We’re taking bets on who’d win the fight between Ray Winstone’s Carlin and Tom Hardy’s Bronson.
“Where’s ya tool? What fuckin’ tool? This fuckin’ tool!”
We’re taking bets on who’d win the fight between Ray Winstone’s Carlin and Tom Hardy’s Bronson.
“Where’s ya tool? What fuckin’ tool? This fuckin’ tool!”
Yatterman should be big news at this year’s festival, although I suspect that bigger news for us will be that we’ve figured out El Cable’s opening times.
Click here to make your own mind up.
Can Jonathan Auf Der Heide wow with the visuals in his feature directorial debut, or will it be a case of “CorridorStyle couldn’t give a xxxx how nice it looks, we need action”. Read on for clues.
Julie Delpy rolling back the years and venturing into virgin territory with this period blood bath. Whether we’ll be going to see it in Sitges is another matter.
I can’t quite put my finger on it but there’s just something I don’t quite like about her. Will she be as good as Oh Dae Suh at wielding a hammer? We’re going to find out at Sitges. Read on to see if you will too…
Ok. It’s lazy “Blogalism” but I’m going to go ahead and post up this link anyway for no other reason than it made me smile.
Premium Hollywood’s Will Harris offers up sixteen of his favourite John Hughes quotes.
There’s writing and then there’s writing. Genius.
News of the death of an actor or director can trigger that effect where images, scenes, memories and feelings, previously stored in some unconsciously categorised recess of the mind, rush forward to flood your thoughts in an instant. It happened last year on hearing the sad news of the death of Paul Newman, and again this morning on hearing John Hughes had passed.
The film that first raced to the front of my mind was, of course, FERRIS BUELLER’S DAY OFF. The film of a generation perhaps, but I say the film of any generation. On the surface for some a popcorn flick with a glut of quotable one-liners to see you through summer, but for me it was much more and on so many different subtle levels. Evidenced by the fact that an indirect reference to it now brings so many emotions flooding back.
This is a nice piece over at The Auteurs Daily, particularly where Alison Willmore talks about the “FightClub theory”, something I’d never heard associated with Ferris.
He may have been paraphrasing but I liked Ferris’ philosophical take on things and still refer to it today….
“Life moves pretty fast. You don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”
CS
John Woo’s bad-asses carry TWO guns. Musashi is so bad-ass he carries TWO samurai swords……and he was the real deal so legend would have it. But can Mamoru Oshii bring this 16th century swashbuckler screaming into Sitges? See what we think here
I wouldn’t say that I am the biggest fan of Nick Love’s output so far. I thought The Business was good, Football Factory was ok and Outlaw was initially a great idea, but a weak story and below-par performances made this into a Grade A stinker.
This remake of the late ’80s TV film The Firm attracted me for the same reason as The Business – it looks jam packed with quality trainers and tracksuits. The original was a gritty drama that was mainly carried by the legendary Gary Oldman’s performance, I’m not sure that this one’s going to be able to say the same. If his past films are anything to go by it’s going to be lots of sex,drugs, fighting and cockney wide-boys but very little substance.
I’ll be there in the queue just to get another glimpse of people with wedge haircuts wearing Tacchini tracksuit tops and Diadora Borg Elite trainers, but I suspect the rest of it will be dissappointing.
So you scooped Best Director award at Cannes did you? Pah! This is Sitges we’re talking about here pal. Your Cannes credit cuts no mustard with us. What else have you got to show for yourself?
CS