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Posts Tagged ‘film’

SAG Award Winners With Lists Of All Nominated Actors :: January 2010

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 23rd January 2010 in Uncategorized, awards

SAG AWARDS 2010  :: These awards honor actors, acting ensembles, only.

Only  SAG actors vote.

The winners are listed first, under each category heading. The nominees are listed below the winner.

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Outstanding Performance By A Cast In A Motion Picture

Inglourious Basterds (2009)

An Education (2009)

The Hurt Locker (2008)

Nine (2009)

Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire (2009)

Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role

Jeff Bridges for Crazy Heart (2009)

George Clooney for Up in the Air (2009/I)

Colin Firth for A Single Man (2009)

Morgan Freeman for Invictus (2009)

Jeremy Renner for The Hurt Locker (2008)

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role

Sandra Bullock for The Blind Side (2009)

Helen Mirren for The Last Station (2009)

Carey Mulligan for An Education (2009)

Gabourey Sidibe for Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire (2009)

Meryl Streep for Julie & Julia (2009)

Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role

Christoph Waltz for Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Matt Damon for Invictus (2009)

Woody Harrelson for The Messenger (2009/I)

Christopher Plummer for The Last Station (2009)

Stanley Tucci for The Lovely Bones (2009)

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role

Mo’Nique for Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire (2009)

Penélope Cruz for Nine (2009)

Vera Farmiga for Up in the Air (2009/I)

Anna Kendrick for Up in the Air (2009/I)

Diane Kruger for Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series

“Glee” (2009)

“Curb Your Enthusiasm” (2000)

“Modern Family” (2009)

“The Office” (2005)

“30 Rock” (2006)

Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series

“Mad Men” (2007)

“The Closer” (2005)

“Dexter” (2006)

“The Good Wife” (2009)

“True Blood” (2008)

Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series

Alec Baldwin for “30 Rock” (2006)

Steve Carell for “The Office” (2005)

Larry David for “Curb Your Enthusiasm” (2000)

Tony Shalhoub for “Monk” (2002)

Charlie Sheen for “Two and a Half Men” (2003)

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series

Tina Fey for “30 Rock” (2006)

Christina Applegate for “Samantha Who?” (2007)

Toni Collette for “United States of Tara” (2009)

Edie Falco for “Nurse Jackie” (2009)

Julia Louis-Dreyfus for “The New Adventures of Old Christine” (2006)

Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series

Michael C. Hall for “Dexter” (2006)

Simon Baker for “The Mentalist” (2008)

Bryan Cranston for “Breaking Bad” (2008)

Jon Hamm for “Mad Men” (2007)

Hugh Laurie for “House M.D.” (2004)

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series

Julianna Margulies for “The Good Wife” (2009)

Patricia Arquette for “Medium” (2005)

Glenn Close for “Damages” (2007)

Mariska Hargitay for “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” (1999)

Holly Hunter for “Saving Grace” (2007)

Kyra Sedgwick for “The Closer” (2005)

Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries

Kevin Bacon for Taking Chance (2009) (TV)

Cuba Gooding Jr. for Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story (2009) (TV)

Jeremy Irons for Georgia O’Keeffe (2009) (TV)

Kevin Kline for “Great Performances: Cyrano de Bergerac (#37.8)” (2008)

Tom Wilkinson for A Number (2008) (TV)

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries

Drew Barrymore for Grey Gardens (2009) (TV)

Joan Allen for Georgia O’Keeffe (2009) (TV)

Ruby Dee for America (2009) (TV)

Jessica Lange for Grey Gardens (2009) (TV)

Sigourney Weaver for Prayers for Bobby (2009) (TV)

actor jeff bridges winner of sag award and golden globe. so far this year!

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Please share. Thank you.

Golden Globes Nominations List :: Print-able

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 17th January 2010 in awards

Here’s another Golden Globe Nomination List, To Print.

I am going to put my favorites on this post, just before the show. If you wish to put your predictions or favorites, please do. I realize I am a little late to ask for such, but just in case…Use the comments area if you catch this, in time…

GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS IN THE FILM CATEGORY

Golden Globe Nominee list

golden globes best pic nominations

GOLDEN GLOBE TELEVISION NOMINEES

:: Actor :: Actress :: Oscar Nominees ::

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 22nd January 2009 in Fine Film Acting, Hollywood Actor Prep Cheat Sheet

This Hollywood Actor Prep Cheat Sheet lists only the 2009 Academy Award Nominees, in the Acting Categories.

Doesn’t everyone always talk about the “Best Acting” categories, primarily??

Or only??

I mean, everyone, everywhere.

Okay. Also, they talk about the “Best Picture Nominees”. Right?

Then, the other categories

Maybe.

I’ve found…that is, to your average American ticket-buyer…the acting and best picture categories ARE their whole definition of “the movies”, when it comes to the Oscars.

Most movie-goers are in the dark …about what directors do

And, about what producers do, fugedabowdit …total mystery. Like invisible… Right?

People watch the Oscars for the categories they are rooting for, the ones that they care about. It’s emotional…If they cared, while watching the movie; then they “care” during the Academy Awards. A–lot.

Acting + Best Picture: There are no other Oscar categories, to most.

Scientifically, I can prove it.

Monitor your own plumbing, during the Academy Awards television broadcast.

I’ll wager that almost no toilets are flushed, in any bathroom, in the entire USA…

…on February 22nd 2009..

…during the announcing of Oscar wins for any acting category, or best picture.

Okay.

The brilliant acting performances of this year….

The nominated actors are in alphabetical order, and not in order of my own favorites.

(…Come back to Hollywood Actor Prep this this weekend, for that…)

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ACADEMY AWARD ACTING NOMINEES 2009

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

Anne Hathaway in “Rachel Getting Married”
Angelina Jolie in “Changeling”
Melissa Leo in “Frozen River”
Meryl Streep in “Doubt”
Kate Winslet in “The Reader”

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Amy Adams in “Doubt”
Penélope Cruz in “Vicky Cristina Barcelona”
Viola Davis in “Doubt”
Taraji P. Henson in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”
Marisa Tomei in “The Wrestler”

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE

Richard Jenkins in “The Visitor”
Frank Langella in “Frost/Nixon”
Sean Penn in “Milk”
Brad Pitt in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”
Mickey Rourke in “The Wrestler”


PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Josh Brolin in “Milk”
Robert Downey Jr. in “Tropic Thunder”
Philip Seymour Hoffman in “Doubt”
Heath Ledger in “The Dark Knight”
Michael Shannon in “Revolutionary Road”

Please share the Hollywood Actor Prep Blog with your friends, especially those who are actors.

Please put this blog on your Facebook and MySpace Pages. (*Thanks to those who already have!)

And wanna follow me, on Twitter? I “tweet” there, to announce new blog posts; and to communicate news that pertains to actors, in real time…On Twitter, I am __dana__.

;Best,

Dana


Werner Herzog :: On Truth

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 11th December 2008 in Real Actor Truths

 

If you have only truth, in acting; you have everything.

That sounds so pat.

It’s not.

 

 

Excerpt From “Thompson On Hollywood”:

The winners of this year’s International Documentary Awards were announced Friday [12-5-2008] night at a ceremony at the DGA.  

…But the highlight of the night was director Werner Herzog’s tribute. After showing stellar clips from ‘Little Dieter Learns to Fly’, ‘Grizzly Man’ and his most recent doc, ‘Encounters at the End of the World’ (which is short-listed for Oscar consideration), Herzog got a standing ovation and gave a speech.

“There are deeper strata of truth in cinema and there’s such a thing as poetic ecstatic truth,” said the director… “In being a filmmaker I really tried to find an answer about what constitutes reality…we have to individually find our own ways. I have tried to find something much deeper, something that constitutes truth, which is hard to grasp. In my filmmaking I have tried to find some sort of ecstasy where you are deeply moved and illuminated. If you leave pure facts behind…truth can create illumination.”

Directors Werner Herzog + Jonathan Demme

Directors Werner Herzog + Jonathan Demme

 

What is your response to what you just read?

How do you think the notion of “truth” relates to acting?

                                                                              ******* 

You may have noticed something new, in the navigation bar, above.  I added a new page, “Guestbook”. 

It’s for you, and this Hollywood Actor Prep community.  To write on… you can answer the above question/s.  Or, leave a comment there.

Please do.

The first ten blog-users, to leave a comment, will be asked to participate in a chat with me…about acting, and this site…

 

Here’s a portion of a letter, from Roger Ebert, to Werner Herzog. You can read the rest of letter, at Mr. Herzog’s official site.

 

 

A letter to Werner Herzog:

In praise of rapturous truth

 

           November 17, 2007

 

 

Dear Werner,

 

You have done me the astonishing honor of dedicating your new film, “Encounters at the End of the World,” to me. Since I have admired your work beyond measure for the almost 40 years since we first met, I do not need to explain how much this kindness means to me. When I saw the film at the Toronto Film Festival and wrote to thank you, I said I wondered if it would be a conflict of interest for me to review the film, even though of course you have made a film I could not possibly dislike. I said I thought perhaps the solution was to simply write you a letter.

 

But I will review the film, my friend, when it arrives in theaters on its way to airing on the Discovery Channel. I will review it, and I will challenge anyone to describe my praise as inaccurate.

 

I will review it because I love great films and must share my enthusiasm.

 

This is not that review. It is the letter. It is a letter to a man whose life and career have embodied a vision of the cinema that challenges moviegoers to ask themselves questions not only about films but about lives. About their lives, and the lives of the people in your films, and your own life.

 

Without ever making a movie for solely commercial reasons, without ever having a dependable source of financing, without the attention of the studios and the oligarchies that decide what may be filmed and shown, you have directed at least 55 films or television productions, and we will not count the operas. You have worked all the time, because you have depended on your imagination instead of budgets, stars or publicity campaigns. You have had the visions and made the films and trusted people to find them, and they have. It is safe to say you are as admired and venerated as any filmmaker alive—among those who have heard of you, of course. Those who do not know your work, and the work of your comrades in the independent film world, are missing experiences that might shake and inspire them.

 

I have not seen all your films, and do not have a perfect memory, but I believe you have never made a film depending on sex, violence or chase scenes. Oh, there is violence in “Lessons of Darkness,” about the Kuwait oil fields aflame, or “Grizzly Man,” or “Rescue Dawn.” But not “entertaining violence.” There is sort of a chase scene in “Even Dwarfs Started Small.” But there aren’t any romances.

 

You have avoided this content, I suspect, because it lends itself so seductively to formulas, and you want every film to be absolutely original.

 

You have also avoided all “obligatory scenes,” including artificial happy endings. And special effects (everyone knows about the real boat in “Fitzcarraldo,” but even the swarms of rats in “Nosferatu” are real rats, and your strong man in “Invincible” actually lifted the weights). And you don’t use musical scores that tell us how to feel about the content. Instead, you prefer free-standing music that evokes a mood: You use classical music, opera, oratorios, requiems, aboriginal music, the sounds of the sea, bird cries, and of course Popol Vuh.

 

All of these decisions proceed from your belief that the audience must be able to believe what it sees. Not its “truth,” but its actuality, its ecstatic truth….

                                                                             —Roger Ebert

 

 

Best,

:-Dana

     

Explaining The Actors Strike, Simply

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 30th November 2008 in SAG Strike + SAG Negotiations

A SAG CONFLICT MEANS IT IS BETWEEN THE ACTORS AND THE PEOPLE WHO PAY THEM

The conflict is between the **ACTORS** and the **PRODUCERS/MOVIE STUDIOS**

Actors union: is called **SAG**  (or the Screen Actors Guild)

Producers union is:  known as **AMPTP**  (Yes, the movie studio bosses and producers have a union, also).

It’s called the “Actors Strike” and “SAG Negotiations” because it is about a “contract” renegotiation between the actors and the producers/studios.  It is an, overall, “general contract”, which contains all agreed upon working conditions, as negotiated and agreed upon, between the two unions.  All actors, in SAG, are covered by the terms.

The AMPTP, in real terms, are the bosses.  They are the bosses of the industry, the bosses of Hollywood.  

(**AMPTP** stands for Alliance-of-Motion-Picture-and-Television-Producers)

The“Workers” , in this case,  are the Actors

It’s still the same as any other worker-boss struggle…big guys vs little guys…

 

Why do actors need a union?  

Basically, a union’s job is to make sure the worker gets a fair and just payment for the work that the union member does, and that the work conditions are safe and decent.

Almost everything in entertainment, in Hollywood; and on location, even; is most likely “union”. Nearly all the workers, from the crew, the camerapeople, the sound, the directors, writers, and actors, have a union.

When any actor is hired, no matter  what, if they are in the union, and it is a union job…then they will be paid.  And they will be paid, at least, what the “current contract” scale base pay deems.

“What about those actors that get those high salaries?” Well,  if an actor has an agent that believes the actor can earn more, and that the actors work has a value of a higher amount, that agent can negotiate for a higher pay for that day.  Or the amount of time the actor is working for.  Even though those salaries are the ones that make the news, the overwhelming majority of professional actors never, ever earn anything like that.  Far, far, from it…


 

Why Is SAG Suddenly In The News Again?  

“Haven’t they been without a contract for months?”

  1. SAG has been working “without a contract”, lately, because there has not been any agreement made. SAG kept trying, anyway, to get the AMPTP to meet their demands some.  The negotiations continued on, (long past the original strike deadline) –and even a moderator came and attempted to forge an agreement; but on November 22, 2008 all talks stopped.  
  2. When the Writers Strike was going on, the Writers were striking against the same bosses, and the “deal-breaker” was over one of SAG’s same issues: the one concerning payment in “New Media”.  It was this particular contractual item, and the lack of agreement,  that, broke down all talks, just recently; between SAG and the AMPTP.

Part of what recently ”broke the camel’s back”, and stirred this whole new chapter up– was the current realization and announcement from the Writers Guild:

According to the Writers Guild, the AMPTP is not upholding the terms that they agreed to, the ones that settled the Writers Strike!  They aren’t paying, what they promised, for work in New Media.

…So, when you read or hear some Actor-bashing hogwash, like SAG is just trying to take away everyone’s Academy Awards…by doing all this now…please let them know about the Writers Guild’s current discovery, and announcement.


 

Actors Union Logo

 

 

 

“THE CONTRACT” = Working Conditions That Productions Must Provide On Every Set

There are general rules that govern all movie sets.  All television shows

They are often referred to as “Union Rules” or “SAG Rules”, on a set.

You can see these rules in action, always, on union sets.  Anything of quality, whether film or TV, is shot on a union set.  Most likely.  

Once in place in “the contract”, the rules aren’t variable.  They are written, with the understanding, by both sides, that they will be rigidly followed.

Why are these rules always followed?  

 

  • Both unions know that at one point they had discussed and agreed upon them
  • The rules were written into a contract, and signed by both sides
  • They are, generally, based on a logic of what is considered humane; they are agreed-upon, decent, and fair, working conditions
  • There are penalties for NOT adhering to the rules, and they usually involve paying money.  However, with too many violations, the penalties get harsher.  
  • No one wants to jeopardize their union status. 

 

Examples of these SAG rules, in the “general” contract, are:

Allowing an actor to go home and go to sleep after a very long shooting day, instead of continuing to do more scenes.

There’s always a nurse on set, in case someone gets injured.  

Lunch is always a certain number of hours from the “call time”, or start of a work/shooting day.

All kinds of things are in the ” union actors’ contract”; like dressing rooms, kids and their hours allowed and tutors on the set if they are missing schooling, little babies can only work a little bit of time and are allowed their mother nearby, per diem pay for those on location and not having their own kitchen and food, transportation to the set when working on location..and so on.

 

Are The Actors Creating All This Now?  Or, Are They Reacting?? 

The news media, in calling this anactor’s issue” makes it appear as if actors are the only ones involved.

I find that most people don’t even know what is being negotiated, even actors, have no clear idea of what this is all about.

Worse, the whole thing has been presented by the press (and the AMPTP) as either unnecessary, greedy, or worse, intentionally harmful to the rest of the industry.

 ”Actors out to harm the economy!!!”  (Whaa?)

Other words have been freely slimed: “stupid”, “mad” (as in crazy),  ”crazy” (as in, yes, kee-raa-zzy), and other free-flinging ugliness.

Just like bullies, in a schoolyard.  Some of the press joined the charge.  

(Whatever happened to the journalistic code of fair reporting? Presenting both sides?)

Some of that “PR” has been even been presented to the media, by the most outspoken members of the AMPTP.  And published on the AMPTP site….(see fake-movie-review-poster, below…)

Just today, they took out a full page ad in the Los Angeles Times. 

 

This isn’t a conflict that has been over-dramatized.

Neither histrionic, nor illogical; this conflict is similar to most conflicts that take place in a worker setting, between boss and employees… when a situation becomes untenable, and a strike becomes imperative.

The bosses, who are represented by the AMPTP, will not budge on a few very critical points, on the new contracts for the actors, and how they will treat the actors in their future employ.  How, or how they won’t, pay the actors.

Actually, they say that they don’t want to pay the actors, or devise any pay strategy, until they see how the internet revenue will come.

…Anyone see any commercials or advertising yet, on the internet?  Isn’t that the same way they get money on television?

 

There Is One Main Industry, In This Very Big City

This is a “one-factory” town.  The bosses, are the big bosses.  You don’t hear a lot of outspoken opinions from celebrities and famous actors, even.  Not even low level activist types. Why?  Because the Producers are the ones who pay. AND hire.  It’s hard enough to work in this town, but no one wants to blacklist themselves, by simply asking for their rights. Or rather, for what is right.

Actors make art, businessmen plan, and make money.

All of the major studios, the heaviest players at the top, in this town, have made some very large investments on the future of the “New Media”.  For their very powerful and business-like bosses, who didn’t come from the movie business.  They came from well, business–worldwide, big business.

If you do keep up with business, then, you know that the internet is evolving, at the speed of lightning.  Just a few weeks ago, the Los Angeles Times ran an article that stated that the economy is affecting people so, that they are cutting back their budgets, dramatically. They are even getting rid of cable.  But not internet.  That is correct, we are in a “new day”.  (Link to LA Times article.)

The big businesspeople of this country don’t read business journals first, and then follow.  They are the ones that are making the news in these papers.

All the film studios have invested in securing their futures, on the internet.  Some ACTUALLY assured their stockholders that the economy won’t affect their business, and the future is securely theirs, because they have a solid stake on the internet.

You can look this up, easily, on Google.

How many millions of dollars, do you think they have invested?  So far?  Billions? Maybe a reporter could do some homework, and find out…

Unabashedly, these businessmen, who are making the plans,  are set on not paying the actors. They strategized everything, except that?

 

Variety published an article today, presenting both sides.  (Link to the Variety on SAG here.)

AMPTP:   ”We are standing firm behind our offer because it represents a pattern of hard-fought agreements over the past year, and its construct is vital to the future of our industry,” the CEOs said. “No single guild or union should be allowed to undermine the hard-won consensus over how our industry can experiment and then prosper in the speedily changing new-media marketplace.”


 

Why Is This Setting A Precedent For All Actors…And For All Talent In The New Media?

SAG is especially concerned about setting the precedent, for how actors,  and all talent will be paid, on the internet.  They feel that if they don’t establish the right way, now, it will never be righted.  

When they mention cable, and homevideo (video and DVD’s)…they are referring to the bad deal that was made with the same notion, way back when. No one expected VCR’s, DVD’s, or cable, to become what they did, eventually.  

SAG didn’t either, and so did not negotiate a proper payment “schedule” for what was known as the new and future media, then. It was never recouped.  Or corrected.

Once in place, it wasn’t able to be changed.  And, the profits, from VHS, DVD, Cable reruns and even made-for-cable productions, didn’t provide actors with a decent pay.  Certainly not compatible with network pay, or residuals payment.  That also means that the studios got to keep all the profits, from those areas, mentioned above.  

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In summary, I just find it hard to understand, that in this current time, when we just elected a President because we all voted that it be a time of “Change” and “Hope”… that, still,  business is tromping on the little guy, the artist…Which in this case, are the actors. 

 

There’s an elephant in the middle of this room.  And… he’s not the caterer.

 

Ad On AMPTP Website

Ad On AMPTP Website

 

 

For more and better details: Please go to the website of the Screen Actors Guild

I do welcome comments, and especially from those that have something to say, “from the other side”!  I invite to enlighten, please…!!

So please click on this link, because temporarily, all comments need to be posted on Facebook, on Hollywood Actor Prep Group page…You don’t even need to be a member!

Best,
Dana

Follow me on Twitter!  ( __dana__ )

 

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Holiday Movie Trailers and Free Soundtrack

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 25th November 2008 in Ooooh! Movie Trailers!

These film trailers make the holiday season exciting, this year.

Sean Penn is one of my favorite actors, and this performance is creating an Oscar buzz…“Milk”...

 

YouTube Preview Image

 

 

 

 

 

“Doubt” was directed by John Patrick Shanley, whose name you may recognize. He’s a well-known playwright; and “Doubt” was originally written for the stage.   That’s when it won the Pulitzer Prize.

Great cast in the film version, including Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Meryl Streep.

YouTube Preview Image

 

 

 

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” is getting some very good reviews, and a few that aren’t so great.  All agree, though, that it’s technically remarkable…

YouTube Preview Image

 

…And, according to Slashfilm, who got it from FirstShowing, you can listen to the entire soundtrack of “Benjamin Button” for free, on Warner Brothers’  ”For Your Consideration Site”

Here’s the playlist:

1. Postcards
2. Mr. Gateau
3. Meeting Daisy
4. A New Life
5. Love in Mourmansk
6. Meeting Again
7. Mr. Button
8. Little Man Oti
9. Alone At Night
10. It Was Nice to Have Met You
11. Children Games
12. Submarine Attack
13. The Hummingbird
14. Love Returns
15. Sunrise On Lake Pontchartrain
16. Daisy’s 
Ballet Career
17. The Accident
18. Stay Out of My Life
19. Nothing Lasts
20. Some Things You Never Forget
21. Growing Younger
22. Dying Away
23. Benjamin and Daisy

 

Enjoy!

;-Dana

 

    

Film Studios Are Making Movies Again, Says Variety!

Posted by Dana Kaminski on 8th October 2008 in Acting work in Hollywood

Acting Work Is Available

Really great news for actors. Film auditions, actively,  will start up very soon…Why?? 

The Hollywood studios have all started making movies again.  

Yesterday, in Variety, there was a list of 40-plus new movies, about to go into production…that’s more than FORTY new films scheduled for this Spring and Summer, 2008!  

All at once,  Columbia, Warner Bros, MGM, Miramax, New Line, Paramount, Disney, et al, announced that they are swinging, full-force, into making movies again.  No more waiting, no more Hollywood-on-hold. 

The announcement, dated Oct. 7 2008, revealed that each major studio is doing five films each, at least.  Big and medium budget-type films, which means lots of money; and, often…big casts.

…If you need catching up on background events: For months, the industry has avoided making “product”… This was due to a fear-of-SAG-strike; and, subsequently,  the contract stalemate between the actors and producers unions. For further depth, you can read my posts that explain:  the SAG negotiations, and who is involved, and the complex  actors’ issues

 

 

Film Production List From “Variety”:

COLUMBIA

  • Ruben Fleischer-directed “Zombieland” 
  • Phillip Noyce-helmed “Salt” with Angelina Jolie 
  • Stephen Chow-directed “The Green Hornet” with Seth Rogen

DISNEY

  • Tim Burton-directed “Alice in Wonderland”; 
  • “Tron” sequel; 
  • Robert Zemeckis-produced motion-capture film “Mars Needs Moms”; 
  • Jon Turteltaub-directed “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” with Nicolas Cage; 
  • Walt Becker- helmed “Wild Hogs 2″

FOX

  • James Cameron-directed “Avatar” 
  • Shawn Levy-helmed “Date Night,” with Steve Carell and Tina Fey 
  • “A-Team” 
  • “Ramona” 
  • Chris Columbus-directed “Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief” 
  • “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” 
  • John Carney-directed “Town House” 
  • “Alvin and the Chipmunks 2″ 
  • Tom Bezucha-directed “Orbit” 
  • Rick Famuyiwa-helmed “Family Wedding”

MGM

  • Drew Goddard-directed “The Cabin in the Woods” 
  • Kevin Tancharoen-helmed “Fame” 
  • “The Matarese Circle,” which David Cronenberg is negotiating to direct Washington 
  • Darren Aronofsky-helmed “RoboCop”

MARVEL
(Paramount distributing)

  • Jon Favreau-directed “Iron Man 2″ with Robert Downey Jr. 
  • Kenneth Branagh-helmed “Thor”

MIRAMAX

  • John Madden-directed “The Debt” with Helen Mirren 
  • “Man on a Train” 
  • “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark”

NEW LINE

  • “Torrente” 
  • “Sex and the City 2″ 
  • Wesley Strick-directed “A Nightmare on Elm Street” 
  • Len Wiseman-helmed “Gears of War”

PARAMOUNT

  • Kenny Ortega-directed “Footloose” with Zac Efron; 
  • M. Night Shyamalan-helmed “The Last Airbender” 
  • “Morning Glory” 
  • “Beverly Hills Cop” 
  • “Us and Them”

UNIVERSAL

  • Edgar Wright-directed “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,” starring Michael Cera 
  • Untitled Nancy Meyers-helmed comedy with Meryl Streep and Alec Baldwin 
  • Peter Billingsley-directed “Couples Retreat” with Vince Vaughn; 
  • Gore Verbinski-helmed “BioShock” 
  • Nicholas Stoller-directed “Get Him to the Greek” 
  • Ridley Scott-helmed “Nottingham” with Russell Crowe

WARNER BROS.

  • Clint Eastwood-directed “Human Factor” with Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon 
  • Mark Neveldine/Brian Taylor- helmed “Jonah Hex” 
  • “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” the David Yates-directed final, two-part installment in the franchise, which begins production in February; 
  • Alcon-financed “Book of Eli,” the Hughes brothers-directed Denzel Washington starrer 
  • Louis Leterrier-helmed “Clash of the Titans” 
  • Zack Snyder-directed “Suckerpunch.”

 

Does “Dancing With The Stars” Success Mean Less Work For Actors?

 

Dancing With The Stars Logo

Dancing With The Stars

ABC and Dancing With The Stars 

Reality television was included in the Emmys for the first time, this year.

Last night, “Dancing With The Stars” got some very high ratings; in this brand new television season.

Is “Dancing With The Stars” classified as “Reality TV”? Is that because it doesn’t contain professional actors; or rather, professional-actors-that-aren’t-acting

What do you think it means, that audiences are choosing “Dancing With The Stars” over other traditional types of television shows, as far as popularity goes??

…Just  putting out the question… 

 

How Actors Think About Reality TV

For actors, reality television means:
Shows without actors.

The more “reality” programming there is, the less jobs for actors.

There is actually a “master list” of all the auditions television, movies, and some legit theater–it’s called “Breakdown Services“… It’s a “wire service”, an auditions roster, it comes out daily. In Los Angeles.

Only some people are allowed access to “The Breakdowns”; they are the agents and casting directors, and some managers.

Easy equation, though, huh? Reality TV casts real people, so the numbers of auditions for network television lessens as they increase reality TV programming.

In other words, less professional actor casting.  Less auditions, less jobs available…

What accounts for the popularity of reality TV?
Is “Dancing With The Stars” really reality TV?

I’ll give my opinion sometime in the near future, and I do wish to mull it over some, and gather some more information.
In the meantime, I’m asking around….
;Dana

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