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  • Ghostbusters Game Demonstrated. Clip of the Day

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    Ghostbusters  (1984)

    The highly anticipated new Ghostbusters game has finally been given a release date: June 2009. That may not be specific enough for you, especially since it was originally supposed to come out this fall, but as Karina previously reported, Atari has decided to coincide its release with the original film’s 25th anniversary. To ease your impatience, though, there’s an awesome new trailer for the video game (view it on YouTube), in which you can hear some of the new vocal performances from Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis.

    I can’t stand video games, but even I’m looking forward to playing this thing. Then again, I’m such a fan of Ghostbusters that I’d be just as excited if the new game was as simple as the old Activision Ghostbusters game for the Commodore 64, a demonstration of which I’m sharing as today’s clip. Oh, I hope you didn’t think by the headline that I’d found a demo of the new game. Sorry about that, if you did. I didn’t mean to trick you. Don’t worry, you’ll enjoy the video anyway. Check it out after the jump.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • A Good Day to be Black and Sexy Director Dennis Dortch: The Media Diet

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    One of the most underrated and overlooked titles at Sundance last year was Dennis Dortch’s A Good Day to be Black and Sexy. Over six vignettes, Dortch takes a daring, authentic and frequently hysterical look at the sexual mores of a young black Los Angelenos. The film, which garnered Dortch a nomination at Tuesday’s Gotham Awards for Best Breakthrough Director, opens in Los Angeles today via Magnolia Pictures. We caught up with Dortch to discuss seeing The Story of a Three Day Pass at MoMA, Marvin Gaye as an auteur and his desire to work with George Clinton.
    What films or television shows have you seen recently?
    I don’t watch television. And I rarely watch films. When I do, it’s usually films from my peers’ at film festivals, etc, like Medicine for Melancholy, Ballast, etc. I immerse myself in what other people are doing currently. I just saw a screening of Melvin Van Peebles’ first film Story of  a Three Day Pass in NYC.

    Which ones stuck with you and why?
    Story of  a Three Day Pass. It was Melvin’s first film and first expression to the world in long form. I dig how his perspective on race, male/female relationships, and the art of filmmaking. And he is one my major influences socially as a black independent filmmaker in the 1960s and aesthetically as an artist. This dude took chances and did what he wanted to in the Industry and in his films.

    Medicine for Melancholy. I thought I was going to be alone this year with an indie black film.  Here comes director Barry Jenkins making a film of roughly the same budget constraints with something different to say on the black experience.  Just on a social level, it was cool to see another black perspective along with my film on the festival and award circuit. On an aesthetic level, the dude did his thing and made a film that white people stood up and took notice of. So, in my mind, he is cut from the same cloth as Melvin, as far as breaking expectations. It’s the story behind and around the films that stay with me and inspire me to up my game.

    How, if at all, does your interest in and appreciation of your favorite types of cinema inform your own work as a director?
    Simply put, personal work from other artists always grabs my attention. If we are talking about music, it’s Marvin Gaye. Take his Here, My Dear double album that chronicled the break down of his marriage and divorce from his first wife. AND the proceeds from that album were part of the divorce settlement. That was deep to me. My first exposure to different genres of cinema outside the norm was the surrealism films of Fellini and Bunuel in film school. Both directors put a lot of themselves and the lives and characters of people around them in their films. That’s me 100%. Overall, I have an attraction to Italian films. They have a certain style and wit to them that transcends the language barriers. The Italian tongue-in-cheekiness is all over my work.

    How often do you read fiction? Do you wish you read more?
    Rarely, unfortunately. Especially for pleasure. I’m a work-a-holic. Non-fiction books about the industry or something I want to learn is the majority of my reading. The last fiction book I read was a collection of shorts stories. And I was reading that for research. But it does stimulate your own creative juices, so I wish I could do it more.

    What would be your ideal literary adaptation and why?
    Elaine Brown’s A Taste of Power. I know she wanted to make this film for years and it hasn’t happened. This is my era of interest. And social/politically this incredible woman’s true story needs to be told in a wider medium. And I embrace the challenge of interpreting the structure and perspective she presented.

    How, if at all, has literature informed your work as a director?
    I think as a child, literature definitely influenced my writing. I was a book nerd for real. As an adult, I read less and less, and I’m not sure how far reaching my childhood readings are. And they are limited to the books that were at my level growing up.

    What are you listening to recently?
    I mostly listen to independent recording artists. I am always interested in the underground artist, whether they are musicians, filmmakers, visual artists, etc. As far as music, there is an indie artist in Atlanta called Eva Kennedy. She is bad. I saw a live recording of her doing a rock (Betty Davis) version of Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy.” She’s bad. There are other artists like Monica Blaire, Shawn Berry, Carol Riddick, Coultrain, Bryron the Aquarius, Peter Hadar, Liv, Stacy Epps, Madlib… If you know who these people are, then you know what I’m talking about. These artists take soul music beyond the simple “neo” label and experiment with their art without commercial considerations.

    If you could collaborate with one musician on a film, who would it be and why?
    George Clinton. The body of work this cat has produced would be enough to work with. Giving him a new fresh blank canvas to paint with, would inspire me to go places with a film that I would not have gone without him. I know he sees movies in his head when he’s composing. I hear music in my head when I am writing. Perfect match.

    What would be the ideal pairing of filmmaker and musician for a concert film?
    George Clinton and P-Funk (Parliament, Funkadelic).  Of course, I’m talking about a performance from their prime in the 70s. But really, they still put on a slamming unique show and probably need an unique perspective to bring it to an audience.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Merry Christmas from Spout

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    Every Wednesday in the Spout offices, we effectively close down to watch a movie. Movie Watchin’ Wednesday we call it…kind of cheesy, I know, but it works for us. This past Wednesday we watched It’s A Wonderful Life and a curious thing happened. Although I have personally seen this movie at least once a year for the past 30 or so, many of the people in our office had effectively avoided it or only seen clips. What a shame! This is such a fantastic film and the origin of so many tropes.

    If you haven’t seen it before, now is your chance. Close your office down, gather the kids, surround yourself with your loved ones and be prepared for that warm Christmasy glow.

    Merry Christmas from the team at Spout!


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Hollywoodizing Revolutionary Road

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    In her Variety column today, Anne Thompson contrasts Sam Mendes’ star-studded, Oscar-positioned, somewhat tonally revisionist adaptation of Revolutionary Road with the work and life of author Richard Yates. Thompson reminds what unlikely source material this is for a re-teaming of the beautiful young stars of the highest grossing film of all time, relating in detail the plight of “the long-suffering Yates,” who lived in “squalid” solitude, never sold more than 12,000 copies of a single novel, and hated the only produced film his writing ever had anything to do with.

    In his day, Yates was asked by its editor to stop submitting fiction to the New Yorker, a publication which had no use for the writer’s “mean-spirited view of things.” In describing how Mendes and crew revised the material to make its protagonists “warmer and more sympathetic” (and chose to take their dreams seriously where Yates drily mocked and criticized), Thompson implies that Hollywood has no use for the acid element of Yates’ view, either.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • The Most Disappointing Films of 2008

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    About.com’s Jurgen Fauth has put together a list of the ten films he was most disappointed by in 2008. Among them: box office champion The Dark Knight (”turgid”), preordained indie “surprise” awards darling Slumdog Millionaire (”completely falls apart by the light of day”) and the year’s token “but it’s good for grown ups too!” animated hit, Wall-E (”predictably schematic kid’s fare”). Three cheers for contrarianism!

    It should be noted that many of Jurgen’s disappointments are amongst my favorite films of the year. If I made a top ten of 2008 today, spots for Burn After Reading and Synecdoche, NY would be assured, and I’m a fan of Ballast and Vicky Cristina Barcelona as well. “Many of the movies that disappointed me most in 2008 were grossly over-hyped, flagrantly overpraised — and zealously defended by people with wide-ranging vocabularies,” he writes. I’m one of those zealots!

    Since the Chicago Reader’s Pat Graham extended the meme on his own blog, I thought I might as well. My own picks for the biggest disappointments of 2008 are after the jump. Chime in with yours in the comments, or write your own blog post and paste a link there.

    The hands-down winner is, as you’ve probably guessed, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Though I’ve been accused by commenters of deliberately hating it, I should point out that I was much kinder to the footage shown at Telluride than some of my peers. This was a film I wanted to love. In the end, I could not.

    So, the five movies that I’d put in the “missed opportunity” file, with excerpts from my original reviews:

    The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: “Increasingly as the film wears on, it seems as though the crux of each scene is the juxtaposition of a slightly younger Brad Pitt with a slightly older Cate Blanchett, and Fincher seems to move from one juxtaposition to next as quickly as possible as if he’s convinced that if he just hits every point on his predetermined timeline, the relationship itself will happen organically. It doesn’t.”

    W.: “17 years ago, Oliver Stone made a movie that made such bizarro claims about the fate of an American president that the government actually had to pass a law to dispute it. Now, he’s content to create a live-action version of DC Follies. If history remembers W. at all, it’ll be as a monument to the erosion of Oliver Stone’s balls.”

    Che: “One would think the life story of Che Guevara would have more inherently going on under the surface than, say, a Rat Pack remake, but if so that’s not the target of Soderbergh’s concern.”

    American Teen: “American Teen propagates the same, modern-day martyr, constant victim-as-star bullshit that L.C. plays out season after season on The Hills. And even that, it gets wrong.”

    Religulous: “It quickly becomes apparent that Maher’s journey is not about finding out what makes religious people tick, but about using the tics of mostly fringe religious people to prop up the thesis Maher came in with.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Sci-Fi Footloose Meets You Got Served. Trade Roughage 12/05/08

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    • Yes. Sci-Fi Footloose meets You Got Served! Exclamation point. Actually, Chris Stokes’ Boogie Town probably won’t be as good as it sounds, but it is set in a ludicrous near-future New York City where dancing is illegal. So, kids start an underground “battle dancing” scene. Obviously, it’s also being labeled a “modern West Side Story for the hip-hop generation,” and it’s set in 2015, so hopefully there will be hoverboards. Then it would actually be better than it sounds. Anyway, Vivendi will release the film next summer.
    • Another music-genre sci-fi/fantasy: Stephen Edmond’s Emo Boy comic book is being turned into a movie, which he’ll script. The property is described as “being in the tone of Napoleon Dynamite, Harold and Maude and Zoolander,” which is funny, because none of those movies are similar in tone at all.
    • Hot off The House Bunny (and let’s pretend also Smiley Face), Anna Faris is set to star in two new comedy projects, one of which she co-pitched with Bunny writers Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith. The untitled movie involves the Golden Age Hollywood plot of husband-seeking sisters. The other project, called 20 Times a Lady, is also about finding Mr. Right, though also concerns the non-Golden Age idea of “a person’s sexual quota.”
    • Another hot romantic comedienne, Amy Adams, will produce and star in an adaptation of The Ten Best Days of My Life, which treads in the same kind of afterlife territory as It’s a Wonderful Life and Defending Your Life.
    • The Dark Knight re-release has been slated for January 23rd, one day after the anniversary of Heath Ledger’s death, which is unfortunate for the celebrity death cult. It’s also one day after the Oscar nominations are announced, so it could be advertised as a “Best Picture Nominee.”

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog