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December 23, 2007

wall-e

walle.jpg

Pixar's next production, wall-e, seems exciting. Wall-E is a story of a robot. Written and Directed by Andrew Stanton, the director of Finding Nemo, Wall-E's trailer is just so nice that it reminds me of Spielberg's ET. Finding Nemo is my most favorite among Pixar's flicks.

Pixar owns this site, Buy n Large, a fake site about a robot manufacturing company, possibly the one that creates Wall-E robot.

Summer of 2008 has an interesting line-up of movies at hollywood and Wall-E should be one among the toppers.


August 11, 2007

Films, Faith and Friendship

Now that Google Video's Pay-to-Play store is closed, I was searching the Charlie Rose interview and found this gem. Though, I watched this interview before on Pan's Labryinth DVD, thought it would be a great pointer for film buffs.

Charlie Rose interviews three mexican directors who are shaping hollywood with their films. Alphonso Cuaron (director of Y tu mamá también and Children of Men), the fantasy whiz Guillermo del Toro (director of Hell Boy and Pan's Labryinth) and Alejandro González Iñárritu (director of Amores Perros(inspiration for Mani's Aayitha Ezhuthu) and Babel) are three friends, who are also incidentally film makers.

This interview talks about their faith on each other and also how their appreciation and criticism on other's work, elevates all three of them. While my personal favorite is Alphonso Cuaron, I also enjoy del Toro's work. Alejandro was simply astounding in Babel which I think it one of best movies of last year. Cuaron's Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, is the most stylish Potter movie in that series.

With tons of humor and some sneak peaks into their film-making process, this is a great interview. I wish it was longer.


July 23, 2006

Night Shyamalan's Lady in the

Night Shyamalan's Lady in the Water is taking a bad hit. Has just 22% of approval rate in Rotten Tomatoes. And that's not good.


March 30, 2006

Thank you for smoking - Merchants of Death

Thank You For Smoking

Thank You For Smoking takes a funny look at the lives of spin doctors, the truth they almost filter, the corporations that rest on their shoulders and the people the tackle on their everyday lives. It's certainly not great flick that one should raise up and give a Two thumbs way way up !! but it certainly provides enough thought and laughter on a Tuesday evening.

The spin doctors or the lobbyists as they are lovingly called, manage to be a firewall between the government and the corporations. In this process they also get burnt by the public angst. These guys talk their way through even the toughest of trials and save the corporations billions of dollars every year. Now if you couldn't make any sense of the previous statements, watch Thank You For Smoking. If you do, watch Thank You For Smoking.

Nick Naylor[Aaron Eckhart], the charming gentleman with a broad smile, is a lobbyist for tobacco. In short, he proves to be middleman between the cigarette companies and the public / government. His life is like standing on a landmine, from tackling the anti-smoking debates on a television show to arguing for pro-smoking in jury courts without giving the slightest of a doubt that he is for against anti-smoking. He dines with the Merchants of Death [MOD], a group of lobbyists who are in a league of their own. MOD consists of a lady lobbyist for alcohol, Nick Naylor for cigarettes and another gentleman for firearms. Not just that but he has a kid son who manages to dramatically change the way Nick thinks himself in general. Nick is ready to accept people calling him by names from Profiteer to a Pimp to blood sucker. Gracious performance by Aaron who carries the entire movie on him.

Nick's bed talk on lobbying tips & tricks to Heather [Katie Holmes], an aspiring journalist of The Washington Probe, starts the fun. The aftermath forms the rest of this 90 minute movie. TYFS moves along with funny dialogues and some interesting situations along way that lead to an expected climax.

As expected, not a single person smokes in the film except for the Captain[Robert Duvall] who holds a cigar on his hospital bed. The titles roll with the cast names printed on vintage cigarette boxes reminding us of the 70's. Other than that and the funny arguments [some of which are ture] there is not much on pro-smoking advices. In fact its all black humor, starting from the 15 year old guy on the morning show who was traced of lung cancer to the Marlboro model who accepts bribe to reduce his old-age cigarette bashings.

The writing is razor sharp with some funny quotes sprinkled all along. Made me think, when Nick Naylor tells his son, "You are never wrong, when you argue right". Jason Reitman as the writer and director of this movie, based on the book by Christopher Buckley, does a great job in making the best out of the screenplay. From the very idea of Space Smoking to the message, Smoking is Cool !! which Hollywood sends to the world, Jason makes enough satire on the industry he comes from and that's exciting.

If you are bored with sitcoms and reality shows on cable, this film is a great escapade.


March 16, 2006

V V

v for vendetta

Not Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu. This one is from the makers of Matrix and it's releasing this weekend, V for Vendetta. Too much expectations. Waiting to check out the masked 'V'.


December 19, 2005

Spielberg's Munich, A Prayer for Peace

The recent interview of Steven Spielberg[via Ajay] with Time's Richard Schickel, is an interesting look into Spielberg's mind as a director. Not only Spielberg talks from his heart, he also effectively conveys his steadfast approach towards doing the film he wants to and how he escapes without succumbing to the pressures of success.

When I don't have a movie, I don't take a job just for the sake of working. I just sit it out until I find something I'm passionate about. If I find something light, I'll make it. Like Terminal. It wasn't a film that I'll be remembered for, but it's a film I'll remember for the rest of my life, a sweet short story that gave me a chance to work with Tom Hanks--and people think I'm crazy for saying this--giving what I think was his best performance. Some people have said, "Why did you make that little movie when you could have been doing something important?" And I said, "Well, at the time it was important." And if I find something dark and historical--like this Doris Kearns Goodwin book [Team of Rivals, about Abraham Lincoln] I'm working on now--I'll do that. It's just how things work out. It's all about timing.

Richard also writes in-depth about Spielberg's yet-to-be released, Munich, a film on the killing of Israeli atheletes during 1972 Olympics.

Meanwhile, 2 people from Redmond are named as the Persons of the Year 2005. Bill Gates & Melinda Gates are the duo. Also named as Person of the Year is U2's Bono.


December 14, 2005

Big fish. Small Fish.

dreamworks

Even with a string of not-so-big movies and a long tail of media ventures failing, I was hoping that Spielberg's Dreamworks SKG would never go away. But the ancient theory of big fish eating small fish happened to spill over Spielberg's dreams too. And Paramount bought Dreamworks for $1.6 billion.

By no way one could write a tribute for the eaten-up production house of Spielberg, Dreamworks. I've been thinking atleast for 2 years that Mani Ratnam's Madras Talkies should be cloning what Spielberg and his partners at Dreamworks are doing to Hollywood. So what where they doing ?

The new studio was portrayed as heralding a tectonic shift in the way the industry operates. The perception was fed by the principals themselves, with Katzenberg telling reporters at the launch news conference, "I look at the three of us and think this has got to be the Dream Team."

It's hard to think that we may not see the boy throw the fishing rod from the moon. It was a symbol of good cinema. There is always another hope left.


December 11, 2005

3 more 24 hrs

kk

3 more 24 hrs for the beast feast.


November 9, 2005

Spielberg's Munich - Trailer

Speilberg's Munich

After the tripods attacking mother earth, Steven Spielberg is all set with his next offering for Christmas. This time it's an historical thriller based on dramatization of a real story. I only wish Mani Ratnam could bounce back as fast as Spielberg, after a movie.

Munich, starring 'Troy' fame Eric Bana, is named after the 1972 Olympics at Munich, which forms the crux of the story. As the Munich site explains, it is a gripping suspense thriller set in the aftermath of the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. The whole movie production and the news about the movie were kept under covers , until the official trailer was released, few days back.

Don't miss to watch the trailer. The trailer sets high expectations for the movie especially John William's background score stands out. Can't actually wait to see the movie. For now all eyes and ears set to Dec 23rd.


September 12, 2005

Girlfriend's Dad !!


Its about Ben Stiller and his girlfriend's dad Robert De Niro in Meet the parents. I found the movie to have enough silly laughs. Thinking about it, I felt so sorry for Ben Stiller to have been caught by his GF's dad who is a nerd and a detective. Ben Stiller has a wonderful timing for humor and I hope he gets some better roles than these to prove his mettle.

Ben Stiller - Oh, dear god, thank you, you are such a good god to us. A kind and gentle and accommodating god, and we thank you oh sweet, sweet lord of hosts for the smorgasbord you have so aptly laid at our table this day, and each day, by day, day by day, by day oh dear lord three things we pray to love thee more dearly, to see thee more clearly, to follow thee more nearly, day, by day, by day. Amen.

I think I forgot to mention the crux of the post. In Bold, In Italics and Underlined - Girl friends' dads are the toughest to handle !!

P.S - Due to heavy pressure, here is an additional statement. They are the nicest of people.


June 19, 2005

Identifying yourself with films !! - Spielberg

steve_cruise
[Pic - News Week]

Question - It's been 30 years since "Jaws." You've achieved every measure of success. What keeps driving you to make movies?

Spielberg - I've often asked myself that question, and my answer comes back the same way every time: I love it. Being a moviemaker means you get to live many, many lifetimes. It's the same reason audiences go to movies, I think. When my daughter Sasha was 5 years old, we would be watching something on TV and she'd point to a character on screen and say, "Daddy, that's me." Ten minutes later a new character would come on screen and she'd say, "No, Daddy. That's me." Throughout the movie she would pick different people to become. I think that's what we all do. We just don't say it as sweetly.

Seems like a Deja vu. I've posted Steve's view of filmmaking, before. This time its reasoning out the filmwatching experience in the interview to Newsweek.

This is Steven Spielberg's honeymoon with the media. Just when his movie's post-production is all done and he is waiting for the verdict, he loves to talk to the media. A little hype, for his latest film, may be behind these interviews but what comes out are some amazing quotable quotes.


June 16, 2005

Star War[s] of the Worlds

Steve Vs Lucas
[From Slate]

It's the summer movies week at Slate and to celebrate the block busters releasing this summer they got their dudes to write some hot gossip. With George Lucas' Star Wars already taking a box-office by storm, StevenSpielberg's sci-fi thriller War of the Worlds is set to rock the theatres by June 29th. To cook some masala here is pretty easy. They do it pretty well in this article named, Lucas vs. Spielberg - The worst best friends in Hollywood.

Not just gossipy but this story seems to have some really interesting trivias on the duo. If you are a fan of atleast one of them, you would read it without taking a breath. If you love both, it is a treasure because the kind of stuff is said seems pretty true. I don't think Slate can just bluff like this in public space. It talks about the outwardly friendship and the true inside competition that goes on between Steven Spielberg and Lucas during their movie releases. Steve seems to admire Lucas so much from his debut film, THX 1138. And Lucas seems to be extremely aware of the sharp director in Steve right from his first tele-film, Duel.

Spielberg—it was revealed—had lent a helping hand to the climactic light-saber duels in Sith. "George gets stuck sometimes," said producer Rick McCallum, as if the Star Wars saga were a particularly stubborn patch of lawn. "He never asks for help, but you can feel it when he needs it. With Steven he got encouragement from a directing peer and a good friend." Meanwhile, Spielberg hired the same pre-viz-effects supervisor sent to him by Lucas to help with his aliens for War of the Worlds, much as you or I might borrow a trowel or Rotavator. "We've always helped each other," said Lucas when approached by the cable network A&E about a documentary detailing the rivalry between the two directors. "[Spielberg] and I have never had an argument in our lives. ... I want DreamWorks to succeed. They want me to succeed. And we're going to help each other succeed." So, there you have it: just two successful movie titans succeeding, side by side, successfully.

Not just this but a no-harm debate on - Did George Lucas and Steven Spielberg Ruin the Movies?. Don't miss it.


March 26, 2002

The Academy at its best

The Academy at its best :
Disappointed. one billion people were dissapointed in india when "no man's land " broke the Lagaan dream. Thats fine. But the point is that, when are we gonna leave this comedy of sending out indian films to oscars. Oscar awards are given away for english films mainly taken in hollywood. Lets stop this joke from this year atleast and lets create an award for which the hollywood should send films to recieve this award. This is not a shout of an angry indian who is disappointed for not getting the oscar this year.
Whats is happy is that African americans got the honour this year and the academy should be appreciated for that. Denzel washington is worth the oscar.Morgan Freeman is also a deserving actor who needs to be honoured. If you would have seen The Shawshank Redemption, you will agree.