Archive for Film – Page 2

Sex-pot Goth girl — Kate Beckinsale in Underworld Awakening

“I just finished wrapping my legs around a lycan’s neck and shooting everyone in the room.”

Sounds like just another typical day on the set of an Underworld movie. Sexy star of the first two films, Kate Beckinsale makes a welcome return to the popular franchise after a six-year absence to head up the fourth installment, Underworld Awakening.

With her jet-black hair worn in a stringy bob and clad in an ornately tooled leather corset and floor-sweeping leather coat teamed with skintight black latex pants and motorcycle boots, Beckinsale as vampire warrior Selene is the ultimate Goth girl.

In the new movie, a naked and vulnerable Selene emerges after barely existing within a coma-like state for fifteen years inside a cryogenic chamber. Once she breaks out of her frozen prison, Selene learns that she has a fourteen-year-old vampire/Lycan hybrid daughter, Eve (India Eisley), and makes it her mission to locate the girl. Selene finds herself in a chaotic world where humans have discovered the existence of both Vampire and Lycan clans and are undertaking an all-out war to eradicate both immortal species. Selene leads the battle against humankind, but faces a formidable force of experimental ‘Hybrids’ – souped-up Vampires infused with Lycan genes and the ability to shapeshift. Early reports indicate that the Lycan-based hybrids are capable of taking on a Wolfman-like form while the Vampire-based ones can adopt a human/bat-like form. Somehow Eve holds the key to help her stop the evil BioCom organisation from creating a race of super Lycans that will exterminate them all.

Michael Ealy, Sandrine Holt, Robert Lawrenson, Stephen Rea, Theo James and Charles Dance all co-star in the new action horror sequel.

Written by series creator Les Wiseman and directed by Swedish filmmaking team Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein, Underworld Awakening brings a stunning new dimension to the epic battle between Vampires and Lycans as it is the first film in the franchise to be filmed in 3D, on the compact and portable RED Epic cameras. The new Alien, Spiderman and Hobbit movies are all following suit, but Underworld Awakening will be the first of the movies filmed on the RED Epic cameras to be released, in January 2012.

Commented Mårlind, “The new thing with this film is that it has a wider range of emotions. We have more action, but it is different to the previous films – much more violent, gritty and brutal. There’s a sense of desperation to Selene’s fight.”

Stunning, bloody and action packed, Underworld Awakening boasts some explosive combat sequences and extreme violence. Early footage reveals the 3D filming approach to be a completely immersive one for audiences. At the center of the maelstrom is a capable female killer. A bit like a sexy, breathy and brunette ‘Brigitte Bardot’, Beckinsale has noticeably large and pale hands, which is surprising for such a petite woman. The scorching hot British-born actress wields an icy English composure while she slaughters her enemies and generally kicks ass.

Clarifies Beckinsale, “There’s so much that is familiar, it doesn’t feel like a departure. It just feels bigger and better and that we’re going a bit further with it. But yeah, there’s been a lot more action and I have a lot more bruises on this one.”

Beckinsale’s major acting debut came in 1991 when she appeared in a British TV film about World War II called One Against the Wind. She began attending Oxford University later that year, majoring in French and Russian literature, and it was while she was still studying that she received her big break in Kenneth Branagh’s film adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing (1993). Kate worked in three other films while attending Oxford, mostly British costume dramas, in addition to various stage and radio productions. She began to seek film work in the States during the late 1990s and, after appearing in small-scale dramas The Last Days of Disco (1998) and Brokedown Palace (1999), she had a breakout year in 2001 with starring roles in war epic Pearl Harbor and romantic comedy Serendipity. Appearances in The Aviator (2004) and the mean-spirited Click (2006) followed.

Recalls the actress, “Early in my career I kept going to meetings and the character was a cop, but they’d be saying, ‘Well, she really does period movies and she’s English and she’s fragile.’ I love to do as many different things as possible – I think every actor does – and so I saw the first movie as a way to stop this whiff of crumpets and tea. It really worked – slightly too well, though…” she smiles wryly.

In her conscious move away from stuffy costume dramas, Beckinsale forged a reputation as an tough action star with the first Underworld movie in 2003, followed by Van Helsing (2004), Underworld: Evolution (2006) and Whiteout (2009). She has also opted to work on smaller independent projects such as Snow Angels (2007), Winged Creatures (2008), Nothing but the Truth and Everybody’s Fine (2009). Beckinsale has two other films set for release in 2012: the crime thriller Contraband and sci-fi remake Total Recall.

Raised in London, the actress had an eight-year relationship with Welsh actor Michael Sheen from 1995 until 2003 and they share custody of their daughter, Lily. Beckinsale married Underworld film director American Len Wiseman in 2004 and they currently reside in Los Angeles, California.

The demure actress seems almost irrationally ecstatic by the increase in violence. “I love the fact that she’s doing a lot more fighting in this one. I especially love all the wirework we do – that’s always a thrill. There’s a scene where I am sliding along a corridor on my knee and slitting everybody’s throats and that really hurt me when we were training for it. I’ve still got scars on my ankles from not wearing long enough socks!”

While adjusting to performing stunts and action sequences was a challenge, apparently Beckinsale took to using guns immediately. “It was a weird thing on the first movie. When it first came up, it was during that first period of training where they go, ‘Run!’ and then said, ‘Oh, god. Okay, throw a punch,’ and then ‘Oh, dear…’ I was so relieved when I got a hold of a gun. Suddenly it was like, ‘I found my thing!’ I think it is really only because I have enormous hands. I can’t play the piano or play basketball. It turns out huge hands are quite useful for handling guns.”

The directing duo Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein adopt a unique approach on set as on a daily basis each takes turns to direct the actors and action while the other observes. Beckinsale enthuses, “It really is quite cool. When I first met with them I thought, ‘I wonder how that is going to work?’ But they have a real system where one of them directs on a Monday and then the other one directs on Tuesday. The one that is not directing is kind of silent and doesn’t say anything. At all. I thought they would never be able to keep that up – it must be really difficult. But they really do. The advantage is that you get somebody who may possibly have been incredibly frustrated the day before and is so desperate to have his turn that he is full of enthusiasm. They are both really nice, as well. Sometimes they talk in Swedish and we can’t understand them. That makes me sad because it is one of the languages that I don’t speak.” She grins as she assures me she’s working on correcting that. “I am learning all the dirty words.”

That skin-tight rubber suit…

How does it feel to be stepping back into the skintight leather and rubber suit? “It feels weirdly like indigestion!” Beckinsale laughs prettily. “Actually, this costume has good memories for me, even though it does make it a bit difficult to have a big lunch. It’s weird. I’ve never played another character multiple times, so it’s a bit daunting to put on the exact same outfit that you wore a decade ago and try not to feel a bit different.”

So how long did it take you to feel comfortable as Selene again? “It was quite quick. There was an odd moment putting on the costume for the first time in the first costume fittings. I had forgotten that special shrieking rubber noise it makes – it was just so familiar. The first training period was incredibly nerve-racking. I was not somebody who was particularly athletic at school. I hadn’t held a gun before, I’d never thrown a punch – I’d never done anything like that. I was so completely out of my comfort zone. I had to go through the training because I was just terrible at everything. I couldn’t run properly or anything. So doing this one now, after having already passed through that barrier is really nice. I still expect myself to mess it up every time. I’m still in the same old mindset. But I am kind of good at it now.”

The corsets don’t give you any grief? “No. I mean – I am used to wearing corsets. When I was first starting out it was either Shakespeare or Chekhov. Everything that I was doing involved corsets. I guess I am just not destined to breathe that deeply.”

 

This interview first appeared in Filmink Magazine.

 

The sexual compulsion of Shame

Shame’s unabashed nauseating effect is, in its own right, beautiful and nonetheless daring. While current television and cinema currently push the sexual envelope, Shame seems to seal it, and then pass it through the paper shredder.

Michael Fassbender as Brandon Sullivan lives what one could call a simple yet sordid life in New York. None of his routines is altered within the pattern of his habitual everyday behavior. Routines that incidentally include a threesome, careless exhibition, an encounter with a hooker and sexually suggestive eye contact all before catching his train to work. Each act is emptier than the next, yet the complexities of such an empty life mirrored perfectly within the sexy, sad scope of Fassbender’s stare.

Alas, his performance was passed over for this year’s Oscar nominations, perhaps to allow for more crowd pleasing performances such as Brad Pitt in Moneyball aka ‘Eat Acting’ (where he spends most of the movie stuffing his mouth with food). Eliminate his talent with food, and the actor’s task is simplified; not to stray too far from the path.

Soon Fassbender’s soulless sexual routine is interrupted by the pleas of a younger and rather disturbed sister named Sissy. Leaving a trail of tears and trash, she follows hopelessly in her older brother’s footsteps. Sissy is fragile and dangling by thread, threatened by the wear and tear of what seems to be an unbearable existence. Playing Sissy, Carey Mulligan pulls off a graceful performance and always seems to find depth in her roles. Nicole Beharie brings a beautiful element to the cast, playing the nervous and fiery co-worker/sometime lover Marianne who forces Brandon to confront the realities of what taboo-less attraction entails.

While certainly too uncomfortable viewing to be deemed enjoyable, the film is beautifully executed by Brit director and co-writer Steve McQueen (fairly new to the scene) while his cinematographer, Sean Bobbitt, crafts a film shot to match the daring script that is chock full of invasive, languishing angles of ribcages and forlorn staring bouts that seem to last an eternity.  Shame reflects on images of a man we find hard to watch at times. This is a movie that asks you to confront your deepest darkest sexual guilt while questioning your faith in the familial bond.

Shame is not for the faint of heart, but a must see for avant garde movie lovers.

Running time is approximately 110 minutes.

 

Now playing in selected Los Angeles cinemas.

 

 

Tom Hiddleston talks about Spielberg and War Horse

Likely to be a three-hanky weepie, featuring stunning photography by Janusz Kaminski and an original score from John Williams, is a new picture directed by Steven Spielberg. In War Horse a young man named Albert (Jeremy Irvine) forges a deep bond with his beloved horse, Joey. At the outbreak of World War I, Albert’s handsome horse is press-ganged into the cavalry and shipped to France and to the treacherous mud soaked trenches of the battlefields. Despite being too young to enlist in the British Army, Albert embarks on a dangerous mission to find his horse and bring him back to their idyllic home in Devon. Once in France, Albert is soon caught up in the horrors of warfare and dodging enemy fire. Death, disease and fate take him on an extraordinary odyssey that sees him serving on both sides of the conflict before finding himself alone in No Man’s Land.

War Horse is based on a children’s novel by Michael Morpurgo, published in 1982. By some reports, Spielberg’s film also uses elements of the critically acclaimed, award-winning stage adaptation that opened in London in 2007, notable for its dazzling puppet design by Basil Jones and Adrian Kohler of the life-sized horses.

In Interview:

Within a large ensemble cast, Tom Hiddleston plays Captain Nichols, the cavalryman who forges his own connection with the noble creature at the center of this tale. Last seen as Loki facing off against Thor, the tall, fine-featured and erudite actor speaks enthusiastically about his recent experiences and burgeoning career.

Not surprisingly, he starts off by warmly praising his director. “Spielberg is a master. He’s just a miracle-maker. He’s one of the kindest men I’ve ever worked with. Deeply, deeply kind, and I think his kindness is something that runs through all his work. You can see he has a warm heart.”

Describing the relatively painless audition process, Hiddleston recalls the golden week that saw him being cast in both a Spielberg picture and Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris (in which the actor played F. Scott Fitzgerald). “I got Woody and Spielberg together in the same week – it was a good week. I went over to Dreamworks, which is on the Universal Lot in LA, and I sat down with Steven. He said he’d seen my tape and then we talked about the First World War history and horses. Certainly in British schools, and probably the same in European schools as well, the First World War is really a big part of our history and our education. So I felt very connected to it.”

Spielberg (L) and Hiddleston on location

The British-born actor recalls a treasured childhood memory that he shared with Spielberg during that meeting. “I’d played the trumpet on Remembrance Sunday when I was 13, and that was a great honour. After I told Steven that story, he said, ‘Well, I’d like you to do it.’” Hiddleston laughs with incredulity, adding, “Which never happens! Usually the casting director calls your agent and your agent tells you and then you have to do more tests. But he just asked me across the table.”

On the potential success of the movie, Hiddleston is effusive; “It’s just classic storytelling. I read the book, I saw the play and the reason the book and the play work is because it somehow encapsulates something very deep and profound about the human condition. In the figure of Joey, the horse, you find nobility and perseverance and strength and dignity in the face of horror.”

The actor describes War Horse as a story about redemption and survival, set against an almost romantic, poetic backdrop, adding, “In a way, there is a romance to the First World War because it was the most horrific episode and yet out of it came all that poetry and we learned all those lessons and there seemed to be no enemy; the great enemy was the War itself. It’s a very simple and beautiful story. Spielberg saw that when he saw the play and thought he could do something with it.”

Hiddleston struggles to describe his experience, fearful of sounding sentimental. “The book was so good. Richard Curtis and Lee Hall’s screenplay was so moving that I cried four times the first time I read it. There’s such a huge ensemble of characters, you feel how the horse touches so many lives in much the same way that those four years of horrendous trench warfare changed and affected so many lives.”

Filming took place during the summer of 2010 in Devon and Cornwall with South-East England locations doubling for the war scenes of North-West France. “My experience of shooting it was a dream. It was just a beautiful shoot – just glorious. Working with horses is amazing – they’re such beautiful creatures and they teach you so much about yourself.”

Hiddleston adds, “I think it will be a beautiful, beautiful film. I can say that confidently.”

 

War Horse is now playing in LA cinemas.

 

 

 

 

Mudfest goes to Hollywood

Get a taste of Australian cinema! MudFest has been announced as an Official Satellite Event of the G’Day USA Festivities, with a special evening of all-Australian short films being screened in Los Angeles on January 17, 2012 at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.

 

Background:

Mudgee’s MudFest International Short Film Festival – lovingly known as Mudfest – has been showcasing short films from around the globe every year since 2005. Held in March every year, MudFest takes place at Bunnamagoo Estate, in Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia.  This year Mudfest will be held on Saturday, March 17, 2012.

 

G’Day USA is an annual program held in the lead-up to Australia Day and is designed to showcase Australian business, innovation and culture to the USA. The 2012 G’Day USA 3-week program brings new business, education, entertainment, innovation, and tourism events to seven cities (San Francisco, Dallas, Los Angeles, San Diego, New York, Houston and Chicago).

MudFest is an Official Satellite Event of G’Day USA and will be the only Australian Film component in the Los Angeles line-up of G’Day Events next year.

MudFest Co-founder and G’Day LA Festival Director Mike O’Malley travelled to Los Angeles recently to finalize arrangements for the MudFest screening and to meet with a number of Australian Film Industry Organisations based here. “It’s taken several years to convince the G’Day USA Organising Committee to include us, but our Committee couldn’t be more excited at the prospect of taking MudFest to Hollywood” he said. “This is a great thing for MudFest and for the Mudgee Region.”

MudFest G’Day LA is sponsored by Destination NSW (formerly Tourism NSW), Qantas, and local winery Bunnamagoo Estate Wines. “We’ll have a fantastic opportunity to promote our Festival, our Region and Wines from Mudgee to the Los Angeles audience” Mr O’Malley said. “MudFest has always had great support from the Mid Western Regional Council and Mudgee Region Tourism. This will be our chance to promote Mudgee internationally.”

This evening of screenings will feature a Mudgee Tourism element, and our pre-screening party will feature canapés made using Australian produce matched to local Wines from Bunnamagoo Estate. “We’re hoping the media attention that MudFest in Los Angeles generates will draw more people to MudFest Mudgee at Bunnamagoo Estate next year.”

The Los Angeles screening will take place at the historic Egyptian Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard in the heart of Hollywood. “You couldn’t get more ‘Hollywood,’” Mr O’Malley enthused. “We’re screening half a block from the famous Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and right on the Hollywood Walk of Stars.”

The movies screened will be a selection of the best Australian entries submitted to Mudfest since the Festival began in 2005. The entire MudFest Committee (Steve Garland, Mike O’Malley, Peter Scott, Phil Van Gent and Sean Wolfson) will be attending the LA screening as ambassadors for the region.

Details of the 2012 G’Day USA program can be found at their official site.

Mudfest

an Official Satellite Event of the G’Day USA events

Egyptian Theatre

6712 Hollywood Blvd.

Hollywood,  CA  90028

DATE:

Tuesday, January 17, 2012 

Schedule:

6pm–7.30pm

Pre-screening cocktail reception.

8pm

Short films screening.
Tickets:

$7.00–$11.00

Purchase tickets here.

 

 

Dream a Little Dream: Artists in Film – Getty

The myth of the artist has been a popular theme for filmmakers since the dawn of cinema. On January 14–15, the Getty Museum will present Dream a Little Dream: Artists in Film, a series of films that exemplify the relationship between filmmaker, audience and artist.

The series includes films that approach artists from a number of angles, from the myth of the “tortured artist,” to the joy of artistic social circles in cities like Paris. Each film provides insight into how an artist works, lives and views the art that he or she creates.

 

“These rare and spectacular films unite fine art and filmmaking,” said Laurel Kishi, performing arts manager at the J. Paul Getty Museum. “Each film offers a separate ‘slice of life’ about a particular artist and their lifestyle, from Caravaggio to Picasso.”

 

Dream a Little Dream: Artists in Film complements the exhibition Images of the Artist, which is currently on-view through February 12, 2012.

 

Film Schedule:

Blood of a Poet and Testament of Orpheus

Date: Saturday, January 14, 2012

Time: 3:00 p.m.

Jean Cocteau (1889–1963), one of the most versatile artists of the 20th century, explores the joys and hardships of being an artist in this double feature of the first and third films of his Orphic Trilogy. (France, 1930 and 1960)

The Moderns

Date: Saturday, January 14, 2012

Time: 7:00 p.m.

Alan Rudolph’s homage to 1920s Paris delights in having real- life personalities—Pablo Picasso, Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway—interact with his fictional characters in the smoky cafes and esteemed salons of this radically creative place and time. (USA, 1988)

The Draughtsman’s Contract

Date: Sunday, January 15, 2012

Time: 12:00 noon

Peter Greenaway, who was trained as a painter, made this period film that joyfully blends an intellectual exploration of cultural and social history with his own singular artistic style. (Great Britain, 1982)

Caravaggio

Date: Sunday, January 15, 2012

Time: 3:00 p.m.

Derek Jarman was a painter who made beautiful films that are intensely personal and moving. In his major film debut, Jarman realizes a 17th-century artist who, like Jarman, didn’t shy from controversy. (Great Britain, 1986)

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Screenings of Dream a Little Dream: Artists in Film will be held January 14–15 at the Harold M. Williams Auditorium at the Getty Center.

The events are free, but reservations are required.

For reservations, visit their official site or call (310) 440-7300.

 

 

The J. Paul Getty Trust is an international cultural and philanthropic institution devoted to the visual arts that includes the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Getty Research Institute, the Getty Conservation Institute, and the Getty Foundation. The J. Paul Getty Trust and Getty programs serve a varied audience from two locations: the Getty Center in Los Angeles and the Getty Villa in Malibu.

The J. Paul Getty Museum collects in seven distinct areas, including Greek and Roman antiquities, European paintings, drawings, manuscripts, sculpture and decorative arts, and photographs gathered internationally. The Museum’s mission is to make the collection meaningful and attractive to a broad audience by presenting and interpreting the works of art through educational programs, special exhibitions, publications, conservation, and research.

Visiting the Getty Center:

The Getty Center is open Tuesday through Friday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. It is closed Monday and major holidays. Admission to the Getty Center is always free. Parking is $15 per car, but reduced to $10 after 5pm on Saturdays and for evening events throughout the week. No reservation is required for parking or general admission. Reservations are required for event seating and groups of 15 or more. Please call (310) 440-7300 (English or Spanish) for reservations and information. The TTY line for callers who are deaf or hearing impaired is (310) 440- 7305.

The Getty Center is at 1200 Getty Center Drive, Los Angeles, California

Additional information is available at the official website.

Sign up for e-Getty here to receive free monthly highlights of events at the Getty Center and the Getty Villa via e-mail, or visit their official site for a complete calendar of public programs.