As the month of July winds down, the hits just keep coming over on Netflix, and this week we’ve got five flicks worth checking out, all of which have some knockout nudity! Hit the jump for more pics and info…
Beaming into theaters, Alice Eve co-stars in Star Trek Into Darkness (2013), but the most she shows is a shot of her skivvies. I think I feel the Vulcan nerve pinch in my pants! The Sundance shocker Black Rock (2012) is giving a full frontal peek at both Katie Aselton and Lake Bell , and the French drama Augustine (2012) has a thorough sexamination of Stephanie Sokolinski ’s funbaguettes and fur. More after the jump!
It’s turning out to be a great year for nudity at Sundance- or as I like to call it, Skindance- this year. First we got nudes of Laura Prepon’s nude debut , and now our Skin Skout has sent us this breaking nudes from Park City: Gentlemen, Lake Bell has officially broken the seal. After finally making her nude debut last year on How to Make It in America , she’s following up with a topless scene in the thriller Black Rock. Lake, Kate Bosworth , and The League ‘s Katie Aselton (who also directed) co-star as old friends forced to run for their lives on a hiking trip. Bosworth keeps her boulders in her bra, but Lake and Katie both bare boobs as they strip out of their wet clothes 52 minutes in, marking Lake’s second career nude scene and Katie’s nude debut . But that’s nothing compared to Helen Hunt , who returns after five years of non-nude fare like Soul Surfer (2011) with a fantastically full-frontal turn as a sex therapist in The Surrogate . We counted four skinstances of Helen’s cunt (a first for the As Good As It Gets star) in the nudity report, along with an impressive nine breast-baring scenes. She’s Mad about Pubes…and so are we! For more breaking nudes from Sundance, check our reviews of festival flicks 28 Hotel Rooms , V/H/S, and Simon Killer right here at MrSkin.com!
It’s turning out to be a great year for nudity at Sundance- or as I like to call it, Skindance- this year. First we got nudes of Laura Prepon’s nude debut , and now our Skin Skout has sent us this breaking nudes from Park City: Gentlemen, Lake Bell has officially broken the seal. After finally making her nude debut last year on How to Make It in America , she’s following up with a topless scene in the thriller Black Rock. Lake, Kate Bosworth , and The League ‘s Katie Aselton (who also directed) co-star as old friends forced to run for their lives on a hiking trip. Bosworth keeps her boulders in her bra, but Lake and Katie both bare boobs as they strip out of their wet clothes 52 minutes in, marking Lake’s second career nude scene and Katie’s nude debut . But that’s nothing compared to Helen Hunt , who returns after five years of non-nude fare like Soul Surfer (2011) with a fantastically full-frontal turn as a sex therapist in The Surrogate . We counted four skinstances of Helen’s cunt (a first for the As Good As It Gets star) in the nudity report, along with an impressive nine breast-baring scenes. She’s Mad about Pubes…and so are we! For more breaking nudes from Sundance, check our reviews of festival flicks 28 Hotel Rooms , V/H/S, and Simon Killer right here at MrSkin.com!
A quick update on the flurry of Sundance deal-making of recent days, with well-received documentaries and less acclaimed but star-driven (read: marketable) narratives sitting pretty with distribution agreements. Will this be, as pundits predicted, a high-volume buying year in Park City? This list will be updated as more films reach distribution deals this week at Sundance, where smaller hits (i.e. Beasts of the Southern Wild ) and high profile pieces (Spike Lee’s Red Hook Summer , which screens tonight) have piqued buyer interest. The documentary field is especially strong so far, with Searching for Sugar Man , The Queen of Versailles , Kirby Dick’s The Invisible War , and West of Memphis having already screened to warm responses, while a host of narratives featuring name actors have also shown promise. Searching for Sugar Man (Sony Classics) – The documentary about 1960s musician Rodriguez played well to critics and was snatched up by SPC for a reported six figures . The Queen of Versailles (Magnolia Pictures) – Another well-received doc, Lauren Greenfield’s examination of Florida real estate mogul David Siegel was picked up by Magnolia on Friday. Black Rock (LD Distribution) – Katie Aselton’s thriller about three female friends (Aselton, Lake Bell, Kate Bosworth) surviving a weekend getaway gone wrong was the first Midnight selection to seal a deal, partnering with newbie venture LD Distribution. The Words (CBS Films) – Bradley Cooper, Zoe Saldana, and Jeremy Irons lead a cast of recognizable stars in this literary drama about a writer (Cooper) who claims credit on someone else’s manuscript and is confronted by its real author, so it’s easy to see why buyers were interested. CBS Films reportedly made the most expensive buy of the fest so far, laying down $2 million for the film. Whether or not that move was smart remains to be seen, as this first review over at The Playlist is less than encouraging. Previously: The five films likeliest to ignite a Sundance 2012 bidding war Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . Get more of Movieline’s Sundance coverage here .
A quick update on the flurry of Sundance deal-making of recent days, with well-received documentaries and less acclaimed but star-driven (read: marketable) narratives sitting pretty with distribution agreements. Will this be, as pundits predicted, a high-volume buying year in Park City? This list will be updated as more films reach distribution deals this week at Sundance, where smaller hits (i.e. Beasts of the Southern Wild ) and high profile pieces (Spike Lee’s Red Hook Summer , which screens tonight) have piqued buyer interest. The documentary field is especially strong so far, with Searching for Sugar Man , The Queen of Versailles , Kirby Dick’s The Invisible War , and West of Memphis having already screened to warm responses, while a host of narratives featuring name actors have also shown promise. Searching for Sugar Man (Sony Classics) – The documentary about 1960s musician Rodriguez played well to critics and was snatched up by SPC for a reported six figures . The Queen of Versailles (Magnolia Pictures) – Another well-received doc, Lauren Greenfield’s examination of Florida real estate mogul David Siegel was picked up by Magnolia on Friday. Black Rock (LD Distribution) – Katie Aselton’s thriller about three female friends (Aselton, Lake Bell, Kate Bosworth) surviving a weekend getaway gone wrong was the first Midnight selection to seal a deal, partnering with newbie venture LD Distribution. The Words (CBS Films) – Bradley Cooper, Zoe Saldana, and Jeremy Irons lead a cast of recognizable stars in this literary drama about a writer (Cooper) who claims credit on someone else’s manuscript and is confronted by its real author, so it’s easy to see why buyers were interested. CBS Films reportedly made the most expensive buy of the fest so far, laying down $2 million for the film. Whether or not that move was smart remains to be seen, as this first review over at The Playlist is less than encouraging. Previously: The five films likeliest to ignite a Sundance 2012 bidding war Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . Get more of Movieline’s Sundance coverage here .
The brilliant haute spy character Modesty Blaise — created by British author Peter O’Donnell in 1963 and kept alive, through 2002, in a series of comic books and novels – has been botched on film so many times that those of us who love her have mostly given up hope. Joseph Losey first missed the target with the 1966 Modesty Blaise ; Scott Spiegel took another wobbly shot with the 2004 direct-to-video My Name Is Modesty: A Modesty Blaise Adventure . But the spirit of Modesty lives, by another name and in a different sort of story, in Stephen Soderbergh’s stylish, quietly exhilarating Haywire , which features mixed martial-arts star Gina Carano as a hit person with a smoldering, deadpan gaze and nutcracker thighs. She also, as it happens, looks killer in a cocktail dress. Carano’s character in Haywire is a shadowy freelance special-ops agent and ex-Marine named Mallory. She has the requisite action-novelist father (played by Bill Paxton), who’s half protective mother-hen, half proud papa. And somehow, as we learn in the early moments of this decidedly nonlinear picture, she has reason to be wary of the behind-the-scenes string-pullers who employ her – they’re played by Ewan McGregor (sporting a silly-wonderful Beaker haircut), Antonio Banderas (in an equally silly mountain-man beard) and Michael Douglas (in his normal Gordon Gekko ’do, which is silly enough by itself). When we first meet Mallory, she’s striding into a sleepy eatery in upstate New York. A gently charismatic maybe-thug, played by Channing Tatum, has followed her there – why? Even after an instance of classic diner violence a la Quentin Tarantino, we still don’t know, but boy, do we want to find out. Later, Mallory will dress as a sultry trophy wife and tryst, in a manner of speaking, in a Dublin hotel room with a suave-as-usual Michael Fassbender. And somewhere in between, she barks orders to Michael Angarano, as a mild-mannered citizen who comes under her spell: “You’re going to fix my arm while I drive, OK, Scott?” He hears and he obeys. It’s hard to say whether Haywire moves fast or at a pace as languorous as a cat’s stretch. It’s probably somewhere in between, and although the story begins somewhere near the end and encompasses about a half-dozen middles, the sequence of the plot details is almost beside the point. The script is by Lem Dobbs, also the writer behind what is, for my money, Soderbergh’s finest picture (and another nonlinear tall tale), The Limey . Haywire doesn’t have that picture’s chilly elegance, but then, it’s not trying for that effect. This is Soderbergh’s version of a ’60s spy caper – even the music, by David Holmes, channels the purring, ocelot sleekness of old Honey West episodes — and it’s driven by a kind of bossy energy, embodied largely by Carano. Her mighty haunches ought to get their own screen credit. Because this is the best kind of action film: One in which we’re actually granted the pleasure of watching bodies move . Haywire is low on gaudy explosions, which have become the ho-hum fallback position of most action movies – as the fireworks have gotten bigger, louder and more elaborate, they’ve come to mean almost nothing. And although there is a car crash of sorts in Haywire , it’s a wincingly amusing one that’s ingenious in its simplicity. When Soderbergh does action, less is more. He’s more interested in watching Carano, and he’s betting we will be, too: Her muscles are obviously mighty, yet they have the softness of feminine curves – Mallory is a mixed-message heroine for sure, which is part of what makes her compelling. (And the guy actors here all deserve credit for so gamely bowing to her mercy.) That Carano does all her own stunts, of course, only adds to the allure. Watching a woman being hurled against a flat-screen TV might not ordinarily be my idea of fun, but it’s clear Carano can take it, and land on her feet – like all of the violence in Haywire, the moment is brutal and laced with grim humor. In advance, I’m dismayed by the suspicion that a lot of people will come out of Haywire thinking Carano “can’t really act,” though her performance is a useful catalyst for thinking about all the qualities of doing and being that acting – whatever the hell it really is – can encompass. The character of Mallory isn’t as starkly and distinctly drawn as she would be if she’d actually been modeled on Modesty Blaise – Mallory’s personality is elusive and indistinct by design, while O’Donnell had very clear ideas about who Modesty was, where she came from, and what her values were. But Carano gives us just enough, I think, without giving the whole game away. Her Mallory, a brunette bombshell, is as cool as an oyster on ice. At one point she receives Ewan McGregor’s character in the apartment she’s recently moved into. The flat is in disarray, and she’s just come out of the shower: He hair is wet, and she’s wearing a kimono robe knotted tightly around her waist, which just makes everything above and below look that much rounder . Mallory is all woman, though she eyes McGregor’s character as if she’s considering eating him for breakfast — and, in fact, a sly bit of dialogue suggests that she already has. Elsewhere in the picture, McGregor warns another man, “You shouldn’t think of her as being a woman. That would be a mistake.” Yes and no. We’re plenty used to seeing ass-kicking heroines in the movies, from Angelina Jolie in Salt to the feisty schoolgirls of Sucker Punch to Kate Beckinsale’s Underworld latex babe. But Carano’s Mallory is something else again: Paradoxically, she’s both more purposeful and more casual than any of those action heroines – she’s never guilty of trying too hard, even when she’s got a man stuck between a rock and a hard place. That she makes it all look so effortless is part of the fun – as long as you’re not unlucky enough to be the guy with his nut in the nutcracker. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Park City was eerily peaceful early this morning with nobody around and last night’s dusting of snow on the ground. Soon enough – by this afternoon, or this evening, or certainly tonight – that will all change as filmmakers, press and industry folks roll in and the dreaded promoters (“leveragers,” Sundance founder Robert Redford called them in his inaugural address today) pimp out this snowy mountain town like a toddler in a tiara. Appropriately, Redford pointed to the current hardships for filmmakers, and the world at large. “Times are hard and grim,” he acknowledged, later offering optimism. “Independent film is healthy. That doesn’t mean it’s easy.” As the Sundance Film Festival grew beyond its humble origins, so too did the hype in and around town. Navigating the festival is an exercise in navigating hype. Pick up a hot tip on a buzz film while shuttling around town; pick up free crap you know you’ll never need from swag marketers hungry for exposure. Either way it’s a circus, and the energy is palpable: No one wants to miss anything, but there’s always something (or many somethings) that you necessarily must. Redford addressing Sundance’s hype problem is nothing new – he’s been battling Sundance’s other rep for years , and with mixed feelings about the exposure swag houses and celebrity sightings and exclusive parties bring. “Success has two sides to it,” he admitted during the opening day press conference. “For example, hype… I’m not going to condone that, and I’m not going to criticize it, because some of that is good for the filmmakers as long as they can keep their head about it.” But really, can you blame those struggling first-time indie filmmakers for stopping off for free snow boots and sunglasses when they haven’t seen, and maybe never will see, a dime for their passion projects? On the other hand, even established filmmakers need hype. Spike Lee and Stephen Frears are both here this year with new films seeking distribution (Lee’s Red Hook Summer and Frears’ Lay the Favorite ). Oscar-winning fest veteran James Marsh ( Man on Wire , Project Nim ) is back, this time with the narrative feature Shadow Dancer , a drama-thriller starring Andrea Riseborough and Clive Owen. They’ll be jockeying for that coveted intangible – buzz – throughout the next ten days, up against a vast variety of films equally desperate, if not more, for the spotlight. So here’s a selection of what’s caught my eye at the outset: The host of films from returning recent Sundance darlings, including Elizabeth Olsen in Liberal Arts , her Martha Marcy May Marlene crew with Simon Killer , Brit Marling in Arbitrage , and John Hawkes in The Surrogate ; the influx of hip-hop related offerings, like the girl MC narrative Filly Brown , Ice-T’s rap documentary Something from Nothing , the short Life and Freaky Times of Uncle Luke – a twist on La Jetee starring Uncle Luke of 2 Live Crew, of course – and LUV , starring rapper-turned-actor Common; docs like Kirby Dick’s The Invisible War and the Peter Jackson-supported West of Memphis ; and genre offerings including the horror anthology V/H/S , Compliance , co-starring Innkeepers standout Pat Healy, Katie Aselton’s Black Rock , and Gareth Evans’ excellent Indonesian martial arts pic The Raid (which I’ve already seen and would gladly see again and can’t recommend highly enough). Check back daily as I file Sundance diaries from here in Park City, where I aim to track the trends and the buzz and yes, the hype. Follow and tweet questions to me at @Movieline and @jenyamato , and help me search for the answers to the biggest questions of Sundance 2012. Like, who’s got a +1 to the Drake show? Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . Get all of Movieline’s Sundance coverage here . [Photo credit: Getty Images]
It’s not going so well for Rob Reiner’s Flipped . The period family drama came out August 6 in limited theaters and was supposed to move into wide release this Friday, but instead of expanding, it will continue to drop theaters after a few weeks of tough box office. Five straight months of inexplicably constant LA Times coverage couldn’t move the needle any? [ THR ]