Posts Tagged ‘secret life of bees’

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 movie’s festival valley mill

October 1, 2008

It can’t be a coincidence that this year’s Mill Valley Film Festival
will open and close with movies focusing on race, politics and
religion – the timeliest of topics during this fevered presidential
campaign season.

The festival, whose program was announced Tuesday, pulls no punches
with its opening-night films: “Religulous” is a comic documentary with
Bill Maher that casts a critical eye on organized religion, and “The
Secret Life of Bees,” based on Sue Monk Kidd’s best-selling novel,
tells of a troubled young white girl who finds refuge with three
Southern black sisters in the early ’60s.

“The Mill Valley Film Festival is unique in the sense that we premiere
two opening films, which means more choices for our audiences,” said
Mark Fishkin, the festival’s executive director. Fishkin said that
“Religulous” director Larry Charles and “Bees” star Dakota Fanning
will attend the screenings.

Running Oct. 2 to 12 at three main venues in Marin County, the
festival offers more than 200 films from around the world – though
festival programmers note that this year is particularly strong in
entries from Asia, Ireland, Poland and South Africa.

As always, Mill Valley has an impressive lineup of tributes. Writer-
director Paul Schrader, actresses Alfre Woodard, Harriet Anderssen and
Sally Hawkins and screenwriter Eric Roth will be honored this year,
and will attend the festival for onstage interviews and conversations.

Schrader’s latest, “Adam Resurrected,” a Holocaust drama starring Jeff
Goldblum and Willem Dafoe, will be screened at the filmmaker’s
tribute. Anderssen is noted for her work with Ingmar Bergman, and her
tribute will include the director’s intense 1961 drama “Through a
Glass Darkly.” Hawkins (“Cassandra’s Dream”) won the top acting award
at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival for her work in Mike
Leigh’s “Happy-Go-Lucky,” which will be shown at her tribute.

Closing night also delivers two features: Tim Disney’s “American
Violet,” starring Woodard and based on the Texas case of a white
district attorney accused of racism in the arrest of a black woman;
and Israeli director Eran Riklis’ “Lemon Tree,” a drama set on the
Palestinian border.

In connection with the Anderssen tribute, a multimedia installation
will be on view at the Rafael Film Center, featuring a tree-shaped
sculpture that projects videos of scenes from Bergman’s films and
interviews with the director.

Among the festival’s “Valley of the Docs” offerings will be Brazilian
filmmaker Denise Zmekhol’s “Children of the Amazon,” about
deforestation in indigenous Amazonian lands. Attending the screening
will be Elenira Mendes, daughter of the slain environmental activist
Chico Mendes.

New at Mill Valley this year is the Active Cinema program, which
allows audiences to hook up with the causes espoused in many of the
festival’s offerings. For example, there will be a tree-planting
event, co-sponsored with Friends of the Urban Forest and Goodscapes,
on Oct. 4.

The festival presents live musical performances at the 142
Throckmorton Theatre in connection with several movies, including “The
Wrecking Crew,” the latter about a group of 1960s studio musicians who
worked on some of the era’s biggest hits.

Other notable events: The festival’s 14th annual Children’s
FilmFestruns Oct. 4 to 11; director Joe Wright (“Atonement”) will
offer a master class Oct. 4; and, in a “post-festival presentation”
Nov. 18 at San Francisco’s Castro Theatre, Tony Curtis gets a tribute.

Mill Valley Film Festival: Oct. 2-12 at the Sequoia Theater and 142
Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley and the Smith Rafael Film Center
in San Rafael. Tickets $10-$12.50, on sale Sept. 19. (877) 874-6833 or
.

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licorice a day, plant manager John Nelson is betting that…

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.

Valley raymond napa in religulous movie

October 1, 2008

Saint Helena, Napa Valley, CA, September 30, 2008 –()– Raymond
Vineyards Napa Valley Reserve Chardonnay and Napa Valley Reserve
Cabernet Sauvignon will be featured on opening night at this
year’s Mill Valley Film Festival. The Festival gets underway on
October 2nd with Larry Charles’ documentary, Religulous, and
Gina Prince-Bythewood’s star-studded coming-of-age tale, The
Secret Life of Bees, followed by an Opening Night Gala at the Mill
Valley Community Center.This is the second year Raymond Vineyards has
sponsored the Mill Valley Film Festival. In 2007, Raymond wines were
poured at the US premiere of Into The Wild and the Opening Night Gala
festivities. This year, Raymond wines will be poured at a private
party during the Festival as well as the Opening Night Gala. Raymond
is also the film sponsor of The Amazing Osamu Tezuka, a collection of
the late artist’s non-anime work along with a restored episode
of the American TV version of Astro Boy. Hailed as the “god of
manga [the comic book],” Osamu Tezuka’s, Astro Boy
character will live on in a new movie being released in 2009. The film
screens on October 4th and 5th.The 31st Mill Valley Film Festival runs
October 2-12. Please visit their website at http://www.mvff.com for
additional information on the festival and the California Film
Institute.About Raymond VineyardsRaymond Vineyards was founded in 1971
by Roy Sr., Roy Jr. and Walter Raymond. The Raymond family’s
roots in the Napa Valley date back to 1876, when Jacob and Frederick
Beringer founded Beringer Brothers Winery. Five generations later,
Craig and Krisi Raymond have joined the family business to continue
the family’s winemaking legacy at Raymond Vineyards.Raymond
produces Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot and
Sauvignon Blanc as well as limited production Cabernet Sauvignons from
the Rutherford, St. Helena and Oakville appellations and Generations
Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. A limited production Small Lot series
of wines were introduced in 2008 and available exclusively to the
winery’s club members and tasting room guests.Raymond
Vineyards849 Zinfandel LaneSt. Helena, CA
94574800-525-2659www.raymondvineyards.com###

The religulous movie oct valley throckmorton

October 1, 2008

Call this the unofficial “Year of the Woman” at the Mill Valley Film
Festival, opening Oct. 2 and closing Oct. 12.
“We have a spectacular group of stars who just happen to be women,”
says Zoe Elton, the festival’s director of programming.

On opening night, 14-year-old star Dakota Fanning adds glamour to the
screening of “The Secret Life of Bees,” an adaptation of the novel by
Sue Monk Kidd in which she stars with Queen Latifah. Director Gina
Prince-Bythewood talks about the making of the movie after the
screening.

British actress Sally Hawkins, who stars in Mike Leigh’s new film
“Happy-Go-Lucky,” a festival selection, gets the annual Spotlight
Award on Oct. 10.

Swedish actress Harriet Andersson, an Ingmar Bergman movie icon, gets
well-deserved recognition for her remarkable career with an Oct. 10
tribute that includes an on-stage interview and screening of the 1961
Bergman classic “Through a Glass Darkly.”

The festival wraps on Oct. 12 with a salute to Academy Award nominee
Alfre Woodard, who stars in the closing night movie, “American
Violet,” playing a courageous African-American housing project mother
fighting racism in a small Texas town.

A showcase for independent films considered one of the premiere
noncompetitive film festivals in the country, the festival features
214 films from 44 countries, including 27 world, North American or
West Coast premieres.

“Wendy and Lucy” – Michelle Williams in a heartbreaking performance in
this new indie by “Old Joy” director Kelly Reichardt.

“Happy-Go-Lucky” – The latest from British director and festival
stalwart Mike Leigh, starring Sally Hawkins as the happiest person in
London.

“Adam Resurrected” – Director Paul Schrader recreates Horam Kaniuk’s
powerful novel set in an Israeli rehabilitation camp for Holocaust
survivors.

“Lemon Tree” – Two women face off in a conflict over a lemon grove
bordering the West Bank and Israel.

“Archeology of Memory” – Chilean musician Quique Cruz revisits his
former homeland where he was imprisoned under the Pinochet regime.

“Call it Home: Searching for Truth on Bolinas Lagoon” – West Marin’s
decade-long debate over its beautiful and fragile body of water.

“Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story” – Dirty licks and dirty tricks
from the Republican’s musical bad boy.

“The Wrecking Crew” – Documentary on legendary coterie of hotshot Los
Angeles studio musicians precedes a concert featuring some of those
ace session men with Monkee Peter Tork and Beach Boy Al Jardine at 142
Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley. Oct. 6.

“Last Days of the Fillmore” – Clips from the 1972 concert film,
followed by a concert at 142 Throckmorton with the Grateful Dead’s Bob
Weir, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek, Elvin Bishop, Dan Hicks, Rob
Wasserman, Lydia Pense of Cold Blood and the house band Moonalice.
Oct. 3.

“Hi De Ho Show” – Village Music’s John Goddard returns with music
videos on the theme: “All I ever learned I learned from television.”
Oct. 4 at Sequoia Theatre.

Where: Various venues around Marin County including the Christopher B.
Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael; CineArts
Sequoia Theatre, 25 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley; 142 Throckmorton
Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley

After screenings of comedy-documentary “Religulous” (at the Rafael)
and the coming-of-age tale “The Secret Life of Bees” (at the Sequoia),
invited guests Dakota Fanning, Larry Charles, Gina Prince-Bythewood
and others will convene at the Mill Valley Community Center for food,
wine and live music by the Stompy Jones swingin’ sextet.

An overview of the British actor’s career, which includes the new
“Happy-Go-Lucky,” will be followed by a reception at the Frantoio
Ristorante.

After a 5 p.m. screening of “American Violet” and a tribute to Alfie
Woodard (at the Rafael) and a 5:45 p.m. screening of “Lemon Tree” (at
the Sequoia), filmgoers can enjoy the closing party and Hornblower
yacht cruise on San Francisco Bay.