Friday 29 July 2011

'Real Time With Bill Maher' Picked Up for 10th Season

Jason LaVeris/Getty ImagesBill Maher HBO kicked off Wednesday's Television Critics Association Tour session by announcing it has picked up Bill Maher's show, Real Time With Bill Maher, for a 10th season. "I'm very thankful to be at HBO," Maher said, from the stage at the Beverly Hilton. "I can't believe its been 10 years. I can't believe it's been 20 years since I started with [ABC's] Politically Incorrect." He noted that he loved being on a network that he himself watches, adding to big laughs, "I've been at other networks where i didn't watch their shit. I never watched Dharma & Greg." He continued, "I don't understand why other nets don't steal HBO's formula. Hire people you like and trust and let them do their thing." TCA Bill Maher HBO Real Time with Bill Maher TCA Summer Press Tour 2011

New Change-Up Red Band Trailer Lands

Warning: naughty jokes withinWhile many of you might still need some convincing that the world truly needs another body swap comedy, at least The Change-up has some solid names both behind and in front of the camera, with Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman starring. As the release date rushes ever close, another Red Band trailer (i. e. with naughty words and rude jokes - so don't show it to granny) has arrived online and can be watched below. The film finds Bateman as Dave, a settled, happily married but harried father of two who is envious of his pal Mitch's (Reynolds) playboy life. But guess what! Turns out Mitch is actually looking to settle down. One night, the pair are peeing in a fountain after a few drinks and they make a wish that they could swap lives. Because you couldn't have a film of this type if it didn't happen, presto change-o!Hopefully this one will prove to be a winner, with this latest promo containing a few solid chuckles. And with Reynolds and Bateman leading a cast that also includes Olivia Wilde, Leslie Mann and Alan Arkin plus Wedding Crashers man David Dobkin directing a script from Hangover writers Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, there are reasons to be hopeful...The Change-Up will find its way into our cinemas on August 5.

Friday 15 July 2011

Revolver

After spending seven years in solitary confinement during which his sister-in-law is murdered, confidence trickster Jake Green (Jason Statham) is out to get revenge on Dorothy Macha (Ray Liotta), a corrupt casino boss.

Jake Green is a hotshot con artist who has acquired a specific strategy (referred to as "The Formula"), that is supposed to lead its user to win every game, during his seven-year stint imprisoned in solitary confinement. While the reasons for his sentence are unspecified, it is implied that he was incarcerated due to the efforts of Dorothy Macha. The Formula itself was discovered by two unnamed men who inhabited adjacent cells on either side of Jake's own. They are referred to as a chess expert and a con man. During the first five years of his seven-year sentence, the three men communicated their thoughts on confidence tricks and chess moves via messages hidden inside library books, such as 'The Mathematics of Quantum Mechanics'. The chess expert and the con man plan to leave their cells simultaneously, and promise to take Jake with them. But when they disappear from their cells, they leave Jake behind to serve the remaining two years of his sentence. When Jake is released, he finds that all of his possessions and money have been taken by the two men with whom he had shared everything. Still, he has The Formula, and he goes about making a lot of money at various casinos. Two years later, Jake has garnered a reputation that leads many casinos to fear his freakishly good 'luck'. The Formula applies to any game, and is often exemplified by Jake's apparent mastery of chess (He beats Avi over and over again as they converse). The story revolves around Jake's epiphanic awakening, as he learns how to apply the Formula to the 'game' of life.

Approximately two years after his prison release, Jake, Billy and their other brother Joe walk into one of Macha's casinos. He is recognized and "all the tables are closed" to Jake and company. But Macha promptly calls them up to a private area of his casino where a high rollers' game is currently taking place. Jake bets Macha a fortune on a chip toss, and wins. This hurts Macha. As Jake says "nothing hurts more than humiliation and a little money loss". Macha suspects that Jake, who seems unafraid of him, will be out for more revenge. As Jake and his brothers leave the casino, a man hands Jake a card and tells him that he can help him. Jake, who has a fear of enclosed spaces, decides to take the stairs. In the stairwell he looks at the card and then collapses, falling down the stairs. The card is revealed to read "Take the Elevator". Jake is rushed to the hospital. The doctors report he is very ill but do not disclose why he had the blackout. Macha puts out an order for a hit on Jake. Jake arrives home, without Billy, to be welcomed by one of Macha's hits. However, on his doorstep there is another card, which says "Pick This Up". As Jake bends to retrieve the card bullets fly over his back. As the shooting continues, the same mysterious individual called Zach (Vincent Pastore) arrives and rescues Jake who is the only person to survive the hit. Zach introduces Jake to his partner, Avi (André Benjamin). They offer him a deal: they will take all of his money and he will do what they say, no questions asked. In exchange, they will protect Jake from Macha. In the course of their proposal, they show Jake his medical file, which they have mysteriously obtained. It indicates that the blackout occurred due to a rare blood disease which will cause his death within three days. Jake suspects a con. The mysterious men later reveal that his money will be used to fund their loan shark enterprise.

Sam Gold is seen to be the 'king' in this chess game of gang warfare. He is the ultimate figure that all men are supposedly aspiring to be. Sam Gold is revealed to be an ultimately powerless cipher, whose power is granted only by those who invest in him. He represents ego and self-investment. He is the personification of greed. It is revealed that Avi and Zach were Jake's "neighbours" during his years of incarceration. They have forced Jake to "induce head pain to engage the enemy" by making him give his money away under the principle that "nothing hurts more than humiliation and a little money loss". They are inflicting this form of 'premature enlightenment' upon Jake because, according to them, he was not ready to hear how hard this process of liberation was going to be while in prison. It was because of this that they left without him.

Avi attempts to get Jake to understand the nature of the ego. He tells Jake "the greatest con that [the ego] ever pulled was making you believe that he is you." This is seen to be the 'ultimate con', in that no-one wants to sever their connection with their ego, because they refuse to challenge their own life-long investment in it. In the end, Jake also steps off the proverbial chess board by making a conscious effort to reverse everything his ego tells him to do. This is seen to be the truest and most fundamental application of the Formula. The characters of Jake, Zach, Avi and Sorter (Mark Strong) are seen to ultimately reject the ego's 'rules'. The character of Dorothy Macha is seen to succumb to them.