JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS 20th Anniversary Blu-Ray Release Coming November 16th!

“Wyatt, you messed with the wrong pussy!”

Mill Creek Entertainment announces the 20th Anniversary release of Josie and the Pussycats on Blu-Ray November 16, 2021.

Hot newcomers Josie (Rachael Leigh Cook), Melody (Tara Reid), and Val (Rosario Dawson) are three small-town musicians with big dreams but little future. Then fate gives the Pussycats the chance of a lifetime when band manager
Wyatt (Alan Cumming) of MegaRecords signs them overnight to an awesome recording contract. Suddenly, Josie and the Pussycats are living life in the fast lane with sold-out concerts, a number one single, and global stardom. But it’s not all limousines and private jets. The Pussycats soon discover they’re being played like pawns in an evil plot by the record label’s maniacal CEO Fiona (Parker Posey) to control the youth of America.

For the 20th Anniversary, the story of the all-girl rock band that became a national sensation is on Blu-Ray releasing November 16, 2021

Packed with Special Features including:

• Feature Commentary with Directors Deborah Kaplan, Harry Elfont and Producer Marc Platt
• Backstage Pass
• Behind the Scenes Featurette
• Deleted Scenes
• Josie and the Pussycats 3 Small Words music video
• Dujour Backdoor Lover music video
• Dujour Dujour Around the World music video

Netflix’s LOST IN SPACE Debuts A Slick New Poster And Trailer

“Danger, Will Robinson” and “That does not compute” will forever be associated with the 1960’s sci-fi TV show “Lost in Space,” created and produced by Irwin Allen. With their home away from home aboard the Jupiter 2, the Robinson family left Earth on October 16, 1997 on a five-and-a-half-year journey to a planet orbiting the nearest star. In the show, the family was made up of Professor John Robinson, his biochemist wife, Maureen, their children, Judy, Penny, and Will. Also on board was U.S. Space Corps Major and pilot Donald West, who is trained to fly and land the ship. But Dr. Smith, a spy, sabotages the Jupiter 2, reprograms the Robot, but is inadvertently stuck on board and the ship is thrown of course. Thus the premise of the show.

“Lost in Space” ran for three seasons from 1965 to 1968 on CBS, just about the same time “Star Trek” was on the air over on NBC. The catchy theme music was written by John Williams.

Watch the amazing new trailer for Lost in Space, a Netflix Original dramatic and modern reimagining of the classic 1960’s science fiction series.

Set 30 years in the future, colonization in space is now a reality, and the Robinson family is among those tested and selected to make a new life for themselves in a better world. But when the new colonists find themselves abruptly torn off course en route to their new home they must forge new alliances and work together to survive in a dangerous alien environment, light years from their original destination.

Lost in Space stars TOBY STEPHENS (Black Sails, Die Another Day) as John Robinson, and MOLLY PARKER (House of Cards, Deadwood) as Maureen Robinson. As the Robinson kids, TAYLOR RUSSELL (Falling Skies) is the strong-willed and confident Judy, MINA SUNDWALL (Maggie’s Plan, Freeheld) is the quick-witted and definitive middle-child Penny, and MAX JENKINS (Sense8, Betrayal) is the curious and sensitive Will Robinson. Stranded along with the Robinsons are two outsiders who find themselves thrown together by circumstance and a mutual knack for deception, the unsettlingly charismatic Dr. Smith played by PARKER POSEY (Café Society, Mascots, A Mighty Wind) and the inadvertently charming Don West, played by IGNACIO SERRICCHIO (Bones, The Wedding Ringer). The series is produced by Legendary Television and written by Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless (Dracula Untold, The Last Witch Hunter). Zack Estrin (Prison Break) serves as showrunner.

Lost in Space premieres April 13, 2018.

Watch Lost in Space on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/80104198

In 1998, New Line Cinema produced a Lost in Space feature film which you can watch on Netflix.

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THE DOOM GENERATION Screening at Schlafly Bottleworks June 7th – ‘Strange Brew’


“ Oh my God. If i don’t find my skull lighter, I’ll, like, slit my wrists!”


THE DOOM GENERATION screens Wednesday, June 7th at 8pm at Schlafly Bottleworks Restaurant and Bar (7260 Southwest Ave.- at Manchester – Maplewood, MO 63143) as part of Webster University’s Award-Winning Strange Brew Film Series. Admission is $5


‘90s queer teen cinema at it’s best to kick of Pride Month! Gregg Araki’s THE DOOM GENERATION (1995) is an intelligent and satirical look at American youth culture and its relationship with the media. It’s one hell of a journey into oblivion – pure teen angst on speed. With an excellent debut performance from Rose McGowan. Araki takes viewers  on a voyage into mayhem. Jordan White (James Duval) and Amy Blue (McGowan) , two troubled teens, pick up an adolescent drifter, Xavier Red (Johnathon Schaech). Together, the threesome embark on a sex and violence-filled journey through an America of psychos and quickiemarts.


THE DOOM GENERATION has a collection of the best socially inept one liners ever-used on celluloid. It will have you repeating them in the most inappropriate of places. Watch for cameos from Parker Posey, Margaret Cho, Christopher “Peter Brady”  Knight, Hollywood Madam Heidi Fleiss, and St. Louis’ own Dustin Nguyen (Kirkwood High School class of 1980!) Check it and enjoy it Wednesday, June 7th at 8pm at  Schlafly Bottleworks Restaurant and Bar (7260 Southwest Ave.- at Manchester – Maplewood, MO 63143)

CAFÉ SOCIETY Arrives on Blu-ray Combo Pack, DVD, Digital HD and On Demand October 18th

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“First a murderer, and now a Christian!”

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Read my 5-Star review of CAFE SOCIETY HERE

Proving once again that high society life is captivating and amusing, four-time Academy Award winner Woody Allen (Best Original Screenplay, Midnight in Paris¸ 2012; Best Original Screenplay, Hannah and Her Sisters, 1986; Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, Annie Hall; 1977) wrote and directed CAFÉ SOCIETY, arriving on Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital HD), DVD (plus Digital), Digital HD and On Demand October 18 from Lionsgate. The all-star cast of this 1930s romantic comedy includes Jeannie Berlin (Inherent Vice), Academy Award nominees Steve Carell (Best Actor, Foxcatcher, 2014) and Jesse Eisenberg (Best Actor, The Social Network, 2010), alongside actors Blake Lively (“Gossip Girl”), Parker Posey (Irrational Man), Kristen Stewart (Twilight franchise), Corey Stoll (“House of Cards”) and Ken Stott (The Hobbit franchise.)

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Set in the 1930s, Woody Allen’s romance CAFÉ SOCIETY follows Bronx-born Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) to Hollywood, where he falls in love, and back to New York with his colorful Bronx family, where he is swept up in the vibrant world of high society nightclub life.

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The CAFÉ SOCIETY home entertainment release special features include a look at the red carpet at the Café Society premiere and a photo gallery. Café Society will be available on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD for the suggested retail price of $39.99 and $29.95, respectively.

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BLU-RAY / DVD/ DIGITAL HD SPECIAL FEATURES
· On The Red Carpet
· Photo Gallery

The First Poster And Trailer Are Here Woody Allen’s Bittersweet Romance CAFÉ SOCIETY

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Watch the first trailer for Woody Allen’s CAFÉ SOCIETY.

The movie will have its world premiere on opening night of the 69th Cannes Film Festival.

Amazon Studios & Lionsgate will release CAFÉ SOCIETY on July 15, 2016.

Set in the 1930s, Woody Allen’s bittersweet romance CAFÉ SOCIETY follows Bronx-born Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) to Hollywood, where he falls in love, and back to New York, where he is swept up in the vibrant world of high society nightclub life.

Centering on events in the lives of Bobby’s colorful Bronx family, the film is a glittering valentine to the movie stars, socialites, playboys, debutantes, politicians, and gangsters who epitomized the excitement and glamour of the age.

Bobby’s family features his relentlessly bickering parents Rose (Jeannie Berlin) and Marty (Ken Stott), his casually amoral gangster brother Ben (Corey Stoll); his good-hearted teacher sister Evelyn (Sari Lennick), and her egghead husband Leonard (Stephen Kunken). For the hooligan Ben, there are no questions that can’t be answered with brute force, but the others are more likely to ponder deeper matters, like right and wrong, life and death, and the commercial viability of religion.

Seeking more out of life, Bobby flees his father’s jewelry store for Hollywood, where he works for his high-powered agent uncle Phil (Steve Carell). He soon falls for Phil’s charming assistant Vonnie (Kristen Stewart), but as she’s involved with another man, he settles for friendship. Bobby also befriends Rad (Parker Posey), a model agency owner, and her husband Steve (Paul Schneider), a wealthy producer.

When Vonnie’s boyfriend breaks up with her, Bobby seizes the opportunity to romance her, and she ultimately returns his affections. When he asks her to marry him and move to New York, she is tempted, but things do not go as smoothly as planned.

Heartbroken, Bobby returns to New York, where he begins working for Ben, who has muscled his way into owning a nightclub. Bobby displays natural talents as an impresario and swiftly promotes the club into the hottest in town, renaming it “Les Tropiques.” Rad introduces him to the beautiful socialite Veronica (Blake Lively) and he courts her assiduously. Although he is still carrying a torch for Vonnie, when Veronica reveals she’s pregnant, they marry and begin a genuinely happy life together.

Everything seems to have fallen into place for Bobby until the night Vonnie walks into “Les Tropiques.”

Poignant, and often hilarious, CAFÉ SOCIETY, a film with a novel’s sweep, takes us on a journey from pastel-clad dealmakers in plush Hollywood mansions, to the quarrels and tribulations of a humble Bronx family, to the rough-and-tumble violence of New York gangsters, to the sparkling surfaces and secret scandals of Manhattan high life.

With CAFÉ SOCIETY, Woody Allen conjures up a 1930s world that has passed to tell a deeply romantic tale of dreams that never die.

For more info:

Facebook: facebook.com/cafesocietyfilm/

Twitter: twitter.com/cafesocietyfilm

IRRATIONAL MAN – The Review

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Review by Dane Marti

One of the reasons I love the work of Woody Allen is that he obviously thinks of cinema as an art form, intellectual and aesthetic. Allen attempts –and often succeeds in a magnificent way—in delving deeper into a visual tale. Sure, his films ordinarily are extremely entertaining, but I find that they always contain a bit more. ‘The Irrational Man’ is a good, solid example of a film that offers thoughtful and interesting surprises for film viewers.

Allen’s films, even when they are not completely successful, are always interesting—and I mean that word in a truly positive way.

The Story: A young, disheveled professor, Abe Lucas, played with angst and passion by Joaquin Phoenix, arrives at a prestigious eastern University. Although only in his thirties, Abe is already a legend with the local academic environment, women in particular. And he definitely reeks Existential angst, not only discussing different philosophers and worldviews in class, but everywhere he goes in the picturesque town: It’s a running, obsessive conversation that plays non stop in his mind. At first, it appears to the viewer that he is simply a tortured soul, attempting to live his life with meaning.

Phoenix is great in his performance. You feel his frustration. And, as in many great films, whether comedy or drama, you smile and chuckle at his perplexed nature: Whether an intellectual or not, everyone should be able to understand his inner pain and confusion. Somehow, most of us come to some understanding in how we should deal with life. Hell, some of us deal with life by utilizing medication or drugs or alcohol; we are all confused, many of us in pain.  What am I saying? I figure we end up compromising with life and dealing with the slings and arrows of this crazy and ugly world in the best way we can. At least, most of us do this.

The film is at first a small character study. Abe meets a few other people, a student and fellow professor: Both find him fascinating. They glean that he is messed up, of course, but to them, compared with many academic dullards they know, he radiates a cool intensity: Yes, he offers them an escape. Although Abe mightily tries to dissuade her, he soon becomes involved with the young and gorgeous Jill Pollard, played with subtle conviction and just the right amount of sweetness by Emma Stone. Parker Poesy is—as in practically everything else she has ever acted in—superb in her small role. Frankly, Stone and Phoenix are the red-hot center of the story, with other characters in the town commenting and inhabiting the narrative, but never completely entering the couple’s duel of emotional morality.

While the first half of the film focuses on relationships in a relaxed, humorous and verbal way, the second half of the movie takes a dark turn: I wouldn’t call it film Noir or Hitchcockian exactly because it cohesively fits with the intrinsic subject matter that the first half had done so well. However, the audience discovers that, at least for some people, continuously analyzing goals and purpose in life can occasionally drive one toward delusion. Allen’s direction of his actors is, as usual, skilled. I believe that he also lets them create emotions, expressing their characters and  (Allen’s stunning dialogue) with their own unique talent; he doesn’t interfere. This is just my guess…The cinematography of Newport Rhode Island is lovely: ‘Annie Hall’, ‘Manhattan’, ‘Zelig’ firing all the way up to ‘Midnight in Paris’ and ‘Magic in the Moonlight’, the visual look in Allen’s films has always demonstrated that he isn’t simply interested in acting, dialogue and fascination with human beings. The visual frame is also important.

As in every Woody Allen film, the dynamic interplay between characters had me enthralled from start to finish. While this definitely isn’t one of Allen’s best, it is still a quality motion picture. It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to see that the creators involved in the work are all making something with passion: It’s on a higher aesthetic and intellectual level than the average amusement park ride that passes as a movie in theaters these days.

3 1/2 of 5 Stars

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Check Out The Poster For Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN

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Opening July 17th in New York and Los Angeles, here’s a first look at the U.S. poster for Sony Pictures Classics IRRATIONAL MAN.

Called “entertaining” by Collider in their review, the film screened Out of Competition at Cannes 2015.

Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN is about a tormented philosophy professor who finds a will to live when he commits an existential act.

Philosophy professor Abe Lucas (Joaquin Phoenix) is at rock bottom emotionally, unable to find any meaning or joy in life. Abe feels that everything he’s tried to do, from political activism to teaching, hasn’t made any difference.

Soon after arriving to teach at a small town college, Abe gets involved with two women: Rita Richards (Parker Posey), a lonely professor who wants him to rescue her from her unhappy marriage; and Jill Pollard (Emma Stone), his best student, who becomes his closest friend. While Jill loves her boyfriend Roy (Jamie Blackley), she finds Abe’s tortured, artistic personality and exotic past irresistible. Even as Abe displays signs of mental imbalance, Jill’s fascination with him only grows. Still, when she tries to make their relationship a romantic one, he rebuffs her.

Pure chance changes everything when Abe and Jill overhear a stranger’s conversation and become drawn in.

Once Abe makes a profound choice, he is able to embrace life to the fullest again. But his decision sets off a chain of events that will affect him, Jill and Rita forever.

IRRATIONAL MAN opens in St. Louis on July 31st.

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W.A.S.P. 2014

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New Trailer Is Here For Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN

W.A.S.P. 2014
Photo by Sabrina Lantos © 2015 Gravier Productions, Inc., Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

Starring Joaquin Phoenix, Parker Posey and Emma Stone, check out the first trailer for Woody Allen’s latest movie, IRRATIONAL MAN.

Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN is about a tormented philosophy professor who finds a will to live when he commits an existential act.

The film will screen Out of Competition at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

IRRATIONAL MAN opens in theaters July 17th.

https://www.facebook.com/IrrationalManMovie

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WAITING FOR GUFFMAN Screens in St. Louis Next Tuesday at THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL

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“We consider ourselves bi-costal if you consider the Mississippi River one of the coasts!”

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WAITING FOR GUFFMAN screens Tuesday, September 30th at the MX Theater downtown (618 Washington Ave, St Louis, MO 63101) as part of THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL. Admission is FREE!

Never has small town theater been so hysterical. Christopher Guest’s mockumentary WAITING FOR GUFFMAN is one of the funniest movies ever made. Its smart humor and devoted cast all give the 1996 film what it needs to work. In the small town of Blaine Missouri (“The stool capital of the world”), temperamental, effeminate Corky St. Clair (Christopher Guest) is determined to get his play about the town’s history off the ground. Using all the (very) limited talent he has in the community, Corky puts on his production. Blaine’s dentist Dr. Allen Pearl (Eugene Levy), travel agents Rob and Sheila Albertson (Fred Willard and Catherine O’Hara – “Some people find it ironical that although we run a travel agency, we’ve never been outside of Blaine”), and Libby Mae Brown (Parker Posey), the local Dairy Queen employee, all team up to give Blaine it’s tribute to history which includes UFO’s and, of course, stools. While getting the show ready, they are informed of an important Broadway critic is going to come and review the show to see if it has any potential what so ever of making it ….to Broadway! This makes the cast excited, anxious, and just ready to give Blaine and the critic Mr. Guffman one hell of a performance. The dialogue between these characters is priceless (“….’cause you people are BASTARD PEOPLE!”). They unleash what could be some of the funniest scenes of cinema history such as when Corky tries to put “modern” dance into the play. What Christopher Guest and Eugene Levy have written is solid 24k gold (“Well, then, I just HATE you… and I hate your… ass… FACE!“). The characters are outlandish, eccentric and quirky and all played quite phenomenally. The writing is spot on and it’s just terrific.

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St. Louis-area film fans will have the chance to see WAITING FOR GUFFMAN on the big screen when it plays Tuesday, September 30th at the MX Theater downtown (618 Washington Ave, St Louis, MO 63101) as part of THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL. Admission is FREE!

All of the details about the THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL can be found HERE

http://mxfilmfest.com/

This is a special screening sponsored by Sham Fest, a celebration of mockery, spoofs, and satire which will take place October 24th at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (for details on that film fest, go HERE) http://shamfilmfestival.com/

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THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL is aimed at local, independent filmmakers and features the best of what St. Louis screenwriters, directors, and actors have to offer. THE MX INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL is dedicated to making the film festival experience as accessible as possible for both filmmaker and audiences alike. Taking a minimalist approach they collect no submission fees and the majority of  festival events are free. However no expenses are spared when it comes to filmmaker recognition, with trophies offered for both audience and jury awards. The awards ceremony will be held on October 4th starting at 9:00p in the MX Bar Lounge with free beer provided by Urban Chestnut.

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Get DAZED AND CONFUSED With Your High School Friends at the Tivoli Midnights This Weekend

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“That’s what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age!”

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DAZED AND CONFUSED plays this weekend (August 19th and 20th) at the Tivoli as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series.

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I graduated from Kirkwood High School in 1979 and DAZED AND CONFUSED, which I saw at the Shady Oak Theater in Clayton 14 years later, is so spot-on it’s scary. Writer-Director Richard Linklater is one year older than me and his film debut was a nostalgic look back at the final day of school, when the soon-to-be-seniors get drunk and stoned waiting for their first year at the top of the food chain while the incoming freshmen get prepared for a year of getting picked on. A wide range of character drink, smoke pot and have fun talking about what life is about to offer them. I think it’s fair to say that this film did for the late ‘70s what American GRAFFITI did for the early ‘60s in that it was a very nostalgic look back for a director who was clearly putting his memories on film so that future generations could look back and use the film to say that’s what it was like back in the day. With DAZED AND CONFUSED, Linklater did a remarkable job capturing the mood and spirit of teenagers and the colorful soundtrack really packs a punch. The actors playing these parts are at the top of their game and seeing this movie today is a lot different than when I saw it back when it was first released. I still remember watching DAZED AND CONFUSED and being impressed by all of the unknowns, but when you see the film today it’s rather shocking to see how many went on to bigger things. Matthew McConaughey, Jason London, Renee Zelweger, Rory Cochrane, Adam Goldberg, Milla Jovovich, Joey Lauren Adams, Ben Affleck, and Parker Posey are just a few of the familiar faces and all of them do a fine job with their characters. Another important part of the film is its terrific soundtrack, which includes the likes of Aerosmith, Bob Dylan, Alice Cooper, ZZ Top, KISS, Deep Purple, Ted Nugent, Peter Frampton, War, Nazareth and many others. There’s no question that the story is fairly light as there’s really not too much going on except for drinking and smoking but I think there was a point to that. The young faces and terrific music are two of the biggest highlights and in the end there’s no way not to be impressed with what you’re seeing with DAZED AND CONFUSED.

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Now grab your old stoner buddies and relive your high school days when DAZED AND CONFUSED plays on the big screen this weekend (August 19th and 20th) at the Tivoli as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series.

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The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

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Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next several weeks:

Sept. 26-27         THE ROOM

Oct. 3-4                PRINCESS MONONOKE – Sponsored by Star Clipper, with prizes!

Oct. 10-11            YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN

Oct. 17-18            CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST– Adults only!

Oct. 24-25 and Oct. 31-Nov. 1     ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW – All tickets $10 for ROCKY

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