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The Master Rules In Chicago: 70 mm Screening Of Anderson Film Recalls Welles’ The Lady From Shanghai

Thanks to the cajoling of a local critic, Chicago cinephiles got an advance look at Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master on Thursday night at a special 70 mm screening of the highly anticipated feature. The sold-out benefit screening took place at Chicago’s Art Deco landmark, the Music Box Theatre, which is the only movie house in the Windy City capable of projecting 70 mm film stock. Anderson was present at the Music Box, although he did not introduce the film and was not available for comment afterward. The advance screening, which doubled as a benefit for Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation (which is dedicated to film preservation), followed a much-talked about  surprise showing of the picture at Santa Monica’s Aero Theatre on Aug. 3.  (The film will make the festival rounds in Venice and Toronto.) Anderson and his superb cinematographer Mihai Malaimare Jr. shot most of The Master in 65mm, marking it the first fictional film project since Kenneth Branagh’s 1996 four-hour adaptation of Hamlet to utilize the wide-gauge format. The advent of digital projection has rendered the costly and time consuming format largely obsolete and only a handful of theaters around the country have the proper technological specifications to project such films. The Music Box is one of those theaters, and just as critics petitioned a recalcitrant Fox Searchlight to offer more screenings of Kenneth Lonergan’s second feature  Margaret , Time Out Chicago film editor Ben Kenigsberg was instrumental in bringing about the Chicago event after he wrote a series of well-reported blog posts insisting on the need for a screening in Anderson’s preferred 70mm format. Within moments of the public announcement of the screening late Wednesday night, Chicago cineastes were abuzz.  The theater sold out its allotment of more than 700 tickets in 85 minutes, according to Dave Jennings, the theater’s managing director. “We’ll project in whatever format we receive them, but we love film,” Jennings said in his prefacing remarks. Running 137 minutes (without final credits), The Master traffics in the director’s trademark themes. The first third of the story appears highly indebted to Orson Welles’s great and potent 1946 noir The Lady From Shanghai . It’s another of Anderson’s brittle and audacious portraits of wounded masculinity and sexual panic. Set in 1950, the story details the complicated emotional interaction of Freddie (Joaquin Phoenix), a hollow-eyed World War II veteran who casually insinuates himself into the inner-workings of Lancaster (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a huckster proselytizing for a new self-help religion that has been likened to Scientology. Like Mark Wahlberg’s debased porn actor in Anderson’s Boogie Nights , Freddie constructs an elaborate alternative family from Lancaster’s entourage that results in much unintended conflict when some members of the insular and tight-knit group — especially Adams, who plays Lancaster’s wife — consider him too willful, naive and insufficiently faithful to be a worthy apostle. Visually, the movie is a marvel of precise and lyrical imagery. One sustained single-take tracking shot follows a young woman as she models a fur jacket. In another vivid, sexually hallucinatory moment, Freddie imagines all the women surrounding Lancaster during a musical number naked. The 70mm image, with its saturated colors and solidity, casts its own spell. In the first of several tense encounters between the two men that functions as Lancaster’s inquisition of the tremulous Freddie, Anderson unflinchingly keeps the camera tight on their faces. The scene plays out in one long, unbroken take, and the effect is hypnotic. As with There Will Be Blood , Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood provides a percussive score that’s even more astringent. The second half is less audacious and more problematic. The crowd’s reaction was excited though also muted, possibly as a result of fatigue since the closing credits didn’t roll until just before 1 a.m.. Given its complex — and dark — subject matter, The Master is likely to be championed by critics and specialized audiences and largely ignored by the larger public. But last night in Chicago, it ruled. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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The Master Rules In Chicago: 70 mm Screening Of Anderson Film Recalls Welles’ The Lady From Shanghai

Shia LaBeouf Ready To Perform Sex ‘For Real’ In Lars Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac?

This week Shia LaBeouf announced that his blockbuster phase is over . From here on out he’s focusing on working with indie artistes , starting with everyone’s favorite provocateur, Lars Von Trier . But will Shia go all the way for his art on Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac , which will reportedly be shot in both softcore and hardcore versions and potentially require its cast to perform unsimulated sex scenes? “There’s a disclaimer at the top of the script that basically says, we’re doing [the sex] for real,” LaBeouf told MTV during a chat promoting Lawless , as Lawless co-star Jessica Chastain looked on lamenting the future corruption of “little Shia.” “And anything that is ‘illegal’ will be shot in blurred images, but other than that, everything is happening.” Charlotte Gainsbourg will play the lead and reunite with her Antichrist director in Nymphomaniac , in which Von Trier “wants to see the sexual arousement of a girl [on screen],” according to producer Peter Aalbæk Jensen . Stellan Skarsgard and Nicole Kidman have also signed on to join the cast. Get More: Movie Trailers , Movies Blog

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Shia LaBeouf Ready To Perform Sex ‘For Real’ In Lars Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac?

Lars Von Trier Wants You! Invites World To Submit Films Inspired By Albert Speer, Sammy Davis Jr.

Leave it to Lars von Trier to find a connection between Nazi architect Albert Speer and Rat Pack singer Sammy Davis Jr.  The controversy-courting Danish filmmaker has invited the public to reintrepret one or more of six great works of art for a community film project that will be unveiled at the Copenhagen Art Festival. The project is being called Gesamt , which translates to “coming together” or “a joint piece of work,” said director Jenle Hallund, who has the nerve-wracking challenge of creating a cohesive film from fragments of the submissions under some very tight time constraints.  The deadline for submissions is Sept. 6, and the finished film is slated to debuty Oct.12, 2012 at Kunsthal Charlottenborg in Copenhagen. Hallund, who was a script supervisor on Von Trier’s Melancholia as well as the co-director Limboland  (2010)  told us Gesamt has the potential to “be a testimony to the health and the soul of civilization. It should show how ordinary people appreciate and interpret big art,” she says. Make that big art that stirs the soul of Von Trier. Participants must base their submissions one or more of six different works of art, and Hallund said that the chosen few “are all pieces of art that [Von Trier] likes.” According to the announcement of the project — which was modestly titled “Lars Von Trier Challenges The People” — by the Danish Agency for Culture, prospective entrants must use as their muse(s):  James Joyce’s Ulysses , “which once was banned in the United States because it was seen as obscene and lewd”; August Strindberg’s play The Father , “which still stands as a striking example of a dysfunctional family”; Paul Gaugin’s painting Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? French composer César Franck’s improvisations; or the music of the late Sammy Davis Jr., “who stepped himself into the hearts of people through song.” Also included among is the Zeppelin Field grandstand in Nuremberg, Germany that Hitler’s main architect Albert Speer created. The choice is sure to generate debate given comments Von Trier made during a press conference at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, when he said: “I understand Hitler, but I think he did some wrong things, yes, absolutely. … He’s not what you would call a good guy, but I understand much about him, and I sympathize with him a little bit. But come on, I’m not for the Second World War, and I’m not against Jews.” When I asked Hallund if Von Trier, who likes to stir the pot, was referencing the Cannes controversy by including Speer, she replied: “I can’t speak on his behalf, but if you look at some of Speers’ art, it is phenomenal, and I would say that it is possible to appreciate his art independent of the ideology” to which it was attached during the reign of Hitler. “All art can be used toward elitism and propaganda,” Hallund continued, adding, “a lot of religious art has been used for that. Some people will say that the Bible and the Koran are works of art, but they have also been used toward mass murder and genocide and repression on the planet.” “We can’t just close our eyes and say we can never talk about Albert Speers or Nazism,” Hallund concluded. “We make ourselves more prone to repeat the past by ignoring it. Gesamt producer Nadia Claudi told me that six submissions have already been received. One arrived from Germany, she said, and the rest are from Denmark. All but one of the submissions are filmed, and Speers right now is leading the subject matter by a thin margin: Two submissions are based on his work at Zeppelin Field; one deals with Joyce, and another, with Gaugin. She said that one entry takes on all six subjects, while the content of another submission is a bit inconclusive. The deadline for entries is Sept. 6.  Everything you need to know about submitting your work can be found  at this link. “I just hope that  people will be very free in their interpretations of this and show us what they have in their hearts,” Hallund said.  “And I would love to hear from Americans.” You heard the lady. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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Lars Von Trier Wants You! Invites World To Submit Films Inspired By Albert Speer, Sammy Davis Jr.

Remembering Dogville, the Odd Film Out in New Nicole Kidman DVD Set

The film : “Dogville” (2003) Why it’s an Inessential Essential : It’s admittedly a little strange to think of this fairly well-known film as needing endorsement of any kind. However, Lionsgate recently released a new Nicole Kidman box set, packaging the first film in Lars von Trier’s acerbic but still incomplete “America Trilogy” in the same collection as more high-profile and easy-to-swallow Kidman roles like Cold Mountain , Rabbit Hole and The Others . The juxtaposition is striking, and as the clear odd film out in the four-disc set, Dogville emerges as perhaps Kidman’s most inessential essential. As von Trier guardedly remarks on the film’s audio commentary, the making of Dogville hinged on Kidman’s involvement. The film’s only began shooting when Kidman was able to fit the gig into her busy work schedule, frustrating Von Trier, who says that he understood and there was no real way around it. He had to have Kidman play Grace, the fugitive gangster’s daughter who finds refuge in the titular small town. Kidman’s performance essentially fuels von Trier’s rabid vision of America as a pseudo-Smalltown, USA. Dogville’s self-interested residents orbit her character as if she were the Sun and the consequences of her actions almost always eclipses everyone else’s. She is good-natured and that’s why von Trier stir the conniving Dogvilleians’ shit. It’s why von Trier’s camera (he’s credited as a camera operator in the end credits) always seems to cling to Kidman’s face. He loves that face (“She’s a very good listener,” he remarks to director of photography Anthony Dod Mantle during the audio commentary). Which in turn is why, according to the skittish but always provocative Danish filmmaker says that Kidman was put off by how physically close he would get to her during shooting. Kidman gives an indelibly nuanced performance here, making the film a barbed satire first and a showcase for Kidman a close second. How the DVD Makes the Case For the Film : Lionsgate repackaged their old DVD release of Dogville but that’s all right given how inadvertently revealing von Trier and Mantle’s audio commentary is. The two filmmakers go silent for a number of scenes as von Trier clearly doesn’t know what to say. This conversation seems to have been recorded in one take and sometime between the film screened at the Cannes Film Festival and its original 2004 American theatrical release. When it comes to Kidman, von Trier seems deliberately shy. But he does bring up certain things that hint at why Kidman didn’t reprise her role as Grace in Manderlay, like how Kidman didn’t like the idea of Grace dragging around a heavy weight around her attached to a collar with a bell. Von Trier says he doesn’t really mind as that was “the job, not to like it.” But while LvT generally sounds like he just wants to put Dogville behind him, his silence regarding Kidman seems like it was his way of trying to be diplomatic. He complements Kidman’s performance but also readily admits that working with such a big star frustrated him, too. When talking about working around Kidman’s schedule, he remarks, “She has to do what she has to do but.” Then he exhales dramatically and continues: “It kind of suffocates you in your creative process.” Other Interesting Trivia : Von Trier says a number of funny (ie: funny-peculiar, not funny ha ha) off-the-cuff things that reveal just how uncomfortable he is talking about Kidman and the film after-the-fact, like when he jokes about how much Stellan Skarsgaard, “loves to be naked, like me,” during Grace’s rape scene. In fact, the only remark he makes about Kidman or Grace during this scene is that her head is over the chalk line demarcating the borders of the house she’s being raped in. He also half-snorts, half-laughs at the absurdity of Kidman complaining about “[feeling] trapped” by having to wear Grace’s degrading collar. Von Trier’s point couldn’t be more clear: Dogville wouldn’t be Dogville if it were less venomous. But it also wouldn’t be Dogville without Kidman, too, and that’s something he sounds reluctant to admit. PREVIOUS INESSENTIAL ESSENTIALS The Last Temptation of Christ The Sitter Citizen Ruth The Broken Tower Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice, Time Out New York, Vulture and Esquire. Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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Remembering Dogville, the Odd Film Out in New Nicole Kidman DVD Set

REVIEW: Lars von Trier’s Melancholia Offers a Glorious Peep into the Sugar Easter Egg of Doom

Lars von Trier’s Melancholia is neither the provocation nor the yowl of anguish that his last picture, Antichrist , was. For those reasons, it’s less effective and also far less of a workout: Antichrist was the first von Trier movie I genuinely loved, after a decade’s worth of railing against the sufferdome atmosphere of pictures like Dogville , Dancer in the Dark , and even the mildly bearable Breaking the Waves . Antichrist stunned and upset me, but it also filled me with compassion toward the man who made it, a feeling I’d never imagined I could have. The gift of Antichrist — with its horrific depictions of emotional suffering, its wailing-wind subtext of “Nature is everywhere, inside you and outside, and it is not your friend” — was that von Trier had surprised me. That is a critic’s greatest pleasure — or at least it’s mine.

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REVIEW: Lars von Trier’s Melancholia Offers a Glorious Peep into the Sugar Easter Egg of Doom

Charlotte Gainsbourg on Melancholia, Kirsten Dunst and Lars von Trier: ‘He’s Always Right’

This week finally brings Melancholia to limited theatrical release in the US, where prospective viewers have spent the five months since its Cannes premiere attempting to parse the great , fraught , near-instant mythology of director Lars von Trier’s latest masterpiece. Finally the work can speak for itself — or mostly speak for itself, anyway, with help from co-star and modern-era von Trier muse Charlotte Gainsbourg.

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Charlotte Gainsbourg on Melancholia, Kirsten Dunst and Lars von Trier: ‘He’s Always Right’

Kirsten Dunst on Her Nude Scenes in Melancholia: "Yes, I Do Have Big Boobs"

Danish director Lars von Trier is known for being an, ahem, rather unpleasant man- he refuses to fly, he psychologically tortures his leading ladies ( Nicole Kidman famously once asked him why he hates women), and recently he was banned from the Cannes Film Festival for saying he “understood” Hitler. But you gotta give the man one thing- he finally got Kirsten Dunst to bare her Kirsten cunst. We reported earlier this year that Dunst makes her full-frontal debut in Von Trier’s latest gloom-and-doom masterpiece, Melancholia – you can even catch a faraway glimpse of her totally nude and lying on a rock in the film’s trailer (seen at left). In advance of Melancholia ‘s stateside debut, Kirsten was interviewed by Elle magazine about her experiences filming the movie. Snatchurally, the subject of nudes came up: One of the surprises about Melancholia is Kirsten’s curvaceous body. She is naked in several scenes and as Von Trier refuses any form of retouching or airbrushing, surely it caused some anxiety? ‘I trusted everyone and the lighting was beautiful. I didn’t work out beforehand, it was all very natural. I don’t have any real body issues. I never really overeat, I shed weight in the summer, put it on in the winter and yes, I do have big boobs. People don’t realize because I cover up a lot, but they are there. Big boobs.’ Oh, we’ve realized for years, Kirsten- ever since that skintillating nip slip of yours in Crazy/Beautiful (2001). In other Von Trier nudes, the director has just announced his next project, the titillatingly titled Nymphomaniac . The movie will depict “the sexual evolution of a woman from birth to age 50″, and the always-tactful Dane has already confirmed that “As a cultural radical I can’t make a film about the sexual evolution of a woman from zero to 50 without showing penetration.” Oh, Lars. You’re a kook, but you’re our kind of kook. Members can see all the breast scenes from Lars von Trier ‘s movies, like Bryce Dallas Howard in Manderlay (2005) and Charlotte Gainsbourg in Antichrist (2009)- right here at MrSkin.com!

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Kirsten Dunst on Her Nude Scenes in Melancholia: "Yes, I Do Have Big Boobs"

Movie Marketing 101 with Lars von Trier: The Nymphomaniac vs. Dirt in the Bedsores

Even if you despise the films of Lars von Trier, the fact that he’s made a new film is still noteworthy, if only for the fact that it means we’ll be seeing more ridiculous quotes in the press from the self-proclaimed best film director in the world . Apologies to James Franco, but von Trier is still the king of turning press releases and interviews into deadpan performance art pieces. In his most recent interview, he teases a potential new project and imparts sage wisdom from his producer about how to keep films commercial.

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Movie Marketing 101 with Lars von Trier: The Nymphomaniac vs. Dirt in the Bedsores