Thursday, August 11, 2011

SPOOKS to stop after series 10


Kudos have decided to end their espionage drama Spooks after ten series on the BBC and around the world, aiming to go out on a high rather than let the show dwindle.

Jane Featherstone, production company Kudos:

"I feel very sad about it. It was a very difficult decision to make. But we didn't want to get to the point where the BBC said, 'We don't really want another one,' we wanted to kill it off in its prime."
Ben Stephenson, BBC Drama Commissioning Controller:

"Kudos created a groundbreaking series in Spooks ten years ago that challenged convention with its topical, fast-paced, contemporary style. I hope fans will tune in this September to see what promises to be a fittingly high-octane, thrilling finale."
It’s a laudable decision to end something before it turns stale, which happens more regularly on the BBC because the network's not driven by advertising. Spooks has notoriously killed many of its leads and replaced them with new blood, and this reinvention is credited with keeping the show hovering around the 6m viewers mark for so long. Lisa Faulkner, Matthew Macfadyen, Rupert Penry-Jones, Hermione Norris, and Richard Armitage all played characters who met their end during the show's run.

Spooks is a BBC show I never got into, though. Back when it started I didn't have much faith in contemporary BBC drama, and the show felt like a kneejerk reaction to Fox's smash-hit 24—given the basic premise and similar use of split-screens (which was seen as quite radical in the early-'00s). And, while I understand Spooks benefits from real-world political inspirations, isn't constricted by a real-time format, and can tell multiple stories over its run, I was more entertained by the ruthlessly compelling adventures of CTU's Jack Bauer. Even when 24 fell into self-parody towards the end, Spooks never appealed to me as an alternative. I perhaps missed some great homegrown TV, but you make your choices.

The final series of Spooks will apparently focus on counter-terrorism boss Harry Pearce (Peter Firth), the only original character left on the show. After ten years escaping the icy fingers of death as his colleagues dropped dead around him, is Harry's time finally up?

SPOOKS returns to BBC1 for its tenth and final series in the autumn.

Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons photo


“Harry Potter” star Emma Watson has been spotted kissing Hollywood hunk Johnny Simmons.

Emma Watson, the British actress who plays Hermione Granger in the recently completed “Harry Potter” movie franchise, looks very much loved up with Johnny Simmons. He is her co-star in her upcoming movie “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.”

Watson is certainly no wallflower! The pair were snapped kissing passionately, out in public in Santa Monica over the weekend.

Wearing a patchwork maxi shirt and figure hugging black camisole under a casual summer cardigan, Watson got up close and personal with the actor. Then the two of them lunched together. Their tender kiss was shared right outside the restaurant.

Who started the kiss? Emma Watson did! Onlookers report that she reached up her face to kiss Johnny Simmons and he gazed at her in adoration, before pulling her in to a tender embrace, their hands on each others’ waists.

Emma Watson
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons

Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons
Emma Watson Kissing Johnny Simmons



Emma Watson and Johnny Simmons were first identified as a couple in May, when they were seen walking through a park in Pittsburgh together. At the time they strongly denied that they were in a relationship together. Watson’s agent even dismissed speculation as “complete fiction.”

But either they were lying, or things have moved on a lot since May, because Emma and Johnny looked very much a couple in Santa Monica this weekend.

Simmons, who co-starred with Megan Fox in the 2009 flick “Jennifer’s Body,” is Watson’s first boyfriend since she split with “One Night Only” singer George Craig last year.

You will have to wait until next year to see Emma Watson and Johnny Simmons on screen together in “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.” The movie, based on the novel by Stephen Chbosky, about freshman Charlie’s introduction to sex and drugs, is scheduled for release in 2012.

But for now, we have the kiss!

Movie Review: HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (2011)




directed by David Yates; written by Steve Kloves (based on the novel by J.K Rowling)
starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Alan Rickman & Ralph Fiennes

After a reprise of Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Part 1's closing scene, with Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) retrieving the fabled Elder Wand from the entombed corpse of Albus Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) and firing a triumphant bolt of energy into the heavens, Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Part 2 continues without interruption—so I recommend you get reacquainted with the previous film, or risk spending the first section of Hallows 2 trying to remember how and why Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) captured a grumpy goblin, and that Hermione (Emma Watson) can transform into the likeness of wicked witch Bellatrix Lestrange (Helena Bonham Carter).

Of course, the Harry Potter movies tend to assume the majority of the audience have read the books till they're dog-eared, which is probably true, but not in my case. For me, the Potter saga has been an exclusively cinematic experience, but I finish many installments with questions and confusions buzzing around my brain. Whatever happened to that nice Chinese girl Harry kissed once? When did Ginny Weasley and Harry get together? Whatever happened to Moaning Myrtle, whose role as "resident ghost" is supplanted here by the Grey Lady (Kelly Macdonald)?

"You've kept him alive so that he can die at the proper moment."

After eight movies covering seven increasingly hefty books, I think it's safe to say the saga's narrative could have been improved by writing the scripts with the benefit of having all Joanne Rowling's completed books to draw from. Instead, the movies were being made before J.K had finished the fifth tome, and despite the guidance she kindly gave laudable screenwriter Steve Kloves (highlight this character more because he'll be important later, wink-wink), a feeling lingers that the movies were incapable of properly developing or emphasizing key ideas, characters, and storylines that became important in the latter films. A case in point: I have no doubt that Warner Bros would have insisted a better actress play Ginny Wesley, and Kloves would have developed that character more, had everyone known she'd become the hero's love-interest.

Hallows 2 is just an extended climax of its immediate predecessor; a movie that brings a dazzling sense of pace and energy to the often sluggish franchise, in particular contrast to quiet and character-focused Hallows 1. It's not long before we're watching an exciting Potterverse bank heist at Gringotts (where a terrific dragon's ued as the getaway car), and then we're back inside the oppressed Hogwarts—now run by traitorous, dictatorial headmaster Snape (Alan Rickman)—before the students regain power and batten down the hatches in preparation for Voldemort's arrival with his army of Death Eaters. It's an epic clash evoking The Lord Of The Rings' fabulous Siege of Gondor, only involving characters you have deeper attachment to.

In many ways Hallows 2 is one of the least nuanced and plotted installments, but after seven films nudging the mytharc along (often within the confines of self-contained mysteries), it feels only right the boy-wizard's climax is an epic action movie involving animated stone knights, club-wielding trolls, giant spiders, ethereal Dementors, and thousands of wizards spitting spells with their wands. Of particular merit were the World War II feel to battle sequences—with Hogwarts analogous to liberal Britain and Voldemort's cronies representing fascist Nazi Germany. This war movie vibe echoed through the design of the half-demolished school, resembling areas of post-Blitz London with '40s-style wooden stretchers to ferry the injured away.

"You were right, never better. I feel like I can spit fire."

The lead triumvirate of Radcliffe, Watson and Grint have grown into their characters and play them well, with Radcliffe delivering his best performance yet with clenched determination. It's just a shame Watson and Grint don't have much to do beyond chase a big snake around before sharing a kiss (a moment that flops because, honestly, who's ever believed Hermione was attracted to twerpy Ron?) It's particularly sad to realize that Hermione has faded from the plucky young know-all of yesteryear into someone who can't even summon the courage to destroy a horcrux by herself, fated to live out her days as a wife and mother? Considering Rowling's claim that Hermione's essentially herself as a young girl, it's especially disappointing treatment by the author. Rowling even gave an imperative and heroic moment to a relative background character like Neville Longbottom? Astonishingly poor judgement, at least from the perspective of what the movies have given us. (For all I know Neville was a boy of considerable depth and latent valor in the books—anyone care to shed some light?)

Such is the busyness of Hallows 2, most of the adults are just wheeled on to prove they're still on the payroll (hello Mark Williams and Julie Walters, nice to see you again Emma Thompson and David Thewlis), with the exception of the delightfully eerie Alan Rickman—who almost steals the show thanks to a sublime final moment with Radcliffe, leading to a revelatory flashback for Snape that, despite slightly undermining a sacrifice, was brilliantly handled and highly charged. Fiennes also receives a greater amount of screen time than ever before, cementing Lord Voldemort as one of fiction's greatest villains. Seeing the Dark Lord slowly emasculated by every horcrux's destruction, his power chiefly derived from a serpent (how Jungian!), made for compelling drama.

"It seems despite your exhaustive defensive strategies, you still have a bit of a security problem, Headmaster."

To its credit, the mechanics of how Harry triumphs over his arch-nemesis has good internal logic and a few surprises that feel plausible, blessed with some very memorable imagery (a dueling Harry and Voldemort locked in a Star Wars-esque stalemate with fizzing wands, an embryonic Voldemort curled into a fetal position), and the only real letdown is the inclusion of the novel's contentious coda involving a limp flash-forward. It may have felt daft on the page, but at least your imagination could do a better makeup job.

Overall, this conclusion of the long-running, astonishingly popular Harry Potter saga is unlikely to disappoint its fans, and even people left scratching their head over various matters will have been too entertained to really care. At times Hallows 2 delivers edge-of-your seat action, not to mention some emotional peaks that should elicit some lump-in-your-throat moments. For all its faults, and problems with the series as a whole (which danced with greatness, but never seized it), the majesty and ambition of this franchise is beyond reproach. A remarkable contemporary mythology; these spellbinding films, like the best-selling books, will be entertaining us for many years to come.

Warner Bros. Pictures / 130 minutes

lucille ball

Lucille Ball is mostly known for her comedic television show I Love Lucy. To this day this is my favorite television show. Ball was an American comedian, film, TV, stage and radio actress. She was also a model and television executive. She stared in the sitcoms, I Love Lucy, We Love Lucy, The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour, The Lucy Show, Here's Lucy and Life With Lucy.
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball

lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball
lucille ball

nicki minaj slip

We all remember that one year on the MTV VMA’s when Lil’ Kim showed up with her left breast hanging out and covered with a pastie.

When Kim presented an award with Diana Ross, and Ross grabbed Kim’s breast, that was an instant classic moment in television history (albeit, a similar one would derail Janet Jackson’s career, but that’s another post for another time).

Well, Kim’s breasticles made an impromptu appearance at a club over the weekend when things got a little out of hand, and one of Kim’s tig ol’ bitties popped out to say hello and throw a few darts at Nicki Minaj (not really, but could you imagine?).

nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip

nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip
nicki minaj slip

London Riots 2011-Violence Escalates Across London News

London Riots 2011-Violence Escalates Across London News: Project staff in 1700 extra police to combat violence and met with the chief asks parents to check the cost of the activities of the children interrupted his vacation Interior, Theresa May, visited the control room of the effort Metropolitan Police the brain to stop the riots.

When she visited a special room operations in Lambeth, south London, where it was said, the acting commissioner, met Tim Godwin, the first reports began to severe tensions in Hackney, East London .
London riots 2011

London riots 2011

He had more first hand experience of May, the extent of the problems with the police, as you might expect.

Last night, Met was the third night of losing power in the streets of London, and Mayhem, the latest outbreak seems to have been the worst so far.

In the north, south, east and west of London, about 1,700 new employees dedicated to the return of control the streets and trying to cope with extreme violence.

Police were deployed in section 60 powers to stop and search people to avoid disturbances in various parts of London.

london riots
london riots 2011
london riots 2011
london riots 2011
london riots 2011

london riots 2011
london riots 2011
london riots 2011
london riots 2011

Once the images were sent to the dispatch of police in Hackney, and burning buildings in south London, with reports from other parts of the problem, it was clear interim guidance Met that measures up now not enough.

Godwin decided to make his first public statement before the camera actually asks for voluntary curfew for parents to do more. “I ask parents to initiate contact with their children and ask them where they are”

This was due to the fact that the second night of unrest Sunday, the age composition of the thieves on Saturday was much younger, more teens are currently involved.

Chaos has brought people leaving the streets to watch. Godwin asked to remain at home. “There are so many spectators in the police to fight crime and theft, crime, I pray that people will start to clean the streets, so that substances to fight crime, before they were.”

mclaren f1 car

McLaren F1 is the most powerful supercar produced by McLaren between the years 1994-1998, from the 100 cars: 65 are street versions, 5 are LMs (which was build to honor victory at Le Mans in 1995) and 3 are Gts (the road versions of the 1997 F1 GTR racing car) and 28 F1 GTR made for the roads.
The Chief Engineer Gordon Murroy`s concept refers to the use of expensive materials like: carbon, titanium, gold and for the first time, the use of carbon fiber monocoque chassis.

mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car

mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car
mclaren f1 car

Power? Here is a good question, the car has the power output at 627 horsepower or has an imperial HP. The super car is powered by an 6 L V12 engine built by BMW, 627 HP at 7400 rmp, same as road car version.