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Interview with Mance Rayder

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Ciaran Hinds was amazed to be offered the iconic role of Big Daddy in the latest Broadway production of Tennessee Williams’s masterpiece, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, starring Scarlett Johansson. Cahir O'Doherty talks to the Belfast-born actor about acting alongside Johansson, and co-star Benjamin Walker’s startling resemblance to his oldest friend Liam Neeson.

Like a lot of successful actors Ciaran Hinds, currently electrifying Broadway audiences in the iconic role of multimillion Southern plantation owner Big Daddy in Tennessee Williams’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, can live a pretty weird life.

Finding himself in London, New York or even Reykjavik at a moment’s notice, the challenge Hinds, 59, faces with each new role never changes -- sink or swim. 

Belfast-born and raised Hinds confesses to the Irish Voice that he had to skip out of rehearsals for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof for an entire week last year to film his new starring role in the forthcoming third season of worldwide Belfast-made HBO hit Game of Thrones.

Playing Mance Rayder, the legendary King Beyond the Wall, was a role Hinds knew little about, but his agent insisted he take a look at it

“I was aware of the popularity of the show but I’ve got to catch up on the whole series,” he says

“My English agent told me that it was based in Belfast and that they then go off for a couple of weeks to do location work. He knew a lot of people in it. He knew it was really good.&rdquo

Fans of the international hit know that Rayder is a pivotal role in the sword and sorcery epic, but Hinds initially thought it would be a small commitment

“They said it would literally be three or four days work in Belfast. I thought, ‘That’s great I can spend time with my sisters and return to work.’ He told me I wouldn’t have to do a follow up until November.”

But the follow up turned out to be in the middle of a blizzard in northeast Iceland. As commitments go, it was starting to mushroom

“They only give you the script you’re in. They don’t give you the full storyline. So I did it but I had no idea how it went,” he says.

“Then I put it out of my mind. I saw my mum for the rest of the week.&rdquo

Meanwhile, Hinds had been surprised to be offered the iconic role of Big Daddy Pollitt, the rough around the edges Southern millionaire in Tennessee Williams’s greatest play. He couldn’t think why they had thought of him.

“’That’s mad,’ I said, when my agent mentioned the offer. He agreed with me but said it would be interesting,” Hinds recalls.

“The dates conflicted with Game of Thrones though. So I flew into New York, started work for eight days, then flew over to north east Iceland for six days in a blizzard.

“I had just been working in a Mississippi accent, then I had to go over there and work in a Yorkshire one. Mississippi kept sneaking in,” he laughs

“It was kind of scary but kind of exciting to be in a mad blizzard in Iceland. To go from the Mississippi Delta to north Iceland in the same week was magic. This is my life, weird as it may sound.”

Rayder’s part defines the Game of Thrones series, which Hinds only realized as he began to play the role

“If I’d known that I would have practiced a bit more,” he laughs. “Maybe they’ll put me right. I’m waiting to catch up on what they have planned

“I saw the first series and I found some of the sexuality and violence a little gratuitous and it annoyed me but then it calmed down a bit, but the storytelling and the juggling of the storylines are fantastic. It draws you in and takes you elsewhere.”

Hinds mentions the work of fellow Belfast actor Conleth Hill in the series, which fans of the show will be delighted to hear

“I have seen his work in the third series and it is absolutely brilliant,” he says with admiration

As for his role in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Hinds praises the show director, Tony Award winner and eight-time nominee Rob Ashford

“It was more than just about making it sexy. He wanted to make it earthy and real. The play was based on real people. We want to get to their complexity rather than play them as icons,” says Hinds.

Burl Ives and Laurence Olivier have played, and some would argue defined, the role of Big Daddy. Hinds was determined to make the role work on his terms

“When I read the script I found his treatment of his wife shocking. We learn that he has sat around quietly for the past few years in fear of his own mortality,” offers Hinds.

“When he hears he doesn’t have cancer, when he hears he’s going to survive, wrongly as it turns out, it sort of clears away any doubts he’s had about his life

“He decides he wants to get through his birthday party and take the opportunity to talk to the only person that he really loves [his son Brick, played by Benjamin Walker].”

The trick with this play is to keep an eye on the real, he says

“If you’re venturing into territory that is slightly operatic it all has to be done so carefully,” he says

Another conspicuous aspect of this production is the strength of the women characters, who clearly surpass the men.

“The women in this play are driving the car, except they’re driving it from the passenger’s seat,” Hinds says

“They’re having to keep the car on the road and the man is supposed to lead, but they’re having to lean over and correct him.”

The theatrics on stage can be a little draining when they reach such a fever pitch night after night

“As soon as that second act is finished I feel a profound relief,” Hinds says. “You have to come right on, on the front foot, throughout the second act

“Sometimes I have to ask myself, ‘Can my aging old bones stand up to this?’ I mean, just the amount of verbiage and the amount of commitment!”

Onstage, Hinds’s scenes with Walker, 30, the actor who plays his son (and who is engaged to Meryl Streep’s daughter, actress Mamie Gummer) are electrifying, providing the emotional center of the play. Irish audiences will be particularly surprised to see how strong Walker resembles Hinds’s closest friend Liam Neeson.

“You wouldn’t be the fourth, fifth or eighth person to say that!” Hinds laughs.

“My English agent came to see me in my dressing room yesterday and he said, ‘God, Ben Walker is very like Liam Neeson.’ I replied, ‘Yeah, well I wasn’t going to have f***ing Liam as my son, was I?’  But I noticed the resemblance myself and mentioned it to my daughter.”

Hinds and his family spend every Christmas with the Neesons. When Hinds’ daughter Aoife saw Walker she blurted, “He looks like young Liam.&rdquo

Hinds discreetly told her not to mention it to Neeson as it might make him feel old.

“Then, after all this, I asked Liam if he knew Ben Walker. Before I said anything more he said, ‘He played the young me in the film Kinsey.’ That sort of seals the deal on that way.”

Hinds knows a lot of the people will be coming to the theater see Scarlett Johansson

“She’s so good and so on the money in her role,” he says, supportively. “She’s plays a real breathing hurt southern lady.&rdquo

But clued in audiences will also come to see an iconic play by Williams and what Hinds makes of it

“We’ve been hearing back from people who came to see a play they thought they knew, but the evening was full of revelations they didn’t anticipate as they watched it,” he says.

“That’s what Rob was aiming for. He knew Williams’s work inside out. He let us follow our instincts.”

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London Critics' Circle Awards: 'Amour' a big winner, Joaquin Phoenix releases weird statement

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On a snowy night in the city, in a ceremony held at the Mayfair Hotel, the London Critics' Circle expressed their admiration for Michael Haneke's "Amour" by awarding it three prizes: Film of the Year, Actress of the Year for Emmanuelle Riva and Screenwriter of the Year for Haneke. The victories add a nice head of steam to "Amour"'s awards-season campaign, with Riva in particular getting a boost in the run-up to the BAFTAs and Oscars.

"The Master", which had been neck and neck with "Amour" with seven nominations, claimed wins for Joaquin Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman respectively as Actor of the Year and Supporting Actor of the Year. Neither was on hand to receive their prizes in person, although Phoenix did send an eccentric thank you that was read out by Kate Muir, the film critic for the London Times (it's transcribed in full below, along with the other main acceptance speeches).

Peter Strickland's "Berberian Sound Studio" won The Attenborough Award for British Film of the Year, while the film's star Toby Jones was presented with British Actor of the Year, triumphing over Daniel Day-Lewis for "Lincoln" and Daniel Craig for "Skyfall". British Actress of the Year went to Andrea Riseborough for "Shadow Dancer"; she was home with the flu, nominating last year's winner in the same category, Olivia Colman, to pick up her gong and read out her thank you message.

Ang Lee was honoured with Director of the Year for "Life Of Pi," triumphing over Haneke, Kathryn Bigelow and Paul Thomas Anderson. Lee's film also collected the Technical Achievement Award for visual effects. Supporting Actress of the Year went to Anne Hathaway for "Les Miserables." Producer Debra Hayward accepted the award on Hathaway's behalf, reading out a thank you text from the actress.

Tom Holland was named Young British Performer of the Year for his role in "The Impossible," while Breakthrough British Film-maker was awarded jointly to Alice Lowe and Steve Oram, the stars and co-writers of "Sightseers" (IFC are releasing the black comedy stateside in May). Foreign Language Film of the Year went to Jacques Audiard's "Rust And Bone" and Bart Layton's "The Imposter" received Documentary of the Year.

The London Critics' Circle honourary prize, the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Film, was given to Helena Bonham Carter, who joins previous recipients Dirk Bogarde, Judi Dench and Nicolas Roeg. Mike Newell, who directed the actress in last year's "Great Expectations," presented Bonham Carter with her award. "This feels better than a bad review, I can tell you that," said Bonham Carter, who also directed thanks to "the father of my bastards," Tim Burton, sitting in the audience. "I've spent a lot of my life with bad-review depression... Next time I get a bad review, I can stroke this and feel alright."

ACCEPTANCE SPEECH HIGHLIGHTS:

Anne Hathaway – Supporting Actress of the Year, "Les Miserables" (text message):

"It's lovely to receive this award and I wish I could be there in person. Please thank the London Critics' Circle for deeming my performance worthy of distinction… I send thanks to Eric Fellner and Tim Bevan at Working Title for being cool yet passionate yet reasonable yet ever so slightly prone to concern, which in turn inspires courage and a certain degree of awe from collaborators. And finally thank you also to Tom Hooper, our visionary director. Be well and thank you."

Joaquin Phoenix – Actor of the Year, "The Master" (written message):

"I struggle with the idea of winning awards for acting. Stating I'm Best Actor for something as subjective as film seems strange to me. To the uninitiated it implies I'm solely responsible for the creation and implementation of the character. I am not. I suppose that's why we thank our colleagues. There are those who you all know such as Paul Thomas Anderson, to whom I am eternally grateful – a man who has persistently searched for the truth. I am fortunate to have been under his guidance. Philip Seymour Hoffman for his patience and advice. Amy Adams for being angry. Megan Ellison and everyone at Annapurna for their support of the film and ensuring that I was able to cover my mortgage. But there are many others who you do not know by name such as Mike Kenna, who I believe was the grip but he did 20 different jobs so I can't be sure; Adam Somner, the first assistant director; Karen Ramirez in the office; Tommy – I don't know your last name… there are too many to list. The truth is, you cannot separate my work from their's. We were a unit bolstered by the same goal: to do our part in helping Paul to achieve his vision. I view this award as recognition of all of our work. I am very cognisant of the fact that for me this award is an encouragement to continue my lifelong passion of being an actor. I will not squander this high regard. P.S. There's an up-and-coming actor named Daniel who's in a movie called Lincoln. You should check it out."

Michael Haneke – Film of the Year, "Amour" (filmed message):

"How to thank you. I'm taken aback to have been awarded this prize because when we made the film it isn't something we thought about. But it's very flattering and very lovely that it's been so well received by the critics."

Ang Lee – Director of the Year, "Life Of Pi" (written message read out by actor Rafe Spall):

“Thank you. I am truly honoured to receive this award from the London Critics' Circle. You already honoured me for "Brokeback Mountain" and now "Life Of Pi". From cowboys in love to a boy and a tiger on the same boat may seem like a stretch for one director but I am reminded that it is here in England where I first fully stretched myself, leaving my background far behind as I went back in time to Jane Austen's world in "Sense And Sensibility". Every film is a journey to a strange place, with odd fellow travellers, and in the end none more so than "Life Of Pi". It's an incredible story but no story speaks for itself. Stories and films truly come alive when they are shared with an audience. Your generous praise has helped this happen and I am truly grateful and humble."

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Sundance 2013: EW Portraits, Day 2

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Jessica Biel, Francesca Gregorini (director), and Kaya Scodelario, Emanuel and the Truth About Fishes


Joseph Gordon-Leviitt and Tony Danza, Don Jon's Addiction


James Franco, Interior. Leather Bar


Christina Voros (director), James Franco, and Travis Mathews (director), Interior. Leather Bar


Robert Rodriguez (director), El Mariachi


Alison Brie, Toy's House


Gabriel Basso, Alison Brie, Nick Robinson, Erin Moriarty, and Moises Arias, Toy's House


Chris Galletta (writer) and Jordan Vogt-Roberts (director), Toy's House


Tequan Richmond, Alexandre Moors (director), Joey Lauren Adams, Tim Blake Nelson, Isaiah Washington, Blue Caprice


Ricky Whittle, Stephenie Meyer, Jerusha Hess, J.J. Fields, Jane Seymour, Keri Russell, Georgia Kin, Brett McKenzie, and James Callis, Austenland


Keri Russell, Austenland


Stephenie Meyer, Austenland


James Frecheville, Naomi Watts, and Xavier Samuel, Two Mothers


Allison Janney, Touchy Feely


Lynn Shelton, Allison Janney, Ellen Page, Rosemarie DeWitt, Touchy Feely


Ellen Page, Josh Pais, and Rosemarie DeWitt, Touchy Feely


Ron Livingston and Rosemarie DeWitt, Touchy Feely


Lucas Ochoa (producer), Marc Silver (director), Thomas Benski (producer), and Gael Garcia Bernal, Who is Dayani Crystal


Matthew McConaughey, Tye Sheridan, and Jeff Nichols, Mud


Matthew McConaughey, Mud and upcoming Dallas Buyers Club


Michael B. Jordan, Octavia Spencer, Melonie Diaz, and Ahna O'Reilly, Fruitvale


Michael B. Jordan and Ahna O'Reilly, Fruitvale


Michael B. Jordan and Octavia Spencer, Fruitvale


Elisabeth Moss and Holly Hunter, Top of the Lake


Holly Hunter, Top of the Lake


Guy Pearce, Breathe In


Felicity Jones, Drake Doremus (director), Mackenzie Davis, and Guy Pearce, Breathe In


Amy Ryan, Breathe In


Robert Reich, Inequality For All


Directors Maxim Pozdorovkin and Mike Lerner, Pussy Riot


Johnathan Tchaikovsky, Robin Weigert, Maggie Siff, and Julie Fain Lawrence, Concussion


Ayushita Nugraha, Nicholas Saputra, Karina Salim, and Lupita Jennifer, What They Don't Talk About When They Talk About Love


R.J. Cutler (director), World According to Dick Cheney

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Alexander Skarsgard, Brit Marling and Ellen Page Promote The East at Sundance

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Alexander Skarsgard wraps his arms around his The East co-stars Ellen Page and Brit Marlingfor a portrait session as part of the 2013 Sundance Film Festival on Sunday (January 20) at Village at the Lift in Park City, Utah.

The 36-year-old actor and his co-stars were joined by their director Zal Batmanglij.

Earlier in the day, Alex signed autographs outside of Village At The Lift 2013 as part of day three of the star-studded festival.




















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Girls 2x03 Promo

Songs from Glee 4x11 "Sadie Hawkins"

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Artie, Blaine, Ryder, Sam & Joe - "No Scrubs"




Marley & Unique - "Locked Out of Heaven"


Marley & Brittany - "Tell Him"


Tina - "I Don't Know How to Love Him"


Adam (Oliver Kieran Jones)'s Apples - "Baby Got Back"


Ryder - "I Only Have Eyes for You"



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'Zoey 101' Star Matthew Underwood Avoids Jail in Weed Arrest

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"Zoey 101" sta Matthew Underwood ust dodged a major bullet ... because a judge decided NOT to throw his ass in jail after prosecutors say he committed FIVE probation violations

We broke the story ... Underwood's probation officer begged the judge to lock up the actor for 180 DAYS after he allegedly failed a drug test and blew off most of the terms of his probation, stemming from a drug arrest back in 2012

But Friday, the judge DISMISSED the charges -- after Matthew showed proof he completed the conditions of his probation and even stayed clean through a "pre-trial supervision" period

Underwood is still on probation for another four months ... if he can manage to keep his nose clean.

Good luck!

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Shameless 3x03 Promo "May I Trim Your Hedges?"


omg! new stills from "before midnight" with julie delpy & ethan hawke

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Could there be any movie at the Sundance Film Festival more anticipated – perhaps with a bit of nervousness – than Richard Linklater's "Before Midnight"? With the third romantic outing for Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, fans are hoping the film honors the remarkable and beautiful "Before Sunrise" and "Before Sunset," and undoubtedly, the picture is easily one of the hottest pictures that distributors may end up battling for. We'll soon know how it plays as the film premieres tonight, but until then, here are some new images from the movie.

Shot on the sly in Greece last summer, the picture catches up with Celine and Jesse nine years later, as once again they use a portion of the day to reignite their relationship. Not much has been given away about the story, though Hawke had previously teased that, "The biggest change between this one and the last one is the Internet" and that, "I feel like in a strange way we may have come to the end of the story." There's no doubt we're anxious to see where these characters go next, and we just hope it's as rewarding an experience as the previous two films.

After playing Sundance, "Before Midnight" will head to the Berlin International Film Festival next month, and hopefully we'll see it open in theaters soon.









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The Movie Secretly Filmed At Disneyland & Disneyworld

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PARK CITY, Utah -- "Escape from Tomorrow," filmed on the sly at Disney theme parks, is the talk of the Sundance Film Festival this weekend. But what was it like to make a movie over 25 days at Disney World, Epcot and Disneyland without park employees, or tourists, knowing?

In the video above, lead actor Roy Abramsohn and director Randy Moore explain the bizarre and thrilling experience of filming on Disney property without permission. In the black-and-white film, Abramsohn plays a down-on-his-luck father touring the park with his wife and children.


"As an actor, once you get over the fact that you didn't get caught that first day, no one threw you into 'Mickey Mouse jail,' then you're really just playing the scene," Abramsohn said. "It's almost easier, because you're not waiting for lighting setups" and other typical preparation between takes.

Abramsohn described the experience as "almost more exciting" than a normal production because there was "always the thrill of getting caught."

"It's the constant thrill, like an illicit affair," he said. "You're never bored."

Still, at various points during the shoot, the cast and crew were faced with the difficult task of playing the scene while not attracting too much attention from park staff and visitors. Abramsohn recalled one particularly challenging day when they filmed at the Germany section of Epcot in Orlando.

"There was a scene where I'm getting drunker and drunker and more belligerent," Abramsohn said. "The waitress didn't know [what we were doing], and I would have my arm around the waitress and saying 'Deutschland uberalis!' and I was trying not to say Nazi stuff so I wouldn't get thrown out.... That was a little touchy."

"There was a few moments where I was just crossing the edge, [where a person might say] 'What are you doing?'" he added. "She didn't know it was a movie. The cameramen were just at the other table, filming very quietly."

Moore said he decided to make the movie in black and white because he "didn't want it to be home movieish, didn't want it to have a found footage feel."

Without color, he said, audiences see "almost an alternate Disney World."

"Fantastic things were popping out of the woodwork, things you normally don't notice," he said.

Moore said "Escape" is an exploration of a childhood that was influenced by "a great deal of time spent with my father at these places, particularly Disney World.... I was trying to explore the relationship I had with the park and my father as a child."

Abramsohn said it was interesting to explore the question of "how do you live in a place that's supposed to be the happiest place on earth, but you're miserable and longing? There's a real sadness, longing and wanting in this movie."

It's unclear if Disney will have legal objections to the movie that might prevent it from being shown beyond the festival, in movie theaters nationwide or on DVD or video-on-demand. So far, no distributor has picked up the film.

Moore said he was hopeful Disney executives "would just see it as a creative exploration of someone who does have a nostalgia for the park."

"I'm not trying to shut Disney down or hurt them," he added. "This was the story, and that was the only place I could tell it."


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PARK CITY, Utah -- About three years ago, Randy Moore, a struggling screenwriter living in Burbank, had an out-there idea: What if he took a tiny camera and, without asking permission, began shooting a narrative movie at Disney theme parks?

Moore had been visiting Disney World in Orlando, Fla., with his now-estranged father since he was a child, and he’d also begun taking his two children, then 1 and 3, to Disneyland. He thought that juxtaposing the all-American iconography of Mickey Mouse with a dark scripted tale would be cinematic gold, or at least deeply weird.

So with the help of an extremely small Canon camera and some very game actors and crew, the director began shooting a movie guerrilla-style.

The result of Moore’s quixotic dream is “Escape from Tomorrow,” a Surrealist, genre-defying black-and-white film that was shown for the first time at the Sundance Film Festival on Friday night and that was primarily shot across the vast expanses of Disney theme parks in Orlando and Anaheim. There is Buzz Lightyear Space Ranger Spin and Space Mountain, Tiki Room and teacups, princesses and a Main Street parade. At one point, Epcot Center blows up.

It is one of the strangest and most provocative movies this reporter has seen in eight years attending the Sundance Film Festival. And it may well never be viewed by a commercial audience.

Sitting at a Park City café shortly after the screening ended, Moore, 36, is trying to take deep breaths. The director has been living the last three years in a state of heightened tension, fearful that Disney would find out about his stealth project and try to quash it.

The filmmaker strongly encouraged anyone who worked on the film not to tell anyone, not even close friends, what they were working on. He was so nervous about a potential blabbermouth at a postproduction house that he took the movie to South Korea to edit, where he has been traveling to, on and off, from Los Angeles for the last two years.

“It got really tense for a while,” Moore said of his home and personal life. His wife knew what he was up to; many friends didn’t.

Moore had drifted through several film schools before graduating from Full Sail in Orlando. After graduation he packed up his car and headed out to Los Angeles with a friend, and for the last decade he's been mostly engaged in rewrite work, never shooting a feature before this one. He largely financed this film's budget, which he pegs at under $1 million--and generally supported his family over these three years--with an inheritance from his grandparents. (There is some but not a lot of green screen and sound stage work that can be more costly.)

To attempt to describe the plot of “Escape” is to go down a rabbit hole as disorienting as any amusement park ride. Basically, the film is about a down-on-his luck fortysomething father (Roy Abramsohn) on the last day of a Disney World vacation with his henpecking wife and their two angelic children. As he takes his children to various attractions, the father is haunted by disturbing imagery; he is also, in the meantime (and with his children in tow), tailing two young flirtatious French girls around the park. Airy musical compositions you might find in classic Hollywood films play over many of these scenes, giving a light shading to the darker moments.

“Escape from Tomorrow” is not a puzzle movie per se, though a healthy dose of clues and a general dream-like vibe will have fans trying to figure out what it all means. (Certainly the film fits with "Memento," “Primer" and other indies of that ilk, a cultish comparison Moore seems comfortable with, though maintains, with a fair degree of sincerity, that he didn’t set out to elicit.) "Escape" is also, ultimately, a character study about a man who seems to have lost any sense of optimism in a place that’s overrun with it.

Yet to discuss the film in these conventional terms is also to miss the point. It's true that it is not always clear what exists in the father’s mind and what is happening in the real world. It is also true that it's sometimes not clear what is happening, period—a scene at a spaceship exhibit suggests the father is part of a larger, possibly extraterrestrial-themed experiment. It is one of many mysteries the film chooses to leave unsolved.

The third act “Escape” takes on an increasingly macabre tone. And though the movie borrows tropes from horror movies (think young girls running out of sight and creepy smiling dolls) and 1950s futurism, it most often evokes David Lynch, both in its deadpan tone and its utter inscrutability.

“I like movies that you have to see several times,” Moore said. “I’ve seen ‘The Master’ six or seven times, and I can’t wait to see it an eighth. I don’t like movies that have a skeleton key that explains everything."

How the film was shot is a mystery unto itself.

To make the movie, Moore wouldn’t print out script pages or shot sequences for the 25 days he was filming on Disney turf, instead keeping all the info on iPhones. This way, when actors and crew were looking down between takes, passersby just thought they were glancing at their messages.

Though Moore’s actors entered the parks day after day wearing the same clothes, and though Moore was filming with abandon, the production was never shut down by anyone at the parks--in part, the director suspects, because taking out a camera and holding it in front of people at Disneyland is about a natural an act as you can imagine.

Still, Moore worked under some serious constraints, often having to stand with his assistant director across the park and communicating by phone as actors moved in front of his cinematographer, so that it didn’t look like a crew was forming.

Most of the extras were real people unaware they were being shot--a challenge unto itself. (Abramsohn said after the screening that the experience was "emotionally intense...[I was] a little scared as an actor running around and bumping into actual people."

And some of the actors Moore used, like those who played the French girls, would often have to be cued by phone via a spy across the grounds.

At one point, Moore even needed to shoot a scene of people passing on opposite monorail cars, having them board again and again for hours because he couldn't quite decode the exact schedule.

What’s remarkable about all this is that, in watching the film, one doesn’t get the feeling of a guerrilla filmmaking exercise. There are numerous wide shots, and scenes luxuriating in classic Disney images. It looks as if it was made with the full cooperation of the company, which of course it wasn’t.

“To me this is the future. Cameras in your hand. Cameras in your glasses. Anyone can be shooting at any time. And I think it will explode,” Moore said.

Moore has never attempted to speak to anyone from Disney, nor has anyone ever contacted him.

Still, there is no way the company could be happy with the result, in part because of what many courts might deem rampant trademark infringement but also because of the nature of the thing, a juxtaposition of Disney's family-friendly corporate imagery with some pretty grotesque behavior.

In so doing, the movie seems to be denouncing a culture-of-distraction in a way that might call to mind “Infinite Jest,” a novel Moore, like many of us, sheepishly admits he didn’t finish.

“I have nothing against Disney,” Moore said when asked if he saw his film as political. “It’s just upsetting that it was about a one-man vision, and now it’s like so much of the world in how corporate it’s all gotten,” he said. “I look at Apple and Steve Jobs and my biggest fear is that something like this will happen there.”

Whatever his politics, Moore in person comes off as affable and a little wide-eyed. He has never been to the Sundance Film Festival before, and was in fact surprised organizers even accepted his movie given. he said, Sundance’s abundance of corporate sponsors. (Before the screening Friday the festival’s Trevor Groth said that choosing "Escape" was the highlight of his programming season; he was, he said, ”blown away” by the film.)

Whether a distributor, even a bold one, takes a flier on this is the big question. The media interest would be high. The legal bills would be even higher.

The film’s rights are being represented by Cinetic Media, which has sold high-profile Sundance titles such as “Precious” and “Napoleon Dynamite” as well enigmatic fare such as 2010 Banksy movie “Exit Through the Gift Shop.” The company’s principal, John Sloss, declined comment for this story, but the feeling in distribution circles is that the movie will have a legal Everest to climb. While trying to censor an independent film tends to blow up in a conglomerate’s face, it would be hard to imagine how Disney would ever allow this film to see the light of day.

A Disney spokesperson did not return an immediate message seeking comment; it is not clear how aware they are of the movie.

Yet Moore said he didn’t expect any kind of typical distribution deal and wouldn't even necessarily need the film to be passed along, mixtape-style, to feel satisfied by what he’s created.

“It’s out there, and no one can change that,” said Moore, who said he wants his next film to be an indie project in a different vein, perhaps a European period piece. “If this never gets distribution, that’s OK. if not a lot of people see it, that’s OK. I made it, and it’s in the world. That’s all I ever really wanted.”



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'Hobbit' Star Richard Armitage Recalls His Time On 'Star Wars: Phantom Menace' Set

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The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is arguably the most important movie of Richard Armitage's career, exposing the actor known from British television like Robin Hood and MI-5 to a global audience for the first time. Surprisingly, though, it's not his biggest movie to date.

That honor goes to another prequel: the infamous Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace. As a budding actor, Armitage attended London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art while playing bit parts at the Royal Shakespeare Company. Like any actor looking to break out, Armitage was taking any film and television role that crossed his path. Thus, he became "Bravo Fighter Pilot" in George Lucas' much-maligned sci-fi epic.

The actor fondly remembers his brief time working on Star Wars, an experience that quickly exposed him as a Hollywood newbie. "Walking onto that set… I remember thinking, 'Why didn't they finish building the rest of the set?" Armitage tells Hollywood.com. "'Are they behind? They must be out of money.'"

Armitage is one of many famous faces who were still obscure to mainstream audiences back when The Phantom Menace hit screens back in 1999. Sharp eyes can catch a young Keira Knightley, a spot-on Natalie Portman lookalike, appearing as Padme's handmaiden Sabé. Lost in Translation and Somewhere director also appears as part of the Padme posse, while The Wire star Dominic West battles droids as one of the Palace Guards. Say what you will about the prequels, but they proved a breeding ground for young talent.

When Phantom Menace eventually hit theaters, Armitage was excited to see himself on the big screen. His biggest problem was actually seeing himself behind the many stars. "I certainly turned up and filmed a day, but I can't find myself in the movie!" Armitage says. "I think I ende up as a droid. I thought I was a fighter pilot. I can't find where I am I had a line to Ewan McGregor: 'No one's on board, sir.'"

We're here to help Mr. Armitage. We've managed to point him out in the below screenshot from The Phantom Menace. Needless to say, he has a bit more screentime in An Unexpected Journey.

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10 Spoilers: 'Vampire Diaries' spin-off scoop plus 'Teen Wolf' sex

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Since Mondays are just the worst, we here at Zap2it have decided to give your week a much-needed wake-up call with 10 TV teasers -- just to remind you that when the work day is over, your DVR waits to welcome you home.

This week's Monday Kickstart has some fun spoilers from "Vampire Diaries" and "Teen Wolf," plus dish from "Pretty Little Liars" executive producer Oliver Goldstick on whether the show can go on after Aria, Spencer, Emily, and Hanna graduate and leave Rosewood.

"The Vampire Diaries": In "The Originals" backdoor pilot (Episode 20 this season), Klaus will meet the beautiful and intelligent Camille, a psychology student at Tulane in New Orleans. Like Elena before her, Cami is a human, unaware of the "supernatural storm" brewing around her -- but she's certainly intrigued by the darker side of the French Quarter. She'll be particularly drawn to Klaus, because as a smart and curious student, she's intrigued by one question in particular: What makes someone evil? If anyone can answer that, it's our very own Original hybrid. If "The Originals" gets picked up to series, Cami will be a regular cast member. (Also, some good news for you purists -- in addition to Atlanta, we're hearing that some scenes for the episode will actually be shot in New Orleans.)

"Arrow": Laurel's mother, Dinah, abandoned Laurel years ago, but in Episode 16, she'll return to Starling City in the interest of reuniting with her daughter. In the comic books that inspired "Arrow," Dinah is the original Black Canary, and Laurel later takes over for her mother. Of course, in the comic books Dinah also dates Oliver Queen... which we're guessing (and hoping?) won't translate to the TV version. In other "Arrow" news, look for China White to make a few more appearances this season. Kelly Hu tells us we haven't seen the last of her character. "I can tell you that I do get to speak -- I get to talk a little bit more. And I do have a lot more action going on too," she says.

"Teen Wolf": We've always been impressed by "Teen Wolf's" frank and inclusive approach to sexuality, and that'll continue in Season 3. This season, we'll even see at least one gay sex scene on the show, which is a rarity in teen dramas. Don't get too prematurely excited though, Sterek fans -- this particular hookup involves Danny, who we're hearing has a pretty significant role in Season 3 even though his BFF Jackson left Beacon Hills.

"Pretty Little Liars": Could Spencer, Aria, Hanna, and Emily ever be replaced? Time moves very slowly in Rosewood -- but eventually, the Liars have to grow up and move on from high school. Executive producer Oliver Goldstick tells us that the writers have a plan for the current Liars through the summer after their senior year. "I think five [seasons] is what we originally thought," he says. "But there are ways to invigorate this show, interestingly enough. We've talked, internally, about introducing four new Pretty Little Liars; we've talked about that with the studio. There could be four new girls after these girls graduate, who witness or participate in some sort of crime, and all of a sudden you have four new girls who are lying. I don't know! But for now, with these girls, we've all thought that we've got five seasons in them."

"Castle": As you already know, "Vampire Diaries" and "Arrow" star Kelly Huwill be guest-starring on Monday's episode of "Castle," and she does have a busy time. Not only is she a suspect in the murder of her boss, but Hu also gets to go on a date with Esposito The date doesn't exactly go as planned, of course. What would be the fun in that? "During the date, there's a little surprise," Hu teases.

"Nikita": In episode 16, we'll meet "intense" young Division agent Rachel, who was something of a potential Nikita and/or Alex in the making before Percy fell. Rachel is the leader of a revolution within Division, or so we're lead to believe. Rachel will turn her gun on Alex at one point during the episode, but the real surprise is who ends up on the wrong end of Alex's weapon.

"American Horror Story": Adam Levine and Jenna Dewan-Tatum are back in this week's episode. We'll return to the gory scene from Episode 1, when the couple was enjoying some nice romantic oral sex in the abandoned insane asylum (man, some people have the weirdest kinks). This time, though, we'll see the whole mess from the perspective of Dylan McDermott's character, the new Bloody Face -- just before he takes violent action.

"Scandal": Each of Olivia Pope's gladiators has had time in the spotlight this season -- except for Harrison. That's likely to change in the season's back nine episodes. After the current mystery wraps up, expect Columbus Short's character to come to the forefront a little bit more. He might even get a love interest.

"Justified": Thisssss week Billy's snakes takes center stage out at the preachin' tent, though things aren't exactly what they seem with the serpents that he charms. And hey, if you've always wanted to see someone get bit in the face by a rattlesnake, well -- you're in luck.

"Nashville": In Episode 14, Juliette will meet Ozzy, an experienced sober companion who comes off as very genuine, and is extremely good at his job. Right now, his job is to keep an eye on Juliette's mess of a mother, Jolene. He wants Juliette to be involved in Jolene's ongoing recovery, but as far as Juliette's concerned, she's already involved enough -- after all, she's the one writing the checks.

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Paramore - "Paramore" TRACKLIST!!!

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1. Fast In My Car
2. Now
3. Grow Up
4. Daydreaming
5. interlude: Moving On
6. Ain’t It Fun
7. Part II
8. Last Hope
9. Still Into You
10. Anklebiters
11. interlude: Holiday
12. Proof
13. Hate To See Your Heart Break
14. (One Of Those) Crazy Girls
15. interlude: I’m Not Angry Anymore
16. Be Alone
17. Future

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Haters can stay pressed, and yes they're still a band.

Lupe Fiasco Removed from Stage After Anti-Obama Comments

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He's made controversial comments about President Obama before, and tonight, the controversy continued as Lupe Fiasco was removed from the stage during his performance at Hamilton Live in Washington D.C. Booked to perform in celebration of Obama's reelection, Lupe apparently performed an anti-war song, said that he did not vote for President Obama in November's election, then was asked to leave after refusing to move on to the next song after 30 minutes.

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Above is a picture of Lupe Fiasco backstage at the event, and also a picture of him performing on stage. And below are detailed tweets from Josh Rogin, a popular political writer for Foreign Policy, who was in attendance at the show. Stay tuned for more details.


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Official Statement:
Lupe Fiasco performed at this private event, and as you may have read, he left the stage earlier than we had planned. But Lupe Fiasco was not “kicked off stage” for an “anti-Obama rant.” We are staunch supporters of free speech, and free political speech. This was not about his opinions. Instead, after a bizarrely repetitive, jarring performance that left the crowd vocally dissatisfied, organizers decided to move on to the next act.


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Adult swim is finally going to air the lost episode of Dexter's Laboratory

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To those who don't know of the lost episode here's the history of it. An episode of Dexter's Laboratory  was made during when its creator Gennd Tartakovsky, run the show (later on he moved to doing th Powerpuff Girls, while others ran it) around 1998. During a select few animation and comic book conventions, Genndy would show the lost episode to a small crowd.
The episode, entitled "Dexter's Rude Removal" had Dexter and Dee Dee get hit by the former's latest invention the  Rude Extractor which separated their rude halfs (who were both VERY foul mouthed. A  complete summary of the episode can be found here.
There where two versions were shown of this episode. One totally unedited with all profanities kept and one edited with bleeps). Obviously due to the content, Cartoon Network never ran the episode.  It was considered lost to the ages and long considered a myth.
That was until this past October 2012, when Genndy revealed during a eddit interview hat it does exist, he still had an unedited copy of the episode, and show it at a convention down the road.  a year later Adult swim addressed on twitter that they have the unedited copy of the episode and will post the link on Tuesday for everyone to see.
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Shameless 3x03 Promos: "May I Trim Your Hedges?"

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Ngl, I loved the gay sex scenes even though I would have preferred them to be longer.

Rula Jebreal on "Real Time with Bill Maher"

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It's cut out from the clip but Bill Maher calls her "darling" in the most condescending way. Douche.

Kanye West is high-maintenance. You don't say?!

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Beware Kim! Kanye West’s Ex Says He’s Insecure, Needy & Vulnerable

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Kanye West's ex-girlfriend says the Watch the Throne rapper was “insecure” and “vulnerable” and wouldn’t go on stage unless she was there to reassure him.
In an interview with the British newspaper The Sun, Brooke Crittendon portrays the hip-hop star as being more clingy than cocky during their relationship.
The aspiring actress, who met West in 2004 and dated him for two-and-a-half years, said, “He was not macho – he needed you to be with him and needed your opinion.
“He was quite vulnerable. He was insecure as he couldn’t be with me every day. I got the impression he worried he wasn’t good enough for me.
“He needs people to tell him he is good and that he is needed and wanted.”

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Brooke, 31, met the star backstage at an Usher concert. Then on the cusp of global fame, West was the opening act for the R&B singer.
The two dated while his debut album The College Dropout soared up the charts and earned the rapper a Grammy Award nomination.
But she says back then he needed her reassurance just to get on stage and perform.
“He wouldn’t start his show unless I was at the side of the stage,” Brooke says.
“One night the show was delayed because he couldn’t find me. He refused to go on till I’d told him it was going to be OK.”
Brooke says they eventually split up because she wasn’t comfortable with the increasing female attention West was getting.
Saying that her ex was obsessed with curvy women she says she is not surprised that he is dating Kim Kardashian, who is pregnant with his child.
“For Kanye, what other person besides Kim Kardashian is there?” she said.
“There’s Halle Berry, J-Lo and Beyoncé but they are all taken. She fits into his brand.”

RadarOnline

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I wish I could have find a "Im' Kanye West, that doesn't make any sense" gif.
This gif is brought to you by yeezy

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Lupe Fiasco Removed From Stage at Inaugural Show

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Lupe Fiasco took it there at a concert in celebration of Obama’s second inauguration at Hamilton Live in Washington D.C. last night (Jan. 20). After performing the first verse from “Words I Never Said,” his anti-war song taken from "Lasers" for a whole 30 minutes, the rapper made a statement about not voting for Obama in November’s election. Eventually, he was removed from the stage by security. However, event organizers continue to maintain Lupe was not kicked off for his words. Watch the footage and read their statement below.




StartUp RockOn is all about startups helping startups. At Sunday night’s Inauguration Celebration at the Hamilton Live, organizers set out to honor innovative visionaries with grants, accolades and a party worthy of the success we achieved at the RNC and DNC this summer.

Lupe Fiasco performed at this private event, and as you may have read, he left the stage earlier than we had planned. But Lupe Fiasco was not “kicked off stage” for an “anti-Obama rant.” We are staunch supporters of free speech, and free political speech. This was not about his opinions. Instead, after a bizarrely repetitive, jarring performance that left the crowd vocally dissatisfied, organizers decided to move on to the next act.

The party continued as planned, and we celebrated the announcement of CodeNow’s winning the Grant Challenge. CodeNow is a non-profit startup based in Washington DC that teaches “underrepresented high school students basic skills in computer programming.





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'The Following' 01x02 "Chapter Two" Promo + Stills

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Loved it. Loved it. Loved it. I'm surprised at how much the censors let them get away with to be honest. I can't wait for the next episode even though it's up against RuPaul's Drag Race and I am not happy about that decision Fox not one fucking bit. Kevin Williamson doing what he does best. <3 Anyway, thoughts on the pilot? Discuss.
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