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Jennifer Lawrence Had The Best Reaction To Seeing Lupita Nyong'o At The SAG Awards

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Jennifer Lawrence and Lupita Nyong'o are the top two contenders to win Best Supporting Actress at the 86th annual Academy Awards on March 2. Lawrence, who stars in "American Hustle," won the supporting-actress award during the Golden Globes on Jan. 12, but Nyong'o, who makes her screen debut in "12 Years A Slave," took home top honors during Saturday night's Screen Actors Guild Awards. Not that Lawrence and Nyong'o are taking the competition to heart. Before the SAG Awards ceremony, the young actresses ran into each other on the red carpet, and thus created the best photo of the night.

lupita nyongo jennifer lawrence

More of this at all future awards show, please, followed by a movie about Lawrence and Nyong'o hanging out and being great.

lupita nyongo jennifer lawrence

2014 Screen Actors Guild Awards Honor 'American Hustle'

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Hollywood loves a sequel, and this awards season is shaping up to be one.

Just as "Argo" emerged as the unlikely victor over "Lincoln" last year, another 1970s-set crowd-pleaser is turning into the Academy Awards favorite over a solemn historical epic about slavery. David O. Russell's "American Hustle" took the Screen Actors Guild Awards' top honor for outstanding cast on Saturday night, beating out Steve McQueen's acclaimed "12 Years a Slave." Because actors make up the largest branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the SAG Awards (which last year picked "Argo") are considered one of the best indicators of the Oscars.

Just days ago, the Academy Awards nominations set up a trio of front-runners, bestowing 10 nods on "American Hustle" and "Gravity," and nine on "12 Years a Slave." But though no actor was individually honored by the guild for "American Hustle," the Abscam tale now appears to have an edge over its Oscar rivals.

Speaking for a cast that includes Amy Adams, Christian Bale and Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper credited Russell as the epitome of the actor's director.

"He makes you feel like you're part of the family, whether you're Robert DeNiro or you're Patty Mack," Cooper said at the Shrine Auditorium ceremony in Los Angeles. "You are part of the family."

In addition to last year's "Argo," SAG cast awards have lined up with such past Oscar best-picture winners as "The King's Speech," ''Slumdog Millionaire" and "No Country for Old Men." But the guild has also diverged with picks like "The Help," ''Inglourious Basterds" and "Little Miss Sunshine."

Saturday's awards were a somewhat low-key affair with a few memorable speeches but no earthquakes in a rapidly solidifying award season. The night's acting winners — Matthew McConaughey ("Dallas Buyers Club"), Cate Blanchett ("Blue Jasmine"), Lupita Nyong'o ("12 Years a Slave") and Jared Leto ("Dallas Buyers Club") — are each probably the favorites of their categories.

"It really shines a great light on this bull ride we call acting," said McConaughey, honored for lead actor in the Texas HIV drama. "I've been able to recently find some characters that I can humble myself to their humanities and get feverishly drunk on their obsessions."

One of the night's biggest winners was Nyong'o, who won supporting actress over Lawrence. Though "12 Years a Slave" is only her feature film debut, the Kenyan actress has been hailed for her red-carpet style and grace this awards season. Her speech was both composed and emotional — the kind of display that can turn Oscar voters' heads.

She thanked McQueen "for taking a flashlight and shining it underneath the floorboards of this nation and reminding us what it is we stand on." And she recalled the celebratory phone call to her father when she got the part.

"'Daddy, do you know who Brad Pitt is? I'm going to be in a movie with him!'" recalled Nyong'o. "And he said, 'I don't know him personally, but I'm glad you got a job.'"

The "Breaking Bad" victory lap continued as the show took honors for outstanding dramatic cast and for lead actor Bryan Cranston. For his indelible performance as teacher-turned-meth dealer, Cranston added his second lead actor SAG Award, to go with his recent Golden Globe win and his numerous Emmys.

"We have the nicest bunch of white supremacist Nazis I have ever worked with," said Cranston, looking over his former cast mates. "I swear to you I would kill you all over again."

Two big-screen veterans won awards for TV films: Michael Douglas for HBO's Liberace drama "Behind the Candelabra," and Helen Mirren for the biopic "Phil Spector," also on HBO.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus has been a mainstay at award shows recently, both for her acclaimed HBO series "Veep" (for which she won an Emmy) and the romantic comedy "Enough Said" (for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe). She won a SAG trophy for female actor in a comedy series for "Veep," and slyly mocked the award season crush by first thanking the Hollywood Foreign Press and then the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.

"It's hard you know because it's awards season and things get confusing, much like elections," said Louis-Dreyfus.

The ABC sitcom "Modern Family" enjoyed another round of awards, winning for ensemble in a comedy series and taking the male actor in a comedy series honor for Ty Burrell.

Emma Thompson, a surprise snub in Thursday's Oscar nominations for the "Mary Poppins" making-of tale "Saving Mr. Banks," was just as much the witty, winning award-show attendee she's been all season. As a presenter, the lead actress nominee noted the show's cheesy elevator music soundtrack: "Is this music available on CD?"

SAG's lifetime achievement award was given to Rita Moreno, the 81-year-old "West Side Story" actress whose career has spanned Broadway, television and music. Introduced by Morgan Freeman, the much-honored Latina legend danced to the podium before a standing ovation and let out a gleeful expletive.

"I hope the man with the button was there," she said. (He was.)

Moreno serenaded the SAG audience with a few bars from "This Is All I Ask":

"And let the music play/ As long as there's a song to sing/ And I will stay younger than spring."

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Associated Press writers Beth Harris and Anthony McCartney in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

Mitt Romney Hits Sundance For 'MITT'

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PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Mitt Romney surprised filmgoers when he came to the Salt Lake City premiere of "MITT," the documentary that tracks his run for the presidency. But he declined to share what he thought about the movie afterward, even with the filmmaker behind it.

"If he hated it, I don't know if he's going to tell me," director Greg Whiteley said. "He's nice and he and (his wife) Ann are gracious. I wonder what they really think." Whiteley followed the Romney family for six years, from the Massachusetts governor's first attempt for the Republican nomination in 2006 to his run against now-President Barack Obama in 2012. Whiteley said the Sundance Film Festival premiere Friday was the Romneys' first look at the film, which will debut on Netflix on Jan. 24.

Romney and his wife are also expected to attend Saturday night's premiere of the film in Park City, Utah.

Whiteley said he long admired the Romneys because, as a Mormon, he'd heard of George Romney while growing up.

"What Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax is to young Jewish kids probably is what George Romney was to me," Whiteley said. "When I heard that Mitt Romney was running for president, I had just finished my second film and occurred to me that might make a great movie."

Through a meeting with Romney's eldest son, Tagg Romney, Whiteley pitched the documentary idea and he "thought it was great."

Romney's campaign, however, not so much. Whiteley had unfettered access to the Romney family, which made campaign officials nervous, but the family went along with it anyway.

Part of any campaign strategy, Whiteley said, is to "present the most polished, most veneered, most presidential image as you can."

"What we forget is we need to connect with these people," Whiteley said. "They're human beings, and that gets lost in all of this."

The portrait of Romney in "MITT" is very human. He's shown playing in the snow with his grandkids, eating pasta from a plastic takeout container and brainstorming with his family about what to say in a concession speech. He discusses the pros and cons of his presidential run with his wife, children and siblings. Intimate footage shows his moments of confidence and doubt and the emotional toll the campaign took on his family.

Romney comes off as warm and likable, but the director said that wasn't the goal of the film.

"I had no agenda in trying to make him look good," Whiteley said. "I had no agenda in trying to convince people to vote for him."

He describes the film as "very apolitical."

"I really saw my job as to just shut up, film everything I can, and when I'm editing this footage, just try and find a balance between just being as honest and authentic and as entertaining as I possibly can."

Whiteley said he's as thrilled to have "MITT" premiere at Sundance — which he compared to Yankee Stadium or the MET for a documentary filmmaker — as he is to have it reach worldwide audiences on Netflix next week.

"Streaming is the future, and we've been able to do something that I think is unprecedented," he said, "Premiere it worldwide during the festival and capitalize on all this great media that were getting now."

The Sundance Film Festival continues through Jan. 26.

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

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Online:


www.sundance.org/festival

SAG Honors Rita Moreno With Lifetime Achievement Award

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rita Moreno did a little of everything in accepting the lifetime achievement award from the Screen Actors Guild. She sang, she danced, she dropped the F-bomb.

The 82-year-old entertainer was clearly delighted with being singled out at the SAG Awards on Saturday night. The crowd of actors at the Shrine Auditorium gave her a standing ovation, with Julia Roberts whooping it up as Moreno's giddy acceptance speech came to a close. "I am so (expletive) thrilled," she crowed after being introduced by old friend Morgan Freeman.

Moreno is one of Hollywood's rare EGOT winners — owner of Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony awards. Her Oscar came in 1962 for her iconic portrayal of saucy Anita in "West Side Story."

Screen Actors Guild Awards Quotes From Matthew McConaughey, Lupita Nyong'o

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Quotes from Saturday night's 20th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles:

"What I found was tapioca pudding. I would use the tiniest little antique spoon and I would eat it with that so it would last longer. I could make it last an hour." — Matthew McConaughey backstage on his weight-loss plan to play his winning role in "Dallas Buyers Club." ___

"I was just talking to June Squibb. She and my mother were in a play at the Cleveland Playhouse in 1957." — Dermot Mulroney, Screen Actors Guild nominee as a cast member of "August: Osage County."

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"I found the voice by working with transgender people. They really showed me the way. They were my mentors and it was through experimentation, trial and error and a lot of education. It was the role of a lifetime, obviously." — Jared Leto backstage after winning supporting actor for his role as a transsexual named Rayon in "Dallas Buyers Club."

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"I am so (expletive) thrilled. I hope the man with the button was there on time." — 82-year-old Rita Moreno upon accepting the SAG Awards lifetime achievement award.

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"I've loved the opportunity to learn about the fashion world and appreciate it as an art form, but I never want it to take over my acting." — Supporting actress winner Lupita Nyong'o backstage about being a fashion icon during awards season.

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"It's about persevering. We'll get there. The door is ajar. I'm saying we have to open that door some more. I don't think it will happen in my lifetime, I mean I'm 82." — Rita Moreno backstage on the struggle of Latinos to raise their profile in Hollywood.

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"I had a lot of fun doing it, but I had to speak Arabic and it's not my first language." — Robert De Niro backstage after sharing in the motion picture cast award for his role in "American Hustle."

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"I hope Australian customs will be kind to me." — Cate Blanchett backstage after winning leading actress honors on how she'll get her SAG and Golden Globe trophies home.

The Weird and Wonderful World of Animal Shows

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By Jordan G. Teicher


Photographer Amy Lombard grew up in a house filled with pets and has always loved animals. After finishing a series on IKEA showrooms early last year, she was looking for a new project. That’s when she started going to animal shows.

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She started with dog beauty pageants and then let her curiosity lead her to new discoveries. Quickly, Lombard came across shows devoted to all sorts of creatures, from reptiles to cats to insects. “Anything you can imagine, there is a subculture for it,” Lombard said. “If you look in the corners of the Internet, you will find it.”

While Lombard found the dog shows to be hypercompetitive, she said shows devoted to other animals tended to be more about celebration and shared appreciation. Lombard, who has photographed BronyCon to a real-life Barbie dream house and more, is used to working in environments with people who have very unique interests. “I'm very drawn to photographing what I will generally define as ‘experiences,’ whether it's people shopping in IKEA, a witch festival on Long Island, or animal shows,” Lombard said via email. “There's something extraordinary about being in a room with hundreds of people who share one mutual passion. I enjoy this especially when my work can serve as a visual introduction to a particular event, place, or group of people who are overlooked in society.”

Walking around the shows, Lombard said she was searching for details that would inspire surprise and interest, like rats in hats and a group of pigs spooning. She was also interested in capturing people at the events and hearing their stories. “I am completely and utterly fascinated by people—I always have been,” she said. “When I was very young, I was painfully shy, and I was always observing people, just mainly being curious about the decisions we make and why we do the things we do. Obviously I'm not as shy anymore or I wouldn't have the courage to approach strangers constantly, but my camera allows me to explore this deeper in a more visual way.”

Lombard’s work is distinctive for its heavy use of flash, which she said she learned to like as her career developed. “When I started taking photography very seriously, I was incredibly sensitive to natural light and mainly doing street photography. In my mind, I wouldn't dare use any other light source. While the photographs were beautiful, as I was growing and developing my vision, I no longer felt that this style matched my voice,” she said. “I bought a Sunpak 622 Super Pro, a flash I still use to this day that is pretty much the size of my head, and it was suddenly like the world came alive for me. When you use flash, you see ordinary things in a different way—a concept that is fundamental to my work.”

Lombard’s series is ongoing. She’s especially looking forward to attending a rabbit show later this year.

See the original post on Slate.

A Mitt Romney Documentary, Jenny Slate's 'Obvious Child' And More From Sundance

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Three days of the 2014 Sundance Film Festival are now complete, but something is different from years past: the vibe is strange. There’s no obvious movie to see. By this point in the last two festivals (which, to be fair, are the only other years I’ve attended), the buzz was already growing for “Beasts of the Southern Wild” and, last year, “Fruitvale.” (Eventually renamed “Fruitvale Station” for its public release.)

Now, this year, there’s certainly buzz, but it’s been more spread out. There has yet to be one of those must-see movies, such as Richard Linklater's "Before Midnight," which debuted here last year. The wealth is being spread around, so to speak. Everyone I talk to on the street has seen a wide variety of different movies, and there doesn’t seem to be a consensus on anything. Which, honestly, kind of makes it more fun. (This could all change Sunday night after Linklater’s latest Sundance feature, “Boyhood,” debuts.)

Anyway, here’s another roundup of the movies I’ve seen so far at the festival -- including what could be Jenny Slate’s breakout role, a documentary on a failed presidential candidate, and the latest from the man who brought you “Another Earth.”

"I Origins"

i origins

I didn’t realize before seeing this movie that close-up pictures of eyeballs kind of freak me out. And there are a lot of zoomed photos of eyeballs in Mike Cahill’s “I Origins.” Michael Pitt plays Ian Gray, a brilliant scientist who is trying to disprove the existence of God by proving evolution through experiments on the eyes of different species. Obviously, what he and his lab partner (frequent Cahill collaborator Brit Marling) discover defies logic and the pair will go to all ends to solve the mystery behind what they may or may not have found.

My biggest complaint with “Another Earth” is that it was such an interesting concept, but there was really little payoff. I mean, there’s another Earth in the sky! and a lot of that movie doesn’t have a lot to do with this remarkable fact. In “I Origins,” the entire movie is about the concept –- to the point that it’s hard not to think, Boy, this dude is really into eyeballs. Seriously, everything has something to do with an eyeball. But, the eventual payoff is excellent.

"Obvious Child"

obvious child

After watching “Obvious Child,” it’s hard to understand why Jenny Slate didn’t make more of a name for herself on “SNL,” other than as the person who accidentally said “fuck” on live television during her debut show. Slate plays comedian Donna Stern who, after a one-night stand, finds herself pregnant. What follows are some pretty heavy issues –- abortion, namely –- addressed in a both introspective, yet, in the form of her stand-up material, public way. Jenny Slate knocks this one out of the park -- and, in case it's not clear, is very, very funny -- and I hope “Obvious Child” gets the opportunity to be seen by a lot of people because Slate deserves better than being known best for one “SNL” gaffe.

"Mitt"

mitt

I'll be upfront: I didn't vote for Mitt Romney. I only mention this because the new documentary about him, "Mitt," paints a portrait of a flawed man who actually seems human. I know it's cliché after a presidential election to ask, "Where was this guy before the election?" -- the losing candidate almost always loosens up and behaves in a recognizable way -- but why something like this isn't shown before an election, I'll never know.

The documentary chronicles Romney's ill-fated 2008 Republican primary loss, then his 2012 presidential loss. The former is much more interesting than the latter. I don't know if this is true, but it at least appears that Romney let the filmmakers have more access in 2008 than 2012.

At one point, the filmmakers ask one of Romney's sons if he's enjoying the experience. He admitted that he wasn't, but he's also says he has been given talking points in case that question is asked by members of the media. In that version of the answer, he's thrilled.

Also, who knew that Romney's favorite movie was the Coen brothers' "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"

"Fishing Without Nets"

fishing without nets

"Fishing Without Nets" certainly feels important -- and I don't mean that as disparaging to what the film is trying to do. It almost plays as a companion piece to "Captain Phillips." Like in "Phillips," we're along for the ride as Somali pirates hijack a shipping freighter. Only this time, it's told from the Somali point of view. (To be fair, "Captain Phillips" offered a glimpse of the Somali view to start the film.)

In a weird way, it reminded me a bit of the short film, “Aningaaq,” which was a companion piece to “Gravity.” The only difference being (other than a direct connection between the two films) that “Fishing Without Nets isn’t a short film. And after the Somali pirates hijack the freighter, it feels like the movie runs out of things to do until the end of the film. We see a lot of internal squabbles between the pirates who want to treat their hostages well and the pirates who like to abuse the hostages. In other words: It feels important to make a movie that at least attempts to explain why the pirates do what they do, but the answer is pretty clear early on, leaving the viewer with a lot of filler.

Mike Ryan is senior writer for Huffington Post Entertainment. You can contact him directly on Twitter.

John Lithgow & Alfred Molina Connect In 'Love Is Strange'

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PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — John Lithgow said playing Alfred Molina's longtime lover in the film "Love is Strange" was "just like falling in love with this man."

The veteran actors portray a couple who marry after 39 years together in the Ira Sachs film that premiered Saturday at the Sundance Film Festival. Once wed, one of the men loses his job as a music instructor at a Catholic school and the couple is forced to sell their apartment to survive financially. They end up living apart, staying with friends and family until they can remedy their situation.

Lithgow and Molina have been friends for 20 years but this is the first time they have worked together.

Solar Flare Sculpture In Downtown Calgary Brings Golden Hour To Darkest Winter Days (PHOTOS)

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They've worked with thousands of little lightbulbs, but this time around Calgary artists Caitlind r. c. Brown and Wayne Garrett are going big.

The light artists, known around the world for their gorgeous and inspired works of illuminating art, have done it again, lighting up a portion of downtown Calgary with a massive tribute to the sun.

Solar Flare has been hanging above the 200 block of Stephen Ave. in the heart of Calgary's downtown core for the last month, bolstered by more than 6,820 pounds of concrete to keep it suspended.

Solar Flare is constructed from fibre optic rays and lit by a single large light bulb. The effect is similar to the sun at 'golden hour' - the time just before sunset when the sun's rays split and cast everything is a warm, golden light.

Story continues below the slideshow...



As well, two motion sensors trigger the sculpture to shimmer in patterns. The shimmering effect is always changing and different, it's pattern shifting as the sensor is triggered.

Commissioned by Downtown Calgary, the sculpture aims to "artificially prolong 'golden hour' into the longest and coldest nights of the year."

"We know that the short days and long, cold nights of the winter can make going outside a less-than fun experience, so we hope that the sculpture will inspire Calgarians to come downtown and bring their friends and family to enjoy the sculpture and explore Downtown Calgary in the same way they do during the warmer months."


Solar Flare comes on the heels of another interactive light sculpture Brown created in 2012 for Calgary's first-ever Nuit Blanche. A massive hit with the crowd, 'CLOUD' featured thousands of recycled lightbulbs, which visitors could turn off and on with the attached pull-strings.

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Check out more amazing images of Solar Flare, as captured by Calgarians.







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Bob Adelman's Civil Rights-Era Photo Archive On Display In South Florida

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Photographer Bob Adelman was a witness to history, documenting the civil rights movement across the Deep South.

The most prominent face among Adelman's extensive archive belongs to a man he casually calls "Doc" — better known as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Nova Southeastern University's Museum of Art-Fort Lauderdale has assembled 150 of Adelman's photographs for an exhibit marking the half-century since the Civil Rights Act passed in 1964.

Museum director Bonnie Clearwater says the exhibit's title, "The Movement," refers to both the demonstrations and Adelman's perspective as a photographer, watching the descendants of enslaved people exercise their freedoms.

Flipping through images shot during a 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., Adelman said events now considered momentous originally were buried then in newspapers' back pages.

'Peter Pan' Announced As NBC's Next Live Musical Event

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Second star to the right and straight on till ... NBC?

NBC president Robert Greenblatt announced today (Jan. 19) that "Peter Pan" will be the peacock network's next live musical event, according to TV Line.

Another live musical is a no-brainer for the network after last year's "Sound of Music Live" which brought in record ratings for NBC.

“Great ready for flying children," said Greenblatt.

"Peter Pan" should take flight later this year.

RANKED: The Best Bedroom Paint Colors For Sleep (PHOTOS)

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We've all had those sleepless nights where you just can't get a little shut eye and you know exactly why -- maybe you had that mid-afternoon coffee a little too late in the day and your spouse's snoring has reached an unthinkable decibel. Or maybe the neighbors decided to throw a party that carried on long after your bedtime.

But what about when the cause of your tossing and turning is not so obvious? Well, according to an infographic created by Men's Health, a decor decision you made months (or even years) ago could be to blame. And the findings are pretty troubling for homeowners who went with those deep eggplant or radiant orchid color schemes in their masters.





Moral of the story? Go with a blue hue in the bedroom, and sleep a little easier.

'Ride Along' Box Office Wins Out, Topping 'Lone Survivor'

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — "Ride Along" arrived in first place at the weekend box office.

The buddy cop comedy featuring Kevin Hart and Ice Cube debuted with $41.2 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. The strong opening for "Ride Along" marks the biggest opening for a film released during Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend and puts it on track to top the $46.1 million record set by "Cloverfield" in 2008 for the biggest opening of January. Universal's Navy SEAL drama "Long Survivor" starring Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch and Ben Foster earned $23.2 million in second place in its second weekend in wide release.

Open Road Films' animated film "The Nut Job" featuring the voice of Will Arnett opened in third place with $20.5 million.

Richard Ayoade On Robert Redford's Sundance Commitment

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PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Richard Ayoade says his connection to Sundance founder Robert Redford runs deeper than most filmmakers.

"I think Robert is grateful that I came. Now he's too proud to say that. But you can see in his eyes," Ayoade joked in an interview. "He doesn't want to focus the whole thing on me at this stage. It's kind of between us." Ayoade, a British comedic actor, made his feature directing debut with the 2011 Sundance coming-of-age movie "Submarine." He claims a warm welcome from the 77-year-old Redford after returning this year with "The Double," which he directed and co-wrote.

"He's there turning down the beds, making sure everyone's got enough eggs. He's all over it. He's just there. But that's just Robert. He does too much, I tell him. He won't listen. It keeps him busy, that's the thing. Because otherwise the mind goes," Ayoade said in an interview, maintaining a deadpan face while his film's star Jesse Eisenberg giggled beside him.

"And he's pretty much all there still. He's sharp. I mean there's sometimes a delay. He'll drift off. But he'll come back within five minutes. You just stick with it. . But sometimes he just hits the deck and does mess-ups and I'm going, 'I don't know you.' A lot of it is about circulation. You've got to keep the blood moving. And joints. You've got to keep your joints opened. And he's more aware of that than anyone. I mean that's why he's been in the business so long."

As Ayoade kept up his story, Eisenberg was nearly doubled over with laughter.

"He likes a deep stretch. He works on his glutes a lot. But the thing with Robert is that if you stretch him too far he can snap. A little bit like a brandy snap. Because you know there's a straw component to him. You know how he kind of looks a little bit like he's made out of wheat? So if he says 'Sundance kid' you stop that deep stretch."

"Why do you think it's called Sundance? That is his safe word. We're in his safe word," Ayoade concluded.

Lincoln Chafee Calls On Rhode Island To Invest In The Arts

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Idaho has potatoes and Maine has lobsters. If Gov. Lincoln Chafee has his way, Rhode Island will be the state Americans associate with the creative arts.

The Democratic governor of the nation's smallest state is calling for a sizable investment in performing arts centers, museums and other facilities that cater to the arts. In a state with shuttered factories, struggling cities and a 9 percent jobless rate, Chafee calls the arts economy a safe bet. "It's already here. It's all around us in this state," he told The Associated Press. "It just needs a little recognition, a little help. When you look at what the arts can offer the economy, the community, our quality of life, it makes a lot of sense."

States across the country slashed funding for the arts in the wake of the economic downturn. But as the economy slowly recovers, local arts agencies are seeing renewed interest by officials who see arts and culture as a relatively low-risk economic investment.

Big investments in the arts would have been unthinkable just a few years ago, when funding declined precipitously as states around the county grappled with yawning budget deficits. State arts funding — which represents less than $1 per American — was dispensable compared to dollars for education, health care or other needs.

Overall, total funding to state art agencies dropped by 38 percent after the 2001 recession. Funding rebounded slightly after 2004, but then fell 27 percent from 2008 to 2012. The California Arts Council received $32 million in 2000 and less than $6 million this year. Kansas eliminated its arts commission in 2011 but resurrected it as a much smaller agency a year later.

Startlingly, states like Michigan and Rhode Island — which have some of the nation's highest unemployment rates — are leading the effort to reverse the trend.

In Rhode Island, Chafee is pushing for a voter referendum on the fall ballot that would authorize $35 million in grants for upgrades to local arts facilities. Museums, theaters and historic sites could apply for the money, which would be awarded by the state's Commerce Corp. Organizations seeking the grants would have to contribute some level of matching funding. The question must be approved by lawmakers before going on the ballot.

"This is not National Endowment for the Arts-type funding. This is an investment in facilities — an investment in a sector that has proven to be one of the bright spots in our economy," said Jon Duffy, chairman of the board at Providence's Trinity Repertory Company.

Chafee is also seeking to increase the state's general funding for the arts by $1 million.

Top lawmakers say they like Chafee's focus on the arts but want to carefully review the idea before deciding if the investment is worth the cost. Not everyone is convinced, however. Republicans argue that reductions in taxes and business regulations would do more to increase the overall economy.

"The last thing we should be doing is taking on more debt in this economic climate," said Republican Party Chairman Mark Smiley.

The proposals come after state lawmakers voted last year to exempt locally made art — including theater performances — in a move to help local artists and attract tourism. In doing so, Rhode Island became the first state to rescind a sales tax on art.

Michigan has more than quadrupled its arts funding — to an estimated $7 million — since fiscal year 2012. A state economic analysis found that spending on the arts and culture in Michigan exceeded $2 billion a year — more than golf, skiing, sailing and hunting and fishing combined.

One reason that officials — particularly in struggling states — are showing a renewed interest in the arts is that they're a relatively safe and affordable investment.

"It's interesting that some of the states that were hardest hit by the recession are the ones doing the reinvestment," said Jonathan Katz, director of the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies. "It has to do with the arts being seen as an economic engine and one that's reliable."

Compare Rhode Island's proposed $35 million arts referendum to the state's failed $75 million investment in a video game company started by former Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling. State officials hoped the investment would create a new economic cluster in the state, but 38 Studios went bankrupt, laid off its entire staff of 400 and left the state on the hook for $100 million — when interest is factored in.

By comparison, Rhode Island's more than 1,000 arts organizations created more than 5,200 jobs in 2009 and contributed $324 million in economic activity. The state estimates that every $1 spent by an arts organization in Rhode Island generates $2 for the economy thanks to spillovers to restaurants, hotels and other businesses.

Rhode Island has prided itself on its artistic bent. The Rhode Island School of Design is considered one of the most prominent art and design schools in the world. Art galleries and studios can be found in tony Newport or in refurbished mills in working-class Pawtucket.

Morgan Calderini, a RISD graduate with a degree in printmaking, runs Ladyfingers Letterpress, a handcrafted stationary company she founded with her wife. Calderini said her business turned a $750 state arts grant into lots of business — and tax revenue — when it allowed her to attend a trade show in New York.

She wants to see grants continue even as the state considers making a bigger investment in performing arts centers, museums and other larger organizations.

"It doesn't have to be a lot of money," she said. "There are lots of creative small business owners in this state. Sometimes they just need a little investment."

Sam Rockwell's 'Laggies' Character Is Not Who You Think He Is

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Sam Rockwell is sitting at a bar in Sundance drinking seltzer water. Joking about bloody noses and how, because of it, Park City, Utah isn't the ideal climate for doing 8-balls, Rockwell spoke with The Huffington Post about his latest role as a single dad raising a teenage daughter, played by the magnetic Chloë Grace Moretz, in the Sundance film “Laggies.”

Shot in Seattle, where director Lynn Shelton (“Humpday,” “Your Sister’s Sister”) does all of her films, “Laggies” turns the lens on Megan (Keira Knightley), a woman in her late 20s who just cannot find a way to have her life make sense. After befriending a teenager (Moretz) in a parking lot, Megan is brought into the youngster's home and life quite unexpectedly.

Highlights from our conversation below.

“Laggies” is my favorite movie this year at Sundance.
Really! That’s awesome. It's a rom-com with some layers, right? It's deep and it's also commercial. It's really your favorite film?

I have one movie left to see before I go, so that has a chance of dethroning you. It's Zach Braff’s new film, “Wish I Was Here.”
Oh, there you go. He directed it. He's a good filmmaker. Is this his second movie? He really took his time.

In the film, Keira Knightley's character attends her 10-year high school reunion and is going through what we might call a quarter-life crisis. Did you identify with that aspect of the movie at all?
I did my 10-year reunion a while ago now. So I think I'm more in the mid-life crisis zone now [laughs].

Are you exhibiting any symptoms?
I haven't bought a Porsche or anything, but I have a big flat-screen TV and I'm looking to get a bigger one.

And you have a beard.
Yes, I have a beard, but that's for something I'm shooting. But yes, I totally relate with all of that stuff -- getting older and not wanting to grow up. But I had a lot in common with the character I played, Craig. I had sort of already been through the stuff Keira’s character goes through. It’s the male equivalent of “High Fidelity” or “The Graduate” or even “The Hangover.” But this was really the first middle-aged part I've played [laughs]. And it's weird. I've played dads before. But in movies that nobody saw. But those characters were still kids; I was really playing a big kid.

Your character in “Laggies” is an adult.
He's an adult. It was fun to do that. Without [screenwriter] Andrea Seigel’s writing, I couldn't have. It's like when I did “Frost/Nixon.” I'm not that smart in real life. I'm a different kind of smart. My intelligence probably goes more through my sense of humor or acting. When you're playing somebody who is well educated, you need that text, that script. And then it's your job to make it real and personal.

What was most compelling about this character for you?
I loved his melancholy. In the same way that Rick in "Casablanca" has a kind of melancholy, there's a similar emotional through-line with this character. The obvious sort of Tom Hanks or Paul Rudd aspect of this character, but mixed in with a little William Hurt and Jack Nicholson. He’s got a lot going on.

He’s not what he seems to be in the beginning. And I that's something Lynn Shelton and I really wanted to be on the same page about. In a way, we were trying to trick the audience because Mark Webber's character is the youthful one. When you think of youth, you think of spontaneity. And you think of adults as being more cautious. I probably seem more cautious in the beginning and less spontaneous, but what you find out is that I actually have a lot of spontaneity -- it’s just been buried. So it's kind of a switcheroo. We had to camouflage my youthfulness. It's kind of like gift-wrapping a bomb in pink paper.

Did you audition for the role?
No. Lynn just called me. Paul Rudd was actually supposed to do it. And Anne Hathaway was playing the female role. Chloe was in before I was. And then I came on, and we lost Anne. She dropped out, regretfully. I know she wanted to do it. But she had another commitment; I think it was with director Christopher Nolan. And then we were scrambling. Went out to a few people. Thank god we got Keira.

I thought her American accent was good. I know people can be harsh about that.
Listen, she did great. And she had so little time to prepare. She was getting married. She was prepping with a dialect coach after her honeymoon.

I haven’t loved her in a film like this since “Bend It Like Beckham.”
That’s exactly what Lynn Shelton said. Even the drunk scene in "Pirates of the Caribbean," with Johnny Depp where they're drinking rum on the beach, you can tell she's got a little punk rock in her. And it's the kind of thing that Melanie Griffith did in "Something Wild." That’s one of the greatest movies ever made. Ray Liotta. It's how he got “Goodfellas." But Melanie has that same thing that Keira has in "Bend It Like Beckham." You can’t really describe it. You know, it's just somebody you want to go to a rock concert with.

"Laggies" was picked up by A24 after its Sundance Film Festival premiere. Expect to see it in theaters this summer.

Iconic Photographer Remembers Audrey Hepburn, 21 Years After Her Death

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Audrey Hepburn was nearly 40 when she met Douglas Kirkland, the young magazine photographer who'd gotten famous taking pictures of Marilyn Monroe in bed for Life. In Paris to shoot promotional stills for Hepburn's 1966 heist movie “How To Steal A Million,” Kirkland wound up leaving with one of his favorite images in a 60-year career: of the still girlish grande dame in a sixties beehive, glancing sideways and grinning as if she had the world’s greatest secret up her sleeve.

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To mark the actress' death exactly 21 years ago today, HuffPost Arts asked Kirkland – himself something of a legend these days – to tell us about capturing that iconic shot, also featured in his new visual memoir, A Life In Pictures: The Douglas Kirkland Monograph. For more of the photographer's personal best, scroll down to the photos below.

I was brought to Paris to work with Audrey on a film she was making called How To Steal A Million. Now I was comparatively young -- I was probably 29 or 30 -- but I was sort of late in the cycle. So many people had worked with her before, from Richard Avedon to Irving Penn. But it was like I was the first person to ever work with her. She had energy, she had joy, she totally worked with the camera.

Because she was so delightful, we’d walk around Paris together. There was a place called the Boulevard St. Michel, a very popular students’ area in the Left Bank, and we’d go there and we’d sit down at a cafe. In those days -- this was before paparazzi had arrived -- there was a custom in France that you should not bother celebrities. We would sit and have a coffee, and sometimes I‘d pick up my camera and take a picture or two. Most of the time, we’d talk. I felt I was in some peculiar way almost re-living Fred Astaire’s role in Funny Face. I was the guy from New York, and Audrey was Audrey. She was really delightful. She laughed easily.

The day we shot that very picture, I was shooting a series to be used for covers of magazines for the purposes of promoting the movie, which she was doing with Peter O’Toole. It became a fairly big movie at one point. I just said to Audrey, “Let’s be a little more playful here.” I said, “Throw your eyes to the side.” I didn’t have to say anymore than that. She did with a big perfect smile. Click. That was how that image happened. It’s probably one of my favorite of my career, period.


All photos courtesy Glitterati Incorporated.

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Check Out The First Poster For 'Better Living Through Chemistry'

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Oliva Wilde, Sam Rockwell, Jane Fonda and Ray Liotta star in "Better Living Through Chemistry," a new comedy that focuses on a small town pharmacist (Rockwell) whose life takes a twisted turn when he embarks on a "drug-and-alcohol fueled affair with a seductive customer" (Wilde). Samuel Goldwyn Films is distributing the film, which is out in theaters and via on-demand services on March 14, 2014. Check out the exclusive debut of the first "Better Living Through Chemistry" poster below.

better living through chemistry

Bill Hader On His Sundance Drama, 'The Skeleton Twins'

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The last time I spoke to Bill Hader was at San Diego Comic-Con and he was, to say the least, reflective. After eight seasons, Hader had just left "Saturday Night Live" and was venturing into a new chapter of his career -- a very uncertain chapter. During that interview, Hader mentioned a film called "The Skeleton Twins" that he had just made with his former "SNL" co-star Kristen Wiig. The part the grabbed my attention is that "The Skeleton Twins" is not a comedy, but a drama. Hader wasn't waiting long at all to play against type.

In "The Skeleton Twins," Hader plays Milo -- a gay man living in Los Angeles who, after too many failed relationships and too much failure as an actor, attempts suicide. After, Milo is invited to live with his estranged sister, Maggie (Wiig), and her husband (Luke Wilson) -- who she clearly no longer loves -- in upstate New York. The film focuses on the two siblings as they attempt to work through all of their emotional damage. (And, honestly, the film is much funnier than anyone was letting on.)

I met Hader off of a very busy Main Street in Park City, Utah -- a very different Hader than the one I had met in San Diego. This is now a guy looking forward, not back. And it's obvious how proud he is of this film and, honestly, he should be.

The last time we spoke, I got in a little bit of trouble because we didn't really talk about the movie you were promoting.
So it's my fault.

I requested this interview today just to blame you personally.
Yeah, thanks, asshole. [Laughs]

It's interesting, they're billing this as the "Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig drama," but it's a lot funnier than people are letting on. It's not "Ordinary People," or something like that.
No, no. Yeah, it has comedy in it. I think the reverse would be worse, where it's like people were kind of expecting, when they see us they're thinking, "Oh, this is going to be fucking hilarious."

Here comes the hijinks.
Yeah, here comes the hijinks, here comes the crazy voices. And then they go, "What the fuck is this?" You know? Especially the opening. And so, for me, approaching it is different than anything else I've ever done -- and it's also the biggest role I've had in a movie, too. So I was very happy that I got to do a bigger role and also do something different than what people kind of expect from you -- especially coming off "SNL."

Did you feel some sort of pressure at all going in for something like this? Because it is a lot different than what people are used to seeing you do.
No, I was very excited to do something different -- I was doing a thing that I was excited about. And so just because I came from "SNL" doesn't mean I have to have the stereotypical career. Which isn't bad, by the way. I mean, it's wonderful and I love some of those movies.

Then there's interesting stuff like Will Forte is doing.
Exactly! Where it's like, you don't have to do that. I mean, I was very lucky that the people I was with at "SNL" were all good actors. Everyone was just a solid actor. And that's what I enjoy doing. Even when I would do a character on the show, I always liked to kind of figure out the voice, figure out the costume, talk more about little moods you can do. I don't know; it's all just instinctual. It's hard to like intellectualize it. It's a very instinctual thing.

Well, the instinctual part of it, working with Kristen again -- obviously you guys worked together for a while and then there's a chemistry that's already there. But did you worry that we might not take it too far, from a comedy aspect?
Well, that's [director] Craig Johnson. And we did a couple of times, but Craig cut it out because he's smart.

Oh, really?
Yeah. That whole scene with us using gas at the dentist office, there is a lot of shit of us doing crazy shit in that. Craig was like, "It was hilarious," we were falling down on the floor laughing, but it was like, "Oh, these are the professional comedians now," you know? But I also wanted to make sure that the guy was funny in the way that they wrote him to be. I was like, "Okay, that's different funny in the way -- medium funny." It's a different kind of funny.

Milo makes a joke that he won an Oscar playing a mentally challenged Ukrainian immigrant who lives in Brooklyn and teaches high school kids how to play chess. That should be your next role.
I should do that. Why didn't I do that? I know, it would be like the most meta thing on earth.

That will be your shtick.
Yeah, that will be my shtick.

Every movie, you do a joke about something then you play it next.
And then actually do it.

You and Kristen mime out Starship's "Nothing's Gonna to Stop Us Now" in this movie. That's a show-stopper
Yeah.

You know what's great about that? That the whole song played.
Yeah, when I first saw it, I went, "Man, you played the whole song!" We did it, but I thought we'll cut out of it at some point or whatever. No. Craig's like, "No, we're playing the whole song."

As a viewer of it at a film festival, I'm worried that when it's released theatrically, they're gonna cut it down. I hope that doesn't happen.
Well, you know what? It's hard because it keeps going. I mean, I heard even at the press screening it got a reaction.

I was there. It did.
Which, a press screening? That basically doesn't happen. The screening yesterday at the Library, it got applause and people went nuts during it. So, yeah, I hope they don't touch it at all.

You've read the reviews, right? People are responding very well to this.
I tend to just -- people are saying nice things?

Yes.
Good. Very good to hear.

I mean, you had to have a good idea it would go over well.
We had no idea.

You've had to have been in movies where you knew things were going well or not going well.
Sometimes, yeah. Sometimes you think it's great, then you see it and you go, "Oh, that's what we were making." Or you go, "Oh, I don't know about that," then you see it and you go, "Oh, that's what they were doing!" You know? You have no idea; it's just kind of out of your control.

Is there an example in "The Skeleton Twins" where you were like, "I don't know about this shot?" until you saw the final cut?
You know what? And it's a testament to Craig Johnson's directing. My very last shot of the movie, and I don't want to give a lot away in your interview, but it's me and Kristen in a pool. It was my very last shot of the movie. And I said, "This should be a very big emotional moment right now, right?" I planned this thing, and then I talked to him about it. And he said, "No, I just want you to look at her." And he kind of looked at me, and he went, "Bill, you've got to trust me." And I went, "Yes, sir," and I jumped in the water, I looked at her and then they went, "That's a wrap on Bill," and I went home -- and that was it. And so then when I saw the film, when I saw the music play and I saw where that came in the movie, I was like, "brilliant, spot-on, bang-on, perfect." You don't need that big moment. He was 100 percent right.

With the suicide attempt from the beginning: I had done research, I had talked to people. And so, I had all these ideas for how to do this. I was like calling Craig, going, "What about this? What about this? What about this? What do you think?" And he let me try some of them, but, ultimately, he was like, "We've got to be able to go someplace in this movie. At the beginning of the movie, you've got to be able to go someplace." If you do something that's fucking off the wall, then it's like, where do you go from here?

The audience is thinking, Who is this guy?
Yeah, "Who is this guy? Where do you go from here?" So it was little things like, "Ooh, let's put the suicide note on a envelope."

With a funny message written.
With a funny message. We didn't know how funny that was -- and then that was a great thing.

Mike Ryan is senior writer for Huffington Post Entertainment. You can contact him directly on Twitter.

María Conchita Alonso Quits Play Over Protest Against Tea Party Campaign Video

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A Tea Party candidate’s attempt at Latino outreach is provoking the opposite reaction.

Venezuelan actress and singer María Conchita Alonso resigned from the Brava Theater Center’s production of a Spanish-language version of “The Vagina Monologues” Friday, after facing protests and threats of boycotts for appearing in a campaign video backing immigration hardliner Tim Donnelly as her choice for governor of California.

“We really can’t have her in the show, unfortunately,” Eliana Lopez, the producer of the show scheduled to run in the heavily Hispanic Mission District, told KPIX 5. “Of course she has the right to say whatever she wants. But we’re in the middle of the Mission. Doing what she is doing is against what we believe.”

Following her appearance in the Donnelly ad, a series of radio listeners called in to Spanish-language station KIQI 1010 AM in San Francisco threatening to boycott the production because of Alonso, according to KPIX 5.

“I’ve been called all these horrible names, like you can’t believe,” Alonso told Fox News.

The bilingual campaign ad released last week shows Alonso standing alongside Donnelly, translating his comments into Spanish, often changing the meaning for comedic effect. For example, Alonso translated a two-sentence line attacking big government and welfare costs as “we’re screwed.”

The actress praised the size of Donnelly’s testicles after he said he wanted “a gun in every Californian’s gun safe.”

Donnelly’s immigration politics don’t mesh well with Latino attitudes on the subject. He has participated with the Minutemen, a vigilante group of volunteers that patrol the border. As a California Assemblyman, he attempted last session to overturn the state's Dream Act, which allows undocumented immigrants to qualify for state financial aid.

Watch the campaign video that started the ruckus below.
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