ELEGY TO CONNIE – The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase Review

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ELEGY TO CONNIE screens Sunday, July 13th at 2:30pm at The Tivoli Theater (6350 Delmar Blvd.) as part of The St. Louis Filmmaker’s Showcase

Charles Lee “Cookie” Thornton lived in the predominately black Meachum Park section of Kirkwood. On February 7, 2008 he wrote a note that promised, “The truth will win out in the end”, then drove to Kirkwood City Hall with a gun. Outside, he shot and killed Kirkwood Police Sgt. Bill Biggs and took his gun. Inside the council chamber, he killed Officer Tom Ballman, four city officials, and critically wounded the mayor, who would die of his injuries a few months later. One of those murdered was Councilwoman and mayoral candidate Connie Karr and the new documentary ELEGY TO CONNIE is a tribute to her. The touching and unusual film employs nothing but stop-motion animation to address the events leading up to and following the Kirkwood City Council shooting. The story is told in narration by a group of Kirkwood women – Nancy Luetzow, Gina Jaksetic, Harriet Patton, Joyce Gregory, Anne Bedwinek and Lucy Ryan, who are bound together by their friendship with Connie Karr. Made in collaboration with these women, ELEGY TO CONNIE addresses the complicated issues surrounding the shooting and celebrates Connie’s legacy as a leader.

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As a resident of Kirkwood since 1964 (except for a 7 year stint in Dogtown), I had a keen interest in seeing this film about the Kirkwood City Hall massacre. It’s a bleak topic and ELEGY TO CONNIE is one odd film. It’s made by an animator, Sarah Paulsen, who uses many forms of animation to turn this story into a kind of massive arts and crafts project. Paulsen animates drawings, pieces of fabric, Claymation, charcoal, water color, architectural drawings, magazine cut-outs, even a Spirograph. She could have just interviewed these people and made a conventional doc, but that’s clearly not her style. The result is a dizzying kaleidoscope of images that never stop moving. They illustrate accompanying audio testimony from Connie Karr’s friends that is relatively mundane, yet it’s that contrast that helps make the whole film work in a weird and completely unique way. It’s impressive how much physical work must have to have gone into the project. Paulsen is playful with her animation yet literal down to the details; when Connie Karr is described as a ‘workhouse’, there’s animation of a horse. When it’s said she sticks up for the ‘underdog’, the Underdog cartoon character makes a brief appearance. It’s all so flashy and colorful that you sometimes forget you’re watching a lead-up to a mass killing. Will Taylor’s score is lively though sometimes mixed in too loudly (at least when I watched it).

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Connie Karr’s friends all paint her as a tireless do-gooder whose ideas on changing Kirkwood government were rejected by the close-minded boys club of her fellow council members. It’s all biased and one-sided (maybe her ideas were not good ones), but the film is called ELEGY TO CONNIE and doesn’t pretend to be anything but a glowing tribute to the accomplishments of this woman. One point that’s alluded to often is that, of all the people in the Kirkwood City Hall building that fateful night, Connie Karr was the one that was most allied with Cookie Thornton, at least in her concern for the residents of Meachum Park.I don’t know what demons were haunting Thornton, but his war with the City of Kirkwood was in his head, and I was glad ELEGY TO CONNIE recognized his mental illness without applying too much victimhood to him (which is what I feared when I read that Ms Paulsen makes films tackling ‘social justice’). Thornton’s problems with Kirkwood leaders stemmed from perceived racism, unfulfilled city contracts for his demolition business, and $20,000 worth of parking tickets (which the city agreed to waive if he would stop beclowning himself at town meetings). Credit Ms Paulsen for not trying to find reason in something as illogical and horrific as what Thornton did, which was to murder seven good people in cold blood. ELEGY TO CONNIE is not only a tribute to one of Thornton’s victims by her friends but a fascinating, singular experience.

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Here’s a fun 3-minute youtube clip that shows how artist Sarah Paulsen creates her unique forms of animation:

ELEGY TO CONNIE screens Sunday, July 13th at 2:30pm at The Tivoli Theater (6350 Delmar Blvd.) as part of The St. Louis Filmmaker’s Showcase. It will be shown with:

Radioactive Backyard, a 15 minute short by Keith Hoffman & Hazel Mullan. Radioactive Backyard is a documentary on the radioactive waste in the Westlake Landfill in Bridgeton, Mo., and how it affects local residents and workers.
The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, an annual presentation of the nonprofit Cinema St. Louis, serves as the area’s primary venue for films made by local artists. The Showcase screens works that were written, directed, edited, or produced by St. Louis natives or films with strong local ties. The various film programs that will screen at the Showcase range from full-length fiction features and documentaries to multi-film compilations of fiction and documentary shorts. Many programs include post-screening Q&As with filmmakers. Filmmakers of all ages within a 120 mile radius of St. Louis are strongly encouraged to submit their works, or at the very least attend the event to celebrate with us and the amazingly talented St. Louis filmmakers.

Tickets for all film programs from July 13-17 at the Tivoli are $12 each; $10 for students with valid and current photo ID and for Cinema St. Louis members with valid membership cards. Advance tickets are on sale at the Tivoli Theatre box office (5-10 p.m. Monday-Friday and 2-10 p.m. Saturday-Sunday). No phone sales, but tickets can be purchased online. Tickets are on a first-come, first-served basis. Advance tickets may be purchased at https://tickets.landmarktheatres.com. There is a $1 per-ticket service charge.

For a 2014 St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase program, go HERE

http://www.cinemastlouis.org/sites/default/files/downloads/2014/2014ShowcaseProgram.pdf

For more information about The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, call Chris Clark at 314-289-4152 or e-mail chris@cinemastlouis.org.

THE DAMNED, Starring Peter Facinelli And Sophia Myles, Coming To VOD July 25

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Adding another spooky entry into the supernatural thriller genre comes THE DAMNED.

The film follows American David Reynolds (Peter Facinelli), widowed from his Colombian-born wife, who flies to Bogota with his new fiancée (Sophia Myles) to retrieve his rebellious teenage daughter Jill (Nathalia Ramos).

En route to the city of Medellin, a car accident leaves them stranded in a rundown isolated inn. When they discover the old innkeeper has locked a young girl in the basement, they are determined to set her free. But have they made a terrible mistake?

aka GALLOWS HILL, the film is written by Richard D’Ovidio (THIRTEEN GHOSTS) and directed by Victor Garcia (RETURN TO HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL). Here’s a look at the trailer.

Stars Peter Facinelli (The Twilight Saga, Nurse Jackie), Sophia Myles (Transformers: Age of Extinction, Underworld), Nathalia Ramos, Carolina Guerra (Da Vinci’s Demons), and Sebastian Martínez.

IFC Films will release THE DAMNED On Demand July 25 and in theaters August 29.

Rated R.

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THIRD PERSON – The Review

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I’m not going to beat around the bush here. THIRD PERSON is the worst film I’ve seen so far this year. Sure, it’s easy to dump on a lame comedy like TAMMY but Oscar-winning writer/director Paul Haggis’ new drama aims so high so has that much farther to fall. Best Picture Oscar notwithstanding, I’ve never met another film lover who has much good to say about Haggis‘ CRASH. It’s hard to think of a more ham-handed piece of popular filmmaking in memory that scored such big prizes (at least until 12 YEARS A SLAVE). In THIRD PERSON Haggis copies the CRASH template by setting up three seemingly random episodes with three seemingly random sets of characters, some of whom eventually become intertwined with one another during a two-day period. The resulting film is overlong, self-indulgent and thoroughly uninteresting.

Liam Neeson plays Michael, an unhappy Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist staying in a luxurious Paris hotel, failing in his attempt to bang out a book worthy of his earlier successes. Also at the hotel, in a separate room, is Anna (Olivia Wilde), the mistress and protégé Michael had left his wife Elaine (Kim Basinger) for a couple of years earlier. Michael and Anna play often-cruel, passive-aggressive games when they’re not criticizing each other’s writing. Her dark secret involving a mysterious older man may spark the motivation he’s looking for.

Meanwhile in Italy, we first meet shady American businessman, Scott (Adrien Brody) frustrated that the barkeep at a tavern called ‘The Americano’ doesn’t speak English (by his reasoning, all waiters at U.S. Italian restaurants should speak Italian). There he meets seductive gypsy Monika (Moran Atias) who quickly confides that she’s about to pay $5,000 to a smuggler to be reunited with a daughter she hasn’t seen in two years. When the money’s conveniently lost, Scott decides to help, especially since he has his own daughter that age (or does he?). Though leery of being conned, Scott joins Monika’s dangerous and costly quest that leads to the darker neighborhoods of Rome.

Finally in New York City, Mila Kunis plays Julia, a stressed-out former soap star who is attempting to regain custody of her son Jesse (Oliver Crouch) after the boy almost died in her care. He is now with his father Rick (James Franco), a pretentious abstract artist and his girlfriend played by French supermodel Loan Chabanol (there are no homely people in this movie). Julia is desperately trying to prove her stability by taking a job as a hotel maid but keeps aggravating her lawyer Theresa (Mario Bello) by missing family court dates.

Almost from the start, THIRD PERSON becomes preoccupied with its own importance. At least some of the characters in CRASH were working class folk we could relate to, but THIRD PERSON is the soap opera world of authors, painters, and actors and Haggis seems to think just putting Paris and Rome in a movie will give it the air of inevitable romance. Dario Marianelli’s tinkly overburdened score swells up to make it appear as if we’re being profoundly touched but THIRD PERSON comes off as trying way too hard, and thus it never gets under your skin or into your heart. As Haggis shuffles through these characters’ boring lives, he leaves more questions than answers. Why would Scott, who seems to hate Italy, risk so much to help Monika, who’s a clichéd Italian spitfire? Why does everyone in the bar think Monika’s abandoned purse contains a bomb? Why does Michael keep calling his ex-wife for feedback on his writing and how did he ever win a Pulitzer when what we see of his work is so awful (“White. The color of trust.”)? And most oddly, why is Julia, whose tale is unfolding in New York, suddenly cleaning Michael’s Parisian suite? This last point initially seems like the ultimate continuity screw-up but Haggis, in a lame attempt to be mystical, throws in an interpretive ‘out’ at the end with a symbolic wrap-up that doesn’t make it any less a cheat. At 137 minutes, THIRD PERSON is too long. Not just long, but long about getting to its points, to its connections, because it has to set up all these many characters and their situations first before showing how they connect. By halfway, one can see it’s a strange, rambling wreck of a movie. This wouldn’t be so bad if THIRD PERSON was clever or entertaining or at least so-bad-it’s-good. But it’s not. It’s deadly dull.

The acting in THIRD PERSON is mostly top-notch, but when you cast your film with Oscar winners and A-listers, that’ll happen. While it’s nice to see Liam Neeson in a role that doesn’t require neck-breaking ‘special skills’, he’s completely charmless, spending much of his time growling at his laptop and slamming it shut in frustration. Brody gives the grouchy Scott a nicely troubled edge and Kim Basinger shines in a role that seems like it was trimmed down to a couple of scenes. Not faring well is Mila Kunis, who lacks the acting chops needed to generate much sympathy. She comes off as a crybaby mess who makes poor decisions and she gets some of the film’s worst dialog (“Why do you get to play God?!?” she tearfully asks a bored Franco). Olivia Wilde is so beautiful that you almost don’t expect a great performance but she transcends the lousy script and effortlessly pulls off the film’s only complex and interesting character (though the icky twist Haggis gives her near the end does not work and I wish he hadn’t gone there). In the film’s best scene, and the only moment when THIRD PERSON comes alive, Wilde’s Anna is trapped in the hotel’s hallway completely nude, frantically racing up floors to get back to her room. Only because of the playful way Wilde plays this scene, and because she looks so great performing it naked, THIRD PERSON earns a single star.

1 of 5 Stars

THIRD PERSON opens in St. Louis Friday, July 11th exclusively at The Tivoli Theater

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DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES New Featurettes And Listen To Michael Giacchino’s Soundtrack

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THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, THE GODFATHER 2, ALIENS, THE DARK KNIGHT. Filmgoers can add a new title to the list of great sequels with director Matt Reeves’ DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES.

Starring Andy Serkis as “Caesar,” the movie opens later tonight at theaters nationwide and the highly-anticipated sequel already represents more than 70% of Fandango’s weekend ticket sales.

According to a Fandango survey of more than 1,000 “Apes” ticket-buyers, 81% of them are Serkis fans and 74% contend that the APES and HOBBIT star should be considered for an Oscar for his motion capture performances.

Here’s a look at the latest featurettes with Reeves and stars Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke and Keri Russell on the escalating showdown between genetically evolved apes and humans.

RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES concluded with the apes breaking free from their human captors – just as a deadly human-created virus spread globally. Caesar, the benevolent ape leader, leads the apes to Muir Woods, a haven outside of San Francisco, where Caesar, then a young chimpanzee, was taken by his human friend Will to escape the confines of the city.

DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES director Matt Reeves wanted the continuity of his movie to fit into that timeline. “The story we are telling will lead to Planet of the Apes, and not Planet of the Humans and Apes, so it’s about how this film fits into that narrative.”

In the new story, the apes have continued to build a community in Muir Woods. Beyond the apes’ enclave, a pandemic, the Simian Flu, has wiped out much of the world’s human population. Gradually the lights of civilization began to dim and become non-existent. For all intents and purposes, humanity has perished.

A viral apocalypse hit the humans and 10 years later, their numbers are severely depleted. Apes, on the other hand, have done quite well. Caesar has led them to freedom and he’s built a new home. The apes have risen, and the humans have declined. And now they’re about to collide.

A formidable antagonist for the humans is Koba, played by Toby Kebbell. In this featurette, the actor discusses a new clip from the film.

The milky-eyed and scar-faced bonobo, introduced in RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES, Koba spent much of his younger life confined in laboratories, where he was subjected to experimentation in the name of science.

In the decade following the apes’ liberation, Koba has evolved into a grizzled warrior who harbors a strong hatred of the human race, believing that the only good human is a dead human.

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Prior to DAWN’s release, Sony Masterworks has released the film’s soundtrack by Michael Giacchino.

The Oscar-winning composer’s very subtle and beautiful score boosts Michael Seresin’s photography and Joe Letteri’s visual effects. This is the second time that Reeves and Giacchino have collaborated following the romantic horror film Let Me In (2010). The soundtrack is available digitally now and on CD on July 29.

Michael Giacchino and Matt Reeves on Percussion from Maria Giacchino on Vimeo.

Michael Giacchino’s stated preference is for clear melodies and themes which he likes to combine with touches of atonality, while respecting previous compositions and reacting to the content of the movie. “I knew immediately that I wanted to acknowledge the experimental musical style which my hero Jerry Goldsmith chose for the original film by finding my own interesting sounds. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes is an extremely moving story about tolerance and how we deal with each other as a society … I knew we would have to treat that subtext with great respect and dignity. I hope that I have done so while also honoring Jerry’s original sound.”

Track 3 “The Great Ape Processional” and Track #17 “Primates For Life” are especially robust and emotionally moving, while Track #6 “Monkey To The City contains flourishes of Jerry Goldsmith’s score from the original 1968 PLANET OF THE APES.

Log onto Spotify to listen.

DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES explores how the apes evolved from the mostly mute but intelligent animals of RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES, into articulate, civilized beings that emerge as Earth’s dominant species within the canon of the PLANET OF THE APES franchise.

Reeves explains: “In RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES the apes said only a few words. With this film we show the apes at the dawn of their society, and learning to truly speak. Inevitably, the younger generation will be better with language than their parents, which leads to a very complicated portrait of the apes’ cultural order. This is the ape society that eventually evolves into what we see in the 1968 PLANET OF THE APES with an organized government, military and science.”

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The film’s screenplay is by Mark Bomback and Rick Jaffa & Amanda Silverand based on characters created by Rick Jaffa & Amanda Silver.

The film stars Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke, Gary Oldman, Keri Russell, Toby Kebbell, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Enrique Murciano, Kirk Acevedo, Karin Konoval, and Judy Greer.

DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES HITS THEATERS ON JULY 11TH.

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LIFE ITSELF – The Review

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The 2014 march of outstanding documentaries about artists continues on with the best of the impressive group of feature films. But this artist’s means of expression are not the brush as in TIM”S VERMEER or still photography as seen in FINDING VIVIAN MAIER or cinema itself (along with many superb illustrators) in JODOWORSKY’S DUNE. Nope, this artist’s (and after viewing this film, that title is not up for debate) means of expression were words with typewriters, computer keyboards, and his own voice utilized instead of brushes on canvas or cameras. The subject of Steve James’s (HOOP DREAMS, THE INTERRUPTERS) new feature documentary is celebrated, Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Roger Ebert. He had been a fixture on TV screens for decades, discussing and debating current movies usually with Gene Siskel, so you may think that you know everything about good ole’ “Uncle Rog”. But though he left the “aisle seat” over a year ago, this new work shows us that as enthralling as the films he wrote about since the late 1960’s, many of them couldn’t match the heartbreak, triumphs and wonders of LIFE ITSELF.

The first shot of the film is a glorious view of that palace of entertainment delights, the Chicago Theatre on State Street, its long expansive marquee lit in tribute to the Windy City staple. Director Steve James takes us back several months as he begins the documentary (based on the autobiography) with Ebert back in the hospital after another health crisis. Because of their friendship Ebert and his wife Chaz have given James intimate access to their lives. Health problems had plagued him for over a decade when complications from papillary thyroid cancer necessitated the removal of his lower jaw, robbing him of the ability to eat, drink, and speak. I recalled his long leave of absence from his TV show and his return with a full hour on Oprah Winfrey’s popular syndicated daytime show. Her crews were not permitted to film Ebert having lunch, but no restraints are on James here. The scene of him taking nourishment may upset viewers, but the film’s subject takes it in stride, smiling, joking, and giving that famous “thumbs up”. As Bette Davis suposedly remarked, “Growing old is not for sissies”, and as is vividly shown, neither is illness. Always grinning, this bit of trouble won’t keep him down (just watch his eyes sparkle as he plots an unapproved trip to the cinema).

But this is not just a film filled with doctors and hospitals. James double back to the beginning with photos of the young lad from Urbana and quotes from Ebert’s book read in a warm, folksy manner by actor Stephen Stanton (often mimicking Ebert’s old vocal mannerisms). We’re then introduced to the first of Ebert’s three great loves, the newspaper. You’d think dark, blue newsprint ink was running through his veins. His big childhood heroes were not the sportsmen or cowboys but the wise-cracking reporters of THE FRONT PAGE (he called the sound of the printing presses “romantic”). A stint as one of the youngest editors of the University of Illinois daily newspaper the Illini lead to a job in the big leagues with the Chicago Sun Times. James gives us terrific interviews with former colleagues who wax nostalgic about grabbing “scoops” and bringing in stories under the wire. And then there’s the stories that occurred after the paper was “put to bed”, of endless hours at seedy, colorful watering holes. The downfall of many newshounds almost took Ebert as we learn in his own words, and from pals, of his struggle with the bottle and his long journey to sobriety (he had only gone public about this a few years ago). During his travails he never lost his affection for the fifth estate and wrote for his beloved Sun Times to the very end (actually several pieces were posted after his passing).

It was at his Sun Times job that the road to his second great love began. As the film relates, Ebert’s film reviewing career started as a lucky fluke. The position opened up and he got the assignment. The newsman took to the cinema gig immediately and became the first reviewer to win the Pulitzer in 1975. Before the big prize, he even scored a screen credit as the writer of Russ Meyer’s campy cult flick BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS in 1970 ( the two continued to team up over the years). Local TV soon came calling (we see a dull, dry Ebert with a “deer-in-headlights” look introducing Ingmar Bergman flicks on the Chicago PBS station). One of those PBS execs had the bright idea of mounting a film review show that would pair him with his rival from the big Chicago Tribune paper, Gene Siskel. James treats us to the stilted uncomfortable footage from that initial pilot. The two maintained a professional, not personal, relationship as they competed for movie news and interviews. We see the outtakes from a session recording show promos with the two insulting and nitpicking at each other like schoolyard enemies. We learn that Ebert wanted to be in control, but Siskel was the wild card, the free radical in the TV mix (one of their old show producers called Gene “Roger’s ‘wasically wabbit'”). But something about the duo clicked with the public (I’ve always thought they had a comedy team visual dynamic similar to Laurel & Hardy or Abbott & Costello) in a way that copycat critic pairings never did. The late night shows came calling and we’re treated to highlights from their many stints on the coach with Johnny Carson (including the infamous Chevy Chase show). And thanks to interviews with former staff members of the TV show and the revealing Marlene Siskel (Gene’s widow) we see how the annoyance slowly became akin to brotherly love (Ebert had no siblings). It’s a complex fascinating relationship that James adroitly explores.

And then there was Chaz, the last great love of Ebert’s life and the film’s vibrant energy. When I lived in Chicago many decades ago, stories careened around town concerning this unlikely Casanova (yup, Uncle Rog was a “playa'”). Thus the wedding of the two in 1992 came as a surprise (a most pleasant one for Siskel, it seems). Chaz brought children (and grandchildren) into the marriage, much to Roger’s delight. Home video vacation footage shows a beaming Ebert leading Chaz and the kids on all manner of adventures in far-off cultures. Several of the now adult kids share stories of how Ebert introduced them to new worlds of art and literature. And thankfully he had her by his side when illness struck. In the camera interviews, Chaz is a fiercely protective partner in her startlingly candid recounts of his struggles and setbacks. But as tender as she could be with him, we get a taste of the tough task-master, who will not tolerate Ebert giving in to frailty (“No! Roger no! Get up from that chair! Now!”). Also their mixed-race coupling is recounted with great humor. Anyone would be very fortunate to have a strong, brave woman like Chaz in their lives. Without her the world may have been denied the last dozen years of Ebert’s remarkable work. To paraphrase the old big band standard, “Love found him just in time”.

To give a sense of the subject’s seventy years, James doesn’t cover a few things in the film like Ebert’s eloquent defense of Justin Lin’s BETTER LUCK TOMORROW, his concern over the influence of 3D and video games, or even his attempt with Chaz to return to public TV in 2011 with the ill-fated “Ebert Presents: At The Movies”. But included are controversies he generated with other critics who charged that the TV shows oversimplified, even “dumbed-down” film criticism. And that Ebert was compromised by having friendships with actors and film makers. Several of said artists are interviewed here including James himself, Errol Morris (he insists the TV show saved his film GATES OF HEAVEN, Werner Herzog, and a very compelling Martin Scorsese (one of the film’s producers), who relates how Ebert and Siskel threw him an emotional lifeline in the mid 1980’s. Even if you rarely agreed with him on films, this bio-doc will have you wishing you could read Ebert’s thoughts on new works like BOYHOOD or THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL. Steve James has made a remarkable film about a remarkable man. It’s a heart-wrenching love story, a witty tale of news hounds, a glitzy jaunt through “Tinsel Town”, mixed together with great warmth, skill, and affection. LIFE ITSELF is a glorious life-affirming, life-celebrating achievement. Recalling his old show sign off, I hope the balcony is not closed to the ultimate movie lover, so he can sit back, enjoy the show once more and joyfully raise that famous thumb.

5 Out of 5

LIFE ITSELF opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

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OneRepublic’s “Ordinary Human” Music Video From THE GIVER

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See new footage from the highly anticipated film, THE GIVER, in OneRepublic’s “Ordinary Human” music video.

The haunting story of THE GIVER centers on Jonas (Brenton Thwaites), a young man who lives in a seemingly ideal, if colorless, world of conformity and contentment. Yet as he begins to spend time with The Giver (Jeff Bridges), who is the sole keeper of all the community’s memories, Jonas quickly begins to discover the dark and deadly truths of his community’s secret past.

With this newfound power of knowledge, he realizes that the stakes are higher than imagined – a matter of life and death for himself and those he loves most. At extreme odds, Jonas knows that he must escape their world to protect them all – a challenge that no one has ever succeeded at before.

THE GIVER is based on Lois Lowry’s beloved young adult novel of the same name, which was the winner the 1994 Newbery Medal and has sold over 10 million copies worldwide.

Starring Meryl Streep, Jeff Bridges, Brenton Thwaites, Alexander Skarsgard, Katie Holmes, Odeya Rush, Cameron Monaghan and Taylor Swift, THE GIVER opens in theaters on August 15.

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Heroin Documentary A SHORT LIFE Screens Monday at The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase

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A SHORT LIFE screens Monday, July 14th at 5:00pm at The Tivoli Theater (6350 Delmar Blvd.) as part of The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase

The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, an annual presentation of the nonprofit Cinema St. Louis, serves as the area’s primary venue for films made by local artists. The Showcase screens works that were written, directed, edited, or produced by St. Louis natives or films with strong local ties. The various film programs that will screen at the Showcase range from full-length fiction features and documentaries to multi-film compilations of fiction and documentary shorts. Many programs include post-screening Q&As with filmmakers. Filmmakers of all ages within a 120 mile radius of St. Louis are strongly encouraged to submit their works, or at the very least attend the event to celebrate with us and the amazingly talented St. Louis filmmakers.

A SHORT LIFE is a documentary by Derek Phillips about four young people and their battle with heroin as told through the experience of their parents. The film focuses on four sets of parents telling their stories. Each lost a beloved adolescent to a heroin overdose. Heroin is resurgent and not just among inner-city youth and gang members. These four ordinary families were torn apart by their loss; the parents have to live with their guilt and their grief for the rest of their lives.

A SHORT LIFE will be shown with ROSE COMPASS, a 30 minute film by Matt Underwood.

ROSE COMPASS is the inspiring story of a woman’s 1,000-mile running pilgrimage from St. Louis to New York City to spread awareness, raise funds, and share stories of cystic fibrosis in honor of her sister.

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Tickets for all film programs from July 13-17 at the Tivoli are $12 each; $10 for students with valid and current photo ID and for Cinema St. Louis members with valid membership cards. Advance tickets are on sale at the Tivoli Theatre box office (5-10 p.m. Monday-Friday and 2-10 p.m. Saturday-Sunday). No phone sales, but tickets can be purchased online. Tickets are on a first-come, first-served basis. Advance tickets may be purchased at https://tickets.landmarktheatres.com. There is a $1 per-ticket service charge.

For a 2014 St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase program, go HERE

http://www.cinemastlouis.org/sites/default/files/downloads/2014/2014ShowcaseProgram.pdf

For more information about The St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, call Chris Clark at 314-289-4152 or e-mail chris@cinemastlouis.org.

ALMOST HUMAN – The Blu Review

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Writer and director Joe Begos’ ALMOST HUMAN (2013) may draw influence from the oft-remade “Body Snatcher” genre of science-fiction, but where he strives to stand apart is by bringing the classic standard to the modern grindhouse horror audience. This is a gory, violent rendition of the concept of alien creatures taking over human bodies and controlling them from within like robots. While this approach has its niche market, I always contend that viewers should try and look past the gore and violence but still embrace it as they experience the film as a whole, then make judgments based on more than simply the visceral sights and sounds that may prove distasteful on their own.

ALMOST HUMAN, not to be mistaken for the short-lives futuristic sci-fi television series that aired the same year, presents itself with a surprisingly low key, unassuming disposition of simplicity. The film avoids the more darkly comedic, or slyly self-deprecating trends that have fared well for films like HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN, instead investing in a more dialogue-conscious, character-driver story that allows the audience to connect more closely to the human element of the horrific events that unfold on screen.

That’s awfully deep talk, so let me move beyond that now and discuss the more visceral traits. ALMOST HUMAN, perhaps shockingly, is not as gratuitously violent and gory as may have been suggested. Granted, I am coming from years of exposure to the type, but the true horror here comes from the cast and script. While the special effects are noteworthy, not over-the-top but realistic, their used sparingly, relative to the genre. Its the anticipation and drama that keeps the viewer on edge in this film.

ALMOST HUMAN stars Josh Ethier as Mark Fisher, a man returned home after having disappeared two years prior in a mysterious flash of blue light. Graham Skipper plays his friend Seth Hampton, one of a small clutch of witnesses who have tried to move on with their lives while fully aware of the unforgettable events that occurred. With Mark’s return, however, something has changed. He has changed and he has a mission.

The story takes place in Derry, Maine, the same fictional town that often serves as the setting for Stephen King’s tales of horror. Told with an indie-spirited perspective, ALMOST HUMAN could be called a minimalist backwoods alien abduction story, graphically interpreted for mature audiences, but its also an exhilarating, edge-of-your-seat film on a small scale. Ethier nails his performance as the cold, empty emotionless husk of a human body driven by its other-worldly host. Consider Schwarzenegger as the Terminator without the accent and a decent skill for acting, then dress him up like Paul Bunyan and you’ve got Mark Fisher.

ALMOST HUMAN is not your 50s sci-fi. It’s gritty, steeped in realism and yes, its violent. Why do I keep coming back to that? Because its important, but the horror isn’t entirely visual. The sound in the film plays a crucial role, both literally and psychologically. Lights and sounds become synonymous to terror and fear, whereas darkness takes an unconventional break from being the harbinger of doom. Viewing the film on blu-ray only greatly enhances this element of the film’s design. The sound becomes its own character symbiotic to the grotesque worm-like alien creature that have implanted themselves within their human hosts.

As for the special effects, the aliens themselves are handles much like Spielberg’s handling of “Bruce” the great white shark in JAWS. The less you see of the inhuman antagonist the better, generating a greater sense of fear and discomfort than can be realized by over use of special effects. Once again, this is where Begos’ use of sound plays an integral role. the aliens are far more present in the film as interpreted through the high-pitched, ear drum piercing shrieks they make. Like fingernails on chalkboards multiplied by a thousand. Add to this the short 80-minute running time and you have a compact sensory science-fiction slasher flick.

As for any lack of a happy ending in the story, this can be remedied by pleasant surprises within this blu-ray’s special features. Containing not one, but two feature-length commentaries: one with writer/director Joe Begos and Josh Ethier and another with this duo plus actor Graham Skipper and producer Cory Lockman. As if this weren’t enough for the average enthusiast, the blu-ray also includes a feature-length making of documentary, a behind-the-scenes featurette on the set with Graham Skipper, and the short film TOXIN, in addition to the standard inclusion of trailers, TV spots and photo galleries. Overall, the ALMOST HUMAN blu-ray is the total package that blends sci-fi and horror with an accessibly engaging but minimally cerebral story and lots of goodies. Oh, yeah… and, it has a chainsaw.

Overall Rating: 3 out of 5 Stars

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Check Out the New Poster And TV Spots for THE EXPENDABLES 3

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THE EXPENDABLES 3 explodes into theaters on August 15th!

In THE EXPENDABLES 3, Barney (Sylvester Stallone), Christmas (Jason Statham) and the rest of the team come face-to-face with Conrad Stonebanks (Mel Gibson), who years ago co-founded The Expendables with Barney.

Stonebanks subsequently became a ruthless arms trader and someone who Barney was forced to kill… or so he thought. Stonebanks, who eluded death once before, now is making it his mission to end The Expendables — but Barney has other plans.

Barney decides that he has to fight old blood with new blood, and brings in a new era of Expendables team members, recruiting individuals who are younger, faster and more tech-savvy. The latest mission becomes a clash of classic old-school style versus high-tech expertise in the Expendables’ most personal battle yet.

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The world premiere of THE EXPENDABLES 3 will take place in London on August 4 ahead of its theatrical release on August 15.

The film stars Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Randy Couture, Terry Crews, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Wesley Snipes, Antonio Banderas, Mel Gibson, Harrison Ford, Kellan Lutz, Kelsey Grammer, MMA star Ronda Rousey, welterweight boxing champion Victor Ortiz and Glen Powell.

Patrick Hughes (RED HILL) directs the film, with veteran Dan Bradley (The BOURNE franchise; MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: GHOST PROTOCOL, QUANTUM OF SOLACE) directing the second unit. THE EXPENDABLES 3 is written by Creighton Rothenberger & Katrin Benedikt, who previously teamed on OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN, and Sylvester Stallone. The film is produced by Avi Lerner, Kevin King-Templeton, Danny Lerner and Les Weldon. Trevor Short, Boaz Davidson and John Thompson are executive producers and the production was overseen by Lionsgate’s Jason Constantine and Eda Kowan.

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The first two installments of THE EXPENDABLES have grossed nearly $600 million in combined global box office.

Check out these two new TV spots for THE EXPENDABLES 3:

http://theexpendables3film.tumblr.com/
facebook.com/TheExpendablesMovie
twitter.com/Expendables3

and this new poster rocks! (via IGN)

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WILD Starring Reese Witherspoon – First Poster

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WILD, the all new Fox Searchlight film directed by Jean-Marc Vallée, has released it’s first poster… and WAMG has it just for you. The film, staring Reese Witherspoon, Gaby Hoffman and Laura Dern is scheduled to release in theaters December 5th, and the trailer will make its debut tomorrow… so be sure to check back for that!

Poster courtesy: IMDB

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With the dissolution of her marriage and the death of her mother, Cheryl Strayed has lost all hope. After years of reckless, destructive behavior, she makes a rash decision. With absolutely no experience, driven only by sheer determination, Cheryl hikes more than a thousand miles of the Pacific Crest Trail, alone. WILD powerfully captures the terrors and pleasures of one young woman forging ahead against all odds on a journey that maddens, strengthens, and ultimately heals her.

FOR MORE INFO:  WEBSITE : http://www.foxsearchlight.com/wild/

WILD hits theaters December 5