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2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004

1-20 of 28 articles from 2009   « Prev | Next »


50 Essential Foreign Films 2000-2008 (Part 3) - Spotlight on German Films

11 October 2009 5:05 PM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »

After a brief respite, we're back with Part 3 of  tMF's Top 50 Essential Foreign Films. This time the spotlight is on German cinema.

- - -

- - - As in Part 1 - French cinema and Part 2 - Movies from the UK, the scope remains the same:

Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.

- - -

1. Das Experiment - 2001 - Featuring the amazing performance of Moritz Bleibtreu and Christian Berkel, from the direction of Oliver Hirschbiegel.

About the Movie: Inspired by a famous 1971 psychological experiment, Oliver Hirschbiegel's »

- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)

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50 Essential Foreign Films 2000-2008 (Part 3) - Spotlight on German Films

11 October 2009 5:05 PM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »

After a brief respite, we're back with Part 3 of  tMF's Top 50 Essential Foreign Films. This time the spotlight is on German cinema.

- - -

- - - As in Part 1 - French cinema and Part 2 - Movies from the UK, the scope remains the same:

Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.

- - -

1. Das Experiment - 2001 - Featuring the amazing performance of Moritz Bleibtreu and Christian Berkel, from the direction of Oliver Hirschbiegel.

About the Movie: Inspired by a famous 1971 psychological experiment, Oliver Hirschbiegel's »

- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)

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50 Essential Foreign Films 2000-2008 (Part 3) - Spotlight on German Films

11 October 2009 5:05 PM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »

After a brief respite, we're back with Part 3 of  tMF's Top 50 Essential Foreign Films. This time the spotlight is on German cinema.

- - -

- - - As in Part 1 - French cinema and Part 2 - Movies from the UK, the scope remains the same:

Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.

- - -

1. Das Experiment - 2001 - Featuring the amazing performance of Moritz Bleibtreu and Christian Berkel, from the direction of Oliver Hirschbiegel.

About the Movie: Inspired by a famous 1971 psychological experiment, Oliver Hirschbiegel's »

- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)

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50 Essential Foreign Films 2000-2008 (Part 3) - Spotlight on German Films

11 October 2009 5:05 PM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »

After a brief respite, we're back with Part 3 of  tMF's Top 50 Essential Foreign Films. This time the spotlight is on German cinema.

- - -

- - - As in Part 1 - French cinema and Part 2 - Movies from the UK, the scope remains the same:

Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.

- - -

1. Das Experiment - 2001 - Featuring the amazing performance of Moritz Bleibtreu and Christian Berkel, from the direction of Oliver Hirschbiegel.

About the Movie: Inspired by a famous 1971 psychological experiment, Oliver Hirschbiegel's »

- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)

Permalink | Report a problem


50 Essential Foreign Films 2000-2008 (Part 3) - Spotlight on German Films

11 October 2009 5:05 PM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »

After a brief respite, we're back with Part 3 of  tMF's Top 50 Essential Foreign Films. This time the spotlight is on German cinema.

- - -

- - - As in Part 1 - French cinema and Part 2 - Movies from the UK, the scope remains the same:

Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.

- - -

1. Das Experiment - 2001 - Featuring the amazing performance of Moritz Bleibtreu and Christian Berkel, from the direction of Oliver Hirschbiegel.

About the Movie: Inspired by a famous 1971 psychological experiment, Oliver Hirschbiegel's »

- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)

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Resident Evil: Afterlife Officially Begins Production

29 September 2009 10:16 PM, PDT | DreadCentral.com | See recent Dread Central news »

After weeks of talking about it, and casting news coming from the weirdest of places, ScreenGems and Constantine Film have announced today that filming has officially begun on Resident Evil: Afterlife.

From the press release:

Screen Gems and Constantin Film announced today that “Resident Evil: Afterlife,” the next installment in the widely successful “Resident Evil” film franchise, has begun production in Toronto, Canada. The fourth film, which will be shot and released in 3D, is a first in the “Resident Evil” film franchise. Most of the key creative players who turned the “Resident Evil” film franchise into a global phenomenon will be reprising their roles in “Afterlife”.

Actress Milla Jovovich returns as the zombie-fighting heroine Alice. Ali Larter reprises her role as Claire Redfield from “Resident Evil: Extinction”. Spencer Locke, who played K-Mart in “Extinction,” is also set to return. New to the film franchise is leading man Wentworth Miller, »

- Uncle Creepy

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Resident Evil: Afterlife 3D Begins Production

29 September 2009 5:57 PM, PDT | Collider.com | See recent Collider.com news »

Screen Gems and Constantin Film has sent out a press release announcing that “Resident Evil: Afterlife,” the next installment in the “Resident Evil” franchise, has begun production in Toronto, Canada with Paul W. S. Anderson writing, directing and producing. The fourth film will be shot and released in 3-D. While story details are being kept under wraps, they did provide us with a tease by saying, “Alice’s battle with The Umbrella Corporation isn’t finished. Last time we saw Alice, she let them know she was coming after them. It’s time to settle the score.” They also confirmed the cast and it’s Milla Jovovich, Ali Larter, Spencer Locke, Wentworth Miller, Shawn Roberts, Boris Kodjoe and Kim Coates. Who they play and the full press release after the jump:

Here’s the full press release:

(Los Angeles) September 29, 2009 - Screen Gems and Constantin Film announced today that “Resident Evil: Afterlife, »

- Steve 'Frosty' Weintraub

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Resident Evil: Afterlife Begins Production in Toronto

29 September 2009 11:35 AM, PDT | MovieWeb | See recent MovieWeb news »

Screen Gems and Constantin Film announced today that Resident Evil: Afterlife, the next installment in the widely successful Resident Evil film franchise has begun production in Toronto, Canada. The fourth film, which will be shot and released in 3-D, is a first in the Resident Evil film franchise. Most of the key creative players, who turned the Resident Evil film franchise into a global phenomenon, will be reprising their roles in Afterlife.

Actress Milla Jovovich returns as the zombie-fighting heroine Alice. Ali Larter reprises her role as Claire Redfield from Resident Evil: Extinction. Spencer Locke, who played K-Mart in Resident Evil: Extinction is also set to return. New to the film franchise is leading man Wentworth Miller, who has signed on as Chris Redfield - Claire's brother and a popular character from the game series. Shawn Roberts will take over the role of Alice's nemesis Wesker. Boris Kodjoe and Kim Coates have also been cast. »

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DVD Weekly Roundup – Mon 21st September 09

18 September 2009 4:20 AM, PDT | FilmShaft.com | See recent FilmShaft.com news »

State Of Play

Seeing as Craig has already covered State Of Play I won’t go into much detail here.

I suggest you read his detailed review and all I’m going to add is that it really is an intelligent ensemble piece that has good acting from an impressive cast.

It’s nice to see a smart American film for a change, one that actually has something to say and a message to bring across. It’s a shame that it didn’t light up the box office because it deserved success.

Definitely worth your time if you are looking for a higher level of entertainment.

State Of Play is also available on Blu-Ray

Fast & Furious

The 4th in the series reunites the original cast for more pedal to the metal action.

This time Brian O’Conner and Dominic Toretto join forces to bring an evil heroin importer to justice. »

- Alex Wagner

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The Motion/Captured Review: 'Five Minutes Of Heaven'

5 September 2009 11:30 AM, PDT | Hitfix | See recent Hitfix news »

Revenge is probably one of the most common dramatic engines of all time, in all its varied forms.  As such, it would seem like there couldn't be any new stories to tell about revenge no new ideas to contribute to the conversation. And yet, year after year, season after season, revenge is a subject that filmmakers return to, and it's sort of amazing how it continues to yield results, both dramatically and thematically.  Oliver Hirschbiegel, whose movie "Downfall" gave birth to that Hitler YouTube meme that keeps getting recycled (the joke getting thinner every time), was damn near swallowed by Hollywood... »

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Trailer Mash: Downfall Keeps on Giving

28 August 2009 10:33 AM, PDT | Thompson on Hollywood | See recent Thompson on Hollywood news »

The scene where Hitler berates his officers in Downfall is the gift that keeps on giving. Here’s the latest in a series of alternate subtitles to accompany Bruno Ganz’s climactic tirade. The latest object of Hitler’s wrath: the bad reaction to James Cameron’s Avatar trailer: In August of 2008, Hitler was channeling the head of Universal Studios reacting to the news of what was destroyed in the Universal backlot fire. (Icm’s … »

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Hitler's fed up with the Avatar hype

26 August 2009 11:19 AM, PDT | Corona's Coming Attractions | See recent Corona's Coming Attractions news »

By now anyone that's spent more than twenty minutes online will have seen the many parodies using a now infamous clip from Downfall, the German 2004 film that starred Bruno Ganz in a riveting performance as Adolf Hitler in his final days. If you haven't seen the film there's a scene where Hitler is given the news that the war is over for Germany. Hitler then proceeds to chew out his commanders for letting this happen.

Back when the Blu-ray versus HD-DVD war was on, this clip from Downfall was used to illustrate the victory of Blu-ray over HD-DVD. The video was a huge viral hit and since then, whenever the next big subject of interest to the online crowd pops up, someone boots up their copy of Final Cut and slaps new subtitles on the sequence. And now it's been done for the geek flavor of the moment, James Cameron's Avatar! »

- Patrick Sauriol

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Review: Five Minutes of Heaven

23 August 2009 11:02 AM, PDT | Cinematical | See recent Cinematical news »

By Scott Weinberg (reprint from Sundance Film Festival 2009)

The latest film from Downfall director Oliver Hirschbiegel is a simple, straightforward, and very sincere story that covers some rather fascinating issues: The cyclical nature of violence, the difficulties inherent in forgiveness, and the importance of being able to defeat tragedy and go on to live a happy life. If it sounds like a dark and slightly depressing story to hear, well that's the good news. For all its stark honesty and confrontational emotions, the messages found in Five Minutes of Heaven are refreshingly humane and hopeful.

We open in mid-'70s Belfast, and a very young Alistair Little is about to commit a heinous act. Fueled by streetwise fury and a need to prove himself, Alistair assassinates another young man, leaving his little brother as the horrified witness to the act. Poor Joe Griffen has just began a cycle of tragedy »

- Cinematical staff

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'The Baader Meinhof Complex': Student Unrest, By Kurt Loder

21 August 2009 7:00 AM, PDT | MTV Movie News | See recent MTV Movie News news »

From Germany, a fiery action film with lots more on its mind.

Vinzenz Kiefer, Bernd Stegemann and Hannes Wegener in "Baader Meinhof Complex"

Photo: Vitagraph Films

"The Baader Meinhof Complex" is a smart and explosively powerful movie about a German student terrorist gang of the 1970s, and the wave of arson, robbery, kidnappings and murder with which they shook their country's government — in the process triggering exactly the sort of right-wing repression against which they claimed to be crusading. The picture was a deserving Oscar nominee earlier this year for Best Foreign Language Film, and in its weaving-together of the intricacies of social ferment and the bullet-riddled reality of what the gang wrought, it's a fascinating achievement.

The Baader Meinhof Group, as the gang was called in the press (they styled themselves the Red Army Faction, or Raf), was actually led by Gudren Ensslin (played here by Johanna Wokalek), a »

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Exclusive: 'Five Minutes of Heaven' Poster Premiere

19 August 2009 1:32 PM, PDT | Cinematical | See recent Cinematical news »

Do not be confused by the title of the film Five Minutes of Heaven, as it does not refer to the game you played as a middle-schooler where a boy and girl were chosen at random and locked in a closet together. (I believe that was "Seven Minutes in Heaven.") Five Minutes of Heaven is, rather, a thriller from the U.K. in which a man confronts the guy who killed his brother many years ago. James Nesbitt plays the bereaved, and Liam Neeson plays the killer.

The film debuted at Sundance this year, where it won awards for its director, Oliver Hirschbiegel, and screenwriter, Guy Hibbert. Cinematical's Scott Weinberg gave it a rave review, saying it's "bolstered by a smart, insightful screenplay, directed with low-key style and restraint, and supported by two fantastic performances." Hirschbiegel's last film was the Nicole Kidman flop The Invasion, but before that he made the Oscar-nominated Downfall, »

- Eric D. Snider

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Exclusive Interview: Oliver Hirschbiegel Talks 'Five Minutes of Heaven'

19 August 2009 1:00 AM, PDT | CinemaSpy | See recent CinemaSpy news »

Alistair Little was 16 years old in Northern Ireland in 1975. Tensions between Unionist and Nationalists were at boiling point, not only in Belfast but also in many violently segregated small towns. Riots erupted every week in the street and petrol bombs caused the deaths of fathers, sons and brothers.

 

When Little, a Protestant, learned that Jim Griffin, a Catholic, had been stoking trouble, something, he believed, had to be done. He could no longer sit around and passively wait for matters to improve. With a group of friends, Alistair hotwired a stolen car, donned a ski mask and drove to 37 Hill Street, Griffin’s home. Through the living room window, he shot 19-year-old James Griffin. As he turned to leave, he locked eyes with a boy playing with a soccer ball on the pavement outside. He spared the boy's life.

 

The boy was Jim Griffin’s brother, Joe. The strain of »

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Basterds, the Ira and the real Mad Men

17 August 2009 7:01 AM, PDT | ifc.com | See recent IFC news »

Another monster release slate this week finds, amongst other things, interpretations of the Irish troubles, both real and imagined. Also, we meet the real life Mad Men, Qt's Basterds and the godfather of African-American indie film as a bearded ten-year-old boy.

Download this in audio form (MP3: 15:35 minutes, 14.3 Mb) Subscribe to the In Theaters podcast: [Xml] [iTunes]

"Art & Copy"

Filmmaker Doug Pray ("Surfwise") goes inside the advertising industry to uncover the creative minds behind such iconic slogans as "Got Milk?" and "Just Do It," encountering a multitude of contrasting viewpoints, from those who feel they have whored themselves out in the name of commerce to those hopelessly addicted to the rush of satisfying the constantly changing needs of the modern world. Don Draper, eat your heart out.

Opens in New York.

"The Baader Meinhof Complex"

This year's German nominee for the best foreign-language film Oscar, Uli Edel's adaptation of »

- Neil Pedley

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"Five Minutes of Heaven" - First poster in.

1 July 2009 | Movie Jungle | See recent Movie Jungle news »

We have the first poster in from "Five Minutes of Heaven," the winner of the Directing Award World Cinema as well as the Screenwiring Award at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. Oliver Hirschbiegel ("The Invasion," "Das Experiment," "Downfall") helms from the writing by Guy Hibbert ("Saigon Baby," "The Russian Bride"). The film sees theatres on August 21st and stars Liam Neeson, James Nesbitt, Juliet Crawford, Conor MacNeill, Jonathan Harden, Mathew McElhinney, Diarmuid Noyes, Mark Davison and Katy Gleadhill. »

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Popular Picks at This Year's Sydney Film Festival

23 June 2009 12:32 AM, PDT | FilmInk.com.au | See recent FilmInk.com.au news »

Louie Psihoyos' stirring documentary The Cove has won the Showtime Audience Award for Best Documentary at the 2009 Sydney Film Festival. The Cove follows a group of activists determined to expose the horrors behind the capturing of dolphins in the world's biggest supplier of dolphins, the town of Taijii in Japan. The Cove will open in cinemas on general release from August 20.   Festival jury member and director Oliver Hirschbiegel's study of the cyclical nature of violence in Belfast with Five Minutes of Heaven won the audience award for Best Fiction at the State Theatre, marking a great return for Hirschbiegel (Downfall) after the disaster that was The Invasion. »

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We The Jury

4 June 2009 1:18 AM, PDT | FilmInk.com.au | See recent FilmInk.com.au news »

“Sydney Film Festival’s Official Competition filmmakers will be well served by this diverse, talented and experienced jury galvanised by the leadership of celebrated Australian filmmaker Rolf de Heer,” said Festival Director Clare Stewart.   The Jury President, Rolf de Heer  (pictured) will be joined by German director Oliver Hirschbiegel (Five Minutes In Heaven, which is screening in this year’s fest, Downfall and, um, Invasion), Canadian director/producer Ted Kotcheff (Wake In Fright, First Blood, and, um, Weekend At Bernie’s), Australian actress Miranda Otto and Danish director Lone Scherfig (Italian For Beginners, Wilbur Wants To Kill Himself and An Education which will close out the fest), will form the official judging panel during the festival which runs until the 14th June. »

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