Categories
Rumours

I bet that he’ll be great!!

Benedict Cumberbatch to Star in Marvel’s ‘Doctor Strange’

Marvel Studios has found its Doctor Strange.

Benedict Cumberbatch is in talks to play the doctor-turned-sorcerer-supreme in the newest superhero film from Marvel that Scott Derrickson will direct, sources tell Variety.

The film has not yet been officially dated, but Marvel is said to be eyeing a 2016 release. Cumberbatch’s role could be made official at a Marvel Studios presentation to media and fans at Disney’s El Capitan Theater.

Cumberbatch would play Stephen Vincent Strange, a former neurosurgeon who becomes the next Sorcerer Supreme and primary protector of Earth against magical and mystical threats. Marvel Comics vets Stan Lee and Steve Ditko co-created the character in 1963.

Marvel already has teased Strange in several films, including “Thor” and “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.” The character fits in with the cinematic universe Marvel is building, with Strange having paired up with Thor and the Avengers, along with Spider-Man, the X-Men and the Fantastic Four to battle enemies in its comicbooks.

Marvel has long wanted to launch a film franchise around the character and eventually integrate him in one of its “Avengers” sequels.

Still Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige has long wanted the Doctor Strange character to star in his own solo film as a way to make a movie about magic the way “Guardians of the Galaxy” pushes it into the sci-fi and space genre and “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” into political thrillers.Marvel had been in negotiations with Joaquin Phoenix to take the role, but couldn’t reach a deal because of the number of films the thesp would have to agree to make.

Cumberbatch’s deal is contingent upon his schedule, which includes the “Sherlock Holmes” series for BBC and commitments to star in theater productions.

He will next be seen in “The Imitation Game” and voices characters in “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,” “The Penguins of Madagascar” and WB’s “The Jungle Book.”

Marvel has not commented on the deal.

Categories
Movies

I saw ST. VINCENT this weekend and absolutely loved it!!

Box office report: ‘Ouija’ scares up $20 million, ‘Citizenfour’ opens strong

Ouija, the microbudget, board game-inspired horror pic, came out on top in its opening weekend with a strong (but expected) $20 million showing from 2,858 locations. Meanwhile, Keanu Reeves’ John Wick proved its own strength with a $14.15 million weekend, which doesn’t look all that impressive on its own but is almost double what tracking predicted for the bloody revenge thriller.

Critics may have hated Ouija (even audiences slapped it with a C CinemaScore), but it is a box office truth universally acknowledged that teens will turn out for horror films, no matter how poorly reviewed — especially when they open just days before Halloween. Audiences were a whopping 75 percent under 25, 61 percent female and ethnically mixed. (39 percent of audiences were Hispanic, 31 percent Caucasian, and 12 percent African American.) It also opened in five international territories to $1.3 million and will continue its rollout over the next few months. Ouija cost Blumhouse and Platinum Dunes under $5 million to produce, so no matter what sort of dramatic drop off Ouija might suffer in weekend two, it’s already another micro budget success for Universal and Blumhouse.

“We saw how this film worked with its target audience,” Universal’s President of Domestic Distribution Nikki Rocco told EW. “We watched the tracking for the last three weeks, and there is something to be said for making these microbudget films and making them really, really work. The PG-13 was so smart. It works. PG-13 works. And here are the results.”

Lionsgate and Summit’s R-rated assassin pic John Wick (B CinemaScore) took the second place spot with $14.15 million from 2,589 theaters. Budgets haven’t been reported for this one, but it is a huge win for star Keanu Reeves on a few levels. Critics loved it and the movie does, in some ways, redeem Reeves from last year’s epic flop 47 Ronin, the $175 million pic that opened to only $9.9 million. It helped that John Wick was playing on both IMAX and premium large format screens, too. $2.5 million of its weekend take was from 347 IMAX screens. Still, it would be interesting to know how this might have fared without so much competition in the R-rated space.

The rest of the top five were holdovers, including David Ayer’s WWII saga Fury, which fell a slight 45 percent from last weekend’s opening, a good sign for its life at the box office in the coming weeks. Gone Girl took the fourth place spot with $11.1 million. In the next few days, it will pass The Curious Case of Benjamin Button ($127.5 million) to become David Fincher’s highest earner to date. Finally, the animated fantasy The Book of Life fell 42 percent in weekend two, bringing its domestic cume to $29.91 million.

1. Ouija — $20 million
2. John Wick — $14.15 million
3. Fury — $13 million ($46.05 million domestic total)
4. Gone Girl — $11.1 million ($124.09 million domestic total)
5. The Book of Life — $9.8 million ($29.91 million domestic total)

The Weinstein Company’s St. Vincent (A- Cinema Score) added over 2,200 screens for its third weekend in theaters, barely missing the top five with $8.1 million.

In limited release, Laura Poitras’ Edward Snowden doc Citizenfour opened on five screens to a robust $125K. “With exceptional reviews, sell out crowds and multiple standing ovations, Citizenfour is already on track to becoming one of the biggest documentaries of the last five years,” said RADiUS co-president Tom Quinn. “As one of the most transcendent, historic and thrilling pieces of cinema I’ve ever come across, I see no limits in how far we can take this.” Lynn Shelton’s coming-of-age Sundance pic Laggies, starring Keira Knightley, also opened on five screens and took in an estimated $78.5K.

Also of note: Lucy opened in China this weekend to an estimated $19 million, while Disney’s Big Hero 6 debuted in Russia and the Ukraine in advance of its Nov. 7 North American opening to take advantage of school holidays. The animated pic earned $4.8 million across two days, which is higher than Wreck-It Ralph and on par with Tangled.

Categories
People

May he rest in peace.

Jack Bruce, Bassist for Cream, Dead at 71

“The world of music will be a poorer place without him, but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts,” say his loved ones on his Facebook page

Jack Bruce, the former bassist and vocalist for rock group Cream, has died. He was 71.

“It is with great sadness that we, Jack’s family, announce the passing of our beloved Jack: husband, father, granddad, and all round legend,” the musician’s loved ones stated on his Facebook page. “The world of music will be a poorer place without him, but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts.”

The cause of death is undisclosed. Bruce had been diagnosed with liver cancer in 2003, and underwent a liver transplant that year.

Born in Scotland and trained as a classical cellist and a jazz bassist, Bruce moved to London after graduating from music school. He became a staple in the 1960s British blues scene, playing in a number of bands, including Blues Incorporated, the Graham Bond Organisation, Manfred Mann and John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers. In 1966, he formed the power trio Cream with guitarist Eric Clapton and drummer Ginger Baker, with the band becoming one of the most popular and influential groups of the era.

Bruce wrote or co-wrote many of Cream’s signature songs, including “Sunshine of Your Love,” “White Room” and “I Feel Free.”

The members of Cream were known for the improvisational skills they brought to their blues-inflected psychedelic rock, and also for their stormy relationship offstage. The band split up in 1968, with all the members moving on to solo careers and to other bands. While Clapton enjoyed by far the biggest success as a solo artist, Bruce made more than a dozen albums of his own, beginning with “Songs for a Tailor” in 1969 and continuing through “Silver Rails” in March, 2014.

Cream reunited in 1993 for Cream’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction and for multiple concerts in London in 2005.

Bruce is survived by his wife, five children and one granddaughter.

Categories
News

God bless Cpl. Nathan Cirillo. May he rest in peace.

‘Terrorist’ murdered soldier ‘in cold blood,’ Canada’s Prime Minister says

First a soldier guarding a hallowed war memorial was gunned down in Canada’s capital. Then shots erupted in the halls of the country’s Parliament minutes later.

The two shootings in Ottawa Wednesday left lawmakers barricaded inside offices and parts of the city on lockdown for hours as police searched for suspects.

Ottawa Police lifted the lockdown Wednesday night and said there was no longer a danger to the public.

But many questions remain about the shootings: Who was the gunman? Why did he open fire? And was he acting alone?

“It appears there was just one shooter, and that shooter is dead,” Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “But it has been a traumatic experience, obviously, for not only our city but the country.”

Investigators haven’t provided any possible motives for the shooting. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper didn’t provide details about the investigation in a televised address to the nation Wednesday night.

“In the days to come, we will learn more about the terrorist and any accomplices he may have had, but this week’s events are a grim reminder that Canada is not immune to the types of terrorist attacks we have seen elsewhere in the world,” Harper said. “Let there be no misunderstanding: We will not be intimidated. Canada will never be intimidated.”

It is unclear whether additional suspects were tied to the shootings or whether additional arrests have been made. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said more information would be provided in a press conference Thursday.

As authorities continued to investigate, details began to emerge about the man they suspect was behind the shooting.

Michael Zehaf-Bibeau was identified by Canadian officials to their American counterparts as the suspected gunman, multiple U.S. officials told CNN.

Bibeau, who was born in 1982, was a convert to Islam and had a history of drug use before he converted, two sources said.

His passport had been confiscated by Canadian authorities when they learned he planned to go fight overseas, a U.S. law enforcement official told CNN’s Susan Candiotti. The official said it was not clear when that happened.

Canadian broadcaster CBC reported that Bibeau had a record of drug arrests going back 10 years.

Cpl. Nathan Cirillo was “murdered in cold blood” as he stood guard at the Canada War Memorial, Harper said, expressing condolences to the slain Canadian soldier’s family.

The soldier appeared to have been shot in the back, said Peter Henderson, a journalist who was at the memorial at the time of the shooting. Other soldiers who were nearby doing drills at the time ran to help, he said.

Three people brought to The Ottawa Hospital after the shootings have been released, hospital spokeswoman Hazel Harding told CNN. Earlier, they were described as being in stable condition.

Shortly after the shooting at the memorial, a gunman entered the nearby building on Parliament Hill, officials said.

“I heard rapid fire — gunshots going very loud — and I figure maybe 20-plus shots within 10 seconds,” Canadian Deputy House Leader Kevin Lamoureux told CNN. He was one level below the gunshots.

Gunfire first erupted in the building’s foyer. Then a second round of shooting happened about a minute later in a hallway or near the entrance to the Parliament’s library, Wingrove told CNN.

Several officers had weapons drawn, he said, and most of the dozens of shots that he heard appeared to have been fired by officers at the gunman.

When the shooting ended, a person was lying motionless on the ground near the library entrance, Wingrove said.

Parliament member James Lunney tweeted: #HOC in Lockdown, lone gunman shot security guard, shot his way down Hall of Honor….we are all safe. Gunman dead! Thnk God & our scrty!”

In Twitter posts, several Canadian lawmakers hailed a top security official as a hero, crediting him with shooting the gunman inside Parliament.

“MPs and Hill staff owe their safety, even lives, to Sergeant at Arms Kevin Vickers who shot attacker just outside the MPs’ caucus rooms,” Craig Scott, a member of Parliament, wrote.

A U.S. law enforcement official told CNN that a connection to terrorism hasn’t been ruled out.

On Monday, a man who Canadian authorities said was “radicalized” killed a Canadian soldier with his car. The man was then shot and killed.

Police: Man who ran down and killed soldier was ‘radicalized’

There was no immediate indication that the Monday and Wednesday incidents were related.

In response to the shootings, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, has increased its alert posture, CNN has learned. That means that it has increased the number of planes on a higher alert status ready to respond if needed. NORAD and Canadian authorities are in contact, an official told CNN.

MP Tony Clement tweeted that he heard “at least 30 shots” and apparently was able to take cover with colleagues. He also tweeted that Prime Minister Harper was secure.

Harper was evacuated from the building and is safe, tweeted his press secretary, Carl Vallee.

Hours after the Parliament attack, Harper spoke by phone with U.S. President Barack Obama.

“Obviously, we’re all shaken by it,” Obama later told reporters, “but we’re going to do everything we can to make sure we’re standing side by side with Canada during this difficult time.”

Watson said that Wednesday was “a sad and tragic day for our city and our country.”

“There’s no pain greater than losing a loved one — to have it happen in such circumstances as this morning is beyond expression, and underlined by a sad anger within my heart,” he said.

The violence at Parliament comes just days after Canada raised its terror alert Friday.

The suspect in Monday’s vehicle attack, Martin Rouleau Couture, reportedly converted to Islam about a year ago. Police arrested him last July and confiscated his passport, but lacked enough evidence to keep him in custody, said Martine Fontaine of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

“When he was arrested, he was about to go to Turkey,” Fontaine said. “We stopped him as he was about to leave Canada for terrorist actions. He was questioned when he was arrested. We have not been able to determine any real threat at this time.”

Categories
Concerts

I want to go to there!!

Foo Fighters to play concert at Chicago’s Wrigley Field

Foo Fighters have announced the first date of their US summer tour behind Sonic Highways, and it’s a big one. On August 29th, the band will follow in the footsteps of Pearl Jam, Bruce Springsteen, and Billy Joel by headlining a concert at Chicago’s famed Wrigley Field.

Tickets will go on sale on Monday, October 27th at 10:00am CT.

Foo Fighters’ new album, Sonic Highways, arrives November 10th.

Categories
Music

New Foo For You!!

Categories
Sports

Go Royals Go!!

Lorde’s hit Royals banned by San Francisco radio stations during World Series

Lorde, the 17-year-old New Zealand singer, has become an unlikely pawn in the World Series rivalry between the Kansas City Royals and the San Francisco Giants.

Two radio stations in San Francisco have banned Lorde’s 2013 hit Royals from their airwaves until the Major League Baseball series is over — or until “the San Francisco Giants win the World Series” says the website for the city’s KOIT, 96.5 FM.

“Our listeners told us to do it, so we did it,” the station’s program director, Brian Figula, declared in a statement.

KOIT’s sister station, Kansas City’s KZPT has responded to the ban with a vow to “pump Royals into the highest rotation.”

That means playing it on the hour, every hour, between 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Tuesday — the opening night of the World Series.

“We won’t let their anti-Royals spirit ruin this moment,” said Tony Lorino, the station’s program director in a statement. “A few angry San Franciscans who don’t have a song called Giants won’t rain on our parade.”

Lorde’s Royals catapulted the young artist into international pop stardom in 2013, and earned her a Grammy.

While the song’s lyrics lambasting fame and wealth don’t sound very sporty, Lorde herself has admitted that the tune is indeed inspired by the Kansas City Royals — or, at the very least, the cover of the July 1976 issue of National Geographic magazine.

“I had this image from the National Geographic of this dude just signing baseballs,” Lorde said in a 2013 interview with VH1.

That dude was star third baseman George Brett.

“His shirt said, ‘Royals'”, she said. “It was just that word. It’s really cool.”

Lorde, whose real name is Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O’Connor, hasn’t commented on the radio station rivalry.

The San Francisco Giants take on the Kansas City Royals when the series starts Tuesday night in Kansas City, Mo.

Categories
People

This is very sad…may he rest in peace.

Gerard Parkes, Fraggle Rock actor, dead at 90

Gerard Parkes, the Irish Canadian actor, best known for his roles on the hit children’s series Fraggle Rock and the American crime movie The Boondock Saints is dead.

He died Sunday morning in a Toronto retirement home, four days after his 90th birthday, his niece and agent have confirmed to CBC News.

Born in Dublin in 1924, Parkes came to Canada and launched his show business career on CBC Radio in the 1950s, before landing roles in TV, film and stage.

Parkes appeared in the 1960s CBC-TV adventure series The Forest Rangers, and popular children’s shows The Littlest Hobo and Shining Time Station.

Winner of a Canadian Film Award for his performance in the 1968 feature film Isabel, Gerard also won a Dora award for his performance in a 1999 theatre production of Kilt and several awards for radio dramas.

Despite his lengthy and diverse achievements, Parkes is probably best known for playing “Doc” on Jim Henson’s popular TV series Fraggle Rock.

The grey-haired, bespectacled character, with the dog named Sprocket, was the only human to regularly appear on the 1980s children’s program about a colony of colourful creatures who live under Doc’s house.

When asked what Parkes would think about being remembered most for acting with puppets, Gerry Jordan, Parkes’ agent of 30 years said “he’d love it.”

“He had a thrill doing that show,” Jordon told CBC News. “We got loads of fan mail from kids and adults around the world.”

“He was a magical man and a terrific performer.”

Gerard Parkes is survived by his partner of two decades, Sheelagh Norman.

Categories
Letterman

Poor Inky. All the best, buddy!!

David Letterman’s cue card guy, Tony Mendez, fired after assault: report

David Letterman’s long-time cue card person was fired last week after an argument with the host and an altercation with a staff writer, The New York Post reports.

Tony Mendez, who is often seen on camera holding Letterman’s jokes on old-fashioned cue cards, told the Post it all started when he was interrupted by writer Bill Scheft while trying to talk to Letterman in his dressing room. Mendez snapped at Scheft, which prompted Letterman to make a comment about Mendez’s “sour disposition.”

Mendez then shouted back “You’re the one who has the sour disposition, motherf—–.”

Mendez says he was still stewing over the argument the next day and thought Scheft was trying to create a wedge between him and Letterman. When he got back to work, Mendez immediately grabbed Scheft’s shirt and threw him up against the wall.

“He was very surprised,” Mendez said. “He didn’t say a word. He was cowering, his eyes were real big, he probably peed a little bit on his pants.”

Sources tell the Post Mendez will continue to get his salary as well as benefits until Letterman retires.

“Dave has never let me down,” Mendez said. “He is the best, the most generous boss I have ever had. Dave would never do anything to harm me.”

Categories
Movies

I saw FURY and thought it was intense. Very intense!!

Box office report: ‘Fury’ reaps $23.5 million in a successful debut

Fury flattened all other movies in wide release and is projected to take in around $23 million in its debut weekend in theaters. The Brad Pitt-starring World War II action-drama, set largely within the cramped confines of an M4 Sherman tank rolling across Nazi Germany, comes in at the lower end of pre-release audience tracking expectations. But it caps off a recent run of cinematic success for Pitt (a producer of the multiple Oscar-winning 12 Years a Slave and star of last year’s sci-fi disaster hit World War Z). Fury also features Michael Peña, Shia LaBeouf, Jon Bernthal, and Logan Lerman as a shell-shocked army crew on a deadly mission behind enemy lines.

“The relationship and camaraderie of the cast is really poignant in the film, which is also very visceral and action packed,” said Rory Bruer, president of worldwide distribution for Sony, the studio behind Fury. “We’re feeling really good about it. It’s a very good opening for us and it’s a movie that we’re so proud to be a part of.”

Director David Fincher’s venomous adaptation of Gone Girl slipped to No. 2 in its third week in theaters (passing the $100 million mark domestically in the process with a projected take near $18 million). While producer Guillermo Del Toro’s mythic animated adventure The Book of Life claimed the third box office spot, estimated to earn around $17 million in its first weekend.

The Best of Me, an adaptation of Nicholas Sparks’ 2011 novel starring James Marsden and Michelle Monaghan, fared worst of the new films in wide release. The romantic drama fizzled with critics and appears to be on track for a $10 million opening, on the low end of the spectrum of such bankable Sparks movie adaptations as The Notebook and 2010’s Dear John.

In limited release, director Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s Birdman took flight in just four theaters, hauling in an impressive $415,000 to become one of the biggest specialty film debuts of the year. The industry-skewering dramedy features Michael Keaton as a washed-up superhero movie star attempting to mount his comeback as a Serious Actor on Broadway (the movie expands into 18 new markets next weekend). Writer-director Jason Reitman’s Men, Women and Children continued to struggle in its transition to wide release. The ensemble Information Age drama—whose cast includes Adam Sandler, Jennifer Garner, and Ansel Elgort—is expected to pull in just over $300,000 after platforming into 608 theaters this weekend.

1. Fury – $23.5 million
2. Gone Girl – $17.8 million
3. The Book of Life – $17 million
4. Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day – $12 million
5. The Best of Me — $10.2 million