A Warner Bros. executive emailed a fact sheet about "The Dark Knight Rises" to Hollywood reporters a few days ago and ended with two hopeful syllables for the film's box-office prospects: "Ka ching."
A Warner Bros. executive emailed a fact sheet about "The Dark Knight Rises" to Hollywood reporters a few days ago and ended with two hopeful syllables for the film's box-office prospects: "Ka ching."
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All the news, reviews, comment and buzz from the Croisette on day ten of the Cannes film festival
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareJC Chandor gains a Cannes hit with 'All Is Lost' Associated Press Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Published 2:02 am, Friday, May 24, 2013 The director who put Robert Redford in a struggle for survival as a capsized sailor in "All Is Lost" is talking about mortality when a gust of wind lifts a large beach umbrella from its base and sends it and its heavy metal pole sailing straight toward a publicist sitting nearby. The garrulous American director shrugs off the feat — "I have good eyes" — before resuming his flow of words about life, death and putting a screen icon through the emotional and physical wringer. Redford plays a sailor whose yacht is damaged in a collision with a shipping container in the middle of the Indian Ocean. The film follows him over eight days as he tries, first, to repair his boat and sail on, then simply to survive in increasingly perilous conditions. The 76-year-old actor's famous, weather-beaten face and aging but muscular physique help give the movie its compelling intensity. "When an actor has been working for 40 years, and if you love movies he has so much baggage, that it's almost hard for him at this point to take on a fresh role, because we have all these other ideas and his voice is so specific," said Chandor — who skirted that obstacle by silencing the voice. Trade paper Variety called it "that mainstream-movie rarity: a virtually wordless film that speaks with grave eloquence and simplicity about the human condition." The Guardian newspaper said Redford "delivers a tour de force performance," and the actor got a long standing ovation at the film's premiere.
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More | Talk | Read It Later | SharePainting over Michelangelo's sexuality does little to help this informative but insipid tale of his work on the Sistine ChapelThe Agony and the Ecstasy (1965)Director: Carol ReedEntertainment grade: D+History grade: B–During his own lifetime, sculptor, architect and painter Michelangelo Buonarroti was considered to be the greatest artist in Europe.FactsThe film begins with a formal 12-minute history lesson on Michelangelo's life and work. It includes a tip for American audiences at the time of the film's release that the sublime Pietà of St Peter's was then on display at the New York World's Fair. This piece of information now does little but give historians conniptions at the thought someone might have dropped it on the way. The intent to inform is laudable, but a fictional film should really be able to convey its subject without a lecture – and this lecture sets a regrettably pompous tone that infects the rest of the movie. Just as you're wondering whether you've started watching a documentary by mistake, Rex Harrison rides onscreen as Pope Julius II and gets on with conquering cities, prancing about in white robes and graciously throwing coins at poor people. Phew.ArtJulius takes Michelangelo (Charlton Heston) to a chapel. "As you know, it was built by my uncle, Pope Sixtus," he says. "That is why it is called the Sistine." Seems like the lecture isn't over yet. "It has no more architecture than a cow barn," grumbles Michelangelo. "You will correct the clumsiness of my uncle's architects," says Julius. "Your commission is to decorate the ceiling." The screenplay goes heavy on the dialogue, light on the action. After 45 minutes of nothing much happening, there's finally some drama when Michelangelo gets drunk and decides his first set of frescoes are duff. He sloshes red paint all over them and flounces off. "He will paint it or he will hang!" declares the pope. The film is right that the pope and Michelangelo had a fraught relationship, and that the artist considered his original commission too limiting.InspirationWandering in the marble quarries of Carrara, Michelangelo ascends a mountain and sees in the clouds the faces of God and Adam, which he will later paint on the Sistine ceiling. Heston played Moses in The Ten Commandments the same year this film came out; the parallels aren't subtle. "It is a cheesy, overblown scene and a brazen inversion of an actual event, Michelangelo's vision of a giant monument on an Apuan mountaintop", wrote Eric Scigliano in his book Michelangelo's Mountain. The film breaks for an intermission and grandiose entr'acte music. An intermission isn't usually necessary midway through a two-hour movie, but this one is quite boring – so you might appreciate the opportunity to do something else for a bit.SexMichelangelo has a chaste affection for Contessina de' Medici (Diane Cilento), daughter of Lorenzo the Magnificent. "Is it another woman?" she asks, when he refuses to make it less chaste. "No," he mumbles, standing sheepishly in front of a sketch of a naked man. That's as far as the film goes, concluding that Michelangelo's genius was so all-consuming that he had no energy left for love or sex. "What runs in Michelangelo's veins is not blood; it's paint," says the pope.More sexIn fact, the real Michelangelo's love poems, written mostly to young men such as Tommaso dei Cavalieri, are hot stuff. Moreover, anyone viewing some of his depictions of purportedly female subjects, such as Night from the tomb of Giuliano de' Medici, might reasonably conclude that the artist spent more time looking at naked men than naked women. They'd be correct. Female figures such as the Libyan Sibyl on the Sistine ceiling are known to have been based on studies of male anatomy. What this film desperately needs to liven it up are the real Michelangelo's passions, but Hollywood might not have considered these suitable for general audiences in 1965.VerdictThe Agony and the Ecstasy is reasonably accurate so far as it goes, but the story of Michelangelo would be more interesting – and, arguably, truer to the spirit of the man and his work – if it were told with a lot more humour and a lot less prudishness.Period and historicalDramaMichelangeloAlex von Tunzelmannguardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareCHICAGO - You could be forgiven if you thought John Wayne was born in the back of a covered wagon headed west across the Plains or came into this world in a one-room thatched-roof house in a small Irish village.
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