After reportedly topping the box office and raking in over $100 million during its first week, Michael Jackson’s This Is It has been given an extended run in theaters around the world.
This news likely comes as a surprise to no one, except perhaps whatever poor souls lined up early to get tickets to this “limited run” back when Sony was still lying and saying it would only be in theaters for a few days.
Early reviews of the concert film/documentary Michael Jackson: This Is It have been positively glowing—but that is no surprise since the opening night audiences were packed with Jackson devotees and mourners.
Plus, under the circumstances, giving the film a negative review would be akin to booing at a funeral.
However, regardless of your feelings toward Jackson, his personal controversies or even his music, this actually sounds like an entertaining film and we can prove it with three words: giant mechanical spider. Continue reading »
What’s the biggest question in the entertainment industry this week? It has be how well the Michael Jackson concert film “This is It” will do when it opens on Wednesday.
"Not true. The video was debued on MySpace Music and AdamOfficial told us it was coming before it was release. Really well done video and Adam is so..."
A clip from Adam Lambert’s video for the tune “Time for Miracles” recently leaked online and is now available at Lambert’s MySpace video page (Watch it, below).
According to a report on RollingStone.com, the video was supposed to have been unveiled in movie theaters prior to Michael Jackson’s This Is It starting October 28th, but Continue reading »
In the ’90s, Hollywood’s go-to group for over-the-top melodramatic power-ballads was Aerosmith (think, “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing” from Armageddon).
With his first post-American Idol foray back into the spotlight, runner-up Adam Lambert seems to be taking aim for Aerosmith’s throne—and he just might get it.
"Haters of Michael jackson don't judge who buys or listens to what. We his fans can buy anything from Michael jackson no matter what. Michael Jackson have..."
Michael Jackson returns to the radio airwaves and Internet today with “This is It,” a song the King of Pop recorded just weeks before his death of a drug overdose in June at age 50, according to a Reuters report.
(Listen: Michael Jackson–”This is It,” below)
The tune, according to Reuters, features backing vocals by Continue reading »
"[...] Weekend Wedding: New Moon Musician and Actress) 2Band of Skulls—Friends photo credit: Scott [...]"
REVIEW: Twilight New Moon Soundtrack as Overrated as the Movie? | Music Vixen Blog
Many Twilight fans would be shocked to learn that one of the film’s vampires or werewolves got hitched over the weekend-but don’t get too brokenhearted just yet.
Over the weekend indie film fave actress/singer Zooey Deschanel reportedly tied the knot with Twilight: New Moon Continue reading »
"My favorite Patrick Swayze movie is Dirty Dancing. I could watch the dance scene at the end over and over again. I had such a crush on him when I was..."
ABOVE:At the height of his fame, Swayze attempted to add pop singer to his resume with the ballad, “She’s Like the Wind.”
A Texas-born ballet dancer known for his star turns in movies such as Dirty Dancing, Road House and Ghost, Patrick Swayze made a name for himself as an actor, dancer, singer and People Magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive (1991).
Among Swayze’s better-known films are the Outsiders, Point Break (w/Keanu Reeves and members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers), and Red Dawn, a high school war movie currently being remade.
The star of stage and screen turned to television in 2009, emerging with the gritty police series, The Beast. However, around this time it was also revealed that Swayze was battling pancreatic cancer. His illness and inability to work long hour filming and promoting the TV series likely contributed to it being cancelled.
Eight months after announcing his diagnosis, the star lost his battle on September 14, 2009. Swayze was 57.
Which Swayze film/scene or song is your favorite? Tell us in the comments section. RIP.
A respected underground writer, poet and musician for decades, Jim Carroll gained widespread mainstream attention when Leonardo Di Caprio starred in 1995’s The Basketball Diaries, a film based on Carroll’s 1978 autobiography detailing his turbulent teenage years and struggles with drug abuse growing up.
A fixture of Andy Warhol’s legendary ’70s art scene, Carroll formed the punky Jim Carroll Band and scored a minor hit with his 1980 single “People Who Died.” Largely an cult hit, the song is essentially a list of people who died and how juxtaposed against strangely upbeat music.
In 1994, Carroll penned a moving tribute to a fallen star in the form of “8 Fragments for Kurt Cobain,” a poem which declares, “Genius is not a generous thing/ In return it charges more interest than any amount of royalties can cover.”
While his musical collaborations with the likes of Sonic Youth and Patti Smith are noteworthy, Carroll’s lasting achievement remains his ability to blend high and low art by intertwining the worlds of underground art, poetry, literature and punk/rock music.
Carroll passed away September 11, 2009 of a heart attack at his New York home. He was 59.
We’re not sure why, but Scarlett Johansson is preparing to release another CD.
At this point, we almost respect the fact that she didn’t hang up her microphone after her widely panned debut album was released in 2008. That album, Anywhere I Lay My Head, was an oddball collection of Tom Waits cover songs.
Likely a more accessible collection, Johansson’s new album, Break Up, is a set of duets with…Pete Yorn. (A singer we kinda love/hate based on his absurd song about burritos, here.)
Yorn’s music is innocuous acoustic-based rock, so the good news is that this album will probably be easier to swallow (or easier to ignore) than Johansson’s deadpan Waits songs (not to mention her wholly unnecessary version of Jeff Buckley’s Continue reading »