суббота, 19 марта 2011 г.

C. Thomas Howell Confirms The Lizard Is in 'The Amazing Spider-Man'


One of the worst-kept movie secrets in recent memory concerns who will be the villain in Sony's new'Spider-Man'reboot– everyone and their brother has already guessed that it's going to be The Lizard. Websites likeThe Wrapwere reporting that Rhys Ifans had been cast as Dr. Curt Connors (The Lizard's secret identity) back in October, but actor C. Thomas Howell has now made it even more official with a recent appearance on theRetroradio podcast.

Howell, a stalwart of '80s fare like'Side Out'and'The Hitcher,'has been cast in a small role in Marc Webb's 2012 film. Hit the jump for the actor's update on the project.

There is not a whole lot to talk about. Sony wants us to be hush-hush right now. I play a relatively small role. I play a construction worker who's son is caught in the middle of a battle between The Lizard and Spider-Man on the Manhattan bridge. Spider-Man helps me get my son back from this perilous situation. There is some payback there at the end of the movie. Spider-man is kind of hurting. I help him when all of the other people won't. Part of the story is, the nation thinks he might be a bad guy. They don't know what to think. Because of my experience on the bridge with my kid, I know he is a good guy. I pitch in and help out at the end. That is the best way.

We like the idea of The Lizard being the main bad guy in'The Amazing Spider-Man,'so we're pleased to hear another bit of confirmation that he's being featured in this new outing. There's something tragic and primal about the character -- Curt Connors isn't a bad guy, but one who becomes a monster thanks to his own hubris and desire to replace his lost arm. Hopefully, this film handles him more effectively than 'Spider-Man 3' did for Venom and doesn't screw up his human side in the process.

Webb's film, which finds Andrew Garfield slinging webs across New York City, is set to hit theaters July 3, 2012. Executive Producer Avi Arad is quick to insist this isn't a pure reboot of the popular comic franchise, but instead should be viewed as a story that could have taken place during Sam Raimi's first film. We're kinda skeptical about that, but we're still looking forward to checking out the finished project.

What say you, true believers? Is The Lizard a big enough baddie in Spidey's gallery of goons to pull audiences into theaters or should Sony have gone bigger for this relaunch? Who else would you like to see? Personally, I've always wanted to see the 'Kraven's Last Hunt' story line adapted to the screen ...

{viaMovieweb}


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пятница, 18 марта 2011 г.

Cinematical Seven: Most Memorable Irish-American Cops



If you're Irish (in the movies) and you aren't running a bar or wearing a priest's collar, then you're sure to be walking a beat. The stereotype of the Irish cop is not only alive and well, it includes some of moviedom's most famous policemen. Harry Callahan? Popeye Doyle? Both proudly Irish-American.

Since we're talking stereotypes, we've picked the biggest boozers, brawlers and (of course) brainiest cops as well as a few stand-up officers who actually (gasp) do things by the book for our list.

(Don't fret, classic movie fans, we didn't forget Pat O'Brien: we're saving him for our Most Memorable Irish-American Priests list.)

In keeping with our salty characters, many movie clips contain rampant drinking, fighting and swearing. In other words, they'reNSFW, unless your workplace is straight out of 'The Departed.'

Clint Eastwood as Harry Callahan in'Dirty Harry'(1971)
We'd call him a"textbook"maverick cop, except Dirty Harry never does anything by the book. Harry answers to a higher power and it sure as hell isn't his bosses, but his own unyielding sense of right and wrong. We admire his take-no-prisoners approach and his fearlessness but we're also really, really afraid of getting on his bad side.


Gene Hackman as Jimmy"Popeye"Doyle in'The French Connection'(1971)
This is one dogged cop. He drinks hard, he loves the ladies (and the handcuffs!) and plays by his own rules. He also takes his job so seriously he's pounding that pavement nearly 24/7. Between Harry Callahan in San Francisco and Popeye Doyle in NYC, these two die-hard cops had us covered in the lawless '70s.


Sean Connery as Jimmy Malone in'The Untouchables'(1987)
He's gruff, he's incorruptible and he's Eliot Ness's ace in the hole in his plan to take down gangster Al Capone. He's also spoiling for a fight, even on his doorstep. He's ready when a thug arrives to take him out, sneering that only an Italian brings a knife to a gunfight. Sadly for Jimmy, the thug's friend brought a Tommy gun to this fight. Happily for Connery, this is the role that finally earned him an Oscar.



Barry Fitzgerald as Lt. Dan Muldoon in'The Naked City'(1948)
About a minute into this clip, we meet Lt. Muldoon, the quintessential no-nonsense Irish-accented New York cop, complete with a pipe. (Hey, thiswas1948.) He's got a lot of puffing on that pipe to go before solving the case of a murdered woman and a jewelry ring and a lot of suspects to sweat. He leaves it to the younger cops to do the actual legwork, like frantic chases, but Muldoon's clearly the brains of this particular precinct.



Leonardo DiCaprio as Billy Costigan in'The Departed'(2006)
More Irish cops per square screen inch! Leo is appropriately brooding and dark as undercover cop Costigan, while rival Matt Damon is all Irish charm as rising police star Colin Sullivan, Mark Wahlberg is all attitude as Sgt. Dignam and Martin Sheen makes a fine captain. We love the scene where Costigan orders a cranberry juice in a hard-drinking bar andstill gets respect,and how hecircumvents his shrink's pharmaceutical policy. But mostly, we just love watching all these characters try to get the drop on each other.



Bruce Willis as John McClane in'Die Hard' (1988)
Our favorite wisecracking cop brings his brash New York City attitude wherever terrorists happen to strike. He describes himself as"one step away from becoming a full blown alcoholic,"chain smokes and, we're guessing, should probably cut down on his sodium too. But we're not about to give the guy any kind of advice since, like Jack Bauer, he's always right and always willing to die for his country. Of course, being a smartass, he'd rather make the other poor bastard die for theirs.


Peter Weller as Alex J. Murphy in 'RoboCop' (1987)
Officer Murphy was just another dedicated Detroit cop killed in the line of duty (thanks to a gang of hooligans led byEric Forman's dad!) until he was brought back to life as RoboCop. As a blend of man and machine, he proceeded to mop up Motor City as only a made-in-Detroit, Irish-American cyborg can.


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четверг, 17 марта 2011 г.

Early Edition: Another Slice of 'American Pie'; Liam Neeson Ready for 'Taken 2'; More

Ready for more 'American Pie'?Jason Biggs, Seann William ScottandEugene Levyare reuniting for'American Reunion,'which Universal wants to bring to the big screen (rather than direct-to-DVD as for all the outings after No. 3). The studio apparently is in negotiations with Thomas Ian Nicholas, Tara Reid, Chris Klein, Mena Suvari and Jennifer Coolidge to return as well. The production is set to start May 24. {TheWrap}

Lionsgate is on the hunt for a director for it's upcoming adaptation of the best-selling novel'Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.'Seth Grahame-Smith (the book's author), David Katzenberg and Craig Gillespie are among the names being bandied about by the studio. Grahame-Smith and Katzenberg -- who are producing partners -- would direct as a team. Grahame-Smith's second novel, 'Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter,' is being made into a film by Fox; he's currently set to write 'Dark Shadows' for Tim Burton. {The Hollywood Reporter}

Such a Deal:

Megan FoxandAlbert Brooksare in negotiations to joinJudd Apatow'snext film for Universal, an untitled project that reunitesPaul RuddandLeslie Mannin their 'Knocked Up' roles. Fox's role is being kept under wraps, Brooks is in talks to play Rudd's father. {THR,Deadline}

Overcoming scheduling obstacles,Liam Neesonand writer-producer Luc Besson have worked out a deal for Neeson to reprise his role as ex-spy Bryan Mills for'Taken 2,'which should begin production at the end of this year or the beginning of the next. {Deadline}

Director David Frankel's'Great Hope Springs'may have the male half of the troubled middle-aged couple who attend an intense counseling weekend to decide the fate of their loveless relationship after 30 years of marriage:Tommy Lee Jones.The wife:Meryl Streep.The therapist:Steve Carell.Shooting begins in August. {Deadline}

Michelle Ryan('Bionic Woman,' 'Doctor Who') has been cast opposite Harry Treadaway in'Cockneys vs. Zombies,'a British comedy about hapless bank robbers who come up against zombie Armageddon. The film -- also staring Honor Blackman of 'The Avengers' fame, will begin shooting in London next week. {Deadline}

The just-released'Moonwalking With Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything'has been acquired by Sony. The book, by Joshua Foer, follows the author -- a science journalist -- who decides to become a participant in the U.S. Memory Championship he's covering. {Deadline}


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среда, 16 марта 2011 г.

Why Celebrities Love Scientology


Over the weekend, notorious Scientology founderL. Ron Hubbardcelebrated what would have been his 100th birthday. The former science-fiction writer (born March 13, 1911) founded the religion Scientology in 1952 as a successor to his self-help series, 'Dianetics.'

Since then, Scientology has gone mainstream with the aid of big-name celebrity believers likeTom CruiseandJohn Travolta. But while Scientology's association with movie stars has gained it publicity, it's also revealed outlandish, dangerous and cult-ish aspects that leave many wondering how famous actors and actresses could still choose to be involved with the church.

Moviefone talked to Village Voice editor-in-chief and Scientology expert Tony Ortega (who's writtennumerous articles about Scientology) about the intense connection between Scientology and celebrity and why so many movie stars follow Hubbard's bizarre ways.

Moviefone: When did Scientology become so enmeshed in celebrity like it seems to be today?
Tony Ortega:Almost from the start. I did a story aboutLarry Wollersheim, who joined the church in 1969 and he was telling me about, in the early '70s, how obsessed they were with trying to get actors. It was something that Hubbard realized early on would be a way to bring in people, to get celebrities attached to his organization. Larry told me around that time, Celebrity Centres were very new and these were places the church built specifically to cater to actors and actresses.

He told me about how they'd decided, for whatever reason, they were going to targetRichard Kiel, he was the guy who played Jaws in theJames Bondmovies. And Larry was telling me about strategy meetings where they would talk about how to meet Richard at openings and stuff like that and to slather him with attention. They tried to convince him that Scientology would help him with various ailments he had; he had problems with pain and that kind of thing. So decades ago, Scientology was obsessed with trying to get actors and actresses into the church with varying success.

It's one thing to think about why does the church want to do this, but it's another to wonder why actors and actresses fall for this. But what you have to understand is that actors and actresses are among the most fragile human beings on the planet, and it's not really hard to convince them they're the center of the universe. So for years and years, Scientology has been attracting these stars into Scientology and pampering them at the Celebrity Centre. One of the questions I've always had is, once they attract a celebrity or an actor into Scientology, do the stars then have to go through the same training as everyone else, or do they get special treatment?

That was my next question.
One of the most interesting things that's happened in recent years is the defection of a man namedJason Beghe. Jason's an actor. He's been the lead in a movie {George A. Romero's'Monkey Shine'}, but he's more well known as a character actor and he's been in a lot of TV series. He got sucked into Scientology in the mid-90s and over a 12-year period, he spent, in his estimation, over a million dollars on Scientology training. It turns out these stars go through the same training as everyone else. They do the very bizarre rituals. Jason went through it all. It is true that they get pampered more and they don't have to do some of the low-pay menial labor that some of the other Scientologists do, but they do go through the same training.

There's another recent defector namedMark Headleywho was working at the Scientology secret headquarters in the desert for years. He tells a story about howTom Cruise, when he was first learning how to audit -- which is sort of a"talking cure"-- they used Mark Headley as a test subject for Tom. Mark had revealed this ina book that he wrotethat came out about two years ago or a year ago. It was a very good book. But what wasn't in the book was, 'Okay, what was this training like?' I asked him, 'You've got this movie star across from you who is auditing you. How did it actually go?' There's these very strange Scientology practices, one of which Tom Cruise was leading him through, was asking him to talk to a bottle and talk to an ashtray and ask the ashtray to stand up. Just ridiculous stuff.

I found it hard to believe. I said,"Mark, are you telling me that Tom Cruise, after he'd made some of his biggest movies,movie star Tom Cruise,was sitting across from you asking you to speak to a bottle?"He said,"Yeah, that's how Scientology works."So I don't know. It's a mystery. Why do these stars get attracted to this thing? Why would they go through something so bizarre? I think actors and actresses are more fragile than we realize and they fall for this kind of thing.

What kind of stuff would Scientologists tell a movie star to entice them?
We also saw in the case ofPaul Haggis{the director of'Crash'} who recently came out ...Lawrence Wright did an excellent story on him in 'The New Yorker'and he asked him,"How far did you get?"And he got to the highest levels. He went through all that bizarre training, which includes as you go up what's called"the bridge"in Scientology, once you've spent a couple hundred thousand dollars, to a level called OT3, which stands for Operating Thetan 3. This is the level I like to ask ex-members about because Scientology considers it this super-secret thing that if anybody was to read it without being properly trained, it might kill them or something ridiculous. The materials are available online. I've read them and I think most reporters have.

It's a very strange story that L. Ron Hubbard tells about this galactic overlord named Xenu who took care of an overpopulation problem by bringing aliens to planet Earth and blowing them up in volcanoes. It's very strange stuff. I always ask ex-members,"You've spent all this money at that point to find out this is the actual origin story of the world according to Scientology. How did you deal with it?"Lawrence Wright asked Paul Haggis this, and Haggis and a lot of people, they're so far in at this point that nothing surprises them. They just accept it.


So these well-known stars that you know, Tom Cruise,John Travolta,Kirstie Alley,are all high-level Scientologists. They have been through that level. They have all been told that Earth, 75 million years ago, was populated by these alien beings sent by the overlord Xenu, who blew them all up and their disembodied souls are inhabiting human bodies. This is the core of what Scientology is. If you have a problem in your life, it's because these disembodied alien creatures are attaching themselves to you and preventing you from doing better. So Scientology is the one process, they believe, by which you can remove these alien souls. They're called body thetans and you can audit them away. It's strange enough that Tom Cruise and John Travolta belong to this strange organization, but it's even stranger to realize that's what they believe. These stars go through that same kind of training, accept it and now try to convince the rest of us that it makes sense when actually it doesn't at all.

How do these stars accept the ominous or even dangerous tone of the church that doesn't seem to be a secret?
I think it's true with any true believer, when you believe that your organization has the truth, the only truth that's going to save the planet, you're going to forgive that organization a lot of things. I think that's what's going on here. These celebrities will hear about poor treatment of ex-members or disconnection and the way families are ripped apart, and the stars just shrug it off because they believe it's just the stories of ex-members. They just aren't going to believe it.

Jason {Beghe} has said they were constantly reassured by church officials that this stuff isn't true, people are making this stuff up. They're constantly hearing from people in Scientology that people outside Scientology criticizing it are just a bunch of liars. They're inclined to believe that because they don't want to believe they belong to a bad organization. Paul Haggis is a great example where he had heard the criticism, didn't want to believe it but eventually realized the critics were telling the truth.

What kind of rituals would a celebrity have to do to get to the top level?
They do a lot of auditing and what that is is an E-Meter, which back in the day was literally a couple of soup cans attached to a device; now it's a little bit more sophisticated. As far as I can tell, it measures skin galvanization, and the needle bounces up and down and they believe it reflects something going on in your brain. They sit and talk about what you've done in your life that might have caused problems in your life and watch the needle bounce up and down. They have this endless question-and-answer that they call"rundowns."It gets to the point where they get pretty aggressive with people. They call them"sec checks"or security checks. They want to find out what crimes you've committed. It gets really intimidating. They want these people to believe that what's holding you back in your life are these bad things you've done in your life and if you confess it, you'll free your mind.

Turns out in a higher level you find out there are these alien creatures attached to you, and you have to go into your past lives and find out why they're attached to you. It's so bizarre. But it's just endless security checks and rundowns and auditing. The strange thing is that when Hubbard first proposed this in the '50s, he was about Dianetics, the science of the human mind; and he believed it was a challenge to psychiatry. That it was a different kind of talking cure. It was only after he realized he was paying a lot of taxes did it become a religion and he applied for tax-exempt status.

I sawa list of celebrity Scientologistsand it seemed pretty random. Do all celebrity Scientologists know each other since it's such a closed-off group?
They all know each other. People that are in know each other well. You have to understand when you look at a list like that, there are people who have done some things with the church but aren't necessarily practicing Scientologists. Jason Beghe surprised me by saying that many people don't know this, but Tom Cruise had gotten away from the church for many years and wasn't really a practicing member. He only came back about four or five years ago.

If you see a list of people who are"Scientologists,"keep in mind they may have been seen at Scientology activities or contributed some money, but that doesn't mean they're practicing Scientologists. I would be very careful looking at a list of celebrities that are supposed to be Scientologists because some of them may be very involved. There's someone like Kirstie Alley who is not only a practicing Scientologist but who has been very vocal in defending the church, and then there's some who have a casual relationship with it. Maybe they used a Scientology connection to get a role in a movie, but it doesn't mean they're active Scientologists.

What kind of career benefits are promised? Does the church say that if you become a Scientologist you'll be in this little Hollywood club and you'll get more roles?
There was a particular acting coach in Hollywood,Milton Katselas,that taught a class that had a lot of Scientologists in it and produced a lot of well-known Scientologist stars. It was well known that you should go to the class to get jobs, and actors went there primarily because they wanted to get work in Hollywood. That was a real breeding ground for them. You're a young actor in Hollywood. Someone says you need to take this class to get a good role and if you do, you will get a good role -- and by the way, we're all Scientologists, so join! So it's not surprising that a reputation would grow that you need to get into Scientology to get a good role.

I don't know that that's the case today. I think it was definitely the case some years ago. There was definitely a feeling in Hollywood that if you joined Scientology, it'd help you get ahead. Scientology counted on that. But I think the last five years have been so hard on Scientology with so much bad publicity that I don't know if that's still the case.

So they felt having movie stars would lend them legitimacy and publicity?
It's always been their strategy. You go way back.Karen Blackwas a Scientologist in the early '70s. They counted on that. They were always trying to find stars they could make associated with it. As Larry Wollershein told me, they were trying to recruit stars but even then, in the early '70s, the word was out that Scientology was weird. It's difficult to get somebody in, but when they did, it helped them immensely because it made it seem cool. It made it seem like the thing to do. That's what they count on. If you have someone like Tom Cruise or John Travolta, then young people will think it must be cool. But it's been very difficult for them the last few years because there's been so much negative publicity.


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вторник, 15 марта 2011 г.

SXSW in 60 Seconds: 'Bridesmaids' Buzz Heats Up Along with the Deals



CELEBRITY SIGHTINGS

SXSW isn't SXSW without the occasional (sometimes more than occasional) reminder that celebrities are people too. They like movies, they like music, and even they like all things interactive. Sometimes they appear before, during, or after movie-themes events (i.e., screenings). You can catch up with some of the celebrities at SXSW by checking out thislink, this otherlinkover here, and one morelinkover there.

OUR COVERAGE

Peter Hallreviews'The Innkeepers,' Ti West's ('The House of the Devil') latest film, a comedy-horror mash-up. Hall says,"'The Innkeepers' is radiant with inspiration."He cites the sound design, cinematography, and score as plusses, along with the strong, character-focused writing, performances, and directing.

Hall alsoreviews'Caught Inside,' Australian director Adam Blaiklock's feature-length debut. He says,"'Caught Inside' is an increasingly heated pressure cooker of a thriller; one that impresses with restraint and a disarming lack of malice."Hall cites actor (and"muscled menace") Ben Oxenbould, for his performance as the antagonist, saying"Oxenbould's performance is so plausibly unhinged that it calls to mind some of the greater loose cannons of cinema."

Todd Gilchristreviews'Paul,' the sci-fi/road comedy co-starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost ('Hot Fuzz,' 'Shaun of the Dead,' 'Spaced'). Calling it an"otherwise imperfect but funny and genuinely sweet story,"Gilchrist concludes,"'Paul' is a film that seems to too often pander to genre fandom without finding deeper meaning beneath it, or maybe more accurately, celebrates the people who share our affection for nerdy stuff but neglects to provide a meaningful reason why we should feel it in the first place."

DEALS

In thefirst saleof the SXSW Film Festival, distributor Kino Lorber picked up domestic rights for 'El Bulli: Cooking in Progress,' a documentary centered on chef Ferran Adrià as he develops a new yearly menu for the restaurant of the title. Kino Lorber's new Alive Mind Cinema label will release 'El Bulli' theatrically.

Varietyreportsthat director Rodman Flender's Conan O'Brien-centered documentary, 'Conan O'Brien Can't Stop,'"will be sneaked to subscribers of AT&T's Uverse TV service on the eve of the film's theatrical release through Richard Abrams' Abramorama. Uverse...""Magnolia Home Entertainment will show the film on VOD following the exclusive window on U-verse TV, and will then release the film on DVD and other digital platforms."

The Weinstein Companypicked updistribution rights for 'Undefeated,' a football-centric documentary.' Per Deadline,"Undefeated' tells the Cinderella story of an underprivileged football team from the perspective of three student athletes from inner city Memphis and a volunteer coach. The film is a Blind Side-caliber underdog story with heart."

IFC Midnightpicked upNorth American rights to 'Kill List,' a well-received hitman-thriller written and directed by Ben Wheatley ('Down Terrace') that premiered in the SXSW Film Festival's SXFantastic section.

IndieWIRE LOVE

Eric Kohnreviews'Kill List' and 'The FP,' genre entries in SXSW's SXFantastic section. Of 'Kill List,' Kohn says,"Littered with the grotesque images of a man murdered by a hammer and another holding his own intestines,"Kill List"has plenty to satisfy gorehounds, but there's a much more satisfying dimension of human behavior that allows it to transcend cheap thrills."

Of 'The FP,' Kohn says,"Shamelessly recycling the crass adrenaline rush of 1980s American blockbusters, with references to"The Warriors,""Robocop"and many others, 'The FP' is loud, furious and recklessly funny."Later he says,"Although patently absurd, sometimes to tiring extremes, 'The FP' contains glimmers of creative ingenuity in its fantastical representation of videogame culture."

TWEETS, BUZZ,& OTHER NEWS

Eugene Novikov (@EugeneNovikov):"'Another Earth' (C) Love the notion of ordinary drama set against the barest sci-fi backdrop but this movie is doing it... I dunno... wrong. In a follow-up tweet, Novikov adds,"The sci-fi concept is totally borked, and the human story basically is too."

Erik Davis (@ErikDavis):"The FP: I've never seen anything like it before, and yet I've seen everything like it..."

Erik D. Snider (@EricDSnider):"Liked THE F.P. ok. You know who loooved it? The totally wasted drunk chick who shouted and hooted and wouldn't shut up the whole time."

Ain't it Cool Newscelebrated its 15th anniversary with a special screening of 'Dragonslayer' (1981), with none other than Guillermo del Toro on hand to give the pre-screening talk. Thanks to Drew McWeeney (@DrewAtHitFix) for bringing us the blow-by-blow.

Writing for Movieline, Jen Yamatoweighs inon 'Bridesmaids,' the Judd Apatow-produced, Paul Feig-directed, Kristen Wiig-starring comedy that's already being described as"The Hangover for Women."Yamato boldly claims,"'Bridesmaids' proves that modern comedies about women don't have to be insipid, boring or downright loathsome."

Pete Sciretta,writingfor Slashfilm.com, agrees with Yamato's take on 'Bridesmaids.' Sciretta observed,"The packed crowd of over a thousand SXSW film and tech geeks (which I would {estimate} consisted of over 80% males) walked out of the double feature praising a"chick flick"over the Simon Pegg/Nick Frost nerd-serviced sci-fi alien comedy 'Paul' is a major achievement."

Sciretta alsopostedthe trailer for the about-to-debut Spielberg-inspired short from director Spike Jonze ('Where the Wild Things Are,' 'Adaptation,'"Being John Malkovich') and Grammy Award-winning band The Arcade Fire, 'Scenes From the Suburbs.'

  • City's Best's SXSWhub.
  • AOL Music's SXSWhub.



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пятница, 11 марта 2011 г.

What the Smurf? Sony Releases Second 'Smurf' Trailer

What do Jonathan Winters, Katy Perry, Alan Cumming, George Lopez, Paul Reubens, Kenan Thompson, B.J. Novak, Jeff Foxworthy and Wolfgang Puck have in common?

They're all voicing CGI Smurfs for the August 3 release of'The Smurfs,'starring the real-life bodies of Neil Patrick Harris and Jayma Mays. The story line: When the evil wizard Gargamel chases the tiny blue Smurfs out of their village, they tumble from their magical world into ours -- wreaking fun and havoc. As Sony is saying in their tagline for the film, Smurf Happens -- and it happens right here with this trailer that Sony released just today. Check it out after the jump.


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четверг, 10 марта 2011 г.

10 SXSW '11 Films We've Seen and Highly Recommend



With over 120 films to choose from in just nine days at the2011 South by Southwest Film Festival, even the most experienced planner will be unable to take in all of them. That is just simple math. Sometimes you just have to take a page fromNeil ... Page:"You have to discriminate. You choose things that are funny or mildly amusing."So you can look over the SXSW catalog descriptions and make up your mind, or you can take the word of some trusted critics who have a heads-up and start from there.

If extreme violence laced with comedy is your bag, then you can take the word of Eric Snider who enjoyed 'Hobo With A Shotgun,' or Scott Weinberg who fancied 'Super,' James Gunn's take on the modern superhero. If horror is more your thing you may follow Joe Utichi, who enjoyed James Wan's ghost story, 'Insidious,' or Erik Davis' affinity for a cult with a sci-fi angle in 'Sound Of My Voice.' Maybe reality is more your speed, and in that case you can follow Christopher Campbell's lead into 'Page One: A Year Inside The New York Times,' 'How To Die In Oregon' or Morgan Spurlock's 'The Greatest Movie Ever Sold.'

Or, you can take a cue from yours truly (as you hopefully didlast year) and add ten more recommendations to your schedule to already go along with 'Source Code'and 'Paul.'



'13 Assassins'
If glorious non-stop action is what you crave in-between the atypical mumblecore festival fare, then Takashi Miike's '13 Assassins' will be that deep drink of water after days in the desert. Now, part of that sandy trek includes the first hour of this film as the battle lines are drawn and the heroes are gathered one-by-one. Once that is established, though, the 40-some-minute showdown in the second half rewards the audience in a stretch of film that won't be topped unless there is a special screening of 'The Good, The Bad, The Weird' somewhere. You canreadmore from William Goss, who reviewed it at last year's Fantastic Fest.

SCREENING TIME
Sunday, March 13– 6:30 PM– Paramount Theatre



'The Catechism Cataclysm'
Anyone familiar with HBO's 'Eastbound& Down' will recognize Steve Little as Kenny Powers' devoted hanger-on, Stevie. Any devoted fan of that show will want to see Mr. Little branch out into film as basically a second cousin to Stevie in Todd Rohal's odd concoction of male bonding and, well, it's best for you to discover it on your own.

Little plays Father William, a priest who has trouble handing down life lessons to his parishioners, both in telling them or understanding them. The Church suggests taking a sabbatical to experience life and find the meaning in new stories. So William decides to extend an invitation to his adolescent idol - Robbie, his sister's high school boyfriend, whom he remembers as having a penchant for songwriting and storytelling. Robbie (Robert Longstreet) has left all that behind and hardly even recalls William, though the prospect of free beer and reliving his glory days through perhaps his last remaining fan is more than he has going for himself these days. Thus begins a river-rafting journey that...is best for you to discover on your own.

The title alone suggests that you're to embark on a weird trip, and anyone overselling the oddness of it all may just be preparing you for the whacked-out third act, but also doing a disservice to its strengths. Eastbound fans are certainly the first target for Little's brand of borderline creepy characterization. Either you are with it or you are not. Those on board, however, will be faced with Stevie #2 gushing over another deity of his own making, but also coming to truth about how these two middle-aged guys ended up going down river with one another. 'The Catechism Cataclysm', surprisingly, has more in common with 'Stand By Me' than 'Deliverance' with about twice the laughs and a climax that makes squealing like a pig everyday behavior by comparison.

SCREENING TIMES
Saturday, March 12– 9:30 PM– State Theatre
Friday, March 18– 7:30 PM– Rollins Theatre
Saturday, March 19– 10:00 PM– Alamo Lamar



'Fubar: Balls To The Wall'
If you were to start with SCTV's MacKenzie brothers and mashed them together with the founders of metal group, Anvil, you would have the heroes of Fubar, the 2002 cult mockumentary that now has a follow-up. Terry (David Lawrence) and Dean (Paul J. Spence) are headbangin' party dudes and lifelong friends who, in the previous film, were followed around by a Canadian filmmaker to capture their booze-and-scrum lifestyle. Years later, they are back without the film crew (for the most part) and they're actually showing signs of growth. If you don't count Dean's testicular cancer.

Actually, that is gone now, and in the aftermath of a blazing celebration the guys decide to take up the suggestion of their buddy, Tron (Andrew Sparacino), to get jobs as oil workers in his plant. This is merely an excuse to get beer-and-stripper money, but Terry unexpectedly falls in love with a local waitress (Terra Hazelton) and this Yoko/Jeanine Pettibone may just be the wedge that drives these two apart for good.

Plotting-wise, Fubar Deux may seem like just an excuse to repeat the same jokes and behavior to ad nauseum. Except, along with the innumerable funny riffs in the improv between the actors, Lawrence, Spence& director Michael Dowse care a great deal about these guys and are not content to just portray them as vulgar dumbasses. Growth is an optimum theme for this film, or as best can be interpreted by two guys still trying to live the rockstar lifestyle. Life does catch up to Terry and Dean in dark ways that only further endears their almost complete lack of social and personal behavior.

SCREENING TIMES
Monday, March 14– 9:30 PM– Alamo Lamar
Tuesday, March 15– 5:30 PM– Alamo Ritz (double feature with the original Fubar)



'F*ck My Life'
Nicolas Lopez certainly does not mince words when it comes to his title, and viewers won't help but make comparisons to other time-jumping relationship dramas from the fest circuit like '(500) Days of Summer' and 'Blue Valentine.' But similarities aside, Lopez's film is still rather enjoyable while possessing many of the earmarks of its various predecessors.

Javier (Ariel Levy) is suffering from his whirlwind romance with the beautiful Sofia (Lucy Cominetti). An awkward reawakening from a drunken night in the sack actually turned into something sweet between them. But that has since soured and Javier is left to shout outside her home while she moves on with a local pop music sensation. Thankfully, he has the residual longtime galpal to vent to and be given"what-for"in spite of his whiny, borderline obsessive behavior.

We are not holding our breath to see how this is all going to play out, but Lopez and Levy give us plenty to maintain our interest. The first half of the movie follows the same chords as 'Forgetting Sarah Marshall' in juxtaposing our rooting for Javier with exposing his flaws as a driving force to the break-up in question. Perfect he most certainly is not, and Lopez wisely never treats him as some all-knowing sympathy magnet. He is a bit of a slagging goof, emphasized by his mom's insistence on helping him with the ladies. There is also a really funny bit involving a date with a blunt supermodel and a running relationship with a bartender that takes a casually dark turn. The script is a bit too cavalier with the coincidences down the stretch, but Levy's winning humility and Lopez's approach to the material will likely have hooked you well by then.

SCREENING TIMES
Sunday, March 13– 6:15 PM– Alamo Lamar
Wednesday, March 16– 4:00 PM– Alamo Lamar
Thursday, March 17– 8:00 PM– Alamo Lamar



'George The Hedgehog'
For a species most commonly associated with video games and porno actors, can you think of a better character to follow in their footsteps then a horny, animated pseudo celebrity? In one of the more bizarrely conceived animated features you may ever see, that is exactly what you get. George is a walking, talking hedgehog who loves to drink and loves the women. Human women. And if you think bestiality is the only thing on display here, just you wait.

A nutty scientist has been working on a formula for cloning. His computer tells him his best match for success involves hedgehog DNA. With the help of his skinhead henchmen, he must track down George, get some of his material and dispose of him. This will help complete the master plan of creating a YouTube celebrity out a swearing, vomiting hedgehog and use him to launch a campaign of political and monetary success. Hopefully you are still not trying to ask questions.

'George the Hedgehog' is just about the most knowingly offensive film (animated or otherwise) that you will see at this year's SXSW. It may not have the same satiric know-how or big laugh quotient of 'South Park,' 'Family Guy,' or 'Archer,' but as it tries to offend it still has to bones to be throwing jabs at the instant fame of morons from the 'Jersey Shore' or wherever real housewives and the Kardashians set up their dumb twat shops. Hey, we're just following George's lead here, which contains everything inappropriate from racial stereotypes to the paranoid dreams of pederasts. It is most certainly not for everyone, but if you are adventurous and can appreciate the theorized metaphor of its inception, there are some entertaining fight sequences to boot and an overall uniqueness to this oddity to appreciate.

SCREENING TIMES
Monday, March 14– 11:59 PM– Alamo Lamar
Tuesday, March 15– 11:45 PM– Alamo Ritz
Saturday, March 19– 11:59 PM– Alamo Lamar



'Hesher'
It premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. An 'Inception' and a 'Black Swan' later, and it is time for Spencer Susser's contribution to the resumes of Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Natalie Portman to finally be released this April in theaters. Yours truly was quite fond of the tale of another headbangin' slacker and how he effects a widowed family. Like Fubar, it's incredibly vulgar and yet genuinely sweet. You can read my full reviewhere.

SCREENING TIMES
Sunday, March 13– 9:30 PM– Alamo Lamar
Tuesday, March 15– 9:30 PM– Arbor Theatre
Wednesday, March 16– 6:30 PM– Alamo Lamar



'Inside America'
It was three years ago when I caught up with a popular Sundance documentary called 'American Teen' at the South by Southwest Film Festival. At the time it grabbed me as a rather introspective reality show focusing on the struggles and heartbreak of actual John Hughes archetypes as they prepared to leap from their final year at high school. Further viewings did not compliment the first as their problems downgraded from universal to insufferable - and I say that as a fellow Caucasian who grew up in the suburbs and didn't exactly have the best middle-school experience. Now, along comes Barbara Eder's 'Inside America,' a narrative with a documentary feel that displaces the American Teens of the Midwest further south to the Mexican-American border and strikes a delicate equilibrium between the usual teenage issues and the cultural imbalance that makes complexion an issue.

The film begins with almost an anonymous feel towards the characters as we follow cliques and groups more than individuals. They do begin to break off on their own, though, from the boyfriend more desperate to hold onto a job than his girl, to the cheerleader dealing with the pressure of maintaining her status as a way out, to the sole white boy on campus who is almost doing for cookies what Jerry Renault did for chocolates. Looking at these kids without names also hearkens back to a certain John Hughes film, but unlike it or 'American Teen,' their problems correlate to an uncertain future rather than mere growing pains. Eder does not treat them as types, however, and their stories never fall into the usual cliched outcomes.


SCREENING TIMES
Monday, March 14– 11:00 AM– Vimeo Theater
Wednesday, March 16– 3:00 PM– Alamo Lamar
Saturday, March 19– 5:00 PM– Alamo Lamar



'Tabloid'
As the more popular documentaries of recent years have focused on specific social issues from health care to the financial crisis, inevitably we would get around to someone tackling the world's obsession with tabloid journalism. 'Smash His Camera' and 'Teenage Paparazzo' have made the stalking photographers their targets, but Errol Morris chose to take a more narrow approach. By focusing on one infamous case, he finds a way to satisfy his interest in quirky case studies while still casting an aspersion on anyone outside of the parties involved who may have followed it.

It involves the story of Joyce McKinney, a beauty pageant queen and her love affair with Mormon Kirk Anderson. According to her, they were deeply in love until ripped apart by the brainwashing church cult he was a part of. When he went away on his standard mission, she followed him -- and when he denied their love to, perhaps, protect his celibate standing in the church, she kidnapped him for a weekend of sex and, when arrested, became known as part of"The Case of the Manacled Mormon."Was McKinney delusional or was Kirk covering his enjoyment in the hopes of gaining a higher power.

Sex, religion and those crazy enough to be chained to such obsessions make for great tabloid fodder. And though the film chains itself to this one unseemly incident of people whose fame was created by news instead of talent, it is indicative of the faux-reality obsessed world we gossip about.

Morris has fun interjecting footage from"The Secret World of Mormonism"cartoon which does for Kirk's side what the Daily Mirror did for Joyce's. In essence the filmmaker himself becomes no better than those that would attack the sanity of one side's belief over another's. It's a fascinating position for one of the most acclaimed documentarians of our time to take, proving that when it comes to tabloid journalism there really are no winners, no respect, and no truth.

SCREENING TIMES
Monday, March 14– 4:30 PM– Paramount Theatre
Wednesday, March 16– 9:00 PM– Arbor Theatre



'Turkey Bowl'
One of the most remembered first-season episodes from TV's 'Friends' had the six-some await their Thanksgiving feast by taking part in a little afternoon three-on-three touch football game. Since no one seems to admit they were ever a 'Friends' fan (despite it being a really good show), writer/director Kyle P. Smith may not favor the comparison, but he should know that it is meant as an absolute compliment. An entire film (all 62 minutes of) around a touch football game in more-or-less real-time, 'Turkey Bowl' is as much fun and probably twice as hilarious as those schoolyard days at recess. And it is a great credit to Smith and his cast that in barely an hour he manages to create a kinship as if you have known some of these characters forever.

Aside from some momentary bookends establishing the personalities and sending them off, the bulk of Turkey Bowl is dedicated to the actual game. Through huddles, play-calling and actual performance we really get to know each one of the players; quite a feat considering the depth of the ensemble. Even more impressive in that we are learning about them through the interactive behavior of the game. It is likely to trigger several sense memories to your childhood while bringing them into the present as our adult relationships have evolved through social interaction; perhaps none bigger than what team you are on or root for. Smith's film is far from the usual crybaby arrested development. No pauses for deep epiphanies, and though we can draw a line from each character to a certain subsection of society, none of them feel like archetypes. We are on the field with them and are having at least as much fun.

Laughs are big and consistent throughout. Scripted or improv, Turkey Bowl blurs the old adage by Gene Siskel who used to ask if seeing a narrative would be as much fun as watching a documentary on the actors having a meal together. Whether its food or a game, spending an hour with all of these actors is all you need to commit. Especially with Kerry Bishe, whose one-eighty from the cult family in Kevin Smith's 'Red State' is going to have the SXSW boys getting their own crush right quick. Love at first sight applies to the film though, too, and having seen it twice, I feel confident in saying that audiences will come out admitting that they want to spend more than just an hour with these new friends.

SCREENING TIMES
Saturday, March 12– 11:15 AM– Alamo Ritz
Tuesday, March 15– 12:00 PM– State Theatre
Friday, March 18– 7:00 PM– Alamo Ritz



'Win Win'
One of the best films at Sundance this year was Tom McCarthy's latest. The director of 'The Station Agent' and 'The Visitor' is now 3-for-3 and if you are in Austin, you will have one chance to catch it before it is released nationally later this month. Mr. Erik Davis seems like heagrees.

SCREENING TIME
Monday, March 14– 7:15 PM– Paramount Theatre



'Source Code,' 'Paul,' and those ten films will be a good start to guaranteeing a great SXSW experience this year. After that, you are on your own. So choose wisely.


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