Posts tagged World
The World’s Oldest NFL Cheerleader To Become Focus Of A Movie
Mar 27th
One of the things American fans love most about American Football is what’s on the sidelines; young, attractive and energetic cheerleaders. For the most part, these cheerleaders are in their 20s. Many of them have moved on to something else by the time they are 30. But one cheerleader has managed to stay in the business until over the age of 40 and she’s still going.
Laura Vikmanis is the oldest cheerleader in the NFL. She has worked for the Cincinnati Bengals since she was 40 years old. This is 15 to 20 years older than the cheerleaders she was competing against. She tried out for the team at the age of 39, after her husband left her for a younger woman.
Her story will now be a movie and its writers were responsible for “Ratatouille” and “Gnomeo and Juliet.” Details are coming on this project as the days go on. Vilkmanis says she is most proud of her two children.
For more on this, visit
http://www.examiner.com/tabloid-headlines-in-national/laura-vikmanis-oldest-nfl-cheerleader-gets-movie-deal-for-life-story
Forum: Check out the forum to start a thread on this topic.
From insomniacmania.com
Paramount Movie World Premiere on BitTorrent: PR Stunt or The Future?
Mar 17th

The world premiere of Paramount Pictures The Tunnel will happen in a few months, but not in a theater–it’s going to be released on BitTorrent, for peer-to-peer distribution. Yup, that’s the same tech video pirates utilize.
The movie is set in a network of abandoned rail tunnels that really exist underneath Sydney, Australia, and from the teaser trailer the film proceeds as a real-life feeling horror/thriller with a nod to the Blair Witch Project. Much like that film, this movie seems a little unconventional, and this fits with the MO of the film’s producers, Distracted Media–the team tried to raise money for the project by selling individual frames of it. Simultaneously with its release on BitTorrent, there will be a DVD release through Paramount pictures, and this is where the clever monetizing bit of the plan occurs: The DVD includes hours of extra footage behind the scenes and an alternative ending, intended to entice fans to buy a physical copy.
The thing is, it probably won’t be long before that DVD edition is released as a pirated torrent too, which could impact on the plan to sell many DVDs. Is Paramount hoping that many horror movie fans have scruples and will pay for the real deal? Or is it actually a carefully thought-out directed marketing plan that has a feel similar to Radiohead’s experimental “pay what you want” album sale, intended to attract only true fans of the movie?
Distracted Media’s Enxo Tedeschi spoke about the plan, and highlighted how “forward thinking” Paramount has been–an interesting position given the studio, like most Hollywood studios, is sternly anti-piracy and it’s COO has even this week been speaking to a Congressional committee to try to tighten up anti-piracy laws. Tedeschi remarked to TorrentFreak that the film is not all about “supporting or condoning piracy, but instead trying to incorporate a legitimate use of peer-to-peer in our distribution strategy internationally.” This last bit does make good sense: Some sources of piracy have been identified in staggered international release in theaters (or on DVDs) of big movie titles, and a bit torrent release will be, by its very nature, a global affair.
Just one question remains: This movie is technically a straight-to-DVD affair, since it’s not going to theaters…so is the bit torrent release a clever bit of backwards PR, using the same tools that pirates use to drum up interest in the flick itself?
To read more news like this, follow Fast Company on Twitter: Click here.
From www.fastcompany.com
‘Paul’ movie premiere: Seth Rogen, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost get out of this world
Mar 15th
Alien-friendly actors Seth Rogen, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost abducted the red carpet for the Monday premiere of “Paul,” their genre-mixing, extraterrestrial-and-a-road-trip movie.
Written by and starring “Hot Fuzz” masterminds Frost and Pegg, the film follows two British friends who visit Comic-Con International before roadtripping to visit famous UFO hot spots around the U.S. But on their journey, they encounter a real-life, wise-cracking alien, voiced by Rogen.
“We came up with the idea for ‘Paul’ on the set of ‘Shaun of the Dead.’ It was a way of making a movie somewhere the weather wasn’t British,” Pegg said in a live chat with Hero Complex on Tuesday. “It was kind of a joke but it struck a chord. We thought we might have something here.”
“Paul” pokes fun at the alien/sci-fi genre in the same vein that “Hot Fuzz” spoofed cop movies and “Shaun of the Dead” knocked zombie flicks.
The buddy comedy also stars Jason Bateman as Agent Zoil, who tries to capture Paul, and Kristin Wiig, who plays Ruth, a conservative Christian enlisted to help protect the animated alien. At the premiere, Wiig stepped out in a gorgeous black ruffled number.
“Glee’s” Jane Lynch and “Saturday Night Live’s” Bill Hader joined Rogen and Bateman on the red carpet at Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood. The two make appearances in the film as a diner owner and federal agent, respectively. Joe Lo Truglio, who reteamed with his “Superbad” director Greg Mottola in “Paul,” and plays federal agent O’Reilly.
Liev Schreiber, who also previously worked with Mottola, in 1996′s “The Daytrippers,” joined Naomi Watts, Jeffrey Tambor, Blythe Danner, David Koechner and the rest of the comic-studded cast at the premiere. Click the pics for more photos from the red carpet.
“Paul” invades theaters March 18.
RELATED:
Kristen Wiig gets goofy glam for V magazine
Seth Rogen reveals, he’s so engaged it’s making him sick
‘The Green Hornet’: Seth Rogen, Cameron Diaz, Jay Chou at the premiere
– Nardine Saad
twitter.com/NardineSaad
Top photo: Seth Rogen and Kristen Wiig, cast members in “Paul,” pose together at the Hollywood premiere of the film on March 14, 2011. Credit: Chris Pizzello / Associated Press
Left photo: Bill Hader, left, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost at the “Paul” premiere. Credit: Kevin Winter / Getty Images
From latimesblogs.latimes.com
Sitcom star Josh Radnor brings a movie into world
Mar 5th
At last year’s centerpiece presentation of the San Francisco International Film Festival, Graham Leggatt, the festival’s executive director, told the audience made up mostly of single people in their 20s and 30s his criteria for choosing the movie they were about to see.
“I was looking for a film that makes you want to have sex that night and again tomorrow morning,” he said.
“Happythankyoumoreplease” lived up to its advance billing not because it is saturated with sexuality – it’s actually relatively chaste – but because the characters feel a palpable longing for the closeness that accompanies physical intimacy.
It’s an impressive directing debut from Josh Radnor, best known as the star of the long-running sitcom “How I Met Your Mother.” Although he has appeared in lots of theater – he co-starred opposite Kathleen Turner in the stage adaptation of “The Graduate” – and TV, his film background is scant. To get a lead in a motion picture, he almost would have had to write it.
His character, Sam, is attracted to a cabaret singer named Mississippi, but both fear tumbling into a full-fledged relationship. He also avoids hearing her sing, afraid she will be terrible. In a parallel story, Sam befriends a young boy who has been separated from his family on a New York subway. Festival audiences have embraced the film, which won the 2010 Audience Prize at Sundance.
Not that it’s all been smooth sailing on Radnor’s first feature. “Happythankyoumoreplease” was to have opened in August, but then problems developed with the original distributor, and it took this long to wind its way into theaters.
Radnor talked about how he met up with his new career.
Q: When you first thought about making a movie did you worry that it would be hard for audiences to see you in a different way after six years as Ted on “How I Met Your Mother”?
A: I don’t think my character on the show is so idiosyncratic or odd that people can’t imagine seeing me in other things. The TV show has been such a blessing in my life in so many ways and opened up so many doors, not the least of which is giving me confidence to do other things and also the resources to do them.
Q: How much of Sam is based on you?
A: Parts of him were based on me before I started meditating and stopped drinking. He was a more reckless version of me.
Q: The part about being afraid to go listen to that singer perform out of fear she would be awful felt real. Was it?
A: I did go see a very dear friend of mine perform in a cabaret with other singers, and she was far away the best one there. I remember being happy about that. If you really like someone, you want their art to be an extension of what you like about them. But I think I would still like her if she wasn’t a great singer.
Q: How did you come to write, direct and star in a feature film?
A: Just being on a TV show, it doesn’t really flex all your muscles. So I started writing short stories and a screenplay and a pilot. I wasn’t thinking about directing. I was really feeling an urge to play another role, though obviously not on TV. I thought I would direct down the line, and it happened a lot faster. I would hear horrible stories about directing. But I just loved every part of the process. I loved casting and shooting on location and mixing the sound. It was thrilling to bring to life this story that I just imagined out of thin air.
Q: Why do you think so many actors become writers?
A: I think the more you act, the more you internalize a lot of what works dramatically. The experience of being inside a movie teaches you a lot about the most effective way to tell a story.
Q: Could you talk about your unusual title?
A: It was the original title of the screenplay. I just really liked that title. I would perk up and smile whenever I said it. Some people don’t like it – it has a weird effect on them. But sometimes people say they have adopted it as more of a mantra. More of something you say to yourself at a time when you find yourself in a situation that feels quite wonderful and you’re thinking, ‘I would like to incorporate more of this in my life.’
I don’t mean to preach about all this stuff, and I don’t think this movie is all that preachy. But when you realize so much is going on that is right and you should be thankful, it is a really powerful shift in your life.
Q: What do you have coming up?
A: I have another screenplay that is kind of cooking. But making a movie every year doesn’t really appeal to me. I get a little restless doing the same thing so I want to do a lot of stuff. {sbox}
Happythankyoumoreplease (R) opens Friday at Bay Area theaters.
To see a trailer for the film, go to www.happythankyoumoreplease.com.
E-mail Ruthe Stein at pinkletters@sfchronicle.com.
This article appeared on page P – 20 of the San Francisco Chronicle
From www.sfgate.com
Millionaire movie geek: The Tameside man behind the world’s top cinema website
Jan 11th
It’s one of the world’s top internet sites…but the inspiration for it started in a Tameside living room with a marathon viewing of the film ‘Alien’. The Internet Movie Database, or IMDb.com, is used by millions each day, thanks to the childhood film obsession of founder Col Needham.
With cast, credits and photos from virtually every film and TV programme ever made, the site is synonymous with the moving image as a treasure trove of information.
But IMDb, a go-to place for movie buffs and Hollywood insiders alike, is the result of a Denton lad’s lifelong film obsession which has now made him a millionaire.
And thanks to a family friend who ran a local video shop, as a child Col, who now lives in Bristol, was able to get tapes out for a fortnight at a time – hence the 14 viewings of the original Alien film in 14 days.
“It was after my family got our first VHS player,” remembers Col.
“Because a friend of ours had a video shop I could get tapes out for two weeks – so I watched Alien every day after school until I had to give it back.
“It’s still one of my favourite childhood films, along with the first Star Wars and Jaws, which I saw at the Romiley Forum.”
Col now sees his films in slightly plusher surroundings; invited to film festivals and premieres to rub shoulders with the stars. He has offices in London, LA and New York.
You could be forgiven for thinking the company’s 44-year-old founder – now a very rich man after selling to Amazon in 1998 – would have forgotten his Manchester roots.
But memories of childhood trips to cinemas in Tameside and Manchester’s now defunct Odeon were part of Col’s obsession with film, and, with family still living in Denton, he’s makes regular visits back up north.
“Some of my earliest memories are of cinemas in Manchester,” says Col.
“I used to go to The Palace in Hyde and another cinema in Ashton. Those were in the days before big multiplexes.
“I also remember the excitement of a big trip into the centre of town to watch the first Star Wars film at the Odeon in Manchester in about 1977 – I think it’s one of my most inspiring memories.”
Growing up on Stockport Road, Col attended Audenshaw School and later Hyde sixth form, now Hyde Clarendon.
His movie obsession continued as a teenager, and once he got his first computer there was no stopping him.
Unable to keep track of the amount of films he was watching, self-confessed geek Col began a computerised list.
This became a downloadable database in the late 1980s, which then morphed into one of the world’s first internet sites in the early 1990s.
Originally a hobby as Col worked as a software developer in Bristol, IMDb’s popularity exploded – and unlike many internet sites of the late 1990s, it survived the burst of the dot com bubble.
Today, IMDb.com is one of the world’s most popular websites – its simple yet comprehensive format is beloved of film geeks and film industry aficionados, making it the go-to place for any film query.
“People in the industry say the site is really helpful,” said Col.
“When they get cast in a film they can find out who they’ll be working with and research other actors’ and directors’ past films.”
He names Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo and North by Northwest as first and third favourites, with the second spot taken by last year’s psychological thriller Inception.
When not watching films, Col – who met wife Karen at sixth form college in 1983 and lives with her and their twin daughters Kate and Beth, 17 – works from a small farmhouse in Bristol near the family home.
He and a team of between 100 to 200 staff (Col is restricted from giving an exact number) work tirelessly to collate the cast, credits, trailers and photos from every film and TV programme released. Add in the daily film industry news, user-generated reviews and box office ratings and the amount of information on the site is truly mindboggling.
“The site is growing at an amazing rate,” said Col.
“At the moment we have around 1.7 million details in the database and four million names in film and TV credits.”
Recently celebrating its 20th anniversary, IMDb’s momentum shows no signs of flagging.
Currently getting about 100 million unique users a month, its popularity is something most websites can only dream of, putting it in the top 50 sites on the web alongside giants Yahoo, Ebay and Google.
“There’s certainly never a dull moment,” said Col. “I honestly never thought IMDb would get this big – it is pretty amazing. And I’m just the guy from Manchester who is the founder and now the CEO.”
In ‘Biutiful,’ A Father (And A World) In Extremis
Dec 28th
In his previous movie, Babel, Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu hopped from Africa to Asia to North America in search of global misery. His new Biutiful is simpler in structure, with the action restricted to one city and revolving around a single main character. But the shrill melodrama still hauls several continents’ worth of woe.
This is Inarritu’s first film since splitting with scripter Guillermo Arriaga, and it relies less on chronological trickiness than the three movies they made together. (The other two are 21 Grams and Amores Perros.) But the story does start near its end, before wandering through a clunky dream sequence on its way back to the beginning.
Our anti-hero is Uxbal (Javier Bardem), a harried Barcelona hustler who hefts enough plot for several movies. He’s the middleman between two ruthless Chinese merchants and the illegal immigrants who sell their counterfeit goods on the street. Although he’s something less than a saint, Uxbal tries to help both the peddlers, most of them migrants from various African countries, and the Chinese workers who manufacture the knockoffs in a filthy local sweatshop.
Uxbal has custody of his two children, whose mother is a bipolar alcoholic and sometime hooker. Having just learned that he’s seriously ill, Uxbal allows his ex (Maricel Alvarez) to get reacquainted with their kids, 7-year-old Mateo and almost-10-year-old Ana. (It’s the latter who can’t quite spell “beautiful.”)
In his attempt to fix everything before his possible death, Uxbal is a grimier version of the Will Smith character in Seven Pounds. And if that weren’t enough, Uxbal also has a version of the uncanny knack possessed by the Matt Damon character in Hereafter: Put him close to a fresh corpse and he can receive a farewell message from that person’s immortal soul.
By the way, nearly everyone in Uxbal’s orbit is a double-crosser: his brother, the cop he bribes and the Chinese black-marketeers (who happen to be gay, one of several complications that subtract from rather than add to the overstuffed tale’s impact). It’s lucky that Uxbal has another stereotypical figure, a good-hearted Senegalese mama, to help him with Ana and Mateo.
It takes an impassioned actor to play such a character, and Bardem’s flame never weakens. The actor is always persuasive, whether Uxbal is fiercely protecting the kids, weeping at a horrific calamity or contemplating his bloody urine in a toilet bowl. Bardem even finds occasions to flash his famous smile.
Inarritu can also rely on such longtime associates as editor Stephen Mirrione, composer Gustavo Santaolalla — who contributes a powerful, percussive score — and cameraman Rodrigo Prieto. The hand-held cinematography vibrantly renders such scenes as a police raid on the African vendors and finds an odd beauty in the muted colors and stained surfaces of back-alley Barcelona. (The Catalan tourist board probably won’t be using Biutiful in any upcoming campaigns.)
But the high level of craft can’t sustain the movie as its script (written by Inarritu with Armando Bo and Nicolas Giacobone) becomes increasingly hectoring. Like Babel, Biutiful is contrived, bombastic and lacking a sense of proportion: It takes the hardships caused by economic globalization exactly as seriously as it does the mumbo jumbo about talking to the dead. However much Uxbal tries to help Barcelona’s dispossessed, Biutiful doesn’t really have anything to say about the modern world’s economic migrants. Indeed, it could even be said that the movie exploits them.
Ballet world leery of Aronofsky
Nov 27th
Director Darren Aronofsky on the set of BLACK SWAN. (Handout)
LOS ANGELES — When an acclaimed art-house director says he wants to make a film about your workplace, you’d think the answer would be yes — especially in as arty a world as ballet.
Not so when Darren Aronofsky (Requiem For A Dream, The Wrestler) got underway on Black Swan, his already-Oscar-buzzy portrayal of a young ballerina (Natalie Portman) whose personality begins to unravel with her career-making opportunity to play both Odette and Odile, the White and Black Swan in Swan Lake.
“Getting into the ballet world proved to be extremely challenging,” Aronofsky says. “Usually when you say to someone, ‘I want to make a movie about your world,’ all the doors open and you can say anything you want.
“But the ballet world really wasn’t at all interested in us hanging out. It took a long time to get the info and put it together,” he says of the project, which has been brewing for a decade. (Aronofsky first approached Portman about the role in 2002.) “Over the years, Natalie would say, ‘I’m getting too old to play a dancer, you’d better hurry up.”
The American Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet turned him down flat.
Eventually, the Philadelphia-based Pennsylvania Ballet agreed to make available its location and dancers.
Why the resistance? It’s an insular world, but also a very public-relations conscious one. And Aronofsky’s dark impulses, complete with dancers who cut themselves, and his willingness to equate the themes in Black Swan (in theatres Friday) with those of last year’s The Wrestler probably didn’t sit well with the higher-minded types in the ballet world.
“The connections between the two films didn’t escape us,” Aronofsky said when Black Swan debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival, “ballet being the highest art and wrestling being the lowest. That’s if you consider wrestling an art, which most people don’t, but I do.”
Indeed, amid all the critical raves, there are a few voices in that community raising concern over its portrayal.
Aronofsky says he’s seen those reports, and calls them “unfortunate. We’ve had very different reactions from dancers elsewhere. And I think so many dancers are incredibly relieved that there’s finally a ballet movie that takes ballet as serious art and not as a place to have a love affair. If you actually look at ballet, the ballets themselves are incredibly dark and gothic — Sleeping Beauty, Romeo & Juliet and, of course, Swan Lake.
“We took the fairy tale of Swan Lake and the ballet and basically turned all the characters — Rothbart, the Prince, the Queen — and translated them into characters in our movie reality. So it’s really just a retelling of Swan Lake, but it definitely shows the challenges and darkness and the reality of what it takes to be a ballet dancer.
But it also shows the beauty of the art and the transcendence that’s possible with that art.”
Co-writer Andres Heinz says Black Swan began with a screening of Roman Polanski’s Repulsion.
“I was fascinated by the psychological breakdown and I couldn’t get the story out of my head. And a few weeks later, I was reading The Double by Dostoevsky, and it quickly melded in my head into what became (a project titled) The Understudy. I set it in the off-Broadway role of an actress who is suddenly thrust into the lead role, and the pressure creates a kind of fracture in her psyche and she has a psychological breakdown where she believes her understudy is undermining her.
“Then Darren came onboard and had the idea about Swan Lake, which was a brilliant addition.”
Mila Kunis (That ’70s Show, Family Guy) is that understudy, in a remarkably charged performance. Says co-writer Mark Heyman,
“I think Mila’s character is kind of like a spirit guide in terms of taking someone down that rabbit hole to unearthing her darker self.”
One thing Swan Lake inarguably has in common with The Wrestler is the initial realism of the filming (which gets tossed out in the hallucinatory last act).
“The whole cinema handheld approach to The Wrestler was a big risk to bring to a ballet film. I didn’t know if it would work, but it’s kind of cool, because it makes people think they’re watching a certain kind of movie that can’t ever freak out the way it does. It feels like a documentary at the beginning before it freaks out.”
And of course, there was the dancing realism. Both Portman and Kunis had intense ballet lessons. For Portman, it was a refresher course, since she’d had ballet lessons until age 12.
“I started with my ballet teacher, Mary Helen Bowers, way ahead of time,” Portman says. “Two hours a day, then five hours a day, adding swimming a mile a day, toning. The physical discipline really helped with the emotional side of the character, because you get a sense of the monastic side. You don’t drink, you don’t go out with your friends, you don’t get much food, you’re constantly putting your body through pain. You get an understanding of the self-flagellation of a ballet dancer.”
But if he wanted physical verisimilitude, Aronofsky says he wasn’t much interested in having his actresses show up with “method” madness.
“I’ve dealt with a few method actors, but I think it’s a bunch of nonsense. It’s film acting, and you have to be on when the camera’s rolling. Sure, when it’s an intense scene, you might want to keep that energy up between takes. But when it’s ‘cut’ it’s ‘cut.’ Even when it’s ‘action,’ there’s people with lights moving around. It’s impossible to make believe that doesn’t exist.
“I mean, not to scare away method actors — actually I want to scare away method actors, because, y’know, it’s a pain. ‘Oh, you’re really brooding! Go to your trailer and I’ll see you in an hour.’ “
Portman degree comes in handy
So, do ballet dancers tend to be a little, ahem, unbalanced?
Not to generalize, but Natalie Portman, does have a degree in psychology from Harvard, and she thinks there may be more than a little pathological smoke there.
“This was actually a case where something I learned in school proved valuable,” she says with a laugh.
“Obsessive compulsive behaviour, the scratching, the bulimia, obviously ballet really lends itself to that because there’s such a sense of ritual. The wrapping of shoes for performance, such a process, it’s almost religious in nature, like Jews putting on their Tefillin (black prayer boxes worn on the head) or Catholics with their Rosary.
Obsession
“So a sort of religious obsession compulsion would be my professional diagnosis,” she adds wryly.
The movie’s choreographer, Benjamin Millepied says he’s seen the obsession first-hand. “(Portman’s) character of Nina, I’ve seen several girls that live with their parents and breathe ballet — we call them ‘Bunheads.’ “
Writer Mark Heyman had another pathology in mind when he wrote Nina.
“I gave her was borderline personality disorder. I researched it and it does seem to encompass all symptoms. Of course, it’s a multi-varied sickness, there are different versions. But a big inspiration was (a ballet dancer) I knew. She had danced in this big company, and when she had her first big role she had this recurring nightmare that the night of the opening she was going to die after she danced the role. She was convinced.
“So the night of the performance came, she just kind of collapsed shaking backstage. She’s very happy now, she runs a chocolate company and had a baby.”
Jon Favreau To Make Movie Based On Disney World’s Magic Kingdom
Nov 14th
Director Jon Favreau has signed up to bring Disney’s latest theme park attraction to the big screen – he’s working on a movie based on The Magic Kingdom.
Disney’s “Pirates of the Caribbean” ride spawned a hugely popular film franchise starring Johnny Depp, while “The Haunted Mansion” amusement was turned into a 2003 movie with Eddie Murphy.
Bosses at the company now hope to achieve similar success with a picture based on The Magic Kingdom, which is part of the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida.
“Iron Man” moviemaker Favreau has stepped up to take charge of the family film, directing and helping out with the script, according to Variety.

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New on DVD: ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’
Nov 7th
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Universal, $29.98; Blu-ray, $39.98
Equal parts imaginative and aggravating, Edgar Wright’s adaptation of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s “Scott Pilgrim” graphic novel series stars Michael Cera as the dim, self-centered Canadian indie-rocker, who has to fight the seven super-powered exes of his would-be girlfriend Ramona (played by Mary Elizabeth Winstead). Why does Scott like the mumbly, charmless Ramona? Why does Ramona like the childish, thoughtless Scott? Those questions are never satisfactorily answered by “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” (or by O’Malley’s books, frankly), but those with a high tolerance for one-dimensional young people should still enjoy this movie’s good humor and dazzling effects, which turn the ins and out of an ordinary slacker romance into a frenetic videogame. The DVD and Blu-ray come with a Wright commentary, deleted scenes, outtakes and featurettes galore.
Antichrist
Criterion, $39.95; Blu-ray, $39.95
Lars Von Trier’s “Antichrist” is a boldly personal take on the horror film, tossing all of the moody Dane’s musings on faith, gender and nature into an unfettered phantasmagoria. Willem Dafoe plays a therapist who tries to help his wife (Charlotte Gainsbourg) heal from the accidental death of their toddler son. Von Trier initially mocks the impotence of touchy-feely self-help exercises, but then he turns on the audience, subjecting us to repellent sexual violence as the therapist descends into his wife’s nightmares. “Antichrist” is equal parts repulsive and silly, but it contains some of the most memorably frightening images since Dario Argento’s “Suspiria.” Criterion’s DVD and Blu-ray editions feature a typically mordant Von Trier commentary track, plus interviews and behind-the-scenes footage.
Charlie St. Cloud
Universal, $29.98; Blu-ray, $39.98
Ben Sherwood’s bestselling novel “The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud” is a sweet account of a young man struggling to move on with his life after the death of his younger brother, but what works on the page doesn’t always work on-screen —is evidenced by this movie adaptation, a glossy Zac Efron vehicle. Efron’s great in lighter roles, but here, as a man who has long conversations with his kid brother’s ghost, he can’t overcome the story’s maudlin tendencies. The featurettes on the DVD and Blu-ray focus mainly on Efron, though director Burr Steers does provide a commentary track.
Grown Ups
Columbia, $28.96; Blu-ray, $38.96
There’s an air of crowd-pleasing desperation to “Grown Ups,” an Adam Sandler comedy costarring his old “Saturday Night Live” pals Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider (plus Kevin James), all playing boyhood friends who realize they’ve lost touch with who they used to be. The movie is both broadly funny and broadly sentimental. The DVD and Blu-ray add a commentary by director Dennis Dugan, plus outtakes and bloopers.
Ramona and Beezus
20th Century Fox, $29.99; Blu-ray, $39.99
Beverly Cleary’s books about precocious grade-schooler Ramona Quimby have been kid favorites for decades, and while the cutesy big-screen adaptation “Ramona and Beezus” doesn’t have the originals’ scrappy charm, it’s well-cast and family-friendly. Based mostly on the book “Ramona and Her Father,” the movie stars Joey King as the young heroine, who causes all kinds of accidental trouble when she tries to help her dad weather a layoff. The special-effects-heavy fantasy sequences and romantic subplot for Ramona’s aunt (played by Ginnifer Goodwin) are unnecessary, but children who love the books should find a lot to like here too. The DVD and Blu-ray are refreshingly kid-focused, with featurettes that explain to youngsters how a movie gets made and an interview with Cleary.
And…
“The Golden Girls: 25th Anniversary Complete Collection” (Buena Vista, $149.99); “I Knew It Was You: Rediscovering John Cazale” (Oscilloscope, $19.99); “Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child” (New Video, $29.95); “Men of a Certain Age: The Complete First Season” (Warner, $39.98); “Sherlock: Season One” (BBC Warner, $34.98; Blu-ray, $39.98).
In ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,’ audience is the winner
Aug 24th
Posted: Aug 24, 2010 at 11:17 AM [Today]
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Now playing at the Quality 16 and Rave 20
Grade: B+
The last decade or so has given us a handful of movies based on videogames (Max Payne, Resident Evil, etc), and a sizable number of movies that quite unintentionally looked like video games (300 and the “new” Star Wars trilogy immediately come to mind). But Scott Pilgrim vs. the World might be the first movie to look like a videogame on purpose, as well as use videogame logic to tell its story. The result feels quite refreshing, and like so many great ideas, it makes one wonder why no one had thought of it before.
Michael Cera, who has evolved into the nerd equivalent of America’s sweetheart (Superbad, Juno, cult-classic TV series Arrested Development), plays the title character: a 22-year old bassist in the yet-to-make-it garage rock trio Sex Bob-Omb. Sharing a squalid Toronto apartment (and bed) with his gay roommate Wallace and Wallace’s unending parade of unlikely male conquests, Scott has started dating a painfully naïve high-schooler named Knives Chau (Ellen Wong), who his band mates worry will “geek out” on them. But Scott’s world changes forever when he sees Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), first in his dreams, and then at a party, where he tries to pique her interest with obscure Pac-Man trivia. With her neon-dyed hair and New York bred personality, Scott hopelessly falls for her before finding out the catch: to win Ramona as his girlfriend, he must first defeat, in battle, her seven evil ex-boyfriends.
Adapted from the popular series of graphic novels by Bryan Lee O’Malley, Scott Pilgrim was directed and co-written by Edgar Wright, who previously made the enjoyable genre homages Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz. Like those first two films, Wright uses Scott Pilgrim to write a love-letter to an art form that is generally perceived as lowbrow. Even before the movie begins, cinema reality is distorted as the Universal Studios logo is pixilated into 16-bit and the iconic score is adapted to sound like it came from the Nintendo classic Metroid.
The key element in Scott Pilgrim’s visual identity is not to craft entire scenes out of CGI, but rather to layer graphics over the frame that evoke recognizable gaming conventions. For example, each time Scott Pilgrim faces off against a new nemesis, a giant “vs.” appears between the combatants and they receive life bars, just as they would in, say, Street Fighter II. Scott receives things like a “1-up,” and his vanquished enemies explode into coins. Various fight scenes pay tribute to classic games like Super Smash Brothers, Guitar Hero and Tony Hawk.
But the most interesting thing about Pilgrim isn’t its visual ingenuity, but rather how it uses the inane logic of classic scrolling action games to tell its story and segue between scenes. Just as Super Mario could descend through a pipe and be in an entirely different location, Scott Pilgrim can walk through a door and end up further away than the next room. Each stage of the game that is his life comes packaged with its own “boss”—one of Ramona’s evil exes—that must be defeated before he can move on to the next level. In the best scene, Scott even harnesses an extra life to restart a level when he doesn’t like how things were progressing on the first go-around.
This may all sound ridiculous, and it is. There’s a very good possibility that anyone raised before Nintendo became an inescapable part of childhood will think this is a laughably bad movie. But with original songs by Beck, and a great supporting cast that includes Jason Schwartzman and Chris Evans as villains unreluctant to ham it up, Anna Kendrick as Scott’s gossipy sister, and “Hung” star Thomas Jane in a cameo as a member of the vegan police, Pilgrim definitely has a lot going for it. The deciding factor might be this: if you can still name some of the characters from Mortal Kombat, then chances are decent you’ll love this movie. But if you read the previous sentence and thought “kombat” is spelled wrong, Scott Pilgrim might not be for you.
Daniel Joyaux is a film critic living in Ann Arbor. You can see more of his writing at thirdmanmovies.blogspot.com
