Thursday, December 10, 2009

Shiny New Year: More "Sex," "Death," "Ass" in 2010






With the added benefit of a confirmed Penelope Cruz cameo, "Sex and the City 2" is lookin' pretty good from here. Carrie and Co. face off against the Disney/Bruckheimer sword-and-sandal video game adaptation "Prince of Persia: "The Sands of Time" when both pics open May 28, 2010.  
Opening over the already crowded pre-Christmas frame next December 17, Disney's "Tron" reboot (presumptuously subtitled "Legacy") hopes to make good on the promise of its tech-savvy cult classic translating smoothly into a whole new world. 

Lionsgate is set to "Kick-Ass" on April 16, a date currently shared with Weinstein/Dimension's demographic double-dipper "Piranha 3D." Here's the first poster for Matthew Vaughan's nerdy kid superhero adventure, which suggests this little guy might actually have a few moves in him to combat those carnivorous fish:
Finally, we've got the totally unnecessary American remake of "Death at a Funeral," which looks like it's changed virtually nothing from the 2007 Brit hit aside from the obvious racial transference. Peter Dinklage is even back in the same role he nailed less than three years ago, sans accent. That said, the original was pretty damn hilarious, and Screen Gems managed to corral director Neil LaBute (with whom Sony's genre arm found great success in the 2008 thriller "Lakeview Terrace") to shepherd a sprawling, impressive cast of comedy greats. "Death at a Funeral" opens April 23, and will surely become a sizable hit.


Wednesday, December 9, 2009

"Avatar" Eve: Eleventh Hour Promo Push Finally Means Business

The critical do-or-die advertising rollout for James Cameron's legendarily expensive "Avatar," which is guaranteed to be a wild cinematic experience whether or not it becomes a box office behemoth and/or attains classic film status, finally seems to have hit its stride. 


The bewilderingly polarizing WTF reaction back in August to the first trailer left a collective first impression of "Avatar" as a cross between "Fern Gully," a Final Fantasy video game and something George Lucas might cook up were he to take "Star Wars" any further.  Starring a bunch of shockingly unattractive blue aliens who ride on the backs of hybrid pterodactyls, which are rendered in a color scheme inspired by rainbow sherbet or LSD, "Avatar" was immediately recognizable as a much riskier gamble than the already massive one previously assumed.  Given its five-year production schedule and a negative cost approaching $400 million, you'd think that the Cameron and 20th Century Fox would have only given audiences the first official glimpse at "Avatar" after taking the most painstaking of measures to blow us out of the water and maximize anticipation.  Even the trailer's font was unsettling, using a skinny, reptilian typeface that registered as both amateurish and unconcerned with evoking "epic" in any way. 

While the official "Avatar" title card has retained the initially ubiquitous font, it's the only word in the trailers and TV spots that have followed in the wake of that first, instantly notorious trailer (thank Gods). Since leading man Sam Worthington won't become a household name until next year, once "Avatar" and next spring's "Clash of the Titans" establish certain movie star status, and Sigourney Weaver is the best they've got in terms of marquee names, the major selling point of all subsequent ads has been the director himself.  A rarity among filmmakers, James Cameron shares bragging rights with only Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackson, and M. Night Shyamalan (the latter of whom is quickly falling off the short list) as directors whose name alone can make a movie an event for the average moviegoer.  There are a fair number of filmmakers who can claim household name status (Martin Scorcese and Tim Burton come immediately to mind) but their appeal is too niche and fan bases too artfully inclined to generate commercial crossover success every time out. I can't stress enough how much more appealing "Avatar" became once ads trumpeting the film as "From James Cameron...Director of Aliens...Terminator...The Abyss...Terminator 2...True Lies...and Titanic" spelled these words across the screen in brawny blue boldface, which irrefutably means business and makes implicit that the film itself actually aims to join the ranks of Cameron's resume of strictly blockbusters and represents the typeface equivalent of an antidote to that slithering nightmare of a font that haunted the first trailer and definitively informed the collective first impression of "Avatar" for audiences worldwide.

With just a week to go before "Avatar" finally opens, and hopefully makes good on its legendary hype and having spent the majority of this decade in production, Fox has released the movie's official one-sheet. It does not disappoint, evoking romantic allusions to "Titanic" and other great cinematic epics -- a truly impressive feat given that its romantic leads are in fact not cute, nor human, nor physically tangible in any way -- and cementing my faith that "Avatar" will, indeed, mean business.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009



































Wednesday, November 25, 2009

"Shania hates chicken salad. She HATES it!"


Best of 2004: "Before Sunset"


"I just wanted to see if you'd stay together or dissolve into molecules." 

Best of 2004: "Sideways"

"We are NOT drinking any fuckin' Merlot!"

Best of 2003: "Cold Mountain"


"Let's go cook this rooster!"

Best of 2003: "Kill Bill: Vol. 1"

"O-Ren Ishii! You and I have unfinished business!"

Best of 2003: "Lost in Translation"

"Evelyn Waugh is a man."

Best of 2002: "The Hours"


"I think I'll buy the flowers myself."

Best of 2001: "The Royal Tenenbaums"


"This is my adopted daughter Margot." 

Best of 2005: "A History of Violence"


Don't fuck with Viggo.

Best Picture of 2004: "Before Sunset"


Nothing compares to the magical realism of articulated honesty between adults.  And so, joining Jesse & Celine on their 80-minute stroll through Paris, a decade after that one night in Vienna depicted in "Before Sunrise," amounts to the decade's most extraordinary film experience.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Great Expectation: Noah Baumbach's "Greenberg" opens March 12


Following "The Squid and the Whale" (2005) and "Margot at the Wedding" (2007), writer/director Noah Baumbach's next portrait of narcissistic adulthood at its most verbally acute was always going to be anticipated as a likely great.  This just-released trailer for "Greenberg" (Focus Features; March 12) has definitively amped up that anticipation to 11. 

Set in motion to the tune of LCD Soundsystem's heartbreaking pop masterpiece "All My Friends," with its blistering nostalgia building toward a momentous crescendo, the "Greenberg" trailer means business.  Big time. 

Ben Stiller atones for "Night at the Museum," etc. with an apparently outstanding performance that looks to be a game-changer for the usually generic actor.

Still on Top...


It opened way back in February, but nothing I've seen since has fully eclipsed "Two Lovers" as the best film of 2009.  With eviscerating simplicity, James Gray's oestensibly romantic melodrama infuses richly details with incisive philosophical implication, revealing itself in greater depth upon consecutive viewing.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Happy New Year!


2010 doesn't kick into gear until January 1 in the real world, but it's first day of Year 1 at Best Pictures of the Year and it's a happy occasion, indeed.  Delineated on specific annual terms, BPotY looks forward to creating a yearbook that chronicles each annual collective as the sum of its cinematic parts.  The films of current and future years will always be related to those of the past, reflected across the time continuum to reveal essential cinematic trends that differentiate cinema from every other art, parallel insights that collectively forge the treacherous gap between art and commerce.  Year after year, as audiences alternately ignore (Richard Kelly's "The Box" is 2009's latest arty flop) and embrace (Kelly's debut "Donnie Darko" was ignored in its brief theatrical go, discovered on DVD by smart fans) movies that truly deserve to be seen by an invested audience, they're showing up in predictable masses to see the latest robots vs. aliens spectacle, or worse (unfathomable success for "Alvin and the Chipmunks" made the "Squeakuel" inevitable). 

These patterns of divergence in both quality and quantity didn't begin with movies; comparative literature employs historical framework to illuminate the invisible fabric of the art form through time.  So begins The Best Pictures of the Year, with scholarly earnest and an eye of the calendar. Fireworks!