Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2008

Iron Man movie: first review

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What's it about: Are you kidding me? Just follow the link if you're interested. Click here for a trailer.

Comments: If you haven't heard, the latest superhero to grace the silver screen is Marvel's Iron Man. Now I never really was a big fan of the Iron Man comic books, but the movie reportedly has some smashing special effects. I'm cool with that. This is also the first movie totally funded by Marvel.

More details: Strong points of the movie includes Robert Downey Jr.'s acting (that's him in the picture; looks kinda funny, doesn't he?), special effects (not just the explosions, and particularly Downey Jr. getting used to his suit), and a nice storyline that allows room for character development and witty dialogue. You also have Gwyneth Paltrow making a comeback after four years (her character's name is Pepper Potts... another one of Stan Lee's amazing alliterations, à la Peter Parker and Bruce Banner). Everyone's saying it's a sure blockbuster. And yes, the Black Sabbath song 'Iron Man' does play at the conclusion.

Here's the link again.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Classic Bollywood rain song

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A fine example of a classic Bollywood rain song. For the uninitiated: until very recently, rain songs were the steamiest parts in Bollywood movies (closely followed by rape scenes, which were, strangely, very popular). Nowadays pretty much everything goes, but there was a time when the actors weren't allowed to kiss on-screen (scandal magazines filled the void of our imaginations), so they tried to do everything else to keep you interested. Fans of this song (featuring Amitabh Bachchan and the late Smita Patil) will religiously tell you that it's very romantic. The tune is catchy on my Hindi-tolerant ears, but in polite disagreement, I never can stop laughing at it. Go on, take a look. PS1- the guy who appears at the end of the song plays the owner of the hotel where the other two work. At the end of the movie, he turns out to be the long-lost brother of the tall guy. PS2- my wife tells me that this was once voted the sexiest Bollywood song ever. PS3- sorry if this post offends anybody.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Why do people enjoy horror movies?

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I'm just back from watching The Ruins. These days when I go to the theatre to watch a horror movie, I no longer concentrate on the scenes intended to cause the most trauma. I spend my time looking around, observing how people react.

In Doomsday, when a man is being burnt alive to feed a horde of post-apocalyptic cannibals, the audience is cheering. It's supposedly cool when the Jigsaw Killer in the Saw movies succeeds in making people fall into his gory traps, and people are also cheering when they watch a man being amputated with a hunting knife in The Ruins.

What's so funny about these scenes? I watched carefully to make sure there weren't any hidden directorial tricks involved -- some sort of comic undertone or the likes. Were the actors smirking when they were performing these horrifying scenes? Did the background music turn funny? Were the victims in these movies acting in a comic manner?

No. Nothing, nil, nada. All these extremely repulsive and horrifying scenes weren't meant to be funny. They were meant to be scary, but most people laugh at them. I look at the gleaming faces in the dark -- teenagers, middle aged people, single moms, kids, seniors. Why?

And, from a critical point of view, how successful are these scenes really as artistic devices/constructions? Is the audience really laughing at the scenes or the artists involved?

According to a Science Daily article, researchers at Berkeley have concluded that people love horror movies for the simple reason that they enjoy being scared. The audience perceives that there is no real threat, and even the acting which is meant to evoke feelings of trauma and shock is, bluntly put, an articulate hoax, and therefore enjoy them.

But it still doesn't explain anything beyond the surface layer. A hundred years back, Dracula in a silent movie would absolutely terrify the living shit out of anybody. When did we change? Have we gotten so used to movies, that we unconsciously refuse to immerse in it, but still appreciate it to satisfy a primal instinct deep inside our genes?

We're laughing at something scary because we know it's not real. But violent movies do breed violent acts. What is real, then? And -- how will violence be portrayed in future?

Suddenly, I'm very genuinely scared.

Friday, February 29, 2008

New Iron Man trailer

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I'm not really a big fan of Iron Man but this trailer blew me over. The poster, as you can see, is pretty cool too.




Thursday, February 14, 2008

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull movie trailer!

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Click on the link to check it out :)

Sunday, January 13, 2008

List of Golden Globe 2008 winners (and of those who should have won)

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I was looking for a list of Golden Globe winners for this year, but every one I came across seemed to be embedded in the habitual expert tall-talk. Hence I've come up with my own no-nonsense version (only for the movies, I'm not really interested in who won for TV) -- and a list of those who I think (based on my long history as a movie buff!) should have won.I was looking for a list of Golden Globe winners for this year, but every one I came across seemed to be embedded in the habitual expert tall-talk. Hence I've come up with my own no-nonsense version (only for the movies, I'm not really interested in who won for TV) -- and a list of those who I think (based on my long history as a movie buff!) should have won. You can check out the Golden Globe site here, which lists additional information and links, as well as nominations and results for television performances. Just the list of winners for Golden Globe 2008 (movies)
  • Best Motion Picture - Drama Atonement
  • Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Julie Christie [Away From Her]
  • Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama Daniel Day-Lewis [There Will Be Blood]
  • Best Motion Picture - Musical Or Comedy Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
  • Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Marion Cotillard [La Vie En Rose]
  • Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Johnny Depp [Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street]
  • Best Actress In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Cate Blanchett [I'm Not There]
  • Best Actor In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Javier Bardem [No Country For Old Men]
  • Best Animated Feature Film Ratatouille
  • Best Foreign Language Film The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (France, USA)
  • Best Director - Motion Picture Julian Schnabel [The Diving Bell And The Butterfly]
  • Best Screenplay - Motion Picture Ethan Coel, Joel Coen [No Country For Old Men]
  • Best Original Score - Motion Picture Dario Marianelli [Atonement]
  • Best Original Song - Motion Picture Guaranteed [Into The Wild]; music & lyrics: Eddie Vedder
List of nominees and winners for Golden Globe 2008 (movies) Best Motion Picture - Drama American Gangster | Atonement | Eastern Promises | The Great Debaters | Michael Clayton | No Country for Old Men | There Will Be Blood Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Cate Blanchett [Elizabeth : The Golden Age] | Julie Christie [Away From Her] | Jodie Foster [The Brave One] | Angelina Jolie [A Mighty Heart] Keira Knightley [Atonement] Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama George Clooney [Michael Clayton] | Daniel Day-Lewis [There Will Be Blood] | James McAvoy [Atonement] | Viggo Mortensen [Eastern Promises] | Denzel Washington [American Gangster] Best Motion Picture - Musical Or Comedy Across The Universe | Charlie Wilson's War | Hairspray | Juno | Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Amy Adams [Enchanted] | Nikki Blonsky [Hairspray] | Helena Bonham Carter [Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street] | Marion Cotillard [La Vie En Rose] | Ellen Page [Juno] Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Johnny Depp [Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street] | Ryan Gosling [Lars and the Real Girl] | Tom Hanks [Charlie Wilson's War] | Philip Seymour Hoffman [The Savages] | John C. Reilly [Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story] Best Performance by an Actress In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Cate Blanchett [I'm Not There] | Julia Roberts [Charlie Wilson's War] | Saoirse Ronan [Atonement] | Amy Ryan [Gone Baby Gone] | Tilda Swinton [Michael Clayton] Best Performance by an Actor In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Casey Affleck [The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford] | Javier Bardem [No Country For Old Men] | Philip Seymour Hoffman [Charlie Wilson's War] | John Travolta [Hairspray] | Tom Wilkinson [Michael Clayton] Best Animated Feature Film Bee Movie | Ratatouille | The Simpsons Movie Best Foreign Language Film 4 Months, 3 Weeks And 2 Days (Romania)| The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (France, USA) | The Kite Runner (USA) | Lust, Caution (Taiwan) | Persepolis (France) Best Director - Motion Picture Tim Burton [Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street] | Ethan Coen, Joel Coen [No Country For Old Men] | Julian Schnabel [The Diving Bell And The Butterfly] | Ridley Scott [American Gangster] | Joe Wright [Atonement] Best Screenplay - Motion Picture Christopher Hampton [Atonement] | Aaron Sorkin [Charlie Wilson's War] | Ronald Harwood [The Diving Bell And The Butterfly] | Diablo Cody [Juno] | Ethan Coel, Joel Coen [No Country For Old Men] Best Original Score - Motion Picture Clint Eastwood [Grace Is Gone] | Alberto Iglesias [The Kite Runner] | Dario Marianelli [Atonement]| Howard Shore [Eastern Promises] | Michael Brook, Kaki King and Eddie Vedder [Into The Wild] Best Original Song - Motion Picture Despedida [Love In The Time Of Cholera]; music: Shakira and Antonio Pinto; lyrics: Shakira | Grace Is Gone [Grace Is Gone]; music: Clint Eastwood; lyrics: Carole Bayer Sager | Guaranteed [Into The Wild]; music & lyrics: Eddie Vedder | That's How You Know [Enchanted]; music: Alan Menken; lyrics: Stephen Schwartz | Walk Hard [Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story]; music & lyrics: Marshall Crenshaw, John C. Reilly, Judd Apatow and Jake Kasdan And finally, here's a list of those who should have won (some of them actually did)
  • Best Motion Picture - Drama No Country for Old Men
  • Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Julie Christie [Away From Her]
  • Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama Daniel Day-Lewis [There Will Be Blood]
  • Best Motion Picture - Musical Or Comedy Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
  • Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Marion Cotillard [La Vie En Rose]
  • Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Johnny Depp [Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street]
  • Best Actress In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Cate Blanchett [I'm Not There]
  • Best Actor In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture Javier Bardem [No Country For Old Men]
  • Best Animated Feature Film Ratatouille
  • Best Foreign Language Film The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (France, USA)
  • Best Director - Motion Picture Ethan Coen, Joel Coen [No Country For Old Men]
  • Best Screenplay - Motion Picture Diablo Cody [Juno]
  • Best Original Score - Motion Picture Dario Marianelli [Atonement]
  • Best Original Song - Motion Picture Despedida [Love In The Time Of Cholera]; music: Shakira and Antonio Pinto; lyrics: Shakira
Confessions: I haven't really seen all the movies nominated for Best Actress, Best Actress in a Supporting Role, or Foreign Language film. Nevertheless, whadyathink?