Tag Archives: john hurt

Gary Oldman on The Dark Knight Rises and Tinker, Tailor’s Master Spy Smiley: He’s ‘Like Jazz’

At the center of Tomas Alfredson’s marvelously taut espionage thriller Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (based on the John Le Carré novel previously adapted into a celebrated 1979 British miniseries) is an unusually understated turn by Gary Oldman as George Smiley, a recently retired career spy of few words quietly trying to uncover a mole within British intelligence. Oldman acknowledges a departure of sorts from the wild, often manic characters he built much of his career on — Sid Vicious, Count Dracula, Beethoven, DEA agent Stansfield of Leon, to name a few. Some of Oldman’s best-known roles are, as he described to Movieline this week in Los Angeles, more rock ‘n’ roll. “Smiley,” he explained, “is jazz .”

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Gary Oldman on The Dark Knight Rises and Tinker, Tailor’s Master Spy Smiley: He’s ‘Like Jazz’

On the 10th Anniversary of Her Death, Aaliyah’s Very Short Movie Career Remembered

Ten years ago today, when the R&B singer Aaliyah — whose music videos were often just as cinematic as her acting ventures — died in a plane crash, she was a burgeoning film star with a couple of major flicks under her belt and plans to co-star in the Matrix sequels. Let’s take a quick look back at her filmography, reflect on her screen merits, and try to drown out the goth-rock soundtrack to Queen of the Damned .

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On the 10th Anniversary of Her Death, Aaliyah’s Very Short Movie Career Remembered

REVIEW: In Search of Fresh Style, Brighton Rock Loses its Soul

Graham Greene’s 1938 masterpiece Brighton Rock is an enduring curio of fiction: A literary pulp novel ahead of its time, a gangland allegory of sin and the cost of redemption, and perhaps most fascinating, a pre-WWII oracle anticipating the traumatic British century to come. It’s a prism through which all the harrowing perils of class strife, organized crime and romantic love bend and refract into Greene’s glowing white weave of language, which, when projected onto a screen, have yielded both an equally classic 1947 screen adaptation and now Rowan Joffe’s troubled updating.

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REVIEW: In Search of Fresh Style, Brighton Rock Loses its Soul

The Oxford Murders Clip: Elijah Wood is a Baby-Faced Sherlock

In a world where the theatrical distribution window is shrinking, how about a movie that’s out on demand before it gets into theaters? Movieline’s got an exclusive featurette from The Oxford Murders , an Elijah Wood/John Hurt murder mystery that comes out today on VOD, Xbox Live, Playstation, Amazon and Vudu, though it opens in theaters August 6.

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The Oxford Murders Clip: Elijah Wood is a Baby-Faced Sherlock