Archive: January 2009 (71-75 of 75)

Jan 5 2009 01:00 PM ET

John Travolta, Kelly Preston release statement on Jett's death

Filed under: News

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John Travolta and wife Kelly Preston published a statement on both of their official websites over the weekend addressing the sudden death of their 16-year-old son Jett on Friday. "Jett was the most wonderful son that two parents could ever ask for and lit up the lives of everyone he encountered. We are heartbroken that our time with him was so brief," the statement reads. "We will cherish the time we had with him for the rest of our lives." The statement also thanks to those who have "sent their love and condolences….It is a beautiful reminder of the inherent goodness in the human spirit that gives us hope for a brighter future."

An autopsy is expected to be performed today that may reveal the cause the death. Jett Travolta died at thefamily’s vacation home in the Bahamas on Jan. 2. Jett had a history of seizures.

UPDATE: Autopsy results released on Jan. 5 showed that Jett’s body showed no sign of head trauma, according to the AP,and his death certificate says he was killed by a seizure.

More Travolta:
John Travolta’s son dies in the Bahamas

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Jan 2 2009 09:32 PM ET

John Travolta's son dies in the Bahamas

Filed under: News

John Travolta’s 16-year-old son Jett died today while the family was vacationing in the Bahamas, Reuters reports. The young man reportedly died after suffering a seizure at his family’s vacation home on Grand Bahama Island. According to Access Hollywood, Jett fell and hit his head on the bathtub in his hotel room, and attempts to revive him were unsuccessful. Jett, who had a history of seizures, is John Travolta and wife Kelly Preston’s eldest child. They also have a daughter, Ella Blue, who was born in 2000.

Jan 2 2009 03:00 PM ET

Quentin Tarantino's 'Inglourious Basterds' releasing Aug. 21

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The Weinstein Company and Universal Pictures have set Aug. 21, 2009 as the domestic release date for the Quentin Tarantino-directed WWII drama Inglourious Basterds, Variety reports. The movie stars Brad Pitt, Mike Myers, BJ Novak, and Eli Roth. The story — the title comes from a 1978 Italian film directed by Enzo G. Castellari — centers on a band of Jewish American soldiers dropped intoGerman-occupied France on a mission to kill as many Nazis asthey can. The project is Tarantino’s first attempt at a period piece as well as his inaugural journey into the studio system as a director.

More ‘Inglourious Basterds’:
First Look: Brad Pitt in Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Inglourious Basterds’
Feature: Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Inglourious Basterds’ moves forward
Mike Myers joins Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Inglourious Basterds’
BJ Novak eyes Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Inglourious Basterds’

Jan 2 2009 01:32 AM ET

Donald E. Westlake, mystery writer, dies at 75

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Donald E. Westlake, the famously prolific mystery writer noted for his cinematic storytelling, died on Dec. 31 at age 75 of an apparent heart attack while on vacation in Mexico, according to the New York Times.

Westlake began publishing in the early 1960s and showed a mastery of the comic heist caper in novels starring the hapless crook John Dortmunder such as The Hot Rock (1970) and Bank Shot (1972)—both adapted into successful films starring, respectively, Robert Redford and George C. Scott. Writing under the pseudonym Richard Stark, he produced nearly two dozen mystery gems starring the single-named Parker, a coolly professional criminal with sociopathic tendencies who recalled Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley in everything but style. (While Ripley was more of a sexually ambiguous dandy with the airs of an artist, Parker sprang more from the no-nonsense hardboiled mold of a Dashiell Hammett character.) The first Parker book, The Hunter, which pits our antihero against the woman and best friend who betrayed him (as well as a Mafia-like "Oufit"), was adapted to the screen twice, first as the 1967 thriller Point Blank starring Lee Marvin and later as 1999′s Payback starring Mel Gibson.

With his penchant for twisty plots and witty dialogue, Westlake was a favorite in Hollywood. He also wrote several screenplays himself, picking up an Oscar nomination for director Stephen Frears’ 1990 film The Grifters starring Anjelica Huston and John Cusack as mother-son baddies. (The script was adapted from a novel by another undersung writer, Jim Thompson.)

Westlake, who set most of his books in his native New York City, was a pioneer in another sense. Working in an era long before writers like James Patterson could extend their personal brands churning out as many as five or six new titles annually, Westlake published as many as four books a year — but under a seemingly endless series of pseudonyms. In addition to Richard Stark, there was Tucker Coe, Samuel Holt, Edwin West, and J. Morgan Cunningham. On his website, Westlake noted that the cover of Cunningham’s 1970 book, Comfort Station, even contains one of his favorite blurbs: "I wish I had written this book!" — Donald E. Westlake. You’ve got to admire a guy who could get away with blurbing himself.

Jan 1 2009 04:04 PM ET

Viacom, Time Warner strike a deal

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You want your MTV? You got it. Early this morning, Viacom and Time Warner Cable suits settled a dispute over fee hikes in which the cable company threatened to drop MTV, Comedy Central, Nick, and 16 other Viacom networks, ABC News reports. The details of the deal were not made public.

Earlier this week, the media conglomerate and the cable operator engaged in a public pissing match over how much Time Warner pays to offer Viacom’s networks to its nearly 16 million subscribers. Viacom contended that Time Warner was underpaying,given the popularity of its programming; the cable operator accused Viacom of trying to pad its bottom line to make up for slow ad sales.

Lynette Rice contributed to this report.

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