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Review: “Pacific Rim” Is the Weekend’s Big Studio Success

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Guillermo del Toro, thankfully, never disappoints his slavishly devoted film groupies. The futuristic “Pacific Rim” gloriously shows his quintessential touch, by reflecting his rich poetic fantasy and testerone filled imagination.  That and so much more is up on the screen in this nonstop raucous filled visual feast of filmmaking.

Who knew that monsters fighting robots and the layered characters that save the earth could become a true summer experience that fulfills what so many movies so far this year have unfortunately not.  “Rim” is scary, smart and scientific, with humor weaved in throughout. The visual effects are stunningly believable and artistic in every scene. The way cute and capable Charlie Hunnam plays a former Jaeger pilot Raleigh Becket, Jaegers being the massive robots the humans built to defeat those pesky alien ocean creatures.  Idris Elba always is perfection and he is again here. The gravitas he portrays playing the seasoned professional marshaling his forces for one last stand against the creatures is the emotional vortex of the story.

Scene-stealers Charlie Day and Burn Gorman are the Laurel and Hardy version of the nerdy to the rescue scientists.  Veteran actor Ron Perlman has a terrific comic turn as the black market evildoer.  Rinko Kikuchi plays the young Japanese protégé with heartbreaking secrets of her own.

Del Toro’s films are always filled with detail and carefully thought out, there is art and skill here, the way it should be.  Not these awful so-called blockbusters we’ve been forced to sit through, hear that  “Lone Ranger,” “Man Of Steel,” “White House Down,” well the list goes on.  The Academy should hand the Oscars for Visual, Animation and Sound Effects to Del Toro’s team right now. Del Toro’s artistic integrity and his otherworldly mastery creates magic, excitement and good old fashion fun.  Get ready for the “Pacific Rim” movie ride; it’s the best one to go on this summer.

Lady Gaga Album in November: I Told You This in February

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Remember when I told you Lady Gaga’s album “ArtPOP” would come in November? http://www.showbiz411.com/2013/02/12/lady-gagas-new-album-wait-until-november. Today she announced it on Facebook. A single will arrive on August 19th. Gaga is recording a duets album with Tony Bennett right now. She won’t finish “Art POP” until after that. This does mean that only the single will be eligible for Grammy awards on January 26th. The album will have to wait until 2015. Lady Gaga aka Stephanie Germanotta is very talented. I really wound up liking “Edge of Glory.” But let’s hope the new songs take her away from sounding like Madonna, and are more like “Just Dance” and her earlier, more original hits.

Leah Remini’s Scientology Exit: May Never See Husband, Mother, Sisters Again

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Leah Remini has left the so-called “church” of Scientology. She sent out a brief statement last night thanking fans and friends for their support. But what hasn’t been addressed is what happens to her husband, mother, sisters, and stepfather. They are all in the cult, too. And one of the main things about Scientology is called “disconnection.” When someone leaves the group, they are cut off from any left behind who’s still inside.

When Oscar winning director Paul Haggis left Scientology a couple of years ago, he cited disconnection. His now ex-wife Deborah Rennard was cut off from her parents, who’d been in the cult for years.

Remini’s mother Vicki Marshall started with Scientology in at least 1997. She worked her way up to 8th level of Operating Thetan. I think this means she speaks to aliens. Whatever. She’s in it up to her eyeballs.

Leah Remini has three sisters– Shannon and Nicole, a half sister named Elizabeth. They are all listed as having taken many classes and worked their way through the system. This also means Scientology has made a fortune off of them because the classes cost a lot.

Elizabeth Remini  has had problems with the law because of her drug addiction. She was arrested in 2005 in North Carolina and charged with five felony counts of cocaine possession and dealing the drug.

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Leah Remini also brought her husband, Angelo Pagan, into Scientology. He owns a popular diner called Vivian’s in suburban Los Angeles. Last Tony Ortega called Pagan and asked him if he and his wife were leaving Scientology. Pagan said they weren’t. But now that Remini seems to have made the break, Pagan would have to go, too.

“He’d have to leave,” says one former member. “They’re very happily married. Otherwise, they’d have to divorce. She wouldn’t be allowed to see him again.”

Of course, that’s what Tom Cruise did to Nicole Kidman after their divorce in 2001. He disconnected from her, and made it difficult for her to have a relationship with their children.

Pagan did not return phone calls yesterday.

The ex-member I spoke to said to may take some time before Remini or her husband are able to deal with the reality of the situation. “You have to go through like a detox period. A debriefing. You realize how you’ve been treated, how much money you lost, how lied to you were. It’s not easy. And you’re losing all your friends.”

Remini is taking a gamble. Through Scientology she was able to associate with Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise, Will and Jada Smith, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony. She and JLO had gotten very buddy buddy. When Suri Cruise was born, Remini was one of the few insiders who was on the scene thanks to her Scientology connections. Now it’s all over.

Murdered: Broadway Costume Designer’s Teen Son Was Not a “Lucky Guy”

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The 18 year old son of a famed Broadway costume designer and a popular Brooklyn teacher was murdered on July 2nd in Richmond, Virginia. Toni-Leslie James has won and been nominated for many awards for her work. Just this season she designed the costumes for Tom Hanks’s “Lucky Guy” on Broadway and the amazing “Comedy of Errors” at Shakespeare in the Park.

On July 2nd, her 18 year old son Jett left the house where they spend summers in Richmond, Virginia at 10:45pm. According to reports he had $4 and an iPhone in his pocket. He went to the corner store to get snacks. Within 15 minutes he was dead, the victim of  a robbery gone bad.

In New York, where Toni-Leslie James and her husband, lighting designer David Higham (he teaches at Brooklyn’s PolyPrep), have many ties, only CBS2 has reported this story locally. But at the opening of “Fruitvale Station” this past Monday, a movie with a similar story, someone mentioned this tragedy to me.

In Richmond, three young men were arrested and charged with the crime. Jett has been down in Richmond only six days.

Here’s the not very good report from Richmond TV. (Not to diminish the story. But I don’t know why the correspondent is dressed this way. A jacket and tie might make him and the story seem more important. The guy looks homeless.)

 

Notes on “Fruitvale Station,” The Best Movie Released So Far in 2013

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Ryan Coogler’s extraordinary “Fruitvale Station” opens today in New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Forget all this other stuff– from Adam Sandler to more sci fi robots to John Travolta’s ridiculous ‘Serbian’ accent. None of this matters. “Fruitvale Station” is not like “Precious” but it resonates similarly: you feel the truth of it immediately, from the first scene, to the last. This is quite an accomplishment for 27 year old Coogler and his first film.

Some thoughts: Michael B. Jordan plays the late Oscar Grant in a career making performance. I didn’t watch “Friday Night Lights” closely enough to recognize him. I was shocked later to learn that was a geeky teen with dreds on “All My Children.” This shows you how soaps find young actors. Amanda Seyfried was in a lot of scenes with him, so was Leven Rambin.

Jordan makes Oscar Grant, whom none of us ever knew, into a real person, a 3D human being. But all the actors in “Fruitvale” make their characters come alive, especially Octavia Spencer and Melonie Diaz. And the script has some nice funny touches, too, especially the mini story about birthday cards different for white and black people. There’s a lot of knowing looks in the audience when that story is played out.

The BART cop who shot unarmed Oscar Grant in the back and killed him served only 11 months in jail for involuntary manslaugher. He did wind up losing a civil case. Oscar Grant’s young daughter got a $1.5 million settlement which isn’t much when you realize her life is now full of terrible obstacles.

Oscar’s best friend, who I think in the movie, was played by Ryan Coogler’s very engaging brother Keenan, also sued the city and BART in 2009. Last year he was found shot dead in a car. He was not involved in drugs or any criminal activity. It’s an unsolved murder. You can only surmise what happened to him.

The first time I saw “Fruitvale Station” it stayed with me for two weeks. When I saw it again the other night, it had the same effect. I can’t stop thinking about it now. First, it’s a tragedy, a monumental miscarriage of justice. Second, it’s a great movie. As Coogler said to me at the premiere, “You don’t really want to celebrate after you see it.” But Coogler and that cast deserve a lot.

PS Not to be overlooked: especially good are supporting players little Ariana Neal, Ahna O’Reilly, Marjorie Shears, Kevin Durand, and Chad Michael Murray.

See this movie.

Hasselbeck Hustled Off “The View”: Here’s Your Hat, What’s Your Hurry?

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I’m no fan of Elisabeth Hasselbeck. But her departure from “The View” on Wednesday was really a matter of “Here’s your hat, what’s your hurry?” ABC announced that she was leaving at 7pm on Tuesday, well after every deadline had passed and when most web reporters on the East Coast thought they were done for the day.

The next morning, Hasselbeck not only announced she was leaving “The View” for Fox, but was leaving at that very moment. It was mid week, mid month, and right in the middle of sweeps. Couldn’t they have had her finish out July? The show goes ‘dark’ until Labor on July 31st.

But Hasselbeck’s exit was long in coming. I told you in March that she was out when Joy Behar announced she, too, was going from “The View.” When the news about Hasselbeck broke, Barbara Walters announced on the show that it wasn’t true, sort of. She said if her co-hosts wanted to leave they could, and they would announce it in their own time.

I filed this item: http://www.showbiz411.com/2013/03/11/the-view-elisabeth-hasselbeck-gets-short-reprieve-to-come-up-with-an-out

I can tell you that the people with “The View” have been waiting patiently for Hasselbeck to make her own announcement. And when she did, they didn’t hesitate to remove her right away. Watching her farewell speech was astonishing. In a way, it was worse than Ann Curry’s infamous exit from “Today.” The look on Bill Geddie’s face was priceless. And I did love Hasselbeck calling Sherri Shepherd “my sister in Christ.” Shepherd hadn’t even bothered to come in that day.

And as far as Barbara Walters saying they were going to “take their time” replacing Hasselbeck: both Brooke Shields and Jenny McCarthy have been under consideration since March. There won’t be empty seats at the desk when “The View” returns in September.

 

Windfall for “Skyfall” Director: Sam Mendes Now Officially In for Bond 24 (and Likely 25)

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Oh yes, Sam Mendes is directing Bond 24 and most likely 25. Didn’t we cover this in May? I know we did. http://www.showbiz411.com/2013/05/28/daniel-craig-persuades-skyfall-director-sam-mendes-to-return-for-more-bond. Producer Barbara Broccoli went to London in May to convince Sam to do it, and got the money he’d wanted. Daniel Craig weighed in on it, too. “Skyfall” made a billion dollars, and Mendes wanted a better deal. Now he’s got it. John Logan wrote 24 and 25 as a two parter, so it’s likely Mendes will do both. Adele coming back? If I were her, I’d wait for 25. Give it a rest. Plenty of people just right for 24’s theme song, from Sting to Emeli Sande. One thing Broccoli and Michael Wilson learned: make it a song by a real singer, not that hideous Madonna thing, or the completely unlistenable Alicia Keys theme. What about Judi Dench? They killed her off. Maybe it was a dream.

Adam Sandler’s New Bomb: “Grown Ups 2” Scores a Zero So Far

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Adam Sandler’s endless parade of bad movies is getting longer this weekend. “Grown Ups 2” has scored a zero so far on Rotten Tomatoes. Sixteen (16)  reviews have gone up, but they are all very, very bad. More are coming, things won’t get much better. The film was held from critics until the last minute because the studio, Sony, already suffering from “After Earth” and “White House Down,” is hoping Sandler’s illiterate fans can’t read and won’t care about the reviews.

Of the seven notices posted so far, two are from Variety and THR. Variety says: “Among the slackest, laziest, least movie-like movies released by a major studio in the last decade, “Grown Ups 2” is perhaps the closest Hollywood has yet come to making “Ow! My Balls!” seem like a plausible future project.”

Long ago I stopped watching the Sandler movies. They are unbearable with a few exceptions. I liked “The Wedding Singer.” And he was interesting in “Spanglish.” I loved “The Chanukah Song” from “Saturday Night Live.” But that’s it. Kudos to the brave reviewers who sat through this mishegos.

 

 

Sumner Redstone’s Ex-Stewardess Girlfriend Donates $1.5Mil to Stop Global Poverty

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I don’t even know I can explain this: Sumner Redstone‘s ex-stewardess girlfriend is named Malia Andelin. She is listed as the sole donor to Global Poverty Project. They’re the underlying registered charity of Global Citizen, the group that’s putting on the all-star charity event in Central Park this September.

Global Citizen says it’s part an an Australian clothing company called Cotton One. (You can read about them in my last post.) But when I asked about a Form 990 for Global Citizen, they referred me to the Form 990 filed for Global Poverty Project, And the sole donor to GPP is one Elizabeth Malia Andelin of Beverly Hills, a former flight attendant on Viacom  chief Sumner Redstone’s private plane. Andelin donated $1.5 million. She’s the purported 35ish galpal of 90 year old Redstone. Their pictures are pretty much all over the internet, and they look about as couple-y as Redstone will allow given his checkered romantic history.

The Form 990 for Global Poverty states that they have no– zero– donations to anyone in 2011. (Their 2012 form hasn’t been filed.) But of the $3 million they had on hand in 2011, more than half– $1.6 million–went to salaries, advertising, travel, and legal fees. They spent $899,000 on advertising.

Hugh Evans is the extremely well spoken founder of the group. I spoke to him this morning. He has the Australian gift of gab, which isn’t a bad thing when you’re raising lots of money and chatting up celebrities. Evans is passionate about ending global poverty. He insists on a couple of things: One– that Redstone and Andelin “are not a couple. She isn’t his girlfriend.” Two– that all the money raised by Global Citizen goes to the cause of ending extreme poverty. He seemed unaware of the Form 990 expense listings.  Evans was featured last year in the New York Times and he’s a celebrity in Australia. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/23/arts/music/hugh-evans-29-force-behind-global-festival-on-great-lawn.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

He told me that all of the musicians in this year’s show are performing for free. At 30, he expressed shock that I had attended the famous concert on the Great Lawn in Central Park, back in 1981, with Simon & Garfunkel. “You don’t sound old,” he said. I assured him I had aged naturally.

Evans said Global Citizen doesn’t make charitable donations. “We’re an advocacy group. We got $1.3 billion last year in commitments from other groups and corporations,” he said. “You can see them on our website.”

He also said that a committee of people in the music industry and with big agencies like CAA, WME, Live Nation and AEG Live met to organize the concert.

And what’s the interest of Australian retailer Cotton One, which seems to be somewhere at the root of all this? “They have 153 stores in the US now, and they’re planning a thousand more in the next year.”

Stevie Wonder, John Mayer Central Park Concert: Questions About Organization

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There are already questions about the group staging a massive rock concert in Central Park this September. Stevie Wonder has been signed to headline a the show on September 28th to fight extreme poverty. John Mayer, Alicia Keys and Kings of Leon will join him for a concert produced by an Australian group called Global Citizen. It’s a free show, but ticketed.Last year’s show, the first one from Global Citizen, featured Neil Young, Foo Fighters, and the Black Keys.

Global Citizen says it’s connected to something called the Cotton On Foundation. You’ve never heard of Cotton On because they’re a retail chain, like The Gap, based in Australia. The foundation is based there, too, and has no records in the U.S.

Last December Cotton On was fined $1 million for selling flammable children’s clothing. http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-12-18/cotton-on-fined-for-unsafe-childrens-clothing/4434462.

The report said: “The nightwear was so flammable that they should not have been supplied in Australia at all. To compound this, the highly flammable nightwear was misrepresented by being labelled ‘low fire danger’.”

Cotton On Founder Nigel Austin has no problems with poverty himself: he recently purchased Australia’s most expensive mansion for upwards of $20 million.

The Cotton On Foundation lists no information whatsoever about their finances or anything else on Australia’s official charity registry.

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