Monday, January 31, 2011

The man with the iron FIST now shooting in China film Martial Arts of the RZA

Chinese film crew is so fast and efficient I feel like I'm watching an episode of Benny Hill.

Roth is side and playing an active role is, I think, a good thing and the only real chance that this film was successful. And I think that for a very simple reason. Strip RZA, celebrity far value the, what you're left is a man with acting very limited experience with a single leadership experience with self funded auto produces projects that even he considered good enough to show to anyone. And put someone like it in such multi - cut the position where he is responsible of so on end risk practice it overwhelming completely without a hand to support and guide. And this is before you even get in pressure being placed on him to carry the film as the main actor - a position it has never been before. No mistake, I would really like the film succeed, but put so much money, as the responsibility on a man who has none of these roles filled before significantly is simply massive betting.

[Updated with Word from those close production that Tarantino is not in China after all.]


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Severin Films presents SANTA SANGRE at the Alamo Drafthouse and more!

In preparation for January 25 version date and digital video debut, Severin Films brings Alejandro Jodorowsky Santa Sangre masterpiece to select large screens in Los Angeles, Austin, Texas and Boston.? Here is the word Severin Films on Santa Sangre projections limited around the United States:
celebration of our mammoth Blu - ray and DVD Special Edition from January, Alejandro Jodorowsky classic Santa Sangre will return to the big screen for three occurrences of rare 35 mm to Los Angeles, Austin, Boston.

Santa Sangre project in Los Angeles, January 15 at the American Cinematheque illustrated with debut feature Fando Y Lis, El Topo and the holy mountain 16 Jodorowsky. Executive producer of Mont Saint Robert Taicher for a Q & a. Santa Sangre will detect The Alamo Drafthouse in Austin, Texas, on 19 January and 24 January in Boston (link to ticket soon) will be present at the two projections.

There will be many opportunities like this, I already have my ticket, and if you near anywhere any of these sites, I would not recommend to wait to get yours.

A ticket for the projection of Alamo Drafthouse link is less than


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Witness ultra-destruction on a massive scale in 5 minutes ULTRAMAN ZERO promo!

Alerts the trailer by Todd Brown, December 30, 2010 5: 30 PM UltramanZero.jpg with Ultraman Zero was to push the degree of destruction ultra at levels previously invisible, I believe that they can consider this mission accomplished. And if they also considers a goal to create the most pleasant celebration, the first, the most inner-geek-child of scifi monsterdom superheroes, well, they very well may have done that, too.

Ultraman producers Tsuburaya Productions have been engaged in a continuous set of bidding on their previous films Ultraman, each entry in the series running long films being larger and more extravagant than the previous handle. And this cycle resulted in zero Ultraman and a full-on Galactic war between Ultramen body well and poorly processed Ultraman aspiring Belial Galactic Emperor and its global overwhelming the space station.

And I hear crashed on the planet. This is the form of a hand that retrieves the planets and grind them to dust. It is therefore the weapon more incredibly convenient space of all time and gloriously. You get to see it in action in the new five minutes long embedded below promo.

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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Hollywood is a remake, put the rats in the best possible hand.

New film by Todd Brown, January 4, 2011 11 H 01 GodzillaAnatomy.jpg Legendary Pictures, I tip my hat to so that you have just the best absolute possible decision in which should sit you to the Director of the President for your film Godzilla to come.

And take this honour will be? Monsters helmer Gareth Edwards. OH, hell Yes. Edwards, bluntly, is capable of generating the show without losing his characters and brilliant effects without being in love with them in this. If producers have the sense to let Edwards to do his thing with what they have just guaranteed themselves a film which will be both kick ass and heart. I can't imagine a better choice.

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Berlin 2011: Trailer for Dark Drama Belgian BULLHEAD (RUNDSKOP)

Bullhead_affiche.jpgSoon for the first time in the panorama section of the Berlin film festival is Bullhead (Rundskop), a dark drama in the world of the illegal trade in agricultural hormone Michael Roskam. Shooting by frequent (Former Drummer) Koen Mortier collaborator Nicolas Karakatsanis much seems to like in the trailer. Here is the official summary:

Defined in the underworld of the Belgian agricultural hormone mafia, illegal fatstocker and a police informant face each other in a criminal investigation. But then a dark and disturbing story about loyalty and friendship unfolds through their tormented passed as childhood friends.


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Saturday, January 29, 2011

First teaser for Wong Kar Wai together

WKW made films in which, a few weeks? A few months?

Many people talk about quick recovery Chungking Express, but even this (two months of preproduction display) was not particularly fast by HK standards at the time, and is a flap career Wong. Happy Together shooting dragged on for almost half a year (see the degree zero of Buenos Aires to learn more about this documentary extracts more mountains of unused film and subplots), in the Mood for love took 15 months, partly because he was already preparing 2046), and the filming of 2046 itself lasted one year and a half over a certain amount of off on fire in the previous three years. Days of wild course was also over schedule and over budget, although I do not know Ash shade.


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The unjust that exist currently, the number of ELITE 2 and the MIXTAPE BLACK POWER among the first titles in Berlin

New film by Todd Brown, January 4, 2011 2 H 40 UnjustPoster.jpg while it dragged us somehow 2011 Festival in Berlin has published the first block of titles in the Panorama section yesterday and there are some very familiar names, among them Ryoo Seung-wan the unjust, Elite Squad 2 Jorge Padilha, lawyer for Angelique Bosio Fagdom and The Black Power Mixtape - who have received coverage here in the pages of Twitch of Hugo Olsson.?? You want the full list? Here it is: Bu-dang-geo-rae (The Unjust) by Seung-wan Ryoo, Republic of Koreawith Jung-min Hwang, Seung-bum Ryoo, Hae-jin YooChang-Pi-Hae (Ashamed) by Soo-hyun Kim, Republic of KoreaDance Town by Kyu-hwan Jeon, Republic of KoreaThe Devil's Double by Lee Tamahori, Belgiumwith Dominic Cooper, Ludivine Sagnierwith Juno Temple, Milla Jovovich, William H. Macy, Dwight Yoakam, Mary Steenburgen, Jeremy DozierFjellet (The Mountain) by Ole Giaver, Norway with Ellen Dorrit Petersen, Marte Magnusdotter Solem The Guard by John Michael McDonagh, Ireland/Great Britain/Argentinawith Brendan Gleeson, Don Cheadle, Mark StrongMajki (Mothers) by Milcho Manchevski, Macedonia/Francewith Ana Stojanovska, Vladimir Ja?ev, Dimitar Gjorgjievski, Ratka Radmanovi?, Salaetin BilalMishen (Target) by Alexander Zeldovich, Russian Federation,with Maksim Sukhanov, Justine Waddell, Danila Kozlovsky, Daniela Stoyanovich, Nina LoshchininaRundskop (Bullhead) by Michael R. Roskam, Belgiumwith Matthias Schoenaerts, Jeroen Perceval, Jeanne Dandoy, Barbara Sarafian, Frank LammersTropa de Elite 2 - o inimigo agora e outro (Elite Squad 2 - The Enemy within) by Jose Padilha, Brazilwith Wagner Moura, Sandro Rocha, Andre Mattos, Maria Ribeiro, Andre RamiroUber uns das All by Jan Schomburg, Germany, world premierewith Sandra Huller, Georg Friedrich, Felix KnoppDie Vaterlosen (The Fatherless) by Marie Kreutzer, Austria, world premierewith Andrea Wenzl, Philipp Hochmair, Andreas Kiendl, Emily Cox, Marion Mitterhammer The Advocate For Fagdom by Angelique Bosio, France, world premierewith Bruce LaBruce, Gus Van Sant, John WatersThe Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 by Goran Hugo Olsson, Sweden/USAwith Stokley Carmichael, Angela Davis, Erykha Badu, Harry BelafonteBRASCH - Die Widerspruche sind die Hoffnung by Christoph Ruter, Germany, world premiereComing Home by Tomer Heymann, Israel, world premierehomo@lv by Kaspars Goba, Latvia House Of Shame / Chantal All Night Long by Johanna Jackie Baier, Germany, world premierewith Chantal Lehner, Andreas Schwarz, Joey Arias, Sherry Vine, Gloria ViagraDie Jungs vom Bahnhof Zoo (Rent Boys) by Rosa von Praunheim Germany, world premierewith Sergiu Grimalschi, Lutz Volkwein, Wolfgang Werner, Peter Kern, Master PatrickKhodorkovsky by Cyril Tuschi, Germany, world premiereMondo Lux by Elfi Mikesch, Germany, world premierewith Isabelle Huppert, Ingrid Caven, Wim Wenders, Rosa von Praunheim, Monika Keppler!Women Art Revolution - A Secret History by Lynn Hershman Leeson, USAwith Yvonne Rainer, Judy Chicago, Guerilla Girls, B. Ruby Rich, Carolee SchneemanWe Were Here by David Weissman, USAwith Ed Wolf, Paul Boneberg, Guy Clark, Eileen Glutzer, Daniel Goldstein
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Friday, January 28, 2011

2010: The list of lists


Having escaped to some readers that we here at Twitch a very noisy on what we thought in the past year in the film. Many of us posted the lists of the best of the year, but faithful to our chaotic nature we never set a model for these.

And if we have seen top 5 lists, lists of top - 10, worst-, best-of, etc. Some have been published as press articles, some have been published as multi-film clients. Considered as a group, they are a happy mess, and as a bunch of completely subjective views which is exactly how we like it.

But it is also because of the variety may be difficult to locate all our lists at once, or compare your favorite against those reviewer's choice of your least favorite.

Fear in this very article you'll find each and every of our own year-end lists, we have published, for your ease of navigation. Click on the titles of articles and should open Windows.


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PERUVIAN CINEMA: OCTUBRE / October (2010): interview with Diego Vega

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october_poster04.jpg This has been a great year to engage with Peruvian cinema. Not only did I have the chance to speak with Claudia Llosa whose film La Teta Asustada (The Milk of Sorrow, 2009) was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Academy AwardR, but I was able to follow-up with Dr. Kimberly Theidon, whose research informed Llosa's film. Also, I had the opportunity to speak with Javier Fuentes-Leon, whose Contracorriente (Undertow, 2010) has seductively haunted the hearts of festival-goers the world over and earned the honor of being Peru's official submission to the foreign language category for the 2011 Academy AwardsR. Further, I was fortunate to sit down with Diego Vega--half of the brother team behind Octubre (October, 2010)--upon the occasion of October's North American premiere at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). October's full dance card on the festival circuit required filmmaker brothers Daniel and Diego Vega to divvy up rounds. While Diego introduced the film at TIFF, Daniel was off in Vladivostok introducing October to the Russians. Most recently, October has been announced in the World Cinema Now lineup at the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF).

Money-lender Clemente (Bruno Odar) only knows how to relate to others through transactions. His life is turned upside down when someone leaves him a baby in a basket. When a client, Sofia (Gabriela Velasquez), steps in to help tend to the baby, Clemente is faced with new possibilities during Lima's October celebration of the Lord of Miracles. As further synopsized by Diana Sanchez in her official description for TIFF: "Austerely shot with careful attention to framing, October signals the arrival of a distinct cinematic voice from Latin America. The Vega brothers compose a moving and charming film, balancing themes of loneliness and disconnection with an absurd comic tone that steers the narrative away from melodrama."

[This conversation is not for the spoiler-wary!]

Michael Guillen: October is an enchanting fable and the line that jumped out of the movie at me was: "Poor is not someone who has little but he who wants a lot." This struck me as the lesson of your film's fable, particularly because your main character Clemente is a money lender who somehow misses the true value of his transactions. How did you and your brother go about developing this story? Did one of you write it? Did you both write it?

Diego Vega: We started on October quite a long time ago. The first idea came after I graduated from film school--I studied at Escuela Internacional de Cine y Television in Cuba--and when I came back to Peru, I was full of films and emotions from having been at the school. I liked Robert Bresson's films a lot and had seen his last film L'Argent many times. As you might remember, L'Argent is about a counterfeit bill that crosses the lives of many characters with tragic consequences.

Guillen: Fascinating! I failed to make that connection.

Vega: Well, also in Peru, we have a lot of fake money in circulation. Peru has a "fake" culture in the sense of piracy. Everything is sold as something it's not. You buy something and it's not the real designer label; it's not the original. It's common for Peruvians to be suspicious and scrutinizing when anyone pays them with paper money. Whether it's paying for a taxi, going to a small store, eating at a restaurant, anywhere, people will always check the money you are handing them to see if it's fake. So the influence of Bresson's L'Argent and this cultural practice in Peru of doubting authenticity were the origins of October.

I'm the screenwriter so I took the idea and began to write the script. My brother Daniel and I talked a lot but I wrote the first draft, and then he read it and offered comments. Even though October has a counterfeit bill in it, we left it as a source image. It doesn't move or travel in our film. It stays with Clemente.

Guillen: He can't get rid of it.

Vega: But that counterfeit bill is the source of the story. At the beginning, we had many different families involved but we ended up telling a story about attempting to build a family, even if in our film it is a strange and bizarre family composed of individuals who have no connection to each other yet find themselves together as a family for the birthday party, for the climax.

Guillen: Just so I'm clear, the counterfeit bill in October is 200 soles. Roughly, what would that be in American dollars?

Vega: It's about $70; a bit more than about half of the official minimum wage per month in Peru, which is around $100. Thus, 200 soles is an important bill in Peruvian currency. Some families only have 200 soles to live on for the month. It's distinguished for bearing the image of Santa Rosa de Lima. But it's not a common bill and it's not one that anyone in Peru wants to have in their possession, because they're too often fake. Peruvians prefer a 100 soles bill, or 50, or 20; but, not 200.

Guillen: Let's return to this interesting idea of the constructed family. Are you playing with the idea because there has been so much social upheaval in Peru? Resulting in many Peruvians losing their original families? Or is it because Peruvians are migrating to the cities and losing touch with their original families? Why was it important for you to create the portrait of a constructed family for your narrative?

Vega: The fact is that many original families--including my own family--are dysfunctional families. Either that or one of the parents has abandoned the family, or one of the family members is missing, or they don't get along. Though, yes, I constructed the family for my film, it's not for the reasons you've stated. Daniel and I didn't think about migration into the city or anything like that, even though during the violence of the '80s and '90s many Peruvians did migrate into the city. But that wasn't what we were thinking about. Originally, if I recall, we started to build five families with the fake bill traveling between them and they were all dysfunctional families and that's primarily because that's how Daniel and I grew up. All of the parents of my friends have either split or are dysfunctional in some way. But this isn't a tragic way of seeing the family or anything; it's just like that, no? It's difficult to put people together and keep them together for 30 years. In Peru, my parents' generation is just that way, no?

Guillen: Is Daniel older or younger than you?

Vega: Daniel is 11 months older than me.

Guillen: So I have a sense now of how the two of you negotiate to develop a script; but--when it comes to the actual shooting--is one of you more of a director than the other?

Vega: We split duties. Daniel takes care of the visuals, the cinematography, and works closely with the DP during the shooting, while I stay with the actors.

Guillen: How did the two of you come to that arrangement?

Vega: It was organic and natural. I'm the one who starts the writing and--since I'm the one who comes up with and develops the story--I understand the characters and their motivations and can thus guide the actors better. My brother comes in and has an overall view which has developed from our conversations but has not experienced the lonely process of creation. The actors asked a lot of questions that he couldn't answer so it became easier for me to answer those questions for them. So we came to this arrangement organically. Plus, my brother has always loved cinematography so it's natural for him to be caught up in the film's visuals. Before the shooting, we talk a lot to decide what we want to do so that we're clear and decisive when the shooting starts. But even though we've divided it so that I'm the one who gives notes to the actors, Daniel can always offer comments to the actors as well. Or I can suggest certain framings to the cinematographer. There have been times when I've said something to an actor and then Daniel has come along and said something opposite and the actor complains; but, we just laugh about it and work it out.

Guillen: Clearly the collaboration with your brother works because one of the strengths of your first film October is how your characters are so well-developed and how the film is so visually interesting. I don't know if you can speak for Daniel or not, but in terms of the look of the movie I became keenly aware of how the camera rarely moved. Was that decision partly an economic one?

Vega: We had always visualized the film in that way, though perhaps not so much. We had thought about some small, slow movements, maybe towards the beginning; but, when we sat down with the money we had, and started to draft our shooting budget, we decided to get rid of all of the movement, perhaps to the extreme? Though we had thought of making a film in that way, probably we would have moved the camera a bit more if we could have. Our ideas were conditioned by the budget.

Guillen: Are you and Daniel intending to work together again?

Vega: Yeah! In fact, we are developing our next script. October took so much. It took years to get the funding. But now it's finished and it's working and we're very happy and pleased about that. But during the process of pulling October together, we had time to do a lot of other things--my brother had two kids, continued working while we developed this feature film, and I wrote a couple of scripts--so now that we have put October out into the world, we've returned to one of those scripts and are rewriting it together. Now--because everything is functioning--we're going to keep working.

Guillen: Can you speak about Sofia's ritual of adding her pee to a glass of water she then offers Clemente? At first, I thought it was a vengeful act but then it gradually dawned on me that it was more a form of feminine magic?

Vega: Yes, that's right, and it's common in Peru. Not everybody practices it, of course, but ladies in their forties to sixties are familiar with the ritual. They probably know a friend or two who have done it. For me it's a symptom of desperation. Sophia is a religious woman, a devotee to the Lord of Miracles, and she expects the Lord of Miracles to answer her prayers; but, when she doesn't get what she wants from the Lord of Miracles, then she goes the other way. It's a kind of voodoo, no? Sofia thinks, "The Lord of Miracles is not giving me what I want--which is this man, this family--and so I'll try to catch him with this panty tea."

Guillen: Panty tea?

Vega: In Spanish we call it te de calzon. You've seen Persepolis?

Guillen: Yes.

Vega: Well, Marjane Satrapi--who wrote Persepolis--also wrote a small comic called Borados. I don't know how you say it in English?

Guillen: Embroideries.

Vega: Ah. Well, one of Satrapi's main female characters in Borados does a similar thing. After performing sex, the woman puts a key in her vagina in an effort to catch her lover. But she has to perform the ritual quickly, within 20 minutes of having had sex. Not only does she have to immediately put the key into her vagina, but then she has to boil water, remove the key from her vagina and put it in the water, and then serve this "tea" to the man.

Guillen: A love spell, eh? Yikes! After Sofia performs this love spell on Clemente, he goes to have sex with a whore and, apparently, the magic has worked because he can't get it up to fuck the whore. What impressed me in that scene was the whore's wise response when she comforted Clemente by telling him, "Well, you know, you can't stay the same." I admired that you invested such common sense wisdom into this lady of the night.

Vega: I'm not sure if you remember but that same woman wears glasses. After she finishes having sex, she puts on her glasses, which reveals that she's actually a grandmother, or something like that. We wanted to keep far away from stereotypes of prostitutes and prostitution and to remember that prostitutes are the women men go to in order to feel warm for a moment. Clemente, being the kind of man he is, goes to this woman to feel a moment's warmth, to feel he is at home, but the minute he's finished with her, he rises, cleans himself, and gets out because, probably, afterwards he feels guilty. But during his time with her, he feels okay and a little more human and that woman, of course, she understands this in Clemente, she understands this in men in general.

Through that scene we wanted to give a tip to the audience that Clemente is missing something; he's missing an opportunity. We were too subtle and needed a bit more and by having her say that--"You can't stay the same"--audiences understand better the necessity of Clemente's character arc. They understand that Clemente himself is beginning to understand he needs to change. What's beautiful is that this insight arrives through his involvement with a prostitute who is--in effect--a grandmother.

Guillen: As a character Clemente is quite interesting, but profoundly sad.

Vega: Yes.

Guillen: What struck me was that--whereas Sofia had her faith in the Lord of Miracles to rely upon and (failing that) feminine magic--Clemente had neither. In fact, the film's final image of Sofia walking in the procession of the Lord of the Miracles while Clemente walks against it seemed so telling at how at odds they were. It's as if--though he senses he needs to change--he still doesn't understand why. He doesn't get it.

Vega: He's stubborn, yes. He's too cold, too dry, and--though he has understood something--maybe he hasn't changed? He's understood that he has to do something, he has to move forward, change; but, he resists. That image you bring up of him walking against the procession was the original ending of the script and has stayed through the end of the film. But when we were in the editing room, we felt it was too dark and we wanted to add some light to the final scene. Because of his resistance, we couldn't put the light and the hope in him; so we decided to use Sofia to close the film because--in a way--it's the sensation of a happy ending, even though it's not a happy ending.

Guillen: It ends on a note of faith, which is to say hope.

Vega: The truth is that--even if Sofia and Clemente get together--it doesn't insure happiness. They're difficult personalities and maybe they'll get together but won't know how to be happy? But the sensation at the end of October is that you feel the light of hope, which is what we wanted, because October is dark, it's difficult, and it's sad. We needed the film to end the way it did.

Guillen: Let's touch upon the story of the old man and his poor girlfriend in the wheelchair. You have them leaving the city at film's end. Where did they go?

Vega: They're going off to die.

Guillen: But at least together?

Vega: Yeah. He wants her to die with him somewhere outside of Lima, which is too big and annoying and hard for old people. I think they're going to find a small town somewhere where they can just live at peace until they die together. It's a small thing this man is doing but by the end of the film it's a big thing because they're together. He risks a little bit by kidnapping her, no?

Guillen: Though I have been brought up religiously, I can't say that I am a religious person, though I can say that I am a superstitious person. I believe in the invisible world and am fascinated with the Catholic religion's negotiation with the invisible world, especially as inflected through different cultures. Catholicism in Guatemala is a totally different animal than Catholicism in Peru, though they're both spotted one-eyed cats. In your film October the month of October is associated with the Lord of the Miracles and I'm wondering if that's actually true in Peru?

Vega: Yeah, yeah.

Guillen: Can you speak a bit about that tradition?

Vega: It's a huge tradition in Peru that started up some 400 years ago. It's origin is in Black Peruvian culture. A slave from Angola who had been brought to Peru in the 17th century painted an image of the Crucifixion on a wall. This painting survived earthquakes and floods and--because of that--people began to venerate it. Then they built a church to house the mural [the Sanctuary of Las Nazarenas]. After hundreds of years, the veneration of the Lord of Miracles has become what you see in October.

Throughout the month of October, the image is taken out of the church and moved through a series of six processions from one church to another throughout Lima. The first procession is a small one to the center of Lima but the others are huge, long processions that carry the anda--I don't know how you say it in English--for kilometers. It's become quite popular and is rooted in the modest people, the people with needs, and is now called the Purple Month. That's why Sofia is wearing a purple habit. So, basically, the processions of the Lord of Miracles is from Lima and worshipped primarily in Lima, though--if you go to New York--the Peruvian community there would probably do the same thing. I'm not exactly sure about New York, but I wouldn't doubt that it's the largest procession of the Lord of Miracles outside of Lima, Peru.

Guillen: Is the Lord of Miracles the patron saint of the poor?

Vega: No, he's not. We have a lot of saints in Peru with a lot of different associations. For example, this Lord of Miracles in Peru is also associated with a soccer team named the Alianza Lima. In October, this team changes their regular outfits to purple ones associated with the Lord of Miracles. And though the worship of the Lord of Miracles had its origin among the marginalized Black slaves, it now has less to do with the marginalized and more to do with the lower middle class. In Peru, for example, we have Sarita Colonia; she's a younger saint for the criminals, the marginalized, the prostitutes, no? She's related to the port in Callao. The worship of the Lord of Miracles has to do with much more than that, even though--because of its origins--it's rooted in the lower classes.

Guillen: So are you saying that faith in the Lord of Miracles has more to do with the dreams of the middle class who are still aspiring and want a little bit more?

Vega: That's right. They don't ask for big things.

Guillen: More material things, like a washing machine or something like that?

Vega: That's right. The faithful of the Lord of Miracles wear the purple habits during procession because they are expecting something from the Lord of Miracles. If you remember, the white cord with which they tie their habits have knots and the more knots the cord has, the more they are expecting from the Lord of Miracles. Some folks wear these habits the whole month of October. It depends on what they are expecting. For me, these religious practices are efforts to explain what cannot be explained or to fill the emptiness, right? In the case of the Lord of Miracles, I think the faithful are feeling emptiness and are asking for--not just material things--but spiritual things as well: to have a better year, let's say. It's common for the people to thank the Lord for the miracle of being alive.

Guillen: Well, Diego, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me today about October. It's a lovely film. Congratulations on being picked up for North American distribution by New Yorker Films.

Note: Incidentally, after the fact as I researched the matter, it appears there is a strong following for the Lord of the Miracles among the Peruvian community in San Francisco, who honor him with mass and a procession on October 17 each year.

Cross-published on The Evening Class.


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Thursday, January 27, 2011

LIFF 2010: GINTAMA THE MOVIE review

When a film opens with several self-referential gags up to and including the cast break the fourth wall to crack wise on the production company, it is clear first attract an audience that don't - waiting, even. First feature film for manga long-term so Gintama plays the bleachers the word go, and while it is pretty cool on this topic - often really funny, in a sort of friendly and good market way - it is created for fans whenever wherever the uninitiated frequently have an index what had happened.

Gintama takes place in alternate era Tokyo Edo conquered by foreigners, a setting designed by Hideaki Sorachi creator as a way to bypass the Publisher its it make a period - piece is a good indicator of disposable how all that sometimes finds for those who have not invested in seven previous years material. To be fair, Gintama never once claims to be anything but a light action-comedy. This is just if you cannot pick the story (as is the case) feels or demented enough rank alongside the best gag, manga or fairly coherent (relatively speaking) to correspond to tales of adventure of the boy as a play or bleach.

It is not simply that it is quite many times before - the demonic sword used of macguffin, assassin mysterious which was looted, the various factions, to their villanous swordsman who lives in combat, the hero of maladjusted coterie ruthless, (abruties but well-intentioned, small but powered by the super et al.) and more. Gintama The Movie simply lack none of that bind together. It has its moments, but none of them stand as particularly original and distinctive and no joke or action piece only sticks very clearly in memory passed following said along.

Gintama itself is simply not that interesting. Unlike his peers it boast a large part of fashion with a one-liner, nor is it not much more than swing sword. It is easy to choose gaping holes in Naruto and his fellow, but even at their transparent and reductive, they always have a clear goal, a motivation that permeates the story with a kind of energy. Even the strangest Japanese animated series always managed KA and topics that give this spark further. The lunatic jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu franchise was still clear nods to tribal myths and legends in his conception of character which meant even more absurd slices still had some sort of emotional resonance.

In contrast, Gintama considers just lazy. There is virtually no life, even without purpose doodles in an album that mean nothing to anyone bar exceptionally little public or fans who have committed volumes, printing and the series memory already. At no time do you get lost in the story or the parameter is followed by a gag, then another gag, then a meta, reference a game piece then another short action on and until you realise burst fight scene that is it, and the credits are rolling.

None of the rates as bad in itself - Director Shinji Takamatsu, his voice cast and crew are obviously well within their comfort zone after having worked on the series for a long time, and everyone manages their roles with professional efficiency. Anyone with an interest in anime will handle no doubt a few laughs - jokes set out with a solid if banal sense of time and action provides a minimum of showboating. But it's all a blur, as walk in highlights years performing strung back-to-back in a random order with no reference point whatsoever.

Some people might protest there is nothing wrong with catering to fans, and yet again, it is not difficult to see the delighted to be hardcore. But even taken as fanservice, it really is nothing worth getting excited at the course. Anime has done better - comic on the theme of the Samurai or otherwise. Television series Jubei-Chan wore an absolutely ridiculous premise as nothing more than unbridled Cypher and titillate sweet but the second season, was able to be always funnier than anything seen here with the air battle halfway yet a stunning piece of choreography hosted several years.

In the end, unless you already have an interest in the character not categorically to bother with Gintama The Movie. He is content to try for themselves on its niche, negotiating on the comfortable familiarity and the excitement of seeing a beloved character puts on the big screen. Fans might adore it, but any who want something more memorable – or even just a primer to help - should remain probably later. Decidedly average in all respects, nothing has not been already made and create better Gintama The Movie may not really be recommended.

(Gintama film was screened in the 24th Festival Leeds film).


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Sundance 2011: First images of the vicious Paddy Considine

First feature film the renowned actor Paddy Considine, behind the camera is a tour de force, powered by pure intensity of performances and tales.

Joseph (Peter Mullan), a man tormented, self-destructive invaded by violence, concludes the hope of redemption to Hannah (Olivia Colman), a charitable Christian-shop worker he met one day while fleeing an altercation. Initially ironic faith and the alleged idyllic existence, Joseph nevertheless refers to the shop and soon realize that the life of Hannah is anything but peaceful. A relationship develops, they come to understand the deep pain in another life.

A conventional, vicious love story transcends its dark circumstances by Joseph and Hannah strong impetus to redemption. Take the weight of life loaded with great humanity and a thorough understanding of our ability to heal, Mullan and Colman provide two of the most remarkable performance of the year. Portrait of these two souls lost, bloody, but su Considine, is a deeply beautiful and devastating experience.


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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Trailer for Israel Slasher rage

Alerts the trailer by Todd Brown, December 29, 2010 9 H 08 RabiesPoster.jpg a nation with a significant history in character dramas, war related films production and not any other lot, there are signs Israel may be slowly coming genre film world. And they're diving force with their first ever slasher, rabies.

Undertaken jointly by Navot Papushado and Aharon Keshales - turned Director - former film critic film appear not to break any particular new ground but runs familiar tropes style with a separate spin on it. Here is the official summary:

A brother and a sister in her twenties, run away from home after their dark secret is discovered. They found temporary refuge in a deserted nature reserve. When sister fell into a trap of hunting, defined by a psychotic killer brother sets in a race against time to save her. A forest ranger and his old dog, two cops apathetic, a murderer, mindless wandering among its pitfalls, and four tennis players will all gradually drawn into a vortex of misunderstanding, fear and violence.
You can check the full theatrical trailer below. var part; var href = $('img[id=main-asset]') .attr ('src'); part = href. $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset_plus_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset_plus_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = /(\/[^\/]+)\.(\w+)$/.exec(href); If (party) {part = part [1] + "-thumb-"; $('_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none') .asset-body; $('.asset_plus_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); If (party) {part = part [1] + "-thumb-"; $('_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none') .asset-body; $('.asset_plus_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} Video

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Sundance 2011: Kevin Smith RED State teaser is spent well.

RedStatePoster.jpgIt feels like a compliment very popular back to say that the just-released teaser for new horror picture Kevin Smith Red looks and feels anything like Kevin Smith film typical. But people can respond simply because that is the teaser of Red eyes and feel nothing at all like a typical Kevin Smith film. If she didn't have her name above I would never have guessed that it was Smith, in fact.

On the far right wild comment us, using the Westboro Baptist Church at least to a certain extent as its model, a history of American conservatism terribly shot. It seems to be nervous, disrupt things, and if the film has lived up to this teaser then Smith may very well have just reinvented itself. See below.


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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

PSIFF 2011: CARANCHO: A Critical Overview

Carancho_poster.jpgProgrammed in my favorite box Film Festival international of Palm Springs (PSIFF) - that is to say, awards Buzz: best foreign film (which this year is with 40 65 2011 Oscar R official submissions) - Carancho (Pablo Trapero 2010) continues his whine of the ambulance sirens. I first caught the movie 2010 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) and feel now is a good opportunity to review these notes.

As synopsized by PSIFF: "rooted in the reality of corruption and violence of Buenos Aires, this black modern gritty presents Ricardo Darin (The Secret in their eyes and the sound of the flange) Hector Sosa, who, as the titular Vulture-like, low DeVore unfortunate victims of shockingly common road accidents Argentine bird." Having lost its licence of right, relegated to the role of the continuation of the ambulance for his brutal employers benefit industry booming insurance fraud and false statements, arnaque victims of most any regulations received by their "Foundation".

"When it encounters Lujan [Martina Gusman (lion's den)], an overworked nurse who is tackling its own demons trying to save the lives of"Customer Sosa", there a dramatic turnaround, but its plans to escape to this life and change his ways go horribly wrong." With crisp, tight editing, this lean and full of suspense thriller film takes us through shady inner parameters that would be fully implemented in black Hollywood, hospitals and places of the accident. Carancho is the latest example of socially realistic film director Trapero brand. ?

Carancho explores the notion that "behind every tragedy, it is an industry." Diana Sanchez detailed in his notes Carancho first 2010 TIFF North America program, the Trapero film is "a story from alarming violence on the streets of her country" and "a gripping love story listed among those who trade sudden tragedy and death." Followed by the film press notes, Sanchez writes: "each year, more than eight thousand people were killed on the road and more than one hundred thousand were injured. As a result, worrying much of the argentine economy revolves around the traffic accidents and profit stands to the continuous flow of medical expenses and insurance claims. Sixth feature of Trapero plunges into murky world of opportunism, involving crooks who acquire the scenes of the accident and emergency rooms. ?

At Twitch, Todd Brown reported the first Cannes Film: "a film that merges the stellar character work and intimate drama with the largest thriller and robberies moments with some elements of shocking violence thrown in for good measure, Carancho is a masterful work of writer / director / producer / editor of Pablo Trapero." Trapero is note here that it among the best filmmakers in the world today. Period. The complexity of its characters, the technical quality of the film work on her ability to balance intimate emotion with realistic and brutal action sequences, his obvious talent in collaboration with actors - is made easier when you have players calibre [Ricardo] Darin to work with the option - Trapero is at the highest level across these. Impeccable? Carancho comes pretty damn close. "As for clamping the agreement, Brown has included Carancho in its first fine choice exercise, highlighting that"Ricardo Darin anchors Carancho with a complex, fascinating spectacle as a broken man slowly defeated through the tiny more awareness keeps Pablo Trapero." Classical in the content if it is in the style of the Trapero film noir turns his tale amoral and ambulance insurance scams hunt in affected a style as possible, let them play in a cold, almost clinical manner his characters stumble inevitably to a bad end events. Always stellar Darin has never been better and it fits perfectly with both Director and history.

MUBI, Daniel Kasman rents Trapero as a craftsman in the genus stable, popular ensure. Kasman TIFF reported: "Carancho has the strength of the construction and dependence on types of classic characters and the story arcs to standardize a setting very specific and localized effectively." The result as a rapid entry of Hollywood in the 1930s, is a film of the worker, a fact by a fairly prodigious Director this inglorious context and proceed to convert it in a realistic and attractive - reliable light because it is how it really is. ...The film is so strong that any room for ambiguity is digital masonry implementation-en-scene that generates a clear diagram where simply anyone involved in the night world of dead and near death, accidents and the "incidents" is involved in the darkness, no questions asked. Thus modest ambitions of a genre film remain in its modest limits rather than to escape in the resulting shade, flourishing in grayscale, moral, or aesthetically expanded in risky angles, lighting and other stylistics. ?

Cross-posted on the class of the evening.


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SIRUTHAI characteristic death spinning blade Trailer.

Alerts the trailer by Todd Brown, December 24, 2010 3 H 52 Siruthai.jpg take an eye blow to what Tamil film star Karthi holds on to the next image Siruthai poster. As a saw blade circular at the end of a stick of wood, an instrument of destruction which has no reason whatsoever to exist God's Green Earth other than for look impressive on the screen. What it does.

A remake of 2006 TELUGU film Vikramarkudu Siruthai seeks to be all sorts of crazy with moments of violence extreme - but elegant - backed against broad slapstick and dance numbers. Scheduled for release at the beginning of 2011 the trailer can be found below.

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Monday, January 24, 2011

Sundance 2011: MAD BASTARDS Trailer

MadBastards.jpgHere's the thing about titles: you are at the height of their. And writer / director Brendan Fletcher has developed the very high bar in this respect with his first feature film, Mad Bastards, soon the first Sundance.
TJ is a crazy bastard and son of 13 separate bullet is on the fast track to become one, too. After looking away from the House of his mother, TJ sets off the coast from across the country for the region of Kimberly Northwest Australia to make things right with his son. TeX grandfather lived a difficult life and now, as a local COP, he wants to change things for the men of her community.

Overlap between the three generations, Mad Bastards looks raw on the journey to become a human and personal transformation, it should be. Developed with the local Aboriginal communities and fueled by a local cast, Mad Bastards draws on the rich tradition of inherent aboriginal life stories. Using the music of legendary musicians from Broome fuses Pigram, writer/director Brendan Fletcher brothers poetically the harsh reality of violence, healing and family.

The first trailer for it came online and looking as Fletcher will make good on the promise of the title that it looks like RAW, powerful stuff anchored by some very strong performances. See below.


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Yoshitaka Amano's Final Fantasy made debut in DEVA ZAN

A press conference held on 21 December has announced details of Yoshitaka Amano - character prolific designer/illustrator for Vampire Hunter D, Gatchaman, and the series of video games Final Fantasy - first film animation film Deva Zan.

It should be communicated throughout the world in the spring of 2012.? You can find an overview of one minute embedded below.


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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Retrospective Asia - review "vengeance is mine."

"It'll be damn cold in the ringing" rail reprehensible CAWI (Ken Ogata in its most beautiful performance) as police across the bleak snowy terrain car travel. Forgetting it was captured because it is quiet and only his well-being and thus begins the loosely true tale of this sociopath clinic and serial killer. This prolific account is told with a detachment by one of the real masters of Japanese cinema Shohei Imamura, and said to the Japan cynical postwar period, definition of new wave (1979) portraying films that critical scrutiny of the country.The first point of contention is the title "Vengeance is mine" does not describe the protagonist and the rise of his murder, but suggests instead a holistic. a personal attack on the Japan itself using as a catalyst and symbol of defamation.The film continues with the facts, as Iwao, Iwao pompously smiling at his interrogators that they draw its path by the Japan and murders occurred over short years. This overlay exposure leads to flame murder somewhere back in the timeline. It animates calmly in a pickup truck with two other workers. They split and he murdered almost immediately that it is partnering with a field. There is no rhyme, reason and cause immense daring shows that he himself killed to death in broad daylight. Stops his detachment extreme feelings of empathy quite clear that his vicious attack. It was perhaps a desire that he retains his composure quickly and considers its actions with morbid curiosity. It runs back to a tree and some fruit samples he spit on the ground in disgust. This fruit is a symbol of the Japan and its values. It animates with another worker and in no time at all the brutally not murders him also. Investigation continues, bodies are found in the present examination continues to unravel Iwao. The return of flame goes to his distant past, a case of Christian prejudice on a small island that his family was forced to abandon their vessels fishing for the Japanese army. They are treated unkindly and Iwao as a child rebels against attacks while her meek Captain father looks on. In fact, in as child to his little from time to time of war and into adulthood, it is clear that Iwao has always rebelled against standards. His checkered past continues to unravel. This is a strictly Christian education but ignores this, hates his father and mother to death concerns. Even for his family, he believes engages in criminal and terrifying acts.But that there is no innocent in revenge no mine. His father is a hypocrite and tries to deny her feelings for Iwao reluctant partner. She seduced him also Iwao is undaunted, but there are a few images disturbing of the father and his partner in which an animal is tortured and killed by them relationship and this flash suggests that evil is inherent and finally everywhere. This bizarre love triangle continues for some time, especially after Iwao is released from prison, his time is not described, but the initial reasons are master larceny. It seems that his actions are degrading worst crimes.Throughout flashbacks that more people are murdered. Some simply to help almost shelter and money. The interrogation continued and appeared at a certain point in its past what iwao claimed to be a teacher. Close view of the streets close this intentionally walking towards a family hostel which is similar to that of the journey real families. It remains at the hostel, the guardian is the grandmother of a girl who works as both of them are morally ambiguous. Iwao integrates perfectly with suspicious transactions and illicit sex are the norm here. His vicious streak appears to have disappeared long and it is now an educated man.It humble but false is terrifying how his persona changes. His chameleon like attitude to life was finally refined and is an effective con artist but at this stage the careless trail left behind was wanted by the authorities. Its now recognizable face common mass continues to hide in the hostel and its appearance and clothing as well as he can.Vengeance mine suggests that there is a sociopath throughout the world and Japan same itself is presented changes. The owners of the Inn are filthy opportunists. daughter enters a relationship with Iwao, mother, hidden, watches, it admits even murdering before.It is not long before Iwao is recognized by a prostitute, her cold heart emerges once, in the final Act presented before the conclusion of Iwao himself to be truly psychotic film and any adjustment to the human race.But perhaps proves true vision Imamura suggests is that the actions of the Iwao are excusable and decency, at least in the Japan is deemed to be nowhere in sight. It is supported, but it is imperturbable, because he knows that evil is indeed anywhere in the world.

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PSIFF 2011: SOUTH AMERICAN CINEMA

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hermano_poster_02.jpg Along with my previously-posted entries on the Argentine film Carancho (1, 2) and the Peruvian entries October and Undertow, the 2011 edition of the Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) is rich with representative entries from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica and Venezuela, which I'll explore alphabetically by title. Hermano (Marcel Rasquin, Venezuela)--Situated in PSIFF's Awards Buzz sidebar as Venezuela's official submission to the Foreign Language category of the 2011 Academy AwardsR, Hermano scored multiple honors when it premiered at the 2010 Moscow International Film Festival, including Grand Prix for Best Film, Critics Choice for Best Film, and Audience Choice for Best Film. It went on to win the Cinelatino Audience Award for Best Feature at its North American premiere at the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival and the Special Jury Prize for Opera Prima (First Film) at the 32nd edition of the Havana Film Festival.

As synopsized by PSIFF: "Two brothers who grew up playing soccer in the dirt fields of their barrio, have their prayers answered when a scout gives them the opportunity to try out with the Caracas Football Club. Daniel, the striker, dreams of being a professional player, but Julio's more pragmatic goals of providing for the family lead him down a darker path. As the details of their lives unfold through the simple act of baking a cake, a raucous party or rooftop romance, we see the sinister undercurrents that threaten to derail everything they hope for, and the bonds of family pushed to the limit. Venezuela's entry for Best Foreign Film tells a bittersweet tale of a brother's love and loyalty being put to the test. With fast-paced, exhilarating action, director Marcel Rasquin captures the raw talent of the young hopeful players, and demonstrates the unifying power of team sports played in a vacant lot."

At Variety, Dennis Harvey notes that Rasquin's engaging first feature "escapes cliche by dint of unpretentious presentation and winning perfs." Also reported at Variety, Music Box Films has recently picked up U.S. rights for Hermano and plan a spring release. Latino Weekly Review acknowledges that soccer is an international sport beloved worldwide and praises Hermano for showing how the power of the sport--as played in vacant lots throughout the world--serves "to unify and create peace even as the darker forces of human survival are played out with every movement of the ball and its agile players." Official website [Spanish]. IMDb. Wikipedia. Facebook.

Life of Fish, The / La vida de los Peces (Matias Bize, Chile)--In the Awards Buzz sidebar as Chile's official submission to the OscarsR, The Life of Fish likewise boasts its U.S. premiere at PSIFF. Andres (Santiago Cabrera) is 33 and has been living for 10 years in Berlin, where he works as a travel writer. When he returns to his native Chile on holiday, at a friend's birthday party he rediscovers the world he left behind, including his old love, Beatriz (Blanca Lewin). Director Matias Bize explains: "My idea was to tell the story as simply as possible and follow Andres through his process. I wanted to tell the story in an emotional way, using the camera to penetrate deeply into the characters. The dialogue is very important in this film, but in some cases, what is not said--the silences and looks--are even more important." Taking that cue, PSIFF synopsizes: "It is not what the characters say so much as what they don't say. Their smallest gestures speak volumes. Their collective pain is never fully articulated but is all-pervasive. The weight of missed opportunities leaps off the screen making you question your own."

At Variety, Boyd von Hoeij appears to have the best handle on why Bize's latest effort is his most accessible. Though he's quick to characterize The Life Of Fish as a "slow-burning yakfest", he nonetheless finds it "loquacious and ultimately poignant" and discerns that it represents "an impressive leap forward" for Bize whose "by now familiar Linklater-esque approach finally feels like a solid fit for the material, with both the mise-en-scene and the screenplay ... less claustrophobic and inward-looking than usual. ...Real-time pacing is thankfully accomplished through artfully edited sequences rather than endlessly long takes, and the naturally acted dialogue is what will keep auds hooked." He concludes, "The strong suit of Fish is that it focuses not on possible things in the future or concrete ones in the past, but the nebulous notion of what might have been." Official website [Spanish]. IMDb. Wikipedia. Facebook.

Lope (Andrucha Waddington, Brazil / Spain)--Seeing its North American premiere in PSIFF's Modern Masters sidebar, Lope serves as a romantic introduction to the passionate life of Spanish playwright Lope de Vega. The young poet returns to Madrid from war and gets his foot in the door of Madrid's most important theatre troupe--quickly charming his boss's daughter. His childhood friend, Isabel de Urbina, also falls under the spell of his poems. So much seduction eventually brings misfortune and he must flee Madrid. Says Waddington: "The screenplay and subject fascinated me: a young man becoming an artist. Plus, it's set when Spain was the center of the world."

At MUBI, David Hudson rounded up the Screen and Variety reviews from Lope's world premiere at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival, where I too caught the film and found its most intriguing image to be that of Lope de Vega's staging of the conquest of the Americas. For me, this was a reflexive moment: a historical theatrical reenactment within a historical cinematic reenactment. It made me wonder at what point the "contemporary" would raise its relevant head? Perhaps within such historical reenactments, it could rightfully be said that the modern motivations of the characters bridge their historicities into the contemporary? El Septima Arte has an image gallery, the trailer (in Spanish), and a second gallery that includes a music video of Jorge Drexler's title theme. IMDb.

Lula, The Son of Brazil / Lula, O Filho do Brasil (Fabio Barreto, Brazil)--Whether the Brazilian biopic Lope is more swashbucking than Lula, Brazil's official submission to the Academy AwardsR, remains to be seen. The most expensive Brazilian film ever made upon its release, Lula chronicles the arduous journey of a penniless child of the slums to a man on the brink of greatness. Adapted from Denise Parana's biography of the same name, Lula is a sweeping tribute to Luis Inacio "Lula" da Silva, who rose from the poverty of northeastern Brazil to the presidency of the fifth most populous nation in the world. Robert Koehler's Variety review is respectful of this lavishly-staged "prole to power story", though he criticizes the screenplay as succumbing "to many of the most unfortunate narrative tendencies of biopics, including a proclivity for piling on incident after incident as a substitute for real character insight." Perhaps more importantly, the film "fails to powerfully dramatize the ruthlessness workers and anti-government forces would face over the next two decades, perhaps ironically buttressing claims by political foes who dismiss the pic as mere pro-Lula propaganda." Official website [Portuguese]. IMDb. Wikipedia.

My Life With Carlos / Mi vida con Carlos (German Berger-Hertz, Chile)--As synopsized at PSIFF, "My Life with Carlos is the journey of a son in search of the memory of his assassinated father. More than 30 years of silence are broken when Chilean-born German Berger-Hertz starts to piece together the puzzle of his father's life. In 1973, when Berger-Hertz was only a year old, his father was brutally killed under the newly installed Pinochet regime. Berger revisits the legacy of the man he never knew and the regime that devastated the country. This lyrical and personal documentary combines the emotions of an intimate melodrama with thriller-like tension. Berger weaves his first person narration with beautifully shot scenes, candid interviews, and chilling videos of Pinochet-era violence. In a country where the past remains mostly in the shadows, his exploration of how the pain of injustice permeates not only his family but also the fabric of the country transforms his work in a cathartic and ultimately healing experience for everyone involved." Official website. IMDb. Facebook.

Of Love and Other Demons / Del Amor y Otros Demonios (Hilda Hidalgo, Costa Rica / Colombia)--Situated within PSIFF's Awards Buzz sidebar as Costa Rica's official foreign language submission to the Academy AwardsR, Hilda Hidalgo's debut feature is a masterful interpretation of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's powerful and moving novel. As synopsized by PSIFF: "Her dreamlike landscapes are a luscious counterpoint to the narrative backdrop of the smothering restraint of the inquisition." At Variety, Andrew Barker praises: "In her startlingly assured debut, Of Love and Other Demons, Costa Rican writer-director Hilda Hidalgo has seemingly unlocked the key to translating the cerebral sensuality of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's writing into film, providing one of the few screen adaptations worthy of the Colombian novelist's source material. She's aided immensely in this effort by two impeccable lead performances and painterly cinematography, but the seemingly casual mastery of difficult narrative rhythms is all her own." Official website [Spanish]. IMDb. Wikipedia. Facebook.

Puzzle / Rompecabezas (Natalia Smirnoff, Argentina)--Nominated for the Golden Bear at the 2010 Berlinale, Natalia Smirnoff's debut feature figures its way into the World Cinema Now sidebar at PSIFF 2011. Its central premise of a housewife quietly asserting her independence through a passion for solving puzzles instantly reminded me of Queen to Play from last year's PSIFF line-up. At The Flickering Wall, Jorge Mourinha writes: "Sensible, charming character study that effortlessly overcomes its slight narrative through attentive performances and handling." At Phil On Film, Philip Concannon observes: "Having given one of the best performances of the past year in Lucrecia Martel's The Headless Woman, Maria Onetto displays a different side to her character in Puzzle, giving a warm and thoroughly engaging turn as bored housewife Maria del Carmen. ... Natalia Smirnoff's charming debut film is a gentle drama about a repressed woman gradually blossoming in the most unexpected manner, and her screenplay is full of perceptive, witty touches." Official website [Spanish]. IMDb. Wikipedia.

Square Meter / Metro Cuadrado (Nayra Ilic, Chile)--As indicated earlier, Square Meter sees its North American premiere in PSIFF's New Voices / New Visions sidebar. Francisca and Andres settle into their love nest, their pasts continue to intrude upon the idyllic situation they both had envisioned--the baggage they cannot shed much like the boxes they seem unable to unpack. As further synopsized by PSIFF: "In this extremely capable and self-assured work, Ilic does not shy away from letting the actors have their moment. There is a simplicity in the way quiet moments and awkward silences are captured, allowing audiences the rare treat of understanding what the characters are thinking without their having to say a word." IMDb.

Waste Land (Lucy Walker, Brazil)--Recently shortlisted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science's for Best Documentary Feature, Waste Land has won numerous awards on the festival circuit, kicking off with Best World Cinema Documentary at Sundance 2010. As synopsized by PSIFF, Waste Land is "an up-close-and-personal look at one of the world's leading visual artists--the magnetically charismatic Vik Muniz--as well as a community portrait of the catadores--pickers of recyclable materials at the Jardim Gramacho landfill. The film tracks a three-year collaboration between the Brazilian-born Muniz, and several catadores. Under his direction, they recreate giant photographic images of themselves out of garbage. The project yields surprising results--both as finished works of art and as a potentially life-changing experience for the catadores. Visually dazzling, the film--aided by Moby's deeply resonant soundtrack--packs a powerful emotional punch." If the External Reviews at IMDb don't satisfy you, David Hudson has rounded up some choice reviews at MUBI. Official website. IMDb. Wikipedia. Facebook.

Cross-published on The Evening Class.


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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Sundance 2011: The trailer first OREGONIAN!

Alerts the trailer by Todd Brown, December 27, 2010 12 H 00 The Oregonian-Lindsay gun.jpg Sundance audience better prepare for something of very, very strange when they set foot in Calvin Lee Reeder Oregonian projections. Reeder has already built a loyal cult with his previous short films - Rambler the in particular - and the same bizarre qualities and dream logic that led his shorts are in full effect with debut feature.

True Blood Lindsay Pulsipher takes initiative, the festival described it as follows:

It is necessary. A place where the sky is broad and forests are thick - and strange. You can lose yourself with eternally in these woods. You'll truckers with problems and old women with strange powers. You can even make a friend fur. Make sure that you stay calm. Spend some time with a woman from Oregon is lost on the road and operates from its past. It is now a chance to discover all the grotesque Northwest has to offer, whether it likes it or not.
Pulsipher is a veteran of the Reeder shorts and first game for anything in the world. In a particularly striking moment of The Rambler it pukes quite literally his intestines in the face of a man having sex with him. They will be all that so far, this time pushing? You'll get your first clue in the movie teaser below. var part; var href = $('img[id=main-asset]') .attr ('src'); part = href. $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset_plus_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset_plus_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = /(\/[^\/]+)\.(\w+)$/.exec(href); If (party) {part = part [1] + "-thumb-"; $('_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none') .asset-body; $('.asset_plus_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); If (party) {part = part [1] + "-thumb-"; $('_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none') .asset-body; $('.asset_plus_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} Video

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Twitch kills top: SIMHA

We have not had an Indian film kill since the first payment of kills top twitch.? I'm here to fix that.? It is a doozy, too.

Simha is one of the top grossing films 2010 Tollywood, and it is pure chaos from one end to another.? I don't think I've seen this many killed in a movie in a long all this certainly not many numbers closely choreographed songs and dances.? The story is far too complex to try a synopsis, but in the interest of this clip, I'll give a brief reduction:

Simha (Nandamuri Balakrishna) is a postnuclear.? It is the miracle local surgeon working / vigilant hell-bent on creating order in his town.? In the interest of justice, he brutally murder crime of all stripes in public, usually with a large crowd benevolent acclamation.? In this scene, he has just discovered telepathically that the thugs are gathered in one place to ambush him, but you did ambush Simha.? It goes on roundly dissipation, hacking, breaking, disemboweling and downright murdering tens of wicked.? Just Simha was executed with 4 large Spears and is surrounded by, but that is the end.? Shit is about to get REAL...


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Friday, January 21, 2011

Speech King review

Enter "From King's speech", it is difficult not to be cynical. After all, before displaying an image of the film, he is already begging for an Oscar. All pieces are in place: a historic image (check) the British Royal family (check) the war (verification). A formidable crust top cast (check) led by a skilled player which many believe is due for the treatment of price (check) playing a person with a disability (check-check). All cooked meal by ace award mongers Harvey and Bob Weinstein as still taxable year class end. It is as if scientists gathered in a lab to create the perfect Oscar winner. And it may be just what the movie will be. As I said, it is going, it is easy to be cynical. It remain cynical once that they film gets going it is becoming increasingly difficult. War is exerted to and the newly crowned King George VI has a problem. His rally in England, morale, but it difficult when one is dealing with obnoxious speech disorder. The King (played brilliantly by Colin Firth) must give necessary for his country rallying speech and not disturb her. Disrupt not only his step, he must really hit a lot of the Park (to use an American analogy). Can he do it?

Fortunately, at the request of his wife always supportive (Helena Bonham Carter) was met with a revolutionary speech - instructor makes an unsuccessful actor played with enthusiasm by Geoffrey Rush. The relationship between the two men, even though it is contradictory everything first, predictable of turns into something quite close and vital. This is the friendship of these two men is not only the heart of the film, but also the point of the film. As simple as that and deep, is.

Of course period decoration set and costumes are immaculately spot - on. Edited by Tom Hooper (best known for helming the HBO "John Adams" mini-series) is never boring, because it keeps things moving along in an admirably vivid rhythm. Along the way, Michael Gambon and Guy Pearce show supporting roles as members of the Royal family. The participation of these actors is almost always a good thing, "From the King speech" is no exception.

Therefore, despite his social relationships with the war and people with disabilities, "From the King speech" is not at all heavy or that it is particularly difficult. But it is perfectly correct, as the film almost perfectly what it sets out to do. It can not wrap mental typing something like "Black Swan", but as film, "From the King speech" can boast a false nary move. It may go down easy, but it drops as well.

-Tudor Jim


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Top 10 films memories of J. Hurtado 2010

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I have a confession to make:? I didn't see anywhere near the number of movies that my colleagues here did in 2010, so my list is going to be a little bit different.? I'm not so much making a "Best of" list for 2010, mine is more a list of most memorable movie experiences from the last year.? Almost all of them came in cinema halls, but one or two of them came at home with new films from this year.? You'll see a few familiar names, but then you'll see some things that I bet won't be found on the other guys' lists.? But, hey!? Isn't that what these lists are for, finding the things you missed??

The films on this list made me laugh, chant, and knotted my stomach; sometimes they made me rethink what films should be like, they challenged my preconceptions about people and places; some of them made me question my own sanity, and some were just plain fun in a way that was fresh and new.? There are probably at least a couple that you haven't seen, well, here's your chance to seek them out, in no particular order apart from number one:

1. Enthiran (Dir: Shankar)? Enthiran was an event film of the highest magnitude.? The highest budgeted film ever made in India.? Superstar Rajinikanth inspires such devotion that nothing I've seen in my life compares to the mania that preceded and followed this films release.? The news from India was madness, 24 hour showings were booked solid for weeks in advance, men made pilgrimages to bless holy relics in hopes of the film's success, showings began at 5:30 AM in Dubai, people sat in auditoriums all day to watch the film numerous times.? Most of us cannot even imagine the kind of insanity a new Rajinikanth film inspires, let alone his biggest film ever.? Even in my little corner of the world in Dallas, I saw the film with my wife (neither of us are Indian) in an auditorium absolutely packed with screaming devotees.? We were the only non-Indians in the room, this showing had been sold out for a week, and there was a line out the front door of the theater for ticket holders.? All I can say is that if you missed this, you missed the film event of the year.? When Superstar Rajni's credit comes up (before the production company or any other credits) the house exploded, confetti rained down from the upper rows of the theater, and whistles, cat calls, and shouts of "Thalaivar!" (Rajni's nickname to fans) drowned out the sound track completely through the opening credits and music.? Then the film started, and it only got better.? In my review I made note of the fact that I have no illusions about the experience diminishing once I get a chance to watch this on home video (not available yet, trust me I'll let you know), however, I have confetti at the ready to try and recapture my top movie experience of 2010 at home!

2. Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World (Dir: Edgar Wright)? I am a child of the 80's, I played the original Nintendo Entertainment System, I had a Commodore 64, and I pumped thousands of dollars, I'm sure, into Street Fighter II arcade machines.? I am the target audience for Scott Pilgrim.? That being said, it wasn't those cultural references that really impressed me about this film, though they were cute.? Edgar Wright made his most ambitious movie with Scott Pilgrim, he took chances, not only in making a film that would be hard to market outside of a core audience, but also by smashing so many different types of films together and then watching them explode on the screen in a way that is captivating and fresh.? I didn't walk out of the theater muttering to myself about the 8-bit video game theme music references, I wasn't looking for Easter eggs in the film; I walked out knowing that I'd seen something that no one had ever done before, and I loved it.? It had well-choreographed action, it had heart, it had conflict, it had art, it was touching, exciting, fresh, and familiar all at once.? The blurb on the home video label calls it a "game changer" and while I get the video game reference in that blurb, I unfortunately don't think this film will change much in the film game, especially due to its dismal box-office performance.? However, for those of us who saw it and enjoyed it, we all know that there is something special in Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World, and we know that we may not see anything like it at a megaplex for a long time, and for that, we are sad.

3.? Piranha 3-D (Dir: Alexandre Aja)? Okay, here is where I'm sure I'll begin to drift from my fellow writers.? As evidenced in my Video Home Invasion column, I love horror.? I love horror, I love exploitation, I love gore films, I love them.? To be honest, I remember hearing that Aja was going to remake Piranha well ahead of the release and I wasn't terribly interested at that point. It wasn't until the first pre-release reviews starting trickling out over the internet that my interest piqued.? I read glorious tales of a film that went so far over the edge that it rivaled some of my favorite films from my teenage years.? Sex, blood, and killer fish were all I could think about.? The more I heard, the more I became convinced that all of the hype had to be over-blown, there was no way that a studio would let a director go that far in the boob-baring and blood-letting departments.? I riled myself up and bought my ticket for the midnight show, I went alone, my wife had work the next morning, Hell, so did I, but I wouldn't be deterred.? I saw Piranha 3-D in a nearly empty auditorium with perhaps four other people to share my experience.? The hype was all real.? It was everything that exploitation films of the 80's promised with their posters and rarely delivered.? The key gore set pieces were astonishing.? There were boobs to spare.? From the opening tribute to Jaws featuring Richard Dreyfuss, to the closing sequences promising more to come, Piranha 3-D was exactly the film I paid to see.? A sequel, fittingly titled Piranha 3-DD, has already been greenlit and is to be directed by John Gulager of Feast, I can't say I'm as enthusiastic for the next one, but I love being surprised.? Piranha 3-D releases on home video just after the new year, and it is a day one purchase for me, I'm not sure that the 3-D floating dismembered Member will be the same at home, but this is the type of film I'll support every time.? Piranha 3-D promised, Piranha 3-D delivered, can't ask for much more than that.

4.? Gandu (Dir: Q)? This is the only film on the list that I didn't manage to catch on the big screen, but I'm trying to make that happen here in Dallas sooner rather than later.? This film was a revelation to me.? I've seen a lot of Indian films, I know their tropes, I feel like I know their hopes and dreams, I feel like I know where they live.? I've seen the slums, I've seen the poverty, I've seen the new riches and opportunities, I've seen the heroism, I've seen the evil and corruption that seems to invade the lives of so many common Indian people.? Gandu is something I haven't seen.? It is a film about a loser.? Gandu has hopes and dreams, but he also has drug and gambling habits to feed, and they seem to take precedence more often than not.? It isn't brightly colored, it isn't coy, it isn't unassuming, it isn't a fable, and it is in no way conventional.? It isn't conventional for any film, let along an Indian film.? It is graphic in its depiction of sex, drugs, poverty, and the real struggles of real people living real lives, not the typical escapism of Indian film.? It showed me an India I'd never seen, and it made me care about and cheer for a person who is the hero of no one else's story but his own.? A person like me (only with more drugs).?? Q took an idea and made it real, it was a risk, in fact, there is very little chance right now of Gandu getting a commercial release in India, its content will never pass the censors.? It isn't the kind of film that makes it into art house complexes in the west, it is too experimental.? Normally, I hate that, there is nothing worse that directors who love the smell of their own farts, but Q makes it work.? The film, though very disjointed, works and doesn't feel self-indulgent.? Everything in the film contributes to the messages, from the dialogue, or lack thereof, to the editing style and visual choices.? It is a complete work, and it represents 90 of the finest minutes I spent in front of my TV this year.

5. Symbol (Dir: Hitoshi Matsumoto)? Symbol isn't really about anything.? The first two thirds are a bizarre, yet captivating set up for a joke, but the audience doesn't know they're being told a joke, and the payoff is all the sweeter for it.? Matsumoto places the main action in two locations, first in rural Mexico, where an amateur luchador is off to a weekend wrestling match, and second with Matsumoto himself stuck in a big white room.? Much of the Mexican story plays out like Big Man Japan did, with a very wry sense of humor, and no real direction that the audience can see.? In the other "story", Matsumoto's unnamed character spends a good portion of the film trying to get out of this room in which he finds himself.? He has awakened from a dream, he's even still wearing his jammies, and he can't quite figure out what is going on.? Almost that entire last sentence could also apply to Symbol's audience.? To describe it, Symbol doesn't sound like much, but never has such a seemingly endless stream of ephemera had such a volcanic result in a theater when the punchline is finally delivered.? By the time we reach the 2001: A Space Odyssey inspired conclusion, we are totally into it, and want to watch it all over again!

6.? Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil (Dir: Eli Craig)? The fact that this movie still hasn't found American distribution is a crime.? Tucker & Dale is a pitch perfect send up of any number of classic Hillbilly horrors, from Deliverance to Wrong Turn.? In fact, this is pretty much Wrong Turn filmed from the inside out.? Tucker and Dale are a couple of down home boys celebrating their recent acquisition of a country cabin vacation home.? As they are on their way down to check the place out and start sprucing it up, they encounter a group of 20 somethings who are determined to get into trouble and are frightened by the prospects of anyone wearing overalls or speaking with a Southern accent.? In their ignorance and fear, the nubile would be victims turn aggressive and manage to get themselves killed one after another with no help from our hapless heroes, who are just trying to survive the weekend.? When I saw this film at the Dallas International Film Festival in April, the entire crowd was completely in stitches from start to finish.? The film has had regular theatrical runs in Russia and Lithuania, what the Hell is wrong with you, America?? See this film by any means necessary!

7.? Despicable Me (Dir: Pierre Coffin, Chris Renaud)? I have a six year old son, so I see a lot of kid's movies.? I saw almost all of them this year, though I did manage to avoid Yogi Bear and Marmaduke, but the one that stuck with me the most was Despicable Me.? I loved Toy Story 3, and I really enjoyed Tangled, TS3's efficient and bald-faced tear-jerking, and Tangled's attempt to resurrect the Disney musical, I think Despicable Me ultimately had the most heart of all of them.? The animation was fantastic, the 3-D effects, which are usually pretty anemic, were put to some of the best use I've seen yet in the film as well, but most of all, the characters had depth and were lovable.? I was pulling for Steve Carrel's Gru, and don't get me started on the Minions.? If I had my Christmas wish, I'd have a horde of Minions in my basement doing my bidding as well.? Most non-Pixar animated films suffer from the times in which they are made, and not from the technology, but mostly from jokes that will become dated within months.? Despicable Me has an absolute minimum of those jokes, and will translate into good times for my family and I for years to come.

8.? Summer Wars (Dir: Mamoru Hosoda)? I'm not an anime geek.? I don't watch anime serials, I very rarely watch features, but once in a great while something will grab me.? Summer Wars grabbed me.? Summer Wars was a wonderful, ambitious film.? Taking a very high tech world and attacking it from a sprawling country estate was an inspired decision.? The characters both inside the network and outside in the real world have real worries and concerns.? They mimic so many of us who hide behind our keyboards are create personas that live well beyond our real lives while in cyberspace.? I'm a simple quiet guy in real life, but here online I can be outspoken and opinionated.? This is the power that the Internet has afforded people, and Summer Wars explores that dynamic in an interesting and entertaining way.? Not the mention the fact that the animation is top notch.? I think I still may like Hosoda's The Girl Who Leapt Through Time better, but this is far more expansive and impressive an effort.

9.? House (Dir: Nobuhiko Obayashi)? I know this is a cheat, technically.? I said at the beginning of this column that this was a catalog of my experiences, and I experienced House for the very first time in 2010.?? No single review of this film has managed to do it complete justice, and I'd wager that none ever will.? House is experimental but accessible, there is a completely lucid plot hidden beneath the layers of hallucinatory special effects.? You've never seen anything like it and you never will again, at once it is a product of its time in that the effects are very indicative of where the technology was at the time, but at the same time it is a film out of place with time.? It fits no movement, no particular genre, apart from being broadly a horror film, but it incorporates elements of the musical, the TV commercial, comedy, action, wuxia films, and too many other genres to count.? Nobuhiko Obayashi was a singular artist who's time has finally come, even though his name barely registered a blip on anyone's radar before about 2008.? The rediscovery and resurgence of House is one of the great filmic happenings of the last few years.? These films exist all over the place, mostly forgotten, waiting to be unearthed and shown anew to audiences who are ready to believe in the magic of cinema.? House is a film that leaves very few people undecided, either you love it, or you hate it, very few people are indifferent.? I find myself firmly in the former camp, and even though the film is 33 years old, it was still one of my top movie experiences of 2010.

10.? The Man From Nowhere (Dir: Lee Jeong-beom)? The Man From Nowhere was one of the great films from 2010 that very few people really had on their radar.? It came out of Fantastic Fest with a bunch of really great reviews.? Following that, it was picked up for limited runs in a couple dozen multiplexes across the US and Canada and it was successful anywhere people were able to see it.? It is a classically styled heroic bloodshed film in the mold of Kim Ji-woon's brilliant A Bittersweet Life.? I saw it on the opening night of that theatrical run in suburban Dallas and I was blown away.??The Man From Nowhere is far from a perfect film, and it throws everything including the kitchen sink in to move the plot along, but its brutality and violence can't quite hide its heart.? The movie belongs to Won Bin, who's silent power, charisma, and abs rule the day.? There are other characters, but they are mostly stock characters straight outta any given South Korean gangster film, of which there are dozens of examples in recent years, but Won Bin's Cha Tae-sik is a real person.?? He just happens to be a real person who used to be an American trained super indestructible spy who has gone into hiding and now runs a pawn shop.? None of the events have any ring of truth, but there is an emotional power behind everything Won Bin does, in spite of the hackneyed set ups of which he is a perpetual victim.? At the end you are cheering him on, even as the situations stray farther and farther from reality.? He is involved in a Herculean quest with insurmountable odds, but we still cheer him on.? Every punch and stab punctures the viewers heart, and the final scenes mark less of a choreographed battle and more of an endurance test for character and viewer alike.? Ultimately we are the winners.? The Man From Nowhere leaves you drained, but exhilarated and ready for more.

That's it for me.? I'm going to post a top ten home video releases, but that may have to wait till I get home from vacation, as I suspect I'll have a couple of contenders in my mail to examine.? I hope this will inspire someone to seek out something new, or perhaps something they just overlooked.? Until next year! ?


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OH no, it is the Daleks!

Alerts the trailer by Todd Brown, 21 December 2010 4 H 32 OhNoDaleks.jpg what to do if you're a filmmaker between projects? Well, if you're black sheep and under Mount helmer Jonathan King put you your next film written work, of course, but you also ventilate your creativity in mediums slightly faster and cheaper. As a comic.

Yup, among other things King is also a comic artist and a very good. He was drawing bands and validate its Tumblr account for a little while maintaining and two in particular - invasions involving iconic villains scifi Brit residents may not be much bothered by - strike me as particularly good. Loan? Because it is time for OH no, it is the Daleks! confuse you with the same theme OH non, c'est tripods! at your own risk and peril.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Prinyanka Chopra is the black widow ever 7 MAAF KHOON

Something on film people, they do not hire ugly chicks.? Priyanka Chopra is a stunner and former Miss world.? Recently, it has stuck itself in several courses of the rom-coms mill in Bollywood without much success, his last really large single was Dostana in 2008.? I think I feel its performs a back with his latest film "hit the floor", 7 Khoon Maaf.

7 Khoon Maaf shares the story of a black widow who each husband seven murders, the story takes 20 to 65 Priyanka protagonist.? This is not fluffy stuff, and it seems like the type of project that could finally get it stretching its wings acting and let us know what it is actually obtained.? As if the story was not enough to inspire her, she earned average cast key men face, playing his seven husband is Neil Nitin Mukesh, New York, Naseeruddin Shah, Monsoon Wedding), his co-star Dostana John Abraham, Russian actor Alexander Dyachenko, Annu Kapoor, Vivaan Shah and my own favorite staff and future Spider-Man villain, Irfan Khan.? With this kind of firepower at the other end, Chopra will have it step up a notch.

After the latest trend for Bollywood films, 7 Khoon Maaf will be imported Oscar winning talent to fill some of the behind the scenes support roles.? The largest behind the scenes of the film character is Greg Cannon, winner of the Oscar for special effects in the curious case of Benjamin Button, he was responsible for old Chopra throw you, if Wikipedia is to be believed, Chopra went even so far to gain weight for the role, and somehow that makes her sound even more.? The Director has also a few winners in his sleeve, Vishal Bardwaj helmed a certain number of winners in India and is best known for his adaptations of Shakespeare Omkara (Othello) and Maqbool (MacBeth).? This a fairly decent chance of being good film and I'm all for any movie with Priyanka Chopra!

7 Khoon Maaf is scheduled for release in February 2011.


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