Blogs > Tuned in to Pop Culture

They’re not standing around the watercooler, but Cheryl Sadler, Mark Meszoros, Mark Podolski and Nicole Franz are talking about what they’ve been watching, listening to and playing during their free time.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Podcast: 2012 fall film preview

Entertainment Editor Mark Meszoros runs through the movies he's most looking forward to this fall season in a conversation with Community Engagement Editor Cheryl Sadler.

Meszoros' full fall film preview will be published on News-Herald.com/Life on Saturday (Sept. 1), and appear in the Sidetracks section of the print edition on Sunday (Sept. 2).

Click the play button below to listen:


What movies are you most looking forward to this season? Leave your comments below, or tweet us, @nhfeatures and @nhcheryl.

(If you don't like streaming online, don't worry! We're working on getting this podcast on iTunes. Stay tuned [in to pop culture]!)

Labels: , ,

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Weak box office weekend lets conservative documentary break into Top 10

Déjà vu much? This list may seem a bit similar to last week's list, and it is. The top four films repeat, albeit making about half as much money, in the top spots and then the new movies ("Premium Rush" and "Hit & Run") kind of slip in there at the end, along with another newcomer, "2016: Obama's America." 

I never even heard of this one and here it is breaking into a very weak Top 10. It is a conservative documentary is a critique of what the country would look like four years from now if President Barack Obama is re-elected. It's not likely to make my to-watch list (I prefer my thought-provoking pieces to be more balanced), but it's nice to see a documentary break into the Top 10.

From the Associated Press
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. “The Expendables 2,” $13.5 million ($18.5 million international). (Review by The AP's Justin Lowe: 'Expendables 2' provides crucial end-of-summer action)
2. “The Bourne Legacy,” $9.3 million ($9.4 million international). (Review by The News-Herald's Mark Meszoros: 'Bourne Legacy' solid, but feels like it’s keeping things warm for Damon)
3. “ParaNorman,” $8.5 million. (Review by The AP's Jake Coyle: Weak writing trumps powerful puppetry in 'ParaNorman')
4. “The Campaign,” $7.4 million. (Review by the AP's Michael Rechtshaffen: 'The Campaign' is flimsy political satire)
5. “The Dark Knight Rises,” $7.2 million ($15.3 million international). (Review by Meszoros: 'Dark Knight Rises' overly ambitious, but Batman end is satisfying)
6. “The Odd Life of Timothy Green,” $7.1 million. (Review by David Germain: 'The Odd Life of Timothy Green' fails to inspire)
7. “Premium Rush,” $6.3 million. (Review by the AP's Coyle: Michael Shannon rides away with ‘Premium Rush’)
8. “2016: Obama’s America,” $6.2 million.
9. “Hope Springs,” $6 million. (Review by the AP's Christy Lemire: Streep, Jones give 'Hope Springs' real punch)
10. “Hit & Run,” $4.7 million. (Review by the AP's Germain: ‘Hit & Run’ proves fuel-injected fun)

— Nicole Franz | NiFranz@News-Herald.com | @FranzOrFoe

Labels: , ,

Sunday, August 19, 2012

'Expendables 2' opens at top of box office

I can think of one person in particular -- ahem, Mark Podolski -- who is pretty stoked about "The Expendables 2." What movie did you see this weekend? (Who am I kidding? It was too gorgeous outside to be in a theater!)

From The Associated Press:
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "The Expendables 2," $28.8 million ($17.3 million international). (Review by The AP's Justin Lowe: 'Expendables 2' provides crucial end-of-summer action)
2. "The Bourne Legacy," $17 million ($18.2 million international). (Review by The News-Herald's Mark Meszoros: 'Bourne Legacy' solid, but feels like it’s keeping things warm for Damon)
3. "ParaNorman," $14 million ($2 million international). (Review by The AP's Jake Coyle: Weak writing trumps powerful puppetry in 'ParaNorman')
4. "The Campaign," $13.4 million. (Review by the AP's Michael Rechtshaffen: 'The Campaign' is flimsy political satire)
5. "Sparkle," $12 million. (Review by The AP's David Germain: Jordin Sparks, Whitney Houston star in mush remake of 1976 movie musical)
6. "The Dark Knight Rises," $11.1 million ($20.6 million international). (Review by Meszoros: 'Dark Knight Rises' overly ambitious, but Batman end is satisfying)
7. "The Odd Life of Timothy Green," $10.9 million. (Review by Germain: 'The Odd Life of Timothy Green' fails to inspire)
8. "Hope Springs," $9.1 million ($700,000 international). (Review by the AP's Christy Lemire: Streep, Jones give 'Hope Springs' real punch)
9. "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days," $3.9 million ($867,000 international). (Review by Rechtshaffen: Third 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid' not so wimpy after all)
10. "Total Recall," $3.5 million ($19 million international). (Review by Lemire: New 'Total Recall' slick, forgets to have fun)

— Cheryl Sadler | CSadler@News-Herald.com | @nhcheryl

Labels: ,

Sunday, August 12, 2012

'The Bourne Legacy' wins weekend box office in debut

"The Bourne Legacy" has finally uncovered the way to knock "The Dark Knight Rises" out of the top spot. Jeremy Renner makes it to the top of the box office again this summer ("The Avengers"), this time without a cadre of superheroes at his side. I haven't seen the new 'Bourne' film but it's definitely on my to-watch list.

From the Associated Press

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. “The Bourne Legacy,” $40.3 million ($7.8 million international). (Review by The News-Herald's Mark Meszoros: 'Bourne Legacy' solid, but feels like it’s keeping things warm for Damon)
2. “The Campaign,” $27.4 million ($2.1 million international). (Review by the AP's Michael Rechtshaffen: 'The Campaign' is flimsy political satire)
3. “The Dark Knight Rises,” $19.5 million ($34.2 million international).(Review by Meszoros: 'Dark Knight Rises' overly ambitious, but Batman end is satisfying)
4. “Hope Springs,” $15.6 million. (Review by the AP's Christy Lemire: Streep, Jones give 'Hope Springs' real punch)
5. “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days,” $8.2 million ($1 million international). (Review by Rechtshaffen: Third 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid' not so wimpy after all)
6. “Total Recall,” $8.1 million ($18.7 million international). (Review by Lemire: New 'Total Recall' slick, forgets to have fun)
7. “Ice Age: Continental Drift,” $6.8 million ($16.2 million international). (Meszoros review: 'Ice Age: Continental Drift' out duels Pixar's 'Brave')
8. “Ted,” $3.3 million ($20.3 million international). (Meszoros review: McFarlane's 'Ted' has raunchy 'Family' appeal but also heart)
9. “Step Up: Revolution,” $2.9 million.(Review by Scripps Howard's Sara Bauknecht: 'Step Up: Revolution' has moves, not story)
10. “The Amazing Spider-Man,” $2.2 million ($3 million international). (Meszoros review: 'Amazing Spider-Man' feels unnecessary but still succeeds)
— Nicole Franz | NiFranz@News-Herald.com | @FranzOrFoe

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Revisiting a feature on the late Marvin Hamlisch

With the death of composer Marvin Hamlisch Monday at age 68, I thought I would dig up a feature I did on the musical legend in September 2003 to preview a performance in Mentor. Hope you enjoy.

-- Mark Meszoros | Entertainment@News-Herald.com | @nhfeatures

Marvelous Marvin Hamlisch

Composer felt ‘The Sting’ of music at early age

Mark Meszoros
Staff Writer

It was at the ripe old age of 5 that renowned composer Marvin Hamlisch first showed he had more than a few musical bones in his body.

However, it wasn’t he who was taking piano lessons but instead his older sister.

“When the teacher would leave, I would be able to go to the piano and emulate what she was learning, so people realized I had a good ear for music,” Hamlisch, 57, said during a recent telephone interview.

His father, an accordionist and bandleader, had him taking lessons soon after. At 7, Hamlisch earned admission into the famed Julliard School of Music. Although Julliard had divisions for different age groups, Hamlisch was one of the youngest ever to be admitted.

Despite his talent, he wasn’t destined to become a great pianist. It wasn’t for fear of crowds, either.
“I didn’t love the idea of playing pieces that other people could play better than I could,” he said. “You were always up against someone else who had recorded it and done it better.”

That’s how Hamlisch became focused on composing, something for which he also showed a knack at an early age.

“You can teach certain fundamental skills of writing, but you can’t teach that first spark, that thing that sets it off,” he said.

Of course, there are a lot of talented people out there, so even for a Marvin Hamlisch, it helped to know people. He knew Liza Minelli, who helped him land jobs as a rehearsal pianist for theater productions and a television show, “The Bell Telephone Hour.”

“And that really got me into show business,” Hamlisch said.

Best known for writing film scores, Hamlisch owes his break to his own gumption — and to being in the right place at the right time.

He received an offer to play piano at a party. It was the kind of gig he normally would have turned down.

“But it was for this very famous producer, Sam Speigel, who had done ‘On the Waterfront’ and ‘Lawrence of Arabia,’ so I thought I’d better say yes,” he said.

Wise move. At the party, Hamlisch learned Speigel was looking for someone to score an upcoming film based on the John Cheever story, “The Swimmer.” Hamlisch decided to take his shot.
“I read the book and came to him with my idea of what the main title would be,” Hamlisch said. “I did that totally on my own, and he totally flipped for it.”

The job of scoring “The Swimmer” was followed by many others. Hamlisch said his favorite score in terms of how it worked within the movie is the one for Woody Allen’s 1971 comedy, “Bananas,” while the scores for “Sophie’s Choice” and “The Way We Were” are his favorites in general.

“The Way We Were,” released in 1973, is a romantic comedy starring Robert Redford and Barbra Streisand. The latter, at first, didn’t like Hamlisch’s title song, but it became one of her biggest hits. And, not only did the song win an Academy Award, but so did his entire score.

Streisand obviously changed her tune on Hamlisch, who served as musical director and arranger for her 1994 U.S. concert tour.

“She’s a real perfectionist, which is something I really like. I think she gets a real raw deal for being a perfectionist,” Hamlisch said. “Really, I think the reason we work so well together is we’re both perfectionists.”

Hamlisch’s second Oscar came for the music to “The Sting,” released the same year. The music wasn’t Hamlisch’s. Instead, the rags of Scott Joplin provide the movie’s musical component. “The Entertainer” is basically synonymous with the movie, thanks to Hamlisch.

He said there were many, many great Joplin numbers from which to choose.

“The part where you earn your keep is deciding what pieces to use,” he said.

Hamlisch’s proudest achievement was composing the music for “A Chorus Line,” which opened on Broadway in 1975.

“That was the thing I had always wanted to do … so when I got my opportunity, I wanted to leap tall buildings in a single bound,” he said.

Hamlisch won a Tony Award for “A Chorus Line,” an honor which he said beats his Oscars.

Although Hamlisch holds the position of principal pops conductor with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and with the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C., he is partnering with the Toledo Symphony Orchestra for a quick swing through Ohio. The three-city tour will include a show Sunday in Mentor, which will kick off the new season of the Mentor Performing Arts Concert Series.
Although Hamlisch has plenty of his own compositions from which to choose, the concert’s first half will consist tunes written by the likes of Cole Porter and Giacomo Puccini. The second half, on the other hand, will be all Hamlisch.

“Sometimes you get beaten up for the fact that you’re doing your own stuff,” he said. “I don’t like to get that criticism, so this is the easiest way to get around it.
“And I enjoy playing other music. I really do.”

Labels: ,

Monday, August 6, 2012

'Bad' is just so, so good

Are you watching? I hope you are.

This is really good TV. Great television, really.

“Breaking Bad” is the story of a down-and-out cancer-stricken high school chemistry teacher morphing into Scarface -- or at least a reasonable facsimile. It is gripping, shocking, heart-pounding, gut-wrenching, emotional and even occasionally funny. 

And it’s going away sooner than later, so enjoy it while you can.

Deserved multiple Emmy Award winner Bryan Cranston stars as Walter White, the Albuquerque, N.M., teacher given a death sentence in its 2008 pilot episode when he is diagnosed with advanced lung cancer. To meet his medical expenses and set his family up financially for their time post-Walter, he turns to making crystal meth. And while Walter has the chemistry background to crank out the best crystal Albuquerque’s ever seen, is doesn’t know the first thing about selling it. So he inlists a former highly unpromising student, Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul).

The pair have always been good together, but one of the great things about “Breaking Bad” is how the relationship between Jesse and “Mr. White” -- as Jesse has always called him -- has evolved over time. Once constantly at each other’s throats, there is now a genuine mentor-student or father-son thing going on, although it’s threatened by the possibilty that Jesse might learn how Walter has manipulated him recently into helping him off his rival, Gustavo Fring (Giancarlo Esposito, doing the best work of his career).



No, Walter is not a good dude. Not any more. “Breaking Bad” is, as the story suggests, is the tale about how a good man breaks -- aka goes -- bad. And Walter hasn’t just been bad when it comes to Jesse. He has also become a genuine threat to his wife, Skylar, whose best interests Walter has always felt were foremost in his mind. After reluctantly going into business with her husband and laundering his drug money, Skylar has turned her attention to getting their two children out of the house for their own safety.

When this first half of this, the fifth and last season began, and Skylar became afraid of her husband, I didn’t feel like it was all that interesting or compelling. The character’s journey to willing accomplice had been fascinating, and now she’s suddenly scared of Walter? I wasn’t buying it, and I felt creator Vince Gilligan was trying to set Gunn up for an Emmy. Well, after Sunday’s most recent episdode, give Gunn the Emmy. She was amazing, giving a performance -- complemented by great writing -- that changed my mind completely about Skyler’s character arc. 



AMC
Skylar White (Anna Gunn) has become terrified of her husband,
Walter (Bryan Cranston) and the dangers that come with his
business -- drugs -- in recent episodes of "Breaking Bad."

Gilligan has all but said that Walter’s story will not end well. But what or who will get him? The cancer? Skylar? Rival drug criminals? Or Jesse? My money’s on the latter, but who knows? We haven’t even mentioned Walter’s DEA agent brother-in-law Hank (Dean Norris), who, by the way, just got promoted.

I do have a bone to pick with “Breaking Bad.” The show has been reminding us lately that Walter was diagnosed with cancer only a year ago, that his transformation from chemistry teacher to one of the major forces in the New Mexico drug trade has taken only 365 days. It’s a distracting bit of information not helped by the fact that Walter’s son, Walter Jr. (RJ Mitte), appears to be four years older than when the show started.

Well, whatever. I can buy that as easily as the show’s premise, I suppose. Because at a time when there’s almost nothing good on television -- with apologies to all you “True Blood” fans -- “Breaking Bad” is, if you’ll pardon the drug pun, addicting.

“Breaking Bad” is already done with half of its eight 2012 episodes, which is highly depressing. The show will return in a year for the last eight episodes of this 16-part season. Will Walt be a total monster my then? The season opened with an older Walt -- his typically bald head had a good bit of hair -- buying an automatic weapon. Knowing how the brilliant Gilligan likes to structure his season, that’s probably the beginning of Walt’s end.

Can’t wait.

-- Mark Meszoros | Entertainment@News-Herald.com | @nhfeatures

Labels: , , , , ,

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Best of the Bat trilogy


Warning: Plot spoilers for The Dark Knight Rises are included in this blog.

With enough perspective (i.e. multiple viewings of The Dark Knight Rises) in tow, it's time to take stock of Christopher Nolan's epic Batman trilogy.

Epic scenes, epic characters, movie lines, plot twists and cool gadgets have defined Batman Begins, The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises. With so many, it's difficult to gauge which are the best of the trilogy, but let's give it a shot. Here we go:



BEST NON-VILLAINS

1. Bruce Wayne/Batman: Nolan's trilogy dove deep into the psyche of Bruce Wayne, and delivered a fascinating, riveting tail.

2. Jim Gordon: Gary Oldman as Gordon was perfectly cast.

3. Alfred Pennyworth: Wayne's father figure provided much-needed comic relief throughout the three films.

4. Lucious Fox: Bruce: "What's that?" Lucious: "The tumbler? Oh, you wouldn't be interested in that."

5. Selina Kyle: Anne Hathaway in a full-body leather outfit: Thank you Nolan.

BEST VILLAINS

1. Joker: Slam dunk.

2. Bane: That voice ... absolutely love it.

3. Ra's Al Ghul: Intellectually, Batman's equal.

4. Jonathan Crane/Scarecrow: The only villain to appear in all three films.

5. Carmine Falcone: Tom Wilkinson great as Gotham's crime lord in Begins.

BEST GADGETS

1. Tumbler: Gordon: "I gotta get me one of those."

2. Batman's cape: Love those wings.

3. Skyhook: Don't try this at home, kids.

4. Batpod: A quarter of the Tumbler is pretty good too.

5. Grapple gun: Seriously, who doesn't want one of these?

BEST PLOT TWISTS

1. Bruce survives (The Dark Knight Rises): For a long time, I felt Nolan would kill off the caped crusader, then cooled off that theory. The director had me at the film's conclusion, and what a pleasant surprise to see Bruce alive and well.

2. Ra's Al Ghul's true identity (Batman Begins): Portrayed as Al Ghul's trusty sidekick, Henri Ducard throughout, Liam Nesson steals the show at the film's conclusion as the leader of the League of Shadows.

3. Batman takes the rap (The Dark Knight): No one could have guessed the Dark Knight taking the blame for Harvey Dent's murders.

4. Blake takes mantle from Bruce (The Dark Knight Rises): John Blake's future could be as the next Batman, or as Robin or as Nightwing. It doesn't matter. Nolan leaves it up to us.

5. Talia turns on Bruce (The Dark Knight Rises): Not a huge surprise since many were speculating Miranda Tate was Al Ghul's daughter, Talia, in disguise.

BEST SCENES

1. Batman interrogates Flass (Batman Begins): See best line No. 1 below.

2. Batman/Gordon cover-up (The Dark Knight): An exhausting ride to this point of the film gets amped up well beyond 10.

3. Batman/Gordon discusses escalation on rooftop (Batman Begins): Welcome to the world of the Joker.

4. John Blake rises (The Dark Knight Rises): A powerful way to conclude the trilogy.

5. Bruce escapes the pit (The Dark Knight Rises): He doesn't need no stinking rope!

BEST LINES

1. Batman to Flass: "Do I look like a cop!?!?" (Batman Begins)

2. Gordon: "He's a silent guardian, a watchful protector. A dark knight." (The Dark Knight)

3. Joker: "Why so serious?" (The Dark Knight)

4. Gordon: "I never said thank you." Batman: "And you'll never have to." (Batman Begins)

5. Bane: "Let the games begin!" (The Dark Knight Rises)

- Mark Podolski | @mpodo

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Share your photos from Vintage Ohio

Share your photos from this weekend's Vintage Ohio by clicking the upload button below, emailing photos to yourpics@news-herald.com with the caption in the subject line, or posting on Twitter/Instagram with the hashtag #vintageohio.

Labels: , , , ,