Showcasing classic movies that have fallen out of copyright and are available freely from the public domain (with streaming video!)...
Plan 9 From Outer Space, 1959.
Directed by Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Starring Gregory Walcott, Mona McKinnon, Tor Johnson, Dudley Manlove, Vampira and Bela Lugosi.
Ed Wood's farcical sci-fi horror Plan 9 From Outer Space is routinely cited as the worst film ever to grace the screen, although its multitude of goofs, continuity problems, cheesey effects, absurd dialogue and no-budget set design have seen it gain cult status as one of the best unintentional comedies around.
Originally conceived as a vehicle to promote as Bela Lugosi's final film (the actor had died in 1956 after shooting a few minutes of footage with Woods for a horror entitled Tomb of the Vampire), the plot surrounds an alien plan (number nine, naturally) to resurrect Earth's dead as zombies. Lugosi makes only a fleeting appearance (with the remainder of his role filled out by 'lookalike' Tom Mason a.k.a. Ghoul Man with Cape Over Face) - while the cast also features Woods' regulars The Amazing Criswell and Tor Johnson alongside 50s TV horror personality Vampira.
Since being popularised in the 1980s Plan 9 has been used as the basis for an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and featured prominently in Tim Burton's biopic Ed Wood (1994), while a couple of remakes - Plan 9 and Grave Robbers From Outer Space (the film's original title) - are also in the works.
Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.
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Sunday, February 28, 2010
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Oscar Predictions!
The folks over at VoucherCodes.co.uk have kindly invited me to take part in their Oscars competition where a host of bloggers go head-to-head with the film critics to predict the winners at the 82nd Academy Awards. The rules are straightforward... one point for a correct guess, minus one point for an incorrect guess.
So, without further ado, here are my predictions...
Best Picture - Avatar
Best Director - Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker)
Best Actor - Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart)
Best Actress - Carey Mulligan (An Education)
Best Supporting Actor - Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds)
Best Supporting Actress - Mo’Nique (Precious)
Animated Feature - Up
Foreign Language Film - A Prophet
Best Original Screenplay - Inglourious Basterds
Best Adapted Screenplay - Up in the Air
Best Visual Effects - Avatar
Thanks to VoucherCodes for hosting the competition, and be sure to check out their great deals including fantastic discounts for LoveFilm, Amazon and Sky.
So, without further ado, here are my predictions...
Best Picture - Avatar
Best Director - Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker)
Best Actor - Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart)
Best Actress - Carey Mulligan (An Education)
Best Supporting Actor - Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds)
Best Supporting Actress - Mo’Nique (Precious)
Animated Feature - Up
Foreign Language Film - A Prophet
Best Original Screenplay - Inglourious Basterds
Best Adapted Screenplay - Up in the Air
Best Visual Effects - Avatar
Thanks to VoucherCodes for hosting the competition, and be sure to check out their great deals including fantastic discounts for LoveFilm, Amazon and Sky.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
World Cinema: The Hong Kong Film Industry
Santosh Sandhu discusses the Hong Kong Film Industry...
Hong Kong has a population of about 7 million people. Despite its small size, Hong Kong has been a major player in world cinema for many years. Up to the mid 1990s, Hong Kong was the world’s third largest film producer, making 300 films a year in the Cantonese language. Hong Kong only has a limited number of cinema screens and is therefore reliant on overseas revenue mainly from other parts of Asia.
Martial arts have existed for hundreds of years and form a strong part of Chinese culture and this is often reflected in Hong Kong films. Martial arts films thematically are the cinema of the underdog triumphing over corruption and oppression with the main emphasis being on action which can sometimes take up to half a film’s running time. The early martial arts films were based on traditional folk legends and featured known characters such as Fong Sai Yuk and Wong Fei Hung.
The early 1970s saw the rise of martial arts films as an international force. Up to this time they had largely been made by the Shaw Brothers studios at Clearwater Bay in Hong Kong. Shaw Brothers employed most of the local filmmaking talent and owned a chain of cinemas in South East Asia. Raymond Chow, an executive at Shaw Brothers eventually left to set up rival studio Golden Harvest. Golden Harvest’s first film was The Big Boss (1971) which starred Bruce Lee who would become the first internationally renowned martial arts star. Golden Harvest adopted the Hollywood business method of profit sharing to encourage Lee to work for them. After making three films in Hong Kong, Lee’s last completed film would be the most famous martial arts movie of all time the Golden Harvest/Warner Brothers co-production Enter the Dragon (1973).
In 1979 Golden Harvest signed Jackie Chan, a former stuntman who pioneered Kung fu comedy films. Heavily inspired by the early slapstick comedy of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin, Chan was able to cross cultural boundaries with his willingness to do his own stunts and his well timed kung fu routines almost shot like dance sequences. After gaining prominence in period martial arts comedies such as Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow (1978) and Drunken Master (1978), Chan and his stunt team would perfect their craft in Project A (1983) and Police Story (1985) essentially bringing the genre up to date.
Conversely, Producer/Director Tsui Hark would stick to the period setting but combine the genre with supernatural elements for the visually astonishing Zu Warriors (1983). The film benefited greatly with special effects provided by a Hollywood team. Hark would build on this success by creating his own effects outfit and the supernatural genre would continue with Mr. Vampire (1985) and A Chinese Ghost Story(1987). Hark would also launch the career of Jet Li in Once Upon a Time in China (1991) where Li would reprise the role of Wong Fei Hung.
Apart from its martial arts films, Hong Kong is also famous for its crime thrillers most notably the work of John Woo. A Better Tomorrow (1986), would see the rise of the ‘Heroic Bloodshed’ series of films so called for their heavily choreographed shootouts which would continue to please action junkies with The Killer (1989) and Hard Boiled (1992). Much more concerned with plot and characterization, Infernal Affairs (2002) about a cop working undercover in the triads and a triad posing as a cop would inspire the Oscar winning The Departed (2006).
Hong Kong was a British Colony which was handed back to China in 1997. China has the largest population in the world with over 1 billion people. Most films made in mainland China are in Mandarin. Partly due to the language difference, China has not opened up as a major market for Hong Kong films. Hong Kong is still treated like a separate entity and so its films are still subjected to censorship and quotas. Also much of the Chinese market is dominated by Hollywood blockbusters or ‘dapian’ which make up to 70 percent of the domestic market. Only big name Chinese directors are able to compete with Hollywood.
Like Hollywood, China also has a studio system which was established in 1949. These studios were state funded for many years. Due to state cut backs in 1996, studios have looked to international productions for finance ever since. Today, foreign films shot in China have to be co-produced with a studio and the state owned China Film Co-production Corporation (CFCC). For international filmmakers, the CFCC offers good locations, cheap labour, equipment hire and transportation. Quentin Tarantino’s kung fu inspired Kill Bill (2003) was shot in Shanghai for these reasons.
Certain Hollywood films now have a Chinese martial arts influence such as The Matrix (1999), which employed a Hong Kong stunt crew for its fight scenes. The Oscar winning Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) was a Chinese/American co-production utilizing an international cast and crew.
American studios such as Fox have also been involved in the distribution of Chinese films in Asia, including Hero (2002), which was marketed like a Hollywood blockbuster. Miramax handled the distribution of Hero in most western territories as it was responsible for much of the film’s 31 million dollar budget. Miramax also bought the rights to certain titles from the Shaw Brother’s film library and Golden Harvest sold many of its titles to Warner Brothers.
Sadly the Hong Kong film industry has suffered a decline in recent years with less than 100 films being produced per year. Domestic audiences now prefer Hollywood and rampant piracy has proved a deterrent for getting people into cinemas. Jackie Chan, Jet Li and John Woo are consistently working in Hollywood and filmmakers are now more likely to be looking to work with mainland China.
Related:
The Indian Film Industry
The French New Wave
The Rise and Fall of Italian Neo-realism
Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.
Hong Kong has a population of about 7 million people. Despite its small size, Hong Kong has been a major player in world cinema for many years. Up to the mid 1990s, Hong Kong was the world’s third largest film producer, making 300 films a year in the Cantonese language. Hong Kong only has a limited number of cinema screens and is therefore reliant on overseas revenue mainly from other parts of Asia.
Martial arts have existed for hundreds of years and form a strong part of Chinese culture and this is often reflected in Hong Kong films. Martial arts films thematically are the cinema of the underdog triumphing over corruption and oppression with the main emphasis being on action which can sometimes take up to half a film’s running time. The early martial arts films were based on traditional folk legends and featured known characters such as Fong Sai Yuk and Wong Fei Hung.
The early 1970s saw the rise of martial arts films as an international force. Up to this time they had largely been made by the Shaw Brothers studios at Clearwater Bay in Hong Kong. Shaw Brothers employed most of the local filmmaking talent and owned a chain of cinemas in South East Asia. Raymond Chow, an executive at Shaw Brothers eventually left to set up rival studio Golden Harvest. Golden Harvest’s first film was The Big Boss (1971) which starred Bruce Lee who would become the first internationally renowned martial arts star. Golden Harvest adopted the Hollywood business method of profit sharing to encourage Lee to work for them. After making three films in Hong Kong, Lee’s last completed film would be the most famous martial arts movie of all time the Golden Harvest/Warner Brothers co-production Enter the Dragon (1973).
In 1979 Golden Harvest signed Jackie Chan, a former stuntman who pioneered Kung fu comedy films. Heavily inspired by the early slapstick comedy of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin, Chan was able to cross cultural boundaries with his willingness to do his own stunts and his well timed kung fu routines almost shot like dance sequences. After gaining prominence in period martial arts comedies such as Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow (1978) and Drunken Master (1978), Chan and his stunt team would perfect their craft in Project A (1983) and Police Story (1985) essentially bringing the genre up to date.
Conversely, Producer/Director Tsui Hark would stick to the period setting but combine the genre with supernatural elements for the visually astonishing Zu Warriors (1983). The film benefited greatly with special effects provided by a Hollywood team. Hark would build on this success by creating his own effects outfit and the supernatural genre would continue with Mr. Vampire (1985) and A Chinese Ghost Story(1987). Hark would also launch the career of Jet Li in Once Upon a Time in China (1991) where Li would reprise the role of Wong Fei Hung.
Apart from its martial arts films, Hong Kong is also famous for its crime thrillers most notably the work of John Woo. A Better Tomorrow (1986), would see the rise of the ‘Heroic Bloodshed’ series of films so called for their heavily choreographed shootouts which would continue to please action junkies with The Killer (1989) and Hard Boiled (1992). Much more concerned with plot and characterization, Infernal Affairs (2002) about a cop working undercover in the triads and a triad posing as a cop would inspire the Oscar winning The Departed (2006).
Hong Kong was a British Colony which was handed back to China in 1997. China has the largest population in the world with over 1 billion people. Most films made in mainland China are in Mandarin. Partly due to the language difference, China has not opened up as a major market for Hong Kong films. Hong Kong is still treated like a separate entity and so its films are still subjected to censorship and quotas. Also much of the Chinese market is dominated by Hollywood blockbusters or ‘dapian’ which make up to 70 percent of the domestic market. Only big name Chinese directors are able to compete with Hollywood.
Like Hollywood, China also has a studio system which was established in 1949. These studios were state funded for many years. Due to state cut backs in 1996, studios have looked to international productions for finance ever since. Today, foreign films shot in China have to be co-produced with a studio and the state owned China Film Co-production Corporation (CFCC). For international filmmakers, the CFCC offers good locations, cheap labour, equipment hire and transportation. Quentin Tarantino’s kung fu inspired Kill Bill (2003) was shot in Shanghai for these reasons.
Certain Hollywood films now have a Chinese martial arts influence such as The Matrix (1999), which employed a Hong Kong stunt crew for its fight scenes. The Oscar winning Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) was a Chinese/American co-production utilizing an international cast and crew.
American studios such as Fox have also been involved in the distribution of Chinese films in Asia, including Hero (2002), which was marketed like a Hollywood blockbuster. Miramax handled the distribution of Hero in most western territories as it was responsible for much of the film’s 31 million dollar budget. Miramax also bought the rights to certain titles from the Shaw Brother’s film library and Golden Harvest sold many of its titles to Warner Brothers.
Sadly the Hong Kong film industry has suffered a decline in recent years with less than 100 films being produced per year. Domestic audiences now prefer Hollywood and rampant piracy has proved a deterrent for getting people into cinemas. Jackie Chan, Jet Li and John Woo are consistently working in Hollywood and filmmakers are now more likely to be looking to work with mainland China.
Related:
The Indian Film Industry
The French New Wave
The Rise and Fall of Italian Neo-realism
Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
British Cinema: The One That Got Away (1957)
The One That Got Away, 1957.
Directed by Roy Ward Baker.
Starring Hardy Krüger, Colin Gordon, Michael Goodliffe and Terence Alexander.
SYNOPSIS:
During the Battle of Britain a Luftwaffe plane is hit and plunges down into the British countryside. Although the pilot is captured, he is extremely confident and focussed on his plan: to escape and return home against all odds.
Directed by Roy Ward Baker (A Night to Remember) and based upon the book of the same name by Kendal Burt and James Leasor, The One That Got Away is a dramatic retelling of the exploits of Oberleutnant Franz Von Werra, the only German prisoner-of-war in Britain to escape capture and return to his homeland.
Shot down during the Battle of Britain, Von Werra (Krüger) is sent to a POW camp in Northern England where he sets about plotting to break free of his captors and return home to warn the Reich of Britain’s interrogation methods. Embarking on a number of audacious escape attempts which are ultimately foiled (including an attempt to pass himself off as a Dutch pilot and steal a Hurricane in one of the film’s most suspenseful sections), Von Werra is eventually transported to Canada where he leaps from a train and manages to cross the frozen St. Lawrence River to seek asylum in the neutral United States.
Made just twelve years after the end of World War II, the greatest success of The One That Got Away is the way in which the film defies convention and inverts the typical notion of the Nazi as an evil monster. Credit must be given to Hardy Krüger (himself a former German soldier who experienced life as a POW when captured by the Americans near the conclusion of the war), who delivers a charming and charismatic performance as the cocky and resourceful Von Werra in his first international role.
Situated firmly as the hero of the piece, Von Werra comes across as a sympathetic character with the audience rooting for him to succeed in his efforts to escape. This is no doubt aided by a lack of references towards the Nazi regime while Von Werra’s own background and wartime successes are largely ignored, although the character remains fiercely loyal to his country and devoted to his duty as an officer. This could be considered manipulative, but it certainly makes for refreshing storytelling and allows the film to stand out from other popular POW movies such as The Wooden Horse (1950) and The Colditz Story (1955).
A fast-paced, tense and original thriller, The One That Got Away is a fine example of its genre and one that manages - for the most part, at least - to avoid the "stiff-upper-lip" Britishness common to many films of the period.
Gary Collinson
Directed by Roy Ward Baker.
Starring Hardy Krüger, Colin Gordon, Michael Goodliffe and Terence Alexander.
SYNOPSIS:
During the Battle of Britain a Luftwaffe plane is hit and plunges down into the British countryside. Although the pilot is captured, he is extremely confident and focussed on his plan: to escape and return home against all odds.
Directed by Roy Ward Baker (A Night to Remember) and based upon the book of the same name by Kendal Burt and James Leasor, The One That Got Away is a dramatic retelling of the exploits of Oberleutnant Franz Von Werra, the only German prisoner-of-war in Britain to escape capture and return to his homeland.
Shot down during the Battle of Britain, Von Werra (Krüger) is sent to a POW camp in Northern England where he sets about plotting to break free of his captors and return home to warn the Reich of Britain’s interrogation methods. Embarking on a number of audacious escape attempts which are ultimately foiled (including an attempt to pass himself off as a Dutch pilot and steal a Hurricane in one of the film’s most suspenseful sections), Von Werra is eventually transported to Canada where he leaps from a train and manages to cross the frozen St. Lawrence River to seek asylum in the neutral United States.
Made just twelve years after the end of World War II, the greatest success of The One That Got Away is the way in which the film defies convention and inverts the typical notion of the Nazi as an evil monster. Credit must be given to Hardy Krüger (himself a former German soldier who experienced life as a POW when captured by the Americans near the conclusion of the war), who delivers a charming and charismatic performance as the cocky and resourceful Von Werra in his first international role.
Situated firmly as the hero of the piece, Von Werra comes across as a sympathetic character with the audience rooting for him to succeed in his efforts to escape. This is no doubt aided by a lack of references towards the Nazi regime while Von Werra’s own background and wartime successes are largely ignored, although the character remains fiercely loyal to his country and devoted to his duty as an officer. This could be considered manipulative, but it certainly makes for refreshing storytelling and allows the film to stand out from other popular POW movies such as The Wooden Horse (1950) and The Colditz Story (1955).
A fast-paced, tense and original thriller, The One That Got Away is a fine example of its genre and one that manages - for the most part, at least - to avoid the "stiff-upper-lip" Britishness common to many films of the period.
Gary Collinson
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Freakishly Clever: A Tim Burton Profile (Part 1)
Trevor Hogg profiles the career of filmmaker Tim Burton in the first of a four part feature...
Growing up in Burbank, California, Tim Burton found himself living in a suffocating environment. “There’s something about suburbia,” stated the American filmmaker of his childhood home, “it’s really a place to hide. Or people use it as a mask of normalcy.” Set designer Bo Welch (The Birdcage) observed, “Probably his out-of-place-ness comes from growing up there. It’s in the middle of the movie business, but it’s so mundane that it forces your imagination to work overtime.” This was definitely the case for the young Burton. “I once got some kids to help me set up a bunch of debris and weird footprints in a park,” recollected the prankster, “and we convinced these other kids that an alien ship had crashed in Burbank. I would stage fake fights in the neighbourhood so it looked like somebody was killing somebody, and I once convinced a kid that a killer had fallen into a neighbour’s pool after they’d just cleaned it and doused it with acid and chlorine. I threw some clothes in there and told this kid the guy had dissolved.”
“Embracing death and the catharsis of, ‘Oh, my God, I’m going to die!’, The Fall of the House of Usher (1960), The Raven (1963), Edgar Allan Poe and Vincent Price helped me to live,” reflected Tim Burton who made a directorial debut (which some believe to be a practical joke on his part) at the age of thirteen with a remake of The Island of Doctor Moreau by H.G. Wells. Shot on a Super 8 camera and using locations such as the Los Angeles Zoo animal cages and the beaches of Malibu, The Island of Doctor Agor (1971) features Tim Burton as the title character while the rest of cast consists of his friends and classmates.
Floundering in high school, the eighteen year old received a scholarship to attend the California Institute of the Arts. Finding himself in a setting where he could flourish creatively, Burton produced a pencil-test animation entitled Stalk of the Celery (1979). Hired by Disney, his first assignment was The Fox and the Hound (1981); however, the rookie animator was soon reassigned to work in design capacity on The Black Cauldron (1985). The move did not surprise the moviemaker as he admitted, “My foxes looked like roadkill.”
1982 was a busy and frustrating year for the aspiring filmmaker who was involved in the creation of three separate projects. Luau, a low-budget independent film Tim Burton co-produced, co-directed, and co-wrote with Jerry Rees (Back to Neverland) was never released; and his martial arts version of Hansel and Gretel, which made use of an all Asian cast, was aired only once on the Disney Channel.
Soldiering on with the $60,000 production money given to him by Disney, Tim Burton wrote, designed, and directed the six minute black and white stop-motion animation film Vincent. Seven year old Vincent Mallory pretends to be actor Vincent Price while living in an imaginary world influenced by the horror stories of Edgar Allan Poe.
The short film is based on a poem by Tim Burton which is appropriately narrated by Vincent Price. Asked what would have happened if the legendary performer had turned down his request, the director replied, “I remember going through those feelings at the time, thinking, ‘God, will he like this?’ It’s hard to say what would have happened, but I know how I felt about the thing: it was one hundred percent pure. It could have been one of those things that you see: [imitating a jaded star] ‘Hey, kid, get away from me! Get out of here!’ Everything is based on your first impulse, and I didn’t do the thing for his approval. Vincent is probably the one thing that I can watch and not have to turn away.”
Despite receiving a Chicago Film Festival Award and the Critic’s Prize at the Annecy Film Festival in France, Vincent was pulled after a two-week Los Angeles theatrical run with Disney’s teen drama, Tex.
Expanding to a half hour format, Tim Burton delved into the realm of black and white live-action to produce Frankenweenie (1984). A boy named Victor Frankenstein (Barret Oliver) attempts to bring his dead dog Sparky back to life.
Intended to be paired with the re-release of Pinocchio (1940), the negative feedback for the short film plus a PG rating caused Disney to abort the idea. “I remember a test screening for Frankenweenie where kids started crying,” said Burton. “Parents forget that for some kids, being scared isn’t a bad thing. It’s actually helpful in life.” The film-rating board begged to differ with the moviemaker. “They claimed the film was too violent. The only violence in that is when the dog gets run over by a car, and that is done off-camera.” The director went on to say, “Vincent and Frankenweenie going unreleased has been a constant source of frustration to me. Disney owns both films. I can’t even get a copy of them.”
Looking back on his time at Disney, Tim Burton declared, “They were trying to train new animators. All the old guys had retired, so what was left in charge were these second-stringers. They were older; they were bitter that they weren’t the ones in the limelight. So a lot of things besides creativity leaked in. What drove me nuts is, here you are Disney – ‘Best animation in the world,’ they say.’ A dream come true.’ And on the other hand, they say, ‘Remove part of your brain and become a zombie factory worker.’ The split that it created drove people nuts. So you either succumb to it or you leave.”
Not all was lost for Burton after he left the animation studio. Shelly Duvall (The Shining), who had portrayed Victor’s mother in Frankenweenie, was impressed enough with the rookie helmer to sign him to direct an episode of her Showtime series. “Aladdin’s Lamp [1984] I guess was my first “directing” assignment,” remarked Tim Burton on the project which featured the acting talents of Leonard Nimoy (Invasion of the Body Snatchers) and James Earl Jones (The Great White Hope). “I did that right after Frankenweenie, for Shelly Duvall’s Faerie Tale Theatre. It was a three-camera video thing and I didn’t know what the fuck I was doing. It came out looking like a Las Vegas show. The Jar [NBC, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 1985] was my only other assignment, a case where it didn’t work out again. That’s when I realized that nobody should treat me like a director, because I’m not.”
Horror author Steven King had recommended Frankenweenie to a Warner Bros. studio executive who then showed the short film to Paul Reubens (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), the star of The Pee-wee Herman Show [HBO, 1981]. “It was the easiest job I ever got,” declared Burton of his assignment to direct a big screen adaptation of the television show. “I had a much more difficult time getting my busboy job six months earlier.”
Pee-wee’s Big Adventure released in 1985 centres around Pee-wee Herman embarking on a cross-country quest to find his stolen bicycle.
“There was a lot of spontaneity involved in making Pee-wee and I was flying by the seat of my pants,” confessed Tim Burton of the project which introduced him to his long-time music composer Danny Elfman (Midnight Run). “There was such a mutual belief by Pee-wee and myself in the character that what he did was never questioned. What we did was thrust people into his world. We said, ‘This is Pee-wee, believe him or not.’ We tried to make people understand the character by making him as colourful as possible and setting him in an atmosphere where he was comfortable. It was a very cut-and-dried movie; people either liked it or they didn’t.”
Panned by film critics such as Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune, who gave it a zero star rating, the quirky comedy developed a cult following with moviegoers. Made on a production budget of $6 million, the picture grossed $45 million at the domestic box office.
Returning to his origins as a storyteller, Tim Burton designed the animation for an episode of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories (NBC, 1985 to 1987) called Family Dog (1987); however, he was soon behind the camera again.
“Nearly every script I was offered had the word ‘Adventure’ somewhere in the title,” revealed Tim Burton of the trouble he had selecting his 1988 sophomore effort. “One project fell through and Batman was still on hold. I was freaking out until the script for Beetlejuice came along.”
The ghosts of a recently deceased couple (Gena Davis & Alec Baldwin) call upon an anarchic spirit known as Betelgeuse (Michael Keaton) to exorcise the family which has moved into their former home.
“It’s hard to describe this film as just one thing,” stated Tim Burton. “It has elements of horror but it’s not really scary and it’s funny but not really a comedy. Beetlejuice is one of those movies that just doesn’t fit any place.”
When it came to selecting the acting talent which included Jeffery Jones (Howard the Duck), Catherine O’Hara (Home Alone), and Winona Ryder (The Age of Innocence), the director remarked, “Many of the cast come from an improvisational background, so I felt it would serve to balance the movie if much of what the actors did was created on the spot. We didn’t throw out Michael [McDowell]’s script. We just embellished it a lot.” When asked if he had trouble adjusting to live-action filmmaking, Burton answered, “I’ve had fun dealing with the actors on this film and that’s a hard thing to admit because it hasn’t always been the case. Because of my animation background, I was basically in the position of having to deal with my craft on a non-verbal level.”
“I turned down the role because I didn’t quite get it,” admitted Michael Keaton (Mr. Mom) who later changed his mind when Tim Burton suggested that the actor should do his own interpretation. “I went home and thought, ‘Okay, if I would do this role, how would I do it?’ You clearly don’t create him from the inside out. Meaning, what motivates this guy – his childhood or whatever. You work from the outside in.” Eventually, the character analysis had to come to an end. “At some point you show up on the set and just go nuts,” stated Keaton of his mania-induced cinematic performance. “It was rave acting. You rage for twelve or fourteen hours; then you go home tired and beat and exhausted. It was pretty damn cathartic. It was rave and purge acting.”
Shot over ten weeks in Los Angeles and Vermont, the $13 million production had Tim Burton entering into a new realm as a filmmaker, “This was the first time I dealt with a full-blown special effects film and it sure made my life difficult at times,” recollected the director. “The intent was to do them quick, funky, and fun. You can only take that so far when you’ve got ninety adults standing around a set getting pissed off because a mechanical hat isn’t doing what it’s suppose to do. Much of the stuff we did worked live, but ‘Lets do it in post-production’ was a phrase you heard frequently on this show.”
Central to the commercial success of Tim Burton’s pictures is the work of music composer Danny Elfman. “I remember testing Beetlejuice with no music and then with music,” recalled Burton. “The difference was shocking! And it really has to do with the fact that when you’re doing a movie where people don’t know what is going on, the music is the guidepost, it’s the tone and the context.”
Winning an Oscar for Best Makeup and receiving BAFTA nominations for Best Visual Effects and Best Makeup, the picture grossed $32 million in its first two weeks of release. The final box office tally was $74 million worldwide.
“I wasn’t working on it full time,” stated Tim Burton of Batman (1989), the comic book adaptation which cemented his reputation as an A-list Hollywood moviemaker. “I’d just meet with Sam [Hamm] on weekends to discuss the early writing stages. We knocked it into good shape while I directed Beetlejuice, but as a go project it was only greenlighted by Warners when the opening figures of Beetlejuice surprised everyone – including myself!”
As a high school student attending Comic Con in San Diego, Burton saw the production still presentation for Superman (1978); the event was a revelation for him. “The ballroom was packed with people,” began the director. “All the eyes were glued to the screen with this poor Warner guy trying to keep it all under control. Suddenly, one fan stood up and screamed, ‘Superman would never change into his costume on a ledge of a building. I’m going to boycott this movie and tell everyone that you’re destroying the legend!’ Intense applause followed as he stormed out of the hall. Wow, I thought. And from that moment on I always knew in the back of my mind the enormous problems facing anyone taking on a film version of a comic book hero.”
Batman details the rise of The Caped Crusader’s most famous criminal adversary. “What attracted me to the project in the first place were Batman and The Joker – my favourite characters,” said Burton. “Like all great larger-than-life images, they can be explored in any number of different ways.”
“The very first Batman treatment I read was remarkably similar to Superman,” stated the Californian filmmaker. “It had the same light, jokey tone, and the story structure followed Wayne through childhood to his genesis as a crime fighter. I found it all rather disturbing because, while that route was probably fine in the case of Superman, there was absolutely no exploration or acknowledgement of the character’s psychological structure and why he would dress up in a bat suit. In that respect, it was very much like the television series.” Burton went on to add, “The success of the graphic novels made our ideas [his and Sam Hamm’s] far more acceptable. The movie doesn’t wallow in the darkness, but without becoming a psychological tone poem, it addresses all the issues without hammering you over the head. The Dark Knight works on the comic page – it seems to be a direct response to all the light-heartedness that has gone on before [the 1960s TV series] – but it is too dark stylistically for movie purposes. I think the movie is funny without being campy at the expense of the material. The tone is more consistent than in any other film I’ve made.”
Controversy erupted when Michael Keaton was chosen to portray the title character. “The fan reaction is a surface response,” observed Tim Burton. “Michael is very good. Clean and Sober [1988] proved it. He’s funny/dramatic in a way which added to what I was trying to achieve. Taking someone like Michael and making him Batman supported the split-personality idea...He has a lot going on inside, there’s an explosive side, he has a temper and a great amount of anger – that was exactly the Bruce Wayne character, not some unknown, handsome, strong hunk.” Cast first was an Oscar-winner in the role of The Joker which served to strengthen the director’s resolve to select Keaton. “I kept imagining the reviews and hearing the response in my head, ‘Well Jack Nicholson [Five Easy Pieces] is great, but the unknown so-and-so is nothing special.’” One performer who was replaced during the production was Sean Young (No Way Out) which resulted in Kim Basinger (L.A. Confidential) playing the part of journalist and love interest Vicki Vale.
Responsibility for creating the overall look of the picture was given to production designer Anton Furst (The Company of Wolves). “Tim had wanted me to do Beetlejuice but after two exhausting years working with Stanley Kubrick on Full Metal Jacket [1987], I didn’t feel in the position to take on a new film,” explained Furst who had nothing but praise for Burton. “I don’t think I’ve ever felt so naturally in tune with a director conceptually, spiritually, visually or artistically. There was never any problem because we never fought over anything. I often wanted his advice, but when I came up with four ideas in four different directions, he’d always chose the one I liked most.” The two men found themselves sharing a common philosophy towards their work. “When we first met, we both independently mentioned how sick we were of the ILM [Industrial Light & Magic] school of filmmaking. You can’t stun with effects anymore, you have to go back to basics. We both agreed the best special effect we could ever remember seeing was the house in Psycho [1960] because it registered as such a strong image. Impact –that’s what films are about – not effects.”
In designing the urban dwelling that serves as the principal location for the story, Tim Burton and Anton Furst made use of a “retro high-tech” look. “So few great movie cities have been built,” said the director. “Metropolis [1926] and Blade Runner [1982] seem to be the accepted spectrum. We tried so hard to do something different although people tend to lump things into categories. We conceptualized Gotham City as the reverse of New York in its early days. Zoning and construction were thought of in terms of letting light in. So we decided to take that in the opposite direction and darken everything by building up vertically and cramming architecture together.”
To help stem fan backlash toward the movie, the artist associated with the iconic comic book figure was brought onboard as a creative consultant. “Hiring [Bob] Kane was a very intelligent move,” remarked Furst. “He loved what we were doing. We sent over sketches constantly and he kept sending back these little drawings with notes attached saying, ‘Well done boys.’ He came over once to visit the set and when he was shown around, he was totally awe-inspired. Very clever, because when it comes to the American media, just to have it sanctioned by the creator makes it difficult for the [audience] to complain.”
Filmgoers embraced the movie; Batman earned $411 million worldwide. At the Academy Awards the picture won Best Art Direction, while Jack Nicholson was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Comedy or Musical. The international award circuit honoured the film with six nominations at the BAFTAs, including Best Supporting Actor (Nicholson), Best Production Design, Best Visual Effects, Best Costume Design, Best Makeup, and Best Sound. Looking back on the picture, Tim Burton stated, “I like parts of it, but the whole movie is mainly boring to me. It’s OK, but it was more of a cultural phenomenon than a great movie.”
Faced with the inevitable question of directing the next installment of the blockbuster movie franchise, the filmmaker answered, “Sequels are only worthwhile if they give you the opportunity to do something new and interesting. It has to go beyond that, really, because you do the first for the thrill of the unknown. The sequel wipes all that out, so you must explore the next level. I don’t rule out anything if the challenge is exciting.”
Gotham City’s guardian would have to wait. Next on the cinematic agenda for Tim Burton was a reunion with a childhood film idol and a collaboration with an actor who would become his kindred spirit.
Continue to part two.
Short Film Showcase - Vincent (1982)
For more on Tim Burton, visit his official website or fan-site The Tim Burton Collective.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
Growing up in Burbank, California, Tim Burton found himself living in a suffocating environment. “There’s something about suburbia,” stated the American filmmaker of his childhood home, “it’s really a place to hide. Or people use it as a mask of normalcy.” Set designer Bo Welch (The Birdcage) observed, “Probably his out-of-place-ness comes from growing up there. It’s in the middle of the movie business, but it’s so mundane that it forces your imagination to work overtime.” This was definitely the case for the young Burton. “I once got some kids to help me set up a bunch of debris and weird footprints in a park,” recollected the prankster, “and we convinced these other kids that an alien ship had crashed in Burbank. I would stage fake fights in the neighbourhood so it looked like somebody was killing somebody, and I once convinced a kid that a killer had fallen into a neighbour’s pool after they’d just cleaned it and doused it with acid and chlorine. I threw some clothes in there and told this kid the guy had dissolved.”
“Embracing death and the catharsis of, ‘Oh, my God, I’m going to die!’, The Fall of the House of Usher (1960), The Raven (1963), Edgar Allan Poe and Vincent Price helped me to live,” reflected Tim Burton who made a directorial debut (which some believe to be a practical joke on his part) at the age of thirteen with a remake of The Island of Doctor Moreau by H.G. Wells. Shot on a Super 8 camera and using locations such as the Los Angeles Zoo animal cages and the beaches of Malibu, The Island of Doctor Agor (1971) features Tim Burton as the title character while the rest of cast consists of his friends and classmates.
Floundering in high school, the eighteen year old received a scholarship to attend the California Institute of the Arts. Finding himself in a setting where he could flourish creatively, Burton produced a pencil-test animation entitled Stalk of the Celery (1979). Hired by Disney, his first assignment was The Fox and the Hound (1981); however, the rookie animator was soon reassigned to work in design capacity on The Black Cauldron (1985). The move did not surprise the moviemaker as he admitted, “My foxes looked like roadkill.”
1982 was a busy and frustrating year for the aspiring filmmaker who was involved in the creation of three separate projects. Luau, a low-budget independent film Tim Burton co-produced, co-directed, and co-wrote with Jerry Rees (Back to Neverland) was never released; and his martial arts version of Hansel and Gretel, which made use of an all Asian cast, was aired only once on the Disney Channel.
Soldiering on with the $60,000 production money given to him by Disney, Tim Burton wrote, designed, and directed the six minute black and white stop-motion animation film Vincent. Seven year old Vincent Mallory pretends to be actor Vincent Price while living in an imaginary world influenced by the horror stories of Edgar Allan Poe.
The short film is based on a poem by Tim Burton which is appropriately narrated by Vincent Price. Asked what would have happened if the legendary performer had turned down his request, the director replied, “I remember going through those feelings at the time, thinking, ‘God, will he like this?’ It’s hard to say what would have happened, but I know how I felt about the thing: it was one hundred percent pure. It could have been one of those things that you see: [imitating a jaded star] ‘Hey, kid, get away from me! Get out of here!’ Everything is based on your first impulse, and I didn’t do the thing for his approval. Vincent is probably the one thing that I can watch and not have to turn away.”
Despite receiving a Chicago Film Festival Award and the Critic’s Prize at the Annecy Film Festival in France, Vincent was pulled after a two-week Los Angeles theatrical run with Disney’s teen drama, Tex.
Expanding to a half hour format, Tim Burton delved into the realm of black and white live-action to produce Frankenweenie (1984). A boy named Victor Frankenstein (Barret Oliver) attempts to bring his dead dog Sparky back to life.
Intended to be paired with the re-release of Pinocchio (1940), the negative feedback for the short film plus a PG rating caused Disney to abort the idea. “I remember a test screening for Frankenweenie where kids started crying,” said Burton. “Parents forget that for some kids, being scared isn’t a bad thing. It’s actually helpful in life.” The film-rating board begged to differ with the moviemaker. “They claimed the film was too violent. The only violence in that is when the dog gets run over by a car, and that is done off-camera.” The director went on to say, “Vincent and Frankenweenie going unreleased has been a constant source of frustration to me. Disney owns both films. I can’t even get a copy of them.”
Looking back on his time at Disney, Tim Burton declared, “They were trying to train new animators. All the old guys had retired, so what was left in charge were these second-stringers. They were older; they were bitter that they weren’t the ones in the limelight. So a lot of things besides creativity leaked in. What drove me nuts is, here you are Disney – ‘Best animation in the world,’ they say.’ A dream come true.’ And on the other hand, they say, ‘Remove part of your brain and become a zombie factory worker.’ The split that it created drove people nuts. So you either succumb to it or you leave.”
Not all was lost for Burton after he left the animation studio. Shelly Duvall (The Shining), who had portrayed Victor’s mother in Frankenweenie, was impressed enough with the rookie helmer to sign him to direct an episode of her Showtime series. “Aladdin’s Lamp [1984] I guess was my first “directing” assignment,” remarked Tim Burton on the project which featured the acting talents of Leonard Nimoy (Invasion of the Body Snatchers) and James Earl Jones (The Great White Hope). “I did that right after Frankenweenie, for Shelly Duvall’s Faerie Tale Theatre. It was a three-camera video thing and I didn’t know what the fuck I was doing. It came out looking like a Las Vegas show. The Jar [NBC, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 1985] was my only other assignment, a case where it didn’t work out again. That’s when I realized that nobody should treat me like a director, because I’m not.”
Horror author Steven King had recommended Frankenweenie to a Warner Bros. studio executive who then showed the short film to Paul Reubens (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), the star of The Pee-wee Herman Show [HBO, 1981]. “It was the easiest job I ever got,” declared Burton of his assignment to direct a big screen adaptation of the television show. “I had a much more difficult time getting my busboy job six months earlier.”
Pee-wee’s Big Adventure released in 1985 centres around Pee-wee Herman embarking on a cross-country quest to find his stolen bicycle.
“There was a lot of spontaneity involved in making Pee-wee and I was flying by the seat of my pants,” confessed Tim Burton of the project which introduced him to his long-time music composer Danny Elfman (Midnight Run). “There was such a mutual belief by Pee-wee and myself in the character that what he did was never questioned. What we did was thrust people into his world. We said, ‘This is Pee-wee, believe him or not.’ We tried to make people understand the character by making him as colourful as possible and setting him in an atmosphere where he was comfortable. It was a very cut-and-dried movie; people either liked it or they didn’t.”
Panned by film critics such as Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune, who gave it a zero star rating, the quirky comedy developed a cult following with moviegoers. Made on a production budget of $6 million, the picture grossed $45 million at the domestic box office.
Returning to his origins as a storyteller, Tim Burton designed the animation for an episode of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories (NBC, 1985 to 1987) called Family Dog (1987); however, he was soon behind the camera again.
“Nearly every script I was offered had the word ‘Adventure’ somewhere in the title,” revealed Tim Burton of the trouble he had selecting his 1988 sophomore effort. “One project fell through and Batman was still on hold. I was freaking out until the script for Beetlejuice came along.”
The ghosts of a recently deceased couple (Gena Davis & Alec Baldwin) call upon an anarchic spirit known as Betelgeuse (Michael Keaton) to exorcise the family which has moved into their former home.
“It’s hard to describe this film as just one thing,” stated Tim Burton. “It has elements of horror but it’s not really scary and it’s funny but not really a comedy. Beetlejuice is one of those movies that just doesn’t fit any place.”
When it came to selecting the acting talent which included Jeffery Jones (Howard the Duck), Catherine O’Hara (Home Alone), and Winona Ryder (The Age of Innocence), the director remarked, “Many of the cast come from an improvisational background, so I felt it would serve to balance the movie if much of what the actors did was created on the spot. We didn’t throw out Michael [McDowell]’s script. We just embellished it a lot.” When asked if he had trouble adjusting to live-action filmmaking, Burton answered, “I’ve had fun dealing with the actors on this film and that’s a hard thing to admit because it hasn’t always been the case. Because of my animation background, I was basically in the position of having to deal with my craft on a non-verbal level.”
“I turned down the role because I didn’t quite get it,” admitted Michael Keaton (Mr. Mom) who later changed his mind when Tim Burton suggested that the actor should do his own interpretation. “I went home and thought, ‘Okay, if I would do this role, how would I do it?’ You clearly don’t create him from the inside out. Meaning, what motivates this guy – his childhood or whatever. You work from the outside in.” Eventually, the character analysis had to come to an end. “At some point you show up on the set and just go nuts,” stated Keaton of his mania-induced cinematic performance. “It was rave acting. You rage for twelve or fourteen hours; then you go home tired and beat and exhausted. It was pretty damn cathartic. It was rave and purge acting.”
Shot over ten weeks in Los Angeles and Vermont, the $13 million production had Tim Burton entering into a new realm as a filmmaker, “This was the first time I dealt with a full-blown special effects film and it sure made my life difficult at times,” recollected the director. “The intent was to do them quick, funky, and fun. You can only take that so far when you’ve got ninety adults standing around a set getting pissed off because a mechanical hat isn’t doing what it’s suppose to do. Much of the stuff we did worked live, but ‘Lets do it in post-production’ was a phrase you heard frequently on this show.”
Central to the commercial success of Tim Burton’s pictures is the work of music composer Danny Elfman. “I remember testing Beetlejuice with no music and then with music,” recalled Burton. “The difference was shocking! And it really has to do with the fact that when you’re doing a movie where people don’t know what is going on, the music is the guidepost, it’s the tone and the context.”
Winning an Oscar for Best Makeup and receiving BAFTA nominations for Best Visual Effects and Best Makeup, the picture grossed $32 million in its first two weeks of release. The final box office tally was $74 million worldwide.
“I wasn’t working on it full time,” stated Tim Burton of Batman (1989), the comic book adaptation which cemented his reputation as an A-list Hollywood moviemaker. “I’d just meet with Sam [Hamm] on weekends to discuss the early writing stages. We knocked it into good shape while I directed Beetlejuice, but as a go project it was only greenlighted by Warners when the opening figures of Beetlejuice surprised everyone – including myself!”
As a high school student attending Comic Con in San Diego, Burton saw the production still presentation for Superman (1978); the event was a revelation for him. “The ballroom was packed with people,” began the director. “All the eyes were glued to the screen with this poor Warner guy trying to keep it all under control. Suddenly, one fan stood up and screamed, ‘Superman would never change into his costume on a ledge of a building. I’m going to boycott this movie and tell everyone that you’re destroying the legend!’ Intense applause followed as he stormed out of the hall. Wow, I thought. And from that moment on I always knew in the back of my mind the enormous problems facing anyone taking on a film version of a comic book hero.”
Batman details the rise of The Caped Crusader’s most famous criminal adversary. “What attracted me to the project in the first place were Batman and The Joker – my favourite characters,” said Burton. “Like all great larger-than-life images, they can be explored in any number of different ways.”
“The very first Batman treatment I read was remarkably similar to Superman,” stated the Californian filmmaker. “It had the same light, jokey tone, and the story structure followed Wayne through childhood to his genesis as a crime fighter. I found it all rather disturbing because, while that route was probably fine in the case of Superman, there was absolutely no exploration or acknowledgement of the character’s psychological structure and why he would dress up in a bat suit. In that respect, it was very much like the television series.” Burton went on to add, “The success of the graphic novels made our ideas [his and Sam Hamm’s] far more acceptable. The movie doesn’t wallow in the darkness, but without becoming a psychological tone poem, it addresses all the issues without hammering you over the head. The Dark Knight works on the comic page – it seems to be a direct response to all the light-heartedness that has gone on before [the 1960s TV series] – but it is too dark stylistically for movie purposes. I think the movie is funny without being campy at the expense of the material. The tone is more consistent than in any other film I’ve made.”
Controversy erupted when Michael Keaton was chosen to portray the title character. “The fan reaction is a surface response,” observed Tim Burton. “Michael is very good. Clean and Sober [1988] proved it. He’s funny/dramatic in a way which added to what I was trying to achieve. Taking someone like Michael and making him Batman supported the split-personality idea...He has a lot going on inside, there’s an explosive side, he has a temper and a great amount of anger – that was exactly the Bruce Wayne character, not some unknown, handsome, strong hunk.” Cast first was an Oscar-winner in the role of The Joker which served to strengthen the director’s resolve to select Keaton. “I kept imagining the reviews and hearing the response in my head, ‘Well Jack Nicholson [Five Easy Pieces] is great, but the unknown so-and-so is nothing special.’” One performer who was replaced during the production was Sean Young (No Way Out) which resulted in Kim Basinger (L.A. Confidential) playing the part of journalist and love interest Vicki Vale.
Responsibility for creating the overall look of the picture was given to production designer Anton Furst (The Company of Wolves). “Tim had wanted me to do Beetlejuice but after two exhausting years working with Stanley Kubrick on Full Metal Jacket [1987], I didn’t feel in the position to take on a new film,” explained Furst who had nothing but praise for Burton. “I don’t think I’ve ever felt so naturally in tune with a director conceptually, spiritually, visually or artistically. There was never any problem because we never fought over anything. I often wanted his advice, but when I came up with four ideas in four different directions, he’d always chose the one I liked most.” The two men found themselves sharing a common philosophy towards their work. “When we first met, we both independently mentioned how sick we were of the ILM [Industrial Light & Magic] school of filmmaking. You can’t stun with effects anymore, you have to go back to basics. We both agreed the best special effect we could ever remember seeing was the house in Psycho [1960] because it registered as such a strong image. Impact –that’s what films are about – not effects.”
In designing the urban dwelling that serves as the principal location for the story, Tim Burton and Anton Furst made use of a “retro high-tech” look. “So few great movie cities have been built,” said the director. “Metropolis [1926] and Blade Runner [1982] seem to be the accepted spectrum. We tried so hard to do something different although people tend to lump things into categories. We conceptualized Gotham City as the reverse of New York in its early days. Zoning and construction were thought of in terms of letting light in. So we decided to take that in the opposite direction and darken everything by building up vertically and cramming architecture together.”
To help stem fan backlash toward the movie, the artist associated with the iconic comic book figure was brought onboard as a creative consultant. “Hiring [Bob] Kane was a very intelligent move,” remarked Furst. “He loved what we were doing. We sent over sketches constantly and he kept sending back these little drawings with notes attached saying, ‘Well done boys.’ He came over once to visit the set and when he was shown around, he was totally awe-inspired. Very clever, because when it comes to the American media, just to have it sanctioned by the creator makes it difficult for the [audience] to complain.”
Filmgoers embraced the movie; Batman earned $411 million worldwide. At the Academy Awards the picture won Best Art Direction, while Jack Nicholson was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Comedy or Musical. The international award circuit honoured the film with six nominations at the BAFTAs, including Best Supporting Actor (Nicholson), Best Production Design, Best Visual Effects, Best Costume Design, Best Makeup, and Best Sound. Looking back on the picture, Tim Burton stated, “I like parts of it, but the whole movie is mainly boring to me. It’s OK, but it was more of a cultural phenomenon than a great movie.”
Faced with the inevitable question of directing the next installment of the blockbuster movie franchise, the filmmaker answered, “Sequels are only worthwhile if they give you the opportunity to do something new and interesting. It has to go beyond that, really, because you do the first for the thrill of the unknown. The sequel wipes all that out, so you must explore the next level. I don’t rule out anything if the challenge is exciting.”
Gotham City’s guardian would have to wait. Next on the cinematic agenda for Tim Burton was a reunion with a childhood film idol and a collaboration with an actor who would become his kindred spirit.
Continue to part two.
Short Film Showcase - Vincent (1982)
For more on Tim Burton, visit his official website or fan-site The Tim Burton Collective.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 19/02/10
UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 19th - Sunday 21st February 2010.
Despite the disappointment of losing out to The Hurt Locker at Sunday's British Academy Film Awards Avatar once again returns to the summit of the UK box office chart, banking another £2.8m to push its ten-week gross beyond £83m. Much of this record-breaking haul has come from 3D screenings, although the arrival of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland on March 5th is bound to dent the availability of screens. However, with Disney's ongoing row with Odeon over DVD release windows leading the cinema chain to refuse to show Burton's film, Avatar is likely to continue drawing an audience for the next few weeks at the very least and a £100m haul remains a possibility.
In terms of new releases, Peter Jackson's latest The Lovely Bones could only manage third with £1.6m (which must be considered a disappointment), while Robert E. Howard adaptation Solomon Kane also failed to set the world alight and opens in seventh position with £611k.
Last week's number one film Valentine's Day and horror remake The Wolfman slip three spots to fourth and sixth respectively, with Clint Eastwood's Mandela biopic Invictus tumbling two to finish in ninth. It wasn't an entirely disappointing weekend though as the half-term holidays saw Disney's The Princess and the Frog climb two places to second, with Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief and Astro Boy both managing to hold on to last week's positions. Also benefitting was Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, which climbs one place to finish eighth in its ninth week of release.
On a final note, the top five all manage to break the seven-figure barrier for the second week in a row while the entire top ten exceeds half a million for the first time in more than a year.
Incoming...
Opening this coming Friday is Brendan Fraser / Harrison Ford drama Extraordinary Measures (cert. PG) and John Travolta actioner From Paris With Love (cert. 15) along with Michael Moore documentary Capitalism: A Love Story (cert. 12A), survival horror The Crazies (cert. 15) and rom-com Leap Year (cert. PG) featuring Amy Adams and Matthew Goode.
Also receiving a limited re-release is Howard Hawks' classic comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, starring screen legends Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe.
U.K. Box Office Archive
Despite the disappointment of losing out to The Hurt Locker at Sunday's British Academy Film Awards Avatar once again returns to the summit of the UK box office chart, banking another £2.8m to push its ten-week gross beyond £83m. Much of this record-breaking haul has come from 3D screenings, although the arrival of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland on March 5th is bound to dent the availability of screens. However, with Disney's ongoing row with Odeon over DVD release windows leading the cinema chain to refuse to show Burton's film, Avatar is likely to continue drawing an audience for the next few weeks at the very least and a £100m haul remains a possibility.
In terms of new releases, Peter Jackson's latest The Lovely Bones could only manage third with £1.6m (which must be considered a disappointment), while Robert E. Howard adaptation Solomon Kane also failed to set the world alight and opens in seventh position with £611k.
Last week's number one film Valentine's Day and horror remake The Wolfman slip three spots to fourth and sixth respectively, with Clint Eastwood's Mandela biopic Invictus tumbling two to finish in ninth. It wasn't an entirely disappointing weekend though as the half-term holidays saw Disney's The Princess and the Frog climb two places to second, with Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief and Astro Boy both managing to hold on to last week's positions. Also benefitting was Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, which climbs one place to finish eighth in its ninth week of release.
On a final note, the top five all manage to break the seven-figure barrier for the second week in a row while the entire top ten exceeds half a million for the first time in more than a year.
Pos. | Film | Weekend Gross | Week | Total UK Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Avatar | £2,817,009 | 10 | £83,265,484 |
2 | The Princess and the Frog | £1,725,519 | 3 | £8,873,333 |
3 | The Lovely Bones | £1,637,579 | 1 | £1,637,579 |
4 | Valentine's Day | £1,583,142 | 2 | £7,777,154 |
5 | Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief | £1,487,446 | 2 | £5,225,096 |
6 | The Wolfman | £774,890 | 2 | £4,171,878 |
7 | Solomon Kane | £611,886 | 1 | £611,886 |
8 | Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel | £608,154 | 9 | £23,164,859 |
9 | Invictus | £570,801 | 3 | £3,655,362 |
10 | Astro Boy | £523,215 | 3 | £3,102,327 |
Incoming...
Opening this coming Friday is Brendan Fraser / Harrison Ford drama Extraordinary Measures (cert. PG) and John Travolta actioner From Paris With Love (cert. 15) along with Michael Moore documentary Capitalism: A Love Story (cert. 12A), survival horror The Crazies (cert. 15) and rom-com Leap Year (cert. PG) featuring Amy Adams and Matthew Goode.
Also receiving a limited re-release is Howard Hawks' classic comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, starring screen legends Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe.
U.K. Box Office Archive
Sunday, February 21, 2010
63rd British Academy Film Awards - The Hurt Locker wins big
The biggest night in the British film industry took place in London's Royal Opera House tonight as the 63rd annual BAFTA ceremony honoured outstanding achievement in film from 2009.
Carrying British hopes for glory was coming-of-age drama An Education (dir. Lone Scherfig), tied with Hollywood heavyweights Avatar (dir. James Cameron) and The Hurt Locker (dir. Kathryn Bigelow) on eight nominations apiece including Best Film and Best Direction. Elsewhere Neill Blomkamp's District 9 has seven nominations, with Inglourious Basterds (dir. Quentin Tarantino) and Up (dir. Pete Docter, Bob Peterson) both one behind on six.
And the BAFTA goes to...
We start with a handful of celebrity vox pops from the red carpet including James Cameron, Quentin Tarantino, Mickey Rourke, Terry Gilliam and Matt Dillon before host Jonathon Ross gets the ceremony underway with the usual set of movie-related gags. More star names in the audience pointed out by Ross (Dustin Hoffman, Kate Winslet and Cedric Diggory), a montage of the year's best and now it's time to get the awards underway...
Colin Firth out to present Outstanding British Debut: nominees are Lucy Bailey, Andrew Thompson, Elizabeth Morgan Hemlock, David Pearson (directors/ producers – Mugabe And The White African), Eran Creevy (writer/director – Shifty), Stuart Hazeldine (writer/director – Exam), Duncan Jones (director – Moon), Sam Taylor-Wood (director – Nowhere Boy). And the BAFTA goes to... Duncan Jones for Moon.
Nick Frost and Mackenzie Crook out to present Special Visual Effects: nominees are Avatar, District 9, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Hurt Locker and Star Trek. And the BAFTA goes to... Avatar.
Appreciation for Avatar as the first of the Best Film nominees is profiled. Read our James Cameron profile.
Next up is Best Actor in a Supporting Role, presented by Anna Kendrick: nominares are Alec Baldwin (It's Complicated), Christian McKay (Me and Orson Welles), Alfred Molina (An Education), Stanley Tucci (The Lovely Bones) and Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds). And the BAFTA goes to... Christoph Waltz, hot favourite to repeat this success at the Academy Awards next month.
Early toilet break with Best Costume Design: nominees are Bright Star, Coco Before Chanel, An Education, A Single Man and The Young Victoria. And the BAFTA goes to... The Young Victoria.
Second Best Film nominee... An Education.
Best Make-Up and Hair up next: nominees are Coco Before Chanel, An Education, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Nine and The Young Victoria. And the BAFTA goes to... The Young Victoria. Second in a row for the period romance.
Matt Dillon out to present Best Actress in a Supporting Role: nominees are Anne-Marie Duff (Nowhere Boy), Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air), Anna Kendrick (Up in the Air), Mo'Nique (Precious) and Kristin Scott Thomas (Nowhere Boy). And the BAFTA goes to...Mo'Nique, collected by Precious director Lee Daniels.
Rupert Everett presenting Oustanding British Film: nominees are An Education, Fish Tank, In the Loop, Moon and Nowhere Boy. And the BAFTA goes to... Fish Tank. A surprise there for director Andrea Arnold, winner of a Best Short Film Oscar in 2003 and sporting a hideous green bomber jacket for tonight's ceremony.
Jason Reitman's Up in the Air is the third Best Film nominee. Read our Jason Reitman profile.
Cedric Diggory out to present Best Original Screenplay: nominees are The Hangover (Jon Lucas, Scott Moore), The Hurt Locker (Mark Boal), Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino), A Serious Man (Joel Coen, Ethan Coen) and Up (Bob Peterson, Pete Docter). And the BAFTA goes to... Mark Boal for The Hurt Locker.
Best Production Design up next: nominees are Avatar, District 9, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus and Inglourious Basterds. And the BAFTA goes to... Avatar.
Fourth Best Film nominee... The Hurt Locker. Read our Kathryn Bigelow profile.
Orange Rising Star Award now, presented by last year's winner Noel Clarke and decided by public vote: nominees are Jesse Eisenberg, Nicholas Hoult, Carey Mulligan, Tahar Rahim and Kristen Stewart. And the BAFTA goes to... Kristen Stewart. Good old Twilight fans.
Guy Pearce out to Best Adapted Screenplay: nominees are District 9 (Neill Blomkamp, Terri Tatchell), An Education (Nick Hornby), In the Loop (Jesse Armstrong, Simon Blackwell, Armando Iannucci, Tony Roche), Precious (Geoffrey Fletcher) and Up in the Air (Jason Reitman, Sheldon Turner). And the BAFTA goes to... Sheldon Turner and an absent Jason Reitman for Up in the Air.
A montage honouring those who passed away in the previous twelve months including Jean Simmons, Karl Malden, Jennifer Jones, Edward Woodward, John Hughes, Éric Rohmer, David Carradine, Natasha Richardson, Brittany Murphy and Patrick Swayze. A sad year for the industry with some legendary names departing.
Best Animated Feature Film: nominees are Coraline, Fantastic Mr Fox and Up. And the BAFTA goes to... Up. Pixar bag the award for the third consecutive year. Read our Pixar Animation Studios profile.
On the world cinema front, we head over for Best Film Not in the English Language: nominees are A Prophet, Broken Embraces, Coco Before Chanel, Let the Right One In and The White Ribbon. And the BAFTA goes to... A Prophet. Winner of the Grand Prix at Cannes, the French crime thriller is also a nominee in the Best Foreign Film category at the Academy Awards.
Fifth and final Best Film nominee is Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire.
Clive Owen to present Best Direction: nominees are James Cameron (Avatar), Neill Blomkamp (District 9), Lone Scherfig (An Education), Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker) and Quentin Tarantino (Inglourious Basterds). And the BAFTA goes to... Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker. Bigelow beats Cameron to the coveted award.
Meanwhile, Tarantino realises he's wasted his weekend.
Last year's Best Actress Kate Winslet presenting Best Leading Actor: nominees are Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart), George Clooney (Up in the Air), Colin Firth (A Single Man), Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker) and Andy Serkis (Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll). And the BAFTA goes to... Colin Firth for A Single Man. Can he repeat the feat when he stands as the only Brit to challenge for Best Actor at the Oscars? I'd be surprised.
Best Actor last year for The Wrestler, Mickey Rourke stumbles his way through the contenders for Best Leading Actress: nominees are Carey Mulligan (An Education), Saoirse Ronan (The Lovely Bones), Gabourey Sidibe (Precious), Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia) and Audrey Tautou (Coco Before Chanel). And the BAFTA goes to... Carey Mulligan for An Education. Another British hope at the Academy Awards in the same category.
Dustin Hoffman comes out to present the biggie - Best Film. And the winner is... The Hurt Locker! Avatar is beaten once again as The Hurt Locker continues to add to its impressive list of awards and must surely be front-runner for the Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
To end the night the newly appointed president of BAFTA Prince William comes out to present Vanessa Redgrave with the Academy's highest honour, the BAFTA Fellowship, which must cap an emotional year for the screen legend.
In other categories announced earlier in the night...
Short Film - I Do Air
Short Animation - Mother of Many
Sound - The Hurt Locker
Editing - The Hurt Locker
Cinematography - The Hurt Locker
Music - Up
Final Thoughts - A big, big night for The Hurt Locker, bagging six awards out of eight and destroying the competition. Disappointment surely for Cameron with Avatar collecting just two awards (alongside Up and The Young Victoria) while main British hope An Education is left to make do with just the one. Inglourious Basterds also had to settle for one award from six nominations while District 9 went completely unnoticed.
Roll on March 7th.
Carrying British hopes for glory was coming-of-age drama An Education (dir. Lone Scherfig), tied with Hollywood heavyweights Avatar (dir. James Cameron) and The Hurt Locker (dir. Kathryn Bigelow) on eight nominations apiece including Best Film and Best Direction. Elsewhere Neill Blomkamp's District 9 has seven nominations, with Inglourious Basterds (dir. Quentin Tarantino) and Up (dir. Pete Docter, Bob Peterson) both one behind on six.
And the BAFTA goes to...
We start with a handful of celebrity vox pops from the red carpet including James Cameron, Quentin Tarantino, Mickey Rourke, Terry Gilliam and Matt Dillon before host Jonathon Ross gets the ceremony underway with the usual set of movie-related gags. More star names in the audience pointed out by Ross (Dustin Hoffman, Kate Winslet and Cedric Diggory), a montage of the year's best and now it's time to get the awards underway...
Colin Firth out to present Outstanding British Debut: nominees are Lucy Bailey, Andrew Thompson, Elizabeth Morgan Hemlock, David Pearson (directors/ producers – Mugabe And The White African), Eran Creevy (writer/director – Shifty), Stuart Hazeldine (writer/director – Exam), Duncan Jones (director – Moon), Sam Taylor-Wood (director – Nowhere Boy). And the BAFTA goes to... Duncan Jones for Moon.
Nick Frost and Mackenzie Crook out to present Special Visual Effects: nominees are Avatar, District 9, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Hurt Locker and Star Trek. And the BAFTA goes to... Avatar.
Appreciation for Avatar as the first of the Best Film nominees is profiled. Read our James Cameron profile.
Next up is Best Actor in a Supporting Role, presented by Anna Kendrick: nominares are Alec Baldwin (It's Complicated), Christian McKay (Me and Orson Welles), Alfred Molina (An Education), Stanley Tucci (The Lovely Bones) and Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds). And the BAFTA goes to... Christoph Waltz, hot favourite to repeat this success at the Academy Awards next month.
Early toilet break with Best Costume Design: nominees are Bright Star, Coco Before Chanel, An Education, A Single Man and The Young Victoria. And the BAFTA goes to... The Young Victoria.
Second Best Film nominee... An Education.
Best Make-Up and Hair up next: nominees are Coco Before Chanel, An Education, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Nine and The Young Victoria. And the BAFTA goes to... The Young Victoria. Second in a row for the period romance.
Matt Dillon out to present Best Actress in a Supporting Role: nominees are Anne-Marie Duff (Nowhere Boy), Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air), Anna Kendrick (Up in the Air), Mo'Nique (Precious) and Kristin Scott Thomas (Nowhere Boy). And the BAFTA goes to...Mo'Nique, collected by Precious director Lee Daniels.
Rupert Everett presenting Oustanding British Film: nominees are An Education, Fish Tank, In the Loop, Moon and Nowhere Boy. And the BAFTA goes to... Fish Tank. A surprise there for director Andrea Arnold, winner of a Best Short Film Oscar in 2003 and sporting a hideous green bomber jacket for tonight's ceremony.
Jason Reitman's Up in the Air is the third Best Film nominee. Read our Jason Reitman profile.
Cedric Diggory out to present Best Original Screenplay: nominees are The Hangover (Jon Lucas, Scott Moore), The Hurt Locker (Mark Boal), Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino), A Serious Man (Joel Coen, Ethan Coen) and Up (Bob Peterson, Pete Docter). And the BAFTA goes to... Mark Boal for The Hurt Locker.
Best Production Design up next: nominees are Avatar, District 9, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus and Inglourious Basterds. And the BAFTA goes to... Avatar.
Fourth Best Film nominee... The Hurt Locker. Read our Kathryn Bigelow profile.
Orange Rising Star Award now, presented by last year's winner Noel Clarke and decided by public vote: nominees are Jesse Eisenberg, Nicholas Hoult, Carey Mulligan, Tahar Rahim and Kristen Stewart. And the BAFTA goes to... Kristen Stewart. Good old Twilight fans.
Guy Pearce out to Best Adapted Screenplay: nominees are District 9 (Neill Blomkamp, Terri Tatchell), An Education (Nick Hornby), In the Loop (Jesse Armstrong, Simon Blackwell, Armando Iannucci, Tony Roche), Precious (Geoffrey Fletcher) and Up in the Air (Jason Reitman, Sheldon Turner). And the BAFTA goes to... Sheldon Turner and an absent Jason Reitman for Up in the Air.
A montage honouring those who passed away in the previous twelve months including Jean Simmons, Karl Malden, Jennifer Jones, Edward Woodward, John Hughes, Éric Rohmer, David Carradine, Natasha Richardson, Brittany Murphy and Patrick Swayze. A sad year for the industry with some legendary names departing.
Best Animated Feature Film: nominees are Coraline, Fantastic Mr Fox and Up. And the BAFTA goes to... Up. Pixar bag the award for the third consecutive year. Read our Pixar Animation Studios profile.
On the world cinema front, we head over for Best Film Not in the English Language: nominees are A Prophet, Broken Embraces, Coco Before Chanel, Let the Right One In and The White Ribbon. And the BAFTA goes to... A Prophet. Winner of the Grand Prix at Cannes, the French crime thriller is also a nominee in the Best Foreign Film category at the Academy Awards.
Fifth and final Best Film nominee is Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire.
Clive Owen to present Best Direction: nominees are James Cameron (Avatar), Neill Blomkamp (District 9), Lone Scherfig (An Education), Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker) and Quentin Tarantino (Inglourious Basterds). And the BAFTA goes to... Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker. Bigelow beats Cameron to the coveted award.
Meanwhile, Tarantino realises he's wasted his weekend.
Last year's Best Actress Kate Winslet presenting Best Leading Actor: nominees are Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart), George Clooney (Up in the Air), Colin Firth (A Single Man), Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker) and Andy Serkis (Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll). And the BAFTA goes to... Colin Firth for A Single Man. Can he repeat the feat when he stands as the only Brit to challenge for Best Actor at the Oscars? I'd be surprised.
Best Actor last year for The Wrestler, Mickey Rourke stumbles his way through the contenders for Best Leading Actress: nominees are Carey Mulligan (An Education), Saoirse Ronan (The Lovely Bones), Gabourey Sidibe (Precious), Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia) and Audrey Tautou (Coco Before Chanel). And the BAFTA goes to... Carey Mulligan for An Education. Another British hope at the Academy Awards in the same category.
Dustin Hoffman comes out to present the biggie - Best Film. And the winner is... The Hurt Locker! Avatar is beaten once again as The Hurt Locker continues to add to its impressive list of awards and must surely be front-runner for the Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
To end the night the newly appointed president of BAFTA Prince William comes out to present Vanessa Redgrave with the Academy's highest honour, the BAFTA Fellowship, which must cap an emotional year for the screen legend.
In other categories announced earlier in the night...
Short Film - I Do Air
Short Animation - Mother of Many
Sound - The Hurt Locker
Editing - The Hurt Locker
Cinematography - The Hurt Locker
Music - Up
Final Thoughts - A big, big night for The Hurt Locker, bagging six awards out of eight and destroying the competition. Disappointment surely for Cameron with Avatar collecting just two awards (alongside Up and The Young Victoria) while main British hope An Education is left to make do with just the one. Inglourious Basterds also had to settle for one award from six nominations while District 9 went completely unnoticed.
Roll on March 7th.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Movies... For Free! Häxan (1922)
"Movies... For Free!", showcasing classic movies that have fallen out of copyright and are available freely from the public domain (with streaming video!)...
Häxan a.k.a Witchcraft Through the Ages, 1922.
Directed by Benjamin Christensen.
Starring Benjamin Christensen and Maren Pedersen.
Danish filmmaker Benjamin Christensen's Häxan is a documentary examining the history of witches and demons within medieval culture and is inspired by the director's own studies into The Malleus Maleficarum, a treatise on witchcraft by two Catholic Inquisitors which is said to have been one of the key factors in the witch-hunts of Early Modern Europe.
The film begins by illustrating the medieval view of the heavens and in particular Hell through the use of photographs, models and animation, before a series of dramatic reconstructions including The Devil (Christensen) tormenting a group of monks and a fameous, controversial sequence whereby The Witch (Pedersen) describes in great detail the events of the Witches' Sabbath. Finally Christensen looks to demonstrate how the medieval superstitions could be explained today, arguing that those accused of witchcraft may have suffered from mental illnesses unrecognised by the science of the time.
The most expensive silent film in Scandinavian history, Häxan was highly controversial due to its graphic content (including torture and sexual perversion) and was banned from release in the United States. A re-edited version running just 77 minutes and featuring narration from the novelist William S. Burroughs was released in 1968, while the full-length original is presented below...
Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.
Click here to view all entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.
Häxan a.k.a Witchcraft Through the Ages, 1922.
Directed by Benjamin Christensen.
Starring Benjamin Christensen and Maren Pedersen.
Danish filmmaker Benjamin Christensen's Häxan is a documentary examining the history of witches and demons within medieval culture and is inspired by the director's own studies into The Malleus Maleficarum, a treatise on witchcraft by two Catholic Inquisitors which is said to have been one of the key factors in the witch-hunts of Early Modern Europe.
The film begins by illustrating the medieval view of the heavens and in particular Hell through the use of photographs, models and animation, before a series of dramatic reconstructions including The Devil (Christensen) tormenting a group of monks and a fameous, controversial sequence whereby The Witch (Pedersen) describes in great detail the events of the Witches' Sabbath. Finally Christensen looks to demonstrate how the medieval superstitions could be explained today, arguing that those accused of witchcraft may have suffered from mental illnesses unrecognised by the science of the time.
The most expensive silent film in Scandinavian history, Häxan was highly controversial due to its graphic content (including torture and sexual perversion) and was banned from release in the United States. A re-edited version running just 77 minutes and featuring narration from the novelist William S. Burroughs was released in 1968, while the full-length original is presented below...
Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.
Click here to view all entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Kick-Ass superhero contest and international trailer
Be your own hero! Win big with Kick-Ass...
To promote the release of upcoming comedy Kick-Ass, Universal are asking you to create your own superhero with the chance of winning a unique full-sized movie poster of your character, along with a host of other prizes. Simply think of a name, make a costume and upload a video of yourself in character to the film's Youtube page (10 random subscribers to the channel will also bag a FCUK Kick-Ass t-shirt). Competition closes on April 9th.
Directed by Matthew Vaughn (Layer Cake, Stardust) and based on Mark Millar's comic book series, Kick-Ass tells the story of average teenager Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson), a comic-book fanboy who decides to take his obsession as inspiration to become a real-life superhero. As any good superhero would, he chooses a new name -- Kick-Ass -- assembles a suit and mask to wear, and gets to work fighting crime. There's only one problem standing in his way: Kick-Ass has absolutely no superpowers.
His life is forever changed as he inspires a subculture of copy cats, is hunted by assorted violent and unpleasant characters, and meets up with a pair of crazed vigilantes, including an 11-year-old sword-wielding dynamo, Hit Girl (Chloe Moretz) and her father, Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) - and forges a friendship with another fledging super hero, Red Mist (Christopher Mintz-Plasse). But thanks to the scheming of a local mob boss Frank D'Amico (Mark Strong), that new alliance will be put to the test.
Kick-Ass international trailer:
Kick-Ass is released in UK cinemas on March 26th 2010. Visit the offical site for more info.
To promote the release of upcoming comedy Kick-Ass, Universal are asking you to create your own superhero with the chance of winning a unique full-sized movie poster of your character, along with a host of other prizes. Simply think of a name, make a costume and upload a video of yourself in character to the film's Youtube page (10 random subscribers to the channel will also bag a FCUK Kick-Ass t-shirt). Competition closes on April 9th.
Directed by Matthew Vaughn (Layer Cake, Stardust) and based on Mark Millar's comic book series, Kick-Ass tells the story of average teenager Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson), a comic-book fanboy who decides to take his obsession as inspiration to become a real-life superhero. As any good superhero would, he chooses a new name -- Kick-Ass -- assembles a suit and mask to wear, and gets to work fighting crime. There's only one problem standing in his way: Kick-Ass has absolutely no superpowers.
His life is forever changed as he inspires a subculture of copy cats, is hunted by assorted violent and unpleasant characters, and meets up with a pair of crazed vigilantes, including an 11-year-old sword-wielding dynamo, Hit Girl (Chloe Moretz) and her father, Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) - and forges a friendship with another fledging super hero, Red Mist (Christopher Mintz-Plasse). But thanks to the scheming of a local mob boss Frank D'Amico (Mark Strong), that new alliance will be put to the test.
Kick-Ass international trailer:
Kick-Ass is released in UK cinemas on March 26th 2010. Visit the offical site for more info.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Toy Story 3 - new UK trailer released
Disney-Pixar have released a new UK trailer for their upcoming sequel Toy Story 3 that reveals a little about the plot and provides a look at some of the new characters including Ken (Michael Keaton) and Lotso (Ned Beatty).
Toy Story 1 and 2 editor Lee Unkrich takes over the director's chair vacated by Pixar founder and current Disney CCO John Lasseter for this third installment, which sees Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz (Tim Allen) and company accidentally donated to the Sunnyside Daycare Center when Andy goes to college.
Offered the chance of a new start by the current residents (including the aforementioned Ken and Lotso, along with others voiced by Whoopi Goldberg, Timothy Dalton, Bonnie Hunt and Jeff Garlin), it soon becomes clear that the new acquaintances are not as friendly as they first appear after the gang decide to escape and reunite with their owner.
Judging by this latest trailer, Toy Story 3 is a cert to continue Pixar's incredible run when it opens in Disney Digital 3D this summer.
For more on Pixar, check out Trevor Hogg's comprehensive profile on the animation studio here.
Toy Story 1 and 2 editor Lee Unkrich takes over the director's chair vacated by Pixar founder and current Disney CCO John Lasseter for this third installment, which sees Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz (Tim Allen) and company accidentally donated to the Sunnyside Daycare Center when Andy goes to college.
Offered the chance of a new start by the current residents (including the aforementioned Ken and Lotso, along with others voiced by Whoopi Goldberg, Timothy Dalton, Bonnie Hunt and Jeff Garlin), it soon becomes clear that the new acquaintances are not as friendly as they first appear after the gang decide to escape and reunite with their owner.
Judging by this latest trailer, Toy Story 3 is a cert to continue Pixar's incredible run when it opens in Disney Digital 3D this summer.
For more on Pixar, check out Trevor Hogg's comprehensive profile on the animation studio here.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Absurdity & Carnage: A Coen Brothers Profile (Part 4)
Trevor Hogg profiles the careers of filmmaking siblings the Coen brothers in the fourth of a four part feature... read parts one, two and three.
Working once again with celebrity actor George Clooney, Joel and Ethan Coen found themselves being accused of having “gone Hollywood” with the release of Intolerable Cruelty in 2003. Morally compromised divorce lawyer Miles Massey (Clooney) falls for a conniving serial divorcé, Marylin Rexroth (Catherine Zeta-Jones).
Channeling the suave comic spirit of Cary Grant, Clooney enjoyed performing in the romantic comedy, “The fun part of these characters is that they both don’t really realize the trouble they’re in emotionally until they run into each other.” Catherine Zeta-Jones (Chicago) found her role to be challenging, “I didn’t want Marilyn to be that deliciously bitchy, because I wanted people to like her. And I wanted George, and my other husband, to like me.” Commenting on how she perceived Marilyn, Zeta-Jones declared, “She really has no idea how much chaos she can create. She is like the eye of the storm. The tornado – all the craziness that happens around her – she just waltzes through it.”
Cast alongside George Clooney and Catherine Zeta-Jones are Billy Bob Thorton, Geoffrey Rush (Quills), Cedric the Entertainer (Be Cool), and Richard Jenkins (The Visitor); capturing their performances on film was veteran Coen brothers collaborator and cinematographer Roger Deakins. “We wanted to make a glossy picture,” says Deakins. “The film is about high-society, rich people, and we wanted the people and the locations to look rich, classy, more glossy than what we usually do on [Coen brothers'] features.
Intolerable Cruelty marked two significant changes for the Coens. The script was composed with three other writers and the movie footage was assembled digitally. “It’s so much more efficient,” Ethan remarked on the reason for embracing computer editing, “and so much easier to mark where you want to mark and review what you’ve marked, as opposed to rolling back and forth on a Moviola and using the brake and getting a general idea within a few frames. It’s also infinitely easier to look at alternate takes as opposed to handling all this film. You find yourself looking at more. You find yourself being more comprehensive or exhaustive than you would be if you were still working in film.” Joel agreed. “You can cut about twice as fast as we’re used to. That’s kind of an issue for us, since we don’t start cutting until after we finish shooting.
Earning twice as much as its $60 million budget, Intolerable Cruelty was well received by film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader, “The Coens do an efficient job of stamping their signature grotesquerie on sumptuous Beverly Hills and Las Vegas settings and ladling on gallows of humour and malice, sometimes with the verve of early Robert Zemeckis.” Ruthe Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle was far less impressed with the picture; she wrote, “Two-thirds through, Intolerably Cruelty shifts to Las Vegas and runs out of steam, like a gambler after an all-nighter.”
Remaking the 1955 British screwball comedy The Ladykillers (2004) was next on the cinema agenda for the American filmmakers though it was not originally planned that way. Initially, the movie was to be directed by the Coen brothers’ former cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld. “It wasn’t actually something that ever crossed our minds,” explained Joel, “until he [Sonnenfeld] brought it to us and then Ethan and I looked at the movie again, which we hadn’t seen probably since we were kids. We thought this was something we could do something with and have fun with. Then Barry decided not to do it, and we decided we wanted to do it.”
Under the disguise of being musicians, a group of criminals led by Prof. G.H. Dorr (Tom Hanks) rent a basement apartment from the elderly widow Marva Munson (Irma P. Hall) with the intentions of tunneling into the vault of the neighbouring casino.
Finding an actor who could play the mastermind of the casino robbery was not an easy one for the Coens. “It’s a big part,” stated Ethan, “in a sense almost theatrical, and we felt there was a danger if it was in the wrong hands.” The two Minneapolis-born siblings decided to work with Oscar-winner Tom Hanks (Cast Away) who accidentally developed a signature cackle for the dubious character. “The first time I did it there was a joke at the end of one scene,” recalled Hanks, “and I think Professor Dorr surprised himself that he had actually stumbled on such a witticism. It was like, ‘Oh, I’m actually making a joke here,’ so it began there, and it was a question of, how deep is that well? How often can you go to it, to the rat quiver source? It kind of took over the entire body like a petite mal seizure.”
Tom Hanks also created a personal history for his charlatan film persona. “He says he is from Mississippi, although where, who knows? He says he’s on sabbatical from the institution where he teaches, the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg, which is true, but I think he’s been on sabbatical for fourteen years. He was fired because of a hasty decision by the dean in order to avoid the sexual harassment suit. I do believe he studied at the Sorbonne, but I think he studied drinking. He was essentially accepted, read a couple of the Flaubert books, and then spent the rest of his time in bars.” Hanks did not have any problems handling the endless pontifications by Prof. G.H. Dorr. “The good news is that it’s not unlike doing Shaw or Shakespeare in that the ideas are so easily connected that, once you do the mechanics of memorizing, it just flows out of you.”
Bearing witness to all the cinematic shenanigans is Gwain MacSam, a foulmouthed casino janitor played by Marlon Wayans (Requiem for a Dream). “He has the audience point of view,” remarked Wayans. “He says what everybody else is thinking. He’s a lot smarter in some ways than Hanks’ character, who spits out the big words. He’s like, ‘I don’t know big words, but I know a thing or two. I know a shady man and that Pancake is shady.’’’ The cast for the picture also featured the acting talents of J.K. Simmons (Juno), Tzi Ma (The Quiet American), and Ryan Hurst (Patch Adams).
All the work Tom Hanks put into his role did not go unnoticed by Claudia Puig of USA Today, who wrote, “It is Hanks pitch-perfect timing and eccentric portrayal that makes the movie. You can’t wait to hear what sardonically archaic utterance comes out of his mouth next.” Not everyone was impressed. Film critic Anthony Lane of The New Yorker, scathingly wrote, “Everybody pulls a silly face, or sports a behavioral tic, or shouts his lines a little to loud, for too long, with the camera hanging in close to record the comic effect. After half an hour we realize that instead of enjoying a funny film, we were being lightly bullied into finding fun where precious little exists.”
At the Cannes Film Festival, The Ladykillers was nominated for the Palme d’Or. The picture, which saw Joel and Ethan share the directing and producing credits for the first time, earned $77 million worldwide.
Taking on the role of producers, the Coens supported John Turturro’s directorial debut Romance & Cigarettes (2006). The musical romantic-comedy featured performances by Kate Winslet (Titanic), Susan Sarandon (Atlantic City), and Christopher Walken (The Deer Hunter) as well as songs from Tom Jones, James Brown, and Bruce Springsteen.
Asked to contribute one of the eighteen short films for a project entitled Paris, je t’aime (2006), Joel and Ethan worked with Steve Buscemi to create Tuileries. An American tourist (Buscemi) traveling on the Paris Metro unwittingly becomes drawn into a conflict when he makes eye contact with a feuding young couple (Axel Kiener and Julie Bataille). “We met him in an audition,” recollected Joel regarding Buscemi who has appeared in four of the Coen brothers’ films. “When there’s a great collaboration like the one with him, you want to work together again.” Ethan sheepishly admitted, “We always end up killing his character for some reason.” As to whether the actor resents getting killed, Ethan answered, “He hasn’t complained yet. Maybe that’s why we continue to do it.”
After attempting to write a screenplay during the 1980s, author Cormac McCarthy abandoned the idea and expanded the tale into a novel. A year before No Country For Old Men was to be published, producer Scott Rudin acquired the movie rights and approached the Coens about adapting the story for the big screen.
While out hunting in Texas, Vietnam War veteran Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) comes across the aftermath of a drug deal gone fatally wrong, and a satchel containing two million dollars. Moss takes the satchel only to find himself becoming the target of a homicidal killer (Javier Bardem) seeking to reclaim the stolen money.
Acknowledging that the major problem in converting the works of Cormac McCarthy into movies is their graphic content, Joel remarked, “Violence is an important element in many of the books [he] writes, and it seems to us to be completely misguided to try to soften that in the adaptation.” A more pressing concern for Joel was figuring out how to translate the structure of the novel cinematically, “The initial challenge was what to do in those alternating chapters in the book. You get monologues from the sheriff essentially unrelated to the story. We didn’t want to eliminate them entirely.”
Two of the three critical film roles were cast early on. Native Texan and Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive) was signed to play local Sheriff Ed Tom Bell and Spanish actor Javier Bardem (Before Night Falls) for part of the relentless hired assassin Anton Chigurh. The latter role could easily come across as a mechanical and cold-hearted killer which was something the Coens wanted to avoid. “Clearly he’s not the good guy; I’ll concede that,” said Ethan. “I don’t even know that I’d describe the character as evil. He’s a little more complicated than that, a little more elusive than that. He’s mysterious, he’s withheld, so that was a casting challenge in a way. I have no idea why we thought about Javier except we thought that whatever Javier supplies, he’s a great actor and it’ll be interesting.” Aiding Bardem’s menacing performance as a murderer who uses a cattle gun as his weapon of choice is the actor’s onscreen appearance. “The wardrobe department had found this picture of a guy at a bar in West Texas in 1979 and it was that alarming haircut and actually that kind of wardrobe as well. And we looked at it and thought, well, he looks like a sociopath.”
Choosing an actor to play Llewelyn Moss was a long and drawn out audition process for the Coen brothers. “Tommy Lee Jones and Javier having been cast, the third person had to be able to hold his weight with those two actors,” stated Ethan. “That’s setting the bar pretty high. We saw everybody and we hadn’t met anybody we liked and whom we felt wouldn’t be something of a letdown coming from Tommy to Javier to person X.” Due to the persistence of his agent, Josh Brolin (Milk) was able to get the Coens to agree to meet with him on their last casting call for the movie. “They just hired me,” recollected Brolin, “and said, ‘We really get a sense from you that you’re right for this part. So come up with something interesting.’” On how he perceived Moss, the actor stated, “I think he’s an incredibly heartfelt, compassionate character just in the way the story goes. The fact that he goes back and gives water to what we call “agua man.” It gets him into a lot of trouble. He would have had major obstacles anyway but that one in particular got him shot.”
Playing the role of the ill-fated wife of Llewelyn Moss, is Kelly Macdonald (Gosford Park) who had to forego her Scottish accent for a Texan one. “She wasn't your typical trailer trash kind of character,” stated Macdonald of Carla Jean Moss. “At first you think she's one thing and by the end of the film you realize that she's not quite as naïve as she might come across. And it's not like she's just following her husband blindly. She goes along with his plan but it's because there's a real love there and a real respect.”
Josh Brolin, who had broken his collarbone in a motorcycle accident a couple of weeks before shooting began, was glad he did not abandon the picture despite the excruciating pain. “The great thing about No Country for Old Men, more than these other movies, is that there are a lot of questions that surface for people and they want to talk about it, which I think is just so satisfying as a filmmaker or an actor…I can’t remember the last movie I saw that I’ve thought about for days.” As for the controversial conclusion of the film, Brolin said, “The reaction only defines the fact that we chose a good thing. If people weren’t reactionary to the ending, then we would not have done our jobs.”
Made on a budget of $25 million, No Country for Old Men earned $162 million worldwide and was nominated for eight Academy Awards; it won the Oscars for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Javier Bardem), Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay. At the BAFTAs, the movie received nine nominations and was awarded with the trophies for Best Cinematography, Best Director, and Best Supporting Actor (Bardem). The Golden Globes lauded the picture with Best Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor (Bardem) while the American Film Institute listed it as the Movie of the Year for 2007.
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Cannes Film Festival, Joel and Ethan along with previous winners of the event created a series of short films called Chacun son cinema (To Each His Own Cinema) in 2007; the Coens’ contribution was called World Cinema starring Josh Brolin as a rancher who wanders into a repertory theatre; he seeks the advice of the ticket booth salesman on whether to see Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game (1939) or Climates (2006) by Nuri Bilge Ceylon.
Seven years after their aborted attempt to work with Brad Pitt, Joel and Ethan cast him in Burn After Reading (2008); Pitt was not the only actor making his Coen brother film debut but also John Malkovich (Places in the Heart) and Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton). Summarizing the dark satire, Joel declared that the story “is about the culture of the Central Intelligence Agency and the culture of physical fitness in Washington, D.C. and what happens when those two worlds collide. It’s also about internet dating.”
Accompanying the acting newcomers were veteran Coen collaborators Frances McDormand and George Clooney. “The day we wrapped,” recalled Ethan, “we called wrap on George’s last shot, and he said, ‘All right, that’s it. I’ve played my last idiot.’ So we told him it was sad that he wouldn’t be working with us anymore.” Joining in on the subject, Joel added, “George loves to play idiots for us. We always have a really good time with him.” Ethan went on to say, “George is interesting. The last two movies we’ve done with him, our discussion of the character would take place in the hallway about five minutes before we started shooting.”
Tilda Swinton marveled about the quality of the screenplay. “The script is absolutely written down on paper. You mess with that at your peril because they write it so well. How could you possibly improve it? It feels like the invitation to play with them is exactly that, it's come and let’s all amuse ourselves with this script.” John Malkovich agreed with Swinton, “As per Tilda's remarks, there is nothing to change or improve with a good script. You just do it. There is a reason they say a football field has boundaries. There are a million ways to do a good script within those boundaries.” Playing a moronic fitness club trainer who attempts to enter into the world of espionage so to pay for a co-worker’s cosmetic surgery was not a daunting role for Brad Pitt, “You just start understanding their arithmetic, how they view the world.”
“If we put actors in comedies who aren't normally associated with comedies, it's just simply a reflection of our interest in them as actors,” explained Joel. “Most of the parts in this movie were written for the people who played them.” Despite the presence of box office stars, egos did not rule the film set. “When big actors work on our movies,” said Joel, “it's a pretty stripped-down version of what they're used to on a full-blown, Hollywood studio picture. Those two guys, Brad Pitt and George Clooney, we know well enough for it to be like working with friends.”
With Roger Deakins unavailable due to a scheduling conflict, Joel and Ethan recruited cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (Children of Men) to shoot the picture. Despite Burn After Reading being set in Washington, D.C., most of the principal photography took place in Brooklyn Heights as the two moviemaking siblings wanted to stay close to their New York City-based families.
Outperforming its Oscar-winning predeccesor at the box office by $2 million, the picture earned $164 million worldwide. Film critic Lisa Kennedy wrote in The Denver Post, “The ensemble is at once loose and pitch perfect. Hardly one of them plays a wholly likeable person, yet each reveals the desperate or stupid humanity of their characters.” David Denby of The New Yorker begged to differ in his review, “Even black comedy requires that the filmmakers love someone, and the mock cruelties in Burn After Reading come off as a case of terminal misanthropy.”
Burn After Reading received BAFTAs nominations for Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor (Brad Pitt), and Best Supporting Actress (Tilda Swinton); while at the Golden Globes, it was nominated for Best Picture – Comedy or Musical and Best Actress – Comedy or Musical (Frances McDormand).
By placing their Jewish heritage into the forefront with A Serious Man (2009), the Coen brothers have been constantly asked if the movie is autobiographical. “I guess everything having to do with your background has some influence on how you tell stories,” reflected Joel. “There were other things which were probably much more culturally influential on us than that in particular, things like television, pop culture that other kids are exposed to at the time.” In regards to the coincident that the protagonist of the story shares the same profession as his family’s patriarch, Joel remarked, “Our father was a university professor, but beyond that, he wasn't really anything like the character in the movie.”
Like his Biblical predecessor Job, Larry Gopnick (Michael Stuhlbarg), a Jewish physics professor and family man, encounters one personal catastrophe after another.
“If you go to theatre in New York, you’re going to know Michael,” said Joel of his leading man who was making his cinematic debut in the picture. “He read for two parts: for Larry and also for Uncle Arthur. We knew that we would use him but we weren’t sure at first for which part, which has never happened to us before. It’s a very difficult role: it’s very passive but, at the same time, he has to carry the movie.”
“I wouldn’t say that Larry’s anxiety rubbed off on me,” stated Michael Stuhlbarg, “but I did have to try to live through [the role] as truly as I could. My job is to ask questions of each dramatic circumstance and then try to make it concrete.” For Stuhlbarg, the message of the story extends beyond the big screen, “I think the quote at the beginning of the movie, ‘Accept with simplicity everything that happens to you’, has resonance for both that first parable and the rest of the movie. It's a goal to shoot for in one's life, and he tries to do that the best that he can. I don't know that there's much more one can do. I've found in my own life, if you try to struggle against what the universe is telling you, you set yourself up for more of a battle.”
Explaining why the timing was right to produce the script which was written a number of years ago, Ethan replied, “It would have been hard to do this early on. For one thing, who would give somebody money for this movie about a loser in the Midwest as a first feature? So the fact that we are established helps. But also, who’s interested in their childhood when they’re only in their twenties and their thirties?” A prevailing concern for the Coens was how the members of their spiritual community would react, “We were both curious about whether there would be hostility, but religious Jews who’ve seen it so far have been surprisingly open to it. I guess one’s concern is that a lot of Jews see things through the prism of ‘Is this good for the Jews?’”
Film critic Ann Hornaday wrote in The Washington Post, “Mostly, A Serious Man succeeds because it engages questions worth asking. What is integrity? Does our atavistic need for stories illuminate the meaning of life or further obfuscate it? What does it mean to be good and how are we to achieve it?” For Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News, there was nothing cerebral about the story, “Since everyone is turned into such a caricature, the answers feel optional. It’s hard to forget that Larry’s fate is being controlled not by God or luck or his own worst instincts, but the Coens.”
Earning $21 million worldwide, A Serious Man has been nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Oscars. The BAFTAs and the Writers Guild of America also rewarded the movie with nominations for Best Original Screenplay. At the Golden Globes, Michael Stuhlbarg was up for Best Actor – Comedy or Musical.
Though the much rumoured sequel for The Big Lebowski has yet to come to fruition, it has not prevented the Coen brothers from collaborating once again with Jeff Bridges. Trading the role of “The Dude” for one made famous by “The Duke”, Bridges stars as U.S. Marshall Rooster Cogburn who assists Mattie Ross, a teenage girl seeking to avenge the murder of her father. Scheduled for a Christmas Day release in 2010, True Grit features Matt Damon (Good Will Hunting) as La Boeuf, the Texas Ranger who joins in the manhunt while Josh Brolin plays the killer Tom Chaney.
“We saw it [the original movie] as kids,” recalled Ethan. “It made very little impression on me. We subsequently both read the book [written by Charles Portis] and the book made a huge impression on us, and I guess that’s why we’re interested in doing the movie.” Questioned why he was not inspired by the cinematic adaptation in which John Wayne (The Alamo) won an Academy Award, Ethan answered, "It's partly a question of point-of-view. The book is entirely in the voice of the fourteen year old girl. That sort of tips the feeling of it over a certain way. I think [the book is] much funnier than the movie was so I think, unfortunately, they lost a lot of humour in both the situations and in her voice. It also ends differently than the movie did. You see the main character — the little girl — twenty-five years later when she's an adult." He went on to add, "Another way in which it's a little bit different from the movie — and maybe this is just because of the time the movie was made — is that it's a lot tougher and more violent than the movie reflects. Which is part of what's interesting about it."
Other projects in development for the Coens are: Hail, Caesar!, a 1920s comedy about a group of idiots attempting to stage a play based on the Greek tragedy; a remake of the Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules) and Shirley MacLaine (Terms of Endearment) jewelry theft picture Gambit (1966); Suburbicon, a dark comedy which George Clooney may direct; and an adaptation of Michael Chabon’s alternative world history and murder mystery novel The Yiddish Policemen’s Union.
“It’s funny, as a film director, you don’t meet other directors often,” reflected Joel. “In New York you can live your whole life in the film business and, if you choose, have nothing to do with other people involved in the same business. That’s one of the nice things about New York – It’s not a company town like L.A.. It’s the actors who meet lots of film directors, because they go from movie to movie. So most of the directors I know are people I met through Fran. I’m very good friends with John Boorman [Deliverance], for example, because of Fran doing a movie, Beyond Ragoon [1995], with him.”
Ethan is not surprised that A-list performers are drawn to the characters composed by him and Joel. “There are a lot more good actors out there than there are good parts,” reasoned Ethan, “so if you write something that’s interesting to an actor, you’ll have good actors to choose from.” When it comes to the subject matter for their movies, Ethan sheepishly admitted, “It seems we’re incapable of writing a movie which, in one way or another, doesn’t get contaminated by comic elements.”
Joel and Ethan Coen do not view themselves as a singular creative entity. “The work that we do together reflects the point at which our interests intersect,” remarked Joel. The end result has been a filmmaking collaboration which has spanned over twenty-five years and fourteen feature length pictures. “I can’t watch our old movies – I’m overcome with a fog of boredom,” confessed Ethan. Joel echoed his brother’s sentiment, “I just see it as moving from story to story. There’s no development, except you try to do something a little different each time, different at least from what you did just previous to it, so you keep the exercise interesting to yourself.”
For more on the Coen brothers visit fansites You Know, For Kids! and Coenesque.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
Working once again with celebrity actor George Clooney, Joel and Ethan Coen found themselves being accused of having “gone Hollywood” with the release of Intolerable Cruelty in 2003. Morally compromised divorce lawyer Miles Massey (Clooney) falls for a conniving serial divorcé, Marylin Rexroth (Catherine Zeta-Jones).
Channeling the suave comic spirit of Cary Grant, Clooney enjoyed performing in the romantic comedy, “The fun part of these characters is that they both don’t really realize the trouble they’re in emotionally until they run into each other.” Catherine Zeta-Jones (Chicago) found her role to be challenging, “I didn’t want Marilyn to be that deliciously bitchy, because I wanted people to like her. And I wanted George, and my other husband, to like me.” Commenting on how she perceived Marilyn, Zeta-Jones declared, “She really has no idea how much chaos she can create. She is like the eye of the storm. The tornado – all the craziness that happens around her – she just waltzes through it.”
Cast alongside George Clooney and Catherine Zeta-Jones are Billy Bob Thorton, Geoffrey Rush (Quills), Cedric the Entertainer (Be Cool), and Richard Jenkins (The Visitor); capturing their performances on film was veteran Coen brothers collaborator and cinematographer Roger Deakins. “We wanted to make a glossy picture,” says Deakins. “The film is about high-society, rich people, and we wanted the people and the locations to look rich, classy, more glossy than what we usually do on [Coen brothers'] features.
Intolerable Cruelty marked two significant changes for the Coens. The script was composed with three other writers and the movie footage was assembled digitally. “It’s so much more efficient,” Ethan remarked on the reason for embracing computer editing, “and so much easier to mark where you want to mark and review what you’ve marked, as opposed to rolling back and forth on a Moviola and using the brake and getting a general idea within a few frames. It’s also infinitely easier to look at alternate takes as opposed to handling all this film. You find yourself looking at more. You find yourself being more comprehensive or exhaustive than you would be if you were still working in film.” Joel agreed. “You can cut about twice as fast as we’re used to. That’s kind of an issue for us, since we don’t start cutting until after we finish shooting.
Earning twice as much as its $60 million budget, Intolerable Cruelty was well received by film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader, “The Coens do an efficient job of stamping their signature grotesquerie on sumptuous Beverly Hills and Las Vegas settings and ladling on gallows of humour and malice, sometimes with the verve of early Robert Zemeckis.” Ruthe Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle was far less impressed with the picture; she wrote, “Two-thirds through, Intolerably Cruelty shifts to Las Vegas and runs out of steam, like a gambler after an all-nighter.”
Remaking the 1955 British screwball comedy The Ladykillers (2004) was next on the cinema agenda for the American filmmakers though it was not originally planned that way. Initially, the movie was to be directed by the Coen brothers’ former cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld. “It wasn’t actually something that ever crossed our minds,” explained Joel, “until he [Sonnenfeld] brought it to us and then Ethan and I looked at the movie again, which we hadn’t seen probably since we were kids. We thought this was something we could do something with and have fun with. Then Barry decided not to do it, and we decided we wanted to do it.”
Under the disguise of being musicians, a group of criminals led by Prof. G.H. Dorr (Tom Hanks) rent a basement apartment from the elderly widow Marva Munson (Irma P. Hall) with the intentions of tunneling into the vault of the neighbouring casino.
Finding an actor who could play the mastermind of the casino robbery was not an easy one for the Coens. “It’s a big part,” stated Ethan, “in a sense almost theatrical, and we felt there was a danger if it was in the wrong hands.” The two Minneapolis-born siblings decided to work with Oscar-winner Tom Hanks (Cast Away) who accidentally developed a signature cackle for the dubious character. “The first time I did it there was a joke at the end of one scene,” recalled Hanks, “and I think Professor Dorr surprised himself that he had actually stumbled on such a witticism. It was like, ‘Oh, I’m actually making a joke here,’ so it began there, and it was a question of, how deep is that well? How often can you go to it, to the rat quiver source? It kind of took over the entire body like a petite mal seizure.”
Tom Hanks also created a personal history for his charlatan film persona. “He says he is from Mississippi, although where, who knows? He says he’s on sabbatical from the institution where he teaches, the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg, which is true, but I think he’s been on sabbatical for fourteen years. He was fired because of a hasty decision by the dean in order to avoid the sexual harassment suit. I do believe he studied at the Sorbonne, but I think he studied drinking. He was essentially accepted, read a couple of the Flaubert books, and then spent the rest of his time in bars.” Hanks did not have any problems handling the endless pontifications by Prof. G.H. Dorr. “The good news is that it’s not unlike doing Shaw or Shakespeare in that the ideas are so easily connected that, once you do the mechanics of memorizing, it just flows out of you.”
Bearing witness to all the cinematic shenanigans is Gwain MacSam, a foulmouthed casino janitor played by Marlon Wayans (Requiem for a Dream). “He has the audience point of view,” remarked Wayans. “He says what everybody else is thinking. He’s a lot smarter in some ways than Hanks’ character, who spits out the big words. He’s like, ‘I don’t know big words, but I know a thing or two. I know a shady man and that Pancake is shady.’’’ The cast for the picture also featured the acting talents of J.K. Simmons (Juno), Tzi Ma (The Quiet American), and Ryan Hurst (Patch Adams).
All the work Tom Hanks put into his role did not go unnoticed by Claudia Puig of USA Today, who wrote, “It is Hanks pitch-perfect timing and eccentric portrayal that makes the movie. You can’t wait to hear what sardonically archaic utterance comes out of his mouth next.” Not everyone was impressed. Film critic Anthony Lane of The New Yorker, scathingly wrote, “Everybody pulls a silly face, or sports a behavioral tic, or shouts his lines a little to loud, for too long, with the camera hanging in close to record the comic effect. After half an hour we realize that instead of enjoying a funny film, we were being lightly bullied into finding fun where precious little exists.”
At the Cannes Film Festival, The Ladykillers was nominated for the Palme d’Or. The picture, which saw Joel and Ethan share the directing and producing credits for the first time, earned $77 million worldwide.
Taking on the role of producers, the Coens supported John Turturro’s directorial debut Romance & Cigarettes (2006). The musical romantic-comedy featured performances by Kate Winslet (Titanic), Susan Sarandon (Atlantic City), and Christopher Walken (The Deer Hunter) as well as songs from Tom Jones, James Brown, and Bruce Springsteen.
Asked to contribute one of the eighteen short films for a project entitled Paris, je t’aime (2006), Joel and Ethan worked with Steve Buscemi to create Tuileries. An American tourist (Buscemi) traveling on the Paris Metro unwittingly becomes drawn into a conflict when he makes eye contact with a feuding young couple (Axel Kiener and Julie Bataille). “We met him in an audition,” recollected Joel regarding Buscemi who has appeared in four of the Coen brothers’ films. “When there’s a great collaboration like the one with him, you want to work together again.” Ethan sheepishly admitted, “We always end up killing his character for some reason.” As to whether the actor resents getting killed, Ethan answered, “He hasn’t complained yet. Maybe that’s why we continue to do it.”
After attempting to write a screenplay during the 1980s, author Cormac McCarthy abandoned the idea and expanded the tale into a novel. A year before No Country For Old Men was to be published, producer Scott Rudin acquired the movie rights and approached the Coens about adapting the story for the big screen.
While out hunting in Texas, Vietnam War veteran Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) comes across the aftermath of a drug deal gone fatally wrong, and a satchel containing two million dollars. Moss takes the satchel only to find himself becoming the target of a homicidal killer (Javier Bardem) seeking to reclaim the stolen money.
Acknowledging that the major problem in converting the works of Cormac McCarthy into movies is their graphic content, Joel remarked, “Violence is an important element in many of the books [he] writes, and it seems to us to be completely misguided to try to soften that in the adaptation.” A more pressing concern for Joel was figuring out how to translate the structure of the novel cinematically, “The initial challenge was what to do in those alternating chapters in the book. You get monologues from the sheriff essentially unrelated to the story. We didn’t want to eliminate them entirely.”
Two of the three critical film roles were cast early on. Native Texan and Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive) was signed to play local Sheriff Ed Tom Bell and Spanish actor Javier Bardem (Before Night Falls) for part of the relentless hired assassin Anton Chigurh. The latter role could easily come across as a mechanical and cold-hearted killer which was something the Coens wanted to avoid. “Clearly he’s not the good guy; I’ll concede that,” said Ethan. “I don’t even know that I’d describe the character as evil. He’s a little more complicated than that, a little more elusive than that. He’s mysterious, he’s withheld, so that was a casting challenge in a way. I have no idea why we thought about Javier except we thought that whatever Javier supplies, he’s a great actor and it’ll be interesting.” Aiding Bardem’s menacing performance as a murderer who uses a cattle gun as his weapon of choice is the actor’s onscreen appearance. “The wardrobe department had found this picture of a guy at a bar in West Texas in 1979 and it was that alarming haircut and actually that kind of wardrobe as well. And we looked at it and thought, well, he looks like a sociopath.”
Choosing an actor to play Llewelyn Moss was a long and drawn out audition process for the Coen brothers. “Tommy Lee Jones and Javier having been cast, the third person had to be able to hold his weight with those two actors,” stated Ethan. “That’s setting the bar pretty high. We saw everybody and we hadn’t met anybody we liked and whom we felt wouldn’t be something of a letdown coming from Tommy to Javier to person X.” Due to the persistence of his agent, Josh Brolin (Milk) was able to get the Coens to agree to meet with him on their last casting call for the movie. “They just hired me,” recollected Brolin, “and said, ‘We really get a sense from you that you’re right for this part. So come up with something interesting.’” On how he perceived Moss, the actor stated, “I think he’s an incredibly heartfelt, compassionate character just in the way the story goes. The fact that he goes back and gives water to what we call “agua man.” It gets him into a lot of trouble. He would have had major obstacles anyway but that one in particular got him shot.”
Playing the role of the ill-fated wife of Llewelyn Moss, is Kelly Macdonald (Gosford Park) who had to forego her Scottish accent for a Texan one. “She wasn't your typical trailer trash kind of character,” stated Macdonald of Carla Jean Moss. “At first you think she's one thing and by the end of the film you realize that she's not quite as naïve as she might come across. And it's not like she's just following her husband blindly. She goes along with his plan but it's because there's a real love there and a real respect.”
Josh Brolin, who had broken his collarbone in a motorcycle accident a couple of weeks before shooting began, was glad he did not abandon the picture despite the excruciating pain. “The great thing about No Country for Old Men, more than these other movies, is that there are a lot of questions that surface for people and they want to talk about it, which I think is just so satisfying as a filmmaker or an actor…I can’t remember the last movie I saw that I’ve thought about for days.” As for the controversial conclusion of the film, Brolin said, “The reaction only defines the fact that we chose a good thing. If people weren’t reactionary to the ending, then we would not have done our jobs.”
Made on a budget of $25 million, No Country for Old Men earned $162 million worldwide and was nominated for eight Academy Awards; it won the Oscars for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Javier Bardem), Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay. At the BAFTAs, the movie received nine nominations and was awarded with the trophies for Best Cinematography, Best Director, and Best Supporting Actor (Bardem). The Golden Globes lauded the picture with Best Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor (Bardem) while the American Film Institute listed it as the Movie of the Year for 2007.
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Cannes Film Festival, Joel and Ethan along with previous winners of the event created a series of short films called Chacun son cinema (To Each His Own Cinema) in 2007; the Coens’ contribution was called World Cinema starring Josh Brolin as a rancher who wanders into a repertory theatre; he seeks the advice of the ticket booth salesman on whether to see Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game (1939) or Climates (2006) by Nuri Bilge Ceylon.
Seven years after their aborted attempt to work with Brad Pitt, Joel and Ethan cast him in Burn After Reading (2008); Pitt was not the only actor making his Coen brother film debut but also John Malkovich (Places in the Heart) and Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton). Summarizing the dark satire, Joel declared that the story “is about the culture of the Central Intelligence Agency and the culture of physical fitness in Washington, D.C. and what happens when those two worlds collide. It’s also about internet dating.”
Accompanying the acting newcomers were veteran Coen collaborators Frances McDormand and George Clooney. “The day we wrapped,” recalled Ethan, “we called wrap on George’s last shot, and he said, ‘All right, that’s it. I’ve played my last idiot.’ So we told him it was sad that he wouldn’t be working with us anymore.” Joining in on the subject, Joel added, “George loves to play idiots for us. We always have a really good time with him.” Ethan went on to say, “George is interesting. The last two movies we’ve done with him, our discussion of the character would take place in the hallway about five minutes before we started shooting.”
Tilda Swinton marveled about the quality of the screenplay. “The script is absolutely written down on paper. You mess with that at your peril because they write it so well. How could you possibly improve it? It feels like the invitation to play with them is exactly that, it's come and let’s all amuse ourselves with this script.” John Malkovich agreed with Swinton, “As per Tilda's remarks, there is nothing to change or improve with a good script. You just do it. There is a reason they say a football field has boundaries. There are a million ways to do a good script within those boundaries.” Playing a moronic fitness club trainer who attempts to enter into the world of espionage so to pay for a co-worker’s cosmetic surgery was not a daunting role for Brad Pitt, “You just start understanding their arithmetic, how they view the world.”
“If we put actors in comedies who aren't normally associated with comedies, it's just simply a reflection of our interest in them as actors,” explained Joel. “Most of the parts in this movie were written for the people who played them.” Despite the presence of box office stars, egos did not rule the film set. “When big actors work on our movies,” said Joel, “it's a pretty stripped-down version of what they're used to on a full-blown, Hollywood studio picture. Those two guys, Brad Pitt and George Clooney, we know well enough for it to be like working with friends.”
With Roger Deakins unavailable due to a scheduling conflict, Joel and Ethan recruited cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (Children of Men) to shoot the picture. Despite Burn After Reading being set in Washington, D.C., most of the principal photography took place in Brooklyn Heights as the two moviemaking siblings wanted to stay close to their New York City-based families.
Outperforming its Oscar-winning predeccesor at the box office by $2 million, the picture earned $164 million worldwide. Film critic Lisa Kennedy wrote in The Denver Post, “The ensemble is at once loose and pitch perfect. Hardly one of them plays a wholly likeable person, yet each reveals the desperate or stupid humanity of their characters.” David Denby of The New Yorker begged to differ in his review, “Even black comedy requires that the filmmakers love someone, and the mock cruelties in Burn After Reading come off as a case of terminal misanthropy.”
Burn After Reading received BAFTAs nominations for Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor (Brad Pitt), and Best Supporting Actress (Tilda Swinton); while at the Golden Globes, it was nominated for Best Picture – Comedy or Musical and Best Actress – Comedy or Musical (Frances McDormand).
By placing their Jewish heritage into the forefront with A Serious Man (2009), the Coen brothers have been constantly asked if the movie is autobiographical. “I guess everything having to do with your background has some influence on how you tell stories,” reflected Joel. “There were other things which were probably much more culturally influential on us than that in particular, things like television, pop culture that other kids are exposed to at the time.” In regards to the coincident that the protagonist of the story shares the same profession as his family’s patriarch, Joel remarked, “Our father was a university professor, but beyond that, he wasn't really anything like the character in the movie.”
Like his Biblical predecessor Job, Larry Gopnick (Michael Stuhlbarg), a Jewish physics professor and family man, encounters one personal catastrophe after another.
“If you go to theatre in New York, you’re going to know Michael,” said Joel of his leading man who was making his cinematic debut in the picture. “He read for two parts: for Larry and also for Uncle Arthur. We knew that we would use him but we weren’t sure at first for which part, which has never happened to us before. It’s a very difficult role: it’s very passive but, at the same time, he has to carry the movie.”
“I wouldn’t say that Larry’s anxiety rubbed off on me,” stated Michael Stuhlbarg, “but I did have to try to live through [the role] as truly as I could. My job is to ask questions of each dramatic circumstance and then try to make it concrete.” For Stuhlbarg, the message of the story extends beyond the big screen, “I think the quote at the beginning of the movie, ‘Accept with simplicity everything that happens to you’, has resonance for both that first parable and the rest of the movie. It's a goal to shoot for in one's life, and he tries to do that the best that he can. I don't know that there's much more one can do. I've found in my own life, if you try to struggle against what the universe is telling you, you set yourself up for more of a battle.”
Explaining why the timing was right to produce the script which was written a number of years ago, Ethan replied, “It would have been hard to do this early on. For one thing, who would give somebody money for this movie about a loser in the Midwest as a first feature? So the fact that we are established helps. But also, who’s interested in their childhood when they’re only in their twenties and their thirties?” A prevailing concern for the Coens was how the members of their spiritual community would react, “We were both curious about whether there would be hostility, but religious Jews who’ve seen it so far have been surprisingly open to it. I guess one’s concern is that a lot of Jews see things through the prism of ‘Is this good for the Jews?’”
Film critic Ann Hornaday wrote in The Washington Post, “Mostly, A Serious Man succeeds because it engages questions worth asking. What is integrity? Does our atavistic need for stories illuminate the meaning of life or further obfuscate it? What does it mean to be good and how are we to achieve it?” For Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News, there was nothing cerebral about the story, “Since everyone is turned into such a caricature, the answers feel optional. It’s hard to forget that Larry’s fate is being controlled not by God or luck or his own worst instincts, but the Coens.”
Earning $21 million worldwide, A Serious Man has been nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Oscars. The BAFTAs and the Writers Guild of America also rewarded the movie with nominations for Best Original Screenplay. At the Golden Globes, Michael Stuhlbarg was up for Best Actor – Comedy or Musical.
Though the much rumoured sequel for The Big Lebowski has yet to come to fruition, it has not prevented the Coen brothers from collaborating once again with Jeff Bridges. Trading the role of “The Dude” for one made famous by “The Duke”, Bridges stars as U.S. Marshall Rooster Cogburn who assists Mattie Ross, a teenage girl seeking to avenge the murder of her father. Scheduled for a Christmas Day release in 2010, True Grit features Matt Damon (Good Will Hunting) as La Boeuf, the Texas Ranger who joins in the manhunt while Josh Brolin plays the killer Tom Chaney.
“We saw it [the original movie] as kids,” recalled Ethan. “It made very little impression on me. We subsequently both read the book [written by Charles Portis] and the book made a huge impression on us, and I guess that’s why we’re interested in doing the movie.” Questioned why he was not inspired by the cinematic adaptation in which John Wayne (The Alamo) won an Academy Award, Ethan answered, "It's partly a question of point-of-view. The book is entirely in the voice of the fourteen year old girl. That sort of tips the feeling of it over a certain way. I think [the book is] much funnier than the movie was so I think, unfortunately, they lost a lot of humour in both the situations and in her voice. It also ends differently than the movie did. You see the main character — the little girl — twenty-five years later when she's an adult." He went on to add, "Another way in which it's a little bit different from the movie — and maybe this is just because of the time the movie was made — is that it's a lot tougher and more violent than the movie reflects. Which is part of what's interesting about it."
Other projects in development for the Coens are: Hail, Caesar!, a 1920s comedy about a group of idiots attempting to stage a play based on the Greek tragedy; a remake of the Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules) and Shirley MacLaine (Terms of Endearment) jewelry theft picture Gambit (1966); Suburbicon, a dark comedy which George Clooney may direct; and an adaptation of Michael Chabon’s alternative world history and murder mystery novel The Yiddish Policemen’s Union.
“It’s funny, as a film director, you don’t meet other directors often,” reflected Joel. “In New York you can live your whole life in the film business and, if you choose, have nothing to do with other people involved in the same business. That’s one of the nice things about New York – It’s not a company town like L.A.. It’s the actors who meet lots of film directors, because they go from movie to movie. So most of the directors I know are people I met through Fran. I’m very good friends with John Boorman [Deliverance], for example, because of Fran doing a movie, Beyond Ragoon [1995], with him.”
Ethan is not surprised that A-list performers are drawn to the characters composed by him and Joel. “There are a lot more good actors out there than there are good parts,” reasoned Ethan, “so if you write something that’s interesting to an actor, you’ll have good actors to choose from.” When it comes to the subject matter for their movies, Ethan sheepishly admitted, “It seems we’re incapable of writing a movie which, in one way or another, doesn’t get contaminated by comic elements.”
Joel and Ethan Coen do not view themselves as a singular creative entity. “The work that we do together reflects the point at which our interests intersect,” remarked Joel. The end result has been a filmmaking collaboration which has spanned over twenty-five years and fourteen feature length pictures. “I can’t watch our old movies – I’m overcome with a fog of boredom,” confessed Ethan. Joel echoed his brother’s sentiment, “I just see it as moving from story to story. There’s no development, except you try to do something a little different each time, different at least from what you did just previous to it, so you keep the exercise interesting to yourself.”
For more on the Coen brothers visit fansites You Know, For Kids! and Coenesque.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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