Saturday, August 2, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch Talks Moriarty Return, Mark Gatiss Trying to Recruit 'Avengers' Tom Hiddleston

LATIN POST
By Kevin Li (staff@latinpost.com)First Posted: Aug 02, 2014 01:56 PM EDT

sherlock animated GIF

In a recent interview with MTV, Benedict Cumberbatch hinted that Moriarty will be coming back in the next season. The actor who plays the role of the popular detective also expressed his excitement to return the filming and production of the modern day adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries.

Cumberbatch was asked if the role of Moriarty, portrayed by Andrew Scott, will be returning again next season, and he answered by saying that he thinks so. He also added how he casually chooses to forget so that he could rediscover it again later on, KpopStarz reported.



While the cast members do not have copies of the script yet, Cumberbatch mentioned how they get a rough idea of where the show would be going.

The role of Moriarty did not appear as much in the last season with a minimal appearance in the first episode and another appearance in the third episode in Sherlock's mind-palace as well as the last episode in the third season.

sherlock animated GIF

Also, another character may be joining the show next season, as co-creator Mark Gatiss is reportedly trying to get Tom Hiddleston to join as Holmes' third brother in the fourth season.

Rumors about the casting of Loki from "Thor" and "Avengers" as Sherrinford Holmes have been going around online. However, the star has not given his comments regarding the matter, relegating the status of these reports to mere speculations.


Jude Law: With maturity comes complication

SCNOW.COM
Posted: Thursday, July 31, 2014 3:05 pm


LONDON — Jude Law feels his work options are widening as he gets older, and he revels in the complications.

The 41-year-old British actor — best known for his roles in "The Talented Mr Ripley," ''Cold Mountain" and more recently "Sherlock Holmes" — says there is now "less emphasis on playing romantic leads."

"You get over a certain age, and you're more complicated anyway," he said in an interview. "So, I guess characters written for that age are more complicated, you know."

Law said he likes to take risks by picking roles that terrify him, such as his much-acclaimed stint in "Henry V" in London's West End last year.



"There's this moment when you haven't quite learnt your lines, the play doesn't feel like it's coming together or at least you don't feel that you've fully understood the role or indeed the piece yet and everyone's looking around for a way out, an excuse," he said, recalling the rehearsal period.

"And yet you know that you have a set day ahead of you when you are going to open to the press — and indeed to the public — and it's nothing short of terrifying."

"It's usually at that moment you question yourself, your job, why you're doing this," he added, "but it's also an opportunity to sort of face failure and fear."



Doc Martin quiz: 10 questions to test how well you know the grumpy GP drama

MIRROR
Aug 01, 2014 19:36 By Karen Hyland



His bedside manner with both his patients and his loved ones leaves a lot to be desired, but there's still something rather lovable about Doc Martin.









(it takes a moment to download, and one of the questions has three WRONG answers - not real fans there!)

http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/doc-martin-quiz-10-questions-3949074#ixzz39EqRUebm 
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Friday, August 1, 2014

Here's How Tom Hiddleston Responded After Finding Out He Got the Part as Loki in 'The Avengers"

CELEBUZZ
POSTED 2 DAYS AGO   •   BY KENDALL FISHER

tom hiddleston animated GIF

 To say Tom Hiddleston was excited about receiving the role as Loki in The Avengers is a complete understatement... The dude was legitimately stoked.

And in the new book Joss Whedon: The Biography, we have the absolute pleasure of reading the incredibly nerdy yet oh-so-adorable Thank You letter Hiddleston wrote to the director/screenwriter, divulging his extreme excitement over the role. (It will likely make you fall in love with him all over again).  Enjoy!


Joss,
I am so excited I can hardly speak.

The first time I read it I grabbed at it like Charlie Bucket snatching for a golden ticket somewhere behind the chocolate in the wrapper of a Wonka Bar. I didn't know where to start. Like a classic actor I jumped in looking for LOKI on every page, jumping back and forth, reading words in no particular order, utterances imprinting themselves like flash-cuts of newspaper headlines in my mind: “real menace”; “field of obeisance”; “discontented, nothing is enough”; “his smile is nothing but a glimpse of his skull”; “Puny god” …

… Thank you for writing me my Hans Gruber. But a Hans Gruber with super-magic powers. As played by James Mason … It's high operatic villainy alongside detached throwaway tongue-in-cheek; plus the “real menace” and his closely guarded suitcase of pain. It's grand and epic and majestic and poetic and lyrical and wicked and rich and badass and might possibly be the most gloriously fun part I've ever stared down the barrel of playing. It is just so juicy.



I love how throughout you continue to put Loki on some kind of pedestal of regal magnificence and then consistently tear him down. He gets battered, punched, blasted, side-swiped, roared at, sent tumbling on his back, and every time he gets back up smiling, wickedly, never for a second losing his eloquence, style, wit, self-aggrandisement or grandeur, and you never send him up or deny him his real intelligence…. That he loves to make an entrance; that he has a taste for the grand gesture, the big speech, the spectacle. I might be biased, but I do feel as though you have written me the coolest part.

… But really I'm just sending you a transatlantic shout-out and fist-bump, things that traditionally British actors probably don't do. It's epic.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.celebuzz.com/2014-07-31/heres-how-tom-hiddleston-responded-after-finding-out-he-got-the-part-as-loki-in-the-avengers/

Colin Firth: Movie review: ‘Magic in the Moonlight’ is a good Woody Allen film

SAULT STE. MARIE
Posted Aug. 1, 2014 @ 2:01 am
By Ed Symkus



Woody Allen has often spoken about his drawer full of movie ideas, some of them hastily written down, that he visits now and then when the prolific director feels that it’s time to write and direct another one. Though many of his most ardent fans were saying that his best days are behind him, that his last great film was “Husbands and Wives” two decades ago, it’s always such a great surprise when something the caliber of last year’s resoundingly acclaimed “Blue Jasmine” pops up. (Personal note: I’d also put 1999’s “Sweet and Lowdown” right up there with the strong stuff.)



And though “Magic in the Moonlight” mostly pales next to “Blue Jasmine” – except for Colin Firth’s terrific performance – I can still comfortably recommend it as good, if not great, Woody Allen.

It’s a period piece about the timeless subject of fraud. In 1928 Berlin, a Chinese magician named Wei Ling Soo astonishes audiences with his impossible stage illusions. Of course, all magicians are committing fraud, but it’s the sort of deception that audiences enjoy. Wei Ling Soo takes it a step further, in that he’s actually a Brit named Stanley (Colin Firth) posing, in heavy costuming and makeup, as a Chinese magician. When his magician pal Howard Burkan (Simon McBurney) asks him for a favor – to prove that an American woman claiming to be a psychic is a total fake – he agrees to take on the task, gallantly but tiredly saying, “OK, I’ll expose yet another fraudulent spiritualist.”



But Sophie (Emma Stone) who travels the world under the guidance of her no-nonsense show biz mom (Marcia Gay Harden), is pretty darn good at what she does. When Stanley, who doesn’t reveal his true identity as a prestidigitator, attends a séance at the lavish home where the widowed Grace (Jacki Weaver) – accompanied by her dimwit, ukulele-strumming son Brice (Hamish Linklater) – wants to speak with her dead husband Harry, Stanley is impressed that Sophie seems to be able to know absolutely unknowable things. Sophie calls what she does “miracles.” Stanley admits that they’re “bewildering feats, but not possible.”


He also believes that Grace and Brice are perfect marks, and can see that Brice is smitten with Sophie. But though he can’t figure out how she does what she does, he remains a non-believer because, he says, “I’m rational.”


Read more: http://www.sooeveningnews.com/article/20140801/News/140809977#ixzz39C9jzyb6



Benedict Cumberbatch gushes over his Cumberbitches’ support of the Princes Trust!

UNREALITY TV
August 1st, 2014 by Anna Howell.


Sherlock star, Benedict Cumberbatch, has personally thanked his fans, the self-entitled Cumberbitches, for their efforts in helping support one of his favourite charities.

Cumberbatch, who stars in the title role of the hit BBC detective series which is a modern day twist on the original works of Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle, is an ambassador of The Prince’s Trust, the association formed by Charles, Prince of Wales back in 1976 to help young people.




Also an avid supporter of the Trust, Cumberbatch has been focussed on using his own profession to help groups involved such as Odd Arts, Anno’s Africa and Dramatic Need to name but a few. Since becoming patron, Cumberbatch has been involved in many of the Trust’s most admirable work, including presenting 85 young individuals with the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award at St. James Palace in 19 March 2014, as well as helping to run the fundraiser this year in honour of The Prince’s Trust.



READ MORE HERE: http://primetime.unrealitytv.co.uk/benedict-cumberbatch-gushes-cumberbitches/

Tom Hardy: Mad Max Fury Road, images and comic con trailer



“MAD MAX: FURY ROAD is the fourth film of George Miller‘s Road Warrior/Mad Max franchise co-written and directed by Miller. The post-apocalyptic action film is set in the furthest reaches of our planet, in a stark desert landscape where humanity is broken, and most everyone is crazed fighting for the necessities of life. Within this world of fire and blood exist two rebels on the run who just might be able to restore order… There’s Max (played by TOM HARDY from The Dark Knight Rises), a man of action and a man of few words, who seeks peace of mind following the loss of his wife and child in the aftermath of the chaos. And… Furiosa (played by CHARLIZE THERON from Prometheus), a woman of action and a woman who believes her path to survival may be achieved if she can make it across the desert back to her childhood homeland.”


Thursday, July 31, 2014

A naked Charlie Hunnam Explains Comic-Con Absence in Hilarious Video

ACES SHOWBIZ



Charlie Hunnam had a special message for "Sons of Anarchy" fans at San Diego Comic-Con last weekend to explain his no-show. The hilarious video has now landed online for viewing pleasure.

In the clip, Hunnam goes naked as gets a massage from co-star Mark Boone Jr. "Hello, lovely people of Comic-Con. I'm recording you this message because unfortunately I can't be with you this year," the Jax depicter begins explaining his absence. "I hate to miss Comic-Con on the final season of the show, but for the future and safety of America, my presence is required elsewhere."


Boone Jr. interrupts Hunnam and snarkily says that Hunnam would skip Comic-Con for a photoshoot for Vogue magazine. Tommy Flanagan, who gives Hunnam a manicure, hits Boone Jr. with a towel to warn him to be careful with his words. The "Pacific Rim" star later scolds Boone Jr. for rubbing him too hard.


Kim Coates is also featured as Hunnam's servant, serving Hunnam with the beverage he doesn't like and getting water thrown in his face as the consequence. Coates later annoys Boone Jr. with his giant fan.

Read more: http://www.aceshowbiz.com/news/view/00073422.html#ixzz395ucchlH

Dan Stevens, Ricky Gervais, dinosaurs and London are the stars of the Night at the Museum 3 trailer

RADIO TIMES
By Susanna Lazarus
Wednesday 30 July 2014 at 06:01PM

Dan Stevens, Ricky Gervais, dinosaurs and London are the stars of the Night at the Museum 3 trailer

The action-packed footage also features familiar faces Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Robin Williams and more...


The first trailer for Night at the Museum 3 has landed and there's a lot going on.
Let's start with the new additions – Dan Stevens, Ben Kingsley and Rebel Wilson – who all appear in the footage. Stevens has returned to his Downton roots, employing a plummy accent to play Sir Lancelot who defends the group from a giant dinosaur skeleton entombed in cavernous museum corridors.



Meanwhile, Wilson is the museum's bored security guard (with a dodgy cockney accent), while Kingsley appears as an Egyptian Pharaoh.


READ MORE HERE; http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2014-07-30/dan-stevens-ricky-gervais-dinosaurs-and-london-are-the-stars-of-the-night-at-the-museum-3-trailer

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Downton Abbey's Lady Edith Will Face Even More Devastation Next Season

VANITY FAIR
Julie Miller
July 29, 2014



Last week we learned that Downton Abbey will finally give Maggie Smith’s Dowager Countess the air time she deserves with an especially juicy plot. (Our Downton mole tells us that the story arc involves a character suddenly resurfacing from her past.) And now, we learn that the makers of Downton, somehow believing that Laura Carmichael’s Lady Edith has not been through enough personal tragedy, will heap even more pain and heartbreak her way during the show’s upcoming fifth season.



We, somewhat naively, thought that after Edith was left at the altar by her handicapped love interest, knocked up by a married man, and consequently abandoned to deliver her bastard child alone, the Downton Abbey writers would—I don’t know—cut the middle Crawley sister a break. But no, in a new panel interview, the cast revealed that Edith will be abused even more than usual.




READ MORE HERE: http://www.vanityfair.com/vf-hollywood/downton-abbey-season-five-edith

Benedict Cumberbatch is Alan Turing in trailer for The Imitation Game



DIGITAL SPY
By Simon Reynolds

The first trailer for Benedict Cumberbatch's The Imitation Game has premiered.

The highly-anticipated drama will open the BFI London Film Festival on Wednesday, October 8, StudioCanal has confirmed.


"I am thrilled to be returning to London to share The Imitation Game with the audience of the BFI London Film Festival," said director Morten Tyldum. "The experience of directing this film has been so tremendously rewarding, and I am humbled to share Alan's Turing's incredible story on Opening Night."


In The Imitation Game, Sherlock star Cumberbatch takes on the role of pioneering mathematician and scientist Alan Turing, whose code-breaking work at Bletchley Park proved vital to Germany's defeat in World War II.


Read more: http://www.digitalspy.com/movies/news/a585410/benedict-cumberbatch-is-alan-turing-in-trailer-for-the-imitation-game.html#~oLwOKeIc77HrQP#ixzz38yzGChyg
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Richard Armitage in THE CRUCIBLE



What a wonderful play.  Rich and I saw The Crucible at the Old Vic on July 14 (I think).  We had unbelievable seats - dress circle, first row, smack in the middle.  I had no idea what to expect, and was disappointed, at first, when I read on the side of the theater that it was in the round.  I hate theater in the round.  Usually I get distracted very easily - slight attention span problem there - and, I end up worrying about the actors or if they're going to fall or trip over someone's big feet.

(Actually, in this play, one had to be concerned about the sighing women in the audience with RA in the lead.  One very funny bit - when he removes his shirt to wash up - there was a drastic intake of breath causing a severe loss of breathable oxygen in the room!)

 But, I digress.  I said I hate in the round theater, but happily this was very different.  For one thing, the stage is rather foggy, so that the audience across from you looks more like other characters in the play somehow; almost as if they were sitting in judgement over the proceedings.  And the theater felt more oblong than in a round, with the rows of seats across from us facing ours, with the tiers of balcony seats reminding me of representations of the Globe theater.  Instead of sloping away, the different levels where stacked one directly over the other, giving the theater a more closed in feeling - absolutely perfect for this play.

Enough about all that! The play was wonderful, from the very first moment with the eeriness of Tituba's silent (nearly silent) walk around the stage.   Richard was really magnificent.  Even my husband, who had fallen fast asleep last year when we visited London and saw Perfect Nonsense, was captivated by the play, especially the second half which is magnificent.  The girls - oh, you just want to slap the lot of them - but, when they begin chanting in unison, it is incredibly creepy.



All of the actors were equally wonderful, with two standouts.  Richard, of course, and also Jack Ellis (I think that's his name - I was much too cheap to buy a program).  He played Deputy Governor Danforth, another person deserving a slap on the face.

The only thing that bothered me was RA's voice.  Normally it's such a soothing sound, but he sounded very hoarse here - and no wonder.  We saw the matinee show and then they did it all again for the evening show two hours after we left the theater.   Actors are wonderful.  How they can project such emotion, such heart wrenching tragedy, night after night, is amazing to me.

THE ANGLOPHILE CHANNEL

Anyway, what I really wanted to say was this.  At one moment during the play - don't ask me when because my mind froze up completely - RA exits the stage by walking up a staircase.  A staircase that led directly to where I was seated.  I watched his shadowed figure come up the steps, one at a time, very slowly - and he kept coming closer, and this dark figure kept getting larger and larger, until I thought he was going to jump over the dress circle wall I was grabbing onto in front of my seat.  I truly was smack dab in the middle, and there was a time in my life when that man would not have made it out of the theater alive.  As it was, the girl next to me began making strange hawking noises in the back of her throat.

Anyway, he did get almost eye level and then the steps head downward.  I don't think I took a breath the whole time.  All I remember is that my eyebrow began to twitch and get really, really itchy, but RA was walking straight toward me and I was afraid to move.   I finally went nuts and began gouging at my eyeball to scratch it during this very, very dramatic ascent.  He must have thought I was a looney bird.