Posts Tagged ‘international film festival’

The jennifer miller actor byrne dublin says

October 1, 2008

TICKETS for the Electric Picnic festival in 2009 will go on sale next
week, organisers have announced.

Gabriel Byrne’s heading for 60 — and he’s still getting the heart-
throb roles. In fact, they’re now calling him…

Byrne is philosophical about his perennial heart-throb status. “Well,
when I started my career they were calling sheep farmers sexy, so it’s
nice to know that as one grows older…” He breaks off, changing tack.

“I’m nearly 60 years of age. So that Dr McDreamy thing, whatever that
means, it’s a nice thing but it doesn’t change who I am as an actor,
or alter my perception of who I am.”

For the record, Gabriel James Byrne is wearing very well at the age of
58. The face is not unlined, but still handsome with the striking blue
eyes that first set the hearts of the nation’s housewives a-flutter.
Dressed down in artfully ripped jeans, wine corduroy jacket and open-
necked shirt, Byrne is in relaxed mode.

His career has come full circle too. While Pat Barry might be
remembered in popular culture as sex-in-wellies, the role also earned
Byrne the 1979 Jacob’s Best Actor award.

In a nice piece of synchronicity, his role as In Treatment’s Dr Paul
Weston is hotly tipped to win him a prestigious Emmy for Best Actor in
a Drama Series this Sunday.

The show follows psychoanalyst Paul Weston through his week, capturing
a session each night with his patients before concluding each Friday
in the office of Paul’s own therapist, Gina.

As ever, he plays down the hype but adds that, “Yes, it would be nice
to win, if only to have it on my mantelpiece so my kids could make fun
of me”.

That mantelpiece is getting pretty crowded of late. Last year the
Jameson International Film Festival gave Byrne its Volta lifetime
achievement award. NUI Galway has made him an honorary Doctor of Arts
and Trinity College Dublin outmanoeuvred his alma mater UCD by making
him an honorary patron of its Philosophical Society.

Now here we are, sipping coffee and looking out over Dingle Bay as he
prepares to accept the inaugural Gregory Peck award for lifetime
excellence in acting at the Dingle Film Festival. Is someone telling
Gabriel Byrne it’s time to get off the stage?

He laughs. “Certainly I don’t regard this as the end of anything. I
was given that award in Dublin, for example, because I had made 50
films all around the world. It wasn’t exactly the golden clock they
give you when it’s your retirement. Anyway, I don’t work 12 months a
year, I just do the things that I enjoy.”

The pursuit of happiness, or at least career satisfaction, for Byrne
has involved earning the freedom to pick and choose his projects.

“There were some films I had to make in because I had to make the
money,” he shrugs.

“I looked at them and said, ‘This is going to pay really, really well
and I can go on and do something else that I like’. The vast majority
of my films have been independent films in all kinds of weird places.”

So while Byrne has popped up in some forgettable blockbusters, like
Ghost Ship or Little Women, he is more often noted for nuanced,
interesting performances such as his conflicted gangster in Miller’s
Crossing, the crooked ex-cop in The Usual Suspects, or the good guy at
a moral crossroads in Jindabyne. He is excited about what will surely
be a difficult adaptation of ‘s At-Swim-Two-Birds, in which he will
star with other members of the ‘Pat Pack’; Brendan Gleeson, , ,
Cillian Murphy.

The former linguistics student and seminarian has proven his worth in
screenwriting (The Last Of The High Kings; drama Draoicht) and film
producing (In The Name Of The Father; Into The West). His next project
is his own adaptation of Jennifer Johnston’s novel, Two Moons, about
three generations of women in an Irish family, their relationships and
their struggle to live within their social boundaries.

Although it will be his first time filming in Ireland since the mid-
1990s, the recent -directed documentary about him, Stories From Home,
showed that Byrne feels he still has one foot in Ireland, one in .

Exile, says Byrne, is not too strong a term for the state in which he
has spent most of his adult life.

“The meaning of exile has changed in Ireland very much in the last 20
years,” he muses. “I left Dublin because there was hardly any work in
Dublin, or , so a lot of my life has been about emigration and
unemployment and return.”

The boy from is very much tied to America, as his two children Jack
(19) and Romy (16), by ex-wife , live there.

“But if you ask me if I’m American or Irish, I’ll say that I’m Irish,
without any hesitation.”

Byrne comes across as a frank and thoughtful man, but that enigmatic
quality that captivates audiences is also present. “I believe that
every actor that you see on screen is essentially himself,” he says.

Speaking about Gregory Peck, he says, “There was something about him
that drew you in, and the more he drew you in, the more he retreated”.
But in fact, it’s a good description of Byrne himself.

Up close and personal, he is a man who likes to keep his private life
private, unwilling to drag into the limelight those close to him who
have done nothing to court it.

You wonder, for example, about the significance of the large silver
Claddagh ring he has worn for many years on his right hand. The heart
is pointed inwards, as is the tradition for the loved-up.

Byrne is in Kerry with his girlfriend Anna George, who boasts an
exotic CV of hedge fund manager and actress, and is soon to appear as
the mysterious Mrs Singh in Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones. She is
waiting patiently out in the lobby of the hotel for our interview to
end, so they can take a drive around the Connor Pass.

But while only the ring on his finger hints at Byrne’s inner passions,
it is fair to say he wears his other, more public, heart on his
sleeve. He was so exercised by the controversial design of the new
Department of Finance building on Merrion Row that he rang the
architects to complain.

“I feel as entitled to express an opinion about the architecture of
Dublin as that architect is entitled to put up a building that’s going
to be here for the next 500 years, long after we are all dead,” he
argues.

His greatest ire is reserved for what he sees as the lack of dignity
afforded to the dying in public hospitals.

“I have personal experience of someone dying in a hospital bed in
Dublin and three feet away, this woman was in a locked-in position
like in The Diving Bell And The Butterfly and there’s a television on,
and people talking at the next bed, and one bathroom between all these
people… it was just horrific,” he says.

Like Brendan Gleeson before him, whose criticism of the health service
on the Late Late Show sparked a national debate, Byrne is conscious of
the power of his celebrity.

“I understand that a doctor can come along and say, ‘This is a
disgrace’ and no-one will listen to him, but that someone like me can
say it and they say, ‘Ah, that’s your man, he’s been in a couple of
films, we’ll listen to him’,” he says.

Later that night, he will graciously tell an audience at the cinema in
that he feels honoured to be mentioned in the same sentence as Gregory
Peck, “an earnest man of integrity”.

Jennifer miller dallas’s october film september

October 1, 2008

THANKSGIVING is just a couple of weeks away, so you know what that
means: It must be time, once again, for the Vancouver International
Film Festival.

As always, the festival, which runs to October 10, includes a number
of films that tackle religious subjects or themes, some more obviously
than others.

One of the more subtle examples is Blindness, the opening-gala film,
which comes to regular theatres October 3. Directed by Fernando
Meirelles (City of God, The Constant Gardener), it’s a sort of
post-apocalyptic nightmare which imagines the dreadful effect on
society of a plague that wipes out nearly everybody’s vision.

The disease in question does not cause people to live in darkness;
instead, it makes them see nothing but light. Someone wonders if the
victims might be suffering from ‘agnosia,’ the inability
to recognize familiar objects. Someone else replies by wondering if
that word is related to ‘agnosticism,’ the lack of belief.

Much, much later – after quarantines, blackmail, sexual
exploitation and violent revenge have ripped society apart –
there is an even more explicit religious parallel, brief and fleeting
though it may be, as someone recalls how Paul was rendered blind by
his encounter with God. Challenging stuff, but good discussion fodder.

The Desert Within (September 27, 29, October 6) concerns a widower who
retreats to a secluded place with his family after the Mexican
government begins banning church services and shooting priests in
1926. Convinced that he is responsible for the deaths of several
people, the father spends years building a church of his own to earn
God’s forgiveness. But he remains trapped in his own guilt, and
his efforts to soothe his conscience have an increasingly corrosive
effect on his children.

Birdsong (October 5, 7) is Spanish director Albert Serra’s
extremely minimalistic take on the journey of the Magi, depicted here
as three mildly buffoonish old men who trudge against the landscape
and stare up at the sky, discussing everything from the dreams
they’ve had to the pressing question of whether the clouds are
held up by ice. Interesting, but very, very slow. Mark Peranson, who
plays Joseph, shot a documentary on the making of this film called
Waiting for Sancho (October 6, 7).

The Longwang Chronicles (September 28, 30, October 6) depicts one year
in the life of a Chinese village. Rice and pigs are harvested,
Communist party officials lecture people on family planning, and the
pastor of the ‘official’ local church kills a snake in
Jesus’ name while campaigning against some of the other sects
and cults.

Also worthy of note: Christian filmmaker Robert Kirbyson’s
amusing short film Ctrl Z plays as part of the program The Obstacles
Are Everywhere (October 1, 2).

I’ll be posting brief notes on some of the other films at this
year’s festival – including The Eternity Man (September
26, 29), Religulous (September 27, 28) and the short film Paul Pontius
(October 8, 9) – at my blog over the next two weeks.

First, Murray Stiller, who teaches filmmaking at both Capilano and
Simon Fraser universities, has released his documentary, Nailin’
It to the Church, on DVD.

The film, subtitled ‘Religious Satire and the Gospel According
to The Wittenburg Door,’ will have its premiere at the Dallas
Video Festival in November; it can be ordered at the website,
NailinItToTheChurch.com.

I caught a screening of the film at Regent College back in April, and
it’s certainly an interesting look at the current team which
puts out the Christian satirical magazine originally called simply The
Door, which has been around in one form or another since 1971.

However, those who, like me, thought the magazine jumped the shark
when the late Mike Yaconelli sold it to Ole Anthony in 1996, may be
disappointed by the film’s present-day focus, which gives
relatively short shrift to the magazine’s early days.

Meanwhile, Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, the controversial, Ben
Stein-starring, evolution-challenging documentary produced by Bowen
Island’s Walt Ruloff and co-written by Abbotsford’s Kevin
Miller, is coming to DVD and Blu-Ray October 21.

Coincidentally, next year marks the 200th anniversary of Charles
Darwin’s birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of
On the Origin of Species. And to mark the occasion, not one but two
movies about Charles Darwin and his deeply religious wife Emma –
and the strain his theories put on their marriage – are in the
works.

One, Mrs. Darwin, stars Joseph Fiennes (Luther) and Rosamund Pike (Die
Another Day). The other, Creation, stars real-life couple Paul Bettany
(The Da Vinci Code) and Jennifer Connelly (A Beautiful Mind), and is
based on a book called Annie’s Box – written by the
Darwins’ great-great-grandson Randal Keynes.

So the ‘son of Adam’ who betrayed his brother and sisters
in the movie version of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is played
by the direct descendant of the man whose theories on evolution had
such a profound effect on the relationship between faith and science.
One can only hope C.S. Lewis would be amused, at least.

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The phish reunion band show reunion

October 1, 2008

Jam-rock pioneer Phish is back, but not as you might expect. Four
years after the band called it quits and after months of reunion
rumors, Vermont’s finest finally shared the stage this weekend at
former road manager Brad Sands’ wedding in New York. The quartet
played a brief three-song set of “Suzy Greenberg,” “Julius” and
“Waste.” Somewhere, someone is selling grilled cheese at a wedding.

In other jam band reunion news, the four surviving members of The
Grateful Dead will play their first show since 2004 under the Dead
moniker at Penn State on Oct. 13. The show is to support Barack Obama
– Bob Weir, Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart previously played a “Deadheads
for Obama” show in San Francisco in February. Guitarist Warren Haynes
will join the band, as will the Allman Brothers Band, in which Haynes
also plays.

Today’s biggest non-reunion news comes in the form of Jimmy Page and
Led Zeppelin. At the Toronto International Film Festival, a reporter
asked Page point-blank if Zeppelin was recording and reuniting. “We’re
not actually recording,” Page said, adding, “if you’re going to do a
reunion, you need four members.” Seems singer Robert Plant is still
the holdout.

Air canada film in leading hotels of the world website

October 1, 2008

The Second Annual Air Canada enRoute Student Film Festival Announces
Sponsors – Ford Returns as Presenting Sponsor

– Screening and Awards Gala takes place November 5th in Toronto –

MONTREAL, Oct. 1 /CNW Telbec/ – The Second Annual Air Canada enRoute
Student Film Festival today announced its sponsors for its upcoming awards
gala to be held November 5th in Toronto. Ford Motor company returns as this
year’s presenting sponsor. Other returning sponsors are Krups, Playback
magazine, the Director’s Guild of Canada, Metropolitan Hotels and Cineplex
Entertainment. New sponsors this year include The Spoke Club, Palm Springs
International Film Festival, Bullet Digital and pre-screening partners Ouat
Media.
The student who wins in the Best Film category will take home a brand new
2009 Ford Focus vehicle and an Air Canada, all-inclusive roundtrip for two to
the Palm Springs International Film Festival in January. The Festival was
launched in 1990 by Sonny Bono and features a stellar line-up of more than
200 films from 60 countries, special events and gala receptions.
Pre-gala screenings for the Air Canada enRoute Student Film Festival are
being held at the Scotiabank Theatre (Cineplex) in downtown Toronto on
November 5th. The films are being chosen by the festival’s jury members: Dan
Aykroyd, Wendy Crewson, Colm Feore, Arsinée Khanjian and Andrea Martin,
Canadian Film Directors Patricia Rozema, Rob Stewart, Yves Simoneau and
Toronto International Film Festival CEO Noah Cowan. Winners will be announced
the same evening at the Awards Gala hosted by The Spoke Club.
Air Canada passengers can view the selected short films on the main
screen televisions and personal seatback entertainment systems. The films can
also be viewed online at http://www.enroutefilm.com. The Festival is produced by
Spafax Canada.

enRoute, Air Canada’s in-flight magazine, celebrates Canadian achievement
in film, music, design and cultural innovation. The monthly magazine has
received numerous awards including Best Travel Magazine at the 2007 North
American Travel Journalists’ Association Awards. Every month enRoute profiles
the student films being showcased in-flight.

Montreal-based Air Canada provides scheduled and charter air
transportation for passengers and cargo to more than 170 destinations on five
continents. Canada’s flag carrier is the 14th largest commercial airline in
the world and serves 34 million customers annually with a fleet consisting of
335 aircraft. Air Canada is a founding member of Star Alliance, providing the
world’s most comprehensive air transportation network for Canadian domestic,
transborder and international travel. Air Canada aircraft offer customers
individualized seatback in-flight entertainment systems with hundreds of hours
of digital audio-visual entertainment. As well, customers can collect Aeroplan
miles for future awards through Canada’s leading loyalty program.

For further information: Marsha Mowers, Vision/Co, (416) 341-2474 x270,
marsham@visioncompanies.com; Isabelle Arthur, Communications, Air Canada,
(514) 422-5788, isabelle.arthur@aircanada.ca

Religulous release’s hudson you’re person

October 1, 2008

Actress Jennifer Hudson was put to the test for her role as a
housekeeper in the 1960s South in the movie “The Secret Life of Bees.”

TORONTO — Viggo Mortensen played the piano in a hotel lobby, John
Malkovich clarified he was here in “Disgrace” (not disgrace), and
questions about the Obama-McCain presidential race proved you can run
but you cannot hide from American politics.

Paris Hilton was live and in a documentary called “Paris, Not France,”
Mark Ruffalo scored a triple play with “The Brothers Bloom,”
“Blindness” and “What Doesn’t Kill You,” and Mickey Rourke emerged as
the Comeback Kid at the Toronto International Film Festival.

The 33rd annual event ended Saturday night with Danny Boyle’s “Slumdog
Millionaire” winning the Cadillac People’s Choice Award.

Based on the novel “Q & A” by Vikas Swarup, it’s the story of an 18
-year-old orphan from the slums of Mumbai who is one question away
from winning 20 million rupees (roughly $438,000 in U.S. dollars) on
India’s version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.” Fox Searchlight
will release it into theaters in late November.

First runner-up for audience favorite was “More Than a Game,” a
documentary about an Akron high school basketball team that includes
future superstar LeBron James. Second runner-up was “The Stoning of
Soraya M.,” the dramatization of a true story about “honor” killing
starring Shohreh Aghdashloo.

Other winners: best Canadian first feature, “Before Tomorrow,” about
an Inuit woman and her grandson trapped on a remote island; best
Canadian feature, “Lost Song,” a portrait of post-partum depression;
and Diesel Discovery Award, “Hunger,” starring Michael Fassbender as
Irish hunger striker Bobby Sands.

Also, Prize of the International Critics to both “Lymelife,” about
life and Lyme disease in 1970s Long Island, and “Disgrace,” an
adaptation of the J.M. Coetzee novel starring Malkovich as a professor
in Cape Town whose life falls apart after an affair with a student.

Here is a snapshot of some of the sights and sounds of the festival,
with more to come as the fall movies roll out:

Moviemaking as history lesson: Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson, who plays
a housekeeper in the 1960s South in “The Secret Life of Bees,” said
she didn’t realize how unaware she was about the civil rights era
until she was hired for this movie.

Then, she immersed herself in history to the point where she was
terrified “because I did so much research that my mind was just
clouded with the South being so horrible and people being lynched and
people being hosed and beaten, crazy stuff like that.”

But when director Gina Prince-Bythewood asked her to meet co-star
Dakota Fanning at a North Carolina store, Hudson complied. Prince-
Bythewood handed Hudson a shopping list and said, “Whatever you do,
don’t hit anyone.” Once she was inside, the all-white employees
treated Dakota like a “queen” and were rude or dismissive to Hudson,
asking her to empty her pockets at one point.

When the actresses went to buy ice cream, the clerk told Dakota, “You
know she can’t be in here, right?” Hudson said, “Did I hear him right?
… I sit down at the parlor and there’s this white man eating his
food and he leans over to the clerk, ‘Can you get this [N-word] out of
here, I’m trying to eat my food.’ And the only thing I can hear was
Gina in my head, ‘Whatever you do, don’t hit anybody. ‘ ”

It had been a set-up, to test their reactions and get them into the
1960s frame of mind, and it worked.

Reminder it’s all in the details: Mickey Rourke’s character in “The
Wrestler” may have a body built on steroids and exercise but he also
has an old-fashioned, oversize hearing aid and a pair of reading
glasses, which lend a touching vulnerability to Randy “The Ram”
Robinson.

Finding religion … or not: Bill Maher and director Larry Charles
(“Borat”) say they didn’t plan for their comic documentary about
religion called “Religulous” to come out in an election year but
consider the timing fortuitous.

“Laughter, I would say, is a good weapon to make points,” said
Charles, whose long graying beard makes him look like an extra from
“The Ten Commandments.” He acknowledged, “This is a hard subject, and
it’s a hard subject for people to hear their beliefs threatened and
questioned — these kind of core beliefs — and by using comedy, it
makes that a more palatable equation.”

But Maher says if you’re religious “you’re defending indefensible,
primitive mythic thinking. If you’re an adult and you still believe
this stuff, I’m sorry, you can’t have it both ways, you’re a rube.
There are just no two ways about it. We all have this imaginary person
in our mind who is somehow this smart person but he’s a religious
person, but he’s never any of us.”

Sorry I missed: Mortensen, here in “Appaloosa” and “Good” and soon to
be seen in “The Road,” playing the piano in the lobby of the Sutton
Place Hotel.

Glad I missed: A New York Post critic whacking Roger Ebert with a
rolled-up program or festival binder. An embarrassed Ebert wrote about
it, explaining how he tapped the person in front of him to signal he
was blocking his view of the “Slumdog Millionaire” subtitles and the
critic swatted back. Ebert’s medical condition has left him unable to
speak, so tapping was his way of communicating.

I was at a press conference when this happened but witnessed cross
words at “The Wrestler” when a man confronted someone who appeared to
be saving a pair of seats, forbidden at jam-packed screenings. No
fisticuffs ensued, just sharp words exchanged in a 580-seat theater
with almost no place left to plop down.

Pittsburgh connections: Gaylen Ross, who starred in “Dawn of the Dead”
and “Creepshow” many years ago, directed a documentary called “Killing
Kasztner,” about Dr. Israel Kasztner, a Hungarian Jew who negotiated
with Adolf Eichmann to save Jewish lives.

Kevin Smith’s “Zack and Miri Make a Porno,” set largely in
Monroeville, had its world premiere, and “The Hurt Locker” stars Brian
Geraghty, who lived in Pittsburgh from roughly ages 3 to 7 and
attended North Allegheny’s Espe Elementary School.

Wacky questions: “Pride and Glory” director Gavin O’Connor was asked
if he and his twin brother, Greg, were made to dress alike as
children. Keira Knightley was questioned about reports that she
opposed movie-poster enhancement of her breasts and asked if she’d
prefer to have a son or daughter some day, and Ricky Gervais was
quizzed about his imperfect teeth in “Ghost Town.” It turns out
they’re really his.

Religulous release’s research toronto sun

October 1, 2008

Ian Gillespie! Read the latest from our City columnist, who profiles
the most interesting people in London

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LANGLEY, B.C. – A man is dead after he crashed through a second-storey
window, naked and bleeding from a chest wound, and was hit with an
RCMP Taser.

The religulous release maher religion people

October 1, 2008

Maher, who has been picking on organized religion for years on his TV
shows “Politically Incorrect” and “Real Time,” zealously traveled the
world for “Religulous,” his documentary challenging the validity and
value of Christian, Jewish and Islamic faiths.

Raised in a Roman Catholic household by a Catholic father and Jewish
mother, Maher decided at an early age that the trappings and mythology
of the world’s religions were preposterous, outdated and even
dangerous.

“Religulous,” directed by fellow doubter Larry Charles (“Borat:
Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of
Kazakhstan”), is intended to inspire similar skepticism in others
— and perhaps get nonbelievers to talk more openly about their
lack of faith.

“I’m not looking to form an anti-religion religion. That would defeat
the purpose,” Maher said in an interview at the Toronto International
Film Festival, where “Religulous” played in advance of its theatrical
release Friday. “It’s the nature of the people who are not believers
that they’re individuals, they’re individualistic. They don’t join and
all lock arms and say, ‘We all believe this and so it must be true
because we have strength in numbers.'”

The numbers Maher and Charles really hope to grab are general
audiences simply looking for a fun night at the movies.

Maher, 52, who started mocking religion back in his early standup
comedy days, has no misconceptions that “Religulous” will shake
people’s lifelong convictions to the core. He’s mainly looking for
laughs such as those the film elicited from the enthusiastic crowd at
its Toronto premiere.

“I was so gratified to finally go to a screening with people last
night and hear how big the laughs are,” Maher said. “Because we set
out to make a comedy. I always said, my primary motivation was I’m a
comedian, and this is comedy gold.

“When you’re talking about a man living to 900 years old, and drinking
the blood of a 2,000-year-old god, and that Creation Museum where they
put a saddle on the dinosaur because people rode dinosaurs. It’s just
a pile of comedy that was waiting for someone to exploit.”

Charles shot 400 to 500 hours of material around the world as Maher
visited a Christian chapel for truckers in North Carolina, a gay
Muslim bar in the Netherlands, the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake
City, and Christian, Muslim and Jewish holy places in Israel.

Maher meets with priests at the Vatican, chats with rabbis and Muslim
scholars in Jerusalem, encounters street preachers in London, and
hangs out with the performer who plays Christ in a crucifixion
enactment at the Holy Land Experience theme park in Florida.

They left Eastern religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism alone
largely for budgetary reasons, saying the extra travel and expanded
scope would have made the film too unwieldy.

They also figured that Christianity, Islam and Judaism were the
trinity of faiths at the heart of Western conflict.

Charles grew up Jewish and once considered becoming a rabbi but was
discouraged by his parents, who told him to “get bar-mitzvahed, get
the checks and then get the hell out,” he said. He said he now shares
Maher’s position: Heavy on doubt about the existence of a supreme
being, even heavier on certainty that organized religion is hazardous
to humanity’s health.

“If I believe that Jesus is God and you believe Mohammed is God, then
no matter how tolerant we are, we are never going to meet,” Charles
said. “All you have to do is push that one more step, then somebody’s
like, ‘You’re in the way of people believing in Jesus,’ and ‘You’re in
the way of people believing in Mohammed,’ and the only answer is to
kill you.

“Unfortunately, that sort of thing dominates the religious landscape,
not the Mother Teresas of the world. She becomes the aberration. …
The altruistic wing of religion has been minimized and this
militaristic, warmongering fundamentalism has become the dominant
presence.”

Charles said he assembled the 100-minute film from 14 hours of prime
material. He has suggested to distributor Lionsgate that the 14-hour
cut could be edited into half-hour segments and sold to television as
a series.

Never one to soft-pedal his own opinions, Maher openly scorns remarks
made by Christians, Jews and Muslims he interviews. He hopes audiences
will laugh with him, and that “Religulous” will stand as a testament
for people who share his scorn.

“It is a sobering thought to think that the U.S. Congress has 535
members and there’s not one who represents this point of view, and yet
there are tens of millions of Americans who feel this way,” Maher
said.

“Comedians have always made jokes about religion. It’s a rich topic. I
did when I was a young comedian, but they weren’t jokes that got right
to the essence of it, which is, this is dangerous and this is silly.”

Senator Joe Biden’s tendency to go too far and the hazards of debating
a woman are signs of possible perils ahead.

The Palestinian author Raja Shehadeh looks back on years of walks in
the hills of the West Bank.

An insider look at film director Zhang Yimou, who is directing the
opening cermonies at the Olympic Games.

Film weekend seattle in religulous review

October 1, 2008

With a scorching $27,204 per-theatre-average, Saul Dibb’s “The
Duchess” found 2008’s second highest specialty average (behind
arguable inclusion “Kit Kittredge: An American Girl”) and gave the
competitive fall season a royal beginning. In 7 locations, the
Paramount Vantage release grossed $190,426. A slew of other, lower-
profile films also found decent numbers, including a Texas screening
of Chris Eska’s “August Evening,” the debut of Stuart Townsend’s
“Battle in Seattle” and the second weekend of yoga doc “Enlighten Up!”

After a generally favorable screening at the Toronto International
Film Festival, Saul Dibb’s “The Duchess” found itself high atop the iW
BOT this weekend. The Keira Knightley-Ralph Fiennes starrer, a
dramatized chronicle of the life of 18th century aristocrat Georgiana,
Duchess of Devonshire, scored the second-highest iW BOT debut in 2008
(after Patricia Rozema’s “Kit Kittredge: An American Girl”). The film
grossed $190,426 on 7 screens for a whopping average of $27,204.

The film found itself only moderately under the opening averages of
two of the most successful recent royal accounts, Stephen Frears’ 2006
“The Queen,” which averaged $40,671 on 3 runs in its debut weekend,
and Shekhar Kapur’s 1998 “Elizabeth,” which averaged $30,570 on 9
runs. It far surpassed Kapur’s 2008 follow-up, “Elizabeth: The Golden
Age,” which averaged $3,075 last October on a perhaps incomparable
2,001 theaters.

“We were very pleased with the grosses from this past weekend,” said
“Duchess” distributor Paramount Vantage’s Senior Vice-President Kevin
Grayson in an interview with indieWIRE. “The film showed very good
success at our core theatres on both coasts with strong per screen
averages at all our locations.” The film played particularly well with
women, as Grayson had expected, and will slowly find more theaters in
the coming weeks. “We are expanding our initial runs [in New York, Los
Angeles and Toronto] as well as introducing the film into the top 20
markets in a limited fashion,” he said. “That combined with Keira’s
strong cross over ability, good word of mouth and solid reviews we
feel we are on the right road to reach and exceed our goals.”

However, it might increasingly become a rocky road for “The Duchess”
to maintain this weekend’s success. The next two weekends alone see
the openings of potential specialty powerhouses like Jonathan Demme’s
“Rachel Getting Married,” Larry Charles’ “Religulous” and Fernando
Meirelles’s “Blindness.”

Though without the backing of a “Duchess”-like studio subsidiary, a
wealth of other films crowded the iW BOT’s top slots with less-
dramatic but certainly promising numbers. Redwood Palms release of
“Battle in Seattle” opened on 8 screens and found a decent $46,903
gross. Stuart Townsend’s fictionalized account of the 1999 riots to
stop a World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle averaged $5,863,
from a $9,718 high at New York’s Angelika Film Center to a $2,188 low
at Minneapolis’ Uptown Theatre. “Seattle” will battle the box office
at 11 additional theaters this upcoming weekend, including in Chicago,
Boston and Detroit.

“Seattle” ranked behind two iW BOT underdogs. Maya Releasing’s “August
Evening,” which opened to a disappointing $3,296 at New York’s Village
East Cinema two weekends ago, managed $11,033 from its debut weekend
at San Antonio’s Santikos Bijou Theatre. Directed by Texas native
Chris Eska, “Evening” won the John Cassavetes Award at the 2007 Gotham
Awards, and now has a cumulative gross of $15,576. It opens in Los
Angeles this Friday.
Just behind “Evening” was the surprising second weekend of Kate
Churchill’s yoga documentary, “Enlighten Up!,” which grossed an
impressive $8,598 in its sole run at the Kendall Square Cinema in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. That takes “Enlighten”‘s total up to $20,397
after two weekends. And while one must consider that the screenings
did include actual free yoga classes led before select screenings,
there is still something to be said for such grassroots marketing.

Finally, in what might be one of the year’s biggest – and most
expected – specialty disasters, Empire Film Group opened long-shelved
2007 Sundance entry “Hounddog,” best known for its Dakota Fanning rape
scene, on 11 screens. It averaged $1,249.

Religulous bill maher’s say it’s festival

October 1, 2008

My voice is still a bit shaky, PopWatchers, and my sleep schedule
remains all kinds of wackadoodle, but at least the remnants of Gustav
have finally (hopefully) pushed beyond the Ontario borders. That’s
right, the sun is shining bright on the Toronto International Film
Festival, which means I can at long last vlog outdoors! (Ooo. That
just sounds vaguely untoward, huh? It’s not, I promise.) So click on
to hear more about why I had to walk out of (starring Ben Kingsley and
21’s Jim Sturgess), what surprised Kevin Smith the most about Toronto,
what may be an advance look at a Religulous DVD extra courtesy Bill
Maher, and what some native Torontonians had to say about the film
festival that’s called their city home for over 30 years.

As a Torontonian who has been attending the festival for the last 8
years, I’d say that it definitely has changed. More star seekers, more
corporate and more expensive. But it’s still my favourite part of the
fall.

As to the celebrity question…I can’t imagine a case where I’d accost
someone on the street or stake out a hotel, but at the screenings
themselves I definitely grab my camera and take a picture or two.

First, let me comment on the obscene number of empty sponsor seats at
The Duchess gala premiere last night. What a waste. Dozens of people
would have loved to fill them. Secondly, I saw Religilous today and
LOVED IT! I haven’t laughed that hard in a while. (Wanted to post on
Bill Maher’s site but there’s nowhere to do that). Thank goodness for
people like Bill Maher who try to shake some common sense into the
general public and for exposing the ridiculousness of the belief
system. And it IS a system. Nice work, Bill!

Oh, Adam, Adam… Please learn fast because those vlogs are getting
hopeless. There’s potential, but most of us could probably get better
production value sitting at home filming ourselves with a cell phone.

If he did indeed give money to Obummer becase of a speech that the
next Vice President of the United States made, I have to ask if Billie
boy has a brain?

Isn’t it more scary that Obummer is as close to a Socialist that has
ever been running for president? Does he care that Obummer has Zero
experience (other than mimicking his preacher… oh yea that’s fine)
and changes his words (right in your face to Billy boy) to get the
vote?

Bill, I used to think you were funny and sharp. You blew it. I hope
that everyone boycotts your movie in October of this year. Since you
go with the buck, perhaps that will scare you more.

I couldn’t drag myself out of a Jim Sturgess movie if he was speaking
Klingon! Dude, REALLY.

The festival here in Toronto has definitely gotten a little out of
hand, but I think it’s chugging along at par with the rest of North
America’s celeb-obsessed culture, so it’s not really a surprise. It
was odd going to the see The Wrestler last night with tonnes of fans
lined up across the street, most likely with no clue about what they
were waiting for!

Yeah, I would probably check out all the celebrity happenings. But I
would also plan to go out and eat at a nearby restaurant, just to have
a legitimate excuse to be there.

My God! Is there any way you could possibly make watching these
“vlogs” any more boring!? Zero personality + nothing meaningful to say
= SNORE

ya need to hang out with more foreign english speakers to get to
understand them, I’m Irish and I live in Toronto and I hope people
understand me. I do find a big change here in TO with all the fuss, I
am a movie fanatic and it’s getting insane, I wouldn’t rush up to the
‘talent’ but thats just me, but the whole planet is celeb obsessive
now! I still wanna see the smaller movies, as I can see the
‘hollywood’ ones in a few weeks. I saw ‘Slum Dog Millionaire’ last
night and it was fantastic! best movie so far!

As an almost-native Torontian (I grew up in Mississauga, the city
immediately to Toronto’s west), and as one who had volunteered at the
festival for a few years, I can honestly say that, while I was
starstruck, I never approached any stars because I didn’t want to
bother them. That doesn’t mean I didn’t have any encounters, of course
–Emily Watson smiled at me, I was Farrah Fawcett’s seat holder, and
Brain de Palma even yelled at me–but I never initiated contact. The
only time I ever did that was with Ally Sheedy, and that’s because it
was my job at the time.

Bad Adam! That Word is officially verboten. Okay, let’s make a
deal…you don’t say That Word and I will stop using “verboten”. LOL

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Maher religion holy in religulous bill maher

October 1, 2008

TORONTO — “Just call us the Woodward and Bernstein of religion.”
That’s how Bill Maher sums his quest with “Borat” director Larry
Charles in “Religulous,” a pithy, smart, and usually profane poke at
religion.

From the Holy Land to the Holy Land Experience theme park in Florida,
Maher travels the globe searching out believers and engages them on
their turf about what they believe and why.

That confrontation between the faithful and Maher’s logic makes this
documentary a little like Prince Judah going after the Roman heathen
Messala in “Ben-Hur” — without the showy chariot race.

“All I can say is religion won’t go the way of the button shoe,” Maher
joked with reporters at the Toronto International Film Festival.

“Oh I still found myself bargaining with this guy in my head at times
when I was trouble,” he laughs. “But no, I’m not for this disease that
religion has turned out to be.”

Confronting the faithful as Bill does is funny stuff. With his logic
in hand, Maher goes forth and finds a Jesus impersonater who explains
the Holy Trinity to Maher by comparing it to the three states of
water.

He unearths tourists in the gift shop at The Holy Land Experience who
nosh back and forth with him about the place of the Jews in heaven.
Add to that the everyday American Christians Maher takes on who
“believe in believing” because “what if you died without faith and
found out you were wrong?”

It all sounds like flimsy crap to Maher, especially when he’s talking
to self-styled religious leaders, Catholic higher-ups dressed in un-
Godly expensive suits and bible-thumping fundamentalists like Arkansas
Senator Mark Pryor.

Maher’s approach is fair. He listens to what everyone has to say and
thoughtfully considers every word. Then Maher goes for the jugular.

“How can you believe in a talking snake?” he asks. How can a man live
in the belly of a whale or come back from the dead? And what about
those Mormons? How can they believe that God is some real super-dude
happily residing on another planet?”

From the stormy religious opinions he finds in Jerusalem to the
radical Muslim problem in Amsterdam, Maher’s quest for “truth”
presents a force behind faith that he and Charles would unquestionably
call frightening.

“My country is dumber than your is,” Maher quipped before the Canadian
press. “Only in America will you find politicians in a presidential
campaign trying to out-love Jesus.”

Some may vehemently disagree with such commentary from a man sporting
a ZZ Top beard and a pair of lavender Crocs dangling from his feet.
But so what? Taking a little heat is worth it to these two anti-heaven
crusaders.

“Religulous” won’t appeal to people who loved “The Passion of the
Christ,” the 2004 movie that made devout Catholic director Mel Gibson
richer than God. As Maher says, “We’re giving those who value science
and reason above myth another alternative at the movies.”

Whether “Religulous” changes peoples’ minds as America gears up for a
presidential election has yet to be seen.

“I don’t know how much this film will sway voters. But I’ll tell you.
When Sarah Palin got onto the Republican ticket with John McCain I was
swayed to write a big check to Obama,” Maher jokes.

“I watched a lot of documentaries before I got Larry to sign on. It
was all so depressing to watch,” Maher laughs.