KILL YOUR DARLINGS – The Review

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All right movie geeks, it’s true-life movie origin story time. I’m referring to a sort of pre-greatness biography flick. Of course, when the origin word is brought up you may first think of the comic book heroes that populate multiplexes during the warmer months (well, now a certain Asgardian is establishing a Fall beach head). Said characters usually begin their film or comic series with the story of what happened before they donned cape and mask. And Superman even has a long-running spin-off set in his own past, as Superboy. The movies have done the same thing with real folks many times over the years. There’s YOUNG MR. LINCOLN and YOUNG TOM EDISON to BUTCH AND SUNDANCE: THE EARLY YEARS to NOWHERE BOY (about a pre-“fab four” John Lennon). The new film KILL YOUR DARLINGS takes us to the college years of famed beat poet Allan Ginsberg of later “Howl” fame. But it’s not all about lectures and libraries. Along the road to literary stardom, Ginsberg and some other famous scribes encountered a horrific crime.

As the film begins, said crime has been committed and an arrest has been made. But then we flashback to the teenage Allan Ginsberg (Daniel Radciffe), typing away under the watchful eye of his cold, intellectual poet father Louis (David Cross) while trying to take care of his mentally fragile mother Naomi (Jennifer Jason Leigh) in the early 1940’s. One day a reprieve from his stifling life comes in the form of an acceptance letter from Columbia University. Allan will live on campus as he pursues his ambition to be a poet. While touring the campus, the button-down Ginsberg encounters the flamboyant, rebellious older student Lucien Carr (Dane DeHaan). The freshman is immediately drawn to the charismatic senior poet who introduces him to Manhattan nightlife along with some of his friends: writer and “chemical expert” William Burroughs (Ben Foster), gregarious poet/ ex-merchant marine Jack Kerouac (Jack Huston), and the older college janitor who has a past with Carr, David Kammerer (Michael C. Hall). As the young men break the rules of the literary arts, they experiment with sex and drugs, and eventually are embroiled in a web of deceit, infatuation, obsession, and murder.

After using the Broadway stage as a vehicle to burst into more adult roles with “Equus” now Radcliffe follows up his THE WOMAN IN BLACK with this very provocative movie role. His Ginsberg is a man finally liberated from his prison of a home, and thanks to Carr is finally spreading his wings (in addition to exploring his sexuality). The young poet, upon meeting his mentor, is filled with curiosity and eager to join his intellectual crusade. These feeling turn to love as Ginsberg rejects the hard rules of academia. Radcliffe completely throws himself into to the role showing us that this fine actor is much more than the eternal boy wizard. DeHaan, after dark roles in THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES and CHRONICLE, goes even darker as the self-proclaimed leader of this new re-thinking of poetry. We can see his interest in young Ginsberg as he delights in taking him under his wing. But then there’s his other side, one of blase’ cruelty, slowly shown to the underclassmen and evident in his dealings with Kammerer. Hall conveys him as a man of obsession, drawn to someone who dismisses him as a relic of the past. Foster gives Burroughs a cool, serious “lab nerd” vibe as the promoter of “better living through chemistry”. But as their group dissolves , he realizes that no amount of stimulants will put them back on track. Huston brings a lot of energy to the outgoing Kerouac, who doesn’t seem to realize that Carr wishes to be much more than friends. There’s terrific supporting turns by Cross as the aloof father and Leigh as the too-fragile-for this-world mother along with Elizabeth Olsen as Kerouac’s neglected fiance and Kyra Sedgwick as Carr’s high society mother who must return from her Park Avenue parties in order to clean up after her son’s indiscretions.

First time feature director and co-screenwriter Krokidas gives the film a nice nostalgic mood. His 1940’s campus is full of muted greens, greys, and browns suggesting an old faded photo from a forgotten scrapbook. And besides the center piece crime, he also gives the film a palpable sense of danger as homosexuals were routinely arrested by police in addition to being expelled and fired from jobs. Unfortunately the film stumbles as it tries to portray the writing process. Here it is fueled by drugs, so the film makers resort to amped-up collages intercuting be-bop musicians with the principals feverishly pounding away (often in the nude) on their typewriters, accentuated with sweaty close-ups and motor-mouthed chattering. But there is that wonderful cast who look very authentic in the wonderful period clothing. The film has a great sense of time and place even as the story meanders. KILL YOUR DARLINGS an interesting, often involving “origin” story of this real life literary team. They’re almost a poetic “Avengers” with a very dark, complex leader at its center.

3.5 Out of 5

KILL YOUR DARLINGS opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Tivoli Theatre

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Bryan Cranston Thriller COLD COMES THE NIGHT Gets A January 10, 2014 Release Date

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Stage 6 Films and Samuel Goldwyn Films will release Syncopated Films’ COLD COMES THE NIGHT in theatres and Video-on-Demand on January 10, 2014.

COLD COMES THE NIGHT screened as part of the St. Louis International Film Festival earlier in November.

Read our review HERE.

Written and directed by Tze Chun (Children of Invention) and co-written by Osgood Perkins and Nick Simon, the thriller stars Emmy Award® winner Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad), Alice Eve (Star Trek Into Darkness) and Logan Marshall-Green (Prometheus).

COLD COMES THE NIGHT tells the story of a struggling motel owner (Eve) and her daughter who are taken hostage by a nearly blind career criminal (Cranston) to be his eyes as he attempts to retrieve his parcel of cash from a crooked cop (Marshall-Green).

The film is produced by Mynette Louie and Trevor Sagan, and co-produced by Terry Leonard.

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The Academy Presents Rare Screening Of Richard Williams’s THE THIEF AND THE COBBLER December 10

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The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences celebrates animator Richard Williams with the first public screening of the original version of his film “The Thief and the Cobbler” on Tuesday, December 10, at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills. Williams, who has worked on the now legendary feature throughout the past 25 years, will be on hand to introduce the newly reconstructed original work print from 1992.

Loosely influenced by Persian miniatures, the film has become a legend in the animation industry. Williams began this ambitious film in 1968, and over the next 25 years, collaborated on it with such animators as Ken Harris and Emery Hawkins from Warner Bros., as well as Art Babbitt from Disney and Grim Natwick, the creator of Betty Boop.

The film was originally self-financed by Williams, but after he received two Academy Awards® in 1988 for “Who Framed Roger Rabbit,” Williams was able to secure additional external finances so that the film could be completed. The investors ultimately pulled the project from him and it was completed by other animators. The resulting film was released in different versions under the titles “The Princess and the Cobbler” and “Arabian Knight.”

The film will be accompanied by Williams’s 1972 Oscar®-winning animated short “A Christmas Carol,” which he adapted from the 1843 novella by Charles Dickens. In conjunction with the screenings, the Academy’s ongoing public exhibition “Richard Williams: Master of Animation,” which includes film clips, iPad presentations, photos and original artwork, will be open for extended viewing hours in the Grand Lobby Gallery.

Tuesday, December 10, 7:30 p.m.Samuel Goldwyn Theater
8949 Wilshire Boulevard
Beverly Hills, CA 90211  Doors open at 6:30 p.m.
General admission seating is unreserved.

TICKETS – $5 general admission/$3 Academy members and students with a valid ID. Limit four.

On sale starting Monday, December 2 online and by mail.

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2014 Film Independent Spirit Awards Nominations Announced

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Film Independent announced nominations for the 2014 Film Independent Spirit Awards this morning.

Film Independent President Josh Welsh presided over the press conference held at the W Hollywood, with actresses Octavia Spencer and Paula Patton presenting the nominations.

Nominees for Best Feature included 12 Years a Slave, All Is Lost, Frances Ha, Inside Llewyn Davis and Nebraska.

Mud was selected to receive the annual Robert Altman Award, which is bestowed upon one film’s director, casting director and ensemble cast.

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In its commitment to recognizing the importance of below the line contributions to the art of filmmaking, Film Independent has now introduced, for the first year, the Best Editing category in the Spirit Awards.

Winners will be announced at the Spirit Awards on Saturday, March 1, 2014. The awards ceremony will be held as a daytime luncheon in a tent on the beach in Santa Monica, with the premiere broadcast airing later that evening at 10:00 pm ET/PT exclusively on IFC.

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2014 FILM INDEPENDENT SPIRIT AWARD NOMINATIONS

BEST FEATURE (Award given to the Producer, Executive Producers are not awarded)

12 Years a Slave PRODUCERS: Dede Gardner, Anthony Katagas, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen, Arnon Milchan, Brad Pitt, Bill Pohlad
All Is Lost PRODUCERS: Neal Dodson, Anna Gerb
Frances Ha PRODUCERS: Noah Baumbach, Scott Rudin, Rodrigo Teixeira, Lila Yacoub
Inside Llewyn Davis PRODUCERS: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Scott Rudin
Nebraska PRODUCERS: Albert Berger, Ron Yerxa

BEST DIRECTOR

Shane Carruth Upstream Color
J.C. Chandor All Is Lost
Steve McQueen 12 Years a Slave
Jeff Nichols Mud
Alexander Payne Nebraska

BEST SCREENPLAY

Woody Allen Blue Jasmine
Julie Delpy, Ethan Hawke & Richard Linklater Before Midnight
Nicole Holofcener Enough Said
Scott Neustadter &Michael H. Weber The Spectacular Now
John Ridley 12 Years a Slave

BEST FIRST FEATURE (Award given to the director and producer)

Blue Caprice DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Alexandre MoorsPRODUCERS: Kim Jackson, Brian O’Carroll, Isen Robbins, Will Rowbotham, Ron Simons, Aimee Schoof, Stephen Tedeschi
Concussion DIRECTOR: Stacie PassonPRODUCER: Rose Troche
Fruitvale Station DIRECTOR: Ryan CooglerPRODUCERS: Nina Yang Bongiovi, Forest Whitaker
Una Noche DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Lucy MulloyPRODUCERS: Sandy Perez Aguila, Maite Artieda, Daniel Mulloy, Yunior Santiago
Wadjda DIRECTOR: Haifaa Al MansourPRODUCERS: Gerhard Meixner, Roman Paul

BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY

Lake Bell In A World
Joseph Gordon-Levitt Don Jon
Bob Nelson Nebraska
Jill Soloway Afternoon Delight
Michael Starrbury The Inevitable Defeat of Mister and Pete

JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD – Given to the best feature made for under $500,000.  Award given to the writer, director, and producer.  Executive Producers are not awarded.

Computer Chess WRITER/DIRECTOR: Andrew BujalskiPRODUCERS: Houston King & Alex Lipschultz
Crystal Fairy WRITER/DIRECTOR: Sebastian SilvaPRODUCERS: Juan de Dios Larrain & Pablo Larrain
Museum Hours WRITER/DIRECTOR: Jem CohenPRODUCERS: Paolo Calamita & Gabriele Kranzelbinder
Pit Stop WRITER/DIRECTOR: Yen TanWRITER: David LoweryPRODUCERS: Jonathan Duffy, James M. Johnston,Eric Steele, Kelly Williams
This is Martin Bonner WRITER/DIRECTOR: Chad HartiganPRODUCER: Cherie Saulter

BEST FEMALE LEAD

Cate Blanchett Blue Jasmine
Julie Delpy Before Midnight
Gaby Hoffmann Crystal Fairy
Brie Larson Short Term 12
Shailene Woodley The Spectacular Now

BEST MALE LEAD

Bruce Dern Nebraska
Chiwetel Ejiofor 12 Years a Slave
Oscar Isaac Inside Llewyn Davis
Michael B. Jordan Fruitvale Station
Matthew McConaughey Dallas Buyers Club
Robert Redford All Is Lost

BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE

Melonie Diaz Fruitvale Station
Sally Hawkins Blue Jasmine
Lupita Nyong’o 12 Years a Slave
Yolonda Ross Go For Sisters
June Squibb Nebraska

BEST SUPPORTING MALE

Michael Fassbender 12 Years a Slave
Will Forte Nebraska
James Gandolfini Enough Said
Jared Leto Dallas Buyers Club
Keith Stanfield Short Term 12

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Sean Bobbitt 12 Years a Slave
Benoit Debie Spring Breakers
Bruno Delbonnel Inside Llewyn Davis
Frank G. DeMarco All Is Lost
Matthias Grunsky Computer Chess

BEST EDITING

Shane Carruth & David Lowery Upstream Color
Jem Cohen & Marc Vives Museum Hours
Jennifer Lame Frances Ha
Cindy Lee Una Noche
Nat Sanders Short Term 12

BEST DOCUMENTARY (Award given to the director and producer)

20 Feet From Stardom DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Morgan NevillePRODUCERS: Gil Friesen & Caitrin Rogers
After Tiller DIRECTORS/PRODUCERS: Martha Shane & Lana Wilson
Gideon’s Army DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Dawn PorterPRODUCER: Julie Goldman
The Act of Killing DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Joshua OppenheimerPRODUCERS: Joram Ten Brink, Christine Cynn, Anne Kohncke, Signe Byrge Sorensen,Michael Uwemedimo
The Square DIRECTOR: Jehane NoujaimPRODUCER: Karim Amer

BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM (Award given to the director)

A Touch of Sin(China) DIRECTOR: Jia Zhang-Ke
Blue is the Warmest Color(France) DIRECTOR: Abdellatif Kechiche
Gloria(Chile) DIRECTOR: Sebastian Lelio
The Great Beauty(Italy) DIRECTOR: Paolo Sorrentino
The Hunt
(Denmark)
DIRECTOR: Thomas Vinterberg

ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD – (Given to one film’s director, casting director, and its ensemble cast)

Mud Director: Jeff Nichols
Casting Director: Francine Maisler
Ensemble Cast:  Joe Don Baker, Jacob Lofland, Matthew McConaughey, Ray McKinnon, Sarah Paulson, Michael Shannon, Sam Shepard, Tye Sheridan, Paul Sparks, Bonnie Sturdivant, Reese Witherspoon

17th ANNUAL PIAGET PRODUCERS AWARD – The 17th annual Producers Award, sponsored by Piaget, honors emerging producers who, despite highly limited resources demonstrate the creativity, tenacity, and vision required to produce quality, independent films.  The award includes a $25,000 unrestricted grant funded by Piaget.

Toby Halbrooks & James M. Johnston
Jacob Jaffke
Andrea Roa
Frederick Thornton

20th ANNUAL SOMEONE TO WATCH AWARD – The 20th annual Someone to Watch Award recognizes a talented filmmaker of singular vision who has not yet received appropriate recognition.

My Sister’s Quinceanera DIRECTOR: Aaron Douglas Johnston
Newlyweeds DIRECTOR: Shaka King
The Foxy Merkins DIRECTOR: Madeline Olnek

19th ANNUAL STELLA ARTOIS TRUER THAN FICTION AWARD – The 19th annual Truer Than Fiction Award, sponsored by Stella Artois, is presented to an emerging director of non-fiction features who has not yet received significant recognition.  The award includes a $25,000 unrestricted grant.

Kalyanee Mam A River Changes Course
Jason Osder Let the Fire Burn
Stephanie Spray & Pacho Velez Manakamana

 

TOTALS PER FILM

FILM TITLE CATEGORIES # OF NOMINATIONS
12 Years a Slave Best CinematographyBest DirectorBest FeatureBest Male Lead

Best Screenplay

Best Supporting Female

Best Supporting Male

7
20 Feet From Stardom Best Documentary 1
A River Changes Course Stella Artois Truer Than Fiction Award 1
A Touch of Sin Best International Film 1
After Tiller Best Documentary 1
Afternoon Delight Best First Screenplay 1
All Is Lost Best CinematographyBest DirectorBest FeatureBest Male Lead 4
Before Midnight Best Female LeadBest Screenplay 2
Blue Caprice Best First Feature 1
Blue is the Warmest Color Best International Film 1
Blue Jasmine Best Female LeadBest ScreenplayBest Supporting Female 3
Computer Chess Best CinematographyJohn Cassavetes Award 2
Concussion Best First Feature 1
Crystal Fairy Best Female LeadJohn Cassavetes Award 2
Dallas Buyers Club Best Male LeadBest Supporting Male 2
Don Jon Best First Screenplay 1
Enough Said Best ScreenplayBest Supporting Male 2
Frances Ha Best EditingBest Feature 2
Fruitvale Station Best First FeatureBest Male LeadBest Supporting Female 3
Gideon’s Army            Best Documentary 1
Gloria         Best International Film 1
Go For Sisters            Best Supporting Female 1
In A World Best First Screenplay 1
Inside Llewyn Davis    Best CinematographyBest FeatureBest Male Lead 3
Let the Fire Burn         Stella Artois Truer Than Fiction Award 1
Manakamana  Stella Artois Truer Than Fiction Award 1
Mud           Best DirectorRobert Altman Award 2
Museum Hours           Best EditingJohn Cassavetes Award 2
My Sister’s Quinceanera Someone to Watch Award 1
Nebraska Best DirectorBest FeatureBest First ScreenplayBest Male Lead

Best Supporting Female

Best Supporting Male

6
Newlyweeds    Someone to Watch Award 1
Pit Stop John Cassavetes Award 1
Short Term 12 Best EditingBest Female LeadBest Supporting Male 3
Spring Breakers          Best Cinematography 1
The Act of Killing         Best Documentary 1
The Foxy Merkins      Someone to Watch Award 1
The Great Beauty Best International Film 1
The Hunt Best International Film 1
The Inevitable Defeat of Mister and Pete Best First Screenplay 1
The Spectacular Now Best Female LeadBest Screenplay 2
The Square Best Documentary 1
This is Martin Bonner John Cassavetes Award 1
Una Noche Best EditingBest First Feature 2
Upstream Color Best DirectorBest Editing 2
Wadjda Best First Feature 1

 SOURCE The Film Independent Spirit Awards

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Documentary Motion Picture Nominations Announced For 2014 Producers Guild Awards

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The Producers Guild of America (PGA) announced today, the Documentary Motion Picture nominees that will advance in the voting process for the 25th Annual Producers Guild Awards.

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The nominated films, listed below in alphabetical order, are:

    • A PLACE AT THE TABLE
    • FAR OUT ISN’T FAR ENOUGH: THE TOMI UNGERER STORY
    • LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM
    • WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS
    • WHICH WAY IS THE FRONT LINE FROM HERE? THE LIFE AND TIME OF TIM HETHERINGTON

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The TV Series/Specials and Digital Series nominees will be announced on December 3, 2013. All other nominations for the 2014 Producers Guild Award categories will be announced on January 2, 2014, along with the names of the eligible producers for the nominated documentary motion pictures.

All 2014 Producers Guild Award winners will be announced on January 19, 2014 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. The Producers Guild will also present special honors to Barbara Broccoli & Michael G. Wilson, Robert Iger, Peter Jackson & Joe Letteri, Chuck Lorre, and Chris Meledandri among others. The 2014 Producers Guild Awards Co-Chairs are Lori McCreary (INVICTUS, “Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman”) and Michael De Luca (CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, MONEYBALL, THE SOCIAL NETWORK).

In 1990, the Producers Guild held the first-ever Golden Laurel Awards, which were renamed the Producers Guild Awards in 2002. Richard Zanuck and Lili Fini Zanuck took home the award for Best Produced Motion Picture for DRIVING MISS DAISY, establishing the Guild’s awards as a bellwether for the Oscars. Last year, the PGA awarded ARGO with its Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures, marking the sixth consecutive year the Producers Guild has presaged the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ choice.

Watch Vanessa Hudgens In First Trailer For GIMME SHELTER

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A pregnant teenager flees life with her drug-addicted mother and ends up living on the street before being welcomed into her first real home in this gripping first trailer for GIMME SHELTER, an extraordinary tale of survival and redemption inspired by actual events. Starring Vanessa Hudgens, the film will be in theaters January 24, 2014.

For 16-year-old Agnes “Apple” Bailey (Vanessa Hudgens), life has been a constant struggle to overcome the harsh reality of a subsistence existence with her abusive mother, June (Rosario Dawson), and June’s string of lowlife boyfriends. When she finds herself pregnant and alone, Apple temporarily takes shelter with her biological father, Tom (Brendan Fraser), a wealthy Wall Streeter living in a New Jersey mansion with his wife Joanna (Stephanie Szostak) and two young children. But Apple’s inability to adjust to her new circumstances, and her refusal to terminate her pregnancy, soon force her back onto the streets.

Desperate to find a haven for herself and her unborn child, Apple reluctantly agrees to move into a suburban shelter that houses other pregnant teens. Emotionally scarred and unable to trust those who want to help her, it seems unlikely that Apple will be able to adapt to the shelter’s strict rules and high expectations. With her safety and that of her unborn child at risk, Apple must find a way to break the shackles of her unhappy past and embrace the future with clarity, maturity and hope.

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Inspired by the real-life, David-and-Goliath story of Several Sources Shelters founder Kathy DiFiore, award-winning writer and director Ronald Krauss wrote his original screenplay while spending a year in a shelter for pregnant teens, and based his poignant screenplay on the lives of several of the shelter mothers.

GIMME SHELTER stars Vanessa Hudgens (High School Musical franchise, Machete Kills), Rosario Dawson (Sin City, Trance), Brendan Fraser (Crash, The Mummy), James Earl Jones (The Great White Hope, Star Wars franchise), Ann Dowd (Compliance, Side Effects) and Dascha Polanco (“Orange is the New Black”).  Also appearing in the film are several real life shelter mothers, their babies and Kathy DiFiore.

The film is produced by Krauss and Jeff Rice (End of Watch, 2 Guns). Director of photography is Alain Marcoen (The Kid with a Bike, She is Not Crying, She is Singing). Production designer is William Ladd Skinner (This is the End, Pirates of the Caribbean franchise). Costume designer is Ciera Wells (All is Bright, Damsels in Distress). Executive producers are Paul Hellerman (Pulp Fiction, The Mexican) and Scott Steindorff (The Lincoln Lawyer, The Human Stain).

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Photos: Roadside Attractions

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GIVEAWAY – Win Lindsay Lohan’s THE CANYONS on DVD from IFC Films!

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Director Paul Schrader (writer of Raging Bull and Taxi Driver, director of Hardcore, American Gigolo and Cat People) and screenwriter Bret Easton Ellis (author of American Psycho) team up for THE CANYONS, a searing indictment of Hollywood culture and the year’s most controversial film.

Starring an acclaimed Lindsay Lohan in her first big-screen starring role in six years, the sexually charged thriller arrives on homevideo from IFC Films on November 26, 2013.

The film will be available on DVD and Blu-ray in its R-rated theatrical version, with SRPs, respectively, of $24.98 and $29.98; the Unrated Director’s Cut will also be available on Blu-ray for $29.98.

Order it here: http://www.amazon.com/Canyons-Blu-ray-Lindsay-Lohan/dp/B00EMAGK1W/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1385123788&sr=8-1&keywords=the+canyons+blu+ray

Arrogant young trust-fund baby Christian (adult-film star James Deen) is working on financing a horror film simply to keep his dad off his back. His girlfriend Tara (Lindsay Lohan, Mean Girls, Liz & Dick, Machete, Georgia Rule) is helping him with casting, and his producer, Gina (Amanda Brooks, Happy Hour) is trying to get her struggling actor boyfriend Ryan (Nolan Funk, Awkward) the lead role. Christian is also fond of inviting strangers into his home for threesomes or foursomes with the very willing Tara – and captures all the action on his smartphone.

But unbeknownst to Christian and Gina, Ryan and Tara were once a couple, and as soon as the two meet again at an audition, their romance is rekindled. When Christian discovers that Tara has been having an affair, he begins to play a series of cruelly escalating mind games with both Ryan and Tara, leading to an act of violence from which there can be no redemption.

Featuring fearless and unprecedented performances from its young cast and coolly beautiful cinematography that captures the tarnished edge of Tinseltown like no film since Mulholland Drive, THE CANYONS is a thought-provoking examination of privilege run amok.

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WAMG invites you to enter to win THE CANYONS on DVD.

Answer the following:

What was Lindsay Lohan’s first big movie role?

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES. NO P.O. BOXES.

2.  ENTER YOUR NAME AND ANSWER IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

3. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

The giveaway ends 11:59 a.m. est on December 9th.

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WAMG Interview: ‘A Conversation With Edith Head’ at the Sheldon December 6th and 7th

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A Conversation with Edith Head will be held at The Sheldon Ballroom in St. Louis on December 6th and 7th

ALL ABOUT EVE, ROMAN HOLIDAY, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, A PLACE IN THE SUN, THE STING. These great films and hundreds more have one thing in common: costume designer Edith Head (1897–1981). The small woman with the familiar straight bangs, black-rimmed saucer glasses, and unsmiling countenance racked up an unprecedented 35 Oscar nods and 400 film credits over the course of a sixty-year career. The golden age of Hollywood sparkled with extravagant cinematic productions and stars such as Bette Davis, Elizabeth Taylor, Natalie Wood, Mae West, Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Grace Kelly, Barbara Stanwyck, and Robert Redford were made even more glamorous by donning the costumes designed by incredibly talented Ms Head.

Theater director Susan Claassen, a New Jersey native got the idea for a project based on Edith Head several years ago after she watched a televised biography of the designer.  She realized that her physical resemblance to the designer was uncanny, especially when she put on a pair of large dark glasses. Sharing  Edith Head’s passion for fashion, she came up with the idea of a one-woman show. A Conversation with Edith Head, Susan walks around the theatre as Edith Head. She interacts with her audience, allowing them to ask questions and even bringing one or two into the production with an improvisation that only an accomplished actress like Susan Classen can do. She imparted many “Edith-isms” to us. Some of her favorites are – “Early on, I learned the most important person to please is the Hollywood director.” Or “The director I’m currently working with is always my favorite.” And “When you find a magic, stick with it and never change it.”

Susan Claassen will be bringing A Conversation with Edith Head to The Sheldon Ballroom (3648 Washington Blvd, St Louis, Missouri 63108) on December 6th and 7th. This event is presented in conjunction with the exhibition Glamour: Costumes and Images from the Collection of Mary Strauss, on view at the Sheldon Art Galleries from October 4 to December 28, 2013.

details and ticket info for that event can be found HERE

http://www.sheldonconcerthall.org/showdetail.asp?showID=672

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Susan Claassen took the time to talk with We Are Movie Geeks about Edith Head and her upcoming event here in St. Louis.

Interview conducted by Tom Stockman November 11th, 2013

We Are Movie Geeks: Hi Susan, are you looking forward to coming to St. Louis to talk about Edith Head?

Susan Claassen: Yes, did you see the Google doodle on October 16th?

WAMG: I did not.

SC: It was Edith Head. It was her 116th birthday – the face of costume design in film

WAMG: Neat! Have you been to St. Louis before?

SC: Not for many, many years.

WAMG: Edith Head’s mother was from St. Louis. Do you know much about her?

SC: She was born there but then moved to San Bernardino, so she didn’t really have roots there. But that’s interesting and I always adapt my show to each city. I’ll be back in December to do my show, A Conversation with Edith Head. It’s kind of a history of film. She worked for 60 years in the film industry. It’s kind of amazing.

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WAMG: I saw you introduce Hitchcock’s TO CATCH A THIEF recently. What are special about the costumes in TO CATCH A THIEF?

SC: The thing about Hitchcock is that he was very detailed about all aspects of his films. And Grace Kelly was the ultimate Hitchcock blonde. It was very interesting because Hitch literally wanted to go on a paid vacation to the South of France. They made the film and he got Cary Grant out of retirement to do the film. And that was the last film Grace Kelly did with him so all of those are interesting factors. The costuming, especially the gowns, were proof that Edith Head really understood that costumes further the narrative and I think that’s a key point in this film. Before the film begins I’ll talk about some of the gowns and first impressions and second impressions. Regarding the color choices, you could always tell that Hitch wanted Grace Kelly, in this film as well as REAR WINDOW, to look like a piece of Dresden china. So those are the kind of interesting things throughout the film. And of course you have the chemistry onscreen between Cary Grant and Grace Kelly that rivals any in cinema history.

WAMG: And you only answer questions in character as Edith, correct?

SC: Yes, and whenever I portray Edith Head, it has to be time appropriate so I can’t answer questions about Edna Mode (the Edith Head-based character voiced by Brad Bird in Pixar’s THE INCREDIBLES) or the Google Doodle when I am Edith. When you see the full show, A Conversation with Edith Head, there are questions. I have a host who takes them to make sure they’re time appropriate but the show changes with every performance depending on the questions.

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WAMG: When did you first develop an interest in Edith Head?

SC: I first became interested in Edith Head when I watched a biography of her. I’m an artistic director of a theater so I act and direct and put things together for other people but I had never put anything together for myself. I was watching Biography and I thought that I sort of look like her, and I was aware of her and I thought her story was fascinating. It was really a boy’s club when she came to Hollywood in 1923.

WAMG: So you never met or corresponded with her?

SC: No, but my collaborator wrote the book Edith Head’s Hollywood, so we had thirteen hours of taped interviews. The Academy put a reel together that I watched and studied and what’s really so wonderful is that people who did know her all have such rich stories to tell about her. Obviously, I know I’m not Edith Head, and most people know that I’m not, but they want to share a moment, a moment of memory of a movie palace or a film that they saw or who they were with or where they were in their lifetime when they saw one of her films. And I say, as Edith after the show, to share those memories and we’ve had people attend the show that did work with her. Tippi Hedren has seen the show several times. She was very good friends with Edith Head. After Alma Hitchcock, the next person Hitch had Tippi meet was Edith Head. They did a three day screen test together, full costuming and all, and they remained very good friends.

WAMG: There were two movies made bout Hitchcock a couple of years ago, HITCHCOCK and THE GIRL. I don’t recall, but was Edith Head a character in those films?

SC: No, HITCHCOCK was about PSYCHO and she didn’t do PSYCHO. She did do both THE BIRDS and MARNIE, but she was not a character in THE GIRL.

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WAMG: She should have been. You mentioned you were a theater director. Were you a budding costume designer yourself?

SC: No, I’ve always had a sense of style, and I always collaborate on the set with costumes and all so I was always certainly aware of Edith Head. People who knew her have been so generous with sharing information. Art Linkletter for example, did a show called House Party that Edith Head worked on and we interviewed him, Bob Mackie was a sketch artist for Edith. And others. Elke Sommer came to see the show and Sally Kirkland, who made her film debut as a stripper in THE STING, has seen the show as well. Everywhere I go, somebody has known Edith because she was a household name. If you think ‘Costume Designer’, who do you think of? Nobody will ever achieve what Edith Head achieved.

WAMG: Do you own any of her costumes or drawings?

SC: Yes, I own costumes and drawings. I’m going to bring a miniature of the fabulous gold dress from TO CATCH A THIEF on Sunday. But when you see A Conversation with Edith Head, there are lots of great things on the set. There’s a recreation of the dress Bette Davis wore in ALL ABOUT EVE and a dress Elizabeth Taylor wore in A PLACE IN THE SUN.

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WAMG: Tell me more about the A Conversation with Edith Head show. You say there’s a moderator that interviews you?

SC: Actually, we set it as if it’s a the Sheldon, because she was everywhere. He takes questions for me, questions for Edith Head to respond to. Again, you don’t have to know anything about film to enjoy it. You really understand what drives somebody and their inner workings. She was so driven She never walked off the set in a huff in 60 years. That’s phenomenal. She died two weeks after the wrap of DEAD MEN DON’T WEAR PLAID.

WAMG: I was going to ask about that. Her final job was for DEAD MEN DON’T WEAR PLAID where they incorporating Steve Martin and other actors into old movie scenes. Was this a challenging project for Edith Head?

SC: Carl Reiner, the director, wanted Edith for that film because of her work in Film Noir, DOUBLE INDEMNITY and others. And Edith Head loved working on that. The film is dedicated to her. She worked right up until the end. She was a big animal rights activist and advocate.

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WAMG: Were there any films that Edith Head was embarrassed to have worked on?

SC: Yes. The final Mae West films.

WAMG: Oh, yes, MYRA BRECKINRIDGE and SEXTETTE.

SC: Yes. Edith Head was great friends with Mae West and she did those films as a favor to her but she never saw those films.

WAMG: Vincent Price was from St. Louis. Did Edith Head ever design any costumes for him?

SC: She was with Paramount and occasionally she was lent out just like stars were lent out. In the later years she was with Universal, but she did design the costumes for THE TEN COMMANDMENTS which co-starred Vincent Price, so yes, she would have worked with him.

WAMG: Good luck with your show at the Sheldon. It should be a most interesting evening.

SC: Thank you.

NEBRASKA – The Review

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With NEBRASKA, director Alexander Payne returns to his home state of Nebraska to gracefully examine the lives of aging Midwesterners. Lensed in nostalgic black-and-white, Payne’s new film is anchored by an epic, awards-worthy performance by 7-year old Bruce Dern (crowned Best Actor at Cannes), but it’s not the unstable crazed Dern that made the actor a star in the ‘70s with films like BLACK SUNDAY, TATTOO and COMING HOME. Dern’s Woody Grant (a role offered to Gene Hackman to unsuccessfully lure him out of retirement) doesn’t say a lot in NEBRASKA nor does his expression change much. It’s a role that forces him to skate by on a Hollywood veteran’s charisma and gravity and presence, something tough for any actor to do, but Dern pulls it off in spectacular form, turning this deceptively slight film into one of the year’s best.

Alcoholic Woody Grant is convinced he’s won a million dollars in a Publisher’s Clearing House sweepstakes. Woody’s chirpy wife Kate (June Squibb – Jack Nicholson’s wife in Payne’s ABOUT SCHMIDT) threatens to use the money to put the old crank in a retirement home. Woody’s younger son David (SNL alum Will Forte – an unusual but rewarding casting choice), a passive electronics salesman, recognizes a fool’s errand but, seeing an opportunity to finally get to know his dad, indulges him. Father and son take a 800+ mile trek from Billings Montana to Lincoln Nebraska to collect the winnings. David’s wish to bond with his father is dashed early on as Woody gets drunk at the earliest possible convenience, suffers a nasty cut on his head, and loses his teeth on some railroad tracks. The pair eventually to take a detour and stay with long-unseen relatives in Hawthorne, Nebraska, the town where Woody grew up and where what’s left of his kin still reside. This is where most of the story takes place and where Woody’s family and old friends (and a couple of enemies) initially buy into to his claim of great upcoming wealth. Their ugly and greedy sides are exposed as confrontations, jealousies, and long pent-up revelations arise, making Woody’s homecoming more than a bit knotty.

A father/son bonding road trip isn’t exactly the most original idea and Payne and screenwriter Bob Nelson’s themes of aging parents, small town squalor, and middle-age children struggling with identity issues may seem like tiresome indie-film tropes, but the screenplay is wise and often funny. Payne’s skillful, subtle direction combined with Phedon Papamichael’s camerawork, with its dazzling Midwestern landscapes, well captures the story’s melancholy impression. But it’s mostly Payne’s skill as an actor’s director that are on display. Dern has a great scene where he tours his dilapidated boyhood home and another visiting a graveyard where his friends and family are all buried. These scenes are moving but the actor is equally powerful in humorous moments like his unimpressed assessment of Mount Rushmore. Forte underplays his sad sack part as well, coming off as a genuinely nice guy exasperated by his inability to keep his father sober and out of trouble. More colorful are the supporting players. Stacy Keach shines as the film’s villain, a jerk who feels he’s owed something from his old business associate Woody and uses threats to get it. June Squibb has several scene-stealing moments as Woody’s jaunty, vulgar wife. Shot throughout the Midwest, NEBRASKA is a well-pitched character study/road film that artfully mixes home-spun humor with haunting visuals and is highly recommended.

5 of 5 Stars

NEBRASKA opens in St. Louis Wednesday, November 27th at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theater

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Take A Trip With Ben Stiller In Latest Trailer For THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY

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Meet Walter Mitty – a day-dreamer who escapes his anonymous life by disappearing into a world of fantasies in 20th Century Fox’s highly anticipated, film THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY.

In theaters on Christmas Day, check out the fantastic new trailer and poster.

No one really knows the power of the private dreams inside our heads  . . . until they inspire our reality.  That’s what happens in Ben Stiller’s contemporary rethink of one of the most influential fantasy stories of all time – indeed the quintessential tale about the irresistible allure of fantasizing: James Thurber’s THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY.  Stiller has taken that two-and-a-half page 1939 classic and opened it up into a 21st Century comic epic about a man who finds that his real life is about to blow his wildly over-active imagination out of the water.

This Walter Mitty (Stiller) is a modern day-dreamer, an ordinary magazine photo editor who takes a regular mental vacation from his ho-hum existence by disappearing into a world of fantasies electrified by dashing heroism, passionate romance and constant triumphs over danger.  But when Mitty and the co-worker he secretly adores (Kristen Wiig) stand in actual peril of losing their jobs, Walter must do the unimaginable:  take real action – sparking a global journey more extraordinary than anything he could have ever dreamed up

THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY

Starring Ben Stiller, Kristen Wiig, Shirley MacLaine, Adam Scott, Kathryn Hahn, and Sean Penn, THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY  will be in theaters December 25th.

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THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY

THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY

Photos: Wilson Webb – TM & © 2013 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.