Tag Archives: red riding hood

REVIEW: Amanda Seyfried Makes One Crazy-Looking — But Sympathetic — Blythe Doll in Gone

In the vigilante fantasy Gone , Amanda Seyfried plays Jill, a young Portland woman who can’t shake the memory of her abduction a year ago. She managed to slip through the guy’s clutches – he’d been holding her at the bottom of a deep pit in a sprawling local park – but the local cops, after finding no evidence of said hole (it’s a very big park), decided she made the whole thing up. Then one night Jill’s sister (Emily Wickersham) goes missing in a similar fashion: When Jill goes to the cops for help, they eye her warily, all except newbie detective Wes Bentley , who purrs at her creepily, in a red-herring sort of way. The thing about Seyfried is that she does look a little – OK, a lot — like a crazy waif, capable of making up any old thing and getting you to believe it by blinking those saucer-sized Blythe-doll eyes. She does a lot of that here, and she’s part of what makes Gone reasonably effective: Seyfried can look fragile, feral or a combination of both. Her skin is so translucent that she looks something like a pond creature, delicate and mysterious but also capable of staying underwater for a long, long time without breathing – in other words, she can surely take care of herself. Which is why you never worry too much about her character in Gone – you know she’ll come out on top, but it’s fun to doubt her here and there along the way. The picture is very simply constructed, using a minimum of tricks as it works its way toward its inevitable conclusion. (The director is Brazilian filmmaker Heitor Dhalia; the script is by Allison Burnett.) Essentially, Jill spends a day following a sequence of clues: She finds a possibly significant hardware-store receipt and treks to the establishment to quiz its super-friendly owner. (You know, the kind of guy who’ll sell you duct tape, a shovel, a flashlight and a mini-saw, chuck it all in a paper sack and say, “You have a great day now!”) En route to her prey, she queries a slacker kid about a mysterious fellow who’s been living in a local divey hotel. The kid warns her that the man in question is kind of shady: “My girlfriend says he has rapey-eyes.” Whatever those are – and it’s all too easy to imagine – you wouldn’t want to meet them in a dark alley, or at the bottom of a deep hole. As vigilante thrillers go, Gone is actually kind of subtle – perhaps too subtle. The movie repeatedly tosses the “Can we believe her or can’t we?” coin to the point where we don’t even have to guess. But ultimately, the plot doesn’t really hinge on who the would-be killer is, or even on the question of whether or not we can believe Jill. The more resonant question is, What happens when authority figures think they don’t have to take a pretty, sweet-looking girl seriously? The creepiest thing in Gone isn’t the inevitable showdown between Jill and her prey; it’s the way the cops stalk her (she’s toting an illegal firearm, which, they’ve decided, makes her Public Enemy #1), talk about her behind her back as if she were just some random loony (she did spend time in a mental hospital), and use the people she trusts to help reel her in. The aura of slow-burning paranoia is the best thing about the picture, though it’s not enough to fully sustain it. In the end, Gone really does have to be about Jill’s being smart enough to outwit her possibly imaginary nemesis – that’s what the audience comes to see, after all. Seyfried, a mini-Valkyrie with flaxen hair, can take care of herself all right. Still, those moments where you think she just might be an attention-seeking hysterical cutie-pie are exactly what gives the movie’s ending its satisfying click. Seyfried has spent too much time lately in vehicles that aren’t worthy of her, Red Riding Hood being the most egregious example. Gone at least takes her seriously – except when, to delicious effect, it doesn’t. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Amanda Seyfried Makes One Crazy-Looking — But Sympathetic — Blythe Doll in Gone

Hereafter Not So Big in Japan

“A film distributor says it has decided to stop showing Clint Eastwood’s tsunami movie Hereafter in Japan following a catastrophic quake. Warner Entertainment Japan Inc. official Satoru Otani says theaters will no longer show the film. He said Monday the terrifying tsunami scenes in the movie were ‘not appropriate’ at this time.” Yeeaahhh , probably not. [ AP via Deadline ]

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Hereafter Not So Big in Japan

Shiloh Fernandez Talks Red Riding Hood, Skateland and Dissing Kristen Stewart

The most striking observation made during a recent chat with Shiloh Fernandez is that the 26-year-old is a gentle and thoughtful soul in person — sincere, open, and regretful of comments he made recently about his run-in with Kristen Stewart years ago when reading for the role of Edward Cullen in Catherine Hardwicke’s Twilight . Fernandez may not have been meant to play the famous sparkling vampire, but he got another shot at working with Hardwicke when she cast him as the village bad boy in Red Riding Hood , the first romantic lead role in his young career to date. (Plus, he’s an avid Movieline reader. So, you know — bonus points!)

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Shiloh Fernandez Talks Red Riding Hood, Skateland and Dissing Kristen Stewart

Weekend Receipts: Battle: Los Angeles Destroys Invasion From Mars

This weekend, aliens attempted to storm your local cineplex and America decided it likes its space invaders to shoot lasers at LA rather than just nab some moms. Battle: Los Angeles took the box office crown this weekend, while the Robert Zemeckis-produced Mars Needs Moms crash-landed at number five. And occupying that squishy middle ground was Red Riding Hood , which had a so-so debut at so-so number three. Your weekend receipts are here.

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Weekend Receipts: Battle: Los Angeles Destroys Invasion From Mars

The 9 Most Scathing Sentences in Roger Ebert’s Review of Battle: Los Angeles

It wasn’t just Red Riding Hood that got dragged over the coals by the critical mass this week — fellow Friday release Battle: Los Angeles is apparently pretty bad, too. As Movieline’s own Michelle Orange wrote , Battle: Los Angeles is such a slave to the shaky cam aesthetic that it may as well have been shot by her iPhone-using mother. Ouch. Though considering the all-time pan Roger Ebert wrote for Battle , perhaps Apple-based cinematography and wooden characters are only the beginning. Ahead, the nine most blistering sentences in Ebert’s half-star review.

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The 9 Most Scathing Sentences in Roger Ebert’s Review of Battle: Los Angeles

Meghan McCain Apparently Not Thrilled With Game Change Casting

Twitter star — and Bristol Palin basher — Meghan McCain has had knives out for the upcoming HBO movie Game Change since it was announced that the Mark Halperin and John Heilemann book was coming to the small screen. “I hope all the leakers that talked to Mark Halperin are pleased — that book is 70 percent fiction,” McCain wrote on Twitter last December. “I am sure the miniseries will come out in time for the next election to make sure everything Obama campaign related looks flawless. It’s like being part of something that never dies.” Now that casting has started up on Game Change in earnest, it appears McCain has some further thoughts on the telefilm.

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Meghan McCain Apparently Not Thrilled With Game Change Casting

Girls & Boys on Film: 9 Hollywood Movies About the Porn Industry

Friday marks the limited release of Electra Luxx , the surprisingly sweet-natured film about the adult entertainment industry . Writer/director Sebastian Gutierrez and real-life girlfriend Carla Gugino (who plays the titular porn legend) are just the latest Hollywood-types to humanize porn stars, and in honor of this momentous occasion, Movieline has compiled some of Tinseltown’s other takes on the adult industry.

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Girls & Boys on Film: 9 Hollywood Movies About the Porn Industry

REVIEW: Curse of the Werewolf Haunts Red Riding Hood — Or Is It Just ‘The Curse’?

An alternate title for Red Riding Hood might have been “Catherine Hardwicke’s Revenge”: This might have been the director’s chance to restake her claim on the territory of steamy teen fairytales, after New Moon, the sequel to Hardwicke’s enormously successful (and, for my money, effective) Twilight , was removed from her plate and given to Chris Weitz. Red Riding Hood certainly reads like a faux Twilight, only this time a werewolf, not a vampire, is the stand-in for the terrifying unknowability of sex. There’s no reason that little tweak shouldn’t work. One set of fangs is as good as another, right?

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REVIEW: Curse of the Werewolf Haunts Red Riding Hood — Or Is It Just ‘The Curse’?

Red Riding Hood Trailer: Who’s Afraid of the Big, Bad Gary Oldman?

If you were hoping to catch a glimpse of Amanda Seyfried smiling in the new trailer for Catherine Hardwicke’s Twilight -esque ode to red capes on white snow…I’m sorry. According to the new Red Riding Hood trailer, these werewolf love affairs really take their toll. But hey, Gary Oldman is leading the witch hunt party of the century and he’s having a hell of a time! Everyone’s invited! Even Julie Christie’s going to show up for a few minutes! Come on down!

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Red Riding Hood Trailer: Who’s Afraid of the Big, Bad Gary Oldman?

Catherine Hardwicke Finally Makes Her Twilight Sequel with Red Riding Hood

What hath Twilight wrought? Oh, right: A bunch of unappealing rip-offs on both the big and small screen. The latest is Red Riding Hood , which combines Hollywood’s current fetish with rebooting children’s stories (in this case, “Little Red Riding Hood”) with the Jacob portion of Twilight . For those who have been wondering what a Catherine Hardwicke-directed New Moon would have looked like, here’s your answer.

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Catherine Hardwicke Finally Makes Her Twilight Sequel with Red Riding Hood