Friday, November 16, 2007

Film stars set for IPOof tire-recycling firm...way to go Mel

The actors Mel Gibson and Bruce Willis, part owners of the Malaysian tire-recycling group Green Rubber Global, will see their investment go public as it seeks to raise as much as £40 million in a share sale in Britain next year.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Mel goes to the movies




MEL GIBSON made a rare public appearance at the premiere of AMERICAN GANGSTER in Hollywood on Monday night (29Oct07) - because he hopes to work with all three of the film's "big players". The Braveheart star felt sure that showing Russell Crowe, Denzel Washington and director Ridley Scott his support would help him secure their services in future films. He quipped, "These three big players here... they're all friends of mine. I just wanted to see the movie and I'm an admirer of their work individually. I just want to see what they can cook up together you know. "Maybe I'd like to direct a movie with all of them in it, including Ridley."

Monday, October 15, 2007

Mel Gibson ranked first on a list of Hollywood's top Christians published by the spiritual Web site Beliefnet.com.


The list, "Hollywood's Most Powerful Christians," names 12 movers and shakers within the entertainment industry, including Patricia Heaton, Denzel Washington, Angela Bassett, Tyler Perry and Martin Sheen, who "are at the top of their game in movies or TV and are unabashed about proclaiming their Christian beliefs."

Sunday, September 23, 2007

I'll move to Costa Rica with you Mel

MAD Max star Mel Gibson was put on kidnap alert yesterday over his new home in Costa Rica.

The actor plans to move his wife Robyn and their seven children to the £13million ranch 300 miles from the capital San Jose.

And he seems determined to ignore official US government warnings that the area is prime bandit country.

A State Department briefing claims all American visitors are “potential targets for criminals and kidnappers” and should never travel alone.

It adds: “Local law enforcement agencies have limited capabilities and do not operate according to US standards.”

And an American consular official said: “All US citizens should exercise extreme caution.”

But Mel, 51, has already upset locals. The previous owner employed 13 staff who rented houses on the estate. And they fear losing their jobs if he shuts down farming operations on the 402-acre spread.

Mel has already indicated he plans to use it for movie location shoots.

A business source close to the actor said: “Most locals are enthusiastic about their wealthy new neighbour but others are very worried about their livelihoods.

“He will need intense security for his family in an area where urban and tourist development is minimal and most of the inhabitants are poorly-paid farmers

“Unless they are closely guarded, Mel’s family could find themselves prime targets for bandits and thieves in an area where help will be a very long way away.”

Mel’s ranch spans a densely-wooded, mountainous area in Guanacaste province on Costa Rica’s northern Pacific coast.

He has sold a Malibu property for £15million and has also put his estate in Mianus, Connecticut, on the market for £20million to help finance the deal.

But it is likely the biggest opposition to the Costa Rica move could be closer to home.

A friend of Mel’s said: “The area where he’s chosen to live is hundreds of miles from real civilisation.

“His wife Robyn is not, to put it mildly, as keen as he is on going there.”

She is still reeling after her husband was sentenced to three years’ probation for drink-driving after being pictured in a bar with two blondes.

A magazine quoted a source close to Mel as saying: “Robyn has endured one humiliation after another. But moving to Costa Rica may be the last straw. She wants no part of it.”

Friday, September 14, 2007

He's such a Good Guy

SINGAPORE : Oscar-winning director and actor Mel Gibson has left Singapore after a three-day visit but not before leaving quite an impression.

Gibson donated S$25,000 to Kidz Horizon Appeal, a charity organisation that raises funds for children suffering from illnesses such as cancer and HIV.

He was in Singapore for the Forbes Global CEO Conference, which was held earlier this week.

But the Hollywood actor also took the opportunity to campaign for children suffering from chronic and terminal illness.

And his passion rubbed on to the CEO of Petra Group, Vinod Sekhar, and CEO of the True Group, Patrick Wee.

The two bosses increased their initial pledge of S$10,000 to S$25,000 each for Kidz Horizon Appeal. - CNA/ch

Friday, August 31, 2007

GIBSON LINKED WITH JUSTICE LEAGUE ALL-STAR CAST. WTF?

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Hollywood star MEL GIBSON is tipped to reunited with MAD MAX director GEORGE MILLER in forthcoming superhero move JUSTICE LEAGUE. A number of A'list stars are being linked with the film, which unites comic book heroes Superman, Batman , Wonder Woman and Flash. Ryan Reynolds is expected star as Flash and Superman TV star Tom Welling is tipped to take the part to the big screen. Latest gossip suggests Miller is already on board to direct and wants to Gibson and Bruce Willis as villains Max Lord and Lex Luther. A studio source tells IESB.net that besides Gibson and Willis, Miller is also chasing Leonardo DiCaprio, Jake Gyllenhaal, Jessica Alba and Scarlett Johansson for roles in the movie.


Oh my!

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Gibson film venture closes Sydney office

Six years ago, the Hollywood star and his producing partner, Bruce Davey, announced they were forming a production company with the leading talent agency Shanahan Management, which represents such A-listers as Nicole Kidman, Toni Collette and Geoffrey Rush.

Icon Shanahan Productions was launched at the same time as a new distribution operation, and there were high hopes that it could produce a new generation of Australian films for international audiences.

But the company has now closed its Sydney office - and its creative director, Sally Chesher, has departed - without a single Icon Shanahan film being made.

The closest it came was the part-financing of the drama The Black Balloon, by Icon's distribution and sales agency arms. Icon Shanahan brought Collette to the film, a coming-of-age story from the director Elissa Down which is due in cinemas early next year. Collette's co-stars include the model Gemma Ward, Rhys Wakefield and Luke Ford.

Before that, Icon was involved in a production venture with the Australian arm of 20th Century Fox that dissolved after three years without making a film. Even earlier, a planned partnership between Gibson and the producer Pat Lovell also led to nothing.

While Gibson and Davey have been successful producers in the US, making such movies as Braveheart, What Women Want, The Passion of the Christ and Apocalypto, they have come up bone dry in this country.

The chief executive of Icon's Australian operations, Mark Gooder, points to the difficulty of finding strong films that can work internationally.

"Everyone has good intentions to make as many films as they possibly can out of Australia," he says from Los Angeles. "But when it comes down to it, what are those stories that will resonate and travel overseas?

"… You talk to any producer and any studio in Australia. Are they all sitting on fantastic material that they're holding back from making? No.

"I think everyone finds it's a bit of a struggle to find strong material."

Gooder described the office closure as a "refocusing" rather than a withdrawal from Australian filmmaking. He will continue developing films from Los Angeles and has high hopes for Icon's chances under the Federal Government's new 40 per cent rebate for film production.

One project that has been in development and could still reach production, he says, is the romantic comedy/drama The Girl Most Likely, starring Pia Miranda.

Gibson outlines passion for saving forests

Gibson: ‘I’ve backed a lot of good causes – environmental and humanitarian’


KUALA LUMPUR: Oscar-winning actor and director Mel Gibson sprang a surprise when he attended a sponsorship-signing ceremony here yesterday for conservation of the rainforest.

The event was the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Petra Group and the Royal Society South-East Asia Rainforest Research Programme (SEARRP).

Petra will sponsor the latter's rainforest ecology research programme in Sabah (StarBiz: Petra plays its part in conservation)

Gibson, who last directed Apocalypto, which was set in an ancient Mayan jungle settlement, is on a two-week vacation in Malaysia. He was at the ceremony to lend his support to Petra Group's participation in the research programme on how to conserve the rainforest.



“I'm really proud and happy to be a witness to an agreement such as this. I've backed a lot of good causes – environmental and humanitarian,” he said.

He also cited a similar rainforest conservation project in El Mirador, Guatemala, which he strongly supported.

Petra Group president and chief executive officer Datuk Vinod Sekhar said the group had also “contributed in a small way” to the Guatemalan project.

Gibson also backs Green Rubber Global, a Petra Group unit in the United States that will operate a tyre recycling plant in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

He expressed his intention to visit the local rainforest and Danum Valley Field Centre, where the SEARRP programme is undertaken.

Australian Gibson got his first break in 1979 in Mad Max, and later in the United States with The Bounty (1984).

He is also famous for his work in the Lethal Weapon series with Danny Glover.

After spending more than two decades as a leading man, Gibson ventured into directing with Braveheart and was immediately recognised with two Oscars in 1996.

A serious filmmaker, he braves all sorts of controversies – both personal and professional – to make groundbreaking films such as The Passion of the Christ and Apocalypto.


Monday, August 20, 2007

Rumor has it

The film he’s in Costa Rica scouting locations for is “an epic about the Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez De Balboa.”

A quick google and we discover De Balboa was “a Spanish explorer, governor, and conquistador. He traveled to the New World in 1500 and, after some exploration, settled on the island of Hispaniola. He founded the settlement of Santa María la Antigua del Darién in present-day Panama in 1510, the first permanent European settlement on the mainland of the Americas (a settlement by Alonso de Ojeda at San Sebastián de Urabá the previous year had already been abandoned). He crossed the Isthmus of Panama to the Pacific Ocean in 1513, becoming the first European to lead an expedition known to have seen or reached the Pacific from the New World.”



I don't know how true this is, we just have to wait and see.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Damn He Looks Good


GUATEMALA CITY -- Mel Gibson dined with Guatemala's president and admired Mayan murals in the capital's cultural palace after a weekend jungle visit.

The 51-year-old actor-director visited the Palace of Culture on Monday, where President Oscar Berger showed him contemporary murals portraying aspects of Mayan life and the Spanish conquest.

Afterward, the two men had lunch at the presidential palace.

Gibson has visited the country many times as a tourist, said Krista Kepfer, a spokeswoman for Berger.

"He is very interested in Guatemala as a tourist destination and in the culture," she said.

Over the weekend, Gibson visited the Mayan ruins of El Mirador deep in the northern Peten jungle, Kepfer said.

The visit was private and neither Gibson nor Berger made any statements to the news media.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Mel Gibson is not losing his religion.


He keeps investing his "Passion of the Christ" money into the church he built in Agoura Hills, Calif.

Last year, Gibson parked another $8.2 million in his AP Reilly Foundation, the tax-free entity that takes care of his Holy Family Catholic Church.

Gibson's church is not recognized by the Roman Catholic Church because it does not acknowledge the authority of the pope or the Vatican or the doctrine known as Vatican II. Gibson and many of his fellow congregants are Holocaust deniers, as is Gibson's father, who has been known to contribute to neo-Nazi publications.

Gibson, nevertheless, perseveres. According to a federal tax filing obtained exclusively by this column, the foundation now has $30 million in its coffers, up from $22 million last year.

The church sits on about 11 acres of land owned by the Foundation and worth around $3 million, according to public documents.

Let's put this into perspective. Los Angeles Catholic Big Brothers and Big Sisters only has $1.6 million in its till. The Malibu Roman Catholic Church, which is recognized by the archdiocese, supports 600 families. It has a fraction of Holy Family's budget. But Holy Family is said to accommodate about 70 families altogether. That's quite a difference.

Thanks to "The Passion of the Christ" and his anti-Semitic rant last year when he was arrested in Malibu, Gibson is no longer a significant Hollywood player. But he obviously has money, and he is using it as he sees fit.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Me sells his beachfront home


Mel has sold his beachfront Malibu house for $30 million, it was reported Sunday.

The Australian native turned a $6 million sales gain on the property, which he purchased just a year ago, The Los Angeles Times reported.

The beachfront pad has six bedrooms, 10 bathrooms, lagoon pool, cabana, elevator and wine cellar.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Luck Ladies

I really like him a lot

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - Mel Gibson has met with the president of Costa Rica to discuss making a financial donation to help the country's native Indians.

``He wants to help the indigenous population here and wants to know how to channel the funds,'' President Oscar Arias told reporters outside his home, where he met with the 51-year-old actor-director for about an hour Monday.

Arias said Gibson, who directed last year's Mayan epic ``Apocalypto,'' would return to Costa Rica next month to arrange details of his donation.

Gibson has avoided the press in prior trips to Costa Rica, but spent a few minutes answering questions from reporters.

He acknowledged buying a house in Guanacaste on the Central American nation's Pacific coast and jokingly asked reporters if they wanted the address.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Oh my goodness, Kanye West almost wasn't a jerk.


Kanye West almost always has something to say about awards ceremonies — specifically, trophies he believes he deserves. Now, with the MTV Movie Awards coming up Sunday, West is speaking out in a very unlikely person's defense, claiming that the best film of the year was snubbed.

"My favorite movie this year was 'Apocalypto,' and I love Mel Gibson," West said. "Sometimes I feel a little like Mel Gibson. [People say to him,] 'OK, Mel Gibson, we know [your movie is] the best, but if you shut up, maybe we can give you an award.' I think that's how people feel about me sometimes: 'OK, [your album] was the best.'

" 'Apocalypto' was the best movie," West continued. "It's probably some complete bullsh-- that got nominated over it. Around the time of the awards, if you want to ask me what's the bullsh-- that got nominated, I will tell you. It's my opinion; it doesn't mean it's good or bad. I'm a movie buff."



Footnote: yes Mel bought a new home but if you want to know where it is google! In my own little way I'm trying to protect his privacy.

Friday, May 11, 2007

I knew it all along

Mel, who was not present in the Malibu, Calif. court, got major kudos from the judge who told Mel's attorney "I truly believe the rehabilitation in this case is being very effective." The judge added that he would eventually like to see Mel, but at this point "it's counterproductive to have him in the courtroom."

Gibson's attorney Blair Berk filed paperwork with the court this morning indicating he is meeting all the terms of his probation. She told the judge "He's doing extremely well."

Mel's next court date is August 23.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Some Quick Mel News

Mel Gibson is hoping to bring former Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt's life to the big screen. The movie mogul admits he has always been fascinated by Holt's life and death and now he plans to make a biopic about the man.
He says, "In the 1960s, Harry went for a swim on Cheviot Beach near his pad at Portsea in Victoria and never came back. That's not even half as interesting as the life the man led."
Holt was presumed dead after disappearing in December 1967 - a year after becoming Australia's 17th Prime Minister.

Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto will arrive on DVD May 22nd for the suggested retail price of $29.99 and on Blu-ray for the suggested retail price of $34.99.

Though Mel Gibson has already announced that he has no inspiration to return to past hits such as Mad Max, that doesn't mean he isn't up for a lighter fare such as a sequel to Maverick.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Gibson digs digital action

On "Apocalypto," Mel Gibson found that using the Panavision Genesis gave him a unique look.

He points to a scene where the film's hero is chased through the jungle by men carrying torches. Not only was he able to shoot using just the torchlight, but, "When you open the shutter 360 degrees, the quality of movement takes on a different quality that you don't get on film.

"The fire had a liquid thing that doesn't happen on film. The greenery and the stuff he's running by has this incredible blur effect; you can stop on any frame and it's like a Monet painting. It makes him look like he's going even faster than he really is."

Gibson was also excited about seeing those images with digital projection at the ArcLight theater in Hollywood.

"It was astounding," he says. "I think I like the (projected) image (more) than the digital image that was scanned onto film. It was almost like 3-D, it was so great and clear. And of course there's less deterioration of the actual material as you watch it." Referring to the degradation of tradition film, he adds: "You make this pristine image you want to send off like your child to school, but it comes home by 3 p.m. with a nosebleed."

For Gibson, the bottom line is simple: "I think the digital has caught the film. I don't think it's a wannabe anymore. It's an 'is.' It's a very high-class alternative."

Mel Gibson most powerful celebrity


Mel Gibson has been named the world's most powerful celebrity - outclassing last year's winner Jennifer Aniston.

The 48-year-old 'Passion of the Christ' director won top spot with a pay packet of $210 million and the most international press coverage.

The Forbes Celebrity 100 rankings put golf star Tiger Woods in second place, as the top-earning athlete with $80 million, and talk-show host Oprah Winfrey in third - who cashed-in as much as Gibson.

Mel Gibson Arrest Prompts New Legislation


The media fallout surrounding Mel Gibson's much publicized DUI arrest could end up changing California law.
The media fallout surrounding Mel Gibson's much publicized DUI arrest could end up changing California law. A Santa Monica legislator is pushing a bill that would make it a crime for public safety employees to sell information to media outlets in an effort to clamp down on payments made by celebrity tabloids.

"This is a breach of the public trust, and if violated should be a crime," wrote bill author, Assem. Julia Brownley, D-Santa Monica.

Brownley introduced the bill at the request of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. The assemblywoman said she has no direct knowledge that information was sold in the Mel Gibson case, but said in the instant information age, Internet sites may be paying public safety officers for access to immediate information.

"In the Mel Gibson case, we know that once he was accused it was within that evening that he had a mug shot and there was a story," Brownley said. "So does that taint his right to a fair trial? I think possibly so."

Brownley's bill, AB 920, targets peace officers, public safety employees and court employees. It also affects media outlets. Any reporter who offers to pay public safety officials for information could be subject to a misdemeanor under the legislation.

The measure unanimously passed the Assembly Public Safety Committee this week. It has no registered opposition.
I though that this was already a crime. Guess I should have paid more attention in Government class back in the day!!!!