Pages

Friday, 29 November 2013

Selena Gomez Wears Red Leather Bodysuit At Thanksgiving Day Halftime Show

Selena Gomez Wears Red Leather Bodysuit At Thanksgiving Day Halftime Show

Selena Gomez amped up the Thanksgiving Day football game halftime show with a red leather cutout bodysuit. The pop star performed at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas while the Oakland Raiders and the Dallas Cowboys played in the annual game, watched by millions.

selena gomez

After the performance, she tweeted, "Thx @SalvationArmyUS @DallasCowboys for having me. #RedKettle Let's all give a little. http://onlineredkettle.org/selenagomez."

selena gomez

Kelly Clarkson praised her fellow Texas-native, "Great job @selenagomez on the Cowboys halftime show! I just love she and @ddlovato! My two Texas little sisters making us proud :)"

selena gomez

Fans can watch the entire halftime performance featuring Gomez, Demi Lovato and Sendaya on YouTube. Celebrity - The Huffington Post

Demi Lovato Rocks “X Factor”

Demi Lovato Rocks “X Factor”

She’s used to sitting behind the judges’ table on “The X Factor,” but last night (November 28) Demi Lovato hit the stage to sing her hit song “Neon Lights.”

The gorgeous pop star looked to be having a blast as she belted out her single, gearing up for her forthcoming Neon Lights Tour with Fifth Harmony as an opening act.

Meanwhile Demi told press she loves her new condo home in Los Angeles, especially the kind neighbors she met during a recent fire scare.

She explained, "The fire alarm went off and we all had to go outside and it was all older people - like old people. There were walkers and wheelchairs. I loved that. I was like, 'Oh my God, this is so cute!' All of the people there are so sweet, especially the valet attendants. It's so much fun because there's not, like, young people that are loud and noisy."


Celebrity Scandals: Gossip Center

3 Times Liam Payne And Justin Timberlake Looked Exactly Alike

3 Times Liam Payne And Justin Timberlake Looked Exactly Alike

Someone on HuffPost Teen's Twitter feed posted this during last week's American Music Awards:

liam payne


Interesting proposition. Let's examine more closely, shall we?




We're not sure JT is quite old enough to be Liam's dad, but we'll settle for long-lost boy band older brother. Uncanny! Celebrity - The Huffington Post

Gisele Bundchen: Vogue Brazil December 2013 Beauty

Gisele Bundchen: Vogue Brazil December 2013 Beauty

Continuing to prove she’s one of the sexist models in the world, Gisele Bundchen soaked up the spotlight by fronting the December 2013 issue of Vogue Brazil magazine.

The former Victoria’s Secret Angel looked absolutely stunning in sexy pajama wear for the Giampaolo Sguria-shot spread as she dished about the publication’s new photo shoot and revealed her big plans for this holiday season.

“I think the theme of this photo shoot is really interesting,” Gisele explained. “Because it shows the glamorous side and also the relaxed one.”

“A woman can look powerful in a party, but when she arrives at home all she wants is to be comfortable,” she added.

In regards to her upcoming Christmas, Miss Bundchen states that this year will be less chaotic than the previous years. “For me the end of the year is always a time to reflect and recharge my energies. I like to relax with my family, so I’ll stay with my husband [Tom Brady] and kids in Boston.”

Celebrity Scandals: Gossip Center

'Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom' Anchored By Idris Elba

'Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom' Anchored By Idris Elba

If there were ever a season to learn, via the movies, about crucial periods of history, it's this one. Last month we were introduced to "12 Years a Slave," Steve McQueen's unforgettable look at American slavery, through one man with an incredible story.

And now we have "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom," a film about another vital chapter in the world's history â€" the struggle against apartheid in South Africa â€" also through the incredible story of one man, albeit one we know well, and an adored hero of our times. Cinematically, "Mandela," directed by Justin Chadwick and based on Mandela's autobiography, is not nearly as groundbreaking, nor as powerful, as "12 Years a Slave." But that doesn't mean it doesn't handle its subject with admirable ambition and scope.

It is, though, that ambition and scope that also bogs down the movie a bit. Mandela's life is portrayed here from his beginnings in a rural village to his election as president in 1994 at age 75. That's a huge amount of ground to cover, even without the newsreel-like scenes of historical context. And so, the film can feel too much like a stock, traditional biopic, with little time to delve into any one thing.

The happy news here is Idris Elba's magnetic performance as Mandela, portraying both the man's heroic aspects and, at times, his faults: The younger Mandela was rather a playboy, it appears, and the film does not portray his behavior toward his first wife in a favorable light.

Most of all, Elba finds the core of humanity, wisdom, strength and patience that made this one man capable of changing his country's history. By the end of this 139-minute film, Elba has so inhabited the character that you might be stunned to see photos of the real man, during credits, and realize the extensive physical differences (although the real man, apparently, thought he might be seeing footage of himself when the producer showed him a scene).

The wise casting extends to the second most important character, Winnie Mandela. As portrayed by Naomie Harris, the woman who would become Mandela's second wife first appears to us as a hypnotically lovely young lady, full of verve. "I've heard you have a lot of girlfriends," Winnie tells Mandela when they meet. "I'm different." And you believe her. Later, Harris must transform Winnie into a hardened, increasingly bold activist, eventually at odds with her husband. Again, you believe her.

We get to know Mandela as an engaging young lawyer, reluctant to attend an African National Congress meeting. As he becomes more involved in the struggle, his worried mother, Nosekeni (an affecting Zikhona Sodlaka), makes no secret of her disapproval. His first marriage fails.

Mandela's lovely courtship with Winnie culminates in a traditional wedding in tribal dress. This dreamlike moment gives way to scenes of the shocking Sharpeville massacre in 1960, when police mowed down 69 people. Soon, activist Mandela is on the run.

His famous trial, with the masses gathered outside, is well captured here. As the world knows, Mandela and his co-defendants were sentenced to life in prison, and his next 27 years were spent there, 18 of them at the forbidding Robben Island.

"You will never touch a woman or a child again," a prison official tells Mandela. "You will die here." Everyone watching the film will know this isn't true. But knowing what happens hardly blunts the impact of the thrilling 1990 release scene, nor Mandela's election as president in 1994.

A closing scene of the older Mandela, surrounded by children, reminds us that he is still alive, at 95. This is the perfect time for youngsters (or their elders) who don't know enough about the man to go learn about him. For that reason alone, if not for Elba's terrific performance, "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom" is 139 minutes very well spent.

"Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom," a Weinstein Company release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for "some intense sequences of violence and disturbing images, sexual content and brief strong language." Running time: 139 minutes. Three stars out of four.

MPAA definition of PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13. Celebrity - The Huffington Post

Bruce Springsteen 'Born To Run' Manuscript Is For Sale

Bruce Springsteen 'Born To Run' Manuscript Is For Sale

NEW YORK (AP) â€" A handwritten working manuscript of Bruce Springsteen's 1975 hit "Born to Run" will be offered at auction on Dec. 5, with a presale estimate of $ 70,000 to $ 100,000, Sotheby's said Wednesday.

The seller was not revealed. The auction house said the document used to be in the collection of Springsteen's former manager, Mike Appel. Sotheby's said most of the lines in this 1974 version, written in Long Branch, N.J., are apparently unpublished and unrecorded, but the manuscript does include "a nearly perfected chorus."

Springsteen's thought process, written in blue ink on an 8½-by-11 sheet of ruled notepaper, looks like this:

"This town'll rip the (out your) bones from yourback / it's a suicide trap (rap) (it's a trap to catchthe young) your dead unless / you get out (we gotto) while your young so (come on! / with) take myhand cause tramps / like us baby we were born to run."

"The imagery and tone are constant from the present manuscript to the final song," the auctioneer said.

There are also some words in the margins: "Wild" and "Angels" and a word that looks like "velocity," with the letter "t'' in Springsteen's curlicue cursive.

"Although Springsteen is known to have an intensive drafting process, few manuscripts of 'Born to Run' are available, with the present example being one of only two identified that include the most famous lines in the song," Sotheby's said.

The document will be part of a Manhattan sale of fine books and manuscripts. Celebrity - The Huffington Post

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Boston Marathon Bombing Affected 'American Hustle'

Boston Marathon Bombing Affected 'American Hustle'

NEW YORK (AP) â€" While shooting in Boston, David O. Russell found his film "American Hustle" caught up in the Boston Marathon bombing.

When the city was essentially shut down for the manhunt for suspect Dzokhar Tsarnaev in April, the production â€" which had been shooting in the area â€" had to be stopped for a day. The experience, Russell says, was felt closely by the filmmaking crew and actors. "It was hanging over us the whole time," Russell said in a recent interview.

"You just end up feeling the emotion and the strength of the community around you," said the director. "It just makes you more human, really, because you end up having a very human connection with, literally, everyone around you. I mean, everyone, strangers on the street. Everybody was moved and pulled together by that tragedy."

Russell, a New York native, has become increasingly identified with Massachusetts. A graduate of Amherst College, he memorably shot his Oscar-winning "The Fighter" on location in Lowell.

"American Hustle" is a fictionalized version of the Abscam sting operation conducted by the FBI in the late 1970s. The investigation was aided by a convicted con artist (played by Christian Bale in the film) and led to convictions related to bribery for a senator, six congressmen and other politicians.

Though the film largely takes place in New Jersey, Russell shot it around Massachusetts, including stops in Worcester, Medford and Salem.

"There are places there that you can't find in the New York area that are untouched from the '70s," Russell said. "There are parts of Massachusetts â€" Medford and Worcester â€" that haven't really changed since the late '70s."

The explosions on April 15 at the finish line of the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured more than 260. Tsarnaev has pleaded not guilty to a 30-count federal indictment that includes charges of using a weapon of mass destruction.

Before shooting resumed for "American Hustle" in Boston, actors from the film, including Bradley Cooper, visited victims in the hospital.

"When you're telling a story that's full of intensity and emotion, you put it into the movie," said Russell, who last directed the acclaimed self-renewal comedy "Silver Linings Playbook." ''You put all that heart into it. There's a lot of heart in Boston. I love having a lot of heart in my movies."

"American Hustle," which also stars Amy Adams, Jennifer Lawrence and Jeremy Renner, opens Dec. 18.

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle Celebrity - The Huffington Post