Tag Archives: movies

Recently Watched: May 2011

7 Jun
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows P1 — The first installment of the two-part conclusion to the Harry Potter series finds the bespectacled wizard (Daniel Radcliffe) walking away from his last year at Hogwarts to find and destroy the remaining Horcruxes, putting an end to Voldemort’s bid for immortality. But with Harry’s beloved Dumbledore dead and Voldemort’s unscrupulous Death Eaters on the loose, the world is more dangerous than ever.

Man in the Chair— Hoping to craft the winning entry in a student film competition, teenage movie geek Cameron (Michael Angarano) enlists the help of an ornery old Hollywood gaffer named Flash (Christopher Plummer), who happens to be the last surviving crew member of Orson Welles’s masterpiece Citizen Kane. This unusual comedy also stars Robert Wagner as a has-been producer and M. Emmet Walsh as a retired screenwriter.

Perry Mason: The Sinister Spirit— When a reviled horror author plummets to his death from atop a hotel bell tower, an eyewitness (Kim Delaney) spots disgruntled book publisher Jordan (Robert Stack) at the crime scene. Expert defense attorney Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) steps in to prove his innocence. As Perry tries to uncover the truth, his partner Paul (William Katt) investigates a series of spooky ghost sightings.

Jack Goes Boating — Philip Seymour Hoffman directs and stars in this romantic comedy about Jack, a marijuana-smoking Manhattan limo driver who begins an unlikely regimen of self-improvement to win the heart of a fellow misfit named Connie (Amy Ryan). But as Jack learns to cook and swim for the benefit of his girl, he also witnesses the breakup of his best friends’ marriage. John Ortiz and Daphne Rubin-Vega co-star in this adaptation of Bob Glaudini’s play.

Hereafter — Clint Eastwood directs this supernatural thriller about three very different people and their responses to death, including a hesitant American psychic named George (Matt Damon) who may be able to help the others find answers and peace. Marie (Cécile De France) is a French journalist caught up in the aftereffects of the devastating 2004 tsunami, while in London, young Marcus (Frankie and George McLaren) seeks to contact his deceased twin brother.

Black Swan — In director Darren Aronofsky’s psychological thriller, ambitious New York City ballet dancer Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman) lands the lead in “Swan Lake” but soon thinks her dreams of stardom are threatened by a rival ballerina (Mila Kunis). As opening night nears and the pressure to be perfect builds, Nina’s obsession descends into paranoia and delusion. Portman won an Academy Award for the film, which also nabbed an Oscar nod for Best Picture.

Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader — With their dour, bookish cousin Eustace (Will Poulter) in tow, the youngest Pevensie offspring — Lucy (Georgie Henley) and Edmund (Skandar Keynes) — take an unexpected trip back to Narnia and join noble King Caspian (Ben Barnes) for an epic high-seas adventure. Setting sail aboard the Dawn Treader, the young heroes head for the end of the world, determined to rescue seven once-powerful lords banished by Caspian’s evil uncle.

Nothing But the Truth — Journalist Rachel Armstrong (Kate Beckinsale) turns Washington on its ear when she outs a casual acquaintance (Vera Farmiga) as a CIA agent. The government’s formidable prosecutor (Matt Dillon) sends Rachel to jail for contempt, where she discovers the true impact of her decision. David Schwimmer and Alan Alda co-star in this drama from Rod Lurie, the politically savvy filmmaker behind The Contender and “Commander in Chief.”

The Champ — Andy Purcell (Wallace Beery) is a washed-up, boozy boxer and compulsive gambler who travels from bout to bout with his adoring son, Dink (Jackie Cooper), in tow. But when Andy lands in a Tijuana jail, he realizes Dink’s welfare is at stake and sends him to live with his mother (Irene Rich). For his tour-de-force performance in the title role, Beery walked away with the Academy Award for Best Actor.

Treasure Island — When young Jim Hawkins and cohorts book passage on a ship to take them to the “treasure island” of their map to pirate gold, they soon discover that not all of the crew is on their side — and that the loot they’re seeking has already been found. Getting the booty — and getting out alive — could prove tricky. This fifth film version of the classic tale stars Wallace Beery as Long John Silver and Jackie Cooper as Hawkins.

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie — In Luis Buñuel’s deliciously satiric, Oscar-winning masterpiece, an upper-class sextet (Fernando Rey, Paul Frankeur, Delphine Seyrig, Stéphane Audran, Bulle Ogier and Jean-Pierre Cassel) sits down to dinner but never eats, their attempts repeatedly thwarted by a vaudevillian mixture of events both actual and imagined. Perhaps his greatest film, Buñuel’s absurdist view of the upper class is a timeless satire about consumerism and class privilege.

Animal Kingdom — When his mother dies suddenly, a 17-year-old boy (James Frecheville) finds himself drawn into the clutches of a diabolical criminal family, until a good-hearted detective (Guy Pearce) makes a concerted effort to change the boy’s fate. Australian writer-director David Michôd’s first feature-length drama won the World Cinema Jury Prize: Dramatic at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.


Hercules and the Circle of Fire — All the fires in the world are dying out at once, and it’s up to the legendary Hercules (Kevin Sorbo) and Deianeira (Tawny Kitaen) to bring warmth back to the mortal realm. Overseeing these adventures is Zeus (Anthony Quinn), king of the gods, who just as soon interferes as assists the heroes. Kevin Atkinson appears as Cheiron and Stephanie Barrett as Phaedra in this made-for-TV take on the classic myth.


Mosaic — When an ancient rune stone reacts with a sudden electrical storm, upcoming teen actress Maggie Nelson (voiced by Anna Paquin) is caught in the middle and becomes an unlikely superhero. Transformed by the incident, she develops the ability to shape-shift like a human chameleon capable of blending into any environment. Facing off against a crazed alchemist, can Maggie thwart the madman’s plot and manage to graduate from high school?


Jesse Stone: Innocents Lost — The seventh installation of this popular crime-drama series finds alcoholic cop Jesse Stone back on the job as police chief of Paradise, Mass., suspecting that the apparent drug-related suicide of a young friend is actually foul play.


Code 46 — In this futuristic sci-fi romance, William (Tim Robbins) is an insurance examiner whose company assigns him to investigate the use of papelles, fake travel insurance papers required by the strict government. Along the way, he meets Maria (Samantha Morton), the woman responsible for the phony papelles. Although he knows who she is, he engages in a fiery affair with her … but he’ll have to end it within 24 hours, when his own papelles expire.


The Legend of the Lone Ranger — Discover how the Lone Ranger (Klinton Spilsbury) rose to mythical status in the Wild West in this thrilling adventure. His thirst for justice may have begun as early as his adolescent years, when his parents were murdered. At first he tries to work within the boundaries of the law by serving as a Texas Ranger, but after being shot by a member of the Cavendish gang, the Lone Ranger decides to ride solo, accompanied only by his trusted pal, Tonto.

Ice Pirates — Intergalactic buccaneers (led by Robert Urich) traversing the outer reaches of space in search of booty agree to help a princess (Mary Crosby) whose father has disappeared, as they attempt to reform their thieving ways by stealing water (in the form of ice) to supply a thirsty planet. John Carradine, Anjelica Huston and John Matuszak co-star in this fantasy-adventure from director Stewart Raffill (Mac and Me).


Runaway — Michael Crichton (who wrote both the novel and the screenplay Jurassic Park) directs this near-future sci-fi/crime thriller that explores the classic theme of machines gone bad. Sgt. Jack Ramsey (Tom Selleck) is the police robotics expert on the case when evil genius Dr. Charles Luthor (Kiss front man Gene Simmons) unleashes his reprogrammed androids. Runaway also stars Cynthia Rhoades (Dirty Dancing) and Kirstie Alley (“Cheers”).


Unstoppable — It’s a nail-biting race against time as an unmanned train carrying a load of lethal chemicals speeds out of control, and a conductor and engineer do everything in their power to keep it from derailing and killing tens of thousands of people. Denzel Washington leads the cast in Tony Scott’s tough-minded action thriller, in which a terrible circumstance forces a couple of ordinary men to become extraordinary heroes.


Lawman — Director Michael Winner’s stoic interpretation of a timeless Western motif stars Burt Lancaster as flinty, uncompromising Marshal Jered Maddox. He’s out to jail seven cowpunchers who left a corpse in the wake of their drunken spree. Along the way, Maddox contends with an aging cattle baron (Lee J. Cobb), a milquetoast sheriff (Robert Ryan) and a town full of craven hypocrites, all carved into fascinating characters by a topnotch ensemble cast.


The Green Hornet — Seth Rogen and writing partner Evan Goldberg (Superbad) apply their trademark humor to the superhero genre in this big-screen action-adventure about a newspaper-publishing playboy (Rogen) who dons a disguise to fight crime after hours. As the Green Hornet, Britt Reid’s power is no longer limited to the printed page — and thanks to a nimble martial-arts expert (Jay Chou), he has the skills to expose the city’s roughest criminals.


I Am Number Four — After nine aliens flee their home planet to find a peaceful life on Earth, their plans are shattered by pursuers who must kill them in number order. Number Four is a teen named John (Alex Pettyfer), who uses his extraordinary abilities to battle his enemies. John’s guardian, Henri (Timothy Olyphant), aids him in his deadly fight while he tries to protect his human girlfriend, Sarah (Dianna Agron), and connect with the others who share his powers.


The Inspectors — U.S Postal Inspectors are called in when a suburban couple are killed by a mail bomb. Suspicion immediately falls on the couple’s estranged and heavily in debt son, who also just happens to be a Navy munitions expert. But investigations reveal that he is on the run from a past event in his life that is associated with the bombings. (from IMDb)


The Illusionist — Oscar-nominated for Best Animated Feature, this wistful tale follows the fading fortunes of aging illusionist Tatischeff , who’s forced to perform in obscure venues as his act is eclipsed by the growing popularity of rock bands. He gets an emotional lift, though, from a wide-eyed girl named Alice, who thinks he possesses magic powers. But Tatischeff’s “sleight of hand” efforts to impress her with expensive gifts may lead to his financial undoing.


Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles — Picking up right where the movie Terminator 2: Judgment Day left off, this series follows Sarah Connor (Lena Headey) and her son John (Thomas Dekker) as they race to save humanity from forces sent from the future. Pursued by agents of Skynet, the mother and son must use their wits and create alliances to ensure that John survives to become the savior of the human race. Disguised as regular people, evil Terminators seek to destroy the duo.


Kym’s Picks: 05/24/2011 and 05/29/2011

2 Jun

mmm
Biutiful — Diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer, Uxbal (Javier Bardem) — a divorced father raising two children — is determined to atone for his life as a black marketeer in this engrossing character study that unfolds in the slums of Barcelona, Spain. Co-starring Maricel Álvarez as Uxbal’s estranged wife, director Alejandro González Iñárritu’s haunting tale received Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Best Foreign Language Film.


The Waiting City — Radha Mitchell and Joel Edgerton star as adoptive parents-to-be, en route from Australia to Calcutta to pick up their new baby, in this unconventional love story infused with the exotic charms of India from director Claire McCarthy. To foreigners who have never been on Indian soil, the city is at once intoxicating and overwhelming. But it also has the power to pull the couple’s already fragile marriage apart at the seams.


mmm

mmm
Even the Rain — In this provocative film-within-a-film, director Sebastián (Gael García Bernal) heads to Bolivia to shoot a film about Christopher Columbus’s trespasses in the New World, only to find the locals protesting present-day exploitation of the poor. Sebastián is sympathetic to the cause, but realities collide when lead actor Daniel (Juan Carlos Aduviri), cast as a rebel against the Spanish, becomes a key figure in the demonstrations.


Kaboom — Lovelorn college student Smith (Thomas Dekker) spends his days hanging with his friend Stella (Haley Bennett) and his nights lusting after his straight roommate Thor (Chris Zylka), until one wild party shatters his world in this comic thriller from edgy director Gregg Araki. After eating drug-laced cookies, Smith witnesses the murder of an enigmatic woman who has haunted his dreams, and he begins a bizarre journey that will determine his future.


Passion Play — Restrained by a ruthless gangster (Bill Murray), gorgeous Lily (Megan Fox), a circus freak whose incredible wings make her look like an angel, yearns for freedom. After crossing paths with the trapped beauty, down-on-his-luck musician Nate (Mickey Rourke) commits himself to rescuing her. The directorial debut of established screenwriter Mitch Glazer, this unconventional love story also stars Rhys Ifans, Kelly Lynch and Bud Cort.


mmm

mmm
Rizzoli and Isles: S1 — One comes from a blue collar family and the other from a background of privilege, yet tough-as-nails detective Jane Rizzoli and über-intellectual medical examiner Maura Isles are a match made in crimefighting heaven as they combat Boston’s baddest.


mmm

mmm
The Planets — Take a thrilling guided tour of our solar system in this documentary series, which examines cutting-edge scientific discoveries about the planets, explores the origin and fate of the sun, considers the possibility of life on other worlds and more.


Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies — Director Arne Glimcher (The Mambo Kings) and narrator-producer Martin Scorsese present this documentary that explores the connection between cinema and the Cubist paintings of Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque. Film clips from Georges Méliès and others offer a cinephile’s delight, as interviews with filmmakers, artists and historians, including Scorsese, Chuck Close, and Julian Schnabel, give insightful commentary.


Transcendent Man — Inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil is the subject of this documentary that follows him on a world speaking tour in which he expounds on his ideas about the merging of man and machine, which he predicts will occur in the not-so-distant future. The visionary who invented the first text-to-speech synthesizer and much more raises eyebrows here with his wildly optimistic views of a technology-enhanced future.


Mao’s Last Dancer — A delegation from Madame Mao’s Beijing Dance Academy selects 11-year-old peasant villager Li Cunxin to study ballet in far-off Beijing, where he trains for seven grueling years to become one of China’s greatest dancers. His efforts win him the opportunity to dance in America, opening his eyes to a new love and the possibility of a dramatic defection from China in this remarkable true story based on Cunxin’s autobiography.


Netflix Instant Watch: Expiring Soon

22 May

May 24:

mmm
Hey Hey It’s Esther Blueburger — A total outcast at her private school, Esther (Danielle Catanzariti) suffocates under her mother’s (Essie Davis) constant pressure at home. But after forming an unlikely friendship with well-liked Sunni (Keisha Castle-Hughes), Esther starts taking daring risks and suddenly becomes popular. A smart, good-natured comedy about learning to be yourself, this Australian coming-of-age story also features Toni Collette.


A Midsummer Night’s Dream — Peter Hall directs this fine Royal Shakespeare Company adaptation of the Bard’s most pixilated romantic comedy about a group of amorous adults — under a fairy’s spell — that couple and uncouple at the slightest provocation. (“What fools these mortals be.”) Stars Diana Rigg, Judi Dench, Ian Holm, Helen Mirren, Ian Richardson and David Warner. One of Shakespeare’s most magical plays (and unusual in that it lacks a written source for the plot).


Legend of the Seeker: S1-2 — His mighty deeds foretold in an ancient prophecy, the heroic Seeker (Craig Horner) joins forces with alluring Confessor Kahlan (Bridget Regan) and wise wizard Zedd (Bruce Spence) to defeat magic-wielding tyrant Darken Rahl (Craig Parker), the Keeper of the underworld and other nasty enemies. Based on Terry Goodkind’s best-selling novels, this fantasy series features thrilling action scenes full of swordplay and sorcery.


Nuts in May — Director Mike Leigh’s made-for-television masterpiece, Nuts in May, continues his social commentary on the tensions among economic and social classes in British society. An affluent, snobby couple, Keith (Roger Sloman) and Candice-Marie (Alison Steadman), go camping, but their idyll is destroyed by the arrival of a music-blaring college student, Ray (Anthony O’Donnell), and the loud Finger (Stephen Bill) and his wife, Honky (Sheila Kelley).


Punch-Drunk Love — Barry Egan (Adam Sandler) — a bathroom supply salesman prone to paroxysms of destructive rage — finds his life refreshed when he meets Lena Leonard (Emily Watson), who falls in unconditional love with him. Meanwhile, Egan tries to escape constant harassment from his seven sisters as well as three thugs who have implicated him in a phone sex extortion scam. Paul Thomas Anderson (Boogie Nights, There Will Be Blood) writes and directs.


mmm

May 25:

mmm
Amargosa — Soon after a psychic tells her she will give up her dancing career and move to a remote town that starts with the letter A, Marta Becket is stranded in Death Valley Junction, Calif. But when she finds out the town used to be named Amargosa, she knows she’s found her destiny. This documentary from director Todd Robinson follows Marta’s lonely existence dancing in an abandoned theater with only the company of an audience hand-painted on the walls.


Beautiful Girls — In director Ted Demme’s smartly written, slice-of-life film, Willie Conway (Timothy Hutton) returns to the small town he left behind as erstwhile friends, lovers and the scary thought of settling down swirl around him. A friend’s unapproachable cousin (Uma Thurman) and the winsome teenager next door (Natalie Portman, in a standout performance) couldn’t be more different, but they afford glimpses of two possible futures.


Late for Dinner — On the lam in 1962 for a crime he thinks he committed, family guy Willie Husband (Brian Wimmer) flees his picture-perfect Santa Fe wife, Joy (Marcia Gay Harden), and child, lands in a cryogenic deep sleep with dim bulb buddy Frank (Peter Berg), and wakes up 29 years later yet only one day older. In this sci-fi romantic comedy, Willie tries to go home again, but discovers on arrival that even if his feelings haven’t changed, Joy’s life has.


mmm

May 26:

mmm
Black Orpheus — This superb retelling of the Orpheus and Eurydice Greek legend is set against Rio de Janeiro’s madness during Carnival. Orpheus (Breno Mello), a trolley car conductor, is engaged to Mira (Lourdes de Oliveira) but in love with Eurydice (Marpessa Dawn). A vengeful Mira and Eurydice’s ex-lover, costumed as Death, pursue Orpheus and his new paramour through the feverish Carnival night. Black Orpheus earned an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.


Burden of Dreams — This feature-length documentary from filmmaker Les Blank paints a riveting portrait of megalomaniacal German director Werner Herzog as he worked against almost insurmountable odds in the Amazon jungle to craft his epic movie Fitzcarraldo. Besides capturing the seemingly hexed production’s myriad adversities, Blank’s camera exposes Herzog as a man obsessed with his art and pressed to the brink of insanity to see his cinematic vision fulfilled.


Children of Paradise — Often considered the classic epic of French film, Children of Paradise is the tragic tale of vastly different men who all fall for the same woman (played by Arletty). This romantic saga takes place amid a theatrical community in 19th-century Paris, set against a backdrop of intrigue, duels and murder that allegorizes occupied France. Jean-Louis Barrault, Pierre Brasseur and María Casares co-star in this Oscar-nominated film for Best Original Screenplay.



Au Revoir Les Enfants — As World War II rages on, two students at a boarding school — the French-Catholic Julien Quintin (Gaspard Manesse) and the Jewish Jean Bonnet (Raphael Fejto) — form an unlikely friendship in director Louis Malle’s powerfully moving drama based on events from his own life. Although the boys begin as adversaries, they soon find common ground, especially when it becomes clear that Jean is merely trying to survive the tyranny of the Nazis.


Beauty and the Beast — Lost in the woods, a hapless merchant is captured and held prisoner in the castle of a beastlike man (Jean Marais), who vows to kill the merchant unless he’s replaced by one of his daughters. The lovely Belle (Josette Day) gives herself up to save her father. But before long, she finds the beauty hiding inside her grotesque captor in this lyrical masterpiece, the most celebrated film of the French director and poet Jean Cocteau.


Eyes Without a Face — A plastic surgeon (Pierre Brasseur) becomes obsessed with making things right after his daughter Christiane’s (Edith Scob) face is terribly disfigured in a car accident that he caused. Overcome with guilt, Dr. Genessier and his vicious nurse, Louise (Alida Valli), concoct a plan to give Christiane her face back by kidnapping young girls and removing their faces … and then grafting them onto Christiane’s.


Knife in the Water — Director Roman Polanski ratchets up the suspense with a story that takes place almost entirely within the confined setting of a sailboat owned by a wealthy journalist and his much younger wife. On their way to the lake for a weekend of sailing, the couple invites a young hitchhiker to join them on their boat. But hostility looms as each man tries to humiliate the other in front of the woman.


Le Jetee — In this groundbreaking sci-fi tale told through still photos, a human guinea pig travels back in time from post-apocalyptic Paris to the peaceful days of his childhood, where he falls for a familiar woman and fights to remain in the past. The inspiration for the film 12 Monkeys, this engrossing masterpiece from French filmmaker Chris Marker stars Jean Négroni’s voice, Davos Hanich, Hélène Chatelain and Jacques Ledoux.


Sans Soleil — A unique meditation on time, memory and place from French filmmaker Chris Marker, this nonlinear essay fuses the poetic narration of an unseen woman with kaleidoscopic images from Iceland, Cape Verde, Japan, San Francisco and Guinea-Bissau. Several of the film’s most striking scenes include petrified animals in the desert, dancing teenagers, sleeping commuters and visits to locations from Alfred Hitchcock’s film Vertigo.


Solaris — Scientist Kris Kelvin travels to the mysterious planet Solaris to investigate the failure of an earlier mission. But when his long-dead wife appears on the space station, he realizes the planet has the power to materialize human desires. Director Andrei Tarkovsky’s sci-fi cult classic, based on Stanislaw Lem’s novel, presents an uncompromisingly unique and poetic meditation on space travel and its physical and existential ramifications.


The Spirit of the Beehive — In this mesmerizing allegorical tale set in post-Civil War Spain, precocious young Ana (Ana Torrent) becomes obsessed with finding the spirit of Frankenstein’s monster after watching director James Whale’s 1931 classic. When she happens upon a wounded military deserter, Ana believes that she’s evoked the cinematic creature.


The Sweet Hereafter — Director Atom Egoyan’s haunting adaptation of Russell Banks’s novel follows a grieving mountain community in the wake of a tragic school bus accident that takes the lives of numerous local children. A lawyer (Ian Holm) arrives in town to persuade the survivors to initiate a class-action lawsuit, driving apart the once tight-knit hamlet. Meanwhile, a teen crippled in the crash (Sarah Polley) must choose between mourning and moving on.


The Virgin Spring — On the way to deliver candles to a church, the virginal daughter (Birgitta Pettersson) of feudal landowner Töre (Max von Sydow) is savagely raped and murdered. But fate takes a vengeful hand when the killers unknowingly seek food and shelter at the girl’s home. Set in medieval Sweden, this disturbing tale directed by Ingmar Bergman earned an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.


Mon Oncle — Jacques Tati plays Monsieur Hulot, a self-absorbed chucklehead wrestling with neoteric gadgetry — and losing — in this satirical masterpiece that makes sport of mechanization, class distinctions and modernity. While visiting his sister’s surreal, ultra-trendy home, Hulot finds himself incessantly at odds with newfangled contraptions that get the better of him. The tongue-in-cheek French comedy garnered a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.


Kym’s Picks: 04/19/2011 and 04/26/2011

28 Apr

mmm
Britain’s King George VI (Colin Firth) struggles with an embarrassing stutter for years until he seeks help from unorthodox Australian speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush) in this biographical drama that chalked up multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Logue’s pioneering treatment and unlikely friendship give the royal leader a sense of confidence that serves him and his country well during the dark days of World War II.


In director Darren Aronofsky’s psychological thriller, ambitious New York City ballet dancer Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman) lands the lead in “Swan Lake” but soon thinks her dreams of stardom are threatened by a rival ballerina (Mila Kunis). As opening night nears and the pressure to be perfect builds, Nina’s obsession descends into paranoia and delusion. Portman won an Academy Award for the film, which also nabbed an Oscar nod for Best Picture.


In this raw drama based on David Lindsay-Abaire’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name, Becca (Nicole Kidman) and Howie (Aaron Eckhart) grapple with the realities of life eight months after the death of their 4-year-old son, Danny. Even with Becca’s well-meaning mother (Dianne Wiest) offering comfort and weekly group therapy always available, the couple go about their own secret ways of coping. John Cameron Mitchell directs.



mmm
In this pair of sequels to his 2006 children’s fantasy, writer-director Luc Besson tells the continuing story of Arthur (Freddie Highmore), an adventurous 10-year-old who returns to the land of the elfin Minimoys to help them defeat the evil Emperor Maltazard. Blending elements of live action and animation, the films also star Mia Farrow as Arthur’s grandmother and feature the vocal talents of Snoop Dogg, Lou Reed and other high-profile artists.


Billy Casper (David Bradley) is a puny kid from the poor end of Barnsley. He’s struggling in school, bullied by his older brother and basically dismissed by everyone else. But when he finds an injured fledgling kestrel, he begins to train the bird. In the process, he learns a lot about himself. This award-winning coming-of-age drama from director Ken Loach is based on the novel by Barry Hines and co-stars Freddie Fletcher and Brian Glover.


After narrowly escaping from a wretched World War II Siberian labor camp, a small band of multinational soldiers desperately undertakes a harrowing journey to traverse Siberia, the Gobi Desert and the Himalayas on foot. Directed by Peter Weir, this exciting drama about courage and endurance — based on a true story — stars Colin Farrell, Jim Sturgess, Ed Harris, Saoirse Ronan, Mark Strong and Gustaf Skarsgård.


After a wild night of partying with friends, Terry (Donald Faison) awakens to discover that he’s one of the few remaining people on Earth. Banding together with a small group of survivors (Eric Balfour, Scottie Thompson, David Zayas, Brittany Daniel and Crystal Reed), Terry sets out to solve the mystery of what happened to the human race. Greg and Colin Strause (whose work includes the visual effects for Avatar and 300) direct.


Watery Venice, Italy, provides the setting as Johnny Depp, playing an American tourist seeking solace for his shattered heart, instead finds it in danger again after encountering a beautiful Interpol agent (Angelina Jolie). Little does the Yank know that the artful lady has gone to great lengths to arrange their “chance” meeting and is using him to trap a thief who happens to be her ex-lover. The film earned Golden Globe nods for Depp and Jolie.


Nothing can separate Linus and his beloved blue blanket, but with the news that disapproving Grandma is coming to visit, the Peanuts gang tries everything in their power to persuade the independent-minded boy to let go. In this adaptation of Charles Schulz’s original comic strips, Linus holds on for dear life as big sister Lucy applies her psychiatric techniques, Charlie Brown lends a sympathetic hand and Snoopy simply snatches the blanket.


Stephen Turnbull (Edward Hogg) hasn’t left his flat in months. With so much time to think, his mind wanders back to a road trip he and his friend Bunny (Simon Farnaby) once took across Europe. As he revisits the journey, a psychedelic swirl of memories invades his living room. And since most of the trip was an utter disaster, Stephen’s apartment is in for a makeover. Paul King, the mad genius behind “The Mighty Boosh,” helms this comedy.


While searching for an ancient relic on the stunning Greek island of Patmos, uptight American archaeologist Eric (Matthew Modine) falls for vivacious local Katerina (Agni Scott). But when his career clashes with his burgeoning romance, Eric must decide what matters most in life. Director Udayan Prasad’s feel-good romantic comedy about letting go of your fears also stars Richard Griffiths and Alki David.



mmm
Set in post-Katrina New Orleans, this multifaceted drama follows the challenges facing the devastated city’s frustrated yet determined residents, including trombonist Antoine (Wendell Pierce), Mardi Gras Indian Chief Albert (Clarke Peters) and restaurant owner Janette (Kim Dickens). Created by David Simon (“The Wire”) and Eric Overmyer (“Homicide: Life on the Street”), the HBO series also stars Steve Zahn, John Goodman and Melissa Leo.



mmm
Documentarian Billy Corben shines a spotlight on three unusual and interrelated stories about drug trafficking in Florida during the 1970s and 1980s, when marijuana smuggling was big business practiced by everyone from ordinary folks to pirates. Interviews and archival footage examine the practices of the incendiary Ethiopian Coptic Church, the jobless fishermen who grew pot in Everglades City and the enterprising members of the Black Tuna Gang.


mmm
Directed by longtime star of independent German cinema Margarethe von Trotta, this reverent biopic chronicles the fascinating story of 12th-century Christian mystic and scientist Hildegard von Bingen (Barbara Sukowa). Despite living in an era when women are proscribed from preaching and interpreting scripture, Hildegard believes that the visions she experiences are a gift from God that she must reveal — even at the risk of condemnation.


Actor Leonardo DiCaprio narrates this awe-inspiring documentary that takes viewers on a visually stunning IMAX 3-D journey to explore the faraway galaxies viewed by the Hubble Space Telescope in its travels throughout the cosmos. During the mission, astronauts walk in space, contend with successes and setbacks, view nebulae and galaxies, observe the birth of a star, witness a powerful supernova and much more.


Jeffrey Blitz (Spellbound) directs this documentary that tells the stories of lottery players whose lives have been changed — or not — by their wins, and also of those who obsessively keep trying even though they know the odds are slim. Although Blitz remains skeptical about gambling itself, he objectively illustrates each player’s poignant account in this engrossing film, an official selection of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.


Kym’s Picks: 04/05/2011 and 04/12/2011

12 Apr

mmm
Tron Legacy — While investigating the mysterious disappearance of his father, Kevin (Jeff Bridges), techie Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund) lands in a beguiling computerized world of enslaved gladiators, where his dad has been living for more than 20 years. Joined by Kevin’s trusted friend (Olivia Wilde), the father and son must journey across a breathtaking — and perilous — cyberscape in this 21st-century update to the beloved 1982 sci-fi classic.


I Love You Phillip Morris — When upstanding Texas cop Steven Russell (Jim Carrey) realizes he’s gay, he changes his entire life and pulls a series of bold con jobs that lands him jail — where he meets his one true love, cellmate Phillip Morris (Ewan McGregor). When Morris is transferred to another prison, lovesick Russell mounts a series of jailbreaks just to be with his beloved soul mate. Glenn Ficarra and John Requa direct this comedy based on a true story.


Hereafter — Clint Eastwood directs this supernatural thriller about three very different people and their responses to death, including a hesitant American psychic named George (Matt Damon) who may be able to help the others find answers and peace. Marie (Cécile De France) is a French journalist caught up in the aftereffects of the devastating 2004 tsunami, while in London, young Marcus (Frankie and George McLaren) seeks to contact his deceased twin brother.


White Material — Writer-director Claire Denis returns to Africa — her childhood home and the site of her 1988 film, Chocolate — to spin this tale of a country torn apart by civil war, as African soldiers force French nationals to abandon their land. At the center of the story is Maria (Isabelle Huppert), a white woman who ignores her family’s fears and steadfastly refuses to leave her coffee plantation. Isaach De Bankolé and Christopher Lambert also star.


mmm

mmm
A Summer in Genoa — After his wife’s tragic death, Joe (Colin Firth) moves his two daughters to Genoa for a fresh start. The romantic Italian town has its effects on the girls, as teenager Kelly (Willa Holland) begins to test her sexuality and young Mary (Perla Haney-Jardine) believes she’s seen her mother’s ghost. Director Michael Winterbottom’s poignant tale of love, family and forgiveness co-stars Hope Davis and Catherine Keener.


Heartless — Reclusive Londoner Jamie Morgan (Jim Sturgess), who bears a prominent, heart-shaped birthmark on his face yet can’t seem to find love anywhere, makes a deal with a devil-like figure to get a girl — but there’s a deadly price to pay. After his mother is murdered, the newspapers say thugs wearing devil masks committed the crime. But Jamie soon begins to suspect that they weren’t wearing masks at all.


Ricky — Katie (Alexandra Lamy) and Paco (Sergi López) are astonished when their seemingly normal newborn son, Ricky (Arthur Peyret), develops a functional pair of wings and begins to flit around the house, in this fantastical family drama from French director François Ozon. As the couple learns to adapt to Ricky’s amazing skills, they also begin to appreciate the magic that goes into creating and sustaining a content family.



mmm
Masterpiece Classic: Any Human Heart — Riding the waves of the 20th century to two continents, Logan Mountstuart tries his hand at writing, the art trade and espionage, brushing shoulders along the way with a stunning assortment of iconic personalities. Jim Broadbent, Matthew Macfadyen and Sam Claflin pool their acting talents to portray one multifaceted man through three different seasons of his life in this sweeping British drama based on William Boyd’s best-selling novel.


Lark Rise to Candleford S4 — The fourth season of this lushly adapted British drama (based on a series of semiautobiographical novels by Flora Thompson) finds the residents of Candleford courting a newcomer when grieving widower Gabriel Cochrane (Richard Harrington) arrives in town. Later on, Daniel Parish (Ben Aldridge) announces that the newspaper is having a poetry contest, which pushes some residents to extreme measures in pursuit of the prize.



mmm
Marwencol — After a terrible beating left Mark Hogancamp brain damaged, he began creating models of a fictional town, Marwencol, to process the trauma. Jeff Malmberg’s documentary explains how Hogancamp uses the elaborate dioramas as stand-ins for real life. When Hogancamp’s work attracts the attention of a prestigious New York art gallery, however, he’s forced to leave the safety of his make-believe world and reconnect with the real one.


Kym’s Picks: March 15, 22 and 29: 2011

1 Apr

 

The Fighter — After a string of defeats, Mickey Ward rediscovers his fighting will with help from trainer and half-brother Dicky (Oscar winner Christian Bale) — a once-talented pugilist and small-town hero now battling drug addiction.

127 Hours — From director Danny Boyle comes this harrowing tale of real-life mountain climber Aron Ralston (James Franco), who literally cuts himself loose from danger — and lives to tell about it when sliding rock pins his forearm under a boulder during a climb in Utah. To stay alive, Ralston resorts to his basest survival instincts. The film scored Academy Award nominations in the Best Picture and Best Actor (Franco) categories.


Topsy Turvy — After their production of “Princess Ida” tanks, Arthur Gilbert (Allan Corduner) and William Sullivan (Jim Broadbent) start a cold war that threatens to end their long-lasting partnership — but friends and associates work overtime to bring them back together. The result is their classic play “The Mikado.” Mike Leigh’s thoughtful musical comedy-drama garnered four Academy Award nominations and won for costume design and makeup.

 

 

 

Unstoppable— It’s a nail-biting race against time as an unmanned train carrying a load of lethal chemicals speeds out of control, and a conductor and engineer do everything in their power to keep it from derailing and killing tens of thousands of people. Denzel Washington leads the cast in Tony Scott’s tough-minded action thriller, in which a terrible circumstance forces a couple of ordinary men to become extraordinary heroes.


No One Knows About Persian Cats — What do you do when you can’t play music in your homeland, but you can’t leave your country to play it abroad either? This is the dilemma faced by an Iranian guy and gal who, fresh on the heels of their prison release, decide to form a rock band. Despite having drive and ambition to spare, the wannabe rockers are stymied by lack of passports, lack of funds and lack of musicians who’re willing to leave Iran in this drama from Bahman Ghobadi.


Meskada — While investigating a juvenile homicide case in an affluent area of the Catskills, Det. Noah Cordin (Nick Stahl) follows the trail back to his economically stagnant hometown, where old friends step up to help — and test his loyalties. But tensions soon rise between the well-off town where the murder took place and the struggling community that seems to be harboring the killer.


All Good Things — After restless real-estate scion David Marks (Ryan Gosling) weds middle-class beauty Katie McCarthy (Kirsten Dunst) against the wishes of his disapproving father (Frank Langella), suspicions of murder fall on the unmoored heir when his wife mysteriously vanishes. Though he’s not indicted in her disappearance, people with ties to the case begin turning up dead when it’s reopened two decades later — and the unhinged David is the prime suspect.


Burlesque –After leaving Iowa with stars in her eyes, Ali (Christina Aguilera) arrives in Los Angeles and at a burlesque lounge, where she dreams of taking the stage with her soaring voice. Club owner Tess (Cher) is about to lose the place and thinks Ali may help business. Meanwhile, Ali’s roommate (Cam Gigandet) starts to fall for her in this snappy, Golden Globe-nominated comedy co-starring Stanley Tucci as Tess’s sidekick and Kristen Bell as Ali’s rival.


Fair Game — After her husband, Ambassador Joseph Wilson (Sean Penn), writes op-ed columns accusing the Bush administration of misleading the public to justify invading Iraq, Valerie Plame Wilson’s (Naomi Watts) status as a covert CIA agent is leaked by administration officials. Based on events described in Plame Wilson’s memoir, this drama explores the political scandal that led to the conviction of Lewis “Scooter” Libby.


Made in Dagenham — Sally Hawkins stars in this cheeky dramatization of the landmark 1968 labor strike initiated by hundreds of women who rebelled against discrimination and demanded the same pay as men for their work in a London automobile manufacturing plant. During one march, a banner that reads “We Want Sexual Equality” inadvertently becomes shortened to “We Want Sex.” Nigel Cole directs this film that co-stars Miranda Richardson and Bob Hoskins.


Mesrine Part 2: Public Enemy #1 — Jacques Mesrine (Vincent Cassel) finds his star rising throughout the 1970s as both a gangster and a publicity-hungry celebrity. But while his criminal plans are as grandiose as ever, the Paris police are redoubling their efforts with a special anti-Mesrine unit. The conclusion to Jean-François Richet’s epic crime biopic also stars the luminous Ludivine Sagnier as Mesrine’s glamorous Italian lover, Sylvia Jeanjacquot.


Tangled — Disney animators take on the classic Grimm Brothers story of Rapunzel (Mandy Moore), a long-locked beauty imprisoned in a secluded tower by evil hag Mother Gothel (Donna Murphy), who needs the rejuvenating powers of Rapunzel’s tresses to remain young. When a bandit on the lam (Zachary Levi) helps Rapunzel escape, the old crone plots to recapture her and end her budding romance with the thief in this Golden Globe nominee for Best Animated Feature.


Love and Other Drugs — Pharmaceutical representative Jamie Randall (Jake Gyllenhaal) becomes a player in the big game of male-performance-enhancement-drug sales and, along the way, finds unexpected romance with a woman (Anne Hathaway) suffering from Parkinson’s disease. Based on the real-life Jamie Reidy’s memoir, Hard Sell: The Evolution of a Viagra Salesman, this satirical look inside the culture of Big Pharm is directed by Edward Zwick.


 

 

In Plain Sight: S3 — In the third season of USA Network’s hit series about Mary Shannon (Mary McCormack), a marshal in the Albuquerque branch of the Witness Protection Program, Mary copes with the effects of getting shot and continues to protect witnesses, whether criminals or innocents. Mary’s partner, Marshall (Frederick Weller), is determined to find her assailant, while her fiancé (Cristián de la Fuente) and wacky mother (Lesley Ann Warren) beg her to retire.


Mad Men: S4 — In the fourth season of this smash-hit, critically acclaimed drama, debonair adversting exec Don Draper (Jon Hamm) continues to build his own fledgeling agency even as his personal life slides deeper into excessive boozing and other destructive habits. Meanwhile, Peggy (Elisabeth Moss) expands her personal and professional horizons, and Betty (January Jones) has trouble adjusting to life with Henry (Christopher Stanley).


 

 

The Parking Lot Movie — Over the course of three years, filmmaker Meghan Eckman tracked the comings and goings of a solitary parking lot in Charlottesville, Va., chronicling the lives of the attendants who were working there. This inspiring documentary is the result. Hanging tough as they navigate the range of human emotion — from hope to frustration, from a sense of limitless possibilities to stagnation — the film’s subjects embody the pursuit of the American Dream.


The Wildest Dream — When Conrad Anker finds the body of George Mallory on Mount Everest 75 years after Mallory’s death, Anker becomes obsessed with learning whether the man determined to become the first to reach the mountain’s summit actually met his goal before dying. Narrated by Liam Neeson, this visually spectacular documentary also features the voices of Alan Rickman, Ralph Fiennes, Natasha Richardson and Hugh Dancy.


Waste Land — Renowned artist Vik Muniz embarks on one of the most inspired collaborations of his career, joining creative forces with Brazilian catadores — garbage pickers who mine treasure from the trash heaps of Rio de Janeiro’s Jardim Gramacho landfill. In this Oscar-nominated documentary, the catadores prove to be unique and surprising individuals in their own right, waxing philosophic as they impart a valuable lesson about what society discards.


The Human Experience — In a world fraught with hostility and violence, an altruistic group of young men endeavor to understand the true essence of the human spirit by visiting forgotten souls such as homeless New Yorkers, Peruvian orphans and isolated Ghanian lepers. By spotlighting heartwarming stories from around the world, this uplifting documentary shows viewers that every single person, no matter his or her lot in life, is beautiful.


Rare Photos of Famous People – Visboo

31 Mar

Found this fabulous set of 125 photographs on Visboo.com and have sampled a few of them here. To see the rest, go to the original page at Visboo.

Here is an amazing collection of rare pictures of the famous people.
I’m sure you will love it.

Rare Photos of Famous People (125 pics)

Madonna, Detroit, 1976

Rare Photos of Famous People (125 pics)
Marilyn Monroe in 1946

Rare Photos of Famous People (125 pics)
The Beatles in 1957. George Harrison is 14, John Lennon is 16, and Paul McCartney is 15.

Rare Photos of Famous People (125 pics)
Andy Warhol and Candy Darling (she was born James Lawrence Slattery)

Rare Photos of Famous People (125 pics)
Hunter S. Thompson (the author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas)

Vincent Cassel Interviews – Pure Movies

30 Mar

Vincent Cassel

Interviews

Written by Dan Hollis

Vincent Cassel in Mesrine: Killer Instinct

Vincent Cassel’s latest film is a two-part biopic of the notorious French gangster, Jacques Merine. Mesrine: Killer Instinct, the first part, is released on 7 August and the second part, Mesrine: Public Enemy No. 1 is released on 28 August. It is directed by Jean-Francios Richet. The La Haine star speaks to Pure Movies writer Dan Hollis about playing a public enemy.

Vincent Cassel: So what would you like to know?

Did your opinion of Jacques Mesrine change over the course of making these films?

VC: Well first of all I’ve never been a fan of the character – as a criminal you never know why people are doing what they’re doing, so I’ve learnt a lot but still today I do not know quite what to think of him. For the audience, we’re not telling you exactly what to think about the guy; sometimes he’s really sympathetic, sometimes he’s just the worst jerk you can meet.

From the start of the film we get an idea of what made him the kind of a man he is from the terrible things that happen in the Algerian war…

VC: This excuse, to me, doesn’t work. I think it’s just a way for him to justify the way he was living. And the father figure thing, he used as an excuse; I don’t believe these are the reasons he became “Jacques Mesrine” the gangster, the killer. A lot of people went to that war. Another interesting thing that we didn’t tell in the film is that as a kid he loved to go to the movies, James Cagney especially, I think that’s one of the real justifications.

Is the general perception of the French public similar to yours?

VC: It depends, people at the time had a really strong judgement on him, they believed what they read in the paper. Of the six murders he was accused of by the French Justice (in his autobiography he wrote in prison he accuses himself of forty-three), but none of these crimes have been proven till now. But still, he was executed in the middle of Paris with his corpse displayed on TV. What I have learned is that this guy was getting too dangerous as a clown, he was too loud and you have to understand in ’79 when he got shot by the cops, he was the favourite celebrity of the French people, everybody was running after him and they couldn’t find him. But that same year he gave an interview to Paris Match insulting and threatening the government and I think that’s why he died, not because of the murders.

Did you meet any opposition, anyone not wanting you to make this film?

VC: No because that trial had been closed two years when filming started, the police were found not guilty – guilty of what? Guilty of executing him without due evidence. We thought we would have to change names, but we didn’t. I think even now, the police won’t mind the truth coming out about his execution, even of it’s not the official version.

Have you met anybody who knew him?

VC: Oh yeah, I was contacted for the movie seven years ago and it took a long time to get a good enough script, to find the right director, to raise the money more than anything else, and the good thing about having seven years is that I could read everything written by him, on him, and to meet the people who knew him – the ones who were still alive, the ones I could meet without paying a fortune, so I really collected a lot of information.

Were there any quite scary characters?

VC: Well they’re getting older now so they’re seventy-something now, they don’t want to go back to jail! Some of them, one in particular, is really crazy, but as we say, he is mean but not dangerous.

In the film, after breaking out of prison, he returns with a friend in a jeep and several machine guns and tries to bust his friends out, but he fails…

VC: Yeah exactly he fails! But he went back as he said he would, and that’s enough to tell you that the guy was totally a man of his word, and on that you have to respect the him. He got really angry when this extreme-right journalist wrote that he had no “word”, but that’s the one thing he has – that’s the only clean part of him: you can trust him when he says something.

Did you find you had to be careful not to make him too sympathetic?

VC: Well seven years ago, I felt that the original director was too much of a fan of Mesrine up to the point where he would say ‘and then the bad guys come in…’ – ‘who are the bad guys?’ –  ‘the cops’. I then knew we couldn’t make four hours of this sort of film, we needed a more complex character. They didn’t want to go that way so I had to drop the project. However, it was a bluff; perhaps somewhat pretentiously I thought that the movie would simply not be made without me, so I told them that when you’ve get the right script, call me back. In the final script, from one scene to the next, you didn’t know what to think of the character, so I agreed, also to make it into a two part film which I initially was against.

With the length of time you’ve invested in the project, does this make it the most important film of your career?

VC: I’ve actually got another project I’ve been working on for seven years, so perhaps not the most important at this point, but it is still definitely an important project for me.

Do you see him on one level as a mirror for French society – they project on him their views of the government, the police, themselves?

VC: Totally. I think that’s what Jean-Francois Richet, the director, is saying through this pretty normal guy – he is a showman, not a huge criminal [someone coughs] sorry, I’ve lost it! But, yes, it’s a political snapshot of France in the ’60s and ’70s, from the post-war of Algeria to that moment of boredom in the ’70s.

How involved where you in the casting of the film?

VC: Well I gave Richet seven names, and he didn’t listen to one of them! But you know what, it’s the best news; if a director becomes too easy to influence, maybe it’s not a director.

What are the main differences between the two parts of the film?

VC: I think they’re different in every way, meaning of course that the era is a different era; I mean the ’60s don’t look like the ’70s in terms of looks, music, cars. It’s a different political environment, too, but more than that, the first movie, the way that the narrative is told is very linear, it is very much a genre movie – film noir I would say – about a guy who’s trying to understand what he’s made of. At the end of the first movie, he knows what he is made of. The second movie is about an adult who knows exactly where he’s going but he’s really going for it, so you’re more into the psycho- and the ego-trip of the character.

Is Merine sexy or brutal in your mind?

VC: I think he’s both.

But he was attractive to women because of his public persona as a gangster, or because of who he really was as a man?

VC: I think some women, quite a few actually, are attracted to bad guys, even though they won’t go for it because it’s dangerous, the attraction still exists. Apart from the first woman he had in his life – a virgin in Spain totally outside of that world, the mother of his three kids – all the others he found in strip clubs and were, or had at some point been, prostitutes.

What happened to his three children and do you know what they think of the film?

VC: They’re still alive. I think they’re really proud of it, because I think it is the closest thing to the truth that has been made about their father in every sense, meaning that when he’s brave he’s brave and when he’s a jerk he’s a jerk.

Last edited: 25th January 2010

Wanna See This: Kill the Irishman

23 Mar

 

What a cast: Ray Stevenson, Christopher Walken, Vincent D’Onofrio and Val Kilmer. I’ve been well impressed with Stevenson since I first saw him in Rome, and hope that this film will bring him bigger, better roles where he can show the breadth and range of his talent. Anyway, this film is based on the true story of Danny Greene, his rise to power as head of Cleveland’s Irish mob in the 60s and 70s, and the many attempts to bump him off. In the process of which lots of stuff blows up real good. My expectation: A fun time, perhaps a decent story and intriguing characters if I’m lucky. I’ve read a number of negative reviews, but it’s still sitting at 64% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes (80% in the RT community).

Free Viewing: Robinson Crusoe on Mars

19 Mar
mmm
mmm

It’s the whole enchilada, too!  This will do quite nicely until I get the Criterion release. I was quite surprised at the number and variety of movies now available to watch on Youtube.