Tag Archive | "Films"

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Fresh Faces at Sundance Film Festival

Posted on 20 January 2009 by terradise

On Friday night, January 16th, 7 For All Mankind and Gen Art honored seven talented up-and-coming actors at the 2nd annual “7 Fresh Faces in Film” celebration taking place at the Hollywood Life House hosted by Virginia Madsen. The event featured rising stars who were toasted by members of the film and fashion communities.

Each one of the “7 Fresh Faces” has at least one film premiering at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. The honorees include: Zach Gilford (Dare, TV – Friday Night Lights), Tania Raymonde (The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle, TV – Lost), Pell James (Shrink, Zodiac), Louisa Krause (Toe to Toe, The Babysitters), Charlyne Yi (Paper Heart, Knocked Up, TV – 30 Rock), Jess Weixler (Peter and Vandy), and Mark Duplass (Humpday, The Puffy Chair, co-wrote/co-directed Baghead).

Gen Art is an arts and entertainment organization dedicated to showcasing the best emerging talent in film, fashion, visual arts and music. For more information on Gen Art and its events, visit www.genart.org.

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Salute to Big Name Actors in Independent Film

Posted on 20 January 2009 by terradise

On Saturday, January 17th, Black-Kenneth Cole and Gen Art saluted six actors for their dedication to the art of independent film at the “Kenneth Cole Black Party,” which took place at Greenhouse at The Sky Lodge in Park City, Utah.

This event honored some of today’s best acting talent who are dedicated to independent filmmaking, including: Kevin Bacon (Taking Chance), Jeff Daniels (Arlen Faber), Kevin Corrigan (Big Fan), Virginia Madsen (Sideways), and Alan Cumming (Dare). Nick Cannon (The Killing Room) served as guest DJ.

Black-Kenneth Cole made a $10,000 donation to the Sundance Institute on behalf of the evening’s honorees. This event is part of Gen Art’s 15th Anniversary celebration of promoting, showcasing, and building awareness for emerging independent artists through special events and grants.

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Jigsaw puts the ‘old’ in ‘up to his old tricks’… ‘Saw V’ Review

Posted on 27 October 2008 by Michael DeZubiria

For some reason I really get a kick out of the HAHAHAHAH at the bottom. I've seen all five movies, so surely someone somewhere is laughing at me!

For some reason, I really get a kick out of the HAHAHAHAH at the bottom. I've seen all five movies, so surely someone somewhere is laughing at me!

So the tagline for Saw V is “You won’t believe how it ends.” Yeah, whatever. More like, “you won’t believe that it ends.” And you shouldn’t believe it, either. The grisly series has been a dead horse for three movies by now, but if the rumors circulating the internet are true, there will be at least two more.

In the movie’s defense, there are times when the premise is interesting and creative, at least more than I had anticipated. Eyes will glaze over throughout the audience when the movie starts out with Jigsaw saying Hello so-and-so I want to play a game, but the story that the movie tells is a lot more ambitious than you might think. It’s better than part 3 and 4, but that’s not saying a lot.

The vicious, brutal death-traps remain the centerpiece of the movie, but this one gets extra points because it goes behind the scenes into Jigsaw’s world. The problem is that the movie tries to tell a bigger story than the material can sustain. There is a series of flashbacks that jumps back and forth between past and present (and more than one previous Saw sequel), making the movie convoluted and confusing. You may find yourself wondering why Jigsaw is masked and kidnapping people one moment, and lying in a hospital bed struggling for breath the next.

The Jigsaw Killer - feeling much better than in previous movies...

The Jigsaw Killer - feeling much better than in previous movies...

There are three main stories going on in the movie. Five apparent strangers are forced to perform violent tests in order to get a door to open before it locks forever, and during each test, one person will be, ah, voted off the island. The whole scenario is remarkably similar to Cube, a far more interesting movie.

The other story is a detective named Mark Hoffman who is involved with Jigsaw as sort of an unwilling accomplice, and then there is an Agent Strahm that is investigating the killings from outside Jigsaw’s world, trying to figure out what’s going on while the five strangers are killed off one by one.

By this point in the series, hardcore Saw fans (which I am guessing make up about 90% of the remaining audience) will probably be mostly interested in the new torture devices, but the movie spends a huge amount of it’s relative short running time jumping around in flashbacks and side stories, including one about Jigsaw’s daughter, who has inherited a mysterious box, the contents of which Jigsaw explains are “of grave importance.”

Agent Strahm, early in the film, escapes a trap that was not meant to kill him but to test him, and he begins to suspect a copycat killer or that Jigsaw had an accomplice. Hoffman has a unique involvement in Jigsaw’s killings, and is forced to try to cover his tracks while at the same time overseeing the deadly game involving the five supposed strangers, while they themselves try to get to know each other enough to figure out why they were put there together in the first place.

As before, Jigsaw once again is taking on the laughable mission of trying to clean up where America’s shoddy legal system screws up. The movie opens with a stomach-turning scene involving a guy who slipped through the cracks, serving only five years of a 25-year sentence because of a technicality. I appreciate the effort of the movie trying to make a comment of the shortcomings of the American legal system, but it’s pretty hard to take it seriously when it tries to present the Jigsaw Killer as doing the Lord’s good work. He’s like a Boondock Saint with a violent imagination and a lot more time on his hands.

Detective Hoffman tries to remember what happened when he saw this on "CSI:Las Vegas."

Detective Hoffman tries to remember what happened when he saw this on "CSI: Las Vegas."

The performances are passable, given the movie that they’re in (which doesn’t really ask much of an actor except screaming), although there are a few moments of remarkably awful acting. Tobin Bell once again lends his creepy voice to a nice synthesizer and then to that creepy doll, but the look of the movie is pretty thoroughly boring. It’s totally lightless from beginning to end, a cheap horror technique that gets real old real quick.

Not much effort is put into having a good twist at the end of the movie, although the closing scene does have the element of surprise and, like mostly all of the movies before it, is pretty painful to watch. This is not the worst Saw film that they have sprung on us so far, but there is definitely nothing in it to make me look forward to any more sequels.

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50 Amazing Movie Facts!

Posted on 17 October 2008 by Michael DeZubiria

1. Nicholas Cage’s real name is Nicholas Coppola, but he changed it to disassociate himself with Francis Ford. After the recent release of Bangkok Dangerous, one wonders if this was such a good idea.

2. Samuel L. Jackson politely requests that anyone who claims not to enjoy watching themselves in movies to please stop lying.

3. Francis McDormand and Joel Coen have been married since 1984, the year of the Coen Brothers’ debut film, Blood Simple.

Robert Shaw won the role of Captain Quint over Paul Newman through a combination of dumb luck and sheer, unfiltered scariness.

4. The late Paul Newman was originally cast in the role of Captain Quint in Jaws (1975).

5. Sigourney Weaver’s real name is Susan Weaver, but she changed her first name to be named after a character in the classic novel “The Great Gatsby.”

6. Oprah is actually a typo. Her parents wanted to use the biblical name Orpah, but the midwife couldn’t spell so it became Oprah.

7. The Dark Knight is the first Batman film not to have “Batman” in the title.

8. 78% of all musicians-turned-actors are rappers, and of those, 58% are black, and only two are any good.

9. “Beverly Hills 90210” star Luke Perry was born Coy Luther Perry but changed his first name to Luke after the lead character in his favorite movie, Cool Hand Luke.

"No friend of Luke Perry's is a friend of mine!"

"No friend of Luke Perry's is a friend of mine!"

10. Paul Newman, who starred in Cool Hand Luke, was one of the celebrities on the “Enemies List” kept by Richard Nixon during the Watergate scandal.

11. Samuel L. Jackson’s starring role of Jules Winnfield in Pulp Fiction was ranked by the UK’s Empire magazine as the second coolest movie character of all time, after Brad Pitt’s Tyler Durden, from Fight Club.

12. Jean Claude Van-Damme, ladies and gentlemen, speaks FIVE LANGUAGES.

13. The title “Quantum of Solace” has been kicked around since the time of License to Kill (1989).

"Which wallet's yours?"

"Which wallet's yours?"

14. No one really knew who Samuel L. Jackson was until 1994, when Pulp Fiction was released. By then, he was 46 years old.

15.  By 2006, twelve years after his break-out role in Pulp Fiction, Samuel L. Jackson’s films had grossed more money at the box office than any other actor in cinematic history (more than $3 billion).

16. I made fun of Hannah Montana’s Best of Both Worlds concert DVD in my “New DVDs This Week” post here on Hollywire a couple months ago. It went on to become the highest grossing Super Bowl weekend release ever.  Oops.

"I'm not only the Superspy Hair Club President, I'm also a member!"

"I'm not only the Superspy Hair Club President, I'm also a member!"

17. Sean Connery wore a toupee in every James Bond film that he starred in, beginning with Dr. No (1962).

18. At Parklane Academy, a private school that she attended in McCombs, Mississippi until October 1994, Britney Spears was on the girls basketball team.

19. I am writing all of this from the heart of China in a city called Luoyang, one of the most intensely Communist cities in the country. Brad Pitt is unable to visit me here, since he’s been banned from ever entering China because of his role in the 1997 film Seven Years in Tibet (feel free to send the wife though, Brad!).

20. Kevin Bacon has had at least a supporting role in 27% of all American movies made since 1982.

21. The first trailer for Cloverfield was shown before Transformers in 2007. It showed an explosion in the heart of New York City and the Statue of Liberty’s head being thrown down the street. It was shot with a hand-held video camera and gave no title.

22. The movie is actually named after the boulevard in Santa Monica, California, where the Bad Robot offices were located during the making of the film. “Cloverfield” was originally just a codename for the movie.

23. Johnny Depp dropped out of school at age 15 with hopes of becoming a rock star.

24. Among the first films ever made was a series of shorts in the late 1870s that showed a horse galloping. Audiences were absolutely amazed.

25. Britney Spears’ name is an anagram for “Presbyterians.”

26. Jack Nicholson hates giving interviews so much that he has not appeared on a talk show since 1971.

27. It took $7,500,000 to build the Titanic, approximately 20,000,000 tons of iceberg to sink it, and $200,000,000 to make a movie about it.

28. Titanic passenger Stuart Collet’s insurance claim for lost college-lecture notes – $50. Passenger Charlotte Cardeza’s insurance claim for lost luggage – $177,352.

29. New York Evening Sun headline on April 15, 1912 – “ALL SAVED FROM TITANIC AFTER COLLISION.” Oops!

30. Okay just one more. After the tragedy, Senator W. A. Smith asked, “What exactly is an iceberg composed of?” Fifth Officer Harold Lowe politely responded, “Ice, I suppose, sir.”

A proposed sketch for the poster for M. Night's next blockbuster.

A proposed sketch for the poster for M. Night's next blockbuster.

31. Since the commercial success of The Happening this year,  M. Night Shyamalan has been working feverishly on the script for a film he plans to call The Anticlimax.

32. Superman could clearly kick the asses of both Spiderman and Batman simultaneously. In fact, I don’t understand why there was ever any debate about this.

33. In America, our films and television shows are played in NTSC format, which is 30 frames per second. In much of the rest of the world, they use PAL format, which is 24 frames per second. Our eyes see too slowly to tell the difference.

34. Wes Craven first proposed the script for A Nightmare on Elm Street, one of the most successful horror films of all time, in 1981, but no one was interested. It floated aimlessly until the now hugely successful New Line Cinema eventually picked it up.

Lovingly referred to as "The house that Freddy built."

New Line Cinema - lovingly referred to as "The house that Freddy built."

35. A Nightmare on Elm Street was the first feature film that New Line Cinema ever produced. Prior to that, they were just a small distribution company for college campuses.

36. John Carpenter was a huge Alfred Hitchcock fan. Two characters in Halloween (1978), were named after characters in Hitchcock films – Tommy Doyle, from Rear Window (1954), and Sam Loomis, from Psycho (1960).

37. Jamie Lee Curtis made her acting debut in Halloween, and her mother, Janet Leigh, was the actress killed in the shower scene in Psycho, one of the most famous scenes in film history. Carpenter considered his casting of Curtis in Halloween to be the ultimate tribute to Hitchcock.

38. 19 years ago today, Hollywire’s own film critic (me) was in San Jose being scared out of his 10-year-old wits by the 7.1 Richter scale Bay Area earthquake.

"Who the hell is Hugh Hefner?"

"Who the hell is Hugh Hefner?"

39. Here’s a big surprise – when Michael Jackson was informed that his Thriller co-star Ola Ray had posed nude for Playboy in June 1980, Jackson confessed that he had never heard of the magazine.

40. Thanks to his background as an actor, Ronald Reagan is the only U.S. President to have ever worn a Nazi uniform.

41. Peter Ostrum, who played Charlie Bucket in Mel Stuart’s beloved Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971), was offered a three-movie contract after the success of the film, but turned it down. He never acted again, and is now a veterinarian for large animals in rural New York state.

42. Mel Gibson is Empire magazine’s 12th greatest movie star of all time and 37th sexiest movie star ever, he was chosen numerous times as one of People magazine’s 50 Most Beautiful People (Sexiest Man Alive in 1985), and voted one of the Greatest Movie Stars of All Time by Entertainment Weekly. Despite all this, he met his wife through a dating service.

43. Contrary to popular belief, Angelina Jolie is actually not that attractive.

44. At one point, Jim Carrey and his family lived in a car and they all worked as janitors at a factory to make a living. As a child, Jim wore tap dancing shoes to bed, just in case his parents needed cheering up in the middle of the night.

45. The charming metal band Cannibal Corpse appeared in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994) because they are Jim Carrey’s favorite band (!!).

46. Jim Carrey was Tupac Shakur’s favorite actor. While in prison, Carrey would write letters to Tupac to help him smile and laugh.

No wonder he's so into Angelina's chicken legs!

No wonder he's so into Angelina's chicken legs!

47. Tupac was cast in Menace II Society (1993) but was fired after a fist-fight with the film’s director, he auditioned for the part of Bubba in Forrest Gump (1994), and won a role in the film Woo (1998) but was shot and killed five days before filming began.

48. Brad Pitt’s first job was dancing in a chicken suit to attract customers to an El Pollo Loco restaurant on Sunset Blvd.

49. Okay, I made up number 8, 20, and 31, but they seem right, don’t they?

50. Everything else is true.

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Fergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday party

Posted on 29 March 2008 by Tammy Cakes

Fergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday party

Fergie and Quentin Tarantino celebrated their birthdays last Thursday night in Las Vegas.

“We wanted to do something that was crazy and a lot of fun,” she told Us magazine.

The pair — who filmed a hot and heavy love scene in Tarantino’s 2007 flick Grindhouse — spent the afternoon with friends at the Mirage Hotel’s Bare Pool Lounge.

Fergie (who turned 33) and Tarantino (who turned 45) caught the 7 p.m. performance of Cirque du Soleil’s, Beatles-themed show, “LOVE.”

Fergie and Quentin headed to Jet Nightclub to party the night away with their friends. Kid Rock showed off his DJ skills for the birthday girl and boy. The night ended when Fergie and Quentin started a food fight with the big fancy cake that rolled out around 2:30 a.m

Further putting those pregnancy rumors to rest, Fergie sipped on wine throughout the night.

Here are some pics from the party:

Fergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday partyFergie and Quentin Tarantino’s joint birthday party

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Paris Hilton & Christine Lakin : “The Hottie and the Nottie”

Posted on 20 February 2008 by admin

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