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Former male stripper voted out of "American Idol"

David Hernandez, the "American Idol" contestant with a reported history as a male stripper, was eliminated on Wednesday from the competition on the hit TV talent show.

More than 29 million viewers cast votes for their favorites this week as the series entered the home stretch of its seventh season, moving from three nights a week to two.AmericanIdol
Voters chose Syesha Mercado and Kristy Lee Cook to continue competing. The two singers, along with Hernandez, were the bottom finishers among the 12 remaining contestants.

Hernandez, 24, from Glendale, Arizona, performed the 1960s Beatles hit "I Saw Her Standing There" for the Lennon-McCartney songbook-themed show.

"Idol's judges concurred with viewers' choice of the bottom three finishers. "I think America got this absolutely spot on," said famously blunt judge Simon Cowell on the live broadcast.

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"Away From Her" dominates Canada's Genie Awards

The film "Away from Her" was the big winner on Monday night at Canada's Genie Awards, winning seven statuettes, including best picture, best actor, best actress and best director for first-time filmmaker Sarah Polley.

Polley, 29, a longtime darling in the Canadian acting scene, also took home a Genie statuette for best adapted screenplay and won the Claude Jutra Award, recognizing outstanding achievement by a first-time feature film director.

AwayFromHer "The ridiculousness of me winning this award is not lost on me ... this is totally absurd but thanks," said a humbled Polley after accepting the award for best director.

Gordon Pinsent took home the best actor award for his role as a man trying to cope with the institutionalization of his wife due to Alzheimer's disease in "Away From Me."

Pinsent's on-screen partner, Julie Christie, won for best actress, and Kristen Thomson won for best supporting actress.

Director David Cronenberg's dark Russian mob film, "Eastern Promises," also took home seven awards, including best supporting actor for Armin Mueller-Stahl and best original screenplay for Steve Knight.

Two words heard often during the evening were "Kill bill," followed by "C10."

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"Bank Job" a criminal undertaking

The caper film is such a time-honored and recently neglected genre that it's a shame to report that Roger Donaldson's "The Bank Job" isn't better than it is.

Loosely based on the true-life 1971 robbery of a Lloyds Bank in a ritzy section of London, "Bank" is a slow-paced and often confusingly plotted crime drama that never lives up to the delicious potential of its premise.

bankjob The heist's central figure is Terry (Jason Statham, working in a less physically demanding mode than usual), a small-time car dealer and petty criminal who is propositioned to do the job by his old flame Martine (Saffron Burrows). Although she promises a roomful of safe deposit boxes containing untold millions in cash and jewelry, it turns out that her motivations aren't financial. She's being pressured by the British spy forces, who are determined to procure sexually incriminating photos of a member of the royal family that are being used for blackmail purposes by a drug-dealing revolutionary (Peter De Jersey).

Although the robbery is successful, Terry and his makeshift gang suddenly find themselves being pursued not only by the agents of M15 or M16 -- no one is really quite sure which -- but also by a ruthless gangster (David Suchet) looking to retrieve a ledger detailing his payoffs to the local police.

The screenplay by the veteran team of Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais ("The Commitments") doesn't succeed in conveying the complicated scenario in fully coherent fashion, and Donaldson's tonally wobbly direction is atypically unsure. The proceedings never achieve the necessary tension or pacing, and the half-hearted attempts at comic relief mainly fall flat.

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Chinese filmmaker says Spielberg withdrawal "regrettable"

China's top filmmaker Zhang Yimou said Hollywood director Steven Spielberg's resignation as an adviser to the Beijing Olympics was "quite regrettable", but would not affect the Games, the China News Service said.

Zhang and Spielberg were working on the direction team for the opening and closing ceremonies for the August 8-24 Games, widely expected to be a spectacular affair showcasing China's rich culture and new confidence.

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The absence of the three-times Oscar winner, who pulled out last month over China's policy on the conflict in the Sudan region of Darfur, would not have any effect on the Opening Ceremony, Zhang was quoted as saying by the semi-official China News Service.

Spielberg said China was doing too little to help halt the bloodshed in the western Sudanese region of Darfur, where Khartoum-linked militia have battled rebel groups.

"This has been a very difficult decision for me, as I have cherished the relationships with my Chinese counterparts, in particular ... Zhang Yimou, who is a close personal friend," the American said in his statement.

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Anne Heche subs for actress in comedy feature

Anne Heche is set to star opposite Ashton Kutcher in the indie romantic comedy "Spread," replacing Jennifer Jason Leigh.

AnneHeche The "Punk'd" star and "Call Me Crazy" author will mix it up in the tale of a womanizer and the lover he scorns.

Leigh dropped out of the project February 21 for undisclosed reasons. News reports have suggested that Leigh and her husband, "Margot at the Wedding" director Noah Baumbach, are expecting a child.

Heche has had a career resurgence on ABC's "Men in Trees." The series returned to the air Wednesday with 11 episodes in the can, giving Heche free time before the show likely resumes shooting in the summer.

With only a minor hiccup in the recasting, the Los Angeles-based production is set to begin this week. David Mackenzie directs.

Heche's feature credits include the "Psycho" remake, and "Six Days Seven Nights" with Harrison Ford.

 
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