Thursday, December 20, 2012

The List Of The Top Hollywood Action Movies 2012


The year 2012 is on the verge of its completion and it has already delivered a great wide bunch of awesome movies. If we titled the year 2012 as the year of action movies, it wouldn't be wrong at all, not even a bit. It has produced some of the most memorable action movies of this era with an elephantine amount of bucks pouring in throughout the year.

2012 is also the year of superhero movies, it unveiled some of the greatest superhero movies featuring some of the greatest stars of Hollywood. The Dark Knight Rises, The Avengers, The Amazing Spider Man and a couple of others whipped the movie audiences to the cinema theatres which brought loads of dollars of business to Hollywood.

The list of top Hollywood action movies 2012 is solely based on my ratings and likes, you may have another favourite movie of a specific number so bear it in your mind that this is not intended to negate your judgement with respect to movies.


8. The Hunger Games [2012]

Welly welly well, no other movie has surprised critics and audiences alike more than The Hunger Games. It was expected to be an average movie with an average action and an average box office business. But surprisingly, The Hunger Games shattered the average-expectations and popped out as a big movie in terms of concept, execution and box office business. Don't miss this one.

7. Taken 2 [2012]

In Taken his daughter was abducted, in Taken 2 his wife's in danger which compels him to do one thing that he does best - k!ll. Watch Liam Neeson in this non-stop thriller which gives you great action sequences and nerve-shredding entertainment.

6. Total Recall [2012]

Actor Colin Farrell does not do many action movies in a year but when he does, he does it with brain and brawn. Total Recall features outstanding sci-fi pompous action entertainment which never gets boring throughout the movie. If you haven't watched this one yet, go get your DVD now!

5. The Amazing Spider Man [2012]

Okay, let's admit it - The Amazing Spider Man has not lived up to the expectations that one had out of it. The hype was great, the anticipation was awesome, the star cast looked compelling but the movie turned out to be an average spider-man flick. But, this young spider-man looks promising and vibrant nevertheless.

4. Looper [2012]

Oh boy, this young man keeps on impressing people in every movie. Yes, I'm talking about Joseph Gordon-Levitt - in Looper, a futuristic sci-fi actioner, Joseph Gordon-Levitt does a remarkable job a future assassin who assassinates his preys by going back in time. In combination with one of the greatest action stars Bruce Willis, this movies's got sense, action, romance, relationship drama and loads of entertainment.

3. Skyfall [2012]

Skyfall has been in news for the past 3-4 years since the last Bond movie was released. The 23rd instalment of James Bond series, this spy-flick is a vivid blockbuster. Tons of action, compelling story, gripping dialogues and multi-dimensional screenplay makes this bond movie a must watch this year.

2. The Avengers [2012]

What happens when all the superheroes come together in a single movie for a final showdown? A blockbuster happens. The Hulk, Captain America, Iron Man, Thor and Black Widow in the same movie provides an actor with ear-popping action. You cannot afford to miss this awesome superhero blockbuster.

1. The Dark Knight Rises [2012]

I reckon I don't need to term this movie as number one movie of 2012 right? Similarly, I don't need to crown The Dark Knight Rises as the best action movies of 2012. Christopher Nolan concludes The Dark Knight franchise with a solid bang. If you haven't watched this Batman blockbuster, you're not a movie fan - there, I said it. Period.

Friday, December 14, 2012

The Discussion About 3D Film

Although the 1950s are most often considered the 3D movie decade, the first feature length 3D film, "The Power of Love," was made in 1922. Since that time the use of 3D technology in theaters and on television has drifted in and out of mainstream popularity.

Believe it or not, there are lots of movie lovers around the world, that still would be better off watching a usual DVD, or even a VHS, instead of going to a 3D theater for the latest blockbuster.

3D still has specific problems that need to be seen in advance, so that a filmmaker would be able to do the film as intended, and the viewer will get the maximum out of the shown content.


The latest 3D Film Festival in Los Angeles had experts discussing a lot of issues regarding the 3D, some of which were really interesting. Some practical advices were given as well. For proper distribution of a 3D film, you need both a good idea and something that people would want to see in 3D. In other words, if there's no "hook", there is no economic incentives yet to go the extra mile, and pay more money.

It was noted, that 3D at the Hollywood level is always director driven. In a nutshell, there are two approaches, either the directors think of 3D as integral to the story, or an afterthought.

Speaking of technical aspects – most theaters still project 3D too dark. According to the 3D discussion panel, the optional way to watch is at a whopping 14 foot lamberts of brightness. The average, for a good theater is 4.5 foot lamberts and many theaters are well below.

The panel experts recommended that while shooting 3D, it would be better to have at least a 42-inch monitor on set, to be able to watch playbacks. 3D scales down too well, you won't see problems for big screens unless you have a big monitor.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Here Is A List Of The Best Adventure Movies

If you're in the mood for a film that gets the adrenaline pumping, why not opt for an action-packed adventure movies? Here are five of the best choices to you're your next movie night as heart-poundingly fun as possible:


King Kong (1933)

No list of adventure films would be complete without this classic of the genre. "King Kong" follows the adventures of a film crew who goes to a tropical island to finish the shooting of a film. While on the island, they encounter a massive gorilla who develops a passion for the film's female star (played by Fay Wray), and the movie follows the crew as they struggle to save her and themselves from the gorilla's brutal will.

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

This epic adventure film, directed by David Lean, tells the story of a real-life man named Thomas Edward Lawrence – an individual who led a guerilla army to triumph in the Arabian desert (during the Arab revolt against the Turks in World War I). The movie is packed with sweeping visuals and action-packed scenes as Lawrence forges ahead, eventually helping the British bring down the Ottoman Empire.

North by Northwest (1959)

This Hithcock classic combines intrigue with adventures when a New York ad executive gets mistaken as a government agent. He flees across the country while being ferociously pursued by a group of foreign spies, and the film brings viewers on a harrowing journey as he struggles to outsmart the spies and survive. The movie includes a romantic thread along with the ample amounts of adventure, so the movie appeals on many levels.

Goldfinger (1964)

This James Bond classic, directed by Gary Hamilton, follows Bond as he untangles gold magnate Auric Goldfinger's plot to infiltrate the Fort Knox gold reserve. The goal of Goldfinger and his henchmen is nothing less than to obliterate the world economy. Bond's mission to stop their plot and save the world brings up against many obstacles – and the fun is in watching him maneuver his way forward despite the tangles placed in his path.

Top Gun (1986)

This film, staring Tom Cruise and Val Kilmer, follows the students of a top US flying school that are working toward becoming advanced fighter pilots. As they compete to be the best in the class, the main character Maverick combines his sky adventures with earthly pursuit of a female instructor in the flight school.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

There Are The Right 5 Online Movie Streaming Sites

You may have been good when you were young or used to get a student discount, but now when you need to shell out for an adult ticket both for you and your girlfriend it doesn't seem so cheap, does it? Wouldn't it be cool if you could get the flexibility of enjoying DVD's without the need to pay so much or even having to head out to the store. It needn't be a mere dream. If you like the concept of paying less but getting more then take a look at these Online Movie Streaming Sites:


1. Netflix - standard in online movie access, high video quality (not HD yet), discount rates.

Netflix started life mailing out Videos to members, but now are the alpha male of online movie streaming in America. Netflix has a solid focus on providing a good streaming service and ensuring new content is regularly put into their online library of movies and TV shows. They understand the potential and major benefits movie streaming rentals and are market leaders in getting it to the front of the new movie revolution.

2. Blockbuster - Most likely too little and too late.

Though Blockbuster in their current form isn't departed yet, very few expect them to live on for much more time. They are producing a major effort to join the online movie streaming get together, but just like Netflix are yet to provide HD titles. It is difficult to say what's going to become of Blockbuster, their emphasis remains on the physical media, but their online catalogue of streamed content is growing weekly.

3. VUDU - Opportunity to obtain the newest releases in high definition.

VUDU is aimed more at occasional movie viewers than those who want to undertake regular movie marathons. The appeal with VUDU is that you only pay for what you see and there is no contract tying you into their service.

4. Hulu Plus - View your favorite television shows when you wish.

Another online movie streaming site that has been established for a while is Hulu, who made their name streaming re-runs of good old TV programs. Hulu is somewhat unlike any other services in that their focus is a lot more on television programming.
If you sign up for Hulu you're subscribing more for the library of television shows than anything else. It's the ideal service for people who want to watch several hours of old TV re-runs regularly. It can work great together with VUDU to provide you with a good selection of viewing options without having to pay for satellite tv.

5. Amazon Prime Streaming - a bit more costly compared to the others but maybe worth a go for frequent Amazon customers.

Bearing that in mind, you can still find free movies and TV shows available, that are older and in all probability ones you've viewed several times over on your local TV stations. Additionally they provide a free trial for 1 month, so you can always test it out and if you’re dissatisfied within 30 days, just cancel.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

The 2012 Romantic Movie American Reunion

The American Pie gang gets back together in East Great Falls, Mich., for their 13th class reunion. In the fourth installment in the comedy series (not counting spinoffs), Jim (Jason Biggs), Oz (Chris Klein), Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas), Steve (Seann William Scott) and Paul (Eddie Kaye Thomas) have grown up and gone their separate ways. They return for a weekend to remember old times, find out who and what has changed and reaffirm friendships.
American Reunion is the continuation of the American Pie series of movies and is here in the top romantic movies 2012. It is the eighth movie of this series and a continuation of the first three movies - American Pie, American Pie 2, and American Wedding. The original characters return to East Great Falls for their high school reunion, during which we get to see what has become of them in the years since the events of American Wedding. Many of the people who made up the original cast return to take up the roles they played years ago.
This is always wonderful to see as it helps draw the viewer into the story being told when familiar faces are involved. Even actors who played such parts as Chuck Sherman, Nadia, and Stifler's mom return in this movie. American Reunion will be worth seeing if you are new to the series or if you have been watching since the first movie came out in 1999. It is scheduled for release on April 6, 2012.
The first two American Pie films were, if not classics, then cultural powerhouses in their day. When your dad asks you, not the other way around, to watch American Pie 2 on a visit home from college, you know the film has entered the cultural zeitgeist and is not just a flash in the pan or appealing to a niche market.
Only the first film, titled American Pie (1999) has really aged well despite being laughingly nineties in appearance. There is something. . .charming. . .and even low key about this end-of-the-nineties flick that, though focused entirely on sex, was not actually JUST about sex. Being in high school during that film and being the targeted audience, it was nice to see people I could actually relate to as opposed to 32 year olds pretending to be younger and being way too cool for school (literally).

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Explore About These Unknown 3D Movies Problems

Movies makers have been producing films in three dimensions for decades now, but scientists are just starting to realize the effects these films can have on a person’s eyesight, today there are so many people are interested in 3D movies. But several recent studies have shown that 3D movies can elicit previously unknown problems with someone’s eyesight, I think that that is why .


3D movies are created to allow a viewer to focus on one object at a time, and these movies are far better for a person’s vision due to the fact that the eyes don’t have to continuously adjust to unnatural settings. Even these movies, however, can still cause headaches, eye fatigue and nausea. These symptoms are caused by the close proximity to a viewing screen and the apparent distance of whatever is on that screen. For this reason, a person may experience fewer visual problems if they watch a 3D movie at a theater rather than at home. Screens at movie theaters actually are situated in the distance, so this allows the eyes to focus more normally than if the screen were nearby.

The quickest way for a person to notice these problems is by watching a poorly made 3D movie. This includes movies that were not originally made for this type of viewing, but were later converted and rereleased. However, even top-quality 3D movies can bring about problems. People’s eyes work naturally to converge when they’re looking at something nearby and diverge when they’re looking at something far away. Three dimensional movies violate this norm by bringing perception that seems far away right up to the face of a viewer.

A person who repeatedly experiences headaches, fatigue, or motion sickness when watching 3D movies should consult an optometrist to determine what is happening, and if it can be helped. Many times people have vision problems (like astigmatism) that can be fixed with eyeglasses, and other times people can have more advanced problems with their eye working together properly. This is what optometrists call problems with “binocularity”. There are times eyeglasses and/or vision therapy can help with these symptoms. An optometrist will be able to diagnose and recommend appropriate treatment.

Monday, June 18, 2012

The Exciting LA Film Festival 2012

LA Film Festival is a top movie festival all over the world, all the great films and stars are all get together there, now LA Film Festival 2012 is in full swing with films, parties and gatherings galore. It is quite wonderful, the first notable flick on our coverage radar is a fantastic and moving Swiss film titled "Sister." Directed by the amazing Ursula Meier and featuring one knock out performance by young lead actor Kacey Mottet Klein, the movie is powerful emotional drama about secrets, lies and family. We recently celebrated "Sister" and it’s inclusion into this year’s festival with some of the folks from the film at the lush residence of the very welcoming Bruno Ryff, the Consul General of Switzerland. It was a memorable event with a bit of everything.


 This year LA Film Festival is held in a special place, the house is magnificent. Not only are there massive amounts of room, but also in the hot California weather the massive swimming pool looks very inviting! After some very eloquent words from the Consul General Bruno Ryff, we get to hear from both "Sister" director Ursula Meier and her lead actor Kacey Mottet Klein, who talk a bit about the film and how it was made.

The best part of any party may be the food! There are a lot of kinds of food, they are all so dilicious, all kinds of food from different places and countries. And this was a Buffet-Luncheon befitting of a king, as our generous hosts provided everything from an out of this world chicken and mushroom dish to fresh bread and butter that melted in your mouth – I’m never leaving!

The party is held in the beautiful swimming pool, the programs in this party are all very exciting, all the people are very happy, because there are so many famous stars in the party, it is full of myth.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Can You Stand The Humor Of There's Something About Mary

there's something about mary
Sometimes Western civilization declines in deliriously funny style. Why bother to list the myriad offenses given by ''There's Something About Mary,'' the proudly obnoxious new film by Peter and Bobby Farrelly, when it's easier -- definitely much too easy -- to enjoy them? In the raunchy wake of ''Dumb and Dumber'' and ''Kingpin,'' the Farrelly brothers have made a romantic comedy that's a hoot in every sense, worth a smidgen of disapproval and a whole lot of helpless laughter. But the Farrellys are as gleeful as they are crude, and they certainly aren't witless. The film works ridiculously well because it never stoops to being mean-spirited or (despite all appearances) authentically inane.
  
There's Something About Mary features the immortal story of "boy meets girl, boy loses girl when a certain body part becomes the victim of a freak accident, boy starts stalking girl." The boy in question is a nerdy Ted Stroehmann (Ben Stiller, sporting weird teeth, ears, and hair), and the girl in question is Mary (Cameron Diaz, positively radiating charisma). There are a few more components in this simple and touching love story: a sleazy private investigator, Pat Healy (Matt Dillon with a moustache which looks like a dead earthworm), who starts stalking Mary; a dweeby architect (Lee Evans, previously seen in Mouse Hunt), who starts stalking Mary; Ted's buddy Dom (Chris Eliot, with the award-winning-caliber makeup boiling all over him), who starts. Well, by now you get the idea.
  
Mixed up into this heartwarming narrative are the jokes, which deal with subjects including, but not limited to: masturbation, various bodily fluids, gays, serial killers, sagging breasts, and, of course, aforementioned attempts to cue humor from mental and physical handicaps and stalking.
  
Let me make one thing perfectly clear - I don't object to jokes based on any of the above because of the subject matter. One could simply rent A Fish Called Wanda and see a good number of riotously funny sequences which deal with such subjects as marital infidelity and stuttering. No, the reason why I didn't find There's Something About Mary funny was that most of the "envelope- pushing" jokes simply didn't work. I'm somewhat dumfounded pondering how anyone could think it was possible to successfully elicit laughs from this subject matter.
  
A prom, a crush and a cruel, cruel zipper set ''There's Something About Mary'' in motion. It seems that Ted Stroehmann (Ben Stiller in braces), a kind of Everydweeb, is destined to ruin the biggest night of his young life. Notably unsuccessful in recruiting a prom date (''If everything else falls apart, maybe'' is the best answer he gets), Ted suddenly catches the eye of Mary Jenson, played by Cameron Diaz with a blithe comic style that makes her as funny as she is dazzling. Miracle of miracles, Mary makes Ted her designated prom date for that fateful night.
  
Stiller's character has had the memory of a disastrous prom date with Mary casting a shadow over his love life for years and decides to track down the "one that got away", only to find he has to compete with much more devious wannabe suitors. The film is completely fearless in its pursuit of laughs – no subject is taboo. You know Mary and Ted will end up together, but the Farrellys make sure that the finale isn't arrived at easily or predictably and, most importantly, that it's a lot of fun to get there.
  
Sure, the plot may sound like your typical romantic comedy -- but not with the Farrelly brothers at the helm. These are the same guys who brought you Dumb and Dumber, with its toilet humor and political incorrectness. Instead, this is a frat guy's idea of a romantic comedy, full of jokes at the expense of disabled people and women. Sure, the guys who fall for Mary are the ultimate joke; undeveloped man-boy idiots drooling over her charms -- how many leggy blondes are doctors who love beer and football?
  
If you can't stand this kind of humor, stay clear. And it's certainly not the thing for anyone with dating horror stories -- Chris Elliot's character won't be funny at all. But the film definitely has enough to satisfy adult gross-out humor fans.
  
To reassure non-Farrelly fans of sound judgment, there are at least as many zit jokes here as other types of witticisms, with Chris Elliott in the abrasive role of Ted's blotchy best friend. As equal-opportunity offenders, the Farrellys also kid about a serial killer, mental illness, wizened old breasts and a half-dead dog, and they make these things unabashedly funny. The dog and its sun-shriveled owner (Lin Shaye) are the film's looniest characters, and Mary's mentally handicapped brother is one of its sweetest. The joke is on Healy when, in trying to impress Mary with his bogus compassion, he cites ''work with retards'' as his cherished hobby.
  
Destined for instant notoriety is a sequence that starts off with masturbation and ends up with hair gel. But by the time it happens, you're sure to be either in the unaccountably innocent spirit of ''There's Something About Mary'' or on the way home. I hope it's not the latter. The Farrellys display a crazy audacity that's worth admiring, and they take sure aim for the funny bone. ''There's Something About Mary'' may be many things, but dull and routine aren't among them.

Thirteen years pass, and Ted is still pining away for Mary, so his friend Dom (Chris Elliott) persuades him to send a detective named Pat Healy (Matt Dillon) to find her. Except when Healy finds Mary, he decides he wants her for himself.
  
Like the other Farrelly Brothers' movies, nothing is out of bounds here, and there are a lot of things that, after laughing, you wonder if you should have laughed. But you laugh just the same.A near-perfect script, crack comic editing, and some really great performances synergize here to make one of the great comedies of the '90s (along with the other two Farrelly flicks).

Friday, May 4, 2012

How Can Loss Also Be An Occasion For Learning, Sharing, And Emotional Maturation?

sisterhood of the traveling pants
THE SISTERHOOD OF THE TRAVELING PANTS follows four high school girl friends who separate for the summer and vow to keep in touch by way of a pair of blue jeans that magically fits all their different body sizes perfectly. They mail the jeans to one another, along with letters to keep up with what's happening in each other's lives. Lena (Alexis Bledel) is shy and quiet, on her way to Greece to visit relatives; aspiring documentary-maker Tibby (Amber Tamblyn) resents being stuck working at a local Wal-Mart-type store; golden girl Bridget (Blake Lively) is dealing with her mom's suicide and distant father as she heads to soccer camp in Mexico; and young writer Carmen (America Ferrera) goes to North Carolina to visit with her long-absent father, Al (Bradley Whitford), who announces he's about to marry Lydia (Nancy Travis), whose two blond teens seem complete opposites of Carmen. During their vacations, they explore their emerging sense of independence, while figuring out how to maintain relationships with their families and with each other, and each girl learns a valuable life lesson.
  
Families can talk about the film's depiction of loyalty and loss, especially as each of the girls loses something precious, but also gains experience and faith in herself and her best friends. How do you support your friends when they feel sad or angry? How can you be mad at someone but also, at the same time, still love him or her? How can loss also be an occasion for learning, sharing, and emotional maturation?
  
We're dealing in symbolism here so it doesn't pay to question the physics. It's a tribute to the story's involving charm and the angst-filled journeys of the four girls that the jeans' flexible characteristics are, if not plausible, at least accepted. After all, "These aren't just jeans," declares the Paris Hilton-esque Bridget (Blake Lively) "they make things happen." And happen they certainly do.
  
The four girls - Tibby (Amber Tamblyn), Carmen (America Ferrera), Lena (Alexis Bledel) and Bridget - have been a foursome since their mothers met at a pre natal exercise class. Despite their differing backgrounds and privilege, the girls have formed a tight bond, one which is being challenged as they all go their separate ways in life. Having discovered the jeans' special properties, the girls draw up a manifesto outlining the rules for the ownership of the pants which will be passed around every week. The rules vary from the unhygienic (they can't wash the pants) to the revelatory (they have to disclose what happened while wearing them).

Four friends - Tibby (Amber Tamblyn), Lena (Alexis Bledel), Carmen (America Ferrera), and Bridget (Blake Lively) - who have done everything together their entire lives find themselves, on the summer of their 16th year, separating for the first time. In order to keep themselves close even while separated, they agree to share a pair of second-hand jeans that magically fits all of them while they go on their separate life altering adventures.
  
It sounds like it should be incredibly trite, but it never really is, despite a few alarming dips into the waters of clich. Strong, if slightly overdone, performances from the four leads carry a well-crafted film along to its emotional but never quite poignant ending. Director Ken Kwapis keeps events flowing smoothly between the four stories with skillful intercutting, giving each story its due time to build. The only one that gets a short shrift is Bridget's, which feels like it's building to an emotional realization but never quite gets there. Carmen's story of estrangement from her father (Bradley Whitford) and his life is the best of the bunch; her emotional confrontation with him is well done by everyone involved and rings true with pathos and turmoil.
  
The only real problem with the film is the dialogue, which isn't bad, but is so self-aware and adult it often does not fit coming out of these supposed teenager's mouths. And the younger the characters get, the more adult their dialogue is. Twelve-year-old Bailey (Jenna Boyd) who is dying of leukemia sounds like an old man talking about mysteries of life. Certainly the knowledge of impending death will create a certain amount of lucidity for anyone, but there are some thing's twelve-year-olds can't know because they haven't had the life experience yet. It sounds too often like the writer is speaking instead of the character.

With that understanding they all go off for the summer. Bridget heads to Mexico for soccer camp, Lena visits her grandparents in Greece, Carmen visits her estranged father and his new family while Tibby remains at home, working in a local store and making a documentary. Through their various experiences, the film explores poignantly, under the sympathetic and patient guidance of director Ken Kwapis, the emotional vulnerability of being a teenage girl. It deals with loss, love and identity. Away from each other, they begin to discover themselves. But away from each other they also have pangs of loneliness, which is why they are always so excited when it's their turn for the jeans and they are reconnected with their sisterhood.
  
The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants is a sweet and moving drama with strong performances from all four girls who each bring a very different presence. It does allow itself to become a little maudlin at times, but its virtues make such weaknesses forgivable. Aimed squarely at a female market, there's enough in Traveling Pants to make it a good fit for a wider audience.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Never Let Me Go, A Story About Three People's Emotional Entanglements


Never Let Me Go
If ever proof were needed that cultural snobbery is alive and well, it’s right here. ‘Never Let Me Go’ is a film so ashamed of its own genre trappings that it goes to extreme and illogical lengths to pretend they don’t exist. Carey Mulligan, Keira Knightley and Andrew Garfield play Kathy, Ruth and Tommy, pupils at a strange English boarding school who slowly learn that they’re being bred for a grim purpose – and one we can’t fully reveal without a spoiler.

The film begins with on-screen captions explaining that a medical breakthrough in 1952 has permitted the human lifespan to be extended beyond 100 years. Subsequently, the film is narrated by 28-year-old Kathy H (Carey Mulligan) as she reminisces about her childhood at aboarding school called Hailsham, as well as her adult life after leaving the school. The first act of the film depicts the young Kathy (Izzy Meikle-Small), along with her friends Tommy (Charlie Rowe) and Ruth (Ella Purnell), spending their childhood at Hailsham in the late 1970s. The school seems to be somewhat unusual. Students are encouraged to create artwork such as paintings and poetry instead of science and maths normal for school children, and their best work gets into "The Gallery." There is also a strong emphasis on "keeping yourselves healthy inside" especially when it comes to smoking. At one point, a new teacher, Miss Lucy (Sally Hawkins) quietly informs the students of their nature: they exist only as donor organs for transplants, and will die - or, rather, "complete" - in their early adulthood. The following day Miss Lucy is "no longer working at Hailsham." As time passes, Kathy and Tommy fall in love, but Tommy falls into a manipulative relationship with Ruth. Ruth and Tommy stay together throughout the rest of their time at Hailsham.

In the second act of the film, the three friends, now young adults, are rehoused in cottages on a farm. They are permitted to leave the grounds if they wish but are resigned to their eventual fate, seeing it as inevitable. At the farm, they meet former pupils of schools similar to theirs, two of which one day sight a woman in a nearby town who they believe to be a "possible" for Ruth, her "original" - the person she was cloned from. Ruth is ecstatic at the prospect, but when she, Kathy, Tommy and the two witnesses travel to the coast to re-examine the woman, there turns out to be very little resemblance. Ruth, bitter and disillusioned, rages that all donors are "modeled on trash," meaning that they are cloned from the people lowest in society, or, in her words, "in the gutter."

From the others, Kathy and her friends hear rumors of the possibility of "deferral" – a temporary reprieve from organ donation for donors who are in love and can somehow prove it. Tommy becomes convinced that The Gallery at Hailsham, was intended to look into their souls and that artwork sent to The Gallery will be able to verify true love. He hereby hints at his feelings for Kathy, but she misinterprets his words to signify that he wants to apply for a deferral with Ruth. She is visibly distressed. The relationship between Tommy and Ruth becomes sexual, putting a strain on Kathy's friendships with the two. Kathy, feeling the need to distance herself, leaves the cottages to become a "carer" – a clone who is given a temporary reprieve from donation to do the job of supporting and comforting donors as they give up their organs. Tommy and Ruth's relationship ends shortly before her departure, though it is not depicted but revealed through Kathy's narration.

In the third and final act of the film, ten years later, Kathy is working as a carer. She has watched many clones gradually "complete" as their organs are harvested. Kathy has not seen Ruth or Tommy since the cottages. While working as a carer, Kathy happens to meet Ruth again, who is frail and unwell after two donations. They find Tommy, who is also weakened, and the three of them drive to the sea as a short trip at Ruth's request. There, Ruth asks for their forgiveness for keeping them apart. She admits she has always known that Kathy and Tommy were meant to be together because their love for each other was real, whereas Ruth was with Tommy because she was jealous of his closeness to Kathy and afraid to be "left alone." She tells them it was the worst thing she ever did and now she wants to put it right, then claims she has found a means to do so: she has found the address of the gallery owner, Madame from Hailsham, whom she thinks may grant deferrals to couples in love. With some reluctance due to skepticism, Kathy accepts the opportunity. Shortly afterward, Ruth dies on the operating table when another organ is extracted.

A moment passes in which she looks at me as though I’ve just asked the head of MI5 if I can have a go on his computer. 'Definitely not answering that. No!’ she exclaims with a big, angry laugh.

At this point the film’s publicist – who has been sitting in the corridor listening in on our interview – approaches the big, round table where the actress and I are talking. He glances from me to her, her to me.

Eventually he backs away, arms out to the side and still facing us as if ready to rugby-tackle me to the ground should I attempt any more personal questions. The atmosphere in the room is terrible.

I think back to the things I've read about Knightley before meeting her: how she always used to keep herself to herself on film sets, how, according to Carey Mulligan, 'she reserves herself for the people she really cares about’ and how, according to Knightley herself, she 'never’ attends events 'as myself, Never No! I’d rather keep some protection up.’

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Like Crazy: The Film Is Youthful In The Best Of Ways.

Like Crazy
Like Crazy is a 2011 American romantic drama film directed by Drake Doremus and starring Anton Yelchin, Felicity Jones, Jennifer Lawrence and Alex Kingston. In an interview with The Telegraph, Jones stated that the script was fully improvised and that this should be readily apparent to any viewer.

Yelchin and Jones play Jacob and Anna respectively, college students in Los Angeles who become a couple. Anna is a British exchange student who, having fallen in love with Jacob, a design student, spends the summer with him, overstaying her student visa after it had expired on graduation. She returns home to London for a family obligation, and when she flies back to Los Angeles as a tourist she is detained, denied entry, turned away, and sent back to England by Los Angeles airport immigration officials, throwing the couple into an awkward and strained long-distance relationship.Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin play Anna and Jacob in the poignant love story ‘Like Crazy.’ Directed and co-written (with Ben York Jones) by 20-something Drake Doremus, the film is youthful in the best of ways.

Anna is banned from entering the United States for this prior violation of having overstayed her original visa. The deep love of the couple is strained by the distance and frustration of not being able to see each other except when Jacob can make the time away from his successful design business in Los Angeles to visit Anna in England. Anna's family in England hires an immigration lawyer to try to get the ban lifted and allow Anna to return to Jacob in the United States.[5] Anna's father suggests that marrying may help to get the ban lifted. Upon Jacob's return to the US, and after an undisclosed time, he begins a relationship with someone else, a work colleague. Anna continues to struggle with her feelings for Jacob and eventually phones him up suggesting that they should marry, that no other relationships that they experience are like the one they have together.

Jacob returns to the UK once again and marries Anna in a small court ceremony with her parents as witness. They are told to wait 6 months before appealing the ban on Anna's visa again, and Jacob returns to the UK after these 6 months for the appeal, which is again unsuccessful and the relationship of Anna and Jacob is compromised. They again begin relationships with other people, but Anna and Jacob still feel a profound connection with each other. Anna gets promoted at her work to a position that she is really happy about. Anna's boyfriend at the time, Simon, proposes to her.Shortly after, Anna finds out from her lawyer that her ban from the United States has finally been lifted. She gives up her job, her current boyfriend and her apartment and she returns to Los Angeles to Jacob. Jacob greets Anna at the airport with flowers and the two have the reconciliation that they didn't have after Anna was first banned, although it seems to lack the passion you see earlier in their relationship.Reunited and without any legal impediments to being together, Anna and Jacob are shown to be starting a life together. The film closes with the two in the shower reminiscing their initial courtship. They appear somewhat strained likely because their journey together has had many ups and downs. The movie ends with both characters reflecting back on a cascade of clips of their initial encounters together. The future of Jacob and Anna's relationship is unclear.

A love story is both a physical and emotional tale, one that can be deeply personal and heartbreaking for an audience to experience. Director Drake Doremus' film Like Crazy beautifully illustrates how your first real love is as thrilling and blissful as it is devastating. When a British college student (Felicity Jones) falls for her American classmate (Anton Yelchin) they embark on a passionate and life-changing journey only to be separated when she violates the terms of her visa. Like Crazy explores how a couple faces the real challenges of being together and of being apart.

The characters seem to be discovering their emotions right in front of our eyes, and this is not simply because the scenes came out of improvisations. It's because the actors understand the essential seriousness of what they are attempting, which is nothing less than a delicate, layer-by-layer rendering of mirth and passion and heartbreak. Yelchin and Jones want to do justice to these emotions because so much is at stake in getting them right.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Do Not Miss The Favorite Fashion Movie Heathers

If there’s one thing that fashionable '80s cult film Heathers can teach you, its that the American high school can be a treacherous place.Set in the Midwest at Westerberg High School, the film has all the typical trappings of state-required education, but with a murderous twist.

Heathers centers around a typical popular mean-girl clique: a croquet-loving foursome that includes queen bee Heather Chandler (Kim Walker), Heather Duke (Shannen Doherty), Heather McNamara (Lissane Falk), and popularity-rebel Veronica Sawyer (played by the amazing Winona Ryder).While the three Heathers do their best to alienate their less-popular classmates, Veronica actually has a conscience, and doesn’t see the value in this soul-crushing behavior.Meanwhile, cute loner Jason “J.D.” Dean (Christian Slater) enrolls in their high school and stokes the interest of Veronica. She soon learns that J.D.’s tough exterior isn’t an act – he pretty much hates everyone, and is willing to take action to eliminate the draining existence of his classmates. Heathers is dark, morbid, and sometimes hilariously surreal. While extreme, it does has some true insight on the angst-ridden plight of the American teenager. The 1988 cult classic is also chock full of acid-tongued, now-iconic quotes like “What’s your damage?”
Heathers is not merely a vastly underappreciated comedy, it’s also a highly fashionable film.These popular girls have no problem expressing themselves through clothing, accessories, and general appearance; styling is important, and this clique has perfected the practice.Their hair is carefree – wavy and cool, not overdone – with Heather Chandler and Heather McNamara letting their mess of curls rule.The clique typically sports coordinating '80s popular girl looks – oversized patchworked or vibrantly colored blazers with linebacker shoulder pads – but they fill out their wardrobes with welcome individual flourishes. Veronica favors blue tights and a whole mess of brooches, typically with one sweetly placed at the top of her button-up shirts. Heather Chandler has her signature enormous red scrunchie, the ultimate symbol of her status as popular girl queen bee.

The Heathers, though more homogenous, also have some great looks. Think lacy socks with plaid flats, floor-length pink brocade robes – which welcomed Heather Chandler to her untimely end – and body-con mourning dresses. Even the other students and faculty at Westerberg High have great style. J.D. is the personification of psychotic cool, with his signature small, gold hoop earring in one ear, and foreboding long black trench.

Ms. Fleming, the suicide-capitalizer, favors rad animal-themed accessories and wears a belted golden-rod scarf as a sash. Be sure to peep the whale-print button-down on the yearbook nerd and the “Big Fun” slogan tee on other students – which is ridiculously easy to DIY, and even the gratuitously teased Martha “Dumptruck” Dunnstock was in on the trend.

Whatever your need – cocktail party-approved quoteables or fashion inspiration – the girls of Heathers are there for you.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

"The Ides Of March" Is Insightful As A Night Spent Watching Film

The Ides of March was adapted from the play “Farragut North” by Beau Willimon, which was itself loosely based on the 2004 Democratic primary of Governor Howard Dean. If there is one thing to be said about this film adaptation of Willimon’s play, it’s that its Broadway origins are glaringly apparent – a fact that will delight some viewers, but will ultimately leave others yawning in their seats.

The story follows Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling), an idealistic young campaign staffer working on the presidential campaign of Governor Mike Morris (George Clooney), a man whose promises of real change and clean politics have energized many of the young staffers who work for and support him. The film follows Team Morris’ hard fight to win the pivotal state of Ohio in the Democratic primary. As Myers floats along in his euphoric state of political idealism – believing that he is truly in the corner of a “good” candidate – he learns hard lessons about the reality of American politics, and ultimately comes to recognize it for the corruptive, immoral dogfight it truly is.

Clooney directed Ides of March as well as starring in it, and while he’s far from being a technical wizard, the actor has proven himself to be competent at the helm (see: Confessions of a Dangerous Mind). Here, Clooney wisely surrounds himself with more technically proficient talent like cinematographer Phedon Papamichael (Walk the Line, Pursuit of Happyness, W., 3:10 to Yuma), and in that sense, The Ides of March is a good-looking and well-crafted film. Unfortunately, while the visual and technical components are strong, the script Clooney co-wrote with his Good Night, and Good Luck collaborator Grant Heslov is not as successful in translating a dialogue-heavy stage play into an exciting movie experience.

Snappy banter and (somewhat) interesting plot and character developments are definitely the strong points of The Ides of March script. The downside is that this movie still feels very much like a stage play (i.e., static scenes of people sitting around talking) and the subject matter is now so dated that the movie, as a whole, comes off as a feature-length report on old news. Notions like ‘politics is a dirty game’ or ‘there are no noble politicians’ or ‘the game never changes’ are by now so ingrained in our cynical cultural zeitgeist, that watching Gosling’s character develop from a naive idealist into a cynical political player feels about as revelatory as a headline about another political scandal (read: not at all).

What keeps the film going are the performances of the ensemble cast. While Gosling’s character feels somewhat outdated, the actor plays him earnestly as a man whose passion and conviction ultimately get swallowed by his cunning and ambition. Clooney appears only briefly throughout the film, but conveys the gray shades of a seasoned politician well – as does Jeffrey Wright in the role of a senator playing both sides for the sake of his own political advancement. Evan Rachel Wood serves well as the pretty little intern who becomes fodder for the dirty game, Max Minghella is fine playing a well-meaning but oblivious aid, and Marissa Tomei is strong in the few scenes she has, playing a brass-balled (and ultimately prophetic) reporter who tries to cut through all the spin to get at the so-called “truth.”

The strongest two figures in the ensemble, though, are undoubtedly Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Paul Giamatti, who play rival campaign managers. On his own, each actor nails the task of delivering some of the heavier monologues about the nature of politics, while simultaneously keeping those scenes dynamic and interesting. When (briefly) onscreen together, Hoffman and Giamatti have an exciting chemistry that is totally contained within a few exchanged glances or brief quips. Their roles also feel like the most authentic and relevant, since their characters are the ones who provide the clearest and most truthful insight into what the political process is all about.

On the subject of politics: there are many people who will have trouble separating the subject matter of this film from George Clooney’s real life political dogma – but they needn’t be concerned that this is some sort of ‘pro-left, anti-right’ propaganda film. If anything, Ides of March takes a hard, cynical jab at the Democratic party, showcasing the same back-room dealings and moral lapses that the Republican party is often accused of. The point the film makes is very clear: modern politics (as a whole) is a dirty game, and anyone thinking they can come in and change it into something uncompromised, earnest and noble will never survive long enough in the race to do so. It’s kind of a dark outlook to have – but one that probably rings true for many Americans today.

In the end, The Ides of March is a movie that will likely only appease the most die-hard political pundits in the crowd. For most everyone else, an hour and a half watching people discuss the nature of modern American politics will probably be as fun and insightful as a night spent watching C-SPAN.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

The Three Musketeers Must Be Re-told On Film At Least Once Every Generation

It seems that the tale of The Three Musketeers must be re-told on film at least once every generation. This 2011 re-imaging of Alexandre Dumas’ legendary story comes our way in an action-stuffed 3D package, courtesy of Resident Evil director, Paul W.S. Anderson.

Those who know of Anderson’s style of filmmaking already know what to expect from this film; for those unfamiliar, here’s a quick description: over-the-top action, weak scripts, and a sense that the cast of actors have their tongues firmly planted against their cheeks. Three Musketeers proudly continues this tradition.

This modern version tweaks Dumas’ tale of honor, espionage and sword-duels aplenty into a 3D spectacle featuring airships, Mission: Impossible-style capers (complete with martial arts acrobatics), and Milady de Winter (Milla Jovovich) transformed from a conniving spy into a conniving spy doing Kung Fu in a corset.

If you’ve never read the Musketeers story, here’s a quick rundown: brash young D’Artagnan (Logan Lerman) leaves his home in the French countryside in order to be a King’s Musketeer like his father. On the road to Paris, D’Artagnan just-so-happens to run afoul of three disgraced Musketeers – Athos (Matthew Macfadyen), Aramis (Luke Evans) and Porthos (Ray Stevenson) – as well as Rochefort (Mads Mikkelsen), the Cardinal’s captain of the guard. Talk about bad luck. D’Artagnan challenges each Musketeer to a duel, and when the four men meet up to fight, they form a quick camaraderie over their shared disdain for Rochefort, and put their differences aside to slice his men to ribbons.

Meanwhile, Cardinal Richelieu (Christoph Waltz) schemes with his super-spy henchwoman Milady (Jovovich) to steal jewels from the young Queen Anne (Juno Temple). The plan is to use the jewels to frame her as having an affair with young King Louis XIII’s rival, the Duke of Buckingham (Orlando Bloom). If Louis should believe the Queen is unfaithful, he would have no choice but to go to war with England and appoint the Cardinal – a man of strength and experience – to lead France. The Musketeers of course learn of this plot, and must get the Queen’s jewels back on her neck before she is supposed to present them to the king at a royal ball.

This “updated” adaptation of Dumas’ work is pretty flimsy, but the actors playing the characters seem to know this, and rise to the challenge of making it all light and fun. They accomplish this by throwing themselves into their roles with a shoulder shrug and a sense of hammy abandon. Stevenson, Bloom, and Lerman all play their characters over the top (Evans is good in the straight-man slot), and thankfully the script is mostly a string of action sequences punctuated by scenes of the characters trading quick one-liners and sarcastic jokes. Freddie Fox provides visual gags via the flamboyant (and ridiculous) costumes worn by the silly King Louis, and you almost feel pitty for James Corden as the Musketeers’ mistreated (downright abused) squire, Planchet.

Jovovich looks like she’s having a ball working with her hubby (Anderson), and once again puts on her Resident Evil action persona to get down and dirty with the boys. Christoph Waltz, on the other hand, once again plays a weird and offbeat villain, as he has done famously in Inglourious Basterds and not-so-famously in Green Hornet. The only two actors who seem to take things seriously are Mads Mikkelsen as Rochefort and Mattehew Macfadyen as Athos. Macfadyen is handed the only dramatic weight in the film (Athos is in a state of melancholy since Milady broke his heart), and the actor has the skill to carry it. Mikkelsen is playing the sort of badass warrior he did in Valhalla - the type you wouldn’t want to mess with, instead of wanting to giggle at.

Anderson has been a big proponent of 3D since James Cameron’s Avatar came along, and here uses the effect in a much smarter, more effective way than he did in the much-hyped Resident Evil: Afterlife 3D. Instead of “pop-out” gimmicks, Three Musketeers uses the draw-you-in immersive 3D effect that Cameron employed so well in Avatar. Granted, shots of old European architecture and landscapes aren’t exactly a thrilling use of 3D, but many of the film’s set pieces are truly spectacular and the 3D helps to accent all the gorgeous details in every shot.

In terms of action scenes: sword fights and fancy acrobatics aren’t any more exciting when filmed in 3D, but things are bound to go over-the-top in an Anderson film, and that point in Three Musketeers comes when the “airship” battles start to ensue during the movie’s climax. You have to give 3D ticket buyers some kind of bang for their buck, and when dealing with a story set in the 17th century, Da Vinci-designed airships are about as much as you can get away with, I guess… All in all, this 3D film is more than a cheap gimmick, but is far from mind-blowing.

The Three Musketeers is a good remedy for anyone looking for mindless-but-harmless 3D action movie fun. Whether or not there’s an audience looking for mindless-but-harmless 3D action movie fun in a period setting is another question altogether…

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Elegant Movie The Future

There is one of the elegant comedy and dramatic venture from the hollywood become the latest topic among the movie lovers is The Future. Now you are eligible to get its first and official trailer from the internet in these days. That make you delight and bringing such a fantastic story which you never sighted before. Hope this trailer will raise up your desire well and gaining lots of movie lovers around this movie as well. There is a story of a couple who spend thier life strange way. The movie makers are clearly describing that marvelous story from this hot trailer as well.

When you enfold this The Future Trailer there you will never feel any boring feel from the beginning to end of this trailer anytime. Because they are really attached fantastic and also most interesting incidents of this movie in to this trailer and it will make very impressive image of this movie in your mind well. That is a positive attitude of this movie trailer and you will never forget it anymore. This will truly enhance your curious to get that fabulous fiction in your hand and you will never leave it ever.

Movie trailers are video clip advertisements of new films that are not but in cinemas. They’re previews of a movie that present hints of its narrative, and expose the actors along with the scenery. Trailers are so referred to as simply because through the early years of movie theatre, the advertisings for one particular film were displayed soon after yet another film. Trailers are now shown at the starting of a film in order that folks don’t miss out on them.

The main purpose of a film trailer would be to make the audience inquisitive. A rightly planned collection of scenes, tracks and circumstances has to be shown within the trailer to arouse the curiosity within the audience. Given that music is a crucial aspect of any movie, all movie trailers possess a wholesome aiding of it. The truth is, oftentimes, movies trigger frenzy amongst fans some time before the film is even released since a track or scene manages to grab the imagination of hundreds of thousands across the nation.

You can find plenty of internet sites offering totally free downloading of film trailers. All official sites of film businesses and movies offer not only a single but often various trailers with the most recent film. Websites that feature film reviews and perhaps previews along with other related discussions can usually provide trailers that you just can download as well. Some great examples of these web sites are Yahoo Films and IMDB. Even YouTube is an excellent source of trailers; you’ll be able to quickly download movie trailers so extended as you understand how to properly modify the video configuration settings.

Trailers are usually criticized for using clichéd phrases like-”In a planet where…” Some no cost trailers have scenes which are not inside the film. Some directors are with the opinion that a trailer must sum up the entire film nevertheless other people think that they should only arouse some curiosity inside the audience.

Film trailers are obtainable on all sorts of media sources. Previously, only film journals and television shows employed to emphasize a specific film evaluation. Nonetheless with all the kind of world wide web revolution the present generation is witnessing, film trailer evaluations may possibly also be viewed on the web. The world wide web critiques of film trailers are obtaining increasingly beneficial and in demand from clients around the globe. The net version with the film trailers has been far more productive in producing the best type of promotion needed for different movies. The fact is several with the Hollywood movies these days contain a web-based variation of their trailers.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Watch The Famous Crazy Horse Movie Online

Frederick Wiseman is the deep-cover anthropologist of American cinema. Over a 50-year career his documentaries have hidden out in the wings, playing quiet witness to the workings of various social institutions and inviting the viewers to draw their own conclusions. Wiseman has visited schools and hospitals, the Ballet de l'Opera National and the Idaho state legislature. But the spry, reflective Crazy Horse catches him on more ostensibly exotic ground, backstage at a Paris cabaret, purveyor of reputedly "the best chic nude show in the world". Very gently, Wiseman disrobes the spectacle and peers inside.

The dancers at Crazy Horse put on two shows a night, seven days a week. These shows come with names like Desire, Upside Down and Baby Buns and involve a lot of synchronised bump-and-grind. Sometimes the girls are dressed as horny astronauts, sometimes as sexy beefeaters. On other occasions they jiggle about in the altogether with their limbs lit in leopard-print patterns or their rumps painted with large red blotches that make it look as though they're suffering from some ghastly tropical disease. All of which is perfectly diverting, assuming one is turned on by leopards, or beefeaters, or girls in the grip of a ghastly tropical disease.
But Wiseman then wheels back the camera to show the lighting rigs and fitting rooms, the cleaners and the clientele (who are moneyed, middle-aged and about 30% female). We meet Philippe, the harassed choreographer who absolutely-positively needs more time to stage a new show called Evolution ("to give me one or two weeks - it's inhuman"). Plus, of course, we get to sit in on the rehearsals where the erotic allure of two undulating, scantily clad sirens is comprehensively doused by the sound of Philippe barking orders from the sidelines. "And kiss!" he bellows. "Well arched. Buttocks!"

Crazy Horse is languid, impressionistic and perhaps a shade overlong at 134-minutes. At times I would have liked more signposts along the way - more sense of an overriding narrative structure - though this is surely to miss the point of Wiseman's visit. The director is not here to celebrate the cabaret, nor even to critique it, exactly. Instead, he comes to observe the process and audit the workload. In fact, if Crazy Horse contains anything so crude and reductive as a message it is probably that work is hard and is therefore deserving of respect, whether that work be in the corridors of local government or beneath the lights of the Paris cabaret. Lest there be any doubt, it takes a lot of graft, sweat and strain to maintain the illusion that you're a libidinous dancing leopard, just dying to be pawed.

Everyone who marveled at Frederick Wiseman's masterful "La Danse: The Paris Opera Ballet" (as well as those who missed it on screen) will want to feast their eyes on "Crazy Horse," his inside look at Paris's world-famous nude dance revue. The legendary erotic cabaret prides itself on the beauty of its women and the humor, fantasy and old-fashioned glitz that its productions lavish upon their seemingly flawless bodies. The show's choreographer Philippe Decouflé argues passionately for more time to perfect his newest show, Désir, as Wiseman and his longtime cinematographer, John Davey, record every bump and grind, slither and slink -- every sexual innuendo on stage, and now, on screen.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Watch Oscars 2012 Online Live

What's the most prestigious award of all time? What is the most glamorous and the most-anticipated award ceremony every year? If you ask anyone on the street, I'm pretty certain that everyone will have the same answer. The Academy Awards. This year the 84th annual Academy Awards will be held at the world famous Kodak Theatre on Sunday, February 26th 2012. After originally selected host Eddie Murphy backed out, Billy Crystal has stepped in. Billy is hosting this years' ceremony and it is definitely set to be a big one and since this is Crystal's 9th time hosting the ceremony, he knows how to do it right. The Oscars 2012 live stream is available online for anyone that wants to watch this on a computer.

Which films are nominated at this years' ceremony? "Hugo" nabbed 11 nominations (the most of any film this year), "The Artist" earned 10, the Brad Pitt driven film "Moneyball" (for which he is also nominated) earns 6 nominations and other favorites like "The Help" earned 4 nominations.
Another thing that the Oscars are famous for is the fashion! Everyone loves talking about what the stars were wearing and if they were hits or misses. Expected presenters include Jennifer Lopez, Halle Berry, Cameron Diaz, Penelope Cruz, Tom Cruise, Tina Fey, Natalie Portman, Meryl Streep and more. With presenters as glamorous and famous as these, there are sure to be some major red carpet stunners that everyone will be talking about the next day.

The Oscars is definitely not a ceremony that you want to miss. Everyone will be talking about it! They air on Sunday, February 26th on ABC but if you don't get a chance to catch it on television then be sure to Watch Oscars 2012 Online and then you will be sure not to miss out on all the action! Who will win? Who will wear what? What will happen? All these questions will be answered! Watch Oscars 2012 online.

The 84th annual Oscars are set to take place on Sunday night at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood and will honour the best in movies in 2011. This years award show should be great as it is every year. The host will be Billy Crystal for the ninth time and it will be produced by Brian Gazer. This award show will be shown all over the world and people will be watching in many countries. For fans of movies, it is possible to watch Oscars 2012 online as long as a computer and Internet connection is present. This will be a star studded night and should be full of memorable moments.

There has already been plenty of controversy surrounding the Oscars and they haven't even begun. The main talk has been around Sasha Baron Cohen and the fact that the Oscar committee does not want him to attend if he plans on promoting his movie as he has done in years past for his movies such as Borat. A movie he was in, Hugo, does have many nominations and the committee would like to attend as long as he is himself and not a movie character. It is adding more entertainment to an already exciting night of television. The 2012 Oscars live stream will be online for everyone to watch as long as there is access to a computer and Internet connection.

Monday, February 20, 2012

The Top Famous Movie In The World Now

Many people go to IMDb to check the rating of the latest movies, but quite many are unaware of the list of top 250 movies based on the popularity. I took time to compile a list of top 10 movies,so that people would know which movie ranks the best and which does not! Here goes the list of top 10 most famous movies.

10. Star Wars V- The Empires Strike Back
The story of Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia,Han Solo and the others didn't end with the dusk of the Death Star - it goes on in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK. Imperial forces have since driven the Rebels to hide on the ice world Hoth. But even on such an icy, backwater world, they cannot escape the wicked Darth Vader's eye for long, and he destroys the Rebel base in an assault with the horrible AT-AT walkers. Luke flees to Dagobah to begin Jedi Knight training with Yoda, while Han Solo, Chewbacca, Princess Leia and C-3PO run the blockade of Imperial Star Destroyers in the Millenium Falcon. The Imperials pursue them across the galaxy and eventually catch up with them at Bespin. Now Darth Vader plans to use them as bait to lure Luke Skywalker to him, and turns Han Solo over to Boba Fett as a prize to be delivered to crime lord Jabba the Hutt. Luke learns a terrible family secret after losing a swordfight with Vader. Will he - and the others - escape the Empire's clutches? You should watch and find out!
9. 12 Angry Men
This movie stands as 9th among the top 10 most famous movies. The title of the movie might suggest to you that the movie might be about a team of 12 angry soldiers barging through enemy barriers. Its not! Instead "12 Angry Men" is based on a jury's deliberations in a capital murder case. A 12 year old Latin boy is accused of murdering his father with a knife, and is on the verge of being announced a death sentence, and the jury of 12 members is asked to deliberate on the issue. The case appears to be open-and-shut: The defendant has a weak alibi; a knife he claimed to have lost is found at the murder scene; and several witnesses either heard screaming, saw the killing or the boy fleeing the scene. Eleven of the jurors immediately vote guilty; only one casts a not guilty vote. As the deliberations unfold, the story quickly becomes a study of the jurors' complex personalities (which range from wise, bright and empathetic to arrogant, prejudiced and merciless), preconceptions, backgrounds and interactions. That provides the backdrop to Mr. Davis' attempts in convincing the other jurors that a "not guilty" verdict might be appropriate.
8. One Flew over the cuckoo's nest
This stands at 8th spot among the top 10 most famous movies. Jack Nicholson performing as McMurphy has in his account many assault convictions. The most recent of his lands him into the jail. He is now convicted of rape of his own girlfriend, after he finds out that she lied about her being 18, but in fact was 15. Inside jail he starts acting crazy and starts convincing the guards that he has become mad and was in need of psychiatric care. He becomes successful in his efforts and gets transferred to a mental asylum. Once inside, begins the real movie. He is confronted with a hostile nurse who is behind him at his every move, and his insane point of views actually starts making progress in many of the patients.
7. Schindler's List
This film stands 7th among the top 10 most famous movies. Don't let the black and white wallpapers fool you; as the movie once watched will leave its impact on you for a very long time. I still wonder how this movie was not placed still higher in list. The key role is of Oskar Schindler (Neeson) who is a greedy businessman, who wants to expand his business to the army and supply them with vessels and ammunition. While doing so, he unexpectedly starts turning humble towards the Jews getting killed in the concentration camp. Thus he starts making a list of people who then are called upon to work in his factory. Movie is not worth letting go. Do watch it; if you don't have a reason yet, we have one for you; it's directed by Steven Spielberg.
6. The Dark Knight
The Dark Knight is a sequel to the The Batman Begins and this stand as 6th among the top 10 most famous movies, it has done a wonderful job climbing up the top 250 movies ladder in the IMDB. Heath Ledger's acting in this movie is unmatched. The director has left no reason for you not to be scared of him. Every time he appears on the screen, there is a dead cold music in the background. Batman now has to face his wrath and make sure that Joker does not kill anymore civilians or innocents. The rating zoomed past all the pillars which stood for long time on the top 250 list, just because of the quality of the acting done by these people. There is no reason why you should not watch this movie.
5. Pulp Fiction
This movie holds 5th position among the top 10 most famous movies. Marsellus Wallace is the boss for Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield who has stolen their suitcase. Vincent is given the duty of Wallace's wife Mia, as the boss will be out of home for a while. Butch Coolidge is an aging boxer who is paid by Wallace to lose his next fight. Samuel and Travolta get into a violent and yet strangely humorous conversation. Movie includes few most violent possible scenes, wherein Travolta accidentally fires a bullet into a boy sitting in backseat; and how these two guys clean up the car in their friend's home. Instead of empathizing on the victim, we actually start laughing on their humor. This movie strangely captivates and glues us to the chair. Do not miss it.
4. Buono, il brutto, il cattivo., Il
Good bad and Ugly stand at 4th at the list of top 10 most famous movies. Filmed in 1966, the movie revolves around the 3 guys; Blondie (The Good) is a professional gunslinger who is out trying to earn a few dollars. Angel Eyes (The Bad) is a hit man and does the job whenever he is asked to, as long as he is paid to do so and Tuco (The Ugly) is a wanted in the city and is trying to hide. Blondie and Tuco share a partnership together making money off Tuco's bounty. Tuco tries to hunt down Blondie when he unties the partnership. When Blondie and Tuco come across a horse carriage loaded with dead bodies, they soon learn from the only survivor (Bill Carson) that he and a few other men have buried a stash of gold in a cemetery. Unfortunately Carson dies and Tuco only finds out the name of the cemetery, while Blondie finds out the name on the grave. Now the two must keep each other alive in order to find the gold. Angel Eyes (who had been looking for Bill Carson) discovers that Tuco and Blondie meet with Carson and knows they know the location of the gold. All he needs is for the two to lead him to it. And the fight for gold begins!
3. The Godfather: Part II
Is on top 3 of top 10 most famous movies. Don't ask me why; probably people love mafias. This is the sequel to The Godfather. It covers the tragedy and story of Vito in his adulthood. Then the movie shifts towards Micheal; Vito's son, who tries to expand his family business to Hollywood, Las Vegas and Cuba. It's better if you watch the Godfather before you get this movie in your collection. But dare not to miss this. This comes as 3rd of imdb ten things.
2. The Godfather
No.2 in the top 10 most famous movies, is The Godfather of 1972. The movie is all about the Family, Don is not ready to shed is old ways of working and ensuring the stability of mafia business. But then comes the guy who is determined to sell drugs out in the city. Don's son who has returned from the war wants to lead a normal life with his family. Then the rival drug seller seeks protection from the DON, which the DON feels is against morals and denies. The rival then conspires and gets Don shot; but Vito survives, and the incident pushes his son to become violent and rage war against the rival. Do not miss this action packed drama.
1. The Shawshank Redemption
Still at No.1 in top 10 most famous movies is the Shawshank Redemption. Tim Robbins gets thrown into Shawshank for a life term under the charges of his wife's murder. Here he comes across Red (Morgan Freeman) and develops a bond of friendship. Andy (Tim Robbins) goes through all kinds of torture within the prison, and yet importantly retains the hope that one day he'll be out as a free man. The story continues and shows us how he plans along with Red, an escape which almost takes a quarter of his life. The movie highlights the persistence and patience that is required in a person. Does he escape? Movie is worth watching; you should find out yourself.

Friday, February 3, 2012

A Shaded View On Fashion Film Festival

The Grand Duchess of Fashion Films, Diane Pernet,presents the third edition of A Shaded View on Fashion Festival, the First Annual International Fashion, Style and Beauty Film Festival. This year there are 67 films in competition by established and young, up and coming artists including Glen Luchford, Steven Klein, The Quay Brothers, Wing Shya, Johan Renck, Stephan Blaise, Daniel Eskils, Miho Kinomura, Rain Li, Cyril Guyot, Alex Prager, Marcelo Krasilcic, Frod & Marcus, Tilda Swinton, Hannelore Knuts, and Bryce Dallas Howard. The prestigious jury members are Olivier Saillard (Musée Galliera) - President of the ASVOFF Jury, Mike Figgis (Director Leaving Las Vegas, Timecode), Elisabeth Quin,Michael Nyman (Composer The Piano), Dita Von Teese, Paolo Roversi (Photographer), musician Bryan Adams, Fabrice Brovelli (BETC Euro-RSCG), Nadja Romain (Independant Producer), Sara Maino (Vogue Italia), Emmanuelle Castro (Wild Bunch Distribution), and Zowie Broach (Boudicca). Out of competition films include directors Zoe Cassavetes, Bruce Weber, and Kenneth Anger. There will be special live performances by Rosey Chan, Sayoko Paris, and rock group My Name is Claude.
September 25, and 26th
Centre Pompidou
Metro: Rambuteau or Hotel de Ville For full schedule go to

Monday, January 23, 2012

Lafangey Parindey Movie Review

Director- Pradeep Sarkar
Producer: Aditya Chopra, Yash Chopra
Lafangey Parindey’ (Lafange Parinde) from Yash Raj’s Banner a film in Mumbaiya Coloquial Bhasha. A love story, which shapes up slowly and gradually. Neil Nitin Mukesh [One Shot Nandu,] a fighter who punches his opponent in the ring blindfolded. Deepika Padukone [ Pinky Palkar,] a dancer who turns blind. Now, how she turns sightless is the million dollar question? Nonetheless, she is ambitious to make it big on the dancing floors. Pinky’s love for Nandu is true. However Nandu is a kind hearted guy but unable to declare his love for Pinky . Finally Pinky and Nandu make it big on the “Got Talent Hunt” dancing reality show. Nandu is keen to take over the job of K.K.Menon, K.K Menon is working for a gangster. He is the dada of the Tilakwadi. Nandu who is always the winner in the boxing ring had to lose the last round, as he chooses Pinky over the boxing ring.. A good amalgamation of the reality show.
Direction by Pradeep Sarkar is a refreshing change for Yash Raj Films. The accident of Pinky after which she turns blind, the case is shut down abruptly. Finally, the Police Inspector in-charge of the case tries to solve it on personal level. The case looses importance. Love story turning too hot and the other angle losing importance loosen the intricacies of the story and hence director’s cut suffers a lot. Before the intermission hopes from the “Parneeta” director Pradeep Sarkar is quite high. But with closing down of the parallel story line” the accident of Pinky.” Looks, like the director too looses the strings of the tale.
Neil is the saviour for YRF. He seems to be the perfect solo hero, for the YRF.Neil’s exuberant performances certainly deserve a pat on his back. Hopefully, he could be the perfect replacement of Shahrukh Khan. Deepika Padukone has done a wonderful job. The rest of the cast and credits too performed well.
Dialogues match the Chawl dwellers, very appropriate to the situation. No prizes for guessing that the Censor Board has become liberal with the big production houses as all the cursing words used by the characters have gone uncut.
The peppy and foot tapping number “pakad pakad …  will be on the tip of the tongue of the audiences after they come out of the theatres. Music is soothing to the ears.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Lamhaa Movie Review

While the burning issue of Kashmir has been handled before on the Indian screen rarely any effort has been such well researched, carrying such depth and effectively narrated with technical finesse as Rahul Dholakia (Parzania) directed Lamhaa. Taking you straight into ‘the world’s most dangerous place’, Dholakia offers a very disturbing piece that brings out many emotions out of you.
The film opens with Indian Military Intelligence suspecting a plot to disrupt and paralyze Kashmir and an attempt to do a successful repeat of what was a failed attempt in 1989. That’s breaking of the state of Kashmir away from India, hand in glove with Pakistan. A retired paramilitary commando Vikram (Sanjay Dutt) is sent to investigate and avert it. In Kashmir, he goes undercover posing as press photographer Gul Jehangir. Haji (Kher) an influential separatist leader has had 17 attempts on his life so far in the last 18 years and Vikram through his sources concludes that last attempt on his life was an insider’s job. He succeeds in gaining the trust of Haji’s protégé Aziza (Bipasha) and convinces her that there is another attack planned on his life. Atif (Kunal Kapoor) a former militant and love interest of Aziza who has had a fall out with Haji hopes to bring peace to the valley by participating in the upcoming state elections. But then as Vikram digs further he realizes the mess has only got deeper. Nothing is actually what it seems and there is hardly any one who can be trusted.
Dholakia and his co-writer Raghav Dhar successfully put before the viewers the fact that Kashmir is being run like ‘Company’ where everyone (RAW, ISI, Indian and Pakistani Military and political leaders from both sides) are all its mutually benefiting shareholders. Also, how everyone is keeping the issue burning forever so they all can benefit more from it. Hardly giving any space to breath, Dholakia’s treatment of the film is very international with quick cuts and hand held camera moment giving many a time a feel of guerilla shoot. He doesn’t waste time in establishing a scene but gets straight to the point with minimal dialogue exchanges, expecting the viewer to apply his brains and be an active participant. He also brings superb authenticity to the proceedings by means of setting, locations and jargon. Despite the fact that the big conspiracy at the climax doesn’t come across as effectively as it should have, the culmination of the principal characters appears apt.
Dutt in an unrecognizable look is in top form and goes beyond the character. Check out his body language on his arrival to meet anyone, he always looks around trying to feel convinced he is not on ‘target’. Bipasha Basu is an unusual choice for a Kashmiri girl but puts up a convincing act. Kunal Kapoor does his job earnestly but fails to maintain consistency in his diction. Anupam Kher not only looks the part but goes on with it with tremendous conviction. It is a hard act for any Kashmiri Pandit but Kher proves why he is the best in the business when it comes to strong character roles. Cameos by Denzil Smith as the Army officer, Yashpal Sharma as the ISI agent masquerading as a businessman and Mahesh Manjrekar as Dutt’s trusted old source are good. Murli Sharma, Jyoti Dogra and Shernaz Patel are effective as well. Another aces are Mithoon’s soul stirring tunes and James Fowlds remarkable camerawork.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Patiala House Hits Theaters In February

The makers of upcoming Bollywood film Patiala House have reportedly decided to change the promotional posters of the film. According to reports in the media, this change has been finalized at the last moment to incorporate the leading lady of the film Anushka Sharma. Post her box office success with the Yash Raj film Band Baaja Baarat, Anushka Sharma has become one of the most wanted young actresses of Bollywood. And it is keeping this fact in mind that the producers will now promote Patiala House as a love story between lead actors Akshay Kumar and Anushka Sharma as opposed to the earlier choice of projecting the film as a father-son emotional drama.
However, the director of Patiala House, Nikhil Advani has vehemently refuted any claim of making changes in the film’s poster keeping only Anushka Sharma in mind. In a statement to the media, Nikhil Advani says that the concept of a variety of posters had always been in his mind and it was only the Akshay Kumar – Rishi Kapoor poster that was released initially. Nikhil Advani also confirmed that since Anushka Sharma is an integral part of the star cast, there was no question of releasing posters without her picture.
Patiala House essentially concentrates between the emotional tussle between a son (played by Akshay Kumar) and father (played by Rishi Kapoor). Their battle begins when the son wants to join the England cricket team inspite of being an Indian citizen. Patiala House hits theaters in February.