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Trailer for THE BUTLER

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Way back when, Lee Daniel‘s The Butler had some steam in its Oscar chambers but with the release of this first trailer, some pundits are saying that it may have tuckered out early in the race already. The film is a loose biopic about White House butler Eugene Allen, played by Forest Whitaker, who served between the era of Harry Truman in 1952 until the reign of Reagan in ’86. Daniel’s last film, Precious, received a Best Picture nomination but, come on, who didn’t hate watching that movie?

There seems to be a lot invested in the supporting characters in this film as it’s stuffed to the brim with big namesincluding Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo, Jane Fonda, Melissa Leo, Minka Kelly, Cuba Gooding Jr., Nelsan Elli with Alan Rickman, James Marsden, John Cusack, Liev Schreiber, and Robin Williams all playing former US presidents.

I guess it’s hard to be shocked that something starring Oprah Winfrey making that face wouldn’t be quite up to snuff. Have a look at the trailer yourself and see if you think that this will be something that will get Oscar voters in its corner.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUA7rr0bOcc

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ROTFL For Edgar Wright's THE WORLD'S END Trailer

 

With The World’s End, Edgar Wright will finish out his much beloved blood and ice cream trilogy that started with Shaun of the Dead and followed up Hot Fuzz. As one would expect, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost will return as a pair of Brits palling around. This time though, instead of fighting off zombies or busting suburban crime as buddy-cops, they’ll witness the end of the world in the midst of a legendary pub crawl.

I’ve been a massive fan of the trilogy so far and The World’s End has been one of my most anticipated pictures of the year. the comedic pairing of Frost and Pegg under the direction of Wright is just a combination made in heaven.

Check out the trailer here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ibQvQUpMTg

The World’s End is directed by Edgar Wright and stars Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Martin Freeman, Paddy Considine, Eddie Marsan and Rosamund Pike. It comes to theaters on August 23.

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Watch Out for Somali Pirates in CAPTAIN PHILLIPS Trailer

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Return to the edge-of-your-seat world of Paul Greengrass’s films with this first trailer for Captain Phillips. Telling the true story of Captain Richard Phillips, played here by Tom Hanks, Greengrass’s film charters Phillips surrender to Somali pirates after their cargo ship was captured. Like the real life events, Phillips gave himself up in order to allow his crew to leave unharmed.

The screenplay is adapted from the semi-autobiographical book by Richard Phillips himself alongside co-author Stephen Tatty entitled “A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea” 

Greengrass made a name for himself with the Bourne franchise as well as the fantastic United 93 but his last outing, Green Zone, was a bit of a dud. Hopefully this next effort will return his name to good standing. Check out the trailer for yourself and see how interested you are:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3ASoBrFGlc

Captain Phillips is directed by Paul Greengrass and stars Tom Hanks, Catherine Keener, John Magaro, Max Martini, David Warshofsky, Chris Mulkey, Corey Johnson and Yul Vazquez. It comes it theaters on October 11.

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Get a Better Look at New Coen Bros Movie With Red Band Trailer For INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS

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When I was drafting my 40 most anticipated films of 2013, I gave the Coen Bro‘s Inside Llewyn Davis the benefit of the doubt and let it soar to my number ten spot. This had nothing to do with the synopsis or the talent in front of the camera. No, all my expectations arose from the mere presence of the men behind the camera- the enigmatic Coen brothers- the familial duo responsible for classics such as Fargo, The Big Lebowski and No Country for Old Men.

While I wouldn’t say that their proverbial chicken lays a gold egg each go around, I think they swing pretty hard when the ball comes their way and have a first-rate batting average. Letting go of the metaphors- they’re just great filmmakers. While not all of their stuff is Academy fare, it all has the potential to be looked at as an award’s darling so it’s still up in the air as to whether this one will have any running at the 2014 Academy Awards.

Have a peek at this red band trailer and see if it gets you more intrigued than the first trailer did.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4GGOXkY5CI

Inside Llewyn Davis is directed by the Joel and Ethan Coen and stars Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, John Goodman, Justin Timberlake, F. Murray Abraham, and Garrett Hedlund. It’s expected to open at this year’s Cannes Film Festival in May and then hits limited theaters on December 6 and goes wide on December 20.

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"We've Unmade a Huge Mistake" – Final Poster for ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT

 

Lately, I’ve been watching Arrested Development (for about the tenth time) to get my insider bits up to snuff as I’m priming for the fated day of May 26 when AD makes it’s glorious return. The show functions so well as a house of jokes riffing on itself and constantly building towards more and more complex gags. Ultimately, the better you know the show, the funnier it gets.

When I hopped on Netflix today, the home screen was flooded with Arrested Development mockups, including a “funniest clip” voted on by Facebook users. It seems that the Netflix marketing camp knows what they’re doing here and they’re using the exclusivity as advertisers on their platform to promote their upcoming show. It’s brilliant. That and they’re blowing up the internet with a slew of character posters, teaser peeks and this final poster that totes the clever little tagline– “We’ve Unmade a Huge Mistake”

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 Sunday, May 26.

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Poster and Teaser Trailer for My Most Anticipated Film of the Year – GRAVITY

 

Alfonso Cuaron‘s Children of Men was an astonishing piece of work and the mystery and intrigue behind his new film Gravity made me pop it into the highest spot on my Most Anticipated Films of 2013 List. Starring George Clooney and Sandra Bullock as two solitary astronauts stuck on a damaged spacecraft, Gravity tells the story disaster in the worst possible location: space.

One of the most intriguing aspects of  Cuaron’s work is his lengthy shots and Gravity is supposed to open with one breathtaking 17-minute long shot. If Cuaron is able to live up to hype and deliver a film on caliber with Children of Men, I’m sure Gravity will be one of the best the year has to offer.

The trailer is expected to float down to Earth tomorrow so this little teaser and poster will have to do for now:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwAn276ujB4

Gravity is directed by Alfonso Cuaron and stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney. It hits theaters on October 18.

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Trailer for TRUE BLOOD Season 6

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In five seasons, True Blood has seen vampires, shifters, plain clothed murders, werewolves, fairies, witches, werepanthers and, er, Maenads. Many believe the show to have jumped the proverbial shark and cling to simpler times when True Blood just involved Southern society adapting to the public knowledge that vampires are indeed real.

With so much going on, the show has gotten a smidge diluted and often it’s hard to keep track of what’s what and who’s who. This has not discouraged the powers that be though as True Blood is pending a sixth season and you can catch a first watch of that trailer right here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnCI-M6Eqfc

Series regulars Anna Paquin, Alexander Skarsgård, Stephen Moyer, Sam Trammell, Ryan Kwanten, Rutina Wesley, Chris Bauer, Nelsan Ellis, Jim Parrack, Todd Lowe, Jessica Hamby and Joe Manganiello are all expected to return. The new season premieres on HBO on June 16 at 9PM.

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Premiere Trailer for ENDER'S GAME

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Ender’s Game
is one of those popular young adult books that I never around to reading as a kidbut with a big screen adaptation on the way, I’ll be able to discover what all the fuss is about. 70 years after an alien race attacked Earth and nearly destroyed everything that we know, the human race has decided to train child soldiers in an effort to subvert the enemy’s expectations and conquer them.

Directed by Gavin Hood (X-Men Origins: Wolverine), this first trailer for Ender’s Game seems to really be repping the Academy-friendly cast as nearly every name in the trailer is stamped with an ‘Academy Award Nominee’ subtitle. It’s an interesting bit of positioning but I don’t usually go to see sci-fi flicks to get award winning performances. Take a look at the trailer and see if it’s something that might interest you.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vP0cUBi4hwE

I’m still on the fence as to where this one will fall for me but I’m usually intrigued by sci-fi. How closely the source material will be followed or how successfully is still up for grabs. In my opinion, the worse case scenario for this film is that it could wind up much like the money-jettisoning John Carter.

Ender’s Game is directed by Gavin Hood and stars Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld, Ben Kingsley, Viola Davis, Abigail Breslin and Harrison Ford. It launches into theaters on November 1.

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SIFF Review: WHAT MAISIE KNEW

‘What Maisie Knew’
Directed by Scott McGehee and David Siegel
Starring Onata Aprile, Julianne Moore, Steve Coogan, Alexander Skarsgård and Joanna Vanderham
Drama
99 Mins
R

What Maisie Knew is an emotional powerhouse of a film led by an adorably funny-faced young actress functioning on a purely natural level, allowing the “performance” underneath to disappear entirely. It strikes a particularly meaningful chord for the “divorced generation” and anyone who has been part of a broken home will feel heart-warbling empathy for the fledgling Maisie. Directors Scott McGehee and David Siegel tread carefully through difficult territory and instead of offering a tired, sentimentally-formulated heart-throbber, they have crafted a compelling but tragic familial drama that breaks the mold by being dreadfully honest.

At once a counterpoint and response to Beasts of the Southern Wild, What Maisie Knew explores themes of forced adolescence. Instead of the dreamlike wetlands setting of Beasts, this is bare-bones realism plunkered down in the heart of New York City.

The picture opens with Maisie (Onata Aprile), a sweet little five-year-old swept up in her childish fantasies and playing make-believe. She’s a perfectly normal little tyke, albeit abnormally cute, who plays with toy horses and ogles at the wonder of the New York skyscrapers looming above her ritzy apartment. But there’s a different breed of normalcy in Maisie’s life, as she is surrounded by her parents incessant arguing and is left almost unfazed by the cycle of domestic admonishment unfolding around her.

As she merrily trots about the house collecting pizza money or making herself her own food and passing out in front of the T.V., her parents, Susana (Julianne Moore) and Beale (Steve Coogan) holler at each other, getting incrementally louder and more personal in their attacks. Although it is abundantly clear that this hostile environment is no suitable place for a child, it’s the only world that Maisie knows and it’s become as normal to her as a walk in the park or the taste of a Kraft grilled cheese sandwich.

When her unmarried parents do call it quits and split ways, a battle ensues behind closed doors for custody of their dear Maisie. But the fighting doesn’t stop there. As they duke it out in court, Maisie is little more than a pawn in their game of comeuppances. Rather than caring for her interests, these two self-involved parents are more concerned with their own career successes and egos then they are about their own daughter.

Their resulting courtship for custody is more a battle of pride that one born out of genuine care and love. To them, Maisie is a trophy to be won, not a child to be cherished. She is a source of comfort and self-worth that they otherwise lack. Poor Maisie is stuck in the midst, quietly navigating her confused and crumbling world but even after the dump-trucks of neglect that they bury her in week-by-week, Maisie is helplessly adoring of her parents, making it all the more crushing to watch them let her down again and again.

In the haze of separation, both parents get hastily hitched, Susana to the young and lanky Lincoln (Alexander Skarsgård) and Beale to long-time live-in-nanny Margo (Joanna Vanderham). With Maisie’s folks all wrapped up in themselves, the responsibility of caring for Maisie falls unto the shoulders of these new, semi-surrogate parents. At first obligatorily sparing with each other, Margo and Lincoln recognize their counterpart in each other and their mutual love for Maisie blossoms into an unexpected friendship.

As Beale and Susana’s sanctimonious posturing plays out, a universal truth about love is revealed, particularly the notion that love is not petty nor does it want for itself. Here, their professed love for Maise is more an addiction than anything – a one-hit fix of undeserved lovin’ to get them going through their next few weeks. Dissecting their parent-daughter relationship we find none of the tropes of love as described by John Lennon but something more demanding and hollow. Petty love, however, is not criminal and so the warfare marches on.

Ticking down the list of performers, there is nothing but praise to pile on. Aprile as Maisie is great beyond her years and it’s hard to tell if she was even acting. Whenever she speaks, an age-appropriate-innocence as well as empathy beyond her years seeps from her as naturally as fresh water from a spring. To draw the inevitable comparison, she’s a white Quvenzhané Wallis who deserves recognition just as much as the former did. Mommy-not-so-dearest Julianne Moore gives a measured and striking performance as Susana as she allows her own selfish lifestyle to overshadow her daughter even though she tries to bend things and make them seem otherwise. As a counterpoint to the overbearing and illusive Susana, Joanna Vanderham’s Margo has the beating soul of a mother and puts priority in that stake. Vanderham drips with earnest concern and youthful naivety and really gives a fulfilled sense of spirit to Margo. 

Over in the men’s boxing ring, Beale and Lincoln duke it out for paternal authority. Coogan’s sneering, stiff-upper-lip British persona is ideally matched for Beale and although he’s not a genuinely bad-guy, you can’t help but think of him as little more than a parent of convenience. He’s more likely to buy an expensive gift than to have a genuine conversation with his daughter. While Beale plays the role of father when it suits him, Lincoln is a rock. Rocking the Skarsgård-slump, Alexander Skarsgård as Lincoln is disarmingly gentle and loving. Laying the brooding antihero to rest, he offers up a mild-natured and wholly likeable character that you cannot help but root for. 

What hangs with you after the film is over and the lights come up is not the moments of ferocity but the moments of quiet. It’s the sense of hope imparted by the lingering light buried in the innocence of children. It’s the silent reeling the characters are left in in their own private moment of self-realization. It’s the acceptance of tough truths.

We’re ultimately left to wonder about the lasting scars and impending legal battles, as Maisie’s life going forward is destined to be an uphill battle with no foreseeable end. There are many years to suffer through and many more wounds to endure for this little girl with a gumdrop personality and yet her path isn’t painted as too glum or hopeless.

In the age of divorce as norm, this is a strikingly close-to-the-bone story that cuts deep into the ethos of modern day child-rearing.  It’s sentimental without ever being sappy and, in the end, even more touching because of its emotional difficulty. The hard truth to this story; there’s no light at the end of the tunnel and fairy-tales only exist in books. With phenomenal acting across the board, tender directing and a gem in little Onata Aprile, this is a film worthy of respect that, like its lead character, should be appreciated and cherished.

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Kevin Feige Isn't Afraid of Misleading You About the Future of Marvel

First things first, this editorial features in-depth discussion on Iron Man 3 so if you haven’t yet seen it turn back now. Don’t say I didn’t tell you so because SPOILERS FOLLOW…

Ok now that you’ve made it through, let’s talk Kevin Feige and Iron Man 3. So anyone who had seen one trailer, poster, T.V. spot or any semblance of marketing out of the third Iron Man campaign who be sure to tell you that Sir Ben Kingsley plays the villain, The Mandarin. Anyone who has seen the film however knows full-well that the Mandarin is actually a scapegoat, a performance, a fake. He’s the personification of our American fears of others, specifically when it comes to his eccentric Middle Eastern style of dress but when the camera’s stop rolling he’s actually just Trevor, a fickle English actor getting the role of a lifetime.

When this fact was revealed, I did a double-take. Was this some fake-out or a body-double? No, it was just plain old Trevor. I felt cheated. I had been waiting for my Ben Kingsley villainy and he’s nothing more than a hack thespian?! It took me a good twenty minutes to come to terms with the fact that Kingsley was not in fact the villain, even though I was under the impression from the first production announcement out of the Marvel camp that he would be.

Not only did Marvel head exec Kevin Feige, he rep Kingsley as the villain, he even talked up his performance as one of the fear-inducing dread:

“On his last take of his first full day as the Mandarin, when they yelled ‘Cut!’ the entire crew burst into applause, spearheaded by Mr. Downey himself…It was pretty amazing to see that. That’s what you get when you hire Sir Ben Kingsley. He’s so excited about his part and so into this character, and frankly just scaring the heck out of everybody…They’re like, ‘You’ve broken us out of our skeptical malaise!’

The more I began to dissect that gotcha! moment, the more I respected the long con on Feige’s part. In this information age, nothing is secret and nothing is sacred. There’s set photos snapped from iPhones, spoiler alerts that saturate online forums before the movie even gets close to theaters and trailers themselves have become more SparkNotes than intrigue builders. What Fiege has done is dupped us all into expecting something and pulling the carpet from under us. Did it work though? Yes and no.

 

 

On the one hand, he got me. He got my brother. He got probably most of the theater I was in. As far as subverting expectations, well done sir. He has managed to proof that Marvel and Co. are not strictly subject to the overflowing rumor mill and are willing to play their own crafty hand to mislead and deceive expectant audiences and impart a degree of surprise.

On the other hand, I feel like this bit of maneuvering is just a little confusing. Now that we know that Kingsley is just a goof in a silly robe isn’t it ridiculous that he’ll be plastered all over the posters and Blu-Ray covers? Guy Pearce put on a great performance as the true villain, Killian, and yet he won’t really be getting any cred nor will we see posters of Iron Man punching Killian in his fiery face (which I would personally love to see). It was a big risk and potentially could have alienated audiences but, IMO, it was a risk that paid off for the most part.

The question going forward is where will we see Feige-led deception next? Is the misleading something we can expect more of in the future or was this a one-and-done gambit? Honestly, I say keep the surprises coming. I like when you make me go – ‘Huh?’

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