Categories
Amusing Trailers

Toy Story Requiem

This trailer mash-up of Toy Story 2 and Requiem for A Dream is one of the cleverest I’ve seen:

[youtube]D1qihwMN0JM[/youtube]

Categories
News

IMDb redesign

The IMDb has had a face lift.

If you look at the entry for an individual film – like say, The Departed – you can see how they have redesigned the basic template. One of the best new features is that it is easier to rate films.

If you look at the entries for individual actors – e.g. Naomi Watts – they have replaced the single photo with a gallery and made it easier to browse their films by decade.

The main quibble I’d have is that the menu on the left side of the page is too small but overall I’d give it a thumbs up.

> A FAQ on the IMDb redesign
> Find out more about the IMDb at Wikipedia

Categories
Box Office News

Ghost Rider storms US box office

The movie adaptation of Marvel comic book Ghost Rider has topped the US box office.

David Germain of the AP reports:

Satan’s bounty hunter has looted the wallets of movie-goers. “Ghost Rider,” Sony’s comic-book adaptation starring Nicolas Cage as a motorcycle stunt driver moonlighting as a collector of evil souls for the devil, debuted as the top weekend movie with $44.5 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Despite lacklustre reviews, the fact that February is usually a quiet month and Nicolas Cage’s problems with Entertainment Weekly, it seems that the champagne corks will be popping tonight at Sony.

Not only is this an unusually massive opening for this time of the year but the folks at Culver City have another Marvel hit awaiting release on May 4th.

> Find out more about the Ghost Rider character at Wikipedia
> Original AP story at Yahoo News

Categories
Amusing News Trailers

Glengarry Glen Ross Trailer

Those clever folks behind the Must Love Jaws and 10 Things I Hate About Commandments have created a spoof trailer for Glengarry Glen Ross called Glen & Gary & Glen & Ross.

[youtube]QipAqdomO3I[/youtube]

(It is very funny but if you are at work I’d turn the volume down or use headphones as the F-word gets a regular outing)

> More remixed trailers at The Trailer Mash
> IMDb entry for the original Glengarry Glen Ross

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 16th February

Hot Fuzz is the new comedy from the team behind Shaun of the Dead and Spaced and is a hugely enjoyable spoof of cop movies set in an English rural town. Simon Pegg stars Nicholas Angel, a London cop who is so effective at his job he embarrasses the Met and gets transferred to a sleepy Somerset village. There he finds it difficult to adjust to the local ways but soon finds himself drawn into a series of grisly murders. Imagine if Joel Silver and Jerry Bruckheimer teamed up to make a feature length epiosde of The Bill and you have some idea of what the film is like.

Director Edgar Wright puts things together with flair and a loving attention to detail, especially the cast which features a knowing selection of actors who have played law enforcers: Timothy Dalton (James Bond), Edward Woodward (The Equalizer) and Jim Broadbent (Chief Inspector Slater in Only Fools and Horses). There are also a slew of film and TV references for the more eagle eyed viewer. It might not reach the more sublime heights of Spaced but it is still one of the best comedies to come out of these shores in quite some time. And before you ask, yes, I do think it is better than Shaun of the Dead (good though that was).

The Science of Sleep is another example of director Michel Gondry and his penchant for the surreal. A truly bizarre but highly enjoyable love story sees Gael Garcia Bernal play Stephane – a Mexican who has just moved back to Paris. He has problems separating dreams from reality and when he gets a new job and falls in love with his neighbour (Charlotte Gainsbourg) things get complicated. Gondry explores similar themes to 2004’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Whilst this isn’t as good as that film (the absence of screenwriter Charlie Kaufman is felt) there is still much to admire here – notably the performances and the sly streak of wit that runs through the film.

The visuals are a bit hit and miss but when they do work, are a joy to behold. Of particular note are the sequences where Stephane’s mind is represented by a TV show (“Stephane TV”) set in a cardboard studio. They encapsulate the wild approach the film takes – if you don’t like them you probably won’t appreciate the film. In fact some people might be actively repelled by such wanton strangeness. But for me, such off the wall creativity is more than welcome. It is also worth pointing out that despite the whacky fantasy sequences in which they often appear, Gainsbourg and Bernal are both believable and touching as a screen couple. Deep down this is a moving tale despite the zany wrapping. Another thing that I liked and surprised me was the fact that they invest in a new memory foam mattress for this movie. I looked it up on internet and after reading about them I knew I had to buy one for me.

FILMS OF THE WEEK: Hot Fuzz and The Science of Sleep

> Find the cinema showtimes for these films in your area with Google

Categories
Lists

12 Movies That Were Ahead of Their Time

This list of “Movies That Were Ahead of Their Time” at First Showing is interesting.

It consists of some obvious (yet correct) choices like Star Wars, The Matrix and Metropolis but somehow omits Citizen Kane and Blade Runner.

Plus, I think that films like Sin City, Pulp Fiction and Escape From New York are also worthy of inclusion.

Add your thoughts in their comment section.

> The full list at First Showing

Categories
Awards Season News

BAFTA Winners

BEST FILM: The Queen

DAVID LEAN AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN DIRECTION: Paul Greengrass – United 93

BEST ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE: Forest Whitaker – The Last King of Scotland

BEST ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE: Helen Mirren – The Queen

ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE: Alan Arkin – Little Miss Sunshine

ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE: Jennifer Hudson – Dreamgirls

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Michael Arndt – Little Miss Sunshine

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Peter Morgan – The Last King of Scotland

BEST FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE: Pan’s Labyrinth

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM: Happy Feet

ANTHONY ASQUITH AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN FILM MUSIC: Gustavo Santaolalla for Babel

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Emmanuel Lubezki – Children of Men

BEST EDITING: Clare Douglas, Christopher Rouse, Richard Pearson – United 93

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN: Geoffrey Kirkland, Jim Clay, Jennifer Williams – Children of Men

BEST COSTUME DESIGN: Lala Huete – Pan’s Labyrinth

BEST SOUND: Chris Munro, Eddy Joseph, Mike Prestwood Smith, Martin Cantwell, Mark Taylor– Casino Royale

ACHIEVEMENT IN SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS: Christopher Boyes, George Watters II, Paul Massey, Lee Orloff – Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

MAKE UP AND HAIR: Jose Quetglas, Blanca Sanchez – Pan’s Labyrinth

SHORT ANIMATION FILM: Ian GouldstoneGuy 101 

SHORT FILM: Do Not Erase – Asitha Ameresekere

ALEXANDER KORDA AWARD FOR THE OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM OF THE YEAR: The Last King of Scotland

ORANGE RISING STAR AWARD: Eva Green (voted for by the public)

ACADEMY FELLOWSHIP: Anne V Coates

MICHAEL BALCON AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING BRITISH CONTRIBUTION TO CINEMA: Nick Daubeny

CARL FOREMAN AWARD FOR SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT BY A BRITISH DIRECTOR, WRITER OR PRODUCER IN THEIR FIRST FEATURE FILM: Andrea Arnold – Red Road

> Yahoo News on the BAFTA winners
> Full list of winners at the official site of BAFTA
> Listen to our interview with Helen Mirren about The Queen
>
Listen to our interview with Daniel Craig about Casino Royale
> Listen to our interview with Leonardo DiCaprio about The Departed
> Listen to our interview with Emily Blunt on The Devil Wears Prada

Categories
Awards Season Thoughts

BAFTA Predictions

As I write, this year’s BAFTA awards are only about 30 minutes away. I’ve just rushed back from a hotel room where I’ve interviewed one of last year’s winners, who will actually be presenting an award tonight (but more of that at another time).  

Here are my predictions for the main categories: 

BEST PICTURE: The Queen – It probably won’t win at the Oscars but for British BAFTA voters this ticks all the boxes. It is a very British story, has a towering central performance from Helen Mirren and was made by one of our best (if underappreciated) directors. 

BEST ACTOR: Forest Whitaker for The Last King of Scotland – Although Peter O’Toole could get the sentimental vote for Venus, but Whitaker has cut a swathe through the awards season for his stunning portrayal of Idi Amin. 

BEST ACTRESS: Helen Mirren for The Queen – Despite a strong field that includes Judi Dench, Kate Winslet and Meryl Streep, there is simply no way Dame Helen is going to lose. It really is that simple. 

BEST DIRECTOR: Martin Scorcese for The Departed – It is the year when everyone wants a bit of “Marty Atonement”. The legendary director has (incredibly) never won an Oscar, although BAFTA members showed some taste in giving him some awards for Goodfellas back in 1991. However, don’t rule out Stephen Frears (The Queen) or Paul Greengrass (United 93). 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Michael Sheen for The Queen – This is a tough one to call as James McAvoy, Leslie Phillips, Alan Arkin and Jack Nicholson could all conceivably win or split the votes for each other. However, Sheen’s excellent performance in The Queen (and his terrific recent turn in the West End as David Frost in Frost/Nixon) makes him the favourite for me. 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jennifer Hudson for Dreamgirls – It is in the supporting categories where the BAFTAS can get all a tad parochial, so don’t be surprised if Emily Blunt sneaks a win for her scene stealing turn in The Devil Wears Prada. That said I think Hudson is too good to ignore. She should win …I think. 

Those are the main categories but interestingly enough there is also one for BEST BRITISH FILM. The nominees are Casino Royale, The Last King Of Scotland, Notes On A Scandal, The Queen and United 93. I think The Queen will triumph in the Best Film category so I’m going for United 93 here.

The Last King of Scotland also has a good shout and perhaps some contrarians will go for Casino Royale, but I think the real achievement with that is that a Bond film got nominated in the first place. In fact, given the duplication of title in Best Film and Best British Film it is a hard category to predict. Why don’t they just have one category for all films and a special award (i.e. one title only) for Best British film.

In other categories: 

Pan’s Labyrinth will win Best Foreign Film 

Happy Feet will take Best Animated Film 

Alexandre Desplat will win Best Score for The Queen  

Emmanuel Lubezki will collect Best Cinematography for his incredible work on Children Of Men 

Paul Andrew Williams will win Best Newcomer for London To Brighton. 

I was speaking to a BAFTA board member on Friday and he told me that although it screens on BBC One at 9pm, the event actually gets under way at the Royal Opera House at 6.30pm. 

I guess this is so they can edit it for TV reasons (like cutting out any poems from Russell Crowe) but if the Oscars are live it would make more sense for the BAFTAs to be as well.

It would certainly give it more excitement, especially in the light of the disappointing TV ratings in recent years. When I find out the winners I’ll post them here.

If you have any thoughts, then feel free to post them below.

> Official BAFTA site
> The full list of BAFTA nominees

Categories
Interviews

Steve McManaman interview

Earlier this week I interviewed former Liverpool and Real Madrid player Steve McManaman about his role as a producer (and actor) on the new film Goal 2.

We discussed his experience making the film, the influx of Spanish players at Liverpool, Rafa Benitez’s comments about Everton last week and how Real Madrid can get back to winning ways.

Listen to the interview here:

[audio:Steve_McManaman_on_Goal2.mp3]

> IMDb entry for Goal 2
> Find out more about Steve McManaman at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Variety knocks down paywall

Well this one sneaked under my radar. A couple of days ago trade industry bible Variety announced that it is now fully available to all users.

In a press release they said:

Today, Variety, the leading global entertainment industry news source, announced that all of its award-winning editorial and advertising content on Variety.com is now available for free and without registration. Variety also launched its first electronic edition of Daily Variety – Digital Variety. Digital Variety will be available by subscription through Variety.com and access will be bundled with print subscriptions to Daily Variety and Weekly Variety.

We chose the open web site access because of our exceptional growth in unique traffic. In the past year our monthly unique users have exponentially grown to over 2.4 million and after the Variety.com re-launch, we decided to keep the site free to continue to drive that growth, said Charlie Koones, President and Publisher, Variety. Additionally, weve launched the digital edition for our entertainment and media professionals worldwide who demand convenient, reliable and timely access to Daily Variety.

This can only be a good move. It will inevitably lead to more users and better ad revenues on the site, although how it will affect the print edition remains to be seen.

> PaidContent on the news (Thanks to Matt for the link)
> The original press release at Business Wire

Categories
Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 9th February

This week on the podcast we take our weekly look at the latest cinema and DVD releases and also speak to some of the film makers involved in them.

Hannibal Rising is the prequel to The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal and focuses on how the young Lecter became the chianti swilling serial killer we all know and love. We speak to French actor Gaspard Ulliel who plays the young Lecter and also discuss how the film got made with producer Martha Di Laurentiis and director Peter Webber.

The other big cinema release this week is Goal 2, the story of a young footballer playing for Spanish giants Real Madrid and we speak to associate producer and former Liverpool and Real Madrid star Steve McManaman about his role in the film.

Our DVD pick this week is the terrific Spanish drama Volver, directed by Pedro Almodovar and starring Penelope Cruz.

Plus, our website of the week is ComingSoon.net.

> Download or listen to the podcast at Creation Podcasts
> Subscribe via iTunes
> Subscribe to the RSS feed

Categories
Amusing News

Gangsta Feet

Imagine Happy Feet remade gangsta rap style:

[youtube]luDVtpAEkho[/youtube]

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray Interviews

Interview from the Archives: Emily Blunt

The Devil Wears Prada is out on DVD today so here is a chance to have a listen again to the interview I did with Emily Blunt about her role in the film.

Amongst other things she told me about her character she plays, how she got the part and why she was afraid of giving Meryl Streep a cold.

Listen to the interview here:

[audio:Emily_Blunt_on_The_Devil_Wears_Prada.mp3]

> Find out more about Emily Blunt at the IMDb
> Buy The Devil Wears Prada on DVD at Amazon

Categories
In Production News

Joss Whedon is off the Wonder Woman movie

It would seem that Joss Whedon has departed from the new Wonder Woman movie.

In a post on Whedonesque the writer and director says:

You (hopefully) heard it here first: I’m no longer slated to make Wonder Woman. What? But how? My chest… so tight! Okay, stay calm and I’ll explain as best I can. It’s pretty complicated, so bear with me. I had a take on the film that, well, nobody liked. Hey, not that complicated.

Let me stress first that everybody at the studio and Silver Pictures were cool and professional. We just saw different movies, and at the price range this kind of movie hangs in, that’s never gonna work. Non-sympatico. It happens all the time. I don’t think any of us expected it to this time, but it did. Everybody knows how long I was taking, what a struggle that script was, and though I felt good about what I was coming up with, it was never gonna be a simple slam-dunk. I like to think it rolled around the rim a little bit, but others may have differing views.

The worst thing that can happen in this scenario is that the studio just keeps hammering out changes and the writer falls into a horrible limbo of development. These guys had the clarity and grace to skip that part. So I’m a free man.

It would appear to be an amicable parting of ways but its sad that someone as smart as Mr Whedon is no longer involved with the project.

> Find out more about the Wonder Woman film at Wikipedia
> Joss Whedon’s comments at Whedonesque

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 2nd February

Dreamgirls is the much hyped film film version of the 80’s Broadway musical. A thinly disguised rise and fall story loosely based on the story of The Supremes and Motown Records, it stars Beyonce Knowles and Jennifer Hudson as singers whose careers take a different trajectory under the guidance of a savvy empresario (Jamie Foxx). Although director Bill Condon infuses things with and undeniable panache and verve, there is something lacking in the story which just isn’t dramatic or moving enough. That said ,Jennifer Hudson and Eddie Murphy (as the act the girls initially sing for) deliver terrific performances. Hudson, in particular, eats up the screen and could well win an Oscar for her supporting turn.

Based on Zoe Heller’s novel of the same name, Notes On A Scandal is an absorbing tale of scheming and status in contemporary London. Barbara (Judi Dench) is a veteran teacher becomes quietly obsessed with Sheba (Cate Blanchett), a younger colleague. When she learns about her affair with a pupil, she uses the information to her own devious ends. As you might expect the two standout things here are the lead performances. Dench, in an unusually dark role, gives a splendidly nasty portrayal of a bitter loner whilst Blanchett is also on fine form as a privileged and frustrated urban mother. Patrick Marber’s script has echoes of Harold Pinter, with its fine balance of comic menace and shifting power games whilst director Richard Eyre never quite lets things descend in to TV drama territory.

Arthur and the Invisibles is a surreal and only intermittently successful children’s film from director Luc Besson that mixes live action with animation. When a young boy (Freddie Highmore) tries to save his grandmother’s house from repossession, he has to venture into the world of the Minimoys – tiny elfin beings that exist in his garden. Despite an amazing cast of voices (that includes none other than Madonna, David Bowie and Robert De Niro) the story never really takes off and the mix of animation and live action is uneasy throughout. It passes the time but should have been much more engaging given the talent involved.

FILM OF THE WEEK: Notes on a Scandal

> Get cinema showtimes for your area via Google

Categories
Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 2nd February

On the podcast this week we cast a critical eye over the new cinema releases: Dreamgirls, Notes on a Scandal and Arthur and the Invisibles.

Our DVD picks are The Maltese Falcon and The Devil Wears Prada, plus we speak to Emily Blunt about her role in the latter film.

Our website of the week is the splendid TV listings site at Bleb.org

> Download it for free from Creation Podcasts
> Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes
> Subscribe to the RSS feed

Categories
Interesting News

A sequel to The Departed?

Steve Gorman of Reuters reports that there could be a sequel to The Departed:

It’s hard to imagine a sequel to a movie like Oscar-nominated crime drama “The Departed,” which ends in such a spasm of violence that hardly any of the lead characters are left alive.

But almost anything is possible in Hollywood when enough money is at stake. So it should come as no surprise that a follow-up to Martin Scorsese’s cops-and-gangsters thriller, the biggest box-office hit of his career, is already in the works.

A person close to the situation said on Wednesday that the screenwriter behind “The Departed,” William Monahan, was outlining a film script that would bring back a surviving character played by Mark Wahlberg and introduce a new role envisioned for Robert De Niro.

The article goes on to say:

According to sources cited by The Hollywood Reporter, Scorsese would need to approve any plans for a new film before it could move forward.

Scorsese has never directed a sequel to any of his films, though his 1986 pool hall drama “The Color of Money” was a follow-up to 1961’s “The Hustler” directed by Robert Rossen.

The original “Infernal Affairs” was followed by a “prequel,” involving events leading up to the first movie, and a third film that combined elements of the first two. According to The Reporter, the idea of a prequel for “The Departed” has not been ruled out.

If Scorcese wins the Oscar (which is looking highly likely) then I certainly wouldn’t rule this out completely.

> Find out more about Infernal Affairs at Wikipedia
> All Movie Guide entry for The Departed

Categories
Awards Season News

SAG Winners

Here are the winners of the 13th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards:

Best Actor: Forest Whitaker, “The Last King of Scotland”

Best Actress: Helen Mirren, “The Queen”

Best Supporting Actor: Eddie Murphy, “Dreamgirls”

Best Supporting Actress: Jennifer Hudson, “Dreamgirls”

Cast: Little Miss Sunshine

These awards are often seen as a good indicator for the acting categories at the Oscars. I think everyone now knows that Helen Mirren is a virtual certainty to win Best Actress so her victory here isn’t a big shock.

Forest Whitaker’s win confirms his status as the Best Actor frontrunner although if there is a huge swell of sympathy for Peter O’Toole in Venus then the veteran could spring a surprise.

Actors form the largest block of voters in the Academy so any trends here are also likely to spill over to Oscar night, which could be good news for Little Miss Sunshine. It is clearly a much loved film and its win for Best Ensemble could be another indicator that it might sneak Best Picture.

> Offical SAG Awards site
> Find out more about the SAG awards at Wikipedia
> Full list of winners (including the TV section)

Categories
Awards Season News

Producers lose out on Oscar nominations

Although The Departed is up for Best Picture, one of its producers will not be. Brad Grey – who is also the chairman of Paramount Pictures – has been denied a producer credit.

The producers of another Best Picture nominee, Little Miss Sunshine – Albert Berger and Ron Yerxa – find themselves in a similar situation.

According to Gregg Kilday in The Hollywood Reporter the reason lies in the Academy’s “three producer rule”:

According to the Academy’s rules, the best picture winner can be repped by no more than three producers. Thursday night, the executive committee of its producers branch met to arbitrate the producing credits on both “Departed” and “Sunshine,” and ruled against Grey, Berger and Yerxa.

The Academy takes its lead from the PGA, which has developed a mechanism for deciding which producers on a given film performed the necessary producing chores to have full producing credit for awards purposes.

In the case of “Departed,” the film’s credits list as producers Graham King and director Martin Scorsese as well as Grey and Brad Pitt, who developed the film through their Plan B production company. The PGA, however, decided to credit only King as producer when the film was nominated for the PGA’s best picture award.

Grey asked the Academy to reconsider the PGA decision, but, without comment, the Academy has decided to list King as sole producer.

In the case of Little Miss Sunshine, the rule also applied even though Berga and Yerxa first developed the script:

PGA decided that Berger and Yerxa, who are producing partners, deserved credit along with David T. Friendly, Marc Turtletaub and Peter Saraf.

Because of the Academy’s rule-of-three, though, the producers’ exec committee took a second look and ruled out Berger and Yerxa, who actually first developed Michael Arndt’s screenplay and later introduced the directing team of Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris to the other producers.

Because of the Academy’s ruling, only Friendly, Saraf and Turtletaub will be called to the stage if “Sunshine” wins best picture.

Although the three producer rule was introduced after five producers collected an Oscar for Shakespeare in Love in 1998, surely credit should be given where it is due?

> NPR report on Oscar’s ever changing rules
> Emmanuel Levy with more detail on the story
> Anne Thompson from The Hollywood Reporter with her take on the story

Categories
Interesting Technology Useful Links

Amapedia

It looks like Amazon have created their own Wikipedia clone. It is called Amapedia and although it is still in beta, the idea is a very good one.

A wiki for Amazon products not only gives us more information about the huge amount of books, DVDs and products they have but also allows Amazon to better to gauge customer responses.

It will be interesting to see how this develops

> Amapedia (link via Read Write/Web)

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 26th January

Another packed week for cinema releases in the UK but do watch out for an inspired performance from an aging legend and a disturbing low budget horror.

Blood Diamond is set amidst the conflict in Sierra Leone in the late 90s this drama sees Danny Archer (Leonardo DiCaprio), a mercenary turned diamond smuggler,  cross paths with a Mende fisherman (Djimon Honsou) who has come across – and hidden – a large diamond before being imprisoned as a rebel. Along with a US journalist (Jennifer Connelly) they are all drawn into the murky world of the African diamond trade. Although director Ed Zwick stages the action with impressive aplomb and the performances are good (especially Honsou) it ultimately falls short in its attempts to explore the issue of conflict diamonds and corruption in Africa.

Bobby features a large ensemble cast (featuring Anthony Hopkins, Martin Sheen, Sharon Stone, William H Macy, Joshua Jackson, Heather Graham, Demi Moore, Lindsay Lohan and Elijah Wood) and is a fictional account of the lives of several people present in the hotel where the late Robert F. Kennedy, was shot on June 6, 1968. Although it has its flaws director Emilio Estevez has constructed a drama that keeps you watching and the use of footage from the time is surprisingly powerful.

Venus is about an old English actor (Peter O’Toole) who forms a bond with an unruly young woman who he finds strangely attractive despite being so different to her. Although this sounds like an inverted remake of Harold and Maude, it is actually a highly amusing and shrewdly observed film about getting old. O’Toole gives his best performance in years and newcomer Jodie Whittaker proves a feisty foil for the veteran star. Vanessa Redgrave and Leslie Phillips offer solid – and often touching – support. Director Roger Michell keeps things ticking along nicely and there are some standout comic scenes.

The Fountain is a hugely ambitious love story set across three different time periods and sees Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz play two different sets of characters. A Spanish Conquistador named Tomas, a present day oncologist and a futuristic astronaut all try to find the find the key to eternal life. Although there are certain things here to admire (not least Clint Mansell’s mournful score) this long delayed project from writer-director Darren Aronofsky is a major disappointment. The heavy themes are never properly developed and visually the film never opens out, so the actors are left all at sea with an undercooked script and some weird concepts.

Them features a French couple who stay in a Romanian country house and they find themselves stalked by some locals. A low budget but highly effective horror that avoids the usual pitfalls of the genre. More in the vein of Assault on Precinct 13 or Deliverance it has moments of genuine terror that easily surpasses the schlock of more recent mainstream fare. The fact that it is based on a real life tale about an Austrian couple in the Czech Republic makes it all the more disturbing.

FILMS OF THE WEEK: Venus and Them

> Get cinema showtimes for your local area via Google Movies
> Get other reviews for cinema releases at Metacritic

Categories
Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 26th January

Up for discussion this week on the podcast are Blood Diamond (an action drama starring Leonardo DiCaprio), Bobby (a historical drama set around the assassination of Bobby Kennedy in 1968), Venus (a bittersweet comedy starring Peter O’Toole as an aging actor), The Fountain (an ambitious sci-fi drama set across three different time periods) and Them (a chilling low budget horror).

We also speak to Joshua Jackson, one of the stars of Bobby, who talks about his character in the film and the rise in political films since 9/11.

Our DVD picks are World Trade Center and Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait.

Plus, our website of the week is DVD Price Check.

> Download it for free from Creation Podcasts
> Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes
> Subscribe to the RSS feed

Categories
Behind The Scenes Interviews

Behind the Scenes: Military Advice

John Adams of Universal CombatWhenever you see military action on screen the production has probably hired a military advisor to make sure things look accurate.

But what are the usual mistakes filmmakers make when portraying the military on screen? How does one become a military advisor? And why do action heroes always pull back the chamber of their pistol?

In order to find the answers to these questions and few more we spoke to John Adams from Universal Combat.

He has worked on projects as diverse as The Four Feathers, The Queen and the forthcoming The Mark of Cain. In the following interview he tells us about the world of military advice for films.

Ambrose Heron: What exactly do you do?
John Adams: I run Universal Combat Ltd., an agency which represents ex-military personnel and provides tri-service military advice and support to the entertainment industry. Universal Combat was formed in the year 2000 by former Commissioned Officers and NCOs representing Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine units from around the world.

Our primary goal was initially to provide the right military advisor to every specific project, but we quickly built up an extensive database of ex-military personnel and found that we could also provide small calls of trained background artists to perform specialist military action in front of camera. Basically, if a project features military action, we are there to advise the key production team and cast to ensure that it is as realistic as possible.

AH: Where are you based?
JA: Universal Combat is based in Chelmsford, Essex but I am also a partner in production company Cowboys & Indians plc and have an office at Shepperton Studios. The Shepperton office has proved vital because I am constantly aware of forthcoming productions and can ensure that we contact them at the earliest possible stage.

AH: How long have films had official military advice?
JA: To my knowledge, we were the first exclusively military agency in the UK and especially the first to set up with our aim to provide the correct military advisor with the relevant experience and qualifications specific to each project. However, military advisors have been commonplace in Hollywood for much longer. During the 1940s and 50s it was not uncommon for military support to be provided to productions by the Ministry of Defence as propaganda and to aid public relations.

More recently though, perhaps because modern films tend to be more politically and socially challenging, the MoD has tended not to become involved. Bear in mind that until 1960 we had National Service in the UK so it is a fair assumption that at that time most production team members and cast had a basic military training!

AH: How did you start out in the industry?
JA: Because of my military experience as a Commissioned Officer in the British Army, I was offered a nine month contract as a specialist background artist on Steven Spielberg’s Band of Brothers. It was during my time on Band of Brothers that I met my future partners in Universal Combat and developed my love for the industry and determination that my future was in film and TV. Band of Brothers was completed in November 2000.

We set up Universal Combat the following month and by mid 2001 we had provided a 76 year old former prisoner of war as an advisor to Hart’s War (starring Bruce Willis and Colin Farrell) and worked on The Four Feathers and submarine horror movie Below.

AH: What films have you worked on recently?
JA: Over the course of the last seven years, we have not only been employed on films but also on TV programmes, commercials, video games, live shows and even security contracts. Recent projects include providing advice and personnel to the Oscar nominated feature The Queen and a TV movie remake of The Shellseekers; training animators and designers from Electonic Arts developing the PS2 and X-Box video game Black in basic military skills relevant to the game; helping the writers of Eastenders to develop a new character for the series; and taking over the military advice role for the post production of the feature film Doom including providing US Marine voice artists for ADR work and writing additional dialogue.

AH: What did you do on The Queen?
JA: As far as possible, The Queen used original archive footage of the events surrounding the death of Princess Diana. However, one event for which they didn’t get the rights to use archive footage was the arrival of Princess Diana’s remains back in the UK at RAF Northolt on August 31st 1997. We were asked to recreate this as accurately as possible.

Initially, our intention was to use ex-soldiers from our database to perform the ceremonial coffin drills but because the RAF Regiment picked the youngest members of the Queen’s Colour Squadron to bear the coffin from the BAe 146 aircraft of the Royal Squadron to a waiting hearse we found that we didn’t have any ex-servicemen young enough for the roles. As a result, I trained a group of background artists in the correct drills and ended up in front of camera to whisper the commands and timings!

AH: What was the toughest challenge you had on a film set?
JA: Without mentioning any specific projects, providing military advice is always a compromise between the reality of a situation and the Director’s artistic vision for the film. Our job is to ensure that as much realism as possible is kept within the constraints of the project but in a way which compliments and helps the Director to achieve their vision without destroying the artistic integrity.

AH: What battle would you love to see re-enacted on screen that is yet to be done?
JA: Perhaps because of my military allegiances, I would love to see a film version of the battle of Salamanca. Salamanca was fought between the Anglo-Portuguese army of Lord Wellington and the French under Marshal Marmont on 22nd July 1812 as part of the Peninsular War. When Wellington observed that Marmont had made the tactical error of separating his left flank from the main body of his force, he allegedly threw the chicken leg he was eating over his shoulder and shouted, “By God, that will do!”.

During the course of the battle a young Officer from the 44th East Essex Regiment of Foot named Lieutenant Pearce captured the Salamanca Eagle from the French 62nd Regiment of Line. The 44th became part of The Essex Regiment which was subsequently amalgamated by stages into my unit The Royal Anglian Regiment in 1964. As an Army Cadet I was proud to bugle The Last Post and Reveille for veterans at the Essex Regiment reunion.

AH: What is the biggest mistake filmmakers tend to make when portraying the military?
JA: Strangely, it’s the little errors which stand out for me much more than the glaring ones. Most mistakes stem from a lack of knowledge which is understandable, but there are occasions when filmmakers show a complete lack of common sense! Again, I don’t want to cite specific projects we have worked on but my favourites are sentries smoking cigarettes at night and soldiers silhouetted against the skyline. For years military units around the world have been developing monocular vision goggles – a modern equivalent for the red dot you see in sniper movies at the intended point of impact except only visible to the sniper because the laser is at a frequency which can only be seen through the specific goggle he is wearing… All of this becomes irrelevant if a sentry is smoking at night because the heat of the cigarette creates an orange dot on his face! No professional soldier would risk his life for a smoke!

I’ve had conversations about soldiers on the horizon with directors on several occasions. Yes, it looks great on camera to have a silhouette of a soldier on the skyline at dusk, but he is breaking a fundamental rule of camouflage and concealment! The outline of a human shape lit from behind on a skyline is visible for miles. This may look artistic on film but it also means that the enemy can see him and his life expectancy just plummeted to about three seconds!

AH: In action films, characters often pull back the chamber of their pistol when preparing for a gunfight. Is this accurate or just Hollywood nonsense?
JA: It depends on the scenario. The weapon would almost certainly have been readied in advance and if silence is important then obviously a serious soldier would be confident enough not to check the chamber. However, once a firefight begins, it can be reassuring to check that a round is definitely loaded into the chamber and the weapon is ready to fire before exposing your position… and it does make a great noise!

AH: What other projects do you have coming up?
JA: We recently provided a military advisor to a feature titled Mark of Cain which is set during the most recent Iraq conflict and which is due for release early this year. Without giving too much away, we’ve also been asked to become involved in a film about the origins of the SAS; my production company Cowboys & Indians has two projects in development set in World War II; and as ever I will be attending the Berlin Film Festival next month and Cannes later in the year so hopefully this might be another busy year!

If you want to find out more about Universal Combat (or even hire them) just go to their website at www.universalcombat.co.uk

Universal Combat logo

 

Categories
Awards Season News

The Oscar Nominations in full

Here is the full list of nominees for the 79th Academy Awards. They will be held on Sunday 25th February at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles:

Best picture
Babel
The Departed
Letters From Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen

Best director
Clint Eastwood, Letters From Iwo Jima
Stephen Frears, The Queen
Paul Greengrass, United 93
Alejandro Gonzales Inarritu, Babel
Martin Scorsese, The Departed

Best actor
Leonardo DiCaprio, Blood Diamond
Ryan Gosling, Half Nelson
Peter O’Toole, Venus
Will Smith, The Pursuit of Happyness
Forest Whitaker, The Last King of Scotland

Best actress
Penelope Cruz, Volver
Judi Dench, Notes on a Scandal
Helen Mirren, The Queen
Meryl Streep, The Devil Wears Prada
Kate Winslet, Little Children

Best supporting actress
Adriana Barraza, Babel
Cate Blanchett, Notes on a Scandal
Abigail Breslin, Little Miss Sunshine
Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
Rinko Kikucki, Babel

Best supporting actor
Alan Arkin, Little Miss Sunshine
Jackie Earle Haley, Little Children
Djimon Hounsou, Blood Diamond
Eddie Murphy, Dreamgirls
Mark Wahlberg, The Departed

Best foreign language film
Efter Brylluppet (aka After the Wedding), Denmark
Indigenes (aka Days of Glory), Algeria
El Laberinto del Fauno (aka Pan’s Labyrinth), Mexico
Das Leben der Anderen (aka The Lives of Others), Germany
Water, Canada

Best animated feature film
Cars
Happy Feet
Monster House

Best adapted screenplay
Borat
Children of Men
The Departed
Little Children
Notes on a Scandal

Best original screenplay
Babel
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen
Pan’s Labyrinth

Best music (score)
Babel
The Good German
Notes on a Scandal
Pan’s Labyrinth
The Queen

Best music (song)
I Need to Wake Up – An Inconvenient Truth
Listen – Dreamgirls
Love You I Do – Dreamgirls
Our Town – Cars
Patience – Dreamgirls

Best documentary feature
Deliver Us From Evil
An Inconvenient Truth
Iraq In Fragments
Jesus Camp
My Country, My Country

Best documentary short subject
The Blood of Yingzhou District
Recycled Life
Rehearsing A Dream
Two Hands

Best visual effects
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Poseidon
Superman Returns

Best cinematography
The Black Dahlia
Children of Men
The Illusionist
Pan’s Labyrinth
The Prestige

Best art direction
Dreamgirls
The Good Shepherd
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
The Prestige

Best animated short film
The Danish Poet
Lifted
The Little Matchgirl
Maestro
No Time for Nuts

Best short film
Binta and the Great Idea
Eramos Pocos (One Too Many)
Helmer & Son
The Saviour
West Bank Story

Best costume design
Curse of the Golden Flower
The Devil Wears Prada
Dreamgirls
Marie Antoinette
The Queen

Best make-up
Apocalypto
Click
Pan’s Labyrinth

Best sound mixing
Apocalypto
Blood Diamond
Dreamgirls
Flags of our Fathers
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Sound editing
Apocalypto
Blood Diamond
Letters from Iwo Jima
Flags of our Fathers
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Best film editing
Babel
Blood Diamond
Children of Men
The Departed
United 93

> Find out more about the nominated films at Wikipedia

Categories
Awards Season

Oscar Nominations to be announced

Later today the Oscar nominations will be announced by Salma Hayek and Academy President Sid Ganis.

There are always a few surprises but here are my predictions for the main categories:

BEST PICTURE
The Departed
Dreamgirls
Babel
The Queen
Little Miss Sunshine

BEST DIRECTOR
Martin Scorcese (The Departed)
Bill Condon (Dreamgirls)
Paul Greengrass (United 93)
Stephen Frears (The Queen)
Alejandro Gonzalez Innarritu (Babel)

BEST ACTOR
Forest Whitaker (The Last King of Scotland)
Leonardo DiCaprio (The Departed)
Peter O’Toole (Venus)
Will Smith (The Pursuit of Happyness)
Ryan Gosling (Half Nelson)

BEST ACTRESS
Helen Mirren (The Queen)
Penelope Cruz (Volver)
Kate Winslet (Little Children)
Meryl Streep (The Devil Wears Prada)
Judi Dench (Notes on a Scandal).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Jack Nicholson (The Departed)
Eddie Murphy (Dreamgirls)
Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine)
Jackie Earle Haley (Little Children)
Djimon Hounsou (Blood Diamond)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls)
Cate Blanchett (Notes on a Scandal)
Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine)
Rinko Kikuchi (Babel)
Adriana Barraza (Babel)

They will be announced at 13.30 GMT and 05.30 PST.

> Check out more Oscar predictions and news at Oscarwatch
> CNN think the nominees are easy to predict

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews

DVD Pick for Monday 22nd January

Little Miss Sunshine is the real word of mouth success of the past year. Since it debuted at the Sundance Film Festival (almost exactly a year ago) it has won audiences and critics over with its charming brand of bittersweet comedy. It follows a dysfunctional family from Albuquerque as they drive to California in order to take their young daughter (Abigail Breslin) to a beauty pageant. A pushy father (Greg Kinnear), a stressed mother (Toni Collete), a depressed Proust scholar (Steve Carell) and a foul mouthed grandpa (Alan Arkin) all form the rich bag of misfits in the film.

First time directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris manage to create a genuinely charming comedy whilst avoiding easy cliches and schmaltz. It also neatly breaks a taboo of US pop culture in that it actually celebrates losers, rather than turning them in to bland success stories. Watch out for it at the BAFTAs and Oscars – it might not be this year’s Crash but it could certainly be a strong dark horse candidate.

> Check out reviews of the film at Metacritic
> Buy the DVD from Amazon

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 19th January

A really busy week at UK cinemas sees the release of no less than four major films. So if you can brave the extreme weather conditions you may find something worthwhile, especially if you are a fan of multi-layered dramas, boxing underdogs, Truman Capote or plucky Dutch girls in World War 2.

Babel is a thoughtful multi-layered drama from Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Innarritu. It bears many similarities to his previous two films (Amores Perros and 21 Grams) with its use of intertwining narratives but is more ambitious in scope and theme. A US couple in holiday in Morroco (Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett), a Mexican nanny and two children under her care and a Japanese teenager in Tokyo who are all connected by a single gunshot. The acting is first rate (watch out for a startling turn from Japanese newcomer Rinko Kikuchi) and the cinematography and editing is superb. A moving and intelligent film whose themes of miscommunication and clashing cultures are sadly all too relevant in today’s world.

Incredibly Rocky is back for his sixth film in Rocky Balboa and Sylvester Stallone returns as both star and director. Here Rocky is persuaded to come out of retirement when ESPN stage a simulated fight on computer between Rocky and current World champ Mason “The Line” Dixon. His promoters think an exhibition match could be a money spinner so they persuade the aging Italian Stallion to fight in Vegas. Although the Rocky series should really have ended years ago Stallone wisely infuses this with the understatement and low key charm that made the first one such a hit.

Infamous is the ‘other’ film about Truman Capote writing In Cold Blood was unfortunate to go in to production around the same time as Bennett Miller’s Capote that came out last year. That film was widely acclaimed and Philip Seymour Hoffman won an Oscar for his brilliant central performance. This film is not as good, but there is still much to admire, especially the acting which is uniformly excellent. Toby Jones stands out with a performance that certainly merits comparison to Hoffman’s portrayal and Daniel Craig gives killer Perry Smith a brooding intensity that wasn’t in the other version. Its not as technically accomplished as Capote but still worth a look.

Dutch director Paul Verhoeven returned to his native country to direct Black Book, a World War 2 drama about a Jewish woman who joins the Resistance in Holland as it endures Nazi occupation. When her family are killed she goes undercover but has to deal with double crosses and intrigue from both sides. Carice van Houten in the lead role gives an impressive performance and the film is well paced. However, beneath all the well staged action the film doesn’t really grapple with any deep issues. It is more interesting than Verhoeven’s recent Hollywood films but could have been something really special.

FILM OF THE WEEK: Babel

> Get cinema showtimes for your local area via Google Movies

Categories
Awards Season Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 19th January

On this week’s podcast we discuss all the latest cinema releases which include Babel, Rocky Balboa and Black Book.

Plus, we also chat to Douglas McGrath, the director of Infamous and speak to him about how he dealt with being the ‘other’ film about Truman Capote and his thoughts on adapting the story.

We also discuss the winners and losers at this week’s Golden Globes and what it means for the Oscars.

Our DVD pick is Little Miss Sunshine and our Website of the Week is DVDfile.com

> Download the podcast from Creation Podcasts

Categories
Amusing News

The Genius of George Bush

Some bright spark has compiled an impressive selection of George W Bush gaffes and edited them together to music.

[youtube]Bi84LJLRjaM[/youtube]

Categories
Amusing News

Borat in 30 seconds

Those clever folks at Angry Alien productions have created an animated 30 second version of Borat.

> Angry Alien Productions
> Pulp Fiction in 30 seconds

Categories
Awards Season News

Golden Globe winners

The Golden Globes were held last night and although their status as an Oscar indicator is questionable they are still an important part of the build to the big event.

Anyway, here are the nominees and winners in full:

Best film (drama)

Babel
Also nominated:
Bobby
Little Children
The Queen
The Departed

Best film (musical or comedy)

Dreamgirls
Also nominated:
Borat
Little Miss Sunshine
Thank You For Smoking
The Devil Wears Prada

Best director

Martin Scorsese – The Departed

Also nominated:
Clint Eastwood – Flags of Our Fathers
Clint Eastwood – Letters from Iwo Jima
Stephen Frears – The Queen
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu – Babel

Best actor (drama)

Forest Whitaker – The Last King of Scotland

Also nominated:
Leonardo DiCaprio – Blood Diamond
Leonardo DiCaprio – The Departed
Peter O’Toole – Venus
Will Smith – The Pursuit of Happyness

Best actor (musical or comedy)

Sacha Baron Cohen – Borat
Also nominated:
Johnny Depp – Pirates of the Caribbean
Aaron Eckhart – Thank You For Smoking
Chiwetel Ejiofor – Kinky Boots
Will Ferrell – Stranger Than Fiction

Best actress (drama)

Helen Mirren – The Queen
Also nominated:
Penelope Cruz – Volver
Judi Dench – Notes on a Scandal
Maggie Gyllenhaal – Sherrybaby
Kate Winslet – Little Children

Best actress (musical or comedy)

Meryl Streep – The Devil Wears Prada
Also nominated:
Annette Bening – Running With Scissors
Toni Collette – Little Miss Sunshine
Beyonce Knowles – Dreamgirls
Renee Zellweger – Miss Potter

Best supporting actor

Eddie Murphy – Dreamgirls
Also nominated:
Ben Affleck – Hollywoodland
Jack Nicholson – The Departed
Brad Pitt – Babel
Mark Wahlberg – The Departed

Best supporting actress

Jennifer Hudson – Dreamgirls
Also nominated:
Adriana Barraza – Babel
Cate Blanchett – Notes on a Scandal
Emily Blunt – The Devil Wears Prada
Rinko Kikuchi – Babel

Best foreign language film

Letters From Iwo Jima (US)
Also nominated:
Apocalypto (US)
Pan’s Labyrinth (Mexico)
The Lives of Others (Germany)
Volver (Spain)

Best animated feature film

Cars
Also nominated:
Happy Feet
Monster House
 

Best screenplay

Peter Morgan – The Queen
Also nominated:
Guillermo Arriaga – Babel
Todd Field and Tom Perrotta – Little Children
Patrick Marber – Notes on a Scandal
William Monahan – The Departed

Best original song

The Song of the Heart – Happy Feet
Also nominated:
Listen – Dreamgirls
Never Gonna Break My Faith – Bobby
Try Not to Remember – Home of the Brave
A Father’s Way – The Pursuit of Happyness

Best original score

Alexandre Desplat – The Painted Veil
Also nominated:
Clint Mansell – The Fountain
Gustavo Santaolalla – Babel
Carlo Siliotto – Nomad
Hans Zimmer – The Da Vinci Code

Cecil B DeMille Award – lifetime achievement
Warren Beatty

Categories
Interviews

James McAvoy on The Last King of Scotland

I recently spoke to actor James McAvoy about his role in The Last King of Scotland.

Listen to the interview here:

> Find out more about Idi Amin at Wikipedia
> IMDb entry for James McAvoy

Categories
Awards Season News

BAFTA Nominations

The BAFTA nominations were announced today and The Queen is the front runner with ten nominations although the other key contenders are Babel (seven nominations), The Departed (six nominations), Little Miss Sunshine (six nominations) and The Last King of Scotland (five nominations).

The awards will be held at the Royal Opera House on Sunday 11th February and here is the list in full:

Best film
The Queen
Babel
The Last King of Scotland
The Departed
Little Miss Sunshine

Best British film
The Queen
Casino Royale
The Last King of Scotland
Notes on a Scandal
United 93

Best actor in a leading role

Daniel Craig – Casino Royale
Forest Whitaker – The Last King of Scotland
Leonardo DiCaprio – The Departed
Peter O’Toole – Venus
Richard Griffiths – The History Boys

Best actress in a leading role

Dame Helen Mirren – The Queen
Dame Judi Dench – Notes on a Scandal
Kate Winslet – Little Children
Penelope Cruz – Volver
Meryl Streep – The Devil Wears Prada

Best actor in a supporting role

Alan Arkin – Little Miss Sunshine
James McAvoy – The Last King of Scotland
Jack Nicholson – The Departed
Leslie Phillips – Venus
Michael Sheen – The Queen

Best actress in a supporting role

Emily Blunt – The Devil Wears Prada
Abigail Breslin – Little Miss Sunshine
Toni Colette – Little Miss Sunshine
Frances De La Tour – The History Boys
Jennifer Hudson – Dreamgirls

Original screenplay

Guillermo Arriaga – Babel
Michael Arndt – Little Miss Sunshine
Guillermo del Toro – Pan’s Labryinth
Peter Morgan – The Queen
Paul Greengrass – United 93

Adapted screenplay

Neal Purvis/Robert Wade/Paul Haggis – Casino Royale
William Monahan – The Departed
Aline Brosh McKenna – The Devil Wears Prada
Peter Morgan/Jeremy Brock – The Last King Of Scotland
Patrick Marber – Notes On A Scandal

The David Lean Award for achievement in direction

Martin Scorsese – The Departed
Jonathan Dayton/Valerie Faris – Little Miss Sunshine
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu – Babel
Stephen Frears – The Queen
Paul Greengrass – United 93
 

Animated feature film
Cars
Flushed Away
Happy Feet

The Carl Foreman Award for special achievement by a British director/producer or writer in their first feature film
Andrea Arnold – director (for Red Road)
Julian Gilbey – director (for Rollin’ with the Nines)
Christine Langan – producer (for Pierrepoint)
Gary Tarn – director (for Black Sun)
Paul Andrew Williams – director (for London to Brighton)

Best film not in the English language
Apocalypto
Black Book
Pan’s Labyrinth
Paint it Yellow
Volver

The Anthony Asquith Award for achievement in film music
Gustavo Santaolalla – Babel
David Arnold – Casino Royale
Henry Krieger – Dreamgirls
John Powell – Happy Feet
Alexandre Desplat – The Queen

Cinematography
Babel
Casino Royale
Children of Men
Pan’s Labyrinth
United 93

Editing
Babel
Casino Royale
The Departed
The Queen
United 93

Production design
Casino Royale
Children of Men
Marie Antoinette
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Costume design
The Devil Wears Prada
Marie Antoinette
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
The Queen

Sound
Babel
Casino Royale
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
United 93

Achievement in special visual effects
Casino Royale
Children of Men
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Superman Returns

Make up and hair
The Devil Wears Prada
Marie Antoinette
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
The Queen

Short animation film
Dream’s and Desires – Family Ties
Guy 101
Peter and the Wolf

Short Film
Care
Cubs
Do Not Erase
Hikikomori
Kissing, Tickling and Being Bored

> Official site for BAFTA
> Variety with their take on the nominations

Categories
Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 12th January

On this week’s podcast we discuss the The Pursuit of Happyness and speak director Gabriele Muccino about the film and how he got appraoched by Will Smith to make it.

We also take a look at The Last King of Scotland and talk to actor James McAvoy about who his character is based on and the deeper issues surrounding this gripping drama.

The other film up for analysis is Smokin’ Aces, the thriller (or is it a black comedy?) directed by Joe Carnahan.

Our DVD pick this week is Children of Men, the brilliant futuristic drama set in a world where people have stopped giving birth. Directed by Alfonso Cuaron and starring Clive Owen, Julianne Moore and Michael Caine, it is one of the best films of last year.

Our website of the week is the very handy DVD Easter Eggs

> Download this week’s Movie Cast from Creation Podcasts
> Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes
> Subscribe to the podcast via RSS feed

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 12th January

It might be dark and miserable every January (well, here in London at least) but it is usually a great time to visit the cinema as a lot of films in contention for awards are getting released now.

This week sees the red hot favourite for the Best Actor Oscar hit UK screens and what a performance it is as Forest Whitaker stars as former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin in The Last King of Scotland. A riveting adaptation of Giles Foden’s semi-fictional novel. The story involves a young Scottish doctor (James McAvoy) who travels to Uganda and by chance and opportunity becomes Amin’s personal physician. Initially charmed by the leader he slowly realises the awful truth about regime he has become part of. Directed by Kevin MacDonald (the man responsible for the brilliant documentaries One Day in September and Touching the Void) it is cleverly written, well acted and features a truly mesmerising central performance from Whitaker.

Another film out this week with an impressive lead performance is The Pursuit of Happyness, in which Will Smith leaves his usual wisecracking persona at home. He stars in this true life tale of a salesman in San Francisco during the early 80s who struggles to cope financially when he seeks a better job. Although this has been marketed as an uplifting syrupy drama it is actually a moving and accomplished drama with Smith doing his best work since Ali and Six Degrees of Separation. Italian director Gabriele Muccino gives a fresh perspective to the source material and – despite the overall nature of the story – explores poverty with a sharper eye than you might expect for a mainstream studio film.

Director Joe Carnahan impressed with 2002’s gritty cop drama Narc, but with his latest film he has overstretched himself. Smokin’ Aces is about a mob entertainer (Jeremy Piven) who is targeted by several assassins who have all been hired to bump him off. Two FBI agents (Ray Liotta and Ryan Reynolds) must ensure that he stays alive and travel to his Lake Tahoe hotel where, eventually, all hell breaks loose. It features a lot of jumbled narrative flashbacks and some slick editing but despite a few effective scenes here and there comes across as a confusing and messy B-movie. Think the Wacky Races (with hit men) crossed with Ocean’s 11 – only done badly.

FILM OF THE WEEK: The Last King of Scotland

> Get cinema times for your area via Google

Categories
Amusing Trailers

Tom Hanks as James Bond

This trailer mashup from Dan Perrault and Matt Dahan of Double D Enterprises and Chocolate Cake City depicts Tom Hanks as the next Bond.

It is very funny, with some clever use of old Hanks films (especially the final line) 

[youtube]9wOcQr-2-pE[/youtube]

[Link via Anne Thompson at RiskyBizBlog]

Categories
Images In Production Interesting

The Bourne Ultimatum at Waterloo

I got the train into Waterloo this morning and as soon as I got off platform 10 I noticed that the crew from The Bourne Ultimatum were filming there today.

I saw director Paul Greengrass in discussion with actor Paddy Considine and later on noticed Matt Damon and producer Frank Marshall. They were filming there last October so maybe they are back to do pickup shots.

What struck me was how laidback (yet professional) the whole thing was. Despite the presence of a big star and one of England’s best directors, commuters went about their business as usual without causing any fuss.

Here are some pictures:


Director Paul Greengrass in discussions with actor Paddy Consindine


Matt Damon and Paul Greengrass in discussion with producer Frank Marshall (in the centre of the picture)


The camera and some extras


Poster informing commuters that filming is happening today


Some of the crew by the monitors


Some boxes and lights


Matt Damon (in the centre of the picture about an inch right of the “sale” sign)

The film is the third Bourne film (after 2002’s The Bourne Identity and 2004’s The Bourne Supremacy) and is scheduled for release later this year on August 3rd.

> Find out more about the film at Wikipedia
> IMDb entry for The Bourne Ultimatum
> Check out a set photos over at Flickr

Categories
Awards Season Essential Films

Why Children of Men should be nominated for Best Picture

This YouTube video singing the praises of Children of Men is a grass roots viral that neatly emphasises why the film is wholly deserving of a Best Picture nomination.

[youtube]-lfs1UIKALQ[/youtube]

> My original review of Children of Men
> Reviews of Children of Men at Metacritic

Categories
Podcast Reviews

The Movie Cast for Friday 5th January

On the first podcast of 2007 we take a look at Mel Gibson’s new historical epic Apocalypto, Renee Zellwegger in Miss Potter and Robert Altman’s last film A Prairie Home Companion.

Our DVD pick this week is Thank You For Smoking and we also speak to its director, Jason Reitman.

Our website of the week is the ghoulishly comprehensive Cinemorgue.

> Download this week’s Movie Cast from Creation Podcasts
> Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes
> Subscribe to the podcast via RSS feed

Categories
Reviews

Cinema Picks for Friday 5th January

The thing to see at cinemas this week (provided you can cope with the extreme levels of violence) is Mel Gibson’s latest historical epic Apocalypto. Whilst he may have have a few lessons to learn about alcohol and race relations, he sure knows how to film a sweeping historical drama. Since winning the Oscar with Braveheart in 1996 and making The Passion of the Christ in 2004 he has grown into an accomplished director.

The film depicts the experiences of one tribesman during the last days of the Maya civilization. After being captured and taken for human sacrifice he has to find a way to escape and get back to his village. It is a brutal and at times sadistic film but is also a gripping experience with a dazzling production design. It might not suit everyone’s tastes but credit to Gibson for using his money to make a film as startling and uncommerical as this.

Also out at cinemas this week is the last film from the late and great director Robert Altman. A Prairie Home Companion is adapted from the long running US radio show and features a terrific cast with the likes of Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, John C Reilly and Woody Harrelson. There is a nice bittersweet quality to the film and in retrospect it is a nice swan song to the maverick director. However, despite positive aspects to the film it isn’t in the same league as his best work like Nashville, MASH or The Player.

Miss Potter is a biopic of famed children’s writer Beatrix Potter, here played by Renee Zellwegger. Although Renee does a mean English accent the film is sloppy, sentimental and wastes Ewan MacGregor in a poorly written supporting role.

FILM OF THE WEEK: Apocalypto

> Get cinema showtimes for your local area from Google