IC Payoff 1-sht.REV.1Divorced… with Benefits?…  well, It’s Complicated!   

On behalf of Universal Pictures, Screenhead is excited to let you know that the new trailer and one-sheet for Nancy Meyers’ upcoming comedy about love, divorce, and everything in between, has just debuted online. It’s Complicated stars Meryl Streep, Alec Baldwin and Steve Martin – they are hilarious. Come Christmas Day we will find out if love is truly lovelier the second time around…

If anyone has ever seen Nancy Meyer movies, you know you are in for a treat. This trailer proves it. Go to Apple to see the new trailer!

DF Int One Sheet

The story is about a fox named Mr. Fox (George Clooney). In order to feed his family, he steals chickens, ducks, and turkeys at night from three mean, stinky and wealthy farmers: Boggis, Bunce and Bean. The farmers are fed up with this and try everything to kill him. One night they wait outside his foxhole in an attempt to ambush him. When Mr. Fox emerges from his home, they fire at him but only succeed in blowing off his tail. Ouch!

Determined to catch him, the farmers use spades and shovels to dig their way into the foxes’ home, but Mr. and Mrs. Fox (Meryl Streep) and their son dig a tunnel deeper into the ground and manage to escape. The farmers even resort to using bulldozers in order to dig deeper into the ground.

More happens in the story. The trailer is fun to watch - it’s wildly nutty.

(Source)

Okay, put on your film student hat, watch this behind-the-scenes featurette narrated by Jason Schwartzman and learn about filmmaking puppet-style. You’ll even laugh out loud with all the clever and funny visuals created by Wes Anderson.  Mr. Fantastic Fox is truly a labor of love.  It’s an amazing production.

Nancy Meyers’comedic touch is a definite ball of laughter with Meryl Streep, Alex Baldwin and Steve Martin playing in a romantic trio that gets very complicated. Streep’s character starts a love affair with her ex-husband, Baldwin, who is now re-married.  Martin is the other man who tries to win Streep’s love interest while Baldwin is trying to woo his wife back — it’s complicated with a wonderful supporting cast.  Fun trailer — Enjoy!

The story is about a fox named Mr. Fox (George Clooney). At night in order to feed his family, he steals chickens, ducks, and turkeys from three mean, stinky and wealthy farmers: Boggis, Bunce and Bean. The farmers are fed up with this and try everything to kill him. One night they wait outside his foxhole in an attempt to ambush him. When Mr. Fox emerges from his home, they fire at him but only succeed in blowing off his tail.

Determined to catch him, the farmers use spades and shovels to dig their way into the foxes’ home, but Mr. and Mrs. Fox (Meryl Streep) and their son dig a tunnel deeper into the ground and manage to escape. The farmers even resort to using bulldozers in order to dig deeper into the ground. The attempt was futile. The three men therefore decide to play a waiting game, keeping watch on the entrance to the tunnel with shotguns, while their men patrol the area to make sure the foxes don’t escape.

More happens in the story. The trailer is fun to watch - it’s kooky.

(Source)

doubtDoubt is a funny thing.  It has a way of sneaking itself into our lives, forcing us to question all those things we thought were supposed to be beyond questioning.  Our place in the universe, for one—our purpose in life, the love we have for family and friends, the trust we have in our co-workers, and so on, right down the line.  Doubt blends itself into the very fabric of our lives, never all at once, but always beginning with just a quiet little question:

What if?

What if that person is not who they claim to be?  What if this thing we value so highly is worthless or doesn’t even exist at all?  When Oliver Cromwell confronted his accusers with “I beseech you, from the bowels of Christ—think it possible you may be mistaken!” he actually created a statement that downright weaponizes doubt.  And that is the focus of the movie of the same name, Doubt.

A tension-packed, downright thrilling drama based on a play, with a plot so relevant it may well have been ripped from next week’s headlines, Doubt pits the rigid disciplinarian principal of a Catholic school against a progressive, popular priest.  The principal, Sister Aloysius Beauvier, means to aggressively root out wrongdoing wherever she may find it, but she may have found a lot more than she bargained for from Father Flynn, the priest.  And as she strives to get to the bottom of what she believes is wrongdoing, she discovers that she has little proof to support her suspicions, but what she has is lots of doubt.

After seeing Doubt, I find myself convinced that more movies should be adapted from stage plays.  This is a taut, terrifying piece that all but requires the actors involved (Philip Seymour Hoffman as Flynn and a stunning Meryl Streep as Beauvier) to literally carry the plot on their backs.  There are only a handful of different scenes here—most everything is done either in or around this Catholic middle / grammar school—and thus is so heavily dependent on the actors.  Indeed, Streep and Hoffman rise easily to the occasion.  Some of the best scenes in the movie are this irresistible force shrieking at this immovable object and watching them go at it.  They collide with an elemental force, each with their own kind of surety…and with their own kind of doubt as well.  They get plenty of support in all quarters from the rest of the cast, with the rest of the denizens of the Catholic school alternately providing both tension and tension-cutting laughs throughout.

There’s just no two ways about it—Doubt is an incredible achievement that represents some of the best that drama can offer.  Frankly, it’s no wonder that this tore up as many awards shows as it did—it’s a powerful and profound work that’s still accessible, with some great twists and surprises.  It’s a deep and rich affair, and perhaps most importantly, highly watchable.

Go out and get a copy of this—it’s hit video store shelves not so long ago.  It’s going to be well worth your time and viewing dollar to enjoy this magnificent work.

Julie and Julia Trailer

Now here is a dramedy that promises some light and serious moments. Headed by renowned actress Meryl Streep, she teams up with upstart Amy Adams based on on Julie Powell’s book “Julie & Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen.”

Julie Powell recounts how she conquered every recipe in Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking and saved her soul. Julie Powell is 30-years-old, living in a rundown apartment in Queens and working at a soul-sucking secretarial job that’s going nowhere. She needs something to break the monotony of her life, and she invents a deranged assignment. She will take her mother’s dog-eared copy of Julia Child’s 1961 classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and she will cook all 524 recipes. In the span of one year.

(Source) ComingSoon.net

Universal films will be producing another movie and has added Rita Wilson to the cast of Meryl Streep, Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin. There is no official title for the said movie although the role of Wilson has already been announced. She will be playing on of Streep’s best friends and confidantes.

Up next for Wilson is Fox Searchlight’s spring release “My Life in Ruins,” starring Nia Vardalos of “My Big Fat Greek Wedding.” In November, Wilson appears in the Disney comedy “Old Dogs” alongside John Travolta and Robin Williams.

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meryl-streep Hollywood Elsewhere reports that Paul Giamatti, Meryl Streep, Sacha Baron Cohen and Reese Witherspoon are apparently circling a project called Downsizing that will be directed by Alexander Payne.

"Nothing is locked down at this juncture, not even script, certainly not cast,” a source told blogger Jeff Wells. “[Payne is] still working on screenplay, although he’s close."

Payne is currently working on HBO series Hung that stars Anne Heche and Thomas Jane as a high-school basketball coach who capitalizes on his large penis.

SAG Awards 2009 Announced

Even though a lot of hype is coming from the media on SAG’s ensemble award to Slumdog Millionaire on Sunday sag_award_statuenight, we mustn’t let it go unnoticed that they also handed out awards to Sean Penn for playing activist Harvey Milk in Milk and Meryl Streep for her performance as a fiercely certain nun in Doubt.

The late and multi-talented actor Heath Ledger won supporting role as the joker in The Dark Knight and the ever so vibrant, talented Kate Winslet for her appearance as a German woman harboring secrets in The Reader.

As for television it appears to be cookie cutter wins from the Golden Globe with NBC’s “30 Rock” and HBO’s “John Adams” in the comedy series and longform categories, and a top drama series honor for AMC’s “Mad Men.”

For a complete list of SAG winners, click here.