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Kisses - Clip From director Lance Daly (Last Days in Dublin, The Halo Effect) comes the story of two young runaways living in the fringes of Dublin who discover both beauty and danger in the big city. Kylie lives with 5 siblings and an overworked mother. Next door, Dylan is growing up with an abusive father and the memory of his runaway brother. One day, after a violent altercation with his father, Dylan and Kylie flee. Together they make their way to the magical lights of downtown Dublin to search for Dylan's brother and the hope of a new life. Dublin, as shown through the innocent eyes of our young protagonists, is a kaleidoscope of magic, wonder and mystery. But as the night wears on, Dublin takes on a darker character and the two children learn that they have to rely on the kindness of strangers and the sagely wisdom of Bob Dylan to persevere. Featuring two incredible breakthrough performances by Shane Curry and Kelly O'Neill, Kisses is a tale of two children who test the limits of what life can become and in the process learn what they can do for each other. Directed by: Lance Daly Starring: Kelly O’Neill, Shane Curry |
Kisses – Clip
July 14th, 2010Machete – Trailer
July 14th, 2010![]() |
Machete - Trailer After a violent shakedown from a notorious drug lord nearly kills him, Machete, a renegade Mexican Federale and tough-as-nails vigilante for justice, roams the streets of Texas, working as a day laborer. When Machete is hired by a crooked US Senator to execute a covert hit, Machete is double-crossed and forced to run from the cops and an endless stream of assassins. But what they don't know is that Machete is looking for them so he can settle the score. Directed by: Robert Rodriguez, Ethan Maniquis Starring: Danny Trejo, Steven Segal, Michelle Rodriguez, Jeff Fahey, Cheech Marin, Lindsay Lohan, Jessica Alba, Robert De Niro |
Valhalla Rising – Clip
July 14th, 2010![]() |
Valhalla Rising - Clip Nicolas Winding Refn, the acclaimed director of BRONSON and THE PUSHER TRILOGY, strikes again with his bone-crushingly brutal Viking epic starring Mads Mikkelsen (CASINO ROYALE, FLAME & CITRON). This stylized knockout premiered to acclaim at the Venice and Toronto Film Festivals and is destined to become a cult classic. An epic tale of war, vengeance and redemption, VALHALLA RISING is a provocative collision of art and action and an unmissable summer movie event. For years, One-Eye, a mute warrior of supernatural strength, has been held prisoner - forced to fight for his life and the amusement of his pagan slavers. Aided by a boy, he finds his moment, furiously kills his captors and together they escape, beginning an odyssey through an unknown land. After falling in with a band of Vikings, One-Eye and his young companion find they must confront terrible fate in the quest for their freedom. Directed by: Nicolas Winding Refn Starring: Mads Mikkelsen |
Legend of the Guardians – The Owls of Ga Hoole – Trailer
July 14th, 2010![]() |
Legend of the Guardians - The Owls of Ga Hoole - Trailer Acclaimed filmmaker Zack Snyder makes his animation debut with the fantasy family adventure “Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole” based on the beloved Guardians of Ga’Hoole books by Kathryn Lasky. The film follows Soren, a young owl enthralled by his father’s epic stories of the Guardians of Ga’ Hoole, a mythic band of winged warriors who had fought a great battle to save all of owlkind from the evil Pure Ones. While Soren dreams of someday joining his heroes, his older brother, Kludd, scoffs at the notion, and yearns to hunt, fly and steal his father’s favor from his younger sibling. But Kludd’s jealousy has terrible consequences—causing both owlets to fall from their treetop home and right into the talons of the Pure Ones. Now it is up to Soren to make a daring escape with the help of other brave young owls. Together they soar across the sea and through the mist to find the Great Tree, home of the legendary Guardians—Soren’s only hope of defeating the Pure Ones and saving the owl kingdoms. Directed by: Zack Snyder Starring: Emily Barclay, Abbie Cornish, Emilie de Ravin, Ryan Kwanten, Jay Laga’aia, Miriam Margolyes, Helen Mirren |
John Scalzi – How Inception Is Not Dreamscape 2: The Quickening
July 13th, 2010
I was talking with an old friend of mine about the summer releases this year and our general feeling of utter blah-ness about the whole summer season, when I said to him, "Well, look at it this way: at least you have Inception to look forward to," naming the upcoming film in which Leonardo DiCaprio takes a stroll through other people's dreams, directed by Christopher Nolan.
"Oh, that," he said. "I don't get that one at all. It's the same basic concept as Dreamscape, and I already saw that. I don't know why anyone would get excited about what's basically yet another remake."
One reason, of course, is that Dreamscape came out 25 years ago, i.e., at a time when a lot of Inception's opening-weekend audience was still in a haploid state. In that respect, it's similar to asking why tween girls are excited about the Jonas Brothers when there's already been the New Kids on the Block.
I have a tween-age daughter here at home. Every time I point out to her that there's an earlier analogue of every single piece of music she likes, she looks at me as if to say, You poor, sad, balding little man. You just don't get it, do you? She does it with love, mind you. But she still does it. Likewise, telling a 21-year-old guy that he can get pretty much the same experience with a quarter-century-old flick starring Dennis Quaid and directed by the guy who did The Stepfather that he'll get with a Leonardo DiCaprio movie directed by the guy who did The Dark Knight is likely to get you a similar result.
But beyond that, I would take exception to the argument that Inception is basically a remake. What the two films have in common is a central conceit, or plot point -- in this case, both films feature a man who can enter other people's dreams and, in doing so, learn things about them or change the course of their lives. It's a pretty specific plot point, to be sure. But it's also like saying that, because the film 9 features a main character made out of bits of cloth that tries to rescue a fellow living doll from the clutches of evil, it's a remake of Toy Story. Anyone who's seen both films knows that's not the case; despite certain thematic elements, they're different stories. Heck, Dark City and The Matrix have so much in common -- including production dates -- that the latter used the leftover sets of the former. And yet, for all their similarities, they are two very different viewing experiences.
I've been pretty consistent in my opinion that Hollywood goes a little too often to the well of sequels and remakes, but, philosophically, I don't really have any problem with filmmakers dipping out of the same well of inspiration or playing with the same basic ideas and running variations of those themes, especially when the filmmakers themselves have wildly divergent perspectives. As an example of this, I give you Michael Herr's Vietnam War memoir, Dispatches, which served as a partial inspiration for at least two films. In the hands of Francis Ford Coppola, it was transmuted into Apocalypse Now. In the hands of Stanley Kubrick, Full Metal Jacket. That's not a bad spread there.
Inception doesn't have similarities just to Dreamscape, of course. You could spend a merry day name checking influences from a number of cinematic predecessors, including the aforementioned Matrix and Dark City and, of course, director Christopher Nolan's own Batman movies. But for me, as a viewer, the question isn't whether a filmmaker uses the same basic ideas as one film or borrows other ideas from another film and outright steals them from a third. The question for me is what the filmmakers do once they start putting those ideas together as a film. Do it poorly as a filmmaker, and you'll be told you've created a cheap knockoff. Do it well, and you'll be told you've breathtakingly reinvented the concept.
And this, to my mind, is a fine reason for my friend to check out Inception, even if he's seen Dreamscape: to watch a filmmaker either master his influences and predecessors or be swallowed up by them. In that respect, my friend has access to a joy that the 21-year-old who's never seen Dreamscape does not: the excitement of watching something that's been done before get done again -- possibly (and definitely, in this case) even better.
"Oh, that," he said. "I don't get that one at all. It's the same basic concept as Dreamscape, and I already saw that. I don't know why anyone would get excited about what's basically yet another remake."
One reason, of course, is that Dreamscape came out 25 years ago, i.e., at a time when a lot of Inception's opening-weekend audience was still in a haploid state. In that respect, it's similar to asking why tween girls are excited about the Jonas Brothers when there's already been the New Kids on the Block.
I have a tween-age daughter here at home. Every time I point out to her that there's an earlier analogue of every single piece of music she likes, she looks at me as if to say, You poor, sad, balding little man. You just don't get it, do you? She does it with love, mind you. But she still does it. Likewise, telling a 21-year-old guy that he can get pretty much the same experience with a quarter-century-old flick starring Dennis Quaid and directed by the guy who did The Stepfather that he'll get with a Leonardo DiCaprio movie directed by the guy who did The Dark Knight is likely to get you a similar result.
But beyond that, I would take exception to the argument that Inception is basically a remake. What the two films have in common is a central conceit, or plot point -- in this case, both films feature a man who can enter other people's dreams and, in doing so, learn things about them or change the course of their lives. It's a pretty specific plot point, to be sure. But it's also like saying that, because the film 9 features a main character made out of bits of cloth that tries to rescue a fellow living doll from the clutches of evil, it's a remake of Toy Story. Anyone who's seen both films knows that's not the case; despite certain thematic elements, they're different stories. Heck, Dark City and The Matrix have so much in common -- including production dates -- that the latter used the leftover sets of the former. And yet, for all their similarities, they are two very different viewing experiences.
I've been pretty consistent in my opinion that Hollywood goes a little too often to the well of sequels and remakes, but, philosophically, I don't really have any problem with filmmakers dipping out of the same well of inspiration or playing with the same basic ideas and running variations of those themes, especially when the filmmakers themselves have wildly divergent perspectives. As an example of this, I give you Michael Herr's Vietnam War memoir, Dispatches, which served as a partial inspiration for at least two films. In the hands of Francis Ford Coppola, it was transmuted into Apocalypse Now. In the hands of Stanley Kubrick, Full Metal Jacket. That's not a bad spread there.
Inception doesn't have similarities just to Dreamscape, of course. You could spend a merry day name checking influences from a number of cinematic predecessors, including the aforementioned Matrix and Dark City and, of course, director Christopher Nolan's own Batman movies. But for me, as a viewer, the question isn't whether a filmmaker uses the same basic ideas as one film or borrows other ideas from another film and outright steals them from a third. The question for me is what the filmmakers do once they start putting those ideas together as a film. Do it poorly as a filmmaker, and you'll be told you've created a cheap knockoff. Do it well, and you'll be told you've breathtakingly reinvented the concept.
And this, to my mind, is a fine reason for my friend to check out Inception, even if he's seen Dreamscape: to watch a filmmaker either master his influences and predecessors or be swallowed up by them. In that respect, my friend has access to a joy that the 21-year-old who's never seen Dreamscape does not: the excitement of watching something that's been done before get done again -- possibly (and definitely, in this case) even better.
DVDs on demand: the sequel
July 13th, 2010In March 2009, Ty wrote about the debut of the Warner Archive Collection.It's a great idea. Take old movies that have never made it to DVD because projected sales would be too small, but for which there would certainly be some consumer interest, and let purchasers buy them directly from Warner. The DVDs are, in effect, made to order.The collection's initial run has offered more than 500 titles -- shorts and TV movies and miniseries, as well as feature films.
Last month, Warner started releasing a new batch of releases.
Last month, Warner started releasing a new batch of releases.
What’s Your Movie Morality?
July 13th, 2010Filed under: Action, Drama, Noir, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom

Occasionally I'm faced with a difficult choice at the box office, and I find myself wanting to take a stand at the ticket counter and say to myself: "Self, you are not about to hand over $12.95 for this" -- and I seriously consider doing the unthinkable: I refuse to watch a movie on purpose. Of course, this is about as close as I get to a personal moral code with my movie going habits, but it did get me thinking about what I call: Movie Morality. To explain: it's not a heavy political, ethical, or socio-religious thing. It's just sometimes, before I shell out my cash, I have a moment of contemplation and think: if we vote with our wallet, should I be thinking long and hard about where I place my vote?
My reasoning to avoid a movie can come from a pretty benign place. Take for example The A-Team, a movie that was generously described as brainless, and that's next to a TV show from the 80s so you know things are bad. But also as relatively harmless, and as the so-so reviews piled up, I just thought, "I've had enough checking my brain at the door and I'm tired of Hollywood being proud of stupid movies, and I think I'll wait awhile". But, sometimes the source of my reluctance can be a little more disturbing; take for example, the most recent recorded 'outbursts' of a certain Hollywood jackass? Can I bring myself to pay to watch someone on-screen who as a human being may turn my stomach? I'm not sure.
Continue reading What's Your Movie Morality?
3. The Sorcerer’s Apprentice – $17.6M
July 13th, 2010
A wizard (Nicolas Cage) trains a reluctant protege to help him fight a powerful adversary.
Feminine Fancy
July 13th, 2010
Alasdair McLellan's feminine photos of Ashley Smith, Barbara Palvin and Lindsey Wixson for W
Alphabet
July 13th, 2010
Slick animated alphabet from Sofia based Pavel Pavlov.



