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‘Public Enemies’ Michael Mann and Christian Bale

Posted by tfreak On July - 5 - 2009

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There’s arguably no theme in cinema quite as fundamental, as primal, as Cops and Robbers – the genre that Michael Mann has always returned to. Mann loves gangsters, but not as Martin Scorsese does: for Mann, criminal and cop are inseparable, yin and yang, neither truly functioning unless both are edging towards their big showdown.

A Scorsese or perhaps a David Fincher might plausibly have made a film about the 1930s gangster John Dillinger that focused on Dillinger alone. But a Mann gangster has no being without the law on his heels; to Mann, Dillinger is nothing without a pursuing army of G-Men, under the command of a mean-eyed monomaniac.

Oddly, though, in Public Enemies Mann has made a film in which Dillinger himself doesn’t quite register, either as centre of attention or as personality, yet nor do the lawmen. There isn’t the same diamond-sharp focus on counterparts as in Mann’s Heat, nor does Johnny Depp’s anti-hero have the same implacable menace as Tom Cruise’s hitman in Collateral. (Cruise more satanic than Depp? You read right.)

Maybe that’s the film’s counter-intuitive selling point: Depp underacts. The droll barnstormer of Pirates of the Caribbean and Tim Burton’s films downplays it so far that we never know who Dillinger is, other than a cool principle of crime personified. He’s a brutal, cold-eyed man, but also incorporates elements of dashing adventurer (he vaults over a bank barrier in gravity-mocking slo-mo), of raffish wit (told of his prison transfer, he quips, “I have absolutely nothing I want to do in Indiana”) and of matinee idol, a kissing bandit that his moll Billie Frechette (Marion Cotillard) simply can’t resist, especially when he shoves aside some inopportune Joe Public.

Yet the one image I retained was of a taciturn soldier of crime with a slicked forelock flopping from his brim. Nor is his adversary quite flesh and blood: Christian Bale’s FBI agent Melvin Purvis is a basilisk-cold tracking machine, but, given Bale’s indifferent charisma, more a walking sheriff’s badge than a person.

Mann prides himself on research, and you can well believe that everything there is to know about Dillinger is contained in the script (Ronan Bennett, Mann and Ann Biderman, based on Bryan Burrough’s book). But I’m damned if I followed much of it, or knew who most of the characters were: they don’t stop to announce themselves, too busy reaching for gats or jumping on to the running boards of fine old automobiles.

You do, however, get an unusual impression of the 1930s in their nowness. As is his wont, Mann shoots in high-definition video, here counteracting that sense we usually get in historical films, that we’re looking from afar at a reconstruction of a distant world. Instead, HD brings the intensity of instantaneous coverage, as if the action were being downloaded live to screen from 70 years ago.

This is especially vivid in the shoot-outs: Mann’s trademark is the gunfight as free-form percussion symphony, bullets blanging off car bonnets. In Public Enemies, the word “gunfire” has rarely seemed so apposite – guns explode in blasts of flame, most dynamically in a sequence staged deep in a forest at night.

Yet Dante Spinotti’s photography can be ugly and distracting: the glare of daylight is electronically abrasive, and while the cameras whip round with fevered agility, the nerviness brings an odd sketchbook quality. The result feels somehow less like a movie than a video run-through for one, just as Mann’s flat, telegraphic TV film LA Takedown was essentially a filmed storyboard for the fully realised Heat.

This wouldn’t matter if Mann were entirely attempting to go Dogme-style and expunging every trace of Hollywood rhetoric from his film. But this isn’t so – particularly when it comes to Elliot Goldenthal’s routinely lush score, pumped up whenever we need to be reminded that there’s romantic heat between Dillinger and Billie.

Public Enemies is frustrating because so much of it is good. While there’s little sense that Mann is interested in strong formal individual images, when he does trouble to frame them, they’re great: an Edward Hopper interior when a cop closes in on Baby Face Nelson, or the long grey prison walls at the start, complete with chain gang shuffling in mint-humbug stripes.

There are good performances too, particularly Billy Crudup’s J Edgar Hoover, bull-necked and officious, and Peter Gerety as Dillinger’s flamboyantly outraged attorney. And the person who truly imparts some warmth is Marion Cotillard. Casually disguising her French accent, she gives Billie a dainty, sexy playfulness. Even if Depp’s muted playing effectively diffuses any sense of grand passion between the couple, Cotillard heats the film up, often with her smile alone – and that testifies to a real degree of proper old-school star quality. The rest? A dark, crowded battlefield on which men in hats fight men in hats, till the last bullet hits its target.

Also Showing: 05/07/2009

Embodiment of Evil (90 mins, 18)

In the mid-1960s, Jose Mojica Marins directed two Brazilian horror films in which he also starred as a sadist named Coffin Joe. He’s finally completed the trilogy with Embodiment of Evil – but the trippy visuals, gory misogyny and bargain-basement effects are still stuck in the Sixties. The paunchy anti-hero now looks more likely to have a coronary than he is to “implode the entire cosmos”, so Embodiment of Evil could end up as a cult midnight movie for fans of kitsch, so-bad-it’s-good psychedelia. The rest of us might wish that Joe had stayed in his coffin.

Strawberry and Chocolate (110 mins, 18)

First released in 1994, and set in 1979, Strawberry And Chocolate is a warm, bright Cuban chamber piece that depicts the friendship between a naive communist student and a subversive gay artist. It’s amazingly outspoken for a film made under Castro, but it’s also a love letter to faded, flaking Havana.

Red Mist (81 mins, 18)

This Northern Irish horror cheapie, left, features some obnoxious medical students being bumped off by a psychic hospital porter, a passable premise that’s thrown away as quickly and thoughtlessly as a post-sneeze tissue.
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MSI Launches X-Slim X400 Notebook

Posted by tfreak On July - 2 - 2009

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In case you’re looking for an ultra-slim notebook computer, then I suggest you to check out the newly launched X-Slim X400 from MSI. This stylish machine not only measures less than an inch thick but it also weighs only 1.5Kg. As for the specs itself, you’ll find a 14-inch HD 16:9 TFT-LCD display with 1366 x 768 resolution, an Intel Ultra Low Voltage (ULV) processor, an Intel GMA 4500MHD graphics, up to 4GB RAM, a 500GB hard drive, a 1.3MP webcam, Windows Vista Home Premium, a media card reader, a HDMI port, 2x USB ports, WiFi and Bluetooth connectivity. Sadly, there’s no word on pricing yet.
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“Daybreakers” Trailer

Posted by tfreak On June - 26 - 2009

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Directed by: Peter and Michael Spierig
Produced by: Chris Brown, Sean Furst, Bryan Furst
Cast: Ethan Hawke, Sam Neill, Willem Dafoe, Claudia Karvan, Vince Colosimo, Isabel Lucas

Synopsis:
Starring two times Oscar nominee Ethan Hawke and Sam Neil, Peter and Michael Spierig have come up with their new production ‘Daybreakers‘. Slated to release on January 8, 2010, the frame of the film is set in 2019 when a plague transforms almost every existing human on this earth into a vampire. With very few humans left, the blood supply for the vampires starts diminishing culminating into circumstances where their existence is getting threatened. The vampires need to trap and farm every human on this earth or else find a substitute for blood. However, an undercover group of vampires make a discovery that has the potency to save the human race from extinction.
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Oprah Treats Staff To All-Expenses-Paid

Posted by tfreak On June - 22 - 2009

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Oprah Winfrey is treating her entire Oprah Show staff and their families to an all-expenses-paid Mediterranean cruise. This is the second time the generous talk show host has rewarded her staff with a luxury cruise. The first time was back in 2005 when Oprah celebrated the end of her “Wildest Dreams” season by surprising her staff with a trip to Hawaii.
According to Chicago-based Best Travel, similar cruises to the Mediterranean cost about $5,400 per person. Oprah will join her staff and their families, who left Saturday, on the10-day cruise stopping in Spain, Italy, Turkey, Greece and Malta. Oprah is covering the cost of transportation, food, drinks and activities at the port stops. Does anyone know if Oprah is hiring?
What’s the best gift given to you by a boss? Share your stories below.
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Sarah Harding Makes Beachwear Grecian Sundress

Posted by tfreak On June - 21 - 2009

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beachside cafe is hardly the most elegant of places - even in the celebrity-studded holiday spot of Ibiza.

But Sarah Harding gave her fellow guests a lesson in how to make beachwear glamorous as she visited the Blue Marlin cocktail bar and cafe on the Spanish Isle.

The 27-year-old proved put her bikini-clad fellow revellers in the shade in a full-length Grecian sundress at the Cala Jondal venue.
Girl’s Aloud singer Sarah’s dress, which hung from a chain at her neck, flattered her slim figure - toned from the last few months’ hectic touring schedule.

Although she originally hails from Manchester Sarah now lives with her boyfriend Tom Crane and their puppy Corker in Camden in North London.

The Ibiza break is a working holiday for DJ Tom, who played at the HedKandi night at Space.
Sarah joined him in the DJ box for part of his set before they headed into the VIP area where they drank vodka.

Even back at their villa the party was going strong - the luxury holiday home contains its own nightclub
Sarah is currently considering a new career, after making it clear she wants to try her hand at acting.

Top U.S. acting agency William Morris are interested in representing Sarah after seeing her performing in BBC2 drama Freefall, which airs this month.

Girls Aloud will pursue solo projects next year with Sarah and Kimberley Walsh going into acting, Cheryl Cole and Nadine Coyle trying out solo projects, and Nicola Roberts working on her make-up range.
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The World’s Fastest Cars

Posted by tfreak On June - 21 - 2009

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Gas prices are up. The economy is down. For some, neither matters–all they want is to be able to drive faster than anyone else on the road, whatever the cost.

And the cars that can deliver that promise are built solely for speed. They’re not the kinds of cars that are particularly good for anything else, such as dropping off the kids at school (unless they’re running exceptionally late that day) or picking up a carton of milk on the way home from work.

These cars reach obscene speeds in mere seconds, the same amount of time that normal cars need just to warm up. Just ask Tom duPont, publisher of duPont Registry, a gallery of fine automobiles.

“A Bugatti test driver took a $100 bill and plastered it on the dashboard,” recalls duPont, who was invited to strap into the passenger seat for a demonstration drive. “He told me I could have it if I could grab it once we took off.”

The French-made Bugatti Veyron races from 0 to 60 mph in 2.5 seconds and effortlessly cruises to a top speed of 253 mph. Most probably can’t imagine what that feels like, but duPont learned firsthand.

“The car accelerates so fast that you can’t touch [the $100 bill],” he said. “You can’t move your hands.”
Even if duPont had managed to defy the laws of physics and become $100 richer, that wouldn’t have afforded him a Bugatti Veyron or any of the other nine vehicles that made our list of the fastest cars in the world. DuPont cautions that superfast cars “aren’t for the faint of heart financially or physically.” The Veyron is the most expensive ultra-fast car on our list, with a price tag starting at $1.5 million.

But the Veyron is not the fastest car on the road, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. In March 2007 it tested the American-made SSC (Shelby Super Cars) Ultimate Aero and crowned it the Fastest Production Car in the world.

The $654,400 twin-turbocharged car boasts a top speed of 257 mph and goes from 0 to 60 in 2.78 seconds. Snagging this title marked a first for a U.S. auto manufacturer since the Ford GT40 claimed the Guinness record in 1967 with a top speed of 167 mph.

Rounding out the top five fastest cars are the $695,000 Swedish-made Koenigsegg CCX, top speed 250 mph; $595,450 American-made Saleen S7 Twin Turbo, top speed 248 mph; and the $700,000 British-made Bristol Fighter T, top speed 225 mph.

There are only a handful of these vehicles available in the world. Bugatti has said it will build a total of only 300 Veyrons since the model was introduced in 2005; Bristol custom-builds 20 Fighters each year.
Buyers who want these cars are placing their orders two years in advance, says Bassam Al-Farraj, founder and publisher of Rich Guy magazine. People who just can’t wait that long will pay a premium, he says.

He adds, “I’ve seen people pay a million for the Ferrari Enzo,” which is no longer in production but has a base manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $670,000.

All of the cars on our list are street legal. So if you really do want to use one of them to cruise around town (or test the limits of how late in the morning you can leave for work), that’s up to you. When researching which cars truly go fastest–with the automakers themselves , we excluded cars that are built and equipped for the sole purpose of racing on a track. We also excluded vehicles that are no longer in production.

If the wait is a bit too much to bear for one of the aforementioned cars and you are on a slightly tighter budget, you could check the second half of our fastest-cars list–some no less expensive, or more available. But you might get lucky.

They’re the $741,000 Italian-made Pagani Zonda F, top speed 215 mph; $325,560 Netherlands-made Spyker C8 Double 12 S, top speed 215 mph; the $430,000 Italian-made Lamborghini Murcielago LP640, top speed 213 mph; $497,750 U.K.-made McLaren Mercedes SLR, top speed 206 mph; and the U.S.-made Silva GT3, which clocks in at 205 mph and sells for $75,000.

Would you ever purchase one of these cars, or are they just nice to look at? Add your thoughts in the Reader Comments section below.

Despite the high prices and lack of local roads on which one can actually drive these cars at their maximum speeds, demand for these luxury treats is heating up, says DuPont. Wealthy buyers in new markets like China are searching for expensive rewards for their newfound riches.

“Only the top 2% of the economic pyramid of the world are buying these cars,” says duPont. “It is a reward for achieving personal success in life. There is new wealth emerging in developing countries, and they want the same luxury rewards.”

And if any of those people happen to take you for a test drive, they may, with luck, put a $100 bill on the dashboard. Good luck grabbing it, but you’re probably best off just enjoying the ride.
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Farah Khan Back To School

Posted by tfreak On June - 21 - 2009

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The school days are back again for Farah Khan. Well her triplets will be soon heading to the toddlers school from next week. The mummy dearest would be accompanying them.

“My kids have grown up. Now they are one year four months old and will be going to toddler’s school from next week,” says Farah Khan.

Her school days are back again. “I will be accompanying them to the school thrice in a week. The kids grow up so fast. Now I want to spend as much time with them as possible,” he adds further.

Farah is busy finishing up her TV show Entertainment Ke Liye Kuch Bhi Karega. “The show is all set to end and we are busy winding it up. After this I have a 4-5 days schedule for Karan Johar’s next My Name is Khan,” she briefs.

“As soon as I complete that commitment, I would dedicate my full time to my kids. I want to see them growing up. Films and other such promises will keep coming in future but this time with kids will not,” she verbalises.

Talking about her project she stated, “Things are shaping up slow. I will get the script done by the end of July.”

For now it’s time for Farah to head back to school with her triplets…
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“No Problem” For Neetu

Posted by tfreak On June - 21 - 2009

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Neetu Chandra has been signed for Anees Bazmee’s next, No Problem to be produced by Anil Kapoor.
She will star opposite Sanjay Dutt. This will be the first time that the two actors are being paired together.

When we contacted, Bazmee he confirmed to us that Neetu Chandra had been signed on for an important role.

He however further added, “I cannot reveal anything about her role now because it’s too early, but yes, Neetu is going to be the surprise package in the film. She suited the role perfectly.”

Bazmee also further revealed that No Problem will star Akshay Khanna, Paresh Rawal, Kangana Ranaut, Sushmita Sen and Suneil Shetty in pivotal roles.

He revealed, “I am planning to start shooting the film next month in South Africa and it will be a 50-day long schedule. After that we will have one more schedule in Singapore and Bangkok.”
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Samsung Showcase Stylish Pocket Projector ‘P410M’

Posted by tfreak On June - 20 - 2009

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The P410M is the latest LED pocket projector from Samsung that was showcased during World IT Show 2009 in Korea. This stylish projector offers 800 x 600 resolution, a 1000:1 contrast ratio and 30,000 hours of ramp life. Pricing and availability are still unknown at the moment.
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LUCK THEATRICAL TRAILER

Posted by tfreak On June - 20 - 2009

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