There are several delicious ironies about “The King’s Speech,” billed as an historical drama and directed by Tom Hooper from a screenplay by David Seidler. The first is the title. The King’s Speech is given at the opening of the British Parliament. To your critic’s knowledge, it has been The Queen’s Speech since 1952, when Elizabeth II ascended the throne following the untimely death from lung cancer of her father, King George VI, one of pic’s principals ably played by Colin Firth. Since the next three in line for the throne today are men, the Speech is likely to be the King’s again. George VI had a terrible stammer, which made it difficult for him to perform many of his public duties as Duke of York, younger brother of David, the Prince of Wales, who would later become Edward VIII, Duke of Windsor. The latter is played by Guy Pearce in a rather one-dimensional portrayal of a self-indulgent royal. George VI, who had a more down-to-earth understanding of his duty, was known as Bertie to his family. His wife is a legend of 20th Century Britain, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (Helena Bonham Carter), who, when she was still the Duchess of York, set out on her own to find a speech therapist for her husband. This brings up pic’s second delicious irony: Helena Bonham Carter is the great-granddaughter of Herbert Henry Asquith, English Prime Minister from 1908 to 1916, the first prime minister to serve under George V (played here by Michael Gambon), father of pic’s subject, and great niece of Violet Asquith, a Liberal member of Parliament for many years and close friend of Winston Churchill, who is played by Timothy Spall in a less than ideal bit of casting. The goings on in this pic had to be gossip at her family’s dinner table. For those who care, the shapely Carter was most certainly padded to play the matronly Elizabeth, who, during pic’s action, never passes her 40th birthday.
The Duke of York put little stock in speech therapy. Treatments of the day (Pic’s action covers the period from the mid 1920s to the outbreak of war in September 1939) were both appalling and humiliating. One doctor even advised the Duke that smoking cigarettes relaxed the throat and calmed the nerves. It was no surprise that when the Duchess finally encountered Australian ex-pat speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush, who also gets executive producer credit) that the Duke offered resistance. Logue’s methods were unorthodox to say the least. He is self-taught, a former actor, who got into speech therapy helping traumatized Australian soldiers returned from the First World War. There was no textbook. He had to make it up as he went along.
Now enters the buddy-film aspect of this period piece. Logue won’t treat the Duke unless the His Royal Highness submits to his rules on his turf. He insists that the Duke call him Lionel and that he will call the Duke “Bertie.” The Duke grudgingly submits to acting as the social equal of his speech coach. Unwilling to divulge much private information, the Duke does admit that his stammer began around age four or five and that his father, the King, encouraged his brother David to tease him about it. Michael Gambon’s George V is the gruff, remote father and family man of the history books. But as King, he has learned one important modern lesson: Radio has turned royalty into actors. His annual Christmas broadcast to the Empire drives the point home. His advice to Bertie is like a Nike slogan barked by a drill sergeant.
A friendship between King and subject can never be normal, no matter how high the regard each holds for the other. The dynamic between Rush and Firth captures this delicate balance. In matters of speech, Logue is in charge. His methods include exercises, encouragement, and provocation. Provocation proves to the pupil that the stammer has a non-physical component: When his temper is aroused the Duke spits out words in continuous flow. But when Logue steps over the line, more out of enthusiasm for his pupil’s ability than anything else, the Duke accuses him of treason and cuts him off. His offense? With George V having passed, David has become King, and he is making a mess of the job. The abdication crisis of 1936 looms, and Bertie is next in line. David has already teased him about wanting to usurp the throne, an idea that Bertie abhors. The last thing he wants to be is chief of state in an era when the chief of state has to speak in public. Logue’s enthusiasm (“You can outshine David”) in that instant is impertinent and incisive — too incisive. Logue’s attempt to apologize is rebuffed. Give helmer Hooper credit for knowing how to use the close-up to good effect with pros like Rush and Firth.
Eventually, with a coronation to perform, Bertie (now George VI), recalls Logue to his service. A scene in Westminster Abbey with Derek Jacobi as a presumptuous Archbishop of Canterbury reveals the esteem in which Bertie is held by the British establishment. Zero. He is accorded deference because of his position. His years of stammering and failed public appearances have cost him respect. His courtiers think they can manipulate him. Thanks to Logue’s help in mustering the courage he had as a naval officer in the First World War, George VI overcame what studies say is the greatest fear people in civilized nations face: the fear of public speaking. In overcoming that fear he became the King whose grace under pressure during the bombing of London inspired a quarter of the world’s population to resist the Axis. Logue would continue to assist the new King in rehearsing all his wartime broadcasts, and he was rewarded in 1944 with an honor for service to the monarch. The King, who most certainly was unaware of it, also inspired a young Australian boy who also had a stammer. The boy listened to the King on the radio and thought, if the King can beat his stammer, so can I. After almost 50 years writing for film and TV, David Seidler would write pic’s screenplay. He was fortunate to have the cooperation of Logue’s descendants, who kept many of his period diaries. He was also fortunate to have the cooperation of King George VI’s widow, by then the Queen Mother Elizabeth, who asked only that the film not be made until after her death — the memories were too painful. It was a long wait. She lived to be 101. The rest is history.
It is impossible to delve into the entire nuance “The King’s Speech” packs into 118 minutes. Pic is rated R due to language. It seems that profanity trips off the tongue of the stutterer with ease. But it would be a mistake for readers to think that “The King’s Speech” is entirely without comic relief. Logue repeatedly snatches cigarettes from his star pupil as the latter is about to light them. It would have been to George VI’s advantage to heed him and kick the habit. A scene in which Myrtle Logue (Jennifer Ehle) arrives home unexpectedly early only to find the Queen taking tea in her dining room is priceless. It is at pic’s ending that its neatest irony unfolds. It follows George’s radio broadcast to the Empire at the outset of war. It may be a tad difficult to believe, but it is true.
After a disappointing few weekends, the US box office enjoyed a healthy bump in the last three days as three new movies opened wide to successful returns. Topping the charts was DreamWorks’ latest 3D ‘toon, Megamind, with the superhero comedy earning $47.6 million, putting it ahead of Todd Phillips’ new comedy Due Date. The Robert Downey Jr/Zach Galifianakis road trip pic nabbed a strong $33.5 million, winning second place.
Tyler Perry’s latest, For Colored Girls, was third with a solid $20.1 million. Rounding out the top five were Red, which is holding strong, and dropped just one place to fourth with $8.8 million, despite having been out for a month now, and Saw 3D, which toppled from the top to land in fifth, adding $8.2 million for a running total of $38.8 million.
But though Jigsaw and co are still ahead of Paranormal Activity 2 in terms of chart placing, the scary sequel is easily outperforming the torture title, adding $7.2 million to a current total of $77.2 million after three weeks. They’re both put to shame by Jackass 3D in seventh, which made $5 million this weekend and is well over $110 million.
Clint Eastwood’s Hereafter slipped to eighth with $4.1 million and Secretariat dropped to ninth with $4 million. Finally, in 10th, we find The Social Network, which will likely leave the top 10 next week and made $3.6 million.
New York (USA), Nov. 5 (ShowBizCafe.com) – We know this sounds like a joke, but I promise you, it’s all true. In recent years, large toy properties have attracted big name directors to bring their toys over to the big screen. An example is Ridley Scott who is in pre-production of ‘Monopoly‘ and Peter Berg who is on the final touches of ‘Battleship‘. Now we learn that CAA (the largest talent agency in Hollywood) is playing and making a movie of ‘Rubik’s Cube.’ The cube has an agent!
A Rubik’s Cube is a puzzle whose sides are divided into squares of one color that can change position. The objective of solving the puzzle is achieved by putting all the squares on one side of the cube with the same color.
Now pardon my lack of creativity, but seriously, can you tell me how these guys are going to make a film with quality and substance from this? All I can think of is the Hellraiser box that opened a door to hell. But that premise is now used.
CAA is one of the most powerful agencies in Hollywood, representing the likes of George Clooney and Oprah, so if anyone knows how to make a movie from a toy, it’s these guys. Richard Lovett, president of the brand of a Rubik’s cube, believes in the potential to make a movie about an iconic toy. However, the notion of making a movie about this toy feels absurd at this time.
Friends … I really think this will happen. For now, there are no more specific details on the movie, but I promise we’ll be following this story closely.
âDue Dateâ from helmer Todd Phillips, who dumped âThe Hangoverâ on innocent, unsuspecting auds, follows the formerâs formula. This 100 minute R-rated piece of cinematic phlegm, involves a road trip, drugs, many smashed automobiles, inappropriate sexual situations, extraordinary vulgarity, and a totally underused female lead, Michelle Monaghan (as Sarah Highman), in a role that is the polar opposite of her groundbreaking work in âTrucker.â âDue Dateâ is a crummy picture punctuated by pasted-on jokes.
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Much of the objectionable material is presented courtesy of Zach Galifianakis, who did the same for âThe Hangover.â Galifianakis plays essentially the same objectionable character he played in âThe Hangover.â He annoys.Â
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Premise, like that of âThe Hangoverâ, is simple: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. Robert Downey Jr., who rises above the awful material, is Peter Highman, a high-strung yuppie architect on his way back to Los Angeles from Atlanta to attend the birth of his first child in a scheduled Cesarean section three days hence. Monaghan plays his pregnant wife.
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A chance encounter — thanks to a traffic accident — with Ethan Tremblay (Galifianakis) at the Atlanta airport touches off a series of disasters. The pair are escorted off the plane and put on a no-fly list largely thanks to Tremblayâs indiscreet language.  It is not a good idea nowadays to talk about bombs and terrorism while sitting in the first class section of an airliner about to depart.  Tremblay is a would-be actor on his way to Hollywood. He travels with a small dog, Sonny, who has an annoying habit of using his left front paw to rub his male organ. That sums up the humor in âDue Date.âÂ
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From that point forward, plot is Murphyâs Law on steroids. The unlikely pair are cooped up in a rental car which Tremblay demolishes about half way through the road trip by falling asleep at the wheel. He flips the car off a freeway bridge, giving Highman a broken arm, and putting his dog in a lampshade head protector.
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A bit about Tremblayâs dadâs ashes in a coffee can stretches the plot a tad with the most extraordinarily predictable results.Â
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âDue Dateâ is a buddy picture about a schlemiel (Highman) and a schlimazel (Tremblay). How Highman progresses from loathing to loving Tremblay is one of picâs major flaws. It is both too sudden and not properly set up by either backstory or events.  Jamie Foxx appears mid pic as Highmanâs best friend and a former boyfriend of wife Sarah. Schlimazel uses the ancient relationship to put a bug about infidelity into Highmanâs head. If your critic were the object of that nonsense heâd have strangled Tremblay even with the broken arm. A word about Galifianakisâ performance: Much of it looks improvised and not in a good sense. It is as if he were told to come up with the most socially inappropriate way for Tremblay to play a scene that was only sketched out, not written, and then did it.
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It is at this point that pic sheds any semblance of plausibility and heads straight past farce into fantasy land. Said fantasy involves Tremblay, high on dope, taking a wrong turn toward the Mexican border with California, thinking that the âMEXICOâ sign was âTEXACOâ — the car is low on gas. Said gag could appeal to a naughty six-year-old, but children are not allowed to see R-rated movies. A couple of Federales give Highman a hard time about his vicodin (for the broken arm) and Tremblayâs weed. Tremblay then hijacks a Mexican police pickup truck, hitches it to the trailer in which Highman is held by the Federales, and takes off back across the US border, Federales in chase.
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This is allegedly a comedy so auds can imagine the rest.Â
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Situations are so implausible that it appears as if Phillips, who also gets writer credit along with three others, took a pile of gags out of his file, threw them against the wall, and picked what landed on top to paste into his picture. Galifianakisâ performance is especially annoying. He affects a prissy walk which suggests homosexuality, but it a loose end. There are a few inside showbusiness jokes, largely uttered by Downey, and they are among picâs few elements that work.
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There are a couple of attempts at pathos which end up as bathos and a Hollywood ending which makes absolutely no sense. Picâs sole highlight, other than Monaghanâs pretty face, is Downeyâs acting chops. The guy does more in a closeup than Galifianakis does in the entire picture. Galifianakis runs the risk of being typecast time after time with different co-stars and sets. The guy is more than a one note actor. He proved it in âItâs Kind of a Funny Story.â  This garbage probably offered a bigger paycheck. For Downey, who killed in âGood Night and Good Luck,â âDue Dateâ is a comedown.Â
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Tech credits, as one would expect from a big-budget Hollywood effort, are adequate. Its vulgarity, however, is repulsive.
New York (USA), Nov. 2 (ShowBizCafe.com) – After his appearance as Dr. Peter Venkman, the main character in 1984’s Ghostbusters, at the Scream Awards 2010 on Spike TV a few weeks ago, actor Bill Murray once again fueled speculation that the highly anticipated second sequel is back on track. So will it happen or not?
A new rumor has seeped through the cracks once again, this time from Production Weekly, who says that there is a definite shooting date. According to them, Sony Pictures could have Ghostbusters 3 begin production in May 2011. If this date is true, we could have our long-awaited film for summer 2012! The only uncertainty we have is the truth of the rumor, and boy, have we heard our share of them the past two years. What encourages us though, without doubt, is Murray’s appearance at the Awards. It gives us a good indication that he now seems to be excited to embody his old role again after 26 years.
Developing the next installment of Ghostbusters has been a tremendous mess, mostly due to Bill Murray. His disinterest in being Venkman again and his disenchantment with the screenplay by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky have by far been the most difficult challenges. Dan Aykroyd, part of the core four, has been doing several rewrites trying to intertwine the old and the new generation of Ghostbusters fans. As we understand, Murray and Aykroyd are on a path to agreement.
Does the picture of Bill Murray scream out anything to you? This is happening!
The film’s original director, Ivan Reitman, is willing to start shooting as soon as possible with the rest of the cast – Sigourney Weaver, Harold Ramis, Ernie Hudson and even Rick Moranis, who might come out of a 20 year retirement to reprise his role as Louis Tully.
We will have to cross our fingers and wait patiently for these Ghostbusters finally agree on giving us the latest installment of one of the most beloved films of the decades of the 80’s and 90’s.
New York (USA), Nov. 1 (ShowBizCafe.com) – Tintin, on of the most famous and iconic European cartoon characters in history finally returns to silver screen. After having six films in his name, Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson reveal the first movie stills, via England’s Empire Magazine, from the seventh chapter in The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn.
The pair of photos shows Captain Haddock (voice of Andy Serkis) alone screaming at someone and the other with Tintin (voice of James Bell) and Haddock caught at sea seeking help.
The film was not made with traditional animation, but 3D motion capture in which the actors movements are captured digitally, and then in post, are converted to animation.
Steven Spielberg, the director of the film, talks about the plot: “The first part of the film, which is the most mysterious part, certainly owes much to not only film noir but the whole German Brechtian theatre — some of our night scenes and our action scenes are very contrasty. But at the same time the movie is a hell of an adventure.”
Master filmmaker and producer Peter Jackson, whose company Weta is in charge of special effects, says the visuals “With live action you’re going to have actors pretending to be Captain Haddock and Tintin. You’d be casting people to look like them. It’s not really going to feel like the Tintin Hergé drew. It’s going to be somewhat different. With CGI we can bring Hergé’s world to life, keep the stylised caricatured faces, keep everything looking like Hergé’s artwork, but make it photo-real.”
The film also stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as Thompson and Thomson, respectively, and Daniel Craig as Red Rackham. It also features Cary Elwes, Toby Jones, Mackenzie Crook and Daniel Mays.
For those unaware of the lore of Tintin, he is one of the most influential twentieth-century cartoons. He was created by the Belgian author Georges Remi (Hergé) in 1930.
Although it’ll take more than a year for the release of Tintin’s movie (the film comes out in theaters on December 28, 2011 in the USA) you can behold the first images of the film.
{New York, NY, October 31, 2010) – The New York City Horror Film Festival (www.nychorrorfest.com) today announced their full programming slate of short and feature films, featuring over 50 films submitted from the United States and some 15 countries from around the world. The 2010 NYCHFF takes place November 9 thru 14, 2010 at the Tribeca Cinemas, located at 54 Varick Street at Canal Street. The Festival’s Opening Night Gala will take place this year at Soirée (199 Bowery at Spring Street) on November 10 at 8:00pm. The gala is open to the public and will feature live performances, short films, complimentary cocktails, and more.
The 9th Annual NYCHFF Feature Presentations are:
DON’T GO IN THE WOODS (Noncompetition) Directed by Vincent D’Onofrio. – An indie rock band of five young men heads into the woods for a weekend of creative inspiration away from modern distractions. New songs are sung and written but female groupies crash the creative jam session causing distraction. In traditional slasher movie style, characters begin disappearing and are violently killed by a crazed murderer. Unlike a traditional horror film, DON’T GO IN THE WOODS is a musical with scenes of characters singing while being murdered. The film oozes with thrills and a dark sense of humor complemented by a solid rock soundtrack. {US}
YELLOWBRICKROAD (Competition) Directed by Frank Holland – In the Fall of 1940, the entire population of Friar, New Hampshire walked together up a winding mountain trail and into the wilderness. Without warning, they left behind everything: their homes, their clothes, and their money. The only clue where they went was a single word etched into stone near the forest’s edge: YELLOWBRICKROAD. In 2009, the coordinates for the ‘YELLOWBRICKROAD’ trail head are declassified. An expedition begins in hope of answers. A few among them believe they will find something terrible in the forest. But it is the forest that will find something terrible in them. {US}
BEREAVEMENT (Competition) Directed by Stevan Mena – The horrific account of 6 year old Martin Bristol, abducted from his backyard swing and forced to witness the brutal crimes of a deranged madman. {US}
THE PACK (Competition) Directed by Franck Richard – In the middle of a snowy no man’s land, Charlotte picks up Max, a hitchhiker; they stop in a truck-stop restaurant, and when Max doesn’t come back from the bathroom, Charlotte starts looking for him in vain. She decides to return during the night but gets kidnapped by the bartender, La Spack, who turns out to be Max’s mother and needs to feed her kids, ‘The pack’, a bunch of blood lusting ghouls. Alone and in the middle of nowhere, she quickly realizes… she’s next on the menu! {France}
OUTCAST (Competition) Directed by Colm McCarthy – OUTCAST is the tale of Petronella, a Scottish/Romany girl, and Fergal, her mysterious Irish traveler boyfriend. As their doomed relationship plays out, a Beast stalks the estate, killing locals, working its way towards our protagonists. Meanwhile Cathal and Liam, two mysterious travelers from Ireland use ritual and magic on a blood hunt. Mary, Fergal’s mother performs ritual and magic of her own. In a vicious finale we know one thing: the Beast must die. {UK} TICKED OFF TRANNIES WITH KNIVES (Competition) Directed by Israel Luna – A group of trannies are violently bashed and left for dead. The surviving ladies regain consciousness, confidence, and courage ready to seek out revenge on the ones who attacked them. {US}
KISS THE ABYSS (Competition) Directed by Ken Winkler – When a young woman is brutally killed by an intruder, her husband and estranged father conspire to bring her back from the dead with the help of a mysterious desert dweller. Soon after she awakens, she begins to realize that something is horribly wrong… {US}
WON TON BABY (Noncompetition) Directed by James Morgart Thirty years ago brothel owner Rachel “Madam” Won Ton found herself one drug-filled night involved with her wildest client. That encounter leaves the Madam pregnant. She decides to move on for “cleaner” life. Today, her brothel converted into a Chinese restaurant, the Madam’s past continues to haunt her. However, her continued social scorn is the least of her concerns when she learns her adult daughter, Lily, has a parasitic twin growing in her belly! When the fetus is removed, it is not only alive; it possesses a mutated umbilical cord. The baby’s mass murdering and eating of the locals forces the Madam to confront a secret she’s hidden for years. Can the Madam solve things before it’s too late or has she sealed her family’s fate by the release of the child? {US}
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET Lifetime Achievement Award Presentation to Actor/Director Robert Englund – In the dreams of his victims, a spectral child murderer stalks the children of the members of the lynch mob that killed him. A print of this film will screen as part of the Lifetime achievement program dedicated to Actor /Director Robert Englund. {US}
Also part of the program this year’s program are the four audience choice award winners of the Killer Shorts Sudden Death Competitions that was held in conjunction with Wizard Conventions throughout the spring and summer of 2010. The winners are:
Wizard Anaheim – WRITTEN BY, directed by Karni Baghdikian Wizard Philadelphia – NOW THAT YOU’RE DEAD, directed by Patrick Rea Wizard Chicago – GET OFF MY PORCH, directed by Patrick Rea Wizard New York – LET’S MAKE A TAPE, directed by Jorge Abreu
NYC HORROR FILM FESTIVAL (NYCHFF) was founded in 2001 by Film Producer and Director
Michael J. Hein. The festival is dedicated to the international genre film community and there are no restrictions on the films screened during the festivals. Programs include short and feature films screened both in and out of competition. The Festival jury presents awards to films in the categories of Best Feature Film, Best Short Film, Best Cinematography, Best Special Effects, Best Actor / Actress, Best Screenplay for films showcased, and an Audience Choice Award. The NYCHFF also presents an annual Lifetime achievement award. Past recipients include director George A. Romero, Special Effects Artist and Director Tom Savini, Producer and Director Roger Corman, and Producer and Director Mick Garris. Over the last nine years the festival has grown into America’s largest and most recognized genre film festival focusing solely on Horror, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Thrillers. Each year the NYCHFF celebrates both the horror classics we grew up with and new genre films & filmmakers who created them and fills the city with special screenings, parties, celebrity guests and free giveaways. For more information visit the festival’s website at www.nychorrorfest.com
James Frey, whose fictional autobiography, âA Million Little Pieces,â got him roasted on Oprah Winfeyâs sofa for 48 minutes, got off easy compared to Bobby Dagen, ably played by Sean Patrick Flanery, who is tortured (along with the audience) for 90 minutes for concocting a fictional best seller about surviving the Jigsaw killer in âSaw 3Dâ or âSaw VIIâ — depending on oneâs point of view.
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Horror thrillerâs plot is simple. The late Jigsaw John (Tobin Bell) who appears in flashback, had an accomplice, which everyone who saw âSaw VIâ knows is crooked Detective Mark Hoffman (Costas Mandylor) whose career has not exactly soared since his stint on David E. Kellyâs âPicket Fencesâ. He may be best remembered by some as the fellow in HBOâs TV series, âSex and the City,â with a male part too big even for Samantha (Kim Cattrall) to handle.Â
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Bobby Dagen is raking in cash on his book tour. Hoffman gets upset about this (why is anyoneâs guess) and sets out to right matters. He also has a beef with Jigsaw Johnâs widow, Jill (Betsy Russell), who has fingered him to the cops as her late husbandâs accomplice and tried to kill him. At least that makes sense.
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Like the rest of the Saw series, âSaw 3Dâ relies on about one dead body every ten minutes, cheesy special effects, and relentless villains to achieve suspense. The vics are also not guilt free. They mostly (with a few exceptions) did something badâ¦. In other words, theyâre human.Â
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This alleged thriller relies on an extraordinary suspension of disbelief. Hoffmanâs traps depend on perfect timing, amazing mechanical perfection, and a puppet showing up on TV at exactly the right moment to move the plot along. The money such a setup would cost would be far beyond the means of a policeman. It would be the kind of cash that would make Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke apoplectic.Â
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By now everyone who knows anything about the Saw franchise knows that its central premise is that life is about choices. Unfortunately for those caught in Jigsawâs traps, said choices are Hobsonâs on steroids. Picâs second scene is set in an urban storefront in which two guys, both dated by an attractive women held overhead in a sling which emphasizes her most excellent endowments, are chained to circular saws. In order to save the girl, one of them must saw the other to death. If they save each other, the girl gets sawed to death. This is classic Saw. It is also a tad unfortunate since the unaccredited actress is sort of righteous.
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âSaw 3Dâ also plagiarizes other works. Hoffman stitching his face after Jillâs alleged murder attempt is straight out of Spanish pic âPanâs Labyrinth.â A bit in which Bobby has to shove hooks into his pectoral muscles was used to much better effect by Arthur Kopit in âIndians,â both on stage and on screen.
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3D is a gimmick that Hollywood tried about 50 years ago.  It coincided with the Hula Hoop.  There is nothing new under the sun gear, as âRoad & Trackâ magazine founder John Bond said. Hollywood is reviving the gimmick to get bodies to shell out money to see subpar films. It will work for a while. Thus far your critic has seen only one picture that benefitted from 3D: It is âDespicable Meâ (which is reviewed on this site). Heck, even CBS Sports is toying with 3D to get folks to watch its depleted roster on television. Note to programmers: 3D does not make up for crummy material. A compelling work can be shown on a 13-inch black and white TV screen and hold oneâs interest, if not oneâs breath.
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Helmer Kevin Greutert was an editor on many of the Saw pictures and directed âSaw VIâ. Tech credits, save for the cheesy special effects, are adequate. So is sound recording, although âSaw 3Dâ could be a silent picture and be none the worse for it. Dialogue is at best banal. Performances are almost universally awful. Only Flanery rises above the material, which is not saying much.
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âSaw 3Dâ is billed as the end of the Saw franchise. That would be a good thing.  With No. 7 it has jumped the shark. But your critic fears otherwise. Pic leaves a number of dangling participles on any of which can be hung âsequel.â Auds do not know if Bobby dies or if Hoffman dies. And it is revealed that Jigsaw John had a second accomplice, a blond haired physician (Cary Elwes) who cauterized his stump after amputating his own leg — picâs opening scene. Near picâs end it is revealed that Jigsaw John made the guy his âexecutorâ of sorts. The future will depend on the box office that âSaw 3Dâ does.
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Released just in time for Halloween, âSaw 3Dâ is rated R according to its press materials âfor sequences of grisly bloody violence and torture, and language [sic].â Take a pass. Put the Jigsaw guys out of their misery.
New York (USA), Oct. 26 (ShowBizCafe.com) – With the shocking success of ‘Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert’ and ‘Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience,’ Paramount Pictures decided to take the story of the young Canadian singer Justin Bieber to the big screen in a biopic directed by Jon Chu entitled ‘Justin Bieber: Never Say Never 3D’. The film, which premieres on February 11, 2011, Valentine’s Day, had its debut last night at his concert in Los Angeles and now you can see it in the video below.
The trailer begins with images of Justin as a child singing and playing musical instruments, all as part of his daily life. The focus then switches to his beginnings as a star and famous people who helped him along the road to fame. Finally we see testimonies of love from his fans and the songs they all obsessively sing as ‘Baby’ and ‘Somebody to Love’. The film ends with Bieber giving words of encouragement to his audience – “there will be times when people tell you you cannot live your dreams,” says Bieber. “This is what I say: Never say never”
The business of ‘Bieber’ continues to boom all around – I mean he has even signed a deal with publisher Harper Collins to create a memoir on his life and his path to the top of the music industry. This guy has become an economic attraction for film executives and publishers who see enormous potential to make money in a variety of properties.
Initially, the documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim (It Might Get Loud, An Inconvenient Truth) was going to make the Bieber project, but looks his fans got on him. Guggenheim left the project after receiving a deluge of criticism via the web by his own fans. Scooter Braun, his manager and LA Reid, chairman of Island Def Jam, will produce the film.