« March 2008 | Main | May 2008 »

April 2008 Archives

April 30, 2008

Gearing up for "Indiana Jones"

In honor of the long-awaited addition to the "Indiana Jones" series (the last one — "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" was released in 1989!), it's worth taking a second look at the three films that led up to this point in Indie's life.

"Raiders of the Lost Ark," "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" and "Last Crusade" are available in a convenient DVD set, and feature all kinds of extras and fun tidbits. (Yes, I totally watched all three over the past two weeks.)

Fun trivia:
* Director Steven Spielberg, for example, added a gazillion more snakes than he originally planned to (and a bunch of hoses) in the Well of Souls scene in "Raiders of the Lost Ark."

* In the same scene, Harrison Ford actually had a sheet of Plexiglass separating him from that nasty cobra that hissed in his face.

* Tom Selleck was originally offered the role of Indiana Jones, but turned it down to do "Magnum, P.I."

* "Temple of Doom" was Kate Capshaw's second film.

Production is keeping mum on details about "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" and the trailer (above) doesn't disclose much, either. But if it's any indication, the new film possesses the usual Indiana Jones elements: action, adventure and, well, cheesiness.

— Korin

'Baghdad High' breakout hit of Tribeca Film Festival

bhigh.jpg

'Baghdad High' is one of those films you know will be good as soon as you hear the concept: Two journalists gave four Baghdad teens video cameras to capture their senior year of high school.

But like most of the packed house Tuesday night at the Tribeca Film Festival, I had no idea the finished documentary--gleaned from more than 300 hours of footage--would be great.

After the film, the Q&A (everybody stayed), and four rounds of applause, I felt like calling and emailing and texting everyone in my life, telling them to Go See This Film! (Or, Wait For it To Air on HBO Later This Year!)

Hayder, Anmar, Ali, Mohammad... if fame were based on merit, these four extraordinary teens would become as well-known as Brandon, Dylan, Kelly and Donna.

They catch themselves and each other, up close and personal, rapping (badly) to Tupac, singing (hilariously) to Britney, stressing about exams, playing soccer, celebrating holidays.

Plus the mandatory teen preening and male bravado (Anmar at one point flexes for the camera, and with a grin says, "Look at my body--extraordinary, the champion.") Mixed with telling displays of how much they care for each other (like a shot of them all lying in the warm sun, piled on top of each other).

But there's also gunfire, driving through checkpoints, a bombing, electricity rationing, hiding in the dark, worries for a girlfriend, relatives forced to move in because of safety concerns.... They "feel like you're in prison," Hayder says at his lowest point.

Continue reading "'Baghdad High' breakout hit of Tribeca Film Festival" »

April 28, 2008

Tribeca Film Festival: Must-see movies

FOOTBALLUNDERCOVER_STILL01__LOW.jpg

New Yorkers are standing in long lines--or playing the 'don't you know who I am?!' card--as the Tribeca Film Festival gets underway with its usual mix of dazzling small films and interesting major productions.

And the normal geographic confusion--this year it seems most of the 120 feature films from 31 different countries are actually screening in the East Village.

* See an interview with Bart Got a Room director Brian Hecker (and yes, see William Macy's Jewfro)

* Click here for fellow film fanatic Emily Ngo's interview with acclaimed director Robert Drew about his recut documentary, 'A President to Remember: In the Company of John F. Kennedy'--and the comparisons with Barack Obama.

* Click here for trailers for many of the films.

And my early favorites thru Tribeca's first weekend--from Muslim women playing soccer to fighting with chicken, crab and halibut--are after the jump.

Continue reading "Tribeca Film Festival: Must-see movies" »

April 23, 2008

Loving Sarah Marshall

18874861.jpg
Jonah Hill and Jason Segel in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall"

"Forgetting Sarah Marshall" was supposed to be too crude to love, but it defied expectations. I hate the other stuff from Judd Apatow's clique ("40-year old Virgin," "Knocked Up"), but I loved this.

Yes, there is raunchiness. Nude scenes. Plenty of dry humping. And cursing galore. But there is unexpected depth to the characters and the plot. Even the bitchy Sarah Marshall, played by Kristen Bell, turns out to be someone you can sympathize with. The British comic who plays Sarah's new boyfriend, Aldous Snow, is Russell Brand. He's an absolute scene stealer with deadpan lines like, "Well, I wanted to listen to your CD, but then I decided to just go on living my life."

The movie audience couldn't stop laughing. I couldn't blame them.
— Emily

James Mac in action

jamesmcavoy_00.jpg
James McAvoy = hot

As if there weren't enough reasons to be totally hot for James McAvoy (he charmed as a fawn in "Narnia," he showed his uber-romantic side in "Atonement," he was simply amazing in "King of Scotland").

McAvoy plays an assassin alongside Angelina Jolie in action thriller "Wanted," set to hit theaters this June. He worked out for the role. Clearly. And we thank him for it. The plot reminds me a bit of the first "Matrix." Also, the chemistry between he and Jolie is ripe, judging by the trailer.

Someone tell me how McAvoy can play every archetype of man possible.
— Emily

April 16, 2008

What's worth standing in line for at the Tribeca Film Festival?

tribeca.jpg

Get a better feel for what films you want to see and check out around 50 trailers from the Tribeca Film Festival, which starts a week from today on April 23.

Click here to see the trailers.

You can get tickets here on their website.

Photo by Scott Wintrow/Getty Images

April 13, 2008

Separated at birth?

matt.jpggeorgehamilton.jpg
(Left to right: Matthew McConaughey at the UK premiere of "Fool's Gold"; George Hamilton)

Note to Matthew: When you're more tan than George Hamilton, there's a problem.

— Korin

Where ya been, Claire?

80659389.jpg

Claire Forlani, arguably best known for her role as the devil's love interest in 1998's "Meet Joe Black," hit the red carpet today for the UK premiere of "Flashbacks of a Fool."

According to IMDB.com, Claire's been keeping herself busy with a slew of forgettable movies (some made for TV!) and a role on "CSI:NY." Who knew?

— Korin

April 9, 2008

This is why we love Danny DeVito

80570181.jpg

The man knows how to leverage his assets!

Danny DeVito, who appeared to be drunk on "The View" two years ago after a limoncello bender, plugs Danny DeVito's Premium Limoncello liqueur in Las Vegas yesterday.

— Korin

Casinos drawn to "21"?

jim.jpg
Sturgess takes Vegas for millions in "21."

A recent Newsweek article has presented a fair question in regard to the gambling hit "21," in which an MIT big shot finances his education by counting cards/cheating at the blackjack table.

But why, why, oh why, would casinos be rushing to embrace and host the premiere of a movie that portrays them getting scammed?

"This movie is great for Vegas. It perpetuates the myth that blackjack is beatable," an MIT dude told Newsweek. Counting cards to up your gambling chances is much harder than actor Jim Sturgess makes it look, apparently.

— Emily

April 8, 2008

Get a glimpse of 'Tropic Thunder'

The "Tropic Thunder" trailer has arrived! And it looks funny as heck.

The Ben Stiller-starring flick follows a group of actors who are dropped in a jungle to film a war movie. Through a series of unfortunate events, they find themselves in danger, but think it's all part of the plot. Jack Black and Robert Downey Jr. also star in the film.

The movie's scheduled for an August release.

— Korin

No love for 'Valkyrie'

"Valkyrie," Tom Cruise's pet project about a German assassination attempt on Adolph Hitler, has had its release date pushed back yet again.

For the record, this is the third date that has been listed for the drama's theatrical release. The movie has been plagued with rumors about the need for reshoots to fix Cruise's (allegedly) poor acting skills.

Originally, the film was scheduled to hit theaters this Fourth of July weekend. Odds are, studio heads figured there's not a huge demand for a Hitler assassination story in the midst of all the summer blockbusters, because they pushed the flick back to Oct. 3. The studio's official reason for the move? A big aerial scene still needed to be shot.

Now, ladies and gents, the movie will be released on Feb. 19, 2009! For real! Mark those calendars! Just do it in pencil. Cause, you know, it could change again.

Check out the movie's trailer, above. And, um, don't pay attention to the "Summer 2008" ending note.

— Korin

April 7, 2008

Owen Wilson gets his tennis fix — again

80543128.jpg
(Owen Wilson and Woody Harrelson)

Holy tennis fan!

Owen Wilson turned up yet again at the Sony Ericsson Open in Key Biscayne, Fl., Sunday to watch a men's singles match. The actor and buddy Woody Harrelson also took in a game the day before.

Wilson, who's filming the dog-centric flick "Marley and Me" with Jennifer Aniston in the Sunshine State, has been a regular fixture at the tournament.

Sounds like his shooting schedule is really, uh, ruff.

— Korin

TiVo alert!

80546370.jpg

Heads up, ladies: Brad Pitt will appear on Wednesday's "Idol Gives Back."

And, yes, audience members nearly went into cardiac arrest over the Sexiest Man Alive when the show was taped on Sunday.

Miley Cyrus, Carrie Underwood, Mariah Carey and other also take part in the show, but, really — does anyone care when Brad Pitt's around?

— Korin


April 6, 2008

Farewell to Charlton Heston

The world lost a great actor on Saturday.

Charlton Heston’s inimitable voice, manner and epic acting talents are on my mind as I think about his passing at age 83.

In his best roles, as Moses in “The Ten Commandments” or George Taylor in “Planet of the Apes,” he was a commanding and menacing alpha male, barking orders through clenched teeth, with a gleam in his eye. Even in terrible 1970s disaster movies, he was a reliably entertaining movie star.

Maybe his politics deviated wildly from my own. But that would never color my appreciation of his movies.

My cousin and I always loved to do impressions of Heston intoning memorable lines from “Commandments” such as, “Blood makes for poor mortar,” or, “The city is made of bricks. The strong make many, the starving make few, the dead make none. So much for accusations.”

We’ll miss you, Charlton.
— Max

April 3, 2008

Trailers: More than just ads

Just one more reason for movie studios to put together a phenomenal ad campaign: The Golden Trailer Awards.

Huh?

Often pushed to the bottom of the awards season barrel, the Golden Trailers celebrate the film industry's best, um, trailers. Categories include Best Action, Best Documentary, Best Drama and Best Horror, among others. ("300," last year's Best Action winner is above.)

Get ready! The ninth annual ceremony will take place on May 8 at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles. Odds are, if you want to go, no one's going to care enough to stop you.

Check out last season's winners here.

— Korin

The one, maybe the only, reason to see "The Ruins"

tucker.jpg

"The Ruins," whose tagline is "terror has evolved," appears to be another cheesy horror film that teenagers go to see on dates as an excuse to clutch each other in feigned fright, but guess who's in it?

Tommy of the unfairly defunct "Black Donnellys," a show about some Irish brothers trying to make it in the 'hood. Jonathan Tucker is a superbly refined actor, so I don't know what he's doing in a suckfest like "The Ruins."

"The Ruins," which also stars Jena Malone and Shawn Ashmore and is produced by Ben Stiller, opens tomorrow. I'll give it a chance, but only because I'm a sucker for that dark-curly-hair-soulful-green-eyes combo that Tucker rocks.
— Emily

April 2, 2008

A beautifully crafted story

Go see "The Counterfeiters" before it leaves theaters. I was lucky enough to do so.

This German/Austrian film, which won an Academy Award, tells the tale of a Jewish counterfeit mastermind whose craft helps him to survive the Holocaust. Operation Bernhard — the largest counterfeiting ring in history — was intended to flood the English and American economies with fake currency, and in the film, the Nazis treated Sally Sorowitsch and his fellow artists "well" in hopes they carry out the master plan. (The prisoners stalled the process long enough for the war to end.)

The characters are so masterfully developed. My favorite was the young Kolya Karloff, whose TB symptoms Sorowitsch tries in earnest to hide as it would lead to Karloff's death. Conservations between the two about art are heart-breaking as is the contrast between Sorowitsch's crook-ish side and his fatherly side.

So well acted and directed, The Counterfeiters is the best film, foreign or American, that I've seen in a long time.
— Emily

April 1, 2008

He's back, baby!

78122051.jpg

After undergoing several surgical procedures for cancer, Roger Ebert will resume writing reviews for the Chicago Sun-Times later this month.

The movie critic broke the news in a letter published in his newspaper today. Ebert will not resume his show, "Ebert & Roeper," since he is still unable to speak.

"I still have all my other abilities, including the love of viewing movies and writing about them," he wrote.

— Korin

Freeze Frame: Today's Top Movie Stories

* Cutie Abigail Breslin likes to work.

* Once the co-owner of Plan B (along with ex-hubby Brad Pitt), Jennifer Aniston has formed her own production company. Take that, Brad!

— Korin

Video