Tag: Jeremy Piven (Page 5 of 6)

Entourage 5.1 – Fantasy Island

After the semi-disastrous season four, the “Entourage” writers were in desperate need of a longer vacation. After all, there’s nothing like a little R&R to get you back to full fighting strength, and though that much-deserved break came in the form of the writers’ strike, it may have just been a blessing in disguise. It should come as no surprise, then, that as the new season opens, Vincent Chase is also on vacation following the disastrous performance of “Medellin” at the box office. It seems not even Harvey Weinstein could save the film, and to make matters worse, Richard Roeper has just proclaimed it as one of the worst films of the year. Better yet, he says that Vince’s make-up job made him look like “the love child of Jimmy Glick and a bag of Twinkies” and then rips into him even more by declaring that “Al Pacino called and wants his accent back.” Ouch.

Still, all the negative publicity doesn’t appear to be affecting Vince quite like it should. He’s down in Mexico with Turtle jet skiing, lounging around, and having sex with lots of beautiful women, while Eric and Ari desperately attempt to save his career back in LA. Eric’s management company has even expanded to include a secretary and a new client – Charlie (Bow Wow), an up-and-coming comic who has yet to land an actual gig. When word comes in from Ari that producer Carl Hurtz is anxious to meet with him for a new genre film called “Danger Beach,” however, the duo head down to Mexico to convince him otherwise. Vince couldn’t care less (despite the fact that Hurtz is willing to pay his full asking price), but after some rather discouraging words from Eric (who feels responsible for messing up “Medellin”), Vince agrees to give the whole movie star thing another shot.

Entourage 5.1

Upon returning home (sans bushy beard) and taking the meeting with Hurtz, however, Vince is upset to learn that he was only being used in order to drive down Emile Hirsch’s (the original star attached to the film) asking price. This is probably the last thing I expected to happen, but it actually makes sense considering Vince has been MIA for the past six months and his last movie tanked. Also, did Warner Brothers just void the contract they had with Vince and Walsh for “Silo,” or is that still happening? I guess if I was a betting man, I’d choose the former. That would also explain how Vince is able to live so lavishly down in Mexico after investing everything he had into “Medellin.” Sure, $79/day may not sound like much, but it has to start adding up when you’re unemployed.

Nevertheless, while Vince is top priority amongst the characters in the show, Eric has always been the real star. His arc has remained the most interesting of the five men, and this season promises to flesh it out even more as he stops relying on Vince and becomes a success on his own. Drama and Turtle still need to break the comic relief mold and get some meatier storylines, but where their silly antics were a bit tiring in the past, they delivered some of the best moments in tonight’s episode. Turtle blasting the porn from the Escalade was hilarious, but Drama’s retaliation against Hurtz was even better. After taking a golf club to his Mercedes and leaving a fish on the hood, Turtle asks him if he’s leaving some sort of message, to which Drama replies, “Yeah. Aquaman is back.” It’s unclear whether the same holds true for “Entourage,” but if the season premiere is any indication, it’s certainly on the road to reclaiming its former glory.

Entourage: Season Five Preview

No matter how disappointed you may have been with the fourth season of “Entourage,” there’s not a fan in the world that isn’t counting down the days until the show’s season premiere on September 7th. A victim of the writers’ strike, the HBO comedy series hasn’t aired a new episode for an entire year, so it’ll be nice to finally see what Vince and Co. have been up to since “Medellin” tanked at the Cannes Film Festival.

You might even want to check out season four as a refresher before diving in to the new season. Not only will it prepare you for the year to come, but you’ll also notice that, despite some minor faults, it really isn’t as bad as you remember. Sure, Eric and Walsh’s bickering got rather annoying at times, and Drama and Turtle actually took a step backwards in terms of character development, but the overall mood of the series has remained the same since Day One: chicks, celebrities and cannabis.

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The biggest problem with the fourth season was that the whole “Medellin” plot failed to be as interesting as the writers hoped it would be. Thankfully, it looks as if the film is but an afterthought in the upcoming season, which finds Vince living the life of a beach bum in Mexico after “Medellin” flops at the box office. The whole “Medellin” fiasco will no doubt be mentioned early on, but aside from that, I think Doug Ellin has learned his lesson about creating storylines that are overly ambitious.

So what about the rest of the guys? Well, HBO isn’t spilling the beans, but from the few publicity shots that have fallen into my hands, it appears Eric will be getting a new client in the form of rapper-turned-actor Bow Wow, while Turtle will be hanging out with Vince in Mexico; at least for the short term. No word on whether Bow Wow will be playing himself or a fictional character, but at least it shows that Eric’s career plans haven’t been completely thwarted since getting canned by Anna Faris. Additionally, one of the clips over at Dailymotion has confirmed that Drama’s French lover, Jacqueline, is now his girlfriend, so that should give him a little more to do this year other than playing the group jester.

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As for guest stars, season five is looking pretty good. Both Mark Wahlberg and Martin Landau are returning, while Tony Bennett, Phil Mickelson, Kevin Pollack and Fran Drescher will also appear. Giovanni Ribisi and Lukas Haas are also tapped for recurring guest roles as a pair of up-and-coming screenwriters that sign with Eric, so look for Kevin Connolly’s plotline to dominate most of the season. That’s all we know for now, but that alone is enough to indicate the writers are planning to wipe the slate clean and start fresh. It’s exactly what the series needs, and I can’t wait. In the meantime, check out this “Viking Quest” web game, which is sure to get you in the mood for the new season.

Ari Gold would be proud. Your mother, not so much

Jeremy Piven has reportedly been banned from all restaurants owned by Asian chef extraordinaire Nobu Matsuhisa after behaving like not just a jackass, but a tightwad, self-promotional jackass, at the Aspen Matsuhisa during the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival:

[Piven] came in with a large group of 12 or more without reservations and asked for a table. It was a very busy night, but a table, although cramped, was provided. On his way out, he made a nasty comment to the manager: ‘Thanks for nothing.’

Piven was at the HBO-sponsored festival to appear on a panel with fellow “Entourage” stars. Allegedly his tip also left something to be desired.

“He left a DVD of the first year of ‘Entourage’ to one of the waiters. [An employee] ran up the stairs and hurled it at him as he was leaving.”

Ahhh, Piven. If only that box set had connected with that big head of yours. If it didn’t succeed in knocking some sense into your melon, it might at least have provided some comic relief by sending your dead rodent toupee skittering to the floor.

[Thanks to Us Weekly for the link]

Jeremy Piven refuses to hug it out

Apparently still upset over losing out to Jack Black for the latter’s star-making role in “High Fidelity” back in the year 2000, “Entourage” star Jeremy Piven recently demonstrated his ongoing resentment in the most childish of manners:

Black told Howard Stern on Sirius that as he talked to a director at a recent premiere, Piven “stepped in and all of a sudden he was talking to the director and I was standing there facing the back of his head. I was like, ‘Whoa, dude! What are you doing? You just cut me off’ . . . He turned around and there was this strange, awkward tension.”

Our only advice to Mr. Piven on this topic is as follows: Dude. It’s been six years. You’ve won an Emmy. Can’t you just let it go?

Jeremy Piven gets a trophy, Ari Gold gets the boot

I’ll be damned, they didn’t wuss out. After watching the “Entourage” writers so neatly wrap up last season’s primary conflicts in the finale, I seriously doubted they’d have the stones to let Vince fire Ari tonight. Instead, on the night Jeremy Piven took home the “Supporting Actor” Emmy, Ari Gold lost his #1 client, his first discovery, and the guy he described as “my baby.”

And you’ve got to love the way they did it. As soon as Lloyd called Vince “Mr. Chase” and said “they’re waiting for you in the conference room,” you knew what was about to happen and you felt damn sorry for Ari. I did anyway. It was painful to watch, just knowing that Ari could’ve saved the relationship had he brought Vince and E into his office, sat down, and admitted that he fucked up. Instead, he threw the flashy corporate presentation at Vince, and he crashed and burned.

So now, of course, the question becomes: How long does this all last? We’ve got several months to think about it, but it’s never too early to start. Personally, I say it drags on for at least the first two episodes next season, maybe longer. I said last week that a desperate Ari makes for great television – we saw it last season when he tried to organize the coup, we saw it again when he was scrambling to retain his clients after he got canned, and we saw it tonight when he tried to get “I Wanna Be Sedated” back while also sabotaging Vince’s lunch meeting (which was classic, by the way). After hearing Ari gush about Vinnie tonight, you know he’s going to be gung-ho next season trying to get back in the crew’s good graces. It’s just a matter of how long it takes Vince and E to cave.

I’ll put the over/under at three episodes, meaning Vince and Ari will reunite in the third episode. What do you think? Are you taking the over, the under, or the number?

Drama wrapped up a great season for him with another standout episode tonight. I can’t get enough of his “back in ‘92” stories, and the advice he gave Vinnie in the driveway at the end of the episode was spot-on. I’m torn, though, on whether or not I want to see his pilot picked up. I said an episode or two ago that an unemployed Johnny Drama has always been more fun to watch than a working Drama, so I bet it flops. Hell, at that point, it’d be hilarious to see him on “The Surreal Life,” as Ari suggested tonight.

Then there’s Turtle and E. Not much going on in Turtle’s life these days, huh? Now that Saigon dumped him, Turtle’s own storyline kinda stalled, though to be fair, it never really got going this season. And neither did E’s, for that matter. Sure, the threesome episodes were legendary, but beyond that there wasn’t much at all for E to do, which is a shame since he’s always been the show’s most intriguing character.

Despite those complaints, it was still an awesome season, largely because we didn’t have to sit through several painful episodes of the Vince/Mandy Moore ugliness. And the fact that Ari and Vince didn’t kiss and make up practically ensures that at least the first few episodes next season will be just as good.

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