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tabuno
11-18-2012, 09:42 PM
2013 looks to be a somewhat less than specular season, though not without its potential gems, many that appear to involve fantasy, magic, and science fiction:

Avoid [January 25: Movie 43 (2013). Raunchy all star comedy ensemble. One of the worst listing of movie critic reviews.]

February 1: Warm Bodies (2013). Zombie finds love.
March 8: Oz The Great and Powerful (2013). A Prequel.
March 15: Icredible Burt Wonderstone, The (2013). Rival magicians.
March TBA: In From Up on Poppy Hill (2013). A Japanese movie about two youth’s and their family secrets.
April 12: Oblivion (2013). A sci fi movie starring Tom Cruise who rescues a mysterious female in the far future.
May 10: Great Gatsby, The (2013).
May 24: Epic (2013). A fantasy animated movie.
June 7: Now You See Me (2013). Magicians who are thieve must contend with persistent FBI agents.
June 14: Man of Steel (2013).
August 9: Elysium (2013). A sci fi movie starring Matt Damon and Jodie Foster.
October 11: Captain Phillips (2013). Based on a real-life seas drama of a Captain captured by Somali pirates starring Tom Hanks.
November 1: Ender’s Game (2013). A long awaited sci fi adaptation of Orson Scott Card’s book.
December 20: Saving Mr. Banks (2013). A drama with Tom Hanks as Walt Disney.

Chris Knipp
11-18-2012, 11:33 PM
I noted the promise of WARM BODIES in my TWILIGHT: BREAKING DAWN -- PART 2 re (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?3381-THE-TWILIGHT-SAGA-BREAKING-DAWN-PART-2-%28Bill-Condon-2012%29)view posted earlier today.

How about the coming releases for the rest of 2012? This Friday was an unusually rich offering, by the say, with LINCOLN, SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK, TWILIGHT, ANNA KARENINA, and much more, including, BARRYMORE, FIRST WINTER, and THE COMEDY, plus these are additional ones that opened Friday in Ne York that the NYTimes has reviews of Friday"

Movie Review | 'Jab Tak Hai Jaan': Defuse Bombs? That's Nothing Next to Love
Movie Review | 'A Man Vanishes': Hunt for Truth Behind a Man and Cinema
Movie Review | 'Generation P': Writing Ads That Sell His Soul
Movie Review | 'Who Bombed Judi Bari?': A Victim Testifies From the Grave
Movie Review | 'La Rafle': Rounding Up Jews in France
Movie Review | 'Turning': Boy? Girl? And Other Questions
Movie Review | 'Habibi': The Course of Love, Written on the Walls
Movie Review | '16 Acres': Collisions at Ground Zero
Movie Review | 'The Normals': Being a Guinea Pig for Pay May Not Be Worth It

Below is only a partial list of movies opening in the US the rest of this year. Notable ones are LIFE OF PI, AMOUR, RUST AND BONE, ON THE ROAD (that I know of).

November 16 (Friday)
Lincoln (Expands Wide)
Silver Linings Playbook
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2
Anna Karenina (Limited)
Dangerous Liaisons (Limited)
Price Check (Limited)

November 21 (Wednesday - Thanksgiving)
Life of Pi (in 3D)
Red Dawn
Rise of the Guardians (in 3D)

November 23 (Friday)
The Central Park Five (Limited)
Hitchcock (Limited)
Rust & Bone (Limited)

November 30 (Friday)
Killing Them Softly
The Collection (Limited)
Dragon (Limited)

December 7 (Friday)
Playing for Keeps
Deadfall (Limited)
Hyde Park on Hudson (Limited)
Lay the Favorite (Limited)

December 14 (Friday)
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (in 3D)
Save the Date (Limited)

December 19 (Wednesday)
The Guilt Trip
Monsters Inc (in 3D)
Amour (Limited)
Zero Dark Thirty (Limited)

December 21 (Friday)
Cirque Du Soleil: Worlds Away (in 3D)
Jack Reacher
This is 40
The Impossible (Limited)
Not Fade Away (Limited)
On the Road (Limited)

December 25 (Tuesday - Christmas Day)
Django Unchained
Les Miserables
Parental Guidance

December 28 (Friday)
Promised Land (Limited)
Quartet (Limited)

tabuno
12-15-2012, 06:52 PM
This Wizard of Oz prequel appears to hold all the visual magic in 3D and the powerful children's storyline based on the classic original of 1939. It's a wonder that the Oz story has been more adapted as Alice in Wonderland has.

tabuno
01-07-2013, 06:55 AM
Rarely have so many A-listed actors and actresses headlined what is typical a dumb, raunchy movie with 12 credited directors and 8 writers.

Hugh Jackman

Emma Stone ... Ellen Malloy

Elizabeth Banks

Gerard Butler ... Chaun

Kate Winslet ... Juliet Hulme

Kristen Bell ... Supergirl

Naomi Watts

Anna Faris ... Vanessa

Richard Gere ... Boss

Halle Berry

Chris Pratt ... Jason

Uma Thurman ... Lois Lane

Justin Long ... Robin

Liev Schreiber

Seann William Scott

Kate Bosworth ... Arlene

Terrence Howard

Johnny Knoxville

Tony Shalhoub

Setting up possibly the worst ensemble comedy ever or perhaps the most well acted, performed smart and sassy comedy ever.

Chris Knipp
01-30-2013, 03:14 PM
The movie listed above by tabuno, MOVIE 43, was indeed released on Jan. 25, 2013 but may have vanished without a trace from brick and mortar presentation. It received a Metacritic rating of: 16.

Chris Knipp
01-30-2013, 03:17 PM
http://img526.imageshack.us/img526/913/warmbodiesposterewbrand.jpg

Opening this Friday 1 Feb. 2013 is a tongue-in-cheek genre rom-com I've been looking forward to from the trailers, Jonathan Levine's WARM BODIES with Nocholas Hoult and Teresa Palmer in the leads, from the adult novel of Isaac Marion.

I will have a review of it on this site Friday.

I'm also working on Kim Lee-woon's THE LAST STAND, with the Gumbernator.

Johann
01-31-2013, 09:56 AM
MOVIE 43 was reviewed by Peter Howell for the Toronto Star and he said it was the worst waste of talent he's EVER SEEN.
I have much respect for Peter Howell. I love his voice and how he covers Cannes and other festivals. I'm actually jealous of how good he is.
He's a very reliable critic. The Star is lucky to have him. I read everything he writes. He's top notch. No bullshit with him.
I believe he said it was the worst film he's ever seen in his life, if memory serves...
Did you see it Chris?

Thanks for this thread tabuno. The main event for me for 2013 is Zack Snyder's MAN OF STEEL. I think we will see the Best Superman movie ever made. The first Richard Donner film with Christopher Reeve is untouchable to me, but this new Man of Steel looks like the film we need in this day and age. The trailer gives you hints of Mighty Greatness. I don't think I will be disappointed. Christopher Nolan is producing. I've loved every film Zack Snyder has made. He makes movies for guys like me. Bombast and wicked style.You can pick them apart critically (especially SUCKERPUNCH), but his films aren't meant for critics in all honesty. They are sheer entertainment of a high quality to my eye. I know people hate him with a passion, that's their problem. I love the guy. He made WATCHMEN cinematic. I drop a knee. Fanboys who are honest with themselves know that Snyder has got the goods. Period.

The Great Gatsby is one I'm looking very forward to.
The OZ movie by Sam Raimi also has me stoked. It looks fantasmagorical, visually dazzling.
I'm not sure about James Franco. I really don't know what to make of him. He strikes me as a guy with a Huge ego.
He was great in HOWL. Probably the best thing I've seen him do. Why is he going to an Ivy League school? He's got a rock-solid movie career.

Chris Knipp
01-31-2013, 10:48 AM
Warning: the year's "most anticipated" movies are rarely the best ones.

No, I didn't see MOVIE 43 nor do I want to. I'm glad you have a newspaper critic in Toronto you like.

James Franco may seem spread a little thin but I admire his intellectual curiosity and creativity. His MY OWN PRIVATE RIVER this time last year was a great tribute. He has explained that he has too much energy and he was dissatisfied with just acting. Acting in movies involves a lot of waiting around. He has been much happier since he started all the studying as well as the acting. HOWL isn't his only good effort as an actor. He was good in 172 HOURS. I loved his weird appearance in six episodes of "General Hospital." He will try just about anything. His whole life has become a kind of performance piece. Viva James Franco! His life is his greatest work of art.

http://img442.imageshack.us/img442/7205/jamesfrancocandycover.jpg
James Franco in drag for Candy
Magazine, Oct. 2010.

tabuno
01-31-2013, 12:40 PM
Maybe I can just sit back and forget fretting about upcoming movies and just come back and read Johann's expectant movies and be done with it. His three movies mentioned have a similar impact on my looking forward to them. Maybe it's just the trailers, but there is something quite compelling with each of them.

Johann
01-31-2013, 02:33 PM
:)

Thanks tabuno. You're too kind. It's a little sad that we can only get excited about 3 movies.
Nothing else on the radar, except J.J. Abrams doing Episode 7 of Star Wars. I have a STRONG hunch he will blow our minds.
All those bitter and jaded Star Wars fans will be carping and crowing and returning like lemmings. just you watch.

Abrams will BRING IT. He will shut everyone's mouth. People will be joyous that Star Wars is BACK.
I can feel The Force is strong in him....:)

tabuno
05-09-2013, 08:58 PM
Read the book by Orson Scott Card, a local Mormon novelist, years ago. Can't remember the story, remember I loved the book, don't want to remember the plot when I see the movie in November. Nevertheless watching the movie trailer reminds me of Starship Troopers (1997) or Star Trek (2009) but for younger audiences. Yawn. There's no idea of who and what the enemy is or even what's so special about these new troopers. The sales pitch seems directed towards young kids and older audiences using famous aging male stars. Yawn. Has it been too long in developing this movie? Is it now out of date while fresher more novel sci fi movies have come and gone? After Earth (May 31, 2013) trailer appears to be even more contemporary and offering an even great appealing impact than Ender's Game at this point with its father-son, and virtually everything on earth trying to kill them.

tabuno
06-04-2013, 02:54 AM
RED 2 with its all-star cast of aging actors may be able to restore the balance of aging sequels with old-time, experienced comedy in this espionage comedy with out of their usual dramatic roles, including Helen Mirren and Anthony Hopkins, and even Bruce Willis. Quirky John Malkovich never seems to become tiring. and Catherine Zeta-Jones new to this series has already demonstrated her appeal in a variety of entertaining popular espionage movies. Its summer release is just right for an action-comedy with the American public still recovering from a terrible economic and political polarizing year. Some violence and comedy with wit may be just the right combination, at least for the older generation. We'll have to see the demographic breakdown.

tabuno
06-04-2013, 03:09 AM
Interstellar directed by Christopher Nolan and starring Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, Michael Caine in a sci fi outer space voyage back two major movie studios sounds like it has big potential for being a great hit.

oscar jubis
06-04-2013, 06:38 PM
PACIFIC RIM may sound like a TRANSFORMERS knockoff. It does not look at all like anything I would want to watch. But this is a GUILLERMO DEL TORO film, which means it's likely to be as good as pop-corn movies get.

Chris Knipp
06-04-2013, 07:09 PM
The GUARDIAN: (http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2013/may/17/pacific-rim-sci-fi-guillermo-del-toro)
Guillermo del Toro's robots v aliens smackdown promises to combine a little class with its Michael Bay-style pyrotechnics. It could be the moment the sub-genre grows up. . . It may not go down all that well in the world of Michael Bay, but Guillermo del Toro's Pacific Rim is fast shaping up as the Transformers it's OK to like. A new extended trailer for the hugely hyped robots v aliens smackdown dropped earlier this week, confirming the Mexican film-maker's determination to show that enormous warring monstrosities can be a thing of surprising beauty.

It's still a sci-fi action film and I'm really beginning to OD on them. But del Toro has a superior touch with pop, for sure.

oscar jubis
06-04-2013, 07:25 PM
Yes, he does.

Chris Knipp
06-04-2013, 07:29 PM
I liked PAN'S LABYRINTH best. Not my thing, but superior to everything else he's done, even THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE .

tabuno
07-12-2013, 09:55 PM
As the title suggests, this is a science fiction movie about an exploration to the Jupiter moon Europa and has already been speculated about in 2010 (1984) this is another space version. The previews have the sharp Kubrick look, less of the mainstream popular polished 2010 movie version look. Whether or not the script can hold up to the technical look, remains to be seen.

Chris Knipp
07-16-2013, 07:26 AM
Upcoming Strand Releasing films.

Comments: I've reviewed IL FUTURO as part of the SFIFF; a disappointment after her PLAY, which I loved. I'm curious to see ZAYTOUN. From what I've seen of them so far and heard so far I'm pretty sure I find these Seidl films unbearable and annoying; Oscar likes them or the first of them, very much, I believe. True, Oscar? But they are much discussed. I didn't previous know about the Irish one, whose Baltimore setting lends interest for me - my sister often goes to the Charles, the premier art house, I guess. The French gay film was much talked about at Cannes and is of some interest. "Joe" Weerasethakul's films are always the focus of attention, but this reputedly is a very sight one. I'm interested in anything by Fatih Akin. All in all quite an interesting, solid release list from this little distributor. Have a look.
______________

PARADISE: FAITH (Drama) Directed by Ulrich Seidl. In this second installment, Ulrich Seidl explores what it means to carry the cross. For Anna Maria, a single woman in her 50s (and sister of PARADISE: LOVE’s Teresa), paradise lies with Jesus. She devotes her summer vacation to doing missionary work, so that Austria may be brought back to the path of virtue. On her daily pilgrimage through Vienna, she goes from door to door, carrying a foot-high statue of the Virgin Mary. When her husband, an Egyptian Muslim confined to a wheelchair, comes home after years of absence, her life is turned upside down. FAITH recounts the stations of the cross of a marriage and the longing for love. Official Selection of the Venice International Film Festival. Opens in New York on Friday, August 23, 2013 at the City Cinema’s Village East.

IL FUTURO (Drama) Directed by Alicia Scherson (Play) When her parents die in a tragic car accident, adolescent Bianca's universe is suspended. Entrusted with the care of her younger brother, Tomas, she struggles to hold it together. Life is further complicated when Tomás's gym-rat friends invite themselves to stay indefinitely. Using Bianca as a lure for a heist they've concocted, they convince her to initiate a sexual relationship with an enigmatic blind hermit, Maciste (Rutger Hauer). But as the two spend time together, Bianca unexpectedly finds normalcy and acceptance in the aging B-movie star and former Mr. Universe's rococo mansion. Official Selection of the Sundance Film Festival. Opens in New York on September 6, 2013 at the IFC Center. LA opening TBA.

ZAYTOUN (Drama) Directed by Eran Riklis (The Syrian Bride, Lemon Tree). In 1982, amid the Lebanese Civil War, Israeli pilot Yoni (Stephen Dorff) is shot down over Beirut and is taken prisoner by inhabitants of a Palestinian refugee camp. Among the captors is ten-year-old Fahed, whose father obsessively tends to his prized, but sickly olive tree, refusing to replant it until they return to their ancestral land. Despite his deep-rooted hatred for Yoni, Fahed realizes he can use him to get past the border and into “Palestine” to plant his father’s olive tree. The two embark on a harrowing and dangerous journey – one that tests the very boundaries of humanity. ZAYTOUN is a story of survival, reconciliation and friendship. Official Selection of the Toronto International Film Festival and AFI Festival. Opens in New York on Friday, September 20, 2013 at the Lincoln Plaza. Opens in Los Angeles on Friday, September 27, 2013 at Laemmle’s Royal Theatre, Playhouse 7 (Pasadena) and Town Center 5 (Encino).

I USED TO BE DARKER (Drama) Directed by Matt Porterfield (Hamilton, Putty Hill). When Taryn, a Northern Irish runaway, finds herself in trouble in Ocean City, MD, she seeks refuge with her aunt and uncle in Baltimore. But Kim and Bill have problems of their own: they’re trying to handle the end of their marriage gracefully for the sake of their daughter Abby, just home from her first year of college. A story of family revelations, people finding each other and letting go, looking for love where they’ve found it before and, when that doesn’t work, figuring out where they might find it next. Official Selection of the Sundance Film Festival and Berlin International Film Festival. Opening September 27 at Charles Theatre in Baltimore; October 4 at IFC Center in NYC and October 11 at Sundance Sunset 5 in Los Angeles.

PARADISE: HOPE (Drama) Directed by Ulrich Seidl. The third installment in Ulrich Seidl’s PARADISE trilogy, PARADISE: HOPE tells the story of overweight 13-year-old Melanie and her first love. While her mother travels to Kenya (PARADISE: LOVE) and her aunt (PARADISE: FAITH) does missionary work, Melanie spends her summer vacation at a strict diet camp for overweight teenagers. Between physical education and nutrition counseling, pillow fights and her first cigarette, Melanie falls in love with the camp director, a doctor 40 years her senior. As the doctor struggles with the guilty nature of his desire, Melanie had imagined her paradise differently. Official Selection of the Berlin Film Festival. Opening Fall 2013.

POLLUTING PARADISE (Documentary) Directed by Fatih Akin (The Edge of Heaven, Head-On) Along the coast of the Black Sea in northeastern Turkey lies the small mountain town of Çamburnu – a place where villagers have thrived for generations on fishing and tea cultivation. A decade ago, this idyllic landscape was threatened by the government’s decision to build a garbage landfill directly above the village. Since its inception, the consequences have been devastating: the air is polluted, the ground water is contaminated, flocks of birds and stray dogs have besieged the village and the tea growers have lost their livelihood. Award-winning filmmaker Akin spent over five years documenting the small village’s fight against the government sanctioned facility and the resulting disasters that continue to plague this former paradise. Official Selection of the Cannes Film Festival. Opening TBA.

MEKONG HOTEL (Drama) Directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Blissfully Yours, Syndromes and a Century, Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives). MEKONG HOTEL is a self-reflexive portrait of a hotel near the Mekong River in Thailand. In the bedrooms and terraces, director Apichatpong Weerasethakul holds a rehearsal with his crew for a movie he wrote years ago entitled Ecstasy Garden. The film blends fact and fiction, expressing the bonds between a vampire-like mother and her daughter, the young lovers and the river, while exploring themes of recollection, politics, Thai folklore and the modern world’s undeniable connection to its spiritual roots. Official Selection of the Cannes Film Festival. Opening TBA.

STRANGER BY THE LAKE (Drama) Directed by Alain Guiraudie (No Rest for the Brave, The King of Escape). Summertime. A cruising spot for men, tucked away on the shores of a lake in rural France. Franck falls in love with Michel, an attractive, potent and lethally dangerous man. Franck knows this, but wants to live out his passion anyway. Official Selection of the 2013 Cannes Film Festival and winner of the Queer Palm and Un Certain Regard Best Director. Opening Spring 2014.

tabuno
07-25-2013, 08:25 PM
This George Clooney, Sandra Bullock sci fi space thriller has the markings of a "serious" general release blockbuster from the trailers where specialist Bullock is lost in space in only her space suit orbiting earth through an accident with space debris. Whether or not the premise can hold up for over two hours of suspense is another story. If 127 Hours (2010) can do it, maybe Gravity can to. We'll see.

Chris Knipp
07-25-2013, 09:49 PM
GRAVITY. Yes, serious blocubuster (oxymoron though?), could be right, tabuno.

You might mention the director: Alfonso Cuarón.

I always think of him as debuting with Y TU MAMÁ TAMBIÉN (2001), which seemed to set an exciting new direction in Mexican filmmaking along with AMORES PERROS (Alejandro González Iñárritu 2000), and put Cuarón on the map as well as his two stars Diego Luna and Gael García Bernal.

But actually before that (1998) he did GREAT EXPECTATIONS! With Ethan Hawke and Gwyneth Paltrow.

He's been an uneven director, but always an interesting one. I objected to his CHILREN OF MEN (2006), but in comparison to most recent sci-fi blockbusters, it stands out as clearly more individual and interesting.

Chris Knipp
07-25-2013, 09:59 PM
I liked PAN'S LABYRINTH best. Not my thing, but superior to everything else he's done, even THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE .

P.s.

That opinion may be wrong; maybe THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE is better; PAN'S LABYRINTH is just like his later stuff, more technically intricate. Maybe it made an impression on me because it was part of the NYFF (2006) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?1851-Ny-Film-Festival-2006&p=16065#post16065). I just saw one critic writing about PACIFIC RIM say he liked Del Toro's first feature, CRONOS, best of all, and has not really liked anything else he's done since. It was Rex Reed in THE NEW YORK OBSERVER (http://observer.com/2013/07/rooting-for-the-robots-pacific-rim-is-another-in-a-long-predictable-line-of-end-of-the-world-thrillers/). Nobody much reads Reed any more (though he is cited by Metacritic) but I follow his reviews every week, and he ofen does four a week.
Pacific Rim was directed, more or less, by Mexico’s Guillermo del Toro. His debut film was a neat little horror called Kronos [sic: IMDb gives the spelling as CRONOS], but I have personally disliked everything he’s done since. I was not a fan of the labored, overrated Pan’s Labyrinth, and I hated the equally contrived and pretentious ghost story The Orphanage. The failure to impress is not reversed, I’m sorry to say, with the agonizingly juvenile Pacific Rim.
--Rex Reed

tabuno
07-26-2013, 02:30 PM
"While a pretty good movie with compelling, thrilling cinematography, some of the best of the year, the screenplay falls a bit short with its over the top, somewhat manipulative and unnecessary exploitative death scenes. More subtlety and independent movie thinking would have made this movie a clear nominee for best picture. This movie follows in the footstep Fahrenheit 451 (1966), A.I. (2001), Saving Private Ryan (1998), Blade Runner (1982) with this amazing military scenes and the fine contrast between the rich and poor. The whole look of the movie is clearly a notch above almost any movie of the future, the atmospherics are terrific. The weak parts of the movie are the circumstances the scriptwriter needed to say the obvious with how many of the characters die. This is an ensemble piece where there really isn't the acting so much as the performance of the composite of the movie's actors. A credible, richly dense, layered movie with a few writing and plot weaknesses."

tabuno
08-05-2013, 10:08 AM
THE BUTLER being released August 16 about a butler serving eight U.S. Presidents will be receiving award nominations based on the trailer, in the mold of LINCOLN (2012).

Chris Knipp
08-05-2013, 10:33 AM
And I may like it about as much as I liked LINCOLN. In it Daniels seems to be becoming more conventional.

Chris Knipp
08-16-2013, 07:22 PM
AUG. 16, 2013

This is a good weekend for US releases. I hope to review:
KICK-ASS 2
LEE DANIEL'S THE BUTLER
JOBS
And also these two released Aug. 3 but arriving in the Bay Area Aug. 16.
THE SPECTACULAR NOW
EUROPA REPORT
Also out today, in NYC:
AUSTENLAND - I'm holding my review for release in San Francsco a week alter
YOU ARE MY SON - Reviewed in this year's Rendez-Vous with French Cinema
AIN'T THEM BODIES SAINTS (coming later to SF?)
CUTIE AND THE BOXER (later SF release)
Another I'm holding full review for local release of, from SFIFF;
THE PATIENCE STONE

oscar jubis
09-18-2013, 01:49 AM
Tonight I watched DON JON, a movie starring, written and directed by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. It deals with the sex life of a 20-something, Italian-American, practicing Catholic. What's best about it is how it achieves a tone that can incorporate comedy and a bit of pathos, and Julianne Moore is in it. She always seems to be the best thing about the movies she's in. Some of the characters are "one-note", not fully fleshed out, and the script is too obvious in spots, but overall I think this is a good movie. It opens a week from Friday. I don't know how wide. Is anyone here interested?

Chris Knipp
09-18-2013, 07:54 AM
Also New Jersey. Don't forget that part. And addicted to porn. Pretty wide release.. I've seen the trailer repeatedly. It's been around since Sundance, and reviewed; mixed. I like G-L.

Johann
09-18-2013, 10:36 AM
I like Joseph Gordon-Levitt a lot.
He was on George Strombo last night, discussing his directorial debut, which looks good to my eye.
He's all about creation. He also discussed Marc Webb's 500 Days of Summer, which he loved to remember as a movie-making experience.
I'm glad he's taken his clout and poured it into a directing job.
He was one of the best things about The Dark Knight Rises too.
He's the new ROBIN!

Chris Knipp
09-18-2013, 06:51 PM
Joe has had an unusually smart and adventurous filmography, and he's been rewarded with these blockbuster slots.

oscar jubis
09-19-2013, 09:44 PM
Great comments. I am curious about what you all think of this movie. It hasn't opened, so I tried to say as little as possible about the plot, choosing to say simply that it is about the "sex life" of the character played by Gordon-Levitt. He has decided to broach a theme that is hard to handle but mind you, this is no "art movie", this is not Steve McQueen "Shame" (the poster seems designed to let people know this movie is not lugubrious and depressing).

oscar jubis
09-21-2013, 01:27 PM
I watched STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS this week. I cannot find a thread for it. Just like the 2009 Star Trek also directed by J.J. Abrams, this film continues to emphasize loud action sequences to the detriment of the ideas, character development and humanism of the original series. Both films get very good reviews but I don't like this general tendency of turning sci-fi films into action extraganzas.