Tag: review

2007 Nov 19

Movie reviews: Romance & Cigarettes

After sitting on a shelf for two years, John Turturro’s Romance & Cigarettes, a boldly quirky comedy-drama-musical about a fractured marriage in working-class Queens, has danced its way into limited release. If you’re game for something different, it’s worth a few giggles.
Inspired by British dramatist Dennis Potter, whose The Singing Detective had actors lip-synching to songs that conveyed their characters’ feelings, R&C is even loopier in its colorful crudeness and its outrageously silly choreography.
James Gandolfini plays Nick Murder, a bridge worker whose wife, Kitty (Susan Sarandon), intercepts a salacious love note from his mistress, Tula (Kate Winslet). The emotional blowouts that follow are both acted out and relayed in song and dance.
Nick takes to the street in front of his small frame house and is joined by garbage collectors as they all sing over Engelbert Humperdinck’s A Man Without Love. Winslet’s hilariously tart Tula is introduced in a flame-colored gown to the music of the Buena Vista Social Club’s El Cuarto de Tula. And Christopher Walken, as the Elvis wanna-be who helps Kitty locate Nick’s girlfriend, arrives on the lyrical wings of Elvis’ “Trouble”.
A Cyndi Lauper song is played behind a montage of dancing pregnant women and the outpatient circumcision of Nick, whose scream merges with Lauper’s on the “I’m” in “I’m just a prisoner of love”. The story is rudimentary: Wife catches husband; wife punishes husband; husband seeks redemption. But getting through the cycle is like riding a roller coaster through a fun house. And everybody is in on the joke.
The large cast includes Mandy Moore, Aida Turturro and Mary-Louise Parker as Nick’s confounded children, Elaine Stritch as his scolding mother and Steve Buscemi as the co-worker loaded with bad advice. Turturro drops the music and the jokes for a soap-opera ending that doesn’t match the rest of the movie, but getting there is a gas.

  • Romance & Cigarettes
  • HH½
  • Fair
  • Rated: R (language, sexual content)
  • Starring: James Gandolfini, Susan Sarandon
  • Directed by: John Turturro
  • Running time: 1 hour, 55 minutes
  • Playing at: UPST
  • Source: recordonline.com

    Continue reading Movie reviews: Romance & Cigarettes

    2007 Aug 22

    John Turturro To Self-Distribute Romance & Cigarettes

    Actor-director John Turturro will distribute his movie Romance & Cigarettes with his own money, after a studio takeover left it on the scrap-head.

    The musical was made in 2004 with an ensemble cast including James Gandolfini, Kate Winslet, Susan Sarandon, Steve Buscemi and Christopher Walken.

    Its future was thrown into jeopardy before it could be released when MGM was bought by a consortium headed by Sony in 2005. It was released in the U.K. in 2006, but has been left in limbo in the U.S. as the filmmakers attempt to unravel a legal mess so the film can be seen by the American public.

    Sony Pictures claims it has video rights for the movie and MGM has theatrical rights — but a source claims Turturro has secured the film’s release so it can go on show at New York’s Film Forum from 7 September (07), at his own expense.

    Source: WENN
    Continue reading John Turturro To Self-Distribute Romance & Cigarettes

    2007 Apr 05

    DVD Review: Deep Sea – IMAX

    When IMAX films are released on DVD you can be sure of one thing: you will lose some of the impact of the giant screen. There is simply no way for a film made with the expected result of an IMAX broadcast, to retain its impact when viewed on your 27″ living room television. So, when you lose the primary draw of the IMAX format, the film will live or die based on its content. Deep Sea has one foot in the grave. I so hoped to like it, and there are a few elements that I did like, but there was enough to drag it down. Which all makes the end result something of a frustrating experience.

    Continue reading DVD Review: Deep Sea – IMAX

    2007 Feb 06

    Killers Kill, Dead Men Die

    Vanity Fair’s film noir made for this year’s Hollywood issue and its behind the scenes can now be downloaded off the videos archive:

    I’ve also added captures from both videos:


    GALLERY LINKS:
    • Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die (Thanks to Mariana)
    • Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes (Thanks to Mariana)

    VIDEO LINKS:
    • Miscellaneous: Vanity Fair’s Killers Kill, Dead Men Die
    • Miscellaneous: Vanity Fair’s Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes

    2007 Feb 06

    March’s Vanity Fair preview

    E! News showed a preview of next month’s Vanity Fair Hollywood issue. We’ve got the caps and the video:

    GALLERY LINKS:
    • Television/Other Shows: E! News: Vanity Fair Preview
    • Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes

    VIDEO LINKS:
    • Miscellaneous: E! News: Vanity Fair Preview

    Watch a really cool film noir directed by photographer Annie Leibovitz and Michael Roberts created for this issue on the Vanity Fair website. And there’s also its behind the scenes here.

    2007 Jan 06

    Little Children Reviews

    “…There are so many fragments of human minutiae parading around here, and that’s what makes “Children” an unbelievably good, transporting film…” ¾ FilmJerk.com“…A film that embraces the complexities of human nature instead of pretending that they don’t exist.” — Moneycontrol

    “…The movie is consistently fascinating to watch. Not an easy movie, but definitely worth watching…” — Di-ve

    “…The story has the tight focus of the best novellas, a tart balance between cynicism and humanism…” — StarTribune.com