Year: 2006 (Page 129 of 228)

NBC has announced its fall season…

…and it looks pretty interesting, actually.

Among others, there’s a new drama on Monday nights which involves normal people getting superhuman abilities (which, if you’ll check your calendars, means it only took 21 years for NBC to decide that America has forgiven them for “Misfits of Science”), a show inspired by the film “Friday Night Lights” (even if the pitch sounds more like they’re trying to make a series out of the James van der Beek classic, “Varsity Blues”), two shows – one a half-hour sitcom, one an hour-long dramedy – both decidedly inspired by the backstage goings-on of “Saturday Night Live,” a serialized drama that’s clearly NBC’s attempt to get in on some of Fox’s “24” action, and a sitcom which teams Jeffrey Tambor with John Lithgow. There’s also a very interesting decision to not re-run episodes of “E.R.,” instead opting to show 13 episodes of the show, then take a break to show off 13 episodes of a new drama called…oh, but I don’t want to give it all away without making you click below:

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Sometimes, it’s obvious why gossip columnist Cindy Adams is a legend…

…and, sometimes, you wonder why she continues to be allowed to waste column inches in the New York Post.

Today’s column features both sides of the coin. It opens with a short but sweet interview with Mel Brooks, one of his first conversations since the death of his longtime spouse, Anne Bancroft…but, then, it ends with this:

SO if Crystal Gayle married Billy Crystal, she’d be Crystal Crystal; Ste vie Nicks married Stevie Wonder she’d be Stevie Wonder. If Star Jones had married Ringo, she’d be Star Starr. Barbara Walters and lawyer Dominick Barbara? Barbara Barbara. Bo Derek and Beau Bridges? She’s Bo Bridges. If Nicole Kidman married Mike Nichols she’d be Nicole Nichols. Iman to Imus? Iman Imus. If Cindy Crawford married Michael Crawford she’d be Cindy Crawford Crawford. And if Rosie O’Donnell had married Christopher O’Donnell, wouldn’t she be Rosie O’Donnell O’Donnell? Yeah, she would. And if anyone married Robert Blake, they’d be nuts.

Ugh.

You don’t have to like your sister to love her

Earlier this season, Chris and Little Carmine were pitching a script in Hollywood that they described as “‘Saw’ meets ‘The Godfather.’” Seems “The Sopranos” these days is a “Brokeback Mountain”/“The Godfather” blend. Some of you thought the picnic scene from a couple weeks ago was graphic, but this week the heat on Vito’s relationship with Johnny Cakes was turned up several degrees. They even had their first couples fight. Ah, but Vito’s bored – he’s working too hard during the day (the scene where he looked at his watch, thinking it was 11:30 and time for lunch only to learn it wasn’t even 10:00 am, was money) and everyone he knows turns in before midnight. So he bails on Johnny, empties out his closet and dresser in the middle of the night (apparently very quietly, seeing as Johnny didn’t even wake up), and heads back to Jersey. But on his way back, Vito slams into a parked car and, instead of calling the cops to file a report, he shoots the driver in the back of the head and takes off. Just like riding a bike, apparently.

(By the way, I’ve been calling Vito’s boy toy “Johnny Cakes” for weeks, but I think this is the first time I ever heard Vito actually refer to him as “Johnny Cakes.” Did I really just make up a nickname, or did I steal one without even knowing it?)

Has anybody else noticed just how fast our widdle gangster is growing up? During Tony’s session with Melfi, he says that he and Carm had an agreement when they reconciled (only Tony says it like “rewind,” with a long “e”), that if Tony backed Carm on her spec house, “she would have more of a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy toward my work…and my recreational life outside of the home.” So you know what that means? Tony tossed Julianna Marguiles off his lap a couple weeks ago because he didn’t want to cheat on Carm, not because Carm may find out. That’s an interesting distinction. Of course, that may also mean that we’ve seen the last of Julianna, since she seems to have been more of a temporary diversion for Tony rather than his new goomah. (What a shame, because she looked fabulous in her two episodes. Those boots…ooh, those boots.)

And then there’s the favor Tony did for Janice. Early in the episode, she comes into his office and starts bitching about how hard T is on Bobby and wondering why he hasn’t been made captain yet before breaking down and telling Tony that she sat with him and cried for him while he recovered in the hospital. He says he was grateful, and it’s obvious he was sincere, but then he lobs this classic: “But we both know, no matter how much help I gave, you’d still be here fuckin complaining.” Wow, so damn cold and yet so damn true. And yet, after examining the root of his resentment toward his sister in another session with Melfi (“I love it when I can take a shit on her. And her husband,” he admits), Tony gets Johnny Sack to sell his house to Janice, a house she absolutely loves, for half market value. What a great little brother.

Of course, Tony did Johnny (Sack, not Cakes) a favor, and when that favor became more of a hassle, Tony took the opportunity to improve his end of the deal. Had Tony known what Johnny was up to, though, he probably would’ve turned him down. Imagine what you would have to do to make 15 years in the can sound like a fair deal for a guilty plea. So what’s Johnny Sack’s purpose now? If he’s not going to give anyone up, it seems he’s no longer useful to the overall story. In fact, I think we’re about to find out what David Chase has planned for Phil Leotardo – they’ve been setting him up for a major role all season, and it’ll likely come to a head in the final two episodes.

And as for Chris, well, we only saw him this week as a federal marshal towed his car, which Johnny Sack’s wife sold to him for $25k cash after Johnny was arrested. I know you all think I’m crazy for thinking Chris has flipped, but we’ll have to wait another week or two before I prove you wrong. (Or before I eat a steaming plate of crow, whatever.)

By “in private” we meant “via dueling tabloid headlines”

denisecharlie

Momentarily choking back enough bile to eat through all of the arachnids in “Starship Troopers,” feuding spouses Denise Richards and Charlie Sheen reached a temporary custody agreement on Friday. The pair also expressed the desire to settle their divorce peacefully and in private:

“Denise and Charlie are working with the Courts to privately resolve their differences regarding their children,” the pair said in a joint statement. “They hope to resolve this matter outside of the public forum and will both continue to make every effort in this regard.”

So, did they reach that decision before or after the restraining order, the sleeping-with-former-best-friend’s-rock-star-husband, and the accusing-estranged-husband-of-watching-kiddie-porn?

After? It was after, wasn’t it? Yes, definitely after.

Um, something about closing the barn door after the horse has escaped comes to mind here. Was that in a Charlie Sheen movie?

Box Office Roundup: Better crazy than dead

Based on Sunday’s estimates:

1) Mission: Impossible III: $24.5 million ($84.6 million, second week)
Paramount’s marketing department gets a reprieve from being fed to Brad Grey’s dogs, but they should spend this time getting their affairs in order, since the godless followers of “The Da Vinci Code” are going to eat this movie alive next week.
2) Poseidon: $20.3 million (first week)
Only $140 million to go before it breaks even. Good luck with that, fellas.
3) RV: $9.5 million ($42.8 million, third week)
The most frightening part is that while every other movie’s box office fell off 30%-50%, “RV” only fell off 13.7%. Which begs the question: are people going back to see this movie a second time? Find them, kill them, distribute their possessions evenly amongst the rest of us.
4) Just My Luck: $5.5 million (first week)
Not even “The Wink” could save this one.
5) An American Haunting: $3.6 million ($10.9 million, second week)
“Haunting,” on the other hand, only needs to make another $3 million to break even. There’s a lesson in here somewhere, but damned if we can figure out what it is.

We’re pleased that “M:I III” won out over “Poseidon,” but we still say “Brick” trumps everything.

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