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Posts Tagged: HBO

SXSW 2012: Girls and Sleepwalk with Me

Girls

Writers are often told that, when it comes to the act of artistic creation, one should "write what you know." And yet, when it comes to the art I value most, I tend to be more intrigued and even sometimes moved by works in which an artist not only depicts what he or she knows, but also tries to step outside of themselves and imagine characters and situations outside of their usual purview.

I've thought a lot about this issue ever since I saw Lena Dunham's 2010 feature Tiny Furniture, which won top honors at South by Southwest two years ago and which has since inspired its fair share of spilled ink, especially from those firmly on the "con" side. I've always been rather baffled by the charges of narcissism that have plagued this immensely talented writer-director since Tiny Furniture exploded on the independent film scene; apparently, one person's bracingly honest self-examination is another's insufferable navel-gazing. But really, where's the point at which unsparing self-awareness lapses into the kind of self-absorption that no one except the filmmaker would really care about? What distinguishes one from the other? Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day: HBO Axes Luck, Kony 2012 Takes Heat for Bigot Funding, Sponsor Drops Celebrity Apprentice, Ides of March Songs, & More

Luck

In the wake of three horse deaths during filming, HBO has canceled its critically acclaimed, if underperforming, Dustin Hoffman series, Luck.

Dennis Lim on Japan's unusually accelerated surge of post-catastrophe documentaries.

The Kony 2012 guys are taking some heat for accepting funds from anti-gay Christians.

Fiona Apple surprised SXSW attendees last night, performing new tracks and kicking off a planned 2012 comeback tour.

Thanks to Donald Trump Jr.'s extracurriculars, a sponsor has dropped ads from The Celebrity Apprentice.

You're a fool if you put any stock in the label "4G," says Slate.

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Links for the Day: Massacre in Kandahar, David Cronenberg Behind Knifeman, Hunger Games Will Be Huge, Pitchfork's Guide to SXSW, & More

Kandahar

All the signs are that the U.S. military and its NATO allies have not only outlived their welcome in Afghanistan but also passed the point at which their presence is anything other than toxic.

David Cronenberg is teaming with Media Rights Capital to adapt Knifeman for TV.

Will Hollywood ever speak Hispanic audiences' language?

An oddly addictive new social network for TV fanatics.

The Hunger Games is tracking to open bigger than Breaking Dawn.

Mike D'Angelo isn't kidding when it comes to David Fincher's The Game.

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Links for the Day: Oprah Interviews Bobbi Kristina, Sarah Palin's Big Weekend, Steven Boone Talks Kony 2012, A Song for Santorum, & More

Oprah Winfrey and Bobbi Kristina Brown

Bobbi Kristina Brown didn't shed any tears during last night's episode of Oprah's Next Chapter, but there were a lot of hugs.

According to Slate, HBO's Game Change gave Julianne Moore the meatiest role of her career.

According to the real Sarah Palin, Barack Obama wants to wind the clock back to before the Civil War.

For Capital New York, Steven Boone on the meaning of Kony 2012.

Backhanded congrats are in order for Eddie Murphy's A Thousand Words, which clinched the elusive 0% rating on the Tomatometer.

Is Mitt Romney poised to win because of his sanity or in spite of it?

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Luck: Season 1, Episode 7

Episode 7

As in creator David Milch's previous HBO shows, Deadwood and the short-lived John from Cincinnati, one of Luck's central themes concerns the building of a community. This comes to the fore in episode seven, written by Amanda Ferguson and helmed by returning director Brian Kirk, which emphasizes the growing interaction between the denizens of the Santa Anita Race Track. It reinforces that the most successful of them rely on others, and those that don't are destined to fail. Continue Reading »




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Reaction Shot: Game Change

Game Change

HBO's Game Change isn't the first time director Jay Roach and writer Danny Strong have tackled American electoral politics, and it's not the first time they've portrayed women in politics either. Their first collaboration, Recount, about the contested 2000 presidential election, featured Laura Dern as Katherine Harris, whose gauche gaudiness dropped into the middle of the film's strategic maneuvering came across as the antics of some kind of grotesque buffoon played for dissonant laughs. Game Change handles Sarah Palin (Julianne Moore) with a bit more aplomb, preferring sober psychological study to broad caricature. But it's precisely in its straight-ahead characterization that the film lays bare its contempt for the political theater on display. It's confident that Saturday Night Live-level mockery is unnecessary to highlight the absurdity of what's being proffered to the American public—and what that public is eating up. Continue Reading »




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Luck: Season 1, Episode 6

Episode 5

There's no getting around the fact that this week's episode of Luck, written by Robin Shushan and directed by Henry Bronchtein, was overstuffed with exposition. Last week's entry was a bit of a respite after the turning point that was the fourth episode, letting us take in the state of some of the characters midseason. This week's episode is one where David Milch and the writers start setting the plates into motion that will keep spinning all the way until the first season concludes three weeks from now. As such, much of the plot mechanics are a little more obvious, particularly in the storyline involving Ace's (Dustin Hoffman) scheme to get back at former partner-in-crime Mike (Michael Gambon). So, given that Luck is strongest when the show is at its most elusive, eliding past plot points to get to a deeper truth, the strongest thread this week belonged to stammering jockey agent Joey Rathburn (Richard Kind), whose simmering financial/professional tensions have finally come to a boil. Continue Reading »




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Luck: Season 1, Episode 5

Episode 5

After the emotional high points reached in last week's installment of Luck, it's only natural that this week's episode, written by Scott Willson and directed by Brian Kirk, feels a bit like a come-down. But the seeming pause in the action allows for revelatory moments of introspection which will inform the plot developments that arise as the first season heads into its backstretch. Characteristic of such introspection is the opening shot, trained on a reflection of Ace (Dustin Hoffman) before reframing on the man himself. Using mirrors both literal and figurative, this episode reminds us that three of Luck's characters, Ace, Joey (Richard Kind), and Marcus (Kevin Dunn), each bluff their way through many of their personal dealings considering their hidden good nature. Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day: How Viola Davis Took Meryl Streep's Oscar, President Apologies for Quran Burning, Killing the Food Truck Revolution, & More

Viola Davis

How Viola Davis took Meryl Streep's Oscar.

U.N. panel accuses Syria of crimes against humanity.

President Hamid Karzai blamed a U.S. soldier for "ignorantly" burning copies of the Quran at a NATO base, an accusation that could trigger more protests across Afghanistan.

Chevrolet Volt owner shows Newt Gingrich how to put a gun rack in one.

City governments are threatening to kill the food truck revolution with dumb regulations.

Mitt Romney clawing his way back in Republican race.

Sarah Palin aids lash out at HBO's Game Change.

Jon Stewart rips GOP's Obama fear-mongering.

MUBI gathers coverage of the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Film Comment Selects series.

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Links for the Day: WGA, Berlinale, & Goya Winners, Notes on a Lost Style of Acting, Oscar Voter Demographics, Tinker Tailor's Tradecraft, & More

The Descendants

Midnight in Paris and The Descendants were the big winners at the WGA Awards.

In a major upset, the Italian docudrama Caesar Must Die from directors Paolo and Vittorio Taviani has won the Golden Bear for best film at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival.

And yesterday, Pedro Almodóvar didn't have much luck at the Spanish Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' Goya Awards.

David Denby takes some notes on a lost style of acting.

Take these stats into account when entering your office's Oscar pool.

David Bordwell on the tradecraft of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

A slideshow of New Yorker covers about the Academy Awards.

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Luck: Season 1, Episode 4

Episode 4

For the past few weeks, those unfamiliar with David Milch's style have probably been scratching their heads, wondering what, aside from the lush visual rubric established by Michael Mann, critics and fans see in Luck. As far as Milch shows go, Luck's characters, at least initially, are a good deal less likeable than, for instance, Dennis Franz's alcoholic, racist Andy Sipowicz was in Milch's NYPD Blue. Because the writer incorporates horse-racing terminology into his trademark stylized slang, Milch-speak as it's referred to, is made more impenetrable in Luck than it is in his period-accurate Deadwood—never mind the surfer-infused dialect of his failed John in Cincinnati. Tonight's revelatory episode, written by Daily Racing Form columnist Jay Hovdey and directed by Phillip Noyce, marks the turning point that should put any detractors' criticisms to rest. Continue Reading »




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Luck: Season 1, Episode 3

Episode 3

If I had to select one image that best represents the central theme of this week's episode of Luck, it would be a medium shot of Marcus (Kevin Dunn), Jerry (Jason Gedrick), Renzo (Ritchie Coster), and Lonnie (Ian Hart), all holding carrots while they stand, befuddled, in Turo's stall. The episode's director, Allen Coulter, is known for the menacing edge he brings to his other projects for HBO, like The Sopranos. But what's often ignored is his ability to leaven such dark material with a healthy dose of humanity, and this week, Bill Barich's script provides just the right opportunity for Coulter to display his talent in this respect. A good number of our main characters are closer to catching on to what Luck's horse trainers, old Walter (Nick Nolte) and Turo (John Ortiz), seem to know already: These horses aren't just lucky talismans; they also possess a purity of spirit that rehabilitates many of the show's jaded characters. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Winner Predictions: Documentary (Short Subject)

Saving Face

We're not exactly batting a thousand in this category, but we're pretty sure we got this year's winner pegged. Stupidly, we placed our bets the last two years on wrenching docs—one about the aftermath of the massive earthquake that rocked the central region of China, the other about a female soldier's post-traumatic stress disorder—only to see the voters indulge other fetishes. So, if topicality isn't exactly an asset for a film nominated in this category, we can safely rule out Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday's warmhearted but mundane The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement, about a now-deceased activist who looks back on the early days of the movement in the days leading up to Barack Obama's victory in the 2008 election. Yes, the 2008 election, which, at least for AMPAS members with proven short-attention spans, probably now feels as old as the silent-film era. Continue Reading »




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Luck: Season 1, Episode 2

Episode 2

Last week, Luck's introductory episode concluded with an exhilarating race that ended badly. The horse that "bug boy" (named for the bug-like asterisk that follows the jockey's name in the racing forms, signifying his apprentice status) Leon rode was put down after its front legs broke. That tragedy still hangs over the main plot of this episode (unlike most shows, Luck isn't naming its episodes). But it also thrusts Leon into a kind of limbo reflective of all of the show's characters. It's in this episode where one is first able to grasp how the different permutations of fortune (good, bad, indifferent) have washed the show's ensemble ashore onto the pretty and slightly desolate beach that is Arcadia's Santa Anita Park. Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day: Damien Bona R.I.P., Viola Davis Gets It Right, Armie Hammer Photobombs Meryl Streep, Raising Cain Recut, & More

Damien Bona

Author Damien Bona, who I met some 15 years ago right out of NYU and humbled me not long after by thanking me in the pages of Inside Oscar 2, passed away yesterday at the age of 57. He will be missed for his wit, sensitivity, and bringing sanity to the yearly Oscar chatter.

Why Viola Davis gets it right.

Ignatiy Vishnevetsky reviews HBO's Luck.

Why has Lana Del Rey's reinvention caused such a stir?

Armie Hammer is going places.

Peet Gelderblom re-cuts Brian De Palma's Raising Cain.

How the Academy Awards slant our views of movies.

What were the gayest (and straightest) Super Bowl halftime shows?

Ben Marcus urges writers to march on the enemy.

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