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  • Event Wraps: BlogNosh 04/15/08

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    • medicine for melancholyWhile I gather my final thoughts on the Moving Image Institute, check out the most recent dispatches from my fellow attendees, Doug Cummings and Kevin Lee.
    • I had to leave the Sarasota Film Festival long before the awards were announced, but I was happy to learn that both Josh Safdie’s The Pleasure of Being Robbed and Barry Jenkins’ Medicine For Melancholy went home with prizes. Alison has further details at Indie Eye.
    • In his round-up of the various stories on Matt Dentler leaving SXSW for Cinetic, David Hudson pays tribute to Dentler’s years at the festival. “As I’ve said here in the past, any history of American independent cinema in the 00s is going to have to include a passage on the impact of Matt’s smarts, instincts and sheer guts as a programmer.” David also links to Scott Kirsner, who has some reservations about the digital division of Cinetic that will becomes Dentler’s new home, at least in terms of its potential attractiveness to filmmakers.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Marilyn Monroe Validates Paris Hilton

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    With news that a memorabilia collector has purchased a Marilyn Monroe “sex tape”, we now see the old starlet meets new starlet trend coming full circle. As if Lindsay Lohan’s aping Marilyn in her recent New York spread and Mamie Van Doren’s recent nipslip weren’t enough to show us both that today’s darlings are nothing compared to yesterday’s and that the media’s crucifixion of Lohan, Britney, Paris and the rest ignores the fact that actresses have been comfortably wild since before most paparazzi photogs were born, now we have an historical artifact that seems to validate Paris Hilton’s breakthrough via her sex tape “1 Night in Paris.”

    Unfortunately for Paris, in her being validated, we also learn that in the 1940s, fellatio was perhaps a surer step to real movie stardom than it is in the 21st century. Of course, I also think that if Marilyn were alive and just starting out today, she would have enough talent to circumvent the “casting couch” and still become a bigger star than Paris. In the context of today, though, she probably wouldn’t become nearly as iconic nor would she have appropriated the same dumb blonde image. So, it’s difficult to tell where she’d fit in.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Will Iron Man Suffer a Backlash?

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    Under discussion:

    Iron Man  (2008)

    Speed Racer  (2008)

    Cloverfield  (2008)

    We have less than three weeks until Iron Man opens in theaters, but the way people are talking about the film today, that might be too long. Regardless of how subversive the comic book adaptation may be (check out Paul’s thoughts from yesterday), or otherwise how intelligent a blockbuster it is (according to an exhibitor, quoted here by Anne Thompson), or how “pretty darn amazing!!!!!” it is to a more mainstream, don’t-care-if-it’s-intelligent-as-long-as-it’s-awesome crowd (such as includes those who send reactions to AICN), the fact of the matter is that we may have already accepted the movie as all these things well before even seeing the whole thing. The big, hairy guy from Ireland, Karl Hungus, sums up his feelings of saturation, sparked by this latest hero-becomes-familiar-with-his-powers clip, on his blog (via IMDb):

    The problem is, with all this cool stuff being flung at us, is there going to be any cool left to blow us away when the film finally hits? I know, this isn’t the first time I’ve said this, but there’s just so many new promo shots and trailers/TV spots being published, the main villain being revealed, the clips with the tank, battles being shown and now a lot of the development of the armour as well, my worry is growing that the final product will be ruined.

    Sure, as Hungus says himself, this is a familiar quip about modern trailers and other marketing onslaughts of late, but it is nonetheless interesting in the context of a tentpole like Iron Man. Plus, it goes along with the comedic yet poignant message of The Onion lampoon featured above. But it’s only funny until we’re all sitting in the theater bored once again with numerous scenes we’re already too familiar with.

    How many lesser movies’ failures have been blamed on their overbearing campaigns? I don’t doubt that Iron Man could make the $200 million it’s expected to gross. And I’m sure that as a non-sequel, based-on-a-less-familiar-superhero movie that it probably wouldn’t be as highly anticipated without the success of the trailer. So, what’s the problem? Even with a backlash, Iron Man seems set to please at least Paramount, a studio that, after Cloverfield (which still never even broke $100 million, yet is considered a success), should have every right to seemingly go overboard with its marketing campaigns.

    With the obligatory springtime cry of “box office slump!” appearing on the wire this morning, all of Hollywood should be pleased with the promise of an approaching hit, especially the kind that hits huge on the first weekend and who-cares-what-happens afterward. And even if audiences are underwhelmed because the actual movie offers nothing really new, they too won’t care a week later when Speed Racer opens, or, more importantly to Paramount, a few weeks later when the studio’s bigger blockbuster, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull comes out.

    Certainly, due to human nature, and more so due to marketing nature, any kind of high anticipation and expectation is going to be typically met with disappointment, so I shouldn’t be surprised if Iron Man isn’t what I’m hoping for. But just to put things in perspective, I want to call more attention to the words of AICN contributor “Hung Lo”:

    Go see it, it is good, just a little disappointing is all. It is still better than Spiderman 3, Superman Returns and X3 combines. Next time I just hope they hire a more competent director. Not that Favs was bad, he showed that he respects the character a lot, (Hell he is even in a few scenes early on a Starks driver) but it could have been so much more in more capable hands.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Moving Image Institute: The Guessing Game

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    DumboToday marks the final day of the Moving Image Institute (see my previous coverage here and here), and though I’ve been taking copious notes, I’ve been too busy actually participating to do much writing. I hope to get caught up posting takeaways by the end of this week. In the meantime, I’m going to throw out three random quotes from my notes from the past four days. Take a look at the list of speakers here, and see if you can guess who said what.

    1) “There are certain people who only exist to show up on websites in order to tell you what an idiot you are.”

    2) “I don’t see it as a queer movie, other than that a sodomite made it.”

    3) “I’m a great Dumbo enthusiast. I think it’s the greatest animated film I’ve ever seen. I like elephants.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • SXSW Shake-up: Trade Roughage 04/15/08

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    • Matt Dentler, whose name has become synonymous with the SXSW Film Festival’s ascendancy over the past several years as both a studio launching pad and a platform for no-budget American indies, is leaving the festival to take a position on a new digital rights wing at sales agency Cinetic. He’ll be replaced at SXSW by Janet Pierson who, with husband John, repped for sale some of the biggest indie success stories of the 90s, including Roger & Me and Slacker. For the full details behind these moves, check out this story at indieWIRE.
    • Time Warner has fired roughly 450 of New Line’s 500 employees, as part of their move to fold the long-independent speciality division fully into the corporate beast.  The news has been expected for awhile––so much so that, after the requisite mourning, David Poland’s already looking at mini-studio’s demise as an opportunity to lessen urban blight.
    • The Academy has announced some key dates for the 2009 Oscar calendar. Most of note: nominations will be announced two days later than is traditional, in order to give the presidential inauguration on January 20 some breathing room.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

 


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