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July 23, 2017

Dunkirk Veteran on Christopher Nolan’s World War II Drama: ‘It Was Just Like I Was There Again’

With a 94 on Metacritic and a $50 million debut at the box office, Dunkirk is already one of Christopher Nolan’s most well-received films. It isn’t just critics and fanboys who appreciate his tense new World War II drama, however, as at least one veteran of the battle itself is now signing its praises as well: “I never thought I would see that again,” said 97-year-old Ken Sturdy. “It was just like I was there again.”

“It didn’t have a lot of dialogue. It didn’t need any of the dialogue because it told the story visually and it was so real,” he continued. “Dunkirk” is light on conventional plotting and dialogue, as Nolan opted for an experiential, you-are-there approach that favors action over words. Study, who was 20 at the time, served as a signalman in the Royal Navy and helped soldiers evacuate the beach where 68,000 British soldiers were captured or killed and more than 300,000 were eventually rescued.

“I had the privilege of seeing that film tonight and I am saddened by it because of what happened on that beach,” he said. “I was 20 when that happened, but watching the movie, I could see my old friends again and a lot of them died later in the war. I went on convoys after that in the North Atlantic. I had lost so many of my buddies.” Learn more about Sturdy here.

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Source: IndieWire film

July 23, 2017

‘Captain Marvel’ Concept Art Shows Brie Larson Fighting the Skrulls — in the 1990s

When it hits theaters in 2019, “Captain Marvel” will become the first Marvel movie centered around a female superhero. Brie Larson has the distinction of leading the upcoming film, which was teased at Comic-Con with new concept art yesterday — as well as the revelation that it will take place in the ‘90s, well before any other chapter in the ongoing Marvel mythos.

It will also pit Captain Marvel (aka Carol Danvers) against the Skrulls, a race of extraterrestrial shapeshifters most familiar to comic-book fans for their appearances opposite the Fantastic Four. Helping the superheroine in that task will be Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), who at this point will still have the use of both eyes — and thus no need for his signature eyepatch.

Marvel Studios’ Kevin Feige told Variety last year that Captain Marvel is one of the most powerful heroes in that particular cinematic universe: “If you had the collector cards of the Marvel characters and you could see the power levels, she would be off the charts compared to anyone that we’ve previously introduced in a film.”

“Captain Marvel” is slated to arrive in theaters on March 8, 2019 and will be directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck. Avail yourself of the concept art unveiled at Comic-Con below.

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Source: IndieWire film

July 23, 2017

‘Dunkirk’ and ‘Girls Trip’ Prove the Box-Office Value of Original Ideas; ‘Valerian’ Does Not

This is an unusual summer weekend, with three original non-franchise titles opening wide. Even odder: Two of them did extremely well.

Christopher Nolan’s “Dunkirk” opened above advance estimates with $50 million. Not only does that place him on par with “Interstellar” in 2014 (adjusted opening gross: $50.9 million), but he did so with a film that didn’t specifically appeal to younger audiences, or even Americans.

If “Dunkirk” goes on to the four-times multiple as “Interstellar” (which was boosted by Thanksgiving and Christmas play time, rather than the summer dog-days ahead), it could score close to $200 million. With initial international grosses strong ($55 million, with no China, Japan, Germany, or Latin America yet), it could reach the break-even minimum of $500 million worldwide.

Girls Trip

Another overperformer is Malcolm D. Lee’s “Girls Trip,” which scored a rare A+ Cinemascore (“Dunkirk” was a decent A-) and earned $30 million. That’s only $3 million less than the best African-American lead-character release of the year, “Get Out” (and one of the few to open since then). At under $20 million in estimated production cost, and the potential for strong word-of-mouth among women (79 percent of the initial audience, which was 59 percent African-American), it could see an ultimate $100 million haul.

STX Films/Europacorp

Unfortunately, Luc Besson’s French production “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” didn’t have the same luck. At an estimated cost of around $200 million, it had to settle for a $17 million opening. While its intended audience is international, it will take a massive performance to make up the difference.

The Top 10 totaled $171 million. That’s about $7 million less than the same weekend last year and the year-to-date decline continues.

"War for the Planet of the Apes."

“War for the Planet of the Apes.”

Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fo

Hurting the cause was the continuing collapse of “War for the Planet of the Apes.” Reviews were great, but the opening was the smallest of the trilogy and its 64 percent drop put the film in fourth place after debuting at #1. The first two entries fell only half in their second weekends.

“Spider-Man: Homecoming” came in at #3, with a third weekend drop of 50 percent. That makes expensive sequels in this perennial Marvel series more challenging than expected, but it gave the studio a needed mid-summer hit that will rank among the season’s top performers.

“The Big Sick”

Amazon Studios

A foursome of films kept their declines between 30-35 percent. “Despicable Me 3,” “Baby Driver,” “The Big Sick,” and “Wonder Woman” (Warner Bros.) all more than held their own against three new films. “Wonder Woman” now is the top-grossing domestic film of the summer, with its next goal to reach $400 million.

Last year saw two summer films open past this weekend to over $50 million with “Jason Bourne” ($59 million) and “Suicide Squad” ($133 million). We probably won’t see that again before the fall. Expect the 2016 falloff to accelerate over the next few weeks.

"Dunkirk"

“Dunkirk”

Warner Bros.

The Top 10

1. Dunkirk (Warner Bros.) NEW – Cinemascore: A-; Metacritic: 94; Est. budget: $150 million

$50,500,000 in 3,720 theaters; PTA (per theater average): $13,575; Cumulative: $50,500,000

2. Girls Trip (Universal) NEW – Cinemascore: A+; Metacritic: 72; Est. budget: $19 million

$30,371,000 in 2,591 theaters; PTA: $11,722; Cumulative: $30,371,000

3. Spider-Man: Homecoming (Sony)  (20th Century Fox) Week 3; Last weekend #2

$22,010,000 (-50%) in 4,130 theaters (-218); PTA: $4,130; Cumulative: $251,712,000

4. War for the Planet of the Apes (20th Century Fox) Week 2; Last weekend #1

$20,400,000 (-64%) in 4,100 theaters (+78); PTA: $4,976; Cumulative: $97,751,000

5. Valerian and a City of a Thousand Planets (STX)  NEW – Cinemascore: B-; Metacritic: 51; Est. budget: $200 million

$17,020,000 in 3,553 theaters; PTA: $4,790; Cumulative: $17,020,000

6. Despicable Me 3 (Universal)  (20th Century Fox) Week 4; Last weekend #3

$12,714,000 (-34%) in 3,525 theaters (-630); PTA: $3,607; Cumulative: $213,323,000

7. Baby Driver (Sony)  (20th Century Fox) Week 4; Last weekend #4

$6,000,000 (-31%) in 2,503 theaters (-540); PTA: $2,397; Cumulative: $84,234,000

8. The Big Sick (Lionsgate)  (20th Century Fox) Week; Last weekend #5

$5,000,000 (-34%) in 2,597 theaters (no change); PTA: $1,925; Cumulative: $24,539,000

9. Wonder Woman (Warner Bros.)  (20th Century Fox) Week 7; Last weekend #6

$4,630,000 (-32%) in 1,971 theaters (-773); PTA: $2,349; Cumulative: $389,033,000

10. Wish Upon (Broad Green)  (20th Century Fox) Week 2; Last weekend #7

$2,478,000 (-%) in 2,154 theaters (-96); PTA: $1,150; Cumulative: $10,522,000

Source: IndieWire film

July 23, 2017

Amazon’s ‘Landline’ Leads Specialized Releases, Followed by Indian Rom-Com ‘Fidaa’

As “The Big Sick” crosses over to 2,500 theaters and “Dunkirk” takes up all the oxygen as the best-reviewed film of the year, this is a quiet moment for specialized releases. Here’s where they stand.

Opening

Landline (Magnolia) Metacritic: 65; Festivals include: Sundance, San Francisco, Seattle 2017

$52,336 in 4 theaters; PTA (per theater average): $13,084

Amazon brought Magnolia on board to handle theatrical on this Sundance acquisition, a complicated family drama about adult kids dealing with parental infidelity and sibling dynamics, with an eclectic cast including Edie Falco, John Turturro, and Jenny Slate. Opening in four top New York/Los Angeles theaters, this scored the best numbers for the weekend but otherwise not especially impressive. Saturday grosses fell slightly from Friday (in-person appearances were a likely factor).

What comes next: Magnolia adds 35 new dates this Friday as Amazon continues its commitment to the traditional three-month window.

midwife deneuve

The Midwife

The Midwife (Music Box) Metacritic: 63; Festivals include: Berlin 2016, Seattle 2017

$20,250 in 3 theaters; PTA: $6,750

This French drama with Catherine Deneuve is at three ideal New York/Los Angeles locations, including the Francophile Paris in Manhattan. That helped raise its grosses to still mixed results, as French films continue to struggle on art-house screens.

What comes next: This expands to 25 total screens this Friday.

International releases:

Fidaa (Big Sky) – $(est.) 1,050,000 in 139 theaters; PTA: $7,554

A strong initial result for Sekhar Kammula’s Indian romantic comedy, his first in Telugu.

Lady Macbeth

Week Two

Lady Macbeth (Roadside Attractions)

$123,140 in 40 theaters (+35); PTA: $3,079; Cumulative: $219,420

An aggressive expansion for the second weekend of this 19th-century erotic drama that’s more akin to Flaubert or Lawrence than Shakespeare, with average results. A strong Saturday boost over Friday could suggest initial positive response from an older audience.

Endless Poetry (Abkco)

$(est.) 28,000 in 11 theaters (+9); PTA: $(est.) 2,545; Cumulative: $(est.) 64,000

Alejandro Jodorowsky’s late-life recounting of his Chilean childhood expanded to other large cities, with a result that doesn’t quite sustain its initial New York/Los Angeles momentum.

“Maudie”

Ongoing/expanding (Grosses over $50,000 in under 1,000 theaters)

Maudie (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 14

$390,198 in 233 theaters (+134); Cumulative: $4,065,000

Most of the film’s North American gross comes from Canada, the country that produced it and served as its setting. The total gross for the U.S. is $1.4 million.

The Beguiled (Focus) Week 5

$251,600 in 331 theaters (-395); Cumulative: $10,155,000

Sofia Coppola’s period Gothic drama will end up at about a fifth of her biggest success, “Lost in Translation” (adjusted gross: $65 million).

The Little Hours

“The Little Hours”

Courtesy of Sundance

Little Hours (Gunpowder & Sky) Week 3

$162,530 in 114 theaters (+9); Cumulative: $971,637

This contemporary-dialogue comic adaptation of “The Decameron” isn’t getting the same response as its initial platform dates, with a per-theater average of under $1,500 in limited release.

A Ghost Story (A24) Week 3

$141,148 in 43 theaters (+23); Cumulative: $480,478

A continued modest result for David Lowery’s acclaimed reteaming of Casey Affleck and Rooney Mara.

The Hero (The Orchard) Week 7

$145,214 in 191 theaters (-124); Cumulative: $3,705,000

Another summer specialized release for an older audience. Decent response, but likely didn’t get higher because of the amount of alternative films for the same group.

Beatriz at Dinner (Roadside Attractions) Week 7

$114,342 in 116 theaters (-89); Cumulative: $6,706,000

Miguel Arteta’s dinner-gone-wrong drama continues its decent run as one of the above-average recent specialized performers.

Lost in Paris (Oscilloscope) Week 6

$61,500 in 42 theaters (no change); Cumulative: $242,176

Unsophisticated Canadians bewildered in the French capital continues its niche fun as another subtitled film getting modest results. In the same number of theaters it held well, dropping only about 25 percent.

Paris Can Wait (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 11

$53,784 in 66 theaters (-111); Cumulative: $5,449,000

Eleanor Coppola’s film winds down its run after a respectable art-house showing.

Also noted:

The Women’s Balcony (Menemsha) – $34,469 in theaters; Cumulative: $978,263

City of Ghosts (IFC) – $18,216 in 18 theaters; Cumulative: $73,216

The B-Side (Neon) – $16,265 in 25 theaters; Cumulative: $94,584

13 Minutes (Sony Pictures Classics) – $11,984 in 19 theaters; Cumulative: $74,540

Source: IndieWire film

July 23, 2017

Sylvester Stallone Once Again Hints That Ivan Drago — or His Son — Will Appear in ‘Creed 2’

Sylvester Stallone’s Instagram has become to go-to spot for updates on “Creed II.” After teasing that Ivan Drago will return in the sequel to Ryan Coogler’s “Rocky” spinoff and that the “sins of the father” will be a factor as well, Sly more or less confirmed that a Drago will appear — though it may not be the original.

“JUST DONE …. if you are curious , around 439 handwritten pages translates into about a 120 page typed screenplay…#writers cramp #rockybalboa #drago #adoniscreed #MGM,” he wrote alongside a picture of the notebook that apparently contains the handwritten screenplay for “Creed II.” That second hashtag is of the most interest to viewers ready to see Dolph Lundgren reprise his role as the fierce Russian boxer who kills Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) in the ring.

Stallone’s most recent “Creed”-related Instagram post was a photoshopped picture of Adonis Creed (Michael B. Jordan), son of Apollo, in the ring next to the man responsible for his father’s death. We’ll see what form their eventual confrontation takes on when the untitled “Creed” sequel is released.

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Source: IndieWire film

July 23, 2017

GoPro Fusion employs advanced stitching techniques to 360 video

Using an advanced lens design and a proprietary stitching algorithm, GoPro’s Fusion 360 camera will premiere on the cutting edge of immersive video tech when it launches later this year.

The post GoPro Fusion employs advanced stitching techniques to 360 video appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

July 23, 2017

Watch: ‘Westworld’ Season 2 Trailer Unveiled at Comic-Con

HBO has dropped a trailer for ‘Westworld’ Season 2, premiering in 2018.

“I want to live / not merely survive / and I won’t keep up this dream of life that keeps me alive.” Those are the haunting Sammy Davis Jr. lyrics that open Westworld Season 2’s new trailer, which HBO screened at Comic-Con in San Diego today.

The trailer previews plenty of carnage, including an apparent mass murder at the Delos corporate office, led by none other than Maeve (Thandie Newton). We also see Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) spraying bullets on the frontier, Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) standing over a slaughtered tiger, and The Man in Black (Ed Harris) sporting a murderous grin, with blood splattered all over his face.

For more, read about Westworld cinematographer Paul Cameron’s “fearless coverage” on 35mm.

Read More

Source: NoFilmSchool

July 21, 2017

‘Endless Poetry:’ Why Alejandro Jodorowsky Thinks You Should ‘Make Movies to Lose Money’


Alejandro Jodorowsky’s ‘Endless Poetry’ is a surrealist vision of the influential artist’s youth.


He’s one of Kanye West’s greatest influences. He fathered the midnight cult movie genre with acid western El Topo (1970), which brought John Lennon to his knees. Alejandro Jodorowsky is the definition of a multi-hyphenate—the director, screenwriter, playwright, actor, author, poet, producer, composer, musician, comic writer, and spiritual guru moves between mediums as fluidly as his work moves between reality and fiction.



The 87-year-old’s latest film, Endless Poetry, spirals from reality to fiction and then back again a thousand times over. Jodorowsky brings a fantastical Chile to life with dwarves, clowns, and his trademark surrealism to tell the true story of his coming of age as a young artist and poet. With the energy of a Fellini film, each scene is more absurd than the next.

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Source: NoFilmSchool

July 21, 2017

BTS with Nolan and ‘Dunkirk’: How They Shot 70mm and IMAX


DP Hoyte Van Hoytema had to invent new lenses to make shooting with the massive cameras work.


Christopher Nolan’s 70mm WWII spectacle Dunkirk has already received more attention and critical praise than almost any other film this year, and it’s only hitting theaters today.



We’ve read and written a lot about what unique spin Nolan might bring to a well-trod topic, and of course about the tech behind the film. It’s one of the first features in history shot almost entirely with a million dollar IMAX camera. (This crazy Business Insider story reveals how the team rescued footage from one that sank unexpectedly during a water-landing scene.)



But why was it so important for Nolan and his DP Hoyte Van Hoytema (Interstellar, Her) to shoot on the rarely used 70mm format? Was it more than just a gimmick? This behind-the-scenes video reveals some of the team’s decision-making process.



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Source: NoFilmSchool

July 21, 2017

More Bad News for Canon’s 6D Mark II


Does Canon’s new camera actually perform worse than the cheaper EOS 80D?


Canon released its 6D Mark II last month to a pretty unanimously disappointed group of DIY filmmakers. Many had hoped that Canon’s popular, cost effective little brother to the 5D would have the ability to record in 4K. It does not.



4K is quickly becoming a necessary format for cinema cameras, so this is a significant spec for Canon to leave out if it is courting the filmmaker market at all. Others are quick to point out that the photography company has been distancing their line of DSLRs from film users, perhaps in an attempt to draw more buyers towards its true cinema line of C-series cameras. The 6D was clearly updated with the photographer and not the filmmaker in mind.

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Source: NoFilmSchool