Amazing New Movie Technologies

Posted on January 9, 2013 at 3:59 pm

It seems like something from “The Jetsons,” but according to The Creators Project, these new technologies will help us literally see and make movies in new ways very soon, including 3D without glasses, laser projection for sharper, more high-contrast images, and “4D,” with smoke and wind machines in the theater to make you feel that you are a part of what is going on in the film.  I am excited about the new smaller cameras that will give filmmakers the chance to make films in new locations and with lower budgets, less excited about apps that just encourage viewers to multi-task while watching a film.

Related Tags:

 

Behind the Scenes Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Tweet Seats in Movie Theaters?

Posted on January 9, 2013 at 8:00 am

Before the movie begins we all sit through those clever reminders to turn off our phones.  But of course people who are inconsiderate enough to use their phones in a movie theater are not going to to pay attention.  Minnesota’s famous Guthrie Theater for live performance has a new idea, “tweet seats” for those who want to use social media while they watch the film.

The seats are located in the balcony-level of the theater so that the tweeting won’t be disruptive to other audience members.

“Tweet seats” are part of a growing trend in theaters across the country. The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Palm Beach Opera in Florida and the Public Theater in New York have all experimented with designated sections for patrons who just must use their phones, The Daily Mail notes.

All of the theaters offering “tweet seats” feature live performances. The perk is meant to encourage audience interaction and to create a buzz about the production. But there is also the chance that introducing these seats legitimizes a behavior that is widely regarded as just plain rude.

The problem with tweeting, texting and other cell phone use in theaters has become so widespread, that an app has been created to offer rewards to theatergoers who switch their phones to vibrate during screenings.

Will this spread to movie theaters?  Should it?

I like the idea of apps that let viewers of television shows interact with each other and get access to additional material via apps.  But I’m with the folks at the Alamo Theater — no one should be allowed to create disruptions or distractions during performances, whether stage or film.

 

Related Tags:

 

Commentary

Happy Birthday, Elvis!

Posted on January 8, 2013 at 3:59 pm

My favorite Elvis song is “Burning Love.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDRH9uwblwg

But I love to hear him sing gospel.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U55xnKZCoIk

Celebrate his birthday with a movie like “Blue Hawaii.”

Or, even better, watch him in concert.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkE6c–mvZc
Related Tags:

 

Music

The Real Story: “Zero Dark Thirty” and the Hunt for Bin Laden

Posted on January 8, 2013 at 8:00 am

Letter from Senators Feinstein, Levin, and McCain“Zero Dark Thirty” is a leading contender for the Best Picture Oscar.  Following her Best Picture and Best Director Oscars for “The Hurt Locker,” Kathryn Bigelow began work on what she thought would be a part journalistic, part feature film version of the hunt for Osama Bin Laden.  She did not expect that during the course of developing the film with “Hurt Locker” screenwriter Mark Boal Bin Laden would be found and killed, so that the entire direction of the movie would have to be revised.

The CIA was criticized for working with Bigelow and Boal, but insists that they did not provide the filmmakers with any classified information and has published a statement correcting what it says are inaccuracies in the film.  Now that the film is out in a few cities and preparing for its wider release on January 11, politicians and commentators on all sides are criticizing its depiction of torture. Senators Dianne Feinstein, John McCain, and Carl Levin have written to the film’s distributor outlining their objections to the portrayal of torture in the movie, calling it “grossly inaccurate” to portray information gathered as a result of torture as essential to determining Bin Laden’s location: “We are fans of many of your movies and we understand the special role that movies play in our lives, but the fundamental problem is that people who see ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ will believe the events it portrays are facts.”  Writer Glenn Greenwald was so eager to complain that the movie supports the use of torture that he decided to condemn it before actually seeing it for himself.  I will be addressing some of these issues in my review, but for now I will just say that it is hard to imagine that anyone who sees the movie will think it is an endorsement of torture and that while the movie depicts waterboarding and other high-pressure tactics that have been well documented and are — as the movie makes clear — not permitted any longer, and one or more characters may endorse torture, that does not mean that the movie is pro-torture.  When Bigelow accepted her New York Film Critics Circle Best Director award, she said, “I thankfully want to say that I’m standing in a room of people who understand that depiction is not endorsement, and if it was, no artist could ever portray inhumane practices. No author could ever write about them, and no filmmaker could ever delve into the knotty subjects of our time.”

I recommend this piece by Paul Miller, describing his reaction to the film as someone who was in the military on Sept 11, 2001 and later served as a CIA analyst, and this piece about a key interview that informed the screenplay.

Watching this movie made me both sad and angry.  Not angry at Kathryn Bigelow or Columbia Pictures.  I would have been if she had made a cheap and splashy film that exploited 9/11, my friend’s death, and the bin Laden raid as blockbuster fare.  This movie, if made by Michael Bay, would have been disgusting.

But Bigelow has made a sensitive and respectful film, one that honors the people who lived its story.  I told my wife after seeing Bigelow’s previous, Oscar-winning film,The Hurt Locker (2009), that it was the most faithful depiction of soldiers’ lives in a modern combat zone I’d ever seen.  I felt honored that someone took the time to tell our story, the story of a million veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, and to tell it right.

Similarly, Zero Dark Thirty tells the stories of the countless  soldiers, sailors,  airmen, Marines, CIA officers, intelligence professionals, and special forces who have spent a decade hunting not just bin Laden, but all of al-Qaida and its murderous allies around the world.  It is the most accurate depiction of intelligence work I’ve ever seen in a movie–the painstaking detective work, the frustration, the dead-ends, the bureaucracy, the uncertainty, and the sudden life-or-death stakes.  There isn’t the slightest hint of James Bond or Jason Bourne here:  even the SEAL Team Six raid is done slowly, methodically, with more professionalism than flare….Bigelow resists the urge to sensationalize, and in so doing she elevates the material and demands that we pay attention to, and think carefully about, what we are watching….The right response to this film is not anger at the filmmakers.  It is, first, anger about 9/11, the wars, the death, and, for me, the casual ignorance among the vast majority of the population about the sacrifices borne by a tiny handful of heroes.  I was angry most of all at al-Qaida, at Osama bin Laden and his hateful jihad, at Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi for murdering my friend.  But the anger is muted by a pervading sadness:  Zero Dark Thirty is a profoundly melancholy, grim film.

The CIA is by nature, culture, and function inclined to keep secrets.  And any story-telling, even documentaries, selects some details, leaves others out, shifts emphasis, intentionally and unintentionally.  At least one commentator says that the real “Maya” is a man.  And the publicity from the film and the focus on the character played by Jessica Chastain, known only in the film as “Maya,” has led to some internal conflicts as well.  Now that story would make a great movie.

 

Related Tags:

 

Spies The Real Story

The Alliance of Women Film Journalists Awards for 2012

Posted on January 8, 2013 at 7:16 am

 

AWFJ EDA ‘BEST OF’ AWARDS:

 

Best Film:  “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Director:  Kathryn Bigelow – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Screenplay, Original:  Mark Boal – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Screenplay, Adapted:  Chris Terrio – “Argo”

 

Best Documentary:  “Searching For Sugar Man”

 

Best Animated Film:  “ParaNorman”

 

Best Actress:  Jessica Chastain – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Actress in a Supporting Role:  Anne Hathaway – “Les Miserables”

 

Best Actor:  Daniel Day Lewis – “Lincoln”

 

Best Actor in a Supporting Role:  Phillip Seymour Hoffman – “The Master”

 

Best Ensemble Cast:  “Silver Linings Playbook”

 

Best Editing:  William Goldenberg, Dylan Tichenor – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Cinematography:  Claudio Miranda – “Life of Pi”

 

Best Film Music or Score:  Dan Romer, Benh Zeitlin – “Beasts of the Southern Wild”

 

Best Non-English-Language Film:  “Amour”

 

 

EDA FEMALE FOCUS AWARDS:

These awards honor WOMEN only.

 

Best Woman Director:  Kathryn Bigelow – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Woman Screenwriter:  Lucy Alibar (and Benh Zeitlin) – “Beasts of the Southern Wild”

Kick Ass Award For Best Female Action Star:  Jennifer Lawrence – “The Hunger Games”

 

Best Animated Female:  Merida (Kelly Macdonald) – “Brave”

I always take special pleasure in voting for these awards and am delighted with the results:

Best Breakthrough Performance:  Quvenzhané Wallis – “Beasts of the Southern Wild”

 

Actress Defying Age and Ageism:  Judi Dench – “Skyfall”

AWFJ Award for Humanitarian Activism – Female Icon Award, presented to an actress for the portrayal of the most positive female role model, or for a role in which she takes personal and/or career risks to plumb the female psyche and therefore gives us courage to plumb our own, and/or for putting forth the image of a woman who is heroic, accomplished, persistent, demands her rights and/or the rights of others:

Jessica Chastain – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

This Year’s Outstanding Achievement By A Woman In The Film Industry, presented only when warranted to a female who has had a banner–making, record–breaking, industry–changing achievement during any given year:

Women Documentary Filmmakers – including Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady (“Detropia”), Lauren Greenfield (“Queen of Versailles”), Alison Klayman (“Ai Weiwei Never Sorry”) and Sarah Burns (“The Central Park Five”).

 

 

EDA SPECIAL MENTION AWARDS:

 

AWFJ Hall Of Shame:  “That’s My Boy”

 

Actress Most in Need Of A New Agent (Tie):

Katherine Heigl – “One For The Money”

Reese Witherspoon – “This Means War”

 

Movie You Wanted To Love But Just Couldn’t:  “Anna Karenina”

 

Unforgettable Moment (Tie):

Anne Hathaway,as Fantine. singing “I Dreamed A Dream” – “Les Miserables”

Jessica Chastain as Maya, saying, “I’m the mother…” – “Zero Dark Thirty”

 

Best Depiction Of Nudity, Sexuality, or Seduction:  Helen Hunt and John Hawkes – “The Sessions”

 

Sequel or Remake That Shouldn’t Have Been Made (Tie):

”Red Dawn”

“Total Recall”

 

Most Egregious Age Difference Between The Leading Man and The Love Interest:

Denzel Washington and Kelly Reilly…and Nadine Velazquez – “Flight“

Related Tags:

 

Awards
THE MOVIE MOM® is a registered trademark of Nell Minow. Use of the mark without express consent from Nell Minow constitutes trademark infringement and unfair competition in violation of federal and state laws. All material © Nell Minow 1995-2026, all rights reserved, and no use or republication is permitted without explicit permission. This site hosts Nell Minow’s Movie Mom® archive, with material that originally appeared on Yahoo! Movies, Beliefnet, and other sources. Much of her new material can be found at Rogerebert.com, Huffington Post, and WheretoWatch. Her books include The Movie Mom’s Guide to Family Movies and 101 Must-See Movie Moments, and she can be heard each week on radio stations across the country.

Website Designed by Max LaZebnik