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Archive for May, 2010


“The Karate Kid” – A star-making turn for child actor Jaden Smith 0

Posted on May 27, 2010 by kankan
Jaden Smith, the twelve-year-old son of Will Smith, stars in the title role of Columbia Pictures’ new action-adventure “The Karate Kid,” a remake of the 1984 hit in which he plays an American youth in China who gets a crash course in martial arts from a maintenance man (Jackie Chan) so he can defend himself against a band of bullies.
Will was a fan of the original “Karate Kid” and thought Jaden, who already had studied martial arts, would be the right guy for the role. “My dad had the idea of remaking it,” Jaden Smith says. “He’s the one who was like, ‘We need to make this movie!’”
Jaden Smith got his big-screen start alongside his dad in the 2006 drama “The Pursuit of Happyness” and co-starred in the science-fiction remake “The Day the Earth Stood Still.” He said he wants to make acting a lifelong career and take a page from his father’s book with more action roles.
Though he’s not yet even a teenager, Jaden appears as dedicated to his craft as a seasoned pro, putting in the hard hours to make his character believable.  For “The Karate Kid,” he spent three months training in the martial arts in Los Angeles and then worked at it an additional four months in Beijing , where the film was shot last year.
“Now, I’m doing it again,” Jaden says.
The film’s title is a little misleading, to be sure, because Jaden studied kung fu rather than karate, but it’s a skill that is serving him well. Kung fu, he explains, “helps me with stunts and stuff like that. It’s great, and it’s fun — but it’s very hard work.”
This new “Karate Kid” plays to a younger demographic than the 1984 original, which starred Ralph Macchio as a bullied teenager who learns karate from a handyman/martial arts master played by Pat Morita.
In the update, Dre and his widowed mother (Taraji P. Henson) leave Detroit when she is transferred to Beijing . Soon enough, the diminutive Dre finds himself the target of older and bigger bullies who are taking kung fu lessons from a sadistic teacher. Jackie Chan, in a surprisingly dramatic turn, plays the handyman at Dre’s apartment complex, who teaches the boy the art of kung fu.
The martial arts superstar also had a thing or two to teach the young actor — but not necessarily about kung fu. “It was more life things and things about the camera. He would come in every day and he would say ‘good morning’ in a different language. It was very fun to work with him. He taught everybody things.”
The youngster’s famous parents, executive producers on the film, accompanied him on the shoot, and though they were there for four months, he says he didn’t get much time to sightsee. “What I did get to see was pretty cool,” he says, looking on the bright side. “I got to run on the Great Wall.”
Relatively “fresh” in the movie business, Jaden was recently awarded the 2010 ShoWest Breakthrough Male Star of the Year.  ”Jaden is an exceptional young actor who has delivered a true breakout performance with his portrayal of Dre Parker in ‘The Karate Kid,’” Robert Sunshine, ShoWest co-managing director.
“I’m very excited about getting awards already. It’s crazy,” Smith answers when asked about the honor.
Opening soon across the Philippines , “The Karate Kid” is distributed by Columbia Pictures, local office of Sony Pictures Releasing International.  Visit www.sonypictures.com.ph to see the latest trailers, get free downloads and play free movie games.

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Jaden Smith, the twelve-year-old son of Will Smith, stars in the title role of Columbia Pictures’ new action-adventure “The Karate Kid,” a remake of the 1984 hit in which he plays an American youth in China who gets a crash course in martial arts from a maintenance man (Jackie Chan) so he can defend himself against a band of bullies.

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“Knight and Day” moves up to June 24 Phils. opening  0

Posted on May 25, 2010 by kankan
Shortening ‘fanticipation’ for the most awaited action-romantic movie of the year, the Tom Cruise-Cameron Diaz film “Knight and Day” books to an earlier opening on June 24 (Thursday) in Philippine cinemas.
“Knight and Day” shoots into a series of high-octane events when June Havens (Diaz) accidentally bumps into Roy Miller (Cruise), a mysterious man who seems to have fallen out from the government’s secret service.  Popping in and out of June’s life, Roy manages to pull June in a string of ballistic episodes that threaten their lives.  Running away from every group who assures them of safety, Roy and June continue the globetrotting chase as they try to figure out the truth in order to survive.
The movie is directed by James Mangold (“3:10 to Yuma,” “Walk the Line”) from a screenplay he co-wrote with Scott Frank (“Minority Report,” “Out of Sight”). The film’s executive producers include blockbuster makers Joe Roth (“The Great Debaters”), E. Bennett Walsh (“Kill Bill”) and Arnon Milchan (“Mr. and Mrs. Smith”).
Also starring in the movie are Peter Sarsgaard (“An Education”) as a federal agent relentlessly pursuing the couple; Viola Davis (“Doubt”) as a CIA director trying to decipher the true purpose of their high-wire activities; Paul Dano (“There Will Be Blood”) as an eccentric genius behind a revolutionary technology; and Olivier Martinez (“Unfaithful”) as a ruthless arms manufacturer.  Co-starring are Maggie Grace (“Taken”) and Marc Blucas (“Buffy the Vampire Slayer”).
“Knight and Day” is a 20th Century Fox film to be distributed by Warner Bros. in the Phil. theaters.

knight&day

Shortening ‘fanticipation’ for the most awaited action-romantic movie of the year, the Tom Cruise-Cameron Diaz film “Knight and Day” books to an earlier opening on June 24 (Thursday) in Philippine cinemas.

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Sarah Jessica Parker returns as Carrie Bradshaw 0

Posted on May 24, 2010 by kankan
Sarah Jessica Parker reprises her award-winning role as New York writer Carrie Bradshaw in New Line Cinema’s “Sex and the City 2,” the eagerly anticipated sequel to 2008 film which grossed more than $415 million at the worldwide box office.
“It’s very moving and truly thrilling to be part of something that people have connected with and have strong feelings about,” says Parker, “something that they’ve welcomed into their homes every week and then gone to the theatre to watch.  So we gave a lot of thought as to how we’d take them into the next phase, two years down the road.”
For Carrie Bradshaw, an unconventional woman by any definition, doing what’s expected of her has never been the norm, and her stance in this film is no different.  As writer-director Michael Patrick King puts it, “tradition snuck in and it freaked her out.”
In fact, Parker notes, “Carrie, who at one point thought she might not be the marrying type, is finally married to the love of her life, the man she spent most of her adult life pursuing.”  She further adds that Carrie is not alone in reaching a crossroads in her life.  “All the women, at this point in their lives, appear to be content with having what they thought they wanted.  But, as Michael Patrick so cleverly does in his writing, there’s nuance and layers and complications under the surface.”
In the film, when we first glimpse Carrie and Big in their home together, Carrie is feeling a bit unsettled in her settled, married life, wondering “what happens after you say ‘I do.’”  And because Carrie is also a writer, she has even gone so far as to express her feelings about the idea of marriage in her new book — a collection of comic essays in which she lampoons the idea of traditional wedding vows.
“Carrie has spent her career writing about being single, and for the first time she’s writing about a different topic, being married,” Parker observes.  “The truth is, she doesn’t know a lot about it yet.  But she’s learned that there’s a difference between having a wedding and being married.  She’s been married for a very short time and she’s not quite wearing it as comfortably as she wants to.”
Parker adds, “Carrie likes to go out, she likes to live the city life, looking, watching, participating.  One of the many things she’s secretly struggling with is the idea of staying in, of these shackles she has figuratively projected onto herself.  She’s able to intellectualize it, but emotionally, she’s not actually where she would like to be in the marriage.  She wants to be able to say she feels good about the expectations she has had of her partner and herself.  So for Carrie, it becomes a story about ‘Yes, I had a wedding, but am I married?  Am I married?’”
For the cast and crew of “Sex and the City 2,” working together throughout the years has become, perhaps, the best of traditions.
“I think what was most interesting to me about the ‘Sex and the City 2’ shoot was getting away with everyone,” Sarah Jessica Parker says. “We were all removed from the most important people in our lives, our families, and that was very difficult, but I think it also helped us grow even closer than ever—and we’ve all been pretty close going on 12 years now.  It was probably the best time we ever had as a group, and it was so great to have that experience.”
Opening across the Philippines on June 2, “Sex and the City 2” is distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures in association with New Line Cinema.

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Sarah Jessica Parker reprises her award-winning role as New York writer Carrie Bradshaw in New Line Cinema’s “Sex and the City 2,” the eagerly anticipated sequel to 2008 film which grossed more than $415 million at the worldwide box office.

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Super hot breaking news! 0

Posted on May 21, 2010 by kankan
Charice – becomes the first Asian artist to have a Top 10 album in the U.S…. ever! With a debut at #8 this week of US Billboard Top 200 with her self-titled debut, selling 43,000 copies.
Rain, Wonder Girls, Seiko Matsuda, Utada Hikaru, Coco Lee, all tried and failed!
Plus!
“Pyramis” single finally hits No. 1 on Billboard Dance/Club Charts & with airplay on over 100 station in the US
Charice by Charice gets the No. 1 Pop Album spot on iTunes US and Canada
“Pyramid” video No. 1 on MYX and Channel [V]
“Pyramid” No. 1 on breaker stations – RX 93.1, 99.5 RT & U92 with massive airplay all over the country.

charice

Charice – becomes the first Asian artist to have a Top 10 album in the U.S…. ever! With a debut at #8 this week of US Billboard Top 200 with her self-titled debut, selling 43,000 copies.

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Perky and poignant talents in “Marmaduke” and “Ramona & Beezus”   0

Posted on May 21, 2010 by kankan
Up and coming youngsters Caroline Sunshine and Joey King lend an organic mesh of endearment to upcoming family movies “Marmaduke” and “Ramona and Beezus.”
Caroline Sunshine is Barbara Winslow in the bigger-than-life family adventure “Marmaduke.” The world’s most lovable Great Dane, Marmaduke leaps from the comic strip and continues to live the good life with the Winslows.  The Winslows are about to move out from their old neighborhood because of Phil’s (Lee Pace) work location.  Beleaguered wife Debbie (Judy Greer) along with their children and Marmaduke (voiced by Owen Wilson) suddenly find their life turned upside down. For Marmaduke, he must navigate the canine turf wars and find himself a place among his new set of acquaintances.
Now 14, Sunshine started out as a commercial model for dog food when she was 11 and “Marmaduke” is her first movie project. Asked in a recent interview in The Rob Redstone Show about her new movie, Sunshine excitedly related that “I really enjoyed playing Barbara because it wasn’t that much of a stretch, I guess since I’m a teenager. But when her family gets uprooted from one place to another, it’s her going through different emotions, as a teenager, and then on top of that, with the big move.  And I think Barbara is a character that a lot of people can relate to, she’s a big texter, she’s very social.  And before the movie I didn’t have a phone…I got my first phone this year.”
Playing a highly-imaginative child in “Ramona and Beezus” from the pages of classic kids’ book series “Ramona” by Beverly Cleary is chaste young talent Joey King.  King stars as Ramona alongside Disney’s teen star Selena Gomez who plays Beezus. The movie follows the adventures of the young Ramona Quimby and her big sister Beezus. Ramona being young and imaginative always ends up a pest to almost everybody in the neighborhood especially to her sister Beezus.  With her vivid imagination, boundless energy, and accident-prone antics, Ramona keeps everyone she meets on their toes. But her irrepressible sense of fun, adventure and mischief come in handy when she puts her mind to helping save her family’s home.
King’s portrayal of Ramona resonates a deeply endearing child who finds herself in awkward situations most of the time.  Also starring are John Corbett and Bridget Moynahan as Bob and Dorothy Quimby as the dedicated parents of Ramona and Beezus. Josh Duhamel and Ginnifer Goodwin also star in the movie.
Earning nominations at an early age in the Young Artist Awards for her voice performance in “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” and for her Guest Starring Performance in “CSI,” King proves she’s no neophyte when bringing characters on reel. She has also appeared in the thriller “Quarantine” and as voice talent in “Horton Hears A Who.”
“Marmaduke” opens June 4 and “Ramona & Beezus” comes in later on August 18 in theaters across the Philippines from 20thCentury Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.

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Up and coming youngsters Caroline Sunshine and Joey King lend an organic mesh of endearment to upcoming family movies “Marmaduke” and “Ramona and Beezus.”

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The toys plan their great escape in “Toy Story 3″ 0

Posted on May 19, 2010 by kankan
Disney/Pixar’s “Toy Story 3” welcomes Woody (voice of Tom Hanks), Buzz (voice of Tim Allen) and the whole gang back to the big screen as Andy prepares to depart for college and his loyal toys find themselves in… daycare!  These untamed tots with their sticky little fingers do not play nice, so it’s all for one and one for all as plans for the Great Escape get underway. A few new faces—some plastic, some plush—join the adventure, including iconic swinging bachelor and Barbie’s counterpart, Ken (voice of Michael Keaton), a lederhosen-wearing thespian hedgehog named Mr. Pricklepants (voice of Timothy Dalton), and a pink, strawberry-scented teddy bear called Lots-o’-Huggin’ Bear (voice of Ned Beatty).
Directed by Lee Unkrich (co-director of “Toy Story 2” and “Finding Nemo”), produced by Pixar veteran Darla K. Anderson (“Cars,” “Monsters, Inc.”), and written by Academy Award®-winning screenwriter Michael Arndt (“Little Miss Sunshine”), “Toy Story 3” is a comical new adventure in Disney Digital 3D™.  Oscar®-winning composer/songwriter Randy Newman, a key collaborator on the first two “Toy Story” films, is back on board to provide another brilliant score (and new song). “Toy Story 3” is based on a story by John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich.
The stellar vocal cast reunites Hanks and Allen with Joan Cusack as Jessie, Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head, Wallace Shawn as Rex, John Ratzenberger as Hamm, and Estelle Harris as Mrs. Potato Head, while featuring the “Toy Story” debuts of Beatty, Keaton and Dalton, as well as Jeff Garlin, Bonnie Hunt and Whoopi Goldberg.
“Toy Story 3” raises the bar for 3D filmmaking and exhibition, and takes full advantage of the newest technology to bring depth and dimension to the story.  For this film, the Pixar team has perfected and pioneered the latest 3D advances to tell their story in a visually dynamic way. Unkrich says that while 3D certainly enhances the movie-going experience, Pixar has been incorporating dimension into their films all along.
“Our approach tends to use 3D as a window into the world so the audience can experience everything in depth,” says Unkrich.  “For ‘Toy Story 3,’ my goal was to tell the best story that I could, while staging the action as dynamically as possible.”
Opening soon across the Philippines in Digital 3D and regular format, “Toy Story 3” is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International.

toystory3

Disney/Pixar’s “Toy Story 3” welcomes Woody (voice of Tom Hanks), Buzz (voice of Tim Allen) and the whole gang back to the big screen as Andy prepares to depart for college and his loyal toys find themselves in… daycare!  These untamed tots with their sticky little fingers do not play nice, so it’s all for one and one for all as plans for the Great Escape get underway. A few new faces—some plastic, some plush—join the adventure, including iconic swinging bachelor and Barbie’s counterpart, Ken (voice of Michael Keaton), a lederhosen-wearing thespian hedgehog named Mr. Pricklepants (voice of Timothy Dalton), and a pink, strawberry-scented teddy bear called Lots-o’-Huggin’ Bear (voice of Ned Beatty).

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The fab femmes ‘Carrie’ on in “Sex and the City 2″ 0

Posted on May 18, 2010 by kankan
In bringing “Sex and the City” to the screen, writer-director Michael Patrick King, Sarah Jessica Parker and the rest of the cast felt a great sense of responsibility to their characters Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte and Miranda, because each of the women is reflected somewhere in the audience.  Therefore, in New Line Cinema’s highly awaited sequel “Sex and the City 2,” even though they vacate their daily lives and take an exhilarating romp in a stunning locale, the women continue to face very human, true-to-life concerns, as voiced by the ever-questioning chronicler, Carrie (Parker).
“Carrie is truly the heart and soul of it all,” says King.  “Even when the story focuses on the other women, we hear and see it from Carrie’s perspective to some degree.”
When we first glimpse Carrie and Big in their home together, Carrie Bradshaw—now also known as Mrs. John Preston—is feeling a bit unsettled in her settled, married life, wondering “what happens after you say ‘I do.’”  And because Carrie is also a writer, she has even gone so far as to express her feelings about the idea of marriage in her new book, I Do, Do I?, a collection of comic essays in which she lampoons the idea of traditional wedding vows.
“Carrie has spent her career writing about being single, and for the first time she’s writing about a different topic, being married,” Parker observes.  “The truth is, she doesn’t know a lot about it yet.  But she’s learned that there’s a difference between having a wedding and being married.  She’s been married for a very short time and she’s not quite wearing it as comfortably as she wants to.”
Miranda Hobbes, having gotten past Steve’s infidelity in the last film, finds herself finally comfortable and secure at home.  It’s her job that’s causing her grief.  She’s grown increasingly frustrated at work, where her obvious talents are being thwarted by her arrogant and clearly chauvinistic boss.
“Miranda has always defined herself as a career person,” says Cynthia Nixon.  “Men might come and go; maybe she would be a mother, maybe she wouldn’t, but she was a lawyer.  Now she’s made partner in a great law firm, she has a terrific salary, but she has a new boss who can’t stand the sight or sound of her.  We all have our breaking point, and Miranda is reaching hers.  To all of a sudden be set adrift and to try to figure out, ‘If I’m not a lawyer, who am I?  What else is left of me?’  That would be a big deal for anybody, but particularly so for someone who has defined herself through her career for her entire adult life.”
Also a wife and mother, Charlotte York-Goldenblatt has spent the last two years in the midst of her growing family, and now finds herself in the middle of the “terrible twos” with her daughter Rose.  “Things are not going smoothly for Charlotte,” admits Kristin Davis.  “She still really wants everything to be perfect, and it’s hard for her to accept the fact that it’s not…and that she’s not perfect either.  It’s been her ongoing struggle throughout the life of the character.  It’s a continuous battle as to how overachieving she can be and how many surprises have to be thrown her way before she can actually let go a little bit and stop this pursuit of perfection.  And now baby Rose is the biggest challenge of all, even if Charlotte can’t admit it.”
The most outgoing of the foursome, Samantha is a smart hedonist who lives life on her own terms.  However, this time around, life is throwing the sexy blonde a few curveballs as she is forced to deal with the idea of aging and what locking horns with the first symptoms of menopause means for her liberated lifestyle.  Cattrall looked forward to approaching this fact of life from a comedic point of view.  “For me, incorporating comedy into a menopausal storyline was incredibly gratifying, because you hear so many negative stories about what women have to go through at that time of their lives,” she comments.  “I feel we’ve taken that subject and mined gold out of it by making it human and funny and accessible.  Samantha has a tremendous lust for life and she’s a powerhouse about her sexuality; she enjoys it and integrates it into every aspect of her life.  So when that part of her is challenged, she fights back with all she’s got.”
“These four actresses embody something very special, something everyone relates to,” says King.  “Whether people feel that they are like Carrie, or Miranda, or they have a friend who is like Charlotte or Samantha, the audience has an investment in these actresses and their characters, and in the emotional journeys they take.”
Opening soon across the Philippines, “Sex and the City 2” is distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures in association with New Line Cinema.

sexcity03

In bringing “Sex and the City” to the screen, writer-director Michael Patrick King, Sarah Jessica Parker and the rest of the cast felt a great sense of responsibility to their characters Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte and Miranda, because each of the women is reflected somewhere in the audience.  Therefore, in New Line Cinema’s highly awaited sequel “Sex and the City 2,” even though they vacate their daily lives and take an exhilarating romp in a stunning locale, the women continue to face very human, true-to-life concerns, as voiced by the ever-questioning chronicler, Carrie (Parker).

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Shrek is back! 0

Posted on May 17, 2010 by kankan

shrek_isback

After challenging an evil dragon, rescuing a beautiful princess and saving his in-laws’ kingdom, what’s an ogre to do?  Well, if you’re Shrek (Mike Myers), you suddenly wind up a domesticated family man.  Instead of scaring villagers away like he used to, a reluctant Shrek is now a local celebrity who begrudgingly agrees to autograph pitchforks.

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