Posts Tagged ‘LA Weekly’

 

September 25th, 2009

In “London River,” Brenda Blethyn and Sotigui Kouyaté portray strangers, each brought to the capital city to find their children in the aftermath of a terrorist attack in 2005, who become unified in their search. Rachid Bouchareb’s latest film debuted in North America at the Toronto International Film Festival earlier this month.

GQ discovers that “Spike Jonze Will Eat You Up.”

Coming next month from the “Napoleon Dynamite” and “Nacho Libre” creative team of Jared Hess and Jerusha Hess, “Gentlemen Broncos” stars Michael Angarano as a home-schooled, fledgling writer and Jemaine Clement (“Flight of the Conchords”) as an idolized but plagiarizing science fiction novelist.

Gendy Alimuring of LA Weekly chats to “Audrey Tautou, After Amelie.”

One Film Wonder: Filmed primarily in 1972 by director George Barry, but not fully completed until 1977, the uproariously titled “Death Bed: The Bed That Eats” faded into the deepest fringes, unreleased. But more than two decades later a surreptitious print circulated, and a voracious underground appreciation finally saw the cult film released officially on DVD in 2003. Starring William Russ in the first role of a career spanning presently 105 appearances, “Death Bed,” immortalized in a Patton Oswalt routine, is the only film directed by Barry, who has reportedly operated a used-books business in the Detroit area for years.


April 17th, 2009

The talented Kelly Macdonald riffs on Marge Simpson, T. Rex and “Back to the Future.”

Ben Walters of The Guardian tags along “When John Waters met the art grannies.”

Thanks to “The Soup” for championing the ingenious and audacious Green Porno shorts devised by Isabella Rossellini and co-director Jody Shapiro for the Sundance Channel. The entire stunning catalogue is located at the network’s site.

“Sugar” is the newly released, acclaimed baseball feature from Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the directing tandem behind 2006’s superlative “Half Nelson.” Scott Foundas of LA Weekly takes them out to the ball game while Justine Ciarrocchi at Screencrave chats with the directors and lead actor Algenis Perez Soto.

One Film Wonder: In 1984, John Hughes introduced the first of his series of smart, enduring teen comedies and Michael Schoeffling, a physical ringer for James Dean and Matt Dillon, seemed destined for stardom after his buzzworthy turn as Jake Ryan in “Sixteen Candles.” Seven years later he was out of the industry and now reportedly runs a hand-crafted furniture business in Pennsylvania. Coincidentally, the heartthrob’s most iconic scene involves a table.

The clip is dubbed in Spanish, and an English language version can be found here. But you really can’t disagree that it isn’t el final perfecto.