Thursday 29 May 2008

'Speed Racer': Massive Attack, By Kurt Loder




On one level, the Wachowski brothers' "Speed Racer," with its hyper-frantic action and ultra-scrumptious Jolly Rancher color design, is a kid flick unlike any other. Viewers of more advanced years, however — say, 13 and up — may feel like they're being beaten to death with lollipops. The picture is also kind of long (two hours and change). Will the tykes sit still for it? Will anybody?

It is said (although not by them, since they no longer do press) that Andy and Larry Wachowski were childhood fans of the "Speed Racer" TV series, a Japanese anime import of the 1960s that was dubbed into English for U.S. syndication. In choosing to turn this property into a feature (it's their first directorial foray since the "Matrix" trilogy collapsed in exhaustion five years ago), the Wachowskis opted for an almost totally computer-generated comic-book look. Actual actors are involved in the film (and some pretty snazzy actual cars, too), but the world in which they operate clearly orbits Planet Manga: Jewel-like cities shimmer in the night, Jello-y pools beckon wetly, and fat white marshmallow clouds drift across impossibly perfect cerulean skies. If the colors in this movie were any more saturated, they'd be dribbling off the screen.

The story is pure milk-and-cookies. The Racer family — Pops (John Goodman), Mom (Susan Sarandon), teenage Speed (Emile Hirsch) and pre-teen Spritle (Paulie Litt) — are all car nuts. Pops builds them, the kids race them, and Mom cheers the gang on. An older son, Rex (Scott Porter), has already bought the farm in pursuit of the world racing championship (we see him in flashbacks). Now his brother Speed — installed in one of Pops' most awesome creations, a screaming white Mach 5 — is preparing to follow in the family tradition, with the chaste support of his girlfriend Trixie (Christina Ricci — with her pert bangs and big liquid eyes, she looks like an anime character herself).

Speed is obviously a Grand Prix ace in the making, and has thus drawn the attention of a sinister industrialist named Royalton (sneer-master Roger Allam, of "V for Vendetta"). When the idealistic young hotshot turns down a big-bucks sponsorship deal Royalton has offered him, the malevolent mogul taunts him with an ugly secret: The top car races are fixed, and always have been — nice guys do finish last. Then he dispatches a gang of thugs to take the potentially troublesome kid out of the running, permanently. Also endangered, for more obscure reasons, is another young driver named Taejo (South Korean pop star Rain, whose effortless cool portends a busy film future). These two outnumbered wheelmen aren't alone, though. Weighing in on their side are a tenacious sleuth, Inspector Detector (Benno Fürmann), and a mysterious masked outrider called Racer X (Matthew Fox).

It's a simple story, but the Wachowskis don't play it for camp; they appear to be genuinely engaged with its themes of faith and family. Not that anyone's likely to care. The picture is a monument to kinetic excess. The overpowered race cars on display crash, careen and sometimes fly along endless, looping tracks that wind through tropical islands, desert wastes and ice-glazed mountain tunnels. There are a few amusing James Bond touches (built-in automotive weaponry, and a poison-dripping scene straight out of "You Only Live Twice") and some passing enchantments (a shot of Trixie piloting a pink helicopter over snow-capped Alpine peaks). The picture looks great. In fact, it looks astonishing. But non-stop astonishment is exhausting — sometimes you want it to stop. "Speed Racer" kicks off in overdrive, and it's a wild ride. Before long, though, it runs out of places to go.

Check out everything we've got on "Speed Racer."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.






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Wednesday 28 May 2008

Rihanna Toys With Adam Levine In Hot New Video!

Rihanna looks set to make pop chart history in America on Thursday when she becomes the female artist with the biggest jump to number one on the Billboard Hot 100.

Her Take a Bow is expected to rocket to the top of the singles chart from a lowly 53, thanks to a whopping 267,000 digital download sales.

The song's jump is the second-best leap to the top, trailing only Rihanna's duet partners Maroon 5 who scored a number one with Makes Me Wonder a year ago after a 63-position hike from 64.

Rihanna's collaboration with Maroon 5 on If I Never See Your Face Again is expected to be one of the new chart's highest debuts when the official countdown is released.

Check out the hot hot hot! video below...




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Carmen Electra talks about having children

Actress Carmen Electra has spoken about her desire to have children in the future.
According to People magazine, the 36-year-old star said: "I hope to be a mom some day, but I'm not rushing to be one."
"It would be a lot of fun. A lot of hard work, but I'll look forward to it someday," she said.

A Midsummer Night's Dream / Grand Theatre, Leeds

One doesn't automatically consider Benjamin Britten as a child of Aquarius; but A Midsummer Night's Dream was written when the country was on the brink of a profound sociological and moral change. Martin Duncan's transgressive staging reminds us that Britten's Dream, along with LSD, psychedelia and swinging, was a product of the 1960s.Johan Engels' setting is, in every sense, groovy. The forest is formed from corrugated, translucent sheeting that suggests both tree stumps and fluted Athenian columns, while also seeming not unlike a giant, rubberised shower curtain. Combined with the giant bubbles floating overhead and Bruno Poet's liquid, aquamarine lighting, it begins to appear as if the action occurs at some splashily high-spirited, cosmic bath time.










The Dream is Britten's most other-worldly opera, whose strange, evanescent tone is dominated by the most extraterrestrial type of voice. The compelling young countertenor James Laing is becoming quite a master of sinister, ethereally pitched roles: he was outstanding as the Fox in Opera North's recent Pinocchio and is no less compelling here as an androgynously alien Oberon, his voice as sharp and scintillating as the diamante sarong and skull cap he is given to wear.Jeni Bern matches him well as a slinky Tytania, a true diva whose coloratura come-on to a confused donkey is remarkably seductive. Henry Waddington brays through the role of Bottom to great comic effect, while Colin Judson's turn as a transvestite Thisbe is a hoot.Among a fine quartet of lovers, Frances Bourne's smoky mezzo particularly impresses as a passionately aggrieved Hermia. I did wonder slightly at the decision to play Puck as a feral, flea-ridden cousin of Caliban from the Tempest, but Tom Walker scratches and slavers through the spoken-word part with acrobatic agility. Stuart Stratford's conducting is supple and responsive to the work's shifts in tonal colour, from the gamelan-inspired, percussive textures of the fairy kingdom to the roistering folk music of the rustic characters.Yet the vision that will persist the longest is that of the angelically sung yet decidedly sinister choir of boy-treble fairies, which Duncan conceives as a troupe of blond-haired, black-winged Hitler youth in their PE kit. This image is disturbing on so many levels it is hard to know where to begin; yet the most memorable Dreams are always those on the verge of turning into a nightmare.· In rep until May 24. Box office: 0844 848 2720. Then touring.

Kooks bassist quits band for good

The Kooks have permanently parted ways with bass player Max Rafferty.
Rafferty had previously spent several periods away from the group because of illness, but he has now left the Brighton rock group for good, according to his bandmates.
He will be replaced by Cat the Dog's bassist Dan Logan on a temporary basis.
No reason for Rafferty's departure has been given by The Kooks.
A statement from the band said: "Max Rafferty has parted company with The Kooks - the band will be continuing with the forthcoming shows. Dan Logan, bassist with local Brighton band Cat the Dog, will be filling in for the short-term."
The Kooks are currently preparing for the release of their second album 'Konk' on 14 April, which is the follow-up to their hugely successful debut 'Inside In/Inside Out'.

Katie Holmes - Holmes Is Tired Of Attacks On Her Family

Hollywood actress KATIE HOLMES hates the constant media attacks on her marriage to TOM CRUISE - insisting it is not fake.

The Dawson's Creek star has been the centre of media attacks since she wed Cruise in 2005 and had baby Suri a year later (06).

But she has hit back at the press for printing lies about her family - branding it a load of "s**t".

She tells Vanity Fair magazine, "I do know what is being said in the press. This is my family, and I do care about them. The stories are not okay. It eats away at me.

"Some of the crap that's out there - it's really frustrating the amount of s**t that's out there!'"




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Zone

Zone   
Artist: Zone

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Glory Colors Kaze No Tobira   
 Glory Colors Kaze No Tobira

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 4




 






Rapper Remy Ma gets 8 years for shooting friend

NEW YORK - Grammy-nominated rapper Remy Ma has been sentenced to eight years in prison for shooting and wounding an acquaintance after discovering money was missing from her purse after a night out in Manhattan.In sentencing the rapper, criminal court judge Rena Uviller said Remy Ma, whose real name is Remy Smith, was "an extremely angry young woman whose anger is completely out of control."In March, a New York jury found Smith, nominated for a 2004 Grammy for her part in Terror Squad's song Lean Back, guilty of assault, weapons possession and attempted coercion.Smith's lawyer, Ivan Fisher, called the shooting in the early hours of July 14, 2007, accidental and suggested the victim, Makeda Barnes-Joseph, was exaggerating the facts to win a large sum in a separate civil suit.Smith believed her friend had taken $3,000 from her and that her gun went off as the pair struggled over her purse. The bullet pierced Barnes-Joseph's colon and hit her rectum and sent her to a hospital for three weeks.




In appealing for leniency, Smith tearfully described how she had grown up in homeless shelters, "surrounded by poverty and drugs and violence and failure.""Remy Ma is not even close to who I really am. I'm not a thug," she said. "I'm not a threat or a menace to society, and I still have so much to offer."But prosecutor Michael McIntosh said that Smith had a habit of traveling with a loaded weapon and said something like this "was bound to happen one day."The sentence was read aloud to a packed courtroom, including the rapper's fiance, the rapper Papoose.Smith and Papoose had planned to marry yesterday at New York's Rikers Island jail, but the ceremony was canceled after a handcuff key was discovered on Papoose, officials said.After the sentencing, as Smith's friends and family gathered outside the courtroom, Papoose had to be restrained as he lurched at one of the 15 court officers who had been stationed in the courtroom.In a phone interview from prison last week on the satellite radio show with New York DJ Kay Slay, Smith said she was innocent and that there is a "whole conspiracy against rappers right now.""Don't be mistaken by a jury that was not my peers. Like, there was not tan, dark brown, black, nothin' on that jury," she said.- REUTERS