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1998-10-26
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From: owner-movies-digest@lists.xmission.com (movies-digest)
To: movies-digest@lists.xmission.com
Subject: movies-digest V2 #122
Reply-To: movies-digest
Sender: owner-movies-digest@lists.xmission.com
Errors-To: owner-movies-digest@lists.xmission.com
Precedence: bulk
movies-digest Tuesday, October 27 1998 Volume 02 : Number 122
[MV] RE: movies-digest V2 #121
[MV] Movie News - 10/23/98
[MV] REVIEW: ORGAZMO
[MV] Film Threat Extra: Film Festival Secrets: Get Your Film Into Festivals
[MV] (no subject)
[MV] Date: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 21:58:23 -0700
[MV] Film Threat Weekly : 10-26-98 : Take 44
[MV] Pleasantville
Re: [MV] Pleasantville
[MV] Where is the 3rd House?
[MV] Movie News - 10/26/98
[MV] subscribe
[MV] REVIEW: LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA)
Re: [MV] REVIEW: LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA)
[MV] The Casper Caper
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 1998 12:19:02 -0400
From: LISA N HAMILTON <HAM6934@cup.edu>
Subject: [MV] RE: movies-digest V2 #121
cancel subscription
Lisa-Nichole Hamilton
Ham6934@cup.edu
Secondary Ed./Comp Soc. Sci
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------------------------------
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 1998 12:26:26 -0600 (MDT)
From: The Reporter <gregorys@xmission.com>
Subject: [MV] Movie News - 10/23/98
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of an Arab-American organization said
Thursday a forthcoming Hollywood film incited hate against Arab
Americans and Muslims and could provoke hate crimes against people of
Arab descent. Hala Maksoud, president of the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee, said in a letter to Edward Zwick,
producer of "The Siege," that she would hold him responsible for any
hate crimes resulting from the movie. "... the film is insidious,
dangerous and incendiary," Maksoud wrote. In the film, Denzel
Washington plays an FBI agent tracking Islamic militants bombing New
York, and Bruce Willis plays an Army general who declares martial law
in Manhattan.
-=> * <=-
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - If the Armand Hammer Museum ever mounts an
in-depth retrospective on the Eisenhower Era, the courtyard will
surely resemble Monday's "Pleasantville" premiere party at the
Westwood site. Not since Doris Day ruled the box office have so many
Formica dinette sets, white picket fences and heroically antique
Philco TVs been seen in public. The decor tied in with
writer-director Gary Ross' New Line feature in which a 1950s town
evolves on screen from black-and-white to living color. And while
Wendy Creed designed the party, Ross said the film's hue-changing
sequences "are all home-grown product" - a new use of an endearing
'60s term.
-=> * <=-
Kristen Johnston has been signed to the new Mike Meyers film
"Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me," according to the
Hollywood Reporter. The actress, who won an Emmy last year
for her role as Sally Solomon on the NBC sitcom "3rd
Rock From the Sun," will play a character named Ivana Humpalot
in the spy spoof. Production begins next month on the film,
which is a sequel to Meyers' "Austin Powers: International
Man of Mystery."
-=> * <=-
CAST: Harrods department store magnate Mohammed al-Fayed,
father of the late Dodi (who, together with Princess Diana,
died in a car crash last year), as a doorman in "Mad Cows."
The big-screen comedy will also star Joanna Lumley
("Absolutely Fabulous") and Oasis lead singer Noel
Gallagher.
-=> * <=-
DIED: Molly O'Day, 88, a star of the silent screen, on
Thursday, in Avila Beach CA. O'Day began her career in "Our
Gang" films and worked with Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
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------------------------------
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 1998 15:25:52 -0600 (MDT)
From: Scott Renshaw <renshaw@inconnect.com>
Subject: [MV] REVIEW: ORGAZMO
ORGAZMO
(Rogue)
Starring: Trey Parker, Dian Bachar, Robyn Lynne Raab, Michael Dean
Jacobs, Matt Stone.
Screenplay: Trey Parker.
Producers: Fran Rubel Kuzui, Jason McHugh, Matt Stone.
MPAA Rating: NC-17 (sexual content, profanity, adult themes, violence)
Running Time: 95 minutes.
Reviewed by Scott Renshaw.
It's the film so daring that it earned a rare NC-17 rating! It's the
film so controversial that Universal Pictures, the parent company of
October Films, forced October to create a separate releasing arm to
distance itself from the film! It's the film so outrageous that only
Trey Parker, the bad-boy co-creator of "South Park," could have brought
it to you! It's ORGAZMO, a film destined for midnight movie immortality!
They say there's no such thing as bad publicity...unless you're a
potential film viewer who pays attention to it. Anyone expecting naughty,
edgy fun from ORGAZMO might find that its most shocking surprise is how
uninspired much of its "outrageousness" is. Sure, it hits two guaranteed
hot-buttons -- religion and sex -- in this tale of a naive Mormon lad
named Joe Young (played by Parker himself) serving a mission in Los
Angeles. One day he knocks on the wrong door, and ends up on the set of
porno film director Maxxx Orbison (Michael Dean Jacobs). Impressed by
Joe's martial arts skills when he fends off a group of bodyguards, Orbison
offers Joe the lead role of Captain Orgazmo (physical stunts only, no sex
required), along with a huge paycheck which will allow Joe and his fiancee
Lisa (Robyn Lynne Raab) to marry in the Salt Lake City temple and live
well. Oh, and Joe also becomes a _real_ crime-fighting super-hero who
uses a high-tech weapon to paralyze adversaries with intense sexual
pleasure.
Occasionally, it looks like Parker is going to take this story on
just the right avenue of absurdity. The film-within-the-film "Orgazmo"
turns out to be a crossover smash hit, ranking third on the all-time box
office chart and naturally creating demand for a sequel. Then there's the
odd little aside in which Joe's film sidekick Ben (Dian Bachar) re-lives a
painful childhood memory of giving up "hamster style" martial arts, and a
cameo appearance by a certain heavenly personage. There are a few amusing
gags sprinkled throughout ORGAZMO, many aimed at the absurdity of adult
film "plot" scenarios when they're not taking broad shots at Utah or the
Latter-Day Saints.
The problem with Parker's sense of humor is that it can be terribly
lazy. His favorite set-up involves wacky character incongruities which
actually lost most of their wackiness many iterations ago -- an old woman
swearing like a sailor, an old woman showing sexual arousal, a Japanese
sushi chef who uses hip-hop lingo. His running gags include brilliant
innovations like a surly porno actor who passes gas in the face of others
("South Park's" Terence and Philip, eat your hearts out), and a lighting
technician (Parker's cohort Matt Stone) who begins every sentence with "I
don't want to seem like a queer or nothin'..." until eventually --
inevitably -- he actually makes a pass at another male character. You can
see punch lines coming from several theaters away in ORGAZMO.
Those who might attend just for prurient interest should also be
warned that ORGAZMO is about as tame as an NC-17 film could get. Though
there's plenty of full-clothed grinding and prominent displays of certain
marital aids, there's nary an exposed female body part to be found (hairy
male buttocks, on the other hand, get a disturbing amount of screen time).
Make no mistake, Trey Parker's brand of offensiveness is far more
sniggering, middle-of-the-road crude than it is truly shocking. There's
nothing wrong with the production being sloppy and amateurish; after all,
this is among other things a parody of porno films, with a wonderfully
cheesy fake explosion for a conclusion. It's another thing when the humor
is often sloppy and amateurish...or worse yet, re-cycled. ORGAZMO
inspires the one reaction a "daring," "controversial," "outrageous" film
can't afford: a great big "so what?"
On the Renshaw scale of 0 to 10 missionary positions: 5.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Visit Scott Renshaw's MoviePage
http://www.inconnect.com/~renshaw/
***
Subscribe to receive new reviews directly by email!
See the MoviePage for details, or reply to this message with subject line
"Subscribe".
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Oct 1998 00:50:40 EDT
From: FTWeekly00@aol.com
Subject: [MV] Film Threat Extra: Film Festival Secrets: Get Your Film Into Festivals
GET YOUR FILM INTO FESTIVALS
===================
(Please excuse this e-mail, if this does not appeal to you just throw it
away.)
Join us for a special evening with the directors and programmers of some of
the hottest film festivals in the industry Sponsored by Crest National and
Film Threat!
Thursday, October 29th, 7-10pm
Gower Theater, Paramount Pictures
- --> Join us for a party hosted by FilmmakerÆs Alliance honoring their
screening at the AFI Film Festival immediately following the event.
*** CALL 1-800-404-4484 FOR INFO. SEATING IS LIMITED***
***MENTION FILM THREAT FOR A SPECIAL DISCOUNT***
Speakers include:
- - Peter Baxter, Executive Director, Slamdance Film Festival.
- - Oren Bitan, Vice President of Marketing and Acquisitions, Seventh Art
Releasing.
- - Robert Faust, Founder and Director, The Los Angeles Independent Film
Festival.
- - Jason White, Director of Programs, Austin Film Festival.
Event will be hosted and moderated by:
- - Chris Gore, Editor of Film Threat and Author of the upcoming Lone Eagle Book
ôThe Ultimate Film Festival Survival Guide.ö
- - Steve Montal, Jury member of numerous festivals including Slamdance, the
Namur Film Festival in Belgium, the Sydney International Short Film Festival,
the Colombia Festival of the Image, the Toronto Worldwide Short Film Festival
and the Stockholm Film Festival.
TOIPICS INCLUDE:
** Strategies for getting your film into festivals.
** Case studies of films that have gone through the festival route.
** Marketing yourself at festivals.
** Distribution deals / Legal & business affairs you need to know.
** Contacts, dates & application information to the major film festivals.
** A look into how festival juries work and make prize decisions.
** How studios and independent distributors buy films at festivals.
** Getting your film accepted into as many festivals as possible.
- -- Space is limited. To reserve call 1-800-404-4484 -- mention Film Threat for
a special discount!
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1998 00:23:09 +0530
From: Pallavi Jatia <fengshui@messages.to>
Subject: [MV] (no subject)
test
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------------------------------
Date: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 22:00:56 -0700
From: "Steve Andrychuk" <sandrychuk@cintek.com>
Subject: [MV] Date: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 21:58:23 -0700
unsubscribe movies-digest
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1998 02:37:24 EST
From: FTWeekly00@aol.com
Subject: [MV] Film Threat Weekly : 10-26-98 : Take 44
FILM THREAT WEEKLY
"Hollywood's Indie Voice of the New Millennium"
=============================
Take 44 : October 26th, 1998
=============================
http://www.filmthreat.com
=============================
"I love the smell of napalm in the morning. ...It smells like victory."
- - Robert Duvall on the frontlines from "Apocalypse Now"
<===========Deluxe======Widescreen======Edition ===========>
THIS WEEK "Right here, right now."
===========================================
ùù> NEWS: Where objectivity is strangely absent.
ùù> BOXOFFICE CHART: Who's number one at the boxoffice?
ùù> PICKS OF THE WEEK: A load of plugs.
ùù> BIG SCREEN: Soldier, more...
ùù> AUSTIN FILM FESTIVAL: Festival Coverage from Texas
SUBSCRIBE "Unless you already did."
===========================================
Subscribe/Unsubscribe by sending an e-mail to FilmThreat@aol.com.
CLASSIFIEDS "If you advertise, they will come."
===========================================
Reach over 60,000 film fanatics on the net. For our reasonable ad rates, e-
mail filmthreat@aol.com.
NO DANCE FILM FESTIVAL
The NO DANCE Film & Multimedia Festival is accepting entries for its 2nd
annual alternative D.I.Y. festival in Park City, Utah January 1999. Seeking
features, docs, shorts, screenplays, and music videos. Screenings on DVD, VHS
and internet streaming. Awards, prizes and parties. Deadline November 20th,
1998. Check web site (http://www.6161.com) for application, or send SASE to:
NO DANCE Film & Multimedia Festival, 703 Pier Avenue #675, Hermosa Beach, CA
90254
http://www.6161.com
FREE VIDEO OFFER EXTENDED BY ATOMIC HOLLYWOOD!
Due to tremendous response, the next 50 Film Threat Weekly subscribers will
continue to receive a SUPERMODELS IN THE RAINFOREST video (list $19.99)
absolutely FREE when they order the Director's Cut of Penthouse Pet Julie
Strain's never-released hilarious and sexy TAKIN' IT OFF OUT WEST for just
$16.98. Type in "FTWLY" into the "discount code" to assure the FREE video.
http://www.atomic-hollywood.com
GET YOUR FILM INTO FESTIVALS
An evening with the directors of some of the hottest festivals in the
industry. Sponsored by Crest National and Film Threat. Speakers include reps
from Slamdance, Austin and the LA Independent Film Festivals. Moderated by
Steve Montal and Chris Gore, author of the upcoming book ôThe Ultimate Film
Festival Survival Guide.ö Join us for a party hosted by FilmmakerÆs Alliance
honoring their screening at the AFI Film Festival immediately following the
event! Thursday October 29, 7-10 pm in Los Angeles, Paramount Pictures. Call
1-800-404-4484.
DIGITAL EFFECTS - AFFORDABLE FOR INDIES!
LOOK! is a new digital effects company producing inexpensive, high-quality
solutions for independent filmmakers. 310-858-0130, or contact@lookfx.com
http://www.lookfx.com
WIN A FILM THREAT VIDEO! "Sign up a friend!"
===========================================
Each week we'll be giving away a special collectible Film Threat Party Video
to readers who forward Film Threat Weekly to their friends! (And you know in
Hollywood, "friends" is a loose term, so that means just about anybody!!!)
You could WIN, too! The more e-mail addresses you send, the more your chances
to win. Sign up your whole family, or your whole company! Start forwarding
FTW to your pals or send us their e-mail address and we'll send them a weekly
fix of Film Threat. That's not a threat, it's a promise.
THE NEWS "Filtered and manipulated. Just like the real news."
===========================================
Our top story...
NO DANCE RETURNING TO THE MOUNTAIN
The 1999 NO DANCE Film & Multimedia Festival is seeking submissions for its
2nd annual alternative event in Park City, Utah January 23rd-26th 1999.
Surviving a frenetic first year, NO DANCE - Year Two - will screen its ten
film competition selections on DVD, a global first for the fledgling
technology.
NO DANCE will author the DVD-Rs through a combination of DVD technologies
provided by returning sponsor, 6161 Entertainment. ôThis is desk-top level
stuff that is quickly becoming affordable to indie filmmakers,ö says founder
and festival director James Boyd. ôThe DVD projection quality is far
superior to VHS tape, and much cheaper than creating a film print. The film
print is dead.ö
NO DANCE screened twelve films last January on video, including CANNIBAL:
THE MUSICAL, HANDS ON A HARDBODY, THE NEW GODS, and episodes from Comedy
CentralÆs SOUTH PARK. This year, NO DANCE seeks new, original works
(features, documentaries, shorts, screenplays, and music videos) from emerging
filmmakers created in any format. Boyd adds, ôThere are no film vs. video
production requirements. The story content comes first, and the technology is
secondary.ö
NO DANCE will donate prizes such as a laptop computer, media software,
and film production services, and award trophies for ôBest Filmö, ôAudience
Awardö, and the highly coveted ôGolden Orbsö award for the most creative
guerrilla marketing campaign on the mountain.
NO DANCE will play in an undisclosed 125 seat digital projection theater,
and will sponsor a DVD-R demonstration in the upstairs interactive media room.
Additionally, there will be an all day video bar lounge, and digital art
gallery. NO DANCE screenings are free to the public. The NO DANCE
application deadline is November 20th, 1998. Please check web site
(http://www.6161.com/nodance) for more details and application, or send SASE
to : NO DANCE Film & Multimedia Festival, 703 Pier Avenue #675, Hermosa Beach,
CA, 90254. (310) 939-6269
http://www.6161.com
GET OUT AND VOTE!! FOR THE TOP 100 SCI-FI FILMS EVER
As devoted fans know, the sci-fi legacy holds both unrecognized gems and a
wider reach than many movie-goers appreciate. Sci-fi fans now have 30 days to
make history by casting their votes for the top 100 science fiction films of
all time, helping to define the sci-fi legacy by creating a much-deserved
roster of fan-worthy flicks. Fans can voice their top three picks by logging
onto the content-rich cyber site http://www.scifi.com/entertainment/filmpoll.
Votes will be tabulated by The SciFi Channel's Dominion web site, and will be
announced both on-line and as a feature in the April issue of Sci-Fi
Entertainment Magazine. Voting closes November 15th, so the electorate must
act now!
With The American Film Institute recently releasing its list of
"America's100 Greatest Movies," science fiction favorites were given short
shrift, only a handful making the list. SciFi Channel's Dominion now need your
help to determine the 100 greatest science fiction films of all time.
Participants can select from a list of 200 films considered worthy, or vote
for films not on the list.
We are urging ALL readers of Film Threat Weekly to vote for "Free
Enterprise" as one of the Top 100. Do your part and vote! Make your voice
heard! Take a stand for your favorites, and you'll also educate the public at
large about the breadth and scope of the science fiction genre. Whether you
worship modern classics like "Blade Runner" or the 1932 version of "Dr.
Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde," it's a wide world out there. Log on and be counted!
http://www.scifi.com/entertainment/filmpoll
http://www.freeent.com
Look for updates this week at Film Threat Online in the Dailies section at:
http://www.filmthreat.com/Dailies-Today.htm
BOXOFFICE CHART "Hollywood's Horse Race... and they're off!"
===========================================
Weekend of October 23-25, Source: Exhibitor Relations Co.
1/New PLEASANTVILLE $9.0 (1)
2/ 1 PRACTICAL MAGIC $8.8/$25.8 (2)
3/ 3 ANTZ $8.2/$61.8 (4)
4/ 2 BRIDE OF CHUCKY $6.7/$21.0 (2)
5/New SOLDIER $6.3 (1)
6/ 4 RUSH HOUR $5.7/$117.1 (6)
7/ 5 BELOVED $4.4/$14.6 (2)
8/ 6 WHAT DREAMS MAY COME $4.0/$47.1 (4)
9/New APT PUPIL $3.6 (1)
10/ 7 A NIGHT AT THE ROXBURY $2.4/$26.6 (4)
PICKS OF THE WEEK "Stuff we wanna plug."
===========================================
FILM FESTIVAL:
The WorldFest-Flagstaff International Film Festival takes place November
13-22, 1998. This annual Independent film festival, now held in the High
Country of Flagstaff, Arizona (previously in Charleston, SC) offers premieres
of independent and international features, shorts, documentaries, and video.
Enjoy Indie Films in the cool, clear evergreen-scented mountain air of
Flagstaff, where the air smells like Christmas every morning! ôFlagö is
located at the foot of the snow-covered San Francisco peaks in the middle of
the largest Ponderosa Pine forest in North America. The 10-day event also
offers in-depth film & video production seminars, from writing screenplays to
Cinematography to directing and producing the independent feature film.
WorldFest screens only Independent Films, and NO major studio films are
accepted. We have more than 5,500 very reasonably priced hotel rooms available
there, placing FlagFest in direct competition with Sundance and Telluride. It
is one hour from the Grand Canyon! Direct Amtrak service from Chicago & LA! Or
drive to Flag on John SteinbeckÆs ôMother Highwayö of Route 66! Series VIP
Passes start at just $100, singles start at free, then $4 and $5.50 per film!
It is the sister-festival to the Spring WorldFest-Houston. Contact:
WorldFest-Flagstaff, Maribel Amador, Program Director, PO Box 56566, Houston,
Texas USA 77256.
email: worldfest@aol.com
http://www.vannevar.com/worldfest
ALTERNATIVE FILM FESTIVAL:
"Call it a Mini-Sundance." Ruth Ratney, Screen Magazine. The Chicago Alt.film
Fest is now seeking entries. Categories for this years festival are: Features
- - American narrative feature film competition; Shorts - American narrative
short film competition; Documentary - American documentary film competition;
Premiere - World and U.S. premieres of specially invited films only; and
Spectrum - Screenings of non-competitive films, experimental works, and
animation by American or International directors.
The Chicago Alt.film Fest celebrates the best in independent films by
emerging and established American filmmakers and provides a forum for
exhibition, recognition, and education. Be cool. The deadline is April 9,
1999.
e-mail: ChiAltFilm@aol.com
http://members.aol.com/ChiAltFilm/Fest
WEB SITE:
The Film & Video Producer's Guild is a new organization and they are rapidly
building a membership and contacts base. Maybe one day, there will be an
Academy Award for "Best Producer"!
http://www.bajecreative.com/fvpg/link.htm
DVD:
Lucio Fulci's gore-fest "Zombie" takes place on a deserted island where a
group of vacationers become the unwilling feast of some hungry zombies. The
zombies are worm-ridden Spanish Conquistadors reanimated by a deranged doctor
bent on unravelling the secrets of life and death. "Zombie" gushes with some
incredibly graphic blood and guts but the most disturbing of the bunch is
witnessing a woman's eyeball getting pierced by a shard of wood! Try picking
out that splinter with a pair of tweezers!! Director Lucio Fulci, in his
infinite wisdom, included a healthy dose of large breasted women in this
Italian horror classic which makes flesh-eating not look so bad. "Zombie" is
a sequel of sorts to George Romero's classic "Dawn of the Dead" and is
available on a special edition DVD from Anchor Bay Entertainment. The disc
contains a widescreen transfer, audio commentary, trailer and more. Get a
great deal on "Zombie" and other horror flicks from DVD EXPRESS' cool
Shocktober promotion. Tell 'em Film Threat sent you.
http://www.dvdexpress.com
BIG SCREEN "Coming Soon to a Theater Near You"
===========================================
From five stars "Perfect! * * * * *" to one star "Crap! *" here's the lowdown.
SOLDIER (R)
* *
(http://www.wb-soldier.com)
From the pen of David Webb Peoples, acclaimed scriptor of "Blade Runner,"
"Unforgiven" and "Twelve Monkeys," you'd expect something edgy, macabre and
titillating. Unfortunately "Soldier" misses that mark by a disappointing
berth. It's a disarmingly, unimaginative sci-fi thriller that egregiously
lifts plot elements from other genre hits ("Terminator," "Road Warrior" and
"Universal Soldier") and even the western classic, "Shane."
The futuristic, interplanetary showdown pits an outdated career commando
(an awkward, but endearingly taciturn Kurt Russell) against his beefier and
more lethal successor (a bald, buff Jason Scott Lee). In round one -- a deadly
training demonstration -- Russell's conditioned-from-birth sergeant gets his
ass handed to him by Lee's genetically-engineered uber-trooper. Left for dead
on a barren, deep-space junkyard, Russell is taken in by the planet's raggedy
inhabitants, who nurse him back to health and get him in touch with his human
side. Of course there's a round two, when Lee and his legion of robotic
exterminators storm the planet, and Russell, recharged by his newfound
emotion, goes on the warpath, proving that the older model can still blood let
like there's no tomorrow. To its credit, "Soldier" does offer a few good mano-
e-mano, testosterone moments, and the set designs are ultra-cool, but there's
too little character development and no reason to care. - Tom Meek
LOVE IS THE DEVIL (Unrated)
* * * *
I really HATE movies about ARTISTS. "Basquiat", "Basketball Diaries"... all
CRAP. Filmmakers always want to show you how an artist "suffered" through
life and overcame hardships to express themselves through their art.
Directors usually make these kind of movies to make themselves look like
artists.
HOWEVER, once in a while, someone gets it right. In this case, it's John
Maybury who wrote and directed "Love is the Devil", subtitled, "Study for a
Portrait of Francis Bacon". Sometimes called the most important artist of the
latter half of the twentieth century, Bacon (Derek Jacobi) was known for
painting dark and disturbing portraits of figures in extreme emotional states.
The studies came from photos or from episodes in Bacon's life. Guess what?
We get to see some of those episodes.
The film covers the period of Bacon's life from 1964 to '71 as he receives
a triumphant retrospectivee at the Grand Palais in Paris. Meanwhile, back at
the hotel, his lover of seven years George Dyer (Daniel Craig), model of many
of his greatest works, is having a pill and bourbon cocktail as a send-off to
this mortal coil.
The rest of the film recounts their sordid affair, from the moment they met
when George tried to break into Bacon's house. While the film does present
many real events, it does so in an impressionistic manner. It often seems
both the art direction and the cinematography took their cues from Bacon's
art. The amazing thing is, while we occasionally see him paint, we never
actually see Bacon's art, just how it expresses itself in his life. This
style is perfect as much of the film is from George's point of view, as his
sanity dissolves in a cocktail of drugs, alcohol and self-loathing. Working
class George is never really able to fit into Bacon's inner circle or the art
world. Bacon seems intent upon playing out the role of tortured, unfeeling
artist the art world has created for him. He can't even publicly grieve for
George as that would display a compassion absent from his image. At one
point, Bacon is accused of putting more energy into his paintings of George
than into their actual relationship. In the end we're left to ponder the true
price of art. - Ron Wells
THE CRUISE (R)
* * * 1/2
This documentary chronicles the life of an eccentric tour guide (Timothy
"Speed" Levitch), who loquaciously offers an intriguing cultural history of
New York City. When Levitch isn't pointing out the more dicey moments in the
lives of Greta Garbo, Arthur Miller and Thomas Paine from atop a double-decker
bus, he's articulately spewing into the camera contemplative bleatings about
the city's oppressive grid system, sexually suggestive terra-cotta
architecture and his own misanthropic being. To the gaudy nebbish, who looks
like John Lennon, sans charisma, and sounds like Woody Allen on helium, the
universe is a neatly compartmentalized dichotomy of "cruise" and "anti-
cruise," with "cruise" referring to Levitch's carnival-like occupation and
fee-spirited ideology.
Shot in gritty black-and-white, documentary style, "The Cruise" is an
improvisational piece that hangs on the perverse quirkiness of Levitch's
persona. His standup caricature is at once compelling, arrogant and -- when
its learned that Levitch is a frustrated playwright who can barely eke out an
existence -- even contemptible. The dark blend of bleak reality and bubbly
wit, may depress some and annoy others, but no mater how it affects you, "The
Cruise" is deftly provocative. - Tom Meek
A NIGHT AT THE ROXBURY (PG-13)
*
(http://www.theroxbury.com)
Another "Saturday Night Live" skit-to-screen comedy. This one isn't as abysmal
as "The Coneheads" or "It's Pat," but it's certainly not on par with "Wayne's
World" or "The Blues Brothers." SNLers Chris Kattan and Will Ferell reprise
their head-bopping Butabi brothers, and spend the entirety of the film trying
to get into the Roxbury, L.A.'s hottest night club. Of course the fashion-
challenged siblings -- replete with chains and polyester -- think they're the
hottest movers and shakers since John Travolta in "Saturday Night Fever," but
they're really a pair of delusional dimwits who live at home, can't get laid
and are shunned at every club door. Along the way a woman comes between them
(SNL's Molly Shannon in an uproarious bit) they schmooze with the Pat Lyons of
L.A. (Chazz Palminteri,), hang out with Richard Grieco and get berated by
their controling father (Dan Hedaya looking ripe for a coronary).
There are few subtle moments in "A Night at the Roxbury." Its forced
slapstick egregiously mugs the audience for laughs, and while things
occasionally hit the warm, goofiness of "The Wedding Singer," the film's real
star is the retro-hip, disco soundtrack ("What is Love") that sustains the
sherds of momentum with a throbbing, rhythmic energy. If only SNL alum, Mike
Myers, had tossed his "54" shtick into this flick, there might have been at
least one entertaining cinematic take on club life. - Tom Meek
AUSTIN FILM FESTIVAL & HEART OF TEXAS SCREENWRITER'S CONFERENCE
===========================================
Festival Coverage from Texas
http://www.austinfilmfestival.org
by Merle Bertrand
Just as some towns deserve two major league baseball teams, cinema-savvy
Austin, TX deservedly hosts two rising stars on the film festival circuit:
SXSW in the spring and the Austin Film Festival and Screenwriter's Conference
in the fall. With the AFF devoted to that infrastructure of film the
screenplay, it seemed apropos that the elegant Driskill Hotel, once again the
AFF's headquarters, has been stripped down to its infrastructure while
undergoing major renovations. One glance at the Driskill Lounge's bare sheet-
rocked walls, cleverly plastered over with oversized screenplay pages, and the
"Brazil"-like steel beams and duct work exposed in the ceilings unfortunately
also symbolized the tattered and bleeding condition of several film prints
after encountering the most voraciously sadistic projectors I've ever seen.
Yes, the AFF attracted big names deep to the heart of Texas - the Coen
brothers, John Landis, Jon Cryer, Bryan Singer (Sandra Bullock doesn't count
'cause she lives here now) and many others. Yes, this year's films were a
solid crop. And yes the festival turned its usual welcome spotlight on the
forgotten screenwriter. But what this year's festival may mostly be
remembered for is more technical snafus, delays, and foul-ups at normally
four-star screening venues than even last year's 30th Parallel Film Fest.
Patient audiences endured, for instance, at least three breakdowns during
the World Premiere of Gary Ross' excellent "Pleasantville" and an impressive
on-screen frozen frame melt during "Went to Coney Island On A Mission From
God... Be Back By Five" the likes of which I haven't seen since my Super 8
days as a kid.
These were just the proverbial tip of the iceberg as horror stories
abounded. Here's hoping that next year's AFF uses projectors that aren't held
together with baling wire and bubble gum and hires projectionists that know
where to find the Dust-Off can and Focus and Frame Line knobs. Many more
instances of a director having to act out a "missing" scene during the Q&A,
and this'll quickly be a one festival town again.
Enough griping. Let's get to the good stuff...
To read reviews from the Austin Film Festival, visit Film Threat Online at:
http://www.filmthreat.com/Dailies-Today.htm
END CREDITS "Written, produced, and directed by . . ."
===========================================
Publisher / Chris Gore
Executive Publisher / Victor Minjares
Contributors / Merle Bertrand, Tom Meek, Anthony Miele, Ron Wells
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Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1998 09:55:41 -0800 (PST)
From: Catherine Clark <clarkc45212@yahoo.com>
Subject: [MV] Pleasantville
I am planning to see the blockbuster Pleasantville on sunday, but I
was wondering if someone who had seen it would recomend it. So did
anyone take a trip to the theater this weekend to see the number one
ranked film? How was it?
_________________________________________________________
DO YOU YAHOO!?
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Date: Mon, 26 Oct 98 13:09:56 PST
From: Wade Snider <wsnider@brazoselectric.com>
Subject: Re: [MV] Pleasantville
I saw Pleasantville this weekend. I was very pleased. ;-) It probably really just
doesn't quite live up to the hype in my mind, given that we've been seeing previews
for it since June, but it's probably one of the best movies I've seen this year in
the theater. I tend to think that maybe seeing so many previews for this movie hurt
it. i kept feeling here and there that I had already seen it... but that was really
just the things from the previews.
Everyone probably knows the setup.. Geeky brother and popular sister fight over TV
remote and get stuck in a 'Leave it to Beaver' type 50's sitcom.
At first, it's a funny spoof on the time period and tv shows of that time, but then
it gets deeper and goes into the theme of personal liberty and human growth. The
two leads cannot hide their true selves from their surroundings, and as the people
of the town begin to see that things are not always the same as they thought they
were, the people of Pleasantville begin to not only change but strive for further
change. As they change, their attitudes change and the colors begin to crrep into
their formerly bland existence.
The imagery and coloring effects are beyond reproach. The black and white world is
so resemblant of shows you mostly see today on Nick at Nite, and then as people of
Pleasantville change, and the colors emerge, the startling differences are even
more clear. There's the obvious metaphors about change and racism and growth, and
that seems as the writers tried a little too hard on that aspect. I couldn't quite
get over the fact that the analogies and metaphors were a little too obvious and
overdone - for instance, in the many 'No Coloreds' signs that pop up in the town as
thigs change....and that is a minor thing. Also, the acting is really very good,
and a lot of the dialogue is well written. Jeff Daniels and Joan Allen give two of
the best performances, but even the leads - Toby Mcquire and Reese Witherspoon
manage to show some depth. And, William Macy manages to give a strong showing in a
smaller role. It is also funny in many places and nearly a tear-jerker here and
there.
Some of the most touching scenes are when we first see a dash of color in a single
rose, when Daniels gets muddled and confused when his routine is disturbed, and
when he first views a book of classic artwork, when McQuire tries to help his
screen mother Allen hide her color from the rest of the town by covering it with
makeup, and even when Mcquire answers the curiousity of other schoolkids about
other places than Pleasantville, popular literature, and even the weather. There
are certainly a lot of great moments in the movie. It has a great underlying theme
about change but also encouragement and hope. That world may have seemed 'perfect,'
but as the movie shows, it really wasn't; there was so much more for people to
learn, and as they began to see this, not changing would have been a great tragedy.
And when you walk out of the theater, the colors of the regular world seem to
bounce at your eyes like you wouldn't believe.
It's a great movie. See it on a big screen, and if you have to, pay the full price.
I think it's worth it.
- --- On Mon, 26 Oct 1998 09:55:41 -0800 (PST) Catherine Clark
><clarkc45212@yahoo.com> wrote:
>I am planning to see the blockbuster Pleasantville on sunday, but I
>was wondering if someone who had seen it would recomend it. So did
>anyone take a trip to the theater this weekend to see the number one
>ranked film? How was it?
- --------------------------------------------------------
W. Snider
Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.
- -Kierkegaard
- --------------------------------------------------------
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 98 16:12:52 PST
From: "Rebecca Bezant" <sunybruk@infoblvd.net>
Subject: [MV] Where is the 3rd House?
To whomever might know the answer to this question:
Im sure alot of you reading this message may know of the movies House,=
House II: The Second Story and House IV, but as my sentace goes, I can =
not find the third House movie. I was just curious how a jump like that =
can be taken without another number in between had taken place. If anyone=
knows how I might find this House III(If there is a another title for =
it, please tell me because I am very interested in finding this film). =
Please write back to me Tim at Sunybruk@infoblvd.net. I am totally lost =
on that movies where abouts. Also, does anyone know of any good thrille=
rs like that of Fallen and A Perfect Murder, I'm into those as well. Than=
k you!
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Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1998 13:46:25 -0700 (MST)
From: The Reporter <gregorys@xmission.com>
Subject: [MV] Movie News - 10/26/98
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Practical Magic" fell out of the top spot on
the North American box office list this weekend, giving way to
"Pleasantville," according to studio estimates. "Pleasantville," a
fantasy about two modern-day teens thrown into a real-life 1950s TV
show setting, earned about $9 million for the Friday-to-Sunday
period. Last week's box office champ, "Practical Magic," featuring
Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman as sister witches, slipped to No. 2
with almost $8.8 million. Third was "Antz," followed by "Bride of
Chucky" and Kurt Russell's sci-fi action flick "Soldier."
-=> * <=-
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Just call her Queen Oprah. Entertainment Weekly
puts talk show host-actress-producer-author Oprah Winfrey at the top
of its ninth annual list of the 100 most influential people in the
entertainment business. Winfrey takes over the No. 1 spot from Steven
Spielberg, who slipped to second. Rounding out the top 10 are mogul
Rupert Murdoch, George Lucas, Time Warner execs Ted Turner and Gerald
Levin, Tom Hanks, Disney's Michael Eisner, Viacom honcho Sumner
Redstone, "Titanic" director James Cameron and a trio of execs from
Murdoch-owned companies. Newcomers to the list include No. 17
Leonardo DiCaprio and No. 40 Helen Hunt.
-=> * <=-
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Christian Slater says he has cleaned up his act,
which in recent years included being busted for taking a gun on a
plane, time in jail for driving under the influence and being taken
into custody for roughing up a girlfriend. Slater, 29, says he has
settled down, but that does not mean the characters he portrays have
gone soft. In his upcoming movie, "Very Bad Things," Slater plays an
amoral real estate agent who is involved in the death of a
prostitute. "I like to be loud in moves and I like to break things
and I like to have a good time," he said in a New York Daily News
interview. "I have that side to me and if I can express it in a
creative manner, we're all a lot safer."
-=> * <=-
"Practical Magic" slipped to No. 2 on the North American box
office list this weekend, giving way to "Pleasantville,"
according to studio estimates. "Pleasantville," a fantasy
about two modern-day teens thrown into a real-life 1950s TV
show setting, earned about $9 million. "Practical Magic,"
featuring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman as sister
witches, earned almost $8.8 million. In third place was
"Antz," followed by "Bride of Chucky" and Kurt Russell's
sci-fi action flick "Soldier."
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Date: Tue, 27 Oct 1998 08:04:52 +1100
From: "Carmine Pascuzzi." <carminep@mediasearch.com.au>
Subject: [MV] subscribe
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Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1998 16:11:33 -0700 (MST)
From: Scott Renshaw <renshaw@inconnect.com>
Subject: [MV] REVIEW: LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA)
LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA)
(Miramax)
Starring: Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi, Giorgio Cantarini, Sergio
Bustric, Horst Buchholz.
Screenplay: Robert Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami.
Producers: Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi.
Director: Roberto Benigni
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (adult themes)
Running Time: 114 minutes.
Reviewed by Scott Renshaw.
LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL, a fancifully dark Italian comedy from
co-writer/director/star Roberto Benigni, has inspired one of the most
misguided criticisms of recent years. A large portion of the film, set in
Italy circa 1939-1945, involves an Italian family in a concentration camp:
Jewish bookseller Guido Orefice (Benigni); his Gentile wife Dora
(Nicoletta Braschi); and their five-year-old son Giosue (Giorgio
Cantarini). In an effort to protect his son from the terrifying reality
of their situation, Guido convinces Giosue that they are playing a grand
game, collecting points for being quiet or remaining hidden. When German
soldiers arrive at the bunkhouse to announce the camp rules, Guido feigns
being able to translate into Italian so he can announce the rules of the
"game" to Giosue; when Giosue hears stories of the evils going on at the
camp, Guido laughingly dismisses them as the attempts of other "players"
to gain a psychological advantage.
The criticism leveled at LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL is that it is a sanitized
version of the Holocaust, which somehow diminishes the gravity of the
tragedy by squeezing humor from it. The absurdity of that criticism is
that it seems to miss the point entirely. Guido's entire purpose in the
second half of the film becomes sanitizing the Holocaust, turning the
experience into something his son can survive both physically and
emotionally. Benigni crafts a sensitive relationship between the father
and son, as Guido's wit and imagination allow him to create a world of
pleasure and hope where no pleasure or hope should be possible. There are
more than enough grim reminders of the camp's true purpose -- as well as a
glimpse of banal evil in the character of an obliviously self-absorbed
physician (Horst Buchholz) -- to dismiss any notion that Benigni as a
film-maker is candy-coating one of the bleakest chapters in human history.
His character, however, is doing exactly that; his success is a triumph of
love and determination in the creation of their own reality.
The irony of that misguided criticism is that there's a much simpler
reason to be less than dazzled by LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL -- namely, most of the
first hour. In essence, it's an _extremely_ extended prologue,
introducing us to Guido as a carefree seeker of love and fortune who
directs his creative energies towards winning Dora's heart. The pleasant
scenes between them certainly establish their bond, as well as Guido's
imaginative gifts, but on their own they're fairly innocuous bits of
romantic tomfoolery. Benigni mixes physical comedy with the occasional
social commentary, all with moderate success and the sense that he's just
passing time until he can get to the real meat of the story. It's easy to
imagine Benigni setting up all the necessary relationships in about half
the time, making the shift in tone less abrupt...and making shifting in
your seat less necessary.
None of that detracts from the potent, bittersweet pleasures of the
film's second half. All of the things that could have gone wrong instead
go right -- the young Cantarini radiates charming innocence without
cloying self-awareness; Benigni hits just the right balance between clown
and unlikely hero; the darker moments always feel consistent with the
human comedy. LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL grows richer by the minute, making it
easy to forgive the amiable but meandering first half. If it hadn't takeng
quite so long to reach its most powerful scenes, LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL would
have been an easy choice as one of the year's best films. An expression
as trite as "triumph of the human spirit" doesn't quite do justice to what
Benigni has pulled off here. He has taken pure horror and turned it into
a whimsical love story -- between a man and a woman, between a man and his
son, between a man and the idea that we never lose the capacity to create
beauty in our lives.
On the Renshaw scale of 0 to 10 beautiful dreamers: 8.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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http://www.inconnect.com/~renshaw/
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Date: Tue, 27 Oct 1998 03:13:30 +0100
From: Olaf Adam <olaf.adam@ruhr-uni-bochum.de>
Subject: Re: [MV] REVIEW: LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA)
There's only one thing left to add to Scott Renshaw's well observed
review of LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (LA VITA 'E BELLA).
I saw a feature on television some time ago that showed director/actor
Benigni receiving an award for his film in Israel.
The minutes-long standing ovations the audience in the theatre granted
him should say enough, because after all they're are still some kind of
authority concerning the question how this difficult subject-matter is
handled.
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Date: Tue, 27 Oct 1998 16:20:56 -0500
From: Gene Ehrich <gene@ehrich.com>
Subject: [MV] The Casper Caper
Last night my wife and I saw a previously unreleased flick from the very
early career of Tom Cruise. Rather disjointed black humor about a small
town detective and his attempt to solve a series of crimes where the
perpetrator dresses as Casper the Ghost and commits the crimes only on
Halloween night. The film gets needlessly bloody which kind of takes away
its unique charm. Cruises mother in the film bears a uncanny resemblance to
Goldie Hawn but the age doesn't fit. His girl friend also looks familiar
but cant place her.
Does anybody know who plays the mother or the girl friend?
gene@ehrich
http://www.voicenet.com/~generic
Computer & Video Game Garage Sale
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End of movies-digest V2 #122
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