Last night, a colorful array of A-listers took to MoMA for the emotionally charged premiere of Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions’…
Grey Goose
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Last night Complex Media, The Cinema Society, and Grey Goose hosted a screening at the AMC Loewe’s Theater near Lincoln Center for FilmDistrict’s Oldboy directed by two-time Academy Award-winning director Spike Lee. The film, which is a reinterpretation of the original 2003 Korean version of the same name, stars Josh Brolin as a down-and-out advertising exec and absentee father who finds himself imprisoned in a hotel room after a night of binge drinking. Brolin’s character, Joe Doucett, spends the next 20 years locked away in solitary confinement for reasons unknown to him until one day he’s mysteriously released into a field. But as he seeks to find answers and a motive for the torture he endured, he finds himself further engulfed in a tangled conspiracy that leads him to seek answers from a young social worker played by Elizabeth Olsen and a mysterious and elusive old man, played by Sharlto Copley, who allegedly can set him truly free.
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Summer may have wrapped, but here’s a decidedly tongue-in-chic encore feature you certainly won’t want to miss. Despite her prominent perch by the beach in Sagaponack, Fairfield, super-tycoon Ira Rennert’s 110,000-square-foot mega-mansion is notoriously tight-shingled. Often referred to as the “House that Ate the Hamptons,†she sits on 63 acres, has 29 bedrooms, 39 bathrooms, and her own synagogue, playhouse and basketball court. But after a little lubrication—one Grey Goose and soda—she opened up to The Daily Summer in an exclusive interview.
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There’s some Cher, some screenings, and plenty more in Sergio Kletnoy’s week, both on- and off-duty. As for the work bit? A Cosmo cover shoot transpires, for starters. Happy weekend-ing! Monday I couldn’t ask for a better start to my week than quality time with Cher! Well, not the real Cher, like physically there, in front of me, but in spirit.
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Expecting solely scintillation and raunchy good times from Lovelace, the new flick based on Deep Throat’s Linda Lovelace, would’ve left a moviegoer decidedly high and dry at last night’s screening at the MoMA, hosted by the Cinema Society, MCM, and Grey Goose. There was a bit of that in the Amanda Seyfried-lead film, sure, and plenty of mesmerizing Seventies coifs (perms, Farrah-fashioned flips, and poufy curls, oh my!). But things got really dark in the Rob Epstein an Jeffrey Friedman directed film, particularly in the latter two-thirds depicting the more harrowing bits of Lovelace’s life.
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Bergdorf Goodman has for 111 years been a Fifth Avenue legend and monument to fashion in New York dressing some of the city and the world’s wealthiest, which is why it has long been the considered the gateway to success for designers. Last night The Cinema Society with Swarovski and Grey Goose hosted Matthew Miele and eONE Entertaiment’s documentary, Scatter My Ashes At Bergdorf’s.
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“I’ve done a lot of movies here, and I’ve never seen it this crowded!” said Cinema Society founder Andrew Saffir at the New York premiere of Olympus Has Fallen, co-hosted by Roger Dubuis, Grey Goose, and The Cinema Society. By 8:30 p.m., the film cognoscenti had filled the Tribeca Grand screening room to the brim, piling out onto aisles or taking last-minute perches on the stairwell.
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A Steven Soderbergh film will undoubtedly create a fuss, but the director’s purported last hurrah is cause for even more pandemonium. His plans? To paint. Although it’s probably not as lucrative, we suspect, thanks to all of those Ocean’s movies, he’s all set in that department. As for the final flcik, The Cinema Society and Michael Kors hosted a premiere for Open Road Films’ Side Effects, starring Rooney Mara,Channing Tatum, Jude Law and Catherine Zeta-Jones.