34 12
Thread
Printable Version

Movie News

"The Da Vinci Code is the best-selling hardcover adult novel of all time."

Well.... i believe it is still the BIBLE is the Best Selling book of all time...

TOP

hello spratt, where did u get all these stuff? are a showbiz insider?lol Big thanks for the info anyway

TOP

Any NEWS about the sequel of DIE HARD???

TOP

a good news?

TOP

more news please.......

TOP

I like him in Australia though...

TOP

any new 007 movie yet?

TOP

ok thanks spratt89... keep on feeding the news! cheers!!

TOP

yeah... every character in that movie deserves an origin story...

TOP

what about Storm?

TOP

'Star Trek' predicted to make $60m

while the movie will open in every major territory except Mexico and Japan. bad for us here.... might be 2 months late again...

TOP

The future king of Japanese animation may be with us

Friday, Aug. 9, 2009



Hosoda steps out of Miyazaki's shadow with dazzling new film


By MARK SCHILLING
"Revenge," George Orwell once wrote, "is bitter," but it can also be sweet, can't it?


Summer Wars  Rating: (5 out of 5)  
      

Astounding anime: Director Mamoru Hosoda and his team mold a story involving the digital world with the real world with brilliant skill. © 2009 SUMMER WARS FILM PARTNERS  

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Director: Mamoru Hosoda
Running time: 114 minutes
Language: Japanese  
Now showing (Aug. 7, 2009)  
[See Japan Times movie listing]  



When Studio Ghibli asked Mamoru Hosoda, an up-and-coming animator at Toei Animation, to direct a new feature, "Howl no Ugoku Shiro" ("Howl's Moving Castle," 2004), it was as if the Imperial family had allowed a commoner to marry one of its members. Then, when Hayao Miyazaki — Ghibli's emperor — decided to take over the film, Hosoda was cast outside of the palace gates.

Rather than cry in his futon over the injustice of it all, Hosoda directed the SF anime "Toki o Kakeru Shojo" ("The Girl Who Leapt Through Time," 2006) for the Madhouse studio. Featuring a sensitive teenage heroine and a time-traveling storyline, with animation that vividly expressed both emotional nuances and imaginative flights, "Toki" was a surprise hit, as well as a winner of many prizes and festival invitations. Meanwhile, its Ghibli box-office rival, "Gedo Senki" ("Tales from Earthsea," 2006), directed by Miyazaki's son Goro, was bashed by critics (including this one, who found it a compendium of cliches) and did, for a Ghibli film, mediocre business.

Hosoda's new followup is "Summer Wars," an animation again made with Madhouse and scriptwriter Satoko Okudera, but with a bigger budget and wider distribution by Warner Japan. Focusing on an epic computer game battle, "Summer Wars" is an ambitious step forward for Hosoda — and a marvelously sure-footed one it is.

It also points out the conservatism of so much feature anime, which either endlessly repurpose popular manga, TV anime and game franchises (e.g., the products of Hosoda's old boss Toei Animation) or rework familiar tropes (e.g., Ghibli's spunky underage heroines and evergreen theme of environmental destruction) over and over. "Summer Wars" may contain familiar elements, beginning with its bashful, moonstruck young hero, but it combines them in ways fresh, contemporary and dazzlingly imaginative.

Unlike most mass audience anime that look back nostalgically to a historical or folkloric past or ahead to various futuristic fantasies, dark and otherwise, "Summer Wars" is totally of the current, postmillennium moment. Watching it, I felt quite the print-and-ink dinosaur, but also more hopeful about the digital culture that has connected nearly everyone in the country. Instead of surrendering their souls to the Internet data stream — the theme of several postapocalyptic anime — the folks fighting the online "wars" of the title retain their individuality and humanity, in every variation from the cute to the obnoxious.

The aforementioned hero is Kenji (Ryunosuke Kamiki), a teenage math prodigy who, together with his equally nerdy best friend, lives almost completely in an online world called Oz. Then, one fine summer day, a pretty sempai (senior), Natsuki (Nanami Sakuraba), asks him if he would like to help her with the big birthday celebration being planned for her soon-to-be 90-year-old grandmother (Sumiko Fuji).

TOP

Disney enters new era with Pixar man at helm

By KAORI SHOJI
Brave, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed Bolt is the canine equivalent of Truman Burbank (Jim Carrey) of "The Truman Show" fame — he lives his whole life in a TV show but doesn't know it. And because he's a dog, the Kafka-esque/metaphysical angst that assailed Truman (once he discovered that his life is all about fabricated fragments of a ratings-grabbing action series) touch Bolt's heart only briefly. He has other things to worry about, like why his superpowers (turning freeways into concrete rubble at a single bark) can't work outside the studio, and whether Penny (his human costar on the show) really loved him or her sweet winsomeness was just acting.


Bolt  Rating: (3.5 out of 5)  
      

Barking mad: It's a lock when you do it the Pixar way. © DISNEY ENTERPRISES, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.  

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Director: Byron Howard and Chris Williams
Running time: 96 minutes
Language: English  
Opens Aug. 1  
[See Japan Times movie listing]  



Directed by Byron Howard and Chris Williams, "Bolt" is the thinking kids-and-parents' Disney animation, one that actually invites semideep discussions concerning reality and identity and job commitment, over postmovie burgers.

Having said so however, it's still heavily customized entertainment, rigged to manipulate the senses (the much-advertised 3-D effect is top-notch, if a little wearing), open tear ducts and extract giggles with Hollywood commercialism vengeance.

"Bolt" heralds a new era in Disney films: It's the first production supervised by Pixar's guru director John Lasseter, and his handiwork shows in the intricate quality of the visuals, combined with a sincerity in the overall tone that speak of a genuine, unslick smartness (read: more action, more meaty dialogue, less wisecracks).

And much to the director duo's credit, Bolt (voiceover by John Travolta) never exchanges his dog identity for a human personality: His logic and behavior patterns remain strictly canine from start to finish.

Bolt's stand-out trait is loyalty, and having been trained from birth to protect Penny (Miley Cyrus) from the clutches of cat-loving evildoer Dr. Calico (Malcolm MacDowell), he can't stop doing that just because the show's come to an end. On the set or out on the nitty gritty streets of Manhattan, where Bolt is mistakenly shipped to after a series of accidents.

Bolt's priorities remain the same: First, find Penny and make sure she's OK. Second, save the world. What a guy!

It's no wonder Penny — teenager that she is — has no interest in human males her own age and is suspicious of the director (James Lipton), whom she suspects is exploiting Bolt's nice-guy qualities in order to increase ratings (duh!).

In New York, Bolt meets the cynical, urbane cat Mittens (Susie Essman) and is taught the ropes of street survival, though he had long considered felines to be "degenerate creatures of darkness," and an overweight TV-obsessed hamster named Rhino (Mark Walton), who turns out to worship both Bolt and his show, decides to tag along. Rhino (who himself is a little vague between what's happening in the real world and the stuff he sees on TV) understands that Bolt needs to return to Penny minus the use of the superpowers he had once wielded so easily. Mittens, on the other hand, tells him to wake up and smell the unpalatable truth: "People can't be depended on. Penny was only pretending to love you, it was her job!"

True to its Pixar influences, "Bolt" draws a lot from "Toy Story," which also featured a pivotal relationship between a human boy and his favorite toys. Only one of them understood he was a mere ah, plaything. The other couldn't understand why, once taken out of his box and deposited in the boy's room with all the other toys, his almighty invincible powers disappeared.

Bolt has a similar dilemma, but it doesn't take long before his concerns for Penny override his concerns for strutting his stuff and having the title role.

In some possibly "dark and degenerate" way, there's a theme in this film about stars and ratings and megalomania. Or maybe it's a more straightforward message about dogs being better actors. Bolt certainly has some moments of method acting that would floor Dustin Hoffman.

TOP

The Wolfman

I guess this will be another good movie to watch in 2010... with  some best actors in the casts.....

[ Last edited by rickman at 9-1-2009 17:25 ]

TOP

Denzel holds the lead

Oscar-winning actor dishes on hero status, reworking 'The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3'


By GEORGE HADLEY-GARCIA
Special to The Japan Times
"I think it's hard to generalize," says actor Denzel Washington about movie remakes. He and John Travolta — as the villain — costar in a remake of the 1974 "The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3," which starred Walter Matthau and was much noted for its powerful score by David Shire. Comparisons between the two versions are invariably being made, generally in favor of the original, which also had an impressive supporting cast.

"You gotta remember that remakes go back to movies and the beginning," says Washington of the film industry's history. "They'd make a movie in the 1930s and then do a remake in the 1940s. If you read some of the movie books, you'll find out they didn't wait near as long as we do now to remake a movie. With this one, what? . . . 20 years, 30 years? (actually, it's 35 years). So it wasn't for greed or just to shock people 'cause Johnny's playing nasty this time out," he chuckles, referring to Travolta in bad-guy role.

"Pelham" has become a hot topic of conversation in New York City, where the story is set. In 1974 the movie didn't create a big stir because it seemed too implausible — but that was before 9/11. The plot concerns the hijacking of a subway train, whose passengers are held for ransom. Manhattan and its infrastructure, political and mechanical, are scrutinized, and some critics have said it's too stressful a film for New York to handle in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Others say it could give bad guys, including terrorists, ideas (ideas that ostensibly it didn't give anyone in the 1970s, '80s or '90s).

Washington feels, "You gotta remember, this is fiction, man. It goes back to a novel (by John Godey). And hijacking can happen anywhere, any time. It can be on an airplane or a bus (as in "Speed") or a car. Or in a subway system in New York City. You can't pin down how many ideas the bad guys have gotten from movies over the years. You can't know that, can't even guess it. And you can't stop creating story lines and books and movies 'cause somebody might go and copy what they have seen.

"Mostly, it's just something everyone involved in this was thinking might interest a lot of people. If you live in a city, you can probably relate to this. It's just one . . . example of what could happen, . . . but in the end, the bad guys get their punishment, 'cause that's how it usually goes in movies, and you just wish that's how it would go out in real life."

The original "Pelham" was written by renowned scriptwriter Peter Stone; this adaptation of Godey's novel is by Brian Helgeland and is directed by screen veteran Tony Scott.

Washington, who plays a subway dispatcher, was born in Mount Vernon, N.Y., in 1954, the son of a minister and a beautician and the middle child of three. He and his wife Pauletta, who wed in 1983, have four children. The two-time Oscar-winner (one for Best Actor, one for Best Supporting Actor) had his first major screen role in the 1981 racial comedy "Carbon Copy." He's since made relatively few comedies, and when asked why, he replies, "Beats me. 'Cause most people (that) know me, they swear I got a great sense of humor. So I don't know."

Of late, he's done action-type roles (he next costars in the action-adventure movie, "The Book of Eli" with Gary Oldman and Mila Kunis due out Jan. 2010). How does he choose a role or script? "The story, mostly. Do you wanna know what happens next? Say, in this ("The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3"), when they hold up the subway and the people in it, wouldn't you want to know what happens next? 'Cause you know it could happen, it could be real. Especially nowadays. And you'd be, like, curious . . . to know what happens next in the subway — all those people — and what the guys working in the subway are gonna do next, and the city's politicians, and what goes right or wrong.

"This one was a no-brainer. You read this story, you want to know the outcome and you want to play the hero, the guy who helps make it all come out OK."

Washington often plays roles not intended for any particular race. This wasn't always the case, as with "Carbon Copy." Why is it now possible for Washington to avoid racial stereotyping? "It's taken time. It's taken the time it needs for writers and the guys who make movies to kind of just see people as people. You know, to not think of them as a color first. Of course, if the lead's like me (black), I get considered practically first off. But this time out, they could've cast anyone. Even," he again chuckles, "John Travolta."

Does Washington avoid playing the villain, and if so, is there a reason? "I . . . would just rather play the good guy," he says after a lengthy pause. One wonders whether, with blacks now so prominent on the screen, he feels a need to avoid portraying a villain? "I sort of had to work my way up into this traditional leading man position," he says slowly and carefully.

"It took me some time. There wasn't no guarantee I was gonna get there. But now I am, I like playing the lead, someone who can set things right. I'd rather have an optimistic outlook than, say, a pessimistic one."

How about a realistic one, which combines the two? He laughs, "Movies, you know, they still go more for the A or Z outlook. You know, black or white, not gray — no racial pun intended."

Do comedies come his way at all? "You know what? The thinking in Hollywood's more stereotyped where comedy's concerned. If it's a brother (a black man) and it's funny, they think of Eddie Murphy first. Or maybe Will (Smith). And that's another thing. Will's younger than me, and this is a real age-conscious business, man. I'm the age I am, and it ain't young, and maybe I look OK for my age, but they're not gonna keep giving me leads and real action roles and all those silvered platters for the next 15, 20 years.

"Once I'm like 60, I'll be fitting into a new category, like it or not. So that's another reason I'm sticking with the groove of a traditional leading man, doing this while I can. When I'm older and older-looking, I can probably get to do more comedies. But I can probably also get to do some nasty guy — you know, villains. And most of the time a villain role is a supporting role, so I can hold off on fitting into that there groove."

Unlike Murphy or Brad Pitt, Denzel Washington is never in gossip columns and has never been touched by scandal. Is this a very deliberate part of a minister's son's plan? He laughs "I'm careful, man. I don't put myself into temptation's way. I keep it in mind that I'm a married man and if I land in some scandal situation, it doesn't just involve only me, it's them (his family) too."

What's the closest he's come to controversy or scandal? "I've said a few things in my time I wasn't supposed to say. I've never actually done anything — I've just opened my big mouth."

For instance?

"Well, . . . I don't judge anyone, and if someone wants to go the interracial romance route or marry outside their race, that is fine. Today it's not unusual. It's just not what I did. But back then, you had to be careful what you said, 'cause other people who went that route could take it personal(ly).

"Or when Will (Smith) came to me for advice. He was playing someone gay in a movie. He asked me if I thought he should kiss another guy in it (which the script required). I said 'no,' and somebody must've heard, 'cause it got reported, and it came out like I was antigay. But I thought for Will, early on in his career in the movies, it was a bit of a risky thing to do. Now, of course, you can win an Academy Award (playing a gay role) and it's not a risk anymore.

"So that's one reason I try not to talk politics or religion or other stuff in interviews. I'd rather speak my lines, being an actor, and give you a happy ending than speak my mind and land in hot water."



http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ff20090904r1.html

TOP

More corn and it could have got a B-grade

Friday, Sept. 18, 2009



By KAORI SHOJI
A favorite aunt of mine used to try one diet fad after another and upon the failure of each one, pull out her old standby excuse: "Marie Antoinette worried over her weight her whole life. In which case there's just no help for the rest of us!" Never mind the lack of logic, I believed her. Now a similar conviction assails me when watching "Homecoming (released in Japan as "The Watchers"). Mischa Barton — "O.C." beauty queen — is the centerpiece of this grisly tale of jilted jealousy gone haywire and through it all I could only recall my auntie. I mean, Barton in the role of a woman who's alone, up all night in disheveled nonglory, simpering, swearing vengeance on a guy who rejected her like a bag of wet trash left out on the wrong day of the week. Well, really. We may as well relax girls, because there's just no help for the rest of us.

Homecoming        Rating: (2 out of 5)
   

Vengeful vixen: Mischa Barton in "Homecoming" © 2008 HOMECOMING THE MOVIE LLC
Director: Morgan J. Freeman
Running time: 88 minutes
Language: English
Opens Sept. 26
[See Japan Times movie listing]
Directed by Morgan J. Freeman (no relation to the actor), "Homecoming" has the makings of a spectacular B-movie, but sadly lacks the guts necessary to push itself onto a truly cheesy level of existence.

Barton, who plays a small-town barkeep named Shelby, comes off as a mere gal unhinged when she could have been grossly, gorgeously deranged. Tsk. Apart from the fact that Shelby has probably watched "Misery" on her DVD player one too many times, there's not much in her behavior that's inspiring in a horrific way and the story hovers indecisively between Shelby's relationship woes and her not very original stalker antics (Kathy Bates should have stepped in to give a tutorial) while the camera never misses an opportunity to zero in on her cleavage and stay there for as long as decently possible. On the one hand, how could a woman this hot be treated like this? On another hand, fairly quickly into the story there comes a tremendous urge to stamp "He's just not that into you!" on Shelby's forehead.

But at least Shelby has a lot of zing and cuteness going for her while her love object, Mike (Matt Long), is the type of clueless lout you never want to meet in real life. In high school Mike was captain of the football team and prom king, going out with Shelby the prom queen and earmarked for a smashing future (yawn). Now playing college football at Northwestern University, Mike returns home in hammy glory with a girlfriend on his arm (and the whole, football-centric town gathers to greet their local hero and cheer) — choosing to ignore the effect such a scene may have on his still love-struck ex. Even klutzier is Mike's willingness to reunite with Shelby and introduce her to his current love, Elizabeth (Jessica Stroup), right in Shelby's bar-cum-bowling alley, with her presiding over the party and carrying drink trays. There's Shelby, passing around the beer and telling Mike that she's decided to make additions to her house, to accommodate the "babies we'll be having." There's Mike, scratching his head and wondering what the hell could that mean?

One dumb decision leads to another and Mike and his terrifically laid back sherrif cousin, Billy (with this guy as law-enforcer, it's a wonder the town wasn't plundered and destroyed long ago), drop Elizabeth off at a motel so she can rest and be fresh to meet Mike's parents in the morning. But the place is fully booked and Elizabeth finds herself walking 5 km to the next motel, her iPhone inexplicably refusing to work. A car brushes past her, Elizabeth takes a fall, the driver steps out and who should it be but her blonde nemesis Shelby. From here on Elizabeth spends the rest of the story with a broken leg, incarcerated in Shelby's bedroom which is covered floor to ceiling with photos and memorabilia of high school and Mike. The decor alone (never mind the gaping plot contrivances) would drive a woman to the depths of insanity.

Still, Shelby turns out to be the one beacon of light (color: shocking pink) in this terrifically antiseptic suburbia-land where everyone apparently goes to bed at 9:00 p.m. and are oblivious to the wails of agony heard from her house. And Mike feels perfectly at home here? It may be the best thing for Elizabeth if she never does get to meet his parents.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ff20090918a3.html

TOP

i didn't watch new moon yet.... but i guess this one is also good movie to watch

TOP

Cameron Diaz and Tom Cruise in Knight and Day

TUESDAY - 9:30AM BY BUZZSUGAR 13 | 19 ||Share
Let's just say this teaser trailer for Knight and Day is a bit confusing but boastful. There's high-speed car chases, plane crashes, and guns, but it also kind of looks like a romantic comedy. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't scratching my head when it ended.

That may be just the point though: Cameron Diaz plays a woman who is suddenly pulled into a world of drama and explosion when she gets on a plane she's not supposed to. After the plane crashes, she wakes up in her bed having no idea how she got there — all she remembers is Tom Cruise, a "secret agent. . . or something." Her friend thinks she's just seeking attention, until Cruise shows up on cue and immediately takes her hostage. Though the teaser doesn't make much sense, it still makes the film look like a fun ride filled with twists, humor, and action, action, action.



http://www.buzzsugar.com/6759378

TOP

The Karate Kid

WEDNESDAY - 7:00AM BY BUZZSUGAR 7 | 11 ||Share
The remakes keep on coming (I know, I know, collective groan). We already heard news of Will Smith's son Jaden and Jackie Chan stepping into roles for the update on The Karate Kid, and now we're getting a peek at the first trailer.

Judging by the preview, the general premise appears to be the same (boy gets harassed, trains in martial arts, and then faces his tormentor in competition), but this new version is definitely geared more to a family audience. Jaden Smith is teeny tiny in the Ralph Macchio part, the bullies are basically a Beijing elementary school yard gang, and a sweet, but baby-faced love interest is sitting in for Elisabeth Shue.
All of this just makes me want to go back and watch the original (and Mr. Miyagi's wax on, wax off scene) and leave this new update for the kiddies. I just can't get myself excited for the story when it's taken on such a younger twist, and I found myself chuckling over the film's villains — who are supposed to be threatening. Still, Taraji P. Henson is playing the mom, so that's a plus in my column.
The Karate Kid high kicks into theaters on June 11. Check out the trailer, and tell me what you think when you read more.

TOP

Frayed hopes in an unkind world

Friday, May 21, 2010



By MARK SCHILLING
Masahiro Kobayashi is a unique figure in the Japanese film business. His knotty, idiosyncratic films, starting with the 1996 film "Closing Time," have never made much at the box office in Japan, though they have become favorites of foreign festival programmers. Four have screened at Cannes, including "Bashing" (2005), a grim drama of alienation and exclusion that was selected for the competition.

Haru tono tabi (Travels with Haru)        Rating: (4 out of 5)
   

Hokkaido blues: Tatsuya Nakadai (right) stars as Tadao, a retired fisherman in Hokkaido searching for a new home so that his granddaughter Haru (Eri Tokunaga) can begin a new life in Tokyo. © 2010 HARU'S JOURNEY FILM PARTNERS
Director: Masahiro Kobayashi
Running time: 134 minutes
Language: Japanese
Opens May 22, 2010
[See Japan Times movie listing]
That's four more invitations than most Japanese directors — including those higher up on the local critical pecking order — get in a lifetime, stirring up insinuations that Kobayashi, whose long association with France includes study of the language, must have an "in."

Meanwhile, many foreign Asian cinephiles — from fans of zany pop entertainment to appreciators of quiet Ozu-esque art films — don't quite know what to make of Kobayashi's oeuvre, which often takes its cues from the more uncompromising European and Asian auteurs and often features blunt, even violent, confrontations and revelations, not gentle epiphanies.

I'm a Kobayashi fan, though I can't say "enjoyment" is how I'd usually describe the experience of watching his films. Instead, I like his angle of vision, which can illuminate dark, secret corners of the heart with a glare fierce and strange.

In his new film, "Haru tono Tabi (Travels with Haru)" Kobayashi is attempting something in a more conventionally humanistic vein. One inspiration was the 1999 Zhang Yimou film "Ano Ko o Sagashite" ("Not One Less") others were such Japanese classics as "Tokyo Monogatari" ("Tokyo Story" 1953) and "Narayama Bushiko" ("Ballad of Narayama" 1983). This approach is reflected in his casting of Tatsuya Nakadai, the 77-year-old icon whose work with the greats of Japanese films, including Akira Kurosawa, Mikio Naruse and Kon Ichikawa, is known worldwide.

TOP

 34 12
Thread