Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Scooby Doo - The Mystery Begins

I suppose you could see this as a companion piece to my ‘Phantom Menace’ review, another prequel no-one asked for. I’m not really sure anyone asked for ‘Scooby Doo

2: Monsters Unleashed’ either; one of the most unpleasant cinematic experiences I can recall in the past ten years. It was everything bad. I know that’s not a sentence, but it was all kinds of proper bad; insincere, illogical, condescending, and it haemorrhaged money all over the screen.

I suppose you could see this as a companion piece to my ‘Phantom Menace’ review, another prequel no-one asked for. I’m not really sure anyone asked for ‘Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed’ either; one of the most unpleasant cinematic experiences I can recall in the past ten years.

It was everything bad. I know that’s not a sentence, but it was all kinds of proper bad; insincere, illogical, condescending, and it haemorrhaged money all over the screen.

The plot concerns the creation of ‘Mystery Inc,’ and the tale of how an awkward teenage boy found his perfect match, in the form of a dopey (talking!) dog. Oh, and the school, ‘Coolsville High,’ was built over another school which was destroyed by a flood many years ago. So obviously there are ghosts. Obviously.

The plot is a mish-mash of a bunch of other movies and shows (‘Poltergeist,’ ‘The Frighteners,’ every ‘Scooby Doo’ episode you’ve ever seen) but it keeps things simple. Hands up who liked the first ‘Scooby Doo’ movie when the bad guy was revealed to be Scrappy Doo on steroids? No? It’s the familiarity and innocence of ‘The Mystery Begins’ that works. The story doesn’t really matter because this is a kid’s movie, and unlike the other live action works, it doesn’t try to offer anything for the adults who are watching except shameless nostalgia. There are no obvious winks at the camera, no drug references, and no high-wire kung-fu. What we do have is a scene of someone pulling off a ghostly mask and revealing one of three suspects (yes, there are only like three suspects), plenty of comical disguises, and a healthy dose of “jinkies,” “zoinks,” and “Scooby snacks.” These are what you want from a ‘Scooby’ movie and this is what the film offers. With no extra padding. In fact, the story moves swiftly and doesn’t dwell on such trifle matters as ‘where do ghosts get off interrupting the big game?’ and ‘why is the dog walking on two legs?’

The performances from the unknown cast are pleasant, inoffensive, ‘High School Musical’ esque versions of the cartoon’s four characters, thankfully minus the cynical stunt casting of the previous films. Bearing in mind this is a children’s film, I would also have to commend the cast as role models. Shaggy’s a sensitive young soul, Velma shows that brains are more valuable than beauty, and Fred doesn’t beat the crap out of Shaggy once the credits start to role (because he’s a jock and that’s what movie jocks usually do). Daphne bothered me for channelling some Hilary Duff. (This review isn’t pretending to be highbrow affair by the way). The core gang get to know each other through a ‘Breakfast Club’ inspired detention sequence complete with all the usual high school movie clichés, but once we’re done with that, the group generally look out for each other and don’t seem fazed by the usual teen-movie hang-ups of social groups and appearances. The innocent banter between the group and the pro-active way they approach their mystery-solving extra-curricular activities were conducted sans whining and fighting and there weren’t any scenes of ‘so-and-so feels alienated so goes off in the other direction…’

with (particularly in a slow-motion shot early on), but you get used to it and learn to embrace the animated-style. The film exists in a world where dogs talk so why shouldn’t the dog look a little unreal? If I had any real complaints, it’s that ‘Scooby’ was pretty superfluous considering the film was named after him, but this was obviously due to budgetary limitations as much as anything else. However, the always-reliable Frank Welker voices ‘Scooby’ and the familiarity of the voice is a nice reminder of the classic cartoons.

Also in the plus pile, the film managed to incite two genuine smiles from me (one ‘Kill Bill’ inspired slow-mo sequence in particular) and the ghosts would probably have been just the right side of frightening for the very young. They weren’t terrifying (and didn’t pose any real threats short of waving their arms in front of them) but they were mildly gruesome (and proceeded to take over toy aeroplanes from which they were able to shoot real bullets – amazing!).


Obviously, it’s not a perfect movie. The intrusive score plays like a cheap knock-off of the ‘Desperate Housewives’ theme tune and the film has ‘straight-to-DVD’ written all over it (particularly the re-use of shots and the obvious attempts to exclude ‘Scooby’ from as many shots as possible). The plot is simple and aimed exclusively at kids (or the ‘Scooby’ obsessives) and the lack of original ideas is glaringly obvious. But this film wasn’t made for me, and I reckon if I was eight, I’d sit down pretty happily for the 80 minute runtime.

The DVD offers an interactive personality test (I am ‘totally shaggified’ apparently) and a couple of short featurettes (none of which deal with the making of the movie) and the film is presented in 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen with a clear picture quality and 22 chapter stops. Nothing to write home about content-wise but fine for the kids.

Ultimately, ‘Scooby Doo: The Mystery Begins’ is a nice, innocent reboot of live-action ‘Scooby.’ Don’t rush out to buy this expecting a high-budget, high-quality affair, but pick it up as a perfectly fine Halloween diversion for young children (or the young at heart).
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

'Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs' serves up second straight week at top of movie box office

Movie fans stayed hungry for "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" as the animated family flick took the top spot at the box office for the second weekend in a row. The flick, based on the children's book, cooked up $24.6 million and pummeled Bruce Willis, whose action thriller, "Surrogates," came in second place with a disappointing $15 million in ticket sales. "We've seen that not only families but teens seem to be embracing it," said Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony. "It's just one of those movies that's playing to everybody."

"Fame," a remake of the 1980s music and dance hit set in a performing arts high school, opened in third place with $10 million. The weekend's other new release, the Dennis Quaid space thriller "Pandorum," failed to launch, earning just $4.4 million and sixth place on the list.

Meanwhile, Michael Moore's latest documentary, "Capitalism: A Love Story," opened strongly in limited release with a $240,000 weekend haul in just four theaters, raising its total to $306,586 since premiering Wednesday.

"People are frustrated, and I think Michael points some things out that are pretty thought-provoking and pretty eye-opening," said Kyle Davies, head of distribution for Overture, which released the documentary. "It's timely, but the movie's funny and entertaining at the same time," he said. "Michael's one of the unique people able to point to some topical issues and make it extremely interesting."
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Sunday, September 27, 2009

Smithsonian getting 'Lion King' costumes

Costumes from the Tony-winning Broadway production of "The Lion King" now have a permanent home in one of the country's largest museums. The Smithsonian National Museum of American History has acquired objects from the musical's costume wardrobe designed by Julie Taymor. The gift from Disney Theatrical Productions includes items worn by the characters of Simba and the tribal shaman Rafiki.

Simba's lion mask and headdress plus Rafiki's costume, custom shoes and hat will join the museum's permanent entertainment collections. The gift from Disney was made on the occasion of the show's reaching the 50 million worldwide attendance mark. "The Lion King" has been produced in 13 countries, including Canada, Great Britain, Japan, Germany, the Netherlands, France, Mexico, Australia, China, Taiwan, South Africa and South Korea.

-- David Ng Robbers steal Magritte nudeTwo armed robbers stole a painting by Belgian artist René Magritte from a small museum in Brussels on Thursday, police said.Brussels police spokesman Johan Berckmans said the men escaped by car with the 1948 "Olympia" oil painting. The nude portrait of the surrealist's wife, Georgette, is valued at $1.1 million.

The painting hung at Magritte's former house, which has been turned into a small museum. Entry is by appointment only. It is separate from a larger Magritte museum that opened this year.

-- associated press 'Posada Magica' moving to L.A.

The recession taketh away, and the recession giveth.

"La Posada Magica" enjoyed a 15-year holiday season run at South Coast Repertory on the strength of its alternately funny, dark and touching script by Octavio Solis about the Christmas spirit lost, then found, and lively music by Marcos Loya. Then it got swept out of its niche on SCR's 2009 schedule, a victim of economy-driven cost-cutting.

But Costa Mesa's loss is now L.A.'s gain, with the Odyssey Theatre Ensemble's announcement of a Dec. 4-24 run of the show, its Los Angeles premiere.

The play tells the story of 14-year-old Gracie, whose faith in God, not to mention her Christmas spirit, has been squelched by the recent death of her baby brother.

-- Mike Boehm 'Da Vinci Code' publisher out

The man who published "The Da Vinci Code" is resigning.

Stephen Rubin, a publishing executive since 1984 whose authors have included Dan Brown, John Grisham and Pat Conroy, said Thursday that he was stepping down as executive vice president and publisher-at-large of Random House Inc., effective Oct. 2.

"I have had the privilege of publishing and working closely with some of the greatest authors in the world," said Rubin, 67.

He said he planned to write a book and was exploring "some very exciting new opportunities in publishing."

Rubin declined further comment. His agent, Robert F. Levine, said the book was about classical music but declined to say which publisher was involved.

-- associated press A turnaround in MOCA's funds

The Museum of Contemporary Art, revealed to be in dire financial straits late last year, said Thursday that the downtown L.A. museum had raised nearly $60 million since December, hailing the figure as an indication of a turnaround at the institution.

The fundraising total includes December's $30-million pledge from the Broad Foundation, $16.4 million in trustee gifts, $3 million from individual patrons, $6.7 million from the museum's annual fund and $3.8 in trustee dues.

MOCA also has announced the election of four trustees, two newly appointed and two returning. The new members are Lilly Tartikoff, president of H. Beale Co., which produces film and television, and Nancy Marks, an arts and education supporter.

Returning trustees are former music industry executive Gilbert B. Friesen and art collector and restaurateur Peter Morton.

-- Diane Haithman Finally

Opening night: "Fantastic Mr. Fox," a stop-motion animated film featuring the voices of George Clooney, Bill Murray, Meryl Streep and Jason Schwartzman, will open the AFI Festival at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Oct. 30.

Awards update: Production designer Terence Marsh, who won Oscars for "Oliver!" and "Doctor Zhivago," will receive a lifetime achievement award from the Art Directors Guild at its annual awards ceremony on Feb. 13.
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Saturday, September 26, 2009

DVD Review - "Hannah Montana The Movie, Deluxe Edition

The pop-star double-life of Miley Stewart (Miley Cyrus) gets complicated and countrified in "Hannah Montana: The Movie,” the big-screen adaptation of the Disney Channel series. Disney has released the movie in a three-disc deluxe edition that includes the standard DVD, Blu-Ray version and digital copy of the film.

The popularity of Miley’s super-star alter-ego Hannah Montana has begun to go to her head. When Hannah gets into a much-publicized catfight with Tyra Banks, Miley’s dad, Robby Ray (Cyrus’ real-life dad, Billy Ray Cyrus), cancels the rest of her busy schedule and carts his daughter to her hometown hamlet of Crowley Corners, Tenn.

He hopes a visit to the rural town and her no-nonsense Grandma Ruby (Margo Martindale) will help Miley regain a sense of perspective. The widower also finds a potential relationship with Ruby’s ranch foreman, Lorelai (Melora Hardin), even as Miley strikes up a budding romance with hottie hired hand Travis (Lucas Till).

But the complexities of the family’s two-sided life follow them to Tennessee when Travis suggests that Miley contact her "personal friend” Hannah Montana to play a benefit concert for the community.

The movie includes all the requisite romantic montages, slapstick moments and musical interludes by both Cyruses, plus tuneful cameos from country stars Taylor Swift and Rascal Flatts (which includes guitarist Joe Don Rooney of Picher). Bonus features: Director’s commentary, deleted scenes, bloopers, music videos and more.
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Saturday, September 19, 2009

Disney on Ice Princess Classics coming to Viaero Event Center

SPECIAL GUESTS Minnie and Mickey Mouse enter the ball in style during Disney on Ice's "Princess Classics" Nov. 18-22 at the Viaero Center in Kearney.

The show, produced by Feld Entertainment, features Cinderella, Jasmine, Ariel, Sleeping Beauty, Belle, Mulan, Snow White and special guest Tinker Bell - the princess stars from a long list of Disney movies.

Tickets are $15 to $35.The show, produced by Feld Entertainment, features Cinderella, Jasmine, Ariel, Sleeping Beauty, Belle, Mulan, Snow White and special guest Tinker Bell - the princess stars from a long list of Disney movies. Tickets are $15 to $35.
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Thursday, September 17, 2009

'Bedknobs & Broomsticks' the best kids movie kids probably shouldn't watch

There were so many movies that shaped my childhood -- "The Witches," "Neverending Story," "Adventures in Babysitting" -- and whenever I watch them today I'm struck by how inappropriate they truly are for kids consumption! Honestly, what were our parents thinking letting us watch a movie that featured rat-faced witches turning kids into mice, pedophiliac flying dragons or gangsters hunting down a little girl in order to get back their copy of Playboy?

And no children's movie was less child-friendly (or more replayed in my house) than "Bedknobs and Broomsticks." The Angela Lansbury-led flick was set in WWII England and focused on three orphans who were sent to live with a witch in training. While there they play with magic, travel to animated lands and fight with Nazis. F'reals.

The movie's 30th anniversary edition DVD is out now and it's a must have for anyone who, like me, spent their youth watching Charlie, Carrie Paul and Miss. Price fight off football loving lion, King Leonidas. Watch, relive and sing along!
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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

'Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs' is a tasty treat

For more than 30 years, children have read about the fictional town of Chewandswallow, where it doesn't rain cats and dogs, it rains meatballs and cheeseburgers and pancakes. Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation have brought this classic tale to the big screen, and in 3-D, no less.

Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, the movie, is not so much based on as it is suggested by the beloved 1978 book of the same name, written by Judi Barrett and illustrated by Ron Barrett. Rather than stick to the original plotline of a grandfather telling a bedtime story about the unexplained weather phenomena of Chewandswallow, the film centers on the exploits of hapless inventor Flint Lockwood, voiced by Saturday Night Live's Bill Hader.

Flint's latest crazy idea is a machine that can convert water to food. After an electrical accident, his gadget is fired into the atmosphere, where it stays and causes clouds to produce whatever culinary delight is programmed into it from Flint's lab. Suddenly the town, once the tasteless sardine capital of the world, is deluged by flavor and variety falling from the sky.

Cue Sam Sparks (Anna Faris), Chewandswallow's new weathergirl, whose nervousness about the job causes her to make a series of painfully bad puns (meatier shower, poultry in motion).

Sam and Flint have more in common than they realize, which makes for cute animated chemistry. There are plenty of creative and hysterical moments, such as a scene showing Flint's previously failed inventions (spray-on shoes, rat-birds). When things with the machine go awry and Chewandswallow is at the mercy of a giant spaghetti tornado, it's scary in an acid-trip sort of way.

On the other hand, the 3-D is unnoticeable except for the occasional twinge of pain caused by your glasses. Flint's relationships with both Sam and his disappointed father (James Caan) are predictable; Mr. Lockwood hides his emotions under his abnormally thick eyebrows. And near the end I found myself thinking it was a bit too long for an animated flick, although it's only an hour and a half. Still, Cloudy is entertaining and funny, managing to retain most of the charm of the book in a fresh way. You'll leave the theater feeling close to full.
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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

9 Movie Review

Set in an apocalyptic world where no human is left alive nine little cloth dolls are all that is left of the world. Machines wiped out the human race and its up to these little things to....well, survive!

There really only is one machine when 9, each of the dolls are named by numbers (9 is Elijah Wood's doll character), meets up with some of the other dolls.

But 9 accidently unleashes a giant robot called The Brain! This thing when awoken begins rebuilding the robot population and creates an army of robots that now these little dolls must fight off for their survival.

This was a kewl movie, really this was a KEWL movie! It has some action and the visuals are great, the movie doesn't look bad and the story is actually quite original (for the most part)! Animation sure has come a LONG way since the old days, and its showed proudly in this movie.

I liked almost all the characters in this movie as well, some of them like 8 and 6 were kewl. I liked them mostly because of the fitting voices or some of the kewl things they did, like 8 was a big tough guy who becomes all scared in battle. And for this it was an enjoyable movie to watch. But there really isn't much development with whose who in this movie because right when the movie starts it goes FAST! With a run time of under an hour and a half and LOTS to tell the movie goes by quick and misses a bit of the important stuff!

SURE, this is a PG-13 movie and I really wasn't expecting it to be for kids, really it isn't. But I was at the movie theater and all these kids were there and then in the opening scene of the movie a woman is shown dead with her baby in her arms, thats just not a kids movie to me :P. But apart from a few images like that this is a movie taht the little ones, plus the adults, will like, its got the action and funness to it for everyone!

Now, this movie wasn't a great action packed movie and it wasn't very great either, but it still holds up to be a fun quick movie experience taht would be worth a low paying matinee, like one of those early morning shows for 6 bucks! Mostly because it is such a short movie! But its fun, enjoyable, and worth seeing for sure either way! I give 9 a deserving 7/10!!!!
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Saturday, September 12, 2009

A kids movie that's not for kids

Bottom-line: Machines bad. Humanity good. That's the simplistic animated fantasy "9" in a nutshell. Opening on 09-09-09 as a gimmick, the movie expands Shane Acker's 11-minute student Academy Award-winning short into a bleaker portrait of a post-apocalyptic future where his rag-doll inventions face off against mechanical monsters.

The remorseful inventor of the biggest baddest machine, Alan Oppenheimer (get it?), which has wiped out mankind, creates these raggedy little wisps as his last best hope to sew new seeds of humanity. They have numbers instead of names, blinking lenses for eyes, and are a plucky band of brothers (and sister).

Using their wits and mustering some might to survive against the evil hunks of hardware hunting them down, they trudge forward. The leader of the pack is 9, voiced by Elijah Wood. He doesn't heed to older, wiser no. 1's desire to play it safe (Christopher Plummer as the elder statesman). His supportive sidekick, no. 5, is voiced by John C. Reilly. Eccentric actor Crispin Glover voices out-there artist no. 6, Martin Landau is elderly inventor no. 2, and Fred Tatasciore is no. 8, a larger enforcer-type. Twins no. 3 and 4 don't speak.

The sole female is Oscar-winner Jennifer Connelly as feisty no. 7.

Acker's certainly clever. His eight-inch 'stitchpunk' puppets are reminiscent of visionary Tim Burton's work (it's no surprise that Burton is one of the producers).

But the story's essentially one-note, so drawing it out with more hide-and-seek scenes, famous performers voicing the numbered creatures and fancier production values doesn't make it better, just longer.

Pamela Pettler, who wrote Burton's "Corpse Bride" and "Monster House," is credited with the screenplay. Its sci-fi doom-and-gloom story has shades of "Terminator," with machines rising to prominence. Cue up the loud ominous score.

The landscape is desolate, with an amber palette broken by flashes of red.

If you weren't enamored with the junkyard landscape of "Wall-E," you certainly won't embrace the dreary atmosphere here. At least Pixar provided witty comic relief. Why so serious?

Stark and self-important, "9" wants you to be drawn in by the heart and soul of the characters, but there is little emotional connection.

We don't have a definitive time or place, but you've been here before: menacing marauders threaten the good people, who must rise up to defeat the hulking metal.

"9" is too dark for young children, and not dazzling enough to energize older ones. But if you enjoy adult-theme animation, the detailed handiwork will keep your attention despite the same-old story.
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Thursday, September 10, 2009

New Princess And The Frog Trailer

It's Disney's return to the great 2D animation of the past, but The Princess and the Frog isn't just a nostalgia piece: it's an all-singing, all-dancing modern musical - at least judging by the new trailer online here.

Dreamgirls' Anika Noni Rose stars as Tiana, a girl in Jazz Age New Orleans working hard to make ends meet. She dreams of one day opening her own restaurant, but one night.

When dressed as a princess for a masquerade ball, she kisses a frog prince (Bruno Campos) and finds herself transformed into an amphibian as well. The two set off across the swamps in search of Mama Odie (Jennifer Lewis), hoping that she can break the curse.
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Tuesday, September 8, 2009

3-D keeps 'Final Destination' on top at the movies

In a rare repeat performance for a horror film, The Final Destination took the top spot in theaters for the second straight week with $15.4 million, according to Nielsen EDI.
The first-place encore is unheard of for a low-budget horror movie, which typically open big and fade fast.

But Destination is the only newer movie with 3-D, which has become an irresistible lure to teens and kids, regardless of genre — or critical reception. The guinea pig comedy G-Force was flayed by reviewers, but the 3-D film has done $115 million.

"The 3-D component gets kids coming back," says Jeff Goldstein of Warner Bros., which released Destination. "It's obvious we need more movies that are 3-D capable," Goldstein says. "We need a larger footprint."

The strong hold of Destination and other films helped Hollywood end its summer season on a positive note. Ticket sales surged 107% over the same weekend last year, which was not a holiday weekend.

Ticket sales, which faltered midway through summer, have regained their footing and pushed about 8% ahead of last year's overall pace, according to Hollywood.com.

Goldstein says the summer saw a string of solid performers as opposed to last season, which was anchored by The Dark Knight's $533 million.

"It didn't play out like last year, but this was a tremendous summer," Goldstein says. "A lot of smaller films picked up the slack."

Like Inglourious Basterds, which continues its triumphant march into fall. The film dropped just 22% to take second place with $15 million. The movie, which has done $95.2 million, will likely break $100 million by next weekend and could become director Quentin Tarantino's biggest movie, eclipsing Pulp Fiction's $108 million.

The Sandra Bullock comedy All About Steve was third with $13.9 million, meeting expectations.

"She's a movie star who sells tickets," says Bert Livingston of 20th Century Fox. "People thought it would be a weaker than normal Labor Day, but we had a good weekend."

The Gerard Butler thriller Gamer opened to $11.2 million, meeting projections, while District 9 added another $9 million to its haul, lifting its total to $103.3 million.

The only other big newcomer this weekend, Mike Judge's Extract, took in $5.3 million, about $1 million below what analysts expected.
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Monday, September 7, 2009

Where The Wild Things Are New Theatrical One Sheet

Spike Jonze’s feature film rendition of Maurice Sendak’s classic story Where The Wild Things Are will hit movie theaters worldwide in October of 2009. A brand new theatrical one sheet has hit the web for the highly anticipated film. Check it out below.The cover art and tracklisting for the film’s soundtrack were released early this week.

It was created by Karen O of Yeah Yeah Yeahs, along with a collection of musicians dubbed “the Kids.” The Kids consist of Tristan Bechet (Services), Tom Biller (co-producer with Karen O and member of Afternoons), Bradford Cox (Deerhunter), Brian Chase (Yeah Yeah Yeahs), Dean Fertita (Queens of the Stone Age, The Dead Weather, The Raconteurs), Aaron Hemphill (Liars), Greg Kurstin (The Bird and the Bee), Jack Lawrence (The Dead Weather, The Raconteurs, The Greenhornes), Oscar Michel (Gris Gris), Imaad Wasif (New Folk Implosion, Alaska), Nick Zinner, (Yeah Yeah Yeahs) and an untrained children’s choir.

The soundtrack is slated to hit stores September 29. The first single from the album, “All is Love,” is currently available on iTunes.
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Sunday, September 6, 2009

Kids' movies aren't just for kids anymore

Conventional wisdom tells us that in the summer we are only able to sit for about an hour and a half to see one of the great big blockbusters; but when fall comes around and we get geared up for the Oscars, we'll sit through more thoughtful films.

Our Friday movie round-up looks at some upcoming films that defy being pigeonholed neatly into a single genre, like the still-appealing-to-adults kid's movies, "Where the Wild Things Are" and "Mr. Fox." "Where the Wild Things Are" is a film version of the Maurice Sendak children's book of the same name. It is directed by Spike Jonze, who also directed the quirky film "Adaptation" and "Being John Malkovich." The film stars Catherine Keener and an of-the-moment soundtrack with indie-rock critic's darlings.

Sendak himself was involved in the creation of the film, and he says of Jonze's interpretation, "There will be controversy about this, but the film has an entire emotional, spritiual, visual life which is as valid as the book. He's done it like me whether he is doing it or not, but in a more brilliant, modern, fantastical way."

Karina Longworth of the daily movie site SpoutBlog says, "I don't know if controversy is the term that I would use. Best-case scenario is that it goes over with both the adults and children. Worst-case scenario is that nobody gets it at all."

Rafer Guzman, film critic for "Newsday," says that Jonze's quirkiness might be just right. "That might fit Maurice Sendak's tone, the tone of the book, which does have a somewhat dark tone. It might actually be a good thing."

The film production was slowed by some back-and-forth between Warner Bros. and Jonze, with the former looking for a bit lighter tone.

"It has been a very troubled production. We'll see whether or not (Jonze) won, but both sides have been basically saying very nice things about each other in the press lately," said Guzman.

A rarity in Hollywood's children's output is that of the stop-motion animation feature -- "Mr. Fox," another fall film, fits that bill. "That's really unusual and interesting, given that so much of the stuff these days is computer generated. I think what also makes this interesting is that it is Wes Anderson's first animated feature," says Guzman.

The voices will be supplied by George Clooney, Bill Murray, Meryl Streep, Owen Wilson, and other big-name, traditional box-office draws, but that isn't what will bring the kids to the theater.

Longworth says, "These are designed to entertain an older audience." She also contends that Wes Anderson's films have often used less than "super-adult" themes, anyway. "In general, his characters are arrested children, so I think this fits really well."

"The Takeaway" is a national morning news program, delivering the news and analysis you need to catch up, start your day, and prepare for what’s ahead. The show is a co-production of WNYC and PRI, in editorial collaboration with the BBC, The New York Times Radio, and WGBH.
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Saturday, September 5, 2009

10 Geeky Movies to Raise Your Kids On - GeekDad Wayback Machine

One year ago, you were reading this by Ken Denmead.In our never-ending quest to provide you the tools and knowledge to raise your kids in your own geeky image, we present you with a list of 10 geeky movies to raise your kids with.

This is a starter list, and by no means comprehensive. It also skews towards the younger set because we have to lay the proper geeky foundation. As always, leave your suggestions for additional titles in the comments.

1. Star Wars: You must, MUST! I say, start your child our with Episode IV: A New Hope. Diligence is key, brothers and sisters, and while your kids will probably enjoy even the new trilogy for its grand spectacle, they must be brought into the fold the right way.

Isn’t it a thousand times better to fall in love with the non-verbal pluckiness of R2-D2 in New Hope, and then cheer when he pops up in Phantom Menace? I knew you’d agree.

2. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s (Philosopher’s) Stone: The Potter movies are this generation’s Star Wars trilogy, and so far, ALL of them have been well-done. The first is a perfect introduction to the world, in a more kid-friendly Chris Columbus way, and makes for a great way to get your kids into all sorts of fantasy literature later. I’ll also take my lumps now:

I’m *not* putting LOTR on this list because I don’t think it’s for younger kids - too long for them, and in cases too scary and violent. It’ll definitely make the second list, for your Geeky Tweens, though, so have no fear.

3. The Last Starfighter: This is the film from our youth that did the first, and maybe best, job of arguing that being good at videogames could be worthwhile in other aspects of your life (like being able to save the universe someday). They early CG was pretty darned good, too. Classic tale of the downtrodden geeky kid getting to find out they’re special, and live out a wish fulfillment.

4. My Neighbor Totoro: All Miyazaki is wonderful, with a beauty and spirit we seldom see in American-produced animation (Iron Giant counts as an exception to that statement). I chose Totoro because it’s the most accessible for a child, I think (Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke are a bit too scary in parts). The imaginary friend angle appeals to every young-at-heart parent, as well. If you can get your kid in love with this, then follow up with Howl’s Moving Castle, Kiki’s Delivery Service, and Nausicaa.

5. Time Bandits: Another great story of wish-fulfillment for a downtrodden kid, but this one has a merry band of miscreant little-people, time-travel, Sean Connery, John Cleese, and David Warner. Plus, it sets them up for Brazil and all the Monty Python oeuvre as they get older.
6. The Dark Crystal: The best pure-fantasy movie out there for younger kids, period. There are no human characters in the film at all (yes, I know, they’re all puppets), but we still get attached to them and sucked into their world. An also-ran here would be Neverending Story, but I’d put Labyrinth in the tweens list for next time.

7. WarGames: You could argue for WarGames to be on the tweens list as well, but I like it here because the kids will connect with the computer angle, the being ignored by grown-ups angle. I also like the idea of starting them young with a sense of the government and military being important, but not always bad. Let’s just pretend the ”sequel” that’s out on DVD now never happened, okay?

8. Chitty-Chitty Bang-Bang: The technicolor American musical in all its splendor, with Dick van Dyke at his prime, and a magical car. The breakfast machine in the beginning should inspire many a Maker, and I always revel in noticing Desmond Llewelyn (original Q in the Bond movies - this was an Ian Fleming story, after all!), and Benny Hill as the toymaker.

9. Goonies: The perfect geek-gang adventure story with home-made gadgets, pirates, treasure and all, this movie also helps reinforce finding and sticking to friendships. The talk about a sequel for this movie, with most or all of the original cast, really gets me excited (just like the Tr2n footage).

10. Back to the Future: The best way to initiate your kids into the joys of time-travel stories, and the joys of all things Christopher Lloyd. This is one of those cases where the whole series is enjoyable and family-friendly, and the great geeky repeatable dialog will keep you amused for a long time. Hello, McFly?!?!So, what do you think? Any other great geeky starter movies for our kids? Let me know!
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Friday, September 4, 2009

Disney to buy Marvel

THE WALT Disney Co. announced Monday it has agreed to buy Marvel Entertainment Inc, whose stable of characters includes Spider-Man, Iron Man and the X-Men, in a stock and cash deal valued at four billion dollars.

'We believe that adding Marvel to Disney's unique portfolio of brands provides significant opportunities for long-term growth and value creation,' Disney president and chief executive Robert Iger said in a statement.

'We are pleased to bring this talent and these great assets to Disney.' Marvel chief executive Ike Perlmutter said Disney is 'the perfect home for Marvel's fantastic library of characters given its proven ability to expand content creation and licensing businesses.

'This is an unparalleled opportunity for Marvel to build upon its vibrant brand and character properties by accessing Disney's tremendous global organization and infrastructure around the world,' he added.

Besides Spider-Man, Iron Man and the X-Men, Marvel's cast of over 5,000 characters includes Captain America, the Fantastic Four and Thor.

Disney and Marvel said Marvel shareholders would receive a total of US$30 per share in cash plus approximately 0.745 Disney shares for each Marvel share they own.

It said that based on the closing price of Disney stock on Friday, the transaction value is 50 dollars per Marvel share or approximately four billion dollars.

Perlmutter will continue to oversee the Marvel properties, which include Marvel Studios, Marvel Animation and Marvel Comics, and will 'work directly with Disney's global lines of business to build and further integrate Marvel's properties,' the statement said.

It said the boards of directors of both companies have approved the transaction but it still needs the green light from anti-trust authorities and Marvel shareholders.
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Review - Even death looks ho-hum in 'The Final Destination"

"Is it safe to sit here?" The girl always asks that in "Final Destination" movies. The answer, on screen, is "Yes, yes, yes." But we in the audience know it's "No, no, no." As in "Get out of there. NOW."In "The Final Destination," showing in many theaters in 3-D, "there" is a stock car race track where the seats are rotting, the cement has cracks and the pit crews are the most accident-prone on the planet.

A quartet of college kids go and one "sees" a crowd-killing accident before it happens and convinces his friends to leave. This is followed by a crowd-killing accident. Followed by more chain-reaction disasters that take out the survivors who "should have been killed" one by one.

They called it "death's grand design" in an earlier "Destination." In the latest unoriginal, exhausted sequel, they give it the pedestrian label "the death list." The latter "Final Destination" movies can't fail to make me nostalgic for the James Wong original, a movie wrapped up in high school kids, who all think they're immortal anyway, wrestling with mortality, trying to decode "death's grand design" foreshadowed by the music of John Denver.

I was thinking of that one this morning on the way to the office as three "I'm gonna live FOREVER" teens darted across six lanes of speeding traffic to beat their bus to the stop. Making that generation question its lack of fear of death was fascinating fodder for a horror film.

movies have been reduced to bland killing machines, though "The Final Destination," the latest, features aggressive use of 3-D, with everything from race cars, tires and engines to nails from a nail gun, entrails and blood blasting off the screen into our laps.

Blandly acted by players who seem resigned to the paycheck rather than terrified by the prospect of death or paralyzed by fear or even morbidly fascinated by their impending doom, this one is certainly worth a pass. Of the blase cast, only Mykelti Williamson, as a security guard who accepts his fate with the help of his faith, and Nick Zano, playing a rude, crude and funny frat-boy jerk, stand out.

A few feeble stabs at social commentary, such as race-fan racism (an attempted cross-burning) and the magic of 3-D at the movies (in one scene, they torch a movie theater showing a film in 3-D) don't make up for the cheats — violent accidents that may or may not be premonitions — or the exciting-as-a-poached-egg leading man (Bobby Campo).

It's not frightening in the least, with only a few amusing moments, a pedal-and-forehead-to-the-metal race track crash opener, and then you just keep time by counting off who survives the initial slaughter, who awaits death when "their turn" comes. Eighty minutes and it's all over. Until the NEXT "Final Destination." A tip? Don't go to stock car races. Don't leave your sun roof open in the car wash. And don't go in any cinema showing "The Final Destination" in Theater 13.
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Thursday, September 3, 2009

Disney TV Series Morphs Into Full-Length Film

The hit Disney TV series "The Wizards of Waverly Place" has been lengthened into a film. Manhattan's magical wizard siblings, Alex, Justin and Max Russo accompany their parents on a Caribbean vacation where Alex's inadvertent magic spell makes it so her parents have never met. Alex Russo is portrayed by Selena Gomez, the superstar principle of the series who also stars in the film.

"I can speak for the whole cast when I say that it just takes our characters to a whole new level," says Gomez. "And you get to see a sweeter side to my character. She's very sassy, of course, and in the beginning she's very frustrated with her parents because she wants to have freedom. But towards the end she's very happy because she has her family and she doesn't know what she would do without them." David Henrie also recreates his series role for the film.

"A lot of things are not resolved but understood on a more dramatic level than on the TV show," says Henrie. Jake Austin learned some acting chops while making the full-length feature. "When you watch a movie you can tell when an actor is over the top or when an actor is just right, when you say, 'wow, I felt like I was there'. That's when the actor was doing good and that's what we try to do in movies where you try to not go over the top and try to make it as realistic as possible."

Maria Canals-Barrera, who plays the mother in the TV series, also brightens up the film version. She learned from the movie what to expect from her own children. "What it does is it gives me a little hint into the future, because my kids are little, ages six and four," says Canals-Barrera. "So I'm raising teenagers on the show and it gives me like 'pretend practice,' so I can deal with teenage problems: love, boys, rebellion."

Coming up the last week in August, there is going to be the favorites of each of the stars playing each and every day up until the movie's premiere on August 28.
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DuckTales - The Movie - Treasure of the Lost Lamp Disney Movie Club Exclusive DVD Review

The long title -- DuckTales: The Movie - Treasure of the Lost Lamp -- implied there was intent to make more films within the universe. While no such sequels were made, the plan was not without reason.

"DuckTales" was a highly successful property for Disney. The television series had received acclaim and very good ratings. Merchandise, from lunchboxes and beach towels to VHS tapes and a Nintendo game, was selling.

When the film was released to theaters, Disney aired a television special hosted by Tracey Gold and Kadeem Hardison (actors from then-popular sitcoms "Growing Pains" and "A Different World", respectively).

The choice of these 20-year-olds as hosts supports the notion that it wasn't just children watching these cartoons, but whole families, even cool young adults. The special wasn't a behind-the-scenes look at the film's making as much as a spotlight on the success of the DuckTales franchise, as the hosts reviewed their favorite moments from the TV series and previewed scenes from the upcoming theatrical release.

Treasure of the Lost Lamp follows Uncle Scrooge, Huey, Dewey, Louie, Webbigail, and Launchpad on a hunt for the lost treasure of Collie Baba (a clever play on the fictitious Ali Baba). After literally stumbling on the location of the treasure in a pyramid that barely breaks the surface of sand dunes, the explorers follow a map to find Collie Baba's treasure. Escaping traps only Indiana Jones would be comfortable with, the ragtag treasure hunters reluctantly leave the booty behind and escape with only a rusty old lamp in Webby's knapsack.

Back in Duckburg, while cleaning the lamp, Webby releases a genie who quickly befriends the children and grants them wishes including making a giant ice cream sundae fall from the sky. The genie seems to enjoy granting wishes and playing with the kids as much as they enjoy requesting and reaping rewards.

All of this is done in secrecy, though, so that Uncle Scrooge doesn't find out about the genie and take away the kids' newfound playmate. It doesn't take long before Scrooge finds out what's going on, though. After making several selfish wishes, he starts to feels sorry for the spirit who must spend his life in solitude and servitude.

Meanwhile, a menacing magician named Merlock is also on the trail of Collie Baba's genie. With his special talisman, Merlock can make an unlimited number of wishes, and rule the world (as evil magicians are so often bent on doing). Stealing the lamp, Merlock assumes his place on a self-made throne of evil overlooking Duckburg.

Can the gang with a special appreciation for the genie overcome the most powerful sorcerer in the world with only their courage and wit? The ending of the film is obvious to any viewer within the first fifteen minutes of the movie (especially if they’ve already seen Aladdin), however I won't spoil it here.

The film itself is cheesy, cookie-cutter storytelling with no real surprises or legitimate character development. Serialized episodes of the "DuckTales" TV series are superior to this outing. Even the writing on this film was campy beyond anything Disney had ever put on screen (including Trenchcoat and Midnight Madness):

Scrooge: Launchpad, is this a stunt you learned in flight school? Launchpad: Flight school? Scrooge: You mean you never took flying lessons? Launchpad: Well, I took a crash course. Scrooge (placing his hand on his head and looking at the camera): Now he tells me.

All of the characters are paper thin and only Scrooge makes a trite character change toward the end of the film. It all seems so forced, though, that an ABC after school special looks subtle in comparison. There is no real depth hinted at in any character on screen, save for perhaps the villain, Merlock (voiced by Christopher Lloyd).

The animation quality is vastly subpar when compared to other Disney theatrical releases, however this is due to the fact that it was almost all animated in France and not by Walt Disney Feature Animation. This was the first film released by the television animation department that would come to be known as DisneyToon Studios (here it's dubbed "Disney MovieToons"). The division developed the story in the United States, then animation was completed overseas.

The practice was similar to what Disney began doing five years earlier on "The Gummi Bears" and "The Wuzzles." The animation of Treasure of the Lost Lamp is only slightly superior to TV caliber, but as all of Disney's small screen animation at that time was high quality, that there wasn't a huge gap to fill in jumping to the big screen.

DuckTales: The Movie - Treasure of the Lost Lamp was first released to DVD in the PAL format and Region 2 of Europe. In January of 2006, the Disney Movie Club included the film in its fourth wave of Club-exclusive DVDs. The disc seemed identical to the earlier international releases, but Americans were finally able to have a clean, legal copy of the film that started DisneyToon Studios and essentially capped off Disney's most successful animated series to date.
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Miley Cyrus enjoys romance with Aussie star Liam Hemsworth

The relationship between Liam Hemsworth and Disney star Miley Cyrus appears to be heating up, with a heavy public pashing session stunning onlookers at a US airport recently.

They were "full-on making out", said Alex Emanuel, a New York actor who was a few feet away from the couple. "(Cyrus was) as giddy as a schoolgirl."

Hemsworth, who was flying out of Nashville, has been working closely with Cyrus, on the Disney movie The Last Song.

"She (Cyrus) jumped into his arms and threw her arms around his neck and kissed him and leaned back and he was dipping her," Emanuel told People magazine. "It was like a scene out of an old movie where the guy's getting on a train and they're saying their goodbyes."

Hemsworth -- who had small roles in Neighbours and adult drama Satisfaction -- and the Hannah Montana star have just finished filming the new Disney flick, which also stars Kelly Preston and Greg Kinnear.

Cyrus has spoken fondly about Hemsworth on her Twitter posts, revealing they like to stay in together and watch TV. "I kinda want to go see The Time Traveler's Wife but I think I'll just sit around and eat sushi and watch Liar Liar with Liam," she Twittered.
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'Inglourious Basterds' predicted to have No. 1 weekend at box office

Weinstein Co. might be getting some much-needed good news this weekend. The financially beleaguered independent movie studio opens Quentin Tarantino's World War II action film "Inglourious Basterds" today and all indications are that it will have a solid and potentially very strong opening. It's the first major release for Weinstein Co., which is attempting to strip away its widespread media interests and focus on movies and television.
According to people with access to pre-release audience polling, "Basterds" should sell more than $25 million worth of tickets in the U.S. and Canada this weekend and could very well top $30 million. The movie cost about $70 million to produce. Weinstein Co. split that cost with Universal Pictures, which is handling overseas distribution. "Basterds" is opening in 22 foreign countries this weekend, including most of Europe. Weinstein Co. and Universal will split the movie's worldwide proceeds equally.

It's likely to be the biggest opening of Tarantino's career, not accounting for ticket price inflation. His highest domestic launch so far is $25.1 million from "Kill Bill: Vol. 2," which Bob and Harvey Weinstein's old studio Miramax released in 2004. A strong opening, however, won't guarantee a great overall performance for "Basterds."

The movie clocks in at more than 2 1/2 hours and may generate some negative reactions given its explicit violence, so word of mouth could be crucial. In addition, movie attendance in late August is typically slow. The biggest-ever opening in the second half of the month is 2007's "Superbad," which earned $33.1 million its first weekend.

Reviews for "Basterds" thus far have been largely positive, with some exceptions: Times critic Kenneth Turan called it "unforgivably leisurely, almost glacial, a film that loses its way in the thickets of alternative history and manages to be violent without the start-to-finish energy that violence on screen usually guarantees."

The movie is tracking strongest with male moviegoers. That could put it in conflict with "District 9," which opened to a very strong $37.4 million last Friday. Sixty-four percent of its opening-weekend audience was men, although Sony Pictures is hoping to attract more women.

"District 9" will almost certainly be the No. 2 movie this weekend, as three other low-budget releases are each expected to gross well under $10 million. Fox has the comedy "Post Grad" from its defunct Fox Atomic youth unit; the Fox Searchlight specialty division has handled the film's marketing.

Disney is releasing documentary "X Games 3D: The Movie" on 3-D screens only.Warner Bros. is releasing the family film "Shorts," directed by Robert Rodriguez, which was financed by Media Rights Capital and Imagenation Abu Dhabi.

With no new film aimed at adult women this weekend, Warner Bros. will probably be watching to see whether "The Time Traveler's Wife" demonstrates staying power by dropping less than 40% after its mediocre $18.6-million launch last weekend.
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Avatar movie - history of 3D cinema

Hundreds of sold-out 3-D cinemas across the world will be showing 15 minutes of teaser footage of the new film, the full version of which will be released in December. To mark the event Telegraph.co.uk has summarised the history of 3-D cinema from its conception in the 19th century to "Avatar Day" in the 21st.

1894 William Friese-Greene, the British film pioneer, files a patent for a 3-D movie process using two films projected side by side on screen while the viewer looks through a stereoscope to converge the two images.

1922 The Power of Love, using a system developed by cinematographer Robert Elder, becomes the first 3-D movie shown to a commercial audience when it is screened in Los Angeles.

1936 MGM's Audioscopics, developed by Joseph Leventhal and John Norling, wins the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Novelty).

1952 sees the beginning of the three-year period referred to as the "golden era" of 3-D cinema. Bwana Devil, the first colour stereoscopic feature, produced, written and directed by Arch Oboler, is released.

1953 Two groundbreaking features are released in 3-D: Columbia's Man in the Dark and Warner Bros. House of Wax, the first 3-D feature with stereophonic sound. Other releases include Dial M for Murder and It Came from Outer Space.

The success of these films proves that major studios now have a method of getting moviegoers back into theatres and away from television sets, which are causing a steady decline in attendance.

1961 Although 3-D films largely remain dormant for the first part of the 1960s The Mask, is a success. The film, which is shot in 2-D, uses 3-D to enhance the scenes in which the main character puts on a cursed tribal mask.

1970 Stereovision is founded. The company releases The Stewardesses, a soft-core sex comedy, which costs $100,000 to produce, but earns $27 million in North America alone in fewer than 800 theatres, becoming the most profitable 3-Dimensional film to date.

1986 IMAX begins offering non-fiction films in 3-D, starting with the 20-minute National Film Board of Canada production Transitions. Other releases include Jaws 3-D, Amityville 3-D, Friday the 13th Part III 3-D, as well as The Man Who Wasn't There and Starchaser: The Legend of Orin.

2003 Sabucat Productions organises the first World 3-D Exposition, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the original craze. James Cameron's Ghosts of the Abyss, a 3-D tour of the Titanic wreckage, is released.

It is the first full-length 3-D IMAX feature filmed with the Reality Camera System, which uses the latest HDTV video cameras, rather than film. The same camera system is used to film Spy Kids 3D: Game Over in the same year, Aliens of the Deep in 2005.

2004 The Polar Express is released as IMAX's first full length animated 3-D feature. The 3-D version earns about 14 times as much per screen as the 2D version – prompting renewed interest in 3-D among film studios.
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Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Hannah Montana The Movie exclusive

Osment first began portraying Miley Cyrus' onscreen best friend Lilly Truscott in 2006 and 75 episodes later -- Hannah Montana is about to begin its final season.

Before Miley, Emily and the Hannah Montana world come to a close, the pop culture earthquake produced a big screen movie that is available August 18 on DVD and Blu-ray.

Osment shares unequaled access to the ‘tween world’s biggest institution that is only available here at SheKnows.

Your kids will flip for Hannah Montana The Movie. The actress is the sister of Haley Joel Osment and is no stranger to film or television.

Emily starred in Robert Rodriguez’s Spy Kids trilogy as well as guest appearances on some of television’s biggest hits including Friends, Touched by an Angel and Third Rock from the Sun. Montana madness SheKnows:

When you first started working on the Hannah Montana show, if there was any inkling that what you were working on was something truly special?

Emily Osment: No, I don’t think any of us on the set ever thought it would get this big. We are so fortunate to be able to work on a show that was widely accepted by so many different types of people. It continues. We’re working on season four next year and we just keep going. SheKnows: It’s so unique, what was your first reaction to the art-imitating-life premise of the show?

Emily Osment: I think you’re right. It’s art imitating life in the fact that it’s Miley basically. I remember sitting in a room with her when she was like, “maybe I should do my own music?” (Laughs) I totally remember that. Ever since then, it’s just been crazy. SheKnows: For you, as a younger performer of her age, was Miley’s dad Billy Ray Cyrus a nice presence on the Hannah Montana set?

Emily Osment: He’s everybody’s favorite guy. He’s so funny and really laid back. Hannah Montana on TV versus screen SheKnows: When you get a chance when you pour so much into a show as you do and you have a chance to take it to the big screen, how was that process filming it for film versus television?

Emily Osment: When shooting for television, it’s very fast paced and the schedule is always the same. When we shoot a movie, the light would change and we’d wait around for five hours. So, it was very different experience. It just takes so much longer to shoot a The Hannah Montana Movie than the show, Hannah Montana. Filming the movie was a fantastic experience.
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Underneath Robert Rodriguez's Shorts.

Robert Rodriguez lives comfortably in two different film worlds; one is the cheeky and violent adult universe, the other is for kids of all ages. On the grown up side, for instance, refer to the El Mariachi series which also includes Desperado and Once Upon a Time In Mexico. By contrast, there's his Spy Kids trilogy, which is strictly adolescent.

His latest called Shorts is definitely for little rascals who like a good farce joke. Opening on Friday, the movie tracks the exploits of 11-year-old Toe Thompson (Jimmy Bennett), a typical kid in a cliched suburban community who is bored at school and bullied by a pack of juveniles.

All that changes, sort of, when Toe finds a magic rainbow rock that makes his wishes come true but not always with positive results as illustrated by the separate arrivals of bratty aliens, walking alligators and a giant monster booger.

Adding to the playfulness of the Rodriguez fantasy is the fact that the movie is told in a series of time-shifting vignettes.

Not all the creative credit should go to Rodriguez, though. His 10-year-old son Rebel came up with the Shorts idea a few years ago, so he was rewarded by dad who gave him a co-starring role playing Toe's sidekick Lug.

The Shorts title was his son's, too,

"As he (Rebel) explained, the stories are short, the kids are short and they wear shorts," reports Rodriguez smiling. "I say it's like Pulp Fiction for kids because each of the stories are told out of order."

As far as casting Rebel, Rodriguez explains, "He's no rookie." At five he played a young Sharkboy in Rodriguez's The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D. He was also a robot in Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over and he was the baby on a magazine cover in 2001's Spy Kids.

Wisely, the filmmaker populated his kids' flick with some veteran actors, too. Jon Cryer and Leslie Mann play Toe's work-obsessed parents. William H. Macy's a compulsive scientist while James Spader chews some scenery as the villainous Mr. Black, head of Black Box Industries which owns the suburb and employs most of the adults who live there.

It's an odd plot with unlikely characters, but Rodriguez continues to do his movies his way thanks to the efficient productions he puts together at his Austin, Texas-based company. which boasts a mini-studio housed in hangars at an abandoned airport.

"A lot of things are happy accidents," Rodriguez says. "When the Austin airport was moving we convinced them to let the hangars stay up, so we used them for the Spy Kids movies."

Four years later, while filming Sin City there, "I looked around and said, 'Wait a minute, I have my own studio'," he says.

It allows Rodriquez the freedom to multi-task, which is the main attraction. He writes, directs, produces, often edits, prepares musical scores and sometimes operates the cameras on his quickly made projects.

"The strange thing is the more you do the easier things are, because there's an efficiency when the director, editor and writer and producer are the same person," notes the 41-year-old father of five.

Spader, the Shorts villain who had never worked with the director previously, says he was amazed at Rodriguez's efficiency. "You have to give yourself up to his movies because he knows exactly what he wants," says the actor.

It's been Rodriguez's style since his movie debut with the cheap and cheerful El Mariachi in 1992, subsequently outlined by his popular memoir on making films, Rebel Without A Crew.

He has tried the director for hire routine, too, but pulled back from that when he had to resign from the Director's Guild of America over a co-directing ruling for Sin City. That forced him out of a planned studio film in development, and he went back to his Austin roots full time.

While the adult-only Sin City did OK critically and at the box-office, he has had disappointments since his independence from Hollywood. Shark Boy and Lava Girl, conceived by another son Racer, received poor reviews and earned mediocre box-office.

Grindhouse, his double feature with Quentin Tarantino, disappointed critics and fans. And his planned remake of Barbarella with girlfriend Rose McGowan (he divorced wife and producer Elizabeth Avellan after separating in 2005 ) was finally scrapped this spring.

However, Machete is a go. It's the feature length action film expanded from the fake trailer in Grindhouse which showcase tough guy Danny Trejo from the Spy Kids films.

In Machete, Trejo plays the title character, a bad ass do gooder battling the bad guys. So far, Rodriguez says he's enjoying the shoot with Trejo and co- stars Robert De Niro, Lindsay Lohan, Cheech Marin, Michelle Rodriguez, Jessica Alba, and Steven Seagal.

"It's been amazing and the movie has a lot of energy," he maintains. "I think we've surpassed what we wanted to do."

Next up is his relaunching of the Predator series with the film Predators, written and produced by Rodriguez.

Then, of course, there is the often discussed sequel to Sin City written by creator Frank Miller. The director's guarded about the film's future, however.

``Until I am on that set, I can't say it's happening," Rodriguez insists. "But I do have a script."
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Moving on up

THE building looked just like another warehouse from the outside, but for the large arch at the front gate that simply stated “Pixar Animation Studios”. However, once you enter the studio’s compound in Emeryville, California, there is no doubt that you are now in Pixarland.

Greeting incoming vehicles at the main road is a huge Cars logo painted on the tarmac, and as you walk towards the main entrance, a gigantic lamp towers over you like a silent guardian. Yes, you read that right. A LAMP. It is a replica of Pixar’s hopping lamp mascot – Luxo Jr, the titular character in a pioneering 1986 Pixar short film that the then fledgling studio made to prove it could make a realistic and engaging animated film using computers.

Celebrations of Pixar’s past, such as the lamp, are all over the place. Entering the main hall of the studio building, one is greeted by life-sized replicas of Monster’s Inc’s Mike and Sully on your left, and Cars’ Luigi and Guido on your right. Bruce the Shark (Finding Nemo) leers at visitors from atop a flight of stairs, while on the opposite end, The Incredibles’ family stand ready to fight off any super-villains who dare enter. Look closer at the bottom of the walls around the building, and you’ll see tiny cartoon rats from Ratatouille drawn on the walls.

Even the toilet signs have been Pixar-fied – in place of the usual male and female stick figures are silhouettes of Woody and Little Bo Peep from Toy Story, while the reception counter is cluttered with memorabilia from all the films – from Toy Story and A Bug’s Life, all the way to WALL-E.

Still, for all their pride in their significant past achievements, Pixar has always been a company that lives in the present and looks to the future. And at the time of this visit to Pixar, all eyes were on a small little remote-controlled model house suspended by hundreds of balloons, flying around the hall … the focal point of Pixar’s landmark 10th feature
Measuring up

Critics had predicted that Up would be the movie to break the amazing streak of nine successive box-office hits, four of which won Best Animated Feature Oscars.

After all, surely the studio couldn’t possibly follow up a movie as huge as last year’s WALL-E with yet another hit. Surely this movie about some old guy and a floating house couldn’t measure up to their past movies and continue the studio’s “lucky” streak.

Oh, how wrong all those naysayers are!

At the time of writing this article, Up has grossed almost US$290mil (RM1bil), making it Pixar’s second biggest hit ever, after Finding Nemo. It has also beaten the likes of Star Trek and Watchmen, coming in second only to Transformers: The Revenge of The Fallen at the top of the US’s domestic box office of 2009.

And to prove money is not all that matters, Up was even chosen as the opening film at the prestigious Cannes Festival in France earlier this year, the first ever animated feature to be given that honour.

So how is it that a movie about a cranky old man in a house that floats away on thousands of balloons has managed to do so well?

During a roundtable interview with director Pete Docter (who already has one major Pixar hit under his belt – Monsters Inc), three months before Up became the studio’s 10th straight hit, he admitted that there certainly was pressure to keep the winning streak going.

“We’re always under pressure around here. Even on Monsters Inc, I remember going to the Toy Story 2 wrap party and having a good time, when it struck me ... oh, no, our movie comes next!” he recalled whimsically. “You try not to compare one movie with another, and hope that it will be different enough from the rest. To me, movies should always be able to stand on their own.”

Up to par

One of the reasons Up works so well is because of the emphasis on telling a good story, a quality that all Pixar movies possess. The movie revolves around 78-year-old Carl Fredrickson (voiced by Ed Asner), whose house is in danger of being demolished to make way for high-rise buildings. To save it, and also to fulfil a promise to his late wife, Carl ties his house to thousands of balloons and floats away to Paradise Falls in South America. Unfortunately, things don’t quite go as planned, as a young kid named Russell (Jordan Nagai) unwittingly comes aboard as well.

The story of Carl and his floating house of balloons essentially came from two separate ideas that Docter and his co-director/head writer Bob Peterson came up with.

“After Monsters Inc, Bob and I just sat in a room and came up with a long list of ideas of what we wanted to do next. One of the things we thought would be fun was to do something with a really sour old guy,” he said.

“At the same time, being an animator who is always stuck at a desk drawing and animating, I’ve always like the idea of escaping – of floating away somewhere.”

“That idea of escaping led to Pete doing a lot of drawing and writing, and eventually to this drawing of a house on balloons which looks fun, cool, beautiful and lyrical,” recalled Up producer Jonas Rivera. “From there onwards, it literally became like a math problem – who’s in that house? Where is he going? Who’s with him? And as we started answering those questions, we reverse-engineered the story out of that idea.”

According to Rivera, the moment they felt the story was good enough, they pitched it to the big guns at Pixar – namely founders John Lasseter and Ed Catmull, and the other directors such as Brad Bird and Andrew Stanton.

“Bob (Peterson) was pitching the story of Carl – his life, as a kid, meeting Ellie, falling in love, and their whole life together up till her death ... and at the end of it, John was in tears!” Rivera recalled. “He said at the time, ‘I don’t care where it goes; at that point, you got me!’ From then on, it felt like we had a license to really take this where we wanted it to go.”

Uphill challenges

Given that Up is arguably Pixar’s first film with ordinary people as the main characters (as opposed to talking cars, toys, fishes, superheroes and bugs) and the studio’s first film in 3D, Docter’s team was faced with an uphill task.

And that’s without mentioning the ludicrous idea of a house floating away on balloons.

“The idea of a floating house on balloons is a bit bizarre ... it doesn’t make logical sense but it makes emotional sense, and it feels right,” said Docter.

“I was always secretly worried about the house lifting up, because the movie takes a crazy turn at that point. If we didn’t do it right, it’s going to seem like two different movies altogether,” said Rivera. “Then one day we screened it for an audience in Portland of families and kids who knew nothing about the film, and after that we had 80 people asking us questions, but not one person asked us about the house going up! They all accepted it. We felt like we were on the right track.”

Docter and his team also found time to take a trip to South America in the name of research – spending four days at Triple Point, a mountain range right where Venezuela meets Brazil and Guyana that consisted of tepuys (tabletop mountains) and weird rock formations.

“We hiked up there and stayed for four days just sketching and taking photographs, and basically experiencing what Carl and Russell do on the film. We also took a boat up to Angel Falls which we based Paradise Falls on,” Docter recounted.

After four to five years working on the film, Up is truly a labour of love for Docter, Rivera and the rest of the team. Rivera sums up their effort best: “John (Lasseter) always tells us, ‘Just make a film you’ll be proud to show your family and friends.’

“We don’t know if people will like it as much as WALL-E or Finding Nemo, or whether it’ll make as much money, but we do know that this is the best that we can do. We can sleep at night thinking it’s as good as we can make it ... so here you go, world, I hope you like it!”
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