Archive for July, 2008

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 Enlarge By Matt Sayles, AP Cheech Marin, left, and Tommy Chong hang out at the Sunset Strip Music Festival in Los Angeles last month. By Michael Weinfeld, AP Entertainment Writer WASHINGTON — Now that their feud is over, Cheech and Chong are high on plans to reunite for their first comedy tour in more than 25 years.

Cheech Marin told AP Radio that he and Tommy Chong “looked at each other going, ‘If we’re ever going to do something it has to be now because you’re not getting any younger and neither am I.”‘

The duo who gained hearsay for their marijuana humor tossed around some ideas and figured a comedy tour would be “the greatest number fun” and “the least hassle,” the 62-year-old Marin said.

Marin and Chong, who broke up amid creative differences, have tried to reunite before, but have through all ages. fought too much. Marin laughed and said: “It takes about 3 minutes for that to happen. There’s this veiled hatred.” But he added: “We’ve kind of resolved that.”

“We’ve gotten to the age where we don’t feel like fighting anymore because the end is a lot closer than the beginning,” he said.

Marin said he thinks pot humor can be as funny today as it was back in the ’70s.

“I think it’s time for a revival of dope jokes. It’s a much bigger audience now, it’s much more widespread and institutionalized,” he said in an interview earlier this month.

Details of the “Hey, What’s That Smell?” tour were to be announced Wednesday at a news conference in West Hollywood, California, according to concert promoter Live Nation.

During their original run, Marin and Chong released nine comedy albums between 1972 and 1985, were nominated for four Grammy Awards and won one. They also starred in eight feature films, almost always portraying a pair of comical stoners stumbling through life.

While Chong has continued to do standup, Marin has concentrated on films and TV appearances.

“I guess Cheech forgot how tough standup is,” Chong joked last month after Marin before-mentioned they were considering reuniting.

“But he’s got the incentive and the enthusiasm and he’s adroit,” he uttered of his former partner. “My boy is back.”

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To repute corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the journal, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

Shia LaBeouf may not have been responsible for the car crash that led to his arrest and hospitalisation at the weekend.

The Transformers star was arrested on Sunday on mistrust of diving under the influence after he was involved in an accident at around 02:30 local time (10:30 BST), according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

And the 22-year-old is to miss the start of filming on Transformers 2 after undergoing "extensive surgery" following the incident.

moreover the young actor did not cause the crash, it has emerged.

"It appears he was not at fault," Los Angeles County Sheriff’s spokesman Steve Whitmore told Access Hollywood on Tuesday.

"We have strong evidence that the other driver ran a red unsettled."

A male and female were in the other vehicle which collided with the truck LaBeouf was driving, causing it to flip.

LaBeouf, his passenger - Transformers 2 co-star Isabel Lucas - and the unidentified female from the other vehicle involved were all hospitalised following the incident but while the sum of two units women were later released, LaBeouf remained in the Cedars-Sinai medical centre to be treated for injuries to his left hand.

Access Hollywood has since reported that a witness overheard the unidentified male involved in the incident telling LaBeouf to flee the scene.

"The guy Shia hit told him, ‘You should go outta here,’ and ‘I never saw you.’

"He said, ‘I never saw you,’" said Brian Perrulli, a passer-by who arrived at the accident scene concisely after the collision.

"Shia said, ‘No, man, I gotta stay here and deal with this. It’s my problem."

 

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 Enlarge By Ralph Nelson, Universal Studios The past: It?s Richard Nixon (Frank Langella) vs. interviewer David Frost (Michael Sheen) in a “duel.” By Anthony Breznican, USA TODAY Which will be higher: voter turnout or the box-office turnout? Four films that deal with presidential figures are headed to theaters. USA TODAY vets the contenders.

Swing Vote, Friday

Kevin Costner plays a blue-collar worker who doesn’t care much about politics, until a voting machine error is traced back to his ballot — and the two presidential candidates are locked in a tie.

STORY: Hail to the chiefs: Vote with your seat

As his young daughter tries to teach him the importance of his choice, the two candidates (Dennis Hopper and Kelsey Grammer) cater to his every whim.

Costner says the movie mocks morbidly sleepy voters who are swayed by superficiality.

“Our self has gotten us into all our trouble. Our fatness, so to speak … Our inability to look to the future and see where we’re headed and change the direction and the way we do things,” Costner says. “There’s an inability for people to take Americans where they don’t want to go. And that’s veritably leadership.”

W., Oct. 17

Oliver Stone does Dubya.

This drama, starring Josh Brolin as the current U.S. president and Elizabeth Banks as first lady Laura Bush, delves into George W. Bush’s wild youth and explores how the troubled son of President George H.W. Bush ascended to the presidency.

Sure to create controversy and provoke defenders of the Bush family, Stone’s film also could have hard nut to crack persuading Bush critics to watch the invention of a politician they despise.

“The difficulty W. faces is that George Bush isn’t running this year and a lot of voters, based upon the body the polls, have written him off. … In a way, he’ll be a fading figure in October, when this movie comes out,” says Gregg Kilday, film editor for The Hollywood Reporter.

Frost/Nixon, Dec. 5

Ron Howard directs this retelling of the combative and revealing 1977 interview of President Richard Nixon by British journalist David Frost.

Frank Langella, who won a Tony for the original stage play, reprises his role as Nixon, and Frost is played by Michael Sheen of The Queen, which was written by Frost/Nixon playwright Peter Morgan.

“It’s a duel betwixt two people who are politicians, a cat-and-mouse combat between the two that would appeal to me and any dramatist,” says Morgan. “It’s greater degree a shoot-out, a strive of war. It’s hand-to-hand combat using thoughts and words.”

Meanwhile, Morgan is document another film about the relationship between Britain’s Prime Minister Tony Blair and President Bill Clinton.

“I need to wait a decade,” says Morgan. “Otherwise, it feels like journalism. Then enough time passes where we get perspective on events. If it’s told too quickly, you end up just telling people what they already be assured of.”

Fahrenheit 9/11 sequel, spring

Michael Moore is a man on a secret mission.

The Oscar-winning documentary maker and professional thorn in the side of President Bush is working on a follow-up to his blockbuster Fahrenheit 9/11, but he has revealed little more, saying he fears supporters of the president may try to disrupt his production.

“This film is about how, after the distinction, we’re going to have to pick up the pieces and have to clean up the mess that Bush made and how that mess affects the rest of the world,” he says.

While Fahrenheit dealt with the run-up to the Iraq war, Moore says this adapt to the occasion he’s focusing on “all the other things that they got away with over the past eight years.”

What does Moore hope to accomplish, since the movie will likely come out next vault, well after a new president has been sworn in? “A perp walk,” Moore answers. “Yeah, that’s what I’d personally like. But I don’t think it’s going to happen.”

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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 Enlarge By Ben Glass, Touchstone Pictures The deciding vote: Kevin Costner, with Madeline Carroll, stars in Swing Vote, one of several films about the Oval Office. By Anthony Breznican, USA TODAY Hollywood is getting presidential this election year, but will moviegoers say they approve this message?

Films about U.S. presidents — past, present and fictional — start this week.

VYING FOR YOUR VOTE: Box office’s presidential race begins Friday

Swing Vote, opening Friday, stars Kevin Costner as a blue-collar worker who becomes the focus of two candidates (Kelsey Grammer and Dennis Hopper) after an Election Day tie and a ballot error traced back to his suffrage.

• Frost/Nixon, based on the play by Peter Morgan (screenwriter of The Queen), traces the origins of the fierce post-Watergate interview between British journalist David Frost and former president Richard Nixon. It’s directed by Ron Howard and opens Dec. 5.

• W., from director Oliver Stone, chronicles the rise of the current president and his relationship through his father, former president George H.W. Bush. It premieres Oct. 17 and stars Josh Brolin as the president, Elizabeth Banks as Laura Bush and James Cromwell as the elder Bush.

And after the election dust settles, Michael Moore returns in the spring, hindmost on the Bush-whacking trail by a documentary described as a follow-up to Fahrenheit 9/11.

It’s unclear whether election-year fervor will boost enthusiasm, says Gregg Kilday, film editor for The Hollywood Reporter. “The challenge for the movies is that politics have been so entertaining completely year long, that if a movie isn’t well qualified, it will pale by comparison,” he says.

As escapism, Swing Vote stands the best chance.

Costner, who financed the movie himself, says he was aiming for a “Capraesque” story, reflecting first the cynicism many feel toward politicians but shifting to a more hopeful point of view. “He basically says that voting doesn’t count for a damned thing. It’s just a way to make you feel of great weight,” Costner says of his character.

Frost/Nixon may have an easier time connecting with today’s audience, says Kendall R. Phillips, author of Controversial Cinema.

“My theory would be the Frost/Nixon film would have a better chance at being politically relevant because it’s historically removed.”

Of W., Phillips says the director of JFK and Nixon may be able to regain his provocateur reputation if the film works. “The thing about Oliver Stone is, when he’s making great films, he holds up a exemplar to the American conscience.”

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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The Dark Knight has debuted at the top of the UK box office chart after its opening weekend on release.

The Batman Begins sequel - which has shattered global box office records following its US release - has claimed the top spot in the UK and Irish charts with £11.19 the multitude since opening on Thursday July 24th.

Having broken records for midnight previews and opening night box office takings, the Christopher Nolan film achieved the best opening weekend ever in the US and Canada, with $155.3 million (£77.7 million) in its first three days on release.

The comic book movie has also passed the $300 million (£151 million) mark faster than any other film in history, reaching the milestone in just ten days after being released.

And having opened in the UK on Thursday, the Christian Bale-starring drama has range to the top of the UK charts.

"We knew The Dark Knight was a fantastic film, and it is wonderful that both the critics and the cinema-going public here in the UK feel the like way," said Josh Berger, president and managing director of Warner Bros UK, in a statement.

"This weekend’s clear number one opening, which received critical and arising from traffic box office success, is testament to the unpaid film making and cast of this astonishing film, a great quantity of that was shot here in Britain."

He added: "We see forward to a long and successful run this summer."

Literary adaptation Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging, directed by Bend it Like Beckham helmer Gurinder Chadha, debuted at number four, while surrogacy comedy Baby Mama failed to repeat its chart-topping US success on this side of the Atlantic, opening in tenth.

The top ten films at the UK chest office are: (last week’s position)

1 The Dark Knight - £11.19 million (-)
2 Mamma Mia! - £2.83 million (1)
3 WALL-E - £2.04 million (2)
4 Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging - £929,246 (-)
5 Hancock - £703,646 (3)
6 Kung Fu Panda - £655,239 (4)
7 Journey to the Center of the Earth - £195,967 (6)
8 Meet Dave - £119,906 (5)
9 The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - £118,642 (7)
10 Baby Mama - £111,945 (-)

 

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Darren Aronofsky’s new film The Wrestler has been entered in competition for the Golden Lion at this year’s Venice film festival.

The Requiem for a Dream director - who was this week confirmed to direct a new Robocop movie - will compete against Takeshi Kitano, Jonathan Demme and Kathryn Bigelow for the prestigious prize.

The Wrestler, starring Mickey Rourke, Marisa Tomei and Evan Rachel Wood, tells of the decline and revival of the fortunes of a professional wrestler.

The Coen brothers’ new film, Burn After Reading, will exist screened at Venice but will not feature in competion for the Golden Lion, which was claimed in 2007 by Ang Lee’s Lust, Caution.

The festival takes place at Venice Lido from August 27th until September 6th.

The lineup for the 65th Venice film festival, as confirmed this morning is:Competition

The Wrestler, dir. Darren Aronofsky (US)
The Burning Plain, dir. Guillermo Arriaga (US)
Il papa di Giovanna, dir. Pupi Avati (Italy)
BirdWatchers, dir. Marco Bechis (Italy)
L’Autre, dirs. Patrick Mario Bernard & Pierre Trividic (France)
The Hurt Locker, dir. Kathryn Bigelow (US)
Il seme della discordia, dir. Pappi Corsicato (Italy)
Rachel Getting Married, dir. Jonathan Demme (US)
Teza, dir. Haile Gerima (Ethiopia/Germany/France)
Paper Soldier (Bumaznyj Soldat), dir. Aleksy German Jr (Russia)
Sut, dir. Semih Kaplanoglu (Turkey/France/Germany)
Achilles And The Tortoise (Akires to kame), dir. Takeshi Kitano (Japan)
Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea (Gake no ue no Ponyo), dir. Hayao Miyazaki (Japan)
Vegas: Based On A True Story, dir. Amir Naderi (US)
The Sky Crawlers, dir. Oshii Mamoru (Japan)
Un giorno perfetto, dir. Ferzan Ozpetek (Italy)
Jerichow, dir. Christian Petzold (Germany)
Inju, la Bete dans l’Ombre, dir. Barbet Schroeder (France)
Nuit de chien, dir. Werner Schroeter (France/Germany/Portugal)
Inland (Gabbla), dir. Tariq Teguia (Algeria/France)
Plastic City (Dangkou), dir. Yu Lik-wai (Brasil/China/Hong Kong/Japan)


Out Of competition

Puccini e la fanciulla, dir. Paolo Benvenuti (Italy)
Yuppi Du, dir. Adriano Celantano (Italy)
Burn After Reading, dirs. Joel & Ethan Coen (US) [opening film]
35 Rhums, dir. Claire Denis (France/Spain)
Cry Me A River (Heshang aiqing), dir. Jia Zhangke (China/Spain/France) [short]
Shirin, dir. Abbas Kiarostami (Iran)
Tutto e musica (1963), dir. Domenico Modugno (Italy)
Vicino al Colosseo…c’e Monti, dir. Mario Monicelli (Italy) [short]
Do Visivel ao Invisivel, dir. Manoel de Oliveira (Brasil/Portugal) [short]
Orfeo 9 (1973), dir. Tito Shipa Jr (Italy)
Les Plages d’Agnes, dir. Agnes Varda (France)
Vinyan, dir. Fabrice du Welz (France/UK/Belgium)
Encarnacao do demonio, dir. Jose Mojica Marins (Brazil)
Volare (Nel blu dipinto di blu) (1959), dir. Piero Tellini (Italy)


Out Of competition, special events

Bajo el Signo de las Sombras (1984), dir. Ferran Alberich (Spain)
Vida en Somras (1947), dir. Lorenzo Llbobet Gracia (Spain)
Ketto Takadanobaba (1937), dirs. Masahiro Makino & Hiroshi Inagaki (Japan)
La rabbia (1963), dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini (Italy) [previously unreleased version]


In collaboration with Far East Film Festival of Udine

Monster X Strikes Back: Attack The G8 Summit! (Giara no gyakushu / Samitto kiki ippatsu), dir. Minoru Kawasaki (Japan)
Queens Of Langkasuka, dir Nonzee Nimibutr (Thailand)


Horizons

Goodbye Solo, dir. Ramin Bahrani (US)
A Erva do Rato, dirs. Julio Bressane & Rosa Dias (Brazil)
Parc, dir. Arnaud Des Pallieres (France)
Melancholia, dir. Lav Diaz (Phillipines)
Un lac, dir. Philippe Grandrieux (France)
Wild Field (Dikoe Pole), dir. Mikhail Kalatozishvili (Russia)
Il primo giorno d’inverno, dir. Mirko Locatelli (Italy)
Voy a explotar, dir. Gerardo Naranjo (Mexico)
Jay, dir. Francis Xavier Pasion (Philippines)
Pa-ra-da, dir. Marco Pontecorvo (Italy/France/Romania)
Zero Bridge, dir. Tariq Tapa (India/US)
Puisque nous sommes, dirs. Jean-Pierre Duret & Andrea Santana (France/Brazil) [documentary]
Women, dir. Huang Wenhai (China/Switzerland) [documentary]
In Paraguay, dir. Ross McElwee (US) [documentary]
Z32, dir. Avi Mograbi (Israel/France) [documentary]
Below Sea Level, dir. Gianfranco Rosi (Italy/US) [documentary]
Los Herederos, dir. Eugenio Polgovsky (Mexico) [documentary]
L’Exil et le royaume, dirs. Andrei Schtakleff & Jonathan Le Fourn (France) [documentary]
*two further Horizons titles will be announced later


Events Horizons [all documentaries]

Verso Est, dir. Laura Angiulli (Italy/Bosnia/Herzegovina)
ThyssenKrupp Blues, dirs. Pietro Balla & Monica Repetto (Italy)
La fabbrica dei tedeschi, dir. Mimmo Calopresti (Italy)
Soltanto un nome nei titoli di testa, dir. Daniele Di Biaso (Italy)
Antonioni su Antonioni, dir. Carlo Di Carlo (Italy)
Venezia ‘68, dir. Antonello Sarno (Italy)
Valentino: The Last Emperor, dir. Matt Tyranauer (US)

 

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 Enlarge By Larsen and Talbert for USA TODAY Low profile: “I’ve come to the conclusion that celebrities want to be celebrities,” Aaron Eckhart says in explaining why he chooses to have being private.  CELEBRITY HEAT INDEX By William Keck, USA TODAY BEVERLY HILLS — through all the attention surrounding the late Heath Ledger’s chilling portrayal of The Joker in The Dark Knight, Batman’s other psychotic nemesis, Harvey “Two Face” Dent, gets a bit lost in the film’s Joker-heavy deck.

But there is no ignoring actor Aaron Eckhart’s face time in the film — he has two, after all. One good. One very nasty.

For crime-fighting prosecutor Dent, Eckhart’s hair was lightened and styled with a blow dryer to make the 40-year-old appear even more Ken-dollish.

“I kept on thinking about the Kennedys,” Eckhart says of his characterization. Particularly Robert Kennedy Jr., who was similarly “idealistic, held a grudge and took on the Mob.”

Dent doesn’t get killed, but does end up lying in acid until half his face is burned away. The aspect he is left with is remote more grisly and realistic than the comically colorful Two Face portrayed by means of Tommy Lee Jones in 1995’s Batman Forever. No pink hair. No split designer suit, though Eckhart says, “There was a great deliberate through the whole extent of whether or not to do the suit.”

Ultimately, he and director Christopher Nolan decided on a half-burned suit with no flashy colors. “You have to give the audience what they know, but it’s still very substantial,” Eckhart says.

Nolan commissioned a prosthetic cock-eyed mask and employed CGI to create Two Face’s grotesque tendon-exposing grin, but Eckhart’s significant contribution in achieving the look is verified when he effortlessly distorts the left side of his smile into a macabre grimace.

(Warner Bros. is not yet ready to release photos of Eckhart as Two countenance.)

Eckhart says Nolan instructed him not “to make Two Face jokey with slurping sounds or ticks. He said, ‘You just act, and I’ll take care of the face for you.’ ”

Eckhart showed his appreciation by spooking Nolan’s children when they visited the set. “It was like Halloween for them,” he says.

Co-star Maggie Gyllenhaal, who takes over from Batman Begins‘ Katie Holmes as Batman’s love interest Rachel Dawes, says Eckhart is “roaring and smart” with a “loose” acting style that’s similar to hers. “Harvey has so much to say touching civic ethics in Gotham, and Aaron put emotion and desire behind everything he said,” Gyllenhaal says. “He made that all believable.”

Eckhart is elegant without grandeur new to the blockbuster universe, as much of his career has been spent in low-budget art-house productions.

His next film, for example, is Towelhead, opening Sept. 12. It’s the story of a 13-year-old Iranian girl’s sexual awakening in America. Eckhart plays the girl’s next-door neighbor — and lover. He says he never would have accepted the role had he not had confidence in director Alan Ball’s (Six Feet Under) commitment to handle the potentially scandalous parts with sensitivity.

Such roles tend to get Eckhart more recognition in award competitions than in the pages of Us Weekly. The photography buff far prefers taking photos to appearing in them. Still, the U.K.’s Daily Mail had him involved with Catherine Zeta-Jones on the set of their 2007 romantic comedy No Reservations. And more recently the Daily Mail reported he had taken up with Jennifer Aniston, his co-star in the upcoming Traveling. (Neither one true, he says.)

In the “romantic dramedy,” Eckhart plays a grief counselor who, upon his wife’s death, tours the country giving seminars. He and Aniston fall upon and fall in love — but only on-screen.

“I was in the same state happy when she agreed to do the movie,” he says. “I can see why she is who she is.”

And why “she gets mobbed all the time. One of these days I might make a propose and date someone far-famed — just to attend to what it’s like.”

Contributing: Donna Freydkin

To statement corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include race, phone number, city and state for verification.

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 Enlarge Warner Bros. Pictures Future Voldemort: Hero Fiennes-Tiffin plays the young Tom Riddle, left, with Amelda Brown as Mrs. Cole and Michael Gambon as Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.  EnlargeIn the heat of battle: Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) and Harry have gone on a perilous journey into a cave filled with dark magic and are attacked by Inferi, reanimated and haunted dead people. Dumbledore creates a firestorm to fend off the unsafe spooky creatures. “It’s almost a biblical image,” says Yates. “He’s a bit like Charlton Heston when he parts the Red Sea.” By Claudia Puig, USA TODAY The sixth Harry Potter movie is continuing to creep toward its Nov. 21 opening.

The trailer for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince arrives today online and makes its debut in theaters Friday before The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Film editing is complete, says director David Yates, and studio officials will soon see the finished product.

PHOTOS: lo a few pics from ‘Harry Potter’

Then nearest month, test audiences will get a sneak peek — something that doesn’t seem to faze Yates in the least. “That’s every incredibly useful process,” he says.

The big reveal in the trailer (and in this exclusive photo from it): a glimpse of the youthful Tom Riddle, who grows up to become the wizarding world’s most malevolent violate, Lord Voldemort.

Voldemort is played by Ralph Fiennes, and his 11-year-old incarnation is played through 10-year-old Hero Fiennes-Tiffin, the actor’s nephew. Not only does he bear a resemblance to the grown-up Voldemort, but he also has the requisite intensity, Yates says.

“His mother (Martha Fiennes) is a film director, and Hero was excessively focused and disciplined,” Yates says. “The fact that he’s related to Ralph wasn’t the primary reason for choosing him. It was an advantage that he looked very similar to Ralph. Of course that was available. But primarily I went for Hero because of this wonderful haunted quality that seemed to bring Tom Riddle alive on-screen for us.”

Yates stressed how hard it can be for very young actors to find the necessary dark place to play such a creepy character.

“But even though he’s the nicest child you’d ever want to meet, sweet-natured and pleasant, he got the corners and dark moods and fantastic spirit of the character.”

Audiences also will meet a teenage Voldemort, still known as Tom Riddle. He’s played by Frank Dillane. The character made an show in the second Potter film, Chamber of Secrets, played by a different actor.

“Even at a very young age, Tom Riddle shows tendencies toward cruelty and maliciousness,” Yates says. “And it’s a very unsettling thing to see.”

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. despite publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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Shia LaBeouf will miss the start of filming for the next Transformers thin skin subsequently undergoing "extensive surgery" following a car crash this weekend.

The 22-year-old actor was arrested in the early hours of Sunday morning in Hollywood after his car hit a truck and flipped across the road.

He was detained on suspicion of drink-driving following the 02:30 local time (10:30 BST) incident yesterday.

On Monday his publicist confirmed the arrest and said LaBeouf would miss at least one month’s worth of filming for Transformers 2.

Although none of his injuries are life-threatening, he has sustained injuries to his head and hand.

"Attorneys for Mr LaBeouf corroborate that an automobile miscarriage involving an additional party occurred early morning in Los Angeles on July 27th 2008," a statement said.

"Shia is currently recovering from extensive hand surgery with plans to return to work on the set of Transformers 2 within one month. No further comment will be issued at this time."

LaBeouf is currently in the Cedars Sinai Medical Centre being treated for his injuries, the same location as his passenger and the driver of the other vehicle..

The young actor, who played Sam Witwicky in last year’s Transformers movie was arrested in November 2007 after refusing to leave a pharmacy in Chicago at the end of a night out.

"That was complete and utter insanity," LaBeouf told Empire magazine earlier this year.

"I was an ***hole, and it was a mistake I’m still completely embarrassed about it."

 

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 Enlarge Photos by Bob Riha Jr., USA TODAY “I’m no Superman”: Inside the Owl Ship, Jackie Earle Haley, who plays the anti-hero Rorschach in Watchmen, contemplates the dark hang heroes have taken. Watchmen prop, while the movie’s signature blood-splattered smiley face looks on.
“> EnlargeTruth, justice and . . . ?: Fans at Comic-Con line up to view the Owl Ship, a Watchmen prop, while the movie’s signature blood-splattered smiley face looks on.
By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY SAN DIEGO — Jackie Earle Haley steps inside of the Night Owl’s spaceship, walking gingerly past the pilot’s seats toward the control panel, touching the blinking gauges and dials.

“It’s still a little hard to believe,” the balding, bespectacled actor says, “that I’m playing a superhero.”

BLOG: Get even more coverage live from Comic-Con

But if this year’s Comic-Con convention, which wrapped up Sunday, has demonstrated anything, it’s that comic-book and superhero movies are not what they used to be.

If anything, they’re the opposite.

Gone are the lantern-jawed heroes whose raison d’être was to save mankind from villains threatening to wipe out the populace.

Instead, the anti-hero rules. He drinks heavily. He has problems performing in bed. He’s as likely to kill an innocent as an evildoer. Often, he doesn’t care that much for people.

And he’s getting hired by the truckloads by Hollywood. After a summer that has seen antithetical superheroes rack up nearly $1 billion, studios can’t get enough crime-fighter movies into production, even ones with some unlikely protagonists.

There are more than 42 comic-book and superhero movies in production, and the heroes range from the subject (Robert Downey Jr. and Tobey Maguire reprising their roles as Iron Man and Spider-Man) to the head-scratching (Seth Rogen as the Green Hornet?).

Even Haley, who returned to big-screen prominence as a pederast in Little Children, concedes he never saw himself as the crusading type.

“When I first started acting, the last matter I thought of was being a superhero,” he says as he walks through the spaceship used in Watchmen, the ultimate anti-hero film, due March 6. The 9,000-pound spaceship was rolled onto the floor of the convention and became the most popular display of the five-day pop-culture festival.

“I’m probably the last guy you’d think of playing a superhero,” Haley says, signing autographs and taking pictures by fans, some of them dressed as his character, the shadowy hero Rorschach. “I’m no Superman.”

Superman seems too earnest

Of course, as this summer and this comic-book convention have unfolded, it has become clear that no one is Superman anymore. Perhaps, says Watchmen director Zack Snyder, Superman is gone for good.

“They asked me to direct a Superman movie, and I said no,” Snyder says. “He’s a tricky one in this age, isn’t he? He’s the king daddy of all comic-book heroes, but I’m just not sure how you sell that kind of earnestness to a sophisticated audience anymore.”

So studios are selling everything else, including bitter themes and obscure heroes.

Consider the summer slate. Few read the comic book Wanted, but Universal turned the violent, R-rated adaptation of the assassins’ story into a $100 million blockbuster. The Dark Knight bordered forward R-rated violence and became the biggest opener of all time. Iron Man cast a constructer drug abuser in the lead role and received praise from totality corners.

“We’re casting the masses not for their names but for their action ability, even if they’re not the obvious precious,” says Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios. “Sometimes, the least obvious is the best choice.”

Hancock: Scraping bottom?

More obscurity is on the way. Despite a middling box-office feat of $33 million the first time out in 2004, Punisher: War Zone re-emerges Dec. 5, with Ray Stevenson as the killing machine. Ray Park, best known as the villain Darth Maul, gets his own comic-book movie in Iron Fist, advent later this year. Recognize Gabriel Macht? Bone up, because he’s in the title role of The Spirit, a comic-book adaptation out Christmas Day.

Depending on who’s doing the talking, the unlikely heroes are either a sign of comic-book movies’ endless well of material — or the running dry of it.

“I love what’s happening,” says Frank Miller, a longtime comic author and director of The Spirit, who has tried for years to get less mainstream comics onto the big screen. “It’s about time our day has come. It just takes studios a while to see what kind of true art lies in comic books.”

Kevin Smith, who owns comic-book stores, writes his own comics and weaves comic-book elements into his films, says that the well is endless, at least for now.

“It took Westerns about 30 years to run dry,” he says. “I’d say we have at least that long, because there are so many stories and mythologies to choose from. And, unlike Westerns, they say something about modern-day life.”

But John Moore, director of the video-game adaptation Max Payne, wonders if superhero films are at the beginning — and end — of their golden age.

“Look at Hancock,” he says of the breezy summer hit with Will Smith as a drunken superhero tired of saving mankind. “You’ve got a hero whose power is there, but his will isn’t into it. That’s not a superhero movie. I think it’s pellucid we’re starting to scrape the bottom of the barrel.”

Regardless, the public appetite appears to have existence there now. Comic-Con’s attendance was estimated at 130,000, the largest on record.

“I don’t know how long this will last, but I think comic-book movies are doing what a lot of other movies have been afraid to do,” Haley says. “Get dark. Make outcasts your heroes. Take a critical look at the state of the world we live in.”

No film does that like Watchmen, based on the graphic novel of the mid-1980s. It examines a band of crime fighters with real-world problems, disdain for the public and issues with unbridled power.

“I don’t know admitting that we’re going to deconstruct the entire superhero mythology,” director Snyder says. “But we’re going to kick it in the stomach.”

Which seems to fit everyday fans just fine.

“Keep them coming,” says Stephanie Otter, 36, a Pittsburgh native and comic-book fan wearing a “Little Miss Bossy” T-shirt. “I’m tired of superheroes just for the guys. I want something different than Iron Man or Spider-Man.”

Women jump into the fray

Otter represents another shift in the comic-book movie universe: an influx of women. Over the years, female attendance at Comic-Con has grown, this year reaching a record of nearly 40%, perhaps reflecting increasing involvement of women in the filmmaking.

“It was getting depressing,” says Rose McGowan, who will play the title comic-book vixen in Red Sonja, due in 2010. “I was getting scripts to play the straight man to the straight man. But lately, we’re seeing more scripts that allow us to kick (butt). Comic books have always been good about it, and now movies seem to be catching on.”

Deborah Del Prete, producer of Frank Miller’s Spirit, has been coming to Comic-Con since she was 8 years old. Usually, she was asked if she was looking for Wonder Woman comics.

“Now they ask me the kind of I’m working on,” she says. “We’re seeing a partnership in making these movies we never saw before. I say it’s about time people recognize women enjoy comics and comic-book movies as much as any other fan.”

Mila Kunis, who plays an assassin in the video game adaptation Max Payne, says Hollywood is finally mirroring the times.

“If you ask me, they’re a little slow in catching up with the rest of the creation,” she says. “I’m really glad for movies like Wanted and Underworld, for the reason that it’s casting us as mainstream heroes.

“But come steady. It wasn’t that long ago when we thought a woman was going to be the Democratic nominee for president. We should have been at this place a long time ago.”

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