Categories
Announcement

Weekend Box Office: Mar 8-Mar 10

#1 Oz The Great and Powerful from Buena Vista opened at #1 with a gross of $79.1 million in 3,912 theaters.  Budget was $215 million.

#2 Jack the Giant Slayer from Warner Bros. (New Line) fell from #1 to #2 with a gross of $9.8 million (-63.8%) in 3,525 theaters.  Total gross to date is $43.6 million.  Budget was $195 million.

#3 Identity Thief from Universal fell from #2 to #3 with a gross of $6.3 million (-34.7%) in 3,002 theaters (-228).  Total gross to date is $116.5 million.  Budget was $35 million.

#4 Dead Man Down from FilmDistrict opened at #4 with a gross of $5.3 million in 2,188 theaters.  Budget was unknown.

#5 Snitch from Summit Entertainment fell from #4 to #5 with a gross of $5.1 million (-34.4%) in 2,340 theaters (-171).  Total gross to date is $31.9 million.  Budget was unknown.

#6 21 and Over from Relativity fell from #3 to #6 with a gross of $5.09 million (-41.8%) in 2,771 theaters.  Total gross to date is $16.9 million.  Budget was $13 million.

#7 Safe Haven from Relativity held at #7 with a gross of $3.8 million (-40.2%) in 2,541 theaters (-410).  Total gross to date is $62.8 million.  Budget was $28 million.

#8 Silver Linings Playbook from Weinstein Company held at #8 with a gross of $3.6 million (-36.8%) in 1,727 theaters (-109).  Total gross to date is $120.6 million.  Budget was $21 million.

#9 Escape from Planet Earth from Weinstein Company fell from #6 to #9 with a gross of $3.2 million (-51.4%) in 2,549 theaters (-561).  Total gross to date is $47.8 million.  Budget was $40 million.

#10 The Last Exorcism Part II from CBS Films fell from #5 to #10 with a gross of $3.2 million (-59%) in 2,700 theaters.  Total gross to date is $12.1 million.  Budget was $5 million.

#11 A Good Day to Die Hard from 20th Century Fox fell from #9 to #11 with a gross of $2.1 million (-53.6%) in 1,725 theaters (-864).  Total gross to date is $63.4 million.  Budget was $92 million.

#12 Life of Pi from 20th Century Fox held at #12 with a gross of $1.6 million (-33.5%) in 671 theaters (+45).  Total gross to date is $119.4 million.  Budget was $120 million.

 

The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $128.3 million.

Sources:
Box Office Mojo

Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 08 Shows

BSP Episode 261: Iron Sky

Release date:  2/11/2012

Walt Disney Studios

Directed

  • Timo Vuorensola

Produced by

  • Tero Kaukomaa
  • Oliver Damian
  • Cathy Overett
  • Sam Horton
  • James Wenban
  • Mark Overett
  • Samuli Torssonen

Screenplay by

  • Michael Kalesniko
  • Timo Vuorensola

Story by

  • Johanna Sinisalo
  • Jarmo Puskala (concept)

Cast

Julia Dietze

  • Renata Richter

Gotz Otto

  • Klaus Adler

The hosts review:

  • Oscars chit chat & Walter White.
  • Jennifer Lawrence & Kristin Stewart: one acted like a mouth-breather, one is…
  • Someone found it better than A Good Day to Die Hard and Battleship.
  • Someone just didn’t like it and couldn’t even get through it.
  • Someone thought this movie was better than it deserved to be.
  • I’ve got a space ship, you’ve got a space ship, everybody’s got a space ship!
  • No nakedness… boo.
  • Then let’s make a new horizon.
  • So… a cheesy movie with moon Nazis.
  • The music was not in the right place.
  • Still… better than Four Rooms.
  • Harlem Shake, because you can’t have any kind of conversation without that being brought up.
  • David makes a disturbing discovery about the clothing that turns him on.
  • Covering up guy-parts in Superman and Tron.

Trivial bits ‘n pieces:

  • More than 10 percent of funding for this film came from fans. The donors are listed in the credits.
  • The German customs office would not allow the film-makers to bring any Nazi costumes and regalia into Germany, but fortunately the makers of Inglorious Basterds helped director Vuorensola by revealing how they had circumvented the same problem.

Your Producers for this episode were:

  • Tony
  • David
  • Tony/Deuce

This episode was recorded: 2/27/2013

Categories
Announcement

Theatrical Review: Oz, the Great and Powerful

Oscar Diggs, also known as Oz, is a small-time magician with dubious ethics and working for a traveling circus that’s now in dusty Kansas. thanks to Oz’s womanizing ways, he’s forced to make a run from the circus (in a balloon) right in the midst of a destructive tornado. This tornado whisks Oz to the magical land bearing his name. Now Oz finds himself to be the object of fulfilling a prophecy in the magical land; a great and powerful wizard with the same name as the land saves it’s people from the forces of evil.

That’s the basic premise of Oz, the Great and Powerful, a prequel film to Victor Fleming’s The Wizard of Oz, and also the latest film from director Sam Raimi, who’s best known for his work on the original three Spider-Man movies, the Evil Dead series, Darkman and Drag Me to Hell. Now I like the original film, it’s an obvious classic, and it’s certainly strong enough to weather any number of sequels, prequels and re-interpretations that have come after it. For myself, if you first told that this was coming, I probably wouldn’t have been that interested in seeing it, but you tell me that it’s coming and that Sam Raimi is directing it, then it becomes a different story. I’m a huge fan of Raimi’s work and from what I first saw in the trailer to the movie, it looked to me like he was going to throw his all into this.

Well, for me he did and i ended up enjoying Oz, the Great and Powerful way more than I ever expected I would. Raimi’s an obvious fan of the original and it’s evident in his style of making the film. Raimi knows that the original is a simple morality story and he basically does the same thing here. The characters are played in broad strokes and there’s certainly plenty of hints and homages to what’s to come from Fleming’s film. This all worked for me but at the same time I can certainly see how it won’t for others. After Sony re-booted the Spider-Man series with The Amazing Spider-Man, one thing that I saw that other’s liked about it over what Raimi did, was the style of filmmaking. The new Spider-Man film was trying to be a little more grounded and much darker in tone, whereas Raimi’s films (third one withstanding, but it’s hard to blame Raimi entirely for that) are much more broad and carefree. If that style is a turn-off to you, then I’ll tell you right now, save your money and find something else to see.

Raimi’s visuals are just fantastic, brimming with life and color and an artificiality to them that screams pure theatrics, but totally suitable to the subject matter and Raimi’s storytelling style. Raimi’s thoroughly embraced the 3D process with this and I think he’s done a pretty darn fine job. The opening of the film is in black and white and side-boxed with more of an old TV full frame. Seeing that in 3D is like looking through a window, though Raimi has the odd moments’ where a few of the effects pop outside it. Once we get to Oz, the screen expands and the world around us becomes much more immersive and Raimi then plays a little more freely with effects that are also “in your face.” He does a great job with this and totally gets how 3D should be used. It’s a terrific enhancement here and I don’t think I’d even want to see this again without it.

My biggest issue with the film is that I think it’s pacing is just a little too relaxed in some places and it could probably be tightened up a little bit, but that’s not a dealbreaker by any means. Danny Elfman punctuates the action pretty nicely with a wonderful score, but that leads to another slight disappointment and that;s with the use of a Mariah Carey song over the film’s end credits. Now granted, it’s the end credits, most aren’t even staying through them, but I sort of look at as a little signature to the film and like to watch them my own self (and sometimes you get a nice little “easter egg” or two in side). The song just seemed out of place with the rest of the look and the style of the film, but really it’s a moot point.

I know there’s a lot of issues out there with the casting of the film, particularly with James Franco as Oz and Mila Kunis as Theodora. I know that Franco wasn’t the first choice for the film, but honestly it just didn’t bother me at all. Franco looked to me like he was having a ball making this and I certainly think he carries some charisma about him. I did make a little joke to a friend as we were watching this. Oz is making a speech to the people that he’s being charged to protect and here he is in his black coat and hat, standing tall and making a grandiose speech in front of all of these colorful inhabitants. I said to my friend, “It’s Tim Burton’s Lincoln!” (OK, it was a long way to go for little pay-off, but still I thought it was funny). Mila Kunis was a big surprise for me with this, I wasn’t necessarily expecting the transformation that she goes through here and I was quite pleased to see her embracing it and playing it just as big as she could. Rachel Weisz plays Theodora’s sister, Evanora, and I think she’s good in the part, but just a little dry compared to what Kunis does. Michelle Williams plays Glinda the Good Witch, and again, it’s nice work though it doesn’t quite carry the same opulence that’s in the original, but still well done. Further support is provided by the voices of Zach Braff and Joey King (though both are seen in different parts at the start of the movie) and again, I thought they were fitting to what Raimi’s presenting. And of course, being a Sam Raimi movie, it’s nice to see Bruce Campbell here as well, even if it is in a brief part as the Winkie Gate Keeper.

I had a great time with Oz, the Great and Powerful, as did the people that I saw it with. Sam Raimi’s visuals and broad theatrical style carry the film and I think it’s evident on-screen that the actors are having a blast making this little slice of fantasy. It’s a fun film with a big emphasis on the “fun” and it’s certainly enhanced with some wonderfully produced 3D. Very much recommended.

Categories
Back Seat Book Club Feedback Shows

Back Seat Book Club – Feedback #3

Thank you to Tad for his comments on Phoenix Rising, and to all of you for not hounding me over feedback episodes.

Host:

  • Scott

Recorded 05/03/13

Categories
Back Seat Box Office BSBO Results Shows

Back Seat Box Office #129 & Results and Voice Mails #128

Congratulations to Jeff and Father Beast for their high scores of 23!

Thanks to Art, Tad and Nick for their voice mails.

Picks:

Jeff

  1. Oz the Great and Powerful
  2. Identity Thief
  3. Dead Men Down
  4. 21 and Over
  5. Snitch

Lena

  1. Oz the Great and Powerful
  2. Identity Thief
  3. 21 and Over
  4. Jack the Giant Slayer
  5. Dead Men Down

Back Seat Art House picks:

  • Jeff – Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey
  • Lena – Emperor
Categories
Back Seat Quickies Shows

Back Seat Quickies #81: The Expendables 1 and 2

In the seat:

  • Scott

Recorded: 05/03/13

Categories
Announcement

Weekend Box Office: Mar 1-Mar 3

#1 Jack the Giant Slayer from Warner Bros. (New Line) opened at #1 with a gross of $27.2 million in 3,525 theaters.  Budget was $195 million.

#2 Identity Thief from Universal fell from #1 to #2 with a gross of $9.7 million (-30.8%) in 3,230 theaters (+8).  Total gross to date is $107.4 million.  Budget was $35 million.

#3 21 and Over from Relativity opened at #3 with a gross of $8.8 million in 2,771 theaters.  Budget was $13 million.

#4 Snitch from Summit Entertainment fell from #2 to #4 with a gross of $7.8 million (-41%) in 2,511 theaters.  Total gross to date is $24.5 million.  Budget was unknown.

#5 The Last Exorcism Part II from CBS Films opened at #5 with a gross of $7.7 million in 2,700 theaters.  Budget was $5 million.

#6 Escape from Planet Earth from Weinstein Company fell from #3 to #6 with a gross of $6.6 million (-38%) in 3,110 theaters (-243).  Total gross to date is $43.1 million.  Budget was $40 million.

#7 Safe Haven from Relativity fell from #4 to #7 with a gross of $6.3 million (-39.9%) in 2,951 theaters (-272).  Total gross to date is $57.1 million.  Budget was $28 million.

#8 Silver Linings Playbook from Weinstein Company fell from #7 to #8 with a gross of $5.7 million (-0.5%) in 1,836 theaters (-176).  Total gross to date is $115.3 million.  Budget was $21 million.

#9 A Good Day to Die Hard from 20th Century Fox fell from #5 to #9 with a gross of $4.6 million (-55%) in 2,589 theaters (-966).  Total gross to date is $59.7 million.  Budget was $92 million.

#10 Dark Skies from Weinstein/Dimension fell from #6 to #10 with a gross of $3.5 million (-57.6%) in 2,313 theaters.  Total gross to date is $13.4 million.  Budget was $3.5 million.

#11 Warm Bodies from Summit Entertainment fell from #8 to #11 with a gross of $2.6 million (-46.6%) in 1,930 theaters (-714).  Total gross to date is $61.9 million.  Budget was $35 million.

#12 Life of Pi from 20th Century Fox rose from #14 to #12 with a gross of $2.4 million (+48%) in 626 theaters (+54).  Total gross to date is $117 million.  Budget was $120 million.

 

The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $92.8 million.

Sources:
Box Office Mojo

Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 08 Shows

BSP Episode 260: Inglorious Basterds

More Tarantino Love!

Release date:  8/21/2009

Universal Pictures

Directed and Written by

  • Quentin Tarantino

Produced by

  • Lawrence Bender

Cast

Brad Pitt

  • Lt. Aldo Raine

Christoph Waltz

  • Col. Hans Landa

Melaine Laurent

  • Shosanna

Eli Roth

  • Sgt. Donny Donowitz

Samuel L. Jackson

  • Narrator

The hosts review:

  • Beer!
  • Batman!
  • No mistaking that this is a Tarantino movie.
  • Each of the main characters (Aldo, Hans, Shosanna) has their own kind of morality that pushes them to do what they do.
  • Or, is Hans Landa a bored, yet brilliant, sociopath?
  • Is Aldo really just the same as Hans?
  • Brad Pitt is great at playing these off-the-wall characters.
  • Aldo Raine = homage to and poking fun at John Wayne
  • The film within a film within a film!
  • The basement bar scene… a whole bunch of busy dialogue, and then BOOM!
  • The cameos were very good; Mike Myers, Rod Taylor and Harvey Keitel (voice).
  • Changing lanes and discussing Clerks and Clerks 3, and Kevin Smith’s career.
  • The music was all over the place, the soundtrack is fantastic.
  • “Being in wool underwear will make you want to kill anything”
  • “… and Hannah Montana.”

Trivial bits ‘n pieces:

  • Tarantino intended for this to be as much a war film as a spaghetti western, and considered titling the movie “Once Upon a Time in Nazi-Occupied France”.  Instead, that ended up being the title of the first chapter of the film.
  • Cloris Leachman originally appeared in the film as Mrs. Himmelstein, an elderly Jewish woman living in Boston, drinking tea with Donny Donowitz (and signing his trademark baseball bat afterward).  This was cut from the final film, but Tarantino has said that he might use the footage in the prequel.
  • Roughly only 30% of the film is in spoken English, the language which dominates the film is either French or German, with a little Italian.
  • At the end of each take, actors would face the camera and say “Hello Sally”, referring to Sally Menke, the film’s editor.  This has been done with Tarantino’s previous movies (such as Kill Bill: Vol. 1, Kill Bill: Vol 2 and Deathproof).  Inglourious Basterds was the last film by Tarantino to be edited by Menke, whose work was honored in 2010 with her final Academy Award nomination for Best Editing, prior to her death later that year.

Your Producers for this episode were:

  • Tony
  • Darrell
  • Tony/Deuce

This episode was recorded: 2/16/2013

 

 

Categories
Announcement

Theatrical Review: The Last Exorcism Part II

Following the events of the first movie in which the Reverend Cotton Marcus re-discovered his lost faith and sacrificed himself to taking down the demon Abalam from hatching it’s plans, it seems that the only survivor of the event was the object of Abalam’s possession, the young girl Nell Sweetzer. Nell has escaped her fate and now begins to put her life back together, with help from the people of a halfway house in New Orleans. Nell starts to turn her life around, but soon discovers that Abalam wasn’t destroyed at all, and soon her life begins to take another horrific turn.

That’s the premise to The Last Exorcism Part II, once again from producer Eli Roth, but this time with a new director and writer in tow, director Ed Gass-Donnelly who also serves up the screenplay with writer Damien Chazelle. It’s certainly understandable why a sequel to the first would be made; it was a cheap production and it made a boatload of dough… and, it just happened to be a pretty darn good movie as well. Even though the title of the first would indicate that it should be the only word on the subject, I’m certainly willing to give a the idea of a sequel a shot as long as it offers up something that’s just as catchy as the original.

Unfortunately, that’s just not the case with The Last Exorcism Part II and what we have here just seems to totally dilute the effectiveness of the original. The first film is very much part of the “found footage” sub-genre, and it’s pretty effective, but what adds to it’s effectiveness is the other story which was what Cotton Marcus was doing in trying to expose the “reality” of exorcisms. That character was absolutely magnetic in the first film thanks to one terrific performance from actor Patrck Fabien. This sequel decides right off the bat that it’s not going to go the “found footage” route and that it will present itself as a traditional narrative, with the main focus being on the Nell Sweetzer character. No disrespect meant at all to actress Ashley Bell who’s reprising her role here, but the way this is presented, she’s just not strong enough to carry the film. But that’s only the start of the film’s problems.

As this movie starts off, it pretty much follows horror tropes that you’ve seen time and again. The opening few minutes are pretty good, but after that it falls into predictability- Nell starts to get better, she makes friends, she gets a job, she discovers a boy her likes her and it’s all peppered with little bits that act as jump scares that slowly start to unhinge the character again. That’s fine if you can come up with a way in which it all pays off effectively, but here, the solution from the filmmakers comes at us from left field.

Spoilers ahead here – two thirds through the film, the footage from the documentary that was being made around Cotton Marcus is discovered and has made it’s way to YouTube. Nell is discovered by a guy on the street who recognizes her from the video and soon starts to suffer from the consequences of that. As a crowd starts to gather, Nell is grabbed by a VooDoo practitioner named Cecile who says that her “group” has been watching her since she’s come to New Orleans, though this is the first overt way that we the audience are seeing it. Cecile takes Nell and tells her about her group, I believe it was called the Order of the Red Hand, and then they in turn try to help Nell by performing another exorcism on her. Now this would be all well and good if this group had been introduced right from the start, but as it is introduced, it just comes out of nowhere and just feels like it was put in because the filmmakers couldn’t think of anything else to do. What should’ve been done (or at least what I would’ve done- though I like to think I wouldn’t even have made a sequel in the first place) is that the “found footage” format should’ve been retained and this group should’ve been introduced from the start, filming what they were doing as a matter of posterity. You could’ve gone through the same motions of “curing” Nell, but seeing this from a group that was absolutely counter to the first group who were trying to raise Abalam with the “found footage” format adding much more needed immediacy to the events. In addition, this could’ve added a character or two (say like a more fleshed out Cecile) who could’ve added a whole other layer to the film, just as Cotton Marcus did in the first.

Ashley Bell isn’t the only actor from the first film to reprise her role here. Louis Herthum, who played her father is also back. Nell’s father starts to show up as tempting visions from Abalam to try and reclaim Nell. Again, not a bad idea but the execution is what’s at question; in the first film Herthum was clean shaven and when he shows up here he has a beard. Now when I first saw him with the beard, I didn’t even think it was the same actor, but as he showed up later, I did recognize him. This is just sloppy visual continuity, and there’s no excuse for it, or there should be no excuse for it (I get the feeling that the production was only going to get Herthum for a brief time, he needed the beard for another part and couldn’t shave it off for the time frame that he was needed for).

I don’t know who is ultimately to blame for this mess, but really this project should never have even been greenlit in the first place. I’ve read an interview with Eli Roth in which Roth has talked about decisions to go certain ways here, and I’d like to think that he should know better, but really I can’t say how much control he even had in the first place. I didn’t write a review of it, but I can say the same thing a movie from last year that Roth also produced called The Man with the Iron Fists written, directed and starring The RZA. This was also a pretty sloppy mess and what I came away from with was that as a writer, director and actor, The RZA is a good musician. I got the feeling that Roth’s connection with that was to basically make sure the train was running on time and I get the feeling that may be the case with The Last Exorcism Part II as well.

To be fair, I do think Ed Gass-Donnelly has a good eye and I certainly like the composition of the shots here. I also think the idea of the Order of the Red Hand is a good one, I just wish it hadn’t been so clumsily inserted in the film and instead it should’ve been the focus of the movie. Even with that said, The Last Exorcism Part II is still a huge mess and should just be avoided entirely. Between this and Texas Chainsaw 3D, so far 2013 isn’t a good year for horror films.

Categories
Back Seat Book Club Shows

Back Seat Book Club – Book Six: The Magicians

Author: Lev Grossman

Published: August 2009

Viking

Plot Summary – Quentin Coldwater is brillant but miserable. He’s a senior in high school, and a certifiable genius, but he’s still secretly obsessed with a series of fantasy novels he read as a kid, about the adventures of five children in a magical land called Fillory. Compared to that, anything in his real life just seems gray and colorless.

Everything changes when Quentin finds himself unexpectedly admitted to a very secret, very exclusive college of magic in upstate New York, where he receives a thorough and rigorous education in the practice of modern sorcery. He also discovers all the other things people learn in college: friendship, love, sex, booze, and boredom. But something is still missing. Magic doesn’t bring Quentin the happiness and adventure he though it would.

Then, after graduation, he and his friends make a stunning discovery: Fillory is real.

Quick Thoughts [forthcoming]

“You can’t just decide to be happy.”

“No, you can’t. But you can sure as hell decide to be miserable. Is that what you want? Do you want to be the asshole who went to Fillory and was miserable there? Even in Fillory? Because that’s who you are right now.”

There was something true about what Alice was saying. But he couldn’t grasp it. It was too complex, or too simple. Too something…It was strange: he’s thought that doing magic was the hardest thing he would ever do, but the rest of it was so much harder. It turned out that magic was the easy part.”

Your Hosts:

  • Becca
  • Lena
  • Scott

The episode was recorded: 02/07/13

 

Next time: Brave Men Run by M W Selznick