Saturday, October 31, 2009

Youth in Revolt Spoiler


Plot:

Nick Twisp (Michael Cera) is a cynical sex-obsessed 16-year-old who, while on vacation in a trailer park, meets Sheeni Saunders (Portia Doubleday), an intellectual. The only things really standing in his way are Sheeni's poetry-writing ex-boyfriend Trent, (Jonathan B. Wright) Nick's ignorant divorced parents (Steve Buscemi and Jean Smart), and Nick's Mom's boyfriends (Zach Galifianakis and Ray Liotta).
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Starring:

Michael Cera, Ray Liotta, Steve Buscemi, Jean Smart, M. Emmet Walsh, Adhir Kalyan, Portia Doubleday, Justin Long, Fred Willard, Zach Galifinakis, Erik Knudsen, Mary Kay Place, Ari Graynor, Tricia Mara, Jonny Wright, Rooney Mara
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Rumors:

1. Exclusive: 'Youth in Revolt' Poster Premiere!
Get ready all you Twispians, because Cinematical has just received this exclusive teaser poster for Youth in Revolt, which stars Michael Cera as the ultra-angsty (and legendary) Nick Twisp and is based on one of my favorite books of all time. Ah, what can you say about Youth in Revolt? The book, written by C.D. Payne, has amassed a huge, cult-like following partly because we can all relate to being an awkward teenager who'd do anything to capture the love of that special someone, and also because it's just damn funny.

For those who haven't read the book (seriously, read it -- the thing is hilarious), Youth in Revolt follows the misadventures of a love-sick teen who stops just short of destroying the world in order to win the love of one Sheeni Saunders. Cera plays said teen, Nick Twisp, while newcomer Portia Doubleday plays Sheeni. The film also boasts a pretty impressive supporting cast, including Steve Buscemi (as Nick's seedy, trailer-trash father), Zach Galifianakis, Justin Long, Fred Willard, Ray Liotta, Jean Smart and Ari Graynor. Needless to say, I cannot wait to see this cast bring some of these wacky, ridiculous (and memorable) characters to life, and I'm sure you Revolt fans are right there with me.

Youth in Revolt hits theaters on October 30. Click the image below to view entire poster.
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2. Michael Cera Freaks Out On The Set Of Youth In Revolt
Michael Cera has a history of fake, public meltdowns for fun and free advertising. So with the Christian Bale thing on everyone’s mind I guess someone involved with his new movie Youth in Revolt thought it might be funny if he did one on their set.

So here it is, Michael Cera in a robe and what appears to be a ridiculous mustache fake-berating his crew. I’m not really sure what he’s fake-mad about, but if you’ve ever wanted to see a stick figure get angry, then here’s your chance. Watch Michael Cera go fake-nuts below:

And for those who have forgotten, here’s two of his previous fake-meltdowns. The first one is set during his junketing for Superbad, and in the second one he goes nuts on the set of Knocked Up:
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3. Is 'Youth in Revolt' Being Pushed Back ... Again?
Oh look, it's a comedy from The Weinstein Co. that's about to have its release date pushed back for a second time. Who woulda thunk it? Well, considering that Youth in Revolt was supposed to hit theaters in February and we still haven't received photos, a poster or a trailer, it's fairly obvious the film isn't going to make its second date after originally eying a December '08 release. Though no official word has come down yet, according to several different sources it's looking like Revolt is going for another ride through 2009 -- and if I were a betting man, I'd say it may get dumped toward the end of summer.

I briefly spoke to the film's star, Michael Cera, at a dinner party for Adventureland at Sundance, and he didn't really give any clues away as to how he felt about the finished product. All I know is that the book is one of the best (and my favorite) teen angst stories ever told, and the cast -- including Cera, Justin Long, Steve Buscemi, Ray Liotta, Jean Smart, Zach Galifianakis and Portia Doubleday -- is fairly awesome if you ask me. So what's the hold up? No idea. But it's The Weinstein Co., who, after three (four? five?) years are finally releasing the comedy Fanboys on February 6. Hopefully Youth in Revolt is testing through the roof and they want to hold it for a prime date over the summer ... but something tells me that's not the case. Anyway, fingers are totally crossed -- we'll let you know what the new date is when (or if) it's announced.
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Youth in Revolt Trailer




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Youth in Revolt


Release Date: October 30, 2009 (limited)

Studio: Dimension Films (The Weinstein Company), MGM

Director: Miguel Arteta

Screenwriter: Gustin Nash, Miguel Arteta, Michael Cera

Starring: Michael Cera, Ray Liotta, Steve Buscemi, Jean Smart, M. Emmet Walsh, Adhir Kalyan, Portia Doubleday, Justin Long, Fred Willard, Zach Galifinakis, Erik Knudsen, Mary Kay Place, Ari Graynor, Tricia Mara, Jonny Wright, Rooney Mara

Genre: Comedy

MPAA Rating: R (for sexual content, language and drug use)

Plot Summary: "Youth in Revolt" is the irreverent story about the wild adventures of a teenage boy named Nick Twisp who meets the girl of his dreams while on a family vacation and has to turn his life and the lives of all those around him upside down in order to be with her.
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Michael Austin Cera (born June 7, 1988)[1] is a Canadian actor best known for his roles in Arrested Development, Superbad, Juno, and Year One. Cera received two Canadian Comedy Award Best Actor nominations in 2008 for his work in Juno and Superbad, winning for Superbad. He is often typecast as an awkward, sensitive character.
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Steven Vincent "Steve" Buscemi (born December 13, 1957) is an American actor, writer and film director.
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Jean E. Smart (born September 13, 1951) is a multiple Emmy Award-winning American film, television, and stage actress. She is known for her comedic roles, one of the best known being her role as Charlene Frazier Stillfield on the CBS sitcom Designing Women. She later gained critical acclaim for dramatic work, with her portrayal of Martha Logan on 24. Smart most recently appeared as Regina Newly on the ABC sitcom Samantha Who? from 2007 to 2009, another comedic role which garnered the actress an Emmy Award in 2008.
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Raymond Liotta[1] (born December 18, 1954) is an Emmy Award-winning and Golden Globe-nominated American actor, best known for his portrayal of Henry Hill in the critically acclaimed crime-drama Goodfellas, directed by Martin Scorsese.
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Jonathan B. Wright (born December 13 1986) is an American actor who is best known for his performance as Hanschen, in the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical Spring Awakening.
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Friday, October 30, 2009

The Messenger Spoiler


Plot:

A soldier enters an ethical dilemma when he gets involved with Olivia (Samantha Morton), the widow of a soldier.
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Starring:

Ben Foster, Woody Harrelson, Samantha Morton, Jena Malone, Eamonn Walker
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Rumors:

1. Ben Foster and Lubna Azabal Pair for Braden King's 'Here'
Fresh off one of his finest performances to date in The Messenger (surprisingly his first lead role this late in his career despite showing off his skills in 3:10 To Yuma and his psycho bit in Alpha Dog) Ben Foster and Lubna Azabal (Exils and Paradise Now) are top-lining Braden King’s Here.

King mounted the project with the aid of several labs (Cannes, Tribeca) and the same 2007 Sundance lab as Sophie Barthes and her soon to be released Cold Souls.

Co-written by King and Dani Valent, this sees real and imaginary landscapes merge as a solitary satellite mapping engineer (Foster) charts the Armenian countryside with an expatriate art photographer revisiting her (Azabel) homeland. The project is being produced by Parts and Labor's Lars Knudsen and Jay Van Hoy and is currently being shot as of last week in Armenia. Expect the film to play at one of the frist three major film festivals of 2010.

It's with Exiles where I first discovered Azabel (the sequence in question borders somewhere between acting and being in an actual trance) and also happens to be a road movie of sorts which I'm sure Braden has seen.
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2. SOMETIMES YOU JUST HAVE TO ASK... THE MESSENGER GETS A DISTRIBUTION DEAL
Proving that sometimes you just have to a) show up and b) ask, writer/director Oren Moverman sent the below email detailing how it came to be that Oscilloscope picked up distribution rights to his Sundance-premiering film, The Messenger. Six months after the film screened in Park City, a distribution deal emerged when Moverman happened to attend an IFP reception held at Deluxe Laboratories in New York to welcome Adam Yauch to its Board of Directors.

Around 7.45 that night I met Adam and David Fenkel of Oscilloscope for the first time. I had wine.

They told me they liked The Messenger, a film I directed a few months ago.

They said they hoped to release a film like The Messenger one day.

I said, well maybe that day has come.

My friend Ira Sachs smiled.

Adam and David thought we surely already had a distributor.

They were wrong.

I told them to give it a shot.

On July 11th we closed the deal with Oscilloscope to distribute The Messenger this November.

I couldn't be happier.

My daughter and I were experimenting with veganism that month.

I left hungry and tipsy.

A very good idea, this reception.

Thanks IFP, Deluxe, and Ira. — Oren Moverman
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3. Oscilloscope to distribute "The Messenger"
Oscilloscope Laboratories will distribute "The Messenger" in North America and has set the release date for some time in November.

Oren Moverman, writer of "Married Life" and "I'm Not There," makes his directorial debut and co-writes the film alongside Alessandro Camon.

The film played earlier this year at the Sundance and Berlin film festivals and stars Ben Foster, Woody Harrelson, Samantha Morton, Jena Malone, J.D. Daniels, Peter Friedman, Lindsay Michelle Nader, Jeremy Strong and Armand Schultz.

Ben Foster stars as an Army officer who can't stand the guy he's working with in the worst job the military has to offer. Life gets more tricky after he falls for a soldier's widow.
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4. Oscilloscope Stands at The Messenger's Doorstep
I was beginning to think that Oren Moverman's emotionally charged directorial debut was going to be a victim of not indifference, but the distributors being afraid of the movie-going public's lack of interest for films somehow related to the Iraq war. I had speculated on the reasons why it didn't get picked up (read here), but after a full six months from its preem at Sundance and after winning the prize for Best Screenplay in Berlin, Oscilloscope Laboratories have opened up their home to The Messenger setting it for a release sometime in November.

In a year that includes perhaps the best fictionalized representation of madness found in Iraq in Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker, Moverman's The Messenger is perhaps closer to Jim Sheridan's December-set tale of a mangled triangle of victims in Brothers. On paper this was a solid piece, but on film, the transfer is even more absorbing. The Dardenne-like aesthetic offers a generous dose of realism and one of the film's strengths are Moverman's long takes where the camera lingers around longer than expected. As I mentioned here, the lead characters and the supporter players are solid - you can look forward to the excellent cameo perf from Steve Buscemi. You can read the interview I had with Oren back at Sundance, where he mentions how he perfected the tone.

Co-written by Alessandro Camon and Moverman, this follows two officers Foster stars as Will Montgomery, a U.S. Army officer who has just returned home from a tour in Iraq and is assigned to the Army’s Casualty Notification service. Partnered with fellow officer Tony Stone (Woody Harrelson) to bear the bad news to the loved ones of fallen soldiers, Will faces the challenge of completing his mission while seeking to find comfort and healing back on the home front. When he finds himself drawn to Olivia (Samantha Morton), to whom he has just delivered the news of her husband's death, Will’s emotional detachment begins to dissolve and the film reveals itself as a surprising, humorous, moving and very human portrait of grief, friendship and survival.
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The Messenger Trailer




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The Messenger


Release Date: October 30, 2009 (NY, LA; expands: Nov. 6; wide: Nov. 13)

Studio: Oscilloscope Laboratories

Director: Oren Moverman

Screenwriter: Oren Moverman, Alessandro Camon

Starring: Ben Foster, Woody Harrelson, Samantha Morton, Jena Malone, Eamonn Walker

Genre: Drama

MPAA Rating: R (for language and some sexual content/nudity)

Plot Summary: Foster will play a young Army officer who is forced to work with a partner he can't stand in the least desirable job in the military. His life becomes even more complicated when he falls in love with a soldier's widow.
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Ben Foster (born October 29, 1980) is an American actor. He is known for his roles in the teen movies Liberty Heights and Get Over It, as well as the action films Hostage, X-Men: The Last Stand, Alpha Dog, 3:10 to Yuma, and most recently in the horror film 30 Days of Night.
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Woodrow Tracy "Woody" Harrelson (born July 23, 1961) is an American actor. Harrelson's breakthrough role came in the sitcom Cheers as Woody Boyd. Notable film roles include Billy Hoyle in White Men Can't Jump, Roy Munson in Kingpin, Mickey Knox in Natural Born Killers, Larry Flynt in The People vs. Larry Flynt, Dusty in A Prairie Home Companion and Carson Wells in No Country for Old Men. He also played Ezra Turner in Seven Pounds.
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Samantha Jane Morton (born 13 May 1977 in Clifton, Nottingham) is an English actress and film director. A campaigner for social justice, she is an ambassador for the Save the Children organisation.[2] Because of her acting excellence and commitment to political activism, a Sunday Times journalist described her as "a working-class Vanessa Redgrave".
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Jena Malone (born November 21, 1984) is an American actress and musician. Her film work has been mainly in independent films, and she has acted in theater.
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Thursday, October 29, 2009

The Box Spoiler


Plot:

Norma and Arthur Lewis, a suburban couple with a young child, receive a simple wooden box as a gift, which bears fatal and irrevocable consequences. A mysterious stranger, delivers the message that the box promises to bestow upon its owner $1 million with the press of a button. But, pressing this button will simultaneously cause the death of another human being somewhere in the world; someone they don't know. With just 24 hours to have the box in their possession, Norma and Arthur find themselves in the cross-hairs of a startling moral dilemma and must face the true nature of their humanity. Written by Warner Bros. Pictures
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Starring:

Cameron Diaz, James Marsden, Frank Langella
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Rumors:

1. Frank Langella to star in Kelly's 'Box'
Frank Langella will star with Cameron Diaz in "The Box," a horror film to be directed by "Donnie Darko" helmer Richard Kelly.

The $30 million production is being bankrolled by Media Rights Capital.

Langella will play a stranger who presents a mysterious box to a woman.

Kelly wrote the script based on Richard Matheson short story "Button, Button" He is producing with Sean McKittrick of his Darko Entertainment shingle. Ted Hamm will be exec producer.

Pic starts shooting mid-November (Daily Variety, June 29). By then Langella will have wrapped the film version of "Frost/Nixon" for Imagine and director Ron Howard.

Langella won the Tony award for his work in "Frost/Nixon" on Broadway. In November, Roadside Attractions will release Langella's "Starting Out in the Evening" which played at Sundance and Toronto.

MRC, which pays star salaries along with partial copyright ownership that gives talent a DVD windfall, also bankrolled "Babel" and Sacha Baron Cohen's "Bruno."
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2. Marsden wrapped up in 'Box' role
November 02, 2007 James Marsden, left, is in final negotiations to star opposite Cameron Diaz in helmer Richard Kelly's horror film "The Box." (Getty Images photo)

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3. Cameron Diaz to star in 'The Box'
Media Rights Capital has set Cameron Diaz to star in "The Box," a horror film to be directed by "Donnie Darko" helmer Richard Kelly.

Kelly wrote the script based on Richard Matheson short story "Button, Button." Production will begin in the fall on the pic, which will aim for a PG-13 rating. Diaz will play a young woman given a mysterious box by a stranger. She's told that certain things will happen depending on which buttons she presses.

Media Rights Capital is committed to bankrolling the entire $30 million-plus budget, as it did with "Babel" and will with Sacha Baron Cohen's "Bruno."

Kelly and Sean McKittrick will produce and Ted Hamm will be executive producer.

Media Rights Capital won't begin the process of pursuing distribution until the fall, though it is unclear when those deals will be made.

MRC, which pays star salaries along with partial copyright ownership that gives talent a DVD windfall, has shown a knack for making distribution deals at the most advantageous time. That's the model it used with Universal on "Bruno," which sold during the height of "Borat" mania and secured a $42.5 million commitment to license rights in North America and certain other territories.

The recent $20 million opening of "1408" made the star-driven, high-concept supernatural thriller "The Box" feel like a viable financial proposition.

"The storyline has all the commerciality of 'The Ring,' but with Richard and Cameron, this film can rise to the level of 'Rosemary's Baby' and 'The Others,' " said Modi Wiczyk, the former Endeavor agent who founded and runs MRC with Asif Satchu.

"My hope is to make a film that is incredibly suspenseful and broadly commercial, while still retaining my artistic sensibility," Kelly said.
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4. Arcade Fire's Butler Talks Miroir Noir, The Box Score
On our last day in the office before the holiday break, we received an early Christmas/Hanukkah present: A chat with Win Butler of the Arcade Fire. Butler and his band laid low for most of 2008 (give or take a few Obama rallies), taking a well-deserved break after years of nearly nonstop recording and touring. But expect to hear a lot from the Arcade Fire in 2009. The band is working on a new album, and Butler, his wife and Arcade Fire co-leader Régine Chassagne, and Final Fantasy's Owen Pallett, did indeed write the score for The Box, the forthcoming film from director Richard Kelly (Donnie Darko).

Last week, the band digitally released Miroir Noir, a film documenting the making of their 2007 album Neon Bible and the tour in support of it. The film will be released on DVD in March, with pre-orders available now.

We talked with Butler about Miroir Noir, The Box, and, of course, the next Arcade Fire album. Oh, and last night, someone broke into his car and stole his iPod. So if you're in Montreal and you hear somebody bragging about all the cool stuff Win Butler has on his iPod, turn them into the police immediately, please.

Pitchfork: Miroir Noir isn't a typical concert film. It doesn't capture a complete show or contain any sort of narrative, instead stringing together bits and pieces of performance and behind-the-scenes footage with all kinds of arty miscellany. Why did you choose to create the film this way?

Win Butler: I always find live shows on film kind of boring. Even my favorite ones, I kinda zone out for most of it. It's just so different seeing a band in the flesh and then watching a film of it, even if you have a hundred cameras and it's shot from every angle. There's just a communal, visceral thing that never translates very well. We were just trying to pick some bits of the live show. [Directors] Vincent Moon and Vincent Morisset were the only people really filming, so a lot of it was one-camera shoots, so the bits that were the most interesting are the ones we used.

Pitchfork: There are very few full songs in the film. Was that just the way the footage turned out?

WB: Not necessarily. That just wasn't what we were going for with the film. We were more into trying to capture a little bit of the energy. I find that if there are too many full performances, it doesn't really do that good a job of capturing the energy of the show.

Pitchfork: The film certainly captures that energy, but it can be frustrating when a song starts or stops in the middle.

WB: I know what you're saying. It just really wasn't what we were going for. I think, sometimes, it's better to be a little frustrated than to be bored.

Pitchfork: Miroir Noir features a lot of footage of the recording sessions for Neon Bible. Why did you include that in the film?

WB: There's a lot of home movies from when we were making the record. The parts, like, in the Rolling Stone documentaries, the only parts that I really like are the parts where you see a microphone in the background, and you're like "Ooh, that's where the microphone was." I'm kind of a nerd in that way, I guess. Those are the only moments I ever really find exciting.

Pitchfork: There are also quite a few voice-overs throughout the film-- these are voicemails left by people who called the Neon Bible promotional hotline 1-800-NEONBIBLE, right?

WB: Yeah. There were thousands and thousands of them. We checked the phone bill about six months in. It was pretty staggering, the amount we were paying.

Pitchfork: What are the extras on the deluxe edition of the Miroir Noir DVD? The press release mentioned that the DVD would include your "Friday Night With Jonathon Ross" and "Saturday Night Live" performances.

WB: Yeah. There's a BBC in-studio thing that we did with a bunch of full versions of songs that we shot at Maida Vale studio. The BBC always does a really good job, there's actual audio engineers. They actually really know what they're doing on the sound front. There's also this kind of infomercial thing that one of my good friends, Josh, made for us, that's pretty funny. It's kind of a video form of the 800 number. There's a longer clip of when [Arcade Fire multi-instrumentalists] Tim [Kingsbury] and and Richie [Reed Parry] went to "The Price Is Right". Our manager deserves a lot of credit for clearing that one. It blew my mind that he could actually get it cleared.

Pitchfork: So what's next for the Arcade Fire? We've heard you're working on a new album.

WB: Basically, the last five years have been pretty insane for the band. When we were recording [2004 debut album] Funeral, we didn't have a record deal or anything. We just kinda went in to make a 7" at the beginning. We recorded "Wake Up" and "Power Out" and the rest of it, we would kind of raise a bit of money and record. We never had a rehearsal schedule or anything, people would just come over to me and [Butler's wife and Arcade Fire co-founder] Régine's [Chassagne] house and we'd play in small groups and work on arrangements. I think our goal this year was to take enough time off that we would actually start playing together again because we were really dying to play together again. It's been pretty cool, the past couple months, the guys have been coming over to me and Régine's place. We have instruments in the living room, and we're just playing. It's a really exciting time. The first time you play a song is kind of the best part of the whole experience. It feels like a really natural process is happening.

I'm really relieved, because you get off the road after five years, and you're like, "Man, I don't want to play music anymore." But it's been really rewarding over the last couple months to not have to be like, "OK guys, we're gonna make a record, it's gonna take six months, we're recording in this studio." It's like, "We have no idea what we're doing, but I feel like playing with you this afternoon, so how about we have some tea and play songs for a little bit." I mean, I don't think any of us want to spend three years making a record. But after the whole wild ride the last five years, I think it's been super healthy for us to just stay at home, tend our gardens, and actually have a real life. You can feel that in the music now. And fucking hell, what a crazy time to be living in. I think we're all really excited.

Pitchfork: Speaking of which, do you have any plans to perform at any Obama inauguration festivities?

WB: I don't know. There have been a couple emails going back and forth; I don't know if we have too many curse words in our lyrics or something. I'm not sure what's happening with it. We would obviously be totally stoked to play, but I'm sure there are a lot of political considerations. We were in Haiti about a month ago, Régine and I, which was a really mind-blowing experience. It was a couple days after the election. We were in Chicago for election night, and let me tell you, in rural Haiti, they were just as excited as in downtown Chicago.

Pitchfork: You contributed a song, "When Lenin Was Little", to the the forthcoming Red Hot benefit compilation Dark Was the Night. Is that a new song?

WB: No, that's actually the one song that didn't make it on Funeral that was recorded at that time, but it didn't really fit in with the rest of the songs.

Pitchfork: Are you working on anything else, besides the very beginnings of a new album?

WB: Not really. We finished that movie music, I'm not sure when the film's coming out, the Richard Kelly film, which was interesting.

Pitchfork: Wait a second! You did end up contributing music to The Box!?

WB: Yeah. So that will be out at some point.

Pitchfork: Did you write the entire score?

WB: Yes, me, Régine, and Owen [Pallett] from Final Fantasy. It's kind of Hitchcocky, movie, orchestral, Mellotron stuff. It's instrumental music. No songs. It's interesting. We didn't really think we were going to do the whole thing, and then it just kind of was easier once we got in. It was like, "Oh well, we'll just keep going." It has so much to do with the editing, and your job is just to help the director. It's a very different experience.

Pitchfork: What attracted you to this project?

WB: I could really imagine what he wanted for the music. It's based on a "Twilight Zone" episode set in the 70s. The guy works at NASA. It's got this kind of sci-fi, kind of Alfred Hitchcock feel. Those Hitchcock scores are some of my favorite movie music. We have a Mellotron, and since it's the 70s, it really seemed to fit. It was just really easy to imagine the type of music that would help the movie. It was a very ego-less project. The goal was to kind of bang some music out and not be, like, slitting our wrists over if the tambourine is too loud. That was a good experiment.

Pitchfork: "My Body Is a Cage" was recently featured in a commercial for the new movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Why did you agree to license the song for that?

WB: It was one of the first things that's come down the pipe where... it didn't even really have that much to do with the movie, but just the trailer was very appropriate. Usually, people send us stuff, and if the song wasn't in there, it wouldn't really matter that much. It could really be anything. For this one, it makes sense. It's about a guy trapped in a wrong body...It was artistically done and it worked with the theme of the song. It wasn't a big deal. Everyone was like, "Yeah, it looks good." Most of the time, you get sent some commercial for something and it's just like, "Insert band here." It's not that interesting.

Pitchfork: Do you have anything else going on that you'd like people to know about?

WB: In the very short term, I have to go to the police department because someone broke into my car last night, smashed out the back window, and stole my iPod.

Pitchfork: Oh no! That sucks! I hope they catch the person!
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The Box Trailer




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The Box


Release Date: October 30, 2009

Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures

Director: Richard Kelly

Screenwriter: Richard Kelly

Starring: Cameron Diaz, James Marsden, Frank Langella

Genre: Thriller

MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements, some violence and disturbing images)

Official Website: TheBox-movie.com

Plot Summary: Norma and Arthur Lewis are a suburban couple with a young child who receive an anonymous gift bearing fatal and irrevocable consequences. A simple wooden box, it promises to deliver its owner $1 million with the press of a button. However, pressing this button will simultaneously cause the death of another human being somewhere in the world...someone they don't know. With just 24 hours to have the box in their possession, Norma and Arthur find themselves in the crosshairs of a startling moral dilemma and face the true nature of their humanity.
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Cameron Michelle Diaz (born August 30, 1972) is an American actress and former model. She broke out in the 1990s with her roles in The Mask, My Best Friend's Wedding and There's Something About Mary, and subsequently appeared in Charlie's Angels, Shrek, Vanilla Sky, Gangs of New York, What Happens in Vegas and several other Hollywood films.
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James Paul Marsden (born September 18, 1973) is an American actor and former Versace model, perhaps best known for his roles in Hairspray, Enchanted, 27 Dresses, and the three X-Men films.
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Frank A. Langella Jr. (born January 1, 1938)[1][2] is an American stage and film actor. His Tonys include two for Best Featured Actor in a Play for Edward Albee's Seascape (1975), and Ivan Turgenev's Fortune's Fool (2002), and for Best Leading Actor in a Play for his performance as Richard Nixon in Peter Morgan's Frost/Nixon (2008). Langella was nominated for two other Best Leading Actor in a Play Tonys; first in 1978 for the Edward Gorey-designed revival of Bram Stoker's Dracula and again in 2004 for Stephen Belber's Match.
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant Spoiler


Spoilers:

Darren Shan is a regular teenage kid. He and his friend Steve find out about a Freak Show coming to town an work hard at trying to find tickets. They do, and together they go to "Cirque du Freak" where they see many strange acts including a wolf-man and a bearded lady. Steve and Darren think that it is all a joke until a vampire, Larten Crepsley comes on with a very poisonous spider that he makes do tricks. When Steve sees this man he freaks out a bit but won't tell Darren why. After the show, Steve tells Darren to go home, and that he will follow later. Darren says yes but instead sneaks upstairs to see what Steve is up to. He sees Steve talking to Mr. Crepsley and overhears their conversation. Steve tells Mr. Crepsley that he knows that his real name is Vur Horston an is a Vampire and he tells Larten that he would like to join him and become an apprentice. Mr Crepsley says he must test Steve before he agrees, and when he does he reveals that Steve has "bad blood" and he will not transform him. Steve becomes angry but Darren leaves the theatre and doesn't see what happen next. Darren goes home and thinks about what Steve did but also cannot stop thinking about Mr. Crepsley's Spider. The next day he steals the spider with the hopes that he will be able to make it perform tricks too. Meanwhile, Steve is acting as if nothing happened. Darren manages to train the spider by using a flute to hypnotize it (what Larten did). Darren invites Steve over to show him the spider, but when Darren is making it perform tricks on Steve, Darren's sister comes in and breaks the noise, and thus causes the spider to bite Steve. Steve becomes very ill, and is rushed to the hospital where the doctors say that there is nothing they can do. Darren decides to see Mr. Crepsley about the possibility of an antidote. The vampire agrees to give him the only cure if Darren agrees to become his assistant, and half vampire. He does. Steve gets better but starts to realize that Darren is now part vampire and becomes angry, jealous and betrayed. Larten stages Darren's death and Darren is burried. Mr. Crepsley comes to dig up Darren and leave. He does and gives Darren a moment to say goodbye to his hometown. Then Steve shows up and tells Darren about all he knows. He says that Darren and Mr. Crepsley were planning the betrayal all along and that Steve doesn't really have bad blood, which Darren knows is not true. He tries to explain about the spider, but Steve cuts a small cross into the flesh of his left palm and swears on his blood that he will kill Darren and his mentor Mr. Crepsley. Darren shakes off the warning and leaves with Mr. Crepsley. It is rumored that the film will be based on the first three books, if this is true then we will see Darren's reluctance to accept his life as a vampire and meet the character Sam, on top on this he will have his first run in with the vampenezee a race of creatures who kill to eat unlike the vampires.

It is important to note that in this story, vampires are not evil creatures. They never kill when they feed, do not bit in order to transform others, and do not have an evil purpose in life.

And Just so you know. The vampires in this movies aren't those, fanged creatures who cant go into the light, or who can turn into bats or anything like that stereo-type crap. It is more realistic. Like how they don't live forever, they just age real slowly. They don't suck blood through their teeth, they cut open a vein, suck a bit of blood then heal the wound with their spit. They can go into sunlight but not forever because they can get burnt real easily.

Also note that if the film is the content of the first three books it may be created as a stand alone movie, however there could be up to three sequels as the saga consisted of twelve books split into 4 trilogies, they could all easily be put into 4 films of the separate trilogies and flow well together

This Synopsis is based solely on my remembrance of the book--Feel free to edit!!
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Starring:

John C. Reilly, Ken Watanabe, Josh Hutcherson, Chris Massoglia, Ray Stevenson, Patrick Fugit, Orlando Jones, Willem Dafoe, Salma Hayek
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Rumors:

1. The Green Goblin Freaks Out
May 27, 2008 - Spider-Man baddie Willem Dafoe has joined the cast of director Chris Weitz's adaptation of Darren Shan's vampire novel Cirque du Freak.

IGN visited the New Orleans set of Cirque du Freak today and saw Dafoe in action as the foppish vampire "Gavner Purl." It was Dafoe's first day on set and he is expected to work on the film for a week.

The role marks the third time Dafoe has played a vampire after Shadow of the Vampire and the forthcoming Daybreakers.

The cast also includes John C. Reilly, Salma Hayek, Ken Watanabe, Josh Hutcherson, Chris Massoglia, Ray Stevenson, Patrick Fugit, and Jane Krakowski.
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2. Exclusive: Frank Castle Speaks
February 27, 2008 - IGN recently spoke with Ray Stevenson... No, not the country singer that sang all those crazy songs in the '80s... that's Ray Stevens! This is Ray Stevenson, the guy who plays comic book anti-hero The Punisher/Frank Castle in the new movie.

We asked Ray about his experience working on Punisher: War Zone, at which point he dropped to the floor and did 50 push-ups while holding a semi-automatic rifle up to our head. We promised never to make fun of his name again. This is the conversation that followed...

IGN: You're about to embark on what I'm sure many people hope will be the first of several great Punisher films. What was it like tackling the character?

RAY STEVENSON: It was fantastic. It was beyond any of my expectations. I didn't watch the Thomas Jane film beforehand. We were taking a completely new slant. We weren't doing numbers. It's not Punisher 3; it's Punisher: War Zone. We're going exclusively for the MAX series with Garth Ennis writing and Tim Bradstreet doing the cover illustrations. That was the look – the New York, night-time predator, with all the incredible, dark psyche that goes along with him. Certainly not a superhero, but an anti-hero.

IGN: And again – a strong character with legitimate depth.

STEVENSON: This guy is really on a trajectory. Things have happened in his life; he's a vigilante. Some people are beyond redemption and it doesn't matter how many criminal dollars you have to buy the very best criminal lawyers – if you're beyond redemption, that's it. One of the lines from Garth: "If you work for the devil, you better be prepared to die for him." When you really get behind and underneath that, it's a very dark place to be. It's a very human feeling, but to actually systematically go about it as a mission – as a job of work – you know that you're damned. Every choice you make only damns you deeper. There's no light at the end of your tunnel, but you're doing it so that other people can live in that light.

IGN: Would you be ready to don the trench-coat and t-shirt again?

STEVENSON: Hopefully, we'll get a franchise. I'd be delighted to play Frank again. We've opened him with this one; we've opened up wounds. It was a very interesting journey as an actor because it really does raise some quite severe moral and social issues. The state can still kill people, but we can't license individuals to kill people. We've advanced, as it were. Yet if somebody harmed my son, I would absolutely stop their seed. I don't think I'd be big enough, or magnanimous enough, to allow due process. And if they got off, how would I feel then? But where is the advancement if we constantly revert back to eye-for-an-eye, to the ancient law of retribution? Are you happy that he's out there, knowing full well that you'll never be a target? But what if you transgress? Where does he draw his line? And if we entertain, and at the same time hold up a mirror, then we're in…

IGN: Jigsaw is obviously the villain with this film, but what other Punisher villains would you like to go up against?

STEVENSON: There's obviously Barracuda. He's indestructible. It's that old paradox – the unstoppable force meets the immovable object. But I think that the most interesting thing for me is that Frank is constantly coming up against Frank. He's always his own greatest adversary. Hopefully, it doesn't sound too patsy. It's not meant to be diversionary. Jigsaw has been an amazing adversary, but in the long scheme of things, Frank still has a core of what it really means to be human. It's just a question of what constitutes a soul – of what is good and what is bad – and so his greatest adversary of all time with always be himself.

IGN: So what's next?

STEVENSON: I'm just about to go up to New Orleans to start a movie called Cirque du Freak with Selma Hayek, John C. Riley and Ken Wantanabe. I'm playing the lead vampire – the lead bad-guy…This will be great fun. Here I get a chance to play a bourgeoning Stalin or Hitler. It should be such a romp. It's creature, it's carnival, it's traveling street show. It should be a hell of a ride!
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3. Stephen Trask scores Cirque du Freak
This spring, composer Stephen Trask was at the Newman Scoring Stage at 20th Century Fox to record his score to the new Paul Weitz film, Cirque du Freak, based on the vampire book series by Darren Shan. Written by Paul Weitz and Brian Helgeland, the film stars John C. Reilly, Willem Dafoe, Chris Massoglia and Josh Hutcherson.

Trask recorded his score with a large 86-piece ensemble of the Hollywood Studio Symphony - conducted by Pete Anthony - and a 10-person choir. Orchestrated Steve Bartek, Edgardo Simone, Dave Slonicker and Darren McKenzie, with additional music by Lior Rosner, the thematic score features lots of orchestral effects to add to the suspense and action beats.

In the booth, scoring mixer Greg Hayes worked diligently with Trask at the console, while music editor Amanda Goodpaster and director Paul Weitz would discuss the music and give feedback. Assistant music editor Joe Bonn, additional music composer Lior Rosner and orchestrator Steve Bartek also provided input, while Erik Swanson handled the ProTools recording duties.

One of the unique instruments heard in the music is the African kora (a harp-like instrument), performed by Bruno Coon, which Trask employed to represent Dell's (Massoglia) life "pre-vampire".

Cirque du Freak will be released by Universal Pictures on October 23, 2009.
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The Vampire's Assistant Trailer




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The Vampire's Assistant


Release Date: October 23, 2009

Studio: Universal Pictures

Director: Paul Weitz

Screenwriter: Brian Helgeland, Paul Weitz

Starring: John C. Reilly, Ken Watanabe, Josh Hutcherson, Chris Massoglia, Patrick Fugit, Ray Stevenson, Michael Cerveris, Frankie Faison, Jane Krakowski, Orlando Jones, Kristen Schaal, Salma Hayek

Genre: Adventure, Fantasy

MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sequences of intense supernatural violence and action, disturbing images, thematic elements and some language)

Plot Summary: "The Vampire's Assistant" tells the frightening tale of a boy who unknowingly breaks a 200-year-old truce between two warring factions of vampires. Pulled into a fantastic life of misunderstood sideshow freaks and grotesque creatures of the night, one teen will vanish from the safety of a boring existence and fulfill his destiny in a place drawn from nightmares.

14-year-old Darren (Chris Kelly) was like most kids in his suburban neighborhood. He hung out with his best friend, got decent grades and usually stayed out of trouble. But when he and his buddy stumble upon a traveling freak show, things begin to change inside Darren. That's the exact moment when a vampire named Larten Crepsley (John C. Reilly) turns him into something, well, bloodthirsty.

Newly undead, he joins the Cirque Du Freak, a touring sideshow filled with monstrous creatures from a snakeboy and a wolfman to a bearded lady (Salma Hayek) and a gigantic barker (Ken Watanabe). As Darren flexes his newfound powers in this dark world, he becomes a treasured pawn between the vampires and their deadlier counterparts. And while trying to survive, one boy will struggle to keep their brewing war from devouring what's left of his humanity.
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Chris Massoglia (born March 29, 1992 Minneapolis, Minnesota) is an American actor. He played Elliot Plumm in A Plumm Summer and will portray Darren Shan in the upcoming movie The Vampire's Assistant. He is the oldest, and has one sister and two brothers. He will also portray Dane Thompson in Joe Dante's film "The Hole" He is also known as Chris J. Kelly or Chris Kelly.
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Joshua Ryan "Josh" Hutcherson (born October 12, 1992) is an American film and television actor. He began performing in the early 2000s, appearing in several minor film and television roles. He gained wider exposure with major roles in the 2005 films Little Manhattan and Zathura, the 2006 comedy RV, the 2007 family adventure film Firehouse Dog, the film adaptation of Bridge to Terabithia, as Jesse Aarons, and a film adaption of the Jules Verne novel Journey to the Center of the Earth. On March 30, 2008, Hutcherson won a Young Artist Award (for Leading Young Actor). Hutcherson was also featured on a Celebrity Teens edition of the hit show MTV Cribs.
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John Christopher Reilly (born May 24, 1965) is an Academy Award and Grammy Award-nominated American actor. Debuting in Casualties of War in 1989, he is one of several actors whose careers were launched by Brian De Palma. To date, he has appeared in more than fifty film productions, including three separate films in 2002, each of which were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.
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Michael Cerveris (born November 6, 1960) is an American singer, guitarist and actor.
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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

(Untitled) Spoiler


Spoilers:

A fashionable contemporary art gallerist in Chelsea, New York falls for a brooding new music composer in this comic satire of the state of contemporary art.

Adam Goldberg (Two Days in Paris) plays the serious composer, whose work calls for paper crumpling, glass breaking and bucket kicking. Marley Shelton (Grindhouse) plays the gorgeous Chelsea gallerist, whose latest show features an artist (Vinnie Jones) who employs taxidermy and household objects.

Further complicating the affair is the composers brother, played by Eion Bailey (Band of Brothers), whose highly commercial art work the financial backbone of the gallery - is sold to corporate clients discreetly out of the gallerys back room.
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Starring:

Marley Shelton, Adam Goldberg, Eion Bailey, Vinnie Jones
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Rumors:

1. Trailer for Jonathan Parker's (yeah the dude who did Bartleby) UNTITLED
While ostensibly this has low production values, it features one of my personal favorites, Adam Goldberg, who plays an artist who makes nonsense, and is directed by Jonathan Parker who did the excellent film Bartelby. So if you follow that line, we clearly end up with comedy. We've been keeping an eye on it for awhile and even posted a clip back in April.

Synopsis:
Set in the artsy Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, (Untitled) tells the story of Adrian Jacobs (Goldberg), a difficult composer of equally difficult music whose sparsely attended performances involve musicians breaking glass and kicking metal buckets. In contrast, Adam’s brother, Josh (Bailey), is a commercially successful painter of vapid canvasses that corporate clients snap up by the dozen. But, Adrian’s luck appears set to change when Josh brings the stunning Madeleine (Shelton) to one of his concerts. Not only does she embrace his work and ask him to perform at her gallery, she invites him into her bed. As the two embark on a fiery affair, Adrian is introduced to a world of pretentious art collectors, dueling gallerists and eccentric artists, including Ray Barko (Vinnie Jones), whose bizarre creations include chandeliers of stuffed animals and dead cows draped with jewelry.

When Josh discovers Adrian and Madeleine’s relationship and Madeleine refuses to exhibit Josh’s paintings—even though the money they bring in is what keeps the gallery afloat—the stage is set for a showdown as comedic and discordant as Adrian’s music.
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2. Samuel Goldwyn Films Additions Update - "Untitled" images.
We have new images in from Samuel Goldwyn Films' "(Untitled)" starring Adam Goldberg, Marley Shelton, Eion Bailey, Lucy Punch, Vinnie Jones and Zak Orth.

Parker Film Company presents in association with Luber Roklin Entertainment and Bossa Nova Productions

Jonathan Parker directs from the screenplay he wrote alongside Catherine di Napoli. DiNapoli produces the film alongside Matt Luber and Andreas Olavarria. Shot in New York, this smart, satirical comedy, a brooding avant-garde composer falls for the gorgeous owner of a trendy New York art gallery and the quirky worlds of contemporary art and music are set on a hilarious collision course.

The film sees release on 18 September, 2009 in limited areas.
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3. Samuel Goldwyn Films Nabs Jonathan Parker's Untitled
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Samuel Goldwyn Films has snapped up the U.S. theatrical rights to Jonathan Parker's Untitled.

The film is a comedy about the contemporary art and music scene that stars Adam Goldberg. He plays a composer who starts an affair with an art gallery employee (Marley Shelton).

Also starring in the film are Vinnie Jones, Lucy Punch, Zak Orth and Ptolemy Slocum. The film was written by Parker and Catherine di Napoli.

The plan is for Untitled to hit theaters on September 18.
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4. Samuel Goldwyn Leave 'Untitled' project for the Fall
It's a success story in itself when an American independent film doesn't the top tier fests such as Sundance and Tribeca but manages to carve out a presence at fests such as Palm Springs and San Franisco International Film Festival and manages to get picked up for distribution. Perhaps the reason why the rom com didn't make a blip on my radar was because of the aptly titled film title of Jonathan Parker's third film. Screen Daily reports that Samuel Goldwyn Films have picked up the rights to Untitled and have already slotted a September playdate for the film and possibly dislodging the release of Cedric Klapisch's Paris.

Featuring one of the better actors for a talking heads type of film in Adam Goldberg, this is set in the contemporary art scene and against the backdrop of the New York City gallery world. Two brothers — one a brooding avant-garde composer, the other a painter of clichĂ©d, highly commercial work — personify the intersection of art and commerce. What makes the film a rom com is that Goldberg's character (the avant-gardist) has an affair with Marley Shelton’s hip art gallery owner character. Insert a brother spat and you've pretty much get the idea of where this goes.
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5. First footage for Jonathan Parker's UNTITLED
For those unfamiliar with the name Jonathan Parker, a little film from back in 2001 titled Bartleby which starred Crispin Glover might ring a bell. I just recently watched this fantastic adaptation of Herman Melville's novel Bartleby the Scrivener again, and I'm really looking forward to Parker's latest. Untitled stars Adam Goldberg as a brooding music composer (you should really check out his redneck role in From Within) and Marley Shelton as the Chelsea art gallerist who falls for him. Vinnie Jones is in there somewhere too, go Vinnie!

Unfortunately that's all we have in the way of plot, so check out the footage after the break. Click on "menu" and "extended size" for a better view.
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6. First Look: Marley Shelton in Jonathan Parker's Untitled
The reason why (Untitled) is, well, untitled, is because it's a comic satire on the state of contemporary art. Aauteur Jonathan Parker (of Bartleby and The Californians previously) presents this story about a fashionable contemporary art gallerist (played by Marley Shelton) in Chelsea, New York who falls for a brooding music composer (played by Adam Goldberg). This quietly got its world premiere at the Palm Springs International Film Festival in January, and thanks to Hollywood Elsewhere (via The Playlist), we've got a first look at Shelton and Goldberg in the film. I definitely encourage indie enthusiasts to take a look.

Jeffrey Wells saw (Untitled) in Palm Springs in January, and while he didn't love it, he did say: "It's vaguely Woody Allen-esque but without the schtick… And I enjoyed staring at Marley Shelton, whom I hadn't paid very much attention to before… Call this a modest breakthrough performance."

Anytime a sexy photo like that one just above shows up, I've instantly got to find out more. That stunning beauty you see above is Marley Shelton, who hasn't been in much recently besides starring as Rachel Young on "Eleventh Hour" and appearing in Robert Rodriguez's Planet Terror. In fact, based on Wells' review and these photos, I'm interested in checking out (Untitled) in the hopes of becoming an even bigger fan of Shelton, or, a fan of her at all since I'm not akin to much of her older work. Hopefully (Untitled) makes its way to LA or some other film festival in the near future. It doesn't have a distributor as of this moment.
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Untitled Trailer




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Untitled


Release Date: October 23, 2009 (limited)

Studio: Samuel Goldwyn Films

Director: Jonathan Parker

Screenwriter: Jonathan Parker, Catherine di Napoli

Starring: Marley Shelton, Adam Goldberg, Eion Bailey, Vinnie Jones

Genre: Drama

MPAA Rating: Not Available

Official Website: SamuelGoldwynfilms.com

Plot Summary: From the creators of "Bartleby" comes a fresh new satire poking fun of the nuanced world of the New York contemporary art scene through a pair of competitive brothers – eclectic and self-important music composer Adrian (Adam Goldberg) and commercially successful painter Josh (Eion Bailey).

When Chelsea art 'gallerina' and Josh's love interest Madeline (Marley Shelton) attends Adrian's concert – featuring the sounds of paper-crumpling, glass-breaking and bucket-kicking – she commissions him for a gallery performance and a love affair ensues.

Further complicating the situation is that Josh's highly commercial art work – the financial backbone of the gallery – is sold to corporate clients discreetly out of the gallery’s back room.
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Marley Eve Shelton (born April 12, 1974) is an American film and television actress.
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Adam Charles Goldberg (born October 25, 1970) is an American actor, director, and producer.
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Eion Bailey (born 8 June 1976) is a Daytime Emmy Award-winning American actor, perhaps best known for appearing in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers as Pvt. David Kenyon Webster and in the films Fight Club, Center Stage, Mindhunters and Sexual Life.
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Vincent Peter "Vinnie" Jones (born 5 January, 1965) is an English film actor and ex-footballer, having represented Wales. He has capitalised on his tough man image as a footballer and is now known as an actor for his aggressive style and intimidating demeanour.
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Monday, October 26, 2009

Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D Spoiler


Synopsis:

A holiday tradition continues this Halloween when Tim Burton's classic, "The Nightmare Before Christmas," makes a return to the big screen in stunning Disney Digital 3D (tm). Audiences will get closer than ever to Halloweentown's beloved Pumpkin King, Jack Skellington, as he attempts to take over the Christmas holiday. Against the advice of Sally, a lonely rag doll who has feelings for him, Jack enlists three mischievous trick-or-treaters--Lock, Shock and Barrel--to help him kidnap Santa Claus. Jack eventually realizes his mistake but has to contend with the evil Oogie Boogie before he can make things right and restore the Christmas holiday. Fueled by an unforgettable Grammy® nominated soundtrack, Tim Burton's "The Nightmare Before Christmas," combines the Oscar® nominated artistry of stop-motion animation with state-of-the-art digital technology to create a unique and entertaining movie-going experience that has become annual holiday event for the entire family.
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Starring:

Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara, William Hickey, Glenn Shadix, Paul Reubens, Ken Page
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Rumors:

1. Nightmare Before Christmas 3D Version
I loveeeee Tim Burton!! Tim Burton's films are the reason why wanted to be an animator!!

Tapi kenapa yah belum ada tanda2 film ini akan ada di Indonesia??Padahal release datenya bulan oktober 2006 looo..

Plot:Tim Burton’s holiday classic, THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, makes a return to the big screen in stunning Disney Digital 3D™. The dazzling new make-over of the musical-fantasy was led by the film’s original filmmaking team of Academy Award® nominated writer/producer Tim Burton and director Henry Selick as well as the talented technical wizards at Industrial Light + Magic. Audiences will get closer than ever to Halloweentown’s beloved Pumpkin King, Jack Skellington (voiced by Chris Sarandon), as he attempts to take over the Christmas holiday. Against the advice of Sally (voiced by Catherine O'Hara), a lonely rag doll who has feelings for him, Jack enlists three mischievous trick-or-treaters – Lock, Shock, and Barrel – to help him kidnap Santa Claus. Jack eventually realizes his mistake but has to contend with the evil Oogie Boogie before he can make things right and restore the Christmas holiday.
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2. Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D (2006)
Movie review

From Time Out London
Probably the single neatest expression of Tim Burton’s cute-gothic outsider sensibility, this highly likeable 1993 stop-motion fable also proves a perfect match for Disney’s impressive new 3D technology. The spindly, ragged tactility that always made ‘The Nightmare Before Christmas’ such a visual treat now leaps from the screen, its undead stars coming alive thanks to a process that saw the meticulously crafted original translated frame by frame into a digital model, then processed for viewing through polarised specs. The story sees Jack Skellington, ennui-stricken King of Halloweentown, alighting on a muddle-headedly revitalising scheme: he and his variously rotting, slavering and blood-sucking subjects will co-opt Christmas and deliver a holiday according to their own gruesome lights. Daintily combining cartoon horror-show visuals with quasi-Romantic yearnings and a cracking score and songs by Danny Elfman, ‘Nightmare…’ now makes for a thoroughly pleasurable 3D experience – partly for the wonderfully rendered details of the grotesque puppets and sets, partly because the script’s non-stop momentum suits the roller-coaster photography – and the punchy running time brings things to a close before eye-strain sets in.

Author: Ben Walters 2006-10-27 10:47:24

Time Out London Issue 1891: November 15-22 2007
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3. "The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D" First Look
3D So Real, It's Scary.
"Twas a long time ago, longer now than it seems, in a place perhaps you've seen in your dreams..."
--Santa in Tim Burton's THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS

This Halloween, everyone's favorite nightmare will return -- in another dimension. On the occasion of its 13th anniversary, Tim Burton's hippest of holiday classics, "THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS 3D" , will make a ghoulishly groundbreaking comeback to the big screen, seamlessly transformed into stunning Disney Digital 3D. This dazzling new makeover offers a frightfully fun, eyepopping trip into a universe of magic and wonder that remains unlike any other. The film's transformation was led by the original filmmaking team of Academy Award®-nominated writer/producer Tim Burton ("Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," "Corpse Bride") and director Henry Selick ("James and the Giant Peach") -- and was turned into reality through an intense, frame-by-frame digitizing process spearheaded by the technical wizards at Industrial Light & Magic and driven by a passion for the film's visual splendor and timeless (not to mention occasionally headless) characters.

Donning their state-of-the-art, polarized 3D glasses, audiences will now have the chance to get truly up close and bone-rattlingly personal with the film's cast of mischievously macabre ghosts and goblins. They'll be transported directly into the three-dimensional center of the haunted house-like environs of Halloweentown as its bored Pumpkin King, Jack Skellington, attempts to take over the festive Christmas season for a change of pace. Against the advice of Sally (Catherine O'Hara), the lonely rag doll who has secret feelings for him, Jack enlists three trick-or-treaters -- Lock, Shock, and Barrel -- to help him kidnap Santa Claus. But even when Jack realizes his mistake, he'll have to contend with the evil Oogie Boogie before he can turn things around and restore the holiday's cheer.

Fueled by an unforgettable Grammy-nominated soundtrack featuring ten infectiously spooky songs by Oscar nominee Danny Elfman ("Corpse Bride," "Big Fish"), who also provided the singing voice for Jack, Tim Burton's THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS 3D will be released in conjunction with a new soundtrack album from Walt Disney Records that revisits the music in equally fun ways. The two disc set will feature Danny Elfman's acclaimed original score, four never-before-released demos from Elfman and a new twist: a collection of covers of the film's most favorite songs from such popular artists as Fall Out Boy, Fiona Apple, Marilyn Manson, Panic! At The Disco and She Wants Revenge.

THE TRANSFORMATION


A landmark film in its genre, the 1993 release of "THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS 3D" combined the power, enchantment and artistry of stop-motion animation with technological wizardry to create a moviegoing experience that captured the hearts and imaginations of millions of die-hard fans. It simultaneously became an all-time family favorite and attained permanent cult status among the cool. Just as its playful, pitch-perfect sense of Halloween fun made it a holiday standard, its mischievously dark humor and no-holds-barred creativity has made it an enduring video hit among college kids and hipsters -- who admire it, quote it, sing it and even dress the parts at Halloween. For years, every Halloween has been turned into NIGHTMARE season at Hollywood's legendary El Capitan Theatre, which screens the film each October to ever-growing audiences.

Part ghostly love story, part upside-down holiday celebration and part toe-tappingly offbeat musical, this NIGHTMARE was always multidimensional. But now, the classic film that had audiences falling in love with one of the most painstakingly handmade of all animation processes has been brought hurtling into the 21st century and transformed for a new generation to experience in Disney Digital 3D, expanding its legacy of innovation.

STARRING THE VOICES OF: Chris Sarandon, Danny Elfman, Catherine O'Hara, William Hickey, Glenn Shadix, Paul Reubens, Ken Page, Ed Ivory, Susan McBride, Debi Durst, Greg Proops, Kerry Katz, Randy Crenshaw, Sherwood Ball, Carmen Twillie, Catherine O'Hara

DIRECTOR: Tim Burton
STUDIO: Walt Disney Pictures
RATING: PG (For some scary images)
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Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D Trailer




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Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D


Release Date: October 23, 2009 (re-release)

Studio: Walt Disney Pictures

Director: Henry Selick

Screenwriter: Caroline Thompson, Tim Burton, Michael McDowell

Starring: Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara, William Hickey, Glenn Shadix, Paul Reubens, Ken Page

Genre: Animation, Family, Fantasy, Musical

MPAA Rating: PG (for some scary images)

Official Website: Nightmare3Dmovie.com

Plot Summary: A holiday tradition continues this Halloween when Tim Burton's classic, "The Nightmare Before Christmas," makes a return to the big screen in stunning Disney Digital 3D. The dazzling new make-over of the musical-fantasy was led by the film's original filmmaking team of Academy Award® nominated writer/producer Tim Burton ("Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," "Corpse Bride") and director Henry Selick ("James and the Giant Peach") as well as the talented technical wizards at Industrial Light + Magic in collaboration with In-Three, Inc." Audiences will get closer than ever to Halloweentown's beloved Pumpkin King, Jack Skellington (voice of Chris Sarandon), as he attempts to take over the Christmas holiday. Against the advice of Sally (voice of Catherine O'Hara), a lonely rag doll who has feelings for him, Jack enlists three mischievous trick-or-treaters - Lock, Shock, and Barrel - to help him kidnap Santa Claus. Jack eventually realizes his mistake but has to contend with the evil Oogie Boogie before he can make things right and restore the Christmas holiday. Fueled by an unforgettable soundtrack featuring ten ghoulishly delightful songs by Danny Elfman ("Corpse Bride," "Big Fish") who also provided the singing voice for Jack, Tim Burton's "The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D" combines the artistry of stop-motion animation with state-of-the-art digital technology to create a unique and entertaining movie-going experience that has become annual holiday event for the entire family.
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Christopher Sarandon (born July 24, 1942) is an Academy Award-nominated American actor. He is best known for his role as Prince Humperdinck in the film The Princess Bride, as the speaking voice of Jack Skellington from Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas and its spin-offs, and for his Oscar-nominated performance as Leon in Dog Day Afternoon.
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Catherine Anne O'Hara (born March 4, 1954) is a Canadian-American Emmy- and Gemini Award-winning actress and comedienne. She is well known for her comedy work on SCTV and for her film roles as Delia Deetz in Beetlejuice, Kate McCallister in Home Alone, Sally in The Nightmare Before Christmas and the series of mockumentary films written and directed by Christopher Guest.
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William Edward Hickey (September 19, 1927 – June 29, 1997) was an American actor. He was known for his Oscar-nominated role as Don Corrado Prizzi in the John Huston 1985 film Prizzi's Honor.
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William Glenn Shadix (born April 15, 1952) is an American actor, known for his role as “Otho” in Tim Burton's horror/comedy film Beetlejuice, his southern baritone voice, and his eccentric, deliberately exaggerated acting style.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenn_Shadix

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Saw VI Spoiler


Plot:

Special Agent Strahm is dead, and Detective Hoffman has emerged as the unchallenged successor to Jigsaw's legacy. However, when the FBI draws closer to Hoffman, he is forced to set a game into motion, and Jigsaw's grand scheme is finally understood. Written by Anonymous
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Starring:

Costas Mandylor, Mark Rolston, Betsy Russell, Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith, Peter Outerbridge
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Rumors:

1. Exclusive: We Interview 'Saw VI' Director Kevin Greutert!
A few of us here at FEARnet think there’s an underground bunker nestled somewhere in Los Angeles – a bunker housing a pile of Darren Lynn Bousman’s used Kleenex and the genetics engineering laboratory out of which they’re used to breed each new Saw director. And with the speed at which the franchise’s directors are announced and popping out sequels, we may not be entirely wrong! While fans were barely over the hype of Saw V—which JUST hit theaters October 24th--the director of Saw VI, Kevin Greutert (who’s edited the other films in the series), had already been announced, and preliminary plans were underway for Greutert’s first foray at the helm of the Jiggy Mc-Jigsaw franchise!

This past weekend, FEARnet Editor Joe McCabe caught up with Greutert to see what he’s cookin’ for his first go at the ol’ trap-happy Saw story in New York City, right smack in the middle of the very first Sawmania, a convention for none other than those crazzzaaazzyyy Saw enthusiasts! Saw VI will hit theaters at Halloween 2009. Check out the full interview for a taste of what we can expect – and tons of pictures from Sawmania 2008 – after the jump!

How much of a challenge is Saw VI compared to the other films in the series?
I think it only gets harder to make the movies good. We always try to think of ways to blow the audiences’ minds, but the audience is always trying to stay one step ahead of you, which makes it that much harder. If it was the first in a series you really wouldn’t know what to expect, but now the expectations for something unexpected to happen are so high, it makes it a lot harder. The only way to do it is to live and breathe it. I was just talking to Eric, the guy who plays Eric – Mark Rolston. I’ve got hundreds and hundreds of pages of every conceivable variation of what we can do with Saw VI and beyond. One of those will hopefully be the thing that we get. But it’s a matter of thinking through every possible thing we can imagine. And of course creating new characters that we think people will like and can contribute to the drama – that’s important as well.

So right now the script hasn’t been finalized?
The script is not finalized, no. We’re actively working on it – but it’s coming along.

The series is somewhat varied in tone-alternating between drama and thrill ride. How do you see the tone of the next one?
Well I’d love it to be the best of both worlds. Out of the five movies, Saw I is my favorite because I thought it had the most out of the bunch. It was very stylistic but also referenced giallo filmmakers. It had a good twist, but then it also had good dramatic elements. But I also loved Saw II with the adrenaline and the pace of the thing. It moved fast enough – because Saw I was kind of slow and meticulous and Saw II was more breathless. I’d love to be able to do both.

You mentioned giallo – are there any other influences you’d like to bring to the series?
There’s a little bit of Fassbender’s Chinese Roulette – do you know this film? It’s not a great movie, but it’s very Saw-like. There’s a girl in it who reminds me very much of Veruca Salt from Willy Wonka – who’s torturing parents, two parents who are having an affair with one another. It’s a curious movie. Other European filmmakers I love – Werner Herzog. Nosferatu is really great, poetic. Would it influence Saw? Maybe a little bit. I recently saw Carl Dreyer’s Vampyr which has some really incredible shots. Really, really great – again, very poetic cinema. But the giallo films are definitely the most Saw-like. You know, you got the villain whose face is hidden – til the end – with the black gloves and very enigmatic clues. Very poetic as well. Who’s the bad guy? Could be this person, could be that person. But all that iconography I would love to incorporate into the film.

You mentioned you’re working on the script – are you working with the writers of the preceding Saw chapters? Are you bringing anyone else in?
There are two writers working on the script. Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunston – who worked on the other two films – so they’re doing all the hard work. But we all contributed to the outline.

Is it safe to say we’ll at least be seeing Tobin and Costas Mandylor and Mark Rolston again?

Um… Tobin, Costas, and Mark Rolston – yeah, definitely. They’ll all have key parts. In terms of other people – Betsy Russell. But the others I can’t say. There will definitely be some interesting stuff in that respect though.

So your film’s release date – October 23 – is the same as another anticipated horror film – Joss Whedon and Drew Goddard’s Cabin in the Woods… any thoughts about the competition?
I saw that. There was an article that mentioned that. I’m not sure how much competition that will cause. But it’s interesting that people don’t see Saw as such a threat to have the same opening day. [Laughs.]

Is that a good or a bad thing?
It could be a bad thing, but I’m not concerned. I think we’ll stomp ‘em still. [Laughs.]

Have you seen any good horror films lately?
The last horror film I saw was Let the Right One In. I thought that film was so good. I didn’t think it was scary but I thought it was good. It worked well as a character piece. I can’t really think of the last film that really scared me. I’ve seen a lot of horror films that didn’t scare me. I haven’t seen one that I could really say “Yes” about. I was pleased with the way that The Strangers came out, which was the film I edited between Saw IV and V. It was really cool. I thought we were able to do a lot of horror stuff that was very different from Saw. It was very slow burning in the beginning, you spend a bit of time letting the actors develop their characters. There was very little dialogue, very controlled naturalistic sound – the music in particular. The composers Tom and Andy were very fun to work with. A lot of acoustic non-musical samples to construct the soundtrack, and that was really fun.

It often seems that when an editor turns to directing, they have an edge they can bring to the table. Can you talk about how your experience has helped you?
On a mental level, I have probably a better idea of what coverage I need or don’t need. Sometimes a scene will be over-covered. You know they’ll do a wide shot and then go in for mediums and then go in for a close-up when in fact they only needed the wide-shot to open up the first couple lines of the scene. And in some cases, in a three-minute scene it’s just a waste of film. Then also, particularly with the Saw films, as an editor I’m very conscious of not wasting time with shoe leather. If there’s a character that has to walk across the room – there’s a good way to do it and a bad way to do it. There are numerous good and bad ways to do it. I’m always thinking about how to be as economical as possible so we’re not wasting time, and it lets you control the pace much better. It really lets you understand what we don’t need to see and still understand the story.

At this point, are you just looking to direct this Saw film or could you see yourself staying on for other future installments?
It’s too early to say. [Laughs.] It might just be hubris to say anything at all because if Saw VI does terrible then I might be going back to the editing room.

Is there any pressure in the sense that you’re saying “Oh no, I don’t want my movie to be the last one…”?
Yeah, I mean the pressure’s terrible. But I have faith that it’ll work out. I think for numerous reasons it gets harder. We need to think of new stuff. Jigsaw’s dead and Amanda’s dead, and we obviously need to keep Jigsaw’s presence in the film because that’s the focal point of these movies. With every episode that we get away from Saw III it gets harder, in the respect that we are trying to keep it new and make sure we’re showing you something you didn’t know before, and that’s interesting and unexpected without resorting to some kind of labyrinthine story device that pulls you out of the movie. That’s really the big thing.

You mentioned Amanda’s dead. Is there any way she might come back?
She’s dead to me. In Saw III, she died. But what I’m really hoping is that in the next few months there’s a breakthrough in time-machine technology, so that we can sanely go back and rescue Jigsaw from the past. [Laughs.] We could bring him back and people would say, “Oh yeah, they can do that because time machines exist now.” But if that doesn’t happen we’re going to have to get very creative.

In real life, what’s your greatest fear?
Greatest fear… I’d have to say speaking in front of a room full of Saw fans, [if] Saw VI isn’t any good. [Laughs.]
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2. New Confirmed 'Saw VI' Casting
We learned exclusively this evening that James (Jimmy) Van Patten will be returning as Dr. Heffner (Saw IV) in Lionsgate's now-filming Saw VI. He joins the confirmed returning members Tobin Bell, Tanedra Howard and Shawnee Smith in Jigsaw's latest puzzle arriving in theaters October 23rd. The dynamic horror duo of Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton penned the screenplay once again and long time editor Kevin Greutert will be taking the reigns as director.
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3. EXCLUSIVE! We Chat With 'Saw VI' Star Devon Bostick
When it comes to teaching his own brand of morals and justice, Jigsaw doesn’t discriminate age or sex. In Saw VI, one of his latest victims is 17-year-old Canadian actor Devon Bostick, who recently sat down to exclusively speak to FEARnet about joining the popular horror franchise as well as encountering the walking dead again!

IMDB your name and Saw IV is listed under your credits, so how are you back in the sixth installment?
For Saw IV, I auditioned for a role and got it. This happens a lot but once I got on set, my part changed about four times. I was doing one thing and they were like “No, scratch that. We’re going to do this.” By the end, I only had one scene and it got cut. It was actually a miracle I got cut because then I was able to try out for this bigger and better role.

So who do you play in this film and how does he get sucked into Jigsaw’s death traps?
I can’t tell you much. My character’s name is Brent. Me and my mother are in a trap. I can say we are connected to some of the other people too.

You are one of the youngest victims ever in the Saw franchise though.
Probably. There was Erik Knudsen in Saw II. I don’t know if he was my age, but it’s really cool.

With two George Romero films under your belt, you’re no stranger to horror. What was it like doing a Saw movie?
This was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. You put a lot of soul into it and have to go to a really dark place. It sucks a lot out of you so by the end of the day, you’re really tired. It was great to really push my acting ability.

This is Kevin Greutert’s directorial debut. How did he do?
Kevin is amazing. As an editor, he’s done a lot of the Saw movies so he has the whole feel and knows the tone. He was very accepting of the actors and how much time they need to get somewhere. If we don’t have the time, Kevin will give you the confidence you need.

You were in Land of the Dead and you are returning to Romero territory with his upcoming zombie movie?
Yeah, it doesn’t have a title yet. I’m a boy who is picked up along with Crocket’s crew and I go to the island with them. It’s supposed to be more secluded so there is less chance of being eaten. I play this cocky teenager who goes along for the ride.

How are these zombies different than their Land of the Dead brethren?
It’s hard to say. Every zombie is different and George says this too. He doesn’t really have to direct the actors, he just lets them behave the way they think they might be when they are dead. However, people are trying to make the zombies smarter and something does happen.

What’s it like doing a big budget flick like Land of the Dead with Romero as opposed to something smaller?
It’s interesting. There was a lot of grandeur things on set and there’s more time and freedom on a bigger budget movie. It’s also a lot harder because it’s so huge that you need more work and dedication. On a smaller budget, it’s a lot more intimate and you get to know everyone. You also don’t have much time so you go in with what you feel is right and hopefully it works.

In terms of bloodshed, does Saw VI match a Romero zombie flick?
That’s a good question. They are both really gory. I think Saw VI has that psychological gore factor and …of the Dead is bursting out into your face.
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4. Tanedra Wins Scream Queens!
Last night, Tanedra, the scrappy LA lady with no formal training overcame the odds and won VH1's reality show competition Scream Queens, earning her a role in 2009's Saw VI. Unlike some reality shows, the winner actually deserved it, as she was the most consistent actress throughout and didn't sabotage herself by tossing a competitor's suitcase in the jacuzzi. Lionsgate swears she'll have a significant role in Saw VI, but it'll be interesting to see HOW significant a role they'll be willing to give an actress with no professional experience whatsoever. Could they trust her to be the "final girl" who makes it all the way to the end? Based on the historical fates of black characters in horror movies, that would be quite a coup.
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