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Another Trailer for Sofia Coppola's THE BLING RING

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For those of us who always have wanted to see Hermoine’s bad side unleased, Sofia Coppola‘s The Bling Ring will be sure a strike a chord. Emma Watson stars in this based-on-a-true story of a group of teenagers who shoplift from stores and burglarize the homes of rich celebrities.

Based on a piece in Vanity Fair, “The Suspects Wore Louboutins” by Nancy Jo Sales, this will only be Coppola’s fifth feature film following other such vibrant independent features as The Virgin Suicides, Lost in Translation and Somewhere. Coppola’s films have a penchant for probing celebrity and usually are pretty glum and self-reflective so I expect on top of the highs of the thrill, we can expect the film to embody similar themes. Have a look at the trailer.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4LzhgExvrc

The Bling Ring stars Emma Watson, Israel Broussard, Katie Chang, Claire Julien, Taissa Farmiga, Leslie Mann, Gavin Rossdale, and Paris Hilton (an actual victim of the real-life Bling Ring) and will hit theaters on June 12.

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UK Trailer for Joss Whedon's MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING

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Based on one of the greater works of the Bard, Much Ado About Nothing has had no shortage of theatrical adaptations with Joss Whedon‘s take serving as the fourth (or fifth if you consider the Hindi adaptation, Dil Chahta Hai). Although they hardly ever demolish at the box office, Shakespearean work is often recycled in cinema every decade or two and often by unexpected and interesting talent. If you’re trying to place Whedon’s name, you’ll sure to be familiar with his last project: The Avengers.

Coming off the Marvel megalith, Whedon opted to crank out with black-and-white passion project in a mere 12 days with many of his regular collaborators hoping aboard. This premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival last year but won’t find it’s way into regular distribution until later this summer.

I will actually be catching a screening of Much Ado About Nothing tomorrow at the Press Launch for the Seattle International Film Festival so there’s no way I’ll be watching this trailer just yet.

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

The film stars Nathan Fillion, Clark Gregg, Reed Diamond, Fran Kranz, Sean Maher, Spencer Treat Clark, Riki Lindhome and Ashley Johnson and hits theaters June 7, 2013.

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"I Know Kung Fu" – First Trailer for Keanu Reeve's Directed MAN OF TAI CHI

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In order to continue with this article, please watch this 15 second clip.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vMO3XmNXe4

Thank you and you’re welcome.

After learning Kung Fu in The Matrix, Keanu Reeves has directed his very own Kung Fu movie starring a mostly Chinese cast entitled Man of Tai Chi. This is Reeve’s first directorial effort but he seems greatly aided by choreographer Woo-ping Yuen of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, The Matrix trilogy and the two Kill Bills.

Talking about the film, Reeves said:

 “It’s an English-Chinese Kung Fu movie and it’s basically about a young man who gets involved in underground fighting to save his temple and whether or not he loses his soul.”

I simply cannot imagine this being anything but a steaming pile of you know what with lots of spinning, kicking, wire-work and punching but feel free to check out the trailer for yourself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RtOTSyjiU60

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First Trailer for THOR: THE DARK WORLD

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So far the Thor camp over at Marvel has offered up a first look at Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman in what looks to be an Asgardian Christmas card and a standard character poster where Thor is holding his iconic hammer but today we get to dig into the real goodies, as the first trailer for Thor: The Dark World has arrived.

Following the aftermath of The Avengers, Thor: The Dark World returns superhero Thor to Asgard where he must battle a powerful race of dark elves led by the malicious Malekith the Accursed to save his own planet, Earth and the rest of the nine realms.

This one is sure to debut on the big screen in front of Iron Man 3 which releases next weekend but if you can’t wait until then, dig in:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j41qNcjDoc8

Thor 2 is directed by Game of Thrones helmer Alan Taylor andstars Chris Hemsworth, Natalie PortmanTom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgård, Idris Elba, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Kat Dennings, Ray Stevenson, Zachary Levi, Tadanobu Asano, Jaimie Alexander, Rene Russo, and Anthony Hopkins and opens in theaters on November 8, 2013.

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Japanese Trailer for THE WOLVERINE

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I definitely feel like we’ve gotten very little respite from the sequel-mania dominating movie news of late but what can you expect at this time of year right before blockbuster super-season. This latest bit of massive studio film news comes as an alternative trailer for The Wolverine starring Hugh Jackman out of Japan courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox. If you’re keen to have a little more of the story revealed and catch some more bites of the action sequences, take a look at it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDAJz4rF_1M

The Wolverine also stars Svetlana Khodchenkova as Viper, Rila Fukushima as Yukio and Tao Okamoto as Mariko and opens wide on July 26.

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THE AMAZING SPIDERMAN 2's Dane DeHaan Is Rocking Slicked Hair and Hip Jacket as the New Harry Osborn

Dane DeHaan has emerged as one of the best young actors in the last few years with a handful of dark performances in films like Chronicle, Lawless and The Place Beyond the Pines. Well, DeHaan’s big ticket to stardom has appeared in his casting as Harry Osborn in the new The Amazing Spiderman franchise.

This first look at DeHaan as Osborn doesn’t show much except perhaps a penchant for hair gel and his hipster fashion sense. While Franco is often a lovable oddball, DeHaan has a much more brooding presence so I wouldn’t be surprised if the character was quite a bit different from the prior iteration.

Harry Osbourne is a staple of Spiderman lore and was last played by James Franco in Sam Raimi‘s original trilogy. A foundation of duality to Peter Parker’s double life, Osbourne is both Parker’s best friend and mortal enemy. DeHaan’s place in the trilogy is sure to start out more on the friendly side of the spectrum and it is still to be seen whether or not he will eventually fill the shoes of the villain like Franco did in the over-crowded Spiderman 3. Sitting where I am, it seems like this franchise is at least trying to go in a new direction so I doubt that DeHaan will go baddy in the next film or two. If the series extends past a trilogy though, I’m sure he might morph into the New Goblin after all.

 The Amazing Spiderman 2 will see the return of director Marc Webb and stars Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone but also features a whole cast of new actors including DeHaanShailene WoodleyPaul GiamattiFelicity Jones, Chris Cooper, and Sally Field. The Amazing Spiderman 2 opens May 2, 2014.

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Hemsworth and Portman Share Hairstylist, Cloaks AND Smiles in Bland THOR: THE DARK WORLD Photo

 

With the debut trailer arriving tomorrow, Marvel Studio is trying to churn up interest in Thor: The Dark World with this truly lackluster photo. Stars Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman seem to be having a jolly old time chilling in cloaks with their billowy locks tossed about but this isn’t exactly the epic god-of-thunder antics that will get fanboys and superhero fans in seats. Since the Grecian architecture and Padiwan robes here clearly don’t resemble anything you’d see on modern day Planet Earth, I guess the picture is slightly revealing in that Portman’s character, plain Jane, must have teleported to Thor’s home planet (realm?) of Asgard.

The first poster for Thor: The Dark World showed off Thor’s mighty-sized arm amid a storm of CGI and was equally lacking in intrigue. I’m sure that the trailer tomorrow will be sure to seize some attention though. Until then, I guess you can look at this lame picture.

Thor 2 is directed by Game of Thrones helmer Alan Taylor and stars Chris Hemsworth, Natalie PortmanTom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgård, Idris Elba, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Kat Dennings, Ray Stevenson, Zachary Levi, Tadanobu Asano, Jaimie Alexander, Rene Russo, and Anthony Hopkins and opens in theaters on November 8, 2013.

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Jaimee Foxx's Electro Was a Major Nerd Before He Blue Himself in THE AMAZING SPIDERMAN 2

 

Before he blue himself, Jaime Foxx’s character did not look so hot as Max Dillon, the man who turns into Electro in The Amazing Spiderman 2. He’s rocking the comb-over equivalent of squid-ink angel hair pasta and sporting pre-Heisenberg Walter White glasses. At least after some kind of electricity accident, he turns into a cross-breed between an Avatar Na’vi and Star War‘s Emperor Palpatine in this first look.

Let’s hope that the villain’s motivation are a little stronger in this sequel than they were for The Amazing Spiderman where Curt Conners wanted to make everyone a lizard because…lizards are STRONGER! If this snapshot is any indication, the internal struggle of this dude seems to stem from his total lack of a social life. It’s pretty clear he’s not the belle-of-the-ball (that “style” hardly ever is an effective lady-killer look) and seems to have developed a little crush on Spiderman and orange yarn so why NOT like become a lightning-powered super-villian and hunt down the spider-influenced vigilante? Motivation: solved.

The Amazing Spiderman 2 will see the return of director Marc Webb and stars Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone but also features a whole cast of new actors including Dane DeHaanShailene WoodleyPaul GiamattiFelicity Jones, Chris Cooper, and Sally Field. The Amazing Spiderman 2 opens May 2, 2014.

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Weekly Review 23: HUSTLE AND FLOW, MANHATTAN, LIKE CRAZY, THE PERFECT HOST


This week I had a chance to catch up with some more films filling out that ever-growing list of “movies to see.” I finally got to see Terrence Howard‘s knockout performance in Hustle and Flow, Woody Allen‘s masterpiece Manhattan, a rocky rom-com Like Crazy and a David Hyde Pierce psychopathic-thriller The Perfect Host.
 

 

Hustle and Flow (2006)

There’s a strange magic to Hustle and Flow, an earnest independent feature that follows a pimp trying to transition from his life of ho slingin’ into the rap game of wordsmithin’. Days after watching it, I still have the song’s hook in me which in turn reminds me of the film. A brilliant little barb to get people coming back for more? If so, I applaud the scheme but one way or another this is good hard-boiled black pulp.

Despicable though his character may be, Terrence Howard injects DJay with an oddly lovable soul. He’s a lost cause, a result of circumstance, and a mash of truly warped proclivities who has turned to a life of back-alley pimpin’ to pay the bills. Instead of passing judgment on DJay, we root for him. We want the world to sweep him off his feet and we want him to change. Without Howard, he could have easily been a one-note character – a thug, a badboy, a gangster – instead he is an atypical soul with his heart written on his sleeve.

By not creating this world as a dour pit with thousand foot walls, with angst as thick as smog and characters that wallow in the self-pitying mire of their circumstance, director Craig Brewer manages to tread lightly and keep the film almost bubbling with hope without ever skewing the sad nature of his characters. It’s a clever bit of maneuvering that really speaks to the nuance of his work and it’s what makes this such a success.

Hustle and Flow is a view of big dreams and aspirations through the eyes of an otherwise lost soul. Walking a fine line between its characters being too cuddly and too jagged, it lands smack dab in the baby-bear “just right” category. The chocolate coating on the whole thing is music that’s alive and memorable, amping up the sense of movement and electricity while planting its hook deep in the viewer.

B+

Manhattan (1979)

 

Manhattan combines modern romanticism with Woody Allen‘s won’t-back-down bluntness and razor-sharp worldview. Much of the stoic, black-and-white camerawork defy expectation in a simple and loving manner, encapsulating the spirit of Manhattan with the tilt of derelict film techniques. It’s at once an homage to old timey filmmaking and a tribute to the majesty of New York City with a generous helping of oddball humor.

The film feeds on Allen’s eccentric energy both onscreen and behind the camera and it’s clearly evident that he’s at his height of amoral sexual deviance and perverse neuroses. Tracking Allen’s ranting stream of consciousness, Manhattan becomes a constantly evolving narrative on love, sex, and living in the big city. It’s a psychological and philosophical dissection of a time and a place but it’s so lovingly told that even Allen’s critiques come across more as wry musings than condemning judgment.

The worlds that Allen create are populated by people whose relationships are fickle and short-lived. Love is fleeting and infidelities are the norm. It’s a harsh world but at least a lesson is imparted and it’s a place without absolutes; where second chances are still better than nothing at all.

Perhaps Allen’s penchant for romanticizing cities more so than people is becoming more hackneyed lately but Manhattan is him in his absolute prime – razor-sharp, unabashedly sincere, and riotously funny. The bumbling neuroticism which has come to define Allen is perfectly married to his droll perversions and this film thrives somewhere in the intersection of the two. His musings jump off the screen with wit and unique intellect, punctuated with laugh-out-loud funny moments.

As a bittersweet and uncompromising look at love as impulse, Manhattan boldly goes where few other films dare. It teaches us that, occasionally, life doesn’t go as planned and when we find ourselves down and out, you have to roll with the punches and sleep with a 17-year old.

A

Like Crazy (2011)

 

An unflinching stroll through the many phases of a young relationship, Like Crazyhas the rug-swept-from-under-us feel of The Graduate and the unresolved emotional yuckiness of Blue Valentine. All the messy highs and lows that come to define relationships are on full display here for us to peruse through like window-shopping. Though their on-again, off-again love affair becomes frustrating at times, we can all relate to the honest emotions and taxing chagrin of love asunder that define this picture.

While attending the same university, American Jacob and Brit Anna fall madly in love. But when Anna violates her visa, she is sent packing to Britain and their relationship falters. Both Anton Yelchin as Jacob and Felicity Jones as Anna excel at playing with subtle emotions and silent introspection. We’re along for Anna and Jacob’s ride together whether we want to be or not. Thankfully they never cross the indiscernible line into over-dramatics to fecklessly spur the audience on and invite our jeers at their stupid decision-making skills. Rather, each choice they make seems motivated by reason rather than stupidity.

You have to wonder how autobiographical this whole affair is for writer/director Drake Doremus. He seems to know the turmoil and wishy-washy nature of long-distance affairs like the back of his hand and as such, he directs the film with down-to-earth realism. In the end, the illusion is always greater than reality as Doremus’ film is a dishearteningly real take on love as globalization.

For making you feel all that it does, Like Crazy is an unfettered score but it’s limited scope and over-reliance on downright shittiness makes it something I am unlikely to want to revisit.

B

 The Perfect Host (2010)

 

The Perfect Host is the movie equivalent to a titty-twister. It’s gleefully sadistic and yet you can’t help but laugh in places. After John Taylor robs a bank and makes off with nearly $300,000, he barges in on Warwick Wilson’s (David Hyde Pierce) home. Warwick may be a peculiar and friendly man but as the authorities hunt Taylor down, his little home invasion begins to unravel. As a film that really works best when you go in absolutely dry, I want to tread carefully and try not to spoil any of the fun.

Down to his gait and absurdly hairy hands, Hyde has a pretty original character to sink his teeth into and he happily digs into such a grade-A weirdo. His scattershot performance is easily the highlight of the film as he over-shines co-star Clayne Crawford (playing Taylor) again-and-again to an almost embarrassing degree. Sure, this turn will hardly go down in the books as a “great” performance but at least it’s fun to watch and there is definitely something to be said for that.

As the night goes on, the event becomes a circus and we become a cohort into the festivities. It’s wild, it’s weird, and dare I say zany? All-in-all, the outright silly nature of the film actually works quite well in some places but fails to quite live up to it’s own expectations of itself in others.

At least, The Perfect Host changes pace often enough to keep things unexpected and interesting and while it’s not really breaking into any new territory, it’s a very strange and nontraditional little film that functions quite well under it’s tiny budget constraints that managed to keep me invested for its duration.

C+

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Thor Holds Hammer, Has Big Arm in First Poster for THOR: THE DARK WORLD

This first poster for Thor 2 may be simple and boring and a result of lazy Photoshopping but hey, it’s something. He holds a hammer, a lightning does a strike and his golden, godly locks are a-blowin’.

 Two years ago, I was down on the whole Avengers prospect but I will admit that I was won over by the one-two-punch of Thor, Captain America and The Avengers. Light fare though they may be, they were perfectly entertaining, albeit formulaic, and were all the razzle-dazzle spectacle to keep my inner-nerd at bay.

But now that Phase One of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (a mouthful, I know) is complete, we begin the descent into the second act of the journey. After the massive influence of The Empire Strikes Back, act two’s generally take on a darker tone and attempt to dig into the characters more. After Joss Whedon’s promise that the second Avengers movie will be “more personal” and will include more “awful” things taking place, we can assume that Phase Two will adopt a darker tone in general.

Thor 2 is directed by Game of Thrones helmer Alan Taylor andstars Chris Hemsworth, Natalie PortmanTom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgård, Idris Elba, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Kat Dennings, Ray Stevenson, Zachary Levi, Tadanobu Asano, Jaimie Alexander, Rene Russo, and Anthony Hopkins and opens in theaters on November 8, 2013.

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