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'Inception' holds box office lead
LOS ANGELES —"Inception" is still kicking at the box office.
The mind-bending Warner Bros. thriller starring Leonardo DiCaprio remained the No. 1 movie for the third-straight weekend with $27.5 million, bringing its total to $193.3 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. "Inception" edged out the weekend's new releases: "Dinner for Schmucks," "Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore" and "Charlie St. Cloud."
"Dinner for Schmucks," the Paramount comedy starring Steve Carell and Paul Rudd, followed closely behind "Inception" with $23.3 million, while the Warner Bros. 3-D sequel "Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore" fetched $12.5 million in the No. 5 spot. "Charlie St. Cloud," the Universal Pictures drama starring Zac Efron, debuted at No. 6 with $12.1 million.
Source: www.kansas.com
Long road for 'Scott Pilgrim'
When "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" arrived on movie screens Friday, it marked the end of a long odyssey for filmmaker Edgar Wright. The director and co-writer of the beloved 2004 zom-rom-com (zombie romantic comedy) "Shaun of the Dead" and the 2007 cop spoof "Hot Fuzz" first became interested in adapting Bryan Lee O'Malley's graphic-novel series six years ago — when he was given the first volume, during the "Shaun of the Dead" press tour.
In Seattle recently for another press tour, with stars Michael Cera and Anna Kendrick, Wright spoke of his immediate affection for the books, which feature the adventures of 22-year-old Scott Pilgrim (Cera). An unemployed musician in a garage band, Scott is dazzled when he meets the girl of his dreams, Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) —and dismayed when he learns that he must fight her seven evil exes in order to win her heart.
"I felt that the essential conceit of having to literally fight for love was really strong," said Wright. "And the books themselves are really imaginative, really fun, really relatable." The series uses video-game and manga conventions to create a slightly surreal, spiky world of young people (virtually no one over 30 appears in the film) as they find their way toward adulthood —"those lost years," Wright said, "before people fall into whatever their professions will be."
Source: www.kansas.com
Porn Clip: Helena Karel [Fucking Great Clip!]
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Source: edstrong.blog-city.com
Ferrell weak point in 'Guys'
"The Other Guys," the new Will Ferrell cop comedy, is good. But it would have been great without Ferrell. His untethered performance beats the comedy life out of most of his scenes.
Ferrell plays Allen Gamble, a numbers-crunching New York detective content to sit at his desk. Terry Hoitz (Mark Wahlberg), who's been partnered with Gamble as a punishment for shooting a sports legend, desperately wants to get into the streets and stop some real criminals.
He gets his chance to be a hero when a routine case turns into a major crime. (I know, this sounds a lot like the lame Fox TV series "The Good Guys" but they really are two different projects.)
Source: www.kansas.com
Social Sex: Goddess of the Week
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Source: edstrong.blog-city.com
Sex Shot: "I Bend over Forwards for You"
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Source: edstrong.blog-city.com
Past resonates in touching, tragic mystery and love story
Argentinas The Secret in Their Eyes (El Secreto de Sus Ojos) earlier this year won the Academy Award for best foreign language film. Its been in limited release in the United States since then, and opens today in Wichita.
The film is an engrossing mystery told on two timelines and a tragic love story. It has a slow burn that draws you in much like a good novel (its based on Eduardo Sacheris book of the same name).
The intricate plot, which takes place in Buenos Aires, follows recently retired court investigator Benjamin (Ricardo Darin), who decides to write a novel based on a 25-year-old unresolved murder/rape case that he worked on.
Source: www.kansas.com
Interest in 3-D looks flat for the movie industry
Is the 3-D movie juggernaut losing momentum? As recently as six months ago, movies in 3-D were touted as the salvation of the movie business. They offered an experience home theaters couldn't duplicate, and theater owners, in turn, charged more for tickets.
But more dissident voices are being heard. Fans grumble that the $2 to $3 up charge is too expensive, the films are often dimly lit, the 3-D looks phony — or just plain bad. And filmmakers including "Star Trek" director J.J. Abrams and "Inception" director Christopher Nolan have groused about the push to convert to 3-D some films shot in 2-D.
Some Hollywood insiders speculate that interest in the format may have peaked with the huge success last Christmas of James Cameron's "Avatar." Since then, ticket sales for 3-D films generally have trended downward as the number of 3-D films has increased.
Source: www.kansas.com
Porn Clip: Randy Girls Ravish Each Other
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Source: edstrong.blog-city.com