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Showing posts with label paramount. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paramount. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2011

Rango Movie Review


Johnny Depp is wearing a Hawaiian shirt.

He seems to have mislaid his pants.

He has the head of a green lizard and is wandering, lost, in the sunbaked wasteland of the Nevada desert.

Just another day with Hunter S. Thompson.

Except this is not a scene from the life of Dr. Gonzo, or an outtake from Depp’s own tripping tribute, “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.” It is, instead, from “Rango.” A new cartoon. For children.

Yes, when the going gets weird, Johnny Depp gets weirder.

Because, at a time when so many animated features take the safe, cuddly, Happy Meal approach, “Rango” proudly hitches its covered wagon to the mangy, bug-eyed look of Tex Avery, Big Daddy Roth, Basil Wolverton and long-gone underground “comix.”




The slightly surreal animated story begins when a pet chameleon’s terrarium crashes in the desert — marooning him with a paper umbrella, a nude and headless Barbie and a wind-up fish.

So the little fellow starts walking, accompanied by an all-owl mariachi band — and finds himself in a town straight out of a Sergio Leone Western, complete with scrofulous villagers and low-life hired guns.

The Leone references soon start piling up (along with the Ennio Morricone musical cues). But there’s also a big nod to “Chinatown” (in its own way, a modern Western). And some odd, purely original touches — like a mystic armadillo — that come out of nowhere.

The originality may be deep in the DNA — Depp sometimes makes mistakes, but he never makes anything you’d expect him to, and director Gore Verbinski (who worked with him on the first few “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies) is making his first cartoon.

Even better, the movie uses animators from Industrial Light and Magic who are also new to extended feature-film work.

So what’s here doesn’t look like the perfect, spit-and-polish work we’re used to.

It’s its own thing — and sometimes, admitted, it gets lost in its own wanderings. The story easily could have been sped up by five or 10 minutes. And although the late appearance of one movie icon is fine, an invocation of “Apocalypse Now” is both old and off-track.

But Depp, happily disembodied, has a fine time with Rango, who — being a chameleon — is constantly assuming different identities, and he’s nicely partnered by the work of Isla Fisher, voicing his plucky pioneer love.

Adults and slightly older children should have a great time.

Will the movie appeal to the youngest toddlers? Probably not. Its rattlesnake villain is a little too scary and even its nicest characters are so ugly they’re likely to disgust small tots (and some of the indulgent adults who accompany them).

So as a safe, preschool matinee — yeah, it’s a little iffy.

But as a midnight movie, it’s going to have a long, long life.

Read More Reviews Of Rango Movie:

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/rango-2011/

Download Rango Movie Torrents

http://isohunt.com/torrents/Rango?iht=1


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Paramount Making Strong Moves to Snag 'Bond 23'


Now that MGM has announced a start date for the next James Bond film and set its release for November 2012, the remaining question is which studio will distribute the latest installment of the most venerated, if not most lucrative, of franchises?

At this point, the lead player would appear to be Paramount Pictures, which -- thanks to a close relationship between the studio's top brass and new MGM co-chairmen Gary Barber and Roger Birnbaum -- has informally gotten a first crack at the negotiation.

The other contender is Sony Pictures, which successfully released the last two Bond films and is said to be on good terms with the Broccoli family, owner of the Bond rights. Despite that, a knowledgeable source says the Broccolis have approved Paramount as a prospective distributor and that preliminary talks have begun.

Whether Paramount seals the deal -- which is likely to be sorted out in the next couple of weeks -- will depend on what is sure to be a hard-ball negotiation. Given that Barber and Paramount's Rob Moore enjoy tough bargaining, this exchange should be worthy of study at business schools.

Obviously Bond is a jewel in the MGM crown and Birnbaum and Barber will seek to wring more out of this opportunity than just the distribution of one film. Sources speculate that MGM will seek a potentially precedent-shattering distribution fee for Bond and other future films, which could cause Paramount to balk. The most favorable distribution fees run about 8%; that is the rate, for example, that Paramount collects for releasing films from DreamWorks Animation.

Read More

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/paramount-making-moves-snag-bond-71581