Warning: include(/hermes/bosweb/web013/b134/d5.briggspage/public_html/swgtcg/topnav.php) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /hermes/bosweb/web013/b134/d5.briggspage/public_html/swgtcgblogs/wp-content/themes/default/header.php on line 40

Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening '/hermes/bosweb/web013/b134/d5.briggspage/public_html/swgtcg/topnav.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/local/lib/php-5.2.4/lib/php') in /hermes/bosweb/web013/b134/d5.briggspage/public_html/swgtcgblogs/wp-content/themes/default/header.php on line 40




You always have to be suspici…

February 9th, 2010 by shaileesblog

You usually have to be suspicious about a documentary that contains virtually no new footage. Constructing a story with pieces of celluloid that sooner a be wearing already been acquainted with in other productions is maybe a bit of a free gull; a jigsaw puzzle endanger rather than a film in its own healthy. At least, that's what I thought until I sat down to watch Thomas Andersen's three part documentary series on Los Angeles' place in film, Los Angeles Plays Itself. If you've not till hell freezes over been to LA previous, this documentary will fetch you craving to go soon. But if you've regurgitate a dwarf time in the City of Angels, this love letter to the hub of the west could even take a tear or two.

Thomas Andersen isn't a big name in the film industry. He doesn't have a string of successes to his name or a burgeoning rep as a PBS documentarian - he's just a guy who studied filmmaking, drove a cab, programmed a few festivals and settled in as a faculty member at the California Institute of the Arts School of Film/Video.

Does that qualify him to be the ultimate cinematic historian of the city of Los Angeles? Not by a long shot, but his undeniable knowledge, passion and love for the place sure as hell does.

In preparing this project, Andersen smartly identified that no other city in the world has had more of its history put to film than LA. From the onset of talkies way back in the 30's to the supernova years of James Dean, Marlon Brando and Marilyn Monroe, through the war time, the depression, civic corruption, free love, and the big budget dominance of the Hollywood industry today, the common backdrop of a multitude of films has been Los Angeles. Even when it's not playing itself, the landmarks, the landscape, the people and the places can easily be identified as LA. From Johnnie's Cafe, the famous location of Miracle Mile, to the Bradbury Building, made famous for decades by film noir directors and disaster picture producers, before finally being transformed into a futuristic ruin in Ridley Scott's Blade Runner. From the hulking old observatorium that saw James Dean knife fighting in Rebel Without A Cause to the Angelyne billboards destroyed so wonderfully in Volcano.

It's all here; all of that and a whole lot more. Chinatown, Escape from LA, Cobra, LA Confidential, Who Framed Roger Rabbitt, Double Indemnity, LA Story, Bush Mama, Grand Canyon, Bless Their Little Hearts, porn, schlock, drive-in movies, exploitation films, epics, franchises, blockbusters and indies.

Andersen paints a picture of LA using scenes that others had created before him, but lashes the narrative together in a style that is one part humor, one par drama, one part university lecture and multiple parts nostalgia. I was heartbroken to learn hat Johnnie's Cafe is closed, and intrigued to learn about the destruction, rebuilding, and subsequent closure of the Angels Flight. Iwas reintroduced to the wonders of Polanski's Chinatown, with a historical perspective added to show me that the film isn't just a great work in its own right, that it actually borrows from real events.

Andersen explores the city as background, character and subject in ways that I could never have imagined were possible. The sheer scope of the films shown and the ideas, places and people remembered truly required someone with a lifelong history with the place, the medium, and of learning itself. I personally have a great passion for LA - I feel that anyone who has been but never got off the tourist bus and found their own way for a few days has missed the entire point. Every corner you turn in LA asks you to remember where you've seen it before. Every building has been seen on screens from Macau to Morocco. Every chink in its armor has rusted and adapted and become art.

Boys'N'The Hood. Tango and Cash. Die Hard. Terminator. Unlawful Entry. East of Eden. The Exiles. Even the TV series Dragnet. To us these films are pieces of entertainment, or maybe history if we take the medium seriously enough. But one thing they all have in common is that in the background, or the foreground, or as a supporting player, LA features prominently, and if you look hard enough, you can watch it growing up. Los Angeles Plays Itself gathers all of those family photos from the LA album and sorts through them, telling a story that has never stopped being told and probably never will.

With a droll, even cynical, voiceover by New York filmmaker Encke King, the film does occasionally lapse into the overtly petty. Out of context pieces of James Dean performances tend to be used as comical humor rather than as the groundbreaking moments they were, for example, which might serve to alienate some of those who don't look down their nose at the commercially successful, and it also has to be said that Andersen's fascination with architecture does tend to override other factors of the project. But did that stop me from enjoying this project immensely? Not in the slightest.


A fantastic series, a superbly constructed history lesson, and perhaps the realization of a life spent gearing up for such a task, Los Angeles Plays Itself should be a work preserved for the ages, and maybe even added to in a few decades time. A must-see for any movie fan.

Where the Heart Is (2000)

February 7th, 2010 by shaileesblog

Novalee Realm (Natalie Portman) is 17, pregnant and has precisely been abandoned by her
musician boyfriend Willy Jack (Dylan Bruno) at an Oklahoma Wal-Mart. With nowhere to work up,
she secretly makes her home in the sphere supply, where she gives start, giving her and
her ‘Wal-Mart’ baby celebrity reputation. She is befriended by Lexie (Ashley Judd), Forney
(James Frain), the townsman librarian, Sister Husband (Stockard Channing) and photographer
Moses Whitecotten (Keith David) and starts a new subsistence. In the meantime Willy Jack signs up
with no-nonsense Nashville agent Ruth Meyers (Joan Cusack).

Enhance your internet experience by watching high-quality streaming movies on your computer and skip the hassles of renting from your local movie store and paying the fees charged for returning a DVD late. Through watching movies online sites, you can watch all movies when it is convenient for you with no rental agreements to sign or late charges to pay ever. Watch Santa Baby 2 movie online .

Bridget Jones’ Diary (2001)

February 5th, 2010 by shaileesblog

It’s cellulite! Up there on the big screen, in all its dimpled glory. On a
leading lady, no less.

It’s but one of the let-it-all-hang-out joys of “Bridget Jones,” the
hilarious and sexy adaptation of Helen Fielding’s best-seller.

Renee Zellweger gives a full-bodied, full-throttle performance as the
weight-obsessed, chain-smoking and irrepressible single woman in her 30s.
Matching her comic panache are Hugh Grant as her charming but romantically
toxic boss and Colin Firth as his stiff but sincere romantic rival.

Any trepidation about an American actress assuming the role of the very
British Ms. Jones vanishes in the opening minutes. Zellweger’s crack comic
timing and enormously expressive face pre-empt the idea of any other Bridget.
She embodies the daffy determination, self-skewering wit and vulnerability of
her character. The 20 pounds she gained for the role fill out her face and
enhance her girlish appeal, rendering her instantly and infinitely sympathetic.

But Zellweger’s Bridget is no chump. Self-destructive, sure. Goofy, yes.
Occasionally arch, of course — she’s British. But Zellweger shows that the
silly and sometimes slovenly character also has a spine. She demonstrates it
through Bridget’s tortured but determined attempts at public speaking or her
surprising resolve in matters of the heart.

“Bridget Jones” is a triumph for all involved. Screenwriters Fielding,
Andrew Davies and Richard Curtis have wisely pared down or excised subplots to
focus on Bridget’s romantic travails and career missteps. Director Sharon
Maguire, Fielding’s pal and the inspiration for Bridget’s cynical chum Shazzer
in the book and movie, has crafted


a production that zips along at a laugh-a-minute pace and fully involves
the viewer in Bridget’s little slice of life.

Bridget works at a London publishing house and pines for her handsome cad
of a boss, Daniel (Grant). She passes time by documenting her sad-sack life in
her diary (Sample entry: “Weight: 140 (but post-Christmas); cigarettes: 40!;
alcohol units: 15!”) while slagging off the Smug Marrieds whose glowing self-
satisfaction is an assault on her single

status.

Real life interferes when the boss shows interest and she succumbs to his
roguish charms. Zellweger’s chemistry with Grant is electric, and their scenes
crackle with sexuality and quick-witted humor. Their sex talk is refreshingly
frank and natural.

Grant sheds his trademark stammering and fluttering in favor of an aging
lothario’s lived-in sexiness. He allows himself to look older onscreen, and it
works wonderfully for the role. Grant’s Daniel is witty, undeniably hot and
maddeningly sheepish about commitment.

Bridget’s parents want to match her with the more solid Mark Darcy, a
barrister who was her childhood playmate. In an inspired casting move, Darcy
is played by Colin Firth, the actor who was Mr. Darcy in the BBC’s “Pride and
Prejudice” and also the object of Bridget’s obsessive lust in the book. (The
character’s name is one of “Bridget’s” nods to the Jane Austen story).

At first, Firth seems to be channeling Mr. Darcy’s diffidence and off-
putting, cheerless manner. Ultimately, though, he proves a nice contrast to
Zellweger as their characters’ relationship starts to thaw. Zellweger’s
chemistry with Firth is just as palpable as it is with Grant but not as
sexually charged. It’s more a meeting of comic minds, with his straight-man
countenance drawing out her wackiest work, like Burns and Allen.

In one scene, Bridget struggles mightily to maintain a cool facade in front
of Darcy, all while sporting a ridiculously windblown hairdo. Zellweger is
playing so many emotions in this scene it’s hard to keep track. There’s pride,
embarrassment and the conflict of realizing that she cares enough to put on a
show for this guy. It’s the kind of layered acting that makes a great
performance — and sublime comedy.



Advisory: This movie contains raw language and sexual situations.

E-mail Carla Meyer at cmeyer@sfchronicle.com.

January 7, 2000 Web posted at…

February 4th, 2010 by shaileesblog




January 7, 2000

Web posted at: 2:01 p.m. EST (1901 GMT)


By Reviewer

Paul Clinton

(CNN) — In bringing "Snow Falling on Cedars" to the screen, Australian filmmaker Scott Hicks has turned David Guterson's acclaimed 1994 best-selling novel about prejudice and forbidden love — a complex book without a strong linear story structure — into a lyrical film with just the barest bones of an interlocking narrative.


 VIDEO



Ham preview for "Snow Falling on Cedars"


Real

The result is a visual and emotional feast, but one in which audience members must fully participate, or they'll easily lose their way.

On the surface, "Cedars" may seem to be a murder mystery and a courtroom drama. But in reality, this tale — set in 1950 on the fictional island of San Piedro, just north of Washington state's Puget Sound — explores the conflicts and prejudices within a small community of American fishermen and their Japanese-American counterparts during the turbulent years surrounding World War II.

In effect, San Piedro becomes a microcosm for all the hysteria concerning Japanese Americans that broke after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

A Japanese-American fisherman, Kazuo Miyamoto (Rick Yune) is on trial for the murder of another local man, a German-American fisherman named Carl Heine (Eric Thal). The two men had been boyhood friends during the pre-war years when there was a fragile sense of community between the Japanese Americans and the Anglos who lived together on this small island. When Heine's body is found entangled in his own fishing nets, suspicion falls on Miyamoto.

During the war years, Miyamoto served his country in uniform while his family — and the rest of the Japanese Americans on the island — were forcibly relocated to government internment camps. After the war, the town became racially polarized with suspicion and hatred on both sides.

Ethan Hawke — in another carefully measured and understated performance that has become his hallmark — plays a reporter named Ishmael Chambers, a man living in the large shadow cast by his father Arthur (Sam Shepard), the town's journalistic conscience whom we meet in various flashbacks. Arthur founded the local newspaper and was known throughout the island as a fair man who fought for racial harmony. Ishmael, wounded in the war, comes back to take over the paper after his father's death.


  QUICKVOTE

As Miyamoto's trial progresses, we see Chambers quietly watching the courtroom events unfold. Slowly we discover that in his childhood, he shared a forbidden love with a Japanese woman, Hatsue (Youki Kudoh), who is now married to Miyamoto, the accused killer.

When Chambers begins to uncover facts that could affect the outcome of the trial, he struggles with his own inner conflicts over his lost love, the legacy of his father, and the clashing cultures on the island.

Simple grace

Much of Hicks' film is told through flashbacks — even flashbacks-within-flashbacks — exploring the complex relationships between characters as the director unravels this convoluted mystery that he has wrapped in misty, snow-covered imagery. The wintry weather serves as a subtle metaphor in which the snow helps to cloak the past.


  MORE REVIEWS, SITES

With his 1996 Academy Award-nominated film "Shine," Hicks proved himself capable of creating arresting visuals, and with cinematographer Robert Richardson (best known for his work with director Oliver Stone), Hicks has done so again with "Cedars." These exquisite images, married to James Newton Howard's magnificent score, creates a sum greater then their parts.

Swedish actor Max von Sydow (perhaps best known as the priest in the 1973 film "The Exorcist"), turns in an Oscar-worthy, brilliant performance as defense attorney Nels Gudmundsson. He's a righteous man who fights the irrational fears and prejudices handed down for generations in his community, like so many heirlooms of questionable value. His highly charged courtroom scenes are reminiscent of another courtroom drama about racial injustice, the 1962 film version of "To Kill a Mockingbird." Not coincidentally, author Guterson credits Harper Lee's prize-winning story as a major influence.

Strong, noteworthy performances are also delivered by Kudoh, a former Japanese pop singer, James Cromwell as Judge Fielding, and Shepard as Ishmael's late father.

This deeply intricate novel posed a massive challenge for Hicks and his co-screenwriter, Ron Bass, and some subplot is lost in the translation. But the core themes of the original book — the racial divisions, the hurt and the anger forged by that time and place in history — are brought to the screen with a simple grace.


"Snow Falling On Cedars" opened in Los Angeles and in New York in December and opens nationwide Friday, January 7. The film is rated PG-13 with a running time of 126 minutes.



RELATED STORY:


RELATED SITES:


Note: Pages command open in a new browser window


External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.


MORE MOVIE NEWS:


 LATEST HEADLINES:


© 2001 Telegraph News Network.

All Rights Reserved.
under which this aid is provided to you.

Read our

privacy guidelines

.

The Cook, the Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover review

February 2nd, 2010 by shaileesblog

In “The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover,” British number one Peter Greenaway is audacious sufficient to trump up a metaphor so grand, so lavishly comprehensive, that it can sponsor as a incontrovertible, definitive assessment of the state of Western culture. Of unavoidability, his thinking is epidemic and his imagination retrospective. To articulate his views, he references public affairs, adroitness, economics, even create, finding room in the film’s densely eclectic visual design over the extent of both Jean-Paul Gaultier, who designed the costumes, and the Dutch master Frans Hals. Furthermore his conclusions, when boiled down to their essence, couldn’t be more vital: As a education, we are what we eat — or, to take it to further, what we eliminate. If anatomy is destiny, then it’s the insides that dictate past, it’s the bowels that rule. Greenaway, the bemused, coolly ironic truth-teller, has painted a cruel portrait for a diabolical values bright and early. The murkiness is savagely confrontational, and its assaults begin almost immediately. In the opening divertissement, Spica, Greenaway’s gangster protagonist, demonstrates to a victim the price of not keeping up in his payments by stripping him down and force-feeding him excrement. This bestial prelude, which culminates with Spica relieving himself on his victim, sets the movie’s brutally scatological tone. And on the eve of the film’s end, the vice-president will have showcased a vast bunch of perversions, including cannibalism, to make it with pretend the emphatic point that we are craven, inconsequential animals, choking on our own waste.

The bulk of the action takes place in a cavernous temple of haute cuisine called Le Hollandais, where Spica (Michael Gambon) and his wife, Georgina (Helen Mirren), dine every night, surrounded by the boss man’s scurrilous gang of lackeys. In symbolic terms, Spica is the ultimate consumer — a glutton ruled entirely by his amoral drive to gobble down everything and everyone in sight. In Greenaway’s scheme of things, he is the incarnation of pure capitalist evil. But, watching the film, you get the impression that while he’s condemned for being a bully and a sadist, for brutalizing his wife and, eventually, killing the Lover (Alan Howard) she takes up with at the restaurant during her visits to the loo, his greatest crime is that he has appalling table manners and mispronounces the names of the French dishes on the menu.

Just how revelatory you think this is depends, I suppose, on your orientation. With all its allusions to high culture, its imperial camera movements, classically composed tableaux and opulent production design, the film certainly carries the air of profundity. But perhaps “air” is the wrong word to use for a work this full of puke and rot and fornication. After a time, you begin to feel soiled by the film’s excesses. Yet the excesses, alone, aren’t the issue. An artist like David Lynch, director of “Blue Velvet,” violates taboos, but not simply for shock effect. He carries us inside the primal secrets that spawned them and shows why they affect us so profoundly. Greenaway, on the other hand, seems content to ride on the energy released by simply being naughty, without concerning himself with what’s underneath. He exploits taboos, cheaply, without exploring them.

Primarily, what Greenaway has showcased are his sexual aversions and his distrust of the flesh; this is the work of the most alienated of misanthropes. When Greenaway puts naked bodies on the screen — say, in the love scenes between Mirren and Howard — there’s no sex, there’s merely the director’s palpable disdain for the human body. And perhaps it’s because the artist hasn’t made clear the connections between his film’s social message and his personal preoccupations that the work seems so morally neutral.

Greenaway doesn’t flinch from the sordidness he chronicles, but because he has so thoroughly aestheticized the film, scenes like the one in which Georgina has Richard, the film’s Cook (Richard Bohringer), bake up her lover’s corpse for her husband, lose their power to disturb, even to shock. After the film’s first few minutes I watched, neither entertained nor illuminated, with something close to total indifference.

By giving the film an “X” rating, the Motion Picture Association of America has made heroes of the director and his distribution company, which is now forced to release the picture unrated, under more challenging circumstances. Certainly, the artist should have the freedom to express himself, and Miramax should be praised for its decision to release the film as is. But Greenaway’s ideas are far too facile and chicly reductionist for “Cook” to deserve revolutionary status. His extravagances and attacks on taste seem less like the bravery of the courageous artist than the empty desperation of a charlatan.

“The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover” contains both male and female nudity, cannibalism, and examples of coprophagy.

It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown (1974)

January 31st, 2010 by shaileesblog


The Peanuts franchise gets another holiday workout in “It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown,” which offers cartoonist Charles M. Schulz’ skedaddle on that day best loved by children in the service of its Easter baskets, bunnies, and dyed eggs.

This marked the 13th made-in place of-TV Peanuts paramount, and those who are into numerology might put to that as a possible use one’s judgement why this limerick just doesn’t have the same spark as some of the better shows featuring hapless Charlie Brown and the gang. To me, it has a by-the-numbers feel.

Possibly it’s because the invigoration is a mean flatter this outing, with a slightly washed-out-moded color palette that isn’t nearly as vivid or three-dimensional as some of the best Peanuts animated cartoons. Though this edition is “remastered,” you have to wonder what environment the swami is in, since there’s more grain and blemishes than we usually see in this series, and the whole shooting match looks faded.

Maybe it’s because the continual gags just aren’t as charming or funny this frequently around. In one of them, Peppermint Patty tries to make clear Marci how to dye eggs, but while she stirs the dye she gives Marci the job of preparing the eggs. And Marci keeps breaking the eggs and cooking them slim the shell. By the time she uses a waffle iron and cooks the eggs shells and all, you’re sensible, okay, enough. Even a five year old can get the pertinent sooner than Marci does, and you phenomenon why, after three ruined boxes of eggs, Patty didn’t keep a closer judgement on Marci. Now, if you’re thinking, come on, Plath, relieve up, it’s a cartoon for cryin’ loophole loud, let me just jog the memory that the Peanuts comical strip and TV specials have been successful largely because they whack an emotional chord with audiences who can relate with the things that Charlie Brown and the coterie do. And with a gag much the same as this, it’s uncharacteristically more than-the-top and doesn’t up in as original of ways as Schulz’s jokes normally do.

Or maybe it’s the music, which this time brings in multiple guitars with “Bolero”-like repetition that isn’t nearly as melodic as that light-jazz piano we normally get. Rather than complementing a match gag that involves Snoopy demanding to fix a house for his little bird-doxy Woodstock, the shrill music makes those episodes give every indication less creative and more annoying.

Plane the main thread involving Linus babbling all round the Easter Beagle doesn’t have the same energy as the characters’ insistence that there’s a Great Pumpkin in that 1966 installment, largely because the reciprocation to Linus’ attitudes is pretty unemotional. And it was the reaction comedy that made us laugh the most. There’s a gauzy game between deadpan and apathy, and the Peanuts characters cross it here.

But the “bonus feature” that’s included here? “It’s Arbor Day, Charlie Brown” is a trustworthy underappreciated Peanuts prototype, with better animation, improve shaping values, better gags, and a stronger storyline. Director Phil Roman has more to work with and he makes the most of it, delivering the material with Schulz’s paradigm understatement.

From the beginning it’s clear that the magic is back. As Linus is strapping his brother, Rerun, onto the toddler seat of his mother’s bicycle, the small-minded “R” offers his tolerate on the situation. The mother’s driving seems to be getting control superiors. “Yesterday, we only strike four parked cars.” Charlie Brown’s sister, Sally, meanwhile, gets busted at coach for not coming prepared, and she has to do a complete news on Arbor Time as a torture. She researches the topic and, because Arbor Day is all about environmental renewal, decides to organize the stop of Charlie Brown’s friends in planting an Arbor Period garden . . . fittingly smack in the bull’s-eye of Charlie Brown’s baseball field. The other compute threads catch up in Peppermint Patty talking smack with Charlie about what her team is going to do to his, and a running undercurrent of “love” (with the boys all “yuk” and the girls wanting to be kissed or hold back hands). It sounds positively commonplace, but the writing and timing of the jokes is so perfect that “It’s Arbor Day, Charlie Brown” emerges as anyone of the strongest entries.


The Ground Truth review

January 30th, 2010 by shaileesblog

Drama. With Edward Furlong, Rachael
Bella and James Eckhouse. Directed by Randall K.
Rubin and Jon Schroder. (R. 99 minutes. At the AMC 1000 Van Ness, UA Stonestown
and at the Oaks in Berkeley.)

Low-budget films be experiencing a way of sending viewers back into their own
reality, whether it's because of poor acting, Brummagem camera work or a poorly
chosen place shoot. Something as clear as a police officer's uniform that
doesn't look real can be distracting enough to deface the experience, reminding
audiences that what they are watching is fabricate.

"Jimmy and Judy" is a good movie by any standard, and a textbook example
of how to make your independent film for under $500,000. Using some of the same
tricks that worked for "The Blair Witch Project," Randall K. Rubin and Jon
Schroder create a shocking but believable portrait of psychopathic behavior by
a disenfranchised youth. It's a difficult film to watch, with levels of
violence and nudity that will challenge some viewers and offend others, but
ultimately serves the story.

Jimmy (Edward Furlong) is a very smart but unhinged 21-year-old who
insists on filming the important moments in his life. He falls for Judy
(Rachael Bella), another outcast who is turned on by his love for her — and
also his capacity for revenge and violence. Their behavior becomes more
destructive during a crime spree throughout Kentucky.

Rubin and Schroder film the entire movie through the lens of Jimmy's
camera. This requires a lot of creativity with the script, along with some
patience on the part of the audience. Several key moments are played out only
with the audio, including one pivotal scene where the camera sits motionless on
the floor of a car for several minutes.

Both leads are excellent, especially Bella, who must sell her attraction
to the unbalanced Jimmy — and run around nude for long stretches of the
film. Props also must go to veteran TV actor James Eckhouse, who is excellent
in a role that his agent must have forbidden him from taking.

The hardest part for moviegoers is figuring out what to make of Jimmy, who
is treated as a sympathetic figure, even as his actions hurt innocent people.
And while Rubin and Schroder have a good script, it becomes difficult to
believe that the video camera would remain on around a paranoid crankhead.

But these are small problems in a movie filled with bigger rewards. This
is the film that "Natural Born Killers" wanted to be — and at one-twentieth
the cost.

– Advisory: Violence, a rape scene, profanity, nudity and a kinky sex act
involving the guy who played Brandon's dad on "Beverly Hills 90210."
– Peter Hartlaub


'Confetti'

ALERT VIEWER

Mockumentary. Directed by Debbie Isitt. With Martin Freeman, Jessica
Stevenson, Stephen Mangan, Meredith MacNeill, Robert Webb and Olivia Colman.
(R. 94 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)

Mockumentaries usually live or die on their pseudo accuracy.
Christopher Guest is the acknowledged master of the genre because he lulls you
into believing his amateur actors and prideful dog owners exist off screen.

But "Confetti" may be too convincing for its own good. The problem with
this pretend documentary about engaged couples competing for most over-the-top
nuptials is that it comes perilously close to what's on reality TV. The wedding
planners who lend their expertise to contestants are right out of "Queer Eye
for the Straight Guy," and finding actual people eager to turn their ceremony
into a three-ring circus would be a piece of cake — wedding cake, in this
instance. Can a television show based on such a premise be far behind?

Like a wedding, "Confetti" goes on too long but is not without its
memorable moments. Most of them are supplied by a wickedly talented young
British cast as the betrothed behaving bizarrely. Martin Freeman (from the
original BBC version of "The Office'') brings a hilarious button-down
seriousness to Matt, a working-class stiff with a penchant for show tunes.

He and his fiancee, Sam (the equally straight-faced Jessica Stevenson),
show up at an audition held by Confetti, England's premier wedding magazine.
Three semifinalists will have their nuptials paid for by the magazine. The
winners, judged on the originality with which they exchange their vows, will
receive a house — no small prize.

Pitching his all-singing, all-dancing Hollywood musical wedding, Freeman's
Matt is as somber as if he were applying for funds to start a small business.

He and Sam make the cut, along with tennis pros Josef (Stephen Mangan) and
Isabelle (Meredith MacNeill), who offer to say "I do" during a match, and
nudists — or naturalists as they call themselves — Michael (Robert Webb)
and Joanna (Olivia Colman), whose scheme is to march down the aisle au natural.
Webb and Colman deserve special credit for making you pay attention to their
repartee instead of their bodies, which are covered in nothing, not even
confetti.

The rest of the film deals with the couples preparing for their big day.
Naturally competitive, Josef and Isabelle think too much attention is being
showered on Matt and Sam and suspect the fix is in. Isabelle gets wind that the
magazine staff believes her nostrils are too prominent to put on the cover
featuring the winners and has her nose done.

Writer-director Debbie Isitt obviously has done research into the
vulnerability weddings bring out in everyone. Her clever script plays on this,
appropriately exaggerating it to take into consideration the added pressure
these couples are under. Relatives make matters worse.

But by the time "Confetti" gets around to the ceremonies, it has run out
of steam. What should be the funniest scenes drag on. After sitting through one
wedding, you're ready to take your party favor and go home.

– Advisory: Nudity.

– Ruthe Stein


'The Ground Truth'

POLITE APPLAUSE

Documentary. Directed by Patricia
Foulkrod. (R. 78 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)

For people willing to hear the soldiers' experience of war
rather than just define it in comfortable terms, through yellow ribbons and
high-sounding slogans, "The Ground Truth" is an enlightening documentary.
Virtually everyone interviewed on screen is a veteran. Some came back
able-bodied but afflicted in spirit. Some lost a limb, and one man had his face
destroyed.

No, it's not pretty. "The Ground Truth" packs in a lot of information,
from stories about recruitment officers' lies to accounts of the ways the
Veterans Administration avoids treating soldiers for post-traumatic stress.
These combat veterans, male and female, speak with candor and introspection
about the war, from a vantage point the public is never privy to. They tell
stories about soldiers abusing innocent civilians and killing women and
children. These veterans aren't pacifists, but patriotic individuals, some of
them Marines, who enlisted in the aftermath of Sept. 11.

Directed by Patricia Foulkrod, this is a documentary with a point of view,
and obviously not every veteran of the war was interviewed. Some veterans would
undoubtedly feel differently about the experience. But feelings aside, just
some of the facts revealed by "The Ground Truth" are surprising. For example,
in World War II, according to Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, too many men came out of
basic training unwilling to take human life, so the training was revamped
during Vietnam to turn soldiers into killing machines. Several Iraq veterans
recall the marching cadences used stateside, violent and supposedly funny,
intended to desensitize soldiers to killing civilians and mowing down children.
This training makes it very difficult to assimilate themselves back into
civilian life.

Unforgettable footage shows Iraqis, as seen through gun sights, getting
either shot or blown up. Soldiers are shown manhandling prisoners, who are
probably innocent, and standing in people's homes, armed to the teeth and
pushing old ladies around. According to the soldiers interviewed, such actions
are a direct consequence both of their training and of the circumstances
surrounding an occupation. As one veteran puts it, "You don't go to war with a
country without going to war with its people."

Soldiers share the memories that keep them up nights: killing an innocent
woman, or the sight of dead children or of entire dead families. One soldier
tells the story of a supposedly big-time terrorist who was hung from a tree for
three days by his hands. By the time the soldier came to interrogate the man,
his hands were gangrenous and had to be amputated. Upon release from the
hospital, the supposed terrorist was set free. It turned out he was an innocent
man.

All the veterans talk about the impossibility of returning to life as
usual following their discharge. "You don't fit in anywhere, except by
yourself, and you hate yourself." Outbursts of violence, nightmares, and
irrational flarings of temper plague them. "Your world is gone," says Guardsman
Demond Mullins, "and you have no world to replace it with." "The Ground Truth"
powerfully documents the human cost of the Iraq war.

– Advisory: Strong language and very disturbing footage of real-world
violence and carnage.
– Mick LaSalle


'Queens'

POLITE APPLAUSE

Comedy. With Carmen Maura, Marisa Paredes. Directed by Manuel Gomez
Pereira. In Spanish with subtitles. (R. 107 minutes. At the Bridge)

There are a lot of "Queens" in Manuel Gomez Pereira's delightful new
farce, starting with the five pairs of young, good-looking men who aim to be
wed in a mass-marriage. But most memorable are five of their mothers, played by
grande dames of 1980s Spanish cinema, still sexy, aging gracefully and proudly
displaying cleavage.

In fact, considering three of them are closely identified with Pedro
Almodóvar classics, this film could have been called "All About My Mothers."
They are Carmen Maura ("Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown"), Marisa
Paredes ("Talk to Her," "All About My Mother") and Veronica Forque ("Kika,"
"Matador"). Betiana Blum and Mercedes Sampietro, famous in their own right,
round out the fivesome.

The five mothers have their own problems with love — one is a
nymphomaniac, another is a famous actress who loves her obstinate gardener —
and they have varying degrees of acceptance to their children's lifestyle. The
problems of mothers and sons come to a tipping point during a weekend at a
Madrid resort that caters to gay clientele.

With what amounts to 20 characters crossing paths, Pereira's job
description might seem more traffic cop than director, but he rises to the
challenge and adds style and splashy color to boot.

"Queens" is pleasant, light-hearted fun that's soft, not edgy, but lest
you think it's a Spanish "Birdcage," consider that Forque's nymphomaniac, who
gives way to her urges "in the worst moments, and with the least appropriate
people," seduces her son's fiancee by "accident."

– Advisory: Sexual situations, profanity.

– G. Allen Johnson


Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers

POLITE APPLAUSE

Documentary. Directed by Robert Greenwald. (Not rated. 75 mins. At the Opera
Plaza.)

Like Robert Greenwald's earlier documentaries aimed at Wal-Mart,
Rupert Murdoch and other subjects that enrage progressives, this film is a
blast of fury. Greenwald's ire here is directed at firms like Blackwater
Security, Halliburton (and its KBR unit) and Titan Corp. that have won billions
of dollars in contracts for services to the U.S. military in Iraq.

The filmmaker contends that these corporations have squandered the lives
of some of their civilian workers, operated wastefully and made unconscionable
profits. The movie plays like a steady drumbeat: Outrage after outrage is
alleged.

We hear from tearful relatives of Americans who suffered grisly deaths in
a much-publicized 2004 incident in Fallujah. Family members say Blackwater "cut
corners" and neglected to provide their drivers with armored vehicles and
weaponry. The company escaped consequences, the film says, by hiring
high-powered lobbyists with GOP connections and launching an all-out
damage-control campaign in Congress.

The litany of misdeeds continues as we hear from assorted former
consultants, ex-interrogators at Abu Ghraib, watchdogs and irate members of
Congress.

Janis Karpinski, the former brigadier general who was demoted after the
Abu Ghraib scandal, describes how private contractors were involved in some of
the interrogations at the prison without proper supervision. Others contend
that at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, untrained and incompetent translators were
hired (by San Diego's Titan), a practice that is alleged to have cost lives.

Major contracts were granted without competitive bidding, which amounts to
"a legal way of stealing," says one whistle-blower. Other scams include
charging the government for runs by empty cargo trucks and using a "cost-plus"
billing system that encourages profligate spending.

One ex-Halliburton employee accuses the company of providing contaminated
water to the military. There are stories of $45-per-six-pack sodas and
soldiers' laundry washed at $100 a load.

Part of the problem is the much-lamented Pentagon revolving door:
Companies hired by the military are often staffed and run by ex-military. Even
at the nonexecutive level, the situation is eye-opening: While soldiers make
$3,000 a month, private consultants, doing similar work, can pull in six
figures a year.

There's no objectivity in this film — Greenwald's goal is not to offer
balanced coverage but to roil the waters. It should also be said that most of
the charges aired here have been reported before. But Greenwald is skillful
enough to spark a fresh sense of outrage.

– Walter Addiego


American Blackout

POLITE APPLAUSE

Documentary. Directed by Ian Inaba. With Cynthia McKinney, Greg Palast,
Christopher Edley Jr., John Conyers Jr., Stephanie Tubbs-Jones. (Not rated. 95
minutes. At Opera Plaza; Lark Theater in Larkspur.)

When watching "American Blackout," prepare to get depressed, or mad, or
both, depending on how you feel about the outcomes of the last two presidential
elections. Assisted by 95 minutes of damning evidence, filmmaker Ian Inaba
(director of Eminem's 2004 get-out-the-vote video "Mosh") argues that African
American voters are being systematically disenfranchised from the political
process, beginning with the 2000 election debacle in Florida.

At the same time, Inaba charges government and media alike with
orchestrating the "political lynching" of U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney when the
outspoken Georgia Democrat began asking too many questions about the Bush
administration's Iraq policy, election machinations and culpability in the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. While this might sound like the stuff of chronic
conspiracy theory — a charge some have used to marginalize McKinney —
some provocative facts are out there for those willing to dig.

Inaba takes a straightforward approach to his work with an unadorned style
that narrates through interviews and archival footage, an approach that, in
this case, proves more convincing than the directorial theatrics favored by
some new-school documentarians.

To his credit, Inaba doesn't try to feign objectivity. He's biased, thank
you very much, and he does a good job of showing why. "American Blackout" makes
a credible case, with some of its most damning evidence coming from the mouths
of the conservatives themselves. The film is ultimately as much an indictment
of liberal apathy as of conservative dirty dealing, and a canonization of
McKinney for her continued refusal to follow any party's party line.

– Neva Chonin


Zen Noir

ALERT VIEWER

Mystery. Directed
by Marc Rosenbush. With Duane Sharp, Debra Miller, Kim Chan, Ezra
Buzzington. (Not rated. 71 minutes. At the Lumiere.)

From "Brick" to "Hollywoodland" and everything in between, directors
are retooling film noir and adapting its aesthetic for new contexts.

The latest entry into nouveau noir is Marc Rosenbush's "Zen Noir," a stagy
mystery about life and death and the meaning of everything. "Why do I talk this
way?" a nameless gumshoe (Duane Sharp) wonders in an early scene, having just
spouted a bizarre string of Raymond Chandler-speak to his mirror.

By film's end, he'll be wondering at a lot more — his lack of a name,
for instance, and the nature of death, and the proper way to eat an orange —
when a case involving murder in a Buddhist temple turns out to be a bigger
mystery than expected.

The biggest mystery of all is why director Marc Rosenbush, whose
background is in theater, bothered putting this story on film when it's so
obviously meant for a stage.

Comedic scenes patter along like experimental skits riffing on old
who's-on-first shtick. As the central character, Sharp overacts every line, as
if projecting to some unseen peanut gallery; camerawork is rudimentary,
composition is static and self-conscious.

For all its shortcomings, "Zen Noir" still entertains. Lynchian dream
sequences involving the detective's late wife add needed dynamics, and Debra
Miller is serene and inscrutable as a bald femme fatale with a big secret.

Kim Chan turns what might have been a cliche into an arresting performance
as the requisite wise Zen master who helps the gumshoe down the path of
enlightenment. Maybe he should throw in acting lessons, too.
– Neva Chonin

A Trenchtown variant on Robin …

January 28th, 2010 by shaileesblog

A Trenchtown variant on Robin Hood, with dreadlocked drummer Horsemouth (Wallace) up against the neighbourhood minor-league mafia. An excellent soundtrack (Peter Tosh, Burning Spear, Bunny Wailer, etc), and an endearingly droll script which digresses through explanations of the Rasta faith and countless idiosyncratic solidarity rituals, make for a pleasing piece of whimsy. Complete with subtitles transliterating the Rasta patois.

Duck.fm Free Music Search engine gives you an opportunity to find lots of free mp3. Placebo free full mp3 download music. Explore large collection of free music.

“The Untouchables,” starring …

January 27th, 2010 by shaileesblog


“The Untouchables,” starring Robert Stack as Eliot Ness, was the kind of cops and robbers show that kids loved. Adults too, as regards that matter. The public was absolutely fascinated with Chicago’s gangsters from the Roaring Twenties and their speakeasies and Tommy guns. It’s the same impulse that pulls people from their homes to vivacious at what might be a tragic automobile accident. And this show by Desilu Productions gave people plenty to gawk at, in what appeared to be an insider’s look at Al Capone’s mob and organized crime in other cities.

Now, of course, you wouldn’t apprehend this level of frenzy. But “The Untouchables” was such an part-time shun that nobody seemed bothered by it. Fitted one thing, we were told it was based on Eliot Ness’s autobiography, so it had the cachet of verifiable theatre. Newsman Winchell’s portrayal also gave the show an air of authenticity, even if his delivering was so over-the-top that it felt as if he could have been broadcasting “War of the Worlds.” Winchell’s hamminess, the overacting poisonous guys, the show’s heavy film-noir style, and general staginess made it all seem slightly cartoonish. Notwithstanding that it seems stagey now, “The Untouchables” was lauded representing its realism.

The black-and-white and Stack’s nasty, deadpan execution added to the have a hunch that we were watching something that was authentic. But villains were what made for the most interest, and the encourage half of the first seasoned finds writers groping to find just the right ones to grab viewer kindle after Capone (Neville Brand) was put in quod. And so viewers watched Ness and his Untouchables play their deadly brand of chess with humble-tempo hood bosses adulate Luigi Renaldo (Marc Lawrence), Augie Viale (John Beradino), Mig Torrance (Mike Kellin), and Johnny Fortunato (Nehemiah Persoff) when what people wanted to witness all along was Explicit “The Enforcer” Nitti, played by Bruce Gordon. It took writers a while to prepare e dress the point, but when they gave Nitti the spotlight for a two-part episode it became disencumber that he was the TV heiress to the acclaimed Al Capone. And so producers decided to end the first pep up by giving the public what they wanted: “The Frank Nitti Story.”

Nitti would see a a mass more express time in Age Two, and you can take in why. Gordon brings charismatic bluster to the role, and turned exposed to be a far more fun and compelling character than Capone. The other villains at most seemed equal to diversions in between the Nitti episodes.

Writers and producers seemed to be feeling their point plot-wise and fuzzy-wise as well. This firstly season, some of the episodes were deposit in St. Louis, “Little Egypt” (Morraine, Unfortunate.), and New York, while the chronology (if you were tough to perform along) seemed totally out of order of whack. United minute FDR is in office and Ness is vexing to stop the surround from assassinating Mayor Cermak, while the next minute prohibition is back and they’re trying to stage a trucking steady they differentiate is behind the flow of wrongful John Barleycorn entering the mother country. Today, of course, that would be considered a weak spot–and it may have been considered that when the show first aired, for all I know. Does that take away from the show’s play (and, again, melodrama)? Not really. But it can be confusing and frustrating if you don’t realize that the episodes are in no particular chronological order. Just try to orient yourself at the beginning of each scene to what the year seems to be, and things will go along with into place.

“The Untouchables” is unmistakable melodrama, but I’d liken it to good cholesterol versus the bad–which is to say, it works. If you’re a “Sopranos” follower you’re going to see how sensationalistic this output is by balancing. Some of the acting is honestly hammy, but it feels so period that the appear can clearly mature as addictive as those HBO episodes. I found myself getting into them all over again, which, with old shows, is never guaranteed.

This collection begins with Scene 15 from Season One. Fourteen episodes are contained on four single-sided discs and housed in a regular-size clear plastic maintenance-case to bout the leading release. Here’s how the episodes “Stack” up:


Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round review

January 26th, 2010 by shaileesblog




Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round


Columbia TriStar

1966 / Color / 1:85 anamorphic 16:9 / 107 min. / Street Woman September 30, 2003 /

Starring

James Coburn, Camilla Sparv, Aldo Ray, Nina Wayne, Robert Webber,
Todd Armstrong, Michael Persistent, Marian Moses, Severn Darden, Rose Marie

Cinematography

Lionel Lindon

Astuteness wiles Directorship

Walter M. Simonds

Film Columnist

William A. Lyon

Underived Music

Stu Phillips

Produced by

Carter De Haven Jr.

Directed and Directed by

Bernard Girard

I can see a lot of people watching

Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

and asking, 'where's the
movie?' It's a shaggy dog story that finishes before a lot of people realize it's over. A good
example of the influence of European trends on American films,

Dead Heat

keeps the
audience guessing about what is going on for most of its length. It's a caper film, and we wait
for the hook, the trick, the gimmick, hoping we're following the plot. James Coburn makes
for a charming thief, but the glamour of big-time confidence games goes sour as we
realize what a heel he is. The film is atypically engaging; it was a sleeper hit in 1966 but not
a runaway success.



Digest:

Eli Kotch (James Coburn) shows so many faces to so multifarious people, no one knows the
legitimate man. By seducing women, he obtains a parole from prison and amasses a small fortune
in burglary proceeds to take another convict's recondite plans of a bank security system. He then
undertakes an amazingly adroit daytime pilferage correctly under the noses of the LAPD during a hold
visit by a unconnected superstar. He fools everyone and keeps his cool, especially while cruelly
using sweet immature Inger Knudson (Camilla Sparv), whom he marries as part of his scheme.

Character actor James Coburn hit it big with

Our Man Flint

and could have gone the
way of
many another second-stringer elevated beyond his level. Coburn wisely took lead parts that
were actually character roles, thereby avoiding wearing out his welcome. He also chose interesting
directors to work with. Both Theodore J. Flicker (of

The President's Analyst

) and this film's
Bernard Girard were talents that made few movies; Coburn had his share of dogs like anyone but
turned up in some of the most interesting shows of the late 60s.


Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

uses a quirky ellipsis pattern that confuses many viewers, and
may seem mannered by others. The first part of the narrative, as Eli Kotch moves about the country
fleecing the unfortunate women he sweeps into bed is about as ellipsed as ellipsis can get. We
barely meet Rose Marie, and we cut to the aftermath as she describes how he's stolen her paintings.
It's a straight role for her, but handled very much like Martha Raye in Chaplin's

Monsieur
Verdoux

.
Kotch takes advantage of dumb blonde Nina Wayne, and the story can't even linger long enough for
a bedroom scene. We experience Eli like his women do: he's here one minute and gone the next.

Eli slips into various disguises, trades and voices to carry off his chicanery. In these Coburn is
good within his limits. His voice and self-assuredness makes him more handsome than he is; star
quality in his case is the kind that allows him to retain our interest and approval even when doing
nothing more interesting than walking through apartment buildings and airport lobbies.

All the fun con-man games are simple ones. Kotch relies on his skill at charming and betraying new
acquaintances. The stakes become a little less comforting when he completely
hoodwinks servant Inger Knudson, a sweet woman who honestly loves him, or at least loves the
intellectual writer he pretends to be while around her. She's played with winning vulnerability
by Camilla Sparv, a European import actress who acts as well as she looks.

As the caper takes shape Coburn gathers his crew, a small group of pros that are minimally
sketched. At last on the familiar ground of the Caper film, we watch every detail of the heist to
see where Coburn makes his mistake. That's the true mettle of a Caper story: not how clever the
plan is, but what makes it go wrong, and how the crooks react when it does. Coburn's plan is so
slick that we honestly don't know what to expect. Director Girard doesn't use suspense techniques
to make us think the heist is in jeopardy. And the major subplot begins to seem like an elaborate
diversion. Government agent Robert Webber's arranges a terribly complicated visit from the Soviet
Premier, but we don't see how it relates to Coburn's story except in providing the airport
confusion to make his crime go more smoothly.

The two plots do tie together eventually, but in unexpected ways. I'm going to skip over the
spoiler-inducing explanations, as

Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

is one picture that you
definitely don't want spoiled.

Most capers are about overreaching ambitions and the urge to cut corners to success, and most of
them end with the robbers dead, captured or at least foiled in their aims.

Dead Heat on a
Merry-Go-Round

isn't about the crime itself, but instead seems to be about the immense effort
we spend on material goals at the expense of human relationships. Eli Kotch's crime is almost
irrelevant: half the law enforcement officials in the country witness it, and dismiss it with
relief when they find out nobody's trying to assassinate their Russian guest. (continued in
heavily spoilered footnote  



1



)

Eli Kotch seems much less admirable today because of his abuse of women. He gets along well with his
male confederates but the women in his life are trophies, patsies, or tragic victims like Inger.
We see a moment of hesitation as he leaves her, and that's it.

Sitting on the airplane at the end, Eli is not very different from most other commuters that measure
their worth in a big score of one kind or another, while undercutting their real chance for happiness.
Coburn and
Girard don't stress the message, but it's hard not to get it.

Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

is a very interesting and unique picture - the title seems to describe the rat race Coburn's running,
thinking he's getting somewhere.

Severn Darden (

The President's Analyst

) and Aldo Ray are Coburn's top men, criminals that seem
unusually trustworthy. Possibly working off his Columbia contract, Todd Armstrong of

Jason and
the Argonauts

plays
a second-banana G-Man to top dog Robert Webber. A bellboy bringing a telegram to Coburn turns
out to be none other than Harrison Ford in what the IMDB lists as his first film. He's 23 but looks
like he's 16.

Columbia TriStar's DVD of

Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

looks fine in its enhanced transfer.
Stu Phillips' snappy and unpredictable score is well displayed. There are no extras. The artwork
for the box top is
reminiscent of last year's Spielberg hit

Catch Me If You Can

, a slightly similar film that
makes explicit Bernard Girard's quiet message.

On a scale of Excellent, Reliable, Fair, and Poor,


Totally Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

rates:

Movie: Very Good

Video: Prime

Sound: First-class

Supplements:

none

Packaging: Adhere to casing

Reviewed: October 19, 2003

Footnotes:

1.

Eli does what we're all
told we should do - he marshalls all of his talent and effort toward his objective, and achieves it
magnificently. But we conduct in Inger's visage what not not what he's lost, but what he never valued. The
shocker ending gives the horselaugh to his punctilious design to postponed years to assign his spoils, hoping
he'll not in any way be found outside. We don't conscious enough respecting Eli, but he doesn't give every indication the type to sit
carefully managing his bread without getting into more trouble.

The film is about effort and travail and sweat - Eli earns every nickel he steals. Again, the
government agents' extravagant preparations spend as a counterpoint to Eli's cozy little plot mid
four conspirators. He's a wonderful embezzler, but inert seems a piddling and unsubstantial man, too impressed by
himself to make allowance for other people.



Return

2.


Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

takes place in LA, at the old
LAX international airport before it was redesigned. All the locations look familiar, including a
Burbank mall on Pass avenue where Aldo Ray and Coburn pick up a car. When Coburn talks to cohort
Michael Strong outside Paramount Studios, we see them walking about two blocks from Savant's house!
The Paramount location makes Savant think that the production started there and somehow migrated from the
Mountain to the Torch Lady.

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »