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June 13, 2010

Joan Rivers A Piece of Work

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Joan Rivers: A Piece Of Work (2010) Poster

Exposes the private dramas of comedian and pop icon Joan Rivers as she fights tooth and nail to keep her American dream alive. A unique look inside America’s obsession with fame and celebrity – Joan’s story is both an outrageously funny journey and a brutally honest look at the ruthless entertainment industry, the trappings of success and the ultimate vulnerability of the first queen of comedy. With unprecedented, unguarded access, the film takes the audience on a year long ride with Joan Rivers in her 76th year of life; it peels away the mask of an iconic comedian, laying bare both the struggle and thrill of living life as a groundbreaking female performer.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: A glimpse into the comedic process and private dramas of legendary comedian and pop icon Joan Rivers as she fights tooth and nail to keep her American dream alive.
Genres: Comedy, Documentary and Biopic
Running Time: 1 hr. 24 min.
Release Date: June 11th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for language and sexual humor.
Distributors:
IFC Films
Production Co.:
Break Thru Films
Produced in: United States

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MOVIE REVIEW
Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work (2010)

By ROBERT LEVIN

Joan-rivers-a-piece-of-work
Seth Keal/IFC Films

If there’s one conclusion to be derived from Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg’s
documentary about Joan Rivers, it’s this: The 77-year-old comedienne really is “a
piece of work.” She’s also — “Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work” makes clear — much
more than the sum of her polarizing public image. Beyond the plastic surgeries
and the abrasive demeanor is a driven, passionate woman who’s achieved the
miracle of retaining her show business relevance for more than four decades.

Gangsters Paradise Jerusalema

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Gangster's Paradise: Jerusalema (2010) Poster

Starting off with simple smash and grabs, and petty crime, Lucky Kunene quickly graduates to more aggressive heists such as armed robbery and carjacking. Soon, Lucky realizes he needs a bigger score to fulfill his goals of making it big, and escaping from the slums, to a dream house by the sea. Kunene hatches an elaborate and violent plan to make his fortune – hijacking buildings from landlords of Johannesburg tenements by winning the favor of the tenants and then holding their rent hostage from the landowners. His high-profile real estate acquisitions attract the attention of the local police force who have no qualms about using unprovoked brutality to bring him down. His trouble with the law, coupled with an escalating war between a local drug lord, creates a tense standoff: both sides are closing in, and Kunene must stay one step ahead–or his empire, and his life, will come crashing down.

Also Known As:
Jerusalem Entjha
Logline: An unflinching look into the crime, corruption and the transgressions of those looking to survive in the most crime-infested district of Johannesburg.
Genres: Action/Adventure, Art/Foreign, Drama and Crime/Gangster
Running Time: 1 hr. 58 min.
Release Date: June 11th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for brutal bloody violence and brief sexuality.
Distributors:
Anchor Bay Films
Production Co.:
Muti Films
Produced in: South Africa

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Gangster”s Paradise: Jerusalema

June 09, 2010


With it’s Oscar nomination for Best Picture, last year’s “District 9″ marked a major leap for South African–set movies. Now comes another reason for cinematic celebration from that country: “Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema,” a film about crime and poverty in the worst part of Johannesburg that shares much in common with Fernando Mereilles’ landmark Brazilian film, “City Of God.”

Setting his film mostly in the worst slums of South Africa, writer-director Ralph Ziman uses the area to sock home his message about a dead-end, crime-ridden world that has sucked once-promising kids dry in post-apartheid Johannesburg. It’s a side of the country we haven’t seen portrayed often since Mandela came into power. To say this film is no “Invictus” is an understatement. Where that film offered hope and inspiration, this one revels in squalor and desperation.

Early sequences establish a young boy, Lucky Kunene (Jafta Mamabolo), living in poverty but trying to find a way out through education. When he learns he has been accepted into college—but with no scholarship—his hopes are dashed. The boy who tells us in his narration that his heroes are Karl Marx and Al Capone soon finds himself reluctantly falling under the spell of the local Russian crime lord, Nazareth (Jeffrey Sekele), who encourages Lucky and his hot-wired buddy, Zakes (Motlatsi Mahloko), to graduate from smaller crimes to stealing cars for him. Cut to greener pastures as the ambitious Lucky becomes an adult (Rapulana Seiphemo), flees to Johannesburg, and moves into the roughest section of town, eventually hatching a misbegotten real estate scheme. This eventually complicates his life with threats from local law enforcement in the form of a white cop (Robert Hobbs), as well as a battle with a local drug lord (Malusi Skenjana).

Inspired by true events, Ziman’s story is as gritty as the place it portrays, a compelling look at a crime-infested environment overrun with shady characters just trying to stay one step ahead to survive in the modern South Africa. The film is more “Scarface” than “Tsotsi,” the South African Oscar winner that also featured the terrific Seiphemo in a memorable role as a distraught young father. “Jerusalema” (apparently retitled with the more obvious “Gangster’s Paradise” handle for domestic consumption here) gets under your skin with first-rate acting from some of the country’s finest, led by the aforementioned Seiphemo who is authentic at every turn. Hobbs (”District 9″) also delivers a solid performance, as does Mamabolo and a sterling, flawlessly cast group of local actors who help make this a must-see for serious film fans.

With gut-wrenching violence, numerous shootouts, and as much action as any summer tent-pole Hollywood movie, Ziman never loses sight of the tragic human waste simmering beneath this riveting look at a side of South Africa that seems to have been swept under the rug.

Genre: Drama
Written and directed by: Ralph Ziman
Starring: Rapulana Seiphemo, Motlastsi Mahloko, Jeffrey Sekele, Robert Hobbs, Malusi Skenjana

Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky

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Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky (2010) Poster

At the Theatre Des Champs-Elysees, Igor Stravinsky premieres his The Rite Of Spring. Coco Chanel attends the premiere and is mesmerized. But the revolutionary work is too modern, too radical. The enraged audience boos and jeers. A near riot ensues. Stravinsky is inconsolable. Seven years later, now rich, respected and successful, Coco Chanel meets Stravinsky again – a penniless refugee living in exile in Paris after the Russian Revolution. The attraction between them is immediate and electric. Coco offers Stravinsky the use of her villa in Garches so that he will be able to work, and he moves in straight away, with his children and consumptive wife. And so a passionate, intense love affair between two creative giants begins.

Also Known As:
Chanel & Stavinsky, l’histoire secrete
Chanel & Stavinsky: The Secret Story
Chanel and Stavinsky: The Secret Story
Coco & Igor
Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky
Coco Chanel and Igor Stravinsky
Coco Et Igor
Coco and Igor
Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: Focuses on the love affair between pioneering French fashion designer Coco Chanel and avant-garde Russian composer Igor Stravinsky.
Genres: Art/Foreign, Romance, Adaptation and Biopic
Running Time: 1 hr. 58 min.
Release Date: June 11th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for some strong sexuality and nudity.
Distributors:
Sony Pictures Classics
Production Co.:
Eurowide Film Production
Financiers:
Cinemage, Wild Bunch, TPS Star, Studio Canal, Hexagon Pictures
Produced in: France

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COCO CHANEL AND IGOR STRAVINSKY is a lush yet curiously lifeless retelling of the affair between the eponymous duo. Each was the driving force behind a redefinition of art in the 20th century, she fashion, he music. Each was unswerving in following a inner muse that led them to unexplored country. The film about the two of them colliding in a bonfire of passion should explode off the screen. It doesnt. It is, however, art directed within a millimeter of its cinematic life, which is something, but even with the voyeuristic detailing of Chanels archly decorated home and even more archly gruff management style in her atelier, gives the whole the air of a carefully arranged museum piece preserved under glass in a vacuum.

It begins promisingly enough with the riot caused by the first performance of Stravinskys The Rite of Spring in 1913, the which is presented in snippets with all its primal force and oddity intact. The Parisian crowd, foolishly expecting something more traditional from The Ballet Russe and its choreographer, Nijinksi, erupts in outrage. The police are called. The performance is ended. Stravinsky (Mads Mikelsson) is undone. The effect of art on its viewers, its ability to evoke such strong emotion even in even such a stuffy crowd of elite dilettantes is a potent one and a paean to what great art should do. The image of Nijinski, hollow-eyed at the reception his work received, a stark insight into the artists soul. Its the last time anything resembling such force will manifest itself.

Seven years later, Chanel (Anna Mouglalis), who was in attendance at that fateful performance, is formally introduced to Stravinsky at a party. Hes an impoverished refugee from the Russian revolution. Shes in mourning for the love of her life. Being Chanel, though, she is in mourning by always wearing the chicest of little black dresses. Being Chanel, a collector of people and impressed with his work besides, she offers him the use of her country house to compose. He accepts, reluctantly, moving his ailing wife Katia (Yelena Morozova) and their four children from a cramped hotel room to the impressively deco style of the spacious house, done in variations of streamlined black-and-white. He is an intense, methodical man, formally buttoned down in dress, formally buttoned up in personality. She is an independent woman with an appetite for art and for control.

Chanel and Stravinsky begin an affair. Katia puts up with it while continuing to endlessly copy out and correct her husbands scores in her sickbed. Chanel begins to wear white. Stravinsky begins to go about without a tie. His music becomes more daring. Chanel concocts her signature perfume. Katia copies out more of Stravinskys scores and makes him feel guilty by not trying to make him feel guilty.

And that is the level of passion at work. The camera swoops with all the precision and careful calculation of an art deco flourish. Scenes are composed with equal calculation, all form, no feeling, even those detailing the coitus between the lovers. Mikkelssen is an actor who has no trouble implying the depths of seething emotion beneath Stravinskys implacable demeanor. Mouglalis is an actress with fire. Together they are choreographed into mere static figurines.

The affair goes sour. Stravinskys music once pushes even more boundaries of convention. Chanel wears chic black again and pushes the boundaries of fashion, to judge by the turned heads and raised eyebrows and general startled murmurings that greet her when she arrives at the Paris Opera in her latest creation.

COCO CHANEL AND IGOR STRAVINSKY in its own way attempts to push the boundaries of cinema, introducing as it does dashes of surrealism, and that is why it fails. Surrealism, though startling in its time, and compelling when well-executed even today, is a vintage conceit. The result makes these innovators seem as stuffy as those outraged Parisians of 1913.

 

The Mormon Proposition

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8: The Mormon Proposition (2010) Poster

Exposes the Mormon Church’s historic involvement in the promotion and passage of California’s Proposition 8 and the religion’s secretive, decades-long campaign against gay rights. The film takes place in California and Utah as Mormons, following their prophet’s call to action, wage spiritual warfare with money and misinformation against gay citizens, doing everything they can to deny them of marriage and the rights that come with it.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Logline: An examination of the relationship between the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in the promotion and passage of California’s Proposition 8 denying marriage rights for Gay and Lesbian couples.
Genres: Documentary
Running Time: 1 hr. 20 min.
Release Date: June 18th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Distributors:
Red Flag Releasing
Production Co.:
David v. Goliath Films
Produced in: United States

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Winters Bone

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Winter's Bone (2010) Poster

17 year-old Ree Dolly sets out to track down her father, who put their house up for his bail bond and then disappeared. If she fails, Ree and her family will be turned out into the Ozark woods. Challenging her outlaw kin’s code of silence and risking her life, Ree hacks through the lies, evasions and threats offered up by her relatives and begins to piece together the truth.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Drama
Running Time: 1 hr. 40 min.
Release Date: June 11th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: R for drug material, language and violent content.
Distributors:
Roadside Attractions
Production Co.:
Anonymous Content
Filming Locations:
Ozarks, Missouri, USA
Produced in: United States

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Reviews for June 11th, 2010




The A-Team

Directed by Joe Carnahan.




Based on the television series by Frank Lupo and Stephen J. Cannell. Hannibal (Liam Neeson) leads a team of Special Forces, namely, B.A. Bacarus (Quinton Rampage Jackson), Murdock (Sharlto Copley), and Face (Bradley Cooper). General Morrison (Gerald McRaney) sends them on a secret mission to Baghdad to retrieve counterfeit money plates. A CIA agent, Lynch (Patrick Wilson) assists them during their mission which, eventually, lands them in prison because theyre framed for a murder when the mission doesnt go precisely as planned. Hannibal concocts a clever plan to get him and the rest of the team to escape from prison so that they may hunt down the diabolical person who framed them. Jessica Biel plays a sexy military officer who also happens to be Faces former girlfriend and still remains attracted to him even though its her job to track him down and apprehend him. The screenplay co-written by Brian Bloom, Skip Woods and director Joe Carnahan chucks logic and reason out the window in favor of mindless and thrilling action sequences. One of the most exhilarating action scenes here takes place in the air as Murdock pilots the team in a fighter jet as another fighter jet chases and fires at them. At times, the dialogue is quite snappy, for instance, in the way that Hannibal lets the soldiers on a grounded military aircraft that theyre about to steal the aircraft or when Hannibal quotes Gandhi. Sharlto Copley, whom you might recognize from District 9, shows off his great comedic timing here, although, in truth, each member of the team is amusing to watch. The Losers treaded similar ground back in April, but The A-Team has zanier characters, less preposterous scenes, more wittiness and excitement without any dull moments. The terrific cast certainly helps to keep you entertained and hungry to watch the team devise more clever and fun plans in further missions once this one comes to an end. At a running time of just under 2 hours, The A-Team is a mindlessly entertaining blockbuster brimming with thrilling action sequences and delightfully zany characters that never take themselves too seriously.
Number of times I checked my watch: 4
Released by Twentieth Century Fox.
Opens nationwide.



Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky

Directed by Jan Kounen.




In English, French and Russian with subtitles.

*Full review coming soon*

Number of times I checked my watch: 4
Released by Sony Pictures Classics.
Opens at the Angelika Film Center and Paris Theatre.



Ganster’s Paradise: Jerusalema

Directed by Ralph Ziman.




In English and Afrikaans with subtitles.
*Full review coming soon*

Number of times I checked my watch: 1
Released by Anchor Bay Films.
Opens at the Village East Cinema.



Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work

Directed by Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg.




This wildly entertaining, hilarious and surprisingly moving documentary focuses on the life and work of 76-year-old comedian and television personality Joan Rivers. On stage while shes performing her stand-up comedy routines she projects fearlessness, charisma, energy and plenty of pizzazz. Shes relentlessly fierce and irreverent when it comes to her sense of humor which often results in uproarious laughter from her open-minded audiences. If youre familiar with her work, youll already know that she started out as a thespian in the play Seawood before performing in comedy clubs during a time when female comedians werent so vulgar and sexually explicit in their comedy routines. In many ways, Rivers broke through that barrier and paved the way for many other brave female comedians nowadays, such as Kathy Griffin who considers Joan to be her inspiration. River gained a lot of fame through her appearances on The Tonight Show hosted by Johnny Carson, but their friendship took a nosedive when she accepted to host a rival show, The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers. Soon after, her business partner and husband, Edgar Rosenberg, committed suicide, yet she continued to make her fans laugh as she remained a television personality. Co-directors Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg do an impeccable job of providing you with background information about Joan Rivers uphill battles as a comedian as well as shedding light on what she has learned from all of her struggles. Sociologist Erving Goffman once noted that everyone has a frontstage life and a backstage life. Stern and Sunderberg gives a rare glimpse of what Rivers is truly life backstage behind that obstructing curtain. Backstage, Rivers maintains her razor sharp humor, boldness and panache, but, most importantly, she comes across as an honest, intelligent, self-aware and sensitive human being. She candidly admits that no one has ever called her beautiful and that she knows that without continuing to work so diligently every day from morning ’til night, she can easily become unemployed which is her greatest fear. If youve never seen Rivers without her makeup on, well, nows your chance. At a running time of only 1 hour and 24 minutes, Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work manages to be a gut-bustingly funny, endearing and unflinchingly honest documentary that finds just the right balance between entertaining the audience and provoking them intellectually as well as emotionally. Joan Rivers perseverance, audacity and sheer brilliance is an inspiration for everyone.
Number of times I checked my watch: 0
Released by IFC Films.
Opens at the IFC Center and Lincoln Plaza Cinemas.



The Karate Kid

Directed by Harald Zwart.





12-year-old Dre Parker (Jaden Smith) must move with his mother, Sherry (Taraji P. Henson), from Detroit all the way to Beijing, China when she accepts a job transfer. A large part of his struggles to assimilate to a new environment and culture includes facing a group of tough bullies at school who beat him up with their kung fu skills. He befriends a young Chinese girl, Meiying (Wenwen Han), which angers one of the bullies, Cheng (Zhenwei Wang), whenever theyre together. Will Dre find a way to defend himself against those bullies and win over Cheng? His chances to accomplish that increase when he meets Mr. Han (Jackie Chan), his apart buildings maintenance man who turns out to be a kung fu artist. Mr. Han persuades him to compete in an open kung fu tournament where he would face the bullies each of whom train in a nearby martial arts academy. He trains him in peculiar ways such as by having him hanging up his coat, throwing it on the ground, picking it up, putting it on over and over. Meiying promises Dre that she will comes to watch his tournament while he promises her to attend her concert where she hopes to be selected to join the Beijing Music Academy. Not surprisingly, Mr. Han comes to Dres aid when hes once again attacked by the school bullies. The screenplay by Christopher Murphey spends too much time leading up to the much-awaited tournament and making sure that you really end up hating Dres bullies. Youll find so many tangential storylines crammed in such a contrived way that it distracts from the overall flow of the film. For example, the romance between Dre and Meiying gets threatened when her father forbids her to see him anymore. Then theres the backstory of Mr.Hans emotional burdens, and the relationship between Dre and his mother who has no appreciation for the art of kung fu. Jaden Smith gives a charming, heartfelt performance that will win you over and make you realize his potential to become a huge star. It’s equally engaging to watch Mr. Han train and interact with Dre, especially when he trains him right on the Great Wall of China. The tournament itself, though, seems to last for an eternity with round after round and, just when you think the movies finally over, theres yet another few mind-numbing rounds of kung fu. At a running time of 2 hour and 20 minutes, The Karate Kid overstays its welcome, lacks surprises and feels intermittently captivating thanks to Jaden Smiths charming, heartfelt and star-making performance.
Number of times I checked my watch: 4
Released by Columbia Pictures.
Opens nationwide.



The Lottery

Directed by Madeleine Sackler.




This important and provocative documentary follows four families as they enter their kids into the admission process for the Harlem Success Academy, a prestigious private charter school that not need to adhere to union rules and regulations. Each year, the admission is open to any families who want to send their kid to that charter school which would provide them with a better education than public schools offer. A lottery system must take place because demand exceeds supply, so, according to the law, the charter school must randomly select the students. Only 16% of total number of applicants get selected which means that a whopping 84% of them lose the lottery to the game of chance. Their son or daughter might be very smart, but, when it comes down to it, the enrolment in the Harlem Success Academy all comes down to pure luck. Director Madeleine Sackler chooses to document families of four children, Ameenah, Christian, Greg Jr. and Eric Jr., from Harlem and the Bronx, as they struggle through the admissions process which proves to be filled with tension up until the very end where they join other families in an auditorium while waiting and hoping for their childs name to be called. The charter schools founder and CEO, Eva Moskowitz, along with Joel Klein Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education, want to get rid of a Harlem public school and replace it with a charter school much to the dismay of the union leaders, one of whom, during a public hearing, dares to disbelieve Moskowitz when she says she lives and even grew up in Harlem. Interviews with politicians (i.e. with the mayor of Newark), principals and teachers from the charter school as well as from public schools, all help to shed further light on the multifaceted issue of whether charter schools are truly beneficial and necessary. Whats missing, though, is more interviews with those who are against charter schools and a thorough assessment of all of the interviews, testimonies, fact and figures which would have offer practical solutions to the escalating tensions between public and charter schools. At least The Lottery, at a running time of 1 hour and 21 minutes, manages to be an eye-opening, provocative and heartfelt documentary that will inspire you to debate and discuss the issue of charter schools openly and intelligently.
Number of times I checked my watch: 1
Released by Variance Films.
Opens at Big Cinemas Manhattan.



Winter’s Bone

Directed by Debra Granik.





Based on the novel by Daniel Woodrell. 17-year-old Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence) lives with her near-catatonic mother and younger siblings, Ashlee (Ashlee Thompson) and Sonny (Isaiah Stone), in small town located in the Ozark Plateau of Missouri. Her father has mysteriously disappeared and misses a court date. A bail bondsman arrives to inform Ree that she has one week to find her father or else she will lose her home because he had put it up for collateral. Ree goes from neighbor to neighbor around the town in hope of finding the whereabouts of her father who may or may not be dead. One of the neighbors, Victoria (Cinnamon Schultz), seems to be withholding some sort of secret when Ree knocks on her door to ask for information about her father. Even her own uncle, Teardrop (John Hawkes), refuses to help her, at least at first. Director/co-writer Debra Granik, who previously wrote/directed Down to the Bone, combines drama, mystery and suspense with mixed results. Given that you never get to actually meet Rees father before he goes missing, its difficult to grasp the bond that he and Ree had or to care about whether he turns up dead or alive. Granik throws you head-first into the life of Ree and, admittedly, it takes a while to feel even slightly immersed in the narrative while getting used to its cold and shady characters. The most interesting character is actually the Ozark setting itself which gives the film a sense of foreboding as if something sinister will happen at any given moment. Strong, well-nuanced performances by everyone, particularly Jennifer Lawrence, helps to keep you marginally engaged. A truly great mystery, though, like Fargo, ought to have intricate details and intelligent surprises that make sense in retrospect while keeping you riveted as you try to put all the pieces together as the events transpire. Winters Bone certainly establishes a relentlessly dark, eerie and even melancholic atmosphere through its setting, pacing and the characters themselves each of whom seems hiding emotional scars that could burst into anger at any moment, especially when it comes to the menacing Teardrop. However, the mystery surrounding the disappearance of Rees father starts out intriguingly, but, as Ree visits her neighbors, asks questions, and gets some kind of trouble which wont be spoiled here, the gradual build-up of suspense fizzles out while some scenes drag until the revealing third act. At a running time of 1 hour and 40 minutes, Winters Bone lacks adequate suspense and intrigue, occasionally drags, and leaves you feeling underwhelmed despite strong, well-nuanced performances and a richly atmospheric setting.
Number of times I checked my watch: 3
Released by Roadside Attractions.
Opens at the Village East Cinema.




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Kings of the Evening

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Homer Hobbs, home after two years in jail, discovers that life on the outside can be crueler than the back-breaking injustice of the chain gang. He returns to a bleak urban town caught in the depths of the Great Depression–no jobs, no prospects, no hope–where he is thrown together with four strangers, each struggling to survive as they scratch and scheme to dig their way out of poverty. Life is grim. But on Sunday nights, in a dingy hall in a forlorn neighborhood, the men of the ghetto piece together the finest attire their meager lives can beg, borrow or steal to compete in an underground contest like no other. The big winner will go home with the five dollar prize. The real prize–far less tangible, yet priceless–is the chance to feel like a king, if just for an evening.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Drama
Production Co.:
Picture Palace Pictures

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There are many reasons a movie takes two years to come forth, then oozes out to a few regional theaters.

The actors might be unknown, too old to be marketable or playing outside their fans’ narrow comfort zones.

Distributors might pass because they have no idea how to target big audiences or pigeonhole the film in a genre.

The picture might be described as “small,” “quiet” or “intimate” – all euphemisms for “guaranteed not to make a splash at the box office.”

Or, of course, it might stink.

Every reason but the last applies to “Kings of the Evening,” which rolls out to certain Southern cities (Charlotte included) today in anticipation of a wider release.

The title refers to a weekly ceremony in an unnamed Southern town in the 1930s. Black men dress up and show their style in a contest that offers many small prizes – a $5 bill, tickets to a play – and the huge one of self-esteem. As its master of ceremonies says, “If a man can stand up to the mirror, he can stand up to life.”

The inhabitants of Gracie Marigold’s boarding house have a hard time standing up to that mirror on most days.

The owner (Lynn Whitfield) is about to give up her independence and join her sister farther west. Homer Hobbs (Tyson Beckford), a former thief who spent two years on a chain gang, has set down the trumpet with which he hoped to make a living.

Benny Potter (Reginald Dorsey) lives high when his dice are hot, but they’re icy. Alcoholic Clarence (Glynn Turman) claims to be waiting for a relief check the government never sends. Though Lucy Waters (Linara Washington) has slowly accumulated $200 in hopes of opening a dress shop, a loan shark (James Russo) insists she owes him the money as part of her ex-husband’s debts.

So there they are: the old (by Hollywood standards) Turman and Whitfield, the unknown Washington and Dorsey, and former male model/action actor Beckford (”Biker Boyz”) demonstrating dry humor and sensitivity. All are as saleable as a Humvee when gas is $5 a gallon.

Yet the movie works. Director Andrew P. Jones, who wrote the script with Robert Page Jones, doesn’t aim for huge emotional climaxes; the characters’ modest dreams have modest fulfillments or (less often) modest letdowns.

The actors strike home quietly in scene after scene. The understated music and cinematography set the mood. Beckford anchors the picture almost effortlessly with his sleepy, ingratiating gentleness, and the exotic planes of his high-cheekboned face give him an air of mystery.

“Kings” also acknowledges one truth most films don’t explore: A lot of Southern racial conflict before the civil rights era was about class, not skin color. Segregation let poor whites feel superior to someone; it made them less likely to realize they had more in common with equally poor blacks than with the country club set, which patronized and had contempt for both colors of the lower class.

Jones makes this point with the same ease as all the others, showing us the beginnings of solidarity among beaten-down seamstresses. Even if Hollywood didn’t care to listen to him, you might.

The Karate Kid

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Summer Movie GuideSee Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan in trailers, clips, photos and more from ‘The Karate Kid’

The Karate Kid (2010) Poster

The Critics:
B-
12 reviews
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B+

725 ratings

12-year-old Dre Parker could’ve been the most popular kid in Detroit, but his mother’s latest career move has landed him in China. Dre immediately falls for his classmate Mei Ying – and the feeling is mutual – but cultural differences make such a friendship impossible. Even worse, Dre’s feelings make an enemy of the class bully, Cheng. In the land of kung fu, Dre knows only a little karate, and Cheng…See Full Description

Genres: Action/Adventure, Remake and Sports
Running Time: 2 hr. 6 min.
Release Date: June 11th, 2010 (wide)
MPAA Rating: PG for bullying, martial arts action violence and some mild language.
Distributors:
Sony Pictures Releasing
Cast and Credits
Starring: Jaden Smith, Jackie Chan, Han Wen Wen, Taraji P. Henson, Yu Rong-Guang
Directed by: Harald Zwart
Produced by: Dany Wolf, Susan Ekins, Han Sanping (II)
See Full Cast and Credits
Critical Consensus
Critics Reviews Average Grade:

B-

Boston Globe, Ty Burr
“Director Harald Zwart has The Pink Panther 2’ to his credit, for which he will never, nor should ever, be forgiven, but he keeps this one moving smoothly, and he uses the Chinese locations well.” more…
B
Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert
“…a lovely and well-made film that stands on its own feet.” more…
A-
Chicago Tribune, Michael Phillips
“I doubt even Smith and Chan believe their film needed to be 140 minutes long…” more…
B-
E! Online, Dezhda Gaubert
“…wobbles, flails, and ultimately stumbles in a futile attempt to top the original.” more…
C
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Love Ranch

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 9:00 am

Love Ranch (2010) Poster

Grace and Charlie Bontempo are a husband/wife team who own and run one of Nevada’s first legalized brothel ranches. Their lives are irrevocably altered when Armando Bruza, a world famous heavy weight boxer from South America, is brought to the Ranch to train as part of Charlie’s ever expanding entrepreneurial empire. Plans quickly go awry when Bruza comes between Grace and Charlie as an unforeseen romantic triangle develops that erupts into uncontrollable passion and murder.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Drama
Running Time: 1 hr. 57 min.
Release Date: June 30th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Distributors:
E1 Entertainment
Production Co.:
Pangea Media Group
Financiers:
Pangea Media Group
Filming Locations:
Albuquerque, New Mexico USA
Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
Produced in: United States

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The Agony and The Ecstasy of Phil Spector

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By Prairie Miller

Whether a work of art should be viewed solely on its own merits or in the context of the artist and his life, has always been a contentious and unresolved talking point. But with Vikram Jayanti’s The Agony And The Ecstasy of Phil Spector, there’s a whole lot of both perspectives, and more.

Nearly replicating the famed creative genius, producer and imprisoned felon’s flamboyant collage memorialized in the annals of song as Spector’s Wall Of Sound, Jayanti mixes metaphors, music and murder trials, while managing a distinct neutrality as to Spector’s actual guilt or innocence. And though human beings rarely designate themselves as villains in their own life story to begin with, the more ethereal primary obsessions of this creatively driven recluse and self-described pariah celebrity, are more the focus of this impressionistic noirish documentary anyway.

Filmed between the elderly Spector’s original 2007 mistrial in the handgun murder of forty year old actress Lana Clarkson at his Alhambra mansion and a second trial when he was convicted and imprisoned on a 19 years to life sentence, the documentary is less about factual challenges than emotions and personality. Which primarily revolves around the logistical choice to allow the film’s real life protagonist unfettered self-expression, while tempered with the agony of the public accusations against him juxtaposed strangely with his personal ecstasy of now legendary musical creations. From rock ‘n roll classics that include the 1965 hit You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’, produced and co-written by Spector and listed by BMI as the song with the most U.S. airplay in the 20th century, to work with the majority of prominent artists back then, and compositions like Let It Be and Imagine for the Beatles.

Sitting beside the white piano where he worked with John Lennon on Imagine, Spector rants against a jury he claims ‘all voted for Bush’ and viewed him as either guilty or insane, while intimating that he can’t get a fair trial because of his outcast status within the music industry. But it’s far more astonishing to learn that his first release, To Know Him Is To Love Him, wasn’t a love song at all, and rather a tribute to his late father who blew his own brains out when Spector was just a boy, a song title taken from the inscription which appears on the elder’s tombstone. And a trauma early in his life which may have inspired not only his often mournful and emotionally needy lyrics, but his reported fixation with guns and lovers, and related abandonment issues. And though asserting a powerful identification with creative genius martyrs in history including Galileo, Bach, Michelangelo and Da Vinci, and more recently Woody Allen, he oddly bypasses mention of the more timely case of Roman Polanski.

And whether sitting in court with extravagantly wigged head bowed like a kid berated for being caught stuffing his hand in a cookie jar, or rambling on back home with wild eyed tales, Spector comes across as an immature child stuck long ago in traumatized arrested development (not to mention deeply retro, frozen in time favored mod attire) who doesn’t seem to understand the consequences of his acts, and at the same time a conversely wrinkled old gnome. Though his facial deterioration (and coverup crazy wigs), is reportedly the result of horrific injuries in a nearly fatal car crash in 1974, which required scores of disfiguring stitches to his head.

The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Phil Spector (a play on words of the Michelangelo book and screen bios), however worshipfully one-sided or on the other hand legally scornful, is without a doubt a musical treasure trove of the withdrawn eccentric’s immense, innovative creative outpouring. And a landmark documentary chronicling the breadth and depth of popular music in the 20th century.

BBC/Arena/ VIXPIX Films

Unrated

4 stars

Prairie Miller is a multimedia journalist online, in print and on radio. Contact her through NewsBlaze.

Wild Grass

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:00 am

Wild Grass (2010) Poster

Retraces the encounter between a dentist and amateur pilot whose bag is snatched and its contents thrown across a car park, and a solitary man with a troubled past who retrieves her wallet. The unlikely chance meeting of the two leads to a certain romantic dithering that unfolds in eight phases, corresponding to the rules of flying, and in particular the safety procedures before take-off.

Also Known As:
L’ incident
Les Herbes Folles
Les herbes folles
Wild Reeds
Genres: Art/Foreign, Drama, Thriller and Adaptation
Running Time: 1 hr. 53 min.
Release Date: June 25th, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: PG for some thematic material, language and brief smoking.
Distributors:
Sony Pictures Classics
Production Co.:
F Comme Film, France 2 Cinéma, Studio Canal, BIM Distribuzione
Financiers:
Studio Canal, TPS Star, Centre National du Cinema, La Region Ile de France, Eurimages, Cinemage
Filming Locations:
France
Produced in: France

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A Lifetime Achievement Award received at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival suggests that the best work from 60 year veteran French director Alain Resnais lies in his illustrious past. Wild Grass (Les Herbes folles), a lively romantic comedy that premiered at the 2009 Cannes Festival before traveling to the Toronto International Film Festival and the New York Film Festival, says otherwise. The story of an unexpected romance between a couple (Resnais regulars Sabine Azéma and André Dussollier) that meet over a lost wallet, Wild Grass is colorful, smart and brought to vivid life via the rich performances. Wild Grass, an Italian-French co-production, comes to U.S. theaters in late June from Sony Pictures Classics, around the same time a long lost behind-the-scenes documentary about Resnais’ 1961 drama Last Year at Marienbad surfaces. While the two films qualify summer 2010 as something of a Resnais celebration, the box office prospects for mature foreign language films remain modest at best, even when involving a legendary master like Resnais.

Georges Palet (André Dussollier) is an elderly husband and father of two whose life changes when he finds a red wallet tossed beneath the wheel of his car. A photo of the wallet’s owner, a single dentist named Marguerite Muir (Sabine Azéma), intrigues Georges so much he quickly decides to meet her. The comedy unfolds as the unlikely romance between Georges and Marguerite takes shape and they discover some things in common.

At first glance, Wild Grass may appear frivolous compared to 1959’s Hiroshima mon amour or landmark documentary, Night and Fog, but Resnais has displayed great variety of storytelling throughout his expansive career and proven over and over again that not all of his films need be as experimental or as serious as Last Year at Marienbad. (Have you watched his fun period musical Not on the Lips?) Based on Christian Gailly’s novel, The Incident, from a faithful screenplay by Laurent Herbiet and Alex Reval, Wild Grass treats its fascinating, complex, adult characters with warmth, respect and also intelligence. Still, there’s no denying the great humor throughout the film.

Resnais continues to work with a regular team of actors and their intimate knowledge of what works best for one another shows throughout the film. André Dussollier puts his magnificent, velvety voice to great use as the somewhat mysterious André. Mathieu Amalric provides some of the film’s funniest scenes as an annoying police officer. The best performance belongs to Sabine Azéma (Resnais’ real-life companion) who brings the lovely Marguerite to life.

Digital photography from cameraman Eric Gautier brings the film a modern look, and production designer Jacques Saulnier makes striking use of bold color in many of the film’s scenes. More importantly, Resnais’ storytelling is in top form. Turning 88 this June, he’s an inspiration to us all.

Aided by critical praise and a small but devoted following of specialty film buffs, Wild Grass will exceed the modest $134,636 of Resnais’ 2007 IFC release Private Fears in Public Places, but will likely fall below the year’s foreign-language leader, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. For Sony Pictures Classics, which releases the film stateside in late June, being in the Resnais business brings plenty of prestige but also plenty of theatrical challenges.

Along with Agnès Varda and Chris Marker, Resnais make up the Left Bank wing of the French New Wave and their place in film history is both central and secure. In fact, it can be argued that Resnais never needed to make another film after Hiroshima mon amour and Last Year at Marienbad, but Wild Grass makes one glad that he remains so prolific.

Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics
Cast: Sabine Azéma, Andre Dussollier, Anne Consigny, Emmanuelle Devos, Mathieu Amalric and Michel Vuillermoz
Director: Alain Resnais
Screenplay: Lauret Herbiet and Alex Reval
Producer: Jean-Louis Livi
Rating: PG for some thematic material, language and brief smoking.
Running time: 104 min.
Release date: June 25 NY/LA

 

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