be bringing you fresh scoops from the convention — the latest news on some of the most anticipated Hollywood films. Here are some of the movies we can't wait to check out:

"Green Lantern": Saturday at 11:45 a.m. PT
Saturday marks the kickoff of Warner Bros.' blockbuster presentation in Hall H, and there's little doubt "Green Lantern," based on the DC Comics property, is the studio's most eagerly awaited flick. Coming on the heels of a first look at Ryan Reynolds as the titular superhero, fans have been promised the first-ever glimpse at actual movie footage. There's no official word that Reynolds will be in the house, but we're going to go ahead and predict he'll make an appearance.

"Tron: Legacy": Thursday at 11:15 a.m. PT
This sequel to the 1982 sci-fi classic has appeared at three straight Cons. After premiering test footage in '08 and a more robust video in '09, you can now expect Disney to deliver a hefty look at the new film, which arrives in theaters in December. Castmembers expected to attend include Jeff Bridges, Olivia Wilde, Garrett Hedlund and Michael Sheen, as well as director Joseph Kosinski.

"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows": Saturday at 11:45 a.m. PT
Anything having to do with the boy wizard shoots immediately to the top of many Con-goers' wish-lists. This year, Warner Bros. will debut fresh "Deathly Hallows" footage, as the studio pushes toward opening the first part of this series' finale in December. No castmembers have been announced, but there's always a chance someone from Hogwarts might stop by to greet fans.

"Thor" & "Captain America: The First Avenger" Saturday at 6 p.m. PT
We've been checking out concept art and photos for both these Marvel adaptations, but who knows what we'll get at the Con? "Thor" has been shooting since early this year, while "Captain America" just began production last month. Will we get footage from either flick? Let's wait and see. We do hear "Thor" stars Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman and Kat Dennings will be at the Con, and we're also hoping to see Captain America himself, Chris Evans, drop in on the festivities.

"Scott Pilgrim vs. the World": Thursday at 6 p.m. PT
In the midst of the Marvel and DC behemoth is "Scott Pilgrim," a graphic novel series that started out as an indie hit and has now graduated to the mainstream. Clips and trailers have been lighting up on the Web for months, so who knows how they'll step it up for Con fans. We expect, somehow, they will. Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Brandon Routh and Jason Schwartzman will be on hand, as well as director Edgar Wright and series author Bryan Lee O'Malley.

MTV News and MySpace are live at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con! From Seth Rogen to Michael Cera to Anna Kendrick, we're talking to some of the world's biggest stars during three daily live streams. So tune in to MTV.com at 3 p.m. ET/ noon PT on Thursday and Friday, and 6 p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT on Saturday to watch the fun unfold. And don't forget to check in all week for exclusive interviews, movie clips and much more!



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'Inception' Hallway Scene: How Filmmakers Pulled It Off

On the red carpet for "Inception" last week, star Joseph Gordon-Levitt talked at length about one of the film's most eye-popping visuals: a zero-gravity fight scene in a dream-created hallway that spins in all directions. It's an astounding bit of moviemaking magic that has you wondering just how director Christopher Nolan and his team were able to do that.

We put that question to Nolan's right-hand man and longtime director of photography Wally Pfister, who revealed the inside scoop about the hallway scene, describing it as the movie's most technically challenging sequence.

"There are always scenes in a Chris Nolan script where I'm wondering how we're going to pull it off, going all the way back to Guy Pearce shooting Joe Pantoliano in the head in 'Memento,' " Pfister told MTV News. "When I was reading those rotating hallway scenes, I was blown away and also scratching my head," Pfister recalled.

To create the environment, the scene was shot using not CG effects, but rather massive, rotating sets that twisted and turned and forced Gordon-Levitt to maneuver with utmost caution. Five-hundred crewmembers were involved in the scene, which took a full three weeks to complete. In a World War I-era airship hangar just outside London (also home to sets for "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight"), Nolan's crew built a series of different hallway settings: a horizontal one that rotated 360 degrees, a vertical one that allowed actors to wear wires and another on which the actors were strapped to steel trolleys, which were eventually erased using visual effects.

Gordon-Levitt trained for two weeks with the stunt department to learn how to negotiate the rotations. When it came time to shoot, the whole crew would rehearse first with no rotation, and then graduate to a slower rehearsal with a little rotation, until it was finally time to roll the cameras.

"We run the fight scene for as long as the actors can pull it off," Pfister explained. "We begin with a camera that's not fixed to the set and shows a bit of the rotation, and then you quickly jump to where you're rotating with the set. It creates this bizarre, strange movement. It's an exhausting process for the actors. Having rotated on that set myself, it's really quite challenging and a very strange thing to get used to. If you jump at the wrong time, you could be falling 12 feet through the air.

"We kept coming back to it," he added. "We'd shoot out a part of a sequence and then the riggers would have to adjust something. We'd duck out and shoot something else and come back a few hours later and shoot more. The whole thing was spread out over about three weeks. You've never seen anything like this before."

Which scene in "Inception" ranks as the most memorable to you? Tell us in the comments!

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



‘Inception’ Director Christopher Nolan Reveals His ‘Star Wars’ InspirationSlash dissapointed with current rock scene

'Inception': The Reviews Are In!

It happened last winter with "Avatar" and it's happening again with "Inception": a hugely hyped, big-budget thrill-ride hits theaters, pretty much everyone loves it, yet there remain a few critics on the sideline defiantly shouting, "But it's really not that good, people!"

To those "Inception" haters, we might ask: Um, what exactly do you expect from a summer blockbuster? Because "Inception" is about as perfect as a summer blockbuster can be. Which is not to say it's a perfect movie . No doubt, Christopher Nolan's cinematic dreamscape has its fair share of flaws. But if you expect a ripping story line, whiz-bang special effects and the sense of being transported to another world, you will not be disappointed. In fact, you will be elated.

Leonardo DiCaprio plays Dom Cobb, the brains behind a crew of thieves — including Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page and Tom Hardy — with a peculiar specialty: They possess a machine that allows them to enter another person's dreams and steal a secret. Their quest in "Inception" is to implant a memory, which requires them to create dreams worlds within dream worlds — and not get lost forever on the bewildering shores of their own subconscious.

Will you be a fanatic or hater of "Inception"? There's only one way to find out: Get thyself to the multiplex. And before you do, check out what the critics have to say.

The Hype
"The accomplishments of 'Inception' are mainly technical, which is faint praise only if you insist on expecting something more from commercial entertainment. That audiences do — and should — expect more is partly, I suspect, what has inspired some of the feverish early notices hailing 'Inception' as a masterpiece, just as the desire for a certifiably great superhero movie led to the wild overrating of 'The Dark Knight.' In both cases Mr. Nolan's virtuosity as a conjurer of brilliant scenes and stunning set pieces, along with his ability to invest grandeur and novelty into conventional themes, have fostered the illusion that he is some kind of visionary." — A.O. Scott, The New York Times

The Dissenters
"If you approach 'Inception' with lowered expectations it's a pretty good time ... For all the complexity, craftsmanship and color of 'Inception,' it's yet another of [Nolan's] ultra-serious schematic constructions with no soul, no sex and almost no joy, all about some tormented dude struggling with his ill-managed Freudian demons. That same guy sitting next to me cracked that Nolan needs to stop seeing a therapist; there's not nearly enough sublimation in his movies." — Andrew O'Hehir, Salon.com

The Complexities
"Nolan, who also wrote the screenplay, lays out the rules of his world deftly. A ton of exposition is needed, yet it never feels like exposition. Things are explained plausibly, and in just enough detail for us to get it — the last thing Nolan wants to do is over-explain himself. The information is parceled out carefully, not all at once, but not in a way that's maddening or cryptic, either. Again, I marvel at how many films with concepts far simpler than this one never make sense at all, or else only make sense because they repeat themselves clumsily." — Eric Snider, Cinematical.com

The Performances
" 'Inception' benefits immensely from a series of low-key and thoroughly credible performances. DiCaprio, in a kind of riff on his 'Shutter Island' performance, embodies both the steel and the putty of Cobb, a man who can do remarkable things and is at the same time deeply vulnerable. Gordon-Levitt, stylish and lean as a dagger, makes a fine and steady cohort, Page is utterly at home in the intellectual depths of her character, and Hardy has a seedy nobility that suggests a John le Carré antihero. In [Cillian] Murphy we have a man who isn't a villain but a decent fellow with reasonable defensiveness, and in [Marion] Cotillard, as you might expect, we have a woman worth losing one's mind for — literally, as it happens." — Shawn Levy, The Oregonian

The Director
"Nolan exemplifies the best kind of filmmaking, unchained from the laws of time, space and even gravity, but never from the most basic rules of narrative. Even at its most tangled and paradoxical, 'Inception' keeps circling back to the motivation that has driven films from 'The Wizard of Oz' to 'E.T.': Cobb, finally, just wants to go home." — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post

The Stunts
"Many of the movie's effects and digital manipulations are spectacularly imaginative, especially a sequence of weightless action in a rotating hotel corridor, the unexpected arrival of a huge train in a scene without tracks, and the startling sight of a long boulevard peeling up off the ground and rising to double over on itself." — Kurt Loder, MTV News

The Final Word
"When was the last time you had your mind blown by a movie? Because when 'Inception' ends and the lights come up, you'll be sitting in your seat, staring at the screen, wondering what the hell just happened. Of course, it won't be the first time director Christopher Nolan has shaken us out of the apathy that modern moviegoing induces. 'Inception' blends the blockbuster enormity of his 'Dark Knight' with the indie insights of 'Memento' to create an all-encompassing experience that makes most other summer films seem mediocre." — Elizabeth Weitzman, New York Daily News

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



‘Inception’ Director Christopher Nolan Reveals His ‘Star Wars’ InspirationBlack Eyed Peas welcome Tom Cruise on stage

'Scream 4' Has A 'Perfect Setup,' Hayden Panettiere Says

With filming of the fourth chapter in the "Scream" franchise under way in Michigan, fans are hard-pressed to find out new details about the fourth film's notoriously mysterious plotline. However, when MTV News recently caught up with Hayden Panettiere, she said she's confident the filmmakers are doing the previous movies justice and that the process so far has been a blast.

"I think it's just perfect timing, the amount of time that has passed since the last one came out," the former "Heroes" star told MTV News. "It's a perfect setup, with all of these films ... the [fictional] 'Stab' [movies] and all the things like that. I think with all of the 'Scream' [films], the idea is to throw the audience for a loop every time."

Panettiere acknowledged that for savvy audiences, the surprise factor is an even bigger challenge this time around.

"For an audience that is so well-versed in 'Scream' [films] and in what happens and who becomes the killer, blah, blah, blah, it's trickier to throw them a curveball," she said. "I think they've done a really cool job with the script. We've had a blast on it."

Panettiere also heaped praise on her castmates and director Wes Craven. "Wes Craven is, he not only is the nicest human being, but he's a brilliant director. And it's all the original cast as well: Neve Campbell and Courteney Cox and David Arquette. We've got an incredible new cast that's come in, and we have a pretty good team."The spunky actress said she couldn't reveal too much about her character Kirby, only that she's "edgy, sassy and smart. She's a very strong character."

Other key players in the star-studded cast include Emma Roberts, Rory Culkin, Adam Brody, Anthony Anderson and Marley Shelton. "Scream 4" is scheduled to open April 15, 2011.

Check out everything we've got on "Scream 4."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

'The Walking Dead' Zombies Take Over Atlanta, Then Your TV

ATLANTA — There is carnage on the streets of the ATL. At least there was, when MTV News went down South, to visit the set of "The Walking Dead." There we found a horde of living dead prepared to bring Frank Darabont's live-action adaptation of the hit comic books to life when the series premieres on AMC in October.

We also found Darabont, "Walking Dead" comic creator Robert Kirkman, and many of the creative minds behind the show.

"We have blocks of Atlanta shut down here, and there's a tank behind me, if you can't see it," said Kirkman, who also serves as the series' executive producer and a screenwriter for two of the first six green-lit episodes.

"Just the scale of everything," he marveled. "Everything is being done exactly the way I would've wanted it. And it's better than I could have ever envisioned it. The whole thing is just amazing."

"The Walking Dead" follows a small group of human survivors in a world overrun by flesh-hungry zombies. Unlike zombie stories of the past, however, the comic book series and its small-screen adaptation focus on the effects a zombie apocalypse would have on the people who survive it. Instead of the zombie outbreak, it's the zombie aftermath.

And what an aftermath it is, as the project's team brought the devastation of a zombie plague to the streets of downtown Atlanta — complete with overturned vehicles, scattered debris and yes, even a tank.

"We're going to follow the Robert Kirkman narrative pretty closely, but we're giving ourselves permission to veer off path and find the interesting detours," Darabont told MTV News. "We've got hundreds of zombies. We've got a downed helicopter; it just goes on and on. It's crazy — all on a TV budget."

"The cool thing about it is, Frank Darabont, everything that he's doing is him looking at the book and going, 'I think there's something here that would make it better,' " said Kirkman. "And I'll be damned if he's not right every time."

During our visit to the set, Darabont gave direction to series lead Andrew Lincoln, who plays police officer Rick Grimes, as hundreds of extras in full zombie makeup waited in the wings, ready to crawl, shamble and drag themselves into action. Given the 95-degree temperature on the day of our visit, the performance of the zombie horde was impressive.

"There's a certain look that we're going for," makeup effects supervisor Greg Nicotero told MTV News. "We want real gaunt, real thin features. ... Tall, so that then we can make it look like they're malnourished. So far, we've had some great performers, and they bring the makeup to life."

Darabont said he'd love to make the series a regular part of his career well beyond the first six episodes, much like Kirkman himself has done with the long-running comic book series.

"I'd like to do 20 years of zombie TV," he laughed. "Every day I'm at the monitors, and I'm going, 'This is really, really cool.' "

Much of the show's team will also be attending this year's Comic-Con International in San Diego and will host a "Walking Dead" panel on Friday at 11:30 a.m. in Room 6BCF.



Cheryl Cole is to appear in a comic bookNicolas Cage Says ‘Ghost Rider’ Sequel Will Offer A ‘Very Fresh Take’

After 'Inception,' What's Next For Christopher Nolan?

With the mammoth success of "Inception" behind him, Christopher Nolan will be turning away from the world of dreams and heading straight into comic book territory. He's got his hands on (at least) two of the most valuable franchises in Hollywood, and we're all waiting to see just what he chooses to do with them. Here's what the future looks like for Nolan.

"Batman 3"
In the wake of the billion-dollar success of "The Dark Knight," Nolan had earned a blinding green light to bring the Caped Crusader to the big screen for a third time. But last January, rather than commit to a "Batman" threequel, Nolan chose to go off and make "Inception."

For a while, there was a rumor that he would never return to Gotham City, but earlier this year, word began to spread that Nolan was pushing forward with a script he was spearheading, along with his brother Jonathan ("The Dark Knight") and David Goyer (ABC's "FlashForward"). Nolan also revealed the next "Batman" would bring this latest cinematic arc to a close.

"I'm very excited about the end of the film, the conclusion, and what we've done with the characters," he said. "My brother has come up with some pretty exciting stuff. Unlike the comics, these things don't go on forever in film and viewing it as a story with an end is useful. Viewing it as an ending — that sets you very much on the right track about the appropriate conclusion and the essence of what tale we're telling."

The final "Batman" installment is officially set to arrive in theaters on July 20, 2012. Yet, at this point no announcement has been made about when production will begin. While rumor has it that shooting could start as soon as next March, Nolan has publicly declined to commit to a date. Suffice to say that whenever it ramps up, "Batman 3" will be Nolan's next directorial gig.

"Superman" Reboot
Warner Bros. has been so pleased with Nolan's handling of the "Batman" series that the studio handed him a special mentoring role for a new "Superman," four years after Bryan Singer's "Superman Returns" failed to connect with audiences. Goyer is writing the script.

"While David Goyer and myself were putting together the story for another Batman film a few years ago — you know, thrashing out where we might move on from 'The Dark Knight' — we got stuck," he explained to Empire magazine. "We were just sitting there idly chatting and he said, 'By the way, I think I know how you approach Superman,' and he told me his take on it. I thought it was really tremendous. It was the first time I had been able to conceive of how you would address Superman in a modern context. I thought it was a very exciting idea."

Rumors — and the hopes of fanboys — have abounded that Nolan could eventually helm a new "Superman," but the names of other candidates continue to pop up in the blogosphere, including Chris Columbus, who directed the first two "Harry Potter" films.

"Justice League"
With Nolan now involved in both "Batman" and "Superman," there's hope on the Net that he might one day join both superheroes together in a potential "Justice League" movie. But when asked about that possibility, Nolan remained tight-lipped.

"I can't really talk about other things," Nolan told us with a smile.

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



Underworld return‘Inception’ Director Christopher Nolan Reveals His ‘Star Wars’ Inspiration

'The Sorcerer's Apprentice': Wizard War, By Kurt Loder

Kid flicks have ruled this summer, with movies like "Toy Story 3," "The Karate Kid" and "Despicable Me" racking up box-office grosses far beyond industry predictions. Now comes "The Sorcerer's Apprentice," which looks likely to repeat that money-minting feat. Like all great kid flicks, though, it's too good — too fast and too funny — to be confined within the "family film" ghetto.

It's a Disney picture, of course, derived from a segment of the studio's 1940 animated classic, "Fantasia," in which apprentice sorcerer Mickey Mouse did battle with a platoon of out-of-control buckets and mops. For this live-action version of the tale, that eight-minute episode has been much-enlarged (although thanks to some of the year's tightest editing, the movie still runs well under two hours). Now the story begins in 740 A.D., with the legendary sorcerer Merlin bequeathing his magical secrets to three acolytes, Balthazar (Nicolas Cage, back in top comic form), Horvath (Alfred Molina) and Veronica (Monica Belluci). But Horvath is secretly in league with the evil Morgana Le Fay (Alice Krige), who wants to use Merlin's secrets to (what else?) "enslave mankind." Morgana knows that Balthazar loves Veronica, so she takes possession of Veronica's body. Balthazar is torn, but Veronica implores him to imprison her (and her inner Morgana) within a Grimhold — a nesting-doll contraption designed as a repository for all sorts of nasty Morganians.

The director, Disney vet Jon Turteltaub, sketches in this prologue with gratifying brevity. The story then leaps ahead some 1,200 years. The immortal Balthazar is now the proprietor of a curio shop in downtown Manhattan. When a boy named Dave (Jake Cherry) blunders into his store one day, Balthazar — who still has the Grimhold, and has been searching for a kid to turn into a supremely great sorcerer, the "Prime Merlinean" — realizes that Dave is the one. But then Horvath materializes in the cluttered store, a fantastical wizard fight ensues, and the Grimhold is lost (well, misplaced). Jumping ahead another 10 years, we find that the grown-up Dave (Jay Baruchel) is now an NYU physics student well on his way to becoming a career nerd. Balthazar reappears to instruct him in the magical arts he'll need to help recover the Grimhold. But Horvath is back on the scene, too, and soon recruits his own apprentice, a celebrity illusionist named Drake (Toby Kebbell, delightfully daft), whose rock-star affectations — snakeskin pants, bleached rooster hairdo — are decidedly post-Merlinean. ("Are you in Depeche Mode?" someone asks.) Now the furious hunt for the Grimhold gets underway in earnest.

The movie's action, which rarely lets up, is a stunning blend of practical stunt-work and highly-imaginative CGI. (And the digital effects are so precisely applied that very little of what we see here looks like a cartoon.) You're still marveling at a huge metal eagle that has sprung to life on the side of the Chrysler Building (Balthazar climbs aboard and flies away on it), when a frantic car chase (this is a Jerry Bruckheimer movie) gets underway, tearing through traffic-clogged Times Square, with Balthazar's Rolls-Royce transforming into an SUV and Horvath's Mercedes morphing into a Ferrari, a taxi and a scary garbage truck. (In one of the movie's cleverest inventions, the two antagonists careen into a mirror-world universe in which all the famous Times Square signage is reverse-lettered). Then there's a spectacular sequence set amid the confetti-blizzard of a clamorous Chinatown street parade, in which Balthazar and Dave are menaced by an exotic Morganian called Sun Lok (Gregory Woo) and a papier-mâché dragon that suddenly springs to rampaging life.

I'm leaving aside the raging wolf-pack attack, the angry iron bull and all the furious sword-and-sorcery (and fiery plasma-ball) combat. "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" is really a high-caliber action movie, and it's not just for kids. Although there is a message, of sorts, for all the little nippers who'll be pulling their parents along to see it. After listening skeptically to one of Dave's evasive excuses for screwing up his magical training, Balthazar says, "You're a bad liar, Dave. I like that."

Check out everything we've got on "The Sorcerer's Apprentice."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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'Inception': Dream Warriors, By Kurt Loder

Are they handing out joints at the box office for "Inception"? That would make the movie considerably more fun. Christopher Nolan's latest is a terrific-looking picture that bounds around the globe from Paris to Tangiers to Tokyo (among places that actually exist) in the wake of a freelance dream thief named Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio). Cobb's specialty is infiltrating the dreams of corporate big shots and extracting their most valuable secrets. His latest assignment, however, is a little different — a Japanese industrialist named Saito (Ken Watanabe) has hired him to implant an idea in someone's head that will allow Saito to take over a rival titan's business empire. Cobb's reward for achieving this goal: an end to his exile from the United States, where he's currently a wanted man, and a yearned-for reunion with his two children.

Right here you may wonder why anyone in search of secret information would break into someone's dreams, which are so often distortions of waking life, rather than their memories, which could be more straightforward recollections. But Cobb is not a memory man, so ... whatever.

Gearing up for his mission, Cobb assembles an A-team of dream-work specialists. There's an "architect" named Ariadne (Ellen Page), whose job is to structure dreams; a "forger" named Eames (Tom Hardy), who can pass for any other person in a dream world; and a "chemist" named Yusuf (Dileep Rao), whose drug concoctions allow penetration not only into dreams, or into dreams within dreams, but into dreams within dreams within dreams. There's also a fixer named Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), whose purpose is to handle details and look sharp in skinny suits.

As we see, the movie all but nudges us to notice that some of these characters' names refer to celebrated figures outside the story. But this is cute to no purpose. Ariadne shares no qualities with her mythological namesake, and Eames displays none of the talents of a famed architectural designer. (Anyway, wouldn't that be Ariadne's turf?) Similarly, there's nothing poetic about a lawyer called Browning (Tom Berenger), and an industrial heir named Robert Fischer (Cillian Murphy) offers no indication of a chess-master's cunning. Then there's Cobb's estranged wife, Mal (Marion Cotillard), who haunts his dreams and does her best to screw up his every plan: as her name unnecessarily denotes, she be bad. And what about Dom Cobb himself? Is his unlikely moniker meant to suggest Dummkopf , the German word for a dope? That would seem entirely counterintuitive. But, as I say, whatever.

Many of the movie's effects and digital manipulations are spectacularly imaginative, especially a sequence of weightless action in a rotating hotel corridor, the unexpected arrival of a huge train in a scene without tracks, and the startling sight of a long boulevard peeling up off the ground and rising to double over on itself. These eye-popping amazements are much-appreciated in a story that goes on and on for two and a half hours, with Cobb and his team flashing back and forth disconnectedly from one dream level to another, occasionally touching down in reality (whatever that is). Each of the dream-invaders carries a "totem," an everyday, real-world tchotchke that tips them off as to whether or not they are in fact in a dream, either their own or someone else's. As the dream levels and their far-flung locales piled up and intermingled — a collapsing Japanese mansion, a bullet-pocked snowscape, an exploding Parisian street — I wished I had a totem myself to keep track of what was going on.

Unlike Nolan's exceedingly clever 2000 film, "Memento," which was a devilishly complex mystery, "Inception" is basically a complicated heist flick -- there is no mystery to ponder and penetrate. Cobb's goal is clear from the beginning; we spend the rest of the movie attempting to parse its many confusions as he attains it. Nolan says he spent 10 years obsessing over this story (the script is only the second one he has written on his own), which may explain its central problem. Despite its technical brilliance, and its fine cast (Hardy is clearly a star, and DiCaprio brings an emotional depth to the tale that is nowhere else in evidence), the picture is a puzzle palace with far too many rooms. The director himself may have gotten lost in it.

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



‘Inception’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To KnowThe-Dream talks of being a dad

Saturday, July 17, 2010

'Inception' Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

"Inception" is defined as a beginning — the act of commencement — but in Hollywood these days, "Inception" might just be shorthand for what happens when you make two immensely profitable movies and a studio backs up a truckload of cash onto your front lawn and says, "Thanks, man! Now go make the movie you've always dreamed of making."

Because that's essentially what went down between Warner Bros. and director Christopher Nolan, who helmed "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight," which grossed a combined $1.4 billion worldwide and resurrected one of the comic world's most beloved film franchises.

Nolan took his pile of cash — a rumored production budget of $200 million — and put together a film about a band of dream thieves, led by Leonardo DiCaprio, that can infiltrate another person's sleep-time reveries and swipe coveted secrets. Their task in "Inception" is to implant an idea rather than steal one — a task so monumental they're forced to construct dreams within dreams within dreams.

What follows is nearly three hours of hallucinatory imagery, killer performances and story lines that unfold like origami to reveal hidden layers you never even thought existed. MTV News, however, has been tracking every hidden layer of this production since word of the movie first dropped. Before you hit the theater this weekend, check out our "Inception" cheat sheet for everything you need to know about what is thus far 2010's coolest flick.

Gotham Will Have to Wait
In February 2009, a few weeks before Heath Ledger won a posthumous Oscar for his turn as the Joker in "The Dark Knight," word leaked that Nolan would not immediately return to the world of the Caped Crusader for "Batman 3." Rather, he'd be embarking on "Inception," which was described at the time as a "contemporary sci-fi actioner set within the architecture of the mind."

Aside from that rather vague description, precious few plot details about the new movie would arise for months. Instead, we stood back as the cast came together. DiCaprio signed up in March, and in April, "Dark Knight" vet Michael Caine told us he'd be joining up as well. Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Ellen Page, Cillian Murphy, Ken Watanabe and Tom Hardy eventually rounded out the cast. "I can't wait to talk to you about it, but I've been very specifically asked not to talk about it," Gordon-Levitt told us that June. "I want to respect [Nolan's wishes], because I love his movies, and I'm so honored and grateful to be working with him."

"Inception" Commencement
By the middle of summer, key details about plot points had begun to spring up on the Web, but we still didn't really know what the heck this movie was about. And after the teaser trailer popped up online, well, we didn't know a whole lot more — except that it looked freaking amazing.

The cast continued to reveal almost nothing about the film during interviews. "It's conceptual. It doesn't fit into any genre," Murphy told us. "There are elements of different types of things in it, but it is all from Chris' imagination. I've never read anything close to it before."

Nolan's "Inception" was shrouded in secrecy, but as 2010 rolled around, he had to begin telling the world just a little bit more about the movie. "I think it's really a balance between creating intrigue about the movie, getting people excited to see something original, something different that they don't know what they're going to get," the director explained to us in March. "We have to start giving people a little bit of information, a little bit about what 'Inception' is."

Then in April, he let loose in a spoiler-filled interview with the Los Angeles Times, shortly before a full trailer appeared on the Web.

Welcome to Our Shared Dream
As the film's July 16 release date approached, Nolan, DiCaprio and the rest of the "Inception" crew began to make the press rounds. Murphy and Watanabe took us inside one of the film's craziest scenes, Nolan explained how the movie builds on his "Dark Knight" experiences and DiCaprio highlighted the epically layered story line.

"It's a very rare occurrence where you can do a movie that exists on four different planes simultaneously," DiCaprio said of the film's various dreamscapes. "That was the immediate intrigue: delving into the world of the subconscious with Chris Nolan."

For his part, Nolan had one specific goal in mind when he decided to take a detour from Gotham City and head straight into "Inception." "I think, for me, my whole career in making films, really every time I set out to make a film, I want to try and give somebody in the audience the experience I had watching ['Star Wars'], where it really felt like anything was possible in that world," he said. "That's a really extraordinary experience to have as a moviegoer. I think that's the highest aspiration of the Hollywood blockbuster."

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



Black Eyed Peas welcome Tom Cruise on stage‘Inception’ Director Christopher Nolan Reveals His ‘Star Wars’ Inspiration

'Mission: Impossible IV' Still Moving Forward With Tom Cruise

Paramount and Tom Cruise chose to accept another "Mission: Impossible" in February, and despite a slew of questions surrounding the project, both the studio and its leading man remain committed to one another.

"We absolutely are excited about having Tom Cruise star in this movie," Paramount vice chairman Rob Moore told The Hollywood Reporter.

Yet the fact that Paramount even had to go on record in support of Cruise highlights the issues surrounding "Mission: Impossible IV" four years after the last installment in the franchise. (Paramount and MTV are both owned by Viacom.)

Last month, Cruise's action comedy, "Knight and Day," opened to an underwhelming $20.1 million box office haul, and Paramount is reportedly keeping a watchful eye on the overseas numbers to see if the actor can sustain his appeal to foreign audiences.

"It all depends on whether Tom Cruise brings in foreign bucks," an executive not involved with the film told THR.

For the moment, preproduction on "M:I 4" continues. Brad Bird ("The Incredibles") is reportedly onboard to direct, with J.J. Abrams producing, and Paramount is said to be expecting a final script within weeks. Shooting would reportedly begin by the end of the year with a theatrical release planned during 2011's holiday season. The studio is targeting a budget of around $140 million, significantly less than the $165 million budget of "M:I 3," and Cruise is not expected to receive a $20 million payday, as he had not long ago.

"Everybody will do their best to make it work," said a Cruise rep about the star's "M:I 4" payday.

And then there's the ongoing talk about just what Cruise's role in the movie will be. There is a long-standing rumor that his Ethan Hunt character might not even be the face of the franchise for the new film, but that he'd hand off the reigns to a younger actor or even an ensemble.

" 'Mission: Impossible' is a brand," an unnamed former studio chief said. "It didn't have anything to do with Tom Cruise in the beginning."

Do you think Tom Cruise's Ethan Hunt should be the main character in "M:I 4"? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Check out everything we've got on "Mission: Impossible IV."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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Friday, July 16, 2010

'Inception' Director Christopher Nolan Reveals His 'Star Wars' Inspiration

The demented memory flipbook that is "Memento," the noir-ish freakery of Gotham City in "The Dark Knight," the intricately woven, epically scaled "Inception" — all this can be traced back to a formative experience director Christopher Nolan had at the cinema in 1977.

Seven years old at the time, Nolan took in a screening of "Star Wars." Nothing was ever the same.

"That completely changed movies for me," he told MTV News. "It changed everything, really."

Nolan had never seen a film that was so, well, intricately woven and epically scaled as George Lucas' space odyssey. "It created a world that lived on in your mind after you saw the film and seemed to have this limitless potential," he said.

And, as Nolan explains it over three decades later, he's made a career out of trying to instill a similar sense of wonderment for ticket buyers.

"I think, for me, my whole career in making films, really every time I set out to make a film, I want to try and give somebody in the audience the experience I had watching that film, where it really felt like anything was possible in that world," he said. "That's a really extraordinary experience to have as a moviegoer."

Nolan started out small, shooting "Following" on a shoestring budget with a bunch of friends. He graduated to "Memento," gaining some financial backing and the talents of professional actors. Eventually, Warner Bros. handed him the task of resurrecting the dormant "Batman" franchise. After delivering two blockbuster takes on the Caped Crusader, the studio basically gave Nolan a pile of cash and carte blanche to make a movie he'd been dreaming about for 10 years: "Inception."

As with all his earlier films, Nolan set out to deliver an experience that would create a world that lived on in the minds of moviegoers, that seemed to have limitless potential.

"I think that's the highest aspiration of the Hollywood blockbuster," he said.

Check out everything we've got on "Inception."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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John Edwards Film To Be Directed By Aaron Sorkin

The saga of disgraced North Carolina politician John Edwards is on its way to the big screen. According to The Hollywood Reporter, screenwriter and "The West Wing" creator Aaron Sorkin has acquired the rights to the tell-all "The Politician: An Insider's Account of John Edwards's Pursuit of the Presidency and the Scandal That Brought Him Down." The tome was penned by Edwards aide Andrew Young, who divulged damaging details about the pol's extramarital affair.

Edwards was vilified in the press for carrying on an affair with campaign videographer Rielle Hunter. The politician was apparently cheating with Hunter while his wife, Elizabeth, battled cancer. The former senator, who sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, also fathered a daughter with Hunter. Edwards initially denied he was the child's father until a paternity test revealed otherwise.

"This is a first-hand account of an extraordinary story filled with motivations, decisions and consequences that would have lit Shakespeare up," said Sorkin, who will make his directorial debut with the movie.

"There's much more to Andrew's book than what has been reported, and I'm grateful that he's trusting me with it."

Sorkin has worked extensively in film and television. In addition to helming the hit political show "The West Wing," he also created the shows "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" and "Sports Night." He has written screenplays for "Charlie Wilson's War," "A Few Good Men" and, most recently, "The Social Network," based on the rise of the social-media juggernaut Facebook.

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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Wednesday, July 14, 2010

'Despicable Me' Supervillains Triumph Over 'Eclipse'

The Box-Office Top Five

#1 "Despicable Me" ($60.1 million)
#2 "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" ($33.4 million)
#3 "Predators" ($25.3 million)
#4 "Toy Story 3" ($22 million)
#5 "The Last Airbender" ($17.2 million)

Audiences clearly didn't despise "Despicable Me" this weekend, as Universal's latest family-friendly animated flick won the top spot at the box office over rivals "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" and "Predators."

"Despicable Me" stars Steve Carell as Gru, a diabolical supervillain with an army of minions at his disposal. His current mission in life is to challenge his rival, Vector (Jason Segel), for supervillain supremacy, but Gru finds himself sidetracked by the arrival of three orphaned girls who suddenly look to him as a father figure. The tale of a bad guy gone good was widely embraced by audiences across the country, rocketing "Despicable Me" to an unexpected $60.1 million first-place finish. With a production budget of $69 million, "Despicable Me" is quite the lovely new property for Universal, with franchise potential going forward.

Although superheroes and villains led the pack at the box office this weekend, supernatural creatures weren't far behind. "Eclipse" took second place in its second weekend in theaters. With a domestic weekend worth $33.4 million, the third "Twilight" film has earned a massive $237 million in the U.S. since opening on June 30, with an even greater $456 million worldwide total.

Beyond "Despicable Me," the weekend's other major new release was "Predators," producer Robert Rodriguez and director Nimrod Antal's resurrection of the languishing science-fiction franchise. Starring Adrien Brody as one of several mercenaries abducted by aliens and turned into prey for the titular creatures, "Predators" managed a solid $25.3 million opening domestically and $18 million overseas, surpassing its $40 million production budget with a $43.3 million worldwide total.

"Toy Story 3" and "The Last Airbender" finished in fourth and fifth place with $22 million and $17.2 million, respectively. The weekend's highest per screen averaged belonged to newcomer "The Kids Are All Right," scoring a walloping $72,143 per screen at just seven locations.

Upcoming Releases

Nicolas Cage brings some magic to the box office as "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" hits this week, while director Christopher Nolan and star Leonardo DiCaprio remind you that the dream is real in "Inception."

Check out everything we've got on "Despicable Me" and "Eclipse."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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Zac Efron Lines Up Workplace Comedy With '17 Again' Producers

Zac Efron has graduated from "High School Musical" fame to a burgeoning career as a successful Hollywood producer.

The 22-year-old star is lining up a number of projects under his Ninjas Runnin' Wild Prods. slate at Warner Bros., the latest of which is an untitled workplace comedy that would have Efron re-teaming with Adam Shankman and Jennifer Gibgot, who were behind his 2009 hit comedy, "17 Again," and his big-screen breakout, "Hairspray," according to The Hollywood Reporter.

No plot details about the project have been released. THR reports that acquiring the comedy is one step in Efron's strategy to aggressively seek "vehicles and opportunities" for himself and his company. Other projects in development at Ninjas Runnin' include "Art of the Steal," based on a Wired magazine article about a master thief; "Einstein Theory," a time-travel tale set up for Efron to star in; "Fire," adapted from the Brian Michael Bendis graphic novel about a college student pulled into a CIA training program; and "Snabba Cash," a remake of a 2010 Swedish noir thriller.

In a separate development, Variety reported that Efron has joined the voice cast of "Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode III," which will debut on Adult Swim on December 12. Efron will play Anakin Skywalker, alongside an ensemble cast that includes many original "Star Wars" actors, including Anthony Daniels, Billy Dee Williams and Ahmed Best.

"Robot Chicken" has released two previous "Star Wars" mash-ups, the last of which arrived in the summer of 2009. "We're telling more of a linear story this time that covers the series from start to finish," exec producer Seth Green said.

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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'Breaking Dawn' In 3-D Will Be 'A Creative Decision,' Studio Says

Summit Entertainment understands the importance of 3-D. Still, there continues to be rampant speculation about whether "Breaking Dawn," will open as a 3-D release when the first of a two-part finale arrives in theaters next year. But now, another movie on the studio's lineup may provide some clues about where Summit will take the "Twilight Saga."

"They're completely fascinated and intrigued by the technology," said director Patrick Lussier, who recently wrapped production on Summit's 3-D action flick "Drive Angry." "I think Summit has been discovering, as they've been seeing the 3-D material and the ease we've been able to work with it, is that it's an incredibly viable format to work in."

So will Summit's "Drive Angry" experience — the movie was shot using 3-D cameras rather than converted in post-production — combined with the fate of "Eclipse" at the box office , convince them to deliver their biggest 2011 release in three dimensions?

"That decision has yet to be made," Summit distribution head Richard Fay told MTV News. "It's still the source of a discussion."

While those talks inevitably touch on technological hurdles and monetary interest — owing to the premium-ticket prices that 3-D flicks command — Fay emphasized that the studio is more focused on creative concerns.

"There's certainly a financial part of the discussion," he said. "And yes, there's a certain amount of technology that has to be considered and accounted for. But it really comes down to the creative folks."

"In any of these roundtables conversations, [Summit CEO] Rob Friedman has always been concerned about the 'Twilight' patron," Fay added. "His concern is always the people that come in to see this movie. He doesn't want to turn them off or offend. That's why it's a creative decision. A big factor is the perception of our audience. What are their feelings going to be? If it lends itself to being a better movie because of 3-D, then that's the technology we'll use."

What are your thoughts on "Breaking Dawn" in 3-D? Tell us your thoughts in the comments!



‘Breaking Dawn’ Won’t Be Rated R, Summit PromisesThe Twilight Saga : Eclipse soundtrack revealed

'Breaking Dawn' Won't Be Rated R, Summit Promises

In the "Twilight" universe, there are levelheaded questions — will "Breaking Dawn" be in 3-D? — and then are the improbable, yet intriguing, ones. Among the more puzzling queries is whether, based on the many scream-inducing elements of its source material, "Breaking Dawn," will draw an R rating instead of the usual, Twi-approved PG-13.

It's hard to imagine Summit Entertainment making a "Twilight" movie that would require its tween-heavy audience to convince adults to buy them movie tickets, but the idea nonetheless remains a topic of discussion in the blogosphere. So we decided to put the question to Summit. While the studio acknowledges that discussions about an R rating are definitely taking place ("By all means," said distribution chief Richie Fay), the studio remains committed to its tried-and-true PG-13.

"I don't see it ever becoming an R-rated movie," Fay told MTV News. "The middle road we have to travel is a mutual respect as to staying true to the book but not turning off your audience.

"It's always with the eye of making Stephenie Meyer happy and making the audience happy," he added. "I can't say for a fact, but I just don't see us getting into an R-rated area with any of the 'Twilight' titles."

That sentiment jibes with what "Breaking Dawn" scribe Melissa Rosenberg has been saying for a while.

"In this series, you don't sacrifice anything," she said in April. "There are some movies that wouldn't play at PG-13, like 'The Hangover,' but this is just not one of them for me. Again, if you're capturing character, emotion and emotional journey, you're OK."

Do you think an R-rated "Breaking Dawn" would make for better movies? Let us know what you think in the comments.

Check out everything we've got on "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" and "Breaking Dawn."

For young Hollywood news, fashion and "Twilight" updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com.



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Monday, July 12, 2010

'Inception' Star Leonardo DiCaprio On The 'Fireworks' Of His Dreams

Last February on the red carpet of Leonardo DiCaprio's "Shutter Island," a film that keeps you in is-it-real-or-a-nightmare bewilderment for two hours, the Hollywood star confessed to MTV News that he himself never remembers his dreams.

"That's the weird thing about me," he said. "People talk about psychoanalysis, discovering who they are through the dream state. I have no recollection in the morning."



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'Breaking Dawn' To Film In Louisiana And Vancouver

When Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart dive back into the "Twilight" universe, they'll be doing so in both America's Deep South and Canada's Pacific Northwest.

"Breaking Dawn" will be filmed in both Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Vancouver, Canada, Summit Entertainment announced on Friday (July 9). Split into two separate films but being shot simultaneously, the production will ramp up in the fall and continue over the next year. No exact start date for filming was given.



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'Predators': The Reviews Are In!

The filmmakers behind the new movie "Predators" decided to pretend the last three movies in the sci-fi horror franchise never happened and instead set their story as if it takes place directly after the 1987 original. That was probably a wise call on their part, seeing as each successive "Predator" installment was less beloved, culminating with the disgraceful mash-up "Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem."

How beloved will "Predators" ultimately be? With the film opening on Friday (July 9), reviews have been pouring in, and they're largely positive — if not on par with the original, then respectably, satisfyingly close. Let's take a deep dive into the "Predators" reviews to see what people are saying.

The Story
" 'Predators' is a B movie that knows its job, and does it. Which means, among other things, that making sense is not on its to-do list. The picture opens with a group of people falling from the sky into a jungle. What are they doing here? None of them knows. ... [T]hey're all prey on this strange planet, which turns out to be an off-world hunting ground for Predators, whose day-trip spacecraft is invisibly parked nearby. As you'd expect, the picture consists — with the exception of a visit to a batty survivor played by Laurence Fishburne — of each of the human interlopers being put away like finger food by the wily monsters." — Kurt Loder, MTVNews.com

The Actors
"Think of it as 'Avatar' with more gore, a lot less wit, and Adrien Brody (and his Situation-like abs) as the alpha-male leader of a doomed pack of tough guys, gruffly barking orders as he tries to get inside the mind of you know who. Topher Grace does his signature smart-ass quipster thing, Alice Braga is the tough chick with a big heart, and Laurence Fishburne drops by to lend the film its only bit of unpredictable fun as a loco, Kurtz-like soldier of fortune who's gone native. These aren't characters, they're cardboard clichés lining up for the body count." — Chris Nashawaty, EW.com

The Director
"The director of 'Predators' is Nimrod Antal, whose B-movies — 'Kontroll,' 'Vacancy,' 'Armored' — refuse to settle for the free 200 points awarded for filling in one's name. He's a skilled moviemaker who understands the cumulative power of withholding. A good thriller is a striptease, and Antal respects the art of peeling away layers. He uses his camera (Gyula Pados is the cinematographer) to draw you in, instead of leaning on editing blitzes to spell everything out, the way 90 percent of this ilk of horror-action-comedy does." — Wesley Morris, The Boston Globe

The Visuals
"In keeping with the 'no-frills, old-school' vibe, 'Predators' delivers practical effects all over the place. Aside from some necessary splashes of CGI here and there, the effects come from the Greg Nicotero/ Howard Berger team — and they're pretty much awesome across the board. Of course we get some gross new Predators to feast our eyes upon, but the 'classic' character is also on board — and all four of the Predators (in addition to their dog-like mega-beasts and a few other nasty newcomers) look like living, breathing creatures. CGI will never trump 'a guy in a suit,' provided the suits (and the guys) are as cool as the ones found in 'Predators.' " — Scott Weinberg, FearNet.com

The Final Word
"While 'Predators' isn't nearly as vivid or fresh as the original, it's certainly its strongest sequel. It's also a weird semi-nostalgia trip back to the days when Joel Silver ruled action cinema, when directors had the patience to lock their cameras down and calmly set up situations before blowing things up in comprehensible action beats." — Mike Russell, The Oregonian

Check out everything we've got on "Predators."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.



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