A classic makes its way to Blu-ray via the Criterion Collection, and a trio of lesser known flicks bring some skin to your home theater this week!… read more
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SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: Arabian Nights, Easy Rider, and More 5.3.16
A classic makes its way to Blu-ray via the Criterion Collection, and a trio of lesser known flicks bring some skin to your home theater this week!… read more
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SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: Arabian Nights, Easy Rider, and More 5.3.16
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Tagged celeb, classic-makes, criterion collection, Hollywood, hollywood-star, lesser-known, some-skin, stars, week, your-home
Dazed and Confused often gets lumped in with pot comedies and is celebrated on 4/20, but Richard Linklater’s first studio film transcends mere pot comedy and is still one of the most realistic teen movies ever made. It arrived at a time (1993) when teen movies were out of vogue, and it dared to take a trip down memory lane to a time remembered more with cringes than smiles. It’s arguably the most anti-nostalgia period movie ever, as acknowledged by Linklater himself. Digging in to the Criterion Collection extras (a Blu-ray Criterion release came out in October ), here are some bits of evidence of that, tied to some of the movie’s most memorable lines. “It’s the like every-other-decade theory, you know? The ’50s were boring. The ’60s rocked. The ’70s, oh my God, they obviously suck.” Linklater admits that teenage years are tough no matter what decade you’re in: “I can’t look back too nostalgically at this,” he says. “It’s the only years you have. You’ve got no choice.” But the filmmaker looked around at teen movies that’d been done before and still wanted to tell his teenage rock ’n’ roll movie. Strangely, when asked about the ’70s in behind-the-scenes footage and cast interviews, many of the teenage actors came out of the film shoot having a favorable opinion of the decade. The core group of girls, who bonded offscreen — Parker Posey, Joey Lauren Adams, Christine Harnos and Michelle Burke — actually appreciated the wardrobe of bellbottoms and pants that jokingly required pliers to zip up. For a painful look back at what people wore in the ’70s, see also an audio-free, fairly eerie feature in which the costume supervisor dons many of the characters’ costumes. “Wipe that face off your head, bitch.” The off-the-cuff line is spoken by fascist hazing ringleader Darla, played by Posey, after she tortures the new group of freshman girls on the last day of school. In one of the cast interviews, the actress says that the line was from a play she’d done and was a bad translation from German. She suggested the line to Linklater, and he was all for it. In the DVD commentary and making-of feature, Linklater likened working on his studio debut — for the mini-major Gramercy Pictures — to the initiation rituals that kick the film into gear. (A gleefully vicious Ben Affleck is Posey’s male counterpart.) The director references the bits he had to fight to include, like a simple “good game” hand-slap lineup after Mitch’s baseball game, that didn’t move the film forward but instead captured the dull essence of what life is like for a teenager. Of the pressure from studio executives, Linklater says: “At the end of the day, it was sort of my boxing match that makes or breaks you as a fighter, and I sort of survived it. I don’t know if I won or if there was a draw. I think I won.” That’s what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age. The role of Wooderson, the skeezy older member of the pack, was a breakthrough for Matthew McConaughey, and the story of how he stumbled into the role is recounted in a couple of the film’s special features. Basically, McConaughey happened to be at the same Austin, Texas, hotel bar as casting director Don Phillips. They did some serious male bonding over a four-hour conversation, talking about everything but movies. When they got kicked out of the bar for talking too loudly, the wannabe actor proved himself so awesome — by calling the hotel to stand up for Phillips — that the casting director suggested he would be good for what was then a small part in the film. Of the “high school girls” line, one of Wooderson’s best, Linklater says in the director commentary, “It concerns me I could write such a line.” Of the character himself, the director admits that having the older but not necessarily wiser member of the group of friends was an essential teen memory for him. He cites the years before driving age when kids are at the mercy of anyone willing to chauffeur them around, and how peer pressure came into play in those cases. All I’m saying is that if I ever start referring to these as the best years of my life, remind me to kill myself. Perhaps the reason many critics complain that Dazed and Confused has no plot is that Linklater strove to capture the boredom of being a teenager: driving around, meeting up late at night back at the place you hate, your high school, because there’s nowhere else to go. In several of the extra features, the director recalls that viewers have told him the movie is just like their high school experience. He seems taken aback by it, though, because it does show a specific small-town Texas life that he survived, with characters that were composites of old friends. Those composites are the only cause for nostalgia in the movie. The friends who were a lifeline to sanity during high school are worth remembering. Similarly, in a bittersweet interview, local Austin actress Christin Hinojosa, who played freshman Sabrina, gives a teary interview toward the end of filming in which she talks about the friends she made the summer of the shoot, and how just like at the end of camp, they probably won’t stay in touch.
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On 4/20, Revisit Dazed and Confused With the Criterion Collection
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Tagged 420, ben affleck, bennyhollywood, criterion collection, david mamet, dazed and confused, director, Hollywood, hotel, linklater, mercy, Pictures, teenage
So did all that MPAA ratings nonsense and media outcry pay off for Bully ? What do you think? Lee Hirsch ‘s film achieved the year’s best documentary opening to date with $115,000 on five screens in New York and Los Angeles — a $23,000-per-theater average that amounted to the best of the week by nearly $10,000 over The Hunger Games . But now that The Weinstein Company has to take its unrated baby out of the doc-friendly megamarkets and into the mainstream wilds, a new report suggests that Harvey Weinstein may be preparing to make the cuts required for a PG-13. Surprise! Per the LAT : The new cut of the teen-bullying film, which would minimize in some manner the profanities featured in a controversial schoolbus scene, would hit theaters April 13, when the movie widens to 25 markets, and allow children of any age to see it without adult accompaniment. The film, which centers on five families affected by teen bullying, plays in limited release in Los Angeles and New York this weekend. The Weinstein Co. denied that changes were being made now but allowed for the possibility in the coming weeks. “At this time, there are no plans to change the film for a PG-13,” Stephen Bruno, the company’s head of marketing, told 24 Frames on Friday. “We are in constant conversation with the MPAA and hope a compromise can be reached.” The MPAA has been steadfast that the existing cut wll not be given anything lower than an R. Hmm. Where have we seen this before? Oh, right . Also from the LAT : “I did that on The King’s Speech , and Colin and Tom killed me for it,” Weinstein said, referring to a new PG-13 cut for the 2011 Oscar winner, and to star Colin Firth and director Tom Hooper’s criticism of the move. That was another April gambit, for the record — after the R-rated Speech was already out of theaters with $134 million in its pocket. A little more than two months and $3 million later , kids didn’t want to see that either. Anyway, if you need any more evidence that all this “controversy” is just another hustle, then I can’t help you. [ LAT ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
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Report: After Big Opening, Now We Might Get a PG-13 Bully
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Tagged criterion collection, detected, film, films, harvey-weinstein, Hollywood, Movies, mpaa, pg-13, possibility, profanities, speech, the king's speech, TMZ, weinstein
Did you all have a good April Fool’s Day? Either way, chances are it wasn’t nearly as satisfying as that of the Criterion Collection, which turned its customary April 1 brio on the perfect target: Kindergarten Cop . This July, we’ll be releasing Ivan Reitman’s landmark KINDERGARTEN COP on Blu-ray and DVD: ow.ly/a0AO5 — Criterion Collection (@Criterion) April 1, 2012 Better still: The Kindergarten Cop page at the Criterion site, replete with such special features as “New audio commentary featuring Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, author of It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Can Teach Us ,” Excerpts from the French television program Cinéastes de notre temps : ‘Ivan Reitman'” and this extraordinary cover art: Nicely, nicely done, team. [ Criterion Collection ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
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Criterion’s Kindergarten Cop is Instant April Fool’s Classic
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Tagged criterion, criterion collection, detected, dvd, french, Hollywood, kindergarten cop, rodham-clinton
Every New Wave must go the way of all flesh eventually, and it does seem as though the Iranian New Wave has faded into history. Don’t tell me you missed it. A prickly, pressurized cataract of neo-realist film wisdom that more or less began for most of us in the early ’90s with the festival appearances of Abbas Kiarostami’s Close-Up , the Iranian wave may have been the most significant national breakout movement since Godard bounced his day job. A product if anything was of the country’s Islamic revolution, the films (by Kiarostami, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Bahman Ghobadi, Jafar Panahi, etc.) weren’t stylish tubthumpers but patient and elliptical puzzles, humane but challenging, machine-pressed by the Sharia strictures on society and media into a kind of whole-grain eloquence.
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On DVD: Criterion, Close-Up Brilliantly Take Us Back to the (Iranian) New Wave
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Tagged abbas kiarostami, been-the-most, criterion collection, film-wisdom, films, Hollywood, iranian, jafar panahi, Movies, sharia, the-country, TMZ