Wednesday 28 November 2012

Lindsay & Grant

No-one's immune from the Hollywood "biopic", whether you're an assassinated American President or a beautiful young British Royal who died tragically in a car crash.

Even better if you can - if you will pardon the expression - kill two birds with stone.

So now, barely 18 months after the death of Elizabeth Taylor aged 79,  we have Liz and Dick, tracing the turbulent relationship of the Oscar-winning actress and the Welsh boyo actor Richard Burton (who died in 1984 aged 58) after they first met on the set of Cleopatra.

They would marry twice, make a number of films together - one great (Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), the rest ordinary to stinkers (Boom, Hammersmith is Out) - and generate probably more headlines than any other showbiz couple in history.


But who to portray this tempestuous tandem (pictured above)? As Liz, enter Lindsay Lohan, a car crash celebrity in her own right, who compounded the image by making this biopic during probation for theft. As for the pock-marked Dick, or "Rich" as he was generally known, step up Kiwi hunk Grant Bowler, best known for teleseries like True Blood and Blue Heelers.

What next? Subo - The Movie? Heaven help us, that is apparently in the pipeline.


Thursday 1 November 2012

Scare yourself slim!



Here’s some good news if you want to lose a bit of weight. Watching a scary movie can help you burn the same calories as eating a small chocolate bar gains, according to a new study. 
 

Researchers at the University of Westminster found that people who watched a 90-minute horror film were likely to burn up to 113 calories – the same sort of figure as a half-hour walk.

Some movies were more effective than others, however. Of the 10 films studied, the top calorie-burners were the classic Stanley Kubrick chiller The Shining (184 calories), Jaws (161 calories) and The Exorcist (158 calories).

The study found that films with regular "jump-scare" moments were most likely to help burn calories because they increased the heart rate dramatically. "Each of the 10 films tested set pulses racing, sparking an increase in the heart rate of the case studies," said Dr Richard Mackenzie of the university.

"As the pulse quickens and blood pumps around the body faster, the body experiences a surge in adrenaline. It is this release of fast-acting adrenaline, produced during short bursts of intense stress (or in this case, brought on by fear), which is known to lower the appetite, increase the basal metabolic rate and ultimately burn a higher level of calories."

Scientists measured heart rate, oxygen intake and carbon dioxide output for the study, which was commissioned by the movie rental firm Lovefilm. They discovered that the number of calories used increased, on average, by a third during the screenings.