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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • BUTTERKNIFE Episode 5: Laugh Attack

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    Under discussion:

    Frownland  (2007)

    BUTTERKNIFE 5: Laugh Attack

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    This episode of Butterknife co-stars Sean Prince Williams (again), the cinematographer of Frownland. You can go to Spout.com???s Butterknife page for more info on the series, to watch future episodes, to talk about the show, and to sign up for email updates.

    Previous episodes:

    Plastic Hassle (with Kentucker Audley)
    Sicilian Style (with Tony Baker and Frank V. Ross)
    Key Witness (with Michael Tully)
    Bongo Board (with Sean Prince Williams)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Oscar Clips on YouTube? That Would Be Too Easy.

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    Scott Kirsner passes along the news that even though the Academy has an official Oscar YouTube channel, they’ve so far failed to use it to showcase clips from last night’s show. Not only that, but they have YouTube hard at work removing clips from the show uploaded by other users??????this clip, and this one, and this one were all removed within three hours of their upload.

    And not only THAT, but with the exception of a clip from last year’s Jack Black/Will Ferrell/John C. Reilly medley, most of the recently uploaded clips from actual Oscar telecasts date back to the 75th edition of the show??????which, of course, took place in 2003. So if you’re just now getting around to blogging about Adrien Brody kissing Halle Berry, you’re in luck! Or, you would be, if the entire channel didn’t disable embeds.

    Chris is coming up with a list of things the Academy can do to improve telecast ratings, so check back later this afternoon for that. But this kind of thing has got to be one explanation for last night’s show doing so poorly. The new generation of celebrity porn addicts don’t even know they’re supposed to obsess about the Oscars, because the Perez Hiltons of the world are instead blogging about Jennifer Aniston’s frozen eggs, because at least they have visual aids for that.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Lars Von Trier: So THAT’S What He’s Up To

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    Anthony Kaufman points to this profile of Lars Von Trier in the Telegraph, occasioned by the UK release of the filmmaker’s last, brutally underrated feature, The Boss of it All, in which we learn that Von Trier is apparently in need of paying the mortgage aiming to put at least one more conventional English-language film in the can before continuing with the Dogville/Manderlay trilogy. His next project, called Antichrist, is described thusly:

    …a “psychological thriller that evolves into a horror film”. It features one man and one woman, yet to be cast, will be shot in Germany and in English this summer and deals with the favourite Von Trier topic of cruelty between the sexes: “You have to guess who is the Antichrist,” says its producer, Meta Louise Foldager, mischievously. Von Trier is testing ways of manipulating the image in it.

    So there’s that. While we wait, you can watch the “blooper” reel from the video Von Trier shot for the theme song to his TV series, The Kingdom. I’ve seen this thing 100 times, but it never fails to make me laugh.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • The JUNO Press Cycle is Complete

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    Unlike other major papers, which mostly went with a cover shot of a resplendently emotional Marion Cotillard, the ever-classy New York Post puts “former stripper” Diablo Cody on the cover of their Oscar morning-after edition, letting her outdated job description stand in for her name. And with THAT, the rags-to-riches transformation from strip club Cinderella to Oscar winner, as well as the little indie-choo-choo-that-could fiction that made it happen, (the Post story actually uses the phrase “the little indie that could”, and refers to the win itself, which was the second-biggest lock of the night behind Javier Bardem, as a “shocker”) is complete.

    Oh, and did we mention that the Post, like Fox Searchlight, the teeny-tiny independent company that made and released Juno, is owned by Rupert Murdoch? Vertically integrated corporate strategy is a beautiful thing.

    Via Tim Shey.

    UPDATE: I apologize for suggesting that Cody only wore one earring to the Oscars. I was clearly wrong.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • SXSW Preview: A Necessary Death

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    Daniel Stamm’s Emerging Visions entry A Necessary Death looks like it has the potential to be one of the more controversial titles on this year’s SXSW Film Festival slate. The documentary-style feature tracks a film student who places an ad on Craig’s List in order to find a determinedly suicidal individual to film in the days leading up to the fatal act. Judging by the trailer (embedded above) and the film’s brief, enigmatic SXSW synopsis, it seems as though Death could be reasonably situated within a trend that Eric Kohn cited last month at Slamdance, of “YouTube generation filmmakers” seeking “to tell fictional stories within a documentary framework.” We shall see when the film premieres in Austin on March 8. In the meantime, watch the trailer above, and see Stamm’s answers to the 4 Questions We’re Asking Everybody below.

    Tell us about your movie. Who did you work with, why did you make it? Give us the reductive, 25-word or less, “It’s like [pop culture reference a] meets [pop culture reference b]!” pitch, then explain what the quick and dirty sell leaves out.

    The quick and dirty sell is:

    “Documentary Filmmaker looking for suicidal individual to follow from first preparation to final act.” Cut from 142 video tapes, this film sheds light on the tragedy following the infamous internet ad.

    That may be 31 words but at least they don’t leave anything out, so I am saving words overall. I am also saving words where why I made the movie is concerned. I was fascinated by the story and I saw that others were just as stunned by it. That’s really it.

    I worked with an incredible cinematographer, Zoltan Honti, whom we had to wait for every now and then because he was working with Vilmos Zsigmond on Brian dePalma’s or Woody Allen’s sets. Switching back and forth between the glossy look of Black Dahlia and the grittiness of A Necessary Death can’t have been easy. But that is how good he is. Well worth waiting for.

    I was lucky enough to get to work with award-winning editor Shilpa K. Sahi and casting director Mali Finn. Mali cast films like Titanic, Matrix, and L.A. Confidential. She was a wonderful woman who sadly passed away last year.

    The score was written by Morgan Kibby of the Romanovs and Jonathan Leahy of the Broken Remotes - both of which I couldn’t be a bigger fan of. Leonard Cohen wanted Morgan for his world tour. She said no and set out on her own tour with M83. Kids these days. No respect.
    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Kurt Cobain: The Ride: The Movie

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    fleaandkurtcobain_855_18324829_0_0_15358_300.jpgThere are a lot of eyebrow-raising moments in this interview with Chicago 10 director Brett Morgan, in which he announces that his next project will be a Courtney Love-approved documentary about Kurt Cobain. Some of it is cringe-worthy, some of it is intriguing, most of it is somewhat WTF? On the good side, it sounds like the film will incorporate some material we haven’t seen before:

    …we???ll have the music of course but [also] his home movies. He did stop action animation, which I don???t know if anyone???s ever seen but I saw it and it???s fucking great. I mean it was crude and I???m gonna probably refine it, you know…

    …but on the bad side…

    I mean one of the things I think with all my movies, if I won the lottery last night you know, one day I???d love to open up a theme park like Disneyland with rides based on all my movies because I think that like when I did The Kid Stays in The Picture, to me it was like the Disneyland ride about Bob Evans. If Disneyland had a ride called Bob Evans The Kid Says in the Picture it???s that? When I did Chicago 10, I kept thinking this is a Chicago experience. This is like Space Mountain with like police coming out at you and whatnot. The same thing with Kurt Cobain, it???s what the Seattle music experience should be in a way. It???s going to be like this 3 dimensional visceral sort of sublime you know movie…ultimately I think the goal for that film is to make sort of a Catcher on the Rye for the next decade?

    I love it that that last part is phrased as a question. Anyway, as wary as I am of the notion of a documentary modeled after a theme park ride seeking to usurp the greatest novel ever about teen alienation, I think I’m a little bit more troubled about a few statements Morgen makes which sound vaguely familiar. More after the jump.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

 

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