Tag Archives: New Movie

REVIEW: Bromantically Whimsical A Bag of Hammers Gets By on Scruffy Sweetness

What if  The Sting ‘s Henry Gondorff and Johnny Hooker could be your surrogate parents? And what if they were also SoCal slackers? That seems to be the thought at the center of Brian Crano’s directorial debut, an uneven but appealing dramedy about two car thieves and petty con-artists who end up taking charge of an abandoned 12-year-old boy. It’s a film that should be appallingly twee, but more often than not is actually scruffy and sweet, thanks to a nicely underplayed turn by Chandler Canterbury as the kid, Kelsey, and the chemistry between  Jason Ritter and Jake Sandvig (who co-wrote the film with Crano) as hipster grifters Ben and Alan. The pair are incredibly unconvincing as criminals, which is partly the idea — they dress up in hideous bow-tied uniforms and stand outside funerals with a notice offering complementary valet parking. It works because they look like schmucks — why would anyone wear formal shorts and stand outside in the sun for hours if they weren’t getting paid to do so? When someone bites, they take his or her car, throw their sign in the back and drive straight to a shady garage run by Marty (Todd Louiso), the least threatening stolen vehicle fence imaginable. This low-key illegal operation is barely sketched out — wouldn’t someone eventually spread news of this scheme? — and ends up being more symbolic of the man-child refuge the two have created for themselves. Ben and Alan live in the guest quarters in the backyard of a larger house they rent out to tenants; they have cookouts on the porch, on which they also like to sit in fancy bathrobes; and they pay regular visits to Alan’s sister Mel (Rebecca Hall), who works at a chain diner that requires employees to do a dance to welcome their customers, and who’s in school and disapproves of their illicit moneymaking schemes. It’s hard to say whether A Bag of Hammers is deliberately stylized or simply so lo-fi it inadvertently comes across that way, but the simplicity of its elements works. (It resembles last year’s Bellflower  in that it creates a sense of an enclosed alt Los Angeles universe by stripping away all the mundane details and consequences.) Ben and Alan have created a loafer’s Neverland in their Burbank back house, an easy life that’s far from the troubled childhoods they mention in passing. They don’t have any further plans to expand their criminal enterprises — when presented with a gun by Marty, Ben looks shocked. And they have no desire or motivation to change, until Kelsey comes into their lives. Kelsey and his mother Lynette ( True Blood ‘s Carrie Preston) are the front house’s current tenants, driven, according to Lynette, from their home in Louisiana by Katrina. Kelsey’s a serious kid, but his mother seems scattered and frazzled. While Ben and Alan are idly talking about who would win in a fight (the Ultimate Warrior being the answer to all scenarios) or accidentally stealing the car of Ben’s ex girlfriend (Amanda Seyfried) while leading charmed lives (“What if our luck runs out?” one asks, to which the other replies “Our con luck or our regular person luck?”), Lynette goes from job interview to job interview. In her desperation for cash, she completely neglects her son — and things get worse with child services and a concerned teacher (Gabriel Macht) lurking in the wings. The shift between quirky comedy and emotionally scarred drama doesn’t really work out, but  A Bag of Hammers  remains fairly light despite some serious developments threatening to encroach on the boys’ bubble. When Kelsey ends up in their care, Alan is ready to commit to raising him (despite being utterly unprepared to care for a child), while Ben is alarmed — “We can’t even keep fish!” — and Mel is the voice of reason, a voice pointing out that they’re being ridiculous. A Bag of Hammers ‘ mistrust of systems and authority figures — who tend to either be abusive or too caught up in their own problems to pay attention — seems strange given the bromantic whimsy with which its main characters have chosen to live their lives, like eternal kids whose parents are away. But Lynette’s dilemma comes across as genuinely distressed and free of bathos, conveying the despair of running up against an unmovable wall again and again. The title comes from the name Ben has for the difficulties life hands you — you’re burdened with “a bag of hammers” representing the poverty in which you grew up, or the cancer that claims your loved ones, or the accident in which your brother died, or the divorce that splits up your family. “The thing is what you do with these hammers,” Ben explains. As metaphors go, it doesn’t make much sense — isn’t the saying “a box of hammers,” and doesn’t it refer to someone’s idiocy? — but then, neither does the world in which the movie takes place. That it works as well as it does is a pleasing accident. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Bromantically Whimsical A Bag of Hammers Gets By on Scruffy Sweetness

Epic Movie Spoofers Plotting Hunger Games Send-Up The Starving Games

Look, people: If you keep giving Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer money to make their cheap-o spoof flicks, they’re going to keep the lowest common denominator drivel coming. Case in point: The Starving Games , the next in the duo’s empire of big screen parodies, will take aim at Lionsgate’s mega-hit The Hunger Games with a little something for every fanboy and girl. Variety reports : “Though The Hunger Games will be front and center for many of the jokes, other pics to be pilloried include The Avengers , Sherlock Holmes and the finale of the Harry Potter franchise.” Ready, aim, spoof. [ Variety ]

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Epic Movie Spoofers Plotting Hunger Games Send-Up The Starving Games

Diaz & Del Toro Team for Agent, Posey Honored, LaBeouf’s Film Critic Movie: Biz Break

Also in Thursday afternoon’s Biz Break: Gavin O’Connor ( Warrior ) is set to direct a post-tsunami Japan crime thriller, Naomi Watts and Matt Dillon’s Sunlight Jr. will preview at Cannes, Nigel Lythgoe teams with BAFTA L.A., and Venice winners are spotlighted in NYC Italian film series. Cameron Diaz and Benicio Del Toro Set for Agent: Century 21 Exclusive Media will produce and finance the action/comedy. The film revolves around a divorced mother (Diaz) who does a task for her boss that gets her kidnapped and thrown into the center of the Mexican drug war. Adam Hashemi will make his directorial debut from a script by Greg Brooker. Provincetown Film Festival to Open with Bachelorette The festival will host the East Coast debut of the dark comedy which debuted at Sundance. Producer/director Roger Corman will receive the festival’s Filmmaker on the Edge Award (and will appear in a live conversation with John Waters). Parker Posey will be honored with the Excellence in Acting Award and director Kirby Dick ( The Invisible War ) with the Faith Hubley Career Achievement Award. The Provincetown International Film Festival takes place June 13 – 17. Venice Film Festival Winners and More Set for Italian Film Series in NYC Called Open Roads: New Italian Cinema, the series will also feature debuts by two of Italy’s finest screenwriters, Francesco Bruni ( Easy! ) and Ivan Cotroneo ( Kryptonite ). Hosted by the Film Society of Lincoln Center, the series takes place June 8 – 14. For a full list, visit their website . Nigel Lythgoe to Chair 2012 BAFTA L.A. Britannia Awards The British Academy of Film and Television Arts Los Angeles will celebrate 25 years and the American Idol producer Nigel Lythgoe will lead oversight of the 2012 Britannia Awards set for November 7th at the Beverly Hilton. Around the ‘net… Gavin O’Connor to Direct Japan Crime Thriller Yakuza The story revolves around an American intelligence expert who becomes involved with a yakuza ‘godfather’ set against a criminal underworld of post-tsunami Japan. Brian Grazer will produce, Deadline reports . Naomi Watts/Matt Dillon Pic to Get Cannes Preview A promo reel of Sunlight Jr. will be shown in Cannes by Hyde Park International. Directed by Laurie Collyer ( Sherrybaby ), the film revolves around store clerk Melissa and her paraplegic boyfriend who are excited when they learn they will be having a baby. But when she loses her job and they are evicted from their motel, things go from bad to worse. Hollywood Wiretap reports . Shia LaBeouf to Bring Movie Critic Film to Cannes The Transformers star directed the short Howard Cantour.com , billed by organizers as an “offbeat, irreverent vision of film criticism.” The film debuts in Critics Week May 18th, The Guardian reports . Studios, Guilds, Agencies Align for Vets Movie studios, TV networks, talent agencies and the entertainment unions, together with a host of nonprofit groups, have created the “Got Your 6” initiative, a multi-pronged effort to support military veterans and their families, A.P. reports .

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Diaz & Del Toro Team for Agent, Posey Honored, LaBeouf’s Film Critic Movie: Biz Break

Bangers: Jordin Sparks Remembers Whitney Houston In V Magazine

Jordin Sparks is featured in the new Americana issue of V Magazine on newsstands Thursday. Inside the magazine the beauty talks about her relationship with Whitney Houston, which was fostered on the set of their new movie “Sparkle”. Peep an excerpt below: Part musical, part cautionary tale, the movie tells the story of three sisters, Sparkle, Delores (Tika Sumpter) and Sister (Carmen Ejogo), whose successful Motown singing act disintegrates in the face of drug addiction and familial strife. Originally Houston had signed on solely as exectutive producer, but eventually agreed to also play the girls’ mother, Emma. “I think she was hesitant at first, and then she said, ‘Yeah, I really want to do that,” says Sparks. On set in Detroit at the first table read, Sparks, who has d worshiped the pop star since childhood, was appropriately tongue-tied. “She walked in and I was like, ‘This. Is. Awesome.’” But over time the two women grew close, bonding over a slavish devotion to the craft-services table and a near constant habit of singing under their breath. “One day, actually, she was walking behind me and singing ‘I Have Nothing,’” recalls Sparks. “And then she reached out and said, ‘I forgot I sang that. I was annoyed that day and just didn’t ant to do it. We ended up doing it in three takes!’” When Houston died unexpectedly in February, Sparks (who attended her memorial service) was grief-stricken. “She was always so full of light,” she says, choking back tears . “Every day… she would open the door and ask, ‘How are my babies this morning? Are my babies good? God is good. Praise the Lord.’” Still Sparks has no illusions about the demons that plagued her late costar (and, ironically, some of the films characters). “I can see how people can fall and people can flip or they can just get in with the wrong crowd.” Gotta love Jordin Sparks. We are really looking forward to “Sparkle” but we have to side-eye the writer for saying Whitney and Jordin had a “near slavish devotion” to craft services. Big SMH. Photo Credit: Mark Abrahams

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Bangers: Jordin Sparks Remembers Whitney Houston In V Magazine

Trailer for Ben Affleck’s Argo Teases Bizarre Slice of Hollywood-CIA History

Ben Affleck , director, makes his most ambitious movie yet in this fall’s Argo , the crazy true (and until recently, secret) story of how the CIA attempted to rescue six American diplomats during the 1979 Iran hostage crisis by disguising them as a film crew working on a science fiction movie. The first trailer for Argo ranks up there with the best we’ve seen all year, setting up the stranger-than-fiction premise with juicy moments from veteran thesps (John Goodman! Alan Arkin!) and up-and-comers (ladies and gentlemen, Scoot McNairy) alike as Affleck serves up a bizarre slice of history. Affleck directs from a script by Chris Terrio (based on Joshuah Bearman’s engrossing 2007 Wired article “How the CIA Used a Fake Sci-Fi Flick to Rescue Americans from Tehran”), casting himself as CIA officer Tony Mendez, the orchestrator of the so-called “Canadian Caper.” He’s joined by Goodman as Planet of the Apes Oscar-winner John Chambers, the Hollywood make-up artist who helped Mendez set up the operation, and Arkin as a producer delivering choice zingers (“If I’m doing a fake movie, it’s going to be a fake hit!”). In addition to folks like Goodman, Arkin, Victor Garber, Bryan Cranston, Michael Parks, Zeljko Ivanek, Affleck tapped a few rising actors to fill out his cast: Scoot McNairy ( Monsters ), Christopher Denham ( Sound of My Voice ), and Kerry Bishe ( Red State ) join Tate Donovan, Clea Duvall, and Rory Cochrane as the six imperiled diplomats. Add in the muted ’70s palette and sense of humor tempered by life-and-death stakes and you’ve got what promises to be an intriguingly layered ride, if Affleck the director can pull it off. Argo is slated for release on October 12, gunning for awards season. Verdict: If it measures up to the true story and the article it inspired, this could be great. Thrill me, Affleck.

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Trailer for Ben Affleck’s Argo Teases Bizarre Slice of Hollywood-CIA History

U.S. Military SHIELD-ed from The Avengers Collaboration

The U.S. military has a history of joining forces with Hollywood. Michael Bay’s Transformers franchise and Peter Berg’s Battleship have cozied up to the military to take advantage of defense material, while the Pentagon gets to market itself to moviegoers. (To say nothing of the recent Navy SEAL showcase Act of Valor .) So how did The Avengers not make the cut? It seems that the Joss Whedon superhero spectacle was “too unrealistic” for military brass get involved. At the end of the day, it was Nick Fury’s SHIELD that clinched the decision (perhaps if they just stuck to the superheroes and alien invaders it would have been OK?) “We couldn’t reconcile the unreality of this international organization and our place in it,” said Phil Strub, the DOD’s Hollywood liaison. “To whom did SHIELD answer? Did we work for SHIELD? It just got to the point where it didn’t make any sense. We hit that roadblock and decided we couldn’t do anything [with the film].” [ WorstPreviews ]

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U.S. Military SHIELD-ed from The Avengers Collaboration

Scary Movie 5 Targets Black Swan, Ditches Anna Faris

So there’s good news and bad news regarding Scary Movie 5 . The bad news is… well, there is a Scary Movie 5 . The good news? Anna Faris has reportedly exercised her option and/or good judgment to step away from the ever-deteriorating franchise. And then there’s this, which could go either way depending on your taste: The new installment reportedly intends to spoof Black Swan . Like, the whole thing . Know the Artist tweeted a referral to this casting call, which disclosed the basic plot as such: The story in Scary Movie 5 involves the dance world, with a snooty, aloof, imperious, and oversexed French director of a dance company named Pierre putting on a huge production. Jody, a Caucasian late-20’s mother of two and her late-20’s African American friend Kendra are both vying for the lead in the production. Jody’s extremely controlling former dancer mother is determined that Jody will have the brilliant career that eluded her. The highly skilled mid-30’s Diva veteran dancer with the company, Heather Daltry, gets cut from the production and goes berserk. The studio had been very interested in bringing back some of the series’ original cast members, but there’s no word on where that plan stands now. Insiders have said that the film has been completely retooled and will hire a brand new cast. That would not be a surprise considering the casting directors are “seeking a comedic leading lady with the ability to play comedy in a grounded dramatic style”. Faris is more than capable of that last part, though the actress disclosed at this week’s Dictator press junket that it won’t be her: “I don’t think I’m going to do it. I don’t think I’m part of that. I don’t know exactly what’s happening with it, but I hear it’s sort of in the works and stuff.” Womp woooomp . Or wait — huzzah! You tell me. [ @KnowTheArtist via First Showing ; Coming Soon ]

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Scary Movie 5 Targets Black Swan, Ditches Anna Faris

Watch Jean-Claude Van Damme’s Kickboxer With Just the Kicking

Everyone knows there are kicks aplenty in the 1989 Jean-Claude Van Damme muy thai action classic Kickboxer , in which the Muscles from Brussels portrayed an American avenging his brother against a fearsome Thai fighter. But you really get an appreciation for just how many bone-crunching legs and feet and knees were unleashed in the action classic in this brilliantly hilarious, deceptively simple supercut that whittles Kickboxer down to, well, just the kicks. Your Monday must-watch is here. The crazy thing about this supercut is that, in addition to being strangely mesmerizing at times, the chronological edit comprised only of onscreen kicking scenes completely conveys Van Damme’s entire emotional arc as he goes from supportive cornerman to avenger-in-training to ring champ. It’s also a reminder of just how majestic Van Damme was in his prime, doing split kicks in mid-air and roundhousing heads left and right all young and oiled up and stretchy… Watch below and celebrate the kickingest movie of our time! [Via The Cussing Channel ]

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Watch Jean-Claude Van Damme’s Kickboxer With Just the Kicking

Remembering Adam Yauch: The 9 Best Films/Videos Directed by Beastie Boys’ MCA

The late Adam Yauch made history as Beastie Boys rapper MCA, but he also leaves behind a rich legacy in filmmaking: Recall his work helming a number of the trio’s music videos (as Nathaniel Hörnblowér), releasing envelope-pushing (and Oscar-nominated) documentaries and features via his production/distribution label Oscilloscope Labs, and directing his own acclaimed films, notably the 2006 concert doc Awesome; I Fuckin’ Shot That! . Take a look back at Yauch’s work behind the camera, with and without fellow Beasties Mike Diamond and Adam Horovitz, as Movieline runs down the 9 best films and videos he made as a director. “Shadrach” (1989) Live performance footage was rotoscoped over resulting in the gorgeous and surreal hand-painted music video for “Shadrach,” off the Beasties’ second studio album, Paul’s Boutique . “So What’cha Want” (1992) Mike D, Ad-rock, and MCA traipse the woods as rapping, destructive forces of nature in one of my favorite Beastie Boys videos, made eerily sinister (and strangely perfect) by photo negative effects and speed-tweaked lip synching. “Intergalactic” (1998) A tribute to/send-up of Japanese kaiju monster movies and one of the best music videos of all time. “Body Movin’” (1998) More film nerdery from MCA — “Body Movin'” as parody of the Dino De Laurentiis-produced Italian cult spy flick Danger Diabolik . “Three MCs and One DJ” (1999) A loving nod to DJ Mix Master Mike, who marked his first Beastie Boys collaboration on 1999’s Hello Nasty ; without him around to drop the beat, our MCs are frozen and helpless.

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Remembering Adam Yauch: The 9 Best Films/Videos Directed by Beastie Boys’ MCA

Chained to NC-17: Watch the Trailer for the Latest Movie to Earn the MPAA Kiss of Death

Filmmaker Jennifer Lynch knows a thing or two about battling the MPAA — her 1993 debut Boxing Helena earned the ratings board’s dreaded NC-17 for its sexualized violence and general depravity — and so it seems just like old times that her latest effort, Chained , faces the same fate for “some explicit violence.” But wait: Isn’t violence supposed to fly with the ratings board while sex gets the adults-only rating? What gives? Actually, look no further than the film’s NSFW trailer for your answer. On the one hand, I wouldn’t put it past distributor Anchor Bay to pull a Harvey special and exploit Chained ‘s Vincent D’Onofrio serial-killing kidnapper menace for maximum ratings “controversy.” On the other, publicity stunts aside, this just looks… heinous : Anyway, no release date has been set, and Anchor Bay can always turn around and release the film unrated, which is basically regarded the same as an NC-17 by skittish mainstream theaters, so for now it’s just a conversation piece with straight-to-video written all over it. Interested? [ LAT ]

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Chained to NC-17: Watch the Trailer for the Latest Movie to Earn the MPAA Kiss of Death