Category Archives: Film

Astroboy teaser trailer

Astro Boy is coming to the big screen again. Check out the new teaser trailer at Apple.

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Die Harderer

Edited down to frames where there is fire/gunfire.

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Alan Moore on superheroes

Wired Magazine has a great interview with Alan Moore, where he discusses the origins of the superhero as well his current and future projects.

That wasn’t what it used to mean. That wasn’t what it used to mean to me when I was a child. What I was getting out of it was this unbridled world of the imagination, and the superhero was a perfect vehicle for that when I was much younger. But looking at the superhero today, it seems to me an awful lot like Watchmen without the irony, that with Watchmen we were talking very much about the potential abuses of this kind of masked vigilante justice and the kind of people that it would in all likelihood attract if these things were taking place in a more realistic world. But that was not meant approvingly.

Via Meta-Filter.

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Stephen Colbert predicts the Oscars

His homophobia gets the best of him. So, close, Colbert.

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Aquellos ojos verdes

One of my all-time favorite scenes (in a Wong Kar-Wai film) taken from In The Mood For Love. Apologies for Chinese subs over Chinese dialogue. Sucka! Inspired by Steven’s comparison of Slumdog Millionaire’s cinemetography to WKW’s Chungking Express.

Thanks, Hard Liquor, Soft Holes.

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Dr. Manhattan’s little boy blue

It’s coming soon.

Via Topless Robot.

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Medicine for Melancholy

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Medicine for Melancholy is a film directed by Barry Jenkins and features Wyatt Cenac and Tracey Higgins as two people who recover from a one-night stand, only to follow-up with a day of exploration through various parts of San Francisco while reflecting the dichotomy between the city and their identities as black Americans.

Micah is a preternaturally chill native San Franciscan who feels increasingly alienated as the city rapidly gentrifies. “Imagine the Lower Haight filled with nothing but black folk and white artists,” he tells Jo, his would-be lover, about his long-gone San Fran. (It’s become the least black of America’s major cities.) Jo, wary at first but charming over time, is a transplant who doesn’t see the world in Micah’s specifically racialized terms, and it’s implied by the relative sizes of their living spaces that she occupies a higher position in the economic food chain. Both though, are black people partaking in a social milieu where Negroes are rarities. None of this tension is anywhere near as didactic as it may sound; these issues come up intermittently in the course of the pair walking and biking around, making each other laugh and generally feeling each other out.

I have always yearned for some poetic reflection on the state of San Francisco, the city I grew up in, as it has grown and morphed into a somewhat placated upper middle class of families. As a result, what has been born is a group of tweens, teens, and young adults, all searching for something greater in a city that seems to be innoculated with the rising cost of quaint comfort. Searching for identity, love, and reason may just be as hard to find in San Francisco as it is finding a decent and affordable place to live.

Via Racialicious.

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Asian horror films

In honor of Friday the 13th, you should check out Asian Horror Movies, a ghetto but free source for any possible Asian horror flick you can think of. I will leave you with this piano death scene from Hausu:

Have a great weekend kiddos.

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Rorschach’s face in Watchmen

Via i09.

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