The 2009 Sundance Film Festival will open with the claymation feature Mary and Max from Oscar-winning director Adam Elliot. Featuring the voices of Philip Seymour Hoffman and Toni Collette, the film tells the story of a 20-year pen-pal correspondence, though Variety’s synopsis makes it sound creepier by noting that the friendship is initially between an 8-year-old girl and an obese, 42-year-old man.
Sony is making a movie about an African-American who spends 34 years in the White House. No, it’s not a hopeful prophesizing biopic of an 8½-term Obama. The adaptation of A Butler Well Served by This Election will tell the true story of Eugene Allen, who served Presidents Truman through Reagan.
Another film based on a true story is being made at Paramount about a journalist who blows the lid on a con man posing as a federal agent assigned to clean up a drug-ravaged Missouri town.
Twilight has now prematurely sold out more than 2,000 shows scheduled for tonight and this weekend, which Variety claims has given all the major studios “Twilight envy.” Really? All the studios? Because Warner Bros. seems pretty well-endowed these days.
We’ve had a bit of trouble getting this episode to go through the iTunes feed, so we hope this re-post will fix the problem. The original post, with episode description and embedded player, is here.
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