Sunday, February 27, 2011

Hilary Swank Oscar Dress: Gucci Premiere Couture


Actress Hilary Swank arrives at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards held at the Kodak Theatre on February 27, 2011 in Hollywood, California.

Written by dominique on Feb-27-11

On the holiest of holy red carpet nights, fashion mavens the world over watched with bated breath the parade of exquisite Oscar gowns. The 83rd Annual Academy Awards did not disappoint. But in truth, all eyes were waiting for just a glimpse of Hilary Swank's Oscar dress. The actress wore Gucci Premiere Couture.

Hilary Swank's film career began with a small part in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992) and then a major part in The Next Karate Kid (1994). She has become known for her two Academy Award-winning performances: first as Brandon Teena, a transgender man (FTM) in the movie Boys Don't Cry (1999), and a struggling waitress-turned-boxer, Maggie Fitzgerald, in Million Dollar Baby (2004). In 2010, Swank earned a SAG nomination for her role in Conviction. Watch for her in the upcoming movie The Resident, starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan.

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards were held February 27, 2011 at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. James Franco and Anne Hathaway hosted the festivities, which honored the best films of 2010. Hathaway, who employed her stylist gal pal Rachel Zoe to dress her for the event, looked fabulous as always. And as well she should: Zoe's fee was reportedly astronomical!

Style Bistro

Friday, February 25, 2011

Charisma Carpenter in Deadly Sibling Rivalry


February 23, 2011

Charisma Carpenter (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel) is leaving the mainstream to take the indie route, according to JoBlo and her own Twitter feed.

A few days ago, Carpenter shared on Twitter, “No hints! Starting a movie Monday for about 3 weeks. Small independent,” and then followed up a little later with, “’Sibling Rivalry’ I will play twins! Rock climbing involved. – YAY”

It turns out that ‘Sibling Rivalry’ is actually Deadly Sibling Rivalry, but you really can’t complain when you’re breaking news in 140 characters or less. The film is being directed by Hannelle M. Culpepper and the script was written by Steve Peterson and John Murlowski. Check out the synopsis below:

    Identical twins Janna and Callie have always had a sibling rivalry competing for their father’s love. After a horrific climbing accident kills their father, the twins grow further apart and carry out their lives in the wake of the tragedy. Janna gets married and has a daughter while Callie floats from one job to the next, getting tangled in illegal dealings. After a near fatal crash puts Janna into a coma, Callie secretly steals her sister’s identity in an attempt to start over with a new life and keep her sister out of her way. Callie stops at nothing to seek revenge on a sister that has always had the seemingly better life.

Carpenter actually shared the news on Twitter last week (Feb. 17) so filming should already be under way.

BSC Review

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Candice Accola Talks Vampire Diaries


Marty Shaw - February 24, 2011 4:37 pm

Candice Accola (Caroline on Vampire Diaries) chatted with the gang over at TVLine about some of the things going on with the series, including the possibility of death hinted at when Kevin Williams revealed that nobody would be safe going into the end of the season.

Now that Tyler is out of the way, the door is wide open for something to happen between Caroline and Matt but Candice is keeping her tease on when it comes to revealing any juicy tidbits to fans, saying only, “This week’s episode creates a wonderful opportunity for Matt and Caroline to talk without Tyler there — at least they’ll have an opportunity for a potential honest conversation. And that’s all I can say.”

Candice also says that Matt might not be getting clued in to what’s going on all around him because part of the fun of a vampire show is keeping certain people in the dark because it keeps the conflict going, as well as making viewers anticipate character reactions when someone is finally let into the secret circle.

One thought that’s on the minds of both fans and actors is the end of this season. Nobody is safe, so anyone could be meeting a violent end before the break begins. Candice is keeping an open mind about it, saying, “Day one of us all getting to Atlanta, we were very plainly told that we’re on a vampire show and characters will be killed off — that’s just the premise. So it’s been in the back of our minds, but it’s hard.” Still, not knowing your fate can be a little nerve-wracking, “It’s sad and difficult, but at the same time we know that it’s coming — although we really don’t know who it’s going to be. We feel the anticipation just as much as the audience does.”

She also warns that now might not be the best time to decide to occasionally skip an episode or two, “Right now, there’s so much story to be told around the sacrifice, whatever that’s going to consist of and who’s going to be involved, so a lot of the upcoming episodes are very information-based.”

What do you think lies in Caroline and Matt’s future? Will the two hook up or will the end of the season see something bad happening to one or both of them? Personally, I’m thinking that since Tyler is no longer a roadblock, things are way too smooth for the two of them… although Matt remaining clueless does add a bit of fun. I think something bad is going to happen to one of them. Of course, something bad happening to Caroline could be good for Candice because it would leave her schedule open in case she snags the lead role of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

BSC Review

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Outrageously Talented, Camden Toy, Exclusive


Posted by Tommy Garrett on Feb 19, 2011 - 7:41:03 PM

STUDIO CITY—Handsome and multi-talented star Camden Toy spoke exclusively with me this week to discuss his varied roles from bad guy to sitcom actor to television and movie monster. Camden recently guest starred on the hit web series “The Bay” and is now filming “Good Night Burbank,” which will become Hulu.com’s first full length (30-minute) series ever. “This role is a departure for me, that’s for sure, but I love playing all types of characters,” said Toy.


The actor’s most famous villain role is the grand demon Gnarl from the hit WB series “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” Starring with Sarah Michelle Gellar was always a treat for the brilliant actor, who said, “Sarah was always so gracious to me. I remember once when I was guest starring as the uber vampire. I had the teeth and prosthetics in place and had been in the makeup chair for hours, but Sarah didn’t want me to not have a snack break. She took me by my hand and said, ‘Come on, if you don’t eat this, it’ll be gone.’ I remember thinking, what a nice woman. And a great actress too.” However, it was Alyson Hannigan that Camden got to spend the most quality time with. “I was filming this scene, this time as the evil dominant demon Gnarl and Gnarl peels the skin off of his victims and eats it. For almost 7 hours I sat on top of Alyson and we filmed this scene. She never stopped being gracious and I apologized later, but she laughed and reminded me that it was in the script,” said the star.

Speaking with Camden Toy on his “The Bay” role as Igor Chambers made the actor smile. “I had worked previously with Gregori [Martin], the producer, creator, writer and yes, casting director of ‘The Bay’ on a film project. You know what a treat it is to deal with the guy, Tommy. When he called me about this role, my first question was, why me? Since I had heard that the roles were going to major soap stars, I was very touched when he told me that he wanted me on the show as well, despite my not being a soap actor. When he gave me the script, he called me a few days later and asked me what I thought? I told Gregori that I wanted the role. Who could turn down such a great part? Everything Gregori does is amazing, he’s very charming and professional and I admire how he works with his actors and treats his crew and everyone around him. He is wonderful at what he does,” said Toy.

Camden has acted in well over one hundred independent films, including; “Vertical City,” “The Killers,” “My Chorus,” “Backgammon,” “Morning Glory,” “Irascible” and “The Works,” with an additional half dozen currently in production. The actor said he has no problems being typecast as a villain. “I am interested in any good role there is out there. As an actor, I love doing it all, but I don’t mind being chosen many times to play monsters or anti heroes at all,” concluded the star.

When not acting, the prolific thespian is writing and editing film. He hopes that in the the future he could also try directing. In the second part of our exclusive feature with the actor, Camden Toy discusses the other aspects of his varied career including behind the scenes wizardry in the entertainment field. The amazingly talented and strikingly handsome star is ready for it all, including his dream of becoming a director.

Canyon News

Writer/Producer Marti Noxon talks Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Fright Night remakes


by: Niki Stephens Feb. 18, 2011

As a fan of both BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER (movie and series) as well as FRIGHT NIGHT, I was interested when I came across a small article that mentioned both.

MTV Movies Blog caught up with co-writer of I AM NUMBER FOUR Marti Noxon during a premiere for the film. As you know, Noxon wrote several episodes as well as produced for BUFFY and is the main writer on the FRIGHT NIGHT remake. A BUFFY re-do I'm not so happy about, especially if writer and creator Joss Whedon is not allowed at the party.

Noxon shared her feelings on the subject, “It’s hard to imagine anybody but Joss bringing that to the screen. I wouldn’t want to be the person trying to write it. And I worked on the show, but I would not want to be that [person] because the fans are very loyal. They’re excruciatingly loyal, unless they hate you, in which case they’re excruciating about that too.” She's not lying.

Then the FRIGHT NIGHT remake came up for discussion. This is something that I have a hard time being against. Mainly due to the fact that my favorite Doctor, David Tennant and one of my favorite Irish actors, Colin Farrell have starring roles in the film. Noxon described the updated as such, "It's 20 years later, so there were certain things about the movie that we just completely reimagined. It's a different setting and the Peter Vincent character is a totally different kind of guy. The plot is quite different, but there's a lot of the same basic set up." She then explained how they tried to stay as true to the original, "We identified scenes that were iconic from the original movie and tried to make sure that we hit those beats. There was some puzzle-doing, fitting a new story into that framework. But I had such a good time on that movie, I really did. It's been amazing from start to finish, so we'll see what happens."

So...shouldn't we be seeing a trailer for the FRIGHT NIGHT remake soon?



Thursday, February 17, 2011

Ambitious action


‘I Am Number Four’ packs in too much plot for its own good

By Carl Kozlowski 02/17/2011

Most outsiders have it rough enough in high school, feeling like aliens in their little social universes. But for John Smith, the alias of the lead character in the new sci-fi thriller “I Am Number Four,” things are infinitely worse.

John’s the new kid in the Norman Rockwell-esque small town of Paradise, Ohio, having just moved there after fleeing his previous home near a California beach. In fact, John’s constantly running, because, in reality, he actually is an alien known as Number Four, one of only a few specially gifted members of a species that survived a vicious attack on its home planet from an evil alien race known as the Mogs.

The Mogs have seized control of John’s home planet and live in fear that specially gifted young aliens such as John may someday lead a rebellion to take back their planet. Therefore, vicious Mog killers are tracking down the heroic young aliens on Earth and killing them — with John’s number next up.

With only a fellow alien warrior named Henri (Timothy Olyphant) to protect him, John must keep his identity secret while blending into yet another small-town high school. But things get extra-complicated this time after he falls in love with Sarah (Dianna Agron), a good-girl cheerleader whose jealous ex-boyfriend is the school’s quarterback and lead bully.

John teams up with the school’s long-established nerd Sam (Callan McAuliffe), whose father mysteriously died while investigating alien and UFO appearances, to fight off the Mogs and save Paradise. But can they do it alone, or will the hot blond girl (Teresa Palmer), who keeps walking away from explosions, have to help them?

Got all that? This is easily the longest explanation of a plot I’ve had to dish out in ages, and it truly offers just the setup for what’s to come rather than everything but the ending. This means that there’s an awful lot going on here, and while it’s often enjoyable, it ultimately feels like too much to digest — kind of like the giant turkey you regret having a fourth helping of at Thanksgiving.

Blending teenage identity issues, slam-bang action sequences, solid performances and a sweetly written romance with often-impressive special effects, the inventive “I Am Number Four” theoretically should prove to be both a blockbuster and a teen-movie classic.

Yet, in trying to juggle multiple genres into one slick show, writers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar (TV’s “Smallville”) and Marti Noxon (a top writer from the late great “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) wind up dropping the ball at a few key points.

The main problem with “Number Four” is that the Mogs’ attacks and action scenes often seem like jarring afterthoughts rather than integrating fully into the story. The final battle has so many laser zappings and objects getting destroyed — plus dozens of Mogs and their monster sidekicks coming out of nowhere — that the film nearly goes off the rails. The appearance of a character able to help save the day comes so randomly that it almost makes the film feel like it has a laughable, come-out-of-nowhere ending.

The performances from all the young leads — particularly Alex Pettyfer as John/Number Four — are solid enough to make the quirky inconsistencies forgivable. And the small-town aspects of the film are nicely rendered, with the central romance between John and Sarah a refreshing throwback to the positive teen relationships of John Hughes’ teen films.

With most of the movie’s other suspense and action scenes directed by D.J. Caruso (“Disturbia,” “Eagle Eye”), “I Am Number Four” may not quite merit four stars, but the  many elements that work ensure that it will still be a hit.

pasadenaweekly

Review: ‘I Am Number Four’ Is A Sci-Fi ‘Twilight’ With a Sense of Humor


Based on a novel co-authored by shamed memoirist James Frey, “I Am Number Four” is a sci-fi take on the same sort of material that has made ‘Twilight’ an international sensation. Instead of sparkly vampires, though, it’s a handsome, hounded alien played by Alex Pettyfer  that takes center stage. And while it succeeds in some respects, particularly in the fact that it has a sense of humor and some jaunty action set pieces, it all too often falls into the same draggy aimlessness that largely defines the ‘Twilight’ franchise.

This is expected, though. In the years that followed the phenomenal success of the ‘Harry Potter’ films, various studios trotted out their own versions of ‘Potter’-like would-be franchises. They were all based on children’s or young adult literature, all with a slightly magical or mystical bent, and none succeeded in the same fundamental ways that the ‘Potter’ movies did, critically or commercially. (This is why we haven’t seen a “City of Ember II” or “Return of the Spiderwick Chronicles.”) It was only a matter of time before the same formula was applied to the ‘Twilight’ series. In the months and years to come the box office will be littered with similar material. “I Am Number Four” is just, well, the first.


“I Am Number Four” opens with a rush: we swoop in on a jungle village. There’s some kind of fearsome beast hunting a young man. The boy shows amazing dexterity, leaping from tree to tree in skittering, Spider-Man-ish leaps. The boy is then seized upon by a cloaked figure and disemboweled by a glowing scabbard. The boy’s body turns to ash; it’s the thrilling opening to either a blockbuster film or a particularly memorable episode of “Fringe.”

From the South American jungles we zoom to Florida, where the attractive but somehow “off” Pettyfer (he sort of looks like a walking, talking hieroglyphic) is fooling around with his high school chums. Suddenly, he’s seized. He can sense and see the murder of the boy in the jungle and is gripped by the knowledge that he’s next. You see, he’s a space alien who crashed landed on Earth with the sole survivors of his home world. They’re being hunted down one by one (and “in order,” although the reason for this and the particular order are never clarified) by the same destructive alien race that killed his original planet; heady stuff for a dude going through the already quite-painful tract of adolescence.

Pettyfer has a mentor in Henri, played by underrated genre stalwart Timothy Olyphant, and the two pick up and move to the fictional Paradise, Ohio, where the film begins in earnest and we first encounter what turns out to be a series of narrative roadblocks.

The biggest issue, and one that you feel very early on in the movie, is the sense of detachment with being forced to identify with a kid that is an intergalactic refugee. In these types of big-budget science fiction movies, the audience needs to have someone they can connect with, which is why most great sci-fi flicks feature an “everyman” hero; someone we can enter an outlandish world with and goggle at the craziness together. These are characters like Luke Skywalker, Neo, and Ellen Page from “Inception.” This might have been a deliberate move away from ‘Twilight,’ since Bella Swan is our emissary to the vampire world in those books, but the decision doesn’t make any less sense.

Number Four, as he’s known, may not exhibit all of his extraterrestrial character traits, but he’s still otherworldly and burdened with a worrisome amount of clunky “mythology” that he’s forced to deliver via deadpan narration. Once he gets to Paradise, he falls in love with a local girl played by “Glee‘s” Dianna Agron, has skirmishes with the local meathead football star (Jake Abel) and befriends a social outcast (Callan McAuliffe) whose father may have ties to his alien ancestry (don’t ask). He longs for a normal, human life, of course, because no one in any of these movies ever reminds the vampire/werewolf/alien that being a human teenager is the worst fucking thing on the planet.

Another huge issue, which settles in during the second act and almost cripples things entirely, is that they set up Timothy Olyphant to be a kind of mentor character, but he rarely imparts any wisdom and only seems to understand slightly more about the situation than Number Four. Not only would his expertise have been helpful in dispensing chunks of exposition, but it could have offered us some nifty training montages, complete with “eureka” moments of epiphany.

Instead, we get syrupy moments between the alien and the girl punctuated by of-the-moment, this-is-what-the-characters-are-feeling pop songs, and out-of-left-field bursts of violence courtesy of the film’s villain, the clumsily named Commander (Kevin Durand, under gobs of unconvincingly goofy make-up). The former should be better than the latter, considering the script was written by a trio of television writers who made their bread-and-butter with supernatural outsider series – Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, co-creators of teenage-Superman drama “Smallville,” and Marti Noxon, former show-runner for “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” And while these scenes have a certain Norman Rockwell charm, they never really gel as romantic (or particularly dramatic) moments, and often feel sluggish and insubstantial (maybe because everything else seems so hazy too).

Things pick up considerably when a fellow alien, Number Six (a fiery Teresa Palmer) shows up, and the action takes on a grander, crazily over-the-top scale, with the inclusion of a fearsome space beast that looks like what would happen if the monster from “Cloverfield” had sex with a flying squirrel. This is also when the movie seems to find its sense of humor, along with its pulse, as Number Six, after being juiced-up with some electro mumbo-jumbo, says, “Red Bull is for pussies” and the family dog mutates into a Harryhausen-indebted interstellar protector.

It’s just that, since things were never all that clear (or emotionally satisfying) to begin with, when the fireballs and plasma bursts start to fly, it’s hard to care much. “I Am Number Four” was directed by D.J. Caruso, a better-than-average Spielberg protégé (Spielberg produced this along with Michael Bay), and the action sequences in particular have a lively spark that matches the heady rush of hormones that adolescence provides, glittering with computer-generated embellishments. (Trevor Rabin‘s throbbing score helps too.) “I Am Number Four” doesn’t end exactly, or even provide a tantalizing cliffhanger. Instead, it just kind of trails off, a muddily elliptical conclusion that is built entirely on the understanding that future installments are on the way. For a movie with a number in the title, though, the filmmakers might be counting their alien chickens before they hatch. [C+]

indiewire

Michelle Trachtenberg clueless about drugs


By MusicRooms  on 17/02/2011

Michelle Trachtenberg had to research marijuana for her latest movie role, as she “doesn’t know anything about the weed".
image: Michelle Trachtenberg

The 25-year-old American actress is known for her roles in hit TV shows including Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Gossip Girl, and her latest part in comedy Take Me Home Tonight sees her portraying a partying cannabis user.

Michelle has never been interested in drug taking, so she had to do a fair amount of research on the effects of the illegal substance.

"I play a goth stoner chick and I don't know anything about the weed," Michelle told Us Magazine at a party celebrating her recent Maxim cover shoot.

"Really, I know nothing about it. So I had to do a little research."

Michelle was eager to confirm her research didn’t actually involve sampling the drug, although she found speaking to users of the substance just as revealing. The talented actress was shocked to discover many of her pals are partial to marijuana, although it at least meant she gained an in-depth understanding of the drug.

"I was talking with my friends, who are apparently a bunch of f**king stoners," she added.

Meanwhile, the beauty discussed her preparation for the raunchy Maxim photo shoot, where she displays her toned physique in provocative lingerie. The star teased that she didn’t eat for over a week in preparation for the modelling, before quickly confessing she actually continued to eat her favourite food but just on a smaller scale.

"I stopped eating," she laughed. "No, I ate a lot. My favourite foods are bread and cheese, so I basically just limited eating those things from five times a day to about twice a week. But only for ten days."

musicrooms

Buffy: Vampire Slayer and Queen of My World


17 February 2011

She's the greatest vampire slayer ever, a true TV cult that attracted millions worldwide and she stands the test of time. An appreciation.

God, where to start? Well to begin with, God doesn’t come into it. There’s heaven, kind of: we only have Buffy’s word for that but she has been there. And there’s a priest. But he’s an evil, woman-hating priest who gouges out the eye of a character that we’ve spent seven years growing to know and love – a sweet boy who never hurt anyone who wasn’t a vampire or a demon – with his thumb.

But that’s all at the end. (Don’t worry if you haven’t seen it, you’ll have forgotten this by the time you do.) Now let’s start at the beginning, and with what we know before that.

From one thing and another, e.g. the title and the word of mouth, we can guess that Buffy the Vampire Slayer is about vampires and that Buffy is a teenage, all-American, high-school cheerleader type … and most people would be put off right there. I was for a long time.

Latching on took a while – weeks, months, maybe a year of occasional dips and finding it quite refreshing. Later, watching with commitment from the start, I saw how the opening minutes of Season One do nothing to dispel that initial prejudice: It’s night, a teenage couple dressed like extras from Happy Days break into a school looking for some petting privacy. The girl is worried: this is not a good idea. The boy is cocky, pushy and maybe just a little predatory. The girl’s hearing noises while he’s hearing thoughts that could be lusty – or evil. ‘There’s nobody here,’ he says impatiently. ‘Are you sure?’ ‘Yes, I’m sure,’ he says. ‘OK,’ says the girl.

That’s when she turns around with her demon face on and sinks a mouthful of fangs in the boy’s neck.

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 1

This show will always blindside you. First it takes your prejudices and shows you that they were just expectations, then it takes those expectations and shoves them up your ass. In the words of Lee Van Cleef in The Master, ‘Always expect the unexpected.’  Well, you can try, but every time you think you’ve got Buffy pinned down by the scruff of the neck, it will be right there behind you giving you a well-aimed, double-taking kick up the ass. The theme music sums up this attitude beautifully: spooky organ chords conjure up a stony-walled, moonlit, gothic cliché – yeah, for about three seconds before it shatters into a riptide of guitar thrash that expresses the true Buffy spirit. Once that riff kicks in, we know that TV is never gonna be the same again.

OK, a little context is in order.

Buffy’s the Slayer, selected by fate, with no choice in the matter, to fight evil, which doesn’t help her school studies or her relationship with her divorced mother, Joyce.

She’s at Sunnydale High, which sits above the Hellmouth, a gateway for evil to enter our world in a variety of guises, mostly vampires and demons.

Xander and Willow, school nerd and geek respectively, are her sidekicks.

Giles, the uptight Brit librarian, is her Watcher, a guiding font of knowledge on Hellmouth demonology. A typically dry utterance from Giles in raconteur mode is, ‘It’s a funny story – if funny meant horrific.’

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 2

Humour – especially verbal and linguistic. Buffy has some of the sharpest dialogue since Philip Marlowe:

‘I don’t think we’ve been properly introduced. I’m Buffy. And you are . . . history.’

For a petite teenage girl Buffy talks tough, so it’s lucky she has the Tae Kwon Do skills and supernatural strength to back it up. ‘I can beat up demons until the cows come home, and then I can beat up the cows.’ It sounds like corn-fed noir but she’s not joking. This girl’s physical powers know few bounds.

‘I’m not sure our basic workout is challenging you anymore,’ says Giles, to which Buffy quips sarcastically, ‘Maybe next time I patrol, I should carry bricks and use a stake made out of butter.’ Buffy loves to talk back. She’s a teenager after all, and Watchers are invariably fuddy-duddy adults with English accents.

‘Remember,’ says Wesley, a foppish, rule-bound and ineffectual Watcher who’s sent to usurp Giles in Season Three, ‘the three key words for any slayer: preparation, preparation, preparation.’ But the Tony Blair pastiche is wasted on Buffy: ‘That’s one word three times.’

The great lines don’t just belong to Buffy though:

Xander describing an educationally challenged student: ‘What he lacks in smarts, he makes up for in lack of smarts.’

Exchange between a demon and Faith, a rogue Slayer turned bad, who’s just skewered a man with a crossbow: ‘You killed him.’ ‘What are you – the narrator?’

Exchange between two college campus vampires: ‘Does this sweater make me look fat?’ ‘No, the fact that you’re fat makes you look fat. The sweater makes you look purple.’

The Season Seven school principal to Buffy: ‘Well, I better get to work. Got to start deadening young minds.’

Exchange between vampire girlfriend and boyfriend: ‘You love that tunnel more than me.’ ‘I love syphilis more than you.’

This creative vein of humour runs below the verbal to the linguistic level. Buffy manages to capture the verve of the Valley Girl vernacular while avoiding the irritation, from the clunky, affecting syntax of ‘That is so not true’ to the prissy disgust expressed by ‘Again I say eeeww’. So many playfully twisted gems are thrown up that the word play becomes more and more dazzling. ‘Aren’t you acting a little overly?’, ‘What’s the sitch?’, ‘Love makes you do the whacky’ and ‘I’ll talk to you later when you’ve visited Decaf Land’ are examples of the show pushing the envelope of the SoCal teen dialect.

This inevitably encompasses pop-culture references, expressing an intertextuality unusual in a show set in its own fantasy miniverse. ‘My spider sense is tingling,’ says Buffy, and ‘I can’t believe that you of all would Scully me,’ while Xander comes out with, ‘Does anyone else feel like they’ve been Kaiser Sozhe’d?’

    ‘Being popular isn’t that great, or so I’ve read in books’

As the one-lining sidekick, Xander delivers always with the right touch of self-deprecation –‘Being popular isn’t that great, or so I’ve read in books’ – fear-tinged sarcasm – ‘And the fun just keeps on leaving’ – or angsty teenage lust – ‘I’m sixteen: looking at linoleum makes me think about sex’. Plain deadpan works too, as when he reports to Buffy during a battle with demons, ‘I tried to stop them by beating their fists with my face but they got past me.’

The demons can get the laughs too. The juxtaposition of these mostly upright-walking lizardy types and the everyday setting of a karaoke bar or watching their favourite daytime soap is funny to us, but they have their own sense of humour too, as when Season One über-vampire The Master calls back a minion in disfavour and says companionably, ‘Oh Colin, you’ve got something in your eye,’ before stabbing his finger in it up to the knuckle. Not the kind of thing you’d expect to see on teatime telly – until Buffy came along.

But it’s Buffy herself who’s the queen of the put-down, especially when facing off a demon. ‘Oh good – the feeble banter portion of the fight,’ she chirps sarkily before whupping some talkative vamp’s ass. At one point, the show meta-comments on its own verbal felicity through the mouths of Willow and Xander. ‘The Slayer always says a pun or a witty play on words, and I think it throws off the vampires,’ Willow observes, to which Xander replies, ‘I’ve always been amazed with how Buffy fights, but in a way I feel like we took her punning for granted.’

The writers’ love of suggestive and allusive language extends into the episode titles. Personal favourites include ‘Never Kill a Boy on the First Date’, ‘I, Robot – You, Jane’, ‘Inca Mummy Girl’, ‘Reptile Boy’, ‘Killed by Death’, ‘Band Candy’ and ‘The Zeppo’ (in which Xander is compared to the fourth Marx Brother).

This is not just humour. Sustained and developed across seven seasons, this is fertile linguistic creativity of a high literary order. Writers and directors who cut their teeth on Buffy have subsequently appeared prominently in the credits of hit shows like Battlestar Galactica, Desperate Housewives, Lost, CSI – the list goes on. And they all got their break from one man – the show’s guiding light, Joss Whedon.

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 3

First of all, there’s his determination to bring Buffy to the small screen as a long-running series years after the movie version had failed to light any fireworks. That takes balls and it takes a worrying amount of self-belief but above all it takes love. Everything about the show, the assuredness and consistency of the characters and the world it creates, from episode 1 to episode 144, convinces us of this. After a short and self-contained first season, according to the dictates of typical network caution, the show’s success gave Whedon the freedom to build his grand story arc of a girl who just wants to cheer-lead forced by circumstances to grow up faster than she wants to, faster than is fair, before dying and being reborn into her true destiny as not the lone avenger she thought she was fated to be but a tested general and a lightning-rod for global female empowerment: learning to deal with the responsibility of being the Slayer and saving the world, a lot.

Whedon, a big Dickens fan, believed that if a film was the equivalent of a short story then a drama series was the novel of the media age. And not a short novel but a Dickensian-sized grand narrative. Buffy would turn out to be as detailed, complex and expansive as The Forsyte Saga, except it would have monsters, a gang of slightly inept ‘Scoobies’ marshalled by a charismatic superhero and lots and lots of kick-ass fights.

Whedon’s talent was for employing gifted writers but staying hands on, guiding the direction of the overall narrative and writing and directing the keystone episodes himself and generally seeing the job through, the way he saw it. Nowhere is this more evident and more impressive than in the Season Six episode ‘Once More with Feeling’, conceived and executed in the style of a classic Hollywood musical. The explanatory premise of a demon that forces its victims to sing their innermost thoughts before dancing themselves on fire is the perfect vehicle for uncovering all the secrets that the core characters have been keeping from one another, not least of which is Buffy’s, which will devastate them all. The episode closes with an iconic moment, the final wide-screen kiss that sets the seal on Buffy’s torrid relationship with the vampire called Spike.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer with weapon

Careful, you could have an eye out with that

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 4

Of all the characters, Spike is one of the great swaggering creations of any TV drama, up there with Bilko, Emma Peel and Swerengen from Deadwood. When he crashes his car into the ‘Welcome To Sunnydale’ sign at the start of season 2, he crashes into Buffy’s life for keeps. Spike, another Brit, likes to think he’s the baddest vamp around, he’s killed two Slayers already, uses words like ‘bugger’ and ‘wanker’ and dresses like Billy Idol. The Slayer is everything he hates and he’s everything she hates and that’s the way it goes for the next four seasons. But never forget the blindside – and this one’s a biggie. The thing we fall in love with about Spike is his oft-thwarted efforts to give full rein to his undead instincts for violence, bloodlust and chaos and have a bloody good time doing it. As the architecture of the big story unfolds, he must learn to deny himself these pleasures and disinter his long-buried human self if he wants to win the love of the one girl who continues to frustrate his darkest desires.

Many other characters, all brilliantly realised and acted, have long and illustrious roads to travel to the final credits. Angel and Spike, opposing aspects of the same good-evil dichotomy, may be the bookend loves of Buffy’s life but spare a thought for the smitten soldier Riley who romances her through Seasons Four and Five but is too intimidated by her power to win her heart. Or for Faith, the rogue slayer who represents middle-class Buffy’s white-trash alter-ego (in one episode they even switch bodies) and takes out her self-hate on everyone who tries to help her until the father figure of Sunnydale’s evil Mayor takes her under his wing. Just one of a wide gallery of memorable villains that Buffy presents us with, the Mayor, with his homespun aphorisms (along with the fashion-conscious demon goddess Glory in Season Five) stands out for being witty and kinda likeable. Other figures too numerous to mention come and go – even when you’re dead you can always return in Buffy, which must’ve been great news for the actors – but we should at least pay our respects here to school queen bitch Cordelia, loony vamp Drusilla, loveable werewolf Oz and flaky ex-demon Anya, all of whom have pivotal parts to play in the lives of the core characters.

Which brings us back to Buffy’s mother.

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 5

Groundbreaking television. Not just for its scope and depth of story and character development – enough to support a whole industry of books, scholarly articles and university courses – but for a fistful of prize-winning episodes that took the Buffy audience to places where no comparable show had previously taken it. It showed teens the adult world without patronising them, nowhere more so than in the Season Five episode ‘The Body’, which deals with the loss of a parent. It’s one of the most devastating 45 minutes of TV drama ever produced, not least because Joyce, Buffy’s mother, is not offed by some blood-sucking demon in the hokey manner that the show would typically have us anticipate. Instead, Buffy gets home all chirpy in the middle of a sun-drenched afternoon to find her mother dead on the living-room couch from a brain haemorrhage. The business of the disposal of the corpse and having to pull her younger sister out of class to break the news are treated with the realism of serious adult drama.

And if you thought Buffy didn’t have a sister you were right – until Season Five anyway.

And if you thought Buffy didn’t have a sister you were right – until Season Five anyway. The introduction of Dawn may have been a network strategy to attract new young followers to the show but Whedon’s explanation and integration of the character into the story arc is masterfully done, an epic revision of the sort that only Dallas with the return of Bobby Ewing had attempted before, and which Buffy was in a position to pull off with bags more credibility.

Of the other innovative episodes, a couple have achieved special status in Buffy lore for one reason or another. ‘Hush’ is notable for being the episode in which the entire population of Sunnydale is robbed by creepy night-stalking demons of the ability to speak. Again, the absence of dialogue is not entirely original – think of the film One Million Years BC – but it was something which television, with its fear of dead air, had never done before. Another episode, ‘Earshot’, gained notoriety and was even withdrawn from broadcast in the US because it came too close to the subject of high-school massacres at a time when they were high in the news. And in ‘Gone’ the camera follows a brawl between invisible opponents, something I’d never seen before and arguably still haven’t.

My personal favourites however are those episodes which introduce an alternative reality to the show’s alternative reality. In ‘The Wish’, Cordelia carelessly expresses a desire that Buffy had never come to Sunnydale to the newly arrived Anya, who at this point in the show is still a Vengeance Demon (later she’ll become human and almost marry Xander, but how he leaves her standing at the altar is another story). This plunges the town into a new reality without the protection of the Slayer where virtually all the main characters are picked off one by one, starting with Cordelia herself. Even an alternative Buffy, called to Sunnydale from Cleveland to save the day, is killed, and only Giles remains to restore normality.

The episode introduces Willow’s other vampire self, who reappears later when she crosses over from this alternative universe in ‘Doppelgangland’ and about whom Willow prudishly notices, ‘I think I’m kinda gay.’ This prefigures her later transition from heterosexual girlfriend of Oz to lesbian partner of Tara in Season Four. Tara becomes the love of Willow’s life, and her death in Season Six – again shockingly real, the bystanding victim of a stray bullet – triggers Willow’s descent into a campaign of black magic to wreak revenge and destroy the world.

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 6

The complexity of the relationships in Buffy goes far beyond the usual 2D expectations of teen TV drama, where characters normally know what they want from one another and either get it or don’t. Real life tends to be a whole lot messier, and that’s the way Buffy plays it. At the beginning, Willow fancies Xander, who she’s known from childhood, but Xander fancies Buffy. Buffy falls in love with Angel, the vampire cursed by gypsies with a human soul, but when they make love he turns evil and she has to kill him. He comes back later, naturally, but the whole evil thing puts a block on sex so he has to leave town. In the meantime, snooty society queen Cordelia and school geek Xander fall for one another, which leaves Willow wilting until she meets the coolly laconic Oz, who’s a really sweet guy despite being a werewolf, but their relationship is doomed by his lycanthropic tendencies and Willow’s continuing attraction to Xander which is destined to ruin not only her own love life but Cordelia’s too …

You get the picture. Further down the line, Willow turns gay, Xander loses his virginity to Faith before dating and nearly marrying an ex-demon, Buffy and Riley are cursed into making non-stop love at the bottom of a deep pit and even Giles and Buffy’s mother have sex on the hood of a police car, twice. But it’s the dawning of Spike’s sexual and emotional obsession with the Slayer, his nemesis, that leads to the show’s hottest, least expected and most graphic couplings. The darkly inappropriate romance that suffuses Buffy the Vampire Slayer is summed up by the Slayer when she says to Angel, ‘When I kiss you I want to die.’

But ultimately the show is not about sex or jokes or postmodernist surprises. It’s about Buffy.

Why Buffy Rocks, Reason 7

The story of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is that of a young girl growing into a young woman and facing all the joys and terrors which the journey entails, and Sarah Michelle Gellar plays the whole gamut of emotions to perfection. Buffy doesn’t just come to terms with being the Slayer, the Chosen One, across the show’s seven seasons. She also confronts and changes the nature of what a Slayer is: by romancing vampires; by flouting the patriarchal rules of the Council of Watchers; by taking on adult responsibility when her mother dies and she’s left to look after her kid sister; by confronting her own mortality again and again; by sacrificing her life to save a sister she knows isn’t even real but who she can make real if she only believes; by being raised from the dead against her wishes and forgiving those who snatched her back from the comfort of heaven into a world that resembles hell; by being a strong and resourceful leader in battle; and yes, even by going out and getting a shitty job flipping burgers when necessity calls for it. What started by appearing to be a show for teens has most definitely become a show for adults.

Perhaps Buffy’s ultimate test comes in the Season Six episode ‘Normal Again’, in which she awakens from the fantasy world of Sunnydale to find her mother still alive, her parents still married and herself confined to a mental ward in LA, where she has been internally living out the far-fetched adventures of the previous six years. Is this true reality or the real delusion resulting from a demonic poison injected into her bloodstream? The doctor treating her schizophrenia convinces her that she can return to normal life by killing her imaginary friends, Xander, Willow and Dawn, back in the mental construct that is Sunnydale. Instead, she chooses to save them and, in an ending reminiscent of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil, regresses into a catatonic state while her despairing parents watch her slip away. It’s one of the most unsettling pieces of television ever.

But, in praise of Buffy and all it stands for, I’ll finish on the more upbeat note that comes at the end of the Season Four episode ‘Fear Itself’. After freaking and fighting their way through a Halloween party of mind-bending terrors, Buffy and the gang find that the demon behind it all is only three inches tall, so Buffy stamps on it so they can all go home. Back at Giles’s, poring over the demon’s illustration in a book, the Watcher suddenly whispers, ‘Oh, bloody hell.’ Eerie music begins to rise, reviving our sense of dread.  ‘What is it?’ Buffy asks, worried but ready as ever to throw herself back into the fray. ‘I should’ve read the caption properly,’ says Giles. ‘Actual size.’

Cut to end credits.

sabotagetimes

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Vampires Are Sucking The Media Industry In

Thursday, February 10, 2011 By CAITLIN IVEY

Since the release of the Twilight saga, it seems that the media world has been overwhelmed by various vampire tales. As a result, an abundance of teenagers and young adults have grown accustomed to the modern era of vampire entertainment.

"I started reading the Twilight saga as a freshman and became obsessed. I like it just as much or possibly more than Harry Potter," senior Charlotte Stockdale said.

Twilight author Stephenie Meyer had no idea that her simple dream would become a pop culture sensation. After releasing Twilight, in 2005, Meyer expanded her dream into an entire series with three additional books. Only three years later, her novels were released as movies. However, some students are not fans of the Twilight phenomenon.

"Twilight strays from original vampire stories. Vampires are monsters who want to come suck your blood and kill you, not love you and shine in the sun," senior Connor McLear said.

In 1897, the first famous vampire tale was released as the story of Count Dracula from Transylvania. Multiple film adaptations of the Dracula story have been released since.

Other noteworthy vampire TV shows include Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which aired from 1997 to 2003, as well as the Buffy the Vampire Slayer film that was released in 1992. Now, vampire stories have evolved into modern TV series such as True Blood and The Vampire Diaries.

Although vampires may seem like the new trend, not everyone is feeling the vampire love. The movie Vampires Suck was released on Aug. 18, 2010, as a spoof of the most popular vampire-themed movies. For example, from Twilight, Edward’s last name is change from Cullen to Sullen in Vampires Suck.

The popularity of vampire entertainment comes in waves, with the recent explosion of vampire literature, movies and TV shows being the height of the most recent one. Within the next couple of years, the era of vampire entertainment is expected to end.

The Hawk Eye

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Cobie Smulders Joins Marvel’s Avengers

Actress Cobie Smulders, best known to television audiences as journalist Robin Scherbatsky on CBS’ long-running comedy ‘How I Met Your Mother’, has joined Marvel’s highly anticipated superhero movie “The Avengers”.

The movie is based on the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name and teams up multiple Marvel superheroes including Captain America, the Hulk, Iron Man and Thor.

Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Jeremy Renner, Scarlett Johansson and Samuel L. Jackson are the leads in the ensemble. Zak Penn and Joss Whedon (”Buffy The Vampire Slayer”) are writing, with the latter one directing the movie, which is eyed for a release on May 4, 2012.

Smulders is set to play an unspecifid S.H.I.E.L.D agent. Her character would work closely with Jackson’s Nick Fury, and eventually becomes the head of the espionage and law enforcement group.

“The Avengers” marks Smulders’ first major movie outing. Prior to landing the role of Robin Scherbatsky on CBS’ comedy “How I Met Your Mother” in 2005, the Canadian actress had only guest starred on various television programmes. Smulders had previously been Joss Whedon’s choice for the role of “Wonder Woman”, before he exited the project in early 2007. “The Avengers” is set to start filming in April, while “How I Met Your Mother” is on hiatus.

The Cinema Post

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Spike Gets Married!


More Vampire love.

James Marsters has played many a villain on television, but he recently got to play groom again!

The former Buffy the Vampire Slayer actor, 48, got hitched to girlfriend Patricia Rahman Marsters, 25, in a private L.A. civil ceremony.

Marsters, who also starred in Angel, said "I met her backstage and got her phone number, but then my jeans were cleaned out by the crew and they threw it out."

After months of trying, James finally got a hold of Pat and the rest was fate - just like Marsters' opening the "Hellmouth" on Buffy.

Congrats Spike James!

Perez Hilton

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Exclusive! Marti Noxon on ‘Number Four,’ ‘Fright Night,’ and ‘Buffy’

by Alyse Wax

Has Marti Noxon been dubbed a genre queen yet? She darn well should be. The writer/producer/singer (!) made a name for herself on Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel. After some time on non-genre projects like Mad Men, she's back now with not one, but two movies: I am Number Four, a teen sci-fi/action flick (think Twilight with less moping and more monsters), and Fright Night, a remake of the classic '80s vampire flick. The vivacious writer (who also cooks and bakes!) took a few minutes during dinner prep to chat with us.

How did you get involved in I Am Number Four?

I had just done Fright Night for Dreamworks, and they were looking for addition work on I Am Number Four. They had had a couple other writers on it, and it had been through a couple different versions. They specifically wanted me on the character stuff, but I ended up on the project for a few solid months and I ended up doing a lot of work on it.

With all of these different writers and sources, how did you manage the script? Did anyone else have input?

It was a very collaborative process. Steven Spielberg [Dreamworks produced the film] had a lot of input because they were getting close to shooting and there were a lot of things he wanted developed, visually. We did a lot of work on how much backstory was necessary. There was some back and forth with the author, although at that time - during the draft that Miles Millar ad Alfred Gough did - they were talking back and forth with [author] James Frey, and the book was actually changing based on their input. It was a kind of symbiotic relationship, which is rare. Usually the book has been written and you have to toe the line. At that time, the book was still in galleys. The guys had read a first draft [of the novel] and they were able to tell James what they thought would be cool - and he was really receptive, apparently. I came in later, when the book was about to be published, so I couldn't make any changes like that!
i am number four

There are a fair amount of creatures in the film. Does knowing what a creature will look like alter the way you write an action scene?

It can. Every time you are writing action, you are looking for something unique about that sequence. You want something fresh that, hopefully, your audience hasn't seen a million times. So if the creature has any unique properties, that will really help. However, the creature design was going on concurrent with my writing. Plus, most of the action stuff had already been written, and DJ [Caruso, the director] and Guillermo [Navarro, director of photography] did a lot of work on that stuff. The huge set piece at the end, I did all the dialogue and character stuff there, but in terms of visuals and [choreography], that was already in place.

Are you guys already planning a sequel? Perhaps I am Number Five?

I think everyone is waiting to see how this movie does. It's part of a quadrilogy, so it ends with the promise that there might be more. Hopefully the movie is satisfying in and of itself, but there is the opening there for something more with these characters.

You definitely feel like the characters are going to go find Five and Seven and Eight and Nine.

And number Six is so awesome, so you want to see more of her. We left the door wide open.

Six had a very kick-ass, Buffy kind of thing going on.

More like a Faith kind of thing. [Laughs.]

Do you have a particular affinity to that type of character?

Absolutely. I love me a kick-ass girl. I feel like there is a dearth of them right now. There have been great movies with female action characters, but never enough for my tastes. It is great to get to write a character like that. She's not looking to please anybody, and she's not a moper. We really, really like that. Teresa Palmer is a great actress and really brought a lot to the role. Because of the book, we were limited in our introduction of her, but hopefully it will make people want to see another [film].
i am number four

How does the process differ when adapting a book for the screen, versus writing a remake of a film, like Fright Night?

There is a roadmap with both of them. The source material for I am Number Four is not particularly well known, so you don't feel like you have as much obligation to the fans of the material - the fans don't exist yet. When you are dealing with a book, you also have to make sure not to derail the franchise. With Fright Night, I knew it was a movie that a lot of people had a strong affection for. Some love it because it is a campy classic, others love it because they just love it, some love it because there were boobs in it... everyone has a reason. You are striving to make it feel new and fresh, but make it respectful to the original. With a book, there is more room to set tone because from page to screen is a lot different than screen to screen.

What kinds of changes or updates can we expect to see in the new Fright Night?

It feels more contemporary. We don't have midnight movie hosts anymore, so we tried to find a contemporary counterpart to that. We went with a Las Vegas magician. I kind of based it on Penn & Teller because I read that they have an amazing occult collection - they collect occult artifacts and stuff. Even though they are not believers - they are debunkers - they still collect it.

Actually, it's really just Teller who collects that stuff.

Oh yeah? [Laughs.] Well, when I read that, I thought, "Wouldn't it be something if one of these kinds of guys were an authority on all things creepy and vampirey." Plus I thought it would be a good character. You can pull the curtain on the creepy, gothy magician type. So our character has a show called "Fright Night" on the strip [instead of a late night TV show].

When I first saw Fright Night, I was a kid, so I don't remember how the tone of the movie was received originally - whether it was considered scary or goofy. Watching it now, it definitely feels campy. What tone will yours have?

I think it definitely falls more in the traditional, dark vampire category. It takes the world it is in... not more seriously, but it is a little more grounded. One of the goals the director [Craig Gillespie] and I shared was that we wanted these kids to feel like real teenagers, in a real world. Hopefully we achieve that. At the same time, it is self-aware. Times have changed in the 20 years since the original Fright Night, so there is a lot of self-awareness. We have some fun with the vampire genre. The other fun thing was that I got to write about the relationship between Ed and Charlie. In watching the original, I was always like, "How the hell did those guys know each other? What brought them together?" So we really went into that. I think tonally, it feels more real, but it is meant to be fun. It doesn't take itself too seriously, and there is a lot of humor to it. One of the highest compliments I have ever gotten was from Mr. Spielberg, who said "If Amblin ever made a horror movie, this is what it would be like." [Amblin Entertainment was Spielberg's now-defunct production company - it merged with Dreamworks - that boasted projects like Gremlins, The Goonies, and Back to the Future]. We'll see if it turns out that way, but that was how he felt. That was one of the better days of my writing career. Tonally, that is the goal: funny and scary, but not over-the-top.

Back in July, you told one of our reporters that the idea of a Buffy reboot without Joss Whedon was "ridiculous." I'm sure after the news broke that a reboot was indeed in the works, you knew that comment would come back to haunt you. Any comments now?

[Laughs]. I guess I should address it. God bless, them, good luck to them, but I still think it is ridiculous. I stand by my quote! I hope that I am proven wrong. But the show was so much a product of Joss's voice. We loved his vision, and stepped to it, but it is hard to imagine anyone else capturing what is supremely him. I totally get that there is a fan base that wants more, and if he can't do it, somebody ought to. But it is hard for those of us who were together, in the trenches, at the beginning, to imagine someone else trying to capture that.

I am Number Four hits theatres February 18, 2011

Fearnet