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The Simple, Fan-Driven Pleasures of Moonrise Kingdom’s First Poster

Movieline is pleased to present the first installment of One-Sheet Wonder , a new column on the best, worst, weirdest and other milestones of contemporary movie-poster art. — Ed. We’re a little more than two months away from the debut of the Cannes Film Festival opener Moonrise Kingdom , Wes Anderson’s first live-action film in five years, and the promo push is on. The first trailer hit a while back, and the first poster was revealed last week. And while the trailer is an exhilarating promo clip, on first glance it’s easy to dismiss the poster. It feels minimal and rather meh overall, like a starving-artist, Bob Ross knock-off masquerading as a one-sheet (“Look at that happy little waterfall…”). But since The Life Aquatic , posters for Anderson’s films have trended to a less-is-more approach. The Darjeeling Limited , for example, focused on, essentially, a snapshot of the three leads in a moment of quiet introspection, whereas Rushmore is all about bombastic (Photoshopped) revolution. The reason for this change is Anderson’s movies, increasingly, have been sold to his fans rather than audiences at large. Not surprisingly, this began with The Royal Tenenbaums as Anderson established his unique visual style. Since then, his posters have become more conceptual and more for his acolytes. ( Fantastic Mr. Fox — aimed squarely at kids with its kooky, busy everything-but-whackbat design — is the exception.) Moonrise Kingdom is the zenith (so far) of this marketing strategy. It’s not very active, but it picks up many of Anderson’s trademarks. Sam and Suzy, the film’s leads, are in full-on Anderson mode — Sam carries a popgun and pulls his best young Bud Cort impression while Suzy is loaded down with a travel record player and Margot Tenenbaum-esque style/ennui — and their straight-on confrontation of the viewer is an Anderson trademark. And while the foreground is fairly flat, there’s a world of depth and texture in the background, a staple of Anderson’s cinematography. The poster also continues the practice (begun on Darjeeling ) of placing the credit block at the top of the poster, above the title, drawing our eye (and consideration) to an image rather than text. When you factor in the font-type similarities to the invitation script at the beginning of Tenenbaums , it could be that Anderson is finally establishing a design continuum for his ad art to complement the one in his films. Visually dazzling? Maybe not to the motion-poster (blech) crowd, but for Anderson devotees it’s exciting. It picks up on his filmmaking sensibilities like no poster before it — and it aesthetically establishes Moonrise Kingdom ’s place in Anderson’s legacy vis-à-vis the Criterion Collection. Criterion’s releases of Bottle Rocket , Rushmore , Tenenbaums , Aquatic and Darjeeling are whimsical, but they eschew studio publicity shots for a handcrafted, Andersonian representation of a scene or the essence of the film. (Criterion’s Tenenbaums and Aquatic releases had studio art slipcovers over the hand-drawn ones because they were the only official releases of the films, Buena Vista didn’t likely want to scare off the normals with childlike illustrations.) Moonrise Kingdom is the first theatrical poster for an Anderson film to similarly disregard poorly edited stills (a la Rushmore or Bottle Rocket ) for a painted distillation of what we can imply is the film’s spirit. Ultimately, it might seem this poster is selling Anderson’s sensibility more than the film, but that’s because they’re one and the same. The poster says, “Wes Anderson has a new movie coming out,” and that will either sell people on it or drive them away. Such is the plight of an auteur. Focus Features understands the audience for this film — the cinephile who genuflects at the Wes Anderson altar — and the studio absolutely reaches it with this poster. It might not be the flashiest of Anderson’s ads to date, but it’s certainly the most authentic. Dante A. Ciampaglia is a writer, editor and photographer in New York. You can find him on Twitter , Tumblr , and, occasionally, his blog .

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The Simple, Fan-Driven Pleasures of Moonrise Kingdom’s First Poster

Watch Mexican Cowboy Will Ferrell Sing ‘Yo No Se’ En Español in Casa de mi Padre

SXSW ers will get a peek at Will Ferrell’s Spanish-language comedy Casa de mi Padre this week in Austin, but here’s a quick taste of what you’re in for: Ferrell as a Mexican ranchero singing the moonlit ditty “Yo No Se” in a scene from the film, which is best described as something of a Spanish telenovela satire grindhouse comedy. Yo No Se performed by Will Ferrell from Will Ferrell Ferrell plays Armando Alvarez, the son of a rancher who falls for the girlfriend (Genesis Rodriguez) of his brother (Diego Luna) and must defend his family from a local drug lord (Gael Garcia Bernal). Efren Ramirez and Adrian Martinez also co-star as Ferrell’s ranch hand pals, who join him in a moonlit serenade in the above scene… as cowboys are wont to do. [ Funny or Die ]

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Watch Mexican Cowboy Will Ferrell Sing ‘Yo No Se’ En Español in Casa de mi Padre

Introducing the Soily Awards, Movieline’s Inaugural Tribute to Cinema’s Worst

As you likely know, the Golden Raspberry Awards are quickly approaching with all the promise of recognizing the worst of the last year in cinema. As you also likely know, the reaction to the Razzies among film critics and commentators has yielded many of the same complaints we hear every year: The nominations tend to omit movies that take themselves more seriously and/or aspire to something a little more sophisticated than Adam Sandler jump-roping with his shrill twin sister. The editors at Movieline concur with this perspective and hope to change it with the help of both esteemed peers and loyal readers. Thus the inaugural Soily Awards, our attempt to reconcile the year’s highest-profile Hollywood misfires with their truly uninspired brethren. To be awarded on March 23, the Soilies will showcase the new spectrum of awful that confronts today’s filmgoers, with the ultimate goal of redefining Bad Movies for the 21st century. Or at least not letting high-achieving 2011 crapmakers like Clint Eastwood or Natalie Portman off the hook. Winners in the six categories below — whose nominees were chosen by Movieline’s distinguished Brown-Ribbon panel of experts — will receive one of the lovely Soilies statuettes seen above. We have a brand-new Facebook page for the occasion, where a Reader’s Choice component will be introduced as well later this week. Stay tuned! The inaugural nominees are: The Soily for Worst Picture of 2011 The most appalling, misconceived and/or unpleasant-to-watch film of 2011. The more ambitious/pretentious, the better. Abduction Conan the Barbarian Green Lantern The Human Centipede II (Full Sequence) Transformers: Dark of the Moon The Soily for Achievement in Bad Directing The director of the most appalling, misconceived and/or unpleasant-to-watch film of 2011 — or maybe just most appalling director? (NOTE: The award will be named after its inaugural winner.) Michael Bay, Transformers: Dark of the Moon Dennis Dugan, Jack and Jill Clint Eastwood, J. Edgar David Gordon Green, Your Highness and The Sitter Zack Snyder, Sucker Punch The Soily for Achievement in Bad Acting A unisex award recognizing the worst and/or least inspired performance by any actor in any film in 2011. Russell Brand, Arthur Glenn Close, Albert Nobbs Taylor Lautner, Abduction and The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part I Alex Pettyfer, I Am Number Four and Beastly Adam Sandler, Just Go With It and Jack and Jill The Brown Paycheck Achievement in Bad Acting A unisex award recognizing the most lopsided ratio of salary to quality. Bradley Cooper, The Hangover Part II Harrison Ford, Cowboys and Aliens Nicole Kidman, Just Go With It Helen Mirren, Arthur Natalie Portman, Your Highness , No Strings Attached and Thor The Shart Prize A film that seemed like it might be bad but turned out much, much more aromatically awful than anyone could have imagined. Arthur Atlas Shrugged: Part I Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star Your Highness Zookeeper The Shit-the-Bed Award Arguably the most prestigious Soily, this honor goes to the movie that, despite its pedigree and everything it had going for it on paper, nevertheless resulted in a massive failure to move the cultural needle or achieve anything remotely resembling entertainment. Carnage Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close The Iron Lady J. Edgar War Horse I would like to thank the Soilies’ extraordinary Brown-Ribbon Panel for their contributions both here and to come as we vote on the year’s worst:

Poster Premiere: Ron Perlman Goes Transgender in Frankie Go Boom

While some marketing efforts demand a close read , others allow no margin for misundertanding what they are, where they come from, or what they portend. Take writer-director Jordan Roberts’s comedy Frankie Go Boom , which premieres this weekend at South By Southwest with arguably the best tagline of any festival film in history and the promise of Ron Perlman in full transgender mode. Get your first look at the poster — and a tagline translation — after the jump. Perfect! Now in English: Frank Bartlett has been tortured, embarrassed and humiliated by his brother Bruce — usually on film — his entire life. Now that Bruce is finally off drugs and has turned his life around, things should be different. They are not. And why might that be? Another bit from the synopsis made available to Movieline: While trying to remove a compromising video from the internet, two brothers (Charlie Hunnam and Chris O’Dowd) visit a brilliant computer hacker named Phil (Ron Perlman). But when they get there, they discover that Phil is now Phyllis… …and she has no intention of helping them for “free.” The rest will remain a mystery until Frankie Go Boom unspools for the first time Saturday night in Austin, where Movieline’s own Jen Yamato will be on hand for a look. Stand by for that and plenty more from SXSW. And please form an orderly queue until these one-sheets are available for the home, the office, and beyond. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Poster Premiere: Ron Perlman Goes Transgender in Frankie Go Boom

EXCLUSIVE: A Dog, a Gun, and a Serial Killer’s Eerie Charm in Clip from Aussie Thriller The Snowtown Murders

” Shoot the dog .” In the vein of powerhouse Aussie import Animal Kingdom comes The Snowtown Murders , a chilling thriller based on the true story of charismatic charmer and sociopathic serial killer John Bunting, who led a band of criminals in South Australia as they kidnapped, robbed, terrorized, and murdered victims from their own community during the ’90s. Get a glimpse of the masterful manipulation skills that helped Bunting earn the notorious title of Australia’s worst serial killer in Movieline’s riveting exclusive clip, featuring Daniel Henshall as Bunting and Lucas Pittaway as his emotionally vulnerable protege — tasked here with proving himself by committing a heinous act at Bunting’s behest. In her review of the film , Movieline’s own Alison Willmore described Henshall’s Bunting as “an unassuming monster,” and as you can see in the clip below Henshall is wonderfully, and chillingly, unsettling. Director Justin Kurzel’s slow-burn pic introduces the notorious killer as a do-gooder savior who steps in to pull an ailing Australian community up by its bootstraps, drawing his group of brethren deeper and deeper into adopting and, frequently, aiding in his own ultraviolent tendencies; by the time the most heinous atrocities have been committed, it can at least be understood just how these neighbors and friends had fallen under Bunting’s destructive spell in the first place. First screened at the Cannes Film Festival (where it won the FIPRESCI Prize — special mention) as Snowtown , The Snowtown Murders is quite an unsettling but powerful watch, but is worth seeing especially if you’re curious about the so-called Australian New Wave. The film hits theaters in limited release today (NYC Friday at IFC Center, 3/15 in LA at the Egyptian) but can already be viewed now on IFC Midnight VOD. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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EXCLUSIVE: A Dog, a Gun, and a Serial Killer’s Eerie Charm in Clip from Aussie Thriller The Snowtown Murders

The Single Most Awkward Image From the Oscars’ Red Carpet

I had vowed to get on with my life and leave the Academy Awards alone today. That all changed when a friend alerted me to an eye-popping moment on the Oscars red carpet that haunted my dreams and now demands reckoning. Dear readers, does anybody knows what the hell is going on here? Seriously, I need to know . Also: Top that, Sacha Baron Cohen . [Thanks to Justin for the heads-up.] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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The Single Most Awkward Image From the Oscars’ Red Carpet

Last Chance! Submit Your Hunger Games Haiku to Win Tickets to the Premiere

Hunger Games fans, here’s your chance to be among the first to see Lionsgate’s highly anticipated YA novel adaptation — Movieline is giving away a pair of tickets to the Los Angeles premiere of The Hunger Games , starring Jennifer Lawrence as teen warrior Katniss Everdeen, based on the novels by Suzanne Collins. To decide our winner, we’re holding a Cornucopia of words: A Hunger Games Haiku contest! Channel your inner mockingjay and get to composing in the comments below. [ UPDATE: Only one day left to enter, so get your entry in now! ] To celebrate the 50-day countdown to the Hunger Games nationwide release on March 23 (Twitter hashtag #HUNGERGAMES50), Movieline’s Hunger Games Haiku contest will close February 22 at 5pm PT/8pm ET , so make sure to enter with your best, most inspired Hunger Games -themed haiku. Winners will be announced on February 29. [ Browse Movieline’s Hunger Games cast gallery here ] In order to be eligible, entries must follow these guidelines: – Haiku entries must follow the 5-7-5 syllable format (otherwise that ain’t a haiku, duh). – Entries must be original writings. Write it in Katniss’s voice! As an ode to the series! Compose a ditty about pretty baker’s sons! Run wild with it! – Entrants must be 18 years of age and must be able to attend the premiere in Los Angeles at the Nokia Live on March 12, 2012. – Entrants must register with their email address in order to be contacted if selected. – Only one entry per person. Now remember, candidates: Entries will be judged by Movieline’s editors so put your best haiku forward! Elegance, wit, and razor-sharp concision are key, along with a healthy dose of Hunger Games knowledge. Wow us, and as always — may the odds be ever in your favor. For more information on the Hunger Games movie and premiere info, head to Facebook . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Last Chance! Submit Your Hunger Games Haiku to Win Tickets to the Premiere

‘No’: Russell Crowe Tweets Swift End to RoboCop Rumors

Maybe you can’t quite ask Woody Harrelson anything , but at least he has a forthcoming contemporary in Russell Crowe. The Oscar-winner recently leveled with fans on Twitter, acknowledging his and Liam Neeson’s interest in Darren Aronofsky’s biblical epic Noah while putting a swift, certain and severe end to speculation that he may participate in a RoboCop . Anyway, now you know. If only it could always be this easy. Tweets, not trades, Hollywood! [ @russellcrowe via The Playlist ] @russellcrowe Is there any truth to these rumors of you being involved in “Robocop”? Fri Feb 03 07:11:04 via web John Dotson DRockDot @DRockDot no Fri Feb 03 07:12:32 via web Russell Crowe russellcrowe Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘No’: Russell Crowe Tweets Swift End to RoboCop Rumors

Submit Your Hunger Games Haiku For a Chance to Win Tickets to the Premiere

Hunger Games fans, here’s your chance to be among the first to see Lionsgate’s highly anticipated YA novel adaptation — Movieline is giving away a pair of tickets to the Los Angeles premiere of The Hunger Games , starring Jennifer Lawrence as teen warrior Katniss Everdeen, based on the novels by Suzanne Collins. To decide our winner, we’re holding a Cornucopia of words: A Hunger Games Haiku contest! Channel your inner mockingjay and get to composing in the comments below! To celebrate the 50-day countdown to the Hunger Games nationwide release on March 23 (Twitter hashtag #HUNGERGAMES50), Movieline’s Hunger Games Haiku contest will close February 22 at 5pm PT/8pm ET , so make sure to enter with your best, most inspired Hunger Games -themed haiku. Winners will be announced on February 29. [ Browse Movieline’s Hunger Games cast gallery here ] In order to be eligible, entries must follow these guidelines: – Haiku entries must follow the 5-7-5 syllable format (otherwise that ain’t a haiku, duh). – Entries must be original writings. Write it in Katniss’s voice! As an ode to the series! Compose a ditty about pretty baker’s sons! Run wild with it! – Entrants must be 18 years of age and must be able to attend the premiere in Los Angeles at the Nokia Live on March 12, 2012. – Entrants must register with their email address in order to be contacted if selected. – Only one entry per person. Now remember, candidates: Entries will be judged by Movieline’s editors so put your best haiku forward! Elegance, wit, and razor-sharp concision are key, along with a healthy dose of Hunger Games knowledge. Wow us, and as always — may the odds be ever in your favor. For more information on the Hunger Games movie and premiere info, head to Facebook . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Submit Your Hunger Games Haiku For a Chance to Win Tickets to the Premiere

Share Your Best Daniel Radcliffe Mini Fan Fiction, Win a Woman in Black Prize Pack

The much-anticipated Daniel Radcliffe ghost-story thriller The Woman in Black opens Feb. 10. This calls for a giveaway! But considering what you stand to win (including an iPod Nano and a signed WIB poster, we’re going to make you work for it. (Sort of.) Welcome to Movieline’s Daniel Radcliffe Mini Fan Fiction Sweepstakes! First things first: The prize line-up!