Showing posts with label Jacki Weaver. Show all posts

"The Grudge" (2020) Review


Reboots and sequels are a fascinating topic of discussion in the horror genre. Though the film industry has grown increasingly reliant on pre-existing films to re-adapt and create new sequels for, horror has been home to this practice for decades, with Halloween and Friday the 13th being notable examples of this practice. Though the latest Grudge film is another example of this, director Nicolas Pesce deserves full credit for putting out a respectable story that neatly balances the lore of Ju-on but still working as a stand-alone creation.

The Grudge was originally a Japanese horror film released back in 2002. Though initial reports had claimed that this latest installment would be a reboot, the story serves as more of a sidequel, as the events of this film take place after the first films in the original Japanese and American films but also concurrently with later films in the series. If you ascribe to the notion that big horror franchises are defined by their villains instead of their heroes, I can share that Kayako has a small sort-of cameo in the film.

The trailer under-sells the look of the film, which is unfortunate since more people might have been inclined to show up if the trailer had showcased the aesthetic more. The colour design is beautifully put together, with a general tendency to desaturate the hues and up the yellow tones. Colour is emotion and the editors have made intelligent choices to create the right look for this story.

There are also great choices made in the way The Grudge was filmed. There are many shots of the main characters from behind, which is a really effective way of building tension and unsettling the audience because there's an implication that they're being watched by this vengeful entity. There's also an excellent use of dolly zooms which are a great source of dramatic flair.

About mid-way through The Grudge film, things began to click in regards to how this film falls in with the deeper themes of the series since it's inception. To better understand how this revelation came about, we must look closely at a particular scene. After the lead character, Detective Muldoon, visits the haunted house while investigating a series of deaths among those that have come into contact with it she heads back to the police station to regroup. After coming out of the bathroom she makes her way into the evidence storage area.

When she sense that something is behind her, watching her, she turns around catches a glimpse of one of the victims whose death she is investigating. Naturally, this freaks her out. Being that she's at a police station where there are surveillance cameras, she goes to where the surveillance monitors are, rewinds the feed of the camera that shows the outside of the bathroom door and where you walk into the evidence storage area and she sees herself leaving the bathroom door and where you walk into the evidence storage area. On the surveillance footage, she sees herself leaving the bathroom door and shortly after that the victim she thought she saw comes out of the bathroom after her. She has another encounter with it but it disappears when one of her co-workers shows up to where she is being haunted in the station.

She attempts to explain what has just happened and brings him back to look at the surveillance feed but upon playing the footage back the murder victim is nowhere to be seen. This is when it became clear that the curse was gas lighting her, and gas lighting is a common tactic in abusers.

In the original Grudge film, the most commonly seem forms the curse takes on are Kayako and her son Toshio, with the odd appearance as the family cat. All three of them were murdered by Kayako's husband Takeo. The concept stems from traditional Japanese horror stories, in that these ghosts are vengeful spirits that were wronged in life and consequently wreak havoc on the living. This vengeance curse as it exists in The Grudge series is a symbol for the violence that people inflict on one another not solely on a grand scale with things like war, but in a more devastatingly intimate way like domestic violence.

Kayako is the victim of a violent, abusive, murderous husband. She loses her life as does her only son, as the original Japanese film paints a brutal portrait of the man who commits these acts. Hurt people hurt people, and that's exactly what happens with the Grudge curse albeit in a more exaggerated depiction since this is a horror film involving ghosts and curses. This is the most simple way of boiling down what the film is really about. It's not rational for a victim of abuse to go on a killing rampage but trauma isn't rational, and that's where the horror comes from.

This new Grudge film does largely exist as a scary story but there are little details sprinkled in that connect it to the deeper themes and layers of the original Grudge film. There is a lot of terror in The Grudge that comes from this idea that the pain people inflict on one another can very quickly spread to more victims.

For a more detailed review, including a preferable alternative to the ending, watch here:

STARZ Releases First Look Live Action Teaser Of Original Series “BLUNT TALK”


Patrick Stewart Stars in Half-Hour Scripted Comedy from MRC,
 Executive Producers Seth MacFarlane and Jonathan Ames
Beverly Hills, Calif., March 27, 2015 – The STARZ Original series “Blunt Talk” released a first look teaser of  the 10-episode first season of the half-hour scripted comedy series from MRC and executive produced by Seth MacFarlane, Jonathan Ames (creator and showrunner), Stephanie Davis and Tristram Shapeero.  The teaser will premiere on-air during the “Black Sails” finale on Saturday, March 28 at 9 PM ET/PT.
Set in Los Angeles, the story follows Walter Blunt, a British import intent on conquering the world of American cable news and the fallout from his well-intentioned, but mostly misguided decision-making, both on and off the air. The series will premiere on STARZ in the summer of 2015.
Through the platform of his nightly cable news show, Blunt is on a mission to impart his wisdom and guidance on how Americans should live, think and behave.  Besieged by network bosses, a dysfunctional news staff, numerous ex-wives and children of all ages, Blunt’s only support is the alcoholic manservant he transplanted from the U.K. to join him in Los Angeles.  The series is greenlit for a two-season, 20-episode commitment.
The cast is led by Patrick Stewart (X-Men franchise, Ted) in the role of Walter Blunt, Jacki Weaver (Silver Linings Playbook) as Rosalie, Blunt’s tough and motherly producer-manager and Adrian Scarborough (The King’s Speech) as Harry, Blunt’s manservant. Dolly Wells (“Doll & Em”) who was cast as Celia, Blunt’s senior producer and head writer, with Timm Sharp (“Enlightened”) who was cast as Jim, Blunt’s head writer, round out the cast.
MacFarlane and Fuzzy Door Productions, Inc. serve as executive producers.  Ames, who created the series, will also serve as executive producer, showrunner as well as a writer on the project.  Tristram Shapeero (“Community”) and Stephanie Davis (“Bored to Death”) will also serve as executive producers with Shapeero also serving as director. Stewart will also serve as producer on the series.
MRC, the studio behind MacFarlane’s directorial debut Ted, which is the highest grossing original comedy of all time worldwide, the highly anticipated sequel, Ted 2, and the award-winning series “House of Cards,” is best known as one of the most artist-friendly independent studios. 

For more information follow @BluntTalk_Starz on Twitter. Join the conversation with #BluntTalk and #STARZ.
About MRC
MRC is a leading film and television studio, specializing in the creation of content in partnership with the industry’s foremost creative talent.  The company develops, produces and finances film and TV for leading distributors including Sony, Warner Brothers, Universal and Fox, as well as premier networks including HBO, ABC, Netflix, AMC, Lifetime and Comedy Central. 

MRC is the studio behind the Emmy® and Golden Globe® winning series, House of Cards, distributed by Netflix and various international distributors.  The company also developed, produced and financed Ted, distributed by Universal Pictures, the highest grossing original comedy of all time.  For more information, please visit www.mrcstudios.com.

About Starz
Starz (NASDAQ: STRZA, STRZB) is a leading integrated global media and entertainment company with operating units that provide premium subscription video programming on domestic U.S. pay television channels (Starz Networks), global content distribution (Starz Distribution) and animated television and movie production (Starz Animation), www.starz.com.

Starz Networks is a leading provider of premium subscription video programming through the flagship STARZ® and ENCORE® pay TV networks which showcase premium original programming and movies to U.S. multichannel video distributors, including cable operators, satellite television providers, and telecommunications companies.  As of December 31, 2014, STARZ and ENCORE serve a combined 57.3 million subscribers, including 23.3 million at STARZ, and 34.0 million at ENCORE, making them the largest pair of premium flagship channels in the U.S.  STARZ® and ENCORE®, along with Starz Networks’ third network MOVIEPLEX®, air more than 1,000 movies monthly across 17 linear networks, complemented by On Demand and authenticated online offerings through STARZ PLAY, ENCORE PLAY, and MOVIEPLEX PLAY. Starz Distribution develops, produces and acquires entertainment content, distributing it to consumers globally on DVD, digital formats and traditional television.  Starz Distribution’s home video, digital media and worldwide distribution business units distribute original programming content produced by Starz, as well as entertainment content for itself and third parties.  Starz Animation produces animated TV and movie content for studios, networks, distributors and audiences worldwide.

MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT arrives on Digital HD 12/2 and on Blu-ray & DVD 12/16


It’s remarkable that Emma Stone is entrancing and so is the movie as a whole. Filled with flavorsome performances. The film’s most powerful magic lies in its unquenchable playfulness. Think of it as a 97-minute séance that leaves you giddy with delight.”
-- Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal
MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT

Starring Eileen Atkins, Colin Firth, Marcia Gay Harden,
Hamish Linklater, Simon McBurney, Emma Stone and Jacki Weaver


Available Dec. 2 on Digital HD, and on Blu-ray and DVD Dec. 16

CULVER CITY, Calif. (Sept. 29, 2014) – Love is written in the stars, and the events are indeed magical in Sony Pictures Classics’ romantic comedy MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT, available Dec. 2 on Digital HD, and on Blu-ray and DVDDec. 16 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.  Written and directed by Woody Allen, MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHTis set in the 1920s against the beautiful and opulent Cote d’Azur in the south of France, starring Colin Firth as an Englishman and master magician who helps expose a swindler, played by Emma Stone.

Rolling Stone’s Peter Travers called the film "The summer’s most beguiling romantic comedy. Colin Firth and Emma Stone make a magnetic pair of opposites. Emma Stone lights up the screen. Colin Firth is wonderfully appealing. The actors are a pleasure to be around." Additionally, The New York Observer’s Rex Reed considered it “A master stroke of enchantment from one of the few legitimate cinematic geniuses of the modern cinema.” The strong ensemble cast also includes Eileen Atkins, Marcia Gay Harden, Hamish Linklater, Simon McBurney and Jacki Weaver.

Bonus materials for MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT include two all-new featurettes. “Behind the Magic” offers fans a peek inside the film’s production, while “On the Red Carpet: Los Angeles Film Premiere” features interviews with the film’s stars upon arrival at the Los Angeles premiere.

SYNOPSIS
Acclaimed magician Stanley Crawford (Colin Firth), has dazzled audiences across Europe with feats of supernatural amazement. But when it comes to explaining the inexplicable, Stanley is a dedicated skeptic. Enter Sophie Baker (Emma Stone), psychic, soothsayer, and stunning seductress. As Stanley and Sophie embark on misadventures up and down the French Riviera, will they discover proof of a world beyond the laws of physics or have they fallen under the sway of a more earthly chemistry? Woody Allen pulls the strings with masterful precision in this enchanting romantic comedy that explores the realm between what is understood in our minds and what is known in our hearts.

Blu-ray & DVD Special Features Include:           
·       Behind the Magic
·       On the Red Carpet: Los Angeles Film Premiere
MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT has a runtime of approximately 98 minutes and is rated PG-13 for brief suggestive comments and smoking throughout.
Visit Sony Home Entertainment on the Web at www.SonyPictures.com.

“Academy Award®” is the registered trademark and service mark of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (SPHE) is a Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) company.  Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) is a subsidiary of Sony Entertainment Inc., a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Sony Corporation. SPE’s global operations encompass motion picture production, acquisition and distribution; television production, acquisition and distribution; television networks; digital content creation and distribution; operation of studio facilities; and development of new entertainment products, services and technologies. For additional information, go tohttp://www.sonypictures.com.

STOKER Watch a New Film Clip

Watch this new film clip from STOKER:

STOKER will premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on Sunday, January 20, 2013, and open in theaters March 1, 2013.

Synopsis: After India's (Wasikowska's) father dies in an auto accident, her Uncle Charlie (Goode), who she never knew existed, comes to live with her and her emotionally unstable mother Evelyn (Kidman). Soon after his arrival, she comes to suspect this mysterious, charming man has ulterior motives, but instead of feeling outrage or horror, this friendless girl becomes increasingly infatuated with him.
Rated: R | Running Time: 100 min
Directed by Park Chan-wook
Starring Mia Wasikowska, Matthew Goode, Dermot Mulroney, Jacki Weaver and Nicole Kidman 
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