Friday, January 30, 2015

Mitt Romney Announces That He Will Not Contest for President in 2016






Mitt Romney announced Friday he will not run for president in 2016, after briefly flirting with a third White House run -- a decision that only slightly narrows the crowded field of potential Republican candidates.

"After putting considerable thought into making another run for president, I've decided it's best to give other leaders in the party the opportunity to become our next nominee," Romney told donors on a conference call Friday morning.

The announcement comes after the 2012 GOP nominee, who repeatedly denied interest in another campaign, surprised donors earlier this month by telling them he was considering it.

Since then, the former Massachusetts governor spent three weeks calling donors and strategists and giving a handful of addresses, including to a Republican National Committee summit. But while some from his former campaign team were willing to wait for his decision, others were already gravitating toward the budding campaign of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.

The two heavyweights were seen as competing for many of the same donors, supporters and strategists. And some doubted whether Romney, who lost to President Obama in 2012 after a campaign in which Democrats cast him as out-of-touch, would be able to connect on a third run -- even as early polls showed him leading the GOP field.

Romney, in a written statement which he also read from on his conference call, said he believes that he could win the nomination, and that he would have enough funding and support.

"The reaction of Republican voters across the country was both surprising and heartening," he said in the statement. At the same time, Romney said it would have been a "difficult test and a hard fight," and it's time for a new voice.

"I believe that one of our next generation of Republican leaders, one who may not be as well known as I am today, one who has not yet taken their message across the country, one who is just getting started, may well emerge as being better able to defeat the Democrat nominee," Romney said. "In fact, I expect and hope that to be the case."

He said he will not hire a campaign team, will not take donations and will not organize a political action committee.

Romney recently spoke with Bush in a private meeting in Utah. It's unclear whether that meeting set the stage for Friday's announcement.

Bush, in a written statement on Friday, praised Romney as a party leader and a patriot. "There are few people who have worked harder to elect Republicans across the country than he has," he said. "Though I'm sure today's decision was not easy, I know that Mitt Romney will never stop advocating for renewing America's promise through upward mobility, encouraging free enterprise and strengthening our national defense."

A day earlier, it emerged that a key former Romney adviser was joining up with Bush's team.

Bush recruited Romney's former senior Iowa adviser, David Kochel, as a senior strategist for his newly launched Right to Rise PAC. If Bush formally pursues a White House bid, Kochel could take on a bigger role.

Former Romney donors also told The Associated Press they were moving toward Bush. The donors, in interviews with The Associated Press, said they see in Bush what they liked about Romney in 2012, the capacity to serve successfully as president, but also something Romney could not muster over two campaigns: the personality and senior staff needed to win the White House.

Bush was hardly the only impediment to a Romney run. A slew of other high-profile Republicans are considering a campaign including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.

Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, said Romney just wasn't the "giant" of the field that he was in 2012. "You've got a herd of people running for the Republican nomination for president," he told Fox News.

For a brief spell, though, Romney was back in his role as chief target of national Democrats, some of whom relished the potential chance to hammer him in 2016.

Speaking to Democrats in Philadelphia on Thursday, President Obama said, "We've got a former presidential candidate on the other side who suddenly is just deeply concerned about poverty. That's great. Let's go. Come on."

He added: "Let's do something about it. I am glad that their rhetoric at least has shifted. But let's now make sure that the policies match up with the rhetoric."

Romney responded on Twitter. "Mr. Obama, wonder why my concern about poverty? The record number of poor in your term, and your record of failure to remedy," he wrote.



culled from Fox News 

Shakira Is Expecting another Baby






Colombian singer Shakira and FC Barcelona's soccer player Gerard Pique pose during a photocall presenting her new album "Shakira" in Barcelona.
Colombian pop star Shakira has given birth to her second child with footballer Gerard Pique.

A statement on the singer's website said the couple's son, Sasha Pique Mebarak, was born late on Thursday at the Teknon clinic in Barcelona, Spain.

It stated: "The name Sasha is of Greek and Russian descent and means 'defender of mankind' and 'warrior'."

The hospital confirmed mother and baby are in "excellent health".

Sasha is a younger brother for the celebrity couple's first child Milan, who turned two a week ago.

The clinic had been surrounded by reporters for several days in anticipation of the birth, which Spanish media reported was by caesarean section.

Shakira, 37, and Barcelona footballer Pique, 27, were pictured driving to the hospital on Thursday together before the birth.

Spanish international defender Pique met Shakira while she was filming a video of her song Waka Waka for the South Africa World Cup in 2010.

The pop star's other hit songs include Whenever, Wherever and Hips Don't Lie with rapper Wyclef Jean.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Lil wayne Say That He Is willing to Stay If the Price Is Right

Lil Wayne will stay with Cash Money and Birdman IF they ante up the money he's owed ... in fact, we're told if Cash Money antes up, Wayne has no choice but to stay. 

Sources involved in the case tell TMZ ... Wayne feels Birdman's decision to avoid paying him is nothing more than a power play. TMZ broke the story that Wayne is suing, and a central claim is that Birdman has consistently stiffed him over the last year.

There are 2 payments that have irked Wayne -- he says he was owed $8 million when he went into the studio to record "Tha Carter V" in December 2013, and another $2 mil when he completed the album last month.

We're told the hope is that Universal -- which distributes Cash Money records -- will step in and earmark the $10 mil for Wayne. And we're told Universal is already putting pressure on Cash Money to settle. 

If Cash Money pays Wayne the $10 mil, it would essentially eliminate any breach of contract. That means Wayne would have no legal basis to ask out of the contract. Even though Wayne's suing for $51 million, most of that is predicated on future lost profits which would not be an issue if they settle.

As for the release of "Tha Carter V" ... even if the case settles the power would be in Birdman's claws
0128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-02

Dead Cat Resurrects From the Grave After Being Buried



A cat who was buried after being hit by a car has seemingly come back from the dead - after managing to claw himself out of a grave.

Bart appeared lifeless after being found in the middle of a road by his grief-stricken owner and was laid to rest.

But five days later, the two-year-old cat was spotted in a neighbour's garden alive, despite the animal's serious injuries.



Bart's owner thought he had died in the accident. Pic: The Humane Society

"He had dug himself out of the grave and slowly made his way back home - albeit weak, dehydrated and in need of medical attention," said the Humane Society, which is now caring for Bart as his owner is unable to pay for veterinary treatment.

When Bart was taken to their animal health centre in Florida, doctors discovered he had sustained a broken jaw and open facial wounds during the accident.

The feisty feline has also undergone surgery so one of his eyes could be removed.

Vets expect Bart to make a strong recovery, allowing him to return home in the not-too-distant future.

Bart is not the only Florida cat to have used up one of its nine lives recently - another family pet survived an arrow being shot through its head.






SOURCE: Sky News USA

Lil wayne Say That He Is willing to Stay If the Price Is Right

Lil Wayne will stay with Cash Money and Birdman IF they ante up the money he's owed ... in fact, we're told if Cash Money antes up, Wayne has no choice but to stay. 

Sources involved in the case tell TMZ ... Wayne feels Birdman's decision to avoid paying him is nothing more than a power play. TMZ broke the story that Wayne is suing, and a central claim is that Birdman has consistently stiffed him over the last year.

There are 2 payments that have irked Wayne -- he says he was owed $8 million when he went into the studio to record "Tha Carter V" in December 2013, and another $2 mil when he completed the album last month.

We're told the hope is that Universal -- which distributes Cash Money records -- will step in and earmark the $10 mil for Wayne. And we're told Universal is already putting pressure on Cash Money to settle. 

If Cash Money pays Wayne the $10 mil, it would essentially eliminate any breach of contract. That means Wayne would have no legal basis to ask out of the contract. Even though Wayne's suing for $51 million, most of that is predicated on future lost profits which would not be an issue if they settle.

As for the release of "Tha Carter V" ... even if the case settles the power would be in Birdman's claws
0128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-020128-lil-wayne-birdman-02

Saturday, January 24, 2015

BIRDMAN vs LIL WAYNE: No settlement To This War! What Could it result to?


Image result for photo of birdman and lilwayne


Does this mean ''biting the hand that fed you''?


Birdman and Lil Wayne have officially declared war ... settlement talks have broken down and Wayne will now sue his mentor, claiming among other things Birdman owes him $8 million.




As TMZ reported ... the 2 titans tried coming to terms this week but it wasn't meant to be. Now Wayne will ask a judge to declare him free of Cash Money and Birdman's control. Wayne says Birdman has violated their contract by withholding the release of his new album.




As for the $8 MIL claim ... Wayne says Birdman owed the money for his latest album -- it was supposed to be an advance.




Birdman has held firm ... he will release the album "in due time," but clearly that's not good enough for Wayne.




We're told Wayne will keep recording but he will release his works outside of the Cash Money umbrella

By TMZ ReporterRead more: http://www.tmz.com#ixzz3Pks1LgIY

Thursday, January 22, 2015

HOT: Three Movies To Be Released Tomorrow January the 23rd

The Box Office has been a little dull this year, if not for the sake of the blockbuster movie 'American Snipper'. Tomorrow January the 23rd will be a very good big day, a day of expected big hits this month! The three movies being released tomorrow are: Cake, Mommy and Black Sea. They will be ready for download on this site in two weeks, depending on demand. We will give you a review of these three movies.


'Cake'



Jennifer Aniston roughs up her appearance to star as a woman suffering from chronic pain, both mental and physical, in this low-budget drama


Cast as a cranky, depressed woman suffering from chronic pain, Cake represents Jennifer Aniston’s first low-budget, indie-style film since 2006’s Friends with Money, offering the star her most dramatically challenging part since either the latter movie or The Good Girl (2002).Covered in prosthetic scars and made up to look as dowdy and unglamorous as someone in cashmere sweatpants can look, Aniston submits an honest, sturdy performance. However, the film, directed by Daniel Barnz (Phoebe in Wonderland, Beastly) and written by Patrick Tobin, is less emotionally potent than it wants to be, and feels as if it might have been overmedicated by script doctoring to make it more palatable to Aniston’s fan base. That sizeable audience will drum up box-office support but it’s hardly likely to doWe’re the Millers-sized business.

Set in Los Angeles, which it evokes with a resident’s sensitivity to the area’s social geography, the film opens at a support group for sufferers of chronic pain. It transpires that one regular, Nina (Anna Kendrick), has committed suicide, and facilitator Annette (Felicity Huffman) asks each of the members to share what they feel. When it’s time for Claire Simmons (Aniston) to tell an imaginary Nina what she thinks, she rips into the dead woman, condemning her decision to end her life in such a way as to cause maximum distress to her family. The others are so upset by her honesty they later politely ask her to take her pain elsewhere.

Scenes at Claire’s home gradually reveal the state of the nation for this troubled woman. Addicted to prescription painkillers, she lives alone in a large, tastefully appointment house, her ex-husband (Chris Messina) having moved out some time ago. Occasionally, she has carefully positioned, loveless sex with her gardener Arturo (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo).When she gives him a box of unused children’s toys she no longer needs, it’s an obvious clue that Claire once had a child who’s now dead, probably killed in the same accident that mangled her body.

Her main support, however, is Silvana (Adriana Barraza, easily the movie’s MVP), Claire’s Mexican housekeeper. Silvana maternally clucks over her employer, taking on the chin Claire’s sometimes brusque comments and ferrying her around town when needed, even as far Tijuana to pick up extra Percocets. The fact that Claire always insists on having her passenger seat fully reclined to ease her back pain marks a nicely observed detail, paid off poignantly at the end.




Nina starts making hallucinatory appearances in Claire’s dreams, urging her to kill herself too. Seeking to exorcize this demon, Claire goes to the dead woman’s house and meets Nina’s husband, Roy (Sam Worthington, speaking with his native Australian accent for a change). Like Claire, Roy is a tightly wound ball of fury, filled with rage at his dead wife for leaving him alone to raise their pre-school-age son. He and Claire strike up a non-physical relationship and something romantic looks possible, but it only takes an encounter with someone connected to the tragedy to shatter Claire’s locked-down composure.

The road map the film draws for recovery comes straight out of the atlas of trauma-drama psychotherapy, prescribing that in order to heal any devastated individual in question must have a big hysterical screaming scene, weep a lot in a jump-cut montage sequence, and hit rock bottom before turning to loved ones – in this case Barrazza’s longsuffering Silvana - for redemptive forgiveness and support. Cake follows this narrative trajectory with dogged scrupulousness, which rather drains any sense of surprise or originality from the movie, however well Aniston performs the required maneuvers.

Even more problematic is the way everyone in the film, including the protagonist, describe Claire as a “bitch,” and yet she doesn’t really do anything all that bitchy or mean. Sure, she’s a bit caustic tongued, and not above using lawyerly tricks to get what she wants (it’s mentioned that she was a brief before the accident), but that hardly makes her any kind of harridan. One can’t help wondering if earlier drafts of the script gave the character more opportunity to be venomous but the end result got watered down somewhere along the way.

Ultimately, the film is better at comedy than it is at the tragic stuff, and Aniston’s redoubtable comic timing never fails her. The back and forth between her and Barrazza has substantial fizzle and in the end the movie is more perceptive about the unique, intimate relationships domestics and employers form between them than it is about pain and grief.

DoP Rachel Morrison’s off-center, oddly-angled compositions add an edginess, enhanced by the faint handheld quiver of the camera while heightened colors are deployed sparingly to signal Claire’s breaks with reality.

Production companies: A Cinelou Films production in association with Echo Film, We’re Not Brothers Productions

Cast:Jennifer Aniston, Anna Kendrick, William H. Macy, Adriana Barraza, Felicity Huffman, Sam Worthington, Chris Messina, Mamie Gummer

Director: Daniel Barnz

Screenwriter: Patrick Tobin

Producer: Ben Barnz, Mark Canton, Kristin Hahn, Courtney Solomon

Executive producers: Jennifer Aniston, Shyam Madiraju

Director of photography: Rachel Morrison

Production designer: Joseph Garrity

Costume designer: Karyn Wagner

Editors: Kristina Boden, Michelle Harrison

Sales: Conquistador Entertainment






'Mommy': Cannes Review






Competing for the Palme d'Or in Cannes, this explosively emotional portrait of a troubled mother-son relationship is 25-year-old director Xavier Dolan's most substantial work to date.


CANNES – The flamboyantly coiffed Quebecois writer-director who put the auteur into hauteur,Xavier Dolan has enjoyed a sensational career rise over the last five years, going from teenage actor to Cannes Competition contender at the ridiculously young age of 25. Dolan's fondness for operatic, style-saturated histrionics onscreen and tetchy narcissism in person tends to divide critics and juries.




But Dolan's fifth feature feels like a strong step forward, striking his most considered balance yet between style and substance, drama-queen posturing and real heartfelt depth. A lusty character study of a working-class Montreal single mother and her emotionally damaged teenage son, Mommy should have plenty of potential commercial appeal beyond Dolan's hard-core art house fan base. This could be his Blue Is The Warmest Colormoment. The Ego has landed.

CANNES REVIEW: 'Fantasia' ('Huan Xiang Qu')

Mommy is Dolan's fourth Cannes entry. He last came to the festival just two years ago with the visually ravishing polymorphous love story Laurence Anyways, which won the LGBT-themed Queer Palm award. Reportedly miffed at being denied an official Competition slot for that film, he chose Venice for his next -- last year's arty psycho-thriller Tom at the Farm.

But even if the gossip is true, his hissy fit is clearly now over as he is back in Cannes with his first official Competition entry. If Mommy defies the current bookie's odds and takes the Palme d'Or, Dolan will be the youngest ever winner --a year younger than Steven Soderbergh was when in 1989, at age 26, he took the big prize with Sex, Lies and Videotape.

The omens are good, since Mommy is a kind of thematic sequel to Dolan's first feature, I Killed My Mother, which won top honors in the Directors' Fortnight in Cannes five years ago. The same leading lady, Anne Dorval, plays the matriarchal pillar of both films. But this time, sympathy has very much shifted toward the long-suffering mother figure. Even though the dramatic material here is much less autobiographical, this more emotionally generous story could almost be read as an apology for Dolan's sulky, spiky, self-absorbed debut.

Mommy takes place in a lightly fictional near-future Canada following the adoption of new laws that dictate parents must either take responsibility for their emotionally disturbed children or send them to detention centers. While this may sound like the opening to one of David Cronenberg's dystopian sci-fi thrillers, it is actually just Dolan's slightly clumsy setup for the family psychodrama ahead. Everything that follows is a broadly naturalistic contemporary three-hander set in the suburbs of Montreal.

Dorval gives a force-of-nature performance as Diane “Die” Despres, a glamorously trashy middle-aged widow whose teenage son Steve (Antoine-Olivier Pilon) suffers from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, bouncing off the walls as he struggles to contain his explosively violent temper. Pilon is great casting for Steve, charismatic and manipulative, volatile but vulnerable. Imagine a demonically cherubic Macaulay Culkin with the sexually charged swagger of a young Jean-Paul Belmondo.

STORY: Cannes Culinary Showdown--Ranking the Macarons

Diane and Steve are both flawed characters, neither victims nor villains. Their conversations are combative and prickly, full of salty slang and occasional physical contact, with teasing hints of incestuous intimacy that the script never fully explores. Unlike Dolan's typical protagonists, these are not bourgeois bohemian hipsters but damaged blue-collar outsiders, struggling yet ever hopeful, bursting with a vitality and vulgarity that give the film its raw humor.

There are more four-letter words in Mommy than all of Dolan's previous features put together. But thankfully, he avoids kitsch caricature or patronizing sentiment in depicting these impoverished, marginalized characters. "I don't see the point in making films about losers," the director explains in his Cannes press notes.

Mommy becomes a kind of bizarre love triangle when shy, stammering neighbor Kyla (Laurence Anyways alumni Suzanne Clement) takes a shine to Diane and Steve. The trio form their own dysfunctional family unit, which liberates all three from stifling personal limitations, at least temporarily. Kyla has a mysterious past and a controlling husband at home, neither of which Dolan explains fully. A missed opportunity, but not a serious omission.

At over two hours, Mommy could benefit from a shorter cut, like all of Dolan's self-edited films. Even so, he keeps this story engrossing, surprising and emotionally pungent for most of its long running time. In another sign of growing maturity, he also resists the lure of tragic melodrama right until the final few scenes, when a heartbreaking daydream sequence showing the successful alternative life that Steve will never lead (Dolan cleverly switches Pilon with another actor here) is followed by a bitter collapse into bleak reality. This downbeat ending does not sit smoothly with the rest of the film, nor does it devalue the good work that has gone before.

PHOTOS: The Party Scene at Cannes 2014

One of Dolan's key selling points has always been his strong visual eye, and he does not disappoint here with balletic slow motion, gorgeous clothes and beautifully lit interiors bathed in lush reds and warm golds. But in a bold departure from his past work, Dolan and cinematographer Andre Turpin chose to shoot Mommy in the square 1:1 aspect ratio. This gimmick initially feels needlessly restrictive but soon creates its own appealing visual grammar of tightly framed close-ups and geometric patterns. Without giving away spoilers, the frame widens during two brief scenes of hope and optimism, an elegant metaphor for the characters literally expanding their narrow horizons. This flashy flourish earned a rare round of mid-movie applause in Cannes.

Another of Dolan's signature touches is his collage soundtracks of vintage pop and classical tracks.Mommy maintains this tradition, using the conceit that the songs all derive from a mixtape CD compiled by Steve's late father. Lana Del Rey, Dido and Beck all feature, but only Celine Dion is honored with her own stand-alone dance routine. "She's our national heroine!" Diane cries.

Dolan may well have read the Canadian music critic Carl Wilson's extraordinary book defending Dion against highbrow snobbery, Let's Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste. If not, he should. Because Mommy feels like a similarly joyous celebration of the raw emotionalism and cultural richness of Quebec's Francophone working class. In any case, it is Dolan's warmest, most humane and least narcissistic film to date.

Production company: Metafilms

Cast: Anne Dorval, Antoine-Olivier Pilon, Suzanne Clement

Director: Xavier Dolan

Screenwriter: Xavier Dolan

Producers: Nancy Grant, Xavier Dolan

Cinematographer: Andre Turpin

Editor: Xavier Dolan

Music: Eduardo Noya

Sales company: Seville International




Black Sea






LOCARNO, Switzerland -- A clash of cultures and generations gives way to understanding and friendship in Federico Bondi's touching "Black Sea" ("Mar Nero") in which a grouchy Italian widow slowly bonds with her young Romanian caregiver. Acclaimed Italian star Ilaria Occhini and Romania's Dorotheea Petre make a lasting impression in a variation on the odd couple theme. Petre was named best actress in the Cannes sidebar Un Certain Regard for "The Way I Spent the End of the World" in 2006.

Full of gentle wisdom and the fresh air of New Europe, the film's fine acting and general warmth will endear it to festival and art house audiences everywhere.

Petre plays Angela, who arrives with very little Italian to take care of the elegant but permanently disgruntled Gemma (Occhini), whose aches and pains are made worse by desperately missing her beloved late husband. Guileless and patient, Angela lets the old woman's unpleasantness bounce off her as she gets on with her job, never losing her temper and sticking up for herself when she needs to. Gradually, she wins not only Gemma's trust but also her affection.

Their relationship deepens the more Gemma learns about life in Romania and sees the young woman's devotion to the man she loves, Adrian (Vlad Ivanov), back in Romania. When Angela learns that Adrian has been fired from his job and has gone missing, Gemma decides they must embark on a trek to find him.

Bondi and co-writer Corso Salani let the pair's relationship flourish slowly with some amusing misunderstandings and observant exchanges. Cinematographer Gigi Martinucci's expertly captures the interplay of the two actresses with Occhini's radiant beauty and intelligence shining through her character's initial truculence and Petre's fresh-faced honesty matching her line for line.

Bondi clearly has great sympathy for the plight of migrants from countries new to the European Union. His scenes showing the Romanian celebrations when joining the EU are as bright and alive as his two accomplished stars.

Production company: Film Kairos. Cast: Ilaria Occhini, Dorotheea Petre, Vlad Ivanov, Maia Morgenstrern, Corso Salani. Director, screenwriter: Federico Bondi. Screenwriter: Ugo Chiti. Producer: Francesco Pamphili. Executive producers: Giorgia Priolo, Marina Spada. Director of photography: Gigi Martinucci. Production designer: Daniele Spisa. Music: Enzo Casucci, Guy Klucevsek. Costume designer: Alessandro Vadala. Editor: Ilaria Fraioli. Sales agent: Intramovies..

Monday, January 19, 2015

The movie 'American Sniper' smashes box office records this weekend


bradley cooper aims in american sniper ap.jpg
Kyle Gallner, left, and Bradley Cooper appear in a scene from "American Sniper." (The Associated Press)
“American Sniper” hit the bullseye, earning an astonishing $90.2 million in its debut weekend.
It is now on pace to decimate records for the Martin Luther King holiday and for the month of January, pulling in roughly $105 million over the four-day period. It’s also a new high-water mark for director Clint Eastwood, whose previous weekend record was the $29.5 million wide-release opening for 2008’s “Gran Torino.” At 84, he’s still got it.
“The movie has become a cultural phenomenon,” said Dan Fellman, Warner Bros. head of domestic distribution. “It tore apart the record book and not by a little. By an enormous amount.”
“American Sniper,” recently picked up Oscar nods for Best Picture and Best Actor for star Bradley Cooper, and the awards buzz only intensified interest in the film. The war drama was co-produced and co-financed by Village Roadshow for less than $60 million.
“American Sniper” wasn’t the only record-breaker. Sony and Screen Gems’ “The Wedding Ringer,” starring Kevin Hart as a best man for hire, is looking to be the number one R-rated comedy opening for the month of January. The film will earned $21 million for the weekend and should pick up $25 million for the four-day holiday. Those numbers are good news for a film that cost $23 million to produce. It also keeps Hart’s box office roll going following his success in recent hits such as “Ride Along” and “Think Like a Man.”
“Kevin Hart really is that guy that everybody wants to hang with,” said Rory Bruer, Sony Pictures president of worldwide distribution. “Not only is he always funny, but he’s that guy that you want to sit down and have a beer with. He exudes charisma.”
The Weinstein Co.’s “Paddington” opened to $19.3 million from 3,303 screens for the weekend and a third-place finish. By Monday, however, it could supplant “The Wedding Ringer” as the holiday’s second highest grossing film as it is also expected to earn roughly $25 million over the four-day period. The Weinstein Company picked up U.S. distribution rights from StudioCanal, which financed the $55 million adaptation of Michael Bond’s beloved series about a talking bear with a penchant for marmalade sandwiches.
“American Sniper’s” success was bad news for the weekend’s other adult drama, “Blackhat.” Michael Mann’s look at the way we hack now flopped, earning a doleful $4 million from 2,567 locations for the weekend and should make $4.6 million over the holiday. That’s a dreadful result for the $70 million production and the worst of Mann’s career. It’s lower even than the modest $10 million the studio projected “Blackhat” would pull in over the four-day period. Legendary Pictures backed the film, with Universal distributing.
The top five was rounded out by holdovers, “Taken 3″ and “Selma.” Liam Neeson’s latest vigilante flick fell sharply in its sophomore frame, dropping more than 60% to earn $14 million over the weekend and bringing its total to $62.8 million.
Despite being snubbed in several major Oscar categories, Paramount Pictures’ “Selma” seemed to capitalize on the Martin Luther King holiday, earning $8.3 million. It should earn $10.3 million over the four-day period. The Civil Rights drama has made nearly $28 million since premiering in limited release on Christmas.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Box Office Report: 'Taken 3' Struck Up Sleepy January With $38.5M-Plus Debut

Liam Neeson's Taken 3 is proving another win for the franchise, which has rocketed the actor to fame as an older action star.
The $48 million action film, produced by LucBesson's EuropaCorp and distributed by Fox, topped the Friday box office with an impressive $14.7 million from 3,594 theaters, and will have no trouble claiming the North American box office crown with a weekend gross between $38.5 million and $40 million, putting it among the top January openings of all time, not accounting for inflation.
Last year's Ride Along is the current record-holder with $41.5 million, followed by Cloverfield, which debuted to $40.1 million in 2008, and last year's Lone Survivor, which opened to $37.8 million.
Leeson's threequel unseats The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, which placed No. 1 for three straight weekends. Taken 3 won't match the $49.5 million debut of Taken 2 in October 2012, but that film faced less competition.
The movie reteams Neeson with castmembers Famke Janssen and Maggie Grace, and introduces Forest Whitaker to the franchise. Olivier Megaton returns in the director's chair, while Besson and Robert Mark Kamen once again wrote the script. This time out, ex-covert operative Bryan Mills (Neeson) avenges the death of his ex-wife.
Coming in No. 2 Friday was Ava DuVernay's Golden Globe nominee Selma, which is expanding nationwide after a limited Christmas release. The critically acclaimed civil rights drama, starringDavid Oyelowo as Martin Luther King Jr. and currently sporting a 99 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, earned an estimated $3.8 million to $4 million Friday from 2,179 runs for a weekend take between $11 million and $12 million.
Holdovers Into the WoodsHobbit and Unbroken were in a relatively close race Friday. Angelina Jolie's Unbroken narrowly led with $2.6 million, but Hobbit and Into the Woods, nominated for a Golden Globe in the musical/comedy category, could pull ahead over the weekend. Either way, both Disney's Into the Woods and Unbroken, from Universal, will jump the $100 million mark by Sunday, while New Line and MGM's Hobbit will clear $236 million.
The Imitation Game, another Globe contender, continues to impress, and should finish the weekend at No. 6, pushing its domestic total to north of $40 million for The Weinstein Co. and star Benedict Cumberbatch.
Fox's family film Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb follows at No. 7, and will finish its third weekend with a domestic total of $99 million.
Horror films often fall steeply in their second weekend, and Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death is no exception. The Relativity release is coming in No. 8 with a projected weekend gross of $4.5 million, putting its domestic total at roughly $22 million.
Annie follows at No. 9 in its third outing, and is looking at a North American total of $78.3 million through Sunday.
Like SelmaPaul Thomas Anderson's Inherent Vice is expanding nationwide this weekend, although it is only playing in 645 locations. The film took in $960,000 on Friday, and is expected to place No. 11 for the weekend with a muted $3 million.
Among other players in the awards race, although not necessarily the Globes, Clint Eastwood'sAmerican Sniper, starring Bradley Cooper as Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, continues to make headlines in its limited release. The movie is projected to earn $545,000 from four theaters for the weekend, putting its average at a mighty $136,250 in its third outing and domestic total at $3.1 million. Warner Bros. expands Sniper nationwide Jan. 16 following Academy Award nominations Jan. 15.
Elsewhere, Sony's The Interview continues to fall off at the box office, not a surprise, considering its availability on VOD (also, the comedy's theater count has dropped from 581 locations to 492 locations). The film is expected to take in $390,000 for the weekend, a decline of roughly 64 percent, for a domestic total of $5.7 million. It has made far more on VOD, or north of $31 million.

Friday, January 2, 2015

10 BIGGEST BOX OFFICE SURPRISES OF 2014

There was plenty of drama at the box office this year, from some tight races to a few dramatic disappointments (Transcendence, anyone?). Along the way, there were some major surprises, as a handful of films exceeded expectations to become box office smashes.


Annabelle
New Line's low-budget horror movie (made for $6.5 million) shattered expectations when it raked in a $37.1 million domestic debut, beating any other horror film's debut this year. The film about a possessed doll went on to do stellar business in foreign markets, especially Mexico, where it had a record-breaking $11.7 million launch and went on to earn $18.9 million. The film also did strong numbers in Brazil ($16.3 million) and the UK ($12 million). The Conjuring spinoff has earned an outstanding $252.7 million worldwide, reaping tens of millions in profits for New Line and parent studio Warner Bros.

Gone Girl
Gillian Flynn
's dark and twisted book Gone Girl was extremely popular, but the David Fincher-helmed film far exceeded expectations. The Fox film remained in the top 10 for 10 straight weeks in the U.S., earning $166.1 million to date. Worldwide, it has grossed $356.5 million, making it the No. 19 film of the year. The $61 million drama, starring Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike, is Fincher's top grossing film and led the way to a new record for the domestic box office for the month of October.

Guardians of the Galaxy
A movie about a tree and a talking raccoon? Even with hit-making studio Marvel behind Guardians of the Galaxy, many insiders wondered if an adaptation of the relatively obscure comic book could work. But James Gunn was able to make a funny, charismatic space opera that raked in a huge $332.9 million in the U.S. The film also built Parks and Recreation star Chris Pratt into a full-fledged movie star and launched a new franchise for Marvel and Disney (a sequel is slated for May 5, 2017). With a worldwide gross of $772.5 million, Guardians, made for $170 million, is the second biggest film of 2014 after Transformers. 

Heaven is for Real
Faith-based film Heaven Is for Real soared at the Easter weekend box office, earning a stellar $22.5 million to bury big-budget sci-fi epic Transcendence, starring Johnny Depp. The faith-based TriStar film, made for a lean $12 million, has earned $101.3 million worldwide. It's not the only faith-based film to flourish this year: God's Not Dead ($62.6 million) and Son of God ($67.8 million) both exceeded expectations as well.

The Lego Movie
There was a time when February was a dumping ground for weak films, but The Lego Movie proved that the right film can work in that window. The surprise animated hit opened to $69 million domestically for the second-highest February opening ever, and held onto the No. 1 spot for four consecutive weeks. The $60 million family film, which earned an awesome $468.1 million worldwide, also launched a new franchise for Warner Bros., which has several sequels and spinoffs in the works.

Lucy
No one expected a female-led action film to out-muscle a big-budget epic starring Dwayne Johnson. But that's just what happened when Luc Besson’s sci-fi action thriller Lucy, starring Scarlett Johansson, beat epic Hercules for the No. 1 spot when it opened in July. The Universal movie had a stellar $43.9 million debut and went on to earn $458.9 million worldwide, a stunning number for a movie costing $40 million. The film, which attracted both male and female moviegoers evenly, was a big win for Universal and EuropaCorp., and proved Johansson's box office power.

Maleficent
Angelina Jolie
's dark take on the iconic villainous role cast a spell over moviegoers to top the domestic box office in May with a debut of $69.4 million, easily taking the No. 1 spot ahead of holdover X-Men: Days of Future Past, which took in $32.6 million. Disney's film, made for $180 million, also enchanted foreign markets, with Jolie's star power pulling in big audiences in China, Mexico, Russia, Japan and Brazil especially. The film has earn a stunning $757.8 million worldwide to become Jolie's highest grossing live-action film, and the third highest-grossing film of 2014.

Neighbors
Universal's Neighbors exceeded all expectations when it laughed its way to a $49 million domestic debut over Mother's Day weekend — the No. 4 three-day opening of all time for an R-rated comedy. Starring Zac Efron and Seth Rogen as feuding neighbors, the $18 million comedy went on to earn $268.2 million worldwide and is one of the most profitable films of the year.

Ride Along
Kevin Hart
and Ice Cube delivered an unexpected box office smash for Universal when Ride Along hit theaters in January. The $25 million comedy topped the domestic box office for three straight weekends, a rare feat mostly accomplished by big tentpoles. After a $41.5 million U.S. debut, Ride Along rolled along to a total domestic tally of $134.9 million. While the comedy's success story is due to its outstanding domestic numbers, it also raked in a respectable $19 million abroad for a worldwide total of $154 million. A sequel is already in the works.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
When the CG-live action project was first in development, there was some concern when producer Michael Bay mentioned that the film might have aliens in it. Could fans' anger lead to a box office bomb? Instead, Paramount's film, with a budget of $125 million, did swift business, topping the domestic box office with a $65.6 million debut. Most impressively, the film had strong legs and continued to do huge numbers overseas ($286 million) for an impressive worldwide total of $477.2 million.

LISTEN AND DOWNLOAD KANYE WEST HOT NEW song "Only Me"

HAPPY NEW YEAR. Its good to be back, up and kicking. So many things spiced up our new year celebration, one of which is music.

Kanye West is ringing in the new year with new music. After hours of Internet rumors and speculation Yeezus dropped “Only One,” on Wednesday (Dec. 31) shortly before the the 2015 ball dropped.  Kanye West quietly dropped an emotional new song called “Only One.” Not only is new music from Kanye West an event in itself, but this song also features the legendary Paul McCartney, and is only the first of a series of collaborations between the two musicians. Their relationship is described as prolific: “It will be the first publicly available recording from what has become a prolific musical collaboration between these two legendary artists,” according to a press release.

The sentimental track finds West singing over simple and sweet piano chords. “As I lay me down to sleep, I hear her speak to me,” he whispers with his opening line to the song which is now available on iTunes.

“Only One” is the first single from West’s upcoming and untitled solo album.  Back in May, a track titled “God Level” was featured in an Adidas commercial and in August an unfinished and unofficial version of “All Day” leaked onto the Internet.

From Kanye’s camp, here’s the story how the song initially came together:
“In early 2014, Paul McCartney and Kanye West first began working together in a small bungalow in Los Angeles. The process that would result in ‘Only One’ began with a simple brainstorming session between the two: With McCartney improvising on the keyboards and Kanye vocally sketching and shaping ideas in a stream-of-consciousness riff.”
What I wouldn’t give to be a fly on the wall in the studio while Paul and Kanye are improvising together! You can feel that in the song though, it feels like it’s unspooling naturally without any strict sense of order. But then, things got even more spiritual:
“When they played back the recording afterward, something remarkable happened. Kanye sat there with his family, holding his daughter North on his lap, and listened to his vocals, singing, “Hello, my only one . . . ” And in that moment, not only could he not recall having sung those words, but he realized that perhaps the words had never really come from him. The process of artistic creation is one that does not involve thinking, but often channeling. And he understood in that moment that his late mother, Dr. Donda West, who was also his mentor, confidante, and best friend, had spoken through him that day.
‘My mom was singing to me, and through me to my daughter,’ he said, astonished.”
If that doesn’t give you chills, then the next part will:
“To some, Kanye’s insight didn’t immediately register. But then he explained: The name Kanye, which his mother had chosen, means ‘only one.’ And then it dawned on everyone there: Something powerful and undeniable had occurred through the power of music and of letting go. A message had been passed down through generations.”
That has to be pretty much the best omen for the start of a year, right? Even if you’re not a fan of Kanye or disagree with his politics, this is a special song. You can hear Paul McCartney’s influence too in the way that the song alludes to “Let It Be,” and there’s a peacefulness here that we rarely hear in Ye’s music.



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