Category: Documentaries (Page 14 of 43)

The box office kung-fu of “The Karate Kid” proves strong; “The A-Team” does B-grade business

It’s probably not a completely original thought of mine and it’s obviously a vast oversimplification, but it’s always seemed to me that what audiences really seem to want is more of the same, but different. If something is too unfamiliar, only a limited portion of viewers will be adventurous enough to try out a brand new movie flavor. If it’s too familiar, on the other hand, it’s kind of a bore, at best.

That formula has apparently been in full effect this weekend as a film which put a few gentle twists on a very familiar property prospered at the box office. A second movie — in terms of marketing, at any rate — was an apparent carbon copy of its source material, notwithstanding a new cast, more violence, and a bigger budget (too much bigger, probably). That film will prove vastly less profitable, at best.

Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith in

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Trailer for a Thursday — “Winnebago Man”

As the number of Internet memes and fads grows, so will interest in the stories behind them. Such is the germ of “Winnebago Man” about how an extremely frustrated RV pitchman found his little bit of fame a couple of decades after a difficult day in 1988. Below is the fairly curse-filled trailer via the Playlist, where you can also the extremely funny, extremely curse-filled video that started it all.

And here’s a video I found from 2009’s SXSW that shows that Jack Rebney hasn’t lost his special mojo.

A pitbull named Buddha. It all suddenly makes sense now.

They say this cat Lando is a bad mutha…shut your mouth

After that last post I’m on a full on “Star Wars” kick, of a sort.

Anyhow, who knows how one misses such momentous occasions, but back on April 1 of this year, the extremely nifty-cool writer, filmmaker, geek soul brother #1 and all-around macho-man movie guru David Walker of the great and mostly gone zine, Bad Azz Mofo, presented a secret project of such momentous portent that it boggles the mind. Forget, “The People vs. George Lucas,” this work in progress has to be the geek muckraking documentary of the decade. It’s key revelation: there may have been an Afro-centric “Star Wars” film with a capital ‘fro. Remember, you heard it here first, unless you heard it somewhere else.

And, once again via Landoistheman.com, here’s part two that just surfaced last week…

Could this be the greatest cinematic revelation since Costa Botes and Peter Jackson’s electrifying “Forgotten Silver“? Or, could it actually be real, the unlikelihood and date of the original posting of the first video notwithstanding, really for real? Stranger things have happened. Okay, they haven’t, but there’s always a first time — and, like David says, it should have happened. Also, while I can’t find this particular Frederick Jackson in IMDb, there really was a Michael Fink who directed the two movies mentioned. The town of Picayune, MS is also very real. Hmm.

All the movie news that fits my schedule

With Cannes starting to wind down — or with people probably starting to leave in the manner of Hollywood folk at lengthy fests much in the way Los Angelenos leave sporting events early — maybe the news will start to slow down a bit as well. In any case, it’s looking like I won’t be around to cover it tomorrow, and then comes the weekend movie preview, so this will have to tide you over for a bit.

Megan Fox in * Our top story tonight, however, is far away from anything likely to screen in, or even out of, competition at the world’s most famous film festival. Seems that Megan Fox, who you might remember compared director Michael Bay to Hitler some time ago, will not be returning in “Transformers 3.” Apparently Bay has finally realized there are lots and lots of unnaturally attractive young women in Hollywood and some of them can act a little.

In any case, Nikki Finke brings you a crash course on the apparent Fox/Bay hate affair, while AICN’s Merrick reminds you of some of those other unnaturally attractive women.

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Movie news and stuff

Where to begin…

* Could the ultimate case of movie development hell finally be unraveling? We’re told that Ewan McGregor will star in Terry Gilliam’s “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote.”

* Lionsgate may be on the block with all kinds of possible ramifications for hardworking and often underpaid workers there. However, just in case you were worried, they’ve got $16 million set aside for five executive golden parachutes if Carl Icahn’s attempt is successful. Whew!

* Anne Thompson discusses the people who didn’t show up at Cannes.  Somehow, she overlooked my absence.

* One of the people who isn’t showing up is living cinema legend/bad boy Jean-Luc Godard, who is citing the chaos in Greece as his reason. Yeah, I have only the vaguest possible idea what he means by that myself. Meanwhile, the Playlist’s Christopher Bell reviews a new documentary about the severed friendship between Godard and Francois Truffuat, who were respectively the Rolling Stones and the Beatles of midcentury French New Wave cinema and, alas, finds it lacking.

francois-truffaut-strike

* Marina Zenovich, the woman whose documentary many credit/blame with restarting the Roman Polanski mess — and, yes, that’s the “evil profligate dwarf” himself next to Godard, Truffaut as well as Claude Lelouche and Louis Malle in the picture above — will next be doing the film version of Mark Harris’s widely acclaimed book, Pictures at a Revolution, which looks at the remarkable five best picture nominees from 1968.

* Speaking of Polanski, Oy vey, Woody. (Via FilmDrunk whose headline repeats the obvious, but still hilarious, joke here.)

* Armando Iannucci, co-writer and director of the outstanding comedy about tragedy, “In the Loop,” has a new film with a preposition and a noun in the title set up.

* Cameron Crowe, who was on an amazing run of movies like “Say Anything” and “Almost Famous” until suddenly, he wasn’t, is getting back on the horse with a fact-based tale that involves all kinds of animals, possibly including horses. It does sound like a heck of a story.

* Nikki Finke thinks James Robinson should pay up before showing his face at Cannes.

It’s late. I’m tired and I want my turkey burger and an Old Fashioned. More to come later.

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