MUSIC
After 17 months of negotiations and sign-offs from Paul McCartney, Ringo
Starr, Yoko Ono, and George Harrison's widow, Olivia, The Beatles will
star in a videogame that's been authorized for a Christmas 2009 release.
It's the result of a partnership between MTV and Harmonix (the companies
behind Rock Band) and the band's business enterprise, Apple Corps Ltd.
And, like anything involving the Beatles, securing the deal was no small
feat. But Ono says it makes perfect sense. ''All of us are actually
pretty hip, so we said yes,'' she tells EW exclusively. ''I'm personally
very excited. [The game] lets you participate in a way where you're
really [immersed in] the music. With so many young kids into the
Beatles, it's a start to a beautiful new page in [the band's] history.
Maybe they'll start to make music and not just listen to it, and really
understand what it's about.'' But while they were long hailed for being
ahead of their time, the Beatles have been surprisingly reluctant to
enter the digital age none of their tracks are available for legal
download anywhere on the Internet. So does their foray into the world of
gaming of all places mean we could finally see their catalog hit iTunes
sometime before the next century? There's reason for optimism. ''The Love show continues to sell to full capacity in Las Vegas, 30 million people
watched American Idol's Beatles night, and now there's this game,'' says
Martin Bandier, head of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, which controls more
than 250 Beatles copyrights. ''I think there's a changing wind and that
this will naturally lead to other opportunities no one even thought
about.'' Shirley Halperin
MOVIES
Charlize Theron might soon become the latest in a long line of
beauties to go toe-to-toe with Tom Cruise on the big screen. The Academy
Award winner has been offered the lead role opposite Cruise in The
Tourist, a remake of the 2005 French thriller Anthony Zimmer. The
film likely Cruise's next project centers on an Interpol agent (Theron)
who's after an elusive criminal. She ends up ensnaring an unwitting
American tourist (Cruise) in her pursuit a move that puts his life on
the line. Screenwriter Julian Fellowes (who won an Oscar for Gosford
Park) penned the script for Spyglass Entertainment, while Bharat Nalluri (Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day) plans to direct. Nicole Sperling
TV
The CW's decision to contemporize Melrose Place for today's
audiences underscores the latest trend in TV: developing tried-and-true
titles in hopes of overcoming marketing challenges. Now that NBC and The
CW have succeeded (at least for now) in getting reboots of Knight Rider and 90210 off the ground, CBS is considering remakes of two popular
crime series from the '70s: The Streets of San Francisco and Hawaii
Five-O, for next fall. Ed Bernero (Criminal Minds) is writing the Five-Oscript, while Sheldon Turner (The Longest Yard) and Robert Port (Numb3rs) will attempt to update Streets by focusing on the city's gay
population. Meanwhile, The CW is currently on the lookout for a writer
with a twisted enough imagination to re-create the legendary Melrose madness. Lynette Rice
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