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Rampage of the Innocents - My Historical Romance Novel (now, with more sex and violence for my teenaged readers)

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"You know, I hear everybody talking about the generation gap. Frankly, sometimes I don't know what they're talking about. Heck, by now I should know a little bit about it, if I'm ever going to. I have seven kids and eighteen grandkids and I don't seem to have any trouble talking to any of them. Never have had, and I don't intend to start now." - John Wayne

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Norman Rogers is the driving force behind "Celebrity Disaster."

This is a blog dedicated to the arts, celebrity, the entertainment industry, you know--light, fluffy, unserious stuff--that can kill.

Mr. Rogers explains:

"I wanted to have a world-class blog, and I have that. I wanted to write about sports, and I have that, too. I wanted a place to tell the stories about my secret work as a Gentleman Bounty Hunter, and I have that now. I wanted to post pictures of nearly-naked hotties, and I have that. What I didn't have was my own venue to comment on the world of celebrity, and now I have that as well. To me, modern celebrity is a disaster, and the name was available, so we took it, and that's what you have right here. Celebrity Disaster! It doesn't make sense, but it doesn't have to."

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Entries in Acting (5)

Sunday
28Feb2010

Kate Beckinsale Says Yes to Underworld 4

Kate Beckinsale

Relax, goth nerds. It'll be out in the fall of 2011. You can be rest assured she'll do fine. Now, stop bugging the poor lady.

Wednesday
03Feb2010

Daniel D’Addario, You Need to Stop Criticizing Film

Meryl Streep in the film Doubt

I'm not going to go completely after Daniel D’Addario, I'm just going to refute one thing.

Here's what Mr. D’Addario says about Meryl Streep in Doubt:

The rap on Streep has been the same since the beginning of her career, or at least since she won the best-actress Oscar for Sophie’s Choice: she’s an accent machine, without the ability to create empathy from her audience. While this is arguably true, the accents aren’t the issue. What Streep most crucially lacks is the notion of underplaying. The outsized quality of Julia Child speaks exactly to Streep’s weaknesses among moviegoers not predisposed to like her. She plays every role to the absolute hilt, even when she hasn’t, it seems, decided what role she’s playing. Consider Doubt. The part called for subtle shadings of emotion as the nun protagonist began to question whether the priest she accused of sexual misconduct was actually innocent. Streep simply put on a broad Bronx accent and went careening towards a final scene where she weeps and shouts to the heavens. In contrast, watch her rage in Woody Allen’s Manhattan, or her delicate pain in the accent bonanza of Sophie’s Choice. Streep is more subtly emotional in those than she’s been in decades.

In my lifetime as a moviegoer, Streep seems to have chosen one trait to build each of her characters, and dragged the film along behind her. What can a moviegoer who has only seen her warbling in Mamma Mia!, snarking in he Devil Wears Prada, and doing whatever she was trying to do in Doubt make of her sterling reputation?

Now, I want you to watch at least three and a half minutes of this video, of Streep in the film Doubt:

What planet do you live on, sir?

That's the most difficult of roles, the most complicated of scenes, and the greatest challenge an actor can ever be faced with. In heavy, transformative makeup and costume, in a period piece, while walking outside, and with a terrific actress right there with her, Miss Viola Davis in a part that was woefully overlooked and underappreciated in and of itself, Streep does amazing work. At no point does she do anything to take away from what Miss Davis is doing, and at no point does Miss Davis do anything to betray the scene or take away from what Streep is doing. There's more going on in that three minutes than I think anyone realizes, and that just doesn't happen.

That's not even the best work in the damned film, of course, but it neatly refutes what the critic is saying, doesn't it?

Streep plays the scene with conflict, but also with studied restraint. She does nothing easy in the scene. She is, in the emotion of the scene, dealing with child molestation, and is reaching out to a stranger, across all of the pitfalls of religion, race, guilt, duty, and what's right and wrong, and Streep absolutely becomes this woman without a single misstep. Where'd that accent go? It disappears because Streep is carrying the scene without the need for tricks or mannerisms.

What no one really understands is that, if anything about that scene is not paced, presented, or delivered in perfect tone, the whole movie falls apart. The character Streep plays has to be absolutely pitch perfect or her credibility collapses. Without her moral authority and credibility, the film becomes a screwball comedy about a priest abusing children. You cannot understate how difficult it is to carry out that level of work. Oh, sure. Not every role is like this one. Not every actress could pull off what you see Streep do in the scene above. The ones that can are legendary. You can count them on one hand.

There's no bombast, no focus on the accent, and absolutely no focus on "herself."This is pure gut-wrenching emotion, and none of what you see above is overstated or phoned in. Tucked in beneath that bonnet is a brilliant, brilliant actress. It's so far above my pay grade to even try to explain it, but she's the best of her generation. What she tosses off in a week as her regular paying gig is at a level of mastery that sails over the head of commoners like myself. Enjoy it and appreciate it, sir. You're not supposed to get how she can do that and not be dented by your nonsense.

I'd give up the film criticism. Gawker always needs more snark. Go see if you can help them.

Tuesday
08Dec2009

Brian Bonsall Arrested in Boulder, Colorado

Brian Bonsall booking photo Dec 5 2009

This is about as sad as it gets:

28-year-old [Brian] Bonsall got into a fight at an apartment on Saturday and hit a friend with part of a broken wooden stool, police said Monday.

Bonsall allegedly told officers he had been drinking and didn't remember what happened.

He is being held in the Boulder County Jail and was due in court Wednesday.

Authorities say Bonsall was sentenced to probation in 2007 for assaulting his girlfriend. He was later accused of probation violations.

Child stars getting into trouble later in life? That's evident here. Either way, it's just sad.

Saturday
05Dec2009

Just Another Creepy Old Man With Too Many Pictures of Jennifer Love Hewitt

Well, that's relative, but who cares?

Tuesday
01Dec2009

Alec Baldwin Uses the Media to Advance an Evil Political Agenda

30 Rock, with original cast member Rachel Dratch

This is the way that Alec Baldwin will begin his political career--by walking away from the arts and embracing the pure, sexless evil of politics:

He found the role that defined his career in the NBC sitcom, but "30 Rock" actor Alec Baldwin says he is prepared to leave the acting profession altogether in 2012.

The Emmy award winner told Men's Journal that he is calling it quits when his contract for the hit show expires in two years. "I don't have any interest in acting anymore," he said. "I'm not young, but I have time to do something else."

This isn't the first time Baldwin, 51, has grumbled over his intent to leave the industry.

In April 2007, following a media firestorm over a leaked voice mail message in which Baldwin called his 11-year-old daughter, Ireland, a "rude pig," the actor told talk show "The View": "If I never acted again, I couldn't care less." In June, Baldwin told Playboy magazine that he would retire at the "30 Rock" wrap party in 2012.

"In March 2012, I'll wake up and say, 'What am I going to do now? Am I done?' I think I will be done. I may finish a play or something, but I'm retiring at the wrap party."

What he forgot to add was, "vote for me, suckers. I'm running for...Joe Lieberman's seat in the United States Senate? President of the America? Representative so and so's House seat?"

Take your pick. Another liberal walks away from art, and finds that the political arena is where they can make a killing. This is why I miss Ronald Reagan. Consistency.