New Shoot Em Up Movie Trailer

Shoot Em Up

The new movie trailer for Shoot ‘Em Up has hit IGN, check it out after the jump. The movie follows a man named Mr. Smith (played by Clive Owen) delivers a woman’s baby during a shootout, and is then called upon to protect the newborn from the army of gunmen. Paul Giamatti, and Monica Bellucci also star. I wasn’t originally hyped for this film, especially consider the writer/director is the one behind the horrendous 1994 video game movie adaptation of Double Dragon. And Michael Davis’s last six films have ranked well below the considered “fresh” 6.0 rating on imdb.com (which is never a good sign). And this movie probably won’t be any different, but at least it has an awesome trailer, with good actors. So don’t get too hyped, but we’ll see…

Monica Bellucci Biography

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This regally beautiful stage-trained black performer has distinguished herself on stage, TV and film, often playing intelligent but long-suffering women who exhibit strength, patience and quiet elegance. Bassett has played opposite some of contemporary Hollywood’s most illustrious black leading men including Laurence Fishburne, Denzel Washington and Eddie Murphy. She has also worked with such notable black filmmakers as Ossie Davis, Spike Lee and John Singleton. Bassett, however, has not been confined to “black subjects” as she has also been featured prominently in diverse TV projects and in film collaborations with writer-directors John Sayles and Wes Craven.

Bassett learned her craft at the Yale School of Drama where she began a valuable association with the dean–celebrated stage director Lloyd Richards who directed Bassett on Broadway in two August Wilson plays: “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” (1985) and “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” (1988).

Bassett’s screen career began in 1985 with a guest shot on the ABC detective drama “Spenser: For Hire” and a brief turn as a hooker on the CBS miniseries “Doubletake”. While the action thriller “F/X” (1986) marked her move into features, Bassett remained more regularly employed in TV during the late 1980s and early 90s with guest shots, brief stints as recurring characters and roles in high-profile TV-movies and miniseries. Some fans may remember her from the “Spencer” spin-off, “A Man Called Hawk” (ABC, 1989), as Avery Brooks’ “pseudo-cryptic clandestine girlfriend” (her phrase). Bassett registered more strongly as the wife of ill-fated astronaut Ronald McNair in the 1990 ABC Theater presentation “Challenger”. She won raves for her portrayal of Katherine Jackson, Michael’s mom, in the miniseries “The Jacksons: An American Dream” (ABC, 1992).

Bassett first gained notice in features as the estranged, ambitious wife of Laurence Fishburne in John Singleton’s “Boyz in the Hood” (1991). Her impressive resume grew to include playing the “do-gooder” wife of politician Joe Morton in John Sayles’ “City of Hope” (1991) and an outstanding portrayal of Betty Shabazz, the quietly strong wife of activist and preacher Malcolm X in Spike Lee’s epic biopic “Malcolm X” (1992). A lean and pumped up Bassett earned raves, celebrity and a Best Actress Oscar nod in her debut as a feature lead in “What’s Love Got To Do With It” (1993). Her riveting and thoroughly convincing portrayal of three decades in the life of pop icon Tina Turner transformed her career.

After a hiatus, Bassett returned to the screen with leads in three highly publicized 1995 Hollywood releases: the millennial sci-fi actioner “Strange Days”; the Eddie Murphy horror comedy vehicle “Vampire in Brooklyn”; and the adaptation of Terry McMillan’s best-selling novel “Waiting to Exhale”. Whereas the first two films built upon her image as a strong black woman by giving her firearms and fangs, the latter paired her with recording superstar Whitney Houston in a character-driven comedy-drama that proved a box-office success. Bassett undertook another McMillan heroine playing a fortyish divorcee who embarks on a relationship with a much younger man in “How Stella Got Her Groove Back” (1998). In 2002, Bassett was cast as Rosa Parks in the CBS biopic “The Rosa Parks Story”. For her portrayal of the civil rights icon, Bassett received an Emmy nomination.

Bassett turned in a finely etched performance as a Florida-born woman return to confront her tangled past in writer-director John Sayles’ pleasing “Sunshine State” (2002). After appearing as herself on a 2003 episode of the Fox sitcom “The Bernie Mac Show” she teamed with the series’ titular star for the baseball comedy “Mr. 3000″ (2004).

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A Busy Jessica Alba Talks Plastic Surgery

A Busy Jessica Alba Talks Plastic Surgery

Want a sure fire way to become a millionaire overnight?  Get a plastic surgery practice in Beverly Hills.  While Jessica Alba isn’t a strong supporter of Hollywood’s tendency to go under the knife, she hasn’t ruled it out for herself.

“As an actress, you express emotion with your face and if you have plastic surgery, you lose that spark. I’m not going to say never for sure, though,” she told Elle Magazine in a recent interview.

The Fantastic Four starlet says that she may have work done if she has excess wear on her tummy as a result of pregnancy.  “I don’t know if, for example, having babies will stretch my stomach beyond what is acceptable,” she said.

Far better than stick thin, plastic-looking women are the naturally curvy, beautiful ones, according to Alba.  “I love Kate Winslet, she has a beautiful body, as does Monica Bellucci. Beyonce, Jennifer Lopez, Jessica Biel, Scarlett Johansson—there are so many gorgeous girls out there,” she told the mag.

To see more of Jessica, see one of her many movies releasing this summer, including Good Luck Chuck, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, and Awake.  Also keep your eyes open for Sin City 2, now in pre-production.

She was in NY to promote Fantastic Four: Rise of the Siver Surfer, stopped by MTV’s TRL and ended up at a Seventeen magazine cover launch party.