Quantcast
Channel: Film School Rejects
Viewing all 22121 articles
Browse latest View live

Culture Warrior: Scorsese’s ‘Hugo’ and the Death of Celluloid

$
0
0

Culture WarriorThe self-reflexive practices of the meta-film take various forms. On the one hand, there’s the legacy of cinephilic directors from Brian De Palma to P. T. Anderson to Robert Rodriguez who shout out to specific films through their in-crowd referencing, or even go so far as to structure entire narratives through tributes to cinema’s past. Then there’s “the wink,” those film’s, like this weekend’s The Muppets, who exercise cheeky humor by breaking the fourth wall and by constant reference to the fact that they are in a heavily constructed film reality.

The third category is less common, but perhaps the most interesting. There has been a recent influx of films that don’t use past films to construct present narratives or engage in Brecht-light humor, but have as their central narrative concern the broad developmental history of the medium itself, from practices of filmgoing to particularities of projection, and anything in between. Bertolucci’s The Dreamers is a good example of this mode of meta-filmmaking, but more high-profile films have begin to make this turn, specifically by directors who formerly operated in the first (and perhaps most common) category, like Tarantino with Inglourious Basterds two years ago. Now Martin Scorsese has followed suit with the 3D love letter to early cinema and film preservation that is Hugo.

As strong of a film as Hugo may be, it’s certainly a bit odd in the context of major Holiday releases from Hollywood studios. While many critics see the work as the closest we’ll come to a veiled autobiography of Scorsese’s childhood as Mean Streets (1973) was formed from his young adulthood (Slate’s Dana Stevens even goes so far as to say Hugo is his Fanny and Alexander), we mustn’t forget that it’s also a loyal adaptation to an award-winning children’s book by Brian Selznick. Now, I’ve never read the book, but upon speaking to a few people who have, I’m surprised to learn that it’s a rather direct adaptation. If Hugo is in some ways an unlikely Hollywood product, that’s because it’s source material is a successful and highly regarded children’s book about early cinema of all things! It’s difficult but fascinating to imagine that, for some children, somewhere, George Méliès is a Gepetto-style figure within their imaginative folklore. It’s hard to picture Hugo’s story told in any medium but the moving image.

Hugo

Hugo’s weekend box office performance is promising considering its strong word-of-mouth, but its intake was modest, especially considering Scorsese’s recent financial success. I only say this because it feels to me like the film has limited appeal to its alleged target audience, children, simply because of the comparable level of patience it requires in the face of recent 3D competitors like dancing penguins and shiny talking cars. However, I genuinely hope I’m proven wrong. If Hugo, against all odds, becomes a sleeper hit, I (and I say this in total self-awareness and with all sincerity) hope it inspires at least one kid out there to add “film historian” to their undoubtedly long list of potential future occupations. I’m not saying it should rank as high as “astronaut” or “cowboy,” but in the more realistic realm alphabetically situated between “famous person” and “firefighter.”

Hugo’s combination of rekindling initial childhood wonder of a magical medium and its work as a polemic for film preservation is potent for cinephiles. In many ways, this big, shiny, studio-sleek and confidently crafted ode to cinema’s long history could not have come at a better time. Panavision and other companies recently announced that they will cease production of celluloid film, and apparently several major film studios have ceased distributing their repertory of 35mm prints. We are now experiencing the time that has been portended for the last decade or so: the death of celluloid, and the full integration into cinema as a digital form.

But the real movement away from celluloid and towards digital filmmaking, exhibition, and even distribution has often been hyperbolically equated in some critical circles to the death of cinema itself. Such a rhetorical strategy is misleading, especially when taking into account that cinema, in the eyes of critics, filmmakers, and fans, has suffered many “deaths” with new technological changes that vastly reshape the medium. In the 1920s, Eisenstein, Pudovkin, and a group of other Soviet filmmakers bemoaned the arrival of sound filmmaking as the death of what they deemed a “purely” visual medium. Ten years later, Eisenstein himself would make his first sound films, all as visually compelling as his silent work. Over half a century ago, television posed the next big threat to cinema’s hegemony, but cinema in response (or, at least, Hollywood cinema) became something different to establish its unique, then-inimitable theatrical experience with the advents of CinemaScope, new color processes, and experiments like 3D.

Throughout all these changes, what we’ve come to know and understand to be “movies” – what they look like, what they sound like, where we see them – has changed drastically, but through it all cinema remains and will continue to. “Film” may no longer exist one day, but you don’t need celluloid to make “films.”

Hugo (and, by extension, Scorsese) seems to me to be rather unconcerned with the final days of celluloid in the film production sector. Auteurs like Scorsese may continue to use film throughout their directing careers, but this shift in media material does not necessarily portend the ruins of a form. Watching the pristine quality of Hugo digitally projected (in a small-ish town theater no less, signaling digital projection’s growing ubiquity) and accompanied by state-of-the-art 3D, Hugo certainly doesn’t confuse the value of preserving history with a well-meaning but purely nostalgic effort to continue it. Like Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams, Hugo uses new means of visual storytelling to depict old means of visual storytelling (and as a result, both of these are the only two films I’ve seen so far where 3D is substantially justified through content and not merely spectacle). By literally recreating Méliès’s work with 21st century technology, Scorsese renders the old new again.

Scorsese, as demonstrated by this film and his own restoration work, understands the vulnerable tactility of film stock, and the tremendous loss film history has endured from being a product ascribed with little cultural regard in its initial years. As Hugo’s declaration of the recovery of 80 of Meilies’s 500+ films indicates, the history of early cinema that we’ve managed to retain doesn’t even tell half the story of early film history (in fact, we only have somewhere around 25% of early films). While cinema as a concept will inevitably change its form as an object, the inevitability of such change renders the preservation of film (as with any history) a moral and cultural imperative.

As whimsical, wonderful, and emotionally engaging as Hugo is, its thesis (in juxtaposing the old and the new) is surprisingly realist in its maintenance of the urgency of preservation. While Scorsese himself may choose to continue utilizing film stock his entire career (he is certainly one of an increasing few who has the privilege of making such a choice), he’s likely more concerned about the fact that studios are not renting out their film prints than by the fact that Panavision is changing their business model. Each technological shift cinema has experienced has only proved the impermanence of movies. If studios converted all their existing prints to digital files, that will not render them any more immortal than they are now in 35mm. Decades (and certainly centuries) from now, with technological changes we can’t even envision, new crises in preservation will emerge. As cinema creeps toward its 125th year of existence, the ability to continue making available its many means of making moving images appear onscreen from both then and now must be possible. We cannot understand cinema only by its content, but its means of image-production as well: the digital projector should not warrant the complete extinction of the hand-crank projector.

This is not romantic nostalgia of cinematic years long past, but the preservation of reality – not a reality depicted, of course, but the reality that, to borrow the terms of Ben Kingsley’s Méliès, brought “dreams” to life by a hughly specialized means of running thousands of individual pictures quickly through metallic reels. Hugo does not reluctantly resign itself to the fact that new will be new (the characters enjoy the brothers Lumière as much as they do Harold Lloyd, as we look on through our 3D glasses) but celebrates it. However, at the same time the film exhibits an adamant refusal to live in a world where both old and new can’t simultaneously exist (either through changing studio business practices or the stigma of obsolescence), for this is to relegate Méliès once again outside of the glass studio and back into the tiny toy shop.

For more culture, trust your Culture Warrior.


New York Film Critics Choose ‘The Artist’, Get Overshadowed by Fake Armond White Twitter

$
0
0

The Artist

The major criticism I saw this morning of the New York Film Critics Circle and their live-voting awards show, as broadcast to the world by several member Twitter accounts, was that they seem to be placing a higher priority on being first than any other element of being relevant. Then again, their choice for best picture — Michel Hazavanicius’ silent smash The Artist – is the talk of The Town this awards season, so it doesn’t seem out of left field or completely irrelevant that they chose to honor it with both Best Pic and Best Director. What is striking about this morning’s NYFCC awards, however, isn’t the awards at all, it’s the fact that they were mightily overshadowed by the postings of a fake account on Twitter. Is that a comment itself on the awards process itself, that the most entertaining part of it all what the part not taking it seriously in the least?

Lets explore a bit, shall we?

First, some select winners from the NYFCC awards, courtesy of the folks at IndieWire:

Best Film:
The Artist

Best Director:
Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist

Best Screenplay:
Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin for “Moneyball”

Best Actress:
Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady

Best Actor:
Brad Pitt, Moneyball and The Tree of Life

Best Supporting Actress:
Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life, Take Shelter and The Help

Best Supporting Actor:
Albert Brooks, Drive

Best Cinematography:
The Tree of Life

Best Non-fiction Film:
Cave of Forgotten Dreams, directed by Werner Herzog

And now, a selection of tweet from the Fake Armond White (@ArmondWhite) account:

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

Fake Armond White NYFCC Awards Tweets

See, even something as specifically inside-basebally as a fake Twitter account for a rabble-rousing film critic can be pretty funny. Isn’t awards season fun?

This Week in Blu-ray: Tucker & Dale, 30 Minutes, Smurfs, Blue Velvet, Chillerama and More

$
0
0

This Week in Blu-rayThis Week in Blu-ray we celebrate the post-Black Friday hangover with a very light week. If you didn’t buy The Matrix trilogy for $28 dollars today, you should do that. Then move on to more pertinent matters, including the support of great horror comedies that sat on the proverbial shelf far too long, R-rated comedies about bombs and Werner Herzog’s journey into the depths of human emossshun, courtesy of really old cave drawings. It’s going to be a pretty diverse week, so you might want to keep reading.

Blu-ray Pick of the Week

Tucker and Dale Blu-rayTucker & Dale vs. Evil

The Pitch: “What are you going to say? I don’t know what happened officer, these college kids just showed up and started killing themselves all over my property.”

Why Buy? A few years back, when this unfortunately shelved genre comedy broke onto the scene in the snowy streets of Park City, Utah, I was one of those critics who was brave enough to name it one of my Must See Movies of Sundance 2010. We would later go on to include it in our list of Must See Movies of SXSW 2010. And it might as well have made our list of Must See Movies of SXSW 2011, as it played there, too. This movie spent more than its share of time in festival circuit hell. And now that it’s on Blu-ray, it’s time for folks like me to remind you that it’s one of the funniest, most clever flicks I’ve seen in a long while. And if you don’t pick it up, you’re truly missing out. Also, it affords you the opportunity to support one of those rare independent gems folks may just be talking about years from now. Remember that one with Alan Tudyk and the hot girl from 30 Rock? Yeah, I saw that way back when.

Blu-rays Worth Buying

30 Minutes or Less Blu-ray30 Minutes or Less

The Pitch: If you strap a bomb to the guy who invented Facebook and make him rob a bank, hilarity will ensue.

Why Buy? It’s a comedy worth seeing. The sophomore effort from Zombieland director Ruben Fleischer features some memorable moments from some currently popular comedic talents — the likes of Danny McBride, Aziz Ansari, Nick Swardson and Michael Pena. Our own Cole Abaius loved this one, calling it as tight and funny as any R-rated comedy we’d see all year. Most importantly, the Blu-ray is full of HD-exclusive features, including picture-in-picture video commentary, deleted scenes, an exclusive featurette and even a Playstation 3 theme that you can use to make your gaming system more explosive. Very funny, somewhat raunchy and completely immature film. Solid Blu-ray extras. That seems more than worth whatever money you have left after Black Friday.

Blue VelvetBlue Velvet

The Pitch: “I don’t know if you’re a detective or a pervert.”One thing we do know: David Lynch is a genius.

Why Buy? Because renting and watching one of the most controversial and psychologically brutal films of the 1980s probably isn’t enough. This special edition Blu-ray release of David Lynch’s deeply disturbed noir demands that you buy it. It grabs a hold of you, throws you to the ground and brutalizes you until you admit that you need it on your collection. It’s also got a few exclusively HD deleted scenes and outtakes to make the transition to the high definition medium a bit more cost efficient. It’s also your best chance to understand what the hell was going on in the mind of David Lynch, as it’s his most straight-forward film. Which is saying quite a bit, as it’s brilliantly off the wall and completely unique in every way.

Blu-rays Worth Renting

Chillerama Blu-rayChillerama

The Pitch: The Ultimate Midnight Movie! Only you get to watch it whenever you want.

Why Rent? Wadzilla, I Was A Teenage Werebear, The Diary of Anne Frankenstein, and Zom-B-Movie. Those are but a few of the titles included in this ultimate midnight movie anthology. Directors Joe Lynch, Adam Green, Adam Rifkin and Tim Sullivan bring you four rare, schlocktastic movies worthy of a late night marathon, a bit of heavy drinking and some very weird cinematic happenings. The Blu-ray affords you the opportunity to watch them as often as you like — you could even hold your own late-night marathons on a weekly basis. If that sounds like something you’d attend, consider this one a buy. If not, it’s worth being adventurous at least once and giving this one a try. In addition to being a fun anthology, there are also several worthwhile bonus features, including a look into what it takes to make The Diary of Anne Frankenstein.

The SmurfsThe Smurfs

The Pitch: It’s a movie about Smurfs that includes Neil Patrick Harris and jokes about why there’s only one girl Smurf. That’s pretty Smurfin’ Smurf’d up.

Why Rent? For the kids, my friends. For the kids. Also, there’s something indelibly charming about this latest incarnation of Papa Smurf’s gang. Something a little subversive about some of the laughs it earns. And Hank Azaria as Gargamel is far more fun than it has any business being. Toss in more live-action charm from NPH, Glee gal Jayma Mays and the ever-buxom Sophia Vergara and you’ve got yourself a movie that you, as parent or guardian, will more than survive watching with your kids. The kids will enjoy it as well, as it’s got silly little blue Smurfs doing silly little blue Smurf things. For families, the Blu-ray may actually be a buy. It’s got a host of special features — Blue-pers (get it?), multiple commentary tracks, featurettes and even a few interactive games. It’s enough to kill an entire afternoon. I’m not saying that I did so myself. But I know a guy who did. And he said that it was a lot more fun than he’d admit it was in public. This friend of mine. Who I know… (Note: There’s also a version that comes with The Smurfs: A Christmas Carol, which is a cute little mini-movie with some very blue holiday spirit.)

One Day Blu-rayOne Day

The Pitch: Anne Hathaway is frumpy! And she’s British, all of the sudden…

Why Rent? Unlike so many cookie-cutter romantic comedies, One Day has enough ambition to step away from some of the genre’s big cliches and play for us a straight-forward, oft-charming romantic story about two otherwise cookie-cutter characters. He’s the charming, bravado-filled success story who can’t find love and she’s the frumpy, dumpy, completely hot underneath dame with horrid glasses and a pony-tail who also just can’t seem to find love outside of that one perfect date she had with Mr. Wonderful. It’s about two lives intersecting, kisses and somewhat wonky British accents. That last part is all Ms. Hathaway. But despite its flaws, One Day manages to be charming and sometimes sweet and finds an ending you probably won’t expect, for better or worse. The Blu-ray offers you extras, but only a few. And like the film itself, it’s something you’ll enjoy, but forget about soon enough. The essence of a rental.

Cave of Forgotten Dreams 3DCave of Forgotten Dreams – 3D

The Pitch: Werner Herzog takes you deep into ze soul of a thousand year-old cave.

Why Rent? On a visual level, Herzog’s latest is absolutely stunning. If you’ve got a decent 3D television and you missed out on the chance to see this on the big screen, it’s highly recommended. From a storytelling standpoint, no narrator makes his subjects seem more profound and engrossing as Mr. Herzog. He’s a master documentarian who expertly captures the emotion of exploring a place buried within the Earth, left untouched by human hands for thousands of years. If you allow yourself to be transformed, this film will easily overtake you. That’s the way Werner Herzog intends it. That’s the way it shall be.

Blu-rays to Avoid

Nothing to avoid this week, although there is plenty in the ‘I didn’t get a chance to review it’ section below, so beware the unknown.

Also on Blu-ray this week

Exploring The Twilight Zone #112: No Time Like The Past

$
0
0

With the entire original run of The Twilight Zone available to watch instantly, we’re partnering with Twitch Film to cover all of the show’s 156 episodes. Are you brave enough to watch them all with us?

The Twilight Zone (Episode #112): “No Time Like The Past” (airdate 3/7/63)

The Plot: A man goes to the past to right some wrongs…but can he?

The Goods: Stupid, crappy old time travel. It’s such a spectacular innovation, but we can never do anything good with it (except that one time I stole Hitler’s wallet). As it turns out, things are pretty much set in stone.

But Paul Driscoll (Dana Andrews) doesn’t believe that. So, he sets out into the ether of things already seen to try to change history’s course.

This story is so by-the-numbers that you can almost see Rod Serling connecting the dots in the background of some of the shots. Driscoll begins his quest with the highest of intentions – to go back and save as many people as possible from the horrors of war (and other people). Unfortunately, circumstances keep him from warning a police officer in Hiroshima about the incoming atomic bomb (I guess Nagasaki was on its own?), from taking out Hitler, and from changing the course of the Lusitania before it gets targeted by a German U-boat.

The lesson is that no matter how hard you try, and even if you have a time machine, you cannot alter the past. At least, you can’t alter the big stuff.

Forlorn from this realization, Driscoll heads back to a sleepy little hamlet in 1881 to live out the rest of his troubled days in simple splendor. After letting President Garfield’s assassination happen (like he had a choice), he gives tampering one last shot and attempts to stop a schoolhouse from burning down. Guess what? Not only does he fail to stop it, his actions result directly in it happening – ensuring a much stronger lesson.

Other than being average, it’s a perfectly passable episode. It’s interesting and well-acted, but it suffers from the same problem that a lot of time travel missives find themselves ailing under: a logical gap.

It’s simply moronic that this man, armed with a device that can take him anywhere in time and space, fails to achieve basic goals. That failure comes not in the circumstances that bar him from killing a despot or changing a ship’s course – but from when he chooses to go back. Killing Hitler at the onset of his speaking popularity? Difficult. Killing Baby Adolph while his parents sleep? Notably easier. Yet for some reason, Driscoll (like many other characters used as props for this parable) uses his ultimate power to give himself only a few hours to complete a task.

Still, as make-work as it all is, it’s still effective at providing a larger message: that the past should left to tend to itself. At best, messing with it is ineffectual and at worst, it can do real damage. As a reality, it’s a bit far-fetched, but as a metaphor for our emotional, mental health, it’s pretty powerful.

Maybe Driscoll should have called on The Doctor.

What do you think?

The Trivia: Dana Andrews was a massive star in the 1940s, but his career was relegated to B-level status in the 50s. As for oddities, he plays a time traveler here trying to change major events; the same plot concept was used for the Twilight Zone episode Back There when a character tried to stop Lincoln from being assassinated; Abraham Lincoln was married to Mary Todd Lincoln; and Dana Andrews married a woman named Mary Todd. Plus, all of them knew Kevin Bacon personally.

On the Next Episode: An astronaut returns to the Earth to find things a little bit out of order, but things are about to get a lot more complex when a second him lands.

Catch-Up: Episodes covered by Twitch / Episodes covered by FSR

We’re running through all 156 of the original Twilight Zone episodes over the next several weeks, and we won’t be doing it alone! Our friends at Twitch will be entering the Zone as well on alternating weeks. So definitely tune in over at Twitch and feel free to also follow along on our Twitter accounts @twitchfilm and @rejectnation.

Steven Soderbergh Re-Thinks Retirement, Swallows ‘The Bitter Pill’

$
0
0

Remember back when Steven Soderbergh was going to retire? Yeah, that doesn’t seem like it’s going to happen. Recently the director was all set to make a big screen adaptation of the old TV show The Man From U.N.C.L.E., which was going to be one of his last movies ever; but once casting and budget problems got too out of hand on that project, the director decided to drop it and move on with his life. That sounds like a pretty obvious decision for a man who has said repeatedly in interviews that he’s over the whole filmmaking thing and wants to move on. Why tear your hair out dealing with a movie that just isn’t coming together?

But, in comparison, the newest move the director has made makes less sense, given the context of his recent comments. According to THR he has signed on for a new project called The Bitter Pill. This new film will see Soderbergh re-teaming with his The Informant! and Contagion writer Scott Z. Burns, and is said to be a thriller set in the world of psychopharmacology. Little else is known about the project, however.

So what’s the deal with Soderbergh signing on to do another movie? Does the movie-making business have its claws in him more than he is willing to admit? Was the pitch he got for this project just too damn good to pass up? Will he drop out of this one as well if another laundry list of Hollywood’s leading men look to star in it but then move on to other things?

The future of Soderbergh’s career seems to be pretty up in the air at this point, but at least we all know we still have Haywire coming out soon. Hopefully that will be enough to hold us over until this guy gets his head together. And maybe we’ll be hearing about Ocean’s Fourteen soon after all.

Sony Classics to Unleash ‘The Raid’ Next Spring

$
0
0

The Raid

There’s a movie out there that’s on a collision course with you, me and everyone we know. It’s called The Raid and it’s from director Gareth Evans, the guy who brought us the excellent martial arts film Merantau. He rocked the Toronto International Film Festival’s Midnight Madness crowds a few months back and lit the internet on fire with a rockin’ trailer (which I just so happen to have included after the break). It’s been the most anticipated movie on my indefinite calendar since the project was announced.

Now there’s a bit more definition in this journey, as Sony Pictures Classics will now distribute the film in the spring. According to Deadline Jakarta, The Raid may make a pit-stop at Sundance in January, complete with a new soundtrack from Linkin Park, then debut sometime in the spring. After re-watching the trailer again (see below), I’m convinced that spring can’t come soon enough.

Watch the trailer for The Raid:

Art for Movie Lovers: Josh Cicci’s Muppets

$
0
0

Muppet Pegs by Josh Cicci

Before we begin with this particular feature, we feel the need to apologize. This particular feature was due to be part of our Guide to The Muppets feature, but somehow it got lost in the shuffle. That said, we couldn’t let it get completely lost. Because as you’ll see, it’s a great feature full of art from a very talented artist named Josh Cicci. And since every week is Muppets Week in our hearts, we actually don’t see any problem running it late. We were still celebrating The Muppets, anyway. And now, on with some great Muppets art from Josh Cicci.

First, an explanation. When we asked Mr. Cicci to provide us some awesome Muppets art, we also asked him the most important question: what draws you to The Muppets? It is with his answer that we begin our journey:

Why am I so drawn to draw The Muppets? Well, first off, The Muppets were my first exposure to great comedy. It was a far smarter humor than anything I’d seen at that point- the first time I realized a joke could work on multiple levels. They are masters of double entendre and the absurd. They also provided my earliest exposure to the great human comedians. I’ve always had respect for actors, such as Steve Martin, who can work seamlessly with Muppet costars.

Aside from his comedic talents, I’ve always looked to Kermit as the archetype of how a person should be- a kindhearted dreamer, timid and humble, but no pushover. I regard Jim Henson in the same way, a man who just wanted to share his imagination with the world.

A lot of fond memories bring me back to The Muppets. When I was about 6 years-old, my mother bought me a Shrinky-Dinks set of the Muppet Theater and I explored it hours on end. As an artist, I’ve always been fascinated with how the characters can convey so much personality with such simple details. Their eyes are glued on and fixed, yet they display an impressive range of emotions. They inspired my earliest interests in art and comedy, and it’s for that reason that now, decades later, Kermit is still the common result of my absent mindedly putting pencil to paper.

And now, some art from Josh Cicci. Included along with the image at the top of the page — a collection of handpainted Muppets pegs — are these two items, one set of Dia de los Muppets coffins (sort of grim, but totally awesome) and a poster of The Muppets as The Three Amigos. Check them out below.

Dia de los Muppets by Josh Cicci

3 Muppet Amigos by Josh Cicci

You can find more work from Josh Cicci at his website, joshcicci.com.

 

Daniel Radcliffe is Going Ginsberg For ‘Kill Your Darlings’

$
0
0

Daniel Radcliffe

James Franco isn’t just known as the greatest Oscars host of all-time, he’s also an actor. An actor who up until now was the most recent man to portray legendary beat poet Allen Ginsberg on screen. Franco played Ginsberg in the movie Howl, which didn’t shy away from the perceived obscenity of Ginsberg’s works, the fact that there was a lot of drug use going on in the man’s life, or the fact that he was pretty openly homosexual. You have to be comfortable dealing with some pretty risqué stuff if you’re going to accurately portray Ginsberg on film, so it makes sense that an actor as concerned with being artsy and progressive as James Franco would take the poet on. But what’s a little more shocking is the newest actor who is going to be stepping into Ginsberg’s shoes. In the upcoming film Kill Your Darlings the poet is going to be played by none other than… Harry Potter?!

Yes, that’s right, Daniel Radcliffe is all set to star in the film, by writer/director John Krokidas, which centers on true life (and murderous!) events involving the relationships between Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and Lucienne Carr. Radcliffe has actually become a fine actor, and I’m sure he will do well playing Ginsberg, but I like to bring up his Harry Potter past to rib the guy a bit, because he seems to be so self-consciously anxious to make us forget. First he shows his magic wand in Equus, and now he’s playing a homosexual drug addict. That’s a little much for someone who, just a few months ago, was an idol to little kids. How about we dial it down a notch Daniel? Playing Rimbaud didn’t prove to the world that Leonardo DiCaprio wasn’t that little kid from What’s Eating Gilbert Grape? anymore; people just wanted to see him starring in Titanic. How about we ease into that adult career by doing a romantic comedy or something?

Kill Your Darlings was originally talked about back in 2009 with Jesse Eisenberg, Chris Evans and Ben Whishaw set to play the Ginsberg, Kerouac and Carr trio, but with Radcliffe’s involvement it now appears that most if not all of those old plans have been scrapped. Time will tell if Evans and Whishaw are still slated to appear alongside Eisenberg’s replacement, or if what we’re looking at is an all-new cast and all-new approach. If that’s the case, then it appears we’re going to have to start brainstorming which two actors would look good standing next to Radcliffe wearing 50s garb. And don’t say Rupert Grint and Tom Felton. Let’s cut the kid some slack. [Twitch]


Watch a Clip from the ‘Chillerama’ Blu-ray That You Can’t See Anywhere Else

$
0
0

Chillerama: I Was a Teenage Werebear

Sure, Film School Rejects is an international publication. But as far as the IRS is concerned, we’re a resident of the great city of Austin, Texas. And as residents of Austin, we’re required to celebrate all that is weird. It’s just part of the cost of living here. It helps that much of our staff is already into the strangest that cinema can provide, from the depths of the horror genre to oddities from around the world. As a general rule, we love a good midnight movie. Chillerama is said to be the “ultimate midnight movie,” at least according to its Blu-ray packaging. This genre anthology features films from the likes of Adam Green, Joe Lynch, Adam Rifkin and Tim Sullivan bringing you titles like Wadzilla, I Was A Teenage WerebearThe Diary of Anne Frankenstein, and Zom-B-Movie. It’s quite a treat for anyone with a little moviegoing courage. And to celebrate its DVD and Blu-ray release today, we’ve rounded up an exclusive behind the scenes clip in which star Sean Paul Lockhart explains what its like to be a Teenage Werebear, struggling with animalistic urges, suggen hair growth and his own sexuality.

Check out the exclusive Blu-ray clip below. Chillerama is on Blu-ray and DVD today, November 29, 2011.

New ‘Shame’ Red Band Trailer is Too Sexy For the Subway

$
0
0

Shame

There has been a lot of talk about the sexual content in Steve McQueen’s upcoming drama about sexual addiction and bratty little sisters, Shame. How explicit does it get? Exactly how many seconds is Michael Fassbender’s wang on screen? What gets glossed over a lot, however, is that Shame has been stuck with an NC-17 rating not because it shows too many boobs and butts, but because of how dirty, creepy, and downright…well, shameful watching this movie is going to make you feel. This is a no frills, brutally honest look at sexual compulsion, and the explicit content it contains is much more likely to repulse than it is to titillate. There is nothing healthy about the way Shame portrays human sexuality.

You wouldn’t know that from the newest red band trailer for the movie though. What we get here is an isolated scene from the film, where Fassbender’s character eyeball humps a redhead on the subway. His wolflike leering and her suggestive thigh shuffling are interrupted by brief bursts of images from all of the dirty, dirty sex that Fassbender has over the course of the film, and the effect of watching it all cut together is rather… well, exciting. Make no mistake, this trailer paints Shame as being a much more pleasingly erotic experience than it really is, and is in some ways misleading.

But what it does give you an accurate look at is the moodiness of the film, and the expert way it is able to set a tone. This is the sort of moviegoing experience that sweeps you up into its world, manipulates your emotions, and spits you back out into the theater lobby with serious bed head and a glazed over look in your eyes. It accomplishes this through tension building, expert photography, and visceral performances from its actors; all of which are evident in this new trailer, which actually works pretty well as a short film in and of itself. Give it a look if you’re feeling naughty.

Shame opens in limited release December 2, 2011.

Don’t Get Caught Out in the Cold: Follow Along With Our 2011 Holiday Survival Guide

$
0
0

Survival Guide: You Can Survive the Holidays!

In the coming weeks, Film School Rejects will, for the first year on record, perform a valuable public service. Instead of counting down our favorite Christmas movies in a 12 Days of Christmas style feature or being hip and only celebrating Hanukkah, we’re going to do something that will actually help you while entertaining you and somehow bringing it all back to movies. We’re pleased to present our 2011 Holiday Survival Guide.

In this month-long feature that kicks off Friday (Dec. 2), we will address topics such as ‘How To Pick Out the Perfect Present’, ‘How to Find Holiday Love’, ‘How To Pick Holiday Movies to Watch with Grandma’, ‘How To Avoid Being Murdered During the Holidays’ and plenty more thanks to the incredible depth of knowledge of the FSR staff. In short, we watch a bunch of movies so that you can learn life lessons. We’re having a lot of fun writing it, so we hope you have similar fun reading it.

Keep your browsers pointed to our 2011 Holiday Survival Guide homepage throughout December so that you don’t miss out on all the fun.

Review: Michael Fassbender and His ‘Shame’ Burn Through the Screen

$
0
0

Michael Fassbender in Shame

Years from now, cinephiles and film fans will likely remember the stipulations that brought Steve McQueen’s Shame to regular, film-going audiences after running through film festivals like some men go through women. McQueen himself reportedly told prospective buyers two things – it had to stay uncut (thus guaranteeing that fearful NC-17 rating) and they would have to push lead actor Michael Fassbender for recognition come awards season. The film has stayed uncut, and Fassbender won’t need a back cover For Your Consideration ad for viewers to recognize that he’s turned in the most brave (and bare) performance of the year.

McQueen and Fassbender have reteamed for their second feature with Shame (following 2008’s Hunger, a similarly wrenching film that established both men as talents to watch), and the film only cements their bond and shared aesthetic – one that film fans should be eternally anxious to see more of. Fassbender plays Brandon Sullivan, a handsome Manhattanite whose seemingly normal exterior shields his true self, one driven almost entirely by his out-of-control addiction to sex. McQueen approaches his subject in an almost clinical manner – using Sean Bobbitt‘s stunning cinematography to observe Brandon in his natural environment, as it were, a predator amongst prey. As the film progresses, it becomes more and more obvious (and more and more unsettling) that Brandon is not “safe” around any woman. He leers at women on the subway, gets a touch too close physically to his own kin, manhandles a perfect stranger in a bar while her boyfriend rests mere feet away. But the film is called Shame for reason, and it’s McQueen and Fassbender’s task to show Brandon’s addiction for what it is – source of deep and constant disruption and pain.

When Carey Mulligan arrives, Brandon’s equally-as-damaged sister (only known as “Sissy”) throws his life into chaotic disarray. Brandon is already hanging on by a thread, with his addiction bleeding over into his professional life (his work computer is revealed to be filled with porn, a feat made impressive by the fact that Brandon shares a glass-windowed office). Brandon makes a few attempts at normalcy, asking a beautiful co-worker out on a date before accelerating their relationship at a breakneck pace, the kind that would scare off any sensible woman. But Brandon’s seeming inability to conduct a normal relationship, paired with Sissy discovering him giving into some of his base desires, appears to finally break him. Brandon’s collapse is spectacular, wrenching, terrifying, and complete – his pursuit of pleasure finally tears away any sort of basic moral framework he may have been working under, along with any kind of personal preference for how he obtains his release.

McQueen does not offer any greater explanations for why Brandon and Sissy are the way they are beyond a third-act admission from Mulligan, who attempts to soothe Brandon by telling him, “we’re not bad people, we just come from a bad place.” We will never know the logistics of that place, but putting together small hints that populate the film – including Sissy’s desperation for affection and acceptance along with her own too-free sexuality, a mention that Brandon and Sissy’s family moved to America when he was a teen, and that we never hear anything about the rest of their family – at the very least sketch out a sense of what happened to them to make them this way.

Shame is only as good as its performances, so it’s quite a piece of luck that McQueen’s stars turn in two of the finest performances of the year. Fassbender’s on-screen magnetism allows Brandon to be both believable and sympathetic. Few actors working today could compel the women of the film into his bed, while also retaining even an ounce of audience sympathy. Brandon is a monster, and yet, he’s not, as Fassbender infuses his character with just enough regret and just enough disgust with himself to keep him feeling human and fallible, if excessively and enormously human and fallible.

Mulligan is a skilled actress, but her quick rise to fame after An Education and some of her more immediate roles (particularly Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps or even Drive, a film that I love but continue to believe she was woefully miscast in) have made it somewhat difficult for me to see that spark of what made her special (though Never Let Me Go did allow her to bring more of best work to the screen). Shame all but erases any lingering doubts about Mulligan’s talent. Just as Brandon is unnerved and unnerving, Sissy is a powder keg of bad mistakes and an even worse attitude, stripped down and laid bare in some of the most deeply emotional scenes in the film. When Sissy wails to an ex-lover over the phone, begging him to take her back, it is wrenching – but it is nothing next to her already infamous singing scene, when Sissy the lounge singer breaks out with a haunting rendition of “New York, New York.” Sissy’s spin on the material touches Brandon so deeply that he actually cries – his most unexpected response in a film made of unexpected responses.

While Shame has undoubtedly been the source of much cinematic chatter due to its basic storyline (and the nudity and sex that entails), McQueen and his cast have pulled off a much finer feat than just delivering a stirring portrait of a sex addict, they’ve actually crafted a stirring portrait of a human being. Brandon’s illness is merely an entry into his character as a whole, a facet of all of the parts that add up to one very damaged man. Putting aside the nudity (it’s there, and early), the sex (which devolves into being so unsexy as to actually encourage abstinence), and the emotional abuse that touches nearly every character (it stings), Shame is a surprisingly universal story. It is not a film about sex addiction so much as it’s a film about disconnection and obsession and need and consumption and seduction and trust – human issues for a human story.

The Upside: Searing performances, beautiful cinematography (from McQueen’s Hunger collaborator, Sean Bobbitt), and a deeply personal story add up to a film that will leave you with a pit in your stomach for days (in the most positive way possible).

The Downside: A tough subject matter will likely turn off moviegoers who would rather have an easy cinema experience.

On the Side: Someone give Carey Mulligan a role in a large-scale musical.

Movie News After Dark: Justified, Scorsese’s Hugo, Batsuit Nipples, J.J. Abrams, Community and The Doctor’s Xmas Special

$
0
0

Movie News: Justified Returns

What is Movie News After Dark? It’s a nightly movie news column that doesn’t mess around. If it tells you to leave town or else it will shoot you on the spot, then you’d better believe that it will shoot you on the spot. Lucky for you, it would never ask you to leave town. All it asks is that you come back and read on a nightly basis. Or else.

We open tonight with a bit of news for your boob tube. FX has set dates for the return of Justified and Archer, two favorite shows of mine. Both are coming back in January. They’ve also given the green light to an animated comedy called Unsupervised, which features the likes of Justin Long, Kristen Bell, Fred Armisen, Romany Malco, Kaitlin Olson and Alexa Vega. It’s about teens who are forced to navigate through life without parental supervision. Either way, did I mention that Justified is coming back? Walton Goggins, man…

James Rocchi at MSN’s The Hitlist has a great interview with veteran actor Robert Forster about The Descendants and making your fake punches count. “I’m going to punch you,” his character says to a smart-alecky kid in the movie. You can probably figure out the rest.

Fully jazzed a week after seeing Martin Scorsese’s latest film, I’m more than excited to share a number of links to great pieces written about Hugo. First, over at io9, Meredith Woerner tells us What Martin Scorsese’s Hugo taught us about the Grandfather of Science Fiction film, George Méliès. And at The Film Stage, Jordan Raup offers up 10 Classic Films You Must Watch Before Seeing Martin Scorsese’s Hugo. I wound’t waste time, though, as you should probably just see Hugo. These films are worth your time, as well, but Hugo will knock you out with its brilliant old fashioned story told with modern technology.

Angela Watercutter at The UnderWire has written a really interesting and well-thought piece entitled  TheTwilight Issue: Why Geeks Should Get Behind Breaking Dawn. She makes a few excellent points about the formula employed in bringing Twilight to the big screen and how well it serves its audience. Also, I’ve heard that it gets weird. And geeks love weird.

Speaking of movie geeks, there seems to be an entire culture on the internet that was born on a hatred for Joel Schumacher’s Batman films, Batman Forever and Batman and Robin. Which makes this Batman & Robin Fake Criterion entry by Doug Goodwin all the more entertaining. It comes complete with the nippled batsuit and a Director Approved sticker. It’s just too good.

Batman and Robin Fake Criterion

Over at Hero Complex, J.J. Abrams tells us about the big lessons he’s learned from small budgets. In short, he’s doing more with less — in the case that “less” is the Hollywood version of less, a measly $55 million for Super 8. In the end, it’s making one hell of a profitable guy. And his movies are still pretty entertaining. Interesting…

Now that Community has been pulled from NBC’s midseason schedule, it’s uncertain as to whether we may ever see our friends at Greendale again after this week. If this makes you as sad as it makes me, you’ll find some comfort in Pajiba’s exploration of Community‘s Beetlejuice Easter Egg that was three years in the making. Only the good die young, as they say.

Also at Pajiba, my competitive crush Joanna Robinson delivers another really great, timely list with her countdown of Eight Cinematic Black Sheep to Make You Feel Better About Your Holiday. Because sure, you may have been pepper sprayed trying to buy a waffle iron, but at least you’re not related to Margot Tenenbaum.

Roger Ebert asks: where do you like to sit in a movie theater? Then he goes on, in his usual way, to tell a compelling story about why he always sits where he always sits, in various theaters. This is something that reminds me of my friends who frequent the Alamo Drafthouse. We all know which seats are the best in the house.

Have you guys and gals heard of this new website Moviegr.am yet? It aggregates info from IMDB, Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic. It’s an aggregator aggregator. I dig the design. Needs to do something special, however, if it is to be useful.

We close tonight with the trailer for the Doctor Who 2011 Christmas special, The Doctor, The Widow and the Wardrobe. It looks like fun. And holiday spirity.

This Week In DVD: November 29th

$
0
0

This Week in DVDIt’s the last DVD release week of November, and judging by the stellar releases out today it’s fair to say Christmas has come early. There are several titles, big and small, deserving of a purchase or at least a rent, and they’re pretty widespread genre-wise too. Some of the week’s offerings include Tucker & Dale vs Evil, Our Idiot Brother, Friends with Benefits, 30 Minutes or Less and more.

As always, if you see something you like, click on the image to buy it.

Another Earth

The unfortunately named Rhoda (Brit Marling) is a bright high-school graduate with a limitless future, but on the night a new planet is discovered in the night sky above she celebrates a bit too hard and smashes her car into a family of three. A few years later, Rhoda is released from prison and makes an attempt at an apology to the man (William Mapother) she injured and whose wife and child she killed. Communication with the new planet has also revealed that it is a mirror image of our own as far as geography and population, but that different choices there may have given way to different events. Marling co-wrote this intriguing and often mesmerizing sc-fi/drama with director Mike Cahill, and while the logic and explanation behind the science fiction aspects are woefully lacking the drama, character work and “what if?” scenarios are excellent. As she does in the somewhat superior Sound of My Voice Marling brings an ethereal and fragile presence to the role that makes this tale of loneliness, guilt and hopeful redemption all the more powerful. [The DVD in the Blu-ray/DVD combo pack is devoid of extras, but the Blu features deleted scenes, a music video and featurettes.]

Kidnapped

Pitch: Much like what Congress’ Super Committee underwent the original title of this movie is Secuestrados. A mixing of the two probably would have resulted in agreements on some severe cuts…

Why Buy? A family sits down for a contentious meal at the dinner table, but their time together is interrupted when a trio of villains invades their home and takes them hostage. The intruders are after money and a good time, but the following hour will be anything but entertaining. For the family and bad guys I mean. Viewers who love nail-biting suspense, smart cat and mouse play, and creative film-making will find much to enjoy. Just don’t get me started on the ridiculously shitty final minute. Check out my full review here. [The DVD includes a featurette and trailers.]

Our Idiot Brother

Pitch: I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. As a straight man who enjoys a good laugh I would not kick Paul Rudd out of bed…

Why Buy? Ned (Paul Rudd) is a nice guy who also happens to be a bit of a goof. He’s too trusting, too irresponsible and too… Ned. His sisters (Elizabeth Banks, Zooey Deschanel and Emily Mortimer) are better adjusted on the outside, but they’re also a bit too consumed with their own troubles to notice and enjoy the world around them. This is easily the second best ensemble cast of the year (after Horrible Bosses), and every single actor nails it. Rudd especially carries the film with a character that could easily have slipped into an annoying and blundering caricature, and his bantering with Adam Scott are comedic gold. Seriously, someone give them a buddy cop movie already. Check out Robert Levin’s full review here. [The DVD includes commentary, deleted scenes and a featurette.]

Tucker & Dale vs Evil

Pitch: They’ll make you laugh, but not before making you squeal like a piggy…

Why Buy? A group of sex-crazed college kids runs afoul of a pair of hillbillies, and soon the clean-cut young people are dropping like flies. Sounds like a thousand other movies, but the catch here is that Tucker and Dale, the aforementioned hillbillies, are simply trying to help the kids who keep dying through misfortune, accident and misunderstanding. Eli Craig’s film is a funny and subversive take on well worn genre conventions. I lean more towards a Rental, but the fact that the movie sat on a shelf for two years before being dumped to DVD has earned it a bump into the Buy category. Check out Landon Palmer’s full review here. [The DVD includes commentary, outtakes, featurettes and a trailer.]

Vampires

Pitch: “The truth is Elizabeth can’t stop herself from eating children. As for me, when they’re older, I can’t stop myself from making love to them…”

Why Buy? This pseudo documentary crosses This Is Spinal Tap with Man Bites Dog as a film crew explores the lives of a family of Belgian vampires who deal with their situation in different ways. Dinner table etiquette, teen drama, vampire rules and more all come into play as we see how vampires live and die (and live again). This isn’t only the best vampire related movie of the year… it’s the best damn vampire movie in ages. It’s funny as hell, occasionally frightening and sharp as a bloody fang. Check out my full review here. [The DVD includes deleted scenes and a trailer.]

The Wave

Pitch: True story about a young girl who goes surfing and has her arm bitten off by fascism…

Why Buy? Modern day Germany is not a place that’s forgotten about Hitler and his doings, but for many of the country’s youth that’s because they’ve never really understood it in the first place. A high school teacher assigned the task of exploring autocracy with his students sets in motion an experiment in totalitarianism to show them the effects and power of unity and obedience, but the project quickly grows out of control as the teenagers begin taking their new-found power too seriously. The film is suspenseful and dramatic without ever tipping into the unbelievable or melodramatic, and it’s a powerful look at a dark time in history that could very easily happen again if good people do nothing and allow it. It’s message can even be downgraded to apply to gangs, cliques and bullies in general, and it should probably be shown in schools for that very reason. [The DVD includes featurettes and a trailer.]

30 Minutes or Less

Pitch: Remember the Domino’s Dance that delivery drivers had to do if they were late with your pizza? Was that just an urban legend? I don’t know, but either way Jesse Eisenberg does not do one here…

Why Rent? Nick (Jesse Eisenberg) is a down on his luck pizza delivery guy (redundant I know) who’s kidnapped, strapped with a bomb and forced to rob a bank or be evaporated. With the help of his friend Chet (Aziz Ansari) he tries to outwit the kidnappers (Danny McBride and Nick Swardson), avoid exploding and woo Chet’s sister at the same time. Director Ruben Fleischer reunites with his Zombieland lead for a movie that is a little bit funnier and only slightly less madcap. Plus, Fred Freaking Ward! Check out Cole Abaius’ full review here. [The DVD includes a featurette.]

Cave of Forgotten Dreams

Pitch: “There seems to have existed a visual convention extending all the way beyond Baywatch.” Werner Herzog referring to an ancient figurine of a large bellied and large breasted woman…

Why Rent? Fifteen years ago a cave was discovered in the hills of France that changed everything we knew about cave paintings made by ancient peoples. The Chauvet Cave has since become a hot bed of research and study, and by hotbed I mean only a very select group of visitors are allowed in for a peek. The world famous Curious George narrator, Werner Herzog, was one of those lucky few, and with a small crew he looks into and beyond the cave’s history and meaning. The film captures much of the cave’s beauty and awe, and Herzog’s narration is occasionally a thing of beauty, but there’s not really enough here to justify the running time. It would have made a fantastic 45-minute short, but as it stands it’s a mildly interesting feature. [The DVD includes a short film and a trailer.]

Guilty of Romance (UK)

Pitch: No one is what they appear to be on the outside. Especially women apparently…

Why Rent? Izumi (Megumi Kagurazaka) leads a fairly sheltered life as the docile housewife to a famed romance novelist whose books are far more lively than his personality at home. An attempt at finding herself through a part-time job leads to a gig in porn, and soon she’s discovering more than she could have expected about herself inside and out. Running alongside her story is a murder investigation into a crime scene featuring body parts sewn together with mannequin pieces. Director Sion Sono mines some similar territory to his last film, Cold Fish, in this story that melds true crime with sexual exploration, and in the process he’s crafted a movie that alternates between beauty and real ugliness. [The DVD includes commentary and an interview.] **NOTE – This is a region2 DVD which requires either a region-free player or the willingness to watch on your PC.**

Friends With Benefits

Pitch: Friends don’t let friends watch unfunny movies with lead actors who can’t act…

Why Avoid? Two sexy young people (Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake) who’ve recently been dumped by funnier actors (Andy Samberg and Emma Stone) decide they’re no longer interested in serious relationships and instead want one that’s focused on sex only. But if Natalie Portman and Ashton Kutcher have taught us anything it’s that such a thing is patently absurd. (Although it does work in real life if you choose your partner well enough.) This is a lesser version of No Strings Attached, which if you’ve seen that movie you know that is faint praise indeed. Timberlake is not a good actor, period, and he lessens every scene he’s in to the point where it’s more annoying than entertaining. Although at least he didn’t woose out and use a butt-double like Kunis. Check out Adam Charles’ full review here. Skip it and watch Fired Up! instead. [The DVD includes commentary, deleted scenes and outtakes.]

The Future

Pitch: Your future should not involve wasting time with this annoyance…

Why Avoid? A couple of hipsters rescue and adopt a cat, but it needs to spend a month at the vet’s before they can bring it home. They realize that in thirty days they’ll be forced to become responsible adults so they decide to take these four weeks to truly explore their last days of freedom. I haven’t seen writer/director/star Miranda July’s previous film, Me and You and Everyone We Know, but I hear it’s pretty fantastic. Of course, some people say the same thing about this movie. Skip it and watch Back to the Future instead. [The DVD includes commentary, a featurette, a deleted scene and a trailer.]

Needle

Pitch: What’s in the box? What’s in the box?!? Something stupid and occasionally gory…

Why Avoid? A college kid whose father died a few years prior receives the last part of his dad’s estate in the form of an elaborately constructed box. The his friends start dying in gory and violent ways. The script does a fine job of misdirection when it comes to the killer’s identity, but that doesn’t really matter when the characters and remainder of the script are uninteresting and illogical. The deaths do feature the occasional nice bit of gore though. Skip it and watch Hellraiser instead. [The DVD includes a featurette and a trailer.]

Also out this week, but I haven’t seen the movie/TV show, review material was unavailable, and I have no blind opinion:

The Art of Getting By
Chillerama
One Day
The Smurfs

Read More: This Week in DVD

What are you buying on DVD this week?

31 Things We Learned From the ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ Commentary

$
0
0

Beverly Hills Cop

Brett Ratner. Tower Heist. The Oscar debacle. I think it’s time we gazed into our crystal balls – heh, heh, heh – to a much simpler point in Eddie Murphy’s career. He found success on Saturday Night Live, even brought out a few fans here and there with 48 Hours, but it wasn’t until 1984 and Beverly Hills Cop that he became an A-list movie star. It remains a classic, a pinnacle of Murphy’s career, and to this day remains one of the biggest comedies of all time.

And who directed it, you might ask. Why, it’s none other than Martin Brest, the guy who would go on to make that hilarious comedy where Brad Pitt bounces off two cars and Gigli. Yes, he made Gigli. You think there’s a reason the guy hasn’t been heard from since 2003? He didn’t die. Oh, right, back to Beverly Hills Cop. Here is what Martin Brest had to say about this comedy classic. I’m sure I’ll be stopping and rewinding this commentary an awful lot listening to Harold Faltermeyer’s theme and watching this over and over and over and over and over again. It never gets old.

Beverly Hills Cop (1984)

Commentators: Martin Brest (director) and Harold Faltermeyer’s awesomely ’80s score.

  • Brest starts over the Paramount logo saying it’s an early Saturday morning in Santa Monica. Oh, yeah, Martin? Well, it’s a cold, Thursday night here in Austin, so get to the movie talky, you braggart. I kid. I’m not even gonna count this as one of the “things learned”.
  • The chase in Detroit was one of the last things shot on Beverly Hills Cop. The random shots around Detroit over the opening credits were also shot at this time. At one point, you see a man standing on a sidewalk describing something very animatedly to his friends. He’s actually describing to his friends the chase sequence in the film, which he had seen being filmed earlier.
  • Brest and his crew had to get clearance from the people being filmed for the opening credits. He and his crew had an off-duty police officer accompanying them, but the cop would not go with them into the housing project for the shot of the kids spitting up milk. I don’t understand. I saw Real Steel. Detroit seems an affable, jovial place to me.
  • The scene in the back of the truck at the opening of the film was the first scene shot. Brest knew right off the bat they were going to have a blast working with Murphy. He’s still fascinated by Murphy as indicated by the long stretches here where he just sits and watches the movie. The haggling between Murphy and Frank Pesce was inspired by dialogue said between Robert DeNiro and Harvey Keitel in Mean Streets. The Faltermeyer theme was inspired by God.
  • The truck used during the opening chase sequence was referred to on set as “The Train”. It’s front bumper was replaced with a steel i-beam so it could plow through anything it came into contact with. Murphy did many of the stunts needed during this sequence, and these shots were filmed in downtown L.A., not Detroit. The shot of Axel Foley flying out the back and hitting the side of the truck was obviously a stuntman, one who didn’t want to get back in the truck after.
  • When Foley enters the department where he works, the words “INVESTIGATON OPERATIONS DIVISION” are written on the window. “Investigation” is misspelled. Brest mentions this, notes that it annoyed him at the time, but this being 1984, he didn’t worry about it too much. It was the day even before home video was very popular, so no one had the capability to really examine it. Now, we have Blu Ray. Now, we have columns like Commentary Commentary to analyze and point these things out.
  • Brest wanted the Detroit office to be as different from the Beverly Hills office as possible. He didn’t think a Jewish person like Paul Reiser would be working at the Beverly Hills police department. Reiser’s character, Jeffrey, was named after Jeffrey Katzenberg, future President of Production at Paramount.
  • Gilbert Hill who plays Inspector Todd was head of homicide in the Detroit Police Department. Brest met him while visiting Detroit to do research and scout locations for the film. “He almost seemed to me like he could be Eddie’s father,” says Brest. In fact, the idea of Axel Foley holding his gun in the back of his jeans with no holster was inspired by the way Hill carried his service revolver. At the time Brest recorded this commentary, Hill was running for mayor of Detroit. A quick glance on Wikipedia tells us he lost in 2001 to Kwame Kilpatrick. Kwame Kilpatrick was elected to the Michigan House of…oh, yeah. The movie. It’s easy to get lost on Wikipedia.
  • Sylvester Stallone was originally cast as the lead. He left the project a few weeks before shooting began. This threw everything into disarray. That’s all Brest says about this, but evidently Stallone used a lot of what was in the script at that time to make Cobra. He left Beverly Hills Cop because of a disagreement in what kind of orange juice was to be kept in his trailer. Put this, too, in the “evidently” category. Also put it in the “Stallone is one crazy diva” category. Also put it in the “light pulp” category.
  • The scene at the bar between Murphy and James Russo who plays Mikey Tandino brought out a mixed reaction from preview audiences. Some audiences laughed when the two character expressed love for one another. The studio wanted Brest to cut this scene out, but Brest resisted. Instead of cutting it out altogether, he and his editors trimmed it way down, even cutting out a few frames holding on Mikey after he says, “I love you.” This minor adjustment made all the difference in the world. Also, I love you. I don’t care what the editors think.
  • In the scene where Mikey is killed, the production was rushed out of that location. They were unable to shoot a shot of Axel falling to the floor after he gets knocked out. Brest notes he regrets not getting this shot, as it confuses some people when Eddie Murphy just disappears. Kind of like how he just disappeared from the public conscious. Zing. Moving on.
  • “You know, the movie is sort of this weird hybrid between In the Heat of the Night and The Beverly Hillbillies.” Brest says this before pointing out the obvious homage shot of palm trees he lifted from the Beverly Hillbillies opening. He also laughs and laughs about it. That Martin Brest. Always cracking himself up. This reminds me I have to do the Gigli commentary sometime. I’m sure he gets quite a kick out of that movie.
  • During production, Brest wanted to shy away from the idea of race being brought up. As he noted earlier, Stallone was originally intended for the part, and the director didn’t want much mentioned about race when Murphy stepped into the role. However, Eddie Murphy, who was evidently allowed to improvise much of Axel Foley’s dialogue, brings it into his dialogue a few times, one being when he’s checking into the Beverly Palms Hotel. Brest felt it worked and left it in.
  • Brest wanted to get a shot of Murphy walking down a Beverly Hills street. However, they could never work it into the schedule. The shot of Axel walking down the street and passing the two guys dressed in leather outfits was shot during a lunch break in a particularly crummy part of Los Angeles. Expensive cars and greenery were added in to make it appear to be Beverly Hills.
  • 25:05 – Martin Brest turns the volume up on the film so he can listen to Bronson Pinchot’s performance. Funny, most of the time people are reaching for the Mute button when Pinchot shows up. I grew up on Perfect Strangers, okay? I know.
  • Brest wanted a nice set with a good view of L.A. for the film’s villain, Victor Maitland’s, office. The office set was completely constructed on a floor of a tower that was under construction. Of course, as Brest notes and as we can see behind actor Steven Berkoff in the scene, the day they shot this scene the city was completely covered in smog. If you look really closely, you can see a Native American standing in the corner with a single tear running down his cheek. Okay, I totally made that part up, but you can imagine.
  • Brest notes that the production was unable to gain access to the actual Beverly Hills Police Department. The set they constructed for this was a complete fantasy, one Brest mentions he knows looks nothing like the real department. They wanted to make it appear as different from the Detroit Police Department as possible. They wanted to make it look like private security for all rich people, one of the class issues Brest wanted to include in the film. So, in case you didn’t think Beverly Hills Cop had anything under its hood besides the banana in the tail pipe joke, you’re wrong. You’re just wrong.
  • Brest also mentions later on the commentary that much of the Beverly Hills Police Department set was based off conceptual designs he and his crew had come up for for the NORAD scenes in WarGames, which Brest was fired off of. A lot of time was spent creating this set, and Brest didn’t want it to go to waste.
  • A particularly drawn moment of exposition comes during the film, and Brest, after pointing this out, mentions a phone call he had with the late producer Don Simpson. The call was regarding how much story should be “jammed in” at this point of the movie and which story points should be hit. Since it was 1984, things like Skype and text messaging weren’t around to make such a call more convenient while Brest was attempting to shoot it. Yeah, they really need to remake this movie. Get Brett Ratner on the horn.
  • Ah, the banana in the tail pipe scene. Brest mentions it was originally supposed to be a potato in the tail pipe, and a scene involving Axel sneaking into the kitchen of the hotel to get a potato was intended. Budget and scheduling issues stepped in, and the scene couldn’t be shot. Murphy had to grab something that was easily accessible in a location that was already lit and ready to be shot. The lobby became that location, and, since a potato in the lobby didn’t really work, they changed it up to Axel grabbing a banana off a buffet. It was Eddie Murphy’s idea to get Damon Wayans in as the guy working the buffet. Side note, Wayans is credited in the film as Banana Man. Just think, at one point that was on his resume.
  • Brest likens Judge Reinhold and John Ashton to Laurel and Hardy on more than one occasion. I mean, don’t get me wrong, Reinhold and Ashton are funny in Beverly Hills Cop. The have excellent chemistry, one of the many many reasons why Beverly Hills Cop III was such a travesty. But Laurel and Hardy? Brest might be giving every aspect of his film a little too much credit here. Having said that, I could go for a series of films with Reinhold and Ashton. Hell, anything to get Judge Reinhold more work works for me.
  • According to Brest, the stripper in the scene where Axel, Rosewood, and Taggart are at the club together was a dance named Mouse. She was evidently a legendary stripper, and the song playing in this scene, “Nasty Girl” by Vanity 6, was the actual song Mouse danced to. You don’t get a lot of director’s commentary talking about the strippers they use in their movies. I felt it necessary to mention it here. Point Brest. Point breast. I’m five.
  • For the scene at the strip club, Brest went back to his film school days in an effort to get all the shots he needed regarding who everyone in the scene is looking at even though they were long distances from one another. He also watched scenes from 48 Hours in preparation for this scene, because he liked how Walter Hill shot the bar scenes in that film. It should be noted that once the action starts, no one is looking at Mouse. Poor Mouse.
  • In the scene where Axel is explaining to Lt. Bogomil, played by Ronny Cox, what went down at the strip club, Brest notes it was a completely closed set with no oxygen or central air being pumped in. Since it was the middle of August, the set was ridiculously hot and everyone was extremely sluggish. Brest mentions Murphy, who had hardly ever drank coffee in his life, had a cup of coffee before shooting the scene, and it sent him off the wall. If you look closely, you notice Murphy’s eyes twitching quite a bit in this scene. Also look closely, and you’ll notice John Ashton cracking up through the entire scene.
  • Because the film’s production was on such a tight schedule, and because the screenplay was being reworked as production went on, oftentimes the actors would be given their dialogue less than an hour before shooting. When Stephen Elliott as the chief of police enters his first scene, you’ll notice he’s carrying rolled up papers in his hand. Brest notes these are actually script pages he was handed just before filming the scene. Holding these pages during rehearsals looked so official Brest felt it added to his character to be holding them during the actual shoot. Likewise, the chief referring to Rosewood as Rosemont was an accident during rehearsals that they decided to keep in the finished film.
  • Producers wanted to cut out the scene between Victor and Jenny, played by Lisa Eilbacher, but Brest felt it was necessary to the plot and that it was the scene where Victor’s villainy became clear. Brest made a trade. In order to keep the scene in, he had to give in and include the freeze frame shot at the end of the film. Brest didn’t like this aesthetic idea, but acquiesced. In fact, every director should acquiesce to a freeze frame ending their film. Can you imagine Schindler’s List with a freeze frame at the end? No, you can’t, because Spielberg didn’t give in.
  • In the scene where Jenny and Axel are being held at gunpoint, and Victor is confronting them, there is a moment where Victor looks at Axel and just scoffs and shakes his head. As Brest notes, this was originally a reaction to something Axel said, a line Eddie Murphy improvised on set. Brest loved the reaction shot, how it was a quirky but villainous moment for Victor, and left it in though the line Murphy said was cut out.
  • Brest, who had never shot action before, was intimidated by shooting the climactic shoot-out at Victor Maitland’s mansion. The shot of Axel, Rosewood, and Taggart traveling along a hedge is about two seconds long and what remains of tons of footage of that same shot from different angles. Brest spent so much time on those few shots, because he was nervous to get into the heart of the action scene. The final scene of the film was also supposed to be shot at night, but budget constraints didn’t allow for this.
  • 1:26:14 – Brest uses the word “bougainvillea”. You can look it up here, but no it’s now a word I’m adding to my everyday lexicon. “I got a wicked skin rash from this bougainvillea.” Yup. Feeling smarter already.
  • For the shot where Axel jumps down steps and rolls into a gunshot, Murphy had to shoot some of this. He had to shoot the shot of Axel actually jumping off the steps, but Murphy didn’t want to do this. Brest convinced him by saying if he could do it, Eddie could do it. Brest did it, and Murphy gave in. Brest didn’t have to go through all that. He could have just said Stallone would have done it without issue. Of course, he’d be lying. As we’ve established, Sylvester Stallone is a major diva. Heh. Orange juice.
  • The sound of Eddie Murphy’s sneakers squeaking through the final action scene unnerved the sound crew at first. However, Brest and the crew decided it added a nice motif for his character and left it in. In fact, according to Brest, they went back and added the sound to places in the film where it originally wasn’t.
  • The scene after the gunfight, when Bogomil is explaining everything that went down to the chief of police, was a particularly nerve wracking day of shooting for Brest. Their time was very limited, and all the different shots required several camera movements and different lighting setups. He even called the studio during the day and said he wasn’t sure if they’d be able to get the entire scene finished that day. They told him to do the best he could. Brest, who was smoking at the time, notes he smoked literally seven packs of cigarettes that day. I’m sure Joe Camel was proud. He was around back then, right? Sometimes I really miss the ’80s.

Best in Commentary

“What is it about villains and warehouse locations?”

“Once Eddie got on board to do the movie, and we kind of changed everything, this area was the sort of thing I was really aiming towards in the restructuring of the movie, this whole notion that the unorthodox policing techniques that Eddie’s character used wound up wearing off on the most orthodox Beverly Hills cops.”

Final Thoughts

All in all, not a bad commentary, especially one involving the director alone. There are long stretches of silence and several moments where Brest points something out without much insight. You can’t help but think what some of the cast might offer, especially Murphy or Reinhold and Ashton. Yeah, I’m always going to refer to them that way now. Just like Lauren and Hardy. I wouldn’t even mind listening to a commentary track from Harold Faltermeyer. The man is a God, you know. Nonetheless, Brest’s solo commentary track here is a solid one. I’m sure much more interesting than anything he has to say about Gigli.


M. Night Shyamalan Joins Twitter, The Internet Responds

$
0
0

M. Night Shyamalan

When M. Night Shyamalan join the world of Twitter, I immediately thought, “This guy’s going to get slaughtered.” So far, it hasn’t been a slaughter, but neither has it been the warmest of welcomes. Right when it became aware the divisive director – and a director I still like, The Last Airbender and The Happening notwithstanding – the twist jokes came.

So. Many. Twist. Jokes.

I searched through the twitter-sphere to see what type of flack he was getting, and so far, a decent amount. Honestly, I’d be lying if I said some of these tweets didn’t make me laugh, but then I felt kind of bad. Think about it, isn’t it pretty cool for a director, especially someone who has plenty of harsh critics like Night, to put himself out there online to interact with fans? I think so. Not only that, there’s something so cowardly about a random twitterer sending off a dig directly — or indirectly as well — to a director/actor, considering they probably would never say it to his or her face.

However, I still feel obligated to share some of the more funny (and mean) tweets made at Shyamalan’s expense.

A Look at The Amazing Spider-Man’s Lizard That Doesn’t Involve a Pez Dispenser

$
0
0

The Amazing Spider-Man

Yesterday the web was all aflutter with a “first look” at The Lizard from The Amazing Spider-Man that came via a Pez dispenser mock-up. Yes, it’s come down to this. Waiting to see a wicked new baddie through the eyes of a candy-related toy. As you’ll note if you read us daily, we missed out on covering it. Something about the entire situation screams “There’s something better for those who wait.” And lo, there is something better that’s come along this morning: some leaked concept art of what Rhys Ifans may look like as Spider-Man’s foe.

Check it out after the jump if you dare be spoiled (but only a little).

Lizard Concept Art: The Amazing Spider-ManClick to enlarge

Source: SpiderMedia.ru (via Coming Soon)

All This ‘Scarface’ Remake Has Is Its Word, Its Balls and a Screenwriter

$
0
0

Scarface: Redux

Such an obviously lame idea deserves that terribly puny title.

Screenwriter David Ayer — the man behind such films as U-571 and Training Day – has been assigned the task of reworking the concept of Scarface for a contemporary audience by Universal Pictures. It will most likely follow a gutsy gangster on his climb to the top, only to see him fall victim to his own self-indulgence. He may also yell catchphrases.

“I sought it out; I went after it hard. I see it as the story of the American dream, with a character whose moral compass points in a different direction. That puts it right in my wheelhouse,” Ayer tells Deadline. “I studied both the original Ben Hecht-Howard Hawks movie and the De Palma-Pacino version and found some universal themes. I’m still under the hood figuring out the wiring that will translate, but … there are enough opportunities in the real world today that provide an opportunity to do this right. If it was just an attempt to remake the 1983 film, that would never work.”

As stated above, this won’t be the first time someone has retold this particular story. Brian De Palma’s 1983 film was already a re-envisioning of Howard Hawks’ 1932 film of the same name. So we’re not exactly broaching new lows with another version. In reality, someone over at Universal wants a new “gangster franchise” and they’re using the Scarface name to sell it. For all we know, David Ayers could write an excellent gangster drama that doesn’t involve Al Pacino screams or a bedroom floor jacuzzi. Although one can hope that the latter actually happens. Time will tell.

For now, at least we can rest easy knowing that college kids and rappers 30 years from now will have a new poster to put on their bedrooms room walls.

Channel Guide: The Walking Dead Character Annoyance Index

$
0
0

Channel Guide: A Column About TVAMC’s zombie-pocalypse drama The Walking Dead should have everything going for it. It holds a spot on the Sunday night lineup of a network with a seemingly can’t-miss scorecard when it comes to original drama series (I loved The Killing, I don’t care what anyone says); it boasts a dark and usually unexplored TV subject matter; and it’s season 2 premiere broke cable ratings records. Additionally, it’s a never-fail trending topic every Sunday night — a subject echoed through the virtual voices of social media-ers everywhere.

Before I jump into the oh-so-inevitable criticism (I promise, I do actually LIKE television), let me preface my musings with this: I LOVED this show when it premiered. Like many other television enthusiasts (read: hermits) I stayed in on Halloween eve, lapping up the undead adventures of Rick Grimes, et. al with an insatiable fervor. Lately, though? I find myself hemming and hawing for ¾ of every hour-long episode about just what causes this show to fail in my eyes — the characters. Sure, there are a few that aren’t entirely detestable, but the majority of the people on The Walking Dead are so deplorable that by the end of each week, you’re praying that they’re the next blue plate special at the zombie café. So while we all begrudgingly ponder what season 2’s conclusion holds, I proudly present my very own Walking Dead Character Annoyance Index. Enjoy.

Rick

Rick

Backstory: Sheriff. Likes to wear his uniform as though it is the only clothing available. Woke up from coma in season 1 to discover that the world had gone all undead on everyone’s asses.

Most memorable moment: Single-handedly taking on a zombie swarm on horseback in season 1.

Annoyance level: 3 walkers. Listen, Rick should be everyone’s favorite character. He’s the John Wayne of Zombietown, rolling in with his gold star and leading the pack. However, Rick is one of the worst offenders here, and mainly by no fault of his own. The writers seem to want to make him their golden boy, yet poor Andrew Lincoln is barely even one-note, a lifeless character who seems most comfortable when portraying a man down to a half-pint of blood.

Lori

Lori

Backstory: Rick’s wife. Skinny. Frail. Bitchy. Likes plaid.

Most memorable moment: Getting over her believed-to-be-dead husband by screwing his asshat best friend.

Annoyance level: 5 walkers. This woman, you guys. She’s worse than the worst. She’s subterranean bad. She screws the mayor of DoofusTown, and spends the rest of the series treating everyone else like crap. Except for Carl. More on Carl later.

Dale

Dale

Backstory: Old guy. Wears hats.

Most memorable moment: Fixing that damn camper every week. Seriously, is this the most poorly functioning recreational vehicle of all time?

Annoyance level: 1 walker. While he serves little purpose other than to hang around and act somewhat judgmental, Dale’s actually one of the least-reprehensible people on the show. He’s the Bob Vila of the zombie nation.

Andrea

Andrea

Backstory: Blonde, vaguely pretty (but not enough to counteract her insufferable nature).

Most memorable moment: Took sister out after she got bitten by a walker.

Annoyance level: OFF THE CHARTS. There’s something to be said for anchoring your cast with women who make the Sex and the City gals look like the cast of Little Women, but this broad takes the cake. Each week she’s more annoying than the previous, and I for one am just waiting for the day when Dale snaps and pushes her out of the moving Winnebago. Do it, Dale. No one would be sad to see her go.

Glenn

Glenn

Backstory: Asian. Generally likable. The Hiro Nakamura of TWD.

Most memorable moment: Taking one for the team by being lowered into a swollen zombie-filled well.

Annoyance level: Half a walker. If that! Seriously, who hates Glen?

Shane

Shane

Backstory: Sherrif’s deputy. Possessor of physical features that are vaguely Neanderthal. Mayor of DoofusTown.

Most memorable moment: Sacrificing portly Otis to the walkers in order to get the medical supplies necessary to save young Carl.

Annoyance level: 5 walkers. There isn’t much more to say. He killed Otis, his accent is bad, and he pseudo-raped Lori at the CDC. I don’t like him. Done.

Carl

Carl

Backstory: Child. Son of Rick and Lori. Goofy looking and Opie-esque.

Most memorable moment: Taking a bullet to the gullet when poor Otis confused him for a deer.

Annoyance level: 3 walkers. Carl should get a pass, because of his age, but I’m not that kind. The kid causes too many problems to let things go.

Daryl

Carl

Backstory: Redneck. Brother of meth addict left behind in season 1.

Most memorable moment: Nothing sticks out, but homeboy’s pretty good with some arrows. He’s a regular Legolas of the walker world.

Annoyance level: 1 ½ walkers. I’m not quite sure how it happened, but Daryl really eclipsed some of the others on the likability scale. He’s sweaty, abrasive, and even mildly attractive. Plus, he doesn’t really take any bull, and with these people, that’s almost admirable.

T-Dog

T-Dog

Backstory: Don’t make me say it. OK, fine. Token black guy.

Most memorable moment: Getting all tetanus-y when he got sliced and diced by a stray vehicle.

Annoyance level: 3 walkers. He doesn’t REALLY have enough scenes to warrant his annoyance, but after dissecting these people (see what I did there?) my patience is really wearing thin.

Carol

Carol

Backstory: Had a mean and abusive husband. He got his in the end. Quiet, nice enough, has short hair.

Most memorable moment: I just… I can’t really think of one.

Annoyance level: 4 walkers. Given just because she’s a woman on this show. They have no choice but to reek of fail.

With characters like these, it’s no wonder that Sophia ran off and (Spoiler Alert!) crossed over to the dark side. She couldn’t handle these people anymore than I can, and I don’t blame her. Are you willing to overlook the shortcomings of this band of not-so-merry misfits? Fire away!

For more on the world of television, walk lively over to the Channel Guide archives.

Short Film Of The Day: How To Eat Your Apple

$
0
0

Why Watch? Surreal, mesmerizing work from a Pixar veteran.

Erick Oh doesn’t have a ton of movies under his belt, but he’s working with the best animators in the business, and it’s shorts like these that prove is worth as a strong and steady (if not bizarre) team member. Here’s where I would normally include a synopsis, but if you can figure out what the hell is going on here, feel free to let me know.

Otherwise, simply enjoy an outlandish, towering imagination brought to life through moving art – an explosion of complexity born from a simple apple. For more fun and more art, check out Oh’s blog.

What does it cost? Just 1 minute of your time.

Check out How To Eat Your Apple for yourself:

HOW TO EAT YOUR APPLE (2011)

Trust us. You have time for more short films.

Viewing all 22121 articles
Browse latest View live