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According to Google News Kevin Smith has won his appeal to the MPAA for an R rating for his new movie Zack and Miri Make a Porno. The original NC-17 rating was given for the films sexually graphic nature citing two scenes specifically involving co-stars Jason Mewes and Katie Morgan.

WebMD reports that more and more children are being allowed by their parents to view violent “adult” content. According to a Dartmouth study more than 12% of children aged 10 to 14 are regularly viewing R rated violent content. The study, published in the journal Pediatrics, focused on 40 movies that received an R raring for violent content and showed that these movies had been seen by about 12.5% of American children between the ages 0f 10-14.

Goonies 2 appears to be moving forward. Moviehole quotes an anonymous source as saying the the film is being developed as a tent-pole release.

MovieWeb says that Ang Lee and Focus Features will begin production on Taking Woodstock later this month. Taking Woodstock is an adaptation of the Elliot Tiber memoir detailing the beginnings of the seminal 1969 music festival.

Comtex Cablevision will be giving free advance screenings of the new Lucas feature Star Wars: The Clone Wars at eight Clearview Cinemas in New York. The screenings will be given to to the cable providers “Optimum Rewards” members and their guests.

Rocketboom has signed a signed a seven-figure deal with Sony giving the media giant its distribution and add sales.

Gore Verbinski (Pirates of the Caribbean) has called dibs on the John Logan (The Aviator) big screen adaptation of the video game BioShock having just signed a 3 year first-look deal with Universal.

The Justice League appears to be back on again as director George Miller has just praised Megan Gale’s screen test for Wonder Woman. Miller said he plans to resume filming next year.

The Dark Knight has exceeded $400M on its 18th day, beating out Shrek 2’s 43 day mark.

Sources:
THR
Google News
The Movie Blog
WebMD
MovieWeb
Moviehole
Variety
Market Watch
TechCrunch

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DVD Review Text Reviews

DVD Review – Nim's Island

Movie Poster

Children’s movies normally aren’t my thing. I’m not a kid (although some people might disagree), I don’t have any kids, I don’t hang out with any kids, so the movies aren’t marketed towards me. I hold no disdain towards kids movies, but normally the films I watch demand more from me as a viewer.

Nim’s Island came out on DVD yesterday, and I had the opportunity to watch it instead of work. Which I did. In all honesty, I was glad I took the opportunity to do so.

Nim’s Island is about Nim and Alexandra. Nim (Abigail Breslin) lives on a volcanic island in the South Pacific with her father, marine biologist (and occasional contributor to National Geographic) Jack Rusoe (Gerard Butler). Jack homeschools her, and she pals around with a sea lion named Selkie, the pelican Galileo, and a marine iguana she dubbed Fred. Jack goes away for a couple days to gather plankton from a nearby atoll, leaving Nim behind to help a sea turtle lay eggs and to read a new adventure novel. They talk by satellite phone for the first day, but a storm damages Jack’s boat and breaks the phone.

On the other side of the world, in San Francisco, agoraphobic adventure writer Alexandra Rover (Jodie) is having one heck of a block. She writes a series of books featuring an Indiana Jones-esque character named, oddly enough, Alex Rover (also played by Gerard Butler). She’s written herself into a corner, giving Alex over to a volcanic sacrifice, with no way to get him out. After discussing the matter with the version of Alex that lives in her head (Butler), Alexandra searches for information about volcanoes and comes across one of Jack’s National Geographic pieces about living on a volcanic island. She sends Jack an e-mail (signed Alex, not Alexandra), Nim answers (thinking that Alex Rover is the action hero, not the author), and the story is off.

I’m not going to spoil the rest of the movie, but needless to say it’s a lot of fun. No real scary bits, and the story clips along at a nice pace. A couple times Alexandra vomits (motion sickness) but it’s offscreen. There’s a lot here for the kids, but a few scenes (particularly one in an airport) that the parents/adults can relate to. The acting is good; Breslin in particular shines in some scenes. Jodie Foster is great, giving us the impression that she really is an agoraphobe, and overcoming her illness feels like a real process rather than a switch being flipped. Butler is less impressive, better as the fictional action hero than intrepid scientist.

The plot’s pretty simplistic, but I wasn’t expecting much. There’s no underlying political message here, just a good story about self-sacrifice and heroism. A great fart joke, as well. At around 90 minutes, it’s probably the perfect length for a children’s movie. If you’re looking for a movie with a convoluted plot and intense character drama, this ain’t it. This is a fun, easy movie to digest for both kids and adults.

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Back Seat Producers Double Trouble Season 03 Shows Special Episode

Double Trouble Mini 6: 8 Mile

Welcome to the sixth of eight minisodes. In this episode, we are reviewing 8 Mile.

These review-only episodes highlight eight films that feature the number eight in title. They are from various genres, styles and decades.

We are doing releasing these episodes to help support Tee Morris and Philippa Ballantine‘s event Double Trouble.

Tee and Pip are making a run at Amazon.com on 8.8.08 at 8 AM PST. Head out there Friday morning and buy their books, The Case of the Pitcher’s Pendant: A Billibub Baddings Mystery and Digital Magic. Two books, two authors, two sequels.

We will be releasing these minisodes twice a day for the next four days. You get 8 episodes (plus the regular show) between now and Thursday. Enjoy… and go buy some books.

Friends and fellow podcasters: If you want to include this or any of the Double Trouble Minis in your podcast feed, shoot me an email and we’ll get you set up to do so. We want to spread these puppies far and wide and let them run free.

Categories
Back Seat Producers Double Trouble Season 03 Shows Special Episode

Double Trouble Mini 5: Eight Days a Week

Welcome to the fifth of eight minisodes. In this episode, we are reviewing Eight Days a Week.

These review-only episodes highlight eight films that feature the number eight in title. They are from various genres, styles and decades.

We are doing releasing these episodes to help support Tee Morris and Philippa Ballantine‘s event Double Trouble.

Tee and Pip are making a run at Amazon.com on 8.8.08 at 8 AM PST. Head out there Friday morning and buy their books, The Case of the Pitcher’s Pendant: A Billibub Baddings Mystery and Digital Magic. Two books, two authors, two sequels.

We will be releasing these minisodes twice a day for the next four days. You get 8 episodes (plus the regular show) between now and Thursday. Enjoy… and go buy some books.

Friends and fellow podcasters: If you want to include this or any of the Double Trouble Minis in your podcast feed, shoot me an email and we’ll get you set up to do so. We want to spread these puppies far and wide and let them run free.