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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • Benjamin Button Reviews Start Seeping Out

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    Under discussion:

    Yesterday, Anne Thompson posted “an early review” of David Fincher’s The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, which she says was emailed by “one of [her] industry spies.” David Poland quickly huffed that “running an anonymous ‘friend’ as a ‘review’” is “just bullshit”, but for our purposes, skepticism over where the comments on the film (which are effusive regarding every aspect of the production) come from is neither here nor there.

    I’m just wondering what happens now. The film has screened for some long-lead press as well as a couple of guilds, but until now everyone who has seen it (including yours truly) has kept quiet in the interest of playing nice with the de facto embargo. Should we now consider that vow of silence null and void?

    I’m guessing probably not; I imagine that if I were to post what I actually think about the film in any significant detail, I would be punished. And I kind of really want to see Revolutionary Road, so I’m gonna hold off on incurring the wrath of Paramount a little bit longer — at least until a review hits the web with its author’s name attached.

    All I’ll say for now, is that for me, the image that Thompson used on her blog post (which I’ve appropriated above) says it all. Look at Taraji P. Henson’s eyeline. What is she looking at? Not [the make-up-caked face of] Brad Pitt [superimposed via digital magic on a smaller man's body] — her eyes eyes seem to be directed at the tippy-top of his head, if not higher. Which is weird, because she’s ostensibly watching him miraculously rise from his wheelchair and walk for the first time, so you’d think she’d be looking at his legs, or maybe try to make eye contact, as a way of connecting with him personally during this special moment. Instead, it’s like she’s grinning at something that isn’t there … and now I’ve started to say too much.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Slamdance Co-Founder Masterminds Fake McCain Source, Hoaxes MSNBC

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    Under discussion:

    The Holy Land  (2001)

    It finally happened: my obsession with MSNBC has dovetailed with legitimate movie news! Sort of!

    Tonight the New York Times broke the news that over a year ago, Dan Mirvish (filmmaker and co-founder of the Slamdance Film Festival) and Eitan Gorlin (whose directorial debut, The Holy Land, won the Grand Jury Prize at that festival and was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award) made up a fake adviser to John McCain named Martin Eisenstadt. On Monday, MSNBC’s David Schuster reported on air that Martin Eisenstadt had taken credit for the “Palin thinks Africa is a country” leak. Eisenstadt had indeed published a post on his blog (tagline: “Because freedom isn’t free”) claiming to be the leaker, which no one at MSNBC bothered to look into deeply before Schuster’s report, otherwise they might have discovered that Eisenstadt a) is a made up person, and b) didn’t actually talk to Carl Cameron, the Fox news reporter who broke the “anonymous sources say Palin doesn’t know Africa is a continent” story.

    MSNBC weren’t the only ones snowed – The Huffington Post, The National Review and The Los Angeles Times have all previously used Eisenstadt’s made-up blog full of made-up insider information as a source. TV Newser started digging into the story yesterday; they posted an email “from” “Eisenstadt” which, in retrospect, probably should have tipped all of us off. “It’s strange for me (and all a bit Hegelian) to get requests to prove that I exist,” writes “Martin,” before insisting that “every single blog that says I am a ‘hoax’ has emanated from a single, bitter individual who for some reason has a vendetta against me - a golf blogger allegedly named ‘Wolfrum.’” William K. Wolfrum’s blog looks so overtly hoaxy that it might actually be not a hoax … except that at the end of the Times story,”Wolfrum” himself seems to imply that he doesn’t actually exist. I think.

    In any case, above you can watch the first part of a fake BBC documentary Mirvish and Gorlin produced about Eisenstadt, called The Last Republican. Gorlin plays the, uh, titular lead, and he does a superb job of saying things like, “We can bomb every rainforest back into prehistory, but we’ve got to have some kind of economic model that people can embrace,” and “Bill Kristol was my counselor in Zionist summer camp”, with a straight face.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

 


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