stars, sex and nudity buzz : 09/07/2012

* how did I miss this one? Hayley Atwell - half-English rose all-American babe - is reportedly nude in Sweeney. A word of caution. She is known to employ body double. The muted reaction by critics and readers comments suggest it's a very brief topless scene. Hopefully I'm wrong about that.
Hayley character is described by one foreign critic as completely uninhibited sexually. 

The affair is secret and passionate according to screendaily.com

There is a certain age difference between Winstone and Atwell, but she looks at him with such convincing affection that the film gets away with the romance sub-plot. Even the sex scenes are funny and oddly tender rather than embarrassing. 

Dailyrecord.co.uk was scathing about the love scene : "And a sex scene between him – with his great, flopping belly – and a much younger woman is more amusing than alluring."

Ian Loring praised Hayley's bravery : "Hayley Atwell... I hope she got paid a lot for some of the stuff she has to do here but fair play, she makes a fucking baffling love interest plot somewhat work."

Ross MacLean : "Hayley Atwell is pleasingly given a role that lets her be just as hard as the men but, unfortunately, that’s balanced out by also making her inexplicably fall into bed (or, rather, a toilet cubicle) with Winstone at every opportunity."

Hayley talks about the love scene : http://www.entertainmentwise.com/news/86882/VIDEO-Hayley-Atwell-In-The-Sweeney-Ray-Winstones-Not-As-Brutal-As-He-Looks-In-Bed


Sex symbols don’t normally wear baggy, black underpants and offer the hint of a paunch — but then, Ray Winstone is not like other sex symbols.

Both his pants and protruding stomach make regular appearances in the new, £4 million movie version of classic TV cop show The Sweeney.

Yet Ray’s tough guy character Jack Regan also enjoys intimate scenes with alluring detective Nancy Lewis, played by 30-year-old Captain America star Hayley Atwell.

Hayley describes 55-year-old Ray as an ‘attractive, charismatic, alpha male’, and the makers of the movie clearly think he has the Sex-Factor too: why else would they pair him with an extremely captivating woman young enough to be his daughter?!

‘If people think I’m a sex symbol, then fine,’ says Ray, who is reprising the role first played by John Thaw in ITV’s original version of The Sweeney, almost 40 years ago. ‘In fact it’s more than that — it’s fantastic!

‘I’m a fat 55-year-old, so how do you expect me to feel at being cast as a bloke who has a girlfriend 25 years his junior? Importantly, though, I think it is plausible.

'It illustrates — quite rightly, in my opinion — that women don’t just go for young slim guys with six-packs.

‘I’m old fashioned enough to believe that what women find attractive is being treated well, and Jack Regan does treat the woman in his life well and looks after her.
Attraction: Hayley Atwell plays Ray Winstone's character's love interest in The Sweeney
Attraction: Hayley Atwell plays Ray Winstone's character's love interest in The Sweeney
‘You have to be a bit of a rogue, as well, I think, but you have to be a gentleman and a protector.

'That’s maybe what turns women on, although, of course, you’d need to ask a woman for some kind of confirmation of that.’

Ray says he had a few qualms about playing a man enjoying a passionate affair with a woman a quarter of a century his junior.

‘Originally I thought it might be better if Regan had a girlfriend who was in her 40s,’ he says.

‘I’ve got daughters of 30 and 26 and there was slight discomfort at the thought of kissing someone of their age. But Hayley was fine about it — she saw no problem with the idea of our characters having a relationship, so we went with it.’

Once those love scenes were definitely going to be a part of the movie, Ray made sure he was as trim as he could be for them.  

He may be, by his own admission, a little on the chunky side, but managed to drop more than a stone and a half, from 15½st down to 14st, through an exercise regime that comprised three-mile daily walks on the treadmill at his palatial Essex home, a ban on food after 6pm, periods of fasting that lasted for two days at a time and pretty much a total ban on alcohol.

‘Although I did occasionally lapse from that last one,’ grins Ray, a little sheepishly. ‘I did enjoy the odd — very large — alcoholic drink.’

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* the reviews are coming in for Rachel McAdams' Passion and so far they are discouraging.

Review: The devil wears La Perla in De Palma's disappointing 'Passion'
Art-trash master's return to the thriller form plays as sedated self-parody By Guy Lodge


* as I suspected De Palma chickens out and acquiesced to Rachel's demand for lame nude-less scenes (and likely use of body double) for her. A 'woman' film is how most critics are describing it.

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A special Toronto International Film Festival - TIFF.net edition. Guide to all the movies playing at the festival:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/sites/default/files/custom/Toronto_day1.pdf

* Sweet Jesus....Is that Agam Darshi topless (her first nudity on-screen?) in Crimes of Mike Recket?



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Fifty Shades of Grey Artwork

If you haven’t heard of it,  Fifty Shades of Grey is a new best-seller that makes your naughty romance novel look like Sesame Street.  The erotic novel served as inspiration for this collection of artwork,  depicting the detailed accounts of bondage, role play and fetish desires.  Scroll through the gallery below to see the 50 Shades of Grey collection, curated by Saatchi Online.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Kristen Stewart in On the Road : Is She the Only Celebrity Making Real Art?
In her next movie, Kristen Stewart goes to bed with two men at the same time, gives both of them simultaneous hand jobs in the front seat of a car and performs oral sex on one of them while he's driving said car. She also appears topless twice, once just minutes into the movie, and spends much of the rest of her time doing drugs and robbing people.

But wait. Before you scroll down to the comments to register your disgust at Stewart's latest attempt to lead the nation's youth into a ditch of vice and vulgarity, try to imagine any of her fellow Millennial über-celebrities giving a performance as brave, or as powerful, as the one Stewart delivers in "On the Road," a new adaptation of Jack Kerouac's famous novel, directed by Walter Salles ("The Motorcycle Diaries").

For Taylor Swift, edgy is writing a breakup song and encouraging her fans to figure out who she's talking about. For Miley Cyrus, it's letting her side boob hang out. For Kim Kardashian, it's dating Kanye West and daring the world to decide if the whole thing is one giant put-on.

Is Kristen Stewart the only major celebrity of her generation who also happens to be a true artist?

It's certainly telling that she chose to make her big post-scandal comeback at last night's North American premiere of "On the Road," which took place at the Toronto International Film Festival. It was her first outing since photos of her fooling around with director Rupert Sanders blew her fairytale romance with Robert Pattinson to bits. And while it's possible Stewart was contractually obliged to support the film, the decision to spend an hour communing with her fans and answering questions from the press had to be hers. Again and again, she told reporters that she would be just as happy to be there promoting "Twilight," but I wonder. I suspect it's important to her to remind the world that she's more than just a twinkling star in the celebrity-weekly firmament. She's a real actress.

Like her contemporary Shia LaBeouf, Stewart gets a lot of flak from people who can't stand her zillion-dollar franchise. I won't claim to be a "Twilight" fan, but I'm consistently impressed by Stewart's work in what you might call more "serious" films, and "On the Road" is no exception.

This is definitely an "On the Road" for our times, directed by a Brazilian Boomer for a global audience of Millennials. The film doesn't shy away from the destruction that Kerouac's speed-demon hero, Dean Moriarty (Garrett Hedlund), wreaked on those around him, and, as a result, the women register with far more impact than they do in the book. Kirsten Dunst plays Dean's second wife, Camille, as an arrogant princess whose dreams fall victim to her man's wanderlust, but it's Stewart who steals a sizeable portion of the film. Not in a showy way -- it's remarkable how much time this massive global superstar spends in the back seat, literally and figuratively. But hers is a bold, brave, indelible performance. When we first see her, she's topless on a bed, shaking off her sexual afterglow so she can roll a few joints for Dean's friends. "You're the only girl I've ever known who can roll tea like this," Sam Riley's Sam Paradise tells her, as smitten as the audience would be if their inner tabloid editors weren't reminding them that they're supposed to be mad at her for breaking RPattz's heart.

The toplessness itself is an extremely courageous choice for someone as famous as Stewart. There is no question that screen shots of those scenes will proliferate all across the Internet, in contexts that would make even Marylou blush. But Stewart has proven that she's the kind of actress who puts her commitment to the role above concerns like that. To some people, her self-seriousness comes off as pretentious, but I see it as her way of protecting herself from the madness that surrounds her.

Marylou's sexually competitive side makes her a great fit for Dean, but she doesn't capture his imagination the way Camille does, and Stewart does her best acting during the group's long trip from New Orleans to San Francisco. As they depart, Dean, who has more or less replaced sleep with Benzedrine, promises to spend half his time with Marylou even though he's returning to Camille, who has fathered his child, but Marylou knows that's not going to work. As the car barrels toward the coast, we watch the clouds slowly fill Stewart's face. This is acting of the highest order, and it's all the more impressive that it's being done by one of America's most notorious celebrities.

You know you're dealing with a real movie star when her off-screen travails enhance her performance, rather than detracting from it, and that's what happens here. Stewart's Marylou is pure Id: she steals what she needs and she screws who she wants, when she wants. And Stewart -- who, lest we forget, is only 22 -- is so convincing in the role that I can't help feeling glad that she now has the chance to stop playing house with Robert Pattinson and truly explore the world.

To my knowledge, Stewart did not address the scandal or her personal life on the red carpet last night. She kept the focus on the film -- and the real people whose stories inspired Kerouac -- and shrewdly did all her interviews in tandem with Garrett Hedlund. That protected her a bit by making it feel extra-inappropriate to shout out Robsten questions (not that she had much to fear from the polite Canadians bunched up against the rope line), but it also represented an admirable level of collegiality. Hedlund, after all, plays the lead in the film, not Stewart, and it was generous and right of her to share her spotlight with him.

Judging from the hundreds of fans and dozens of media outlets who crowded around her last night, Stewart has plenty of support to get her through what has been a tough time. She doesn't need any help from me. But I'm going to keep rooting for her anyway, if only because it would be a shame if we ceded our celebrity arena to shameless fame balls and reality-TV oversharers. I still remember when the biggest celebrities were people like Liz Taylor and Mick Jagger and Jack Nicholson. People who did great work and lived fascinating lives.

If we want interesting people to share their lives with us, we can't rip them to shreds every time they make a mistake -- or a courageous choice. And we should try to recognize real talent when it arises in our midst -- even when it comes attached to a corny franchise.

Kristen Stewart Gets Naked, Does Drugs in On the RoadSpoiler warning: You should stop reading now if you don't want to know too many of the movie's details.
Stewart first appears in the film on a bed topless. Then you see her rolling and smoking joints with Hedlund and Sam Riley, who plays the Kerouac-like Sal Paradise.

The sex scenes are numerous. In one, Stewart is sandwiched between Hedlund and Riley. Another has her banging a wall while moaning and groaning.

And then there's the much-talked-about bit where she appears to be sitting naked in the front seat of car and using her hands to pleasure Hedlund and Riley at the same time.

To be fair, Stewart is not the only one who is pushing the envelope in the movie. Hedlund also appears naked (the first shot of him is of his bare bum) and having sex and doing drugs—a lot. He shares a passionate kiss with Tom Sturridge, who plays Carlo Marx (aka poet Allen Ginsberg), and even has a sex scene with—get ready for it!—Boardwalk Empire star Steve Buscemi.

Even so, the sex, drugs and naughtiness are not gratuitous. Like Kerouac's semi-autobiographical novel, On the Road captures both the genius and the recklessness of the Beat Generation.

In other words, this film may not be suitable for Twi-hards of all ages.


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Looper
Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Bruce Willis star in 'the smartest movie of the year and the best action movie of the year.'

Katharine Isabelle And My Completely Normal and In No Way Unhealthy Interest
Posted by Spooky Sean
Very excited to see her in American Mary.
Ever since I saw her on that one X-Files episode, Schizogeny, from the fifth season, I’ve had a… strong interest in seeing her in other roles. The episode was about…fuck, it was like a tree that ate people or something, I don’t really remember.
So, very technically, yes, I’ve had my eye on her since I was a teen.
Oh Jesus, that sounds horrible.
No, I haven’t been in the bushes or anything creepy like that. It’s more like,
“Oh, cool, that chick from The X-Files is in Ginger Snaps.”
And then…
“Sweet, that actress from The X-Files and Ginger Snaps is in Freddy Vs. Jason. And, also, she was in Bones.”
And now…
“Word, Katharine Isabelle, who I now actually learned the name of from IMDB, is going to be in a Soska sis film.”
See, I didn’t even know her name until Ginger Snaps, and even then I’m so bad with names, I forgot it a few times! Nope, I in no way have had a pseudo-crush on an actress who I’ve never met, and will probably never meet, since I was 14.
Not at all.
Here are a few screenshots from that X-Files episode. But, that’s just to show you what she looked like in it. I in no way already had them on my hard drive.

Well, I may have.

Okay, look, I wanted to rewatch the episode, to gear up for seeing her growth as an actress from then to now, from The X-Files, to American Mary. So, I saved some screenshots. It’s not weird; I’m a horror blogger, it was for a post, and just happened to have it, and some from Ginger Snaps, and Freddy Vs. Jason. That’s normal. It is normal for someone who writes about actors performances to have screenshots of them.…


And, I would in no way piss myself, and faint, and or collapse and mumble incoherently if I met her. I am a professional, damn it!

(Okay, so I probably would.)
So, in closing, I’m probably going to have to send the Soska sisters a huge thank you card, for giving such an awesome role to such a phenomenal, and earth-shatteringly beautiful actress who I may, or may not have developed a completely normal…interest in.
This was a joke post. Don’t worry everyone, I just like to play up the creeper thing. I’m not really obsessed.
Except with Gillian Anderson.


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29-years old actress Ari Graynor : see-thru Eidé Magazine [Fall issue] 2012
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imagebam.com30-years old (?) and 178 cm Swedish model Jerica Lamens. Had lots of potential but the Scandinavian gene from her father side took over and she became a bit more....curvier. Perfect for nudes though.

for Terry Richardson :
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photo shoot by Carlos Nunez :
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Terry Richardson nudity luck with models keeps getting better and better...........all taken in month of June 2012 for a mag shoot . The agencies continues to send new talents to him. Mostly to familiarize the models with blatant nudity without the usual glitzy shots. The pol-photos are taken after the pro-session.

[1] 22-years old New Zealand-East Indian model Ashika Pratt at his studio.
She was in New York with fellow Kiwi Stella Maxwell (pose nude for Terry) and gorgeous Emily Baker (likely posed topless but yet to come out) . 
Read more here
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Ashika topless (her first) : imagebam.com

[2] 19-years old Canadian model Clara Settje at his studio
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Clara topless : imagebam.com

[3] 24-years old English model Jade McSorley (Britain's Next Top Model) at his studio
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Jade topless : imagebam.com

[4] South African model Lauren Buys at his studio
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Lauren nearly full-frontal (slight resemblance to another South African-born Jessica Marais) : imagebam.com
(you gotta admire these South African models/actresses. The moment they set fool on US soil - boom! Anything goes. Expect more frontal Lauren pictorials to emerge soon from Terry's vault)

More nude modeling for Terry here and here

* Rumors are Terry is producing another Kibosh-type of pictorials. I want to see above models getting jizzed or at least sucking on his cock. It would be incredible but not shocking considering the sexting/web-cam generation is coming of age. Going au naturel is not a taboo anymore. Pushing boundaries is a way to attract attention.
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Avoid these post-game sex follies this weekend


Shower sex sucks. Don’t let Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel trick you into thinking their “aw, shucks” shower sex scene in “500 Days of Summer” is really that fun in real life, because it’s not. Taking that special someone home, stripping them of their ZonaZoo gear and hopping under the shower head may seem like an awesome way to cool down and then steam things up. However, guys, it’s only when your calves are cramping, you’re trying to both please and not slip and break your ass, that you should have planned your approach a bit more. All that hot water is fun at first, but then it kinda becomes something like…

Pool sex. For those uninitiated into what’s arguably the grimiest of all rituals, pool sex is what happens when you take an urban myth (remember in high school when your friend banged a girl in a hot tub and said it was awesome?) and try to make it reality. When there’s a lot of water in a place that’s supposed to be wet for other reasons, all sensation is lost, and suddenly your little exploit turns into a submarine exploration for the g-spot. Also, pool water is disgusting, and nothing quite says “I love you” like a urinary tract infection — except when it doesn’t, which is always.

Now that we’ve covered the unpleasantness associated with Aquaman-style fornication, we can move on to a much drier, yet equally disappointing act. This is hard to put in reader-friendly way, so I’m going to refer to this as something a girl might do to enhance fellatio with the use of breast contact. For guys who enjoy boobs (a very high percentage, to be sure) it would seem as though this act would be fun and exciting. Even for girls, the idea at its best is at least something new and can add another dimension to a stale sexual relationship — or some eye-opening appeal to a brand new one. The reality is the act is not pleasurable for boys or girls — it can create an awkward moment, not to mention the friction and chafing involved. I can almost guarantee that if you try this once, you won’t want to try it again. The next time your drunk self feels like this is an awesome idea, you’re best advised to keep things simple. Save the unusual shit for those who get paid.

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My nudity question of the day : What are the chances of seeing Ashlee Simpson tits for the first time on-screen in Wayne Kramer's Pawn Shop Chronicles (2013)
 
 

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Elle Canada Photoshoot ft Alison Brie | FashionTV
Photographer Giuliano Bekor snapped away as the "Mad Men" hottie Alison Brie posed in an array of gorgeous outfits.  
* stunning as usual. She sure can pose like a pro.

Elle Canada Photoshoot ft Alison Brie | FashionTV by Fashion_TV


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Patrick Ryan : 'Bachelorette' the raunchy, vulgar cousin of 'Bridesmaids'
Grade: C+

Before you even say it, “Bachelorette” is not the wannabe, comedic sister to last summer’s smash hit “Bridesmaids”. Instead, think of it as a raunchier, older cousin that gets polite acknowledgment at family reunions before it snorts some cocaine in the bathroom.

Where “Bridesmaids” found humor in flatulence and intoxicated plane rides, “Bachelorette” finds uncomfortable but often-hilarious comedy in drug binges, bulimia and semen-stained bridal gowns.

Adapted from the 2010 Off-Broadway play by Leslye Headland (who wrote and directed the film), the story follows three high-school friends (played by Kirsten Dunst, Isla Fisher and Lizzy Caplan) who come together years later as bridesmaids for their overweight friend, Becky (Rebel Wilson), who they consistently mocked as teenagers. On the eve of Becky’s wedding, the three self-proclaimed “B-Faces” find themselves overdosing on prescription drugs, hustling to fix a ripped wedding gown and making a variety of love connections.

The movie has a sharp and hilarious first half that introduces us to the slutty, wild and ever-catty women that are just as absorbed in their high-school mentalities as they were a decade earlier. Imagine a grown-up version of “Mean Girls,” but with a lot more champagne and no Tina Fey.

Dunst, fresh off her impeccable dramatic turn in last year’s “Melancholia”, is the strongest link in the cast. Her vicious attitude is as scorching as a hot poker, but you can instantly read past her constant eye-rolls and see somebody that is legitimately bitter for all the wrong reasons. Her role as confidant to Wilson’s character is oddly believable, and supplies some of the only heartfelt moments in the film that do not feel forced or unnatural.

As the ditzy Katie, Fisher strikes comedy gold in “Bachelorette” and is easily the most likable character. In a movie reeling with negative vibes, her Katie is so bubbly and erupting with energy that it’s impossible not to grin while she’s on-screen. Fisher effortlessly lays on the slapstick and delivers the film’s most unexpected lines of dialogue (While walking into a strip club high on cocaine and surrounded by naked women, she remarks how it’s just like “going to the Oscars.”)
[* strippers listed on Imdb includes June Diane Raphael and Melissa Stephens]

Unfortunately, the film begins to lose its charm midway through. Instead of pushing the envelope with what outrageous situations these characters could get themselves into next, Headland instead chooses to take the sentimental, romantic route. We discover that these women are so unruly and miserable because they don’t have the “necessary” component that constitutes a “fulfilling” life for a woman: a sturdy relationship with a man that eventually leads to marriage and children. Caplan’s character, in particular, is especially insufferable and her scenes with the usually terrific Adam Scott are where the movie drags most.

“Bachelorette” also falters when it tries so hard to be raunchy and vulgar that it simply forgets to be funny. “Bridesmaids” succeeded because, after all the toilet humor and awkward sex scenes were over and done, it was still very original and witty. Headland appears to use topics like oral sex as a constant crutch she can lean on as she winks at the audience, hinting, “This subject is funny because it’s being said by a woman.” In any dude or buddy comedy we see, though, such topics have been hammered to death and are hardly considered clever humor by any definition.

We are in an interesting era for female comedies. There is suddenly some new discovery that women can “actually” be funny outside the romantic-comedy genre, but it seems as if screenwriters are still hesitant about depicting women that are both comical and completely independent. I find that the funniest female characters can be seen on television, where individuals like Liz Lemon on “30 Rock” and Leslie Knope in “Parks and Recreation” may have various love interests, but do not let romance define them as people. “Bachelorette” scratches the surface at what’s possible for the future of female comedians in film, but in no way reinvents the wheel.

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MoviePass Review : Compliance
on September 5th, 2012
Since its premier at Sundance early this year, any positive buzz generated by Craig Zobel’s Compliance (and there’s been plenty) has been overshadowed by controversy. During the very first screening in Park City, many members of the audience walked out, while others stuck around just to yell at Zobel during the post-film Q-and-A. During a recent screening in San Francisco (I was not in attendance, but a few friends were), 33 of the approximately 180 audience members didn’t make it to the end credits, with one man shouting as he left, “why do you sit here and watch this ignorance?”

As I sat in an almost-empty theatre late last night (there were five of us, no one left, though I think at one point or another we all wanted to), I understood why some couldn’t – or perhaps just weren’t willing to – make it to the end. Leaving was never a possibility for me; I’ve never walked out of a movie (no, not even Jack and Jill), for in doing so, I’d forfeit my right to an opinion. Not good for a critic. More importantly, though, while uncomfortable and frustrated, I was captivated. People don’t walk out of Compliance because it’s a bad movie; people storm away because it’s a damn effective one.

The story is at once devastatingly straightforward, yet impossible to fully fathom. The opening title-card informs that the film is based on an actual event. This isn’t a gimmick, but vital information; as the narrative progresses, the decisions of various characters become more and more difficult to accept. If not based in sickening reality, elements of the plot would stretch the limits of plausibility.

On a busy Friday evening, Sandra (Ann Dowd), manager of a rural ChickWich fast food franchise, receives a phone call from Officer Daniels (Pat Healy) of the local police department. Officer Daniels informs her that one of her young employees stole money from a customer’s purse. The victim’s description of the thief fits Becky (Dreama Walker), a pretty, blonde, nineteen-year-old cashier. Officer Daniels instructs Sandra to take Becky to a secure, secluded location in the back of the restaurant to search her pockets and belongings and to confiscate her cell phone. Sandra is hesitant at first, but Daniels insists that it’ll be easier on Becky to just get the admittedly difficult ordeal over with at the restaurant, rather than to take her all the way to the station. The embarrassment and trauma of a full police booking would be far worse. He says he has the ChickWich district manager – to whom he refers by name – on the other line and got approval for the search; already nervous about an incident involving an open freezer and spoiled food, Sandra agrees, hoping to earn her superior’s favor.

By this point, it’s clear to the audience that “Officer Daniels” is a fraud and Sandra has been fooled into playing his twisted game. Daniels’ requests become more and more audacious, involving additional employees and increasingly invasive searches of Becky’s body. Each demand, and the inevitable compliance, is harder to believe than the last. How could these people be so stupid? Why doesn’t Becky put up a fight? I’d never let this happen! Nobody would!

Except that these people did. And so did dozens of others in about 70 other similar cases in 30 different states throughout the country. What Zobel explores so artfully and effectively in Compliance is the psychology at play in these types of situations. As humans in modern, western civilization, we are raised with an inherent respect for and fear of authority. When the man on the other end of the phone calls himself a police officer, and does so with confidence, Sandra is convinced she has no choice but to listen. And though Becky knows she didn’t do anything and is being unjustly accused, she has been conditioned to do what she’s told. As the situation becomes more extreme, Sandra has no choice but to keep going; she’s in too deep now, and the possibility that she is wrong to follow the orders is far more frightening than anything she could be asked to do. Through her trials, Becky’s psyche is slowly eroded, and when it’s obvious to us that what is happening onscreen is unquestionably unethical and immoral, she’s already too broken to know the difference.

Zobel films in intense close-ups and with unconventionally long takes. Cinematically he creates a hypnotic, claustrophobic atmosphere which would be uncomfortable in any situation, but its amplification of this particular story becomes unbearably unsettling. I have a pretty thick skin when film is involved; I’m not rattled easily, but Compliance shook me. I squirmed in my seat, not because of extreme Hostel-style gore, but because Becky’s trauma felt so real. And while Sandra’s actions seemed so ridiculous on the surface, deep down, I knew this really wasn’t all that unbelievable. Even without the title-card disclaimer explaining that the events themselves were real, there’s a bleak honesty in Zobel’s dissection of the human spirit. As a viewer, I wanted so badly to do something, but it’s just a movie; there’s nothing I can do. Once one has experienced Compliance, the reason people walk out is obvious: it’s the only way to wash oneself of responsibility for Becky’s plight. By staying in my seat, I – in some small, weird way – condone what’s happening onscreen. I become as guilty as Sandra or the other employees who stand by and do nothing.

I stuck it out, though, and afterward I was mentally and physically exhausted. This is a powerful film, and though I’m sure it has happened, it’s hard to remember the last time I’ve had such a strong, visceral response to any work of art. While I definitely didn’t like what Compliance did to me, I’m in absolute awe of it’s ability to do so.

Rating: 5/5 Stars

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Airplane funniest film ever, research finds
Spoof disaster movie Airplane is the funniest film ever - generating three laughs a minute on average, according to new research.

Airplane - which features classic one liners such as 'I am serious and don't call me Shirley' - came out top in research conducted by a panel of members of movie subscription service Lovefilm.

They calculated the precise number of 'laughs a minute' for the top 10 comedies chosen by Lovefilm members.

The panel recorded the total number of times each film generated a laugh, before dividing it by the films' total length in minutes to calculate the precise 'laugh a minute' rating for each movie.

With a 'laugh A minute' score of three, Airplane beat nine rival comedies to top the list which has been created to mark The Hangover becoming available to stream on Lovefilm Instant.

The Las Vegas man-movie featuring the bachelor party to end all bachelor parties marked its arrival onto the Lovefilm Instant service by scoring a 'Laugh A Minute' rating of 2.4.

The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad completed the top three with a 'laugh a minute' score of 2.3.

Foul-mouthed Superbad managed a 'laugh a minute' score of 1.9, followed closely by the outrageous and least politically correct movie ever made, Borat, with 1.7.

Modern classic Anchorman reported in at sixth place. This battle of the sexes in a newsroom has spawned a whole range of one liners and manages to make audiences laugh 1.6 times per minute on average.

Helen Cowley, editor of Lovefilm, said: "After many heated debates about whether The Hangover really is the funniest movie ever, we asked our members to vote for the 10 movies that make them laugh the most, and then conducted our own research into how many times those included in this list made us giggle.

"Interestingly, while Lovefilm members voted Life of Brian as the funniest film, our research shows that for laughs a minute the hilarious aircraft-based satire of Airplane beats the Monty Python epic hands-down."

Top 10 Films With The Highest 'Laugh A Minute' Scores:
1. Airplane - 3 Laughs A Minute
2. The Hangover - 2.4 Laughs A Minute
3. The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad ! - 2.3 Laughs A Minute
4. Superbad - 1.9 Laughs A Minute
5. Borat - 1.7 Laughs A Minute
6. Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy - 1.6 Laughs A Minute
7. American Pie - 1.5 Laughs A Minute
8. Bridesmaids - 1.4 Laughs A Minute
9. Shaun of the Dead - 1.3 Laughs A Minute
10. Life of Brian - 1.2 Laughs A Minute

* Almost a perfect list except for over-rated Bridesmaids.

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'That will be my happy place': Lana Del Rey wants to quit music and make movies 
'That will be my happy place': Lana Del Rey wants to quit music and make movies 
The ever-mysterious Lana Del Rey has fielded plenty of criticisms about her live singing ability and pouty, enigmatic persona, so will the 26-year-old 'National Anthem' singer give it all up for a career in movies?

It's on the cards, the melancholy songstress told Vogue Australia in a new interview.

"When I was starting, I had a vision of being a writer for film and that's what I am doing now. I'm so happy," Lana revealed, keeping the actual details of the script top-secret.

"Hopefully I will branch into film work and stay there. That will be my happy place. I'd like to stay in one place for a long time," she added.

Lana's video clips play like mini-movies anyway, so it shouldn't be too much of a stretch for the '60s minx-like bombshell.

* You can afford to be fickle if you're trust fund baby. Christ...the woman is career hopping like crazy. But the movie industry will fit her like a glove. Maybe Magic City producers can hire her for (being super optimistic here) the third season. She will give Jessica Marais a run for her money in nudity department.

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One of the momentous moment in porn this year : After more than 400-flicks to her credit, 25-years old Lexi Belle finally taking it up the ass for the first time on-cam. Lucky guy Deen. From Superstars (2012)
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