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Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

Documentary nominees take the deserved spotlight with 2012 non-fiction nominations unveiled by organizers of the Cinema Eye Honors Friday at AFI Fest with The Imposter and Searching for Sugar Man each receiving five nominations. Six films will compete for Cinema Eye’s Outstanding Achievement in Non-fiction Feature Filmmaking prize. Included are Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi’s 5 Broken Cameras , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s Detropia , Bart Layton’s The Imposter , Matthew Akers’ Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims’ Only the Young and Malik Bendjelloul’s Searching for Sugar Man . The 6th Annual Cinema Eye Honors will take place January 9 as Cinema Eye at New York City’s Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi Produced by Christine Camdessus, Serge Gordey, Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Detropia , directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady Produced by Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady and Craig Atkinson   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton Produced by Dimitri Doganis   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers; Produced by Jeff Dupre and Maro Chermayeff   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims Produced by Derek Waters   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul Produced by Simon Chinn Outstanding Achievement in Direction Detropia , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady   The Law in These Parts , Ra’anan Alexandrowicz   Only the Young , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Planet of Snail , Seungjun Yi   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross and Turner Ross   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Production Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , Alison Klayman and Adam Schlesinger   Big Boys Gone Bananas!* , Margarete Jangård   The Imposter , Dimitri Doganis   Searching for Sugar Man , Simon Chinn   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Heino Deckert Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography Chasing Ice , Jeffrey Orlowski   The Imposter , Erik Alexander Wilson & Lynda Hall   Only the Young , Jason Tippet & Elizabeth Mims   Samsara , Ron Fricke   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Editing 5 Broken Cameras , Véronique Lagoarde-Ségot & Guy Davidi   Detropia , Enat Sidi   How to Survive a Plague , T. Woody Richman, Tyler H. Walk & Jonathan Oppenheim   Room 237 , Rodney Ascher   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross Audience Choice Prize 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Beauty is Embarrassing , directed by Neil Berkeley   Bully , directed by Lee Hirsch   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton   Jiro Dreams of Sushi , directed by David Gelb   Kumaré , directed by Vikram Gandhi   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   Trash Dance directed by Andrew Garrison Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , directed by Alison Klayman   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Room 237 , directed by Rodney Ascher   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   The Waiting Room , directed by Peter Nicks Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score Detropia , Dial.81 The Imposter , Anna Nikitin   Into the Abyss , Mark De Gli Antoni   Room 237 , Jonathan Snipes, William Hutson, The Caretaker (James Kirby)   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Alexander Popov Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation Beauty is Embarrassing , Neil Berkeley, Anthony Maiuri   Herman’s House , Nicolas Brault, Tom Hillman   Indie Game: The Movie , James Swirsky   Room 237 , Carlos Ramos   Searching for Sugar Man , Oskar Gullstrand, Arvid Steen   Urbanized , Brooklyn Digital Foundry/John Szot Spotlight Award Argentinian Lesson , directed by Wojciech Staroń Bestiaire , directed by Denis Côté   Downeast , directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin   Meanwhile in Mamelodi , directed by Benjamin Kahlmeyer   Vol Special (Special Flight) , directed by Fernand Melgar Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking Cutting Loose , directed by Finlay Pretsell and Adrian McDowall   Family Nightmare , directed by Dustin Guy Defa   Good Bye Mandima (Kwa Heri Mandima)  , directed by Robert-Jan Lacombe   Into the Middle of Nowhere , directed by Anna Francis Ewert   Paradise (Paraíso), directed by Nadav Kurtz

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Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

Gotta Love Him: “Uncle” Joe Biden Reads David Letterman’s Top Ten List [Video]

Does it really get any better than good ol’ Joe? Joe Biden Reads David Letterman’s Top Ten List Joe Biden is a G. Image via YouTube

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Gotta Love Him: “Uncle” Joe Biden Reads David Letterman’s Top Ten List [Video]

ATL Giveaway- Attend Chris Tucker’s Stand-Up Comedy Movie Taping

Hometown favorite Chris Tucker will be filming his very first stand-up comedy movie! Win tickets to see Chris Tucker LIVE on Friday, November 9th or the 10th @ 7:30PM at The Fox Theatre!    (Tickets are on sale at FOXATLTIX.COM    Ticket Prices: $49 and $59) We have 5 pairs of tickets to giveaway! Follow us on Twitter @Bossip  and tweet us “I want to go to the live taping of @realctucker 1st stand-up comedy movie in ATL with @bossip http://bit.ly/VHRSiM “ Contest ends November 7th and we will select 5 winners at random to each win 2 tickets. Good Luck!

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ATL Giveaway- Attend Chris Tucker’s Stand-Up Comedy Movie Taping

REVIEW: ‘Flight’ Soars Then Nosedives Despite Denzel Washington’s Acting Aerobatics

Flight , the first non-motion-capture feature Cast Away  and  Forrest Gump filmmaker  Robert Zemeckis has directed in over a decade, is the kind of movie that, people like to bemoan, the industry doesn’t make anymore. It’s a solid, burnished work made about adults for adults and anchored by  Denzel Washington in a role that calls for some classic star gravitas. It’s a mainstream film, but a consciously meaningful one, occupying that increasingly perilous mid-budget middle ground in a world continually drifting toward the opposing poles of massive blockbusters and scrappy indies. There’s not a superhero in sight and not a trace of nuance either — it’s the straightforward drama of a man forced by circumstances out of his control to confront the destructive way he’s been living his life. That  Flight  turns out to be a disappointingly standard addiction story in its second half also serves as a reminder that Hollywood tends to be more invested in these types of self-serious movies than most actual audiences. In its need to reach a smug, by-the-book end goal of redemption and recovery, the film sheds much of the life and complexity it shows in the beginning, devolving from a morally ambiguous story to a story all about its moral. Based on a screenplay by John Gatins ( Real Steel ),  Flight ‘s opening sequences are a dazzling display of studio filmmaking at its limber heights. The camera follows Captain Whip Whitaker (Washington) out of a night-long bender and through the start of what should be a quick, routine Orlando to Atlanta flight. Halfway through, however, the plane malfunctions and things go wrong with terrifying rapidity. In the wake of the crash, friends and family mourn the lost while the press and public clamor for someone to blame, and we learn that Whip may be a great pilot — he’s his best self in the air — but he’s also a functional alcoholic in deep denial. It’s not Whip’s fault the plane starts to go down, but when it does he proves himself capable of grace under pressure in a situation the film portrays through some hair-curling images: people flipped and scrabbling around the ceiling of the plane’s fuselage, tearful panic, plummeting altimeters, flaming engines and the ground rushing up at an angle one never wants to see in real life. The dreamlike way in which Whip watches the wing of his plane take out a church spire in the seconds before impact, like a later shot in which a bloody tear trickles out of his damaged eye as he recovers in the hospital, presents a sliver of lyricism to the sequence and its stunned aftermath, in which Whip isn’t sure whether he’s a hero or a failure. Flight is so sensorially sharp and electrically present in its initial gambit that the movie’s descent into a trudging tale of a problem drinker in the second half brings the film to ground literally and symbolically. Washington turns in a smart, ego-free performance here that goes some way toward making Whip into a character whose fate we might care about. He’s a man who’s been ignoring his issues for so long we don’t at first grasp the depths of them ourselves — but his later cycle of self-abuse feels as familiar and repetitive as the flight scene itself feels fresh. Watching Whip sober himself up with some blow after a boozy dalliance with a flight attendant before traveling to the cockpit, we get the squirmy, tightrope-act sensation of observing someone disturbingly good at getting by while hammered. He’s experienced enough as a pilot and drinker to take off smashed and thread his plane through tricky, stormy weather. Watching him tempt fate again and again as he is investigated in te aftermath of the crash is far less compelling. Whip is looking for someone or something to force him to stop, and apparently a brush with death while transporting more than 100 people in his care isn’t enough. Characters invested in Whip not being held responsible for the accident, for professional reasons or friendship — including Don Cheadle as his attorney, Bruce Greenwood as his union representative, Tamara Tunie as a flight attendant colleague and an amusing John Goodman as his drug dealer — try to protect him, but Whip doesn’t seem that committed to protecting himself. The forced spirituality of the film, which attaches a lot of meaning to the phrase “act of God,” is revealed in the weight it gives to the coincidences that trigger behavior. A smack addict named Nicole (Kelly Reilly), who eventually befriends Whip, reneges on her promise not to inject drugs after knocking the box containing her works onto the floor. Whip himself has temptation thrown in his face at the worst possible moment thanks to a neighboring door not being locked. Washington does find interesting sides to and knotty conflicts in Whip. His charisma, charm and competence don’t quite cover up a sharp and sometimes frightening edge, and it’s painful to watch the way he drinks, like it’s his duty to finish up all the alcohol in sight long after he’s stopped enjoying it. But the film isn’t as willing to push the character as much as the actor playing him, and the lack of mystery attached to whether Whip could be even partially at fault for what happened is ultimately as contrived as the big finish, which gives his character an unearned and unnecessary nobility. In the context of the film, the crash becomes the biggest and most distasteful act of god of them all, an elaborate, bloody way to get a guy to an AA meeting. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: ‘Flight’ Soars Then Nosedives Despite Denzel Washington’s Acting Aerobatics

‘Noah’ Kidding! Aronofsky’s Ark Was In Sandy’s Path

Emma Watson captured the situation succinctly. On Sunday, the actress, who stars opposite Russell Crowe in Darren Aronofsky’s post-apocalyptic adaptation of Noah ,  tweeted, “I take it that the irony of a massive storm holding up the production of Noah is not lost.”   T he Los Angeles Times reported that shooting on the movie, which is currently taking place in the New York metropolitan area, was postponed on Monday due to the arrival of Hurricane Sandy. Even more ironic:  one of the un-seaworthy replicas of the ark that the film’s production crew had built was in danger of getting smashed to hell by the storm.  Two massive arks have been built for filming.  Presumably the one constructed inside a Brooklyn soundstage is safe, but a second, that, the Times reported, is in Oyster Bay, NY was in the path of Sandy. (Aronofsky tweeted the picture of one of the arks above.) The Black Swan director’s spokeswoman had yet to get back to us on the fate of the Oyster Bay ark at post time — I’ll update if an answer is forthcoming — and the filmmaker’s Twitter feed gives no clue either.   Aronofsky’s last tweet was on Oct. 30 when he sent a picture illustrating the survival tactics of New Yorkers who were left without power because of the storm.  “at chase bank squatting electricity,” Aronofsky tweeted , along with a photo of a laptop, possibly his, charging in the lobby of a bank.  On Oct. 29, when Sandy was ravaging New York,  Aronofsky also tweeted: “just lost my chimney, really”. I don’t have a chimney, Darren, but now that I’m on my second day of living in NYC without any power, I feel your pain. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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‘Noah’ Kidding! Aronofsky’s Ark Was In Sandy’s Path

9 Last Minute 2012 Movie Halloween Costumes For The Procrastinating Cinephile

You’re a procrastinator. You waited until the last moment to figure out your Halloween  costume, and now you need ideas, fast — preferably ones that will impress your fellow movie nerds. Fear not! Here are 9 easy-ish cinephile-ready costumes inspired by some of this year’s most memorable films… CLOUD ATLAS What do six interconnected characters in six time periods spanning from the 19th century Pacific to the future where Tom Hanks speaks the true-true have in common, despite wildly divergent costumes and fake noses and whatnot? THAT BIRTHMARK. Draw on your own Cloud Atlas comet mark of the Chosen One anywhere – your shoulder, the back of your head, your left butt cheek — and you’re set. The best part: You can literally look like anyone and it still works. Just whatever you do, do not attempt futuristic Asianface . PITCH PERFECT Here’s a group costume for you and 5-6 of your multi-culti friends: Dress campus casual and walk around in a pack all night singing pop songs  a cappella  and challenging random strangers to riff-offs while shouting Pitch Perfect -isms like “Aca-awesome!” SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS To channel Colin Farrell or any of his eccentric cast mates in Martin McDonagh ‘s madcap crime comedy, all you really need is one key accessory: A Shih Tzu. Carry the pooch around all night and you’re set. Bonus if you do it in a Christopher Walken accent . If you happen to resemble Tom Waits , a white bunny is a lot less costly to procure. THE MASTER Joaquin Phoenix ‘s hunched, feral Freddie Quell can be achieved with just the right attire, posture, and off-kilter touch of insanity. Start with a button-down shirt tucked into pants pulled up to an Ed Grimley-level and slouch your shoulders forward. Carry a few makeshift beakers and jars with you and wherever you go, mix a batch of your special potions from assorted household liquids while pacing and licking windows. And voila ! SKYFALL If you’re a dapper dan who happens to have a Tom Ford fitted suit pressed and hanging in the closet, Halloween’s a cinch: Dress to the nines, grab a Heineken, and spend the evening fixing your cufflink like a boss . PROMETHEUS Don’t have a futuristic space suit lying around the house? No worries, ladies. Strip down to a white bandeau bra and panties, spatter yourself with black creature goop and run around screaming as if there’s a giant space monster right behind you. Lug around a decapitated mannequin head for extra emphasis. You might be cold, but you’ll be the baddest lady in the universe. MAGIC MIKE Fellas can get in on the scantily-clad action too, although the women of the world may prefer it if you have Channing Tatum’s abs and sense of rhythm. Maybe a speedo-vest-cowboy hat combination, a la Matthew McConaughey? Or a g-string, for those who dare? Bring along a boombox and have Ginuwine’s “Pony” queued up. You might even make some cash in the process. THE COMEDY Don your trust-fund hipster polo and boat shoes and walk around making a joke of everything a la Tim Heidecker (of Tim and Eric fame) in the new pic The Comedy ; singing the infectious mantra “No no tip” will really tie the outfit together, although anyone who hasn’t yet seen the movie will just think you’re a giant douche. THE GREY Fish a dirty long-sleeved thermal out of the laundry, smear a few smudges of fake blood on your face, and tape broken minibar bottles to your fists and you’re prepped for action, Liam Neeson-style . Plus: You get to drink the contents of those minibar bottles first, and you’ll be ready for any wolves that may cross your path. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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9 Last Minute 2012 Movie Halloween Costumes For The Procrastinating Cinephile

Lord Of The Boarding Gates: New Zealand Wins Awesomest Airport Ever With Ginormous Gollum Installation

Talk about local flavor: Peter Jackson’s WETA pals this week installed a giant Gollum statue inside Wellington, New Zealand’s airport in celebration of the Lord of the Rings franchise’s fruitful connection to the community (and, y’know, Jackson’s upcoming The Hobbit ). Now boarding: precious, MY PRECIOUS ! The 13-meter installation, depicting Gollum fishing for a tasty fish, hangs over the Wellington Airport’s dining lounge and was created by WETA’s own Oscar-winning Richard Taylor, according to TheOneRing.net ; it took three days for crews to erect this humongous, magnificent thing, which gives Tolkien nerds yet another reason to visit beautiful Wellington, NZ. It’s beautiful and awesome and so wonderfully garish all at once. In other words, how hasn’t LAX done something like this already? [Photo: TheOneRing.net] [ TheOneRing.net via FirstShowing ]

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Lord Of The Boarding Gates: New Zealand Wins Awesomest Airport Ever With Ginormous Gollum Installation

Lord Of The Boarding Gates: New Zealand Wins Awesomest Airport Ever With Ginormous Gollum Installation

Talk about local flavor: Peter Jackson’s WETA pals this week installed a giant Gollum statue inside Wellington, New Zealand’s airport in celebration of the Lord of the Rings franchise’s fruitful connection to the community (and, y’know, Jackson’s upcoming The Hobbit ). Now boarding: precious, MY PRECIOUS ! The 13-meter installation, depicting Gollum fishing for a tasty fish, hangs over the Wellington Airport’s dining lounge and was created by WETA’s own Oscar-winning Richard Taylor, according to TheOneRing.net ; it took three days for crews to erect this humongous, magnificent thing, which gives Tolkien nerds yet another reason to visit beautiful Wellington, NZ. It’s beautiful and awesome and so wonderfully garish all at once. In other words, how hasn’t LAX done something like this already? [Photo: TheOneRing.net] [ TheOneRing.net via FirstShowing ]

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Lord Of The Boarding Gates: New Zealand Wins Awesomest Airport Ever With Ginormous Gollum Installation

5 Terrifying Scenes You Won’t Find In Horror Films

I love horror films , but it’s real life that gives me the heebie jeebies. And when I think about the cinematic moments that haunt my nightmares, they’re rarely from scary movies. Sure, escapism is involved (and a bit of time travel) — just not the supernatural. With that in mind,  here’s a list of the top five movie scenes that make my skin crawl.  I hope they inspire you to come up with more in the comments section.  1. The Fate of Paul Dano’s Character in Looper :   This movie has been out long enough that I don’t feel like I’m breaking any unwritten spoiler rules here, but if you still plan to see Rian Johnson’s smart, dark time-travel film with fresh eyes, then skip to the next entry.  I’ve made this number one because it’s been a long time since I’ve seen a filmmaker come up with such a creatively diabolical fate for a movie character that was both original and integral to the plot. (Dreaming up torture-porn scenarios is kid’s stuff.) The most enduring horror is psychological because the brain is so much better at filling in the gory details than any filmmaker, and Johnson, who wrote and directed Looper , leaves a lot to the imagination when Seth is punished for failing to close his loop by killing his elder, future self.  Instead of watching Dano methodically being relieved of his extremities (most memorably, his nose), we see his future self being bloodlessly altered before our eyes as he attempts to scale a fence and skip town. A message sent to Seth’s future self via a skin-carving is also a beautifully macabre detail, as is the final shot of that horrific sequence: a barely discernible body covered by blood-stained surgical sheets and the clinical beeping of life-support machinery. Like the doctor who carves away at Seth, Johnson works surgically, but the effect is a shotgun blast to the chest. 2. The Ear Removal Scene in Reservoir Dogs:   Obvious, you say?  Essential, I reply. This is Quentin Tarantino’s most fiendish scene, and — please argue with me, but all these years later, he has not topped it.  I cannot watch it without averting my eyes, and — perhaps Django Unchained   will prove otherwise — . Once again, the terror is all in the build-up: The deader-than-deadpan voice of comedian Steven Wright (as deejay K-Billy) introducing “Stuck in the Middle with You” by Stealers Wheel only ramps up the tension as Michael Madsen dances cheesily with an open straight razor. You know something horrible is coming, you just don’t know what. And when it does come, Tarantino does not actually show the violence.  His camera cuts to a hallway that looks like an ear shorn of its fleshy lobe as Madsen’s Mr. Blonde relieves Officer Marvin Nash of his pinna. The purity of Madsen’s onscreen malevolence does not seem like acting — which makes it all the more terrifying — but mad props must also be given to actor  Kirk Baltz, who plays Nash, for palpably conveying the pain and terror of a man in a horrifically fucked situation. When Mr. Blonde douses Nash with gasoline, I swear I can feel my skin burn. 3. The Casino Beatings:   So, you’re thinking, Wait! What?  You’re not choosing the scene where Tony Dogs’ eye pops out because Nicky Santoro ( Joe Pesci ) is squeezing his head in a vise ?   Well, if this were a Top 10, Casino would probably get two entries. The beating scene gets top billing because, though I haven’t timed it (compared to the vise scene), it feels like it goes on forever, and the sound of those aluminum bats hitting flesh and bone does not fade easily. Martin Scorsese is celebrated for his mob movies, but he doesn’t celebrate the mob: his La Cosa Nostra is the stuff of nightmares — nightmares in Brioni suits. 4. The Chainsaw scene in Scarface :   Leatherface, Scarface , there’s not much difference when you’ve got a crazy gangster with a chainsaw who’s not afraid to use it. The scene is one of the few where Al Pacino ‘s Tony Montana’s say-hello-to-my-little-friends bravado falters when he’s forced to watch his partner in crime  undergo some radical deconstructive surgery. The fact that this carnage is taking place in what looks like a decrepit South Beach, Miami location that, today, is probably a $495-a-night hotel makes it all the more more horrific.

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5 Terrifying Scenes You Won’t Find In Horror Films

REVIEW: Ambitious ‘Cloud Atlas’ Is By Turns Glorious, Ridiculous and Moving

As is often the peril with movies of giant ambition,  Cloud Atlas walks a crooked line between the glorious and the ridiculous, its reach unencumbered by sensible decisions or restraint. Adapted with reasonable faithfulness from a novel of equally epic sweep by British author David Mitchell, the film spans eras and genres, intertwining tales of men at sea in the 1850s with a 1970s conspiracy-based mystery with a dystopian future Seoul. Through these settings and the characters that populate them, the movie highlights themes of reincarnation and of the warring nature of mankind as empathetic and self-sacrificing versus competitive and brutal. Directed by Tom Tykwer and Lana and Andy Wachowski , Cloud Atlas  matches the scope of its settings and its motifs with an equally bold filmmaking choice: it reuses its actors in different roles in the different story threads, recasting them with the help of make-up and prosthetics across ethnicities and sometimes genders. Halle Berry   plays the Jewish wife of a 1930s Belgian composer in one storyline and an African-American journalist in San Francisco in another. Hugo Weaving plays a female nurse working in a modern British old age home and an incarnation of the devil in a distant future version of Hawaii. Tom Hanks is a duplicitous 19th century doctor picked up in the Chatham Islands and the thuggish Cockney author of a popular novel in the present day. It’s a wild choice that underscores the film’s suggestion of the transmutation of souls. As the main character — who’s marked by a comet-shaped birthmark and played by various actors — makes his/her way through the eons and different lives, the recurrence of performers provides a visual reminder of this theme, tying together narratives that are wildly diverse in tone and content. It’s also a technique that provokes some unavoidable amusement. Despite the quality of the production, there’s only so much that can be done to plausibly turn Korean star Bae Doona into a freckled white aristocrat, Ben Whishaw into a blonde woman or Jim Sturgess into an Asian rebel leader. And yet, there’s something fiercely admirable about the film’s dedication to this particular type of color-blind casting, even when it fails. (Well, almost color-blind — the black characters are all played by black actors.) Its hero, after all, is a soul, so why stand on ceremony about the malleable bodies in which it, and others, are housed? That protagonist starts off, in the earliest story, as a villain — Dr. Henry Goose (Hanks), who treats the naive Adam Ewing (Sturgess) on their trip to San Francisco by ship in the mid-1800s with a medicine that is quite deliberately making him worse. He is reborn, in the ear between World Wars, as Robert Frobisher (Whishaw), an English composer whose love affair with another man gets him disinherited, he leads to him working for an established talent named Vyvyan Ayrs (Jim Broadbent) who’s not as benign an employer as Frobisher would like. In the 1970s, he’s become a she — Luisa Rey (Berry), a Californian journalist whose investigation into a nuclear plant cover-up lands her in danger. In 2012, she’s Timothy Cavendish (Broadbent), an aging publisher who gets both lucky and unlucky with a hit book and who finds himself committed to a militant nursing home from which he’d like to escape. In New Seoul in the near future, he’s become Sonmi-451 (Bae), a cloned waitress at a chain restaurant who experiences an awakening from the conscripted life that labor “fabricants” are intended to have. And in the far-flung reaches of the film’s timeline, she’s become Zachry (Hanks), one of a small community of peaceful villagers living in Hawaii after the collapse of civilization and trying to avoid the savage cannibalistic faction the remaining humans on the island have become. These stories connect within each other and, unlike the nesting doll structure of Mitchell’s novel, they’re intercut. The film stays with one story for long minutes or dips into another for a brief glimpse. Every thread is, in essence, about the powerful oppressing the powerless and what it takes to put oneself at risk to help others, whether it be an escaped slave stowaway or a manufactured corporate server. Despite the showiness of the structure, it’s the films smaller moments that leap out as emotionally wrenching: an encounter with an old love at the top of a cathedral, a man carrying his sick friend out to sit in the sun, a rallying cry at a pub. Cloud Atlas strives continually for transcendence and only sometimes grasps it, but the sincerity with which it pursues the emotion and the very idea of the reverberating impact selfless actions can have is quite moving. It’s rare, these days, to see a movie declare its aims for greatness so openly and without a leaden sense of self-importance. And though the film doesn’t achieve all of its goals, it does offer an indelibly powerful vision of a throughline from the past to today and on through the end of things, that expresses faith in the ability of people to overcome animalism. It’s spiritual but entirely humanistic, and salvation, when it comes, arrives from within or from other people — an outrageous, silly and beautiful ode to the better nature of mankind. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Ambitious ‘Cloud Atlas’ Is By Turns Glorious, Ridiculous and Moving