Friday, 30 January 2015

Tamil film producer Varun Manian denies buying any team

Amid reports of him buying Chennai Super Kings owned by India Cements Ltd, realty developer and Tamil film producer Varun Manian has denied purchasing any team. "Just Engaged. No plans to buy any Team. LEAVE ME ALONE...," Varun Manian said in a micro blogging site.
Last week he got engaged to popular Tamil actress Trisha Krishnan.
Reports emerged that Varun Manian was in the race to purchase the India Cements franchise Chennai Super Kings after Supreme Court maDE it clear that N Srinivasan would be either BCCI President or as the owner of Chennai Super Kings.
The Supreme Court last week barred Srinivasan from contesting any BCCI election on grounds of conflict of interest and set up a judges committee under a former Chief Justice of India to decide on the punishment in the IPL scam that can threaten the future of Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals.
Varun Manian owns Radiance Realty and has also produced Tamil films Vaayai Moodi Pesavum and Kaaviya Thalaivan.

Yes Foundation organises social film movement

MUMBAI: Yes Foundation, the social development arm of Yes Bank, is giving the public an opportunity to select the winners of India’s largest social film movement - YES! I am the CHANGE.  
 
The top 50 short film entries have been shortlisted and will now compete for the Indian social filmmaking challenge 2014. The five minute long films represent the true spirit of positive social change and touched on social topics including education, women’s safety, women empowerment, animal care and responsible citizenship.
 
The main aim of this campaign is to spread mass awareness about social causes through the thought provoking films made by youth participants. Over 72,000 viewers have already participated and voted for the popular choice awards. The public can watch the films Yes Foundation India’s YouTube channel and vote for their favourite film. The film with the largest number of likes will be adjudged the winner. Voting ends on 31 January 2015. 
 
The top three winners of the YES! I am the CHANGE popular choice awards will receive prizes worth Rs 25,000, Rs 15,000 and Rs 10,000 respectively.
 
This programme is mentored by eminent filmmakers and educationists including Shoojit Sircar, Vikramaditya Motwane, Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, Pritish Nandy, Guneet Monga, Kailash Surendranath, Dr. Indu Shahani, Dr. Nagesh Rao and Nina Lath amongst others.

Security guard avoids jail by blaming Bollywood for stalking habit

Australian lawyer defending Indian man says obsessively pursuing uninterested women is ‘quite normal behaviour’ for those who take their cues from Bollywood movies

An Indian security guard accused of stalking has avoided a conviction in an Australian court after blaming his actions on a passion for Bollywood movies, reports ABC.
Magistrate Michael Hill said he was taking into account the cultural background of 32-year-old Sandesh Baliga in adjourning the complaint against him for five years on condition of good behaviour. Baliga had been accused of stalking two women in 2012 and 2013, but his lawyer Greg Barns argued successfully that it was “quite normal behaviour” for Indian men to obsessively target women without obvious sign of their affections being returned. Male characters in colourful, romantic Bollywood movies are often seen determinedly pursuing their female counterparts until they finally acquiesce to a relationship, argued the defence team.
Baliga, a former student who arrived in Australia to study accounting three years ago from a remote, rural area of India, had texted, called and approached the women on a regular basis. He also began referring to himself as their boyfriend.
But Hill, of the Hobart magistrates court in Tasmania, said he did not want to damage the accused’s job prospects and was satisfied that the security guard’s cultural background meant he did not realise the seriousness of his actions and therefore did not imagine they could be classed as criminal. Baliga was also remorseful, had pleaded guilty – thereby sparing his victims the stress of appearing in court – and was unlikely to reoffend.
The security guard, who acknowledged that alcohol played a part in his behaviour, did not object to the magistrate imposing a restraint order.

“Timbuktu”: A timely African film on Islam — and a spectacular breakthrough

The wrenching, Oscar-nominated "Timbuktu" depicts Mali under jihadist rule -- but it's far more than an issue dramaEven when you get past the eerie-coincidence level of Abderrahmane Sissako’s Oscar-nominated “Timbuktu” — a film about the causes, consequences and contradictions of Islamic extremism, made by an African director who lives in France – it’s an extraordinary accomplishment, a heartbreaking, visually spectacular and largely accessible work from a cinematic master who is more than ready for international attention. (Sissako’s previous film, “Bamako,” although more directly confrontational in a Brechtian or postmodern vein, is also amazing.) This rich, complex tragedy of life in the northern desert of Mali under jihadist occupation never feels didactic or driven by overweening ideology. But every scene and every image, every novelistic shift in tone or mood or perspective, is designed to cut through the stereotypes and misconceptions that divide our world.

Like all the best political art, “Timbuktu” forges a human connection first and foremost, and so drives home its points with subtle force. When we see that a nomadic Tuareg tribesman’s domestic life is full of familiar strife and comedy, or see Islamic militants affiliated with al-Qaida as bored young guys more interested in arguing about their favorite European soccer teams than in enforcing Shariah law, then we no longer perceive their situation as utterly alien or incomprehensible. I don’t kid myself that the people who complain loudly about the absence or silence of “moderate Muslims” would ever go see a movie that so directly challenges their Western-centric worldview. But I wish they would, both because “Timbuktu” vividly depicts the courageous resistance of ordinary Muslims, especially Muslim women, to fundamentalist tyranny and because it makes the crucial but heretical point that Islamic militants are also human beings, and more likely to be driven by human motivations like greed or lust or power than by apocalyptic zealotry
With all the attention paid to what the Oscar nominations got wrong this year, especially with respect to Ava DuVernay’s “Selma,” the academy should also get credit for recognizing this landmark African film. “Selma” and “Timbuktu,” each named for an important city in the history of black people on planet Earth, are films linked by hidden cultural threads, and films that represent breakthroughs on their own terms. “Timbuktu” might ultimately be more important than “Selma,” on a global-historical scale, and Sissako represents a radical alternative to Hollywood conventions of cinema and storytelling in a way DuVernay simply does not or cannot. (I am not discounting the subtle technique and shift in perspective she brought to “Selma.”) And let’s face it, this is a movie about a semi-comprehensible conflict involving Arabs and black Africans in a country most Americans couldn’t find on a map in 20 guesses. Every additional viewer lured in by the Oscar nomination is, in all seriousness, a positive social benefit.
Timbuktu, or Tombouctou in the French-African spelling, is a small city on the southern edge of the Sahara that was once an important center for trade and Islamic scholarship under the medieval Mali Empire. Today it’s pretty much a desert backwater, albeit one that comes with a lot of symbolism. Sissako, who was raised in Mali but has lived mostly in France for the last 25 years, is well aware that the name sounds exotic and mysterious to Western ears, and also that for many Africans and their descendants it stands for a bygone age of pre-colonial African glory. His movie never directly mentions any of those things. It’s about the lives and struggles of the people of contemporary Timbuktu in the age of mobile phones, global pop culture and international conflict by proxy. I’m sure Sissako is not in favor of the reported destruction of thousands of Timbuktu’s ancient manuscripts by the jihadist fighters who conquered the town in 2012; he’s making the point that people who lived there had more pressing concerns.
Along a river on the outer fringes of Timbuktu — Sissako actually shot the film in neighboring Mauritania, where he was born — live the Tuareg herdsman Kidane (Ibrahim Ahmed) and his wife, Satima (Toulou Kiki), along with their 12-year-old daughter, Toya, and Issan, an orphaned boy they have adopted. This loving and almost idyllic family has one foot in the past and one in the present: They sleep in a traditional open-door tent, as the Tuareg people have done for centuries, but their cow is named GPS, in tribute to a technology that is undoubtedly useful for desert navigation. (I assumed that this idealized family unit, standing against a climate of religious warfare and intolerance, was inspired by the similar family and similar context of Ingmar Bergman’s “The Seventh Seal.” Just my own Eurocentrism at work, apparently; Sissako says he has never seen that film.)
A worsening chain of violence that begins with entirely ordinary events — among them Issan’s boyish inattentiveness to GPS, the wayward cow, and Kidane’s angry feud with a neighboring fisherman – will ultimately suck this family into the tragic catastrophe of Timbuktu, which has been taken over by a motley crew of foreign fighters, mostly Arabs from North Africa who don’t even speak the local languages. Music, alcohol, tobacco, sports and even public laughter are all forbidden; women, of course, must cover themselves head to toe and never go out unchaperoned; men without beards are subject to beating, abuse and fines. Townspeople fight back whenever and however they can, at enormous risk: An angry saleswoman in the marketplace tries to shame her oppressors; a group of hedonistic musicians (led by the magnetic Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara) hold a clandestine late-night party, daring their neighbors to denounce them. In perhaps the film’s most powerful and poetic sequence, a group of boys play soccer on a dirt field – with an imaginary ball.
Sissako’s genius as a filmmaker lies in a vision that is both capacious and intimate, that sees both grand, deterministic world-historical forces and individual folly and/or heroism at work. At the head of the local jihadist militia we do not find some wild-eyed lunatic muttering about Allah but a doleful Libyan named Abdelkerim (played by Tunisian-French actor Abel Jafri), whose dedication to the cause seems highly suspect. He is evidently educated, since he speaks French and a little English, he vainly attempts to conceal his chain-smoking from his subordinates, and he’s both fascinated and unsettled by the prophetic rantings of Timbuktu’s resident witch or madwoman (memorably portrayed by the Haitian dancer and actress Kettly Noël). While Abdelkerim is certainly not a sympathetic figure, given his lustful designs on Satima, he’s an altogether recognizable one – a mid-career, mid-level, semi-corrupt army officer, who’s looking out for No. 1.
I don’t want to say much about the details of Kidane’s collision with the small-minded tyranny of Timbuktu’s new rulers, because even at the level of melodrama “Timbuktu” is full of intense twists and turns. Let’s just say that it’s a sad and wrenching tale but also a tale of love and hope and the shared power of culture, one that suggests that over the long haul Africa’s people are stronger than any oppressive ideology. To view history from an African perspective, Sissako tells us, does not mean abandoning notions like complexity or irony or shared responsibility; the more important paradigm shift is about recognizing that Africans are not the victims or passive subjects of history, any more than “we” are. You wouldn’t know this from the movies, at least up till now, but Africans have been creating their own story all along, and can tell it for themselves.

Man killed on Scorsese film set of Silence

One person was killed and two others were injured in Taiwan on the set of Hollywood director Martin Scorsese's latest movie, Silence.
A ceiling collapsed onto three Taiwanese construction workers at the Chinese Culture and Movie Center during pre-production on the film.
A man identified as Chen Yu-lung was pronounced dead at hospital.
Scorsese was said to be "shocked and saddened" by the news.
A spokesperson for the film said the incident occurred after a building on the CMPC Studios backlot was deemed unstable and an independent contractor was hired to "reinforce and make it safe".
"The director is shocked and saddened that one worker was fatally wounded, he regrets that this incident happened," a Taiwanese spokesman for the film, Dave Lee said.
Officials said the two injured men suffered leg and head injuries.
Mr Lee told reporters that the accident was not expected to affect the filming schedule, which is set to begin shooting on Friday.
Silence, due to be released in 2016, will star Liam Neeson, Andrew Garfield and Adam Driver.
The storyline is based on a novel by Shusaku Endo and portrays Portuguese Jesuits in the 17th Century suffering persecution as they work in isolated areas of Japan.

Thursday, 29 January 2015

Shamitabh set to break record


Legendary actor Amitabh Bachchan will consolidate his position as the king of social media by recording a record-breaking podcast for the Apple’s Meet The Filmmaker series at their flagship store in central London on January 28. The actor, who has arguably the biggest presence on social media out of all the Indian movie stars, will record a podcast for his soon to be released movie Shamitabh. It will be made available to more than 800 million iTunes users around the world for free, which makes it the largest ever for an Indian film.

This is only the third ever Bollywood podcast that Apple have included in the popular series. The first saw Hrithik Roshan and Priyanka Chopra get interviewed for Krrish 3 and second had Vishal Bhardwaj and Shahid Kapoor talking about their movie Haider. The Shamitabh podcast with Amitabh Bachchan would eclipse the previous two in terms of reach and will be the first time an Indian movie star has been interviewed solo.
 
Renowned entertainment Asjad Nazir, who has hosted the previous two podcasts and will interview Amitabh Bachchan for the third, thinks this will be the best yet. “Mr Bachchan is a global icon and the most loved Indian movie star on the planet. Now fans from all corners of the globe will have access to the podcast for free and be able to listen to the great man speak about Shamitabh, cinema and his wonderful career. With his immense influence I am sure he will inspire others in Indian cinema to use podcasts such as these to reach fans,” said Asjad.
 
Big named Hollywood stars who have featured in the Meet The Filmmaker series include Matt Damon, Tom Hanks, Meryl Streep and Benedict Cumberbatch. Shamitabh is the latest film from director R Balki and will be released by Eros International on February 6. The comedy-drama also stars Dhanush and Akshara Haasan.

Sonakshi Sinha To Play Lead in Hindi Remake of Tamil Film Mounaguru


Actress Sonakshi Sinha has teamed up with director A. R. Murugadoss for the remake of Tamil film Mounaguru. Sonakshi, who has earlier worked with Murugadoss in Holiday: A Soldier is Never Off Duty, will be seen playing the lead role in the woman centric film Mounaguru. The shooting of the film will reportedly begin in March.

Sunny Leone: From adult-film star to mentor


Adult-film actress turned Bollywood actress Sunny Leone has surely managed to captivate the audience and has succeeded in creating a niche for herself in Bollywood. Sunny Leone, who impressed her fans with her last film, ‘Ragini MMS 2’, topped the list of most searched Indian celebrities of 2014. She will now mentor contestants of an online talent-based reality show.

Sunny Leone will be advising the participants including singers, dancers and actors on how to shoot and what they should shoot, according to a report in Hindustan Times.
The show requires the contestants to make videos showcasing their talent, after which they will upload these videos on the net and be judged on the popularity that their videos generate.

Dance, Dreams and Nominees for Short-Film Academy Awards

Dance on Camera 2015
Film Society of Lincoln Center 
165 W. 65th St., (212) 875-5601 
Friday—Feb. 3

Choreographer and composer Meredith Monk pays a visit to opening night of the annual Dance on Camera festival. The avant-garde dance legend will talk about her 1972 piece “Education of the Girlchild,” which is documented in her new film “Girlchild Diary.” Other documentaries and performance films carry the schedule, exploring dance in popular forms (“American Cheerleader”), celebrating iconic figures (“Dancing Is Living: Benjamin Millepied ”) and veering experimental (“Ghost Line”).
‘Hard To Be a God’
32 Second Ave., (212) 505-5181 
Friday—Feb. 8

Pig slop will never be as aesthetically sublime as framed by the late Russian director Aleksei Guerman (1938-2013), whose final testament offers a vigorous wallow in the muck of a parallel Earth where the Renaissance never happened. The science-fiction fable dwells on the moral plight of a time-traveling scientist Don Rumata ( Leonid Yarmolnik, in a commanding performance), who is compelled only to stand by and observe as mankind grovels in the violence and ignorance of a dark age. Gorgeous black-and-white photography illuminates the Hieronymus Bosch-influenced setting. Three earlier Guerman films will be shown in 35mm during and after the theatrical run.
Academy Award-Nominated Short Films 2015
323 Sixth Ave. (212) 924-7771 
Friday—Feb. 5

Leading in to the 87th Academy Awards, IFC Center presents its popular annual roundup of the nominees that have enjoyed the least theatrical exposure: the short films. In addition to collections of animated and live-action shorts, there are two programs of nonfiction titles. Two Polish films share a theme of illness and family. “Joanna” is the lyrical story of a dying mother and her child, while in “Our Curse” the filmmakers Tomasz Sliwinski and Maciej Slesicki turn the camera on themselves, as they learn to care for their own infant, who suffers from potentially fatal congenital disorder.
“I Am Suzanne!”
11 W. 53rd St. (212) 708-9400 
Through Sunday

Justifiably celebrated for a dream sequence in which its star Lillian Harvey is put on trial by an ensemble of singing puppets, “I Am Suzanne!” is full of surreal interludes. The 1933 romance traces the comeback of a Paris dancer (Harvey’s title character) after an injury sidelines her career and an admiring puppeteer takes her under wing. Rowland V. Lee directs with idiosyncratic flair, with sexy musical routines and bizarre imaginative twists.
‘Hard To Be a God’
32 Second Ave., (212) 505-5181 
Friday—Feb. 8

Pig slop will never be as aesthetically sublime as framed by the late Russian director Aleksei Guerman (1938-2013), whose final testament offers a vigorous wallow in the muck of a parallel Earth where the Renaissance never happened. The science-fiction fable dwells on the moral plight of a time-traveling scientist Don Rumata ( Leonid Yarmolnik, in a commanding performance), who is compelled only to stand by and observe as mankind grovels in the violence and ignorance of a dark age. Gorgeous black-and-white photography illuminates the Hieronymus Bosch-influenced setting. Three earlier Guerman films will be shown in 35mm during and after the theatrical run.
Academy Award-Nominated Short Films 2015
323 Sixth Ave. (212) 924-7771 
Friday—Feb. 5

Leading in to the 87th Academy Awards, IFC Center presents its popular annual roundup of the nominees that have enjoyed the least theatrical exposure: the short films. In addition to collections of animated and live-action shorts, there are two programs of nonfiction titles. Two Polish films share a theme of illness and family. “Joanna” is the lyrical story of a dying mother and her child, while in “Our Curse” the filmmakers Tomasz Sliwinski and Maciej Slesicki turn the camera on themselves, as they learn to care for their own infant, who suffers from potentially fatal congenital disorder.
“I Am Suzanne!”
11 W. 53rd St. (212) 708-9400 
Through Sunday

Justifiably celebrated for a dream sequence in which its star Lillian Harvey is put on trial by an ensemble of singing puppets, “I Am Suzanne!” is full of surreal interludes. The 1933 romance traces the comeback of a Paris dancer (Harvey’s title character) after an injury sidelines her career and an admiring puppeteer takes her under wing. Rowland V. Lee directs with idiosyncratic flair, with sexy musical routines and bizarre imaginative twists.
Two by Jody Lee Lipes
30 Lafayette Ave., (718) 636-4100 
Tuesday

Although he has made a name as a cinematographer, working for a range of buzzy indie directors including Lena Dunham (“Tiny Furniture”) and Sean Durkin (“Martha Marcy May Marlene”), Jody Lee Lipes also makes thrilling documentaries about art and process. Catch a preview of his latest, “Ballet 422,” starring New York City Ballet choreographer Justin Peck, and the earlier “NY Export: Opus Jazz,” a valentine to the city that features NYCB dancers recreating Jerome Robbins ’ vibrant 1958 street ballet.

Sundance Film Review: ‘Zipper’

Following a potential political sex scandal through the eyes of the politician, “Zipper” plays like an odd hybrid of “Shame” and a season-long subplot on “House of Cards.” Tawdry but cripplingly self-serious, the second feature from Mora Stephens (a full decade after her little-seen, also politically themed debut “Conventioneers”) benefits from Patrick Wilson’s committed star turn. Still, the awkward end product would inevitably struggle in theatrical venues, making it more advisable to play to the base and go straight to VOD and premium cable.
Federal prosecutor Sam Ellis (Wilson) is on the fast track in national politics. He’s got it all: high-profile career success, good looks, charm, a well-connected and shrewdly strategic wife, Jeannie (Lena Headey), and a clean-cut image as someone who wants to punish the bad and protect the good. Sam even rejects the advances of comely intern Dalia (Dianna Agron) when they share a drunken kiss after a work-related celebration.
But when he interviews an alluring young escort (Elena Satine) as a witness on a case, his mind starts wandering and his libido takes over. Usually content to masturbate to online porn, Sam investigates a high-class escort service, eventually working up the nerve to arrange a date when Jeannie is away for a long weekend.
Although he almost backs out, the sweetly seductive Christy (Alexandra Breckenridge, superb in a single scene) lures him in hook, line and sinker. And even though Sam promises it was “just a one time thing,” he’s soon making regular calls on his burner phone to book appointments with a different girl every time.
The suspense, then, becomes twofold: First, as Sam’s behavior grows increasingly obsessive and difficult to control it’s clear the film is trying in some way to explore the dangers of sex addiction. And secondly, what will happen when Sam is inevitably found out? Will his political career go down in flames? Will Jeannie be more upset about the cheating or the possibility that their carefully mapped out future (she dreams of being First Lady) might fall apart?
Stephens and her spouse/co-writer Joel Viertel aim for a sophisticated nail-biter but wind up more in the rarely mined territory of early ‘90s erotic thriller. Antonio Calvache’s slick, hyperactive camerawork and Viertel’s occasionally frenzied editing do a solid job of putting the audience inside Sam’s head, but just as often have the sheen of a lurid potboiler, in over its head when it comes to the thematic concerns.
Unfortunately, the script has a nasty habit of explicitly spelling out those themes in clunky dialogue. “Why do we hold politicians to a higher standard when it comes to marriage and adultery?” asks Sam. The film’s ultimately cynical take on cheating politician won’t really help audiences reach any greater clarity on that issue.
The often underappreciated Wilson is ideally cast as a self-pitying philanderer. Sam’s privileged lifestyle offers plenty of comforts, but Wilson renders an impressive study of a man who is never quite satisfied with what he has, owing both to personal demons and being in the position to get anything he wants. (In one of the film’s best twists, Sam essentially takes charge of investigating his favorite escort agency — the better to protect himself.)
The supporting cast is largely squandered, including Richard Dreyfuss and Ray Winstone in roles that threaten to become more menacing than they ever really do. But that’s more intriguing than what the script offers Agron and a barely seen John Cho.
Headey’s stock wife role picks up in the third act when Jeannie is faced with a thorny moral dilemma of her own and the savvy thesp more than rises to the challenge. Penelope Mitchell is another standout as a college dropout-turned-escort who bonds with Sam in a surprising way. Their contrasting pair of dialogue scenes — one professional, the other devastatingly personal — pack more punch than the entire rest of the film.

Sundance Film Review: 'Zipper'

Reviewed at Sundance Film Festival (Premieres), Jan. 27, 2015. Running time: 112 MIN.

Production

A Magnolia Financial Group presentation of a Protozoa Pictures and 33 Pictures production in association with Hyphenate Films. (International sales: Company, City.) Produced by R. Bryan Wright, Amy Mitchell-Smith, Mark Heyman, Joel Viertel, Marina Grasic. Executive producers, Scott Franklin, Ari Handel, Darren Aronofsky, Danya Duffy, Jan Korbelin, Beau Chaney, Christian Oliver. Co-­producers, Deborah Aquila, Julianne Hausler.

Crew

Directed by Mora Stephens. Screenplay, Stephens, Joel Viertel. Camera (color, widescreen, HD), Antonio Calvache; editor, Viertel; music, H. Scott Salinas; music supervisor, Sean Mulligan; production designer, Hannah Beachler; set decorators, Gretchen Gattuso, Deanna Simmons; costume designer, Shauna Leone; sound, Mark LeBlanc; supervising sound editors, D. Chris Smith, Glenn T. Morgan; re-recording mixers, Will Riley, D. Chris Smith; stunt coordinator, Bill Scharpf; line producer, Charles Rapp; assistant director, Julian M. Brain; casting, Deborah Aquila, Tricia Wood.

With

Patrick Wilson, Lena Headey, Richard Dreyfuss, Ray Winstone, John Cho, Dianna Agron, Christopher McDonald, Alexandra Breckenridge, Penelope Mitchell, Kelton DuMont, Elena Satine.

Garlanded with praise

LIKE all good films about robots, “Ex Machina” is really about people. It’s a gripping thriller concerned not just with how human artificial intelligence (AI) can seem, but also with how robotic and devoid of humanity people can be too. 
A tight script from Alex Garland—author of “The Beach”, screenwriter behind “28 Days Later”, “Sunshine” and “Dredd”, now also in the director’s chair for the first time—increases the tension, and three terrific performances battle for centre stage: Oscar Isaac as Nathan, the alcoholic millionaire and former child genius, Domhnall Gleeson as Caleb, the earnest young protégé helicoptered to Nathan’s secluded pad-cum-laboratory to help test his latest work, and the increasingly impressive Alicia Vikander as Ava, the artificial consciousness Nathan has packed into an attractive female form for Caleb to try out, in more ways than one. 
These are meaty, complex roles. The three main actors have been in the ascendant in recent years (notably Mr Isaac, whose breakthrough "Inside Llewyn Davis" was a hit last year) but all are allowed greater freedom here to really exercise their acting chops. They toy constantly with one another—and with the audience—taking the much tried and often tired AI format to new levels. 
Mr Isaac is a menacing colossus. When he’s not pumping iron or dejectedly glugging red wine, he’s busy eyeing his handiwork and guest through the spy-cams that pepper his concrete (and mostly underground) lair. When Caleb first arrives, the lucky employee of Nathan’s technology company to have won a trip to the boss’s estate, Nathan asks him to perform a Turing Test on Ava. Invented by the British codebreaker Alan Turing, the test asks people to judge whether the respondent is human or machine. 
But since Ava’s transparent midriff and limbs purposefully expose the workings of her hardware, surely the test is invalidated from the outset, queries Caleb. He already knows she is a robot. Ah yes, replies Nathan. But the trick is to see whether Caleb can still feel that Ava is a woman, despite knowing from the outset that she is not. 
It is in a rather sinister and murky world of gender politics that “Ex Machina” finds its entirely unique rhythm. Is Ava falling for Caleb? Is Caleb falling for Ava? He certainly seems to be: Mr Gleeson has a natural naivety and boyish charm—like Hugh Grant in his early films, with less of the caddish dandy about him and more of the geek.
In one of the increasingly frequent generator blackouts, Ava tells him he should not trust anything Nathan says. Later, she says she would like to go on a date and asks him whether he finds her attractive. His confusion is telling: can he, or we, tell the difference between woman and machine anymore? Is Nathan the oppressor and Caleb the rescuer, in some kind of new-age replay of fairy-tale heroes and villains, fighting over the spoils while the subservient “other”—cyborg or woman—sits silently pleading from her cage?
Ms Vikander used to be a ballet-dancer (she trained at the Royal Swedish Ballet School in Stockholm for nine years) and it shows; as Ava her movements are graceful and precise, almost too precise at times to be human. The Scandinavian accent that peeks out ever so slightly in her recent appearance as Vera Brittain in “Testament of Youth” is more audible here, but it fits, adding to the sense that something is not quite right. However much Ava tries to fit in, she cannot. A highly disturbing oration from a drunk Nathan on the functionality of her sexual organs adds to the unease.
The scenes are just as carefully calibrated on a visual level as the script itself, an achievement that confirms Mr Garland’s talent as a director as well as screenwriter. One, where Nathan joins his humourless maid Kyoko (Sonoya Mizuno) for some synchronised disco dancing is particularly clever, each bump and hustle more robotic and joyless than the last.
The film's title comes from the phrase "Deus Ex Machina" ("God from the machine"), which refers to the gods that were often ushered into classical plays on mechanical platforms in the final minutes to provide a happy ending. Today it generally refers to slightly unbelievable plot devices that appear as if from nowhere to resolve things. The film has no such device and arguably raises more questions than it answers; indeed, a slightly limp ending may disappoint some. But in the end this is a small quibble, and in any case, ambiguity is presumably exactly what Mr Garland intended. There are no heroes or Gods here. “Ex Machina” is an aggressive, ominous piece of work that sticks in the mind long after a viewing. 

Wednesday, 28 January 2015

Sundance Film Festival 2015: The Films That Have Sold (So Far)!

Well, its the movie-lovers favorite time of the year: the Sundance Film Festival!
The festival isn't even over but there DEFINITELY some winners already!
Like Jack Black and James Marsden are some of the lucky ones seeing as their film The D Train got bought by IFC Films, which means we'll be seeing it in theaters later this year!
YAAAAAAAY!
So, curious to see what other films sold? Well, then…

Norway Tamil Film Festival (NTFF) arriving soon

One of the most prestigious film festivals in the world, the Norway Tamil Film Festival (NTFF) has been a front-runner when it comes to recognizing talents in Tamil cinema and rewarding them amicably. Likewise, the NTFF is venturing into its sixth year this year. We, here at IndiaGlitz are honored to be associated with such a prestigious event as media partner. The preparation for the 6th Norway Tamil Film Festival is already in progress.


The Norway Tamil Film Festival 2015 is all set to happen between 23rd April-26th April 2015 and will have on the likes of acclaimed Director Bala, noted cinematographer Chezhian, popular Tamil actor Atharva and many more.

Apart from recognizing and rewarding those who work in the Tamil film industry, the NTFF has also been setting a benchmark example for Tamil films world over for a period of time now.
Those aspiring to take advantage of this glorious opportunity to bring out the film-maker in them on to the world platform, candidates are requested to get their Feature/Full length film, Short Film, Music Videos, Animation and Documentary registered attamilfilmfestival@gmail.com

Amitabh Bachchan justifies title of R Balki’s ‘Shamitabh’

London: Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bachchan dismissed suggestion that his name has been incorporated in his upcoming movie ‘Shamitabh’ for creating some kind of sensation and described the film as a “never before seen” plot.
 
Amitabh Bachchan, who is in London to promote the film along with co-stars Dhanush and Akshara Haasan, said, “A lot of people have been intrigued by the title and feel that my name has been incorporated for some kind of sensation. That is quite untrue.”
 
“The title actually comes out of the script of the film. It’s a story of two individuals who have different exceptional qualities and what happens when they come together. I give my voice to the character of Dhanush…an aspect of the film which was a first for me,” explained Big B. The actor described the film as a “never before seen” plot. Writer-director R Balki’s ‘Shamitabh will hit the screens around the world on February 6.
 
“Balki has a very intellectual, sensitive mind. He thinks differently and has always made stories that have not been the regular escapist fare that you see in Hindi cinema. And I can say with certain amount of confidence that this is a plot that has never been seen before at least in Indian cinema, even may be true for cinema worldwide. “It’s been a great joy to be able to live with his thought process,” said the 72-year-old actor, who has worked with Balki on two previous critically-acclaimed films – ‘Cheeni Kum’ and ‘Paa’. ‘Shamitabh’, which revolves around a film crazy village boy’s rise to cinematic fame, has been described as an ode to Bachchan‘s distinctive and deep baritone voice.
 
As part of the UK promotions for the film, the superstar will also be interacting with his social media fans directly at a special podcast event planned at the Apple store on Regent Street in central London tomorrow. The recording as part of Apple’s ‘Meet the Filmmaker’ series, will be made available to more than 800 million iTunes users around the world for free, the largest ever for an Indian film. 

Dera chief’s film to be released on February 13

Though the Central Board of Film Certification has still not issued a certificate for screening MSG: Messenger of God , Dera Sacha Sauda head Gurmeet Ram Rahim has, in a tweet, claimed that his film would now be finally released on February 13.

Though the controversial film was cleared by the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal (FCAT) and was scheduled for a January 16 release, it was deferred in the wake of protests by the Akalis and the Indian National Lok Dal, among others.

Dera spokesperson Aditya Insaan told The Hindu that while it was for the CBFC to explain the delay in issuing screening certificate despite a superior body, the FCAT, having cleared it, it had learnt through an oral communication that the certificate would be issued soon.

Dr. Insaan said it was also learnt that the tribunal order had reached the Board. He said the distributors were making arrangements for a worldwide release on February 13 when the film would hit the screens in five languages.

Film Review: ‘Dreamcatcher’


A real-world heroine comes to light in Kim Longinotto's intensely moving study of Chicago prostitutes going straight.

There are certain documentaries that thrive on a real-world version of movie-star magnetism, and in volunteer social worker Brenda Myers-Powell, “Dreamcatcher” has found itself something of a supernova. A former prostitute doling out tough love, escape plans and copious condoms to the unsupported sex workers of Chicago, Myers-Powell has a fierce wit and forthright intelligence that brightens even the darkest moments of Kim Longinotto’s intensely moving doc — which is not to say the film soft-sells its bruised, angry observations on institutionalized discrimination and cyclical abuse. Conventionally constructed but remarkable for the honest, intimate rapport it achieves with highly vulnerable human subjects, “Dreamcatcher” should play well on multiple platforms: Shortly before its Sundance premiere, the pic locked down a U.S. deal with Showtime Networks.
Over nearly 40 years, the British-based Longinotto has carved herself a niche — one in which she still has regrettably few peers — as an impassioned documenter of female disenfranchisement in a wide range of social and national contexts, but with its North American focus and hard-won spiritual uplift, “Dreamcatcher” should wind up her most broadly exposed work to date. Auds who responded to Lee Daniels’s Oscar-winning self-realization drama “Precious,” for example, should be encouraged to investigate Longinotto’s latest; the films may be situated on opposite sides of the narrative-documentary divide, but they share a comparable emotional tenor and feminist purview.
Longinotto’s most successful work has previously centered on the plight of women in developing nations — coastal South Africa in “Rough Aunties” and the Iranian judicial system in “Divorce Iranian Style,” among others — so the focus on First World social decay marks “Dreamcatcher” as a departure of sorts for her. Longinotto’s gaze is no less keen in this environment: With the director serving, as usual, as her own d.p., her camera picks up a brisk, nervous energy on the scarred streets of Chicago’s West Side that has rarely been so vividly depicted in other screen representations of the Windy City. Glistening aerial shots of the city’s CBD at the outset, meanwhile, serve to remind viewers just how far disadvantaged demographics have fallen from the city’s center, both geographically and in terms of administrative attention.
With the authorities making little progressive effort to aid the city’s prostitute population beyond placing a number of them behind bars, Myers-Powell — a survivor of drug addiction, grisly physical abuse and a 25-year streetwalking career — has taken it upon herself to establish the nonprofit Dreamcatcher Foundation with fellow ex-addict Stephanie Daniels-Wilson. Together, they offer both rehabilitative and preventative counseling to women and girls who are either on the streets, in prison or being driven in that direction by desperate circumstances. While caring for her adopted son and maintaining a day job that is never specified, our feisty, fabulously bewigged heroine (hardly too glib a word in this context) spends her evenings cruising the streets to seek and aid women in need; Longinotto joins her on these chilly night patrols, unobtrusively recording Myers-Powell’s warm, patient powers of persuasion and the brutal hard-luck testimonies of those willing to share them.
With Myers-Powell as our charismatic conduit to this under-heard band of society, then, the film gradually builds a rich patchwork of individual stories from the fringe, unrestricted by age, race or even gender. Interview subjects range from Temeka, a homeless 15-year-old attempting to go straight after three years on the beat, to Marie, an older prostitute finally persuaded to accept Dreamcatcher’s support after falling pregnant a second time, to Myers-Powell’s own sister-in-law Melody, a fractiously married addict who describes herself as “unready” for the help so readily at hand. Myers-Powell’s nonjudgmental charity extends even to her reformed pimp Homer, a former oppressor who now contributes to (and, in turn, benefits from) the Foundation’s educational workshops.
As these contrasting individuals unpack their backstories, however, a common history of childhood sexual molestation emerges. Often delivered with the stoic calm that comes with a lifetime of unopposed violation, their wrenchingly frank accounts make “Dreamcatcher” suitably hard viewing, and far from a fuzzily inspirational self-help exercise. Yet Myers-Powell’s empathic, charismatic presence — whether listening to her charges with solemn intent, or jovially leading a classroom singalong of Mary J. Blige’s empowerment anthem “Just Fine” — proves as consistent a comfort to the audience as it is to those under her wing.
Rightly confident in the potency of her raw material, Longinotto feels little compulsion to trick her film out with fussy or manipulative formal devices. Content is king here, which isn’t to dismiss the penetrating clarity of the helmer’s shooting style or the deft contribution of editor Ollie Huddleston, who knows exactly how long to linger on an interviewee’s face and surroundings — absorbing the finer nuances of their story even after they’ve said their piece.

Film Review: 'Dreamcatcher'

Reviewed at Rotterdam Film Festival (Signals: What the F?!), Jan. 25, 2014. (Also in Sundance Film Festival — World Cinema, competing.) Running time: 101 MIN.

Production

(U.K.) A Dogwoof (in U.K.) release of a Rise Films, Green Acres Films, Vixen Films production in association with Impact Partners, Artemis Rising Foundation, Chicken & Egg Pictures, VPro. (International sales: Dogwoof, London.) Produced by Lisa Stevens, Teddy Leifer. Executive producers, Dan Cogan, Geralyn White Dreyfous, Regina K. Scully.

Crew

Directed by Kim Longinotto. Camera (color, HD), Longinotto; editor, Ollie Huddleston; music, Stuart Earl; sound, Nina Rice; associate producers, Wilfred Spears, John Stack.

With

Brenda Myers-Powell.