Gordon's Talk


  • standbyfilms
    Come see this movie with me...
    I saw an early look of Taking Woodstock --

    Its doesn't have that Ang Lee feel - yet its still such a good film.. but my gut feeling is that it won't be on screens long this summer ..

    This is really an excuse to list the films i am looking forward to see in 2009
    some good films should be released this year - many remakes -- darn
    and the potter film has been held up == KEEP IT THAT WAY..


    HERE IS THE LIST OF FILMS I WILL BE LOOKING FOR IN 09

    Benicio Del Toro as The Wolf Man
    D Darko squeal - not sure but its on my list of hopes from the remakes
    Robert Downy in Sherlock Holmes -
    Colin Firth - In Dorian Gray
    Ridley Scotts - Robin Hood
    Stevens Sobrbergh's - The Informant
    Scorsese - Shutter Island
    Mike Cera's - Youth in Revolt and the Year One
    Bill Hadder - Adventureland
    Coen Brothers - A serious Man
    wes andersons - The Fantasic Mr Fox
    Eastwoods - The Human Factor
    Diablo Cody and Amy Sedaris - Jennifers Body
    James Franco as Allen Ginsberg - in Howl
    Emile Hirsh and Paul Dano - Taking Woodstock
    Sean Penn - Crossing over
    Gael Bernal - Rudo y Cursi
    Paul Dano - The Goodheart
    De Niro - Everybodies Fine

    Could be a waste for 2009 - Tarantinos - Inglorious Basterds Christian Bale in Public Enemies and James Camerons - Avatar -- and a slew of remakes ,, including the star trek prequel..
    Taking Woodstock Taking Woodstock
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I saw an early look of Taking Woodstock --

    Its doesn't have that Ang Lee feel - yet its still such a good film.. but my gut feeling is that it won't be on screens long this summer ..

    This is really an excuse to list the films i am looking forward to see in 2009
    some good films should be released this year - many remakes -- darn
    and the potter film has been held up == KEEP IT THAT WAY..


    HERE IS THE LIST OF FILMS I WILL BE LOOKING FOR IN 09

    Fanboys -- a film about film nerds
    Benicio Del Toro as The Wolf Man
    D Darko squeal - not sure but its on my list of hopes from the remakes
    Robert Downy in Sherlock Holmes -
    Colin Firth - In Dorian Gray
    Ridley Scotts - Robin Hood
    Che Part II
    Stevens Sobrbergh's - The Informant
    Scorsese - Shutter Island
    Mike Cera's - Youth in Revolt and the Year One
    Bill Hadder - Adventureland
    Coen Brothers - A serious Man
    wes andersons - The Fantasic Mr Fox
    Eastwoods - The Human Factor
    Diablo Cody and Amy Sedaris - Jennifers Body
    James Franco as Allen Ginsberg - in Howl
    Emile Hirsh and Paul Dano - Taking Woodstock
    Sean Penn - Crossing over
    Gael Bernal - Rudo y Cursi
    Paul Dano - The Goodheart
    De Niro - Everybodies Fine

    Could be a waste for 2009 - Tarantinos - Inglorious Basterds Christian Bale in Public Enemies and James Camerons - Avatar -- and a slew of remakes ,, including the star trek prequel..

    I know FanBoys is pushing it for me..
    But its a guilty pleasure since deep down we are all FANBOYS - cheers to 2009 film season,,,

    Vince
    Vmedia Berkeley


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntzYG9t5zi0
    posted 201 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    Come see this movie with me...
    As April 29th 2009 - this is the best film of the year.
    The Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire" was all about contrasts. Its love story and fable-like story elements alternated with scenes that were underscored with real-world nastiness.
    In some respects, "Sin Nombre" is even nastier than that other film. Yet this movie, which has a few similar story elements, also feels more honest.

    In fact, this vivid, emotionally charged, Spanish-language drama really sticks with you.
    Edgar Flores stars as Willy, aka "Casper," a Mexican gang member who's tiring of "thug life."
    Sayra (Paulina Gaitan) is a Honduran refugee who's trying to make her way through Mexico and then to the United States.You might think you know where these characters are going, and how the various plot threads will be tied up. But you'd be wrong.
    THIS IS THE BEST FILM OF 09 AS OF MAY FIRST

    Sin Nombre Sin Nombre
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    As April 29th 2009 - this is the best film of the year.
    The Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire" was all about contrasts. Its love story and fable-like story elements alternated with scenes that were underscored with real-world nastiness.

    In some respects, "Sin Nombre" is even nastier than that other film. Yet this movie, which has a few similar story elements, also feels more honest.

    In fact, this vivid, emotionally charged, Spanish-language drama really sticks with you.

    Solid performances from its fresh-faced cast certainly don't hurt, either.

    Edgar Flores stars as Willy, aka "Casper," a Mexican gang member who's tiring of "thug life."

    He'd rather spend his time with his girlfriend, Martha (Diana Garcia). Unfortunately, the gang leadership won't let him.

    Sayra (Paulina Gaitan) is a Honduran refugee who's trying to make her way through Mexico and then to the United States.

    But the train that Sayra, her uncle (Guillermo Villegas) and her father (Gerardo Taracena) have hopped aboard has three other, unwanted "passengers": Casper, his young protege "Smiley" (Kristian Ferrer) and vicious gang leader Lil Mago (Tenoch Muerta).

    You might think you know where these characters are going, and how the various plot threads will be tied up. But you'd be wrong.
    posted 201 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    I have posted about this film when it was on screens. Now its on DVD and want to recommend it - One of the finest teen anxiety films, and teen Vamp stories.

    Its odd the other teen Vamp film also hits DVD at the same time. That's a Harry Potter Vamp story compared to
    this one.

    Make sure to see this film (DVD)

    Vmedia
    Berkeley UCB
    Låt den Rätte Komma In (Let the Right One in) Låt den Rätte Komma In (Let the Right One in)
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    Teen Vampire films - I guess arrive in pairs. Twilight was a Harry Potter with fangs pre teen romp - with some tooley fog sfx and youtube acting.

    But this second Tween vampire film wins 100% not only a strong teen annexed story, but a tight plausible script.

    author John Ajvide Lindqvist wrote the screen play and book. The casting of the two pre teens is perfect and the solid white snow setting really baring out the red in this metaphor.

    Forced to attend, many fans of Twilight would doubtless spend the entire running time of Let the Right One In text-messaging their BFF about the boring movie they're presently enduring, while many admirers of Let the Right One In would doubtless flash their presumed intellectual superiority by openly scoffing as Twilight unspoiled before their jaded eyes


    This is an arthouse meditation on the vampire genre, and it works out pretty well. The relationship between the two kids is sweet and tender, but there is also a sense of impending doom. LET THE RIGHT ONE IN is a welcome addition to the horror genre. One that I think will get better with age, like a fine wine.

    In the final analysis, Let the Right One In is superior to Twilight, although in the annals of vampire cinema -- a rich vein that has already produced definitive flicks with Bela Lugosi and Christopher Lee, two wondrous Nosferatu masterworks, and even a bloodsucking ballet (Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary) -- it would be a stretch to claim that it ranks in the highest echelons of the genre. But it comes closer than one would rightly suspect.

    A Swedish import that uses its frozen environment to great advantage, this picture, like Twilight, shows the effect that a vampire can have on the social life of a school-age loner. Here, the central kid is Oskar (Kare Hedebrant), a 12-year-old boy who has no friends and who's the constant target of the school bully and his sycophants. One night while hanging around his apartment complex, he meets his new neighbor: Eli (Lina Leandersson), a mysterious 12-year-old girl. Eli tells Oskar right off the bat that they can't be friends; what she doesn't tell him is that it's because she's a vampire. But Eli is every bit as lonely as Oskar, so the two end up spending a lot of time together. Oskar doesn't always understand Eli's behavior -- for example, why eating candy makes her violently ill -- but he accepts every aspect of their friendship in a matter-of-fact manner. Meanwhile, her empty stomach continues to rumble, and the other neighbors are looking mighty tasty.

    From the Frankenstein creature to the wolf man, the movies have frequently given us sympathetic monsters. There have even been pitiable vampires, yet it's possible that little Eli is the most tragic of all. With no backstory on hand, we have no idea what led to her present situation, but it's poignant when she tells Oskar, "I'm 12. But I've been 12 for a long time." Her craving for blood can't be helped, yet it's still chilling to watch the manner in which she descends upon one of her victims (almost as chilling as the later scene in which the victim, now tainted by vampire blood, is attacked by a roomful of frenzied cats). But it's Eli's friendship with Oskar that redeems her, and helmer Tomas Alfredson, working from an astute screenplay by John Ajvide Linqvist (adapting his own novel), emphasizes this connection with a lovely directorial touch: During the bloody climax, he focuses not on Eli's blood-splattered mouth but on her twinkling eyes, ones that wrinkle slightly as she stares approvingly at the best friend a vampire ever had.

    Vmedia
    posted 240 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    Dylan Thomas comes to life.

    Love, war and poetry swirl together to form this cocktail of a film, in which fantasy and reality are the main, but conflicting ingredients. Sharman Macdonald (who also happens to be Keira Knightley's mother) has written a dense screenplay about a high-pitched emotional story involving Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (played by Matthew Rhys), his first love Vera (Knightley) and wife Caitlin (Sienna Miller). Infatuation, infidelity, friendship, jealousy and betrayal are not comfortable partners, as Vera and Caitlin discover with the help of Cillian Murphy's catalyst soldier hero William Killick. In keeping with Dylan's ethereal poetry, director John Maybury injects an artistic flourish to this involving drama, allowing us to understand the intricate complexities of the spiral of love and friendship in which the characters find themselves engrossed.

    Almost a great film.
    Its on screens this winter

    Vmedia
    Berkeley
    The Edge of Love The Edge of Love
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    Dylan Thomas comes to life.

    Love, war and poetry swirl together to form this cocktail of a film, in which fantasy and reality are the main, but conflicting ingredients. Sharman Macdonald (who also happens to be Keira Knightley's mother) has written a dense screenplay about a high-pitched emotional story involving Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (played by Matthew Rhys), his first love Vera (Knightley) and wife Caitlin (Sienna Miller). Infatuation, infidelity, friendship, jealousy and betrayal are not comfortable partners, as Vera and Caitlin discover with the help of Cillian Murphy's catalyst soldier hero William Killick. In keeping with Dylan's ethereal poetry, director John Maybury injects an artistic flourish to this involving drama, allowing us to understand the intricate complexities of the spiral of love and friendship in which the characters find themselves engrossed.

    To Dylan, Vera lives in his sky, while Caitlin remains in his earth. In an unexpected twist, the two women in Thomas' life become best friends. 'I might like you; then again, I might not,' Miller's Caitlin tells Knightley's Vera on first meeting. It is clear from the start that Vera still holds a large crush on Thomas, her first love, but lets the persistence of Murphy's devoted and loyal William to penetrate her reserve. He falls for her beauty and aloofness as she sings torch songs in the underground shelters of the 1940 blitz. But when William heads to the isolated Wales coast during the war, and finds the threesome comfortably settled in a controversial relationship, a war of a different kind erupts. To William, life is simple when it comes to the woman he loves, but to the parasitic Dylan who feeds off life in order to create his thoughts and words, people and emotions are nothing but commodities used for pleasure.

    Knightley and Miller deliver splendid performances, the former showing she has a pretty, tuneful voice. Murphy is enigmatic as the strong-willed soldier, while Rhys is suitably soppy as the weak and often detestable Dylan. The story drags at times but there are rewards as the relationships each find their footholds, and Vera is taken right to the precarious edge of love as she finally realises what is most important.

    Review by Andrew L. Urban:
    Artists and poets whose works have inspired and enriched our lives seem to have usually lived fairly rotten lives, and Dylan Thomas appears to be no exception. This wonderfully cinematic revelation of his life as seen through relationships with the two key women in his life doesn't have to convince us that every detail is historically accurate. It can't anyway. But it does convince in terms of characters and the mood of the times.

    Matthew Rhys is remarkably effective as Dylan in a performance that captures the complexity of a man who lives to write, but is not very good at anything else. Sienna Miller and Keira Knightley are superb, too, as the sparring women united in friendship but at odds over love. Miller's feisty and risk taking free spirit Caitlin is an entire creation, while Knightley is riveting as the lovely and torn Vera.

    The film's cinematic signature is made up of moody imagery that is still grounded in reality, but with poetic flourish. Angelo Badalamenti's score is elegantly understated but crucial, and Emma E. Hickox finds the right structure with her edit.

    I really don't like the title, the pace sags at times and the ending is a bit of a mess, but these are luckily unharmful to the film's engaging tone and compelling characters. It's an ideal film for all those who complain about too many brash, youth oriented popcorn movies.
    posted 275 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    A remake of 12 Angry men - this take is very well done and is worth renting this DVD or to catch limited screenings of this Russian classic.

    It has been nine years since one of the most internationally acclaimed Russian film directors, Nikita Mikhalkov, has released a feature film. So the appearance of "12" is something of an event.

    The penultimate entry screened in-competition at this year's Venice Film Festival, it was for many the surprise non-winner of the Golden Lion for Best Film. The jury did, however, award Mikhalkov an ad-hoc Special Lion in recognition of his mastery as a filmmaker both in this and his previous works.

    Mikhalkov's "12" has a remarkable and unexpected twist at the end. It suggests two different conclusions: one in the style of Hollywood, another with Russian realities, strangely and subtly, Mikhalkov's endings are not entirely incompatible, challenging the audience to continue to ponder the issues.

    Vmedia
    \Berkeley Ca
    12 12
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    A remake of 12 Angry men - this take is very well done and is worth renting this DVD or to catch limited screenings of this Russian classic.
    It has been nine years since one of the most internationally acclaimed Russian film directors, Nikita Mikhalkov, has released a feature film. So the appearance of "12" is something of an event.

    The penultimate entry screened in-competition at this year's Venice Film Festival, it was for many the surprise non-winner of the Golden Lion for Best Film. The jury did, however, award Mikhalkov an ad-hoc Special Lion in recognition of his mastery as a filmmaker both in this and his previous works. (His "Urga" won the Golden Lion in 1991.)

    Mikhalkov's latest production, which he directed, co-wrote and acts in, coincides with the 50th anniversary of Sydney Lumet's "12 Angry Men." Although inspired by the classic Hollywood courthouse drama, it is very different in many ways.

    The initial situation of "12" is similar to Lumet's film, in which a young Puerto Rican boy is on trial for murdering his father. His guilt seems obvious, the witnesses reliable enough and everybody on the jury inclined to reach a rapid verdict - until a sole juror courageously suggests that they discuss the case further, and at least consider the possibility of innocence.

    In Mikhalkov's film a Chechen youth (Apti Magamaev) stands accused of stabbing to death his adoptive father, a Russian special forces officer, who rescued the boy after his parents were killed in the fighting, and brought him back to live with him in his Moscow apartment.

    Mikhalkov's "12" has a remarkable and unexpected twist at the end. It suggests two different conclusions: one in the style of Hollywood, another perhaps more in keeping with Russian realities, but not in the manner of, say, Peter Howitt's "Sliding Doors" - since, strangely and subtly, Mikhalkov's endings are not entirely incompatible, challenging the audience to continue to ponder the issues.

    Vmedia
    \Berkeley Ca
    posted 275 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    Paul Dano's new film for 2009 is one of his best. "Nothing is normal," one character needlessly reminds us late into director-co-writer Matt Aselton's "Gigantic,".

    Smacking of an unearned love and fascination for all things eccentric, Aselton's debut steadfastly favors gimmicky dialogue exchanges and odd-for-the-hell-of-it scenes over emotional honesty in its telling of a young man's pull between his first real g.f. and his desire to adopt a child. Brian (Paul Dano) is the youngest of three sons, his parents (Ed Asner, Jane Alexander) so elderly that most people mistake them for his grandparents. He sells mattresses in an old Gotham warehouse, where portly, bossy Al Lolly (John Goodman) rolls in, ready to pick out the most expensive bed.

    The film was panned at the T film fest but i liked it and I have always been a fan of Pauls work. Look for this film in April 09

    Vmedia
    Berkeley Ca/
    Gigantic Gigantic
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    Paul Dano's new film for 2009 is one of his best.
    "Nothing is normal," one character needlessly reminds us late into director-co-writer Matt Aselton's "Gigantic," since, by that time, the film's disinterest in anything normal has already been loudly and strenuously announced. Smacking of an unearned love and fascination for all things eccentric, Aselton's debut steadfastly favors gimmicky dialogue exchanges and odd-for-the-hell-of-it scenes over emotional honesty in its telling of a young man's pull between his first real g.f. and his desire to adopt a child. Tailor-made for the terminally hip, pic will draw urbanite upper-crusters and nobody else.

    Brian (Paul Dano) is the youngest of three sons, his parents (Ed Asner, Jane Alexander) so elderly that most people mistake them for his grandparents. He sells mattresses in an old Gotham warehouse, where portly, bossy Al Lolly (John Goodman) rolls in, ready to pick out the most expensive bed on the floor.

    The film was panned at the T film fest but i liked it and I have always been a fan of Pauls work.

    Look for this film in April 09

    Vmedia
    Berkeley
    posted 275 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    The Oscar-nominated Short Films 2009

    Flixter has no link to the short films for the Oscars. they are doing a winter tour around the art houses --

    I saw them this week and want to suggest if you see them playing at your local art house be sure to see them. As if compensating for last year's weak slate of nominees in the Live Action Short Film category, the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences has stretched further than usual for its selection of shorts this year--

    The 10 Live Action and Animated nominees for 2009 come from nine countries with only one American entry, and only a couple in English.

    This years entries are so strong that its hard to pick and choose for once, there all worth seeing, and the Academy will have its work cut out for it in selecting a winner.

    You can see these on DVD later this winter or on screen threw march.

    Vmedia Berk
    The Greatest Short Film Ever!!! The Greatest Short Film Ever!!!
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    The Oscar-nominated Short Films 2009

    Flixter has no link to the short films for the Oscars that doing it winter tour around the art houses -- I saw them this week and want to suggest if you see them playing at your local art house be sure to see them.

    As if compensating for last year's weak slate of nominees in the Live Action Short Film category, the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences has stretched further than usual for its selection of shorts this year-- The 10 Live Action and Animated nominees for 2009 come from nine countries with only one American entry, and only a couple in English.The Live Action shorts are almost entirely solemn and bittersweet while the Animated entries are almost entirely comedic, which gives this years touring program - which omits the Documentary Shorts entries completely-- a solid sense of balance.

    Its also surprisingly difficult to handicap the winners. In the Live Action category, Germany's 'Toyland' has the obvious advantage of being a Holocaust story, specifically about a German boy whose nervous, protective mother convinces him that the Nazis are about to send their Jewish neighbors to Toyland. The story suffers from its similarity to the recent feature The Boy In The Striped Pajamas, but it benefits from sumptuous cinematography rich design, and an understated calm thats more effective than swelling strings and emphatic emotion. The Irish entry New Boy about an African boy trying to find his feet among the bullies in an Irish classroom, is more stridently emotional, but in ways appropriate to the exaggerated traumas of childhood. The Swiss German coproduction 'On The Line' uses subdued execution and terrifically soulful performances to rescue a melodramatic story about a romantic crush and a murder; in the other direction, Frances Manon On The Asphalt = spins a simple story of a dying girl into an overwrought fantasy that recalls the closing scene of 25th Hour. The one hint of comedy comes from Denmarks The Pig= in which a hospitalized older man desperately fixates on a whimsical painting. The dialogue is too on the nose and the ironies are too broad, but the playfulness ameliorates the obviousness.
    In the animated category, manic comedy prevails== Two lovelorn octopi fight for their lives in the cute, three nminute French student goof Oktapodi pallbearers struggle to lay a body to rest in the gloriously dark, insane British entry This Way Up and a magicians rabbit faces off against his owner in the giddy Pixar short Presto, which toured theaters with Wall E. Russias black and white line art entry Lavatory Lovestory mixes slapstick and sorrow into a throwback concoction that feels like the Film Board Of Canada shorts of the 80s. The one wholly serious entry Japans heartbreaking = House Of Small Cubes serves as a lovely metaphor for memory, as a man explores lost rooms in a house mostly lost to a rising tide. This year, all 10 nominees in the Live Action and Animation categories will be available via iTunes as of February 17. But this years entries are so strong that its hard to pick and choose for once, there all worth seeing, and the Academy will have its work cut out for it in selecting a winner.

    You can see these on DVD later this winter or on screen threw march

    Vmedia
    Berkeley
    posted 275 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    I am amazed at all the Top 10 lists this film has made and I am proud its gone so far - In less than a year it has become one of the most honored films in 2008 -

    Thanks for all your support!

    This my original notes on the film: The Premiere went well, Sean busted the red carpet on Tuesday 10/28/08 to join the No on 8 protest outside the theater. But my feelings were positive at the screening and I was really moved by this film - I worked closely on this project - fact is all my scenes were cut and are some where in LA in some editors render file. James Franco and Emile steal the this film along with Luna and Penn. Danny Elfmans dark score really makes this gay bio pic raise the bar to the standard use of gay 70's music to make a statement of the times. Golden Globe I am proud to have been part of it.

    Vince Vmedia
    Berkeley Standby Films
    Milk Milk
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I am amazed at all the Top 10 lists this film has made and I am proud its gone so far - In less than a year it has become one of the most honored films in 2008 - Thanks for all your support

    This my original notes on the film:

    The Premiere went well, Sean busted the red carpet on Tuesday 10/28 /08to join the No on 8 protest outside the theater.

    I have been stressing over this film for weeks - worried that it was released out the gate too soon to beat the other holiday A list films.

    But my feelings were positive at the screening and I was really moved by this film - I know i worked closely on this project - fact is all my scenes were cut and are some where in LA in some editors render file

    James Franco and Emile steal the this film along with Josh, Luna and Penn. Dustins brillant script always moved me.

    Danny Elfmans dark score really makes this gay bio pic raise the bar to the standard use of gay 70's music to make a statement of the times.

    Golden Globe, SAG, NY Critics and Oscars are all over this project and I am proud to have been part of it.

    Vince
    Vmedia berk Ca.

    I am excited to learn that the Box Office for MILK has done well rating number 10 in its 3rd week out. The Oscar Buzz is running high for Sean, Brolin, and Gus. But I am honest but the reality that MILK will not get Best pic -- that will go to Slumdog,,
    posted 278 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    My top 2 best film of 2008 -

    not be missed I will write more later -- if you have a chance to see this Jan 09 -

    put it high of your list .. Amazing film

    more to follow

    Vince Vmedia
    Che: Part One (The Argentine) Che: Part One (The Argentine)
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    My top 2 best film of 2008 - not be missed
    I will write more later -- if you have a chance to see this Jan 09 - put it high of your list ..

    Amazing film
    more to follow

    Vince
    Vmedia
    posted 317 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    This is really an excuse to list the films i am looking forward to see in 2009 some good films should be released this year --

    HERE IS THE LIST OF FILMS I WILL BE LOOKING FOR IN 09 Fanboys - a film about film nerds,
    Benicio Del Toro as The Wolf Man,
    D Darko squeal - not sure but its on my list of hopes from the remakes,
    Robert Downy in Sherlock Holmes,
    Colin Firth - In Dorian Gray,
    Ridley Scotts - Robin Hood'
    Che Part II
    Stevens Sobrbergh's - The Informant.
    Scorsese - Shutter Island,
    Mike Cera's - Youth in Revolt and the Year One Bill Hadder - Adventureland,
    Coen Brothers - A serious Man,
    wes andersons - The Fantasic Mr Fox,
    Eastwoods - The Human Factor
    Diablo Cody and Amy Sedaris - Jennifers Body
    James Franco as Allen Ginsberg - in Howl
    Emile Hirsh and Paul Dano - Taking Woodstock
    Sean Penn - Crossing over
    Gael Bernal - Rudo y Cursi
    Paul Dano - The Goodheart
    De Niro - Everybodies Fine

    Movies to avoid in 09 Star Trek, Public Ememie, Avatar
    -Vmedia
    Taking Woodstock Taking Woodstock
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I saw an early look of Taking Woodstock --

    Its doesn't have that Ang Lee feel - yet its still such a good film.. but my gut feeling is that it won't be on screens long this summer ..

    This is really an excuse to list the films i am looking forward to see in 2009
    some good films should be released this year - many remakes -- darn
    and the potter film has been held up == KEEP IT THAT WAY..


    HERE IS THE LIST OF FILMS I WILL BE LOOKING FOR IN 09

    Fanboys -- a film about film nerds
    Benicio Del Toro as The Wolf Man
    D Darko squeal - not sure but its on my list of hopes from the remakes
    Robert Downy in Sherlock Holmes -
    Colin Firth - In Dorian Gray
    Ridley Scotts - Robin Hood
    Che Part II
    Stevens Sobrbergh's - The Informant
    Scorsese - Shutter Island
    Mike Cera's - Youth in Revolt and the Year One
    Bill Hadder - Adventureland
    Coen Brothers - A serious Man
    wes andersons - The Fantasic Mr Fox
    Eastwoods - The Human Factor
    Diablo Cody and Amy Sedaris - Jennifers Body
    James Franco as Allen Ginsberg - in Howl
    Emile Hirsh and Paul Dano - Taking Woodstock
    Sean Penn - Crossing over
    Gael Bernal - Rudo y Cursi
    Paul Dano - The Goodheart
    De Niro - Everybodies Fine

    Could be a waste for 2009 - Tarantinos - Inglorious Basterds Christian Bale in Public Enemies and James Camerons - Avatar -- and a slew of remakes ,, including the star trek prequel..

    I know FanBoys is pushing it for me..
    But its a guilty pleasure since deep down we are all FANBOYS - cheers to 2009 film season,,,

    Vince
    Vmedia Berkeley


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntzYG9t5zi0
    posted 317 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    THIS IS A LOGO FILM TO POST MY TOP 10 FILMS OF 2008
    (I had to find a film with 10 in the title)
    A GREAT YEAR FOR FILMS !!

    Vmedias Top Ten for 2008 (from the bottom)

    10 - The Stranger
    09 - Rachel getting Married
    08 - The Bank Job/ The Wackness
    07 - The Dark Night
    06 - Che
    05 - Man on a Wire
    04 - Revolutionary Road
    03 - The Wrestler
    02 - MILK
    01 - Slumdog Millionaire

    2008 is a great year for films here is my fall off list from 11-20
    11 - Doubt
    12 - Wallie
    13 - Grand Tor
    14 - In Burges
    15- Loved you so long
    16 -Happy Go Lucky
    17 - The Class
    18 - A Christmas Tale
    19 - Nixon Frost
    20- Wendy and Lucy/

    BEST DIRECTOR Danny Boyle
    BEST ACTOR Sean Penn,
    BEST ACTRESS Sally Hawkins,
    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Heath Ledger,
    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Penelope Cruz,
    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Slumdog
    BEST SCREENPLAy - Dustin MILK
    BEST FOREIGN PICTURE Love you so Long
    BEST DOCUMENTARY Man on Wire
    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE Wallie

    SEND ME YOUR LIST
    10 Attitudes 10 Attitudes
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    THIS IS JUST A LOGO FILM TO POST MY TOP 10 FILMS OF 2008 ( i had to find a film with 10 in the title)

    A GREAT YEAR FOR FILMS
    Vmedias Top Ten for 2008
    (i start from the bottom)

    10 - The Stranger
    09 - Rachel getting Married
    08 - The Bank Job/ The Wackness
    07 - The Dark Night
    06 - Che
    05 - Man on a Wire
    04 - Revolutionary Road
    03 - The Wrestler
    02 - MILK
    01 - Slumdog Millionaire

    2008 is a great year for films
    here is my fall off list from 11 - 20

    11 - Doubt
    12 - Wallie
    13 - Grand Tor
    14 - In Burges
    15- Loved you so long
    16 -Happy Go Lucky
    17 - The Class
    18 - A Christmas Tale
    19 - Nixon Frost
    20- Wendy and Lucy/

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Danny Boyle with Loveleen Tandan, "Slumdog Millionaire"

    BEST ACTOR
    Sean Penn, "Milk"

    BEST ACTRESS
    Sally Hawkins, "Happy-Go-Lucky"

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
    Heath Ledger, "The Dark Knight"

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
    Penelope Cruz, "Vicki Cristina Barcelona"

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
    "Slumdog Millionaire," Anthony Dod Mantle

    BEST SCREENPLAY
    MILK - Dustin

    BEST FOREIGN PICTURE
    Love you so Long/ Mongrel


    BEST DOCUMENTARY
    "Man on Wire"

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
    "Wall-E"

    BEST SCORE
    "Slumdog Millionaire," A.R. Rahman

    BEST BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE
    Sally Hawkins, "Happy-Go-Lucky"

    BEST DEBUT AS DIRECTOR
    Martin McDonagh, "In Bruges"

    BEST ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE
    "MILK"


    Plz send me your to 10
    Thanks

    Vmedia
    posted 327 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    Top 3 amazing films of 2008 -- we will see this on most all the top 10 lists and I would guess that includes many of you out their in Flixter land. Danny Bolye has out done himself with this picture - story - music - casting and direction.

    Boyle's is flat-out brilliant, a crazy kaleidoscope of craft and color that's a matchless homage to India's limitless favelas: vibrant with revulsion yet pulsating with principled promise. Boyle claims India's slums are less about value judgment and more about geographic statement; his respect for the hard-working people cheerfully existing in these dense and dismal conditions is evident in every frame.

    Patel, Mittal and Pinto nail their adult roles, but their child and teen counterparts deserve enormous credit for their enchanting turns as bright-eyed poppet prophets of the ghettos.

    The Bollywood finale adds a touch of whimsy, intermittent cliches so beautifully crafted they ultimately become truth.

    Slumdog Millionaire Slumdog Millionaire
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    Top 3 amazing films of 2008 -- we will see this on most all the top 10 lists and I would guess that includes many of you out their in Flixter land.

    Danny Bolye has out done himself with this picture - story - music - casting and direction.

    Boyle's technique is flat-out brilliant, a crazy kaleidoscope of craft and color that's a matchless homage to India's limitless favelas: vibrant with revulsion yet pulsating with principled promise. Boyle claims India's slums are less about value judgment and more about geographic statement; his respect for the hard-working people cheerfully existing in these dense and dismal conditions is evident in every frame.

    Patel, Mittal and Pinto nail their adult roles, but their child and teen counterparts deserve enormous credit for their enchanting turns as bright-eyed poppet prophets of the ghettos.

    The Bollywood finale adds a touch of whimsy, intermittent cliches so beautifully crafted they ultimately become truth.

    This is a must see on a screen - if you can - and you won't be disappointed.

    Vince
    Vmedia
    Berk Ca.
    posted 335 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    One of the best films of 2008 - will go un noticed at oscar time. But I hope you serious film fans see this one on a screen very soon. The surprises never stop coming in The Wrestler. The movie's very existence is a surprise for those who know director Darren Aronofsky as the visually florid director of feverish movies like Pi and Requiem for a Dream. A stripped-bare, raw and honest drama set in New Jersey, The Wrestler is as down-to-earth as Aronofsky's last film, The Fountain, was spacey. The next surprise is Mickey Rourke, an actor who became known as much for his off-screen bad behavior as for his impressive roles in 80s films like Diner and Rumble Fish.

    Eschewing wide-angle lenses and awesome set pieces for grainy handheld and the dreary realism of the working-class Jersey suburbs, it's a character study that marks Aronofsky's indie roots.

    This tragicomic portrait of God's Lonely Man is the dark horse contender for best film of the year. As well as MILK.

    Vmedia
    UCB Ca
    The Wrestler The Wrestler
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    One of the best films of 2008 - will go un noticed at oscar time . But I hope you serious film fans see this one on a screen very soon.

    The surprises never stop coming in The Wrestler. The movie's very existence is a surprise for those who know director Darren Aronofsky as the visually florid director of feverish movies like Pi and Requiem for a Dream. A stripped-bare, raw and honest drama set in New Jersey, The Wrestler is as down-to-earth as Aronofsky's last film, The Fountain, was spacey.

    The next surprise is Mickey Rourke, an actor who became known as much for his off-screen bad behavior as for his impressive roles in 80s films like Diner and Rumble Fish. Even his fine performance in Sin City can't compare to Rourke as Randy 'The Ram' Robinson, a professional wrestler 20 years past his prime who still attends matches on the weekends to pay the bills not covered by his day job in a grocery store warehouse. Randy's body is all rough planes and scar tissue, and each new injury, we see two wrestling matches in exquisite, brutal detail, is just an added layer on top of decades worth of pain, both physical and emotional.

    It's surprising how funny the movie can be, especially seeing the wrestlers plan out their moves together and talk afterward in the locker room, saying things like 'I hope you were OK with that table hit.' It's surprising how well Aronofsky captures the working-class milieu without an ounce of condescension, the chilly New Jersey locations echoing the resignation of its characters. It's surprising how subtly the professions of stripping and wrestling come to emerge as twinned metaphors, the darkest parts of the human brain put on display as entertainment.

    But the biggest surprise, and the one earning all the attention, is Randy, tender and resilient and as fully formed as any screen character has ever been.

    The parallel stories of Mickey and Randy, each former pros trying to get back on track, are not lost on the audience, but aren't necessary to get it either. The movie is, simply, stellar, an American parable and moving drama found in an unlikely place. Everyone has outdone themselves, including Wood and Tomei in their supporting roles. \

    Stylistically The Wrestler, director Darren Aronofsky's fourth film, is a far cry from his previous effort The Fountain. Eschewing wide-angle lenses and awesome set pieces for grainy handheld and the dreary realism of the working-class Jersey suburbs, it's a poignant character study that marks a return to Aronofsky's indie roots, last seen in his stunning 1998 debut effort Pi. (In other words, this is less Spielberg, and more Dardenne Brothers.) And what more could be said of Rourke's performance It is, simply put, magnificent, and rivals De Niro in Raging Bull or Brando in Last Tango in Paris in terms of raw power and emotional catharsis. This tragicomic portrait of God's Lonely Man is the dark horse contender for best film of the year, although I'm sure its star wouldn't have it any other way. You must see this film - Could be the best film of 2008.

    Vmedia, Berkeley
    posted 340 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    This is not a huge recommend..Buts is a smart film that should be rented and studied for its script and writing references -

    This is like The Matrix except no one ever discovers they’re in the Matrix.

    This is like a horror movie that gets more horrifying the more you think about it. I should stop thinking about Synecdoche, New York, except I can’t.

    It’s only Charlie Kaufman goofing around with movie stuff. It’s only Kaufman fooling with movie time, like how he compresses half a year into the first sequence in the movie, which appears to depict a single morning in Caden’s life but actually stretches from September to March and is still, at the same time, just one morning. Time get compressed and stretched out at the same, falling into a black hole. (it's Kaufman being a clever bastard again, pulling in not only paradoxical literary stuff no one understands but also paradoxical physics stuff)Charlie Kaufman being Charlie Kaufman and messing with us.

    Vmedia Berkeley
    Synecdoche, New York Synecdoche, New York
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    The directorial debut by esteemed writer Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) demand a lasting impression on the viewer for its density, complexity, joy and profound existential angst, it, indeed, warrants repeated viewings for repeated pleasures and treasures.

    The pronunciation is like this: sin-neck-dokey (as in okey dokey). Yeah, it kinda sounds like Schenectady, and you need to know that to understand the beginning of the joke of it. Because synecdoche is a literary term that's similar to metaphor, but not quite. Synecdoche is when a part of something stands in for the whole thing -- like how when we say ?a hundred head of cattle, we don't mean just their heads but their whole bodies, of course. But -- and here?s part of the mindfrak of this -- it can also mean the opposite, when a word describing the whole of something actually means just a part of that whole... like how society, in certain contexts, actually means just high society.

    I could joke and say that I don't have to deconstruct the New York part of the title, but this is a Charlie Kaufman movie...

    This is like The Matrix except no one ever discovers they're in the Matrix.

    This is like a horror movie that gets more horrifying the more you think about it.

    I should stop thinking about Synecdoche, New York, except I can?t.

    But no: it's only a movie. It's only Charlie Kaufman goofing around with movie stuff. It's only Kaufman fooling with movie time, like how he compresses half a year into the first sequence in the movie, which appears to depict a single morning in Caden's life but actually stretches from September to March and is still, at the same time, just one morning. Time get compressed and stretched out at the same, er, time, like we're falling into a black hole. (See, it's just Kaufman being a sneaky clever bastard again, pulling in not only paradoxical literary stuff no one understands but also paradoxical physics stuff no one understands.) It's only Charlie Kaufman being Charlie Kaufman and messing with us.

    Right?

    Vmedia
    posted 342 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    Teen Vampire films - I guess arrive in pairs. Twilight was a Harry Potter with fangs pre teen romp - with some tooley fog sfx and youtube acting But this second Tween vampire film wins 100% not only a strong teen annexed story, but a tight plausible script.

    author John Ajvide Lindqvist wrote the screen play and book. The casting of the two pre teens is perfect and the solid white snow setting really briung out the red in this metaphor. Forced to attend, many fans of Twilight would doubtless spend the entire running time, In text-messaging their BFF about the boring movie they're presently enduring, while admirers of Letthe Right One In would doubtless flash their presumed intellectual superiority by openly scoffing as Twilight unspooled before their jaded eyes.

    John Ajvide Linqvist emphasizes the bloody climax, not on Eli's blood-splattered mouth but on her eyes, ones that wrinkle slightly as she stares approvingly at the best friend a vampire ever had.

    Vmedia - Berkeley
    Låt den Rätte Komma In (Let the Right One in) Låt den Rätte Komma In (Let the Right One in)
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    Teen Vampire films - I guess arrive in pairs. Twilight was a Harry Potter with fangs pre teen romp - with some tooley fog sfx and youtube acting.

    But this second Tween vampire film wins 100% not only a strong teen annexed story, but a tight plausible script.

    author John Ajvide Lindqvist wrote the screen play and book. The casting of the two pre teens is perfect and the solid white snow setting really baring out the red in this metaphor.

    Forced to attend, many fans of Twilight would doubtless spend the entire running time of Let the Right One In text-messaging their BFF about the boring movie they're presently enduring, while many admirers of Let the Right One In would doubtless flash their presumed intellectual superiority by openly scoffing as Twilight unspoiled before their jaded eyes


    This is an arthouse meditation on the vampire genre, and it works out pretty well. The relationship between the two kids is sweet and tender, but there is also a sense of impending doom. LET THE RIGHT ONE IN is a welcome addition to the horror genre. One that I think will get better with age, like a fine wine.

    In the final analysis, Let the Right One In is superior to Twilight, although in the annals of vampire cinema -- a rich vein that has already produced definitive flicks with Bela Lugosi and Christopher Lee, two wondrous Nosferatu masterworks, and even a bloodsucking ballet (Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary) -- it would be a stretch to claim that it ranks in the highest echelons of the genre. But it comes closer than one would rightly suspect.

    A Swedish import that uses its frozen environment to great advantage, this picture, like Twilight, shows the effect that a vampire can have on the social life of a school-age loner. Here, the central kid is Oskar (Kare Hedebrant), a 12-year-old boy who has no friends and who's the constant target of the school bully and his sycophants. One night while hanging around his apartment complex, he meets his new neighbor: Eli (Lina Leandersson), a mysterious 12-year-old girl. Eli tells Oskar right off the bat that they can't be friends; what she doesn't tell him is that it's because she's a vampire. But Eli is every bit as lonely as Oskar, so the two end up spending a lot of time together. Oskar doesn't always understand Eli's behavior -- for example, why eating candy makes her violently ill -- but he accepts every aspect of their friendship in a matter-of-fact manner. Meanwhile, her empty stomach continues to rumble, and the other neighbors are looking mighty tasty.

    From the Frankenstein creature to the wolf man, the movies have frequently given us sympathetic monsters. There have even been pitiable vampires, yet it's possible that little Eli is the most tragic of all. With no backstory on hand, we have no idea what led to her present situation, but it's poignant when she tells Oskar, "I'm 12. But I've been 12 for a long time." Her craving for blood can't be helped, yet it's still chilling to watch the manner in which she descends upon one of her victims (almost as chilling as the later scene in which the victim, now tainted by vampire blood, is attacked by a roomful of frenzied cats). But it's Eli's friendship with Oskar that redeems her, and helmer Tomas Alfredson, working from an astute screenplay by John Ajvide Linqvist (adapting his own novel), emphasizes this connection with a lovely directorial touch: During the bloody climax, he focuses not on Eli's blood-splattered mouth but on her twinkling eyes, ones that wrinkle slightly as she stares approvingly at the best friend a vampire ever had.

    Vmedia
    posted 342 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    A great film for the Holiday season. With a dark non harry potter ending. This film would get past the Hollywood gods who dislike real dark death like endings involving kids. (especially at the holidays).

    A hard movie to watch, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is better received as allegory than as naturalistic depiction of concentration camps and their victims. These internees are entirely too sleek and healthy looking; their grimy faces look like they've been touched up with brushes and blue powder.
    As I walked out of the theater, someone asked me whether I would recommend the movie.

    Of course I do. There is something brave and necessary about this Holocaust movie, but it may be too sad for some of us to bear. Either you will appreciate The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, particular tact, or you will cringe on what it decides to take you. Like the subject it secures as part of its plotting, there is no middle ground.

    Vmedia Berk Ca

    The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas) The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas)
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    A great film for the Holiday season. With a dark non harry potter ending.

    This film would get past the Hollywood gods who dislike real dark death like endings involving kids. (especially at the holidays).

    A hard movie to watch, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is better received as allegory than as naturalistic depiction of concentration camps and their victims. These internees are entirely too sleek and healthy looking; their grimy faces look like they've been touched up with brushes and blue powder. The decision to have the cast employ British accents is also jarring, although understandable for pragmatic reasons. It's clear the filmmakers didn't intend to make a naturalistic movie about a concentration camp.

    As I walked out of the theater, someone asked me whether I would recommend the movie. Of course I do. There is something brave and necessary about this Holocaust movie, but it may be too sad for some of us to bear.

    Either you will appreciate The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, particular tact, or you will cringe on what it decides to take you. Like the subject it secures as part of its plotting, there is no middle ground.

    Vmedia
    Berk Ca
    posted 343 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    This great new Indi opens this weekend in NY LA and SF and its a great new take on Midsummers Nigh Dream - with a new company of actors. This far surpassed HSM3 in any form. Tom Gustafson finally made his short "Fairies" into a full-scale musical in "Were the World Mine," the script is clever as it is based in an all boys prep HS.

    The rich full cinematography exceeds the modest budget. Lots of movies take no chances and still manage to fail. This picture dares to summon the spirit of the Bard as well as the ghost of Arthur Freed and succeeds as a rousing, warm-hearted feeling. Take a chance on this film and see it on the big screen.

    It was a hit at the Frameline film fest in SF and held many honors as the audience fav in other film fests earlier this year.

    Vince Vmedia
    Berkeley *THR
    Were the World Mine Were the World Mine
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    This great new Indi opens this weekend in NY LA and SF and its a great new take on Midsummers Nigh Dream - with a new company of actors.

    This far surpassed HSM3 in any form. Tom Gustafson finally made his short "Fairies" into a full-scale musical in "Were the World Mine," the script is clever as it is based in an all boys prep HS.

    Tanner Cohen has an amazing singing voice, so it isn't hard to believe that he would captivate the school's star rugby player, the handsome Nathaniel David Becker. And Cohen, like Shakespeare's puckish sprite, explodes all stereotypes, managing to be at once masculine and fey. Robie brings the right note of sardonic humor to her witchlike role. Zelda Williams (Robin's daughter) adds considerable spunk as Timothy's best friend. Christian Stolte makes a perfect Shakespearean fool as the macho coach turned into a lovesick ass.

    The rich full cinematography belies the modest budget. Lots of movies take no chances and still manage to fail. This picture dares to summon the spirit of the Bard as well as the ghost of Arthur Freed and succeeds as a rousing, warm-hearted feeling.

    Take a chance on this film and see it on the big screen. It was a hit at the Frameline film fest in SF and held many honors as the audience fav in other film fests earlier this year.

    Vince
    Vmedia Berkeley
    *THR
    posted 359 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    The Premiere went well. Sean busted the red carpet on Tuesday night to join the No on 8 protest outside the theater. Its so close to the issues in the script. Yet it was fancy street theater for the national Media.

    I have been stressing over this film for weeks - worried that it was released out the gate too soon to beat the other holiday A list films. I worried it might be Life time channel material.

    But my feelings were positive at the screening and I was really moved by this film - I know i worked closely on this project - fact is all my scenes were cut and are some where in LA in some editors render file, UMM

    James Franco and Emile steal the this film along with Luna and Penn.

    Danny Elfmans dark score really makes this gay bio pic raise the bar to the standard use of gay 70's music to make a statement of the times.

    Golden Globe is all over this project and I am proud to have been part of it.

    Vince
    Vmedia berk Ca.

    Milk Milk
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I am amazed at all the Top 10 lists this film has made and I am proud its gone so far - In less than a year it has become one of the most honored films in 2008 - Thanks for all your support

    This my original notes on the film:

    The Premiere went well, Sean busted the red carpet on Tuesday 10/28 /08to join the No on 8 protest outside the theater.

    I have been stressing over this film for weeks - worried that it was released out the gate too soon to beat the other holiday A list films.

    But my feelings were positive at the screening and I was really moved by this film - I know i worked closely on this project - fact is all my scenes were cut and are some where in LA in some editors render file

    James Franco and Emile steal the this film along with Josh, Luna and Penn. Dustins brillant script always moved me.

    Danny Elfmans dark score really makes this gay bio pic raise the bar to the standard use of gay 70's music to make a statement of the times.

    Golden Globe, SAG, NY Critics and Oscars are all over this project and I am proud to have been part of it.

    Vince
    Vmedia berk Ca.

    I am excited to learn that the Box Office for MILK has done well rating number 10 in its 3rd week out. The Oscar Buzz is running high for Sean, Brolin, and Gus. But I am honest but the reality that MILK will not get Best pic -- that will go to Slumdog,,
    posted 380 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    I can't really comment on this film since I am so close to the project. The trailer finally hit US screens this past weekend and the reaction has been positive.

    Sean is happy with the film so far and I am waiting for the final cut before I say much.

    Franco already talked the film up on his Pineapple junket - telling the famous loves scenes with him and Sean.

    When Franco signed on - he agreed to one love scene and one frontal.. but when he got to his 1st day pf production Sean told him 2 more love scenes were added along with one more full frontal.

    Be sure to ask me about how that worked out. Its very entertaining. More to follow.

    Plz watch the trailer if you have 2 minutes and tell me what you think?

    http://www.apple.com/trailers/focus_features/milk/

    more to follow..

    Vince
    Vmedia UCB
    Milk Milk
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I am amazed at all the Top 10 lists this film has made and I am proud its gone so far - In less than a year it has become one of the most honored films in 2008 - Thanks for all your support

    This my original notes on the film:

    The Premiere went well, Sean busted the red carpet on Tuesday 10/28 /08to join the No on 8 protest outside the theater.

    I have been stressing over this film for weeks - worried that it was released out the gate too soon to beat the other holiday A list films.

    But my feelings were positive at the screening and I was really moved by this film - I know i worked closely on this project - fact is all my scenes were cut and are some where in LA in some editors render file

    James Franco and Emile steal the this film along with Josh, Luna and Penn. Dustins brillant script always moved me.

    Danny Elfmans dark score really makes this gay bio pic raise the bar to the standard use of gay 70's music to make a statement of the times.

    Golden Globe, SAG, NY Critics and Oscars are all over this project and I am proud to have been part of it.

    Vince
    Vmedia berk Ca.

    I am excited to learn that the Box Office for MILK has done well rating number 10 in its 3rd week out. The Oscar Buzz is running high for Sean, Brolin, and Gus. But I am honest but the reality that MILK will not get Best pic -- that will go to Slumdog,,
    posted 426 days ago
  • standbyfilms
    I recommend you see...
    I saw an early cut or Oliver Stones new fall film.. so I can't say much, other that the casting is amazing.. better that what the Conan writers could have come up with.

    This is sure to be a positive Box Office fall film - due on screens this Nov.'

    I have a good feeling about this film.. The first screening went well.

    Vmedia
    UCB Berkeley Ca.
    W. W.
    by Vmedia Berkeley Ca.
    I saw an early cut or Oliver Stones new fall film.. so I can't say much, other that the casting is amazing.. better that what the Conan writers could have come up with.

    This is sure to be a positive Box Office fall film - due on screens this Nov.'

    I have a good feeling about this film.. The first screening went well.

    Vmedia
    UCB Berkeley Ca.
    posted 439 days ago