Showing posts with label Inception. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inception. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2011

Yogi Bear and more, from Facebook

Warner Bros. has recently started delivering movies through Facebook at a price of $3 per title, starting out with Cristopher Nolan’s Dark Knight.
Now, the company made available five additional titles: Inception, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Yogi Bear and Life as We Know It.
These new titles are available through each film’s official Facebook Page. To rent a movie, users need to click on the “watch now” icon, pay with their Facebook Credits, and they will get a 48-hour window to watch the movie through their Facebook account.
There’s no official word on any upcoming titles, but we’re sure that Warner will be adding this functionality to the movies in its catalog which have a significant Facebook following. Again, all of this is available only to consumers in the U.S.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Coronation: Oscars 2011 yield no surprises

Winners

Best Picture: The King's Speech
Lead Actress: Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
Supporting Actor: Christian Bale (The Fighter)
Supporting Actress: Melissa Leo (The Fighter)



Okay, so The Fighter swung in a one-two combination in the Supporting Actor/Actress categories (sorry, Jackie Weaver, I was really rooting for you). But The King's Speech stammered and stuttered its way to the big prizes on Sunday night, as you can see above: Best Picture, Best Actor (Colin Firth) and Best Director (Tom Hooper). Natalie Portman rounded out her awards season sweep as the troubled ballerina in Black Swan, picking up the Oscar for Best Actress.

Inception picked up the Cinematography Sound Mixing and Visual Effects awards, and The Social Network picked up Best Editing, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Original Score (Trent Reznor must be over the moon). Toy Story 3 earned the Best Animated Feature trophy. 

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Can A Best Picture Direct itself?: Who'll Go Home with Oscar 2011

The nominees for Best Director are:

Darren Aronofsky -           Black Swan
Tom Hooper                     The King's Speech
David Fincher                    The Social Network
Joel & Ethan Cohen           True Grit
David O Russell                  The Fighter

Conspicuously absent from that list, in my view, is Christopher Nolan. We certainly understand that with ten Best Picture slots and only five Best Director nominees than some worthy candidates will be left out, but surely, on the basis of combined mass appeal and clear artistic vision (no, I'm not going into all that 'explaining the dream plot' business), Nolan (below, right) deserved a shot, possibly at the expense of Russell.

Chris Lee, writing on news blog The daily Beast, sums up the barriers to Nolan's "anointing" thusly:


the [Director nomination] snub also highlights a certain image problem Nolan seems to suffer among his peers. According to a cross section of Oscar campaign masterminds—ranking publicity experts and people who have worked with the filmmaker—he's regarded by some as too cool for school. Nolan's chilly English demeanor, combined with his refusal to engage in the usual kind of Academy campaigning that has become de rigueurduring awards season, may have alienated him from the rank and file of the Academy's 367-member Directors Branch.

The King's Speech love-fest continued -somewhat at the BAFTAs, with many talking of a multi-award sweep that would include helmer Tom Hooper (who has already gotten the Directors Guild seal of approval) In the decade since the BAFTAs moved forward to take place while academy members are still voting, they have foreseen four Best Picture Oscar winners:'Gladiator' (2000), 'The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King' (2003), 'Slumdog Millionaire' (2008) and'The Hurt Locker' (2009).


But we're discussing Best director here, and the BAFTAs this year made a surprising choice. They passed over  Hooper and went instead for The Social Network's David Fincher. Personally, Hooper is still the front-runner, but if anybody is to pip him at the line, it will be Fincher.


It wouldn't be the first time that the Oscar votes between Best Picture and Best director are split. In 2005, Crash broadsided Ang Lee's Oscar party, snatching the Best Picture Oscar and leaving Lee to settle for Best Director for his controversial Brokeback Mountain. On the flipside, 20 years ago, Bruce Beresford's Driving Miss Daisy won Best Picture without the director even scoring as much as a nomination.


I'm calling Fincher to similarly spoil the party (a bit) for The King's Speech 

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

2011: The Return of the 'Oscars" White wash"




Getty
Halle Berry
In 2002, the Oscars had a breakthrough: Denzel Washington won the award for best actor (a first for a black actor since Sidney Poitier in 1963) and Halle Berry became the first-ever African-American to win the best actress honor. At that same ceremony, Will Smith had been up for best actor for “Ali.”
This year, Oscar seems to be having something of a breakdown when it comes to honoring black actors. Ten movies were nominated for best picture, and not a single one stars an actor of color in a lead role (Japanese actor Ken Watanabe had a supporting role in “Inception,” but didn’t get a nomination). Twenty actors were nominated for acting honors, and not a single one is an actor of color.
Ironically, this year’s nominations were announced by Mo’Nique, who won a best supporting actress award for the 2009 movie “Precious.”
Did Hollywood pass over deserving actors or did the best choices simply win out? Whatever the case, the numbers are stark: the 2011 nominations are the first Oscars not to feature a black actor in a decade. Asian actors were also shut out. Spanish-born Javier Bardem was nominated for best actor.
The near-shutout of actors of color from this year’s awards season is already drawing comments from bloggers and filmmakers. “Will white be the only color on the red carpet at the 83rd Academy Awards?” asked a Hollywood Reporter story in advance of the nominations.
“The nominations were as much about who got left out as who got nominated for an award,” wrote Nsenga Burton on The Root, an African-American website.
Some critics blame the fact that Hollywood’s casting choices aren’t diverse enough; others say that because Hollywood is making fewer serious films, it’s hard for any actors, regardless of their race, to find rich parts.
The Root story noted that a number of non-black potential nominees got passed over, including Mila Kunis for “Black Swan” and “Inception’s” Leonardo DiCaprio (who may be one of the best actors in the business without an Oscar).
There were a number of movies featuring actors of color that might have gotten Oscar consideration.
Berry was nominated for a Golden Globe for her role in “Frankie and Alice” but came up short at the Oscars. The drama “Night Catches Us,” a low-budget feature directed by African American filmmaker Tanya Hamilton and starring Anthony Mackie and Kerry Washington, drew positive reviews from some critics (and an 80 percent rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes) but no Oscar consideration. Tyler Perry’s “For Colored Girls” got mixed reviews, but many critics praised the performances of stars of the movie, including Washington, Janet Jackson and Phylicia Rashad.
Still, even the NAACP Image Awards seemed to have trouble finding critically-praised candidates for its coming prize ceremony. Its list of outstanding motion picture candidates includes the romantic comedy ”Just Wright” (a 46 rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes) and ”Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too?” (27 percent on Rotten Tomatoes)
In addition, “Night Catches Us,” ”Mother and Child,” which co-stars Samuel L. Jackson, and Berry’s ”Frankie and Alice,” were nominated for outstanding independent motion picture at the coming NAACP Image Awards.
An essay titled “Don’t blame Oscars for lack of black nominees” on the Grio, an African-American website, suggests that economics, not bigotry, are to blame for the lack of black nominees at this year’s Oscars.
“Movies are a function of stark economics and financial viability,” writes Javier E. David. “Ultimately, what gets green-lighted is a reflection of the public’s willingness to pay.”

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Its King's Speech vs True Grit, with Fighter and Social Network in there

The King's Speech emerged the top nominated film in the just announced 2011 Oscar Nominations, taking 12 nominations, ahead of the latest Coen Brothers epic, True Grit coming with 10 nominations. Again, we have a directorial snub: Christopher Nolan's dream-thriller Inception is among the Best Picture contenders, but if it wins, Nolan won't be acknowledged by the Academy

The Best Picture nominees are:

The King's Speech;
The Fighter;
Black swan;
Inception;
127 Hours;
Toy Story 3;
True Grit;
Winter's Bone;
The Kids Are All Right;
The Social Network

Our comments and "Who Will Go Home With Oscar" preview begin tomorrow

Thursday, December 23, 2010

I'll Kiss You, But Keep The Dress! Di Caprio to Play FBI legend Hoover

LEONARDO DiCaprio won’t be dressing up as a woman!
According to the Village Voice, theInception actor will kiss Social Network star Armie Hammer (who played both of the Winkelvoss twins in that moviein Clint Eastwood’s upcoming film about FBI bulldog J. Edgar Hoover — but has refused to don drag in the role! There's as yet no official word on the planned release date or full cast (Joaquin Phoenix is reportedly being considered for the role of Hoover protege - and lover -Clyde Tolson). 
Leonardo DiCaprio
 On the personal front, the Inception star, while appearing to get more serious with girlfriend of five years,   Bar Refaeli, is not necessarily in a rush to become a parent. Di Caprio ha previously stated he'd like to a start a family in the future.

But, he adds: “I don’t think I need to have children to play a father in the movies. This feeling is in me, I understand it completely. In my private life, I still have time to become a dad, and I’ve no desire to rush”.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

"Knight No More": Bale says next Batman reboot his last

Access Hollywood caught up with Christian during the junket for his latest film, "The Fighter," co-starring Mark Wahlberg, where he said he was ready to bring "The Dark Knight" back to the big screen one more time.
"Absolutely!" Christian said, when asked if he was preparing to film the next Batman movie. "I'm assuming it's going to be the last one, so I'm very excited about it."
As far as the film's title - which Nolan has already announced is "The Dark Knight Rises," Christian said he's yet to officially hear that from the director.

"I haven't spoken with Chris since it got written, so I don't believe anything unless I hear it straight from Chris," the actor noted.
When it comes to who may step in as the caped crusader's next on-screen nemesis or lovely leading lady, Christian said that knowledge is still on a need-to-know basis - and this is one detail he still doesn't know.
"Chris will let me know what I need to know when I need to know it," he said. "This is our fourth movie together. He knows me - I'll know when I need to."

According to a previous report by Deadline, the race for the female lead in the film is down to six candidates -- Keira KnightleyBlake LivelyRachel WeiszNaomi WattsNatalie Portman and Anne Hathaway.
Also previously reported by Deadline, "Inception" star Tom Hardy will also join the project, and while details of his role remain under wraps, it's rumored he will step in as the caped crusader's new evil foe.

"The Dark Knight Rises" will hit theaters on July 20, 2012.