August 2016 — What’s Opening This Month

Posted on August 1, 2016 at 8:00 am

August is usually when the summer movie season slows down, but this month we have some movies that are sure to win at the box office and even a couple that might turn up on some end of the year best lists.

August 5

“Suicide Squad” — think “The Avengers” crossed with “The Dirty Dozen.” This “bad guys have to be the good guys” movie from DC Comics stars Will Smith, Cara Delevingne, Jared Leto (as The Joker), and, as Harley Quinn, “Wolf of Wall Street’s” Margot Robbie, my pick for the break-out performance of the summer.

“Don’t Think Twice” Mike Birbiglia wrote, directed, and stars in one of the best movies of the year, the story of an improv troupe, and what happens to the team when one of them gets offered a job on television.

August 12

“Sausage Party” A very R-rated animated story about food in the grocery store that finds out the release of being purchased is not the happy ending they had thought.

“Peter’s Dragon” Robert Redford and Bryce Dallas Howard star in the remake of the Disney fantasy about a boy and his dragon.

“Florence Foster Jenkins” It takes a great actress to play a terrible singer.  Fortunately, we have Meryl Streep, who plays the real-life wealthy woman who loved to sing opera and Hugh Grant as the husband who protected her from finding out that she was awful at it.

“Hell or High Water” Two brothers, one an ex-con (Ben Foster), one who has never broken the law (Chris Pine), rob some banks in Texas.  Two Texas Rangers (Jeff Bridges and Gil Birmingham) go after them in this exceptionally smart, thoughtful crime story.

August 19

“Ben Hur” Jack Huston and Morgan Freeman star in this classic story of the Jewish prince who becomes a slave and wins a chariot race in the time of Jesus.

“Kubo and the Two Strings” An enchantingly beautiful stop-motion animation fantasy set in ancient Japan is a story in some ways about stories and how the stories we tell ourselves and those around us can transform our lives.  Voices include Rooney Mara, Charlize Theron, Ralph Fiennes, and Matthew McConaughey.  I’ve seen it.  The ending had me in tears — and then took my breath away.

“War Dogs” Miles Teller and Jonah Hill star in this fact-based black comedy about two guys in their 20’s with no experience who won a $300 million contract to supply weapons to the Pentagon.  It did not go well.

August 26

“Southside With You”  Barack Obama was working at a Chicago law firm the summer after his first year of law school.  Michelle Robinson was his supervisor.  This is the story of their first date.  Even if their names were Smith and Jones it would be one of the most romantic movies of the year; knowing what was ahead of them makes it even more meaningful.

 

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Opening This Month

List: Movies to Lift Your Spirit from Rogerebert.com

Posted on July 31, 2016 at 2:03 pm

I was honored to be asked to participate in this critics’ discussion of movies that may not be our favorites or the best but that always cheer us up.

Here’s what I wrote:

I have a bunch. I call them “flu movies,” and they are the only ones I will buy, to have on hand any time they are needed. Many are musicals, like “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” “The Music Man,” and “Bells are Ringing.” In a moment of very dire professional circumstances, I admit it, I watched “High School Musical.” Three times in a row.

Some are funny, like “Galaxy Quest” and “Happy Texas.” Some are romantic like “Nick and Nora’s Infinite Playlist,” and some are empowering like “Stick It.” Some I know by heart, like “The Philadelphia Story” and “His Girl Friday” and “I Love You Again.”
My view is that movies fall along two axes. The horizontal is bad to good. But the vertical is what I call “watchability.” Some movies aren’t especially good, but they effortlessly evoke a kind of pleasant dramatic justice that makes them cinematic mood-elevators. Ain’t nothing wrong with that.

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Features & Top 10s

Legion M Lets You (Partly) Own a Movie Studio

Posted on July 30, 2016 at 6:44 pm

Have you ever wanted to own a movie studio? Think you could make better greenlight decisions than the current production executives? This is your chance. An investment opportunity previously limited to the wealthy is now open to regular, ordinary people thanks to the new JOBS Act (Jumpstart Our Business Startups), signed by President Obama. Protections put in place after the stock market crash of 1929 have been eased to allow people who are not rich to invest in startups. (Remember, though, that those protections are in place because these are risky investments, so read the materials very carefully and speak to your financial advisor.)

At Comic-Con, I spoke with Paul Scanlan and Jeff Annison, co-founders of Legion M, a new movie studio that is sort of halfway between Kickstarter (where people do not invest but essentially contribute or pre-purchase) and a traditional stock-or-bond type of investment (where you risk only what you put in but the return has no limit). Legion M has partnered with people like including Seth Green’s Stoopid Buddy Stoodios, 42 Entertainment, Meltdown Comics and Alamo Drafthouse to create TV shows, films, web content, gaming, virtual reality and more, with the goal of turning the traditional Hollywood model on its head. Legion M is the fastest growing equity crowdfunded company and has more than 1,200 investors and nearly half a million in funding since launching on Wefunder in May.

Annison says, “We’re all in on the JOBS Act. It’s a revolutionary new opportunity. A lot of people look at it as a new way to fund a company, but that’s the tip of the iceberg. The real power of it is when you can have your shareholders, the owners of the company, who are also your fans, your consumer base, your audience. Content is king, but it is also a commodity. There’s more out there than anyone could consume in a hundred lifetimes. So the challenge is the marketing, the exposure, rising above the noise. If we can have a content company that is owned by a legion of fans, and if we can get them financially and emotionally invested in what we are doing, then when the projects come to market we have a built-in competitive advantage.”

“We see it as more than a company. It’s a movement,” said Scanlan. They expect to work on 10 projects at a time. “There are more ways to monetize content than in the past.” They are going to start with lower budget, independent movies but may partner on bigger projects as well. “You’ve got that emotional connection that you get from being a part of something and the financial ownership and rewards,” said Annison. They acknowledge that it’s “high risk/high reward,” but emphasize that there are still controls in place — people who are not wealthy cannot invest more than 10% of their annual salary. But Annison and Scanlan say that they prefer to have many small investors to having a few big ones. And they are very encouraged by the way their shareholders have participated with them and with each other through their Facebook page, and hope they will interact with the content creators as well. “The Legion has a voice in this whole process. Instead of paying scouts to give us feedback, we have our investors, who are even better.”

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Behind the Scenes

Trailer: Ace the Case with Susan Sarandon

Posted on July 29, 2016 at 11:59 am

10-year old Olivia and her 17-year old brother are left home alone when their Mom goes on a business trip for the weekend. Olivia sees a young woman being kidnapped on the empty New York City streets. Her brother doesn’t believe her, and neither do the cops. So Olivia starts investigating on her own, trying to persuade a cynical detective (Susan Sarandon) that she is telling the truth.

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