From HE reader/journalist Gabe@ThePlaylist, posted earlier today: “I mostly liked Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, and I’m not sure if I’m just touchy about 9/11, or that you genuinely have to be an asshole to HATE it. But it kinda gave me a headache, and the kid was unbearable. Still, except for me, not a dry eye in the house. I haven’t seen a movie work like that in awhile.
“It turned me around on a lot of things: (as) Favorite Stephen Daldry movie by far…though I am not a fan; (b) Favorite Sandra Bullock performance. Again, definitely not a fan; (c) Max Von Sydow‘s character feels gimmicky. Of COURSE he’ll get Oscar attention. Though I would throw it Bullock’s way, and I think Jeffrey Wright has a great scene near the end that straddles the line between ‘I am answering a lot of questions for myself right now’ and ‘I am touched by the context you’re bringing to this.’ Only great actors make those similar reactions into completely different attitudes; (d) Some of the mother/son stuff is TOUGH. I think there’s a lot of misplaced rage people have when they lose a loved one, and when it’s a hyperactive child, it’s tenfold. I was impressed how dark and affecting this was.
“I think, as far as Academy voting [is concerned], it works on every necessary level. Tugs appropriately at the heartstrings, has just enough edgy content, plays with colorful editing and ‘edgy’ unconventional storytelling, and grandma will love it.”
The left-side image is from Harold Lloyd’s Safety Last (1923). The clock-dangling scene was filmed several stories above Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles.
I’m sorry, but I’ve finally seen Sony Home Video’s Caine Mutiny Bluray and the best I can give it is a B. I don’t think it’s all that fabulous looking. It’s more vibrantly colored and offers more detail than the previous DVDs so yes, it’s an improvement. But for a film shot in three-strip Technicolor, it doesn’t have that natural glow and special richness that ought to be there. The color feels a bit grainy and “pushed,” and a little too blown-up looking at times. Too many pinkish or spray-tanned faces.
And I honestly do feel, as I said a week or so ago, that the 1.85 masking is pointless and that it diminishes the compositions. Many of the scenes feel somewhat hemmed in and pushed down, like they’re in some kind of jail. I say to hell with Universal and Columbia having decided to scam-crop their 1.37 movies down to 1.85 starting in 1953. Movies from that era don’t breathe at 1.85. The Caine Mutiny should have been masked off at 1.66. My eyes know what they know, and they know what’s right.
Gold Derby‘s Tom O’Neil and The Hollywood Reporter‘s Scott Feinberg do another Oscar chit-chat. The Best Picture contenders of the moment, they say, are still The Artist, The Descendants, Moneyball, The Help and Midnight in Paris…obviously not counting the big unseens. Noteworthy: Feinberg remembers and pronounces the name of Michel Hazanavicius, director of The Artist.
O’Neil: “The Artist is not going to win a single critics’ Best Picture award. It’s very lightweight. The story is a little bon-bon.”
Feinberg: “There’s a lot of affection for The Descendants, but I don’t see it as a Best Picture winner. I don’t see Clooney pulling it out again [for a Best Actor Oscar].” Also: “If you don’t like kids or horses, forget War Horse.”
Could Moneyball happen? Feinberg: “I think it could. I don;t see it as a baseball movie. Like the book, it’s less about baseball than about ideas and doing things in a smaller, smarter way. This is the way Hollywood has to operate too.” Less of an emphasis on big stars and big bucks, he means, and more of an emphasis on just “getting on base,” so to speak.
“And the fact that Brad Pitt is in it, doesn’t hurt.”
David Nicholson, a Scotland-based HE reader, reports that the site has been looking blurry on his iPhone since he installed the iOS5 upgrade. He deduces that it has something to do with (a) JavaScript and/or (b) “something in IOS5 [that is] automatically prioritizing an embedded video (the top one?) over the rest of the site content and treating it as if it should immediately preload in preparation for playback, and accordingly blurring the background to concentrate its efforts on this task.”
I noticed this problem myself last night, and am asking myself — anyone — what can be done to fix it? When you click through on a fill-story-plus-comments there’s no blur factor. But I did notice it last night when I was looking at the full page. And a friend from Connecticut reports having noticed the same thing on her iPhone after loading iOS5.
“I may have found the source of the problem,” Nicholson wrote the day before yesterday.
“When I disable JavaScript, the page no longer appears illegibly blurry upon zooming. Yet if I reenable JavaScript,it’s back to blurry. So it’s a Java issue.
“I then enabled the DeBug console under Safari settings and returned to HE. Sure enough, with JavaScript enabled, it reports 2 errors on the page: ‘There was an error at line one…’ When i disable JavaScript, these errors also disappear.
“I guess it’s worth pointing out that disabling Java prevents me from being able to view any of the embedded video clips I’ll be leaving it disabled for the meantime, as I want to be able to read the articles, but it’d be great if you could get someone at your web design/hosting company to investigate?”
Previous email: “I thought I should make you aware of a glitch that myself and a friend have been experiencing since the IOS5 upgrade. We have both been fans of your blog since the Moviepoopshoot & Reel.com days. In fact HE is the only website that we check daily without fail. And being the tech-savvy 21st century hipster sophisticates that we are*, we regularly use our iPhones to view the site. He has an iPhone 4; I have a 3GS.
“The issue is that when viewing your site on either phone using the zoom function, the whole site regularly — seemingly randomly — goes blurry and consequently becomes illegible. I can’t begin to tell you how frustrating it is.
“Not being an expert in this kind of thing, I have nonetheless done a wee bit of testing and it seems to be related to the embedded videos on the site. On scrolling around, when everything else is blurry, there will be one video image that is crystal clear. If I tap on that video (whether on YouTube or most recently the Funny or Die clip) it will usually play okY. However all other video pics are also blurred out and tapping on them does nothing.
“I assume that something in IOS5 is automatically prioritizing an embedded video (the top one?) over the rest of the site content and treating it as if it should immediately preload in preparation for playback, and accordingly blurring the background to concentrate its efforts on this task. Or something..? Again, I’m no expert.
“All the best from the Northeast of Scotland.”
How to explain the $55 million earned this weekend by Paranormal Activity 3? Even with the Catfish guys (Ariel Schulman, Henry Joost) directing I felt no particular hunger to see thing. We all know the routine with these films so what was the big deal with this one?
The reviews were good for the most part but they werent ecstatic — it only managed a Rotten Tomatoes score of 72%, which means dissent in the ranks. And it only got a lousy C-plus CinemaScore, which, if you know anything about CinemaScore grades, is more or less a “fail.”
The late Muammar el-Qaddafi (also known as Muammar Gaddafi in London’s Daily Mail and Moammar Kadafi in the L.A. Times) died of a bullet to the head, according to a heavily illustrated 10.21 Daily Mail story by David Williams.
“Moments after the last grainy video was shot, it is believed Gaddafi was killed,” Williams writes. “Initial reports suggested he had been executed by revolutionary forces in front of a baying mob. But there have been claims by rebels who witnessed the killing that Gaddafi was actually shot by one of his own bodyguards to spare him further humiliation. It has also been suggested he was shot during a fight inside an ambulance conveying him to hospital, or that he was actually caught in crossfire.”
Here’s an account of Qadaffi’s nomadic existence following the fall of Tripoli and particularly his last few days by N.Y. Times reporter Kareem Fahim.
And oh, yeah…he was personally worth over $200 billion dollars, according to a story by the L.A. Times‘ Paul Richter. A Business Insider account by Gus Lubin says this figure made Qadaffi “by far the richest man in the world.”
“Moammar Kadafi secretly salted away more than $200 billion in bank accounts, real estate and corporate investments around the world before he was killed, about $30,000 for every Libyan citizen and double the amount that Western governments previously had suspected, according to senior Libyan officials.
“The new estimates of the deposed dictator’s hidden cash, gold reserves and investments are ‘staggering,’ one person who has studied detailed records of the asset search said Friday. ‘No one truly appreciated the scope of it.’
“If the values prove accurate, Kadafi will go down in history as one of the most rapacious as well as one of the most bizarre world leaders, on a scale with the late Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire or the late Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines.”
Rapacious — ra¬∑pa¬∑cious?[ruh-pey-shuhs] 1. Given to seizing for plunder or the satisfaction of greed. 2. Inordinately greedy; predatory; extortionate: a rapacious disposition.
To paraphase Jack Nicholson‘s Charlie Partanna: “If Qadaffi was so fuckin’ rich how come he’s so fuckin’ dead?” Answer: Because he was arrogant, delusional and asinine. The man could have abandoned Libya many weeks ago and fled to some exotic haven and lived like a sultan and slept with virgins every night of the week and twice on Sundays. But no — he had to stay in Libya to the last and cause more death.
If only an intermediary could have arranged for a conversation between Qadaffi and Gold Derby‘s Tom O’Neil while the dictator was still alive! Tom is looking at a tall monthly nut as he launches his new, aggressively exacting awards-assessment site, and Qadaffi could have polished his rep (well, a little bit) by helping Tom out.
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