Vin Diesel Has An Awakening In THE LAST WITCH HUNTER Trailer

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Here’s a first look at the brand new trailer for THE LAST WITCH HUNTER starring Vin Diesel, Elijah Wood, Rose Leslie, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson, Julie Engelbrecht, and Michael Caine.

This latest preview features a cover of The Rolling Stones’ “Paint It Black,” recorded by Ciara exclusively for the movie.

“I am honored to have been asked to cover such an iconic song by one of music’s greatest bands, the Rolling Stones, for the film. “Paint It Black” matches the film’s mystical and suspenseful plot perfectly. The film and song have the magical recipe that combines romanticism with a touch of black! I cannot wait to see and hear the film and the song on the big screen with the rest of the world” – Ciara

THE LAST WITCH HUNTER is coming to New York Comic-Con. Join Vin Diesel, Elijah Wood, Rose Leslie and director Breck Eisner, in the Main Hall on October 10, 2015 at 3:15pm for a Q&A and a sneak peek at the film before it hits theaters October 23.

The modern world holds many secrets, but the most astounding secret of all is that witches still live amongst us; vicious supernatural creatures intent on unleashing the Black Death upon the world. Armies of witch hunters battled the unnatural enemy across the globe for centuries, including Kaulder, a valiant warrior who managed to slay the all-powerful Queen Witch, decimating her followers in the process.

In the moments right before her death, the Queen curses Kaulder with her own immortality, forever separating him from his beloved wife and daughter in the afterlife. Today Kaulder is the only one of his kind remaining, and has spent centuries hunting down rogue witches, all the while yearning for his long-lost loved ones.

However, unbeknownst to Kaulder, the Queen Witch is resurrected and seeks revenge on her killer causing an epic battle that will determine the survival of the human race.

Directed by Breck Eisner, THE LAST WITCH HUNTER opens in theaters on October 23rd.

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The WITCHES REVEALED web app has also just launched. Using facial recognition to automatically apply a variety of witch effects to pics, fans will be able to reveal their “true witch self,” made ugly by magic-fueled long life or beautiful by mixing potions for smoother skin, makeup, piercings, tattoos and more. Users can login to the web app via mobile or desktop by visiting http://www.witchesrevealed.com.

Explore the mysterious inside world of THE LAST WITCH HUNTER by visiting The Witches Brood – an online publication that encompasses witch culture and welcomes all fans hoping to experience the life of a real witch. With an opportunity to register as a witch, this resource includes in-world editorial, fashion photography, important news surrounding the lifestyle of witches, and potion recipes pulled straight from the film.

Vin Diesel - Character Poster Michael Caine - Character Poster Elijah Wood - Character Poster Rose Leslie - Character Poster

2015 Student Academy Award Winners Announced

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented its 42nd Annual Student Academy Awards® on Thursday, September 17, in Beverly Hills.

On Thursday evening (Sept 17) at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honored 15 student winners from colleges and universities around the world at the 42nd Student Academy Awards ceremony.

The Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal awards were announced and presented by actors Michelle Rodriguez and Jason Mitchell, Oscar-winning director John Lasseter, and the Oscar-winning team behind the animated feature “Big Hero 6,” Roy Conli, Don Hall and Chris Williams.

The 2015 Student Academy Award winners are:

Alternative
Gold: “Chiaroscuro,” Daniel Drummond, Chapman University, California
Silver: “Zoe,” ChiHyun Lee, The School of Visual Arts, New York

Animation
Gold: “Soar,” Alyce Tzue, Academy of Art University, San Francisco
Silver: “An Object at Rest,” Seth Boyden, California Institute of the Arts
Bronze: “Taking the Plunge,” Nicholas Manfredi and Elizabeth Ku-Herrero, The School of
Visual Arts

Documentary
Gold: “Looking at the Stars,” Alexandre Peralta, University of Southern California
Silver: “I Married My Family’s Killer,” Emily Kassie, Brown University
Bronze: “Boxeadora,” Meg Smaker, Stanford University

Narrative
Gold: “Day One,” Henry Hughes, American Film Institute, California
Silver: “This Way Up,” Jeremy Cloe, American Film Institute
Bronze: “Stealth,” Bennett Lasseter, American Film Institute

Foreign Film
Gold: “Fidelity,” Ilker Çatak, Hamburg Media School, Germany
Silver: “The Last Will,” Dustin Loose, Filmakademie Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
Bronze: “Everything Will Be Okay” Patrick Vollrath, Filmakademie Wien, Austria

The Student Academy Awards were established in 1972 to provide a platform for emerging global talent by creating opportunities within the industry to showcase their work.

Past Student Academy Award winners have gone on to receive 47 Oscar nominations and have won or shared eight awards. They include Pete Docter, John Lasseter, Spike Lee, Trey Parker and Robert Zemeckis.

Photos: ©A.M.P.A.S.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented its 42nd Annual Student Academy Awards® on Thursday, September 17, in Beverly Hills. Gold Medal winners (left to right): Alternative film winner Daniel Drummond, Documentary film winner Alexandre Peralta, Animated film winner Alyce Tzue, Narrative film winner Henry Hughes and Foreign film winner Ilker Catak.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented its 42nd Annual Student Academy Awards® on Thursday, September 17, in Beverly Hills. Gold Medal winners (left to right): Alternative film winner Daniel Drummond, Documentary film winner Alexandre Peralta, Animated film winner Alyce Tzue, Narrative film winner Henry Hughes and Foreign film winner Ilker Catak.

Giveaway – Win A Copy of PITCH PERFECT 2

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“PITCH PERFECT 2 is a sweet, funny bit of fluff that never hits a sour note!” said Jim Batts in his review for one of the best movies of 2015.

The fabulous Bellas of Barden University are back to compete in the World Championships of A Cappella after a scandal threatens their legacy in PITCH PERFECT 2

The high-spirited sequel to the movie that sparked a worldwide phenomenon is coming to Digital HD on September 1st and Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand September 22 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.

PITCH PERFECT 2 is packed with more original musical arrangements, memorable one-liners and offbeat romance as the original’s most beloved characters fight to regain their former glory on a worldwide stage facing off against the toughest competition on the planet. Hysterical behind-the-scenes bonus features, never-before-seen deleted footage, all-new musical performances and a hilarious gag reel make Pitch Perfect 2 a must own on Blu-ray and DVD.

Oscar®-nominee Anna Kendrick (Into the Woods), Rebel Wilson (Bridesmaids), Brittany Snow (Hairspray), Anna Camp (The Help), Alexis Knapp (Project X), Hana Mae Lee (“Super Fun Night”) and Ester Dean (Ice Age: Continental Drift) return as the girls who run the a cappella world, with Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit), Chrissie Fit (Teen Beach Movie, “General Hospital”) and Katy Sagal (“Sons of Anarchy”) joining the team for the first time. Elizabeth Banks (The Hunger Games series), who also directed the infectiously funny film, and John Michael Higgins reprise their roles as clueless competition commentators Gail and John. Skylar Astin (21 & Over), Adam DeVine (“Workaholics”) and Ben Platt (Ricki and the Flash) rejoin the comedy as the Barden’s favorite Treblemakers with YouTube superstar Flula Borg and Birgitte Hjort Sorensen (Automata) leading the Bellas’ archrivals, German super group Das Sound Machine.

BONUS FEATURES EXCLUSIVE TO BLU-RAYTM:

  • Never Before Seen Treblemakers Performance
  • The Making of the Riff-Off
  • Das Sound Machine Finale Breakdown
  • Snoop in the House
  • Green Bay Rap
  • Line-Aca-Rama
  • The World Championships of A Cappella
  • An Aca-Love Story: Bumper and Fat Amy
  • Elizabeth Banks’ Directorial Debut
  • Legacy: Hailee Steinfeld
  • Aca-Camp
  • Residual Heat Internship

BLU-RAYTM and DVD BONUS FEATURES

  • Deleted/Extended/Alternate Scenes
  • Gag Reel
  • Extended Musical Performances
  • The Bellas Are Back

Beca (Anna Kendrick), Fat Amy (Rebel Wilson) and the Barden Bellas are back to pitch slap the world! After a scandal threatens to derail their last year at Barden, the three-time defending champs worry that they’ve lost their harmony for good. With one chance left at redeeming their legacy, they must face off against the toughest competition on the planet: German super group Das Sound Machine, and fight for their right to win at the World Championships of A Cappella. It will take the power of sisterhood to find their voice and see what it takes to be the world’s top pitches!

To win PITCH PERFECT 2:

ENTER YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.  WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

2. No purchase necessary.

3. You must have a U.S. Mailing address.

Pitch Perfect 2

FILMMAKERS:
Cast: Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Brittany Snow, Anna Camp, Alexis Knapp, Hana Mae Lee, Ester Dean, Skylar Astin, Adam DeVine, Hailee Steinfeld, Ben Platt, Chrissie Fit, Flula Borg, Elizabeth Banks, John Michael Higgins
Directed By: Elizabeth Banks
Written By: Kay Cannon
Based on Characters Created By: Mickey Rapkin
Produced By: Paul Brooks, Max Handelman, Elizabeth Banks
Executive Produced By: Scott Niemeyer, Jason Moore
Director of Photography: Jim Denault
Production Designer: Toby Corbett
Edited By: Craig Alpert
Costume Designer: Salvador Perez
Music By:  Mark Mothersbaugh

TECHNICAL INFORMATION BLU-RAY:
Street Date: September 22, 2015
Copyright: 2015 Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Selection Number: 61142600 (US)/ 61142601 (CDN)
Layers: BD-50
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Rating: PG-13 for innuendo and language
Languages/Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish and French Subtitles
Sound: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1/Dolby Digital 2.0, Spanish DTS Digital Surround 5.1, French DTS Digital Surround 5.1
Run Time: 1 Hour 55 Minutes

TECHNICAL INFORMATION DVD
Street Date: September 22, 2015
Copyright: 2015 Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Selection Number: 61142595/61142603 (CDN)
Layers: Dual
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Rating: PG-13 for innuendo and language
Languages/Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish and French Subtitles
Sound: English Dolby Digital 5.1/Dolby Digital 2.0, Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1, French Dolby Digital 5.1
Run Time: 1 Hour 55 Minutes

Website: http://www.pitchperfectmovie.com
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Hashtag: #PitchPerfect2

Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of THE WALK In St. Louis

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WAMG has your passes to one of 2015’s most anticipated films, THE WALK.

Twelve people have walked on the moon. Only one has ever, or will ever, walk in the immense void between the World Trade Center towers.

Philippe Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), guided by his real-life mentor, Papa Rudy (Ben Kingsley), is aided by an unlikely band of international recruits, who overcome long odds, betrayals, dissension and countless close calls to conceive and execute their mad plan. Robert Zemeckis, the master director of such marvels as Forrest Gump, Cast Away, Back to the Future, Polar Express and Flight, again uses cutting edge technology in the service of an emotional, character-driven story.

With innovative photorealistic techniques and IMAX® 3D wizardry, The Walk is genuine big-screen cinema, a chance for moviegoers to viscerally experience the feeling of reaching the clouds.

It is also one of the more rare live-action films that is a PG-rated, all-audience entertainment for moviegoers 8 to 80 – and a true story to boot. It is unlike anything audiences have seen before, a love letter to Paris and New York City in the 1970s, but most of all, to the Towers of the World Trade Center.

The edge of impossible. The edge of danger. The edge of your seat. Experience the first step of the impossible dream of THE WALK in IMAX 3D and large format screens on Sept. 30 and everywhere October 8!

WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win a pass (Good for 2) to the advance screening of THE WALK on Monday, September 28th at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

We will contact the winners by email.

Answer the following:

How many feet above the ground was Philippe Petit when he stepped out on a wire rigged between New York’s twin towers on August 7th 1974?

  • a.) 1,503 feet
  • b.) 1,035 feet
  • c.) 1,350 feet 

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

OFFICIAL RULES:

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

2. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.

3. No purchase necessary.

Rated PG for thematic elements involving perilous situations, and for some nudity, language, brief drug references and smoking.

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Philippe Petite (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) in TriStar Pictures' THE WALK.
Philippe Petite (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) in TriStar Pictures’ THE WALK.

EVEREST – The Review

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There’s a moment in most sports movies when you realize that you want the good guys to win. You want the heroes to beat the enemy. Take for instance the movie ROCKY. It doesn’t take long into the film, but you care for the title character enough to root for him no matter what happens. Try as it may, EVEREST never quite manages to make that same connection. Part of it might be because of the film and part of it might have to do with my own personal mental block, but I kept repeating the same thing to myself: these people are crazy. There is a certain level to crazy that you have inside of you to voluntarily climb a mountain in terrain and atmospheric conditions that are not meant for human life. There are moments throughout the film where we’re meant to connect with these “ordinary” people –   one of them is a mailman, for goodness sake – but you can never gather enough energy to root for these crazy people that are willing to risk life and limb to climb a damn mountain. Most of the time you are left in awe of this stark mountain, waiting to see who the first will be to fall to its magnificence.

The year is 1996. Rob Hall (Jason Clarke) is a trained and experienced Mt. Everest tour guide. He’s an expert at training men and women to climb the mountain of all mountains. His new batch of climbers include, Doug (John Hawkes), Jon (Michael Kelly), Beck (Josh Brolin), and many others. Two other tour groups ascend the mountain at the same time, one of which is led by the laid-back and too cool for school Scott Fischer (Jake Gyllenhaal). Due in large part to the guidance and training from Rob, most of these men and women manage to reach the summit and stand victorious. However, a wave of storms suddenly hits the climbers creating a terrifying struggle between life and death as they make their descent down the mountain.

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EVEREST is consistently breathtaking on IMAX screens and in 3D. It’s one thing to make you believe that the actors are going through these torrential and dangerous circumstances, but it’s quite another to pull the audience in. You often feel like you are right there with them -which actually says a lot considering that it really seems that these actors are suffering from hypothermia and frost bite. But that is actually part of the problem. Because the film feels so realistic, you are often left distracted and wondering how these well known actors survived these conditions, when you aren’t speculating if they are even going to survive the trip back down.

Director Baltasar Kormákur is an accomplished director (I really liked 2013’s 2 GUNS) and properly conveys the struggles inherent in the story. He gives Gyllenhaal, Brolin, and Clarke all room to create amiable characters. However, the story is transfixed with the idea of portraying these characters as just “normal” guys. It’s just that “normal” is not always engaging on-screen.

EVEREST is ultimately an endurance test not just for the characters in the film, but for the audience as well. By the end of the two hour runtime – 90 minutes of which is rather intense – I’d be shocked if you didn’t find yourself gasping for air. EVEREST is an exhilarating movie when you are caught in the moment. For thrill-seekers, there will be plenty to love. Still, I’m fascinated by those who seek out these adventures and risk their lives for a natural “high.” At the end of the day, my mind can’t quite admire the level of crazy that these individuals have to have in order to face almost certain death.

 

Overall rating: 3 out of 5

 

EVEREST opens in large format theaters Friday, September 18. It will then expand to regular theaters next week.

 

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CAPTIVE – The Review

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As bland as its title, CAPTIVE is an indifferent home invasion thriller in which a drug-addicted single mom is held hostage by a desperate man who’d just murdered four people. Hostage movies follow such age-old patterns that it’s rare to be surprised by one and CAPTIVE is no exception. Occasionally the genre will be transformed by brilliant filmmaking, as it was in something like THE DESPERATE HOURS or DOG DAY AFTERNOON. Not this time. The true subject should have been given energy but all I felt while watching CAPTIVE was a big yawn.

Taking place over a single day, CAPTIVE closely follows an event that took place in Atlanta in 2005. Brian Nichols (played by David Oyelowo) was on trial for rape when he overpowered and beat a female guard, then took her gun. He calmly walked into a courtroom and fatally shot a judge and a court reporter then another guard before escaping the facility. He became the subject of a city wide manhunt and killed a detective before finding his way to the apartment of 27-year old waitress Ashley Smith (Kate Mara), a complete stranger. A mess herself, Ashley had lost her husband to drug-related violence and was battling her own meth addiction. Her daughter Paige (Elle Graham) is staying with her aunt (Mimi Rogers) while she tries to get her act together. The movie mostly focuses on the 8 hours Ashley and Brian spend together. He threatens her and ties her up in the tub, but she’s never hurt. “Got any weed?” No, but she has some meth lying around so he smokes that (that’ll calm him down!). Ashley turns for guidance to Rick Warren’s inspirational best-seller The Purpose Driven Life, a book forced on her by a well-meaning co-worker that very day. She reads it aloud, hoping it will bring out some humanity in the killer. Meanwhile, Detective John Chestnut (Michael Kenneth Williams) is taking charge, barking orders at his underlings, though he has no clue where the fugitive is hiding.

CAPTIVE presents a basic movie situation and delivers it in an uninspired and pedestrian manner. It’s based on Ashley Smith’s book about the encounter, so knowing she’s the only hostage and that she survives diminishes any tension. Limiting much of the action to Ashley’s small apartment eliminates distractions and allows for a closer focus on these two characters but the story is inert and fails to excite. Much of the problem is the direction by 81-year old Jerry Jameson whose TV career goes all the way back to The Andy Griffith Show and Gomer Pyle. He sets an appropriately gloomy tone but his TV-level compositions and close-ups fill the space where motivation and character-building ought to be. He fails to exploit the claustrophobia of the premise while Lorne Balfe’s low-rent synthetic score adds a cheapness to the proceedings.

David Oyelowo is a powerful screen presence but underplays his role. Brian Nichols had just murdered four people, but by the time he arrives at Ashley Smith’s home, he seems much too calm and composed. He bounces off the walls perfunctorily when he smokes the meth, but you’d think the adrenaline from his crimes would have already put him at least halfway there. We’re told Brian is desperate to make contact with his newborn son but even the actor best known for playing Martin Luther King (in SELMA) makes it impossible to have a speck of sympathy for a character who’s introduced gunning down four innocents. Kate Mara is fine but does not make much of an impression. This may be a true story but the enterprise seems contrived–more like an actors’ workshop than a drama. The poster for CAPTIVE depicts Oyelowo running, gun in hand, like this in an action film. The producers of CAPTIVE (including Oyelowo) may have been wise to have played up the Christian angle (as some recent box-office surprises have proven). Preserving the original title of Ashley Smith’s book Unlikely Angel, would have been a good start instead of the generic CAPTIVE, and more emphasis on how The Purpose Driven Life affected this story may have helped but as is, neither the dramatic or religious details of Ashley Smith and Brian Nichol’s encounter ever come into satisfying focus.

1 1/2 of 5 Stars

Read my recent interview with actor David Oyelowo HERE

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PAWN SACRIFICE – The Review

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The kid faces the champion, loses, fights his way back, and takes the rematch. It’s a familiar sports trope and PAWN SACRIFICE, the biography of volatile chess champ Bobby Fischer, is as formulaic in its own way as ROCKY (or if you prefer, SEARCHING FOR BOBBY FISCHER). The good news is that it’s an intense and fascinating drama capable of involving those who know little about chess as well as avid players.

Raised by his single Jewish mother, Brooklyn native Fischer was born in 1943 and was proficient on the chess board by the age of six. A self-taught player, he continued mastering his game though his early teens, when he defeated star players. As an adult (played by Tobey Maguire) Fischer’s success at the game grows, but his mental state begins to unravel and he suspects the government is watching his every move. Two men enter Bobby’s life to help manage his career – attorney Paul Marshall (Michael Stuhlbarg) and Father Bill Lombardy (Peter Sarsgaard), a heavy-drinking ex-chess champ. Much of the second half of PAWN SACRIFICE focuses on Fischer famously winning the world title from defending champion Boris Spassy in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1972.

Fischer’s story seems a natural for a movie, yet it’s a tricky one. Tasked with the challenge of making a two-player strategy board game seem cinematic is Ed Zwick, director of big-scale epics like GLORY and THE LAST SAMURAI and he does a terrific job working on a smaller battlefield. If you’re expecting close-ups of pawns and rooks being shuffled about in slow motion while dramatic music plays, there is a little of that, but Zwick wisely saves it until the film’s final half hour. He makes other good choices, including having the first match between Fischer and Spassky take place off-screen. Screenwriter Steven Knight provides an insightful look at not only chess but serious mental illness, the psychology of competition, and a battle the film refers to as “World War Three on a chessboard” that would prove to be a major propaganda win for America during the Cold War. James Newton Howard’s score has the right combination of wonder and the hint of something sinister. Period details are impeccable – not just in the costuming and art design but in the vintage newscasts about the event that are perfectly chosen and incorporated along with references to Watergate and the Vietnam War.

PAWN SACRIFICE is anchored by the outstanding performance of Tobey Maguire as Fischer. Mercurial and highly-strung, his interpretation of this tortured genius is textured and complex. There may bit a bit too much focus on his paranoia (how many times do we have to see him dismantling his phone?), but Maguire makes Fischer’s journey from a swaggering “ego-crushing” genius to a shaken shell of a man believable. Liev Schreiber, 90%  of whose part is spoken in Russian, is perfect as the arrogant, confident Spassky. Bobby Fischer eventually descended into madness, arrests, crazed outbursts and allegiance to a religious doomsday cult before his death at age 65 from kidney disease. The film addresses some of this in a brief addendum complete with startling archival footage. Fischer’s bizarre post-Spassky life might one day make for an interesting film of its own.

4 1/2 of 5 Stars

PAWN SACRIFICE opens in St. Louis Friday September 18th exclusively at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theater

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BLACK MASS – The Review

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Hit the deck! Rat-a-tat-tat!! These are the sounds of a cinema staple, the gangster genre. From the early silent days, “thugs with dirty mugs” were the source of many a “hit” at the box office, of course. Soon after the Brothers Warner began their studio, they quickly became the premiere producers of these “blood and thunder” morality plays, featuring a “murderers’ row” of movie icons headed by James Cagney, Edward G Robertson, and Humphrey Bogart. In the waning years of Hollywood’s Golden Age, these thrillers often merged with the biography genre with the stories of real-life 20’s and 30’s criminals like John Dillinger, Bonnie Parker, and Clyde Barrow, and, the big man himself, “Scarface” Al Capone. With the phenomenal success of THE GODFATHER, these “public enemies” were back in vogue, continuing even to this day. Now the Warners are back in the true tale gangster biz, but they’re not offering up a new spin on those tommy-gun toting terrors. Here’s a crime kingpin from a much more recent era who’s actually still around. Now, this isn’t a look at his rise and fall. Rather it’s the tale of an unlikely alliance between this brutal underworld czar and a “G-Man”! Suit up for a truly pitch-dark BLACK MASS.

As the film opens, we’re in an interrogation room, as the “lieutenant” of Boston’s infamous “Winter Hill Gang”, Kevin Weeks (Jesse Plemons) talks about his boss, the crime ruler of the Irish south side, James “Whitey” Bulger (Johnny Depp). We then flashback to FBI agent John Connolly (Joel Edgerton) who has returned to his hometown in 1975, along with his bride Marianne (Julianne Nicholson), and is now part of the bureau’s Boston HQ. The local agents are frustrated with their lack of progress in stopping the illegal activities of the Italian mob to the north and Whitey’s south stronghold. Then John gets an idea. He grew up in the same neighborhood as the Bulgers, why not reach out to state Senate politico Billy Bulger (Benedict Cumberbatch) and see if he can put him in contact with Whitey, so that he can recruit him as an informant on his Italian rivals (in exchange, the feds would look the other way on Whitey’s petty crimes). John’s supervisor Charles McGuire (Kevin Bacon) is skeptical, but another agent, John Morris (David Harbour) is supportive. Billy Bulger is insulted by John, but to his shock, Whitey calls the agent. So, an agreement is forged. As long as Whitey supplies the info and steers clear of felonies (particularly murder), the FBI will ease up on his operations. But the hair-trigger Whitey is not so easily restrained, and soon he’s setting up shop in Miami, while providing guns and cash to the IRA. As he and John become a close team (and the agent become a rising star at the bureau), a new prosecutor, Fred Wyshak (Corey Stoll) questions this “relationship”. Can he possibly reign in Whitey’s gang , who’s now protected by the ambitious Connolly?

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The real James “Whitey” Bulger

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The film’s main selling point is Depp as the almost reptilian mob boss, Whitey, and he most certainly delivers. After more than a decade of maximum quirk as the MVP of Tim Burton and Gore Verbinski flicks, he’s tossed the eyeliner and eccentric duds and nails the complexity of this real life monster mobster. He can be sweet and charming as in the scenes with his sainted mother and adored young son. But then, almost without warning, a switch is flipped and the killer is freed from its shackles. With his hair slicked back to a bullet-like sheen, Depp evokes the image of a human cobra, one that gives no hiss as a warning. On the contrary, he takes great giddy pleasure from lulling his prey into relaxed calm, even shaking their hands, before the out-of-nowhere death strike. With a performance recalling Cagney classics (THE PUBIC ENEMY and WHITE HEAT), it’s nice to see Deep back on earth after so many years in on the planet of the weird. While his image adorns the ads and posters, the film is really the story of the seduction and corruption of Connolly ,and Edgerton, coming off his excellent work on THE GIFT, shows us the ambitious longing in the compromised lawman. He will truly bargain with the devil himself in order to advance his career and get to that next level with the grander title and the bigger office. Later we see the desperation in his eyes as Connolly frantically tries to talk himself out of the deep, deep hole that he has dug, one that traps him as its walls collapse about his feet.

Actually the entire cast is stellar as they support these two very compelling leads. Nicholson as Mrs. Connolly presents a woman quickly falling out of love, with a real sense of disgust as she realizes that her husband shares their emotional bed with a creature of pure evil (a creepy confrontation with Whitey is quite unnerving). Harbor is enthralling as Connolly’s cheerleader/sidekick who slowly learns that he’s very much out of his depth. Bacon is an entertaining hardcase as the big FBI boss, but the terrific Adam Scott has little to do besides modeling tacky 70’s fashions and hairstyles, unfortunately. Stoll proves to be a most capable verbal sparring partner for Edgerton. From his introduction, we sense that he’s a legal pit bull. Cumberbatch tempers his small screen charisma and gives us an original take on an “old school” career politician, one with fierce family pride. He can’t turn his back on his family, especially his brother, no matter the horror tales told behind his back. Peter Sarsgaard shines in a terrific small role as a “coked up” Miami wheeler-dealer nicknamed “Balloonhead”. Plemons and W. Earl Brown are very convincing as two of Whitey’s most trusted enforcers, both morphing into dead-eyed real human terminators, while their cohort Rory Cochrane lets his sadness escape through the eyes of his bulldog-like mug. He lets us see how the humiliation and degradation meted out by his boss has taken its toil on him. That “50 Shades” lady, Dakota Johnson brings out the human side of Whitey in her soft, subtle turn as his common-in-law wife Lindsey Cyr. Great cameo turns by Bill Camp and Juno Temple round out this impressive ensemble.

In his third outing as a director (CRAZY HEART, OUT OF THE FURNACE) former actor Scott Cooper fights a difficult battle to keep this long, meandering screenplay moving forward. Unfortunately it usually gets the better of him, despite his considerable efforts. Although it mainly focuses in on a ten-year period going from the disco 70’s to the grim and gritty 80’s, the script quickly becomes an illustrated rap sheet, checking off a list of crimes (then he did this, then this, then…). There are a few moments between murders where the characters rather than the blood-splattered set pieces take command. One such sequence is the very tense BBQ dinner at the Connolly home, going right from a recipe inquiry (probably too similar to Joe Pesci’s iconic “How am I funny?” monologue, but still strong) to the threat-laced passive-aggressive duet between Whitey and Marianne (just watch the other audience members squirm during this). Bulger supposedly was the inspiration for Jack Nicholson’s “Paddy” Costello character in Martin Scorsese’s THE DEPARTED. Ultimately this new film is swallowed up in the shadow of that Oscar winner, and especially by the even earlier GOODFELLAS (Depp often seems to be doing a mash-up of its DeNiro and Pesci characters). This is a shame, since the movie gets the period look, from autos to fashions, down perfectly and the  Boston location work is exceptional. Perhaps another script draft, or a bit more narration would have helped keep things moving. At least the film reminds us of what a terrific actor Depp can be when given challenging material. But really all the actors are superb, it’s just truly frustrating that the narrative fumbles what should be a cinema touchdown. BLACK MASS, like the law man’s plan at its center, is a flawed attempt at greatness.

3.5 Out of 5

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HELLIONS – The Review

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Bruce McDonald is a name with whom few readers will likely associate with anything, but for those few of us who do, we know this Canadian-born filmmaker has some under-appreciated talent. Perhaps his best-known film, McDonald wowed genre film fans in 2008 with his groundbreaking PONTYPOOL. Since then, rumors and theories about a follow-up sequel have endured endless revivals in smaller circles of horror fandom. So, despite having a few lesser-known non-horror films to his name since 2008, I and others were excited to see McDonald return to horror just in time for Halloween.

HELLIONS is McDonald’s latest film, written by Pascal Trottier, best known for screenwriting THE COLONY (2013), combines McDonald’s unconventional storytelling sense and Trottier’s knack for cerebral flair. The film stars Chloe Rose as Dora Vogel, an apathetic teenager who unexpectedly discovers she’s pregnant and must survive Halloween night when her home is invaded my trick or treaters wanting much more than candy. An overbearing mother and a lack of direction in her life are quickly the least of her worries as she stays home alone on Halloween night and finds herself the target of some creepy child-like tormenters.

The first thing I noticed about HELLIONS was how familiar it felt. The film serves up a number a standard features for Halloween-themed horror films. The devilish trick or treaters often reminded me of the beloved Sam from TRICK ‘R TREAT (2007) but also, as the film progresses, brought back nostalgic memories of watching Stephen King’s CHILDREN OF THE CORN (1984). The film takes place in a small town, one which certainly evokes that of Haddonfield, Illinois. There’s even a moment when Dora cracks a joke about how the town would probably disappear from the map if not for Halloween.

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These are all things that lead one to believe HELLIONS is McDonald’s ode to the cherished holiday of horrors. We can read even further into this, if we like, including connections to such films as Roman Polanski’s 1968 classic, or as a stretch, even to Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 masterpiece, as Dora lives on Overlook Road. I’ll refrain from digging any deeper at this time, given the spoiling nature of such a pursuit. Ultimately, all of this alleged homaging is not the purpose of the film.

In returning to the meat of the film, HELLIONS also stars veteran actor Robert Patrick as the town’s sheriff Corman, who has a close relationship with Dora. Corman serves as a crucial supporting role later in the film, but Dora is not just the central character in the film but also damn near the sole focus. In many ways, HELLIONS is a single character-driven psychological mind-screw as we travel through the fears and nightmares Dora endures. McDonald does not spoon-feed his audience, shying away from any traditional horror formula, even if the film as a whole fails to present any truly original idea of its own.

Once the film comes full-circle, certain to have lost some viewers and engaged others into giving birth to a far-reaching tangent of theories and side stories connected to the film, HELLIONS is a sonically and visually captivating horror film that will serve well for Halloween viewing, given its relatively short 80-minute run time. Anything more and the meat of the film would have rotted off the bone, leaving just the skeleton of a good idea. McDonald successfully pares down the film, keeping it smart and spunky.

HELLIONS also co-stars Rossif Sutherland as Doctor Henry and Rachel Wilson as Dora’s mother Kate. Once again, these characters have minor significance in the grand scheme of the film, but rather serve as pawns in McDonald’s game of gory chess to setup the ensuing insanity. The film boasts some respectfully accomplished special effects that are low-key but highly effective and also an eerie, intensely-disturbing score that is beyond creepy, if not somewhat repetitive in its recycled usage. I will give special acknowledgment to cinematographer Norayr Kaspar, who captured Dora’s tormented mind and soul as an external interpretation on film. This goes a long way in making McDonald’s vision an intriguing experience, despite the film’s flaws.

HELLIONS opens in theaters and VOD on Friday, September 18th, 2015.

Overall Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

Beauty, Power and Grace

EVEREST Visual Soundtrack Preview From Oscar-Winning Composer Dario Marianelli

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Varèse Sarabande will release the EVEREST – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack digitally and on CD September 18, 2015.

The album features the original music composed by Dario Marianelli (ATONEMENT, THE BOXTROLLS). The score is great and it’s what makes the movie even more intense!

“My initial instinctive approach to the score, which our director, Baltasar Kormákur, liked and encouraged me to follow, was to have a calling voice, a distant siren call,” explained Marianelli.  “It is at the same time a voice that represents the ancient goddess-like mountain, but also a luring and irresistible calling to one’s own destiny.”

Marianelli’s musical “siren call” was performed by singer Melanie Pappenheim. “The same tune that I wrote for Melanie was also played by two wonderful string players in many variations—Caroline Dale and David La Page, with whom I also have worked on several other movies,” he said.  “There were also moments where I tried to evoke a primal, raw power, and I tried to build a sense of surging pressure with the blasting brass instruments.”

“The opposite point of the musical compass is the ‘conquering’ attitude of the mountaineers, a kind of macho, go-getting approach to nature,” Marianelli continued, “which is reflected in a much more propulsive, percussive and energetic musical idiom.”

Inspired by the incredible events surrounding an attempt to reach the summit of the world’s highest mountain, EVEREST documents the awe-inspiring journey of two different expeditions challenged beyond their limits by one of the fiercest snowstorms ever encountered by mankind. Their mettle tested by the harshest elements found on the planet, the climbers will face impossible obstacles as a lifelong obsession becomes a breathtaking struggle for survival.

The epic adventure stars Jason Clarke, Josh Brolin, John Hawkes, Robin Wright, Michael Kelly, Sam Worthington, Keira Knightley, Emily Watson and Jake Gyllenhaal.

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Marianelli was born in Pisa and studied piano and composition in Florence and London. After a year as a postgraduate composer at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, he spent three years at the National Film and Television School, from which he graduated in 1997.

Marianelli’s film scores include THE BOXTROLLS (2014), ANNA KARENINA (2012), JANE EYRE (2011), SALMON FISHING IN THE YEMEN (2011), EAT PRAY LOVE (2010), THE SOLOIST (2009), AGORA (2009), ATONEMENT (2007), V FOR VENDETTA (2006) and PRIDE & PREJUDICE (2005).  He has written orchestral music for the Queensland Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra and the Britten-Pears Orchestra, as well as vocal music for the BBC Singers, incidental music for the Royal Shakespeare Company, and several ballet scores.

Dario won the Academy Award, Golden Globe Award and Ivor Novello Award in the Best Original Score category for the Working Title film ATONEMENT, for which he won the World Soundtrack Award and was BAFTA nominated. He was also nominated for a Classical Brit Award in the Soundtrack of the Year category for ATONEMENT and earned additional Oscar nominations for PRIDE & PREJUDICE and ANNA KARENINA.

Universal Pictures’ EVEREST may now be experienced exclusively on IMAX 3D and premium-large format 3D screens on September 18. It will be released wide—including standard 2D and 3D—on September 25.

Varèse Sarabande will release the EVEREST – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack digitally and on CD September 18, 2015.

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