Monday, July 31, 2006

Movie of the Week: Little Miss Sunshine



Holy shit, that was funny

Everyone in the cast was great...especially Abigail Breslin, who from the moment she started speaking in Signs, you knew she would be good in everything she did (check out Keane if you don't believe me). She really pulls off the cute-to-sad-to-cute-again-but-in-a-sad-way thing.

A lot of the movie was predictable but it doesn't matter.

I won't spoil anything but I will say this.

In the last 20 minutes, don't drink or eat anything. Just take a deep breath...

Friday, July 28, 2006

Babel trailer



This is going to be a busy Fall Movie Season.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Stranger Than Fiction trailer

Chuck Klosterman's "23 Questions I Ask Everybody I Meet In Order To Decide If I Can Really Love Them"

I have asked these before (by posting them on Okayplayer) but have never really answered these 23 questions from Chuck Klosterman's Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto*. I am going to make a concentrated effort to answer them all to the best of my abilities. Feel free to leave your own answers (or personal judgements of me) in the comments section.

Shall we begin?

1. Let us assume you met a rudimentary magician. Let us assume he can do five simple tricks--he can pull a rabbit out of his hat, he can make a coin disappear, he can turn the ace of spades into the Joker card, and two others in a similar vein. These are his only tricks and he can't learn any more; he can only do these five. HOWEVER, it turns out he's doing these five tricks with real magic. It's not an illusion; he can actually conjure the bunny out of the ether and he can move the coin through space. He's legitimately magical, but extremely limited in scope and influence.

Would this person be more impressive than Albert Einstein?

Albert Einstein is more impressive only because a magician has managed to move items through time and space and the best application he can find for it is to make a coin disappear. What a dick.

2. Let us assume a fully grown, completely healthy Clydesdale horse has his hooves shackled to the ground while his head is held in place with thick rope. He is conscious and standing upright, but completely immobile. And let us assume that--for some reason--every political prisoner on earth (as cited by Amnesty International) will be released from captivity if you can kick this horse to death in less than twenty minutes. You are allowed to wear steel-toed boots.

Would you attempt to do this?

No, because a political prisoner should be freed because it is proven that they were wrongly jailed, not because I kicked the shit out of some horse.

3. Let us assume there are two boxes on a table. In one box, there is a relatively normal turtle; in the other, Adolf Hitler's skull. You have to select one of these items for your home. If you select the turtle, you can't give it away and you have to keep it alive for two years; if either of these parameters are not met, you will be fined $999 by the state. If you select Hitler's skull, you are required to display it in a semi-prominent location in your living room for the same amount of time, although you will be paid a stipend of $120 per month for doing so. Display of the skull must be apolitical.

Which option do you select?

The skull. 1) Keeping a turtle alive is no easy feat and 2) since the display must be apolitical, who has to know it's Hitler's skull?

4. Genetic engineers at Johns Hopkins University announce that they have developed a so-called "super gorilla." Though the animal cannot speak, it has a sign language lexicon of over twelve thousand words, an I.Q. of almost 85, and--most notably--a vague sense of self-awareness. Oddly, the creature (who weighs seven hundred pounds) becomes fascinated by football. The gorilla aspires to play the game at its highest level and quickly develops the rudimentary skills of a defensive end. ESPN analyst Tom Jackson speculates that this gorilla would be "borderline unblockable" and would likely average six sacks a game (although Jackson concedes the beast might be susceptible to counters and misdirection plays). Meanwhile, the gorilla has made it clear he would never intentionally injure any opponent.

You are commissioner of the NFL: Would you allow this gorilla to sign with the Oakland Raiders?

Um, no. I'd let him sign with the New York Giants.

5. You meet your soul mate. However, there is a catch: Every three years, someone will break both of your soul mate's collarbones with a Crescent wrench, and there is only one way you can stop this from happening: You must swallow a pill that will make every song you hear--for the rest of your life--sound as if it's being performed by the band Alice in Chains. When you hear Creedence Clearwater Revival on the radio, it will sound (to your ears) like it's being played by Alice in Chains. If you see Radiohead live, every one of their tunes will sound like it's being covered by Alice in Chains. When you hear a commercial jingle on TV, it will sound like Alice in Chains; if you sing to yourself in the shower, your voice will sound like deceased Alice vocalist Layne Staley performing a capella (but it will only sound this way to you).

Would you swallow the pill?

No. There's more than one soulmate out there and I love music too much.

6. At long last, someone invents "the dream VCR." This machine allows you to tape an entire evening's worth of your own dreams, which you can then watch at your leisure. However, the inventor of the dream VCR will only allow you to use this device of you agree to a strange caveat: When you watch your dreams, you must do so with your family and your closest friends in the same room. They get to watch your dreams along with you. And if you don't agree to this, you can't use the dream VCR.

Would you still do this?

I don't remember any of my dreams anyway and I'm doing just fine so no.

7. Defying all expectation, a group of Scottish marine biologists capture a live Loch Ness Monster. In an almost unbelievable coincidence, a bear hunter in the Pacific Northwest shoots a Sasquatch in the thigh, thereby allowing zoologists to take the furry monster into captivity. These events happen on the same afternoon. That evening, the president announces he may have thyroid cancer and will undergo a biopsy later that week.

You are the front page editor of The New York Times: What do you play as the biggest story?

The president on the top half of the page with the Loch Ness Monster right under because of its possible evolutionary connection to dinosaurs.

8. You meet the perfect person. Romantically, this person is ideal: You find them physically attractive, intellectually stimulating, consistently funny, and deeply compassionate. However, they have one quirk: This individual is obsessed with Jim Henson's gothic puppet fantasy The Dark Crystal. Beyond watching it on DVD at least once a month, he/she peppers casual conversation with Dark Crystal references, uses Dark Crystal analogies to explain everyday events, and occasionally likes to talk intensely about the film's "deeper philosophy."

Would this be enough to stop you from marrying this individual?

Um, if all she is obessed with is Dark Crystal, she's got nothing on me. :)

9. A novel titled Interior Mirror is released to mammoth commerical success (despite middling reviews). However, a curious social trend emerges: Though no one can prove a direct scientific link, it appears that almost 30 percent of the people who read this book immediately become homosexual. Many of these newfound homosexuals credit the book for helping them reach this conclusion about their orientation, despite the fact that Interior Mirror is ostensibly a crime novel with no homoerotic content (and was written by a straight man).

Would this phenomenon increase (or decrease) the likliehood of you reading this book?

Increase. Hey, if I'm gay, I better find out sooner than later

10. This is the opening line of Jay McInerney's Bright Lights, Big City: "You are not the kind of guy who would be in a place like this at this time of the morning." Think about that line in the context of the novel (assuming you've read it). Now go to your CD collection and find Heart's Little Queen album (assuming you own it). Listen to the opening riff to "Barracuda."

Which of these two introductions is a higher form of art?

The opening line of Bright Lights, Big City.

11. You are watching a movie in a crowded theater. Though the plot is mediocre, you find yourself dazzled by the special effects. But with twenty minutes left in the film, you are struck with an undeniable feeling of doom: You are suddenly certain your mother has just died. There is no logical reason for this to be true, but you are certain of it. You are overtaken with the irrational metaphysical sense that--somewhere--your mom has just perished. But this is only an intuitive, amorphous feeling; there is no evidence for this, and your mother has not been ill.

Would you immediately exit the theater, or would you finish watching the movie?

I'd exit the theater and make a phone call.

12. You meet a wizard in downtown Chicago. The wizard tells you he can make you more attractive if you pay him money. When you ask how this process works, the wizard points to a random person on the street. You look at this random stranger. The wizard says, "I will now make them a dollar more attractive." He waves his magic wand. Ostensibly, this person does not change at all; as far as you can tell, nothing is different. But--somehow--this person is suddenly a little more appealing. The tangible difference is invisible to the naked eye, but you can't deny that this person is vaguely sexier. This wizard has a weird rule, though--you can only pay him once. You can't keep giving him money until you're satisfied. You can only pay him one lump sum up front.

How much cash do you give the wizard?

Whatever I have in my wallet. I'm not stressing it. I'm doing fine as is. :)

13. Every person you have ever slept with is invited to a banquet where you are the guest of honor. No one will be in attendance except you, the collection of your former lovers, and the catering service. After the meal, you are asked to give a fifteen-minute speech to the assembly.

What do you talk about?

Opening line: "Well, this hardly qualifies as a banquet, now does it?"

14. For reasons that cannot be explained, cats can suddenly read at a twelfth-grade level. They can't talk and they can't write, but they can read silently and understand the text. Many cats love this new skill, because they now have something to do all day while they lay around the house; however, a few cats become depressed, because reading forces them to realize the limitations of their existence (not to mention the utter frustration of being unable to express themselves).

This being the case, do you think the average cat would enjoy Garfield, or would cats find this cartoon to be an insulting caricature?

Insulting. Not as insulting as a dog would find Marmaduke but close.

15. You have a brain tumor. Though there is no discomfort at the moment, this tumor would unquestionably kill you in six months. However, your life can (and will) be saved by an operation; the only downside is that there will be a brutal incision to your frontal lobe. After the surgery, you will be significantly less intelligent. You will still be a fully functioning adult, but you will be less logical, you will have a terrible memory, and you will have little ability to understand complex concepts or difficult ideas. The surgery is in two weeks.

How do you spend the next fourteen days?

Writing letters to J.J. Abrams, Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindof begging them to tell how Lost ends before I die because I'm not getting that stupid surgery.

16. Someone builds and optical portal that allows you to see a vision of your own life in the future (it’s essentially a crystal ball that shows a randomly selected image of what your life will be like in twenty years). You can only see into this portal for thirty seconds. When you finally peer into the crystal, you see yourself in a living room, two decades older than you are today. You are watching a Canadian football game, and you are extremely happy. You are wearing a CFL jersey. Your chair is surrounded by books and magazines that promote the Canadian Football League, and there are CFL pennants covering your walls. You are alone in the room, but you are gleefully muttering about historical moments in Canadian football history. It becomes clear that—for some unknown reason—you have become obsessed with Canadian football. And this future is static and absolute; no matter what you do, this future will happen. The optical portal is never wrong. This destiny cannot be changed.

The next day, you are flipping through television channels and randomly come across a pre-season CFL game between the Toronto Argonauts and the Saskatchewan Roughriders. Knowing your inevitable future, do you now watch it?

It depends what else is on. If it is my inevitable fate, what's the rush?

17. You are sitting in an empty bar (in a town you’ve never before visited), drinking Bacardi with a soft-spoken acquaintance you barely know. After an hour, a third individual walks into the tavern and sits by himself, and you ask your acquaintance who the new man is. “Be careful of that guy,” you are told. “He is a man with a past.” A few minutes later, a fourth person enters the bar; he also sits alone. You ask your acquaintance who this new individual is. “Be careful of that guy, too,” he says. “He is a man with no past.”

Which of these two people do you trust less?

The man with no past because he's either a liar, incredibly secretive or a vistor from the future.

18. You have won a prize. The prize has two options, and you can choose either (but not both). The first option is a year in Europe with a monthly stipend of $2,000. The second option is ten minutes on the moon.

Which option do you select?

Ten minutes on the moon. $2,000 dollars a month in Europe at the current exchange rate ain't shit.

19. Your best friend is taking a nap on the floor of your living room. Suddenly, you are faced with a bizarre existential problem: This friend is going to die unless you kick them (as hard as you can) in the rib cage. If you don’t kick them while they slumber, they will never wake up. However, you can never explain this to your friend; if you later inform them that you did this to save their life, they will also die from that. So you have to kick a sleeping friend in the ribs, and you can’t tell them why.

Since you cannot tell your friend the truth, what excuse will you fabricate to explain this (seemingly inexplicable) attack?

Opps, I forgot you were there.

20. For whatever the reason, two unauthorized movies are made about your life. The first is an independently released documentary, primarily comprised of interviews with people who know you and bootleg footage from your actual life. Critics are describing the documentary as “brutally honest and relentlessly fair.” Meanwhile, Columbia Tri-Star has produced a big-budget biopic of your life, casting major Hollywood stars as you and all your acquaintances; though the movie is based on actual events, screenwriters have taken some liberties with the facts. Critics are split on the artistic merits of this fictionalized account, but audiences love it.

Which film would you be most interested in seeing?

The big budget biopic. I lived my life now I want to see it starring Taye Diggs as me.

21. Imagine you could go back to the age of five and relive the rest of your life, knowing everything that you know now. You will reexperience your entire adolescence with both the cognitive ability of an adult and the memories of everything you’ve learned form having lived your life previously.

Would you lose your virginity earlier or later than you did the first time around (and by how many years)?

Later by 4 years.

22. You work in an office. Generally, you are popular with your coworkers. However, you discover that there are currently two rumors circulating the office gossip mill, and both involve you. The first rumor is that you got drunk at the office holiday party and had sex with one of your married coworkers. This rumor is completely true, but most people don’t believe it. The second rumor is that you have been stealing hundreds of dollars of office supplies (and then selling them to cover a gambling debt). This rumor is completely false, but virtually everyone assumes it is factual.

Which of these two rumors is most troubling to you?

Obviously, the second one.

23. Consider this possibility:

a. Think about deceased TV star John Ritter.

b. Now, pretend Ritter had never become famous. Pretend he was never affected by the trappings of fame, and try to imagine what his personality would have been like.

c. Now, imagine that this person—the unfamous John Ritter—is a character in a situation comedy.

d. Now, you are also a character in this sitcom, and the unfamous John Ritter character is your sitcom father.

e. However, this sitcom is actually your real life. In other words, you are living inside a sitcom: Everything about our life is a construction, featuring the unfamous John Ritter playing himself (in the role of your TV father). But this is not a sitcom. This is your real life.

How would you feel about this?

Well, for starters, I'd have to presume I was adopted.

I guess the question now is can you really love me?

*Thanks to Erika for introducing this book to me.

Monday, July 24, 2006

Topher Grace is Venom!



From Ain't It Cool News's SDCC Spider-Man 3 Panel report:

Venom's face. Exactly what you want to see. Big, big toothy mouth, bright white eyes. Looks just like the later McFarlane Venom face.

I couldn't be anymore excited!

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Movie of the Week: Clerks II



I'm in love with Rosario Dawson again.

I know what you are thinking. How could you not be in love with Rosario Dawson? Easy, she broke the number one rule of Sean's Rules of Attraction For Famous People (future post), "You have to be good at your chosen profession." Just because you look good doesn't mean you have to be an actor or an actress or a singer. You could just be a model or a hot Blockbuster employee (Hot retail employees > hot actress and singers). But if you are going to enter thoses fields, don't be shitty about it. Nothing is worse* than an actor/actress/singer where the only reason they are allowed to continue in their profession is how they look (Yeah, I'm looking at you, Halle).

Anyway, after Alexander, I had to admit that Rosario Dawson is no longer attractive. Sin City started to pull her out but Clerks II made her hot again.

She had the most difficult job: convince the viewers that someone who looks like Rosario Dawson would be attracted to and maybe in love with someone who looks like Dante Hicks. And she made it work.

Oh, yeah. The movie was hilarious. Anyone who thinks Kevin Smith sold out is sorely mistaken as Clerks II is more visually and verbally graphic than ANY of Kevin Smith's films and this is without major contributions of Jay and Silent Bob. Basically, if you loved Clerks, aside from the sappy ending, there is no reason not to love this movie. But if this is the first Kevin Smith movie you are seeing, be warned. I can't remember a movie where the word "cock" flew around so much.

Considering all the crap the MPAA decides is dirty, how this movie escaped an NC-17 rating amazes me.

Oh, and I'm going to have to side with Dante. You never go ass to mouth.

*Yes, aside from Cancer, AIDS and world famine

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Fiona Apple & Damien Rice at Jones Beach Theater


So after my friend and I did a couple of No Rain dances, we manage to avoid the torrential downpour that The Weather Channel all but guaranteed.

We got there early and we're reading the program when all of the sudden, music starts playing. Apparently David Garza wanted to surprise us. If David Garza is a really talented guy, I was not sold after that performance. He did a real quick opening set- 4 songs. The two highlights being his first song, "Song for Ann Marie" (if anyone has this on .mp3, hook me up) and halfway through his second song, he sang "I just changed my tune/I forgot what I was supposed to say".

Anyway, he came and went.

Then Damien Rice, Lisa Hannigan and the band came out. It was kind of weird because they performed in front of Fiona's set that was covered in tarps so it looked like they weren't even supposed to be on stage. Nonetheless, it was an amazing set. Damien Rice is one of those singers who sounds the same live or recorded. Actually, I kinda prefer him live. Equally amazing was the voice of Lisa Hannigan. I really hope she comes out with an album of her own some day although they make a great team. So he did his set (Another request: if anyone has an live .mp3 of "Acidental Babies" or "Rootless Tree", send it this way) and everybody was loving it and cheering and then he said Thank you and goodnight. And a near riot broke out. He didn't perform "The Blower's Daughter". Apparently we were sitting in the Damien Rice Fan Club section because everyone freaked out. A few minutes ago, I thought they were going to cry and orgasm at the same time and now they wanted his blood. "Did we miss it?" "What happened?" "How could he not sing my favorite song?" "I don't even like Fiona Apple" And a whole bunch of them left never to return. I can't believe they spent all that money JUST to see Damien Rice (and presumably David Garza). Weird.

A little while afterwards, Fiona Apple's set started. She was one piano and it did not start off well. Her voice sounded as if she had swallowed Spike from Gremlins whole and he was trying to escape while she sang. The first two songs were off and my friend and I gave each other the "Uh Oh. Could we be in for a Fiona Breakdown?" look. Luckily, she got off the piano and opted to stand and sing and DANCE. Oh did she dance. She definitely went to the Thom Yorke School of Stage Dancing. It was a combination of her fighting ghosts on stage and her beings chased by a swarm of killer bees with the occasional "AH! There's a spider on my right leg." It was amazing and worth the price of admission alone. Anyway, dancing aside, she did a beautiful set and I can now cross her off the lists of artists I want to see live.

Photo by HighTea

Friday, July 21, 2006

Children of Men Trailer

Set in 2027 where no human child has been born for 18 years and science is at a loss to explain why, Children of Men envisages a world that's fallen into anarchy and chaos as humankind faces the threat of its own extinction. This threat is made all the more real with the death of the world's youngest citizen. The discovery of a miraculously pregnant woman named Kee leads Theo Faron, a disillusioned ex-activist turned bureaucrat, to undertake a journey to ensure the safety of the woman - a journey where he will face his demons and try to restore faith in the future of humanity.



Clive Owen? Michael Caine? Julianne Moore? Chiwetel Ejiofor? Directed by Alfonso Cuarón?

I'm there.

I Knew It Wasn't Just Me

From The Wall Street Journal

HOLLYWOOD REPORT
The Endless Summer Movie


Overlong Films Test Patience,
Cut Theater Owners' Sales;
How Directors Get Their Way
By KATE KELLY
July 21, 2006; Page W1

Checking your watch is becoming as much a part of the moviegoing experience as popcorn and soda.

Two hours once was the unofficial time limit for most Hollywood films, and about 90 minutes for movies aimed at seat-squirming children. But across the board, many of this year's most-anticipated pictures blow past these caps.

Walt Disney Co.'s "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," the second installment of its wildly popular Johnny Depp franchise, clocks in at two hours and 30 minutes. It takes two hours and 29 minutes for Sony Corp. to crack "The Da Vinci Code." Disney's animated "Cars" hits the finish line at 1:56, far longer than most kiddie fare. And Clark Kent's alter ego flies around for two hours and 34 minutes in Warner Bros.' "Superman Returns."

Posting a review on the movie Web site imdb.com, a "Superman Returns" patron griped that a Space Shuttle rescue scene "seemed to be taking forever, so I wandered around the theater, met a girl, got married, raised a son and sent him off to college."

Next week, Universal Pictures tests the waters with the opening of its $135 million crime drama "Miami Vice," which at 132 minutes exceeds the two-hour mark. But even to get to that length entailed a rare compromise with a big-name director. Originally, the film came in at roughly 140 minutes, a running time that some Universal insiders thought was too long. After discussions, director Michael Mann agreed to cut about eight minutes from the movie, which is based on the 1980s TV show he created.

Audiences, studio executives and theater owners all are unhappy with overlong films. The longer the running time, the more it costs to make a film, generally speaking -- so the extreme length of a movie can both bump up its cost and depress revenue by turning off some customers. And since theaters can schedule only so many movies a day, those that run 2½ hours can't be shown nearly as often as shorter films, reducing potential ticket and concession sales.

"Clearly, nirvana for us is a great 75-to-80-minute, animated feature, because you can add extra show times," says Scott Wallace, chairman and chief executive of Hollywood/Wallace Theaters, a chain based in Portland, Ore. "It's all about turnover -- so you can sell another group of people popcorn."

Not all moviegoers are turned off by long films. Millions of fans were entranced by the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, whose combined running time was nearly nine hours. (The shortest was "Fellowship of the Ring" at 2:58.) And the current "Pirates" sequel set an all-time record with its $136 million in opening-weekend ticket sales.

But Edwin Morales and his date, Marcella Lentz-Pope, contemplated leaving a Pasadena, Calif., theater to stretch their legs midway through a "Pirates" screening this week. "They might have well made two movies out of it," Ms. Lentz-Pope says. "It was just too much."

The average length of a Hollywood film has been on a steady upward creep. In 1986, the year of blockbusters like the Tom Cruise fighter-pilot drama "Top Gun," the Oliver Stone-directed Vietnam War story "Platoon" and the fourth installment of the "Star Trek" movie franchise, the average running time of the 20 most successful releases was 104 minutes, according Exhibitor Relations Co., a research firm that provides statistics about the movie industry. But by last year -- which included such epics as "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," "Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith" and "King Kong" -- the figure was 118 minutes.

By the end of a screening of a recent showing of "Superman Returns," Phyllis Henry really did believe a man could fly -- very, very slowly. She says she loved the special effects, but got bogged down in the superhero's on-again, off-again romance with Lois Lane. "There was way too much love story," the Riverside, Calif., schoolteacher says. "We don't want to sit through 80 minutes of character development to get to the action part."

Most of the blame for the movie marathons lies with studios' inability to rein in the growing clout of a select group of directors. With box-office returns increasingly unpredictable, studios try to hire the most proven filmmakers. But those directors tend to come with strings attached, including eight-figure salaries and plenty of autonomy over how a movie is made -- including running times.

A case in point: Peter Jackson's directing deal for "King Kong." On the heels of his smashing success with the first two "Lord of the Rings" movies, each of which made well over $300 million domestically despite their length, the New Zealand filmmaker had a negotiating advantage when it came to discussing a "Kong" deal in 2003. So to realize his vision of the classic gorilla movie -- a project that Universal had already shelved once -- Mr. Jackson commanded a $20 million payment up front, a 20% share of the studio's share of the box-office gross and the right to "final-cut approval," or complete say, over a PG-13-rated movie of roughly 2½ hours, according to people familiar with the deal.

But even when the rough cut exceeded three hours, Universal executives, feeling it was important to trust Mr. Jackson, didn't push back much, suggesting among other things a cut of less than one minute from a scene. The eventual result: a tepid $218 million in domestic ticket sales against roughly $250 million in production costs. "King Kong" and its 187-minute running time strained many moviegoers' patience -- prompting some to walk out early and others to gripe that it took more than an hour for the title character to appear. Many avoided the film entirely.

"Some of this is just the power that directors wield today," says Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations. "As directors have final-cut approval over the movie, I think we have seen some of the running times get bloated."

Trimming 'Superman'

Alan Horn, president of Warner Bros., says studio executives are aware of the need to trim movie lengths. "We do it in almost every movie," he says, adding that eliminating anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes from a director's rough cut "is not at all uncommon."

Still, he believes the bigger issue is a movie's pace. Although his studio's "Superman Returns" was cut "tons" -- a scene in which the superhero comes across the ruins of his home planet was removed entirely by director Bryan Singer -- Mr. Horn adds that "I myself did not see a pacing issue" with the movie. Mr. Singer had a final-cut approval clause in his contract that was tied to the $209 million film's rating, budget and length. A representative for Mr. Singer declined to comment.

Increasingly, though, epic length doesn't equal epic success. "Superman Returns" disappointed Warner's expectations with its $53 million first weekend, and may struggle to reach $200 million in U.S. ticket sales. Last year's two-hour, 25-minute "Kingdom of Heaven" fell hard, with the $130 million Ridley Scott epic about the Crusades generating just $47 million in domestic ticket sales.

The next test of movie length is "Miami Vice," due in theaters next Friday. "Vice" is a major gamble for Universal, which typically releases just one such megabudget movie in a year. Starring Jamie Foxx and Colin Farrell as undercover cops, the film sailed past its original $120 million budget when a combination of bad weather, cast illness and other costs befell the production. But the studio held the line at about $135 million in production spending, and has thrown a sleek marketing campaign behind the film.

As Mr. Mann, the director, tinkered with the final version of "Vice" over the last month or so and test audiences screened the movie, it became clear that some parts should be trimmed to keep the pace brisk, say people familiar with his thinking. One key element of the eight or so minutes that have been cut: a scene at the beginning in which Messrs. Foxx and Farrell zip across the water in a speedboat chase. Initially planned as a lengthy opening-credit montage, the credits were moved to the film's end. To throw moviegoers right into the action, these people add, the new opening places the stars in a nightclub scene, where the plot unfolds immediately. A representative for Universal said Mr. Mann declined to comment.

Mr. Mann has a long history of long movies. His last four pictures -- "Collateral," "Ali," "The Insider" and "Heat" -- averaged about two hours and 32 minutes each. Their average box-office take: a disappointing $64 million. But the most successful of those -- 2004's "Collateral," with domestic ticket sales of a little more than $100 million -- was also the shortest. So by whittling "Miami Vice" down to 2:12 -- or 2:04 without the lengthy credit sequence at the end -- it may hit the director's sweet spot with audiences.

---- Nick Timiraos contributed to this article.

Write to Kate Kelly at kate.kelly@wsj.com

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Movie of the Week Pt. 2: A Scanner Darkly



Well, that was an experience...

I feel like if Philip K. Dick were alive, he would want all film adaptations of his books to be done with rotoscoping.

Aside from Blade Runner, I feel like this is only other movie to ever capture Dick's voice. All other adaptations have been altered to be more action-packed and fun (i.e. Total Recall, Minority Report) but I felt like A Scanner Darkly really conveyed Dick's tale of a drug-addled society and trying to discover who the villans are or if, in fact, there are any real heroes.

GENIUS casting of Robert Downey Jr. and Woody Harrelson as "Bob's" druggie friends. Some of their crazy conversations and fights reminded me of some of my own friends when there has been too much weed and too much time.

It's a shame that Winona Ryder has fallen off the radar since that whole shoplifting incident. I missed her voice.

Shouldn't Keanu be the first person on every casting director's mind when the character calls for a confused Californian, who may or may not be high on weed, who is looking for answers?

Anyway, you could easily wait until it comes out on video but the animation looks beautiful on the big screen.

Movie of the Week: Strangers With Candy



Did you like the show on Comedy Central?

Then you'll like the movie.

It was funny but in a "you need to be mentally prepared" kind of way.

This movie was made for the fans of the show, not in some attempt to get new fans.

You have to appreciate that on some level.

Monday, July 17, 2006

The Prestige trailer

This and The Fountain are the two movies I am anticipating the most in 2006. I hope they do not disappoint...


Summer Movie Season 2006: Half Way Point

Ok, we are at the midway point of the summer movie season. All the heavy hitters have come out (and they all pretty much disappointed me on some level). Let's check see where we have been and where we have left to go...

Already Seen (click for reviews):
M:I:3
The Da Vinci Code
Over The Hedge
X3: The Last Stand
The Break-Up
Click
Cars
Nacho Libre
Superman Returns
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
Monster House

Released But Haven't Seen Yet:
A Scanner Darkly

Yet To Be Released (movies not on the original list in red)

July 21st:
Clerks II
The Lady In The Water

July 28th:
Little Miss Sunshine
Miami Vice (It's Michael Mann. When has he let us down?)
Scoop (I think Woody Allen has a hard on for Scarlett Johansson.)

August 4th:
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby
Fearless

August 18th:
Snakes On A Plane
The Illusionist (If I don't end up seeing this, I won't lose any sleep)

This may be the first summer that I see all the movies on my list. AMC Theater should throw me a party.

Sunday, July 16, 2006

The Fountain

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Movie of the Week: Monster House



Finally, a real movie for kids...

Don't get me wrong. It's not like Cars or Over The Hedge weren't for children. They were. But like I mentioned in my review for Cars, I feel like there are way too many attempts to satiate the adults who are either going to see it with their children or by themselves by filling the script with pop culture or historical references that would fly over the head of your average 16 and under kid.

Let's call it "The Animainiacs Effect".

Animaniacs was the first cartoon, in my opinion, that was trying to hit every demographic. And then, many years later, Shrek came along and made a shitload of money because of the kids and the adults who went to see it a gazillion times because there was something for everyone. And now every computer animated feature gets more and more adult to the point that they should be PG. It is as if "animation" is enough to get the kids in the seats, and the script is what gets the parents back for repeat viewing.

That's cool but I noticed that little children are getting more and more restless during these films because they can't really follow the story. They are just looking at the screen at the fast actions and laughing at the juvenile flatulence jokes (then only ones they really laugh at because). If you hear laughter in these movies, it's usually the 17+ crowd.

Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah, Monster House.

I didn't feel like this AT ALL during Monster House. It was as if the movie occurs in an alternate reality where nothing that happened in the real world doesn't exist. No obscure pop culture references. No dialogue too smart for the demographic the movie should be aiming for. Everyone laughed. Everyone enjoyed it.

The whole plastic hair thing kinda weirded me out for awhile but I got used to it.

I hate to have a plot quibble with a kids movie but you are telling that no one but these three kids could see this HUGE house turning into a monster on Halloween? C'mon!

But it is a kid movie. I can live with it.

Friday, July 14, 2006

Time For a Geek Moment

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Don't Call Me During...- Summer Edition

I know what you are wondering.

What does a TV-holic such as myself watch during the summer?:

Sunday:
9:00 PM - 10:00 PM: Deadwood/The 4400/Chappelle's Show: The Lost Episodes
10:00 PM - 10:30 PM: Entourage
10:30 PM - 11:00 PM: The Venture Brothers/Dane Cook's Tourgasm/Reno 911
11:00 PM - 11:30 PM: Lucky Louie

Tuesday:
10:00 PM - 11:00 PM: Rescue Me

Wednesday:
10:00 PM - 11:00 PM: Blade: The Series*/Project Runway*
10:00 PM - 11:15 PM: Hustle

Thursday:

10:00 PM - 11:00 PM: It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia/Hex (BBC's Buffy The Vampire Slayer)

Friday

9:00 PM - 10:00 PM: Monk
10:00 PM - 11:00 PM: Psych*

What do I do with all my free time? I watch my Netflix movies. I have a queue of 300 so there's no better time than now to blow through it. I'm also going to try and read some of the Harry Potter books (breaking with my previous stance) and teach myself sign language or French.

Yeah, I don't think I'll be doing all that either.

* On probation

Saturday, July 08, 2006

Movie of the Week Pt. 2: Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest



Johnny Depp was really good. That ended up being a huge problem.

Talk about a movie I really wanted to like that let me down.
  • The first thing I thought as I looked over to my movie going companions and saw THREE of them sleeping (granted we saw the 10:15 PM show but we would have never slept through the first one), I ask again...Why is Hollywood afraid to make a 90-105 minute movie? This movie was too long. I mean, I seriously believe this movie could be a whole hour shorter and not suffer much in the way of character development (wait, there wasn't any) or plot.
  • For a movie based on a Disney ride, this movie was incredibly dark. Should we blame Empire Strikes Back for making every 2nd movie in a trilogy dark as hell.There were too many cheap references to the first movie in order to generate a laugh. My friends and I always joke, "But why is the rum gone?" After they refer to that one line at least 5 times, it's not funny anymore.
  • Do you know how good Johnny Depp was in this movie? When he wasn't on the scene, everyone took a nap, went to the bathroom or went to get popcorn. The entire Will Turner portion movie...when are they going to realize NO ONE CARES ABOUT THIS CHARACTER. We're all here to see Captain Jack Sparrow. And with the way this movie ended, it's going to be a rough start for part three.
I can't believe how much money this movie made. I mean it didn't suck but it was unnecessarily bloated.

Friday, July 07, 2006

Movie of the Week Pt. I: Cars



I wasn't expecting to hate it, I just wasn't expecting to like it as much as I did.

Dear Mr. Lasseter:

Congratulations on another successful Pixar release.

I did not think I would laugh and enjoy myself as much as I did. I came into the theater only wondering if it would be better or worse that A Bug's Life (it was the former).

Two things:

1) How much money did you have to pay the writers of Doc Hollywood for making an animated version of their movie with cars? Did you know right away that you were stealing a multitude of plot points or did you see the finished product and think to yourself, "Why do I have an image of Michael J. Fox in my head?"

2) As much as I love your movies, I feel like Pixar cartoons are moving farther and farther away from children's entertainment. While I don't mind seeing animated feature for adults, the fact of the matter is that these are supposed to be children's movies. While I watching the movie (we went to a latter showing this time to avoid the problems I had with Over The Hedge), I was wondering what the children in the audience were getting out of this aside from the visuals and the occasional flatulence/gross out jokes. I thought the same thing during The Impossibles but I think with all the car specific references, this was a little worse.

Otherwise, keep up the good work.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

I Watch Too Much TV Pt. 846,213

I just realized that everything I know about epilepsy I learned from an episode of Degrassi Junior High when Caitlin went to the sleep over against her mother's wishes and didn't take her medicine because she was trying to fit in and she had a seizure.

Basically, I don't know anything about epilepsy.

Emmy Nominations 2006: The Yays, Nays and WTFs

So much for BIG changes at the Emmys this year that everyone has been talking about...

The Yays:
  • 24 getting 12 nominations (the most). It's about time they noticed how great this show is.
  • Grey's Anatomy getting 11. I'm a believer now.
  • Arrested Development getting nominated for Best Comedy Series giving it a chance to pull a Ben Stiller 1
  • Desperate Housewives getting shut out of the Best Comedy Series nomination because this season really did suck
  • The Girl in the Cafe getting a nominated for TV movie because I really liked it even though it was a little preachy
  • Gregory Itzin (President Logan) & Jean Smart (Martha Logan) getting supporting nods for 24.
  • Will Arnett (G.O.B.) getting a supporting nod for Arrested Development
  • The Office and Scrubs getting best comedy series nominations
  • Dennis Leary getting a best acting nomination. Never thought I'd see that day come.
  • Patrick Stewart getting nominated for his guest stint on Extras. "Make it so!"
  • Chandra Wilson (Dr. Bailey) getting a supporting nomination for Grey's Anatomy
  • Jaime Pressley getting nominated for My Name Is Earl. Never thought she would get nominated for anything in her life except maybe a Cinemax Lifetime Achievement Award but she deserved it.
The Nays:
  • The Two And A Half Men Enigma continues. Best Comedy Series? Really? So out of all the shows on television, Two and A Half Men is funnier than Entourage, How I Met Your Mother, Extras, Everybody Hates Chris and My Name Is Earl? Who votes for these things?
  • The supposed "Lauren Graham Rule" didn't nab Lauren Graham a nomination. That's just ironic.
  • Now I think Kevin James (The King of Queens) is a funny guy. But is he one of the five funniest actors in television?
  • No acting nominations for Scrubs. C'mon, at least Donald Faison (Turk) deserved some Emmy love.
  • I really wanted T.R. Knight (Dr. George O'Malley) from Grey's Anatomy to be nominated
  • Aside from Steve Carell, no other actors were nominated from The Office.
  • How does House get nominated but the actor the show pretty much revolves around and depends on, Hugh Laurie, doesn't?
  • Michael Hall (David Fisher) deserved a nomination more than Peter Krause (Nate Fisher) for Six Feet Under
  • Still no love for Mary Lynn Rajskub (Chloe) from 24.
  • Double ditto for Veronica Mars or Kristin Bell.
  • Triple Ditto for Battlestar Galactica and Mary McDonnell and Edward James Olmos. You'd think Lost would have opened up the possibility of a sci-fi show getting some love. Speaking of Lost...
The WTFs:
  • No major nominations for Lost?!?! This must be a joke. Please let this be a joke.
  • How does Edie Falco NOT get nominated for Best Actress in a Drama? Episodes 2 and 3 should have not only made her a lock to get nominated, I thought her name was already engraved on the statue. I wasn't the only one.
  • The Shield? NOTHING?!? At LEAST Forest Whitaker should have been a shoo-in.
  • I love that the only major acting nomination for Desperate Housewives was for Alfre Woodard who was forgotten about on a number of occasions this season and then chased off at the end of this crap season. She gets the last laugh.
  • Still waiting for this Lost joke to be over.
1 The Ben Stiller Show took home the 1993 Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing in a Variety Series after it was cancelled.

It's Pronounced Pla·gia·rism

Just when you thought the Wayans Brothers couldn't go any lower...

THEY ARE REMAKING A BUGS BUNNY CARTOON!!!

And they don't even admit it.

Do you remember the Bugs Bunny cartoon where the midget criminal pretends to be a baby that Bugs takes in and the money he sticks in a baby carriage falls in his rabbit hole? He spends the entire cartoon trying to steal the money back. It was called "Baby Buggy Bunny".


This is from an interview1 with Shawn Wayans:

" 'Little Man' is a movie about a guy named Darrell and his wife, Vanessa. Darrell really wants to have a baby and his wife doesn't because she's not ready, but that doesn't stop him from trying. At the same time, there's this guy Calvin who is this little dude, this vertically challenged guy, who just got out of prison and robs a jewelry store.

"The cops are chasing him from his botched jewelry-heist attempt, and he runs back into the store and hides the diamond inside of my wife's bag. Then he follows us home to get it back and shows up on our doorstep as a baby. Comedy ensues."

And then Kennan Ivory Wayans says1, "I kinda had the initial idea, and then we all rewrote it together."

NO, you didn't. Michael Maltese, Chuck Jones and Mel Blanc did.

Hell, this scene was lifted STRAIGHT from the cartoon.



God, I feel bad rooting against black people but I hope someone from one of their estates sues their collective asses off.

1 http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1533572/06052006/story.jhtml

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

The "Perfect" Relationship

While talking to Kristy this morning, I came up with the ideal relationship...at least for me...
  • I would only see her 6-7 months out of the whole year. Maybe 2-3 weeks at a time.
  • The only correspondence when we are apart are handwritten or typed letter (no e-mail, text messaging, instant messaging, phone calls only for birthdays--although I'm up in the air about this because the birthday card serves the same purpose--and emergencies)
Now automatically you are thinking, "That is incredibly stupid." and even as I said, I thought so too. The reasons are equally silly:
  • There would be all the "missing" that comes with a long distance relationship without any of the tediousness of talking on the phone everyday just to remain in contact.
  • How hard would it be to argue over pen and pad?
  • I'll be honest. I'm better on paper than I am on the phone.
  • You get to skip all the boring "How was your day?" conversations that eventually you weigh down.
  • With all the technology making everything about getting whatever it is as soon as possible, I miss handwritten letters-writing, sending, reading and re-reading. E-mail isn't the same.
  • A relationship like this is pretty easy to end.
Ok, even the reasons are stupid. But that's what fantasies are. Admit it, you like it a little bit.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Year 28 Revisited

It's 2:22 AM in the morning and I can't sleep (whether it be the heat or the sheer boredom of it being my birthday) so I sit here with a glass of Pinot Grigio (what an alcoholic I've become) and decided to look back on Year 28, which should bore me (and you) enough to go to bed proper:
  • I came up with a good metaphor for commitment issues
  • Spent a full year at the apartment (with rent increase and all)
  • Made no career progress whatsoever (Actually, I don't have a career. I have a job.).
  • I bought my first suit and wore it to two weddings (don't worry, they were like 6 months and 3,000 miles apart)
  • Decided I was never drinking again (which lasted for eight days)
  • Got a new iPod...three days before the video iPods came out
  • Added the following movies to the all-time favorites list: Brokeback Mountain, The Constant Gardener, Wedding Crashers (despite the chick flick ending), Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang, Thank You For Smoking (The Break-Up could make it on the list but I need one more viewing.)
  • Fell asleep more in front of "friends" with cameras
  • Went to my 10 year high school reunion (I still wish I had gotten Aline's e-mail. I forgot how cool she was in high school until I saw her again)
  • Thank you Kaiva for putting me on to Battlestar Galatica. I can't believe there was a time I didn't watch this show.
  • I fell out of love with hip-hop and fell in love with indie rock and pop (Marry me, Jenny Lewis...or at least leave me voicemails every once and awhile)
  • Still now championships for the Yankees, Giants or Knicks (Could someone assassinate Isiah Thomas and James Dolan? Please?)
  • Jack Bauer killed more people
  • We still have no clue where the fuck Jack, Kate, Sawyer or Locke are or what it all means.
  • Disappointed by X-Men: The Last Stand and Superman Returns (Don't let me down, Spider-Man 3)
  • Got the "No P For Me" watch (and...I was right)
  • Saw Jay-Z and Lewis Taylor in concert.
  • Still single (much like all of 27 and 26). Not even a glimmer of hope in the horizon and I don't necessarily know how much I care about that.
Let's see how 29 plays out.

Shit, I'm still not sleepy. Maybe more wine would help.

Sunday, July 02, 2006

The Science of Sleep trailer



If this does come out on August 11th, it's on "The List"

Written & Directed by Michel Gondry (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)