Today marks the release of my new short film, Blood Runs Cold. A self-reflexive horror film, it plays with conventions of the genre in which found footage was discovered from a frightening interview that I conducted with death row inmate Molly White.
Starring:
Gabriella Giammarco
Michael A. LoCicero
Vincenzo Lucciola
Kyle Sawaia
View HERE
Friday, January 14, 2011
Sunday, January 2, 2011
2010: A Look Back at 24 Frames per Second
10) The
Fighter – David O. Russell has earned a pretty sour reputation in Hollywood
and the proof is online in viral videos that show him endlessly berating his
cast. But try not to confuse the artist
with the art. The Fighter is a harrowing journey of lower-class Boston
redemption. Mark Wahlberg realistically
portrays real-life pugilist Micky Ward who became a pro-boxer in the 1980s but
it’s Christian Bale who, as brother Dicky Eklund, deserves to take home the
Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his haunting portrayal of a washed up, drug
addled former fighter.
9) Toy
Story 3 – When the gang of toys we first came to know 15 years ago, heads
towards an inferno, resigned to accept their fiery end as rejected playthings,
I about lost it. The beauty of Pixar’s
oeuvre is that they really do have the best track record in Hollywood. The humanity they impart into each and every
frame of CGI animation holds more grace and beauty than most Oscar-bait awards
drivel. And those damn toys earn it,
too.
8) 127
Hours – Okay…your assignment…if you so choose to accept it: to create a
visceral, squirm-inducing adventure film that centers on one character pinned
in one location: Go! Putting aside the
horrific true story of hiker Aron Ralston’s gripping experience; James Franco
will blow you away as he inhabits the many sides of a man coming to terms with
his certain death. As usual, Danny
Boyle’s high-octane shooting/editing style keeps the film aloft with a bright
and dizzying pace.
7) Exit
through the Gift Shop – The glorious fun in Banksy’s documentary is trying
to determine what, if any of it, is actually real. And while the film, which centers on the
street art movement of the last 15 years, may not actually conform to the genre
in which it masquerades, that surely does not lessen its captivating
qualities. Thierry Guetta may be the single
greatest character of the year.
6) Inception
– Christopher Nolan hasn’t disappointed me yet as he’s segued from
psychological low-budgets (Following,
Memento) to psychological
blockbusters (Batman Begins, The Dark
Knight). His films are rooted first
and foremost in the mind and the labyrinthine exercise of Inception is one hell of a ride.
Many scoffed at the final cut to black but the pure bliss of Nolan’s
visual and symbolic imagery and the ingenuity of his intelligent screenplay are
something more summers should be packed with.
5) True
Grit – Joel and Ethan are my long-lost brothers. They are the biggest inspiration in the types
of films I make; always tackling new genres and infusing them with their
trademark wit. True Grit is the Coen Bros’ first full-on western and they don’t
pilfer from the Duke but rather build up from Portis’ original novel. Fantastic performances, gorgeous Deakins
photography, and an homage to the fraternity and gender divides of the old
frontier, True Grit shines as an
anachronistic jewel.
4) The
King’s Speech – On paper this one couldn’t sound more dry but the assured
work of director Tom Hooper and the blissful performance of Colin Firth as
Britain’s stammering King George VI really dominates with its mixture of humor
and gravitas. And there are subtle
cinematic techniques that enrich the storytelling not often found in period
films. Just go back and re-watch the
shot/reverse shot exchanges between Firth and Rush and notice how they weighted
the actor on the wrong side of the
frame thereby exploiting tons of negative space.
3) The
Social Network – What was originally bandied about as “That Facebook movie”
opened the awards season by storm defying expectations telling the drama surrounding
the creation of a social network empire.
Aaron Sorkin’s monumentally witty script doesn’t ever reduce the real
figures to mere caricatures. Eisenberg’s
performance as Zuckerberg is one of the finest of the year. It’s nice to see Fincher attempting new
styles of film and storytelling (which I found far less successful in the
chemistry-less Benjamin Button). With all of the intrigue and weight of a
Shakespearean masterpiece, The Social
Network turns the trivial matters of elite Harvard douchebags into first
class filmmaking.
2) The
American – Too few saw The American
and of those that did, too few enjoyed it.
Poorly marketed as a sly Hitchcockian thriller, the film, concerning
George Clooney’s artisan weapons’ maker, plays closer to an impervious art
film. What is at once a gorgeous
travelogue, an homage to 70’s intrigue, and a quiet meditation on modern
masculinity, The American is unlike
any other film released this year: quiet, assured, mesmerizing.
1) Black
Swan – Films marketed as psychosexual experiments seem to have gone extinct
in recent years, or at the very least, were left to the Frenchies. However, Black
Swan brilliantly inhabits the dangerous psyche of Nina Sayers, a
perfectionist ballerina, played to perfection by the sumptuous Natalie
Portman. Director Darren Aronofsky
hasn’t just filmed a narrative about a descent into madness but summons his
blistering cinematic techniques to infect the spectator with this nightmarish
journey. Inspired by
Powell/Pressburgers’ The Red Shoes
and Polanski’s Repulsion.
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