Category: News


Held each Spring for 15 days, the San Francisco International Film Festival, recognized throughout the world as an extraordinary showcase of cinematic discovery and innovation in the country’s most beautiful city, is accepting submissions to SFIFF54, to be held April 21–May 5, 2011. Narrative, documentary, animation, experimental, family films, youth-produced and television works in all lengths are considered.

Refreshingly intimate for a festival of its size and scope, the International combines a range of marquee premieres, international competitions, new digital media work, live music performances and star-studded gala events.

The primary deadline is Monday, November 8; the final deadline for short films is Monday, December 6; and the final deadline for features only is Monday, December 13. Read full information about submitting your film using the links below.

http://www.sffs.org/SF-Intl-Film-Festival/Call-for-Entries.aspx

I guess timing is everything. Around a month ago during Black Swan’s unveiling at the London Film Festival, we had the opportunity to sit down with Darren Aronofsky to chat about his much buzzed psychological thriller and when we cheekily tried to slip a few Wolverine questions in there, he acted as if he had never heard of the character in all his life.

This was during the week when his appointment wasn’t quite confirmed but it was increasingly looking likely it would be his next film. Fast forward to this week and now he’s officially attached, he has proven to be a lot more chatty about the film to Drew McWeeny at Hitfix.

Aronofsky reveals his film will simply be titled The Wolverine, which is the ‘to the point’ name the first movie should have had. I mean did anyone go to their box office clerk and say “2 tickets to X-Men Origins: Wolverine please” – I doubt it. They would have simply asked for ‘Wolverine’ – which by the way is the better title than ‘The Wolverine’ but whatever, I will take The Wolverine over anything Rising, Returning or Beginning or with the number 2 attached.

Interestingly Aronofsky says his movie will be an ‘one-off’ and not a sequel in the conventional sense, which I think everyone expected anyway. We already know that The Wolverine will be set in Asia and will enjoy a cast filled with all Asian actors (instead of Hugh Jackman as Wolverine) and no further characters from the Singer/Ratner movies, or the first Wolverine movie.

It’s also been revealed that cinematographer Matthew Libatique will shoot the picture – a frequent staple of Aronofsky’s films (Black Swan, The Fountain, Requiem for a Dream).

So a one shot Wolverine movie directed by Aronofsky and starring Hugh Jackman from a Chris McQuarrie screenplay loosely based on a cool Frank Miller/Chris Claremont era and that isn’t bogged down by even having the need to fit into contunity.

Well, we can’t lose.

source: http://www.obsessedwithfilm.com/movie-news/darren-aronofsky-reveals-the-wolverine-title-says-it-will-be-a-one-shot-movie.php

As a huge fan of the 1988 classic anime, Akira, I, like everyone else, have mixed emotions about a live-action movie version of the story.

 After reading the script for the upcoming Akira movie (dated 2010, written by Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby and which is being directed The Hughes Brothers), I questioned whether this film is a good idea, when the anime version stands on its own merit. We’ll let you guys draw your own answer to that question, but today we have some details of the Akira script to share with you.

The story has been “Americanized,” with the center of the action taking place in New Manhattan after the decimation of the city ( an incident resembling a nuclear bomb explosion), has been blamed on the work of unknown terrorists, with the  iconic shot of Akira as the sole survivor clutching his teddy bear standing solemn in the crater at ground zero.

Flash-forward to sometime in the future where protagonists Kaneda and Travis (gone is the name Tetsuo – why not just keep it? ) belong  to one of several biker gangs that control the burned out old Manhattan, while the shiny new Chinese-owned-and-invested “New Manhattan” glitters back at them like a star that cannot be touched.

The story somewhat follows the animated film but introduces a new character, Ray Arcman, who is the mad scientist that created Akira by using psychic and kinetic experiments on children including the three Espers (the elderly looking 10-year-olds from the animated film).

Asian gangsters run the underworld along with several motorcycle gangs (sadly, the “Clowns” are not in the film). Illegal drugs are still in demand and the gangs in turn  have to pay tribute to their bosses, the ”Packies” (Pakistanis).

Liberties are taken with some of the characters: Princess Miyako is now an elderly trash-collecting lady in Old Manhattan and the Colonel’s part doesn’t come off as strong as he did in the animated version. I cannot see Morgan Freeman playing the Colonel at all – nevermind the rumor that Zac Effron could play Kaneda.

There are also continuity problems with the script. In one scene, the Colonel sets off a claymore mine in order to block the approaching Black Ops army and is wounded. Yet, in another scene after this, when he is captured, The Colonel is able to take out two military policeman and operate a .50 caliber mini-gun in a helicopter gunship in order to save Kaneda – then he promptly disappears for the remainder of the film.

Yes, Travis (Tetsuo) does expand and morph into a ballooning human amoeba, but only for one short scene. I think we can all agree that this is one of the landmark, crucial scenes that needs to be in the film, yet it’s only a mere fragment.

Kaneda gets a Tech 9 machine pistol instead of the high-tech-looking plasma-type weapon that was used in the original anime, and on the iconic Akira poster. This is not a change that makes sense to me.

I thought the ending of the script was weak (it hints at a sequel – please),  and you just didn’t care about the characters the way you did in  Katsuhiro Otomo’s production.

The time to have made this film was in the ’80s when there was still a buzz about it. This new version is not  for all audiences and sadly, I believe it will fall in the same niche category as Watchmen did.

Source: http://screenrant.com/akira-movie-script-review-uncapie-85448/

Even movie bloggers long accustomed to dealing with ill-fated remakes of movies they love nearly choked when, exactly two years ago, Steven Spielberg and Will Smith announced plans to remake Oldboy. The Korean revenge film from director Park Chan-Wook is a landmark in the action genre, and exactly the kind of dark, sadistic thing you instinctively know will never work in Hollywood. Almost exactly a year ago (why do these stories always break in early November?) we were relieved to learn that the project had died due to rights issues, but not so fast: there may be hope (or despair, depending on how you look at it) yet.

According to a tweet from Pajiba and their reliable tipster The Hollywood Cog, Mark Protosevich has turned in his take on the script, and Mandate Pictures is happy with what they’re seeing. The studio is now working on getting Steven Spielberg back on board, and “Vaughan,” though I’m not really sure who that means (NOTE: Pajiba has clarified that this refers to Matthew Vaughn, who has also been considered for the director’s chair). If Spielberg isn’t interested any more– or if he won’t commit due to the million other projects he’s got in the works– they’re eyeing Danny Boyle, who has such a diverse resume there’s really no telling what he might be interested in.

Honestly, a Danny Boyle-handled remake of Oldboy would be a lot easier to contemplate than one from Spielberg, especially if Will Smith is also no longer involved. Would he move on to hammer murder after the arm-cutting of 127 Hours? Or, more likely, is this all still wishful thinking from a Hollywood studio that wants to cash in on something successful no matter what an uphill battle it might be? If Mandate really is serious about making this happen, we’ll likely be hearing more about this fairly soon.  Source: http://cinemablend.com/new/Is-The-Oldboy-Remake-Still-Alive-And-Maybe-For-Danny-Boyle-21617.html

 

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Korean director Lee Seong-gyou’s “My Barefoot Friend” has been invited to compete in the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), and is tipped as a strong candidate to win among the 15 feature-length films.

IDFA is considered one of the most influential non-fiction film festivals in the world, along with the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival in Japan.

Lee Hong-ki, president of IndiePD, an association of independent filmmakers in Korea, said, “‘My Barefoot Friend’ has been receiving rave reviews, and the crew and director have been invited to several events. There are already deals in the works to release it in over 30 countries.”

The documentary portrays the difficult life of Shalim, one of some 10,000 rickshaw drivers in Calcutta who live at the very bottom of Indian society.

This year’s IDFA takes place from Nov. 17 to 28, and winners will be selected in several categories including feature-length, mid-length and student films.

source: http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/10/27/2010102700669.html

A television series adaptation of the 2007 Korean film SOO (otherwise known as Act of Revenge) may be headed for FX.

Deadline reports that the network is working on the project with Barry Josephson (Life as We Know It, Bones) in place as an executive producer. The script is being penned by A History of Violence scribe Josh Olson, who is also on board as an executive producer, along with Ted Kim and Jiwon Park from Soo‘s Korean distributor CJ Entertainment.

Based on Shin Young-Woo’s graphic novel “Double Casting,” Soo centers on a hitman who witness the murder of his policeman twin brother. He then decides to assume his brother’s life in order to track down those responsible and exact revenge.

Would you tune in for a Soo television series?

source: http://www.daemonstv.com/2010/10/29/fx-adapting-korean-film-soo-into-television-series/

The fantasy musical film “Passerby #3” by Korean director Shin Su-won won the Best Asian-Middle Eastern Film Award at the 23rd Tokyo International Film Festival which ended on Sunday. It competed in the “Winds of Asia-Middle East: Film Panorama of Asia-Middle East” section.

  The movie tells the story of a 39-year-old working mother who struggles to realize her dream of becoming a film director.

Other Korean films to have won the honor include “Timeless Bottomless Bad Movie” (1997) by Jang Sun-woo, “Memories of Murder” (2003) by Bong Joon-ho and “A Brand New Life” (2009) by Ounie Lecomte.

“Passerby #3” was made with a budget of just W47 million (US$1=W1,114), much of it raised by director Shin who also served as investor, script writer and producer. The film also won the JJ-Star Award at the 11th Jeonju International Film Festival this spring. It will be released in Korea on Nov. 18.

source: http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/11/03/2010110300683.html

Ang Lee to shoot ‘Life of Pi’ in Taiwan and India

The Associated Press

 Taiwan The Life of PiTaiwan The Life of Pi

AP Photo >Taiwanese director Ang Lee discusses the difficulties in preparing to direct his new film “The Life of Pi”, Friday, Oct. 29, 2010, in Taipei, Taiwan. Lee’s plans to direct the screen adaptation of Yann Martel’s best-selling novel in 3D to better convey the fantasy adventure starting in 2011.

 TAIPEI, Taiwan Oscar-winning director Ang Lee said he is counting on the innocent looks and storytelling ability of an Indian boy to assure the success of Yann Martel’s “Life of Pi,” the fantasy book he is making into a film.

Lee has chosen 17-year-old Suraj Sharma from 3,000 candidates for the title role of the boy who drifts on the open sea with a Bengal tiger and a hyena, saved after a ship carrying the rest of his family sinks.

“There is no dialogue, and he is not Tom Hanks,” Lee said of the boy. “The film is about humankind’s spiritual pursuit, and he must have an appealing temperament.”

Newcomer Sharma “showed the storytelling ability, and you will believe this is a true story,” he said.

Lee will shoot the entire film in 3D in his home of Taiwan and in India. Filming is to start in January.

Lee said that at first he did not believe a fantasy story of a boy surrounded by nothing but water could be made into a film.

“I have not seen any good movies about water,” he said. “Then I realized 3D could be a way to break the dilemma.”

With new technologies, Lee said, “I hope to take viewers to the sea so they can feel for themselves the relationship between humankind and their beliefs.” 

source: http://www.dfw.com/2010/10/29/357434/ang-lee-to-shoot-life-of-pi-in.html

‘Host 2’ Planned as 3D Release

In 2006, director Bong Joon-ho’s film The Host earned $90 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing Korean film of all time. The film, which chronicled a father’s attempts to save his daughter from a giant man-made monster, combined elements of science-fiction, comedy, political satire, and good-old-fashioned horror into an action-packed and highly enjoyable movie that crossed all cultures.

 

Given the success of the first film, a sequel was a no-brainer, but news on the film has not been readily available. Now, thanks to The Hollywood Reporter, we have a few more details about the project, including an anticipated release date, budget, and, most importantly, the news that The Host 2 will be released in 3D.

According to THR, The Host 2 has an expected budget of around $17.6 million. That is about $6 million more than producers spent on the first film. Undoubtedly, some of that budget will go toward releasing the sequel in 3D. Interestingly, producers are making no bones about why they’re spending the time and money to add 3D. Put simply, because everybody else is doing it.

Su-yeon Kim, of Chungeorahm Films, said, ”Given the nature of the film and the current trends in the global film market, we think that 3D is the medium to go.” Kim also admitted, however, that the decision to use 3D would “delay the film’s release date and bring significant changes to the film’s logistics.

As someone who is not a huge proponent of 3D, this is the kind of news that really irritates me. The first film was a huge success. The second film will, more than likely, also be a huge success. If 3D does nothing but delay the movie from getting made without offering anything worthwhile for the viewer, what’s the point?

Whether 3D is a good or bad thing for moviegoers is one of the more contentious debates in Hollywood. Obviously, studios like it because it brings in more money. Certain filmmakers like it because of the additional depth it gives to the filmmaking process (James Cameron’s Avatar pushed the limits of 3D technology in a way that actually enhanced the film). Fans, on the other hand, have not been as keen. Some like it for the novelty, but when it’s mishandled (as in Clash of the Titans or The Last Airbender) it can greatly hurt a film’s credibility.

In any case, I hope that the decision to go 3D does not adversely affect The Host 2. I loved the first film and am hopeful that the sequel will offer similar laughs, chills, and thrills.

The Host 2 will likely be released in the summer of 2012.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter, www.screenrant.com

FuzzyCalifornia proudly hosts the screening of THE HOUSMAID(1960) by KIM Kiyoung at  the AFI Film Festival 

 

THE HOUSEMADE (1960)

Dir. KIM Ki-young

Kim Ki-young’s claustrophobic set piece of a narrow two-story home is the perfect cage in which to attempt to contain the wild and escalating emotions of this domestic melodrama. The film tells the story of Mr. Kim, a music teacher whose guilt over the suspension of a young woman he teaches leads him to question his judgment and test the limits of propriety with his new housemaid. His wife Mrs. Kim works two jobs so that they can afford their new dwelling but her dream of perfect domesticity unravels quickly when her husband surrenders to the housemaid’s advances, an act that puts everyone in the house, including the children, on a path of mounting cruelty and obsession. A spectacular close-up shot of dying rats writhing in a bowl of white rice laced with poison becomes an unforgettable symbol of the nightmarish world evoked in this classic of Korean noir cinema.THE HOUSEMAID has been digitally restored by the Korean Film Archive (KOFA) with the support of the World Cinema Foundation.

Screenings: Sunday, November 7, 1:00 pm, Mann Theatre #1 

Admission: Free

Tickets are available at AFI.COM/AFIFEST or by calling 1-866-AFI-FEST beginning October 28. 

 

  

THE HOUSEMADE (2010)

Dir. IM Sang-soo

This darkly elegant, meticulously crafted thriller follows the travails of a young maid in an opulent mansion where class hierarchy is played out with ever-mounting cruelty.

Screenings: Sunday, November 7, 3:10 pm, Mann Theatre #1

Admission: Free

Tickets are available at AFI.COM/AFIFEST or by calling 1-866-AFI-FEST beginning October 28.