Apple Sells Its 5 Billionth Song, Sets Sights on Movies
Posted by johnnytalkback on June 20, 2008
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Posted by johnnytalkback on June 20, 2008
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Posted by johnnytalkback on June 11, 2008
The O.C. star Rachel Bilson has laughed off claims she’s returning to California’s Orange County for a movie version of the hit TV show.
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Posted by sutukh on May 29, 2008
By Paul Bond
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Walt Disney Co CEO Robert Iger said Wednesday that “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” is underperforming at the box office because of competition from “Iron Man” and “Indiana Jones.”
Since its May 16 release, the “Narnia” sequel has earned $99.6 million in North America, according to Box Office Mojo. Its 2005 predecessor, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” had earned $122.7 million in the same period. It went on to make date $291.7 million.
Disney originally had “Caspian” set for last Christmas, but delayed it in deference to “The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep,” a fantasy vying for the same audience.
The studio might also have been taking into account the feelings of Walden Media, its production partner on “Narnia” and the production company behind “Water Horse.” That film, distributed by Sony, earned just $40 million domestically.
Iger, speaking at the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference in New York, said “Prince Caspian” is a better movie than the first installment but because it was released between a couple of the year’s biggest hits, audiences are overlooking it.
“Prince Caspian” was released less than two weeks after “Iron Man” and just six days before “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.” Both those pictures are headed into the $300 million area.
Iger lamented the “very delicate, very fragile marketplace” for movies in general, given that “there’s just too much out there.” As of now, the next movie in the “Narnia” series is set for release May 7, 2010.
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Posted by sutukh on May 23, 2008
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Posted by johnnytalkback on May 21, 2008
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Posted by sutukh on May 10, 2008
As jarring moments go, the action figure in his likeness was nothing compared to the billboard on the Sunset Strip. There he was, towering eight stories above the boutiques and rock clubs, with sword brandished, lips pursed and “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” emblazoned across his legs. “This has to be one of the weirdest moments of my life,” said Ben Barnes, the young British actor who plays the title role in the coming movie. He backed up to take in the advertisement’s full effect. “I have no comprehension of what’s about to happen to me, do I?”
Mr. Barnes is a polite 26-year-old who, until Walt Disney Pictures came calling in February 2007, was struggling in all the typical ways fledgling actors struggle. Despite the splashy outdoor advertising campaign, he is in many ways still living that life.
He crashed at a friend’s apartment during a recent visit to Los Angeles. He has no publicist. Arriving for an interview at the Sunset Tower Hotel, he parked his rental car on the street because he was leery of leaving it with the valet. Despite being blessed with more than his share of tall, dark and handsome — and starring in a summer blockbuster — he frets that a woman he has a crush on is “utterly unattainable.”
His low-key life will change no doubt with the May 16 arrival of the lavish “Chronicles of Narnia” sequel. Mr. Barnes’s character is the swashbuckling descendant of pirates who must battle his evil stepfather for control of the magical kingdom. The movie, based on the C. S. Lewis children’s classic “Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia,” is expected by some box office analysts to sell more than $300 million in tickets in North America alone. Prince Caspian is also at the center of “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,” which Disney and Walden Media, the franchise’s co-producer, plan to release in 2010. Filming for that movie is scheduled to begin this fall.
For now, though, Mr. Barnes finds himself in a rare position in Hollywood: an unknown actor on the brink of certain global fame.
When Orlando Bloom landed his role in the first “Lord of the Rings,” nobody could say for sure whether the movie would catapult him to stardom. But “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” is as close to a sure thing any movie gets in Hollywood. The first film, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” (released in 2005), sold more than $290 million in tickets in the United States and Canada and $745 million worldwide.
“I keep telling him to remember who he is right now,” Andrew Adamson, the film’s director, said, adding that “I’ve been through enough of this to know how what’s coming can really mess with you, good or bad.”
Mr. Barnes, no relation to this nonacting, nonsinging reporter, was coronated a Disney prince by accident. A London casting director saw his performance in the West End production of “The History Boys” three weeks before filming for “Prince Caspian” was to start. Mr. Barnes played the decidedly non-Disney role of a sexually aggressive boy who toys with his teachers.
Aside from “The History Boys,” the actor’s résumé included a bit role in “Stardust,” the fantasy starring Robert De Niro that flopped at the box office last year, and a television pilot (in which he played a high school quarterback) that never made it to television. But he had experience as a heartthrob: while studying children’s literature and drama at Kingston University (near London), Mr. Barnes played the lead in the school production of “Don Juan.”
Disney and Walden were looking for a particular type of actor, said Oren Aviv, president for production at Walt Disney Studios. The role called for dark features to contrast with William Moseley, the blond-haired actor who portrays Peter Pevensie, the oldest of the children who magically journey to Narnia. He needed to be able to pull off a believable Mediterranean accent. Horse-riding skills were important.
“We also needed somebody we felt could handle the pressure of going from obscurity to stardom,” Mr. Aviv said.
A few days later, in a phone call from California about 3 a.m. London time, Mr. Barnes was formally hired. “I just ran around my house screaming,” he recalled.
(The producers of “The History Boys” were not as thrilled, telling several London newspapers that they were considering suing him for leaving on short notice to star in a “children’s Disney movie.” They got over it.)
Mr. Barnes forgot he had fibbed about knowing how to ride horses until he arrived on the New Zealand set, where he was required to cross a river on horseback. He had told the producers his riding was “average,” but in reality he had seen a horse only once. “My mother still can’t hear the word ‘Ben’ and ‘horse’ in the same sentence without getting the giggles,” he said.
After three weeks of sword training, with riding lessons on the side, Mr. Barnes was ready. Ample eyeliner and hair extensions were added to give him more of a roguish appearance. Mr. Barnes said he studied Mandy Patinkin’s performance in “The Princess Bride” for inspiration on his accent. (Luckily, he also worked with a dialect coach, as Mr. Patinkin’s accent was not exactly authentic.) Mr. Barnes’s first foray with Hollywood a few years ago had very different results. He said his agent at International Creative Management lured him to Los Angeles with an offer to bunk in a guest room in exchange for free baby-sitting services. His first audition was for the part of a lifeguard who gets eaten by a shark.
“I walk in, and here are a half dozen guys literally comparing their calf muscles,” Mr. Barnes said. “I freaked out.” He ended up getting the part. “They decided to go with the sensitive surfer type,” he said, joking. But the project fell apart.
Mr. Barnes is slightly better known in Britain, but not for his acting. In 2004 he competed in a televised singing competition as a member of a boy band called Hyrise. Sample lyric: “When you touch me and tease me you’re leadin’ me on.”
During one clip from the show, viewable on YouTube in all of its synchronized, hip-swinging glory, Mr. Barnes gives a preperformance interview that is particularly mortifying in retrospect. “I’ve got a bit of a tricky note to hit tonight,” he says, “so I’m just going to tighten my belt, wear my cheeky tight pants.”
The remarks, Mr. Barnes said, were written by a producer.
“I learned a very important lesson from that,” he said. “Never agree to say or do anything that isn’t you.”
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Posted by johnnytalkback on May 8, 2008
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Posted by johnnytalkback on May 8, 2008
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Posted by sutukh on May 3, 2008

Blonde, hot actress Leslie Bibb was hilarious as Will Ferrell’s gold digging Southern wife Carley Bobby, in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby. A few years ago, she garnered legions of fans with her role on the high school TV series “Popular” and has been in “ER”, “Line of Fire”, “Nip/Tuck” and “Crossing Jordan”.
Leslie plays a feisty investigative reporter vowing to bring down playboy weapons manufacturer/genius Tony Stark in the new action thriller Iron Man. We wanted to know all about her character, acting opposite volatile and talented actor Robert Downey Junior, why smart gals often go for bad boys and what super heroine the actress would love to play. Leslie lives near me in Los Angeles but was phoning us from New York where she’s doing press for Iron Man. Hey, it’s 7:15 in the morning our time. We’re a bit groggy. Phone rings….
Leslie: Hi. You are up early! If it’s any consolation, I went to bed last night at 1:30 and got up at 7:30. But hey, I’m in a hotel suite getting my hair and make-up done and talking to people about a big ole movie called Iron Man. [we laugh]
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Posted by sutukh on May 1, 2008
There’s not much we love here at MTV Movies more than seeing the greatest superheroes on the big screen — except maybe talking about them. Between obsessively pouring over trailers like they were the Zapruder film and compulsively checking our voicemail hoping those Gotham viralists have left another message — if being geeks is our full-time job, well, you could say that business has never been better.
With the release this week of “Iron Man,” the greatest summer in comic book film history is officially open, so we assembled a panel of comic and film experts, including Staci Layne Wilson of Sci Fi Wire, Steve Weintraub of Collider.com, Shane Coleman of California’s Golden Apple Comics stores and, of course, Larry Carroll and Shawn Adler of MTV News, to discuss everything in the world of upcoming comic films.
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