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May 26, 2012

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Acting

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Sean Penn to Receive PGA’s Stanley Kramer Award

Photo: Chuck Zlotnick

The Producers Guild of America (PGA) just announced that two-time Academy Award winner Sean Penn will be honored with the 2011 Stanley Kramer Award. This prestigious honor will be presented to Penn at the 22nd annual Producers Guild Awards ceremony, which will take place on January 22 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles. (No comments yet)


The Great American Western Rises Again

Westerns have been around nearly as long as movies themselves. (No comments yet)


2011 SAG Award Nominations Announced

This morning, the nominees for the 17th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards were announced. The Fighter and The King's Speech are at the top of the pack, with four nominations apiece, followed by Black Swan and The Kids Are All Right, which both received three. One of the award season's premier events, the 2011 SAG Awards will be simulcast live coast-to-coast on TNT and TBS, on Sunday, January 30, 2011, from the Shrine Exposition Center in Los Angeles. The ceremony will also be telecast internationally. (No comments yet)


2011 Golden Globe Nominations Announced

This morning the Hollywood Foreign Press Association announced the nominations for the 2011 Golden Globes, the ceremony for which will be hosted by Ricky Gervais on January 16th. The British period drama The King's Speech was the most recognized with seven nominations, while the Coen brothers' western True Grit received none, and Burlesque received three, including one for Best Motion Picture--Comedy or Drama. (No comments yet)


Actresses on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

Hitting theaters today, Darren Aronofsky’s much-anticipated Black Swan stars Natalie Portman as a tortured ballerina in the midst of a mental breakdown. Portman’s performance is the latest in a long line of films featuring women on the edge. (1 comment)


Sneak Peek: Nicole Kidman in Rabbit Hole

One of the most buzzed-about releases of the holiday movie season, John Cameron Mitchell's Rabbit Hole, stars Nicole Kidman and Aaron Eckhart as a couple coping with the death of their young son. (No comments yet)


127 Hours with Danny Boyle, Simon Beaufoy and Christian Colson

The Team Behind Slumdog Millionaire Brings Aron Ralston's Survival Tale to the Big Screen

Many people are familiar with the amazing survival tale of Aron Ralston, the mountain climber whose life was irrevocably changed in 2003, when his arm became trapped under a boulder for five days until he managed to amputate it with a dull knife. Now the subject of Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours, an adaptation of Ralston’s 2004 memoir, Between a Rock and a Hard Place, the ordeal has been turned into an uplifting adventure-thriller starring James Franco. (3 comments)


Darren Aronofsky and Mila Kunis Reveal Their Dark Sides

Darren Aronofsky and Mila Kunis Get In Touch With Their Dark Sides on Black Swan

So what’s it all about? Well, like Pi, his 1998 breakthrough indie feature, Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan is a drama about an obsessive protagonist poised on the brink of madness while pursuing perfection. Like Requiem for a Dream (2000), his critically acclaimed sophomore effort, Aronofsky’s latest film focuses on the desperate frenzy of a character whose fantasies are intruding on reality. And like The Wrestler (2008), his sentimentally gritty tale of a has-been grappler who repeatedly returns to the ring, Aronofsky’s much buzzed-about drama about a ballerina who gets in touch with her dark side is the story of an artist who quite literally suffers for the sake of art. (1 comment)


2010 Spirit Award Nominees Announced

Just hours after the Gotham Independent Film Awards were handed out, Los Angeles-based Film Independent has announced the nominees for its 2010 Spirit Awards, kicking awards season into even higher gear. And the nominees are... (1 comment)


2010 Gotham Independent Film Award Winners Announced

Last night the winners of the 20th anniversary Gotham Independent Film Awards were announced in a ceremony in New York City. (No comments yet)


Breaking Away: Ten Great Prison Break Movies

<i>Stalag 17</i> (1953)

If there's one movie genre that provides a guaranteed escape from the humdrum of everyday life, it’s the prison break movie. The meticulous planning (watch out for those guards!), the high-stakes suspense (will they make it?), the glorious moment when the prisoner finally breaks out of his confines and breathes free... it's always an enjoyably nerve-wracking experience. There’s something elemental and universal in our desire to root for the (usually innocent) prisoner. (2 comments)


Gotham Independent Film Awards Nominees Announced

Award season has swung into gear with the Independent Filmmaker Project's announcement of the 20th anniversary Gotham Independent Film Award nominees. (3 comments)


Michael Imperioli Feeds The Hungry Ghosts

For all the work he gets on the small screen, Michael Imperioli hasn’t left film behind. On October 1st, Imperioli added "director" to his business card when his feature directorial debut, The Hungry Ghosts (which he also wrote), opened in New York. (No comments yet)


Richard Jenkins Takes a Bite Out of Let Me In

After four decades of diverse supporting roles, Richard Jenkins was elevated to leading man status in 2007 with his portrayal of lonely professor, Walter Vale, whose life changes unexpectedly after the arrival of three Syrian immigrants in Tom McCarthy’s wonderfully resonant film, The Visitor. (2 comments)


Philip Seymour Hoffman and Amy Ryan Go Boating

Old friends and longtime collaborators explain the importance of a "good hang"

Philip Seymour Hoffman has earned enthusiastic acclaim for his acting work many times over. With Jack Goes Boating, he has announced himself as a formidable movie director, as well. (No comments yet)


Take 10: Justin Long’s Short Story

Photo by Jimmy Fontaine

The Mac Guy channels his inner Marty McFly

Pacino. De Niro. Fox? When it comes to the holy triumvirate of great thespians, the star of Teen Wolf is usually not at the top of the triangle. Unless you happen to be Justin Long. (2 comments)


Katie Aselton’s Pure Indie Power

Photo by Anthony Elgort - www.elgort.com

By way of full disclosure, I’ll admit that I’m a sucker for a girl who starts off a conversation with, “So you live in Midcoast Maine in the summer? I used to rake blueberries not far from there.” But the real reason Katie Aselton won me over when we met for a drink near her Los Feliz home had more to do with her pure, unabashed, unaffected enthusiasm for indie moviemaking. (4 comments)


Mixed Reviews: Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.

Sam Wasson’s new book, Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and the Dawn of the Modern Woman (204 pages, HarperCollins, $19.99), is the story of how the revolutionary film Breakfast at Tiffany’s was sewn together with passion, finesse and luck—and why it shocked the nation in 1961. (No comments yet)


Bruce Campbell Resurrects The Evil Dead

B-movie god Bruce Campbell has just about done it all—from lead roles in offbeat indie flicks like Bubba Ho-Tep to cameos in big-budget hits like the Spider-Man series. (2 comments)


Amanda Schull is Mao's Last Dancer

Photo: Dana Patrick

Dancing and acting go hand in hand, especially on the stage. But what happens when you take a professional ballet dancer and put her in a major motion picture? In the case of Amanda Schull, you get a double threat. Schull made her film debut in 2000’s Center Stage, but returned to her dancing roots afterward. Now she’s back in Bruce Beresford’s Mao’s Last Dancer. (No comments yet)


Scott Pilgrim vs. Ellen Wong

With the exception of being a stalker who violently beats girls who steal her boyfriend, actress Ellen Wong is not so different from Knives Chau, the character she plays in Edgar Wright's Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, which hits theaters today. With a background in martial arts, weaponry and acrobatics, Wong was well prepared for a role of this nature—which marks her feature film debut. (2 comments)


Jennifer Salt Spices Up Eat Pray Love

Actress-turned-screenwriter Jennifer Salt has had an eclectic career. The daughter of Oscar-winning screenwriter Waldo Salt (Coming Home; Serpico), Jennifer began her acting career in the late 1960s, just when a new wave of moviemakers were being given the reins by the studios to make more personal, thought-provoking, offbeat work. Some of her credits during this heady time include Midnight Cowboy (for which her father won an Oscar), Hi, Mom!, Play It Again, Sam, Brewster McCloud and Sisters (in which she starred with former roommate Margot Kidder). (3 comments)


At the Movies With “Kid Critic” Jackson Murphy

As far as present-day film critics go, there’s the old folks, such as Roger Ebert and Leonard Maltin; the pseudo-hip like Peter Travers; and rising star Jackson Murphy. Haven’t heard of him? Give it a few years—or, at least until he graduates from the eighth grade. (6 comments)


Ellen Page’s Dream Job

From Canadian darling to Hollywood star, Ellen Page navigates success on her own terms with Inception

Rising star Ellen Page—the heart and soul of Jason Reitman’s 2007 indie hit Juno—is turning up on Hollywood marquees more and more these days. But her success, while much deserved, has been a relatively long time coming. Next playing opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in Christopher Nolan’s Inception, Page—at the age of 23—has been clocking set time consistently for well over a decade. (2 comments)


Duplass vs. Goliath

Indie brothers go Hollywood for Cyrus, but will they stay there?

"Holy shitballs.” That’s the general feeling we had when we were greenlit for our first studio movie, Cyrus. (No comments yet)


Total Eclipse of the Box Office

After a record-breaking night of midnight shows, The Twilight Saga: Eclipse came in at number one, earning $69 million in its first weekend, with a total gross of $161.7 million in its first five days. (No comments yet)


“Audition America” Teams With New York Film Academy

What ever happens to the winners of those all-too-popular reality show competitions? Sure, there's always a seemingly useful grand prize appropriate to the competition's genre, but once the series has aired and ended, the victor’s limelight usually fades along with it. Enter "Audition America," a hybrid series that fixes this reality show dilemma. (3 comments)


Harald Zwart Kicks Back with The Karate Kid

Born in the Netherlands and raised in Norway, Harald Zwart first came to attention directing several award-winning short films, commercials and music videos (including several for fellow Norwegians, a-ha). (5 comments)


Richard Loncraine vs. Bill and Hillary

Photo: Nicola Dove

He has been making movies for almost 40 years, but even Emmy-winning director Richard Loncraine knows that four weeks of prep for a movie about four of the world's most prominent political figures is not without its challenges. The Special Relationship, now playing on HBO, tells of the relationship between Tony and and Cherie Blair and Bill and Hillary Clinton in the mid- to late 1990s, a time when shared ideologies eventually gave way to political scandals. (No comments yet)


Sneak Peek: Matt Reeves' Let Me In, Starring Chloe Moretz

Just in time for Halloween (October 1st to be precise), Cloverfield director Matt Reeves will unleash his latest monster on unsuspecting audiences: Kick-Ass' Chloe Moretz. Let Me In, the English language remake of the recent Swedish hit Let the Right One In (based on John Ajvide Lindqvist's novel), tells the creepy tale of the friendship that grows between a bullied young boy and his new vampire neighbor. MM has a sneak peek at a few behind-the-scenes shots. (No comments yet)


The Film Society of Lincoln Center Honors Michael Douglas

L to R: Shia LaBeouf, Oliver Stone and Michael Douglas on the set of <i>Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps</i> (2010).

Two-time Oscar winner Michael Douglas will have a new award to place on his mantle later this month. On May 24, at Alice Tully Hall in New York, Douglas will be honored with the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s 37th annual Chaplin Award. Recent Chaplin Award recipients include Tom Hanks, Meryl Streep and Dustin Hoffman. (No comments yet)


Naomi Watts' Wild Child

Naomi Watts breaks all the rules in Mother and Child

Ten years ago, Naomi Watts was a struggling hollywood actress. In 2001, she caught her big break—in David Lynch’s Mulholland Dr.—playing a struggling Hollywood actress. And immediately following her breakthrough role, she took on the role of producer-actress alongside her friend Scott Coffey to make Ellie Parker, playing—what else—a struggling Hollywood actress. (No comments yet)


Mixed Reviews: Clint: A Retrospective

“I’m just a guy who makes movies.” The first sentence in Clint: A Retrospective (Sterling, 288 pages, $35) perfectly sums up the moviemaking powerhouse that is Clint Eastwood, and is actually a quote from Eastwood himself. (1 comment)


Hiroyuki Sanada Enters The City of Your Final Destination

There was really no reason for Hiroyuki Sanada to ever leave Japan. He was a five-time nominee for Best Actor at the Japanese Academy Awards and a winner in 2003 for his performance in Tasogare Seibei. (No comments yet)


Zoe Lister-Jones Breaks Out with Breaking Upwards

" I feel like I’ve led the intense life of a celebrity without making the money or getting any free shit. I’m like Lindsay Lohan minus the swag.” Not quite the humbled perspective you’d expect from an actress who has worked with the likes of Angelina Jolie, Ryan Gosling, Mark Wahlberg and Will Ferrell in 2009 alone. But with Zoe Lister-Jones, this is precisely what you get.
(No comments yet)


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