Sunday 17 August 2008

V Festival 2008: Amy Winehouse And The Verve Return

Amy Winehouse will return to the V Festival later, a year subsequently cancelling her appearance at the case because of a suspected drugs overdose.


The singer joins a legion of acts, including The Verve and Kings of Leon,

Thursday 7 August 2008

Sixty Six

Preteen years can be so

Tuesday 24 June 2008

Terry and Pirates

Terry and Pirates   
Artist: Terry and Pirates

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Doubtful Handshake   
 Doubtful Handshake

   Year:    
Tracks: 8




 






Roughcut

Roughcut   
Artist: Roughcut

   Genre(s): 
Drum & Bass
   



Discography:


Wicked Sound   
 Wicked Sound

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 2


Flex (FLEX038)   
 Flex (FLEX038)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 2




 






'Get Smart': Maxed Out, By Kurt Loder




Why do they keep doing this? Why do they keep brewing up movies from the soggy dregs of old '60s TV series? Like other such awkward projects ("Wild Wild West," "The Avengers"), the new "Get Smart" is uncertain exactly what it wants to be. The original show, created by gag maestros Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, began airing in 1965, in the midst of a spy-movie craze that had been launched by the first three Bond films. That very particular cultural context being long gone, this movie is left with a narrative premise — secret spy agency battles international bad guys with a barrage of shpritzy one-liners — that has no contemporary cognate. And so the filmmakers have striven mightily to refashion their antique material into something, anything, else. What they've come up with is an uneasy amalgam of slapstick comedy, half-hearted romance and, most desperately, rampaging action. The picture is funnier than you might expect, though, and if your expectations are bare-minimal, it might pass for hilarious.

Fans of the original TV show may be puzzled by this lackluster update (it's not worth getting angry about). But of course they aren't the film's target demo, which is a new audience that's too young to remember the old series and must therefore be courted with more up-to-date inducements. Fortunately, the movie has a sharp cast: Steve Carell as the bumbling spy Maxwell Smart, Anne Hathaway as the beautiful Agent 99, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson (his old wrestling handle soon to be an entirely unnecessary credits appendage) as the stalwart Agent 23, and Alan Arkin as their flustered chief, Chief. A few tokens of the old series have been carried over: Maxwell's silly shoe phone, the malfunctioning Cone of Silence, the telephone-booth entrance to the headquarters of the underground agency, which is still called CONTROL (an acronym that still stands for nothing). But there's no attempt to simulate the '60s: the story has been updated to the age of the iPod — leaving it, alas, ankle-deep in a puddle of implausibility.

The gags that work, however, are almost worth sitting through the ones that don't. (Maxwell's acing of an agency test with an essay on existentialism — even though, as he says, "I left that section blank" — has the shape of a joke, but doesn't scan when you think about it.) There's plenty of vintage ba-da-bing ("Welcome back. How was the assassination?"), and Carell's gift for physical comedy puts across such slapstick set pieces as a one-man mini-crossbow struggle in an airplane lavatory (don't ask) and an elaborate and surprisingly sweet dance-off in which he partners with the very large and entirely lovable actress Lindsay Hollister. Johnson once again demonstrates a precise light-comic touch; and the veteran Arkin, now 74, has, of all things, a couple of funny fight scenes.

Unfortunately, Hathaway's character — here upgraded from the adoring sidekick of the TV show to a thoroughly modern butt-kicker — is written with blithe disregard for the need to make at least a little bit of sense. She spends most of the movie sneering at Maxwell, her unwanted new partner, and then, for no persuasive reason, suddenly falls in love with him. Since Hathaway and Carell have no particular romantic chemistry, this attempt at forcing a relationship is a watch-checking waste of time.

As is the plot — something about a terrorist scheme to nuke the president of the United States (James Caan, putting in a pointless appearance) during a symphony concert in Los Angeles. (Los Angeles?) The terrorists here are a vaguely constituted crew of goons bearing no resemblance to the terrorists we know so well today. These people, members of the rival spy agency KAOS, are Russians (I think), although they're led by a character named Siegfried (Terence Stamp, underutilized), who appears to be German. By about halfway through the movie, this strained scenario begins to drag woefully. And a sudden avalanche of road-chase action at the end, despite some really impressive stunt work, is a big-bucks climax that seems to come careening in from another movie. Not necessarily a better one, either.

"Get Smart" is a piffling summer diversion. Unsurprisingly, Steve Carell is the best reason to see it. But even his distinctive comic persona — the deeply deadpan puzzlement, the occasional, unexpected glow of human warmth — may not be reason enough.

Check out everything we've got on "Get Smart."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.






See Also

Six Parts Seven

Six Parts Seven   
Artist: Six Parts Seven

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Indie
   



Discography:


Casually Smashed to Pieces   
 Casually Smashed to Pieces

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 8


Everywhere, and Right Now   
 Everywhere, and Right Now

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 8




The Six Parts Seven was founded by brothers Allen (guitar) and Jay Karpinski (drums) in 1995. Based in Kent, OH, the band's indie sway appeal stems from the influences of Brian Eno and John Fahey. They issued Quiet Magnifies Sound in 2000 with Tim Gerak (guitars, samples), Brad Visker (basso). Two years by and by, the Six Parts Seven expanded into a sestet, adding Matt Haas (lap brand, high-lonesome guitar), and Steven Clements (grand piano). Things Shaped in Passing followed on Suicide Squeeze that March. They toured in support of the album for the succeeding deuce age. During that meter, The Six Parts Seven issued a split EP with with The Black Keys while as well piece of writing and recording a third record album. Lost Notes From Forgotten Songs appeared in fall 2003.





Shadow

The Delta

The Delta   
Artist: The Delta

   Genre(s): 
Trance: Psychedelic
   



Discography:


As a Child I Could Walk On The Celling (X-Noize Rmx) (Proper)   
 As a Child I Could Walk On The Celling (X-Noize Rmx) (Proper)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 1