Sunday 25 May 2008

Indie prison flicks are breakout trend

Allegory for powerlessness or just exploitation?





CANNES -- With boxoffice for indie films taking a nose dive and new Cannes market titles seen as tough to market, many North American buyers feel like they're in a kind of prison, living day to day with little hope, their spirits beaten down again and again.


Perhaps it's because so many of the films they've been seeing lately have characters going to prison, in prison or just out of prison. At a time when distributors are desperately seeking upbeat indie fare after many dark dramas and Iraq War films have failed, what could be bleaker?


Cannes alone featured more than 10 films on the subject, including "Lion's Den," about Argentinean women raising their toddlers in jail; "My Life Inside," a docu about a Mexican woman imprisoned in Texas; and "Wendy and Lucy," in which Michelle Williams gets arrested for shoplifting dog food. None of these women-in-prison films, however, carries the commercial genre appeal of, say, a tormented Linda Blair in "Born Innocent" or one of Jonathan Demme's proudest moments, the women's prison riot flick "Caged Heat."


Men behind bars can now be found in abundance. In James Toback's docu "Tyson," the heavyweight champ recalls fellow inmates throwing "fecal matter" at guards. Adding to the fun, "Four Nights With Anna" centers on a man released from prison for a rape he didn't commit -- only to be arrested for another rape he didn't commit.


Although most buyers have shied away from the subject matter, IFC Films fearlessly has taken the plunge in Cannes, picking up U.S. rights to the intense IRA prison hunger strike drama "Hunger." Defamer's S.T. VanAirsdale thinks there might even be a market for such films. "Millions of Americans have been to prison," he said. "It's kind of nostalgic."


And a few filmmakers are taking a more accessible, lighthearted approach to incarceration. On the heels of the comedies "Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay" and "Let's Go to Prison," Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor will soon be seen as amorous cellmates in "I Love You Phillip Morris."


So what is it about prison that's creating a flood in the theatrical pipeline?


"Filmmakers always position themselves as the underdog," Movie City News columnist Ray Pride said. "If you're confined in a prison cell, what more apt allegory for being powerless is there?"


Dustin Smith, a film scholar and director of acquisitions at Roadside Attractions, has another take. "I'd like to think that it's a collective, worldwide yearning to break free of the constrictive and terrifying times in which we've all been living the past few years," he said. "But my guess is that it's more just an artistically acceptable way to film poop, nudity and chicks fighting."



See Also

Monday 19 May 2008

Black Eyed Peas singer now engaged

Black Eyed Peas singer now engaged



It has been announced that Black Eyed Peas isaac Merrit Singer Stacy 'Fergie' Ferguson and 'Las Vegas' headliner Josh Duhamel are engaged.
The Associated Push reports that Duhamel's publiciser, George Herman Ruth Leonard Bernstein, said that the actor had asked the vocaliser to wed him.
No other details were released.
35-year-old Duhamel is reported to have been geological dating 32-year-old Ferguson for around three years.





Murphy joins Juno star in thriller

Murphy joins Juno star in thriller



Cillian Murphy is to star contrary Oscar nominee Ellen Page in a freshly psychological thriller called 'Peacock'.
Variety reports that the moving picture tells the story of a man (Potato) with a split personality world Health Organization fools the residents of Peacock, Nebraska into believing his alter-egos ar isle of Man and wife.
Sir Frederick Handley Page, currently on Irish screens in 'Juno', plays a young mother world Health Organization holds the key to the man's past times.
The plastic film, directed by first-time theater director Michael Lander, will begin shooting in May.
Study the limited review of 'Juno' here.




Nazgul

Clooney engagement reports denied

Clooney engagement reports denied



Actor George Clooney has denied reports that he is engaged to his girlfriend Sarah Larson.
According to Citizenry clip, the 46-year-old Oscar-winner denied the rumours through his spokesperson Stan Rosenfield, world Health Organization said: "These reports are not true."
The rumours stemmed from a tale on the Marie Claire web site under the headline "George Clooney to Wed?".
The article claimed that a restaurant worker in the Italian ithiel Town of Laglio, where Clooney has a villa, said: "They haven't made any promulgation still, merely there ar people in this town world Health Organization know more than me. They tell the couple ar already engaged."




Martin Stephenson and the Daintees