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Yahoo! News: Entertainment Reviews Mon, 13 Oct 2008 22:44:46 GMT |
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'Kindness' examines good deeds in a big, bad world
(AP)
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AP - Good deeds in a cold, uncaring world are rare indeed. Especially if that world happens to be big, bad New York City.
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Music Review: Kenny Chesney takes chances on CD
(AP)
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AP - Kenny Chesney, "Lucky Old Sun" (Blue Chair/BNA/SonyBMG)
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Reporters: 24-hour news shows hurting the industry
(AP)
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AP - "No Time to Think: The Menace of Media Speed and the 24-hour News Cycle" (Continuum Books. 240 pages. $24.95), by Howard Rosenberg and Charles S. Feldman: Critics who pan 24-hour news channels now have a pair of unlikely allies ? two veteran journalists who agree that frantic deadlines and an endless hunger for content have left news shows bloated and often worthless.
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Music Review: Snider rotest music has funny side
(AP)
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AP - Todd Snider, "Peace Queer" (Aimless)
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Music Review: Keane delivers in 'Perfect Symmetry'
(AP)
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AP - Keane, "Perfect Symmetry" (Interscope Records)
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"Sex Drive" takes a familiar route
(Reuters)
- Reuters - Trying for reheated "American Pie" if served up by Judd Apatow, the raunchy "Sex Drive" is by no means "Superbad," but thanks to a likable cast, neither is it superbad.
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"Quarantine" a tiresome zombie horror
(Reuters)
- Reuters - Oh, "Blair Witch," what hath thou wrought?
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Campbell Scott portrays an unscrupulous journalist
(AP)
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AP - As journalists go, Augustine Early is an unrepentant reprobate, a bottom-feeder who ferociously chases celebrity, particularly if it means the advancement of his own career.
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Vienna director sick, but good music saves opera
(AP)
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AP - Damnation was the dominant theme Saturday in a new Vienna State Opera production of Charles Gounod's Faust. But redemption triumphed in the form of wonderful singing and a powerful orchestral performance.
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Billboard CD reviews: Chesney, Williams
(Reuters)
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Reuters - Kenny Chesney does his heroes George Strait and Jimmy Buffett proud on his latest set, which has a free-and-easy feel befitting its island inspiration.
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Christina Applegate sparkles in "Samantha Who?"
(Reuters)
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Reuters - It takes Christina Applegate approximately 45 seconds in the second-season premiere of ABC's "Samantha Who?" to dispel any lingering discomfort the audience might have with the star's summertime diagnosis of breast cancer and subsequent double mastectomy.
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"City of Ember" strictly for youngsters
(Reuters)
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Reuters - The big-screen adaptation of Jeanne Duprau's children's book "City of Ember" stalls at the intersection of fantasy and science fiction.
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Christian Slater oddly intriguing in "Worst Enemy"
(Reuters)
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Reuters - The proverb says you should keep your friends close and your enemies closer. But what about when friend and enemy is one and the same -- and both happen to be you?
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A new beginning for stylish "Starter Wife"
(Reuters)
- Reuters - If you ever wondered why Hollywood is identified with dirty dealing, hypocrisy, moral bankruptcy, overindulged children and a ceaseless preoccupation with status, check out "The Starter Wife," which is being restarted on USA Network.
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Should Iranian diplomats wear creased pants?
(AP)
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AP - "The Ayatollah Begs to Differ ? The Paradox of Modern Iran" (Doubleday. 273 pages. $24.95), by Hooman Majd: Should Iranian diplomats pursue their duties in neatly creased trousers, as their Western counterparts tend to do?
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Gay-themed family film a little too cute
(Reuters)
- Reuters - Imagine Disney tackling the issue of gay identity in a movie geared for youngsters, and you have some idea of the benign blandness of "Breakfast With Scot."
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'Blasted' graphically depicts a nightmarish tale
(AP)
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AP - Some nightmares are even more vivid on stage. There's an immediacy to the horror that goes beyond terror and into shock.
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Madonna leads fans through intense workout
(Reuters)
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Reuters - The Madonna concert ended nearly 12 hours ago, and this reviewer is still tired. And that's just from watching.
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Hefner: The man behind Playboy
(AP)
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AP - "Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream" (Wiley, 544 pages, $29.95), by Steven Watts: In 1953, Hugh Hefner was a young man in Chicago with an unimpressive resume and big plans. He would start a men's magazine geared toward young urbanites such as himself with lifestyle tips and racy pictures.
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New drama "Eleventh Hour" more of the same stuff
(Reuters)
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Reuters - You don't really need 11 hours -- merely two -- to discern that the new Jerry Bruckheimer procedural "Eleventh Hour" is pretty standard stuff, kind of like "CSI" meets "House."
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