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Sometimes Hollywood cares too much: Fresh off a bummer of a premiere for The Man, the producers of the Eugene Levy/Samuel L. Jackson comedy think that a special screening of their movie will help to lift the spirits of the victims of Hurricane Katrina:

Producer Robert N. Fried said he hopes the film will work on a very large screen — to the thousands of Katrina victims housed in the Houston Astrodome.

"There are logistical issues, ratings issues, this is PG-13," said Fried. "But we're gonna try to do that.

""We're in the entertainment business," added [The Man star Samuel L.] Jackson. "So what we should do is entertain these people: Take the movie, give it to these people in the Astrodome and whatever these shelters are where all these people are, have big screening for them. At least give them an hour and a half to not think about the place they are in, or the plight they are in. And, hopefully, we can make them laugh for an hour and a half. It's been a while since they've had something to laugh about."

Clearly, their hearts are in the right place, but we think that in the emotion of the moment they're overlooking a surefire way to bring some much needed escapism to the Astrodome's temporary tenants. They don't need The Man, they need a rough cut of another, much more breathlessly anticipated Samuel L. Jackson flick, one that's not a wacky, ill-conceived buddy comedy. That's right. They need Snakes on a Plane.