Tag Archives: movie-little

High And Low: Yule Have A Blue Christmas With Desplechin & Deneuve, A Shticky One With Ernest

With the post-Thanksgiving and post–Black Friday hangover still lingering, it’s a pretty slow week for new DVD releases. Since we’re entering the Christmas season, however, there’s no better time to find Highs and Lows among holiday films (while also sneakily reminding you of my film guide Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas , which makes a great stocking stuffer). So if you’re feeling worldly, spend Noel with some extremely unhappy French folks. Otherwise, pop some Ro-Tel and Velveeta in the crock pot and enjoy the holiday hi-jinks of America’s favorite rubber-faced redneck. HIGH: A Christmas Tale (The Criterion Collection; DVD/Blu-Ray, $39.95) WHO’S RESPONSIBLE: Written by Arnaud Desplechin and Emmanuel Bourdieu; directed by Desplechin; starring Catherine Deneuve , Mathieu Amalric, Anne Consigny, Melvil Poupaud, Chiara Mastroianni. WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT: Matriarch Junon (Deneuve) needs a bone marrow transplant, and while this is usually a procedure where parents donate to children, Junon figures that she gave her kids life and now it’s time for them to repay the debt. The search for a donor means that black-sheep son Henri (Amalric) is coming home for Christmas for the first time in years, where he clashes with sister Elizabeth (Consigny), who essentially had him banished from the family for his shady financial machinations. WHY IT’S SCHMANCY: The “mommy dies at Christmas” genre is an ever-more-crowded one, but there’s no easy sentimentality from Desplechin. Junon is haughty and prickly — her barbed exchanges with Henri are classic — and this family tapestry is woven with such care and intelligence that you may find your allegiances shifting from viewing to viewing. I also admire a movie that casually drops cultural references to everything from Nietzsche to Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten Commandments . WHY YOU SHOULD BUY IT: This 2008 import (original title: Un conte de Noël ) has become one of my annual screening rituals. It’s funny, moving, thought-provoking and endlessly fascinating. And since this is a Criterion release, there are some great extras, including L’aimee , a short film by Desplechin (in which he and his father go through their old family home) that inspired the feature. LOW: Ernest Saves Christmas (Touchstone Home Entertainment; DVD $9.99) WHO’S RESPONSIBLE: Written by B. Kline and Ed Turner; directed by John Cherry; starring Jim Varney, Douglas Seale, Oliver Clark, Noelle Parker. WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT: Cab driver Ernest P. Worrell (Varney) gets involved when Santa (Seale) travels to Orlando to hand the keys to his workshop over to kids-show host Joe Carruthers (Clark) — who thinks the old man is a lunatic. Besides, Joe’s more concerned about making the leap to the big screen, even though what he thinks is a family film called Santa’s Sleigh winds up being something far darker. Can Ernest and plucky orphan Harmony (Parker) appeal to Joe’s better nature and save the holiday? WHY IT’S FUN: From local TV spots to stardom on the big and small screens, the character of Ernest is something of an acquired taste. But it’s hard not to be won over by Ernest Saves Christmas , which features some of Varney’s most inspired shtick, from destroying the always-unseen Vern’s house to dressing in drag as the mother of Joe’s agent. There are also appearances by legendary comic second bananas Bille Bird and Gailard Sartain. Before you scoff too much, see the movie. WHY YOU SHOULD BUY IT: Hey, Disney! What’s with Ernest Scared Stupid getting a Blu-Ray release and not Ernest Saves Christmas ? Someone at the Mouse House should be getting coal in their stocking for this one. Alonso Duralde has written about film for Salon and MSNBC.com. He also co-hosts the Linoleum Knife podcast and regularly appears on What the Flick?! (The Young Turks Network) .  He is a senior programmer for the Outfest Film Festival in Los Angeles and a pre-screener for the Sundance Film Festival. He also the author of two books: Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas (Limelight Editions) and 101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men  (Advocate Books). Follow Alonso Duralde on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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High And Low: Yule Have A Blue Christmas With Desplechin & Deneuve, A Shticky One With Ernest

Rep: Mr. Spielberg is Not Going to Washington

” Today’s story regarding Nancy Pelosi made a reference to Steven Spielberg that requires a response,” said Hollywood mega-flack Marvin Levy in a statement. “I can say as a long-time spokesman for Steven that he has made it his career to direct actors, not political figures.” Probably a wise move — the guy lost his touch with alien life forms years ago. [ THR ]

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Rep: Mr. Spielberg is Not Going to Washington

12 Films of Christmas: It’s a Wonderful Life

You didn’t honestly think we were going to feature 12 films from Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas without talking about this one, did you? Clarence (Henry Travers), an angel who hasn’t earned his wings, learns all about the life of George Bailey (James Stewart) so that he can help the man on the darkest night of his life. George dreamed of seeing the world, but wound up staying in his small town of Bedford Falls, N.Y., to run his father’s Building and Loan company, lest the city’s crotchety rich man Mr. Potter (Lionel Barrymore) take over everything. George falls in love with Mary (Donna Reed) and raises children with her, and under his direction, the Bailey Building and Loan builds homes for lots of working-class people in town who never thought they could afford one.

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12 Films of Christmas: It’s a Wonderful Life

12 Films of Christmas: It’s a Wonderful Life

You didn’t honestly think we were going to feature 12 films from Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas without talking about this one, did you? Clarence (Henry Travers), an angel who hasn’t earned his wings, learns all about the life of George Bailey (James Stewart) so that he can help the man on the darkest night of his life. George dreamed of seeing the world, but wound up staying in his small town of Bedford Falls, N.Y., to run his father’s Building and Loan company, lest the city’s crotchety rich man Mr. Potter (Lionel Barrymore) take over everything. George falls in love with Mary (Donna Reed) and raises children with her, and under his direction, the Bailey Building and Loan builds homes for lots of working-class people in town who never thought they could afford one.

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12 Films of Christmas: It’s a Wonderful Life

12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

Who says a Christmas movie can’t also be a twisty crime caper? Certainly not this excerpt from Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas : Bank teller Miles (Elliott Gould) realizes that mall Santa Harry (Christopher Plummer) is casing the bank for a robbery, so Miles arranges for Harry to steal what amounts to pocket change from the drawers while Miles stashes the big bucks away for himself, knowing that Harry will be blamed for the missing money. Unfortunately for Miles, Harry knows what he’s up to, and now he’s forcing Miles to hand over the stolen loot. Can Miles outwit this dangerous criminal — as well as his bright and flirtatious co-worker Julie (Susannah York) — and get away with the perfect crime?

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12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

Not You: Mark Wahlberg’s Fake For Your Consideration Ad for The Fighter

Sometimes the Internet is a miserable place, filled with know-it-alls, egomaniacs, ingrates, trolls and all other assorted forms of villainy; other times, it produces this video of Mark Wahlberg in The Fighter saying “not you” to an assorted array of random celebrities and cartoons. Thanks, Internet! You’re good for today. Click ahead to watch. No, not you. Not you either. OK, you can.

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Not You: Mark Wahlberg’s Fake For Your Consideration Ad for The Fighter

12 Films of Christmas: Die Hard

As we make our way toward Christmas Day, we asked Movieline DVD Editor Alonso Duralde to share a dozen of his favorite movies from his new book, Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas (Limelight Editions). We’ll be running his excerpts from the book all the way to December 25. Up first, you’re invited to a holiday party at Nakatomi Plaza.

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12 Films of Christmas: Die Hard

12 Films of Christmas: Die Hard

As we make our way toward Christmas Day, we asked Movieline DVD Editor Alonso Duralde to share a dozen of his favorite movies from his new book, Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas (Limelight Editions). We’ll be running his excerpts from the book all the way to December 25. Up first, you’re invited to a holiday party at Nakatomi Plaza.

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12 Films of Christmas: Die Hard

Terriers Canceled: Was Its Excellence Too Subtle For Today’s TV Viewer?

FX will not be renewing the critically acclaimed (yet woefully undersampled) Terriers for a second season, which means we may never find out which way private-eye pals Hank and Britt turned as the season finale cut to black.

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Terriers Canceled: Was Its Excellence Too Subtle For Today’s TV Viewer?

Tonight in NYC: Join Alonso Duralde For a Rare, Radical Screening of Santa Claus

This is fun: Movieline’s resident DVD guru and holiday-film expert Alonso Duralde has made his way to New York, where tonight he’ll read an excerpt of his new book Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas before presenting a rare screening of Santa Claus — the 1959 Mexican import in which the jolly title character “and his best bud Merlin the Wizard must team up to stop Satan from ruining Christmas.” As if that weren’t enticement enough, the event is free to attend for all good little boys and girls. Find more information here, and enjoy! [ ReRun ]

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Tonight in NYC: Join Alonso Duralde For a Rare, Radical Screening of Santa Claus