Indiana Jones survives most perilous quest at Cannes

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Indiana Jones survived his first perilous outing in the Kingdom of Critical Knives on Sunday, winning a friendly round of applause at a press preview at Cannes and respectable reviews.

The world premiere of the fourth and latest installment in the adventure series, and the first in 19 years “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” is the hottest ticket at this year’s Cannes film festival.

A packed crowd of hundreds, many wearing Indiana Jones hats, waved and cheered as Harrison Ford, 65, and co-star Cate Blanchett, who plays the villain, walked Cannes’ famed red carpet for the official world premiere.

Set in the late 1950s of the Cold War era, the two-hour movie sees its swashbuckling archeologist hero racing against Soviet agents to recover a mysterious pre-Colombian skull in the wilds of Peru.

The plot had been kept strictly under wraps and promotional stunts kept to a minimum as Hollywood heavy-hitters Steven Spielberg and George Lucas awaited the response to what is arguably this year’s most-anticipated movie.

“Smart, Sleek, Familiar,” ran the headline of an early review in Time magazine’s online edition, which offered an approving appraisal of the film’s veteran lead.

“Ford looks just fine, his chest skin tanned to a rich Corinthian leather; he’s still lithe on his feet, and can deliver a wisecrack as sharp as a whipcrack,” it said.

The Los Angeles Times said fears that the latest outing would prove an embarrassingly geriatric addition to the Indiana Jones franchise had proved unfounded.

“It turns out it’s one of the good ones, and everyone involved can breathe a sigh of relief,” the Times said, while People magazine concluded: “The magic is still there”.

London’s Telegraph critic David Gritten was less enthusiastic, however.

“It’s not that (it) is bad, exactly. But it’s undeniably creaky,” he said.

“He doesn’t wear the fedora with quite the same jaunty angle, his bullwhip doesn’t crack as smartly — and Harrison Ford looks all of his 65 years.”

Ford insisted on doing his own stunts, saying audiences could tell the difference between an actor and a stunt double.

“It needs to be an emotional event, like every moment on screen needs to be invested with real emotion, or pretend emotion,” he told reporters.

“That’s why it’s so gratifying that we were all happy to do the stunt sequences or the action sequences old-school. Human scale.”

Spielberg credited Ford with reviving the Indiana Jones juggernaut when the actor told him in 1994, after he presented the director with an Oscar for “Schindler’s List”, that he would be willing “to put the fedora back on”.

The director called Ford his “secret weapon” in making the movies.

“He’s concerned about the whole, he’s concerned about the story and other characters and he is a collaborator in the entire process of telling the story,” Spielberg, 61, said.

“That takes a lot of pressure and weight off my back to have this kind of a partner in the trenches every single day shooting the picture.”

Ford said he was less concerned with what the critics said than with the opinions of movie-goers round the world.

“This kind of film, it is such a celebration of the movies,” he said.

“I know that we made this movie to reacquaint people with the pure joy that can happen in a dark room with a bunch of other people seeing something that they haven’t seen before that will just kick your butt.”

This fourth adventure begins in 1957 as professor Jones returns to his US college to find he is under suspicion from the anti-Communist administration and is about to be fired.

On his way out of town he meets young Mutt (Shia LaBeouf), a bike-riding knife-flicking James Dean lookalike, who takes him off on a mission to find the Crystal Skull of Akator and to rescue his mother.

Hot on their heels is icy-cold but devastatingly beautiful Soviet agent Blanchett, who is also after the eerie skull which she says Stalin always dreamt of finding to wage “psychic warfare”.

Action-packed with car-chases, waterfall rides, man-eating ants and the usual secret underground temples, the film is chock-a-block with throw-away lines and droll quips.

Its “third dimension” style finale features a Spielberg-fathered ET character surfacing in a Mayan temple — an ending some critics said tested the audiences’ patience.

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Red-faced FFA must take some blame for balls-up

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Who guessed the smack in the knackers Joel
Griffiths handed to an assistant ref in October would slap FFA
in the face just four months later? Had FFA rightly suspended
Griffiths for violent conduct back then, Danny Vukovic would
not be able to claim any perceived injustice for his case. The
goalkeeper will have a point. Vukovic may miss the Olympics but
Griffiths not only guided Newcastle to a title but was anointed the
A-League’s Player of the Year. High-fives for such a balls-up.
Heavy hitters in box
DELICATE seating arrangements for the GF. Prime Minister
Kevin Ruddwas plopped between FFA chairman Frank Lowy
on one side and boss Ben Buckley’s wife, Sarah, on the
other. Let’s hope she was up to date on the passive offside
rule.
Bruce only sees good
WIGAN manager Steve Bruce is walking proof that no two
people see an incident the same way. “Martin Taylor is the
biggest, gentlest man,” Bruce said of the Birmingham player whose
studs-up, over-the-ball, shin-busting tackle snapped the leg of
Arsenal’s Eduardo in two bone-crunching places. “There’s not
a bad bone in his body,” added Bruce, Taylor’s former coach. “He
would never, ever, do anything malicious. He has mistimed the
tackle. Some would say it’s not even a yellow card.” Never ask
Bruce to be a witness if you’re ever mugged.
Emotion in overtime
Danny Vukovic’s red-card rage suggests the
A-League’s “90 Minutes, 90 Emotions” marketing campaign is a bit
out. He blew up in the 94th minute of the GF. And just 18 seconds
elapsed from when Tom Pondeljak took his corner kick to
Vukovic running, red-carded, into the dressing-room. Time flies -
unless you’re on the sidelines. Those 18 clicks could cost Vukovic
15 months of his career.
Kewell shows up Man U
Harry Kewell scored in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester
United on Tuesday %26#133; in a reserve-team game. In goal for
Liverpool? Sydney-born and raised Dean Bouzanis, who may no
longer be an Aussie after playing two games for Greece last
month.
Chelsea’s got the Blues
NOT the greatest week for Chelsea. First, captain John
Terry demanded assistant coach Henk Ten Cate conduct a
more rigorous training session before the Carling Cup final. The
Blues lost to Tottenham, a result that forced manager Avram
Grant to miss a coaching class in his native Israel the
following day, part of a compulsory course necessary to coach top
teams. “If Avram Grant misses too many more he will be treated like
everybody else who fails to turn up,” said Amnon Raz, head
of the Israel Coaches Association. “He will be out of the program
and he will not get his pro licence.”
World according to%26#133;
EVERTON manager David Moyes, always reluctant to release
Tim Cahill for Socceroos duty, now also fast making friends
in Nigeria: “What people don’t appreciate is that [Yakubu
Ayegbeni] is only 25, albeit a Nigerian 25, and so if that is
his age he’s still got a good few years ahead of him.”
Time’s up for Miller
REASON No.263 for being put on the transfer list? Sunderland
manager Roy Keane on out-of-favour Liam Miller: “The
problem is Liam’s time-keeping. If a player is late once or twice,
well and good. If he is late three or four times, maybe well and
good. But when it goes beyond five, six, seven times, then you have
got to draw the line.”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Red-faced FFA must take some blame for balls-up

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Who guessed the smack in the knackers Joel
Griffiths handed to an assistant ref in October would slap FFA
in the face just four months later? Had FFA rightly suspended
Griffiths for violent conduct back then, Danny Vukovic would
not be able to claim any perceived injustice for his case. The
goalkeeper will have a point. Vukovic may miss the Olympics but
Griffiths not only guided Newcastle to a title but was anointed the
A-League’s Player of the Year. High-fives for such a balls-up.
Heavy hitters in box
DELICATE seating arrangements for the GF. Prime Minister
Kevin Ruddwas plopped between FFA chairman Frank Lowy
on one side and boss Ben Buckley’s wife, Sarah, on the
other. Let’s hope she was up to date on the passive offside
rule.
Bruce only sees good
WIGAN manager Steve Bruce is walking proof that no two
people see an incident the same way. “Martin Taylor is the
biggest, gentlest man,” Bruce said of the Birmingham player whose
studs-up, over-the-ball, shin-busting tackle snapped the leg of
Arsenal’s Eduardo in two bone-crunching places. “There’s not
a bad bone in his body,” added Bruce, Taylor’s former coach. “He
would never, ever, do anything malicious. He has mistimed the
tackle. Some would say it’s not even a yellow card.” Never ask
Bruce to be a witness if you’re ever mugged.
Emotion in overtime
Danny Vukovic’s red-card rage suggests the
A-League’s “90 Minutes, 90 Emotions” marketing campaign is a bit
out. He blew up in the 94th minute of the GF. And just 18 seconds
elapsed from when Tom Pondeljak took his corner kick to
Vukovic running, red-carded, into the dressing-room. Time flies -
unless you’re on the sidelines. Those 18 clicks could cost Vukovic
15 months of his career.
Kewell shows up Man U
Harry Kewell scored in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester
United on Tuesday %26#133; in a reserve-team game. In goal for
Liverpool? Sydney-born and raised Dean Bouzanis, who may no
longer be an Aussie after playing two games for Greece last
month.
Chelsea’s got the Blues
NOT the greatest week for Chelsea. First, captain John
Terry demanded assistant coach Henk Ten Cate conduct a
more rigorous training session before the Carling Cup final. The
Blues lost to Tottenham, a result that forced manager Avram
Grant to miss a coaching class in his native Israel the
following day, part of a compulsory course necessary to coach top
teams. “If Avram Grant misses too many more he will be treated like
everybody else who fails to turn up,” said Amnon Raz, head
of the Israel Coaches Association. “He will be out of the program
and he will not get his pro licence.”
World according to%26#133;
EVERTON manager David Moyes, always reluctant to release
Tim Cahill for Socceroos duty, now also fast making friends
in Nigeria: “What people don’t appreciate is that [Yakubu
Ayegbeni] is only 25, albeit a Nigerian 25, and so if that is
his age he’s still got a good few years ahead of him.”
Time’s up for Miller
REASON No.263 for being put on the transfer list? Sunderland
manager Roy Keane on out-of-favour Liam Miller: “The
problem is Liam’s time-keeping. If a player is late once or twice,
well and good. If he is late three or four times, maybe well and
good. But when it goes beyond five, six, seven times, then you have
got to draw the line.”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Red-faced FFA must take some blame for balls-up

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Who guessed the smack in the knackers Joel
Griffiths handed to an assistant ref in October would slap FFA
in the face just four months later? Had FFA rightly suspended
Griffiths for violent conduct back then, Danny Vukovic would
not be able to claim any perceived injustice for his case. The
goalkeeper will have a point. Vukovic may miss the Olympics but
Griffiths not only guided Newcastle to a title but was anointed the
A-League’s Player of the Year. High-fives for such a balls-up.
Heavy hitters in box
DELICATE seating arrangements for the GF. Prime Minister
Kevin Ruddwas plopped between FFA chairman Frank Lowy
on one side and boss Ben Buckley’s wife, Sarah, on the
other. Let’s hope she was up to date on the passive offside
rule.
Bruce only sees good
WIGAN manager Steve Bruce is walking proof that no two
people see an incident the same way. “Martin Taylor is the
biggest, gentlest man,” Bruce said of the Birmingham player whose
studs-up, over-the-ball, shin-busting tackle snapped the leg of
Arsenal’s Eduardo in two bone-crunching places. “There’s not
a bad bone in his body,” added Bruce, Taylor’s former coach. “He
would never, ever, do anything malicious. He has mistimed the
tackle. Some would say it’s not even a yellow card.” Never ask
Bruce to be a witness if you’re ever mugged.
Emotion in overtime
Danny Vukovic’s red-card rage suggests the
A-League’s “90 Minutes, 90 Emotions” marketing campaign is a bit
out. He blew up in the 94th minute of the GF. And just 18 seconds
elapsed from when Tom Pondeljak took his corner kick to
Vukovic running, red-carded, into the dressing-room. Time flies -
unless you’re on the sidelines. Those 18 clicks could cost Vukovic
15 months of his career.
Kewell shows up Man U
Harry Kewell scored in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester
United on Tuesday %26#133; in a reserve-team game. In goal for
Liverpool? Sydney-born and raised Dean Bouzanis, who may no
longer be an Aussie after playing two games for Greece last
month.
Chelsea’s got the Blues
NOT the greatest week for Chelsea. First, captain John
Terry demanded assistant coach Henk Ten Cate conduct a
more rigorous training session before the Carling Cup final. The
Blues lost to Tottenham, a result that forced manager Avram
Grant to miss a coaching class in his native Israel the
following day, part of a compulsory course necessary to coach top
teams. “If Avram Grant misses too many more he will be treated like
everybody else who fails to turn up,” said Amnon Raz, head
of the Israel Coaches Association. “He will be out of the program
and he will not get his pro licence.”
World according to%26#133;
EVERTON manager David Moyes, always reluctant to release
Tim Cahill for Socceroos duty, now also fast making friends
in Nigeria: “What people don’t appreciate is that [Yakubu
Ayegbeni] is only 25, albeit a Nigerian 25, and so if that is
his age he’s still got a good few years ahead of him.”
Time’s up for Miller
REASON No.263 for being put on the transfer list? Sunderland
manager Roy Keane on out-of-favour Liam Miller: “The
problem is Liam’s time-keeping. If a player is late once or twice,
well and good. If he is late three or four times, maybe well and
good. But when it goes beyond five, six, seven times, then you have
got to draw the line.”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Red-faced FFA must take some blame for balls-up

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Who guessed the smack in the knackers Joel
Griffiths handed to an assistant ref in October would slap FFA
in the face just four months later? Had FFA rightly suspended
Griffiths for violent conduct back then, Danny Vukovic would
not be able to claim any perceived injustice for his case. The
goalkeeper will have a point. Vukovic may miss the Olympics but
Griffiths not only guided Newcastle to a title but was anointed the
A-League’s Player of the Year. High-fives for such a balls-up.
Heavy hitters in box
DELICATE seating arrangements for the GF. Prime Minister
Kevin Ruddwas plopped between FFA chairman Frank Lowy
on one side and boss Ben Buckley’s wife, Sarah, on the
other. Let’s hope she was up to date on the passive offside
rule.
Bruce only sees good
WIGAN manager Steve Bruce is walking proof that no two
people see an incident the same way. “Martin Taylor is the
biggest, gentlest man,” Bruce said of the Birmingham player whose
studs-up, over-the-ball, shin-busting tackle snapped the leg of
Arsenal’s Eduardo in two bone-crunching places. “There’s not
a bad bone in his body,” added Bruce, Taylor’s former coach. “He
would never, ever, do anything malicious. He has mistimed the
tackle. Some would say it’s not even a yellow card.” Never ask
Bruce to be a witness if you’re ever mugged.
Emotion in overtime
Danny Vukovic’s red-card rage suggests the
A-League’s “90 Minutes, 90 Emotions” marketing campaign is a bit
out. He blew up in the 94th minute of the GF. And just 18 seconds
elapsed from when Tom Pondeljak took his corner kick to
Vukovic running, red-carded, into the dressing-room. Time flies -
unless you’re on the sidelines. Those 18 clicks could cost Vukovic
15 months of his career.
Kewell shows up Man U
Harry Kewell scored in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester
United on Tuesday %26#133; in a reserve-team game. In goal for
Liverpool? Sydney-born and raised Dean Bouzanis, who may no
longer be an Aussie after playing two games for Greece last
month.
Chelsea’s got the Blues
NOT the greatest week for Chelsea. First, captain John
Terry demanded assistant coach Henk Ten Cate conduct a
more rigorous training session before the Carling Cup final. The
Blues lost to Tottenham, a result that forced manager Avram
Grant to miss a coaching class in his native Israel the
following day, part of a compulsory course necessary to coach top
teams. “If Avram Grant misses too many more he will be treated like
everybody else who fails to turn up,” said Amnon Raz, head
of the Israel Coaches Association. “He will be out of the program
and he will not get his pro licence.”
World according to%26#133;
EVERTON manager David Moyes, always reluctant to release
Tim Cahill for Socceroos duty, now also fast making friends
in Nigeria: “What people don’t appreciate is that [Yakubu
Ayegbeni] is only 25, albeit a Nigerian 25, and so if that is
his age he’s still got a good few years ahead of him.”
Time’s up for Miller
REASON No.263 for being put on the transfer list? Sunderland
manager Roy Keane on out-of-favour Liam Miller: “The
problem is Liam’s time-keeping. If a player is late once or twice,
well and good. If he is late three or four times, maybe well and
good. But when it goes beyond five, six, seven times, then you have
got to draw the line.”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Red-faced FFA must take some blame for balls-up

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Who guessed the smack in the knackers Joel
Griffiths handed to an assistant ref in October would slap FFA
in the face just four months later? Had FFA rightly suspended
Griffiths for violent conduct back then, Danny Vukovic would
not be able to claim any perceived injustice for his case. The
goalkeeper will have a point. Vukovic may miss the Olympics but
Griffiths not only guided Newcastle to a title but was anointed the
A-League’s Player of the Year. High-fives for such a balls-up.
Heavy hitters in box
DELICATE seating arrangements for the GF. Prime Minister
Kevin Ruddwas plopped between FFA chairman Frank Lowy
on one side and boss Ben Buckley’s wife, Sarah, on the
other. Let’s hope she was up to date on the passive offside
rule.
Bruce only sees good
WIGAN manager Steve Bruce is walking proof that no two
people see an incident the same way. “Martin Taylor is the
biggest, gentlest man,” Bruce said of the Birmingham player whose
studs-up, over-the-ball, shin-busting tackle snapped the leg of
Arsenal’s Eduardo in two bone-crunching places. “There’s not
a bad bone in his body,” added Bruce, Taylor’s former coach. “He
would never, ever, do anything malicious. He has mistimed the
tackle. Some would say it’s not even a yellow card.” Never ask
Bruce to be a witness if you’re ever mugged.
Emotion in overtime
Danny Vukovic’s red-card rage suggests the
A-League’s “90 Minutes, 90 Emotions” marketing campaign is a bit
out. He blew up in the 94th minute of the GF. And just 18 seconds
elapsed from when Tom Pondeljak took his corner kick to
Vukovic running, red-carded, into the dressing-room. Time flies -
unless you’re on the sidelines. Those 18 clicks could cost Vukovic
15 months of his career.
Kewell shows up Man U
Harry Kewell scored in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester
United on Tuesday %26#133; in a reserve-team game. In goal for
Liverpool? Sydney-born and raised Dean Bouzanis, who may no
longer be an Aussie after playing two games for Greece last
month.
Chelsea’s got the Blues
NOT the greatest week for Chelsea. First, captain John
Terry demanded assistant coach Henk Ten Cate conduct a
more rigorous training session before the Carling Cup final. The
Blues lost to Tottenham, a result that forced manager Avram
Grant to miss a coaching class in his native Israel the
following day, part of a compulsory course necessary to coach top
teams. “If Avram Grant misses too many more he will be treated like
everybody else who fails to turn up,” said Amnon Raz, head
of the Israel Coaches Association. “He will be out of the program
and he will not get his pro licence.”
World according to%26#133;
EVERTON manager David Moyes, always reluctant to release
Tim Cahill for Socceroos duty, now also fast making friends
in Nigeria: “What people don’t appreciate is that [Yakubu
Ayegbeni] is only 25, albeit a Nigerian 25, and so if that is
his age he’s still got a good few years ahead of him.”
Time’s up for Miller
REASON No.263 for being put on the transfer list? Sunderland
manager Roy Keane on out-of-favour Liam Miller: “The
problem is Liam’s time-keeping. If a player is late once or twice,
well and good. If he is late three or four times, maybe well and
good. But when it goes beyond five, six, seven times, then you have
got to draw the line.”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

What if Oscar threw a party, and nobody came …

Friday, February 1st, 2008

… well, at least we’d still have a good crop of
movies. Stephanie Bunbury reports on the trouble in Tinseltown -
and how one strike might overshadow a mini-revolution.
THE main question hovering around the Oscars at the moment is
not who will win what, but (a) whether they will happen at all, or
(b) if they will happen, but in someone’s lounge room with no more
than a few party hats and crackers to create festive sparks.
The Hollywood writers’ strike is now in its third month and
shows no sign of lifting. This means that the Oscars ceremony, or
whatever passes for it, will be unscripted and thinly populated, as
most actors will not be prepared to cross the Writers’ Guild picket
line even if a gold statuette is waiting on the other side.
Which is something of a pity, as the field of contenders is both
wide open and largely deserving, which would normally make for an
exciting night as the envelopes get opened. No Country for Old
Men, the wacky Coen brothers‘ bloody one-man epic, appears to
dominate the field, with eight nominations, but the brothers’
idiosyncratic coolness and the film’s violence means it is by no
means universally loved; it will be hotly contested in every
category.
In the acting divisions, the only dubious inclusion is Cate
Blanchett’s reprised Elizabeth, a curious choice given that
Elizabeth: the Golden Age was widely panned. All the other
nominees in these categories will have strong supporters, however
%26#151; young Saoirse Ronan in Atonement has been hailed a
revelation, while Cate Blanchett’s cross-dressing role as Bob Dylan
in I’m Not There is worth a dozen Virgin Queens %26#151;
making for a series of hot competitions.
Other categories are even less predictable. The contenders for
the screenplay trophies, for example, include four women as
first-time nominees (for Juno, Lars and the Real Girl
and The Savages in the original screenplay category, and
Sarah Polley for Away from Her in the adapted
screenplay).
The hot tip for an original screenplay is, inevitably, the
colourful Diablo Cody for Juno, but the other screenwriters
in the adapted section are all heavy hitters, including Christopher
Hampton for Atonement, and Ronald Harwood for The Diving
Bell and the Butterfly. It could be anyone’s. What is
particularly striking about this play-off, however, is that it is
largely taking place between niche mini-studios and the big
studios’ specialist units.
These small units, many of them thriving within the big studios,
have practically taken over the prestige end of Hollywood
filmmaking. It is astonishing how quickly this has happened. A few
years ago %26#151; in 2003, to be exact %26#151; Sofia Coppola’s clever
Lost in Translation was the cuckoo in a best-picture nest of
epic studio production, all with casts of (not necessarily human)
thousands and spare-no-expense art direction.
The general talk was that films would increasingly be about
special effects, and no studio would bother with anything that cost
less than $120 million. Bigger, in other words, had become the new
better.
But, over the past few years, that pattern has been reversed.
This year, the only studio represented in the best-picture
competition is Warner Brothers %26#151; and that is for Tony Gilroy’s
Michael Clayton, perhaps the most intellectually demanding
film on the list, with a plot that could be usefully unravelled by
lawyers and a dominant mood of weary moral confusion.
Of the other four contenders, No Country for Old Men and
Paul Thomas Anderson’s There will be Blood, the two films
with the most nominations, were shared by the recently refurbished
Miramax and Paramount Vantage, the studio’s boutique division.
Juno, the only comedy, was produced under the Fox
Searchlight banner, and the British wartime drama Atonement
was made by Working Title for the independent Focus Features.
All apart from Juno, moreover, are resolutely serious. If
there is a shared theme in this year’s Oscar nominees overall, it
is one of mordant disappointment with the state of the world.
In a recent interview with Variety, the film industry
magazine, producer Scott Rudin said that audiences were ready to
welcome films with morally complex themes, but big studios simply
weren’t making those films any more. Rudin produced No Country
for Old Men, and was executive producer on There will be
Blood.
“In many cases, the majors have given up the business of serious
movies, and the rise of specialty units has made possible movies
that wouldn’t have been made %26#151; or would not have been made
this well %26#151; just a few years ago,” he said. The specialised
market, agreed James Schamus, of Focus Features, has matured. “The
Academy and the public, in general, are more open to challenging
movies than ever before. It’s not a case of indies sneaking in
there.”
The results of this shift should make for a stimulating night’s
viewing on February 24 %26#151; if, of course, it happens.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has confirmed
that the show will go on in some form.
Gil Gates, who is producing the Oscar Awards telecast for the
14th time, has suggested that they may use clips of previous
ceremonies to make up a show that would be a kind of Oscar archive.
Otherwise, there may be a ceremony, but no telecast.
Or the Writers’ Guild may be persuaded to come to some sort of
one-day truce to allow America’s most popular annual broadcast to
go ahead.
Officially, the Academy is saying that the usual red-carpet
event will go on. Given the current stalemate between producers and
writers, however, what will happen on the night is a good deal more
mysterious than the likely winner of best actor. Daniel Day-Lewis
for There will be Blood, they say, but we’ll have to wait
and see.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

What if Oscar threw a party, and nobody came …

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

… well, at least we’d still have a good crop of
movies. Stephanie Bunbury reports on the trouble in Tinseltown -
and how one strike might overshadow a mini-revolution.
THE main question hovering around the Oscars at the moment is
not who will win what, but (a) whether they will happen at all, or
(b) if they will happen, but in someone’s lounge room with no more
than a few party hats and crackers to create festive sparks.
The Hollywood writers’ strike is now in its third month and
shows no sign of lifting. This means that the Oscars ceremony, or
whatever passes for it, will be unscripted and thinly populated, as
most actors will not be prepared to cross the Writers’ Guild picket
line even if a gold statuette is waiting on the other side.
Which is something of a pity, as the field of contenders is both
wide open and largely deserving, which would normally make for an
exciting night as the envelopes get opened. No Country for Old
Men, the wacky Coen brothers‘ bloody one-man epic, appears to
dominate the field, with eight nominations, but the brothers’
idiosyncratic coolness and the film’s violence means it is by no
means universally loved; it will be hotly contested in every
category.
In the acting divisions, the only dubious inclusion is Cate
Blanchett’s reprised Elizabeth, a curious choice given that
Elizabeth: the Golden Age was widely panned. All the other
nominees in these categories will have strong supporters, however
%26#151; young Saoirse Ronan in Atonement has been hailed a
revelation, while Cate Blanchett’s cross-dressing role as Bob Dylan
in I’m Not There is worth a dozen Virgin Queens %26#151;
making for a series of hot competitions.
Other categories are even less predictable. The contenders for
the screenplay trophies, for example, include four women as
first-time nominees (for Juno, Lars and the Real Girl
and The Savages in the original screenplay category, and
Sarah Polley for Away from Her in the adapted
screenplay).
The hot tip for an original screenplay is, inevitably, the
colourful Diablo Cody for Juno, but the other screenwriters
in the adapted section are all heavy hitters, including Christopher
Hampton for Atonement, and Ronald Harwood for The Diving
Bell and the Butterfly. It could be anyone’s. What is
particularly striking about this play-off, however, is that it is
largely taking place between niche mini-studios and the big
studios’ specialist units.
These small units, many of them thriving within the big studios,
have practically taken over the prestige end of Hollywood
filmmaking. It is astonishing how quickly this has happened. A few
years ago %26#151; in 2003, to be exact %26#151; Sofia Coppola’s clever
Lost in Translation was the cuckoo in a best-picture nest of
epic studio production, all with casts of (not necessarily human)
thousands and spare-no-expense art direction.
The general talk was that films would increasingly be about
special effects, and no studio would bother with anything that cost
less than $120 million. Bigger, in other words, had become the new
better.
But, over the past few years, that pattern has been reversed.
This year, the only studio represented in the best-picture
competition is Warner Brothers %26#151; and that is for Tony Gilroy’s
Michael Clayton, perhaps the most intellectually demanding
film on the list, with a plot that could be usefully unravelled by
lawyers and a dominant mood of weary moral confusion.
Of the other four contenders, No Country for Old Men and
Paul Thomas Anderson’s There will be Blood, the two films
with the most nominations, were shared by the recently refurbished
Miramax and Paramount Vantage, the studio’s boutique division.
Juno, the only comedy, was produced under the Fox
Searchlight banner, and the British wartime drama Atonement
was made by Working Title for the independent Focus Features.
All apart from Juno, moreover, are resolutely serious. If
there is a shared theme in this year’s Oscar nominees overall, it
is one of mordant disappointment with the state of the world.
In a recent interview with Variety, the film industry
magazine, producer Scott Rudin said that audiences were ready to
welcome films with morally complex themes, but big studios simply
weren’t making those films any more. Rudin produced No Country
for Old Men, and was executive producer on There will be
Blood.
“In many cases, the majors have given up the business of serious
movies, and the rise of specialty units has made possible movies
that wouldn’t have been made %26#151; or would not have been made
this well %26#151; just a few years ago,” he said. The specialised
market, agreed James Schamus, of Focus Features, has matured. “The
Academy and the public, in general, are more open to challenging
movies than ever before. It’s not a case of indies sneaking in
there.”
The results of this shift should make for a stimulating night’s
viewing on February 24 %26#151; if, of course, it happens.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has confirmed
that the show will go on in some form.
Gil Gates, who is producing the Oscar Awards telecast for the
14th time, has suggested that they may use clips of previous
ceremonies to make up a show that would be a kind of Oscar archive.
Otherwise, there may be a ceremony, but no telecast.
Or the Writers’ Guild may be persuaded to come to some sort of
one-day truce to allow America’s most popular annual broadcast to
go ahead.
Officially, the Academy is saying that the usual red-carpet
event will go on. Given the current stalemate between producers and
writers, however, what will happen on the night is a good deal more
mysterious than the likely winner of best actor. Daniel Day-Lewis
for There will be Blood, they say, but we’ll have to wait
and see.

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What if Oscar threw a party, and nobody came …

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

… well, at least we’d still have a good crop of
movies. Stephanie Bunbury reports on the trouble in Tinseltown -
and how one strike might overshadow a mini-revolution.
THE main question hovering around the Oscars at the moment is
not who will win what, but (a) whether they will happen at all, or
(b) if they will happen, but in someone’s lounge room with no more
than a few party hats and crackers to create festive sparks.
The Hollywood writers’ strike is now in its third month and
shows no sign of lifting. This means that the Oscars ceremony, or
whatever passes for it, will be unscripted and thinly populated, as
most actors will not be prepared to cross the Writers’ Guild picket
line even if a gold statuette is waiting on the other side.
Which is something of a pity, as the field of contenders is both
wide open and largely deserving, which would normally make for an
exciting night as the envelopes get opened. No Country for Old
Men, the wacky Coen brothers‘ bloody one-man epic, appears to
dominate the field, with eight nominations, but the brothers’
idiosyncratic coolness and the film’s violence means it is by no
means universally loved; it will be hotly contested in every
category.
In the acting divisions, the only dubious inclusion is Cate
Blanchett’s reprised Elizabeth, a curious choice given that
Elizabeth: the Golden Age was widely panned. All the other
nominees in these categories will have strong supporters, however
%26#151; young Saoirse Ronan in Atonement has been hailed a
revelation, while Cate Blanchett’s cross-dressing role as Bob Dylan
in I’m Not There is worth a dozen Virgin Queens %26#151;
making for a series of hot competitions.
Other categories are even less predictable. The contenders for
the screenplay trophies, for example, include four women as
first-time nominees (for Juno, Lars and the Real Girl
and The Savages in the original screenplay category, and
Sarah Polley for Away from Her in the adapted
screenplay).
The hot tip for an original screenplay is, inevitably, the
colourful Diablo Cody for Juno, but the other screenwriters
in the adapted section are all heavy hitters, including Christopher
Hampton for Atonement, and Ronald Harwood for The Diving
Bell and the Butterfly. It could be anyone’s. What is
particularly striking about this play-off, however, is that it is
largely taking place between niche mini-studios and the big
studios’ specialist units.
These small units, many of them thriving within the big studios,
have practically taken over the prestige end of Hollywood
filmmaking. It is astonishing how quickly this has happened. A few
years ago %26#151; in 2003, to be exact %26#151; Sofia Coppola’s clever
Lost in Translation was the cuckoo in a best-picture nest of
epic studio production, all with casts of (not necessarily human)
thousands and spare-no-expense art direction.
The general talk was that films would increasingly be about
special effects, and no studio would bother with anything that cost
less than $120 million. Bigger, in other words, had become the new
better.
But, over the past few years, that pattern has been reversed.
This year, the only studio represented in the best-picture
competition is Warner Brothers %26#151; and that is for Tony Gilroy’s
Michael Clayton, perhaps the most intellectually demanding
film on the list, with a plot that could be usefully unravelled by
lawyers and a dominant mood of weary moral confusion.
Of the other four contenders, No Country for Old Men and
Paul Thomas Anderson’s There will be Blood, the two films
with the most nominations, were shared by the recently refurbished
Miramax and Paramount Vantage, the studio’s boutique division.
Juno, the only comedy, was produced under the Fox
Searchlight banner, and the British wartime drama Atonement
was made by Working Title for the independent Focus Features.
All apart from Juno, moreover, are resolutely serious. If
there is a shared theme in this year’s Oscar nominees overall, it
is one of mordant disappointment with the state of the world.
In a recent interview with Variety, the film industry
magazine, producer Scott Rudin said that audiences were ready to
welcome films with morally complex themes, but big studios simply
weren’t making those films any more. Rudin produced No Country
for Old Men, and was executive producer on There will be
Blood.
“In many cases, the majors have given up the business of serious
movies, and the rise of specialty units has made possible movies
that wouldn’t have been made %26#151; or would not have been made
this well %26#151; just a few years ago,” he said. The specialised
market, agreed James Schamus, of Focus Features, has matured. “The
Academy and the public, in general, are more open to challenging
movies than ever before. It’s not a case of indies sneaking in
there.”
The results of this shift should make for a stimulating night’s
viewing on February 24 %26#151; if, of course, it happens.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has confirmed
that the show will go on in some form.
Gil Gates, who is producing the Oscar Awards telecast for the
14th time, has suggested that they may use clips of previous
ceremonies to make up a show that would be a kind of Oscar archive.
Otherwise, there may be a ceremony, but no telecast.
Or the Writers’ Guild may be persuaded to come to some sort of
one-day truce to allow America’s most popular annual broadcast to
go ahead.
Officially, the Academy is saying that the usual red-carpet
event will go on. Given the current stalemate between producers and
writers, however, what will happen on the night is a good deal more
mysterious than the likely winner of best actor. Daniel Day-Lewis
for There will be Blood, they say, but we’ll have to wait
and see.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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