Sabtu, 22 Desember 2012

Is ‘Christmas Story 2′ Sacrilegious?

“A Christmas Story,” the 1983 holiday classic you grew up watching religiously with your family. You still remember all the lines: “You’ll shoot your eye out.” “Ho-Ho-Ho.” “FRA-GEE-LAY… it must be Italian!” You still want a Red Rider BB gun even though you have no idea who Red Rider is.


Now Warner Premier, the skuzzy, recently shuttered Direct-to-DVD arm of Warner Bros., has produced a low-budge direct sequel, “A Christmas Story 2,” and while many who love the first one will see it out of sheer morbid curiosity, we are definitely not about to drink the Kool-Aid… or in this case, Ovaltine.


If you’re as big a fan of Bob Clark’s 1983 original as we are, then you probably know he already made a direct sequel ten years later, titled “It Runs in the Family” (sometimes referred to as “My Summer Story”). While that movie doesn’t hit the same bullseye the original did, it had a great cast in Charles Grodin, Mary Steenburgen, and a young Kieran Culkin taking over for Peter Billingsley as the precocious Ralphie Parker.


Besides the same director, “My Summer Story” also had something else this new “sequel” lacks: Jean Shepherd, literally THE VOICE of the film, who not only narrated all the prior movie adventures of Ralphie but also wrote the autobiographical screenplays. His warm, nostalgic recollections of childhood defeats and triumphs within a mildly dysfunctional household are what imbued “A Christmas Story” with the Rabelaisian wit that made it so relatable.


If the above-the-line talent on “Christmas Story 2? (or “Christmas Story Boooooooo” as we like to call it) had an ounce of creative prestige to their name, that would be one thing, but sadly it’s not the case. So who are the perpetrators of this cinematic war crime? Slouched in the director’s chair is Brian Levant, a guy who at one time had a gift for cranking out harmless, mainstream family fare (“Beethoven,” “The Flintstones”) but must have forgot to send some studio execs birthday cards because his last few films have been made-for-TV “Scooby Doo” movies. Yikes!


The screenwriter is Nat Mauldin, a TV writer whose big screen claim to fame seems to be bad remakes (“The Preacher’s Wife,” “Doctor Dolittle,” “The In-Laws”). It’s pretty safe to say that without the guiding voice of Sheherd, both literally and figuratively, this new movie seems like nothing more than tired rehashing of gags that worked in the first movie, like giving the old man a new leg lamp. Yawn.


The only notable cast member is Daniel Stern, taking over for the delightful Darren McGavin as the curseword-spewing old man. Yes, Stern was at one time an impressive actor in classics like “Diner,” “City Slickers,” and “Home Alone,” and his narration as the older version of Fred Savage on “The Wonder Years” was in many ways channeling the spirit of Jean Shepherd. However, having not made a good showing in nearly two decades it’s safe to say that his heart probably ain’t in it anymore, not to begrudge a guy a paycheck gig.


Instead of cranking out an in-name-only sequel as a transparent marketing gimmick (we will honestly pay more for a DVD set that does NOT include #2), someone should release “My Summer Story” on Blu-ray, along with some of the other made-for-TV movies from the ’80s that Shepherd made based on these characters. Those include “Ollie Hopnoodle’s Haven of Bliss” starring a “Stand By Me”-era Jerry O’Connell, and “The Great American Fourth of July and Other Disasters” starring none other than Matt Dillon as Ralphie! Video archaeologists get on that now, please.

Categories: Features

Tags: a christmas story, A Christmas Story 2

FRANKENWEENIE (2012)

Tanggal Rilis : 5 October 2012 (USA)
Jenis Film : Animation | Comedy | Horror
Diperankan Oleh : Winona Ryder, Catherine O'Hara and Martin Short

Ringkasan Cerita FRANKENWEENIE (2012) :

When young Victor’s pet dog Sparky (who stars in Victor’s home-made monster movies) is hit by a car, Victor decides to bring him back to life the only way he knows how. But when the bolt-necked “monster” wreaks havoc and terror in the hearts of Victor’s neighbors, he has to convince them (and his parents) that despite his appearance, Sparky’s still the good loyal friend he’s always been.

The 10 Most Overrated Movies of 2012

While critics busy themselves tearing down very worthy movies, there are some films they all flock to like sheep. An equal mix of box-office juggernauts and Oscar-bait, these are almost always uniformly prestige pictures by big names that barely deserve attention, let alone praise to the heavens.

Here are ten films (with totally unjustified Rotten Tomatoes score) that don’t deliver, despite those film snobs’ reviews.

Having read the script prior to seeing the film, we can say that something clearly got lost in translation, as on the page Quentin Tarantino’s spaghetti western take on slavery had depth and excitement on the level of “Inglourious Basterds.” The finished product starts off promising, with great buddy chemistry between Jamie Foxx and Christoph Waltz, but devolves into a disingenuous (and literal) mess in the third act. Like “Kill Bill: Vol. 1? before it, Tarantino squanders character in service of a bloodbath, mistaking squibs for emotions and n-words for punctuation marks. The biggest disappointment of the year.

With all due respect to Steven Spielberg, a true American master in every sense of the word, he coulda done better. This talky talk-a-thon is rife with great character work and has an appropriate sense of gravitas, but it never truly gets to the heart of matters. Granted, this is not at “Amistad” levels of historical boredom, but it’s dull nonetheless. Also, as good Daniel Day-Lewis is, we still think Liam Neeson could have owned as Honest Abe if Spielberg hadn’t dragged his feet for so long.

Tim Burton must stop. After decades of remakes, sequels, adaptations, more remakes and trading card adaptations, the goth maestro is finally remaking his own films. If you told us a decade ago that he was going to make a black-and-white stop motion animated movie in his “unique” (mostly stolen from Edward Gorey) style, we might have been tickled pink, but now we’re just seeing red. Take a sabbatical and find yourself again, Tim, ’cause this is turning into the cinematic equivalent of Andy Warhol painting pictures of soup cans.

Why, god? Christopher Nolan could have put a bow on things with 2008's “The Dark Knight,” but no, he and Warners needed that Batman Trilogy box set on the shelves for Christmas. As a result, we get this baffling superhero concoction that plays out as a silly James Bond escapade with capes and countless head-scratching moments: Why does Batman burn his symbol in the bridge? How does a hard punch fix a broken back? Why did Gotham send ALL its cops into the tunnels? Who took Bane’s inhaler?

Ang Lee made a perfectly serviceable adaptation of Yann Martel’s pretentious yarn about finding God in yourself, blah blah blah. So much of the book was about internal soul searching, something that all the CGI in the universe can’t impart to viewers. The visuals are resplendent, but fishing while drunk has the same effect and costs less than a 3-D ticket. Jean-Pierre Jeunet, (“Amelie”), who was originally attached to direct, would no doubt have turned in something far more visually bold and less vanilla.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s study of post-war trauma and psychological brinksmanship between a psychotic vet (Joaquin Phoenix) and a New Age fraud (Philip Seymour Hoffman) looked like an Oscar front-runner a few months ago but has turned into an also-ran. Maybe that’s because it’s not nearly as searing an indictment of $cientology as it should have been, or perhaps Anderson needs a stronger story spine to hang his intense actor workshops on.

Gary Ross, who made the fantastic “Pleasantville” in 1998, knows a thing or two about oppressive societies, but he stumbled while dipping his toe into Suzanne Collins’s brave/banal new world of undercooked teen romance and overwrought dystopia. Right away, the casting of twenty-something Jennifer Lawrence took away all the power of forcing children to battle to the death. Anyone under 14 who doesn’t know every beat of this story before it happens needs to turn in their movie-going badge, and anyone who got motion sickness from the overzealous shaky cam should get free Tums for a year.

Shaky cam strikes again in this terminally overhyped indie that may have made for an enjoyable discovery when it first played at the Sundance Film Festival. The film itself looks like someone gave it a golden shower, if you know what we mean. You can practically smell the mud and piss and rust that colors this unpleasant post-Katrina Louisiana world, but that atmosphere would have been made more palatable if it didn’t look like it was shot by someone with hand tremors. Many compared this to the works of Terrence Malick or David Gordon Green, but both of those gentlemen know how to screw a camera to a frickin’ dolly.

What is happening over at Pixar? Has the death of Steve Jobs and former brain trust member Joe Ranft left them high and dry in the creativity department? It’s bad enough that they’re churning out sequels like there’s no tomorrow, but they also have to go for the generic Disney princess dollar? The animation, action and characterization in this story of a daughter whose mother is turned into a bear is all fine, but not up to Pixar par. Meanwhile, Disney’s “Wreck-It Ralph” displayed the kind of ingenuity their Pixar siblings used to have the monopoly on. “Brave” is as safe as it gets.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt has had an awesome year; he was the best part of “The Dark Knight Rises,” a standout in an overcrowded “Lincoln” and absolutely killed it as a Bruce Willis doppelganger in “Looper.” Somewhere amid that victory tour he stopped over for “Premium Rush,” this garbage dumpster of a movie that gives you every generic action movie cliché in the book, only on bikes instead of cars. We would like to see the version where JGL has to messenger the only copy of David Koepp’s hack script to the studio, only to have it accidentally fall down a sewer grate along the way.

Categories: Features

Tags: ang lee, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Brave, Christoph Waltz, christopher nolan, daniel day-lewis, David Koepp, Django Unchained, Frankenweenie, Gary Ross, jamie foxx, Jennifer Lawrence, joaquin phoenix, joseph gordon-levitt, life of pi, Lincoln, paul thomas anderson, philip seymour hoffman, pixar, premium rush, quentin tarantino, Steve Spielberg, The Dark Knight Rises, The Hunger Games, the master, Frankenweenie, The Hunger Games, Brave, Life of Pi, Premium Rush, The Dark Knight Rises, The Master, Django Unchained, Lincoln, Jennifer Lawrence, Quentin Tarantino, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Gary Ross

THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING (2001)

Tanggal Rilis : 6 February 2002 (Indonesia)
Jenis Film : Action | Adventure | Fantasy
Diperankan Oleh : Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen and Orlando Bloom

Ringkasan Cerita THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING (2001) :

Film Lord of the Ring menceritakan tentang Frodo Baggins, seorang Hobbit yang mendapat tugas untuk membawa sebuah cincin sakti (The One Ring), menuju ke Gunung Doom untuk dihancurkan dengan memasukkan cincin tersebut ke dalam kawah Gunung Doom.


Cincin tersebut merupakan milik Sauron, Penguasa Kegelapan yang kembali bangkit setelah tertidur ribuan tahun dan berambisi untuk merebut kembali cincin miliknya. Jika Sauron berhasil mendapatkan cincin itu kembali, maka dipastikan seisi Middle Earth akan dinaungi kegelapan untuk yang kedua kalinya.


Bersama dengan 8 orang pengiringnya yang terdiri dari 3 orang temamnya sesama Hobbit yaitu Sam, Merry, Pippin, ditambah dengan penyihir Gandalf, kemudian Aragorn, yang merupakan keturunan Isildur, lalu Boromir, si peri Legolas, dan terakhir si kurcaci Gimli, Frodo melalui jalan yang penuh bahaya agar bisa berhasil membawa si cincin menuju ke kawah Gunung Doom untuk dimusnahkan.

Top 5/Bottom 5: Natural Disaster Movies

In honor of Naomi Watts and Ewan McGregor’s devastating tsunami extravaganza “The Impossible,” we thought we’d dust off the ol’ archives to see how Hollywood has portrayed angry and destructive nature in cinema. The answer? Not spectacularly well; in fact, two of our “best” selections came from this year! Sadly, it seems as though when Hollywood delivers natural disasters, they serve them up with heaping gobs of schmaltz and melodrama. Still, let’s take a look at the best and worst of natural disasters.

Top Five

5. “Armageddon”
Disaster: An asteroid the size of Texas is headed toward Earth.
Solution: Send a bunch of deep sea oil drillers (including Bruce Willis) up to space, to erm, drill a nuke into the asteroid. *cough*
Explanation: I know “Armageddon” has its fair share of detractors, but compared to “Deep Impact” it is a gem. Plus, inspired performances from Steve Buscemi, Billy Bob Thornton, and Owen Wilson make this film eminently re-watachable. And Charlton Heston narrates! Plus, “Armageddon” was one of the privileged few films to receive a Criterion Edition , and you know those guys wouldn’t choose a lemon. Lastly, this movie has the following scene, which will remain hilarious ad infinitum:

4. “Beasts of the Southern Wild”
Disaster: A giant storm causes a massive flood, and the Arctic ice starts breaking, sending frozen Aurochs toward the Louisiana bayou.
Solution: Blow up the levee (but don’t take your Chevy).
Explanation: I told you it was slim pickings, so Best Picture candidate “Beasts of the Southern Wild” has as solid a claim as anybody. Additionally, young actress Quvenzhane Wallis is extremely buzzy right now.

3. “Titanic”
Disaster: Icebergs, dude, icebergs.
Solution: Sink to the bottom of the ocean. No, it wasn’t the best of outcomes, but there weren’t a bevy of great options.
Explanation: Well, something like 400 million people have seen this one, and you know what they say . Now I’m not admitting I sing the “Titanic” song in my shower, but I’m not saying I don’t either. Once more … you opeeeeeen the door.

2. “Moonrise Kingdom”
Disaster: A hurricane, lightning.
Solution: As per normal, Bruce Willis .
Explanation: Wes Anderson’s latest modern classic features dynamite dialogue juxtaposed against a hurricane backdrop. Children performing dialogue way too mature for their age? Automatic silver medal!

1. “The Perfect Storm”
Disaster: The Halloween Nor-easter of 1991.
Solution: In an ending that left me emotionally beaten and battered, the clip embedded below.
Explanation: There simply isn’t a better natural disaster film than “The Perfect Storm,” a testament to nature’s fury. If you can watch this film without shedding a tear, I’d urge you to get those tear ducts checked. Simply a phenomenal film.

Bottom Five

5. “Twister”
Disaster: Tornados.
Solution: Stop driving around in tornados.
Explanation: This was one the early adopters of the whole “effects over story” phenomenon, an issue that continues to this day. The only two redeeming qualities of “Twister” are 1. Philip Seymour Hoffman and 2. The amazing trailer voice guy featured at the beginning of the trailer below.

4. “Daylight”
Disaster: A tunnel cave in caused by toxic waste, diamonds, and other assorted shenanigans.
Solution: Explosives.
Explanation: Sure, we’re stretching a bit to even include “Daylight,” but I think everyone has forgotten just how terrible this film is. I love that they play the trailer as a “Drama / Thriller” when it’s actually a Melodrama / Stinker. Bright side: it’s available on videocassette AND laser disc!

3. “Sanctum”
Disaster: A cyclone causes the caves the intrepid spelunkers are exploring to flood.
Solution: Attempt to find a way to the surface … or just stay out of caves altogether.
Explanation: James Cameron giveth (“Titanic”) and taketh away (he produced “Sanctum”). The most awful thing about this film is the dialogue. No wait, the faux peril! Ugh, but what about the wooden acting? The great part about “Sanctum” is you don’t have to choose, it’s all world-class terrible.

2. “Poseidon”
Disaster: A rogue wave.
Solution: Something about getting to the bow thrusters? And blowing up propellers? It was all rather difficult to follow.
Explanation: The good news is the studio had to have lost money on this turkey. As we watched “Poseidon” the very real question presented itself “What if you were trapped … in a terrible movie?” My next query is why every bad disaster film has to have that scene where someone is hanging off a cliff and has to kick another person off to live? I hate that scene. That scene can’t possibly happen often enough to require repeated renditions.

1. “2012?
Disaster: The Mayans and something to do with the alignment of the planets.
Solution: Giant ocean-going vessels built with cheap labor.
Explanation: I will admit, in my weaker moments, to watching “2012? on cable. It’s so terrible that I’m forced to consider it, if only to make sense the creative world that could even create it. My other vivid memory of “2012? is sitting in Comic Con and listening to Roland Emmerich as he was asked if the Mayan prophecy was real. He said something to the effect of “Maybe”. Can you beat that? It’s unbelievable the lengths some folks will go to for marketing. For the record, Roland, the whole Mayan deal is a freaking typo. The more you know!

Categories: Lists

Tags: 2012, armageddon, Beasts of the Southern Wild, The Perfect Storm, titanic, Titanic, Beasts of the Southern Wild, The Perfect Storm

Kamis, 20 Desember 2012

PLANET OF THE APES (2001)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 16 August 2001 (Indonesia)
Jenis Film : Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi
Diperankan Oleh : Mark Wahlberg, Helena Bonham Carter and Tim Roth


Ringkasan Cerita PLANET OF THE APES (2001) :

Kalau biasanya kera adalah binatang peliharaan manusia, tapi apa jadinya bila manusia justru menjadi budak seekor kera? Cerita ini berawal dari kegagalan mengejar seekor simpanse yang kabur dari pesawat induk riset Oberon, pesawat yang dikemudikan Kapten Leo Davidson masuk ke lorong waktu ratusan tahun. Yang terjadi kemudian Leo ternyata terdampar di sebuah planet yang dikuasai kera-kera yang dapat berbicara, di mana manusia menjadi budak kera. Beruntung nasib baik masih berpihak pada Leo.


Ari, seekor kera muda anak senator membeli Leo untuk dipekerjakan di rumahnya. Tidak seperti kebanyakan bangsa kera yang membenci manusia, Ari yang merupakan aktifis persamaan hak justru membantu Leo dan semua pembantunya melarikan diri ke Calina, tanah keramat bangsa kera. Dengan susah payah, mereka harus menghindari kejaran ratusan tentara kera di bawah pimpinan Jenderal bengis, Thade. Sesampainya di sana, Leo mendapati rongsokan pesawat Oberon dan kata ‘Calina’ yang merupakan penggalan sebuah kalimat kunci kepulangannya.

UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING (2012)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 4 October 2012 (Malaysia)
Jenis Film : Action | Sci-Fi
Diperankan Oleh : Jean-Claude Van Damme, Dolph Lundgren and Scott Adkins


Ringkasan Cerita UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING (2012) :

John (Scott Adkins) awakens from a coma to discover his wife and daughter were slaughtered in a brutal home invasion. Haunted by images of the attack, he vows to kill the man responsible: Luc Deveraux (Jean-Claude Van Damme). While John tries to piece his reality back together, things get more complicated when he is pursued by a relentless UniSol named Magnus (Andrei Arlovski).


Meanwhile, Deveraux and surviving UniSol Andrew Scott (Dolph Lundgren) are preparing to battle anarchy and build a new order ruled by Unisols without government oversight. They are weeding out the weak and constantly testing their strongest warriors in brutal, life-and-death combat.


Luc has emerged operating the Unisol Church of Eventualism, taking in wayward Unisols whom the government has been secretly operating as remote-controlled sleeper agents. His mission is to liberate these Unisols from the implanted memories and the lies the government has inserted in them. As John gets closer to Deveraux and the rogue army of genetically enhanced warriors, he discovers more about himself and begins to call into question everything he believed to be true.

SEAL TEAM SIX: THE RAID ON OSAMA BIN LADEN (2012)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 2012
Jenis Film : Action | Crime | Drama
Diperankan Oleh : Cam Gigandet, Anson Mount and Freddy Rodríguez


Ringkasan Cerita SEAL TEAM SIX: THE RAID ON OSAMA BIN LADEN (2012) :

When the rumored whereabouts of Osama bin Laden are revealed, the CIA readies a team of seasoned U.S. Navy SEALs for the mission of a lifetime. Despite inconclusive evidence that bin Laden is inside the compound, and ignoring the possible ramifications of an unannounced attack on Pakistani soil, the Pentagon orders the attack. The SEAL Team bands together to complete their mission of justice in a riveting final showdown.

Rabu, 19 Desember 2012

FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS (2011)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 22 July 2011 (USA)
Jenis Film : Comedy | Romance
Diperankan Oleh : Mila Kunis, Justin Timberlake and Patricia Clarkson


Ringkasan Cerita FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS (2011) :

Jamie (Mila Kunis) dan Dylan (Justin Timberlake) adalah dua pekerja kantoran yang bertemu dan berkenalan dalam sebuah proyek kerjasama untuk majalah GQ. Keduanya pun sering bertemu lantaran Jamie harus merayu Dylan agar ia menerima pekerjaannya tersebut. Dylan pun akhirnya memutuskan untuk menerima tawaran Jamie. Pindah ke New York, Dylan pun makin sering bertemu Jamie lantaran ia tak punya kenalan di kota tempat tinggalnya yang baru ini. Dari pertemanan kerja, hubungan keduanya pun makin berkembang sampai titik di mana seks tak lagi tabu dibicarakan dan dilakukan.

The 10 Most Depressing Movies of 2012

The winter packs a double punch for us sensitive souls. If you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, the days get shorter and the nights get longer while the temperatures drop. We’re forced to unnaturally socialize while wearing woolly sweaters with menorahs on them, travel in small tubes full of recycled germy air and avoid discussing politics with our loved ones.


It’s also the time of year when most of the fancy prestige films come out; these are the movies angling for awards season gold, and more likely than not, they are depressing. Even if they come out earlier in the year, it’s a fact: Serious Films are Seriously Depressing. Let’s not be totally glib, though; there’s a certain catharsis in watching a movie that allows us to let it all hang out. And sometimes you really need to get upset and riled up to make a difference in the world about the issues that some of these movies investigate.


If you want a list of movies to only watch on sunny days or with a tissue box close at hand, we’ve got you covered. Welcome to our top 10 most depressing movies of 2012!


10. Bully
“Bully” is a doc that reminds anyone who’s forgotten or luckily has never known how cruel kids can be. It offers an up close and personal look at the effects of bullying on several teens, their families and their community; even more damning is how the adults around them handle the bullying, or more to the point, don’t do anything at all. “Bully” was also the subject of a scuffle between the MPAA, which wanted to give the doc an R for language, and distributor The Weinstein Company, which refused to trim it and released it initially as unrated; TWC later edited it for a PG-13 so the people most affected by bullying could see it.


9. Jeff, Who Lives at Home
You might think a film starring Jason Segel as a pothead who lives in his mom’s basement would be funny. In reality, a grown-ass man who’s too much of a mess to run the most menial errand for his hard-working widowed mom (played by Susan Sarandon) is just sad and annoying. Ed Helm plays his supposedly more mature brother, but he’s a selfish jerk whose wife (played by Judy Greer) dumps him. Frankly, we’d like to dump this movie.


8. The Master
To be fair, “The Master” isn’t depressing per se. Its main character Freddie Quell, on the other hand, is a serious bummer. Joaquin Phoenix gives an outstanding performance as a PSTD-crippled alcoholic who literally stumbles into a cult run by Lancaster Dodd, a charming and highly manipulative fellow played by Philip Seymour Hoffman. Dodd is somewhat tormented himself, as evidenced by his interesting relationship with his wife Peggy (Amy Adams), who’s all too willing to lend him a hand when he needs it most. Then again, Dodd in’t the one cooking up paint thinner moonshine.


7. Beasts of the Southern Wild
A lil moppet nicknamed Hushpuppy lives in The Bathtub with her dad Wink, but the glaciers are melting and ancient animals are rousing from their slumber to threaten her home and everything she loves. This coming-of-age fairytale stars newcomer Quvenzhané Wallis as a little girl who learns how to “beast out” in the bayou to prepare for the coming storms and the inevitable death of Wink (Dwight Henry). “Beasts” is actually a joyous, awesome movie, but much like growing up, living through it can be emotionally devastating. The original music by Dan Romer and co-writer/director Benh Zeitlin is also sobworthy. (In a good way.)


6. Anna Karenina
“Anna Karenina” is right up there with “Madame Bovary” when it comes to doomed love affairs and tortured heroines. Keira Knightley stars as the gorgeous young countess who is married to a sensible older man, played by Jude Law, but falls madly in love with a sexy young cavalry officer named Vronsky, who is played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson and his facial hair. Director Joe Wright and screenwriter Tom Stoppard set this adaptation in a theater, with extravagant sets and dance numbers that drive home the heady romance and scandal of it all. If you don’t know how it ends by now, well, go back to high school.


5. West of Memphis
In the mid-’90s, three teenage boys were jailed for the brutal murders of three young boys in West Memphis, Ark. The case caught national attention when directors Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky went down to document the trial for HBO for what would become a damning trilogy of docs called “Paradise Lost.” Amy Berg’s “West of Memphis” is a grand, poetic and grueling overview of the cases against Jason Baldwin, Jessie Misskelley and Damien Echols, and their long, hellish road to freedom. From the advocacy of supporters like doc producers Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson and stars like Johnny Depp and Henry Rollins to the ongoing work to fully exonerate them, this doc is a wholly terrifying look at a bungled (at best) case. It’s also a beautiful love story between Echols and his wife Lorri Davis, who met as pen pals when Echols was on Death Row.


4. The Central Park Five
If you were old enough to watch the news in 1989, you remember the case of the Central Park Jogger, an anonymous woman who was brutally raped and beaten nearly to death. Five young teens were charged with the crime and vilified by the media and people on the street with race-charged language (i.e. animals, wilding out, etc.). Years later, a chance meeting prompted the real Central Park attacker to confess. The now-grown Central Park Five are free men, but their exoneration got an iota of the attention that their verdicts did. This doc, borne out of co-director Sarah Burns’s initial investigation and book about the case, is a shocking look at how completely mishandled the investigation and court cases were, as well as the political and racial climate of New York City itself. Tellingly, no one from the city of New York agreed to work with Burns and co-directors Ken Burns (her father) and David McMahon on the doc, although a subpoena was filed for all of their film, including outtakes and notes. The five are still embroiled in a civil suit against the city.


3. The Invisible War
In case you weren’t already incensed and distraught by the previous two docs, Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering’s documentary about rape in the military will have you reaching for your tissues. An overwhelming number of interviews with soldiers who were sexually assaulted by other soldiers while on duty are interspersed with chats with aggravating military honchos who refuse to take responsibility for this epidemic. The filmmakers also follows a handful of survivors closely as they wrestle with the fallout from their attacks, like Kori Cioca, whom we see battling the Veterans Affairs Administration for treatment of longstanding injuries stemming from her assault. “The Invisible War” clarifies the inner workings of a strange and byzantine military court system that makes these crimes so difficult to prosecute, in addition to the environment that makes such widespread sexual violence possible. It’s so thorough in its portrayal of this systemic problem that Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta made an immediate change in policy just days after seeing the movie.


2. Rust and Bone
Marion Cotillard and Matthias Schoenaerts play two terribly broken people and unlikely lovers who find a way back to some sort of wholeness with each other. Stéphanie is left a double amputee after a show at a marine park, where she works as an animal trainer, and Ali is a Belgian boxer who moves to Antibes with his son to avoid some nasty personal business. Their somewhat casual sexual relationship invigorates them both, even as it complicates their lives. Co-writer and director Jacques Audiard is known for his wrenching, award-winning dramas like “A Prophet” and “The Beat That My Heart Skipped,” while Schoenaerts is a hot breakout star from last year’s surprise Oscar nom “Bullhead.” You’ll never listen to Katy Perry the same way again.


1. Amour
Writer/director Michael Haneke doesn’t suffer movie-going fools lightly. His resume is littered with hard-to-swallow dramas like “Funny Games,” a fourth-wall shattering horror about preppy kids tormenting a family, and “The Piano Teacher,” a drama focused on a self-abusing lovelorn woman who has a tryst with her student. “Amour” is possibly the most harrowing film Haneke’s ever foisted on us, and the most celebrated. The vibrant, independent lives of Georges (Jean-Louis Trintignant) and Anne (Emmanuelle Riva from “Hiroshima, mon amour”) screech to a halt when Anne has a debilitating stroke. Even as Anne’s condition gets worse, Georges refuses to put her in a home or a hospital because he promised her he wouldn’t. “Amour” is an intimate movie about the biggest things humans think about: love and death.

Categories: Lists

Tags: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Amour, Anna Karenina, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Bully, ed helms, emmanuelle riva, jason segel, jean-louis trintignant, Jeff Who Lives at home, joaquin phoenix, jude law, keira knightley, Ken Burns, marion cotillard, Matthias Schoenaerts, michael haneke, philip seymour hoffman, Rust and Bone, The Central Park Five, the invisible war, the master, West of Memphis, Jeff, Who Lives at Home, Anna Karenina, Amour, Rust and Bone, The Central Park Five, Michael Haneke, West of Memphis, Keira Knightley, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jude Law, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Bully, Marion Cotillard, The Invisible War, Jason Segel, Matthias Schoenaerts

The 50 Must-Have Movie-Related Gifts of 2012

Tis the season, y’all. And we’re not just talking about colored lights and carols. We’re talking about presents.

Of course, after a year filled with “The Hunger Games,” “Star Wars” news and “The Hobbit” anticipation, we searched high and low for the coolest stuff from the coolest movies, including those three and loads more. And we came up with 50 things every movie lover really must have.

A “Star Trek” oven mitt? It’s in here. “Lord of the Rings” cufflinks? Check. The chance to sit on Ryan Gosling’s face? That too.  Head to NextMovie.com for a giant gallery with everything you need this holiday season.

Categories: No Categories

Tags: gift guide, holiday movies

Alt Weekly: ‘Any Day Now’ and More

Welcome back to Alt Weekly, a column in which we shine a spotlight on the independent films brave enough to open opposite Hollywood’s behemoth blockbusters before rolling out in wider release.


This week pits “The Girl” and some “Stand Up Guys” against the wee lads of “The Hobbit.”


‘ANY DAY NOW’
Filmmaker Cred: Travis Fine previously directed the 2011 drama “The Space Between.”
Star Power: Alan Cumming, Garret Dillahunt, Frances Fisher.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This gay rights drama premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival last April. The majority of reviews since have been positive.
Release Details: Opens in about a dozen markets this Friday.
See This If… You’re open to seeing a real-life custody battle treated with sensitive direction and some strong performances.


‘THE GIRL’
Filmmaker Cred: This is writer/director David Riker’s first film since 1998's “La Ciudad (The City).”
Star Power: Abbie Cornish, Will Patton.
Festival/Awards Buzz: A fellow Tribeca alum, this immigration drama has earned some modest praise for Cornish’s headstrong performance.
Release Details: NY and LA for a one-week qualifying run before releasing wider next year.
See This If… You’re keen to check out a single-mom drama set on the Tex-Mex border, a la “Frozen River.”


‘SAVE THE DATE’
Filmmaker Cred: Director Michael Mohan’s last feature was 2010's “One Too Many Mornings.”
Star Power: Lizzy Caplan, Alison Brie, Mark Webber, Martin Starr, Geoffrey Arend.
Festival/Awards Buzz: We enjoyed the film at Sundance, albeit with some caveats.
Release Details: Currently available on demand, this opens the 14th in NY/LA.
See This If… You’re not yet fed up with the relationship problems of white twentysomethings.


‘STAND UP GUYS’
Filmmaker Cred: This marks the latest directorial effort by actor Fisher Stevens.
Star Power: Al Pacino, Christopher Walken, Alan Arkin.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This dark crime comedy made a quiet debut at the Chicago International Film Festival in October, and, as our review indicates, that may have been for good reason.
Release Details: Strictly NY/LA this week to qualify for 2012 awards, due for a wide release come February 1st.
See This If… You’re a die-hard fan of Viagra jokes and nostalgia among crooks.

Categories: Alt Weekly, Columns

Tags: abbie cornish, al pacino, alan cumming, Alison Brie, alt weekly, Any Day Now, Christopher Walken, david riker, Fisher Stevens, garret dillahunt, Lizzy Caplan, mark webber, Save the Date, Stand Up Guys, the girl, Christopher Walken, Save the Date, Stand Up Guys, Alan Arkin, Al Pacino, Any Day Now, The Girl, Alan Cumming, Garret Dillahunt, Frances Fisher, Abbie Cornish, Will Patton, Lizzy Caplan, Alison Brie, Mark Webber, Martin Starr, Geoffrey Arend, Fisher Stevens

NEVER BACK DOWN (2008)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 14 March 2008 (USA)
Jenis Film : Action | Drama | Sport
Diperankan Oleh : Sean Faris, Djimon Hounsou and Amber Heard


Ringkasan Cerita NEVER BACK DOWN (2008) :

Jake Tyler (Sean Faris) terpaksa harus pindah ke Orlando Florida dan meninggalkan karirnya sebagai pemain Football di kota asalnya. Jake harus pindah karena seluruh keluarganya memutuskan pindah demi kemajuan karir adik Jake sebagai atlet tenis.


Di tempat baru ini, Jake berkenalan dengan cewek bernama Baja (Amber Heard) yang kemudian mengundangnya ke sebuah pesta. Di pesta itu, Jake kemudian ditantang untuk bertarung melawan Ryan McDonald (Cam Gigandet). Dengan mudah Ryan dapat mengalahkan Jake. Jake merasa dipermalukan oleh Ryan namun tak bisa berbuat apa-apa.


Tak lama berselang, Jake kemudian diperkenalkan pada Jean Roqua (Djimon Hounsou) oleh teman sekelasnya. Jean ternyata adalah seorang petarung tangguh yang sudah pensiun. Pada Jean inilah Jake kemudian berguru ilmu bela diri dengan maksud membalas dendam pada Ryan yang telah mempermalukannya.

Weekly Trailer Report: ‘Pacific Rim,’ ‘Man of Steel’ & More

Science fiction and adventure rule the day in this week’s trailer report, from brand new looks at the monster and robot thriller “Pacific Rim” and the tremendously exciting Superman reboot “Man of Steel,” to Tom Cruise exploring a deserted Earth in “Oblivion” and Will Smith fighting to stay alive on a hostile planet in “After Earth.”

Further first looks at stirring documentaries, spooky thrillers and tough dramas abound.

With such a strong showing this week, you’re sure to find plenty to please you! Let us know what strikes your fancy in the comments below.

‘Pacific Rim’

Our first look at the new science fiction action film from director Guillermo del Toro gives us a peek at monsters, high tech and ultimate destruction!
Starring: Idris Elba, Charlie Hunnam and Rinko Kikuchi
Release Date: July 12, 2013

‘Man of Steel’

The first full-length trailer for the new take on Superman leaves us breathless.
Starring: Henry Cavill, Russell Crowe and Amy Adams
Release Date: June 14, 2013

‘After Earth’

In this science fiction adventure, a father and son explore and fight to stay alive in a world abandoned by humans nearly a thousand years earlier.
Starring: Will Smith, Jaden Smith and Isabelle Fuhrman
Release Date: June 7, 2013

‘Oblivion’

Earth is a strange and distant memory but when one man discovers the truth behind the myths surrounding the destruction of the planet, it has consequences far beyond his imagining.
Starring: Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman and Andrea Riseborough
Release Date:
April 19, 2013

‘Yelling to the Sky’

A young girl must fight for her own survival amidst the ruins of her family life and the prospect of an uncertain future.
Starring: Jason Clarke, Zoë Kravitz and Tim Blake Nelson
Release Date: Dec. 14, 2012

‘The Haunting in Connecticut 2: The Ghosts of Georgia’

A family is terrorized by the supernatural in this terrifying ghost story based on a true story.
Starring: Katee Sackhoff, Chad Michael Murray and Abigail Spencer
Release Date: TBD

‘Welcome to the Punch’

A dangerous criminal and a skilled detective match wits in London.
Starring: James McAvoy, David Morrissey and Mark Strong
Release Date: March 15, 2013

‘The Lone Ranger’

The new trailer for the Western adventure showcases the rise of a legend and his Native American spirit warrior.
Starring: Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer and Tom Wilkinson
Release Date: July 3, 2013

‘Koch’

This documentary takes a long look at the 105th mayor of New York City, Ed Koch, and his impact on the city and politics.
Starring: Ed Koch
Release Date: TBD

‘Hammer of the Gods’

This action adventure follows the path of a ferocious young warrior and his search for justice in battle.
Starring: Charlie Bewley, Clive Standen and James Cosmo
Release Date: 2013

‘The Girl’

A young mother who finds herself at the mercy of the foster system begins to smuggle Mexicans across the border and gets involved in something far greater.
Starring: Abbie Cornish, Will Patton and Luci Christian
Release Date: March 2013

Categories: Columns, Trailer Roundup

Tags: Man of Steel, Pacific Rim

Selasa, 18 Desember 2012

2012 Film Titles: A Dramatic Reading

And now, a playlet in which the dialogue is composed entirely of 2012 movie titles.


[A guy and his girlfriend are driving around in his car.]


GUY: On the road. Wanderlust! Where do we go now, amour?
GIRL: The best exotic marigold hotel?
GUY: [shaking his head] Safety not guaranteed. The innkeepers: lawless headhunters, beasts of the Southern wild.
GIRL: Moonrise Kingdom? Hotel Transylvania?
GUY: I wish! This is not a film.
GIRL: “Casa de mi padre.”
GUY: The cabin in the woods?
GIRL: The house I live in. Safe house, silent house.
GUY: Safe?! No. Battleship! What to expect when you’re expecting parental guidance: a thousand words. The guilt trip. Sleepless night. Sound of noise. The impossible hysteria!
GIRL: Hope springs…
GUY: The dictator — the master — the man with the iron fists won’t back down! This means war.
GIRL: [scoffing] Think like a man, goon!
GUY: [relenting] Compliance. Brave act of valor for greater glory…


[They drive toward her neighborhood.]


GIRL: 21 Jump Street.
GUY: This is 40…
GIRL: House at the end of the street.
GUY: Trouble with the curve… [stops] This must be the place.


[They see someone in the window of the house and squint to look closer.]


GIRL: Keep the lights on. The grey, dark shadows sparkle…
GUY: [gasps] Holy motors! The devil inside!
GIRL: The queen of Versailles??
GUY: My worst nightmare: your sister’s sister!
GIRL: The woman in black?!
GUY: Sinister, haywire American animal!
GIRL: Hit and run!


[But before Guy can pull away from the curb, Girl's parents have spotted them and come outside.]


MOTHER: Thunderstruck! Big miracle!
FATHER: Lovely Molly!
MOTHER: Joyful noise! Unconditional good deeds!


[They get out of the car. Girl hugs her parents; Guy shakes their hands.]


FATHER: Ted.
GUY: Bernie.
FATHER: The five-year engagement…
GUY: Here comes the boom.
FATHER: Playing for keeps?
GUY: Save the date around June. A royal affair!
FATHER: The vow? That’s my boy!
GIRL: [whispering] Man on a ledge…
GUY: [whispering] Little white lies. Killing them softly.


[They all go inside, where it turns out many of the Girl's other family members are gathered.]


GIRL: [introducing her boyfriend to everyone] The collection: Jack Reacher, John Carter, Alex Cross, Ruby Sparks, Magic Mike, Wreck-It Ralph, Killer Joe…
GUY: People like us? High school friends with kids?
GIRL: [under her breath] Seven psychopaths. Savages.
KILLER JOE: [shaking Guy's hand] Hello, I must be going. Project X contraband stolen. [confidentially] Kill list.


[He exits.]


GUY: The lucky one.
GIRL: [looking around] The other son? Jeff, who lives at home?
MOTHER: Gone chasing mavericks. Two days in New York, flight to Rome with love, salmon fishing in the Yemen!
FATHER: [rolling his eyes] Liberal arts.
MOTHER: The odd life of Timothy Green!
GUY: [gesturing at unmentioned young boy] The kid with a bike?
FATHER: The imposter.
MOTHER: The paperboy.
PAPERBOY: Chronicle!
FATHER: Shut up and play the hits, fun size! “Rock of Ages”!


[The Paperboy commences his duties as DJ for the family gathering, puts on some Def Leppard.]


FATHER: [satisfied] Pitch perfect!


[Girl's sister sidles up to Guy, clearly very drunk.]


GIRL’S SISTER: Searching for Sugar Man. Seeking a friend for the end of the world? Sleepwalk with me??
GUY: [seeking help] Darling companion! How to survive a plague?
GIRL’S SISTER: For a good time, call–
GIRL: Take this waltz, Anna Karenina.
GIRL’S SISTER: [as she leaves] Bully!
GIRL: [to Guy] Girl in progress. Smashed.
GUY: The perks of being a wallflower.


[Meteor falls from sky, hits Earth, kills all. The end.]

Categories: Features

Tags: Amour, Battleship, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Casa de mi Padre, Hotel Transylvania, Moonrise Kingdom, On the Road, Safe House, Safety Not Guaranteed, Silent House, the best exotic marigold hotel, the cabin in the woods, The House I Live In, The innkeepers: lawless headhunters, the master, This is Not A Film, Wanderlust, What to Expect when you're Expecting, Where do we go now, Moonrise Kingdom, The Master, On the Road, Amour

Review: ‘The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey’ Turns Out to Be Unexpectedly Slow

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” starts in the manner of a slapstick comedy. Gandalf (Ian McKellen) is rustling up a posse, he’s got oodles of Dwarves in tow, and they are all headed to visit Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman). Unfortunately, Bilbo isn’t expecting any of them, but they roll right over his objections on their way to his kitchen stores, gorging themselves on his hard-won Hobbit food. Much merriment is had, beverages consumed, and naturally the singing of soulful songs comes into play.

The Dwarves have lost their home, and for some odd reason they need Bilbo to help them get it back. It’s as if “The Lord of the Rings” has resumed, only substituting Bilbo for Frodo, and a mountain for Mordor. Gandalf believes in Bilbo, even though Bilbo himself can’t emotionally get there, and certain members of the traveling Dwarf party are also dubious about the little Hobbit’s abilities. The leader of this merry band of misfits, numbering 13 souls, is a dour fellow named Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage). Throw in Gandalf and Bilbo and you’ve got 15 characters to keep track of, which (naturally) is impossible.

This is not a solid start, so the film doesn’t really get going until a good forty-five minutes into the narrative. This opening gambit was likely meant to help lighten the eventual doldrums that “The Hobbit” falls into, but they would have been better off just getting on with the party already. The film is called “The Hobbit,” and so a conflict where the Hobbit possibly won’t be involved is a stretch to sell an audience. The well-paced action scenes do deliver respite every fifteen minutes, and whenever someone is yelling “Orcs!” it’s impossible not to be engaged. Orcs make for good drama, that’s just screenwriting #101. Action, nostalgia, acting, and lovingly rendered landscapes are the strengths of “The Hobbit,” and they can’t be casually dismissed.

Credit must also be given for the level of ambition, and certain moments play wonderfully in 3-D. Director Peter Jackson has brought back all the classic standards you loved from “The Lord of the Rings” franchise, from Galadriel (Kate Blanchett) to Elrond (Hugo Weaving). “The Hobbit” can’t reference “The Lord of the Rings” early or often enough, clearly hoping for a sympathetic audience, and these beats do find their targets often enough. There are heartbreaking speeches about sacrifice and being homesick, honor and loyalty are routinely pondered. Plus, there’s at least one scene that could leave an audience in tears, and it was nice to see parts of the old gang back together, fighting to save the universe once again.

Still, there’s an awful lot of running around, and against visually ridiculous odds. Yes, “The Lord of the Rings” was fantastical, but “The Hobbit” requires a whole new level of disconnect. There are scenes where the gang fights off hundreds of bad guys at a time, only all of them line up in an orderly manner to be picked off bridges and mountain passes. This made sense in “The Two Towers,” when a siege was being considered, but it comes off as rather silly in “The Hobbit.” Perhaps this is a case of going back to the well too often? Could our affection for “The Lord of the Rings” inform our willingness to enjoy this newer version? Possibly, as the veneration of “The Lord of the Rings” was a transformational event, the final chapter in the “can fantasy ever be accepted by Hollywood?” dilemma. I loved “The Lord of the Rings,” and as such “The Hobbit” is difficult to muster gobs of affection for.

Unfortunately, another ding comes in the form of the motivations considered here, and the main good guy leading them. He’s insufferable, what with his constant undermining of poor Bilbo! The main thrust of the narrative is the band of Dwarves who want to take their home back from an evil dragon. They lost their homes by being too greedy, because dragons love gold. Well, sure, but this is all at once an over-explanation and not nearly explanation enough. “A ring to rule them all” is somewhat obtuse, but it’s symbolically clear, a visual symbol of unchecked power. “Getting our home back from a dragon” isn’t exactly a slogan you can rally around. Various bad guys are thrown in front of the good guys, but it all comes off as too simple, too pat. And what do Orcs or Trolls have to do with anything, anyway? Weirdly, this new “Hobbit” film hints at an Orc society that’s not too shabby, one in which a short-term condo rental would have to at least be considered. These new (well, prequel) Orcs read, send messages, participate in a meritorious leadership system, and create complex hovels for themselves. The “good guys” invade and chop everyone up. Again, a minor item, but you can’t help but think of this as the film slowly moves toward its inevitable conclusion, which of course is no conclusion at all. Three-part films don’t have to make one good film, instead preferring to hint at all the good stuff yet to come! But it’s impossible to give full credit based upon potential, even if the next two films turn out to be great, which I fervently hope they do.

As far as the technical element goes, it’s largely off-putting. 48 frames per second looks sped up, and is definitely disorienting. The special effect gets slightly better as your eyes adjust, but why exactly do the eyes need to adjust in the first place? It’s tough to figure why the frame rate envelope needed to be pushed here, especially with all the advances in CGI – which allowed the action and animals to come off as far more realistic than the last time around. “The Hobbit” would have truly been a technical marvel in 24fps, but sadly the 48fps effect doesn’t work often enough.

What’s all this add up to? Not terribly much. “The Lord of the Rings” franchise is still strong, maintaining a hold on our collective consciousness, but this latest offering prefers to kick the can down the road (instead of exploring new ground). In the end, “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” is merely one-third of an unrealized story, a carbon copy of something rich, lucid, and authentic.

Grade: C

Categories: Reviews

Tags: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

‘The Hobbit’ Makes $13 Million at Midnight, Poised to Set December Box Office Record

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” has only been in theaters for a few hours now, but forecasts are already predicting that the latest epic from Peter Jackson will set a new box office record for a December release.

Thanks to the $13 million “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” made in its midnight release last evening, Box Office Mojo is reporting that the film is well on its way to breaking the mark currently held by “I Am Legend.” By comparison, “I Am Legend” brought in $77.2 million in its opening weekend back in 2007, only $1.7 million of which came from its midnight release.

Of course, “The Hobbit’s” earning potential is somewhat curtailed by its 169 minute run time, which limits the number of showings each theater can present. Still, “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” should benefit enough from both 3D premiums and inflation to pass “I Am Legend” on the charts, presuming mediocre word of mouth doesn’t keep fans away.

Jackson, of course, is no stranger to December blockbusters; all three installments of “The Lord of the Rings” debuted in December, with 2003's “Return of the King” earning $72.6 million in its first weekend. That number, however, was reduced somewhat thanks to a Wednesday release. His 2005 epic “King Kong,” which like ‘The Hobbit” opening on December 14, debuted with $50.1 million.

“The Hobbit” has already set a December debut record by premiering on 4,045 screens nationwide.

Categories: News

Tags: box office, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Jackson

Who are You Happier to See Back: Billy Crystal or Barbra Streisand?

Have we gone back in a time machine to the ’90s? That’s what crossed our minds (and many others’, we’re sure) when it was revealed that both Billy Crystal and Barbra Streisand would have comedy vehicles dueling it out at the Christmas box office this holiday season. Seeing these two back on the big screen, in lead roles no less, is both a head-scratcher and cause for us to ask you: Who are you happier to see back?


Streisand’s — the first out of the gate on December 19th — sees her team up with funnyman-du-jour Seth Rogen for a mother-son road trip comedy titled “The Guilt Trip.” The film got its buzz machine going well ahead of the promotional push for Crystal’s film “Parental Guidance,” thanks to a promising trailer that showcased a more mild-mannered Babs than we’re accustomed to seeing. Still, while visibly restrained as an overbearing mother who leaps at the chance to go on a cross-country trip with her inventor son, Streisand dominates the promo (are you surprised?), generating bigger laughs than a game-faced Rogen, who seems to be playing against type as the “straight man.” Our takeaway: With Streisand in charge, it’s best to just get out of the way.


Meanwhile, in Crystal’s Christmas day release, “Parental Guidance,” the comedian hams it up with the incomparable Bette Midler. It’s another family comedy, but it bears little resemblance to Streisand’s, save for the release date and the yucks.


The trailer, which hit the web over a month after the one for “The Guilt Trip” surfaced and not that well ahead of its theatrical release (bad sign?), sells a comedy that skews to the older set about two old-fashioned grandparents (Crystal and Midler) who are forced to care for their three rambunctious grand-kids when the parents leave town for work. With Midler selling wisecracks like the vet that she is and donning a droll Russian accent to land a punchline (watch the trailer and you’ll understand), Crystal has his work cut out for him to shine. But if there’s any male comedian of Midler’s stature who can go toe-to-toe with the icon, it’s the “City Slicker” himself.


Crystal’s been laying low on the film scene, save for a panned appearance as this year’s Oscars’ host. His last credited film role harks all the way back to 2002 in “Analyze That,” the sequel to his hit comedy “Analyze This” starring the far-busier Robert De Niro.


Streisand’s remained a bit more active thanks to her fun supporting turns in 2004's “Meet the Fockers” and 2010's “Little Fockers,” but those were campy cameos at best. All in all, these two have been out of the game for the better part of 21st century.


Watch the trailers for “The Guilt Trip” and “Parental Guidance” below and let us know who’s more welcome this holiday season, Streisand or Crystal.


“The Guilt Trip”


“Parental Guidance”

Categories: Features

Tags: Barbra Streisand, bette midler, Billy Crystal, Parental Guidance, seth rogen, The Guilt Trip, The Guilt Trip, Billy Crystal, Parental Guidance, Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler, Seth Rogen

‘The Hobbit:’ One Film to Rule The Box Office

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” may not be entirely living up to fan expectations, but it is more than living up to box office expectations, as the first installment in Peter Jackson’s latest fantasy trilogy debuted with a truly epic $84.8 million.

That amount easily tops the previous record for a December debut, which had been held by 2007's “I Am Legend.” It also beat out the box office debuts of all three installments of “The Lord of the Rings,” which, like “The Hobbit,” was adapted by Jackson from J.R.R. Tolkien’s series of Middle-Earth novels.

And the news was equally good for “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” overseas; through Friday, the film had taken in over $57 million internationally, leading industry insiders to speculate that the film could cross $200 million worldwide by the end of the weekend.

The dominance of “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” did mean that there was little meat left on the bone for the rest of Hollywood. With no other major new releases this weekend — who would be foolish enough to open their film opposite “The Hobbit?” — returning favorites “Skyfall” and “Lincoln” stayed strong. “Lincoln” crossed the $100 million mark domestically, while “Skyfall” inched closer to the $1 billion mark worldwide. And “Silver Linings Playbook” crept back into the top ten thanks to strong buzz from its many award season nominations.

Here’s a full list of this weekend’s top ten, courtesy of Hollywood.com:

1. “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” – $84.8m (our review)
2. “Rise of the Guardians” – $7.4m
3. “Lincoln” – $7.2m (our review)
4. “Skyfall” – $7m (our review)
5. “Life of Pi” – $5.4m (our review)
6. “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2? – $5.2m (our review)
7. “Wreck-It Ralph” – $3.3m (our review)
8. “Playing for Keeps” – $3.2m (our review)
9. “Red Dawn” – $2.4m (our review)
10.“Silver Linings Playbook” – $2.1m (our review)

Categories: News

Tags: box office, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Jackson

Stephanie Zacharek’s Top 10 Films of 2012

Stephanie Zacharek December 14, 2012


Some critics carp about how onerous it is to compile a 10 best list, and it does come with some attendant complicated feelings. Do you make space for the boring but worthy documentary, at the expense of the crackerjack action film whose craftsmanship thrilled you? Should you frontload the thing with big, serious pictures, even if there are purportedly dumb comedies you loved much more? Before long, you’ve talked yourself out of doing a 10 best list at all, or you at least hide from the task until the last possible minute.


My MO is to begin by making a list of everything, in any genre, I loved or just thoroughly enjoyed, including movies that lingered with me long after I left the theater — I just throw it all at the wall to see what sticks. Then, in a highly unscientific procedure that involves much copying, pasting and getting up for more coffee, I narrow down the list and attempt to make peace with it. Here’s what I’ve come up with for 2012. Beyond the top three, the order is a bit random, but these are all pictures that thrilled me, moved me or made me think.


The Top 3


3. “Barbara”
German filmmaker Christian Petzold has fashioned a striking, slow-burning narrative from the remnants of the East-West German divide. “Barbara” is a political drama, a mystery and a love story, with a great performance at its core: Nina Hoss says more with her half-haunted, half-hopeful eyes than a hundred lines of dialogue ever could.


2. “Zero Dark Thirty”
Kathryn Bigelow is a clear visual thinker: She films action more concisely than any modern filmmaker. Great craftsmanship aside, though, her fiction-based-on-fact thriller doesn’t go for easy morality: It turns on the idea that the truth of the world we live in isn’t always pretty. In the midst of this kind of bravado filmmaking, her moral uncertainty is a kind of humility.


1. “Holy Motors”
Leos Carax’s first full-length feature in more than 10 years — exhilarating, mournful and always stunning to look at — is a love letter to movies, and to life. It could almost be a film made in a time before language, a rendering of modern life – or modern lives – as a kind of cinematic cave painting. With songs. And a white stretch limo. And Kylie Minogue.


And, in no particular order…


“Django Unchained”
This devilish slavery-revenge fantasy is fueled as much by raw, brute emotion as it is by Quentin Tarantino’s crackpot movie-nerd genius. Shot by Robert Richardson, it’s also one of the most gorgeous-looking pictures of the year: An elegiac winter-western sequence, set amid snow-capped mountains, is practically a mini-movie unto itself.


“Rust and Bone”
Marion Cotillard loses her legs to a killer whale; Matthias Schoenaerts loses his heart to her. Director Jacques Audiard isn’t going for subtlety here. He just wants to send you home with a story and with the memory of his characters’ faces. In other words, he wants to give you the world.


“Skyfall”
The latest Bond adventure, directed by Sam Mendes, takes a brooding Daniel Craig from the gambling halls of Macau to his family homestead on the Scottish moors. It’s an extravagant affair that’s also surprisingly graceful, and the interplay between Craig and boss/mother figure Judi Dench is marvelous — and, in the end, wrenching.


“This Is Not a Film”
This simple but potent 75-minute documentary by Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb chronicles a day in the life of Panahi, the Iranian filmmaker whose work has so angered his home country’s government that he’s been sentenced to six years’ imprisonment. (He’s also banned from making films for 20 years.) “This Is Not a Film” really is a film, made and shown against all odds: It traveled to Cannes in spring 2011 via a USB drive, smuggled in a cake.


“Oslo, August 31?
From Pierre Drieu La Rochelle’s 1963 novel “Le feu follet,” Norwegian director Joachim Trier has fashioned an understated, poetic meditation on the things in life that keep us going — or the things that make us want to stop. You wouldn’t exactly call it a cheerful picture, but it’s one with a strong, throbbing pulse. Its melancholy beauty makes you glad to be alive.


“Premium Rush”
David Koepp’s NYC bike-messenger thriller — in which Joseph Gordon-Levitt has to ferry a vitally important parcel from here to there, pronto, pursued by a dirty cop, played by Michael Shannon — is the most visually intelligent action picture of the year. It thinks on its wheels.


“Hit and Run” and “Haywire”
Squeezing two movies into one slot is cheating. Do I care? No. Dax Shepard and David Palmer’s rambunctious comedy-romance “Hit and Run” shows clear affection for ’70s exploitation pictures like “Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry” and “Eat My Dust,” and features more and better stunt driving than even the great (though perhaps not accurately named) “Drive” did. “Haywire” is Steven Soderbergh’s version of a ’60s spy caper, and it’s driven by a kind of bossy energy, embodied largely by mixed martial-arts star Gina Carano. Her mighty haunches ought to get their own screen credit.


Honorable Mentions: “Turn Me On, Dammit,” “Argo,” “Magic Mike,” “Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel,” “The Guilt Trip,” “Goon,” “Perfect Sense,” “The Central Park Five,” “Take This Waltz.”

Categories: Features, Lists

Tags: Argo, august 31, barbara, daniel craig, David Koepp, David Palmer, Dax Shepard, diana vreeland: the eye has to travel, Django Unchained, gina carano, goon, Haywire, Hit and Run, holy motors, jacques audiard, Jafar Panahi, joachim trier, joseph gordon-levitt, judi dench, kathryn bigelow, leos carax, Magic Mike, marion cotillard, Matthias Schoenaerts, michael shannon, Mojtaba Mirtahmasb, Oslo, oslo august 31st, Perfect Sense, premium rush, quentin tarantino, Rust and Bone, Skyfall, steven soderbergh, Take this Waltz, The Central Park Five, The Guilt Trip, This is Not A Film, Turn Me On Dammit, Zero Dark Thirty, Haywire, Goon, Skyfall, Hit and Run, Perfect Sense, Magic Mike, Argo, Premium Rush, Django Unchained, Holy Motors, The Guilt Trip, Kylie Minogue, Zero Dark Thirty, Daniel Craig, Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel, Rust and Bone, Sam Mendes, The Central Park Five, Quentin Tarantino, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Steven Soderbergh, Oslo, August 31st, Marion Cotillard, Kathryn Bigelow, Matthias Schoenaerts, Barbara, This Is Not a Film, Turn Me On, Dammit!, Nina Hoss, Christian Petzold, Leos Carax, Jacques Audiard, Judi Dench, Jafar Panahi, Joachim Trier, David Koepp, Michael Shannon, Dax Shepard, David Palmer, Gina Carano Previous article Alt Weekly: ‘Any Day Now’ and More Next article The 12 Best Performances of 2012

Minggu, 02 Desember 2012

The 9 Most Random Movie Promos of All Time

A movie’s success is all about its dramatic story compelling characters ability to be marketed. After all, it’s through marketing promotions and tie-ins that current films get seared into our little movie-loving brains—which is why Hollywood sometimes spends a bigger budget promoting its favorite moneymaking projects than actually making them. (Yes, that really happens, and more often than you think.)

So it should come as no surprise that the powers-that-be have come up with some pretty unique ways to promote their films over the years. From 007 nail polish (we didn’t realize this special agent had a penchant for glittery lacquers) to a “Truffula Tree Friendly” Mazda to G.I. Joe shampoo, Tinseltown has a way of tying in just about everything imaginable to one movie or another… whether the promotion makes a lot of sense or not. In honor of this, uh, “creativity,” we’ve compiled a list of some of our favorite promos over the years. Enjoy.

1. “Skyfall” OPI Collection

We already knew 007 likes his martinis shaken and his cars fast, but did you know he likes his nail polish… sparkly? Neither did we. But the makers of OPI Nail Lacquer obviously have classified information we don’t, as the brand has launched a holiday collection in honor of everyone’s favorite spy that features brilliant colors including Her Majesty’s Secret Service (a silvery blue) and Live and Let Die (a metallic-flecked forest green)—so there’s a shade for every Bond Girl on your list.

2. Bill and Ted’s Excellent Cereal

Yes, this was a real product. Back in the ’80s and ’90s, a gentleman by the name of Ralston Purina (of dog food fame) was the king of food item tie-ins for movies. One of his more creative launches was a breakfast cereal based on the teen comedy hit “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure.” It didn’t last long. Guess the adventure was more excellent than the breakfast kibble.

3. Ghiradelli “Twilight” Delight

First, there was Turkish Delight. Now there is Twilight Delight. Yes, the famed chocolatier has created a 72% Cacao Intense Dark chocolate bar in honor of everyone’s favorite vegetarian vamps. While we’re not sure whether little Renesmee pines for sweets, we sure do, so though it’s mighty random, we still approve.

4. “G.I. Joe” Shampoo

He’s a real American hero—both on the battlefield and in the shower, apparently. It would have been hard to tell if he really did have shiny, bouncy locks, after all, since he’s never pictured without a hat or helmet. So when these bottles hit the shelves (another ’80s marketing ploy) it’s no surprise they failed to convince young soldiers to lather, rinse and repeat any more than every other shampoo that came before.

5. “Truffula Tree Friendly” Mazda CX-5

We’ll admit, this one gave us pause. Back when “The Lorax” hit theaters, Mazda launched an ad campaign touting its new CX-5 as… well… here’s the voice-over from the ad. “Who delivers outstanding fuel efficiency without compromising the joy of driving? Mazda with sky-active technology. And who received the only certified Truffula Tree Seal of Approval? Mazda with sky-active technology.” We’re still not sure what sky-active technology is, but does that even matter? The Lorax seems happy and that’s good enough for us.

6. HP Campaign to “Print Like the Lorax”

In all our memories of Dr. Seuss, we don’t recall any stories featuring boatloads of paperwork, but maybe times are changing? In yet another far reach at a marketing partnership, HP encourages us to “print like the Lorax.” That seems a little counter-productive since this little guy’s trying to save the trees, which– last time we checked– were used to make most printing paper. The marketing powers in charge do make some reference to these products being “greener”… but it sure seems like making digital copies would be more Lorax-like.

7. “Star Trek” Waffles

Hmm. We’re not sure whether Captain Kirk and co. noshed on waffles in deep space, but (more importantly) we’re not sure whether we want to either. However, that didn’t stop Eggo from releasing an entire line of limited edition “Star Trek” waffles. The impressive series featured a whopping twenty-five different images, icons and phrases from the franchise. So grab some maple syrup and ask Scotty to beam you up. Or not.

8. Star Trek Casket

Yes. This happened. Eternal Image, a… uh… novelty casket manufacturer, designed a casket based on the Photon Torpedo coffin used in “Stark Trek II: Wrath of Khan.” Not into being buried in the ground, but a super-fan of the franchise? Not to worry, they have “Star Trek” burial urns as well. All we can say is… live well and prosper?

9. “Sherlock Holmes” for 7-11

This one just made us sad. We never really wanted to see one of the greatest crime-solving icons in history hawking coffee in paper cups at a convenience store we usually only stop at when there’s a (serious) need for the bathroom during a long drive. But back in 2009 when “Sherlock Holmes” hit the silver screen, he hit up these mini-marts as well. Why? Because nothing screams British detectives like 99-cent taquitos. Wait.

Categories: Features

Tags: Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, sherlock holmes, Skyfall, star trek

Q&A: Marion Cotillard Never Wants to Go to Another Marineland After ‘Rust and Bone’

It’s only when you feel like you’ve lost everything that you learn who you really are. That’s the thesis of the new French film “Rust and Bone,” starring Academy Award winner Marion Cotillard and Matthias Schoenaerts. Cotillard plays Stephanie, an orca trainer who loses her legs and career following a tragic accident. Following the incident, she’s forced to cope with her new life while also navigating a new relationship with Alain (Schoenaerts), a street fighter and single dad.


The subtitled film is surrounded by awards buzz for its unique story, artsy cinematography and full-hearted performances. This week, before awards season winds up to full speed, Cotillard sat down with Film.com at New York City’s Crosby Hotel to talk Oscars, her new film and why she’ll never visit a Marineland again.


In the U.S., you’re best known for your roles in “Inception” and “The Dark Knight Rises.” “Rust and Bone” has a decidedly different tone. What made you want to get involved in this film?
I’ve always wanted to work with Jacques Audiard, ever since his first movie. So having a proposition from him was really, really crazy amazing for me, and then I read the script. I expected a very special story from him, because all of his movies are very, very special. But I didn’t expect a love story, I didn’t know it was, and I thought it was even more exciting and I totally fell in love with it, and with this character. I fell in love with all the characters in this movie, in this story, and Stephanie was — I felt that would be an experience that I had never had before. That’s what I am looking for in a project, something that I’ve never done before.


Also the fact that before Jacques’ movie I had done many movies with characters based on true people or and I had a lot of material to work with, a lot of information about those people. With [Stephanie], it was like a huge mystery. I had very little information about her. We had to create almost everything. And the opportunity to create and to get into that process of creating someone with such an amazing and brilliant and smart director as Jacques Audiard was really exciting and really inspiring.


You described the movie as a love story, but it’s not a traditional romance. How would you describe it?
It’s definitely an unconventional love story and I think it’s a love story between him and her, between him and his son, between her and the son, and of course between her and the orca. It’s how when there’s nothing left but yourself to face, what do you do with it? Do you let it in, or do you choose to stay out and give up? But then when love is involved there’s no way you will give up.


You mentioned that you did a lot of work creating Stephanie. Did you meet with amputees for character research?
I met with people who worked with orcas because I had to train for the whole choreography of the show, and I cannot be an orca trainer without having to work on that a little bit. But about the amputees, I started to watch footage of people with no legs to see how they move, but very quickly I realized that I didn’t need it because it’s just happened in her life and I didn’t want to have too much information. I thought that I would experience with her what it was. So I didn’t meet anyone, no, for that part. Then your imagination starts to work. What I loved about working with Jacques also is that his search for authenticity can take many directions and to explore many directions is really inspiring and then eventually you will find the authenticity of it. The version you’ve chosen will be richer of all the other versions you’ve explored.


So when you’re doing the hand commands with the whales, you were actually working with them?
Yeah, it was actually during a real show, so I was part of the show and it was a real audience, so we had worked on this before. yeah, I had worked on learning how to ask and to get what I want, and I was very nervous because those people had paid to see a show. I was leading the show, but it went well.


Is that something you ever imagined yourself doing?
Oh my God, never. And I never want to do it again.


Were you scared?
I was not scared of them, I was scared of where they are. The Marineland is not a place where I want to go. I went there once in Chicago and it was a disaster. I cried the whole way because it’s hard for me to see those animals in that kind of environment.


Some animal rights groups are upset about the use of captive animals in the film. It sounds like you might have some sympathy for them.
Well, I remember when I first heard about the project, and I heard about this character, there was a discussion between an agent and some actors, and it was like maybe a year before I was approached. I thought, “Oh my god, as much as I want to work with this director, this is something that I’ll never be able to do.” But then I read the script and I had totally forgotten about that thought, and it actually came back in my mind when I came back to the Marineland. I thought, “Oh my god, this is all real and they’re really there.” But the story and the relationship she has with the whales and what happens to her and especially when she comes back to the whale was — I mean, if it had been a movie about a Marineland, I don’t know if I would have been able to do it. But the relationship with the animals was very powerful, and it was not just showing a Marineland show or something. But it’s still working with animals and it’s still working in a Marineland, which is something that I accepted even though I am not supporting it.


Just a tradeoff you had to make for the role.
Yeah, for the story. Because it was a story that shows something more than just captivity.


Is there a difference in your comfort level between doing a French-language film and an English-speaking part?
Of course, [in French films] I have less work on the language, obviously. But it’s not something that I think about. When I read a story and I feel it’s something that I belong to the story, then you have to work, and to make it work, and find the authenticity of it. But I never think, “Oh, that’s going to be easier because it’s in French,” or “Oh, that’s going to be easy because I have no makeup and hair and I’m going to show up five minutes before action.” It’s not something that I think about.


Do you think “Rust and Bone” could ever have been made in the U.S.?
Yeah. There’s nothing to compare with. It would be, of course, totally different. But even in French, if another director would tell this story it would be different, because there’s no one like Jacques Audiard, there’s no one like another director. But of course here, originally it’s a Canadian story, a story made with two short stories of Craig Davidson. But no, I mean, [the U.S. has] a very interesting independent industry. Well, independent industry, I don’t know if that works, but yeah. And very, very strong visions, very, very strong directors who do amazing independent films, so yeah, I’m sure it would have. It’s a very special story that could totally fit a U.S. film.


How do you choose your roles? You’ve played such varied characters.
Well, I read a story and when I feel that I belong to a story and a story belongs to me, and that I’m gonna be able to give everything I can to the character and the story, it’s really organic. I read something and it gets into my blood and I need to do it. It’s as simple as that.


“Rust and Bone” is getting a lot of Oscar buzz. What do you think of that?
Well, I’m excited that people love the movie, and to be able to share this movie out of my country and have this response to it is really, really exciting. The Oscar buzz itself, I don’t really, I mean, you know, I hear things. But I’m not thinking about it at all, I just want to share the movie. That’s the most important thing for me.


You won the Best Actress Academy Award in 2007 for “La Vie en Rose.” Since you’ve already won a statue, do you feel less pressure now leading up to awards season?
Well, I didn’t have the pressure then, I was enjoying every second of it, and then I was enjoying sharing this movie I had such an amazing experience doing it. Being able to share it almost all over the world was really exciting and that was the most important.


I’ve never felt any pressure. An award, you have to celebrate when it’s there, you have to enjoy it when you get it, but I never expected or I never had a desire to get an award. I just have a desire to meet amazing directors and work with them. Of course when you are rewarded, you really have to enjoy it, but it’s not something that I want to expect.


As an awards veteran, any lessons you’ve learned over the past several seasons?
No, I remember when I started the whole red carpet process, I was really shy, I was really uncomfortable, but then yeah, you get to have fun, which is how you enjoy it. But, no, I always choose what I’m going to wear based on what I like and not what is out there.


Anything about awards season you’re looking forward to?
I never want to see ahead, so if something happens and I have to go to an awards show, I’ll choose then, but I don’t want to think ahead. I really want to enjoy the present time. I want to share the movie.


Do you see a lot of movies?
Well, I used to. Now I’m watching a lot of movies that I bought and DVDs. I don’t go to the theater that much anymore, because I didn’t have time and I spent my time off very far from a movie theater, but I love going to the movie. I watch a lot of movies.


What do you watch?
I watch a lot of documentaries and actually I went to the theater to see “Searching for Sugarman,” which is one of the most incredible stories ever. That artist that came back, you know, to the artistic world is really amazing. I was in shock.


And now what are you working on? Are you looking for your next project?
Yeah, I’ve I wanted to take a time off, I wanted to have my brain clear of stories and characters. I just wanted to go back to myself and the people I love, and so now I’m starting to read again. I’m very excited because I’m really looking for inspiring and great projects.


“Rust and Bone” hit theaters in limited release earlier this month.

Categories: Interviews

Tags: marion cotillard, Q&A, Rust and Bone, Rust and Bone, Marion Cotillard

Knuckle (2011)

 Tanggal Rilis :9 December 2011 (USA)
Jenis Film :Documentary | Biography | Drama
Diperankan Oleh :James Quinn McDonagh, Paddy Quinn McDonagh and Michael Quinn McDonagh

Ringkasan Cerita Knuckle (2011) :

“Setidaknya perang yang Tentang sesuatu!” kata salah satu penonton bingung dalam kursus ini dokumenter cerdas tentang adegan tinju bareknuckle dalam komunitas wisatawan di Irlandia dan Inggris – sebuah kultus pertempuran udara bagi manusia, didorong oleh permusuhan. Selama lebih dari satu dekade, pembuat film Ian Palmer telah Diikuti dengan dendam lama berjalan Antara keluarga Joyce dan Quinn dendam nyata itu telah berawal pada sebuah perkelahian di luar 1.992 Wisatawan pub London. Antara Dua anggota klan yang berbeda, Yang berakhir dengan suatu kematian dan keyakinan pembunuhan untuk yang lain. Tetapi tentang apakah yang sebenarnya ? Atau apakah mereka hanya cinta scrapping?


Keluarga mereka selalu membuat video provokatif untuk menantang berkelahi satu sama lain, kemudian dua orang layak tampak, orang-orang gendut muncul dan menyeimbangkan pelatihan mereka tidak Cleary, termasuk bekerja pada abs mereka. Mereka mengalahkan bejeepers keluar dari satu sama lain dalam sebuah jalan negara terpencil dikelilingi oleh orang-orang, Kebanyakan Dari Siapa memiliki kamera video. (. Salah satunya adalah Palmer sendiri) The Pejuang angin sampai berlumuran darah, tapi – yang terpenting – ada Sepertinya tidak ada bahaya permanen dilakukan. Video yang dihasilkan akan Tampil di belakang van, kopi yang dijual di pub, memicu mitologi macho mual.


Yang kalah kembali ke perkemahan dan kebencian perawat dan keinginan untuk membalas dendam tantangan lain dicatat dan jadi berlangsung. Sebuah komedi hitam tanpa komedi.Film ini mengikuti 12 tahun dalam kehidupan tiga familys wisatawan Irlandia (Nevins, Joyces, Quinns) dan permusuhan pahit mereka dan perkelahian. Film ini mengeksplorasi Alasan Mengapa Mereka Tahan dengan perkelahian dan mengeksplorasi secara mendalam kehidupan rahasia familys, Yang hampir tidak dikenal orang luar dari masyarakat bepergian. Sebuah kisah mencengkeram gairah dan obligasi darah dan Menghormati itu tidak akan pernah berakhir.

Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey (2011)

Tanggal Rilis :27 April 2012 (UK)
Jenis Film :Documentary
Diperankan Oleh :Kevin Clash, Whoopi Goldberg and Frank Oz

Ringkasan Cerita Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey (2011) :

Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey adalah sebuah film dokumenter tentang kehidupan dan karir Clash Kevin. Film ini disutradarai oleh Marks Constance dan memulai debutnya di Festival Film Sundance pada tanggal 23 Januari 2011.Diriwayatkan oleh Whoopi Goldberg, dokumenter fitur rekaman arsip, Termasuk Clash puppeteering sebagai remaja dengan boneka buatan tangan sendiri, serta wawancara dengan Frank Oz, Rosie O’Donnell, Cheryl Henson, Joan Ganz Cooney, Caroll Spinney, Fran Brill, Marty Robinson, dan Bill Barretta.


The City Park perdana film tersebut terjual habis minggu sebelum pemutaran. Itu Dihadiri oleh Kevin Clash, Elmo, Carol-Lynn Parente dan pembuat film. Itu Diikuti oleh Q & A sesi dengan Clash, Elmo, dan Tau Bennett, sebuah 8-tahun dalang Clash berusia Itu mentoring. Brian Muehl itu hadir juga, Clash mengejutkan Setelah Q & A, yang dalam kembali menunjukkan kepada Mereka masih di auditorium Bahwa Ini adalah “Elmo aslinya.”Pada Upacara Awards Sundance pada tanggal 29 Januari 2011, film ini menerima Special Jury Prize: “. Untuk menciptakan sebuah film dokumenter untuk segala usia” Penyerahan penghargaan film Dokumenter tersebut dilakukan oleh Jess Cari, dari Yayasan Channel 4 BRITDOC .


Setelah pemutaran film, Constance Marks Terungkap ke penonton yang tersisa untuk Caroll Spinney Film dokumenter Itu sedang dalam pengerjaan, tapi Keterlibatan disanggah.Film ini ditayangkan di PBS pada tanggal 5 April 2012, dengan menayangkan presentasi ulangan pada tanggal 9 April. [1] (Beberapa stasiun PBS ditayangkan khusus pada tanggal 9, dengan pengulangan pada tanggal 16.) Ini dirilis di DVD pada tanggal 3 April .Film ini dirilis pada Netflix pada tanggal 23 Februari & juga tersedia untuk sewa dan pembelian di Amazon Instan Video, Zune Marketplace, dan iTunes.

Oscar Predictions 2013: Our Picks Thus Far

Meet our new awards expert Joe Reid — keep up with his column for the predictions, news and opinions you’ll need to sound well-informed at parties for the entire awards season.


Six short weeks remain until the Oscar nominations are announced and the picture is definitely clearing up. Right now is the best part of the season, when ANYTHING is possible. So before we get to the precursors — critics awards next week; SAG and Golden Globe nods the week after — I thought I’d lay down some predictions based on where things stand right now in the major categories.


BEST PICTURE


 


Predicted Nominees: “Argo”, “Lincoln”, “Les Miserables”, “Zero Dark Thirty”, “Silver Linings Playbook”, “Beasts of the Southern Wild”, “Amour”.


Other Contenders: “Life of Pi”, “The Master”, “Flight, Moonrise Kingdom”, “Promised Land”.


The big story over the weekend was that both “Les Miserables” and “Zero Dark Thirty” screened for critics, and the crowds went bananas. Without any time for their impact to die down, both have suddenly become LOCKS and FRONTRUNNERS and the ONLY competition for “Lincoln”. As far as I’m concerned, if it is true that both “Les Mis” and “Zero” are the real deal (and I have no reason to think they’re not), I think what we have is a rather exciting four-horse race at the top, with “Lincoln “and “Argo” rounding things out.


Elsewhere, everybody seems to be down on “Beasts”, but I think the critics’ awards will spark a resurgence, and it will end up being the preferred Popular Indie to something like “The Master”, which makes itself so tough to love. I think “Amour” just makes it in as token highbrow prestige, while “Life of Pi” may have to sweat things out, and “Flight” could eke out an 8th-slot nomination as a nod to Grown-Up Moviemaking That Still Makes Money.


BEST ACTOR


Predicted Nominees: Daniel Day Lewis (“Lincoln”), Joaquin Phoenix (“The Master”), Denzel Washington (“Flight”), John Hawkes (“The Sessions”), Hugh Jackman (“Les Miserables”).


Other Contenders: Bradley Cooper (“Silver Linings Playbook”), Anthony Hopkins (“Hitchcock”), Ewan McGregor (“The Impossible”), Jamie Foxx (“Django Unchained”), Christoph Waltz (“Django Unchained”), Matt Damon (“Promised Land”), Richard Gere (“Arbitrage”).


Things are getting hugely competitive in Best Actor, with six incredibly solid contenders. Cooper and Jackman looked to be duking it out for that last spot, but with “Silver Linings” cresting and “Les Mis” getting wildly positive early reaction, it’s getting more and more likely that Hawkes’s slot could be in doubt. And who knows, maybe Joaquin Phoenix will get his wish and not have to worry about the Oscars this year.  Everybody beyond Cooper (and I guess Hopkins) can be considered a long shot at this point, though I maintain that a smart campaign for Richard Gere could be effective if this lineup is starting to seem a little too young. (The Academy likes their Best Actor nominees venerable.)


BEST ACTRESS


Predicted Nominees: Jennifer Lawrence (“Silver Linings Playbook”), Emmanuele Riva (“Amour”), Jessica Chastain (“Zero Dark Thirty”), Quvenzhane Wallis (“Beasts of the Southern Wild”), Helen Mirren (“Hitchcock”).


Other Contenders: Naomi Watts (“The Impossible”), Marion Cotillard (“Rust and Bone”), Keira Knightley (“Anna Karenina”), Judi Dench (“The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”).


The Best Actress field is pretty thin, but in terms of who will win, it’s the most exciting of all the acting competitions. Both Lawrence and Chastain have ascendant career trajectories that could be irresistible to voters looking to crown the Next Big Thing. Which only makes Riva more poised to make a run as the veteran dark horse. I’m not at all confident that “Hitchcock” will end up being an awards player at all, so that Mirren nomination is nothing close to secure. If those positive Naomi Watts reviews from Toronto resurface, she could easily be that fifth nominee.


BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR


Predicted Nominees: Alan Arkin (“Argo”), Tommy Lee Jones (“Lincoln”), Robert DeNiro (“Silver Linings Playbook”), Phillip Seymour Hoffman (“The Master”), James Spader (“Lincoln”).


Other Contenders: Leonardo DiCaprio (“Django Unchained”), Matthew McConaughey (“Magic Mike”), John Goodman (“Flight” or “Argo”), Eddie Redmayne (“Les Miserables”), Javier Bardem (“Skyfall”), Christopher Walken (“Seven Psychopaths”).


Like Best Actor, Supporting Actor has four entrenched contenders (it’s too early to call anyone a “lock,” but if you must use that word, they would be that) plus some heavy competition for slot #5. If “The Master” continues its slide towards disfavor, Hoffman could very well get forgotten, though. Quentin Tarantino has had impeccable success in taking established actors in new directions, which could be just what DiCaprio needs to capture Academy attention again. But while I would not count out Matthew McConaughey, I think the guy I’m putting my money on at the moment is Spader. EVERY Lincoln rave ends up mentioning him. It reminds me a bit of Mark Wahlberg in “The “Departed, who was never pegged for an Oscar nomination until every single person in Hollywood said “You know who I really liked? Mark Wahlberg!”


BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS


Predicted Nominees: Sally Field (“Lincoln”), Anne Hathaway (“Les Miserables”), Helen Hunt (“The Sessions”), Amy Adams (“The Master”), Samantha Barks (“Les Miserables”).


Other Contenders:  Judi Dench (“Skyfall”), Helena Bonham-Carter (“Les Miserables”), Salma Hayek (“Savages”), Maggie Smith (“The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”), Barbra Streisand (“The Guilt Trip”), Kristen Stewart (“On the Road”).


Most wide-open of the acting categories. Field, Hathaway, and Hunt are definitely happening. Amy Adams would be out of luck in a more competitive year, but I think she makes it now. Beyond that? Anybody’s game. Name me a contender. For God’s sake, I’ve got Streisand listed! (Though, honestly, can you imagine a more perfect Golden Globe nominee?) I just want to say right now: Salma Hayek could DEFINITELY happen, if they only campaign for it. Somebody campaign for it. Please.

Categories: Awards

Tags: Argo, ben affleck, Les Miserables, Lincoln, Silver Linings Playbook, steven spielberg, the master, The Sessions, This is 40, Zero Dark Thirty, Moonrise Kingdom, Argo, Les Miserables, Life of Pi, The Master, Flight, The Silver Linings Playbook, Lincoln, Inside Llewyn Davis

Sabtu, 01 Desember 2012

Independent Spirit Awards: Good News/Bad News

Meet our new awards expert Joe Reid — keep up with his column for the predictions, news and opinions you’ll need to sound well-informed at parties for the entire awards season.


The 28th Annual Film Independent Spirit Award nominations were announced on Tuesday — you can check out the full list of nominees here. I made my best guesses for who would be nominated yesterday, but as always, the Spirits had more than their fair share of curveballs ready for me. I did okay. Three-for-five in most categories, with my best showing in Supporting Female, where I missed only Lorraine Toussaint for “Middle of Nowhere,” because I was possessed of the fool notion that Nicole Kidman’s sticky performance in “The Paperboy” might bring a bit of the A-List to the Spirits.


I should also note that while I was correct in assuming that The Weinstein Company would have no problem sneaking “Silver Linings Playbook” past the $20 million budget cap, I did not anticipate that “Seven Psychopaths” or “The Loneliest Planet” would be deemed American enough to qualify, nor that “Magic Mike” would have its status as a studio film brushed aside. I’m not exactly complaining — particularly when it comes to “Magic Mike,” which kept to a tidy little budget and felt sufficiently indie in spirit.


GOOD NEWS: “Silver Linings Playbook”


With five nominations, The Weinstein Company got their top dog into the Best Feature race, and it’s hard to not think of it as the frontrunner to sweep the Spirits on Oscar eve. I’d place Jennifer Lawrence (over Quvenzhane Wallis) and Bradley Cooper (over John Hawkes) as favorites in Female and Male Lead, and David O. Russell the favorite in Director and perhaps even Screenplay. You might expect a backlash against aggressive campaigning from an organization with “Independent Spirit” in their title, but the last few years have shown no indication that voters will rebel against big-time Oscar players.


GOOD NEWS: “Moonrise Kingdom”


Wes Anderson’s latest also grabbed five nominations, though I’d say it’s only a threat to win in Screenplay. Still, it was a nice get for Bruce Willis in Supporting Male, and maybe the producers of the award show can coax him and his harmonica onstage for one of their customary musical performances. More importantly, as far as the Oscar race goes, five nominations are more than enough to keep fledgling Best Picture hopes afloat, for now. (Next stop: a Golden Globe nomination for Best Musical/Comedy?)


GOOD (?) NEWS: “Beasts of the Southern Wild”


Nominations for Best Feature, Best Female Lead, and Best Director for Benh Zeitlin  all add up to a very good day for the Sundance hit and leading contender to represent true (i.e. non-Weinstein) indies at the Oscars. But it could have been an even better one. No nomination surfaced in Supporting Male for Dwight Henry, as Hushpuppy’s troubled dad, nor for screenwriter Lucy Alibar. Alibar’s script (adapted from her own stage play) is already fighting an uphill battle at the Oscars, with “Lincoln,” “Silver Linings,” “Argo,” and “Life of Pi” crowding the category.


GOOD NEWS: “Middle of Nowhere”


Showing up bigger than expected was Ada DuVernay’s film about a woman dealing with the incarceration of her husband,  which got Best Female Lead for Emayatzy Corinealdi (as predicted), as well as notices in Supporting Female (Toussaint), Supporting Male (David Oyelowo), and a nomination for the John Cassavetes Award, for best feature film made for under $500,00.  This is exactly the kind of movie that benefits most from a Spirit nod, and hopefully more people will end up seeing it now.


GOOD NEWS: “Keep the Lights On”


The day’s most unexpected juggernaut was easily Ira Sachs’s “Keep the Lights On,” which scored for Best Feature, Best Director, and Best Screenplay, along with a Best Male Lead nod for Thure Lindhardt, as one half of a gay couple whose hearts are put through the wringer by the other’s drug addiction. Both are fine choices and deserving of the publicity boost.


GOOD NEWS: Matthew McConaughey


In the acting races, the Spirit nod can’t hurt the campaigns for performers like Mary Elizabeth Winstead (“Smashed”) and Ann Dowd (“Compliance”), but the big winner is McConaughey, whose two nominations (supporting for “Magic Mike,” lead for “Killer Joe”) will only advance the notion that 2012 was the Year of McConaughey. That Oscar nomination is still looking entirely attainable.


BAD NEWS: Richard Gere


Getting shut out for his well-regarded performance in “Arbitrage” is a blow, in no uncertain terms. The Best Actor race at the Oscars is already looking far too crowded to get rushed by such a small film. The Spirits seemed to be the one place Gere was poised to get his due. Alas. Other acting hopefuls who got the cold shoulder include Robert DeNiro, though you can probably chalk his absence from Best Supporting Male for “Silver Linings Playbook” to a fluke more than anything. He’s so very Establishment; that’s gotta be a tough sell for the Spirits. Think of it like George Clooney getting passed over for “The Descendants” last year.


BAD NEWS: “Hitchcock”


The total shutout for “Hitchcock” — no Anthony Hopkins, no Helen Mirren, no nothing — can’t be a good sign for that film’s awards chances going forward. That said, it’s always felt like a far better fit at the Golden Globes than at the Spirits, so maybe that’s where it will find traction.


BAD NEWS: Greta Gerwig


One prediction I whiffed on was that Gerwig would see a Female Lead nomination for her festival hit “Frances Ha.” Maybe they’re holding back to prepare to shower it with love next year, when it will have actually opened. But even so, there were plentiful other opportunities to nominate this ascendant actress, for either her sad-eyed wanderings in “Lola Versus” or for her cracked take on collegiate perfectionism in Whit Stillman’s “Damsels in Distress.” Better luck next year!


GOOD NEWS: Brit Marling


This might be promising news for Gerwig fans: the darling of Sundance 2011, Marling was nominated twice last year (First Feature and First Screenplay) for the middling “Another Earth,” but waited a whole year for her first acting nomination, for her spellbinding performance as a cult leader in “Sound of My Voice.” I was a doubter of the Brit Hype myself (she was in “Arbitrage” as well and was, you know, fine), but she knocked me out in “Sound,” at turns compelling and quietly terrifying. My favorite nomination of the day.


GOOD NEWS/BAD NEWS: “Seven Psychopaths”


The first good news, of course, is that this UK-produced (though American-set) picture was deemed eligible for these awards at all. And even better news for Sam Rockwell, who got an unexpected Supporting Male notice. It was unexpected, mostly, because Christopher Walken had been touted as the supporting actor to watch in the film. Maybe Walken and DeNiro can stage a “Deer Hunter” reunion/cocktail hour while the Spirit Awards play out in Santa Monica. Somebody get Meryl Streep on the phone!

Categories: Awards

Tags: Magic Mike, Moonrise Kingdom, Silver Linings Playbook