close menu

Music Geek Track of the Week: Charlie Sheen and Katheryn Winnick. Really

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/75413682″ params=”” width=” 100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

This month Charlie Sheen will be making his first big box office appearance since things got a little crazy for him (cocaine, hookers, #winning). Fortunately for us, film is not the only medium in which Sheen is making a comeback — he’s recorded a cover of the airy, charming “Águas de Março” with costar Katheryn Winnick, which will appear on the official soundtrack for A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III.

Sheen and Winnick trade flirty lines over guitar and sumptuous strings until the end of the track, when Winnick presumably plants a fat kiss on his cheek. I don’t know why I am really digging the idea of a Charlie Sheen comeback, but “Águas de Março” is helping. It’s things like this that make me really regret studying a dead language in high school. Blerg.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RtlXSgbXzbo?rel=0&w=615&h=346]

The Top 5 DC Animated TV Series Christmas Episodes

The Top 5 DC Animated TV Series Christmas Episodes

article
Exclusive Interview: SUITS Creator/Showrunner Aaron Korsh

Exclusive Interview: SUITS Creator/Showrunner Aaron Korsh

article
THE SENIOR CLASS is a Beautiful Animated Film with an Ugly Message (Fantasia Review)

THE SENIOR CLASS is a Beautiful Animated Film with an Ugly Message (Fantasia Review)

article

Comments

  1. Miguel David says:

    As a Portuguese citizen, I must point out that this is the funniest thing i’ve heard in my life.

    Even though I can’t understand half of what they’re saying, good effort.

  2. Matt Grosinger says:

    Ah that is right, because it is famously a Brazilian song. Thanks for the correction Bri.

  3. Bri says:

    No one has told you it’s Portuguese and not Spanish yet? Ok. I’m surprised, but that’s fine. It’s in the Youtube video title.

    Never regret taking Latin. English is a Germanic language with a gigantic Romance vocabulary that stems from Latin. Taking Latin helps you understand English, and it’s an adorably dead language. No regrets.