Puke Your Guts Out at The Hi-Pointe – GATES OF HELL Midnights This Weekend!

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“This morning she was inside a coffin at the funeral home, and now she’s here in my kitchen!”

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GATES OF HELL screens midnights this Friday and Saturday (January 2nd and 3rd) at The Hi-Pointe Theater (1005 McCausland Ave., St. Louis, MO 63117)

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Man, Italian director Lucio Fulci made some great gory zombie horror films and GATES OF HELL is certainly one of them! This marks the fourth Fulci film, after ZOMBIE, THE BEYOND, and HOUSE BY THE CEMETERY to play at Destroy the Brain’s Late Night Grindhouse midnight series (and, after PIECES, the second to star Christopher George!). GATES OF HELL is (perhaps) better known under its DVD title CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD, but it will always be GATES OF HELL to me! I saw GATES OF HELL several times at the drive-ins back in the early 80s but don’t think it ever played in St. Louis at a hard-top, so this weekend’s screening at the Hi-Pointe (a 35mm print no less!!) will be a real treat.

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The plot concerns something about a reporter and a psychic who race to close the Gates of Hell after the suicide of a clergyman causes them to open, allowing the dead to rise from the grave. But with Fulci, it’s always all about the red stuff, something the director has never been one to shy away from, and GATES OF HELL features some truly grotesque gore set pieces… most notably a scene in which young Rosie Kelvin (Daniela Doria) vomits all her internal organs. Gnarly business indeed! In another moment of Neapolitan nastiness, the town weirdo, Bob (John Morghen – the same actor who had his weenie cut off and eaten in MAKE THEM DIE SLOWLY!), has his head forced into a furiously whirring drill by his girlfriend’s furious father (a scene that made the cover of Fangoria #29!)

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Another reason to like GATES OF HELL is the splendid music score by Fabio Frizzi – slow and ominous as hell! Also, this movie has great atmosphere – lots of shots of fog-shrouded streets, dust-blown parking lots, and creepy catacombs. I also like how the zombies disappear and reappear at a whim, and that genuinely weird ending. GATES OF HELL is a pure nightmare film; very suspenseful, technically well accomplished, decently acted and quite the nerve jolter on occasion.

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Don’t miss GATES OF HELL this weekend midnights at The Hi-Pointe!

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Admission is $7 and the pre-show begins at 11:30

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The Hi-Pointe’s site can be found HERE

http://hi-pointetheatre.com/

The Facebook invite for the Friday night show can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/307941596073732

The Facebook invite for the Saturday night show can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/382179068610296/

The Destroy The Brain.com site can be found HERE

http://www.destroythebrain.com/

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Check Out the New Poster and Trailer for ALIEN OUTPOST

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Wow, this movie looks amazing! It’s “Mankind’s Last Stand”! The new action-packed sci-fi flick ALIEN OUTPOST is directed by Game of Thrones‘ visual effects supervisor Jabbar Raisani, adventure and opens in select theaters on January 30th, 2015! I hope it comes to St. Louis!

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Two documentary cameramen embedded in an army unit in the most hostile place on earth, an outpost surrounded by the last remaining alien fighters (Heavies) of an invading attack force. The world may have forgotten about the Outposts, but the Heavies are planning the second invasion of Earth and the soldiers are the only ones who can stop it.
ALIEN OUTPOST stars Adrian Paul, Rick Ravanello, Reiley McClendon, Douglas Tait, Joe Reegan & Matthew Holmes
This trailer looks incredible:

and this poster is mind-boggling!

The movie I’m most looking forward to in 2015 is ALIEN OUTPOST !

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ANNIE – The Review

Celebrity Sightings In New York City - September 25, 2013

Review by Kathy Kaiser

Director Will Glueck takes a classic 1982 film and brings it into the 21st century with all the star-power and modern day finesse imaginable, as we travel the road of orphan/turned foster kid in 2014’s version of ANNIE!

When we meet Annie (played by the youngest Academy Award nominee EVER for best actress in 2014, Quvenzhané Wallis) she is trying to make her way on the streets of New York City in hopes of catching a glimpse of her parents at the restaurant Domani. When once again her parents don’t arrive at the restaurant, Annie is forced to return to her foster home and to her mean and evil Foster Mom, Ms. Hannigan (Cameron Diaz). Even though she loves being with her foster sisters Tessie, Mia, Issabella, and Pepper, Annie continues to search for her parents, as she knows it is only a matter of time before they come to get her. During one of her excursions around town, she is saved from being hit by Mayoral Candidate and business tycoon Will Stacks (Jamie Foxx), whose campaign manager Guy (Bobby Cannavale) sees lots of opportunities with using Annie in their campaign, after the video of Stacks pulling Annie from the street – just in the nick of time – goes viral. When Stacks VP Grace (Rose Byrne) invites Annie to come stay with Stacks for a few weeks, as his campaign against the incumbent mayor is heating up, Annie finds that a world filled with privilege – and an awesome new dog named Sandy – plus the father figure she has been longing for her whole life, might just be the right fit for her after all….

I absolutely loved the 1982 version of this film, so I have to admit going in I was a little bit skeptical of this remake. But as remakes go, Glueck did a superb job of tweaking the story just right by adding a few new songs and plot twists, making this film fresh and new. Annie this time around is sassier, more worldly, and as always, very entertaining – as Academy Award nominee Quvenzhané Wallis is absolutely perfect in this role. And how can you not love seeing Jamie Foxx dance and sing – as I had forgotten how well he really does sing since DREAMGIRLS – and who doesn’t love Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale this time around too, as they are perfectly cast in their respective roles. The only role I wasn’t totally sold on was Cameron Diaz playing Ms. Hannigan. I love Cameron, but her playing the mean spirited Foster Mom didn’t work for me at all – Don’t worry Carol Burnett, Cameron didn’t outplay your most memorable part ever, so you will always be Ms. Hannigan in my eyes, but as movies go, and even remakes for that matter, ANNIE is a definite must see for your family this Holiday Season! You will once again be touched by the little girl with big dreams and a big heart as a new generation is brought to tears – including my 14 year old at the advanced screening she joined me for – and even though it has been getting really bad reviews, personally, I really did enjoy it – whether it’s the mother in me, or the musical lover in me, whatever it was doesn’t really matter –I found it very entertaining. This ANNIE will touch viewers both young and old – just like the Original did – and you can take my word on that!!

3 1/2 of 5 Stars

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WHITE CHRISTMAS Screens Saturday Morning at The Hi-Pointe

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“I wanna wash my hands, my face, my hair with snow!”

The spirit of Christmas is alive and well at The Hi-pointe Theater here in St. Louis. IT”S A WONDERFUL LIFE played last weekend to a nearly-sold out crowd – and that’s a big theater!

This Saturday, December 20th at 10:30am, head over to the Hi-Pointe for a WHITE CHRISTMAS

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WHITE CHRISTMAS was made in 1954 (exactly 20 years before BLACK CHRISTMAS!) and was directed by Michael Curtiz. Bing Crosby teamed up with madcap funny man Danny Kaye and partnering with those two show biz pros as sisters were Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen. One of the most popular films of 1954, WHITE CHRISTMAS opens and closes with the title song, while in between it’s filled with one great musical number after another. Crosby and Kaye play entertainers who went through W.W.II together and decide to host a fundraising event at the Vermont Lodge of their old commanding officer Dean Jagger. Apparently, Jagger’s lodge isn’t doing great business and is about to close. A high profile fund raising event is just the ticket to draw national attention to Jagger’s Vermont lodge and thereby, save the day! Not real complex plotting but watch it instead for the fifties fluff, lots of Technicolor being splashed about, each of the performers getting to do their schtick, and course, the required holiday finale at the end of the movie. And who can forget that dead girl in the attic with that plastic bag over her head (oh wait – I’m getting it confused with BLACK CHRISTMAS!)

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WHITE CHRISTMAS is the third and final film of Hi-Pointe’s Classic Christmas Film Series (after HOLIDAY AFFAIR and IT”S A WONDERFUL LIFE) This Saturday morning (December 20th), you and your family will have the opportunity to see WHITE CHRISTMAS on the big screen when it plays at 10:30am at St. Louis’ fabulous Hi-Pointe.

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Admission is just $5.

Hi-Pointe Theatre is located at 1005 McCausland Ave., St. Louis, MO 63117

Their website is HERE

http://hi-pointetheatre.com/

DRUM – The Blu Review

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MANDINGO, a 1975 movie based on the best-selling period potboiler by Kyle Onstott about sexual shenanigans between masters and slaves on the Falconhurst slave-breeding plantation, was savaged by critics who saw it as nothing but degrading, big-budget exploitation. Roger Ebert called it “racist trash”, a “piece of manure”, and “excruciating to sit through”. MANDINGO certainly had it all; brutal violence, interracial sex, rape, infanticide, lynchings, and abundant nudity including full-frontal shots of it’s male star, boxer Ken Norton. But of course it was a huge hit and inspired a brief run of “slaverysploitation” films such as PASSION PLANTATION (1975 aka BLACK EMMANUELLE, WHITE EMMANUELLE ) and the cleverly titled MANDIGA (1976). MANDINGO was overwrought melodrama to be sure, but it’s a model of subtlety compared to its official sequel, the more lascivious DRUM, a mean-spirited trash epic from 1976 that would never fly in today’s politically correct climate. Despite its spaghetti western trappings, the film Tarantino’s DJANGO UNCHAINED most resembles is DRUM.

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DRUM’s tawdry story picks up about 20 years after MANDINGO. Hammond Maxwell (Warren Oates), the son of the late Falconhurst patriarch Warren Maxwell purchases a slave named Drum from bordello hostess Marianna (Isela Vega). Drum turns out to be the son of Mede (killed at the end of MANDIGO), the slave who had murdered Hammond’s father. Hammond uses Mede and his friend Blaise (Yaphet Kotto) to fight in ridiculous gladiator battles as entertainment for the ‘white folk’. Slave Regine (Pam Grier) is Hammond’s favorite ‘bed wench’ but develops a romance with Drum. Hammond’s bratty slut daughter Sophie (Rainbeaux Smith) stirs up trouble between Drum and Blaise by trying to have sex with both of them and then lying to her father that Blaise tried to rape her and a campy gay French slave trader (John Colicos) wants to bed black stud Drum as well. Tensions build, emotions erupt and by the end of the movie, a mansion is on fire, the black slaves have revolted against the ‘mastas’ wielding scythes and knives, while the white men battle it out with their muskets and rifles.

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I can only imagine the howling responses to DRUM by those same critics who thought MANDINGO was in poor taste. Where MANDINGO was at least pretentious and literary (and had a dignified performance by James Mason as Warren Maxwell), DRUM makes no pretense at being anything except cheap thrills exploitation (despite an impressive budget) and ups the sleaze quotient by adding lesbianism, incest, castration, and a swishy gay villain to the mix. DRUM is more fast-paced and entertaining than its predecessor and any movie that includes Warren Oates and Pam Grier in its cast has to be considered a must-see 70’s classic.

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Square-jawed actor Perry King played Hammond in the first film so the thought of him aging into the grizzled Warren Oates is rich and the always-grinning Oates has a great time in DRUM. Oates brings real demented joy to the part and is fantastic reciting such ripe, un-PC dialog as “Falconhurst is all about niggas fornicatin’. If’n my niggas stop fornicatin’, we stops eatin’”. Drum, that perfect specimen of slave that neither man nor women can keep their hands off, was played by Ken Norton, a former world champion heavyweight boxer who had also played Mede in MANDINGO. Norton had a brooding, massive presence and no doubt high hopes for a film career, but he was no actor and his awkward readings and blank stare stand in stark contrast to the scenery-chewing of his DRUM co-stars. Norton (who once broke Muhammad Ali’s jaw) was reportedly a contender for the role of Apollo Creed in ROCKY but MANDINGO and DRUM were his first and last shots at big-screen stardom. Norton died in September of last year, but not before I got him to sign my DRUM one-sheet poster. John Collicos delivers an eye-rolling, over-the-top performance as the devious gay slave trader Bernard DeMarigny. His evil character is so mincing and disgusting that I’m sure 1976 audiences cheered near the end when Drum reaches down DeMarigny’s pants and rips off his testicles! Yaphet Kotto as Drum’s best friend Blaise provides the film’s best acting but Kotto is so good and so serious that it often seems like he’s not in on the joke. Pam Grier (billed for the only time in her career as ‘Pamela’) was the reigning queen of black cinema, but her role as Regine is surprisingly underwritten and she does none of her trademark ass-kicking. Isela Vega was a sexy Mexican who’d been Warren Oates leading lady in Sam Peckinpah’s BRING ME THE HEAD OF ALFREDO GARCIA (and posed in ‘Playboy’) in 1974 and Cheryl “Rainbeaux” Smith, who plays Oates daughter, is an actress very familiar to fans of 70’exploitation and has a considerable cult following. Smith had starred in LEMORA LADY DRACULA in 1972 at age 17 and adorned drive-in screens throughout the decade in films like CAGED HEAT (1974), SWINGING CHEERLEADERS (1974), and MASSACRE AT CENTRAL HIGH (1976) and essayed the title role in the adult version of CINDERELLA in 1977. Smith was a sexy and charismatic presence but had a weakness for heroin and died destitute at age 45. All four of the aforementioned actresses appeared topless in DRUM.

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Image: DRUM was released on the MGM video label in the mid-80’s but has long been out-of-print. Now DRUM is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Kino-Lorber with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.85:1 aspect. DRUM is easily one of the most scenic enterprises of ‘70s Blaxploitation. With surprisingly evocative production and costume design, DRUM is often visually sumptuous despite its gritty subject matter, and that helps this high definition presentation to pop rather splendidly. There’s the expected amount of color grading here, from the cool blue tones of the opening the probably ironic golden amber hues that infuse the plantation sequence, but fine detail is exceptional throughout this presentation, with virtually every whiskered face and badly scarred back vividly on display.

Audio: The 2.0 DTS-HD sound is solid and free of distortion. Dialogue is cleanly and clearly presented, and the mix is generally superb.

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Extras: Beside a trailer, the lone extra is an outstanding audio commentary with director Steve Carver moderated by Bill Olson. Carver talks at length about the film’s generous budget, which explains some of the opening shots with hundreds of extras dressed as slaves, scenes that were filmed in Puerto Rico by the original director Burt Topper, who dropped out after differences with producer Dino DeLaurentis. Much of the cast had left along with Topper including John Vernon, who was replaced with Oates. Carver also talks about how he had to win over Ken Norton, who was locked into the production even though Jim Brown had originally been approached for the role. It’s a fascinating listen though I wish Olson had been better prepared for the times when Carver’s memory failed him.

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DRUM is historically inaccurate and politically incorrect in a way found only in the mid-70’s. It’s not racist in its attitude toward its characters and it, as well as MANDIGO, found their biggest audiences at urban theatres specializing in ‘Blaxploitation’. It’s one of my favorite exploitation films from the ‘70s and I highly recommend Kino-Lorber’s Blu-ray disc.

My DRUM poster signed by Ken Norton:

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WILD – The Review

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Poor Cheryl Strayed. With the end of her marriage, the death of her mother and after years of reckless, destructive behavior – including rampant promiscuity and heroin use – she made a rash decision. In the summer of 1995, with no experience and driven only by sheer determination, 27-year old Cheryl hiked more than a thousand miles of the Pacific Crest Trail through California, Oregon and Washington – alone. 17 years later, she wrote the best-selling, Oprah-approved memoir WILD, presenting her hike as an uplifting metaphor for healing and now we have the movie version starring Reese Witherspoon. Cheryl Strayed had experienced much turmoil in her life, and I can understand how making this trek was soul-defining for her, but I found her adventure, or at least the film of it, unremarkable. I like to hike, but watching someone else’s hike, especially if nothing unusual happens (except that they’re remarkably ill-prepared) is not interesting. Cheryl never gets lost nor is she ever (one rattlesnake aside) in any real danger. She falls. Her boots cause her blisters and lost toenails because she brought the wrong size. She carries more than she needs. She runs out of water. She heads into town for supplies. She runs low on money. She is showered with kindness from fellow hikers and occasionally even bathes. She sleeps with a hippy. She gets bigger boots but drops one off a cliff. She finds some beauty, gets into a rhythm, and ponders her past. I found WILD a snooze but my biggest problem with it is that Cheryl isn’t sympathetic or fun to be with or at all pleasant. Strangers along the way are exceedingly generous with her, yet we don’t see her at any point giving back (except of course that dude she shags) and I found it obnoxious that Cheryl had the nerve to write familiar quotes from Emily Dickinson and such on the trail’s sign-in sheets, and then sign her own name as co-author. I don’t see how someone destroying their life and deciding to rebuild it by hiking a trail and enduring the elements deserves the attention this true story is getting. Ms Strayed imposed much of these problems on herself. She cheated repeatedly on a husband who, as portrayed in this film at least, is a sensitive Saint who still loves her and sends care packages ahead to her destinations (she doesn’t need condoms – she brought plenty!). He deserves better. Countless flashbacks show she screwed about every man she met including a few in an alley behind a coffee shop where she waits tables.

Some may find WILD profound and reflective while others will find it a tedious pity party for a self-absorbed, hedonistic woman with the morals of an alley cat.  I mostly fall in the latter camp. I suspect women will connect with WILD more than guys (it was based on an Oprah book after all). There are several scenes where Cheryl encounters men on her hike that director Jean-Marc Vallee stages to make the audience think she’s about to be sexually assaulted or worse, yet she’s never harmed. Except for one excellent, if odd scene where she meets a black journalist conducting research for The Hobo Times, WILD is humorless. The only moment played for laughs is an early one where she flops around on her motel room floor, unable to stand because her backpack is too heavy, but that just makes one wonder why she has no trouble maneuvering it on the trail the next day.

I will say some portions of WILD felt genuine, such as the flashbacks with her free spirit mother (a grinning Laura Dern) in the hospital or a memory of her brother shooting their sick horse. Reese Witherspoon is being showered with praise for her work here. It’s one of those performances critics like to describe as ‘bold’ and ‘raw’ which means she’s covered in dirt, wears no makeup, occasionally flashes her breasts, and is reminded several times how stinky she is. Reese is fine and will likely score an Oscar nom, but I saw nothing any number of actresses couldn’t have pulled off just as well. She’s in every scene (seems like every shot!) and I frankly got tired of looking at her unwashed mug. I enjoy movies about redemption; of being lost, then found again, but WILD just didn’t do it for me. Cheryl Strayed embarked on this momentous hike on nothing but a whim and while it may have been cathartic for her, I did not enjoy the journey.

2 of 5 Stars

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Henry Jackman Creates An Epic Action Score for THE INTERVIEW

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Award-winning composer Henry Jackman delivers an epic score to North Korea’s favorite comedy THE INTERVIEW, directed by Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen.

Jackman’s score is ironically-serious and over-the-top, qualities the directors enjoyed from the score for their previous film, THIS IS THE END.

In THE INTERVIEW, journalists Dave Skylark (James Franco) and Aaron Rapoport (Seth Rogen) land an interview with North Korea’s dictator, Kim Jong Un, for their popular tabloid-TV show. As the duo prepare for their journey, the CIA enlists them to carry out an incredible mission: Assassinate Kim Jong Un.

This film marks the second collaboration between Jackman and the film’s directors Goldberg and Rogen, previously scoring their apocalypse comedy THIS IS THE END.

THE INTERVIEW opens in theaters on December 25th. The soundtrack will be released on January 13th 2015 by La-La Land Records.

Jackman began his solo career in 2009, and in just five years, he has established himself as a dynamic and prolific film composer.

His music is featured in films in all genres, scoring animated films (Big Hero 6, Wreck-It Ralph), action-adventures (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, X-Men: First Class, Kick-Ass 1&2), comedies (This is the End) and dramas (Captain Phillips).

Read our interview with him HERE.

Henry Jackman began composing music from age six and after studying classical music at St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir School, Eton College, and Oxford University, he immersed himself in the underground rave and electronica scene. Jackman’s broad music sensibilities is evident when creating music, and his ability to invent compelling scores as well as co-write and produce songs caught the attention of acclaimed film composer Hans Zimmer. Under Zimmer’s wing, Jackman contributed additional music on films such as The Dark Knight and the Pirates of the Caribbean films before developing his solo composing career.

Jackman’s upcoming projects include the British action-spy film Kingsman: The Secret Service, in theaters February 13, 2015, and the third installment of the Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War.

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Win Tickets To The Advance Screening of Angelina Jolie’s UNBROKEN in St. Louis

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WAMG has your passes to the advance screening of one of this year’s most talked about films – UNBROKEN.

Sit down with director Angelina Jolie and the late Louis Zamperini as they discuss the former Olympian & WWII hero’s incredible true life story in a new behind-the-scenes look from the movie.

Adapted from Laura Hillenbrand’s enormously popular book, the upcoming epic drama starring Jack O’Connell, Domhnall Gleeson, Miyavi, Garrett Hedlund & Finn Wittrock opening in theaters on December 25th, 2014!

Academy Award winner Angelina Jolie directs and produces UNBROKEN, an epic drama that follows the incredible life of Olympian and war hero Louis “Louie” Zamperini (Jack O’Connell) who, along with two other crewmen, survived in a raft for 47 days after a near-fatal plane crash in WWII-only to be caught by the Japanese Navy and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp.

Adapted from Laura Hillenbrand’s (“Seabiscuit: An American Legend”) enormously popular book, UNBROKEN brings to the big screen Zamperini’s unbelievable and inspiring true story about the resilient power of the human spirit.

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Starring alongside O’Connell are Domhnall Gleeson and Finn Wittrock as Phil and Mac-the airmen with whom Zamperini endured perilous weeks adrift in the open Pacific-Garrett Hedlund and John Magaro as fellow POWs who find an unexpected camaraderie during their internment, Alex Russell as Zamperini’s brother, Pete, and in his English-language feature debut, Japanese actor Miyavi as the brutal camp guard known only to the men as “The Bird.”

The film is produced by Jolie, as well as Clayton Townsend (This Is 40), Matthew Baer (City by the Sea) and Erwin Stoff (The Day the Earth Stood Still). Leading the accomplished behind-the-scenes crew is 11-time Oscar®-nominated cinematographer Roger Deakins (Skyfall). Academy Award® winners Joel and Ethan Coen (No Country for Old Men) rewrote the screenplay from earlier drafts by William Nicholson (Les Misérables) and Richard LaGravenese (HBO’s Behind the Candelabra).Submit your #IAmUnbroken stories, videos, photos and text here.

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WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win passes (Good for 2) to the advance screening of UNBROKEN on Wednesday, December 17th at 7PM in the St. Louis area. We will contact the winners by email.

Answer the following:

In April 1943, Louie’s defective B-24 Liberator, on a rescue mission in the South Pacific, suffered engine failure and crashed into the sea. What was the name of the plane?

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWER AND EMAIL ADDRESS IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

http://www.unbrokenfilm.com

UNBROKEN has been rated PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned – Some Material May Be Inappropriate for Children Under 13) for war violence including intense sequences of brutality, and for brief language.

Photos: © 2014 Universal Studios. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE Screens on 16mm Sunday December 14th at Schlafly Bottleworks

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If you can’t make it to see IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE Saturday morning at The Hi-Pointe (details HERE), you’ll have another chance to see it on the big screen in St. Louis this weekend.  Roger B of ‘Roger’s Reels’ will dusting off his 16mm print of the perennial holiday classic and will be screening it Sunday night at Schlafly Bottleworks (7260 Southwest Ave, Maplewood, Missouri 63143) beginning at 7pm. Admission is FREE but Roger sets out a donation jar for The National Children’s Cancer Society (NCCS), a worthy, St. Louis-based charity.

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It wasn’t until the 1980s when IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE became the perennial holiday favorite it’s known as today. The ultimate feel-good classic from director Frank Capra was a box-office disappointment when it was initially released in 1946. Due to a clerical error in 1974, the film went into public domain and was then shown on every low-rent local access channel in varying degrees of quality for years and was released on VHS by a variety of fly-by-night  home video companies – including the infamous colorized version. In 1993 Republic Pictures enforced its claim to the film’s copyright. It stopped being televised as often but by then everyone had fallen in love with its charms and taken to heart its message: It’s not so much about what you leave behind when you die, but it’s more about how you use your life while you live.

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The Facebook invite for this screening can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/876509025733988/

 

Don’t Miss IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE Saturday Morning December 13th at The Hi-Pointe

 

“Each man’s life touches so many other lives. When he isn’t around he leaves an awful hole, doesn’t he?”

IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE screens Saturday morning December 13th at St. Louis’ fabulous Hi-Pointe Theater (1005 McCausland Ave., St. Louis, MO). The movie starts at 10:30am and admission is only $5.

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It wasn’t until the 1980s when IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE became the perennial holiday favorite it’s known as today. The ultimate feel-good classic from director Frank Capra was a box-office disappointment when it was initially released in 1946. Due to a clerical error in 1974, the film went into public domain and was then shown on every low-rent local access channel in varying degrees of quality for years and was released on VHS by a variety of fly-by-night  home video companies – including the infamous colorized version. In 1993 Republic Pictures enforced its claim to the film’s copyright. It stopped being televised as often but by then everyone had fallen in love with its charms and taken to heart its message: It’s not so much about what you leave behind when you die, but it’s more about how you use your life while you live.

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This Saturday morning (December 13th), you and your family will have the opportunity to see IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE on the big screen (not the colorized version though) when it plays at 10:30am at St. Louis’ fabulous Hi-Pointe Theater as part of their 3-part Christmas Classics Movie Series. ( the final film – WHITE CHRISTMAS with Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye – plays December 20th).

Admission is just $5.

Hi-Pointe Theatre is located at 1005 McCausland Ave., St. Louis, MO 63117

The Hi-Pointe site can be found HERE

http://hi-pointetheatre.com/

Showtime Line: (314) 995-6273