shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 8 days ago | movies
I really want to see this, despite the not so hot reviews - I used to love watching the show on Cartoon Network! It just looks so stylized and cool, and Christina Ricci and Emile Hirsch would make a badass couple...
Quoted: The Matrix masterminds Andy and Larry Wachowski usher anime icon Tatsuo Yoshida's classic 1960s-era hit into the new millennium with this family-friendly story of a young racecar driver who takes on the mysterious Racer X.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 11 days ago | women, movies
Please, all these women look fabulous - this is not a real problem. Plus, a.) the idea of women in their 40s having sexuality is not so absurd, and b.) this show is clearly a fantasy world (an awesome one, haha). Can't wait for the movie!
Quoted: How does 'Sex and the City' film avoid the age problem? By embracing it.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 15 days ago | siff, seattle, movies
Wow, this movie sounds intense. Also, Charlize Theron is in it and she's going to be at the opening night gala for the Seattle International Film Festival! Can't believe it's coming up again so soon, better get my membership card...
Quoted: "Battle in Seattle" is the story of a handful of characters who find themselves thrust into the chaos of the infamous anti-globalization protests against the WTO that shook Seattle in the fall of 1999.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 29 days ago | movies, women
I love Tina Fey (and Amy Poehler, for that matter). Looking forward to checking this movie out, and I'm especially curious how the gender politics play out!
Quoted: Former Saturday Night Live "Weekend Update" co-anchors Tina Fey and Amy Poehler co-star in this baby-fever comedy about a single, career-oriented woman who previously put parenthood on hold, and is forced to hire a surrogate mother when she discovers there is only a one-in-a-million chance that she will be able to get pregnant.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 11 2008 | movies
I want to see this movie for the cast alone... Ellen Page, Sarah Jessica Parker, Thomas Hayden Church, Dennis Quaid. Also, on the poster for the movie, the title is spelled out with Scrabble tiles - I think that's rad:)
Quoted: Lawrence Wetherhold, the thoroughly unendearing hero of Smart People (Miramax), is an anti-intellectual's fantasy of what a college prof might be. Played with shaggy gusto by Dennis Quaid, Wetherhold is a widowed Victorian-literature scholar raising a teen daughter and son on his own.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 03 2008 | movies, documentary, south asia, immigration
I'm attending a screening of this film about post-9/11 anti-Skih violence on April 19th at the Northwest Film Forum for an article I'm working on. Click on the link about screening events to RSVP for the Seattle one... it's free and the filmmaker and one of the film's subjects will be attending.
Quoted: One of America’s first post 9/11 hate crime murders punctuated a growing wave of violence against Sikhs in retaliation for the terror attacks. Told from the perspective of the victim’s brother, A DREAM IN DOUBT travels to Mesa, Arizona to reveal a story of national tragedy, murder, community and the American dream.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 31 2008 | race, movies, books, news
The Wikipedia entry and some of the blogs are a bit misleading. Here's more on the '21' casting controversy. Apparently the issue is that the team was primarily Asian (as well as other ethnicities) and that the film throws in 2 tolken Asians in the background rather than featuring them prominently. Also, the characters' ethnicities supposedly figure into the story very clearly in the book. Now I almost want to read/watch it just to see how I feel about it this!
Quoted: The head of an Asian-American watchdog group yesterday lashed out at the made-in-Boston flick “21” and MIT card shark Jeff Ma, who he claims supported the “whitewashing” of the Sony Pictures flick. “It’s insulting and pathetic,” said Guy Aoki, head of the Media Action Network for Asian-Americans.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 31 2008 | movies, books being turned into movies, race
Scroll down to the section that's titled "Casting Controversy." This really pisses me off and should've gotten more media attention. I didn't realize that most of the blackjack team from MIT (represented in the movie '21') was actually composed of Asians, although that makes sense. It's not like there's a shortage of strong Asian actors out there right now who could've played the parts. What the hell?
Quoted: Though most of the actual blackjack team was composed of Asian males, a studio executive involved in the casting process said that most of the film’s actors would be white, with perhaps an Asian female.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 29 2008 | movies, seattle
I'm going to Central Cinema a bunch for the AAINA festival this weekend. I'd never been before - it's such a great space (cafe, viewing room where you can order pizza and beer) and I really like the movies they have coming up (Kissing Jessica Stein, Hitchcock)...
Quoted: Central Cinema - Your neighborhood movie joint!
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 28 2008 | movies
Oh yay, this movie's finally coming out! I love this director - he really is an international force (looks like Abhishek & Aishwarya were at the premier). Plus, the cast sounds great - I'm curious to see how Norah Jones does in an acting role!
Quoted: Legendary filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai directs Jude Law, Natalie Portman, Rachel Weisz, and Norah Jones in his first English-language feature film -- a romantic road movie detailing the cross-country journey of a woman who sets off across the United States in hopes of mending her broken heart.
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hmmm
also could be good, despite the incredible Oedipal overtones.
1 FaverViewed: 4 TimesQuoted: Son Hayes never speaks of the scars on his back. The shotgun pellets left under his skin make for a sporadic pattern of blue-black dots. The men he works with take bets on how he got them. His brothers, Boy and Kid Hayes, don’t discuss it. His past, just like these scars, is never far behind him. This stands true for the memory of his father, a man that never bothered to give his children proper names. He left the three brothers, Son (MICHAEL SHANNON), Boy (DOUGLAS LIGON) and Kid (BARLOW JACOBS), when they were young. Their last impressions were of a violent drunk who never hesitated to put his own needs ahead of his family. The brothers were left to be raised by their mother, a hateful woman, who to this day blames her children for the life she’s been left with and the man she could not keep. Their father, having left the memory of his children as completely as he left their home, managed to move on and put his life back together. He sobered up, became a devout Christian, married a wonderful woman, and fathered four new sons. All of who received proper names. His life became a model that most would aspire to, a man successful in business, community and family. His only true failing being the sons he turned his back on. At the beginning of the film, we find Son, Boy and Kid as grown men. The three brothers’ lives progress and their futures play out, but their past inevitably comes to claim them. Following a dispute at their father’s funeral, a feud begins to simmer between these sons and the new young men their father has raised. It is an anger that has always rested uncomfortably in the background of their lives. However now, it is a thing that will rise up to overtake them all. Set against the cotton fields and back roads of Southeast Arkansas, these brothers discover the lengths to which each will go to protect their family.
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- zerohour - 5 days ago1 FaverViewed: 3 Times
