Sunday, December 21, 2025
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EXCLUSIVE Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, 97, Funding Epic Feature Film About Armenian Genocide

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Kirk Kerkorian is 97 years old and worth $4 billion. The one time owner of MGM, and wealthy Las Vegas real estate and casino over ( he also owned the MGM Grand), is not done, however. He still has one more wish. My sources tell me that Kerkorian is funding a secret feature film about the Armenian genocide that took place concurrent with World War I.

The Ottoman Empire, precursor to the country known as Turkey, killed around 1.5 million to people in the effort to destroy Armenia and establish itself. Kerkorian is hoping to produce the Armenian “Schindler’s List” to memorialize the holocaust.

There is already an Oscar nominated director and screenwriter signed to the project. Various actors’ names have come up, and some of that may become clear soon. The movie is described to me by the director– who’s asked me not to reveal his name yet– as a “Reds” or “Dr. Zhivago”, a sweeping World War I romance set against the Armenian genocide.

Kerkorian, who’s always been fascinated with Hollywood, is said to have contributed over $1 billion to Armenian charities and causes over his long life time.

I’ll have some more info on this soon. For now expect the still untitled film to begin shooting this summer in Europe. And the budget should be pretty big, considering there’s one backer. This movie has the potential to be something on a large historic scale, unseen for many years.

And PS,  I am assured that the Kardashians, the most famous Armenian Americans since the great writer William Saroyan, will be not be appearing in the film under any circumstances.

Falling Stars: Will Smith Seen Joining Johnny Depp in the Flop Club with “Focus”

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Will Smith opens in “Focus” on Friday. Rotten Tomatoes already gives it a 50, with Todd McCarthy, dean of reviewers, panning it. So does our Leah Sydney– see below. If “Focus” fails, it follows “After Earth” and Smith’s disastrous appearance in the huge mistake called “Winter’s Tale.” No kidding, this is bad news. “Concussion” is coming at Christmas time, which may be better. But Smith is following in Johnny Depp’s footsteps, it seems.

Here’s Leah’s review:
Will Smith mega star wattage is a huge part of why his new romantic con caper will probably do well in the opening weekend. But once the word spreads that ‘Focus,’ is mostly unimpressive and predictable– with some flashes of humor and stylish, hip coolness–that will probably figure into the big picture box office gross.

Will plays Nicky, a longtime con artist who offers to tutor the novice Jess (played by the impossibly sexy Margot Robbie) after they hook up at posh Manhattan restaurant. What ensues is their quest for the big con, figuring out their relationship, Nicky trying to come to terms with his relationship with his father and on and on.

For a caper con to work it has to have mega chemistry between its stars, and this pairing falters. Since they both are consistent insincere liars, with nary a break, it’s hard to root for either of them. Perennially likeable Will gives it his talented all, as does Robbie– who proves again post “Wolf of Wall Street”– she’s an actress to watch. She is game and committed.

Adrian Martinez provides welcome comic relief as Nicky’s right hand plus size man. The always-reliable B.D. Wong gives a fun stint as a billionaire Chinese gambler and the equally solid Gerald McRaney adds to the talented ensemble.

Ultimately, ‘Focus’ is a sloppy movie. You see the same plot twists coming a mile away; the element of surprise is shot. The production looks cheap, the international locales don’t feel nearly as luxurious or swanky that a romantic con film should, even the scenes with extras look cheap and staged. The second half of the film takes place in Buenos Aires, which livens the film up, a bit. Although the film has its moments, ‘Focus’ is ultimately unsatisfying. You kind of feel that you’ve been played without the payoff. Also, you can’t help but wonder if most of the film’s budget went to Will’s salary.

Oscars: Ill-Informed NY Times Punditry, Not the Movies, Is the Problem

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I just caught up with Tuesday’s take in the New York Times about the Oscars. The movies were small, and the audience was detached. Some film librarian in Michigan named Phillip Hallman thinks the Academy is out of touch with the public. Rubbish. None of these people suggested which movies should have been nominated instead of the almost perfect “Whiplash” or the ingenious “Boyhood.”

Maybe Philip Hallman, whom no one knows, would have preferred “Dumb and Dumber To” as a nominee. Clearly he or the writers of this unthink piece are mad that Christopher Nolan’s endless jumble, “Interstellar,” should have been in the mix. They also cite Nolan’s “The Dark Knight Returns” and “Inception” as examples of popular films that didn’t get Oscar nominations.

The Oscars are not a referendum. They are voted on by members of the motion picture Academy. Want the popular vote, Phil? You got it with the People’s Choice Awards. There, the crap of the year, the commercial stuff made with no artistry and an eye on the lowest common denominator, is celebrated.

The fact is, the eight nominated films from 2014 will last. The ninth film, “Unbroken,” from Angelina Jolie, will also last. “Interstellar” and “Guardians of the Galaxy” will also be seen again and again. Otherwise, I have no idea what these people are talking about. And neither do they.

The way movie releases work, we get mostly dreck in January and February, the stuff that couldn’t be released in the preceding year. Then March and April, light fare, comedies, quirky things. Come May, the summer season begins and it’s all action heroes and explosions. You may get a Woody Allen film in July if you’re lucky.

In August, some serious fare sneaks in, hoping to capitalize on adults’ weariness of “—Man” movies. Come Labor Day, the Oscar season begins, but doesn’t really kick in until October.

It used to be that someone would come running in with a Big Movie after Thanksgiving. But you can’t do that anymore. In the cases of “American Sniper” and “Selma,” they were too late. The film critics groups have to see the films before December 1st. The National Board of Review isn’t smart enough to process a thought in a day, and then vote. Ditto some others. So the late ambush is a no go. And that’s what we got this year.

We also got “Inherent Vice,” which was terrible, the Emperor’s New Clothes, and presented like it was going to mean something. It didn’t.

“Selma” was undermined by having no screeners, much discussed. “Unbroken” was allowed to turn into a big mystery, and then it wasn’t, it was just good. And that was a let down.

So we move on to new films and hope it comes in right. A better host– like Jimmy Kimmel– will help. And new producers will inject some life. Craig Zadan and Neil Meron were like New York city mayors. They had a great first term, an okay second, and by the third they were worn out. It’s time for a new look. Craig and Neil can get a star on the Walk of Fame (if they don’t have one already), the equivalent of getting a New York bridge named for you.

Happy Birthday George Harrison, Born February 25th, 1943

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Get George’s Apple box set on amazon or iTunes. Happy Birthday, George! And just a note to say that George would have been so proud of his wife Olivia and son Dhani. They have maintained his legacy with grace and elegance. Bravo!

Awards Season Is Over: Now Let’s Disband the National Board of Review, They Got Just About Everything Wrong

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The awards season is over at last. Now let’s disband or disregard the National Board of Review, which chooses their winners based on personal ties and preferences. They got just about everything wrong. Basically they were a waste of time.

What did they get right? Just Julianne Moore as Best Actress in “Still Alice.” Otherwise, they gave Clint Eastwood his annual award, so that doesn’t count. They missed all the other acting categories and Best Director, as well as Best Picture. They got the screenplay awards wrong. They gave nothing to “Ida,” which won the Oscar for Foreign Film. They snubbed everything and everyone from “Boyhood” (it made their top list) and “Selma” (it got a toss off award). They ignored “Citizen Four.” They were far off the mark for Animated Film. Both “The Imitation Game” and “The Theory of Everything” didn’t exist in their world.

“Fury” won Best Ensemble! “Fury.” Are you kidding? Over “Imitation Game,” “Boyhood,” “Birdman,” “Into the Woods.” Do you remember who was in “Fury”? (Brad Pitt.)

What is the purpose of this group? Why are the studios still kowtowing to them? NBR, as I’ve written before, shills for Warner Bros and Eastwood (Eastwood probably has no idea). They pick winners based on relationships as they did this year with A24’s “Most Violent Year.” Ridiculous. And their membership– just fans who pay a lot of money to meet stars, get their pictures taken, is even more ridiculous.

It’s time to say goodbye to the NBR. Do the studios really need their phoney baloney name on ads in December? No. The audience is totally overwhelmed by all the awards shows. The movie publicists all hate them. Let’s stick with the real ones, and give the fakers the heave-ho.

2014 National Board of Review winners:

Best Film: A Most Violent Year
Best Director: Clint Eastwood – American Sniper
Best Actor (TIE): Oscar Isaac – A Most Violent Year; Michael Keaton – Birdman
Best Actress: Julianne Moore – Still Alice
Best Supporting Actor: Edward Norton – Birdman
Best Supporting Actress: Jessica Chastain – A Most Violent Year
Best Original Screenplay: Phil Lord & Christopher Miller – The Lego Movie
Best Adapted Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson – Inherent Vice
Best Animated Feature: How to Train Your Dragon 2
Breakthrough Performance: Jack O’Connell – Starred Up & Unbroken
Best Directorial Debut: Gillian Robespierre – Obvious Child
Best Foreign Language Film: Wild Tales
Best Documentary: Life Itself
William K. Everson Film History Award: Scott Eyman
Best Ensemble: Fury
Spotlight Award: Chris Rock for writing, directing, and starring in – Top Five
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: Rosewater
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: Selma

Top Films
American Sniper
Birdman
Boyhood
Fury
Gone Girl
The Imitation Game
Inherent Vice
The Lego Movie
Nightcrawler
Unbroken

Top 5 Foreign Language Films
Force Majeure
Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem
Leviathan
Two Days, One Night
We Are the Best!

Top 5 Documentaries
Art and Craft
Jodorowsky’s Dune
Keep On Keepin’ On
The Kill Team
Last Days in Vietnam

Top 10 Independent Films
Blue Ruin
Locke
A Most Wanted Man
Mr. Turner
Obvious Child
The Skeleton Twins
Snowpiercer
Stand Clear of the Closing Doors
Starred Up
Still Alice

TV: What The? Janet McTeer–Tony Winner, 2 Time Oscar Nominee– is On “Battle Creek”

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Okay, I’m sorry, I know it’s hard for actresses of a certain age to get movie roles. So Tony winner and two time Oscar nominee Viola Davis is starring in “How to Get Away with Murder.” Patricia Arquette, now an Oscar winner, commands “CSI: Cyber.” Marcia Gay Harden, Oscar winner, was on “The Newsroom” and is now on “Murder” too. Oscar winner  and two time nominee Octavia Spencer tried “The Red Band Society.” Glenn Close did very well with “Damages.” For a while two time Oscar nominee Mary McDonnell (“Dances with Wolves,” “Passion Fish”) was on some show, I saw her one day and cried.

But Janet McTeer? Not Janet McTeer! She’s too good for this. The Tony winner (for “A Doll’s House” on Broadway in 1997, so transcendent it’s now a legend), Tony nominee for “Mary Stuart” (she lost to Harden), two time Oscar nominee (“Tumbleweeds,” “Albert Nobbs”). She’s going to play the Beleaguered Police Commissioner on a procedural called “Battle Creek.” I know, she has a mortgage and all that. But really. Can’t we find a movie for her? This isn’t right, folks.

McTeer will be third or fourth banana to Josh Duhamel and Dean Winters. The cast also features Kal Penn, who was Kumar from “Harold and Kumar” and so good in “The Namesake,” and Aubrey Dollar, who went MIA after a big debut in 2003 on “Guiding Light.” Vince Gilligan, who created “Breaking Bad.” created the show, so maybe it has a chance.

But come on, people, this is an emergency. Somehow this reminds me of when they tried to make Dianne Wiest go on “Law & Order.” But Janet McTeer is English! She’s like their Catherine Keener. We can’t do this to her. She has an OBE from the Queen!

I’ll watch “Battle Creek” to see if they give her anything to do except roll her eyes and look exasperated. Otherwise, let’s get McTeer back in the movie game!

Oscars: 7 Million Fewer Viewers Than Last Year’s High Number for “12 Years a Slave”

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You know, “12 Years a Slave” was Best Picture last year. And 2014 was also a high water mark for the Oscars ratings. The show posted big numbers — even though 2014 was considered a big year for “black” movies. This year, an all white year, the show lost over 7 million viewers. Interesting, no? Were all the lost viewers black? Probably not. But there was more interest in “12 Years a Slave” than in “Birdman” or “Boyhood.” Imagine if “Selma,” the actual best movie of the year, had been accorded respect and honors?

The ratings drop had a lot to do with the fact that seven of the eight Best Picture nominees were largely unknown to the public. Some of them were unknown to Oscar voters. “American Sniper” got no love despite its $300 million box office. The show ignored that movie. How about if Chris Kyle’s widow had come on stage the way the real Philomena had done in 2014? How about if Clint Eastwood had presented an award? It’s all in hindsight now.

Another thing: while Lady Gaga soared during her “Sound of Music” segment, Jennifer Hudson struggled with a lame song from the canceled TV show “Smash.” There are nine zillion recognizable songs in the world. Hudson is a magnificent singer. But why punish her with bad material? Maybe it’s because Oscar producers Zadan and Meron also produced “Smash.” Unfortunately, this has been their M.O. since they started producing the Oscars. Remember their tribute to “Chicago”?

The writing also hurt the show. The Oscars used to be run by snarky insiders with a real sharp wit. They called on talented, hip people to craft the show. This show sounded like it was written by TV hacks who have nothing to do with the movie business. It really showed. Why isn’t Jimmy Kimmel hosting the show and bringing his people, if the show must stick with ABC staff? The Kimmel folks would do a fine job. And Kimmel, at this point, would be a welcome relief. He at least might get some of those 7 million people back.

Oscars Puts Common-John Legend Song “Glory” at the Top of the Pops

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How do you get a hit single? Just perform it on the Academy Awards. “Glory” by Common and John Legend is now number 2 on iTunes and number 3 on amazon.com. The “Selma” soundtrack has also bumped up on both charts. Common and John Legend are still “thinking” about an album collaboration, but really– what’s to think about? Get into the studio, and then book the tour. The success of “Glory,” a great record, could help “Selma,” too.

But the Oscars didn’t help anyone else. Neither Lady Gaga nor “The Sound of Music” saw any spikes. And “Lost Stars” as performed by Adam Levine with Maroon 5 didn’t go anywhere. You can’t have everything!

Oscars: Lady Gaga Gets Standing Ovation, Wows Crowd, Transitions from Yoke to Egg Whites

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The Tony Bennett effect is now fully developed. Lady Gaga completely wowed the Oscar audience last night with her “Sound of Music” medley. No more egg costumes, or meat dresses. She sang like a dream. Watch this clip. She got a standing ovation. Something really big is on the horizon for Stefani Germanotta. Someone please get her with an orchestra and a really great producer. Calling Richard Perry, Tommy LiPuma, Quincy Jones.

Oscars: Ratings Down from Last Year, While Most Stars Took Breaks from Show

The Oscars lost around 2 million people last night from 2014. What happened? A lot. First of all, Neil Patrick Harris, always so good on the Tony Awards, was out of his element. He’s not from movies or Hollywood, and he doesn’t have a natural take on this world. He had a good opening song, but no stand up routine or monologue. He didn’t poke fun at the audience, and when he did it was awkward. The writing for the show was terrible, too. Bruce Vilanch, Carrie Fisher, come home!

One look at the little pamphlet given to the audience signaled trouble. After Best Supporting Actor there were ten tech awards. This meant that the Oscars were conceding the key 9-10 hour to the finale of “Downton Abbey” and to a new episode of “The Walking Dead.” There was no guarantee anyone would return.

You could see it in the bars at the Dolby Theater. They were filled and more crowded than I’d seen them in years. Cate Blanchett held court for some time. Eddie Redmayne came out and got himself a vodka and tonic. Socially awkward Anna Wintour stopped in, wearing sunglasses. Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux took bathroom breaks and then stayed for a while.

Best bar moment: Oprah appeared out of nowhere. “It’s freezing in the theater,” she said. “I needed to warm up.” She got some water from the bar, and was suddenly bombarded by — yikes– real people. Lines formed to take pictures with her. I’ve got to say, I was impressed. She sucked it up and did it, smiling and chatting with everyone.

I said to her, “Excuse me, didn’t you have a talk show?”

“Yes,” she laughed, “I was Phil Donahue’s sister.”

Second best moment: Cate Blanchett, waiting for her appearance at the end of the show. “I did get an Oscar last year,” she joked. “Don’t you get one every year?” She laughed that if “Big Hero 6” won– a Disney movie like her upcoming “Cinderella”– she would jump on the stage and take the statue.