Feb 25

By Shannonn Kelly

Actor Brad RenfroAs I watched last evenings Academy Awards, I became increasingly anxious realizing that there were going to be some pretty wet eyes in the Kodak Theater when they flashed this year’s departed film industry professionals.

From set designers, to agents, to directors to actresses and actors, I watched as everyone did, while the names and images of people flickered by from film industry lobbyist Jack Valenti, to Hollywood musical staple Betty Hutton, to cinematographer Lazlo Kovacs (Easy Rider, Five Easy Pieces, to smoky voiced Suzanne Pleshette (The Bob Newhart Show, The Birds). Continue reading »

written by RHIFF

Jan 21

by Shannonn Kelly 

Actress Suzanne PleshetteOne our our favorite smokey-voiced actresses is dead. Suzanne Pleshette died Saturday in her Los Angles home of respiratory failure. She was 70.

Pleshette is best remembered as Emily Hartley the hot, smart school teacher and wife to stuttering, laid-back Chicago psychologist Robert Hartley, played by Bob Newhart on the Bob Newhart Show, from 1972-1978.

Married to former Bob Newhart Show co-star Tom Poston in 2001, who also died from respiratory failure in Los Angeles on April 30, 2007.

I only realized the parallel recently that she played yet another smart school teacher in “The Birds” directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Seeing the film last month, I was struck by Pleshette’s complex rendering of Annie Hayworth, the pining dalliance that over-stayed her welcome after being dumped by Mitch (played by Rod Taylor) in Bodega Bay. She probably out-acted Tippi Hendren in many fans eyes.

Sadly, Pleshette was scheduled to receive her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on January 31, 2008, which would have been her 71st birthday

To read the New York Times article on Ms. Pleshette, click here.

written by RHIFF

Jan 14

by Shannonn Kelly

 goldenglobe.jpg

Normally when a Hollywood award show is on the horizon, our televisions are filled with ads, entertainment news on the fashion and stars and a whole lot of Hollywood glistz and glamor.

Then, on award night you, the television viewer could watch the brightest stars from movies and television step out in their finery on the red carpet for all the world to see and gossip about on Monday.

For the first time since 1944 when the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA),  started them as a fundraiser, the Golden Globes were starless!

The Golden Globe Awards are generally the third most-watched awards show after the and Grammys and the Academy Awards , and is one of the highest honors for actors and actresses from film and television.

With the WGA Strike still ongoing, the Golden Globes were faced with actors and actresses choosing to boycott the ceremony rather than cross picket lines. Striking writers threatened to picket the Globes.

So, on Sunday January 13, 2008  the Golden Globes were held in the Grand Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel and broadcast live for a total of 31 minutes; leaving networks to fill the reamining 3 or so hours of programming with film clips and commentary and as if there were nothing better to run, an episode of —still can’t believe it: American Gladiators.

The winners of last nights Golden Globes can be viewed by clicking on this link at Variety.

I’m going to have that nap now…

written by RHIFF

Dec 10

by Shannonn Kelly 

There Will Be Blood PosterReelHeART is happy to announce Danial-DayLewis has won Best Actor for his portrayal as a shrewd oil barron in “There Will Be Blood”, directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

Having last seen Daniel-Day Lewis in “The Ballad of Jack and Rose” and “Gangs of New York”, it’s been awhile for both audiences and Lewis to get re-acquainted with each other.  Lewis known for his selectivity in roles, gets so deeply immersed in them, that, as a result we only see him in 2-3 films a year. 

He was known to suffer from  pnuemonia while filming “Gangs of New York”, because he wanted to stay true to the wardrobe of the day and not wear a warming coat; he lived off the land in “Last of the Mohicans” and locked himself in a cell for getting into character for “In The Name of The Father”.

Paul Thomas Anderson of “Boogie Nights”, “Magnolia” and “Punch Drunk Love” fame and two time Oscar winner has also won for Best Picture and Best Director for “There Will Be Blood”.

To read about the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and other winners visit the Hollywood Reporter.

To read a review of “There Will Be Blood”, visit Variety.

written by RHIFF

Dec 04

by Shannonn Kelly

Dir. Paul HaggisPaul Haggis, the Canadian director of the film “Crash,” has filed a lawsuit against his partners in the production of the Oscar-winning picture, alleging a financier owes him nearly five million dollars.  

Bobby Moresco, who shared the Oscar with Haggis for Best Original Screenplay for the movie that focuses on racial tensions in Los Angeles, are accusing co-producer Bob Yari with breach of contract.

Cathy Schulman, another co-producer for the film,  alleges Yari also owes her money. Her case is due to start on April 21, 2007.

Read more about this story here.

written by RHIFF

Nov 09

by Shannonn Kelly

With all our Democratic leanings one would think we’d be hitting the theaters in droves to see “the other side of the story” when it comes to war in Iraq.

But it’s just the opposite when Hollywood looks at the latest figures for their A-list cast films that focus on Iraq:

  1. “Rendition” with Jake Rendition and Reese Witherspoon -$10 million
  2. “In the Valley of Elah” starring Tommy Lee Jone and Charlize Theron -$7 million
  3. “The Kingdom” starring Jamie Foxx and Jennifer Garner -47 Million

Those figures leaves Hollywood and the film distributors very worried about new releases such as “Lions for Lambs” directed by Robert Redford starring Tom Cruise and Meryl Streep and Redford.

Here at ReelHeART our odds on favorite for the film to be seen and to reap ticket sales well over it’s production budget is Brian De Palma’s Venice Film Festival winning film ”Redacted”.

We think the story is hard-hitting and timely enough that despite its gut wrenching subject matter, it’s the “proven” film that movie-goers will want to see. Possibly if only for clarification of events surrounding this true life story of a 14 year old girl who was brutally raped and murdered by US soldiers.

If anything it’s the film you need to see before heading to the election polls-

Please go out to see and support “Redacted” if only because it’s extremely fact based. Something that De Palma himself is fighting against as he’s under constant pressure from his distributors to censor the ”real life” events and perpetrators names and faces in his film.

To read more about “Hollywood Films Being A Casualty of War”, click here

written by RHIFF

Oct 29

Actor, Director Ben Affleck

by Shannonn Kelly

ReelHeART always has a hard time deciding whether we actually like Ben Affleck “The Actor”. However, we have no trouble liking Ben Affleck, “the Director”.

With his feature directorial debut, “Gone Baby Gone”, Affleck has managed to do what we know he does pretty well.

We already know Ben can write. Affleck won an Oscar with co-writer MaPoster For Gone Baby Gonett Damon for “Good Will Hunting”. Ben is a co-writer again (with Aaron Stockard) on the screenplay of “Gone Baby Gone” which was adapted from the Dennis Lehane novel of the same name. Lehane by the way, also penned ”Mystic River” before it too was adapted for the screen, winning Oscars for lead, Sean Penn, supporting actor Tim Robbins,  supporting actress Marcia Gay Harden and director Clint Eastwood.

Ben Affleck has also managed to do two other fairly significant things.

First: Ben has been able to further boost his 3 years and 3 days younger brother Casey Affleck’s cache as “an up and coming actor”, even though Casey’s been acting since 1990. While Casey has done some small, somewhat memorable roles in the past, this is his year.

Scene from Gone Baby Gone with Casey Affleck (middle)

His perfomance as Robert Ford in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford has Oscar buzz and now his stars aligned performance as Patrick Kenzie, a private investigator hunting for an abducted 4-year-old girl in the Boston neighborhood of Dorchester is the low-fat, pure Tahitian vanilla bean extract icing on the Oscar buzz cake.

Which brings me to the second thing Affleck has done quite well.

Not born there, but growing up in Boston, Affleck knows these neighborhoods. He brings us inside the Boston that many outsiders aren’t aware of and he’s done a fantastic job. Like Scorcese, Ben makes the city of Boston a character in “GBG” as I will now call it (Think Oliver Stone’s “NBK”).

Sure, yeah, we know about the Bo Sox and their World Series Win. But here at ReelHeART, we think it will only be a short time before we hear: “Mayor Thomas M. Menino welcomes you Ben Affleck as the official mascot for Boston and here’s the key to our fine city. You did a wicked awesome job…

To see the trailer and learn more about the film click here http://gonebabygone-themovie.com/

written by RHIFF

Oct 10

by Shannonn Kelly

Roger Ebert gives Michael Clayton 4 Stars!!!

Film Critic Roger EbertGeorge Clooney plays a “fixer” in the new critical fave “Michael Clayton”, directed by 3-time Bourne series screenwriter Tony Gilroy.

See an awesome production still of Clooney as Michael Clayton and read a terrific review by our main man Roger Ebert at the Chigaco Sun Times.

Our favorite line uttered by Clooney ”I’m not a miracle worker, I’m a janitor…”

written by RHIFF

Oct 10

Director and Screenwriter Tony Gilroy

by Shannonn Kelly 

ReelHeART loves it when a favorite screenwriter turns Director.

Film buffs you can now get more “Bourne for your Buck”, as screenwriter Tony Gilroy who wrote all three Bourne films, takes his turn as director in the George Clooney vehicle “Michael Clayton”.

Read about Gilroy’s take on directing Clooney at Entertainment Weekly http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20147832,00.html

written by RHIFF

Sep 21

by Shannonn Kelly 

Viggo Mortensen in a scene from Eastern PromisesEastern Promises that is - -a  critical success!

Festival Opener Gets Thumbs Up From Critics
By JOHN HOPEWELLMARIA ALVAREZ RILLA
Posted: Thurs., Sep. 20, 2007, 8:01am PT

SAN SEBASTIAN - As Nikolai, the Russian mafioso played by Viggo Mortensen in David Cronenberg’s “Eastern Promises,” plunged a knife into the eye of a Chechen mobster, the audience at its San Sebastian press screening on Thursday morning let out a collective groan… and then burst into applause.

Read more about it http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout=festivals&jump=story&id=2700&articleid=VR1117972357

written by RHIFF