Check out this brilliant scene from the cult classic Pulp Fiction.
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Four years after delivering cash to DreamWorks and CAA clients, the Indian conglom shows signs of retreat.
India giant Reliance Group grabbed Hollywood’s attention in 2008 by pouring tens of millions of dollars into development deals with big-name stars and investing $325 million in DreamWorks at a point when Steven Spielberg’s label urgently needed cash. But nearly four years later, as those pacts have yielded little and DreamWorks has endured a bumpy ride, is India’s largest privately held company losing its appetite for the entertainment business?
Attorney Schuyler Moore, who represents Reliance in some matters, says the company still plans to be a global media player. “They are happy with all their talent relationships,” he says. “They are happy with DreamWorks. They’ve been financially successful. They are thrilled with everything that’s happened.”
But a close look at Reliance’s Hollywood experiment reveals few bright spots and signs of an uncertain future.
The company, which posts annual revenue in excess of $58 billion from interests as diverse as mining and textile manufacturing, broke into Hollywood with 10 development deals worth $2 million each. Those pacts, forged by then-CAA agent Emanuel Nunez, exclusively benefited CAA clients including Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt, Jim Carrey and director Jay Roach.
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Brian De Palma’s “Scarface” rises or falls with Al Pacino’s performance, which is aggressive, over the top, teeth-gnashing, arm-waving, cocaine-snorting, scenery chewing — and brilliant, some say, while others find it unforgivably flamboyant. What were Pacino’s detractors hoping for? Something internal and realistic? Low key? The Tony Montana character is above all a performance artist, a man who exists in order to gloriously be himself. From the film’s opening shots, in which he is one more disposable Cuban ex-con in a Florida detention center, his whole drive is to impress his personality and will on others. He begins with no resources or weapons, except for his bravado, and fakes out more powerful men simply by seeming dangerous and resourceful. His act is a bluff, so there is no sense in underplaying it.
Montana is one of the seminal characters in modern American movies, a character who has inspired countless others. If the crime expert Jay Robert Nash is correct, and American gangsters learned how to talk and behave by studying early Hollywood crime movies, then “Scarface” may also have shaped personal styles. There is even a documentary on the new “Scarface” DVD about the movie’s influence on hip-hop performers. The movie has been borrowed from so often that it’s difficult to understand how original it seemed in 1983, when Latino heroes were rare, when cocaine was not a cliche, when sequences at the pitch of the final gun battle were not commonplace.
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Best Film
“The Artist”
Outstanding British Film
“Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”
Director
Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
Outstanding Debut By A British Writer, Director Or Producer
“Tyrannosaur”
Leading Actor
Jean Dujardin, The Artist
Leading Actress
Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
Supporting Actor
Christopher Plummer (“Beginners”)
Supporting Actress
Octavia Spencer (“The Help”)
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WIth less than three weeks to Oscar night, it looks increasingly certain that this will be one of the most predictable ceremonies in some time. Various theories to the contrary aside, “The Artist” is winning best picture. Christopher Plummer and Octavia Spencer might as well start heading to the podium now, too. And the artistic and technical categories should mostly be a split between “Hugo” and “The Artist,” with a song from “The Muppets” thrown in for good measure.Our full list of predictions is here, and we will continue to update them between now and February 26 (the night it all goes down). But given the circumstances, it would be nice to find some reason to conjur up just a little bit of excitement regarding who wins. And if you look hard enough, there’s still a little suspense to be had.
1. Best Actor: A Four-Man Race?
While many are pegging a Viola vs. Meryl showdown in the best actress race, it seems after her SAG win and some very affecting speeches on the precursor circuit, Ms. Davis is looking more and more like an assured a win come Oscar night. Which leaves the only truly nail-biting acting race to the boys.
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The Academy Award winners for the past thirty years have followed consistent molds, primarily in the categories of Best Actress, Best Actor, and Best Picture. It is a very simple set of templates that I will explain with excessive evidence. This is not to say that the Academy Awards are a conspiracy run by some secret society, although that idea would be quite fun. Rather, at the very least, there is a subtext to American culture that plays out in the ideas and ideals in American cinema, and it plays out consistently. At the very least, I’m illustrating some unwritten ideals in American culture. Whether or not they are healthy or corrupt, they are there in us. So, “Best Picture” is not a great movie; rather, it is a great movie that fulfills the mold.
My goal here is to be proven wrong. My complaint is that American Cinema is so limited in its imaginative and emotional possibilities, especially compared to films of other lands, that I hope this essay compels voters and moviegoers to change things. I doubt that I will be proven wrong by contrary evidence. Rather, I hope that future winners break the molds I list below.
Feel free to test my arguments against those award winners that I do and do not list.
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Man, you couldn’t get me down into that hole in the ground for all the beans in Boston. It’s perfectly circular, in the middle of a gloomy, grassy field, and Matt and Steve talk Andrew into bringing his new video camera and filming as they disappear into its dark maw. They use the camera’s light and of course the screens of their iPhones. They can’t see the bottom.
It’s spoiling hardly anything to tell you they find some sort of weird crystalline object. The letters UFO spring to mind. They stare at it and maybe it stares back. Then they discover they can move LEGO pieces using only their minds. This is called telekinesis. Matt looks it up in the dictionary.
From this deceptively ordinary beginning, John Trank’s “Chronicle” grows into an uncommonly entertaining movie that involves elements of a superhero origin story, a science-fiction fantasy and a drama about a disturbed teenager. Andrew (Dane DeHaan) is a shy and unpopular high school student with a dying mother and a mean-tempered drunk for a father. Matt (Alex Russell) is his cousin and only friend, a smart kid who quotes Plato as they descend into the hole. Steve (Michael B. Jordan) is cheerful, handsome and running for class president — all the things Andrew isn’t.
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