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December 31, 2007

Cinematic Crush: Bobby Cannavale

Filed under: z-link, Videodrone, Cinematic Crushes, Sex and the City, Oz — admin @ 6:50 am

Crush object: Bobby Cannavale, actor/paisano.
- Why we like him: For his affable adorableness and his goofily endearing persona, not to mention his willingness to play gay so often.
- When did we first notice him: As the “funky spunk” guy on Sex and the City.
- Awards on his mantel: Emmy Award for his role as Vince D’Angelo, Will’s first real boyfriend, on Will and Grace (click here for a video tribute).
- More gay for pay: Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart and Paul Rudnick’s The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told onstage; a drug dealer on Oz; closeted characters in both The Guru and Shall We Dance?; Robin Williams’ estranged boyfriend in The Night Listener.
- Other choice roles: Paramedic Bobby Caffey on Third Watch; Joe the snack truck guy in The Station Agent; his acclaimed Broadway debut in the recent play Mauritius.
- Bet you didn’t know: Has had no formal acting training, although he knew he wanted to be an actor at age 8; has appeared on all three Law & Order series — as different characters;
- Yes, it’s true: He was in Snakes on a Plane.
- Can we quote you on that: (Regarding his Sex and the City stint) “I probably get razzed more for that till this day than for anything I’ve ever done — especially by women.”
- You go boy: “If you’re raising kids today and you don’t explain to them from the very beginning that there’s nothing unnatural about being gay and that we’re all God’s children, then there’s something wrong with you.”
- Where we can see him next: In the horror film 100 Feet, the comedy Diminished Capacity and Brief Interviews With Hideous Men (we assume he’s not one of the title characters), all due next year.
- Family ties: His ex-wife is Sidney Lumet’s daughter and Lena Horne’s granddaughter.
- Where you can see more of him right now: Shaking his moneymaker in this outtake from Romance & Cigarettes.

Links via Imdb.com and YouTube.com.

The Latest on TV: Jerry’s Girls

Filed under: z-link, Shop for DVDs, Coming to DVD, Latest on TV — admin @ 6:06 am

Although not as prolific as some of his contemporaries, Jerry Herman is widely regarded as one of the best composers of American musical theater. Winner of ten Tony Awards, his Hello, Dolly! is easily one of the greatest musicals ever written, and his Mame and La Cage aux Folles are pretty darn good too.

Herman is the subject of a new documentary, fittingly titled Words and Music by Jerry Herman, that will air on PBS tomorrow night. Chronicling his rise to Broadway fame, the program also features interviews with original Dolly stars Carol Channing and Charles Nelson Reilly, original Mame Angela Lansbury and original Albin/Zaza George Hearn, among others.

And don’t worry if the PBS station in your area isn’t showing it or you miss it tomorrow, because it will be released on DVD … the same day. And with such bonus features as Channing and the original Broadway cast performing “Hello, Dolly!” and Ethel Merman singing “Before the Parade Passes By”, that may be your best bet after all.

Click here to buy Words and Music by Jerry Hermanon DVD from Amazon.com.
Links via BroadwayWorld.com and Playbill.com.

Ferrari Solstice: For Better Or For Worse?

Filed under: z-link, replica, Pontiac Solstice, Pontiac — admin @ 5:07 am

It’s a story you’ve heard many times; someone buys a car, he likes it general but there’s something about its appearance that doesn’t click. Mr “Mad Mod” in particular didn’t like his Pontiac’s front end so he decided to give it a nose-job by adding a Ferrari F430 inspired bumper.

Apparently the guy didn’t have any intentions of building a full F430 replica, which is a plus in our books. Of

December 30, 2007

Movie Review: Children of Men

Filed under: z-link, movies, review — admin @ 9:32 pm

Children of Men is a violent but excellent movie about a near dystopian future where no children have been born for 18 years. No explanation is given for this premise, nor is one really needed.

As you might expect, the world is pretty down about this, fearing for the end of mankind after the current humans die in a way that doesn’t seem to bother our current civilization (which is why science-fiction is the best of all metaphorical fiction genres, holding up a mirror to ourselves by changing something that we often take for granted).

The movie also presents the entire world as essentially reverted to barbarism, with the lone exception of Great Britain. But GB doesn’t get off easy. They have their hands full beating up, killing, or throwing out the waves of illegal immigrants trying to get in, as well as handling the roaming gangs of thugs in the countryside who are out for a bit of the old ultra-violence.

Theo (Clive Owen) plays a man going about his business who suddenly gets “recruited” by an old girlfriend (Julianne Moore), a “terrorist” leader: she needs him to help smuggle a young woman out of the country. A young woman who is mysteriously, and miraculously, pregnant.

Along the way we meet violence, a bit of friendship, more violence, betrayal, more violence, and more violence.

Theo is an anti-hero. He does what he has to do while the forces around him are slowly circling in, but he’s fragile, weak, and scared. Lots of people beat up, slice, or shoot people in the film, but he’s not one of them. As a result, you feel the fear along with him.

While I disagree with the need to show so much explicit gore (not excessively much, but too much anyway), the movie is beautifully shot with many very long single shots, which gives an air of reality to the narrative.

As far as the pregnancy goes, this is just as unexplained as the premise itself. Nor is any explanation given as to what exactly will happen with a single baby born into this mess of a world. Which is all to the good.

Some people said that the best sci-fi movie of the last decade was Gattaca, but I disagree; Gattaca was an good premise but a rather poor movie shot with little flair and too tightly wrapped up. This is far better; better movie-making, and better story.

Movie Review: Enchanted

Filed under: z-link, movies, review — admin @ 6:01 pm

Enchanted is a wonderful Disney movie that manages to both capture the spirit of family entertainment while simultaneously mocking it at the same time.

The movie begins with a fifteen minute animated sequence about a girl (Amy Adams) in the forest with her woodland animal friends pining for her true love’s kiss just as if the last fifty years of feminism and modern sensibilities never occurred.

The handsome prince (James Marsden), out for his daily jaunt at beating up ogres, swoops in to rescue the girl.

“Who are you?” he asks.

“I’m Gizelle!”

“Gizelle! We will be married in the morning!”

And so they ride off into the sunset.

Hopefully no one will have bolted out of the theater by this point, because this is where it gets truly wonderful. The prince’s stepmother, fearing the loss of her kingdom should her step-son marry, pushes Gizelle into a magical well where she wakes up as a live action person in New York City.

About what you would expect occurs, but it’s done so well. It’s not overdone slapstick, it’s not racy, it’s not all the bad things it could have been. Instead it’s sweet, lightly comedic, and captivating. There are even a few song and dance numbers that are actually good, not forgettable like so many other recent musicals have been.

And even though things work out in the usual Disney manner, enough modern sensibility is thrown in to make it not too cloying.

The movie enters some weak territory when it tries to resolve just what magic works in the real world and what doesn’t. But you can ignore that. And it carries a poor message about the magic of credit cards, which is harder to ignore, but doesn’t take up much screen time.

My daughter Tal (14) saw it with me and hid her face in her hands when the movie started out, thinking that it might be all animated and old-fashioned, but in the end she was singing the songs out of the theater.

This is not a deep, thoughtful life-changing movie, but it’s great entertainment and a welcome member of the Disney collection.

2009 Nissan GT-R Video: Full Test Reveals That It’s Faster Than Nissan Says!

Filed under: z-link, Nissan, Nissan GT-R, Video, Nissan Videos — admin @ 5:04 pm

When there’s a will (and plenty of cash…) there’s a way. Nissan might have not given the all-new GT-R for a full test drive, but the guys at Edmund’s Inside Line travelled all the way to Japan to test a privately owned Nissan GT-R on an airstrip outside Tokyo. The car, owned by Japanese journalist Jun Nishikawa was a Japanese-spec example with 1,500 km or 932 miles on its odo. But enough with

Further Thoughts on the WGA Strike

I was interviewed by Lawrence O’Donnell on KCRW National Public Radio’s “To The Point” this past Friday about the continuing WGA strike and its impact. This was a return engagement for me - I was interviewed on KCRW’s “Which Way L.A.” about the strike by Warren Olney at its outset in the beginning of November.

The most significant part of Friday’s interview, from my perspective, was an exchange of sorts between me and Shawn Ryan - a member of the WGA negotiating team, and creator, among many other important accomplishments in television, of the critically acclaimed “The Shield”.

I said, at the conclusion of my interview, that I thought the television viewers were being hurt the most by this strike, and then the writers themselves.

Shawn Ryan responded, with more than a bit of derision, that, well, of course it’s unfortunate that television viewers are being inconvenienced by not being able to see their favorite shows, but obviously writers who are not getting paid during the strike, and need the money to live, are being hurt far more.

Radio - even NPR - being what it is, I never got the chance to respond. But that’s what they make blogs for, so here’s what I would have said:

First, of course writers are suffering more due to the loss of income during the strike, and the damage that creates. Indeed, one of my main points before and during the strike has been that the writers are hurting themselves more than those they are striking against.

But dollars and cents and the essential things they buy are not the only things of great value being damaged by the strike.

There is also a psychic, cultural damage, that is very different from the sheer economics, but can affect far more people, and have a much longer impact.

Television viewing of scripted shows, like all forms of narrative appreciation, is based on what Samuel Taylor Coleridge called a “willing suspension of disbelief” - we know that what we’re seeing is not real, but a part of our mind pretends that it is. This allows us to make the story our own - to care, sometimes deeply, about the story and its characters. We take time out of our busy lives to read the book, go to the movies, watch television.

In the case of television, this process can be especially profound. We become engaged in continuing series, on screens that cost us little or nothing to watch, in our living rooms and bedrooms. When this process clicks, the characters and the stories can become almost essential parts of our lives. This is what the television industry hopes will happen - and, contrary to what many critics of television in the academic world say, I think that’s by and large a very good thing. (See my book, The Soft Edge, for more of my championship of television and its benefits.)

This is what is being jeopardized by the strike, and it’s more than a mere inconvenience. Although series are not yet being stopped in mid-stream, their relationships with viewers are being seriously disrupted. Lost, which had such a fabulous finale in May, will debut its new season at the end of January - but with only eight episodes. 24, which was supposed to start in January, won’t go on at all. Mad Men, which had a superb and pathbreaking first season on AMC, was supposed to start production on season 2 in November - and that’s now on hold. And this is just the beginning.

Comparing these jeopardized viewer relationships to writers not receiving income during the strike is obviously comparing apples and oranges.

But a shattering of the bond between television viewer and television may be irreversible - and lead to something which cannot be healed by money - viewers going elsewhere, to non-television screens, for their entertainment.

This in no way lets the television networks and producers off the hook for being so stingy and unfair to writers.

But it means the WGA should think again about how long it will keep the strike going.

Teenager Sinks Fiat Punto In The Beach

Filed under: z-link, Accidents, Fiat Grande Punto, Fiat — admin @ 4:29 pm

An 18-year-old college student from Bolton, UK had the bright idea of taking his Christmas present, a used first generation Fiat Punto for a spin on Blackpool beach. A few minutes later Sam Hamilton’s Punto got stuck in the sand. Despite the youngster’s attempts to save the car, it was completely destroyed when the high tide came in. The college student said: “I decided to go onto the beach

Carscoop’s Most Popular Stories In 2007: July To September

Filed under: z-link, Various — admin @ 3:57 pm

This is our third post on the most popular stories on Carscoop from the past year, covering the third quarter of 2007 from July to September. Check out our top stories from the first and second quarter of 2007 by clicking here and here. July 2007 Ferrari F430 Accident - Pretty Car, Pretty Flame…New Fiat 500: 100 High-Res ImagesVideo: BMW 740i Burning Out Turns Upside Down! August 2007

2009 Mercedes SL Facelift: First Official Photo, New SL 63 AMG

Filed under: z-link, Mercedes, AMG, Mercedes SL — admin @ 3:05 pm

Looks like it’s the “AMG facelift” weekend as following yesterday’s pictures of the 2009 CLS 63 AMG (click here), here’s the first official photo of the revised SL AMG models. As with the CLS, the facelift concerns all the range but we’ll have to wait a couple of days to get all the details and pictures. In concern of the facelifted SL AMG models and apart from the new rear bumper and diffuser,

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