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  • Hollywood Babylon & Bespoke Nerdery. BlogNosh 06/10/08

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    • Chris Holland of B-Side weighs in on that whole Jonathan Marlowe-sparked State of Distribution to-do. There are a lot of fine takeaways here, but here’s an especially good one: “Gear up the marketing machine and pack those [festival] screenings, because the more people who see your film now, the more people who will buy it on DVD later…This sounds obvious and simple, but some filmmakers behave as if exactly the opposite were true. They fret about piracy (you should be so lucky!)…”
    • “One of the things that has always nerdily bothered me about Star Wars is all the bespoke weaponry,” John Carney writes. “You know, all those weapons narrowly tailored to the specific environment in which the action is taking place.” Apparently, the latest Clone Wars vid doesn’t seem to make the situation any better.
    • Anne Thompson visited the charred wreckage of the Universal Studios backlot and took a few surreptitious pictures.
    • Filmmaker/Hollywood Babylon author Kenneth Anger has allegedly “put Satanic death curses” on the authors of the recently-released Hollywood Babylon: It’s Back!, who used the title without permission.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • THINKFilm & “Germ-alism”

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    Under discussion:

    Stuck  (2008)

    Yesterday, I posted about Jamie Stuart’s In Spring, a video which had the filmmaker visiting the offices of THINKFilm and turning an interview with Werner Herzog (ostensibly occasioned by the impending release of Encounters at the End of the World) into––I thought––a brilliant piece of satire on the current state of indie film distribution in general and, unavoidably, the rumored struggles of THINKFilm in particular. It was also, on a not entirely subtextual level, about the thorny relationship between journalists and their subjects. Stuart has been doing meta festival coverage for awhile, but In Spring felt like a giant leap forward in his critique of the press process. In my post, I wondered how he was getting away with it. “What does he tell publicists he’s going to do?” I wrote. “Will any of them ever let him do it again?

    By the end of the day yesterday, Stuart had removed the video from his website. He replaced it with a short video response, in which he explained that although THINK had no legal recourse against him, when they asked him to take the video down he complied based on the inference that somebody’s job was on the line.

    I was away from the computer for most of yesterday afternoon and was kept abreast of the ongoing status of In Spring via emails and IMs on my phone. It wasn’t until today that I noticed that around the same time that Stuart was being pressured to remove the video––and just about when a FILMMAKER Magazine blog post about Spring was being removed––another blog post popped up, defending THINK’s right to protect themselves from negative reporting. Or, “reporting.”

    A lengthy excerpt from Tom Roston’s piece at P.O.V. (which does not mention Stuart’s piece):

    A lot of the “reporting” on the issue has referenced unnamed sources, and there’s been a notable lack of comment from Bergstein or ThinkFilm. It appears that some of the “reporters” didn’t even seek comment from the subjects. And lest we forget, a lawsuit is just a legal claim, not a statement of fact. Not that I’m saying there’s no truth in the matter, but I’ve just been bothered by how the rumors have surfaced as news when, really, there have been very few hard news stories (there’s been one Variety piece) covering the situation.

    Roston goes on to slam the “blog-media-complex” and the “vile, insidious blog comments” it produces, so I assume that we can take “reporting” to generally mean “blog smearing,” and that Roston’s point is that if there was “real news” here, Variety would have covered the story more extensively. To nitpick: there have been at least three Variety pieces about THINK’s troubles published in the past month (May 12, May 29, June 1). Also, Roston calls out writers for failing to cite sources and seek quotes, without actually citing the guilty “reporters” (or, even, reporters) in his own piece. But I’m more interested in a quote that Roston obtains from THINKFilm’s exasperated president Mark Urman, of which this part is the eye-opener:

    I am stymied as to why so many film writers are much quicker to cover our problems than they are to cover our films. (And don’t get me started on the attendant and anonymous “comments” that bubble up from the depths and attach themselves permanently to the journalism, or is that germ-alism, like carbuncles!)

    If we take Variety’s May 12 story to be the beginning of this press frenzy, then THINK has, as far as I know, only released one film since this story broke. With 74% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, I think Stuart Gordon’s Stuck has attracted more positive attention from “germ-alists” than any B-movie about a hobo stuck in a drunk driver’s windshield could have reasonably hoped for. Calling journalists names and pressuring them to alter their coverage with the threat that you’ll fire the people who provide them access doesn’t seem to me like the obvious way to improve the tone and content of the coverage, nevermind encourage writers to focus on the films. But I do spend an awful lot of times down here in the depth with all you carbuncles, so what do I know…


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • IMDb for Web Video

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    NewTeeVee, the web video journal that I freelance for, has just launched a sub page called NewTeeVee Station, which pulls editorial reviews from the main site, as well as reviews written specifically for NewTeeVee Station, into an IMDb-like database with cast and crew information, user comments, and more.

    Yes, some of my reviews are included on the site, but I’m not posting this here on Spout purely as self-promotion. Obviously, there’s more overlap every day between the world of web video and what’s going on in indie film/film blog land, and I think a project like this does more to emphasize and strengthen those connections than diminish them. Plus, there are review on the site of work that should be familiar to Spouties, like Joe Swanberg’s Young American Bodies and Rob Parrish’s Next to Heaven and Micahel Cera’s Clark and Michael. Yes, I wrote those reviews, but I had absolutely nothing to do with these entires on Ze Frank and Star Wars Kid and Lazy Sunday, the latter of which contains Liz Shannon Miller’s immortal reminder that “2005 wasn’t that long ago. And it’s important to remember that back then, Hollywood had no idea what it was doing.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • The What’s Happening. Clip of the Day

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    Under discussion:

    The Happening  (2008)

    After showcasing the well-timed TV spot for The Incredible Hulk, which reveals the film’s Tony Stark/Iron Man cameo, I was hoping to find something for M. Night Shyamalan’s The Happening that could similarly turn my (and likely your) low expectations upside down. And I found it: a trailer that reveals the film’s cameos from Raj, Rerun, Dwayne and Shirley, all from TV’s What’s Happening!!. OK, so unfortunately it isn’t real, and it’s not even put together all that well (what’s with the strobe effect?), but it’s still probably more enjoyable than the actual movie (especially if that twist spoiler is legit).

    With the popularity of trailer mash-ups, the ease of YouTube distribution and the internet’s ability to expose the synchronous one-mind of a pop-culture-reared generation, it’s not surprising to find that the above video was not the only combination of The Happening and What’s Happening!!. There’s also this one, which only features the What’s Happening!! theme music and no footage from the show (also it boldly makes light of the more graphic footage from the film’s red-band trailer), and there’s this one, which does the opposite by including the audio from the Happening trailer over footage from the TV show. I’ll let you decide which of the three is the best/worst.

    Hopefully YouTubers will do better when mashing up What’s Happening!! with Barry Levinson’s What Just Happened? (obvious title: What’s Just Happening!!).


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Madonna Divorcing, Making Sequel to Truth or Dare?

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    Under discussion:

    Truth or Dare  (1991)

    Oh, the drama! Whilst a gossip blog of questionable repute allegedly has airtight evidence that maverick filmmaker Madonna has hired Paul MacCartney’s divorce attorney to sever her ties to Guy Ritchie, at the same time rumors are spreading that the soon-to-be 50 pop star is reteaming with director Alex Keshishian to make a follow-up to his 1991 tour doc Truth or Dare (known overseas as In Bed With Madonna).

    I don’t know whether or not the two stories are related, and it’s probably best if we assume that both just aren’t true, but for the sake of argument: please, please, let Madonna make a (probably doomed, but noble!) attempt to recapture her floridly, gloriously shallow Truth or Dare era glory days by once again leaving a movie-making husband and forcing a no-name filmmaker to shape her everyday life into mall-grade Fellini!

    Truth or Dare was the ultimate vanity project, and it worked perfectly, because it gave everybody the Madonna they wanted: an ego with no intention of landing. I mean, just look at the clip from the original film, embedded above––wouldn’t it be amazing to see Madonna drop the English accent and the pretenses at socio-political relevance, and just go back to rolling around in bed with a bunch of gay boys like the Pilates-streamlined heir to Mae West that we all know she really is?

    And the clip below––the original film’s sad-time montage, set to “Promise to Try,” where Madonna takes a huge stretch limo and dons a cross almost the size of the car to visit her mother’s grave, so that her (maybe even real!) sadness can be woven in with shots of her sing-praying on stage and receiving the love that she can no longer get from her mother 20,000 fold from a stadium crowd. This is, by far, the “deepest” that film goes towards making any sort of commentary on Who Madonna Really Is, and it’s patently fake in the best way possible, the way all pop star movies should be. Please, Madonna, please Madonna, please: bring back the superficial! It’s your only hope!


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Spielberg and Smurfs. Trade Roughage 06/10/08

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    • Dreamworks is coming back, baby! All Steven Spielberg needs is a new distribution partner…and one billion dollars in outside financing…and an early exit from his Paramount contract…and an assurance that Jeffrey Katzenberg will take his side if there’s a battle over the Dreamworks name…
    • Sony Animation is producing an Alvin and the Chipmunks-inspired live action/CGI Smurfs feature. Insert tasteless joke about random partying starlet turning blue as research for a role …. here.
    • Madonna has canceled a screening of her Malawi doc I Am Because We Are at the Glastonbury music festival, because she’s afraid that not enough people are going to show up.
    • Hugh Grant and Ziyi Zhang are in talks to star in Lost For Words, a romantic comedy directed by Suzanne Bier. The plot will cleverly circumvent the problem of Ziyi being unable to speak English.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog