Jumat, 13 September 2019

Eddie Murphy Becomes Blaxploitation Icon in Dolemite Is My Name Trailer

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Eddie Murphy embodies the wild true story of Rudy Ray Moore in the trailer for My Name Is Dolemite, the new Netflix film based on the comedian and Blaxploitation filmmaker. The comedy, which premieres in September at the Toronto International Film Festival, also features Wesley Snipes, Mike Epps, Craig Robinson, Snoop Dogg, Tituss Burgess, DaVine Joy Randolph, Keegan-Michael Key, Chris Rock and T.I. among its all-star cast.

The clip opens with Moore (Murphy) conceptualizing his new alter-ego Dolemite, a cane-swinging, Kung fu-fighting pimp in an attempt to reignite his struggling stand-up career. Whatever it takes, Im ready to do it, he proclaims. I got to be totally outrageous.

Elsewhere, he flaunts a soon-to-be-signature catchphrase (Dolemite is my name, and fucking up motherfuckers is my game) and uses the character in his racy stand-up albums including 1970s risqu Eat Out More Often. Its filthy, an executive tells him of the cover. Youve got a product here you cant sell or promote.

Moores ambitions continue to swell, and he recruits a writer (Key) and director (Snipes) to create a film, 1975s Dolemite, that places the pimp character in a setting inspired by 1970s Los Angeles. The trailer hints at the films numerous production strains and comedic hijinks all on its way to becoming a box office success.

Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow, Black Snake Moan) directed Dolemite Is My Name from a script by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski. While Netflix has yet to announce a wide release, the film is expected to his the streaming service and select theaters this fall.

Colbert Slams Trump for Pushing Dangerous, Unfounded Epstein Murder Conspiracy

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Stephen Colbert addressed President Trumps dangerous and completely unfounded retweet of a conspiracy theory regarding Jeffrey Epsteins apparent death by suicide on The Late Show on Monday. He explained that the move proved that Trump could still shock him after all these years.

You know, just when you think hes been around for a while, youre not going to be shocked by him anymore, he pops up and scares the bejesus out of you, Colbert said. Hes like Leatherface, but more leather and way more face.

On Saturday, news broke that Epstein, the financier and convicted sex offender, who was arrested last month on sex trafficking charges, had been found dead in prison with early reports indicating that he died by suicide. Soon after, several bonkers conspiracy theories began circulating, including the baseless one Trump retweeted, which suggested former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were behind Epsteins death.

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Colbert noted that Epstein knew a lot of powerful and important people, including Clinton, Alan Dershowitz, former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, Prince Andrew and Trump. Its a whos who of Whos Jeffrey Epstein? Ive never met Jeffrey Epstein.'

Colbert added that Epsteins death had brought out a wild wave of conspiracy theories online, the sort of stuff that only unstable, tinfoil hat loons could possibly believe. So, Donald Trump Colbert said before slamming Trump for spreading the baseless claim about the Clintons.

Thats your theory? he cracked. Im not saying the Clintons dont have any power. They could definitely get a reservation in any restaurant in New York City. Party of four, seven oclock on a Saturday, maybe not. But masterminding a scheme to assassinate a high profile prisoner in maximum-security federal custody? They couldnt even mastermind a visit to Wisconsin.

But Trump clearly thinks this is the only logical answer, Colbert continued, before mimicking Trumps voice. Follow me down the rabbit hole here, OK? Who had the most to gain from Epsteins death besides me who was on videotape partying with him and young women? And who controls all federal prisons? The president, Bill Clinton. Really, what? Me, how?'

Official Secrets Review: An Iraq War Whistleblowers Tale, Thrills Redacted

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Official Secrets is not kinetic cinema. Instead, it dumps a ton of data on audiences in telling the true story of Katharine Gun (Keira Knightley), the British whistleblower who leaked classified documents meant to pressure the U.N. Security Council into supporting the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. But even when director Gavin Hoods political thriller fails to thrill, theres no doubting the continuing relevance of the topic on the table. Gun, an intelligence operative at GCHQ (Government Communications Headquarters), a British surveillance agency tasked with ferreting out terrorist activity, sits at home in Cheltenham, talking back to Prime Minister Tony Blair on the telly as he pushes the George W. Bush war agenda that claims Saddam Hussein is hiding weapons of mass destruction. Just because youre the prime minister doesnt mean you get to make up your own facts, she sneers, as visions of The Donald dance in the heads of contemporary cynics of institutional mendacity.

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But Gun goes further than mumbling curses at the TV screen while her Muslim husband Yasar (Adam Bakri), a Kurdish-Turk, gripes about preferring to watch football. Back at GCHQ, Gun is copied on a top-secret memo from U.S. intelligence requesting that the Brits lean on (translation: blackmail) five UN Security Council swing-vote members Angola, Cameroon, Chile, Bulgaria, and Guinea to vote for invasion. Fired up with indignation over the deception as well as her own antiwar sentiments, heightened by humanist concern for 30 million Iraqis, Gun leaks the memo. This puts her in violation of the Official Secrets Act, a treasonable offense that has dire consequences.

In the interest of hewing to the truth of the situation, Gun and co-screenwriters Sara and Gregory Bernstein lay out the process with a diagrammatic precision that dampens suspense, as does the well-known fact that Gun did not stop the calamitous war. Theres a pale attempt at journalistic drama in the mode of All the Presidents Men as Guardian reporter Martin Bright, nicely played by Matt Smith (a former Dr. Who and a dynamite Prince Phillip on The Crown), breaks the Gun story with the help of colleague Peter Beaumont (Matthew Goode) and volatile D.C. reporter Ed Vulliamy (Rhys Ifans). Its hard not to appreciate the darkly comic irony when Brights scoop is discredited after the word favorite in the leaked U.S. memo is printed the British way: favourite. No conspiracy, just a spellcheck fix no one caught.

The rest is taken up with Gun prepping for her day in court with the help of human rights attorney Ben Emmerson, played with fierce intellect and enlivening wit by Ralph Fiennes. How can Emmerson defend a woman who actually confessed to her crime? By putting the war itself on trial a rich theme that the film devotes too little time to developing. Knightley gives her all to making Gun a fully dimensional human being onscreen, but the didactic script defeats her at nearly every turn. And so a historical footnote with potent resonance right now fails to get the screen treatment it deserves. Official Secrets remains a compelling tale of injustice on an individual and global level. Its a shame that it hasnt been told better, but give it points for being told at all.

Kamis, 12 September 2019

Edward Norton Unravels a Mystery in First Motherless Brooklyn Trailer

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Edward Norton has shared the first trailer for Motherless Brooklyn, the actor/director/screenwriters upcoming adaptation of Jonathan Lethems acclaimed novel.

On Wednesday, Rolling Stone premiered Thom Yorkes Daily Battles, the musical centerpiece of Motherless Brooklyn; Wynton Marsalis also contributes a jazz arrangement of the Radiohead singers new song for the film. Yorkes rendition soundtracks the first trailer, which finds Nortons private eye unraveling a mystery following the death of his mentor.

Set against the backdrop of 1950s New York, Motherless Brooklynfollows Lionel Essrog (Edward Norton), a lonely private detective living with Tourette Syndrome, as he ventures to solve the murder of his mentor and only friend, Frank Minna (Bruce Willis), the films synopsis states.

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Armed only with a few clues and the engine of his obsessive mind, Lionel unravels closely-guarded secrets that hold the fate of the whole city in the balance.In a mystery that carries him from gin-soaked jazz clubs in Harlem to the hard-edged slums of Brooklyn and, finally, into the gilded halls of New Yorks power brokers, Lionel contends with thugs, corruption and the most dangerous man in the city to honor his friend and save the woman who might be his own salvation.

Following its premiere at the 2019 Toronto Film Festival and closing slot at the 2019 New York Film Festival,Motherless Brooklyn will open in theaters November 1st.

To have [Yorke] write a song for the movie in response to absorbing what the movie and the character are aiming at is a very different thing, Norton told Rolling Stone. Its like Barbra Streisand and Memories forThe Way We Were;sometimes it can define a thing. Like Lady Gaga, what those guys did with Shallow in [A Star Is Born], thats a stunning song that rises up in the film and out of the film. It rises organically out of the story of the film and it gives you shivers, its really a special thing when that happens.

See Lupita Nyongo Play Zombie-Slaying Teacher in Little Monsters Trailer

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Months after her breakout horror role in Jordan Peeles Us, Lupita Nyongo builds on that momentum with the new trailer for Little Monsters. In the grisly horror-comedy, the actress stars as Miss Caroline, a brave schoolteacher who shields her students from a zombie breakout during a field trip gone awry.

The clip opens with military personnel strategizing how to defeat the undead. Its zombies again, one character intones. Fast ones or slow ones, sir? another responds. Luckily for all involved, its the slow variety, as the outbreak unfolds in the sleepy town of Pleasant Valley.

The trailer shows Miss Caroline working with Dave (Alexander England), a washed-up musician on-hand as a chaperone, and kids show personality Teddy McGiggle (Josh Gad) to defeat the zombies. Adding a comedic spin, Caroline attempts to keep her students blissfully unaware of the apocalyptic scene distracting them with ukulele songs and telling them the bloodthirsty beings are part of a game. Gads character, meanwhile, is more defeatist about their potential doom, telling the kids, Were all gonna die.

Abe Forsythe (2016s Down Under) wrote and directed Little Monsters, which premiered in January at the Sundance Film Festival. The film hits theaters in the U.K. and Ireland on November 15th; a U.S. release date has not been announced.

Apocalypse Now: Final Cut: Coppolas Surreal Vietnam Epic Returns

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About a mile out, the man says, theyll put on the music. The kid looks confused: music? Just a classical piece the boys love it. Put on PSYWAR OP, he barks into his headset. Make it loud.

The reel-to-reel starts up. Wagners Ride of the Valkyries, from the German composersRing of the Nibelung opera, begins playing over loudspeakers. The soldiers look around, confused and bemused. The camera keeps shooting a group of helicopters, already in attack formation, from below youd think they were prehistoric birds of prey. The troops staring out from these metal beasts are in profile, stoic and larger-than-life, pure Riefenstahl 101. And from where youre sitting, the command to make it loud seems redundant. It feels deafening, overwhelming. It feels like youre on the whirlybird when that first missile launches, the bobbleheaded co-pilot bouncing in his seat, guns firing, people on the ground falling, explosions everywhere. Noise seems to be swirling around you, from static-y voices on intercoms to heavy artillery blasts. Youre in the middle of pure chaos.

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Its one of the most famous extended sequences in American filmmaking. John Milius wrote it, based on experiences hed heard from folks whod come back from Nam after being in the shit. Gerald B. Greenberg edited it. The legendary Walter Murch designed the soundscapes. Akira Kurosawa allegedly loved it. Francis Ford Coppola says hes watched it many, many times over the past 40 years, in various states of dread and fear. You may have seen these moments on a plane, in a train, on a boat, with a goat. (Just, please, do not say on your phone.)

But sitting in a cavernous theater in downtown San Francisco and viewing Apocalypse Now: Final Cut, a 4K restoration-cum-remix of Coppolas 1979 Vietnam War magnum opus, it almost feels as if you are experiencing this attack for the very first time. It goes without saying that most movies are best seen on a big screen, with an audience and in the dark. When youre talking about this surreal, psychedelic vision of life during wartime, however a phantasmagoria of gung-ho surfing obsessives, gyrating Playboy bunnies, ghostly French colonialists, and Marlon Brando in greenface youre talking about a whole other mind-fuck when its madness is presented in IMAX. Which is all the more reason to catch this rejiggered masterpiece when it gets a brief run in select theaters starting August 15th. (A Blu-Ray release hits shelves, virtual or otherwise, on August 27th.) It is, in terms of storytelling and scope, a completely different trip up the river, through your acid-fried skull, and into the heart of darkness.

So about that Final Cut subtitle . . .

Back in early 2017, James Mockoski, the archivist at Coppolas production company American Zoetrope, approached the director with the idea of doing something special to commemorate the films upcoming 40th anniversary. The 79 negative was in decent though slightly beat-up shape, as was the material used for the expanded 2001 version known as Apocalypse Now Redux; according to mix engineer Colin Guthrie, the original six-track master audio given to the studio and kept by Zoetrope . . . both were lost.

They each knew the restoration process would be laborious frame by frame, moment by moment, as Guthrie says but thanks to advances in digital technology over the past decade or so, not impossible. The two men began examining the elements they had from the various prints and home-entertainment reissues over the years. The idea would be to clean up the images and substantially improve the sonic fidelity, with the goal being a far better-looking and -sounding Apocalypse Now compared to previous rereleases, especially in regard to the audios low end. (At Zoetropes mixing barn in Napa the day after the San Francisco screening, Guthrie plays the newly restored Operation Arclight bombing sequence with massive speakers pointed at a couch in the center of the room, and the rumble of the bombing raid makes you feel like youre seconds away from encountering the mythical brown note firsthand.)

I didnt intend to make a new [Apocalypse Now]. . . . But I felt that this being longer than one and shorter than the other was the right blend.
Francis Ford Coppola

Mockoski and Guthrie figured they could not only get everything into shape but could, in the formers words, push things in a different direction . . . into becoming more of an immersive viewing experience using technology that wasnt around in 1979, especially once Dolby and IMAX came on board. (The Final Cut theatrical run will include screenings in the IMAX format, though not exclusively.) The question was whether Coppola was interested in going back into this particular jungle once more. Hed already revisited the film and radically added close to an hour of footage, giving us the second Redux version. Yet the idea of just putting a spruced-up, albeit technically superior, print of the movie out for the anniversary seemed like too much of a nostalgic indulgence. And which cut would he choose for the anniversary, anyway: original recipe or extra-crispy?

When we were releasing the film in 79, Coppola says, sitting in one of his Northern California winerys large, museum-like spaces above the tasting areas, we knew it was too long, and too weird. The film was surreal my feeling was the war was surreal, so anything trying to get to the heart of it was going to be out-there. But distributors kept telling us, Make it shorter, make it less weird. So we did. Then, when folks were making my wifes documentary [1991s Hearts of Darkness], they had access to all of the hours and hours of footage. And by that point, the mainstream has sort of absorbed what we were doing in Apocalypse, so it didnt seem quite so weird anymore. Ironically, it was the distributors who came to me and said, Well, you have all this stuff, why not put what you cut back in? Thats how Redux happened.

But I always felt, he continues, that the first version was too shortened not too short, too shortened and the other version was . . . well, maybe we shouldnt have put everything back in. A movie is in service to a theme that runs through it, and I always felt that Redux never quite supported the theme of the film as fundamentally as I wanted. So we started with the second version, because that already had the restorations and corrections, and we began to tweak from there. I didnt intend to make a new version . . . but I felt that this being longer than one and shorter than the other was the perfect blend.

Thus was born Apocalypse Now: Final Cut, or what some say Coppola has privately referred to as the Goldilocks edit of the film a just-right amalgamation of both previous iterations, something that seems equally sprawling yet tighter than either of the versions weve come to know. Some 14 minutes have been taken out. Several game-changing Redux decisions remain, notably the PBR Street Gangs water-skiing excursion coming after their Col. Kilgore misadventure rather than before, as it does in the original a move that makes the boats crew seem less gonzo from the get-go and more like guys deservedly blowing off steam. (Laurence Fishburnes rubber-limbed boogieing to the Stones Satisfaction naturally steals the scene no matter where you put it.) The second encounter with the Playboy bunnies is gone; the slapstick stolen-surfboard vignette remains. And the controversial French-plantation sequence has been streamlined, though the immortal Jung-and-the-restless line There are two of you . . . one that kills and one that loves has, for better or worse, been left intact.

More important, this Apocalypse Now retains the center-cant-hold insanity of its onscreen journey (and the offscreen legend of behind-the-scenes creative mayhem) that has always made this movie feel like a singular cinematic fever dream. If anything, seeing this New Hollywood landmark/last gasp in such a clean, crisp, larger-than-life state emphasizes the multitudes it still contains. You might notice that, say, when a CIA agent is cutting into a slice of roast beef during the initial meeting between Martin Sheens Capt. Willard and his military overlords, it mirrors the slaughter of a bull near the end. You may take note of the tenderness that Robert Duvalls Kilgore always and forever a goofy foot displays toward children and babies during his siege on a Vietnamese village. You may find yourself really noticing, for the first time, the chorus of crickets that accompanies Col. Kurtzs final breath. Or you may find yourself identifying with Chef, or Clean, or even Dennis Hoppers countercultural motormouth instead of Willard this go-round. Viewers never step in the same river twice.

As to whether Apocalypse 3.0 is the definitive version of Coppolas warped war-film vision, the answer may depend on the moviegoer. No one is even sure if final is truly applicable either. After premiering this cut at the Tribeca Film Festival in April, he made a few extra trims for its official release; Mockoski notes that the director never really locks a film, he latches it. For Coppola, however, this is the end result of decades of thinking about the story he wanted to tell a three-hour trek into mans dark side and a nations military moral free-fall that has, at long last, come to a conclusion hes happy with. Film is an illusion, he says. And this was the version where the illusion of Apocalypse Now finally snapped into place for me.

Rabu, 11 September 2019

Jeff Goldblum Feeds His Curiosity in The World According to Jeff Goldblum Trailer

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Of all the trailers to come out of Disneys D23 Expo this past weekend, none were quite as dazzling as the one for Jeff Goldblums new travel show, The World According to Jeff Goldblum. The new series, hosted by Goldblum and produced by National Geographic, premieres on Disneys new Disney+ streaming service on November 12th, in tandem with the platforms launch.

The show will follow Goldblum as he travels the globe and explores pretty much whatever interests him in that moment: Sneakers, jewelry, ice cream, tattoos, Korean barbecue, square dancing, synchronized swimming and much more.

Im not here to be didactic or professorial in any way, Goldblum says in the trailer over a mug of coffee. I know nothing thats the premise. Im a humble student and, in fact, kind of a late bloomer a late Gold-bloomer.

In addition toThe World According to Jeff Goldblum, Disney+ will feature a plethora of content from Disney and its various franchises, including Marvel, Pixar,Star Wars and more. Other shows in development for the platform include four separate Star Wars series, as well as aShe-Hulk series anda High School Musical spin-off titled, appropriately,High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. Disney will also make their live-actionLady and the Tramp remake exclusively available on Disney+.