Will Smith Still Has It, Sings ‘Fresh Prince’ Theme

 Will Smith Still Has It, Sings Fresh Prince Theme

Will Smith surprised a bunch of students in England with an impromptu performance of the song that made him a star. He##Q##s still got it.

Also, find out what “Monsters University” has to offer you in today##Q##s Dailies!

» Every suit Robert De Niro wore in “Casino” [reddit]

hon2qiA Will Smith Still Has It, Sings Fresh Prince Theme

» John Malkovich will play Blackbeard in NBC##Q##s pirate pilot [Deadline]

» IMAX-exclusive poster for “G.I. Joe: Retaliation” [Lation Review]

gijoe Will Smith Still Has It, Sings Fresh Prince Theme

» New viral videos for “Monsters University” [/Film]

» The first six minutes of “Bates Motel,” which is actually supposed to be good. [ComingSoon]

» Will Smith sang the “Fresh Prince” theme song to British school children, and they reacted appropriately.

Welcome to the Dailies, where the MTV Movies team runs down all the film and television news, odds and ends that are fit to print! From awesome fan art to obscure casting news, this is your place to feast on all the movie leftovers you didn##Q##t know you were hungry for.

‘Warm Bodies’ The ‘Most Satisfying’ Film For Rob Corddry

Rob Corddry may singlehandedly kick-start a new movie archetype: The Best Friend … Who’s a Zombie.

Zipping around San Diego Comic-Con to promote “Children’s Hospital,” the onetime “Daily Show” correspondent and “Hot Tub Time Machine” actor told MTV News about his role in “50/50″ filmmaker Jonathan Levin’s “Warm Bodies.”

An adaptation of first-time novelist Isaac Marion‘s “zombie romance,” “Warm Bodies” tells the story of undead wanderer R, who falls in love with the very-much-alive Julie. The lead roles were played by Nicholas Hoult (Beast in “X-Men: First Class”) and Teresa Palmer (“I Am Number Four”).

Corddry was cast as M, a zombie outcast. “I always play the best friend in movies, right? The guy that says, ‘Hey, main character, we have a ticking clock, let’s get to the third act!’ ” noted Corddry, as his “Children’s Hospital” castmates Henry Winkler and Lake Bell looked on.

“Now, this is the best friend, but I happen to be a zombie,” he pointed out. “And so I just do that, basically, but with grunting and words like ‘Hungry.’ “

Warm Bodies” also stars Dave Franco (“21 Jump Street”), Analeigh Tipton (“Crazy Stupid Love”) and John Malkovich. Palmer sang Hoult’s praises to MTV News at the Sundance Film Festival. “He’s playing a zombie, so he can’t say much, but he’s very expressive with his eyes.”

“The world that Jonathan Levine has set up is so epic and so interesting,” she added. “It’s always very cool when Jonathan Levine does something.”

Warm Bodies” isn’t due in theaters until February 1, 2013, but Corddry revealed that he’s already taken in an advance screening.

“It’s one of the most satisfying, weirdest things I’ve ever done,” he said with pride. “I’ve seen the movie. It’s incredible.”

Stick with MTV as we bring San Diego Comic-Con to you with wall-to-wall convention coverage from the panels to the streets. Hosts Josh Horowitz and Steven Smith are onboard for live broadcasts on fan-favorite movies, comic creators, TV shows, cosplay, gaming and more!

‘Bel Ami’: The Reviews Are In!

At long last, your wait to see Robert Pattinson in all his shirtless, pants-less, bum-baring big-screen glory has arrived! “Bel Ami” opens in Los Angeles, New York and other select cites Friday (June 8), in addition to already being available on VOD.

Our story takes place in 19th-century Paris, where self-made man of sorts Georges Duroy (Pattinson) uses his wits and powers of seduction to rise from poverty to wealth, from a prostitute’s embrace to passionate trysts with wealthy beauties. It’s a curiously familiar societal setting in which politics and media jostle for influence and where sex is power and celebrity an obsession.

As excited as Pattinson fans are to see their favorite star in action, the critical mass is less than impressed with the “Twilight” hunk’s assets in this particular period piece as it’s currently sitting at a 31 percent “Fresh” rating at Rotten Tomatoes.

Without further ado, let’s sift through the “Bel Ami” reviews!

The Story
“Guy de Maupassant’s novel ‘Bel Ami’ has been adapted for the stage and screen multiple times — most memorably in 1947, in a movie starring George Sanders and Angela Lansbury. The novel’s appeal is obvious: It explores the social strata of 19th-century Paris by showing an ambitious scoundrel hopping from bed to bed. But given the era when the book was written, and given when its best-known adaptations were made, most ‘Bel Ami‘s have had to imply a lot, being coy about what’s really happening in those private chambers. So for the new adaptation, directors Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod and screenwriter Rachel Bennette try to take more advantage of the freedoms of modern cinema, making sure that their ‘Bel Ami‘ has plenty of sex and straight talk. The result is almost a test case for whether explicitness is a virtue. The verdict? Inconclusive. This new ‘Bel Ami‘ has a lot to recommend it, but it never seems as artful or smart as ‘Dangerous Liaisons,’ the film it most resembles.” — Noel Murray, A.V. Club

Pattinson’s Paramours
“What we get … is a dumb, entitled-but-tortured dreamboat falling into bed with a bunch of aristocratic women, and then turning inexplicably and insupportably Machiavellian only after he’s thoroughly slighted. First charming the throaty, free-spirited Madame Forestier (Uma Thurman, giving the film’s most engaged performance, to little avail), then the apparently erotically frustrated and still slightly gaminesque Clotilde (Christina Ricci, who looks pretty comfortable striking poses inspired by Degas’ odalisques, bless her heart) and finally wife-of-hated-boss Virginie (Kristin Scott-Thomas), Pattinson maintains the air of a kid being sent to bed without dessert. … The more experienced moviegoer may experience relief from the movie’s tedium by recalling the much better period pieces that female members of the cast have appeared in. Seeing Thurman in elaborate costume brought back fond memories of the much edgier and coherent and fun ‘Dangerous Liasons.’ For Ricci, of course, there’s ‘Prozac Nation,’ no, wait, sorry, the appealingly bloody Gothic ‘Sleepy Hollow.’ And for Scott-Thomas, well, when her character finds out that Duroy has just left the army after serving for five years in Algiers, she says, ‘I once heard a rather foolish story about the desert,’ and of course I thought, ‘You mean “The English Patient”?’ ” — Glenn Kenny, MSN Movies

A Pouty Pattinson?
“Mr. Pattinson’s strained performance in ‘Bel Ami’ leads a long list of problems in a film whose plot is so elaborate it would have been better served spread out over several hours. … As you watch Mr. Pattinson twist his features into expressions of cunning and treachery, as if he had just been practicing in a mirror, the primary missing ingredient is charm. This reasonably good-looking 26-year-old English actor, with his asymmetrical eyes and a doughy torso, affects a cold, reptilian sneer. Bad boys may have their appeal, but this one lacks the animal magnetism of even an amateur Lothario. To watch Christina Ricci, Uma Thurman and Kristin Scott Thomas melt under his icy ministrations is to roll your eyes in disbelief.” — Stephen Holden, The New York Times

The Final Word, Pro-Con Style
“[O]n the whole ‘Bel Ami’ is highly watchable. As is often the case in costume pictures especially, the degree to which different characters are convincingly of the world of the film varies. Thomas, for instance, is at once tragically and comically lovely as the good, religious wife seduced out of her right mind. She can telegraph that world in a glance and a few words. Thurman has a tougher time with Madeleine; although she makes a shattering indictment of Georges near the end, her character in particular — the ambitious political player stymied by her sex — demonstrates an endemic problem with the script (by Rachel Bennette) and the direction: The best performances seem to inhabit a story that the filmmaking doesn’t bear out.” — Michelle Orange, Movieline

“Is it his acting, the inexperience of co-directors Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod — each making their feature film debut — or both? Some reports from Cannes (although not from TIME’s Richard Corliss) had Pattinson coming into his own in David Cronenberg’s ‘Cosmopolis,’ but he gives no hint of depth in ‘Bel Ami.’ On the other hand, even an expert meanie like Colm Meany, playing George’s dismissive editor, doesn’t make much of an impression. The ladies fare a little better. Scott Thomas, despite her blessings in the innate elegance department, makes a convincing case she’s as pleased at being petted as a neglected whippet. In between considered puffs on a cigarette and playing a parlor game of French politics, Thurman’s Madeleine has a memorable sex scene with George involving both a figurative and, one senses from the pain on Pattinson’s face, literal testicular crushing. Time check: it’s been 24 years since she played the innocent virgin in the similarly themed, infinitely superior ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ (which in turn spawned its own teenaged version, ‘Cruel Intentions,’ apt to be a lot more fun for Pattinson’s ‘Twilight’ fans than ‘Bel Ami‘). Reality check: Robert Pattinson and John Malkovich; very different generations of le sex machine Française.” — Mary Pols, Time

Check out everything we’ve got on “Bel Ami.”

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

7ef7f spotted Bel Ami: The Reviews Are In!

‘The Grey’, ‘Chronicle’, And More: This Week In Video

This week, two of the year’s most critically praised films hit DVD, plus Criterion releases a modern classic for all of us to enjoy.

Check out all of this week’s releases below.

Pick of the Week
688f6 Chronicle Blu The Grey, Chronicle, And More: This Week In Video
“Chronicle” (2012)
Director: Josh Trank
Cast: Dane DeHaan, Alex Russell, Michael B. Jordan

Story:
Three high school friends obtain telekinetic powers in this surprise found footage hit from director Josh Trank.

On the Disc:
The Blu-ray edition of “Chronicle” comes with an unrated director’s cut, pre-viz footage and a reel of test footage. The package also includes a digital copy.

Past Coverage:
-Exclusive ‘Chronicle’ Test Footage And Interview With Director Josh Trank
-Exclusive ‘Chronicle’ Clip: What Every High School Guy Would Do With Superpowers

Reviews:
Rotten Tomatoes: 85%
Metacritic: 69

Where to get it
Amazon: Blu-ray – $22.99, DVD – $14.96, Digital Download – $14.99
Apple: Digital Download – $14.99
Netflix Instant: Not available

e3080 The Grey Blu The Grey, Chronicle, And More: This Week In Video
“The Grey” (2012)
Director: Joe Carnahan
Cast: Liam Neeson, Frank Grillo, Dermot Mulroney

Story:
Liam Neeson stars in producer/director Joe Carnahan‘s tense adventure thriller about a group of tough-as-nails oil rig workers who must fight for their lives in the Alaskan wilderness after their airplane crashes miles from civilization. With supplies running short and hungry wolves closing in, the shaken survivors face a fate worse than death if they don’t act fast.

On the Disc:
Joe Carnahan recorded a commentary track with his editors. The disc also includes deleted scenes.

Past Coverage:
-Five Reasons To See ‘The Grey’
-’The Grey’ Survival Guide: Do’s And Don’ts In Wilderness Movies

Reviews:
Rotten Tomatoes: 78%
Metacritic: 64

Where to get it
Amazon: Blu-ray – $19.99, DVD – 16.99, Digital Download – $14.99
Apple: Ditigal Download – $14.99 (HD: $19.99)
Netflix Instant: Not available

e3080 One for the Blu The Grey, Chronicle, And More: This Week In Video
“One for the Money” (2012)
Director: Julie Ann Robinson
Cast: Katherine Heigl, Jason O’Mara, Daniel Sunjata

Story:
Recently divorced and desperate for a job following a string of misfortunes, 30-year-old Stephanie Plum (Katherine Heigl) goes to work at her cousin’s bail-bond business, and begins investigating her first case. On the plus side, Stephanie proves to be a resourceful employee with a skill for ferreting out the truth; on the minus side, her first case is that of a Trenton, N.J., cop who broke her heart in high school and now stands accused of murder.

On the Disc:
Two documentaries, including a look at real life bond girls, plus a gag reel.

Reviews:
Rotten Tomatoes: 2%
Metacritic: 22

Where to get it
Amazon: Blu-ray – $19.96, DVD – $14.96
Apple: Ditigal Download – $14.99 (HD: $19.99)
Netflix Instant: Not available

e3080 Being John Malkovich Blu The Grey, Chronicle, And More: This Week In Video
“Being John Malkovich” (1999)
Director: Spike Jonze
Cast: John Cusack, Cameron Diaz, Catherine Keener

Story:
Puppeteer Craig Schwartz (John Cusack) is having money problems, so he takes a temporary job as a file clerk on the seventh-and-a-half floor of a large office building. One day, while rummaging behind a cabinet, he finds a small door that leads to the center of the mind of actor John Malkovich (played by, you guessed it, John Malkovich).

On the Disc:
The Criterion edition of the disc comes packed with features including selected scene commentary from Michel Gondry and a booklet with a conversation with Spike Jonze.

Reviews:
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
Metacritic: 90

Where to get it
Amazon: Blu-ray – $27.86, DVD – $24.99, Digital Rental – $2.99, Digital Download – $9.99
Apple: Digital Rental – $2.99 (HD: $3.99), Digital Download – $9.99 (HD: $14.99)
Netflix Instant: Available

The Video Score is your guide to everything you need to know about what’s out this week, all in one place. What’s available? Which formats? Is it streaming? How much will it set you back? We’ll break down the week’s biggest new releases and some smaller ones that deserve your attention. Check back each Tuesday to find out what’s hot that week and where you can catch it all!

What are you checking out this week on video? Let us know in the comments below and on Twitter!

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