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The end of the world as we know it … and we feel fine

November 5th, 2009, 2:19 pm by wepstein

2012_movie_poster2aI’m having Brandon do a think piece about end-of-the-world movies, of course pegged to the upcoming special-effects extravaganza “2012.”

As Brandon points out in his piece: Just within the past calendar year, we’ve seen the Earth destroyed by solar flares (“Knowing”), nearly disintegrated by eco-warrior aliens (“The Day the Earth Stood Still”) and over-run with zombies who outnumber their human survivors 10 to 1 (“Zombieland”).

Why do you think Hollywood has become so obsessed with the end of the world?

Also, what are your favorite end-of-the-world flicks.

Hollywood Theaters are going digital

October 27th, 2009, 1:34 pm by wepstein

Hollywood Theaters has announced that it’s going digital on all of its 14 screens.

I usually go to Carmike, so I’ve gotten used to the perfect visual quality of those amazing digital projectors. Now, I notice when I’m at a theater that DOESN’T have digital. “My God, that was a scratch on the film!”

Cinemark and Tinseltown have a few digital projectors, but I haven’t heard yet about when they’ll go all digital.

From an industry standpoint, the conversion is a great thing. Distributors won’t have to spend all that money shipping big heavy reels all over the world. (They should be able to do it all via electronic transmission, but fears of piracy keep it on disc drives for the time being.)

I’m sure all that money saved will be passed down to the consumers, and we’ll pay less for tickets and popcorn. Yeah, right.

Here’s the press release, complete with some technical data for geeks (note that the new projectors allow for lots of 3-D, which is going to soon take over the film industry):

COMING SOON TO A THEATER NEAR YOU - SONY 4K DIGITAL CINEMA PROJECTION
PORTLAND, OREGON – October 26, 2009 – Hollywood Theaters is installing Sony Electronics’ 4K digital cinema technology across its circuit. The Portland, Ore.-based exhibitor will begin its digital conversion by equipping 13 of its U.S. locations (167 screens) with Sony® projectors in time for the highly anticipated holiday film, Avatar, directed by James Cameron. All of the 2K digital projectors at the Interquest Stadium 14 in Colorado Springs will be replaced with the higher quality Sony 4K digital projectors.
The 4K roll-out will also include four screens outfitted for 3D digital projection, combining Sony’s single-projector 3D lens system with RealD™ 3D technology, enabling the exhibitor to deliver the highest-quality 3D digital projection. “With four screens capable of 3D presentation, we can show multiple 3D films at a time,” said Clyde Cornell, chief operating officer for Hollywood Theaters, noting that there are already 19 3D features scheduled for 2010.
Sony 4K projectors offer the highest image resolution of all commercial projection technologies, producing 8.8 million pixels. 4K technology provides image resolution four times greater than 2K projection systems and slightly more than four times greater than consumer high-definition televisions.
“Our 4K technology gives Hollywood Theaters the most reliable and flexible foundation for ultimately converting its entire operations to digital projection technology,” said Mike Fidler, senior vice president of Sony Electronics’ Digital Cinema Solutions and Services group. “It elevates the cinematic experience for their consumers, offering movie-goers a much more dynamic, engaging and immersive entertainment experience. The opportunity for alternative content not only presents potential new business; it also allows them to provide exciting additional programming that perfectly complements their current offerings.”
“Sony’s 4K technology provides our patrons in Colorado Springs the opportunity to view motion pictures as never before, combining the highest levels of resolution, contrast and image quality to produce precise, life-like images in vibrant colors,” said Cornell. “We are also excited to be a part of Sony’s alternative content program and plan to fully exploit their broad range of media and entertainment divisions such as sports, music, and gaming to bring fresh, innovative entertainment options to the big screen at Hollywood Theaters.”

sxrd-projector

Another word on ‘Paranormal Activity,’ with is far from the normal horror flick

October 16th, 2009, 9:27 am by wepstein

THIS FROM ANTHONY GRAHAM, ONE OF OUR TOP SOUNDBOARD CONCERT BLOGGERS:

It’s 2:30am as I write this. I should be asleep. Instead, I have goosebumps. I actually have goosebumps. You know how long it’s been since I’ve had goosebumps? Especially goosebumps from a movie? Yep…it’s been way too long. And that is pretty freaking neat.

So last night, I found myself at the midnight showing of Paranormal Activity, the debut film from writer/director Oren Peli that was originally finished back in 2007, but is now getting a more widespread release thanks to a very clever marketing campaign from Paramount, which relied on word of mouth to generate buzz. And the buzz on this one has been ridiculously intense.

But you know what? Enough about that. If you want to read about the marketing campaign, then go read about it elsewhere. Also, if you want me to go on and on about the similarities between this and that there Blair Witch film then you are also in the wrong place. Plenty of critics have talked that up, and if you want to read it, then knock yourself out.

I want to try something a little different. I want to try and explain why this little movie, a movie with four actors, one camera, no gore, and no big huge effects managed to scare the beejeesus out of an auditorium filled with 17-21 year olds and one stunningly handsome 40 year old (that would be me…stop laughing).

The story is pretty stupid simple. Kate (Katie Featherston…who bears a resemblance to my wife, which made watching this all the more agonizing) has a problem. Seems that she has been stalked all her life by a malevolent entity that’s seems to be bent on making her life way more interesting than it should be. Her boyfriend, Micah (Micah Sloat), wants to help out in the manliest (and therefore dumbest) way possible, so he buys a very expensive digital video camera with the idea that he can use it to film everything, figure it all out, solve the problem and save the day. The entire film is shot from the point of view of that one camera as Micah takes the damn thing everywhere to film, well, everything. Things, of course, go from merely annoying to eye poppingly insane as the sounds emanating from dark of the house get louder, things start to break, something big starts coming into their room (much of the action takes place in their bedroom from the camera that Micah puts on a tripod) and then the wheels start to really come off and HOLY CRAP WHAT WAS THAT?!?!?!

Okay. Let’s step back.

See, when you think about it, it is really very easy to effectively scare someone. So simple that you would think it would be employed more often than it is in modern horror films. All you need is Darkness. The Great Unknown. The shadows just outside your bedroom door will suffice just fine, thank you very much. If you are in your bed safe and sound in the middle of the night and you are awakened by a BANG coming from the hall, I can pretty much guarantee that your pulse will quicken, your palms will get sweaty, your hands will shake as the adrenaline starts pumping through your veins and that old fight/flight mechanism kicks in. It’s fear, man. Raw animal fear. And it doesn’t need a puppet that wants to play the latest torture game with you or a 7-foot tall behemoth with bad teeth, a hockey mask and a rusty machete to do its thing. The chances of you running into something like that is slim, no matter how many sequels get made. It’s darkness. Or rather, what is just outside the darkness waiting to munch on your tender yummy flesh. It’s there. Just wait until nightfall, buddy.

Secondly, if you really want to cement that scare, combine that fear with something familiar that is twisted beyond recognition. If one night your lovely spouse, who has done the same routine with you every night for a decade and is as reliable and boring as a well worn overcoat, all of a sudden sits up in bed in the middle of the night screaming curses in Samarian in a Darth Vader voice while bleeding from their eyes, chances are it’s gonna freak you to the core. Considerably more so than if you ran into a random weirdo on the street doing it. Why? Because you were comfortable with that person and the routine you had established. Once that comfort is gone, the reality around you has been upset and you may find yourself vapor locked like a dear in the headlights. And you can’t cross to the other side of the street…they are your life and like it or not you have to deal with it.

That’s it. Do those two things, and you got yourself a horror film that will really get under your skin.

And I think that’s what those kids I saw the movie with had happen to them. No buckets of blood being tossed about as nubile young hard-bodies were mangled to pieces in 3D. Instead, you got a film about two straight up likable people dealing with…something. Something in their own house in the dark just beyond their perception and understanding that is slowly getting stronger and stronger until…

Well, let’s just say this. Micah and Katie’s performances are top-notch, Peli’s direction builds the suspense perfectly and the ending?

The ending will simply kick you in half.

I hope we’re getting ‘Paranormal Activity’

October 9th, 2009, 6:53 am by wepstein

Sounds like the new “Blair Witch.” Brandon says it’s the scariest movie he’s seen since “The Exorcist.”

Shot for $15,000.paranormal-activity-dwrks2

Local filmmakers win big in Boulder Shoot Out

September 29th, 2009, 4:24 pm by wepstein

THIS JUST IN FROM local filmmaker Mark Copley:

I’ve been leading a group of mostly Colorado Springs folks that have competed in
The Shoot Out 24 Hour Filmmaking Festival in Boulder for the last 5 years.
The idea is to make a film in 24 hours or less or no longer than 7 minutes.
You are constrained further to only “in-camera” editing (ie you can’t use an
editting program like iMovie or Adobe Premiere) although teams are allowed to
edit the sound in post production.

This was the 6th year for the contest. It’s produced by
Michael Conti, a Boulder-based filmmaker, at michael@theshootoutboulder
more info on Shoot Out is at (http://theshootoutboulder.com)

This year our team won Best Film, Best Music Composition, and Best Sound
Design for our film - “Alien Probe - The Musical” with a cast and crew of primarily
Colorado Springs residents. The award included various prizes and services
including a high end studio lighting kit and $2,500 of professional editing studio
time and well as the inclusion of our film in the program for the Boulder International
Film Festival, Feb 11-14, 2010 (http://biff1.com)

Our female lead is Carmen Vreeman a freshman in Musical Theatre at UCCS who
has already been appeared in several professional shows at the Fine Arts Center and
most recently in the musical/comedy “Return To The Forbidden Planet” at UCCS
Theatreworks.

Our male lead is Brian McClure who also appeared in “Forbidden Planet”. Brian
also plays with the local band “Head Full Of Zombies”

Alexander Hartman and Karl Brevik are also Theatre students at UCCS and played
supporting roles.

The third supporting role was Chris Malley a Boulder musician. (http:/chrismalley.com)
Chris and I wrote the music for the film and Chris performed it for the production.

I wrote, directed the film and coproduced it with Mark Keisling who works at
Fluke Networks.

I am an engineer by trade and a low volume independent filmmaker by recent
advocation. I have a small production company, Quiz Dog Productions
You can see pictures of the cast and listen to audio files (MP3) of the songs written
for the production at http://quizdog.com/Alien

The Top Ten films were shown yesterday at the Boulder Theatre and prizes
were awarded in various categories. The Top Ten films are viewable online
at http://fastfilmtv.com (although they seem to have hit a download limit at the
moment.)

All the cast and crew are volunteers but my hope is the cast’s careers will benefit from
the exposure of winning this contest and from appearing in BIFF which is internationally
known.

Please let me know if you need any further details of i we need to arrange
a way for you to see the film if fastfilmtv.com continues to have issues.

Thanks!

Thumbs up and down for ‘9,’ two up for ‘Basterds’

September 15th, 2009, 12:52 pm by wepstein

Brandon loved ‘9′

Here’s what he had to say about it:

I first saw Shane Acker’s Oscar-nominated short film on which 9 is based at the Telluride Film Festival nearly five years ago. It was an intriguing film: dark yet captivating, dynamic yet baffling, oddly familiar yet undeniably surreal. The short always felt like part of a much larger whole, so it is no surprise that when visionary director Tim Burton (Batman, Edward Scissorhands, Charlie and The Chocolate Factory) saw the film, he, together with Russian director Timur Bekmambetov (Wanted, Nightwatch) encouraged Acker to develop it into a feature-length film.

9 opens just after the end of the world. The dark and frightening landscape is one of rubble and half decomposed human corpses. Mighty war machines lay where they fell, apparatuses out of place even in a world of shattered buildings and apocalyptic desolation. Ravenous fires lick at any available fuel source, and an impenetrable shroud of pollutants and ash cloak the sky. Following an all-out human vs. machine war, neither side came away the victor. Reflecting a dictate of modern atomic theory, mutually assured destruction was imminent, and now the surface of the planet is a blight, wiped clean of any living human presence.

In a building located somewhere in the desert of annihilation, a rag doll tumbles off a shelf and somehow comes to life; exactly how this happens, we’re left to wonder. The doll, simply known as “9″ (voiced by Elijah Wood), wakes in a battered lab. He’s made of burlap and sealed by a zipper running the length of his middle. He’s no larger than a child’s action figure with blinking, apertured eyes—like camera shutters. To the newly alive 9, everything is fresh, mesmerizing and astonishing. Yet even he senses something is far from normal beyond the disintegrating walls of his birthplace. By chance, 9 finds a small community of others like himself—diminutive, sentient rag dolls—hiding in the sanctuary of a decimated church, and from them learns to evade a series of monstrous mechanical/animal hybrid wraiths intent on ingesting his and his fellow dolls’ souls. (To reveal how they got their souls would be a spoiler.)

But when 9 learns that there may yet be hope to save those who have already fallen to the beasts, he convinces the others (including 5, voiced by John C. Reilly, and 7, by Jennifer Connelly) to go against the advice of their leader (1, voiced by Christopher Plummer) to leave well enough alone and go on the offensive against a menace that is growing in strength and size.

The casting of Elijah Wood is certainly no accident. 9 is steeped in both the imagery and mythology of The Lord of the Rings, a detail made all the more interesting given the fact that director Acker once worked for Weta digital workshop, contributing to the visual effects in The Return of the King. Watching the tiny figures stumble across a blasted landscape toward a towering structure lit by a red, eye-like light source seems to be a reference to the arduous journey made by a pair of persistent hobbits.

It is far from the film’s only homage. 9 also invokes The Wizard of Oz, borrowing the familiar refrain of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” and twisting it to reflect a new, sickening reality—this is not a place where rosy cheeked little girls wake up from Technicolor dreams; this is a horrific, all-too-real nightmare in which all that made humanity unique and special hangs on, literally, by a thread.

The original world Acker creates is both splendid and terrible. Part steampunk (Acker calls his universe stitchpunk), part dystopic fantasy, 9 waves a believable and rich tapestry. Like The Littles, the animated series in the early 80s in which tiny people furnish their lives out of what we all throw away, the rag dolls acquire and reappropriate discarded human objects, using the most innocuous items as the tools and weapons with which they survive. However, it is a creative imperative with a distinctly macabre flipside.

Though the machines were once forged in massive factories, they are now forced to build each other from whatever materials they can scavenge, oftentimes taking on the ghastly appearance of crude, perverted life. The beasts in 9, cobbled together from mechanical scraps, organic remains and found items, are genuinely terrifying. They take the form of prowling cats, complete with sun-bleached skulls; slithering snakes with great hoods hiding cracked doll heads; a pterosaur-like fiend with wings of leather and a scorpion tail; and, of course, spiders. They remind us of the cephalopod-like sentinels in The Matrix.

9 leaves us with numerous unanswered questions. Why make miniature rag dolls in an attempt to save the human race? Who built the first mechanical beast and why? Why is the enemy machine’s brain intent on claiming souls, and how does it do it? Some will see the lack of explanation and back story as appropriately ambiguous, while others may simply find it vexing.

The end of 9, which occurs far too quickly, engages in a bit too much hocus-pocus—a disappointing deus ex machina dénouement. After setting up a world of gears and levers and pulleys, suddenly introducing supernatural elements feels like a magical cheat, an unnecessarily and unwelcome metaphysical bow with which to tie up the storyline. We can see that the film is trying to draw a very clear and wide swath between humanity and machine, but it takes it a step too far.

9 seems to say that technology employed without the application of a human soul is easily corrupted—not a new concept (neither is the sci-fi trope of machines rising up against their human creators), but a valid one. But even this statement grinds against what we are shown—a barbaric humanity that first builds the war machines to decimate their very human enemies. Only later do the machines turn on their masters. Obviously humanity is far from pure and perfect, despite the fact that the end of the film insists that it is the human soul alone that has the integrity to survive and thrive long after humanity itself is ash. But we know better. Machines weren’t the problem. Neither was the so-called dark science that enabled their creation. We were. “We have the power to make [the future] however we want it,” is the film’s closing line. But it is warped and cracked, this image of humanity upon which they plan to remake the world. And history has a devastating way of repeating itself.

Through it all, 9’s visuals are magnificent, its animation breathtaking. It’s all done on computers, but it has a stylized look that resembles stop motion. Animation is one of cinema’s greatest mediums because it is constrained by nothing but the imagination of its creators. While many have bought into the fallacy that “cartoons” are just for kids, many others understand that animation is an unbounded dream world, unfettered by the constraints of physics and the laws of the rational universe. 9 is an enthralling and beguiling step in that direction, a flawed but gripping narrative suffused with wonder, imagination and dread-tinged awe.

HERE’S WHAT I SAY:

OK for young teens, but, unlike “Wall-E,” it never made me care about the characters enough to get involved with their non-stop peril.

I did come up with a much sicker and darker ending: The sock creatures discover they were created by the evil machine to give its Beast playthings to stalk.

Can’t imagine kids would like that one, though.

About Tarantino’s movie, here’s what Brandon said:

Inglourious Basterds is a piece of bravura filmmaking, a scrumptiously over the top revenge fantasy that melds high comedy with tragic melodrama for pure hypnotic effect. I’ve never enjoyed a Tarantino movie more.

Inglourious Basterds begins in German-occupied France with the introduction of Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz), a Jew-hunting Nazi who executes an entire family hiding beneath the floorboards of a small cottage, minus a lone daughter, Shoshanna (Mélanie Laurent), who narrowly escapes. Shoshanna flees to Paris where she assumes a new identity and sets herself up as the owner/operator of a movie house popular with German soldiers.

Elsewhere, U.S. Army Lieutenant Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) has been put in charge of a company of select soldiers whose mission is not simply to harass and harry the Nazis, but to strike the very fear of God into them. Raine’s men (including director Eli Roth, B.J. Novak and Til Schweiger) are composed entirely of Jewish soldiers known as “The Basterds,” who engage in guerilla style sneak attacks, beating their enemies to death with baseball bats and then removing their scalps as mementos. (This is the sort of war film Sam Peckinpah would have been proud to make.) Naturally, the Germans become appropriately agitated.

When the unfathomable opportunity arises to take out all the leaders of the Third Reich at once, the Allies jump at the chance, pairing Raine’s squad with the adored German actress and undercover secret agent Bridget Von Hammersmark (Diane Kruger) and British film critic turned soldier Lt. Archie Hicox (Michael Fassbender). As Col. Landa and Lt. Raine are drawn toward an inevitable confrontation, an even greater collision is poised to occur as Shoshanna, hungry for revenge, sets her own wrathful vengeance in motion.

Director Quentin Tarantino has always been a polarizing figure, always been at the very center of the debate as to where homage ends and plagiarism begins. This film won’t be ending that debate anytime soon. Inglourious Basterds, an unrecognizable remake of an Italian film of the same name, is the cinematic offspring of a threesome between a period war film, a 70’s sploitation film and Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns. Though comprised of several chapters that don’t initially appear to belong together, this is probably Tarantino’s most linear film yet.

The American bad boy of cinema is one of the most distinctive directors working today. He has imitators, but no peers. Hit or miss, his films are always unmistakably his own. As a filmmaker, he is so polished that he must actually work hard to appear raw. His films are always extraordinarily entertaining—self indulgent to be sure, but undeniably entertaining nonetheless. His latest is no different.

It has been said that Tarantino is in love with the sound of his own voice, that he enjoys nothing more than to place a handful of his idiosyncratic characters around a table and let them talk for inordinately long periods of time. But when they are given such words to say, can you blame them? While Tarantino’s predilection failed him in Deathproof (not because the writing was bad but because it violated the rules of the grindhouse genre), it is mesmerizing here. Tarantino’s script positively purrs. His language is milk and honey one moment and venomous antifreeze the next, containing not a drop of sentimentality. His plot doesn’t generate razor sharp tension—he accomplishes that with his words alone.

Tarantino has once again created characters who refuse to be overlooked or forgotten. Brad Pitt’s over-the-top mannerisms and appalling southern accent creates a (mostly) intentionally cartoonishness which works… eventually. Of all the Basterds, he alone is allowed this revelation. The remainder of the men are painted with broad, stereotypical brushes. We don’t ever get to know them. They are not the Dirty Dozen with back-stories to endear them to us or convenient handles for our sympathy. They are Jews there to butcher Nazis and that’s all we need to know about them. The one Allied solider who is given lavish time is Fassbender’s Lt. Hicox, a walking mix of preening Anglo arrogance and chiseled good looks. How amazing is Fassbender, that an actor of his stature and appearance could be such a chameleon, staring in 300, Hunger and now Inglourious Basterds and not be readily identified in any film.

Tarantino also continues a tradition he started with his earliest films, creating devastatingly strong female characters (does anyone create stronger?), especially that of Shoshanna who comes face to face with oblivion and turns into an relentless wraith of vengeance as a result. But she is not an automaton; beneath her cold, resolved exterior beats the heart of a terrified and wounded child.

None of these characters, however, are even remotely as interesting as that of Col. Hans Landa. Christoph Waltz, in his first English speaking film, is absolutely spellbinding, breathing life into a true villain for the ages. We love to hate him, a multi-dimensionality that is not exactly humanizing, but does grant him a certain autonomy from his own abhorrent wickedness.

Yet even Landa is not the star of Basterds. That coveted place belongs to cinema itself. Tarantino litters his film with dozens of pop cinematic references, some overt and some obscure. Sometimes he is elucidating a moment; other times he is simply showing off. The cinema has never been just an entertaining diversion for Tarantino—it has the power to create and to destroy and he proves it here more than in anything else he’s ever made. Basterds is a film in which the climax takes place in a theater, in which movie stars and film critics play pivotal roles and in which film literally saves the day and perhaps ends a war.

Like the brilliant but troubling Leni Riefenstahl, the actress and filmmaker who immortalized Adolf Hitler in Triumph of the Will and is invoked throughout Basterds, Joseph Goebbels has created a film of unadulterated hero worship, Nation’s Pride, an ode to carnage on a colossal scale about an episode of extreme violence made respectable by soft filters and key lights. The film, about the heroics of lowly private (Daniel Brühl) who in real life has taken a touching interest in Shoshanna, is an attempt to distil the jingoistic essence of Nazi Germany into a singular piece of high art. The gory irony then is that film is both literally and figuratively a combustible material that, in the end, turns on it creators and consumes them. Just as a holy God wreaked vengeance on the Nazis for violating the sanctity of his Ark of the Covenant with their unmitigated hubris in Raiders of the Lost Ark, so too does Tarantino give us an ending in that same epic vein—full of larger-than-life wrath, a sort of wish fulfillment judgment day.

Tarantino gives us exactly what we want, a revenge fantasy we can feel good about. After all, if you can’t find satisfaction in killing Nazis, where can you find it? If this is immoral, it nevertheless reflects the audience’s (and I dare say the director’s) own dark and perverse desires. Ultimately, the film abandons reality for an alternate history in which the audience gets to remotely participate in the wartime denouncement they’ve always dreamed of seeing. Tarantino sees no disconnect in any of this. He feels no obligation to treat the Nazis any differently than he would any other characters he’s written over the years and he obviously feels no obligation to history either. This stance—which will disturb some and thrill others—is just the sort of balsy, audacious, foolhardy posturing that makes Inglourious Basterds one of the year’s most magnificent and controversial experiences.

I AGREE WITH BRANDON ON THIS

Cartoonish, but brilliant. A revenge flick worth cheering over.

One thing what occurred to my friend Barry as we were watching this is that by showing Hitler laughing his butt off at a film that’s nothing but pure violence, Tarantino is making a comment about both him and his sadistic audience (us!)

Very clever.

Movies to watch from Telluride

September 8th, 2009, 10:11 am by wepstein

We couldn’t make the Telluride Film Festival this year. That sound you hear is me kicking myself.

Telluride is simply the most beautiful and idiosyncratic in the world, and that’ not just my opinion. Roger Ebert and other critics have said the same thing many times over.

But I’ve noticed, since the economic downtown and the newspaper industry struggles, fewer critics are going. It may have something to do with Telluride being one of the few (possibly only) festival that offers no passes or deals to critics. It’s darned expensive.

Still, it’s an important festival, and often debuts the movies we’ll all be talking about the next year. Last year’s big festival discovery was “Slumdog Millionaire.”

According to Los Angeles Times writer John Horn, the movies to watch from this year’s fest, which ended Monday, include:
- “The Last Station”.
- “Up in the Air”
- “The Road”
- “Bright Star”
- “Paranormal Activity”
- “An Education”
- “Waking Sleeping Beauty”

For more details, see his stories here.

Finally saw “500 Days”

September 3rd, 2009, 10:40 am by tmobleymartinez

I liked it, although it isn’t the all-out romance I was expecting from the kudos friends have been heaping on it.

It really felt like a Woody Allen film for a new generation. And interestingly, the dynamic of movie gender roles are turned on its head: Joseph Gordon Levitt plays the girl, Zooey Deschanel the guy. Which makes for a refreshing take on Big Screen Love.

What’s the best movie of the summer?

August 26th, 2009, 1:55 pm by wepstein

Here’s my list so far:

1. “(500) Days of Summer”
2. “Up”
3. “Star Trek”
4. “District 9″
5. “Away We Go”

Haven’t seen “Funny People” or “Inglourious Basterds.” I’d expect them to score high.

What do you guys think?

Did I walk into the wrong theater?

August 24th, 2009, 10:04 am by tmobleymartinez

I went to a nearly sold-out movie this weekend. Which was surprsing becuase it wasn’t the opening weekend and there was not a single explosion, car chase or shooting.

It was “Julie & Julia,” which tells an interwoven tale of two women finding themselves: Julia Child, who brought French cooking to American housewives, and Julie Powell, a cublicle worker who turns to blogging her way through Child’s magnum opus, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” (which the Baltimore Sun reports is headed to the top of the NY Times bestseller list) as a mission in her mostly blah life.

Not exactly sell-out material. You’d think.

But maybe there’s a craving out there for more flavor and less pop, more boeuf bourguingnon and fewer all-you-can-eat lobster specials.

The theater was filled with men and women (OK, mostly women) who laughed hardily at this charming film. Meryl Streep’s spectacular channeling of the late chef was deft and joyful and director Nora Ephron’s directions very restrained. It all made me want to cook again.

And I say, “Yay!” A film driven by character and story is a rejuvenating respite from the normal late summer fare, movies like “The Collector” and “GI Joe.” And that it  focuses on two women (one of a certain age) is marvelous and oddly inspiring.

Go see it.

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