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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 08 Apr 10, 19:41 
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OK in Iran, shunned in Israel: film about Muslim born a Jew
By Jerome Taylor, Religious Affairs Correspondent Independent


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 12 Apr 10, 9:54 
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Home > Arts & Entertainment > Films > Features
Revenge of the epic movie flops
They've tried remaking hits from the past – now Hollywood studios are planing to revisit the films that failed. Arifa Akbar reports on a plot so bizarre it might just work



Red Sonja: The 1985 original grossed only $6.9m, but Hollywood hopes that by casting Megan Fox, box office disaster can be averted


When Overboard – a dubious 1987 comedy about the antics of a rich woman who suffers from amnesia after falling from her yacht – was released, not even a stellar cast featuring Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn could stop it from sinking at the box office. Then there was Dune, the lavish 1984 science fiction odyssey directed by the ultra-hip David Lynch, starring the acclaimed Francesca Annis and Sting, which cost $40m to make. It pulled in a grand total of $29.7m at the box office.

Then there was The Shadow, 1994's offering about a masked vigilante, with Alec Baldwin in the title role. The film was meant to be a summer blockbuster and the starting point for a new franchise with toys and clothing lines to boot. Critics and fans did not agree, and it flopped.

These films not only have failure in common. With a rafter of other screen turkeys, they are all to be remade as part of a growing trend in Hollywood to look to the past for big budget failures in the hope of transforming them into success stories.

The next "big idea" in America's studio-led film industry is to copy the old "big idea" that went wrong, according to insiders who have noticed an increasing number of former flops currently slated for re-makes or in development.

For some, the trend is mystifying. Although Overboard experienced a healthy second life on cable television in America, it had an ignominious initial run. It was critically lambasted and floundered at the box office, making only $26.7m when it was expected to gross much more. Now, more than 20 years after its unmitigated failure, it is to be remade for modern audiences with Jennifer Lopez – not an actress who always celebrated for her comedic skills – rumoured to be in the starring role. In its new incarnation, Lopez is said to be playing the role of the spoiled heiress who learns that money is not everything after falling overboard her yacht, and experiencing not just a bout of amnesia but also a brush with the "other side" in her encounter with a working-class family.

When it was released, during the height of Hawn's fame, The Washington Post described Overboard as having "one-dimensional characters" and its distinguishing factors being "a good long look at Hawn's buttocks and lots of pathetic sex jokes". That judgement has not stopped Sony and Overbrook Pictures from putting together a remake.

Dune, meanwhile, was considered such an embarrassment when it was first released that even Lynch distanced himself from it. Now,the respected director Pierre Morel hopes to improve on Lynch's effort with a big budget remake for Paramount Pictures. Sam Raimi, the American director and actor, is said to be leading a new version of The Shadow. The Black Hole, a 1979 Disney film that was billed as the studio's answer to Star Wars and the most expensive movie of its time, is also being rehashed. While the original did turn a profit, it suffered a critical panning.

There is even a remake of a remake in the pipeline; Godzilla, a second version of the Japanese film of the same name, was co-written and directed by Roland Emmerich (director of Independence Day) in 1998, but failed to fire the public's imagination on release. A third version is now underway.

One theory for this reliance on rehashed ideas is that Hollywood studios, overwhelmingly owned by multinational companies seeking profit, are fearful of original concepts that may be seen as too high risk to make. Revisiting bad ideas in hope to turn them into good ones are seen as a safer bet.

Leo Barraclough, a British correspondent at Variety magazine, suggested that a film tainted by box office disappointment still boasted some name recognition. "They (the studios) do look to work with something that is a known quantity. It doesn't necessarily need to be a remake – it can be based on a bestselling book or some kind of intellectual property that is a known quantity.

"The stakes for Hollywood films are higher (because of the money involved) so they can't take the creative risks that the independent film sector can. The Hollywood studios can't afford to be cavalier on what risks they take," he said.

The key to a successful remake, he suggested, was to add something novel. "The key is not just to slavishly remake the film but to do something new with it, connect it to the world in which the audiences live," he said.

A remaking trend that he had noticed was the mining of old French films being adapted for Hollywood audiences. Films based on French originals which are understood to be in development include the 2008 hit, LOL (Laugh Out Loud), starring Sophie Marceau, Dinner for Schmucks, about a group of rich people who invite the dimmest person they know for a dinner party once a year, and Welcome to the Sticks, about the divide between Parisians and countryfolk.

There are some notable examples of remakes of flops that have worked in recent cinema history, most famously Ridley Scott's box office smash, Gladiator, which was essentially a remake of the little-known 1964 swords and sandals saga, The Fall of the Roman Empire. The new version starring Russell Crowe and victorious at the Oscars with a best picture statuette, raked in $457.6m worldwide in 2000.

Jonathan Kuntz, a professor of film studies at the University of California, told TheWrap.com website that while remakes were not a new phenomenon, Hollywood studios were more in the habit of turning to old films that had been hits the first time around.

Barry Norman, the veteran film critic, was dismissive about remakes of classics such as Get Carter, Alfie, The Pink Panther, Breathless and The Italian Job, branding them "cowardly" – and other pundits agreed, declaring them inferior to the originals.

But making good films out of former flops, on the other hand, was no bad thing, said Mr Norman. "It is a cautious and cowardly way of making film if you just do remakes but I'm wholly in favour of remaking films that didn't work the first time round but could work if they were made again," he said. "It makes much more sense if you have an intrinsically good idea that wasn't pulled off but could be done better. There is no sense in taking a film like Casablanca or Citizen Kane and remaking it, because it can't be improved upon."

He did however express reservations at the overall culture of remakes, sequels and prequels in which Hollywood had become immersed – a far cry from the roots of the studio system on which it was founded in the 1930s and 40s. "Men like Samuel Goldwyn and Louis B Mayer who established the studio system really loved films. They really pushed the boundaries. Nowadays, there is no equivalent. The bottom line now is the dollar. The studios are run by accountants who are interested only in making money. Making films is seen as to be based on a formula that works, like making baked beans," he said.

He also pointed out that while these remakes may well make a profit, the films that had been scooping the most Oscars in the past two years were innovative, independently made ones including Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire and Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker.

Others, however, have speculated that successful remakes of past flops may be aided by special effects which were simply unavailable to movie makers the right the first time. Now, with the dramatic advances in 3D and CGI, a remake of Dune, for example, may be breathtaking for its special effects alone. The advent of computer graphics and 3D technology could mean that dated action films could be modernised for new generations of film enthusiasts. The old, in this way, may just be rendered thrillingly new.

Second time lucky? Films awaiting remakes

The Shadow The 1994 film starred Alec Baldwin as an ex-American soldier. The modern version will be made by Sam Raimi

Red Sonja The 1985 original grossed only $6.9m, but Hollywood hopes that by casting Megan Fox, box office disaster can be averted.

The Black Hole The 1979 original was Disney's answer to Star Wars and the most expensive film of its time. Disney wants Joseph Kosinski to oversee a remake.

Overboard Goldie Hawn starred in the 1987 comedy. Sony's remake will star Jennifer Lopez.

Dune David Lynch's 1984 space odyssey made $29.7m, but cost $40m. From Paris With Love director Pierre Morel will take over.

Real Genius The Val Kilmer comedy grossed only $12m in 1985, but Imagine and Columbia believe that the Cold War satire can be a success.

Red Dawn The war film set in an alternate 1980s was a $40m hit, but doesn't it seem like the expiration date has passed on its politics.

Godzilla Legendary Pictures is hoping to improve on Roland Emmerich's critically panned 1998 version

Classic reproductions: Success stories

Among the slew of disappointing remakes, there have been some shining successes that have taken critics by surprise. The seemingly untouchable cinematic classic 1962 version of Cape Fear, starring Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum, and directed by J. Lee Thompson, was followed up by a remake that arguably outdid the first version. The second, made by Martin Scorsese in 1991, earned Oscar nominations for actors, Robert De Niro and Juliette Lewis. They were also nominated for Golden Globes. Peck and Mitchum, who had taken the starring roles in the original, appeared in this version in lesser roles. The film critic, Barry Norman, argues that this film was better than the original, bar its "Hollywood ending".

Another remake that many critics felt had outshone the original was Ocean's Eleven, starring George Clooney and directed by the acclaimed Steven Soderbergh. Made in 2001, it was based faithfully on the first version but many praised it for its technical excellence as well as the quality of the acting by a collection of A-list stars including Brad Pitt, Clooney and Casey Affleck. The original was made in 1960 and starred Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis Jnr, among others.

Despite the star wattage of its lead actors, the film was criticised as being self-indulgent and over-reliant on the reputations of its actors rather than their actual performance in the film.
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 16 Apr 10, 14:26 
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Leigh's new film nominated for Cannes Palm D'Or
Director's latest – 'Another Year' starring Jim Broadbent – is up for festival's top prize


By Arifa Akbar, Arts Correspondent Independent


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 18 Apr 10, 10:11 
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'The guilt killed him': TV star Mark Speight's sister speaks for the first time about his suicide
By CATHERINE O' BRIEN Mail


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 20 Apr 10, 0:04 
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BBC to screen £8million animated series of The Jungle Book

By Liz Thomas Mail


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 20 Apr 10, 14:40 
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Dominic Lawson: The Pope is vilified, Polanski indulged

Last weekend I went to see a new film by a child-abuser. Very good it was, too. Roman Polanski's The Ghost shows no diminution in the artistic powers of one of cinema's most enduring talents Indeoendent[


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 25 Apr 10, 8:27 
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Michael Douglas: My night with TWO Mrs Robinsons at age 16

By SHARON CHURCHER


In Douglas’s latest movie, Solitary Man, which is out next month, he plays a fiftysomething who tries to pick up younger women by saying he’s ‘gifted in ways no 18-year-old is’.
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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 25 Apr 10, 20:08 
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Coronation Street’s Ashley 'fuming' after he is axed with screen wife Mail


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 30 Apr 10, 21:51 
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Major New BBC Wildlife Series

Picture from BBC

BBC One has commissioned a new wildlife series called Africa, to be shown in 2012.

The six-part series will use the latest in filming technology to explore previously unseen landscapes – from Angola to Mozambique and Libya to Sudan.

From the Atlas Mountains in the north, to the Cape of Good Hope in the south, from the roof of Ethiopia in the east, to where the forest meets the sea in the west, the series aims to encompass the wildest places left on Earth.

BBC executive producer Mike Gunton said: "The series combines the epic power of Africa's landscapes with intimate and dramatic moments in the lives of individual creatures that struggle to survive there. Each episode focuses on a different region, unearthing the elements that have given each place its own unique character.

"With this series we have the chance to bring about a step-change in the way we use new photographic technology to enhance the intensity of the audience's experience and offer new perspectives on this amazing continent.

"That means there's everything from previously unseen landscapes filmed from the air; 700 day time-lapses; joining vultures as they soar over equatorial glaciers; following camels to an oasis hidden inside an extinct volcano; or capturing the microscopic detail of the strange behaviour of sand grains."




New Nigella Lawson Series

Nigella Lawson is returning to BBC Two with a new series in the autumn.

This 13-part series will show Nigella cooking food for modern living, whatever the situation, at her studio kitchen, at her home and other locations.

The series will include a mixture of easy, fast and fabulous recipes to beat the clock at the end of the day, and more leisurely recipes to unwind with over relaxing weekends. As well as creating dishes for greedy days, Nigella will also show viewers inspired recipes to make with leftovers.

She will also share tips, strategies and culinary secrets, underpinned by her kitchen mantra: "maximum flavour for minimum effort".

Through the course of the series, Nigella will also share with the viewers the kitchen gadgets she has bought over the years, revealing those she can't live without and those that have been bought late at night on the internet and are now gathering dust.

Janice Hadlow, Controller BBC Two, said: "I am thrilled to have Nigella back on BBC Two. Her previous series have been great hits for the channel and I'm sure the viewers will love her new recipes."



Big Exit For Peggy Mitchell

Long-running EastEnders character Peggy Mitchell is going have an “epic” exit from the BBC soap.

Story producer Dominic Treadwell-Collins insists fans will not be disappointed by the Walford matriarch’s departure later this year, following Barbara Windsor's decision to quit the series.

Simon Ashdown, the show’s lead writer and consultant, is set to write the storyline and Peggy will leave Albert Square with a bang.

Speaking to website Walford Web, Treadwell-Collins confirmed: "We've storylined Barbara's exit and that's going to be epic and moving - Simon's already chomping at the bit to write those episodes."

He also revealed the end of Peggy will not mean the end of the Mitchell clan, and Peggy’s niece Ronnie (Samantha Womack) in particular is set to be part of a major storyline.

He added: "It's a huge loss, but the show - and the Mitchells - will keep going. We've actually got an amazing story for the Mitchells over the next year or so. And maybe even some joy for Ronnie! It's time to give the girl a break."



EastEnders Actress To Leave

Lacey Turner, who plays Stacey Branning in EastEnders, is leaving the soap later this year, the BBC has confirmed.

The actress, who has been in the role for five years and collected a number of awards, said "the time has come to try something different".

EastEnders new producer Bryan Kirkwood has said the door will be left open for the character to return in the future.

Stacey's on-screen mother Jean, played by Gillian Wright, will also make her exit from Albert Square.

Turner, 22, said she has had a "fantastic" time playing her feisty character, which she called a "brilliant role".

Kirkwood added: "It's only right that someone as talented and versatile as Lacey should pursue new challenges and we wish her the very best of luck."

He promised a "typically dramatic Slater family exit" for Stacey and her mother.

waveguide.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 30 Apr 10, 21:54 
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Kevin Lygo To Join ITV

Kevin Lygo, Channel 4 director of television, is leaving the broadcaster to take up a post with ITV.

Lygo has been appointed managing director of ITV Studios after six years at Channel 4.

He said he was "very excited" by the new challenges ahead, while ITV said it was a "great signing".

He added: "ITV Studios is one of the most successful commercial producers in the UK and owns some of the biggest brands in TV.

"Our goal is to keep those programmes fresh and relevant, develop new hits and exploit the full value of those properties across all platforms in the UK and internationally."

Adam Crozier, chief executive of ITV, said: "Kevin's track record in finding hit programmes and exploiting content will be invaluable as ITV focuses on improving its hit rate across all platforms - television, online and mobile."

It is expected Lygo will continue to work closely with Channel 4 through his new ITV role, as one of the broadcaster's programme suppliers.

Channel 4 thanked Mr Lygo and called him a "popular and admired colleague".




GMTV Road Trip

Waterloo Road actress Denise Welch has arrived in California to make a Thelma & Louise-style road trip series for GMTV.

She has teamed up with GMTV reporter Carla Romano, hired a red Mustang and hit the road for a girls-only trip.

The series takes in houses of the rich and famous, including Jackie Collins, and will start screening on GMTV on May 24.



Crimewatch Roadshow

Crimewatch goes on the road for a second series this summer on BBC One Daytime.

Presenter Ginny Buckley will join former detective Rav Wilding to co-present the show, which comes live from around the UK.

Each week the programme will feature crimes from a different part of the country – Lancashire, Humberside, Kent and the West Midlands – and will appeal to the public for information to help bring criminals to book.

Liam Keelan, controller BBC Daytime, said: "Crimewatch Roadshow was a huge success for BBC Daytime last year, tackling issues across the regions of the UK that really matter to our audience such as burglary, vandalism and common assault.

"It's great to be able to welcome Ginny Buckley to this series alongside Rav Wilding as the series goes from strength to strength."

Crimewatch Roadshow is due to transmit on BBC One in June 2010.

waveguide.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 03 May 10, 22:45 
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Chart Watch: Week Ending May 8th 2010

My name is James and I don't own a conical bra, sorry..

For the third time in as many weeks we have a brand new single at the top of the official UK charts as Diana Vickers' time in the sun turns out to be a one week wonder - 'Once' dipping to Number 4 in perfunctory manner. Her replacement at the top comes pretty much from out of nowhere, a single from an act whose last hit singles were a full five years ago.

Yahoo


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 04 May 10, 14:15 
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Singer Peter Andre is to present a new teatime show on Channel 4.

Andre announced he would be presenting The 5'Clock Show, which replaces The Paul O'Grady Show, in his regular Planet Pete column for new! magazine.
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 05 May 10, 21:18 
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David Dickinson Hosts ITV Chat Show

David Dickinson hosts his own daily afternoon talk show for ITV1 daytime, starting on Monday, May 17.

Seated in his leather winged chair, ‘The Duke’ will give viewers a mix of items including celebrity chat, topical debate, cookery and a touch of antiques.

Throughout the series viewers can also expect topical views as Dickenson and his team of pundits and celebrity commentators give us their take on the day’s news and views.

Guests in the first week include The Hairy Bikers, Russell Watson, Richard Madeley, Denise Welch and Jo Pasquale.



James Nesbitt To Star In Medical Drama

James Nesbitt is to take the lead in new ITV medical drama series Monroe.

The Cold Feet actor is set to star in the upcoming show, where he will play the unusual, “charismatic”, brain surgeon title character in the script penned by screenwriter Peter Bowker.

ITV’s Director of Drama Commissioning, Laura Mackie, said: “Monroe will breathe new life into the medical genre, I hope the combination of Pete's sharp and pacy script and Jimmy's performance as the charismatic surgeon will make this one of the most compelling new dramas for 2011.”

Each weekly episode will focus on a serious injury or disease and the impact it has on patients, families and staff members.

Peter Bowker, best known for scripting 2004 series Blackpool, said: "I am a huge fan of hospital drama - not least because it provides the chance to tell big emotional stories based on compelling characters.

"Neurosurgeons are the nearest thing we have to real-life miracle workers, yet they share the same human failings as the rest of us. We want them to be brave enough to take the decisions they take, yet they can't always be right. We don't have to like them, but we have to believe in them. Monroe dramatises what it is like to be at the sharp end of those expectations."

Filming is due to begin in September in Leeds and will be produced by Jennie Scanlon.

waveguide.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 07 May 10, 19:48 
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Cilla Black to play stripper as she joins Katie Price in ITV1 comedy Benidorm Mirror


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 Post subject: Re: TV, Radio, Music and Film news
PostPosted: 14 May 10, 10:38 
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Keith Richards: 'I'm probably more aligned to Lucifer and the dark side'
Stories surrounding The Rolling Stones' Exile on Main St have become the stuff of rock legend. As the 1972 classic is reissued, Keith Richards separates fact from fiction with Pierre Perrone



'Exile on Main St' is reissued by Polydor on 17 May. The documentary 'Exile of the Stones' is on Radio 2 on 19 May at 10pm
Independent


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