Kamis, 27 Januari 2011

‘Another Earth’ Is A Sci-Fi Indie Version of ‘Bounce’ [Sundance Movie Review]


I’m always excited to see independently-produced science fiction films at the Sundance Film Festival because it usually means I’m in for a treat. Notable mentions include Shane Carruth’s 2004 time travel movie Primer, and Duncan Jones’ 2009 psychological space thriller Moon. This year’s line- is almost completely devoid of sci-fimovies. As far as I can tell, the only two films are: the Midnight movie selection Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeks Same and a film in the dramatic competition called Another Earth.


Another Earth is described as follows: “On the night of the discovery of a duplicate planet in the solar system, an ambitious young student and an accomplished composer cross paths in a tragic accident.” Sounds like a cool concept for a sci-fi movie, right?


Unfortunately, the Twilight Zone-like premise is only used as a backdrop, a not-so-great metaphor that only really comes to affect the story in the third act. We see news and radio reports about the other Earth, we see the planet in the sky during the outdoor scenes, and there is a highly publicized contest to pick a civilian to come aboard the shuttle to the other planet.


There is so much more potential in this concept, but the movie wants to be something else entirely — an indie slightly-scifi drama version of the Ben Affleck/Gwyneth Paltrow romantic drama Bounce (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing). If you’re willing to accept the sci-fi conceit, the film works as a compelling drama. But the sci-fi elements just feel out of place (as cool as they might be). The bottom line is — this isn’t the droid you’re looking for.


The screenplay was co-written by the lead actress Brit Marling and is pretty well crafted. William Mapother’s performance borders on over melodramatic at moments. Marling, who also wrote and stars in another Sundance film this year, Sound of My Voice, shows a lot of promise — I look forward to seeing more from her.


/Film Rating: 7 out of 10


True Grit - Special preview screenings

Be one of the first to see this much anticipated movie from the Coen brothers at cinemas nationwide on 8 February


Based on the novel by Charles Portis, True Grit, tells the story of fourteen-year-old Mattie Ross (Hailee Steinfeld), whose father has been shot in cold blood by the coward Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin), and she is determined to bring him to justice. Enlisting the help of a trigger-happy, drunken U.S. Marshal, Rooster Cogburn (Jeff Bridges), she sets out with him – over his objections – to hunt down Chaney. Her father's blood demands that she pursue the criminal into Indian Territory and find him before a Texas Ranger named LeBouef (Matt Damon) catches him and brings him back to Texas for the murder of another man.

True Grit is released on February 11
Certificate 15
For more information about the film go to www.TrueGritMovie.co.uk

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VOTD: Pixar’s ‘Up’ Live-Action 1965 Movie Trailer



What if Walt Disney Pictures produced Pixar’s in the 1960s as a live-action feature film? YouTube user whoiseyevan has created an amazing faux “premakes” trailer which imagines this exact possibility. Watch the video now, embedded after the jump.



Here is a note from the video editor:


Ah, the swinging 60s. It was a time when films were dominated by flying automobiles and flying nannies. It was also a time when live-action Disney films flourished and spawned such hits as “The Love Bug”, “The Absent-Minded Professor”, and “The Monkey’s Uncle”. In an alternate reality, this era also saw the production of the high-flying adventure-comedy, “!”. Starring Spencer Tracy and Kirk Douglas, “!” followed the oddball escapades of the elderly widower, Carl Fredricksen, and his earnest band of misfits as they traveled through the wilds of South America. Produced two decades after “Saludos Amigos” and “The Three Caballeros”, the film continued the Disney tradition of telling stories set against Latin American backdrops.


Editor’s Note: I have always enjoyed old Disney movies from the 60s and 70s. They managed to tap into such an imaginatively odd combination of situations and characters (like dinosaur bones and Chinese spies in “One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing”, or flying cars and basketball players in The Absent-Minded Professor”). In many ways, Pixar’s “” continues this charming tradition with its flying houses, talking dogs and gigantic flightless birds. It’s a brilliantly written and beautifully imagined film. Oh, and stay tuned for the frame-by-frame breakdown and cheat sheet… there are a couple of Easter eggs hidden in this one.


Movie clips used in the video include: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, *batteries not included, The Red Balloon, Superman, The Wizard of Oz, The Muppet Movie, Follow Me Boys, Mackenna’s Gold, Benji, A Boy and His Dog, Mysterious Island, The Doberman Gang, The Alvin Show, Posse, One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing, The Island at the Top of the World, Zeppellin, Stephen King’s It, Hollywood Hotel, Jonny Quest, Peter Pan’s Flight, Habanera from Carmen, Always.


Sam Raimi set to resurrect The Evil Dead for modern remake

Director of trailblazing lo-fi horror wants it back in cinemas and 'remade for a proper theatrical experience'

Like many of its 'Deadite' (read zombie) antagonists, it's the movie series that never seems quite ready to rest in peace. According to a US report, Sam Raimi is planning a remake of his notorious 1981 horror, The Evil Dead.

The new film would presumably mark the launch of a new series of films – The Evil Dead was followed by Evil Dead II in 1987 and Army of Darkness in 1992. Bruce Campbell starred in all three films.

Rob Tapert, Raimi's longtime producing partner, told the Detroit Free Press the film-maker wanted to see The Evil Dead 'remade for a proper theatrical experience'.

'It's possible; we're looking at a script this month,' he said. 'What's interesting about Evil Dead is very few people saw it in the format we made it for, which is for the theatre. I think Sam wants to embrace the ultimate experience in gruelling terror.'

The low-budget, distinctly lo-fi first Evil Dead film was branded a 'video nasty' upon its initial UK debut. Best known for an excruciating 'tree rape' scene, it failed to secure an uncut release here until 2001. The 1987 followup, Evil Dead II, was effectively itself a remake and added a healthy dose of Three Stooges-style slapstick to the mix, resulting in one of the first horror-comedy films. The second film remains the most-celebrated and most-watched film in the series, while Army of Darkness moved matters firmly into the swords and sorcery domain, which Raimi was to exploit in his later TV series Xena: Warrior Princess.

Talk in recent years has edged towards a continuation of the series in the form of an Evil Dead 4, but with Campbell now in his 50s it looks an increasingly unlikely prospect. Raimi will probably produce the new film rather than direct.


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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime: "


Sigue Sigue Sputnik: 'Love Missile F1-11'

Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, publishers of the upcoming Deeky's Guide to Smart Investing.

Recommended Reading:

Shani: Ask a Woman Who Knows [TW for gender essentialism]

scatx: Rape in the Peace Corps [TW for sexual violence]

Fannie: The Ignorance of Non-Feminists, Part Whatever

Renee: Toy Story 3: Lessons in Race and Gender

Dori: Thousands of Cuts [TW for discussion of circumcision]

Andy: Peruvian Catholic Bishop Uses Gay Slur; Apologizes 'For Everyone Who Felt Offended' [TW for homophobia; Christian supremacy]

Living ~400lbs: Microagressions

Leave your links in comments...

The Final Push

>> I know I know... I shouldn't be repeat posting especially on an exhibition that has been open for a good few months and the probability is that those with a will to see it will have already done so. Still, I think every excellent exhibition deserves a final push and 'Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion' at the Barbican which is ending on the 6th February definitely necessitates another reminder shoved in your face.

To be fair my last mention of the exhibition was tacked onto an overview of a book that I had picked up at the exhibition store so it doesn't quite count. I was lucky enough to go back a second time with the kind permission from the Barbican to snap away so here I am back with an image flood to a) visually remind people as to why this exhibition is a must-see and b) to be a sort of poor man's substitutefor those that aren't able to visit the exhibition.


We may have come to take for granted the presence of Rei Kawakubo's empire and designers such as Yohji Yamamoto and Issey Miyake who are so entrenched into the Paris Fashion Week as well as in our minds as stalwart designers (which is probably why Yamamoto's near-bankrupcy came as such a shock...). It's easy to forget, and especially if you didn't live through it the first time round, the impact that their first shows in Paris had on fashion and big a game-changer their clothes really were. In a way, the exhibition seems to summarise that initial impact and gives us the chance to relive it again, which is a fortunate thing indeed considering I wasn't even born at the time of Kawakubo and Yamamoto's debut.


I'm dividing it up by designer but the exhibition begins with overarching themes seen in the work of the core Japanese designers that begins with Rei Kawakubo for Comme des Garcons's early work such as this gathered linen dress from S/S 84 that showcases the way that she initially played with silhouette and the contrast between light and dark, that contrasted with her later work.


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In particular I loved how the combination of Naoya Hatakeyama's photography of these Comme des Garcons' pieces laid flat along with the pieces themselves to show the contrast between Kawakubo's intuition for simultaneous simplicity and complexity.


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By laying these foundations, Kawakubo can then allow herself to explore unexpected tangents such as this S/S 97 collection ridden with gingham and distorted body shapes...


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Issey Miyake's famed fabric experimentations are well-documented in the exhibition tracking everything from the development of Pleats Please...


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... to the now defunct A-POC, a way of presenting fully finished garments without any seams that are woven flat on computer-controlled looms.


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The real treat of the exhibition was the ability to see pieces from collections that aren't up on Style.com and are hard to even get decent images of unless you go visit fashion school libraries... expemplified by this soft accordian pleat-filled A/W 00-1 collection by Junya Watanabe...


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There were also unexpected pieces that showed up such as this sky blue kimono by Yohji Yamamoto from his S/S 95 collection - it was intended to be worn in a non-traditional way as an open robe which appeals to my own way with warping kimono-wearing.


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From his A/W 97-98 collection though you have a more romantic and perhaps my favourite aspect of Yamamoto's work exemplified by this black and grey wool herringbone jacket and skirt...


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... as well as this S/S 98 twisted gown that is indicative of the way he tried to extract an essence all those old photographs that he loved looking at, as seen in Wim Wenders' documentary about Yamamoto.


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Seeing Tao Kurihara's early work was a real treat, particularly the S/S 97 paper-filled collection... if I was diligent enough, I would have sat there with reams of paper trying to figure out how to fold it into something that even remotely resembled this skirt...


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I'm quite chuffed that I still have wear the knitted shorts that I bought at the Dover Street Market sample sale, from Tao's first collection and it's with this in mind that I'm going to attempt to own the rest of it, some way, some how...


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I suppose the visual piece de resistance of the exhibition has to be this four walled display of Undercover's A/W 00-01 collection, again another collection which is a bitch to find pictures of online. The plethora of ideas as well that seem to have filtered down from this collection into other more recent collections of other designers seem to be endless...


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In the section devoted to a new generation of designers, I was most taken by Akira Naka's gradiated wool cable knit jacket but it seems Naka hasn't designed a more recent collection than this A/W 09 one...


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In addition, the printed matter of the core designers showcased in the exhibition as well as video footage of shows and documentary form an integral part of Future Beauty which for a brand like Comme des Garcons also demonstrates how much of a universe it has become today, beyond the clothes they show.


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