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Показват се публикациите с етикет Tonight. Показване на всички публикации

неделя, 3 април 2011 г.

Movie Review: Take Me Home Tonight

Remember the 1980s? If not, perhaps you remember some films of the 1980s-perhaps those of the John Hughes variety? If you do, you probably do not remember a movie exactly like Take Me Home Tonight. In the spirit of John Hughes-esque films (i.e. The Breakfast Club, Pretty in Pink), Take Me Home Tonight is a retro-1980s movie that explores high-school politics despite the fact that its characters are four years removed from it. However, it is done in a way that is quite different from those in the days of the Brat Pack.

The film's star, Topher Grace, plays Matt Franklin, a recent MIT grad and math genius who is having a hard time figuring out what his proverbial next step is. Afraid of taking any chances, Matt is a clerk at a video store where he runs into his crush from high school, Tori Frederking (Teresa Palmer). Tori actually talks to him and spreads the word about the mammoth Labor Day weekend party she'll be attending. So Matt finally takes a chance on something by attending the big party with twin sister Wendy Franklin (Anna Faris) and their best friend Barry Nathan (Dan Fogler).

Things heat up for Matt when he and Barry steal a BMW from the dealership that Barry was recently canned from. The car is naturally stocked with cocaine in the glove compartment that Barry partakes in and consequently acts even crazier as the night goes on. From there on more lunacy follows including: a ridiculous dance-off; a car-crash; a run-in with an angry former classmate of Matt's who is wheelchair- bound (Demetri Martin); a disturbing threesome involving Barry, Sylvester Stallone's ex-wife and current NutriSystem spokeswoman Angie Everhart (I'm still scratching my head about that one), and a really creepy dude with a fetish; then, finally topped off by a giant ball that Matt finds himself spiraling out of control in down a steep hill. (Again, still head-scratching.)

One of the highlights of Take Me Home Tonight is a break-out performance by comedian Demetri Martin, who plays that former classmate in the wheelchair, which left me wanting to see much more of him. He is insanely funny and could've (and maybe should have) had a much bigger part in this movie. Another highlight is Grace's performance. He is so fantastic at playing the straight guy in the comedy duo and he brilliantly illustrates his talent in his scenes with Fogler and especially in those with Martin. He is definitely funny and still reminiscent of the Eric Forman (That ‘70s Show) that we all know and love.

Although I found myself belly-laughing throughout the movie, there were some elements of this story that just did not add up. The film was based on a story idea that Topher Grace co-created that is not meant to be a spoof on the 1980s, but rather a throwback movie that could've actually been made in the 1980s. However, I am not sure that the story worked. It's almost like it was a bunch of shorts pieced together to form a feature length film. These "shorts" were funny on their own, but I'm not sure they were enough to substantiate the film. Additionally, the film reminded me a bit more of After Hours, a 1985 movie that takes place in the span of one crazy night, than any of the more mainstream 1980s movies. Still, Take Me Home Tonight is entertaining enough to provide several laughs.

Rating: TWO AND A HALF BONES

Release Date: March 4th, 2011
Rating: R

Starring: Topher Grace, Anna Faris, Dan Fogler, Teresa Palmer, Chris Pratt, Michael Biehn, and Demetri Martin
Director: Michael Dowse
Writers: Jackie Filgo and Jeff Filgo


View the original article here

събота, 2 април 2011 г.

Interview with Topher Grace and Demetri Martin, stars of Take Me Home Tonight

It has been five years since the final episode of That '70s Show aired. A finale that the show's star, Topher Grace (whose films include Traffic, Win a Date with Tad Hamilton, Ocean's 11 & 12, In Good Company, and Spider-Man 3), only made a brief appearance in (after starring on the show for seven seasons playing the loveable loser Eric Forman, Grace decided not to sign on for an eighth season). Grace is definitely a guy who knows his craft, knows who he is and when it's time to try something new. After meeting him, I found that Grace is beyond intelligent, confident, and extremely fascinating. Joining him on the press junket for his upcoming movie Take Me Home Tonight, a retro-1980s movie which originated from a story idea that Grace co-created (he also serves as an executive-producer), is his co-star in the film, Demetri Martin, a stand-up comedian, former writer for Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and the star of two seasons of Comedy Central's Important Things with Demetri Martin. Martin is every bit as fascinating as Grace, and vastly knowledgeable in his craft as well. Together they make quite a comedic pair in Take Me Home Tonight.

Grace and Martin recently sat down with MovieRetriever, Tom Santilli from the Examiner, and Perry Seibert from Allmovieguide. Upon meeting him, Martin comments on the interior design of the restaurant that we are in, while Grace orders lunch. Both are larger than life on-screen, but are extremely relatable in person. Although they appear a bit tired, and have been on the interview circuit for countless hours already, they still manage to act like it's their first discussion of the day. Before we begin, Grace jokes about our time for the interview being up before we even begin. It appears that he is not that different from the Topher that we are accustomed to seeing on both the big and small screens.

Allmovieguide: So Topher, you are an executive producer and have a story credit on this [Take Me Home Tonight], where did the idea start?

TOPHER GRACE: The idea started with, for a while I thought you know everyone makes fun of the Brat Pack, but they had a great opportunity , with John Hughes along with some other filmmakers, for a group of young people to make movies that had everything you know. Now, there's like a movie that's like a raunchy comedy and it's great, or it's just a romance and these movies [from the 1980s] had everything and I was kind of jealous of the kids.

Then at the same time my producing partner, who's a life-long friend of mine, were growing up, we went to boarding school together, and we were watching Dazed and Confused and thought about how great that was. We didn't know anything about the 1970s, you know it was made in the 1990s about the 1970s. Now this kind of the same young cast you know like Dazed and Confused [had] [Ben] Affleck, [Matthew] McConaughey, Renee Zellweger, so we started thinking wait a second, that would be the 1980s now and no one's done that movie about the 1980s where they're not spoofing it, where it's literally really the 1980s. .…There's going to be one opportunity to do the real quintessential 1980s movie.

DEMETRI MARTIN: It's not just about going for the easy nostalgia jokes. It seems like they tried to make more a movie that could've been made in the 1980s in a sense where it's like just people going through [a] certain stage of their lives with that kind of perspective you know, that kind of lens.

MovieRetriever.com: Yeah it definitely has an anti-Wedding Singer kind of vibe.

GRACE: I love the Wedding Singer.

MovieRetriever.com: I do too.

MARTIN: But you're right.

GRACE: But it was only eight years out of the 1980s. You don't really have a focus on that period of time you know it's like if we made a 1990s movie now, it's going to be about grunge and Seattle or something; you'd have to make fun of it. But in about twelve years they'll be able to make a really good 1990s movie you know.

MARTIN: It comes into sharper focus maybe with a little more distance.

MovieRetriever: I love the Suncoast [video store] reference. It's a little more subtle, but hilarious!

GRACE: I actually did grow up working at Suncoast.

MovieRetriever: Did you?

GRACE: It's kind of a personal thing. It started with Sam Goody then Suncoast. It was our idea because there are kids who are like "What are those stores? What is the stuff they are buying?"

Allmovieguide: I have a friend who I work with who worked at Suncoast also and he said he had panic attacks just from the trailer. It brought it right back.

GRACE: Seriously after having worked there, it was a little too spot on.

Examiner: Were there specific [parts of the movie] that you wrote or was just the story idea yours?

GRACE: The story idea was a fancy way of us saying, "There has to be a dance off, there has to be a threesome," all these kind of conventions.

Examiner: Was there a specific film you guys were trying to go for, you mentioned John Hughes.

GRACE: Oh yeah it really started with John Hughes but also Cameron Crowe is a close second when you think about the 1980s being [the time] that he wrote Fast Times (at Ridgemont High) and directed Say Anything. We wanted that element in there and then we wanted like a Less Than Zero, kind of like the dirtier 1980s. We wanted it to be a cross-section of like not time travel, but genre travel. There are kids who don't know those movies that we talked about and they will be at boarding school like me and my buddy were, watching this movie [Take Me Home Tonight] and it will have the same effect, hopefully.

MovieRetriever: Topher, we were born the same year by the way, 1978, so what was your first MTV experience, your first video?

GRACE: "Don't Come Around Here No More," [by Tom Petty]. It creeps me out! It's a great video.

MARTIN: It's a great video.

GRACE: But when you're a kid you are used to the other Alice in Wonderland and that one was crazy! (To Martin) What was yours?

MARTIN: That's a good question. I don't know my first video, but I remember when Peter Gabriel videos were really breaking, "Sledge Hammer," and "Big Time" at that time I remember that period [as] so cool … a lot of the interstitials more than specific videos. I remember videos as events. When I see them re-run somewhere I think "oh yeah right, that video.…"

MovieRetriever: When MTV was actually playing videos.

MARTIN: Yeah when MTV was, we were just talking about this yesterday. Someone asked me, "What was the most underrated thing about the 1980s?" And I said, "MTV, for what it was, and the promise that it held that it totally pissed away. That's just gone forever."

MovieRetriever: Isn't that horrible?

MARTIN: Yeah it's horrible. [I remember] those interstitial things like a cake with the MTV logo candles popping out of it and weird stop motion animation. And a lot of videos were like [made by] young filmmakers. I got to work a little bit with Dayton and Faris who directed Little Miss Sunshine. They are a married couple, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.

GRACE: They were the last great video makers.

MARTIN: They were awesome! They were telling all this stuff about videos, like they were at South by Southwest the year Daniel Johnston, you guys know Daniel Johnston, was on stage going live from Austin, they [Dayton and Faris] were like, "We shot that [footage]!" They told me how they got to meet him [Johnston] and I thought what a cool time to be doing that for it [the music] wasn't really called Indie music yet right?

GRACE: Was it called Indie?

MARTIN: I don't remember it being called that, was it alternative?

Allmovieguide: It was alternative.

MARTIN: It was alternative, or the beginning of alternative.

MovieRetriever: I want to talk about a specific scene from [Take Me Home Tonight] where you (to Demetri) are in a wheelchair and I'm still … laughing about it. Topher, your response to him, because you (again, Demetri) are so angry and so funny at the same time, was great.

MARTIN: Thanks.

MovieRetriever: I love how your (to Topher) character is aloof to the lunacy that is going on around him. Your reaction is like "Hmmm." Most people would be like, "What the hell is wrong with this guy?"

MARTIN: When we shot this scene, I got to do the line and Topher said, "Improvise." There was a bunch of different stuff. On that day we were like "What will work and what is reality?" I remember when I first did ADR [automated dialogue replacement] you know when you fix some of the audio where there's noise in the background and you are kind of listening to yourself, and … my reaction to [Topher] was like, "Cool, thanks. I think that's a funny scene." I like your reaction because you [Topher] are allowing it, that's what finishes it. Without that, it's just some guy acting kind of crazy.

MovieRetriever: Moonwalking in his wheelchair.

MARTIN: Yeah, you're (gesturing to Topher) reaction kind of keeps it tethered to reality.

MovieRetriever: It was perfect.

GRACE: The dream is to have an actor, and I've never produced before so now I really know how great it is to have an actor come into a scene and add stuff to it, that's what you want from every actor, to make it better especially if they're a writer like Demetri. They can really add a lot not just like a funny face, but content. There's a thing in the red band that's not in the actual movie it's in the red band trailer that came out, but it makes you [Demetri] look like a rock star. I oversaw the script and I saw you [Demetri], it was great.

Examiner: Was there a lot of stuff from other actors, a lot of improv stuff?

GRACE: I would say Demetri stole the show in that regard. Dan Fogler you know it's his real break out movie; he knocked it right out of the park. It is great to see someone find his role.

MARTIN: I got to read the script and go to the audition and I remember certain lines and can see what the actors did with them. Even if it's not improv, it's like a choice. I remember thinking that with Dan, that [line] really comes to life or that becomes more of a joke because of what he's doing.

GRACE: Everyone laughs when he's like high on cocaine the entire movie; it was definitely the right role for him. Chris Pratt also did some really great stuff.

MovieRetriever: Wasn't he Anna Farris's boyfriend, always saying to her character, Wendy, "Wenders!"

GRACE: Yeah. Although the "Wenders" line was actually written, he [Pratt] added a lot. Anna and I are more script-specific, although we would change it up in rehearsal. For me, that's the dream of doing this movie, it's really why you do it. I've worked with older actors who are established, who I've learned a lot from. It's great to be around people who are huge stars and you learn by just working with them. But then I really wanted to be with my peer group. I've been telling this story a lot, but it's true. It's how I really feel. I read that Saturday Night Live book, and in it, everyone was together in this little room you know Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, and others and I thought "Man, why couldn't I have lived then?" We'd go to IHOP at the end of the night because that was the only place open at 6 am at the end of our work day, and I'd feel that way. Watching Demetri do a bit with Dan [Fogler] and you guys [the audience] would love it but unfortunately you don't get to see it, you have to pay to go see it [the movie]. I mean I have to pay too in a different way, but I got to be there with Dan and Demetri doing a bit and then Anna Farris joins in, and I'm like, "wow, I'm here in the beginning!" It's a lucky thing.

MARTIN: I know for me I'm psyched if I can just work. You don't know where this goes or how long you get [to] work or what kinds of things you get to be in.

MovieRetriever: You are so funny though. I saw you on YouTube and your bit about kids was great. When did you realize you were funny?

GRACE: I think it was just a couple days ago. No really we were laughing about it. It's true.

MARTIN: My dad was a priest, a Greek Orthodox Priest.

MovieRetriever: Yeah, I read that.

MARTIN: Yeah, the deal with the Greeks is that you can get married before you become a priest but not after. A lot of guys go get the degree and everything and before they get ordained they go out and try to find a wife. My dad met my mom when they were really young, it all worked out. He was a really funny person. I was an altar boy until I went to college you know when my dad was the priest, so I was on the altar and I could see his podium thing from behind and there were no notes, like no typewritten speech or notes, just the back of an envelope with like two words on it. He'd be talking for twenty minutes. I don't know anything about The Bible, he was not one of those guys like "And Jesus said" [this], he liked Bill Cosby. He [my dad] was very anecdotal, very personal. And as a kid it's funny to try to remember what your lens is on people. I remember my parents having people over and my dad would say stuff and he was really funny, he was so [funny] with the people. So I guess to fast-forward to the future, that's how I found my way into stand-up. When I was in college it was like almost recreating that kind of stuff like my dad. In college I had a meal plan, I don't know if you guys had a meal plan, but you know you have to eat there a certain number of days a week, so I would go to dinner and just hang out the whole time. I would go early and just go from table to table hanging out with my friends and just joking around. So around then I started thinking wow, people are laughing at what I'm doing. So then it takes a while to figure out if you can do bits, on demand, when you do stand-up you only have four minutes and it's like "Ok here's this guy," and then you're on. So [to answer the question] I guess it was in college.

Examiner: How hard is it go from TV to film? I mean is it a huge transition?

MARTIN: Yeah we talked about that. Even though Topher never did stand-up, doing a multi-camera sitcom like That '70s Show, your timing is very dependent on the live audience. They feel your rhythm, you know your dialogue. [In] stand-up, that's like a huge thing. One of my favorite quotes is from Woody Allen and he said "The audience teaches you how to be funny." And I thought that is a smart thing. What a smart guy, clearly a prolific man. But it's like you pay attention. I think about some things like dirty jokes, and I tried them like at open mics and they don't want that from me.

GRACE: The dirty guys get up there and are you are like, "yeah right!"

MARTIN: They [the dirty comedians] could not do my jokes, they'd [the audience] be like, "this guy is corny." Maybe they do that with me too! So with film, there is so much trust involved. In stand-up it's kind of the opposite. You can kind of only trust yourself. If you let your guard down, they're going to devour you. You'll get heckled, something will happen, or there's too much silence. But on the set, you can't be defensive like that. You've got to trust everybody. Trust the lighting people, trust make-up [people], and you really have to trust the director and the editor. In comedy, and I know you [Topher] found this as a producer, you can take the same footage and have a terrible movie. But if you really work with it and kind of find those little magic spots where timing works you know. Isn't that true?

GRACE: I'm actually thinking about it. I remember, I literally had never acted and I had a week of rehearsal and then we shot the first episode of That '70s Show. To think about it now, I was 19, and how did I not like just pass out or something! I'm like, "alright, oh yeah, we can do this." If I was any older I would've have failed!

MARTIN: Because there are all these lights, there's like producers on the side and …

GRACE: (interjects) and they take pictures of you for continuity the guy's like "make sure you do this, that." I tried my hardest. I do remember the first couple episodes the audience laughing, and me thinking they already [like it] at this point, we're [there] before they'd even seen the show. The show wasn't even on the air [yet] and they saw a couple of the first episodes.

MARTIN: Sure, they didn't know what they were coming to see.

GRACE: Those [early episodes] taught me the most about my character. Mostly about a situation that my character was in, but it's the same thing. They [the audience] would laugh at stuff and I would think, "Oh, they think that I'm this." And I could play into that.

See Topher Grace and Demetri Martin in Take Me Home Tonight, opening tomorrow, March 4, 2011!

View the original article here

сряда, 2 март 2011 г.

Topher Grace Talks Take Me Home Tonight

Topher Grace unfailingly seems like an all-right dude, self-deprecating in spite of his talent, but a genuinely good actor. So it makes sense that he’s carved out a place for himself in Hollywood, popping up everywhere from That ’70s Show to Predators. With this month’s Take Me Home Tonight—he executive-produced and has a story credit—Grace takes his first step behind the camera. That step had its conflicts, though. The movie has been languishing in studio purgatory since 2007, when it was filmed. The A.V. Club caught up with Grace on a press-tour stop in Chicago to talk about the delay, why he wanted to make his own American Graffiti, and why he never gets the giggles on camera.

The A.V. Club: Take Me Home Tonight is ’80s to the core, including the Shermer High references, which we appreciate here in Chicago—

Topher Grace: Yeah, no one is getting that! We didn’t want to have any other references, though. There was a moment at the banker’s house where everything I was going to talk about was going to be stocks from Wall Street. We had lots of little plans like that, and then we cut them all. The first thing we did when we were thinking about this movie is cut the obvious jokes, which are like “How tiny is this cell phone?” and “Can you even imagine the year 2000?” There have been movies about the ’80s, but they’ve all been spoofs, and we wanted this to be the one… I mean, there’s only one chance to make the first movie that’s like you went back in a time machine and actually made it in the ’80s. By the way, no one in the ’80s was like “How crazy is the way we’re all dressing?” 

Also, we wanted to do… Like, Dazed And Confused was the ’90s doing the ’70s, and American Graffiti was the ’70s doing the ’50s. We thought “We really love these John Hughes movies, and no one’s done that look back 20 years,” so it’s a perfect way to do both things.

AVC: It has to be daunting, though, to say, “Let’s do Dazed And Confused. Let’s do John Hughes.” These are movies and people that are really on a pedestal.

TG: It was only daunting when we set it up with Ron Howard’s company, because he did a sitcom that took place 20 years in the past, and he did this kind of movie with American Graffiti, but, you know, not really. 

My dream, my real passion with it, was to work with a big cast that was my age. I just did a movie with Richard Gere. I’d done this movie with Dennis Quaid and Michael Douglas, I’ve worked with these actors, and it’s amazing to have this one-on-one time. I just spent the whole summer with Richard Gere, and that’s amazing! To be able to work with someone who you learn so much from is a really valuable experience, but if you look at American Graffiti, there’s Harrison Ford and Richard Dreyfuss before they were Harrison Ford and Richard Dreyfuss. There’s Ron Howard, Cindy Williams, Suzanne Somers, I’m forgetting others… Dazed And Confused: Ben Affleck, Matthew McConaughey, Parker Posey, Renee Zellweger, Milla Jovovich. I know that there are those people in this cast. Demetri [Martin] is one of them. There are, like, five $20 million actors from the year 2019 in the movie, I think.

I read that Saturday Night Live book, and it’s like “I was hanging out in Chicago, and it was Belushi and Bill Murray, and then Gilda Radner walked up…” We had moments like that. I was telling this story last night at the Q&A, but we had an IHOP that we’d go to at 6 a.m. because we’d filmed all night. There’d be Dan Fogler and Demetri doing a bit, and Anna Faris would walk up, and I’m like “This is happening,” you know? I got to be in one of those moments with my peer group. It’s a little lonely, film. I loved having a big ensemble on ’70s, but I really wanted that experience. It wasn’t daunting as much as I was really psyched to get the band together.

AVC: This is the movie where Chris Pratt and Anna Faris got together, right?

TG: That’s right. We all really hang out. Dan rooms with me when he comes to L.A. I mean, Anna’s a huge star, but we’re still not in that place where… There was then a time when Belushi and Bill Murray didn’t talk, but I want to be in that moment where everyone was a rock star in bloom.

AVC: The big story with this movie was that it was allegedly unreleased because it featured too much cocaine. Why do you think that was such a big deal?

TG: The really big deal is that it’s a good movie and the audiences all really enjoyed it, so it’d be one thing if there was cocaine and it wasn’t working. The story is that originally we had a really fast development period, the film went really well, and we were really excited, and it tested really well. The studio had some reservations about seeing the drug use happen with people in their mid-twenties. Our feeling was, you know, if you’re doing a movie about Prohibition, you can’t not show alcohol. You’re pulling punches. It’s just not true, if you’re doing a cross-section of kids at a party who are in their mid-twenties in the late ’80s, there’s more cocaine use than there was in the film. 

We were really lucky at that moment that we were with Ron Howard and Brian Grazer. They’re the most prolific producers maybe of all time, and Ron had been in one of these films. That film had a problem with drinking and driving, kids out cruising in the ’50s. Dazed And Confused, same studio, actually, had real problems with people smoking huge joints. There will be a kid in 10 years, probably one of these kids on Wizards Of Waverly Place, who will be starring in the ’90s movie, and the studio will have a problem with all of the Ecstasy. It’s just how it goes. So we were very lucky that Ron and Brian said, “Believe in this movie. It’s not going to get dated, because it is all entirely dated.” They told us “Don’t cut out the cocaine.” We were being put in a position where if Dan’s character would show up at the party and just start acting crazy, it would really neuter the film. 

So we took their advice and waited. Ryan Kavanaugh, who owns Relativity, is only three years older than me. A lot of these studio execs are, like, 70, and they’re telling you what kids in your demo want to see. It’s a good lesson for me when I’m 70, to not tell anyone “No one wants to see that.” So we waited, and about two months ago, we started screening it, and it was this overwhelming relief. People aren’t that worried about it, and there is a lesson. It’s not totally irresponsible. I mean, Dan certainly goes through some weird, dark times, but people are really enjoying it. I’m really glad to be doing publicity for it, personally, because I was there during the inception of the idea. A lot of times, when a film is being held, it’s because stuff is being cut out and it’s being neutered, and in this case, we got to put stuff back in and add stuff. It’s the exact artistic idea of what we wanted when we started.

AVC: Were you at all surprised by the studio reaction? 

TG: It was annoying, especially when I saw the other films they were making. They weren’t exactly the greatest. We had to do the best thing for the movie. Did I want it to be released earlier? Yeah, but the truth is that it’s just as sweet now. People are enjoying it just as much as I thought they would. It was the right thing for the movie artistically.

AVC: In the movie, you work at Suncoast Video. Did you ever actually have a job like Suncoast Video?

TG: I worked at Suncoast Video for two years during the summer in high school. My weird story about Suncoast is I thought “Oh, this’ll be brilliant, I can just watch movies all summer, which is what I’m going to wind up doing anyway.” When I got there, I realized they only show one movie all summer, and that one movie was Space Jam, and Space Jam is the worst film ever made. The best part of that movie is that Bill Murray is in it for two minutes, so those were the best four minutes of my day, when it ran twice and I’d watch those two minutes.

AVC: Do you know the now-defunct Videogum column “What’s up with Topher Grace?”

TG: Sure. Everyone like you always brings that up to me. What I’ve been saying to people is that I write it, but I don’t.

AVC: It seems like people—Videogum included—look at you and think, “Oh, he’s a regular working actor, but he seems to have a good sense of humor about himself.” Like, everything you do is so dry, but still a little funny.  

TG: Yeah, I have a really dry sense of humor. I don’t think it’s funny when people wink at the camera. That’s more of an actor thing, just committing to whatever the thing is.

AVC: You didn’t have any problems filming with Demetri Martin because of that?

TG: Demetri is one of the funniest people alive. That’s a nice exception. I used to hate on ’70s, like how people on SNL break and you see it all the time. It was like that on ’70s Show. There was a live audience, so if you break, the audience loves it. They love nothing more. It’s not healthy to break, because it’s like giving the audience dessert, and they’re not having their nutritious comedy salad. They won’t have an appetite for that once you do that. 

So I used to hate it, and would never break. I mean I’ve probably done it three times in my career, and one of them was with Demetri, in the first scene of the movie. All that stuff was improv. I really can’t believe his mind, even here, being on tour with him. He’ll say something, and I can’t believe someone’s mind can work that fast. It’s pure invention. It’s not like he’s got this joke from before and he’s cramming it in. The guy is a real writer.

AVC: So is there a secret to not breaking?

TG: I just think about how not funny it’s going to be if I laugh. I just don’t do it.


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вторник, 22 февруари 2011 г.

Tonight I’m Frakking You Video Online


Posted by Rodneyon 21. 02. 2011in News Chat

Enrique’s Tonight I’m Lovin You is the radio edit for his boldly stated Tonight I’m Fucking You single, so very appropriately a geek tribute video was created substituting the mother of curse words with the TV friendly Frak used in Battlestar Galactica

Very clever lyrics, not that great vocals, but the Slave Leia cosplay (Caprica’s Alessandra Torressani) was super hot.

And there is a lot more geek tribute than just the cosplaying, as Kunal Nayyar (Big Bang Theory) and Amy Okuda (The Guild), Richard Hatch (Original Battlestar Galactica’s Lee Adama) and Chad Vader!

We even get some overused lense flares left over from Abrams Star Trek. Love the Vulcan Jedi. Geek worlds collide!

Via


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петък, 11 февруари 2011 г.

Take Me Home Tonight Music Video – Don’t You Want Me

Take Me Home Tonight Music Video – Don’t You Want MeTake Me Home Tonight Music Video – Don’t You Want Me
Posted by Rodneyon 10. 02. 2011in News Chat