Tag Archives: festival

Sundance ’13 Poster Debut: ‘Halley’ By Sebastian Hofmann

With just one week to go until the 2013 Sundance Film Festival kicks off next Thursday, images are trickling in of the many films to debut. Beginning next week, M.L. will begin publishing short interviews with this year’s Competition and NEXT section filmmakers. But to whet that Sundance whistle, here is a poster debut for Halley , directed by Sebastian Hofmann. [ Related: Sundance Film Festival Unveils Star-Studded Premieres & Documentary Premieres Lineup ] Screening in the festival’s New Frontiers section, insiders noted it plays more like a genre pic, from the producer of Post Tenebras Lux . The film centers on Alberto who is decomposing and can no longer hide it, so he decides to withdraw from the world. Before yielding to his living death, Alberto forms an unusual friendship with Silvia, the manager of the gym where he works as a guard. Sebastian Hofmann’s Director’s statement follows (with Poster Below): Halley is an essay on the anguish experienced when the illusion of control over our bodies disappears. It is a contemporary gothic story that casts a compassionate look at the life of a zombie; a helpless witness to the decomposition of his own body. Alberto’s condition offers a reflection of our mortality and the solitude of decay. Halley seeks to reassert the temporality of our bodies in a culture engaged in its collective denial. By means of fictional infomercials, and the gym culture Alberto lives in, the film will explore how we conceal the frailty of our condition as living beings underneath a pathological idealization of beauty. We will see human beings running, though never escaping, the more disquieting facts of their existence. Halley is the name of the famous comet which orbits the sun every 75 years; the only short-period comet plainly visible from Earth. Records of its existence can be found in Ancient Greek and Chinese writings. Halley has been an enduring witness of our cyclical history. The time that spans each of its visits is the average length of a human life.

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Sundance ’13 Poster Debut: ‘Halley’ By Sebastian Hofmann

WATCH: ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 4: Editing

Thank god for post-production. After the travails of casting , owning the director’s chair and wrangling two unruly actors , the final shot is done. No more sets and arguments, it’s now all about catching Zen in the edit room. Wallace Cotten begins to edit his masterpiece. Cotten recalls his favorite part of the post-production process and that means he doesn’t have to see some particular people again – at least offscreen. Or does he? Much to his dismay, Don and Lizard Man are there to help out with “final cuts” and songs for the soundtrack. Watch it all play out in Episode 4 of Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies presented by Slamdance TV! 
Slamdance alums Kevin M. Brennan and Doug Manley have teamed up with Slamdance TV to present Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies. In the five part web series, Slamdance TV’s very own Ben Hethcoat goes behind the scenes of Wallace Cotton’s latest feature film, COP HEAT starring Brennan and Manley as the titular duo, Don and Lizard Man. COP HEAT “Two hot for the streets. Two hot to handle.” 

Join the festival ‘By Filmmakers, For Filmmakers’ in this Slamdance TV original web series which explores the independent filmmaking process. Slamdance Film Festival takes place January 18-24 in Park City, UT. For more information visit slamdance.com 
Facebook.com/SlamdanceFilmFestival Twitter @Slamdance
 PREVIOUSLY: ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 1: Casting ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 2: Directing ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 3: Acting

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WATCH: ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 4: Editing

Poster Debut: Kaya Scodelario in ‘Emanuel And The Truth About Fishes’

Rising U.K. actress Kaya Scodelario ( Skins , Moon , Wuthering Heights ) stars as a teenager who strikes up a friendship with her mysterious neighbor ( Jessica Biel ) in the drama Emanuel and the Truth About Fishes , which premieres in competition at the Sundance Film Festival . Movieline ‘s got your first look at the poster for the surrealism-tinged thriller featuring Scodelario, who will be one to watch this month in Park City. Scodelario’s been an intriguing new talent since breaking out on the original Skins , the kids-behaving-badly hit U.K. series that inspired Project X -esque mayhem in suburban England and inspired a terrible American knockoff series on MTV. She appeared in Duncan Jones’ Moon and briefly in Clash of the Titans , but earned critical acclaim last year as Catherine in Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights , and for a good while had considerable fan support vying to play the role of Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games which eventually went to Jen Lawrence. Emanuel should help Scodelario bolster her presence stateside (she also appears in the as-yet unreleased in the U.S. drama Now Is Good , AKA The One Where Dakota Fanning Has Cancer And A British Accent ), and it also adds some zest and indie cred to co-star Biel’s filmography following a varied year marked by the indie horror The Tall Man , the sci-fi remake Total Recall , awards hopeful Hitchcock , and the Gerard Butler vehicle Playing For Keeps . Alfred Molina, Frances O’Connor, Jimmi Simpson, and Aneurin Barnard also star in the pic from director Francesca Gregorini, who previously co-wrote and co-directed the girls school drama Tanner Hall . Check out the full hi-res poster debut below and stay tuned for Movieline ‘s coverage of the Sundance Film Festival, held January 17-27. Synopsis: A troubled girl Emanuel (Kaya Scodelario) becomes preoccupied with her mysterious new neighbor (Jessica Biel), who bears a striking resemblance to her dead mother. In offering to baby-sit Linda’s newborn, Emanuel unwittingly enters a fragile, fictional world, of which she becomes the gatekeeper. More info at the Sundance Film Festival website. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Poster Debut: Kaya Scodelario in ‘Emanuel And The Truth About Fishes’

Swirly Matrimony-dom: Star Wars Director George Lucas Engaged To Beautiful Brown Businesswoman Mellody Hobson

Swirl : 1 , Black Men: 0 George Lucas Engaged To Mellody Hobson One of Hollyweird’s biggest power couples is finally getting hitched! Via HuffPo reports: HuffPost Celebrity can report that filmmaker George Lucas and his girlfriend of seven years, businesswoman Mellody Hobson, are engaged. The famed director, 68, and his longtime partner and president of a big-time Chicago-based investment management firm, Ariel Investments LLC, 43, are no strangers to showcasing their relationship in the spotlight. The pair are often spotted hand-in-hand on the red carpet, everywhere from the Cannes Film Festival to Formula One Grand Prix races to the NAACP awards. This will be the second marriage for the “Star Wars” writer-director — he was previously married to Marcia Lucas (1969–1983) — and the first marriage for Hobson, who helms the $3 billion investment firm and is a regular financial contributor to “Good Morning America.” Lucas recently made headlines after donating $4 billion to an education foundation — the amount he received after selling Lucasfilm Ltd. (which Lucas solely owned) to Disney. “For 41 years, the majority of my time and money has been put into the company,” Lucas said of his donation. “As I start a new chapter in my life, it is gratifying that I have the opportunity to devote more time and resources to philanthropy.” George Lucas is a very lucky man. His girl has brains, beauty and a some nice boobies! We ain’t even made at it. Congratulations!!! Hit the flip to check out a gallery of the beautiful power couple next!

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Swirly Matrimony-dom: Star Wars Director George Lucas Engaged To Beautiful Brown Businesswoman Mellody Hobson

WATCH: Ryan Gosling Sheds A Manly Tear In ‘The Place Beyond The Pines’ Trailer

“If you ride like lightning, you’re going to crash like thunder,” sounds like something Dennis Hopper  would have said in the 1970s (and, actually, the 80s, too), but the always-compelling Ben Mendelsohn gets the line in Derek Cianfrance’s The Place Beyond The Pines . Although you only hear Mendelsohn deliver it in voiceover in this trailer for the feature, it’s a warning he delivers to his partner-in-crime motorcycle stuntman-turned-bank robber Ryan Gosling in the film. As you can piece together from the clip below (which comes via Yahoo! ),   Gosling turns outlaw to support the surprise son he finds out he has (thanks to a fling with Eva Mendes’ character) and ends up on a collision course with a cop played by Bradley Cooper. (That tear Baby Goose sheds in the church is over his little boy, who’s played by a kid named Anthony Pizza, believe it or not.)  But don’t be like the guy in Yahoo! comments section who thinks the trailer gives away the whole movie.   The Place Beyond the Pines is way more complex than a heist  flick. As the tag line in the trailer reads: “One moment defines your life. One decision becomes your legacy.” I’m curious to see whether Cianfrance has re-edited the film since I saw it at the Toronto International Film Festival . I thought the way he structured the movie  was daring and inspired, if a bit unwieldy in places, but there was some grumbling among the crowd that the movie’s three interlocking stories didn’t fit together so well. The movie opens theatrically March 20. RELATED:  Ryan Gosling: ‘I’m Not Allowed to Have An Opinion’ About The Media’s Coverage Of My Life The Principals Behind The  Pines : Gosling and Cianfrance On Robbing Banks, Fatherhood, Face Tattoos, And More [ Yahoo! ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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WATCH: Ryan Gosling Sheds A Manly Tear In ‘The Place Beyond The Pines’ Trailer

The World Ends Today − What’s The Last Movie You Watch?

This  end-of-the-Mayan-Calendar crap  is starting to get on our nerves over here at Movieline virtual headquarters, but it did give us an idea for a fun question to put to you, our esteemed readers: If the world was really about to end, what’s the one movie you would choose to see before things went all Michael Bay ? Yeah, I know what you’re thinking: If the world was ending, I would not be watching no movie, unh-unh.  You’d be getting busy or frantically calling your shrink (who’d be frantically calling his shrink) or looting the nearest Best Buy so you could briefly experience the pleasures of the iPhone 5 without having to actually pay for one. But imagine that panic does not ensue and you have the time and desire to see one last movie before everything fades to black. What would it be? I see it as an emotional choice rather than a critical one:  What is the one film that will leave you in the proper frame of mind to say goodbye to it all? I’ll get the party started. I’d have to go with the 1957 noir classic  Sweet Smell of Success ,  starring Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis . To help give you an idea of why this movie means so much to me, let me tell you a very old joke:  An Englishman, a Frenchman and a New Yorker are captured by cannibals. The captives are told they’re going to be killed and eaten and their skins are going to be used to build a canoe. The cannibals are an empathetic and well-equipped group, however, and they allow each of their victims to choose how they’d like to die. The Englishman asks for a gun and shoots himself.  The Frenchman chooses a sword. When it’s the New Yorker’s turn, he asks for a fork. The cannibals think this is odd, but they give him one — at which point he begins stabbing himself all over his body. “So much for your fucking canoe,” the New Yorker says before he dies. That’s Sweet Smell of Success distilled into a sentence. It’s a dark, ugly (in terms of its subject matter) movie that never fails to exhilarate me because it oozes with old-school chutzpah. Curtis plays a sleazy publicist named Sidney Falco who will do just about anything to get into the gossip column of the corrupt and powerful J.J. Hunsecker (Lancaster) and the two characters’ toxic relationship unfolds like a thrilling prize fight in which the punches consist of lethal lines of dialog written by Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman. I could go on about director Alexander Mackendrick’s stark black-and-white depiction of late 1950s New York and Elmer Bernstein’s score which are as ballsy as the screenplay and the performances, but this post is supposed to be about you, not me. My point is, if the end is near, I’m going to watch a movie that puts a little swagger in my step before I get devoured by a fiery serpent or whatever is supposed to happen when the Mayan calendar ends. So now it’s your turn. What movie would you pick?  Leave your choice in the comments section, preferably with the reason(s) for your choice. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.  Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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The World Ends Today − What’s The Last Movie You Watch?

9 Make Oscars’ Best Foreign Language Shortlist

Nine films have advanced to the final round of pre-nominations in the Academy’s Best Foreign Language category. Previously 71 films had qualified for consideration. This weekend’s Sony Classics release, Amour , which won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival is among the films making the shortlist as well as Canada’s War Witch , the Gael Garcia Bernal starter No (Chile), France’s huge global box office hit A Royal Affair , Iceland’s Baltasar Kormákur’s The Deep and lauded Romanian director Cristian Mungiu’s Beyond the Hills . Five nominees will emerge from this list via Academy members who will view the shortlist after the new year and then casting their ballots. The 85th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 10, 2013, at 5:30 a.m. PT, and the Oscar ceremony will take place February 24th. The Best Foreign-Language Oscar Shortlist for the 85th Academy Awards: Austria, “Amour,” Michael Haneke, director 
     Canada, “War Witch,” Kim Nguyen, director    Chile, “No,” Pablo Larraín, director
     Denmark, “A Royal Affair,” Nikolaj Arcel, director
     France, “The Intouchables,” Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano, directors
     Iceland, “The Deep,” Baltasar Kormákur, director
     Norway, “Kon-Tiki,” Joachim Rønning and Espen Sandberg, directors
     Romania, “Beyond the Hills,” Cristian Mungiu, director
     Switzerland, “Sister,” Ursula Meier, director

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9 Make Oscars’ Best Foreign Language Shortlist

The Dark Knight Rises Most Watched YouTube Movie Trailer: Biz Break

The Batman finale was the most watched movie trailer on YouTube, though it actually placed only third overall. Also in Thursday’s round-up of news, the Palm Springs International Film Festival sets its lineup including opening and closing titles; Sundance unveiled its competition juries; and release dates are set for Arnold Schwarzenegger ‘s Ten and Paramount’s Anchorman sequel. The Dark Knight Rises Most Watched Movie Trailer in 2012 The film ranked highest of any film related trailer, placing third followed by Skyfall (4th), Ted (5th) and Hunger Games (6th). The top two spots in the rankings, based on how many times a cop was viewed, how long people stayed on the clip and how many times people searched for a clip instead of clicking on an ad, were two video games: Activision’s Call of Duty Black Ops 2 , Deadline reports . Blancanieves to Open Palm Springs Film Festival The film, directed by Spanish filmmaker Pablo Berger, is a re-imagining of the Snow White fairytale, will open the Palm Springs fest January 3. The festival will close out January 13 with Paul Andrew Williams’ Unfinished Song starring Terence Stamp and Vanessa Redgrave. As usual the festival will host a large number of Best Foreign Language Oscar contenders. In all the event will screen 180 films from 68 countries, Deadline reports . Sundance Film Festival Sets Juries Sundance Institute named its 19 members in five separate juries for the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Former Fox head Tom Rothman, filmmaker Ed Burns, Waiting for Superman filmmaker Davis Guggenheim, 1998 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner Liz Garbus ( The Farm: Angola, USA ), director Brett Morgen ( Crossfire Hurricane ) and Participant Media exec Diane Weyermann. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Action Thriller Ten Set for January 2014 Schwarzenegger stars as the leader of an elite DEA task force that manages to neutralize a cartel safe house, but after the raid, the ten members of the group start getting eliminated. End of Watch ‘s David Ayer will direct, THR reports . Paramount Sets Anchorman Sequel Release Date Anchorman 2 is the follow up to the 2004 cult comedy that grossed $85 million domestically. Paramount will bow the pic December 20, 2013. The feature stars Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, David Koechner and Christina Applegate with Adam McKay directing, THR reports .

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The Dark Knight Rises Most Watched YouTube Movie Trailer: Biz Break

If The World Ends Tomorrow, Darren Aronofsky Plans To Be Where The Action Is

Whether the world ends tomorrow, a new, more enlightened era dawns or absolutely jack shit happens,  it appears that Darren Aronofsky will be immersed in the culture that set off all this wild speculation in the first place.  The filmmaker tweeted Thursday morning that he’s “going to maya country to pay respect to the great ancient astronomers who knew tomorrow would one day come.” going to maya country to pay respect to the great ancient astronomers who knew tomorrow would one day come. hail xibalba & flaming serpent.— darren aronofsky (@DarrenAronofsky) December 20, 2012 If you like to follow alarmist Internet writings, then you know that on Friday, Dec. 21, a 5,125-year cycle of the Mayan calendar will end, which some so-called enlightened types are saying will either result in a spectacular end to life as we know it or a promising new beginning. Hell, I’ll take that second option any day, but  as the New York Times , and other less gullible providers of  information have noted, the doomsday prophecies are a misinterpretation of the Maya Long Count calendar and Dec. 21 is simply the day when one cycle ends and a new one begins. Sure, Aronofsky is probably in an apocalyptic frame of mind these days because he’s shooting Noah with Russell Crowe , but clearly he’s being cheeky here.  Aronofsky is an adventurer at heart — he was at the Marrakech International Film Festival just a few days ago — so I don’t doubt that he’s going to Maya country. Thousands of people are amassing near Mayan ruins in  Merida, Mexico as I write this in hopes of witnessing something big (and smoking some amazing weed). But look at how he signs off: “hail xibalba & flaming serpent.” Xibalba is the name of the underworld in Mayan mythology where the Mayan death gods and their helpers have apparently been twiddling their thumbs and sending messages to Mel Gibson for a very long time.  As the  sage Franklin Harris also reminds me, Xibalba is featured in Aronofsky’s seriously cosmic  The Fountain . Xibalba is the nebula where Tom (Hugh Jackman) takes the tree bearing the essence of his beloved, dying wife Izzi (Rache Weisz). Aronofsky has said that the film “is about coming to terms with your own death.” I’m not sure about the flaming serpent part — maybe a Mayan culture expert can bring me up to speed in the comments section below — but that message reads to me like the smart-ass Mayan geek equivalent of “Live long and prosper.” I’ve asked Aronofsky’s publicist if he’d like to elaborate on his travel plans. I’ll update if I hear back. More on Darren Aronofsky’s Noah: Snakes On A Boat! Noah Cinematographer Libatique Tweets First Look Inside Aronofsky’s Ark [ New York Times , Huffington Post ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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If The World Ends Tomorrow, Darren Aronofsky Plans To Be Where The Action Is

WATCH: ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 1: Casting

With indie cinema season kicking off next month in Park City, Slamdance TV is here to help with a five-part behind-the-scenes primer on making movies (for dummies) by Slamdance vets Kevin M. Brennan ( It’s a Disaster ) and Doug Manley ( Modern Imbecile’s Planet World ). First up this week, exclusively on Movieline : How to cast your low-budget indie feature, survive audition ad-libs, and find “yesterday’s Robert De Niro, today.” Check back next week for the next installment of Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies . We’ll have you on your way to indie movie stardom in no time! Slamdance alums Kevin M. Brennan and Doug Manley have teamed up with Slamdance TV to present Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies. In the five part web series, Slamdance TV’s very own Ben Hethcoat goes behind the scenes of Wallace Cotton’s latest feature film, COP HEAT starring Brennan and Manley as the titular duo, Don and Lizard Man. COP HEAT: “Two hot for the streets. Two hot to handle.” Episode 1: Casting Writer/director Wallace Cotten guides Ben through the rewarding and oftentimes frustrating process of casting a low budget indie feature. Join the festival ‘By Filmmakers, For Filmmakers’ in this Slamdance TV original web series which explores the independent filmmaking process. Slamdance Film Festival takes place January 18-24 in Park City, UT. For more information visit slamdance.com Facebook.com/SlamdanceFilmFestival Twitter @Slamdance Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: ‘Modern Imbecile’s Idiot’s Guide To Making Movies For Dummies,’ Episode 1: Casting