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Thomas Hoey

Godfather

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

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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

Brock Enright: Good Times Will Never Be the Same

Film Reviews: Jody Lee Lipes' portrait of performance artist Brock Enright presents a study in contrasts.

The Last Beekeeper

Film Reviews: To keep bees or not to keep bees -- that is the question.

Crush: 5 Love Stories ((Korokoye zamikaniye))

Film Reviews: "Crush: 5 Love Stories" reps a cinematic tasting menu consisting of courses by five of Russia's hottest young helmers.

Passenger Side

Film Reviews: Matthew Bissonnette's "Passenger Side" is a sly slice-of-life that starts as a random string of events, then moves obliquely but purposefully toward a poignant epiphany.

High Lane (Vertige)

Film Reviews: "What goes down, must come up" is the pitch behind "High Lane."

new yorker at the movies

Food, Inc.

The Film File

When We Were Kings

The Film File

The Hurt Locker

The Film File

David Denby: "Public Enemies" and "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen."

Michael Mann’s “Public Enemies” is a ravishing dream of violent gangster life in the thirties--not a tough, funny, and, finally, tragic dream like “Bonnie and Clyde” but a flowing, velvety fantasia of the crime wave that mesmerized the nation early in the decade. The scowling men in long dark . . .

The Beaches of Agnès

The Film File

Goings on About Town: Movies

OPENING THE BEACHES OF AGNÈS Reviewed below in Now Playing. Opening July 1. (Film Forum.) BRÜNO In this comedic faux documentary, directed by Larry Charles, Sacha Baron Cohen’s gay Viennese fashionista comes to America. Opening July 10. (In wide release.) THE GIRL FROM MONACO A drama about a French lawyer . . .

Quiet Chaos

The Film File

David Denby: Umberto D at MOMA review.

André Bazin wrote that when Vittorio De Sica’s “Umberto D.” opened in Paris, in 1952, “a conspiracy of silence, a sullen and obstinate reticence” grew up around it (in contrast to the acclaim that greeted “The Bicycle Thief,” which came out four years earlier). The resistance to this great neo . . .

Lauren Collins: Track School

June marks the onset of what one Village resident refers to as “devil-baby season”--the time of the year when the temperature climbs and New Yorkers start doing crazy stuff. This year, the weather stayed cold, and damp. Things still got weird. On Long Island, a newborn was found . . .

Chéri

The Film File

Pop Movie Quiz

In the Heartland

‘Whatever Works': Larry David cranks it up | 2 ½ stars

Even second-rate Woody Allen beats most of the junk littering our movie screens. So let’s be thankful for “Whatever Works,” despite it working only half the time.

‘Little Ashes': The pain in Spain | 1 star

“Little Ashes” may be the only movie ever whose potential audience includes both teenage mall-chicks and devotees of 1920s Spanish surrealism. Since that’s a small demographic, we may as well throw in lovers of bad cinema. At least they’ll go home happy.

'Cheri': An affair to forget | 1½ stars

The last time Michelle Pfeiffer and director Stephen Frears got together, the result was “Dangerous Liaisons,” a film that today looks as good and plays as well as it did back in 1988. Alas, “Cheri” isn’t in the same league. Not even close.

‘Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs' review: Fun has its ‘Age' limit | 2 stars

In a nutshell, the third film in the successful “Ice Age” series is a mediocre standard bearer for a genre that kids love and adults tolerate. Doubtless it will make piles of money, but the Law of Diminishing Comedic Returns looms large, and the gags seem increasingly hollow in a basically weak product.

‘Public Enemies' review: Johnny Depp is wanted, so very much | 3 stars

Is there any role Johnny Depp cannot make his own? Last seen as a singing Victorian barber and serial killer in “Sweeney Todd,” the human chameleon has effortlessly mutated into Depression-era desperado John Dillinger for director Michael Mann’s “Public Enemies.”
 

Let's go to a Movie!

Movies Opening

I Love You, Beth Cooper opens July 10th, 2009 (wide)

Larry Doyle adapts his own novel for the screen with this comedy about a nerdy high school valedictorian who uses his graduation speech to share his love with a popular cheerleader. I LOVE YOU, BETH COOPER stars Hayden Panettiere (HEROES) as the object of the boy's affection.

Weather Girl opens July 10th, 2009 (limited)

It's bad enough to be the victim of cheating. But it's much, much worse when it happens to a local TV meteorologist (Tricia O'Kelly) who catches her anchor boyfriend (Mark Harmon) cheating with his co-host (Kaitlin Olson), and she lose her mind--on the air. Of course, she loses her job, too, and she has to move in with her brother and his best friend. WEATHER GIRL co-stars Jane Lynch and Jon Cryer.

Humpday opens July 10th, 2009 (limited)

MY EFFORTLESS BRILLIANCE filmmaker Lynn Shelton works with a cast of indie favorites--including BAGHEAD's Mark Duplass and THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT's Joshua Leonard--for this comedy. Old friends Andrew and Ben add a new wrinkle to their relationship when they go to a commune where an amateur porn festival is on the agenda. But rather than sitting and watching, these heterosexual men get up and do...each other. How will this change their friendship, and will Ben be able to return to his marriage with Anna (Alycia Delmore)?

Bruno opens July 10th, 2009 (wide)

After BORAT took over America in 2006, another Sacha Baron Cohen creation arrives on the big screen. In BRUNO, the gay Austrian model of the title brings his antics to the States.

Top Trailers

New York Daily News - Movies

Top Entertainment News from Rotten Tomatoes

Watch RT on Current TV

This week, The Rotten Tomatoes Show will be looking at the movies that opened over the weekend, with help from you (the Rotten Tomatoes community), the Current TV community, and the viewers of the show. The cutoff for webcam reviews has already passed (midnight on Sunday), but the good news is that you can still contribute your Haiku Reviews of the last movie you saw. In order to submit 3-Word reviews or to offer your beautiful Haikus, read the full article. Otherwise, be sure to tune in to our show this Thursday (10:30pm on Current TV), and if you missed...

Ryan Reynolds Talks Deadpool

In a new interview with Empire, Ryan Reynolds talked about his upcoming "Deadpool" spinoff -- including whether the character will break the fourth wall.

Major League 4 Winding Up for the Pitch

Ready for another "Major League" sequel? According to Bob Uecker, a fourth installment in the long-dormant franchise is in the works.

(Red Band) Trailer Bulletin: Jennifer's Body

She's currently battling giant robots in a theater near you, but Megan Fox will soon be seen in the horror comedy "Jennifer's Body" -- and you can get an early look, thanks to the just-released red band trailer.

Tim Meadows Joins SNL Reunion Pic Grown Ups

Tim Meadows will join former "SNL" cast members Adam Sandler, Maya Rudolph, Rob Schneider, David Spade, Chris Rock, Norm Macdonald, Tim Herlihy and Colin Quinn in the cast of "Grown Ups," an ensemble comedy about high school friends who get together 30 years after graduation.

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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

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

 
 

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los angeles times reviews

'I Hate Valentine's Day'

'My Big Fat Greek Wedding's' Nia Vardalos and John Corbett are awkward in their second pairing. Vardalos' directorial debut hampers the cliched romantic comedy.

The title implies a cheeky slap at sentiment, but "I Hate Valentine's Day" comes from Nia Vardalos, the plucky writer and star of the highest-grossing romantic comedy in film history, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding." Nobody should be too concerned that cornball lovey-doveyness is in for a trip to the woodshed.


'The Girl Fro m Monaco' fizzles out too soon

Also reviewed: Sabbir Khan's 'Kambakkht Ishq'

A funny thing happens during the ostensibly fizzy French import "The Girl From Monaco": It stops being funny. And fizzy. But that's not such a bad thing since, once this lightweight romantic farce seems to realize it has nowhere particularly unique to go, it digs deeper and turns into a more darkly interesting morality tale. Director Anne Fontaine ("How I Killed My Father") smoothly manages this unforeseen tonal shift, even if her script (co-written with Benoît Graffin) doesn't lay the most thorough groundwork for the film's eventual destination.


'The Beaches of Agnès'

'The Beaches of Agnès' MPAA rating: Not rated


'Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love'

This documentary is an exemplary look at the African superstar's life and the fallout over his album 'Egypt.'

Art that spans global divides often relies either on the loveliness of gauzy universals or the shock of gritty minutiae. Chronicling a tumultuous period in the career of an urbane internationalist, the African music superstar Youssou N'Dour, filmmaker Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi tries to split the difference between these approaches in her documentary "Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love."


A director sifts through her life in 'The Beaches of Agnès'

One of the seminal filmmakers of the French New Wave, Varda stood with Jean-Luc Godard, Eric Rohmer and Alain Resnais.

There is a street in the Pointe Courte neighborhood of Sète, a seaside village in Southern France, that is named for Agnès Varda, the French filmmaker who lived there in the '40s with her mother, brothers and sisters in a sailboat anchored to the quay while her father was off at war.


Chicago Movie News

Megan Fox's worst pictures

Does the 'Transformers' star ever look less than perfect?

Bruno interviews that might have been…

10 celebs we wish would chat with Sacha Baron Cohen

'Public Enemies' review

Too bad John Dillinger never stole any quality scripts

'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince' video game review

Only a real muggle won’t enjoy this movie adaptation

Movie premiere photos

Red carpet shots from 'Bruno,' '(500) Days of Summer,' more

Filming of 'Public Enemies'

See shooting locations in Chicago and Northwest Indiana

Quick reviews

'Public Enemies,' 'Ice Age' and more

Chicago 'Public Enemies' guide

Get our review of the Chicago-set drama, plus red carpet photos, movie shots and lots more

Star Treks: Christian Bale

Check out Bale before the Batsuit and 'Public Enemies'

Top 10 movie gangsters

See the legends Johnny Depp has to live up to in ‘Public Enemies’
 

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