Posted Jul 18th 2008 2:03PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Documentary, Independent, Music & Musicals, Theatrical Reviews, The Weinstein Co., Cinematical Indie

One thing you should know about the Julian Schnabel-directed concert documentary
Lou Reed's Berlin is that Lou Reed has personally instructed theaters to play the film at concert-level volume. That means it's really, really loud. When I saw it (at NYC's
Film Forum, which is following Reed's command throughout the film's limited engagement), an elder woman walked out. Of course, I can't be sure that it was due to the sound, though the exit was during one of the loudest songs.
The volume may seem excessive and unnecessary to some, but at a time when concert docs are shown in IMAX and/or in 3-D, it really helps a film like
Lou Reed's Berlin compete for audiences seeking a filmic experience comparable to the real thing. And leaving the theater with your ears ringing will help you think that you were actually there when Reed performed his 1973 album Berlin live for the first (and second, third and fourth) time in Brooklyn, New York, December 14-17, 2006.
Continue reading Review: Lou Reed's Berlin
Posted Jul 16th 2008 9:32AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Action, Independent, Casting, RumorMonger, The Weinstein Co., Brad Pitt, Quentin Tarantino, War

The casting rumors for Quentin Tarantino's
Inglorious Bastards just keep circulating -- I'm dying for something to be confirmed, already!
Brad Pitt was rumored to be in talks for the key role of Aldo Raine, and given that Tarantino flew all the way to France to meet with him suggests it's more than idle talk.
Now, according to
Variety, Tarantino wants
Leonardo DiCaprio to play Hans Landa, and is meeting with the actor on Thursday to discuss the part with him. This would be DiCaprio's first time working with Tarantino, and frankly, it would be a nice break from his Martin Scorcese trend. DiCaprio is another one of those actors with a pre-production list a mile long, so a scheduling conflict could manage to keep him out of the movie.
While I was really behind the idea of Pitt, I'm not sure how I feel about DiCaprio. Don't get me wrong, I really like him, but he's becoming the go-to guy for just about every film that's in production. Plus, Tarantino is pretty famous for his inspired and offbeat casting. Hiring two of Hollywood's golden boys (and I mean that in a nice way) seems a little pedestrian. But Tarantino is anything but predictable, and he can coax surprising performances out of all sorts of actors. What looks rather uninspiring from the outside could be one of his best ensembles yet. What do you think?
Posted Jul 12th 2008 3:33PM by Scott Weinberg
Filed under: Horror, Thrillers, The Weinstein Co., Home Entertainment, Remakes and Sequels

...and here's where I usually shake my virtual fist at the horror heavens and ask "Why? Holy sweet sausage on rye, WHY the holy hell are they offering up a sequel to
Pulse, which is easily one of the lamest of all the very lame J-horror remakes?" (Dramatic pause)
"Why?!?"But I won't. There's obviously some sort of fan-base for this title, because movie studios don't bang out sequels (even DTV sequels) if they don't expect some sort of return on their investment. If we're looking for silver linings, we could note that both
White Noise 2 and
Wrong Turn 2 were more entertaining than first expected -- but if we choose to go the snarky route we could remind you that
the star of Pulse ended up mocking it (to hilarious effect) in
Forgetting Sarah Marshall! (Dang that scene made me laugh.)
Written and directed by
Joel Soisson,
Pulse 2: Afterlife stars
Jamie Bamber from
Battlestar: Galactica and a whole bunch of actors I've never heard of. (I don't mean that in a nasty way.) I'm assuming the plot has something to do with supernatural technology. Visit
Shock for the brand-new cover art, and circle September 30 on your calendar if this is a title you're after. And hey, at least it's not PG-13, right? Matter of fact:
Rated R for violence, disturbing images, some sexuality, nudity and language. Already it's better than the first one.
Posted Jul 3rd 2008 12:02PM by William Goss
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Independent, Distribution, The Weinstein Co., Fan Rant

"If a film fell in the multiplex, and no one was there to see it..."
Limited release: such a simple phrase, and yet two words that all but indicate to a majority of moviegoers that whatever it is they want to see may or may not escape the confines of a NY/LA run before the film in question comes to them by way of Netflix mere months later.
Meanwhile, screens upon screens across the nation are filled by the likes of the same stars and the same stories, with the same special effects and the same happy endings, leaving the smaller films, the different films, the better films to slip through the distribution cracks, as it were.
Among their number falls The Promotion, a film which we've admittedly supported ad nauseum to the oh-so-ironic tune of $365,928 on a grand total of 81 screens. It opened just this past weekend in my market, Orlando, Fla., on a single screen, for a whopping four days, with a grand total of eight showings, before being shuffled off to make room for that other Jason Bateman co-starring comedy-drama hybrid.
It was the first day of July, and the last night for the film. Having enjoyed it twice before and driven by - I don't know - a sense of romantic futility, I turned out for that final showing. Lo and behold, I wasn't alone...
Continue reading Fan Rant: No One Can Hear You Screen
Posted Jul 1st 2008 9:42PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: RumorMonger, The Weinstein Co., Michael Moore, Miramax

For everyone who's ever watched a bad movie and thought, "If this is what they produced, I wonder what they threw away?," the
Village Voice has found an answer. In an amusing and fascinating
article posted today, reporter Tony Ortega says he and a buddy accidentally stumbled across a recycling bin full of paper from
Harvey Weinstein's office -- and not just from the office, but from Weinstein's own desk. Ortega proceeds to tell us all the juicy details he learned about the daily work of a movie mogul.
So what is Harvey Weinstein throwing away? Lots of copies of screenplays, naturally, as well as daily sheets (prepared by an assistant, no doubt) listing phone calls he needs to make or return. As you might imagine, the roster of people seeking Weinstein's attention is staggering, with actors, agents, lawyers, producers, and reporters all vying for his time. Michael Moore called him on April 25 and Weinstein didn't return the call for over a month. I'd say being able to ignore Michael Moore for a full month is the very definition of power.
Strangely, Weinstein's e-mails are printed out for him to peruse. (Maybe he gets eye strain from looking at a computer monitor? Maybe he just likes wasting paper?) There were some pretty interesting tidbits in the copies he tossed, including lots of stuff about the Weinstein-produced
Project Runway, if you're into that.
Continue reading What's in Harvey Weinstein's Recycling Bin?
Posted Jun 26th 2008 4:34PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Drama, Foreign Language, Independent, Deals, New Releases, IFC, Distribution, The Weinstein Co., Cinematical Indie

With the film industry so busy that even the art houses are having trouble finding room for the indies they want to show, some execs are starting to look at more creative ways of getting their movies seen. That's why the Weinstein Co. is handing over one of its products to IFC Films, which will release it later this year in theaters and -- on the same day -- through Video-on-Demand, right into people's homes.
The movie is
Elite Squad, a Brazilian drama about police corruption that
won the top prize at Berlin in February and comes from a great pedigree: it was directed by José Padilha, who made the fantastic documentary
Bus 174, and co-written by Bráulio Mantovani, who wrote
City of God. (
Cinematical's Scott Weinberg
reviewed it mostly favorably at Tribeca.) It's the kind of foreign film that would normally do pretty well on the U.S. art house circuit, if the art houses weren't already overcrowded at the moment.
So the Weinsteins -- who actually helped produce the film, rather than merely buying the finished product at a festival -- have
made a deal (with unspecified terms) with IFC Films. IFC will release it in a few theaters at the same time that it becomes available through IFC's Video-on-Demand service. Our Christopher Campbell wrote an
excellent summary of this practice, known as "day-and-date," in April. Basically, day-and-date helps non-blockbuster films get seen by more people.
Continue reading Award-Winning 'Elite Squad' to Hit Theaters and VOD Simultaneously
Posted Jun 20th 2008 12:37PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Drama, Foreign Language, Independent, Music & Musicals, Exhibition, The Weinstein Co., Miramax, Cinematical Indie

OK, so maybe they aren't turning
all their movies into Broadway musicals, but it sure seems like it.
According to Variety, The Weinstein Co. is out to produce a number of adaptations for the stage, beginning with
Finding Neverland, which is expected to hit the stage in 2010 (or re-hit the stage, since the movie was based on a play by
Allan Knee). After that, it's a stage version of Pink Floyd's
The Wall (apparently adapted from the album, not Alan Parker's
1982 film). Then, other titles in the pipeline include the Miramax hits
Shakespeare in Love,
Chocolat,
Save the Last Dance and
Cinema Paradiso. Wait, a stage musical based on a movie that celebrates moviegoing? That's gotta be one of the dumbest things I've heard.
These certainly aren't the first movies to be
exploited adapted for the stage, and they won't even be the first stage productions from the Weinsteins, who also had a hand in Tony-winner "August: Osage County," as well as the hit stage adaptation of
The Producers and the soon-to-be-a-film
"Frost/Nixon." The
Finding Neverland musical is already being written, with book by original playwright Knee and music by "Grey Gardens" composer Scott Frankel and lyricist Michael Korie.
The Wall also is in the works under the care of playwright/screenwriter
Lee Hall (
Billy Elliot).
So far, it appears TWC is only adapting Miramax films, from back when the Weinsteins were in charge there, but maybe one day we'll get to see "Grindhouse: The Musical" or a stage adaptation of
Fanboys (maybe it can even hit the stage before theaters, at the rate it's going).
Posted Jun 15th 2008 6:02PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Action, Drama, New on DVD, The Weinstein Co., Cinematical Indie

When I saw
The Incredible Hulk yesterday at a matinee screening, I was entertained. (My feelings were very similar to what
Scott Weinberg wrote in his review, so no sense repeating them here.) But, truthfully, the CGI-to-death battle scenes made me long for hard-core, physical action sequences involving real people, an itch that was easily scratched by watching
Invisible Target, which came out on DVD earlier this week.
Directed by veteran action maestro
Benny Chan,
Invisible Target is a very basic Hong Kong "cops and criminals" tale with a couple of deeper psychological layers thrown in for good measure.
As I wrote in my review when I saw it at
Fantastic Fest last fall, "
Invisible Target may not be strikingly original in either its plot or action choreography, but there's definitely something entirely positive to be said for a film that intends to be nothing more than a delivery system for adrenaline and keeps its promise in a very satisfying fashion."
Continue reading Don't Fear the Subs: 'Invisible Target' Packs Action Punch
Posted Jun 13th 2008 2:38PM by Scott Weinberg
Filed under: Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Thrillers, The Weinstein Co.

Thanks to
Bloody D for filling us in on the just-announced release pattern for
John Hillcoat's adaptation of the Pultizer-winning
Cormac McCarthy novel
The Road. And here it is:
November 14 -- New York and Los Angeles
November 21 -- Limited release
November 26 -- Wide release
There, now you know how long you have to finish the book -- which takes a few pages to get into, but is really quite excellent if you want my opinion. The movie version comes from the director of
The Proposition (which is also quite excellent), and the adaptation comes from screenwriter
Joe Penhall. The impressive cast includes the likes of Viggo Mortensen, Robert Duvall, Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce, and young newcomer Kodi Smit-McPhee..
Expect a Cinematical review of
The Road in mid-November, since Erik Davis lives in New York and he is REALLY freakin' excited to see this movie. (Oooh, or maybe it will play at Toronto, in which case you can bump that review up a month.)
Posted Jun 9th 2008 4:02PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Drama, Foreign Language, Horror, Sony Classics, Box Office, The Weinstein Co., Cinematical Indie, Picturehouse
Genghis Khan rules! Sergei Bodrov's Mongol (Picturehouse), the first installment of a planned trilogy covering the Mongolian military leader, cleaned up at the indie box office, taking in $25,360 per screen, according to estimates compiled by Leonard Klady at Movie City News. Our own Jeffrey M. Anderson didn't even like the battle scenes -- "polite and observant rather than reckless or exciting" -- much less the movie as a whole. Eric D. Snider was more admiring, if not wildly enthusiastic, as were most critics (per Rotten Tomatoes).
Two films that opened at one theater each performed quite well. Take Out (Cavu Pictures) earned $9,900. Directed by Sean Baker and Shih-Ching Tsou, the film depicts a day in the life of an illegal Chinese immigrant who must pay off a large debt to his smugglers or face the consequences. The only way to pay the debt? Get good tips from his wealthy delivery route. Both the New York Times and Village Voice were complimentary.
Eric Guirado's Grocer's Son (Film Movement) made $9,500. The titular character must leave the city to return to the country and care for his sick father's duties. Gradually he finds that the villagers are not so gruff after all, and romance might be blooming too. Slant Magazine and Variety published positive reviews, though noting various flaws.
Continue reading Indie Weekend Box Office: 'Mongol' Conquers All
Posted Jun 3rd 2008 9:32AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Comedy, Independent, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Deals, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom, The Weinstein Co., Newsstand, Comic/Superhero/Geek

It has been deathly quiet on the
Fanboys front, which suggests that no one would see this movie if the Weinstein Co. paid them to. Well, that's probably an overstatement, but it certainly is a dead horse.
Then again, there might be a flutter of life. According to the
New York Times, the Weinstein Co. have brought original director
Kyle Newman back to create a final cut of the film. "I have been brought back into the editing room to work on a final version," Newman told the
Times. "All the key people are back. That's all good."
Of course, there is still no news on a release date, nor whether it will ever be put into theatres or merely relegated to direct-to-DVD. (We also don't know which storyline will be kept in; the cancer one, or the non-cancer one.) It's rather interesting that the Weinstein Co. conceded to the fan backlash -- the backlash they said
didn't really exist. If they can appease those petition signers and protest stagers, could they actually turn a profit on this film?
Continue reading Director Kyle Newman Returns to 'Fanboys'!
Posted Jun 3rd 2008 8:02AM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Documentary, Drama, Magnolia, New on DVD, The Weinstein Co., Home Entertainment, Cinematical Indie

In telling the story of Joy Division's Ian Curtis, director Anton Corbjin focuses on his wife Deborah (Samantha Morton) as much as the singer (Sam Riley) himself.
Control hits DVD today courtesy of The Weinstein Co.; Corbijn contributes an audio commentary and a conversation. Other extras include a "making of" feature, extended live performances, and music videos from Joy Division and the Killers.
James Rocchi reviewed Control and so did
Christopher Campbell.
Mr. Rocchi also saw Olivier Assayas'
Boarding Gate, but
he noticed one problem: "The film has no motor to drive it. " Even the more adventurous and/or devoted fans of director Assayas may wish to proceed with caution. Asia Argento and Michael Madsen star. The DVD from Magnet Releasing includes interviews with Ms. Argento and a feature entitled: "Boarding Gate: In Touch with Asia."
Michael Radford's heist film
Flawless inspired Eric D. Snider to write a
glowing guarded recommendation; he concluded: "Michael Caine and the rest of the mostly British cast are serious enough to pull the job off, and they make the flick eminently watchable." Look for the DVD from Magnolia.
Do you really need to know what
Twisted: A Balloonamentary is about? The title alone justifies a rental, but if you insist on knowing more, I refer you to Richard von Busack's
recent post on the film's theatrical success. The DVD includes an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and much more.
Posted May 28th 2008 4:32PM by Eric Kohn
Filed under: Action, Casting, Deals, New Releases, Cannes, Celebrities and Controversy, Box Office, Distribution, The Weinstein Co., Tom Cruise, Movie Marketing

When two movies with similar plots hit theaters around the same time, it usually just reveals the vapidity of Hollywood formula (as was the case when
Deep Impact and
Armageddon came out a few months apart). The situation changes, however, when the subject matter has far more thematic weight.
Defamer's S.T. VanAirsdale points out the potential conflict brewing now that
The Weinstein Company has picked up U.S. theatrical, DVD and television rights to the 2004 German film
Operation Valykrie, a dramatization of the failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hilter during World War II. Sound familiar? That's because
Bryan Singer's upcoming 2009 release,
Valkyrie, tells precisely the same story, with
Tom Cruise in the role of would-be assassin Col. Claus Von Stauffenberg. In the German movie, the character is played by
Sebastian Koch, the debonair star of
The Lives of Others and
Paul Verhoeven's
Black Book.
In addition to the overlapping content, VanAirsdale points out another potential conflict: Koch's female co-star in
Black Book, the alluring
Carice van Houten, stars opposite Cruise in
Valkyrie, creating the sort of meaty overlap that money
can buy.
Harvey Weinstein's no slouch when it comes to instigating controversy, but his company hasn't exactly had the best of luck with its recent daring titles (few turned out for
Where in the World is Osama bin Laden?). Personal drama
has impacted Cruise's films before, but this might be the rare case where he would have nothing to do with it.
Posted May 28th 2008 2:32PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Documentary, Drama, Independent, ThinkFilm, Warner Independent Pictures, New on DVD, The Weinstein Co., Home Entertainment, Cinematical Indie

This week is overflowing with potentially interesting indie DVD releases.
What Would Jesus Buy?, an entertaining documentary directed by Rob VanAlkemade and produced by
Morgan Spurlock, asks a very serious question in comedic form.
As I wrote in my review, the film follows Reverend Billy and his Church of Stop Shopping Choir on a trek across America as they deliver an anti-shopping, anti-materialism, pro-Christmas message, bolstered by the trappings of fundamentalist religion. The DVD from Arts Alliance America includes deleted scenes, an 8-minute public access show featuring Reverend Billy, the Choir and Morgan Spurlock, and printable lyrics of the Choir's customized Christmas carols.
Theodore Braun's doc
Darfur Now "is solely about the power and the conviction" of six people who have made a difference in Sudan, according to
our own Christopher Campbell. "If there's one flaw with the film, it's that it almost conclusively portrays the Darfur problem as no longer a problem." One of the film's producers is Don Cheadle, who also appears along with George Clooney. The DVD from Warner Independent includes additional scenes and an introduction and commentary with Braun.
Woody Allen may not be thought of nowadays as an "indie" auteur, but, really, how many directors enjoy his creative freedom? I admire his untiring work ethic, but many of his recent films feel half-chewed, and
Cassandra's Dream is no exception.
Continue reading Indies on DVD: 'What Would Jesus Buy?,' 'Darfur Now'
Posted May 21st 2008 7:32PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Drama, Fandom, The Weinstein Co., Movie Marketing, Cinematical Indie, Posters
Cinematical has received this brand new poster for
Boy A (click image to enlarge), a film I was lucky enough to catch at this year's Tribeca Film Festival. Featuring terrific performances from Andrew Garfield (especially) and Peter Mullan,
Boy A tells the story of Jack; a wounded soul who, at 24, is released from prison after serving time for a horrible crime he committed with a friend at the age of 10. Mullan plays the kid's councilor Terry; in charge of basically setting him up in a new town, with a new name and new goals to protect Jack from those who want him either dead or back in jail. Jack slowly begins to build a new life for himself; he excels at his job, makes some good friends and falls in love -- however, hidden deep inside him is a secret he can't afford to let out. Can he continue on as is, or will the truth eventually find its own brutal way of catching up to him?
Boy A is one heckuva powerful flick (shot and edited beautifully) that creeps up on you as the drama slowly unfolds. I have no problem giving this one a strong recommendation; it hits theaters in limited release on July 23.
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