Saturday 22 October 2016

Top Hollywood Movies News

In this article we write a complete list of 2016 ultimate hollywood movies. In this article we write a list of horer movies missons movies civil war movies based on jungle movies batman movies superman movies Warcraft  movies based on animal movies based on biography drama comedy adventure based on full action movie based on full romance movies based on adventure action and other type of movies details are provide in this article. A good collection of all fantastic movies 2016 are here

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2016 Top Hollywood Movies News:

The life of Rachel Scott, a victim of the shooters at Columbine High School, is turned into a big-screen pep talk for struggling Christian teens.
An ungenerous way to describe I'm Not Ashamed, a painfully earnest TV-grade movie about Columbine High School victim Rachel Scott, is that it has turned one of the most horrific events in American history into a mere plot device, using it to add prefabricated gravitas to an otherwise ordinary story of a teen's struggle to live according to her Christian beliefs.

Many won't see it that way: Scott's life and tragic death (and the journal she left behind) were the springboard for an anti-violence nonprofit that has given school presentations to tens of millions of students, and presumably many of those have embraced the comparisons made between Scott and Anne Frank. Many Christians yearning for faith-based entertainment will be moved by this film, and that crowd may well ensure a profit for the production. But more picky viewers will admit that even taken solely as an exploration of the trials of being a Christian teen, it's awfully weak tea as a movie, instantly disposable if not for the tragic backdrop. (Moviegoers who want a more affecting film about campus shootings this month should look instead to Keith Maitland's Tower.)

Played by Masey McLain, Rachel wavers between assertive chipperness about the impact she can have on others and a dark fear that she'll never quite fit in. At the start, she sits with friends lamenting "I just want a real boyfriend." Boys just don't think of her that way, it seems, which is odd, because she's the prettiest one in her popular-girl pack, as well as the most approachable.

Trying to make herself boy-worthy, Rachel sneaks out of the house, goes to parties, smokes and drinks. (Unlike so many contemporary movies that go out of their way to keep tobacco products off screen, Ashamed has more conspicuous teen smoking than a Grease production underwritten by Philip Morris.) She gets caught at one point, and is sent to spend the summer with devout relatives in Louisiana; there, she has the first of multiple revivals of faith.

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When she returns, Rachel tries to be more involved with a church youth group, where she winds up noticing a homeless young man (Ben Davies's Nathan), and essentially stalks him until he accepts her help. He becomes her surrogate big brother, embracing church in a big way. He should probably become her boyfriend as well, but Rachel's hung up on a theater bro named Alex. The film devotes a lot of energy to her budding maybe/maybe-not romance with Alex, who is giving her acting lessons with an eye to putting her in his upcoming school play.

If Rachel was in fact the kind of idealist the movie depicts, she probably would not object to her ensuing trials — brief spasms of loneliness; concerns that "having a walk with God is hard" in an unreligious world — being dramatized for the sake of others in her shoes. But as the movie cuts from time to time to its versions of the two teens who tried to kill hundreds of their classmates on April 20, 1999, the rest of us may have qualms, about both the shallowness of its depiction of mass shooters and about the use of this event to turn Rachel into a Christian martyr. A 2000 book about her used that word in its title, and the movie runs with the idea, implying that Scott's murder was an act of religious persecution — which would come as news to the victims of this indiscriminate act of hatred, who simply happened to be at the wrong school on the wrong day.

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Production companies: Visible Pictures, All Entertainment

Distributor: Pure Flix Entertainment

Cast: Masey McLain, Ben Davies, Cameron McKendry, Terri Minton, Victoria Staley, Taylor Kalupa, Emma Elle Roberts, Sadie Robertson, David Errigo Jr., Cory Chapman, Mark Daugherty

Director: Brian Baugh

Screenwriters: Bodie Thoene, Philipa A. Booyens, Robin Hanley, Kari Redmond

Producers: Brad Allen, Nise Davies, Chuck Howard, Martin Michael

Executive producer: Benny Proffitt

Director of photography: John Matysiak


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Production designer: Christian Snell

Costume designer: Vanessa Gonzalez

Editor: Chris Witt

Composer: Tim Williams


Casting director: Nise Davies

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Friday 21 October 2016

Latest Hollywood Movies News

In this article we write a complete list of 2016 ultimate hollywood movies news. In this article we write a list of horer movies missons movies civil war movies based on jungle movies batman movies superman movies Warcraft  movies based on animal movies based on biography drama comedy adventure based on full action movie based on full romance movies based on adventure action and other type of movies details are provide in this article. A good collection of all fantastic movies 2016 news are here

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2016 Latest Hollywood movies:

The former Fox executive is said to be interested in a significant role overseeing the combined company's content operations.
Peter Chernin is destined to take a major role overseeing Time Warner if a potential AT&T acquisition comes to fruition as expected, according to industry sources.

The formalization of that role may take time to crystallize, as the proposed merger — assuming it passes federal muster — would be about a year off.

Chernin, 65, is said to be uninterested in a day-to-day executive job, but that does not preclude a significant role overseeing the combined company's content operations. Through a spokesperson, Chernin declined to comment. The deal, which Reuters reported would value Time Warner at $85 billion (or $110 per share), is said to be in the final stages of negotiation and could be announced Monday.

For years, Chernin has been deeply involved in the media world — at times working closely with AT&T — while keeping a fairly low profile. He runs his eponymous production company, investing here, advising there, potentially putting himself in a position to run a media giant but never alighting anywhere. There has been speculation about him landing a top job at NBCUniversal, Disney, Yahoo or any other place where a gig worthy of his experience was to be had.


For years, meanwhile, Time Warner chairman and CEO Jeff Bewkes prepped for an eventual sale of his company, parent of HBO, CNN, the Warner Bros. film and television studios, and the Turner television networks. He slimmed it down, spun off assets including Time Warner Cable, and installed top managers with more experience on the business rather than creative side of entertainment — notably Kevin Tsujihara at Warner Bros. While Bewkes rebuffed Rupert Murdoch's offer, valued at $80 billion, in 2014, he has long been regarded in the industry as a seller. Many Hollywood insiders marveled, for example, at his seeming indifference as the Warners film studio suffered through an ill-fated management bakeoff. His eyes were on another prize.

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Chernin, who recently finished a term as a Twitter board member, has had a relationship with AT&T for several years via Otter Media, a joint venture between the telecom giant and his Chernin Group founded in 2014 with a $500 million commitment to invest in, acquire and develop over-the-top video services such as YouTube network Fullscreen and anime subscription service Crunchyroll. Just yesterday, Chernin said Time Warner would be attractive to AT&T and sung its praises in a CNBC interview. "They understand the content business," he said of AT&T, which bought DirecTV last year.

Prior to Otter and the Chernin Group, best known as the company behind the rejuvenated Planet of the Apes film franchise, Chernin was an executive at Murdoch’s News Corp. for two decades. Under Murdoch, Chernin was regarded as one of the most powerful executives in Hollywood. When he ran Fox Broadcasting, he took it to No. 1 in the 18-49 demographic, and when he ran 20th Century Fox Television it became the top supplier of shows to all networks.

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As head of Fox Filmed Entertainment, he oversaw production of Titanic and Avatar, which remain the top two films in history in terms of worldwide box office, combining for nearly $5 billion.

Chernin was eventually made president and COO at News Corp. (long before it split from 21st Century Fox), which might have made him Murdoch’s successor if not for the mogul’s desire to eventually turn the conglomerate over to his sons, James and Lachlan.


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Chernin left News Corp. in 2009 and founded the Chernin Group the following year. The company’s Chernin Entertainment has a first-look deal with Fox for both film and TV projects, the latter of which has produced titles like New Girl. The Fox deal, though, would likely need a tweak if Chernin is to be installed at Time Warner.
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