Tuesday, December 10, 2013

REPOST: ‘Frozen’: A virtually flawless film

Frozen was released just in time for Thanksgiving to remind us how family and love are the things we should be thankful for the most. Hypable.com gives us the details.

Image source: hypable.com


All of the films in the princess subgenre of fairy tales have led to the masterpiece that is Disney’s Frozen.

Frozen is the tale of two sisters. Elsa (Idina Menzel) has the power of the titular character from Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen, the fairy tale the film is loosely based upon. Unlike the Snow Queen, Elsa has no control over her powers. While she does have the ability to do incredible things like create a snow storm upon command, she also can’t stop herself from sending ice flying in any direction. Anna (Kristen Bell), Elsa’s younger sister, is completely normal in every way. The two sisters have a perfect sister relationship and they are each other’s best friend. One day, Elsa loses control and almost kills Anna. In an attempt to never hurt anyone again, Elsa locks herself in her room, away from everyone.

When Elsa finally does come out, it’s only for one day: her coronation as Queen. Anna is excited. Not only does she get to see her sister for the first time in forever, but the castle is opened to the public, and she gets to interact with strangers, something that is clearly necessary for her very extroverted personality. While running around amongst the people she runs into Prince Hans (Santino Fontana) and their interaction is as awkward as it is perfect. As with any fairytale true love, they get engaged that very day. When asked for her blessing, Elsa denies them. This forces Anna to push her, to demand to know why Elsa won’t allow anyone around her. Elsa loses control when the pressure is applied, and when the people know of her uncontrollable power, she flees, leaving the kingdom in an eternal winter. Anna decides to go after her sister and leaves Prince Hans as temporary ruler. On her journey to find her sister, Anna meets up with Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), an ice salesman, and Olaf (Josh Gad), a snowman brought to life by Elsa.

Frozen works on essentially every level, but perhaps the times it’s at its best is when playing off of the very familiar tropes of the princess subgenre of fairy tales. In traditional tales, everything is black and white, but in Frozen almost everything is grey. The town is cursed by a powerful female, but Elsa isn’t an evil queen who did it with malicious intent. No, she’s just a young woman who can’t control her powers, and that makes for a far more interesting character. There are several more examples of turning traditional meanings on their head throughout the film. Figuring them out is one of the most enjoyable aspects of the film, so I won’t spoil you.

The quality of musicals always come down to the effectiveness of the soundtrack. Often, especially with stories as strong as this one that don’t require singing, they can be seen as a gamble. Luckily, Frozen not only succeeds with its soundtrack, but the songs are so grand that they give so much to the film. They are amazing, Broadway caliber songs. The film smartly cast actors with experience on Broadway in the lead roles. While Kristen Bell and Josh Gad aren’t known as well for their Broadway work as co-stars Idina Menzel and Jonathan Groff, they quickly prove that they have the chops. Menzel’s “Let it Go” will likely make a play for best original song at the Oscars, and Gad’s “In Summer,” a song about a snowman who wants summer to come more than anything, is downright hilarious.

The songs never get tiring. The pace between song and script is spot on, as is the pace of the script in general. The film doesn’t drags anywhere, but that’s only one quality the script from co-director Jennifer Lee (the first female director of a Disney animated feature film) boasts. As noted previously, the script plays on tropes marvelously, but it’s also incredibly funny as well as emotional. It goes from punching you right in the gut one minute to making that same gut explode with laughter the next. It’s brilliant.

Image source: hypable.com


The animation work is absolutely beautiful, and it’s interesting to see the lasting effect the purchase of Pixar is having on Disney. Pixar has generally been seen as the innovators, but in the past two years, it’d be tough to claim that a Pixar film is better than a Disney animation film. The work today is really impressive, and this is no exception. There’s enough going on in the background to warrant multiple viewings.

Image source: hypable.com

Frozen is definitely a film made for kids, and with that comes very strong messages. These messages work far better than most kids movies. Sometimes the messages sent can be iffy at best (see: Brave), but they do exactly what they need to do. What and who is good and bad is somewhat murky throughout the film, but by the end it’s very clear. Young girls and boys will have characters to look up to as there are both strong female and male characters.

This is by all means a great Disney animated film. It’s one of their best in recent years, that’s for sure. It’s also probably one of their best ever, and it wouldn’t be crazy to say it’s up there with the big ones like The Lion King. It’s that good.

It’s becoming too common in today’s day and age to use adjectives like “amazing,” “incredible,” and “awesome,” but this really is all of those things. I don’t know what a perfect movie is, but Frozen is damn close.

Samantha Pouls is interested in filmmaking and writing. She loves blockbuster films such as the Harry Potter series, The Hunger Games, and the Twilight saga, and aims to achieve success at the level of these franchises when she produces her own projects in the future. For more articles about movies and film making, read this blog.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

REPOST: In ‘Blue Is the Warmest Color,’ a young woman comes of age

Have you watched the movie 'Blue Is The Warmest Color' yet? This Palme d'Or recipient at this year's Cannes Film Festival isn't just about emerging homosexuality, which has become a commonly explored theme in independent films nowadays. The movie stands out because of its large use of closeup shots to capture emotions from the actors. Read Ty Burr's brilliant review of the movie below.

Image Source: bostonglobe.com


“Blue Is the Warmest Color” is proof that the cinema’s greatest gift to us is the close-up. No other medium gets so physically near to human experience as it unfolds in time; no other technique teases us with revelations of intimacy and every so often delivers. In Abdellatif Kechiche’s three-hour epic about a young woman’s coming of age — the top prize-winner at last May’s Cannes Film Festival and a scandale ever since — the camera hardly ever seems to leave the face of Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos) as it moves from pouty adolescent sensuality through physical ecstasy to a slowly hardening distress. If the filmmaker could somehow push past the barrier of his heroine’s skin to capture her madly firing neurons, you feel he would.

If he had, though, “Blue Is the Warmest Color” would be a different movie, and maybe not the one Kechiche intended. The public brouhaha surrounding this film has to do with three lengthy and explicit sex scenes that fill out the second hour, between Adèle and her older art-student girlfriend Emma (Léa Seydoux), but the movie is more properly about our larger appetites — for love, connection, life fully and vibrantly lived — and how, at the end of the day, we still end up hungry.

When the movie opens, Adèle is a bookish teenager, ravenous to take a bite out of experience. “Blue Is the Warmest Color” hangs around her classrooms and schoolyard, observing the catty byplay of her friends, a relationship with an earnest older boy (Jérémie Laheurte) that tips into sex and then falters. Adèle wants something more: She wants Emma, the blue-haired mystery girl she spotted in a public park — a rapturous movie moment of lust at first sight — and can’t get out of her head.

These early scenes are extraordinarily sympathetic to the confusions of youth, with cinematographer Sofian El Fani hovering daringly close to Exarchopoulos’s naive beauty. At times, the camera is content just to watch the girl sleep, either hoping for a glimpse of her dreams or simply marveling at this accidental odalisque. The original French title of “Blue Is the Warmest Color” is “La Vie de Adèle” -- “The Life of Adèle” — and Exarchopoulos gives us Adèle’s life force, tentatively at first and then in big, greedy gulps. If the movie deserves to be remembered for anything, it’s for this performance, risky and raw in ways not easily quantified.

Adèle finally meets Emma when the younger girl unintentionally-on-purpose wanders into a gay bar; and their initial conversation, followed by the slow dance of courtship and first kisses, is remarkable for the way it conveys the hermetically sealed pleasures — the sounds, the sunlight — of new love. It’s with the sex scenes that “Blue Is the Warmest Color” develops static, not because they’re “shocking” (which they’re not, really) or overlong (which they are) but because they’re aestheticized. Kechiche films the scenes in long takes with medium closeups; the emphasis is on emotional and physical desire finding explosive release, rather than the mechanistic calisthenics of porn.

Still, this is a voyeur’s airbrushed view of two women making love, not quite far enough from the tastefully intertwined limbs and slow dissolves of an old David Hamilton movie on late-night Cinemax. It’s not messy enough, either with these characters’ specific personalities or the funk of real life.

Would this movie look, sound, be different if a woman had made it? If a gay woman had made it? The question is both irrelevant and not. (For what it’s worth, Julie Maroh, author of the original graphic novel, has diplomatically disparaged the film on similar grounds.) Kechiche wants to deliver a heightened experience, to flood our senses with Adèle’s, but his movie only goes so far, and whether that’s a failure of filmmaking, imagination, or gender is anyone’s guess.

The last hour of “Blue Is the Warmest Color” follows the heroine’s life during the years after she and Emma break up; Adèle becomes shellshocked and stalled, and so does the film. It’s as if the director had given up trying to get under her skin and contented himself with recording the character’s weepy, occasionally grotesque flailings. There’s not much tragedy to any of this (although Exarchopoulos is still very affecting) and not much point either.

The most unflattering read would be that Kechiche has already had his way with Adèle — narratively speaking, of course — and now wishes she’d just go home. A more sympathetic take would be that this talented filmmaker has retreated behind the screenplay’s maunderings about the eternal mystery of womanly desire, all of them voiced by men, none of them second-guessed by the female characters. If you don’t really understand women — or don’t even want to — it’s easier to just call them a mystery and let it go at that. For all the close-ups, that may be why “Blue Is the Warmest Color” never gets close enough.


Samantha Pouls is a junior high school student and an amateur filmmaker who explores different techniques in filmmaking to enhance her skills. For more discussions on movies and film productions, subscribe to this Facebook page.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

REPOST: Taylor Swift Cast in The Giver With Meryl Streep, Katie Holmes and Brenton Thwaites

It seems like Taylor Swift is patterning her acting career to the very successful one she has in the music industry. Not the type to sit on her laurels, Taylor has taken upon the challenge of co-starring with one of Hollywood's most seasoned and versatile actresses, the one and only Meryl Streep.  Usmagazine.com gives the scoop on the upcoming film adaptation of The Giver.
Taylor Swift has been cast in a supporting role in the new Weinstein Company film The Giver Credit: David Livingston/Getty

image source: UsMagazine.com
Making room on her mantle for an Oscar? Taylor Swift is heading back to the big screen once again -- this time in an intense new supporting role in the film adaptation of the young adult novel The Giver by Louis Lowry.

image source: wikipedia.com


The singer -- who recently wrapped the last leg of her Red tour -- will be joining a slew of Hollywood A-listers on the new Weinstein Company film. Her costars include three-time Oscar-winner Meryl Streep, Jeff Bridges, Alexander Skarsgard, Katie Holmes, Brenton Thwaites, Odeya Rush and Cameron Monaghan.

image source: thefilmstage.com


"The Giver has always been a favorite book of mine and my kids," TWC Co-Chairman Harvey Weinstein said in a statement Friday. "We could not have assembled a more impressive cast for this project behind Lois Lowry’s beautiful novel and the directorial talents of Phil Noyce, and are tremendously excited to commence production."

As previously reported, Swift and her new costar Thwaites were briefly linked in September when they were spotted flirting at a private bash by Weinstein himself during the Toronto International Film Festival. But alas, the mingling appears to have been just a huge hint at the upcoming collaboration.
In fact, a source reveals to Us that Weinsten was overheard saying "See you in South Africa" to the two stars at the party. The cast of The Giver will soon be leaving to shoot in the country.

"Harvey Weinstein took Taylor to his table and sat her next to Brenton. They had a nice time talking but no numbers were exchanged," a Swift pal told Us Weekly exclusively at the time. "They are definitely not dating."
Swift's previous acting credits include a guest spot on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Valentine's Day, The Lorax and a guest appearance on the season finale of New Girl in Season 2.

Samantha Pouls is a high school student who loves films and the process of making them. See similar articles here

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

REPOST: Taylor Swift heads to Toronto Film Festival for ‘One Chance’ premiere

Taylor Swift walks the red carpet at the Toronto International Film Festival not as an actress but as the writer of the song featured on the end credits of the movie One Chance. Read what she has to say about the experience in an article posted on The Inquisitr.


Image Source: cdn.inquisitr.com
Taylor Swift won’t be showing off her acting skills at the Toronto International Film Festival this year but she will be walking the red carpet. The country singer is heading to TIFF tonight for the premiere of the movie One Chance.

Swift isn’t acting in One Chance but she did write a song for the movie. Her new song “Sweeter Than Fiction” will make its debut tonight during the movie’s ending credits.

Swift writes on Twitter: “Tonight= my first Toronto Film Festival experience-Going to the premiere tonight of One Chance, honored to have written the end credit song!”

One Chance was inspired by Port Talbot tenor Paul Potts. The movie tells the story of Potts’ rise to fame and stars James Corden, Alexandra Roach and Valeria Bilello. The movie was directed by David Frankel.

The Star reports that Taylor Swift may perform her song tonight for the audience. Rumors have been circulating that Swift will hold a small concert at the Toronto International Film Festival tonight but organizers said that there is “no indication” that she is planning to sing at the Winter Garden Theater.

“Sweeter Than Fiction” isn’t the only new Taylor Swift song that fans are excited to hear. The country singer is also reportedly working on new music with Jennifer Lopez.

Tonight= my first Toronto Film Festival experience-Going to the premiere tonight of One Chance, honored to have written the end credit song! — Taylor Swift (@taylorswift13) September 9, 2013

A writer herself, junior high school student Samantha Pouls draws inspiration from singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, among other artists. Get the latest updates about young Hollywood by following this Twitter page.

Friday, August 9, 2013

The insatiable James Franco

Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

There could be more than one apt title for this write-up—The many endeavors of James Franco, James Franco: The lover of life and art, and so on—but all these could be summed up to an adjective: insatiable.


With all the handsomeness the Great Providence has given to him, seeing him dabbling in different art forms is enough to make hundreds of vain men jealous and fan girls more adoring. He is a painter and a cartoonist, he’s been in different soap operas and theater productions, he has produced his own films, and he has busied himself rubbing elbows with some of the most eccentric artists America has ever known—all these are just a modicum of his being an award-winning, A-list, ultra-popular Hollywood actor. To boot, his exhausting-to-recite CV—M.F.A. in creative writing at Columbia University and Brooklyn College, M.F.A. candidate in filmmaking at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts—is put to test with his short story collection Palo Alto, which received mixed reactions from various award-winning American fictionists.


Image Source: reviewswithoutlegs.blogspot.com

Although many critics think that Franco excels as an actor and lacks greatness when it comes to his other endeavors, he is convinced of the quality of his prolific output: “Why not do as many things I love as I can? As long as the work is good,” he said in an interview in New York Magazine.

And as the cliché goes: “all art is subjective,” then it is all up to his fans and critics whether he does well or not.

Image Source: moviepilot.com


Understanding the depth of an actor is one of the many things a film enthusiast like Samantha Pouls must know. More about understanding the complexities of filmmaking can be found on this blog.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Will 2013 be finally Superman's year?

Image Source: nerdsoup.englishboards.com


























The spotlight may have shone on Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, and Batman in recent years, but many believe that this year’s spotlight is reserved for Clark Kent, aka the Man of Steel.


Even during its development stages, Man of Steel has already been generating a lot of buzz. Because superhero films have experienced tremendous successes over the past few years, it is no surprise that a Superman movie would attract a great deal of attention. Adding to the excitement is the fact that the men behind the film are Zach Snyder (300, Watchmen) and Christopher Nolan (the Batman trilogy) – filmmakers known for their “dark” style in action films.



Image Source: weheartit.com
 

























As expected, there are also those who are skeptical about the film, considering that its predecessor Superman Returns was a box office failure despite its critical success. However, given the strong promotion for the film, as well as positive reviews from early screenings, many film experts believe that Man of Steel would surpass the success of Superman Returns.



Image Source: supermanhomepage.com
 

























In addition, Man of Steel’s casting proves to be a factor on its impending success. British actor Henry Cavill seems to have gotten the approval of fans, both men and women, when it comes to playing the iconic superhero. Furthermore, the film boasts of acclaimed actors, such as Amy Adams, Diane Lane, Kevin Costner, and Russell Crowe, which adds an appeal to older audiences. And just like this film, Henry Cavill’s career also looks very promising. Previously losing to Robert Pattinson on his roles in Twilight and Harry Potter, Cavill is among those rumored to fill in Daniel Craig’s shoes as the next James Bond.


With this amount of buzz, it is no surprise that this will be the year of the Man of Steel.


 Young film enthusiasts, like Samantha Pouls, are excited about the summer as it brings a selection of big-budgeted films. View this blog for more news and insights on the film industry.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Inception, the dream heist

Take all the gimmickry out of Inception and everything would seem to be just a plain caper movie—a sci-fi attempt to steal not a corporeal matter but something intangible: in Christopher Nolan’s predilection, it’s the human dream.

Image source: nathanielclaiborne.com

Science fiction-wise, the CGI that brushes all the impossible stunts are impressive. The succession of mirrors and the reclining floors and mirrors make the audience believe that borrowing something from The Wachowski Brothers’ The Matrix for the last time is not criminal at all. The plot is as inexplicable as its structure, as Nolan intricately interweaves the past with the present until in an outside standpoint it becomes hard to identify which is which, which is the past or whose dream is showing on the screen now.

Image source: clarionledger.com


At first glance it is as though Nolan is just sketching his enthusiastic horse playing with images, as he makes use of whatever acting chops there are in the brilliantly assembled ensemble of talents—Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, Marion Cotillard, Ellen Page, Cillian Murphy, Dileep Rao, Tom Berenger, Tom Hardy, and Michael Caine.

Image source: comicbookmovie.com


Sans the flamboyant computer effects the movie remains an existentialist heist film—but one thing is certain: it is well written and properly directed.

And before the credits rule the screen one might think that he has been robbed of his own dream—but it could be the other thing: perhaps Nolan wants his viewers to dream.

Samantha Pouls is an avid fan of many large-scale film productions that have created a strong impact in popular culture and transformed the entire industry of filmmaking. Her exemplary views on films at large are accessible through this website.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Teens and sympathy: Evolving a young genre for adult understanding

Ten Things I Hate About You may be Shakespearian, but it’s no sonnet on the vicissitudes of life. Teen movies have moved forward since then --- at least from the purview of the generation that forgave Clueless and The Hottie and the Nottie. Hollywood has pretty much squandered its high horse among teenagers and their parents for largely depicting adolescence as a squawky mess hall. But with wittier writers, like Tina Fey (for Mean Girls), teen concerns have gone valid. Bullies and crushes are elements of psychological thrillers, even.

Image source: impawards.com
American cinema might not entertain the same illusions for teen movies, unapologetically pushing them into the genre of cheap laughs and publicity for new heartthrobs. The Twilight series attempted to imbue adult problems on teenagers the way defunct TV series Dawson’s Creek did, but these are tawdry nervous breakdowns compared to the more grounded Freaky Friday.

Image source: fanpop.com
Teen movies are in a genre of low expectations, and moviegoers forgive them easily. But it wouldn’t hurt to keep them more sensible by, in fact, scrapping the informal genre altogether. What sets teen movies apart from other film genres is their vagueness --- whether their classification is based on the ages of the characters, or they are strictly set in high school, or they just have to have jocks and cheerleaders --- and this keeps the genre more pliant. Teens coexisting with adults in films --- and having creepy enemies, like those from the Harry Potter films --- might be preferred by parents and guidance counsellors because these films have an inter-generational understanding about them and have dispensed with the old caricatures.

Image source: harrypotter.wikia.com

Teenagers also make promising filmmakers. Samantha Pouls, an aspiring filmmaker, has advanced beyond teen movies in her repertoire of inspiration. See how a more mature lens about films gives her perspective.

Monday, March 4, 2013

A little quandary: The future of cinema and the young filmmakers


 Image Source: dafilmschool.wordpress.com 


Would-be filmmakers have this inkling that winning a Palm d’Or or any prestigious film award is achievable by making films with ungraspable plot lines, indescribable characterizations, precariously shot sceneries, irrelevant nudities, and multilayers of foulmouthed dialogues and shadowy subplots. The result of believing this notion is multitudes of bad films that smear the prestige of the entire movie industry.


Most film students, upon learning immense textbook knowledge in school, suffer from a very injurious illness of having too much eagerness to deviate from the current standards and trends. These students despise mainstream Hollywood movies, turn to international cinema, and make films that are devoid of delicate cinematography and significant storyline.





Image Source: gifilmfestival.com 


That is why many short films and exploratory films made by film students today are unsurprisingly unpromising.


The other quandary that continuously distorts the future of cinema is the heavy borrowing of student filmmakers from the greats. Films that are obviously copied from the oeuvres of Scorsese or Schnabel or Cukor are everywhere—as if these films have been maliciously transported from the past and lost their elegance along the way.


Impatience is one of the serial killers of cinema today. In this time when the Internet is too gracious in providing every human’s hunger for knowledge, young filmmakers do not do it the master’s way any longer. They are subservient to the free tutorial stuff on YouTube and to whatever Wikipedia is saying. They don’t give their lives to the craft as Jean Renoir and Akira Kurosawa and the other masters did before.



 
Image Source: vsthepomegranate.blogspot.com  



Samantha Pouls is a junior high school student who is interested in the intricate process of filmmaking. Like her Facebook page to have more updates of the other activities she loves being involved with.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Useful websites for amateur filmmakers

Image source: uproxx.com

Filmmaking has evolved from being a job for the resource-rich class to becoming a creative diversion for aficionados with Internet know-how. The Web provides many tools that filmmaking greenhorns can use to start with the craft. Although film schools still teach the best lessons and techniques in this evolving form of art, it will not hurt if a little help from Mr. Google is sought. The following are useful websites that beginners can visit to hoist the quality of their works:

Jamendo
This site has an ample list of great music that can be used by newbies in their films. Although not all in the playlist can be used, a great deal of them are licensed and can be applied in film projects. Search result is extensive and downloading can be easy, especially since there is a “your rights on this album” section in every album.

Image source: musikality.net

Freesound
This site is a collaborative database of creative commons-licensed sound effects for sound editors and music professionals. Amateur filmmakers, like Samantha Pouls and Jonason Pauley, would find this as a convenient tool to accentuate audio value in their films.

Archive
The American Library of Congress has the rights to a myriad of old footage, most of which have been released into public domain. This site can be very useful for filmmakers who want to inject videos of real-life accounts, such as the speech made by former US President John F. Kennedy or some old propaganda videos, into their work.

Every great filmmaker was once a neophyte in the art and business of movie production. While amateur filmmakers still have a lot of challenges to tackle, they are given a powerhouse of resources that they could use as training ground to become excellent artists in the future.

Image source: freenew.net

This Facebook page provides more ideas about filmmaking.