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Can IRON MAN 3 Crack a Billy?

 

You may have seen the headlines strewn across internet banners that Iron Man 3 has bested the opening weekend of The Avengers internationally, putting it on track not only to be the biggest box office monster of the summer but also entering it in a position to duke it out for one of the top spots of all time. While The Avengers pulled in $185.1 million internationally on its opening weekend last May, Iron Man 3 has surpassed that opening take with $195.3 million to its name. And that’s before it opens in US theaters.

Thus far, reviews have been positively glowing and it’s got to nab a CinemaScore in the A/A+ range so it really seems like the sky is the limit for the Marvel behemoth.

The question is, will it best The Avengers hefty opening weekend that soared past highest expectations with $207.4 million? Probably not, as it is tracking somewhere around the $167M mark. Personally, I expect it to get closer to that prized $200M slot, but probably not to top it.If I had to put money down, I’d say it winds up somewhere in the $188M range but would not be surprised to see it blow past that number.

As for the residuals, so long as it snags the great CinemaScore that it seems to already have in the bank, hold-overs are sure to be good on this one and with nearly $200M in the bank already, this is sure to be a wild success irregardless. Will it reach that massive billy international mark though? I believe it will. It just needs time.

Iron Man 3, directed by Shane Black and starring Robert Downey Jr, Don Cheadle, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Kingsley, Guy Pearce and Jon Favreau, hits theaters this Thursday, May 2.

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Little Good Ship Chased by Big Evil Ship in STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS IMAX Poster

 

If you’re like me, you’ve been trying your best to avoid the onslaught of Star Trek Into Darkness marketing. Whether this means charging out of the theater during it’s previews, ducking your head when tv spots come on and even popping in headphones or humming along to yourself any time one of what seems like 7,000 trailers appear, we don’t know to know what is gonna transpire in J.J. Abram‘s sci-fi sequel.

Since I’ve been trying to keep myself out of the loop, I’m not exactly sure what this IMAX poster is referencing in the fact but I assume that the big ship shooting red lasers at the little ship (which I’m assuming is the Enterprise) is commanded by the evil dude who’s played by Benedict Cumberbatch. Regardless of what it actually says about the film, the poster is pretty certifiably BA.

Star Trek into Darkness stars Chris Pine, Benedict Cumberbatch, Zachary Quinto, Anton Yelchin, John Cho, Karl Urban, Simon Pegg, and Zoe Saldana and is directed by J.J. Abrams with a script from Alex Kurtzman, Damon Lindelof and Roberto Orci.  It opens May 17th with select IMAX 3D theaters starting May 15th.

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Little Good Ship Chased by Big Evil Ship in STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS IMAX Poster

If you’re like me, you’ve been trying your best to avoid the onslaught of Star Trek Into Darkness marketing. Whether this means charging out of the theater during it’s previews, ducking your head when tv spots come on and even popping in headphones or humming along to yourself any time one of what seems like 7,000 trailers appear, we don’t know to know what is gonna transpire in J.J. Abram‘s sci-fi sequel.

Since I’ve been trying to keep myself out of the loop, I’m not exactly sure what this IMAX poster is referencing in the fact but I assume that the big ship shooting red lasers at the little ship (which I’m assuming is the Enterprise) is commanded by the evil dude who’s played by Benedict Cumberbatch. Regardless of what it actually says about the film, the poster is pretty certifiably BA.

Star Trek into Darkness stars Chris Pine, Benedict Cumberbatch, Zachary Quinto, Anton Yelchin, John Cho, Karl Urban, Simon Pegg, and Zoe Saldana and is directed by J.J. Abrams with a script from Alex Kurtzman, Damon Lindelof and Roberto Orci.  It opens May 17th with select IMAX 3D theaters starting May 15th.

 

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Transformers Battle Godzillas in New Trailer for PACIFIC RIM

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Last month, Guillermo del Toro unveiled an alternative Pacific Rim trailer packed full of new footage to a excited throng of WonderCon attendees and they loved it. While the new trailer was originally intended only for those at the popular convention, adamant del Toro have seemed to wiggle it loose from him. Have a look below and tell me if this is something that you’re interested in, aren’t sold by or will wait on reviews before you go see it.

As Del Toro wrote in a note accompanying the trailer: “Enjoy, my friends!”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zA92Rw6kNWw

Pacific Rim is directed by Guillermo del Toro andstars Charlie Hunnam (Sons of Anarchy), Idris Elba (Prometheus) and Charlie Day (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia). It opens on July 12, 2013.

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Weekly Review 24: THIS IS 40, ROBOT AND FRANK


Just a couple of flicks from 2012 that I never got to see in this week’s installment of Weekly Review. This is 40 seemed to largely divide critics but I found it to be a very ugly, very unnecessary film. Frank and Robot, however, was a nice little independent drama worthy of a worth if not just to watch Frank Langella bad-mouth a robot.

 

This Is 40 (2012)

 
A rambling and mean-spirited film that should have remained in the rejected ideas pile, This Is 40 stinks. Perhaps it might strike a chord with affluent socialites complaining about the size of their mansions and the middling success of their very own record company but for us ordinary folk, it’s an infuriating load of steamy garbage that ought to play like the anthem for the ‘Occupy’ movement.

The film follows the lives of Pete and Debby, who you may remember from Knocked Up. They have a couple of kids, are “struggling” financially, and pretty much hate each other and themselves. Fortunately for them, the most difficult part of their lives involves downgrading from a multi-million dollar home and eating too many five-dollar cupcakes. It’s hard to swallow someone wallowing in self-pity as they drift between their massive master bedroom and accompanying bathroom foyer before throwing a catered party under a giant tent in their massive backyard and eating a 500-dollar custom guitar cake.



Even though the actors involved seem to be committed to fleshing out this reality, I really wish they had done something else with their time. Leslie Mann is probably not to blame but her character is utterly despicable and a major contender for “biggest bitch of the year” award. The ever-lovable Paul Rudd is, well, in a rut for most of the time and just gets dumped on for anything from playing on his iPad to ruining his crumbling physique with, you guessed it, fancy cupcakes. The problem is, nothing goes anywhere. You just see these miserable people for a while, they do nothing and then it’s over. The film tries to bandage the blaring lack of a plot with numerous little cameo roles and pop-fi references which, again, don’t ever amount to anything.



The seams have started to show on director Judd Apatow‘s projects for a while now but This is 40 is the largest departure from the meaningful dramedies like Knocked Up and The 40 Year Old Virgin that made him a household name. Instead of the geeky and almost whimsical nature of those films, this one seems comfortable whining and wishing ill will on its audience. 



Another minus for This is 40 lays in Apatow’s bloated opinion of his film, a miscalculated assessment of its worth that somehow allowed him to let it stretch on aimlessly for over two hours, whereas most comedies tap out around ninety minutes. I guess that makes sense though considering comedies usually involve laughing and this smelly pile of trash is destitute of any laughs. Maybe worst of all, they spoil the end of Lost. That is a sin I will never forgive.



A quasi-sequel that no one ever asked for, This is 40 is a joyless waste of talent and resources. Near the end, Albert Brooks says: “That was deeply uncomfortable. At least that pretty girl was there to divert our attention.” I don’t think he meant to sum up the whole movie, but he just did.

D-

Robot and Frank (2012)



Jake Screider‘s Robot and Frank imagines a future where robots have taken on assisting roles in human life. They stock the shelves at the library, act as medical assistants and….well I guess that’s all we see, but we can imagine that they carry out a smattering of equally undesirable but helpful roles in this society. Even under its not-so-shiny facade, Robot and Frank has heart and chemistry and is inventive enough to score a sly win for independent film.



When retired thief Frank (Frank Langella) is given a care-taking robot from his estranged son, he attempts to involve his new robotic helper in a comeback heist. Seeing the detailed planning that Frank invests into this operation, Robot (who remains unnamed) decides that it would be good for his deteriorating mental health and agrees to help.


Frank Langella is great as the irreverent old Frank who, however thorny, is both a strong and fragile character. He reminded me a lot of Junior Soprano, a lost man on his last leg who can’t really help himself to his askew world view and grumpy, homebody nature. Filling in the voice for Robot, Peter Sarsgaard is perfect. His robotic monotone is rife with notes of sympathy and understanding – making him more of a lovable Wall-E than any of the fearful AI’s that have dominated robotics since 2001. 



Although it is hardly an important enough film to make many waves outside of its very niche circuit, Frank and Robot is an oddly sweet story that tells a meaningful tale about aging and family. It’s a charmed collision of old school and new age with a bittersweet edge, one of those indie films that you can’t help but be won over by.

B-

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Out in Theaters: PAIN AND GAIN

 

“Pain and Gain”
Directed by Michael Bay
Starring Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson, Anthony Mackie, Tony Shalhoub, Ed Harris, Rob Corddry, Ken Jeong, Rebel Wilson and Bar Paly
Action/Comedy/Crime
130 Mins
R

Pain and Gain is a preposterous true story that follows the real life exploits of a group of men who kidnapped a prickly, but rich, playboy, tortured him, and then forced him to sign over all of his valuables effectively making them rich. The narrative at the heart of it is too out-of-control to not be seductive but director Michael Bay lets down this inherently strong story with some elementary filmmaking missteps.

 

The ragtag crew at the center of this real story is led by Danny Lugo, a meathead with delusions of grandeur who is played perfectly by an aloof yet manipulative Mark Wahlberg. This is a man whose muscles outweigh his brain ten-to-one, who possesses a ridiculous entitlement complex and sees the American Dream as something indebted to him rather than something to strive for.

Lugo cons fellow gym-rats Paul Doyle and Adrian Doorbal into kidnapping some rich guy that no one will ever miss (due to his unpleasant demeanor) and extorting him for all he’s worth. The craziest part of this true story is that they actually got away with it. However, when you give a mouse a cookie, he’s gonna want a glass of milk and their taste of success in the criminal racket doesn’t cut it for too long.

Looking at the film from an actor’s perspective, the thing is a big hit. These characters at times seem downright evil and yet there is no judging from the actors. They play their characters with tactful understanding and a lack of discrimination. Honestly, I think that this is the first time that Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson actually made a thespian contribution to a film rather than relying on yet another tough guy persona and boundless muscles to portray some semblance of character. If anything, Johnson is our moral compass – a deeply skewed moral compass yes, but certainly the most ethical of this depraved trio. It’s great to see Johnson come out of his shell and embrace a more complex character than we’re used to seeing and his bouncing back and forth between cocaine-addled-vice and Jesus-inspired-virtue easily makes him the film’s most interesting character.

Aside from the pleasantly surprising acting, there are far too many noticeable no-no’s from the book of directing 101 that really seemed to cash in on the “pain” portion of the title. Sure, Michael Bay has never misrepresented himself as an aspiring auteur or award seeker but what he does champion himself as is a maestro of entertainment. He’s contend making sugary flicks with robots pounding on each other and for the most part, his films are entertaining. However, when his directorial choices stand as a barrier to entertainment, he needs to step back and reconsider what exactly he’s trying to prove.

First off: cut back on the voice-overs. It’s one thing to introduce the protagonist by allowing the audience to listen in on their thoughts but when you’re using it for nearly every character, not only as a method of introduction but for every major moment of revelation, you know that you need to go back to the cutting room. Voice over is seen as a storytelling crutch for a reason. Instead of earning the audience’s understanding, it is forced upon them.

I understand that Bay wants to cut to the essence of who these people are but to rely solely on VO for exposition shows a major lack of talent in the scripting department. The adage “show, don’t tell” would apply nicely here. Bay truly was sitting on a gold mine of a true story with Pain and Gain which is probably why it’s so interesting and yet it’s impossible to ignore that it could have easily been told in a better way sans all the flashy freeze frames and gratuitous use of inner monologue.

Missteps aside, it is clear that Bay tries to transcend the big action spectacle films that make up his resume and fashion a satirical story about greed and a skewed perspective of the American Dream. He keeps all his iconic Bay hallmarks and lets them loose here. The boobs are bigger, the muscles larger but here the violence has consequences, producing more of a feeling of unease than smarmy shoot-em-up bliss. While it seemed like Bay aimed for satirical black comedy, the knowledge that this is a true story makes the whole affair much more disturbing and ultimately limits the laughs.

Of the dubious trio in the the film, their hubris is matched only by their stupidity. Dare I say the same of Michael Bay? These men have been distorted and tainted by a desire for unattainable opulence and an imaginary sense of entitlement that seems to come just from being American. Is this Bay pointing the finger at wealth and celebrity in America or am I just reaching for straws to make this more than what it is?

Even though Pain and Gain is maybe Bay’s most mature film to date and he legitimately tries to dissect an nearly incomprehensible ethos,  his own over-embellishing and tacky directorial choices diverts attention from the actual story that is already so rife with drama. Instead of just letting it play out, Bay condescends to the audience with all his unneeded cues, acting like we’re the ones who can’t keep up with the story when it’s actually him who is letting it escape his grasp. Fortunately, the story is strong enough and the acting powerful enough to overlook most of its structural problems and make this a rather entertaining bit of cinema reality.

 

C+

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Out in Theaters: MUD

“Mud”
Directed by Jeff Nichols
Starring Matthew McConaughey, Reese Witherspoon, Tye Sheridan, Jacob Lofland, Michael Shannon
Drama
130 Mins
R

From the first time we meet the titular character in Mud, we know that there is something strangely magical about him – a forty-something hobo (but don’t call him a bum) living out of a tree-ridden boat in the midst of a deserted island. Cut through the many layers of caked-up dirt and ignore the .45 hanging out of his pants and you see a fully grown man-child living out his own nevernever land fantasy – a postmodern Peter Pan who’s been trapped in a cyclical time warp, chasing down the ever-fleeting girl of his dreams.

Mud is a coming-of-age story for adults and children alike that weaves a meaningful fable about the disillusioned and discarded coming to terms with the harsh reality of their evaporating worlds.Matthew McConaughey disappears into this snaggle-toothed ruffian Mud, grounding this dreamlike down-by-the-bayou yarn with a believable but odd backbone. McConaughey’s performance is delicate and unique, dark and nuanced offering award-caliber work.

Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland play Ellis and Neckbone, a pair of scrappy teenagers living in the backcountry of Arkansas. When the duo comes across a mysterious boat jammed in a crook of a tree in the woods, they discover that an wanderer named Mud has taken up shop there. As Ellis grows closer to Mud, he learns that Mud is a fugitive on the lamb who intends to sweep up his lost love and whisk her away to a “better life.” Although we can see that Mud’s hapless lifestyle is hardly from the pages of a fantasy book, Ellis, having discovered that his parents are splitting up, decides to fight for “true love” and aids Mud’s quest to reunite with his splintered love and make the tree-boat seaworthy again.

 

Since so much of the film is anchored on Sheridan and Lofland’s performances, director Jeff Nichols is lucky to have found such a pair of authentic young actors. While Lofland’s oddly named Neckbone plays nicely as the comedic relief (rifling off cusses and indecencies well over his age), Sheridan is the true heart of the story. His wide-eyed curiosity and irreverent attitude towards his elders makes him a captivating combination of esoteric traits.

On one side of the spectrum, Ellis is an uncommonly brave young man, willing to fight people far older and bigger than him if he deems it right, and yet there is a palpable and tragic sense of naivety to him. He’s a small fish in a big ocean and this little guppy hasn’t really encountered the adult world, even though he likes to think that cruising around on a dirt bike and playing rebel makes him a bona fide BA. Like walking in on a kid learning that Santa Claus ain’t real, we witness Ellis as he encounters disillusionment and heart break to poignant and intimate results.

The detailed sense of place in this story is wonderfully articulated and takes on a murky character of its own. The dirty, brown, ugly river running through the story is a Giving Tree of sorts. It provides with no thought for itself and everyone who lives on the river seems to be living off of it in one way or another. Ellis’s father catches and sells from his riverside shanty, Neckbone’s uncle dives for mussels and pearls and even Mud seems to have emerged mysteriously from the riverbed like an Uruk Hai from a birthing pit.

Unfolding on this mucky river is a growing sense of wonder and mystery that seems to mimic the outlook of a child. Even in his world of recycled possessions and mud-stained belongings, everything seems so full of intrigue and promise. But things are not always as they seem and nothing is black and white in Nichol’s film. Every one has their own indiscretions and share of mistakes but that doesn’t necessarily make them bad, it just…makes them. This is the case with Reese Witherspoon’s character Juniper – a kind but lecherous soul. Her helpless love with Mud is at once pure and manipulative and in the end our impressions of any one of these characters is limited by our brief encounters with them.


Neckbone’s uncle Galen, played in a bit-part by Michael Shannon, offers an anecdote that seems to encapsulate the magic of the film. Looking up at his ceiling fan winding overhead, he muses to his nephew that it’s the best ceiling fan that he’s ever had, finer than all the other ceiling fans he’s ever owned, and yet he found it on the bottom of the river. Who or why someone threw it out is a mystery to him but as the adage goes “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure”. To extend this metaphor to Mud (both the character and the film,) even people who have been thrown away, mistreated or discarded can be worth saving and may just be the finest things of all. They just may need some re-wiring.

Themes of innocence lost and re-invigoration of character are beautifully woven into the subtext and come across as potent and intoxicating, allowing Mud to be something to dwell on rather than watch once and dismiss. It’s a surprisingly tender film that, like its characters, wears its heart on its sleeve. As a postmodern tale of virtue gone slumming and a story of the veracity of the human spirit, Mud is a tremendously heart-warming and gritty modern day fairy tale.

B+

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A Bunch of Character Posters for ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT

 

When I heard that Arrested Development would officially return nearly seven years after its cancellation, like a time-abiding Jesus, I was both ecstatic and worried. The experience of AD was short and sweet – a steady crescendo that built upon its jokes episode-after-episode to side-splitting hilarity- but it left off on such a high note that that former glory seems nearly impossible to re-attain.

My only concern with this revival is that they are forced to start from somewhat of a clean slate and will spend some time re-building the carefully laid house-of-jokes that defined the whole program. My gut tells me that Mitch Hurtwitz and Co will, however, just launch right back in, making the show a bit of a sink-or-swim experience. Honestly, I think it has enough of a following and certainly the hilarious history to warrant just picking up where they left off and I think going outside of the regular networks will work in it’s favor.

This newest slew of character posters attempts to clue people into to the fact that the new episodes will be appearing on NetFlix by using some of these character’s classic one-liners.

Arrested Development stars Jason Bateman, Jeffrey Tambor, Portia De Rossi, Michael Cera, Will Arnett, Tony Hale, Alia Shawkat, Jessica Walter and David Crossand will air exclusively on Netflix with all 15 episodes on Monday, May 25.

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Trailer for Michel Gondry's MOOD INDIGO Amps Up The Whimsy

 

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Michel Gondry
is definitely a hit or miss talent (he’s directed such masterpieces as Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind amongst duds like The Green Hornet) but his latest film, Mood Indigo (L’Écume des jours), which is set in his home tongue of French, looks like a win to me. The vehemently indie flair that defined Eternal Sunshine is on full display here alongside nutty camerawork and bizarre visual panache.

As a return to form for Gondry, Mood Indigo seems to have all of his eccentric earmarks as well as a fantastic cast, including Audrey Tatou, Romain Duris,and Omar Sy – a formula which will hopefully make this a visual and emotional spectacle.

The trailer is as out there and whimsy as they come but I highly suggest watching it to get your interest piqued in a film that you otherwise probably wouldn’t pay much interest to.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dh3V-dFlmyk

Mood Indigo, starring Audrey Tatou, Romain Duris and Omar Sy, is Michel Gondry‘s latest film and does not yet have a scheduled release date for the U.S.

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Seattle International Film Festival Line-Up Loaded With Gems

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Today, the Seattle International Film Festival  unveiled its full lineup for this year’s festival. As this will be my first year covering it (and my first time covering any festival of this pedigree), I anxiously anticipated what the organizers had in store and the answers are pretty exciting. Running from May 16-June 9, SIFF has more to offer than ever before.

SIFF officially launches with Joss Whedon‘s Much Ado About Nothing at its Opening Night Gala. Famously filmed in a mere 12 days, this modernized Shakespeare adaptation tells the tale of love unacquainted and unrequited. Whedon is expected to attend alongside stars Alexis Denisof, Amy Acker, Nathan Fillion, and Clark Gregg.

While Whedon’s black-and-white Bard tale will be sure to charm audiences, Sofia Coppola‘s The Bling Ring, which will close out the festival, delves into the toxic allure of crime and celebrity in this true-life story of a band of teenage thieves who rob the richest of Hollywood’s stars.

Other notable entries to the festival include:

    • Blackfish
      Blackfish
      documents the much-publicized 2010 killing of an orca whale trainer at SeaWorld. It premiered at this year’s Sundance Festival, posing poignant questions about the tactics and ethics of this multinational but predominantly corporate aquarium.

 

  • Byzantium
    From the director of Interview With A Vampire, Neil Jordan‘s Byzantium is a mystery thriller that features (you guessed it) vampires. Starring Saoirse Ronan and Gemma Arterton, Byzantium has been called a stylish and seductive film that mixes up the familiar vampiric tropes.

 

  •  Decoding Annie Parker
    Decoding Annie Parker
    is based on the true story of geneticist Mary-Claire King, who, faced with colleague ridicule and disbelief, proved that breast cancer is born of heredity rather than chance. Featuring a strong cast with Helen Hunt, Aaron Paul, Samantha Morton, Bradley Whitford, Maggie Grace, Alice Eve and Rashida Jones, this film charters how cancer was just almost cured.

 

  • Epic
    From Dreamworks Studios comes this animated feature about the smaller things, er, people in life. Much like Ferngully, Epic takes us to a microscopic level where little people battle malevolent animals in order to save the forest that they love so dearly.

 

  • Frances Ha
    Following up on a pair of sobering and darkly comical critical darlings, Greenberg and The Squid and The Whale, Noah Baumbach takes his distinctive touch to Frances Ha, a “quirky romantic comedy” set to the backdrop of New York City which is already winning the critics over in droves.

  • Monsters University
    Rewinding time back to when monsters Sulley and Mike met at college, this prequel is Pixar‘s latest offering. After a string of misses, Monsters University has a chance to bring the heart and charm back to a studio once renown for just that. 

 

  • The Way, Way Back
    Starring Liam James (The Killing), Toni Collette (United States of Tara), Steve Carell (The Office) and Sam Rockwell (Moon), The Way, Way Back is a coming of age story about a circular kid trying to fit into a square hole who finds an unlikely friend at a water park.

 

  • Twenty Feet From Stardom
    A documentary by Morgan Neville, Twenty Feet From Stardom aims the spotlight at the oft-unnoticed backup singers for some of the world’s best talent. The film will feature interviews by Stevie Wonder, Mick Jagger, Sheryl Crowe and Bette Midler as they talk about these unsung stars living in the periphery of stardom.Seattle International Film Festival
    May 16- June 9, 2013
  • V/H/S 2 
    While last year’s cult hit V/H/S hardly reinvented the wheel with its found footage montage premise, it made waves in the horror genre for doing what horror movies should — scaring the pants off people. This structureless compilation follows almost exactly in the footsteps of its predecessor with five short horrifying segments that lack a strong central thread tying them together. Brendan Walsh of Screen Crave praised it, saying: “This time around, it feels like every filmmaker is right in their wheelhouse, presenting a polished, terrifying vision.”

As there are over 400 films playing at this years festival, there are countless others including a selection of short films and a slew of documentaries. Representing 85 countries and featuring 49 world premieres, 47 North American premieres and 18 U.S. premieres, this is sure to be one of the greatest years in SIFF history.

Before you go, check out the awesome little trailers for SIFF 2013 that’s rife with movie references and some cool little claymation:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFLQ8oCNu0s

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