- Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert To Stay on Comedy Central Through 2012 Election – rauhoittava tieto
- Viikon high concept -traileri on Holy Rollers, jonka kaava on ortodoksijuutalaiset + huumekauppa – jälleen kerran klippi kertoo juonenkäänteistä vähän turhankin paljon, jos sen katsoo kokonaan
- Great Directors -traileri – Bernardo Bertolucci, David Lynch, Stephen Frears, Agnes Varda, Ken Loach, Liliana Cavani, Todd Haynes, Catherine Breillat, Richard Linklater, John Sayles
Maanantain videot
(Pseudo)kasibittinen animaatio:
Paperinukkeanimaatiomusavideo:
Steampunk-natseja:
Canon 5Dmk3:lla 5Dmk2:lla kuvattu lyhäri:
Guy Maddinin The Night Mayor:ja Leonardo-animaatiolyhäri (vaatii rekisteröitymisen).
Elokuvallisia huomioita maailmalta 18.04.2010
- Korean Movie Day Helsingissä lauantaina 24.4.2010 –
- Nippu akateemisia artikkeleita elokuvien leikkaamisesta –
- Mikä on BBC:n Life-luontodokkarisarjan yhteys Dziga Vertovin teorioihin? –
- Ondine-traileri –
- Shutter Island vfx – aika paljon näperrelty tuohonkin leffaan, vaikka ei ehkä päältä siltä näytä
- The Collection Project: "Every post until the project reaches its end will be about a film in my DVD collection." – But not every post I write from here on out will be about films in my DVD collection. Right now, if I had to guess, I'd say you're probably thinking one of two things: "Hah?" or "The fuck??" Please, to explain: let's say that tomorrow I go see Kick-Ass (I'm not going to, but let's just say), and then I come home and decide to write about it. At the end of that review, after I've signed off with a righteous "Time to move off the field, gramps!" — signalling to those who dislike Kick-Ass that they are aged — I would then tack on an addendum, a little capsule review of a film in my DVD collection like, say, Spider-Man. Because, you know: comic books. That's the kind of left-field connection I hope to make on a regular basis.
Elokuvallisia huomioita maailmalta 15.04.2010 – 16.04.2010
- "We've Got Company!" (YT) – Miten niin klise, hä? (via @vuokko)
- What do directors of TV series like Lost and Mad Men do? Are they like movie directors? – Slaten hyvä Explainer-kolumni aiheesta
- The Onion: Sad Sack Purchases Screenwriting Software – hihi
Elokuvallisia huomioita maailmalta 15.04.2010
- 7 unproduced screenplays by Nabokov, Churchill, Adorno & Horkheimer, Huxley… – In Los Angeles in the 1940s, Frankfurt School philosophers Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer spent nearly six years working on a screenplay about prejudice. The final draft, titled "Below the Surface," features a violent commotion on a subway car, during which a woman carrying a vacuum cleaner either falls or is pushed onto the tracks. A one-legged peddler tries to rally the passengers against a Jewish man, who had previously jostled him. At the end of the film, the audience is to be polled regarding the guilt or innocence of the Jew; other audiences might be shown a similar film in which the Jew would be substituted by a "Negro" or a "Gentile white-collar worker." "Below the Surface" was batted around Hollywood for years, subjected to numerous scriptwriting consultations, and pitched to the likes of Jack Warner and Elia Kazan. It was never produced.
- Cruisen ja Diazin tähdittämä Knight and Day on ollut kehitteillä ainakin viisi vuotta – As of last week the Writers Guild of America West had yet to determine final writing credits for the film. But Fox, in submitting the project for credits arbitration, said it viewed the story as having been written by Mr. O’Neill, with a script by Mr. O’Neill and Mr. Mangold — a tribute to the staying power of the original story, notwithstanding the many writers who were involved.
- Christopher Walken visits Astoria, Queens (New Yorker / Talk of the Town) – The woman in the apartment was looking out her window at Christopher Walken. “Hello, hello! I used to live here,” he said to the window. […] In the kitchen, he pointed at an avocado pit suspended by toothpicks in a glass of water, a green taproot reaching downward. “Look, my avocado is growing,” he said. “Isn’t that great? It’s been sitting there for two months, then it did that.”
- Dennis Hopper didn't blow it – The line between Mr. Hopper’s on-screen delivery and his off-screen reputation seems too thin, it makes you squirm, as do many of his later, greater roles. If the pleasure of his performance is tinged with discomfort, it’s because Mr. Hopper has apparently never been afraid of looking ridiculous — an important quality for performers. Few actors can navigate the line between terror and comedy as unnervingly, evidenced by his mesmerizing turn in David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet.” Where does that character end and Mr. Hopper begin? You don’t know, and that not knowing is the space in which Mr. Hopper works.
- Cannes 2010: Lineup reveals a heavy dose of auteurs, with a dollop of celebrity – Terrence Malick's much-ballyhooed and long-gestating "Tree of Life" was also not included in the lineup, negating the rumors, for now, that the Brad Pitt film would make a Cannes debut. It could still be added later — "we're crossing our fingers," festival artistic director Thierry Fremaux said at the announcement — but if it isn't, look for yet another round of rumors about Malick's exacting process.
- Alien-saaga ja Moulin Rouge! julkaistaan blurayllä tänä vuonna –
- Herzog tekee 3d-dokkarin Chauvet'n luolamaalauksista – "I do it [3D] very reduced and as if it was the most natural way to do it," he says. "3D will always have one major problem, and that is when you look as a human being, normally only one eye looks dominantly at things. The other eye is mostly ignored. And only in specific cases – if somebody approaches you – all of a sudden the brain starts to use both eyes for establishing depth of field and understanding space.