Saturday, 30 August 2008

Theron attends `Burning Plain' debut in Venice

VENICE, Italy �

Guillermo Arriaga's directorial debut, "The Burning Plain," opens with a wide shot of a lagger ablaze in the New Mexico desert. While the landscape appears barren and exposed, it is concealment secrets that drive the story.


"The Burning Plain," scripted and directed by the "21 Grams" and "Babel" screenwriter, stars Charlize Theron as a troubled Oregon restaurant manager who is forced to confront her past when a deep visitor arrives from Mexico. Kim Basinger appears in flashbacks as Sylvia's mother, Gina, at a polar moment in her whitney Young life.


The film, which debuts at the Venice Film Festival on Friday, is one of 21 movies competing for the Golden Lion, which will be awarded Sept. 6. Directed by Mexico-born Arriaga, it is one of five U.S. pictures in competition.


Landscape is primal to the movie - which Arriaga initially had titled, "The Four Elements." Water, earth, wind and fire ar present as the tale moves back and off from the searing dryness of New Mexico to the round-the-clock rain in Portland, Ore.


"I have invariably been driven to the desert. I think the landscape itself influences people in a certain way," Arriaga told a news show conference. "We experienced the desert and the sun and the extreme cold in the desert to the nonstop rain in Oregon. I think the weather and the landscape also influences the character."


Cinematographer Robert Elswit, who south Korean won an Oscar for "There Will Be Blood," was lauded by Arriaga for stunning shots of the New Mexico desert and Oregon coastline.


The movie is told through four convergence plot lines, and cuts back and forth through time to reveal Sylvia's story.


"This is the geographic expedition of the mystery of a fair sex called Sylvia who has an emotional journey that takes her to the extremes. It explores what makes her so damaged," Arriaga said.


No stranger to flawed characters, Theron aforesaid she loved the part of Sylvia.


"You should ask people that question. Why are people so blemished? Because that's who we are," Theron said. "Why is it when you watch a film and something happens that moves you - it either moves you to tears or gives a chill down your spine - it's because we derriere see ourselves in that moment."


Theron, wHO also worked as a producer on the film, said on that point was a list of actresses to play the role of Gina, simply they were thrilled to get Basinger.


"She's amazing," Theron said. "There is something about Kim. There's a strength with her leftover vulnerability from her 20s that's scarce unbelievably beautiful to watch. There ar moments on the cover when she's shaking, her entire body is shakiness for real. You couldn't act that."










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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Mp3 music: Scolohofo






Scolohofo
   

Artist: Scolohofo: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Jazz

   







Scolohofo's discography:


OH!
   

 OH!

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 11






Taking its list from letters in the bandmembers' names, nothingness supergroup Scolohofo features the combined talents of guitarist John Scofield, saxophonist Joe Lovano, bassist Dave Holland, and drummer Al Foster. While the group technically formed in 1999 during Lovano's seven-day engagement at the Montreal Jazz Festival, the members receive a much thirster association with each other. Significantly, Foster performed with Scofield import they were both in trumpeter/jazz legend Miles Davis' band during the early '80s. Similarly, Lovano and Scofield's association goes back as far as the '70s when they were both surgical in Boston. Scolohofo toured first in 1999 and then in 2002 in the lead up to the recording of its starting time studio record album, Oh!, released on Blue Note in 2003.






Sunday, 10 August 2008

Scenic Railroads

Scenic Railroads   
Artist: Scenic Railroads

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


We're Serious   
 We're Serious

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 5




 





Exclusive: Spears' Mom Contacted Dr. Phil

Wednesday, 2 July 2008

Jennifer Aniston - Aniston Mayers Secret Relationship

JENNIFER ANISTON and JOHN MAYER have been dating in secret for three months, according to U.S. reports.

Aniston sparked rumours she was romantically involved with the singer last month (Apr08), when the pair was seen enjoying a string of romantic weekends together in Florida.

The couple has since been photographed kissing and holding hands, ending speculation they are just friends.

But now New York Post gossip column Pagesix is reporting that the pair has been dating for much long than previously thought - claiming Aniston started dating Mayer three months ago but managed to keep the relationship a secret until last month (Apr08).

A source tells the publication, "They'd been keeping it under wraps and hiding out together on their dates.

"Then Jen realised it wasn't just a fling and decided to take it public."




See Also

Monday, 23 June 2008

Persepolis - 6/24/2008

What does one do, or even say, about a film that is, by any measurement that matters, perfect? When considering Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud's finely etched animated adaptation of Satrapi's two-part autobiographical graphic novel about growing up in Tehran during the revolution and the Iran-Iraq War, the problem (if one could call it that) becomes particularly acute. By compressing into this film the myriad of themes that it handles, from religious oppression to teenage rebellion to cultural dissonance and war, the filmmakers could have easily encumbered it with a weight that would have outweighed its many sharp delights. But by some strange and fortunate circumstance born out of vision, patience, luck, and sheer unmitigated talent, they have managed to incorporate each of those weighty topics into a work of art that's light as a feather, in the manner of the true masterpiece.



In adapting Satrapi's book for the screen, the filmmakers could easily have gone the route that Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller did with Miller's Sin City, after all, her emotive but simple black drawings would be many times easier to represent in film than, say, the luridly complex and many-colored works of many other graphic artists. But instead of simply replicating what was on the printed page, Satrapi and Paronnaud went to a much more expressive place, choosing instead to keep the spirit and basic look of those dark, simple pages of art, and just add a natural fluidity to it. The frame doesn't move much, leaving one with the impression of looking through a window into another world, where the characters practically float like dancers amid the layered fields of beautifully grey-shaded art, and the mood is grim and poetic. There is little background music or noise except when necessary, eschewing the clouding clutter of a Disney production, with the bright and clear vocals of an early Peanuts film -- and all the heartache-inducing simple truths which that implies.



After a dour scene at an airport, and a beautiful credit sequence that scans like an interpretation of some lushly extravagant Sufi writing, Persepolis lands in Iran, where the young Marjane (voiced by Chiara Mastroianni) plays evil games on unsuspecting kids and practices her karate. The land is in the midst of democratic and religious foment under the repressive rule of the Shah, soon to erupt in "this merry chaos" that follows his ouster by the Ayatollah-led uprising. The initial promise of the revolution starts to sour, and the religious police start to scour the streets of Tehran for those who violate their narrow view of modesty and acceptable Persian culture; one particularly Orwellian person says that the veil that Marjane is forced to wear "stands for freedom." Marjane hones her rebellious streak, wearing a shirt that reads "Punk is not ded" and rocking out to Iron Maiden cassettes bought from shifty-looking men selling black market Western music from underneath their trenchcoats ("Pink Floyd," "Jackson Michael").



Having drawn the chilling veil of a Taliban-like theocratic state around Marjane's family, the filmmakers deepen the shadows with their nightmarish rendering of the senseless slaughter of the Iran-Iraq War, adding to the sense of nationalistic religious fervor gripping the fearful city. Between the bombs falling on Tehran and the worries of Marjane's parents that her rebellious attitude will land her in trouble, and so ship her off to school in Vienna. For Marjane, this ends up not so much as freedom but instead as the spark that sets off years of explorative indecisionand agonizing over her true place in the world, driven between her Persian identity and longing for a pre-Ayatollah freedom that she can now only seem to find in the lonely West. Back home, her grandmother (voiced with saucy hauteur by Danielle Darrieux) sets an example of how to be an Iranian woman who doesn't suffer fools lightly, reminding her, for instance, that "the first marriage is practice for the second."



Nicely avoiding the melodrama that would be almost inescapable were any of the above rendered in live action, Persepolis keeps a wicked gleam in its protagonist's wryly-cocked face all throughout, reminding us that there will be no sob story, though tears are likely to fall. This is a cold tale of geopolitical realties told in a French-inflected fairytale spirit. This is a lament for lost glories, for the wonders of a proud civilization being ground into the dirt by power-mad fanatics. This is also a film that feels the need to remind us that "Abba is for wimps." Perfect.



Update: An English-language version is being released this week.





See Also

Monday, 16 June 2008

Sex And The City - Nixon Protests Against New York School Cuts

SEX AND THE CITY star CYNTHIA NIXON has loaned her star power to aid a campaign against New York City education administrators' plans to slash school budgets.

On Monday (02Jun08), Nixon - who plays lawyer Miranda Hobbes in the TV hit-turned-blockbuster-film - led a rally of hundreds of educators and parents opposed to monetary cuts at Manhattan's Stuyvesant High School, reports the New York Daily News.

Addressing the protesters, Nixon slammed New York schools Chancellor Joel Klein for claiming the state's education system has forced him to make severe cuts at schools like Stuyvesant, while sparing other struggling schools.

Nixon said: "I'm here today not only with parents from my children's schools on the upper West Side, but with parents from high-needs schools and high-performing schools all across the city.

"I think it's outrageous and we want to make as much noise as we can."

Nixon has two children: Samantha, 11, and Charles Ezekiel, five.




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Sunday, 1 June 2008

Blur's Alex James and Goldie for classical music reality TV show

Former Blur bassist Alex James and drum'n'bass star Goldie are among the competitors in a new reality TV show, the winner of which will get to conduct the BBC Concert Orchestra.

As well as the aforementioned duo, actors David Soul and Jane Asher, plus newsreader Katie Derham and comedians Bradley Walsh and Sue Perkins, will star in 'Maestro', which will air on BBC2 in August.

The competitors will undergo training as conductors, then will be judged by a panel of judges and orchestra members on how they perform when conducting.

The winner will get to conduct the BBC Concert Orchestra at the BBC Proms In The Park on September 13, reports BBC News.