Showing posts with label Cinema. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cinema. Show all posts

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Lady Gaga to play scandal-plagued Gucci wife in next feature film


LOS ANGELES, United States—Lady Gaga has lined up her next feature film and will play the wife of a murdered heir to the Gucci fashion dynasty, Hollywood media reported on Friday.

Gaga, whose first lead movie role in "A Star is Born" last year was critically acclaimed, will play Patrizia Reggiani, who served 18 years in an Italian prison for orchestrating the 1995 murder in Milan of her husband Maurizio Gucci, according to Variety, the Hollywood Reporter and Deadline.

Reggiani, dubbed the Black Widow in what was one of the most scandalous high society crimes in Italian history, was released from prison in 2016.

Ridley Scott will direct and produce the movie, the publications said. Representatives for Scott and Gaga, who was born in New York and has Italian heritage, did not respond to requests for comment.

The film will be the first for Gaga since she took her music career to the big screen in "A Star is Born," which brought her an Oscar for best original song "Shallow" and a best actress nomination.

No title or date for the film's release was given.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, June 7, 2019

Hemsworth, Thompson suit up for 4th installment of 'Men in Black'


MOSCOW, Russia - The "Men in Black" are back - wearing the same suits and sunglasses but different faces.

Actors Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson flew to Moscow to launch the fourth installment of the science fiction franchise originally starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, which pits suited agents against aliens disguised as humans on Earth.

In "Men in Black: International," the "Avengers" star and "Creed" actress play Agent H and Agent M, who have to find a mole in the organization. As in the other installments, cars and gadgets take center stage.

"We had this pretty cool souped-up Lexus that we got to drive which has all sorts of gadgets and the ability to... fly across water and fly up walls and all sorts of things," Hemsworth told reporters on Thursday.

"And then there was this old classic Jag (Jaguar) that just looked like a classic beautiful car but again, all the weapons... come out of the exhaust pipe and the side-view mirror and so on, so that was pretty awesome."

Thompson paid tribute to Smith. "The first ("Men in Black") film marks his real entry into global stardom and I think now we can take it for granted because there are a lot of people of color in Hollywood but he was really... one of the first."

The agents try to keep Earth's alien population a secret from humans, and use neuralyzer devices to wipe people's memories if they see too much.

Given a real neuralyzer, "I'd probably attempt to... forget all the wonderful films that I'd watched over the years, that I grew up on, and erase them and experience that joy all over again," Hemsworth said.

"Certain films... I've seen 10, 15 times and still love them but wish I could have that very first impression and experience again."

The movie, which hits cinemas next week, also stars Liam Neeson and Emma Thompson, who featured in "Men in Black 3." 

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Disney sets dates for next 3 'Star Wars' films from 2022


LOS ANGELES, United States - Following its merger with Fox, Disney on Tuesday sketched out its future plans for 2 of its most towering franchises -- the "Star Wars" saga and "Avatar."

Three new as-yet untitled "Star Wars" films will hit the big screen every other year just before Christmas starting in 2022, the mega-studio announced. 

That means that there could be a 3-year wait between the December release of "Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker," the final film in the original series begun in 1977, and the next big-screen "Star Wars" flick.

Several "Star Wars" projects are in the works, including a trilogy by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, the creators of HBO's "Game of Thrones," and a separate trilogy by "Last Jedi" director Rian Johnson.

A spokeswoman for Disney, contacted by AFP, did not offer additional details about the upcoming scheduled films, which will expand upon the cinematic universe created by George Lucas.

Disney paid $4 billion for Lucasfilm in 2012.

In September last year, Disney CEO Bob Iger admitted after the lackluster performance of "Solo: A Star Wars Story," a one-off film in the franchise, that the "Star Wars" release schedule was too frenetic.

After 6 films in 38 years, from 1977 to 2005, the rhythm had picked up considerably. 

A total of 4 films came in rapid succession, from the release of "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" in 2015 to "Solo" in May 2018.

"I made the timing decision, and as I look back, I think the mistake that I made -- I take the blame -- was a little too much, too fast," Iger told The Hollywood Reporter last year.

Meanwhile, the studio pushed back its plans for the next films in director James Cameron's uber-successful "Avatar" franchise -- one of the biggest prizes for Disney in the Fox merger.

"Avatar 2" will come a year later than expected in December 2021, followed by "Avatar 3" in 2023, "Avatar 4" in 2025 and "Avatar 5" in 2027.

"Avatar" remains the top-grossing film of all time, with $2.79 billion in worldwide box office sales, but superhero extravaganza "Avengers: Endgame" is hot on its heels at $2.24 billion and rapidly climbing.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Disney's 'Avengers: Endgame' sets opening day record in China


LOS ANGELES - Marvel superhero movie "Avengers: Endgame" set an opening-day record in China with an estimated $107.2 million in ticket sales, distributor Walt Disney Co said on Wednesday.

"Endgame" is the final chapter of a story told across 22 Marvel films featuring popular characters such as Iron Man, Thor, and Black Widow.

The movie earned rave reviews from critics and is expected to draw huge crowds as it debuts in the rest of the world this week.

As of Wednesday morning, 97 percent of "Endgame" reviews collected by the Rotten Tomatoes website were positive.

The film picks up after last year's "Avengers: Infinity War," when many of Marvel's big-screen superheroes appeared to turn to dust. In "Endgame," the survivors plot to kill the supervillain Thanos.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Cate Blanchett set to crown winner at politically charged Cannes fest


A jury led by Cate Blanchett will crown the winner of the coveted Palme d'Or for best film at Cannes Saturday, after a politically charged festival rocked by controversy and the #MeToo movement.

Movies by Spike Lee, South Korea's Lee Chang-dong, Turkish master Nuri Bilge Ceylan and Nadine Labaki of Lebanon—one of three female directors among the 21 in contention—drew critical acclaim ahead of the famously unpredictable awards night.

But beyond the prize winners, the 71st Cannes festival may linger for its off-screen moments, in the first edition since the Harvey Weinstein sexual assault scandal broke.

Hollywood stars including Blanchett, Kristen Stewart, Helen Mirren and Salma Hayek and directors Ava DuVernay and Patty Jenkins joined a red-carpet protest to demand equal opportunity and a "safe workplace".

Two days later, festival organizers signed a pledge to encourage more diversity in its selection by 2020, saying they hoped it would set an industry standard. 

Despite being one of the most sought-after tickets, the premiere of Danish bad boy Lars von Trier's "The House That Jack Built" saw audience members walk out in droves from what they called a misogynistic orgy of violence. 

Both its female stars, Uma Thurman and Riley Keough, were conspicuously absent from the red carpet, where Stewart on another night staged a kind of protest of her own by slipping off her high heels and climbing the vaunted Cannes stairs barefoot. 

Anti-Trump tirade
The glamour-drenched festival spotlighted dissident directors, including Jafar Panahi of Iran and Russia's Kirill Serebrennikov, who were barred by their governments from attending.

Their films drew lengthy standing ovations, while a single seat marked with their names remained empty.

Polish Oscar winner Pawel Pawlikowski, who won the foreign-language movie Oscar for "Ida" in 2015, caused a scandal at home when he told AFP at the festival that the film had been "blacklisted" by the nationalist government. Warsaw denied the claim.

Critics swooned over Pawlikowski's latest, the slow-burn period love story "Cold War" set against the backdrop of the Iron Curtain.

Labaki won hearts with "Capernaum" set among the poorest of the poor in Beirut and featuring a devastating performance by a 13-year-old Syrian refugee boy.

"While this is unquestionably an issue film, it tackles its subject with intelligence and heart," industry bible Variety said.

Spike Lee scored a hit with "BlacKkKlansman", the stranger-than-fiction story of an African-American police officer who manages to infiltrate the highest levels of the Ku Klux Klan.

The film, which several critics called a return to form for the "Do the Right Thing" director, explicitly links the 1970s tale and white nationalism in the Trump era. Lee attacked the US president with an expletive-filled tirade at his press conference that quickly went viral.

Asian masters like Lee Chang-dong created a sensation, scoring a record 3.8 out of 4 stars in a Screen magazine poll for "Burning", about a young man's mounting rage over unrequited love and set near the North Korean border.

Hirokazu Kore-eda of Japan also moved audiences with "Shoplifters", about a family of small-time crooks who take in a child they find on the street. 

Turkey's Ceylan, who took home the Palme d'Or four years ago for "Winter Sleep", earned rave reviews for his epic homecoming drama "The Wild Pear Tree".

And Matteo Garrone of Italy, best known for mafia tableau "Gomorrah", delighted cinemagoers with "Dogman" about a soft-spoken pooch groomer who stands up to a local heavy.

As the festival wrapped up, director Terry Gilliam presented "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote", his "cursed" project which was two decades in the making.

"I have no life ahead of me, it's so sad after working so long to be so depleted, to have no future," he joked with a wry smile. "I can only think of death now." 

'Less America-centric'
In 2017, the top prize went to Ruben Ostlund's "The Square," an art world send-up that went on to bag an Oscar nomination.

This year there were less-lavish parties and fewer A-listers on the Croisette seaside boulevard.

However industry insiders dismissed talk of a festival in crisis, saying Cannes was returning to its core mission in the face of showbiz "disruption".

US magazine Vanity Fair called 2018 a "pivot year", as movie studios plump for social media to promote their blockbusters instead of the splashy French Riviera promotions of old.

"In making the festival a little less America-centric than it has been lately, Cannes has re-asserted itself as the premier destination for daring, provocative international cinema," it said.

Spike Lee told AFP that for directors doing edgy work, "Cannes is the greatest film festival in the world, there is no argument. This is the Mecca, this is the greatest stage."

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Cinema makes return to Saudi Arabia


Saudi Arabia hosted its first public film screening in over 35 years on Friday, two days after US movie giant AMC unveiled the kingdom's debut theatre in Riyadh.

Clutching prized tickets for the sold-out showing of Hollywood blockbuster action film "Black Panther", men and women walked into the movie hall with tubs of popcorn and fizzy drinks.


AMC chief executive Adam Aron on Wednesday said its multiplex theatre at Riyadh's King Abdullah Financial District will for now operate one screen with a seating capacity of around 250.

He said plans were afoot for three more screens in the coming months.

The conservative desert kingdom lifted a decades-long ban on cinemas last year as part of a far-reaching modernisation drive, with AMC Entertainment granted the first licence to operate movie theatres.

Religious hardliners, who have long vilified movie theatres as vulgar and sinful, were instrumental in shutting down cinemas in the 1980s.

Reopening movie theatres is part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious reform drive as he seeks to balance unpopular subsidy cuts in an era of low oil prices with more entertainment options.

The choice of "Black Panther", a film about a young monarch of a fictional resource-rich African kingdom, has drawn parallels with the Saudi prince.

On social media, many Saudis complained that the ticket price of 75 Saudi riyals ($20), which included a new entertainment tax and value-added tax introduced this year, was too exorbitant in an age of austerity.

"If we go as a family we will need a loan," one Saudi tweeted.

Saudis currently splurge billions of dollars annually to see films and visit amusement parks in neighbouring tourist hubs like Dubai and Bahrain.

"Welcome to the era when movies can be watched by Saudis not in Bahrain, not in Dubai, not in London... but inside the kingdom," Aron said Wednesday at the launch of the theatre.

International theatre chains have long eyed Saudi Arabia as the Middle East's last untapped mass market, with its more than 30 million people, the majority of whom are under 25.

AMC will face stiff competition from heavyweights such as Dubai-based VOX Cinemas, which on Thursday announced it had also secured a government licence to operate in Saudi Arabia and would open the kingdom's first IMAX theatre in the coming days.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Saudi breaks cinema ban, screens 'Black Panther'


RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Saudi Arabia launched its first commercial movie theater on Wednesday, ending a nearly 40-year ban on cinemas under a push by the crown prince to modernize the deeply conservative Muslim kingdom.

A red carpet invitation-only gala event attracted senior government officials, foreign dignitaries and select industry figures to watch Marvel's superhero movie "Black Panther" on a 45-foot screen at a converted symphony concert hall in Riyadh.


Tickets will go on sale on Thursday for the first public viewings on Friday, according to Adam Aron, chief executive of operator AMC Entertainment Holdings.

"Saudis now are going to be able to go to a beautiful theater and watch movies the way they're supposed to be watched: on a big screen," he told Reuters ahead of the screening.

The smell of buttery popcorn filled the air as confetti rained down through the multi-storey atrium where Aron and Saudi Minister of Culture and Information Awwad al-Awwad announced the launch and proceeded into the 450-seat hall.

The opening marks another milestone for reforms spearheaded by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to open the country culturally and diversify the economy of the world's top oil exporter.

The prince, 32, has already eased restrictions in the last two years, including on public concerts, women driving and gender mixing. The kingdom held its first-ever fashion show last week with a women-only audience.

Many Saudis have rejoiced at the end of the cinema ban, sharing praise and pictures of Prince Mohammed on social media.

Others expressed confusion at what they consider a government flip-flop, with one tweeting on Wednesday: "Remember you will stand in front of God ... and you will bear the sins of all those who watched the movies."

Some religious conservatives view cinema and acting as inconsistent with Islam.

There has been little apparent resistance to the social reforms, which seemed unthinkable just a few years ago, though the space for criticism is also limited. Several prominent clerics were arrested last year in an apparent bid to silence dissent.

BUILDING A FILM INDUSTRY

Among Wednesday's movie-goers was Princess Reema bint Bandar, a second cousin of Prince Mohammed, who brought her 16-year-old son to experience what she called "an historical moment".

The kingdom shuttered cinemas in the early 1980s under pressure from Islamist as Saudi society embraced a severe form of Islam.

Saudis have nonetheless been avid consumers of Western media and culture. Hollywood films and television series are widely watched at home and private film screenings have been largely tolerated for years.

In 2017, the government said it would lift the ban in part to retain money that Saudis currently spend on entertainment during trips to Dubai, Bahrain and elsewhere.

To serve a population of more than 32 million, most of whom are under the age of 30, the authorities plan to set up around 350 cinemas with over 2,500 screens by 2030, which they hope will attract nearly $1 billion in annual ticket sales.

A source told Reuters last month that theaters would not be segregated by gender like most other public places in Saudi Arabia.

Awwad, the culture minister, told Reuters on Wednesday that they would be similar to cinemas around the world. Initial screenings are likely to be for families, with occasional ones for bachelors.

The extent of censorship was not clear but a Saudi official said the same versions of films shown in Dubai or Kuwait will be suitable for Saudi Arabia. Two scenes of kissing appeared to have been cut from the "Black Panther" screening.

Asked about possible conservative backlash to cinemas, Awwad said the government was focused on creating investment opportunities.

"For those that would like to come and enjoy watching the movie at the movie theater, they are more than welcome," he said. "And for those who don't want to watch movies at all, it's also their personal choice."

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Monday, September 5, 2011

Rocking the silents

As winged demons and tortured souls squirmed quietly onscreen, Filipino rock band Razorback had a raucous, rocking time providing live music scoring to the 1911 Italian film “L’Inferno” (based on the classic “Dante’s Inferno”) at the 5th International Silent Film Festival held at the Shangri-La Plaza mall recently.

During rehearsals, lead singer Kevin Roy would intermittently jump from his seat and dash to the screen for a better view. “I had to constantly check the moving pictures and check with my band mates, too.”

On the night of the actual performance on August 27, however, Roy had to remain seated throughout the screening. “We couldn’t distract the audience,” he told the Inquirer.

Semblance of structure

In scoring a silent film, the band realized, the movie and the music are the stars—unlike in concerts, where their larger-than-life personalities inevitably hog the spotlight.

Roy related that they got sections of songs from their past six albums and composed a few new tunes, too, “along with transition jam riffs.”

To tell the story of Dante’s journey to the nine circles of hell, they raided the “hellish” tunes in their catalogue, like “Teacher,” “Diwata” and, for the closing credits, “Mana,” according to bassist Louie Talan. “We had to come up with some semblance of a structure,” Talan said.

“At the same time, there was plenty of room to improvise,” said guitarist Manuel Legarda. “It wasn’t exacting.”

They played it by ear, literally. It helped that they tackled some of the film’s karmic motifs in their latest CD, “Three Minutes of Glory,” which will be released later this month.

“We got recurring themes and lyrics that echo the story. We followed the movie’s rhythm,” said Roy, who confessed to the jitters a few hours before show time. “I felt drained,” he said. “Tense.”

Except for Talan (who jammed with Noli Aurillo, Spy and Garlic in past editions of the silent film fest), the band members were newbies in the scoring biz, said drummer Brian Velasco.

“It was a new experience for us,” guitarist Tirso Ripoll agreed. “We learned to be more subtle in our performance and to be more attentive to each other.”

Plus, Velasco said, they had to remain totally alert during the performance, “to make sure that we were in sync with what was happening onscreen.”

“I had to give up alcohol,” Roy joked. “I couldn’t afford to space out.”

Talan confessed that this gig gave him a crash course on the Italian epic poem. “I must’ve cut classes when we tackled ‘Dante’s Inferno’ in high school.”

“We ventured out of our comfort zone,” said Ripoll. “It’s good to try new things. It’ll help us grow.” He found it sweetly ironic that “a 100-year-old film took them to another artistic level.”

Booked solid

Would they do other “scoring” projects in the future? Already, there is talk of an encore, especially since “L’Inferno” was a certified hit and was booked solid days before the fest, according to Emanuela Adesini, cultural attaché of the Italian embassy.

“There are plans to bring it to Cebu or Davao,” said manager Patrick Pulumbarit.

Roy quipped: “It opened doors to other forms of art. I’d gladly do it again.”

Source: http://entertainment.inquirer.net/12239/rocking-the-silents