Police men
"It's such a new exploration for me. The most fun that I have. There's nothing that compares to being on the stage with a hit record. So you know I've been performing a little bit with (DJ Jazzy) Jeff. We've been sneaking out and going to places and working out a little bit. So I think it's going to be magnificent." Another hot-button honoree Sunday was Quentin Tarantino's "The Hateful Eight." Police associations have urged boycotts of Tarantino's movies after the filmmaker said he was "on the side of the murdered" during a recent rally against police brutality in New York.
"We all have a tremendous respect for what police do every day, putting their lives on the line, OK? And I know Quentin feels that way too," said Kurt Russell, who stars in Tarantino's western, out December."Now when it comes to his comments on police men, that's his to comment on," continued Russell. "You don't have to agree every time with everybody to like work together." The awards show, which has raised eyebrows for giving honors to unreleased films, was not televised this year after dismal ratings in 2014. Still, honorees including Robert De Niro, Benicio Del Toro, Jane Fonda and Amy Schumer turned out for the glitzy gala in Beverly Hills hosted by James Corden of "The Late Late Show." Carey Mulligan, who received an award for her historical drama "Suffragette," hoped the attention will help at the box office. "It's an important film for people to see and to understand what women went through for us to have a vote," she said. "All of this award stuff is very good because it means more people will go and see it."-AP