Ristorante Da Luigi: My Favorite Place on Earth

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    Da Luigi, the restaurant in this photo, is not far from the Blue Grotto on Capri. If I had only one afternoon to live, I think I would like to spend it here. Drift on in to the little cove in the boat you've hired for the day, drop anchor, and await the restaurant's launch that will bring you in to the sunbathing area. This is where I like to look around to see if my future wife is in attendance. From there, a chatty Italian waiter will escort you to your table, where you are encouraged to while away the afternoon over delicious food, wine, and plates of olives, prosciutto, and parmigiano.

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Sunday, February 10, 2008

Congratulations to The Wire!

     On Saturday night, The Wire won the WGA Award for Best Drama Series, beating out The Sopranos, Friday Night Lights, Mad Men, and Dexter.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Oscar Nominations Are Out This Morning!

BEST PICTURELunch_oscarstatue_325_2
"Atonement" (Focus Features)
"Juno" (Fox Searchlight)
"Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE
George Clooney in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)
Daniel Day-Lewis in "There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)
Johnny Depp in "Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (DreamWorks and Warner Bros.,
Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount)
Tommy Lee Jones in "In the Valley of Elah" (Warner Independent)
Viggo Mortensen in "Eastern Promises" (Focus Features)

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Casey Affleck in "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" (Warner Bros.)
Javier Bardem in "No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
Hal Holbrook in "Into the Wild" (Paramount Vantage and River Road Entertainment)
Philip Seymour Hoffman in "Charlie Wilson’s War" (Universal)
Tom Wilkinson in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE
Cate Blanchett in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (Universal)
Julie Christie in "Away from Her" (Lionsgate)
Marion Cotillard in "La Vie en Rose" (Picturehouse)
Laura Linney in "The Savages" (Fox Searchlight)
Ellen Page in "Juno" (Fox Searchlight)

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Cate Blanchett in "I’m Not There" (The Weinstein Company)
Ruby Dee in "American Gangster" (Universal)
Saoirse Ronan in "Atonement" (Focus Features)
Amy Ryan in "Gone Baby Gone" (Miramax)
Tilda Swinton in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)

DIRECTOR
Paul Thomas Anderson - "There Will Be Blood"
Ethan Coen & Joel Coen - "No Country For Old Men"
Tony Gilroy - "Michael Clayton"
Jason Reitman - "Juno"
Julian Schnabel - "The Diving Bell And The Butterfly"

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Brad Bird - "Ratatouille"
Diablo Cody - "Juno"
Tony Gilroy - "Michael Clayton"
Tamara Johnson - "The Savages"
Nancy Oliver - "Lars and the Real Girl"

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Paul Thomas Anderson - "There Will Be Blood"
Ethan & Joel Coen - "No Country for Old Men"
Christopher Hampton - "Atonement"
Ronald Harwood - "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
Sarah Polley - "Away from Her"

ANIMATED FEATURE
"Persepolis" - Sony Pictures Classics; Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud
"Ratatouille" - Pixar; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Distribution; Brad Bird
"Surf’s Up" - Sony Pictures Releasing; Ash Brannon and Chris Buck

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
"Beaufort" - Israel
"The Counterfeiters" - Austria
"Katy?" - Poland
"Mongol" - Kazakhstan
"12" - Russia

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Time for the Latest Pro-Wire Post. . .

     Until I've confirmed that all Grotto readers have moved "Get Season One of The Wire on DVD" to the top of their To-Do lists, I am going to keep a steady stream of Wire-related posts flowing.

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     I am in the middle of Season Four right now, and the show's treatment of Baltimore city politics and the condition of the school system is as great as Season One's handling of the drug trade.  If you ever want to really get somebody to think about the important issues confronting us, as humans, at any level (e.g. individual, local, national), forget about parroting bad speeches by politicians and just park your friend in front of The Wire.  The show makes me think about a wide range of issues in new ways, as if I've actually spent time in these places. 

     The bottom line is that if you don't immediately order Season One from Netflicks (or better yet, buy it and display it on a shelf), you might as well jam a couple of shrimp forks into your eyeballs.  It makes about as much sense.

     Here's an article on the show from this past weekend's Life & Arts section of the Financial Times:

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Wire, oh Wire

By Peter Aspden

Published: January 12 2008 00:38 

Some works of art can be so precious and intimate in their appeal that you just have to own them. That impulse is what fuels the art market and, on a less exalted level, it is what keeps music collectors searching for ever purer forms of recording. Art here becomes a private affair, something special between you and it, and the rest of the world can go hang.

But the opposite effect applies too. Some experiences are so great that you want to tell the whole world about them, so that they can share your joy. In fact you can’t stop talking about them. I feel that way about The Wire, HBO’s devastating police series that has just started its fifth and final season in the US.

I walk up to people at receptions or bus stops and ask them if they know about it. Because, in this case, to know is to love. I have never met anyone who has watched the programme and has anything negative to say about it. But we are a mystifyingly small band. I know that many of you will not know what I am talking about. So I have to try to convert you. I imagine this is what the early Christians felt like.

There are reasons for The Wire’s obscurity. First, it is forbiddingly difficult to watch and follow. It tells the story of the drugs war in Baltimore, and tells it like the complex, infuriating affair that it is. Narratives play out over an entire series, and beyond. There is no dipping into The Wire. It is a serious commitment: you have to start with series one, episode one.

Second, there is its authenticity. The Wire was created by a former journalist and a former police officer who ran their beats for many frustrating years. The salt of the street is all over the series. The writing is dense, hard to pick up, and true. There is no smart-arse film school tricksiness here. This is not The West Wing, with its clipped, slick homilies on the wonder of American values. This is the anti-West Wing.

Finally there is the darkness of the programme. As an early commentator said, this show is about an America that is broken. The shot of redemption that we are used to finding in just about any form of popular culture, to make it more palatable and grant it commercial viability, is lacking here. Its makers compare The Wire to classical Greek tragedy: there are immutable forces sweeping all before them while tiny lives skirmish at their edges.

Terrible things happen in The Wire, and no one is brought to account. The show’s heroes are flawed and selfish; its villains are frighteningly charismatic. This is why things are as they are. Respective series have focused on dockworkers, education and local politics as their principle themes (could anything be less sexy?). This final series is devoted to those fine folk in the media. Expect something between Lou Grant and Dante’s Inferno.

The Wire is such a radical programme that it threatens to disrupt entirely the way we watch TV. This is not appointment, or water-cooler, TV. This is a buy-the-DVD-set-and-indulge-in-three-episodes-at-a-time-on-a-quiet-winter-evening-at-home experience.

It also confounds our expectations of the very medium in which it appears. Critics queue to decry the dumbing-down of television, but that is because they spend their lives watching makeover shows and reality programmes. Here is the real deal, yet they seem strangely averse to engaging with it at all. Could it be that the most popular art form is getting a little too “high” for their comfort?

And all those sanctimonious types who do not possess a TV at all, in the deluded belief that watching some piece of rubbish by Oscar Wilde on stage is in some way a superior cultural experience: who will give you your bearings now? Sorry, it’s time to invest in that flat screen.

Here is the clincher: late last year, in a poll in the US’s TV Guide, The Wire was revealed to be one of Barack Obama’s favourite shows. (Some context: Hillary Clinton responded with, among others, American Idol, while Mitt Romney chose Lost.) This is not the place to discuss the finer points of the American presidency. But that would clinch my vote. The man has taste.    

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Here Are the 2008 Golden Globe Nominees (a Friendly Service for Grotto Readers)

Variety

2008 Golden Globe nominations

By VARIETY STAFF

The nominations for the 65th Annual Golden Globe Awards are:

MOTION PICTURE - DRAMA
"American Gangster" - Imagine Entertainment/Scott Free Productions; Universal Pictures
"Atonement" - Working Title Productions; Focus Features
"Eastern Promises" - Kudos Pictures - Uk Serendipity Point Films - Canada A Uk/Canada Co-Production; Focus Features
"The Great Debaters" - Harpo Films; The Weinstein Company/MGM
"Michael Clayton" - Clayton Productions Llc; Warner Bros. Pictures
"No Country For Old Men" - A Scott Rudin/Mike Zoss Production; Miramax/Paramount Vantage
"There Will Be Blood" - A Joanne Sellar/Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Paramount Vantage and Miramax Films

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE - DRAMA
Cate Blanchett - "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
Julie Christie - "Away From Her"
Jodie Foster - "The Brave One"
Angelina Jolie - "A Mighty Heart"
Keira Knightley - "Atonement"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE - DRAMA
George Clooney - "Michael Clayton"
Daniel Day-Lewis - "There Will Be Blood"
James McAvoy - "Atonement"
Viggo Mortensen - "Eastern Promises"
Denzel Washington - "American Gangster"

MOTION PICTURE - COMEDY OR MUSICAL
"Across The Universe" - Revolution Studios International; Sony Pictures Releasing
"Charlie Wilson’s War" - Universal Pictures/Relativity Media/Participant Productions/Playtone; Universal Pictures
"Hairspray" - New Line Cinema in association with Ingenious Film Partners; New Line Cinema
"Juno" - Mandate Pictures/Mr. Mudd Production; Fox Searchlight Pictures
"Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" - Parkes/Mac Donald and Zanuck Company; Warner Bros. Pictures

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE - COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Amy Adams - "Enchanted"
Nikki Blonsky - "Hairspray"
Helena Bonham Carter - "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"
Marion Cotillard - "La Vie en rose"
Ellen Page - "Juno"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE - COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Johnny Depp - "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"
Ryan Gosling - "Lars And The Real Girl"
Tom Hanks - "Charlie Wilson’s War"
Philip Seymour Hoffman - "The Savages"
John C. Reilly - Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story

ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
"Bee Movie" - DreamWorks Animation; DreamWorks Animation
"Ratatouille" - Pixar; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Distribution
"The Simpsons Movie" - Gracie Films; Twentieth Century Fox

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
"4 Months, 3 Weeks And 2 Days" (Romania) - Mobra Films; IFC First Take
"The Diving Bell And The Butterfly" (France And USA) - A Kennedy/Marshall Company And Jon Kilik Production; Miramax/Paramount Vantage
"The Kite Runner" (USA) - Dreamworks Pictures Sidney Kimmel Entertainment And Paramount Classics Participant Productions Present A Sidney Kimmel Entertainment And Parkes/Macdonald Production Distributed By Paramount Classics
"Lust, Caution" (Taiwan) - Haishang Films; Focus Features
"Persepolis" (France) - 247 Films; Sony Pictures Classics

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
Cate Blanchett - "I’m Not There"
Julia Roberts - "Charlie Wilson’S War"
Saoirse Ronan - "Atonement"
Amy Ryan - "Gone Baby Gone"
Tilda Swinton - "Michael Clayton"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
Casey Affleck - "The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford"
Javier Bardem - "No Country For Old Men"
Philip Seymour Hoffman - "Charlie Wilson’s War"
John Travolta - "Hairspray"
Tom Wilkinson - "Michael Clayton"

DIRECTOR - MOTION PICTURE
Tim Burton - "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"
Ethan Coen & Joel Coen - "No Country For Old Men"
Julian Schnabel - "The Diving Bell And The Butterfly"
Ridley Scott - "American Gangster"
Joe Wright - "Atonement"

SCREENPLAY - MOTION PICTURE
Diablo Cody - "Juno"
Ethan Coen & Joel Coen - "No Country For Old Men"
Christopher Hampton - "Atonement"
Ronald Harwood - "The Diving Bell And The Butterfly"
Aaron Sorkin - "Charlie Wilson’s War"

ORIGINAL SCORE - MOTION PICTURE
Michael Brook, Kaki King, Eddie Vedder - "Into The Wild"
Clint Eastwood - "Grace Is Gone"
Alberto Iglesias - "The Kite Runner"
Dario Marianelli - "Atonement"
Howard Shore - "Eastern Promises"

ORIGINAL SONG - MOTION PICTURE
"Despedida" from "Love In The Time Of Cholera" - Music By: Shakira, Antonio Pinto, Lyrics By: Shakira
"Grace Is Gone" from "Grace Is Gone" - Music By: Clint Eastwood, Lyrics By: Carole Bayer Sager
"Guaranteed" from "Into The Wild" - Music & Lyrics By: Eddie Vedder
"That’s How You Know" from "Enchanted"- Music & Lyrics By: Alan Menken
"Walk Hard" from "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story" - Music & Lyrics by: Marshall Crenshaw, John C. Reilly, Judd Apatow, Kasdan

TELEVISION

TELEVISION SERIES - DRAMA
"Big Love" (HBO) - Anima Sola and Playtone Productions in association with HBO Entertainment
"Damages" (Fx Networks) - FX Productions and Sony Pictures Television
"Grey’s Anatomy" (ABC) - ABC Studios
"House" (Fox) - Heel and Toe Films, Shore Z Productions and Bad Hat Harry Productions in association with Universal Media Studios
"Mad Men" (Amc) - Lionsgate Television
"The Tudors" (Showtime) - Showtime/Peace Arch Entertainment/Working Title/Reveille Productions Limited/An Ireland-Canada Co-Production

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A TELEVISION SERIES - DRAMA
Patricia Arquette- "Medium"
Glenn Close - "Damages"
Minnie Driver - "The Riches"
Edie Falco - "The Sopranos"
Sally Field - "Brothers & Sisters"
Holly Hunter - "Saving Grace"
Kyra Sedgwick - "The Closer"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A TELEVISION SERIES - DRAMA
Michael C. Hall - "Dexter"
Jon Hamm - "Mad Men"
Hugh Laurie - "House"
Jonathan Rhys Meyers - "The Tudors"
Bill Paxton - "Big Love"

TELEVISION SERIES - COMEDY OR MUSICAL
"30 Rock" (NBC) - Universal Media Studios In Association With Broadway Video And Little Stranger - Inc.
"Californication" (Showtime) - Showtime Presents In Association With Aggressive Mediocrity, And Then…, Twilight Time Films
"Entourage" (HBO) - Leverage And Closest To The Hole Productions In Association With HBO Entertainment
"Extras" (HBO) - BBC And HBO Entertainment
"Pushing Daisies" (ABC) - Living Dead Guy Productions, The Jinks/Cohen Company in association with Warner Bros. Television

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A TELEVISION SERIES -COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Christina Applegate - "Samantha Who?"
America Ferrera - "Ugly Betty"
Tina Fey - "30 Rock"
Anna Friel - "Pushing Daisies"
Mary-Louise Parker - "Weeds"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A TELEVISION SERIES - COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Alec Baldwin - "30 Rock"
Steve Carell - "The Office"
David Duchovny - "Californication"
Ricky Gervais - "Extras"
Lee Pace - "Pushing Daisies"

MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
"Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee" (HBO) - A Wolf Films/Traveler’S Rest Production In Association With HBO Films
"The Company" (TNT) - Sony Pictures Television
"Five Days" (HBO) - HBO Films In Association With BBC Films
"Longford" (HBO) - A Granada Production in association with Channel 4 and HBO Films
"The State Within" (BBC America) - BBC America, BBC

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Bryce Dallas Howard - "As You Like It"
Debra Messing - "The Starter Wife"
Queen Latifah - "Life Support"
Sissy Spacek - "Pictures Of Hollis Woods"
Ruth Wilson - "Jane Eyre" ("Masterpiece Theatre")

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Adam Beach - "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee"
Ernest Borgnine - "A Grandpa For Christmas"
Jim Broadbent - "Longford"
Jason Isaacs - "The State Within"
James Nesbitt - "Jekyll"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Rose Byrne - "Damages"
Rachel Griffiths - "Brothers & Sisters"
Katherine Heigl - "Grey’s Anatomy"
Samantha Morton - "Longford"
Anna Paquin - "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee"
Jaime Pressly - "My Name Is Earl"

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Ted Danson - "Damages"
Kevin Dillon - "Entourage"
Jeremy Piven - "Entourage"
Andy Serkis - "Longford"
William Shatner - "Boston Legal"
Donald Sutherland - "Dirty Sexy Money"

Thursday, November 29, 2007

It Would Be Impossible to Overstate the Excellence of the HBO Series The Wire. . . .

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     I'm in the middle of watching Season One of the HBO series The Wire.  I don't know where to start, except to say that this show is at least on par with The Sopranos when it comes to intense, realistic drama.

     The show centers on the struggle between Baltimore police and the powerful and violent drug dealers in the projects.  There's the elusive drug kingpin, his righthand man, his mid-level nephew dealer, several low-level teenage dealers, a team of special narcotics detectives, a judge, politicians, heroin addicts, and a host of other characters that weave in and out of the story.

     First of all, you can't believe these guys are acting.  Couldn't be better.  Most of all, for the first time EVER on the screen, I feel like I know what life is like for these guys in the real world.  There are scenes that are so realistic (thankfully without the popular, annoying, over-used, shaky-camera routine) that you get as freaked out as you would by watching the events unfold in real life.

     I guarantee you that if William Shakespeare were alive today, he would name The Wire as perhaps the best dramatic writing and production anywhere in the film and television universe.  If you group it together with The Sopranos, it's not even close.

     The show does a superb job of unpacking the essence of the characters in a realistic, empathetic fashion without falling into the trap of excusing particular actions.  What I mean is that you really, really get to see that the mid-level drug dealer who commits murder or the rock-bottom heroin addict who has abandoned his wife and children to slowly kill himself in the alleyways of the projects are both as human as you or I.  These are human beings who make horrible and evil choices, and they shouldn't be surprised by the often violent fates that befall them, but they are as human as the next guy.

     Last night I watched a scene in which an undercover drug buy goes bad and a cop gets shot, and it was hands-down the most intense scene I've ever seen in film or TV.  The portrayal of the fear and panic that grips the fellow officers of the female undercover cop as the action turns sour is shockingly real.

     The creator and main writer of the show was a Baltimore police detective for twenty years.

       I've attached here a link to a very cool scene in which one of the main characters, the mid-level dealer, explains the game of chess to two of his underlings.  Very cool scene indeed:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1HUlTKvDUI

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     Enjoy!

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

Grotto Arts & Leisure Dept. Recommends WE OWN THE NIGHT

W1_3 I thought this one looked pretty good from the trailer, but it turned out to be excellent.  Written and directed by James Gray, the movie stars Joaquin Phoenix, Mark Wahlberg, Eva Mendes, and Robert Duvall.  Eva Mendes proves once again that it's entirely possible to get by on looks alone, as she's one of the least charismatic or impressive actresses I can think of. Robert Duvall is as solid as always, and Mark Wahlberg adds to his reputation, as I see it, of being a shrewd and humble actor who chooses to take parts in the best films even if it means playing second or third banana.

     Joaquin Phoenix firmly occupies a spot on the Top Five list of currently-working actors.  He, like his companions in that category Russell Crowe and Leonardo DiCaprio, combines a gigantic acting talent with a perfectly chosen range of roles.  This is a good one for him.

     Here's the summary from ComingSoon.net:

  Bobby Green (Joaquin Phoenix) has turned his back on the family business. The popular manager of El Caribe, the legendary Russian-owned nightclub in Brooklyn's Brighton Beach, he has changed his last name and concealed his connection to a long line of distinguished New York cops. For Bobby, every night is a party, as he greets friends and customers or dances with his beautiful Puerto Rican girlfriend, Amada (Eva Mendes), in a haze of cigarette smoke and disco music.

But it's 1988, and New York City's drug trade is escalating. Bobby tries to keep a friendly distance from the Russian gangster who is operating out of the nightclub – a gangster who is being targeted by his brother, Joseph (Mark Wahlberg), an up-and-coming NYPD officer, and his father, Burt (Robert Duvall), the legendary deputy chief of police.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

This October 12th Release Is a No-Brainer. . .

     Elizabeth: The Golden Age

     Let's see. . . the best actress in the world reprising her 1998 Oscar-nominated breakout role.  I think I'll check it out.

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     Geoffrey Rush returns to join Cate Blanchett, and they're joined by Clive Owen and Samantha Morton this time.  Here's the bit from ComingSoon.net:

Reprising the roles they originated in seven-time Academy Award®-nominated "Elizabeth," Cate Blanchett and Geoffrey Rush return for a gripping historical thriller laced with treachery and romance--"Elizabeth: The Golden Age." Joining them in the epic is Clive Owen as Sir Walter Raleigh, a dashing seafarer and newfound temptation for Elizabeth.

"Elizabeth: The Golden Age" finds Queen Elizabeth I (Oscar®-winner Cate Blanchett) facing bloodlust for her throne and familial betrayal. Growing keenly aware of the changing religious and political tides of late 16th century Europe, Elizabeth finds her rule openly challenged by the Spanish King Philip II (Jordi Molla)--with his powerful army and sea-dominating armada--determined to restore England to Catholicism.

Preparing to go to war to defend her empire, Elizabeth struggles to balance ancient royal duties with an unexpected vulnerability in her love for Raleigh. But he remains forbidden for a queen who has sworn body and soul to her country. Unable and unwilling to pursue her love, Elizabeth encourages her favorite lady-in-waiting, Bess (Abbie Cornish), to befriend Raleigh to keep him near. But this strategy forces Elizabeth to observe their growing intimacy.

As she charts her course abroad, her trusted advisor, Sir Francis Walsingham (Academy Award® winner Geoffrey Rush), continues his masterful puppetry of Elizabeth's court at home--and her campaign to solidify absolute power. Through an intricate spy network, Walsingham uncovers an assassination plot that could topple the throne. But as he unmasks traitors that may include Elizabeth's own cousin Mary Stuart (Samantha Morton), he unknowingly sets England up for destruction.

"Elizabeth: The Golden Age" tells the thrilling tale of an era...the story of one woman's crusade to control love, crush enemies and secure her position as a beloved icon of the western world.

     Here's the link to the site.  Click on Trailer:

http://www.elizabeththegoldenage.net/site.html?main=3&sub=3

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Eastern Promises, Despite Its Cheesy Title, Looks Promising. . . .

     On September 14th, we'll be able to settle in at the theater for a great cast in Eastern Promises.  It stars Viggo Mortensen, Naomi Watts, Vincent Cassel, and the sinister Armin Mueller-Stahl.

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     Here's the synopsis from ComingSoon.net:

The mysterious and charismatic Russian-born Nikolai Luzhin (Mortensen) is a driver for one of London's most notorious organized crime families of Eastern European origin. The family itself is part of the Vory V Zakone criminal brotherhood. Headed by Semyon (Academy Award nominee Armin Mueller-Stahl), whose courtly charm as the welcoming proprietor of the plush Trans-Siberian restaurant impeccably masks a cold and brutal core, the family's fortunes are tested by Semyon's volatile son and enforcer, Kirill (Vincent Cassel), who is more tightly bound to Nikolai than to his own father.

But Nikolai's carefully maintained existence is jarred once he crosses paths at Christmastime with Anna Khitrova (Academy Award nominee Naomi Watts), a midwife at a North London hospital. Anna is deeply affected by the desperate situation of a young teenager who dies while giving birth to a baby. Anna resolves to try to trace the baby's lineage and relatives. The girl's personal diary also survives her; it is written in Russian, and Anna seeks answers in it.

Anna's mother Helen (Sinead Cusack) does not discourage her, but Anna's irascible Russian-born uncle Stepan (Jerzy Skolimowski) urges caution. He is right to do so; by delving into the diary, Anna has accidentally unleashed the full fury of the Vory.

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     Click on this link for the trailer:

http://www.focusfeatures.com/viewer.php?f=eastern_promises&c=trailer&ext=mov&w=480&h=260

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

This One Starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe Looks Promising.

     Universal releases American Gangster on November 2nd.  Ridley Scott directs the script by Steve Zaillian.

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     Here's the synopsis from ComingSoon.net:

Denzel Washington, Russell Crowe, Brian Grazer, Steve Zaillian and Ridley Scott team to tell the true juggernaut success story of a cult hero from the streets of 1970s Harlem in "American Gangster."

Nobody used to notice Frank Lucas (Oscar® winner Washington), the quiet driver to one of the inner city's leading black crime bosses. But when his boss suddenly dies, Frank exploits the opening in the power structure to build his own empire and create his own version of the American Dream. Through ingenuity and a strict business ethic, he comes to rule the inner-city drug trade, flooding the streets with a purer product at a better price. Lucas outplays all of the leading crime syndicates and becomes not only one of the city's mainline corrupters, but part of its circle of legit civic superstars.

Richie Roberts (Oscar® winner Crowe) is an outcast cop close enough to the streets to feel a shift of control in the drug underworld. Roberts believes someone is climbing the rungs above the known Mafia families and starts to suspect that a black power player has come from nowhere to dominate the scene. Both Lucas and Roberts share a rigorous ethical code that sets them apart from their own colleagues, making them lone figures on opposite sides of the law. The destinies of these two men will become intertwined as they approach a confrontation where only one of them can come out on top.

Washington ("Training Day") and Crowe ("Gladiator") lead a spectacular cast of accomplished and rising stars--including Chiwetel Ejiofor, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Josh Brolin, Armand Assante, RZA, John Ortiz, John Hawkes and Ted Levine in this blistering tale of a true American entrepreneur directed by Oscar® nominee Ridley Scott ("Gladiator") and produced by Academy Award® winner Brian Grazer ("A Beautiful Mind") and Scott from a screenplay by Academy Award® winner Steve Zaillian ("Schindler's List").

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     Click on the link below to enjoy the trailer:

http://www.apple.com/trailers/universal/americangangster/large.html

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Entertainment Alert: Hollywood's Two Best Working Actors Teaming Up!

     I have no idea whether or not Russell Crowe and Leonardo DiCaprio are cool guys or not (evidence surfaces from time to time suggesting that they, like everyone else, have their flaws and personality glitches), but what does that have to do with the price of tea in China?  The point is that they are the Blue Grotto's picks for the two best actors working today. 

     Russell Crowe has a range without equal among actors.  I would say that he's the closest thing in the versatility department to Cate Blanchett.

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     Leonardo DiCaprio positively seethes with emotion in all of his roles.  To stand out the way he did in The Departed against a backdrop of assorted excellent actors requires a talent of massive proportion.  In Blood Diamond, I felt like I was watching the character onscreen, not an actor playing the character.

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     Don't try to tell me that when the "great" Dustin Hoffman and Al Pacino take roles these days, you ever feel like you're watching anyone but Dustin Hoffman or Al Pacino.  Those two guys, who secured their status as film legends somewhere along the way, are the two most annoying actors to watch, period.  They ruin every movie they're in. 

     Anyway, here's the article from Variety:      

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Crowe 'Lies' with DiCaprio

Duo team for Ridley Scott pic

By MICHAEL FLEMING

Russell Crowe will join Leonardo DiCaprio in "Body of Lies," the William Monahan-scripted adaptation of the David Ignatius novel that Ridley Scott will direct for Warner Bros.

Donald De Line and Scott are producing; pic shoots in the fall.

Crowe will play Ed Hoffman, the manipulative CIA boss who teams with operative Roger Ferris (DiCaprio) to trap a dangerous Al Qaeda leader by planting a false rumor that the bomber is in cahoots with the Americans. Crowe has been working steadily with Scott since "Gladiator," teaming on "A Good Year," the recently completed "American Gangster" and the upcoming "Nottingham," a Universal and Imagine drama that will go into production early next year.

Crowe has been courted to play the CIA boss since DiCaprio signed on in April. He's awaiting a polish by "American Gangster" scribe Steve Zaillian before formally committing.

Crowe will next be seen starring alongside Christian Bale in the James Mangold-directed "3:10 to Yuma."

Monday, June 11, 2007

The Greatness of the Sopranos. . .

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Old Jersey Real

The Greatness of The Sopranos

By Peggy Noonan

Friday, June 8, 2007  (Wall Street Journal)

"The Sopranos" wasn't only a great show or even a classic. It was a masterpiece, and its end Sunday night is an epochal event. With it goes an era, a time.

You know the story, and if you don't, you've absorbed enough along the way as you overheard people chat Monday morning around what we still call the water cooler and mean as the line at Starbucks. A New Jersey mobster with a family, a business and a therapist makes his way through life. It was a family drama that was a mob drama, but in some hard-to-put-your-finger-on way it was the great post-9/11 drama of our time.

"The Sopranos" first aired on HBO in 1999, but rewatching the first season, there's an air of preamble to it, as if something were coming. Something was, and the show really got its shape and mood from what followed in September 2001. Sometimes this was subtle -- Tony goes to his old uncle's place upstate and suddenly thinks about going to live up there where it's safe, where the birds fly on the lake. Sometimes it wasn't -- in the bar, he reads from a newspaper story about how unprotected the Port of Newark is. I remember this because at the time I'd begun to worry about the Port of Newark.

That kind of thing happened a lot with "The Sopranos." It was real, Old Jersey real (Satriale's butcher shop, not the mall) and primal. It was about big things, as all great drama is -- the human hunger for for dominance, for safety, for love; the desire to rise in the world; the need to belong to something, to be a Jet or a Shark, a Crip or a Blood, and have mates, homies, esteemed colleagues or paisans; how we process the hypocrisy all around us, in our families and among our friends, as we grow up; how we process hypocrisy in ourselves.

Because it was primal, its dialogue was pared to the bone and entered the language. You disrespecting the Bing? You wanna get whacked? And other famous phrases, many of them obscene.

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The drama of Tony, the great post-9/11 drama of him, is that he is trying to hold on in a world he thinks is breaking to pieces. He has a sense, even though he's only in his 40s, that the best times have passed, not only for the Italian mob but for everyone, for the country -- that he'd missed out on something, and that even though he lives in a mansion, even though he is rich and comfortable and always has food in the refrigerator and Carm can go to Paris and the kids go to private school -- for all of that, he fears he's part of some long downhill slide, a slide that he can't stop, that no one can, that no one will. Out there, he told his son and daughter, it is the year 2000, but in here it's 1950. His bluster, his desperate desire to re-create order with the rough tools of his disordered heart and brain, are comic, poignant, ridiculous, human.

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David Chase made "The Sopranos" a masterpiece.

Tony became a new and instantly recognizable icon, and his character adds to American myth, to America's understanding of itself. It's a big thing to create such a character, and not only one but a whole family of them -- Uncle Junior, Christopher, Carmella. This is David Chase's great achievement, to have created characters that are instantly recognizable, utterly original, and that add to America's understanding of itself. And to have created, too, some of the most horrifying moments in all of television history, and one that I think is a contender for Most Horrifying Moment Ever. That would be Adriana desperately crawling -- crawling! -- through the leaves in the woods as she tries to flee her lovable old friend Silvio, who is about to brutally put her down.

Here is a question that touches on the mystery of creativity, and I'll probably put it badly because I can't define it better than what I'm going to say. David Chase is the famous and justly celebrated creator of "The Sopranos," the shaper of its stories. The psychological, spiritual and emotional energy needed to create a whole world, which is what he has done, is very great. It is a real expenditure, a kind of investment in life, a giving of yourself. You can't do what he does without something like love. Not sentimentality or softness or sweetness, but love. And yet in a way, if you go by "The Sopranos," Mr. Chase loves nothing. Human beings are appetite machines, and each day is devoted to meeting and appeasing those appetites. No one is good, there are no heroes, he sees through it all. The mental-health facility is a shakedown operation where they medicate your child into zombiehood and tell him to watch TV. Politicians are the real whores. The FBI is populated by smug careerists. In the penultimate show, a table full of psychotherapists top each other with erudite-seeming comments that show a ruthlessness as great as any gangster's. I guess I'm asking where the energy for creativity comes when you see with such cold eyes.

Not that they're unrealistic. They're not. One of the reasons the show was so popular -- one of the reasons it resonated -- is that it captured a widespread feeling that our institutions are failing, all of them, the church, the media, the law, the government, that there's no one to trust, that Mighty Mouse will not save the day.

In Mr. Chase's world, everyone's a gangster as long as he can find a gang. Those who don't are free-lancers.

And what he seems to be telling us, as the final season ends, is that all your pity for Tony, all your regard for the fact that he too is caught, all your sympathy for him as a father, as a man trying to be a man, as a man whose mother literally tried to have him killed, is a mistake. Because he is a bad man. He has passing discomfort but not conscience, he has passing sympathies but no compassion. When he kills the character who is, essentially, his son, Christopher, he does it spontaneously, coolly, and with no passion. It's all pragmatism. He's all appetite. Tony is a stone cold gangster.

There have been shows on television that have been, simply, sublime. In drama there was "I, Claudius," a masterpiece of mood and menace -- "Trust no one!" -- from which writers and producers continue to steal (see HBO's "Rome.") And PBS's "Upstairs, Downstairs." A few others. "The Sopranos" is their equal, but also their superior: It is hard to capture the past, but harder to capture the present, because everyone knows when you don't get it right. It takes guts to do today.

David Chase did, and he made a masterpiece. I'll be watching Sunday night, but I'll wake up that morning with a blue moon in my eyes.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

My Hollywood Sources Tell Me There's a Movie in the Works for This Legendary Non-Human Character.

     If you are unfamiliar with Edward Gorey's The Doubtful Guest, you need to get up to speed.  Get the book: it'll take you all of four minutes to read it.  This slim volume features one of the great Non-Human Characters of all time (up there with Yoda and the Geico Gekko).  It also defies any sort of explanation.  You'll read it, love it, and still end up scratching your head, saying "What was that all about?  And what IS he?"

     Anyway, a Hollywood insider has tipped off the Blue Grotto's Media & Entertainment Dept. that a film may be in the works. . . .

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

This Is Great News for Suspense Lovers!

     I think that before each episode of 24 they should put one of those amusement-park-ride warnings up telling pregnant mothers and people with heart trouble to avoid watching the show!

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Fox Orders More '24'

Emmy winner extended through '08-'09 season

By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER

Jack's back - and on board to save the world at least two more times.

Fox has ordered two more seasons of "24," keeping the Emmy-winning drama on the net through the 2008-2009 TV season. . . .

Exec producers for "24" have already told several publications that they plan to make some changes on the show next season - but the twist will remain the same: Each episode covering one hour of real time as special agent Jack Bauer races against the clock to stop something bad from happening.

20th Century Fox TV and Imagine TV are behind "24," which winds down its sixth season Monday with a two-hour finale.

"24" is coming off an Emmy win for outstanding drama series, as well as outstanding lead actor in a drama (for star Kiefer Sutherland). Show has scored 51 Emmy noms throughout its existence, including five for best drama.

Tintin Being Brought to the Screen by the Best Guys for the Job!

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     I used to love the Tintin books when I was little, in which the odd Belgian boy detective and his little dog travel the world, solving mysteries in exotic locales.  Now, Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson will be directing and producing these books for us, using "performance capture technology" and full 3-D!  Here's an excerpt from the Variety article:

Spielberg, Jackson team for Tintin

Duo pact for adventure trilogy

By ANNE THOMPSON, PAMELA MCCLINTOCK

Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson are teaming to direct and produce three back-to-back features based on Georges Remi's beloved Belgian comic-strip hero Tintin for DreamWorks. Pics will be produced in full digital 3-D using performance capture technology.

The two filmmakers will each direct at least one of the movies; studio wouldn't say which director would helm the third. Kathleen Kennedy joins Spielberg and Jackson as a producer on the three films, which might be released through DreamWorks Animation.

Tintin has long been a passion project for Spielberg; he and Kennedy have held various film rights to the comedic adventure book series off and on for more than 25 years. With the rights in place, Spielberg, Jackson and DreamWorks began quietly developing the project. Jackson has also long been a fan of the comic books.

Jackson's New Zealand-based WETA Digital, the f/x house behind "The Lord of the Rings" franchise, produced a 20-minute test reel bringing to life the characters created by Remi, who wrote under the pen name of Herge.

"Herge's characters have been reborn as living beings, expressing emotion and a soul which goes far beyond anything we've seen to date with computer animated characters," Spielberg said.

"We want Tintin's adventures to have the reality of a live-action film, and yet Peter and I felt that shooting them in a traditional live-action format would simply not honor the distinctive look of the characters and world that Herge created," Spielberg continued. . . .

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     Here are some of my favorite Tintins:

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

A Follow-Up Piece on 300!

     Here's a column about 300 by prolific military historian and columnist Victor David Hanson:

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'300' -- Fact or Fiction?

By Victor Davis Hanson

Crowds are flocking to see the film "300" about the ancient Spartans' last stand at the pass at Thermopylae against an invading Persian army. Yet many critics, in panning "300," have alleged that the film is essentially historically inaccurate. Are they right?

Here are some answers. But first two qualifiers. I wrote an introduction to a book about the making of "300" after being shown a rough cut of the movie in October. And, second, remember that "300" does not claim to follow exactly ancient accounts of the battle of Thermopylae in 480 B.C. Instead, it is an impressionistic take on a graphic novel by Frank Miller, intended to entertain and shock first, and instruct second.

Indeed, at the real battle, there weren't rhinoceroses or elephants in the Persian army. Their king, Xerxes, was bearded and sat on a throne high above the battle; he wasn't, as in the movie, bald and sexually ambiguous, and he didn't prance around the killing field. And neither the traitor Ephialtes nor the Spartan overseers, the Ephors, were grotesquely deformed.

When the Greeks were surrounded on the battle's last day, there were 700 Thespians and another 400 Thebans who fought alongside the 300 Spartans under King Leonidas. But these non-Spartans are scarcely prominent in the movie.

Still, the main story line mostly conveys the message of Thermopylae.

A small contingent of Greeks at Thermopylae (which translates to "The Hot Gates") really did block the enormous Persian army for three days before being betrayed. The defenders claimed their fight was for the survival of a free people against subjugation by the Persian Empire.

Many of the film's corniest lines - such as the Spartan dare, "Come and take them," when ordered by the Persians to hand over their weapons, or the Spartans' flippant reply, "Then we will fight in the shade," when warned that Persian arrows will blot out the sun - actually come from ancient accounts by Herodotus and Plutarch.

The warriors of "300" look like comic-book heroes because they are based on Frank Miller's drawings that emphasized bare torsos, futuristic swords and staged fight scenes. In other words, director Zack Snyder tells the story not in a realistic fashion - like the mostly failed attempts to recapture the ancient world in recent films such as "Troy" or "Alexander" - but in the surreal manner of a comic book or video game.

The Greeks themselves often embraced such impressionistic adaptation. Ancient vase painters sometimes did not portray soldiers accurately in their bulky armor. Instead, they used "heroic nudity" to show the contours of the human body.

Similarly, Athenian tragedies that depicted stories of war employed contrivances every bit as imaginative as those in "300." Actors wore masks. Men played women's roles. They chanted in set meters, broken up by choral hymns. The audience understood that dramatists reworked common myths to meet current tastes and offer commentary on the human experience.

Some reviewers think the film is gratuitously violent. But Thermopylae was no picnic. Almost all the Spartans and Thespians were killed, along with hundreds from other Greek contingents. Some of the film's most graphic killing - such as Persians being pushed over the cliff into the sea - derives from the text of Herodotus. And the filmmakers omitted the mutilation of King Leonidas, whose head Xerxes ordered impaled on a stake.

Finally, some have suggested that "300" is juvenile in its black-and-white depiction - and glorification - of free Greeks versus imperious Persians. The film has actually been banned in Iran as hurtful American propaganda, as the theocracy suddenly is reclaiming its "infidel" ancient past.

But that good/bad contrast comes not from the director or Frank Miller, but is based on accounts from the Greeks themselves, who saw their own society as antithetical to the monarchy of imperial Persia.

True, 2,500 years ago, almost every society in the ancient Mediterranean world had slaves. And all relegated women to a relatively inferior position. Sparta turned the entire region of Messenia into a dependent serf state.

But in the Greek polis alone, there were elected governments, ranging from the constitutional oligarchy at Sparta to much broader-based voting in states like Athens and Thespiae.

Most importantly, only in Greece was there a constant tradition of unfettered expression and self-criticism. Aristophanes, Sophocles and Plato questioned the subordinate position of women. Alcidamas lamented the notion of slavery.

Such openness was found nowhere else in the ancient Mediterranean world. That freedom of expression explains why we rightly consider the ancient Greeks as the founders of our present Western civilization - and, as millions of moviegoers seem to sense, far more like us than the enemy who ultimately failed to conquer them.

Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and author, most recently, of "A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War."

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Cate Blanchett's Signed On to Star in Indiana Jones 4!

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Blanchett on Crusade to 'Indiana Jones 4'

By Tatiana Siegel

Cate Blanchett has signed on to star in the fourth installment of the "Indiana Jones" adventures.

Harrison Ford already has boarded the project, which will be produced by Lucasfilm and directed by Steven Spielberg.

With David Koepp's screenplay shrouded in secrecy, it is unclear what character Blanchett will play. However, sources said the Oscar-winning actress has landed a starring role.

Shooting will begin in June in Los Angeles and at undisclosed locations around the world. Paramount Pictures will release "Indy 4" day-and-date around the world on May 22, 2008, with a handful of territories opening the following day.

Frank Marshall is producing, with George Lucas and Kathleen Kennedy executive producing.

Blanchett, who is filming David Fincher's "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," next will lend her voice to Wes Anderson's "The Fantastic Mr. Fox." In addition to her Academy Award win for "The Aviator," she received a supporting nomination this year for her role in Richard Eyre's "Notes on a Scandal."

She is repped by CAA.

(Hollywood Reporter article)

Monday, March 19, 2007

Blue Grotto Movie Recommendation: 300!

     There is a popular game played amongst my pals, the name of which must be edited, or censored, for The Blue Grotto.  It is akin to the long-car-ride game where one person says "I'm thinking of someone," and the other passengers ask a series of questions about the subject's nature to arrive at the name.

     In our version of the game, somebody announces that they are thinking of somebody, but the subject must be categorized as a "Total [edited - synonyms: ace, champion, conqueror, hero, superstar]" or a "Total [edited - synonyms: wimp, wuss, cream puff, invertebrate, milquetoast, sissy, tenderfoot]." 

     An example of the former might be Russell Crowe's character Maximus in Gladiator, while an example of the latter might be figure skater Scott Hamilton.

     Anyway, I nominate the character of King Leonidas as the ultimate example of the former in the new blockbuster movie, 300!

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     I had seen the previews for this flick for a couple of months and thought to myself, "No, gracias."  It looked like a bizarre, testosterone-soaked B-movie with nothing but a lot of blood and gore and CGI special effects.

     Well, I was impressed by how this new movie set out to offer a whole new genre, and succeeded!  It is AWESOME!  300 tells the story the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 B.C., in which King Leonidas and 300 of his best Spartan warriors defended Greece, to the death, from the onslaught of Persian king Xerxes (Xerxes was, by the way, my father's old email address) and his millions of soldiers.  The heroic stand of the Spartans gave the rest of the Greek army enough time to assemble, march to the area, and defeat the Persians.

     300 is based on Frank Miller's comic book (or "graphic novel" as they're now called), and the special effects are created to give the impression that you're watching a comic book unfold onscreen.  The actors are real, of course, but the whole atmosphere and effect is sort of amped up on adrenaline.  The movie is full of limbs and heads being lopped off at every turn, so if you have a weak stomach you might want to stay home and watch a Matlock rerun. 

     In addition to looking like a comic book, the movie deals in very bold, black-and-white, comic-book-like themes.  What I mean is that King Leonidas and his group of brave warriors are the heroes of this story due to their self-sacrifice based on honor, duty, and courage.  You're not going to find any subplots involving the King crying on his wife's shoulder, showing his more sensitive side.  Nor are you going to see any examples of compassion, sympathy, humility, or even kindness from these heroes.  This story celebrates the virtues of honor, duty, and courage, and it is up to some other story to celebrate other virtues not found in these men. 

     One common denominator among all heroes, I have come to believe, is that whether a hero is a fierce warrior like King Leonidas, or a humble toiler like Mother Theresa, the person places his or her own interests second to the interests of others.

     Well, enough of my commentary.  Here are some pics from this action-movie-on-steroids:

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Wednesday, January 24, 2007

This Oscar Category Is a No-Brainer.

     I saw The Last King of Scotland tonight.  I'm the first guy to say that Leonardo DiCaprio was truly amazing in Blood Diamond, but Forest Whitaker is a shoo-in for Best Actor for his portrayal of Idi Amin.  Case closed. . . .

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Breaking News! Oscar Nominations Are Here!

As a friendly service to Grotto readers, here's a list of Academy Award Nominations.  I will have more Oscar-related commentary in coming days.

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PICTURE
"Babel" Alejandro González Iñárritu, Jon Kilik and Steve Golin, producers; An Anonymous Content/Zeta Film/Central Films Production (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)
"The Departed" Nominees to be determined; A Warner Bros. Pictures Production production (Warner Bros.)
"Letters from Iwo Jima" Clint Eastwood, Steven Spielberg and Robert Lorenz, producers; A DreamWorks Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures Production (Warner Bros.)
"Little Miss Sunshine" Nominees to be determined; A Big Beach/Bona Fide Production (Fox Searchlight)
"The Queen" Andy Harries, Christine Langan and Tracey Seaward, producers; A Granada Production (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)

ACTOR
Leonardo DiCaprio, "Blood Diamond"
Ryan Gosling, "Half Nelson"
Peter O'Toole, "Venus"
Will Smith, "The Pursuit of Happyness"
Forest Whitaker, "The Last King of Scotland"

ACTRESS
Penélope Cruz, "Volver"
Judi Dench, "Notes on a Scandal"
Helen Mirren, "The Queen"
Meryl Streep, "The Devil Wears Prada"
Kate Winslet, "Little Children"

SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin, "Little Miss Sunshine"
Jackie Earle Haley, "Little Children"
Djimon Hounsou, "Blood Diamond"
Eddie Murphy, "Dreamgirls"
Mark Wahlberg, "The Departed"

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Adriana Barraza, "Babel"
Cate Blanchett, "Notes on a Scandal"
Abigail Breslin, "Little Miss Sunshine"
Jennifer Hudson, "Dreamgirls"
Rinko Kikuchi, "Babel"

DIRECTOR
Clint Eastwood, "Letters from Iwo Jima"
Stephen Frears, "The Queen"
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, "Babel"
Martin Scorsese, "The Departed"
Paul Greengrass, "United 93"

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
"Babel" Written by Guillermo Arriaga (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)
"Letters from Iwo Jima" Screenplay by Iris Yamashita; story by Iris Yamashita, Paul Haggis (Warner Bros.)
"Little Miss Sunshine" Written by Michael Arndt (Fox Searchlight)

"Pan’s Labyrinth"
Written by Guillermo del Toro (Picturehouse)
"The Queen"
Written by Peter Morgan (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
"Borat Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan" Screenplay by Sacha Baron Cohen, Anthony Hines, Peter Baynham, Dan Mazer; story by Sacha Baron Cohen, Peter Baynham, Anthony Hines, Todd Phillips (20th Century Fox)
"Children of Men" Screenplay by Alfonso Cuarón, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata, Mark Fergus, Hawk Ostby (Universal)
"The Departed" Screenplay by William Monahan (Warner Bros.)
"Little Children"Screenplay by Todd Field, Tom Perrotta (New Line)
"Notes on a Scandal"Screenplay by Patrick Marber (Fox Searchlight)

ANIMATED FEATURE
"Cars" John Lasseter, Joe Ranft (Walt Disney Pictures/Pixar Animation Studio; Buena Vista Pictures Distribution)
"Happy Feet" George Miller (Kingdom Pictures, LLC; Warner Bros. Pictures/Village Roadshow Pictures)
"Monster House" Gil Kenan (Columbia Pictures; Sony Pictures Releasing)

ART DIRECTION
"Dreamgirls" John Myhre, art direction; Nancy Haigh, set decoration (DreamWorks and Paramount)
"The Good Shepherd" Jeannine Oppewall, art direction; Gretchen Rau and Leslie E. Rollins, set decoration UUniversal)
"Pan’s Labyrinth" Eugenio Caballero, art direction; Pilar Revuelta, set decoration (Picturehouse)
"Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest" Rick Heinrichs, art direction; Cheryl A. Carasik, set decoration (Buena Vista)
"The Prestige" Nathan Crowley, art direction; Julie Ochipinti, set decoration (Buena Vista)

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
"After the Wedding" Zentropa Entertainments; IFC (Denmark)
"Days of Glory" Tessalit Productions; The Weinstein Co. (Algeria)
"The Lives of Others" Wiedemann & Berg Filmproduktion; Sony Pictures Classics (Germany)
"Pan's Labyrinth" Estudios Picasso/Tequila Gang/Esperanto; Picturehouse (Mexico)
"Water" Téléfilm Canada/Noble Nomad Pictures Ltd.; Fox Searchlight (Canada)

CINEMATOGRAPHY
"The Black Dahlia" (Universal) Vilmos Zsigmond
"Children of Men" (Universal) Emmanuel Lubezki
"The Illusionist" (Yari Film Group) Dick Pope
"Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse) Guillermo Navarro
"The Prestige" (Buena Vista) Wally Pfister

DOCUMENTARY SHORT
"The Blood of Yingzhou District" Ruby Yang and Thomas Lennon; A Thomas Lennon Films Production
"Recycled Life" Leslie Iwerks and Mike Glad; An Iwerks/Glad Production
"Rehearsing a Dream" Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon; A Simon & Goodman Picture Company Production
"Two Hands" Nathaniel Kahn and Susan Rose Behr; A Crazy Boat Pictures Production

ANIMATED SHORT FILM
"The Danish Poet" Torill Kove; A Mikrofilm and National Film Board of Canada Production(National Film Board of Canada)
"Lifted" Gary Rydstrom; A Pixar Animation Studios Production (Buena Vista)
"The Little Matchgirl" Roger Allers and Don Hahn; A Walt Disney Pictures Production (Buena Vista)
"Maestro" Geza M. Toth; A Kedd Production (Szimplafilm)
"No Time for Nuts" Chris Renaud and Michael Thurmeier; A Blue Sky Studios Production(20th Century Fox)

LIVE-ACTION SHORT FILM
"Binta and the Great Idea (Binta Y La Gran Idea)" Javier Fesser and Luis Manso; A Peliculas Pendelton and Tus Ojos Production
"Éramos Pocos (One Too Many)" Borja Cobeaga; An Altube Filmeak Production (Kimuak)
"Helmer & Son" Soren Pilmark and Kim Magnusson; A Nordisk Film Production
"The Saviour" Peter Templeman and Stuart Parkyn; An Australian Film Television and Radio School Production (Australian Film Television and Radio School)
"West Bank Story" Ari Sandel; An Ari Sandel, Pascal Vaguelsy, Amy Kim, Ravi Malhotra and Ashley Jordan Production

VISUAL EFFECTS
"Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest" John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson and Allen Hall (Buena Vista)
"Poseidon" Boyd Shermis, Kim Libreri, Chaz Jarrett and John Frazier (Warner Bros.)
"Superman Returns" Mark Stetson, Neil Corbould, Richard R. Hoover and Jon Thum (Warner Bros.)

COSTUME DESIGN
"Curse of the Golden Flower" Yee Chung Man (Sony Pictures Classics)
"The Devil Wears Prada" Patricia Field (20th Century Fox)
"Dreamgirls" Sharen Davis (DreamWorks and Paramount)
"Marie Antoinette" Milena Canonero (Sony Pictures Releasing)
"The Queen" Consolata Boyle (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
"Deliver Us from Evil" Amy Berg and Frank Donnerl; A Disarming Films Production (Lionsgate)
"An Inconvenient Truth" Davis Guggenheim; A Lawrence Bender/Laurie David Production (Paramount Classics and Participant Productions)
"Iraq in Fragments" James Longley and John Sinno; A Typecast Pictures/Daylight Factory Production (Typecast Releasing)
"Jesus Camp" Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady; A Loki Films Production (Magnolia Pictures)
"My Country, My Country" Laura Poitras and Jocelyn Glatzer; A Praxis Films Production (Zeitgeist Films)

FILM EDITING
"Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage) Stephen Mirrione and Douglas Crise
"Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.) Steven Rosenblum
"Children of Men" (Universal) Alex Rodríguez and Alfonso Cuarón
"The Departed" (Warner Bros.) Thelma Schoonmaker
"United 93" (Universal and StudioCanal) Clare Douglas, Christopher Rouse and Richard Pearson

SOUND MIXING
"Apocalypto" Kevin O’Connell, Greg P. Russell and Fernando Camara (Buena Vista)
"Blood Diamond" Andy Nelson, Anna Behlmer and Ivan Sharrock (Warner Bros.)
"Dreamgirls" Michael Minkler, Bob Beemer and Willie Burton (DreamWorks and Paramount)
"Flags of Our Fathers" John Reitz, Dave Campbell, Gregg Rudloff and Walt Martin (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., distributed by Paramount)
"Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest" Paul Massey, Christopher Boyes and Lee Orloff (Buena Vista)

SOUND EDITING
"Apocalypto" Sean McCormack and Kami Asgar (Buena Vista)
"Blood Diamond" Lon Bender (Warner Bros.)
"Flags of Our Fathers" Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman (DreamWorks/Warner Bros., distributed by Paramount)
"Letters from Iwo Jima" Alan Robert Murray (Warner Bros.)
"Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest" Christopher Boyes and George Watters II (Buena Vista)

ORIGINAL SCORE
"Babel" Gustavo Santaolalla (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)
"The Good German" Thomas Newman (Warner Bros.)
"Notes on a Scandal" Philip Glass (Fox Searchlight)
"Pan’s Labyrinth" Javier Navarrete (Picturehouse)
"The Queen" Alexandre Desplat (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)

ORIGINAL SONG
"I Need to Wake Up" from "An Inconvenient Truth," music and lyric by Melissa Etheridge (Paramount Classics and Participant Productions)
"Listen" from "Dreamgirls," music by Henry Krieger and Scott Cutler; lyric by Anne Preven (DreamWorks and Paramount)
"Love You I Do" from "Dreamgirls," music by Henry Krieger; lyric by Siedah Garrett (DreamWorks and Paramount)
"Our Town" from "Cars," music and lyric by Randy Newman (Buena Vista)
"Patience" from "Dreamgirls," music by Henry Krieger; lyric by Willie Reale (DreamWorks and Paramount)

MAKEUP
"Apocalypto" Aldo Signoretti and Vittorio Sodano (Buena Vista)
"Click" Kazuhiro Tsuji and Bill Corso (Sony Pictures Releasing)
"Pan’s Labyrinth" David Marti and Montse Ribe (Picturehouse)

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Here's an Upcoming Movie Starring Three of My Favorite Less-Than-Well-Known Actors. . . .

     On December 1st, New Line Cinema will release The Nativity Story, chronicling the perilous journey of Mary and Joseph and the birth of Jesus. 

Nativitystoryonesheet_1 

     Keisha Castle-Hughes stars as Mary.  Did you see 2002's Whale RiderIf not, rent it.  It's a wonderful movie. She plays Paikea, the main character in that movie, and she's great!  She was nominated for an Oscar at age twelve for that performance, and I heard somewhere that the same agent that discovered her discovered Anna Paquin for her 1993 Oscar-winning performance in The Piano, which she won at about age ten or eleven. 

     Here's Keisha Castle-Hughes as Mary:

Nativitystory2

     Also starring in this movie, as John the Baptist's mother, is Shohreh Aghdashloo.  She was nominated for an Oscar for playing Nadi, Ben Kingsley's wife, in 2003's House of Sand and Fog.  Even better, she was awesome as the sinister Dina Araz in Season 4 of 24.  Here she is in that role:

     Then we have Ciaran Hinds as King Herod.  He's a character actor who's been around, but he's really hitting his stride now.  He played Julius Caesar in HBO's big production of Rome, and he was also recently in Munich.  I think he's great.  Here he is as Caesar in Rome:

     I have no idea if The Nativity Story will be a good movie or some wacko, off-the-wall interpretation like Martin Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ, but I hope it's the former, and it certainly looks promising.  Click on the following link to see the trailer.  It'll take you to the site.  When you get there, the music will start and the site will load up.  When you can, click on "Videos" in the bottom left, then select "Theatrical Trailer" (the first option) and then "Flash Video" on the far right. 

http://thenativitystory.com/

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If This Isn't On Your Christmas Wish List, You're Crazy!

     The Season 5 DVD of 24 will be released on December 5th.  First of all, if you don't watch the show, you're totally insane!  It's one of the three best shows of all time, the other two being The Sopranos and Seinfeld.  (Note: If the U.S. version of The Office continues to be as funny over the next year or so as it's been for the last couple, it will be up there, too.)  Actually, after watching an episode or two of 24, you will feel like you need to go on vacation!  It's that exhausting!

     Anyway, if you are totally new to 24, I suggest taking a week off from work and watching Seasons 2, 4, and 5.  If you don't have that much time, at least sit down and watch either Season 4 or 5 before the new season starts (in January, I assume). 

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Hey, Looks Like We've Got Yet Another Promising Movie Set in Africa Coming Out Soon!

"They say it came from the heart of the Earth to test the hearts of men."

     Blood Diamond is set to be released on December 15th.  Ed Zwick (Glory, The Last Samurai) directs this movie set in civil war-plagued 1990s Sierra Leone.  It stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a South African mercenary, Djimon Hounsou as a local fisherman, and Jennifer Connelly as an American journalist.  I imagine that the plot deals with how the trade in diamonds shapes their lives ("blood" diamonds finance these West African civil wars).

Blooddiamond1

Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou

     Here's a link to the trailer (it's a cool one):

http://www.mymovies.net/player/player.asp?url=/film/fid4425/trailers/trid2437/wm/bb.asx&filmid=4425&sec=trailers

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(By the way, Marty Marcus and I had a very pleasant time with Djimon Hounsou once a few years ago as the three of us were all waiting for our cars outside of Nate & Al's in Beverly Hills.)

    

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Here's What's Cooking with Cate Blanchett. . .

Cate Blanchett has enjoyed the #1 spot on my list of best actors/actresses for some time now.  Check out the cover of the most recent Premiere magazine, which asks if she is "Today's Best Actress".  I think the answer is a resounding "Yes"!

Cateblancettepremiere

     In December, keep an eye out for Steven Soderbergh's The Good German, in which she stars with George Clooney.  I read the script two or three years ago, and it should be a good entry in the film noir category.  Adapted by Paul Attanasio (he won the 1994 Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar for Quiz Show) from Joseph Kanon's novel, it's a thriller set in the four quadrants of Berlin immediately after World War II.  George Clooney plays an American war correspondent, Cate Blanchett plays his former German lover with some things to hide, and Tobey Maguire plays an American soldier with connections in the black market.  There's no trailer available yet, but here's a still:

Goodgerman1

Tobey Maguire, George Clooney, and Cate Blanchett

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Monday, September 18, 2006

Let's Take a Look at The Last King of Scotland, the New Movie About Idi Amin. . . .

Amin

The Last King of Scotland will be released on September 27th.  Forest Whitaker's portrayal of Idi Amin looks excellent to me from viewing the trailer.  The story revolves around a Scottish doctor who gets irreversibly entangled with the blood-soaked Ugandan despot, who killed over 300,000 of his own people.

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Click on this link to watch the trailer:

http://movies.yahoo.com/mv/mf/frame?theme=minfo&lid=wmv-300-p.1467254-169815,wmv-700-p.1467255-169815,wmv-1000-p.1467256-169815,wmv-56-p.1467252-169815,wmv-100-p.1467253-169815,wmv-28-p.1467252-169815&id=1808762866&f=1808762866&mspid=1809741200&type=t

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Amin_2

Amin_3

Amin_4

Monday, September 11, 2006

Here Are the Top-Grossing Movies of All Time, ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION!!

1

Gone with the Wind MGM $1,329,453,600 $198,676,459 1939^
2 Star Wars Fox $1,172,026,900 $460,998,007 1977^
3 The Sound of Music Fox $937,093,200 $158,671,368 1965
4 E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial Uni. $933,401,500 $435,110,554 1982^
5 The Ten Commandments Par. $861,980,000 $65,500,000 1956
6 Titanic Par. $844,515,900 $600,788,188 1997
7 Jaws Uni. $842,758,600 $260,000,000 1975
8 Doctor Zhivago MGM $816,811,300 $111,721,910 1965
9 The Exorcist WB $727,541,800 $232,671,011 1973^
10 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Dis. $717,220,000 $184,925,486 1937^
11 101 Dalmatians Dis. $657,455,500 $144,880,014 1961^
12 The Empire Strikes Back Fox $646,028,600 $290,475,067 1980^
13 Ben-Hur MGM $644,840,000 $74,000,000 1959
14 Return of the Jedi Fox $618,910,900 $309,306,177 1983^
15 The Sting Uni. $586,560,000 $156,000,000 1973
16 Raiders of the Lost Ark Par. $579,973,400 $242,374,454 1981^
17 Jurassic Park Uni. $567,234,400 $357,067,947 1993
18 The Graduate AVCO $562,688,100 $104,642,560 1967
19 Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace Fox $558,153,800 $431,088,301 1999
20 Fantasia Dis. $546,426,100 $76,408,097 1941^
21 The Godfather Par. $519,310,500 $134,966,411 1972^
22 Forrest Gump Par. $516,830,100 $329,694,499 1994
23 Mary Poppins Dis. $514,436,400 $102,272,727 1964^
24 The Lion King BV $508,185,200 $328,541,776 1994^
25 Grease Par. $506,145,100 $188,389,888 1978^

Thursday, September 07, 2006

I Just Got Back from Seeing "World Trade Center"

I saw World Trade Center tonight.  It is amazing.  The movie is beautifully narrow and powerful in its focus.  It doesn't try to cover more than it should.  It is a story about the human spirit.  In the same way that we find in movies like Schindler's List and Hotel Rwanda, it shows us how in the most extreme instances of evil and tragedy the heroism and goodness of the human heart rises up to fight.  Watching this movie, which is not at all "preachy", will straighten out your priorities pretty quickly.

Wtc1  

Wtc2

Here's a DVD-Rental Recommendation

Seeing the following article today in Daily Variety prompts me to suggest that if you haven't seen the original Sleuth, the 1972 movie (some people call them films, but I don't trust that sort of person - I call them movies) starring Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine (both of whom were nominated for their roles), you should probably rent it. 

Sleuth

It's adapted from a play, and it might be the only film you'll see in which only two characters ever appear onscreen!  It's a tense battle of wits.  I think you'll enjoy it.  Here's today's article:

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Branagh finds 'Sleuth'

Law, Caine star in adaptation of Shaffer play


By Michael Fleming

The Jude Law-Michael Caine remake of "Sleuth" is a go, with Kenneth Branagh on board to direct an adaptation of the Anthony Shaffer play, scripted by Harold Pinter.

Financing was arranged by Castle Rock, and the film will shoot in January at Twickenham Studios in London.

It's the second time Shaffer's play is getting movie treatment, and the second time Caine is playing a major role in the drama that revolves around two men vying for the same woman.

This time, Caine will play a brilliant thriller writer and social fixture who's so upset at losing his wife to a young hairdresser (Law) that he hatches a complex revenge plan. Caine played the hairdresser in the original and Laurence Olivier played the writer.

Both got Oscar nominations for the 1972 original film, as did director Joseph Mankiewicz.

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Please Enjoy This Teaser Clip for the New James Bond Movie, Casino Royale!

Here's a teaser preview of Casino Royale, which will be released on November 17th.  It's notable for two reasons.  First, we'll get to see how Daniel Craig does as the new Bond.  Also, it's adapted from the first Bond book by Ian Fleming, so it's about how 007 came to be 007!  Click on this link and enjoy:

http://www.sonypictures.com/previews/player/movies/casinoroyale/index.html

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casinoroyaleteaseros.jpg

Friday, June 23, 2006

Speaking of "Lord of the Rings" . . .

. . . it's always a good time to highlight anything having to do with the best actress in the world, hands down, Cate Blanchett.

So, here's a bit of trivia I bet you didn't know:  After finishing her work on the Lord of the Rings trilogy in the role of Galadriel, royal Elven ruler of Lothlorien, she kept her Elf ear prosthetics and had them bronzed!  How about that?

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

"Meerkat Manor"

Keep an eye out for this new series on Animal Planet, premiering on June 9:

From the description of the show on the website (I supplied the pics):

Meerkat Manor is a soap opera with a difference – the main protagonists are 12 inches high, live underground in burrows and survive on a diet of worms, insects and lizards.

This ground breaking series, narrated by Bill Nighy, follows a group of meerkats living in the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa. From family squabbles to love affairs, Animal Planet presents a detailed portrait of these curious and entertaining creatures as never seen before. We'll get to know each individual character as intimately as any human soap star but here the relationships, births, deaths and conflicts are for real.

(I suspect that this photo has been doctored . . . )

In cooperation with Cambridge University, the story of the Whiskers mob is told from the perspective of the meerkats themselves. With no humans featured, film crews were housed in specially built sheds and, for the first time, successfully filmed inside a meerkat burrow using fibre-optic cameras.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

The Super-Creepiest Movies of All Time!

Here is a list of some titles that might make you look onto the back seat floor of your car to check for any lurking agents of evil before driving away in the dark, peer behind your shower curtain when stopping by the bathroom in the middle of the night, or just look at people in a different, terrified way. . . .

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Jacob's Ladder (1990)

Jacob's Ladder

How about those rubbery, featureless faces peering at poor Tim Robbins from the rear windows of passing cars? 

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The Omen (1976)

The Omen (2-Disc Collector's Edition)

Yikes!  That little kid was so convincing that I really hope he was acting and wasn't in fact . . . .  I've seen the trailers for the remake (clever release date of 06-06-06!) and it looks excellent.

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The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

The Manchurian Candidate (Special Edition)

Talk about a nightmare!  And casting Angela Lansbury as the creepy villainess is up there in the Counterintuitive, Genius Casting category with Wilfred Brimley as the unnerving head of security in The Firm.

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Altered States (1980)

Altered States

Waking up from a hallucinogenic nightmare only to find actual physical evidence of the dream on your body definitely qualifies as creepy . . . .

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The Sixth Sense (1999)

The Sixth Sense (Collector's Edition Series)

Some might call it gimmicky, but I thought it was a stroke of genius.  I hope the little kid, Haley Joel Osment, makes the perilous transition from child actor to full-fledged adult actor, because his talent was obvious. 

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The Ring (2002)

The Ring (Widescreen Edition)

Well, when muddy ghosts start climbing out of the TV and pursuing a character, it's a telltale sign that you're watching a creepy movie. . . .

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Movies to Rent When You've Been Standing in Blockbuster for Twenty Minutes and Can't Decide

Also entitled "Sure-Fire Entertainment" or "Movies any two randomly-selected people thrown together over takeout and a DVD player should enjoy" . . . .

The Hunt for Red October (1990)

The Hunt for Red October (Special Edition)

The Jagged Edge (1985)

Jagged Edge

The Great Escape (1963)

The Great Escape

The Usual Suspects (1995)

The Usual Suspects

No Way Out (1987)

No Way Out

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

Raiders of the Lost Ark - Widescreen Version (1981)

Quiz Show (1994)

Quiz Show

North By Northwest (1959)

North by Northwest

The Terminator (1984)

The Terminator

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

The Shawshank Redemption

The Sting (1973)

The Sting (Legacy Series Edition)

A Few Good Men (1992)

A Few Good Men (Special Edition)

Rear Window (1954)

Rear Window (Collector's Edition)

The Spanish Prisoner (1998)

The Spanish Prisoner

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (Special Edition)

Saturday, May 06, 2006

The Best Movies of All Time

I'm thinking I'll post lists for overall Best Movies, Most Entertaining Movies, Best Comedies, Creepiest Movies, and one for hard-to-categorize, offbeat, or "honorable mention" movies.

Let's get right to it! How are these for some of the Best Movies of All Time?

Casablanca (1942)

Casablanca

The Godfather (1972) & The Godfather, Part II (1974)

The Godfather

The Godfather, Part II

North By Northwest (1959)

North by Northwest

The Sting (1973)

The Sting (Legacy Series Edition)

Braveheart (1995)

Braveheart

Patton (1970)

Patton

Goodfellas (1990)

Goodfellas

Gladiator (2000)

Gladiator

Star Wars (1977)

Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope

Apocalyspe Now (1979)

Apocalypse Now

Schindler's List (1993)

Schindler's List (Full Screen Edition)

Sabrina (1954)

Sabrina

Rain Man (1988)

Rain Man

Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2001-2004)

The Lord Of The Rings - The Motion Picture Trilogy (Widescreen Edition)

The Sixth Sense (1999)

The Sixth Sense (Collector's Edition Series)