Movies

POSTED: Monday, January 3, 2011, 3:45 PM
Filed Under: In Memoriam | Movies
Postlethwaite in The Town
Just heard via Film Junk that British actor Pete Postlethwaite died yesterday due to complications from a long battle with cancer. He was 64. According to FJ, Postlethwaite didn't let his treatments slow him down from working:
[Postlethwaite] put in some memorable performances this year in The Town, Inception and Clash of the Titans. Spielberg supposedly referred to him as the "best actor in the world" at one point after working with him on The Lost World: Jurassic Park and Amistad. ... He still has one more upcoming role in a movie called Killing Bono that is still to be released in 2011.
Personally, I remember him best as Father Laurence in Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet. Here's a clip, to take you back to 1996 for a minute.
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 3:45 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, December 24, 2010, 4:00 PM
Filed Under: Movies trailer!
Merry Christmas Eve, celebrators of Christian holidays! On this momentous day-before-the-big-day, we'd like to take a second from your holiday-glee fest to bring you the trailer for Hanna, set to come out in Philly on April 8, 2011. Saoirse Ronan (The Lovely Bones), in the title role, plays a Jungle Book-meets-Salt-style mini-warrior who throws the feds (Cate Blanchett!) off her dad's (Eric Bana!) trail by acting all sweet and innocent and then killing the shit out of everybody. Behold:
Now go drink some egg nog.
Brion
Posted 2010-12-24 11:39:16
Original Score by The Chemical Brothers!
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 4:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, December 17, 2010, 6:30 PM
Filed Under: Interview | Movies
Andrew Jarecki, director/writer/producer of All Good Things
Writer/director/producer Andrew Jarecki's All Good Things provides an absorbing theory about the Robert Durst cases — the 1982 disappearance of his wife, and two subsequent deaths 20 years later. For All Good Things, the names have been changed — Durst becomes Robert Marks here — to protect the possibly guilty. After helming the spellbinding documentary Capturing the Friedmans and producing Catfish this summer, Jarecki makes his first foray into fiction film with All Good Things (reviewed here). We spoke with the City Paper about the recurring themes of his work — true crime and family. City Paper: What fascinates you about true crime, particularly stories where guilt is suspected by never quite proven? Andrew Jarecki: I never ever thought, I'm interested in a particular genre. It's more that I hear an interesting story, and I take more of an interest in it. As I get closer to it, I start to realize it's similar to other things that I've done. I always think that I stumble into that situation and notice connections. But it's more like sleepwalking than a plan. I do try to listen to my intuition about things. If something interests me, I keep asking questions about it. I like things that are hidden. I think that when people hide things they're usually showing much more of themselves in the hiding than if they never hidden the thing to begin with. CP: Do you identify with the people/characters/families you present on screen? AJ: My family is unbelievably complicated, and I guess that's what probably makes them like all families. CP: How is your family complicated? AJ: They are a bundle of fantastic contradictions. A lot of my family members have alternative lifestyles and ways they do things and they criticize other family members who have other alternative lifestyles that are just as weird. The good thing about my family — and maybe it's liberating — is that my father is very good about talking about these things. There's nothing he won't discuss; he doesn't get offended. Our family doesn't mind a certain kind of self-analysis, so I became an in-house therapist for a lot of people that are in my life. I guess I look at families from that perspective. How families operate interest me, and how people set responsibilities. What do we owe each other for being born in the same house? I know brothers and sisters who hate each other — it's like the proximity of it that makes them go after each other. I love all the dividing lines and society rules. You're not supposed to have sex with your relatives, but millions of Americans do it. You're supposed to honor your brother and sister, but millions of Americans talk trash behind their back. These are rules we ignore. CP: All Good Things and Capturing the Friedmans are both, in their way, about sins of the father. You have two young sons. What messages are you passing along to them in your work? AJ: I sometimes think when I'm with my kids: What are the things I'm doing now that they will be made at me for later, and how do I avoid them? I know that my father did things when I was growing up — he created some impediments for me. They were his job to create, part of the trials and tribulations you have growing up so you get tough and adaptable. Being with my dad is like swinging with two bats. Sometimes he makes things difficult, or your can understand that's what a father will do. Like animals do — they fight internally so the young bucks become stronger and avoid trouble. In this film, the father behaves less like a father. The narcissism of this very powerful man ... his advice is meant to be taken as instruction. He doesn't think he is doing anything destructive.
CP: Katie (Kirsten Dunst) has a line in All Good Things where she says, "I've never been closer to anyone, but I don't know you at all." This could be used as the key to all of your films — where the characters think they know someone but don't have a clue. Why is that a running theme through your work? AJ: That's issue of identity is really important to me — that there is still privacy in an individual. If you're with someone and sleeping with them and you're having children—or not—with them, you are still independent and have secrets. I use that when I'm directing. I often will make an adjustment in a scene by going to one actor, and making an adjustment, and not go to the other at all. I think that that can have a really interesting impact. You're telling a secret to one actor, and it becomes like that game where one person knows something and the other has to guess. That's really how human beings operate with each other. If you try to do a business deal, or want to buy a house — almost every human interaction, whether it's a love relationship or a business deal — and in the Marks family, they are not totally unrelated — you don't have all the information. CP: How much do you think class was a factor in what transpired? AJ: I think that the fact that the case was never understood, analyzed or solved has a lot to do with the privilege of class. I think that was the case back in 1982 when [Katie] disappeared. When you have an enormously wealthy or powerful suspect or later defendant, there is a kind of conspiracy without a conspiracy. If you can't be sure to get a conviction on a regular person, but you think that there's a good chance that they killed someone, you send them through the machine. Because you think there is a pretty good chance to get a circumstantial conviction and send the person to jail. If you only have circumstantial evidence, let's say you don't have a body — and they didn't — I think there is often the phone call that comes from the mayor's office to the chief of police that says, "I would never tell you not to pursue a murder suspect, if you feel like this guy killed his wife, I say hang 'em high, but if you're not sure you can get a conviction, we'd be doing a lot of damage here to a very important constituent. I'd never tell you not to do the work, but be sure you're right." But if you have a murder with no body, you're never sure you're right. Who's going to take that challenge? In Galveston, the judge sees that the defendant is a person of unlimited resources. The judge is going to spend a lot of time protecting the record so they can't get overturned. When you are in Galveston and get a case with a high profile, you know for sure there's going to be an appeal, you let them do almost anything they want in court — like put the witness on the stand for two days and talk about tons of things that have nothing to do with the case. A poor defendant would never have that opportunity. CP: Can you comment on the Durst lawsuit? The family wanted the film stopped... AJ: Robert is a completely different animal from his family. His family is adamantly opposed to the film because the film doesn't work for their purposes, but he is adamantly opposed to his family. It was never his intention to sue us. He just wanted to see what he thought about the film for his own purposes. The Durst family wanting to sue us was a whole different thing, because they wanted to prevent us from shooting the movie. I don't think they were successful, but they certainly worked hard to keep the movie out of the public eye. It worked for a period of time.
Posted by Gary M. Kramer @ 6:30 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, December 13, 2010, 7:52 PM
Filed Under: Movies | Now See This
Posted by Patrick Rapa @ 7:52 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, December 9, 2010, 5:00 PM
Filed Under: Movies trailer!
Guess which one's the alien!
The trailer for the ridiculous-looking I Am Number Four (Feb. 18, 2011), based on a sci-fi book co-written by expert maker-upper James Frey and directed by Disturbia's D.J. Caruso, just dropped so we thought we'd share it with y'all. It's a story about a handsome young human-looking alien (Alex Pettyfer, who was born in 1990! We're old) who's being hunted down by some evil dudes from his home planet, so he hides in the Midwest and falls in love with Quinn from Glee (Dianna Argon, born in a more reasonable 1986). We're not sure what Timothy Olyphant has to do with anything, but he's in it, too.
W.R.Printz
Posted 2010-12-10 05:56:19
Timothy Olyphant plays the "mentor" role, who trains the hero. It's worth it to read the book this is based on, btw. Solid read.
Anna
Posted 2010-12-22 15:47:46
Fun interview with Teresa Palmer from 'I am Number 4' here. So looking forward to seeing this!! http://bit.ly/dFb08t
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 5:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, December 3, 2010, 9:00 PM
Filed Under: Movies | Music | screening | Philly Bands Show
Elaine Watts (right) with her daughter Susan Watts.
A movie about a life in music. A month in advance of the film's debut Facebook was buzzing with the Klezmer community reaching out from Texas and beyond urge friends to show some love for Elaine Watts and the film about her pioneering percussion life, Eatala: A Life in Klezmer. Debora Kodish, founder of The Philadelphia Folklore Project which produced the film, was touched to hear that Watts is getting the wide recognition she deserves. Clearly PFP believes in her. "We've spent three and a half years on this project and the film is only 36 minutes long!" The PFP was diligent in conducting interview with people whose life Watts has touched. The film includes footage of Gerry Brown, former student, famed jazz drummer who credits everything to her. Gospel music and opera endorsements are also part of this film, along with footage of a Watts in concert with contemporary Klezmer luminaries like Hankus Netsky and Henry Sapoznik. PFP also dug deep in research, "We even have a picture of the boat her family sailed on to this country." Watts is renowned for being the first woman to graduate Curtis with a degree in percussion. She is also the daughter of legendary Klezmer (Jewish secular celebratory music) band leader, Jacob Hoffman. Hard as it was for Watts to break the gender barrier to work as a drummer in popular music, she will tell you that the only way she ever worked Klezmer back in the day was when he dad hired her. Eatala is her dad's pet name for her and she was certainly daddy's little drummer, stumbling blocks be damned, To this day, in her 70s, she continues to make his memory proud. Clearly 36 minutes does not an evening's entertainment make, it's more like an appetizer. Watts will perform along with her daughter trumpeter Susan Watts, herself another contemporary Klezmer star, as well as West Philly's pride, Daniel Blacksberg on trombone, Jay Krush playing tuba and all-around go-to accordionist Katt Flagg. Music and dance and latkes provided by Betty the Caterer — what's not to like? Sat., Dec. 4, 7:30 p.m., $10-$30, Crossroads Concert, Calvary Center, 4740 Baltimore Ave., 215-729-1028, crossroadsconcerts.org. Watch some concert footage and a video postcard for the film here.
Posted by mary armstrong @ 9:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, November 2, 2010, 5:00 PM
Filed Under: DVD | Movies | Music
A new film remembers the man who sang "Everybody's Talkin.'" Some of us weren't too scandalized by Cee Lo's "Fuck You" this summer; almost 40 years ago, Harry Nilsson's "You're Breaking My Heart" had the same obscene two-word refrain. Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talkin' About Him)? (Lorber Films) observes the many ironies of the life and career of Nilsson (1941-1994) — including that the singer-songwriter neither wrote his best-known vocal (the Midnight Cowboy theme "Everybody's Talkin'") nor sang his best-known composition ("One," made immortal by Three Dog Night). Nilsson, an ex-bank clerk, wound up close friends with Monty Python and The Beatles; John and Paul called him their favorite performer, and Nilsson accompanied John during his "lost weekend." Through interviews with his wives and grown children and an army of celebrities (including Jimmy Webb, Van Dyke Parks and Robin Williams), writer/director John Scheinfeld details how Nilsson derailed his performing career through heavy drinking, only to find late-in-life bliss as a family man in his last marriage.
Posted by Admin @ 5:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, October 28, 2010, 3:06 PM
Filed Under: Movies
But will he get his coffee at Old City or Double Shots??
Thanks to celeb eagle eye/CP photog Neal Santos, we got early word this morning that Jason Statham — of Snatch/Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels/general sexiness fame — is filming a movie (2011's Safe) below CP headquarters at Second and Chestnut. (Specifically, he seems to be filming in the old Cebu, as evidenced by the "Hot Set" sign by the door in our lobby. I'll say.) As Cinema Blend reported in May, Safe is somewhat of a departure for the generally ass-kicking Statham, since it's directed by Boaz Yakin (Uptown Girls, Remember the Titans). Maybe another member of the Clueless cast will be in this one?!? Don't try to drive down here, since there are about eight grillion support vehicles parked on our tiny cobblestone streets, but take a walk and you might just run into someone hot and British.
Rachel
Posted 2010-10-28 20:52:00
You're forgetting that Boaz directed Fresh and a Price Above Rubies- both worth watching.
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 3:06 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 8:03 PM
Filed Under: Movies | Web Junk
(click image to enlarge)
Came across this map of the U.S., in which each state is assigned its "most representative" movie, on Towleroad, and people are Not! Happy! As my friend Jonas says: "Really? Groundhog Day? Not Philadelphia, Philadelphia Story, Wonder Boys, Trading Places, 1776, Gettysburg, Flashdance, Rocky or even Mannequin?" Good points, all. Here are some particularly astute comments from the site and Reddit: Fargo is in North Dakota, not Minnesota. Also, Maryland appears to have annexed the Virginia part of the Delmarva peninsula. —Chris If Gummo is an accurate representation of Ohio, I don't know how they haven't all killed themselves. —ShakerLife I was like "Why the shit is Wayne's World in Delaware. They're from Aurora, Illinois." Then I reveled in my superiority over OP. Fuck yeah. —Itsdeuce One of the stupidest things I've seen on the Internet. —K in VA What do you guys think? Is Groundhog Day a fair assessment of the Keystone State? Or is it, in fact, the stupidest thing on the Internet? Or somewhere in between?
Rock Colors
Posted 2010-10-27 15:16:19
Most of the suggestions you mention are too Philly-centric to represent the whole state.

It's just a shame this was done before Unstoppable came out.
Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-10-27 15:23:11
Groundhog Day is an amazing movie, a total classic, but I would venture to say more people have seen Rocky.

It would be amazing if Pennsylvania's state movie was Mannequin.
Joe
Posted 2010-10-27 16:06:41
‎'There's Something About Mary' has absolutely nothing to do with Rhode Island. Surely they meant 'Me, Myself, and Irene'

As far as PA, I would go with Slap Shot.
Jesse D
Posted 2010-10-27 16:11:54
A movie to represent all of Pennsylvania? Witness. It's perfect.
miss lilacs
Posted 2010-10-27 16:42:00
this map is all kinds of wrong! is it just me, or does everyone else associate deliverance with alabama?
at least texas is no country for old men. i can agree with that one.
Sam Fran
Posted 2010-10-27 16:54:14
Yeah, "Witness" is a good choice. Other than the title, "Fargo" is mostly set in and fairly depicts Minnesota. I'm happy it's that and not "Little Big League."
Tom
Posted 2010-10-27 18:42:54
Fargo the city is in North Dakota, but Fargo the movie? That's in Minnesota. 

From the movie's title card: 

"The events depicted in this film took place in Minnesota in 1987."
LouF
Posted 2010-10-27 23:04:38
This is what passes for journalism these days?  You went to some bulletin board on the internet and republished what some random stoners posted there?
Rock Colors
Posted 2010-10-28 01:07:59
Awesome call on Slap Shot.
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 8:03 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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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.

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