STAR WARS Live Action Series The Mandalorian Cast Includes Gina Carano, Pedro Pascal, Giancarlo Esposito And Carl Weathers

Lucasfilm is pleased to announce the cast of the first-ever Star Wars live-action series –The Mandalorian.

Pedro Pascal (Narcos) has been cast in the title role as a lone Mandalorian gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy. He is joined by Gina Carano (Deadpool), Giancarlo Esposito (Breaking Bad), Emily Swallow (Supernatural), Carl Weathers (Predator), Omid Abtahi (American Gods), Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man) and Nick Nolte (Affliction).

“We’re having a great time working with this incredibly talented group and excited for everyone to see what we’re up to,” says Executive Producer Jon Favreau.

Currently in production, The Mandalorian is written and executive produced by Jon Favreau, with Dave Filoni (Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Star Wars Rebels) directing the first episode and serving as executive producer alongside Kathleen Kennedy and Colin Wilson. Additional episodic directors include Deborah Chow (Jessica Jones), Rick Famuyiwa (Dope), Bryce Dallas Howard (Solemates), and Taika Waititi (Thor: Ragnarok).

The highly anticipated series will be exclusive to Disney+, The Walt Disney Company’s upcoming direct-to-consumer streaming service, which is set to launch in the U.S. in late 2019.

Stay tuned to StarWars.com for updates.

QUEEN OF THE DESERT – Review

queen of the desert

Nicole Kidman and director Werner Herzog bring to life the true story of a trailblazing woman who found freedom in the Middle East. Gertrude Bell (Kidman) leaves behind her buttoned-up life in England for Tehran. Her excursion across the post-World War I Middle East takes her from finding love with a British officer (James Franco), and an encounter with the legendary T.E. Lawrence (Robert Pattinson) – the character that inspired the film LAWRENCE OF ARABIA. While that previous cinematic classic that will come to mind several times while watching this one, the nostalgia doesn’t help matters across this long desert trip.

Nicole Kidman lends the famous traveler, writer, and cartographer just the right amount of spitfire and gumption, especially towards the beginning of the film – she looks towards the heavens and wishes for an earthquake to take her away from a lavish party that she doesn’t want to be attending. As her relationships build and fade through the film, you don’t necessarily get the feeling that she’s losing her independent spirit as much as you come to view her as a young woman who just finished school and is still finding herself. Kidman handles the emotional turmoil perfectly, even if the actress is playing a character half her age.

Who equally excels in just a handful of scenes is James Franco. Even though he relies heavily on his boyish grin, his restraint and quiet delivery make him downright charming. His scenes opposite Kidman are the crux of the film, and Herzog takes the time to spotlight these romantic moments in sincere fashion.

It’s everything around the duo that doesn’t work as well as it should. Overblown soaring music, traveling by map transitions, and unnecessary text descriptions are just some of the ways that Werner Herzog cheapens his own film, making it feel more gimmicky than his presumed intentions. Kidman’s strong but silent approach to the character won’t be able to keep most viewers from drifting asleep. Hence the reason for an enthusiastic score by Klaus Badelt (who previously worked with the director on RESCUE DAWN) to wake you from your slumber.

Ambition can only take you so far when you’re attempting to make a historical romantic epic. Herzog seems more in love with the idea than actually putting in the proper time and energy to take on this lofty goal. He’s directing with just his emotions instead of also with the skills he has developed from over 50 years behind the camera. It hits the right dramatic notes in its minor character moments, but the overall attempt to make an earnest odyssey from Hollywood’s heyday is a lost journey.

 

Overall Rating: 2.5 out of 5

QUEEN OF THE DESERT opens in limited theaters April 7th and VOD on April 14th

queen-of-the-desert-2

 

Werner Herzog’s SALT AND FIRE – Review

salt_and_fire_still

Review by Stephen Tronicek

It seems Werner Herzog’s art persona exists in the realm of Werner Herzog, not in the realm of modern Hollywood. It’s almost as if the industry evolved around him, leaving him still chugging and fighting the auteurist good fight, churning out the same mind wrenching, thoughtful epics and strangely philosophical and human documentaries that defined his early career. When approaching a narrative feature of his, it’s important to consider this: Even his most acclaimed narrative works, such as AGUIRRE: THE WRATH OF GOD or NOSFERATU are slow building films that in their time were hailed as masterpieces (they still are today), but to the public today would probably hold stale in their sense of artful detachment, made great by their artistry, rather than their true grasp of the audience.SALT AND FIRE similarly doesn’t hold the audience in such a way, but it is not for the artful mastery on screen, it’s because SALT AND FIRE is probably the worst film of Herzog’s oeuvre.

That’s a pain to say too. Last year alone, Herzog crafted two fascinating documentaries, LO AND BEHOLD and INTO THE INFERNO.  SALT AND FIRE  shows what happens instead when a filmmaker of Herzog’s philosophical ambition attempts to take a real world topic and front-load it into a narrative feature while leaving the plot and characters in the background. The Aral Sea, the topic at the center of the film, is a real place of almost mystical qualities, a large expanse of white salt where a sea used to be. It’s haunting in many ways to see the world grown stale and Herzog’s eye for the area seems to capture the beauty and horror of the area. The problem is that the plot surrounding the Sea is, unfortunately, stale. Herzog’s philosophical musings in his documentaries enhance them to a human level, but here where they replace the human emotions of his actors, with what seems a superficial level of these musings.

Of course, this being Herzog there is actually some worth to the film, all of which is devoid of appearance in the first hour of this 97-minute movie. The beautiful cinematography and craftsmanship that Herzog and his cinematographer offer in the opening minutes of the film soon fade into a flurry of confused deliveries and perfunctory plot lines. This often happens when a narrative film is crafted around an idea rather than an actually compelling character.  The dialogue is almost harshly expositional but not totally unsavable. Gael García Bernal, who is in the film for only a few moments, makes it work though with a spark of naturalism that all the other actors (including Michael Shannon, who really could be better) avoid like the plague. The lead, Veronica Ferres, has difficulty resonating as a presence at all. Of course with Herzog, there’s an always present sense that everything may be of artistic intention, with Herzog possibly shaping the attitude toward the narrative much in the same vain as humanity’s own attitude toward the environmental cataclysm around us, that is to say with almost maddening ignorance. It’s really hard to make a movie that is intentionally bad and somewhat dry for a purpose without just making a straight up bad movie.

If one thought is left after watching SALT AND FIRE it’s the fact that this could have been a good movie and a good one from Werner Herzog nonetheless. As a documentary exploring the folly of the Aral Sea and the effects of the expansive desert of salt, it probably would have risen to the level of Herzog’s astounding films last year. The odder touches of the narrative would have been made almost immediately human because in the case of a documentary it would be authentically human. In narrative form, SALT AND FIRE dries up into a desolate expanse of 97 minutes. I hope the next project for this prolific director comes out as beautiful as they usually have.

1 of 5 Stars

XLrator Media will release SALT AND FIRE in Theaters on April 7th and on VOD and iTunes on April 4th.

salt-and-fire-movie-poster

LO AND BEHOLD, REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD – Review

 lo2

Review by Stephen Tronicek

To watch Werner Herzog’s LO AND BEHOLD, REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD is to in itself become lost in a reverie of your own. Herzog’s way of creating the full sweep of emotions of the existing internet is fascinating in fact, but dreamlike in rhythm. The strength of the film is that it plays like a wild, but self-contained dream completely aware of the fact that it is based on an almost infinite and ever expanding topic. There’s beauty in that too. The internet is ubiquitous as to almost alleviate the point in crafting a documentary about its origins, its future, and it’s ultimate effect on humankind, but that doesn’t stop Herzog from trying and succeeding to show us the many faces that the history and effect of the internet have to offer.

The method in how he does so is what makes this a pristine work of documentary filmmaking. Herzog has split the film into ten categories, which in some ways could seem to limit. The internet, as a topic, is ever expanding, and therefore shouldn’t actually lend itself well to any type of structure, and Herzog wisely only uses these categories as bookmarks to direct the narrative that he’s telling, while using the characters and the editing of each section to invoke that ever expanding nature. This creates a documentary that layers the humble, funny origins of the beginning of the internet with the pain of those attacked through it, then to those who have become addicted. These compelling, intellectual narratives combined with a few of Herzog’s own philosophical flourishes give Lo and Behold the ability to cover the entirety of the internet within the span of 98 minutes, which is a triumph anyway you look at it.

Herzog’s direction of the film comes with additional benefits. The dreamlike nature of the editing wouldn’t work without Herzog’s seemingly carefully crafted, yet go for broke cinematography and aesthetic. His use of Wagner’s Das Rheingold during the description of the first thing ever done through the internet suggests a burdening danger, yet incalculable beauty. Combined with what might be the most awe-inspiring interview footage of the film, the song almost seems to symbolize the beginning of the modern world as we know it, hardships and all which deliriously sets us up for the wave of optimism, but also epic cataclysm we are in for. Herzog’s not only interested in the internet of now, his interest also lies in the future of the medium and how it in some ways could lift us higher than we’ve ever been, but also destroy us. As Lo and Behold expands through this direction it only continues to become more and more sublime.

Werner Herzog is the last person one could expect to make a film about the internet, but the first person one could expect to easily dissect the number of perspectives it brings up. Herzog has crafted a documentary for the modern age, that is consistently layered and enthralling.

5 of 5 Stars

LO AND BEHOLD, REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD is currently playing in ST. Louis exclusively at Landmark’s The Tivoli Theater

lo1

Magnolia Pictures Picks Up Right To Werner Herzog’s LO AND BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD

16579-1-1100

Magnolia Pictures announced today that it has acquired worldwide rights to LO AND BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD, a playful and intellectually searching new documentary by legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog (GRIZZLY MAN, CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS) that offers a bold exploration of the past, present and constantly evolving future of the Internet. Praised by critics after its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival this week, the film features interviews (conducted by Herzog) with a diverse array of tech pioneers including PayPal and Tesla co-founder Elon Musk, Internet protocol inventor Bob Kahn, and famed hacker Kevin Mitnick.

Magnolia is targeting a 2016 theatrical release.

In LO AND BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD, the Oscar-nominated Herzog chronicles the virtual world from its origins to its outermost reaches, exploring the digital landscape with the same curiosity and imagination he previously trained on earthly destinations as disparate as the Amazon, the Sahara, the South Pole and the Australian outback. Working with NetScout, a world leader in real time service assurance and cybersecurity, Herzog leads viewers on a journey through a series of provocative conversations that reveal the ways in which the online world has transformed how virtually everything in the real world works – from business to education, space travel to healthcare, and the very heart of how we conduct our personal relationships.

“As only he can do, Werner Herzog has crafted an endlessly entertaining and thought-provoking analysis of modern technology,” said Magnolia President Eamonn Bowles. “Through his unique and inquisitive vision, LO AND BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD allows audiences to experience the Internet in new ways.”

“My dream at Sundance to take off from the Olympic ramp on skis remains unfulfilled, but I am even more exhilarated by the fact that my film now is taking flight through Magnolia,” said Herzog.

“Our vision for this project has always been to inform as many people as possible about the perils and the possibilities of the connected world,” said Executive Producer Jim McNiel. “We could not have chosen a more capable partner than Magnolia to get the story out.”

Written and directed by Werner Herzog and presented by NetScout in association with Saville Productions, Pereira & O’Dell Entertainment and Skellig Rock, LO AND BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD was produced by Rupert Maconick and Herzog. Executive Producers are Jim McNiel of NetScout, Dave Arnold, Tennille Teague and David Moore.

The deal was negotiated by Magnolia SVP of Acquisitions Dori Begley and Magnolia VP of Acquisitions John Von Thaden, with Josh Braun, Dan Braun and David Koh of Submarine on behalf of the filmmakers. Magnolia Head of Worldwide Sales Christina Rogers and Magnolia VP of International Sales Scott Veltri will be representing the film for Magnolia International at EFM. All international rights are available.

Check Out The Brand New Trailer for RED ARMY

2 (1)

From Oscar nominated and Emmy award-winning filmmakers Werner Herzog, Jerry Weintraub, and Liam Satre-Meloy, RED ARMY is a feature documentary about the Soviet Union and the most successful dynasty in sports history: the Red Army hockey team. Told from the perspective of its captain Slava Fetisov, the story portrays his transformation from national hero to political enemy.

Watch the new trailer below.

From the USSR to Russia, the film examines how sport mirrors social and cultural movements and parallels the rise and fall of the Red Army team with the Soviet Union. Red Army is about how an incredibly oppressive system produced one of the greatest teams in history.

From director Gabe Polsky (THE MOTEL LIFE), RED ARMY is an inspiring story about the Cold War played out on the ice rink, and a man who stood up to a powerful system and paved the way for change for generations of Russians.

The film screened at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, Telluride and Toronto and Sony Pictures Classics will release RED ARMY in early 2015.

1

Viachaslav Fetisov – aka Slava Fetisov – is among the Soviet Union’s most-decorated athletes, and is considered one the best hockey players of all time. He was the long-time captain of the Soviet Union’s Red Army team, won seven world championships, two Olympic gold medals, and three Stanley Cups. He was a two-time NHL All Star and played for the USSR First All-Star Team nine times. He was one of six players voted onto to the International Ice Hockey  Federation’s Centennial All-Star Team and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001.

In the 1980s, Fetisov was instrumental in breaking the barrier that prevented Soviets from playing abroad. He was the first Soviet citizen to be granted a visa that allowed him to play hockey in the west. Fetisov’s efforts paved the way for thousands of Soviet and European players to play hockey in America.

After retiring as a player, Fetisov embarked on a political and executive career. He is currently a member of the upper house of the Federal Assembly of Russia, and was instrumental in bringing the XXII Olympic Winter Games to Sochi, Russia. Fetisov is president of the professional Russian hockey Club HC CSKA Moscow, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Kontinental Hockey League, and chair of the World Anti-Doping Agency Athletes Committee. He was also Minister of Sport in Russia from 2002 to 2008.

Photos – Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

3 (1)

THE WIND RISES – The Review

windrises

In the first few months of 2014 animated feature films seem to be setting the box office ablaze. THE LEGO MOVIE has reigned at number one for the past three weekends while a holdover from last year, FROZEN hovers in the top ten after becoming the highest grossing animated feature of all time. Both  employ state of the art computer technology to give them a fully rounded three-dimensional look (even without the stereo-optic specs). But what of hand-drawn animation? Sure, it’s used for television on popular shows like “Spongebob Squarepants” and “Adventure Time” along with commercials and short subjects. The Disney Studios made history with their traditional-drawn features beginning with the Snow White story in the 1930’s. Then Pixar arrived in 1994 with the first TOY STORY and established a new look for feature animation. Almost all new features were made with the new tech, although Disney attempted to revive the classic look with 2009’s THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG to mixed results. But overseas the traditional 2D animated feature film is thriving, especially in Japan thanks to their master of animation art (often called “Japan’s Disney”), Hayao Miyazaki. He has said that his latest work, THE WIND RISES, will be his final animated feature. It’s been breaking box office records in his homeland and has already won several movie awards. And this Sunday it is vying for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, along with another foreign-made 2D film ERNEST AND CELESTINE (Miyazaki took the Oscar in 2002 for SPIRITED AWAY). And what is the subject of his pre-retirement project? A fairy tale fantasy? A revered folk tale? No, this film is a rarity. It’s a biography set within the last 100 years and gives us a unique insight into his country’s troubled past.

THE WIND RISES tells the story of aviation designer Jiro Horikoshi. We meet him as a ten year-old with his head (or really his brain) in the clouds. He daydreams about the aircraft of the early twentieth century. A sympathetic teacher gives him an English magazine concerning an Italian airplane maker and Jiro dreams of meeting the famed Caproni who will become a fantasy mentor through the years, greeting him with, “Japanese boy!”. Years later on a disastrous train ride to college (an earthquake strikes), Jiro meets a young woman named Nahoko. After college, Jiro and his pal Honjo are hired by the Mitsubishi company to design fighter planes for the military (Jiro’s eyesight prevents him from being a pilot). The two young men are even sent to Germany in order to study their aircrafts, but Japan’s ally is not thrilled about sharing their design secrets. After their return, Jiro checks into a resort where he re-unites with Nahoko. The two fall in love, their romance complicated by his job demands and her struggle with tuberculosis. The country continues its march toward World War II as Jiro completes his designs for the A6M fighter aircraft that would become known as the prefered kamikaze weapon, the “zero'”.

For what may be his big screen last bow, Miyazaki has pulled out all the visual stops to make a breathtakingly beautiful work of cinematic artistry. But as gorgeous as WIND is, he never neglects the human element. Perhaps the story of Jiro’s desires and dreams struck a chord with the film maker. Speaking of dreams, the film literally soars showing us Jiro’s fantasies of flight with the flamboyant, gregarious Caproni. The two walk across the wings of Caproni’s elaborate creations without a care. They’re almost castles of the air. But his main goal is not destruction from above, but transportation with a celebratory zeal. Passengers seem to pop out of every orifice of the airship, all of them laughing and cavorting. Back  on the ground, Miyazaki masterfully depicts the terror of the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake that ranks among the best recreations of the Hollywood 1970’s disaster epics. People and homes, along with the lengthy commuter train, are buffetted and shifted about by the angry Earth while flames spring forth at random. It’s harrowing and breath-taking. After witnessing Nature’s fury, Miyazaki shows us her beauty much later at the lush resort that serves as the blissful backdrop for Jiro and Nahoko’s love affair, particularly when the two are caught in an unexpected rain shower while waling through the luscious forest. At the resort’s restaurant we’re treated to some superb character animation via the odd, lovable German tourist Castorp who befriends Jiro. The animation team also showcases their skills during the scenes of the flying tests of Jiro’s prototype planes. The support frames and wings strain against the mighty air currents as they climb toward the heavens. Adding much to these sequences is the unusual use of sounds. It appears that human voices, perhaps full choruses are providing the sounds of engines and winds (even the earthquake rumblings) giving the story a more organic feel than clanging metal and snapping wood. The only missteps in this stunning work may be the two comic relief characters: Jiro’s blustery boss Kurokawa and his excitable sister Kayo. The seem a bit too cartoon-ish next to many of the realistic backdrops (Kayo’s mouth almost swallows her head like a typical “anime” teen girl when upset). But these are minor speed-bumps in this magnificent movie journey through history.

In many markets filmgoers will have the option of viewing the film in its original Japanese language supplanted by English subtitles (oh, there’s a few lines in French, Italian, and German too) or in an English-dubbed version. I’ve been able to view both versions and the story doesn’t lose a thing with the use of Anglo vocals. The whole dubbing process for foreign animation has improved by leaps and bounds since the days of TV’s “Speed Racer” cartoons where the English voices were quickly trying to match the rapid mouths giving the show a sense of goofy camp. The all-star US cast provides great vocal performances with Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the brainy, passionate Jiro. Standouts are Martin Short as the hot-tempered Kurokawa and director Werner Herzog who brings the right touch of whimsy to Castorp (inspired casting!). A quick bit of warning to parents, because of the period setting Jiro and his pals smoke quite a bit, but kudos to the Disney company (the film’s US distributor) for not doing a digital alteration (years ago, Pecos Bill’s cigs were erased for a home video release). Which version doesn’t matter all that much. The important thing is to see this masterwork on the big screen. This tale of a boy who dreams of flight is the inspiring topper of a career of one of the greatest artists in cinema’s history. I imagine that like Jiro, Miyazaki’s dreams have all come true. And who knows how many other dreamers have been inspired. Thanks for planting the seeds, Mr. M.

4.5 Out of 5

THE WIND RISES opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas (dubbed version) and the Tivoli Theatre (subtitled version)

windrisesposter

 

Joseph Gordon-Levitt, John Krasinski, Emily Blunt Among Voice Cast In THE WIND RISES English Language Version

THE WIND RISES

An A-list roster of voice talent has been assembled for the English-language version of Studio Ghibli’s THE WIND RISES, which opens in select North American theaters on Feb. 21, 2014, expanding wide on Feb. 28, 2014. The film marks director Hayao Miyazaki’s final feature, as the legendary animation veteran announced his retirement in September 2013.

THE WIND RISES

The voice cast of the English-language version follows.

  • JOSEPH GORDON-LEVITT (“Don Jon,” “Sin City: A Dame to Kill For”) lends his voice to Jiro Horikoshi, who harbors strong ambitions to create his own beautiful airplane. A bubbling mix of wild excitement, extreme focus, individualism, pride, realism and idealism, Jiro also has a cool and brilliant mind and is recognized for his talent.
  • JOHN KRASINSKI (“The Office,” “Promised Land”) provides the voice of Honjo, Jiro’s college friend and fellow aviation engineer.
  • EMILY BLUNT (“The Young Victoria,” “Edge of Tomorrow,” “Into the Woods”) voices Nahoko Satomi, a beautiful and cheerful girl who is a passenger on the same train as Jiro on the day of a natural disaster. Ten years later, they reunite.
  • MARTIN SHORT (“Father of the Bride,” “Saturday Night Live”) was tapped to portray Kurokawa, Jiro’s grumpy boss.
  • STANLEY TUCCI (“Julie & Julia,” “The Hunger Games” films, “The Devil Wears Prada”) provides the voice of Caproni, an airplane creator known worldwide from the dawn of Italian aviation through the 1930s, who appears in Jiro’s dreams to stir up, advise and voice Jiro’s thoughts and emotions.
  • MANDY PATINKIN (“Homeland,” “The Princess Bride”) lends his voice to Hattori, the senior designer at Mitsubishi.
  • WERNER HERZOG (“Jack Reacher,” filmmaker “Grizzly Man”) voices Castorp, a mysterious visitor to Japan who encounters Jiro at a mountain resort.
  • WILLIAM H. MACY (“Shameless,” “Fargo”) steps into the role of Satomi, Nahoko’s father.
  • MAE WHITMAN (“Parenthood,” “The Perks of Being a Wallflower”) was called on to voice Kayo Horikoshi, Jiro’s younger sister, who adores him. Whitman also voices Kinu, Nahoko’s caretaker.
  • JENNIFER GREY (“Dirty Dancing,” “The Cotton Club,” “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”) provides the voice of Mrs. Kurokawa.
  • DARREN CRISS (“Girl Most Likely,” “Glee”) lends his voice to Katayama, a jovial junior engineering colleague of Jiro.
  • ELIJAH WOOD (“Wilfred,” “Grand Piano,” “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy) voices Sone, a studious engineering colleague of Jiro.
  • RONAN FARROW (“From Up on Poppy Hill”) is the voice of the Mitsubishi Employee.

Also featured in the English-language version of THE WIND RISES are Zach Callison (“Sofia the First,” “Mr. Peabody and Sherman,” “Steven Universe”), who voices young Jiro; Eva Bella (“Frozen,” “Despicable Me 2,” “Almost Heroes 3D”), who lends her voice to young Kayo; and Madeleine Rose Yen (Broadway’s “War Horse,” “Irving Berlin’s White Christmas”), who provides the voice of young Nahoko. Rounding out the English-language voice cast are Edie Mirman (“Epic,” “Howl’s Moving Castle” English-language version) as the voice of Jiro’s mother, and David Cowgill (“Madagascar”) as the voice of the flight engineer.

THE WIND RISES

The English-language voice cast of THE WIND RISES is directed by Gary Rydstrom, a seven-time Academy Award®-winning sound designer (“Saving Private Ryan,” “Titanic”) who worked on “Wreck-It Ralph” and “Brave.” Rydstrom also directed the English-language versions of “The Secret World of Arrietty” and “From Up on Poppy Hill.” The English-language version of the film is produced by Studio Ghibli and executive produced by Frank Marshall, who produced dozens of landmark films, including the “Indiana Jones” series, “The Bourne Legacy” and “War Horse,” and executive produced the English-language versions of Studio Ghibli films “PONYO,” “The Secret World of Arrietty” and “From Up on Poppy Hill.” Mike Jones (“In the Event of a Moon Disaster”) is credited with the English-language screenplay adaptation for THE WIND RISES.

THE WIND RISES was released in Japan in July 2013, topping the Japanese box office and the $120 million mark. The film opened for Academy Award® qualification engagements in New York and Los Angeles Nov. 8-14, 2013, showcasing the original film in Japanese with English subtitles.

In THE WIND RISES, Jiro dreams of flying and designing beautiful airplanes, inspired by the famous Italian aeronautical designer Caproni. Nearsighted from a young age and unable to be a pilot, Jiro joins a major Japanese engineering company in 1927 and becomes one of the world’s most innovative and accomplished airplane designers. The film chronicles much of his life, depicting key historical events, including the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, the Great Depression, the tuberculosis epidemic and Japan’s plunge into war. Jiro meets and falls in love with Nahoko, and grows and cherishes his friendship with his colleague Honjo. Writer and director Hayao Miyazaki pays tribute to engineer Jiro Horikoshi and author Tatsuo Hori in this epic tale of love, perseverance, and the challenges of living and making choices in a turbulent world.

http://thewindrisesmovie.tumblr.com/

Like The Wind Rises on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewindrisesmovie
Follow The Wind Rises on Twitter: https://twitter.com/WindRisesFilm
Subscribe to The Wind Rises on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thewindrisesmovie

TheWindRises527bdc713cca0

Watch The New Trailer For Drafthouse Films’ THE ACT OF KILLING

the-act-of-killing__large

Shaking audiences at the 2012 Toronto and Telluride Film Festivals and winning an Audience Award at the 2013 Berlin International Film Festival, THE ACT OF KILLING is an unprecedented film that, according to The Los Angeles Times, “could well change how you view the documentary form.” Watch the new trailer below.

In this chilling and inventive documentary, executive produced by Errol Morris (The Fog Of War) and Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man), the filmmakers examine a country where death squad leaders are celebrated as heroes, challenging them to reenact their real-life mass killings in the style of the American movies they love. The hallucinatory result is a cinematic fever dream, an unsettling journey deep into the imaginations of mass murderers and the shockingly banal regime of corruption and impunity they inhabit.

THE ACT OF KILLING opens in select theaters Friday, July 19.

Official Website: http://www.actofkilling.com

https://twitter.com/DrafthouseFilms

https://www.facebook.com/drafthousefilms

5_taok_waterfall_framegrab__large

JACK REACHER – The Review

Looks like Tom Cruise has begun another big screen franchise. After starring as Ethan Hunt in four hit films based on the classic 1960’s TV show “Mission: Impossible”, he’s turned to the literary world for the first film based on the long-running (17 books and counting) hero created by author Lee Childs, JACK REACHER. For this adaptation of “One Shot”, Cruise (also the film’s producer) has brought a long a frequent script collaborator Christopher McQuarrie (VALKYRIE, but perhaps best known for THE USUAL SUSPECTS) to direct also (his first feature since 2000’s THE DAY OF THE GUN). Robert Downey,Jr bounces back and forth between Iron Man and Sherlock Holmes, so why can’t Cruise be a part of a super spy team and a loner ex-military cop? It all depends on whether this initial outing is worthy of a follow-up.

This first screen thriller/mystery begins with a lone sniper expertly killing five people in a peaceful Pittsburgh park. After collecting the evidence, police detective Emerson (David Oyelowo) arrests a war vet/ army sniper named Barr. Emerson and public defender Rodin (Richard Jenkins) interrogate Barr and pass him a legal pad to write out his confession. Instead, he writes, “Get Jack Reacher”. But how to find him? Reacher, an ex Army police investigator, has no permanent address, no car (he travels by bus), no cell phone, and no charge cards (he pays cash for everything, including new clothes from Goodwill, via wire transfer from his military pension). After Barr is beaten into a coma during a botched prisoner transfer, Reacher arrives at Barr’s hospital. Seems that Reacher had helped convict Barr of a shooting incident overseas (the conviction later kicked out). Before he can leave, Reacher is hired by Barr’s pro-bono defense attorney Helen Rodin (Rosamund Pike), the PD’s daughter, to exonerate Barr. Reacher’s investigation unearths an intricate vast conspiracy and puts him and Helen on a collision course with a shadowy mastermind, The Zec (Werner Herzog).

Cruise brings his usual intensity to this combination of Sherlock Holmes (the guy really observes) and the Punisher (do not lean on him). Reacher has that “steel trap” brain and needs no notepads. His stoic confidence provides this often grim thriller with some very funny moments. He can also be kind as when he offers some much-needed advice to a young girl on the wrong path. Reacher’s boss/partner Helen is usually regulated to the “damsel-in-distress” particularly in the finale. Pike seems to spend most of the time indignant, angry, or wide-eyed with fear. At about the midway point the costumers (or more likely the producers) decided she should dress more like a cocktail waitress than lawyer, so that she’s nearly bouncing out of her top while escaping the bad guys. Pike’s a talented actress, but this choice distracts from her character. Jenkins and Oyelowo are a great team as they try to deal with Reacher’s quirks and talents (with Oyelowo a determined pursuer of him later). Cruise’s old DAYS OF THUNDER co-star Robert Duvall shows up late in the film to steal scenes as the helpful owner of a gun range. The two are a terrific team in the film’s big showdown. The most inspired casting may be acclaimed director Herzog as the shadowy, sinister mastermind . His cool, calming German accent brings an extra bit of creepy menace to the proceedings.

McQuarrie keeps things moving at a brisk pace that makes the 130 minutes almost breeze by. He puts a new spin on the downtown car chase that concludes with perhaps the film’s funniest moment. There’s also a couple of great sequences that show off Reacher’s considerable hand-to-hand combat skills. You can almost feel every bit of punishment he dishes out the pain to these unlucky thugs (there goes another fracture-crunch! snap!). There’s expert use of the Pittsburgh locations too (and I just knew it as the home of George A Romero’s zombie epics). JACK REACHER is a gritty, brutal thriller that’s a great alternative to December’s family fare and high drama Oscar-bait. Let’s hope Cruise and company are able to revisit this new movie action hero/sleuth in the near future.

4 Out of 5 Stars