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Archive for September, 2009

Synecdoche, New York, 2008 – Movie Review

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009


Synecdoche, New York is due out on DVD and Blu-Ray on Monday 12th October. Because of this I thought I would repost the review again.

Director: Charlie Kaufman
Starring: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Michelle Williams, Catherine Keener, Samantha Morton, Emily Watson, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Dianne Wiest, Tom Noonan.

Score: 7.5 / 10

This excellent review is by regular LFF reviewer, Sarah Louise Dean.

Its not often that once having seen a film, you need to consult a dictionary. Its even rarer to do so before the film. In fact, I needed to do both. Frankly, I was stuck at the title. For the uninitiated, Synecdoche (pronounced (si-nek-doc-kee) means, amongst other things, referring to one characteristic of something in order to refer to the whole. For example saying you have ‘coppers’ in your pocket when you mean you have pennies, which are made from copper.

Synecdoche -New York is both written and directed by Charlie Kaufman, he who wrote the beautiful yet absurd Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Being John Malkovich. Be warned, this film is not a linear fairytale, but if you like being challenged then you should give this a go. The name of the film might be a little pretentious, but it is a clever and telling insight into a moving and multilayered story. Kaufman is asking whether, by focussing on one small part of your life, you can establish the meaning of life itself, and he doesn’t care if he alienates half the audience by doing so. Synecdoche is one of those films that asks many more questions than it answers.

Philip Seymour Hoffman is outstanding as Caden Cotard, a theatre director in the New York suburb of Schenectady (get it?) who is married to Adele (played by the wonderful Catherine Keener) an artist specialising in miniature paintings. The marriage is not particularly happy and one day Adele announces that she is taking their 4 year old daughter Olive and her best friend Maria (Jennifer Jason Leigh) to Berlin for an exhibition of her work. Whilst away Caden begins a flirtation with Theatre box office clerk Heather (Samantha Morton with a decent American accent and an impressive cleavage) whilst suffering a number of mysterious ailments, any of which may be life threatening, or merely psychological. Caden’s revival of Death of a Salesman starring Michelle William’s Claire is a resounding success and off the back of it he receives a seemingly limitless grant from the Macarthur Foundation (a real life body which anonymously bestows vast sums of money on creative ‘geniuses’). Caden uses his new found wealth and purpose to create an ever evolving reality-based theatre project. He hires actors to effectively live their own lives in a huge warehouse under his direction. Along the way Caden develops personal relationships with Claire (played by Williams as just the right side of ingénue) and Heather, whilst trying to make contact with Olive in Berlin. Caden builds his set to resemble his own apartment, hires Sammy (played expertly by Tom Noonan as a kind of Larry David with added pathos) to play himself and later Emily Watson’s Tammy to play Heather, and the lines between art and reality become increasingly blurry. Caden’s relationships with his wife, his lovers and his daughter grow, develop and ultimately flounder, whilst at the same time, the theatre piece remains unfinished and my not be shown to an audience. Is Caden a miserable failure, or is this his grand plan? Later a celebrated theatre actress arrives (Dianne Wiest) saying she wants to assist and relieve Caden of some of his burden.

Although the film is hugely interesting, the plot is not easy to wade through, and Kaufman expects the audience to have an appreciation of the theatre industry which most won’t have. As shown when Caden says to Claire “Today, I want you to play yourself”, and she looks completely perplexed, Synecdoche is not without humour, its just the dry kind. Its certainly a work of genius to create something just straightforward enough to mean something different to every viewer, and it has a clever ending. I’m just not sure whether I could stomach a repeat viewing, just yet.

Synecdoche, like a great deal of Kaufman’s work, also has an inexplicable sadness about it. It wrings out the poignancy of life in a blackly comical manner. But, in parts the film is just plain weird. I found it easier to cope by thinking that time is irrelevant in the movie, and that its normal for Heather’s house to always be on fire. But the questions kept coming. Is there some message in Adele’s work being on such a small scale and Caden’s being huge? What is happening to the world outside whilst Caden magnifies his internal life? But it is this Kaufmanesque weirdness that makes Synecdoche so pleasurable. The movie should also be praised for featuring countless well drawn female characters.

Synecdoche does not shy away from the bigger issues. Are we in control of our own destiny? Can we be absolved from responsibility by allowing someone else to dictate our choices? Many will already know if they want to see this film. Some will dismiss Synecdoche as nonsense which fails to entertain. But I’d respond by asking, surely isn’t this what modern cinema is all about? Visual puns, hyper-reality played out by professionals at the top of their game, and a film that you won’t see anywhere else, which all justifies the cost of your expensive cinema ticket. Ultimately I don’t care that I couldn’t work out exactly what it all meant – I was entertained and it made me think, and for that I am very grateful.

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31 Days of Horror – I want your reviews

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

pumpkin14The 1st October will soon be with us and that means ghosts, ghouls, goblins, pumpkins and other spooky things will be heading our way in the build up to Halloween.

To honour this most spooky of months I am hoping to post a review of a different horror movie each day.

I cannot do it alone. This is where you come in.

Send me your reviews of any horror film. It can be any horror film you desire – classic, corny, old, new, crap, spooky, funny, or a hidden gem that not many people have seen – whatever you wish.

Get writing and send me your reviews (include your name and your website address if you have one) and I will get it posted.

Get emailing.

By the way, the awesome Predator pumpkin was carved by Ray Villafane.

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The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus – TV Spot 1

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

Here is the first TV spot for Terry Gilliam’s next film.

Due out in the UK on 16th October and the USA on 25th December.

Thanks to Pam Fruendt for sending me the link

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Fantastic Mr Fox – Second trailer for Wes Anderson’s stop motion film

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

A new trailer with new footage. Still not sure on George Clooney’s voice, but the whole stop motion style reminds me of the 2006 animated film, Peter and the Wolf, directed by Suzie Templeton (which was brilliant) and it does look funny.

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UPDATED: Ultramarines – Warhammer 40000 film heading our way

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

space-marine-demotivational-poster-
UPDATE: Now there is a director attached – more here.

Games Workshop fans rejoice. Ultramarines are heading our way.

The moment fans have been waiting for is finally here… for the first time, the Warhammer 40,000 universe will be realised in a feature-length movie on DVD.

Ultramarines is a 70-minute sci-fi thriller that will use CGI and state-of-the-art animation production techniques. Games Workshop is delighted to be working with UK-based production company Codex Pictures, who have the momentous task of bringing the Warhammer 40,000 universe to the screen.

UPDATE: Fans of the franchise may recall Games Workshop’s similar attempt in the film field several years ago with Bloodquest, a fully animated feature film starring the Blood Angels Chapter. Unfortunately, Bloodquest was “put on hold” and the production company disbanded before work was ever resumed on the project.

Check out the official site. The video clip below is nothing to do with this film as far as I am aware.

Posted in Film, Horror, news, Sci-Fi, Toy | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 8 Comments »

Iron Man 2 Set Report – More Whiplash

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

more about "Iron Man 2 Set Report", posted with vodpod

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The Rock is to go Faster

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

Oscars ArrivalsDwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson is set to star and George Tillman Jr. (“Notorious”) is in talks to direct the action drama “Faster” for CBS Films says Variety.

Johnson will play an ex-con bent on avenging the death of his brother, who was murdered 10 years earlier when the two were double-crossed during a heist. Joe and Tony Gayton penned the script.

Johnson began negotiating when Phil Joanou (“Gridiron Gang”) was expected to direct, but Joanou dropped out several months ago.

Filming begins in January 2010.

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Resident Evil: Afterlife is now shooting. There is no way it can be stopped

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

ali-larter-milla-jovovich-resident-evilScreen Gems and Constantin Film announced today that production has kicked off in Toronto on Resident Evil: Afterlife, the next and fourth installment in the successful film franchise according to Dark Horizons.

Actress Milla Jovovich returns as the zombie-fighting heroine Alice. Ali Larter reprises her role as Claire Redfield from Resident Evil: Extinction. Spencer Locke, who played K-Mart in “Extinction,” is also set to return.

New to the film franchise is leading man Wentworth Miller, who has signed on as Chris Redfield – Claire’s brother and a popular character from the game series. Shawn Roberts will take over the role of Alice’s nemesis Wesker. Boris Kodjoe and Kim Coates have also been cast.

Filmmaker Paul W. S. Anderson is back as writer, director and producer. Anderson wrote, produced and directed the first Resident Evil (2002) and wrote and produced the sequels, Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004) and “Extinction” (2007).

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Thomas the Tank Engine heading to the big screen

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

tomasthetransformer_1HIT Entertainment has signed on Shrek the Third screenwriter Josh Klausner to pen a feature based on the tiny-train world “Thomas & Friends” created by the Rev. W.V. Awdry in the 1940s, according to MovieWeb.

“‘Thomas & Friends’ is a phenomenally successful and versatile brand that appeals to children and families worldwide,” said Julia Pistor, who heads Hit Movies. “Generations of children have grown up with the adventures of ‘Thomas & Friends’ with its storytelling tradition, positive values, timeless lessons and rich train history. We look forward to working with Josh Klausner to translate the classic ‘Thomas & Friends’ stories into a thrilling, big, modern adventure movie.”

I remember Ringo Starr used to be the narrator on the old TV show and my daughter loves watching Thomas and singing along to the song at the end. I am not quite sure how they could turn it into a big adventure movie though.

Thomas represents the world’s most popular preschool property, with more than 100 million books and wooden train accessories sold globally. HIT plans a new CGI animated TV series for next year (Thomas’ 65th birthday) that will for the first time provide voices for Thomas, Percy, James, Toby and the rest, and the new film project — a mix of live-action and CGI — is slated for a spring 2011 release.

Posted in Animated, Film, Kids, news | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Halloween 3D is on hold – Halloween 2 to be released again

Posted by LiveFor on September 30, 2009

h2Pre-production on “Halloween 3D” at Dimension Films has come to a halt says Deadline Hollywood Daily

Todd Farmer turned in his script on Friday, however Dimension head Bob Weinstein feels the production is being rushed and has decided to wait until director Patrick Lussier (“My Bloody Valentine 3D”) is free so they can take their time with the project.

Lussier signed on to the film but had to begin shooting by November so he could start work on the Nicolas Cage film “Drive Angry” early next year.

As a result, the film will move from an October 2010 to a release sometime in 2011.

TWC is re-releasing the $31m grossing Halloween 2 on…wait for it…Halloween. Those marketing guys are on the ball with that one.

Source: Dark Horizons

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