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Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts

Rabbit Hole 2010 Hollywood English Movie Review, Stills, Poster, Wallpaper and Synopsis

Posted by admin on Sunday, December 19, 2010

Rabbit Hole
Film Name: Rabbit Hole
Directed by: John Cameron Mitchell
Produced by: Nicole Kidman
Written by: David Lindsay-Abaire
Based on: Rabbit Hole by
David Lindsay-Abaire
Starring: Nicole Kidman
Aaron Eckhart
Dianne Wiest
Music by: Anton Sanko
Cinematography: Frank G. DeMarco
Editing by: Joe Klotz
Studio: Blossom Films
Odd Lot Entertainment
Distributed by: Lionsgate (USA/Canada)
Metrodome Distribution (UK/Ireland)
Release date(s): September 13, 2010 (TIFF)
December 17, 2010 (United States)
Running time: 92 minutes
Country: United States
Language: English




Synopsis:
Adapted for the screen by David Lindsay-Abaire from his own Pulitzer Prize-winning play, director John Cameron Mitchell's Rabbit Hole stars Oscar-winner Nicole Kidman and Golden Globe-nominated Aaron Eckhart as a married couple who find their relationship on life-support following the devastating loss of their young child. The further their relationship deteriorates, the harder the grieving parent's fight to keep it alive.


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The Tourist 2010 Hollywood English Movie Review, Stills, Poster, Wallpaper and Synopsis

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The Tourist

Film Name:The Tourist
Directed by: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Produced by: Graham King, Tim Headington, Roger Birnbaum,Gary Barber,Jonathan Glickman
Screenplay by: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, Christopher McQuarrie, Julian Fellowes
Based on: Anthony Zimmer by,Jérôme Salle
Starring: Johnny Depp, Angelina Jolie, Paul Bettany, Timothy Dalton, Steven Berkoff, Rufus Sewell,Christian, De Sica
Music by: James Newton Howard
Cinematography: John Seale
Editing by: Joe Hutshing
Patricia Rommel
Studio: GK Films, Spyglass Entertainment, StudioCanal, Relativity Media
Distributed by: Columbia Pictures (US), Optimum Releasing (UK), StudioCanal (France)
Release date(s): December 10, 2010
Running time: 103 minutes
Country: United States
Language: English






Synopsis:
American tourist Frank (Johnny Depp) meets a mysterious beauty who drags him into a dangerous world of intrigue and espionage while traveling through Europe in director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's paranoid thriller. When Frank met Elise (Angelina Jolie) on the train, he thought it was a chance encounter. Little did Frank realize it was all part of a much bigger plan, one that would soon find him dodging bullets through both the historic streets of Paris and the winding canals of Venice. Now, the faster Frank and Elise run, the more intense their romance grows.




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The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader 2010 Hollywood Movie Review

Posted by admin on Saturday, December 4, 2010






The Chronicles of Narnia
Directed by: Michael Apted
Produced by: Mark Johnson
                       Andrew Adamson
                       Philip Steuer
                       Douglas Gresham
Written by:  Christopher Markus
                    Stephen McFeely
                    Michael Petroni
Based on: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader by
                   C. S. Lewis
Starring: Georgie Henley
                Skandar Keynes
                Will Poulter
                Ben Barnes
                Liam Neeson
                Simon Pegg
Music by: David Arnold
                 Harry Gregson-Williams
                 (themes)
Cinematography: Dante Spinotti
Editing by: Rick Shaine
Studio: Walden Media
Distributed by: 20th Century Fox
Release date: (s) November 30, 2010 (Royal Film Performance)
                               December 9, 2010 (United Kingdom)
                               December 10, 2010 (United States)
Running time: 115 minutes[1]
Country: United Kingdom
                United States
Language: English
Budget: $140 million[2]


The royal film performance is a tradition only slightly older than the Narnia books themselves, beginning as it did with A Matter of Life and Death in 1946. But the nod of favour bestowed by the arrival of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh at a grandiose screening in Leicester Square meant that, after an exhausting three-year haul, a sense of occasion was finally imparted to the premiere of a film that nearly didn't happen.


The travails of the third instalment of the Narnia series have been chronicled in the film industry trade papers: how producing studio Disney first delayed, and then pulled out of financing Dawn Treader, after seeing the disappointing returns for Narnia 2, aka Prince Caspian.


Hopes had been high that Narnia could be another Potter, but instead it looked like it had turned into His Dark Materials: the magic of the print works struggled to emerge on to the screen.


So it's heartening to report that Dawn Treader arrives with confidence and bravado intact – the entirely expected stew of cod-medieval adolescent derring-do, attention-grabbing special effects, and sledgehammer moral lessons with nakedly religious overtones. You can't help but be struck once again by the common elements the Narnia books have with Lord of the Rings; produced in the same dark, drab postwar years, attempting to reinforce the moral sense that Lewis and Tolkien presumably saw had been both drained and somehow redeemed by the war and its outcome.


The plot of Dawn Treader is arguably the most Tolkien-esque of the Narnia books, albeit with a Homeric slant: the two younger Pevensie siblings, Lucy and Edmund, re-enter Narnia through the portal of an animated painting, and find themselves helping Caspian on an island-hopping quest to rid the land of a curse emanating from the "Dark Isle". Their annoying younger cousin Eustace is along for the ride too; in one of the series' most winning aspects, the Narnia-believing baton will be passed to him as the others grow to adulthood and leave their childish fantasies behind.


One thing the Narnia stories have never lacked is a fertile, powerful mythic underpinning – Lewis was easily Tolkien's equal in this regard.


If anything, though, it feels almost as if too much has been shoehorned in; so vivid are many of Lewis's tableaux that you are barely given time to linger before being whisked on to the next. One moment we are peeking into the invisible mansion on Coriakin's island, the next we are gawking at the gruesome contents of the lake of gold.


British director Michael Apted — an astonishingly experienced figure whose feature film credits stretch way back to the early 70s — has rendered all this with near faultless scrupulousness; very much in the high-key, heavily structured Potter style. Imposing angles, high-impact compositions, kinetic action shots: nothing, cinematically, is left to chance.


The weaknesses, unfortunately, are human; like the Potter kids, performance anxiety is getting to the Pevensies. As they get older, in the real world, their self-consciousness increases, and acting abilities decline in inverse proportion. (The only benefit of delay in filming has been to manage the substantial time jump between this and the Prince Caspian movie fairly seamlessly.)


Moreover, the godlike burbling of Liam Neeson, the voice of Aslan, kills the film stone dead whenever the lion has to deliver one of his homilies.


Narnia's standard of acting might be saved, however, by the fresh transfusions built into the story. Will Poulter, from Son of Rambow, pretty much steals the show, evincing laudable snottiness as Eustace; presumably he will be retained if and when The Silver Chair gets off the ground. On the strength of Dawn Treader, you have to say it will be sooner rather than later.


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