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06.30.06 by Widge @ 1:56 am ![]() You never know where this stuff is going to turn up. An amusement park in the Adirondacks is apparently the home to a set of nine displays that tell the story of Snow White. These Disney relics were originally created for use in department stores back in 1937. And they've recently been restored. That's right, they're the original Disney bigfigs! Check out the whole story and the pics here. Categorized as: Movies
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06.19.06 by Widge @ 10:14 am ![]() We Make Money Not Art tips us off to a most excellent resource of Forbidden Planet images, including several classic promo photos with Robby the Robot and Anne Francis. They snagged it originally from Hugo Strikes Back. Categorized as: Movies
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06.02.06 by Widge @ 12:53 pm ![]()
... Don't look at me. What the hell could I possibly say to that? Go read the article at Twitch yourself. Thanks to Connanibus for blowing our minds. Categorized as: Headsup and Movies
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04.14.06 by Rob Levy @ 12:51 am
Written by Gavin Hood, based on the novel by Athol Fugard My Advice: Don't miss it. Lately, Hollywood has made scores of films made about murderers, robbers and reprobates who find redemption and salvation. However none of these blockbusters measure up to Tsotsi--a moving independent film from South Africa. Winner of an Academy Award and several film festivals, the film is both deeply upsetting and uplifting. It's one of those grimy films, much like 2002's City of God, that relies on the power of the visual image to tell story. Set over a period of six days, it's an emotionally transforming story of a tough-as-nails Soweto gang leader on the lamb after killing a man on a crowded bus and then beating up a repentant gang member in a sweaty, dank and dark Soweto club. While on the run, he commandeers a car and shoots the female driver. After the carjacking he looks in the back seat and discovers the woman's child in the backseat, thus embroiling him in the most difficult of positions for a gangster. In order to avoid detection, Tsotsi must look after the child in secrecy. His initial attempts at child-rearing are meet with comical and tragic results. Consumed with panic, Tsotsi turns to Miriam, a widowed mother for help. Over the next several days Miriam and Tsotsi form a bond that leads Tsotsi into strange new emotional territory. If that were not enough, he must also fend off Sergeant Zuma, a brutally obsessively cop who will stop at nothing to reel Tsotsi in. It is these two conflicts--the conflict with the law and the conflict within him--that leads Tsotsi down the difficult road of self-discovery and redemption. Presley Chweneyagae is astonishing in his breakout performance as Tsotsi. From the outset, Tsotsi is a man filled with rage, dashed hopes and a bleak future, a fact prolifically underscored by Chweneyagae's anguished facial emotions and quiet angry stares. Chweneyagae is the emotional and physical powerhouse that propels the film. Terry Pheto plays Miriam, the Soweto mother who helps Tsotsi nurture the baby while injecting common sense into his thick skull. Since Miriam is one of the catalysts for Tsotsi's redemption, a great deal of the film's emotional resonance lies in the hands of Pheto. Fortunately she does a terrific job of making her character shine like a diamond beneath the grit of Soweto's rough streets. Like any good film, Tsotsi's success lay in the vision of its director. Writer/director Hood takes the crime-filled ghettos of a post-Apartheid Johannesburg and transforms them into townships of hope and salvation. His brilliant direction and tight script helped the film garner the 2005 Academy Award for best foreign film. Tsotsi is well acted, crisply directed and visually stunning triumph of cinema. This rough and ready tale of rage and redemption is just one of the reasons why South Africa has recently been touted as the new "hot spot" of world cinema. Buy the DVD from Amazon. Categorized as: Movies and Reviews
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02.27.06 by Widge @ 5:58 pm ![]() 81 years and that bigass evil truck never did manage to get you. Thanks for McCloud and Chester Goode and a slew of others. Rest well. Categorized as: Movies
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02.06.06 by Widge @ 1:42 pm ![]() There's just something about Bollywood films. Is it the fact that they're all musicals? Is it the fact that they're all at least three hours long? Is it the fact that they involve a love triangle, have a couple of bumbling comic relief types, and have at least one fight? And regardless of all that, it's something I enjoy watching. As long as you know what you're getting going in, you can just go with it. "Suddenly they're dancing on a train? Now they're in a lake? Where did all these people come from? Why does everyone sound the same no matter who's singing? Wait, now they're on a beach?" Just go with it. The men are all handsome, the women are amazing, and no one ever kisses. They'll do everything but kiss, but by God, they won't kiss. Anyway, into this mix comes...Fight Club. This has the potential to be the best Bollywood translation since their take on Superman. Found at Twitch by way of Screenhead. Categorized as: Movies
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12.21.05 by Widge @ 9:50 pm ![]() Kidding. Defamer, Lords of the Hollywood Snark, have placed online images of the Xmas card coming out of X-Men 3 (click to see the whole shebang). I don't know what's more terrifying about this pic...Ratner as Wolverine, or the Beast in leather pants. Actually, come to think of it...isn't the Beast wearing Logan's outfit from the Morrison run? Weird. Categorized as: Movies
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12.18.05 by Widge @ 5:56 pm ![]() Film: Written by Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens & Peter Jackson, based on the story by Merian C. Cooper & Edgar Wallace My Advice: Matinee. Carl Denham (Black) has a vision. Okay, well, Leonard Cohen would call it a scheme. He's known for going and making safari movies, but now his backers want more. So he's lined up a name actor (Kyle Chandler) and a name actress...oops, she's dropped out of the project. Denham has to find a replacement actress (Watts), get his screenwriter (Brody) to finish his work, and somehow convince everyone that they're filming in Singapore, when in fact they're headed to a place called Skull Island with nothing but a strange map of how to get there and a load of bad checks. Once there, however, they're going to get much more than they bargained for. Much more indeed. Mooha. Okay, it's nearly pointless to worry about spoilers for a film, at least for major plot points. The only thing more ridiculous would be being concerned about the end of Hamlet or something. We know where this is going. So the trick with this film is to make the ride to get there an enjoyable one. With Jackson on board to make the film he's been wanting to make since before Lord of the Rings, can the ride be worthwhile? Categorized as: Movies and Reviews
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12.10.05 by Widge @ 5:37 pm ![]() You, sir, made it to the age of 65. Proving you are no fool. At least not in my book. Rest well. Categorized as: Movies
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11.16.05 by Widge @ 10:19 am ![]()
Written by Jorge F. Rodriguez, based on a story by Alex Ferrari My Advice: Grab it and watch it. The young lady's name is Bonnie (Polay). She's attractive, is apparently living a pretty decent life, but all of a sudden is inexplicably snatched from her home and life by Evil Dude and the Various and Sundry Evil Henchmen. Now she has no idea what the hell is going on, only that a bunch of armed-to-the-teeth people apparently want her dead...and she's going to die not even knowing why. God, I hear the whining all the time. Now that content is so cheap to produce and people can create their own movies/books/comics/internal organs, there's going to be nobody to ensure that there's a standard of quality! We're going to be drowning in crap! The only people who actually think this are people who haven't watched any movies or read any books recently--because we're already doing a dead man's float in crap. It's folks like Ferrari and Rodriguez who put the lie to these ignorant so-and-sos by throwing $8K on the table and making...well, what I would say is a better action flick than anything you've seen in cinemas this year...but you haven't seen any action flicks in the cinema this year. I've seen the box office. You're staying away in droves. You would do better to snag a copy of this, spend twenty minutes being entertained, and get on with your lives. Categorized as: Movies and Reviews
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