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.

http://thecanyonsmovie.com/

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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.

www.WalterMitty.com
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http://twitter.com/WalterMitty
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#Mitty

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.

HOMEFRONT Giveaway

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HOMEFRONT, the all new action film starring Jason Statham and James Franco hits theaters this week, and to celebrate WAMG is giving away a HOMEFRONT prize pack. Did we mention that it’s written by Sylvester Stallone? That’s an even better reason to celebrate! 

One Lucky winner will receive a Homefront poster signed by the cast along with a copy of the book that inspired the film signed by author, Chuck Logan.

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TO ENTER:

1. YOU MUST BE A U.S. RESIDENT WITH A U.S. SHIPPING ADDRESS. NO P.O. BOXES.

2. PLACE YOUR NAME, A VALID EMAIL, AND ANSWER TO THE QUESTION BELOW IN THE COMMENT SECTION OF THIS POST.

3. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE JASON STATHAM, JAMES FRANCO, OR SYLVESTER STALLONE FILM?

4. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN THROUGH A RANDOM DRAWING OF QUALIFYING CONTESTANTS. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

HOMEFRONT is an action movie about a widowed ex-DEA agent who retires to a small town for the sake of his 10-year-old daughter. The only problem is he picked the wrong town.

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Like the film on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HomeFrontMovie
Follow the film on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HomeFrontMovie

HOMEFRONT hits theaters November 27, 2013

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Aaron Eckhart To Star In Thriller INCARNATE

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WWE Studios and Blumhouse Productions announced today a partnership on INCARNATE, the micro-budget thriller from Blumhouse directed by Brad Peyton (JOURNEY 2: THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND), scripted by Ronnie Christensen (DARK TIDE) and starring Aaron Eckhart.

INCARNATE stars Aaron Eckhart as an unconventional exorcist who taps into the subconscious of a nine-year old boy played by David Mazouz who is possessed by a powerful, ancient demon.

WWE Superstar Mark Henry has been cast in a cameo role, and WWE Studios will leverage its extensive multi-platform reach for the film.

The film is currently shooting.

Jason Blum (Paranormal Activity, Insidious, The Purge and Sinister franchises) is producing the film for Blumhouse which is co-financing the production with IM Global. Michael Luisi, WWE Studios President, is Executive Producing alongside Couper Samuelson, Michael Seitzman, Trevor Engelson, Stuart Ford and Charles Layton.

Universal Pictures will distribute the film in the U.S. and Blumhouse International is overseeing foreign rights.

Jean-Claude Van Damme & Adam Brody Star In WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE In Theaters February 7

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Take a hilarious journey into the heart of madness when WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE arrives in theaters and via VOD February 7.  Check out the trailer below.

Featuring an exceptional cast of comedic talent including legendary action hero Jean-Claude Van Damme (The Expendables 2), Adam Brody (“Burning Love,” “The O.C.”), Megan Boone (“The Blacklist”), Kristen Schaal (“30 Rock,” “Bob’s Burgers”), Rob Huebel (The Descendants, “Children’s Hospital”), and Dennis Haysbert (“24,” “The Unit,” Major League), the laugh-out-loud comedy follows a group of unsuspecting office workers who find themselves stranded on a desert island when a corporate retreat led by unhinged former Marine Storm Rothchild (Van Damme) goes horribly wrong.

Now Chris (Brody) and his co-workers must battle nature — and each other — to survive!

Directed by Rob Meltzer and written by Jeff Kauffmann, WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE garnered the “Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Ensemble Cast” award at the 2013 Newport Beach Film Festival.

The Salt Company presents, in association with 120 DB Films and Stun Creative, a Pimienta Film Company Production: “Welcome to the Jungle.” Produced by Justin Kanew and Luillo Ruiz and distributed in theaters by Cinedigm in the United States and in home entertainment by Universal Studios Home Entertainment and Universal Pictures International Entertainment.

Like the film on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Welcome-to-the-Jungle-The-Movie/274468702622978

Follow on Twitter:  https://twitter.com/W2TheJungle

Join The MAD MONSTER PARTY Thursday December 5th at Schlafly Bottleworks – ‘Culture Shock’

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MAD MONSTER PARTY (1967) is screening at 7pm Thursday, December 5th at Schlafly Bottleworks – 7260 Southwest Ave St Louis, MO 63143. Doors open at 6:30pm. It’s a fundraiser for Helping Kids Together. Attend wearing a monster costume and you may win a DVD of the film!

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“Rankin/Bass” is a moniker long associated with television for the company’s long line of animated specials, the best-known being Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer which first aired in 1964. Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass brought their craft to the big screen the first with WILLY MCBEAN AND HIS MAGIC MACHINE in 1965, which was a flop as were their primarily live-action Hans Christian Andersen musical THE DAYDREAMER (1966) and the traditionally-animated THE WACKY WORLD OF MOTHER GOOSE (1967). While Rankin/Bass was soon to become a fixture in holiday television, a fact we were all reminded of every December, the studio tried once more for cinematic success with 1967’s musical MAD MONSTER PARTY made in their signature sopt-motion style, a technique they dubbed “Animagic.” I saw MAD MONSTER PARTY at the Ellisville Theater when I was around nine years old (it must have been a reissued Saturday Matinee) and, of course, since I was a monster-loving weirdo, I loved it. But every year they would show Rudolph on TV, and I wondered when I was gonna see MAD MONSTER PARTY, the Rudolph for monster kids. I didn’t catch up to it again until I was an adult and I was pleased to discover it holds up monstrously well. Now you’ll have the chance to see MAD MONSTER PARTY on the big screen when it plays Schlafly Bottleworks in Maplewood on Thursday, December 5th.

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MAD MONSTER PARTY unites eight classic-era movie monsters into its ridiculous story. Baron Boris von Frankenstein (voiced by Boris Karloff), decides to hang up his lab coat and turn his castle and duties over to his less than capable nephew Felix Flankin (Allen Swift). He plans to make this announcement at a gathering of creatures that includes a dim-witted monster he has created, the monster’s mate (voiced by St. Louis’ own Phyllis Diller), his lab assistant Francesca (Gale Garnett), Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, Dracula, the Werewolf, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, The Invisible Man, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the Mummy, and a King Kong-like ape), and a creepy Peter Lorre-like character. Naturally, Felix goofs up everything, which causes the monsters to conspire to eliminate him and find out the secret that Frankenstein his unearthed.

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The title song, with Jules Bass’ own lyrics, is performed by Jazz singer Ethel Ennis in a Shirley Bassey/GOLDFINGER style that’s a riot. Maury Laws did the score for the film, including a great moment for Ms Diller singing “You’re Different”, and Karloff doing a spoken word rap on “One Step Ahead” but my favorite song is “The Mummy”. This is a hilarious track where a monster rock band plays their ode to the famous bandaged character. MAD MONSTER PARTY was co-written by MAD Magazine founder Harvey Kurtzman, and it does have that feel of a classic MAD Mag feature, especially when the puppet models were designed by MAD illustrator Jack Davis. If you’ve never seen MAD MONSTER PARTY, you owe yourself this opportunity.

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Thursday, December 5th, you can join the party at Schlafly Bottleworks in Maplewood (7260 Southwest Ave St Louis, MO 63143) when MAD MONSTER PARTY screens as part of the A Film Series monthly ‘Culture Shock’ Film Festival. Doors open at 6:30pm. $6 suggested for the screening. A yummy variety of food from Schlafly’s kitchen is available as are plenty of pints of their famous home-brewed suds. Dan the bartender will be on hand to take care of you.

Attend wearing a monster costume and you may win a DVD of the film!

“Culture Shock” is the name of a film series here in St. Louis that is the cornerstone project of a social enterprise that is an ongoing source of support for Helping Kids Together (http://www.helpingkidstogether.com/) a St. Louis based social enterprise dedicated to building cultural diversity and social awareness among young people through the arts and active living.

The films featured for “Culture Shock” demonstrate an artistic representation of culture shock materialized through mixed genre and budgets spanning music, film and theater. Through ‘A Film Series’ working relationship with Schlafly Bottleworks, they seek to provide film lovers with an offbeat mix of dinner and a movie opportunities.

We hope to see everyone  Thursday night December 5th!

THE FACEBOOK Invite for the event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/509763749139916/

Schlafly Bottleworks site can be found HERE

http://schlafly.com/bottleworks/

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2013 SLIFF Film Awards Announced

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The 2013 St. Louis International Film Festival concluded Sunday night with a party at the Contemporary Art Museum in St. Louis. SLIFF announced the audience-choice and juried-competition awards.

Now in its 22nd year, the Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival is one of the largest international film festivals in the Midwest. This year’s festival was held Nov. 14-24, 2013.

2013 SLIFF Film Awards

Best of Fest Audience Choice Awards

Best Documentary Feature: “Harlem Street Singer” directed by Simeon Hutner

Best International Narrative Feature: “Philomena” directed by Stephen Frears

Best Narrative Feature: “One Chance” directed by David Frankel

New Filmmakers Forum Award

“This Is Where We Live” directed by Marc Menchaca and Josh Barrett ($500 cash prize)

St. Louis Film Critics Association Joe Pollack Awards 
Best Documentary Feature: “Blood Brother” directed by Steve Hoover
Special Jury Mention, Documentary Feature: “The Pleasures of Being Out of Step” directed by David Lewis

Best Narrative Feature: “Key of Life” directed by Kenji Uchida

Interfaith Awards

Best Documentary Feature: “Honor Diaries” directed by Micah Smith
Best Narrative Feature: “The Jewish Cardinal” directed by Ilan Duran Cohen

Honorable Mention, Narrative Feature: “Halima’s Path” directed by Arsen Anton Ostojic

Midrash Award

“Forty-seven Views of Leslie Laskey” directed by David Wild ($500 cash prize)

Documentary Short Film Awards
Best Documentary Short: “Not Anymore: A Story of Revolution” directed by Matthew VanDyke

Special Jury Mention, Documentary Short: “The Children Next Door” directed by Doug Block

Narrative Short Film Awards
Best Local Short: “The Painter” directed by Nate Townsend
Best Short Short: “The Life of Death” directed by Marsha Onderstijn
Best International: “The Last Border” directed by Daniel Butterworth
Best Animated: “Junkyard” directed by Hisko Hulsing
Best Live Action:  “Shanghai Strangers” directed by Joan Chen

Best of Fest:  “The Boy with a Camera for a Face” directed by Spencer Brown

Alliance of Womens Film Journalists EDA Awards
Best Female-Directed Narrative Feature: “Watchtower” directed by Pelin Esmer
Special Mention for Dramatic Excellence: “Three Worlds” directed by Catherine Corbisi
Best Female-Directed Documentary Feature: “Gideon’s Army” directed by Dawn Porter

Special mention for Documentary Excellence: “Uranium Drive-In” directed by Susan Beraza

For more on SLIFF:

http://www.cinemastlouis.org/

https://www.facebook.com/StLouisInternationalFilmFestival

https://twitter.com/STLFilmFest

http://instagram.com/cinemastl

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Check Out The Latest Clip, Photos & Posters For THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

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From Academy Award winning director Martin Scorsese comes THE WOLF OF WALL STREET, starring Leonardo DiCaprio. See it in theaters one month from today – December 25th.

Watch the latest clip from Paramount Pictures’ film as well as some behind-the-scenes photos and new posters.

Revered filmmaker Martin Scorsese directs the story of New York stockbroker Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio).

From the American dream to corporate greed, Belfort goes from penny stocks and righteousness to IPOs and a life of corruption in the late 80s.  Excess success and affluence in his early twenties as founder of the brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont warranted Belfort the title – “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Money.  Power.  Women.  Drugs.  Temptations were for the taking and the threat of authority was irrelevant.  For Jordan and his wolf pack, modesty was quickly deemed overrated and more was never enough.

Check out the trailer.

The film also features Jonah Hill, Margot Robbie, Matthew McConaughey, Jon Favreau, Kyle Chandler, Rob Reiner and Jean Dujardin.

http://www.thewolfofwallstreet.com/

https://www.facebook.com/TheWolfOfWallStreet

https://twitter.com/TheWolfofWallSt

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

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THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

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THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

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