Top Ten Tuesday: Worst Of 2010

With the sweet must also come the salty… and we certainly had some horrible films in 2010. We aren’t just talking about films that you can tolerate sitting through. We are talking about films that make you ask WHAT WERE THEY THINKING???

TOP TEN WORST FILMS OF 2010

Dishonorable Mention: ALPHA AND OMEGA

You would think that adding 3D to almost any movie would make it better. Let me be the first to tell you… this is not the case in ALPHA AND OMEGA! Justin Long and Hayden Panettiere couldn’t have possibly known how bad this was going to be. I actually like Justin Long, but this film belongs in the box of failure. The story was boring, the 3D was possibly the worst that I have ever seen, and the singing… oh, the horrible singing. Now, I normally take into account if the film is designed for children, but when the kid behind me yelled “I’m bored! When is this over?” I knew that this was a lost cause. You could not pay me to sit through this one again.

10. SEX AND THE CITY 2

Sarah, Kim, Kristin, and Cynthia, oh my! The first SEX AND THE CITY film was an appropriate and good quality follow-up to the long running HBO series. It tied up some loose ends. Answered some lingering questions. Part 2 was not necessary. It was a depressing and ill-paced film with a couple fun cameo appearances, and…then it was done. There was nothing new to contribute to the characters in a fundamental way, which was odd because they are deeply complex and interesting women created by the talented Candace Bushnell. It is nice to see the same actors portray the same characters throughout a series and even into the film adaptations; however, these are a specific demographic character set. Part of the appeal was watching these vibrant and sexy women in their twenty’s and thirty’s, not post plastic surgery forty’s and up. Carrie on…indeed.

09. HOW DO YOU KNOW

Here’s a flick that’s a bigger train wreck than UNSTOPPABLE. Maybe that’s because of my high expectations from James L. Brooks. Right out of the gate he scored big with his first feature film TERMS OF ENDEARMENT (this after co-creating one of the most beloved TV sitcoms of all time-The Mary Tyler Moore Show). True he’s had a couple of mis-steps since then, but this new one is a comedy almost completely free of laughs. I can’t really fault the cast. Reeses Witherspoon is very appealing as a confused former Olympic softball player at a crossroads. Paul Rudd uses every bit of his considerable charms as a business man whose life has taken a turn for the worst. Jack Nicholson does what he can with the thankless role of Rudd’s crooked father, one of the most detestable screen dads ever. Owen Wilson proves to be the best part of this film ( as he does in the dud, LITTLE FOCKERS) as the clueless jock vying for Reese. There are some good supporting turns by Kathryn Hahn and Mark Lynn-Baker. None of them can rescue this film from a meandering, unfocused script sol0 credited to Brooks. It’s over two hours of repetitive relationship psycho-babble. Big disappointment!

08. MY SOUL TO TAKE

Who would have thought the worst horror film of 2011 would have come from Wes Craven, one of the biggest names in the genre? Did Craven, the creator of Freddy Krueger, really think the Riverton Ripper, the villain from his wretched film MY SOUL TO TAKE, would join the pantheon of great horror boogey men? He looks like a slightly melted wax figure of Rasputin and I’ve seen Scooby Doo fight scarier fiends. It doesn’t matter though, because halfway the movie Craven puts the brakes on the unstoppable killer angle and goes for a lame body/soul jumping angle. It’s like Craven had no idea how to fully flesh out his ideas so he artlessly threw together plot strands, elevating this lousy movie to the level of horribly bad. Add a completely useless 3D conversion that added nothing to the experience and MY SOUL TO TAKE took my soul to a dark, depressing, and boring place.

07. YOGI BEAR

Despite the dollars at the box office and the beloved icon of Yogi, Oscar winner Eric Brevig still managed to direct a raspberry of a film. Justin Timberlake and Dan Aykroyd’s talented voices could not carry this paper-thin screenplay out of Jellystone in a pic-a-nic basket. The animation was well done, but the live action actors were obviously off the D-list and could not create a warm fuzzy feeling to match the adorable bears camaraderie. This movie can get the infrequent giggle from the audience, but if the viewer is over five years old, then it most likely will not happen. It should have been apparent that what was going to be on-screen was a bad idea all along, just by reading one of the movie’s taglines…All great things come in bears.

06. JONAH HEX

DC Comics continues it’s streak of poorly-made movies, once again proving that short of the BATMAN franchise — which is touch and go itself — they can’t get the formula right. When a film starring Josh Brolin and John Malkovich fails as substantially as this, there’s cause for ridicule. The director, Jimmy Hayward, last directed HORTON HEARS A WHO, his first feature film. This I do not criticize, but it does make me wonder what DC thought they saw in such a filmmaker that screamed violent, supernatural comic book western action movie. Of course, as much as I’d love to blame it all on Megan Fox, she was only part of the problem… the majority of the blame goes to the studio, as this was clearly a case of executives putting the director’s vision on the chopping block. A film of this type, with this subject matter, being rated PG-13… well, that’s red flag #1. Some of the action was kinda cool, but for the most part the film felt eerily reminiscent of WILD WILD WEST, and that’s certainly no compliment. Some of the stylistic elements felt out of place, perhaps because the abbreviated 81-minute theatrical release simply left too much on the cutting room floor. In short, a film that could have… should have been really cool and fun, ended up being really lame and painful to sit through.

05. A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET

Hmm… Robert Englund is still alive,but not Freddy… Wes Craven has no part in it… Lots of Emo teens… THIS SOUNDS LIKE THE ULTIMATE NIGHTMARE! And not in a good way! Hollywood has gotten on this horrible bandwagon of remakes, and it has now gotten into one of my favorite genres, the cheesy 80’s horror film. From the minute that I heard this film was happening, I knew it would be horrible. Jackie Earle Haley is a terrific actor, but he was cast in the role of a specific icon who happens to be still alive, and far to fresh in peoples minds. Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees can be recast because they are essentially faceless. There is only one Freddy Krueger. They essentially tried to make the series scary again, but instead took away the things that made it iconic… such as the humor and the sketchy, awesomely bad special effects. They did nail bad effects though. The CGI was excruciating! The Freddy makeover was abominable. His makeup looked like it was rushed, or not thought through, and the same goes for the camera angles! He was too short to be scary! Add a scruffy, fake sounding voice and you have possibly the biggest failures in remake history. Congrats!

04. GROWN UPS

What do you get when you combine a ton of funny actors and expect them to carry a movie with no real storyline or script? That would be GROWN UPS. Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and yes, even Rob Schneider have been in hit comedies, and often lead to box office gold. When I saw the list of this ensemble cast, even I thought that it would be a winner. Boy, was I wrong! Essentially, they took these “funny” guys and threw them on a set with the only instruction to “Be Funny!”. At least, that is how it comes across. It’s like they are all trying to top one another. I am even more surprised that I am going to say this: Rob Schneider is the funniest one in the film. Probably because he is the only one that is playing a character, rather than the funny guy that’s being paid to make fun of his friends. Ugh! This could have been a huge hit if they would have taken their time and actually developed a script. The concept was great, but the follow-through was less than parr.

03. ROBIN HOOD

The story of Robin and his merry men of Sherwood Forest has been told on screen since the invention of motion pictures. How can you go wrong with this legend? Well this past year the producers of ROBIN HOOD found a way. First off the title’s misleading. The Robin we know and love doesn’t show up till the last minutes. Maybe it should have been named “Robin Hood Begins”. We first meet Robin Longstride(!) as he’s part of King Richards troops pillaging their way back to Britain after the crusades. Instead of meeting up on a log bridge, Little John and Robin are G.I.s fighting over a game of three-card-Monty! Returning to England we are treated to countless, unending scenes of palace plotting involving now King John and his traitorous right hand man, Godfrey ( he’s in with France). Returning the family sword of a deceased soldier, Robin is enlisted by Papa Loxley to assume the dead man’s role and play the husband to widow Marion. So much for any forest romance. The finale scenes are a medieval version of the D Day sequence from SAVING PRIVATE RYAN with flaying swords and confusing edits. Can this be the same Ridley Scott that gave us GLADIATOR? The whole thing’s a big jumbled mess. Mark Strong makes a good hiss-able villain and Cate Blanchett does what she can as a tough Maid Marion ( she armors up for that final battle ). Russell Crowe plays his usual smoldering, dark action hero. He’s far from the worst movie Robin Hood. Kevin Costner’s got a lock on that ( Disney’s animated fox is more believable than him!). This is a huge botch of a story that should be an exciting, rousing entertainment.

02. PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2

The first PARANORMAL ACTIVITY was fresh, edgy and original enough to be enjoyable and even scary… if you’re scared easily. Unfortunately, whenever a film does really well… like, unexpectedly extraordinarily well, as the first film did, studios see nothing but sequels in their eyes. Hey, you can’t blame a guy for making money, right? The problem is, these sequels rarely bring the original filmmakers back, which means films of unique vision such as PARANORMAL ACTIVITY lose much of that essence in the pending franchise. This is where PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 fails. The first thing noticed about PA2 was that the budget was obviously bigger, much bigger, having been shot in high-definition. What’s really goofy about this is that we’re still expected to perceive the film as if it’s being told with home security camera footage. Look, if high-security facilities don’t have full-color, high-def security video, then these average suburban folks don’t either. As for the plot, well… I’m still unclear on exactly how that’s to be interpreted. PA2 takes place in a home that is incredibly similar to that of the first film, but it’s an entirely different family. The film seems to have difficulty deciding on it’s back-story as well, as we’re given a couple of thinly developed, rather hokey bits of extrapolation to chew on, but no of it makes much sense. Even some of the choices in shots and sequences intended to make us scared are questionable, most notably the gratuitous number of night-time pool shots. Ooooh… a possessed pool vacuum! Guess I won’t be swimming anytime soon. Overall, the biggest flaw of PA2 is that the gig is up, the cat is out of the bag. After seeing the first movie, any additional films are just gonna pail in comparison. So, it’s not unlikely we could see a PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 3.

01. CLASH OF THE TITANS

Holy Ray Harryhausen! There are so many things going wrong in this film, it impossible to count on one’s fingers and toes. This should have at least had some great action sequences in it due to the usually reliable director Louis Letterier, but there is only one that comes to mind easily. This huge ensemble cast alone ought to demand some amount of respect, notability, something? Nope. Maybe someone slipped a fake script to Ralph Fiennes and Liam Neeson to get them to do this film because they are both such fine actors; it is difficult to imagine that they said they were on-board with this draft. The use of computer generated animation is used so poorly, then not all the way throughout the movie, and then in 3-D. All we can do is shake our heads at this monstrosity because they should have left the 1981 version alone. Or, at least until it had a chance to be remade in the style befitting it’s Calibos. Oops, caliber.

National Film Registry 2010 Picks

What do STAR WARS: EPISODE V – THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, THE EXORCIST, MALCOM X and AIRPLANE have in common?

They were all selected to be placed in the NATIONAL FILM REGISTRY by the Library of Congress. The list, which was established in 1988 by the National Film Preservation Act to “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant films”. The board members pick 25 films each year for the National Film Registry. A copy of the film is then stored for preservation.

The 25 Films Selected For 2010 (in alphabetical order) are: (I have added pictures for your viewing pleasure… because I care…)

01. AIRPLANE (1980)

02. ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN (1976)

03. THE BARGAIN (1914)

04. CRY OF JAZZ (1959)

05. ELECTRONIC LABYRINTH  THX 113 B 4EB (1967)

06. STAR WARS: EPISODE V – THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK (1980)

07. THE EXORCIST (1973)

08. THE FRONT PAGE (1931)

09. GREY GARDENS (1975)

10. I AM JOAQUIN (1969)

11. IT’S A GIFT (1934)

12. LET  THERE BE LIGHT (1946)

13. LONESOME (1928)

14. MAKE WAY FOR TOMORROW (1937)

15. MALCOLM X (1992)

16. MCCABE & MRS. MILLER (1971)

17. NEWARK ATHLETE (1891)

18. OUR LADY OF THE SPHERE (1969)

19. THE PINK PANTHER (1964)

20. PRESERVATION OF SIGN LANGUAGE (1913)

21. SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER (1977)

22. STUDY OF A RIVER (1996)

23. TARANTELLA (1940)

24. A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN (1945)

25. A TRIP DOWN MARKET STREET (1976)

You can view previous films selected by the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS: NATIONAL FILM REGISTRY HERE. What do you guys think? Any on this years list that you agree with? Disagree?

Top Ten Tuesday: 2010 Just For Fun – Best Bang For Your Buck!

Another year has just about come to an end, with it comes the party of the year, celebrating the New Year. It’s all about having fun! So, we’re signing out with our final Top Ten Tuesday of the year… our Just For Fun 2010. These are the movies we felt were the most fun, most enjoyable films for your buck. Sure, they may not be Oscar contenders, in some cases they may not even be good, but they had us laughing and crying, had us thrilled or had our hearts pounding enough for us to say we got our money’s worth.

Melissa H.’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. MAGRUBER
09. THE OTHER GUYS
08. YOUTH IN REVOLT
07. JACKASS 3D
06. KICK-ASS
05. PREDATORS
04. PIRANHA 3D
03. IRON MAN 2
02. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
01. MACHETE

Michelle’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. DEVIL
09. THE OTHER GUYS
08. MEGAMIND
07. EXPENDABLES
06. SECRETARIAT
05. PREDATORS
04. PIRANHA 3D
03. THE LAST AIRBENDER
02. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
01. HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 3D

Travis’ Just For Fun 2010:

10. DAYBREAKERS
09. PIRANHA 3D
08. HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 3D
07. YOUTH IN REVOLT
06. IRON MAN 2
05. CYRUS
04. HOT TUB TIME MACHINE
03. MACHETE
02. KICK-ASS
01. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD

Tom’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. JONAH HEX
09. LAST EXORCIST
08. SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD
07. HOT TUB TIME MACHINE
06. THE LAST SONG
05. MACHETE
04. DEVIL
03. I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE
02. GULLIVER TRAVELS
01. PIRANHA 3D

Allison’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. BURLESQUE
09. THE WOLFMAN
08. MACHETE
07. THE LAST EXORCISM
06. DEVIL
05. KICK-ASS
04. SCOTT PILGRIM VS THE WORLD
03. PREDATORS
02. THE EXPENDABLES
01. IRON MAN 2

Andy’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. HATCHET II
09. RARE EXPORTS: A CHRISTMAS TALE
08. SOUND OF NOISE
07. THE TROLL HUNTER
06. RUBBER
05. THE MAN FROM NOWHERE
04. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
03. JACKASS 3D
02. THE A-TEAM
01. PIRAHNA 3D

Jim’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
09. DATE NIGHT
08. GULLIVER’S TRAVELS
07. LET ME IN
06. JACKASS 3D
05. KICK-ASS
04. MOST VALUABLE PLAYERS
03. PIRAHNA 3D
02. HOT TUB TIME MACHINE
01. BIRDEMIC!

Melissa T.’s Just For Fun 2010:

10. TRON: LEGACY
09. DATE NIGHT
08. THE OTHER GUYS
07. BRAN NUE DAE
06. SECRETARIAT
05. BLACK SWAN
04. DESPICABLE ME
03. I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS
02. FROM PARIS WITH LOVE
01. MEGAMIND

16th Critics’ Choice Award Nominations

The nominations for the 16th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards have been announced, and amongst the many very pleasing revelations is that BLACK SWAN has earned a record breaking 12 nominations.

Best Picture

  • 127 HOURS
  • BLACK SWAN
  • THE FIGHTER
  • INCEPTION
  • THE KING’S SPEECH
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • THE TOWN
  • TOY STORY 3
  • TRUE GRIT
  • WINTER’S BONE

Best Actor

  • Jeff Bridges – TRUE GRIT
  • Robert Duvall – GET LOW
  • Jesse Eisenberg – THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • Colin Firth – THE KING’S SPEECH
  • James Franco – 127 HOURS
  • Ryan Gosling – BLUE VALENTINE

Best Actress

  • Annette Bening – THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT
  • Nicole Kidman – RABBIT HOLE
  • Jennifer Lawrence – WINTER’S BONE
  • Natalie Portman – BLACK SWAN
  • Noomi Rapace – THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO
  • Michelle Williams – BLUE VALENTINE

Best Supporting Actor

  • Christian Bale – THE FIGHTER
  • Andrew Garfield – THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • Jeremy Renner – THE TOWN
  • Sam Rockwell – CONVICTION
  • Mark Ruffalo – THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT
  • Geoffrey Rush -THE KING’S SPEECH

Best Supporting Actress

  • Amy Adams – THE FIGHTER
  • Helena Bonham Carter – THE KING’S SPEECH
  • Mila Kunis – BLACK SWAN
  • Melissa Leo – THE FIGHTER
  • Hailee Steinfeld – TRUE GRIT
  • Jacki Weaver – ANIMAL KINGDOM

Best Young Actor/Actress

  • Elle Fanning — SOMEWHERE
  • Jennifer Lawrence — WINTER’S BONE
  • Chloe Grace Moretz — LET ME IN
  • Chloe Grace Moretz — KICK-ASS
  • Kodi Smit-McPhee — LET ME IN
  • Hailee Steinfeld — TRUE GRIT

Best Acting Ensemble

  • THE FIGHTER
  • THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT
  • THE KING’S SPEECH
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • THE TOWN

Best Director

  • Darren Aronofsky — BLACK SWAN
  • Danny Boyle — 127 HOURS
  • Joel Coen & Ethan Coen– TRUE GRIT
  • David Fincher — THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • Tom Hooper — THE KING’S SPEECH
  • Christopher Nolan — INCEPTION

Best Original Screenplay

  • ANOTHER YEAR — Mike Leigh
  • BLACK SWAN — Mark Heyman and Andres Heinz and John McLaughlin
  • THE FIGHTER — Scott Silver and Paul Tamasy & Eric Johnson (Story by Keith Dorrington & Paul Tamasy & Eric Johnson)
  • INCEPTION — Christopher Nolan
  • THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT — Lisa Cholodenko and Stuart Blumberg
  • THE KING’S SPEECH — David Seidler

Best Adapted Screenplay

  • 127 HOURS — Simon Beaufoy and Danny Boyle
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK — Aaron Sorkin
  • THE TOWN — Ben Affleck, Peter Craig and Sheldon Turner
  • TOY STORY 3 — Michael Arndt (Story by John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich)
  • TRUE GRIT — Joel & Ethan Coen
  • WINTER’S BONE — Debra Granik and Anne Rosellini

Best Cinematography

  • 127 HOURS — Anthony Dod Mantle
  • BLACK SWAN — Matthew Libatique
  • INCEPTION — Wally Pfister
  • THE KING’S SPEECH — Danny Cohen
  • TRUE GRIT — Roger Deakins

Best Art Direction

  • ALICE IN WONDERLAND — Stefan Dechant
  • BLACK SWAN — Therese DePrez and Tora Peterson
  • INCEPTION — Guy Hendrix Dyas
  • THE KING’S SPEECH — Netty Chapman
  • TRUE GRIT — Jess Gonchor and Nancy Haigh

Best Editing

  • 127 HOURS — Jon Harris
  • BLACK SWAN — Andrew Weisblum
  • INCEPTION — Lee Smith
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK — Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter

Best Costume Design

  • ALICE IN WONDERLAND — Colleen Atwood
  • BLACK SWAN — Amy Westcott
  • THE KING’S SPEECH — Jenny Beavan
  • TRUE GRIT — Mary Zophres

Best Makeup

  • ALICE IN WONDERLAND
  • BLACK SWAN
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS PART 1
  • TRUE GRIT

Best Visual Effects

  • ALICE IN WONDERLAND
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS PART 1
  • INCEPTION
  • TRON: LEGACY

Best Sound

  • 127 HOURS
  • BLACK SWAN
  • INCEPTION
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK
  • TOY STORY 3

Best Animated Feature

  • DESPICABLE
  • HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON
  • THE ILLUSIONIST
  • TANGLED
  • TOY STORY 3

Best Action Movie

  • INCEPTION
  • KICK-ASS
  • RED
  • THE TOWN
  • UNSTOPPABLE

Best Comedy

  • CYRUS
  • DATE NIGHT
  • EASY A
  • GET HIM TO THE GREEK
  • I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS
  • THE OTHER GUYS

Best Picture Made For TV

  • THE PACIFIC
  • TEMPLE GRANDIN
  • YOU DON’T KNOW JACK

Best Foreign language Film

  • BIUTIFUL
  • I AM LOVE
  • THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO

Best Documentary Feature

  • EXIT THROUGH THE GIFT SHOP
  • INSIDE JOB
  • RESTREPO
  • JOAN RIVERS: A PIECE OF WORK
  • THE TILLMAN STORY
  • WAITING FOR SUPERMAN

Best Song

  • “I See the Light” – performed by Mandy Moore & Zachary Levi/written by Alan Menken & Glenn Slater – TANGLED
  • “If I Rise” – performed by Dido and A.R. Rahman/music by A.R. Rahman/lyrics by Dido Armstrong and Rollo Armstrong – 127 HOURS
  • “Shine” – performed and written by John Legend – WAITING FOR SUPERMAN
  • “We Belong Together” – performed and written by Randy Newman – TOY STORY 3
  • “You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me Yet” – performed by Cher/written by Diane Warren – BURLESQUE

Best Score

  • BLACK SWAN – Clint Mansell
  • INCEPTION – Hans Zimmer
  • THE KING’S SPEECH – Alexandre Desplat
  • THE SOCIAL NETWORK – Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross
  • TRUE GRIT – Carter Burwell

Source: Critics Choice Awards

AFI Announces Top Ten of 2010

While every online and print source of motion picture industry news and criticism puts out a Top Ten list this time of year (yours truly not an exception, look for it soon), some may say the “definitive” voice is the American Film Institute. For better or for worse, they’ve announced their list of the top ten films of 200… and, personally, I am quite pleased. None of these films are anything short of spectacular.

“Black Swan,” directed by Darren Aronofsky
“The Fighter,” directed by David O. Russell
“Inception,” directed by Christopher Nolan
“The Kids Are All Right,” directed by Lisa Cholodenko
“127 Hours,” directed by Danny Boyle
“The Social Network,” directed by David Fincher
“The Town,” directed by Ben Affleck
“Toy Story 3,” directed by Lee Unkrich
“True Grit,” directed by Joel & Ethan Coen
“Winter’s Bone,” directed by Debra Granik

BLACK SWAN continues it’s remarkable tsunami of critical acclaim, while WINTER’S BONE is still (thankfully) proving small films are capable of competing with the big dogs.

Source: AFI

EP5: Bring Me The Horizon (Guest: Alex Billington from Firstshowing.net)

On tonight’s episode of The Golden Briefcase, Tim, Scott and Jeremy are joined by Alex Billington from Firstshowing.net (yet again!) to discuss the new DVD/Bluray releases, the new trailers for FROM PARIS WITH LOVE and REPO MEN, relive ROADHOUSE and talk extensively about the upcoming 2010 year in film!

Couldn’t make the live show? No worries. We have it all available at your disposal through iTunes or RSS!

Live broadcasts are on Tuesday evenings at 6:30pm PST/9:30pm EST.

Send show topics, commentary, hate mail, love letters or whatever your heart desires to wamgpodcast@gmail.com! We would LOVE to hear from you!

This week, our show is sponsored by the kind folks at www.fright-rags.com! The BEST in original horror tee-shirts! They are offering Golden Briefcase listeners 10% off their orders using the promotional code: WAMG10. Check out the website for custom shirts featuring themes from new and old horror films alike!

If your company would like to sponsor The Golden Briefcase, please send us an email with something along those lines in the subject line!

Sundance Film Festival 2010 films announced

sundanceimage

Sundance Film Festival 2010 is a little over a month away and that means we can now bring you a list of the competition films that will be playing. Here you go boys and girls… enjoy!

DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

  • “Blue Valentine” – Directed by Derek Cianfrance, written by Cianfrance, Cami Delavigne and Joey Curtis, a portrait of an American marriage that charts the evolution of a relationship over time. With Ryan Gosling, Michelle Williams, Mike Vogel, John Doman.
  • “Douchebag” – Directed by Drake Doremus, written by Lindsay Stidham, Doremus, Jonathan Schwartz and Andrew Dickler, in which a man about to be married takes his younger brother on a wild goose chase to find the latter’s fifth-grade girlfriend. Features Dickler, Ben York Jones, Marguerite Moreau, Nicole Vicius, Amy Ferguson, Wendi McClendon-Covey.
  • “The Dry Land” – Directed and written by Ryan Piers Williams, in which a returning U.S. soldier tries to reconcile his experiences overseas with his life in Texas. With America Ferrera, Wilmer Valderrama, Ethan Suplee, June Diane Raphael, Melissa Leo.
  • “Happythankyoumoreplease” – Directed and written by Josh Radnor, about six New Yorkers negotiating love, friendship and gratitude when they’re too old to be precocious and not yet fully adults. Stars Malin Akerman, Radnor, Kate Mara, Zoe Kazan, Tony Hale, Pablo Schreiber, Michael Algieri.
  • “Hesher” – Directed by Spencer Susser, written by Susser and David Michod from a story by Brian Charles Frank, in which a mysterious, anarchical trickster enters the lives of a family dealing with a painful loss. Toplines Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Natalie Portman, Devin Brochu, Piper Laurie, John Carroll Lynch.
  • “Holy Rollers” – Directed by Kevin Tyler Asch, written by Antonio Macia, concerning a young Hasidic man in the throes of money, power and opportunity who becomes an international Ecstasy smuggler. With Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Bartha, Danny A. Abeckaser, Ari Graynor, Jason Fuchs.
  • “Howl” – Directed and written by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, a “nonfiction drama” about how Allen Ginsberg created the eponymous poem and the subsequent landmark obscenity trial. Stars James Franco, David Strathairn, Jon Hamm, Mary-Louise Parker, Jeff Daniels.
  • “The Imperialists Are Still Alive!” – Directed and written by Zeina Durra, about how a French Manhattanite continues her work as an artist in the wake of the sudden abduction of her childhood sweetheart and a blooming love affair. Toplines Elodie Bouchez, Jose Maria de Tavira, Karim Saleh Karolina Muller, Marianna Kulukundis, Rita Ackerman.
  • “Lovers of Hate” – Directed and written by Bryan Poyser, about how the reunion of estranged brothers is undermined when the woman they both love chooses one over the other. With Chris Doubek, Heather Kafka, Alex Karpovsky, Zach Green.
  • “Night Catches Us” – Directed and written by Tanya Hamilton, which focuses on the eventful return of a young man to the race-torn Philadelphia neighborhood where he grew up during the Black Power movement. Features Anthony Mackie, Kerry Washington, Jamie Hector, Wendell Pierce, Jamara Griffin.
  • “Obselidia” – Directed and written by Diane Bell, about the amorous awakening of a lonely librarian with a beguiling cinema projectionist in Death Valley. Toplines Gaynor Howe, Michael Piccirilli, Frank Hoyt Taylor.
  • “Skateland” – Directed by Anthony Burns, and written by Burns, Brandon Freeman and Heath Freeman, in which dramatic events in early ’80s small-town Texas force a 19-year-old skating rink manager to see his life in a new light. With Shiloh Fernandez, A.J. Buckley, Ashley Greene, Brett Cullen, Ellen Hollman, Heath Freeman.
  • “Sympathy for Delicious” – Directed by Mark Ruffalo and written by Christopher Thornton, which centers on a newly paralyzed DJ who gets more than he bargained for when he seeks out the world of faith healing. Stars Orlando Bloom, Ruffalo, Juliette Lewis, Laura Linney, John Carroll Lynch.
  • “3 Backyards” – Directed and written by Eric Mendelsohn, in which a quiet suburban town becomes intense emotional terrain for three residents on one strange day. Toplines Embeth Davidtz, Edie Falco, Elias Koteas, Rachel Resheff, Kathryn Erbe, Danai Gurira.
  • “Welcome to the Rileys” – Directed by Jake Scott, written by Ken Hixon, about a damaged man who seeks salvation by caring for a wayward young woman during a business trip to New Orleans. Stars James Gandolfini, Kristen Stewart, Melissa Leo.
  • “Winter’s Bone” – Directed by Debra Granik and written by Granik and Anne Rosellini, which focuses on the dangerous efforts of an Ozard Mountain girl to track down her drug-dealer father while keeping her family intact. With Jennifer Lawrence, John Hawkes, Lauren Sweetser, Kevin Breznahan, Isaiah Stone.

DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

  • “Bhutto” – Directed by Duane Baughman and Johnny O’Hara, written by O’Hara, a look at the life of the assassinated former Pakistani prime minister.
  • “Casino Jack and the United States of Money” – Directed by Alex Gibney, an investigation into the world of imprisoned super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his cronies.
  • “Family Affair” – Directed by Chico Colvard, which examines resilience, survival and the capacity to accomodate a parent’s past crimes on the road to satisfying the longing for family.
  • “Freedom Riders” – Directed by Stanley Nelson, about civil rights activists who challenged segregation in the South in 1961.
  • “Gas Land” – Directed by Josh Fox, which looks at toxic streams, dying livestock, flammable sinks and people with weakened health in the vicinity of natural gas drilling.
  • “I’m Pat ——- Tillman” – Directed by Amir Bar-Lev, which focuses on the efforts of the family of the pro football star to take on the U.S. government after he was killed by “friendly fire” in Afghanistan in 2004.
  • “Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child” – Directed by Tamra Davis, a portrait of the celebrated ’80s artist.
  • “Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work” – Directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg, a forthright glimpse into the life and comedic process of the veteran comedian.
  • “Lucky” – Directed by Jeffrey Blitz, which examines what happens when ordinary people hit the lottery jackpot.
  • “My Perestroika” – Directed by Robin Hessman, an analysis of the transition of the U.S.S.R. as seen through the lives of five Muscovites who came of age at the time of communism’s collapse.
  • “The Oath” – Directed by Laura Poitras, lensed in Yemen, about two men whose fateful encounter in 1996 led them to Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden, 9/11, Guantanamo and the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • “Restrepo” – Directed by Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington, for which the two filmmakers accompanied the Second Platoon in a crucial valley to reveal the soldiers’ intense labor, fights and camaraderie as they take on the Taliban.
  • “A Small Act” – Directed by Jennifer Arnold, which spotlights how a young Kenyan, whose life was dramatically changed when a Swedish stranger sponsored his education, later reciprocates by founding his own scholarship program.
  • “Smash His Camera” – Directed by Leon Gast, which uses the story of notorious paparazzo Ron Galella to examine issues such as the right to privacy, freedom of the press and celebrity worship.
  • “12th and Delaware” – Directed by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing, a look at how the abortion battle continues in unexpected ways on an unassuming corner in the U.S.
  • “Waiting for Superman” – Directed by Davis Guggenheim, which uses multiple interlocking stories to analyze the crisis in U.S. public education.

WORLD CINEMA DRAMATIC COMPETITION

  • “All That I Love” (Poland) – Directed and written by Jacek Borcuch, about four small-town teenagers who form a punk rock band in 1981 during the growth of the Solidarity movement. With Mateusz Kosciukiewicz, Jakub Gierszal, Mateusz Banasiuk, Olga Frycz, Igor Obloza. North American premiere.
  • “Animal Kingdom” (Australia) – Directed and written by David Michod, which centers upon a 17-year-old boy who, in the wake of his mother’s death, is thrust precariously between a criminal family and a detectives who hopes to save him. Stars Guy Pearce, Ben Mendelsohn, Joel Edgerton, Luke Ford, Jacki Weaver, James Frecheville. World premiere.
  • “Boy” (New Zealand) – Directed and written by Taika Waititi, a study of how two young brothers reconciles fantasy with reality when their father returns home after many years. Features Waititi, James Rolleston, Te Aho Eketone. World premiere.
  • “Four Lions” (U.K.) – Directed by Chris Morris, written by Morris, Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain, a comedy about some self-styled British jihadis. With Chris Wilson, Kevin Eldon. World premiere.
  • “Grown Up Movie Star” (Canada) – Directed and written by Adriana Maggs, which spins on a teenage girl left to care for her rural father when her mother runs away. Features Shawn Doyle, Tatiana Maslany, Jonny Harris, Mark O’Brien, Andy Jones, Julia Kennedy. U.S. premiere.
  • “The Man Next Door” (Argentina), written and directed by Mariano Cohn and Gaston Duprat, about two neighbors who clash over a wall separating their properties. With Rafael Spregelburd, Daniel Araoz, Eugenia Alonso, Ines Budassi, Lorenza Acuna. International premiere.
  • “Me Too” (Spain) – Directed by Alvaro Pastor and Antonio Naharro, about the unconventional relationship between a 34-year-old college-educated man with Down syndrome and his free-spirited co-worker. With Pablo Pineda, Lola Duenas, Antonio Naharro, Isabel Garcia Lorca, Pedro Alvarez Ossorio. International premiere.
  • “Nuummioq” (Greenland) – Directed by Otto Rosing and Torben Bech, written by Bech, a contemporary story of how a young man pieces together aspects of his past and gets on with his life while journeying through Greenland’s imposing landscapes. Stars Lars Rosing, Angunnguaq Larsen, Julie Berthelsen, Morten Rose, Makka Kleist, Mariu Olsen. World premiere.
  • “Peepli Live” (India) – Directed and written by Anusha Rizvi, a satire about the media frenzy created when an impoverished farmer announces that he’ll commit suicide so his family can receive government compensation. Toplines Riz Ahmed, Arsher Ali, Nigel Lindsay, Kayvan Novak.
  • “Son of Babylon” (Iraq) – Directed and written by Mohamed Al Daradji, the tale of a young Kurdish boy and his grandmother as they travel through Iraq searching for the remains of their father/son in the wake of Saddam Hussein’s fall from power. With Yasser Talib, Shazda Hussein, Bashir Al-Majid. International premiere.
  • “Southern District” (Bolivia) – Directed and written by Juan Carlos Valdivia, a look at social change that envelopes an upper-class family in La Paz, Bolivia. Toplines Ninon del Castillo, Pascual Loayza, Nicolas Fernandez, Juan Pablo Koria, Mariana Vargas. North American premiere.
  • “The Temptation of St. Tony” (Estonia) – Directed and written by Veiko Ounpuu, which centers upon a mid-level manager with an aversion to being “good” who confronts life mysteries as he loses his grasp on his once-quiet life. Features Taavi Eelmaa, Rain Tolk, Tiina Tauraite, Katarina Lauk, Raivo E. Tamm. World premiere.
  • “Undertow” (Colombia-France-Germany-Peru) – Directed and written by Javier Fuentes-Leon, an offbeat ghost story in which a married fisherman on the Peruvian seaside tries to reconcile his devotion to his male lover within the town’s rigid traditions. Stars Cristian Mercado, Manolo Cardona, Tatiana Astengo. North American premiere.
  • “Vegetarian” (South Korea) – Directed and written by Lim Woo-seong, about a housewife whose strange dreams and resulting meat aversion cause trouble with her husband and attract the interest of her artist brother-in-law. Toplines Chea Min-seo, Kim Hyun-sung, Kim Yeo-jin, Kim Young-jae. International premiere.

WORLD CINEMA DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

  • “Enemies of the People” (Cambodia-U.K.) – Directed by Rob Lemkin and Thet Sambath, which recounts the shocking revelations that ensue when a young journalist whose family was killed by the Khmer Rouge befriends the perpetrators of the Killing Fields genocide. World premiere.
  • “A Film Unfinished” (Germany-Israel) – Directed by Yael Hersonski, in which film found in Nazi archives reveals the means used to stage Warsaw ghetto life. World premiere.
  • “Fix Me” (France-Palestinian Territories-Switzerland) – Directed by Raed Andoni, in which Andoni seeks different forms of help for a relentless headache in his hometown of Ramallah. International premiere.
  • “His and Hers” (Ireland) – Directed by Ken Wardrop, in which 70 Irish women offer insights into the relationships between women and men. World premiere.
  • “Kick in Iran” (Germany) – Directed by Fatima Geza Abdollahyan, about the struggles of the first female Taekwondo fighter from Iran to qualify for the Olympic Games. World premiere.
  • “Last Train Home” (Canada) – Directed by Fan Lixin, which focuses on the ordeals of a Chinese migrant worker who, along with many others, tries to reunite with a distant family. U.S. premiere.
  • “The Red Chapel” (Denmark) – Directed by Mads Bruegger, about a journalist without scruples, a self-proclaimed spastic and a comedian travel to North Korea under the guise of a cultural exchange visit to challenge the totalitarian regime. U.S. premiere.
  • “Russian Lessons” (Georgia-Germany-Norway) – Directed by Olga Konskaya and Andrei Nekrasov, which looks into ethnic cleansing in Georgia revealed by an investigation of Russian actions during the 2008 war. World premiere.
  • “Secrets of the Tribe” (Brazil) – Directed by Jose Padiha, which examines the scandal and infighting within the academic anthropology community regarding the representation and exploitation of indigenous Indian in the Amazon Basin. World premiere.
  • “Sins of My Father” (Argentina-Colombia) – Directed by Nicolas Entel, which delves into the life and times of Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar through the eyes of his son, who fled Colombia to lead his own life. North American premiere.
  • “Space Tourists” (Switzerland) – Directed by Christian Frei, a humorous look at billionaires who pay large sums to travel into outer space for fun. North American premiere.
  • “Waste Land” (U.K.) – Directed by Lucy Walker, which reveals how lives are transformed when international artist Vik Muniz collaborates with garbage picker in the world’s largest landfill in Rio de Janeiro. World premiere.