Tag Archives: sweet smell of success

Collect the Latest Awards-Season Trading Card Star: David O. Russell

It’s time once again to return to Movieline’s recently undertaken mission to honor this year’s acting and directing nominees with a tribute that will surely outlive any trophy they could ever hope to receive: one of our inaugural Awards-Season Trading Cards. Today, let’s give it up for Best Director nominee David O. Russell!

View post:
Collect the Latest Awards-Season Trading Card Star: David O. Russell

Here’s Your First Look at the Next Next Terrence Malick Movie

What has gotten into Terrence Malick? The Halley’s Comet of directors has already shot his follow-up to The Tree of Life , even though that film isn’t even coming out for another three months. Slow down, Terry! You’re going to throw your back out! The first look at Malick’s other next film — an untitled drama starring Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams and Javier Bardem — has arrived online, and it looks perfectly Malick-y. Click ahead to get lost in wheat field.

Read the original:
Here’s Your First Look at the Next Next Terrence Malick Movie

Drinks! Prizes! Oscars! Join Movieline and 92YTribeca for This Year’s Big Show

If you’re one of the many swell Movieline readers based in or around New York City, you’ve surely already marked down Feb. 27 as the night you’re joining us and the gang at 92YTribeca for our annual Oscar Viewing Party . But just in case you haven’t, I bring you news that will no doubt sweeten the deal. (Hint: Drinks!)

Read more:
Drinks! Prizes! Oscars! Join Movieline and 92YTribeca for This Year’s Big Show

DVD: Sweet Smell of Success Still a Cookie Full of Arsenic

One of the amusing running gags in Barry Levinson’s Diner is a character who wanders through the movie, constantly muttering lines from Sweet Smell of Success , newly available in a snazzy new Blu-Ray edition from The Criterion Collection. And with dialogue this good — courtesy of Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman, based on Lehman’s story — who can blame the guy for wanting to recite these delicious lines over and over? “The cat’s in the bag, and the bag’s in the river,” “You’re dead, son; get yourself buried,” “Your mouth is as big as a basket, and twice as empty,” “In brief, from now on, the best of everything is good enough for me” — this is staccato word jazz of the most delicious variety.

Continued here:
DVD: Sweet Smell of Success Still a Cookie Full of Arsenic