Exquisitely Subtle Movie Images in Cinemagraphs

Posted on January 10, 2015 at 2:03 pm

Take a look at these gorgeous cinemagraphs by Tech Noir (Floris Kloet). Just watch for a moment and see how he uses the most subtle movement to create a mood. Beautifully done, and illuminating about the way we are touched by those flickering images. Thanks to my friend and fellow critic Eddie Pasa for sharing this.

And here are some more.

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LAIKA Auction: Items from Coraline, ParaNorman, and Boxtrolls

Posted on January 10, 2015 at 8:00 am

Copyright 2014 LAIKA
Copyright 2014 LAIKA

LAIKA Studios is making some of the items from its brilliant stop-motion films “Coraline,” “ParaNorman,” and “Boxtrolls” available for sale for the first time through the Heritage auction house. They include:

● From Coraline
* Coraline production puppet in her iconic blue-starred sweater
* The Cat production puppet
* Other Mother production puppet in her elaborately realized black dress

● From ParaNorman
* Norman production puppet in his baseball shirt outfit
* Zombie Judge production puppet with fully articulated mouth and face
* Intricate large-scale production props such as Mitch’s Van and “Zombie Attack” vending machine
* Original hand-drawn Annie Award-winning character designs

● From The Boxtrolls
* Eggs and Boxtrolls production puppets complete with their “Box” outfits
* Snatcher production puppet in his exquisite hand and laser-etched velvet jacket
* Snatcher’s Mecha-Drill, at over five feet, the largest prop ever created for a stop-motion film

The objects will be on display in Dallas, Jan. 27-29, at Heritage Auctions (3500 Maple Avenue, Dallas, TX, 75219); Feb. 3-5 at Heritage Auctions Park Avenue (445 Park Avenue at 57th Street); and Feb. 9-12, Heritage Auctions Beverly Hills (9478 West Olympic Avenue). I have had the great pleasure of visiting LAIKA in their Portland studio and every single item is an exquisitely crafted work of art. I wish I could bid on everything!

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The Computer Games You Played in the 80’s and 90’s Are Online!

Posted on January 9, 2015 at 3:59 pm

When I was watching one of this year’s most-admired films, “Boyhood,” there was an appreciative laugh through the audience when we got a glimpse of the computer game “Oregon Trail.”  The movie was filmed over a 12-year period, and so the “period” details were especially authentic and telling.  “Oregon Trail” is one of dozens of old-school computer/video games now available to play online for free.  Remember “King’s Quest?” “Leisure Suit Larry?” “Zelda Classic?” “SimAnt?” “Digger?” “Conquest of the Longbow?”  They’re back!

 

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Tribute: Rod Taylor

Posted on January 9, 2015 at 9:02 am

Copyright 1960 Rod Taylor
Copyright 1960 Rod Taylor

Today we mourn the loss of the Australian actor Rod Taylor, star of classic films including The Time Machine and Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds.  He was an affable leading man with the confident physicality of an athlete, comfortable in light comedy, drama, and military settings.

In an interview with TV Guide, Taylor described his early years:

My first big fight was with my mother when I was a kid back in Sydney. She was a writer and wanted me to be an artist. My father began as a rigger on a crane and finally ran his own construction crew. … Anyway, when I was a kid, I dutifully went to the Sydney Technical and Fine Arts College. Then I worked at commercial illustration for newspapers, and my mother was happy. But I did a lot of boxing and I was captain of an Australian surf club. I met a lot of actors there, and I got the bug. I gave up art and became an actor myself, in Australian radio. Mom put up quite a struggle over that — but lost.

He was hired for an American movie filming in Australia, “Long John Silver,” and decided to give Hollywood a try. He told TV Guide:

I did well as an actor in Australia, and then Paramount invited me over … to have a look at me. Hal Wallis took that look, and maybe he was expecting Gregory Peck or something, because he said, “Who is this bum with the broken nose?” … So I told him to stuff it and lived on the beach for a while, catching fish for my food.

After small parts in some films, including “Giant” and “Separate Tables,” and an appearance on “The Twilight Zone” as an astronaut, he had his first movie lead role in the George Pal version of the H.G. Wells classic about time travel, The Time Machine.

After “The Birds,” he appeared in frothy romantic comedies like “Sunday in New York” (with Jane Fonda) and “Do Not Disturb” (with Doris Day).

He was the voice of Pongo, the daddy dog, in “101 Dalmatians.”

He also appeared in one of my favorite guilty pleasure films, the soapy stuck-in-an-airport saga The VIPs, with Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and Orson Welles. Taylor plays an executive who will lose his business if he cannot get to a crucial meeting, when his flight is cancelled. His devoted secretary is played by Maggie Smith, who also co-starred with him in “Young Cassidy.”

Copyright MBM 1968
Copyright MBM 1968

He continued to work on television and in film, including Quentin Tarantino’s WWII epic, Inglourious Basterds.

May his memory be a blessing.

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