What Woman Want Starring Mel Gibson What Men Want Remake Starring Taraji P Henson
You know I am getting so tired of these remakes is an anybody original anymore? I like the concept of 2000s movie What Woman Wants starring Mel Gibson. Hollywood need to desperately get some originality in their screen writing. However I do like this new version of it but seriously we need to come up with something new. As I said I love this movie back in 2000 very funny. Nothing wrong with it. I just think as I wrote I love this movie back in 2000 very funny. Like all movies and TV shows I’m bet the original script was stolen from someone. Because that’s what Hollywood does they still original scripts from other people and make millions off of their creation.
Trailer #1 What Woman Want
Staring Mel Gibson 2000
Synopsis chauvinistic advertising executive acquires the ability to hear what women are thinking. He attempts to use this power to bring about the fall of his female boss, but as he uses this inside knowledge to outwit his superior, the bachelor begins to fall in love with her, and so finds himself feeling more than a little guilty when his plan to have her sacked looks like it may come to fruition.
Trailer #2 What Men Want Remake Starring Taraji P Henson 2018
Synopsis Magically able to hear what men are thinking, a sports agent uses her newfound ability to turn the tables on her overbearing male colleagues.
This remake also stars Erykah Badu and Tracy Morgan yeah I’m complaining about the remake but come January 11th 2019 I’ll get my ticket and go see it.
Netflix N’ Chill Sunday Ken Burns PBS presents prohibition
Streaming now on Netflix Ken Burns PBS prohibition.
Infinity War Crew Reveals Stone Responsible for Killing Half the Universe
It is a question that has bothered fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe since the shocking climax of Avengers: Infinity War, but it’s now been confirmed that the Power Stone was the one that wiped out half the galaxy.
The events of the Russo Brothers’ movie saw Josh Brolin’s Thanos head off in search of the six Infinity Stones with the end goal of bringing balance to the universe with a snap of his fingers.
f anyone had questioned which stone is the most powerful, Avengers: Infinity War artist VFX supervisor Dan DeLeeuw told Inverse, “The Power Stone was blipping them out of existence.”
Although it was hard to distinguish which of the Infinity Stones turned half the MCU (and even animals) to dust, DeLeeuw said his team put a lot of thought into how the iconic moment would happen. “All the Infinity Stones have their signature color and appearance as a visual effect,” he reminded audiences. “So the ‘blip out,’ we thought, ‘What would all the stones do to a person, blipping them out?’”
The stones may have been seen working in harmony to toss the Avengers out of the way as Thanos went for Vision, but it came down to just one being responsible for Thanos’ rebalancing. While some of DeLeeuw’s team championed the Reality Stone or the Soul Stone “because souls cease to exist, ” it was up to the Power Stone to deliver that killer blow.
DeLeeuw continued to explain how Infinity War settled on turning the characters to dust. “We had concept art combining all those things, and it was getting too busy. It became too complicated,” he confessed. “It was stepping on what the actors were doing. So it became ‘body turns to ash.’ We peeled away all those layers and focused on that one [Power Stone], deciding how quickly it would consume someone, what pattern it would consume them.”
Ironically, the Power Stone had the smallest role in the movie and had already been snatched from Xandar before the opening scene. That being said, the Power Stone’s ability to pull a moon out of orbit should’ve been a sign of the energy bubbling inside it.
At the end of the day, the likes of the Soul Stone and Time Stone couldn’t compete with the raw energy of the Power Stone. Fans may also remember the awesome power of the purple gem in Guardians of the Galaxy, so it makes sense that the Power Stone was the one that eradicated half of the universe.
A popular theory is that the Soul Stone could be the key to bringing back the fallen heroes, but if the Power Stone was behind Thanos’ snap, what does this mean for Avengers 4?
ARTICLE VIA: Infinity War Power Stone
One Punch Man Season 2 Announcement
One Punch Man will be returning! Look out for it in April!
Spike Lee talks about his movie BlackKansman with real life detective Ron Stallman
A SPIKE LEE JOINT BlackKlansman in theaters now!
Watch this indepth trailer
Why Black Panther will be more important to Avengers 4 than you think
OK y’all need to pick up a Marvel comic and start reading it because then you’ll understand that black panther is more important to the MCU than you think!
China Can’t See New Movie Starring Notorious Outlaw Winnie the Pooh
Chinese film authorities have denied Disney’s Christopher Robin a theatrical run in the country, Disney’s head of distribution has confirmed, and the reason might be that the film’s star is something of a resistance leader. No, it’s not Ewan McGregor—who plays the movie’s titular character, now all grown up—but Winnie the Pooh who is the subject of controversy. Chinese censors have cracked down on the tubby bear ever since a meme comparing him to President Xi Jinping took off in 2013, and now Chinese audiences will not be allowed to watch Disney’s new movie because, an anonymous source tells the Hollywood Reporter, the Communist Party considers the character persona non grata.
Christopher Robin, which is already in theaters in the U.S., is the second Disney movie to be rejected in China this year, following A Wrinkle in Time. Another source told THR that Christopher Robin was not necessarily snubbed because it stars Winnie the Pooh, and that the decision “likely has to do with the size and scope of the film given the foreign film quota.” But it seems silly to dismiss censorship as a factor entirely: Searching for Winnie the Pooh by his Chinese name on the microblogging site Weibo results in error messages, and earlier this year, Chinese censors also banned mentions of John Oliver after HBO aired a Last Week Tonightsegment that criticized Xi.
Oh, bother.
Article via: Chinese Audiences Can’t See New Movie
The Happytime murders movie trailer
This keep showing up in my YouTube recommended for you I guess it was meant to be posted. Release dates on my birthday that’s a good thing ! LOL
Spike Lee’s movie about a black cop infiltrating the KKK is a subtweet of Donald Trump
NEW YORK — Spike Lee has been opining for a few minutes now: Isn’t it ludicrous that people call football players unworthy of living in this country for kneeling during the national anthem, he says, when the first American who died during the Revolutionary War was a black man?
“So nobody can tell black people s— about going somewhere else,” he concludes. “Along with the genocide of Native Americans, this country got built cost-free from slavery.”
Seated on a bright purple couch in the Brooklyn office of his company, 40 Acres & a Mule Filmworks, Lee eventually pauses. It all comes down to love vs. hate, he says — it always has. That is why the two words appeared on the knuckle rings of Radio Raheem, a fictional character killed by police officers at the climax of Lee’s 1989 film “Do the Right Thing.” Some claim Lee is on a soapbox, but he really just wants to be on the loving side of history.
The provocative filmmaker, 61, has recently faced hurdles in his everlasting pursuit of this goal: “Da Sweet Blood of Jesus” opened to less-than-lukewarm applause in 2014, and the satirical depiction of violence in 2015’s “Chi-Raq” insulted some Chicago natives. But the latest Spike Lee joint, “BlacKkKlansman,” attempts to capture racial tension with the same clarity of “Do the Right Thing,” which Roger Ebert wrote came “closer to reflecting the current state of race relations in America than any other movie of our time.” Only this time, he attempts to do so using a story from the past.
“BlacKkKlansman,” which took home the Cannes Film Festival’s prestigious Grand Prix in May, tells the real-life story of a black Colorado Springs cop named Ron Stallworth (John David Washington) who infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan in the late 1970s by pretending to be a white man over the phone. But it also connects the Klan’s racism to what spurred last year’s Charlottesville rallies and even directly attacks the Trump administration for perpetuating such behavior.
Lee held such “precise opinions” throughout the project, co-writer Kevin Willmott says, that make today’s rant seem comparatively scattered. He frequently trails off in the middle of sentences, gazing off through his orange, thick-rimmed glasses. There is simply too much buzzing in his mind. From where he stands, hypocrisy among those in power, dubbed “snake oil salesman,” has reached an almost unfathomable level.
Although he refuses to utter the president’s name — “Who? Oh, Agent Orange” — Lee admits that while making “BlacKkKlansman,” “everything was done knowing that this guy had the nuclear code.” In one scene, Ron declares that the United States would never elect a man like KKK Grand Wizard David Duke (Topher Grace) president. A superior tells him he is remarkably naive for a black man.
“From the very beginning, Spike said, ‘I don’t want it to be a period piece,’” Willmott recalls. “He didn’t want to give people an out in terms of this being something from the olden days.”
News outlets disagree on whether the standing ovation “BlacKkKlansman” received at Cannes lasted for six or 10 minutes. Lee isn’t a numbers guy, so he doesn’t know which is accurate. What he does know, however, is what a relief it was to discover that the festival audience understood his film.
“It didn’t have to be that way,” he says. “People get booed at Cannes.”
They also get snubbed for awards, which Lee still holds happened to him back in 1989. He doesn’t have any beef with Steven Soderbergh, whose “Sex, Lies, and Videotape” beat front-runner “Do the Right Thing” for the Palme d’Or, or even the festival itself, but rather with the president of the jury: German filmmaker Wim Wenders.
Lee says jurors Sally Field and Hector Babenco later told him that Wenders overlooked “Do the Right Thing” because he considered Mookie, Lee’s protagonist who incites a riot after Radio Raheem’s death by throwing a garbage can through the window of a pizzeria, to be unheroic. The film ends with quotes from the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, expressing their differing views on violence as self-defense against oppression.
By way of comparison, Lee exclaims, “If you look at the main character of ‘Sex, Lies, and Videotape,’ the guy was masturbating watching videotape.”
(Wenders responds in a statement, “It was an exceptionally great year in terms of films,” and adds, “I understood Spike’s frustration and even grief, and I was sorry that Spike concentrated his anger on me.”)
There is no denying the heroic qualities of Stallworth, played by Washington, son of Denzel. “The fruit doesn’t fall far from the tree,” Lee says of his natural talent. Washington spoke weekly with Stallworth, who swung by the set one day and passed around his KKK membership card, which Washington says “made it even more real and scarier.”
“Signed by Mr. Duke,” he adds, incredulous. “Are you kidding me? This is bananas.”
Patrice Dumas (Laura Harrier), an activist college student and Ron’s love interest, tells him in the movie that he “can’t change things from the inside. It’s a racist system.” Lee says he and Willmott wrote the line with W.E.B. Du Bois’s theory of double consciousness in mind: Ron is black, but, as a police officer, he also works a job with a history marred by violent racial oppression.
“It’s gotta be difficult for brothers and sisters who are police officers, because they’re not blind — they’ve gotta see what police forces are doing, shooting down black people left and right,” Lee says. “Knowing that black folks ain’t really feeling you, just because you’re black but you’re also a cop . . . in a lot of ways, Ron’s character is feeling that, too.”
Despite this inner turmoil, Ron orchestrates the undercover mission, persuading his colleague Flip Zimmerman (Adam Driver) to be his white stand-in at Klan meetings. He boldly calls up the KKK and proclaims to hate anyone who “doesn’t have pure white Aryan blood running through their veins.” He does so while working alongside a white officer who once shot a black child and continues to abuse his power.
“We’re flesh and blood, we feel everything,” Washington says. “But he had to just take it, approach it like a job so he didn’t crack.”
The actor/ director and producer says the warm reception at Cannes felt like winning the Super Bowl. But Lee still has the tiniest of bones to pick with this year’s jury president, Cate Blanchett, whom he says he loves dearly. After “BlacKkKlansman” won the Grand Prix, she described it as “quintessentially about an American crisis.”
The film does end with footage from last year’s neo-Nazi rallies in Charlottesville and President Trump’s response, but “this is not just America,” Lee counters. “It was happening in England, with Brexit. This right-wing thing is happening all over the world.”
A citrusy scent suddenly wafts through the office. Grapefruit, perhaps?
“Yeah, it’s a SoulCycle candle,” Lee says, resuming the calm demeanor that appears between his bursts of outrage. He is fresh off one about how the Trump administration’s shenanigans, skullduggery and subterfuge — “The three S’s!” as he repeatedly exclaims — will bring about the end of democracy as we know it.
It is in this even-keeled tone that Lee expresses how odd it is that people look to him for answers to the societal ills depicted in his films. But then he amps back up again, suggesting a solution anyway: To move forward, we must pursue the truth.
The pursuit requires taking off the rose-colored glasses through which we view our nation’s history, according to Lee, a product of the New York City public schools. That’s where he was taught the tale of George Washington cutting down a cherry tree.
“F— that,” Lee says. “George Washington owned slaves.”
He then directs the same profanity toward all of the Founding Fathers.
In interviews, the sheer strength of Lee’s emotions sometimes gets the better of him, such as when he said he had a “Louisville Slugger bat with Wenders’s name on it” in his closet. He once claimed that he could not have made an anti-Semitic film because Jews ran Hollywood, and “that’s a fact.”
His “25th Hour” star Edward Norton told the Atlantic years ago: “I don’t think Spike is his own best advocate. . . . People associate Spike sometimes with an angry righteousness and urgency that I don’t think his films have. I don’t think his films are angry at all. They are very compassionate.”
But Lee says he is always happy to do interviews — he did so as a young director when studios wouldn’t spend that much advertising money on his films and now does them as an artist passionate about his work’s message.
Lee has taken off his hat that says “BLACK” on the front, with a KKK hood in place of the A. “BlacKkKlansman” serves as a direct response to the “corn-fed American terrorism” that killed Heather Heyer as she protested Charlottesville’s white supremacist march and is set to hit theaters a few days before the one-year anniversary of her death. There is an urgency to this particular message, he says, Academy Awards season be damned.
David Duke says in the movie that he wants “America to achieve its greatness again.” Lee hopes American can achieve greatness, period.
READ MORE——-> THE WASHINGTON POST