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Posts Tagged ‘ The Guide ’

Sherlock Holmes is back … again

December 17, 2011

Sherlock Holmes 2 A Game  007 Sherlock Holmes is back … again

If you enjoy the story of Sherlock Holmes…then younwill be happy to know the next installment of movies is here again with  actor Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law. So get ready for some action and another mystery to solve…it should prove to be very entertaining…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=23585

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Sherlock Holmes is back … againThis article titled “Sherlock Holmes is back … again” was written by John Patterson, for The Guardian on Saturday 17th December 2011 00.05 UTC

The Christmas Franchise Frenzy gets under way this week, a steady, unceasing carpet-bombardment of the world’s multiplexes starting with an epic face-off – at the box-office, at least – between the oddly archaic figure of Sherlock Holmes, and Mission: Impossible’s Ethan Hunt, now only slightly less retro, give or take eight decades, than Holmes himself. One retooled franchise from yesteryear versus another, with the similarly aged Alvin And The Chipmunks: Chipwrecked nibbling up the crumbs, perhaps hoping in vain to avenge the box-office spanking that Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakwel suffered at the hands of the first Sherlock Holmes movie over Christmas 2009.

Funny to notice it’s all non-superhero action movies for Christmas this year; I guess superheroes, given all their testosterone, are a spring and summer phenomenon, what with Thor, Captain America, X-Men: First Class and Green Lantern all rolling out early on to their diverse fates under bursting buds and bright sunlight. Holmes and Tintin, evidently more wintry figures, seem destined, or doomed, to be reconfigured as superheroes by default, or perhaps just as Ethan Hunt-style action-hero exaggerations of themselves.

For better or worse, Holmes and Watson, as embodied in Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes 2: A Game Of Shadows by Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law, are the Holmes and Watson we have to live with now; there’s no going back to Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce. That ship has sailed, and sunk.

Now, I’m no Conan Doyle purist (or, to be honest, even a fan), and I’ve always preferred the movies that made fun of Holmes, like Herbert Ross’s The Seven-Per-Cent Solution and Gene Wilder’s The Adventure Of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother, or Benedict Cumberbatch’s fantastic TV reimagining of Holmes as a straight-up weirdo. The more Jeremy Brett they make it, the less I like it (though I do firmly believe you can never have too much of Nigel Bruce slapping his ample stomach and saying, “Bit of a bay window, what, Holmes, old man?”).

You’d think that might better dispose me to enjoy Ritchie’s irreverent tweaking of the character, but there’s your problem: he lets Downey wear more disguises and drag outfits than Marlon Brando in The Missouri Breaks, and brings home half the movie Arthur Penn did.

Next year we’ll see that the next ancient franchise figure due to rejoin us is the lately moribund James Bond, himself created some 68 years ago. There’s obviously something in the air. Who could be next for a retro action franchise of his own? Bulldog Drummond? Fu Manchu? Richard Hannay? Biggles? Churchill? The mind reels.

 Sherlock Holmes is back … again

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Halloween film specials

October 22, 2011

Alice Cooper 007 Halloween film specials

There’s more to do than just going door to door collecting candy on  Halloween. I have always enjoyed visiting the local haunted house with friends to get spooked by zombies. So how are you going to dress up this year for Halloween? Once a year we get to show off our weirdness and creativity. How about as a blood thirsty monster,Dracula,Frankenstein,a witch,Harry Potter,Spiderman,a ghost,Jason, or Freddy Kruger on Halloween night. Remember one thing! Be sure to exercise safety first! Happy Halloween Everyone….

Pass it on,

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Halloween film specialsThis article titled “Halloween film specials” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 21st October 2011 23.04 UTC

There’s so much good horror being made these days, it’s scary, but if you’re terrified of missing out, Halloween is the time to catch up. In the week long build-up to next Saturday, cinemas are serving up a putrefying, maggot-infested smorgasbord of filmic fear – should you tire of pumpkin carving.

Rising to the occasion, the BFI has rolled out the black carpet and reanimated the corpse of Alice Cooper for a special horror evening (BFI Southbank, SE1, Fri, bfi.org.uk). The cadaverous rocker interrupts his tour to give an annotated talk on the “Nightmare Movies” that have mis-shaped his life, music and make-up strategy, including Nightmare On Elm Street (Cooper played Freddy Krueger’s daddy), Vincent Price (did voiceovers for his album), and Tim Burton (Cooper’s in his next movie). Old skull-face also holds a Q&A and introduces John Carpenter’s Halloween. Another atmospheric one-off (alright, two-off) is the Jameson Cult Film Club, which decks out London’s Union Chapel accordingly for screenings of The Blair Witch Project and Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (29 & 30 Oct, jamesoncultfilmclub.com). Watch out for related tricks and treats: spooky forest decor for the former; uncanny extras for the latter.

As for dedicated festivals, Nottingham’s Mayhem (Broadway, Thu to 30 Oct, mayhemhorrorfest.co.uk) includes new Brit horror The Awakening, with Rebecca Hall as a 1920s ghostbuster, and the Japanese apocalyptic zombie flick Helldriver, plus a host of other global gore oddities as well as the BBC’s notorious 1990s reality TV hoax Ghostwatch, starring Michael Parkinson and Sarah Greene. Whitby’s Bram Stoker Horror Film Festival (Fri to 31 Oct, bramstokerfilmfestival.com) has untested horror indies such as timely downsizing horror Axed (“First he lost his job, then he lost his mind”), as well as live entertainment in the form of a lavish Vampire’s Ball (dress code: smart gothic), a Victorian séance and even a Twilight-style dance opera. You could also try Sheffield’s Celluloid Screams (Showroom, Sat & Sun, celluloidscreams.co.uk), including Argentina’s Cold Sweat, described as “Hostel meets The Wages Of Fear”.

Looking ahead to Halloween itself, you’ve got a host of all-nighters. Frightfest offers two (Vue West End, WC2, 29 Oct; Bristol Watershed, 4 Nov, frightfest.co.uk), which include the disgustingly splattery Bad Meat and the premiere of soft-centred romantic comedy Human Centipede II: Full Sequence. Dead And Breakfast III in Derby (Quad, 29 Oct, derbyquad.co.uk) serves up classics old and new, from Evil Dead to Tucker & Dale Vs Evil, plus breakfast, of course. The BFI IMAX goes for a riskier Final Destination marathon (SE1, Fri, bfi.org.uk), while London’s Portobello Electric opts for a John Carpenter all-nighter. The Fog, Escape From New York, They Live and, of course, Halloween (29 Oct, electriccinema.co.uk) should go down like fresh brain terrine at a zombie picnic.

 

 Halloween film specials

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This week’s new games

October 15, 2011

RAGE 007 This weeks new games

I know a lot of my readers love playing computer games…so here is a list of this week’s recently created games.  RAGE looks like an interesting one …waking up to a new world of mutated creatures roaming about the face of the earth. You just want to survive and with each new challenge, you need to eliminate the infected.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=15006

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardian This weeks new gamesThis article titled “This week’s new games” was written by Nick Gillett, for The Guardian on Friday 14th October 2011 23.06 UTC

RAGE, PC, PS3 & Xbox

Waking up from cryogenic stasis, you’re ejected into what’s left of the Earth: a Mad Max-style, mutant-infested wasteland.

Saved from death at the hands of horribly agile, scythe-wielding monstrosities, you repay the kindness by undertaking a succession of jobs. While these never go much beyond fetching things and eradicating baddies, the action is fierce enough and the dusty wild west aesthetic never less than gorgeous. The game all ends rather abruptly, but the journey to that point is a raucous and wildly engaging ride.

Bethesda, £34.99-£49.99

Forza Motorsport 4, Xbox

Along with 500 upgradeable cars, a globe-spanning collection of tracks and entirely superfluous Kinect integration, Forza’s fourth iteration arrives infused with Top Gear, from its Clarkson-intoned introduction to regular visits to the series’ test track. Looking absolutely staggering and supplying a palpable sense of the weight, momentum and handling characteristics of each car, its AI racers are no longer infallible and can often be seen slipping from the track in a doomed bid to stop you overtaking. Conceived as Xbox’s answer to Gran Turismo, this surpasses its inspiration. Best racing game ever.

Microsoft, £49.99

Dark Souls, PS3 & Xbox

Where modern games are easy, Dark Souls’ predecessor – Demon’s Souls – was difficult to the point of abject brutality, teaching you repeated lessons in survival, all of which ended with a view of your character’s broken corpse and the loss of appallingly hard-won equipment and experience. Dark Souls manages to be even harder, but somewhere in the endless dance of death amid the dank, vast network of subterranean corridors and tunnels, there’s an experience of stunning, almost cathartic beauty for those masochistic enough to discover it.

Namco Bandai, £49.99

Games news

Other games out now include Ace Combat: Assault Horizon, which adds helicopters and AC-130 gunships to its wafer-thin fighter plane thrills …

Kinectimals Now With Bears brings lots of cute fluffy pandas and koalas to one of the highlights of Xbox’s Kinect lineup …

Just Dance 3 lets up to four players get their simultaneous grooves on with a wedding-style soundtrack of songs and a flashmob mode for up to eight Wii remotes …

Dead Rising 2: Off The Record places you back among the undead for more zombie massacres using amusing improvised weapons …

Might & Magic: Heroes VI refreshes its strategic, turn-based combat for a a new outing …

Cursed Crusade is a hilariously poor, holy crusaders hack and slash ‘em-up that you should do your best to avoid …

Finally Farming Simulator 2011: Platinum Edition now features animal husbandry and an extended range of tractors along with the “Bergmann Shuttle 900K large silage wagon”.

 

 This weeks new games

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Michael Holden’s All ears

September 10, 2011

All ears taxi  008 Michael Holdens All ears


poweredbyguardian Michael Holdens All earsThis article titled “Michael Holden’s All ears” was written by Michael Holden, for The Guardian on Friday 9th September 2011 23.06 UTC

It takes discipline when drunk and hungry to order takeaway food that requires preparation as opposed to the meat that’s been spinning in the window all night. The resulting “shish hiatus”, though, can be intriguing, as long as it doesn’t end in violence, and the two nocturnal connoisseurs beside me didn’t seem that way inclined.

Man 1 “Rang me up at five in the morning, outside my house. Been drinking since one in the afternoon.”

Man 2 “Can’t believe you answered the phone.”

Man 1 “Well it was an emergency. I said to him, ‘It’s 5am.’ He goes, ‘I know. I’ve been kidnapped by a taxi driver. He’s trying to take me to a brothel. I don’t want to go.’”

Man 2 “How’s that work, then?”

Man 1 “He got in the cab and the bloke won’t take him home, starts heading off in the other direction, talking about a brothel. So as they get near my place, he phones me, so I can hear it all unfolding. Live.”

Man 2 “Breaking news.”

Man 1 “Very much so. He says, ‘He’s showed me a picture of a woman saying she’ll do anything I want. But I’ve looked a bit closer and it’s Sarah Harding out of Girls Aloud.”

Man 2 “Wow!”

Man 1 “I can hear the driver going, ‘You don’t like woman? She famous – she just make extra money.’ Then he goes, ‘That’s Sarah Harding out of Girl’s Aloud. I don’t believe you.’ The driver’s going, ‘Come and see for yourself.’”

Man 2 “He didn’t fancy it, then?”

Man 1 “No. He was at the door two minutes later saying, ‘It got a bit ugly. I’ve had to give him £40 to fuck off. I hope I’m right.’”

Holden on Twitter: @thewrongwriter

 

 Michael Holdens All ears Michael Holdens All ears

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This week’s new films

July 30, 2011

Captain America The First 007 This weeks new films

Here’s your list of movies this week…I saw Captain America and I thought the director did a good job with this film..so if you haven’t seen it …go ahead..watch all the films.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcom2Logo 150x150 This weeks new films  


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 29th July 2011 23.09 UTC

Captain America: The First Avenger (12)
(Joe Johnston, 2011, US) Chris Evans, Tommy Lee Jones, Hayley Atwell, Hugo Weaving, Sebastian Stan. 124 mins

Unsurprisingly, this is the most patriotic of the summer’s superhero movies, but there are few surprises all round. The story is largely what you’d imagine from the trailer: wimpy 1940s do-gooder undergoes a fast-track Charles Atlas course, then socks it to the evil über-Nazis. It’s like Inglourious Basterds meets Indiana Jones, although the wholesome tone and white-bread heroism diminish the effects-driven spectacle, and the real second world war is reduced to mere set dressing.

Our Day Will Come (18)
(Romain Gavras, 2010, Fra) Vincent Cassel, Olivier Barthelemy, Justine Lerooy. 83 mins

Edgy provocateur alert! Expanding on the redhead persecution theme he developed in his MIA video, Gavras’s debut follows ginger alienation to its conclusion, as Cassel and Barthelemy head out on the highway to oblivion, without a map or a ferry timetable.

Arrietty (U)
(Hiromasa Yonebayashi, 2010, Jap) Saoirse Ronan, Mark Strong, Tom Holland. 94 mins

Delightful old-school Japanese animated take on Mary Norton’s Borrowers, with colourful detail and miniature-scaled adventure to recommend. It’s aimed at kids, but deals with some pretty grown-up life issues.

Horrid Henry: The Movie (U)
(Nick Moore, 2011, UK) Theo Stevenson, Anjelica Huston, Richard E Grant. 93 mins

The mischievous schoolboy gets into scrapes but strikes a blow for state education in this juvenile crowd-pleaser. There’s less for adults, though Huston and co are game, and Noel Fielding is a wildcard cameo.

Poetry (12A)
(Lee Chang-dong, 2010, S Kor) Yun Jeong-hie, Ahn Nae-sang, Hira Kim. 139 mins

Expertly made, unexpectedly powerful, and multi-award-winning, the simple story of a Korean grandmother’s determination to embrace life in the face of multiple challenges, with some help from her poetry class.

The Light Thief (15)
(Aktan Arym Kubat, 2010, Fra/Kyr/Ger/Neth) Aktan Arym Kubat, Taalaikan Abazova, Askat Sulaimanov. 78 mins

Set in remote Kyrgyzstan, there’s local flavour and gentle comedy to this fable of a Robin Hood-like technician with eco values.

A Better Life (12A)
(Chris Weitz, 2011, US) Demián Bichir, José Julián, Eddie Sotelo. 97 mins

The uphill struggle of a Mexican gardener and his son in Los Angeles is done justice in a compassionate immigrant drama that could be an update of De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves.

Zookeeper (PG)
(Frank Coraci, 2011, US) Kevin James, Rosario Dawson, Leslie Bibb. 102 mins

Celebrity-voiced talking animals sort out the love life of their slapstick-prone carer in a clumsy comedy that could be seen as payback for humanity’s history of animal cruelty.

Whisky Galore! (U)
(Alexander Mackendrick, 1949, UK) Basil Radford, Bruce Seton, Joan Greenwood. 84 mins

Restored version of the Ealing favourite, in which a shipwrecked cargo of Scotch restores the depleted spirits of a dry Hebridean island.

Out from Friday

The Tree

Charlotte Gainsbourg heads an Australian family hit by tragedy.

Sarah’s Key

Kristin Scott Thomas excavates painful French wartime memories.

Knuckle

Revealing doc on the dynamics of Irish bare-knuckle fighting.

Mr Popper’s Penguins

Hilarity ensues as Jim Carrey inherits some penguins.

The Referees

The whistleblowers explain their side of the beautiful game.

French Cancan

Jean Renoir’s 1954 spectacular on the Moulin Rouge.

Super 8

Small-town kids and fugitive aliens in JJ Abram’s 1980s Spielberg homage.

Do Aur Do Paanch

Hindi kidnapping comedy with Salman Khan.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Double monkey trouble with chimp doc Project Nim and prequel The Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes

In three weeks … Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford lead genre mashup Cowboys & Aliens … The TV teens hit Crete for The Inbetweeners Movie

In a month … Almodóvar’s surgical thriller The Skin I Live In … The rebooted Conan The Barbarian

 This weeks new films This weeks new films

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This week’s new films

July 16, 2011

Cell 211 007 This weeks new films

Here is this week’s films ….my movie pick is Harry Potter’s Deathly Hallows Part 2…get out…go to the movies…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcomLogo 150x150 This weeks new films


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 15th July 2011 23.06 UTC

Cell 211 (18)
(Daniel Monzón, 2009, Spa/Fr) Luis Tosar, Alberto Ammann, Antonio Resines. 113 mins

Sometimes all you need is a great set-up: a prison guard, first day on the job, gets trapped in a cell just as a riot breaks out, and must therefore pose as an inmate to survive. It’s better not to know where this tough Spanish thriller goes from there, but rest assured you’re in very good hands. There’s tightrope tension and breakneck pace, but wider questions of honour and justice unfold, too – everything you could ask for, in fact.

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (12A)
(David Yates, 2011, UK/US) Daniel Radcliffe, Ralph Fiennes, Emma Watson. 130 mins

Having sat through the deathly dullness of Part 1, here’s our reward: a rousing finale that strikes all the right notes, ties up 10 years’ worth of loose ends, plunges you into 3D battle, and perhaps even wrings the odd tear – all without inducing effects fatigue. Great sequel, when’s Part 3?

Bal (PG)
(Semih Kaplanoglu, 2010, Tur) Bora Altas, Erdal Besikçioglu, Tülin Özen. 105 mins

Basking in the lush Turkish countryside, but by no means oversweetening the mix, this tender drama follows a painfully shy boy forced out of his shell when his honey-gatherer father disappears in the forest. It’s a little slow, but often wondrous to look at.

Treacle Jr (15)
(Jamie Thraves, 2001, UK) Aidan Gillen, Tom Fisher, Riann Steele. 80 mins

Fisher plays a man who walks out on his family, but his introspective solo odyssey is hijacked by an overbearing Irish misfit (Gillen), and becomes an eccentric odd-couple drama instead – which is refreshing.

Hobo With A Shotgun (18)
(Jason Eisener, 2011, Can/US) Rutger Hauer, Molly Dunsworth, Brian Downey. 86 mins

Truer to its faux grindhouse trailer roots than Machete, this trashy 1980s-style street justice thriller maintains an admirably straight face. Hauer’s face, on the other hand, has seen better days, but he’s commendably game for an entrail-strewn shoot-up.

Bobby Fischer Against The World (12A)
(Liz Garbus, 2011, US/UK/Ice) 93 mins

The life of the troubled chess champion rendered through oral history and lively graphics, with the focus on his big cold war showdown with Boris Spassky in 1972. That leaves little time to go into Fischer’s later psychological problems, but his complex personality emerges all the same.

Just Do It (12A)
(Emily James, 2011, UK) 90 mins

Putting faces to anonymous direct-action groups, this documentary follows British environmental activists such as Plane Stupid on their imaginatively risky direct action campaigns, and hears their justifications. Being on the inside, it’s far from a neutral account, but the access is illuminating.

Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara (NC)
(Zoya Akhtar, 2011, Ind) Hrithik Roshan, Farhan Akhtar, Katrina Kaif. 154 mins

Three buddies bond and bicker on an expensive road-trip holiday in this Hindi dramedy.

Out from Friday

Break My Fall

East London hipsters trawl the night.

Beginners

Ewan McGregor in a downbeat LA drama.

Horrible Bosses

Jason Bateman and friends plot workplace vengeance.

Cars 2

Spy thriller for junior petrolheads.

The Big Picture

Romain Duris leads a Tell No One-like French thriller.

One Life

Daniel Craig narrates a BBC wildlife doc.

The Violent Kind

Biker teens face demonic evil in this lo-fi horror.

Gilda

Rita Hayworth burns up the screen in the immortal 1940s noir.

The Lavender Hill Mob

Reissue for the lovable Ealing crime caper.

Singham

Ajay Devgan leads an Indian action thriller.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Studio Ghibli’s take on The Borrowers, Arrietty

In three weeks … JJ Abrams’s Spielbergian monster movie Super 8 … Charlotte Gainsbourg leads family drama The Tree

In a month … Double monkey trouble with chimp doc Project Nim and prequel The Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes

 

 This weeks new films

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This week’s new films

July 9, 2011

The Tree Of Life 007 This weeks new films

Here is you list of new films for this week….the list covers a wide variety of subjects for the entire family….this weekend I will be watching “The Tree of Life”.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 8th July 2011 23.07 UTC

The Tree Of Life (12A)
(Terrence Malick, 2011, US) Brad Pitt, Jessica Chastain, Hunter McCracken, Laramie Eppler, Sean Penn, Tye Sheridan. 139 mins

Successor to Kubrick’s 2001 or extended perfume ad? Either way, Malick’s macro/microcosmic take on life, the universe and family life makes most films look unadventurous. Beyond the head-trip “creation of the universe” sequences, it’s largely Sean Penn’s impressionistic reminiscence of his conflicted childhood, rendered in gorgeous imagery, with introspective voiceovers and a dreamy intensity.

The Princess Of Montpensier (15)
(Bertrand Tavernier, 2010, Fra) Mélanie Thierry, Gaspard Ulliel, Lambert Wilson. 140 mins

There’s costumes and courtliness, but this 16th-century saga remains unstuffy. Sought-after Thierry’s quest for self-determination is the focus, and the treatment is modern and immediate.

Trust (15)
(David Schwimmer, 2010, US) Liana Liberato, Clive Owen, Catherine Keener. 106 mins

Those who saw Catfish will know where this teen’s online relationship with an apparently nice boy is headed. But what follows is an exercise in parent-worrying technophobia.

Super (18)
(James Gunn, 2010, US) Rainn Wilson, Ellen Page, Kevin Bacon. 96 mins

Unlike the similar-sounding Kick-Ass, this everyday superhero comedy lurches from farce to gruesome violence, viewing vigilantism as a mental condition.

Film Socialisme (PG)
(Jean-Luc Godard, 2010, Swi/Fra) Catherine Tanvier, Christian Sinniger, Patti Smith. 102 mins

Verging closer on incomprehensibility, Godard’s latest film essay combines images beautiful and ugly, music, subtitles and an intellectual span huge enough to make everyone feel stupid.

Holy Rollers (15)
(Kevin Asch, 2010, US) Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Bartha, Danny A Abeckaser. 89 mins

Hasidic Jewish teen turns ecstasy smuggler – it sounds like the set-up for a wacky comedy, but this is a rather straight character drama, albeit with an interesting setting.

Huge (15)
(Ben Miller, 2010, UK) Noel Clarke, Johnny Harris, Thandie Newton. 78 mins

Armstrong-less Miller is still thinking of comedy duos here, in a story of an unfunny double act aiming for the big time that’s, er, not very funny.

The Devil’s Rock (18)
(Paul Campion, 2011, NZ) Craig Hall, Matthew Sunderland, Gina Varela. 83 mins

Two Kiwi soldiers discover more than Nazi evil when they take a Channel Island bunker in this refreshingly odd wartime horror.

Sawako Decides (12A)
(Yûya Ishii, 2010, Jap) Hikari Mitsushima, Kotaro Shiga, Ryô Iwamatsu. 112 mins

Atypical comic character study of a modern Japanese woman struggling to get a better job, boyfriend, life, etc, in the face of mediocrity.

Last Year In Marienbad (U)
(Jean Resnais, 1961, Fra) Delphine Seyrig, Giorgio Albertazzi. 93 mins

Still defying interpretation, Resnais’s influential modernist brainmelt unfurls its ambiguities with captivating elegance.

Breath Made Visible (NC)
(Ruedi Gerber, 2009, US) 80 mins

Documentary on American dancer Anna Halprin, mixing clips from her works with talk on her career.

Murder 2 (NC)
(Mohit Suri, 2011, Ind) Emraan Hashmi, Jacqueline Fernandes

Racy thriller by Bollywood standards, promising “erotic” undertones and Saw-like horror.

Out from Friday

Bal (Honey)

Prize-winning Turkish hymn to rural life, and a son’s love for his father.

Cell 211

A prison guard gets trapped with the inmates in this Spanish thriller.

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2

Daniel Radcliffe waves his last wand in the series climax.

Treacle Jr

A man walks out on his family to live the London low life.

Hobo With A Shotgun

Rutger Hauer gets trigger-happy in a gory grindhouse homage.

Bobby Fischer Against The World

Documentary on the all-conquering cold war chess champ.

Just Do It

Behind the scenes with the direct-action protest movement.

Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara

Three Indian buddies take a life-changing European vacation.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Ewan McGregor copes with his gay father in Beginners … Jason Bateman schemes against Horrible Bosses

In three weeks … Here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Studio Ghibli’s take on The Borrowers, Arrietty

In a month … JJ Abrams’s Spielbergian monster movie Super 8

 This weeks new films

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This week’s new films

July 2, 2011

Transformers Dark of the  007 This weeks new films

Another week for new films….an impressive line-up of stories to watch on the big screen.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com  


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 1st July 2011 23.07 UTC

Transformers: Dark Of The Moon (12A)
(Michael Bay, 2011, US) Shia Labeouf, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Josh Duhamel, Frances McDormand, John Turturro, Josh Dempsey, John Malkovich. 155 mins

Despite the bombastic patriotism, drooling machine porn, all-round political dodginess, atrocious comedy, antiquated alien-invasion plot, etc, there’s something oddly compelling about metropolitan destruction and high-tech combat rendered on this scale. If only there weren’t those irritating humans getting in the way. It’s an improvement on the last one, but this is so defiantly crass, it’s almost admirable. Best watched with a 10-year-old boy, a hangover, or a cultural historian by your side to tell you how wrong it all is.

A Separation (PG)
(Asghar Farhadi, 2011, Iran) Peyman Moaadi, Leila Hatami. 123 mins

The complete opposite of Transformers: a complex, intricate and deeply satisfying study of Iranian society. Built around a divorcing couple, but ranging far wider, it’s a web of social taboos, domestic clashes and building tension. You’ll have to pay attention, though.

As If I Am Not There (18)
(Juanita Wilson, 2010, Ire) Natasa Petrovic, Fedja Stukan. 110 mins

The harrowing experience of a Bosnian teacher forced into sexual slavery by Serbian soldiers is relayed with horrifying conviction but a sensitive intelligence, too. Based on actual testimony, the story never feels like a mere dramatisation.

The Conspirator (12A)
(Robert Redford, 2010, US) James McAvoy, Robin Wright, Kevin Kline. 123 mins

Redford gives a history lesson and a lecture on civil liberties, as Wright goes on trial for aiding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and McAvoy’s northern lawyer strives to defend both her and good old American justice.

Larry Crowne (12A)
(Tom Hanks, 2011, US) Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts, Bryan Cranston. 99 mins

A feel-nice self-help tale from the same box of chocolates as Forrest Gump. Hanks’s downsized employee goes back to college and develops a crush on his teacher (Roberts). Will he get a second chance? Will Roberts learn a lesson from him? The suspense must be killing you.

Delhi Belly (15)
(Abhiney Deo, 2011, Ind) Imran Khan, Vir Das, Kunaal Roy Kapur. 102 mins

Indian cinema takes a leap westwards, if not exactly forwards, with this Guy Ritchie-styled caper comedy – mainly in English. Concerning three Delhi slackers who find themselves wanted by gangsters, it’s a riot of guns, gags, girlfriend phobias and dodgy toilets.

Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo (U)
(Jessica Oreck, 2009, US/Jap) 91 mins

Japan’s obsession with insects is used to put our own species under a magnifying glass in this free-associative documentary, which flits from the niche world of bug-hunters and insect collectors to cultural staples like haiku and zen.

The Merry Wives Of Windsor (12A)
(Christopher Luscombe, 2011, UK) Christopher Benjamin, Serena Evans, Sarah Woodward. 140 mins

Filmed stage play of Shakespeare’s romantic farce, recorded at London’s Globe Theatre.

Out from Friday

The Princess Of Montpensier

French 16th-century passion and intrigue in Bertrand Tavernier’s epic.

The Tree Of Life

Life, the universe and everything in Terrence Malick’s latest.

Trust

Social networking paranoia thriller to keep teens awake at night.

Film Socialisme

Jean-Luc Godard’s latest (final?) impenetrable film essay.

Super

Rainn Wilson and Ellen Page lead a costumed vigilante comedy.

Holy Rollers

Jesse Eisenberg plays an Orthodox Jew turned drug smuggler.

Huge

Two stand-ups shoot for the very big time in Ben Miller’s comedy.

The Devil’s Rock

Occult Nazi devil-women in the Channel Islands!

Breath Made Visible

Documentary on US choreographer Anna Halprin.

Murder 2

“Erotic” Bollywood serial killer thriller set in Goa.

Sawako Decides

A Japanese underachiever tries to get her life together.

Last Year In Marienbad

Reissue for Alan Resnais’s quintessential 1961 arthouse head-scratcher.

Coming soon

In two weeks … School’s out forever in Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 … Spanish prison riot thriller Cell 211

In three weeks … Ewan McGregor copes with his gay father in Beginners … Jason Bateman schemes against Horrible Bosses

In a month … If we need another hero, here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Brit bad boy goes big screen in Horrid Henry: The Movie

 This weeks new films This weeks new films

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Sexiest man alive Ryan Reynolds dons his CG tights for Green Lantern

June 18, 2011

Green Lantern 007 Sexiest man alive Ryan Reynolds dons his CG tights for Green Lantern

I remember reading Green lantern comic books as a  kid.  I really am looking forward to watching this movie. I hope there are plans for a continuation of this first segment. In all the movies I have seen Ryan Reynolds, he has always excelled with this comedic talent.

Pass it on,

Dr. Anthony

Your Educational Podcast 


poweredbyguardianREV Sexiest man alive Ryan Reynolds dons his CG tights for Green LanternThis article titled “Sexiest man alive Ryan Reynolds dons his CG tights for Green Lantern” was written by Amy Raphael, for The Guardian on Friday 17th June 2011 23.03 UTC

Ryan Reynolds has two small, single-colour tattoos on his lower left arm. One is a series of words engraved into the tender part of his wrist, the other some kind of military gun. I ask about them and his right hand moves quickly and instinctively to cover his left arm. He forces a laugh. “Oh, it says, ‘You’ll regret this one day, you idiot.’” And do you? He shrugs: “Yes.”

Reynolds doesn’t particularly appreciate questions that creep into his personal life, although when I later find out that the words simply say “Know Thyself” and that the gun is in fact an old naval cannon, I wonder if he’s being slightly sensitive. Anyway, it’s clear that the personal is private: his assistant has already issued a friendly warning that there are to be no questions about Scarlett Johansson, to whom Reynolds was married for two years until last December. I assume that also means no questions about singer Alanis Morissette, a fellow Canadian – Reynolds was born in Vancouver 34 years ago – to whom he was engaged before meeting Johansson. Which is fair enough, really, but it does mean that Reynolds spends the first 25 minutes of the interview positioning his 6ft 2in frame right on the edge of the sofa just in case I recklessly decide to breach protocol.

So we talk instead about green tights and magic rings. Over in the States, Reynolds is a big deal and he’s about to go properly global with the adaptation of DC Comics‘ 71-year-old Green Lantern story. He plays Hal Jordan, a test pilot with commitment issues who is the first human inducted into an intergalactic group of peace-loving superheroes who go by the name of the Green Lantern Corps. Hal must save the Earth and the universe – and get the girl – but only if he learns to overcome fear with willpower. A lighthearted hero, Reynolds anchors the film but doesn’t carry it; it’s more an ensemble piece, with Peter Sarsgaard as the nerdy scientist infected by alien matter and Mark Strong as Sinestro, a sardonic Green Lantern leader and baddie-in-waiting.

‘Changing body shape is part of your job … A few months later you’re back on the couch watching daytime TV’

It’s always entertaining to watch a mere mortal unlock their exceptional potential in a superhero story. But with the Iron Man, X-Men and Batman franchises all active, as well as the much-anticipated Avengers film on the way, does anyone apart from the most devoted fanboy really care about another comic-book adaptation? Reynolds raises an eyebrow and laughs: “I don’t think Green Lantern will be a hard sell at all. It differentiates itself from other comic-book films because it doesn’t have the darkness those typical superhero stories have in terms of their backstory. It’s just a fun, epic summer movie that is not too precious about anything. I loved watching Harrison Ford as Han Solo in Star Wars when I was a kid. I tried to learn from him – he often rolled his eyes at something ridiculous that was happening in front of him. So I’d say what also distinguishes Green Lantern is its ability to laugh at itself.”

Reynolds says he has always been good at self-mockery: “I laugh at myself more than anything else.” This, he explains, goes back to his days in an improv comedy group at school in Vancouver. He may have failed drama class at the age of 12 but by 14 he had moved to Florida and was making his television debut in the Nickelodeon show Fifteen. Throughout the 90s Reynolds appeared in made-for-TV movies and television series such as Sabrina The Teenage Witch before, in 1998, securing a role in Two Guys And A Girl.

In the past decade he has become known as the buff, handsome actor able to genre-jump: he has done comedies (Just Friends, Van Wilder: Party Liaison), horror (The Amityville Horror remake, which is memorable to his fans mostly because it featured Reynolds chopping wood topless), action thrillers (Blade: Trinity) and, in 2009, his breakout romcom The Proposal, in which he starred opposite Sandra Bullock. Yet he doesn’t only go for big-budget, glossy movies; last year he was in Buried as a civilian truck driver kidnapped in Iraq and buried alive. An even better example of his indie credentials is the relatively low-budget 2007 film The Nines, in which Reynolds played several characters. Variety declared him “sensational”.

John August, who directed The Nines, has called Reynolds the Facebook generation’s actor – becoming “a star through aggregation”; other directors talk of his lack of vanity and work ethic. He certainly gave Green Lantern everything, doing as many of his own stunts as he could and ending up with a separated shoulder and in need of two minor operations. Wearing a grey motion-capture unitard (the green suit is all CG), he sweated his way through 104 days (his estimate) of 100-degree New Orleans heat. Every day he would observe a rigorous exercise regime. “For the most part it was the usual gruelling mess of early morning squat thrusts and crap like that.” Did his body go to pot as soon as he stopped training? “It doesn’t so much go to pot … I just kind of shrink.”

‘When I arrived in LA, Jason Bateman was the first person to be nice to me. And you’ll always remember that guy’

The sleeves of his grey shirt are rolled up to the elbows and his biceps appear to be on the verge of ripping through, but his waist is surprisingly narrow and he’s certainly no incredible hunk. “Changing body shape is part of your job and it’s not something I bemoan. I keep thinking, this too shall pass, and it does. A few months later you’re back on the couch watching daytime TV.”

It’s quite hard to imagine Reynolds lounging around on the sofa aimlessly watching TV: he’s widely read (Philip Roth is a favourite), he’s contributed a series of well-written and often funny blogs to the Huffington Post and he likes to work. He’s just finished Safe House, a CIA thriller starring Denzel Washington and Vera Farmiga and filmed in Cape Town. I heard that Reynolds cried 26 times in one day for a particular scene. How did he do it? I feel the glare of the publicist behind me, but Reynolds smiles: “To really let go like that 26 times in a row was tough. Sometimes the job is absurd and you just have to get through it.”

Currently, Reynolds is saving the world in green tights and in August he will return in a comedy with his old friend Jason Bateman. Written by the Hangover team and directed by David Dobkin of Wedding Crashers fame, The Change-Up looks, from its trailer, to be daft and funny. Reynolds calls the story – in which he and Bateman switch bodies – “the most impossibly stupid premise” and “absurd in a grounded way”. How did he and Bateman meet? “When I first arrived in Los Angeles 14 years ago, he was the first person to be nice to me. And you’ll always remember that guy!”

But Green Lantern and The Change-Up guarantee Reynolds the kind of celebrity he is not sure he really wants. He’s glad he only really got famous a few years ago, with The Proposal and his marriage to Johansson, because he’s not sure he could have handled it in his 20s.

I am given the last question signal. It’s embarrassing to have to ask this, I start to say, and the air seems to be sucked out of the room. What does it feel like to be the Sexiest Man Alive, as voted for by People magazine last year? There is a collective sigh of relief; the divorce has not been mentioned. Reynolds sits back on the sofa and slaps his thigh: “Oh God! Yeah! I feel like it was designed to give my three older brothers ammunition to destroy me on a routine basis.” He narrows his eyes, which are just a tiny bit too close together. “But seriously? That stuff is just silly.”

 Sexiest man alive Ryan Reynolds dons his CG tights for Green Lantern

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This week’s new films

May 23, 2011

Pirates Of The Caribbean  007 This weeks new films

Wow …we have a great line up of movies to look forward to….so make time to see them..get together with family and friends and enjoy time well spent on films.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com 


poweredbyguardianREV This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 20th May 2011 23.05 UTC

Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (12A)
(Rob Marshall, 2011, US) Johnny Depp, Penélope Cruz, Ian McShane, Geoffrey Rush, Sam Claflin. 137 mins

Ahoy! Aha! Ahem. The excitement of another rip-roaring high seas adventure dissipates almost before they set sail in this lightweight epic of action set-pieces and people trying to get stuff they want. Depp is business as usual and the presentation is classy, but the new blood brings little to this non-party, which feels less like a story than a succession of twists and swoops along well-established tracks – like a theme-park ride, in fact. Oh, hang on …

Win Win (15)
(Tom McCarthy, 2011, US) Paul Giamatti, Amy Ryan, Bobby Cannavale. 106 mins

Giamatti’s hard-up lawyer inherits a whole heap of surrogate family issues, and a teen high-school wrestling ace, in a wry drama that doesn’t really stray out of its suburban comfort zone.

Julia’s Eyes (15)
(Guillem Morales, 2010, Spa) Belén Rueda, Lluís Homar, Pablo Derqui. 117 mins

Another shard of “Iberian gothic” in The Orphanage vein, with Rueda’s steady sight loss and mysteriously murdered sister making for a reliably slick slasher/suspense tale.

Blitz (18)
(Elliott Lester, 2011, UK) Jason Statham, Paddy Considine, Aidan Gillen. 97 mins

Statham plays a bubbly wedding planner. Just kidding: he’s a tough, rule-bending detective who makes use of his fighting skills on the trail of Gillen’s fame-courting cop killer.

Fire In Babylon (12A)
(Stevan Riley, 2010, UK) 87 mins

The West Indies’ rise as a cricketing force is done justice in this reverential reggae-backed documentary, which benefits from star testimonies, political perspective and being far shorter than an actual cricket match.

Age Of Heroes (15)
(Adrian Vitoria, 2011, UK) Sean Bean, James D’Arcy, Danny Dyer. 90 mins

Ian Fleming’s war years form the basis for this straightahead adventure, with Bean’s crack commandos on a snowy Norwegian mission straight out of Action Man.

Planeat (U)
(Shelley Lee Davies, Or Shlomi, 2010, UK/US) 72 mins

Documentary presenting a case for the personal and planetary benefits of eating less meat, via scientific evidence and tempting food-porn. A carrot, not a stick.

The Great White Silence (U)
(Herbert Ponting, 1924, UK) 108 mins

Scott’s doomed Antarctic expedition was beautifully captured by the observant Ponting, and now it’s been beautifully restored, with a new score to complement the still-powerful images.

Third Star (15)
(Hattie Dalton, 2010, UK) Benedict Cumberbatch, JJ Feild, Tom Burke. 92 mins

Four friends, one with terminal cancer, take a mildly eventful Welsh holiday in this low-budget drama, whose promise of final-act revelations might excuse some pacing issues.

Vidal Sassoon: The Movie (PG)
(Craig Teper, 2010, US) 93 mins

The snipper who changed the world (of hair, at least) looks back on his humble beginnings in this uncritical biodoc – is he retouching his roots?

Out from Friday

Le Quattro Volte

Italian art film guided by the natural rhythms of the countryside.

The Hangover Part II

More amnesiac buddy antics with the gang – this time in Bangkok. Out from Thu

Angels Of Evil

The makers of Romanzo Criminale tackle a charming Milanese gangster.

Diary Of A Wimpy Kid 2: Rodrick Rules

Sibling bonding issues in a kids’-eye comedy sequel.

Dancing Dreams

Doc on the making of Pina Bausch’s final, 40-person dance piece.

Heartbeats

Dreamy French-Canadian drama on a bisexual object of desire.

Life, Above All

A village schoolgirl carries the burden in this South African drama.

Apocalypse Now

Restored print of Coppola’s mighty war movie.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Superheroes before they were famous in X-Men: First Class … The fast times of an F1 racer in Senna

In three weeks … Jack Black back on the attack in Kung Fu Panda 2 … Sex, highs and the apocalypse in college comedy Kaboom

In a month … Ryan Reynolds sees the light in Green Lantern… Globally sourced diary doc Life In A Day

 This weeks new films

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