Archive for October, 2010

Top Ten Prison Movies

Saturday, October 2nd, 2010

There's a prison picture for every mood and inclination, from trashy romps to hard-hitting exposes. Are you craving a little sleazy, teasey WIP (that's "women in prison," newbies) action? Feel the need to get your blood boiling with a fact-based story of justice denied? How about a lavish musical set behind bars? There's something on this list for everyone,

cagedheat-125.jpg10. Caged Heat (1974)
The quintessential "chicks in the slammer" movie, whose poster really did say it all, promising: "Women's Prison U.S.A. - Rape, Riot & Revenge!" 1970s exploitation starlets Erica Gavin, Roberta Collins, Rainbeaux Smith and Desiree Cousteau play mad, bad and under-clad inmates (the only way to better this line-up would be to add Pam Grier), and cult icon Barbara Steele is the wicked, wicked warden who eventually gets what's coming to her. 

turkey-shoot-125.jpg9. Turkey Shoot/Escape 2000/Blood Camp Thatcher (1981)
This quintessential slice of shameless Ozploitation unfolds in a dystopian future where "social deviants" are shipped off to prison camps for attitude adjustment. And if they're really lucky, they get sent to Warden Thatcher's hellhole, where a select few are given the opportunity to win their freedom by volunteering for a Most Dangerous Game-style hunt. All they have to do is elude a bunch of wealthy, heavily armed sadists, thrill seekers and nut jobs.


redford-brubaker-125.jpg8. Brubaker (1980)
Robert Redford plays progressive warden Henry Brubaker, who pisses off the establishment by cleaning up Wakefield Prison Farm, an Arkansas hellhole so contemptuous of its inmates that it doesn't even have guards -- who needs 'em when you can just arm the trusties? Though technically not a '70s movie, this is such a '70s message movie. But the cast is great and Redford's at his prime.


shawshank-redemption-125.jpg7. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Frank Darabont's adaptation of Stephen King's short story chronicles the unlikely friendship between a rich boy (Tim Robbins) who continues to swear he didn't kill his wife even after he's been convicted of double murder, and the sage lifer (Morgan Freeman, back in the slammer once again) who teaches him to navigate the brutal rules of prison engagement while holding on to his humanity.


jailhouse-rock-125.jpg6. Jailhouse Rock (1957)
Ex-con Elvis Presley gets thrown back into jail (unfairly, as it happens) and finds a life-changing mentor in a guy who teaches him to play guitar. It's a lavish, old-school musical that features the young, hunky Presley and a bunch of dancers gyrating around a cellblock set to lyrics like these: "You're the cutest jailbird I ever did see/I sure would be delighted you're your company."


escape-from-alcatraz-125.jpg5. Escape from Alcatraz (1979)
Clint Eastwood does his whispery, sinewy, coiled-bundle-of-potential-violence thing as Frank Morris, the real-life prisoner who in 1962 masterminded an elaborate escape from the "The Rock." He and his two partners might -- just might -- have been the only escapees to survive both the breakout and the treacherous waters of San Francisco Bay.


birdman-alcatraz-125.jpg4. The Birdman of Alcatraz (1962)
Inspired by the story of Robert Stroud, a hardened lifer with an unlikely love of birds, John Frankenheimer's movie is bad history and great drama. The real-life Stroud may have been a thug, but Burt Lancaster's portrayal of an angry man who discovers a humanity he never imagined he possessed is mesmerizing. Watch it back to back with Brute Force (No.1) and marvel at Lancaster's versatility.


midnight-express-125.jpg3. Midnight Express (1978)
Yet another fact-based movie that plays fast and loose with those pesky facts, Midnight Express is also an uber-cautionary tale. American tourist Billy Hayes (Brad Davis) is caught smuggling hashish out of Turkey and winds up in a prison that makes Alcatraz look like a luxury spa. It was written by Oliver Stone and directed by Alan Parker, so don't expect subtly -- but it sure is intense.


cool-hand-luke-125.jpg2. Cool Hand Luke (1967)
Stuart Rosenberg directed Paul Newman in the role of knee-jerk authority hater Luk, whose antics just don't fly in the deep south, circa 1948. He ends up in a prison campe, where, between alpha inmate George Kennedy and sadistic guard Strother ("What we've got here is failure to communicate") Martin, he gets beat to hell more times than a junkyard dog. And he's still so sexy it hurts.


brute-force-125.jpg1. Brute Force (1947)
Hell is called Westgate Penitentiary in Jules Dassin's bleak, nihilistic story. Burt Lancaster plays Joe Collins, a career criminal  who's locked in a war of wills with the sadistic Captain Munsey (Hume Cronyn). Much of the movie's reputation rests on the no-holds-barred riot sequence -- it may be 60-plus years old, but that retribution by blowtorch/industrial press scene is still a shocker, especially since it's the good guys dishing out the pain.

A Facebook in the crowd

Friday, October 1st, 2010
Thumbnail image for facebook-logo.png"The Social Network" may or may not be the movie of the year. There's still three months to go, after all. Here are Ty and David Denby giving reason to think it might be. What "The Social Network" definitely is is the latest example of a very old and successful Hollywood defense mechanism: absorbing competing media, subverting them, or both.

Make no mistake. Social media like Facebook are a bigger threat to the movie box office than anything since the arrival of television six decades ago. Ask a 14-year-old whether he or she would rather go to a movie or be on Facebook, and chances are the question won't even have been heard since he or she is actually already on Facebook and too engrossed in it to pay attention to what you're saying. Going to a movie used to be one of the best ways to escape parents. Now escape is just a mouse click away. It's not that moviegoing has lost its appeal to teens or is likely to. It's that moviegoing as a habit threatens to. Video games were bad enough. But Hollywood's been on to them at least since "Tron" ("Tron: Legacy" is coming out in December). More generally, movies have become bigger-screen versions of video games, courtesy of pinball editing, Krakatoa-scale explosions, and lowest common denominator character motivation.

Miley Cyrus Is A Voyeur Party Girl

Friday, October 1st, 2010
Looking to be in true party mode, Miley Cyrus imbibed on a night out on the town in Hollywood, CA on Thursday (September 30). The Disney darling looked to be enjoying herself as she donned denim hotpants and cropped black top while partying it up at Voyeur nightclub. Following her time inside the Tinseltown hotspot, Miss Cyrus [...]

Stephanie Pratt: Poolside Bikini Babe

Friday, October 1st, 2010
Catching some autumn rays, Stephanie Pratt was spotted laying out at her Los Angeles, CA home on Thursday (September 30). The former “Hills” star seemed to be enjoying the warm sunshine all the while catching up on some reading and texting throughout her tanning session. Later in the day, Stephanie took to Twitter to profess her excitement, [...]

Kim Kardashian: Best Buy Beauty

Friday, October 1st, 2010
Looking to pick up a new mobile device, Kim Kardashian was spotted at Best Buy in Los Angeles, California on Wednesday (September 29). The “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” star got some help from a Best Buy employee and was shown how to work the gadget she had her eye on. Always one to keep her fans [...]

ActionView International, Inc. Announces Additional Fights Scheduled for the October 16th World Championship Full Contact Event at The Rail Event Center

Friday, October 1st, 2010
DANVILLE, Calif., Oct. 1, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ActionView International, Inc. (Pink Sheets:AVEW) today announced additional professional match-ups scheduled for the October 16, 2010 World Championship Full Contact (WCFC) event at The Rail Event Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. The October 16th pro-am event will feature three professional fights, including the previously announced match between "Super" Steven Siler from the Riven fight team and Steven "Razor" Sharp of Absolute MMA, and 7 amateur bouts with fighters from some of the western United States' top mixed martial arts facilities, including Absolute MMA, The Academy, The Bernales Institute, Kingdom Klub, and Wicked Ways Muay Thai.

DISH No Longer Carrying MSG & MSG Plus Following Expiration of Agreement at Midnight Last Night

Friday, October 1st, 2010
NEW YORK, Oct. 1, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Despite MSG Media's attempts since early this year to engage DISH Network in good faith negotiations, no agreement was reached for DISH Network to continue to carry MSG Network and MSG Plus. Therefore, as of midnight last night, DISH is no longer carrying the networks on its channel lineup, and New York area sports fans will now miss exclusive live coverage of the Knicks, Rangers, Islanders, Devils and Sabres.

IMAX and Regal Entertainment Group(R) Expand Joint Venture Relationship for up to 25 New IMAX(R) Theatres

Friday, October 1st, 2010
NEW YORK and KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 1, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IMAX Corporation (Nasdaq:IMAX) (TSX:IMX) and Regal Entertainment Group (NYSE:RGC), today announced an expansion of the companies' joint venture agreement to include installation of an additional 16 to 25 new IMAX(r) theatres in the United States. These theatres, which are part of an amendment to the parties' original 2008 joint venture agreement, are in addition to Regal's previously committed rollout of 39 IMAX joint venture theatres, 34 of which are in currently in operation. As part of the agreement, Regal also plans to upgrade eight of its existing film-based IMAX theatres with IMAX's digital projection technology.

Leaving – Clip

Friday, October 1st, 2010
  Leaving - Clip
A riveting new drama by the prolific French filmmaker Catherine Corsini, LEAVING (PARTIR) stars Oscar-nominee Kristin Scott Thomas as a woman prepared to abandon everything in pursuit of passion. A success with critics and audiences alike at the Toronto and Seattle film festivals, this elegantly told tale of intrigue is not to be missed. Kristin Scott Thomas is Suzanne, the bourgeois wife of a successful doctor, Samuel (Yvan Attal), living together with their children in the south of France. Weighted down by a thrill-less lifestyle and a stale marriage, Suzanne falls for the handsome young Ivan (Sergi Lopez), an immigrant ex-con working on their property. Their affair is passionate, but Suzanne is wracked by guilt. When she confesses to her husband, his retaliation begins an ugly turn of events.
Directed by: Catherine Corsini
Starring: Kristin Scott Thomas, Sergi Lopez, Yvan Attal

Paranormal Activity 2 – Trailer 2

Friday, October 1st, 2010
  Paranormal Activity 2 - Trailer 2
None at this time.
Directed by: Tod Williams
Starring: