Tag Archives: title-sequence

The Beatles To Take Another Big Screen Bow

The Beatles will be getting a big screen spotlight all their own with a ‘little help from their friends.’ A new project, The Beatles Live! is in the early stages, which will unearth rare treasures from the days of the fab four. Production company One Voice, One World (OVOW) has been given the go-ahead with the project from The Beatles’ Apple Corps to begin work on The Beatles Live! , The Wrap reports . The aim is a global search for hidden films, sound recordings, stories, photographs and other media artifacts that capture Paul, John, Ringo and George during the seminal band’s concert tours. “The best media and stories that we find will be showcased in a planned feature film about The Beatles’ concert tours. This project provides a one-time opportunity for the fans to collaborate with The Beatles in a planned feature film,” notes the OVOW website . The project solicits fans’ material to be uploaded directly to their website in addition to submitting non-digital media and their stories at the center of Beatlemania. The ultimate goal: to combine footage, images, music, interviews, and stories in a definitive, emotional and visceral feature film about Beatlemania,” OVOW noted. “This cultural phenomenon not only brought the world together through song, but helped usher in what is now recognized as a golden age of contemporary music.” The Rolling Stones currently has a documentary marking their 50 years together. Brett Morgan’s Crossfire Hurricane screened as a gala at the BFI London Film Festival last month. In related Beatles’ news, Sotheby’s auctioned off the original artworks from the group’s Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album for $87,720, Huffington Post reported . [Sources: Huffington Post , The Wrap ]

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The Beatles To Take Another Big Screen Bow

The Beatles To Take Another Big Screen Bow

The Beatles will be getting a big screen spotlight all their own with a ‘little help from their friends.’ A new project, The Beatles Live! is in the early stages, which will unearth rare treasures from the days of the fab four. Production company One Voice, One World (OVOW) has been given the go-ahead with the project from The Beatles’ Apple Corps to begin work on The Beatles Live! , The Wrap reports . The aim is a global search for hidden films, sound recordings, stories, photographs and other media artifacts that capture Paul, John, Ringo and George during the seminal band’s concert tours. “The best media and stories that we find will be showcased in a planned feature film about The Beatles’ concert tours. This project provides a one-time opportunity for the fans to collaborate with The Beatles in a planned feature film,” notes the OVOW website . The project solicits fans’ material to be uploaded directly to their website in addition to submitting non-digital media and their stories at the center of Beatlemania. The ultimate goal: to combine footage, images, music, interviews, and stories in a definitive, emotional and visceral feature film about Beatlemania,” OVOW noted. “This cultural phenomenon not only brought the world together through song, but helped usher in what is now recognized as a golden age of contemporary music.” The Rolling Stones currently has a documentary marking their 50 years together. Brett Morgan’s Crossfire Hurricane screened as a gala at the BFI London Film Festival last month. In related Beatles’ news, Sotheby’s auctioned off the original artworks from the group’s Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album for $87,720, Huffington Post reported . [Sources: Huffington Post , The Wrap ]

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The Beatles To Take Another Big Screen Bow

Carrie Fisher Gives Her Vision For Princess Leia In New ‘Star Wars’

Carrie Fisher , aka Princess Leia, came out from under the heavens giving her hilariously light-hearted thoughts on the future of Star Wars and whatever came of Leia and Han Solo. Episode VII writer-apparent, Michael Arndt may want to take a peek at what Her Celestial Highness has to say about the character she first brought to the Galaxies way back in the late ’70s and a tidbit or two on where to go from here. One thing for sure, given the recent sale of Lucasfilm to that big time studio that asks its fans to Wish Upon a Star, Fisher knows her place. “I’m now a Disney Princess,” she said on CBS’ The Talk to laughter from the show’s hosts and the live audience Wednesday. “She’s never been gone. She’s been with me forever.” Arndt may have other ideas, but Fisher apparently sees Leia as married to you-know-who, but she would not be a domestic sort of spouse. “I like the idea of being Mrs. Solo and we just fought and fought and I killed him,” she joked. And perhaps alluding to a raging controversy today right here back on earth, Fisher offered up: “I probably even had an affair with some General.” Fisher and Luke Skywalker co-star Mark Hamill first learned of creator George Lucas’ intent to continue the Star Wars saga last summer after the celluloid siblings had lunch with him. Said Hamill: “…When he said, ‘We decided we’re going to do Episodes VII, VIII , and IX ,’ I was just gobsmacked. ‘What? Are you nuts?!’ [laughs] I can see both sides of it. Because in a way, there was a beginning, a middle, and an end and we all lived happily ever after and that’s the way it should be…” Fisher did not hint at a return on The Talk , but after giving her two-cents on what might come next, she talked about her earthly mother, Debbie Reynolds, who recently was released from a hospital. “She’s fine,” she said, adding some details about some risqué banter she had with her 80 year-old mother after meeting with a doctor. Check out the clip from the show below: [ Source: TV Guide ]

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Carrie Fisher Gives Her Vision For Princess Leia In New ‘Star Wars’

Bond Designer Danny Kleinman On His ‘Skyfall’ Title Sequence (And How To Craft A Great 007 Opener)

James Bond veteran and BAFTA-nominated director Danny Kleinman has crafted all but one of 007’s title sequences since taking over from Maurice Binder, the creator of Bond’s iconic gun barrel shot, with 1995’s GoldenEye . For Skyfall Kleinman created a moody, inky death dream of a title sequence powered by Adele’s “Skyfall” theme song — a reflection, he explains, of the MI6 agent’s dark emotional state as Bond’s 23rd EON outing unfolds. REVIEW: James Bond Is Reborn In Lavish Skyfall “At the beginning of the film there’s always an amazing action sequence, and this time it ends with Bond being shot. So one of the things I wanted to do was perhaps suggest what might be flashing through Bond’s mind as he thinks he might be dying,” Kleinman explained to Movieline. Kleinman memorably used scorpions to open Die Another Day and turned Casino Royale ‘s literal and figurative gambling theme into a kaleidoscope of deadly hearts, spades, diamonds, and clubs . The key guiding motif for Kleinman’s Skyfall title sequence? Death. “It’s a sequence that starts with Bond underwater and thinking that he’s dying,” Kleinman said. “I took that on as being almost like going into the underworld, feelings of mortality and feelings of, perhaps, regret and nostalgia.” In Skyfall ‘s opening sequence Bond drifts through a watery dreamscape of daggers and guns, encountering faceless, shadowy foes who threaten to overtake him. “One of the lines in the movie is about the intelligence service working in the shadows,” Kleinman said, “and I found that really interesting — the idea of being in the shadows and how shadows suggest different things but can also be intimidating.” “It’s quite a macabre and dark sequence, because I think the film is about Bond coming to terms with things that have happened in the past and with [Judi Dench’s M], it’s a very emotional story — moreso than most Bond films. My intention is to set up an atmosphere that gives you little clues, little hints, but is not too specific.” He paused. “It’s better than watching a bunch of names against black, anyway.” How does one go about creating a fantastic James Bond title sequence? Kleinman takes us through his creative process, the delicate art of teasing Bond’s exploits without giving too much away, how closely he works with Bond theme song creators like Adele — or not, as it happens — and his favorite 007 title sequence of all time.

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Bond Designer Danny Kleinman On His ‘Skyfall’ Title Sequence (And How To Craft A Great 007 Opener)

Bond Designer Danny Kleinman On His ‘Skyfall’ Title Sequence (And How To Craft A Great 007 Opener)

James Bond veteran and BAFTA-nominated director Danny Kleinman has crafted all but one of 007’s title sequences since taking over from Maurice Binder, the creator of Bond’s iconic gun barrel shot, with 1995’s GoldenEye . For Skyfall Kleinman created a moody, inky death dream of a title sequence powered by Adele’s “Skyfall” theme song — a reflection, he explains, of the MI6 agent’s dark emotional state as Bond’s 23rd EON outing unfolds. REVIEW: James Bond Is Reborn In Lavish Skyfall “At the beginning of the film there’s always an amazing action sequence, and this time it ends with Bond being shot. So one of the things I wanted to do was perhaps suggest what might be flashing through Bond’s mind as he thinks he might be dying,” Kleinman explained to Movieline. Kleinman memorably used scorpions to open Die Another Day and turned Casino Royale ‘s literal and figurative gambling theme into a kaleidoscope of deadly hearts, spades, diamonds, and clubs . The key guiding motif for Kleinman’s Skyfall title sequence? Death. “It’s a sequence that starts with Bond underwater and thinking that he’s dying,” Kleinman said. “I took that on as being almost like going into the underworld, feelings of mortality and feelings of, perhaps, regret and nostalgia.” In Skyfall ‘s opening sequence Bond drifts through a watery dreamscape of daggers and guns, encountering faceless, shadowy foes who threaten to overtake him. “One of the lines in the movie is about the intelligence service working in the shadows,” Kleinman said, “and I found that really interesting — the idea of being in the shadows and how shadows suggest different things but can also be intimidating.” “It’s quite a macabre and dark sequence, because I think the film is about Bond coming to terms with things that have happened in the past and with [Judi Dench’s M], it’s a very emotional story — moreso than most Bond films. My intention is to set up an atmosphere that gives you little clues, little hints, but is not too specific.” He paused. “It’s better than watching a bunch of names against black, anyway.” How does one go about creating a fantastic James Bond title sequence? Kleinman takes us through his creative process, the delicate art of teasing Bond’s exploits without giving too much away, how closely he works with Bond theme song creators like Adele — or not, as it happens — and his favorite 007 title sequence of all time.

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Bond Designer Danny Kleinman On His ‘Skyfall’ Title Sequence (And How To Craft A Great 007 Opener)

REVIEW: Machete Cuts Just Deep Enough to Leave a Mark

Within the first five minutes of Robert Rodriguez’s Machete , his cheeky, freewheeling return to exploitation homage, there’s a car crash, a mutilation, a decapitation, a baker’s dozen deaths by blade, a naked lady, and a Steven Seagal sighting. And that’s not even mentioning the clamshell cell tucked up the naked lady’s hoo-ha. Then the film ramps right up to a pseudo-vintage, sprocket-skipping title sequence that promises the most deliciously random cast in recent memory: Jessica Alba AND Lindsay Lohan, Seagal AND Robert De Niro, a Nash Bridges reunion AND a Danny Trejo leading-man coronation. Though the film can’t reasonably maintain this 10-gags-a-minute trajectory, it sure does try. Forget modulation, nuance or storytelling, this is a movie that hits hard from first to last, no questions asked or logic followed.

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REVIEW: Machete Cuts Just Deep Enough to Leave a Mark