24 Oct, 2008
Posted by: admin In: Reviews

I know it’s been a while since I’ve written something here, but I think it’s time I resumed. In the mean time, however I didn’t stop doing what I like most - watching movies. Today I saw a movie called THX 1138. A strange, but really good film. Here is the synopsis: In George Lucas’s fascinating debut feature (based on his short student film), the filmmaking wunderkind creates a futuristic, underground world in which bald, drone-like workers are forced to take drugs to regulate their moods and stifle their libidos. THX 1138 (Robert Duvall) and his mate LUH 3417 (Maggie McOmie) are factory workers, building the robotic police that keep order in their stark world. The soundtrack to their lives is a news service that continually lists information about factory accidents, as well as sex and drug crimes, à la George Orwell’s 1984. There are electronic confessionals where workers admit to mistakes they’ve made, outlets THX uses to express his unhappiness with his life. When LUH decides she and THX should stop taking their medication, their sense of humanity–and their desire and love for each other as a couple–is unleashed. It’s not long, however, before they are imprisoned for this crime, and LUH learns that she is pregnant. Separated from LUH, THX embarks on a journey to find her, with the help of rebel SEN (Donald Pleasence) and hologram SRT (Don Pedro Colley), eventually attempting escape to the outside world. Combining complex editing and sound techniques with brilliantly subtle performances, THX 1138 is Lucas’s less widely regarded vision of life in outer space, though it stands firmly as an awe-inspiring sci-fi spectacle. The film is also eerily prophetic, depicting a world in which television screens are bombarded with sensationalistic news, sexually explicit films, and vapid comedy shows.

I enjoyed the film a lot and if you’re into strange SF movies, you will too.
09 May, 2008
Posted by: admin In: news
Filed under: Family Films, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Trailers and Clips
If you’re still trying to decide whether you want to go to see Speed Racer tonight, maybe this will help your decision. Yahoo has posted the first seven minutes of the film, which you can check out above. Man, if car races looked half that cool, I’d be a total fan.
I know, some of you aren’t getting the whole appeal of this flick, and frankly, I’ve never been interested in the story until this movie. There’s just something about a real-life cartoon that looks all sorts of cool. (I’ve always wondered what a cartoon-turned-live action film would look like if it was created in a more cartoonish manner.) And major props for making the theme song front and center. I remember how ticked I was when I left during the credits of Spider-Man and missed the theme song I had waited the whole [...]
Original post by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Drama, Sony Classics, Interviews
When David Mamet’s Redbelt was announced, the initial simple summary seemed bizarrely incongruous: A noted playwright and dramatist making a film about martial arts? But while Redbelt involves the worlds of Jiu-jitsu and mixed martial arts, it’s really just another way for playwright, screenwriter and director Mamet to look at the world. As martial arts instructor Mike Terry (played by Chiwetel Ejiofor) is taken from his noble (but underfunded) studio and plunged into the greed and glitz of Hollywood and commercial fighting.
As Mike tries to hang on to the things that matter to him in a world that dismisses honor as unprofitable, Mamet’s script and direction create a film that somehow puts a philosophical twist on traditional fight films while also embodying everything we love about them. Cinematical spoke with Mamet and Ejiofor in Los Angeles.
Continue reading Redbelt Interviews: David Mamet and Chiwetel [...]
Original post by James Rocchi
Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Scripts
There’s a really neat-sounding small-scale sci-fi project in development at Overture Films called Pandorum. But for the news that Paul W.S. Anderson is involved, I’d be really excited. Pandorum will be about two spaceship crewmen who wake up on their ship with no idea who they are or what they’re supposed to be doing. Soon, they “make a discovery that threatens the survival of mankind.”
Anderson didn’t write and won’t be directing the film — those tasks both fall to relative unknowns — but he is reteaming with his Resident Evil cohorts to produce it. He’s not exactly on my must list these days, since the Resident Evil franchise has pretty much died under his supervision and AvP isn’t exactly a venerable addition to the list of ongoing big-name series. Pandorum’s premise sounds cool, but then so did Event Horizon’s until you actually learned what [...]
Original post by Eugene Novikov
Filed under: Classics, Drama, Horror, Independent, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Thrillers, Deals, Celebrities and Controversy, Newsstand
It sounds like a prank. We would all like it to be one. But it seems to be legit.
The story comes from Screen Daily, who reports that S. Darko is being shopped around, with Fox already picking up the North American distribution rights. Touted as the sequel to the 2001 cult hit, the story picks up seven years after Donnie Darko left off. The youngest Darko, Samantha, is now 18 and abandoning her commitment to Sparkle Motion. She heads to Las Vegas with her best friend Corey, but the two are plagued with bizarre visions. I imagine they will involve a rabbit.
Richard Kelly, the original director, is in no way involved. Chris Fincher will direct instead. Daviegh Chase, who played Samantha in the original, will reprise her role. It looks like she is the only [...]
Original post by Elisabeth Rappe
09 May, 2008
Posted by: admin In: news
Filed under: Comedy, Romance, Theatrical Reviews, 20th Century Fox
Here’s where I get confused: If you knew a pair of people like the characters played by Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher in the new feature-length sitcom pilot What Happens in Vegas, you’d probably hate them. Undoubtedly, in real life, you’d want to punch / mock / immediately walk away from people so outrageously stupid, selfish, and insufferable. So here’s my question: Why would you actually PAY for the experience of meeting two such woeful and worthless people? It’s not like there’s much upside for you…
Pre-packaged movie star detritus of the most inane order, What Happens in Vegas offers an I Love Lucy premise, an Odd Couple leading duo, and a Three’s Company screenplay. (I mean, like, season five Three’s Company, when you could spot the flaccid punch-lines the split-second the set-up is delivered.) It’s not like I went in gunning for [...]
Original post by Scott Weinberg
09 May, 2008
Posted by: admin In: news
Filed under: Classics, Documentary, Foreign Language, Horror, Independent, Columns, Cinematical Indie, The (Mostly) Indie Film Calendar
Welcome to another nutritious edition of The (Mostly) Indie Film Calendar, a weekly roundup of what’s happening beyond the multiplexes in this great land of ours. If you know of something cool going on where you live — a small film festival, retrospective, midnight movies, etc. — let me know! You can find me at Eric.Snider (at) Weblogsinc (dot) com.
INDIE THEATRICAL RELEASES
Frontiere(s) is a French horror flick whose history is almost as torturous as its content. It was supposed to be part of the After Dark series last fall, but its NC-17 rating made that impossible due to the contract that the After Dark people had with the theatrical venues. So now it’s basically going straight to DVD — but first it’s being deposited in a handful of theaters today in New York, L.A., Denver, [...]
Original post by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: New Releases, Movie Marketing, Cinematical Seven, Columns
Whether or not shows like Aqua Teen Hunger Force or The Simpsons succeeded in translating their television dynamics to the big screen depends on your point of view, but the release of Speed Racer this weekend raises a more specific question about the viability of turning an animated series into a live action spectacle on the big screen. The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Underdog both suggest how this goal can go wrong — namely, by imploding on its absurd conceits. You may disagree with the inclusion of some of the following titles, all of which culled their material from animation, but it’s fair to say that each of them takes its subject matter at face value, allowing the natural ingredients of the original sources to remain intact. Well, maybe not Super Mario Bros., but that one is a special case [...]
Original post by Eric Kohn
Filed under: RumorMonger, Newsstand, Politics
I think it’s kind of funny that in Eugene’s post about T4’s start date, he says: “barring some Terry Gilliam-scale disaster.” I wonder if the disaster could be a long and arduous SAG strike? The New Zealand Herald (Reuters) pointed out today that the production is moving on despite the distinct possibility that the movie industry could get hit with another strike very soon.
Right now, the SAG contract expires on June 30, which could very easily become the start of another strike. (Union leaders say they hope to reach an agreement, and of course they do — but that doesn’t mean they’ll get one.) Nevertheless, Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins has started filming in New Mexico this week, throwing caution to the wind.
But this doesn’t mean they’ll speed through it. A source told Reuters there is no intention to finish production by June 30, and [...]
Original post by Monika Bartyzel
08 May, 2008
Posted by: admin In: news
Filed under: Action, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Remakes and Sequels
He’s one of pop culture’s most beloved outer space adventurers, but we sure haven’t seen a lot of good ol’ Buck Rogers lately. (Then again, Flash Gordon’s most recent incarnation was pretty awful, so maybe that’s a good thing.) Born in 1928 from the pen of Mr. Philip Nowlan, Buck Rogers was a pilot / astronaut who fell into a five-century coma, only to awaken to find the world all futurized and stuff: robots, laser guns, spaceships, interstellar wars, all that jazz.
On screens of various size, the character has appeared in a 12-part 1939 serial from Universal Pictures, a short-lived 1950 television series, and (of course) a 1979 movie / TV program that starred Gil Gerard and (sigh) Erin Gray. So the big guy is heading back to the cinemas? Yep. According to IGN Movies, it’s Avi Lerner’s Millennium Films that [...]
Original post by Scott Weinberg