Tag Archives: films

REVIEW: Fassbender and Mortensen Duke It Out, Amicably, in A Dangerous Method

David Cronenberg’s A Dangerous Method is probably the most fun you’ll ever have watching a movie about Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud duking it out — and nurturing a deep-rooted but fragile friendship — in early 20th century Austria and Switzerland. In fact, when I first saw Viggo Mortensen done up in his trim little Freud beard, I nearly laughed out loud — not because he looked ridiculous, but because he looked so right. Mortensen has become one of Cronenberg’s go-to guys in recent years, and you can see why: Even in a period film like this one — a picture that runs the heavy risk of being ponderous and stiff — he can slip himself into the scenery with a “Don’t mind me, here in my Sigmund Freud getup” naturalness.

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REVIEW: Fassbender and Mortensen Duke It Out, Amicably, in A Dangerous Method

REVIEW: Fassbender and Mortensen Duke It Out, Amicably, in A Dangerous Method

David Cronenberg’s A Dangerous Method is probably the most fun you’ll ever have watching a movie about Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud duking it out — and nurturing a deep-rooted but fragile friendship — in early 20th century Austria and Switzerland. In fact, when I first saw Viggo Mortensen done up in his trim little Freud beard, I nearly laughed out loud — not because he looked ridiculous, but because he looked so right. Mortensen has become one of Cronenberg’s go-to guys in recent years, and you can see why: Even in a period film like this one — a picture that runs the heavy risk of being ponderous and stiff — he can slip himself into the scenery with a “Don’t mind me, here in my Sigmund Freud getup” naturalness.

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REVIEW: Fassbender and Mortensen Duke It Out, Amicably, in A Dangerous Method

Twi-Hard Teen Blames DUI On Missing Breaking Dawn

Say you’re a teen Twilight devotee. Ever since last year’s Eclipse , you’ve been counting down the days until Kristen Stewart , Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner reprised their roles for the long-awaited, demon fetus pregnancy installment in Stephenie Meyer’s fluffy vamp franchise. Your boyfriend promised he would take you to Breaking Dawn — Part 1 , only at the last minute he bailed (typical!) and you missed the one thing that was getting you through a particularly rough and angsty period of your adolescence. What do you do?

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Twi-Hard Teen Blames DUI On Missing Breaking Dawn

Rampart Trailer: Is the Woody Harrelson the Most Corrupt Cop You’ve Ever Seen Onscreen?

Just in time for the 2011 awards-release homestretch come the first trailer for Rampart , promising star Woody Harrelson as “the most corrupt cop you’ve ever seen on screen.” Which isn’t a review blurb, mind you, or some praise from Toronto, AFI Fest or elsewhere on the circuit where Oren Moverman’s latest has made its first impressions. That’s just a bold claim by distributor Millennium Entertainment — kind of the Pepsi Challenge of Oscar-chasing bad-cop dramas.

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Rampart Trailer: Is the Woody Harrelson the Most Corrupt Cop You’ve Ever Seen Onscreen?

Boat Captain Says Robert Wagner Responsible for Natalie Wood’s Death

Breaking/shocking update: Not only is the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department re-opening their investigation of Hollywood icon Natalie Wood’s 1981 death, but the boat captain in charge the night she drowned now says that Wood’s husband, Robert Wagner, was to blame.

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Boat Captain Says Robert Wagner Responsible for Natalie Wood’s Death

Exclusive: Dominic Cooper Explains How He Pulled Double Duty in The Devil’s Double

Need a break from fluffy features depicting vampire weddings , cross-dressing Adam Sandler and dancing penguins ? Look no further than The Devil’s Double , Lee Tamahori’s biographical drama about sadistic psychopath Uday Hussein (son of Saddam) and his body double, both played by Dominic Cooper. Ahead, the film’s star discusses the difficulty of playing two characters in one fast-paced production.

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Exclusive: Dominic Cooper Explains How He Pulled Double Duty in The Devil’s Double

VIDEO: Cloris Leachman’s Panties Just the Tip of Last Picture Show’s 40th Anniversary Reunion Iceberg

It wasn’t quite a complete reunion for Peter Bogdanovich and the cast of his 1971 breakthrough The Last Picture Show last night at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences; there was no Jeff Bridges or Ellen Burstyn in sight, but plenty of the other main players including Cybill Shepherd, Timothy Bottoms, Cloris Leachman (who gives a funny anecdote about an underwear-related scene), and Eileen Brennan joined Bogdanovich to recount stories from behind the scenes of the adapted Larry McMurtry novel. Yeah, it’d have been nice for The Dude to stop by, but you’ll find yourself transfixed by Brennan very soon anyway. Mrs. Peacock in the flesh, yo. Video (featuring moderator Luke Wilson) after the jump.

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VIDEO: Cloris Leachman’s Panties Just the Tip of Last Picture Show’s 40th Anniversary Reunion Iceberg

9 Milestones in the Evolution of Robin Williams

In this weekend’s Happy Feet Two , Robin Williams voices Ramón, a South American penguin lothario, and Lovelace, a deep-voiced love guru. So how did a self-described quiet child from Chicago transform himself into one of Hollywood’s most energetic Academy Award winners and skilled impressionists, who pulls double duty in Warner Bros.’s latest animated feature?

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9 Milestones in the Evolution of Robin Williams

Exclusive Poster from Edward Burns’s New $9,000 Film Newlyweds

Edward Burns’s newest film Newlyweds closed out the Tribeca Film Festival this year, and the director/writer/star is happy to tell you how he allocated the $9,000 in its budget: “5k for actors, 2k insurance, 2k food and drink. 9k in the can.” That’s according to Burns’s Twitter , which is a pretty fun and inspiring scroll for independent filmmakers. Movieline premieres the new poster for Newlyweds after the jump.

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Exclusive Poster from Edward Burns’s New $9,000 Film Newlyweds

REVIEW: Ellen Barkin Snarls to Life in Ruthless, Unpleasant Another Happy Day

As a general rule in the movies, dysfunction is better offered as a side dish rather than a main course, accenting what’s really a story of grieving and letting go, or coming of age, or self-acceptance. Screaming, crying, acting out and mistreating others are tougher to take when they’re the primary focus instead of symptomatic of something deeper to be excavated and explored.

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REVIEW: Ellen Barkin Snarls to Life in Ruthless, Unpleasant Another Happy Day