James Franco, ‘Pitch Perfect’ cast join Wilson to kick off Movie Awards night in epic musical fashion. By Josh Wigler The cast of “Pitch Perfect” perform at the 2013 MTV Movie Awards Photo: Kevork Djansezian/ Getty Images
A few weeks ago I wrote about the importance of Robert Downey Jr. to the future phases of Marvel’s superhero film rollout. With Tuesday’s release of the limited edition Marvel Cinematic Universe: Phase One – Avengers Assembled Blu-ray box set comes some corroboration, plus a cool scene of Iron Man doing some acrobatic hot-dogging just to put on his mask. It’s the highlight of this brief — and not exactly revelatory — Phase 2 preview clip that comes with the collection . Then again, with the release of Iron Man 3 just a little over a month away, why give away the store? Iron Man Flips Out Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
A few weeks ago I wrote about the importance of Robert Downey Jr. to the future phases of Marvel’s superhero film rollout. With Tuesday’s release of the limited edition Marvel Cinematic Universe: Phase One – Avengers Assembled Blu-ray box set comes some corroboration, plus a cool scene of Iron Man doing some acrobatic hot-dogging just to put on his mask. It’s the highlight of this brief — and not exactly revelatory — Phase 2 preview clip that comes with the collection . Then again, with the release of Iron Man 3 just a little over a month away, why give away the store? Iron Man Flips Out Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
As mystifying as his 2004 sci-fier, Primer , albeit for entirely different reasons, Shane Carruth’s Upstream Color is a stimulating and hypnotic piece of experimental filmmaking. It’s also a poem about pigs, a meditation on orchids, a cerebral-spiritual love story, an intensely elliptical sight-and-sound collage, and perhaps a free-form re-interpretation of Thoreau’s Walden . Surely the most challenging dramatic entry at Sundance this year, this unapologetically avant-garde work regards conventional narrative as if it were a not-especially-interesting alien species; the mainstream will take no notice, but adventurous auds are in for a strange and imaginative trip. Primer fans and hardcore art-film devotees will likely be the sole takers for this long-anticipated sophomore effort, which again finds Carruth taking on writing, directing, acting, producing, scoring, lensing and editing duties. He’s even serving as his own distributor this time, with plans to release the picture in L.A. and Gotham in April, followed by a quick transition to repeat-viewing-friendly smallscreen play. At the center of Upstream Color is a young woman, Kris ( Amy Seimetz ), who finds herself an unwitting participant in some exceedingly bizarre experiments. First a thief (Thiago Martins) attacks her and forces her to ingest a bio-engineered worm that brainwashes her into handing over her savings. When the critter starts to replicate inside her body, in scenes that give the picture a brief horror-movie spin, she’s rescued, after a fashion, by an older gentleman identified in the credits as Sampler (Andrew Sensenig), who subjects her to a bizarre respiratory treatment involving one of his many farm pigs. Left with little to no memory of what has happened, Kris finds herself drawn to a young man ( Carruth ) who seems to have experienced the same ordeal. The two walk and talk, ride the subway, make love and at one point cradle each other in a bathtub. They wander a nondescript-looking city, exchanging dialogue laced with random repetition and impenetrable non sequiturs. Even as their actions and circumstances defy comprehension, a troubling and poignant idea rises to the surface: the universal human compulsion to construct a sense of identity and ascribe meaning to one’s life, to impose order on disorder. The futility of such a thing may well explain the befuddling, pretzel-like contours of the story; even the most attentive viewers may be hard-pressed to comprehend the significance of the women harvesting orchids, or why Sampler walks around using sound-recording equipment. Peculiar as it all may sound in outline, it’s even stranger to experience onscreen, arranged by Carruth in a complex symphonic framework that variously invokes Malick and Lynch in its narrative illogic, tactile lyricism and possible transmigration-of-souls subtext. The picture is so densely edited (by Carruth and Ain’t Them Bodies Saints helmer David Lowery) that no single shot seems to last more than mere seconds, which combines with the shallow-focus compositions to produce an experience of near-continual disorientation. Factor in the almost omnipresent synth score, layered under tinkling piano chords, and the film seems to be attempting to induce a state of synaesthesia. Walden , a frequent reference point here, provides a clue as to what Carruth is up to: In its intense levels of visual-aural stimulation, the film is at once transcendent and meditative, and in some ways a call for the sort of inner detox Thoreau prescribed. And since exalted literary works seem to be on the interpretive agenda, the transference of illness to a herd of pigs calls to mind nothing so much as the gospel accounts of Jesus casting out Legion by the Sea of Galilee. Pretentious or sublime, these ineffable spiritual overtones are finally what make Upstream Color so approachable, for all its mysteries: This is a warmer, less foreboding picture than Primer , not moving in any conventional sense, but suffused with emotion all the same. One can only imagine what directions the actors were given in order to inhabit roles that seem to splinter and reassemble themselves at will, but Seimetz supplies a quietly haunting presence, particularly in the film’s tender closing fade. Follow Movieline on Twitter .
As mystifying as his 2004 sci-fier, Primer , albeit for entirely different reasons, Shane Carruth’s Upstream Color is a stimulating and hypnotic piece of experimental filmmaking. It’s also a poem about pigs, a meditation on orchids, a cerebral-spiritual love story, an intensely elliptical sight-and-sound collage, and perhaps a free-form re-interpretation of Thoreau’s Walden . Surely the most challenging dramatic entry at Sundance this year, this unapologetically avant-garde work regards conventional narrative as if it were a not-especially-interesting alien species; the mainstream will take no notice, but adventurous auds are in for a strange and imaginative trip. Primer fans and hardcore art-film devotees will likely be the sole takers for this long-anticipated sophomore effort, which again finds Carruth taking on writing, directing, acting, producing, scoring, lensing and editing duties. He’s even serving as his own distributor this time, with plans to release the picture in L.A. and Gotham in April, followed by a quick transition to repeat-viewing-friendly smallscreen play. At the center of Upstream Color is a young woman, Kris ( Amy Seimetz ), who finds herself an unwitting participant in some exceedingly bizarre experiments. First a thief (Thiago Martins) attacks her and forces her to ingest a bio-engineered worm that brainwashes her into handing over her savings. When the critter starts to replicate inside her body, in scenes that give the picture a brief horror-movie spin, she’s rescued, after a fashion, by an older gentleman identified in the credits as Sampler (Andrew Sensenig), who subjects her to a bizarre respiratory treatment involving one of his many farm pigs. Left with little to no memory of what has happened, Kris finds herself drawn to a young man ( Carruth ) who seems to have experienced the same ordeal. The two walk and talk, ride the subway, make love and at one point cradle each other in a bathtub. They wander a nondescript-looking city, exchanging dialogue laced with random repetition and impenetrable non sequiturs. Even as their actions and circumstances defy comprehension, a troubling and poignant idea rises to the surface: the universal human compulsion to construct a sense of identity and ascribe meaning to one’s life, to impose order on disorder. The futility of such a thing may well explain the befuddling, pretzel-like contours of the story; even the most attentive viewers may be hard-pressed to comprehend the significance of the women harvesting orchids, or why Sampler walks around using sound-recording equipment. Peculiar as it all may sound in outline, it’s even stranger to experience onscreen, arranged by Carruth in a complex symphonic framework that variously invokes Malick and Lynch in its narrative illogic, tactile lyricism and possible transmigration-of-souls subtext. The picture is so densely edited (by Carruth and Ain’t Them Bodies Saints helmer David Lowery) that no single shot seems to last more than mere seconds, which combines with the shallow-focus compositions to produce an experience of near-continual disorientation. Factor in the almost omnipresent synth score, layered under tinkling piano chords, and the film seems to be attempting to induce a state of synaesthesia. Walden , a frequent reference point here, provides a clue as to what Carruth is up to: In its intense levels of visual-aural stimulation, the film is at once transcendent and meditative, and in some ways a call for the sort of inner detox Thoreau prescribed. And since exalted literary works seem to be on the interpretive agenda, the transference of illness to a herd of pigs calls to mind nothing so much as the gospel accounts of Jesus casting out Legion by the Sea of Galilee. Pretentious or sublime, these ineffable spiritual overtones are finally what make Upstream Color so approachable, for all its mysteries: This is a warmer, less foreboding picture than Primer , not moving in any conventional sense, but suffused with emotion all the same. One can only imagine what directions the actors were given in order to inhabit roles that seem to splinter and reassemble themselves at will, but Seimetz supplies a quietly haunting presence, particularly in the film’s tender closing fade. Follow Movieline on Twitter .
With three laugh-out-loud trailers in circulation, This Is The End is looking like the comedy of the summer. At the very least, it’s going to make the phrase “titty fucking” extremely popular. And if it doesn’t live up to the hype? We’ll always have this latest red band clip, which is such a laugh riot that I’ve taken the opportunity to list the 20 funniest moments, in ascending order. Disagree? Leave your ranking in the comments section. And memo to Mr. Rogen: please find a cameo for Will Ferrell before the movie is released. He and Craig Robinson should have a bat fight . ‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer The 20 Funniest Moments: 20. Paul Rudd getting third billing on IMDb without even even appearing in the trailer. 19. The Beavis & Butthead way James Franco says “Machinima” in the introduction. 18. Emma Watson in extreme looting mode. 17. Craig Robinson expressing a little James Franco envy — “Fuck your house, Franco!” — after a runaway helicopter rotor leaves him with a boo-boo. 16. Mindy Kaling overstating her desire to hook up with the “fucking pale, 110 pounds, hairless” Michael Cera . 15. The freaked-out lady getting crushed by a gigantic vintage air conditioner. 14. Cera shotgunning a massive cloud of cocaine into Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s face and finishing with a Karate Kid move. 13. Jason Segel falling into a sinkhole with his belly hanging out. 12. Rihanna falling into the same sinkhole. 11. Robinson declaring Aziz Ansari unfit to rescue because “you’re already in the [sink]hole.” 10. Jay Baruchel managing to look sleepy even when he’s terrified. 9. Robinson screaming like a little girl (in the last scene). 8. Michael Cera asking “Is it bad?” After being impaled by a lamp post. 7. The debate over who gets to a piece of James Franco’s “special” Milky Way . 6. Rihanna smacking Cera—really hard—after he pinches her ass. 5. Franco’s “You could be a looter. A rapist. A titty fucker” speech. 4. Emma Watson clocking Seth Rogen with an ax handle. 3. Robinson declaring: ” We’re actors. We pretend to be hard, man. We soft as baby shit!” 2. The bald dude offering to “titty fuck” his way to safety 1. Danny McBride : “Hermione just stole all of our shit.” Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
With three laugh-out-loud trailers in circulation, This Is The End is looking like the comedy of the summer. At the very least, it’s going to make the phrase “titty fucking” extremely popular. And if it doesn’t live up to the hype? We’ll always have this latest red band clip, which is such a laugh riot that I’ve taken the opportunity to list the 20 funniest moments, in ascending order. Disagree? Leave your ranking in the comments section. And memo to Mr. Rogen: please find a cameo for Will Ferrell before the movie is released. He and Craig Robinson should have a bat fight . ‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer The 20 Funniest Moments: 20. Paul Rudd getting third billing on IMDb without even even appearing in the trailer. 19. The Beavis & Butthead way James Franco says “Machinima” in the introduction. 18. Emma Watson in extreme looting mode. 17. Craig Robinson expressing a little James Franco envy — “Fuck your house, Franco!” — after a runaway helicopter rotor leaves him with a boo-boo. 16. Mindy Kaling overstating her desire to hook up with the “fucking pale, 110 pounds, hairless” Michael Cera . 15. The freaked-out lady getting crushed by a gigantic vintage air conditioner. 14. Cera shotgunning a massive cloud of cocaine into Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s face and finishing with a Karate Kid move. 13. Jason Segel falling into a sinkhole with his belly hanging out. 12. Rihanna falling into the same sinkhole. 11. Robinson declaring Aziz Ansari unfit to rescue because “you’re already in the [sink]hole.” 10. Jay Baruchel managing to look sleepy even when he’s terrified. 9. Robinson screaming like a little girl (in the last scene). 8. Michael Cera asking “Is it bad?” After being impaled by a lamp post. 7. The debate over who gets to a piece of James Franco’s “special” Milky Way . 6. Rihanna smacking Cera—really hard—after he pinches her ass. 5. Franco’s “You could be a looter. A rapist. A titty fucker” speech. 4. Emma Watson clocking Seth Rogen with an ax handle. 3. Robinson declaring: ” We’re actors. We pretend to be hard, man. We soft as baby shit!” 2. The bald dude offering to “titty fuck” his way to safety 1. Danny McBride : “Hermione just stole all of our shit.” Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
It’s Thursday and Oz The Great and Powerful has topped $300 million worldwide at box office, according to Deadline . So, the Franco File is going to celebrate with a clip of what is arguably the best part of the movie: the black-and-white pre-CGI opening credits sequence. Alas, there’s no footage of our hero, the artist James Franco half-assing it through the Emerald City, as David Edelstein might put it , or yelling “Look at this shit!” over and over at the Alamo Drafthouse. But his name is prominently displayed in old-school fashion right at the beginning of this thing, with lots of hypno-wheels spinning in the background — which is exactly how we think of James. Enjoy. Previously, on The Franco File: WATCH: Look At This S#&t! James Franco Inspires ‘Oz’-‘Spring Breakers’ Mash-Up James Franco Has A Great And Powerful Smile [ Deadline ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
It’s the first day of spring and a perfect time to celebrate young love of the parasitic alien variety. And how do we do that? By giving away a prize pack for Open Road’s adaptation of Twilight creator Stephenie Meyer’s novel, The Host , to one budding poet out there who can capture the spirit of the movie in an original haiku. First, some inspiration: one winner will receive the following bag o’ swag: 1. The Host T-Shirt 2. The Host Buttons 3. Signed Poster 4. A copy of Meyer’s novel 5. Movie Companion with Behind-The-Scene Photos If that’s enough to turn your brown eyes an eerie shade of blue, all you need to do is reside in the United States and submit an original haiku ( using the 5-7-5 format ) inspired by the plot of The Host or an actual parasite. I’m crossing my fingers that we get at least one entry involving bedbugs. Deadline is 6 p.m. Pacific Time on March 28 . A winner will be chosen on March 29, when The Hos t opens in theaters. In the event that you’re going to completely wing it for this contest, some background follows. Good luck. The official synopsis: What if everything you love was taken from you in the blink of an eye? “The Host” is the next epic love story from the creator of the “Twilight Saga,” worldwide bestselling author, Stephenie Meyer. When an unseen enemy threatens mankind by taking over their bodies and erasing their memories, Melanie Stryder ( Saoirse Ronan ) will risk everything to protect the people she cares most about — Jared ( Max Irons ), Ian ( Jake Abel ), her brother Jamie (Chandler Canterbury) and her Uncle Jeb ( William Hurt) , proving that love can conquer all in a dangerous new world. The trailer: Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
Look at this shit! It’s Wednesday afternoon, and time for The Franco File , Movieline’s daily — at least for this week — coverage of James Franco’s genre- and gender-bending multimedia artistry. On Monday, I brought you, “Hangin’With Da Dopeboys, ” the JF-directed video from Florida rapper Dangeruss, who inspired the actor’s Alien character in Spring Breakers . On Tuesday, it was time for another Franco-helmed clip for his band Daddy. And today? Another clip! But this one’s more of a rap video, in which Franco does a turn-off-your-cellphones PSA for the Alamo Drafthouse in Austin, TX that riffs on one of Alien’s Spring Breakers monologues and references key moments from Pulp Fiction and Spider-Man . The video has like three endings, too, which is part of Franco’s I’m-flying-on-instruments genius. Look at this shit! Now, look at this shit: Thighs Wide Shut has put together a most excellent Oz The Great and Powerful meets Spring Breakers mash-up video that will most surely make Franco jealous that he did not think of it first. It’s called Oz Breakers: That was fun, with a capital F, as in…Franco! Can’t wait to see what tomorrow brings. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.