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Things That Go Pop! tag:www.cbc.ca,2010-08-05:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237 2012-04-11T21:33:34Z Movable Type Enterprise 4.37 The Hunger Games on the hunt for new director tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.210212 2012-04-11T15:52:54Z 2012-04-11T21:33:34Z Dystopian teen tale The Hunger Games might still reign at the box office, but the budding movie franchise is losing its original director Gary Ross. Young fans have kept the movie No. 1 in ticket sales for a third week, but critics offered the first instalment mixed reviews, with many noting that Ross' take lacked the fire and potential of the books. Who should step in to tackle the post-apocalyptic world of Katniss Everdeen and Panem? Jessica Wong Dystopian teen tale The Hunger Games might still reign at the box office, but the budding movie franchise is losing its original director Gary Ross. Young fans have kept the movie No. 1 in ticket sales for a third week, but critics offered the first instalment mixed reviews, with many noting that Ross' take lacked the fire and potential of the books. Who should step in to tackle the post-apocalyptic world of Katniss Everdeen and Panem?

Dystopian teen tale The Hunger Games might still reign at the box office, but the budding movie franchise is losing its original director.

Gary Ross has revealed that he will not return for Catching Fire, the next film instalment inspired by Suzanne Collins' super-hot book trilogy about reluctant teen heroine Katniss Everdeen, who defies the authoritarian regime of Panem, a post-apocalyptic America.

Ross, whose credits include family-friendly fare like Seabiscuit, Pleasantville and Big, cited the restrictions of a "tight production schedule" -- the next Hunger Games movie is due in theatres November 2013 -- for his decision and has denied reports of a rift with distributor Lionsgate.

Though a legion of young fans have kept The Hunger Games No. 1 at the North American box office for a third week, critics offered mixed reviews for the inaugural look at the multi-layered world of Panem, with many -- including our own Eli Glasner -- noting that Ross' take lacked the fire, excitement and unsettling potential of the books.

"Just for a moment imagine what a Paul Greengrass or Kathryn Bigelow could have done with this," Glasner noted in his review. "Turns out director Steven Soderbergh did some second-unit directing on a small riot scene -- a scene that is one of the few moments in which the movie approaches the potential of the books."

In particular, one thing that piqued my interest in the book series was Collins' dark commentary about government control of the media, the lust for the Survivor-type entertainment programming so commonplace today and its use as a distraction for the masses. Sure, the subject's been tackled before -- and Collins has obviously been inspired by historical, literary and pop culture predecessors in her trilogy -- but she wove it all into a smart, intelligent tale that somehow doesn't quite make it to the silver screen.

In that vein, and riffing off Eli, what might a more sci-fi familiar director do for The Hunger Games? Though I wouldn't call RoboCop, Total Recall or Starship Troopers dramatic masterpieces, Paul Verhoeven has often offered interesting interpretations of dark and dystopian futures as well as media used as propaganda in his films.

Greengrass, Bigelow, Soderbergh, Verhoeven: many fans are contemplating which filmmaker should tackle Katniss and Panem. Who would you like to see in the director's chair for Catching Fire and the explosive series final, Mockingjay?

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FILM REVIEW: Titanic 3D - minute by minute tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.209280 2012-04-05T13:38:29Z 2012-04-11T21:38:54Z James Cameron's Titanic was always a marathon at three hours and counting. As it returns in 3D, Eli Glasner examines the experience --- minute by minute -- and discovers Cline Dion's ubiquitous soundtrack, and James Cameron's risible dialogue, have not improved with age. Eli Glasner James Cameron's Titanic was always a marathon at three hours and counting. As it returns in 3D, Eli Glasner examines the experience --- minute by minute -- and discovers Cline Dion's ubiquitous soundtrack, and James Cameron's risible dialogue, have not improved with age.  The Titanic takes so long to go down, audiences are bored of sitting still. (Paramount/Associated Press)

Part of the function of your fearless film reviewer at Canada's public broadcaster is to see the movies so you don't have to. It's been 15 years since James Cameron's epic created a wave of Titanic-Fanatics, so I decided to take a look at the new and improved 3D version to see if it still holds up. Has it improved with age? Or decayed like some relic best left forgotten on the seabed. Let's find out as I record my impressions minute by minute.

T-minus 5 minutes: The crowd is a mix of film critics resigned to their fate, Titanic fans giddy with excitement and a motley group of mutants who seem to show up at every free screening. I have come prepared with water, coffee, smuggled chicken dinner, gum, chocolate, pen, paper and emergency cyanide pill. ONWARD!

0:02 We're under water at the wreck of the Titanic. With the new 3D, the silt stirred up by the submersible floats in front of us. It's a subtle effect; is it too much to hope this is a sign of good things to come?

0:25 Old Rose, who I will call Granny, is narrating the story as sad young Rose boards the boat to take her to America. "But for me, it was a slave ship." Ah, exaggerate much?

0:26 Look, it's young Leonardo DiCaprio at a card game. And when I say young I mean embryonic. DiCaprio always had a baby face -- here he looks like a preteen.

And there's his chum, Italian stereotype Fabrizio. "I-ah go to Ah-mare-ee-cah!"

0:27 Rose's fiance Caledon doesn't like Pablo Picasso = BAD MAN. Look closely and you see the exact moment Billy Zane was typecast as villain for life.

0:30 Cameron takes us into the engine room of the great ship. There's an almost sexual excitement in the air as he films the massive pistons and cranks pounding away.

 The fiery rich girl and the poor commoner and the ham-fisted dialogue. (Paramount/Associated Press)

0:32 Clearly I've forgotten how relentless the soundtrack is. It's like Switched on Bach meets Enya.

0:34 "I'm the King of the World!" Little did Leo know that 15 years later his costar would call him fat. Funny how we never remember Super Mario Fabrizio right next to him. "I canna see the Statue of Liberty."

0:40The first time Jack sees Rose, she's perfectly backlit by the setting sun.

0:45 Rose is going to jump. Jack talks her out of it because he's just a swell, charming guy. Wow, it's amazing how much DiCaprio has grown as an actor. Here he has the honest but overwrought appeal of Mark Hamill.

You could call their relationship -- the fiery rich girl and the poor commoner -- uncomplicated, or you could point to some of the most ham-fisted writing since Lucas matched up Leia with Luke.

Oh look, they're learning to spit....cue Cline.

0:49 Jack says he's like "a tumbleweed blowing in the wind" as he squints off into the distance, the wind tousles his hair...like a tumbleweed.

0:52 I have to say the 3D ranges from subtle to downright nonexistent. That's not to say it's bad. But after all of Cameron's talk ($18 million, 60 weeks, 300 artists) of the effort that went into the converting the film, the result doesn't add much. Certainly nothing compared to the immersive dive-into-the-screen experience of Avatar.

1:00 "LIfe's a gift," says Jack.

1:05 Our gift has come. My Heart will Go On has cardiac arrest and is replaced by a rousing Irish jig scene. Sure it's a bit like the cast of Stomp travelled back in time, but the movie has blood in its veins for a moment. Also young Rose has transformed herself into quite the lively devil all of a sudden.

1:13 Bad Mom (Frances Fisher) says "Life's unfair, we're women," then maniacally tightens Rose's corset one more time.

Question. Was the acting style always this broad or have things actually improved in 15 years? This festival of fromage would be at home in 1972's The Poseidon Adventure.

Let's pause for a moment to savour this fine speech by Jack to Rose:"They've got you trapped, Rose. And you're gonna die if you don't break free. Maybe not right away because you're strong but... sooner or later that fire that I love about you, Rose... that fire's gonna burn out."

You gotta feel for a guy delivering lines like that, but for 1912, his voice and the way he carries himself seems quite modern. The only thing authentic about him is his suspenders.

1:20 It's here. The Cline song crests, there they are -- Jack and Rose standing on the bow of the ship. Winslet's arms are outstretched, bosom heaving. "I'm flying." Still an iconic moment.

1:22 THE MUSIC! MAKE IT STOP. WHY ARE THE ANGELS YELLING AT ME!

1:25 We arrive at the nude scene where Jack sketches Rose. Strange moment for such a tame film.

1:27 And BAM, we're back to Granny in the present, like jumping into a cold shower. Old Rose talks about the most erotic moment in her life. People in theatre shift awkwardly in their seats.

1:40 Back to the ship and the most persistent theme music since Brazil. Does it ever end?

1:35 "Put your hand on me Jack." The two love birds fog up the windows in an old buggy. Rose's hand streaks across the steamed-up glass. I giggle.

1:40 Another cold blast from Cameron. Just as young Rose is wiping the sweat from her brow...Iceberg Sighted! Is he punishing us for getting aroused?

 Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet huddle together in the cold night air, warmed by the thought one day they'll be respected as actors. (Paramount/Associated Press)

1:45 Wait, forget about that pesky iceberg. Let's argue about who stole the jewel for a moment. That's right, it's time for the inevitable momentary misunderstanding to tear these lovers apart. Jack stole a jacket, ergo he's a jewel thief.

2:00 Jack tells Rose to go. She doesn't want to go. Gets in lifeboat. People jumping off ship to reach boats. Clinging to ropes. Boat begins to descend. Rose jumps back on ship. Tearful reunion at grand staircase. "You're so stupid." (kiss kiss kiss) "You're so stupid" (kiss kiss kiss)

2:02 White water rapids portion as ocean rushing through hallways. Claustrophobic. Effective. Action always Cameron's forte.

2:04 Brief pause in the soppy spectacle for an artful montage. Floating dead girl. Painting under water. The Captain. Older couple embracing in bed as water rushes in.

2:30 Having the heavenly choir belting away as the ship sinks seems tacky if not outright bizarre.

2:40 Jack hangs onto the wooden headboard as he tells Rose how winning his ticket to go on the Titanic was the best thing that ever happen to him.

    Jack: Promise me you'll survive. Promise me now, Rose, and never let go of that promise.
    Rose: I promise.
    Jack: Never let go.
    Rose: I'll never let go, Jack. I'll never let go.

2:41 She lets go. Popsicle Leo sinks away.

3:00 We're back in the present with Granny and Brock (Bill Paxton) as the modern-day treasure hunter. "For three years, I've thought of nothing except Titanic, but I never got it... I never let it in." More risible dialogue from the Cameron school of screenwriting.

3:02 We see Granny's plump toes on the rail of the ship. Oh look it's the Heart of the Ocean jewel. And......plop!

3:05 No wait, Cameron's not through with us yet. One last dream sequence. Jack is standing in the grand staircase. Everyone is applauding. This is like the end of Wizard of Oz. I hold my breath waiting for the water to come rushing back, but it never does.

3:08 Credits roll! Audience rushes to the exits. Ushers try to impose order suggesting women and children first, but mob reigns.

3:10 Man in front of me: "God, that was a long time to sit." Amen sir. Amen.

RATING: 2.5 / 5 with half a point deducted for needless 3D

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Sparkle trailer gives last glimpse of Whitney Houston tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.208806 2012-04-03T17:47:49Z 2012-04-11T21:40:28Z A trailer for the movie musical Sparkle was released Monday, giving us a glimpse of Whitney Houston's last project. The late singer plays the mother of Jordin Sparks, an aspiring singer in the 1960s who rises with a girl group similar to the Supremes. Sparkle will be released in August. Arts Online A trailer for the movie musical Sparkle was released Monday, giving us a glimpse of Whitney Houston's last project. The late singer plays the mother of Jordin Sparks, an aspiring singer in the 1960s who rises with a girl group similar to the Supremes. Sparkle will be released in August.]]>

A trailer for the movie musical Sparkle was released Monday, giving us a glimpse of Whitney Houston's last project. The late singer appears both in coiffed splendour and a dejected woman in housecoat and curlers in this clip.

She plays a former singer and the mother of Jordin Sparks, a young woman who rises in a Supremes-like group in the 1960s. Comparisons to Dreamgirls are inevitable. Sparks is an American Idol winner with two albums to her credit who has since appeared in In the Heights on Broadway. Sparkle is due for release in August, according to IMDB.

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FABLE FIGHT: Mirror Mirror vs. Wrath of the Titans tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.207509 2012-03-30T05:00:00Z 2012-04-11T21:47:57Z It's a box office battle of mythic proportions this weekend as remixed fables and fairy tales go head to head. In one corner, Mirror Mirror, a snarky retelling of the Snow White fairy tale. In the other, Wrath of the Titans, the sequel to the widely panned remake from 2010. Eli Glasner It's a box office battle of mythic proportions this weekend as remixed fables and fairy tales go head to head. In one corner, Mirror Mirror, a snarky retelling of the Snow White fairy tale. In the other, Wrath of the Titans, the sequel to the widely panned remake from 2010.  Lily Collins as Snow White (left) and Sam Worthington as Perseus. (Relativity Media/Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures)

It's a box office battle of mythic proportions this weekend as remixed fables and fairy tales go head to head. In one corner, Mirror Mirror, a snarky retelling of Snow White. In the other, Wrath of the Titans, the sequel to the widely panned remake from 2010.

Mirror Mirror
Wrath of the Titans
Plot Evil queen, enchanting princess. You've heard it all before. In this version, the Queen rules over a poor kingdom ruined by her lavish lifestyle. When a handsome prince arrives, she plots to seduce him and end her money troubles. But first she must dispose of Snow White, the sheltered and alluring heir to the throne.. Picking up somewhere after Clash of the Titans, we find Perseus the half-mortal son of Zeus, trying to live the humble life of a fisherman with his son Helius. But when the gods Ares and Hades join forces, Perseus is forced back into action to find the one weapon that can stop the fiery leviathan Kronos.
Director Tarsem Singh, a director from India with a flare for striking visuals that distract from the flimsy story lines. Singh already had his crack at the Greek legends with Immortals. Johnathan Liebesman is the club sandwich of Hollywood directors. Safe, predictable and probably a little bad for you. He made his mark with horror/thrillers like Darkness Falls and The Killing Room. Next up, Ninja Turtles, another remake guaranteed to infuriate fans.
Hero Snow White, a pretty princess who sings to birds and turns out to be a quick study when trained in the art of combat by a band of mercenary dwarves. Played by the pixyish Lily Collins, daughter of Phil, who it seems also inherited her Papa's set of pipes. Perseus, played by Sam Worthington. Worthington may be out of his league in dramas like Last Night or Man on a Ledge but this is the perfect use of the Aussie's talents. He has the he-man soft-but-strong voice down pat and just enough brio to sell the ridiculous role.
Villains Julia Roberts plays the Evil Queen with a killer smile and a bitter bite. Kudos to Roberts for taking on the vain villainess. Like aging prom queen who won't give up her tiara, Roberts gets to poke fun at her own vanity while showing us she's the original Mean Girl. Like a sleepy Voldemort, Ralph Fiennes appears as the god Hades, who looks like Alan Moore at a Renaissance Fair (or is that redundant?) But he pales in comparison to Edgar Ramirez as the petulant Ares. Ramirez turned heads in Carlos and simmers with insolence here, bringing a curious vulnerability to the cartoonish character.
Feels Like... The sarcastic retelling of the story seems like an updated version of The Princess Bride. . In fact Armie Hammer, who plays the handsome prince, is quite similar to Westley: charming, befuddled and continually embarrassed. The problem is, where Princess Bride was sweet and timeless, Mirror Mirror leans towards the Shrek school of snark with modern quips that shatter the illusion. (i.e. Dwarf punches Prince shouting "Say hello to my little friend.") Star Wars. Worthingon's Perseus has a certain Han Solo-ish feel to him. Watch when he flies off from his son on Pegasus and asks the horse to "make me look good." The roguish hero isn't as forced as some of Mirror Mirror's self-aware characters, but brings the larger-than-life heroics down to earth. Plus speaking of Star Wars, Liam Neeson/Zeus whips off some force blasts near the end Qui-Gon Jinn style.
Visuals Always Singh's strength, the images are the most striking element of Mirror Mirror. The movie opens with a stunning animation sequence as porcelain statues spring to life. The Queen's castle perches above a frozen lake, like pearl capped with gold. Strangely, the scenes in the forest have a old-fashioned, man-made feel to them, all styrofoam snow and paper mache sets. Like a swirling sandstorm a thousand shades of brown, Wrath presents a familiar and dingy view of ancient Greece. While there's an abundance of CG effects, Liebesman keeps the action close and actually provides moments of quiet to break up the chaos. The finale, with waves of lava streaking across the sky, has its own audacious kind of beauty.
Bonus The now nearly obligatory Bollywood-style dance number at the end seems, again, out of context, but nearly worth the price of admission. Then, you could just watch it here. The 3D doesn't suck this time.
Rating A smarmy smart remix of the classic fable, this Snow White has an identity crisis. The actors are offering up full-bodied characters but are trapped in a simplistic story filled with tired gags An amusing experiment that doesn't quite work. RATING: 3/5. A sand-and-sandals epic on steroids, Wrath isn't trying to be overly smart but focuses on providing inventive action and showing the human side of the heroes. Actors like Ramirez and Rosamund Pike shine in this better-than average adventure. RATING: 3.5/5
]]> Hot in Cleveland heads to Ontario tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.207215 2012-03-27T15:25:27Z 2012-04-11T21:44:03Z Forget beavers, Mounties and maple syrup -- Canada's newest stereotype may be our tolerant stance towards same-sex marriage, as evidenced in tonight's season finale of the sitcom Hot in Cleveland. Arts Online ]]>  The cast of Hot in Cleveland. From left, Betty White, Valerie Bertinelli, Wendie Malick and Jane Leeves. (Peter Kramer/Associated Press)

Forget beavers, Mounties and maple syrup -- Canada's newest stereotype may be our tolerant stance towards same-sex marriage, as evidenced in tonight's season finale of the sitcom Hot in Cleveland.

In homage to The Hangover, the episode focuses on a bachelorette party gone horribly awry as Elka (Betty White) prepares for her upcoming nuptials. Her three roommates Melanie (Valerie Bertinelli), Joy (Jane Leeves) and Victoria (Wendie Malick) throw the senior citizen bride a raging bash only to awaken with no recollection whatsoever of the night's events, including a voyage north of the border.

"Joy and Victoria find out that they both got married to each other the night before in a wedding ceremony performed on Canadian soil - Ontario," according to a CTV press release. No word on whether the scene was actually filmed in Canada's most populous province but the shout-out is much appreciated.

It's nice to see an American sitcom that, on paper, at least, does not fall into the all-too-familiar trappings of a typical visit to Canada. There was widespread disappointment among Canadian fans when The Simpsons much-hyped visit to Toronto in 2002 turned out to be not much more than a few jokes about beer, free health care and curling.

Hopefully, the Hot in Cleveland finale will be able to rise above typical Canadian stereotypes.

The episode airs on Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. on CTV.

-- Ryan Charkow]]>
Jessica Par turns chanteuse for Mad Men tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.206798 2012-03-26T16:36:20Z 2012-04-10T13:02:04Z Kiss Kiss was Megan's message to Don Draper as the new season of Mad Men began on Sunday. Canadian actress Jessica Par gave a sexual charge to her version of an old French hit. Arts Online Kiss Kiss was Megan's message to Don Draper as the new season of Mad Men began on Sunday. Canadian actress Jessica Par gave a sexual charge to her version of an old French hit.]]>

Two cultural touchstones from this weekend's Mad Men debut - the first is a twist on the hit series' titles with Barack Obama filling in for the falling man. It was created for weekend news magazine The Chris Matthews Show.

 Megan's song for Don Draper. (Lionsgate/AMC)

The second is Canadian actress Jessica Par's version of Zou Bisou Bisou, which was a 1961 hit for the British singer and actress Gillian Hills (later to appear in Blow-Up) and may have been originally performed by Sophia Loren.

Par's erotically charged rendition of the song, performed as a birthday gift to Don Draper (Jon Hamm), her new husband on the show, is so eye-catching it was burning up Twitter on Monday.It is sold on iTunes and on the AMC website.

The rough translation - "oh, kiss, kiss."

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FILM REVIEW: Footnote tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.206525 2012-03-23T19:30:16Z 2012-03-23T20:28:35Z Footnote, the Oscar-nominated movie from Israel, has arrived in Canada. Eli Glasner says the film about a bitter father-son relationship is an interesting investigation into buried secrets -- both those concealed in text and the ones hidden in the people we love. Eli Glasner Footnote, the Oscar-nominated movie from Israel, has arrived in Canada. Eli Glasner says the film about a bitter father-son relationship is an interesting investigation into buried secrets -- both those concealed in text and the ones hidden in the people we love.

Part text-based detective story, part searing family drama about a bitter father-son relationship, Footnote is a film that can be read many ways.

Set in the insular community of Talmudic scholars, the story revolves around a mix-up. Eliezer Shkolnik receives a phone call congratulating him on receiving the Israel Prize; except the phone call was intended for his son, Uriel Shkolnik.

Although they're both Talmudic scholars of a sort, the father and son are on opposite ends of the academic spectrum. Younger Uriel is a star, in demand as a speaker at synagogues and community halls for his pithy observations on Jewish tradition. The father is a hermit who has toiled for decades on a radical thesis only to be usurped by another colleague. One treats words with an almost forensic devotion. The other mixes and matches text to suit the topic.

 Eliezer Shkolnik (Shlomo Bar Aba) in Footnote. (Sony Pictures Classics)

Director Joseph Cedar captures Uriel's frustration with his Dad, whose disappointment with his son is written on his face. There are interesting questions posed about the value of family ties versus secrets that eat away at us. As Eliezer transforms from plodding zombie to a joy-filled, whistling human because of his win, his son refuses to take the acclaim that is rightly his. But Eliezer himself, a crank who could give Walter Matthau a run for his money, can't help himself. In an interview with a journalist, he insults, not just his son but the very institution giving the award. Shlomo Bar-Aba captures Eliezer expertly, showing someone who retreats into the world of the word. His standards are high and unforgiving, regardless of the consequences they create.

While Footnote touches on the modern politics of Israel and the daily security gauntlet everyone runs, it's greatest relevance is toward anyone who's worked in higher education. There's a scene that manages to be farcical and scathing at the same time where Uriel begs the Academy of Science Israel prize jury to reconsider their decision. It's an academic knife fight in close quarters as the entire jury and Uriel cram into a supply closet doing double duty as a conference room. Between the scraping of chairs and constant shifting of positions, Uriel drops his warm and friendly persona and opens fire on jury chairman Grossman. As Uriel tears into him, we watch as the creases in actor Micah Lewensohn's waffle-wrinkled forehead get deeper and deeper. A mini masterwork of comic claustrophobia.

Footnote isn't note perfect. There are allusions to certain misdeeds by family members that could use clarifying and writer/director Cedar clouds the climax by playing up Eliezer's autism. It's an unnecessary embellishment on a character who is fascinating from frame one. Still, like a curious crossword, Footnote is a film worth puzzling over.

RATING: 4 out 5.

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FILM REVIEW: The Hunger Games tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.206160 2012-03-23T05:10:05Z 2012-04-02T03:20:58Z The Hunger Games is guaranteed to be a box office hit this weekend, but that doesn't make it a great film. Although the source material was inspired, director Gary Ross plays it safe, presenting an action adventure that's missing many of unsettling elements of the original. Eli Glasner The Hunger Games is guaranteed to be a box office hit this weekend, but that doesn't make it a great film. Although the source material was inspired, director Gary Ross plays it safe, presenting an action adventure that's missing many of unsettling elements of the original.

"When I read it, I thought it had the possibility to be the most influential American film since I can't remember. What we're dealing with is the destroyed fabric of a once-upon-a-time empire. And the empire is obviously here."

That is the august Donald Sutherland speaking with The Telegraph about The Hunger Games and Lord, I wish he was right.

Full disclosure, I'm a fan. I've read the series. It contains post-apocalyptic action, rebellious teens and mutant half-breeds and I was powerless to resist. And the heroine, Katniss, is the anti-Bella. Sure she's caught in a love triangle between Peeta , the white-bread baker boy, and Gale, the moody-loner-keeping-the-home-fires-burning. But it was Katniss' voice that puts the series head and shoulders above Bella's tale of self-sacrifice. This is a young woman who fights for herself and her family. Yes, in the few spare moments when she's not running for her life or avoiding tracker jackers, she ponders her choices. But survival is the priority.

 Liam Hemsworth stars as Gale Hawthorne in the film. (Alliance Films)

Yet, now, as the blockbuster book is set to become the biggest film of the season, all I can see are the missed opportunities. For fans that know the material, it's fine. In the words of Farmer Hoggett "That'll do." But to quote another film, "It could have been a contender."

At this moment in history, with the up-to-the-minute themes of the rich and the poor, the 1-per-centers, and our world being filtered through reality TV, The Hunger Games had the potential make a lot of people uneasy.

Just for a moment imagine what a Paul Greengrass or Kathryn Bigelow could have done with this. (Turns out director Steven Soderbergh did some second unit directing on a small riot scene -- a scene that is one of the few moments in which the movie approaches the potential of the books.)

Instead, producers turned to Gary Ross: the master of movies that settle over you like a warm blanket just out of the dryer. Remember, he is the writer of Big, and director of Seabiscuit and Dave.

This is the man they entrusted with author Suzanne Collins' dark dystopian vision. Why? Because Ross delivers a family-friendly, PG-ready version of the gladiatorial death match. It's the Hunger Games with the sharp edges smoothed off. Because when you're handling the adaptation based on $16 million in book sales, you don't take chances.

 Director Gary Ross on set. (Alliance Films)

If Twilight proved anything, it's that fans besotted by their love for the original are blind to the quality of the film making. The bar isn't low; it's subterranean -- hence the focus on the hunks of The Hunger Games. Thor's bro Liam Hemsworth as Gale. Josh Hutcherson as Peeta, someone with an open face, easy to love. If there's a surprise, it's that the filmmakers actually cast an actress with some fire in her eyes, opting for Jennifer Lawrence as the iron-willed Katniss. Sure, jumping from Winter's Bone to the world of Panem seems like a leap. But remember she's already proved she's franchise ready in X-Men: First Class, plus she cleans up good for the carpet.

The Hunger Games film begins top-heavy with exposition. We're introduced to Panem, the shattered remains of North America, where a handful of cities live under the iron fist of the totalitarian government. The capitol allows the citizens of the various districts to prove their loyalty by offering up their youth for an annual gladiatorial death match watched by millions. It's Death Race 2000 crossed with Running Man and the voyeurism of The Truman Show.

 Effie Trinket (Elizabeth Banks, left) and Katniss Everdeen (jennifer Lawrence) in The Hunger Games (Alliance Films)

First we meet the hard-scrabble citizens of District 12, a coal mining town cast with the extras from The Grapes of Wrath. The opening scenes watching Katniss and Gale hunting in the forest is when The Hunger Games is at its best. But after Katniss volunteers to save her young sister from the horror of the games, we're thrust into the gaudy Capitol City. In an attempt to play up the rift between the rich and the poor it seems the costume designers over-compensated with a Rainbow Brite colour scheme that makes Flash Gordon seem subtle. Our first taste of things to come is Elizabeth Banks as the guide to the games, Effie Trinket. She's a pale-faced Kabuki clown that's impossible to take seriously.

In her journey to the games, Katniss is paired with Peeta, a bland-looking baker boy. They have a shared history that's hinted at, But where The Hunger Games truly stumbles is in presenting Katniss' inner struggle. Forced to compete together, the two become fan favourites for the games. Helped by their stylist Cinna (played by a surprisingly subtle Lenny Kravitz) they're presented as star-crossed lovers, thrown together in desperate times. In the novels, the question about what is real and what's a ploy is the narrative engine propelling us forward. In the film we see but a sliver of this; A furrowed brow, an unspoken question. The rest is left to us to add. Not to mention poor Gale left at home in District 12, seen briefly brooding in a corner.

Once the games get underway, the action takes a turn for the mundane. Ross favours shaky close-ups, his way of duplicating Collin's "first person narrative". Sadly there appear to be few steadicams in this future. And while fans may have been looking forward to seeing how the government manipulates the games for the loyal citizens of Panem, what we get instead is like a glitzy Coach's Corner, with the games host Caesar and Claudius the announcer providing play by play.

 Lenny Kravitz plays Cinna. (Alliance Films)

Still, just like the indomitable spirit of Katniss, there are actors who overcome the horrendous hair and make up. Woody Harrelson plays Haymitch, a former winner of the games who mentors Peeta and Katniss. Saddled with ridiculous long, limp, blond bangs, Harrelson still bubbles with a mixture of bitterness and rage and the movie could use much more of him. Stanley Tucci also triumphs over his purple pompadour playing Caesar Flickerman, the Guy Smiley of the games. He's the crowning jewel of the propaganda machine, but Tucci plays both sides giving us the sense he's more than just a puppet with a painted grin.

Also, while it's a brief role, Donald Sutherland makes the most of his appearance as President Snow. Framed in a wizardly mane of white hair, there's an ominous weight to his softly-spoken words. He is malice, cloaked in velvet.

The best adaptations take novels and add something more to them, but this installment feels like a reduction. Rather than the world-building, flesh and blood spirit that imbued the Harry Potter films, The Hunger Games is a by-the-book (or perhaps it's a buy-the-book) adaptation. It should satisfy fans and will amuse the rest, but it's nothing like the unsettling original.

RATING: 3 out of 5]]>

Navigating Canadian Music Week: Day 1 tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.206175 2012-03-22T17:56:17Z 2012-03-23T12:00:07Z Canadian Music Week presents so many choices -- and so many organizational hurdles -- it can be hard to navigate. CBC music correspondent Laura Thompson talks about her approach on Day One, what works and doesn't work, and new finds such as Samantha Savage Smith and Craig Stickland. Arts Online Canadian Music Week presents so many choices -- and so many organizational hurdles -- it can be hard to navigate. CBC music correspondent Laura Thompson talks about her approach on Day One, what works and doesn't work, and new finds such as Samantha Savage Smith and Craig Stickland. ]]>  Johnny Reid fires it up at Canadian Music Week. (Laura Thompson)

Johnny Reid is a melody-making, heart breaking, floor-shaking mega star. Nothing we didn't already know and it's nice that some things never change.

He headlined one of two Canadian Music Week kick-off shows Wednesday night at the Mod Club in Toronto. The Scotsman we claim as our own has an energy that can Fire It Up every time. The hands-down highlight was Let's Go Higher, a heart and soul-steeped tune that screams car commercial and can galvanize any crowd. He flings his arms open and Johnny's inner gospel pours out.

Higher experience at CN Tower

The true, "Higher" experience, however would have been Joel Plaskett and the Emergency making celestial rock magic up in the clouds at the CN Tower. This one I experience via Twitter only, with no shortage of amusing references to how "high" the band was. The air must've been pretty thin up there.

CMW boasts 900 music acts from something like 40 countries this edition. Of the intriguing draws, reunion performances by '90s indie pop posterbands, Treble Charger and The Inbreds. Another intriguing draw - as I spread the schedule out before me, I recognize maybe five per cent of the names glaring back. There are so many up-and-comers this year, it's time to discover some bands.

Knowing the potential perennial headache that CMW can be with venues packed to capacity, travel time between them taking longer than anticipated, and sets not starting on time (rock 'n' roll, baby!), I laid out three potential plans of attack for CMW day one. I chose the plan that was the best bang for my wristband. It started out something like this:

  • 9-10PM JOHNNY REID @ MOD CLUB
  • 10:30-11:30PM SAMANTHA SAVAGE SMITH @ HARD LUCK
  • 11PM-12AM RUNNING RED LIGHTS @ SUPERMARKET
  • 12-1AM CRAIG STICKLAND @ SUPERMARKET//or//
  • 12-1AM LIFE BLOWN OPEN @ NEUTRAL LOUNGE

Shimmering sounds

 Aussies Oh Mercy gave a lacklustre performance to a thin crowd. (Laura Thompson)

From Reid, I traveled in the direction of Samantha Savage Smith at Hard Luck. It turned out to actually be the opposite, as I entered to the shimmering sounds of Aussie four-piece Oh Mercy. Unfortunately, the crowd was thin and far from the warm reception they deserved, coming all the way from Melbourne with an Australian Music Prize under their belts. A discouraging start that resulted in a sombre stage presence and frankly, a lacklustre set.

Change of plan

After a careful game plan re-jig, I took brisk walk down to Cherry Cola's Rock N' Rolla Cabaret, but to disappointing consequence. I was hoping to have Mad Anthony blow my eardrums out with their head-banging rowdiness, but was instead met with - nothing. While fans stood by, speakers and stands littered the stage, obviously in transition and definitely off schedule. Back to Hard Luck it was, the irony not beyond me.

Samantha Savage Smith, a lovely girl she is. The epitome of geek-chic indie, her sweet, crisp voice cutting through the room as a Kathleen-meets-Sarah-meets-Amy hybrid might. The tri-named belle was confident and effortless in her delivery, despite yet more pitiful attendance - remainders from Oh Mercy's set, plus a few. Was it because it was Wednesday? Were people still burned out from SXSW? Or was Queen Street where all the hullabaloo was going down? Unless CMW is losing its sparkle, folks should get on the Savage Smith bandwagon.

 Predicting great things for Craig Stickland. (Laura Thompson)

Next stop, Kensington Market. At this point, I clue in that the online CMW schedule and the hard-copy booklet don't quite match up. I sadly missed Running Red Lights, a retro pop outfit that features a fiery-haired, east coast singer named Scarlett. But no complaints over stumbling in on Craig Stickland, a happy revelation. A Toronto singer-songwriter with his heart on his sleeve who -- attention ladies -- looks kind of like Ashton Kutcher. He laid out his history of trampled emotions right there on the keyboard like a tortured soul who doesn't want saving. A sure-fire formula for success that I predict is coming and quickly. It was his birthday this week too, so give him a shout out - @Craigstickland.

CMW Day 1 wasn't without its bumps in the road. But when you get home with your musical soul satisfied and just in time to catch your next day's newspaper being delivered, you know it was a good one.

-- Laura Thompson ]]>
Inside Ai Weiwei's world tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.206068 2012-03-22T13:38:15Z 2012-03-22T19:30:31Z CBC's China bureau was asked to conduct an interview for Radio One's Q cultural affairs show with dissident artist Ai Weiwei. Ai has been forbidden to speak to foreign media and his movements are closely watched. Here's an account of how it went down. Arts Online CBC's China bureau was asked to conduct an interview for Radio One's Q cultural affairs show with dissident artist Ai Weiwei. Ai has been forbidden to speak to foreign media and his movements are closely watched. Here's an account of how it went down.]]>  Ai Weiwei's Beijing studio is surrounded by mysterious construction and at least two security cameras are nearby. (CBC News)

Even before arriving at the home of one China's most celebrated activists, there were rules to follow. All communication between Ai Weiwei's people had to be done through email. Conversations on cell phones are a no-no, because someone is always listening.

Ai Weiwei lives in one of the art districts of Beijing. Arriving by car, we spot a parked dark vehicle without a licence plate -- code for "this car belongs to plainclothed police."In fact the driver of the car checked us out from a distance. But left us alone.

We noticed at least two surveillance cameras on the street. They are trained directly at the gated entrance to Ai Weiwei's home.

There's some construction going on directly in front of the house too, with workers not looking that busy. Are THEY undercover police? In China, it's hard not to become a little suspicious.

 In the Chinese language, the characters for "river crab" sound like the word "harmony." (CBC News)

Once inside, Ai's assistant greets us. She's Canadian and is envious when we tell her of the summer-like temperatures in eastern Canada.

Ai himself is an imposing figure with his trademark salt and pepper beard. He quietly greets us and the interview gets underway.

His spacious dwelling is crawling with well-fed cats -- we counted at least a dozen. And there's Danny, Ai's aging cocker spaniel who's been part of his chaotic life for 15 years.

On the long wooden table where we've placed our recording device for the interview there are six little figurines in the shape of river crabs. In the Chinese language, the characters for "river crab" sound like the word "harmony."

Is Ai Weiwei being ironic, or is it just wishful thinking on his part?

-- CBC News ]]>
Sugar Shack cuisine from Quebec's Martin Picard tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.205967 2012-03-21T21:39:31Z 2012-03-22T21:45:17Z An ambassador for Canadian gastronomy as its most savage, indigenous, and authentic, Martin Picard has aroused passions with his squirrel sushi and stuffed beaver. "It would be best not to open your interview with ...the squirrel", I was advised by his publicist. "It just might set the wrong tone." Arts Online ]]>  Chef Martin Picard. Don't call him a wild man. (Canadian Press)

"It would be best not to open your interview with ...the squirrel", I was advised by Martin Picard's publicist. "It just might set the wrong tone."

The Quebec chef's frustration towards some media stems from a particular, perhaps unfair, interest in some of the more adventurous offerings in his new, 386-page tome of a cookbook, A Pied De Cochon Sugar Shack.

The oft-maligned, bushy-tailed rodent is up to its pesky ways again, triggering some mild pushback toward Picard's second collection of recipes, along with its patriotic counterpart, the beaver. Why?

Picard serves up panko-crusted squirrel as a sushi dish, saving the paws, tail and head for presentation. He stuffs butchered beavers with their own tails, dressing them with oyster mushrooms and cognac sauce. All laid out in glossy, coffee table book format so you too can try it at home. That's only IF you're into haute Canadiana cuisine. Wink!

If this has got your stomach churning and your animal rights antenna tweaking, consider this: Picard is a chef, and a celebrated one -- a hard-working creator and an experimental innovator. A steward of the sugar shack, an awakener of tired traditions. An ambassador for Canadian gastronomy as its most savage, indigenous, and authentic.

But also at its most honoured and revered. It's legal to trap and eat what he does. Maybe it's his sense of humour that leaves a bad taste in your mouth.

Regardless of how one feels about his from-forest-to-fryer approach, his love for his work is evident. Did you know that it took 380 litres of maple syrup just to test the recipes for this cookbook? Have you seen the delectable mile-high mille-feuille? What about the flaming Caf Saint-Benot with maple nuggets? What about how his seasonal sugar shack restaurant near Montreal is reserved solid for the next four years?

In Picard's words, "At the end, you're tired. But you live things nobody could live." He explained how much he loves working with animals from the woods around a sugar shack, a place where he spent so much time as a boy. "It's more like a genetic thing," he said.

And so we segue into the salty issue of the "ingredient" provocateur.

"You have to understand that I'm a cook," he says. "Tasting and having those kinds of meats are part of my life, you know?"

I'm satisfied with that.

--- Laura Thompson ]]>

Bill Roache on Corrie Street and the great beyond tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.205317 2012-03-19T18:57:15Z 2012-03-20T19:50:41Z William Roache, the British actor who plays Coronation Street's Ken Barlow, is on a tour of Canada that takes in Vancouver and Halifax. Sian Jones went to his Toronto appearance with the curiosity of any Corrie fan and discovered that Bill Roache the man has an interest in psychic phenomena. Arts Online William Roache, the British actor who plays Coronation Street's Ken Barlow, is on a tour of Canada that takes in Vancouver and Halifax. Sian Jones went to his Toronto appearance with the curiosity of any Corrie fan and discovered that Bill Roache the man has an interest in psychic phenomena.]]>  British actor William Roach, who plays Ken Barlow, is shown on the Coronation Street set in Manchester in 2005. (Reuters)

I spent last Saturday afternoon with Coronation Street's Ken Barlow. Actually it was with William Roache, who plays Ken on the soap. And to be fair, I wasn't alone with him. I was in Toronto's Winter Garden Theatre where he made a stop on his Canadian tour.

The theatre was packed with Corrie fans. We were all there to see "The Man."

Ken is the world's longest serving soap opera character. Roache has been playing Barlow for more than 51 years. Ken has been married four times and has dated 27 women and has a reputation as a lothario.

There was so much I wanted to know. So many details about his life on the Cobbles that I was anxious to find out about.

He spoke of his love of theatre.He paid tribute to his on-screen mother-in-law Blanche Hunt, who, alas, is no longer with us. He suggested that one or two of his colleagues had undergone plastic surgery (hello Rita). For the record, William Roache, has never gone under the knife.

And guess what?The beer the cast drinks in the Rovers is not real.

Probably a good thing. They spend so much time in the pub on the show that if they were drinking real beer the entire cast would be intoxicated day in and day out.

None of that surprised me. The 'big reveal' came not from the set of Corrie, but from the experience of the man who has spent a lot of time on the set. William Roache has had four psychic episodes. He has seen ghosts. He has received messages from the great beyond. And when Bill Roache spoke about that, his 79-year-old face lit up. He looked like a much younger man for that moment. And his passion for the subject was clear.

I had been hoping for insight into Ken and Deirdre's relationship. What I got was a glimpse of a man who believes passionately in the possibility of the unknown, and who is way more interesting than the character he plays.

And I wasn't expecting that during my afternoon with Ken Barlow.

-- Sian Jones ]]>
FILM REVIEW: Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.204976 2012-03-16T19:20:42Z 2012-03-16T20:12:41Z Being Elmo is a movie about how puppeteer Kevin Clash found his voice -- one that just so happens to be that of Sesame Street's fuzzy love monster Elmo. For fans of Jim Henson and the Muppet magic he created, this film offers a glimpse into the famed furry kingdom. The doc largely paints a happy smile on Clash's life story, says Eli Glasner. Eli Glasner Being Elmo is a movie about how puppeteer Kevin Clash found his voice -- one that just so happens to be that of Sesame Street's fuzzy love monster Elmo. For fans of Jim Henson and the Muppet magic he created, this film offers a glimpse into the famed furry kingdom. The doc largely paints a happy smile on Clash's life story, says Eli Glasner. Being ElmoPuppeteer Kevin Clash, the man behind Sesame Street's Elmo. (Mongrel Media)

Being Elmo is a movie about how Kevin Clash found his voice -- a voice that just so happens to be that of the helium-high, giggling, fuzzy love monster named Elmo. For fans of Jim Henson and the Muppet magic he created, the documentary offers a glimpse into the famed furry kingdom.

This story starts and ends with Clash, who was a young black kid growing up in Baltimore when he fell in love with puppets at an early age. Exposure to Sesame Street planted a seed in him and, suddenly, this tall awkward child was cutting up his father's coat to make puppet creatures of his own.

Fortunately for Clash, his mom ran a daycare, which provided him a focus group on which to practice. She also had the temerity to cold-call Muppet designer Kermit Love and introduce her son to him. On one fateful day in New York City, the puppet proteg and the master builder met. Soon, Kevin was on his way.

Being Elmo takes its time telling the story of how Elmo and Clash first met -- a fascinating blend of luck and determination. Once Clash describes of how he discovered Elmo's voice -- after the fuzzy red monster had been discarded by another puppeteer -- the story shifts to profile his role as a teacher figure. Personally, I've been a lifelong fan of all things Henson and loved watching him show others how to make a sock come to life.

The movie is packed with tidbits for Muppet maniacs like me, but there are also hints that working under Henson was no comedy.

Being ElmoKevin Clash, left, in a scene from Being Elmo (Mongrel Media)

The few snippets Clash provides paint a portrait of Henson as a Steve Jobsian-like visionary who suffered no fools. If anything, Being Elmo has made me more desperate than ever to see The Muppet Man, a long-rumoured biopic on Henson himself.

While Being Elmo does show us how the famous scarlet monster moppet came between Clash and his family, for the most part the film paints a happy smile on his life story. Little is said about Kevin's role as the first black puppeteer in the company, for instance. Instead, we have the saccharine narration of Whoopi Goldberg carrying us through.

Puppets fans will undoubtedly crave more about why this quiet man feels so comfortable as everyone's furry red friend. Still, there's lots to enjoy in Being Elmo, a film that -- like its titular subject -- is easy to love.

RATING: 3.5 out of 5

Bonus feature: below, a clip of Elmo, at his best, with a special celebrity guest.

]]>
FILM REVIEW: Jiro Dreams of Sushi tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.204597 2012-03-16T05:01:00Z 2012-03-16T12:12:57Z Jiro Dreams of Sushi is a delectable delight for foodies and film fans alike, as well as a testament to the art of simplicity. Though master chef Jiro Ono makes for a fascinating profile subject, director David Gelb's uninventive technique waters down the final result. Eli Glasner Jiro Dreams of Sushi is a delectable delight for foodies and film fans alike, as well as a testament to the art of simplicity. Though master chef Jiro Ono makes for a fascinating profile subject, director David Gelb's uninventive technique waters down the final result.

Director David Gelb had a quest to make a documentary about the greatest sushi restaurants in the world. But everyone he spoke to directed him to the unassuming man who runs a 10-seat restaurant near a subway in Tokyo: Jiro Ono of Sukiyabashi Jiro.

The room is not spacious and the ambiance could be described as sparse, but there is a three-month waiting list. There are no snacks, no appetizers; just plate after plate of award-winning sushi.

Behind the counter, Jiro is a stern host, placing his morsels just so and adjusting the portions to each eater. We watch the 85-year-old man -- grim-faced, bald head shining -- as diners swallow his creations in a single gulp.

When Gelb takes us in for a closer look at Jiro, his first words are a question: "What defines deliciousness?"

As we ponder the answer, we're treated to sumptuous close-up shots of his edible art. For Jiro, simplicity is the goal. Everything is done to bring out the essence of the fish. The rice, an often under-appreciated component, is served room temperature to better let the flavours of the vinegar seasoning and the seafood mingle.

Jiro OnoMaster sushi chef Jiro Ono is profiled in the documentary Jiro Dreams of Sushi. (eOne Films)

As food critic Masuhiro Yamamoto explains, Jiro serves sushi in a series of movements, like a symphony. First, he offers the classics, such as tuna and mackerel. The second movement is centred on fresh seasonal selections. The third and final movement features traditional ingredients such as egg.

As Gelb brings us into Jiro's world, we also meet the maestro's son. Yoshikazu is a master chef in his own right, but labours in his father's shadow. Another son has already fled to the suburbs to open his own restaurant -- out from under the old man's unforgiving gaze.

Jiro has dedicated his life to reducing sushi to its essential elements and Gelb could stand to learn a lesson from his subject. There's enough quiet drama between the aspirations of Jiro's son and his other proteges, but the film doesn't stay in the tiny restaurant. Gelb widens his focus by taking a trip to the famous Tokyo fish market, where shrimp and tuna experts put aside special catches for Jiro. Dreams of Sushi also touches on declining fish stocks and overfishing.

Then, there are the visual flairs. Any fan of documentaries will recognize the soundtrack: a drum chant borrowed from Baraka (as well as its sped-up camera trick). There's the ever-present Phillip Glass fluttering away as Jiro carefully brushes each slice of tuna. Don't get me wrong. I adore Baraka and a little Glass goes a long way, but in a movie about a culinary pioneer, Gelb's cinematic flourishes feel stale.

Still, for the average sushi fan, my quibbles won't detract from the overall experience. Jiro Dreams of Sushi remains a satisfying ode to a life lived with a single-minded purpose.

RATING: 3.5 out of 5

]]>
Drake's GQ style update tag:www.cbc.ca,2012:/news/arts/things-that-go-pop-blog//237.204616 2012-03-15T19:06:35Z 2012-03-15T20:30:57Z Toronto's Drake riffs about his relationship with his father, the current state of the rap industry and his own promiscuity in a cover story for GQ magazine. The dapper rapper also admits to a very calculated approach to his own image - so does anyone believe it when he says he's looking to be more than a playboy? Arts Online Toronto's Drake riffs about his relationship with his father, the current state of the rap industry and his own promiscuity in a cover story for GQ magazine. The dapper rapper also admits to a very calculated approach to his own image - so does anyone believe it when he says he's looking to be more than a playboy?]]>  Drake is shown performing in Los Angeles this March. (Kevin Winter/Getty)

Drake shows off his pearly whites and dapper style on the cover of GQ's April issue. But the Toronto rapper strips down (no, not literally) and touches on some important aspects of his life, including his relationship with his father, the current state of the rap industry and oh yeah -- promiscuity. Drake admits to sleeping with numerous women, but says it didn't work for him and he wants something more.

Riiiiiiiiight.

Before you start vying to become Drake's "something more," you may want to check out his video for Practice off his latest album Take Care" (Go to the 3:27 mark to catch Drake in action).

Drake's group blog October's Very Own even encouraged fans to submit videos of themselves dancing to the track. Because naturally, that's what you do when you want to develop something meaningful with a woman?

Whether Drake is actually looking for more than just casual sex, or this is a clever, well-orchestrated PR ploy to keep his female fans happy -- it doesn't look like Drake is parting from his playboy status anytime soon. He does admit to GQ that much of what he does is calculated.

Sorry to break your hearts, ladies.

Drake goes into the Junos April 1 with four nominations, but the well-dressed guy who shepherded last year's ceremony so handily is giving the music awards a miss this year - after being passed over for Juno glory last year. He'll be performing in Manchester.

-- Parisa Durrani]]>