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REVIEW: Don’t Go in the Woods — Unless You’re Up for Something Cheap, Cheerful and Seemingly Unfinished

If horror movies have taught us anything, it’s that you can lead teenagers to a big red sign that reads “DON’T GO IN THE WOODS,” but you can’t make them not go in the woods anyway. Actor Vincent D’Onofrio nods to this and other slasher clichés in Don’t Go in the Woods , his feature directing debut — that is, when he’s not nodding to clichés native to the musical and the old “star is born” storyline. All that nodding gives a new definition to the term “genre-friendly,” and if a film could get by on its cheap and cheerful vibe alone, this one certainly would. Unfortunately, outside of the proxy satisfaction it will give those who are dying to see the grim reaper let loose on the set of a very special episode of Glee , the pleasures of Don’t Go in the Woods can’t quite compensate for its straggly bits. Casting five unknown musicians to play the band at the center of the film was logical enough: Slasher actors are not known for their Juilliard pedigrees, so prioritizing their musical skill makes sense. The story has the band decamping into the woods to try and write that elusive hit record without the usual distractions (D’Onofrio’s pointed removal of one of them, the cell phone, seems to channel the modern horror director’s frustration with those little plot spoilers). And the songs they do come up with are tuneful in a strangled yet twinkly, Fleet Foxes kind of way. Musician and director Sam Bisbee (who took home a 2010 Oscar for The New Tenant , a short film he worked on with D’Onofrio) wrote all of the music, and the boys’ performances are high points, in part because if they’re singing it means no one on-screen is attempting to act. Well, no one but the psychotically focused group leader Nick (Matt Sbeglia). Nick has disproportionately big blue eyes and a hipster cloche of dark hair, and during his numbers he usually strays from the campfire to emote in private. Nick rides the rest of the guys — played by Casey Smith, Soomin Lee, Nick Thorpe and Jorgen Jorgensen — like they’re pack mules, and at least one reason why they might put up with it emerges. Their camping spot is the same one Nick used to visit with a now-deceased brother (actually, it was shot on D’Onofrio’s Woodstock, N.Y., property), though presumably the forest’s resident Sledgehammer Guy was not a problem back in those less gruesome times. Did I mention Sledgehammer Guy? Oh, he’s around. He just makes noises that everyone shrugs off for a while, but when the band’s groupie crew shows up to join the party (and make Nick popping mad, naturally), Sledgehammer Guy gets cracking. The kill sequences are quick and not very scary — more like pulling weeds than serial murder — and though some of the ladies get to warble out a few evocatively shot bars before they’re beaned to death, most of the jam sessions are directed like stand-alone videos. A story about the clash of creative and destructive drives set in the wilderness and starring a bunch of scruffy but ambitious kids has big themes and genre toys to play with. Though obviously aware of the potential and prepared to really go for it, D’Onofrio came up with something that feels unfinished — an interesting harmony that needs a better bridge. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Don’t Go in the Woods — Unless You’re Up for Something Cheap, Cheerful and Seemingly Unfinished

Margaret Comeback Adds L.A. Engagement; Awards Crusade Next?

The enduring saga of Margaret — three years in the making, six years in the editing, one week in the theatrical showing, and finally rescued from oblivion by a cabal of devotees best known by their #TeamMargaret brand — presses on this week with news that Kenneth Lonergan’s embattled epic is finally returning to theaters in Los Angeles. Great! But perhaps just as interesting as how this complements the film’s ongoing revival in New York City is how it shores up a better-late-than-never awards campaign by distributor Fox Searchlight. Karina Longworth, who chose Margaret as her favorite film of 2011 (a distinction not too far from critic Alison Willmore’s own here at Movieline ), reports via LA Weekly that Cinefamily will launch a new engagement of the film starting Friday. The run starts at one week but could be extended based on demand — an option exercised three times now by the proprietors of New York’s Cinema Village , where tomorrow Margaret enters its fourth week on the comeback trail. The grassroots effort to get Margaret not only seen but outwardly acclaimed represents one of the season’s more inspired awards crusades, and one with which Searchlight is now playing along. Well, sort of, anyway: Speaking with Longworth, a studio publicist confirmed previous reports that Margaret screeners have been distributed Academy-wide — for what that’s worth, particularly with Oscar nomination ballots due Friday by 5 p.m. and the publicist denying that Searchlight’s “strategy” for the film had changed. But really, does the awards noise even matter in light of fans willfully prying a troubled mainstream film out from under a stubborn distributor’s heavy haunches? This is something to celebrate! Do them and their efforts proud and go see this thing, already. [ LA Weekly ]

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Margaret Comeback Adds L.A. Engagement; Awards Crusade Next?

Fox Searchlight Picks Up Shame; NC-17 Next?

As presumed , word from the first day of the Toronto International Film Festival has Shame finding a distribution deal. But not quite as presumed, Steve McQueen’s acclaimed drama is at Fox Searchlight — which will almost certainly face an NC-17 rating for the movie’s frank sexuality and graphic nudity.

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Fox Searchlight Picks Up Shame; NC-17 Next?

Fincher and Nolan on the importance of Terrence Malick

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Director Terrence Malick’s much buzzed about new film “The Tree of Life” has been dazzling many people as of late. Not only did it win the Palme d’Or at Cannes film festival but has also done astonishingly well at the box office considering the small amount of theaters featuring the picture. However, as Fox Searchlight prepares to take the film to over 100 theaters this weekend, they aren’t taking… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Screening Log Discovery Date : 16/06/2011 09:30 Number of articles : 2

Fincher and Nolan on the importance of Terrence Malick

Fox Searchlight Will Release Partial Little Miss Sunshine Reunion

At least some of the gang is officially reunited! Deadline reports that Fox Searchlight will distribute the previously announced He Loves Me , the first film from co-directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris since Little Miss Sunshine earned multiple millions (and Oscar nominations) for the studio in 2006. Keeping with the reunion theme, Paul Dano co-stars, but — as of now — he’s the only Sunshine actor in the cast. On the upside: Jeff Bridges is being discussed for another role. Sorry, Alan Arkin! [ Deadline ]

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Fox Searchlight Will Release Partial Little Miss Sunshine Reunion

‘Another Earth’ Trailer

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This week, Fox Searchlight is all about Sundance breakout star Brit Marling. She wrote, produced and starred in two films that hit the fest this year: The Sound of My Voice and Another Earth, each of which has a sort of sci-fi component. Fox Searchlight announced yesterday [1] that it had picked up The Sound of My Voice, in which Brit Marling plays a cult leader named Maggie who claims to be a time… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 21/04/2011 21:00 Number of articles : 2

‘Another Earth’ Trailer

Charlie Sheen Enters Rehab, the Old Softy

Is There an Emoticon For Sponsor Love?

Because if there were, Movieline would be loading up a post full of them aimed at Fox Searchlight’s 127 Hours — our valiant sponsor, and your weekend viewing. At the very least, click on one of their ads. It’s the least we can all do to keep the lights on around here. Thanks, Searchlight!

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Is There an Emoticon For Sponsor Love?

Is There an Emoticon For Sponsor Love?

Because if there were, Movieline would be loading up a post full of them aimed at Fox Searchlight’s 127 Hours — our valiant sponsor, and your weekend viewing. At the very least, click on one of their ads. It’s the least we can all do to keep the lights on around here. Thanks, Searchlight!

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Is There an Emoticon For Sponsor Love?

Fox Searchlight Acquires Aptly-Titled Another Earth

One more Sundance acquisition to start the morning: Fox Searchlight will be bringing Mike Cahill’s low-budget sci-fi film Another Earth to theaters. Starring co-writer Brit Marling, the film involves a promising MIT student who kills a talented composer’s family in a car crash the same night that a duplicate version of earth is discovered orbiting the sun. So yes, it’s not just some letdown-metaphor title! No release date on this one yet. [ Deadline ]

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Fox Searchlight Acquires Aptly-Titled Another Earth