Word: jims
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...actor was easy. “They think because it’s based on my life story that I’m playing myself,” 50 says of his critics. “You still have to really act in the film.”Director Jim Sheridan (“In America”) led 50 through every scene, and 50 was more than willing to follow. “I hadn’t made a film before so I would be a fool to be standing there saying, ‘No, we should...
Directed by Jim Sheridan Paramount Pictures 2 stars Sitting in the theater with my hood up and the Gs on my G Unit sneakers still spinning, I was prepared to enjoy the best film of the year. “Get Rich or Die Tryin’,” 50 Cent’s semi-autobiographical tale of rags-to-rap-stardom, promised everything that I look for in a film: drug-dealing, thugged-out raptors (rapper/actor), and a banging hip-hop soundtrack. Unfortunately, the film tells the same story we’ve heard hundreds of times...
...Middle East box office or through Ticketmaster. $15. (PRC)Clandestino: Rock In Spanish Dance Party. The event will feature Lucybell, a noted, fiery Latin-American band. T.T. the Bear’s Place. 9 p.m. $12. (KF)Saturday, Nov. 19Jim Carroll and The Catholic Boys. Poet-turned-punk Jim Carroll, whose song “People Who Died” can be heard during the opening scene of “E.T.,” arrives in Cambridge with The Catholic Boys for their 25th Anniversary Tour, presented by WFNX and The Middle East. The Middle East Downstairs...
...000—nearly $100 per rain- and mud-soaked attendee. Nor was Havana on the Harbor much fun; $2,500 was spent on 40 students—many of whom later wanted their money back. The Snoop Dogg fiasco wasted more than $7,000 and the poorly-attended Jim Breuer show blew through about twice that. Then, of course, there’s Wyclef Jean, who didn’t play to the tune of about $30,000.The purpose of this column, however, is not to simply list these wasteful expenditures as so many have done before. Hallow calls...
...That casting suggestion by NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams, responding to a playful question from TIME's Managing Editor Jim Kelly, reflected the dominant motif of Monday's Person of the Year luncheon at TIME's midtown headquarters. The consensus among the panelists assembled to nominate candidates for this year's award was that 2005 was dominated by news events authored by nature, rather than by humans, making it difficult to find individual newsmakers to fit the preferred terms of the award...