Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category

New York vs. Los Angeles, via Classic Movies

January 8, 2009

vs.

Turner Classic Movies is pitting Los Angeles against New York on Thursday nights throughout January:

Each Thursday in January, TCM will pit the Big Apple against the City of Angels with a trio of double-features that showcase the cities. The various double-features include “When Animals Attack” on Jan. 1, with King Kong (1933) and Them! (1954); “Kelly vs. Kelly,” with the Gene Kelly musicals On the Town (1949) and Anchors Aweigh (1945); “Simon Says,” with the Neal Simon comedies The Out-of-Towners (1949) and California Suite (1978); and “Broadway vs. Hollywood” with All About Eve (1950) and Sunset Blvd. (1950).

Wonder what a modern NY-LA movie smackdown might consist of…

Preschooler Movie Review: "Bolt"

December 2, 2008

It was a big movie weekend for the Blogger Preschooler, who couldn’t get enough this past weekend of “Wall-E” and “Cars” on DVD. The beautifully made “Wall-E,” in particular, made a big impression on Evan — and me too.

That led to our Sunday visit to the AMC Burbank Media Center 6, where we caught an early matinee of the new Disney animated feature “Bolt.” (FYI, the AMC Burbank Media Center 6 costs just $6 for all shows before noon on the weekend and holidays.)

This was big: Evan’s first official theatrical movie experience. We took him to a children’s short movie festival at the REDCAT earlier this year, and before that took him to a premiere screening of “Handy Manny” at the Arclight when he was a 2-year-old.

Until now, however, the Preschooler wasn’t high on spending a long time in a dark theater. Also, some of the Disney and Pixar animated features weren’t his cup of tea — those villains (such as the sharks in “Finding Nemo”) can be pretty scary.

But the relative tameness of “Wall-E” and “Cars” gave Evan the confidence to tag along as we took him to the movie theater.

Verdict? He managed to watch the entire thing — not a foregone conclusion, and there were moments where he told us he was ready to go. (Now, of course, he is raving about his first movie experience — forgetting how he tried to talk us into leaving!)

The movie itself? Decent, better than many animated features. As the first animated Disney film under Pixar’s John Lasseter — who now serves as Chief Creative Officer of both Pixar’s and Disney’s animated studios — “Bolt” retains some of the look, story and heart of a Pixar pic.

But it’s no “Wall-E.” Or, for that matter, “Cars” or “Finding Nemo.”

The story is simple: “Bolt” is the most famous pup on TV, saving his master — a pre-teen girl named Penny — from evil. The rub: The real-life Bolt has been led to believe he really is a superhero canine, and not a modern-day Lassie. He somehow escapes and, while making his way back to Hollywood, slowly realizes that he’s an ordinary dog. John Travolta is fine as Bolt, while Miley Cyrus — and her husky, Brenda Vacarro voice — seems like an unusual choice for Penny.

Meanwhile, it’s Disney employee Mark Walton who steals the movie as Rhino, the fan boy hamster whose Comic-Con-style adoration of Bolt is the highlight.

Get Your Filmmaking Mojo On

October 8, 2008

Our friend Chris Nichols has tipped us off to his pal Norwood’s annual Super 8-themed filmmaking competition. Films will be screened Nov. 13 at 7:30 p.m. at the American Cinemateque at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood.

Interested in entering? “You must act fast. 25 people will be chosen to participate based on getting an entry form in quickly and if you’re a newcomer,” Norwood writes. “We want to encourage more filmmakers to experience the super 8 attack, but if you’ve done it before and want to try again, that’s great. What you shoot is what we’ll show. The night of the screening will be the first time any of the filmmakers will see their films. Contact flicker@mekons.com for more details.

Another Chance to See "Los Angeles Plays Itself"

October 1, 2008

I’m excited to see that the American Cinematheque will be bringing back the 2003 doc “Los Angeles Plays Itself” to the Egyptian Theatre on Sunday, Oct. 12 (details here).

Here’s the synopsis of the Thom Andersen-directed film:

A must-see for Los Angeles history buffs and cinema enthusiasts. Hundreds of archival and film clips reveal an almost secret history of the City of Angels.

Don’t miss these big screen screenings because this film will never come out on DVD. An epic meditation on the role of Los Angeles (“the most photographed city in the world”) in the movies and the impact of the movie industry upon its own capital city — as well as a fascinating deconstruction of both movie-making and movie-going.

Filmmaker Thom Andersen, a life-long Angelino, works in a tradition pioneered by Godard, Chris Marker and Agnes Varda. His enthralling essay investigates ’50s B-movies that use Los Angeles as the epitome of urban sleaze, science fiction classics that revel in destroying its tallest buildings, and film noirs that paint it the nation’s capital for adultery and murder.

Ever think about why Los Angeles’s modern architectural classics (by Neutra and Frank Lloyd Wright) are favored housing for villains? It’s a movie for anyone who loves (or hates) Los Angeles and who wonders what they may have missed by not spending more hours in the dark.

“This cinematic essay focuses on the discrepancy between the lived-in urban reality of Los Angeles and its various century-deep cinematic mythologies — It’s about the way the imaginary space of cinema — becomes a kind of separate urban reality unto itself.” – The Toronto Star

Any of you bloggers or L.A. fans attending?

Retro Friday: Pirate Edition

September 19, 2008

In honor of Talk Like a Pirate Day, I bring you the trailer to… “The Pirate Movie”! Anyone who watched HBO in the early 1980s remembers this 1982 (alleged) comedy/musical, starring… Christopher Atkins and Kristy McNichol!

“Pirate Movie” was part of that late 1970s/early 1980s attempt to revive the movie musical in the wake of “Grease’s” mega success. Mostly though, the studios came up with this and “Xanadu.”

L.A. Plays Itself, And Plays Itself, And Plays Itself Again

September 2, 2008

A list of the top 25 L.A.-centric films of the past 25 years? And Midnight Madness wasn’t among them? For shame.

Kidding aside, it is a pretty good list. The top 10:

1. L.A. Confidential (1997)
2. Boogie Nights (1997)
3. Jackie Brown (1997)
4. Boyz N the Hood (1991)
5. Beverly Hills Cop (1984)
6. The Player (1992)
7. Clueless (1995)
8. Repo Man (1984)
9. Collateral (2004)
10. The Big Lebowski (1998)

That’s a movie festival I wouldn’t mind seeing.

Retro Friday: Remembering Siskel & Ebert

August 1, 2008

The recent announcement that Roger Ebert had ended his association with “At the Movies” — as well as Richard Roeper — repped the end of an era. Ebert still promises to find a new home for the famous thumbs (a trademark he owns with Gene Siskel’s widow), but it’s clear that the glory days of Siskel & Ebert are long over. Here’s a clip from 1982, when the duo were still hosts of PBS’ “Sneak Previews.” Quite an episode: “ET,” “Poltergeist,” “Rocky III” and “Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid” were all reviewed in this episode.

Movies Move to Koreatown

June 27, 2008

Despite its large population, Koreatown and Mid-City have been surprisingly short on movie theaters — until now.

According to today’s Variety — with a dateline out of Seoul — South Korea’s largest multiplex chain is building a 648-seat, three-screen theater at “a site near Western Avenue.” The details:

CJ Entertainment’s CJ CGV chain set up CJ CGV America Holdings at the end of 2006 to run its exhibition business in the U.S. The theater was skedded to bow last year, but the opening got postponed.

“We’re going to increase our competitive power with a small but high-qualified boutique theater,” said Park Yong-gil, prexy of CJ CGV America Holdings.

The company said 45% of its pics would be Korean, 45% from Hollywood and 10% from Asia at large.

Still sounds like too small of a theater to me.

Inflation Hits the Los Feliz 3

June 26, 2008


(Flickr pic by Santa Barbarian.)

A reader writes that the Los Feliz theater, long a cheap alternative to the megaplexes, has upped its box office price:

Just wanted to pass along that the Los Feliz 3 movie theater has quietly raised ticket prices and its no longer such a deal. adults are now $9 apiece!

Yikes! Considering how tiny those three screens are, that’s pushing things.

Inflation Hits the Los Feliz 3

June 26, 2008


(Flickr pic by Santa Barbarian.)

A reader writes that the Los Feliz theater, long a cheap alternative to the megaplexes, has upped its box office price:

Just wanted to pass along that the Los Feliz 3 movie theater has quietly raised ticket prices and its no longer such a deal. adults are now $9 apiece!

Yikes! Considering how tiny those three screens are, that’s pushing things.


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