Tag Archives: michael-moore

President, Hollywood Respond to Colorado Multiplex Massacre

This morning’s horrific Colorado multiplex shooting , which left at least 12 attendees of a midnight Dark Knight Rises screening dead, has prompted an ongoing wave of reactions from Hollywood to the White House and beyond. President Barack Obama, who canceled a campaign event scheduled for this evening, issued a statement : “Michelle and I are shocked and saddened by the horrific and tragic shooting in Colorado. Federal and local law enforcement are still responding, and my Administration will do everything that we can to support the people of Aurora in this extraordinarily difficult time. We are committed to bringing whoever was responsible to justice, ensuring the safety of our people, and caring for those who have been wounded. As we do when confronted by moments of darkness and challenge, we must now come together as one American family. All of us must have the people of Aurora in our thoughts and prayers as they confront the loss of family, friends, and neighbors, and we must stand together with them in the challenging hours and days to come.” Also from the campaign trail came comments from presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney, who cited preliminary casualty reports: “Ann and I are deeply saddened by the news of the senseless violence that took the lives of 15 people in Colorado and injured dozens more. We are praying for the families and loved ones of the victims during this time of deep shock and immense grief. We expect that the person responsible for this terrible crime will be quickly brought to justice.” Meanwhile, Warner Bros. called off its Paris premiere and issued its own statement: “Warner Bros. is deeply saddened to learn about this shocking incident. We extend our sincere sympathies to the families and loved ones of the victims at this tragic time.” MPAA chief Chris Dodd spoke out as well: “We share the shock and sadness of everyone in the motion picture community at the news of this terrible event. We extend our prayers and deepest sympathies to the victims, their loved ones and all those affected by this tragedy.” Reactions on Twitter are those of sustained shock and grief, perhaps best characterized by Michael Moore, whose 2002 documentary Bowling For Columbine explored the issue of gun violence in America (particularly in Colorado): Too sad at the moment to comment. — Michael Moore (@MMFlint) July 20, 2012

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President, Hollywood Respond to Colorado Multiplex Massacre

Popeye in 3-D in the Works, Big Easy Becomes First Feature Launched on iTunes: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday morning’s round up of news briefs, Elissa Greer joins FilmDistrict’s exec team, comic book writer Alan Moore is looking to collaborate on film, big-name directors and others come out in defense of Wikileak’s Julian Assange and BAFTA revamps its nomination and voting rules. Elissa Greer Joins FilmDistrict Greer will serve as Senior Vice President of Publicity, overseeing the Company’s domestic theatrical publicity and promotional campaigns. She previously worked at New Line Cinema. Greer’s hire completes the senior executive team working under FilmDistrict’s President of Marketing, Christine Birch. Around the ‘net… Director Takes on 3-D Popeye Hotel Transylvania director Genndy Tartakovsky is set to develop and direct Popeye for Sony Pictures Animation. The character first appeared in 1929 with a long running series of cartoon shorts and Robert Altman’s 1980 version starring Robin Williams, Variety reports . Big Easy Express Becomes First Feature Launched Worldwide on iTunes The documentary which traveled the film festival circuit becomes today the first feature to be distributed via iTunes in 50 countries. Directed by Emmett Malloy, the film follows a train tour by folk bands Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Old Crow Medicine Show, and Britain’’s Mumford & Son, Deadline reports . Alan Moore to Write First Screen Project The comic book creator will collaborate with director Mitch Jenkins on a series of “occult, noir flecked” short films. He recently finished the latest edition of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Century 2009 , The Guardian reports . Michael Moore, Oliver Stone & More Push Ecuador on Assange Asylum Bill Maher and Naomi Wolf asked the South American country to allow Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to have political asylum. Assange, who is Australian, walked into the Ecuadorian embassy in London last week to avoid extradition to Sweden where he would face sex assault charges, THR reports . BAFTA to Change Nomination, Voting Process Rules The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is altering how it will proceed with the 2013 Orange British Film Awards. January 9th will be the nominations, six days ahead of the Oscar nominations, Deadline reports .

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Popeye in 3-D in the Works, Big Easy Becomes First Feature Launched on iTunes: Biz Break

Popeye in 3-D in the Works, Big Easy Becomes First Feature Launched on iTunes: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday morning’s round up of news briefs, Elissa Greer joins FilmDistrict’s exec team, comic book writer Alan Moore is looking to collaborate on film, big-name directors and others come out in defense of Wikileak’s Julian Assange and BAFTA revamps its nomination and voting rules. Elissa Greer Joins FilmDistrict Greer will serve as Senior Vice President of Publicity, overseeing the Company’s domestic theatrical publicity and promotional campaigns. She previously worked at New Line Cinema. Greer’s hire completes the senior executive team working under FilmDistrict’s President of Marketing, Christine Birch. Around the ‘net… Director Takes on 3-D Popeye Hotel Transylvania director Genndy Tartakovsky is set to develop and direct Popeye for Sony Pictures Animation. The character first appeared in 1929 with a long running series of cartoon shorts and Robert Altman’s 1980 version starring Robin Williams, Variety reports . Big Easy Express Becomes First Feature Launched Worldwide on iTunes The documentary which traveled the film festival circuit becomes today the first feature to be distributed via iTunes in 50 countries. Directed by Emmett Malloy, the film follows a train tour by folk bands Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Old Crow Medicine Show, and Britain’’s Mumford & Son, Deadline reports . Alan Moore to Write First Screen Project The comic book creator will collaborate with director Mitch Jenkins on a series of “occult, noir flecked” short films. He recently finished the latest edition of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Century 2009 , The Guardian reports . Michael Moore, Oliver Stone & More Push Ecuador on Assange Asylum Bill Maher and Naomi Wolf asked the South American country to allow Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to have political asylum. Assange, who is Australian, walked into the Ecuadorian embassy in London last week to avoid extradition to Sweden where he would face sex assault charges, THR reports . BAFTA to Change Nomination, Voting Process Rules The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is altering how it will proceed with the 2013 Orange British Film Awards. January 9th will be the nominations, six days ahead of the Oscar nominations, Deadline reports .

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Popeye in 3-D in the Works, Big Easy Becomes First Feature Launched on iTunes: Biz Break

Music-Killing Cable Channel Announces New Award For Best Movie Music

From the people who brought you 16 & Pregnant , Date My Mom , A Shot at Love With Tila Tequila and Jersey Shore where once you found proud, pioneering music videos roaming free on the TV plains: Five new categories for this year’s MTV Movie Awards! Including “Best Music”! This should turn out great . And there’s more . From the official MTV press release just over the transom, which doesn’t even read like English after a while: “The Movie Awards will be a re-imagined celebration of the most popular films and performances from the past year,” said Stephen Friedman, President of MTV. “This year, we’ve overhauled categories and added a Breakthrough Performance award that will be chosen by some of the best directors in the world. We’re also making music a more central experience to the overall show creative, and are thrilled to announce fun. – a band that has already imprinted a new anthem on a generation – as our first musical moment.” Once again, MTV fans will hold the “Power of the Popcorn” awards in their hands. This year’s brand new “Best Music” category will allow fans to vote for a specific movie moment when the perfect song played during the perfect scene. In returning category favorites like “Movie of the Year,” will the final installment of Harry Potter bring home the crown or will the record-shattering The Hunger Games shake things up? Last year, Emma Stone took home the prize for “Best Comedic Performance” but could she receive a nomination for “Best Female Performance” for her role in The Help ? One thing is for certain, it’s Hollywood’s wildest awards ceremony and anything can happen. Categories for the “2012 MTV Movie Awards” include: “Movie of the Year” “Best Female Performance” “Best Male Performance” “Breakthrough Performance” “Best Comedic Performance” “Best Music”* “Best On-Screen Transformation”* “Best Gut-Wrenching Performance”* “Best Kiss” “Best Fight” “Best Cast”* “Best On-Screen Dirt Bag”* * New category The “2012 MTV Movie Awards” nominees will be elected by a special voting Academy, including members of the MTV audience. In addition, the winner of “Breakthrough Performance” will be decided on solely by a special Academy of Directors who will lend their expertise for spotting and developing new talent. What could go wrong, etc. etc. Find out June 3! [ MTV ]

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Music-Killing Cable Channel Announces New Award For Best Movie Music

Michael Moore Reveals George Clooney’s Unlikely Date Movie: Roger & Me

Actor George Clooney once confessed to Oscar-winner Michael Moore that he used the filmmaker’s debut Roger & Me as a dating litmus test. Or so Moore told an audience at the Walter Reade Theater in New York, where the hit 1989 documentary had a special screening Tuesday night. Moore laughed when recalling the story at an event hosted by the Film Society of Lincoln Center, which screened the documentary as part of its lead-up to the 50th anniversary edition of the New York Film Festival in September. The director explained how Clooney shared with him years back that, “I use Roger & Me for dating. By the first or second date, they have to watch [your film]. If they get it, they get a [follow-up] date. If they don’t… they don’t.” Then Moore added rhetorically: “This story will only stay in this room, right?” Moore gave insight and, not surprisingly, his opinion about Roger & Me and how it figures in the present economic times Tuesday night, and didn’t hold back. “We’re in some deep shit,” Moore said about the condition of the country today compared to when he made Roger & Me for $150K back in ’89. “I had hoped that what we have now wouldn’t have happened.” Moore, who sat through the screening with his wife, said that he hadn’t seen the film in years because doing so is personally difficult. He noted today there are only 4,000 GM workers left in Flint, Michigan where Roger is mostly set, compared to 50,000 at the time he made the film. “Five minutes into the film, my wife started crying,” he said. FSLC program director Richard Peña praised Moore — dressed in a brown hoodie and Tribeca Film Festival baseball cap — for ushering in a “golden age” of documentary beginning with Roger & Me which screened at the New York Film Festival in 1989. “I was nobody in the business then,” Moore responded. “I was unemployed at the time. We screened it around the same time as Sex, Lies and Videotape was showing. The Warner Bros. people were in the audience that night and saw it receive a standing ovation and they bought it.” Roger & Me was the first documentary to hit multiplexes, eventually grossing nearly $8 million worldwide. “I never liked documentaries growing up, they felt like medicine,” Moore said. “I wanted this film to be structured in a way that can be enjoyed with popcorn in a theater, but at the same time, making sure all the facts are in fact — true.” Moore added that he takes pride in helping to “kick the door open” for doc filmmakers that have also had success with theatrical releases. But when it comes to making his movies including his blockbuster Fahrenheit 9/11 and Oscar-winner Bowling for Columbine , he said that he finds the root-cause of his films depressing. “I dread making these movies,” he said. “When we solicited stories from people for Sicko , it was very emotional. We couldn’t help crying.” Now, more than two decades after making his debut, Moore gave himself a pat on the back for Roger & Me , noting the film stood above the rest for him personally. “I wouldn’t change a frame of this film,” Moore said. “It’s probably the favorite of all my films. I was learning how to make a film as I was doing it.” Follow Brian Brooks on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter . [Photo: Julie Cunnah/Film Society of Lincoln Center]

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Michael Moore Reveals George Clooney’s Unlikely Date Movie: Roger & Me

5 Reasons Why the Academy’s New Documentary Rules Mean Nothing

The New York Times reported Sunday that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ documentary branch is tweaking its qualification rules once again, allowing only theatrical nonfiction feature films that have been reviewed by the NY or LA Times to be considered for Oscar nominations. Furthermore, voting on nominees will be expanded to the entire 166-member Documentary Branch (as opposed to individual committees), and the Academy as a whole can vote for Best Documentary, regardless of how or where members saw the nominated films. The revisions have prompted more than a little hand-wringing around the doc community — for no especially good reason, alas. Here’s why: 1. Films they’re seeking to block will still get through. In a year when the Doc Branch fielded an unprecedented volume of submissions (thanks entirely to the 2010 rule change that expanded the 2011 awards year to 16 months), the Academy wants to screen out docs conceived and produced primarily for television but which qualify for the Oscars with a one-week theatrical run in Manhattan and Los Angeles County. By requiring a newspaper review, said Academy COO Ric Robertson, the Oscars are likelier to reward “genuine theatrical” documentaries. Which would be fine — if it were true: The same HBO-produced docs that are presently, quietly four-walled at the Coliseum Cinemas in Washington Heights or the Playhouse 7 in Pasadena are just going to do the same old thing in slightly more upmarket venues. 2. The process has always favored bigger films. Michael Moore, who made his name putatively fighting on behalf of the little guy in the face of outsized institutional malevolence, apparently helped engineer the expanded voting-bloc change in what the NYT ‘s Michael Cieply termed an effort to recognize more “popular and culturally significant films.” Ha. It not clear what these films would be except for maybe things like Moore’s own Capitalism: A Love Story and certain high-profile oversights like Werner Herzog’s long-playing 3-D doc Cave of Forgotten Dreams — a theatrical nonfiction treat if ever there were one. But the reality is that despite the annual snub ritual known as the documentary short list , theatrically geared films released by well-known specialty distributors win the majority of Academy attention when it matters — in the nominations — and the lion’s share of Best Documentary Feature wins. Even Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory , arguably this year’s frontrunner and a perfect example of the type of made-for-TV doc the Academy would hope to deflect, is a product of the well-heeled HBO Documentary Films. 3. It’s still all about the awards-season resources. Moore also told Sasha Stone that, in effect, “the new rules effectively protect the smaller fish from being chased out because the big fish have more money to manipulate the broken system.” I’ll believe it when I see it. The new screener permission alone plays right into those larger interests’ hands — or rather, into their campaigners’ hands: Guys like Harvey Weinstein, for example, can now flex their Academy muscle across the entire voting body while independently distributed docs will still only advance as far as their grassroots word-of-mouth (and thus their seasonal Oscar publicist) takes them. Suggesting that a film’s awards cred relies on critical and theatrical integrity is like saying Mitt Romney will win the Republican presidential nomination based on values. Please. 4. The NY and LA Times already review virtually everything — and filmmakers can appeal being omitted. The most vocal opposition to the new rules invokes such films as the current short-lister Semper Fi: Always Faithful , which qualified via the International Documentary Association’s DocuWeek program and has no record of a review in either newspaper. Would it be barred from consideration in future years? Probably not: As Stone also notes, DocuWeek inclusion costs not much less than four-walling a theater and sending an e-mail to a couple editors, and in the off chance that that tack fails, filmmakers and producers can appeal directly to the Documentary Branch for consideration. Which actually might be a disadvantage for the movies, simply because… 5.The Documentary Branch has no taste. Nonfiction greats like Herzog or Steve James or Frederick Wiseman aren’t routinely overlooked because of some qualification quirks or because some TV-oriented doc usurped their spots on the short list. They’re snubbed because year after year, no single Academy voting bloc has proven its intellectual laziness and lack of judgment more assiduously than the Doc Branch. Expanding the actual Documentary Feature Oscar voting across the entire Academy only proves that the form’s practitioners have next to no faith in the branch’s members to either recognize “popular” documentaries (which isn’t even the branch’s job anyway) or defend the short-list selections and eventual nominees it does choose. If they really wanted change, they would just burn the place down, split the insurance money 166 ways, and outsource the Best Documentary voting to the Cinema Eye Honors or another reputable awards body. Until then? The more things change, the more they stay the same. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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5 Reasons Why the Academy’s New Documentary Rules Mean Nothing

Matt Damon in GQ: Handsome as Ever!

Is there anything Matt Damon can’t do? He’s been a breakout young star, a bona fide action hero, an Oscar-winner, a leading man, an activist, a screenwriter, a sitcom revelation and even an Internet meme machine. The star is also the topic of GQ’s new cover story , meaning there’s a terrific Matt Damon cover staring you in the face below. You’re welcome, ladies … and everyone really. Damon, who stars with Scarlett Johansson in We Bought a Zoo , plays a widowed father of two who buys a ramshackle zoo in the Cameron Crowe-directed film. In all, he was in five movies in 2011, and has appeared in more than 35 films since his breakout role as an emaciated addict in 1996’s Courage Under Fire . Off screen, he has thrown his full weight (and his money) behind a charity, Water (dot) org, that seeks to provide sources of clean water to the Third World. He has spoken up about teachers, the middle class, and President Obama. Michael Moore even called on Damon to run for president . Not a bad resume, right?

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Matt Damon in GQ: Handsome as Ever!

Troy Davis’ Last Words: “I Am Innocent” [VIDEO]

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The Associated Press has obtained an audio recording of Troy Davis’ last words before he was put to death on September 21. After a long day of emotional goodbyes, the AP reports that Davis knelt in his prison cell and began to pray 15 minutes before he was scheduled to die. Davis’ execution for the murder of Savannah police officer Mark MacPhail was the center of an international outcry from supporters who said he was the victim of mistaken identity. Prosecutors and MacPhail’s family said they were certain Davis was guilty and that justice was served. Listen to Davis’ last words below: Read more here. AUDIO: Troy Davis’ Final Words: MyFoxATLANTA.com RELATED: Thousands Attend Troy Davis Funeral In Savannah [VIDEO] Michael Moore Calls For Boycott Of Georgia Over Troy Davis Execution Killer Mike Goes In At Troy Davis Rally! [VIDEO] Troy Davis Executed Big Boi & Killer Mike Protest Troy Davis Execution [VIDEO]

Troy Davis’ Last Words: “I Am Innocent” [VIDEO]

Michael Moore Calls For Boycott Of Georgia Over Troy Davis Execution

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Filmmaker Michael Moore is calling for an economic boycott of Georgia over last week’s execution of Troy Anthony Davis. “I encourage everyone I know to never travel to Georgia, never buy anything made in Georgia, [and] to never do business in Georgia,” Moore said on his website this week. The award winning filmmaker and author is even threatening to pull all his books from stores in Georgia. Read more at the AJC.com . RELATED: Killer Mike Goes In At Troy Davis Rally! [VIDEO] Troy Davis Executed Big Boi & Killer Mike Protest Troy Davis Execution [VIDEO] After #TroyDavis, Then What? A Message From Troy Davis

Michael Moore Calls For Boycott Of Georgia Over Troy Davis Execution

Are We Broke Yet?

http://www.youtube.com/v/Tjw2Ls5mZXA

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Author: Veronique de Rugy Talking at a rally in Wisconsin, Michael Moore said that America’s not broke yet. Reality begs to differ, says this video by Reason TV. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Corner Discovery Date : 07/03/2011 21:30 Number of articles : 2

Are We Broke Yet?