Categories
DVD & Blu-ray dvd releases

DVD Releases: Monday 18th August 2008

DVD PICKS

Persepolis (Optimum): Writer and director Marjane Satrapi (along with co-director Vincent Paronnaud) adapted her own graphic novel about growing up during the Iranian Revolution in 1979. Using a striking animated style, it explores her journey living in a theocratic society until she emigrates at the age of 21. A moving and insightful film, filled with healthy doses of humour, it deservedly won the Jury Prize at Cannes last year and was nominated for Best Animated Film at the Oscars.

Lars and the Real Girl (MGM/Fox): Although the premise of this film might sound odd – a Midwestern loner called Lars buys a sex doll only to treat it as a real person – this actually feels more like an updated Frank Capra movie, with Ryan Gosling playing the introverted title character. There aren’t many laugh out loud moments but there is an amiable charm to the film, which is helped by some fine performances from Gosling, Paul Schneider, Emily Mortimer and Patricia Clarkson. Directed by Craig Gillespie from Nancy Oliver‘s script, which was nominated for an Oscar.

OTHER RELEASES

A Town Called Eureka – Season 2 (Universal Playback): Second season of the fantasy series involving a sheriff (Colin Ferguson) in the small town of Eureka, a place where scientific experiments cause innovation or chaos.

Breathing Room (DNC Entertainment): A psychological thriller involving a woman (Alisa Marshall) who finds herself thrown into a desolate room with thirteen strangers before discovering she is the last contestant in a deadly game.

Chuck – Season 1 (Warner): First season of the NBC show about a computer geek who receives the world’s greatest spy secrets after opening an e-mail from an old college friend who is now a rogue CIA agent.

Diamond Dogs (Sony): Dolph Lundgren – currently stuck in straight-to-DVD hell – stars in this action film about an ex-Special Forces officer hired to lead a band of treasure hunters in order to find a priceless Buddhist artifact.

Get Smart – Season 1 (HBO): Released to coincide with the cinema release of the movie remake starring Steve Carell and Anne Hathaway, the original Get Smart was a 1960s comedy series revolving around the bumbling Washington spy Maxwell Smart (Don Adams). Created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry it also starred Barbara Feldon as Agent 99, who often saves the day.

Gossip Girl – Season 1 (Warner): From the creators of The O.C., comes this show is based on the book series by Cecily von Ziegesar, follwing the lives of privileged teenagers in Manhattan. The first season starts when students learn from the ‘Gossip Girl’ blog that Serena van der Woodsen (Blake Lively), a formerly notorious party girl, is back in New York.

La Antena (Dogwoof Pictures): The second feature film from Argentinean director Esteban Sapir is a silent black-and-white tale about a world dominated by trashy TV, where even the ability to talk has been snatched from people.

Leatherheads (Universal): George Clooney directs and stars in this 1930s-style screwball comedy about an American Football team struggling to stay afloat in the early days of the sport. Renee Zellweger and John Krasinski co-star.

Meet the Spartans (Fox): Another hastily made spoof from the creative talents that gave us Date Movie and Epic Movie.

Sports Movie (aka The Comebacks) (Fox): A sports movie spoof about an out-of-luck coach (David Koechner) trying to lead his team of fumbling footballers to victory before his long-suffering wife (Melora Hardin) leaves him.

Stargate: Continuum (Fox): Yet another Stargate spin off in which members of SG-1 find themselves returning to a world where history has been dramatically altered.

Stop-Loss (Paramount): After several years in development hell, director Kimberley Pierce (who made Boys Don’t Cry in 1999) returned with this tale of a decorated Iraq war hero (Ryan Phillippe) who returns to Texas, only to find a clause in his army contract will force him back to duty in the Middle East.

The Neverending Story (Warner): A re-release for Wolfgang Petersen’s 1984 fantasy adventure based on the German novel of the same name by Michael Ende

The Sword in the Stone – 45th Anniversary Special Edition (Disney): The animated Disney film based on the novel of the same name gets a re-release .

Unearthed (Icon): The story of an unknown creature stalking an archaeological dig in the middle of a desolate New Mexico town and the inhabitants who must fight it out.

Virgin Territory (Momentum): A straight-to-DVD release for this very loose adaptation of Giovanni Boccaccio‘s The Decameron with Hayden Christensen, Mischa Barton and Tim Roth.

If you have any questions about this week’s DVD releases or any upcoming titles then just email me

(To buy any of the DVDs above just click on the title and you will be redirected to our Amazon affiliate)

> Browse more DVD Releases at Amazon UK and Play
Check the latest DVD prices at DVD Price Check
> Take a look at the current UK cinema releases (W/C Friday 15th August)

Categories
The Daily Video

The Daily Video: The Swimmer

To mark the extraordinary feats of Michael Phelps at the Olympics, here is the theatrical trailer to the Burt Lancaster film The Swimmer from 1968.

> The Swimmer at the IMDb
> Burt Lancaster at Wikipedia
> Roger Ebert’s review of the film

Categories
Popular Posts

Popular Posts: Monday 11th – Sunday 17th August 2008

Here are the most popular posts in the last week.

  1. Thundercats movie in the works
  2. Interview: Stephen Morris on Joy Division
  3. The Most Useful Movie Websites 2.0
  4. The Dark Knight Prologue at the London IMAX
  5. DVD Releases: Monday 4th August 2008
  6. The Top 10 Most Useful Film Websites
  7. Why The Dark Knight should not be a 15 certificate
  8. Cinema Releases: Friday 8th August 2008
  9. DVD Releases: Monday 28th July 2008
  10. DVD Releases: Monday 11th August 2008

Stats courtesy of Google Analytics

Categories
Amusing The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Baracky II

Barack Obama‘s presidential campaign meets Rocky II.

> The Empire Strikes Barack (previous viral video about the Democratic primary campaign)
> More about the 2008 presidential campaign at Wikipedia

Categories
Cinema Interviews Podcast

Interview: Anthony Daniels on Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Anthony Daniels is best known for his role as the droid C-3PO in the Star Wars films made between 1977 and 2005.

I recently spoke with him about his iconic role in the franchise and the new animated feature film Star Wars: The Clone Wars.

Listen to the interview here:

Or you can listen here:

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

You can also download it as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars is out now at UK cinemas

> Download this interview as an MP3 file
> Anthony Daniels at the IMDb
> Official site for Anthony Daniels
> Find out more about C-3PO and Star Wars at Wikipedia
> Official site for Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Categories
Cinema cinema releases

Cinema Releases: Friday 15th August 2008

Here is the rundown of the UK cinema releases this week.

NATIONAL RELEASES

You Don’t Mess With The Zohan (12A): Sony will be hoping this Adam Sandler comedy will takes a significant bite into The Dark Knight and The Mummy 3’s box office. Although Sandler’s comedies tend to do better in the US than over here, the fact that this was co-written and produced by Judd Apatow (who Sandler has known for a long time) might help it’s prospects. Despite a tepid reaction from sniffier UK critics, heavy marketing and audience word of mouth could help it crack the top 3 slot.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars (PG): Although Star Wars usually signals box office gold, this animated feature (dealing with events between Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) is something of a curiosity. It wasn’t initially planned to be a feature, but George Lucas thought it would be a good launch pad for the upcoming animated series. Only three of the actors from the prequels (Christopher Lee, Samuel L Jackson, Anthony Daniels) reprise their roles and although Star Wars has a huge fanbase, it will have to overcome some bad early buzz to make a dent on the top three. Interestingly Warner Bros are distributing this rather than Fox, who up to now have released all the Star Wars movies.

Wild Child (12A): Working Title (and their distributor Universal) venture into the tween market with this film about an LA girl (Emma Roberts – best known for her role in the Nickelodeon show Unfabulous) shipped off to an English boarding school. Given that it is the summer holidays, the target audience for this kind of material is plentiful but a lack of genuine star names and plenty of box office competition may hinder its chances.

IN SELECTED RELEASE

Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day (PG): This World War 2 period comedy with Frances McDormand and Amy Adams, based on the 1938 novel by British author Winifred Watson, didn’t exactly light up the US box office back in March. But given that it was filmed here in the UK, Momentum will be hoping it will appeal to an older audience with it’s cosy retro vibe. Directed by Bharat Nalluri (best known for TV work such as Life on Mars and Hustle) it seems more likely to find an audience on DVD. (Showing in key cities)

The Banishment (Izgnanie) (12A): Artificial Eye give a limited release to the second film from director Andrey Zvyagintsev (who made The Return in 2003) which deals with a family moving to an old house in the Russian countryside.  (Showing in London at the Curzon Soho , The Gate, Renoir, Richmond Filmhouse & other key cities)

God Tussi Great Ho (12A): Eros release this Bollywood remake of Bruce Almighty, which stars Salman Khan, Amitabh Bachchan and Priyanka Chopra in the lead roles. (Showing at Cineworld Cinemas in Feltham and Ilford, Shaftesbury Ave, Vue 02 & Key Cities)

Jimmy Carter Man From Plains: The BFI are giving a limited run to this Jonathan Demme documentary about former US president Jimmy Carter at the BFI Southbank in London.

Little Box Of Sweets: An Indian film about a village girl named Asha who falls in love with her childhood friend Seth (Joe Anderson), the half-English son of a local commissioner. Oceansonic Pictures will give it a limted run at the ICA Cinema in London & selected key cities.

Black White & Gray : Revolver release this documentary (directed by James Crump) about the relationship between curator Sam Wagstaff, photographer Robert Mapplethorpe and musician/poet Patti Smith in a limted run at the ICA Cinema in London.

If you have any questions about this week’s cinema releases or any upcoming titles then just email me or leave a comment below.

> Get local showtimes via Google Movies (just enter your local postcode)
> Find out about films showing near you at MyFilms
> Check out the DVD releases for this week (W/C Monday 11th August)

Categories
Amusing The Daily Video

The Daily Video: The Dark Knight (Kids Version)

[Link via b3ta courtesy of Matt]

Categories
Interesting The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Meetin’ WA by Jean-Luc Godard

A 26 minute short film about Woody Allen by Jean-Luc Godard from 1986.


Meetin’ WA (1986)
by Tomsutpen
[Link via SPOUTblog]
> Woody Allen at the IMDb
> Find out more about Jean-Luc Godard at Wikipedia
Categories
Cinema Podcast Reviews

The Cinema Review: You Don’t Mess With The Zohan / Star Wars: The Clone Wars / Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day

On this week’s review podcast we examine You Don’t Mess With The Zohan, Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day.

Listen to the review podcast here:

[audio:https://www.filmdetail.com/podcast/get.php?fla=podcast-2008-08-17-88843.mp3]

Download and subscribe to the review podcast via iTunes by clicking here

* Listen to our interview with Adam Sandler about You Don’t Mess With The Zohan *

* Also listen to our interview with Anthony Daniels about Star Wars: The Clone Wars *

> Download this review as an MP3 file
> You Don’t Mess With The Zohan, Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day at the IMDb
> Get local showtimes via Google Movies

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Sponsored Content

Sponsored Video: Orange Jont Unlit Tour

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Trailers

Trailer: Body of Lies

This is the trailer for the new Ridley Scott film Body of Lies, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe:

It opens in the US and the UK on Friday 10th October

> Official website
> Find out more about the film at Wikipedia

Categories
Directors Interesting The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Alfred Hitchcock cameos

Director Alfred Hitchcock was famous for cameo appearences in his own films.

Here are a selection:

> Alfred Hitchcock at the IMDb
> Find out more about Alfred Hitchcock at Wikipedia
> Senses of Cinema essay on Hitchcock by Ken Mogg
> The Hitchcock/Truffauat Tapes (an essential listen)

Categories
Cinema Interviews Podcast Trailers

Interview: Adam Sandler on You Don’t Mess With The Zohan

Since making the transition from TV and stand up to movies in the mid-90s, Adam Sandler has become one of Hollywood’s biggest comedy stars.

Films such as Happy Gilmore, The Wedding Singer and Big Daddy have all been big hits whilst he has also starred in more discerning projects such as Punch-Drunk Love, Spanglish and Reign Over Me.

His latest film is You Don’t Mess With The Zohan, a comedy in which plays an Israeli commando who tires of fighting terrorists and packs it all in so he can travel to America and fulfill his dream of becoming a hairdresser in New York.

I spoke to Adam recently about the film and his career, which you can listen to here:

[audio:https://www.filmdetail.com/podcast/get.php?fla=podcast-2008-08-13-23140.MP3]

You can also download it as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here.

Here is the trailer:

You Don’t Mess With The Zohan is out in UK cinemas this Friday

> Download this interview as an MP3 file
> Subscribe to our podcasts vis RSS or iTunes
> Adam Sandler at the IMDb
> Official UK site for the film

[Image courtesy of Sony Pictures © 2008]

Categories
Amusing Posters

Posters spoofing those annoying anti-piracy adverts

These two posters accurately reflect the frustration of anyone who has legally bought a DVD and put it in the player only to be confronted with a patronising advert (that you can’t skip!) which informs you that piracy (the very thing you just haven’t done) is both bad and wrong.

[Posters via Broken TV]

> Read more posts on piracy at Broken TV
> Spoof anti-piracy mashup from The IT Crowd

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray dvd pick Film of the Week

DVD Pick: In Bruges

In Bruges is the tale of two Irish hit men named Ray (Colin Farrell) and Ken (Brendan Gleeson) who have been sent to lie low in the Belgian city of Bruges.

There they have arguments with one another and upset all manner of people from the locals, US tourists and even the crime boss (Ralph Fiennes) who sent them there.

Written and directed by the playwright Martin McDonagh, who won an Oscar in 2006 for his short film Six Shooter, this is one of the most impressive debut features in recent memory.

Not only does it contain several memorable sequences, but it contains the sort of ballsy, politically incorrect humour absent from a lot of mainstream comedy movies.

It also features some excellent performances, most notably from the two leads. Gleeson is his usual dependable self whilst Farrell shows what a good actor he can be when released from the constraints of big budget Hollywood productions.

Ralph Fiennes also makes a startling impression in a menacing supporting role that owes more to his turn in Schindler’s List than some of his more recent performances.

If you are familiar with the sensibility of McDonagh’s plays, such as The Lieutenant of Inishmore, you will find much to feast on here – it feels like Harold Pinter’s The Dumb Waiter remade by Quentin Tarantino.

It opened the Sundance Film Festival back in January and got a wider US release in February, with a UK opening following in April.

Although it had a relatively low budget, it still didn’t really get the attention it deserved, which may have been down to bad marketing (the US one sheet poster was horrible, with the UK one not much better) or maybe the title confused people.

But the DVD is an essential purchase as this is easily one of the best films to come put this year – smart, funny and superbly made.

The extras include:

  • Deleted and extended scenes: There is a generous amount of unused footage (11 deleted and 2 extended scenes), some of which are very funny, the highlight being the scene with Ralph Fiennes’ character on the train.
  • Gag reel: Perhaps less impressive is this gag reel which consists of the actors cracking up on set.
  • When in Bruges: A solid 13 minute making-of featurette featuring interviews with director Martin McDonagh and the main cast, exploring the ideas behind the film and the experience of making it.
  • Strange Bruges: This is a 7 minute feature the cast and director discussing the Belgian town where the film was set and made.
  • A Boat Trip Around Bruges: A 5 minute film about the history of Bruges filled with some nuggets of information and trivia.
  • F**king Bruges: A short feature in which the most prominent word in the script is repeated over and over again.

Watch the trailer here:

In Bruges is out now on DVD from Universal

> Buy the DVD from Amazon UK
> Listen to our review on our podcast back in April
> In Bruges at the IMDb
> Read other reviews of the film at Metacritic
> Find out more about Martin McDonagh at Wikipedia
> The Guardian profile Martin McDonagh
> The Times interview Colin Farrell and Martin McDonagh about the film

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Interesting The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Steve Martin & Jerry Seinfeld on The Charlie Rose Show

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Sponsored Content

Sponsored Video: Heart Attack



For more information go to www.2minutes.org.uk

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News

Isaac Hayes dies at the age of 65

Isaac Hayes, the soul legend behind the Theme from Shaft, has died in Memphis aged 65.

The AP report:

He was also an occasional actor in films like Escape From New York and latterly the TV show South Park where he played Chef.

Hayes also starred in the forthcoming Soul Men, which also features the late Bernie Mac (who also died earlier this week).

Here is the classic Shaft theme:

And this is the music in opening scene from the famous 1971 blaxpoitation classic which starred Richard Roundtree as the title character:

> More about Isaac Hayes and Theme from Shaft at Wikipedia
> Shaft at the IMDb

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray releases

DVD Releases: Monday 11th August 2008

DVD PICKS

In Bruges (Universal): The tale of two Irish hit men (Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson) who have been ordered to lie low in the Belgian city of Bruges is one of the funniest films to come out this year. Written and directed by Martin McDonagh, who won an Oscar for his short film Six Shooter, this is features some glorious sequences, as well as some fine acting by the two leads with Ralph Fiennes in a key supporting role. [Read our full review here]

My Brother is an Only Child (Revolver): Adapted from the best-selling novel ‘Il Fasciocomunista’, this story of two feuding brothers, set amidst the politically charged Italy of the 60s and 70s, is a highly accomplished and involving film. Written and directed by Danielle Luchetti it stars Elio Germano and Riccardo Scamarcio as the two brothers.

Son of Rambow (Optimum): A charming British comedy about two young boys (Will Poulter and Bill Milner) in the mid-1980s who try to make an ultra low budget sequel to First Blood (the first Rambo movie) using a VHS camera and their own surroundings. Directed by Garth Jennings and also starring Jessica Hynes from Spaced.

[REC] (Contender): A contemporary Spanish horror in which a TV crew cover the night shift of a Barcelona fire station and follow a team as they respond to an event in mysterious apartment building. It plays like a Spanish version of The Blair Witch Project but also has it’s own sense of claustrophobia and tension. Directed by Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza.

ALSO OUT

If you have any questions about this week’s DVD releases or any upcoming titles then just email me

(To buy any of the DVDs above just click on the title and you will be redirected to our Amazon affiliate)

> Browse more DVD Releases at Amazon UK and Play
> Check the latest DVD prices at DVD Price Check
> Take a look at the current UK cinema releases

Categories
Amusing The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Star Wars according to a 3 year old

This video of a 3 year old discussing the plot of Star Wars has had over 8 million views on YouTube since it was uploaded in February .

> Fist of Blog – The blog where it all started
> Find out more about Star Wars at Wikipedia

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Sponsored Content

Sponsored Video: Lost PacMan

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Random Technology Thoughts

Ten Things Movies Told Us About Technology This Summer

Hollywood has long had an interesting relationship with technology from classic films like 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) to nonsense like The Net (1995).

Since the rise of the PC over 15 years ago, computers haven’t always always been portrayed accurately in films.

For example in real life when you download something on your computer, the screen looks something like this:

But in a movie it often looks more like this:

But how about this summer’s crop of movies?

Here is a list of what we learned about technology on the big screen this summer:

1. TONY STARK IS BOTH A MAC AND PC GUY (IRON MAN)

If you are a billionaire industrialist trying to make a robotic suit that will turn you into a superhero, you still face the same dilemma as millions of computer users: do you use Mac or PC?

In order to become Iron Man, Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jnr) appeared to use both.

In this summer’s first blockbuster, I caught a glimpse of a heavy duty Dell workstation and some Mac Pros – maybe he uses the Dells to crunch some stats and the Macs for the sleek design? Or maybe the two companies paid Marvel a ton of money to feature both.

2. ARCHAEOLOGISTS CAN SURVIVE NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS BY HIDING IN A LEAD LINED FRIDGE (INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL)

One of the most startling scientific revelations from this summer’s movie season was that Indiana Jones could survive a nuclear explosion by hiding …in a lead lined fridge.

It even led to a term being coined: “Nuking the Fridge“, which is supposed to be some kind of follow up to ‘Jump the Shark‘.

This video explains the terms:


Nuke The Fridge

One commentator suggested that:

The problem is that, even if he didn’t get flattened, horribly burned or suffocated (kids, don’t hide in refrigerators), Indy almost certainly would have gotten a lethal dose of radiation from the fallout.

Will the next Indy movie be called Indiana Jones and the Fallout from the Lead Lined Fridge?

3. WALL-E IS A PIRATE (WALL-E)

The cutest futuristic robot since Silent Running charmed audiences worldwide with his impressive devotion to cleaning up planet Earth and love of old musicals.

But where do the MPAA stand on his flagrant disregard of copyright law? Not only does he illegally record ‘Hello Dolly!‘ but there is no compensation for the artists involved.

However, given that the film takes place hundreds of years into the future, I think we can safely assume the 20th Century Fox musical will by then be in the public domain. Unless News Corp and Fox owner Rupert Murdoch lives forever (which shouldn’t be ruled out…)

4. CARRIE BRADSHAW CAN’T HANDLE THE iPHONE (SEX AND THE CITY)

If you were a fan of HBO‘s Sex and the City you will have noticed that Carrie Bradshaw wrote everything on her MacBook Pro.

However, in the movie version of the show she can’t seem to handle the iPhone.

When she needs a phone at her wedding in order to get in touch with her husband-to-be (Mr. Big) she is dismayed at the iPhone’s touch interface, saying ‘I can’t work this’.

Maybe some brushing up is needed for the next film?

5. BATMAN HAS THE NEW NOKIA ‘iPHONE KILLER’ (THE DARK KNIGHT)

In contrast to Carrie, Batman (Christian Bale) in The Dark Knight has a surer grasp on mobile phone technology.

Not only does he have a brilliant CEO named Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman) who supplies him with all the gadgets a night time vigilante needs, but he also has an intimate knowledge of Gotham’s phone network.

However, in a move that will give Steve Jobs pause for thought, Bruce is introduced to the new Nokia ‘iPhone killer’ by Lucius on a trip to Hong Kong and it proves invaluable in extraditing a criminal.

Despite official denials from Nokia that the phone doesn’t exist, it looks like it could be the prototype for the Nokia 5200 – which is nicknamed ‘The Tube’.

Reports of a red version in a glass case, that lights up every time someone calls, were sketchy as this article went to press…

6. HELLBOY’S BOSS HATES YOUTUBE (HELLBOY II: THE GOLDEN ARMY)

When you are the demonic spawn of a Nazi experiment gone wrong – that now secretly works for the US government as secret agent – anonymity is tough. Especially when you are Hellboy, who is bright red with horns and a tail.

In the first Hellboy he just about covered his tracks but in this summer’s sequel, Hellboy II: The Golden Army, he couldn’t escape the attentions of citizen journalists in the Web 2.0 era, prompting his boss Tom Manning (Jeffrey Tambor) to snarl: “God, I HATE YouTube”.

The same sentiments could apply to Viacom’s lawyers.

7. ALIENS THINK GOOGLE AND YAHOO ARE SILLY NAMES (MEET DAVE)

Like some internet refuseniks (mainly older guys working in the newspaper industry) the aliens in the unfunny Eddie Murphy comedy Meet Dave are tickled pink that humans search and store information in places called Google and Yahoo.

Believe it or not, this was actually one of the funnier jokes in this dull Eddie Murphy vehicle which saw an alien spaceship (Eddie Murphy) land on Earth piloted by lots of little aliens led by a Captain (Eddie Murphy). Confused? Google it.

8. BRUCE BANNER USES AN OLD IRC CHAT PROGRAM (THE INCREDIBLE HULK)

When you are the victim of a radiation experiment that periodically turns you into a large green monster, what do you do when hiding out in Brazil from the clutches of the US government?

If you are Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) in The Incredible Hulk, you use a creaky old laptop and what appears to be an encrypted IRC program (remember those?) to communicate with a fellow scientist about a possible cure.

Would Skype not have been a better option, especially given its appropriately green icons?

9. MARIAH CAREY PREFERS MACS TO PCS (YOU DON’T MESS WITH THE ZOHAN)

Whilst Tony Stark seems happy to multitask on both, it seems Mariah Carey is a Mac devotee. In the Adam Sandler comedy You Don’t Mess With The Zohan, Mariah appears as herself in a cameo and in one scene her assistants are asked what she prefers: Macs or PCs?

Given that the film was funded by Sony, I was fully expecting them to say ‘PC’ and that (like James Bond) she is a huge fan of the Sony Vaio laptop. But no, they look at one another – as if to say ‘what a silly question!’ – and eagerly report she loves Macs.

High fives all round at Cupertino.

10. TIVO DOES MORE THAN JUST TV (TROPIC THUNDER)

Many people find that that DVRs like the TiVo has changed their TV viewing habits, but in the new Ben Stiller comedy Tropic Thunder we find that it has more uses.

But given that the film hasn’t opened yet I don’t want to spoil why…

Can you think of any other memorable tech moments in the movies this summer?

> 2008 in film at Wikipedia
> The Inquirer’s Top 10 Technology Films
> The uses of computers in movies at Annoyances.org

Categories
Popular Posts

Popular Posts: Monday 4th August – Sunday 10th August 2008

  1. Thundercats movie in the works
  2. DVD Releases: Monday 4th August 2008
  3. The Top 10 Most Useful Film Websites
  4. Interview: Stephen Morris on Joy Division
  5. The Dark Knight Prologue at the London IMAX
  6. The Most Useful Movie Websites 2.0
  7. DVD Releases: Monday 21st July 2008
  8. Cinema Releases: Friday 1st August 2008
  9. Why The Dark Knight should not be a 15 certificate
  10. Cinema Releases: Friday 8th August 2008

Stats courtesy of Google Analytics

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Amusing

Barack Obama vs Rick Astley

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Interesting Technology The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Francis Ford Coppola on Technology

Aside from creating films like The Godfather and Apocalypse Now, director Francis Ford Coppola has always been passionate about technology and film preservation, as this clip from the TV documentary Memory and Imagination (1990) shows:

> Francis Ford Coppola at Wikipedia
> Memory and Imagination at the IMDb
> Michael Lawrence Films at YouTube

Categories
Interesting News

Jeffrey Wells on The O’Reilly Factor

Hollywood Elsewhere blogger Jeffrey Wells went on The O’Reilly Factor yesterday to discuss a piece he’d written recently about Jon Voight‘s anti-Obama Washington Times op-ed piece.

> Wells looks back on the appearence at HE
> Voight’s original piece at the Washington Times
> Bill O’Reilly viral video from earlier this year

Categories
Cinema Podcast Reviews

The Cinema Review: The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor / The Fox And The Child / Elegy

This week we review The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor, The Fox And The Child and Elegy.

Listen to the review podcast here:

[audio:https://www.filmdetail.com/podcast/get.php?fla=podcast-2008-08-08-85431.mp3]

> Download this review as an MP3 file
The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor, The Fox And The Child and Elegy at the IMDb
> Listen to our interview with Luc Jacquet about The Fox and the Child
> Listen to our interview with Ben Kingsley about Elegy
> Get local showtimes via Google Movies

Categories
Cinema Interviews

Interview: Mary Elizabeth Winstead on Make It Happen

Mary Elizabeth Winstead first came to prominence as a movie actress in the Disney superhero comedy Sky High (2005) before going on to appear in such films as Final Destination 3 (2006), Bobby (2006), Death Proof and Die Hard 4.0 (2007).

Her latest film is Make it Happen, in which she stars as a struggling dancer trying to make it in Chicago.

I spoke to her about her new role, working in horror films, the experience on Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof and her part opposite Michael Cera in Scott Pilgrim vs. The World the upcoming film from director Edgar Wright.

You can listen to the interview here:

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

You can also download it as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here.

Here is the trailer for the film:

Make It Happen opens in UK cinemas today

[Image courtesy of Optimum Films © 2008]

> Download this interview as an MP3 file
> Mary Elizabeth Winstead at the IMDb
> Official UK site for Make It Happen

Categories
Amusing

The Daily Video: The Onion News on The Beijing Olympics – Are They A Trap?


The Beijing Olympics: Are They A Trap?

Categories
Cinema releases

Cinema Releases: Friday 8th August 2008

Here are the films out in UK cinemas this week.

NATIONAL RELEASES

The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor (12A): One of Universal’s tent pole releases for this summer got released on Wednesday to capitalise on the summer holiday. The third film in the action-adventure franchise pits Brendan Fraser against an ancient Chinese warrior, but all the special effects and epic scale of the film can’t hide Rob Cohen‘s sloppy direction and the fact that this franchise feels as dead as the title character. The waste of Asian icons like Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh, plus the miscasting of Maria Bello (replacing Rachel Weisz) only adds to the sense of woe. [Opens nationwide]

The Fox And The Child (U): Director Luc Jacquet scored a surprise hit documentary in 2005 with March of the Penguins and his latest film is a simple but charming tale (narrated by Kate Winslet) of the relationship between a young French girl and the fox she befriends. Pathe have marketed this like a traditional children’s film and will be hoping for family audiences eager for something other than Kung Fu Panda or WALL-E. However, adults taking their kids may be pleasantly surprised at the thought and craft that has gone into making it.  [Opens nationwide]

* Listen to our interview with Luc Jacquet about The Fox and the Child *

Make It Happen (PG) Another dance film in the mould of Flashdance and Save the Last Dance which sees Mary Elizabeth Winstead as a young dancer trying to make the big time in Chicago. Optimum will be hoping that this attracts the Bebo demographic (the official UK site is hosted there) and follow in the footsteps of recent dance films that have done decent box office. [Opens nationwide]

IN SELECTED RELEASE

Elegy (15): The latest adaptation of a Philip Roth novel hits the big screen with Ben Kingsley playing a cultural critic afraid of committing to a relationship with a younger woman (Penélope Cruz). Altough Roth has often been poorly served on the big screen, the choice of Isabel Coixet to direct proved an inspired one as she coaxes out fine performances from an impressive cast that also includes Dennis Hopper, Patricia Clarkson, Peter Sarsgaard and Debbie Harry. Entertainment will be hoping the solid name cast leads to decent business amongst more discerning audiences. [Opens in key cities]

* Listen to our interview with Ben Kingsley about Elegy *

Death Defying Acts (PG): This supernatural romantic thriller directed by Gillian Armstrong stars Guy Pearce as escapologist Harry Houdini in the height of his career in the 1920s. Despite the presence of co-star Catherine Zeta Jones this got released last month in the US by The Weinstein Company to mixed reviews and a distinct lack of fanfare. Lionsgate are releasing it over here (where it was largely filmed) but it’s prospects for making much cash look slim given the lack of marketing and awareness for it. (Opens in key cities]

Elite Squad (18): The winner of the Golden Bear at this year’s Berlin Film Festival is a semi-fictional look at the BOPE (the Special Police Operations section of the Rio de Janeiro Military Police). It is the feature debut of director José Padilha, who had previously made the documentary Bus 174. Optimum will be looking for decent art house buzz and audiences hungry for another brutal slice of Brazilian realism. [Opens in key cities]

Blindsight (PG): Set against the backdrop of the Himalayas, this documentary directed by Lucy Walker follows six blind Tibetan teenagers as they climb a mountain in the shadow of Mount Everest. Spark Entertainment will be hoping this award winning and critically acclaimed documentary can generate good word of mouth in a limited release. [Opens at the ICA in London & selected key cities]

CJ7 (PG): A science fiction/comedy from Hong Kong co-written, co-produced and directed by Stephen Chow, who also stars in the film. [In limited release at London’s BFI Southbank]

Singh Is Kinng (PG): A Hindi film starring Akshay Kumar and Katrina Kaif that was mostly shot in Australia. The UK distribuotr is Studio 18. [Opens at the Cineworld in Ilford, Wood Green, Wandsworth & selected cinemas nationwide].

If you have any questions about this week’s cinema releases or any upcoming titles then just email me or leave a comment below.

> Get local showtimes via Google Movies (just enter your local postcode and search)
> Find out about films showing near you at MyFilms
> Check out the DVD releases for this week (W/C Monday 4th August)

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews

DVD Pick: Escape From New York

Writer-director John Carpenter‘s smart, dystopian thriller Escape From New York was re-released on regular DVD and Blu-ray this week.

Made in 1981 it imagines a futuristic New York where crime has spiralled out of control to the point where Manhattan has been turned into a maximum security prison.

When Air Force One crashes over the island, the prison governor (Lee Van Cleef) recruits a notorious criminal named “Snake” Plissken (Kurt Russell) to go in and rescue the leader of the free world.

The major snag is that he has less than 24 hours to complete his mission and must survive in a completely lawless and hostile environment.

Although the premise stems from anxieties about New York that now seem dated, the film holds up remarkably well with the visuals, acting and a pulsating electronic score all adding to the mix.

The extras on both releases include:

  • Return to Escape from New York: A 23 minute featurette on the making of the film with interviews and insight from cast and crew.
  • John Carpenter Interview: A new and exclusive 30 minute interview with the writer-director about the film.
  • Snakes Crime: The deleted opening scene where Snake robs a federal bank.
  • Commentary: John Carpenter and Kurt Russell, which is highly engaging and informative.

There are also three theatrical trailers including this one:

The Blu-ray version is presented in 1080P 2.35:1 Widescreen (VC1) with English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio.

> Buy it on regular DVD or Blu-ray from Amazon UK
> Escape from New York at the IMDb
> More information on the film at The Official John Carpenter site

Categories
Cinema News Thoughts

Why The Dark Knight should not be a 15 certificate

Last week in The Daily Mail columnist Alison Pearson helped kick off a silly bout of hysteria with a column about The Dark Knight.

She wrote:

Nothing in this new Batman is in jest. Not even the Joker. This film is doing serious business  –  and, make no mistake, its business is violence.

I saw The Dark Knight on Monday; or at least I saw the bits that I could bear to watch from behind my giant Diet Coke.

Fair enough. If you find the film hard to watch, then that is entirely how you experienced it.

It is dark, oppressive and filmed in a realistic style, especially for a comic book movie. Plus points as far as I’m concerned, and maybe that’s also true for the record-breaking audiences and large selection of critics who also loved it.

However, the picture she painted was not exactly accurate.

Let’s examine the bits she found so repellent:

Within the first five minutes, the body count was in double figures  –  and that was before a detonator was shoved down the throat of a dying bank manager.

Yes, that’s true but she neglects to mention that it doesn’t actually go off,  which is handy if you want to portray the opening sequence as some kind of exploding head filled monstrosity.

But not good if you want to be precise about what actually happens on-screen.

She goes on:

Soon afterwards, the Joker, played with diabolical brilliance by the late Heath Ledger, explained how he got that permanent blood-red clown’s grin.

His father had been attacking his mother’s face with a knife when he caught his young son watching with a serious expression.

Dad slashed the boy’s cheeks to make sure that the kid would never look down-in-the-mouth again.

As far as I could see and hear this wasn’t on-screen violence – it was a character talking.

Plus, if you pay attention you will notice that throughout the film the Joker gives different stories about how he got the scars, suggesting he is lying or screwing with people’s heads.  Creepy? Yes. Violent? No.

Then she brings up the scene in which the Joker kills a gangster with a pencil:

Consider this. If Batman had climbed out of bed and walked across the room to find his rubber boxers, thus showing his Batbum, the film would have been rated a 15  –  nudity being deemed far more shocking than cutting people’s throats, obviously.

Personally, I would be far happier for my children to glimpse Batman’s buttocks than to see a pencil skewered into a man’s eye, but what do I know?

Whilst I agree that sex is seen by censors as more taboo than violence (especially in the US) the problem with her point is that at no point do we see a pencil going in to an eye.

In fact, we don’t see any contact between face and pencil. Not only does it happen so quickly, but the camera cuts away so that even if you slowed it down I don’t think you would even see any actual gore in the frame.

The violence is implied, not shown. It certainly gives the audience a jolt but it is nothing like the grisly scene being painted here.

All of this might sound like standard Fleet Street outrage but the really troubling bit comes when a connection is made to the recent death of a teenager in London:

The day I went to see the film, I happened to drive past the spot where 16-year-old Ben Kinsella was stabbed 11 times. He was the 21st teenager to die of knife wounds in London this year.

His killers may have thought they were some kind of cartoon masters of the universe, meting out a perverse justice, but the scruffy street corner with its altar of rotting bouquets tells a different story.

No stirring music bestowed a thrilling poetic grandeur on Ben’s last seconds. No giant shadow of a cape flitted across the sky. Nobody could save him. Especially not this Batman.

What exactly is the point here? That the Joker’s taste for knives will lead to more deaths? The new Batman (a fictional character let’s remember) can’t save vulnerable children?

What on earth is she actually saying with this ill-advised detour into a much more serious issue?

That seemed to be the end of that, but it now appears that a snowball of indignation from a Daily Mail columnist is threatening to become an avalanche of idiocy.

Now, a cluster of clueless MPs and right wing commentators have all recently turned their sights on the film and the BBFC for awarding it a 12A certificate.

They seem to be rather upset that the film didn’t get than a 15 certificate.

For those unfamiliar with the film ratings system in the UK, each film is given one the following ratings before it can be shown in UK cinemas or sold/rented as a DVD:

  • Uc (Universal Children): Suitable for all, but especially suitable for young children to watch on their own (home media only)
  • U (Universal): Suitable for all, but parents are advised that certain scenes may be unsuitable for children under 4 years old.
  • PG (Parental Guidance): All ages admitted, but parents are advised that certain scenes may be unsuitable for children under 8
  • 12A (12 Accompanied/Advisory): Suitable for those aged 12 and over. Those aged under 12 are only admitted if accompanied by an adult at all times during the performance (replaced the standard 12 certificate for cinema releases only in 2002)
  • 12: Suitable for those aged 12 and over. No-one younger than 12 may rent or buy a 12 rated VHS, DVD or game (home media only since 2002)
  • 15: Suitable for those aged 15 and over. Nobody younger than 15 may see a 15 film in a cinema. No-one younger than 15 may rent or buy a 15 rated VHS, DVD or game.
  • 18: Suitable for those aged 18 and over. Nobody younger than 18 may see an 18 film in a cinema. No-one younger than 18 may rent or buy an 18 rated VHS, DVD or game.
  • R18 (Restricted 18): Suitable for those aged 18 and over. May only be shown at licensed cinemas or sold at sex shops, and only to people aged 18 or over.

The body that awards these certificates is called the BBFC (British Board of Film Classification), which is the organisation responsible for viewing films (and some video games) and given them one of the ratings above.

The Dark Knight was given a 12A which is, let us not forget, a restrictive certificate in that only those under 12 can see it if they are accompanied by an adult.

But clearly this isn’t good enough for the loons who want to see The Dark Knight reclassified as a 15.

Here some samples of what is being said.

The Daily Mail said yesterday in an another article (this time by Olinka Koster and Caroline Grant) that:

The violent new Batman movie has been given a 15 and 16 certificate by many countries – heaping fresh pressure on beleaguered film censors.

Parents say they have been ‘let down’ by the British Board of Film Classification which maintains that a ‘family friendly’ 12A rating is the right classification for The Dark Knight.

Parents? OK, some have complained.

But what sample size are we talking about here? And to what extent did the paper go chasing people who they knew didn’t like the film?

Are they really telling us they couldn’t find anyone who wasn’t outraged by the violence? But why let facts get in the way of opinion?

They then quote Simon Calvert, of the Christian Institute (those noted experts on film classification):

‘The BBFC has let parents down by giving it a 12A rating when it is clearly nothing of the sort.

‘I would like to see parents up and down the country complaining to the BBFC and the whole system of film classification revisited.

‘The BBFC have got this wrong and won’t admit it. I don’t think we can trust the board and perhaps we need a tougher legislative regime to prevent abuses like this.’

Who exactly are The Christian Institute? According to their website they exist for:

… “the furtherance and promotion of the Christian religion in the United Kingdom” and “the advancement of education”.

The Christian Institute is a nondenominational Christian charity committed to upholding the truths of the Bible. We are supported by individuals and churches throughout the UK.

Here’s a quick question. Would they allow children under 12 to read the Bible?

After all it contains scenes of graphic violence and acts of wanton cruelty.

  • In Genesis 6:7, 17 God gets angry and decides to destroy “all flesh wherein there is breath of life.” by drowning them.
  • In Exodus 12:12 God reveals to Moses that he is a baby killer, saying he intends to “smite all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast.”
  • Leviticus 20:13 puts forth the idea that Homosexuals must be executed.
  • In Numbers 25:1-5 Moses has people killed and then God tells him to hang their dead bodies up in front of the Sun.

These are just the first four books of the Old Testament and already we see a pattern of violence and cruelty much worse than anything in the Gotham of The Dark Knight.

Next up we have John Beyer, director of the rather conservative Mediawatch-uk (the successor to Mary Whitehouse‘s old pressure group The Viewers and Listeners Association):

‘One has to look at the fact we have a knife culture and ask what effect the BBFC’s decisions over the last 40 years or so have had on this.

‘This follows on from a long stream of films that have been excessively violent and badly classified and it gets children accustomed to seeing these sorts of things.

‘There is public concern about violence in entertainment and the board seem to be immune to it.’

We currently have – and have had for many years – one of the most restrictive film classifications in the Western world.

In recent years the BBFC have (rightly in my opinion) taken a more liberal stance on certain films (Such as 9 Songs, in which an erect penis was shown, along with – gasp! – real consensual sex), but it is just idiocy to say that our film ratings system over 40 years has contributed to knife crime.

If Mr Beyer really believes that, then I want detailed research, stats and strong evidence to back up his argument, not just some vague, reactionary sound bite.

I appreciate that when a newspaper rings you up for a quick soundbite it can be difficult, but these are serious issues that need deeper context and details.

They then quote a businessman named Mog Hamid, 43:

…he regretted taking his son Daniel, nine, to see the film in north London yesterday. ‘It was just too violent for someone as young as Daniel, he had his hands over his face a lot of the time because he was scared.’

Fair enough, but what about the thousands of young children who weren’t scared. Do we hear from them? The logic of piece presumably dictates that they are busy dressing up as the Joker and sharpening their knives as we speak.

But then we also get this zinger from Duncan Boyd, of the Church Society (another group renowned for their penetrating insights on film and society):

‘Any film that might encourage a child to engage in gratuitous violence should be awarded at least a 15 certificate…’

Let’s stop right there. These quotes sandwiched together – as they are in the piece – seem rather illogical.

The first suggests the film is so scary kids can’t even bring themselves to watch it. The second then suggests it will turn them into knife wielding maniacs.

If they are so scared by it then why would they be influenced? Surely, following this line of thinking, the film would act as a deterrent.

But again, why is The Church Society – a noble institution I’m sure – being asked for their views on a Batman movie?

Who else do they pull out of the right-wing closet to tip the article further into a pit of moral outrage?

How about Dr Adrian Rogers, former director of the family values pressure group, the Conservative Family Institute? (Could this be the same man who according to a 2001 article in The New Statesman once described homosexuality as “sterile, disease-ridden and God-forsaken”?)

He says:

”The BBFC do have a responsibility to act on their common senses.

I hope none of them are ever subjected to knife crime but they must accept that when they pass things like this, they have done their bit for the establishment of this culture.’

Again, this a lazy and unsubstantiated connection between knife crime and a ‘violent’ film (which The Dark Knight actually isn’t – but more of that later).

Where exactly is the data and evidence to back up these wild claims and suppositions? And has the Dr actually seen the film? Just asking.

But they save the best for last with television presenter, mother-of-three, and Swindon’s most noted cultural commentator, Melinda Messenger. She says:

‘I think children especially younger ones are like sponges and they absorb everything you put in front of them.

I find it really worrying that we are exposing our kids to these kinds of images from a much younger age from such a broad spectrum of media and the messages they are carrying are not positive ones.

‘With the current trend for knife crime in this country this should be the last thing we encourage.’

Whilst I respect someone’s right to an opinion about what films their children should see, this is just another slice of lazy outrage.

And in a piece about a film being reclassified and the connection between media and violence in society, I think getting the opinions of a former Page 3 girl is rather scraping the barrel.

But it also appears that some British MPs have also lost their senses when talking about this film.

The Times quote Keith Vaz (the Labour MP and chairman of the Commons home affairs committee) as saying:

“The BBFC should realise there are scenes of gratuitous violence in The Dark Knight to which I would certainly not take my 11-year-old daughter. It should be a 15 classification.”

But it seems the madness about the films is cross-party and The Guardian report that Ed Vaizey, the Tory culture minister as saying:

“The film contains violent and disturbing scenes, even though it’s a brilliant movie.

We should remember that BBFC classifications are only advisory and local authorities are ultimately responsible for classifications.

It would be interesting to see if any local authorities wish to use their powers for this and future films.”

Would it be interesting? Or would it totally contradict the point of having a central body like the BBFC giving films ratings? And don’t Tory politicians dislike the idea of the nanny state and government intervention?

Even my old boss – and now Sun columnist – Kelvin Mackenzie is chipping in, despite enjoying it:

…the film was tremendous. And violent. Even for adults.

The script was surprisingly intelligent, not at all what you would expect from a superhero film. It was also unashamedly aimed at an adult audience.

So how on earth could the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) have got it so wrong?

This movie deserved a 15. An idiot would know that.

No Kelvin, it appears only idiots do not know that. But anyway…

Not only is there a scene of an eyeball being stabbed with a pencil, a grenade in a bank manager’s mouth and a knife-wielding madman in the shape of The Joker, there is a strange feeling of psychotic danger.

Very clever by the filmmaker, but totally wrong for a little mind.

The BBFC have let it be known that they were lobbied by Warner Bros to allow the 12A.

Warner knew they had a massive worldwide blockbuster on their hands, so why on earth did they feel they needed even more money? It was simply greed.

I would be fascinated to learn how many Warner execs with young children took them to the film. My bet is none.

But the real villains are the BBFC, who now say the film was on the upper limit of what they would allow for a 12A.

Quick question for Kelvin.

If this was a 20th Century Fox film (the studio owned by your former/current boss Rupert Murdoch) would you be complaining about the rating, or would you be raising a glass and congratulating him on the vast sums of cash it is adding to News Corp‘s coffers?

However, at least Kelvin has actually seen the film. I get the feeling that some (perhaps many) of the ‘outraged’ commentators have not even seen it. This makes them look stupid and renders their opinion on the film utterly redundant.

If you discuss this issue with someone and they bleat about how violent the film is just ask them if they’ve seen it. And if they say no, then ask yourself if you can trust someone’s opinion on something they haven’t seen.

It really is that simple, but it is amazing how often people want to bleat ignorantly because an argument has been made for them to swallow hook, line and sinker.

And as for the violence – well, here’s the thing and let me say it in block capitals just for effect:

THE DARK KNIGHT IS NOT PARTICULARLY VIOLENT.

Dark? Certainly. Creepy? Yes, in parts. But violent? I mean as really violent as all these tabloid and Christian film experts are making out?

Well, lets talks about the violent scenes Kelvin highlights (which are the most extreme in the film).

  1. The scene where someone is stabbed in the eyeball with a pencil – We don’t see ANY contact between face and pencil. (See above response to Alison’s comments for more on this scene).
  2. A grenade in a bank manager’s mouth: It is a joke – albeit a dark one – but not violent or gory.
  3. There knife-wielding madman in the shape of The Joker: Firstly let’s just state that although he’s responsible for a lot of deaths and a huge crime wave, The Joker doesn’t actually kill that many people with a knife in the film. When he does we don’t actually see him do the act as the camera cuts away (just like the pencil scene).

Now, I’m willing to accept that some children might find The Joker and these sequences frightening but are they enough to upgrade the film to a 15? No, I don’t think so.

And what’s so wrong with being scared? Surely it is part of growing up, rather than the major trauma some make it out to be.

We are talking about a Batman film here (albeit a dark, realistic one) and not something truly disturbing and violent like Salo or Irreversible.

What is most disturbing is that a series issue like knife crime has been blown out of proportion and inflamed by a collection of tabloids, Christian pressure groups and people who offer little in the way of raw evidence or statistical data to back up their claims.

Even worse than that, some MPs (yes, even on their well paid summer break from Parliament) have found time to effectively railroad the BBFC in to changing their considered opinion on a film.

But we should leave the last word to the BBFC and their spokeswoman Sue Clark, as relayed by The Guardian :

Clark said that the BBFC had received about 100 complaints about the decision to give The Dark Knight a 12A.

A 100 complaints – whilst it may seem a lot in relation to other films that only attract 1 or 2, let’s put it into context.

Many thousands of viewers saw this film (easily one of the biggest of the year) and didn’t complain. Compare the two figures and then do the math.

She also said:

…it had not been made a 15 because the violence was depicted in a comic-book context and because “you do not see any blood or injury in detail”.

Correct. Absolutely 100% correct. This film should not be a 15 certificate – especially after all the lame arguments and slanted reaction put forth by papers who should know better.

Maybe it is time to shine a large bat signal above London and hope a masked vigilante comes into town to rescue us from this chorus of stupidity.

UPDATE 08/08/08: Just so you know exactly why the BBFC passed this film as a 12A, here are the official reasons as quoted from their website:

THE DARK KNIGHT tells the story of Batman’s continuing war on crime and in particular his personal battle with the psychotic Joker. It was passed ‘12A’ for moderate violence and sustained threat.

The BBFC Guidelines at ‘12A’ state that ‘violence must not dwell on detail’ and that ‘there should be no emphasis on injuries or blood’ and whilst THE DARK KNIGHT does contain a good deal of violence, all of it fits within that definition.

For example, in one of the stronger scenes, Batman repeatedly beats the Joker during an interrogation. The blows however are all masked from the camera and despite both their weight and force; the Joker shows no sign of injury.

There are also scenes in which the Joker threatens first a man and then a woman with a knife and whilst these do have a significant degree of menace, without any actual violence shown they were also acceptably placed at ‘12A’.

In the final analysis, THE DARK KNIGHT is a superhero movie and the violence it contains exists within that context, with both Batman and the Joker apparently indestructible no matter what is thrown at them.

THE DARK KNIGHT also contains some special make up effects that whilst clearly not real, have the potential to be moderately frightening.

Check out the parent section of the BBFC website, which helps parents make informed decisions (thanks to IncongruousM for the tip)

UPDATE 09/08/08: Children’s author Anthony Horowitz has posted his thoughts on the whole affair in today’s Guardian.

Although he steers clear of the distorted idiocy engulfing some commentators, some of his points don’t really add up:

Iain Duncan Smith described himself as astonished. Melinda Messenger was really worried. Keith Vaz announced that he certainly wouldn’t be taking his 11-year-old daughter. And a doctor, writing in the Daily Mail, warned of the possibility of brain damage for an entire generation.

The last comment is so utterly ludicrous am astounded Anthony is taking it seriously. Do we have hard data and stats about the generation that is having their brain damaged?

But anyway, he goes on to say:

They had all been to see the new Batman film, The Dark Knight, and it would be easy enough to sneer at their collective dismay as it was expressed in recent days, scattered over the press.

But they were joined by one or two broadsheet journalists including Richard Brooks in the Sunday Times and Jenny McCartney in the Daily Telegraph who wrote that “the greatest surprise of all, even for me, after eight years spent working as a film critic, has been the sustained level of intensely sadistic brutality throughout the film”.

Wow. Two broadsheet journalists didn’t like the film. But Jenny McCartney’s comments are worthy of further examination – whilst there are dark moments in the film, I don’t see anything sadistic or especially brutal in the film let alone a ‘sustained level’ throughout. She’s making it sound like Saw or Hostel – which it isn’t.

Horowitz also makes the daft assertion that:

…it may be one of the bleakest and most cynical films ever made.

What?! I think there are many more films in the entire history of the medium much bleaker and more cynical. But lets just excuse this hyperbole for the moment:

Forget the heroics – Batman barely gets a look-in. The film belongs to Heath Ledger’s psychotic Joker who shoots a colleague point-blank in the face, shoves a hand grenade into an innocent victim’s mouth, drives a sharpened pencil through a gangster’s eye … and all this before you’re barely out of the credits.

Again, why don’t we talk about facts. Two of these acts (the shooting – which by the way isn’t shown as a point-blank shot to the face – and the grenade) happen in the extended opening sequence but the pencil bit happens some way into the film. His use of the word ‘barely’ doesn’t really cover up the misleading picture he – or the Guardian sub-editor – paints.

He does give some background on the 12A certificate but he loses the plot when discussing the BBFC’s decision:

12A doesn’t warn children off. It makes the film more enticing, more of a must-see.

Yet even if the certificate extends what it permissible, it’s hard to see how the BBFC agreed to it in this case. “The Dark Knight is a superhero movie and the violence it contains exists within that context,” it says on its website.

But actually the context of this film is an overwhelming nihilism, which is in many ways as disturbing as the violence itself. The argument doesn’t hold. Would the certificate have stayed the same if the Joker had committed rape?

No. The argument does hold because if the Joker had committed rape in the film then the context would be different.

As for the fact that the violence happens off screen he says:

Nor should we be fooled by the excuse that the actual blood-letting happens off-screen. It’s true that we don’t actually see the pencil enter the eye; we merely infer it for ourselves.

But films speak a strange language. As Lev Kuleshov demonstrated in 1918 with his famous experiment – showing the same, impassive face edited against a series of different images, a cinema audience can easily fill in the gaps, given the right prompts.

More to the point, even if we don’t allow children to see an eye being gouged out, are we really comfortable inviting them to imagine it?

Just think for a moment about what is being said here. An experiment from 1918 (when cinema itself was just over 20 years old) is being used to explain how our current generation observes violence on screen.

Whilst the principles of the Kuleshov Effect may still apply, our current generation consumes media in radically different ways, be it games, TV, DVDs or online videos. So I don’t his argument holds up particularly well, particularly when he discusses his experience of actually seeing it::

There were a great many children in the cinema when I saw it and they didn’t seem particularly traumatised by the experience.

Most of them looked rather bored. At a guess, I’d have said that the fizzy drinks and popcorn they were devouring would have been worse for their overall health.

So what he’s admitting is that despite the panic and hysteria spead by of some of the UK press and the possibility of children being exposed to implied violence, it’s actually OK. Kind of undermines the overall thrust of his argument doesn’t it?

Furthermore, I’m disappointed when he quotes the Mail as a source of scientific data:

In the Mail, Dr Aric Sigman of the British Psychological Society quoted research that showed that “watching screen violence had changed the frontal lobe brain function of normal adolescents to be more like that of the children with disruptive brain disorders.”

Could we please have a link to this research? Or at least some more detail?

His best point comes late in the piece:

…children never really were that innocent. They’ve always been fairly bloodthirsty creatures with a great liking for violence.

From the slapstick of circus clowns to the psychotic mutilation of Tom and Jerry, they have always been entertained by it.

This is true – despite the fact that The Dark Knight has a sense of realism to it, we shouldn’t forget that it is a still a comic book adaptation and not some kind of dangerous explotitation movie.

UPDATE 13/08/08: I’ve just been listening to Andrew Collins on this issue (who has also been standing in recently for Mark Kermode on Five Live), via his podcast with Richard Herring. He claims that a Daily Mail editorial, the day after the Pearson peice, said:

The Dark Knight has been called a ‘symphony of sadism’

Which as Andrew correctly points out is exactly what the Mail’s very own Alison Pearson called it.

So, the logic here appears to be that the Mail quote one of their own writers in order to paint an ever more hysterical picture of the film.

> Alison Pearson on The Dark Knight in The Daily Mail
> The Times on the ‘record complaints’ it has received
> A more reasoned look at the film from Rebecca Davies at The Telegraph
> The Dark Knight at the IMDb
> More background detail on how director Christopher Nolan rebooted the Batman franchise

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Sponsored Content

Sponsored Video: Dynamo Works his Magic on a Nokia (Part 2)

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Amusing The Daily Video Viral Video

The Daily Video: Paris Hilton responds to McCain campaign ad

You may have seen the rather tacky ad the John McCain camp issued recently, equating Barack Obama to a Paris Hilton-style celebrity unfit for the US Presidency.

Well, now Paris and the folks at FunnyOrDie have hit back with this response:

See more funny videos at Funny or Die

> Barack Obama and John McCain YouTube channels
> More on the 2008 US presidential election at Wikipedia

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DVD & Blu-ray Reviews

DVD Pick: Total Recall

One of the consequences of the recent hook up between Optimum and Studio Canal is that a selection of Arnold Schwarzenegger action movies from the 80s and 90s have been re-released in a box set and as individual titles.

The best of these is Total Recall, the 1990 sci-fi adaptation of Philip K Dick‘s story ‘We Can Remember It For You Wholesale‘ which stars Arnold as blue collar worker who dreams of Mars.

When he visits a company who can offer him a virtual holiday by implanting memories it inadvertently unlocks his ‘real’ past as a secret agent and he then has to escape to the red planet for real.

Directed by Paul Verhoeven (after the success of RoboCop in 1987) it is definitely the best of Schwarzenegger’s films between the two Terminators and contains some interesting ideas, even if the emphasis is skewed towards action.

The production design is still impressive and the visual effects by Rob Bottin still stand up very well – in many ways they foreshadow how SFX as a whole would develop in the 90s with films like T2 and The Matrix.

One of the highlights on the extras is an excellent commentary with Verhoeven and Schwarzenegger recorded for the previous Special Edition, as they complement each other very well.

Arnold seems especially amused at some of the more gruesome scenes whilst Verhoeven has many thoughtful riffs and views on the plot twists and themes of the story.

The director also frequently reveals that he wanted the film to be even more violent (one scene in particular sent the MPAA crazy) which is saying something, as it is probably one of the most brutal mainstream action films of its era.

That said it is still a solidly entertaining and at times surprisingly clever slice of sci-fi.

The other extras include:

  • Imagining Total Recall: A fine 30 minute featurette exploring the original Philip K Dick story and how it came to the screen. Paul Verhoeven, screenwriter Ron Shussett (who also write Alien) and Schwarzenegger all give solid contributions.
  • Making of Total Recall: A more modest 8 minute on set making of feature from 1990 that was presumably a TV promo from 1990.
  • Vision of Mars: Another short piece (5 mins) on how Mars was visualised for the film.
  • There are also storyboard comparisons and the requisite trailers and TV Spots.

Here is the original theatrical trailer:

The Blu-ray version is presented in 1080P 2.35:1 Widescreen (VC1) with English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio.

However, it doesn’t feature any of the extras on the regular DVD disc, so unless you are desperate for the HD version of the film I think the regular DVD with the extras is much better value.

I realise it may be a space issue on the discs but if Blu-ray is going to take off as a format, extras are an essential part of any DVD package.

> Buy on DVD or Blu-Ray at Amazon UK
> Total Recall at the IMDb
> Reviews of the film at Metacritic
> Find out more about Total Recall at WIkipedia

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The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog

This is the 43-minute ‘tragicomic musical’ created by Joss Whedon, exclusively for distribution on the web.

According to Wikipedia:

It tells the story of Dr. Horrible (Billy), an aspiring supervillain, Captain Hammer, his nemesis, and Penny, their mutual love interest.

The movie was written by writer/director Joss Whedon, his brothers Zack Whedon (a television writer) and Jed Whedon (a composer), and Jed’s fiancée, actress Maurissa Tancharoen.

The writing team penned the musical during the WGA writers’ strike.

The idea was to create something small and inexpensive, yet professionally done, in a way that would circumvent the issues that were being protested during the strike.

It is available on US iTunes store and the video site Hulu – normally two places UK viewers can’t access for copyright reasons.

However the above video appears to be working.

[Link via Adam Bowie]

> Official Dr. Horrible site
> Listen to our 2006 interview with Joss Whedon about Firefly
> Find out more about Joss Whedon at Wikipedia
> IMDb entry for Joss Whedon
> Discover more about Firefly at Wikipedia – the TV series that led to Serenity
> Whedonesque – Extensive fansite

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Cinema Interviews Podcast

Interview: Luc Jacquet on The Fox and the Child

Director Luc Jacquet came to prominence in 2005 with the Oscar winning documentary The March of the Penguins, a surprise hit which also won the Oscar for Best Documentary.

His latest film is called The Fox and the Child which is the charming story of the relationship between a young girl (Bertille Noël-Bruneau) and the wild fox she befriends. It is narrated by Kate Winslet.

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

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

You can also download it as a podcast via iTunes by clicking here.

Watch the trailer for the film here:

The Fox and the Child opens in UK cinemas this Friday

[All images © 2008 / Pathe ]

> Download this interview as an MP3 file
Luc Jacquet at the IMDb
> Official UK site and IMDb entry for The Fox and the Child

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Sponsored Content

Sponsored Video: Will you be watching?



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Box Office News

The Dark Knight passes the $400 million mark

The Dark Knight has now crossed the $400 million mark at the US box office in just 18 days.

Variety report:

In only its 18th day in release, Warner Bros.’ “The Dark Knight” reached the $400 million mark in domestic sales on Monday, grossing $6.3 million for a cume of $400.1 million.

That easily beats the 43 days it took “Shrek 2” to jump the $400 million boundary.

Some pundits were predicting that The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor would just beat out the Batman sequel this past weekend but the caped crusader grossed $42.7 million, narrowly ahead of The Mummy which took in $40.5 million.

In foreign territories it has taken over $200 million, which is pretty remarkable even for a summer blockbuster, especially as it has achieved this number in 18 days.

Unless there is an unexpected drop off, it will almost certainly end up in the top 5 grossing movies of all time but can it beat the all time champ Titanic?

Jeremy Kay crunched some numbers recently over at The Guardian:

Talk has turned to whether the bat has the chops to overtake Stars Wars’ $460.9m (£233.4m) lifetime tally to become the second biggest earner in history.

It could well do. Overhauling Titanic’s legendary $600.8m (£304.2m) mark is another kettle of fish, however.

Many believe it will never be bettered and I’m inclined to agree. Still, you never know, and I’ll gladly take my hat off to Nolan if it does.

By the close of Tuesday, after 15 days on release, The Dark Knight stood at $333.9m (£169m) in the US and Canada, making it the biggest film of the year-to-date in the US and Canada and the 16th biggest release in North American history.

It’s been averaging a little over $10m in daily tickets sales this week thanks to rabid word of mouth and nationwide school holidays.

By conservative estimates, factoring in a 50% drop-off in ticket sales in the third weekend, The Dark Knight should boost its cumulative gross by $35-40m (£17m-£20m) by the end of Sunday, which would catapult it into the lifetime earnings top 10 on a tally of more than $380m (£192m).

How much it drops off this weekend is contingent on the number of new and repeat visits and, of course, the competition.

The extraordinary thing about Titanic was that when it opened in the US in December 1997 it didn’t have the blast off that accompanies a lot of blockbusters.

It actually took 12 days to pass the $100 million mark and just kept grossing consistently as it stayed top of the box office for an unprecedented 15 weeks, which is still a record.

Strangely, it had it’s biggest weekend gross in mid-February as no doubt the Valentines Day effect kicked in. In short it is an anomaly amongst big grossing films and unlikely to be broken in the near future.

The Return of the King ($1.1 billion) and Dead Man’s Chest ($1.06 billion) are the only other films in history to enter the $1 billion club and even they are still some way off Titanic’s $1.8 billion gross.

I personally don’t think The Dark Knight can sink Titanic, but is there a possible contender?

My hunch is that in 2011 when Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II comes out (the final book will be two films), the fan base, media hype and expectation of the final Potter film could mean the all time record finally being broken.

> The Dark Knight at Box Office Mojo
> List of the highest grossing films of all time at Wikipedia
> More on Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows being split into two films

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Amusing The Daily Video

The Daily Video: Woody Allen on The Dick Cavett Show

This is an interesting appearence by Woody Allen on The Dick Cavett Show from 1971.

What’s nice is that both of them take questions from the audience and have an easy rapport with one another.

> Woody Allen at the IMDb
> Dick Cavett’s blog at the New York Times