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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • BUTTERKNIFE Episode 6: Bedroom Bully

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    Under discussion:

    Low and Behold  (2006)

    BUTTERKNIFE 6: Bedroom Bully

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    This episode of Butterknife co-stars Barlow Jacobs, co-writer and star of one of my favorite festival films of 2007, Low and Behold. Barlow also appears in New Orleans Mon Amour, one of the films I’m most looking forward to at SXSW. 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)
    Laugh Attack (with Barlow Jacobs)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Scarlett Johansson’s Guide To Sexual History: BlogNosh 03/03/08

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    • “From the grave of Queer Cinema emerges the gay zombie movie, in the form of German-Canadian co-production Otto; or, Up with Dead People,” declares Matt Riviera. His aim is to defend Bruce LaBruce’s latest “intentionally bad film” from critics who refused to engage with it. “I wonder if some of the folk who didn’t get Otto simply missed the second layer of satire beneath the obvious metaphor of capitalist, consumerist societies turning today’s youth into zombies (kids who feel ‘dead inside’).”
    • Jeffrey Wells reminisces about his brief stint as a publicist for New Line: “I grew up under the domain of an alcoholic dad, and can tell you that I felt the same disturbed, frazzled, self-loathing aura. But at the same time I was relieved that New Line wasn’t a chilly corporate place.”
    • At Big Media Vandalism, Odienator offers a recap of Black History Mumf.
    • “4:43p Scarlett Johansson gets married. Tells Anne she is scared about tonight (cause of the sex, in case you’re slow)…4:45p Scarlett’s husband says “lie down.” That’s it. Wow, sex was awesome back then.” Ricky and Alex at 23/6 live blog The Other Boleyn Girl.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • Shining For Obama. Clip of the Day.

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    Over the weekend, a video called Jack and Hill appeared on YouTube. The clip strung together clips from Jack Nicholson films (including A Few Good Men, Five Easy Pieces and Tim Burton’s Batman) with white-on-black title cards summarizing Hillary Clinton’s qualifications to be president. Though first thought to be the work of the Clinton campaign, the Politico reported on Sunday that it was the brainchild of a number of Hollywood figures, including Rob Reiner and Nicholson himself, who produced it independently of the Clinton camp.

    In the film blog world, the general consensus was that however Jack and Hill was produced, as a campaign video, it was pretty bad. “Just utterly pathetic,” was how Michael Newman put it in a comment on Chuck Tryon’s blog, and FILMMAKER editor Scott Macaulay sighed, “This election is getting too bizarre.” Beyond the obvious ideological problem that the clip has Hillary being endorse by various Nicholson villains, there’s something exceedingly lazy about the way it’s been put together. None of the characters repeat, and there’s barely a connection between their pullquotes and the titles on screen. It seems as though the idea was to stack one clip on top of the next in the hopes that, out of context, they’d play as a series of punchlines. Instead, as Tryon notes, anyone who can bring the context of the excerpted films with them to the viewing experience will be unable to refrain from doing so, and at that point, the whole thing backfires: ultimately, this is a clip in which the implication is that Hillary Clinton is going to make life better for the axe wielding psycho of The Shining, whilst restoring the Joker’s trust in the political system.

    But of course, there’s already a reaction clip, one which, in particular, puts scenes from that Kubrick film to good use.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • A Shane Meadows Slideshow

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    Under discussion:

    This is England  (2006)

    Shane Meadows has very quietly followed up his skinhead instant-classic This is England with Somers Town, a black-and-white, 75-minute feature fronted by England’s young star, Thomas Turgoose. The film popped up unexpectedly at the Berlin Film Festival last month, where it earned a rapturous Variety review and very little other press. Now Twitch has a slide show of images from the film, apparently put together by Meadows himself in lieu of a trailer. See it above.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • True/False Recap

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    true_false_thumbnail.jpgAfter seven hours in the St. Louis airport, I have returned from my long, wonderful weekend at the True/False Film Festival. Below, you’ll find a recap of the films I covered whilst in Columbia, MO. But first, I want to give a shout-out to Satin and Chenille.

    Before each screening at True/False, “buskers” culled from all over the country take the stage to perform while the audience is filing in. At some of the larger True/False venues, the buskers sort of fade into the background, but at an intimate space like the new Little Ragtag, the performers really get a chance to take over the room. That’s where I saw Satin and Chenille, a girl and boy (I came late, so I’m not sure which one is Satin and which one is Chenille) who did a tongue-in-cheek set of standards and love songs before the Friday night screening of Carny.

    “I hope you guys love each other as much as we love love songs,” said the boy, before they launched into an acoustic guitar-fueled version of “Baby It’s Cold Outside.” They followed that up with an epic, partially-accapella version on “I’ve Had The Time of My Life,” which turned into a mass sing-a-long. It was a great moment, and maybe an audience of 50 or so moviegoers united by a Dirty Dancing reference is a little thing compared to the achievement of such a well-curated program of films, but it’s also one of the many things that sets True/False apart from larger, more impersonal festivals, and it’s definitely a reason to go back next year.

    Anyway. Check out a guide to my True/False reviews after the jump.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

  • SXSW Preview: Second Skin

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    Second Skin, a documentary to be featured later this week in the Spotlight Premieres section at SXSW, follows a handful of gamers who are deeply devoted to Massively Multiplayer Online games such as Second Life and World of Warcraft. The film premieres on Friday at 9pm at the Austin Convention Center. Check out the trailer above, and answers to the 4 Questions We’re Asking Everybody, from director Juan Carlos Pineiro Escoriaza, and producers Victor Pineiro and Peter Schieffelin Brauer below. Victor Piniero and I are also speaking on the same SXSW panel, Blogs, Buzz and Buddy Lists, which goes down on Sunday, March 9.

    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.

    Juan Carlos: This flick is like An Inconvenient Truth meets Errol Morris. Except that the movie we’ve been making for two years doesn’t involve an environmental crisis. I kept on coming back to An Inconvenient Truth, because online games (MMO’s) have the power to change the landscape of our society. Games like World of Warcraft, Everquest 2, and Second Life have and will continue to make our global community closer in ways that I think are just becoming clear now. I’m not trying to imply that it is going to cause problems on the scale of global flooding, but I think it is a societal evolution that we are running to catch up with. Errol Morris’ Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control on the other hand takes a really intimate look into people’s obsessions. Which is to say that our movie is about people who tend to play a lot of MMO’s. In our film I try to balance between that gigantic cultural phenomenon, and the personal lives of people who are ‘just gamers’. Finding a way to say this movie is about a burgeoning sub-culture AND seven people - is a delicate balance. Suffice to say I think you’ll be pretty surprised where everything ends up.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

 

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