#brett is so ‘catty’ i love him
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Watched Michael Mann’s Manhunter
(No, he didn’t choose the title)
So I’ve been in both a Hannibal mood and a Michael Mann mood recently, so I thought I’d take a look at the original adaptation of the original novel. And I gotta say, it’s very interesting to look at it both isolated and in the context of everything that came afterwards
First of all, it’s got a great cast. Unlike the sequels there aren’t really any names in the cast outside of Brian Cox, but everyone gives a great performance, especially William Petersen as Will Graham. Whenever he’d do the character’s signature monologues while talking to himself, it’s nothing but him talking directly to the camera in single takes, he doesn’t have the luxury of cuts or montages to fall back on. Brian Cox’s Hannibal Lecktor is the most understated version, but that doesn’t mean he’s missing the kind of fruity cattiness that makes him so fascinating to watch. The two of them have great chemistry that definitely does have hints of the homoerotic, but I just wish I was able to watch more of them. The killer who they’ve reunited over, Francis Dolarhyde, is played by Tom Noonan, is also a real treat. He’s so tall and imposing, and a great antagonist. One of the flaws of the movie is how little time is spent on him. (Ironically the book has the opposite problem, having page after page describe every single injustice Dolarhyde has faced as a child to the point of being cartoonishly tragic.) As I haven’t finished the Hannibal show, I can’t comment on its portrayal of the Red Dragon, so I have to give it to the 2002 movie for the best version of him. All of the rest of the cast, such as Dennis Farina, Kim Greist, and Joan Allen are all extremely natural and do a good job even if they aren’t as memorable as future performances in the series
From a filmmaking perspective, it’s beautiful. Michael Mann and cinematographer Dante Spinotti have beautiful imagery that they love to linger on, the score is that kind of 80s synth sound that horror and thrillers have severely lacked in the last few decades, and it all builds up to a movie that has the perfect amount of style and substance.
I’ll compare it to the other movies in the series that I’ve seen, Silence of the Lambs and Red Dragon. It’s very interesting to watch compared to the former, since that one is unique in that it goes for a very naturalistic visual style, which pairs well with the more animated cast. And then Red Dragon makes the cast even more animated somehow, and has become perhaps the most stylized thing outside of the TV series, though I think it backfired into becoming style over substance, which is odd considering it has the same source material and cinematographer, but 16 years and a worse director make all the difference. Mann’s iconic level of detail may be a bit overboard, to the point where most of the crew left before wrapping and the ending is very noticeably cobbled together and short, but you won’t see Brett Ratner have people ride an elevator in a building several blocks away timed exactly to rise as Will figures out the killer’s motive, being basically a Lightbulb moment.
All in all, if you’re a fan of either Hannibal Lecter, thrillers, or just movies in general, give this a watch, it’s very much a hidden gem
#Gonna try to keep track of movies I watch here#Filmshot#Manhunter#Manhunter 1986#Michael Mann#Hannibal#Hannibal Lecter#Will Graham#1986#Thrillers
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LeBron to Philly (not really) Confirmed
Stop the presses! While Sixers fans were prepping themselves for Joel Embiid’s start in tonight’s All-Star game, Ben Simmons – an All-Star in our hearts – stole some social media headlines when he took to Instagram and posted a picture of himself with LeBron James, John Wall, and Tristan Thompson.
In the hours that have followed, many (or just me) have called this image of greatness the newest incarnation of the infamous Banana Boat photo of LeBron James, Chris Paul, and Dwane Wade.
Dwyane Wade swears he was against getting on the banana boat with LeBron and company https://t.co/rTNG2Ig5kp pic.twitter.com/eUahFsPXgT
— Dime on UPROXX (@DimeUPROXX) September 30, 2017
One cannot help but to think about the greatest of a potential lineup of Ben Simmons, LeBron James, John Wall, Tristan Thompson, Joel Embiid, Robert Covington, and Markelle Fultz.
This incited a mini-riot in our Slack channel leading me to ask the question: Would you want LeBron James on this Sixers team?
LePRO:
BWanksCB: “I understand the worry over LeBron James coming here and dictating personnel moves and subsequently hijacking a fun and likable team. I can also appreciate fans who prefer to win organically, but since when are we so selective over ‘how’ we want to win? If James wants to sign up to play here and make Philadelphia THE best show in the NBA, then I’m all about it.”
JoyOnBroad: “Are there character concerns with LeBron? Yes and no. The greatest player of his generation – perhaps ever – stays out of legal trouble and out of the tabloids. He does, however, have a track record of influencing player personnel choices and leaving teams with a roster of overpaid, overrated role players with little cap room and practically no assets for the future. All of that said, LeBron could bring PG13 with him. In that scenario, we never need to worry about Ben developing a jump shot, nor Markelle remembering how to basketball. That scenario isn’t inconceivable in Philly these days. After all, the Eagles won the Super Bowl, the Phillies signed Carlos Santana, the Flyers are fighting for a playoff spot featuring young players like Nolan Patrick, Travis Konecny, and Ivan Provorov, and the Union traded $1 million of Jay Sugarman’s MLS’ money for a player. Bring me a title. I’ll handle the fallout later.”
Kevin: “Why wouldn’t you want LeBron?”
Phil: “LeBron on the Sixers as currently constituted makes them favorites in the East. I really don’t care about his baggage. I would love to have Simmons and Embiid learn about being a world-class player from the greatest player of his generation. For that matter, LeBron might play four years here as opposed to three somewhere else. This is not a difficult decision. The Process was designed to make great players want to play in Philadelphia. If LeBron will come here, you have to do it and worry about the ancillary issues after the first parade.”
LeCON:
Anthony: “Quite simply, if you have the opportunity to bring in a talent like LeBron James, how can you say no? It’s instantaneous championship contention. Would you turn down the best player in any other sport if one of the Philly teams traded for or signed them? Not at all. It’s automatic relevancy. However, there is so much drama that follows LeBron wherever he goes. He’s very picky about his teammates. He’s very picky about his coach. And there are guys in pro sports who are great players, great winners, but there’s just something about them that makes you feel like you don’t want them to win. Tom Brady is that way… Sidney Crosby is that way. A-Rod was that way. LeBron is that kind of superstar. And that sucks the life out of you a bit. Seriously, wasn’t the Eagles championship so much better because there wasn’t a me-first star player on the team? Think about the Phillies in 2008. Same thing. So yeah, it’d be so much better if the Sixers went on to win without a hired gun superstar. Let Simmons and Embiid come into their own and be the stars that lead you to that championship. And if they don’t, then we never should have trusted the process… but that’s a whole other discussion for another day.”
Coggin: “I think I agonized more over this question than the question of what to name my son. My brain says ‘yes,’ of course the 76ers should sign arguably the greatest player to ever play in the NBA. My heart says ‘no,’ as I’d much rather prefer the focal point of this team to be either Joel Embiid, Ben Simmons, or Markelle Fultz if Herb Magee takes him under his wing and fixes his busted shot. So **** it, **** Lebron. He’s a passive aggressive wine-lush who would make the Sixers trade Dario Saric for Carmello Anthony or some horse**** like that. Build the team around the young stars, develop what you have, and then sign a superstar who won’t sub-tweet catty remarks about his teammates after a three-game losing streak.”
Jeff: “The fact that this is even a debate is insane. It’s LEBRON JAMES. The best player in the world. Maybe the best of all time. Meanwhile, the Sixers haven’t won a title in 35 years. I just wrote that and had to think about it for a second to make sure it was right. THIRTY FIVE YEARS. Most of the writers on this site weren’t alive that long ago (Phil was in college I think). Who the hell are we to even THINK about whether we would want him here next year? Well, I lived through the Process. I watched damn near 70 games of a team that won 10 the whole season. I earned the right to decide how I want MY Sixers team to finally win their next championship. And it ain’t LeBron coming here with his Klutch crew messing **** up for a year, MAYBE beating Golden State and then leaving us high and dry. In the immortal words of Sam Wyche, WE DON’T LIVE IN CLEVELAND. We live in Philly, and maybe this is the lingering Super Bowl high, but I want a parade led by Joel Embiid and Brett Brown, not LeBron James. That said, Paul George is more than welcome.”
You’ve heard from us. Would YOU want LeBron James on the Sixers? Phone lines are open for the first time tonight!
LeBron to Philly (not really) Confirmed published first on https://footballhighlightseurope.tumblr.com/
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Latest story from https://movietvtechgeeks.com/wind-river-mudbound-hero-shine-day-3-2017-sundance-film-festival/
'Wind River,' 'Mudbound,' 'Hero' shine for Day 3 2017 Sundance Film Festival
Day 3 of the 2017 Sundance Film Festival saw some buyer action as Netflix scooped up the Jeff Orlowski, Chasing Coral documentary which looks at the state of the world’s coral reefs. This was the filmmakers follow-up to Chasing Ice, which looked at the melting ice caps. Chasing Coral had a lot of interest and bidders but Netflix made it’s second purchase this year being the highest bidder.
Wind River made news before the festival began after the Weinstein Company decided not to distribute it making worldwide rights go up. It was easily one of Jeremy Renner’s best films, but it still hasn’t been picked up yet.
Mudbound
For the second time in her rising career, director Dee Rees brought the house down at an Eccles Theatre premiere. Following her debut feature, Pariah, which played opening night in 2011, she came back with a primetime Saturday night bow of Mudbound, an ambitious but assured film about two families living uneasily on the same Mississippi farm during the tumultuous 1940s. The Jackson family works tirelessly and thanklessly as sharecroppers on land owned by the McAllans, Memphis transplants who struggle to adjust to the hardships of rural life. When World War II breaks out, one young man from each family leaves for an extended period of time, and then they both return as changed people to a culture of racism and degradation that hasn’t changed at all.
Suitable for a film that offers six distinct points of view, the post-screening Q&A allowed the cast and crew to describe their own personal connections to the material, as well as to one another. Author Hillary Jordan said that her novel, which was adapted for the screen by Virgil Williams and Rees, was loosely based on her own family, whose stories of owning a farm in the Deep South were passed along to her when she was growing up. Rees said, “There was a lot of there there” in Jordan’s book, and she was eager to “explode it out” for the screen. That partly included imbuing the material with her own family history.
“My grandmother was born in 1925 in Louisiana, and her parents were sharecroppers. She said she wasn’t going to be a sharecropper, that she wanted to be a stenographer,” Rees said, a detail that made its way into the film. “My maternal grandfather fought in World War II, and my paternal grandfather fought in Korea. Both men were from the country—one from rural Tennessee, the other from Louisiana. They both went away and came back and didn’t quite get what they should have gotten.”
Jason Mitchell, who plays Ronsel, a decorated sergeant in Europe who suffers racist abuse the moment he returns home, also connected deeply with the material, and with Ronsel’s resilience in particular. “I’m from the Deep South, my grandfather fought in the Korean War, and I always wanted to do a movie like this,” Mitchell said. “But I never wanted to do it with a character who put his head down, who ran and was afraid. I feel like there’s so much more to stand for as a black man even if it means your life. So when I saw this character I was like, yo. It blew my mind. The character felt right, and I think we did something right.”
Actresses Carey Mulligan (whose career took off in Park City in 2009 with her turn in An Education) and Mary J. Blige (the singer-turned-big-time-actress, thanks to this performance) talked about how they finessed playing characters who operate with a certain degree of mutual respect despite an obvious power disparity. The two had never met before working on this project together, and Mulligan said that on the first day of rehearsals, Rees put them across a table from each other, looking each other in the eye, “and it was awkward.”
“Right, because you were so tight,” Blige said, eliciting laughter from the audience. “It was very real. She didn’t come in trying to be my friend. She came in just like I came in, like, ‘Who are you?’ And then you’re like, ‘Oh, I love you.’ You know how it goes.”
“It got less awkward and then it felt very real, and interesting,” Mulligan said. “Mary is always really, incredibly truthful to act with. She’s just open.”
“As women we have a bond. This thing that people understand about each other—what it takes to be a woman,” Blige said. So we understand each other, and that’s what makes us connect. And that’s where the chemistry comes from, because automatically, if another woman is not being catty, and she’s open, the relationship is going to just fly.”
When a member of the audience asked Rees what advice he had for filmmakers just starting out, her answer resonated with what she accomplished with this film. “Don’t start with a message. Start with character. Start with a character that won’t get out of your head,” she said. “When you start out trying to leave a message I think it pushes people away. The thing I liked about this film was the opportunity to look at all of these relationships, these families constantly bouncing off of each other. Find characters that you love, find material that you love, and keep finding the core. That’s what makes people feel something.”
Wind River
Having written the much-praised screenplays for Sicario and Hell or High Water, Taylor Sheridan makes a persuasive debut as director with Wind River, a sometimes stark, often brutally violent mystery about the search for the killer of a young woman whose body was found on a Native American reservation in the snow-covered mountains of Wyoming.
In his introductory remarks at the premiere of the crime drama on Saturday, Festival director John Cooper confessed his surprise about the director’s work—it is so accomplished, he couldn’t believe Sheridan didn’t already have dozens of films on his résumé.
In some ways, Wind River, which is titled after the rugged reservation on which it takes place, serves as the completion of a trilogy of Sheridan’s previous work exploring the American frontier. Cory Lambert (Jeremy Renner), a wildlife tracker haunted by the death of his own daughter years earlier, is forced to team with a rookie FBI agent (Elizabeth Olsen) to uncover the truth about the young woman’s murder. Sheridan has again created a forceful drama melded with memorable characters, realistic dialogue, and scenes that go in unexpected directions, often resulting in explosive violence.
Sheridan explained that he chose to make his helming debut with Wind River because the story is deeply personal to him. “I was trying to find an entertaining way to highlight atrocities that exist in an area in the world that most people don’t know about, where some very dear friends of mine have suffered,” he revealed. “I couldn’t risk another director interpreting that vision differently. If it failed, it had to fail on my shoulders, and if the mission was misinterpreted it would be because of me.”
He succeeded, it seems. Actor Gil Birmingham, who plays the father of the murdered woman and is one of many Native American actors in the cast, noted that he appreciated that Sheridan’s film addressed a rarely discussed statistic that approximately 2,000 Native women have gone missing or have been murdered during the past decade. “The resources to solve these things [were] reflected in the film in a very realistic way,” he stated.
The Hero
It’s a role that only Sam Elliott could play, and director/screenwriter Brett Haley confirmed that he and co-writer Marc Basch wrote The Hero specifically for the legendary mustachioed actor, noting, “There’s no other man on earth who could’ve played Lee Hayden.”
After a decades-long career as a Western movie star with an iconic voice, Lee finds himself doing radio commercials for barbecue sauce and not much else, besides smoking weed with his friend and drug dealer, Jeremy (Nick Offerman). But when he finds out he has pancreatic cancer, he goes in search of a way to make meaning of his life before he dies. He dreams of making one final movie; he tries to patch up his relationship with his long-estranged daughter, Lucy (Krysten Ritter); and he begins dating a much younger woman, Charlotte (Laura Prepon).
The age disparity between Lee and Charlotte is reminiscent of Haley’s previous film, I’ll See You in My Dreams, about a friendship between an older woman and a younger man. After the premiere screening of The Hero, Haley explained that he is drawn to stories about older people in part because of the ageism in Hollywood and in the world. He also told the audience that he didn’t want this romantic relationship to be seen as the typical scenario in which an older man goes after a younger woman.
“Marc and I really tried to make this a specific relationship. …It challenges you and it might be like, that’s weird, that’s different, but that’s what I want you to be thinking about. Why is it so weird or different? … I try not to judge too much and I try to just ask questions.”
The premiere drew many of the Festival’s more grownup crowd, and several attendees thanked Haley for his depiction of aging people, complimenting him for beautifully capturing something that is rarely seen on screen, and something that spoke to them directly. Elliott, in turn, expressed gratitude for the opportunity to play a role like this, which doesn’t come around very often.
Haley revealed that he didn’t just have Elliott in mind for the movie; he also wrote the part of his ex-wife for Katharine Ross. And he was lucky enough to get every one of his top choices for the other main roles in the film. When the cast members were asked why they were drawn to this project, Nick Offerman joked, “Brett got a hold of me and said, ‘Would you like to play Sam’s boyfriend?’” and with that, he passed the mic.
The Yellow Birds
Four years after his acclaimed debut film, Blue Caprice, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, French filmmaker Alexandre Moors returns with his follow-up, the intense Iraq War drama The Yellow Birds. Based on a novel by Kevin Powers, which was adapted for the screen by David Lowery and R.F.I. Porto, The Yellow Birds tracks two young men, Murph and Bartle (Tye Sheridan and Alden Ehrenreich), from boot camp to battle ground, where they face extreme combat, tragic losses, and the unpredictable behavior of their sergeant (Jack Huston). Thanks to recurrent flashbacks, it becomes apparent that Bartle is holding onto a secret from the final days of deployment, a secret that might help explain why his fellow soldier has gone missing.
During the post-screening Q&A, Moors said that when he read Powers’s book, he “was crying by page ten.” When asked how he accomplished the realistic battle scenes, he said his goal was less realism than communicating the strong emotional impression the powerful material made upon him. “I wanted sometimes to go beyond reality,” he said. The war scenes were shot in Morocco, with the cast and crew relocating to, and immersing themselves in, the remote desert region.
“It was hard as hell to shoot,” Sheridan said. “But I’m so happy we shot it there. At times I did feel that isolation, being in a foreign land, and not speaking the language. I think that really translates to the screen.” Sheridan also described several nights during which the actors pitched their own tents and camped out under the desert stars.
“We went to a boot camp for about two weeks, which got us into a pretty tight unit,” Huston added. “It gave us the slightest glimpses into what it might be like to prepare yourself for war, and gave us a newfound respect for guys who actually go and do fight.”
“For those two weeks during boot camp, we just became brothers,” Sheridan said. “It’s easy to see how you can form those bonds when you have nothing but the guy standing to your right or your left.”
Chasing Coral
Five years after Chasing Ice, his documentary about melting glaciers, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, environmental activist/filmmaker Jeff Orlowski returned to Park City with another, equally valuable nonfiction film about climate change. Chasing Coral records underwater expeditions by a group of divers, photographers, and ocean scientists who set out to provide visual proof of coral bleaching, the destruction of coral reefs.
Orlowski creates a stunning narrative that focuses on Zackery Rago, a self-proclaimed coral nerd, and Richard Vevers, a former ad man who left his advertising career to become an underwater photographer, traveling to reefs around the world over the course of three years. The two team with various marine biologists and battle technical malfunctions and nature to record the unprecedented 2016 coral bleaching event at the Great Barrier Reef’s Lizard Island off the coast of Australia, ominously noting that 22 percent of the reef died during 2016 due to global warming and pollution.
Utilizing the first time-lapse camera to record coral bleaching, the film offers visuals of rarely seen underwater life that are breathtakingly beautiful.
Following the screening, the film’s team of scientists joined the director on stage and were unanimous in their praise for the documentary and the possible impact it will have on taking their decades of work to the next level. “This has to be the path that will get attention from the world,” one said.
Orlowski stated that he hopes Chasing Coral will serve as a call to action and plans screenings of the film in cities around the country. “We want this film to be a tool,” he said. “With our resources and team, we hope to develop the infrastructure to support campaigns in cities and states across the country. We want to go broad with existing groups and really deep in places where we can have the most meaningful impact and leverage.”
Chasing Coral was picked up by Netflix after a rather heated bidding war kicked in after it’s premiere. Orlowski commented, “This project has been a labor of love for so many years. We wanted to make sure that our film found the right home, especially given the global scale of this story. In partnering with Netflix, we’re excited about working together to make a huge impact around the world.”
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The way he rips up the paper.💀
FAG
#brett is so ‘catty’ i love him#the persuaders#danny wilde#brett sinclair#roger moore#tony curtis#rb
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