Frem Here To Awesome Festival
Advertisement

Karina on SpoutBlog

  • SpoutBlog Week in Review

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Mike Figgis, Agent Provacateur Auteur

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Miss Julie  (1999)

    I’m sure there are many who are happy that Mike Figgis has essentially given up on filmmaking in order to make softcore ads for Agent Provacateur, but I kind of liked his version of Miss Julie, and sort of wish he’d make another film where the corsets are narrative-mandated and period-appropriate instead of, like, for sale. In any case, here’s his latest promo. This one is for a new line of Agent Provacateur shoes, and it’s much more of a straightforward advert than the shorts Figgis made for AP with Kate Moss last year. And–sorry boys–new AP model Maggie Gyllenhaal unfortunately does not make an appearance. Since it’s basically semi-tasteful bondage porn, it’s probably not safe for work, but considering it’s the Friday before Christmas, that’s probably not an issue. Happy Holidays!

    [Via CineKink]


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Tracy Morgan IS Thomas Jefferson. Clip of the Day.

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    First Sunday  (2008)

    Do you ever wish that an actor would drop their own persona and just adopt the life/career plan of one of their fictional characters? That’s were I am right now with Tracy Morgan, who is SO good??????and SO underrated??????on 30 Rock, but who spends his time off from the show making films like First Sunday. There’s a clip from that slice of modern blaxploitation floating around; I like the way FilmDrunk sums it up:

    The clip gives us a hilarious taste of what black church is like. It’s great, because I’ve often said that the differences between how white people do things and how black people do things too often goes unaddressed in comedy.

    I totally understand that Morgan has a mortgage to pay and base audience that he wants to play to, but it just seems like the caricature of himself that he plays on TV is doing both with a little bit more style.

    On 30 Rock, Morgan plays Tracy Jordan, a huge movie star known for films like Samurai I Am Awry and Honky Grandma Be Trippin’, in which he employs all manner of costuming and prosthetics in order to play multiple parts. Last season, Tracy took a DNA test which revealed that he was a distant descendant of Thomas Jefferson, and became inspired to make a Jefferson biopic, in which he would, of course, play every part. He took the idea to the president of NBC/Universal (which, on 30 Rock, is a subsidiary of the Sheinhardt Wig Corporation), who thought Tracy should make a movie version of The Jeffersons instead. Tracy then made the above trailer, in hopes that a visual aid would change the suit’s mind. It didn’t, but it’s hilarious.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Trade Roughage 12/21/07

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]

    • rainn.pngHere they are, your last strike bites before Christmas: the AMPTP has produced the figure that 74 percent of Americans report that their viewing habits unaffected by the strike. Which is nice, but when 26 percent of Americans report something, isn’t that, like, a lot? Also: the WGA has granted a waiver to allow writers to work on the Independent Spirit Awards. Rainn Wilson from The Office will host. Which is, um, also nice.
    • Speaking of events living or dying based on a WGA waiver: uncertainty over whether or not stars will cross the picket line to attend the Golden Globes has thrown party planners into a panic. Yes, it’s that slow of a news day.
    • Lou Reed will be the keynote speaker at the SXSW Music Conference. In conjunction, the SXSW Film Festival will screen Julian Schnabel’s concert film, Lou Reed’s Berlin.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • BlogNosh 12/20/07

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]

    • Your Christmas weekend time suck is here, in the form of indieWIRE’s massive 2007 Critics Poll. There Will Be Blood takes top honors, but as usual, the real fun lies in investigating the individual ballots and spotting the idiosyncrasies. Behold Andrew Bujalski’s single vote for Best Supporting Actor! Marvel at the critic who gave almost equal love to Ken Jacobs and Blades of Glory! But before you do, decide whether you’re thrilled or infuriated to see Southland Tales land ten full places ahead of Atonement (I’m the former. I think.)
    • Speaking of There Will Be Blood, critics poll participant Filmbrain has posted some “sketches, fragments, and other half-baked ideas” about what he declares is “easily the best film of the year.” His key contention: it’s a love letter to Stanley Kubrick.
    • Tomorrow is Burbanked’s second blogoversy, and he’s celebrating with a ten day party.
    • Finally, here’s another time suck, if you need a break from all that critic pollery: Marisa Tomei joins Natalie Portman in the ranks of unwitting screencap porn stars. NSFW, via The WoW Report.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • State of the Indies, Part 2

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]

    ipod.jpgAndrew O’Hehir’s annual survey of the year in indie film is up at Salon today. Consider it a companion to yesterday’s discussion of the best “undistributed” films of 2007. The big theme: the increasing dominance of studio indie arms (like Fox Searchight and Focus Features, which exist primarily because their parent companies want to win awards without actually having to take their attention away from their bread and butter tentpoles) is forcing “true” indies like Magnolia and IFC (which is still part of a huge corporation, but manages to operate under a curation strategy that’s more like MoMA than Miramax) to take risks, both in what they release and how they attempt to deliver it to an audience. Oh??????and beware of iPods!

    Ah, futurism. O’Herhir gives the impression that if the indie industry can’t figure out how to get anyone to see the legitimately good films that they have been distributing, their solution will be to basically scrap all that and start making content for the devices that they’re pretty sure kids are paying attention to instead (again with the kids!) Killer Films’ Christine Vachon acknowledges that iPods, “the YouTube universe and the whole notion of making things for cellphones” are forcing producers like herself to “shift with the times.”

    Microcinema’s Joel Bachar takes it a step further: our devices have ruined our ability to respond to traditional content. “There’s this social-networking mentality; they’re Twittering, they’re blogging,” he says. “There’s more commitment to, you know, the experiential moment, and not much commitment to longer moments.”

    Interesting. I’m going to go back to Twittering about the three 3-hour films that are sure to make my 2007 Top Ten while you ponder it.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

 

Like what you're reading?

Subscribe
Search
  Go

Browse previous
<December 2007>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2526272829301
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
303112345


Categories
 


Advertisement