Tag: fka-twigs

  • Movie Review: ‘Mother Mary’

    Anne Hathaway in 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    Anne Hathaway in ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    Opening in theaters in limited release on April 17 and expanding on April 24 is ‘Mother Mary,’ written and directed by David Lowery and starring Anne Hathaway, Michaela Coel, Hunter Schafer, Atheena Frizzell, Kaia Gerber, Jessica Brown Findlay, Alba Baptista, Sian Clifford, and FKA Twigs.

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    Related Article: Anne Hathaway & Adam Driver Starring in ‘Alone at Dawn’ for Ron Howard

    Initial Thoughts

    Anne Hathaway on the set of 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    Anne Hathaway on the set of ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    David Lowery is nothing if not unpredictable. From Disney product like ‘Pete’s Dragon’ and ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ to weird experimental dramas like ‘A Ghost Story’ and ‘The Green Knight,’ the director’s career has taken one wild swing after another. With ‘Mother Mary,’ he pivots back in the direction of arthouse fare, with the story itself (according to Lowery) inspired by his own bifurcated career choices.

    The result is an original, compelling — if not always coherent – hybrid of love story, psychological horror, and pop musical in which Anne Hathaway is outstanding as the title character, a mega pop singer about to make a comeback but unsure of who she is and aching with grief over a fractured relationship. Joining her is Michaela Coel (‘I May Destroy You’), the other half of that relationship, with both women yearning to repair their broken hearts and going to extreme lengths to do so.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Director David Lowery and Anne Hathaway on the set of 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Director David Lowery and Anne Hathaway on the set of ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    Mother Mary (we never know her real name) is a massive pop star – modeled after female musical icons ranging from Madonna to Taylor Swift – who’s about to attempt a career comeback after being derailed by a breakdown. On the eve of her first performance in years, she flees from rehearsals in L.A. to the English home and workshop of Sam Anselm (Coel), the fashion designer who created all her stage outfits for a while and with whom she shared a deeply symbiotic friendship (and perhaps more), until Mary’s fame fractured their relationship and put Mary’s costumes in the hands of top designers.

    Estranged for a decade, with Mary asking Sam to make her a new dress for her show, the two circle each other like wary combatants: Mary, so confident, charismatic and larger than life onstage, is a meek, shattered shell of herself, not sure of her music or even her identity anymore, while Sam, having established her own career, is nevertheless barely able to repress her fury at Mary after all these years.

    The two go through a long night of the soul in Sam’s atelier, a centuries-old converted barn full of shadows and mysteries, with ever-present rain and thunder rumbling in the background like restless spirits. As the two explore their past together and separately, a spirit literally comes into play as well – a red entity that, real or not, symbolizes both the creative spirit and sense of loss that both women feel, and that is equally comfort and torment to them both.

    (L to R) Michaela Coel and director David Lowery on the set of 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Michaela Coel and director David Lowery on the set of ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    Lowery stages all this as a mix of horror movie, character study, and pop spectacle, with scenes from Mary’s past stadium gigs filling the screen with light, sound, dancers, and hordes of people, alternating with the moody, dark sequences in Sam’s atelier and brooding home. The scenes between Mary and Sam come across almost as a stage play sometimes, while the narrative involving the spirit (known as the Red Woman, and initially conjured up by a medium played by FKA Twigs) heads into more phantasmagoric, almost Ken Russell territory visually. It’s a bracing, ever-changing cinematic style that certainly makes this Lowery’s most ambitious film yet.

    Yet the hallucinatory, expository nature of the story makes it self-consciously arty – much like ‘The Green Knight’ – which often keeps it at an emotional arm’s length. The result is a movie that is visually stunning, not easy to categorize, but also difficult to fully invest in.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Michaela Coel and Anne Hathaway in 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Michaela Coel and Anne Hathaway in ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    Anne Hathaway (who has four other movies coming out this year) has been veering between mainstream titles like ‘The Hustle’ and more daring material like ‘Eileen’ in recent years, but ‘Mother Mary’ may be the most immersive performance she’s given in some time.

    As Mary, she must sing onstage (all original songs, penned by Jack Antonoff, Charli XCX and FKA Twigs) and project the veneer and physicality of a major pop star, complete with elaborate choreography which she replicates on her own for Sam in one riveting sequence. But she also exposes the wounded woman inside who is longing to find her creative spark again and grieving for the one true relationship she lost.

    Michaela Coel’s Sam is grieving as well, but turns it into a weapon of scorn, sarcasm, and rage that she coolly wields against Mary like a knife. But Sam herself is lonely and unmoored, and her interrogation of Mary slowly brings back her energy and inner light. Both women are fantastic in the film, giving such dominant performances that there’s little room for anyone else to shine – except for FKA Twigs, who shows off some eerie physical work in her one major scene, in which she opens the way for the Red Woman.

    Final Thoughts

    Anne Hathaway in 'Mother Mary'. Photo: A24.
    Anne Hathaway in ‘Mother Mary’. Photo: A24.

    ‘Mother Mary’ is a deliberately experimental narrative, flashing back and forth in time and space, and despite what may seem like a conventional premise it delves into the mystical, spiritual, and existential in often bold ways, bolstered by its two fearless leading ladies.

    While a feast for the eyes and ears, the film is perhaps not as moving as it could be, thanks to its dislocating narrative shifts. Yet the bond between Sam and Mary, strained and torn as it is, is still made powerful by the work of the two actors. ‘Mother Mary’ is ultimately about healing one’s soul and rediscovering one’s muse, a potent message from a filmmaker who seems to have done just that.

    ‘Mother Mary’ receives a score of 80 out of 100.

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    What is the plot of ‘Mother Mary’?

    Long-buried wounds rise to the surface when iconic pop star Mother Mary (Anne Hathaway) reunites with her estranged best friend and former costume designer Sam Anselm (Michaela Coel) on the eve of her comeback performance.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Mother Mary’?

    • Anne Hathaway as Mother Mary
    • Michaela Coel as Sam Anselm
    • Hunter Schafer as Hilda
    • Atheena Frizzell as Emily
    • Kaia Gerber as Nikki
    • Jessica Brown Findlay as Tessa
    • Isaura Barbé-Brown as Kyla
    • Alba Baptista as Miel Contrera
    • Sian Clifford as Jade
    • FKA Twigs as Imogen
    'Mother Mary' opens in theaters on April 17th. Photo: A24.
    ‘Mother Mary’ opens in theaters on April 17th. Photo: A24.

    List of films directed by David Lowery

    Buy Tickets: ‘Mother Mary’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Anne Hathaway Movies on Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘The Crow’

    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate. Copyright: © 2022 Yellow Flower LLC.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate. Copyright: © 2022 Yellow Flower LLC.

    Opening in theaters August 23 is ‘The Crow,’ directed by Rupert Sanders and starring Bill Skarsgård, FKA Twigs, Danny Huston, Josette Simon, Laura Birn, Sami Bouajila, and Jordan Bolger.

    Related Article: ‘The Crow’: First Images of Bill Skarsgård and FKA Twigs in the Remake

    Initial Thoughts

    Here’s a little secret: this writer has never been a huge fan of the original 1994 movie ‘The Crow.’ At the time, it seemed dreary, gratuitous, and largely a case of style over substance, with simplistic characters and a reactionary, nihilistic narrative. But the death of lead actor Brandon Lee — who was accidentally shot on the set and died later from his injuries, just a few days before the end of filming — cast an unmistakably somber pall over the film that one would have to be a robot not to feel. Lee is great despite the movie around him, but there is also a ghostly aura around his presence onscreen that permeates the entire movie and lifts an otherwise ho-hum revenge thriller into a different light that has since made it a cult classic.

    Fairly or not, taking the mystique and legend of Lee out of the equation, as the new remake of ‘The Crow’ does, leaves you with nothing but the ho-hum revenge thriller. Despite the best efforts of star Bill Skarsgård (who’s cornering the market on movie monsters with his past portrayal of Pennywise the Dancing Clown in ‘It’ and his upcoming title turn in ‘Nosferatu’) and a few inspired moments, this long-in-development reboot from director Rupert Sanders (‘Snow White and the Huntsman’) is dull, derivative, and predictable, lacking in energy both from its direction, its style, and even its cast.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    The new ‘Crow,’ written by Zach Baylin and William Schneider, keeps the bones of the story (based on the original 1989 graphic novel by James O’Barr) but adds a convoluted new set-up to get us to the main plot. Skarsgård’s Eric Draven is in a rehab facility in a rather vague location (it appears to be out in relatively sunny countryside, while the unnamed city where the primary action takes place is perpetually dark and rainy) for rather vague reasons (a flashback reveals he watched a treasured animal die as a child) when he meets fellow resident Shelly (FKA Twigs), a musician who allowed herself to get arrested for possession of drugs and sent to the facility to avoid an even darker fate.

    This is where ‘The Crow’ 2024 diverges sharply from the 1994 film: whereas the villains in that movie were local Detroit thugs (yes, that movie was set in Detroit; the new one is supposed to be set in an American city but was shot in Germany and Prague) who were looking to take over the apartment building where Eric and Shelly make their home, the antagonist here is Vincent Roag (a bored Danny Huston), who is apparently immortal thanks to a deal he made with the Devil ages ago. That deal involves using a demonic voice to whisper in people’s ears and make them either kill themselves or someone nearby, thus corrupting their soul and sending them to hell. Shelly has been used in this fashion by Roag to murder someone, thus damning her, but she has the whole thing on videotape (although how it’s going to bring him down remains frustratingly unclear).

    It’s a needlessly complicated back story that diminishes the power of Eric himself becoming a supernatural being. Which, of course, is what eventually happens. He and Shelly rather easily escape rehab just ahead of Roag’s goon squad (led by ‘Foundation’ star Laura Birn, who deserves better) and enjoy an inexplicably idle montage of hanging out at a lake with their friends or making sweet love and/or music together (the timeline in this film is really murky). But Roeg’s minions catch up with them again at Eric’s apartment, suffocating both of them in a harrowing sequence as they watch each other die.

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    Eric is sent to a gray CG afterlife that looks like the outside of an abandoned railyard, where ghostly mentor Kronos (Sami Bouajila) provides the necessary exposition for the film to move forward. Eric is dead, but he can return to the land of the living and avenge Shelly’s death, or “put the wrong things right.” His physical body can heal from any wound, as long as his love for Shelly remains “pure.” And he can save her damned soul as well – but at a much higher cost.

    From there, it becomes a rather standard stalk-and-kill scenario, albeit with copious amounts of CG blood (God, how we miss karo syrup sometimes) and some enjoyably bonkers deaths, particularly in one extended battle in an opera house that leaves Eric standing amidst a pile of severed limbs and heads (two of which he dispatches in unintentionally hilarious fashion). But while Eric faced distinctive villains like Michael Wincott’s Top Dollar and his moll Myca (Bai Ling) back in 1994, his enemies here are just a bunch of the usual burly, vaguely Eastern European-looking security guys in nice suits, whom Roag seems to have in endless supply. The title bird, a sort of spirit guide in the first film, just kind of tags along in this one.

    There’s an overall lack of suspense, energy, or tension in the proceedings, as everyone seems to know that they’re going through some predictable paces. The eventual confrontation between Eric and Roag, after just about everyone else has been killed, is as disappointingly flat as everything else on display here. The Goth aesthetic and alternative/metal soundtrack of the original film have been replaced with a generalized gray-brown murk and actually some pretty good songs from the likes of Foals, Enya, and Traitrs. But the overall style that made the first film such a cultural touchpoint of its time simply cannot be channeled in the same way.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    We very much enjoyed Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise the Dancing Clown in the ‘It’ movies, as well as his turns in films like ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ and ‘Barbarian.’ And while it’s unfair to judge him against Brandon Lee, the latter is such an integral part of the ‘Crow’ legacy and a dominant presence in the original film. It’s not possible to disregard the fact that while Lee was able to transcend the material, Skarsgård can’t. He gives it his best shot, but the emotional undercurrents simply aren’t there, while his patchwork look of random tattoos, choppy hair, and disheveled clothing doesn’t do anything to build his character.

    There is also no chemistry between him and FKA Twigs, who gives a dead-eyed, monotone performance in a crucial role. Some of the scenes between Twigs and Skarsgård simply lapse into silence, as if they have nothing more to say to each other, and Twigs is not a strong enough actor to flesh Shelly out. A subplot involving her relationship with her mother (Josette Simon) goes largely unexplored and mostly forgotten, but based on this we’re not sure Twigs can handle anything too complex anyway. In a movie already existing on a purely surface level, an actor needs all the tools they can muster, and Twigs falls short.

    Danny Huston mostly phones in his villainous role as Roag, a character whose own back story and methodology is confusing to say the least. Is he a vampire? A demon? Both? It’s never quite clear. Laura Birn remains a striking presence (her work as the android Demerzel on ‘Foundation’ is one of that series’ strong points) but is underused, while the rest of the cast doesn’t get enough to do to stand out here.

    Final Thoughts

    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    This is IP mining at best, an attempt to cash in on a brand name that still has some resonance 30 years later (a string of poor sequels kept it in public view for a while as well), and sheer exploitation at worst. But above all, it’s mediocre: too much of ‘The Crow’ has the kind of bland feel that one gets from watching direct-to-video thrillers. Whatever aura Brandon Lee brought to the original is no longer there, and even the love story at the heart of the movie pales in comparison.

    The original 1994 ‘The Crow’ remains a testament to a promising actor and career tragically lost far too soon, as well as a snapshot of a particular moment in youth culture. Lacking either of those aspects, 2024’s ‘The Crow’ is a testament to what happens when story material is resurrected and rebooted without wondering if it should be in the first place.

    ‘The Crow’ receives 3 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Crow’?

    Damaged souls Eric (Bill Skarsgård) and Shelly (FKA Twigs) fall deeply in love, only for Shelly’s dark past and demonic benefactor to catch up with her. After the couple are brutally murdered, Eric is sent back from the realm of the dead to “put the wrong things right” – even if it means it will cost him the one thing he wants most of all.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Crow’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Eric
    • FKA Twigs as Shelly
    • Danny Huston as Vincent Roeg
    • Josette Simon as Sophia
    • Laura Birn as Marian
    • Sami Bouajila as Kronos
    • Isabella Wei as Zadie
    • Jordan Bolger as Chance
    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    Other Movies and TV Shows in ‘The Crow’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘The Crow’ Movie on Amazon

  • First Images Land from ‘The Crow’ Remake

    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.'
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    Preview:

    • The first pictures from the new ‘The Crow’ movie are online.
    • Bill Skarsgård and FKA Twigs star in the movie.
    • Rupert Sanders is directing this one.

    After years spent in development limbo (more on that below), we are finally going to see the remake of 1994 cult goth action movie ‘The Crow’, which as before will be adapted from James O’Barr’s graphic novel.

    And now, to remind us all, the first pictures from the film are online, giving us a look at Bill Skarsgård (tattooed and buff), and FKA Twigs as soulmates Eric and Shelly, who are slaughtered, only for Eric to be brought back via a supernatural avian for some dark, vengeful justice against their murderers.

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    What’s the story of ‘The Crow’?

    Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.'
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    O’Barr’s comic book focuses on a man named Eric Draven, who along with his fiancée Shelly Webster, find themselves under attack. They’re brutally assaulted and murdered by a gang, but a mystical crow brings Eric back so he can hunt down and take out the criminals responsible.

    Director Alex Proyas, along with writers David J. Schow and John Shirley, adapted the comic book for the 1994 movie, which featured Brandon Lee as Eric Draven, a rock musician slain alongside his fiancée by a criminal gang on Devil’s Night in Detroit.

    It was made infamous by the death of Lee on set in an accident involving a blank round in a prop gun. It went on to become a box office success, spawned three sequels and a TV series spin-off.

    Related Article: Bill Skarsgard Will Star in a Reboot of ‘The Crow’ from Director Rupert Sanders

    What’s the history of ‘The Crow’ remake?

    Brandon Lee as Eric Draven / The Crow in 'The Crow.'
    Brandon Lee as Eric Draven / The Crow in ‘The Crow.’ Photo: Miramax Films.

    If you thought Eric Draven’s story sounds tortured, wait until you learn of the new movie’s journey to screens.

    Blade’ director Steven Norrington came up with a fresh take in 2008, which went through different variations including Nick Cave on screenplay duty and Mark Wahlberg considering the lead. Norrington later walked off the project over creative differences.

    The next year, ‘28 Weeks Later’s Juan Carlos Fresnadillo came aboard, while ‘Watchman’ writer Alex Tse took a fresh crack at the script. Bradley Cooper was offered the lead but turned it down. A spat over the rights emerged saw Fresnadillo leave, to be replaced by F. Javier Gutiérrez, with another new script in the works. Luke Evans became the latest potential star, but that didn’t work out either.

    Most recently, ‘The Nun’s Corin Hardy was attached to the movie, and he oversaw a version that briefly had Jack Huston in the lead before being replaced by Jason Momoa. Yet even that compelling combo was stymied, largely by “creative and financial differences” which led to Hardy and his chosen star leaving in 2018.

    Rupert Sanders, who has the live-action ‘Ghost in the Shell’ and ‘Snow White and the Huntsman’ on his resume, jumped aboard in 2022, with ‘King Richard’s Zach Baylin writing a draft before William Schneider took it on.

    When will ‘The Crow’ remake be in theaters?

    Thanks to ‘John Wick’ spin-off ‘Ballerina’ being pushed back to 2025 so more action set-pieces can be added, ‘The Crow’ has flapped in to replace it, landing on June 7th.

    Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.'
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Crow’ Remake:

    Buy ‘The Crow’ Movie on Amazon

  • ‘John Wick’ Spin-Off ‘Ballerina’ Delayed By a Year

    Ana de Armas in 'The Gray Man.'
    Ana de Armas in ‘The Gray Man.’ Courtesy of Netflix © 2022.

    Preview:

    • ‘John Wick’ spin-off ‘Ballerina’ is moving back a year.
    • The Ana de Armas-starring movie is adding some extra actions.
    • Lionsgate is moving ‘The Crow’ re-imagining into the film’s slot this year.

    Things are changing on the ‘John Wick’ spin-off front. While ‘Ballerina’, the Ana de Armas-starring new movie, had been scheduled for June 7th, will now move back a year.

    But before you start worrying that the High Table has somehow found a way to hobble the main character, fear not: it’s for a good reason.

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    What is happening with the ‘Ballerina’ movie?

    Chad Stahelski and Keanu Reeves
    (L-R) Chad Stahelski and Keanu Reeves attend the Lionsgate CinemaCon presentation in support of ‘John Wick: Chapter Four’ at the Colosseum Theatre in Caesar’s Palace on April 28th, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo by Eric Charbonneau.

    According to Deadline, the change is happening so the ‘Ballerina’ team can add in some extra action scenes.

    Chad Stahelski, who has directed ever ‘Wick’ movie since the first, has been promoted to oversee the wider franchise for Lionsgate, and is now going to help director Len Wiseman with boosting the action quotient of the new movie. Which makes sense, since the ‘Wick’ films are always full of stunts and set-pieces.

    What’s the story of ‘Ballerina’?

    Anjelica Huston as "The Director" in 'John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum.'
    Anjelica Huston as “The Director” in ‘John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum.’ Photo: Lionsgate.

    ‘Ballerina’ will follow the Ballerina character, played by de Armas, glimpsed briefly (and there brought to life Unity Phelan) in ‘John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum’ and tracks a young assassin who seeks revenge against the people who killed her family. Which feels fitting for a ‘Wick’ movie.

    Wiseman, who has worked on the likes of ‘Underworld’ and ‘Live Free or Die Hard’, directed the new movie, based on a script by Shay Hatten (who wrote ‘Chapter Three’).

    The cast for the new movie also includes Norman Reedus, Anjelica Huston, Catalina Sandino Moreno, and Gabriel Byrne, plus ‘Wick’ stalwarts Keanu Reeves, Ian McShane and the late Lance Reddick (since the majority of the movie was shot back in 2022).

    Related Article: Keanu Reeves and Ian McShane will Appear in ‘John Wick’ Spin-Off ‘Ballerina’

    When will ‘Ballerina’ be in theaters?

    The action movie is now targeting a June 6th, 2025 release slot. Which might be a smart move, since it plants a flag on a date that is currently empty of competitors.

    What is moving into ‘Ballerina’s old release slot?

    Brandon Lee as Eric Draven / The Crow in 'The Crow.'
    Brandon Lee as Eric Draven / The Crow in ‘The Crow.’ Photo: Miramax Films.

    If you’re wondering what you can watch instead of ‘Ballerina’, Lionsgate has a plan for that. The studio is moving the new version of ‘The Crow’ to the June 7th date this year.

    Directed by Rupert Sanders, the new adaptation of the James O’Barr graphic novel stars Bill Skarsgård as Eric Draven, who is brutally murdered alongside his soulmate Shelly Webster (FKA twigs) when the demons of her dark past catch up with them.

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    Given the chance to save his true love by sacrificing himself, Eric sets out to seek merciless revenge on their killers, traversing the worlds of the living and the dead to put the wrong things right.

    The movie also stars Danny Huston, Laura Birn, Sami Bouajila, and Jordan Bolger. But it’ll be under plenty of pressure, since the 1994 original is considered a cult classic. And the new movie will be up against Ishana Night Shyamalan’s (daughter of M. Night) horror pic ‘The Watchers’ on that June date.

    Keanu Reeves as John Wick in 'John Wick: Chapter 4.'
    Keanu Reeves as John Wick in ‘John Wick: Chapter 4.’ Photo Credit: Murray Close.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Ballerina’:

    Buy ‘John Wick’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Robert Pattinson Reportedly Ended His Engagement to FKA Twigs

    BRITAIN-ENTERTAINMENT-CINEMA-FILM-THE LOST CITY OF ZRobert Pattinson and FKA twigs have been “fizzling out” their relationship and he reportedly ended their engagement.

    E! News “confirmed” the actor and the singer-songwriter split after three years of dating. Two sources told the site Pattinson initiated the breakup, with one saying, “Their travel schedules took a big toll on the relationship. Robert is the one who ended it. […] They bought a house together but then it was just not working out between them. She moved out.” (If she moved out, did he really initiate the breakup?)

    Another source said the split was from “timing” issues but “They still have love for each other.” Someone else told E!, “He is technically still with FKA twigs, but it doesn’t seem like it will last. They were serious at one point, but not anymore. The whole thing with Rob saying they are ‘kind of engaged’ speaks for itself. The relationship has been fizzling out.”

    That “kind of engaged” comment came in July when Pattinson told Howard Stern he and FKA twigs (aka Tahliah Debrett Barnett) were “kind of” engaged. That led many fans to think the relationship might not be headed down the aisle after all.

    'China: Through The Looking Glass' Costume Institute Benefit Gala - Alternative ViewsApparently the “major distance and tension” between them pushed them apart, and even though they tried to make it work, they’re now figuring out how to sort everything and separate their lives before going public with the split.

    E! added the note that Pattinson has been leaning on his friend Katy Perry after the split. Fans may read into that, but Rob and Katy have been friends for ages. Maybe someday they’ll be more than friends, but they were friends after he dated his “Twilight” co-star Kristen Stewart and they’re friends after his engagement to FKA twigs. And he was there for Perry after her celeb splits as well. Maybe they do belong together, but that’s not for us to decide.

    Now we just have to wait and see if the President of the United States decides to weigh in on this breakup, since he was once so invested in Pattinson’s love life.

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  • Robert Pattinson Slams All Internet Commenters After Racist Posts About Fiancee

    Comment about this story at your own risk. Robert Pattinson may or may not Google it to see what you think about him. He will be judging, since he knows you’ll be judging him. The “Twilight” alum is now playing photojournalist Dennis Stock in “Life” and he talked to NME about the paparazzi, press, and attention to his own personal life. He’s no longer with Kristen Stewart, but when he started dating FKA Twigs, who is now his fiancée, some fans posted racist comments and insults on her appearance.

    As NME noted, Twigs said she was “shocked and disgusted” by the messages and Pattinson weighed in on the world of Internet comments in general.

    I was talking to my dad about this and I bet him that if he looked up Nelson Mandela’s funeral on YouTube, the first comment would be a racist one. And it was, with like a million upvotes. What I don’t get is why. I think it’s because most normal people are not commenters – I’ve never met anyone who’s left a comment on anything. It’s just demons who live in basements. You have this weird thing where you end up trying to fight against this faceless blob, where the more you hate it, the bigger it gets, because it’s all in your head.”

    So there you go. If you have ever commented on anything — even a positive comment or one standing up to the racists (’cause we really shouldn’t just let mean people own the Internet) — you are a demon and you live in a basement. (Question: Can you save your soul by moving to the attic?) However, Pattinson added that he still has a “weird compulsion” to Google himself and read comments from these demons. He said it’s to “reinforce my negative opinion of myself. I go through periods where I don’t do it at all and feel glorious! Then I’ll fall back into this pit. It really does affect you, and it all comes from some moron sitting on a comment board. It’s always that person who’s needling away at you, who you either want to destroy, or convince them to love you.”

    OK, now the commenters sound like Regina George: you hate her, but you want her to like you. Pattinson should just get ahead of this and start commenting on threads himself — write posts so negative about this “Robert Pattinson” guy that other commenters feel compelled to defend him. Reverse psychology can sometimes work against trolls.

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  • Sorry, ‘Twilight’ ‘Shippers: Robert Pattinson Is Engaged to FKA Twigs

    Surface Magazine Event With Hans Ulrich Obrist And FKA Twigs
    We have some bad news for “Twilight” fans hoping against hope that former costars (and former flames) Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart would one day get back together: Pattinson is reportedly engaged to British musician FKA twigs.

    The news was broken by an unexpected source: rapper T-Pain, who accidentally revealed the hush-hush engagement during an interview with Vulture. Talking about influences on his new album, T-Pain said that he’s a huge fan of twigs — but probably wouldn’t get the chance to work with her anytime soon, because she’s busy planning her wedding.

    “[S]he’s engaged now, so that’s about to be a whole other thing,” the rapper said of the perpetually-busy songstress.

    When pressed about that bit of information, T-Pain told Vulture, “Yeah, to ol’ Patty [Robert Pattinson]. I don’t know if she wanted anybody to know that …”

    Apparently, T-Pain really wasn’t supposed to let the cat out of the bag, and later tried to play off his gaffe as an April Fools’ joke. But People reported on Wednesday that that the pair is indeed engaged, citing two anonymous sources as proof.

    Reps for Pattinson and twigs are staying quiet about the news for now, though People reports that the pair — who have been dating for about six months — had previously exchanged promise rings, and reportedly live together.

    No word yet on how Stewart — or millions of “Twilight” ‘shippers — is taking the news.

    [via: Vulture, People]

    Photo credit: Astrid Stawiarz via Getty Images

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