Tag: magic-mike-xxl

  • Movie Review: ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’

    Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo: Claudette Barius. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Magic Mike,’ loosely inspired by the atmosphere and energy of some of star-producer Channing Tatum’s own experiences in an all-male revue as a teenager, was a huge surprise box office hit for Warner Bros. in 2012, grossing $167 million in theaters against a minuscule $7 million budget. Three years later, with director Gregory Jacobs stepping in for Steven Soderbergh behind the camera, follow-up ‘Magic Mike XXL’ grossed $123 million. A loose-limbed, well-oiled, unexpected franchise seemed born.

    There’s a clarity of purpose in the first two ‘Magic Mike’ films. While actually quite different in tone, they are both movies which center the female gaze and, with goodnatured affability, invite men to ponder the fact that maybe, just maybe, there is value in working to be seen as desirable, in addition to treating women with respect. Sadly, the third installment lands in fuzzy and unfocused fashion as a sequel that’s lost its way — uncertain of what its place in the world is, or for whom it is supposed to exist.

    JRZtLnMJ201cXpkoCOaJT7

    A Script That Borrows From ‘Magic Mike’ Stage Show, But Still Represents Only Missed Opportunities

    Interestingly, that description very much mirrors the set-up for the plot of ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ and the plight of its title character. When we first catch up with Mike, voiceover narration explains in exacting detail how Mike hasn’t been able to withstand the economic stresses of life in, and after, a pandemic. Ergo, he’s tending bar as part of the catering waitstaff at a swanky private fundraiser.

    This fact could set the table for a fascinating exploration of the gig economy, or even just shifting values in an era of socioeconomic tumult and considerable uncertainty. (After all, Soderbergh and Tatum aren’t dumb.) Instead, audiences are left with what feels like a wan, dutiful, by-the-numbers effort which borrows unimaginatively from real life (Tatum directed a ‘Magic Mike Live’ London stage show in 2018) without digging down into anything of interest or substance about the character that might advance a viewer’s understanding of him, or deepen their rooting interest.

    Despite Tatum’s undeniable physical prowess (“You move like water,” says one character early on), this nearly two-hour entry is vacuumed almost entirely free of gleefulness and mischievousness, two of the qualities which most elevated its predecessors. The result is a curiously flat misfire, interrupted only by a small handful of lively moments and two or three pulse-quickening, well-staged dance numbers.

    Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    How Much Does It Cost to Rent Channing Tatum For One Month?

    The movie opens in Miami, at the aforementioned party. At the end of the evening, with Mike Lane (Tatum) having been recognized by an attendee, host Max Mendoza (Salma Hayek Pinault) asks him for a private lap dance. After initially turning her down, Mike relents when Max offers him $6,000. What follows is an acrobatic bump-and-grind session which makes creative use of various chairs, tables and support beams. Max, awakened and inspired, then insists that Mike accompany her back to London. Her proposition: stay with her for a month, and she will pay him $60,000.

    In the light of day, Max’s offer comes into sharper focus. Potentially undergoing a divorce from her media scion husband, Max breezes into a historic venue the couple owns, the Rattigan Theater, and abruptly cancels the stuffy, marry-for-money-or-love costume drama, ‘Isabel Ascendant,’ that is in rehearsals. She installs Mike as the new creative director, empowers his air-quote vision, and tasks him with mounting (ahem) a new show that taps into and recreates the enlightenment she experienced from his dance.

    Cue the obligatory montage, as the pair recruit an array of dancers. While Mike grapples with the realities of this incredible whirlwind experience, he also leans some on Max’s put-upon butler Victor (Ayub Khan Din) and adoptive, sardonic daughter Zadie (Jemelia George), in an effort to try to better understand his new benefactor.

    Channing Tatum as Mike Lane and Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Channing Tatum as Mike Lane and Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo: Claudette Barius. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Related Articles: First Look Image From ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’

    Are There Any Dances That Can Measure Up To the Original Film’s Ginuwine’s “Pony” Number?

    Screenwriter Reid Carolin, a longtime Tatum collaborator, has received solo credit on all three movies, so one can’t reasonably accuse him of not understanding the core appeal of the franchise. Instead, the failures of ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ don’t feel egregious, or particularly active. They feel passive — in choices not made, avenues not explored. Somewhat depressingly, this leads one to the conclusion that the storytelling well here had simply run dry.

    The use of Zadie (who the movie tells us is writing a novel) to provide sporadic but knowing voiceover about both Mike and her mother feels like a weird choice — a fact highlighted even further in the movie’s finale, when it runs headlong into the issue of her presence at Mike’s sexually charged stage show debut, and has Victor cover her eyes.

    Additionally, Carolin’s script never really solves the set-up of Max and Mike’s complicated relationship. Nor does it take it anywhere believable. Tatum and Hayek Pinault (who replaced Thandiwe Newton after shooting had already commenced) have a good chemistry together, and the movie courts intrigue by presenting Max as an impulsive dilettante, prone to whimsically adopting new hobbies and personas that she abandons once she achieves mental equilibrium.

    Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza in Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza in Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. Photo: Claudette Barius.

    While some scenes are a little uneven and work better than others, Hayek Pinault gives off an amusing manic energy throughout. So for a moment it seems as if the movie is going to use that to explore the idea of Mike’s self-checkmate owing to economic preoccupation. Unfortunately, without giving too much away, the film abandons this in favor of far more traditional plotting. This rings enormously false.

    The first two ‘Magic Mike’ films were in large measure hangout movies that coasted on charisma and vibes (‘Magic Mike XXL’ in particular), while scoring points for sociological insight around the edges. Dense plotting was, to be certain, not part of their appeal. But the whole “vibe” portion of ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ never really clicks into focus, either — the supporting cast of dancers remain personality-free background players. This leaves viewers just biding time, checking their watches as they wait for the next dance sequence.

    It’s here, of course, that ’Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ scores its highest marks. The original film memorably featured a solo dance set to Ginuwine’s “Pony,” and this installment has arguably two show-stoppers. Tatum’s opening dance for/with/on Hayek Pinault is a thing of rather mesmerizing beauty — bold and erotic and at times even funny. Then, after the movie makes much ado of his character not dancing, Tatum returns for a water-infused duet with ballet dancer Kylie Shea. Mixing power and grace, this sequence has an element of danger; it’s legitimately great.

    Other performances include a brief, bus-set group effort used to secure the approval of a bureaucrat (don’t ask), and a twice-used recreation (once solo, once in group form in its finale) of a number that’s become a staple of live ‘Magic Mike’ stage performances, in which Mike and his charges celebrate the notion of obtaining consent from females, set to Ro James’ slinky “Permission.”

    Director Steven Soderbergh on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Director Steven Soderbergh on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo: Claudette Barius. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Final Verdict

    Overall, the degree to which ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ borrows from the stage show, without building out any of those numbers in a particularly compelling way, is disappointing. Emotionally, the movie doesn’t really take its title character anywhere new, and neither does it honor its new characters with complexity. This dance simply marks time, sadly reminding one of what once was in the franchise.

    ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ receives  4 out of 10 stars.

    Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Magic Mike’ Movies On Amazon

    ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ will be released in theaters on February, 10th from Warner Bros., and was written by Reid Carolin, and directed by Steven Soderbergh. The movie stars Salma Hayek and Channing Tatum, and is rated R for sexual material and language.

  • 14 Things You Never Knew About ‘Magic Mike’

    A male stripper might be lucky to get a few $20 bills stuffed into his G-string. For Channing Tatum, however, strip-club work turned into a movie franchise that has earned $290 million since the release five years ago this week of “Magic Mike” on June 29, 2012.

    Directed by Oscar-winner Steven Soderbergh, “Magic Mike” proved as much a hit among critics as it did with party-night moviegoers. Still, as many times as you’ve re-watched (and hit freeze-frame on) the movie, there’s plenty you may not know about how the film came together.
    1. Tatum has said he stripped for only eight months, when he was 18 and living in Tampa. “If you’re going to do something stupid, do it when you’re young,” he told Moviefone. Of stripping, he said, “It’s not something I’m proud of, but it’s not something I’m ashamed of.”

    2. In developing his semi-autobiographical movie, Tatum initially wanted Nicolas Winding Refn, of “Drive” fame, to direct. The Danish director was interested but ultimately unavailable.
    3. Since Tatum was already working with Soderbergh on “Haywire,” he ended up developing the movie with him instead.

    4. Tatum farmed out the actual screenwriting to his producing partner, Reid Carolin. The strip-club world that Carolin’s script depicted was not nearly as bleak as the real thing. “I don’t think we even scratch the surface of really how dark that place can get, and how slippery of a slope it can actually be,” Tatum said at a “Magic Mike” press conference. “This was probably the most palatable version of this movie. Otherwise, you wouldn’t want to see it twice. You’d just be like, ‘Okay, I feel dirty now.’”
    5. Matthew McConaughey was the first actor that Tatum and Soderbergh called. By the end of a ten-minute phone conversation, he had agreed to play impresario Dallas. “When he said ‘yes,’” Soderbergh told the New Yorker, “it made the rest of the casting much easier.”

    6. Tatum and McConaughey’s first face-to-face meeting was a research trip to a strip club outside New Orleans. As McConaughey told the Daily Beast, “The one thing I got from that: this is not these guys’ real jobs. One guy I met that night was back from Afghanistan. Another guy was a lawyer and had three kids. They all looked like accountants when they were in street clothes.” He added, “The other thing I learned is the production value is horrible. I said to Steven, ‘Can I run this production?’ I took off on that. I became P.T. Barnum. I was channeling Jim Morrison and Malcolm McDowell from ‘A Clockwork Orange.’”
    7. What you see in the film is all the actual actors flaunting what they’ve got, according to Tatum, who told Access Hollywood that there wasn’t one “stunt butt” or stunt dancer. McConaughey also assured the Daily Beast that none of the actors stuffed their thongs, “All my guys go out there with what God gave us,” he said.

    8. Before playing stripper colleagues on screen, Joe Manganiello (Big D**k Richie) and Matt Bomer (Ken) were friends back in college at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon.
    9. Having spent so much time showing off his shirtless abs as werewolf Alcide on “True Blood,” Manganiello wasn’t sure whether he wanted to risk typecasting by doing more of the same in “Magic Mike.” He told the Los Angeles Times that he consulted Chris Rock, his co-star in “What To Expect When You’re Expecting,” telling the comedian, “‘I just think dudes are going to hate my guts if I don’t put a shirt on soon.’ And Chris was like, ‘Guys are going to hate your guts anyway. Brad Pitt spent 15 years with his shirt off. He’s doing fine.’”

    10. Even Tatum was nervous at having to dance in a thong. He recalled to the Times, “I’m about to go on stage and dance for the first time, and I’m like, ‘Why did I want to do this again? This is completely not what I remembered.’ I was terrified.”
    11. Initially, McConaughey didn’t have a strip number of his own. So the “Ladies of Tampa” routine was created for him, and he co-wrote the song himself. The female extras went wild and nearly tore the actor’s thong off, as you can see in the movie.

    12. Days before the film’s release, two Florida strippers — who had danced alongside Tatum back in the day — came forth and accused the filmmakers of stealing their life stories and their dance moves. At the press conference, Tatum insisted that the film was entirely fictional. “There’s not one character that I took from my real life,” he said. “This is just a world that I went into and that I had a perspective on, and we created everything from a fictional place.” Saying he didn’t want to disparage his accusers, he nonetheless added, “Those guys have been trying to make money off of me since I’ve gotten into this business.”
    13. Tatum and Soderbergh financed “Magic Mike” themselves, spending a mere $7 million and wrapping the shoot in just 25 days. It made back $114 million in North America and another $53 million abroad.

    14. Bomer had a hard time letting go of his character. “I remember being at my sister’s wedding reception a month after we wrapped, and I’d had a few drinks and — all of a sudden — I was doing body rolls on the dance floor,” he said at the press conference. “I realized, ‘Matt, it’s time to let go. You can’t take this with you. It’s already been captured on film.’”

  • 9 Times Channing Tatum Was So Hot That You Cried


    Whether he’s dressed up in a tux, gyrating to Ginuwine, or being the funniest guy in the room, Channing Tatum is undeniably sexy.

    Here are 9 times he was so hot that we pretty much couldn’t keep it together. Try not to drool, guys.

  • 17 Times Matt Bomer Gave Us Something That Rhymes With Bomer

    %Slideshow-327719%
    White Collar,” and “American Horror Story.” Whether he’s stripping down to his skivvies or killing it in a suave tux on the red carpet, he sure is one beautiful specimen. And we’ve got the pictures to prove it. Here are 17 times Matt Bomer was pretty much the hottest guy ever.

  • What’s New on TV, Netflix, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: October 5-11

    magic mike xxlAt a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “Magic Mike XXL”
    Not everyone went out to see this one in a crowded theater of tittering fans. Perhaps you were waiting until Channing Tatum was available for a private showing at home? Ready or not, he’s grinding your way October 6. The sequel features the usual suspects, plus Amber Heard, Donald Glover, Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss, Michael Strahan, Andie MacDowell, Elizabeth Banks, and Jada Pinkett Smith. The DVD and Blu-ray combo pack both include the special features “The Moves of Magic Mike XXL” and “Georgia,” and the Blu-ray also has an Extended Malik Dance Scene.

    “Batkid Begins”
    This should warm your heart. “Batkid Begins” is out on DVD on October 6. The documentary follows the one day, in one city, when the world came together to grant one 5-year-old cancer patient named Miles his wish. The movie looks at the “why” of this good-news phenomenon. Source it, bottle it, and spread it through the water system!

    “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”
    This winner of the 2015 Sundance Audience Award and Grand Jury Prize arrives on Blu-ray, DVD and VOD October 6. The funny, uplifting story follows quirky teenager Greg Gaines, who is trying to get through high school while making film parodies with his “coworker” Earl. When he is forced to spend time with a terminally ill classmate, he finally learns to let his guard down and connect with the people around him. Both the DVD and Blu-ray editions come with several extras, including deleted scenes with commentary.


    “Home Alone: 25th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Christmas Edition”
    Can you believe it’s been 25 years since they forgot Macaulay Culkin’s Kevin McCallister back at the house? To celebrate the milestone, Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment is issuing this ultimate collector’s edition on Blu-ray and DVD on October 6. The gift set features all five films packaged together for the first time in a collectible paint can full of limited edition movie memorabilia.

    New Video on Demand, Rental Streaming, and Digital Only

    “Paper Towns”
    “Paper Towns” — another adaptation from John Green, author of “The Fault in Our Stars” — arrives on Digital HD on October 9, before the Blu-ray/DVD drop on October 20. Nat Wolff stars in the coming-of-age story about a high school senior who has been in love with his enigmatic neighbor Margot (Cara Delevingne) since childhood. Follow them on an all-night adventure, followed by Margo’s sudden disappearance, and trail of cryptic clues.

    “Red Oaks”
    The first season of Amazon’s original comedy series will start streaming to Prime members starting Friday, October 9. Watch all 10 episodes of the half-hour coming-of-age dramedy set in suburban New Jersey in 1985. “Red Oaks” — which someone has ingeniously dubbed “The Graduate meets Caddyshack” — stars Craig Roberts, Paul Reiser, Jennifer Grey and Richard Kind.

    Check out the trailer:

    “Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th”
    Just in time for Halloween — and just following the passing of Wes Craven — “Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th” is arriving on Digital October 6. Inspired by the critically-acclaimed book, the tribute takes viewers behind the mask on a journey into the making of the landmark horror franchise-from its beginnings in 1980 at a New Jersey summer camp to the blockbuster release of its 2009 “reboot.” The movie combines hundreds of rare and never-before-seen photographs, film clips, outtakes, archival documents, conceptual art and behind-the-scenes footage, and interviews with more than 150 cast and crew members spanning all twelve films and the television series. The film stars Sean S. Cunningham, Corey Feldman, Wes Craven, Robert Englund, Alice Cooper, Frank Mancuso Jr., Adrienne King, Amy Steel and more.

    New on Netflix

    This is a big week for Fall TV premieres, and Netflix will start streaming the previous seasons of several shows in time for their TV returns. For example, on Tuesday, October 6, Netflix is offering “American Horror Story: Freak Show” (one day before the debut of “American Horror Story: Hotel”) plus the first seasons of “iZombie” and “The Flash” and the second season of “The Originals.” On October 7, Netflix will start streaming “Arrow” Season 3 and “Supernatural” Season 10. Why not binge your way into a full catch-up so each season will be fresh in your mind before you start watching them “live”?


    TV Worth Watching

    “The Walking Dead” (Sunday on AMC at 9 p.m.)
    When Season 5 ended, Rick shot Pete and Morgan showed up in Alexandria just in time to watch. (Awkward!) We’ll see the old friends reunite for the first time since Season 3 in Season 6, Episode 1, “First Time Again.” The 90 minute will show “Rick and the group continue to have trouble assimilating into Alexandria. Multiple threats lead the community to adopt a mindset of hardness, while Rick’s group must take a step back from the violence they’ve come to embrace.”

    “American Horror Story: Hotel” (Wednesday on FX at 10 p.m.)
    Welcome to the Hotel Cortez, where Lady Gaga is in charge and you may or may not be sewn into your bed at night. In the first episode, appropriately titled “Checking In,” detective and family man John Lowe (Wes Bentley) investigates a chain of gruesome murders in Los Angeles, and a mysterious tip points him to the mysterious Hotel Cortez.

    “The Vampire Diaries” (Thursday on The CW at 8 p.m.)
    Are you ready for life without Elena? In the Season 7 premiere, “Day One Of Twenty-Two Thousand,Give Or Take,” Damon (Ian Somerhalder) is forced to navigate his new reality without the love of his life. A newly empowered Bonnie (Kat Graham) has decided that she will be Damon’s moral compass and keeps a close eye on him as he, in turn, cautiously keeps tabs on Alaric (Matt Davis), following the loss of his fiancée Jo. Meanwhile, as he waits for Caroline (Candice King) to sort out her emotions, Stefan (Paul Wesley) takes an active role in protecting the town from Lily (Annie Wersching) and her family of Heretics, who have wasted no time wreaking havoc in Mystic Falls.

    “Billy on the Street” (Thursday on truTV at 10:30 p.m.)
    Comedian Billy Eichner returns to the streets of NYC — and starts his run on truTV — on October 8. In the first episode, Tina Fey joins Billy as they hit the pavement to find Tina a friend. Plus, Billy ambushes pedestrians with the news that Emma Stone seems down to earth. (It’s true!) Other games include “For a Dollar” and a new “Lightning Round.” This season will feature multiple A-listers, including Chris Pratt, Will Ferrell, Anna Kendrick, Julianne Moore, Sarah Jessica Parker, Bill Hader, and Jason Sudeikis.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.
    %Slideshow-324535%

  • What Made Jada Pinkett Smith’s Knees Buckle in ‘Magic Mike XXL’

    Jada Pinkett Smith had a wild reaction to the handsome crop of “greased down” men on the set of “Magic Mike XXL.”

    “There were these extras [who] were playing strippers in my club,” the actress, who plays club owner Rome, tells “Made in Hollywood.” “And there were these beautiful men [who] were just lined up … and my knee buckled [laughs]. My knee literally gave out on me. I was like, ‘Wow, that’s crazy.’ I had never reacted like that.”

    All silly reactions aside, Smith really did see a different side of the male species during filming.

    “I just really got to appreciate masculine beauty on a whole,” she says. “I never really related to masculinity in that way – just how beautiful it is.”

    Since 1997, Smith has been married to Will Smith. Together, the couple of nearly 18 years has son Jaden, 17, and daughter Willow, 14.

    Inspired by Channing Tatum’s brief time moonlighting as a 19-year-old stripper, Smith joins the men of “Magic Mike XXL” as the hard bodied bros travel to a stripper convention and meet other flirty beauties played by Amber Heard and Andie MacDowell. Also starring Matt Bomer, Joe Manganiello, Kevin Nash, Adam Rodriguez and Stephen “tWitch” Boss. — Written by Dahvi Shira

    20061972

  • How Heavy Metal Prepared Jada Pinkett Smith for ‘Magic Mike XXL’

    Jada Pinkett Smith sure knew how to hold down the fort of the strip club in “Magic Mike XXL

    “I think that I got a lot of practice from being in my metal band, right?” she tells “Made in Hollywood,” with a laugh, about her club-owner character. “The metal crowd is a very hard crowd to reel in.”

    Added Smith with another chuckle: “I think just connecting to energy and knowing how to move a crowd – I really learned through my band and the metal crowd, so thank you, metal!”

    In 2002, Smith launched and fronted the vocals for the metal band Wicked Wisdom, performing under the stage name Jada Koren. The singer-actress has previously cited Metallica and Guns N’ Roses as influences.

    Inspired by Channing Tatum’s brief time moonlighting as a 19-year-old stripper, Smith joins the men of “Magic Mike XXL” as strip club owner Rome, whom she meets as the hard bodied bros travel to a stripper convention and meet other flirty beauties played by Amber Heard and Andie MacDowell. Also starring Matt Bomer, Joe Manganiello, Kevin Nash, Adam Rodriguez and Stephen “tWitch” Boss. — Written by Dahvi Shira

    20061972
  • Andie MacDowell Says It’s OK to Ogle Shirtless Men

    Andie MacDowell wants “Magic Mike XXL” fans to know there is nothing wrong with shamelessly feasting your eyes on the hot crop of shirtless men featured in the movie.

    “It was not controlling or totally objectifying them,” the actress tells “Made in Hollywood” of Channing Tatum, Matt Bomer and the other actors who play strippers in the film. “It’s more about enjoying them.”

    MacDowell plays Nancy, a recent divorcee, who encounters Tatum’s Magic Mike character and his posse of male strippers.

    Talking about the “Magic Mike” sequel’s girls-night-out-appeal, the actress refers to it as a “role reversal,” adding, “It’s great fun that we can get that excited about a bunch of guys entertaining us … Everything’s in good fun. There’s nothing demeaning about it.” — Written by Dahvi Shira

    20061972
  • Magic Mike XXL: The Guys Give Each Other Stripper Names!

    The studly stars of “Magic Mike XXL” have gotten quite crafty with their stripper nicknames!

    Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss had an interesting description for costar Channing Tatum’s character, who he referred to as “Black Belt Jones 9000.”

    “It just fits,” Boss explained to “Made in Hollywood” when Channing gave him a puzzled look. “Black belt is symbolic for discipline in a certain style. Jones is with the times, and 9000 gives the year. It’s what, 2015? So, 9000, he’s like mad years ahead of anything that’s going on. Black Belt Jones 9000 is Channing’s stripper name.”

    And Tatum’s response was a cute one.

    Referring to Boss’s character as “Vibrator Virgil Gummy Bear,” Tatum said, “Gummy Bear because he’s sweet – he’s like friendly looking. I want to just eat him up!”

    Donald Glover gave his costar pal Matt Bomer the name “Songbird,” while Bomer called his buddy, “Magnum Talent. Talentus Magnus.”

    Said Bomer: “He’s bringing thunder in so many ways and he can pretty much do anything.” — Written by Dahvi Shira

    20061972
  • 5 Reasons Why ‘Magic Mike XXL’ Bombed at the Box Office

    You know it’s a bad day in Hollywood when “Magic Mike XXL” can’t get a rise out of the box office.

    The male-stripper sequel was expected to earn in the low $30 million range over the three-day holiday weekend, and hit somewhere around $45M for the five days since its debut on Wednesday. Instead, it opened in fourth place with an estimated Friday-to-Sunday haul of $12 million and $27.1 million for its first five days of release. That’s nearly 45 percent below the $49.6 million the original “Magic Mike” earned in its first five days in 2012. Ouch.

    Another sequel, “Terminator Genisys,” also underperformed this weekend. The fifth film in the franchise opened in third with an estimated $28.7 million for the three-day weekend, and $44.2 million since its Wednesday debut. But at least those numbers were at the low end of what pundits had predicted. “Magic Mike XXL” wasn’t even in the ballpark.

    Why did Channing Tatum and his team of male entertainers drop so fast and so far? Here are six likely reasons:

    1. Channing Tatum Can Be Hit or Miss
    Is C. Tates a box office draw? Sure. A consistent one, though? Not so much.

    Outside of “The Vow,” the first two “Jump Street” films and “Magic Mike,” Tatum seems unable to attract the level of box office that other A-Listers can. (We’re looking at you, “Jupiter Ascending.”) “XXL” was sold largely on his shoulders (and pecs and abs) alone, and they don’t seem muscular enough.

    2. The Female Appeal

    That’s been the big box office story all year, starting with “Fifty Shades of Grey” and “Cinderella.” Indeed, exit polls show that 96 percent of “XXL’s ” audience were women. But it seems you have to have at least some men buying tickets to generate a hit, and “Magic Mike” had hardly any.

    3. Needs More Than Just Good Word-of-mouth

    “Magic Mike XXL” earned a very good A- CinemaScore, suggesting that viewers would give the film strong recommendations to friends. But the film’s older audience relies on more than just word-of-mouth recommendations. These ticketbuyers still read reviews, and reviews for the sequel were decidedly mixed.

    4. That Big Drop Over the Weekend
    Wednesday’s opening day triumph ($9.3 million) seemed to indicate that fans of the first “Mike” were really eager to see the sequel. Unfortunately, as with many franchise movies and genre films (especially horror), the die-hard fans are the only ones who feel compelled to see the film on opening day. And a troublesome 60 percent slide from Friday-to-Saturday all but underlines that point.

    5. July 4th Competition

    Usually, Independence Day is a good weekend to open a movie; just ask Will Smith. But this year, July 4 fell on Saturday, so fireworks and barbecues cut into the heart of the moviegoing weekend. Plus, competition was especially stiff, not just from fellow newcomer “Genisys,” but also from unstoppable holdovers “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out.” The two box office hits nearly tied for first, even though they’ve already been in theaters for four weeks and three weeks, respectively.

    But there is a silver lining (ish) here. Thanks to hits like “Jurassic World,” “Inside Out,” and “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” this summer is running about 13 percent ahead of 2014, and only five percent behind 2013. But are these films, and December’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” enough to carry a whole year?

    They’d better be, if the rest of 2015 turns out to be filled with miscalculations like “Magic Mike XXL.”