Categories
Amusing TV

Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto on SNL

Chris Pine (Kirk) and Zachary Quinto (Spock) went on Saturday Night Live this weekend to address fan concerns over the new Star Trek movie

> The Onion report on what fans think of the new film
> Reviews of Star Trek at Metacritic

Categories
Amusing TV

Tom Hanks on Jonathan Ross

Tom Hanks was recently on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, talking about Angels and Demons.

> Tom Hanks at the IMDb
> Angels and Demons official website

Categories
TV

Parenthood: The TV Series

NBC have a new TV series airing in the autumn called Parenthood based on the 1989 movie directed by Ron Howard.

 

Craig T. Nelson and Bonnie Bedelia play the parents and it also features Peter KrauseMaura TierneyErika ChristensenDax Shepard and Monica Potter.

Fact fans may note that it was made into a TV series before in 1990 and featured quite a few people who would go on to later fame.

Joss Whedon was a writer and the cast featured actors such as Leonardo DiCaprioDavid Arquette and Thora Birch.

If you don’t remember the original movie, here is the trailer:

(Notice a young Joaquin Phoenix at 0.50)

UK air dates for the new TV series are TBC.

Categories
Amusing News TV

Hugh Jackman on Jonathan Ross

Hugh Jackman was on The Jonathan Ross Show last night talking about the new Wolverine film.

Here it is in two parts:

> Hugh Jackman at the IMDb
> Official site for Wolverine

Categories
TV Viral Video

Susan Boyle on Britain’s Got Talent

This clip of Susan Boyle on Britain’s Got Talent has now got over 8 million views on YouTube.

> BBC News with more on the Scottish singer 
> Find out more about Britain’s Got Talent at Wikipedia
> Jazz FM on the version of Cry Me A River she recorded in 1999

Categories
Amusing TV

Vin Diesel on Helium

Here is Jonathan Ross persuading Vin Diesel to inhale helium.

> Vin Diesel at the IMDb
> The Jonathan Ross Show at the BBC

Categories
TV

President Obama on Tonight with Jay Leno

Here is President Obama‘s appearence on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, which was recorded yesterday.

Categories
TV

Kevin Rose and Alex Albrecht on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

Kevin Rose and Alex Albrecht from Diggnation recently appeared on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. (Russell Brand was also on)

Jimmy was recently on their show:

> Find out more about Diggnation at Wikipedia
> Jimmy Fallon’s Twitter Bryan Brinkman experiment

Categories
Interviews TV

Red Riding chat with Tony Grisoni

Red Riding

Red Riding is a trilogy of films adapted by Tony Grisoni from David Peace‘s cult novels set in Yorkshire during the 1970s and 80s.

The three films are all two hours long and are airing as part of C4’s winter 2009 schedule.

It boasts an impressive cast including: Mark AddySean BeanJim CarterWarren ClarkePaddy ConsidineAndrew GarfieldRebecca Hall, Eddie Marsan and David Morrissey.

Produced by Michael Winterbottom and Andrew Eaton’s production company, Revolution Films, each film has been directed by a separate director: Julian Jarrold (Brideshead Revisited), James Marsh (Man on Wire) and Anand Tucker (And When Did You Last See Your Father?).

The first is entitled 1974 and explores the paranoia, mistrust and institutionalised police corruption in Yorkshire.

When a young journalist named Eddie Dunford (Andrew Garfield) becomes obsessed with a police investigation into a series of child abductions, he uncovers a complex maze of lies and deceit.

One of the characters he comes across is a local businessman named John Dawson (played by Sean Bean) who, in this clip, advises Eddie to form a mutually beneficial relationship with him.

The second episode, directed by Marsh, set in and called 1980, sees the Yorkshire Ripper terrorise the area for six long years, and with the local police failing to make any progress, the Home Office sends in Manchester officer Peter Hunter (Considine) to review the investigation.

Having previously made enemies in the Yorkshire force while investigating a shooting incident in 1974, Hunter finds himself increasingly isolated when his version of events challenges their official line on the “Ripper”.

In the final instalment, directed by Tucker and set in and called 1983, another young girl has disappeared and Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice Jobson (Morrissey) recognises some alarming similarities to the abductions in 1974, forcing him to come to terms with the fact that he may have helped convict the wrong man.

When local solicitor John Piggott (Addy) is persuaded to fight this miscarriage of justice he finds himself slowly uncovering a catalogue of cover ups.

Channel 4 logo on their building
 
I was recently invited down to Channel 4 for a round table interview with screenwriter Tony Grisoni which included my webmaster Matt, Niall Browne from Screen Rant and Phil Edwards from Live For Films.

We looked at a 20 minute montage of sequences from the trilogy and spoke with Tony about adapting the books for the screen.

They start tonight (March 5th) on Channel 4 and could possibly have a cinema release around the world in the future (a la Sunday Bloody Sunday).

The questions in bold were asked by the bloggers, which included myself.

INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT

How do the 3 films tie together?
[They are] 3 full length films and they work so that 1983 revisits 1974 and you see things from a slightly different perspective and then the middle one, 1980 is against the background of the Yorkshire Ripper but the characters roll all the way through the 3 of them.

The original idea of the novels, it’s basically fiction around a true event?
The novels where a quartet, 1974, 1977, 1980, 1983, and what David Peace talks about, he says it’s fiction torn out of the facts.

There are 4 books and 3 films. Was that your decision?
No, it started out that we’d make all four and I wrote all four, but filmmaking is capital intensive and we didn’t have enough money to do all four and we then had a choice.

We could have made all four but made them shorter and I’m so glad it didn’t go that way. These tales are not just about cops and robbers. Making them shorter would have forced us into a vagueness of narrative and you wouldn’t have had chance to have these incredible atmospheric moments that David Peace wrote in the books that we tried to mirror in the films.

It seemed to make more sense to make three. It was then a question of how do you do it? Do you take a couple to pieces and feed them into the others, but in the end I decided to just drop 1977 out cleanly.

This was for a number of reasons. One is that the others seemed to work really well as a trilogy and the other thing is it leaves 1977 untouched and I hope we can possibly go back and make that at some point.

Another thing I noticed from watching it was the films seem to be police vs journalists, then police vs police and then police vs people. Is that something you planned or was it in the original books?

This is an adaptation. I trusted those books and I trusted David’s writing and so I treated those as the truth. What was there I took and then had to turn it into a screenplay.

What happens in 1974 is that what you’ve got is very complex. You’re with a young journalist and it’s not quite journalists against cops. It’s a particular journalist. A young guy. He’s a typical film noir hero.

He’s libidinous, he’s lazy, he’s selfish, self obsessed young man. What happens with him, he starts off by just being out for himself, but then he’s got this thing in that he has to know what happened.

He wants to find the truth and so he goes further and further down that path and eventually he gets to a point where he needs to know the truth more than anything, more than his own safety or anything. He kind of changes as it goes along.

The second one is very much the police against their own. Peter Hunter (Paddy Considine) is on a Home Office investigation that he has to keep to keep to himself and he has to investigate corrupt police and as it said in that clip how deep does the rot go?

The third one is a two hander. You’ve got two main characters. You’ve got Morris Jobson, a policeman, who has gone along with corruption all the way through and has finally reached a point where he is going to do what he should have done a long time ago, like nine years before so it’s quite redemptive in many ways.

Then you’ve got John Piggot. I really like his character, he is wonderfully disgusting. He’s a damaged man. A lousy solicitor, but again, he wants to know what really happened. Although he doesn’t feel quite up to being a champion that is what he becomes.

The thing about David’s fiction and these films we made is that they are quite complex pieces. There isn’t good and bad. It is more like what it is like out there.

It’s all these different levels of good and bad. They are not comic book heroes. They are fractured people. They are a bit like you and me.

How do you think it will go down in the North?
Where are you drawing the line? (Laughter) I think West Yorkshire will enjoy it. As you can hear I’m not a Yorkshire man. Just to misquote David Peace again, he was Yorkshire born and bred although he wrote these in Tokyo.

He’s got a very complex relationship with that area but he believes, and I agree with him that particular crimes happen in particular places to particular people.

It’s for a reason and in the 70s and 80s Yorkshire was a hostile place. The UK was a pretty hostile place and he would say that that area in that period was hostile particularly to women.

That’s a Yorkshire man talking but I agree with him. I say that about Yorkshire but I could do that for London or anywhere else.

Do you think Life on Mars fans will get into it?
Well it is the period, but there are a few more teeth in this one! I think one of the interesting things when I see lots of cuts of these is that I forget about the period. I follow the drama and I’m following the characters.

One of the exciting things for me is that you’ve got three full length films, three different directors, three different styles, so what are you following? You are following the characters and it is a real joy I’ve found to see how the characters change.

There is a young man called BJ who starts off as a silly little rent boy and who ends up a son of Yorkshire and a hero. That’s a beautiful path for him. So you follow these people and the way we structured the films was the way the novels were structured.

Your main character bows out but the more minor characters that you’ve got to know a little bit then come to the fore in the next one and so it is like baton passing.

I think that is why you are going to watch to find out what happens to these people and why things happen to them. I hope that is so interesting and so involving that you won’t look at how big the lapels are.

Did the directors have much to do with each other or did they look after their own thing?
The whole thing was very much a team effort right from the beginning in that everyone spoke to everyone else. You were always aware of two more of these films going on at the same time.

Having said that the idea was always that they should have the freedom to make the film they wanted to make. You have them on very different formats.

You have 1974 which is on 16mm. 1980 is shot on 35mm and 1983 shot digitally, but beautiful digital. They all have very different tones. They all feel different films and again what goes through though are those characters.

That’s what is leading you through and it is an interesting experience. Again, I think the more involved you become in the characters everything else falls back.

What was the hardest thing when you got the novels about changing them into a workable screenplay?
What to leave out. The novels are so full and they are such full on experiments. David uses all kinds of different styles of writing.

You’ll feel like you are reading American detective fiction where all the action is pushed through on dialogue without any stage direction and then he’ll go to stream of consciousness where there is no punctuation for blocks of text.

It is very full on. I was spoilt. These novels were gifts. The other thing was, that was quite amazing, I was getting total freedom. I wasn’t having someone saying “Oh can you do all the outlines and treatments” and all that kind of stuff which when you do, makes you kind of bored and it’s like homework then. I just ploughed in.

Fortunately, because I got a main character leading the first one, a main character leading the second one and then two characters, what’s great is that you tell the story from their perspective so you only know what they know.

You cannot know anything outside and that gave me a really solid framework. That was like the sheet anchor that helped me stay on course. Then I just waded in and started writing a very long first draft of it that I then pared down. The main difficulty was that.

The other thing was the books are written where they ask more questions than are ever answered. Part of the darkness of the books is that some narrative strands kind of disappear off into the darkness and you can never know everything.

We employed a woman whose job it was to take those novels to pieces and she gave me cross referenced charts. We had to uncover all those strands so we knew what we were dealing with.

The screenplays had to be a little more tied down than the novels but I didn’t want to do it too much otherwise you destroy the feeling of them. That was pretty tricky.

There were lots of emails between me and David Peace in the lead up to me writing it and then he came over. We had a six hour meeting and I just grilled him, “Why did they do that? Why did that character go there?”

Of course this was all in David’s past so he had to start digging again, but he was really generous and always very helpful. If he knew the answers he’d tell me.

If he didn’t he’d try and find out and if it didn’t quite add up then we’d have conversations about what might be the story.

How happy where you with the cast as there are some big names in there?
How
could I not be happy with that cast? I was just knocked out by them.

Did you picture any of them when you were writing the screenplay?
No. When I am writing they are just characters in my head, but when the casting starts to come together it adds another level to it. I don’t want to mention any particular names as they are all so good.

At what point where the directors brought in? Was that before you’d finished the scripts?
They came in after we had locked off the scripts. They weren’t completely locked off because that would have been kind of daft. I started in early 2006.
By the beginning of 2007 we had three scripts. We went through about 2 or 3 drafts. Then the directors came in.

Having said that I met James Marsh at the Edinburgh Festival and we started talking. He became attached to these projects way before anyone was officially approached. He knew the material and because we were in touch he stuck his flag in 1980.

Most people will know David Peace from The Damned United becoming an unlikely bestseller. Was this all green lit before that success?
Oh yeah. I wouldn’t say greenlit but I was working on it before Damned United.

How long where you on the project?
3 years. It started in early 2006 Andrew Eaton from Revolution Films made me an offer I couldn’t refuse. The thing is I knew Andrew because I’d worked with Michael Winterbottom on In This World.

That film about those 2 Afghanistan boys being smuggled and working on that film was one of the best filming experiences I’ve had.

The whole thing about Revolution Films is that if they make that call you know it is going to be a challenge. The chances are you are going to be asked to do something you don’t think you can really do or you are scared of doing. Go to Afghanistan. Adapt 4 novels into films inside a year and a half.

Are these 3 films going to be released in cinemas around the World?
There are plans. Things are being looked into. I’d be really interested to see how the States take them. I think they could really do well in the States.

They’ve got a feel to them. They owe a lot to film noir and American detective movies of the 40s and 50s.

It reminded me a lot of Zodiac. The density of it.
Yeah. I agree. It will be very interesting to see how it does.

What are you going to be doing next?
I’ve just finished worked on an extraordinary film that is a First Film directed by Sam Mortimer in Nottingham that concerns a little girl who is in care. That was quite an experience.

We wrapped that film just before Christmas. Also last year I directed a film I wrote. It was a 20 minute short which is set in the Kurdish community in North London where I live and so right now I’m writing the feature version of that called Kingsland.

I’m helping Terry Gilliam put Don Quixote back in the saddle.

What are they going to do with the film that never was (as seen in Lost in La Mancha)?
There was only 5 days shooting.

Is it really looking like a go this time?
Absolutely. 100% (Laughs)

————————————————————————————-

Thanks to Murray Cox and the Channel 4 press office for their help in arranging this.

Red Riding starts tonight at 9pm and can also be seen on 40D.

> Official site for Red Riding at Channel 4
> Tony Grisoni at the IMDb
> Find out more about David Peace at Wikipedia

Categories
TV

Trailer: Real Time with Bill Maher

A trailer for the new series of the HBO show Real Time with Bill Maher.

Can a British TV executive please bring this to UK screens?

Categories
Awards Season Interesting TV

Mickey Rourke on Charlie Rose

Mickey Rourke sits down for an hour long interview with Charlie Rose.

Fingers crossed he wins the Oscar a week on Sunday.

Categories
Amusing TV

Joaquin Phoenix on Letterman

Joaquin Phoenix recently made a strange appearance on Letterman, which has led to people questioning whether it was real or a hoax.

I’m definitely thinking it was the latter.

Categories
Amusing TV

Hulu Superbowl Ad

This Superbowl ad for Hulu with Alec Baldwin was directed by Peter Berg.

Categories
Trailers TV

Superbowl Movie Spots 2009

The Superbowl half time is one of the key advertising slots for big summer movies and last night saw the following air as the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Arizona Cardinals:

Angels & Demons (Sony Pictures)

 
Fast & Furious (Universal)

 

GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra (Paramount)

 
Land of the Lost (Universal)

 

Monsters vs. Aliens in 3D (DreamWorks)

 

Star Trek (30 Seconds)

 

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (DreamWorks)

Up (60 seconds)

 

Year One (60 seconds)

Categories
TV

Tom Cruise on The Jonathan Ross Show

Here is the opening monologue of last night’s Jonathan Ross show, which has returned after Sachsgate.

 

Tom Cruise was also on discussing Valkyrie and some ‘bedroom things’.

Categories
Amusing TV

Brad Pitt in Japanese TV ad

This Japanese TV commercial with Brad Pitt was directed by Wes Anderson.

The 30 second spot was for Japanese mobile company Softbank and is a homage to Jacques Tati’s 1953 film Les Vacances de Monseieur Hulot.

[Link via /Film]

Categories
Amusing TV

Frank Caliendo on Jay Leno with Tom Cruise

Comedian Frank Caliendo on The Tonight Show with Tom Cruise.

Categories
Amusing TV

The Simpsons spoof Apple

 

Down the years The Simpsons has spoofed many areas of modern life and now they have turned their attention to lampooning Apple in an episode entitled Mypods and Broomsticks.

(Look out for the reference to this famous superbowl ad from the 1980s directed by Ridley Scott)

* UPDATE: Click this link if the above videos don’t work *

> The Simpsons at Wikipedia
>
A history of Apple at About.com
>
Listen to an interview we did with Matt Groening and Al Jean last year about The Simpsons movie

Categories
Interesting TV

Channel 4 launch in 1982

The opening minutes of Channel 4 when it launched on November 2nd 1982.

Categories
Amusing TV

John McCain on Saturday Night Live

John McCain and Sarah Palin (Tina Fey) address the Nation on QVC 

[ad]

 

McCain unveils his new strategies on Weekend Update.

> Official site for Saturday Night Live 
Tina Fey at the IMDb 
> John McCain at Wikipedia

Categories
TV

Barack Obama on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

Barack Obama‘s recent appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

UPDATE: 31/10/08: According to Variety’s Anne Thompson this appearence had a dramatic impact on The Daily Show’s ratings:

According to Comedy Central, last night’s Obama satellite interview “lifted The Daily Show with Jon Stewart to record levels,” they wrote in an email:

  • It was the most-watched and highest-rated episode in the show’s history, with 3.6 million total viewers and a 2.6 HHLD Rating.
  • This episode beat the October 8 prior most-watched episode record set by Michele Obama, by 700,000 total viewers.
  • The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” (October 29, 11:00 p.m. – 11:30 p.m)
  • 3.6 million total viewers
  • 2.2 million P18-49 viewers
  • 2.6 HHLD Rating
  • 2.0 P18-49 Rating
  • This is the first time The Daily Show has averaged more than 3 million viewers for a single episode.
  • The Daily Show outperformed its previous best by +22% (2.9 million viewers on October 8, 2008).
Categories
Amusing TV

Sarah Palin as herself on Saturday Night Live

Sarah Palin has been the subject of many Saturday Night Live sketches recently, so it only seemed natural that she would appear on it as herself. 

The Republican VP pick took a break from the campaign trail to appear in two sketches, where she watched Tina Fey (play her) in a bit about Palin’s first press conference alongside SNL honcho Lorne Michaels

Alec Baldwin and Mark Wahlberg also made appearances in the opening sketch.

Later in the show, she popped up during Weekend Update which featured the ‘Palin Rap’.

Categories
Amusing TV

Tina Fey as Sarah Palin on SNL

Comedian and actress Tina Fey already bore a resemblance to Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin, but in this recent Saturday Night Live sketch, the likeness is really quite uncanny.

> Tina Fey at the IMDb
> Find out more about Sarah Palin at Wikipedia

Categories
Documentaries Interviews TV

Interview: Simon Tatum on The Last Freak Show

The Last Freak Show is a short documentary directed by Simon Tatum that airs on More4 this Tuesday.

It follows a musician named Jeffrey Marshall who was born without arms or legs, his feet growing almost directly from his hips.

Curious as to whether people come to his gigs for the music or to stare at a limbless man playing the bass guitar with his feet, he decided to explore his identity as a disabled performer by exhibiting himself in ‘The World of Wonders‘ – the last remaining ‘freak show’ in America.

It is run by Ward Hall, a veteran who was on the road with the likes of Schlitzie the Pinhead (made famous by Tod Browning’s 1932 film Freaks), Sealo the Seal Boy, Grace McDaniels: The Mule-Faced Woman, Percilla the Monkey Girl and countless others.

Today, along with his business partner Chris Christ and 77 year-old dwarf Pete ‘Poobah’ Turhurne, he runs the only surviving 10-in-1 freakshow in America, the World of Wonders.

I recently spoke with Simon about the film and you can listen to the interview here:

[audio:http://filmdetail.receptionmedia.com/Simon_Tatum_on_The_Last_Freak_Show.mp3]

You can download this interview as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here

The Last Freak Show is on More4 this Tuesday at 8.30pm

> Download this interview as an MP3 file
> Check out Tuesday’s schedule for More4
> Discuss documentaries, shows and films at the More4 Forum
> The FourDocs section at Channel 4 and the other films showing in the First Cut strand
> The film recently screened at the Chashama Film Festival in the US
> See Jeffery Marshall play with his band Supercool and check them out at MySpace
> New York Times article from 2006 on Ward Hall and The World of Wonders show
> Find out more about the 1932 film ‘Freaks’ at Wikipedia

Categories
Interesting TV

Stanley Kubrick season on More4

A Stanley Kubrick season starts this month on UK TV channel More4, with a series of his films screening between the 15th and 25th of July.

Channel 4 Creative Services have created this excellent TV spot to promote the season, which is a one shot recreation of The Shining set, shot from Kubrick’s point of view:

(If the video doesn’t work try this direct link over at The Guardian)

The season kicks off with a documentary called Citizen Kubrick, which screens on Saturday 15th at 10pm.

It is presented by Jon Ronson, who was invited to the director’s estate in 2001 to explore the many boxes the Kubrick had collected during his life at Childwickbury Manor in Hertfordshire.

The resulting documentary is the story of Kubrick and the archive, now housed at University of the Arts London.

The season continues over the next two weeks with the following films:

  • Day of the Fight (1951): An early documentary short about a day in the life of a middleweight Irish boxer named Walter Cartier and his fight with black middleweight Bobby James. (Saturday 15th July, 11.05pm)
  • Barry Lyndon (1975): Kubrick’s adaptation of William Makepeace Thackeray’s novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon went under-appreciated at the time but remains one of his most enduring and visually stunning films. The tale of an 18th Century Irish adventurer (Ryan O’Neal) is now regarded as one of his most important works and is notable for the remarkable cinematography from John Alcott. It is also Martin Scorcese’s favourite Kubrick film. (Screens on Sunday 16th July, time TBC.)
  • Paths of Glory (1957): One of Kubrick’s early classics – a searing anti-war film about innocent French soldiers sentenced to death after taking the blame for the mistakes of their superiors. Kirk Douglas gives an excellent central performance as Colonel Dax, an officer trying to prevent the soldiers’ execution. Watch out too for a cameo near the end from the actress who whould become his wife Christiane Kubrick, then credited as ‘Christiane Harlan’. (Screens 17 July, 11:55am).
  • Flying Padre (1951): Another documentary short about two days in the life of a priest in New Mexico called Father Fred Stadtmuller whose spreads the word of God with the aid of a mono-plane. (Screens on Friday 18th July, 12.55pm in the afternoon)
  • Lolita (1962): Kubrick moved to England in the early 1960s to film this adaptation of Vladimir Nabakov’s novel and stayed here for the rest of his life. James Mason stars as Humbert Humbert, a middle aged professor obsessed with a precocious young girl. Although aspects of the novel had to be toned down for censorship reasons, it is still a work of considerable interest. (Screens Friday 18th July at 9pm).
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968): Kubrick’s adaptation of Arthur C Clarke‘s short story The Sentinel reimagined science fiction on film and inspired a generation of writers and directors. The story charts how a mysterious alien intelligence influences mankind from it’s earliest origins to a futuristic space mission involving two astronauts and an advanced computer named HAL 9000. The visual effects (overseen by Kubrick and engineered by Douglas Trumbull) are still dazzling and the use of classical music (especially Richard Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra) is now inextricably linked with the film and it’s imagery. (Screens Saturday 19th July, 1.30pm)
  • Killer’s Kiss (1955): Kubrick’s second film is a short (only 67 mins), low budget film noir about a has-been boxer (Jamie Smith) who falls for a woman with a violent boyfriend. (Screens Monday 21st July, 11.30pm)
  • The Killing (1956): Notable for being Kubrick’s first feature with a professional cast and crew, this is a tautly plotted heist drama adapted from Lionel White‘s novel Clean Break by Kubrick and co-screenwriter Jim Thompson. Sterling Hayden (who would return in a key supporting role in Dr Strangelove) takes the lead. (Screens Wednesday 23rd July, 12.05am).
  • The Shining (1980): A remarkable and enduring adaptation Stephen King‘s novel about the winter caretaker (Jack Nicholson) of a remote hotel who slowly goes insane, endangering his wife (Shelley Duvall) and young son (Danny Lloyd). Although King was upset with Kubrick’s take on the material, there is much here to feast on, especially the meticulous production design, inventive sound editing and innovative visuals. It was the first time Kubrick used the Steadicam, which was invented by Garrett Brown – the cinematographer who achieved many of the remarkable tracking shots in the film. (Screens Friday 25th July, 9pm).

It is a great chance to catch up on the work of one of the most important directors in the history of cinema.

> Find out more about The Stanley Kubrick Season at More4
> Read more about how the More4 promo was created at Media Guardian
> Stanley Kubrick at the IMDb
> Official Kubrick site at Warner Bros
> Stanley Kubrick Archive at University of the Arts London Archives and Special Collections Centre
> Essay on Kubrick at Senses of Cinema by Keith Ullich
> An extensive set of links to interviews with Kubrick at Archivio Kubrick
> A Guardian feature and webchat with Jon Ronson about the Kubrick archive in 2004
> An exhibiton of Stanley Kubrick’s work in Germany
> An archive of the debate in the New York Times over A Clockwork Orange
> Stephen King discusses his first phone call with Stanley Kubrick
> Steven Spielberg talks about his admiration for Kubrick

Categories
Interesting News TV

Elvis Mitchell hosts new TCM interview series

A new interview series hosted by Elvis Mitchell is about to start airing on TCM in the US.

It is called Under the Influence and features Mitchell speaking to various luminaries from the film world about how classic film has influenced their lives.

Most notably it features the last interview Sydney Pollack gave before his untimely death in May.

Here is the schedule for July:

The series will return in November with guests featuring Joan Allen, Edward Norton, John Leguizamo and Richard Gere.

For those of you unfamiliar with his work, Elvis was a film critic at the New York Times for four years, served as Editor-at-large for Spin magazine and has also written for Esquire.

He also presents the weekly radio show The Treatment on KCRW (which you can download as a podcast here).

I’ll update this post if the series is scheduled to air on TCM’s UK channel.

UPDATE 08/07/08: TCM have been in touch to confirm that Under the Influence will screen on their UK channel in January.

> Elvis Mitchell: Under the Influence at TCM
> KCRW’s The Treatment with Elvis Mitchell
> TCM in the UK

Categories
Cinema Interviews TV

Interview: Jason Bateman and Charlize Theron on Hancock

Hancock is the new film starring Will Smith as a depressed, drunken superhero loathed by a public that finds him a dangerous nuisance.

Jason Bateman plays a Ray Embrey, a PR man who decides to help Hancock rehabilitate his image after he is saved by him whilst Charlize Theron plays Ray’s sceptical wife, Mary.

I recently spoke to Jason and Charlize about their roles in the film and Arrested Development – the TV show they starred in from 2003-2006.

Listen to the interviews here:

[audio:http://filmdetail.receptionmedia.com/Jason_Bateman_and_Charlize_Theron_on_Hancock.MP3]

You can download this interview as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here

Hancock is out at cinemas on July 2nd

> Download the interviews as an MP3 file
> Jason Bateman and Charlize Theron at the IMDb
> Official site for Hancock
> Find out more about Arrested Development at Wikipedia

[Photo credit: Frank Masi SMPSP. ©2008 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. and GH Three LLC All Rights Reserved.]

Categories
Amusing TV Viral Video

Joan Rivers swears on Loose Women

Live TV can be very funny, especially when someone does something they shouldn’t.

Joan Rivers was recently on Loose Women (for US readers, it is essentially the UK version of The View) and she clearly didn’t realise it was a live show when she gave her thoughts on Russell Crowe:

ITV bosses issued the predictably stern press release:

Guests are always briefed that it is a live daytime show and are reminded not to swear or use inappropriate language.

An editorial decision was taken that Joan Rivers should not appear in the final part of the programme.

We would like to apologise to Loose Women viewers for the inappropriate language used on today’s show.

But Joan was hilariously unrepentant about the whole affair, according to BBC News:

‘I said: I apologise. Everyone apologised. It was hilariously funny’.

During a commercial break, Rivers said producers took her off the set, adding that it was the first time she had been removed in 40 years and she was ‘thrilled’.

However, the star is prepared to return – but only on her terms.

‘I would be delighted to go back if they would apologise and give me a gift’.

In 2005 she got into a row with Darcus Howe on Radio 4, calling him a ‘son of a bitch’.

Can someone high up in UK media please give her a show?

> BBC News on the latest swearing story and on the 2005 row
> Media Guardian with their angle
> Find out more about Joan Rivers at Wikipedia

Categories
Amusing TV Viral Video

Badly dubbed films for TV

Have you ever laughed or sighed when a film on TV has a ridiculous piece of editing to replace ‘offensive’ language?

This Basic Instinct video that compares the original film with the badly dubbed version altered for sensitive TV audiences.

Check out the differences between Scarface and the US TV cut (“this town is like one big chicken, just waiting to get plucked!”):

How about the safe-for-TV version of Die Hard 2? (“Hey turkey!”):

Or what about this scene from the TV edit of The Big Lebowski, with possibly the strangest substitute line ever? (“This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps!”)

And what about Casino, where the f-word is said 422 times?

This scene with De Niro and Pesci in the desert finds a way of avoiding it completely (“You better get your own fighting army pal!”):

Den of Geek has noted some other TV dubbing disasters:

Goodfellas: “Go fu*k your mother” bizarrely becomes “Go feel your mother”.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off: “Pardon my French but you’re an AARDVARK!'”(????)

Field of Dreams: “We were going to ask Ty Cobb to play, but none of us could stand that son of a squid”

Robocop: “You’re gonna a bad mothercrusher…”

Lethal Weapon: “We bury the funsters!”

The Last Boy Scout: “I POPPED your wife, and later I’m gonna POP her again”

If you know of any others, just leave them in the comments below.

> Melon Farmers reprint an official BBC response as to why Thelma and Louise was cut for TV
> Bad TV Edits
> More edited-for-TV movies at Den of Geek

Categories
TV Viral Video

Gremlins BT Ad

The Gremlins are back.

Those creepy little monsters from Joe Dante’s 1984 film have been resurrected for this BT ad starring Peter Jones from Dragon’s Den.

Some quick facts from the press release:

  • Special effects company Artem created 20 Gremlins for the ad.
  • It took a crew of 34 specialist technicians and over 2,500 man hours to produce the different component parts required to bring the mischievous creatures to life.
  • More than 100 litres of liquid latex and 75 litres of soft foam went into the bodies; hundreds of teeth had to be made and each set of eyeballs painstakingly hand painted.
  • A separate crew was working simultaneously on the internal mechanisms to make them easy to operate for the puppeteers and give them distinctive Gremlin™ expression and movement.
  • The shoot required 28 puppeteers and technicians to operate the Gremlins who each developed their own character.
  • The ad airs on TV for the first time on Monday May 5th.

The ad agency Swarm – who are behind the ad – have also released this making of video:

> Gremlins at Wikipedia
> IMDb page for the Gremlins movie

Categories
TV

BBC Inside Out: Who Killed My Son?

Christine Lord is the mother of Andrew, a former colleague of mine who died last year of variant CJD.

She recently featured in an edition of the BBC current affairs program Inside Out which explored her battle to find out why her son died such a tragic and unnecessary death.

You can watch it on BBC’s iPlayer here or by clicking the image below:

As someone who knew and worked with Andy over a 2 year period, a lot of this programme was deeply upsetting.

Like many others who worked with him at Talk Radio and TalkSPORT I can testify that he was a genuinely lovely guy and a real pleasure to be around.

Christine has a website called Justice for Andy which you can visit here and has also written a piece for the Inside Out site here.

N.B. As with all iPlayer shows it will only be available for a few days and to UK viewers only. Although if anyone at the BBC is reading this, is there any chance of putting it up permanently on your YouTube channel?

UPDATE 07/07/08: You can now watch the programme by clicking on this link

> iPlayer link to the programme
> Christine’s piece for the BBC Inside Out website
> Justice For Andy site

Categories
TV Viral Video

Every death in The Sopranos

Someone has made a 10 minute compilation of every single death in The Sopranos:

It goes without saying that there are spoilers and violence.

[Link via LinkMachineGo]

> HBO page for The Sopranos
> Episode guide and timeline for the show at Wikipedia

Categories
Interesting TV

Orson Welles on Dick Cavett

You may have seen his cinematic masterpiece Citizen Kane, marvelled at him in The Third Man, or heard outtakes from that infamous peas commercial but there was no doubt Orson Welles was a fascinating talker.

Check out this interview with Dick Cavett from July 1970, where Welles turns the tables on his host:

He also talks about Jerry Lewis and being directed by other people (such as Mike Nichols in Catch-22):

and how Winston Churchill helped Welles finance a film:

Plus, they finish by pondering whether a work of pornography can be a masterpiece and what his desert island movie is:

Categories
TV Useful Links

Mobile TV Listings

TV listings via WAPHave you ever wanted to check TV listings on your mobile phone?

One of the best is Andrew Flegg’s wonderful TV listings site which has listings for nearly all the UK channels.

But there is also a mobile version – written by Chris Lloyd – which you can access via your mobile’s WAP browser.

Just enter http://bleb.org/waptv and you can access the listings which look like this:

WAP browser screenshot

There is even an option where you can check out what films are about to screen, which is very handy indeed.

If anyone knows a US version or any equivalents for other countries then just leave them in the comments below.

> Andrew Flegg’s TV listing site
> The WAP version
> On The Box – Another useful TV listings site

Categories
News TV

Simon Pegg upset about the Spaced US remake

Spaced on DVDThe classic TV series Spaced is going to be remade by Fox with McG as one of the producers.

Star and co-writer Simon Pegg has released an official statement in which he is understandably upset:

My main problem with the notion of a Spaced remake is the sheer lack of respect that Granada/ Wonderland/Warner Bros have displayed in respectively selling out and appropriating our ideas without even letting us know.

A decision I can only presume was made as a way of avoiding having to give us any money, whilst at the same time using mine and Edgar’s name in their press release, in order to trade on the success of Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz, even professing, as Peter Johnson did, to being a big fan of the show and it’s creators.

A device made all the more heinous by the fact that the press release neglected to mention the show’s co-creator and female voice, Jessica Hynes (nee Stevenson). The fact is, when we signed our contracts ten years ago, we had neither the experience or the kudos to demand any clauses securing any control over future reversioning.

We signed away our rights to any input in the show’s international future, because we just wanted to get the show made and these dark days of legal piracy seemed a far away concern. As a result, we have no rights. The show does not belong to us and, those that do own it have no obligation to include us in any future plans.

You would perhaps hope though, out of basic professional respect and courtesy, we might have been consulted. It is this flagrant snub and effective vote of no confidence in the very people that created the show, that has caused such affront at our end.

If they don’t care about the integrity of the original, why call it Spaced? Why attempt to find some validation by including mine and Edgar’s names in the press release as if we were involved? Why not just lift the premise?

Two strangers, pretend to be a couple in order to secure residence of a flat/apartment. It’s hardly Ibsen. Jess and I specifically jumped off from a very mainstream sitcom premise in order to unravel it so completely.

Take it, have it, call it Perfect Strangers and hope Balkie doesn’t sue. Just don’t call it Spaced.

Whilst I don’t like to prejudge anything, the thought of McG producing a US version of the show sounds like a recipe for disaster.

For those who have never come across the show, get the original on DVD.

> Spaced Out – Fansite of the show
> Find out more about Spaced at Wikipedia

Categories
Interesting TV

A Lost Time Travel Theory

Jason Hunter has written a detailed theory about time travel and Lost.

Time Travel theory on Lost

(Note: There are spoilers)

> Official site for Lost
> Check out more theories on Lost at Wikipedia

Categories
Amusing TV

Hilary Clinton on SNL

Last night Hilary Clinton appeared on Saturday Night Live in a self deprecating sketch with her impersonator Amy Poehler, not long after her recent comments about the show in a debate:

UPDATE: Here are the recent debate sketches with Poehler as Clinton and Fred Armisen as Obama:

Categories
Amusing Interesting TV

Tom Hanks on Letterman in 1994

This is an interesting Tom Hanks appearance on David Letterman‘s show back in July 1994.

They discuss Tom’s early appearances in TV shows like The Love Boat, Taxi and Happy Days as well as an early role for Dave himself in Mork and Mindy.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XU7NhBr2Pj0[/youtube]

Categories
Essential Films TV

Magnolia on TV tonight

This is a little late notice but if you are in the UK, one of the best films of the 1990s is on TV tonight.

Paul Thomas Anderson‘s sprawling LA epic Magnolia is on BBC2 at 23.25, so if you can, check it out.

If you haven’t seen it, here is the trailer:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwXDHSrNFbQ[/youtube]

> If you missed it you can buy Magnolia on DVD at Amazon UK
> Find out more about the film at the IMDb

Categories
Lists TV

50 Films to See Before You Die

I just finished doing my regular Sunday morning film review on TalkSPORT and one of the presenters (Rhodri Williams) asked me about the Channel 4 program last night called 50 Films to See Before You Die.

Film4

It was actually shown on Film 4 last year, to celebrate the channel’s launch on Freeview and featured a list of “essential films” that would subsequently be shown on the channel.

The range is impressive and it features some interesting choices so, in case you missed it, here is the list in full:

1. Apocalypse Now
2. The Apartment
3. City of God
4. Chinatown
5. Sexy Beast
6. 2001: A Space Odyssey
7. North by Northwest
8. A Bout de Souffle
9. Donnie Darko
10. Manhattan
11. Alien
12. Lost in Translation
13. The Shawshank Redemption
14. Lagaan: Once Upon A Time in India
15. Pulp Fiction
16. Touch of Evil
17. Walkabout
18. Black Narcissus
19. Boyz n the Hood
20. The Player
21. Come and See
22. Heavenly Creatures
23. A Night at the Opera
24. Erin Brockovich
25. Trainspotting
26. The Breakfast Club
27. Hero
28. Fanny and Alexander
29. Pink Flamingos
30. All About Eve
31. Scarface
32. Terminator 2
33. Three Colours: Blue
34. The Royal Tenenbaums
35. The Ladykillers
36. Fight Club
37. The Searchers
38. Mulholland Drive
39. The Ipcress File
40. The King of Comedy
41. Manhunter
42. Dawn of the Dead
43. Princess Mononoke
44. Raising Arizona
45. Cabaret
46. This Sporting Life
47. Brazil
48. Aguirre: The Wrath of God
49. Secrets and Lies
50. Badlands

> Check out what’s on Film4
> Find out more about Film4 at Wikipedia