Movies and Film

Whats playing tonight. Popcorn, a good Film and good people, a great night out.

Socially Global

Search for Movie Times!

Forum

Doris Anne Beaulieu

Dear Producers

Started by Doris Anne Beaulieu in General Discussion Nov. 27, 2009.

Amy Domestico

SAGIndie Live !

Started by Amy Domestico in The Movies Jul. 29, 2009.

Thomas Hoey

Godfather

Started by Thomas Hoey in The Movies Jul. 11, 2008.

Music

Loading…

Movies and Film

Film is a term that encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the motion picture industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects.

Films are cultural artifacts created by specific cultures, which reflect those cultures, and, in turn, affect them. Film is considered to be an important art form, a source of popular entertainment and a powerful method for educating — or indoctrinating — citizens. The visual elements of cinema gives motion pictures a universal power of communication. Some films have become popular worldwide attractions by using dubbing or subtitles that translate the dialogue.

Traditional films are made up of a series of individual images called frames. When these images are shown rapidly in succession, a viewer has the illusion that motion is occurring. The viewer cannot see the flickering between frames due to an effect known as persistence of vision, whereby the eye retains a visual image for a fraction of a second after the source has been removed. Viewers perceive motion due to a psychological effect called beta movement.

The origin of the name "film" comes from the fact that photographic film (also called film stock) had historically been the primary medium for recording and displaying motion pictures. Many other terms exist for an individual motion picture, including picture, picture show, photo-play, flick, and most commonly, movie. Additional terms for the field in general include the big screen, the silver screen, the cinema, and the movies.

Variety Film Reviews

American Jihadist

Film Reviews: Winner of the Slamdance docu jury award, "American Jihadist" doesn't have a remotely clear view of its subject.
Continue

Autumn Adagio

Film Reviews: The inner life of a menopausal nun is laden with heavy-handed, over-precious symbolism.
Continue

C'est deja l'ete

Film Reviews: Industrial depression doesn't get more depressing than in "C'est deja l'ete."
Continue

High School

Film Reviews: High School" offers up a fast and sporadically funny tall tale about two tokin' teens trying to cover their tracks by getting their classmates to fail a mandatory drug test.
Continue

Susa

Film Reviews: FIlm beautifully captures the way the crumbling locale permeates the characters' lives.
Continue

new yorker at the movies

Edge of Darkness

The Film File

Phyllis and Harold

The Film File

Ajami

The Film File

Hilton Als: Charles Ludlam’s “The Sorrows of Dolores” and “Museum of Wax” at IFC.

In the nineteen-seventies, Charles Ludlam, the founder of the Ridiculous Theatrical Company, started to make two films. But by the time he died, of complications from AIDS in 1987, the movies, both silent, were still not finished. “The Sorrows of Dolores” and “Museum of Wax,&#8221 . . .

Richard Brody: Jia Zhangke’s “24 City” and the Dardennes’s “Lorna’s Silence.”

paragraph class="noindent">There’s a crisis of naturalism in the contemporary cinema, resulting from the presumptively objective, quasi-documentary style with which politically engaged filmmakers have been getting their messages out. The Chinese director Jia Zhangke—as seen in his latest film, “24 City” (Cinema . . .

David Denby: “The Red Riding Trilogy.”

8220;This is the North—we do what we want.” These defiantly jocular words are spoken by a policeman as he throws a young reporter out the back of a van. The scene takes place in “Red Riding: 1974,” the first in a series of films . . .

Anthony Lane: “Edge of Darkness” and “The Red Shoes.”

Running at more than five hours, over six episodes, “Edge of Darkness” was a tense eco-drama—not something you see every day—which appeared on British television in 1985. It was directed by Martin Campbell, who, a quarter of a century later, is revisiting the . . .

Police, Adjective

The Film File

Anthony Lane: “Star: How Warren Beatty Seduced America.”

In 1967, when “Bonnie and Clyde” was rolled out across America, Warren Beatty, according to a publicist, “wrote personal notes to all the projectionists and stuck them in the film cans, with the projectionists’ names on each one.” (He wanted them to raise the volume . . .

44 Inch Chest

The Film File

Pop Movie Quiz

In the Heartland

‘Dear John' too heavy on clichés | 2 stars

Old-fashioned I can deal with. Old-fashioned implies an emphasis on story over style. Nothing wrong with that. But “Dear John” isn’t so much old-fashioned as it is clichéd.

‘From Paris With Love' is a copycat victim | 2 stars

John Travolta shaved his head, dyed his goatee and gave himself and his stunt double quite a workout for “From Paris With Love,” a gonzo spy shoot-’em-up from the folks who gave us “Taken.” Despite its explosive action and jokey tone, “Paris” is basically a bloody buddy picture that tries too hard.

‘Edge of Darkness' | Mel Gibson is back in action | 2 ½ stars

The hair is thinning and the waist is growing, but it’s good to have Mel Gibson once again kicking tail after an eight-year absence from the big screen. Love him or loathe him, the Melster still has screen presence. That’s why he’s a star.

‘When in Rome': Kristen Bell makes the cliché worse | 1 star

You'd think by now Hollywood would have romantic comedies down to a cell-phone app any studio exec could access.

‘Legion' is pure hell | 1 star

If Italian poet Dante Alighieri had seen “Legion” he would have written in his “Divine Comedy” that there are 10 circles of hell instead of nine — the last being reserved for movies that are so lame, uninspired, poorly crafted and vile they are sinfully bad.
 

Let's go to a Movie!

Photos

Loading…

Movies Opening

Valentine's Day opens February 12th, 2010 (wide)

A diverse group of Los Angelenos navigate their way through romance and heartbreak over the course of one Valentine's Day. Couples and singles experience the pinnacles and pitfalls of finding, keeping or ending relationships in a day in the life of love.

Wolfman opens February 12th, 2010 (wide)

Lawrence Talbot is a haunted nobleman lured back to his family estate after his brother vanishes. Reunited with his estranged father, Talbot sets out to find his brother...and discovers a horrifying destiny for himself.<br><br>Lawrence Talbot's childhood ended the night his mother died. After he left the sleepy Victorian hamlet of Blackmoor, he spent decades recovering and trying to forget. But when his brother's fiancée, Gwen Conliffe, tracks him down to help find her missing love, Talbot returns home to join the search. He learns that something with brute strength and insatiable bloodlust has been killing the villagers, and that a suspicious Scotland Yard inspector named Aberline has come to investigate. <br><br>As he pieces together the gory puzzle, he hears of an ancient curse that turns the afflicted into werewolves when the moon is full. Now, if he has any chance at ending the slaughter and protecting the woman he has grown to love, Talbot must destroy the vicious creature in the woods surrounding Blackmoor. But as he hunts for the nightmarish beast, a simple man with a tortured past will uncover a primal side to himself...one he never imagined existed.<br><br>Joe Johnston ("Jurassic Park III") directs "The Wolfman," and six-time Oscar-winning special effects artist Rick Baker brings his design and makeup talents to transform Del Toro into the fearsome title character.

Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief opens February 12th, 2010 (wide)

The son of Poseidon travels the Earth with the hope of quelling a battle of the gods in this adaptation of the first book in Rick Riordan's bestselling children's series. Veteran filmmaker Chris Columbus (HOME ALONE, HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCEROR'S STONE) directs from his own script with co-writer Craig Titley. 3:10 TO YUMA's Logan Lerman toplines a godlike cast that includes Uma Thurman, Pierce Brosnan, and Sean Bean.

Top Trailers

New York Daily News - Movies

Jack Bauer takes aim at big screen: Fox greenlights '24' the movie

Jack Bauer's big screen debut is now officially on the clock. Twentieth Century Fox's film division is scooping up its hit TV series, "24," starring Kiefer Sutherland, and gunning to spin it off into a potential feature film franchise.

Katherine Heigl to play Stephanie Plum in 'One for the Money,' Janet Evanovich best-seller

What do you get when you mix Katherine Heigl, lingerie and bounty hunting? A chick flick that guys are sure to enjoy.

'Dear John' bumps 'Avatar' from top spot with $32.4 million debut

A low-budget chick flick finally nudged record-setting blockbuster "Avatar" from its nearly two-month-long perch at the top of the box-office charts.

New on DVD: 'A Serious Man,' 'The Time Traveler's Wife,' 'Couples Retreat'

It would be tough to find a broader range of releases than the ones we've got this week. Looking for Oscar fare? Then you'll want to watch "A Serious Man," the Coen brothers' Best Picture nominee about a luckless Midwestern professor in 1967.

A winning weekend of Oscar-nominated pics at the movie theater

Now that you know all the Oscar nominees, it's time to get busy. After all, you can't play along at home on March 7 unless you've seen everything in advance. Our suggestion: Make a weekend of it, and support some local arthouses at the same time.

Short movie reviews: 'District 13: Ultimatum,' 'The Red Riding Trilogy,' 'Ajami,' and more

Here's an odd coincidence: The 2004 French thriller "District 13" came from Pierre Morel and Luc Besson, who also made this week's "From Paris With Love." Which to see? If you want authenticity, go for the energetic "Ultimatum."

'Dear John': Romantic sob story is strictly by the book

The basic necessities of a romantic tearjerker are right in the description: love and loss (and then, in the best-case scenario, love again). And that's what you'll get no less, but not much more in "Dear John."

'From Paris With Love': John Travolta utterly Gauling in cloying spy comedy

Beginning with its cutesy-derivative title and ending with John Travolta's ugly American act, "From Paris, With Love" oozes immaturity. If it were the brash, inventive kind, that at least might be fun.

Carrie Underwood to make film debut in 'Soul Surfer,' biopic of shark-attack victim Bethany Hamilton

Carrie Underwood is doing some heavy-duty beach hopping on Sunday. The country crooner is scheduled to sing the national anthem at Super Bowl LXIV in Miami before flying to the Hawaiian island of Oahu to start shooting her feature film debut.

'Avatar's' actors snubbed by Oscars, and James Cameron blames himself

The cast of "Avatar" is feeling blue. The box-office behemoth may have gotten nine Academy Award nominations this week, but none were for its actors - and "Avatar" director James Cameron thinks the Oscar snub is totally unfair.

Top Entertainment News from Rotten Tomatoes

Chris Nolan on Board for Dark Knight Sequel -- and Superman Reboot?

Hey, superhero film fans, it's the news you've been waiting to hear: Christopher Nolan is reportedly on board for the sequel to "The Dark Knight"...and he'll also "mentor" a "Superman" reboot.

Tim Robbins Joins Green Lantern

Tim Robbins has joined the cast of "Green Lantern," signing on to play the father of villainous Hector Hammond (played by Peter Sarsgaard).

Fox Moves Forward with 24 Movie

After years of whooping on TV bad guys, Kiefer Sutherland will take Jack Bauer to the big screen in a "24" film, currently being scripted by Billy Ray.

Terminator Franchise Rights Sold

The auction for the rights to the "Terminator" franchise is over -- and to everyone's surprise, neither Sony nor Lionsgate emerged victorious.

Bogdanovich Feels the Turn of the Century

Peter Bogdanovich has agreed to write and direct an adaptation of Kurt Anderson's "Turn of the Century," a 1999 novel about "a Manhattan power couple with three kids who are managing their troubled marriage in a world where BarbieWorld has opened in Vegas and Charles Manson's parole hearing is live on TV."

Our Sponsors


Top Box Office this Week

Valkyrie ($14.0 Million)

Rating: PG-13
Box Office: $14.0 Million

Marley & Me ($20.3 Million)

Rating: PG
Box Office: $20.3 Million

Bedtime Stories ($24.1 Million)

Rating: PG
Box Office: $24.1 Million

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button ($18.4 Million)

Rating: PG-13
Box Office: $18.4 Million

Yes Man ($13.9 Million)

Rating: PG-13
Box Office: $13.9 Million

Blog Posts

Barbara Wilkins

Speech Writing: How To Write A Good One?

Speech writing is in lots of ways similar writing a paper, apart from that there is no penalty for spelling and punctuation mistakes. You should not try to write words in your speech that you are not relaxed pronouncing or don't know the meaning of because it can lead to a less fluently delivered speech.

To be able to write a high-quality speech is a lot like making a good cake. Having the right elements is key for it's success. Every… Continue

Posted by Barbara Wilkins on November 17, 2009 at 4:39am

Doris Anne Beaulieu

Ramifications of Homeshooling

Hello,
My name is Doris Anne Beaulieu. I have a website-Life’s Ultimate Test dot com-on which you can learn more about my mission to change the face of home schooling.
I attended a parochial school as a child in the 1950's. In this Catholic school I was sheltered from the realities of the world around me-from swearing, from public displays of affection, from slang. These are often some of the same things that modern home schooling parents aim to protect their children from. A superior court judg… Continue

Posted by Doris Anne Beaulieu on May 9, 2009 at 8:04am

suzzane donald

How To Write A Good Masters Dissertation?

Writing a good dissertation requires certain dissertation writing help solutions which should always be used in order to write dissertations comprehensively. It is a critical requirement for every academic dissertation that the student should prove his research question in relation to the dissertation topic in the simplest manner. This can be done through the presentation of original thoughts or ideas or by analyzing what others have researched on the topic that the dissertation is about.

If th… Continue

Posted by suzzane donald on March 11, 2009 at 6:40am

Groups

 
 

Latest Activity

Doris Anne Beaulieu added a video
November 5, 2009
November 5, 2009
Doris Anne Beaulieu added a video
September 16, 2009
Doris Anne Beaulieu added a video
Making business fun. Enjoy!
August 7, 2009
Mohaneesh Thapar added a photo
July 22, 2009
Mohaneesh Thapar is now a member of Movies and Film
July 22, 2009
Doris Anne Beaulieu added a video
June 1, 2009

Badge

Loading…

Events

los angeles times reviews

Review: 'Dear John'

This adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks romance isn't always true to the letter of life.

Dear Reader, I'm so sorry, gulp, but "Dear John" is like a very bad relationship with a very beautiful someone: You want it to work, you truly do, but the pain, the guilt, the boredom, the CW soundtrack . . . .


'District 13: Ultimatum' is a showcase for stunts, which isn't a bad thing

Also reviewed: 'Frozen' and 'Shinjuku Incident.'

Joining "From Paris With Love" in U.S. theaters this weekend is "District 13: Ultimatum," more frenzied action from style-conscious Gallic popcorn impresario Luc Besson, and a follow-up to 2004's "District B13." That cult hit (directed by "From Paris With Love's" Pierre Morel) took the reality of France's immigrant unrest and devised a future Paris in which the government has cynically walled off the most gang-infested and racially charged ghettos.


Brit Noir series to start at Nuart on Friday

It includes such classics as 'The Third Man' and 'The Fallen Idol' and lesser-known ones such as 'Brighton Rock' and 'It Always Rains on Sunday.'

To everything there is a season, and this is incontestably the time for a newly minted, previously unexamined genre called Brit Noir.


'From Paris With Love'

John Travolta and Jonathan Rhys Meyers team up to create chaos in the city during an anti-terrorist assignment. Did you expect a Valentine's Day movie? You are in for a different kind of heart-throbbi

Stupid fun, "From Paris With Love" doesn't do much for Paris or love, or your brain cells, but it flies like a crazed eagle on uppers and comes from the talented, propulsive schlocketeer Pierre Morel. A former cinematographer who learned to light brutality stylishly under the tutelage of international violence impresario Luc Besson, Morel turns his kinetic eye to a tale (story by Besson, script by Adi Hasak) of a low-level spy and Paris embassy functionary, played by Jonathan Rhys Meyers. He lives a fine life in Paris with his fiancée (Kasia Smutniak) but longs for more, job-wise.


'The Last Station'

"The Last Station" is a paean to the enduring power of both love and that long list of irritations between couples who've spent a lifetime together. Newly Oscar-nominated Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren as writer Leo Tolstoy and wife Sofya create such an authentic sense of long-suffering affection that it's easy to imagine that life off-screen. But Tolstoy's estate is a bitter issue, with Sofya intent on leaving the rights to his works to their children and the writer planning on giving them to the Russian people. There's a fine supporting cast, including James McAvoy as a Tolstoy acolyte and Paul Giamatti as an advisor. The film captures the struggles of a great mind troubled by fame and tormented by his wife.


Chicago Movie News

Movie premiere photos

Red carpet shots from 'Valentine's Day,' 'Percy Jackson,' more

16 movies to watch for in 2010

Preview the new year: 'Iron Man,' 'Alice,' 'Potter' and more

Evolution of the movie werewolf

From classics to 'Twilight' to Del Toro

Super Bowl movie trailers

Ads for 'Alice,' 'Robin Hood,' 'Prince of Persia' and more

Super Bowl movie trailers

Ads for 'Alice,' 'Robin Hood,' 'Prince of Persia' and more

Best of Sundance 2010

13 highlights from the premiere indie film festival

Metromix movie awards for 2009

The results are in! See the top sex symbol, guiltiest pleasure and more

Q&A: Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried

'Dear John' stars on love, stripping and respect

2010 Oscar nominees: 10 biggest snubs

People, films that could've and should've been nominated

2010 Oscar nominees

'Avatar' leads way in the coveted film nominations
 

© 2010   Created by Thomas Hoey on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!
Clicky Web Analytics