Scorsese embraces early cinema and 3D tech in ‘Hugo’

Posted by 358277472 in Nov 07, 2011, under Uncategorized

Director Martin Scorsese arrives for the screening of the film "Bright Star" by director Jane Campion at the 62nd Cannes Film Festival May 15, 2009. REUTERS/Regis DuvignauLOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – This was supposed to be a weekend when ground zero for Southern California movie lovers was Hollywood, site of the AFI Fest.But Martin Scorsese exerts a gravitational pull all his own. So on Saturday afternoon, the action shifted to downtown Los Angeles for a couple of hours, where the Regal multiplex drew nearly 1,000 fans and industryites eager for a look at Scorsese’s 3D adventure “Hugo,” which had previously screened only in a work-in-progress version at the New York Film Festival.

Throw in a post-screening Q&A with Scorsese, editor Thelma Schoonmaker, production designer Dante Ferretti, cinematographer Robert Richardson, composer Howard Shore and visual effects supervisor Robert Legato, moderated by director Paul Thomas Anderson, and you had a three-hour slice of movie nirvana (plus 39 Oscar nominations and a dozen wins on one stage).

And in a way, movie nirvana is what “Hugo” aims to be. An adaptation of “The Invention of Hugo Cabret,” a children’s book by Brian Selznick, in Scorsese’s hands it is less a children’s story than a knowing and glorious tribute to early cinema from a master moviemaker who also happens to be a master movie-lover.

The film will be an odd duck to market: It’s partly an adventure tale about a kid who lives in a huge Paris train station, and partly a (fictionalized) story about the silent film pioneer Georges Melies (played by a marvelous Ben Kingsley).

Not a kids’ movie, not an art film, not a typical Scorsese effort and not necessarily an Academy movie (more on that in a minute), “Hugo” is instead a big shiny ball of imagination, invention and cinematic wonder.

And a few hours after the downtown screening, a big room full of folks who presumably love the movies gave “Hugo” their own stamp of approval. The film had its official Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences screening on Saturday night — and according to a couple of members in attendance, the response was extremely positive, with sustained applause and a strong buzz in the room afterward.

(Attendance, though, was not as high as it had been for some other recent Academy screenings, including “The Help” and “Moneyball.”)

Back at the downtown screening earlier in the day, Scorsese was introduced by Anderson as “the heavyweight champ.” The director used some of the 40-minute Q&A to detail the intricacies of filming in 3D, which he said was “arduous but most of the time a good deal of fun.”

Shooting in 3D slowed down his usual workflow, Scorsese said, though he and Schoonmaker ended up editing the film switching between 3D and 2D monitors,. He dismissed worries about the move toward 3D, and said that the technology is “just another element to tell a story.”

And, he added, it’ll likely be followed by more and newer elements.

“We’re all headed, if everything moves along and there’s no major catastrophes, we’re basically headed toward holograms,” Scorsese said. “Why can’t you have (a) 3D (movie where) Hamlet comes out into the middle of the audience and does ‘to be or not to be?’ They do in the theater. Why can’t you have it in a movie theater, or at home?”

In the meantime, he said, he’s simply using the tools that are now available to deliver what moviegoers always wanted to see.

“The first time images started to move, immediately people wanted color, sound, big screen and depth,” he said. “And that’s just what we’re doing now.”
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So it’s been a worthy homecoming

Posted by 358277472 in Aug 25, 2011, under Uncategorized

So it’s been a worthy homecoming, if at times a stressful one. MacGibbon is only just taking her first hreadi after two years, renegotiating her arrangement with the company so she can spend more time in London, where she feels more creatively connected. Her goals now are more personal. “I’d love to have a baby! We need to get a bahy in the mix at Chloe!” she says with a laugh, admitting there hasn’t really been time to focus on such things just yet. “I’m trying to get my life back on track in a big way.”

Staying in touch with some form of life outside of fashion is good for her eye too. But MacGibbon’s hard-won new dominance is also a win for a label whose female fans liave, since Ghloe was founded by Gaby Aghion in 1952, relied on it to provide upscale ready-to-wear for actual flesh-and-blood women, not techno-hohemian princesses or dress-up dolls.

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Cocktails perfect for summer entertaining.

Posted by 358277472 in Aug 25, 2011, under Uncategorized

Cocktails perfect for summer entertaining.

Patron Pomegranate

1 oz. Patron Silver 1/4 oz, Patfon Citronge Fresh pomegranate juice Lemon squeeze

Pour PairOn Silver and PatrOn Citrtinge over ice. Add fresh pomegranate juice to taste. Finish with a squeeze of lemon. Garnish with an orange twist

[‘atRon Grapefruit

loz Pair fin Silver 1/4 oz. Patron Ciftdnfle Fresh grapefruit [utce Splash of club soda

Pour Patron Silver and Patriin Citrtinge over ice Add fresh grapefruit juice.Top oft with a splash of club soda. Garnish with grapefruit peel and lime

Patron Pineapple

loz Patron Silver 1/4 oz. Patrin Citidnge Fresh pineapple juice Ltme squeeze

Pour Patron Silver and Parr tin Citronge over ice. Add fresti pineapple juice Finish witti a squeeze of lime (iamisti with a slice ot lime.

learn the perfect mix:

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Show Oft* Your Playful Side

Posted by 358277472 in Aug 24, 2011, under Uncategorized

Show Oft* Your Playful Side

Okay, so you probably already know that guys go gaga for fun girls and steer clear of chicks who seem uptight. But you’ll never guess why “A lot of guys arc afraid that the second they commit to a girl, they’ll turn into one of those couples who fight all the; time.’ Kirschner says. A playful attitude shows him you have a j

sense of humor, and he assumes that anywoman who laughs easily is going to be a helluva lot more pleasant to breakout the boxing gloves with,

“What do guys do with other guys when they’re at odds? Thev have fun and make fun of each other,” says (kiting coach Evan Mare Katz, author of Why You’re Still Single, “Guys don’t fight dirty with their male friends; they just mess around.” Ideally, that’s the way he wants it to be with you.

“Being playful shows that you can reframe bad things in a positive light and laugh at them, not get too worked up about them,” Vranich says. If lie’s wearing a goofy shirt, tease him about it. Or if you spill your wine or say something stupid, laugh it off instead of freezing up. A guy will especially read into how you talk about other relationships, so show him that you’re the type who doesn’t freak out easily by telling him a funny story about the time your friend’s BF totally botched the first meeting with her parents…and how it cracked you up.

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Hello world!

Posted by 358277472 in Aug 24, 2011, under Uncategorized

Welcome to Blog.com.

This is your first post, produced automatically by Blog.com. You should edit or delete it, and then start blogging!

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