Saturday, December 29, 2012

Mark Wahlberg donates $10,000 to Malden teen center

The Boston Globe reports that the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation recently donated $10,000 to the Malden Teen Enrichment Center. Here is the article:

Mark Wahlberg has pledged $10,000 to the Malden Teen Enrichment Center through his charitable foundation, according to Scott Saia, a security coordinator for the Wahlberg's and Malden native. 
Saia organized Home for the Holidays, a street hockey tournament fundraiser for the teen center held on Dec. 23. The tournament was a success -- raising about $7,000 for the center on its own. The next day Saia was notified that the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation would chip in another $10,000. 
Saia, who has worked in various security capacities for Wahlberg and his brothers, Donnie and Jimmy, said he had told mentioned the tournament to the brothers, but didn't expect them to get involved. 
"It floored me when I got that phone call," Saia said Friday. "Not that it surprised me, knowing the Wahlbergs, but it wasn't something I expected. It was the best Christmas present I could get." 
The teen center, located at 1 Salem St., opened Dec. 12. It offers leadership and educational programs for teens, as well as gym access. The center is set to receive about $125,000 in funding from the city in 2013, but also relies on donations to operate. 
"That money's going to allow for a lot of great programs for these kids," Saia said.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Mark Wahlberg at the BevNET Live Conference

Mark was recently interviewed by BevNET Live Conference. He talks about promoting Aquahydrate and more. 


Thursday, December 20, 2012

Watch Trailer for 'Pain and Gain'

Here is the trailer for Mark's upcoming movie "Pain and Gain":

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

New movie poster for 'Pain and Gain'


Here is a new movie poster for Mark's upcoming movie "Pain and Gain" which is due to hit theaters on April 26, 2013.

Mark Wahlberg talks about Transformers 4 with MTV News

Here is a short video clip of Mark Wahlberg on MTV News about "Transformers 4".

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Mark Wahlberg on the set of 'Broken City'

MTV News interviewed Mark while he was on the set of "Broken City". Here is the video:

Mark Wahlberg talks about Transformers 4

Here is a short interview clip from IGN.com of Mark talking about Transformers 4

Watch new trailer for 'Broken City'

Here is another trailer for "Broken City" which comes out on January 18th.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Update on Transformers 4 and Ted 2

Collider talked to Mark about his plans for filming a sequel to "Ted" and "Transformers 4". Here is a quote from Mark.

“We’re shooting Transformers in May, and then I believe we’re gonna do Ted 2 right after. They’re working on it now and we’ve kind of gone through the negotiation process. The great thing about it is Seth’s ideas for the second one are sick. He comes from the world of episodic television so he knows how to tell the stories, man, in a way that most people don’t, like for instance The Italian Job we’ve been trying to do the sequel for 10 years. He’s a different kind of guy.”



Source Collider.com

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Mark Wahlberg To Produce Movie About a Hacker

Mark has singed up to produce a movie about hacker Luis Mijangos. Here is an article from Cinema Blend:


Mark Wahlberg To Produce True-Life Hacker Thriller For Universal

Mark Wahlberg has been behind a surprising number of critically-acclaimed television shows and movies as a producer, from The Fighter to HBO shows Entourage and Boardwalk Empire, and now he hopes to bring his magic touch to a new project about a digital terrorist. The star is pairing with Universal Pictures to make a new currently-untitled film about real-life incident involving a hacker and the student population of a high school.

THR says that the actual events were documented by David Kusher in a GQ article that ran in January of this year, and that Jonathan Herman has been hired to write the screenplay. Herman wrote the script for the long in-development remake of Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, but has also been featured twice on the annual Black List, with his scripts Conviction (which is set to be produced by Joel Silver's Silver Pictures) and Rites of Men (which is also set up at Universal). In the real story, hacker Luis Mijangos went much further than just looking into people's email accounts and sending instant messages - he dove into students' hard drives and even went as far as to spy on them through their own web cameras. And what's more he did it all from his wheelchair.

Wahlberg will soon start work on Michael Bay's Transformers 4, but has a good number of films already set to be released in 2013, including the crime drama Broken City, Bay's dark comedy Pain & Gain, Peter Berg's marine story Lone Survivor, and the comic book action flick 2 Guns.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Mark Wahlberg's interview with Globe and Mail

The Globe and Mail interviewed Mark about investing, his business Real Partners, the Canadian film industry and more.

When Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce needed to close a bond deal Wednesday, it turned to an unlikely source: Mark Wahlberg.

The Boston-born actor, producer, and former singer, now known for Ted, Boogie Nights and the forthcoming Broken City, took a turn on CIBC’s Toronto trading floor Wednesday as a celebrity broker for the bank’s annual Miracle Day charity drive. First on the agenda: CIBC needed to move some bonds. A broker for the bank handled logistics, and Mr. Wahlberg – who technically can’t trade in Ontario since he doesn’t hold a licence – got on the phone with the client to provide some extra convincing on the deal.

Commission from the trade went to charity, part of more than $4-million each year that CIBC raises for children’s groups across Canada from the event. Previous celebrity brokers have included musicians Geddy Lee of Rush and Alice Cooper.

After closing a handful of trades, Mr. Wahlberg spoke about his own approach as an investor (how not to end up as a broke celebrity), his own aspirations in the financial sector (teaching other celebrities not to waste their fortunes), and his strong opinions on the Canadian film industry (bring back those tax incentives).

What kind of investor are you, the conservative Warren Buffett-type, or do you like to take a bit of risk?



I’m fairly conservative. I work hard to make the money, so I wouldn’t be okay with somebody calling and telling me, ‘Oh, by the way, we lost $400,000 in this hedge fund’ and so on.

But as I learn more about the market I start to feel a little bit more comfortable. But it really depends.

You are now dabbling in financial services, with a firm for athletes and celebrities. What’s the strategy there?



We started a business called Real Partners because, if you look at most of the athletes, they’re bankrupt before they end up retiring. And they don’t really have people in their lives that tell them ‘No.’ And it’s really important to understand that guys get these cheques. And they just assume it’s going to last forever. But the longevity of athletes is, at the most, you play until you’re 40 in certain sports and after that there’s not really any income. So we’ve got to get these guys to think about that.

I learned the hard way: when I got my first cheque, I got a cheque for $100,000, I went to a Mercedes dealer and I bought a car, and I didn’t have money to register or insure it. And fortunately enough, my career continued to stay on the right path. But a lot of guys aren’t as fortunate. So we just want to make sure to help them make the right decisions, and have somebody in their life that can tell them what they can and can’t do, especially when it comes to their finances.



Banking isn’t too far from your roots. Is it true your mom used to work at a bank?



She did … in Boston. Now she just pulls from my account as regularly as she likes.

You’ve been vocal calling for more government support of the film industry in Canada. Why?



We are really trying to encourage the government to reinstate these tax incentives to bring film and cinema back to Canada. I’ve made four movies in Toronto and three in Vancouver. It’s the best working experience, some of the best crew, the best people I’ve ever worked with, and there’s just not enough film being made here.

We want to reopen Eastern Studios [in Toronto] and encourage people to come back here and make films. I made Fear and Shooter in Vancouver. I made The Big Hit, Corrupter, Max Payne [in Toronto]. It was some of the best work experiences that I’ve had. And it’s just a shame that films are going to other places. We want to really bring it back to Canada.



What sort of reception are you getting on the government front on that?



Mixed. But if we’ve got the right people in the right places, maybe we can make that happen, because Canada loves the arts. And they have the best film festival in the world. They need to have the best film production here. We need to encourage everybody to make that happen.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Mark Wahlberg visits CIBC in Toronto to raise money for children’s charities

The Toronto Star posted an article about Mark's appearance at the CIBC Miracle Day.

Oscar nominated actor and producer and philanthropist Mark Wahlberg along with his good friend ex leaf Tie Domi met kids and employees and made calls to clients to raise money for children charities on the trading centre on December 5th 2012 for CIBC Miracle Day.

Mark Wahlberg is grateful. He’s had success as a singer, actor and producer, as a husband and father of four children.

Which is why he showed up on the CIBC equity trade floor in Toronto on Wednesday, where he was swarmed by an army of traders armed with nervous jokes and smart phones recording his every step and word.

The crush was so overwhelming that at one point Wahlberg took refuge with his entourage in a glassed-in office, where he leaned back in a chair and hoisted a workboot-clad foot onto the desk until things calmed down.

Yes, the executive producer of the hit HBO series Entourage had an entourage, and yes it included a brother, James Wahlberg, executive director of the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation.

The foundation is mandated to improve the quality of life for inner-city youth, which is where the Wahlberg boys began their lives and where they could easily have ended them.

Mark Wahlberg’s early life as a thug and petty criminal in a tough Boston neighbourhood landed him in jail at 16. Jail was not cool, not fun, not where he wanted to be. Wahlberg decided to turn his life around, and he did.

A lifetime later, having succeeded at virtually everything he tried – his debut album as rapper Marky Mark went platinum; he launched an obsession with six-pack abdomens by baring his own as a model for Calvin Klein underwear; he won praise as an actor for his roles in Boogie Nights, ThePerfect Storm, The Italian Job and I Heart Huckabees; his life in Hollywood with his friends was the inspiration for the hit HBO series Entourage, which he executive produced; he was also executive producer of the hit show Boardwalk Empire – he’s giving back and urging others to do the same.

An ardent Roman Catholic, Wahlberg, 41, wears a rosary around his neck and says he prays on his knees each morning and visits church nearly every day. He wears a gold watch on his left arm. He is informal, playful, charming and soft-spoken, and kept his cool although the scene on the trading floor was somewhat chaotic.

At a press conference after ringing the bell to open a day of trading, Wahlberg said his success puts him in the position of wanting to help others.

“Jail’s not a nice place; I am trying to encourage kids not to ever go there. I’ve been very fortunate – most of my friends didn’t get an opportunity to have a second chance to turn their life around. I don’t want to screw it up and I want to make sure that I give back and provide an opportunity for kids to not make the same mistakes that I made and give them an opportunity to pursue their dreams and make things happen.”

Wednesday was the 29th Miracle Day for the CIBC, which donates the commissions of trades made on one day a year to children’s charities in Canada. Last year the event raised more than $4-million. The money raised Wednesday will be distributed throughout 2013 to 650 children's charities across Canada.

Wahlberg donated his time to this year’s event, and the money raised will go to Canadian charities of his choice.

“There’s people in need everywhere you look,” said Wahlberg. “You just have to get involved, whether it’s your time, whether you’re giving money, it’s your obligation to help people in need if you’re in a position to. I come from the real world. I had a very difficult upbringing and it’s important to me to give back.”

Mark Wahlberg to Canada: Restore Film Tax Breaks for Hollywood

Mark Wahlberg talked to The Hollywood Reporter about filming movies in Canada.

The movie actor called on Canadian politicians to reinstate subsidies for Los Angeles producers shooting movies locally, as he raised money in Toronto for kids charities.

TORONTO – Hollywood actor and producer Mark Wahlberg was in Toronto Wednesday to pass the hat around for kids charities – and for subsidies to draw Hollywood film production back to Canada.
While the Entourage executive producer visited the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s trading floor to raise money for childrens’ causes, Wahlberg urged the Canadian government to restore lost tax breaks for Hollywood film and TV shoots here.

“We are really trying to encourage the government to reinstate these tax incentives to bring film and cinema back to Canada,” Wahlberg told The Globe and Mail newspaper Wednesday.

The Hollywood celebrity was in Toronto to participate in the CIBC Miracle Day, an annual fund-raiser where bank employees, including market traders, donate their fees and commissions to charities.
“I’ve made four movies in Toronto and three in Vancouver. It’s the best working experience, some of the best crew, the best people I’ve ever worked with, and there’s just not enough film being made here,” he added.

Wahlberg was last in Toronto to shoot Max Payne in 2008, and a year earlier made Shooter in Vancouver.

Both locales popular with Hollywood film and TV producers have since sweetened their provincial tax credits, with Ontario in 2010 introducing a 25% all-spend film tax credit to remain competitive with Louisiana and New Mexico.


Other Canadian provinces like New Brunswick and Saskatchewan have either rejigged or scrapped their refundable film tax credits.
Even so, Wahlberg urged the Canadian government to do more to ensure Hollywood kept coming north.
“It was some of the best work experiences that I’ve had. And it’s just a shame that films are going to other places,” he said.

“We want to really bring it back to Canada,” Wahlberg told the Canadian newspaper.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to paticipate in CIBC Miracle Day

Mark will be volunteering in Toronto on Wednesday. Here is an article about it from Global Edmonton.

TORONTO - Actor and producer Mark Wahlberg will be working in Toronto's financial district Wednesday morning - and it's for a good cause.

The Hollywood star is scheduled to be on the CIBC trading floor to call clients seeking donations for children's charities.

"I know first-hand the important work done by charities and organizations that support kids and youth," Wahlberg said in a press release. "As a kid, I was fortunate enough to spend my free time in the positive and nurturing environment of the Boys and Girls club."

Wahlberg is supporting CIBC Miracle Day, an annual one-day fundraiser where CIBC wholesale banking employees and participating CIBC Wood Gundy Investment Advisors donate their fees and commissions. The initiative has raised nearly $65 million since 1984.

Wahlberg, a father of four, runs an eponymous youth foundation.

The actor and Entourage executive producer is no stranger to Toronto, having made several movies in the city since the late '90s: The Big Hit, The Corruptor, Four Brothers and Max Payne. He's also a regular guest at the Toronto International Film Festival, where his film Boogie Nights premiered in 1997.

The former rapper and underwear model is a close friend of ex-Toronto Maple Leaf star Tie Domi and recently purchased a condo at 36 Hazelton in the Yorkville neighbourhood.

Wahlberg's next movie, Broken City, opens January 18.



Read it on Global News: Global Edmonton | Mark Wahlberg to support charity in Toronto

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Photos of Mark Wahlberg on the set of "Lone Survivor"

You can view a few still photos of Mark Wahlberg on the "Lone Survivor" set on KOAT channel 7.

Click here to watch.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to work on new TV show "The Happy Tree"

FOX is developing a new show called "The Happy Tree", which is about the marijuana legalization movement. The executive producers include Mark Wahlberg and other former Entourage producers Rob Weiss and Steve Levinson. According to Deadline.com, the show "centers on a brilliant young corporate attorney who, after a nervous breakdown, quits his job and seeks a life of peace and serenity on Venice Beach only to find himself the unlikely voice for the marijuana “legalize it” movement."

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Mark Wahlberg talks to The Boston Globe

Mark Wahlberg recently talked with The Boston Globe about some his latest projects. Here is the article.


Mark Wahlberg gets into the docu-series biz

By Mark Shanahan and Meredith Goldstein | GLOBE STAFF NOVEMBER 19, 2012

Last week’s announcement that Mark Wahlberg is pitching a pilot inspired by the entertaining if shrill sisters from “The Fighter” got us thinking. Why is a millionaire movie star getting mixed up with reality television?

“I’ve always been as focused on being a businessman as I have been on being an actor,” Wahlberg (inset) told us, reached while riding a horse on a movie set in New Mexico. “I’m not the kind of actor who likes to look at himself in the mirror. I enjoy producing because it gives me creative control.

“If a movie or TV show that I make doesn’t succeed,” he says, “that’s on me.”

That hasn’t happened much lately. “The Fighter,” in which Wahlberg played Lowell-bred brawler Micky Ward, received multiple Oscar nominations; “Ted” was the surprise hit of last summer; and the HBO series “Boardwalk Empire,” produced by Wahlberg, is must-see TV for the smart set.


So what’s the pilot — which follows a handful of young Boston women — about? First, Wahlberg doesn’t consider it a reality show, preferring to call it a “docu-series.” And he’s emphatic that it will have little in common with crass reality TV franchises like “Jersey Shore” and “Real Housewives.”

“There are plenty of ways to get a paycheck in this business, but I’m always looking to do something top quality,” says Wahlberg. “This is our first venture with a docu-series and we want to do it right. We’re not going to be encouraging these girls to cause trouble and get into [expletive]. We want to give them opportunities to really change their lives.”

The show, which doesn’t have a title yet, will focus on three or four young women who, in Wahlberg’s words, “live in the real world.” That might mean they struggle with money, jobs, boyfriends, family, or drugs and alcohol. The goal of the show, he says, is to give the women a leg up and see if they can take advantage of the help.

What’s interesting is that Wahlberg and his producing partners — Stephen Levinson of Leverage, Bill Thompson of Bill Thompson Productions Inc., and Stephanie Drachkovitch of 44 Blue Productions – didn’t assemble the cast in the usual way. Instead of a casting director, they used some of Wahlberg’s friends and connections from the neighborhood to find the prospective stars. (The show starts filming in the next few weeks.)

“We put a lot of people on tape,” he says.

Wahlberg knows something about the sort of characters he’s looking for because he used to be one. As anyone even remotely familiar with his bio knows, before he was a star, Wahlberg was something of a miscreant with a well-deserved rap sheet.

“Look, when I was young, I had people who wanted to help me, but I didn’t realize it. I liked the nice car and the good-looking girl,” he told us. “At some point, I got out of jail and my brother [Donnie] was able to give me an opportunity. It was a pivotal moment for me.

“With these girls on the show,” he says, “we don’t want them to fail, we want them to succeed.”

The pilot is actually one of two shows Wahlberg is doing for A&E. The other, called “Teamsters,” is focused on Boston’s Teamsters Local 25. That’s already been shot and delivered to the network, but it’s not known yet if the show will be picked up.

Asked to explain Boston’s apparent pop-culture appeal – there are two other Southie-based reality shows being developed as well as a spate of recent films, notably “The Town,” “The Departed,” and “Mystic River” – Wahlberg said he’s somewhat bewildered.

“I spent eight years trying to lose my Boston accent because I thought it was nails on a chalkboard to people,” he said.

Before hanging up, we had to ask Wahlberg, who’s shooting a movie called “Lone Survivor,” if he knows how to ride a horse. After all, that’s not something a guy from Dorchester grows up doing.

“I spent a lot of time on a horse when I did ‘Planet of the Apes,’” he says. “But, no, you don’t see too many of these in the neighborhood unless a police officer’s on it.”

Friday, November 16, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to shoot TV pilot inspired by “The Fighter”

Mark Wahlberg is going to executive produce a reality pilot for A&E inspired by the women from ‘The Fighter’. Here is an article about it from The Boston Globe:

Mark Wahlberg to shoot reality TV pilot inspired by “The Fighter” sisters

The Wahlberg family’s foray into reality TV continues.

Mark Wahlberg confirmed Friday he plans to produce a half-hour pilot for A&E inspired by the Oscar-nominated film, “The Fighter.” Specifically, by the tough-talking sisters of the movie’s stars, Lowell-bred boxer Micky Ward and his brother Dicky Eklund.

The reality show, which doesn’t have a title yet, will focus on a few ordinary women from Boston as they cope with the everyday issues of work, family, relationships, and perhaps alcohol and drugs.

“Three young women from working-class Boston will do whatever it takes to achieve their dreams, move up and out,” reads the A&E pitch. “But can they ever truly leave their past of bad boys, bad choices, and bad behavior behind?”

In addition to Wahlberg, the show’s being produced by Stephen Levinson of Leverage, Bill Thompson of Bill Thompson Productions Inc., and reality TV veteran Stephanie Drachkovitch of 44 Blue Productions.

Thompson told us this is not a knockoff of “Jersey Shore.”

“We have zero interest in that type of show,” he said. “This is more like, ‘What would happen if we gave these girls a shot?’ Maybe they’ll succeed and maybe they’ll crash and burn.”

This is actually Wahlberg’s second reality pilot at A&E. He recently filmed “Teamsters” for the network, which is focused on Boston’s Teamsters Local 25. It’s not known yet if the show will be picked up.

Reality TV has become something of a family affair for the Wahlbergs. Donnie Wahlberg is currently working on a show about the Boston Police Department, and Bob Wahlberg produced a pilot called “Boston Metal,” about a family-owned scrapyard in Brockton, which aired in September on the National Geographic Channel.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to star in next ‘Transformers’ movie

Michael Bay says Mark Wahlberg to star in next ‘Transformers’ movie

Here is an article from the Associated Press:

LOS ANGELES — Mark Wahlberg, roll out.

“Transformers” director Michael Bay says the 41-year-old actor will star in the franchise’s fourth film.

Bay called Wahlberg the “perfect guy to re-invigorate the franchise and carry on the Transformers’ legacy” in a post on his blog Thursday. He previously squashed rumors that Wahlberg was joining the film franchise about warring robots.

Bay worked with Wahlberg on his upcoming film, “Pain and Gain.”

“Transformers 4” is scheduled to be released by Paramount Pictures on June 27, 2014.

Bay has said the next film will take a new direction in the series. The first three movies starred Shia LaBeouf and featured Peter Cullen as the voice of Autobot general Optimus Prime.

The third “Transformers” film, “Dark of the Moon,” was the second highest-grossing film of 2011.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to remake 'Point Blank'

Variety.com reports that Mark will be working on a new movie called "Point Blank". Here is the article.

Working Title is teaming with Mark Wahlberg and Stephen Levinson's Leverage banner to remake Fred Cavaye's hit French action thriller "Point Blank."

Produced by LGM and Gaumont, the original $14 million "Point Blank," which starred Gilles Lellouche ("The Players"), Roschdy Zem ("Just Like A Woman"), Gerard Lanvin ("A Gang Story") and Elena Anaya ("The Skin I Live In"), delivered a race-against-time story about a male nurse who needs to orchestrate the escape of a murderer in order to keep his kidnapped wife alive.

The Paris-set pic was a B.O. sleeper hit in Gaul and traveled worldwide, including in the U.S. where it was released by Magnolia. It's not related to John Boorman's 1967 pic.

Cavaye's feature debut "Anything for Her" (Pour Elle) also spawned a U.S. remake: Paul Haggis' "The Next Three Days" starring Russell Crowe and Elizabeth Banks.

Deal was negotiated by Cecile Gaget, Gaumont International topper; Sheeraz Shah and Emily MacKintosh, co-toppers of business affairs at Working Title; and WME on behalf of Leverage, the indie powerhouse behind "Boardwalk Empire" and "Entourage."

"Between Working Title Films and Leverage, it's truly the best production team we could have imagined for this remake," said Gaget, who's attending the AFM with Yohann Comte, Gaumont Intl. deputy head of sales.

"Blank" is also set for South Korean makeover, produced by Syd Lim at Barunson and Young Films, whose track record include such critically-aclaimed pics as Jee-woon Kim's comedy adventure "The Good, the Bad, the Weird," Joon-ho Bong's mystery thriller "Mother" and Dae-woo Kim's drama "The Servant."

The Asian redo will be helmed by up-and-comer Juhn Jaihong, a frequent Kim Ki-duk collaborator, whose debut "Beautiful" preemed at Berlin in 2008; and follow-up, post-war drama romance "Poongsan Dog," was commercially successful, grossing over $11 million worldwide.

Jay Lee at Barunson Co., and Comte at Gaumont negotiated the South Korean remake deal.

Gaumont will handle international sales -- except Asia -- on the Asian makeover.

Along with Olivier Marchal, Cavaye ranks as Gaul's top thriller helmer. He's now lensing his third and most ambitious pic yet, "Mea Culpa," a $20 million action thriller toplining Lellouche, Vincent Lindon ("Mademoiselle Chambon") and Nadine Labaki ("Where Do We Go Now"). Gaumont is shopping "Mea Culpa" at the AFM.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Ted coming to DVD on December 11


Ted will be released on DVD/Blu-Ray on December 11.

Blu-ray and DVD bonus features include:

  • Ted unrated version
  • Gag Reel
  • Ted – The Making Of
  • Feature Commentary
  • Bonus features exclusive to the Blu-ray:
  • Deleted scenes
  • Alternate takes
  • Teddy Bear Scuffle
  • Ultra Violet
  • Digital Copy


It is now available for pre-order at Amazon.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Watch the Trailer for 'Broken City'

Here is the trailer for "Broken City" starring Mark Wahlberg, Russell Crowe and Catherine Zeta-Jones. The movie is due in theaters in January.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Mark Wahlberg talks about the Entourage movie

In this clip from Hollyscoop, Mark Wahlberg says that the script for a movie version of "Entourage" is done and the cast will begin shooting the movie next spring.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's interview with Mark Wahlberg

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette interviewed Mark about his GNC project and his latest movies. Here is the article:

Actor, producer, health enthusiast Mark Wahlberg encourages others to determine their own destiny

When it comes to his own music, Mark Wahlberg jokes, "I try not to look back on it," and adds, concerning his kids, "I try to keep it as far away from them as possible."

So, no reunion of Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch will be forthcoming, but Mr. Wahlberg will be coming through here in a semi-musical capacity Thursday, appearing at Stage AE to introduce a concert by the rock band 3 Doors Down.

The star actor's purpose is two-fold, as the concert is a benefit celebrating MARKED, his new line of performance nutrition products for the Pittsburgh-based GNC. A portion of ticket sales will be donated to support the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation and the Pressley Ridge Foundation.

"I spent 15 years trying to find out what was good for you and what wasn't, and I've always wanted to be in the health and wellness business," he says. "People have approached me about endorsing certain products and stuff, but I met with Joe Fortunato and Tom Dowd [of GNC] and we hit it off, and I told them I desired to be in the business and what I wanted to do: that I wanted to start with vitamins and supplements and eventually create inner-city gyms, stuff like that, really try to attack obesity. I want to create opportunities for those who can't afford to have a trainer and a nutritionist to come to a place where they can learn about fitness and nutrition, and encourage people to live healthy lives. So this is kind of like a starting point."

From those Calvin Klein underwear billboards in 1992 that showed off his killer abs to his Golden Globe-nominated role in 2010's "The Fighter," the 41-year-old actor from Boston has been known to be in great shape. He's put that body to the test a few times for his roles, especially of late.

"I put on 40 pounds for 'Pain & Gain,' which is the body-building movie I did with Michael Bay, and then I had to drop 30 of it right away for '2 Guns,' which is the movie I did with Denzel Washington."

In "Pain & Gain," Mr. Wahlberg, who scored big this summer with the comedy "Ted," goes back into action with Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as part of a gang of Miami bodybuilders wrapped up in kidnapping, extortion and murder. For "2 Guns," derived from the Steven Grant graphic novel and also coming in 2013, they didn't want him to look quite so formidable as a naval officer who teams with a DEA agent for an undercover operation.

The physicality of a role obviously doesn't discourage him.

"There's a few things that go into the decision-making process. It's about the material, it's about the part, it's about the filmmaker. I usually look for roles where I can kind of transform myself in some sort of way. And I also try to find roles that I can connect to in some personal or emotional way, so there's a lot of factors."

In addition to those movies, he's about to star with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Russell Crowe in "Broken City," a crime thriller shot in New Orleans that's described as being in the "Chinatown" vein.

One of the other balls in the air is executive producing the big-screen version of "Entourage," the HBO comedy that was loosely based on his circle of friends and associates early in his career.

"The screenplay is finally finished," he says, "and hopefully we'll be in production no later than the spring for Christmas release later next year, or we'll figure out the best time to put it out, but we're really excited about it. It's been a long time coming."

The actor is juggling all these projects while raising four children -- two girls and two boys ages 2 to 9 -- with wife/model Rhea Durham.

"I just make sure that I plan my days wisely," he says. "If I've got to be working or training for work I'm up at 4:30 in the morning. I get as much done as possible before the kids wake up, and we get the kids up and off to school. But right now, about to start my fourth movie in like 12 months, it's been hard. I'm making sure I'm home every weekend, and the kids are coming and visiting me. It's hard, but I gotta make it work while I can."

Clearly, his kids are enjoying a very different upbringing than his own as the youngest of nine children to a Teamster dad and mom who was a nurse's aide and bank teller. Prior to becoming a rapper and getting his first role in 1993's "The Substitute," he roamed the streets as a violent gang member who ended up in prison. That's a big part of why he established the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation in May 2001.

"The most effective thing is to be able to communicate with them directly," he says of the kids, "because once they realize I came from the same kind of place as them, and was able to accomplish my dreams and goals, they can identify with me on a very personal level. I just tell them that things may be difficult, but if there's a will, there's a way, and with hard work and determination, you can create your destiny, with our help, the opportunities we create for you, give you a better chance of education, inspire you to go into the arts. Because, I never had anyone trying to create opportunities for me and I was very fortunate, but unfortunately, most of my friends weren't. Me, I've always had the desire. I just needed the opportunity. They realize if I could do it, they could do it."

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Webcast with Mark Wahlberg on Thursday

Mark Wahlberg will be answering fans' health and fitness questions on a live webcast which takes place on Thursday at 5 p.m. ET.

Check out the webcast here!

Monday, September 17, 2012

Sequel to 'Ted' coming

According to the Boston Globe, Universal Studios has confirmed that there will be a sequel to the Mark Wahlberg movie "Ted".

Another possible movie project with Mark - The Amory Wars

According to AVClub.com, Mark Wahlberg is planning on working on a new movie called The Amory Wars. It is about a "couple named Coheed and Cambria and their attempt to oust a superhuman dictator named Wilhelm Ryan".

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Mark Wahlberg Interview with StuTV

Mark Wahlberg was interviewed by StuTV. He talks about the movie "Ted" and more.

StuTV - Ted + Interview Mark Wahlberg from StuTV on Vimeo.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Mark Wahlberg at the 'Ted' premiere in Amsterdam

Mark recently attended the premiere of "Ted" in Amsterdam, Holland. Just Jared posted some photos from the event.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Update about the Entourage movie

Examiner posted a new article about the status of the upcoming Entourage movie.

Script for 'Entourage' movie is nearly complete

“Entourage” is coming back. Last year the enormously popular HBO series ended its eighth and final season with a Hollywood cliffhanger that easily set up the movie “Entourage” creator Doug Ellin is officially writing. As reported by Deadline today, September 12, 2012, Ellin is on page 110 of his screenplay and “gonna finish by Sunday (I pray).”

Ellin states that no one wants to see the movie green lighted by HBO more than the series’ WME packaging agent Ari Emanuel – the inspiration for Ari Gold – and executive producers Mark Wahlberg and Steven Levinson. Ellin jokingly explained that Wahlberg keeps promising “to kill me if I don’t write faster. Every time I see him, Mark says, ‘I’ve made 5 movies this year. Getgoing!”

Ellin took a bit of time off after spending a decade on the TV series that premiered on HBO in 2004. In the meantime, Ellin is under an overall contract with HBO and continued to develop for the network. He created an HBO comedy pilot starring Ed Burns that wasn’t picked up. Ellin and his producing partner Jim Lefkowitz also developed another HBO project, the boxing drama “Da Brick,” with Spike Lee and Mike Tyson and John Ridley. Ellin told Deadline that when he got down to writing the “Entourage” screenplay, he felt “renewed momentum”.

He says his script starts about 6 months after the TV series leaves off. “There are interesting developments about Ari as a studio head, and that’s still the first page for me. But foremost is the friendship between the guys who are still hanging out and going to fun parties, and it continues with the same characters.” Ellin has kept in touch with all the key cast members: Jeremy Piven (“Ari”), Adrian Grenier (“Vince”), Kevin Dillon (“Drama”), and especially Kevin Connolly (“E”) and Jerry Ferrara (Turtle”) who are apparently two of Ellin’s closest friends. The “Entourage” actors have been getting other gigs while HBO has been working with Ellin on developing the script.

HBO heads Richard Plepler and Michael Lombardo have clarified that thus far that they have only heard “a very general pitch” and need to read the completed script before moving forward. However, Ellin is optimistic, saying, “I’m excited. I feel a lot of positive energy,” he tells me. “Everywhere I go, people ask me, ‘Where’s the movie?’”

Deadline explains that the majority of “Entourage” fans want an R-rated movie filled with women, nudity, and cameos by Hollywood bigwigs as well as strong plotting and character arcs. Hopefully, Ellin has exceeded expectations, though Deadline also recalls its previous comment after the conclusion of the show, “Goodbye Entourage as a TV series. Now just don’t come back as an embarrassingly lame movie.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

'Broken City' photo and update

Entertainment Weekly posted a new photo from Mark Wahlberg's upcoming movie "Broken City". Click here to view! They say the movie will be opening January 18 and Mark will play New York cop-turned-PI named Billy Taggart.


Sunday, September 2, 2012

Concert featuring 3 Doors Down in Pittsburgh to benefit Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation

Here is a press release about an upcoming concert with 3 Doors Down in Pittsburgh hosted by Mark Wahlberg.

GNC, Mark Wahlberg & 3 Doors Down Host MARKED™ Benefit Concert to Raise Money for Underserved Youths
Pittsburgh event will help raise money for the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation and Pressley Ridge Foundation

PITTSBURGH, Aug. 29, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- GNC Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: GNC), the nation's largest specialty retailer of health, wellness and sports nutrition products, and actor/producer Mark Wahlberg today announced that they are hosting a benefit concert in celebration of MARKED™, a new line of performance nutrition products they developed in partnership. Rock band 3 Doors Down will headline the one-time only concert taking place in Pittsburgh, Pa on Thursday, September 20th at Stage AE. A portion of all ticket sales will be donated to support the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation, whose mission is to improve the quality of life for inner city youth, and the Pressley Ridge Foundation, which offers programs for troubled and developmentally challenged children.

"MARKED is more than just a line of products. It's a brand that is built on the principle that everyone should enjoy a healthy and supportive lifestyle," said Mark Wahlberg. "Currently, a portion of all sales of MARKED products are donated to my Foundation, so this concert only emphasizes our dedication to supporting the health and wellness of the next generation."

The MARKED line – consisting of seven sports and active nutrition products – provides the ultimate performance nutrition for anyone who wants to achieve their health and fitness goals. Every MARKED product has been rigorously tested for banned substances by HFLSports Science, a world-class sports anti-doping lab, and based on cutting edge nutritional science using only the highest quality ingredients.

"Working with Mark Wahlberg and 3 Doors Down to raise money for two great organizations is a testament to our commitment to help people of all ages 'live well,'" said Joe Fortunato, GNC President and CEO. "We're thrilled to be able to offer this unique opportunity for our consumers to 'Get MARKED' with Mark Wahlberg and 3 Doors Down this September."
In addition, ahead of the concert, on September 20th, Mark Wahlberg will participate in a webcast on MarkedNutrition.com with Men's Fitness Editor-in-Chief Michael De Medeiros to discuss the MARKED line and answer questions directly from fans. More details about how to join will be available at the website in September.  GNC is also deploying street teams around Pittsburgh that same day to present exclusive product offers and help inspire consumers to "Get MARKED."

"Mark has personally motivated me to get back on a healthy workout program and it's clear he takes 'living' well very seriously.  Thanks to his inspiration and guidance, I'm exercising regularly and have already lost 50lbs." said Tom Dowd, EVP, Chief Merchandising Officer and General Manager.

Tickets for the MARKED benefit concert can be purchased at all Ticketmaster locations. Charge by phone at 800-745-3000 or online at Ticketmaster.com. For more information visit StageAE.com
For more information about the MARKED line, visit MarkedNutrition.com or GNC.com. Connect with MARKED on Facebook: Facebook.com/MarkedNutrition and follow MARKED on Twitter @MarkedNutrition and share how you #GetMARKED!

About GNC
GNC Holdings, Inc., headquartered in Pittsburgh, PA, is a leading global specialty retailer of health and wellness products, including vitamins, minerals, and herbal supplement products, sports nutrition products and diet products, and trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "GNC."
As of June 30, 2012, GNC has more than 7,800 locations, of which more than 6,000 retail locations are in the United States (including 933 franchise and 2,157 Rite Aid franchise store-within-a-store locations) and franchise operations in 55 countries (including distribution centers where retail sales are made). The Company – which is dedicated to helping consumers Live Well – has a diversified, multi-channel business model and derives revenue from product sales through company-owned retail stores, domestic and international franchise activities, third party contract manufacturing, e-commerce and corporate partnerships. GNC's broad and deep product mix, which is focused on high-margin, premium, value-added nutritional products, is sold under GNC proprietary brands, including Mega Men®, Ultra Mega®, GNC Total Lean, Pro Performance®, Pro Performance® AMP, Beyond Raw®, and under nationally recognized third party brands.

For more than 75 years, GNC has been committed to bringing people superior GNC brand products using only the highest quality ingredients, manufactured under the strictest quality controls. Managing every stage of the process – from formulation to retailing – allows GNC to guarantee quality, purity and potency of GNC products.
Web: GNC.com | Twitter: @GNCLiveWell | Facebook: facebook.com/GNCLiveWell

About the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation
Mark Wahlberg and his family established the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation on the belief that no child should be prevented from living up to his or her potential due to financial hardship. The Foundation works to improve the quality of life for teens living in urban communities and distributes funds to support local youth service and enrichment programs nationwide. A life-long member and advocate of the Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Mark comes from a family of nine children with limited means and spent most of his afternoons and evenings at his local club. He credits a large part of his success to the fact that he was fortunate to spend his free time in a positive and nurturing environment. Visit www.markwahlbergyouthfoundation.com.

About Pressley Ridge Foundation
Pressley Ridge was founded in 1832, and offers programs for troubled and developmentally challenged children in Delaware, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. Internationally, the organization's programs serve children in Hungary and Portugal. More than 5,200 children and their family members are assisted each year. Pressley Ridge provides education programs that are interactive, individualized and holistic, encouraging students to celebrate their competence and become lifelong learners.
Media Contact:
Diana Torres-Bixby
diana.torres@edelman.com
212-819-4895

Boston Globe: Fans vie for a spot on the Wahlburgers menu

The Boston Globe posted a new article about Wahlburgers (the burger restaurant owned by Mark, Donnie and their brother Paul).  They had a contest for customers to come up with a new burger idea.  In the end a chicken sandwich ended up winning:)  Click here to read the article. 

Monday, August 27, 2012

New article about Mark in People Magazine

People.com has a new article about Mark and what his son Brendan thinks about his muscles.

Mark Wahlberg: My Son Doesn’t Want Me to Lose My Muscles

It’s no secret that Mark Wahlberg is famous for his fantastic physique, and he’s launched a line of supplements with GNC to further his connection to the fitness world. Still, even he has critics when it comes to his looks, the actor tells PEOPLE.

While working out to lose weight for his role in 2 Guns, Wahlberg’s 3½-year-old son Brendan asked, “Daddy, are you losing weight?” he recalls. “I said, ‘Yes, buddy.’ He said, ‘Don’t lose weight, don’t lose your muscles!’”

Wahlberg, 41, thinks his little boy may be hoping for his own set of biceps.

“His mother [Rhea Durham] and he had a picture of his face super-imposed on a body-builder’s body from some fitness magazine,” he says. “He’s obsessed with me carrying it in my briefcase. Whenever I open my briefcase to read my scripts, the first thing I see is that picture.”

Fitness has always been a big part of Wahlberg’s life, and he says he tries to teach his kids — Ella, 8½, Michael, 6½, Brendan and Grace, 2½ — about health whenever he can.

“My sons are always down in the gym with me, and they notice that daddy doesn’t like to eat a lot of sweets.” When he brought them donuts as a treat before he went off to a shoot, “they were like, ‘Daddy, where’s your donut?’” he recalls. “I said, ‘Nope, Daddy’s ok, I don’t want a donut today.’”

Saturday, August 25, 2012

2 Guns and Lone Survivor filming news

According to On Location Vacations, Mark is spending time in New Mexico to film "2 Guns" and he will also be back in late September to film "Lone Survivor".  "Lone Survivor" will also be filming in Arizona and Afghanistan.



Listen to Mark Wahlberg's Interview with Kiss 108

Mark Wahlberg did an interview with Matty in the Morning on Kiss 108 to talk about "Ted".

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Mark Wahlberg to produce a show on NBC

Mark has signed on to executive produce a new tv new NBC drama about a Beverly Hills law firm. Here is the announcement from The Hollywood Reporter:

NBC Buys Legal Drama from Mark Wahlberg and Stephen Levinson

The pair, along with scribe Paul Davies, has sold a drama project set at a high-powered Beverly Hills law firm.

Stephen Levinson and Mark Wahlberg are bringing their brand to NBC.

The pair, along with writer Paul Davies, nabbed a script order for a drama set at a high-powered Beverly Hills law firm. In this case, the firm's attorneys will have to negotiate their relationships with one another as they litigate their cases.

Davies is set to pen the Universal TV project, with Levinson and Wahlberg attached as executive producers.
In recent years, the frequent collaborators have found success behind the camera, with projects including HBO’s Entourage, Boardwalk Empire, In Treatment and How to Make It in America. On the broadcast side, they had a Rob Riggle comedy, Home Game, in contention at CBS in 2011.

For Davies' part, this is not his first piece of development at NBC. In 2011, he worked with Dark Toy's Todd Holland and Karey Burke on a comedy about twins separated at birth.

Wahlberg is repped by WME, Levinson’s Leverage and Sloane Offer; Levinson is repped by WME and Sloane Offer; and Davies is repped by WME and 3 Arts.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Mark Wahlberg and Justin Bieber movie

Justin Bieber talked to E! about working on a movie with Mark. Watch the video below!



Yahoo has also posted a new article about the possible Mark Wahlberg/Justin Bieber movie:

Justin Bieber wants to follow 'Marky Mark' Wahlberg into acting

In a new interview with E!, Bieber reveals that he "hopes to do some more acting." The pop star also confirms that he and Wahlberg, 41, are joining forces on a film project that's been buzzed about for a while: a basketball drama. "We've been working on this script for a long time now," Bieber reveals.

Wahlberg has also discussed teaming up with the teen in the movie he reportedly hopes to begin filming in the spring. "Think of [it as] like, 'The Color of Money,'" Wahlberg told MTV, referring to the 1986 movie about pool hustlers that starred Paul Newman and Tom Cruise. Wahlberg also joked that he was surprised to learn he'd be playing the older character in the film. "So I get this call from Paramount [with a story about] an old guy and a young guy. I'm like, 'Cool, let's get Jack [Nicholson]. Let's get Robert De Niro. Let's get Robert Duvall.' And they go, 'What about Garrett Hedlund?' I'm like, 'For what?' They're like, 'For the young guy.'"

Wahlberg, who's now a father of four, first experienced Bieber Fever thanks to his children. In fact, he even told Time magazine in 2010, that Bieber is the only person who could make him rap again! "If Justin Bieber asked me, I'd do that for my daughter," Wahlberg said. "She loves me to death, but she doesn't think I'm very cool, so that might turn it around." Then, he raved about Bieber in June. "Obviously, [Bieber] is a very good athlete," Wahlberg told MTV, referring to an episode of "The Diary of Justin Bieber" in which the teen showed off his skills on the court. "People have seen him on MTV; he can play. But I also really think he can act … There's not going to be any shortage of pushing him in getting that kind of strong performance out of him, if we get to make the movie. We're just going to have to make him realize that he's playing a character so he can't have the same hairdo."

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Mark Wahlberg photos from '2 Guns' Set

Check out some new photos of Mark Wahlberg on the set of "2 Guns" from PopSugar!

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Celebrity fan of Wahlburgers

Bon Appetit asked Steve Carell what he'd choose as his last meal on Earth and he replied "A cheeseburger, fries, and a shake from Wahlburgers, which is owned by Mark Wahlberg and his brothers Donnie and Paul. That burger holds up against all others."

Check out the full article here.

Mark Wahlberg shares some exercise tips

Men's Fitness has posted a short article in which Mark Wahlberg shares what he does when he works out his arms. Check it out here!

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

2 Guns to film in New Mexico

According to New Mexico Business Weekly, “2 Guns” will shoot in New Mexico for about three weeks during August and September in Albuquerque and Santa Fe.

Watch Mark Wahlberg's MARKED promotional video


Mark's line of performance nutrition products developed by GNC are now available. According to the press release, the MARKED line (which consists of seven sports and active nutrition products) provides the ultimate performance nutrition for anyone who wants to achieve their health and fitness goals.  Here is a video of Mark promoting the products.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Mark Wahlberg in talks to star in 'Neuromancer' movie

Producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura, who cast Mark Wahlberg in such movies as “Four Brothers” and “Shooter", has a new movie project in the works based off the book “Neuromancer” by William Gibson. Mark Wahlberg and Liam Neeson have recieved offers to star in the movie, no one has officially signed on. The movie is expected to be released in 2014. For more details, check out MovieHole.net.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Mark Wahlberg in Louisiana working on '2 Guns'

Mark is currently in Louisiana filming the movie "2 Guns". On Location Vacations has posted some photos of him and Denzel Washington on location.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Boston Herald: Mark Wahlberg to star in The Armory Wars

Here is a quick article about one of Mark's new upcoming projects!

MARK WAHLBERG has another big project in the works. The former Dot rat and his producing partner Stephen Levinson scored the rights to “The Armory Wars,”which Hollywood trade mag Variety describes as “an epic fantasy set in a futuristic alternate universe.” The comic book series is written by Coheed and Cambria lead singer Claudio Sanchez, who also based several albums on the comic.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Update on Wahlburgers restaurants

Wahlburgers, the restaurant owned by Mark, Donnie and Paul Wahlberg has announced they have hired former Panera CEO Rick Vanzura and that plans to open more Wahlburgers locations! Here is an article from PR Newswire:

Wahlberg Brothers, Paul, Mark and Donnie, Name New CEO to Lead Expansion of Wahlburgers


HINGHAM, Mass., July 10, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The Wahlberg brothers have named Rick Vanzura Chief Executive Officer of Wahlburgers to lead the expansion of this burger restaurant concept with its flagship location in Hingham, MA, just 15 miles south of Boston. Wahlburgers debuted last October following the successful launch in June 2010 of the brothers' first venture, Alma Nove, a fine dining waterfront restaurant named for their mother and nine siblings.

Formerly Executive Vice President and co-Chief Operating Officer of Panera, LLC, Vanzura will focus on growing the Wahlburgers brand with plans to open more nationwide beginning in the Boston area. "I'm extremely impressed by the Wahlbergs' commitment to build a world-class concept offering extraordinary food," said Vanzura. "This is not just another celebrity-driven restaurant. Paul is an exceptional chef, and his commitment to quality shows up in the restaurant every day."

According to Vanzura, Wahlburgers is a hometown Boston brand inspired by memories of the Wahlberg brothers' pre-celebrity days growing up in their Dorchester neighborhood. "We hope to share a little bit of our childhood times with our guests," explains Paul. "Our family has had some humble beginnings and some amazing success, but at Wahlburgers, it's all about the food."

"Mark and I are pleased to pair a proven executive like Rick with an outstanding chef like Paul to continue to develop Wahlburgers and grow our family business," said Donnie Wahlberg.

Wahlburgers menu features fresh ground beef burgers made from an exclusive blend of chuck, brisket and short rib, as well as turkey burgers, salmon burgers, all beef hot dogs, crispy fries, onion rings, tater tots, signature ice cream frappes, house made desserts and more. With full liquor service, Wahlburgers serves enticing adult frappes, cocktails and brews including the Wahlbrewski, unfiltered Pale Ale made by Harpoon especially for Wahlburgers.

Wahlburgers is located at 19 Shipyard Drive at the Launch at the Hingham Shipyard, in Hingham, MA. Lunch and dinner are served daily from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. For more information call 781-749-2110, or visit www.wahlburgers.com.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Mark Wahlberg interview on 94.7 Fresh FM

Here is a really short interview Mark did with 94.7 Fresh FM where he is asked about the reference to Lou Gehrig’s disease in the movie "Ted".

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Mark Wahlberg talks to The Telegraph

Mark Wahlberg was interviewed by The Telegraph, here is the article:

Mark Wahlberg, the star of Boogie Nights and The Fighter, might have cleaned up his act – the drugs, violence and the spell in prison are now just distant memories – but the 41-year-old reformed bad boy still flirts with trouble on occasion.

He cites a recent example, involving his wife, former model Rhea Durham, two of their four children and the TV cartoon series Family Guy.

“Now, I had never seen Family Guy,” begins Wahlberg, “but I had figured as it was a cartoon that I could sit down and watch it with my two eldest kids; the oldest is eight.” He figured wrong. “We watched the 150th episode.” Oh dear.

In this particular episode, two of the main characters, Stewie, a talking baby, and Brian, a talking dog, get locked in a bank vault and things get out of hand.

“The baby is locked in with the dog; the dog eats poo out of the baby’s diaper; then they are drinking alcohol; then they get this gun out of a safety deposit box... All this crazy stuff is going on and my wife comes barging in from the other room because she hears all this laughter and she immediately turns the TV off and yells at me for letting the kids watch it.”

Wahlberg looks momentarily sheepish but then leans in conspiratorially and whispers, as if his wife might still be next door, “But my kids and I were like, 'Okay, we want to see that again'. It was really funny stuff.”

In Wahlberg’s defence, the Family Guy viewings were a professional duty. He had just received the script for a movie called Ted, a live-action comedy written by Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, who also launched the cartoon shows American Dad and The Cleveland Show, and who would direct the film. The film came to Wahlberg via a recommendation from actress Mila Kunis, with whom the actor shot the 2008 computer-game adaptation Max Payne and the 2010 action-comedy Date Night. Kunis has voiced the Family Guy character Meg for more than a decade and has the same agent as Wahlberg.

“The script for Ted came in and was absolutely hilarious,” he recalls. “Then I started watching some of Seth MacFarlane’s work. We met, and we hit it off and so I committed to making Seth’s movie.”

The movie, which opens next month, introduces the audience to a young boy, who, lacking friends, wishes one Christmas that his teddy bear would come to life and be his best friend for ever. He gets his wish. The bear, Ted, becomes a celebrity, then fame passes and we pick up the story proper with a fully-grown boy (Wahlberg) pursuing a dope-hazed and mostly aimless existence with his now quite unruly bear. He is also dating a very attractive girl (Kunis). Ribald adventures ensue; Flash Gordon fans are in for a treat.

“It is a live-action film with this motion-capture teddy bear,” explains Wahlberg. The writer-director, MacFarlane, voices the bear, a knee-high wiseacre whose personality recalls those of Peter and Brian from Family Guy.

“The humour in the movie I guess you could say is similar to Family Guy,” continues Wahlberg, “but Seth is probably pushing things a little bit more in this movie.

"I think it is going to offend more people than Family Guy does but, hey I didn’t write it.” He laughs, “I told them I want that as a disclaimer!”
The film represents something of a departure for Wahlberg. His Hollywood career stretches back almost 20 years but comedies are rare – there’s Rock Star, I Heart Huckerbees, Date Night, The Other Guys but only the latter two are played for straight up laughs, and both are squarely rooted in the action genre.

“I grew up in a tough neighbourhood and it’s cool if you’re playing a tough guy,” he says, “but playing the vulnerable guy or someone who’s not so cool, that used to be a concern for me.”

Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Wahlberg grew up in the small town of Dorchester. After his father left when he was 11 years old, Wahlberg, the youngest of five, slipped into a life of drugs and petty crime. At the age of 16, he robbed a pharmacy while under the influence of a hallucinogenic, knocking one man unconscious and leaving another blinded in one eye. He pleaded guilty to assault and was given a two-year sentence, serving 45 days.

The stint in jail changed his life, and upon release he worked hard to find fame as a pop star, recording two albums with Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch. Even as he progressed into film, however, in the wake of his breakout performance as Dirk Diggler in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1997 hit Boogie Nights, he struggled at times to shake off the residue of his youth.

“It is no problem playing a bad-ass or a hard guy, I love doing that,” he adds, “but I decided I wanted to be an actor. Too often I have wanted approval from my peers back home and respect from guys in general, but to be a good actor you’ve got to be able to do all kinds of different things and certainly be vulnerable.”

There is no doubt that Wahlberg is most at home when proving invulnerable. His CV is riddled with adrenalin-pumped actioners, like Three Kings, The Italian Job, Four Brothers, The Departed, Shooter, We Own the Night and The Fighter. In some of them, he’s rather good.

He’s a successful filmmaker off-camera, too, executive producing the hit TV series Entourage that ran between 2004-2011 and which was loosely drawn upon Wahlberg’s own experiences in showbiz, and the current HBO Prohibition drama Boardwalk Empire. He also undertook producer duties on The Fighter and his most recent action film, Contraband. An English-language remake of the Icelandic film Reykjavik-Rotterdam, with Wahlberg in the leading role, Contraband scooped almost $100 million at the worldwide box office, a good return on a $25 million budget.

“I just thought that Contraband would be an interesting, fresh spin on the heist thriller,” says Wahlberg of his decision to produce the movie. “Usually these days you have to go outside Hollywood to find something interesting and different.

“There are a lot of really talented filmmakers and storytellers out there.” To direct Contraband, he hired Baltasar Kormákur, who was the lead actor in the Icelandic original. Wahlberg smiles. “So for me it was either go and look for interesting material out there, or just do a superhero sequel!”

He hopes his next project might be another English-language remake of a Scandinavian hit – he’s been lobbying for the chance to produce and star in a version of the Norwegian crime-thriller Headhunters, which was based on the best-selling novel by Jo Nesbo, with Morten Tyldum as director.

“I am campaigning to be able to remake Headhunters and also to have that filmmaker direct it with me as producer,” says Wahlberg. “I saw it for the first time and couldn’t take my eyes off it. It’s probably the slickest movie I have seen in ten years.”

Perhaps not surprisingly, his research landed him in hot water again. “I was supposed to pick up my wife and kids at the airport but I couldn’t tear myself away from the film. I was like, 'I need to go get my wife and the kids but I am finding it hard to stop watching this thing’.”

He eventually made the pick up, but it was close. Wahlberg might have cleaned up his act, but he still flirts with trouble on occasion.
'Contraband’ is released on DVD/Blu Ray on Monday, July 16. 'Ted’ opens on Aug 1

Monday, July 2, 2012

Watch clips of Mark Wahlberg on Piers Morgan Tonight

Here are some clips of Mark Wahlberg on Piers Morgan Tonight. He talks about the importance of knowing his lines and the dedication he puts into acting and in the second clip he talks about getting his high school diaploma.



Mark's son meets Dwayne Johnson

Here is a short article from Star Pulse in which he talks about what happened when his son met The Rock.

On the set of his new movie "Pain and Gain," Mark Wahlberg's 3-year-old son punched his father's co-star Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in the genitals.

During filming, Wahlberg asked Johnson to stop by his trailer so his children could meet the former wrestler. He didn't realize his son's painful penchant for greeting men would apply to the three year old's hero.

Wahlberg recalls, "They're in the trailer, he gives my one son a high five and then the next one he goes to give him a high five and my son... (punched him) right in the nuts. I'm like, 'What are you doing, dude?' And he (Johnson) looks at me like I made him do it or something. I thought he was gonna try to, like, pick me up and slam me."

The film centers on a group of bodybuilding criminals and is directed by Michael Bay.

Listen to Mark Wahlberg on the Dan Patrick Show

Mark did an interview on the Dan Patrick Show last week. He talks about basketball, his "man cave", boxing, a movie version of "Entourage" and more.

Click here to download! (Mark's interview is about 11 minutes into it)


Sunday, July 1, 2012

"Ted" is Number 1 movie in America

Here are some early box office reports for Ted's opening weekend.

Washington Post
‘Ted’ outstrips ‘Mike,’ $54M to $39M, in big box-office weekend for Hollywood

Alt Film Guide
Box office: Ted Movie far surpasses expectations.


Newser
Ted Tops Magic Mike With $54M Debut


Mark Wahlberg talks about his childhood fantasies

In this short clip from On the Red Carpet Mark says he used to have a toy monkey and one of the childhood dreams was to play for the Boston Celtics.

Mark Wahlberg talks about the New England Patriots losing the Super Bowl

Contact Music reports that Mark was so upset over the New England Patriots losing the Super Bowl that it even started a fight with his wife. Here is the article:

Mark Wahlberg has been banned from watching the Super Bowl at home with friends following a row with his wife after his beloved New England Patriots lost to rivals the New York Giants in February (12). 
The passionate Boston, Massachusetts sports fan was so upset when the Giants won he kicked all his pals out of his house and then yelled at his wife Rhea Durham when she told him to calm down. 
The movie star admits he has regretted the confrontation ever since and now he accepts he may never be able to watch his Patriots in the American football final if his wife is at home. 
He says, "She was so upset I wasn't able to make it up to her until Valentine's Day... She said, 'You know, you're never watching the game again (at home),' but now she just hopes that the Patriots make it back to the Super Bowl so she can go on, like, a week vacation." 
Wahlberg admits he's still coming to terms with the Giants' come-from-behind victory: "It was bad. I always tell myself I'm not gonna get upset, but you just can't help it." 
In fact, he's more cut up about the defeat that Patriots quarterback Tom Brady. 
Wahlberg adds, "He's doing good. He handled it better than I did. He came to visit me... and Tom feels, like, they're gonna win this year."

Mark Wahlberg interview with ABC News

In this clip, Mark talks to ABC News about the movie "Ted". Mark also does some "Family Guy" impressions and they show some behind the scenes footage from the set of "Ted"!

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Read movie reviews for the movie "Ted"

Here are some reviews for the movie "Ted":

Kansas City Star
Review: 'Ted': So cuddly, so wrong, so hilarious

A.V. Club
Ted Review

New York Times
'Ted,' by Seth MacFarlane, With Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis

USA TODAY
Mark Wahlberg's 'Ted' is funny but frayed

MLive.com
Movie review: 'Ted' pairs Mark Wahlberg with Seth McFarlane's profane plush bear in crude comedy


Roger Ebert
Movie Review: Ted

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Mark Wahlberg interviewed by Men's Fitness

Here is an interview with Mark from Men's Fitness. He talks about putting on weight for movie roles, how his kids have influenced him, the importance of God in his life and more.


Mark Wahlberg had blood on his arm when he arrived on set in Miami for our cover shoot, and he didn't even realize it. As we were chatting prior to getting set up, I pointed to the spot on his forearm and said, "Tough scene today?" He shrugged, smiled, and grabbed a tissue to wipe away the crimson. "It's makeup," he chuckled.

I won't lie; I was a little disappointed. I'm not a sadist, but showing up to a shoot bleeding is the equivalent of finishing a race on a broken foot. On the other hand, I also wasn't surprised I believed it was real. That's the thing about the 41-year-old actor and star of the upcoming comedy Ted (about a crude teddy bear come to life, and the brainchild of Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane): He's believable in everything he does. Funky Bunch frontman? We bought it. Calvin Klein model? Sold. Tough guy? Definitely. Funny? For sure. Award-winning leading man? No question about it.

Whatever Mark Wahlberg does, he does well—and if you've been paying attention, he does a lot. Actor, entrepreneur, producer, philanthropist, husband, and father—there doesn't seem to be a role he can't fill with relative ease. For his MF cover story, he almost interviewed himself.

"What do you want to talk about?" Wahlberg asked when we sat down. Celebrities don't ask you that. This approach is all too rare, but it served to open a door to something different—something, perhaps, that hasn't been said for a man about whom so much has already been written. I was ecstatic to let him take the wheel and tell me what he wanted me to say about the things he thinks are important. As ever, Wahlberg didn't disappoint.

"I don't even know what cool is anymore!" The statement, totally unprompted, is indicative of a man who knows his past—and his place in the world. It's also quite telling of his actually being a lot cooler than even he thinks he is. And, truthfully, Wahlberg really is cool.

He's not Marky-Mark cool. He's not Dirk Diggler cool. He's Mark Wahlberg cool—a reflection of everything he's done and the work ethic he employs, as well as everywhere he's been and the experiences he's learned from along the way. "I can't forget where I came from," he told me, lacking any of the pretension that could be layered in such a statement.

Born in the Dorchester section of Boston, Mass., seasoned with a checkered youth that saw him split his time equally between the backseat of squad cars and secluded makeout spots with members of the opposite sex, Wahlberg had been the bad boy and played the role well. But that's not who he is right now: "I try to be as respectful as possible. My wife and little girls expect it of me," Wahlberg says.

He doesn't lament his past, but he is intensely aware of it, and it's likely the main catalyst, along with raising his four children, for his creation of the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation. "Too many kids have fallen through the cracks," he remarked to me with a sincerity that a presidential candidate would envy.

"I wouldn't be able to sleep at night if I had this amazing life and didn't give back." And indeed he does give back. The Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation alone has raised more than $1 million since its inception.

For his role as pro boxer Micky Ward in The Fighter, he employed a heavy dose of fight training—a style he now uses to work himself into shape for every role. "There's really nothing more demanding than boxing training," he says, noting that slimming down for Ted "meant playing basketball and doing serious cardio."

Wahlberg's seamless transition from serious action roles into comedy doesn't surprise anyone these days—especially Ted's director, Seth MacFarlane. "Mark is really the only guy who could play this role," the Family Guy creator told me during a phone interview, sounding a lot like Brian Griffin.

MacFarlane went on to say that he wanted Wahlberg for the lead actor in his directorial debut because the role "required the delicacy of a comedic performance that would be funny but wouldn't take it too far into the unreal." In fact, according to MacFarlane, "Mark gives a hilarious performance that's vulnerable and real."

The tone on set was one of collaboration and good humor. MacFarlane noted that Wahlberg and Mila Kunis did "a lot of laughing together." The bottom line for MacFarlane, and studio execs, however, has to be that, as MacFarlane himself told me, "Mark made the difference between this movie sinking or swimming."

Wahlberg is very proud of the film, though he downplays his own performance in favor of simply saying that he believes "Ted will reach a much larger audience than any of my other films because it's a very creative project that will surprise a lot of people."

He also downplays the massive transformation he had to undergo for his upcoming role in Pain and Gain (about a pair of real-life Florida bodybuilders trapped in an extortion ring). "I had two months to get into shape for the role, I was pounding heavy weight, and I packed on about 40 pounds for it," Wahlberg told me, also mentioning that he crafted his own program to gain the muscle.

All told, he went from 165 pounds to a thick 205, likely his most muscular ever. He used his preparation for the role as a challenge to best his efforts in years past: "I wanted to surpass the goals I had when I was younger—right now I'm benching 335."

But he's also keenly aware that the demands on his body to maintain such size greatly increase his risk for injuries. He hopes in the future to always "stay around 180-to-185 [pounds], train regularly with athletic moves, and have no real aches and pains at all." He'll be on that path at the time you're reading this, as he's leaning down again for the upcoming film 2 Guns with Denzel Washington.

Wahlberg's ability to morph into fitting into the clothing of all these characters is as impressive as his ability to be believable in all the roles. When I said as much, he thanked me—but not in the typical Hollywood "I know I'm awesome, but I shouldn't say it, so "I'm glad you did" demeanor you'd expect.

He stopped, thought for a second, and said, "I've always wanted to try to do it all. Right now, I'm shooting 12 hours per day, I go to bed early, get up at 4 a.m. to train, then I eat, take my supplements, spend some time on my lines, and get to work." He concluded the stream of consciousness simply by saying, "Hard work does pay off.

Truly a sentiment that the Mark Wahlberg many people like to talk about—the high school kid with an attitude—invoke on a routine basis because it highlights who he was.

And, indeed, you can tell his story as a dramatic turnaround, as many already have. But when you talk to Wahlberg, you can tell that the man he was certainly isn't who he is now, and that he hasn't been that kid in a very long time.

This is a seasoned, smart, savvy businessman who won't be acting for life—unless he chooses to. His evolution to becoming this powerhouse didn't happen overnight, but it's past transition now. There are no lurking skeletons in the closet or hidden secrets that will take him back to who he was.

In many ways, however, the reinvention of Mark Wahlberg and ultimately who he is today is vastly more impressive than any of his roles or anything he has done in his colorful past. "I start every day on my hands and knees in prayer," Wahlberg told me, eyeing me to see if I'd be a cynic or at all skeptical about the statement. I wasn't.

In fact, Wahlberg is clearly not playing the part of a devout Roman Catholic; it really is a big part of his life. Staying quiet, he could sense I was leaving it open for him to unpack the statement, especially in light of his youthful image and current roles where he carries more guns than rosaries.

He recounted an all-too-common story of being a kid who didn't have an option about attendance at Sunday mass, but now he openly says, "God is more important [in my life] now." He didn't preach it at all—he was just honest enough to say it, which is something many in the public eye stay away from. And maybe the Wahlberg of old, or many of his contemporaries, would sidestep being honest about something that personal, but as with anything in his life at the present time, he endeavors to be, as he told me, "as real as possible."

And that's exactly who Mark Wahlberg really is, a genuine article who has been through as much in life as he has onscreen and someone who has grown as a man and outside of the shadow of a persona.

I asked him if he had undergone any of these changes as a result of being a father. It was a soft question, but his answer was disproportionately intense. "Having daughters made me a real man," he told me with the tone of a dad who values being a protector and role model. It makes sense and seems to be a reflection of his current image in the public eye.

"I don't think about my public image," he said, almost anticipating my next question, "I can't control it. I just try to do the right thing." And he's very aware of making sure he's doing the right thing—so much so that when I was thanking him for taking the time to sit and talk (for much longer than anyone had promised—no doubt to the dismay of any handlers, producers, or the like), he asked me if there was anything else I needed to know.

It was a broad enough question that I figured I could answer with an equally broad query: "Who is the real Mark Wahlberg?" I asked. His answer didn't surprise me and had no hyperbole attached to it: "The real Mark Wahlberg is the most blessed individual ever, a devoted servant of God, humble with a huge appreciation for everything, and a hard worker."

Friday, June 29, 2012

Listen to Mark Wahlberg on Paul and Young Ron

Mark Wahlberg talked with Paul and Young Ron this morning. They talk about the basketball, "Ted" and more. Listen to the audio below.

Listen to Mark Wahlberg on Rock 105.3

Mark Wahlberg did an interview with Rock 105.3. Listen to the audio below. You'll have to fast forward to about 17 minutes for where they start talking about Mark, and 22 minutes for the actual interview.

Listen to Mark Wahlberg Interview With Mark And Mercedes

Mark was was on-air with Mark and Mercedes on Mix 94.1 this morning.

Click here to listen!

KS1075 talks with Mark Wahlberg

Mark Wahlberg did an interview with the KS1075 Morning Show to talk about "Ted" and more. Here is the audio:

Listen to Mark Wahlberg on the Dave Ryan Show

Mark did an interview on the Dave Ryan Show on KDWB this morning. Mark talks about his days as a bachelor, how he taped "Ted" without someone there and more. Here is the audio:

Watch Mark Wahlberg on Conan

Here are some clips of Mark Wahlberg on the Conan show last night:



Thursday, June 28, 2012

Mark Wahlberg's interview with Machinima

Machinima interviewed Mark and other cast members from "Ted". Mark talks about smoking "weed" in the movie, Boston accents and more.


Video courtesy of machinima

Mark talks about fight in 'Ted'

Mark talks about doing a fight scene with Ted in this video clip from MTV News:

Mark Wahlberg's interview with VH1

Here is a short interview clip from VH1 in which Mark talks about challenges when filming Ted.

Mark Wahlberg talks to USA Today

Mark Wahlberg was interviewed in a recent article from USA Today.

BURBANK, Calif. – Mark Wahlberg stares at the motorcycle helmet at his feet, contemplating wearing it during an appearance on Conan O'Brien's talk show.

Someone backstage bet him $20 he wouldn't, and Wahlberg is weighing the shock value. "I ought to just run out with it on and freak him out," he says of the oblivious host. "He wouldn't know what to do."

A stagehand tells Wahlberg he's on in 10 seconds, and the star walks out sans headgear. But he was tempted.

"Especially in this business, if someone says you can't do something, you just want to do it more," Wahlberg says.
Even if it means dancing like a klutz, singing like a tone-deaf lounge act and wrestling a foul-mouthed teddy bear, all stunts he had to pull for Ted, a comedy that opens Friday.
The role seems an unlikely match for a guy who's cut like a boxer, swears like a sailor and did two months in a Boston jail for assault when he was a kid.
But the odd fit can suit Wahlberg. The 41-year-old father of four played a porn star in Boogie Nights, an anti-petroleum nut in I Heart Huckabees and a dense gumshoe in The Other Guys.
But Ted may be Wahlberg's largest on-screen leap yet. The story about a teddy bear who comes to life and becomes a fluffy nightmare (think Teddy Ruxpin on coke) initially struck Wahlberg as so outlandish that he declined on the concept alone.
"It was a little too out there," the two-time Oscar nominee says in Conan's green room, while waiting for Mitt Romney's five sons to finish their shtick. "I wasn't exactly looking to do a movie with a teddy bear."
But after meeting Ted director and Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, his interest was piqued.
"Thirty pages in, and I was sold," says Wahlberg, who had never seen a Family Guy episode before taking the part. "It's really a story about friendship, relationships — you forget it's about a bear."
He grins, shakes his head, chuckles. He knows there's no escaping the film's hook. "Though (Ted) does do some crazy (stuff)."
That stuff includes snorting a lot of blow, inviting many a hooker to his apartment and getting randy with inanimate objects. Despite the tawdry antics, Wahlberg agreed to do the R-rated film as long as he didn't have to do three scenes: a clumsy dance number, singing a flat-note ballad at the Hollywood Bowl and a brawl with a teddy bear that leaves him with a crushed penis.
He wound up doing all three.
"What can I say?" Wahlberg says with a shrug. "Seth is a sweetheart and a smart guy. He's convincing."


Enjoy four clips from 'Ted'
A Hollywood multitasker
So, too, can be Wahlberg. For all the ridicule he's taken for being rapper Marky Mark and a Calvin Klein underwear model, Wahlberg has become one of Hollywood's most powerful fortysomethings.
Consider: Wahlberg has been nominated for two Oscars (a supporting-actor nomination for 2006's The Departed and a best-picture nomination for 2010's The Fighter, which he starred in and co-produced ). He's also produced more than two dozen titles, including HBO's Entourage and Boardwalk Empire. He's developing an Entourage movie, though no release date is set.
"He doesn't get enough credit for it, but Mark is a guy of a million different colors," MacFarlane says.
Still, MacFarlane concedes he was looking for the same hue most directors seek when they hire the Boston native: something dark.
"There really was a very short list of actors who could have played this part," MacFarlane says. "The idea of the bear's existence is ridiculous enough. The rest had to be realistic, and there aren't many guys who can pull off an R-rated comedy."
Adult themes, Wahlberg can do. He almost didn't get out of Boston's impoverished Dorchester neighborhood, where he clashed with cops and did two months on various theft and assault charges.


VIDEO: 'Ted' Hollywood premiere
Since then, Wahlberg has gained, if anything, a reputation as one of Hollywood's more conservative residents. He takes his family to Mass weekly, though he laments getting more scripts handed to him during service.
"The moment he comes on set, he feels like a big brother," says co-star Mila Kunis. "I just felt, if I ever needed it, he'd stand up for me."
After heavy turns as a boxer in The Fighter and a smuggler in this year's surprise winter hit Contraband ($67 million), Wahlberg says he was looking for lighter fare. He's a fan of hopscotching: After playing a soft-spoken mathematician in 2008's The Happening, Wahlberg says he took the action lead in Max Payne later that year "so I could blow (stuff) up."
Ted was nothing if not a change of pace, though its Hangover-style humor was a draw. He's done nearly three dozen films, not one of which he's allowed his children, ages 2 to 8, to watch. Though most of his films are too adult-themed for kids, one, he admits, is off-limits because he's embarrassed: 2001 remake Planet of the Apes remains one of his worst movie experiences.
"One of the kids saw it when we were flipping channels and said the monkeys looked funny," Wahlberg says. "I couldn't disagree."
Relating to a talking teddy
That's when Wahlberg swore off movies about talking animals.
But parenting, he says, has softened his view. His goal is to make a movie his kids can watch someday.
"The more I read (the script) and talked with Seth, the more I realized it's about trying to keep this balance between your friendship and your relationship," he says.
One of those relationships just happens to be with a computer-generated teddy bear. Wahlberg says that for all the film's silliness, Ted posed an acting first: working in CGI.
In every scene, the bear (voiced by MacFarlane) was inserted digitally after the rest was shot. Which meant nearly half of Wahlberg's scenes went without an actual co-star, including the heavily advertised fight between Ted and Wahlberg's character, John Bennett.
For that scene, Wahlberg gripped severed teddy bear arms and threw himself about a hotel room, emulating a brawl.
Wahlberg grins recounting the scene, one he thought he'd never do.
"It's a little freaky at first; I enjoy working with other actors," he says. "But you gotta push yourself. If you're not going to mix it up, you're not going to have fun."