Movies

POSTED: Wednesday, May 15, 2013, 11:29 AM
Filed Under: Movies

Taking care of business: Miller Time "interns" travel across the country in support of the summer comedy, The Internship.

Times are tough for the movie business, so studios have been getting creative with how they promote their films. Moving beyond newspaper ads, TV spots and fast-food toys, the big film groups have been devising kooky tactics to grab our scattered attention: Facebook apps, crowdsourced screening locations, promotional web videos made by YouTube stars are all ways of reaching millennials, and we get that. But some of the latest marketing ploys to have reached our ears sound downright wacky (but they must be working if we're writing about them, right?).

Posted by Paulina Reso @ 11:29 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, April 16, 2013, 6:38 PM
Filed Under: Movies

From left: The TLA's founding members, Claire Brown Kohler, Eric Moore and Ray Murray

After 32 years in the movies business, Adapt or Die might as well be the TLA Entertainment Group's motto. What started as a repertory movie house on South Street in the '80s expanded into a thriving video rental chain that later went bust when Netflix and other video-on-demand businesses came along. But instead of keeling over, the TLA got a second life through its DVD distribution business and is still making some of the most obscure (and bizarre) cinema available to the masses. Despite the group's prominence, Eric Bresler, a former TLA employee who started his own film festival this year, felt it necessary to give the TLA its due. “The history of TLA isn’t recorded anywhere in detail, “just [in] broad strokes,” he said when we profiled Cinedelphia earlier this month.

And so on Monday night at the Philadelphia Mausoleum of Contemporary Art (an exhibition/film space run in part by Bresler), TLA's three founders – Ray Murray, Claire Brown Kohler and Eric Moore – gathered to give a quick and dirty history of the group, tossing around jokes and launching into wistful reminisces while speaking to the evolution of an industry now in turmoil.

Posted by Paulina Reso @ 6:38 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, March 26, 2013, 11:25 AM
Filed Under: Movies | Music

A short documentary on the Philly punk/DIY scene, house shows in particular, made by Temple film students Evan Lescallete and Luke Proctor. (Earlier I attributed the film to Kristine Trever-Weatherston. She's their film professor. Sorry about that.)


Posted by Patrick Rapa @ 11:25 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, December 19, 2012, 10:00 AM
Filed Under: Movies Movie Review
David Pevsner (L) and Ronnie Kroell as Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Past.

Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is an all-too-familiar story that has had its fair share of Hollywood adaptations. With Scrooge & Marley, debut directors Richard Knight Jr. and Peter Neville attempt to modernize the well-worn holiday tale by putting a gay spin on it, and at times they succeed.

“Ben” Scrooge (David Pevsner) is a grumpy, money-obsessed owner of a piano bar — one that he used to work at with friend “Jake” Marley (Tim Kazurinksy) and Fezziwig (Bruce Vilanch), portrayed here as a wild, coke-sniffing club owner. Speaking of things you inhale into your brain, Scrooge is taken into the past by huffing poppers (sigh). There he is shown painful moments from his young adulthood, like when he and his partner are caught by his father, who immediately disowns him. This subplot adds a fresh perspective on Scrooge’s disdain toward family, whereas scenes from the present and future don’t shed any new light on the old story, trying instead to use humor as a crutch.

Other than a few chuckle-worthy moments, the film’s jokes are weighed down by obvious puns — donning “gay” apparel is a recurring one — and the song numbers seem to be forced fillers. But despite the amateur filmmaking and occasional eye-rolling punch lines, the basic sentiment from Dickens’ classic remains intact. Thanks to the scenes from Scrooge’s past and the strong source material, the climax — though expected — is still a festive and tender one.

(catherine.haas@citypaper.net) (@kittycatzzz)

Posted by Catherine Haas @ 10:00 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, December 18, 2012, 11:59 AM
Filed Under: Movies

These days, the holidays seem to be more shoved-down-your-throat than a peaceful, jolly time. What with the same list of sappy songs playing ad nauseam (if we hear Mariah Carey screeching about what she wants for Christmas one more time … ), the blow-up Santas lining suburban driveways and the stream of 24-hour Christmas-movie marathons, these festive times inevitably start to lose their charm. To keep the spirit going without making you want to hang yourself with a strand of Christmas lights, we’ve put together this list of the best non-holiday holiday films.

Posted by Catherine Haas @ 11:59 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, December 11, 2012, 4:08 PM
Filed Under: Movies | Now See This trailer!

Have you seen the trailer for M. Night Shyamalan's After Earth? The sci-fi flick, slated to come out June 7, stars Will Smith and his mini-me Jaden as a space general and his son who take the spaceship out for a father-son outing and crash-land on a post-apocalyptic Earth.

Looks pretty cool if you can get past the Smith-family overload. I just keep waiting for little Willow to pop out of a bush and whip her hair back and forth or something. 

Posted by Josh Middleton @ 4:08 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, November 28, 2012, 10:00 AM
Filed Under: Movies

As the rabid turnout for Exhumed Films’ annual 24-Hour Horrorthon exemplifies, nostalgia plays a huge role in horror fanatics’ adoration of even the dreckiest films from their younger days. In her new book, House of Psychotic Women, film programmer and journalist Kier-La Janisse explores the idea of female neurosis in horror films through an autobiographical look at her own fright-flick-obsessed youth. The title comes from a 1973 Spanish film starring unlikely horror idol Paul Naschy as a drifter who dreams of strangling women (the film is also known as Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll – if only Euro-sleaze filmmakers were as adept at pacing and coherent storytelling as they were at devising baroque titles). Exhumed’s Joseph A. Gervasi will present an evening with both Houses, featuring a screening of an uncut video print with an introduction and discussion by Janisse.

Wed., Nov. 28, 8 p.m., $8, PhilaMOCA, 531 N. 12th St., www.philamoca.org.

(@shaundbrady)

Posted by Shaun Brady @ 10:00 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, November 27, 2012, 10:00 AM
Filed Under: Movies
I'll be the first to admit I’m a total movie snob. I mean, it’s a rare breed that devotes its spare time to watching Jacques Tati movies and salivating over new Criterion releases. What’s tougher to admit, though, is the fact that my boyfriend is so not one of those people. Maybe I should have screened him better before I went and got all emotionally attached and sentimental. That’s why I’m here today, to provide my fellow film buffs a movies-they-must-have-seen test to use when dating so they can avoid having to sit through another Fast & Furious marathon (hopefully few can relate to this example). If the guy or girl hasn’t seen at least three of the following flicks, pay that check and run in the other direction!

 
Citizen Kane: This one is a biggie, especially since most of today's filmmakers cut their reel teeth on the techniques Orson Welles pioneered in Kane. To the average viewer, it may not seem like a huge deal—but deep focus, narrative complexity and even aging effects (to name a few) were revolutionary at the time. Regardless of whether or not you think it deserves the “Best Film of All Time” stamp, the film’s ingenuity is undeniable, and if your partner wants to learn about film, they might as well start with this classic groundbreaker.
 
 
The Thin Red Line: Out of Malick’s small repertoire of films, this one really showcases the director's fully bloomed style, without bordering on self-parody like some of his later flicks. After making Days of Heaven in 1978, Malick moved to Paris to teach before coming back 20 years later to make what has become one of the greatest war films. Thin Red is not only gorgeous and filled with a million mind-blowing revelations (thank you, Jim Caviezel’s voiceover), but it also features one wildly diverse cast — everyone from John C. Reilly to Nick Nolte to Jared Leto.
 
 
Blue Velvet: David Lynch has an incredible ability to create a outrageously disturbing aesthetic that truly affects viewers, even if it’s in a negative way. After seeing Blue Velvet for the first as a teen I spent three days in an uncomfortable haze of distress, which, funny enough, is one of the reasons I love it so much — that and the fact that within Lynch’s bizarre and almost-campy world, there’s also such cinematic beauty thanks to his attention to detail, unusual camerawork and the striking color pallet. If that's not enough to convince you, consider Dennis Hopper’s insane performance. That definitely pushes this movie into the “must-watch” category.
 
 
Philadelphia Story: I fear that the great comedies of the past are becoming obsolete as we cascade into a bizarre and unfortunate Hangover generation. Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant, and Katharine Hepburn in one ridiculous and powerful romantic comedy? AND it’s set in Philadelphia? Come on! The acting is spot on (Stewart may give the greatest “drunk” performance of all-time) and the dialogue is so witty that you can’t help but yearn to go back to a time when people talked like that.
 
 
Psycho: This may be the most important one of all — and not just because it’s my personal favorite or that I think it's one of Hitchcock's best. What’s remarkable about this movie is that it transcends its own clichéd moments (shower scene!), and still manages to be beautiful, provoking and creepy today. If your significant other is unfamiliar with “the master of suspense” this is a great way to introduce them—and hey, it’ll prep them for the upcoming biopic Hitchcock, which focuses on the making of Psycho. Check out Shaun Brady's review in this Thursday's paper.
 
 
Posted by Catherine Haas @ 10:00 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, November 15, 2012, 10:00 AM
Filed Under: Movies screening

In 1985, the Tiberino family of Poweltown Village filmed The Mural, a noisy, lively look at Philly’s Beat generation of contemporary artists, poets and musicians who hung out at Joseph and Ellen Tiberino’s Bachanal bar. Along with The Mural being a giddy tour guide to the then-battered area, the grainy black-and-white film examines Joseph’s legendary painting The Liberation of Women, and delves into the mythology surrounding the Tiberino clan. Twenty-five years later, that family started filming Tiberino, an autobiographical mockumentary that finds their patriarch searching for an allegorical pot of gold at the end of an imaginary rainbow. Tonight, the Troc will screen the former in hopes to raise funds to finish the latter.

TONIGHT, Thu., Nov. 15, 8 p.m., $10, The Trocadero, 1003 Arch St., 215-922-6888, troc.com.

Posted by A.D. Amorosi @ 10:00 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, November 9, 2012, 10:27 AM
Filed Under: Movies | Now See This

Philadelphia (sometimes potrayed by Glasgow) is ground zero for a total zom dot com situation. Looks pretty great. And sounds like Inception.


Posted by Patrick Rapa @ 10:27 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
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About this blog
Featuring everything from event roundups to concert reviews and sex talk, City Paper's Critical Mass is a space for off-the-wall coverage of Philly's A&E scene.

Follow Critical Mass editors Patrick Rapa and Emily Guendelsberger on Twitter:

@mission2denmark | @emilygee

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