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UPDATE Johnny Depp’s “Mortdecai” Gets 38 Negative Reviews, 3 Positive– Is He Still a Movie Star?

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updated Friday 11:15am
“Mortdecai” has 38 negative reviews, and 3 positive, on Rotten Tomatoes. Meanwhile both “Strange Magic” and “The Boy Next Door” are hovering around an astoundingly low 13%. This may be the worst weekend ever for new movies. Go see the 8 Oscar nominated films. Or go see Al Pacino in “The Humbling,” a great movie that was killed by its distributor.

updated Thursday night
“Mortdecai” is at 5% now on Rotten Tomatoes. Lions Gate should claim North Korea really hates it, and put this latest Johnny Depp flop on VOD right now. What has happened to Johnny Depp? “The Lone Ranger” was a spectacular failure. “Transcendence”,” released since The Long Ranger, made only $23 million. “The Tourist” with Angelina Jolie was so bad no on speaks of it without laughing.

Other than the “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies, Johnny has been out of his depp. “Mortdecai” will face a brutal Friday. All they can do is hope for a blizzard on Saturday and blame the weather. But is Depp really a movie star? Without “Pirates” what would his career be?

Meanwhile, Jennifer Lopez’s “Boy Next Door” isn’t doing much better at 19% on Rotten Tomatoes. This calamity may have one more week than “Morty.”

And Disney’s “Strange Magic” has terrible reviews. But kids and families could keep it afloat over the weekend.

Lance Armstrong’s Former Charity, Livestrong, Is in a Financial Free Fall Since the Scandal

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It was two years ago this week that Lance Armstrong admitted to Oprah Winfrey that his “mythic story” was “one big lie.” That moment, combined with a documentary by Alex Gibney, put an end to Lance Armstrong’s life as a celebrity. The not-7 time Tour de France winner was disgraced in public and had to leave the Lance Armstrong Foundation. It was renamed LiveStrong. And from the looks of it, the foundation isn’t living strong at all.

The foundation’s Form 990 for 2013 tells a sad story. Total revenue fell from $38 million in 2012 to $23 million in 2013. And while total expenses fell by about $6.5 million, LiveStrong claimed they were $8 million in the hole for 2013. The prior year, their loss was only $132,350.

Because of this, LiveStrong’s grant giving fell by $3 million — from a little over $9 mil to $6 mil. But their total salaries stayed about the same, dropping just about $500,000. So while their donees suffered, at least the Live Strong staff kept going strong.

Indeed, President and CEO Doug Ulman still drew a total of just over $400,000 in 2013. Nine executives besides Ulman took home six figure paychecks. The highest paid was one Morgan Binswanger, VP of External Affairs, at $208K.

How times have changed since Armstrong left. When the disgraced former athlete was an international star, in 2009, LiveStrong received $41 million in grants and contributions from the public and other institutions. In 2013, the number had dwindled to $15 million. Their total assets also fell from $112 million to $103 million.

Armstrong was forced to resign from the foundation, and his name was taken off of it. He hasn’t been erased completely. But in his bio under “Our Founder,” no mention is made whatsoever of Armstrong’s career or cycling. His entire scandalous history no longer exists. It simply says Lance Armstrong is a “father, cancer survivor, advocate and philanthropist.”

 

 

Julianne Moore on Getting a Retrospective: “I feel like I don’t need a memorial service”

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Julianne Moore was asked on the red carpet at her Museum of the Moving Image tribute in Manhattan last night about how much pressure she felt about winning an Oscar for “Still Alice.” It was a sure thing, a reporter told her, after her Golden Globe win.

“You know what?” Moore said, looking fabulous in an embellished metallic short gown with long sleeves, her red hair swept high in a bun, “I think you have to be grateful for everything that comes your way, there’s never a guarantee. You never know if anyone’s going to even see your movie, and the fact that it got this much attention is really incredible.”

About her portrayal as a linguistics professor with early-onset Alzheimer’s, which has earned her a fifth Oscar nomination, Moore said of the role, “One of the things it says about us as people is we have to consider who are central selves are. Who are we if we start to lose the things that people use to redefine us? Are we still there? Who do we still love? I think the thing this movie posits is that a human life is more than what we think it is. It encompasses more than we know.”

The gorgeous 54-year-old movie star received a two minute standing ovation that kicked off the evening of loving tributes and accolades by A-listers, who included Moore’s husband, writer-director Bart Freundlich; Mark Ruffalo (via video); Michael Parker, Sony Pictures Classics chief and new Museum chairman, and outgoing Museum chairman, Herb Schlosser; along with Billy Crudup, Rebecca Miller, Sarah Paulson, Ethan Hawke, Steve Buscemi and Chloë Grace Moretz, who introduced clips from some of Moore’s celebrated films, including “A Single Man” (2009), “The Big Lebowski” (1998), “Boogie Nights,” (1997), “The End of the Affair” (1999), “The Kids Are All Right” (2010), “The Myth of Fingerprints” (1997) and “Short Cuts” (1993).

“It’s kind of crazy because my children are here and they haven’t seen any of my films, except the ones I’ve made with their Dad, just parts of them,” Julianne Moore said in her eloquent speech that topped the evening. She shared the award with her husband and kids, Liv, 12 and Caleb, 17. It’s all “pretend” she told them, “the cigarettes were fake.”

julianne by paula schwartzMoore included in her thanks, appreciation to her friends who spoke “so eloquently,” Michael Barker, her representatives and publicists. “This is not something I ever expected, certainly not while I was alive to see it,” she joked. “I received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame last year, and I made a lot of jokes to my family and to anyone else who would listen that now I don’t need a tombstone.” Everyone laughed. “Now I feel like I don’t’ need a memorial service either. Thank you! You saved my family a lot of money,” she joked.

The actress said the evening’s tribute inspired her to think about on how she became an actor. “I never ever imagined that I would be a movie actor. When I was a kid I liked to read and I was pretty good at school and I wasn’t athletically inclined and I had no hobbies so I ended up trying out for the school play like the rest of the nerds,” she said. She said it surprised her to discover acting didn’t feel any differently than reading out loud or pretending and teachers encouraged her in the pursuit. “It wasn’t because I’d seen a lot of plays or known any actors or knew anything about the theater. I just liked how acting made me feel, and I love stories and I thought that was a good enough reason to do something for a living. It was super, super practical!” she joked, as the audience laughed.

“When you’re young, you know you assume things without any knowledge about where you’ll be or how they’ll shape you’re life, but because this is a retrospective it’s forcing me to look back and consider what it was that got me here.” As a drama student in Boston she’d go to double features and one day she saw “Three Women,” the 1977 Robert Altman film starring Shelley Duvall, Sissy Spacey and Janice Rule. “I never heard of Robert Altman,” she said. “I loved this story – which Bob later told me was based on this dream he had – and I was actually shocked because it was the first time in my life I heard a directorial voice, a point of view, and I thought, that’s what I want to do. That’s the kind of acting I want to do. I want to work with that guy!”

It would be another decade of working in television and off off Broadway, where she noted, “That didn’t make a dent in the film world and not feeling like I saw those voices, the voices, like Bob’s voice in the scripts that I read. But then suddenly everything changed for me, and there were opportunities for me to work with astonishingly adventurous filmmakers, amazingly original stories and finally, finally, Robert Altman and then I realized that through independent film I actually become an actor, but even more important to me was how film shaped my life, not just professionally, by finally finding a place to tell these stories, but personally. When I read the script for ‘The Myth of Fingerprints’ and I met Bart Freundlich, and I loved his script and I loved his story and that’s what turned me towards him. But I never, ever, ever in my life imagined that making that movie would give me the personal life that I always dreamed of.”

Moore ended her speech with, “I’ve been so privileged to have this premiere and to be in so many exciting, interesting narratives, with so many tremendous filmmakers and so many unbelievable talented people, so many of whom are here tonight, but really it’s my own story, my own family story, Bart and Cal and Liv, who have given my life so much meaning,” she said. “This is an unbelievable evening, and I’m so very grateful.”

The evening’s highlights included a poignant video tribute by “Still Alice” writers-directors Wash Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer, who are also married. Mr. Glatzer has ALS and is unable to speak, but through his iPad, which has a robotic voice, he was to express his gratitude to her for taking on the starring role in their film. “There’s no one more deserving of this honor.” Adding her talent was “one of life’s mysteries.”

“The Kids Are All Right,” co-star Mark Ruffalo sent a message from Europe via video, “Sorry I’m not there but I am with you in art and spirit.” While Moretz, who is 17 years-old and spent some time talking to Moore’s teenage son, noted that she’d known “Julie since I was 15 years old and I feel, so, so lucky to have met here at such a young age. She taught me to always make decisions on movies and what characters you want to e be from your heart and you never choose it for fame or money. What you have and what you stand for in your career are the products of what you’ve put on screen.”

Ethan Hawke joked, “It’s funny, you don’t know how many awards you haven’t won until you Google Julianne.” And Steve Buscemi brought up one of Moore’s early films, “Tales From the Dark Side” (1990). “I think this is one maybe you’re kids can see, if they had a VCR. You played Christian Slater’s sister. You were killed by a mummy and came back to life. Good times.”

Julianne Moore’s husband, director-writer Bart Freundlich, got in some of the best lines.

“I’m questioning how we brought the kids. Never see those movies,” Freundlich joked. “Seeing this makes me realize how many people Julie has made out with on screen. That bothers me.”

He reminisced about meeting Moore some 20 years ago. “I was naïve enough to think that Julianne Moore would do my first movie. I was lucky enough that she read the script and decided that she would meet me. We met at the Peninsula Hotel. She was very late and I was very nervous. And we sat down and she said I liked your script man but it’s too long and something needs to be cut down. If it’s my part I wouldn’t be interested, to which I replied, ‘Will you marry me?” The audience laughed.

“I have a very special insight into Julianne Moore,” Freundlich said. “I’ve known her for 20 years. I’ve been married to her for 11 and had kids with her for 17. Directed her three times,” he said. “I’ve been with her through numerous sunburns. Four Oscar ceremonies, five to come,” everyone cheered. “A colostomy and her Broadway debut. I think the last two were equally uncomfortable for her. I don’t consider Julianne an actor. I consider her an artist. She conjures people off the page with her intelligence, boundless empathy, and unparalleled hard work. I always felt the success of our relationship was in part because the writer in me speaks to the actress in her. However I’ve come to understand, every writer whose words she’s read, believes that.”

 

Inside photo c2015 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

Hollywood Hiding This Weekend’s 3 Box Office Stinkers By Blocking Reviews

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UPDATE The reviews are coming, and they’re not good. Keep refreshing…

EARLIER Yes. It’s Oscar season and we have great movies out there– all 8 Oscar nominees, as well as “Unbroken” and “Into the Woods” and “Nightcrawler,” plus the effervescent and lovely “Paddington.”

But Hollywood is hiding this week’s releases, trying to minimize the damage from an onslaught of bad reviews. First up is “Mortdecai” with Johnny Depp and Gwyneth Paltrow. There are no press screenings until it’s too late. The movie is a disaster apparently. And Johnny Depp is going to get pasted from the reviews. Lions Gate is hoping the reviews will be too late, and someone will go see this thing before the word gets out.

Disney has “Strange Magic,” an animated film that has already registered 5 negative reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, and none positive. This was George Lucas’s project, but he’s already disowned it. There’s quite a backstory to how “Strange Magic” was destroyed. In the meantime you’re better off listening to the ELO hit of the same from the 70s.

Jennifer Lopez? She’s in this horrible looking thing called “The Boy Next Door.” JLO has made some of the worst films ever registered with the MPAA. This one has all the appeal of a Lifetime for Women rerun. Maybe Universal thinks there will be a strong DVD appeal. The commercial trailer is a howler. There are already three negative reviews posted. More are coming. And how hilarious was the effort to suggest JLO and the boytoy in the movie are dating in real life?

And then there’s “Cake.” Rotten Tomatoes has it at 36%. That’s kind. Much as I love Jennifer Aniston, I have no idea what this movie is supposed to be. Don’t waste your daily caloric intake on this concoction, which is not tasty at all.

Grammys: John Legend & Common Will Perform “Selma” Song, Sam Smith, Usher Added

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The Grammy Awards are coming on February 8th, and the lineup looks good. LLCoolJ will host again (don’t know why– he’s blackmailing someone, obviously). But there’s plenty of good news: John Legend and Common will perform their Oscar nominated “Glory” from “Selma.” Other performers including Sam Smith, Usher, Miranda Lambert and Pharrell (he’d better do “Happy”).

Still waiting for more announcements. I’d guess that Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, and maybe even Barbra Streisand, will on the show. Ken Ehrlich might even wrangle Bob Dylan, who’s getting the MusiCares Person of the Year Award on Friday before the Grammy show. We wait, and we see.

In other music news, Streisand scored her 31st Platinum album this week with her “Partners” duets album. It’s the Most everything– most for a female, most for anyone, etc. Bravo!

Pee Wee Herman is Back with New Feature Film “Big Holiday” for Netflix!

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Pee Wee Herman is back! Sources tell me Paul Reubens is rounding up his old crew and casting for new some friends in his first feature film in a long time. Netflix will be making and showing the film, another incursion by Ted Sarandos and co. into the world of movie theaters.

“Pee Wee’s Big Holiday” is produced by Judd Apatow, along with Paul Reubens. Executive Producers are Josh Church and Richard Vane. The movie is written by Reubens and Paul Rust, and directed by John Lee.

Some of the characters include Pepper and Freckles, described as pretty and tough girls in their late 20s – late 30s, who may also be bank robbers; Penny, an eccentric Katharine Hepburn type heiress. She’s described as “a bit of a throwback to old Connecticut money from the 30s or 40s and should have a big personality. And “Grizzly Bear”
a big bearded rugged Mountain man who has taken to the woods to live.

It’s a little interesting that Apatow, who is so fervent about Bill Cosby, has no issue with Reubens. But that can be debated later.

It’s been 30 years since “Pee Wee’s Big Adventure.” The sequel came out in 1988. Reubens has worked on and off for years, memorably on “Murphy Brown.” The time seems right to bring it all back, and a Netflix feature could lead to a series.

James Franco Eco Short Film “Future Relic” Turning into Feature with Juliette Lewis

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EXCLUSIVE Juliette Lewis, Ethan Suplee, Lukas Haas and Ronald Gutman will join James Franco in a feature film version of “Future Relic.” This is an expansion of a nine minute short film called “Future Relic,” written and directed by multidisciplinary artist Daniel Arsham. Producer is Courtney Andrealis.

In the film, which may or may have dialogue, the Earth’s climate in the near future has become dangerously unstable. Scientists attempt to save the world from imminent destruction with an experiment that works temporarily. Earth is saved, but the world becomes an increasingly inhospitable place for humans after elements of the experiment backfire.

Franco, no stranger to experimental films, had already made the short with Arsham.

Candice Bergen Steals the Show at Julianne Moore Tribute: “I haven’t seen Still Alice because at 68 years old it’s just too close”

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Candice Bergen stole the show Tuesday night at the Julianne Moore tribute for the Museum of the Moving Image in Manhattan. (The museum’s in Queens, the tribute was in Manhattan.) Bergen, a guest, was persuaded to introduce a clip and say a few words about Moore after she arrived at the dining hall.

In fine sarcastic Murphy Brown form, she took the stage and said she’d met Moore maybe three times, knew nothing about “Still Alice,” but admired Moore for the way she lived her life and raised her family. She added of the movie for which Moore is nominated for an Oscar “I haven’t seen Still Alice because at 68 years old it’s just too close.”

The other presenters did know Julianne Moore quite well, from husband Bart Freundlich to Steve Buscemi, Rebecca Miller, Chloe Grace Moretz, Ethan Hawke, Billy Crudup, Sarah Paulson, Ellen Barkin, Mark Ruffalo (on video), Sony Pictures Classics chief Michael Barker (now chairman of the Museum) and outgoing long time Museum chief Herb Schlosser. Moore gave a beautiful speech (more in the AM) in which she thanked the museum for staging her memorial service. “You’ve saved my family a lot of money,” she joked.

Moore also wore a beautiful sparkling Chanel dress, the height of elegance. She’s getting the Oscar, everyone’s thrilled, and it’s about time.

More later…

“Selma” Director Ava Duvernay on White House Screening: “Beyond Exquisite”

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“Selma” director Ava Duvernay posted this to Instagram earlier Tuesday. I’m reprinting it here. Duvernay, her family and the cast were welcomed on Friday to the White House by President and Mrs. Obama for a screening and a reception.

Here’s what Duvernay said:

“Here is a small note that they will never see, but I must post it anyway. Projecting a film that I made with my comrades in the White House for the President and the First Lady – for THIS President and First Lady – was as stunning an experience as I’ve ever known.

The first film to ever screen at the White House was “Birth of a Nation” or as it was previously titled “The Klansman.” That was in 1915. Last Friday, “Selma,” a film about justice and dignity, unspooled in that same place in 2015. It was a moment I don’t have to explain to most. A moment heavy with history and light with pure, pure joy all at once.

President Obama’s introduction of SELMA in the presidential screening room, the quality time he and the First Lady took with us before and after, the stories he shared with my editor and cinematographer, the praise she gave our dear cast, the handshake he gave my father, the hug she gave my mother, the laughter, the smiles, the extra time they gave us all long, long, long beyond when we were scheduled to go, the warmth, the respect, it was just beyond exquisite.

“I’m proud of you,” she said to me. “We’re proud of you,” he added. I’m proud too – of them, of us, of the film, of this moment in my life. Who knows what lies ahead. But what has already occurred is food and fuel and fire and freedom. To President Obama and First Lady Obama, it was a dream I never dreamt, a dream seared in my memory like a scar from a fight won. The kind you look at every now and then, and just nod and smile. I thank you. xo.”

Wow! “American Sniper” Four Day Take Was a Whopping $110.6 Million

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Clint Eastwood must be grinning from ear to ear. After a horrendous June with “Jersey Boys,” he’s bounced back just the way I knew he would. Clint’s “American Sniper” took in a whopping $110,636,235 from Friday through Monday– much more than anyone anticipated.

“Sniper” is suddenly a main contender for the Oscar for Best Picture. It’s made more money than any of the seven other films nominated. Actually it’s made more than all them rolled together.

Bradley Cooper is now a dark horse candidate for Best Actor. He could actually beat both Michael Keaton and Eddie Redmayne, who split the Golden Globes. Cooper can’t do much about it, though. He’s stuck on Broadway until February 21st in “The Elephant Man.”

“American Sniper” is absolutely resonating in both red and blue states and with audiences of all political standing. Even Michael Moore praised it after being misunderstood as criticizing it.

If you thought Clint might be done, guess again. He hasn’t chosen his next project yet, but we’ll see him in 2016, that’s for sure, with a new movie.