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Before you see the 'Poltergeist' reboot, watch the terrifying trailer from the 1982 original

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Before you see the remake of "Poltergeist" that comes out this weekend, check out the spooky trailer for the 1982 thriller on which the new one is based.

The original "Poltergeist" is somewhat controversial due to confusion over producer/writer Steven Spielberg's actual role in the production. In his book "The Films of Steven Spielberg," author Douglas Brode wrote that Spielberg actually performed more of a directorial role than the film's credited director Tobe Hooper ("The Texas Chainsaw Massacre"). Brode says that Spielberg's contract with Universal — the studio that released Spielberg's "E.T." that same year — stipulated that Spielberg could only be credited with directing one movie in 1982.

Therefore Spielberg doesn't get a director credit, but he is said to have been perceived as the man in charge on the set of "Poltergeist."

Spielberg's name isn't attached to the 2015 remake, which is produced by horror-master Sam Raimi ("Evil Dead 2"). The new "Poltergeist" is directed by Gil Kenan, who also directed the 2006 animated movie "Monster House," which was executive produced by Steven Spielberg.

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THEN & NOW: The cast of 'Entourage' 11 years after the hit HBO show premiered

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Entourage Movie

With the "Entourage" movie opening in theaters everywhere today, we're looking back on the 11 years since the show premiered in 2004.

Since the show ended its eight season run in 2011, the actors and actresses who made up the main cast have gone on to star in numerous television and movie roles  but none have managed to top their "Entourage" fame just yet.

See what Vinnie, Eric, Drama, Turtle, and Ari, the rest of the crew have been up to since the show ended.

THEN: Adrian Grenier played the young Hollywood movie star Vincent "Vinnie" Chase.



NOW: Grenier starred in the 2013 apocalyptic dramedy "Goodbye World" and became an environmental activist.

In March, Grenier's Kickstarter to fund a search for the "loneliest whale in the world" was saved at the last minute by a $50,000 donation from actor and fellow activist Leonardo DiCaprio.

Grenier and filmmaker Josh Zeman will use the proceeds from the fundraiser to film a team of scientists as they search for the lonely whale — called "52 Hertz" for the high frequency of its mating song that no other whale speaks.



THEN: Kevin Connolly starred in all 96 episodes of "Entourage" as Eric "E" Murphy.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

It took a lot of back and forth to finally get 'Entourage' on the big screen

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entourage golden globes adrien grenier

Adrian Grenier had been to the Golden Globes many times before.

As the actor who played movie star Vincent Chase on "Entourage" — nominated for six Globes best-comedy-series awards during its eight-year run — he had logged plenty of hours on the red carpet at The Beverly Hilton. But at January's ceremony, as he smoldered for the paparazzi, there was something different in his demeanor. It was hard to put a finger on it — the change was nearly imperceptible — but it turns out he was acting.

"We were working," says Grenier, 38, of the day he and the rest of the "Entourage" cast turned up at the Globes, in character, to photobomb the event for an oh-so-meta sequence in the "Entourage" movie, Warner Bros. $30 million big-screen adaptation that (finally) arrives in theaters June 3. "We showed up the night before to run through it — we choreographed it. There was a lot going on — you're on the red carpet with celebrities and actors and performers — but we had a job to do. We weren't there for the glitz and glam."

On HBO's "Entourage," which ran from 2004 to 2011, the line between fantasy and reality — between glitz and glam and phony glitz and glam — always was blurry. But that's what made it such a favorite among Hollywood insiders (along with 3 million viewers). Every character was a carbon copy of an industry original. Vincent was loosely based on executive producer (and movie star) Mark Wahlberg. Ari Gold, the sharky agent played by Jeremy Piven, was not-so-loosely based on Wahlberg's agent, WME's Ari Emanuel. Kevin Dillon, who played Johnny "Drama" Chase, Vincent's less successful brother, himself is the sibling of a more successful star (that'd be Matt). 

ari gold entourage

Every week, the show featured scenes set at trendy Beverly Hills eateries, plot points torn from the trades and more industry name-dropping than one could overhear at e. baldi during lunch hour. Getting name-checked on "Entourage" became the ultimate professional accolade, way cooler than a star on Hollywood Boulevard.

"Most movies and shows that deal with the business border on insipid," says "Entourage" fan J.C. Spink, a manager and producer. "It was fun to see one where they got most of the stuff right. My friends and family back home could understand what I go through."

The movie is more of the same, only bigger.

There's a plot, kind of — Vincent is directing his first feature, the tentpole Hyde (as in Jekyll and …), while Ari, now running a studio, is battling the Texas billionaire funding the project (Billy Bob Thornton, with Haley Joel Osment as his son); Drama is having a crisis over his X-rated home video getting leaked online (worse, the Texans want him out of Vincent's movie); Eric (Kevin Connolly), Vincent's manager and childhood friend, is dealing with a pregnant ex-girlfriend; and Turtle (Jerry Ferrara), Vincent's friend and driver, has a crush on martial arts star Ronda Rousey — but never mind.

entourage jerry kevin

The movie is more of the same, only bigger.

There's a plot, kind of — Vincent is directing his first feature, the tentpole Hyde (as in Jekyll and …), while Ari, now running a studio, is battling the Texas billionaire funding the project (Billy Bob Thornton, with Haley Joel Osment as his son); Drama is having a crisis over his X-rated home video getting leaked online (worse, the Texans want him out of Vincent's movie); Eric (Kevin Connolly), Vincent's manager and childhood friend, is dealing with a pregnant ex-girlfriend; and Turtle (Jerry Ferrara), Vincent's friend and driver, has a crush on martial arts star Ronda Rousey — but never mind.

Nobody watched "Entourage" for the plots. What's likely to critic-proof the 104-minute film, written and directed by series creator Doug Ellin, is that it's packed with glamorous locales (dozens during the opening credits alone!), more than 50 cameos (even Warren Buffett zips by in a studio golf cart) and countless shout-outs to indus­try names that will be meaning­less to anyone outside show business (take a bow, CAA's Michael Kives, who has two seconds of screen time and gets mentioned during Jessica Alba's cameo — even his house is in the film).

entourage doug ellin

"I try to make 'Entourage' just what Hollywood is — I really do," says Ellin. "The world has to be as real as possible to make it feel like it's happening. People watching the first season thought it was a reality show — a lot of people didn't realize it was scripted. And that's the goal: to make it feel exactly how it would feel if you were walking through the streets of Los Angeles."

Only now, on a 30-foot-tall screen.

•••

So, whose big idea was it to turn "Entourage" into a movie? Nobody seems to know. Dillon, 49, recalls discussions as early as 2008, during season five — right around the time another HBO series, 'Sex and the City,' made its big-screen debut (and went on to gross $415.3 million worldwide). "We all went, 'Hmmm, maybe we could do something like that, you know?' " he says. "We were often compared to that show. I don't know why — I never watched it. But we thought maybe we could do a film as well."

In the fake Hollywood of the "Entourage" movie, Vincent's directorial debut goes $15 million over budget and nearly gets shut down. In real Hollywood, Ellin's film had problems of its own. For starters, the 47-year-old writer-director was having trouble pounding out a story despite nagging phone calls from Wahlberg. "He called me every few months and said, 'Where's the script?' " says Ellin.

Salary negotiations also stalled the project for months, and there were rumors of acrimony among the cast, particularly over how much Piven, 49, the only established star on the series, was being offered. Some of that strife leaked into the press — asked in October 2013 when an "Entourage" movie would begin shooting, Wahlberg told TMZ, "As soon as them guys stop being so greedy"— and spilled onto social media. "I will sign any deal that gives ALL the boys an opportunity to share in the upside of success EQUALLY," Grenier fired back at Wahlberg on Instagram.

Mark wahlberg entourage

In the end, a deal was struck that, according to sources, paid Piven about $5 million and each of the other actors more than $2 million (plus backend). "It was just a matter of ironing out details," Grenier tells THR. "The previous deal for the show was over, so we all had the right to negotiate however we wanted for the movie." And the way Grenier and the other actors (minus Piven) — none of whom had broken out beyond their "Entourage" roles — wanted to negotiate was as a team, which TV stars sometimes do but is more of a rarity in the film world. "We recognized that we had more leverage when we were aligned," adds Grenier.

The 34-day shoot, which began in February 2014, was more sprawling than the TV show, with scenes set not merely on the Warners backlot and at local restaurants but also in places like Miami, where Vincent throws a party on a $30 million yacht. But it wasn't all caviar and Jell-O shots. "We were doing a party scene at Turtle's house with cameos up the yin-yang," says Dillon. "We had 20 trailers, each for a different celebrity — it was like a small city. It was fun, but it wasn't really a party. As soon as they said, 'Cut!' the music would stop." In yet another case of life imitating "Entourage," Dillon's favorite scene — in which Drama does a striptease with Channing Tatum — was dropped from the shooting script when Tatum canceled his cameo ("I did a lot of whining," says Dillon).

But there were more serious snafus on set. On day 20, while shooting that celeb-packed party on the Rancho Palos Verdes estate that's supposed to be Turtle's digs, Connolly broke his leg fooling around with a football. "Kevin whispered to me, 'I heard something pop,' " says Ellin. "Kevin is one of my best friends, but immediately I'm like: 'Oh, God. This movie is dead.' " After some creative adjustments, though — in a few scenes where Eric was supposed to walk, he instead gets driven — the movie fans have been awaiting for four years finally was finished.

entourage doug ellin ari

Almost.

Nearly a year later, in January — after editing on the film mostly was complete — Ellin decided to add one more scene: a bit where Vincent and his posse steal the show at the Golden Globes. "I just had this idea," he says. "I called Lev [producer Stephen Levinson] and Mark [Wahlberg] and asked if they could figure it out. They called the Globes, and they were awesome to let us on their carpet. That's millions of dollars' worth of free sets, you know?" The only hitch: Ellin failed to dress for the part. "My girlfriend told me to wear a suit, but I was like: 'I'm just filming — I'm shooting. I'm not wearing a suit,' " he adds. "Then a few hours later I start getting calls from people saying they can see me on Access Hollywood, and why am I dressed like there's a flood?"

He'll remember to dress better for the "Entourage" premiere June 1 at Westwood's Regency Village Theatre. And he might want to bring a camera to capture more red-carpet footage because a second "Entourage" movie is not out of the question. "Warner Bros. is ready to move ahead with the script," says Ellin of plans for a sequel. "But I'm not thinking about it till I see if people are into this one."

SEE ALSO: Whether or not you watched the show 'Entourage' — you will absolutely love the movie

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's The First Trailer From The New 'Entourage' Movie

The new ‘Macbeth’ movie looks like Shakespeare meets ‘Game of Thrones'

THEN & NOW: The cast of 'Entourage' 11 years after the hit HBO show premiered

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0
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Entourage Movie

With the "Entourage" movie opening in theaters everywhere today, we're looking back on the 11 years since the show premiered in 2004.

Since the show ended its eight season run in 2011, the actors and actresses who made up the main cast have gone on to star in numerous television and movie roles  but none have managed to top their "Entourage" fame just yet.

See what Vinnie, Eric, Drama, Turtle, and Ari, the rest of the crew have been up to since the show ended.

THEN: Adrian Grenier played the young Hollywood movie star Vincent "Vinnie" Chase.



NOW: Grenier starred in the 2013 apocalyptic dramedy "Goodbye World" and became an environmental activist.

In March, Grenier's Kickstarter to fund a search for the "loneliest whale in the world" was saved at the last minute by a $50,000 donation from actor and fellow activist Leonardo DiCaprio.

Grenier and filmmaker Josh Zeman will use the proceeds from the fundraiser to film a team of scientists as they search for the lonely whale — called "52 Hertz" for the high frequency of its mating song that no other whale speaks.



THEN: Kevin Connolly starred in all 96 episodes of "Entourage" as Eric "E" Murphy.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Steven Spielberg's 'Jaws' just turned 40 — watch the original 1975 trailer

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Steven Spielberg's box office blockbuster "Jaws" just turned 40 years old. The masterpiece originally hit theaters on June 1, 1975 and immediately changed the Hollywood landscape. After the film's success, movie studios focused their efforts on creating summer "tentpole" releases, with buzz fueled by expensive marketing campaigns and unconventionally wide theatrical releases.

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5 science facts 'Jurassic World' totally ignored

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"Jurassic World," the latest installment of the "Jurassic Park" franchise, will open this summer to fan expectations of bigger, better dinosaurs. While the studio might deliver on that front, this latest flick sadly continues a long "Jurassic" tradition of bad and incomplete science. Here's how "Jurassic World" still can't get the science right. 

"Jurassic World" opens on Friday, June 12th. 

Produced by Kevin Reilly. Video courtesy of Universal Pictures

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This awesome montage shows all the movie scenes Quentin Tarantino has stolen from

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Quentin Tarantino

Director Quentin Tarantino is a thief, and he'll be the first to tell you so.

“I steal from every single movie ever made,” Tarantino once said in an interview with Empire magazine. “If my work has anything, it’s that I’m taking this from this and that from that and mixing them together.”

In movies from “ Reservoir Dogs ” to “ Django Unchained, ” Tarantino has borrowed from classic and unknown films alike, replicating and reinterpreting his source materials with an unabashed brilliance.

"8 1/2" (1963) and "Pulp Fiction" (1994)

pulp fiction fellini gifIn a famous scene from Tarantino's classic "Pulp Fiction," Vincent Vega (John Travolta) and Mia Wallace (Uma Thurman) reenact a dance scene from another classic, Federico Fellini's “8 1/2.”

"The Flintstones" (1960-1966) and "Pulp Fiction" (1994)

flinstones pulp gifJust before the dance scene, Tarantino references "The Flintstones" when he has Mia tell Vega not to "be a square"— though Mia inexplicably makes a rectangle with her fingers instead.

"City of the Living Dead" (1980) and "Kill Bill Vol. 1" (2003)

Kill Bill gif 2In this scene from "Kill Bill Vol. 1," Tarantino copies a stunning bloody-eye sequence from the 1980 Italian horror film "City of the Living Dead."

"Black Sunday" (1977) and "Kill Bill Vol. 1" (2003)

kill bill black sunday gifAnd in another memorable and violent sequence from the Uma Thurman-led film, he completely rips off the split-screen style of the trailer for the 1977 thriller "Black Sunday."

"Gone with the Wind" (1939) and "Django Unchained" (2012)Gone with thewinddjango gif"Django Unchained," Tarantino's acclaimed western that's set partly in the slavery-era South, features an unlikely visual influence from the title sequence of the 1939 historical romance "Gone with the Wind."

"A Professional Gun" (1968) and "Django Unchained" (2012)

Leo dicaprio gifAnd in a climactic scene from the same film, Tarantino reimagines the 1968 spaghetti western "A Professional Gun" when he has Christoph Waltz's Dr. Schultz kill the menacing slave owner Calvin Candie (played by Leonardo DiCaprio).

Spanning the filmmaker's entire career, a montage video from editor Jacob T. Swinney compiles these scenes and many other notable copycat moments from Tarantino's catalog.

Watch the full video below:

SEE ALSO: Quentin Tarantino is 'retrofitting 50 theaters in the world' with special projectors so they can show his new film properly

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This deleted scene from 'Back to the Future' shows Doc discovering Playboy magazine

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Back to the future doc playboy

For fans of the "Back to the Future" franchise, a lost scene from the 1985 film might taint your image of the "genuinely likable" Dr. Emmet "Doc" Brown (Christopher Lloyd). 

In the deleted scene, Michael J. Fox's Marty McFly brings the 1955 version of Doc a suitcase filled with Doc's personal belongings from 1985. 

Sifting through the suitcase with an incredulous look, Doc is initially amazed to find that people in the '80s have personal hair dyers and still use cotton underwear ("I thought for sure we'd all be wearing disposable paper garments by 1985," he says.)

Back to the future gif 1

Doc then reaches back into the suitcase, opens a Playboy magazine to the centerfold and says, with a wide-eyed stare, "Suddenly the future's looking a whole lot better."

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As Huffington Post points out, though, the first issue of Playboy was actually released in 1953, two years before the deleted scene takes place, so it's a bit unlikely that it would have taken Doc another 30 years to discover the magazine. 

Nonetheless, it's not hard to imagine why the scene got cut. It's incredibly slow-paced and entirely out of character for the genial genius that Christopher Lloyd plays throughout the film series. 

Watch the full clip below:

SEE ALSO: 21 Things 'Back To The Future 2' Got Wrong About 2015

MORE: These 20 stars from blockbuster movies were replaced in the sequels — here's why

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FIFA took over the $30 million movie about itself, and the director and cast hate it

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fifa movie

A version of this story first appeared in the June 26 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

Opening in the wake of the arrest of 10 FIFA officials under investigation by the FBI for corruption, bribery and money-laundering, United Passions, the propaganda-filled film about the world soccer body FIFA, was an instant — and epic — flop. It grossed just $918 in the U.S. during the June 6 weekend. But even before the scandal broke, the $30 million movie was plagued by a battle between FIFA, which put up 80 percent of the budget, and the film's director and stars, including Tim Roth — who plays Sepp Blatter, the longtime FIFA president who announced June 2 that he will resign.

In his first interview since the disastrous U.S. opening, French director Frederic Auburtin tells THR he tried to strike a balance between "a Disney propaganda film [and] a Costa-Gavras/Michael Moore movie," but the project ultimately tipped in FIFA's favor. "Now I'm seen as bad as the guy who brought AIDS to Africa or the guy who caused the financial crisis. My name is all over [this mess]," the director laments, "and apparently I am a propaganda guy making films for corrupt people."

Roth declined repeated requests to speak about United Passions, but in a stunning confession in May, before the scandal broke, to German newspaper Die Welt, the actor lamented playing Blatter. "Yeah, I apologize I didn't question the director, I didn't question the script," he said. "This is a role that will have my father turning in his grave."

Roth admitted he took the job for the money, saying it helped him out of a "financial hole," adding, "but you know what? The hole FIFA has dug for itself is so deep, they'll never get out of it."

Roth wasn't the only actor involved with United Passions to shun the film — he apparently hasn't even seen it — and refuse to do any publicity. Only Gerard Depardieu bothered to show up at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, where United Passions had its world premiere on a huge outdoor screen in the Cinema de la Plage program. Sam Neill likewise skirted promotional duties for the movie, which purports to tell of the heroic efforts of FIFA presidents — including founder Jules Rimet (Depardieu), Joao Havelange (Neill) and Blatter — to turn soccer into a global sport beloved by billions and worth just as much to FIFA and its sponsors.

According to Auburtin, the film's problems began back in 2012, when Louisa Maurin, a first-time producer, pitched FIFA the idea of making a film about the organization's history. Maurin joined forces with veteran French producer Christine Gozlan and attached Depardieu. Depardieu, in turn, brought in his friend Auburtin, who had directed the actor in 2006's Paris, je t'aime.

From the start, however, Auburtin and co-screenwriter Jean-Paul Delfino were under the gun. FIFA wanted the film finished for release in the summer of 2014, ahead of the FIFA World Cup in Brazil. "Normally you need a year to write a script. We had four months," Auburtin says.

Initially, Auburtin says he worked with Roth to "introduce a subtext" of corruption to the largely pro-FIFA script. That could explain some of the film's lines, including: "Blatter, he's apparently good at finding money."

fifa sepp blatterAuburtin also points to the end of the film, in which Roth as Blatter is shown opening an envelope announcing South Africa as the host country for the 2010 World Cup. "You the audience should be clever enough to make your own conclusions [about how Blatter reacts]. We know now [FIFA] cheated because Morocco won the bidding, and apparently when Blatter opened the envelope, he changed it to South Africa."

In fact, says Auburtin, the first treatment had a narrative thread involving an investigator looking into alleged FIFA corruption. "The image we had, … and of course is very ironic today, was these flashing lights and sirens arriving at FIFA headquarters early in the morning."

At first, FIFA was mostly hands-off, the director says. But when the production ran out of money during shooting in 2013, FIFA stepped in and doubled its commitment — from about $13 million to $26 million.

"In my mind, it was now like making a film for a major studio — the guy who has the power is the guy who is paying," says Auburtin. "You have to be loyal to the guy who is paying for it, unless you're Jean-Luc Goddard or Quentin Tarantino, people who are very very powerful and they can say f— off to everybody."

Filming concluded in September 2013. FIFA originally had wanted to call the movie Men of Legend. "Can you imagine such a title? It's nonsense," the director says. "Then The Dreammakers. Come on." Auburtin successfully fought for the United Passions title, an ironic play on the fact that FIFA has more member states than the United Nations. But after the final edit, FIFA made changes, he says. By the time of the film's debut at Cannes, it was "totally pro-FIFA," says Auburtin. 

READ MORE: Critic's Picks: 9 Great Soccer Movies (Beyond 'Bend It Like Beckham')

Despite worldwide interest in soccer, only a handful of countries stepped up to claim theatrical rights. Its best performance has been in Russia, where United Passions earned a meager $158,000. It premiered on TV in Italy (to poor ratings) last July and went straight to DVD in France. The film hasn't sold at all to several major territories with huge soccer fan bases, including the U.K., Germany and Brazil. After the movie's poor U.S. performance, distributor Screen Media Films pulled it from theaters.

"I would have liked a marketing plan," Auburtin says. "For a film of [this budget] the budget for marketing should be around €5 million, €10 million [$5.6 million–$11.2 million], but it was nothing. Not even €20,000 [$22,000]." The director says he didn't even know the film had a U.S. release until a journalist told him a month ago. Insiders question whether Screen Media, which declined to comment, was hoping the controversy would spark interest. If so, the ploy didn't work.

Blatter, according to sources near FIFA, was "very touched and satisfied" with United Passionsbut, after the film failed to sell, the organization appeared to abandon it. Auburtin, though, says he's interested in making a sequel focusing on FIFA's current scandals. He'd have enough material, he adds, to make "four seasons of a TV show … more like True Detective." But, right now, he says he's had enough and hopes to put United Passions, and FIFA, behind him.

"I'm a victim of the game. It's a disaster, but that is not the point, I accepted the job," Auburtin concedes. "[But] I was not paid to be the Che Guevara of the sports business. … Please don't make me the guy responsible for the fact that FIFA is rotten."

fifa flop

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NOW WATCH: FIFA just spent $30M on a film about itself — and guess who plays Sepp Blatter

Jennifer Lawrence is getting paid $20 million for her next movie — here's why she deserves it

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Jennifer lawrence hunger games gettyAll major movies involve some behind-the-scenes salary negotiations, but Sony's sci-fi drama Passengers has endured more than its fair share of paycheck-related turbulence on its way to a green light.

Two weeks ago, The Hollywood Reporter's Kim Masters reported that though Sony had landed the red-hot Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt to star in the spaceship-set romance, studio head Tom Rothman was balking at Lawrence's $20 million salary demand. Yesterday afternoon, Masters wrote that Lawrence had indeed secured her paycheck, measured against 30 percent of the profits after the movie breaks even.

I've noticed that many of the writers who've picked up Masters's story over the last two weeks have done so with can you believe that tone of incredulity, as though Lawrence might not be worth her rare payday. They're not alone: Masters reported that even Rothman "was heard wondering aloud" about Lawrence's actual star power during budget meetings.

Allow me to allay their fears: If anyone in Hollywood is worth a $20 million paycheck, it's freaking Jennifer Lawrence.

jennifer lawrence hunger games mockingjay

It's not for nothing that Jennifer Lawrence landed the No. 1 spot on Vulture's Most Valuable Stars list last year: By practically every metric by which an actor can be measured, she comes out on top. The 24-year-old stars in two of Hollywood's biggest franchises, thanks to The Hunger Games and X-Men, and has been nominated for three Oscars, winning one for Silver Linings Playbook. She enjoys sky-high likability, terrific recognition ratings, and four-quadrant appeal in an era where new young megastars are very hard to come by. She is the only first-billed actress who has made more than one movie that's grossed over $400 million domestically (the few men who've managed that significant feat are comic-book heroes Robert Downey Jr. and Christian Bale), and she may add a third to her tally if the final Hunger Games movie hits its expected number this winter.

Simply put, she's the most significant name that Sony could have possibly cast in this role.

sacha baron cohen camel the dictatorCompared to Lawrence, other stars have gotten $20 million paychecks with much less scrutiny, and with far more meager results. Liam Neeson received $20 million for Taken 3, which didn't even crack $90 million domestically, and Sacha Baron Cohen got at least that much money (and by some accounts, even more once scripting and producing fees were factored in) for 2012's dud The Dictator, which grossed a measly $59 million in the States. When Baron Cohen inked his megabucks deal, it was greeted with rah-rah, "go Sacha" enthusiasm at Deadline; I can't help but wonder if the difference in tone now has something to do with Jennifer Lawrence's gender. If, say, her frequent co-star Bradley Cooper had upped his quote to $20 million on the back of last year's megahit American Sniper, would his reasonable request have generated nearly the same amount of scoffing?

To be fair, there are a few legitimate reasons that Rothman might have dug in his heels over the size of Lawrence's paycheck.

Jennifer Lawrence X MenAfter replacing Sony chief Amy Pascal in February, Rothman may have had misgivings about spending big so early into his tenure at the studio, fearing that other stars might come to him seeking the same salary. (To them, I'd recommend that Rothman simply say, "You're not Jennifer Lawrence.") It's also possible that since $20 million deals are typically reserved for franchise paydays, and Lawrence is not likely to take on another series anytime soon after wrapping both the Hunger Games and X-Men movies, Rothman wanted to bring her future salary demands down to a more acceptable standard so that Lawrence wouldn't expect the studio to pay $20 million for her next non-sequel, too.

But you know what? F--- that. Lawrence is the rare star who has proven herself bankable outside her major franchises and is equally adept at action, drama, and comedy; with such an expansive wheelhouse, she more than deserves a paycheck that puts her on equal footing with stars like Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, especially since Passengers is a tentpole movie that will attract significant foreign interest on the basis of its big names and outer-space setting.

american hustle

Sony surely wanted Lawrence to take a reduced paycheck up front in favor of a less-risky backend deal that would pay her a significant amount after the movie's profits exceeded its costs, but even in negotiations like those, Lawrence has been stiffed before: The Sony hacking deal revealed that she got fewer profit-percentage points for American Hustle than her three male co-stars (including the less-valuable Jeremy Renner), and when Lawrence asked for a bigger share of the pie for her upcoming David O. Russell vehicle Joy, Fox proved so stingy that the project "nearly fell apart."

After Amy Pascal left her Sony post, she was asked about how little she'd paid Lawrence for American Hustle. "People want to work for less money, I pay them less money," Pascal replied. "Women shouldn’t be so grateful. Know what you’re worth. Walk away."

Message received: Lawrence was ready to walk if she didn't get that top-tier paycheck for Passengers, and director Morten Tyldum indicated he'd leave the project, too, if he lost his leading lady. Some people may take issue with the fact that teachers still struggle while Lawrence stands to earn an exorbitant amount for Passengers — even though it's the kind of salary that has been given to stars for nearly two decades, since Jim Carrey first collected a $20 million payday for 1996's The Cable Guy — but I question their sudden interest in income inequality when it comes at the expense of a young female star.

For as long as Hollywood is willing to hand out $20 million, Jennifer Lawrence more than deserves it. Sony can take that one to the bank.

SEE ALSO: Bradley Cooper's new movie tells the crazy-but-true story behind inflatable artillery used to trick the Nazis

MORE: Emma Stone 'did one of the worst things ever' after her contact info was published in the Sony hack

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NOW WATCH: How Jennifer Lawrence Became The Most-Loved Actress In Hollywood

Donald Trump finally replies to claims that he bullied a 90-year-old woman who lives near his golf course

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donald trump

Years after the release of his scathing documentary, "You've Been Trumped," filmmaker Anthony Baxter finally got his audience with Donald Trump

"I can't do interviews with everybody because I don't have enough time," Trump said in his interview for Baxter's new film, "A Dangerous Game," which is being released on iTunes June 23. 

"Your documentary ['You've Been Trumped'] got carried by BBC and others, so you've become a much more important person, in terms of doing an interview," Trump reasoned. 

In his sophomore documentary, Baxter takes aim at luxury golf courses that "just pound water," as actor Alec Baldwin put it, and have unforeseen social and ecological costs. It's a kind of sequel to his first film, which focused squarely on Trump and his pummeling of the Scottish coastline to build a $1.5 billion golf course ("the world's greatest," as Trump called it) that promised to generate 6,000 jobs.

alec baldwin

As the film illustrated, the course, Trump International Golf Course, Aberdeen, created less than 200 jobs and left nearby residents — including a 90-year-old woman — without proper water supply for years. 

While "A Dangerous Game" takes a global look at the eco-impact of luxury golf courses, citing similarly reckless developers in Croatia, China, and even New York's East Hampton (which Baldwin speaks on), it never loses track of Trump and the prolonged effects of his course on Aberdeen locals.

In this exclusive clip from the film, Baxter questions Trump about his "bullying" of Scottish locals, including the aforementioned 90-year-old and Michael Forbes, a farmer who refused to sell his land to Trump. The billionaire later called Forbes "an embarrassment to Scotland" who "lives like a pig." 

In addition to the sit-down with Trump, Baxter was also given access to Donald Trump, Jr., who describes himself as "environmentally conscious" but quickly pivots when asked about photographs of him holding the tail of a dead elephant and standing next to his brother, Eric, cradling the carcass of a leopard during a big game hunt in Africa.  

donald trump jr

The interview took place at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster, which, as Baxter noted in a 2014 blog post for The Guardian, has been accused of "using up hundreds of millions of gallons of much-needed water" in a drought-prone area. 

The iTunes release of "A Dangerous Game" marks the film's US premiere. It aired previously in UK.    

SEE ALSO: Donald Trump Angrily Tweets At British 'You've Been Trumped' Director

SEE ALSO: Donald Trump's Sons Killed A Whole Bunch Of Big Game On An African Safari

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The name of the next 'Star Trek' sequel hints at a return to the series' roots

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star trek

Production on the next "Star Trek" film appears to be underway — and it finally has a name. 

Monday night, director Justin Lin tweeted out a teaser image of Starfleet uniforms on a rack with a hashtag that seems to confirm the long-rumored title of "Star Trek Beyond."

Taken in conjunction with the tweet and the Starfleet uniforms, it seems like the next "Star Trek" will indeed feature a renewed focus on space exploration, returning the series to its roots. And given Lin's track record on the "Fast and Furious" franchise, chances are it will be a lot of fun, too. 

SEE ALSO: The biggest celebrity "Star Trek" fans

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Steven Spielberg is developing another book by 'Jurassic Park' author Michael Crichton

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Steven Spielberg, Jurassic Park

With an Executive Producer role on Jurassic World, Steven Spielberg is having a pretty fantastic summer — and it looks like he's working to turn that success into a trend. To help him do so, he's turning back to the author who made Jurassic Park possible — Michael Crichton — and developing an adaptation of the novel Micro

The Wrap has the scoop on this story, saying that Spielberg's DreamWorks Studios has acquired the rights to the book and that Jurassic Park/Indiana Jones/Back To The Future producer Frank Marshall is on-board to help the project get made.

book micro michael crichtonThe book is notable for being the last one that Michael Crichton was working on before he died — and, in fact, he didn't actually finish it. He was still in the process of putting it together when he passed away in 2008. Author Richard Preston ultimately picked up where Crichton left off, and Harper Collins published it in 2011.

Described as a thriller, Micro follows a team of graduate students who make their way to Hawaii after being hired by a "mysterious biotech company." Unfortunately, things go very wrong very fast. The fact that the protagonists wind up getting stranded out in the middle of the rainforest is bad enough, but the worst part of it is that they're first shrunk down to tiny size. (If you're afraid of insects/bugs/spiders, one can imagine that this movie will wind up being one for you to skip). 

Many of you will probably be quick to say that the movie sounds like a mixture of Jurassic Park and elements of Marvel Studios' upcoming Ant-Man — and this isn't lost on the filmmakers. In fact, Steven Spielberg made the comparison himself in an official statement, saying,

"We are so pleased to have this opportunity to develop Micro. For Michael, size did matter whether it was for ‘Jurassic’s’ huge dinosaurs or ‘Micro’s’ infinitely tiny humans."

Jurassic Park and its sequels are far and away the most successful Michael Crichton adaptations to come out of Hollywood, but the truth is that the great sci-fi writer had many of his works adapted. This is a list that includes The Andromeda StrainSphereCongoThe Terminal Man, and, more recently, Timeline. He is also credited with creating the television show ER, and wrote and directed 1973's Westworld

As you might imagine, Micro is still very much in the earliest stages of development, though it will be interesting to see if it winds up getting fast-tracked thanks to the ridiculous success of Jurassic World (which has now made more than $500 million worldwide, and the fact that it already has some very big names behind it. Stay tuned for more updates as they comes in about the project.

SEE ALSO: Here's what it's like to work with Steven Spielberg

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We just learned a bunch of new details about what's coming up in the next 'Star Wars' movie

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At this year's San Diego Comic Con, Walt Disney Pictures released a behind-the-scenes video for the upcoming film "Star Wars: The Force Awakens." The video reveals some new interesting details that were not know before. We break the video down and show you the most interesting nuggets. 

Video by Corey Protin. Original reporting by Steve Kovach

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