Month: June 2009

article placeholder

Michael Jackson Scene Cut From Brüno

/Film reported today that the new comedy Brüno had it's LA premiere last night with one scene cut out. A scene involving the recently passed Michael Jackson...
article placeholder

[Review] The Hurt Locker

After years of Iraq war films that are mostly nothing but pandering messages, now there is finally a film that adds something new to the genre. Kathryn Bige...
article placeholder

[Review] Samson & Delilah

Taking out the much-coveted Camera d'Or this year at the Cannes Film Festival, director Warwick Thornton’s first feature film has reignited the Australian film industry. Using very little dialogue, this unpredictable coming of age story relies upon body language to engage with its audience. Set in a remote Aboriginal Community in the Central Australian desert, Samson & Delilah follows the story of two Aboriginal teens, Samson (Rowan McNamara) and Delilah (Marissa Gibson) whose fight for survival is thwarted by violence, poverty and substance abuse....
article placeholder

[Off Stage] The Band’s Visit

“Once, not long ago, a small Egyptian police band arrived in Israel. Not many remember this. It was not that important.” The Alexandria Police Ceremonial Orchestra arrives in Israel at the request of the Arab Cultural Center in Peta Tikva to play at their grand opening. With the potential disbanding of the Orchestra, the stoic leader and conductor Colonel Tawfiq Zacharya (Sasson Gabai) is determined to make the trip a success and bring honor to the Orchestra. Despite his best efforts the band runs into problems immediately upon arrival. The band is stranded in a foreign land unable to reach anyone who could help them. Attempting to find transportation on their own, the Arabic/Hebrew language barrier mistakingly sends them to a small empty town in the Israeli desert called Betah Tikva and not the Petah Tikva that invited them to play. With no more buses until morning and no hotels in the town the band finds themselves marooned for the night dependent on the kindness of strangers. A group of Arab men stuck in an Israeli town provokes thoughts of conflict and turmoil. However we are shown that even in the midst of a problem as large as Israeli/Arabic conflict we are all cut from the same cloth and the emotions and personalities that make us who we are transcend political and religious boundaries....
article placeholder

The Future of Comedy

In the 20’s comedy meant one thing, the slapstick stylings of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin complicated by subtle social commentary. As the ideas and me...