Posts Tagged ‘gallery’

Mr. Bones 2

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Lindsay Lohan

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Lindsay LohanLindsay Morgan Lohan was born on the 2nd of July, 1986 in New York City and raised in Long Island. She is the eldest of four with two brothers and a sister. Lindsay’s career started at a very young age. At just three she was the first redheaded child to be signed by the Ford Modeling Agency. She appeared in print ads for companies like Toys “R” Us and modelled for Calvin Klein Kids (usually with siblings Michael and Ali) and Abercrombie Kids.

Lindsay was talented but after auditioning for some T.V. commercials she was unsuccessful. Just before she was about to give up she was awarded the role in a Duncan Hines commercial. Over sixty commercials followed including a Jell-O commercial with Bill Cosby. Lohan began appearing in soap operas, and in 1996 she landed a role in NBC’s soup opera, Another World.

Lohan was ready for the big screen. She left Another World when Nancy Meyers cast her in the Parent Trap. She played twins who attempt to bring their divorced parents together. The movie pulled in $92 million worldwide with critics praising Lohan’s performance. Disney signed her onto a three picture deal after the movie’s success. Her next two movies, Life- Size andGet a Clue, were made for T.V. Just before Get a Clue she shot a pilot for a new sitcom called Bette but left when production moved to Los Angeles. The show was cut after sixteen episodes.

After Get a Clue Lohan took time off from her movie career to focus on music. In September 2002 she signed a five-album deal with Estefan Enterprises. But Lohan was soon cast in her next Disney film, Freaky Friday. The remake of the classic had her starring alongside Jamie Lee Curtis. The movie pulled in over $160 million and allowed her to show off her singing abilities. The soundtrack ended up in the Billboard’s Top 20 in less than three weeks.

Lindsay Lohan

But her movie success didn’t follow into Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004). Lohan’s first movie which was not a remake only grossed $30 million and was a failure according to critics. “Though still a promising star, Lohan will have to do a little penance before she’s forgiven for Confessions,” Robert K. Elder wrote. Later that year Mean Girls was released to critical acclaim and $128 million worldwide. It was her first non-Disney film. Steve Rhodes said, “Lohan dazzles us once more.”

Lohan was asked to host Saturday Night Live three times, in 2004, 2005, and 2006, after her Mean Girls success. In 2005, she released her debut album, Speak, followed by A Little More Personal the next year. In the same year Lohan became the first living person to have a My Scene Goes Hollywood doll released by Mattel. She also voiced her doll in their straight to DVD movie.

Lohan was back on the Disney set in the 2005 Herbie: Fully Loaded film. Fully Loaded earned $144 million worldwide. She followed Herbie with Just My Luck. The movie received poor reviews and only $38 million worldwide. Lohan was in three limited release films leading up to 2007, the films made very little leaving critics unimpressed.

Lindsay LohanLohan began a troubled 2007, admitting herself into rehab in February. On the 11th of May Georgia Rule was released. Lohan was seen alongside Felicity Huffman and Jane Fonda. The film received mostly negative reviews and grossed $22 million worldwide. Things got worse from there. Lohan was arrested and her latest movie, I know who killed me, opened to a shocking $3.5 million dollars. Lohan was cast in Dare to Love Me after leaving rehab in 2007; the movie is due in 2009

In February 2008 Lohan re-created Marilyn Monroe’s final photo shoot, known as the Last Sitting, including nudity. Lohan continues to search for a more adult identity but is searching in all the wrong places. She turned down a few roles in 2008 but is due to star in Labor Pains. At the time of writing the film is in post-production. Lohan will play a young woman who pretends to be pregnant to avoid being fired.

Lohan, who already guest starred in the season 2 finale of ABC’s Ugly Betty, will be back in the next season for a rumoured five episodes. She also has a new album due soon.

Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

High School Musical 3

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Review

High School Musical is a phenomenon that has taken the world by storm. Its third instalment is set to heighten that status to all new levels. High School Musical 3 takes the humble school of East High onto the big screen, and it does it in style.

This time around our stars are seniors struggling to come to grips with leaving high school and starting new lives. It’s a solute to the three years of HSM and a start to what may be a new breed of stars who will continue the legacy.

Because we are actually expected to pay to watch HSM3 the cast and crew kick every aspect into high gear. The songs are on a bigger scale, the dancing is on an entirely new level and the story telling, although still basic, is of a higher quality. Kenny Ortega deserves a solute to some awesome choreography, especially in the boy’s junk yard scene.

It can be appreciated that more screen time was given to characters who we didn’t see much of in previous movies but loved them anyway. Ms Darbus has some more time to shine as does Kelsi and Martha. But essentially this is still Tory and Gabriella’s story.

Two new stars have joined the cast namely Matt Prokop who plays Jimmy Zara and Justin Martin who plays Donny Dion. Donny doesn’t say much but he and Justin are great new characters who are rumoured to be the ones continuing the HSM legacy.

What seems to have made this series a success is its romanticised high school experience. We love it because as simple as the story is, it shows us what high school should really be about. It allows us to kick back and just pretend we are in a perfect world were the only problems are how far away our best friends are going to be and which school to go to. It breaks into that part of us that thinks it’s a star and allows that dream to sparkle again.

Take your big head out the way and go and enjoy some pure unadulterated fun with High School Musical 3 – Senior Year. 7/10

Wall•E

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

Pixar is up to its old tricks again by pulling off the craziest and most daring thing I have ever seen in animation. They have made us believe toys could be real, taken us to worlds of monsters and cars, and made us fall in love with ants, fish and a rat. This year they are taking us into the future and through space with WALL•E.

WALL•E, or Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class, is the last of his kind. Stranded on our earth long after all humans abandoned it due to extreme pollution. He spends his days neatly sorting the trash into giant towers and collecting little tit-bits that interest him as his trusty pet cockroach follows him everywhere. That is until EVE arrives. A slender and many have said iPod looking bot, sent to earth to see if life is sustainable again. Our hero WALL•E immediately falls head over heals for her, but when EVE finds what she is looking for she is called back to the Axiom space station to inform the humans of life on the trash filled earth. WALL•E follows her and his journey through space begins.

Now the really groundbreaking news is that the movie has no dialog besides robotic beeps for the first half an hour of the movie. And even from there the dialog is extremely limited. Although it is pulled off in a spectacular fashion many movie goers may be slightly annoyed by the extreme lack of dialog. Although it provides for a breakthrough in storytelling it may keep a chunk of movie goers at a distance, creating one major movie flaw. As amazing as it is to see movies as art, if the viewer can’t appreciate the art, it has been wasted.

With that in mind, Pixar have managed to pull a beautifully executed love story together, along with adventure, sci-fi, and slap stick comedy. Neatly packaged in the robot whose cute eyes and zest for life will melt even the hardest of hearts. It’s a movie that caters for kids and those who can only see surface deep, but more excitingly it caters for those who see deeper. It challenges our product saturated, over indulging, over polluting ideals. It premieres a love story that grows and blossoms as in the most classic films and takes us into a future that is not only extremely fun but visually amazing.

What worries me, although it’s hard to judge such bold and innovative story telling, is that I don’t know if movie goers are ready for a movie of this calibre, although I may be underestimating how adaptable most movie goers are. If you see this movie for the first time and it just didn’t sit right with you, watch it again there is so much to experience if you just forget about the limited dialog.

8/10

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As a side note, the Pixar short before the movie is one of the most hysterical pieces I have seen. The piece shows a magician and his rabbit that is desperate for his carrot. What follows is fast paced slap stick humour that only Pixar can achieve. It is nothing short of brilliant.