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Oscar Season Begins, Gets Complicated. Today in Film Bloggery 09/01/09

Christopher Campbell
By Christopher Campbell posted 2 months ago
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It’s already September, and this means it’s officially awards season. Well, maybe not officially, but the Oscars seem to be a hot topic of discussion all of a sudden. On the one hand, the big fall film festivals kick off tomorrow with the opening of the Venice Film Festival. And Telluride and Toronto are about to begin, too. This means awards contenders will begin to be seen by critics and other buzz-makers.

Prematurely putting things into perspective, Vulture posted some Oscar nomination predictions Sunday evening, despite not yet seeing the majority of their picks, and bloggers at the Los Angeles Times responded with either continued analysis or the complaint that it’s too soon.

Meanwhile, those who aren’t necessarily excited or annoyed with the sudden arrival of the season at least have something to say about the Academy’s latest change of rules. This time they’ve revised the voting process for the Best Picture category — which now will include ten nomineees — in a way that could hurt a lot of films’ chances. The interesting thing is, some people believe the change is bad for The Hurt Locker, while other people think it’s beneficial to the film.

Check out what the film blogs are saying about the season and the new rules after the jump:

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Somali Pirate Movie: Casting Couch

Somali Pirate Movie: Casting Couch

Kevin Buist
By Kevin Buist posted 11 months ago
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When I first had the idea to assemble a dream cast for a movie about Somali pirates, I envisioned a typical actioner with a dash of tense international politics. The pirates would be played by unknown actors of African descent, with the exception of “the good one,” who would be played by either Djimon Hounsou or Chiwetel Ejiofor. He would realize his folly, then become an integral part of the hero’s harrowing siege of a captured vessel. The hero, of course, would be a white, male, American naval officer, rough around the edges, not afraid to cut the crap and do the right thing. As it turns out, the truth of what’s going on in the Gulf of Aden is much more fascinating.

Enter Michele Ballarin: Virginia socialite, investment banker, weapons dealer. When she’s not breeding horses or fending off allegations of fraud in Austria, she’s running Select Armor, Inc. The company is not your typical private security firm competing for lucrative anti-terror contracts. It’s a small, nimble company, run by a woman, with small town roots, and plenty of murky dealings in places like Somalia.

What does Ballarin have to due with the pirates? More importantly, who should play her in a movie? More after the jump.

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Claymation Opens Sundance. Trade Roughage 11/20/08

Christopher Campbell
By Christopher Campbell posted 1 year ago
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  • 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.
  • And yet another film based on a true story, this one described as “Erin Brockovich-style,” is in development to tell the story of multiple tragedy-stricken Collene Campbell and her fight for victims’ rights laws in California.
  • 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.