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Gillian Anderson Boards I’ll Follow You Down – She’s up for the sci-fi mystery

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

Richie Mehta’s is pulling together quite a good cast for his sci-fi mystery I’ll Follow You Down, as Deadline reports that his Gillian Anderson has signed up to star alongside Haley Joel Osment, Victor Garber and Rufus Sewell.

The actress will play the wife of missing scientist Gabriel (Rufus Sewell), who disappeared during a business trip. The family finds out years later that their missing loved one might mysteriously still be alive. Haley Joel Osment plays the actresses’ son with Victor Garber portraying his grandfather.

Richie Mehta wrote and is directing the film. Shooting has already begun in Toronto.

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Loads Of New Pics From Les Miserables – Hugh Jackman, Amanda Seyfried, Anne Hathaway & more

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


With the promise of the first trailer later today, a slew of new images have emerged from Les Miserables via USA Today, Twitter and The Film Stage, which show us the likes of Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Amanda Seyfried, Anne Hathaway, Eddie Redmayne & more in the adaptation of the long-running musical.

Tom Hooper is directing the movie, which hits cinemas this Christmas. Set against the backdrop of 19th-century France, Les Misérables tells an enthralling story of broken dreams and unrequited love, passion, sacrifice and redemption–a timeless testament to the survival of the human spirit. Jackman plays ex-prisoner Jean Valjean, hunted for decades by the ruthless policeman Javert (Crowe) after he breaks parole. When Valjean agrees to care for factory worker Fantine’s (Hathaway) young daughter, Cosette, their lives change forever.

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Lay The Favourite Trailer – Willis, Zeta Jones & more in the star-studded dramedy

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

Bruce Willis, Rebecca Hall, Joshua Jackson, and Catherine Zeta-Jones star in Stephen Frears’ Lay The Favorite, as adaptation of Beth Raymer’s memoir about the strange world of sports betting. Early reviews have been mixed, but there’s promise in this tale of a thirtysomething woman who becomes involved with a group of geeky fiftyish men who have found a way to work the sportsbook system in Las Vegas to their advantage. Now the trailer is here, so take a look. It’s out in the UK on June 22nd.

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Chill (DVD) – HP Lovecraft’s tale gets the film treatment

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


A struggling writer takes a job in a convenience store and soon encounters its owner, the enigmatic and sinister Dr Muñoz, who has a rare and unnamed skin condition that forces him to live in sub-zero temperatures. Soon after Sam’s arrival he falls for Maria, the owner of the clothes store across the street, but their burgeoning relationship is hampered by a series of disappearances that the investigating detective – Maria’s ex – is determined to link back to Sam, while the actual threat being much closer than they realised.

The idea of a film adapted from an HP Lovecraft story is often a lot more appealing than the eventual outcome. Most famous are the tales of eldritch abominations of such unfathomable hideousness that merely beholding them is to know madness, so any adaptation will have quite a lot to live up to, even if, like Chill, they don’t contain any aspects of cosmological horror.

Cool Air was one of Lovecraft’s tales written while living in abject misery in New York and as a result was one of his less memorable and indistinct works. What little of the film that actually takes its cue from the story gives little of the sense of underlying dread that permeates Lovecraft’s work, and other than an obligatory throwaway reference to the Necronomicon there’s almost nothing to connect it to them. Even the violence is too low-key to provide any real shocks.

In the scenes between Sam and Maria, we are subjected to one of the least convincing screen romances since the Ben Affleck/Jennifer Lopez train wreck that was Gigli. That said, despite the sub-par script, genre stalwart Ashley Laurence (of Hellraiser fame) gives one of the most convincing performances in the film, and it also must be said is looking pretty damn nubile for a woman on the far side of 40. James Russo’s Detective Defazio is a police officer of the overly macho and unreasonable breed who you just can’t wait to see gutted. Shaun Kurtz as Dr Muñoz had a great deal more potential and would likely have at least partially achieved it if most of his story wasn’t recounted in incoherent flashbacks telling of his determination to “complete my work.”

The visual effects are some of the most amateurish you’re ever likely to see, some even looking like they were rendered on Photoshop, and are so sloppily edited in that MST3K would pass up mocking them, as well as the rest of the film, on account of it being too easy.

Overall Verdict: Even Chill’s tangential association to Lovecraft does not give it any distinction beyond a generic pseudo-supernatural horror story. If a Lovecraft adaptation featuring a brilliant but insane doctor obsessing about mastery over death is your thing, you’d be a lot better off watching Re-Animator.

Special Features:
None

Reviewer: Andrew Marshall

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Edinburgh International Film Festival 2012 Programme Announced – 121 features and 19 world premieres planned

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

Edinburgh, Scotland – 30 May 2012: At a press conference at Filmhouse in Edinburgh this morning, Artistic Director Chris Fujiwara announced details of his inaugural programme for the 66th edition of the Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF). This year the Festival, which runs from 20 June to 1 July, will host nineteen World premieres and thirteen International premieres.

The Festival will showcase one hundred and twenty-one new features from fifty-two countries, including eleven European premieres and seventy-six UK premieres in addition to the World and International premieres. Highlights include the World premieres of Richard Ledes’ FRED; Nathan Silver’s EXIT ELENA and Benjamin Pascoe’s LEAVE IT ON THE TRACK and European premieres of Lu Sheng’s HERE, THERE and Yang Jung-ho’s MIRAGE in the maiden New Perspectives section; and the International premiere of Benicio Del Toro, Pablo Trapero, Julio Medem, Elia Suleiman, Gaspar Noé, Juan Carlos Tabio and Laurent Cantet’s 7 DAYS IN HAVANA and the European premiere of Bobcat Goldthwait’s GOD BLESS AMERICA in the Directors’ Showcase. In addition to the new features presented, the Festival will also host twenty-nine older titles in Retrospectives and Special Screenings, bringing the total number of feature films to one hundred and fifty across the twelve-day event.

British films competing for the Michael Powell Award will include, for the first time, documentaries contending alongside narrative films. Among them are seven World premieres: Peter Strickland’s BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO; DAY OF THE FLOWERS by John Roberts; Katarzyna Klimkiewicz’s FLYING BLIND; Maja Borg’s FUTURE MY LOVE; Alex Barrett’s LIFE JUST IS; ONE MILE AWAY by Penny Woolcock and PUSHER by Luis Prieto. The Michael Powell Award contenders, which also include Bart Layton’s THE IMPOSTER; SHADOW DANCER by James Marsh and Martin Wallace’s SMALL CREATURES, also compete for the Award for Best Performance in a British Feature Film.

The International Feature Competition, supported by Innis and Gunn, hosts a selection of outstanding new films from around the world and includes the World premieres of Mao Mao’s HERE, THEN and Alexandre O Philippe’s return to EIFF with THE LIFE AND TIMES OF PAUL THE PSYCHIC OCTOPUS. The International Feature Competition includes, for the first time, documentary films alongside narrative films. International premieres competing for the award are Jang Kun-jae’s SLEEPLESS NIGHT and Dan Sallitt’s THE UNSPEAKABLE ACT; while other titles include ONE.TWO.ONE by Mania Akbari; Oskar Alegria’s THE SEARCH FOR EMAK BAKIA; Yeon Sang-ho’s THE KING OF PIGS; David Zellner’s KID-THING; Maite Alberdi’s THE LIFEGUARD and TABU by Miguel Gomes. Two films are by co-directing couples: Clarissa Campolina and Helvécio Marins Jr’s GIRIMUNHO and Anka Sasnal and Wilhelm Sasnal’s IT LOOKS PRETTY FROM A DISTANCE. Gastón Solnicki’s PAPIROSEN and A WOMAN’S REVENGE by Rita Azevedo Gomes round out the International Feature Competition.

Focusing on two masters of their art, Spotlight on Shinya Tsukamoto and Spotlight on Wang Bing bring together a collection of their films, including Japanese cult director Tsukamoto’s latest project KOTOKO, and culminating in a Masterclass with Wang Bing, who will discuss his extraordinary documentary filmmaking career. Accompanying their respective films, ¡VIVAN LAS ANTIPODAS! and CALIFORNIA SOLO, director Victor Kossakovsky and actor Robert Carlyle, EIFF Patron, will also have on-stage In-Person events, with Victor Kossakovsky presenting a Masterclass, while Robert Carlyle is the subject of 2012’s In Person: BAFTA Scotland Interview.

EIFF Artistic Director Chris Fujiwara commented: “Our programme reflects the exceptionally vibrant state of current cinema. Our audiences will be able to explore a wide range of outstanding films from around the world, including work by established masters and films from new and emerging talents. There are also some no less exciting discoveries to be made this year in our Retrospectives. Altogether it’s a rich and diverse programme that tells, I believe, a fascinating story about where cinema is today, what it can learn from the past, and where it is going in the future.”

Jules Bishop’s BORROWED TIME, Steve Rainbow’s NFA and Scott Graham’s SHELL are the three World premieres in the new British Scenes section, where it is joined by Bryn Higgins’ UNCONDITIONAL, in a strand introducing films from the UK that are made by new filmmakers, that try out non-traditional funding models or that venture into unusual thematic areas. WHAT IS THIS FILM CALLED LOVE? by Mark Cousins receives its World premiere alongside Nicholas Ray’s WE CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN and Susan Ray’s accompanying DON’T EXPECT TOO MUCH in the new Films on Film section.

The late-night Night Moves strand sees the World premiere of Ian Clark’s GUINEA PIGS and the European premiere of Jon Wright’s GRABBERS, both from the UK, and other titles include EDDIE – THE SLEEPWALKING CANNIBAL by Boris Rodriguez; Eric Wareheim and Tim Heidecker’s TIM AND ERIC’S BILLION DOLLAR MOVIE; the multi-directed V/H/S; Quentin Dupieux’s WRONG and Magnus Martens’ JACKPOT, based on a story by Jo Nesbo.

Highlighting EIFF’s global curatorial expanse, the Philippine New Wave examines the creativity of young independent Filipino filmmakers, and includes the World premieres of Emerson Reyes’ MNL 143 and PHILIPPINE NEW WAVE: THIS IS NOT A FILM MOVEMENT by Khavn De La Cruz among the twelve strong section. A special Focus on Denmark features Mads Brügger’s THE AMBASSADOR; Nicole N Horanyi and Heidi Kim Andersen’s AU PAIR; and SIBLINGS – FOR BETTER OF WORSE by Max Kestner, Mikala Krough, Laila Hodell and Aage Rais-Nordentoft. Showcasing the vitality of filmmaking in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, Looking South brings together a collection of films including Juan Ignacio Domìnguez’s RIDING ZORRO; MÚSICA CAMPESINA [COUNTRY MUSIC] by Alberto Fuguet; and Ana Katz’s LOS MARZIANO.

The Directors’ Showcase, presenting work from the established auteurs of our time, includes Denis Côté’s BESTIAIRE; Johnnie To’s LIFE WITHOUT PRINCIPLE; Peter Chan’s DRAGON; Asoka Handagama’s HIM, HERE AFTER; Gakuryu Ishii’s ISN’T ANYONE ALIVE?; RENT-A-CAT by Naoko Ogigami and THE REST OF THE WORLD by Damien Odoul. New Perspectives, boasting 40 titles, presents a global array of work by emerging directors also including Tetsuaki Matsue’s TOKYO DRIFTER, DJ Chen’s YOUNG DUDES, Patrik Eklund’s FLICKER, Gabe Torres’ BRAKE, Petros Sevastikoglou’s ATTRACTIVE ILLUSION and NUCLEAR NATION by Atsushi Funahashi.

EIFF’s animation tradition continues with THE 99 UNBOUND by Dave Osborne and a Special Screening of Chris Renaud and Kyle Balda’s 3D version of DR SEUSS’ THE LORAX. In addition to the animated films and shorts at the Festival, EIFF continues to showcase the best of Scottish, UK and international shorts in a series of programmes which include Romola Garai’s directorial début SCRUBBER; FUNTIMES by Joe Carter and REVOLUTIONARY MEMORIES OF BAHMAN WHO LOVED LEILA by Sarahnaz Sharifi. The experimental Black Box section also presents a series of shorts programmes from innovators of the visual art world, as well as Abigail Child’s feature-length THE SUBURBAN TRILOGY. The world of art is also represented by four free exhibitions and events across Edinburgh, through collaborations with Collective, Stills, Inspace and the Ingleby Gallery in Beyond EIFF.

Special Screenings and Festival Events throughout EIFF include the new digital restoration of LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, marking the 50th anniversary of this masterpiece. The process of restoring the classic will be discussed by multi-Oscar®-winning editor Thelma Schoonmaker and Grover Crisp of Sony Pictures Entertainment at the panel event FILM RESTORATION IN THE DIGITAL AGE. Returning due to popular demand will be the SURPRISE MOVIE and AWARDS CEREMONY, as well as ESSENTIAL EDINBURGH & EIFF – UNDER THE STARS 2012, a prelude to EIFF the weekend before the Festival kicks off, when family-friendly films will get an airing in St Andrew Square Garden.

2012’s previously announced Shinji Somai Retrospective section, presenting the world of a neglected master of Japanese cinema, will be joined by a second Retrospective exploring the creations of screen comedy genius Gregory La Cava including: MY MAN GODFREY (1936), two films starring Claudette Colbert, PRIVATE WORLDS (1935) and SHE MARRIED HER BOSS (1935), and the rarely seen masterpiece UNFINISHED BUSINESS (1941). EIFF will screen six of La Cava’s films, and the Retrospective will continue at Filmhouse throughout July, with a further six films.

Special Screenings also include Penny Woolcock’s ONE DAY, Margaret Tait’s BLUE BLACK PERMANENT, Harmony Korine, Aleksei Fedorchenko and Jan Kwiecinski’s THE FOURTH DIMENSION and the previously announced World premiere of the London 2012 Festival-commissioned films by Lynne Ramsay, Mike Leigh, Asif Kapadia and Max Giwa and Dania Pasquini.

Other Special Events include MIDNIGHT SUN, accompanying a screening of the original Norwegian INSOMNIA, directed by Erik Skjoldbjærg, which will give audience members an experience of the late light northern sky to celebrate summer solstice; while THE BROCKAS IN FILM CONCERT will present Philippine art-rock improvisers The Brockas performing their first Edinburgh gig against the backdrop of GENGHIS KHAN, a Philippine film that originally screened at EIFF in 1952. An annual series of lectures looking at the history of cinema in Scotland has its inaugural year with THE EDINBURGH FILM GUILD FORSYTH HARDY LECTURE, presenting a fully illustrated account of the beginning of EIFF followed by a complete screening of Humphrey Jennings’ rarely seen THE CUMBERLAND STORY, the first film shown at EIFF 1947.

To help guide audiences in their exploration, for the first time this year EIFF is introducing Pathways. Each Pathway is a group of films, selected from across the different strands of the EIFF programme, that are linked by common themes or that appeal to particular tastes. Pathways include Teenage Kicks (films for 15-year-olds and upwards); Played for Laughs (films for comedy lovers); Relationships (films on love, couples and relationships) and Community & Conflict (films on themes of power, responsibility and history).

As previously announced, the 66th Edinburgh International Film Festival opens with William Friedkin’s KILLER JOE and the Closing Gala will be the European premiere of Disney/Pixar’s BRAVE.

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First Les Miserables Trailer – Anne Hathaway dreams a dream

30th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

The first trailer has arrived for Les Miserables, Tom Hooper’s adaptation of the classic musical, It’s got Anne Hathaway singing I Dreamed A Dream and plenty of epic period imagery. So take a look! Set against the backdrop of 19th-century France, Les Misérables tells an enthralling story of broken dreams and unrequited love, passion, sacrifice and redemption–a timeless testament to the survival of the human spirit. Hugh Jackman plays ex-prisoner Jean Valjean, hunted for decades by the ruthless policeman Javert (Russell Crowe) after he breaks parole. When Valjean agrees to care for factory worker Fantine’s (Hathaway) young daughter, Cosette, their lives change forever. It hits cinemas at Christmas.

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