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February 8, 2012

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In Theaters Now

Meet the Robinsons
directed by Stephen J. Anderson
In this latest animated film from Walt Disney Studios, Lewis (voices of Daniel Hansen and Jordan Fry) is an overachiever. His science fair experiments are ambitious, but they result in explosions so often that his teacher pleads with Lewis not to kill anyone. Lewis doesn’t have mayhem on the brain, though. Instead, he’s desperately searching for the family he’s never met. Lewis gets sidetracked when he’s plucked from the present and taken into the future to “Meet the Robinsons.” The Robinsons are a family he’d love to have, full of quirky eccentrics, but as Disney likes to browbeat, the only family you should yearn for is your own. Also starring the voices of Angela Bassett, Matthew Josten, Adam West, Tom Kenny, Paul Butcher and Tom Selleck.

The Lookout
directed by Scott Frank
The tagline for this thriller is “Whoever has the money has the power.” The punchline could be “...to deviously remake Memento.” Chris Pratt (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) suffers short-term memory loss after a car accident, forcing him to write stuff down to remember it. When he gets a job as a bank janitor, a maybe-former classmate manipulates Chris into helping him rob his employer while promising to help him overcome his memory problem. Nothing is what it seems… yadda yadda yadda… the credits roll. Audiences should heed the tagline: You have the money and the power to keep movies like this from clogging theaters. Also starring Jeff Daniels, Isla Fisher and Matthew Goode.

Blades of Glory
directed by Josh Gordon and Will Speck
Will Ferrell has sent up television news and NASCAR, so the next logical step is, of course, men’s figure skating. Ferrell is a gruff, Journey-lovin’ figure skater and Jon Heder is his dainty, leotard-wearing rival. After they butt heads and cause some damage, they’re banned for life from singles skating. But thanks to a loophole, they’re able to put their differences aside, embrace each other’s styles and become a duo. If you’ve seen Anchorman or Talladega Nights, you know what kind of non-sequitor, classic rock-inspired humor to expect. Also starring Craig T. Nelson, Will Arnett, Amy Poehler, William Fichtner and Jenna Fischer.

Peaceful Warrior
directed by Victor Salva
It’s not every film that gets ringing endorsements from both Sting and Deepak Chopra, but Peaceful Warrior gets one. In this Zen/New Age sports movie, Dan Millman (Scott Mechlowicz), a star gymnast with everything going his way, becomes paralyzed after a horrific motorcycle accident. During his recovery, he meets a mechanic named Socrates (Nick Nolte) who calls himself a “peaceful warrior” and acts as Dan’s Ghost Dog, teaching him how to become a peaceful warrior himself. It might sound a little hokey, but in an era of emotionally transparent, overcoming-the-odds sports movies, Peaceful Warrior has something going for it--perhaps earning the praise of Sting and Chopra. Also starring Amy Smart and Tim DeKay.

After the Wedding
directed by Susanne Bier
Another 2006 Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award nominee gets a wider release this week, as After the Wedding, a thriller-drama from Denmark, makes its way into theaters. Mads Mikkelsen, recently seen as Le Chiffre in Casino Royale, is Jacob, the head of an orphanage in India that’s in desperate need of money. Rolf Lassgard is Jorgen, a Danish businessman who offers a lot of money to help the orphanage-if Jacob attends his daughter’s wedding. When Jacob makes eyes-and other things-with Jorgen’s wife, all kinds of bad things happen. In English and Danish. Also starring Sidse Babett Knudsen, Stine Fischer Christensen and Mona Malm.

March 30th, 2007 | Category: In Theaters Now | By MovieMaker Staff

No comments (yet!)

This Day in Indie History: Warren Beatty

march-30.jpgHenry Warren Beatty joined his parents and older sister, Shirley MacLaine, when he came into the world on this day in 1937. Beatty’s first noticeable role was on the CBS sitcom “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis,” where he spent a short time as the resident heartthrob. His first feature, 1961’s Splendor in the Grass came soon thereafter. With longtime large aspirations, Beatty expanded his production role for his second movie, 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde. In addition to acting opposite Faye Dunaway, the actor produced the film. Both roles earned him Oscar nominations (the film was noticed for a total of 10).

Throughout the years, Beatty has continued to challenge himself with roles and production credits from Shampoo (which he co-wrote and starred in) to Reds (for which he won the Oscar for Best Director). In total, Beatty’s films, including Heaven Can Wait, Bugsy and Bulworth have garnered 14 Oscar nominations. At the 2000 Academy Awards ceremony the accomplished moviemaker was honored with the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award.

Factoid: In 1987 Warren Beatty hit a snag when Ishtar, the movie he produced and starred in, was deemed by critics as one of the worst ever made. Luckily he redeemed himself with such fare as Dick Tracy and a remake of Love Affair with his future wife, Annette Bening.

March 29th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

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This Day in Indie History: The Godfather

march_29.jpgOn this day in 1971, Francis Ford Coppola woke up to start production on The Godfather. Finalizing the script while on set and primarily concerned about collaborating with the actors, Coppola left most all of the decisions about visuals to his director of photography, Gordon Willis. Meticulous and slow-going in his lighting set-ups, Willis irked Coppola more and more as the production fell behind in its shooting schedule. On top of that, the mob thwarted the moviemaker’s ability to shoot in particular locations at specific times.

Although the movie release on March 15, 1972 ushered in both positive reviews and box office numbers, the production experience made Coppola question whether or not he wanted to direct the sequel. He relented—and returned in 1974 with The Godfather: Part II, often cited as the best of his mafia trilogy.

Quotable:
“I’m gonna make him an offer he can’t refuse.” -Marlon Brando as Don Corleone in The Godfather.

March 28th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 1

This Day in Indie History: Lucas

march_28.jpgThe David Seltzer-penned high school coming-of-age story Lucas was released to U.S. audiences on this day in 1986. Seltzer, previously known for writing The Omen, also took charge behind the camera as director. In a complete 180 from his previous work, this is a sweetly told tale of unrequited, teenage love. The story revolves around Lucas, a typical pint-sized science geek, his crush, beautiful new student Maggie, and her football player love interest, Cappie. An attempt to join the football team backfires and lands Lucas in the hospital. As an unexpected bonus, his injuries gain him the respect of the entire school--even the jocks that once goaded him.

Factoid: While the movie unfortunately did little to propel the career of its title star, Corey Haim, it did launch the careers of Winona Ryder (Mermaids, Reality Bites) and Jeremy Piven (Smokin Aces, “Entourage"). This was the first feature film for both.

March 27th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

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This Day in Indie History: Quentin Tarantino

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He’s not even 45 and Quentin Tarantino, born in Knoxville, Tennessee on this day in 1963, is already a moviemaking legend. By the age of two, his mother had moved him to Los Angeles. After leaving school at a young age, Tarantino began work at the famous California movie haven Video Archives. It was during his five-year stint there that the movie buff began imagining and writing some of his biggest hits.

Through a chain of connections, Tarantino met with Lawrence Bender, who helped to produce and release Reservoir Dogs at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival. Together the pair formed the production company A Band Apart and its divisions, including the Miramax distribution label Rolling Thunder. In 1994 A Band Apart released Pulp Fiction, arguably Tarantino’s most famous and well-respected work to date. It won the Palme d’Or at Cannes that year, plus honors at the Independent Spirit Awards, Golden Globes and the Oscars. Since then the writer-director-actor’s contributions to cinema have be seen in Four Rooms, Jackie Brown, Kill Bill: Volumes 1 and 2 and the highly anticipated Grindhouse, due out early next month.

Quotable: Quentin Tarantino is a walking pop-culture trivia game, frantically spouting off responses both on-screen and off. Ironically, so important is the writer that lines from his own screenplays have become part of that same lexicon. Case in point, Pulp Fiction’s “I’m going to get medieval on your ass” is sure to go down in movie history.

March 26th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 2

This Day in Indie History: Alan Arkin

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New York comeback kid Alan Arkin was born this day back in 1934. The actor began his career as part of the folk group The Tarriers, but soon found his rightful path as an original member of Chicago’s “Second City” acting troupe.

Arkin’s stage career took off with a Tony Award for Carl Reiner’s 1963 comedy “Enter Laughing.” Four years later, he earned his first Oscar nomination for his debut feature, The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming. His second nod came in 1969 with The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.

After dozens of screen appearances in-between, Arkin finally received his first Academy Award this year for his supporting role in the independent movie sensation Little Miss Sunshine. Other roles made memorable by Arkin include Captain Yossarian in Catch-22, opposite Peter Falk in The In-Laws, John Cusack’s therapist in Grosse Pointe Blank and a desperate salesman in Glengarry Glen Ross.

Quotable: Never missing a beat, Alan Arkin returned last year as the oddly comforting grandfather in Little Miss Sunshine. Despite a filthy mouth, his Grandpa character cleaned up around young Olive, who counted on him for support. When doubting her beauty, Grandpa classically assured her, “I’m madly in love with you and it’s not because of your personality.”

March 26th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 2

Moviemaker of the Week: Robert Rodriguez

For independent moviemakers there is perhaps no better example of creativity and ingenuity than the $7,000 man, Robert Rodriguez. The San Antonio native began his meritorious career back in 1991 when he and high school chum Carlos Gallardo completed a feature-length action movie in a small Mexican border town. Rodriguez famously sold his body to science to raise funds and acted as the movie’s director, cinematographer, camera operator, lighting technician, editor and every other conceivable member of the production crew. He was the new golden boy of independent cinema once El Mariachi and the story behind it became talk show and festival circuit fodder.

The moviemaker’s path took a few unexpected turns beginning with the 1992 Toronto Film Festival, where both the El Mariachi media frenzy and a friendship with Quentin Tarantino began. From that first feature grew the high-budget, celebrity-strewn sequels Desperado and Once Upon a Time in Mexico, with Rodriguez still pulling the weight of multiple crewmembers. Together with Tarantino, Rodriguez has completed five films. Dimension Films will release their latest collaboration, Grindhouse, on April 6, 2007.

As two movies on one bill, Grindhouse references those theaters of old that screened back-to-back explicit and taboo exploitation movies. Rodriguez’s segment, “Planet Terror,” features Rose McGowan and Freddy Rodriguez as a scarred couple out for revenge. Making sure he still has a hand in everything, this gritty thriller is produced, edited and scored by the famed moviemaker himself.

Sound Off:
Robert Rodriguez raised money for his first feature film by becoming a lab rat. What is the furthest you have gone to complete a film? Let us know in the Comments section!

--Mallory Potosky

March 26th, 2007 | Category: Moviemaker of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 3

Film School of the Week: Mobile Film School

Getting an education in moviemaking can be tough-the best programs can be almost impossible to get into, and cost alone is enough of a deterrent for some. But what about those who have no access to a film school, or even the equipment they need to start making movies on their own? The Mobile Film School was founded with these people in mind, with the mission to reach out to underserved communities by bringing film school to them.

The Mobile Film School, which employs guest instructors like legendary documentarian Albert Maysles (Gimme Shelter), travels to rural areas in two buses: One containing editing suites and production equipment, the other holding a resource library and staff offices. They offer five-week courses in narrative and documentary moviemaking as well as acting, giving students the opportunity to express themselves via the medium of film.

The inaugural run of the Mobile Film School took place this February in the town of Manor, Texas, where high school seniors collaborated on the completion of a documentary short entitled In A Place Like This. “The students were so intuitive about the process, it was really exciting to watch,” says executive director and founder Lisa McWilliams. “They absolutely exceeded my expectations.”

For more information on the Mobile Film School’s upcoming workshops, visit www.mobilefilmschool.com.

Sound Off: Mobile Film School is one of several organizations sprouting up in order to help under-represented communities express themselves through the medium of film (Mira Nair’s moviemaking laboratory, Maisha, is another). Do you think programs like these should work to expose the rest of the world to the experiences of these communities, or should their goal solely be one of artistic expression? Talk back in the Comments section!

--Jennifer Straus

March 26th, 2007 | Category: Film School of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 12

Film Festival of the Week: Cucalorus

What’s in a name? At the Cucalorus Film Festival, apparently not much. “We just think it sounds cool,” says festival director Dan Brawley of his fest’s unusual moniker. But it’s this laidback vibe that makes Cucalorus a true festival gem for indie moviemakers.

When MM called this North Carolina festival the “best kept secret on the indie fest circuit” a few years back, we focused specifically on the caliber of films and huge growth it had achieved in just a few shorts years. But the real highlight, according to Brawley, “is what happens off the screen. When you gather filmmakers together and toss in a limitless supply of spirits, strange things happen.”

Now moving into its 13th year, the secret it out, mostly due to the always innovative and controversial movie selection on display each year. Want to get in on it while you can? Hang out with past participants David Gordon Green, Gus Van Sant and John Cameron Mitchell? Or check out some “penetrating films, cold Tuaca and a little raw meat?” Visit www.cucalorus.org for more details.

Sound Off: The Cucalorus Film Festival attracts some of the world’s most innovative indie talents to the bewitching arts town of Wilmington, North Carolina. What factors do you look for when entering or attending a film festival? Let us know in the Comments section!

--Mallory Potosky

March 26th, 2007 | Category: Festival of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 4

Top of the Box Office

1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Weinstein Co.
Weekend Gross: $25,450,000
Total Gross: $25,450,000

2. 300
Warner Bros.
Weekend Gross: $20,510,000
Total Gross: $162,354,000

3. Shooter
Paramount Pictures
Weekend Gross: $14,501,000
Total Gross: $14,501,000

4. Wild Hogs
Buena Vista
Weekend Gross: $14,362,000
Total Gross: $123,815,000

5. The Last Mimzy
New Line
Weekend Gross: $10,200,000
Total Gross: $10,200,000

6. Premonition
Sony Pictures
Weekend Gross: $10,100,000
Total Gross: $32,191,000

7. The Hills Have Eyes II
Fox Searchlight
Weekend Gross: $10,000,000
Total Gross: $10,000,000

8. Reign Over Me
Sony Pictures
Weekend Gross: $8,000,000
Total Gross: $8,000,000

9. Pride
Lionsgate
Weekend Gross: $4,000,000
Total Gross: $4,000,000

10. Dead Silence
Universal
Weekend Gross: $3,467,520
Total Gross: $13,243,245

All data courtesy of www.the-numbers.com

March 26th, 2007 | Category: Top of the Box Office | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 3

In Theaters Now

The Hills Have Eyes II
directed by Martin Weisz
In the preview for this sequel to the remake of the 1970s cult exploitation horror classic, one of the hill people drag “you” in a sack to their lair. (See, the camera is bound in the sack, where you’re supposed to be, and you’re pulled along the rocky terrain. Clever, huh?) Funny, that might be the only way a large number of people will see this ill-conceived exercise in quick-cash-in moviemaking. You know the drill: People get lured to the mountain and are killed by mutated hill people in gruesome ways. Save a few bucks and rent the original. Starring Jessica Stroup, Reshad Strik, Michael McMillian, Daniella Alonso and Lee Thompson Young.

Pride
directed by Sunu Gonera
This “inspired by true events” sports story deserves credit for thinking outside the gridiron. Pride takes place in a community center and is centered on Jim Ellis (Terrence Howard) starting up an all-black swim team for troubled teens. Racism, classism, politics and ignorance are all used in an attempt to tear down the swim team and the community center where they compete. There aren’t many swimming films out there, so Pride is already ahead of the pack. Of course, the film sinks or swims in its ability to rise above the sappy tide of teary sports movies convention. Also starring Bernie Mac, Kevin Phillips, Evan Ross and Nate Parker.

Reign Over Me
directed by Mike Binder
Adam Sandler is in full-on dramatic mode in this story of Charlie Fineman (Sandler) who loses his family in the September 11 attacks in New York City. When he runs into his old college roommate, Alan Johnson (Don Cheadle), the reclusive, disheveled Charlie begins to emerge from his shell. But it’s a precarious breakthrough as Alan navigates his way through Charlie’s emotional minefields in this exploration of the emotional and psychological fall-out resulting from 9/11. Also starring Jada Pinkett Smith, Liv Tyler, Saffron Burrows, Cicely Tyson and Donald Sutherland.

Shooter
directed by Antoine Fuqua
The set-up of Shooter sounds retread: Bob Lee Swagger (Mark Wahlberg) is a hardened military man, recruited into the service of his country by former colleague Colonel Isaac Johnson (Danny Glover) to prevent an assassination attempt on the president because Bob Lee is the best marksman in town. But thanks to director Antoine Fuqua’s skilled, action-oriented eye and Wahlberg’s intensity, Shooter looks like a no-holds-barred, R-rated action film for adults-something that’s increasingly rare nowadays. Also starring Kate Mara, Michael Pena, Rhona Mitra and Ned Beatty.

TMNT
directed by Kevin Munroe
The last time the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were on the big screen, they were traveling through time, pitching pizzas and going on concert tours. This time, the heroes in a half shell-Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo-return to theaters in an animated form, closer in tone to their comic book counterparts than the previous live-action incarnations. The Turtles’ arch-rival, Shredder, is “defeated” prior to TMNT, leaving the ninjas to repel an evil industrialist trying to take over the world by raising ancient monsters. Might not be as epic as the to-the-death battles with Shredder, but it’s still nice to have the Turtles back. Starring the voices of Patrick Stewart, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ziyi Zhang, Mako and Chris Evans.

March 23rd, 2007 | Category: In Theaters Now | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 2

Hope Davis

march-23.jpgHope Davis was born on this day in Englewood, NJ in 1964. The acting bug bit Davis early on; as a young girl she often performed neighborhood skits with childhood friend Mira Sorvino. Later, after attending Vassar and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, the actress took to Chicago’s theater scene, where she performed under the direction of John Cusack and Joel Schumacher. Her bond with the famous action director led to her first feature film role in Flatliners.

Her next role was a blip on the cultural scene as the French ticket agent that does little to help a distressed Catherine O’Hara in Home Alone. Since then Davis has found herself an independent film staple, with roles alongside Nicolas Cage (Kiss of Death, The Weather Man) and Campbell Scott (The Daytrippers, The Imposters, Duma, The Secret Lives of Dentists and the ABC drama “Six Degrees"). The blonde actress can be seen later this year in Charlie Bartlett with co-stars Robert Downey Jr. and Anton Yelchin.

Factoid: Hope Davis has had many a noticeable role since first affecting that French accent years ago. In 2004 the actress was nominated for both a Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress Award (for her work in American Splendor) and an Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Female in The Secret Lives of Dentists.

March 22nd, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 2

Stolen Summer

march-22.jpgAfter the impressive and immediate success of Good Will Hunting, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck put together “Project Greenlight,” a competition aimed at allowing other “little guys” to strike it big. The first feature film result, Stolen Summer, was put into limited release on this day in 2002. Written and directed by rookie moviemaker Pete Jones, the cast included Aidan Quinn, Bonnie Hunt and Kevin Pollack. But the real stars were the young boys--an Irish-Catholic lad who believes his newfound friend, a terminally-ill rabbi’s son, will not go to heaven until converting to Catholicism. The movie made its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2002. Despite high hopes and an inflated budget, Stolen Summer performed poorly in box office sales and never saw a wide theatrical release.

Factoid: The “Project Greenlight” HBO television series documented the trials and tribulations that went on behind the scenes from conception through production of Stolen Summer. It returned for another two seasons with limited success, producing the coming of age tale, The Battle of Shaker Heights, and the stylized horror spectacle Feast.

March 21st, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

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Thoroughly Modern Millie

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Fifty years ago today Thoroughly Modern Millie hit U.S. theaters nationwide. Set in the 1920s, the musical stars Julie Andrews as the titular Millie Dielmount, Mary Tyler Moore as Miss Dorothy Brown, the unsuspecting woman in distress, and a supporting cast of Carol Channing, James Fox and John Gavin.

When Millie moves from small-town Kansas to the center of New York City, she changes her appearance and her occupation to score herself a wealthy husband. Her new home, at the Priscilla Hotel, turns out to be the cover for a white slavery ring, which Millie discovers just in time to save Miss Brown. The movie went on to receive seven Academy Award nominations in 1968, ultimately winning for Elmer Bernstein’s original score. Screenwriter Richard Morris also received an award for the Best Written Musical from the Writers Guild of America.

Connections: Before working together on Thoroughly Modern Millie, director George Roy Hill and Julie Andrews released Hawaii in 1966. Elmer Bernstein received his fifth career nomination for the same movie at that season’s Academy Awards, but it was with Thoroughly Modern Millie that he brought home his one and only trophy.

March 20th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

No comments (yet!)

Spike Lee

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Socially-conscious director Spike Lee was born Shelton Lee in Atlanta, Georgia on this day in 1957. As a child, Lee moved with his family to Brooklyn, where he formed the New York identity that still follows him today. After receiving degrees from Atlanta’s Morehouse College and NYU’s film school, the aspiring director began a hot streak of successful movies beginning with 1986’s She’s Gotta Have It. The movie won recognition at Cannes and the Independent Spirit Awards. Lee followed two years later with School Daze, a comedy of class and race where “gammas” face off against the darker-skinned “jigaboos.” Do the Right Thing, Mo’ Better Blues, Jungle Fever and Malcolm X weren’t far behind--all released within six years of the director’s first commercial success. Lee’s blunt portrayal of race relations in America brought popularity, controversy and awards to his doorstep. From his Academy Award-nominated documentary, 4 Little Girls, to his most recent feature, Inside Man, with Denzel Washington and Clive Owen, Lee has managed to remain within the Hollywood system while all at once bucking it.

Quotable: “Wake up. The black man has been asleep for 400 years."—from his Student Academy Award-winning NYU thesis film, Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barber Shop: We Cut Heads.

March 19th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 3

Top of the Box Office

1. 300
Warner Bros.
Weekend Gross: $31,185,000
Total Gross: $127,473,000

2. Wild Hogs
Buena Vista
Weekend Gross: $18,825,000
Total Gross: $103,993,000

3. Premonition
Sony Pictures
Weekend Gross: $18,000,000
Total Gross: $18,000,000

4. Dead Silence
Universal
Weekend Gross: $7,770,525
Total Gross: $7,770,525

5. I Think I Love My Wife
Fox Searchlight
Weekend Gross: $5,715,000
Total Gross: $5,715,000

6. Bridge to Terabithia
Buena Vista
Weekend Gross: $5,141,000
Total Gross: $74,917,000

7. Ghost Rider
Sony Pictures
Weekend Gross: $4,000,000
Total Gross: $110,202,000

8. Zodiac
Paramount Pictures
Weekend Gross: $3,073,000
Total Gross: $28,923,000

9. Norbit
Paramount Pictures
Weekend Gross: $2,722,000
Total Gross: $92,394,000

10. Music and Lyrics
Warner Bros.
Weekend Gross: $2,200,000
Total Gross: $47,377,000

All data courtesy of www.the-numbers.com

March 19th, 2007 | Category: Top of the Box Office | By MovieMaker Staff

No comments (yet!)

Location of the Week: New Mexico

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With its rose-colored stretches of desert and broad, rocky mesas, the state of New Mexico seems an ideal place to capture the spirit of the American Southwest. From Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to Brokeback Mountain, New Mexico has appeared on screen as the home of that zll-American male archetype: The cowboy. With its long history of Native American, Spanish and American settlers, the state’s intermixing of cultures has made it a perfect locale for moviemakers looking to capture the unique history of this area of the United States. Since 1898, more than 700 films have been shot within New Mexico’s borders.

Only recently, however, has the state started moving toward becoming amenable to moviemakers looking to base their whole productions in the area. To this end, the New Mexico-based Rio Grande Studios has teamed up with British production company Turn of the Century Productions to work on an upcoming film, the action-adventure flick Judgement Day. The first feature to be produced from pre- through post-production entirely in the “Land of Enchantment,” Judgement Day will be directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak (Doom, Cradle 2 the Grave).

For information on shooting in New Mexico, visit www.nmfilm.com.

You can also catch NM’s desert plains in:
Independence Day
Every Which Way But Loose
Traffic
Superman
Natural Born Killers

Sound Off: Do you think it helps the independent film industry to have more films produced outside of Los Angeles and New York? Do you prefer to work outside of one of these bigger cities if you can complete pre- through post-production somewhere else? Weigh in by posting in the comments section!

--Jennifer Straus

March 19th, 2007 | Category: Location of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 35

Festival of the Week: Delray Beach Film Festival

Location: Delray Beach, FL
Festival Dates: March 13 - 18, 2007

fow-delray.jpgWith so many festivals popping up these days, it can be hard to stand out from the crowd. The Delray Beach Film Festival, however, has made an effort to be a bit different from the standard fest, taking advantage of its location on the sunny Florida shore, while still catering to the needs of the moviemakers and the local community. “We provide a relaxed atmosphere for filmmakers to network, schmooze and screen films,” says founder and director Michael Posner. “We have events daily for our filmmakers, free surfing lessons, free belly dancing lessons, a golf tournament, beach tennis lessons and workshops daily--and of course cocktail parties every afternoon and spotlight parties every evening.”

But DBFF isn’t just a bit of fun in the sun; all of the festival’s profits will be split between the Humane Society (Posner is a former veterinarian) and the communication departments of the Palm Beach County schools. Giving back to the community while making the most of an idyllic location? It’s clear that Delray is a festival that is making a difference in the moviemaking world and beyond.

For more information, visit www.dbff.us.

Sound Off: Do you think it’s important for festivals to be “different,” or do you prefer a more traditional festival program without all the side attractions? Why or why not? Let us know in the comments section!

--Jennifer Straus

March 19th, 2007 | Category: Festival of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 5

Exhibitor of the Week: Warner Home Video

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Warner Brothers has long been a household name. Originally the family distribution and production outfit entertained only those audiences paying to sit in a theater. Now, as part of the Warner Bros. Entertainment empire and the Time Warner family, Warner Home Video (WHV) brings cinematic entertainment right to a movie lover’s front door. As the world’s largest global video distributor, WHV offers 7,000 features, 40,000 television titles and more than 14,000 animated movies to its consumers--many under the Castle Rock Entertainment, HBO Home Video, New Line Home Video and MGM brand names.

Starting with James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart and running all the way to Leonardo DiCaprio (both Blood Diamond and The Departed are Warner Home Video releases) and Robert Downey Jr. (A Scanner Darkly), for those looking for a movie to watch in the comfort of home, chances are it will be from Warner Home Video. And that’s something that will remain true for many years to come, with the Harry Potter series already a WHV staple and box office hits Happy Feet and 300 just itching for a release date.

Sound Off: When Warner Bros. Entertainment began, directors like Howard Hawks and Darryl Zanuck were on the payroll. Today’s studios work differently—optioning works from directors of varied acclaim and character. It’s part of the reason why Warner Home Video can bring the works of both independent and blockbuster moviemakers alike to anyone with a working DVD player. The newer system benefits the viewer, but what does it do for the moviemaker? Send us your feedback in our “Comments” section.

--Mallory Potosky

March 19th, 2007 | Category: Exhibitor of the Week | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 10

Harvey Weinstein

march-19.jpgOne half of the infamous behemoth brother producing team, Harvey Weinstein was born on this day in 1952. While at the State University of New York at Buffalo, the Flushing, Queens native produced concerts with his brother, Bob. It was with the profits from this venture that the boys began Miramax Studios in 1979. Through persistence and bravado, the company went on to become one of the earliest driving forces behind the independent film movement.

Sometimes referred to as “Harvey Scissorhands” because of his willingness to cut, discard or reconfigure the work under Miramax’s umbrella, the looming figure has nonetheless earned the respect of the industry’s top talent. Alone, Weinstein has been nominated for two Academy Awards, but for the features he has produced has earned 220 nominations, three Best Picture Oscars and a total of 53 statues. Over the years, the producing giant has had a keen eye, gathering up such films as The English Patient, Good Will Hunting, sex, lies, and videotape, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Fahrenheit 9/11 and the upcoming The Nanny Diaries.

Factoid: With Bob acting as the man behind the curtain, Harvey has had a chance to shine, forming connections with (and in some cases, careers for) Gwyneth Paltrow, Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Kevin Smith, Renee Zellweger and directors of the new Grindhouse feature, Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino.

March 18th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 1

In Theaters Now

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon
directed by Scott Glosserman
Slasher films are a dime a dozen, but this inventive take on the genre blends Man Bites Dog and Scream to create a movie that stands out from the heap of horror remakes. A documentary crew follows Leslie Vernon (Nathan Baesel) as he climbs the ranks of unstoppable serial killer, a la Jason Voorhees. We see him work out, put on face paint and masks and prepare for his hunts. He plans elaborate traps for victims, ensnaring a crop of teenagers, as well as the documentarians--and viewers--in his blood-soaked plans to rise to the top of the slasher killer mountain. Also starring Robert Englund, Zelda Rubinstein, Scott Wilson and Angela Goethals.

Dead Silence
directed by James Wan
Ventriloquist dummies are inherently creepy, but their capacity to freak out audiences might be trumped by how horrifically clunky Dead Silence is. Equal parts The Blair Witch Project and Puppetmaster, an eccentric old ventriloquist, Mary Shaw (Judith Roberts), is accused of killing a young boy. She’s hunted down by vengeful townsfolk, who cut out her tongue and kill her. When she’s buried, she’s laid to rest with her dolls, which she called her “children.” Of course she can’t stay dead, and her “kids” sneak out of her grave, going on a killing spree--cutting out tongues, naturally. By the end, viewers might be begging for a removal of their eyes. Also starring Leigh Whannell, Amber Valletta, Ryan Kwanten, Donnie Wahlberg and Christina Cox.

I Think I Love My Wife
directed by Chris Rock
Richard Cooper (Chris Rock) is your typical, successful, suburban businessman. He’s got a good job and strong family. Problem is, he’s bored with his wife, Brenda (Gina Torres). But when an old friend, the free-spirited Nikki (Kerry Washington), shows up at his office door, Richard starts to wonder why, if he loves his wife, he’s so drawn to Nikki. I think Chris Rock used to be a funny, cutting-edge comedian. And I think I saw this movie when it was called The Last Kiss. Also starring Steve Buscemi, Cassandra Freeman and Samantha Ivers.

Premonition
directed by Mennan Yapo
Sandra Bullock is becoming the queen of weirdo time travel movies. First there was The Lake House, an across-time romantic dramedy. Now there’s Premonition, a time-bending drama where she wakes up one day and her husband’s alive, she wakes up the next day and he’s dead, the next day things are slightly different, the next day he’s dead again. Repeat for 110 minutes. Sounds like The Butterfly Effect for grown-ups. Also starring Julian McMahon, Mark Famiglietti, Kate Nelligan and Nia Long.

The Wind That Shakes the Barley
directed by Ken Loach
This latest offering from Ken Loach, winner of the 2006 Palme d’Or at Cannes, focuses on two brothers, Damien (Cillian Murphy) and Teddy (Padraic Delaney), as they get pulled into the 1919 Irish Civil War. Questions of loyalty and nationalism take center stage in Loach’s epic about the Irish struggle for independence from oppressive British imperialist forces. Think Loach might be waxing allegorically in this film? Also starring Liam Cunningham, Gerard Kearney and William Ruane.

March 15th, 2007 | Category: In Theaters Now | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 2

Isabelle Huppert

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Parisian actress Isabelle Huppert was born on this day in 1953. Her English-language debut came in 1974 with a notable role in Otto Preminger’s Rosebud, but this thespian was working her way to the top long before then. By the age of 21 she had acted in over 15 respectable films and can now count nearly 100 credits to her name. Some of Huppert’s most famous and controversial work includes Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate, Jean-Luc Godard’s Passion, 8 Femmes with Catherine Deneuve and 2001’s The Piano Teacher. Her international appeal still reigns supreme, however, and you can still catch her in the occasional English-language indie (see David O. Russell’s I Heart Huckabees).

Factoid: To date, Isabelle Huppert has received 12 nominations and one win (for La Cérémonie) from the César Awards in France. Other honors bestowed upon the French actress include the Best Newcomer award from BAFTA in 1978 and two Best Actress awards at the Cannes Film Festival (for Violette and The Piano Teacher).

March 15th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 1

Circle of Friends

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Seasoned Broadway performer Alan Cumming was brought to life on-screen for the first time as Sean Walsh in Circle of Friends, released on this day in 1995. The movie also stars a slightly awkward, deliberately dowdy Minnie Driver and an Irish-accented Chris O’Donnell. The movie, based on Maeve Binchy’s novel of the same name, never really received much in the way of popular acclaim but critics found the romantic comedy darling. Not only did it bring about a new audience for the movie’s protagonists, but for Englishman Colin Firth, who found international acclaim shortly thereafter with his roles in the BBC miniseries “Pride & Prejudice” and Anthony Minghella’s epic love story, The English Patient.

Quotable: “You mustn’t mess me about. I know I may look like a rhinoceros, but I’ve got quite a thin skin really.”--Minnie Driver as Bernadette ‘Benny’ Hogan, who, in the film’s 100-plus minutes, deals greatly with, and attempts to overcome, issues of image and self-worth.

March 14th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 3

Love Jones

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After premiering earlier that same year at the Sundance Film Festival, Theodore Witcher’s Love Jones was released on this day in 1997. It ultimately left the renowned Park City festival with the Dramatic Audience Award and a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize. The movie was the first for writer-director Witcher, who went on to write the little-seen Body Count starring Forest Whitaker. Larenz Tate lent his acting chops to this movie’s talented cast (including Nia Long and Isaiah Washington), deftly moving through the urban streets of the Chicago poetry scene and the tribulations of love. With characters all at once general and race-specific, Love Jones made an impact on the future of black cinema.

Factoid: Larenz Tate won notice for his portrayal of Darius Lovehall in this small-scale dramedy about love—quite different from his previous roles as a Vietnam vet in 1995’s Dead Presidents and troubled O-Dog in Menace II Society. For his turn as the lovelorn poet, the actor received a nomination from the Acapulco Black Film Festival, but lost to veteran scene-stealer Samuel L. Jackson. It only took one year for the award to catch up with him though: Tate won the same award the following year for Why Do Fools Fall in Love.

March 14th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 4

Emile Hirsch

march-13.jpgIt was on this day in 1985 that young, burgeoning actor Emile Hirsch came into the world, or, more specifically, Topanga Canyon, California. His early career involved series television, including recurring roles on “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” and “Third Rock From the Sun.” Fans of the Olsen twins might also remember him from the sitcom “Two of a Kind.” Thankfully, he soon left his teeny-bopper side behind and took off with head-turning, provocative roles in The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys, The Emperor’s Club, Imaginary Heroes, The Mudge Boy and Alpha Dog. Look for him to shine next in the Sean Penn-penned (and directed) drama Into the Wild, alongside Vince Vaughn, Catherine Keener, William Hurt and Marcia Gay Harden.

Connections: Emile Hirsch was approached by the producers of the now-defunct Matt Damon/Ben Affleck television series, “Project Greenlight,” to star in its second independent production, The Battle of Shaker Heights. Hirsch ultimately turned the role down, paving the way for fellow budding actor Shia LaBeouf to take it.

March 12th, 2007 | Category: This Day in Indie History | By MovieMaker Staff

Comments: 1

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