Posts Tagged ‘joel and ethan coen’

The leading hotels of the world rome film films story

October 1, 2008

THE Venice Film Festival of 2008 delivered, by general consensus, the
most disappointing program in many years, a particularly unfortunate
outcome given that the past two years were so strong.

Disgruntled festival-goers not only coped with a collection of below-
par films, but with inadequate internet connections in major hotels, a
mosquito plague of almost biblical proportions and stiflingly hot
weather.

Yet it all started very promisingly with the judiciously chosen
opening night feature,Burn after Reading, which finds Joel and Ethan
Coen in comedy mode after the grim tensions of their previous film, No
Country for Old Men. This is a smart, witty film about Washington
insiders – and some decided outsiders – that starts off with the
dismissal of long-serving CIA operative Osborne Cox (John Malkovich)
for a drinking problem. This event triggers off a series of others
involving Cox’s faithless wife, Katie (Tilda Swinton), her federal
marshal lover, Harry Pfarrer (George Clooney) and, in another part of
the city, the somewhat clueless Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt), and his
fellow employee at the Hardbodies Fitness Centre, Linda Litzke
(Frances McDormand). With the CIA and the Russian embassy involved
with some missing documents that may or may not be of great security
value, the stage is set for some comic, occasionally lethal,
misunderstandings. The film is beautifully scripted and every member
of the large cast, down to the smallest role, is utterly convincing.

But after this bright beginning it was all pretty much downhill,
especially in the competition. The two best films on display were both
out of competition, one of them French and the other Italian. With The
Beaches of Agnes, the matriarch of the French new wave, Agnes Varda,
has made a whimsical, touching and informative autobiography in which
she explores her childhood in Belgium and later (during the war) in
the south of France leading to her work as a photographer in China.
She was involved with the nouvelle vague from the very beginning
because of her friendship with Alain Resnais, Chris Marker, Jean-Luc
Godard and others; and at the age of 26 she directed the first feature
film of the movement, La Pointe-Courte, in 1956.

The film contains excerpts from her features and documentaries and an
expectedly warm portrait of her husband, Jacques Demy (the director of
that masterpiece, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg) who died in 1990. Varda
emerges as an indomitable character, as feisty and inquiring at 80 as
ever she was.

First-time feature director Gianni di Gregorio’s Lunch in Mid-August,
which screened in the Critics Week, is also about the elderly. The
director plays Gianni, who lives in a small Rome apartment with his
very demanding 90-year-old mother (Valeria De Franciscis). He needs
the money, so he agrees to look after another old lady for a few days
at the height of summer, but in the end he gets stuck with four of
them, all very much with minds of their own. This is a very small film
but, mainly thanks to the quartet of grand old women, hugely
enjoyable.

Back in the competition, much was expected fromThe Burning Plain, the
first film directed by the Mexican writer, Guillermo Arriaga, whose
screenplays for 21 Grams and Babel, among others, have been so finely
wrought. The mechanics of his work are beginning to show, however, and
The Burning Plain, which tells apparently parallel stories unfolding
in sunny New Mexico and rainy Portland, Oregon, seems contrived. In
desert country, a young girl – well played by Jennifer Lawrence, who
deservedly won the jury’s prize for best young actor – discovers that
her mother (Kim Basinger) is having an affair with a Mexican man. In
the grey and overcast northwest, Charlize Theron plays the super-
efficient manager of a very upmarket restaurant who indulges in casual
affairs with staff and customers alike. It won’t take long for anyone
familiar with Arriaga’s other screenplays to work out the connections
between the two stories. But despite generally strong performances,
the film underwhelms.

The best American film in competition screened on the last day and,
against all odds, won the coveted Golden Lion from the jury headed by
Wim Wenders. Darren Aronofsky’s The Wrestler takes a basically
familiar story about a fighter long past his prime who unwisely agrees
to a comeback. In films, this kind of story usually features a boxer,
so the wrestling setting provided some freshness, especially in the
behind-the-scenes sequences as opponents plan their mostly scripted
contests. The revelation here is Mickey Rourke, who gives the
performance of his career as burnt-out Randy (aka The Ram), who lives
alone in a trailer, is in love with a stripper (Marisa Tomei) who sees
him mainly as a customer, and who has lost contact with his bitterly
disappointed daughter (the excellent Evan Rachel Wood). The story arc
may be familiar, but Rourke’s performance lifts this tersely made
story of a loser at the end of the road. And The Wrestler was the only
film screened in Venice that had any kind of emotional impact.

Kathryn Bigelow has always staged action scenes very well, but she is
often less effective when it comes to exploring human emotions. Her
new film, The Hurt Locker, centres on a squad of three bomb disposal
experts working on the streets of Baghdad. That this is incredibly
dangerous work is demonstrated in the opening sequence, where Guy
Pearce plays a victim of a bomb triggered by a mobile phone. He is
replaced by the gung-ho Jeremy Renner, and the rest of the film
explores a series of increasingly tense incidents in which he and the
other members of his team become involved. These set-pieces are
powerfully staged – though the hand-held camera is overused – but
there’s too little in the way of character development or narrative.
Bigelow doesn’t even take a position on the conflict, and to introduce
a British officer, played by Ralph Fiennes, for virtually a walk-on
part seems a little indulgent.

Not as indulgent, though, as Jonathan Demme’s Rachel Getting Married,
which the usually reliable director has chosen to make in the Dogme
style. Anne Hathaway is rather good as Kym, a disagreeable, self-
centred young woman just out of rehab who arrives at her family home
in time for her sister’s wedding and creates no end of ill-will. No
doubt there are people as selfish and tiresome as Kym, but keeping
company with the character for almost two hours, especially with
Declan Quinn’s queasy camerawork to contend with, is like attending a
wedding where you hardly know anybody and the speeches are
interminable.

Iranian-born Amir Naderi’s Vegas: Based On A True Story is almost
equally annoying; seemingly inspired by Erskine Caldwell’s God’s
Little Acre, it’s about an addicted gambler, played on one monotonous
note by Mark Greenfield, who comes to believe that a fortune in stolen
money is buried under his garden and, despite the initial objections
of his wife (Nancy La Scala) and son (Zach Thomas), he starts digging.
They soon join him in what is clearly going to be a futile exercise.
This is little more than an anecdote; material, perhaps, for a short
film but when extended to feature length it quickly bores.

Two other competitive films worthy of attention came from Russia and
Japan. Alexei German Jr’s Paper Soldier is set in Kazakhstan in 1961,
when Soviet space scientists were about to launch cosmonaut Yuri
Gagarin into the stratosphere. The film tells the story of a Georgian
medical officer on the isolated base and his troubled relationships
with his wife back in Moscow and his mistress at the site. It’s
beautifully shot with intricately choreographed camera movements and a
strong feeling for a period undergoing change with the recent fall
from grace of Stalin. The Jury awarded German the best director prize
and also acknowledged the fine photography by Alisher Khamidhodjaev
and Maksim Drozdov with an award for best cinematography.

Then there were the genuinely Third World films, including Ethiopian
Haile Gerima’s well-meaning but rather clumsy and over-extended Teza,
winner of the special jury prize and the best screenplay award, which
was about an intellectual who returns to his native country during the
rule of a repressive Marxist regime.

The Italian and French films were hardly worthy of inclusion, though
they provided the acting awards: Silvio Orlando for the title role of
the annoying parent in Pupi Avati’s Giovanni’s Dad and Dominique Blanc
as a frustrated woman in the pretentious L’Autre.

Finally, it was good to see Japan’s Takeshi Kitano making something of
a comeback, though an overlong one, with Achilles and the Tortoise, a
comedy about an artist who can’t connect to his audience. The film
almost seemed a metaphor for many of the films screened in Venice this
year.

From here you can use the Social Web links to save Masterpiece of
mediocrity to a social bookmarking site.

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Staff writers THE Australian competition watchdog said today it would
not oppose BHP Billiton’s proposed takeover of rival mining giant Rio
Tinto.

Mitchell Bingemann TELSTRA chief executive Sol Trujillo says he
single-handedly turned around the ailing telco when he joined in 2005.

ROLLING Stone magazine founder Jann Wenner has given the thumbs up to
a makeover of the Australian edition.

Bernard Lane THE University of New England may move to elect a new
chancellor as early as next month in the long-running leadership
crisis.

Michael Bloomberg will seek to overturn a term limits law so he can
run New York for another four years.

Mark Dodd AN Australian delegation visiting Croatia will today meet
its leaders to press for help in resolving the fate of Britt
Lapthorne.

Paul Kelly, Editor-at-large ROSS Garnaut’s report will be anathema to
the environmental lobby but it focuses on the achievable.

Avril Groom in Milan WITH couture taking a clobbering, shoes and
accessories are now at the pointy end of fashion

The religulous release oct sept nov

October 1, 2008

George Clooney, left, and Frances McDormand star in Joel and Ethan
Coen’s dark spy-comedy Burn After Reading, which also stars Brad Pitt.
It is set to be released Sept. 12. Photo courtesy of Focus Features

Harry Potter pulled a disappearing act from Hollywood’s fall and
holiday schedule, his sixth big-screen adventure bumped from November
to next summer.

That leaves a little more room to roam at the box office for the likes
of James Bond, a vampire heartthrob, the High School Musical kids and
all those talking cartoon critters that studios are about to unleash.

The season offers action (Bond’s latest, The Quantum of Solace);
family flicks (the animated sequel Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa);
fantasy romance (the best-seller adaptation Twilight); and serious
stuff lining up for the Academy Awards, including Nicole Kidman’s epic
Australiaand Bond star Daniel Craig’s war saga Defiance.

Brad Pitt reunites with old pals George Clooney in one film and Cate
Blanchett in another; Clint Eastwood does his own two-fer by directing
Angelina Jolie in one drama and himself in another; and Oliver Stone
takes on his latest president with a George W. Bush biopic.

All release dates are subject to change, and some films will open only
in limited release, meaning they probably won’t come to Central
Kentucky on the date listed.

Burn After Reading:The new one from the Coen Brothers, a spy farce
with George Clooney and Brad Pitt, Tilda Swinton and Frances
McDormand, about some goofballs who stumble across a lost disc of CIA
data. (Sept. 12)

Righteous Kill:Robert De Niro and Al Pacino team up as cops tracking
down a poetry-composing serial killer, fretting that they imprisoned
the wrong guy years ago. From the director of 88 Minutes. (Sept. 12)

Tyler Perry’s The Family that Preys: Alfre Woodard and Kathy Bates are
matriarchs of families from different social strata who have to work
together when scandal strikes. (Sept. 12)

The Women:A who’s-who of Hollywood women star in this remake of the
1939 film about a woman who recuperates from her husband’s cheating at
a spa with many others in similar circumstances. Meg Ryan, Annette
Bening, Carrie Fisher, Eva Mendes, Jada Pinkett Smith, Bette Midler,
Cloris Leachman; everybody is in this one. (Sept. 12)

Appaloosa:Ed Harris’ Western about men hired to protect a town, the
rancher who rules the place and the widow who shows up to complicate
matters, with Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger and Jeremy
Irons. (Sept. 19)

The Duchess:Keira Knightley has the title role as Georgiana, Duchess
of Devonshire, an 18th-century woman much gossiped about for her
political and sexual passions. Ralph Fiennes co-stars. (Sept. 19)

Ghost Town:Ricky Gervais stars in this comedy about a man who starts
to see ghosts, one of whom (Greg Kinnear) wants him to break up the
wedding of his widow (Téa Leoni). (Sept. 19)

Igor: A cartoon about a mad scientist’s assistant who dreams of moving
up from sidekick, this one features the voices of John Cusack, John
Cleese, Steve Buscemi and Molly Shannon. (Sept. 19)

Lakeview Terrace: Will Smith produced this Neil LaBute drama about an
interracial couple (Kerry Washington and Patrick Wilson) who face the
ire of their racist cop neighbor, played by Samuel L. Jackson. (Sept.
19)

My Best Friend’s Girl: Dane Cook is the guy commissioned by his pal to
take Kate Hudson out and show her a real bad time, all to convince her
that the friend (Jason Biggs) was the guy she is supposed to be with.
With Alec Baldwin. (Sept. 19)

Taken:Action auteur Luc Besson wrote this thriller about a former spy
(Liam Neeson) trying to track down his daughter (Maggie Grace) who is
now trapped in the slave trade. (Sept. 19)

Blindness:Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo star in this Fernando
Meirelles horror parable, based on the novel by José Saramago,
about an epidemic of blindness and the ways society breaks down.
(Sept. 26)

Choke:Sam Rockwell plays a con man who makes ends meet by preying on
the deep pockets of people who “rescue” him from choking. With
Anjelica Huston, Bijou Phillips and Joel Grey. (Sept. 26)

Eagle:Shia LaBeouf reteams with his Disturbia director for this
thriller about two strangers (Michelle Monahan is the other) framed as
terrorists, forced to join a cell planning a political assassination.
(Sept. 26)

Nights in Rodanthe:Richard Gere and Diane Lane reteam for this chaste
romance set on North Carolina’s Outer Banks, based on the Nicholas
Sparks novel (he also wrote Message in a Bottle). (Sept. 26)

Towelhead:Summer Bishil, Aaron Eckhart, Maria Bello and Toni Collette
star in this drama about an Arab-American girl who struggles with
racism and her sexual obsessions during the Gulf War. (Sept. 26)

Beverly Hills Chihuahua:George Lopez heads the voice cast of this
comedy about singing, dancing and talking Chihuahuas. (Oct. 3)

The Express:This is a biopic of the first African-American to win the
Heisman trophy, Ernie Davis, played by Rob Brown. (Oct. 3)

How to Lose Friends and Alienate People:Simon Pegg, Gillian Anderson
and Jeff Bridges star in this comedy about a British writer trying to
fit in at a major New York magazine. (Oct. 3)

I Served the King of England:A picaresque and romantic Czech tale
about changes in the life of one man and the classic old hotel where
he works, before WWII and after, when the communists take over. (Oct.
3)

Nick and Nora’s Infinite Playlist:A lad (Michael Cera of Juno and
Superbad) talks a lass (Kat Dennings) into pretending to be his new
flame for “five minutes,” leading to a night of many bizarre and
R-rated adventures in the R-rated Big Apple. (Oct. 3)

Religulous:Larry Charles directed and Bill Maher hosts this sure-to-
be-controversial comic documentary about the state of religion on
Planet Earth. (Oct. 3)

Possession:A Sarah Michelle Gellar supernatural thriller about a wife
who survives a car wreck only to feel that her husband’s spirit is
haunting her. (Oct. 3)

Sex Drive:A teenager sets out from Chicago to Knoxville on a quest to
lose his virginity to a girl he met online. What Enchanted’s James
Marsden is doing in this cast is a mystery. Given that Kentucky is
sure to be on the route, we can’t wait for the lame hillbilly jokes.
(Oct. 3)

City of Ember:Bill Murray, Tim Robbins, Saoirse Ronan (Atonement) and
Martin Landau are the stars in this child-friendly sci-fi epic about
an underground city of the future that is dying, based on the novel by
Jeanne Duprau. (Oct. 10)

Miracle at St. Anna:Spike Lee’s World War II tale about black U.S.
soldiers trapped in a Tuscan village during a battle. (Oct. 10)

Quarantine:A TV crew and the firemen they’re doing a story about are
caught up in an infected apartment building where terrible things
happen in this horror movie starring Jennifer Carpenter and Johnathan
Schaech. (Oct. 10)

Happy-Go-Lucky:Sally Hawkins and Eddie Marsan star in this Mike Leigh
dramedy about an eternally upbeat teacher and the eternally downbeat
driving instructor she falls in with. (Oct. 10)

Flash of Genius:Greg Kinnear stars in this drama about the inventor
who took on Detroit over who deserved credit and royalties for the
development of the intermittent windshield wiper. (Oct. 17)

Max Payne:The video game comes to the big screen with Mark Wahlberg
starring as the DEA agent tracking those who murdered his family, and
Mila Kunis as an assassin out to avenge her dead sister. Directed by
John Moore (Behind Enemy Lines, The Omen). (Oct. 17)

The Secret Life of Bees:Dakota Fanning stars as a girl who, with the
family maid (Jennifer Hudson), takes a road trip to find answers about
the life of her late mother in 1964 South Carolina. (Oct. 17)

W:Oliver Stone’s take on the Bush presidency, before it’s even over,
stars Josh Brolin in the title role, with Elizabeth Banks as Laura
Bush, Ellen Burstyn and James Cromwell as the Bush parents, Jeffrey
Wright as Colin Powell, Toby Jones as Karl Rove, Scott Glenn as Donald
Rumsfeld and Thandie Newton as Condi Rice. (Oct. 17)

The Brothers Bloom:Adrien Brody and Mark Ruffalo star in this dramedy
about veteran con men who take “one last job.” (Oct. 24)

He’s Just Not That Into You:Jennifer Aniston, Scarlett Johansson, Ben
Affleck, Jennifer Connelly, Justin Long and Drew Barrymore head the
cast in this multirelationships, multifailed relationships romantic
comedy from the director of License to Wed. (Oct. 24)

High School Musical 3: Senior Year:The cable TV hit’s cast graduates
from high school and finds that it’s something to sing about. And
dance. (Oct. 24)

The Lucky Ones:Tim Robbins, Rachel McAdams and Michael Peña
play three “lucky ones,” lucky to return from the Iraq war alive, who
meet on a cross-America road trip in this comedy-drama. (Oct. 24)

Pride and Glory:A family of cops is tested when one (Edward Norton)
begins investigating his brother-in-law (Colin Farrell). (Oct. 24)

Saw V:Jigsaw’s dead, but a forensics expert (Costas Mandylor) is ready
to carry on his “work,” in this annual torture-porn ritual. And a new
director takes over the franchise. (Oct. 24)

Changeling:Clint Eastwood directed Angelina Jolie in this period piece
about a mother who thinks the kidnapped boy returned to her is not her
son. (Oct. 31)

Rocknrolla:A Guy Ritchie crime thriller about a stolen painting and
its impact on London’s underworld, with Gerard Butler, Idris Elba,
Thandie Newton and Tom Wilkinson. (Oct. 31)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno:Kevin Smith’s latest stars Seth Rogen and
Elizabeth Banks as a couple who try to figure out a sexual way, a
cinematic way, to earn a little extra cash. (Oct. 31)

Boy in the Striped Pajamas:This World War II concentration camp tale
is about a camp commandant’s son’s forbidden friendship with a Jewish
boy imprisoned there, with David Thewlis and Vera Farmiga cast as
adults. (Nov. 7)

Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa: The New York Zoo critters get away from
Madagascar, only to get stuck in Africa, where “family issues” come to
the fore. (Nov. 7)

The Quantum of Solace:Daniel Craig’s second outing as James Bond has
him seeking revenge on those who killed his lady love, and trying to
prevent a super villain from seizing Britain’s water supply. (Nov. 7)

Assassination of a High School President:A dark comedy about stolen
SAT scores, and a popular girl and the school newspaper reporter who
uncover a vast conspiracy about the scores. (Nov. 14)

Australia:Director Baz Luhrmann’s epic about his homeland during World
War II, starring Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman. (Nov. 14)

Nothing Like the Holidays:A Puerto Rican family living in Chicago
faces what might be its last Christmas together. (Nov. 14)

The Road:Cormac McCarthy’s post-apocalyptic tale of a man trying to
get his son to safety stars Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Robert
Duvall, Guy Pearce and Kodi Smit-McPhee. (Nov. 14)

Role Models:Misbehaving energy-drink salesmen Paul Rudd and Seann
William Scott are forced to enroll in a Big Brothers program. (Nov.
14)

Soul Men:Samuel L. Jackson and the late Bernie Mac play estranged
singers from a soul act who reunite for a memorial concert at the
Apollo honoring a fallen bandmate. (Nov. 14)

Bolt:Animated comedy about a movie-star dog (voiced by John Travolta)
who tries to find his missing co-star, all the while thinking he’s the
action hero dog he plays in the movies. (Nov. 21)

The Soloist:Jamie Foxx is a schizophrenic violinist who dreams of
playing in a great concert hall; Robert Downey Jr. is a journalist who
meets and writes about him. A true story. (Nov. 21)

Twilight:Very young, good-looking vampires and those who love them are
featured in this film version of the Stephanie Meyer novel starring
Kristen Stewart. (Nov. 21)

Four Christmases:Reese Witherspoon and Vince Vaughn try to visit all
of their divorced parents on a single Christmas Day. With Robert
Duvall, Sissy Spacek and Mary Steenburgen. (Nov. 26)

Transporter 3:Jason Statham returns to the role that made him famous,
a two-fisted driver for assorted Euro-mobsters. (Nov. 26)

Milk:A long-delayed biopic of Harvey Milk, the openly gay San
Francisco politician assassinated by a colleague. Stars Sean Penn.
(Nov. 26)

Defiance:Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber and Jamie Bell star as three
Polish Jews who flee the Nazis and join the Russian Resistance. (Dec.
5)

Doubt:Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Amy Adams star in this
John Patrick Shanley period piece about a nun who accuses a priest of
abusing a black student in 1964 New York. (Dec. 5)

Frost/Nixon:Ron Howard’s film adaptation of the hit stage drama, about
the legendary interviews between disgraced President Richard Nixon and
TV talker David Frost. It stars Frank Langella and Michael Sheen.
(Dec. 5)

Punisher: War Zone:Ray Stevenson replaces Thomas Jane in the comic
book hero series about an avenging G-man who takes down bad guys, no
holds barred. (Dec. 5)

Seven Pounds:Will Smith stars as a guilt-ridden IRS agent who sets out
to make amends to seven people, then falls in love with a woman
(Rosario Dawson) with a heart condition. (Dec. 12)

The Day the Earth Stood Still:Keanu Reeves stars in this remake of the
1951 sci-fi classic about an alien and his giant robot who come to
give the warring, troublesome Planet Earth one last chance to act
civilized. (Dec. 12)

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button:David Fincher directed Brad Pitt,
Tilda Swinton, Cate Blanchett and Julia Ormond in this tale of a man
who ages in reverse. (Dec. 19)

The Tale of Despereaux:Based on the Kate DiCamillo children’s fairy
tale about adventures by a mouse, a rat and a servant girl in an
ancient castle. (Dec. 19)

Yes Man:Jim Carrey stars as a man who resolves to say “Yes” to any
question or proposal. For an entire year. Based on the Danny Wallace
memoir. (Dec. 19)

Bedtime Stories:Adam Sandler stars as a hotel handyman whose bedtime
tales told to his nephew and niece magically turn true. (Dec. 25)

Hurricane Season:Forest Whitaker plays a Louisiana basketball coach
who assembles a team of kids from several damaged schools and molds
them into state championship contenders. (Dec. 25)

Marley& Me:The Miami-based tale of a family headed by Owen Wilson and
Jennifer Aniston, who learn life lessons from their free-spirited new
dog, Marley. Based on John Grogan’s memoir. (Dec. 25)

Revolutionary Road:Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio reunite for a
period piece about suburban angst in 1950s Connecticut. Mr. Winslet,
aka Sam Mendes, directed this film of the Richard Yates novel. (Dec.
25)

The Spirit:Frank Miller directed this adaptation of Will Eisner’s
influential comic about a dead cop (Gabriel Macht) who returns to
fight against the evil that killed him. (Dec. 25)

Religulous movie’s festival film toronto

October 1, 2008

BRAD Pitt will drop in, as will Bryan Brown. Hollywood veteran
Jonathan Demme has a new film to show, the family drama Rachel Getting
Married; so does Melbourne actor Matthew Newton, who will present his
second feature behind the camera, Three Blind Mice.

If it’s early September, it must be the Toronto International Film
Festival, one of the largest, most respected and tightly run movie
bazaars in a world suddenly full of such events. The numbers are
startling: 312 films from 64 countries; 249 features, with three-
quarters of those billed world, international or North American
premieres (this is an important distinction in the world of film
festival bragging rights). Sixty-one are films from first-time
directors, and Australia will be represented by six features.

In all, the festival is promising more than 500 filmmakers, writers
and actors from across the world, on hand to present their work,
answer audience questions, participate in gruelling press interview
sessions and hobnob at exclusive parties.

Polling colleagues from across the world, one Toronto-based film
journalist has concluded the five must-see movies, based on buzz, are
Steven Soderbergh’s two-part revolutionary epic Che; Joel and Ethan
Coen’s CIA satire with Pitt, Burn After Reading; Canadian Bruce
McDonald’s zombie romp Pontypool; and Religulous, the documentary from
Borat director Larry Charles, in which comedian-commentator Bill Maher
traverses America in search of definitions of piety and faith.

Screenings run from 9am to well past midnight. Distributors and film
critics will jostle for seats with the Canadian public.

It’s a daunting 10 days. Depending on what business one has at TIFF,
it’s possible to see five films a day, or three times that number if
one is simply sampling the vibe by hopping from one cinema to the
next. At the other extreme, many festival-goers never set foot in a
cinema. Toronto has become a crucial stop for movie buyers and
sellers, with deals done in the members-only industry centre and on
napkins in upscale restaurants.

Programmers from festivals across the world — including Sydney Film
Festival executive director Clare Stewart — come to Toronto to pre-
screen movies for their events.

The festival, in its 33rd year, has had a torrid love affair with
Hollywood for the past decade. After Sam Mendes’s American Beauty
surfed its overwhelmingly positive 1999 festival buzz to a best-
picture Oscar win, studios in subsequent years have scrambled to get
their end-of-the-year award hopefuls into the Toronto schedule before
commercial release.

Studios are pruning their lavish budgets for travel, lodgings and
splashy parties to promote these films. As a result, Toronto is locked
in competition with the overlapping Venice film festival for high-
profile pictures and A-list stars. Sometimes films play at both
festivals, such as Burn After Reading. Often, films given a big push
in one city are conspicuously absent from the other.

In fact, as comprehensive as TIFF is, the list of films not showing is
also noteworthy. Oliver Stone’s W., with Josh Brolin as the incumbent
US president, apparently wasn’t finished in time, even though it’s
scheduled to open in the US scarcely a month after the festival
closes. Word has it films from prominent directors Darren Aronofsky
(The Wrestler, with Mickey Rourke) and Jim Sheridan (Brothers, with
Jake Gyllenhaal and Tobey Maguire) weren’t even submitted. (Unlike the
Cannes festival, where anyone with enough money can rent a screen and
show their film in the market section, Toronto screens only what
Toronto invites.)

Laurent Cantet’s high school drama The Class, which won the Palme d’Or
at Cannes last May, was scheduled to play Toronto but was pulled when
the film was selected as the opening-night gala by the New York
festival, which opens later this month. Toronto also apparently lost
Clint Eastwood’s Cannes favourite Changeling, starring Angelina Jolie,
to New York’s demand for exclusivity.

Director Steve Jacobs’s new Australian film Disgrace, adapted from the
novel by J.M. Coetzee and starring John Malkovich, will open near the
festival’s halfway point. Baz Luhrmann’s anticipated Australia is not
finished. Other Australian films in various sections of the festival
include the stop-motion animated $9.99, a co-production with Israel
and featuring the voices of Geoffrey Rush, Anthony LaPaglia, Joel
Edgerton and Ben Mendelsohn; the documentary Yes Madam, Sir, with
narration by Helen Mirren; and two films in the cult Midnight Madness
program, the horror thriller Acolytes and the Ozploitation documentary
Not Quite Hollywood. Brown co-stars with Sam Neill and Peter O’Toole
in writer-director Toa Fraser’s British-New Zealand co-production Dean
Spanley, from the novel by Lord Dunsany.

But in the end and beyond the hype, attending Toronto or any film
festival isn’t so different from checking session times on a Friday
afternoon: all anyone’s really looking for is a good movie.

From here you can use the Social Web links to save Toronto’s casts of
thousands to a social bookmarking site.

Information provided on this page will not be used for any other
purpose than to notify the recipient of the article you have chosen.

Staff writers THE Australian competition watchdog said today it would
not oppose BHP Billiton’s proposed takeover of rival mining giant Rio
Tinto.

Andrew Colley IT took a few days but Hutchison 3 Mobile customers
finally have access to popular websites such as BigPond and Hotmail.

FAST food chain McDonald’s has consolidated its $65 million
advertising account with DDB, dumping rival agency Leo Burnett.

Bernard Lane THE University of New England may move to elect a new
chancellor as early as next month in the long-running leadership
crisis.

Michael Bloomberg will seek to overturn a term limits law so he can
run New York for another four years.

Mark Dodd AN Australian delegation visiting Croatia will today meet
its leaders to press for help in resolving the fate of Britt
Lapthorne.

Paul Kelly, Editor-at-large ROSS Garnaut’s report will be anathema to
the environmental lobby but it focuses on the achievable.

Avril Groom in Milan WITH couture taking a clobbering, shoes and
accessories are now at the pointy end of fashion

Religulous movie’s films toronto film

October 1, 2008

Toronto’s annual dance with the stars kicks off tonight with a
suitably Canadian bang, premiering Paul Gross’s Passchendaele,a gritty
look at the killing fields of World War I. And it will no doubt end
with a cross-eyed whimper 10 days from now, when the credits roll on
the last of 312 films featured in the 33rd Toronto International Film
Festival, a brilliant northern lights of glitz, stargazing, artistry
and sheer fun.

The festival is one of the world’s best, rivalling Cannes, Sundance
and Venice. This year it showcases 29 Canadian feature films and 38
shorts, in a program that includes 237 premieres and films from 64
countries. Necks will be bent trying to catch a glimpse of air-kissing
stars such as Brad Pitt, Charlize Theron and Isabelle Huppert, or
directors Atom Egoyan, Deepa Mehta, and Joel and Ethan Coen.

Even Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s multi-million-dollar cuts to the
arts, including film, can’t suck the fizz out of this champagne.

Where else can movie buffs revel in Che, Parts 1 and 2, a four-hour
retelling of Che Guevara’s ill-fated Marxist saga, then wander over to
see a zombie-themed flick like Pontypool, an irreverently
Religulouslook at faith, or Burn After Reading,which is not about
editorial writing. Who can resist films with titles like Daytime
Drinking, The Paranoids, The Good, the Bad and the Weird, or The
Secret Life of Bees?

There’s a serious Hollywood North business side to it, of course.
Oscars are previewed here. The festival draws the world’s attention to
Toronto, highlights our film industry, and pumps millions into the
local economy. It also showcases young filmmakers and their fresh
takes on raw drama, docs, comedies, “green” films and much more.

Like Passchendaele, TIFF `08 reminds us of who we are, and were and
want to be. Here’s looking at you, Toronto.

More in the news
Bailout package failure wreaks market havoc Charges dropped in baby’s
death Canadian technology spots snow on Mars Somali pirates a scourge
to ships in Gulf of Aden

This reader was 12 and it was a hot day sitting on the dock by the
bay.

The tim brown hall of fame film pictures based

September 30, 2008

NEW ON NOLA RADIO Latest additions: Interviews: GALLERIES Theresa
Andersson at the Louisiana Music Factory Musicians around New Orleans
live out their rock-star dreams at Rock ‘n’ Roll Fantasy Camp The
Palmetto Bug Stompers perform at d.b.a. TP ENT VIDEOS

Shia LaBeouf is on the run from — who, exactly? — in the thriller
‘Eagle Eye,’ opening Sept. 26.

The typical summer frivolities have come and gone at the multiplex,
and now it’s time for studios to trot out their more serious fare.

That’s not to say there are no laughs on tap this fall. It’s just that
what few there are trend less toward summertime sophomorism (“”) and
more toward quirkier comedies (the Coen brothers’ “Burn After Reading”
and Adrien Brody in “The Brothers Bloom”).

Even then, though, the heavy stuff outweighs the silliness as studios
straighten up for awards season. In some cases, the buzz has already
started, with a full slate of period pieces (“The Duchess”), weighty
dramas (“The Changeling, ” “Frozen River”) and tragic biopics (“The
Express”) on the calendar.

What follows is a list of the nearly 50 films expected to hit local
screens between now and Oct. 31, followed by their tentative opening
dates and other key details. I’ve also highlighted five “Best Bets, ”
but there are more than a few potential gems hidden among all the
others.

Just keep in mind that everything below is subject to change, as
studios might not be finished tweaking their release schedules.

BEST BET! Brad Pitt discovers a disc with what he suspects is valuable
information in ‘Burn After Reading.’

BEST BET! BURN AFTER READING A disgruntled CIA operatives misplaced
memoirs serve as a launching pad for this star-studded comedic caper
from Joel and Ethan Coen, whose much more serious “No CCountry for Old
Men” dominated the Academy Awards earlier this year. Why I’m excited:
The Coens are the kings of quirky comedy, so this just-for-funsies
project marks a return to form for them. Their cast also dives in,
fully committing themselves to mostly moronic roles. If nothing else,
this is film that is good, plain fun. (Check out the .) Cast:George
Clooney, Brad Pitt, Frances McDormand, John Malkovich, Richard
Jenkins, Tilda Swinton. Directors:Joel and Ethan Coen. Studio:Focus
Features.

ELEGYA college professor who habitually engages in mostly heartless
affairs with his (much) younger students meets his match, in a drama
adapted from Philip Roth’s short novel “The Dying Animal.” Cast:Ben
Kingsley, Penelope Cruz, Patricia Clarkson, Dennis Hopper.
Director:Isabel Coixet. Studio:Samuel Goldwyn Films.

THE FAMILY THAT PREYSNew Orleans native Tyler Perry’s sixth feature
film is a dramatic comedy about the matriarchs of two very different
families who are linked by a common scandal. The film shot for two
days in the New Orleans area earlier this year. Cast:Perry, Kathy
Bates, Alfre Woodward, Taraji P. Henson. Director:Perry.
Studio:Lionsgate.

RIGHTEOUS KILL Robert De Niro and Al Pacino share the screen — and
really that’s all the information I need to be intrigued by it. For
the record, though, the plot sees the two accomplished actors playing
veteran New York cops on the trail of a vigilante serial killer with
an apparent poetic bent. Cast:De Niro, Pacino, Curtis “50 Cent”
Jackson, Donnie Wahlberg. Director:Jon Avnet. Studio:Overture Films.

THE WOMEN Writer-director Diane English (“Murphy Brown”) skippers a
star-studded update of George Cukor’s 1939 girls-only comedy (which in
turn was based on Clare Boothe Luce’s 1936 play). Cast:Meg Ryan,
Annette Benning, Eva Mendes, Debra Messing, Jada Pinkett Smith,
Candice Bergen, Bette Midler, Cloris Leachman, Carrie Fisher, Debi
Mazar. Director:English. Studio:Picturehouse.

GHOST TOWN Ricky Gervais sees dead people, including Greg Kinnear, all
of whom seem to want a favor, in this romantic comedy. Cast:Kinnear,
Tea Leoni, Gervais, Kristin Wiig. Director:David Koepp.
Studio:DreamWorks/Paramount.

IGORTired of being a lowly lab assistant, a hunchback rises up against
the status-quo in an animated twist on monster-movie convention.
Cast:John Cusack, Steve Buscemi, Eddie Izzard, John Cleese.
Director:Anthony Leondis. Studio:MGM.

LAKEVIEW TERRACE A thriller about a so-cool-he’s-creepy cop (Samuel L.
Jackson) who does his darnedest to drum his new, interracial neighbors
out of the neighborhood. Cast:Jackson, Patrick Wilson, Kerry
Washington. Director:Neil LaBute. Studio:Screen Gems.

MY BEST FRIEND’S GIRL Funnyman Dane Cook breaks the golden rule by
falling for his buddy’s ex-girlfriend. Cast:Cook, Kate Hudson, Jason
Biggs, Alec Baldwin. Director:Howard Deutch. Studio:Lionsgate.

PATTI SMITH: DREAM OF LIFE This documentary portrait of
singer/artist/poet Patti Smith, narrated by Smith, was honored for its
cinematography at January’s Sundance Film Festival. Cast:Smith, Flea,
Sam Shepard. Director:Steven Sebring. Studio:Palm Pictures.

BEST BET! New Orleans residents Kim Rivers Roberts and Scott Roberts
in a scene from ‘Trouble the Water.’

BEST BET!TROUBLE THE WATER A Katrina documentary built upon footage
taken by 9th Ward residents Kim Rivers Roberts and husband Scott
Roberts shortly before the storm, during the storm and during their
post-storm exile. Why I’m excited: This is the film that took top
honors in the U.S. documentary category at January’s Sundance Film
Festival. Executive-produced by actor-activist Danny Glover, it’s as
much a historical document as it is anything else, required viewing
for every New Orleanian — shoot, for every American. Directors:Carl
Deal and Tia Lessin. Studio: Zeitgeist Films.

WALKING ON DEAD FISH Hall-of-Fame quarterback Terry Bradshaw narrates
a documentary about the East St. John High School football team’s
post-Katrina season. Bradshaw, along with New Orleans Saints running
back Reggie Bush, also produced. It had been scheduled to open Sept. 5
— days after Hurricane Gustav blew through town — but, well, you
know. Director:Franklin Martin. Studio:Variance Films.

WHAT WE DO IS SECRET A biopic on the seminal L.A. punk band The Germs
and their charismatic leader, Darby Crash. Cast:Shane West, Bijou
Phillips, Rich Gonzalez. Director:Rodger Grossman. Studio:Vitagraph
Films.

CHOKEA med-school dropout who passes time by feigning choking in
restaurants, only to form parasitic relationships with the wealthy
tourists who “save” him, has his world rocked after his mother shares
a secret. Cast:Sam Rockwell, Anjelica Huston, Clark Gregg.
Director:Gregg. Studio:Fox Searchlight.

EAGLE EYE Shia LaBeouf and “Disturbia” director D.J. Caruso reteam for
this taut-looking thriller about a pair of strangers who become pawns
in a deadly game. Cast:LaBeouf, Michelle Monaghan, Billy Bob Thornton.
Director:Caruso. Studio:DreamWorks SKG.

FIREPROOFKirk Cameron is as brave a firefighter as they come, but
while he’s off playing hero his marriage is crashing and burning in a
drama with a strong spiritual message. Cast:Kirk Cameron, Erin Bethea,
Ken Bevel. Director:Alex Kendrick. Studio:Samuel Goldwyn Films.

NIGHTS IN RODANTHE The latest weepie based on a book by Nicholas
Sparks (“The Notebook”) is about a pair of troubled souls forced
together by a raging storm. It’s a safe bet that much smooching
ensues. Cast:Richard Gere, Diane Lane. Director:George C. Wolfe.
Studio:Warner Bros.

THE LUCKY ONES A dramatic comedy about three couldn’t-be-more-
different Iraq veterans — each scarred in a different way by their
service — who embark upon an unexpected, and unexpectedly revealing,
road trip together. Cast:Rachel McAdams, Tim Robbins, Michael Pena.
Director:Neil Burger. Studio:Lionsgate/Roadside Attractions.

BEST BET!MIRACLE AT ST. ANNA Four American soldiers are separated from
their unit and trapped behind enemy lines in World War II Italy. The
film is based on the bestselling novel by James McBride, which in turn
was inspired by the August 1944 Sant’Anna di Stazzema massacre, which
saw German soldiers retaliate against Italian partisan activity.
Though it was filmed mostly in Italy, it shot for a day in the Baton
Rouge area, and New Orleans native Terence Blanchard, a longtime Lee
collaborator, provides the score. Why I’m excited: He’s controversial,
he’s outspoken, he’s often abrasive, but Spike Lee is also one heck of
a filmmaker. He’s never tackled a war film before, however, or one
with such an apparently broad scope, but with its mix of history,
social issues and — it would appear, spirituality — it’s hard not to
be intrigued by it. Cast: Derek Luke, Michael Ealy, Laz Alonso, Omar
Benson Miller, John Turturro, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, John Leguizamo.
Director: Spike Lee. Studio: Touchstone Pictures.

A VERY BRITISH GANGSTER The Sundance documentary takes a peek inside
one of Britain’s most dangerous crime families. Cast:Dominic Noonan.
Director:Donal MacIntyre. Studio:Anywhere Road Entertainment.

BEST BET!APPALOOSA A pair of flinty lawmen mosey into the Old West
territory of New Mexico to do what no one has been able to do: put an
end to the misdeeds of a big-hatted, deep-pocketed rancher and his
band of thugs. Based on the 2005 novel by Robert B. Parker. Why I’m
excited: OK, it does sound like a cookie-cutter Western: Strong,
silent heroes face off with a greedy rancher. But then, corporate
immorality really is a timeless theme. Besides, I’m a sucker for a
well-done oater (See last year’s “”), and this has all the hallmarks
of one, starting with that 10-gallon cast. Cast: Viggo Mortensen, Ed
Harris, Renee Zellweger, Jeremy Irons. Director: Ed Harris. Studio:
Warner Bros. / New Line Cinema.

BEVERLY HILLS CHIHUAHUA A pampered, talking Chihuahua (yes, you read
that right) from Beverly Hills gets lost on a trip to Mexico, in
Disney’s live-action family film. Cast:Drew Barrymore, Salma Hayek,
Jamie Lee Curtis, Cheech Marin, Andy Garcia, George Lopez.
Director:Raja Gosnell. Studio:Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures.

BLINDNESSSudden blindness befalls every resident of a small city, save
Julianne Moore, in this dramatic thriller based on the novel by Jose
Saramago. Cast:Moore, Gael Garc a Bernal, Sandra Oh, Danny Glover.
Director:Fernando Meirelles. Studio:Miramax.

FLASH OF GENIUS The real-life story of a part-time inventor who went
toe-to-toe with automakers who he says stole his idea for the
intermittent windshield wiper. Cast:Greg Kinnear, Lauren Graham,
Dermot Mulroney, Alan Alda. Director:Marc Abraham. Studio:Universal
Pictures.

FROZEN RIVER A Sundance-honored drama about two single mothers drawn
into the world of smuggling at the U.S.-Canada border. Cast:Melissa
Leo, Misty Upham, Michael O’Keefe. Director:Courtney Hunt. Studio:Sony
Pictures Classics.

HOW TO LOSE FRIENDS AND ALIENATE PEOPLE A fish-out-of-water comedy
about a small-time journalist swept up in New York City’s high
society. Based on the book by Toby Young. Cast:Simon Pegg, Megan Fox,
Gillian Anderson, Jeff Bridges. Director:Robert B. Weide. Studio:MGM.

NICK AND NORA’S INFINITE PLAYLIST A romantic comedy about two
strangers, with nothing in common but their musical tastes, who embark
on a late-night quest to find a secret concert by their favorite band.
Cast:Michael Cera, Kat Dennings. Director:Peter Sollett. Studio:Screen
Gems.

WHAT JUST HAPPENED? Another satire of the Hollywood way, this time
starring Robert De Niro as a producer struggling to make a movie.
Cast:De Niro, Bruce Willis, Catherine Keener, Robert Wright Penn.
Director:Barry Levinson. Studio:Magnolia Pictures.

BODY OF LIES A dramatic-thriller about a CIA operative who schemes to
infiltrate a terror network but quickly learns he doesn’t know whom he
can trust. Based on the novel by Washington Post columnist David
Ignatius. Cast:Leonardo DiCaprio, Russell Crowe. Director:Ridley
Scott. Studio:Warner Bros.

CITY OF EMBER Two teenagers race against time to save the lights from
going out forever in their magical city in this fantasy adventure.
Cast:Bill Murray, Tim Robbins, Saoirse Ronan. Director:Gil Kenan.
Studio:Fox-Walden.

THE DUCHESS A period biopic on the life of Georgiana, Duchess of
Devonshire — a distant relation of Princess Diana Spencer — who was
famous both for her political and, ahem, personal dealings.
(Georgiana, not Diana.) Cast:Keira Knightly, Ralph Feinnes, Charlotte
Rampling, Hayely Atwell. Director:Saul Dibb. Studio:Paramount Vantage.

THE EXPRESS Ernie Davis, the first black man to win the Heisman
Trophy, gets the biopic treatment. Cast:Dennis Quaid, Rob Brown,
Clancy Brown, Darrin Dewitt Henson. Director:Gary Fleder.
Studio:Universal Pictures.

QUARANTINEMembers of a news crew become part of the story when they
find themselves quarantined in a building in which residents are
mysteriously dying off, in a horror thriller based on Spanish director
Jaume Balaguero’s 2007 film “REC.” Cast:Jennifer Carpenter, Johnathon
Schaech, Jay Hernandez, Columbus Short. Director:John Erick Dowdle.
Studio:Screen Gems.

TELL NO ONE Eight years after his wife was murdered, a man receives
evidence that she might still be alive, in this well-received French
thriller that has been generating beaucoup buzz. Cast:Francois Cluzet,
Marie-Josee Croze, Andre Dussollier, Kristen Scott Thomas.
Director:Guillaume Canet. Studio:Music Box Films.

MAX PAYNE The hugely popular and hugely violent video game — about a
DEA agent bent on revenge — becomes a movie. Cast:Mark Wahlberg, Mila
Junis, Beau Bridges, Chris “Ludacris” Bridges. Director:John Moore.
Studio:20th Century Fox.

THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES A drama about a white girl and her black nanny
in 1964 South Carolina who find refuge from abuse and injustice on a
bee farm. Based on the bestselling 2002 book by Sue Monk Kidd.
Cast:Dakota Fanning, Paul Bettany, Queen Latifah, Alicia Keys,
Jennifer Hudson. Director:Gina Prince-Bythewood. Studio:Fox
Searchlight.

SEX DRIVEA comedy about a teenage horndog who hits the road to fulfill
the promise of pressing the flesh — and all that means — with a girl
he met online. Cast:James Marsden, Katrina Bowden. Director:Sean
Anders. Studio:Summit Entertainment.

W. Shame on you if you don’t already know about Oliver Stone’s
unauthorized, unvarnished biography of the 43rd president. Not only is
it notable for star Josh Brolin’s Shreveport arrest during production,
or because of its remarkably rushed post-production (shooting only
wrapped in late July), but also because the release date means it’ll
come out while Bush is still in office — and just before November’s
election. Cast:Brolin, Ellen Burstyn, Thandie Newton, Richard
Dreyfuss. Director:Oliver Stone. Studio:Lionsgate.

CROSSING OVER An exploration of the complexities of U.S. immigration
policies in what co-star Jim Sturgess calls a “Crash”-like format.
Cast:Harrison Ford, Sean Penn, Ray Liotta, Ashley Judd, Sturgess.
Director:Frank Marshall. Studio:The Weinstein Co./MGM.

HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL 3: SENIOR YEAR It’s baaaa-aaaack. Cast:Zac Efron,
Vanessa Anne Hudgens, Ashley Tisdale, Corbin Bleu. Director:Kenny
Ortega. Studio:Walt Disney Studios.

SAW V If it’s late October, it must be time for more deeply disturbing
carnage, in the film series for which the term “torture porn” was
invented. Cast:Tobin Bell, Costas Mandylor. Director:David Hackl.
Studio:Lionsgate.

PASSENGERSAnne Hathaway plays a young therapist assigned to counsel
the five survivors of a plane crash — who mysteriously begin
disappearing. Cast:Hathaway, Patrick Wilson, Andre Braugher.
Director:Rodrigo Garcia. Studio:Tri-Star.

PRIDE AND GLORYA gritty portrait of the NYPD — one that sounds just a
touch like last year’s “We Own the Night” — focusing on an
investigator from a multigenerational police family whose biggest case
leads him back to his own kin. Cast:Edward Norton, Colin Farrell, Jon
Voight. Director:Gavin O’Connor. Studio:New Line Cinema.

BEST BET!CHANGELING After her son is kidnapped, a California woman is
elated when police say they’ve found the boy. But the child they hand
over, she insists, isn’t hers. Why I’m excited: It’s another gut-punch
of a drama from Clint Eastwood, who has been cranking out reliably
weighty — sometimes excruciatingly so — dramas for the past few
years. To top it all off, this is a story that really happened. (And
if Jolie’s performance lives up to the buzz, this could give the
Academy a chance to right last year’s snubbing of her “” performance.)
Cast: Jolie, John Malkovich, Amy Ryan. Director: Clint Eastwood.
Studio: Universal Pictures.

ROCKNROLLAWhen a crooked land deal begins to unfold, every criminal in
London tries to get his hand in the cookie jar, in this action-
suspense film. Cast:Gerard Butler, Tom Wilkinson, Thandie Newton.
Director:Guy Ritchie. Studio:Warner Bros.

ZACK AND MIRI MAKE A PORNO Kevin Smith writes and directs an (alleged)
romantic comedy about a pair of platonic friends-slash-roomies who
dive into the world of DIY porn, in an effort to raise some quick cash
to pay their mounting bills. Cast:Seth Rogen, Elizabeth Banks, Justin
Long. Director:Kevin Smith. Studio:The Weinstein Co.

The following movies are expected to open this fall, but distributors
were unable to provide potential release dates for the New Orleans
market.

ASHES OF TIME REDUX Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai does a do-over on
his 1994 film about a brokenhearted man who moves to the desert where
he finds skilled swordsmen to carry out his contract killings.
Cast:Jacky Cheung, Leslie Cheung, Maggie Cheung. Director:Wong Kar-
Wai. Studio:Sony Pictures Classics.

BAGHEADThe latest low-fi comedy/drama from New Orleans’ Duplass
brothers — leaders in the indie world’s “mumblecore” movement —
tells about four aspiring filmmakers (including one played by another
local product, Steve Zissis) who are terrorized by (you guessed it) a
guy with a bag over his head. Cast:Zissis, Gina Gerwig, Ross
Partridge, Elise Muller. Directors: Mark and Jay Duplass. Studio:Sony
Pictures Classics.

MORNING LIGHT A documentary about 15 young sailors who face off with
top professionals in the TRANSPAC, the revered open-ocean sailing
competition. Directors: Paul Crowder, Mark Monroe. Studio:Walt Disney
Studios Motion Pictures.

RACHEL GETTING MARRIEDAnne Hathaway plays a recovering addict who
attends her sister’s wedding. (Don’t expect it to go smoothly.)
Director Jonathan Demme cast a number of New Orleanians in small
roles, after meeting them while working on his Katrina documentary “.”
Cast:Hathaway, Rosemarie DeWitt, Debra Winger. Director:Demme.
Studio:Sony Pictures Classics.

TOWELHEADAlicia Erinan’s coming-of-age novel, about an Arab-American
girl sent to live with her uncle in Texas during the 1991 Persian Gulf
War, makes the leap to the big screen. Cast:Summer Bishil, Aaron
Eckhart, Toni Collette, Maria Bello. Director:Alan Ball. Studio:Warner
Independent.

Daniel Craig is set to return as Bond — James Bond — in ‘Quantum of
Solace,’ set to bow Nov. 14.
LONG SHOT: LOOKING AHEAD TO WINTER . . .

Now that we’ve got our Fall Movie Preview out of the way, it doesn’t
seem right to make you wait until early November for our Winter Movie
Preview. So here’s a peek at some of the expected cream of this
winter’s crop, just to whet your appetite.

Daniel Craig gets things kicked off Nov. 14 as he reprises his role as
James Bond in the latest 007 film, “Quantum of Solace.” . . . “The
Soloist, ” which is based on the book by Los Angeles Times columnist
Steve Lopez, has a chance to be a multiple Oscar nominee, for actors
Robert Downey Jr. and Jamie Foxx. It comes out Nov. 21. . . . Sharing
the same release date is the eagerly awaited vampire romance
“Twilight, ” based on the popular novel by Stephanie Meyer. . . .
Director Danny Boyle’s India-set coming-of-age tale “Slumdog
Millionaire” turned a number of heads when it premiered at the Toronto
Film Festival. Expect it to turn more when it bows on Nov. 28. . . .

In December, a pair of films without exact release dates are expected
to land: another Toronto head-turner, “The Wrestler, ” a drama
starring Mickey Rourke; and “Defiance, ” a World War II saga set in
Eastern Europe and featuring “Quantum of Solace” star Daniel Craig. .
. . In addition to Ron Howard’s Watergate-era drama “Frost/Nixon, ”
two locally shot and locally set films land on Christmas, “The Curious
Case of Benjamin Button” and “Hurricane Season.”

The tim brown ideo minutes kennedy comedy

September 30, 2008

Dark lark. ***1/2. R. Brad Pitt and George Clooney star and one could
fear too much chuminess from Joel and Ethan Coen’s zippy comedy about
secrets, lies and an errant computer disk two gym employees Chad and
Linda (Pitt and Frances McDormand) attempt to turn to their advantage.
Instead the brothers’ departure from the brutal terrain of “No Country
for Old Men” provides a crisp belt of Beltway absurdism. John
Malkovich is furiously amusing as Osborne Cox, an intelligence analyst
who up and quits the CIA when his role is downgraded. That disk has
his notes for a memoir. Tilda Swinton plays Ozzie’s wife. She’s
carrying on an affair with U.S. Marshal Harry Pfarrer (Clooney).
“Burn” is a juggling act of mistaken identities and misjudged
reactions. One of the funniest miscalculations comes when shake-down
numbskull Chad gets popped in the nose by Ozzie. Ouch. (Kennedy) 95
minutes

Superhero action. PG-13. ****. More than any other recent comic-book
hero flick, Christopher Nolan’s tour de force sequel provides an
enduring, unsettlingly bleak fable of our moment. The theme of the
lawman’s reliance on those outside the law to take down those who know
not the rule of law beats at the bruised heart of this flick.
Christian Bale’s modulated presense as sour billionaire Bruce
Wayne/Batman finds competetion in the performances of the late Heath
Ledger and Aaron Eckhart as the Joker and D.A. Harvey Dent. Maggie
Gyllenhaal proves a superior Rachel Dawes, Wayne’s beloved who’s
fallen for Dent. Ledger’s portrayal of the scarred, face-painted arch-
villain is uncanny and kitch-proof, even when he dons a dress. An evil
clown has taken the sensitive actor’s place. He’s not a Bozo but an
even creepier character than the E-Trade baby springs for. (Kennedy)
152 minutes

Action/Thriller. **. R. Of all the Z-movies in the Roger Corman
catalog, they had to remake “Death Race 2000.” But if the original
“Death Race,” with its murderous road-rally drivers who take down
pedestrians for “points,” seemed darkly prophetic when it came out in
1975, the new one feels ripped from the pages of tomorrow’s TV Guide.
Jason “Stick Shift” Statham is Jensen Ames, an ex-driver framed for
his wife’s murder. He winds up on Terminal Island, the prison where
the worst of the worst are held. And there he’s given the choice:
Drive, or else. (Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel) 105 minutes

Space cartoon. ***. G. “Fly Me to the Moon” is the last and least of
the animations of summer, a good-looking, nostalgic but underanimated
and thinly scripted child’s-eye view of that ancient history known as
the Apollo program. The story: A group of young flies living on Cape
Canaveral in the 1960s tries to join the Apollo 11 crew and fly to the
moon. The kids concoct spacesuits, a plan to sneak into the capsule,
an excuse to tell their parents. They think the flights last only a
few minutes. Meanwhile, some sneaky Russian flies (Tim Curry does a
voice) are out to foil the mission. (Roger Moore. Orlando Sentinel) 80
minutes

Drama. ****. R. When Ray Eddy quietly weeps in the opening moments of
“Frozen River,” the tears follow age lines formed by worry, poverty
and cigarettes. Ray, played by Melissa Leo in one of those career-
defining performances, has two children, a crummy part-time job that
won’t cover expenses and a husband who has just run off with all her
meager savings — again. She’s earned the right to cry. But she
has one dream: a new double-wide, insulated against the upstate New
York cold, a home for her two sons, Ricky, 5, and T.J., 15. (Roger
Moore, Orlando Sentinel) 97 minutes

Haunted comedy. ***1/2. PG-13. Bertram Pincus DDS hasn’t much use for
the living and even less for the dead. Indeed, Pincus DDS is such a
bitter pill, there are times you wonder if David Koepp’s comedy about
the dour doctor and the deceased cad who enlists his earthly help to
help wreck his widow’s new relationship stands a ghost of a chance of
pulling off the transformations it hints at. But Koepp, who co-wrote
the screenplay with John Kamps, has delivered a gem of a movie. Ricky
Gervais, Greg Kinnear and Téa Leoni are terrific working the
pain and pleasures of comedy. Kristen Wiig is impossibly funny as the
surgeon who must explain to Pincus that well, yes, something happened
during a routine medical procedure: he died. (Kennedy) 103 minutes

Thriller. ***1/2. Not rated, but for mature audiences. A triangular
romantic comedy until we discover that all three of the lovers are
hurtling headlong to self-destruction. At the center of everything is
Gabrielle Deneige, a peppy young blond who does the weather at the
local TV station. A bookstore in Lyon and holds a signing for the
best-selling author Charles Saint-Denis. Also at the event is a
spoiled local rich kid, Paul Gaudens. The three central characters are
in an emotional fencing match, and Gabrielle lacks a mask. (Roger
Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times) 114 minutes

Superhero action. PG-13. ***1/2. Played with finesse by Will Smith,
damaged superhero Hancock shows scant signs of shaking off his bitter
moods. The unkempt L.A. denizen is sleeping it off on a bench when a
major freeway shootout transpires. Signs of Hancock’s disenchantment
range from alcohol abuse to rank personal hygiene to sorry
interpersonal skills with regular folk. His don’t-give-a-damn
rejoinders tip the movie’s PG-13 rating toward R. A typically clumsy
intervention by the super-gifted bum leads to an intervention of a
different sort, and sends this action-FX ride in surprisingly humane
directions. (Kennedy) 92 minutes

Animated comedy. **. PG. Malaria is where every lad can dream of
opening his own lab, having his own comely milkmaid girlfriend or
diabolical mad scientist moll. Unless he has a hunch on his back and
is named “Igor.” John Cusack plays an Igor with a dream, to be his own
evil genius someday. But he is tied to the clumsy Dr. Glickenstein
(John Cleese, terrific). Still, if Igor can get his pet project into
the annual Evil Science Fair and win, it’ll be a big win for Igors
everywhere. But “Igor” is chatty and dull, a bit too reliant on
innuendo for a kids’ film. (Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel) 80 minutes

Rorschach Drama. **1/2. PG-13. Samuel L. Jackson’s once good cop makes
for a very bad neighbor in this drama about an interracial couple
moving next door to 30-year LAPD veteran Abel Turner (Jackson).
Patrick Wilson and Kerry Washington are the young couple excited about
their new home. But all is not right and as the distant hills burn
with California brush fires, the story smolders. Washington is
especially interesting as the sort of character we haven’t seen
onscreen: a quasi-bohemian African American woman. Neil LaBute directs
David Loughery and Howard Korder’s screenplay that challenges
generation attitudes about race by flipping the script on whether this
is or isn’t a film about interracial relationships, black bigotry,
abusive of authority, or all of the above. “Lakeview Terrace” is most
intriguing when it simmers with interpersonal tensions. Once those
tensions are set ablaze in a final-act escalation, it falters.
(Kennedy) 106 minutes

Musical redux. ** 1/2. PG-13. Fans of the ABBA musical will likely
bring a happy sense memory of the play with them into the multiplex.
That will be all they need to be off and humming along to this story
of a daughter on the cusp of marriage, her mother and the three men
who may be her father. Those hoping to be wowed by what is a
tantalizing, grown-up cast — Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan,
Christine Baranski — are in for choppier waters. But you can’t
accuse Streep and Co. of not being super troupers. They sing. They
dance. Only too often, it seems like exertion when play should be the
thing. Instead theater director Phyllida Lloyd has made “the play the
thing.” One of the three creators of the onstage smash, LLoyd has
little sense of cinema’s less-is-more powers. Not to say she’s
delivered a dud or a dirge. Far from it. It’s just that “Mamma Mia!”
feels like a souvenir program: something to revive the feelings you
had watching the stage performance. (Kennedy) 108 minutes

Offbeat drama. ****. R. “Mister Foe,” improbably but beautifully,
balances creepiness and tenderness as perfectly as young Hallam Foe
teeters on the pitched roofs of Edinburgh while he’s spying on a
pretty young woman he’s seen in the street. 17-year-old Hallam
believes his late mother was murdered by his new stepmother, Verity.
Hallam may have an Oedipal attachment, but that doesn’t obviate the
fact that he’s still a kid trying to find a place in his own fractured
family and, beyond that, in the world. (David Wiegand, San Francisco
Chronicle) 95 minutes

Tomb Raider redux. **. PG-13. The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor,”
the third installment in the kin-of-Indy franchise, finds the son of
explorer Rick O’Connell (Brendan Fraser) on his own archaeological dig
in China in search of the tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Alex (Luke Ford)
is tempting a disaster in digging for him. If the emperor (Jet Li) is
revived and his army of terra-cotta warriors called forth, well you
know the action-fantasy drill. (Kennedy) 111 minutes

Action comedy. ***. R. This action comedy finds customer Dale (Seth
Rogen) and toasted dealer Saul (James Franco) on the lam from a drug
kingpin and his cop accomplice (Gary Cole and Rosie Perez). A process
server with a bag of tricks and some odd costumes in the trunk of his
car, Dale thought he was just going to deliver a subpoena. Instead he
witnesses a gang murder. He panics, tosses his smoldering joint. It’s
funny, sad, and very careless. It’s also got a strange joy to it.
(Kennedy) 112 minutes

Dark Family Dramedy. ***1/2. R. “Red Roses and Petrol,” boasts its
share of moments — I’m thinking especially of the point when one
of the characters snorts two lines of his father’s ashes, mistaking
them for cocaine. Those ashes are the remnants of Enda, tyrannical
father and an unfaithful husband, who has bequeathed to his family a
lifetime’s worth of grievances. But between its extraordinary
performances and some of the most inventive cursing I’ve ever heard
(all in a creamy Irish brogue), this film deserves its own place in
the sun. (Michael Hardy, Boston Globe) 97 minutes

Young chick flick. ***. PG. The girls are linked by an usual pair of
blue jeans. The embroidered, sequined denim fit each girl perfectly.
Over the course of a summer, the pants are passed from character to
character with powerful effect. This sequel finds the quartet half-
heartedly committed to the ritual of the pants and pursuing new goals
after their first year of college. Their are no slackers here: Tibby
attends New York University, artist Lena goes to Rhode Island School
of Design, Blake is studying at Brown and Carmen is a Yalie. But in a
film that depends as much on chemistry as individual effort, the
sisterhood of the pants remains strong. (Kennedy) 111 minutes

Animated comedy. G. ***. “Chimps,” from the animation studio that gave
us “Valiant,” is one of those cartoons parents won’t mind sitting
through while little Miss or Mister 8-and-under chuckles at the cute
talking primates. And chuckle they will. With adorable critters and
icky monsters and oodles of potential toy accessories (to say nothing
of a video game tie-in), this movie looks for that sweet spot in every
7-year-old’s heart for chimpanzees and movies about them. And the
script manages the occasional wisecrack or movie lovers’ inside joke
to keep the grown-ups awake, too. (Roger Moore, The Orlando Sentinel)
81 minutes.

French thriller. Not rated. *** 1/2. What a terrific pas de deux of
withholding and revelation Guillaume Canet’s adaptation of Harlan
Coben’s novel (co-written by Philippe Lefebvre) is. The thriller
balances a story of upended love with a mystery that wields power till
the very end. Eight years after the death of his wife, still-grieving
pediatrician Alexandre Beck (Francois Cluzet) comes under suspicion
when two bodies are unearthed near the site of wife Margot’s brutal
murder. At the same time, Alex receives an anonymous email showing a
woman who looks like his wife caught on a surveillance camera. What
gives? Cluzet resembles a Gallic Dustin Hoffman circa “Marathon Man”
— and not just because he leads the police on a fantastic foot
chase. The dark-haired actor has a moving intensity. “Tell No One” is
rich with intriguing characters: a thug who dotes on his hemophiliac
toddker, a skeptical police shrink, a wealthy senator who employs
Alex’s sister. Canet avoids the nighttime hours of noir. Better, he
hasn’t much use for femmes fatales, though there is a chilling
hitwoman. Marie-Josee Croze does her part to make us yearn for Margot.
Kristin Scott-Thomas provides fine ballast as Alex best friend and
sister in law. Helene. Nathalie Baye gives a nicely fierce turn as the
lawyer Helene hires for Alex. (Kennedy) 125 minutes

Political thriller. ***. PG-13. Globe-trotting political thriller
“Traitor” begins with a tender moment between a father and a son as
they pore over the Koran and later as they ponder their moves on a
chessboard. Violence and loss leave an imprint on the sensitive boy
who grows up to be the protagonist. Thrillers that avoid insulting our
intelligence are not as common an occurrence as they should be. Don
Cheadle is Samir. The son of an Islamic holy man and an American
mother, he was born in Sudan but raised in the U.S. When we meet him,
the special-ops explosives expert is hawking Cemtex to some bad actors
in Yemen. Whether Samir is a devout Muslim or a purveyor of mayhem, or
both, provides the tension at the heart of the film, which at once
takes belief seriously and scrutinizes it. (Kennedy) 90 minutes

Train thriller. ****. R. A worldly “bad-girl” wife, a naive husband,
two too-chatty strangers, drugs, Russian cops and a very long train
ride — that’s a combo Alfred Hitchcock would be happy to call
his own. “Transsiberian” is a paranoid, chilling train trek that
borrows freely from the best Hitchcock pictures to give us that rare
adult summer thriller. Woody Harrelson is Roy, the rube hardware-store
owner from Iowa whose church has just finished a help-kids outreach in
China. Emily Mortimer is Jessie, his onetime “bad-girl” wife, a
photographer, a smoker and probably a little wilder than Roy can
handle. (Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel) 111 minutes

War flick parody. ** 1/2. R. The disaster-beset war flick within Ben
Stiller’s action comedy is not the only bungle in the jungle taking
place when five actors are stranded and believe the cameras are still
rolling. No, those aren’t extras. They’re a drug gang. Stiller
improbably stars as a has-been action hero Tugg Speedman. Jack Black
overplays Jeff Portnoy whose chief complaint is the lack of illicit
substances to abuse. As Aussie method actor Kirk Lazarus (who
underwent a procedure to make him appear African American), Robert
Downey Jr. seems to be working in a different, better movie. Stiller
and cowriters Justin Theroux and Etan Cohen had the makings of a wry
satire about the pampered insularity of Hollywood denizens. Instead
they settled for an above par parody movie with some sub-par gags
about disability. In spoofing war movies and their disconnect with
real combat, “Tropic Thunder” seems even more clueless. Thanks to
Downey and Tom Cruise, there are a few incandescently insane set-
pieces: Lazaruz argues racial authenticity with Alpa Chino, an African
American rapper-turned-actor. And Cruise’s performance is reminiscent
of his chilling turn in “Magnolia.” He’s nearly unrecognizable beneath
the balding-hairy guy get-up and yet… (Kennedy) 107 minutes

Romantic Travelogue. *** 1/2. PG-13. They are best friends and in
matters of the heart like night and day. And Woody Allen teases their
contrasts when he sends sensible Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and yearning
Cristina (Scarlett Johansson) to Barcelona for a summer where they
flirt with pleasure and minor disaster. Javier Bardem and
Penélope Cruz are vibrant as a painter and his volatile and
talented ex-wife. They are catalysts in the women’s deeper if
confounded appreciation of “Catalan Identity” (Vicky’s masters
thesis). Agile and warmly sexy, Allen’s romp is a study in how a place
and its denizens, familiar enough but distinctly different, upend what
one knows about oneself. Patricia Clarkson adds texture as Judy, who
along with her husband, puts the duo up for their adventure. An amused
Allen adds to his wry treatise on character contrasts — American
and Meditteranean, pragmatic and romantic — Vicky’s
fiancé arrives shirt tucked in his khakis, laptop at the ready.
(Kennedy) 97 minutes

Animated. ***. G. “Finding Nemo” director Andrew Stanton returns with
a vivid and rather dystopian fable set in the future. Little, curious
Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class aka WALL*E stacks garbage
skyscraper-high centuries after humans have departed for space. When
sleek probe EVE arrives in search of vegetation, the lonesome bot
falls, hard, then follows. On a cruise-style spaceship, hefty pampered
humans could use some shaking up. After a bleak start that might have
gotten sci-fi author Philip K. Dick’s seal of approval, “WALL*E” finds
its rousing, hopeful groove without ever sacrificing its far-from
artificial intelligence. (Kennedy) 97 minutes

Declawed comedy. *1/2. PG-13. The best intentions don’t always lead to
the best films. The long-awaited version of George Cukor’s 1939
classic (based on Claire Booth Luce’s Broadway hit) has a impressive
roster of stars: Meg Ryan, Annette Bening, Eva Mendes and Jada Pinkett
Smith flips the script dramatically. And Diane English, “Murphy Brown”
creator turned first-time film director, should be lauded for wanting
to rescue the original from its negative ideas about female
friendship. Here Ryan plays the morally upstanding Mary Haines, whose
husband has strayed. Bening is Sylvia, Mary’s frenemy is now her best
friend. Debra Messing and Smith fill out Mary’s clique of love. Eva
Mendes is the knockout perfume hawker who KOs the Haines marriage
(Joan Crawford did the damage in 1939). Original gossip girl Hedda
Hopper referred to “The Women” as “that feminine kennel.” And it was
the kind of bitchfest that has given drag queens yards of fabric to
work with. This version wields little razor-sharp repartee. Still, you
don’t have put it up against Cukor’s film to find it lacking.
Ironically, a television series beat English to the punchline. The
women of “Sex and the City” made this “Women” late to the party.
(Kennedy) 104 minutes