Showing posts with label hugo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hugo. Show all posts

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Tom Hardy: HUGO, Martin Scorsese, Tom Hardy, Jessica Chastain: Nevada Film Critics Winners (Alt Film Guide)



| Jan 14, 2012

The Nevada Film Critics Society, not to be confused with the Las Vegas Film Critics Society, has announced its Best of 2011 list. Martin Scorsese's period adventure fantasy Hugo was voted Best Picture. Scorsese was the Best Director and Asa Butterfield the Best Child Actor.

The Best Actor and Best Actress choices were the Nevada Critics' biggest surprises: the upcoming The Dark Knight Rises' Tom Hardy was selected as the Best Actor for his performance as a boxer in the little-seen Warrior. Jessica Chastain has been winning awards everywhere, but in the Best Supporting Actress category. The Nevada Critics chose her as the year's Best Actress "for her outstanding work in several films of 2011 including The Debt, The Help, The Tree of Life, Take Shelter."

With Chastain out of the way, the Best Supporting Actress Award went to Janet McTeer for her butch lesbian in Albert Nobbs. Albert Brooks was cited for his work as a mean gangster in Nicolas Winding Refn's Drive.

Tate Taylor's sleeper hit The Help won for Best Ensemble (in addition to Chastain, the film's cast includes Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard, Sissy Spacek, Octavia Spencer, Mary Steenburgen, and Cicely Tyson). Rooney Mara (for her Lisbeth Salander in David Fincher's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and Elizabeth Olsen (for her problematic character in Sean Durkin's Martha Marcy May Marlene) tied for the Best Breakthrough Performance of 2011. Chris Miller's Puss in Boots, featuring the voices of Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek, was the Best Animated Feature. Curiously, the Nevada Critics don't hand out award for Best Foreign Language Film.

If you hadn't heard of the Nevada Film Critics Society, don't despair. They're a brand new (and apparently quite small) group, founded last year. Below is the full list of the Nevada Critics' choices.
Best Film - Hugo
Best Director - Martin Scorsese (Hugo)
Best Actor - Tom Hardy (Warrior)
Best Actress - Jessica Chastain (The Debt, The Help, The Tree of Life, Take Shelter)
Best Supporting Actor - Albert Brooks (Drive)
Best Supporting Actress - Janet McTeer (Albert Nobbs)
Best Ensemble Cast - The Help
Best Child Actor - Asa Butterfield (Hugo)
Best Breakthrough Performance (tie) – Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy Mae Marlene) and Rooney Mara (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo)
Best Animated Film - Puss in Boots

Via Awards Daily
Tom Hardy/Joel Edgerton/Warrior photo: Lionsgate Films
7 29share39






Text © 2004-2011 Alt Film Guide and/or author(s). Not to be reproduced without prior written consent.


Twitter follow us button logo
RSS Subscribe button feed



http://www.altfg.com/blog/movie/hugo-martin-scorsese-tom-hardy-jessica-chastain-nevada-film-critics-winners/

Friday, January 13, 2012

Critics Choice Awards - 'The Artist' wins best picture (CBS News)


From left, director Michel Hazanavicius, actress Berenice Bejo, actor Jean Dujardin and producer Thomas Langmann, winners of the Best Picture Award for "The Artist," pose in the press room during the 17th Annual Critics' Choice Movie Awards on Jan. 12, 2012, in Los Angeles.
(Credit: Getty)
(CBS/AP) Updated 10:38 p.m. ET

"The Artist" waltzed off with the most awards at Thursday's 17th Annual Critics' Choice Movie Awards, including the night's top honor.

The black-and-white silent film directed by Michel Hazanavicius led winners with four honors, earning trophies for best picture, score, costume design and director.

"I don't like to speak so much," Hazanavicius admitted during his best picture acceptance speech, before inviting the actors on stage to celebrate the win.

Southern drama "The Help" also came out a big winner, with best and supporting actress honors for Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer and a best acting ensemble win for the cast.

Other winners in the acting categories included George Clooney as best actor for "The Descendants," Christopher Plummer as best supporting actor for "Beginners," and Thomas Horn as best young actor for "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close."

"The Artist" beat out "Hugo," "The Descendants," "Drive," "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close," "The Help," "Midnight in Paris," "Moneyball," "The Tree of Life" and "War Horse" to win the best picture category. Hazanavicius also earned directing honors for the homage to silent film.

Other winners included "Bridesmaids" as best comedy movie (producer Judd Apatow put the censors to work by dropping a series of F-bombs while accepting the award), "Drive" as best action movie, "Rango" as best animated feature, "A Separation" as best foreign film and "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2" for best makeup and best sound.

The evening started off as a face-off between "The Artist" and "Hugo," Martin Scorsese's sweeping 3-D family film, with 11 nominations each. The awards were handed out at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, in a ceremony hosted by comedians Paul Scheer and Rob Huebel.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Olivia Harrison presented Scorsese with the Critics' Choice Music + Film Award, with a special musical tribute from Bob Dylan. Dylan was the subject of Scorsese's PBS documentary "No Direction Home," and in 1976 the director captured his performance at the Band's "Last Waltz" concert.

Clooney presented Sean Penn with the fifth annual Joel Siegel Award, which the actor and humanitarian accepted via satellite from Haiti. The award, which honors those who understand that celebrity is a platform to do good works for others, pays homage to the late "Good Morning America" film critic Joel Siegel. 

BFCA members voted on films that were released in 2011 for Thursday's awards show. Last year, the ceremony served as a predictor of the Academy Award nominations as well as winners, with all four of the acting category winners - Colin Firth, Natalie Portman, Christian Bale and Melissa Leo - accepting awards at the Critics' Choice as well as at the Oscars.


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-31749_162-57358289-10391698/critics-choice-movie-awards-the-help-takes-an-early-lead/


Thursday, January 12, 2012

George Harrison: Martin Scorsese Earns a Second Directors Guild Nomination for 'George Harrison: Living in the Material World' (Hollywood Reporter)


George Harrison Living in the Material World

DGA feature documentary noms also include "Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory," "The Interrupters," "Project Nim" and "Bill Cunningham New York."

Martin Scorsese, who is nominated by the Directors Guild of America for his feature Hugo, has also received a nomination in the DGA's feature documentary category for George Harrison: Living in the Material World.

Scorsese's nomination for his documentary about musician Harrsion is his 10th DGA nom. He is a previoius winner for best feature in 2006 for The Departed and dramatic TV for Boardwalk Empire. It is the third nomination for Berlinger and Sinofsky, who won in the category for in 1992 for Brother's Keeper and also were nominated for Paradise Lost, the first film in their current trilogy. It is also the third nom for James, who won in the doc category in 1994 for Hoop Dreams. It is the second nomination for Marsh and a first-time nomination for Press.

The nominees for the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for 2011 are (in alphabetical order):

JOE BERLINGER & BRUCE SINOFSKY

Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/martin-scorsese-dga-documentary-nominees-280975

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Christopher Lee's Saruman Is 'Good And Noble' In 'The Hobbit' (MTV Movies Blog)

Posted 7 hrs ago by Jeremy Gordon in News

Saruman
In a video message to his fans, Christopher Lee sounds as he ever does.

"We are coming to the end of 2011," he intones in his trademark baritone. "I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas, a happy Christmas, and the family's gathered together." Proceeding from there, he begins to talk about the state of the world, and how the state of things are in bad shape. It's heavy talk coming from the long-time actor, but with his 90th birthday approaching, it would be weirder if he didn't have thoughts of mortality on his mind.

Lee spends much of the video discussing "The Hobbit," the two-part prequel to "Lord of the Rings" that sees the actor returning to the role of Saruman the White.

According to Lee, he's finished filming his scenes for both movies, scenes he hopes to live long enough to see again. That may sound macabre, but at his age, Lee says he takes smaller roles that don't require as much time on set.

"What is extremely important is that in these two films, which of course are long before 'Lord of the Rings,'" he says. "Saruman, who I play again, is indeed still Saruman the White, but he is a good and noble man, and the head of the Council of Wizards, as he always was." When "The Hobbit" drops, it'll be a joy to see Lee on screen, as it always is.

Lee also spoke about his other movie projects, such as "Hugo," "The Wicker Tree," and "The Hobbit." After lauding Martin Scorsese's directorial skills with "Hugo," he stresses that "Wicker Tree" is not a sequel to "The Wicker Man" -- it's more of a spiritual successor. Lee was the villain in the original "Wicker Man" -- not the Nic Cage remake, unfortunately -- but his role in the new film, listed as "Old Man," would seem less involved.



Tell us what you think of Lee's "Hobbit" update in the comments and on Twitter!



Friday, December 30, 2011

The Best Films of 2011 (DCist)

2011_1229_postercollage.jpg 

There appears to be a lot of random grousing in the comments sections of movie posts all over the internet about how 2011 was a lackluster year for the movies. That's hardly notable, since, with all apologies to DCist's esteemed commentariat, comments sections are generally where the unhappy naysayers live, especially when it comes time for year-in-review posts.


But for some reason that complaint particularly irks me this year because it's not just a case of it being a pretty much normal year and that some people will never be happy. It's that this was an extraordinary year for film, and I just can't fathom anyone who cares about movies looking at this year's roster—admittedly, making sure to look past many of the wide releases—and not being ecstatic at what they see.

This was a year in which filmmakers weren't afraid to throw out our expectations and play with the form. Terence Malick inserted a 40-minute film about the evolution of the universe and life on earth into a family drama; Clio Barnard made a documentary that found actors lip-syncing interviews with real people; Asif Kapadia, Steven Soderbergh and Andrei Ujica all made documentaries entirely out of archival footage, without shooting a single frame themselves; many filmmakers felt no requirement to offer traditionally satisfying or loose-end-tying endings. Not every experiment succeeded, but watching someone walk a tightrope and fall is far more thrilling than seeing someone walk a well-traveled, safe sidewalk.

If I made this list tomorrow, or the next day, or the next, it'd be different each time. I'm a huge fan of all of them, as well as the rest of the ones (pictured above) that kept trying to jockey for position as I made this list.

One quick note about where you can watch these now; if I mention rental streaming below, you can find out exactly where it's available to watch via CanIStream.It, a great free informational site that compiles the home viewing statuses of a number of streaming services in one place.

10. Submarine: In addition to his debut feature film, British director Richard Ayoade (The IT Crowd) also directed the Pulp Fiction/My Dinner with Andre-homage episode of Community this season. What I love about both films is the same: Ayoade deftly takes cultural references and makes them work in entirely new ways to not just make jokes, but to reveal real character detail about the people in his story. So if one watches the coming of age story in Submarine and feels that they're seeing the marriage of Catcher in the Rye, Harold & Maude and the 400 Blows, all of those references (and more) are entirely intentional. But don't confuse quirk for a lack of heart, because this film has plenty, and the in-your-face cinematic devices Ayoade employs may initially seem like showing off how proficient a filmmaker he is (and that's quite proficient), but they're all in service of getting at the heart of who our slightly egomaniacal (but actually insecure) hero Oliver really is. This is a film that I liked a lot when I first saw it; the longer it's been with me, the more and more I love it.

This one's out on DVD and Blu-ray, and is also available for streaming rental via a number of services.

Read my full review here.

9. Hugo: Like Submarine, I enjoy Martin Scorsese's film about loving film more the more it sits in my head. When I initially reviewed it, I had problems with some of the more kiddie-elements of the first half, which I didn't feel meshed as well as I'd have liked with the film's second half. But it's nitpicking when the film's second half is such a glorious tribute to the medium. I had tears in my eyes as Scorsese puts the images of early silents that Hugo and Isabelle are reading about in a book onscreen; the director captures in just a few minutes the flood of wonder in that moment of discovery when one realizes all the limitless potential of film. It's just as surely a tribute to the act of creation as Malick's "origin of the universe" sequence in The Tree of Life.

Still out in plenty of area theaters, in both 3-D and standard form. I say go for the 3-D; I can count on one hand the number of films that actually merit paying the extra charge for the glasses, and this is one of them.

Read my full review here.

8. The Tree of Life: And, speaking of The Tree of Life, I loved that there was a film this year this hugely divisive, that movie fans could argue so passionately about its merits or lack thereof. I realize that it doesn't work perfectly 100 percent of the time: yes, the dinosaurs hit the nature vs. grace points just a little too squarely on the head, and the Sean Penn sequences might have been developed a little more fully. But there hasn't been a major American film this ambitious, this willing to tackle subject matter this knotty and difficult to put onscreen, in many years. It's a gorgeous, jaw-dropping, sometimes maddening work that I'm sure I'll be returning to many times, and I'm sure feeling differently about it each time I see it.

This film has been out for a while now on DVD and Blu-ray, and the high-definition version is pretty stunning to watch even at home. Available for rental streaming as well.

Read my full review here.

7. Beginners: This was a film I didn't really have high hopes for going in. Mike Mills' previous feature, Thumbsucker, was fairly forgettable, and all I could think after the trailers was that the scruffy subtitled dog seemed awfully precious, and not necessarily in a good way. I wasn't prepared for a film that affected me quite as deeply as it did, as Mills manages to marry some of those more quirky aspects, like the dog, or a meet-cute where only one half of the couple can talk due to a case of laryngitis, with the more poignant story at its core. That tale is drawn from Mills' own life, and is about a thirty-something artist whose septuagenarian father comes out of the closet not long before being diagnosed with terminal cancer. The details of how that event, as well as his parents' entire flawed marriage, affects his entire approach to life and relationships cuts straight through the twee. Christopher Plummer and Ewan McGregor both put some of the best work of their careers on display as father and son. Meanwhile, Mills' technique of use striking narrations from McGregor's character alongside rapid-fire collections of images is the sort of thing that ought to create distance, and instead made me feel more emotionally connected to the material.

Out now on DVD and available for rental streaming.

Read my capsule review here.

2011_1229_kevin.jpg

6. We Need to Talk About Kevin: Lynne Ramsay is far from prolific, this being only her third feature since her beautiful 1999 debut, Ratcatcher. Of course a large part of that time was taken up by a failed attempt to make The Lovely Bones, and one of the first things I thought after seeing her adaptation of Lionel Shriver's reputedly unfilmable novel, is that it's a shame Peter Jackson ended up making it instead of her. Ramsay takes difficult material—a story with a disjointed timeline, telling the entire life story of the titular boy, hinting around at and leading up to a horrific and disturbing event -- and renders it sensitively without ever softening its impact. A deeply unsettling film that stays with you for a long time afterwards.

The film hasn't hit D.C. yet, but is set to be released locally on Jan. 27.

5. A Separation: This film, hopefully a shoo-in for a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar nod, starts out seeming like it might be an Iranian Kramer vs. Kramer. What unfolds is more than just a drama about the breaking of a family, but a sharply written, thoroughly engrossing examination of the conflicting forces at work in Iranian culture today. If that sounds a little self-consciously high-minded, never fear: those examinations are embedded deep within a story so full of twists, turns, and who-did-whats that at times it almost feels more like a thriller.

Opens in D.C. on January 20.

4. Martha Marcy May Marlene: If this year's often vague and incomplete endings aren't your thing, you may have found Sean Durkin's debut feature particularly maddening. But the way to the film's big closing question mark, Durkin creates a quiet psychological thriller of identity and mind control, as we see Martha's time spent in an upstate New York cult in flashback as she tries to assimilate back into "normal" life, always with the fear that they might come to take her back at any moment.

Elizabeth Olsen is mesmerizing as a young woman unsure of everything, including who she is or should be, and John Hawkes is as frighteningly charismatic here as he was in last year's Winter's Bone, with a softer, more insidiously creepy turn than in that film.

This is currently in the limbo between theatrical run and home video; it'll be available for the latter on Feb. 27.

Read my full review here.

3. Bill Cunningham New York: Richard Press' profile of the The New York Times' longtime street fashion photographer is hardly the most innovative documentary of the year. But even using the standard tools of the genre—interviews, following the subject around in his daily life with a camera—Press is able to make one of the most inspired and inspiring movies of the year. And, with all due respect to Press for his contributions, a lot of the credit lies with the subject: Bill Cunningham is one of the most lovable characters in movies this year.

Potentially hokey motivational phrases like "follow your dream" and "do what you love" feel like nothing but the sagest wisdom ever devised when one witnesses Cunningham quietly, modestly doing exactly those things. For a movie that's about the city of New York as much as it is just about this one man—because he's spent so long chronicling the daily life of the city—it might come as a surprise that this film is so resolutely free of irony or hardness of any kind. It's a feel-good film that never cheats, and earns every inch of the wide smile you'll have chiseled on your face once you're done watching.

Out now on DVD, available on Netflix streaming, and on iTunes for rental streaming.

Read my full review here.

2. Meek's Cutoff: In last year's best-of list, I felt compelled to throw out an honorable mention to a film that I'd seen at a festival in 2010, and would have certainly made that list if it had seen a theatrical release. A year later, the power of Kelly Reichardt's quiet, unusual take on the western hasn't diminished one bit. From her commitment to accurately reflecting the monotony of life for settlers on the wagon train west, to the nearly imperceptible incremental increases in dread and desperation as this group realizes that Stephen Meek's shortcut has gotten them hopelessly lost in the dusty interior of Oregon, to the inventive ways in which Reichardt uses framing, sound, and even the film's aspect ratio to examine what it was like to be a woman on these grueling journeys, every piece of this film is meticulously crafted and note-perfect. Michelle Williams is going to get an Oscar nomination for her portrayal of Marilyn Monroe in My Week with Marilyn, and she is, as always, fantastic in that film; but the award should really be for the subtle and emotional work she does here.
Out now on DVD, available on Netflix streaming, and on iTunes for rental streaming.

Read my full review here.

2011_1229_drive.jpg

1. Drive: There were three D.C. press screenings of Nicolas Winding Refn's quietly violent neo-noir. I went to all three, under the guise of wanting to bring different friends who were all interested in seeing the movie as my plus-one. But the fact is, I'd have gone all three times even if I was going alone. Refn's film is, like all his work, relentlessly stylized, and just barely on the opposite side of reality from where we stand. This seemed to put off some people who found the languorous pauses in conversation between Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan's characters self-consciously unrealistic, or who were bothered by the unnatural length of that final, brilliantly constructed elevator ride down to the the very, very bottom.

But every shot and every angle here is constructed with the utmost care by Refn. Like most great noirs, this is the most generic of dime-store novel shorelines, but it's elevated by an uncommon attention to tone and mood that leaves Refn in absolute control of the emotions of anyone willing to submit to it. Every single time I saw Drive, my reaction was the same as it is when I step off a terrifying roller coaster: I want to do that again, as soon and as many times as possible.

http://dcist.com/2011/12/best_films_of_2011.php

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Brendan Gleeson: San Diego Film Critics Announce 2011 Nominees: ABOUT.COM

Drive
The San Diego Film Critics Society (of which I'm a member) just announced their nominees for the best of 2011. We normally don't march to the beat of other critics groups, and this year's no exception. Notable differences between SDFCS' selections and other groups is the inclusion of Drive in the Best Film category, Brit Marling in the Best Actress group for her outstanding work in Another Earth, Brendan Gleeson for The Guard as Best Actor, and Jessica Chastain for The Help in the Supporting Actress category (our rules do not allow us to combine the work of an actor in multiple films under one nomination).
Also standing out from the pack of already-announced nominees and winners, the SDFCS included Andy Serkis' performance in a motion capture suit bringing Caesar the ape to life in Rise of the Planet of the Apes in the Best Supporting category (a category loaded with possible nominees this year) and gave a nod to the much-overlooked performance of Nick Nolte in Warrior.

Here are highlight's from the SDFCS list of 2011 nominees:

Best Film - Drive, Hugo, Midnight in Paris, The Artist, and The Tree of Life
Best Director - Martin Scorsese (Hugo), Michel Hazanavicius (The Artist), Nicolas Winding Refn (Drive), Terrence Malick (The Tree of Life), and Woody Allen (Midnight in Paris)

Best Actress - Brit Marling (Another Earth), Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene), Michelle Williams (My Week with Marilyn), Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin), and Viola Davis (The Help)

Best Actor - Brad Pitt (Moneyball), Brendan Gleeson (The Guard), George Clooney (The Descendants), Jean Dejardin (The Artist), and Michael Shannon (Take Shelter)

Best Supporting Actress - Bérénice Bejo (The Artist), Carey Mulligan (Shame), Jessica Chastain (The Help), Mélanie Laurent (Beginners), and Shailene Woodley (The Descendants)

Best Supporting Actor - Albert Brooks (Drive), Andy Serkis (Rise of the Planet of the Apes), Christopher Plummer (Beginners), Max von Sydow (Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close), and Nick Nolte (Warrior)

Best Ensemble Performance - Carnage, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, Margin Call, Midnight in Paris, and The Help

For a full list of the nominees, visit the San Diego Film Critics Society website. Voting for the winners takes place on December 14, 2011.
(Photo from Drive © FilmDistrict)


http://movies.about.com/b/2011/12/12/san-diego-film-critics-announce-2011-nominees.htm

Monday, December 12, 2011

Butt-Numb-A-Thon 2012 full report, from "The Hobbit" to "Cabin in the Woods" : IFC

IFC

It was sneak previews galore at Harry Knowles' annual movie marathon.
When Harry Knowles, the Grand Mufti of movie bloggers, has a birthday party he does it up big. It starts with the Internet's most die-hard cinemaniacs filling out an elaborate application for a coveted, assigned seat at Austin's Alamo Drafthouse Theater, and ends with intense film junkie bragging rights.

The event, appropriately called Butt-Numb-a-Thon, is a (more than) 24-hour movie marathon mixing hard-to-find vintage prints and first looks at forthcoming films. In years past, attendees have had sneak peeks at movies like "King Kong", "Kick-Ass" and "Hobo With A Shotgun", as well rare opportunities to see flicks like Disney's "Song of the South" or Orson Welles' "Chimes at Midnight."
This year, after a Friday night kick-off party at an elaborate pinball arcade, the lucky few exchanged tips on how long to wait until drinking coffee (everyone has their own theory) and tried to guess the line-up. This was my second BNAT, but the first one is merely a haze of nachos, laughter and beer breath. I still felt like a noob going into this, and, frankly, a little nervous. It was Saturday at 11:30 am and I wouldn't be out again til 1 pm on Sunday.

Here's a rundown of went down.




hobbit.jpg

Readers of AintItCoolNews (Knowles' site) know that contributor Eric "Quint" Vespe has been embedded with Peter Jackson's production of "The Hobbit." As such he could not be there, so offered a "happy birthday" video of messages from the set. Sir Ian McKellan appeared in costume as Gandalf the Grey and, through the magic of cinema (and some pyrotechnics in the theater) Vespe appeared in the flesh. A nice reunion for he and Knowles, but for the rest of us he brought the first ever peek at the trailer for "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." As a gag, he handed the hard drive containing the trailer to frequent BNAT attendee Elijah Wood to bring to the projection room, adding "keep it secret, keep it safe."

We were asked not to get too specific with the description, but hearing the music and seeing The Shire I was surprised at the flood of emotions that hit me. It was like seeing old friends. (And something to look out for: a band of Dwarves sing. It's a thing of beauty.)

The Alamo Drafthouse is known for the fun programming that happens between the films, and Butt Numb-a-Thon is no different. In addition to relevant trailers, this year the audience was treated to one-frame blasts of the movie "Teen Wolf." The subliminal images of a furry Michael J. Fox's slam dunks was the gift that kept on giving. Threatening to play "Teen Wolf" is a recurring gag, and this year's 13th anniversary was actually called BNAT13Wolf on Twitter.

hugo.jpg

The first feature to roll was Martin Scorsese's "Hugo." An odd choice, perhaps, as it is currently out in theaters, but considering its love of cinephilia and invitation to "dream together" it couldn't be more appropriate.

This led directly to the only 35mm print in the United States of George Melies' ninety-nine year old sci-fi/fantasy film "A Trip To The Moon." Watching it after "Hugo", while you are still holding back the sniffles and willing to take a bullet for Melies, gives the short film an extra jolt of the warm and fuzzies.

justimagine.jpg

The next feature was the event's most obscure, a 1930 sci-fi musical (yes, musical) called "Just Imagine." You've never heard of it, but you've seen bits of it. . .in other movies. Many of the sets and props were re-used in sci-fi flicks like James Whale's "Frankenstein" and the Buster Crabbe "Flash Gordon"/"Buck Rogers" serials.

It's not by any stretch a good film - it a generic Depression-era picture grafted onto sci-fi. Characters say things like, "the only way I'll be fit to marry her is if I'm the first man to explore Mars!!" Still, there are some odd, subversive jokes (like a baby vending machine) and a surprisingly blunt reference to Henry Ford's anti-semitism. If you like quips about Prohibition while rockets are zipping through the heavens, this is a movie for you.

tinkker.jpg

After "Just Imagine" was "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy." I'd seen it already in New York, but it is good to be reminded every now and again that not everyone lives in New York. I liked the picture the first time, loved it the second time. (This is precisely how I felt about Thomas Alfredson's previous picture "Let The Right One In", so maybe this is a trend to try and squeeze two ticket prices out of people.)

I strongly recommend this movie, and seeing it again confirms that I need to get out an eraser and adjust my end of the year top 10 list. The photography is gorgeous and the script is like a wind-up mechanical automaton (they borrowed it from "Hugo.") "TTSS" came with a video message, and hearing Gary Oldman say the words "Butt Numb a Thon" with just trace elements of confusion and disdain got one of the biggest laughs of the night.

sherlock.jpg

This led right to "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows." Reaction to this picture was mixed. I liked it for the most part. It's better than "Pirates 4", maybe not as good as "National Treasure 2." I give the action sequences points for a lot of visual panache, even if they don't really add up to much. For example, there's a scene where our heroes are running in the woods and getting shot at by canons. It takes the "Matrix" "Bullet-time" effect and cranks it up to a remarkable degree. But it is empty. If feels like Guy Ritchie got hipped to a new technique, was excited to use it, but never bothered to put any depth to the characters or story.

I did not actively dislike "SH: AGOS", but it is desultory. Jared Harris' Moriarty is an evil genius because we're told he is, not because of anything we see him do. I'm pretty sure I saw Noomi Rapace's big Hollywood debut, too, but other than a moment of sitting in an unladylike pose in her Gypsy gown, I can't recall a thing she did or said.

beast.jpg

Next was another vintage film, something unavailable on DVD. "The Beast With Five Fingers" stars Peter Lorre at his most bugnuts Peter Lorre-ish, working as one of a number of "kept people" in the service of a rich eccentric in a small Italian village. The other lead is Robert Alda, a composer, small time grifter, lover and all-around good guy who, when the benefactor dies, would like to see the fortune transition smoothly. Some greedy American cousins look like they're gonna' get in between Lorre and his Astronomy books, so that's when the hallucinations and killings start.
The titular "five fingers" are a living hand that runs amok through the compound like an angry version of Thing from "The Adams Family." The performances (and one-handed classical music selections) are gloriously over-the-top, making this 1946 selection a fun B-picture.

The next round of trailers featured a nice gift, the first look at "G.I. Joe: Retaliation." It went by quickly, but I can tell you that Dwayne Johnson's muscles are bigger than ever, there's an epic ninja battle dangling from the side of a cliff-face and the sight of COBRA flags atop the White House brought squeals of delight from the BNAT crowd. The trailer was set to a techno version of the White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army," and concludes with Bruce Willis giving a "getting too old for this shit"-type joke. Yes.

tintin.jpg

This led to "The Adventures of Tintin", which, for me, was a second viewing. Some quickies on "Tintin": It is the best Steven Spielberg movie the of the year (and, yes, I've seen "War Horse"), it has the best dog performance of the year (and, yes, I've seen "The Artist"), and it has the best opening titles sequence of the year (and, yes, I've seen "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.") And while I have no proof of this, I am convinced that writers Steven Moffat, Edgar Wright and Joe Cornish, good nerds all of them, crafted a major sequence as an homage to the truck chase in "Raiders of the Lost Ark."

At this point the clock struck 2 am and it was time for a vintage film. It was Hayao Miyazaki's "Porco Rosso" - the Studio Ghibli animated feature about an Italian pig-man aviator/bounty hunter.

Now, some Miyazaki I like ("Spirited Away") and some I can't stand ("Ponyo") but I can't give you an honest appraisal of "Porco Rosso." I may've mentioned it was 2 am, I'd been there since 11:30 am and, well, this is when I hit the wall. I conked out. Snored through 75% of it. It was a gorgeous print (a brand new one, and this was the first time it was ever shown publicly) but, hey, I'm not going to lie and tell you I really watched it. I'm the last honest man on the Internet.

cabininthewoods.jpg

After a refreshing walk through the parking lot and another black coffee I was back in the game and ready for one of the night's highlights. We were among the very first people to see Drew Goddard's and Joss Whedon's teen horror flick "Cabin in the Woods." Mr. Knowles pleaded with us not to Tweet about this viewing ("Cabin" is going to have its official premiere at a major festival soon) but folks like myself were allowed dispensation to at least acknowledge the title. But here's the deal, "Cabin in the Woods" is not what you think. I don't want to say how or why, but it takes the horror film and spins it on its head. Not in a self-referential way, but in a very clever and unique way. I won't be the one to spoil just how it comes together, suffice to say that it escalates in an unpredictable manner, erupting into every nightmare you've ever had. And it's good to see Bradley Whitford again.

ghostrider.jpg

After this high high came a low low. It was time for the first look at "Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance."

I can hear my mother's voice reminding me "if you don't have anything nice to say...." and I really don't. This movie is awful. It makes the first "Ghost Rider" look like "Iron Man." It makes Neveldine and Taylor's "Gamer" look like "Inception." It looks cheap, has a rancid script and thinks it a lot cooler than it actually is. There are pauses in the movie where we, the audience, are clearly supposed to fill in with thunderous applause. At our screening there was silence and eventually sighs.
Listen, I love Crazy Nic Cage. "The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans" is terrific. But this is just an embarrassment. He doesn't even muster the energy to be all that crazy. It is a movie made by people who "think" they understand what the midnight genre audience wants, but is actually clueless. That's my opinion, anyway.


thegrey.jpg

But after this atrocity we were saved. It was time for the other big highlight, Joe Carnahan's new film "The Grey." It is the best thing he's ever done, mixing badass action, sphincter-tightening tension, unique characters and genuine drama. I held my breath, chewed my fingernails and even shed a tear.
The film concerns a group of end-of-their-rope Alaska pipeline workers surviving a horrific plane crash then getting picked off Irwin Allen-style by a pack of wolves. What follows is one of the finest and harshest survival movies, mixing plenty of "what the hell would I do?" situations and opportunities to mutter "holy crap." Also, and somewhat surreptitiously, there are some touching insights about faith and perseverance. Do I sound like I love this movie? I do, and so did the rest of the audience.

missionimipossible.jpg

After we survived "The Grey" we all hopped on buses and rode from the Drafthouse to a nearby (true) IMAX screen. It was time to invoke "Ghost Protocol."

"Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol" is the best entry in the series since the De Palma original. It is basically one action sequence after another and it works. Brad Bird's first live action film has a very bare script. They are literally chasing after a briefcase most of the time. But the shooting style is clean and the sequences are creatively put together. There's dangling and hovering and the wearing of masks. And Paula Patton popping out of evening-wear. (Hey, is this movie 3D?) Plus, this time Simon Pegg has more to do.

We finally got to this movie after 10 am on Sunday, and I'll admit that I zonked out during the one scene of exposition. Tom Cruise gets in a car to let Tom Wilkinson introduce both Jeremy Renner and the plot of the film. I fell asleep the instant that scene started and woke up a few minutes later when the car blew up. Guess what? Even without knowing what the heck was going on, I was able to know what they heck was going on. Tom Cruise was running and climbing up buildings and getting caught in storms. It was great.

And so was Butt-Numb-a-Thon. It was an exhausting 27 hours. I ate so much fried food. I drank beer, then coffee, then beer, then coffee. I snored in public during a well regarded Japanese cartoon. I can't wait until next year.

http://www.ifc.com/news/2011/12/butt-numb-a-thon-2012-full-report.php?page=2

Friday, December 9, 2011

Predicting the Golden Globes: Motion picture drama races

Jeremy Irvine in War Horse
How do you forecast what nutty notions might be floating around in the heads of the 83 full- and part-time entertainment journalists who constitute the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., a group that, for last year’s Golden Globes, labeled “The Tourist” a laugh riot and “Burlesque” one of the year’s best movies?
Easy. Think ratings. It’s why the foreign press association invited Ricky Gervais back to host the Globes, even though last time around he “joked” that the group’s members take bribes and nominate A-listers for shoddy work. So when predicting, if there’s any doubt, go with the celebrity. Julia Roberts for “Larry Crowne”? Why not? Mel Gibson for “The Beaver”? Maybe he’ll punch Gervais in the face? Worth considering. With that in mind, here's how things just might shake out with the nominations on Thursday.

Motion picture, drama
1. “War Horse”
2. “The Descendants”
3. “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close”
4. “The Help”
5. “The Ides of March”
6. “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”
7. “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”
8. “J. Edgar”
9. “Hugo”
10. “Moneyball”

Bubbling under: “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2,” “The Iron Lady,” “Tree of Life,” “Albert Nobbs,” “Shame.”

Analysis: George Clooney’s full-scale charm offensive pushes “Ides” into the nominee circle. “Moneyball” whiffs with international journos still puzzled over why on-base-percentage is so important.

Lead actor, motion picture drama
1. George Clooney, “The Descendants”
2. Leonardo DiCaprio, “J. Edgar”
3. Brad Pitt, “Moneyball”
4. Ryan Gosling, “The Ides of March”
5. Michael Fassbender, “Shame”

Bubbling under: Gary Oldman, “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”; Daniel Craig, “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”; Woody Harrelson, “Rampart”; Ralph Fiennes, “Coriolanus”; Martin Sheen, “The Way”
Analysis: Four movie stars and a German guy who soon will be one. It is possible, though, that Gosling wins his nomination for “Crazy, Stupid, Love” and Oldman or Craig sneaks in.

Lead actress, motion picture drama
1. Meryl Streep, “The Iron Lady”
2. Glenn Close, “Albert Nobbs”
3. Viola Davis, “The Help”
4. Rooney Mara, “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”
5. Tilda Swinton, “We Need to Talk About Kevin”

Bubbling under: Kirsten Dunst, “Melancholia”; Elizabeth Olsen, “Martha Marcy May Marlene”; Emma Stone, “The Help”; Keira Knightley, “A Dangerous Method”; Michelle Yeoh, “The Lady.”

Analysis: Wouldn’t be surprised if this one expands out to six (the foreign press group likes to do that) with Olsen and/or Dunst joining the party. Stone, a nominee last year for “Easy A,” remains a factor here and over in comedy for “Crazy, Stupid, Love.”


The Envelope

Monday, December 5, 2011

The New Yorker: The Best Films of 2011

December 5, 2011

The Best Films of 2011

perm_2011-year-in-review_p154.jpg
Hugo”—In Martin Scorsese’s wondrous 3-D masterpiece, you feel like you’re inside a giant box with the entire history of the cinema playing on the walls. The movie is intricate, touching, a reverent summing up of the past of movies, and a triumphant, heart-swelling surge into the future.

The Tree of Life”—Yes, I know, Terrence Malick’s movie is unbearably high-minded and humorless. But still! There are sequences that rival the greatest things ever done in movies, especially the long family episodes with Brad Pitt, Jessica Chastain, and the little boys, in which the camera floats around the characters, and all of eternity is summoned in the minutest motions of love and rage. Brad Pitt gives an amazing performance; he’s a shoo-in for the Oscar.
tree-of-life-family.jpg
Margin Call”—Or, as Werner Herzog might put it, Der Sheisse fliegen in der Whirligig, i.e., the bottom falls out of the mortgage-backed derivatives market. J. C. Chandor’s first feature film is sparely but eloquently written and perfectly played by a large cast whose attitudes towards one another, in the roles of financial executives, mutate through a long day from wary collegiality to outright hatred or desperate loyalty. The movie has a keen, bitter sense of the sudden breakdown of preposterous illusions. Great performances by Kevin Spacey, Zachary Quinto, Paul Bettany, and even Demi Moore.

Certified Copy”—In Abbas Kiarostami’s puzzling fable, a British art historian (William Shimmel) and a French gallery owner (Juliette Binoche) meet, seemingly for the first time, in Arezzo, and take off for a day of sight-seeing in the village of Lucignano. For their own amusement, they play at being married. Or are they really married? In the end, we realize that both stories are true; that both have been woven together in a double-sided fiction abut the varieties of intimacy. Beautifully shot in Lucignano, with a hand-held camera that smoothly recedes as the two, walking together, quarrel and flirt in the handsome stone village.

A Separation”—This somber but spirited look at the concentrics spreading out from the break-up of an attractive and intelligent couple—its effect on elders, servants, children—holds you from first to last. An Iranian film written and directed by Asghar Farhadi.

Contagion”—A businesslike, unexaggerated vision of catastrophe. Steven Soderbergh’s depiction of a new toxic virus spreading, well, virally, is frightening in its sober-minded attention to specifics. Some people wanted more filmmaking excitement, but the plainness and sureness of the movie are its greatest virtues.

The Descendants”—Nothing could be more suggestive of the screwed-up nature of Hollywood’s current business arrangements than the seven-year wait for a new movie from Alexander Payne (“Sideways”). In this lovely film, the director takes his time, pausing for observation, reflection, puzzlement, but there are two clear, intersecting story-lines: The cluelessness of a father (George Clooney) who has to take care, for the first time in his life, of his two daughters; and the debate within a large family over what to do with a large hunk of virgin property on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The movie asks: Who shall inherit Hawaii?

J. Edgar”—Clint Eastwood does his best to inject some soul into the creaky biopic form in this epic portrait of the F.B.I. director as a mother-dominated man whose furious sexual self-suppression erupts into a broadly authoritarian drive. By casting Leonardo DiCaprio as the young Hoover, the movie traces how an attractive young man thickens with power and age. Armie Hammer is suavely appealing as Hoover’s lifetime inamorata Clyde Tolson.

Source Code”—Duncan Jones’s crackerjack time-travel thriller injects Jake Gyllenhaal into a speeding train booby-trapped with bombs. The entire thing is wild fantasy, of course, but the separate eight-minute segments of Gyllenhaal looking for the bombs are shot in real time, and the suspense is terrific.

Rise of the Planet of the Apes”—The best use of digital in a big commercial movie this year. The apes, injected with DNA intended to prevent Alzheimer’s, become super intelligent, and develop humanish traits like empathy. But then their inner apeness comes out, and they climb and jump all over San Francisco. Enormous fun. Directed by Rupert Wyatt.

Illustration by Jim Stoten.
Photograph by Merie Wallace/Fox Searchlight.

THE NEW YORKER
Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/culture/2011/12/denby-the-best-films-of-2011.html#ixzz1fhKtU0KY