Saturday, April 14, 2012

Miley Cyrus slammed by dietitians

Miley Cyrus has come under fire by registered dietitians after she promoted her new gluten-free lifestyle on Twitter.

The 19-year-old had hit back at rumours that she was anorexic after she appeared to lose a substantial amount of weight in recent weeks.

But the performer said that she had a "gluten and lactose allergy" and told one fan that "everyone should try no gluten for a week".

"The change in your skin, physical and mental health is amazing," she wrote. "You won't go back!"

But registered dietitian Rachel Begun told Today's Health that only those with a gluten-related disorder should cut the food group out.

"People who go gluten-free may gain weight if they rely mostly on highly processed gluten free foods," Begun said.

Another registered dietitian Karen Ansel also agreed.

"There's absolutely no evidence that a gluten-free diet promotes weight loss," Ansel maintained.

"However, there is data that indicates that following a gluten-free diet can result in a diet that's low in key nutrients."

Have you experimented with a gluten-free diet?

- Cover Media


Justin Bieber hints at NZ tour

Will Justin return to Auckland this year?

Is Justin Bieber heading back to New Zealand?

It's the question thousands of "Beliebers" are asking and the pop star may have just answered it.

Bieber, 18, posted on his Twitter account earlier this morning: "gonna be coming back to AUSTRALIA and NEW ZEALAND soon!"

Bieber also hinted at his return on Australian breakfast show Today earlier this week, saying he hoped to bring his new world tour Down Under.

The Boyfriend singer visited NZ in 2010 when he performed exclusively at Strathallan School in Papakura, South Auckland, after it won a radio station competition.

The visit to NZ caused a frenzy both online and off, with hundreds gathering at Auckland International Airport to greet the star as well as plenty of hysterical fans tweeting their excitement.

One fan also caused the Canadian some trouble when she stole his hat and held it for ransom. Bieber tweeted at the time: "Finally got to New Zealand last night. The airport was crazy. Not happy that someone stole my hat and knocked down my mama. Come on people."

Bieber is currently in the studio recording his follow up  album titled Believe, due to be released later this year.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Review: Jersey Boys

Review: Pop musical gritty yet magical

BRIDGET JONES

REVIEW: Pop music.  It's often considered a dirty, shameful pair of words.  A term that conjures up images of over-produced, under-dressed princesses and throw away, flash in the pan songs.

But once upon a time, pop was king and the Four Seasons sat very comfortably in the nearby throne.  The utterly marvellous musical Jersey Boys celebrates the joy of what music was, and the surprisingly gritty story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons.

To call this a successful musical is something of an understatement - Jersey Boys has broken records all over the world.

Millions of people have seen and heard the tale of four boys from the wrong side of the track, fighting tooth and nail to get to the top.  The end result was success, but there were more than a few rough patches for the Four Seasons along the way - mobsters, tax issues, broken hearts.

It's a story told with a rye smile and a lot of heart.  From the rocky beginnings to the even rockier end, Jersey Boys is not a musical like others that you may be familiar with.  After all, this is a musical about music, so while the story is strong and delivers a few surprises, it's the way the groups' songs are interwoven, and at times it's like being at a concert, 40 years in the past (complete with screaming girls).

And that's where the magic is - good, old fashioned, carefully crafted pop songs.  From the moment their first hit, Sherry Baby, rings out from the stage you can't help but hum along quietly - and sometimes rather loudly - to yourself.  These are the songs that have lasted more than 40 years and remain pure gems: Can't Take My Eyes Off You, Big Girls Don't Cry, Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye). You have no idea how many hits this group had, and how many you know all the words to.

The core cast recognise this is a tale of four boys who are universally loved, and they do them absolute justice.  Dion Bilios as Frankie Valli is a little shining star, nailing the unique sound of the singer and standing out as every inch the front man, and Declan Egan was charming as songwriter Bob Gaudio.  Meanwhile, Glaston Toft's Nick Massi was the comedic star, with Anthony Harkin's Tommy De Vito was the bad boy you can't help to love. 

Together, these four have combined to make magic.  The characters are terribly easy to care about, and the four-part harmonies are a joy to listen to, wrapping you up like vocal candyfloss. 

So pop a quarter in the jukebox and take a trip back to a time where harmonies and catchy choruses never fail to warm the heart.  Jersey Boys can't help but smack a smile on even the coldest of hearts.

Jersey Boys

Where: The Civic Theatre, Auckland

When: April 10 - May 17

Tickets from The Edge.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Lady Gaga's 'insensitive' tweet

BOB TOURTELLOTTE

Lady Gaga has stirred a debate over pop stars, diets and eating disorders with a tweet that some of her millions of fans have interpreted as insensitive.

On Tuesday, the "Born This Way" singer tweeted "Just killed back to back spin classes. Eating a salad dreaming of a cheeseburger." She then added the hashtag #PopSingersDontEat.

Some of her followers interpreted the inclusion of the hashtag as encouraging fans to avoid eating in order to become thin.

But it upset those who recalled her admitting earlier this year to having suffered from bulimia as a student and imploring people to stop obsessing with being overly thin.

"I'm gonna say this about girls: The dieting wars have got to stop. Everyone just knock it off," Gaga said at the conference held in Los Angeles and hosted by former California First Lady Maria Shriver.

The singer also has been an outspoken advocate for empowering youth who feel like outsiders, and the irony between what the singer has said in the past and her tweet was not lost on her more than 22.7 million followers in the Twitterverse.

One post from @StuddedBlack on Friday read "I was on the verge of becoming bulimic and now I just might because of YOU. #PopSingersDontEat"

Others, like this from @fluffness said, "People are taking the #PopSingersDontEat thing way too seriously! Acting like Gaga promotes that. She didn't mean it that way..."

A separate blog post on proud2beme.org, which is affiliated with the National Eating Disorders Association, said "If it was meant to be a joke, there are plenty of people who aren't finding it so funny."

Since the April 10 tweet, Lady Gaga has failed to address the flood of comments. She has only tweeted a few times, telling fans about listening to Radiohead and thanking them for buying tickets to her shows.

- Reuters

Carnage carries it off

SARAH WATT
Carnage

BIG NAMES: Carnage features an all-star cast.

Carnage, M, 80 mins

Two couples meet in the middle-class bohemia of a New York apartment to discuss a violent incident between their two school-aged sons.

Whether Zachary was "armed" with a stick, or had been "provoked" by Ethan into losing his cool, this argument is the catalyst for an afternoon of accusation, retribution and attempted reconciliation (though not strictly in that order).

Adapted from an award-winning play by playwright Yasmina Reza and director Roman Polanski, the action happens over a crisply articulated 80 minutes, principally in one room. The audience's engagement in such a relatively static piece of cinema will depend entirely on its appreciation of the spiky dialogue, amusing performances and its tolerance for the insufferable characters.

And it's the headline cast that should have you at "hello". Three Oscar winners (Foster, Winslet and Waltz – we don't even need their first names) and a nominee (it's only a matter of time before John C Reilly's buffoonish talents are rewarded) perform this chamber piece.

As any parent would, they start off civil and personable, discussing unrest in Africa and nodding in agreement that "culture can be such a powerful source for peace", before gradually revealing themselves, warts, wrinkles and all to be as obnoxious as anyone you're likely to meet on the PTA. Soon we have Foster wailing "I am an advocate for civilised behaviour!" while Christoph Waltz's mobile phone rings off the hook and his uptight investment banker wife (Winslet) shoots him evil looks.

It does go on a bit at times, rather like the end of a drunken party when people ramble and you glance longingly at the door, but to its credit the pace is kept high and the terrific performances maintain momentum (Waltz is the standout in the company of brilliance).

Carnage is as mannered and theatrical as a one-room, cinematic adaptation of a stage play is bound to be, and no less enjoyable for it.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Film review: Battleship

SARAH WATT
Battleship

SUNK: Battleship is a lacklustre film.

Battleship, M, 131 mins

Since the producers of Battleship presumably knocked up the concept for the movie on the back of a Nicotinell packet, let's take a similar tack.

Story: having run out of childhood fairy tales to mangle and clearly not wanting to stray into "indie" territory by having an original thought, the premise for the film is taken (with liberties) from the strategy game that originated, albeit on paper, in the 1930s. In the movie, the US and Japanese navies are about to engage in some good-natured war games exercise on the high seas around Hawaii, for old times' sake, when suddenly an alien spacecraft plummets to earth and threatens the lives of every mortal.

Cast: John Carter hadn't yet been released and received its critical panning, so the cast is helmed by JC hero Taylor Kitsch. It will take Tarantino to resurrect his career after this. For luck, Kitsch's naval commander brother is the usually wonderful Alexander Skarsgard (True Blood and Melancholia)

Yet, as it turns out, the best things about this film are two supporting actors: New Zealander John Tui, making a terrific foray into Hollywood from a career in television here, and pop singer Rihanna as the feisty, token female naval officer, Raikes.

Their lines may be stock-standard, their characters necessarily one-dimensional, but both do a fantastic job and provide the most watchable moments.

Direction: Peter Berg, who had a respectable acting career in the likes of Chicago Hope for many years before he turned to directing The Kingdom (good) and Hancock (not so much), produced and directed this film, which was a terribly disappointing revelation as the credits rolled.

Even the bombast of McG and Michael Bay would have provided more innovative entertainment. However, instead Berg seems to have eschewed any notion of making this gritty and exciting, and phoned in his direction from the office.

Battleship makes a great navy recruitment video but a lousy two hours in the cinema.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Britney Spears gets X Factor support

Nicole Scherzinger is backing Britney Spears in her efforts to become an X Factor judge.

Scherzinger was a judge on last season's US version of Simon Cowell's TV reality singing contest, but left the programme to pursue other ambitions.

Spears is reportedly "closer than ever" to sealing a deal to become a panelist and the songstress has Scherzinger's support.

"I think that it's something that we can't deny, but there's something about Britney that we... are always rooting for her and behind her no matter what," she told E! Online. "Britney is so bubbly and warm and everyone loves her anyway, so she just has to be herself."

It was previously reported that Spears had been offered a $10 million contract for the second season of the talent show. However, it is now believed the figure is closer to $15 million - which would eclipse Jennifer Lopez's $12 million salary for American Idol.

Judge Simon Cowell is eager to sign Spears up before he finalises the rest of the panel.

Her partner, Jason Trawick, is believed to be handling the negotiations.

The first round of X Factor auditions began on March 1.

Cover Media

Let the Brangemania begin

It turns out that Wills and Kate were just the warm up for wedding of the century.

After years of cohabitation, six kids and countless tabloid headlines, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie made it official: They plan to make it official.

If you thought the media circus involving the world's most glamorous couple was on overdrive before, just wait. Now that Brangelina are officially engaged, expect endless speculation about where and when they'll wed, what they'll wear, what their kids' roles will be, and who might get to attend the celebration.

''This is really a state wedding,'' said Stephen Galloway, executive editor of features at The Hollywood Reporter. ''This is America's equivalent to Prince William and Kate Middleton.''

He called the Brangelina wedding ''the media event of the new century''.

Pitt's manager confirmed the couple's engagement Friday after Jolie was spotted wearing a diamond ring on her wedding finger. Jeweller Robert Procop said he spent a year working with Pitt to design the ring.

''The prominent engagement ring is giving the world a warning,'' Galloway said. ''It says 'look out, get ready'.''

But Bradley Jacobs, a senior editor at Us Weekly, sees things differently. He anticipates the wedding will be a private, even low-key affair.

''I don't think you're going to see a bunch of fanfare,'' he said. ''It's certainly not going to be a Kim Kardashian-style wedding ... It's going to be very subdued.''

Expect massive media coverage either way: ''We will not rest until we know when and where and how and who's going to be there,'' Jacobs said.

Entire magazine issues could be devoted to each star's wedding-day outfits and hairdos.

''Every single designer on the planet will be pursuing Angelina for the dress,'' Galloway said. ''It's literally worth millions of dollars in business.''

Even Pitt's look leaves room for ample speculation: Long hair or short? Facial scruff or clean shaven? A classic tuxedo? And designed by whom?

Then there's the guest list. Who will be the best man and maid of honor? Will Jolie's father, Jon Voight, attend? Will George Clooney be in the house? Jolie has said she doesn't have many close friends.

''This is going to be a map of the inner state of their private life,'' Galloway said. ''This is like Kremlinology. You'll be able to read all sorts of things into this wedding.''

Unless, of course, the two elope.

The timing of the engagement and the wedding are also fodder for editorial exploration. The couple long maintained that they wouldn't marry until the right to do so was extended to all Americans, but when Galloway interviewed Pitt for a February cover story, the 48-year-old actor said he didn't think they'd be able to hold out that long.

''It means so much to my kids, and they ask about it,'' Pitt said at the time. ''And it means something to me, too, to make that kind of commitment.''

But days later, he backtracked, saying he'd spoken too soon.

''There's a certain mystery in these contradictory statements made in the weeks leading up to this (engagement news),'' Galloway said. ''People who've been together a long time get married when things are great or when you want to shore up things that are not so great.''

The A-listers have been partners since they began a relationship in 2005 while working on the film Mr & Mrs Smith.

Already megawatt superstars in their own right, the romantic pairing of Pitt and Jolie instantly made them Hollywood's most glamorous and photographed couple. The fact that Pitt was still married to Jennifer Anniston when he met Jolie only fueled the tabloid fire; Pitt and Aniston divorced in 2005 after five years of marriage.

Jolie was previously married to Billy Bob Thornton and British actor Jonny Lee Miller.

Regardless of the size of the celebration or where it takes place, the Jolie-Pitt wedding has major economic implications. Journalists from all over the world will swarm to the wedding location; the designers of each nuptial element will see their businesses boom; the rights to the photos and footage will be haggled over by publishers and broadcasters with deep pockets.

Galloway predicts the bidding has already begun.

''A mini-industry in itself will be created as a result,'' he said. ''The money generated by the wedding in direct fees to them and indirect income to other people will be more than the equivalent of everything the two of them have earned in their career. You're talking about two empires meeting.''

Some of that revenue will, of course, be in magazine sales.

After the rash of celebrity divorces last year, Brangelina fans ''will be happy to see them affirm their relationship and what they mean to each other,'' Jacobs said.

And they might be just as eager to read accounts of why the wedding is not to be. Galloway speculates that ''between now and whenever the wedding takes place, there will be at least a dozen stories that say it's off; Brangelina call it quits.''

- AP

Boy's cardboard arcade goes viral

What began as creating a home-made arcade using cardboard boxes and cello tape has turned into a viral sensation.

Nine-year-old Caine Monroy from Los Angeles spent his summer vacation building an arcade in his dad's auto-repair shop using old cardboard boxes and his imagination.

The only problem was he didn't have one customer, until filmmaker Nirvan Mullick stopped by to buy a doorhandle for his '96 Corolla.

Nirwan was so impressed by the carefully created cut-up games, including minature football and basketball, he decided to make a short film about it.

The film was released on Tuesday and has gone viral. The 11-minute video has picked up 1.4 million views on vimeo and another 708,000 on youtube.

Not only did Mullick showcase the arcade to the world, but he set up a donation box for a scholarship fund on Caine's arcade website.  So far people have donated more than US$100,000 (NZ$121,940) to the young entrepreneur.

"He doesn't really understand how big this is," Caine's dad, George Monroy, told ABC News. "He sees himself on the screen and he laughs. He doesn't understand how everyone is just pouring their hearts out to him."

- © Fairfax NZ News

Spears in Cowell's sights for X Factor

Simon Cowell would hire Britney Spears to be a judge on the X Factor "if he could get her".

It is rumoured the TV mogul is in deep negotiations on a multimillion-dollar contract to secure Britney on the talent show.

Simon won't confirm or deny whether or not Britney is indeed the production team's final choice.

"If it was my decision, [I'd] 100 per cent [go for Britney]… if we could get her," Simon told Ryan Seacrest on his radio show.

Other famous faces linked to the X Factor panel include Fergie, Beyonce Knowles, Mariah Carey and Janet Jackson.

Simon remains coy about who will ultimately appear on the programme.

"We'll have to find out very soon if we've spoken to [Britney]," Simon said.

"Don't forget there are a lot of names that have been bandied around, some true, some false. But we've said to everyone we've spoken to, we've got to keep quiet about it. You got to wait until people sign up, but we're very, very close."

It is believed that Britney is being offered a $15 million contract to appear in the second season.

Britney's fiance Jason Trawick is believed to be handling the negotiations.

The first round of X Factor auditions began on March 1.

- Cover Media

Art goes off with a bang

An international artist unveiled a new work at Auckland Art Gallery today - blowing up balloons and popping them.

The performance art was called The Ability to Blow Themselves Up and launched a three month exhibition called Made Active exploring the idea of action through painting, sculpture, installation and performance art.

In today's 30-minute live performance by artist Seung Yul Oh, about 20 participants were asked to go to different points around the gallery and blow up balloons until they popped.

Oh who was the 2011 recipient of the Arts Foundation Harriet Friedlander Residency, said the performance was a living sculpture.

''It's got sound, something expanding, colour, shape. It is an object they are making.'' There were mixed reactions however to the echoing bangs disturbing the quiet gallery space.

''Some got really annoyed and hated it because they wanted to come to a quiet gallery and see the artwork and there was banging,'' Oh said.

''It's a fine line whether you like it or not. Others enjoyed it because it wasn't what they expected. It was a new experience for everyone.''

Oh has used balloons in exhibitions before and likes to explore the placement of rounded objects inside the ''geometric cube box that is the gallery space''.

The performance, said Yul, is about fear and joy.

''If you get over the fear you can enjoy it.''

Made Active runs until 15 July and includes 25 exhibitors, seven of which will contribute live performances on weekends throughout this period.

The exhibition is free to the public and sponsored by Chartwell Trust.  

- © Fairfax NZ News

Robin Gibb in coma, outlook grim

Bee Gees pop star Robin Gibb is in a coma in a London hospital, amid fears he has only days to live, according to reports.

Britain's The Sun newspaper says his family is keeping a bedside vigil for the 62-year-old star, who has been battling colon and liver cancer and now has pneumonia.

It is reported that family and fans of the Bee Gees were last night praying for the star's survival.

On Thursday (local time) Gibb's son said the singer would not be able to attend the premiere of their debut classical work, The Titanic Requiem.

Robin-John (RJ) Gibb, who worked on The Titanic Requiem with his father, said his family was hoping for "a speedy recovery".

"He is still in hospital, he's fighting infection and of course - as a lot of people who have family members or friends who endure cancer, they know - there are a lot of periphery problems afterwards they have to deal with," he told BBC Breakfast.

Ongoing health problems forced Gibb to miss the premiere of the Titanic work - to mark the centenary of the ship's ill-fated voyage - at London's Westminster City Hall.

"The one place he really wanted to be in two and and a half years and he couldn't be, and it was heartbreaking, but he'll be able to see it. It was recorded and live streamed," RJ said.

Gibb recently underwent surgery for an ongoing problem with a twisted bowel. The same hereditary intestinal condition led to the death of his twin brother, Maurice, at the age of 53.

Gibb appeared to have made a miracle recovery, but doctors now believe a secondary tumour is present.

Gibb's wife, Dwina, brother Barry, 65, daughter Melissa, 37, and sons Spencer, 39, and RJ, 29, were at his bedside in a private hospital in Chelsea in west London, according to The Sun.

Gibb's health problems began last October when he had emergency surgery to treat a blocked bowel.

Last month Gibb told The Sun: "I sometimes wonder if all the tragedies my family has suffered - like Andy and Maurice dying so young and everything that's happened to me recently - is a kind of karmic price we are paying for all the fame and fortune we've had."

Gibb also praised his wife, who has helped him fight his cancer fight.

"She gave me health foods and brewed herb teas for me, alongside conventional treatment," he said.

- AAP

Friday, April 13, 2012

Kiwi film into New York festival

AMY MAAS

A Kiwi short film is set to premiere at a prestigious New York film festival next week.

The film, 43,000 Feet, will premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on Thursday - the same day scriptwriter Matthew Harris receives his PhD in English at Massey University's Albany graduation.

The film is about a statistician who gets sucked out of a plane. He calculates he has exactly three minutes and 48 seconds before he hits the ground and rehearses what he will say to the media on the off chance he survives.

The idea for the film came after Harris heard about the miraculous survival of a New York window washer who fell 47 storeys from an apartment building.

Harris' 43,000 Feet, which received $90,000 in funding from the New Zealand Film Commission, is one of two short NZ films selected from more than 2800 submissions from 25 countries. The other film is Whakatiki, written by Bernadette Murphy.

Central Auckland was used as the backdrop for most of the live action scenes and a training fuselage was used for the interior aircraft shots.

Harris is a tutor at the School of English and Media Studies at Massey University's Albany campus. His second short film, Snooze:Time has gone into production.

43,000 Feet will screen in New Zealand later this year.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Bye bye Fry: Hobbit star heads home

TOM HUNT

After eight months in Wellington filming The Hobbit, Stephen Fry is heading home.

Fry arrived in Wellington in August last year to film his part as Master of Laketown in Sir Peter Jackson's The Hobbit.

''Phew! Got all emotional after shooting my final scene on The Hobbit. Preparing for home over the weekend,'' he posted on Twitter yesterday.

In his time in Wellington, Fry has been not only one of the biggest stars to feature in the two-part movie but also one of the most visible.

When the emperor penguin Happy Feet visited Wellington, Fry made a visit to see the bird. He shared a photograph of his encounter on his Twitter page, which is followed by 4.1 million people.

He also made a big splash when he criticised New Zealand's slow broadband speeds.

Last month he joined an early morning queue in Manners St to get one of the new iPads, and earlier in his stay was spotted grocery shopping at Chaffers New World, attended New Zealand International Arts Festival shows, and even had a Wellington beer named in his honour.

He attended the World of WearableArt Awards, declared rugby the most exciting game in the world, and took part in Movember.

- © Fairfax NZ News


Ricki Lake tweets wedding pics

Ricki Lake has posted photos of her wedding dress on Twitter, after eloping with Christian Evans.

The 43-year-old television personality chose Dancing with the Stars costume designer Daniella Gschwendtner to create her gown.

Lake and Evans exchanged vows at the San Ysidro Ranch in Montecito, California over the weekend in a simple ceremony.

Lake told People magazine it was the anxiety about having a large event for her nuptials that made her decide to have a scaled-back affair.

"We talked about a big wedding at first," she said. "We hired a wedding planner, but I broke into hives thinking about who I'm going to invite and who I'm going to insult by not inviting."

"At the end of the day," Evans added. "The best solution was to have our moment of being together and getting married."

The only guests, apart from Lake's "glam squad" to get her ready, were the couple's two dogs.

Lake's two children from her first marriage; Milo, 15, and Owen, 10, opted out of attending.

"They love Christian," Lake said, "but they couldn't care less about the ceremony."

Lake is launching her new talk show later this year and has a memoir coming out called Never Say Never.

What do you think of Ricki's dress?

- Cover Media

Katy Perry 'obsessed with aliens'

Katy Perry is "fascinated" with extraterrestrials.

The pop songstress spends a lot of time reflecting on what lives beyond our galaxy.
Perry grew up in a household with devoutly religious parents where aliens were not regular dinner table discussions.

The star is happy to explore that subject now that she is on her own.

"I'm fascinated by that kind of stuff because of how I grew up, where everything was so black and white," Perry told British newspaper the Sun.

"Now I'm seeing a lot more colour in the world and asking more questions. So I'm very into things that are above and beyond me and were before me and will be after me."

Perry's interest in the subject was piqued soon after she was exposed to American TV documentary series Ancient Aliens.

"I've ordered 50 of those DVDs," Perry gushed. "I sent out a Christmas gift basket to people filled with my favourite things and the first season of Ancient Aliens was one of the things I included. It's so good. I made everyone on my tour watch it. I'm just obsessed."

Should aliens ever land on earth, Katy will be prepared for their arrival.

"I do hope that when the aliens come, they'll recognise me. I'll be like, 'Please don't kill me, I wrote a song called ET," she said.

- Cover Media

Taite Music Prize: She's So Rad

Meet the Taite Music Prize finalists | She's So Rad

The seven finalists for the Taite Music Prize have been announced earlier this month, now it's time to get to know them better.

In today's video Jeremy Toy and Anji Sami from Auckland band She's so rad talk about their album In Circles.

The three-piece's sound has been described as 'warm clouds of distortion and feedback cloaking every sound and gorgeous hazy melodies that swirl around you like smoke'. Elements of shoegaze and 90's indie rock are clearly audibe. The band will head over to the UK soon to support Ladyhawke on her tour.

In its inaugural year in 2010 the Taite Music Prize was won by Lawrence Arabia for his album Chant Darling and Ladi 6 was awarded the prize for The Liberation Of... last year.

All Nominees:

Andrew Keoghan - Arctic Tales Divide (Brave Beluga Records)

Beastwars - Beastwars (Destroy Records)

David Dallas - The Rose Tint (Dirty Records)

She's So Rad - In Circles (Round Trip Mars)

The Bats - Free All Monsters (Flying Nun Records)

Tiny Ruins - Some Were Meant For The Sea (Spunk Records)

Unknown Mortal Orchestra - Unknown Mortal Orchestra (Seeing Records)

Today: Auckland shoegazers: She's So Rad

Listen to She's So Rad's Circles

- © Fairfax NZ News

From Harry Potter to the dark side

JK Rowling's first book for adults will be a "blackly comic" novel set in an idyllic English town where all is not what it seems, her publisher says.

The title of the closely guarded 480-page novel by the prolific Harry Potter author will be The Casual Vacancy.

It will be available worldwide in English on September 27 in hardback, e-book and in audio form, Little, Brown and Company said in a statement.

The publisher promised it will be "blackly comic, thought-provoking and constantly surprising," and offered some general plot details.

Rowling's foray into the adult fiction world begins when a character called Barry Fairweather dies unexpectedly, leaving a town called Pagford in shock, before readers will realize that behind Pagford's facade is a town at war, according to the publisher.

"Rich at war with poor, teenagers at war with their parents, wives at war with their husbands, teachers at war with their pupil ... Pagford is not what it first seems," said the statement.

"And the empty seat left by Barry on the parish council soon becomes the catalyst for the biggest war the town has yet seen. Who will triumph in an election fraught with passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations?"

When the novel was first announced in February, Rowling, 46 said the successful Harry Potter series had given her the "the freedom to explore new territory." The seven-book series sold 450 million copies worldwide and resulted in eight top-grossing movies.

The Casual Vacancy is the British writer's first novel directly aimed at the adult market.

- Reuters

Guns, aliens and Rihanna triumph

GILES HARDIE

REVIEW: Somewhere between a film based on a Hasbro board game and the casting of music diva and screen novice Rihanna, expectations for this big-budget alien-blast-a-thon reached the sort of lows found only in the Mariana Trench.

The more you learn about this film, the sillier and less enticing it becomes: aliens attacking Hawaii, the Japanese randomly on hand to help defend it, Pearl Harbour veterans and a modern-day soldier who has lost his legs getting dragged into the mess, all mixed with a thumping AC/DC soundtrack.

There is just no way this should work.

And yet, we have an adrenalin-packed winner.

Director Peter Berg, whose surprise box-office success with Hancock gave studios the confidence to back him in this US$200 million gamble, finds the same balance between action-packed imagination and not taking the premise seriously that made Michael Bay's original Transformers such a joyride.

Berg sets up his heroes, gives them their challenges and turns everything up to 11.

Given it's based on a game consisting of shouting out letter and number combinations, the plot is quite complicated.

When astronomers identify a planet that may contain life, they blast out the loudest, most visible radio waves towards it.

Then as the navies of the world descend on Hawaii for some naval games, an alien exploratory team arrives, destroying Hong Kong in the process.

When the navy makes contact, an impenetrable dome descends and the navies must destroy the small but vastly superior force before they can send for reinforcements.

The extraordinary success of this film is the commitment to concept from every performer, each surfing the fine line between silly and self-serious, either of which could ruin everything.

Rihanna is operating missile systems one minute, part of a boarding party the next, and surprisingly engaging throughout.

None of this could ever happen, of course.

The game was fun to play, not realistic, and the film is a whole lot of fun too, with realism a worthy, early sacrifice in this battle for the greater good.

- Sydney Morning Herald


The real Springfield revealed

The tales of Homer Simpson and his family have become embedded in television lore, but ever wonder where Springfield, the illustrious hometown of The Simpsons, is really based?

The town of Springfield has become a character of its own on the popular animated TV show, serving as the backdrop to the adventures of the Simpson family.

But in 23 years on air, the show's creator has kept the real location of the town veiled, saying he didn't want to "ruin it for people" - until now.

In an interview with Smithsonian Magazine's May issue, Matt Groening revealed that the animated town is based on Springfield, Oregon, near his childhood hometown of Portland.

He also was inspired to use the town's name after it was featured on the 1950s television show Father Knows Best.

"I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the US. In anticipation of the success of the show, I thought, 'This will be cool; everyone will think it's their Springfield.' And they do," said the show's creator.

The tales of donut-loving father Homer J Simpson and his dysfunctional family, wife Marge and kids Bart, Lisa and Maggie, have become a staple of American culture, winning 27 Emmy awards, earning a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, and even coining a new word as Homer's expression "D'Oh" entered the Oxford English Dictionary in 2011.

The Simpson family are named after Groening's family - father Homer (named after the Greek poet Homer), mother Margaret and sisters Lisa and Maggie. Bart is based on the creator himself, although Groening changed the name from 'Matt' to 'Bart' because he "had this idea of an angry father yelling 'Bart,' and Bart sounds kind of like bark - like a barking dog," and he thought it would sound funny.

The inspirations drawn from Oregon didn't just stop at the town name. Groening also said he named some of the characters after streets in Portland, including Reverend Lovejoy, the school bully Kearney and the Simpsons' annoyingly loveable neighbour Ned Flanders.

Even the address that America's favourite animated family live at, 742 Evergreen Terrace, is named after Groening's own childhood home address.

The Simpsons was created by Groening for Fox television and first aired in 1989. It is the longest-running American sitcom in history, broadcast in more than 100 countries and 50 languages, and it still attracts an average 7.7 million US viewers weekly.

- Reuters

Gibson slams anti-Jew claims

Mel Gibson has fired back at screenwriter Joe Eszterhas for accusing the Braveheart star of anti-Semitism, calling the writer's comments "utter fabrications" and saying he was angry over a rejected film script.

Gibson, who has been dogged by similar criticism since making an anti-Semitic statement in 2006 to police in a drunken rant, had been working with the Basic Instinct screenwriter on a movie about the ancient Jewish hero Judah Maccabee.

On Wednesday (local time), Hollywood show business publication TheWrap.com reported that the first draft of Eszterhas' script was rejected by Warner Bros. Upon hearing of it, Eszterhas sent a nine-page letter to Gibson accusing him of not really intending to make the movie, called The Maccabees.

Eszterhas wrote that Gibson announced the project purely "in an attempt to deflect continuing charges of anti-Semitism", according to a copy posted on TheWrap.com.

He also accused Gibson of calling Jews "oven-dodgers" and "Jewboys" when they met, and even wrote that Gibson admitted vowing to kill his ex-girlfriend Oksana Gregorieva, following a bitter public feud with her over custody of the pair's child.

Gibson, the Oscar winner whose movies include Mad Max and Lethal Weapon, did not directly address charges of anti-Semitism, but said Eszterhas' description of his "statements and actions" are "utter fabrications".

"Contrary to your assertion that I was only developing Maccabees to burnish my tarnished reputation, I have been working on this project for over 10 years and it was publicly announced eight years ago," Gibson wrote in the letter, released by a spokesman.

"I absolutely want to make this movie; it's just that neither Warner Brothers nor I want to make this movie based on your script," he said.

Gibson, 56, went on to call the draft that Eszterhas submitted the most "substandard" he had seen in 25 years of overseeing script development and a "waste of time".

Jewish leaders criticised Gibson's Maccabee project when it was revealed last fall as offensive given the star's history.

In the past, Jewish groups accused Gibson of evoking age-old stereotypes about Jews in 2004's Passion of the Christ, which made more than $600 million at worldwide box offices.

Two years later, Gibson was arrested for drunken driving in Malibu, California, and he ranted at the officer: "The Jews are responsible for all the wars in the world." His arrest and tirade made headlines around the world. He later publicly apologised and attended self-help meetings.

Judah Maccabee was the son of a Jewish priest who in the 2nd century BC led a guerrilla revolt in Judea against armies of the Seleucid Empire. The historical figure, whose last name in Hebrew translates as "The Hammer", is revered by many Jews. The holiday of Hanukkah commemorates his triumphs.

- Reuters

Axl lacks appetite for Hall of Fame

Axl Rose, the mercurial front man for rockers Guns N' Roses, has declined his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this week saying he does not feel wanted or respected at the ceremony.

In an open letter made available on Wednesday by Rose's spokeswoman, he said other members of the LA band were welcome to attend and be honoured at Saturday's event, but not the lead singer of the band that gained fame in the late 1980s with smash hit album Appetite for Destruction.

"I won't be attending The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Induction 2012 Ceremony and I respectfully decline my induction as a member of Guns N' Roses to the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame," Rose wrote in the letter.

"I strongly request that I not be inducted in absentia and please know that no one is authorized nor may anyone be permitted to accept any induction for me or speak on my behalf," he said.

Appetite for Destruction, with songs like Sweet Child O' Mine and Paradise City, was a mega-sized hit of 1987, and it propelled Rose, guitarists Slash and Izzy Stradlin, bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Steven Adler, to global rock stardom.

But by the early 1990s, drug abuse had taken hold of several band members and Rose and Slash openly feuded. By the middle of that decade, the original line-up was no more.

Rose eventually gained the right to use the band's name, released a long-awaited album Chinese Democracy in 2008, and still tours with a group of the same name but none of the members are original, except for himself.

"When the nominations for the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame were first announced I had mixed emotions but, in an effort to be positive, wanting to make the most of things for the fans and with their enthusiasm, I was honoured, excited and hoped that somehow this would be a good thing," Rose wrote in his letter.

"Of course I realized as things stood, if Guns N' Roses were to be inducted it'd be somewhat of a complicated or awkward situation," he added.

Rose goes on to write that over the past few months, he has met with members of the Hall of Fame's board, spoken with its president, and read in the media what fans and other members of the band had said.

He describes his efforts to find a way to appear as being "polite, courteous, and open" but adds, "no offense meant to anyone but the Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony doesn't appear to be somewhere I'm actually wanted or respected."

A representative for the Hall could not immediately be reached for comment late on Wednesday. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony takes place on Saturday, April 14.

- Reuters

Cabaret restored to original glory

LYNN ELBER

It took a stray bit of dirt to scratch the perfection of Cabaret, and painstaking effort to return it to cinematic glory.

The restored Cabaret, minus damage that had prevented a high-definition version, earned the opening spot at the four-day TCM Classic Film Festival. Stars Liza Minnelli and Joel Grey were scheduled to attend Thursday's ceremony marking the musical's 40th anniversary.

Minnelli, whose turn as cabaret singer Sally Bowles captured a best actress Academy Award and cemented her young stardom, said making Cabaret was a joyful "secret," filmed in Munich and far away from meddling Los Angeles studio bosses.

Director Bob Fosse "got away with murder. We all did," Minnelli said in a recent phone call from New York. She's on a concert tour, Confessions, based on her album of the same title.

"We'd take chances, and the studio would send notes like, 'Too cloudy. It will break up on drive-in (screens),'" she recalled. "Fosse would read that out loud, tear it up and throw it over his shoulder - in front of the whole cast and crew."

Set in 1930s Berlin, with German life darkening under the Nazi Party's rise, the film was based on the 1966 Broadway musical adapted from Christopher Isherwood's short novels.

Michael York starred as Sally's boyfriend and Helmut Griem played the wealthy lover shared by both in a then-rare movie depiction of bisexuality. Fosse's distinctive, archly suggestive choreography defined the film's candour and cynicism.

Grey portrayed the grotesquely painted master of ceremonies at the nightclub where Sally performed. Her vulnerability and yearning were on display in the tawdry setting as she belted out Maybe This Time, Life Is a Cabaret and other indelible songs from the John Kander-Fred Ebb score.

Both Grey and Minnelli won Oscars, his for supporting actor. Besides capturing a total of eight trophies, including best director for Fosse, the 1972 film was nominated for best picture.

Thomas S Hischak, professor of theatre at the State University of New York College at Cortland and author of The Oxford Companion to the American Musical, said he routinely shows clips from Cabaret to his students.

"It hasn't dated. It really was exceptional," he said. "The movie Cabaret is totally different from the play, and it's just as good. They took one masterpiece, radically changed it, and came up with a film masterpiece."

Cabaret has been sold on standard-definition DVD from Warner Bros. But it was unavailable in high-def or for digital presentation because of a vertical scratch that ran through 1,000 feet, or 10 minutes, of one of its reels, said Ned Price, vice president of mastering and restoration for Warner Bros.

The damage apparently was caused by a piece of dirt that had rolled through the length of the reel, starting with a scene in which York's character has a confrontation with a pro-Nazi boarding house resident, and cut into the emulsion.

With the damaged images digitally "painted out" using bits from surrounding areas, "the difficult part was matching the grain structure so the fix was invisible," Price said in an email.

Repair attempts using automated digital processing failed, so all 1.4 million frames of the damaged reel were painted by an operator using a computer stylus. The restored version is expected to play on TCM later this year.

For Minnelli, 66, Cabaret holds a certain family irony: It reversed an approach to movie musicals she said was pioneered by her late father, famed director Vincente Minnelli, in a 1944 film starring her mother, Judy Garland. The actress-singer and Vincente Minnelli were married from 1945-51. Garland, 47, died in 1969.

"My father changed everything when he did Meet Me in St. Louis," Minnelli said. "That was the first time a musical had taken the songs outside of the theatre, and people sang at home and on the street."

"Cabaret," she said, "changed it back," with Fosse staging nearly all the musical numbers in the nightclub setting. An exception: Tomorrow Belongs to Me, sung by a handsome, innocent-faced teenage boy, who as the camera pulls back, is chillingly revealed to be garbed in a Nazi uniform.

"Every time I see it, I just keep marvelling at Bob Fosse's work, and his choices," Minnelli said of the film

(Professor Hischak agrees that Cabaret represented a "radical" departure in movie musical staging. But he differs on the contribution of Minnelli's Meet Me in St. Louis: "Granted, in that movie he did get away from doing all the songs in one studio setting," Hischak said. "But I can't say it was revolutionary at the time because movies as early as 1933, such as Flying Down to Rio and 42nd Street, totally destroyed the idea that songs took place on a stage set.")

Her dad had a role in how she approached her character's style, the actress said. When she sought inspiration from the sleekly elegant look of Marlene Dietrich, who was famous in the 1930s (and beyond), Vincente Minnelli protested.

"My father said, 'No, no, no,' and he showed me pictures of (actresses) Louise Brooks and Theda Bara. He said they were marvellous brunettes," she recalled. The result: Sally's heavily lined, thickly lashed eyes, defined lips and a sleek cap of black hair with an impish - devilish? - point extending down her forehead.

Two days before shooting began, she put the look together for Fosse's benefit.

"I knocked on his door and said, 'What do you think?'" Minnelli recalled. He gave a surprised stammer, she said, followed quickly by, "It's good!"

How does Minnelli, one of the few artists to win an Oscar, a Tony (her first was at age 19, for Flora, the Red Menace), an Emmy and a Grammy, feel about being so closely identified with Cabaret?

"Honey, to tell you the truth, anything anybody says is fine," she said, adding a husky, hearty laugh.

- AP

Horror film soundtracks: best and scariest

It's Black Friday - Friday 13th. I stopped Googling songs for Black Friday because Rebecca Black's Friday kept showing up.

I thought of Steely Dan's Black Friday straight away. Then I realised that a better thing to do than building a Black Friday Playlist, my initial plan for today's blog-post, would be to look at horror movie soundtracks.

Friday The 13thWhy? Because as soon as I stopped listening to Steely Dan's (awesome) Black Friday song I thought about the horror film Friday The 13th - and its excellent soundtrack. The main theme, sure. But I really like the end scene/credits music - in fact here's the actual scene.

The iconic scenes in horror movies are framed by vital pieces of musical score, the obvious examples being music from Psycho and music from Jaws. It stays with us - it often becomes ripe for parody, reused for comedic effect in spoof films, recontextualised, sampled for hip-hop tracks. Dr Dre's 2001 uses some great snatches from John Carpenter.

John Carpenter is one of my heroes. His filmmaking gets the big tick, absolutely - if he'd made nothing else but They Live I would consider him a hero. But the real kick I get is hearing Carpenter's soundtrack work. He scores his own films, writing the music, performing it. It started with Halloween. And the music from that film is some of my favourite horror-film music.Freddy Krueger

Another obvious example, something startling, powerful, haunting, is the music from The Omen. A still-frightening film, worryingly frightening in fact. Sinister.

And then there's The Exorcist - famous for its use of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells, specifically this extract.

The first horror-film franchise to win me over was A Nightmare on Elm Street. I was obsessed with Freddy Krueger. Thing is, I was s**t-scarred of the idea of horror-films as a kid. I decided to intentionally overdose on them, to conquer a fear, I guess.

So it was the Elm Street series first - and I love Charles Bernstein's score for the first film. (I was such a fan of the series I even found The Fat Boys' Ready for Freddy? on cassette tape. I had a T-shirt for A Nightmare on Elm Street 5, a giant poster for the fourth film in the series; the third on VHS - I found soundtrack LPs. I was dedicated - until they brought Freddy back from the dead one too many times!)

After Elm Street I was hooked - four films into that series and it was on to Halloween, Friday The 13th, Hellraiser and whatever I could get my hands on. Comedy-horrors were part of the deal too, but I was keen on the real stuff. Gore, ghosts, gruesome stuff. The best horror though, the most frightening, the viscerally charged material, for me, is always the psychological terror - music plays such a huge part in the build, the layering, the suspense.

I keep an ear out, still, for great horror music. It's one of my quirks perhaps; it's a hobby that I almost keep separate from my passion for great film scores. And my interest in music. Obviously it's related - but somehow it sits on its own still, a collection of music that reminds me of the time I spent scaring the living s**t out of myself as a 13-, 14-, 15-year-old. Well it started at 11 and 12 actually. And on it went from there.

Scenes from The Shining still linger, along with the music of course - coupled with my fascination in horror films was a love of the Stephen King books. I just discovered two dozen of his books last weekend at my parents' house. The books were packed into the car to return with us to fill up a gap in the top of the bookshelf, reunited with the handful of his books that I did already have in Wellington. I keep telling myself that I will once again read a Stephen King book. I'm not sure if I actually will - but I admire his work from that time. It was simply more fuel for the fire. A break from watching a horror film, in my world, meant a chance to kick back with a King novel and listen to Bernard Hermann's Cape Fear score on cassette tape or an LP of The Omen soundtrack.

I'm forgetting to mention George Romero's cult-classic Dawn of the Dead - some great music from that film. And so many others.

Two of the best for me: Texas Chainsaw Massacre's opening credits music and Silent Night, Deadly Night's theme (man I loved that film!)Twins

Watch the film without the music and it's not scary. That's often the case - I'm not sure why anyone would want to do that, of course. Well, sometimes, you can listen to the music and not have any fear at all - it's lovely and serene, calm, soothing. For many years my "classical music" as such was all of the film scores I'd been collecting. In many cases it was horror film soundtracks. Remove the context and it survives as its own thing.

But some of the best horror movie music is just downright creepy - curious and disturbing, dark and weird, evil.

I love so much of it, the terrifying and the whimsical.

Who's with me? Who else is a fan of the dark and twisted, the incongruously serene? I'll mention The Director's Cut, an album by Fantomas that features horror-score re-imaginings. Because, well, if I don't mention it somebody will complain that it should have been mentioned. I like the album - definitely. But it's a bit like listening to Jacques Loussier playing his version of Bach. Cute, and not entirely without merit but after a while - or perhaps quite swiftly - you just want something that is that much closer to the real thing.

So, for this Black Friday let's start a list of the great horror-film music and the great horror-film moments that could not have worked without the music. The shark in Jaws didn't even work, so the music helped cover that up. A classic example. The subverted nursery rhyme from the Freddy Krueger/Nightmare films. And so many moments of apocalypse, of all-out carnage, or the creeping loom of suggested terror. Scored by a shriek of violin or a thrum of guitar, the twinkle of the piano, synthesisers serving up some form of nausea-inducing discomfort; wonderful stuff. Lovely, lovely. I love it.

So what horror film soundtracks do you love? What are your favourites? Do you have favourite composers, favourite film scenes that work because of the music? Or were you a film fan who bought the soundtracks as part of the ephemera relating to the experience of being wrapped up in the movie? There's a guy in the documentary Cinemania who has hundreds of movie scores on vinyl; the only records he collects. He doesn't even own a turntable. He's never played any of them.

I also think that horror films went downhill when the soundtracks were phoned-in after, not a carefully considered part of the film. To me the soundtrack of a horror-film is often one of the stars; in that sense it's a bit different from how other film soundtracks work, in support, sometimes barely noticed.The Omen

I'm off to plan my Black Friday mini horror-film festival. Thanks for allowing me to ramble on about this. Now it's your turn. Are you a horror-film soundtrack junkie too?

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Thursday, April 12, 2012

She's got movie stars in her backyard

GWYNETH HYNDMAN
Barbara Thompson
GWYNETH HYNDMAN/Fairfax NZ

RUSTIC SCENE: Barbara Thompson's house.

Trading in a three-bedroom house for a six-metre hired trailer has been worth it, says Otautau woman Barbara Thompson, if only to see her favourite Outrageous Fortune actor saunter through her backyard every morning.

Ms Thompson was approached in November by a film scout to have her 1920s house used as part of the set for the film, Weight of Elephants and, since February, she has been living in a trailer on her 1.6-hectare (4-acre) property, close to her 16 sheep, four horses, six cats and a dog but far enough from the house to give Southland-born writer-director Daniel Joseph Borgman and the 30-plus crew their space.

Borgman's script about the disappearance of three children from a small town was selected for development by Cinefondation in Paris, supported by the Cannes Film Festival. It is the first co-venture between the New Zealand Film Commission and the Danish Film Institute. About $50,000 in funding from Southland is going into the filming.

Almost 800 pupils from Invercargill primary schools had auditioned for the core cast of about 20 since August, with eight selected to play supporting roles. Filming began in the first week of last month.

Weight of Elephants is based on Australian novel Of A Boy by Sonya Hartnett. It stars child actors Demos Murphy and Angelina Cottrell and award-winning actors Matthew Sunderland and Catherine Wilkin.

Hori Ahipene, of Outrageous Fortune, was acting coach for the young actors.

As the crew was wrapping up after filming for 10 weeks in her house, Ms Thompson said she was looking forward to moving back in, but expected it to feel a bit quiet. "It's been so exciting; very special. Especially to see Hori [Ahipene].

"I couldn't stop smiling the first time I saw him come through," she said. "He's very laid-back, very easy-going. I would always give him a bit of cheek when I'd see him."

Ms Thompson said she couldn't say how much she was being paid to let the house to the crew, but it was "worth her while".

"They've been like family while they've been here – they've walked into my life quite regularly. I'm actually going to miss them when they go."

She said Borgman told her that the house had the right feel and atmosphere that they were looking for.

"He loved the window in the bedroom. I was going to replace it – it was pretty shot, all worn out. But I wasn't allowed to touch it.

"She's an old house, but I love it. She's just rustic."

Ms Thompson hoped the film would give good publicity for Otautau.

"This has been a whole new experience – nobody knows about us down here; they don't know we exist.

"This has been wonderful for the township. I hope this film goes far," Ms Thompson said.

Filming wraps up on April 22.

Weight of Elephants will be distributed in New Zealand by Transmission Films.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Adele is richest U-30 UK singer

Adele has been given the prestigious title of the wealthiest singer in the UK under the age of 30.

The 23-year-old superstar has amassed a £20 million (NZ$39 million) fortune and seen an increase of £14 million (NZ$27 million) in the past 12 months alone.

The Sunday Times Rich List highlights the fact that the London-born performer's record-breaking album 21 has propelled her fortune at such a tender age.

Girls Aloud star Cheryl Cole, X Factor winner Leona Lewis and Katie Melua came in joint second place with £12 million. Joss Stone came in fifth place with her £10 million earnings.

Meanwhile, Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe, 22, has been named the richest young British actor. He has raked in £54 million in total which is up £6 million from a year ago.

Twilight star Robert Pattinson is now sitting on a £40 million empire while Keira Knightley came in third place with £30 million. Charlie Chaplin's granddaughter Kiera Chaplin came in fourth with £28 million while Emma Watson rounded out the top five with £26 million.

Full details will be published this Sunday in the annual list.
 
The Sunday Times Rich List - Wealthiest Musicians Under 30
 
1. Adele - £20m (£6m- 2011)
2. Cheryl Cole (Girls Aloud) - £12m (£12m- 2011)
3. Leona Lewis - £12m (£12m- 2011)
4. Katie Melua - £12m (£12m- 2011)
5. Joss Stone - £10m (£9m- 2011)
7. Charlotte Church - £8m (£8m- 2011)
8. Craig David - £8m (£8m- 2011)
9. Paolo Nutini - £8m (£7m- 2011)
10. Florence Welch- £7m (£5m- 2011)
11. Lily Allen - £6m (£6m- 2011)
12. Natasha Bedingfield - £6m (£6m- 2011)
13. Duffy - £6m (£6m- 2011)
14. James Morrison - £6m (£5m- 2011)
 
The Sunday Times Rich List - Wealthiest Actors Under 30
 
1. Daniel Radcliffe - £54m (£48m - 2011)
2. Robert Pattinson - £40m (£32m - 2011)
3. Keira Knightley - £30m (£30m - 2011)
4. Kiera Chaplin - £28m (£28m - 2011)
5. Emma Watson - £26m (£24m - 2011)
6. Rupert Grint - £24m (£24m - 2011)
7. Lily Cole - £8m (£5m - 2011)
8. Sarah Harding - £6m (£5m - 2011)
9. Rosie Huntington-Whiteley - £5m (New)
10. Kimberley Walsh - £5m (£5m - 2011)

- Cover Media

Graphing out our favourite shows

A few years ago, my friend Paul and I came up with an idea we called The Trilogy Club: basically, we would sit down on a Saturday night and work our way through a classic movie trilogy - Star Wars*, Indiana Jones**, Back to the Future, The Matrix, and so on. It would be a fun way to spend an occasional Saturday night indoors, an excuse to hang out, and a chance to look back on a few old favourites.

Okay, so we didn't end up getting around to actually watching any of the trilogies (yet), but we did spend a considerable amount of time discussing various film trilogies and speculating how the rise and fall in the quality of each film in the trilogy would look if we were graph it, giving us a look at the overall trends.

Okay, so we didn't end up getting around to actually graphing any of the trilogies (yet), but I found myself thinking about those graphs earlier this week and wondering if I could somehow use them to look at specific shows, graphing how good each season of a particular show is and seeing if we could figure out what to expect from upcoming seasons.

Here are a few shows I've graphed out to start with:

True Blood
I've measured the quality of vampire show True Blood on a scale of cool from Vampires to Ninjas; True Blood is an example of a show which has steadily declined over the course of its run. As you can see below, the graph shows that we have no reason to believe it might improve when it returns later this year - although Tara is dead, so there's at least one reason to be hopeful.

20120413-1

Breaking Bad
Breaking Bad is one of two current shows (along with Parks & Recreation) that have improved steadily since Season 1. Remember way back when Walter White first received his diagnosis, then that troubling second season when he let Jesse's girlfriend choke on her own vomit and inadvertently caused a plane crash ... c'mon, you know as well as I do that the show is better than it ever was back then. By the way, Season 3 of Breaking Bad started airing on Four last night (10.30pm). Hey, better late than never.

20120413-2

Mad Men
The fifth season of Mad Men starts tomorrow night on SoHo (with a double-episode at 8.30pm). What can we expect from the team at Stirling Cooper Draper Pryce? Well, either the show's best days are behind it (precipitating that drop after Season 3), or Season 4 was an aberration - having seen the brilliant first two episodes of the upcoming fifth season, I can tell you that it's probably the latter. Look for that upward trend across Seasons 1, 2 and 3 to continue.

20120413-3

Lost
I couldn't resist - and as you can see from the graph, only God knows how a seventh season might have turned out.

20120413-4

Of course, the graphs can't predict everything; changes in writing staff or in the cast can mean an improvement from year to year, for example. But I think this could be a fun way to look at how a show has been performing, and try to figure out how it might perform in future.

So, if you graphed your favourite shows, how would the graphs look? Steady improvements, or quick declines, from season to season? Or maybe a spiky graph that jumps all over the place? Suggest a few graphs for your favourite shows below, by rating each season out of 10 - I might even try to make a few of them over the weekend and post them at the On the Box Facebook page ...

(*) Original trilogy only, thank you very much.

(**) Technically a quadrilogy, I suppose, but only if you actually admit the fourth Indy movie ever happened.

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This is a spoiler-free blog - please comment responsibly.

William Boyd to pen new Bond novel

Suave and brutal British superspy James Bond will find himself in the thick of danger at the end of the swinging '60s in a new, official novel by author William Boyd due out next year.

Boyd is the third writer in recent years to be invited by the Fleming estate to write an official Bond novel. US thriller writer Jeffery Deaver wrote Carte Blanche in 2011, and Sebastian Faulks' Devil May Care was published to mark Fleming's 100th birthday in 2008.

The author of Restless, A Good Man in Africa, An Ice-Cream War and movie and TV screenplays said the Cold War espionage genre runs through a lot of his writing. He has worked with three of the actors who have played Bond and has been close to the story since he was a boy.

"I never met Fleming, but I knew somebody who knew him very well and I've written about Fleming quite a lot and I actually put him in one of my novels," Boyd said.

"There's been a kind of Bond/Fleming motif in my life for a long time, so it's rather spooky and serendipitous."

While Boyd has sworn to keep the details and title of the next 007 adventure secret, he said the book will mark a return to the classic Bond character in his mid-40s who is navigating the end of the swinging '60s. He declined to be drawn into conversation on any of the countries Bond might travel to.

Boyd - whose latest novel Waiting for Sunrise came out in February - said his previous espionage-themed books and time spent in late 1960s London during his youth made him comfortable with the subject matter.

"I've written two novels that deal with espionage and quite a few of my novels have elements of plot that are to do with duplicity and covert operations," Boyd said.

The challenge for Boyd is to try and put his own stamp on a global franchise that has seen Bond leap off the pages into a film series that celebrates a high-tech contemporary character -- currently played by Daniel Craig -- and the official literary figure who remains closer to Fleming's original template.

"Inevitably, there will be a kind of Boydian element in the new novel," he said.

The book, which is yet to be titled, will be published in the U.K. in late 2013 by Jonathan Cape - Fleming's original publisher and an imprint of Vintage Publishing - and by HarperCollins in North America.

With the original James Bond movie Dr. No celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, and the release in October of new Bond film Skyfall, there will be plenty of buzz to build on ahead of the novel's release.

The Bond catalogue is one of the most prized in publishing, with global sales totalling more than 100 million copies.

Ian Fleming's estate said earlier this year it had signed a 10-year deal with the Random House Group to publish the James Bond back list both in print and e-book format.

Boyd said the negotiations with the Fleming estate took a bit longer to finalise than his decision to take up the challenge when he was first asked to be the next Bond author.

"I should be so lucky was my instant response."

- © Fairfax NZ News

Dictaphone Blues get helping hand

BRIDGET JONES

If albums were named after what went into them, then Dictaphone Blues might have christened their new baby Freezing Mates and Deadline Bookends.  

Luckily for their record company they chose the slightly catchier Beneath the Crystal Palace, but there is no denying what went into the Auckland band's second album.

Three years have passed since the one-time Mainlanders, now bona fide gems of the Auckland music scene - singer/guitarist Edward Castelow, bass player Rob Collins and Myles Allpress on drums - released the quirky delight On The Down And Out.

Since then they have gone from a team of four to a merry band of three, toured Australia and supported Okkervil River and the Broken Social Scene.

A lot was achieved, but a lot of time passed as well. Until now, that is.

Beneath the Crystal Palace was recorded in the depths of last winter, in what has been dubbed The Mt Eden Gentlemen's Club. It had character, but it wasn't all fun and games.  Allpress got familiar with the joy of fingerless gloves and Collins was in charge of making sure that every day the heater was turned on hours before any microphone was switched on.

But the whole time, the band knew the end of a very chilly few months wasn't far away. The owner of the recording space, music tour-de-force Ryan McPhunn was only out of the picture for three months, meaning the trio could work as much or as little as they wanted, just as long as the album was done in time.

"We had to be out by September.  We knew when we had to be finished," says Castelow.

"If he didn't want to go home and he didn't mind staying longer, then we could just sit there until we were sick of each other.  And that was the difference, that's what feels great when you are not beholden to someone else's time, money or cost," says Collins.

And what was created is the sound of a psychedelic pop dreamscape.  There are tambourines, snarling guitars and musicians switching instruments.  This is a band loved for their live shows - full of tongue-in-cheek swagger and infectious enthusiasm and don't think pop is a dirty word.  And this is an album that attempts to capture that.

But, like the oh-so appropriately named song on the album, friends need friends. Luckily these lads had no problem getting a helping hand when it was called for.  

Whether it was James "Lawrence Arabia" Milne, Ryan McPhunn or The Checks' Jacob Moore adding some "finishing flourishes",  the Unfaithful Ways being "milked for their vocals" over a drink one fateful evening or Jonathan Brunette and Princess Chelsea bantering over a microphone, Collins says the right people were there when they needed them.

"It was quite organic, and that's what I was really excited about...When you kind of have no budget and you can't approach people, to have people approach you, it just blows your mind."

"We're just really lucky to have a supportive group of people working around us...We were like puppies in a park," jokes Castelow.

Beneath the Crystal Palace is out now.

Dictaphone Blues New Zealand tour:
Cabana Bar, Napier - April 13
Space Monster, Whanganui - April 14
Mighty Mighty, Wellington - April 20
St Peter's Hall, Paekakariki - April 21
Static, Hamilton - April 27
The Kings Arms, Auckland - April 28

- © Fairfax NZ News

Justin Townes Earle finds soul

JULE SCHERER

Some artists seem to need alcohol and drugs to excel creatively and struggle to deliver once they sober up.

Not so Justin Townes Earle, son of singer, songwriter, activist, producer, playwright, actor and novelist Steve Earle, a drug addict in his young teens who spent most of his adult life struggling with addictions that landed him in a lot of trouble.

Although the younger Earle says he was not particularly close to his troubadour father, growing up in Memphis and Nashville he must have soaked up country and soul music from an early age.

Only in the last couple of years has the younger Earle finally gotten a grip on his addictions and cleaned up his act.

The singer-songwriter now divides his time between Nashville and New York.

''My angst and my want is very much New York but my actual movement and my thought process I just don't move that fast. But after living in New York, I move a little bit faster  but not that much.''

Last month he released his fourth and arguably best full-length studio album, Nothing's Gonna Change the Way You Feel About Me Now.

While its predecessor Harlem River Blues (including the song of the same title that won him an Americana Music Award for best song last year) was a twangy country number, the new offering adds some soul to the equation.

''It's a record I wanted to make for a long time. Instead of it being based in country music, I based this record on the roots of soul music.

''While making Harlem River Blues I started to experiment ... with horns and things like that and this new album is much in the same vein; it is a little bit dark, and much more an emotional record than my past records.''

In the lyrics he opens up about the blessing and curse of having a famous father, his martyred mother, his own struggle with addictions and fractured romances.

The title track and first single is like the final chapter of a loveless affair, where he tells the girl that he never loved her and that it is time to move on.

''It's definitely a song that is going to piss at least one person off, but sometimes, unfortunately, if you're involved with an artist, you know what artists do, they hang their laundry out to dry, and that's what happens here,'' he explains.

So while it's a bit of a mean and bitter song, it is presented in a laidback way with a cheerful horn section and Earle's slightly raspy voice.

The album was recorded live in a studio in North Carolina, yet the music is infused with the spirit of Memphis, taking in soul, country and even a bit of rockabilly.

It was Earle's first live recorded album and was done in less than a week.

''It was really an awesome experience, because you record a track and then it is done,'' he says.

Having left his troubles behind (''there's nothing rock'n'roll about dying in your 30s'' he reflects now), he says he didn't feel the need to change anything when reaching the milestone of turning 30 earlier this year.

''I was going to keep doing what I was doing. It worked out pretty well for me so I don't see any reason to change.

''I arrived at a calmer point in life and I don't feel as much need for drama these days.

''I just barely managed to accomplish the things in life, all I want to do is making a living from my music and I pulled that off and I won't ask for anything else,'' he says.

Having an Americana Music Award under your belt would, one may think,  widen the scope of a musician's freedom, but he says his label, Bloodshod Records, never bothered him anyway.

''I always had freedom to do what I want and I think that I have surrounded myself with the right players and the right people.

''For the most part, I do what I want  this is not a democracy, it's a dictatorship and I am the sole, supreme dictator,'' he laughs.

The lanky young man with the big glasses is not only a gifted musician but has made himself a name as a snappy dresser. It's not unusual to see him sporting hats, scarves, bowties and vests.

He's no stranger to fashion shoots and a couple of weeks ago he was modelling designer suits for an Italian fashion magazine.

And he's happy to reveals his style secrets.

''I have two designers I wear predominantly. One is here in Nashville called Imogene + Willie, and I also dress in Billy Reid who is from Alabama. These are both very dear friends of mine and we get together and make a lot of my clothes,'' he says.

He is about to embark on his fourth tour of New Zealand, and he says he has grown fond of the county. His last album even had a song called Christchurch Woman.

''I started coming to New Zealand because I was touring Australia and it seemed like a no-brainer kind of thing to do and the crowds were really great from the start.  I enjoyed my time there very much and I have a fascination with this part of the world.

''I am looking forward to relaxing and playing some good shows for good people.''

- © Fairfax NZ News

Game of Thrones gets a third season

Like winter, many fans expected this was coming.

Following a stellar season two premiere of 8.3 million viewers in the US, HBO has renewed Game of Thrones for a third season.

"Series creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss raised our expectations for the second season - and then surpassed them," said HBO programming president Michael Lombardo in a press release.

"We are thrilled by all the viewer and media support we've received for the series, and can't wait to see what Dan and David have in store for next season."

The series is based on the best-selling fantasy book series A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin and is set in the world of Westeros where summers and winters can last decades. It's a savage place full of incest, murders and much plotting between the clans.

The third book A Storm of Swords is one of the longest books in the series and many believe that in order to fit all the events into the television series it would need to be spread out over more than one season. Benioff and Weiss have spoken openly about the idea of playing it out over the course of two 10-episode season.

The series was a breakout hit after its first season, earning an Emmy and a Golden Globe for its star Peter Dinklage, who plays Tyrion Lannister. It also stars Lena Headey, Kit Harington, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Michelle Fairley and Emilia Clarke.

Game of Thrones, Season 2, starts Monday 8.30pm on SoHo.

- © Fairfax NZ News

Stars shine at Avengers premiere

The Avengers stars assembled today on the red carpet for the film's Hollywood premiere.

The cast of the film directed by Joss Whedon includes Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Jeremy Renner, Cobie Smulders and Tom Hiddleston.

The Avengers, which hits theatres in New Zealand on April 26 - one week ahead of the US release - unites Marvel's disparate superheroes Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Hulk, Hawkeye, Black Widow and Nick Fury against Thor villain Loki and what appears from the teaser trailer to be an army of airborne alien invaders.

Will the alpha-male (and -female) heroes of S.H.I.E.L.D. be able pull together, fend off their attackers and save the planet....

Watch the trailer:

- © Fairfax NZ News

Timberlake regrets 'N Sync style

Justin Timberlake regrets everything he wore when he was in 'N Sync.

The singer was in the US boy band for seven years, until he decided to embark on a solo career in 2002.

Timberlake sported a range of questionable looks during his time in the group, including all-denim outfits.

He now admits he may have made more than one fashion faux pas.

"I really regret all of my outfits from the times with 'N Sync," he told the German edition of InStyle. "All those muscle shirts, satin jackets, velvet coats, jeans with vests and bandannas."

Timberlake also cringes about the hairstyles he had during his time in the band.

The 31-year-old experimented with several looks including bleached curls and cornrows.

"And then these brightly dyed blond curls. That was so embarrassing. I don't even want to think about that horrible look anymore," Timberlake laughed.

What's your biggest fashion regret? Comment below or send us your pictures.

- Cover Media


Crowd-sourcing site to fund arts projects

TOM HUNT

Arts projects struggling to get funding are turning to crowd sourcing in a bid to get their projects up and running.

The Arts Foundation is launching a new crowd-sourcing website to help artists source donations, which the donors are then able to use for tax kickbacks.

Crowd sourcing – generating private funding online – has already proven successful for Wellington film-maker Taika Waititi, who managed to distribute his breakout feature film Boy in the United States using it.

In the US, crowd-sourcing site kickstarter.com is expected to raise US$150 million ($184m) this year for arts projects – US$6m ($7.3m) more than federal government arts grants.

The Arts Foundation will today announce Boosted.org.nz, which will allow arts projects to be crowd sourced, with donations able to be deducted against tax.

"We expect to create literally thousands of philanthropists for the arts, albeit mostly at modest levels," Arts Foundation executive director Simon Bowden said.

"In the world of crowd funding every dollar counts. We believe that many donors who initially give small amounts to projects on Boosted will be able to give more in the future."

While he did not expect Boosted to surpass the $35.7m funding handed out by Creative NZ last year, he hoped annual donations would reach $3m early on.

Donations would be made to the Arts Foundation, a charitable trust, making them tax deductable.

Like Waititi, Wellington writer and film-maker Duncan Sarkies has launched an online crowd-sourcing project.

He launched a drive this week to raise $6980 to create a podcast, Uncle Bertie's Botanarium Episode I: Cheese Dreams in the Gravy Isles.

The project – co-created with illustrator Stephen Templer and musician Lawrence Arabia, with Jemaine Clement, Nigel Collins and Nic McGowan collaborating – is set in an alternative world with an aristocratic botanist in search of an elusive plant.

In less than 24 hours yesterday he had received pledges of $355, in amounts as little as $5.

For their money people can get back a range of things, from a $5-plus podcast to a $1500-plus dinner party with entertainment provided by the creators.

While Sarkies did not see the new Arts Foundation website or Pledgeme.co.nz, on which he launched his fundraising drive, replacing Creative NZ, he said they were an invaluable new tool.

"It's just a way to do it for all the people that fall outside the cracks of Creative NZ. I feel it empowers everybody in a way."

It would allow more "weird and wacky" projects to be made.

In the case of the Uncle Bertie's project it was hoped the podcast – for sale to donors now and once it was made – would set up a financial base so future projects would need neither crowd sourcing or government funding.

An illustrated book and movie is planned.

PRIVATE PLEDGES LAUNCH BOY IN US

Boy may have taken New Zealand by storm but it could not have hit the United States were it not for hundreds of private pledges.

Taika Waititi's film made close to $10 million at the New Zealand box office, making it the highest grossing New Zealand-themed movie.

For its US launch this year, Waititi raised the US$100,000 ($122,000) needed for distribution with the help of 1826 individual backers on kickstarter.com, 335 of whom contributed $100 or more.

"We couldn't have launched Boy in the US without the support of the many people that responded to our crowd funding campaign," Waititi said.

"It's a great way to raise funds for creative projects. The arts need all the support they can get, so it's great news that the Arts Foundation is building a purpose-built crowd funding site for New Zealand."

- © Fairfax NZ News