Categories
News

Empire’s Done In 60 Seconds Competition 2009

Empire Jameson logoEmpire magazine are running their Done in 60 Seconds competition again this year.

This involves them challenging budding film makers to put together a 1 minute video of their interpretation of a film.

The entries are submitted and the winner gets an Empire Award presented to them at the Empire Awards aswell as having their 60 second video played at the ceremony.

Here is a compilation of last years entries:

The rules remain basically the same: your movie must be a 60 second remake of a feature film and not involve any copyright infringement, ie music, product placement or nudity.

The only other stipulation they have this year, as 2009 marks Empire’s 20th year, is that the film you choose was made during Empire’s lifetime (ie, since 1989).

Here are a list of do’s and don’ts

Do

  • Remake a movie of your choice from 1989 onwards (no originality required)
  • Use your friends and family (make sure your cast have agreed to perform)
  • As many as you want (it’s your time)
  • Feel free to ‘adapt’ the film to fit the format (you don’t have to be completely faithful)

Don’t

  • Go over one minute in length, you’ll be disqualified
  • Slander anyone (Empire have an aversion to court cases)
  • Do pornography, we are trying to run a decent magazine here
  • Use any footage that is not your own (no ‘mashing’ allowed)

To enter just visit the Awards section at the Empire site:

http://www.empireonline.com/awards2009/done-in-60-seconds/

Categories
News

UK Release Date for In The Loop

In the Loop

A UK release date has been announced for In the Loop, the political satire which played to considerable acclaim at Sundance recently.

It will open the Glasgow Film Festival on February 12th and will be released nationwide by Optimum Releasing on Friday 17thĀ Ā April.

Directed byĀ Armando Iannucci,Ā it is a loose spinoff of the TV seriesĀ The Thick of ItĀ and starsĀ Tom Hollander,Ā James Gandolfini,Ā Chris Addison,Ā Peter Capaldi,Ā Gina McKeeĀ andĀ Steve Coogan.

Here is the official press release:

Optimum Releasing presents IN THE LOOP, a devastatingly sharp political comedy from the reigning king of satire, writer and director Armando Iannucci (The Thick of It, The Day Today, Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge).

Following its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, IN THE LOOP will open the Glasgow Film Festival on February 12th 2009 and will be opening in cinemas across the United Kingdom on April 17th 2009.

IN THE LOOP is a foul-mouthed comedy that draws on non-specific events to create a world that is terrifyingly familiar: The US President and UK Prime Minister fancy a war, but not everyone agrees that war is a ā€˜good thing’. US General Miller (James Gandolfini) certainly doesn’t think so and neither does the British Secretary of State for International Development, Simon Foster (Tom Hollander).

But when the mild-mannered minister inadvertently appears to back the war on prime-time television, he immediately attracts the attention of the PM’s venomously aggressive communications chief Malcolm Tucker (reprised from The Thick of It by Peter Capaldi), who latches onto him like a hawk. Soon, the Brits are in Washington, where diplomatic relations collide with trans-Atlantic spin doctors and Foster’s off-hand remark quickly spirals into an insurmountable ā€˜mountain of conflict’.

Foster quickly becomes the oblivious plaything of the US and British government, on the one side by Malcolm Tucker, on the other by paranoid US Assistant Secretary for Diplomacy Karen Clarke (Mimi Kennedy) and her ambitious intern Liza Weld (Anna Chlumsky). The loyal British delegation at Foster’s side consists largely of his new aide Toby (comedian Chris Addison), whose inept attempts to preserve his job are matched only by his hapless bid to sleep with US intern Liza.

Meanwhile, the minister’s efficient and thoroughly skeptical Director of Communications Judy (Gina McKee) has been left behind in London to deal with the breaking story of an angry constituent and his collapsing garden wall (Steve Coogan). It soon becomes clear that the light at the end of Simon Foster’s tunnel is likely to be an oncoming ballistic missile.

Armando Iannucci reunites the award-winning writing team behind The Thick of It, bringing together collaborative writers Jesse Armstrong and Simon Blackwell (The Old Guys, The Thick of It, Peep Show), Tony Roche (The Thick of It, Alistair McGowan’s Big Impression), producers Adam Tandy (The Thick of It, I’m Alan Partridge, The Armando Iannucci Shows) and Kevin Loader (History Boys, Brideshead Revisited).

IN THE LOOP is shot in a pseudo-documentary style, incorporating Iannucci’s infamous improvisational techniques, creating an unforgiving, lightning-fast comedy peppered with razor-sharp expletives, which gives a frighteningly uncomfortable sense of how things really might be.

This is a Sundance Channel report on the premiere:

> In the Loop at the IMDb
> The Guardian and The Times report on the reaction at Sundance

Categories
Interesting News

C-SPAN Interview with John Updike

A lengthy C-SPAN interview from 2005 with author John Updike, who died recently.

> C-SPAN BooknotesĀ 
> Find out more about John Updike at Wikipedia

Categories
News

DEC Gaza Crisis Appeal

This is the DEC Gaza Crisis video that the BBC and Sky NewsĀ wouldn’t air.

You can donate online at www.dec.org.uk

DEC Members include: ActionAid, British Red Cross, CAFOD, Care International UK, Christian Aid, Concern Worldwide, Help the Aged, Islamic Relief, Merlin, Oxfam, Save the Children, Tearfund and World Vision UK.

Ironically, the BBC’s refusal to show the video has resulted in an avalanche of publicity that will probably be beneficial to the appeal.

> Official site for the DEC
> Find out more about the conflict at WikipediaĀ andĀ BBC News

Categories
Box Office News

Slumdog Millionaire still top of the UK Box Office

Slumdog Millionaire

Slumdog Millionaire is still top of the UK box office despite a raft of high profile films opening last Friday.Ā 

A combination of awards season buzz, word of mouth and the fact that it is really good, helped it take £2.8 million over the weekend, which leaves its current UK gross at £10.2 million.

Given that its production budget was just $15, this is very good indeed. And all this despite a terrible UK poster.

Fantasy horror sequel Underworld: Rise of The Lycans opened at five, whilst Oscar contender Frost/Nixon came in at nine.

Best picture nominee Milk made its debut at 14 in limited release.

Here are the top 15 films at the UK box office:

  1. Slumdog Millionaire (Pathe) £2,806,996 / £10,239,371
  2. Valkyrie (Fox) £1,854,195 / £1,854,195
  3. My Bloody Valentine (Lionsgate) £1,182,514 / £3,347,088
  4. Seven Pounds (Sony) 2 £1,089,129 / £3,356,438
  5. Underworld 3 (Entertainment) £990,285 / £990,285
  6. Role Models (Universal) £951,449 / £6,157,336
  7. Bride Wars (Fox) £950,538 / £5,351,888
  8. Beverly Hills Chihuahua (Disney) £918,808 / £2,112,937
  9. Frost/Nixon (Universal) £591,847 / £591,411
  10. Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa (Paramount) £408,315 / £22,323,063
  11. The Wrestler (Optimum) £374,214 / £1,592,098
  12. Milk (Momentum) £336,027 / £336,027
  13. Defiance (Momentum) £331,680 / £3,309,194
  14. Bedtime Stories (Disney) £326,634 / £8,084,449
  15. The Reader (Entertainment) £293,800 / £3,311,282

N.B. Box office numbers for the weekend are followed by the total UK gross.

> Listen to our interview with Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle
> The Times report on Slumdog’s successĀ 

[Box Office Data courtesy ofĀ Nielsen EDI]

Categories
News

Variety layoffs

Variety bloodbathIndustry trade paper Variety have announced a raft of layoffs.

Those let go include:Ā 

  • Anne ThompsonĀ 
  • Diane GarrettĀ 
  • Mike JonesĀ 
  • Phil GalloĀ 
  • Andrew BarkerĀ 
  • Lisa WeinsteinĀ 
  • Martha HernandezĀ 
  • Alys MarshallĀ 
  • Byron PerryĀ 
  • Ben FritzĀ 
  • Jeff Sneider

The trade have issued the following statement about who has ‘ankled‘:

“Due to the economic downturn, some 30 staffers will be trimmed by Reed Business in Los Angeles.

The staff reductions span corporate, editorial, sales and other personnel.

Among the businesses involved areĀ Daily Variety,Ā 411,Video BusinessĀ andĀ Trade Show Week.

Neil Stiles, president and publisher ofĀ Variety, said: ā€œWe continue to have confidence in the long-term growth of our businesses, but the economic realities of the moment call for a degree of belt-tightening.ā€

ā€œThe modest staff cuts will in no way compromise the editorial integrity ofVarietyĀ orĀ Daily Variety,ā€ said editor-in-chief Peter Bart, who acknowledged that several of those cut were reporters and copy editors.

ā€œHowever, Neil and I deeply regret that any personnel had to be let go in these difficult times.ā€

It is another sign that things are getting worse not only in the wider economy but also in the media.

Thompson was recruited by Variety in 2007Ā from the Hollywood Reporter and her Thompson on Hollywood blog was always a useful source of news and comment on the film industry.

She has written that she’ll keep the blog goingĀ and is also involved in a web start-up which is in ‘stealth mode’ and should ‘launch soon’, as well asĀ teaching film criticism at USC.

In many ways the trade paper’s relatively recent foray into blogs and new media was a positive one, even though at times editor-in-chief Peter Bart has seemed a reluctant convert.

But the immediate cause for these deep cuts would appear to be a major advertising downturn, in particular the awards season advertising upon which a paper like Variety feeds.

David Poland at The Hot Blog has written more about how the continued awards success of Slumdog Millionaire is costing Variety ‘for your consideration‘ ad money, who would prefer the heavier marketing spend of ‘The Curious Case of Benjamin Button’.

This may be true but the size of these cuts seem to hint at deeper problems, not only for a major publication like Variety but also for smaller outlets who all rely on advertising.

In the meantime we can only hope that all those affected get back on their feet soon.

> Variety announce the cutsĀ 
>Ā Nikki Finke, Defamer and Hollywood ElsewhereĀ have their say

Categories
Awards Season News

SAG Winners

SAG LogoThe winners for this year’s Screen Actor’s Guild Awards have been announced.

They have been going sinceĀ 1995 and are often seen as an important indicator of where the acting Oscars may end up.

Nominations for the awards come from 4200 randomly selected members of the union, with the full membership (120,000 as of 2007) available to vote for the winners.

Here they are in two different categories:

FILM

Ensemble Cast:Ā Slumdog Millionaire
Lead Actress:Ā Meryl Streep, Doubt
Lead Actor:Ā Sean Penn, Milk
Supporting Actress:Ā Kate Winslet, The Reader
Supporting Actor:Ā Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight

Lifetime Achievement Award:Ā James Earl Jones

[ad]

TELEVISION

Lead Actress, Comedy Series:Ā Tina Fey, 30 Rock
Lead Actor, Comedy Series:Ā Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock
Ensemble Cast, Comedy Series:Ā 30 Rock
Lead Acress, Drama Series: Sally Field, Brothers & Sisters
Lead Actor, Drama Series:Ā Hugh Laurie, House
Ensemble Cast, Drama Series:Ā Mad Men
Lead Actress, Miniseries:Ā Laura Linney, John Adams
Lead Actor, Miniseries:Ā Paul Giamatti, John Adams

> Official SAG awards site
> Find out more about SAG at Wikipedia

Categories
Awards Season News

Oscar Nominations

Oscar NominationsThe Oscar nominations have been announced for the 81st Academy Awards.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button leads the field with 13 nominations, including Best Picture.

Other Best Picture contenders are Frost/Nixon, Milk, The Reader and Slumdog Millionaire.

They were announced Thursday morning at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences in Los Angeles by Academy President Sid Ganis and actor Forest Whitaker.

In 15 of the last 20 years, the film with the most nominations went on to win Best Picture, but that trend has changed in recent years with the top nominee only winning best pic in two of the last five years.

The awards take place onĀ Sunday 22nd FebruaryĀ at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood and will be hosted by Hugh Jackman.

Here are the nominations in full:

BEST PICTURE

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Frost/Nixon
  • Milk
  • The Reader
  • Slumdog Millionaire

BEST DIRECTOR

  • Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
  • David Fincher, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Ron Howard, Frost/Nixon
  • Stephen Daldry, The Reader
  • Gus Van Sant, Milk

BEST ACTRESS

  • Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married
  • Angelina Jolie, Changeling
  • Melissa Leo, Frozen River
  • Meryl Streep, Doubt
  • Kate Winslet, The Reader

BEST ACTOR

  • Richard Jenkins, The Visitor
  • Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon
  • Sean Penn, Milk
  • Brad Pitt, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

  • Amy Adams, Doubt
  • Penelope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
  • Viola Davis, Doubt
  • Taraji P. Hensen, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Marisa Tomei, The Wrestler

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

  • Josh Brolin, Milk
  • Robert Downey Jr, Tropic Thunder
  • Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
  • Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
  • Michael Shannon, Revolutionary Road

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

  • Courtney Hunt, Frozen River
  • Mike Leigh, Happy-Go-Lucky
  • Dustin Lance Black, Milk
  • Martin McDonough, In Bruges
  • Andrew Stanton, Wall-E

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

  • Eric Roth, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • John Patrick Shanley, Doubt
  • Peter Morgan, Frost/Nixon
  • David Hare, The Reader
  • Simon Beaufoy, Slumdog Millionaire

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

  • Bolt
  • Kung Fu Panda
  • WALL-E

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

  • The Baader Meinhof Complex
  • The Class
  • Departures
  • Revanche
  • Waltz With Bashir

BEST DOCUMENTARY

  • The Betrayal (Nerakhoon)
  • Encounters at the End of the World
  • The Garden
  • Man on Wire
  • Trouble the Water

BEST ORIGINAL SONG

  • ā€œDown To Earthā€ (WALL-E)
  • ā€œJai Hoā€ (Slumdog Millionaire)
  • ā€œO Sayaā€ (Slumdog Millionaire)

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Alexandre Desplat
  • Defiance, James Newton Howard
  • Milk, Danny Elfman
  • Slumdog Millionaire, A.R. Rahman
  • WALL-E, Thomas Newman

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

  • Australia, Catherine Martin
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Jacqueline West
  • The Duchess,Michael O’Connor
  • Milk,Ā Danny Glicker
  • Revolutionary Road, Albert Wolsky

BEST FILM EDITING

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Kirk Baxter & Angus Wall
  • The Dark Knight, Lee Smith
  • Frost/Nixon, Mike Hill & Dan Hanley
  • Milk, Elliot Graham
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Chris Dickens

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

  • Changeling, Tom Stern
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Claudio Miranda
  • The Dark Night, Wally Pfister
  • The Reader, Chris Menges & Roger Deakins
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Anthony Dod Mantle

BEST ART DIRECTION

  • Changeling, James J. Murakami, Gary Fettis
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Donald Graham Burt & Victor J. Zolfo
  • The Dark Night, Nathan Crowley, Peter Lando
  • The Duchess, Michael Carlin, Rebecca Alleway
  • Revolutionary Road, Kristi Zea, Debra Schutt

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

  • Australia, Catherine Martin
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Jacqueline West
  • The Duchess, Michael O’Connor
  • Milk, Danny Glicker
  • Revolutionary Road, Albert Wolsky

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Eric Barba, Steve Preeg, Burt Dalton, Craig Barron
  • The Dark Knight, Nick Davis, Chris Corbould, Tim Webber, Paul Franklin
  • Iron Man, John Nelson, Ben Snow, Dan Sudick, Shane Mahan

BEST SOUND EDITING

  • The Dark Knight, Richard King
  • Iron Man, Frank Eulner, Christopher Boyes
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Tom Sayers
  • WALL-E, Ben Burtt, Matthew Wood
  • Wanted, Wylie Stateman

BEST SOUND MIXING

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, David Parker, Michael Semanick, Ren Klyce, Mark Weingarten
  • The Dark Knight, Lora Hirschberg, Gary Rizzo, Ed Novick
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Ian Tapp, Richard Pryke, Resul Pookutty
  • WALL-E, Tom Myers, Michael Semanick, Ben Burtt
  • Wanted, Chris Jenkins, Frank A. MontaƱo, Petr Forejt

BEST MAKEUP

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Greg Cannom
  • The Dark Knight, John Caglione, Jr., Conor O’Sullivan
  • Hellboy II: The Golden Army, Mike Elizalde, Thom Floutz

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT

  • The Conscience of Nhem En, Steven Okazaki
  • The Final Inch, Irene Taylor Brodsky, Tom Grant
  • Smile Pinki, Megan Mylan
  • The Witness – From the Balcony of Room 306, Adam Petofsky, Margaret Hyde

BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM

  • La Maison de Petits Cubes, Kunio Kato
  • Lavatory – Lovestory, Konstantin Bronzit
  • Oktapodi, Emud Mokhberi, Thierry Marchand
  • Presto, Doug Sweetland
  • This Way Up, Alan Smith, Adam Foulkes

BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM

  • Auf der Strecke (On the Line), Reto Caffi
  • Manon on the Asphalt, Elizabeth Marre, Olivier Pont
  • New Boy, Steph Green, Tamara Anghie
  • The Pig, Tivi Magnusson, Dorte HĆøgh
  • Spielzeugland (Toyland), Jochen Alexander Freydan

> Official Oscar site
> Follow more analysis at Awards Daily and In Contention

Categories
Amusing News

Dick Cheney: Bad action movie villain?

Is it just me or does Dick Cheney look like a bad action movie villain in this photo from today’s inauguration?

Dick Cheney villain

He hadĀ pulled a muscle in his back, which explained the wheelchair, but all the guy needed was a white cat and he would have beenĀ Ernst Stavro Blofeld.Ā 

Marvel commissioned a special Spider-Man meets Obama comic recently but now – as I’ve suggested before – they really need to do another forĀ the outgoing vice-president.Ā 

A teamup withĀ Kingpin would be appropriate.Ā 

Dick Cheney and Kingpin

Marvel describeĀ the bald-headed Spidey villain (aka Wilson Fisk) as:

…a criminal mastermind who is involved in extensive illegal activities such as drug running, smuggling, murder, and so forth.

Despite this, he has no criminal record and an army of lawyers to keep it that way, and is a criminal financial strategist without parallel.Ā 

Remind you ofĀ anyone?

[Photo via Popurls]

Categories
News

President Barack Obama 2009 Inauguration and Address

The swearing in and inauguration speech in full from C-SPAN.

Categories
News

The Inauguration of Barack Obama – Live

Categories
News Technology video

Download videos on YouTube

Interesting things are happening on YouTube, as you can now officially download selected videos from the site.

One such video is President-Elect Obama’s recent weekly address:

The above is an embed but if you view the video on the actual site you will see more options.

Obama address on YouTube regular

For example you can also view it in HD:

Obama address in HD

But on the bottomĀ left of the video you will see a link saying ‘click to download’:

Obama address on YouTube download linkIf you click on it then you can download the video as an MP4 video file to your computer.Ā 

[Link via Lessig]

Categories
News

Warner Bros and Fox settle Watchmen lawsuit

WB Watchmen Fox

Warner Bros andĀ 20th Century Fox have settled their differences overĀ Watchmen and the film will now definitely be released on March 6th.

For those unfamiliar with the case, Fox brought aĀ copyright lawsuit against Warner Bros last February,Ā assertingĀ that in a series of legal agreements in 1991 and 1994, they retained distribution rights to a film based on theĀ Watchmen graphic novel.

On Christmas Eve,Ā Judge Gary Feess ruledĀ that Fox owned a distribution interest in the film and a trial was scheduled for January 20th.

Variety report the details:

Warner Bros. gets the right to open its superhero pic on March 6 as planned, and Fox’s logo will not be on the film, sources said.

Fox, on the other hand, will emerge with an upfront cash payment that sources pegged between $5 million and $10 million, covering reimbursement of $1.4 million the studio invested in development fees, and also millions of dollars in legal fees incurred during the case.

More importantly, Fox will get a gross participation in “Watchmen” that scales between 5% and 8.5%, depending on the film’s worldwide revenues. Fox also participates as a gross player in any sequels and spinoffs, sources said.

Both studios issued this joint statement:

“Warner Bros. and Twentieth Century Fox have resolved their dispute regarding the rights to the upcoming motion picture “Watchmen” in a confidential settlement.

Warner Bros. acknowledges that Fox acted in good faith in bringing its claims, which were asserted prior to the start of principal photography.

Fox acknowledges that Warner Brothers acted in good faith in defending against those claims.

Warner Bros. and Fox, like all “Watchmen” fans, look forward with great anticipation to this film’s March 6 release in theatres.”

Nikki Finke provides more background details:

This is a case where producer Larry Gordon’s hot property changed hands again and again since the late 1980s from Fox, to Universal, to Paramount,Ā until finally to Warner Bros and Legendary Pictures which together went forward with the $130 million film despite knowing that Fox had claims which led to the lawsuit.

The next legal step might haveĀ been an injunction againstĀ Watchmen‘sĀ March 6th release. Initially, Warner Bros said it would fight Feess’ intention to side with Fox and appeal.

But then, according toĀ my sources,Ā Warner Bros boss Barry Meyer stepped up and stopped that, and his studio finally started talking settlement with FoxĀ last week.

So now,Ā Warner Bros can releaseĀ Watchmen domestically as planned, and Paramount (which also had to sign off on the settlement) play itĀ internationally,Ā and FoxĀ reap the rewards, and fans of the comic book series/graphic novel can rejoice — or find something else about the movie to bitch about…

Although some tried to paint Fox as the bad guy who didn’t care about the material, the fact of the matter was that they did have a legal claim.

The real question is: how did Warner Bros manage to greenlight a production like this without realising they would be open to a massive lawsuit?

The LA Times thinks that Larry Gordon and his legal and insurance teams could now be in a spot of bother:

The court fight over “The Watchmen” is costing Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees, but the biggest bill of all could fall to the film’s producer, Larry Gordon, his lawyers and their insurers, who could be on the hook for substantially more money.

Court documents in the nearly yearlong dispute over the superhero movie’s distribution rights show that Warner Bros., which is poised to lose valuable rights to “Watchmen” after a judge’s favorable ruling for Fox, is pursuing Gordon “for all damages Warner Bros. suffers as a result of Fox’s claims.”

Although the main thing is that the film will be released, there is perhaps more on this case to be unearthed.

> Variety on the settlement
> Watchmen at the IMDb
> Find out more about the graphic novel by Alan Moore

Categories
News

Patrick McGoohan Interview from 1977

Patrick McGoohan passed away recently and although his film career included such diverse roles asĀ Ā Ice Station Zebra,Ā Escape from AlcatrazĀ andĀ Braveheart, for me he will always stand for his work on 1960s TV series The Prisoner.

This is the classic intro:

Ā 

If you have never seen it, then you should buy the DVD boxset for it is one of the most inventive and distinctive TV shows of its era.

It follows a former British spy who, after resigning, is held captive in a mysterious small village by the sea by an unidentified organisation.

Each of the 17 episodes saw the unnamed prisoner, labelled Number Six, trying to escape or challenge the authority of ‘the Village’Ā and itsĀ chief administrator, a person usually calledĀ Number Two.

Although he was the star McGoohan also created the series withĀ George MarksteinĀ and deserves great credit for fashioning such an unusual and groundbreaking show.

It has influenced many films and TV shows, most notablyĀ Lost,Ā The Truman ShowĀ and even Big Brother.

Check out this interview from 1977 where Magoohan discusses the show withĀ Warner Troyer:

Part 2:

Part 3:

Part 4:

You can also check out a documentary called Be Seeing You and Part 1 is here.

> Patrick McGoohan at the IMDb
> Buy The Prisoner on DVD from Amazon

Categories
Awards Season News

BAFTA Nominations

BAFTA TrophyThe BAFTA nominations have been announced and here are all the categories.

The films with the most nominations are Slumdog Millionaire and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, which both have 11.

The following pack include The Dark Knight (9), Changeling (8), Frost/Nixon (6), The Reader (5) and In Bruges, Milk and Revolutionary Road all on 4.

TheĀ Orange British Academy Film Awards will take place onĀ Sunday 8th February.Ā 

BEST FILM

  • The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button,Ā Kathleen Kennedy / Frank Marshall / CeĆ”n Chaffin
  • Frost/Nixon,Ā Tim Bevan / Eric Fellner / Brian Grazer / Ron Howard
  • Milk, Dan Jinks / Bruce Cohen
  • The Reader, Anthony Minghella / Sydney Pollack / Donna Gigliotti / Redmond Morris
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Christian Colso

DIRECTOR

  • Clint Eastwood,Ā Changeling
  • David Fincher,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Ron Howard,Ā Frost/Nixon
  • Stephen Daldry,Ā The Reader
  • Danny Boyle,Ā Slumdog Millionaire

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

  • Joel Coen / Ethan Coen, Burn After Reading Ā 
  • J. Michael Straczynski,Ā Changeling
  • Philippe Claudel,Ā I’ve Loved You So Long
  • Martin Mcdonagh,Ā In BrugesĀ 
  • Dustin Lance Black,Ā Milk

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

  • Eric Roth,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Peter Morgan,Ā Frost/Nixon
  • David Hare,Ā The Reader
  • Justin Haythe,Ā Revolutionary Road
  • Simon Beaufoy,Ā Slumdog Millionaire

FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

  • The Baader Meinhof Complex, Bernard Eichinger / Uli Edel
  • Gomorrah, Domenico Procacci / Matteo Garrone
  • I’ve Loved You So Long, Yves Marmion / Philippe Claudel
  • Persepolis, Marc-Antoine Robert / Xavier Rigault / Marjane Satrapi / Vincent Parannaud
  • Waltz With Bashir, Serge Lalou / Gerhard Meixner / Yael Nahl Ieli / Ari Folman

ANIMATED FILM

  • Persepolis,Ā Marjane Satrapi / Vincent Parannaud
  • Wall•E, Andrew Stanton
  • Waltz With Bashir, Ari Folman

BEST ACTOR

  • Frank Langella, Ā Frost/Nixon
  • Dev Patel, Slumdog Millionaire
  • Sean Penn, Ā Milk
  • Brad Pitt, The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Mickey Rourke, Ā The Wrestler

BEST ACTRESS

  • Angelina Jolie, Changeling
  • Kristin Scott Thomas, I’ve Loved You So Long
  • Meryl Streep, Doubt
  • Kate Winslet, The Reader
  • Kate Winslet, Revolutionary Road

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

  • Robert Downey Jr., Tropic Thunder
  • Brendan Gleeson, In Bruges
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
  • Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
  • Brad Pitt, Burn After Reading

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

  • Amy Adams, Doubt
  • PenĆ©lope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
  • Freida Pinto, Slumdog Millionaire
  • Tilda Swinton, Burn After Reading
  • Marisa Tomei, The Wrestler

BEST MUSIC

  • Alexandre Desplat,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin ButtonĀ 
  • Hans Zimmer / James Newton Howard,Ā The Dark KnightĀ 
  • Benny Andersson / Bjƶrn Ulvaeus,Ā Mamma Mia!
  • A. R. Rahman,Ā Slumdog Millionaire
  • Thomas Newman,Ā Wall•E

CINEMATOGRAPHY

  • Tom Stern,Ā Changeling
  • Claudio Miranda,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Wally Pfister,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Chris Menges / Roger Deakins,Ā The Reader
  • Anthony Dod Mantle, Slumdog Millionaire

EDITING

  • Joel Cox / Gary D. Roach,Ā Changeling
  • Kirk Baxter / Angus Wall,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Lee Smith,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Mike Hill / Dan Hanley,Ā Frost/Nixon
  • Jon Gregory,Ā In Bruges
  • Chris Dickens,Ā Slumdog Millionaire

PRODUCTION DESIGN

  • James J. Murakami / Gary Fettis,Ā Changeling
  • Donald Graham Burt / Victor J. Zolfo,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Nathan Crowley / Peter Lando,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Kristi Zea / Debra Schutt,Ā Revolutionary Road
  • Mark Digby / Michelle Day,Ā Slumdog Millionaire

COSTUME DESIGN

  • Deborah Hopper,Ā Changeling
  • Jacqueline West,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Lindy Hemming,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Michael O’Connor,Ā The Duchess
  • Albert Wolsky,Ā Revolutionary Road

SOUND

  • Walt Martin / Alan Robert Murray / John Reitz / Gregg Rudloff,Ā Changeling
  • Lora Hirschberg / Richard King / Ed Novick / Gary Rizzo,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Eddy Joseph / Chris Munro / Mike Prestwood Smith / Mark Taylor,Ā Quantum Of Solace
  • Glenn Freemantle / Resul Pookutty / Richard Pryke / Tom Sayers / Ian Tapp,Ā Slumdog Millionare
  • Ben Burtt / Tom Myers / Michael Semanick / Matthew Wood,Ā Wall•E

SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS

  • Eric Barba / Craig Barron / Ā Nathan Mcguinness / Edson Williams,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
  • Chris Corbould / Nick Davis / Paul Franklin / Tim Webber,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Pablo Helman,Ā Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull
  • Shane Patrick Mahan / John Nelson / Ben Snow,Ā Iron Man
  • Chris Corbould / Kevin Tod Haug,Ā Quantum Of Solace

MAKE UP & HAIR

  • Jean Black / Colleen Callaghan,Ā The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button Ā 
  • Peter Robb-King,Ā The Dark Knight
  • Daniel Phillips / Jan Archibald,Ā The Duchess
  • Edouard Henriques / Kim Santantonio,Ā Frost/Nixon
  • Steven E. Anderson / Michael White,Ā Milk

SHORT ANIMATION

  • Codswallop, Greg Mcleod / Myles Mcleod
  • Varmints, Ā Sue Goffe / Marc Craste
  • Wallace And Gromit: A Matter Of Loaf And Death, Steve Pegram / Nick Park / Bob Baker

SHORT FILM

  • Kingsland #1 The Dreamer,Ā Kate Ogborn / Tony Grisoni
  • Love You More, Adrian Sturges / Sam Taylor-Wood / Patrick Marber
  • Ralph, Ā Olivier Kaempfer / Alex Winckler
  • September, Ā Stewart Le MarĆ©chal / Esther May Campbell
  • Voyages D’affaires (The Business Trip), Celine Quideau / Sean Ellis

OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM

  • Hunger,Ā Laura Hastings-Smith / Robin Gutch / Steve Mcqueen / Enda Walsh
  • In Bruges, Ā Graham Broadbent / Pete Czernin / Martin Mcdonagh
  • Mamma Mia!,Ā Judy Craymer / Gary Goetzman / Phyllida Lloyd / Catherine Johnson
  • Man On Wire, Simon Chinn / James Marsh
  • Slumdog Millionaire, Ā Christian Colson / Danny Boyle / Simon Beaufoy

THE CARL FOREMAN AWARD (For Special Achievement By A British Director, Writer Or Producer For Their First Feature Film)

  • Simon Chinn, Ā Producer – Man On Wire
  • Judy Craymer, Ā Producer – Mamma Mia!
  • Garth Jennings, Writer – Son Of Rambow
  • Steve Mcqueen, Director/Writer – Hunger
  • Solon Papadopoulos / Roy Boulter, Producers – Of Time And The City

THE ORANGE RISING STAR (Voted For By The Public)

  • Michael Cera
  • Noel Clarke
  • Michael Fassbender
  • Rebecca Hall
  • Toby Kebbell

NOMINATION TOTALS

  • Slumdog Millionaire: 11
  • The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button: 11
  • The Dark Knight: 9
  • Changeling: 8
  • Frost/Nixon: 6
  • The Reader: 5
  • In Bruges: 4
  • Milk: 4
  • Revolutionary Road: 4
  • Burn After Reading: 3
  • Doubt: 3
  • The I’ve Loved You So Long: 3
  • Mamma Mia!: 3
  • Wall-E: 3
  • Duchess: 2
  • Hunger: 2
  • Man On Wire: 2
  • Persepolis: 2
  • Quantum Of Solace: 2
  • Waltz With Bashir: 2
  • The Wrestler: 2
  • The Baader Meinhof Complex: 1
  • Gomorrah: 1
  • Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull: 1
  • Iron Man: 1
  • Of Time And The City: 1
  • Son Of Rambow: 1
  • Tropic Thunder: 1
  • Vicky Cristina Barcelona: 1

> Official BAFTA site
> The original longlist

Categories
Festivals News

Sundance Film Festival 2009: Preview

Sundance 2009 logo

If you are heading off to Utah or just curious to see what’s happening, here is a rundown of what’s going on at this year’s Sundance Film FestivalĀ which runsĀ from Thursday 15th until Sunday 25th JanuaryĀ inĀ Park City.

The high profile premieres have this year been reduced from 24 films to 16 and will screen at the Eccles Theatre.

PREMIERES

The Premieres section showcases the latest titles from American and international directors and screens world premieres of highly anticipated films.Ā 

  • 500 Days of SummerĀ / USA. (Director: Marc Webb; Screenwriters: Scott Neustadter, Michael H. Weber)—When an unlucky greeting card copywriter is dumped by his girlfriend, the hopeless romantic shifts back and forth through various periods of their 500 days ‘together’ in hopes of figuring out where things went wrong. Cast: Zooey Deschanel, Joseph Gordon-Levitt. [World Premiere]Ā 
  • AdventurelandĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Greg Mottola)—In 1987, a recent college graduate takes a nowhere job at his local amusement park and discovers the job is perfect preparation for the real world. Cast: Kristen Stewart, Ryan Reynolds, Bill Hader.Ā [World Premiere]Ā 
  • Brooklyn’s FinestĀ / USA (Director: Antoine Fuqua; Screenwriter: Michael C. Martin)—After enduring vastly different career paths, three unconnected Brooklyn cops wind up at the same deadly location. Cast: Richard Gere, Ethan Hawke, Wesley Snipes, Don Cheadle, Ellen Barkin. [World Premiere]Ā 
  • Earth DaysĀ / USA (Director: Robert Stone)—The history of our environmental undoing through the eyes of nine Americans whose work and actions launched the modern environmental movement.Ā [World Premiere &Ā Closing Night Film]Ā 
  • EndgameĀ / UK (Director: Pete Travis; Screenwriter: Paula Milne)—A political thriller in which a businessman initiates covert discussions between the African National Congress and white intellectuals to try and find a peaceful solution to the Apartheid regime. Cast: William Hurt, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Jonny Lee Miller, Mark Strong.Ā [World Premiere]Ā 
  • I Love You Philip MorrisĀ / USA (Directors and Screenwriters: Glenn Ficarra and John Requa)—The true story about con artist and imposter Steven Jay Russell, a married father whose exploits land him in the Texas criminal justice system. Based on the novel by Houston Chronicle crime reporter Steve McVicker. Cast: Jim Carrey, Ewan McGregor, Leslie Mann, Rodrigo Santoro.Ā [World Premiere]
  • The InformersĀ / USA (Director: Gregor Jordan; Screenwriters: Bret Easton Ellis and Nicholas Jarecki)—A drama based on Bret Easton Ellis’ novel, set in the 1980s, focusing on wealthy Angelinos consumed by a decadent lifestyle. Cast: Billy Bob Thornton, Kim Basinger, Winona Ryder, Mickey Rourke.Ā [World Premiere]Ā 
  • In the LoopĀ / UK (Director: Armando Iannucci; Screenwriters: Armando Iannucci and Jesse Armstrong)— A fast-paced film about Britain and America’s special relationship in the lead-up to a war no one seems to be able to stop. Cast: Peter Capaldi, James Gandolfini, Tom Hollander.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • ManureĀ / USA (Director: Michael Polish; Screenwriters: Mark Polish and Michael Polish)—A comic tale centered on manure salesmen in the early 1960s. Cast: TĆ©a Leoni, Billy Bob Thornton, Kyle MacLachlan.Ā [World Premiere]Ā 
  • Mary and MaxĀ / Australia (Director and Screenwriter: Adam Elliot)—The tale of two unlikely pen pals: Mary, a lonely, eight-year-old girl living in the suburbs of Melbourne, and Max, a forty-four-year old, severely obese man living in New York. Cast: Philip Seymour Hoffman (voice), Toni Collette (voice), Barry Humphries (voice).Ā [World Premiere &Ā Opening Night Film]
  • The MessengerĀ / USA (Director: Oren Moverman; Screenwriters: Alessandro Camon and Oren Moverman)—Two soldiers from different generations form a unique bond as they cope with their assignment with the Army Casualty Notification department. Cast: Ben Foster, Woody Harrelson, Samantha Morton, Jena Malone, Eamonn Walker.Ā World Premiere
  • MoonĀ / UK (Director: Duncan Jones; Screenwriter: Nathan Parker)—Before returning to Earth after three years on the moon, things go horribly wrong for astronaut Sam Bell. Cast: Sam Rockwell, Kevin Spacey.Ā [World Premiere]
  • MotherhoodĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Katherine Dieckmann)—A mother of two from Manhattan is having a day that would challenge even the toughest maternal multi-tasker. Cast: Uma Thurman, Minnie Driver, Anthony Edwards.Ā [World Premiere]
  • Rudo and CursiĀ (Rudo y Cursi) / Mexico (Director and Screenwriter: Carlos Cuarón)—Two siblings rival each other inside the world of professional soccer. Cast: Diego Luna, Gael GarcĆ­a Bernal, Guillermo Francella.Ā [U.S. Premiere]Ā 
  • ShrinkĀ / USA (Director: Jonas Pate; Screenwriter: Thomas Moffett)—Unable to come to grips with a recent personal tragedy, Los Angeles’ top celebrity psychiatrist loses faith in his ability to help his patients. Cast: Kevin Spacey, Keke Palmer, Mark Webber, Dallas Roberts, Saffron Burrows.Ā [World Premiere]
  • SpreadĀ / USA (Director: David Mackenzie; Screenwriter: Jason Dean Hall)—A handsome young man survives in Los Angeles by seducing wealthy older women. Cast: Ashton Kutcher, Anne Heche.Ā [World Premiere]

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SPECTRUMĀ 

A strand showcasing out-of-competition dramatic and documentary films from some of the most promising filmmakers in the world today.

  • Against the CurrentĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Peter Callahan)—Facing the anniversary of his pregnant wife’s tragic death, thirty-five-year old Paul Thompson enlists the help of two friends to help him swim the length of the Hudson River. Cast: Joseph Fiennes, Justin Kirk, Elizabeth Reaser, Mary Tyler Moore, Michelle Trachtenberg. World PremiereĀ 
  • The Anarchist’s WifeĀ (La Mujer del Anarquista) / Germany/Spain (Directors: Marie Noelle and Peter Sehr; Screenwriters: Marie Noelle and Ray Loriga)—During the Spanish Civil War an idealistic young lawyer combating Franco’s Fascist troops is separated from his wife and children. Cast: Maria Valverde, Juan Diego Botto, Nina Hoss, Ivana Baquero, Jean-Marc Barr.North American PremiereĀ 
  • Barking WaterĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Sterlin Harjo)—Irene and Frankie have had a tumultuous relationship for forty years. As Frankie lies on his deathbed, Irene comes back to him one last time to break him from the hospital and take him home. Cast: Richard Ray Whitman, Casey Camp- Horenik.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Children of InventionĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Tze Chun)—Two young children living illegally in a model apartment outside Boston are left to fend for themselves when their mother is arrested for unwittingly taking part in an illegal pyramid scheme. Cast: Cindy Cheung, Michael Chen, Crystal Chiu.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Everything Strange and NewĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Frazer Bradshaw)—Trapped by a life he never intended, a man struggles to navigate family, sexuality and drug addiction. Cast: Jerry McDaniel, Beth Lisick, Rigo Chacon Jr., Luis Saguar.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • HelenĀ / Canada/Germany (Director and Screenwriter: Sandra Nettelbeck)—A successful music professor fights her own clinical depression. Cast: Ashley Judd, Goran Visnijic.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • The Immaculate Conception of Little DizzleĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: David Russo)—After losing his high-paying job, Dory takes a gig as a night janitor in order to pay rent. Alone late at night inside a market research firm, he discovers something worse than his new job cleaning toilets – a conniving corporate executive has made him the subject of a bizarre experiment. Cast: Marshall Allman, Vince Vieluf, Natasha Lyonne, Tania Raymonde, Tygh Runyan.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Johnny Mad DogĀ / France (Director: Jean-StĆ©phane Sauvaire; Screenwriters: Jean-StĆ©phane Sauvaire and Jacques Fieschi)—A fifteen-year-old kid-soldier fighting in Africa is armed to the hilt and inhabited by the mad dog he dreams of becoming. Cast: Christophe Minie, Daisy Victoria Vandy.Ā North American PremiereĀ 
  • La MissionĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Peter Bratt)—A traditional, Latino father in San Francisco’s Mission District struggles to come to terms with his teenage son’s homosexuality. Cast: Benjamin Bratt, Erika Alexander, Jeremy Ray Valdez, Talisa Soto Bratt, Jesse Borrego.World PremiereĀ 
  • LymelifeĀ / USA. (Director: Derick Martini; Screenwriters: Derick Martini and Steven Martini)—Set in the 1970s, a unique take on the dangers of the American dream seen through the innocent eyes of a fifteen- year-old boy. Cast: Alec Baldwin, Kieran Culkin, Timothy Hutton, Cynthia Nixon, Emma Roberts.Ā U.S. PremiereĀ 
  • The Missing PersonĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Noah Buschel)—Private detective John Rosow is hired to tail a man on a train from Chicago to Los Angeles. En route, Rosow uncovers that the man’s identity is one of the thousands presumed dead after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Cast: Michael Shannon, Amy Ryan, Frank Wood.World PremiereĀ 
  • Once More with FeelingĀ / USA (Director: Jeff Lipsky; Screenwriter: Gina O’Brien)—A comedy about a psychiatrist who undergoes a midlife crisis and pursues his long-lost ambition of becoming a singer through karaoke. Cast: Drea de Matteo, Linda Fiorentino, Chazz Palminteri, Susan Misner, Lauren Bittner.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • The Only Good IndianĀ / USA (Director: Kevin Willmott; Screenwriter: Tom Carmody)—Set in early 1900s Kansas, a teenage Native American boy is taken from his family and forced to attend an Indian ‘training’ school to assimilate into White society. Cast: Wes Studi, Winter Fox Frank, J. Kenneth Campbell.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Pomegranates and MyrrhĀ (Al Mor wa al Rumman) / Palestinian Territories (Director and Screenwriter: Najwa Najjar)—The wife of a Palestinian prisoner searches for freedom. Cast: Ali Suliman, Yasmine Al Massri, Ashraf Farah, Hiam Abbass.Ā North American PremiereĀ 
  • The Vicious KindĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Lee Toland Krieger)—Suffering insomnia and testy by nature, Caleb Sinclaire reluctantly picks up his brother Peter at college and brings him and his new girlfriend Emma home to his estranged father’s house for Thanksgiving. Cast: Brittany Snow, Adam Scott, J.K. Simmons, Alex Frost.Ā World Premiere
  • World’s Greatest DadĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Bobcat Goldthwait)—A comedy about a high school poetry teacher who learns that the things you want most may not be the things that make you happy. Cast: Robin Williams, Daryl Sabara, Alexie Gilmore, Tom Kenny, Geoffrey Pierson.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • It Might Get LoudĀ / USA (Director: Davis Guggenheim)—The history of the electric guitar from the point of view of three legendary rock musicians. Cast: The Edge, Jimmy Page, Jack White.Ā U.S. PremiereĀ 
  • No Impact ManĀ / USA (Directors: Laura Gabbert and Justin Schein)—The documentary follows the Beavan family as they abandon their high consumption Fifth Avenue lifestyle in an attempt to make a no- net environmental impact for the course of one year. Cast: Michelle Conlin, Colin Beavan.Ā World Premiere
  • Passing StrangeĀ / USA (Director: Spike Lee; Lyrics: Stew; Music: Stew and Heidi Rodewald)—A musical documentary about the international exploits of a young man from Los Angeles who leaves home to find himself and ‘the real’. A theatrical stage production of the original Tony-Award winning book by Stew. Cast: De’Adre Aziza, Daniel Breaker, Eisa Davis, Colman Domingo, Stew.Ā World Premiere
  • TysonĀ / USA (Director: James Toback)—An intimate look at the complex life of former heavyweightĀ 
  • champ Mike Tyson. Cast: Mike Tyson.Ā North American Premiere
  • Why We Laugh: Black Comedians on Black ComedyĀ / USA (Director: Robert Townsend; Quincy Newell)—Using rare archival clips along with provocative interviews with many of today’s leading comedians and social critics, Why We Laugh celebrates the incredible cultural influence and social impact black comedy has wielded over the past 400 years. Cast: Chris Rock, Bill Cosby, Keenan Ivory Wayans, Steve Harvey, Dick Gregory.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Wounded KneeĀ / USA (Director: Stanley Nelson; Screenwriter: Marcia Smith)—In 1973, American Indian groups took over the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota to draw attention the 1890 massacre. Though the federal government failed to keep many of the promises that ended the siege, the event succeeded in bringing to the world’s attention the desperate conditions of Indian reservation life.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • The Yes Men Fix the WorldĀ / France/ USA (Directors: Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno and Kurt Engfehr)—A pair of notorious troublemakers sneak into corporate events disguised as captains of industry, then use their momentary authority to expose the biggest criminals on the planet. Cast: Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno.Ā World PremiereĀ 

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PARK CITY AT MIDNIGHTĀ 

Park City at Midnight shows eight films that are likely to amuse, surprise, or shock the late night festival audience.Ā 

  • Black DynamiteĀ / USA (Director: Scott Sanders; Screenwriters: Michael Jai White, Scott Sanders, and Byron Minns)—When ‘The Man’ murders his brother, pumps heroin into local orphanages, and floods the ghetto with adulterated malt liquor, 1970s African-American action legend Black Dynamite is the one hero willing to take him on. Cast: Michael Jai White, Tommy Davidson, Salli Richardson-Whitfield, Byron Minns, James McManus.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • The CarterĀ / USA (Director: Adam Bhala Lough)—An in-depth, intimate look at the artist Dwayne “Lil’ Wayne” Carter Jr, proclaimed by many as the “greatest rapper alive” Cast: Lil’ Wayne, Brian Williams, Cortez Bryant.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • DĆød SnĆøĀ (Dead Snow) / Norway (Director: Tommy Wirkola; Screenwriters: Tommy Wirkola and Stig Frode Henriksen)—A group of teenagers had all they needed for a successful ski vacation; cabin, skis, snowmobile, toboggan, copious amounts of beer and a fertile mix of the sexes. Certainly, none of them anticipated not returning home alive! However, the Nazi-zombie battalion haunting the mountains hadĀ other plans. Cast: Vegard Hoel, Stig Frode Henriksen, Charlotte Frogner, Jenny Skavlan, Jeppe Beck Laursen.Ā North American PremiereĀ 
  • GraceĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Paul Solet)—After losing her unborn child, Madeline Matheson insists on carrying the baby to term. Following the delivery, the child miraculously returns to life, but when the baby develops a desperate appetite for human blood, Madeline is faced with a mother’s ultimate decision. Cast: Jordan Ladd, Samantha Ferris, Gabrielle Rose, Malcom Stewart, Stephen Park, Serge Houde.Ā World Premiere
  • The Killing RoomĀ / USA (Director: Jonathan Liebesman; Screenwriters: Gus Krieger and Ann Peacock)—Four individuals sign up for a psychological research study only to discover that they are now subjects of a brutal, classified government program. Cast: Chloe Sevigny, Peter Stormare, Clea DuVall, Timothy Hutton, Nick Cannon.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Mystery TeamĀ / USA (Director: Dan Eckman; Screenwriters: Dominic Dierkes, Donald Glover, and DC Pierson)—A group of kid detectives called The Mystery Team struggle to solve a double murder to prove they can be real detectives before they graduate from high school. Cast: Dominic Dierkes, D.C. Pierson, Donald Glover, Aubrey Plaza, Bobby Moynihan.World PremiereĀ 
  • Spring BreakdownĀ / USA (Director: Ryan Shiraki; Screenwriters: Ryan Shiraki and Rachel Dratch)— Three thirtysomething friends attempt to break the monotony of their uninspired lives by vacationing at a popular spring break getaway for college students. Cast: Rachel Dratch, Amy Poehler, Parker Posey, Will Arnett, Rachel Hamilton.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • White Lightnin’Ā / UK (Director: Dominic Murphy; Screenwriters: Shane Smith and Eddy Moretti)—The outrageous cult story of Jesco White, the dancing outlaw. Cast: Ed Hogg, Carrie Fisher, Muse Watson, Wallace Merck, Clay Steakley.Ā World PremiereĀ 

Ā 

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FRONTIERĀ 

The Festival’s Frontier section explores the experimental world of filmmaking.

  • Lunch Break/ExitĀ / USA (Director: Sharon Lockhart)—Lunch BreakĀ andĀ ExitĀ yield from Lockhart’s timely new film and photographic series about the bleak state of U.S. labor. InLunch Break, a single tracking shot through a long corridor where workers take their lunch hour at the massive shipyard, Bath Iron Works in Maine, reveals how 42 workers spend their lunch break. InĀ Exit, the frame constantly fills with teaming workers each day as they head for home after a long day’s work.Ā 
  • O’er the LandĀ / USA (Director: Deborah Stratman)—A meditation on our national psyche and the milieu of elevated threat, ‘O’er the Land‘ addresses gun culture, national identity, wilderness, consumption, patriotism and the possibility of personal transcendence.
  • Stay the Same Never ChangeĀ / USA (Director and Screenwriter: Laurel Nakadate)—A mix of visual fact and narrative fiction starring a group of amateur actors in Kansas City. Whether it’s a family man looking for beauty or a young woman obsessed with polar bears and Oprah, the characters in this humorous film reveal quiet lives full of sadness and desire. Cast: Dirk Cowan, Julie Potratz, Emily Boullear, Cyan Meeks, Tate Buck.Ā World PremiereĀ 
  • Where is Where? /Ā (Director: Eija Liisa-Ahtila)—Where is Where?Ā is an experimental, four channel film based on an incident which happened during the struggle for independence in Algeria. As a reaction to the acts of violence committed by the French, two young Algerian boys murder their friend, a French boy of the same age. The film starts from the present day when the Death enters the house of a poet who is attempting to write about the incident.World PremiereĀ 
  • Artist Spotlight: The Works of Maria MarshallĀ / USA (Director: Maria Marshall)—Maria Marshall’s disturbing and gorgeously composed video projections provoke the psychological dimensions of cinema. Often violent and always visually charming, Marshall often uses her two sons in the main roles of her films. Her work tackles fundamental subjects of motherhood, socialization and life experience and takes us back to the world of childhood as a pretext in order to evoke the anxiety of adults.Ā 
  • You Won’t Miss MeĀ / USA (Director: Ry Russo-Young)—A portrait of a modern day rebel, Shelly Brown, a twenty-three year-old alienated urban misfit recently released from a psychiatric hospital. Cast: Stella Schnabel, Rene Ricard.Ā World Premiere

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DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

This year’s 16 documentaries were selected from 879 submissions.

  • Art & CopyĀ (Director: Doug Pray; Screenwriter: Timothy J. Sexton) – Rare interviews with the most influential advertising creative minds of our age illustrate the wide-reaching effect advertising and creativity have on modern culture.Ā World Premiere
  • Boy InterruptedĀ (Director: Dana Perry) – An intimate look at the life, mental illness and death of a young man told from the point of view of the filmmaker: his mother.Ā World Premiere
  • The CoveĀ (Director: Louie Psihoyos; Screenwriter: Mark Monroe) – Dolphins are dying, whales are disappearing, and the oceans are growing sick. The horrors of a secret cove nestled off a small, coastal village in Japan are revealed by a group of activists led by Ric Barry, the man behind Flipper.Ā World Premiere
  • CrudeĀ (Director: Joe Berlinger) – The inside story of the ƒAmazon ChernobylƓ case in the rainforest of Ecuador, the largest oil-related environmental lawsuit in the world.Ā World Premiere
  • Dirt! The MovieĀ (Directors: Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow) – The story of the relationship between humans and dirt,Ā Dirt! The MovieĀ humorously details how humans are rapidly destroying the last natural resource on earth. Ā World Premiere
  • El GeneralĀ (Director: Natalia Almada) – As great-granddaughter of Mexican President Plutarco Elias Calles, one of Mexicoƕs most controversial revolutionary figures, filmmaker Natalia Almada paints an intimate portrait of Mexico.Ā World Premiere
  • Good HairĀ (Director: Jeff Stilson) – Comedian Chris Rock turns documentary filmmaker when he sets out to examine the culture of African-American hair and hairstyles.Ā World Premiere
  • Over the Hills and Far AwayĀ (Director: Michel Orion Scott) –Ā Over the Hills and Far Awaychronicles the journey of the Isaacson family as they travel through Mongolia in search of a mysterious shaman they believe can heal their autistic son.Ā World Premiere
  • The ReckoningĀ (Director: Pamela Yates; Screenwriters: Peter Kinoy, Paco de Onis, Pamela Yates) – A battle of monumental proportions unfolds as International Criminal Court Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo faces down warlords, genocidal dictators and world superpowers in bringing perpetrators of crimes against humanity to justice.Ā World Premiere
  • ReporterĀ (Director: Eric Daniel Metzgar) – Set in Africa, this documentary chronicles, in verite fashion, the haunting, physically grueling and shocking voyage of Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist, Nicholas D. Kristof. World Premiere.
  • The September IssueĀ (Director: R.J. Cutler) – With unprecedented access, director R.J. Cutler and his crew shot for nine months as they capturedĀ VogueĀ editor in chief Anna Wintour and her team preparing the 2007Ā VogueĀ September issue, widely accepted as the “fashion bible” for the year’s trends.Ā World Premiere
  • SergioĀ (Director: Greg Barker) –Ā SergioĀ examines the role of the United Nations and the international community through the life and experiences of Sergio Vieira de Mello, the U.N.’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, including interviews with those who knew and worked with him over the course of his extraordinary career.Ā World Premiere
  • Shouting Fire: Stories from the Edge of Free SpeechĀ (Director: Liz Garbus) – An exploration of the history and current state of free speech in America narrated by the filmmaker’s father, First Amendment attorney Martin Garbus.Ā World Premiere
  • We Live in PublicĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Ondi Timoner) –Ā We Live in PublicĀ is the story of the Internetƕs revolutionary impact on human interaction as told through the eyes of maverick web pioneer, Josh Harris and his transgressive art project that shocked New York.Ā World Premiere
  • When You’re StrangeĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Tom DiCillo) – The first feature documentary about The Doors, Ā When You’re StrangeĀ enters the dark and dangerous world of one of Americaƕs most influential bands using only footage shot between 1966 and 1971.World Premiere
  • William Kunstler: Ā Disturbing the UniverseĀ Ā (Directors: Sarah Kunstler and Emily Kunstler) – With clients including Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Chicago 10, the late civil rights attorney William Kunstler was one of the most famous lawyers of the 20th century. Filmmakers Emily and Sarah Kunstler explore their fatherƕs life from movement hero to ƒthe most hated lawyer in America.Ā World Premiere

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U.S. DRAMATIC COMPETITION

This year’s 16 films were selected from 1,026 submissions.

  • AdamĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Max Mayer) – A strange and lyrical love story between a somewhat socially dysfunctional young man and the woman of his dreams. Cast: Hugh Dancy, Rose Byrne, Peter Gallagher, Amy Irving, Frankie Faison, Mark Linn-Baker.Ā World Premiere
  • AmreekaĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Cherien Dabis) – When a divorced Palestinian woman and her teenage son move to rural Illinois, they find their new lives replete with challenges. Cast: Nisreen Faour, Melkar Muallem, Hiam Abbass, Yussuf Abu-Warda, Alia Shawkat, Joseph Ziegler.Ā World Premiere
  • Arlen FaberĀ (Director and Screenwriter: John Hindman) – A reclusive author of a groundbreaking spiritual book awakens to new truths when two strangers enter his life. Cast: Kat Dennings, Lauren Graham, Olivia Thirlby, Jeff Daniels, Tony Hale.Ā World Premiere
  • Big FanĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Robert Siegel) – The world of a parking garage attendant who happens to be the New York Giants’ biggest fan is turned upside down after an altercation with his favorite player. Cast: Patton Oswalt, Michael Rapaport, Kevin Corrigan, Marcia Jean Kurtz, Matt Servitto.Ā World Premiere
  • Brief Interviews with Hideous MenĀ (Director and Screenwriter: John Krasinski) – When her boyfriend leaves with little explanation, a doctoral candidate in anthropology tries to remedy her heartache by interviewing men about their behavior. Cast: Julianne Nicholson, John Krasinski, Timothy Hutton, Dominic Cooper, Christopher Meloni, Bobby Cannavale.World Premiere
  • Cold SoulsĀ (Director and Screenwrtier: Sophie Barthes) – In the midst of an existential crisis, a famous American actor explores soul extraction as a relief from the burdens of daily life. Cast: Paul Giamatti, David Strathairn, Dina Korzun, Emily Watson, Lauren Ambrose, Katheryn Winnick.Ā World Premiere
  • DareĀ (Director: Adam Salky; Screenwriter: David Brind) – Three very different teenagers discover that, even in the safe world of a suburban prep school, no one is who she or he appears to be. Emmy Rossum, Zach Gilford, Ashley Springer, Ana Gasteyer, Alan Cumming, Sandra Bernhard, Rooney Mara.Ā World Premiere
  • Don’t Let Me DrownĀ (Director: Cruz Angeles; Screenwriters: Maria Topete and Cruz Angeles) – Two Latino teens whose lives are affected by the attack on the World Trade Center discover that love is the only thing that keeps them from drowning. Cast: E.J. Bonilla, Gleendilys Inoa, Dami—n Alc—zar, Ricardo Chavira, Gina Torres.Ā World Premiere
  • The GreatestĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Shana Feste) – After the tragic loss of their teenage son, a family is again thrown into turmoil by the arrival of a young woman.Ā  Cast: Pierce Brosnan, Susan Sarandon, Carey Mulligan, Johnny Simmons, Aaron Johnson, Mike Shannon.Ā World Premiere
  • HumpdayĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Lynn Shelton) – A farcical comedy about straight male bonding gone a little too far. Cast: Mark Duplass, Joshua Leonard, Alycia Delmore, Lynn Shelton, Trina Willard.Ā World Premiere
  • Paper HeartĀ (Director: Nicholas Jasenovec; Screenwriters: Nicholas Jasenovec and Charlyne Yi) – Even though performer Charlyne Yi doesn’t believe in love, she bravely embarks on a quest to discover its true nature – a journey that takes on surprising urgency when she meets unlikely fellow traveler, actor Michael Cera. Cast: Charlyne Yi, Michael Cera, Jake Johnson.World Premiere
  • Peter and VandyĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Jay DiPietro) –Ā Peter and VandyĀ is a love story told out of order. Ā Juxtaposing Peter and Vandy’s romantic beginnings with the twisted-manipulative-regular couple they become, the film explores the question most couples ask themselves… ā€œHow the hell did we get this way?ā€Ā Cast: Jess Weixler, Jason Ritter, Jesse L. Martin, Tracie Thoms.Ā World Premiere
  • PushĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Lee Daniels; Damien Paul) – Based on the acclaimed, best-selling novel by Sapphire, Push is the redemptive story of Precious Jones, a young girl in Harlem struggling to overcome tremendous obstacles and discover her own voice. Cast: Gabourey ƒGabbyƓ Sidibe, Paula Patton, MoƕNique Imes, Lenny Kravitz, Mariah Carey. Ā World Premiere
  • Sin NombreĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Cary Joji Fukunaga) – AĀ teenaged Mexican gang member maneuvers to outrun his violent past and elude unforgiving former associatesĀ in this thriller setĀ amongĀ Central American migrants seeking to cross over toĀ the United States. Cast: Edgar Flores, Paulina Gaitan, Kristyan Ferrer, Tenoch Huerta Mej’a, Luis Fernando Pe–a, Diana Garc’a.Ā World Premiere
  • Taking ChanceĀ (Director: Ross Katz; Screenwriters: LtCol Michael R. Strobl, USMC (Ret.) and Ross Katz) – Ā Based on real-life events, Lt. Col. Michael Strobl, a volunteer military escort officer, accompanies the body of 19-year-old Marine Chance Phelps back to his hometown of Dubois, Wyoming. Cast: Kevin Bacon. Ā World Premiere
  • Toe to ToeĀ (Director and Screenwriter: Emily Abt) – The story of an inter-racial friendship put to the test by the intense pressures of a competitive Washington, D.C. prep school. Cast: Sonequa Martin, Louisa Krause, Silvestre Rasuk, Leslie Uggams, Gaius Charles, Ally Walker. Ā World Premiere

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WORLD CINEMA DOCUMENTARY

This year’s 16 world cinema documentaries were selected from 744 submissions:

  • 211:Anna/ Italy (Directors:Paolo Serbandini & Giovanna Massimetti) – The story of Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian journalist and human rights activist who risked her life to report the truth about the Chechen conflict and President Vladimir Putin. Ā World Premiere
  • Afghan Star/Afghanistan/UK (Director: Havana Marking) – After 30 years of war and Taliban rule, Pop Idol has come to television in Afghanistan: millions are watching and voting for their favorite singer. This film follows the dramatic stories of four contestants as they risk their lives to sing.Ā North American Premiere
  • Big River Man/ USA (Director: John Maringouin) – An overweight, wine-swilling Slovenian world-record-holding endurance swimmer resolves to brave the mighty Amazon – in nothing but a SpeedoĀØ.Ā Ā World Premiere
  • Burma VJ/Denmark (Director: Anders Ostergaard) – In September 2007, Burmese journalists risking life imprisonment to report from inside their sealed-off country are suddenly thrown onto the global stage as their pocket camera images of the Saffron Revolution make headlines everywhere.Ā U.S. Premiere
  • The End of the Line/ UK (Director: Rupert Murray) – Based on the book by journalist Charles Clover,Ā The End of the LineĀ reveals the devastating effect that global overfishing is having on fish stocks and the health of our oceans.Ā World Premiere
  • The Glass House/USA (Director: Hamid Rahmanian) –Ā The Glass HouseĀ follows four teenage girls striving to overcome drug addiction, abandonment and abuse by attending a rehabilitation center in Tehran.Ā North American Premiere
  • Kimjongilia/France/USA (Director: N.C. Heikin) – Defectors from North Korea finally speak out about the terrifying reality of their lives–and escapes.Ā World Premiere
  • Let’s Make Money/ Austria (Director: Erwin Wagenhofer) – From the factories of India, to financial markets in Singapore, to massive housing developments in Spain and offshore banks in Jersey,Ā Let’s Make MoneyĀ reveals complex and shocking workings of global money flow.World Premiere
  • Nollywood Babylon/Canada (Directors: Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal) – Welcome to the wacky world of Nollywood, Nigeria’s bustling home-grown movie industry.Ā U.S. Premiere
  • Old Partner/South Korea (Director: Chung-ryoul Lee) – A humble octogenarian farmer lives out his final days with his spitfire wife and his loyal old ox in the Korean countryside.Ā North American Premiere
  • Prom Night in Mississippi/ Canada (Director: Paul Saltzman) – When a small-town Mississippi high school resolves to hold its first integrated senior prom, strong emotions fly and traditions are challenged to their core.Ā World Premiere
  • The Queen and IĀ (Drottningen och jag) / Sweden (Director: Nahid Persson Sarvestani – Swedish filmmaker Sarvestani, an Iranian exile who helped overthrow the Shah’s regime in 1979, confronts her own assumptions and complex truths about Iran when she enters the life of the Shah’s widow.Ā World Premiere
  • Quest for Honor/ Kurdistan / USA (Director: Mary Ann Bruni) – A former teacher and tireless activist works with local lawmen, Kurdish government agencies and her colleagues to investigate and eradicate honor killings in the tribal regions of Kurdistan.Ā World Premiere
  • Rough Aunties/ UK (Director: Kim Longinotto) – Fearless, feisty and unwavering, the ‘Rough Aunties’ protect and care for the abused, neglected and forgotten children of Durban, South Africa.Ā North American Premiere
  • Thriller in Manila/ UK (Director: John Dower) – A tale of betrayal stoked by the racial politics of 1970s America,Ā Thriller in ManilaĀ chronicles the most intense and bitter sporting rivalry ever: Ā the 1975 final match between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier.Ā North American Premiere
  • Tibet in SongĀ / USA (Director: Ngawang Choephel) – Through the story of Tibetan music, this film depicts the determined efforts of Tibetan people, both in Tibet and in exile, to preserve their unique cultural identity. Choephel served six years of an 18-year prison sentence for filming in Tibet.Ā World Premiere

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WORLD CINEMA DRAMATIC COMPETITION

This year’s 16 world cinema entries were selected from a record 1,012 submissions:

  • Before Tomorrow (Le Jour Avant Lendemain)Ā /Ā Canada (Directors: Madeline Piujuq & Marie-Helene Cousineau)—A wise old woman fights to survive impossible circumstances with her young grandson in the Canadian arctic. Cast: Peter-Henry Arnatsiaq, Paul-Dylan Ivalu, Madeline Piujuq Ivalu, Mary Qulitalik, Tumasie Sivuarapik.
  • BronsonĀ / UK (Director: Nicolas Winding Refn; Screenwriter: Brock Norman Brock; Nicolas Winding Refn) – Bronson traces the transformation of Mickey Peterson into Britain’s most notorious, dangerous, and charismatic prisoner, Charles Bronson. Cast: Tom Hardy. Ā North American Premiere
  • Carmo, Hit the RoadĀ /Ā Spain (Director and Screenwriter: Murilo Pasta)— A lonely, handicapped smuggler and a beautiful girl embark on a reckless ride through a South American border landscape. Cast: Mariana Loureiro, Fele MartĆ­nez, Seu Jorge.Ā North American Premiere
  • The Clone Returns Home(Kuron Wa Kokyo-Wo Mezasu)/ Japan (Director and Screenwriter: Kanji Nakajima) – A Japanese astronaut who dies during a mission is subsequently resurrected as a clone and returns to his childhood home. Cast: Mitsuhiro Oikawa, Eri Ishida, Hiromi Nagasaku.Ā Ā North American Premiere
  • Dada’s DanceĀ / China (Director: Zhang Yuan; Screenwriter: Li Xiaofeng) – Dada is a flirtatious young woman who lives with her mother in a small town. Having to fend off the constant advances of her mother’s boyfriend who tells her she is adopted, she undertakes a journey in search of her birth mother. Cast: Li Xinyun, Li Xiaofeng, Gai Ge, Chen Jun. Ā North American Premiere.
  • An Education/UK (Director: Lone Scherfig; Screenwriter: Nick Hornby) – In the early 60s, a sharp 16-year-old with sights set on Oxford meets a handsome older man whose sophistication enraptures and sidetracks both her and her parents. Cast: Peter Sarsgaard, Carey Mulligan, Alfred Molina, Emma Thompson. Ā World Premiere
  • Five Minutes of HeavenĀ /UK / (Director: Oliver Hirschbiegel; Screenwriter: Guy Hibbert) – Two men from the same town but from different sides of the Irish political divide discover that the past is never dead – in fact it isn’t even past. Cast: Liam Neeson, James Nesbitt, Anamaria Marinca.Ā World Premiere
  • A French Gigolo (Cliente)Ā / France (Director and Screenwriter: Josiane Balasko) – An attractive, successful 50-something woman regularly treats herself to the sexual services of young men selected on Internet sites. When one particular escort becomes a habit, the relationship gets a bit more complicated. Cast: Nathalie Baye, Eric Caravaca, Isabelle Carre, Josiane Balasko. Ā North American Premiere
  • Heart of Time (Corazon Del Tiempo)/ Mexico (Director and Screenwriter: Alberto Cortes) – In La Esperanza de San Pedro, Chiapas, in the midst of the Zapatista struggle, a young woman makes serious waves when she falls in love with a revolutionary fighter from the mountains. Ā Cast: Roc’o Barrios.Ā North American Premiere
  • Louise-Michel/France (Directors: Benoit Delepine and Gustave Kervern) – When a French factory is abruptly closed by its corrupt management, a group of disgruntled female workers pool their paltry compensation money and hire a hit man to knock off the corrupt executive behind the closure. Cast: Yolande Moreau, Bouli Lanners. Ā North American Premiere
  • Lulu and Jim (Lulu und Jimi)/ Germany (Director: Oskar Roehler) – Bright garish colors, rock and roll and wild dance numbers mark this road movie about lovers fleeing from the evil powers of a 1950s deeply bigoted German society.Cast: Jennifer Decker, Ray Fearon, Katrin Sa§, Rolf Zacher, Udo Kier.Ā World Premiere
  • The Maid (La Nana)/Chile (Director and Screenwriter: Sebastian Silva) – When her mistress brings on another servant to help with the chores, a bitter and introverted maid wreaks havoc on the household. Cast: Catalina Saavedra, Claudia Celed—n, Mariana Loyola, Alejandro Goic, Andrea Garc’a-Huidobro.Ā North American Premiere
  • One Day in a LifeĀ (Un Altro Pianeta)/Italy (Director and Screenwriter: Stefano Tummolini) – One languid summer day, a man heads to the beach in search of sunshine and bit of peace, but finds himself tangled up in the dramas of an eclectic group of nearby sunbathers.Cast: Antonio Merone, Lucia Mascino. Ā World Premiere
  • Unmade Beds/ UK (Director and Screenwriter: Alexis Dos Santos) – Two young foreigners find romance in the vibrant, artistic underground of London’s East End.Cast: Deborah Francois, Fernando Tielve.Ā World Premiere
  • Victoria Day/Canada (Director and Screenwriter: David Bezmozgis)—Over the course of one week in 1988, the search for a missing teammate, parental expectations, a burgeoning sexual awakening and the rock concert of the century all threaten to jolt a sixteen year old into adulthood. Cast: Mark Rendall, Sergiy Kotelenets, Nataliya Alyexeyenko, Holly Deveaux, John Mavrogiannis.Ā World Premiere
  • Zion and His BrotherĀ (Zion Ve-Achiv)/ France / Israel (Director and Screenwriter: Eran Merav) – The disappearance of a young boy sends a wedge between two teenage brothers whose loyalty had been unshakeable, in this gritty story of a working class Tel Aviv single-parent family. Cast: Reuven Badalov, Ronit Elkabetz, Tzahi Grad.Ā World Premiere

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> Official website for the Sundance Film Festival
> Find out more about the history of the festival at Wikipedia

Categories
Awards Season News

Golden Globe Winners

Golden GlobesHere are the winners from the Golden Globes last night.

FILM

  • Best Picture, Drama: Slumdog Millionaire
  • Best Picture, Comedy Musical: Vicky Cristina Barcelona
  • Best Director: Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
  • Best Actor, Drama: Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler
  • Best Actress, Drama: Kate Winslet, Revolutionary Road
  • Best Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
  • Best Supporting Actress: Kate Winslet, The Reader
  • Best Screenplay: Simon Beaufoy,Ā Slumdog Millionaire
  • Best Foreign Language Film: Waltz With Bashir
  • Best Animated Feature: WALLĀ·E
  • Best Actor, Musical/Comedy: Colin Farrell, In Bruges
  • Best Actress, Musical/Comedy: Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky
  • Best Original Score: A.R. Rahman, Slumdog Millonaire
  • Best Original Song: Bruce Springsteen, The Wrestler
  • Cecil B. DeMille Award: Stephen Spielberg

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TELEVISION

  • Best Comedy Series: 30 Rock
  • Best Drama Series: Mad Men
  • Best Actor, Drama: Gabriel Byrne, In Treatment
  • Best Actress, Drama: Anna Paquin, True Blood
  • Best Actor, Comedy: Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock
  • Best Actress, Comedy: Tina Fey, 30 Rock
  • Best Miniseries: John Adams
  • Best Actress, Miniseries: Laura Linney, John Adams
  • Best Actor, Miniseries: Paul Giamatti, John Adams
  • Best Supporting Actor: Tom Wilkinson, John Adams
  • Best Supporting Actress: Laura Dern, Recount

> Official site for the Golden Globes
> Check out the latest awards buzz at In Contention and Awards Daily

Categories
Amusing News

Obama teams up with Spider-Man

Obama Spiderman coverPresident-elect Barack Obama has teamed up with Spider-Man.

Marvel have announced a special tribute issue:

To celebrate the upcoming inauguration of Barack Obama, Marvel is proud to present an all-new story teaming up one of the world’s most recognizable political figures with the world’s greatest super hero as President-Elect Obama joins Spider-Man in “Spidey Meets the President!”

Written by Zeb Wells with art by Todd Nauck and Frank D’Armata, the story takes place in Washington, D.C. on Inauguration Day and finds one of Spider-Man’s oldest foes attempting to thwart the swearing in ceremony of the 44th President of the United States.Ā 

Obama reportedly collected Spider-Man comics as a child, so Marvel wanted to give him a ‘shout-out back’ by featuring him in a bonus story, said Joe Quesada, Marvel’s editor-in-chief.

Spidey even gets a fist bump from the incoming president:

Obama Spidey fist bump

The Obama story is a bonus in Marvel Comic’s Amazing Spider-Man #583, available in comic book shops on January 14th and is expected to sell out, with half the covers devoted to Obama.

But can I suggest Marvel do another special issue for the outgoing vice-president?Ā 

Maybe a teamup withĀ Kingpin?

Dick Cheney and Kingpin

Marvel describe the bald-headed Spidey villain (aka Wilson Fisk) as:

…a criminal mastermind who is involved in extensive illegal activities such as drug running, smuggling, murder, and so forth.

Despite this, he has no criminal record and an army of lawyers to keep it that way, and is a criminal financial strategist without parallel.Ā 

Remind you of anyone?

> Official Marvel announcement
> AP report on the story

Categories
Awards Season News

DGA Nominations Announced

DGA LogoThe DGA nominations have been announced and the final five directors are:

  • David Fincher, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Christopher Nolan, The Dark Knight
  • Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
  • Ron Howard, Frost/Nixon
  • Gus Van Sant, Milk

The winner will be named at the 61st Annual DGA Awards Dinner on Saturday, January 31st, at the Hyatt Century Plaza Hotel inĀ Los Angeles.

> Official DGA press release
> Find out more about the Director’s Guild of America at Wikipedia
> Listen to our interview with Danny Boyle abou Slumdog Millionaire

Categories
News

Freestyle Search For A Star

Revolver Entertainment (distributor of Kidulthood) has teamed up with the social networking site Bebo and the National Basketball Association (NBA) in a search for individuals to star in a new film.

The ā€œSearch For A Starā€ competition will be judged by a panel of experts that includes Kolton Lee (Freestyle director and ex-professional basketball player), Kenrick ā€œH20ā€ Sandy (ace choreographer who has worked with the likes of Dizzee Rascal, Misteeq, Sugababes, Big Brovas and Fergie) and a special celebrity guest.

The winning contestants will go on to take the lead roles in Freestyle, a British urban drama set in the competitive world of freestyle basketball.Ā 

Regional auditions will be held throughout January in London (10th), Manchester (17th) and Birmingham (18th), and lucky contestants who impress the judges will be invited to compete in the grand finals, which take place in London on the 24th January.

All entrants must register for their audition spot via the film’s Bebo profile: Ā www.bebo.com/FreestyleMovieĀ 

Freestyle has been financed by Film London, BBC Films and the UK Film Council, and will be released in the UK in autumn 2009 by Revolver Entertainment.

Categories
News

Josh Brolin speaks his mind at the NYFCA

Josh BrolinJosh BrolinĀ isn’t a man to mince his words.

At the New York Film Critics Awards dinner last nightĀ Brolin was remarkably candid about his American Gangster co-star Russell Crowe.

After winningĀ Best Supporting Actor for his role inĀ MilkĀ and being introducedby co-starĀ Sean PennĀ Brolin said:

Quite an actor, Sean Penn. And not an a-hole like Russell Crowe.

He then apparently repeated Crowe’s name just in case anyone missed it:

Like Russell Crowe.

He also had some choice words for New York Times theatre critic Ben Brantley, who pissed him off with this negative review from 2000 when Brolin was in a production of Sam Shepard’s play ‘True West’, saying:

I hate that motherf***er.Ā And I don’t think he’s a good writer.

According to Fox News he was sort of joking:

He’s a great guy. It’s all good. He has his thing.

This hot on the heels of the release of his arrest back in July whilst filming W in Louisiana.

His performance as the 43rd president was one of the most underrated of the year and his turn in Milk as Dan White is simply terrific.

Milk opens in the Uk on Friday 23rd January

> Josh Brolin at the IMDb
> Official UK site for Milk

Categories
Awards Season News

BAFTA Longlist

BAFTA TrophyVariety have posted the BAFTA longlist, which is all the films that have been selected in the first round of voting.

The longlist of films includes 15 contenders in each category, from which the five nominees will be chosen in the second round of voting.

Once the final nominees are selected, the whole membership votes again to decide the best film, four acting prizes and film not in the English language.

In all the remaining categories, the members of each chapter determine the vote.

The best British film is not included on the longlist, as the whole membership will vote for nominees in the first round and the BAFTA film committee will whittle that number down in the next two.

Here is the longlist in full:

BEST FILM
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Burn After Reading
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Doubt
Frost/Nixon
In Bruges
I’ve Loved You So Long
Milk
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
Wall-E
The Wrestler

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
The Baader Meinhof Complex
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Dean Spanley
Defiance
Doubt
The Duchess
Frost/Nixon
Gomorrah
Mamma Mia!
Persepolis
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire

DIRECTOR
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Burn After Reading
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Doubt
Frost/Nixon
Hunger
In Bruges
I’ve Loved You So Long
Milk
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
The Wrestler

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Burn After Reading
Changeling
Che: Part One
Happy-Go-Lucky
Hunger
In Bruges
I’ve Loved You So Long
Milk
Rachel Getting Married
Vicky Cristina Barcelona
The Visitor
W.
Wall-E
Waltz With Bashir
The Wrestler

MAKE UP & HAIR
Australia
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Brideshead Revisited
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
The Duchess
Frost/Nixon
Mamma Mia!
Milk
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
Tropic Thunder
The Wrestler

VISUAL EFFECTS
Australia
Changeling
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Cloverfield
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Hancock
Hellboy II: The Golden Army
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Iron Man
Quantum of Solace
Slumdog Millionaire
Tropic Thunder
Wall-E
Waltz With Bashir

SOUND
Australia
Burn After Reading
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Frost/Nixon
In Bruges
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Iron Man
Mamma Mia!
Quantum of Solace
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
Wall-E

EDITING
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Burn After Reading
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Doubt
Frost/Nixon
In Bruges
Man on Wire
Milk
Quantum of Solace
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
The Wrestler

COSTUME DESIGNĀ 
Australia
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Brideshead Revisited
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
The Duchess
Frost/Nixon
Mamma Mia!
Milk
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Sex and the City
Slumdog Millionaire
The Wrestler

PRODUCTION DESIGNĀ 
Australia
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Brideshead Revisited
Changelingā€
The Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonā€
The Dark Knightā€
The Duchessā€
Frost/Nixonā€
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skullā€
Mamma Mia!ā€
Milkā€
Quantum of Solaceā€
The Readerā€
Revolutionary Roadā€
Slumdog Millionaireā€

CINEMATOGRAPHY
Australiaā€
Changelingā€
The Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonā€
The Dark Knightā€
Doubtā€
The Duchessā€
Frost/Nixonā€
In Brugesā€
Mamma Mia!ā€
Milkā€
Quantum of Solaceā€
The Readerā€
Revolutionary Roadā€
Slumdog Millionaireā€
The Wrestlerā€

ANIMATED FILM
Kung Fu Pandaā€
Persepolisā€
The Tale of Despereauxā€
Wall-Eā€
Waltz With Bashirā€

MUSIC
Australia
Burn After Reading
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
The Duchess
Frost/Nixon
Mamma Mia!
Milk
Quantum of Solace
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire
The Visitor
Wall-E

LEADING ACTOR
Benicio del Toro – ā€œChe Part Oneā€
Brad Pitt – ā€œThe Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonā€
Christian Bale – ā€œThe Dark Knightā€
Colin Farrell – ā€œIn Brugesā€
Dev Patel – ā€œSlumdog Millionaireā€
Frank Langella – ā€œFrost/Nixonā€
George Clooney – ā€œBurn After Readingā€
Javier Bardem – ā€œVicky Cristina Barcelonaā€
Josh Brolin – ā€œW.ā€
Leonardo DiCaprio – ā€œRevolutionary Roadā€
Michael Fassbender — ā€œHungerā€
Michael Sheen – ā€œFrost/Nixonā€
Mickey Rourke – ā€œThe Wrestlerā€
Richard Jenkins – ā€œThe Visitorā€
Sean Penn – ā€œMilkā€

LEADING ACTRESSĀ 
Angelina Jolie – ā€œChangelingā€
Anne Hathaway – ā€œRachel Getting Marriedā€
Cate Blanchett – ā€œThe Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonā€
Frances McDormand – ā€œBurn After Readingā€
Kate Winslet – ā€œRevolutionary Roadā€
Kate Winslet – ā€œThe Readerā€
Keira Knightley – ā€œThe Duchessā€
Kristen Scott Thomas – ā€œI’ve Loved You So Longā€
Meryl Streep – ā€œMamma Mia!ā€
Meryl Streep – ā€œDoubtā€
Nicole Kidman – ā€œAustraliaā€
Penelope Cruz – ā€œElegyā€
Rebecca Hall – ā€œVicky Cristina Barcelonaā€
Sally Hawkins – ā€œHappy-Go-Luckyā€
Scarlett Johansson – ā€œVicky Cristina Barcelonaā€

SUPPORTING ACTOR
Brad Pitt – ā€œBurn After Readingā€
Brendan Gleeson – ā€œIn Brugesā€
David Kross – ā€œThe Readerā€
Eddie Marsan – ā€œHappy-Go-Luckyā€
Heath Ledger – ā€œThe Dark Knightā€
John Malkovich – ā€œBurn After Readingā€
John Malkovich – ā€œChangelingā€
Josh Brolin – ā€œMilkā€
Kevin Bacon – ā€œFrost/Nixonā€
Peter O’Toole – ā€œDean Spanleyā€
Philip Seymour Hoffman – ā€œDoubtā€
Ralph Fiennes – ā€œThe Duchessā€
Ralph Fiennes – ā€œIn Brugesā€
Ralph Fiennes – ā€œThe Readerā€
Robert Downey Jr. – ā€œTropic Thunderā€

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams – ā€œDoubtā€
Charlotte Rampling – ā€œThe Duchessā€
Elsa Zylberstein – ā€œI’ve Loved You So Longā€
Emma Thompson- ā€œBrideshead Revisitedā€
Freida Pinto – ā€œSlumdog Millionaireā€
Judi Dench – ā€œQuantum of Solaceā€
Julie Walters – ā€œMamma Mia!ā€
Kathy Bates – ā€œRevolutionary Roadā€
Marisa Tomei – ā€œThe Wrestlerā€
PenĆ©lope Cruz – ā€œVicky Cristina Barcelonaā€
Rebecca Hall – ā€œFrost/Nixonā€
Tilda Swinton – ā€œThe Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonā€
Tilda Swinton – ā€œBurn After Readingā€
Vera Farmiga – ā€œThe Boy in the Striped Pajamasā€
Viola Davis – ā€œDoubtā€

The BAFTA screening and awards schedule for this year breaks down like this:

Ā 

Ā 

Ā 

  • Thursday 20 November 2008:Ā Deadline for entry of films and submission of Screen Credits Forms
  • Monday 8 December:Ā Round 1 of voting begins
  • Thursday 18 December:Ā All entered films, including qualified films, must be screened to members by this date. Screenings may continue after this date
  • Monday 5 JanuaryĀ 2009:Ā Round 1 of voting ends
  • Tuesday 6 January 2009:Ā Round 2 of voting begins
  • Tuesday 13 January 2009:Ā Round 2 of voting ends
  • Thursday 15 January 2009:Ā Nominations announced. Round 3 of voting begins.
  • Monday 2 February 2009:Ā Round 3 of voting ends
  • Friday 6 February 2009:Ā All entered films must open on general release by this date
  • Sunday 8 February 2009:Ā Orange British Academy Film Awards

Ā 

> Official BAFTA site
> Variety story

Categories
Interesting News

Harold Pinter on Charlie Rose

Harold Pinter died yesterday after a lengthy bout of cancer.

The playwright gave this interview to Charlie Rose in December 2006 where he discussed his life and work.

> Harold Pinter at the IMDb
> New York Times report on his death
> John Lahr profile in The New Yorker from 2007
> Find out more about his life and career at Wikipedia

Categories
News

The Reel Geezers on DVDs in 2008

The Reel Geezers give their take on the year in DVD.

>Ā Check out The Reel Geezers on YouTube
>Ā Lorenzo Semple JnrĀ andĀ Marcia NasatirĀ at theĀ IMDb

Categories
News

Deep Throat RIP

Mark FeltĀ died yesterday.

After thirty years of denying his involvement with reportersĀ Bob WoodwardĀ andĀ Carl Bernstein, Felt – a former deputy director of the FBI – revealed himself in 2005 to be the keyĀ Watergate scandalĀ whistleblowerĀ called “Deep Throat“.

In honour of the man who helped bring downĀ PresidentĀ Richard Nixon, below is a clip fromĀ All The President’s MenĀ where Woodward (Robert Redford) goes to meet Deep Throat (Hal Holbrook) in an undergound parking lot.Ā 

> Find out more about Mark Felt at Wikipedia
> All The President’s Men at IMDb

Categories
Awards Season News

SAG Nominations 2008

SAG Awards 2008The nominations for this year’s Screen Actor’s Guild awards have been announced.

Here are the film nominees:

BEST ACTOR

  • Richard Jenkins, The Visitor
  • Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon
  • Sean Penn, Milk
  • Brad Pitt, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

BEST ACTRESS

  • Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married
  • Angelina Jolie, Changeling
  • Melissa Leo, Frozen River
  • Meryl Streep, Doubt
  • Kate Winslet, Rev Road

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

  • Josh Brolin, Milk
  • Robert Downey , Jr., Tropic Thunder
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
  • Heath Ledger, The Dark Night
  • Dev Patel, Slumdog Millionaire

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

  • Amy Adams, Doubt
  • Penelope Cruz, Vicky Cristina
  • Viola Davis, Doubt
  • Taraji P. Henson, Benjamin Button
  • Kate Winslet, The Reader

ENSEMBLE

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Doubt
  • Frost/Nixon
  • Milk
  • Slumdog Millionaire

You can download a full list of nominations (including the TV categories)Ā as a word docĀ orĀ or a PDF file.

The 15th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards will be held on January 25th, 2009.

> Official SAG website
> Awards season reaction at InContentionĀ and Variety

Categories
Awards Season News

Golden Globe Nominations 2008

Golden GlobesThis year’s Golden Globe nominations have been announced.

As always, they will be seen as a signpost for the Oscars but it is worth noting that the Hollywood Foreign Press Association split the major categories into Drama & Musical/Comedy and can occasionally offer up some weird choices.

That said, a large chunk of the films and performances will be the ones up for Oscar and BAFTA recognition.Ā 

The surprises that initially stick out below are the lack of nominations for MilkĀ in the major categories and the nod forĀ Tom Cruise in Tropic Thunder.

Here is the full list of film nominations:

Best Picture – Drama

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Frost/Nixon
  • The Reader
  • Revolutionary Road
  • Slumdog Millionaire

Best Comedy/Musical

  • Burn After Reading
  • Happy Go Lucky
  • In Bruges
  • Mamma Mia
  • Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Best Actor – Comedy

  • Javier Bardem, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
  • Colin Farrell, In Bruges
  • James Franco, Pineapple Express
  • Brendan Gleason, In Bruges
  • Dustin Hoffman, Last Chance Harvey

Best Supporting Actress – Musical or Comedy

  • Amy Adams, Doubt
  • Penelope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
  • Viola Davis, Doubt
  • Marisa Tomei, The Wrestler
  • Kate Winslet, The Reader

Best Director

  • Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
  • Stephen Daldry, The Reader
  • David Fincher,Ā The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Ron Howard, Frost/Nixon
  • Sam Mendes, Revolutionary Road

Best Supporting Actor

  • Tom Cruise, Tropic Thunder
  • Robert Downey Jr., Tropic Tunder
  • Ralph Fiennes, The Duchess
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
  • Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight

Best Actor – Drama

  • Leo DiCaprio, Revolutionary Ā Road
  • Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon
  • Sean Penn, Milk
  • Brad Pitt,Ā The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

Best Actress – Drama

  • Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married
  • Angelina Joie, Changeling
  • Meryl Streep, Doubt
  • Kristin Scott Thomas, I’ve Loved You So Long
  • Kate Winslet, Revolutionary Road

Best Actress – Comedy

  • Rebecca Hall, Vicky Cristina
  • Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky
  • Frances McDormand, Burn After Reading
  • Meryl Streep, Mamma Mia
  • Emma Thompson, Last Chance Harvey

Foreign Language Film

  • The Baader Meinhof Complex (Germany)
  • Everlasting Moments (Sweden)
  • Gomorrah (Italy)
  • I’ve Loved You So Long
  • Waltz with Bashir

Best Animated FilmĀ 

  • Bolt
  • Kung Fu Panda
  • WALL-E

Best Screenplay

  • Slumdog Millionaire
  • The Reader
  • Frost/Nixon
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Doubt

Best Score

  • Benjamin Button
  • Changeling
  • Defiance
  • Slumdog Millionaire
  • Frost/Nixon

Best Song

  • Down to Earth, Wall-E
  • Gran Torino,Ā Gran TorinoĀ 
  • I Thought I Lost You, Bolt
  • Once in a Lifetime, Cadillac Record
  • The Wrestler, The Wrestler

> Check out the full list of nominations at the HFPA site
> Gauge reaction to the nominations at Variety, The Hollywood Reporter and In Contention

Categories
News

Sight and Sound’s Top Films of 2008

British film magazine Sight and Sound have published their top 10 films of 2008.

They asked 50 critics for their five favourites of the past year and the titles that appeared the most were then selected as their Top 10 of 2008.

Here is the final list (with some ties):

1. Hunger (Steve McQueen, UK)
2. There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson, USA)
3. WALL-E (Andrew Stanton, USA)
4. Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone, Italy)Ā 
=5. A Christmas Tale (Arnaud Desplechin, France)Ā 
=5. The Class (Laurent Cantet, France)
7. Of Time and the City (Terence Davies, UK)
8. Happy-Go-Lucky (Mike Leigh, UK)
=9. The Headless Woman (Lucrecia Martel, Argentina/France/Italy/Spain)
=9. Let the Right One In (Tomas Alfredson, Sweden).

The January edition of the magazine will have the full choices of each critic and you can also check out their best DVDs of 2008.

Lists like these are always difficult for UK critics as a lot of the best films open in the US during the last months of the year (for award consideration) and only get released in the UK during in January or February.

This means that a lot of US end-of-year lists are out of sync with their UK counterparts. My policy last year was to just list the films I had seen that year and ignore the UK release date.

After all, in years to come, if you look up There Will Be BloodĀ in the IMDb or any self respecting film guide you will see ‘2007’ next to the title and not 2008.

However, I’m slightly puzzled by Sight and Sound’s policy. I thought they had gone with year of UK release policy but The Class (incidentally an outstanding film) is also in there.

It doesn’t get released here until February and won’t even qualify for this year’s BAFTAs as it is coming out in February. Does it get in because it had a public screening at the London Film Festival a few weeks back?

Anyway, whatever the policy, there are some real highlights above and if you haven’t seen Hunger yet then it is a film you really should catch in a cinema.

> Sight and Sound site and their 2002 polls
> My favourite films of 2007
> Metacritic end of year lists for 2007

Categories
News

Barack Obama’s Weekly Video Address on YouTube

Notice how Barack Obama‘s weekly video address is now making use of YouTube’s new 16:9 widescreen aspect ratio. (The high quality version looks particularly good)

Categories
News Technology

YouTube goes widescreen

You may have noticed recently that YouTube videos have switched to a widescreen ratio.Ā 

Or to be technical about it, they have changed theĀ aspect ratioĀ of their video player fromĀ 4:3Ā toĀ 16:9.

This appears to apply to all videos, so the 4:3 videos are screened in aĀ pillarboxĀ format.

They also now offer some of its videos in trueĀ HDĀ format, with a resolution of 1280×720Ā pixels.

Videos uploaded with 720 pixel resolution can be viewed in this format by addingĀ &fmt=22Ā to the web address.

The changes were announced yesterdayĀ via their blog:

“We’re expanding the width of the page to 960 pixels to better reflect the quality of the videos you create and the screens that you use to watch them.

This new, wider player is in a widescreen aspect ratio which we hope will provide you with a cleaner, more powerful viewing experience.”

This is an eager user describing the benefits of widescreen:

(Here isĀ a playlist of BBC videos that look nice in the widescreen format)

What this development suggests is that they are getting ready for streaming movies and TV shows via their site in order to directly compete with Hulu and Vimeo.

CNET have a theoryĀ with regard to the former:

YouTube parent Google may be trying to duplicate the success of competitor Hulu, which has become the top outlet for watching full-length films and TV shows on the Web, and is reportedly generating as many ad dollars in its first year in business as YouTube, which will mark its fourth birthday in February.

They recently signed a deal with MGM to stream films and I would be surprised if they didn’t have plans with other studios in the pipeline.

Warner Bros and Sony would seem the likely candidates given that Fox and Universal are joint partners on Hulu, Paramount are owned by a company (Viacom) that are currently trying to sue Google, whilst Disney appear happy to go down the iTunes route.

is it possible that all of them may partner with the video sharing site in the future if it can help them?

ReutersĀ recently reportedĀ that theĀ UK production companyĀ FremantleMediaĀ (behind numerous reality shows, game shows and other entertainment) have plans to produce shows exclusively for YouTube for an undisclosed revenue split.

But what about Google?

Despite owning the most successful video site on the web, YouTube remains something of a conundrum for it’s corporate parent.

Although massively popular and possessing aĀ great brand name, how do they monetise it effectively?

Google are still gushing money but there are still question marks over the copyright issues that have infuriated the likes of Viacom and how advertising will fit in to the general ethos of the site without making it suck.

According to a Fortune article back in March delivering free video wasn’t cheap:

YouTube sends a staggering 1,000 gigabytes of data every second, or nearly 300 billion GBs each month.

Several industry insiders estimate that YouTube spends roughly $1 million a day just to pay for the bandwidth to host the videos.

By that number, YouTube downloads would account for roughly 3% of Google’s $11.5 billion operating costs for 2007.Ā 

Here is a video from June of CEO Eric Schmidt talking to Ken Auletta about the future of YouTube (go to 6.20):

My guess is that they will start showing more premium content alongside the user generated videos but somehow find a way of importing their lucrative text-based Adsense model into video.

IsĀ the shift to widescreen a move in that direction?

> YouTube blog post announcing the move to widescreen
> A playlist of widescreen YouTube videos from the BBC
> CNET on the story
> Find out more about Widescreen at Wikipedia

Categories
Interesting Lists News

Cahiers du cinĆ©ma’s 100 Greatest Films

French film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma have compiled a list of the 100 greatest films of all time.

It is published this month in an illustrated book and was put together by 76 French film directors, critics and industry executives.

Here are the 100 films:

  1. Citizen Kane – Orson Welles
  2. The Night of the Hunter – Charles Laughton
  3. The Rules of the Game (La RĆØgle du jeu) – Jean Renoir
  4. Sunrise – Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
  5. L’Atalante – Jean Vigo
  6. M – Fritz Lang
  7. Singin’ in the Rain – Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
  8. Vertigo – Alfred Hitchcock
  9. Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis) – Marcel CarnĆ©
  10. The Searchers – John Ford
  11. Greed – Erich von Stroheim
  12. Rio Bravo – Howard Hawkes
  13. To Be or Not to Be – Ernst Lubitsch
  14. Tokyo Story – Yasujiro Ozu
  15. Contempt (Le MĆ©pris) – Jean-Luc Godard
  16. Tales of Ugetsu (Ugetsu monogatari) – Kenji Mizoguchi
  17. City Lights – Charlie Chaplin
  18. The General – Buster Keaton
  19. Nosferatu the Vampire – Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
  20. The Music Room – Satyajit Ray
  21. Freaks – Tod Browning
  22. Johnny Guitar – Nicholas Ray
  23. The Mother and the Whore (La Maman et la Putain) – Jean Eustache
  24. The Great Dictator – Charlie Chaplin
  25. The Leopard (Le GuĆ©pard) – Luchino Visconti
  26. Hiroshima, My Love – Alain Resnais
  27. The Box of Pandora (Loulou) – Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  28. North by Northwest – Alfred Hitchcock
  29. Pickpocket – Robert Bresson
  30. Golden Helmet (Casque d’or) – Jacques Becker
  31. The Barefoot Contessa – Joseph Mankiewitz
  32. Moonfleet – Fritz Lang
  33. Diamond Earrings (Madame de…) – Max Ophüls
  34. Pleasure – Max Ophüls
  35. The Deer Hunter – Michael Cimino
  36. The Adventure – Michelangelo Antonioni
  37. Battleship Potemkin – Sergei M. Eisenstein
  38. Notorious – Alfred Hitchcock
  39. Ivan the Terrible – Sergei M. Eisenstein
  40. The Godfather – Francis Ford Coppola
  41. Touch of Evil – Orson Welles
  42. The Wind – Victor Sjƶstrƶm
  43. 2001: A Space Odyssey – Stanley Kubrick
  44. Fanny and Alexander – Ingmar Bergman
  45. The Crowd – King Vidor
  46. 8 1/2 – Federico Fellini
  47. La JetĆ©e – Chris Marker
  48. Pierrot le Fou – Jean-Luc Godard
  49. Confessions of a Cheat (Le Roman d’un tricheur) – Sacha Guitry
  50. Amarcord – Federico Fellini
  51. Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la BĆŖte) – Jean Cocteau
  52. Some Like It Hot – Billy Wilder
  53. Some Came Running – Vincente Minnelli
  54. Gertrud – Carl Theodor Dreyer
  55. King Kong – Ernst Shoedsack & Merian J. Cooper
  56. Laura – Otto Preminger
  57. The Seven Samurai – Akira Kurosawa
  58. The 400 Blows – FranƧois Truffaut
  59. La Dolce Vita – Federico Fellini
  60. The Dead – John Huston
  61. Trouble in Paradise – Ernst Lubitsch
  62. It’s a Wonderful Life – Frank Capra
  63. Monsieur Verdoux – Charlie Chaplin
  64. The Passion of Joan of Arc – Carl Theodor Dreyer
  65. ƀ bout de souffle – Jean-Luc Godard
  66. Apocalypse Now – Francis Ford Coppola
  67. Barry Lyndon – Stanley Kubrick
  68. La Grande Illusion – Jean Renoir
  69. Intolerance – David Wark Griffith
  70. A Day in the Country (Partie de campagne) – Jean Renoir
  71. Playtime – Jacques Tati
  72. Rome, Open City – Roberto Rossellini
  73. Livia (Senso) – Luchino Visconti
  74. Modern Times – Charlie Chaplin
  75. Van Gogh – Maurice Pialat
  76. An Affair to Remember – Leo McCarey
  77. Andrei Rublev – Andrei Tarkovsky
  78. The Scarlet Empress – Joseph von Sternberg
  79. Sansho the Bailiff – Kenji Mizoguchi
  80. Talk to Her – Pedro Almodóvar
  81. The Party – Blake Edwards
  82. Tabu – Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
  83. The Bandwagon – Vincente Minnelli
  84. A Star Is Born – George Cukor
  85. Mr. Hulot’s Holiday – Jacques Tati
  86. America, America – Elia Kazan
  87. El – Luis BuƱuel
  88. Kiss Me Deadly – Robert Aldrich
  89. Once Upon a Time in America – Sergio Leone
  90. Daybreak (Le Jour se lĆØve) – Marcel CarnĆ©
  91. Letter from an Unknown Woman – Max Ophüls
  92. Lola – Jacques Demy
  93. Manhattan – Woody Allen
  94. Mulholland Dr. – David Lynch
  95. My Night at Maud’s (Ma nuit chez Maud) – Eric Rohmer
  96. Night and Fog (Nuit et Brouillard) – Alain Resnais
  97. The Gold Rush – Charlie Chaplin
  98. Scarface – Howard Hawks
  99. Bicycle Thieves – Vittorio de Sica
  100. NapolĆ©on – Abel Gance

The reaction from some outlets in this country is surprise that there are no British films on the list.

The Telegraph say:

The list in the publication Les Cahiers du Cinema features films from the USA, Germany, Russia, Italy and Sweden but there is no place for some of the biggest British directors including David Lean, Ken Loach and Peter Greenaway.

British-born Alfred Hitchcock and Charlie Chaplin are both mentioned but only for the movies that they made in Hollywood.

The nearest the British cinema industry comes to a mention is the 17th (equal) place given to 2001: A Space Odyssey, made in 1968, by the American director, Stanley Kubrick, partly with British money and with British technicians.

The 1962 classic Lawrence of Arabia came seventh in a recent list of the best 100 movies drawn up by the American Film Institute in Hollywood but is perhaps the highest profile omission.

Jean-Michel Frodon, the editor of Les Cahiers du Cinema, has pointed out that the lack of British-made films was “striking” but not part of any Gallic conspiracy:

“It does not reflect an anti-British bias. It is simply the result of the individual choices of 76 people in the French industry. Each was asked to name their 100 best films and this was the result.

Yes, it is surprising, maybe, that there is no Lawrence of Arabia, or no film by Ken Loach or Stephen Frears (The Queen).

But there are many other national film industries which are also missing. There are no Brazilian films, for instance.”

Some British films that should have made the list would surely include:

That said, if you were to ask me what are the truly great British films of the last 20 years, then I would struggle to come up with one.

In May 1957 a former editor of Cahiers (and later director) Francois Truffaut once remarked:

“The British cinema is made of dullness and reflects a submissive lifestyle, where enthusiasm, warmth, and zest are nipped in the bud. A film is a born loser just because it is English.

Maybe nothing has changed in 50 years.

> The Telegraph on the list
> Official site for CahiersĀ du Cinema
> Geoffrey MacNab of The Guardian in 2001 on Cahiers du Cinema

Categories
Box Office Cinema News

Twilight set to rule the US box office

TwilightĀ is the film adaptation ofĀ theĀ novelĀ byĀ Stephenie MeyerĀ that looks set to rule the US box office this weekend.Ā 

The book is an international bestseller which has been translated into over 20 languages worldwideĀ and there are currently four ‘Twilight’ novels: Twilight (2005), New Moon (2006), Eclipse (2007) and Breaking Dawn (2008).

They have a combined sale of over 25 million copies,Ā which helps to make this one of the most eagerly anticipated films of the year and the start of a lucrative franchise for Summit Entertainment.

Directed byĀ Catherine HardwickeĀ it starsĀ Kristen StewartĀ as Bella, a teenage girl who falls in love with aĀ vampire, played byĀ Robert Pattinson.

It opens in the US tomorrow (and on the UK in December 19th) and pundits are already predicting that it will take a huge bite out of the box office competition.Ā 

Steven Mason of Fantasy Moguls is predicting a $60 million weekend opening, calling it:Ā 

… a phenomenon in industry tracking and advance sales, and two separate competing studio sources are telling me that they expect the film adaptation of Bella and Edward’s forbidden romance to top $60 million in its opening three days.

He has also writes that the film is skewing towards females:

Industry tracking indicates that Females Under 25 will make up the core audience for Twilight, but Females 25 Plus, including moms, have ā€œDefinite Interestā€ in seeing it.

It’s not entirely surprising, considering that there is even a website called TwilightMoms.com.

Interestingly, although there aren’[t many Males Under 25 who name Twilight as their ā€œFirst Choiceā€ in tracking data, an industry insider tells me that the ā€œDefinitely Not Interestedā€ score with young males isn’t through the roof.

If Twilight is not especially objectionable to teenage guys, then they are more likely to be dragged to see it by girlfriends and dates this weekend.

Earlier this week Nikki Finke of Deadline Hollywood Daily reports that pre-sales of tickets doing a brisk trade:

Summit Entertainment will be running the pic in 3,386 theaters and has arranged with the major theater circuits for Thursday midnight or Friday morning shows.

As of noon ET today,Ā TwilightĀ has already sold out 389 performances at MovieTickets.com, including more than 140 this past weekend alone.Ā 

Four days prior to its release,TwilightĀ is already No. 20 on MovieTickets’ Top-20 Pre-Sale List of All-Time.Ā The picĀ hasĀ accounted for 85% of tickets sold on the site today.Ā 

She had already reportedĀ the following facts:

  1. The official film website has received over 11 million views since October.Ā 
  2. The trailers have garnered over 12 million views on MySpace, which is a record.Ā 
  3. The debut of the final trailer in theĀ TwilightĀ widget and on MySpace Trailer ParkĀ generated over 3.5 million views in the first 48 hours.Ā 
  4. It’sĀ the 3rd most searched movie on IMDb Pro’s MOVIEMeter (others above it are already in theaters).
  5. TheĀ Entertainment WeeklyĀ “Twilight Saga” cover was the best-seller of the year for the mag, surpassing theĀ Dark KnightĀ andĀ Harry PotterĀ covers.Ā 
  6. TheĀ TwilightĀ soundtrack is #1 (on Top 200, Soundtrack and Alternative charts) after one week of release. It’s the first soundtrack to accomplish this feat in 6 years (sinceĀ 8 MileĀ was released).Ā 

All of which has taken Hollywood a bit by surprise.Ā Although it was expected to do well, in recent weeks the buzz has reached fever pitch.

Whatever happens it looks like it will be a major hit, which will be impressive for a film with an estimated production budget of $37 million.

Plus, it will be the first major film for Summit Entertainment, which has had a series of box office duds since they got into production, acquisition and distribution.

The execs at MTV Films must be kicking themselves as they originally had the film rightsĀ but passed on the project before selling itĀ to Summit.

Will it deliver the goods? I’m seeing it on Sunday so I’ll write some thoughts then.

Twilight opens in the US tomorrow and in the UK on December 19th

> Official Twilight website
> Find out more about the Twilight books at Wikipedia
> Listen to our interview with Cam Gigandet (who plays the main villain in the film)

Categories
News Thoughts

David Cox of The Guardian loses the plot over Hunger

I have to admit that I missed David Cox’s article about Hunger on the Guardian’s film blog, which was published on November 3rd, and only discovered it retrospectively after seeing the reader’s editor piece on it.

For those not familiar with the film, it deals with the 1981 IRA hunger strikes inside the Maze prison.

ItĀ premiered toĀ great acclaim at the Cannes Film FestivalĀ back in May and it also garnered similar reviews on it’s UK release.

Despite some early articles predicting ‘controversy’, it hasn’t really materialised, mainly because the film doesn’t seek to be a political polemic, but rather an exploration of the reasons and realities of life inside the prison.

One of the actors in the film (Liam Cunningham) recently told me that when it was screened in Belfast last month, the reception from both sides of the political divide was positive because it took a human look at this dark chapter of The Troubles.

So it is extremely disappointing to read Cox’s silly and offensive rant about the film, which possibly qualifies as one of the worst articles I’ve ever read in a paper I generally admire and respect.

I would encourage you to read it for yourself but there are some sentences worth highlighting.

On the conditions in the prison, as depicted in the film, he says:Ā 

Far from being shocked at seeing the inmates roughed up a bit, I found myself wishing they’d been properly tortured, preferably savagely, imaginatively and continuously.Ā Ā 

So, a Guardian journalist advocates torture. I realise we have had an historic week for other reasons but I really never thought I would see the day. Ā 

I assume he is making a feeble attempt at a joke but given the appallingĀ torture scandals in recent years in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, you’ll have to excuse me for finding this both trite and disgusting.

But I don’t need to tell you that as even Cox admits that what he is writing is ‘immoderate’ and ‘reprehensible’:

I appreciate that my responses to this beautifully made film are uncharitable, immoderate and indeed reprehensible.

Yet, the men heroised in Hunger chose to murder my fellow citizens, on their own island and mine, indiscriminately and brutally, in pursuit of a cause I consider unimpressive. What do you expect me to feel?Ā Ā 

Well, you can feel what you like, but before putting your thoughts down for a serious newspaper, I would suggest you think a bit more deeply about not only the long and complex history between England and Ireland, but also about a film which is clearly operating on a level far above your shameful ramblings.

For good measure he even chucks in an offensive term for Catholics when discussing the nationality of the director Steve McQueen:

Admittedly, some of my compatriots seem better able to contain their rancour.

Hunger’s writer/director,Ā Steve McQueen, isn’t some baleful, unreconstructed Fenian, but a Londoner sporting an OBE.

Given that the term ‘Fenian’ has often been used as a derogatory slur against Catholics, I would suggest this was unwise at best and more to the point, what has McQueen’s nationality got to do with anything?

Clearly this is something of a pet peeve, as he goes on to question why British directors like Ken Loach and Paul Greengrass should have the gall to use British money in order to make films about one of the most important historical episodes in our recent history:

His film was funded not by Libya Movies or the Boston Irish Benevolent Society but by Film Four, the Wales Creative IP Fund and theĀ UK Film Council.

Forgiveness is a wonderful thing, but there still seems something a little odd here. Wasn’t the United Kingdom the entity that the IRA was created to destroy? Would Israel subsidise an admiring biopic about Leila Khaled?

Yet, Hunger isn’t alone. The UK Film Council also found cash forĀ The Wind that Shakes the Barley, whose sturdily EnglishĀ directorĀ hails from Nuneaton. Granada had a hand inĀ Bloody Sunday, and that film’sĀ directorĀ was born in Cheam.Ā 

Cox seems to be implying that there is some kind of irony in British directors making films that ‘glorify’ an enemy bent on ‘destroying’ the UK.Ā 

If you actually watch The Wind That Shakes The Barley or Bloody Sunday (preferably with brain switched on) you might realise that Cox is talking utter bollocks.Ā 

Neither film glorifies terrorism or indeed the Republican cause, so what exactly is his point?

Furthermore, if the UK Film Council were to go insane and select directors for subjects based on their nationality, then surely this is the kind of prejudice and narrow minded thinking that leads to division and conflict? Ā 

But clearly levelheaded tolerance is in short supply on this corner of the Guardian’s film blog:

Doesn’t it ever occur to the British film industry’s luminaries that Britain’s role in The Troubles could also be celebrated, at least occasionally?

It was, after all, shaped by the call of duty, rather than misplaced nationalist fervour.

What kind of film is he talking about here?Ā 

A possible subject comes to mind. CaptainĀ Robert Nairac, a maverick undercover agent, was abducted, savagely tortured and killed by the IRA. His assassin subsequentlyĀ said, “Nairac was the bravest man I ever met. He told us nothing”.

Yet Nairac was a Catholic. HisĀ last wordsĀ were “Bless me Father, for I have sinned”. All of this seems to me to make him a more interesting as well as a more heroic character than Bobby Sands.Ā 

Is Hunger making Sands out to be a hero? I don’t think so, but to go down the road of making films celebrating either the Unionist or Republican position on the Troubles strikes me as a very slippery one indeed.

Do the UK Film Council fund a film about an IRA atrocity like Enniskillen, followed by one involving the alleged shoot-to-kill policy of the SAS?

Surely this is nonsensical – it is best to just let artists and writers bring their vision to the screen and judge them on the final result.

If you read through the comments on the post (currently 848 as I write this) you’ll find that many have taken offence and complained at the lowering of standards at The Guardian.

The reader’s editorĀ Ā posted her own piece about this, saying:

More than 700 comments were posted to it, but let’s not confuse that with popularity: “grossly antagonistic”, “hysterical”, “uninformed view of Irish history”, “rabble-rousing”, “anti-Irish”, “bigoted” and “a spittle-flecked BNP-style rant” were just some of the objections to it.

How did Cox offend readers? Let me count the ways. Talking about scenes in the film that showed the brutal treatment of republican prisoners at the Maze he said: “Far from being shocked at seeing the inmates roughed up a bit, I found myself wishing they’d been properly tortured, preferably savagely, imaginatively and continuously.”

Many commenters and nearly all of the 21 people who complained to me objected to that statement, which appeared to advocate torture, being published by the Guardian.

It’s obvious that the Guardian doesn’t endorse all of the frequently diverging views in all the comment pieces it publishes, and other articles about Hunger had a different slant. However, fragmentation of web content means that readers of Cox’s blog may not have seen them.Ā 

It’s not that a dissenting view on Hunger is a bad thing, it is more that a bone-headed and offensive pile of rubbish was spewed all over a normally respectable and intelligent part of the web.

But Siobhain goes on to get Cox’s reply and that of the film site’s editor, which is revealing to say the least:

Cox went on: “You see, what kept coming into my mind (although not into the film) was the treatment that these same victims of the shovings and beatings had meted out to the victims of their own bullets and bombs.”

What on earth this has to do in a serious discussion of the film (as distinct from the actual horrors of the Troubles) is beyond me, but anyway let’s continue:

He told me that it was a misrepresentation to suggest that he was actually advocating torture and the film site’s editor said that his blog was a gut response to Hunger.

Well, it isn’t a ‘misrepresentation’ if he actually wrote a sentence advocating torture is it?Ā And if he is making an attempt at satire, then I would humbly suggest that it has failed miserably.

Just because scenes in Hunger made him think of the victims of the IRA doesn’t really mean anything unless he forms that ‘gut reaction’ into a sensible point about the film.

I bring this up because one of the most shocking scenes – which he neglects to mention – is actually a brutal and callous murder by anĀ IRA gunman.

The site’s editor says:

“Film-makers provoke a reaction and the film blog is a forum for discussing reactions to films,” she told me.

Well, that’s all fine except I think this particular comment piece crossed several lines.

Can you imagine what the Guardian’s reaction would be had this piece been published by right-leaning papers like The Daily Mail or The Telegraph?

Furthermore, it annoys me that some editors on newspapers appear to think that tendentious crap can be passed off as colourful comment simply because ‘its on a blog’.

Whether it is in print, online or on a podcast I expect there to be some quality and consistency from a news organisation like The Guardian.

To be fair, the reader’s editor does admit:

It was an extremely provocative blog that deliberately treated a sensitive subject insensitively.Ā 

…As more than one objector said, it was “incendiary”, but in the end Cox appeared to be hoist by his own petard.

There was limited support for his diatribe and, while his approach to the subject matter was a recipe for a polarised and nasty debate, there is evidence that many commenters resisted the urge to match Cox’s intemperate tone.

Generally, they raised the level of debate and the discussion was, in many places, markedly courteous.

Which is more than can be said of Cox, who is fairly unrepentant in his final reply:

Cox has no regrets about causing offence.

“There is a strong tradition in English journalism, dating back to Swift … of robust expression on matters of great sensitivity,” he said.

“I don’t think it’s true that we can debate just as effectively if we all express ourselves in as genteel fashion as Victorian maiden aunts might have done.”

I’m all for robust debate but I want intelligence and facts too, which is ironic because as thisĀ one perceptive comment points out:

Swift wasĀ Irish, you ignorant pillock

Former Guardian editor C.P ScottĀ once said:Ā ‘Comment is free, but facts are sacred‘, but in this case I think he would agree the above comment by user ‘Setanta‘ has a certain divine quality to it.

> Read the original post by David Cox at The Guardian
> The reader’s editor respondsĀ 
> Listen to actor Liam Cunningham discuss Hunger

Categories
News

NBC reviews the 2008 election

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News

President-Elect Barack Obama in Chicago

The victory speech from Chicago.

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News

President Obama

Fox News reported. America decided.Ā President Obama.

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News

US Electoral Map 2008

Above is a live map of the 2008 US elections, courtesy of Google and the Associated Press.

Hover your mouse over states to see the current percentages, or use the drop-down menus to check out individual states and see totals by county.

You can zoom in and out, pan around, and do everything you normally do with Google Maps.

>Ā Find out more about the 2008 US ElectionĀ at Wikipedia
> Get the latest polling data atĀ BBC News,Ā Electoral VoteĀ and theĀ New York Times

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News

The 2008 US Election Campaign in 3 Slate Videos

From the Conventions to the First Debate in Three Minutes

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From the First to the Last Debate in Four Minutes

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From the Last Debate to the Final Week in Two MinutesĀ 

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> More videos at Slate
> Find out more about the 2008 US Election at Wikipedia
> Get the latest polling data at Electoral Vote, BBC News and the New York Times

Categories
News

Joaquin Phoenix quits acting?

According to the entertainment show Extra, Joaquin Phoenix has decided to quit acting.

The video above was shot last night at a Paul Newman benefit, and the star of Gladiator, Walk the Line and the forthcoming Two Lovers, said :

‘I want to take this opportunity… also to give you the exclusive and just talk a little bit about the fact that this will be my last performance as an actor… I’m not doing films anymore.’

When asked if he was being serious, Phoenix (who was being followed by his own camera crews), said:

‘Yeah. I’m working on my music. I’m done. I’ve been through that.’

Either this is some kind of elaborate joke or Phoenix might have some serious issues going on.

>Ā Joaquin PhoenixĀ at theĀ IMDb
> BBC News report the story

Categories
Box Office News

Quantum of Solace breaks UK box office record

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The latest Bond film Quantum of Solace has made box office history on its opening day in the UK, taking amassive £4.94m and making it the biggest Friday opening of all time.

This shatters the previous record held by Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which took £4.025m back in 2005.

The latest installment from the longest running franchise in film history, has also beaten the opening day figure for the last Bond movie, Casino Royale, which took £2.9m on its opening day.

The new film opened in 542 cinemas in the UK and Ireland on yesterday (Friday 31st October) and will open in the US on November 14th.

UPDATE: 03/11/08: The film has now earned a massive £15.4million over it’s first three days, makingĀ it the biggest weekend opening of all time at the UK box office.

This beats the previous weekend record held by Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which took £14.93million.

According to Variety the new Bond film captured a ‘jaw-dropping 70% of the market’.

> Quantum of Solace at the IMDbĀ 
> Box Office Mojo compares the grosses of different Bond films