Steve Carell

Zut Alors! Steve Carell Gets Frenchy...But What About His Date With Tina Fey?

<i>Zut Alors!</i> Steve Carell Gets Frenchy...But What About His Date With Tina Fey?
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Steve Carell don't break our hearts! No, we're not upset because you've signed on for yet another terrible sounding family film-in this case, Brigadier General, a period comedy (uh-oh) about a French soldier during the Napoleonic wars who thinks he's much braver than he actually is (eeek!). While that certainly sounds bad, we understand that Mr. Carell has to earn a living, especially in this economy. Making a family comedy like that is certainly worth his time; think of it as his version of Night at the Museum.

No, the reason we're crestfallen is because buried in the  read more »

Emmy Picks, Day Four: The Actors

Emmy Picks, Day Four: The Actors

The 60th Primetime Emmy Awards air Sunday on ABC. And in preparation, we thought it would be fun to give you a little help on your office pool. Welcome to Day 4 of our Emmy preview!

We've already handicapped both supporting races and the lead actresses. Now it's time to look at the actors.

Best Actor, Comedy: Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock; Steve Carell, The Office; Lee Pace, Pushing Daisies; Tony Shalhoub, Monk; Charlie Sheen, Two and a Half Men

Who we're pulling for: We weren't the biggest fans of the fourth season of The Office. It was hit and miss , with episodes ranging from profoundly funny to profoundly stupid. Still, Steve Carell was a supreme constant. He managed to inject Michael Scott with an underlying humanity, even in the most absurd situations. This is the third time Mr. Carell has been nominated and, thus far, he hasn't won. But doesn't it feel like he should have?

Prediction: With apologies to Mr. Carell, we'd be shocked if Alec Baldwin didn't win for 30 Rock.  read more »

Resolved: There Is Only One Way to Portray Office Life

Resolved: There Is Only One Way to Portray Office Life
via businessweek.com; nymag.com; wired.com; magazine-agent.com

Let's say you're a magazine editor and you need to illustrate a special issue about office life: What do you do for art? If you're the editor of Businessweek and you're compiling a special Business @ Work issue in collaboration with readers (a first, according to the magazine's Web site), you just do what New York did in April 2007 with its "Office Life" package and slap Rainn Wilson of NBC's The Office on the cover and in a spread inside. Oh, and you might as well get photographer Chris Buck to shoot him, like New York did.

To justify that cover placement, do a short interview with Mr.  read more »

Sorry About That, Chief! Carell, Hathaway Can’t Hold a Shoe to Adams, Feldon

Power suits: Hathaway and Carell in <i>Get Smart</i>.
Warner Bros. Pictures
Power suits: Hathaway and Carell in Get Smart.

Get Smart
Running time 110 minutes
Written by Tom J. Astle and Matt Ember
Directed by Peter Segal
Starring Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway, Dwayne Johnson

Peter Segal’s Get Smart, from a screenplay by Tom J. Astle and Matt Ember, is based on a satiric television series with characters created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry. In fact, Mr. Brooks and Mr. Henry are listed in the film’s credits as “consultants.” This leads one to wonder if the timely jabs at an anonymous Bush-like president and a Cheney-like vice president can be attributed at least partly to the Brooks-Henry team.  read more »

Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide To This Week’s Movies: Oldie but Goodie Woody

Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide To This Week’s Movies: Oldie but Goodie Woody
screenrush.com

We really do like him when he’s angry! Although general wisdom might have advised against bringing the Hulk—the mild mannered scientist by day, giant green ragey monster by night—to the screen again, after the Ang Lee’s adaptation went splat in 2003, The Incredible Hulk did pretty well last weekend. The Edward Norton-starring flick made $54.5 million, edging out Kung Fu Panda and M. Night Shyamalan’s The Happening. But what’s weird is that while The Happening was soundly trounced by most critics, it still managed to make $30 million and do healthy business overseas. Come on, Europe—you’re supposed to be the classy continent.  read more »

Manhattan Weekend Box Office: Bella Does Beautifully; (Another) Eastwood Needs to Pull the Plug

Manhattan Weekend Box Office: Bella Does Beautifully; (Another) Eastwood Needs to Pull the Plug
Courtesy of Lions Gate, Buena Vista, and Roadside Attractions

Heartbleeders, both literally—ew!—and metaphorically—aw!—speaking, ruled over the weekend. Saw IV (No. 1) grossed over $32 million nationally and averaged over $53,000 at 8 theaters in the city, while Dan in the Real Life (No. 2) took in a respectable $12 million in national receipts, and did similarly respectable business in the city with an over $23,000 average on 8 screens.

Perhaps there is a little surprise that Steve Carell and his first foray into serious acting couldn’t pull stronger in the city, but the film did around the business its reviews suggested: above-average. A film that defied expectations, including those of the critics, was Bella (No. 9), a drama set in New York City surrounding a pregnant hostess and a mysterious chef, who seeks to help her. Apparently targeted at Christians and Latin-Americans by Roadside Attractions, the film, which was directed by first-timer Alejandro Gomez Monetverde, averaged a surprisingly strong $36,000 in the city. If the film can keep this up, it’ll be another example (See Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married?) of how intelligent niche fare can be successful despite the opinions of the mainstream press or expensive publicity campaigns.  read more »

Girl on Film: Saw, Again, Carell in Dan in Real Life, Clint Eastwood's Spawn, and Bacon—Mmmm, Bacon

Girl on Film: Saw, Again, Carell in Dan in Real Life, Clint Eastwood's Spawn, and Bacon—Mmmm, Bacon
Courtesy of Focus Features

This weekend we’ll be treated to a blessed break from the heavy-duty Oscar-hopeful onslaught of late. If, like us, you have barely been able to breathe under the weight of recent movies (see Reservation Road, Rendition, Things We Lost in the Fire—ouch! It hurts!), Halloween torture flicks might actually feel like relief. The folks at Lions Gate are hoping that Saw IV (we know, we know … do you need to go back and watch Saw I, II, and III before seeing this one? We’re guessing not!), a series of disturbing prolific-ness, will have the kind of box office that Alaskan vampire flick, 30 Days of Night, had last weekend. Saw IV can’t boast the same amount of star wattage (no hottie Hartnett in this one!), but when aren’t people in the mood for random orifice blood-spurting? Seriously.  read more »

The 2000-Year-Old Virgin: Purity, Chastity, Mystery

An independent scholar, Hanne Blank has edited several collections of erotica and written one herself.
An independent scholar, Hanne Blank has edited several collections of erotica and written one herself.

In Virgin, Hanne Blank reminds us that the idea of virginity exists for no other animal species.  read more »

But When I Became a Critic, I Put Away Critical Things

Today, at a multiplex near you, Steve Carell loses it at the movies with The 40-Year-Old Virgin. As Andy Switzer, the film's eponymous virgin, finally gets to know a woman, you know, biblically, critics across the country are turning to The Bible itself to make sense of the Universal comedy.

Well, not the whole Bible: more like a single turn of phrase from the Bible.

"Andy must calculate how many childish things he must put away to make room for the love of a good woman..." - The Opposite of Sex, by Jessica Winter, The Village Voice, Aug. 16, 2005.

"Andy puts away these childish things at least temporarily after three of his fellow workers stumble onto his secret, throwing a wrench into his orderly, celibate existence." - Losing His Innocence, Not a Minute Too Soon, by Manohla Dargis, The New York Times, Aug. 19, 2005.

"Andy isn't the only one who has to put away childish things..." - The Virgin' mirth, by Joanna Connors, The Cleveland Plain Dealer, Aug. 19, 2005.

"So she's attracted by Andy's innocence — turned on by it — even before she knows why he's so innocent, while he's inspired by her to finally put away childish things (or, at least, auction them on the Internet)." - Sex and the Pocket Protector, by Soctt Foundas, LA Weekly, Aug. 19-25, 2005.  read more »

Matt Haber