Senin, 25 Januari 2010

Week in Film Vlog: January 25, 2010



Canada's Top Ten 2009: Cairo Time, Passenger Side
Theatrical: High Life, Legion, My Most Anticipated Films of 2010 List, The Warriors
101 in 1001: Eraserhead, Happy Together, Brides of Dracula
Sword & Sandal: Jason in the Argonauts (1963)
Random:
Curse of the Werewolf, The Proposal

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Before the Dawn: A Twilight Podcast - Episode 36: Daybreakers Discussion




Before the Dawn: A Twilight Podcast - Episode 36 is up!

This week Marina & I's have an all out discussion on the 2010 vampire film Daybreakers starring Ethan Hawke, Willem Dafoe, Sam Neill and Claudia Karvan. It's complete with spoilers so I highly recommend listening to it after you've seen the film.

Before the Dawn: A Twilight Podcast is a weekly 1/2 hour podcast meeting all your audio Twilight needs!

Poll Results: In General, Film Trailers Show Us....

Almost a perfectly even split on the poll results for In General, Film Trailers Show Us.... with a tie of 46% to 46% on the trailers showing us Just Enough to Get Me Interested and Way To Much of the Film. I'm in the way to much boat, but I do see trailers an awful lot these days. Surprizingly 7% answered that they don't watch trailers and no one thinks that they show Not Enough to Tell if I'm Interested in Film.

46% - TIE: Just Enough to Get Me Interested & Way To Much of the Film
7% - I Don't Watch Trailers
0% - Not Enough to Tell if I'm Interested in Film

Thanks for voting!

Sabtu, 23 Januari 2010

2010 Own/Unseen Challenge

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Last year one of the film challenges I set for myself was to see all the unseen films I had around the house be they borrowed or owned. I'm not usually one for purchasing films unseen but they started to pile up so this seemed like the perfect solution. The challenge completely worked and I made my way through the titles by the end of the year. Ironically, throughout the year I ended up acquiring exactly the same number of titles so now I have another 18 films to get through. If it worked once, I've got faith it will work again. So here comes the 2010 Own/Unseen Challenge.

Challenge Status: Over and Incomplete
Films Seen: 11/19

Airport - seen
Airport '77
Airport 1975
Alexander - seen
Babylon A.D. - seen
Cargo 200
Concorde: Airport '79, The
Darkon - seen
Dracula's Daughter - seen
House of Dracula - seen
Kwaidan
Miss Julie (1999)
Pathfinder - seen
Punisher: War Zone - seen
S. Darko - seen
Son of Dracula - seen
Titan A.E.
Transsiberian
Vinyan - seen

Update at the end of 2010: I sadly only made it though 11 of the 19 titles in my owned/unseen challenge, and I did made a good go of it (albeit it mostly at an end-of-year push), I just couldn't make it through them all. Even though I've continued to accumulated more unseen films throughout the year, doing this challenge really got me thinking strongly about buying films I haven't seen yet. I do plan on working through most of the remaining titles, maybe I'll see them by the end of 2011.

Reverend's Reviews: Swim Trial

David Oliveras' Watercolors, about a high school art student who falls in love with a hunky if troubled member of the swim team, made quite a splash (no pun intended ... OK, maybe a little) at Outfest, Los Angeles's GLBT film festival, way back in the summer of 2008. It is finally being released theatrically this weekend in Los Angeles and New York as part of a gay mini-fest sponsored by Regent Releasing/here! Films and Gay.com.

The plot of Watercolors is reminiscent of the superior, 1999 British film Get Real, in which a self-accepting gay student also has the hots for a closeted athlete. To Watercolors' detriment, Oliveras turns up the angst and minimizes the humor in his tale of conflicted boy-love. He stacks the odds against Danny (played by Tye Olson, who won the 2008 Best Actor award at Outfest for his work here) and the object of his affection, Carter (Kyle Clare, also quite good). Both are the sons of recovering alcoholics. Carter, a promising athlete, suffers as a result of his father's too-high expectations and turns to drugs. Meanwhile, the bullied, effeminate Danny hones his artistic technique under the tutelage of a compassionate teacher played by camp movie queen Karen Black.


One can't blame Danny for falling for the seductive Carter when the latter ends up staying at Danny's home one weekend. Sexy if unsurprising, almost requisite scenes involving skinny dipping, smoking lessons using a shared cigarette, and tentative same-sex kisses result. And also predictably, things between Carter and Danny end tragically.

Oliveras suffuses his film with odd, unnecessary vignettes of the grown-up Danny fighting with his current boyfriend over his continuing obsession with Carter during an exhibition of Danny's art. The tipsy boyfriend comes across as a jerk, and I kept hoping Danny would dump him instead of begging him not to leave. The movie's finale, intended to be romantic, felt hollow to me.


The best feature of Watercolors — apart from its Speedo-clad swimmers — is the lovely, color-saturated cinematography by Melissa Holt. Also of note is the presence of out champion diver Greg Louganis, suddenly middle-aged but still very attractive, as Carter's demanding swim coach.

Watercolors is playing for a limited time as part of a triple feature with Murder in Fashion, about gay party boy Andrew Cunanan and the killing of Gianni Versace, and Misconceptions, a promising-sounding comedy in which a conservative Southern woman decides to act as a surrogate for two gay men after receiving a message from God telling her to do so. For more information about the fest and these films, visit Gay.com.

UPDATE: Watercolors is now available on DVD from Amazon.com.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Jumat, 22 Januari 2010

Reverend’s Reviews: Gladiators in the Living Room

Kirk Douglas was sexy, to be sure, as the loincloth-clad star of Stanley Kubrick’s epic 1960 film Spartacus. Apart from that loincloth, though, Douglas doesn’t have anything on the sometimes-nude hunks that populate the new Starz series Spartacus: Blood and Sand, which premieres on the cable channel tonight.

Seemingly inspired by the blockbuster 2007 film 300 as much as by historical accounts of a slave uprising against ancient Rome, the series is a stylish if graphically bloody soap opera. A lot of money appears to have gone into Spartacus: Blood and Sand, and its high-powered producers include filmmaker Sam Raimi (best known for his Evil Dead and Spider-Man movies), Rob Tapert (The Grudge) and Steven S. DeKnight (of the beloved Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV show).

Newcomer Andy Whitfield plays the title role, although his character doesn’t initially sport the moniker “Spartacus.” Rather, he starts out as an unnamed, happily married Thracian who becomes enslaved by a treacherous Roman soldier with a vendetta against him. Subsequently forced to fight four trained gladiators at once, the Thracian stuns his captors and the audience by slaying all of his opponents single-handedly. A star is born and is christened “Spartacus” (after a legendary fighter) by the crowd.


Spartacus is purchased by the scheming Batiatus (played by John Hannah, who was very funny as Rachel Weisz’s high-living brother in The Mummy movies) for formal training at the ludus (gladiator school) he owns. Batiatus sees his new recruit as having the potential to earn him and his wife (Lucy Lawless, Xena herself, who looks ravishing here) enough money and prestige to be accepted into the upper-echelons of Roman society.

I was able to view the first three episodes of Spartacus: Blood and Sand in advance. While the main plot and setting will seem familiar to anyone who has seen Gladiator or, again, 300, there is enough sex (both romantic and kinky, as well as some lesbian action) and full-frontal male and female nudity to keep more than a few GLBT viewers interested. Gay men, especially, will want to catch the second episode, “Sacramentum Gladiatorum,” which features naked gladiators shaving, strutting and preening in the ludus’s bath. Be sure to have your thumb at the ready over the remote’s “freeze frame” button!

The series is set in a digitally recreated ancient Rome wherein men stand stoic in virtual snow and sunsets, and slo-mo blood sprays out in all directions during the fight scenes. The violence is completely over-the-top, with severed heads and limbs similarly flying across the screen. There is also gratuitous, historically questionable use of derogatory terms for sexual acts and anatomy.


What gives Spartacus: Blood and Sand some sorely needed credibility are the fine performances of its lead cast members. Whitfield makes a fine hero: strong and seething angrily as appropriate while adding a nuanced softness and everyman quality to his role. Hannah and Lawless are excellent, as is Peter Mensah as Doctore, the gladiators’ domineering head trainer. Mensah deserves special credit, as he keeps his and his character’s dignity intact while delivering the scripts’ ripest dialogue.

But if chiseled, oiled men grappling with one another while wearing little more than codpieces get your blood pumping, you won’t want to miss Spartacus: Blood and Sand. For more information, visit the show's official website.

UPDATE: The first season of Spartacus: Blood and Sand is now available on DVD and Blu-ray from Amazon.com.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Film Fan Fridays for Friday January 22, 2010

Hello Film Fans and Fanatics!

Welcome to Film Fan Fridays for Friday January 22, 2010! We only made it a few weeks into the year before hitting some snags on odd releases, we have 5 films in regular release and then 2 more that just miss the mark either being short film with a really long title (Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands) or having a really short run with Revanche stopping by The Bloor for 5 days. But on to the regular releases where we have a week is full of history, inspiration and fantasy.

In limited release this week we have just one release with The Last Station, a film that has popped up on the radar primarily for Helen Mirren performance which has been snagging nominations everywhere. The Last Station is a biopic on Russian author Leo Tolstoy, played by Christopher Plummer, also starring James McAvoy, Paul Giamatti and of course Helen Mirren.

In wide release this week we have 4 releases and 2 of those star Paul Bettany! What are the chances? Take your pick of him either as Charles Darwin in Creation alongside Jennifer Connelly in the biopic that was the Gala opener for TIFF in 2009. Or if you prefer a little more rough 'n' tumble there is the apocalypse & angel action flick Legion, which is the first of 2 supernatural action flicks by director Scott Stewart - look for Priest in August 2010 (also starring Paul Bettany). Next up is a slightly different kind fantastical creature with Tooth Fairy starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as hockey player and ... you guessed it a tooth fairy. Last up for the week is the Extraordinary Measures which centres of a families journey to find a cure for a genetic disorder.

We also have 2 films that are neither here nor there when it comes to limited/wide release. Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands a 43 minute Canadian documentary short film plays at The Royal and the Oscar nominated Austrian film Revanche does 5 day run over at The Bloor.

Have a great weekend!

Shannon

Friday January 15, 2010 Releases

Creation
Dir:
Jon Amiel (The Core)
Cast: Paul Bettany, Jennifer Connelly, Jeremy Northam
UK
Official Film Site, IMDb Page, Trailer

Extraordinary Measures
Dir:
Tom Vaughan (Starter for 10)
Cast: Brendan Fraser, Harrison Ford, Keri Russell, Meredith Droeger, Diego Velaquez
USA
Official Film Site, IMDb Page, Trailer

The Last Station
Dir:
Michael Hoffman (Restoration, Soapdish)
Cast: Christopher Plummer, Helen Mirren, James McAvoy, Paul Giamatti
Germany/Russia/UK
Limited Release
Official Film Site, IMDb Page, Trailer

Legion
Dir: Scott Stewart - feature film directorial debut
Cast: Paul Bettany,
Dennis Quaid, Adrianne Palicki, Lucas Black, Kevin Durand, Tyrese Gibson
USA
Official Film Site,
IMDb Page, Trailer

Tooth Fairy
Dir:
Michael Lembeck (The Santa Clause 2)
Cast: Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Ashley Judd, Julie Andrews, Billy Crystal, Seth MacFarlane
USA/Canada
Official Film Site,
IMDb Page, Trailer

**please note this list of releases reflects first run film released in Toronto, Ontario, Canada as of January 22, 2010**

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