Wednesday 10 September 2008

Jonas Brothers Series To Mimick Hannah Montana

The Jonas Brothers have re-written their new TV show and it bares a similarity to fellow Disney series Hannah Montana.


Just as Miley Cyrus has an alter ego in the show, Jonas Brothers will play the role of a rock-and-roll band at night, piece living a normal teen life in the day.


The New York Daily News reports how the series will be set in a born-again New Jersey firehouse, with filming to be held in Los Angeles.


The fresh reports contrasts with recent claims that the Jonas Brothers would be doing a comedy music show, as inspired by Flight Of The Conchords.




More information

Sunday 31 August 2008

Pumpkinhead

Toward the end of the '80s, special effects artists had literally get gods. They had instigated and then escorted in the genre revisionism of the geological era, while pickings their physical art form as far as the pre-computer years would reserve. Such names as Tom Savini, Rob Bottin, Chris Walas, and Kevin Yeager were all championed by a burgeoning collection of horror geeks giddy o'er their latex paint and Kayro skill correct. By 1988, the recent Stan Winston was as well a member of this visionary Valhalla. His play on Terminator, Aliens, and Predator made him a creature-creating b. B. King. And as with many in his order, it was thinking he could translate his talent into the field of view of guiding. Pumpkinhead proven them right.


Ed Harley (Lance Henriksen) is a single father functional a pocket-size grocery store along the outskirts of town. He loves his little boy Billy (Matthew Hurley) and dotes over him ceaselessly. When a group of teenagers wander into ithiel Town, motorcycles in tow, Harley senses trouble. Sure enough, an fortuity involving his son turns fatal. Devastated, our parent turns to a bushwhacker family for help. Seems they know the whereabouts of a legendary hag who tin can unleash a vengeful spirit known as Pumpkinhead. Knowing he volition never pillow until something is done, Harley makes the necessary blood sacrifice, and unleashes the deadly demon. Little does he know that while his boy will be avenged, his own soul is in mortal danger.


Relying heavily on both rural folklore and yet another leading performance from B-movie maverick Henriksen, Pumpkinhead is a near classical monster movie. Filled with mood and atmosphere, it only suffers from a limited production budget and Winston's relation inexperience behind the camera. Clearly, the F/X whiz understands the basics of the genre. We get voodoo black magic, late night visits to a fog-covered burial ground, the standard array of aggressive adolescents, and one helluva of a beastie. With its firm storytelling and attention to art blueprint and detail, what we wind up with is an supra average attack at transcending the Greed decade's fast, cheap, and cheesy fright ideals.


It's impossible to tell enough good things almost Henriksen. He owns every aspect of this film, his emotional depth providing the grief, the madness, and the regret that comes with his actions. Though many consider him a sultan of shlock, the role player actually got his take up in high profile transportation such as Dog Day Afternoon, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and The Right Stuff. Yet thanks to his work with James Cameron (where, oddly enough, he met Winston), he has suit synonymous with movie sick -- and that rattling doesn't do him justice. As Ed Harley, Henriksen comes off as poor, proud, and protective of what he has. When his only child is taken from him, his reaction is so nuanced and natural that we'd buy any response -- including a 10-foot-tall terror sprung straight from his id.


While the teen characters are comparatively interchangeable, Winston does a good job of reconciliation their sloppiness with consideration. A duet of the gals even challenge the boys for their reckless ways. But once the title devil is unleashed, the photographic film has to rely on the customary shocks and nighttime action scenes to get by. It's a testament to Winston's underlying talent that he manages to pull them off with small logistical error. Indeed, without his involvement behind the lens and Henriksen's in front, Pumpkinhead would have been a serviceable if subpar monster-on-the-loose exercise. But thanks to both of these certified creepshow legends, what could be platitudinous comes off as hideous, and quite honorable.

Monday 11 August 2008

Phalanx

Phalanx   
Artist: Phalanx

   Genre(s): 
Trance
   



Discography:


Symphony in Gminor CDM   
 Symphony in Gminor CDM

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3




 






Wednesday 6 August 2008

Lindsay Lohan Fires Back at Police 'Gay' Remark



(AP)


Lindsay Lohan said Friday that police force have no business acquiring involved in her personal life, a day later the constabulary chief explained that the paparazzi were no longer an issuance � in part because the 22-year-old actress had evidently "at rest gay."


"Police chiefs shouldn't

Thursday 19 June 2008

Lake fires back at AMA for childbirth statement

NEW YORK —

Ricki Lake is firing back at physicians groups that have singled her out for bringing attention to at-home childbirth.


The 39-year-old former talk-show host is named in a recent statement by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists that says the home is not the safest setting for having a baby.


In her film "The Business of Being Born," a documentary about the maternity care system that premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, Lake is shown giving birth in the bathtub of her Manhattan apartment to her second son Owen, who turns 7 on Wednesday.


The ACOG statement, supported in a resolution Tuesday by the American Medical Association, said, "There has been much attention in the media by celebrities having home deliveries," citing a "Today Show" headline that read "Ricki Lake takes on the baby birthing industry: Actress and former talk show host shares her at-home delivery in her new film."


"It's scary that both (the ACOG and the AMA) have sort of targeted me," Lake told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "And, you know, I'm all about choice. This is not unlike the abortion issue. I am pro-choice when it comes to childbirth and choices in birth. Home birth was around long before hospitals were taking over - and I just think women need to know (the information) so that they can make the best choice for them."


The AMA resolves in the statement to support state legislation "that helps ensure safe deliveries and healthy babies by acknowledging that the safest setting" is a hospital, connected birthing center or other approved facility.


"There's a lot of provocative things that are said in the film," she said, "but I think it's very clear that we need doctors, we need the care and the technology that we have. But we also need to value the process of giving birth normally."


Lake said she had no problems delivering her oldest son Milo, 11, at the hospital, but "looking back on it, I felt that I did not necessarily need the intervention. I didn't need the (drug Pitocin, which induces labor). I just should have labored on my own."


The second time around, as long as her pregnancy continued to be low-risk, she decided to give birth at home.


"I was empowered, I was transformed and I would love for women to have had that opportunity - to be an active participant in their own birth choices and birth experience," she said.








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Friday 6 June 2008

Jessica Simpson - Simpson Has Marriage On Her Mind Despite Split Reports

JESSICA SIMPSON is laughing off reports she and boyfriend TONY ROMO have split, suggesting the sports star might be marrying material.

With Dallas Cowboys star Romo in Chicago, Illinois for promotional duties and Simpson working in Los Angeles, rumours are rife the couple has split, but she insists that's not the case.

And, as if to prove a point, the singer/actress admits she has marriage on her mind: "I want to be married and have kids. I have a future ahead."

But she wants to make sure her second trip up the aisle is forever after splitting from her first husband Nick Lachey.

She says, "I don't know about that yet - I've been down that aisle."




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