Daily Update For Movies, Musics, Celebrities, Hollywood & Life Style News.
3 Sep
Oh yes, you heard that right — and I almost slapped myself when, during a Toronto Fest meeting earlier today, I unfortunately had to inform our team that coverage of Paris, Not France was a top priority. Congrats Ms. Hilton, you’ve successfully found a way to turn all the attention toward your documentary by making it look like you want nothing to do with it. Of course, that’s not the case at all — heck, it’s not like the chick ever pulled something like this before (cough … sex tape … cough). But let’s back up for a minute …
… there’s a Paris Hilton documentary playing Toronto? Yup, it’s called Paris, Not France, and it marks the first feature for music video and commercial director Adria Petty (daughter of Tom). What’s it about? Apparently, the flick follows Paris around for a year and provides us with one of those intimate looks into the life of blah blah …. and then she says “That’s hot” about a gazillion times … the end. So why is everyone talking about it?
Well, because Paris (and her “people”) somehow managed to get the festival to pull all but one screening of the doc for reasons they’re not willing to disclose at this time. So what’s up? Is Paris really that upset with the way she’s portrayed in the film that she doesn’t want it shown? Or, is this whole “pull the screenings, threaten lawsuits” thing just a ploy to get people (like us) talking and wanting and needing? I’d say it’s certainly suspicious, especially since we’re talking Paris Hilton here, who, whether you like it or not, is pretty smart when it comes to marketing herself as a larger-than-life personality.
What do you think? And does all this hoopla make you want to see the film even more?
[via Risky Biz Blog]
16 Aug
For all you Harry Potter fans who are also devoted to a certain series of teen-vampire romance novels, here’s something that should help you deal with Thursday’s devastating news about Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince being pushed back to next summer. Summit Entertainment announced today that with Harry having vacated the November 21 spot, they’re going to fill it with Twilight, bumping it up a full three weeks from its original date of December 12.
While some fans wondered, irrationally, if the Harry Potter move was to get away from Twilight, Summit’s CEO says Twilight never had any delusions of being more powerful than the boy wizard at the box office. “With a giant franchise like Harry Potter in the market, we had to stay clear of it,” Rob Friedman told Variety — hence the original date well away from Half-Blood Prince. “Their move created an opportunity to bring the movie to fans three weeks earlier.”
Once November 21 opened up, the move was really a no-brainer. As a press release from Summit points out, movie theaters get very crowded around the holidays, and Twilight will be able to open on far more screens on November 21 than it could have on December 12. Now it’ll be opening the Friday before Thanksgiving, too, which is nearly always a plus. Its only competition will be Disney’s animated Bolt. The only loser here is Entertainment Weekly, whose Fall Movie Preview is now wrong again, before most readers have even seen it. (Or, from another point of view, now that issue is even more of a collector’s item.)
What do you say? Are you excited about getting Twilight sooner? To those of you who have been sending Warner Bros. wrathful messages about the Harry Potter move, does this quell your anger somewhat? Will you at least be able to live and function and carry on?
8 Aug
I’m not partial to overtly subjective reviews, yet I can’t seem to find any better way of relating my response to Isabel Coixet’s latest film, Elegy, an adaptation of Philip Roth’s novel “The Dying Animal,” which follows the romance between a college professor and his much younger former student. First, though, a note of appropriateness: early in the film, this professor, the Roth regular David Kepesh, who previously appeared in the novels “The Breast” and “The Professor of Desire,” is lecturing about how literature, specifically Tolstoy’s “War and Peace,” will be appreciated differently by a reader at different points in his or her life. In ten years, for example, it may seem like a new book entirely.
Perhaps in ten years, then, or more likely in thirty, I will be able to watch Elegy again and have a new perspective. Maybe I will be able to relate to Kepesh, here portrayed by Ben Kingsley, when I am in my sixties and have similarly lived and experienced as much. Yet the fact that Coixet’s film is so depressing makes me almost hope that I never actually live so long to find out. I should have known, what with the filmmaker’s past films, such as My Life Without Me, with their gray atmospheres and dreary dealings with illness and death. While appearing on the outside to be a sexy drama about how one lecherous old man discovers love, Elegy is on the inside really just a slow, uninteresting depiction of a selfish fool who possibly too-late realizes that he’s grown old before he’s actually grown up.
8 Aug
Have I ever told you that I’m obsessed with watching Cirque du Soleil shows? I’ve seen at least 10 live performances in the past few years and highly recommend them to anyone who’s never taken the Cirque plunge. In fact, now you have more of a reason to check out a Cirque show because their latest, Delirium, is coming to a theater near you at the end of the month. Sony Pictures Releasing has set up this new programming division called The Hot Ticket, and they specialize in bringing stuff like rock concerts, Broadway shows and premier sporting events to theaters across the United States and Canada. We’ve talked about this sort of thing a bunch before, and it’s definitely a smart move for theaters; one that might eventually become the norm.
So far, The Hot Ticket is bringing Delirium (I’d shell out money to see Delirious on the big screen too, by the way) to theaters for a limited run of four days (August 20, 21, 23 and 24). You can find out where it’s playing near you by visiting The Hot Ticket website. Aside from Delirium, they’ll also be bringing the show Rent to theaters in September. As far as the viewing experience goes, here’s a quote from their website: “Each presentation from The Hot Ticket will be a limited engagement and events will be shown in 2K and 4K digital theaters to ensure the highest quality viewing experience. With the very best in special event programming and state-of-the-art digital projection and sound in theaters, The Hot Ticket will offer the kind of unparalleled access that will make these events memorable viewing experiences.”
Sounds like something worth trying out. What do you think? Is this the future of theatrical entertainment? (Check out some really cool images from Delirium in the gallery below.)