Emmanuel Lubezki, Michael Keaton and Director Alejandro G. Iñárritu on the set of ‘Birdman’
Birdman picked up another trophy as the Director’s Guild of America named Alejandro G. Iñárritu the winner of their Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film award. Only seven times in the DGA’s history has the winner of their Feature Film award differed from the winner of the Best Director Oscar, which means Birdman‘s Iñárritu is now the front-runner despite the fact Boyhood‘s Richard Linklater was the early favorite.
This year’s Director Guild Awards ceremony also included a surprise announcement by Steven Spielberg. Spielberg had the honor of revealing next year’s Directors Guild Awards will include a new category: First-Time Feature Film Director.
Directors Guild Award Winners
Feature Film – ALEJANDRO G. IÑÁRRITU, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Dramatic Series – LESLI LINKA GLATTER, Homeland, “From A to B and Back Again”
Comedy Series – JILL SOLOWAY, Transparent, “Best New Girl”
Movies for Television and Mini-Series – LISA CHOLODENKO, Olive Kitteridge
Variety/Talk/News/Sports – Regularly Scheduled Programming – DAVE DIOMEDI, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, “Episode #1”
Variety/Talk/News/Sports – Specials – GLENN WEISS, The 68th Annual Tony Awards
Reality Programs – ANTHONY B. SACCO, The Chair, “The Test”
Children’s Programs – JONATHAN JUDGE, 100 Things To Do Before High School, “Pilot”
Dr. Dre and Ice Cube introduce the first look at Universal Pictures’ Straight Outta Compton coming to theaters on August 14, 2015. Straight Outta Compton, which is showing off a red band/restricted trailer, charts the rap group N.W.A. and was directed by F. Gary Gray (The Italian Job, Law Abiding Citizen). Straight Outta Compton stars O’Shea Jackson Jr., Corey Hawkins, and Jason Mitchell as N.W.A. members Ice Cube, Dr. Dre, and Eazy-E, and Ice Cube and Dr. Dre served as producers on the dramatic film.
The Plot:
In the mid-1980s, the streets of Compton, California, were some of the most dangerous in the country. When five young men translated their experiences growing up into brutally honest music that rebelled against abusive authority, they gave an explosive voice to a silenced generation. Following the meteoric rise and fall of N.W.A., Straight Outta Compton tells the story of how these youngsters revolutionized music and pop culture forever the moment they told the world the truth about life in the hood and ignited a cultural war.
There’s a sense of magic in the air when walking down the streets and alleyways of Warner Bros Studios. For it was there that great stars such as Bette Davis, James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart and yes, little dancing star Ruby Keeler, made their way to the sound stages where their films became classics of the Golden Era.
Ms. Keeler was a petite and innocent-faced young girl when she developed an interest in dancing. Born into an Irish-Catholic family in Nova Scotia, Canada on August 25, 1910 as Ethel Hilda Keeler, she and her five siblings, mother, and father, moved to New York City where job prospects were better. Little Ruby was only three years old, but she loved to dance. Unfortunately, her family was too poor to enroll her in a dance studio for lessons. However, a sympathetic dance instructor at her parochial school decided to help out the talented girl by allowing her into class.
At this time, Ruby was only 13 years old, but she and some of her girlfriends decided to lie about their age and attend an audition for a show. She tapped her little heart out and was rewarded with a part in the chorus of producer George M. Cohan’s musical The Rise of Rosie O’Reilly. A year later, at age 14, producer Nils Granlund saw her and hired her to appear in the famous show at Texas Guinan’s gangland nightclub. Luck usually comes when you are seen by the right people, and one of the “right” people was Broadway producer Charles Dillingham who immediately cast her in Bye, Bye, Bonnie in 1926. During the six-month run, another Broadway legend, producer Flo Ziegfeld, saw the future “Ruby Keeler” and cast her in the Eddie Cantor show Whoopee! in 1928.
Before beginning rehearsals for Whoopee!, Granlund sent Ruby off to Los Angeles to participate in a promotion for the Al Jolson film The Jazz Singer. Although Ruby was then only 17, she met and fell in love with Jolson, then age 42. Considered the “world’s greatest entertainer,” Jolson has the historic distinction of starring in the world’s first all-talking picture made at Warner Bros. The two lovebirds got married, and Ruby’s part in Whoopee! was given to actress Ethel Shutta. After their honeymoon, it is reported Ruby toured with the Whoopee! company. Jolson also agreed to her returning to Broadway in 1929 for the Ziegfeld musical Show Girl. During their marriage, the couple adopted a little boy, Al, Jr.
Because of Jolson’s status in show business, they became “Hollywood Royalty” and Ruby lived lavishly in the Jolson mansion. They knew everybody who was anybody in Tinseltown, so Ruby was exposed to all the greats of the time. She quickly caught the attention of young producer Darryl Zanuck, who cast Ruby in the iconic musical 42nd Street at Warner Bros., co-starring with crooner Dick Powell. Zanuck was making a name for himself at Warner Bros by producing the Rin Tin Tin dog movies. After leaving Warners, he combined his 20th Century Pictures with William Fox’s studio and founded 20th Century Fox Studios in Century City. However, his big discovery in 1933 was Miss Keeler, and the musical was to go on to be one of the most significant films of the 1930s and for all time.
42nd Street
Warner Bros and studio mogul Jack Warner spared no expense on this picture. The Depression was in full swing, and downtrodden people in America wanted to be entertained and be happy when they went to see a movie. 42nd Street was to be their be-all and end-all in entertainment. Sprinkled with fresh-faced newcomers (Keeler and Dick Powell) and with, up-and-coming future stars such as Ginger Rogers and George Brent, and old favorites such as Una Merkel, Ned Sparks, George E. Stone, and Bebe Daniels, and with the appearance of blond bombshell Toby Wing for eye candy, the picture couldn’t miss.
The cast was terrific, of course, but what really set the film apart was the music by Harry Warren and Al Dubin and the tremendously inventive choreography by Busby Berkeley. Standards such as “Shuffle Off To Buffalo,” “You’re Getting To Be A Habit With Me,” “It Must Be June,” and the unforgettable theme song “Forty-Second Street” are sung to this day.
Busby Berkeley was an inventive genius and the “designs” he put on the screen had never been seen in any other film. He devised the over-head camera technique in which he photographed chorus girls in various patterns that looked like scenes in a kaleidoscope. Berkeley would raise the camera boom high into the rafters of the sound stage and shoot directly downward. Had the film been in color it would have been even more dazzling (see 20th Century Fox’s The Gang’s All Here! with Alice Faye and Carmen Miranda for a sample).
Born into a show business family, Berkeley became a child actor on stage. He later choreographed many Broadway musicals and was innovative at that time as well. When producer Samuel Goldwyn hired him for Eddie Cantor musical films, Berkeley originally devised his geometric dance patterns at Goldwyn Studios.
Jack Warner was so impressed by the 23 year-old newcomer that he signed Ruby Keeler to a long-term contract. She followed 42nd Street with Golddiggers of 1933, Footlight Parade, Dames, Flirtation Walk, Go Into Your Dance, and Ready, Willing and Able.
By 1937 Jolson thought he could better manage Keeler’s film career and essentially ruined it. He got her to leave her lucrative Warner’s position and signed her to a contract at thread-bare RKO Studios for the film Mother Carey’s Chickens in 1938. The movie was a gigantic flop and put Keeler’s film career into a tailspin. Husband and wife starred together for the last time in a Broadway fiasco called Hold Onto Your Hats in 1940. They divorced that same year.
In 1941, Ruby met and married real estate mogul John Homer Lowe and essentially retired from show business to raise a family. The couple produced four children.
She returned from obscurity in 1963 when she appeared in a television show and again in 1970 in a small part in the film The Phynx.
By 1972 she was almost totally forgotten when she was offered the stage revival of No, No Nanette at age 62. Originally produced in the 1920s, Ruby was a logical choice to revive that era on stage once again. By coincidence, Busby Berkeley – her old choreographer at Warner Bros. – was also hired to supervise the musical numbers. Co-starring with Keeler were stage veterans Jack Gilford and Helen Gallagher plus MGM dancing star Bobby Van and classic comic Patsy Kelly, the show as a smash and Keeler played it for two years in New York. She did another two-year stint on the road with the show.
She retired into seclusion once again and lived for another 20 years in Palm Springs. Taken ill at 83, she died from cancer February 28, 1993 in Rancho Mirage.
“Awesome” news from Oscar producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron: The Lonely Island (Andy Samberg, Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone) and Tegan and Sara will be teaming up to perform “Everything is Awesome” on the 87th Academy Awards. The pop duo and the comedy music trio’s recording of “Everything Is Awesome,” the Oscar nominated song from The LEGO Movie, has sold more than half a million copies just in the U.S.
“Tegan and Sara and The Lonely Island?…..Everything Is Awesome, indeed. This is certainly an ‘Only on the Oscars’ moment,” said Zadan and Meron.
This year’s other nominees in the original songs category include “Glory” from Selma, “Grateful” from Beyond the Lights, “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” from Glen Campbell…I’ll Be Me, and “Lost Stars” from Begin Again.
The 2015 Oscars will be hosted by Neil Patrick Harris and on February 22nd in Hollywood.
Gemma Arterton and Ryan Reynolds in ‘The Voices’ (Photo: Lionsgate)
The dark comedy/horror film The Voices gives Ryan Reynolds the opportunity to play a sociopathic killer who’s a likable enough dude when he’s not slicing and dicing up women. The strange and twisted tale also provides Reynolds with the chance to deliver one of his best performances in years.
Directed by Marjane Satrapi (Persepolis), The Voices focuses on Jerry Hickfang (Reynolds), a vulnerable and socially awkward factory worker who longs for love. Unfortunately for Jerry’s female co-workers, underneath his sweet and innocent demeanor lurks a seriously disturbed individual. Unbeknownst to his fellow factory workers, Jerry is not only mentally unstable but also a budding serial killer.
When he’s not at work or in therapy sessions with his psychiatrist (Jacki Weaver), he’s home with his two roommates who battle over what Jerry should be doing with his life. Bosco believes all Jerry needs is a good walk to work off his anxieties while Mr. Whiskers thinks no one will ever really accept Jerry and so his best bet is just to kill over and over again. And while Jerry doesn’t want to listen to either roommate, he can’t block out their voices, and asking them to stop talking doesn’t work, either. Why? Because Mr. Whiskers is a cat with a Scottish accent and Bosco is a slow-talking dog with a smooth Southern drawl, and those voices telling him what to do are all in his head.
The scenes at home with Jerry hanging out with Bosco and Mr. Whiskers (both voiced by Reynolds) discussing life, relationships, and listening to the dog and cat – good and evil in animal forms – take opposite sides of every issue feature some of the film’s best lines. Reynolds is such a charming guy that even as his character’s tenuous grip on sanity slips away, you can’t help but root for Jerry to somehow get away with butchering his co-workers.
Gemma Arterton and Anna Kendrick play two of the woman at the factory who catch Jerry’s eye. Arterton plays the office hottie, a flirty single lady who knows the effect she has on men and on Jerry in particular. Kendrick plays Jerry’s down-to-earth co-worker who has real feelings for the man and who could quite possibly keep him from killing, if only she wouldn’t ask so many questions.
Jerry’s decision not to take his medication provides plenty of opportunities for The Voices to alter reality and show the world as Jerry fantasizes it to be. To show the contrast between reality and Jerry’s twisted take on his surroundings, director Satrapi switches back and forth between the world as it truly exists and the world as Jerry believes it to be, the difference most obviously demonstrated in shots of Jerry’s filthy, cramped apartment (reality) and the apartment’s larger, tidier, and more bachelor pad-esque look of Jerry’s imagination. The depth of his illness is also vividly displayed when the severed heads in his refrigerator carry on lengthy – and sometimes flirty – conversations with the man who separated them from their bodies.
The Voices is a trippy horror film that shifts tones often and is as twisted as its lead character. Reynolds holds it all together with a fine performance, showing vulnerability, awkwardness, and a descent into madness that makes The Voices fascinating to watch.
GRADE: B
Rating: R for bloody violence, and for language including sexual references
Brad Pitt at the ‘Fury’ press conference during the 58th BFI London Film Festival (Photo by Tim P. Whitby / Getty Images for BFI)
Brad Pitt will star in a currently untitled thriller set up with Paramount Pictures, GK Films and New Regency. The film, described as a sweeping romantic thriller, will be directed by Robert Zemeckis (Flight) from a script by Steve Knight (The Hundred-Foot Journey).
Graham King and his GK Films banner are producing along with Zemeckis and Steve Starkey. Steve Knight, Jack Rapke, Patrick McCormick, and Denis O’Sullivan are executive producing.
Paramount didn’t release any further details on the story or on when we can expect to see the romantic drama in theaters.
Pitt was most recently seen in Fury directed by David Ayer. He recently finished up work on By the Sea written and directed by Angelina Jolie, and he’s reportedly attached to Jolie’s next project, Africa, based on the story of conservationist Richard Leakey.
ABC is ready to bring back BattleBots this coming summer. The network just announced they’re working on a new reality competition series that’s a “reimagined” version of the original BattleBots. The new series comes from Whalerock Industries and Ed Roski and Greg Munson (the guys behind the original BattleBots).
Season one of the new BattleBots will consist of six episodes. The competitors will battle it out in a single elimination tournament with cash prizes awarded to the winners of the Championship Rounds.
The Plot, Courtesy of ABC:
The new series promises to wow viewers with next generation robots – bigger, faster and stronger than ever before. The show will have a greater emphasis on the design and build elements of each robot, the bot builder backstories, their intense pursuit of the championship and the spectacle of the event. Separate weight classes will be eliminated so that robots of all sizes will battle against each other. State of the Art Onboard Technology and Cameras will provide audiences with enhanced viewing and combat analytics.
Teresa Palmer and Liam Hemsworth star in ‘Cut Bank’
The Hunger Games‘ Liam Hemsworth stars in the thriller Cut Bank from director Matt Shakman (The Good Wife, Revenge) and co-starring Teresa Palmer, Billy Bob Thornton, John Malkovich, Bruce Dern, Michael Stuhlbarg, and Oliver Platt. A24’s just released the official trailer for the dramatic film which is heading to Directv on February 26, 2015 followed by a theatrical release on April 3rd.
The Plot:
Dwayne McLaren (Hemsworth) dreams about escaping small town life in Cut Bank, Montana, “the coldest spot in the nation,” with his vivacious girlfriend Cassandra (Palmer). When Dwayne witnesses an awful crime, he tries to leverage a bad situation into a scheme to get rich quickly but he finds that fate and an unruly accomplice are working against him. Thrust into the middle of a police investigation spearheaded by the local sheriff (Malkovich), everything goes from bad to worse in this all-American thriller.
“We might have stumbled into a war with one of the most powerful dynasties in the universe,” says Caine (Channing Tatum), a genetically engineered warrior to Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis) who he just saved from some evil aliens in the science fiction adventure film Jupiter Ascending.
Jupiter dreams of the stars and of a life other than the one she has: a life as a maid cleaning other people’s houses and bathrooms with her family from sunrise to sunset. When Jupiter goes to a medical clinic to sell her eggs for some much-needed cash, she’s completely unaware that the doctors and nurses she encounters are actually aliens in disguise who’ve been sent to Earth to terminate her. Fortunately, Caine – an alien charged with keeping her safe – comes to her rescue, saving her from death multiple times during a long and chaotic chase and firefight that takes place on the streets of Chicago and in the skies above the Windy City.
Once outside the city, Caine explains to Jupiter that Earth is just one of many planets throughout the entire universe that has intelligent life. It’s owned by Balem Abrasax (Eddie Redmayne), a powerful Lord who sees her as a threat to his throne and wants her dead. Jupiter insists it all has to be a mistake and that she’s no one important, but Caine explains the Abrasax family rarely make mistakes, and she is in grave danger.
Caine seeks out an old friend named Stinger (Sean Bean) for help in protecting Jupiter, and Stinger reveals Jupiter’s genetic signature marks her as royalty and the next in line for an extraordinary inheritance that just might reshape the balance of the cosmos.
Written and directed by the Wachowski siblings (The Matrix trilogy), Jupiter Ascending is an overblown science fiction adventure that gets bogged down by its own mythology and suffers from incredibly stilted acting. Mila Kunis delivers a mediocre performance as Jupiter, the Cinderella of the universe, literally cleaning and being taken for granted by her family and then being saved by a mighty hunter/warrior only to discover she is the Queen of the galaxy. She gave a better performance as the Wicked Witch of the West in Oz: The Great and Powerful, another film in which she was horribly miscast.
Channing Tatum delivers a one-dimensional performance as Caine, Jupiter’s protector and…no big surprise here…her love interest. His natural charm, wit and charisma are absent in this convoluted, video game-looking sci-fi bomb, as he’s never allowed to show any emotion (hello Mr. Spock, Jr) and the chemistry between he and Kunis is non-existent.
Sean Bean is completely wasted as Stinger, Caine’s former commanding officer and friend who’s really only in the film to deliver all the boring backstory about the three bad guys and the “true beginning of Earth’s past”…yawn. But without a doubt, the worst performance is given by Oscar nominee Eddie Redmayne as Balem Abrasax, the villain who wants Jupiter dead. It’s ridiculous and incredibly uneven as Redmayne portrays Balem as a prissy tyrant who whispers his lines with sporadic moments of screaming thrown in for no apparent reason.
The special effects and space crafts are unimpressive, stealing some of the look and design from other science fiction classics, including Star Wars and Star Trek. The action scenes are incredibly chaotic and, at times, such a blur that the audience can’t follow who is shooting who, not that that matters in the long run as the plot is ridiculous.
Melodramatic, boring, and basically a giant mess, Jupiter Ascending is a science fiction flop that should never have been launched into production, let alone into movie theaters.
GRADE: D-
Rating: PG-13 for some violence, sequences of sci-fi action, some suggestive content, and partial nudity
The final film of The Hunger Games franchise will be released in IMAX 3D as well as conventional theaters on November 20, 2015. According to Lionsgate, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 will be digitally remastered for the IMAX 3D format using IMAX DMR (Digital Re-mastering) technology. Directed by Francis Lawrence, the cast is led by Jennifer Lawrence and features Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Willow Shields, Sam Claflin, Jena Malone, Stanley Tucci, Donald Sutherland, Julianne Moore, Mahershala Ali, Natalie Dormer, Wes Chatham, Elden Henson, and Evan Ross.
“I’m thrilled Mockingjay – Part 2 will be in IMAX theaters,” stated director Francis Lawrence. “Fans will now have the chance to see the film in any format they want, which is exciting; we recently saw the 3-D version of Mockingjay – Part 1 before its release in China, and the new level of immersion was really fantastic.”
“It’s exciting to be back in The Hunger Games world and once again team up with our partners at Lionsgate, director Francis Lawrence and producers Nina Jacobson and Jon Kilik on what we believe will be a thrilling, action-packed finale to this blockbuster franchise,” said Greg Foster, Senior Executive Vice President, IMAX Corp. and CEO of IMAX Entertainment. “The fan enthusiasm and cultural impact that this series has generated has been truly remarkable and we are thrilled to offer audiences the opportunity to experience the last chapter in IMAX 3D.”
Lionsgate also released details on The Hunger Games: The Exhibition, a traveling exhibition opening on July 1, 2015 in New York City at Discovery Times Square. The exhibition will remain open to fans at the NYC location through January 3, 2016 and then will be on the road for a global tour. Among the items that will be on display will be Katniss’ Girl on Fire and Mockingjay dresses, her Mockingjay armor, a Mockingjay pin, Cinna’s sketchbook, and Katniss’ bow.
“The Hunger Games: The Exhibition offers visitors an unparalleled experience and brings them closer to the world of Panem,” said Jenefer Brown, Lionsgate Senior Vice President of Location Based Entertainment. “Through a dynamic series of interactives, never before seen content, and immersive environments, guests will connect to The Hunger Games in a one-of-kind experience.
The application of the film’s science, technology, and real world problem solving also translate to a valuable educational experience that will resonate with school groups and visitors alike. We are thrilled to be launching this first ever interactive experience that will serve our global fan base and attract a new audience to the powerful Hunger Games franchise.”
For more info on the exhibition, visit thehungergamesexhibition.com.
The The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 Plot:
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 now brings the franchise to its powerful fourth chapter in which Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) now fully realizes the stakes are no longer just for survival — they are for the future.
With the nation of Panem in a full scale war, Katniss confronts President Snow (Donald Sutherland) in the final showdown. Teamed with a group of her closest friends – including Gale (Liam Hemsworth), Finnick (Sam Claflin), and Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) – Katniss goes off on a mission with the unit from District 13 as they risk their lives to stage an assassination attempt on President Snow who has become increasingly obsessed with destroying her. The mortal traps, enemies, and moral choices that await Katniss will challenge her more than any arena she faced in The Hunger Games.