Tampilkan postingan dengan label High School Musical. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label High School Musical. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 13 September 2009

Reel Thoughts: Love 'Em or Leave 'Em on the Screen

When a movie is turned into a stage musical, it’s a huge gamble that can pay off handsomely, or sting the nostrils for years to come. I’ve been lucky enough to miss most of the misses, but I have seen all of the hits, so here are my Top 10/Worst 10. (Xanadu belongs near the top, but since it is almost a parody of the film, I didn’t include it on my list.)

The Best:
1) Hairspray: Hairspray is a smart, funny and infectiously entertaining show that reinvented its 1988 John Waters inspiration. Likewise, the film version of the stage version of the film (confused yet?) was a new creation altogether, and all three succeed in proving that sometimes the Hefty Hideaway girl can get the guy!

2) The Producers: It may be heresy to say, but I can’t watch the original Mel Brooks film, what with Gene Wilder’s shrieking and Zero Mostel’s bellowing. But the musical? Brilliant! Brooks’ canny eye about what works on stage combined with his love of old-fashioned musicals made this one of the funniest and most entertaining nights I’ve had at the theater.

3) The Lion King: If you’re going to remake an animated movie about a lion cub with daddy issues (and big-time “uncle issues”), it helps to infuse the show with gorgeous ethnically diverse and respectful imagery that celebrates the beauty and wildlife of Africa. Like The Producers, I don’t particularly enjoy the film inspiration, but on stage only one word suffices: Wow!

4) Beauty and the Beast: Disney’s first screen-to-stage translation was a smart, eye-popping spectacle that kept all of the great Alan Menken/Howard Ashman music that made the movie feel like a Broadway musical in the first place, but added stage magic that enchanted audiences and was more responsible than any other show for inspiring a generation of children to love the theater. The dishware sang “Be Our Guest” and I was more than happy to oblige.

5) La Cage aux Folles: Okay, so it was a stage play before a film, but Jerry Herman and Harvey Fierstein’s ode to non-traditional families and “being who you are” definitely followed the film plot-wise, but burst forth with everything that is wonderful about Broadway musicals. "The Best of Times" indeed.


6) Reefer Madness: So maybe it isn’t wise to try and turn Citizen Kane into a musical comedy (“Rosebud!”), but why not try and turn something terrible into something great? Reefer Madness takes the awful 1930’s Scare Film about the dangers of the demon weed and makes it sublimely hilarious. This time, the humor’s intentional!

7) Little Shop of Horrors: This selection could land anywhere on the list, but it replaces The Full Monty only because I enjoy the rest of the shows personally, regardless of their pedigree or lack of critical approval. This was the show that proved that films should be musicals, and that schlocky films about man-eating plants named Audrey II are a better source material than beloved classics (Breakfast at Tiffany’s, The Thin Man, High Society, et al).

8) Victor/Victoria: I know, I know! What’s this doing on the list? Simply put, I found the show a hoot to watch and would go see it again. Adding songs that were so delicious/awful as “Paris Makes Me Horny” (“It’s not like Californie…”) and “Louis Says” added to the thrill of seeing Julie Andrews in her last big musical performance. The pro-GLBT message of the show certainly didn’t hurt either! Thoroughly Modern Millie won the Tony (over Urinetown no less ... and without "Tap-Tap-Tapioca"!), but V/V is the Julie show I prefer.

9) Catch Me If You Can: It’s too early to know how the show will evolve prior to its Broadway debut, but in Seattle it was a cool, cool night at the theater. A stellar cast including super-hot Aaron Tveit, Norbert Leo Butz and Tom Wopat really helped reinvent the 2002 Steven Spielberg film, and once again Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman and Terrence McNally prove that they know what works on stage.

10) Cry-Baby: This is the most unfairly-maligned musical of recent history, and I truly think it’s because its ironic name (also the title character's) is fun for people to put down. Was the show as naughty and campy as its John Waters inspiration? No. Still, when Cry-Baby was on fire (Alli Mauzey’s incredible “Screw Loose”, the license plate jailhouse stomp of “A Little Upset”, and many other entertaining musical moments), Cry-Baby was exactly the show I wanted it to be, and I had a blast.

Of course, just because you can make a musical out of a movie doesn’t mean you should, and these are my worst ten musical mistakes, and the reasons I think so.


10) Big: Remembering this show, which underwent huge rewrites prior to touring and is now considered a great show for schools to perform, I was reminded how much I enjoyed much of it. However, the bland Daniel Jenkins in the lead, and the dreaded “Happy Birthday Josh! Birthday Josh!” nightmare scenes will haunt me until I find a Zoltar Speaks machine to wipe out the memory.

9) Young Frankenstein: Lightning doesn’t strike twice, especially when the producers of Young Frankenstein exhibited the same hubris of their title character. Huge ticket prices, a cavernous theater and a lackluster score of unmemorable songs did not bring the film to life, even with a stellar cast that included Sutton Foster, Megan Mullally and Roger Bart.

8) Tarzan: Josh Strickland’s amazing body notwithstanding, nothing in this amplified theme park show justified its existence, proving that Phil Collins is no Elton John, much less a Menken or Ashman. The biggest stumble with Tarzan (and The Little Mermaid) was their need to be blockbusters that blanched out any risk-taking.

7) The Wedding Singer: The hallmark of poor film to stage adaptations is losing what made the film special, which in this case meant Drew Barrymore and the usually unbearable Adam Sandler. The completely unmemorable score and book make the show little more than a non-audience participatory Awesome 80s Prom.

6) High School Musical: This is what I call “Rice Cake Theater”, a show with absolutely no flavor or value intended simply to cash in on the goodwill generated by its small screen original. Still, it gets kids interested in live theater, although in this case, it could just as easily be HSM on Ice.


5) Footloose: Take an 80’s movie without much going for it except its soundtrack, regurgitate it on stage with little or no originality and you’re ready to "cut loose, footloose". Believe me, when you watch it, you’ll think somebody cut loose.

4) Saturday Night Fever and Urban Cowboy: Apparently, if one John Travolta movie musical was successful (Grease), everything he did must be aching for the musical treatment. How else can you explain stage versions of Saturday Night Fever and its lesser cousin, Urban Cowboy? Fortunately, neither show inflicted itself on audiences very long.

3) Dance of the Vampires: On first glance, a stage version of Roman Polanski's The Fearless Vampire Hunters might not be an automatic flop. To really put it over the top, you need terrible music, an awful book and a cast (including a hammy Michael Crawford as Count Giovanni Von Krolock) unable to overcome either one.

2) Singin’ in the Rain: I can’t tell you if this show is always as god-awful as the production I saw, but it definitely begs the question: “Why?! For Pete’s sake, why??!” It’s virtually impossible to cast leads as charismatic as Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds and Donald O’Connor, nor is the title song ever going to match Kelly’s splish-splashing high-kicking delivery. “All wet” is an understatement.


1) Carrie: What part of this infamous catastrophe was worse? The malt shop scene where the kids dressed like leather bar habitués ? Lyrics like “It's a simple little gig, you help me kill a pig”? The death of Margaret White transported from Carrie’s grubby house in the film to some surreal “Stairway to Heaven”? The answer is “All of the above”. Carrie was quite simply the perfect storm of misguided musicals, which lives on in the hearts and minds of those few lucky or unlucky enough to witness it.

Click here for Chris' best and worst from screen to stage, and feel free to weigh in with your reactions and/or your personal picks in the comments section below!

Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

Minggu, 31 Mei 2009

Awards Watch: MTV Movie Awards 2009

Apparently the tween fangirl population was out in full voting force regarding the MTV Movie Awards, as their beloved Twilight took home five popcorn trophies earlier tonight, including Best Movie. The film's star, Robert Pattinson, snagged three awards for his broody vamp Edward Cullen: as Breakthrough Performance - Male and one-half of both Best Fight (with Cam Gigandet) and Best Kiss, shared with Best Female Performance winner Kristen Stewart.

Disney stars Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana: The Movie), Zac Efron and Ashley Tisdale (both of High School Musical 3: Senior Year) also won, further proving that only teenage girls took these awards seriously. Other winners included Jim Carrey (Yes Man), Amy Poehler (Baby Mama), Ben Stiller (the "lifetime achievement"-like "MTV Generation Award") and the late Heath Ledger, as Best Villain for his Joker in The Dark Knight.

Curiously, (thankfully?), the latter award was not presented during the live broadcast, perhaps because such a somber occasion would not have fit in with all the Adam Samberg antics and vulgarity present throughout the garish ceremony. But in a night of crass outrageousness, the real award goes to Sacha Baron Cohen, who — dressed in angel wings, a gladiator toga and a jockstrap as his flamboyant gay character Brüno — descended from the rafters to land, bare ass-to-face, in the lap of notoriously homophobic rapper Eminem, who promptly stormed out of the auditorium. The whole stunt was obviously staged, although it appears "poor" Em was not in on the joke.

UPDATE: Well, what do you know: Eminem actually does have a sense of humor.

Senin, 04 Mei 2009

Awards Watch: MTV Movie Award Nominations

It is a case of extremes as far as the nominations for the 18th Annual MTV Movie Awards (announced earlier today) are concerned. On one hand, we have Twilight (which was totally ignored when it came to all other 2008 film awards), scoring a field best seven nods; on the other, we have Slumdog Millionaire (which won every prize in sight, including Oscar's Best Picture), coming in a close second with six nominations. Both films are vying for the top popcorn trophy for Best Movie, alongside The Dark Knight, High School Musical 3: Senior Year and Iron Man.

Among the other notable nominees in MTV's many wacky categories (including the new "Best WTF Moment") are Heath Ledger's Joker up for Best Villain (gee, do you think he'll win?), a rematch of the Academy's Best Actress line-up (Kate Winslet, Angelina Jolie and Anne Hathaway, albeit for totally different films for the latter two) and two man-on-man lip locks (Milk's James Franco and Sean Penn and I Love You, Man's Thomas Lennon and Paul Rudd) in the Best Kiss race.

As with the nominations, anyone can vote for the final awards, which will be presented live on MTV May 31 (hosted by Saturday Night Live's Andy Samberg). For a quick look at all the nominees, see the comments section below.

Minggu, 25 Januari 2009

Awards Watch: PGA Winners, More

This year's awards race is starting to sound like a broken record, as Slumdog Millionaire, Man on Wire and WALL-E took the top prizes in their respective categories at the Producers Guild of America Awards last night. As previously announced, Milk was honored with the Stanley Kramer Award for "dramatically illuminating provocative social issues".

In more Awards Watch for the week, the Motion Picture Sound Editors guild announced their Golden Reel Award nominees, including a Career Achievement Award for WALL-E MVP Ben Burtt. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Dark Knight and Iron Man led the nominations with three each; see the comments section below for a quick look.

And the 15th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards will air live on both TNT and TBS this evening. In addition to the usual trophies, James Earl Jones will receive their Life Achievement Award. And as usual, we will be live blogging all the film winners right here at Movie Dearest. The festivities start 8:00 PM EST.

Kamis, 01 Januari 2009

Toon Talk: Top 10 of 2008

Yes, it is that time again, where a critic looks back at the year just past and anoints the best and the brightest of the past twelve months. So without further ado … the Toon Talk Top 10 - 2008: The Year's Best Disney Films and DVDs!

Click here to read my complete article at LaughingPlace.com.

Rabu, 31 Desember 2008

Monthly Wallpaper - January 2009: 2008 - The Year in Film

What better way to start 2009 out right than to celebrate 2008 - The Year in Film all month long with January's Movie Dearest calendar wallpaper.

Twenty-eight of the best and brightest of this past year are represented — see how many you can name in the comments section below. And for more fun, identify the three stars who show up in the collage twice. Plus, bonus points for whoever names the guy who kinda appears twice.

Just click on the picture above to enlarge it to its 1024 x 768 size, then right click your mouse and select "Set as Background", and you're all set. If you want, you can also save it to your computer and set it up from there, or modify the size in your own photo-editing program if needed.

Rabu, 17 Desember 2008

Awards Watch: Playing Their Song

The music branch of the Academy has released the (not so) short list of the movie tunes eligible for this year's Best Original Song Oscar. And of the 49 songs that qualify for the next round of voting, 22% are from High School Musical 3: Senior Year. That's right, Disney submitted every single original song from their tweener hit (including "I Want it All", pictured), 11 total. However, unlike in previous years, only two songs per movie can be nominated due to new rules in effect this year.

Other Disney tunes making the cut include two from Bolt (which means the phrase "Miley Cyrus, Academy Award nominee" could become a reality ... shudder), "Down to Earth" from WALL-E and "The Call" from The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. Also short-listed are such musical oddities as "Rock Me Sexy Jesus" from Hamlet 2, "Dracula’s Lament” from Forgetting Sarah Marshall and three rocking arias from Repo! The Genetic Opera, any of which (if nominated) will make for an interesting production number. I vote that Oscar host Hugh Jackman play Sexy Jesus, how about you?

See the comments section below for a quick look at the finalists.

UPDATED: Film Experience has collected sound bites from most of the eligible songs, including (double shudder) Clint Eastwood croaking out "Gran Torino".

Kamis, 06 November 2008

Can I Have This Song

That didn't take long. Following in the dancing footsteps of Hairspray and Mamma Mia!, Disney's High School Musical 3: Senior Year (which has overtaken Mamma Mia! as the biggest-opening movie musical of all-time) will now offer sing-a-long screenings in select theaters starting tomorrow.

In more HSM news, Atlanta's Theater of the Stars will present the world premiere of the stage version of High School Musical 2 beginning tonight and running through November 16.

And the Wildcats continue to take over the world ...

Senin, 27 Oktober 2008

Toon Talk: Senioritis

Following the phenomenal success of the original High School Musical on The Disney Channel two years ago, which was further cemented by the equally popular made for TV High School Musical 2 last year, the decision to bring the third and (supposedly) final chapter of the HSM trilogy to the big screen as a theatrical release was still a risky one for Disney.

As evidenced by this summer’s dismal ratings flop reality series (High School Musical: Get in the Picture), not all things HSM are sure things. However, with the chart-topping box office returns this past weekend of High School Musical 3: Senior Year, all has been righted in the world, this world that will continue to be gripped (at least for the immediate future) in the throes of Wildcat fever.

But how does HSM3 stack up to its predecessors? Not too shabbily, as a matter of fact. While the by-now tried-and-true HSM formula (Troy and Gabriella once again face teen angst-y problems that may rip their true love apart, Sharpay schemes to keep her self-deluded stardom on the rise, all is made happy through peppy pop songs and delirious dance numbers) is very much apparent … so much so that if there is a HSM4 (as rumored), I suspect it will collapse into self-parody.

Nevertheless, by the time the diplomas are handed out in a frenzied finale, director/choreographer Kenny Ortega and screenwriter Peter Barsocchini will have you as wrapped up in the celebration as much as if it was your own kin standing there in cape and gown.

Click here to continue reading my Toon Talk review of High School Musical 3 on LaughingPlace.com.

UPDATE: High School Musical 3: Senior Year is now available on DVD and Blu-rayfrom Amazon.com.

Kamis, 23 Oktober 2008

The Latest in Theaters: Music in the Night

Amongst all the somber fall dramas and spooky Halloween horrors in theaters this week is the squeaky-clean Disney musical sure to perk up the tween set (not to mention the box office):
  • High School Musical 3: Senior Year: Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens and the rest of the East High gang are back for their first big screen outing, directed and choreographed by Kenny Ortega.
  • Changeling: Angelina Jolie stars and Clint Eastwood directs this based-on-a-true story period drama about a mother who takes on the corrupt LA police department when her child goes missing.
  • Synecdoche, New York: Oscar winning screenwriter Charlie Kaufman makes his directorial debut with this quirky dramedy about a theater director (Philip Seymour Hoffman) who has one heckuva set.
  • Saw V: Yup, #5 brings more torture, traps and lots and lots of blood and guts. Were you expecting anything else?
  • Pride and Glory: Edward Norton and Colin Farrell are cop brothers in the Big Apple ... and on opposite sides of a scandal.
  • I've Loved You So Long: Kristin Scott Thomas is earning the best reviews of her career in this French language drama about a woman who must adjust to everyday life following a prison sentence for murder.
  • Let the Right One In: Boy meets girl, girl is a vampire in this Swedish import that already has a Hollywood remake in the works.
  • Passengers: A grief counselor (Anne Hathaway) for plane-crash survivors finds herself in a mystery when they start to disappear. Patrick Wilson, Dianne Wiest, Andre Braugher and David Morse co-star.
  • The Universe of Keith Haring: Documentary about the influential New York new wave artist; includes interviews with Madonna, Andy Warhol and Yoko Ono.
  • Roadside Romeo: Bollywood gets animated: a cocky mansion-dwelling mutt named Romeo finds himself stripped of the high life after being accidentally left behind on the streets of Mumbai.
  • Fear(s) of the Dark: Another non-traditional toon: Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles aim to prey on our collective [insert title here].
  • And finally: check in later for Chris' full review of Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom, including an exclusive interview with Noah's Arc creator Patrik-Ian Polk.
To find out what films are playing in your area, visit Fandango - Search movie showtimes and buy tickets!

Fairies, High Schoolers, Robots and One Nasty Serial Killer

All the latest in movie-themed entertainment at a theme park near you:

- Fairies of all kinds can meet their ilk at Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom starting tomorrow as Tinker Bell's Pixie Hollow opens to the public. The Mickey's Toontown Fair walk-through/meet and greet attraction is (conveniently) timed to coincide with the debut of the new Tinker Bellmovie on DVD and Blu-ray next Tuesday.

- Also opening tomorrow at Walt Disney World, this time at Disney's Hollywood Studios, is a brand new "street-tacular" live show based on High School Musical 3: Senior Year, also conveniently timed to open on the same day as the movie.

- And any day now you can expect to see the crime-fighting critters of Disney's next animated feature Bolt to be wondering around the various parks. Conveniently, the movie opens November 21. Ah, Disney Synergyⓒ at work.


- Moving from the G-rated kiddie (and kid-at-heart) fare to the realm of PG-13 sci-fi and R-rated horror: Universal Studios will be launching an attraction that is "more than meets the eye" in its Hollywood and Singapore parks come 2011. Based on the popular Transformers movie, the ride will utilize state-of-the-art 3-D technology to immerse riders in a battle between the friendly Autobots and evil Decepticons.

Meanwhile, over in merry ol' England, Surrey's Thorpe Park will be unleashing the psychotic fury of Jigsaw next year with Saw: The Ride. The torturous rollercoaster will include three inversions and a "beyond vertical" drop of 100-degrees from a height of 100 feet. Yikes.

UPDATE: LaughingPlace.com has video and pictures for both the new HSM3 parade at Disney's California Adventure and the new Pixie Hollow attraction at the Magic Kingdom.

Rabu, 22 Oktober 2008

Movie Music: Back to School

The sure-to-be hit soundtrack albumof High School Musical 3: Senior Year is now available from Amazon.com.

For a sneak peek of the music and the movie (in theaters this Friday), here's the music video for "A Night to Remember", which shows Troy, Gabriella and the rest of the Wildcats getting ready for a big night: the senior prom.

Senin, 20 Oktober 2008

Cinematic Crush: Zac Efron

Crush object: Zac Efron, actor.

- As of this past Saturday, our little Zac is now 21 years old. So now we can finally, fully express our Cinematic Crush on him without feeling all pervy about it.

- He became an instant Tiger Beat heartthrob with Disney's smash hit TV movie High School Musical. He reprised his role as the dreamboat BMOC of East High Troy Bolton in last year's equally successful small screen sequel, and returns one more (last?) time in this week's big screen release, High School Musical 3: Senior Year.

- "Ladies' Choice" is right: his slicked-back hair and ever-ready wink made all the girls (and quite a few guys) swoon as Link Larkin in another musical hit from last year, Hairspray. His performance in the film won him the "Breakthrough" award at the MTV Movie Awards.

- Taking a break from tuners, he'll be seen next in the period drama Me and Orson Welles, followed by the age-switch comedy 17 Again.

- But nothing will stop his dancing feet, as he's rumored to play Ren McCormack in a movie musical version of Footloose, not to mention that planned Hairspray sequel.

UPDATE: Here's the trailer for 17 Again, in theaters April 17.

Minggu, 19 Oktober 2008

Lawyers and Secretaries, Drag Queens and Piragua Guys

A weekend round up of all things from screen to stage:

- Legally Blonde: The Musical will do its last "bend and snap" today on Broadway. I guess the Great White Way will be a little less pink from now on. Don't feel bad for the recently christened Elle Woods, Bailey Hanks, though: she already has her next gig lined up, as another blonde over-achiever, Sharpay Evans, in Disney's High School Musical at Paper Mill Playhouse.

- Speaking Legally, here are the latest episodes of the hi-lar-ious spoof from the In the Heights guys, Legally Brown: The Search for the Next Piragua Guy, starring 9 to 5er Allison Janney, Hairspray hottie Matthew Morrison and Xanadude Cheyenne Jackson (and don't tell me you wouldn't act just like Robin "I was in Camp" De Jesús if you were in the same situation).

- And speaking of Cheyenne (Mr. Jackson if you're nasty), EW.com floats an intriguing casting possibility for him: Patrick Bateman in American Psycho: The Musical. Alas, that may not be a possibility, as Jackson has been tapped to board The Band Wagon, penned by his Xanadu librettist Douglas Carter Beane. The stage version of the classic Fred Astaire/Cyd Charisse tuner was known as Dancing in the Dark when it played earlier this year in San Diego, but it has since been reconceived with Jackson replacing Scott Bakula in the Astaire role.

- Getting back to the ladies, Dolly Parton's 9 to 5: The Musical wraps up its LA try out tonight, and it seems that Janney, Megan Hilty and Stephanie J. Block will be punching the Broadway time clock a little later then originally planned: previews at the Marquis Theatre will now begin on April 7, with the official opening now set for April 30. Perhaps they need more time to iron out some of the kinks that Chris mentioned in his review. In the meantime, Hilty will return as Glinda in the Los Angeles production of Wicked October 31 and stay with the show until it closes there January 11.

- Plans are afoot to turn last year's sleeper hit Once into a Broadway bound stage musical. The original songs by the fim's stars Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová (including the Academy Award winning "Falling Slowly") will be featured.

- And finally, starting tomorrow, the lovely Les Cagelles will be kicking up their well-shaved heels once more in the London revival of La Cage aux Folles.

Sabtu, 04 Oktober 2008

HSM 3: It's Now or Never

For those of you who like to watch Zac Efron sweat ... I mean, sing ... while he plays basketball, then here's the music video for "Now or Never" from High School Musical 3: Senior Year.

Also, the soundtrack album(on sale October 21) is now available for pre-order.

Sabtu, 13 September 2008

Awards Watch: ALMA Winners 2008

The winners of the 2008 ALMA Awards were revealed last night, and our Ugly Betty reined supreme, picking up three awards, including the Entertainer of the Year Award for Betty Suarez herself, America Ferrera.

Other notable TV winners include actors Edward James Olmos (Battlestar Galactica), Jorge Garcia (Lost) and sexy soap stud Kamar de los Reyes (One Life to Live), plus a special award for High School Musical 2 director Kenny Ortega.

On the movie side, Alejandro Gomez Monteverde's Bella picked up the prize for Outstanding Performance of a Lead Latino/Latina Cast in a Motion Picture, while Patricia Riggen's Under the Same Moon (La Misma Luna) was honored with a Special Achievement Award for Outstanding Spanish Language Motion Picture.

Created in 1995 by the National Council of La Raza (the largest national Latino civil rights and advocacy organization in the US), the ALMA Awards promote fair, accurate, and balanced portrayals of Latinos in the entertainment industry.

Minggu, 31 Agustus 2008

Monthly Wallpaper - September 2008: High School Movies

It's back to school time at Movie Dearest, and what better way to show your school spirit then by downloading this month's calendar wallpaper dedicated to High School Movies!

With this all-star class of cinematic students, all through the month of September you can ponder such burning questions as: who would win the student council election, Tracy Flick or Pedro? Who's a better dancer, Danny Zuko or Tracy Turnblad? Who has a better prom dress, Carrie White or Gabriella Montez? Which is the cattiest clique, the Heathers or the Plastics? Who's better at channeling school spirit, Torrance Shipman or Riff Randell? Will you get extra credit if you join the Breakfast Club? And, most important of all, who will be the class valedictorian, Jeff Spicoli or Cher Horowitz?

Just click on the picture above to enlarge it to its 1024 x 768 size, then right click your mouse and select "Set as Background", and you're all set. If you want, you can also save it to your computer and set it up from there, or modify the size in your own photo-editing program if needed.

Sabtu, 02 Agustus 2008

The Latest on TV: Muppets Almost Live!

The Muppets return to television tomorrow in Studio DC: Almost Live on The Disney Channel. The half-hour special will feature the furry, fuzzy, felty gang alongside such TDC regulars as Miley Cyrus and the Jonas Brothers.

Despite such high-profile tween sensations as those, the highlight of the show promises to be a boppin' duet of High School Musical's "Bop to the Top" performed by HSMer Ashley Tisdale and the one, the only Kermit the Frog. Now that's what I call aye que fabulosa.

This is obviously a ploy by Disney to turn kids these days on to the Muppets. But hey, if it gets some Hannah Montana wannabes to watch The Muppet Show or one of their movies (or that rumored new TV show we've been hearing about for years), I'm all for it. Promisingly, there are already plans for a second Studio DC: Almost Live special this fall.

Selasa, 29 Januari 2008

Start of Something New

The legit stage version of Disney's High School Musical just got a little more legit: it will open in London's West End this summer following a sold out tour of the United Kingdom.

Pengikut