1-20 of 55 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
5 November 2009 6:08 PM, PST | Aceshowbiz | See recent Aceshowbiz news »
This year's annual MTV Europe Music Awards (EMAs) has been kicked off on Thursday, November 5, and the likes of Katy Perry, Pete Wentz and Beyonce Knowles were among some of the celebs spotted hitting the event's red carpet. Billed to be the awards' host, Katy showed up to the star-studded affair wearing a nude-colored one shoulder Marchesa gown with embroidered ebony flowers. The 25-year-old British singer was showered with confetti on the red carpet.
As for Pete, the Fall Out Boy bassist wore all-black outfit to the ceremony. He finished off his look with a matching cap. Besides, he was also spotted sporting a heavy black make-up on his left eye, which supposedly was inspired by film "A Clockwork Orange". Beyonce, who was one of the tapped performers at the event, hit the red carpet in Atelier Versace.
In the meantime, singer Joss Stone was also present. She was all »
- AceShowbiz.com
5 November 2009 2:25 PM, PST | GreenCine | See recent GreenCine news »
Continuing Simon Augustine's countdown of the Most Disturbing Movies (Read Part 1 for the previous 13). [<< #11]
10. A Clockwork Orange (1971) 10/7
A film of such high artistic merit that I hesitate to place it here, but Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Anthony Burgess's sci-fi novel must grace any list with "disturbing" in the title. Mainstream enough to have been seen by countless neophytes, but twisted enough to be treasured by the more perverse among us, A Clockwork Orange (even the title is unsettling in its somewhat arbitrary and colorful surrealism) evokes a not very distant dystopia that is both absolutely convincing and yet disorienting in its restrained mix of futurism and contemporary realism: Kubrick infuses the early 70s overt, garish style with "things to come" details to create an effect both familiar and strange. »
- underdog
4 November 2009 12:58 AM, PST | HollywoodNorthReport.com | See recent HollywoodNorthReport.com news »
The 40th Anniversary of director Sam Peckinpah's 1969 western The Wild Bunch, will be celebrated at the 'Jules Verne Légendaire Award Charity Event', November 12 @ Los Angeles' 2,000 seat, downtown 'Million Dollar Theater', bringing the ground-breaking feature back up on the big screen. The film's surviving lead actors Ernest 'Dutch Engstrom' Borgnine, Bo 'Crazy Lee' Hopkins, L.Q. 'T.C.' Jones, Alfonso 'Lt. Hererra' Arau and others will be accepting awards on stage. In addition, Melissa Peckinpah will accept a special award on behalf of her father, director 'Bloody Sam' Peckinpah and Camille Fielding will accept a Lifetime Achievement Award on behalf of her late father, composer Jerry Fielding. Celebrities confirmed to attend the event include Ali "The Getaway" MacGraw, composer Lalo "Dirty Harry" Schifrin, director Walter "The Warriors" Hill and actor Malcolm "A Clockwork Orange" McDowell. "It will be the last great ride of the movie," organizers said. Premise of the film, »
3 November 2009 1:01 PM, PST | ifc.com | See recent IFC news »
Tim Burton invades New York, New Italian Cinema hits Los Angeles, Harold and Kumar spread holiday cheer in Austin and everywhere you look, they're celebrating All Tomorrow's Parties -- just some of the holiday film fun you can have this winter at your local repertory theater.
More Holiday Preview: [Theatrical Calendar]
[Repertory Calendar] [Anywhere But a Movie Theater]
New York
92YTribeca
In November, the 92YTribeca Screening Room will have some special guests in the house when it hosts the already sold out "A Conversation with Wes Anderson and Jason Schwartzman" on November 10th, with the two longtime collaborators discussing their latest film "Fantastic Mr. Fox." But tickets are still available for the night before (Nov. 9th), when actor Ben Foster and director Oren Moverman will screen their acclaimed new post-war drama "The Messenger". Much of the rest of the month is devoted to Cinema Tropical's Ten Years of New Argentine Cinema series with screenings of Adrián Caetano's immigration »
- Stephen Saito
2 November 2009 10:20 AM, PST | The Hollywood Interview | See recent The Hollywood Interview news »
Matthew Modine: Better Angels
By
Matthew Modine has been something of an iconoclast most of his working life. After being groomed for ‘80s teen idol status in early films such as Private School and Vision Quest, Modine was also one of the first actors of his generation, along with Sean Penn, to take on riskier projects, such as Robert Altman's Streamers, Alan Parker’s Birdy, Gillian Armstrong’s Mrs. Soffel, and Alan J. Pakula’s Orphans. It was his lead role as the cynical Marine Private Joker in Stanley Kubrick’s Vietnam epic Full Metal Jacket that put Modine into the pantheon of young actors who were more than just pretty faces and knowing winks at the camera. This, after all, was the young man who turned down the lead in Top Gun, arguably the prototypical ‘80s blockbuster, due to its cold war politics. From the beginning, »
- The Hollywood Interview.com
2 November 2009 4:58 AM, PST | Atomic Popcorn | See recent Atomic Popcorn news »
The London penal system has no idea what to do with Michael Peterson, famously on record as its most violent criminal. If the film Bronson can be believed, their solution was to beat him intensely and often. Strangely, that’s also director Nicolas Winding Refn’s answer to his subject. Bronson, so named because Peterson adopts the full name of action star Charlie, is a pseudo-biography about a real life man who entered prison as a low-level bank robber and is still there today, infamous for taking hostages and inciting riots that would make Ufc fighters cower. Refn’s film isn’t the whole truth; it might not even be half the truth, but it creates a violently swirling vortex around its central figure, played to rage-filled precision by Tom Hardy.
“All my life I’ve wanted to be famous” says Bronson in the film’s opening which has Hardy »
- Nathan Bartlebaugh
1 November 2009 10:12 AM, PST | Rupert-Grint.us/ | See recent Rupert Grint - Ice Cream Man news »
Remember a few weeks ago when we were discussing Rupert Grint's Drama Magazine photoshoot and how Rupert looked like Alex from A Clockwork Orange (originally played by Malcolm McDowell)? Well, Rupert fulfilled our wishes and donned the Alex-costume for a Halloween party! According to Celebrity-Gossip, Rupert and his Harry Potter co-stars Daniel Radcliffe and Tom Felton attended the Halloween party at Harry’s Bar in London on Saturday night (31 October). You may view Rupert/Alex in our gallery here, and my God, he looks amazing! »
- Ivana
1 November 2009 2:07 AM, PST | Celebuzz.com | See recent Celebuzz news »
While it would seem that every day is a little like Halloween for the Harry Potter cast, Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Tom Felton really did it up on Saturday night for the Harry Potter Halloween Party at Harry's Bar in London. Rupert arrived all done up as a droog from A Clockwork Orange, while Felton donned a Ghostbusters uniform for the soiree. We're not sure what D-Rad's costume was; maybe some kind of biker-hippie hybrid? Click through the photo gallery and offer your thoughts in the comments section! »
- Celebuzz
31 October 2009 1:31 AM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
The first-ever Fangoria Trinity Of Terrors has officially taken over the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, becoming The Place you want to spend your Halloween! Its 1:31am Vegas time as I type this and the party is continuing downstairs as Halloween has officially arrived in the city of Sin.
Opening night was a blast here, packed with film screenings, celebrity guests (including some unannounced surprises), horror, freaks, and rock. And to top it off, we're broadcasting the demonic debauchery Live!
Check out this clip from last night's Live webcast featuring John Kassir doing a little bit of The Crypt Keeper!
As the final screening of the night comes to a close with Black Devil Doll wrapping up in the Brenden Theatres, we're already prepping for the show floor to re-open at 10am. Tickets will be available at the door for only $20 beginning at 8:30am, and here's what horrors lie in-store for Halloween. »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
30 October 2009 2:00 AM, PDT | Pastemagazine.com | See recent PasteMagazine news »
Art-pop hopefuls issue another rough gem “Oh my god, my life is so fucked up,” Elia Einhorn emotes in the most overwrought fashion possible on the otherwise lightly swinging “Something’s Happening,” delivering the clincher for both laughs and blood: “I’m supposed to go out with Alie to a midnight movie at the Music Box / Maybe we’ll see That Sinking Feeling, maybe we’ll see A Clockwork Orange.”... »
26 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
If you're going to ask me (once again) who I considered to be one of the most controversial filmmakers today, then I would name Michael Haneke (right after Lars von Trier, of course). While von Trier's movies can be overwhelming at times, Haneke's can be very daunting and just like subjecting one self to torture. If von Trier loves to portray America without touching American soil, Haneke loves to teach his viewers a dose of their own medicine - patronizing American escapist movies is like committing a crime, there will be punishment sooner or later.
- - -
- - - But how to begin? Perhaps a look at The White Ribbon, his latest would be a good way to start. Instead of a chronological set of events, we start from the most recent.
More about The White Ribbon, Haneke's previous movie Funny Games and some insights into the Austrian filmmaker after the jump! »
- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)
26 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
If you're going to ask me (once again) who I considered to be one of the most controversial filmmakers today, then I would name Michael Haneke (right after Lars von Trier, of course). While von Trier's movies can be overwhelming at times, Haneke's can be very daunting and just like subjecting one self to torture. If von Trier loves to portray America without touching American soil, Haneke loves to teach his viewers a dose of their own medicine - patronizing American escapist movies is like committing a crime, there will be punishment sooner or later.
- - -
- - - But how to begin? Perhaps a look at The White Ribbon, his latest would be a good way to start. Instead of a chronological set of events, we start from the most recent.
More about The White Ribbon, Haneke's previous movie Funny Games and some insights into the Austrian filmmaker after the jump! »
- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)
26 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
If you're going to ask me (once again) who I considered to be one of the most controversial filmmakers today, then I would name Michael Haneke (right after Lars von Trier, of course). While von Trier's movies can be overwhelming at times, Haneke's can be very daunting and just like subjecting one self to torture. If von Trier loves to portray America without touching American soil, Haneke loves to teach his viewers a dose of their own medicine - patronizing American escapist movies is like committing a crime, there will be punishment sooner or later.
- - -
- - - But how to begin? Perhaps a look at The White Ribbon, his latest would be a good way to start. Instead of a chronological set of events, we start from the most recent.
More about The White Ribbon, Haneke's previous movie Funny Games and some insights into the Austrian filmmaker after the jump! »
- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)
26 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
If you're going to ask me (once again) who I considered to be one of the most controversial filmmakers today, then I would name Michael Haneke (right after Lars von Trier, of course). While von Trier's movies can be overwhelming at times, Haneke's can be very daunting and just like subjecting one self to torture. If von Trier loves to portray America without touching American soil, Haneke loves to teach his viewers a dose of their own medicine - patronizing American escapist movies is like committing a crime, there will be punishment sooner or later.
- - -
- - - But how to begin? Perhaps a look at The White Ribbon, his latest would be a good way to start. Instead of a chronological set of events, we start from the most recent.
More about The White Ribbon, Haneke's previous movie Funny Games and some insights into the Austrian filmmaker after the jump! »
- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)
26 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
If you're going to ask me (once again) who I considered to be one of the most controversial filmmakers today, then I would name Michael Haneke (right after Lars von Trier, of course). While von Trier's movies can be overwhelming at times, Haneke's can be very daunting and just like subjecting one self to torture. If von Trier loves to portray America without touching American soil, Haneke loves to teach his viewers a dose of their own medicine - patronizing American escapist movies is like committing a crime, there will be punishment sooner or later.
- - -
- - - But how to begin? Perhaps a look at The White Ribbon, his latest would be a good way to start. Instead of a chronological set of events, we start from the most recent.
More about The White Ribbon, Haneke's previous movie Funny Games and some insights into the Austrian filmmaker after the jump! »
- modelwatcher@gmail.com (Jed Medina)
24 October 2009 4:29 PM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
The inaugural Fangoria Trinity Of Terrors roars into The Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas next weekend (October 30-November 1), and for those looking to plot out their weekend, we've got your first-look at the programming schedule for the Trinity.
With a massive list of celebrity guests, film screenings and premieres, musical performances, a VIP Party, Costume Contest, Tattoo Contest, Fango Foto Features, Autograph Sessions, and so much more - we want you to know the lay of the land so that you don't miss a single thing.
If you don't have your tickets for our massive Halloween Weekend yet, there is still time to pre-order online through http://www.trinityofterrors.com and through Vegas.com. You may also order tickets from Vegas.com by phone - 1-888-las-vegas (527-8342) 24 hours a day. Tickets Will Not Be Mailed - You may pick them up at the Trinity registration booth (next to »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
24 October 2009 10:52 AM, PDT | 28 Days Later Analysis | See recent 28 Days Later Analysis news »
The Trinity of Terrors hosted by Fangoria will kick-off during this Halloween Weekend! The Trinity movie and music festival will take place in Las Vegas and start Friday October 30 with several movie premieres. Some of the screenings include House of the Devil, Smash Cut, Sea of Dust and several more listed below. If you are a fan of horror, and in Vegas on the 30th then check out the celebration throughout the Halloween weekend. Have a look at the full event schedule inside with a list of some of the actors and crew members in attendance i.e. Ken Foree (Dawn of the Dead), Chris Jericho (Albino Farm), Tom Atkins (The Fog), Jake Kennedy(Penance), and many, many more!
Halloween Weekend
Friday, October 30-sunday November 1
Friday, October 30
8:30am Registration opens
4pm Event doors open
4:30pm Opening Greeting & Future Fears Film Preview- Brenden Theaters #2
4:30pm Sea Of Dust »
- Michael Ross Allen
15 October 2009 6:11 PM, PDT | JoBlo.com | See recent JoBlo news »
Over the past few weeks, I've managed to add 25 reviews to my Movie Fan Central profile page, so I'm halfway through the "50 Coolest Movies of All-Time" as per my 2002 book (Click Here to read about where the f*ck I've been for the past couple of years). These reviews include Aliens, American Psycho, Austin Powers, The Big Lebowski, Blade 2, Blade Runner, Boogie Nights, Bound, Clerks, A Clockwork Orange, The Crow, Dark City, Die Hard, Dirty Harry, The... »
- JoBlo
11 October 2009 1:03 PM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
Greetings Fango Fiends! It's time once again for another installment of Fangoria Musick's Lists Of Doom - the column where we track down some of your favorite (or soon-to-be favorite) bands to get their thoughts on on the world of horror, and which films scare them.
For #26 we caught up with Nick Coleman, drummer for Chicago's 1997 - whose sophomore album Notes From The Underground hit's retail this Tuesday. So what scares Nick? Check out his List of classic films and writers after the jump!
A Clockwork Orange (1971) written by Anthony Burgess
Just the over all crazy state of mind that Alex is in.. that’s why I love this movie.
28 Weeks Later (2007) written by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
The best modern-day zombie movie
A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984) written by Wes Craven
A classic. Love Freddy, not Jason
The Shining (1980) written by Stephen King
I saw this when I was little »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
11 October 2009 1:01 AM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
In the not-too-distant future, humanity is so decimated by poverty that people will do anything for money. An innovative producer gives the poor hope by offering them work as extras in a series of “live death” films where they’ll be stalked by giant, blood-thirsty mechanical monsters. The job is easy - survive.
First off, the concept behind Michael Shea’s The Extra is brilliant. By taking a story like The Running Man to a much darker place, this could’ve been an entertaining read. But it wasn’t. I’ve studied Joyce, Milton, Shakespeare, Burroughs, etc and I’ve never come across a work as hard to understand as The Extra. It’s not that the novel is so genius that it’s over my head. It’s the opposite. I hate to say this because I’m sure Shea worked painstakingly hard on this, but The Extra is a poorly-written, »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (Rich Mallery)
1-20 of 55 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles. News articles are published for the entertainment of our users only. The news items do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the site responsible for the article in question to report any concerns you may have.