Summer 2010: Hollywood Hits & Misses
By Emily Christianson, Whitney Friedlander, Lisa Fung, Todd Martens and Jevon Phillips, Los Angeles Times staff
We’ve seen a lot this summer.
Our jaws dropped when we heard alleged recordings of
Now, presenting entertainment’s summer in review... (Clockwise from top left: Chris Pizzello/Associated Press; Capitol Records/Associated Press; Warner Bros.; Kirk McKoy/Los Angeles Times)
After a five-year absence,
-- Todd Martens (Andrew Milligan / Associated Press)
-- Emily Christianson and Whitney Friedlander (Michael Becker / Associated Press)
Who knew Chris Pine had it in him? Sure, we’ve seen the “Star Trek” actor in
-- Lisa Fung (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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Fans were not as kind to
Photo: Martie Maguire, Sara Bareilles, Emily Robison, Sarah McLachlan, Serena Ryder and Jill Hennessy attend Lilith Fair at the Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden,
This Huntington Beach band survived a tragedy and documented it in full on record. Avenged Sevenfold confronted the unexpected death last year of drummer James “The Rev” Sullivan on its recently released “Nightmare.” The darkly personal hard-rock song cycle was instantly embraced by fans and gave the locals its best-ever sales week on the U.S. pop charts. “Nightmare” landed at No. 1 in early August, topping the chart with 162,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan. After three weeks, the album was still in the top 20.
-- Todd Martens (Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)
Director
-- Whitney Friedlander (Suzanne Tenner / Associated Press)
It seemed like a good idea on paper, right?
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The indie act, based in Canada, topped the U.S. pop charts with its third album, “The Suburbs,” awarding its label, Merge Records, its first-ever No. 1 album. What’s more, the
And that doesn’t even touch on the music. “The Suburbs” is a full album experience, with themes and sounds shifting in and out from song to song. It’s quieter and less anthemic than past efforts from the act, but over the course of 16 tracks, the Arcade Fire crafts a novel-like look at a residential life populated with broken dreams and sprawling strip malls. (Cory Schwartz / Getty Images)
One man on a sparse stage offering up a history lesson. Perhaps not the easiest sell for a theater production. Unless the man is
-- Lisa Fung (Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press)
Pop vixen
-- Todd Martens (Joseph Nair / AFP / Getty Images)
-- Whitney Friedlander (Joan Marcus / Associated Press)
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After finding mainstream success with her “Paper Planes,” a heavily licensed, Clash-sampling cut that won the border-hopping electronic artist a Grammy nomination,
That hasn’t quite panned out, as the first glimpse of the album, “Born Free,” was far more punk than dance and came with a controversial, extremely violent video. Soon after,
A shame, as The Times’ Ann Powers wrote, “It feels like a serious artist’s sometimes tentative but very promising step toward a broader vision of herself. In its 12 tracks, M.I.A. explores both what it means to serve as a sexual/romantic ideal in the
-- Todd Martens (Leon Neal / AFP / Getty Images)
Comic-Con International doesn’t really get bigger and bigger as most people keep saying. They reached capacity, with sold-out tickets earlier and earlier, a long time ago. It’s just the coverage that seems to grow.
Big stars and big projects continue to come, and this year did not disappoint (except maybe the “