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"Dreams feel real while we're in them. It's only when we wake up that we realize something was actually strange." -Inception
Showing posts with label Rango. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rango. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Visual Effects Society Winners 2012


I'm a bit late updating these winners list but here are the victors from feature film categories Visual Effects Society (VES) 10th annual awards gala.  As expected, both Rise of the Planet of the Apes and Rango topped in their categories but Hugo was a surprise winner in the supporting category.  Way to go, Hugo!  




Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects-Driven Feature Motion Picture
Rise of the Planet of the Apes

Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Feature Motion Picture
Hugo

Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Rango

Outstanding Animated Character in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Rise of the Planet of the Apes - Caesar

Outstanding Animated Character in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Rango - Rango

Outstanding Created Environment in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - 155 Wacker Drive

Outstanding Created Environment in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Rango - Main Street Dirt

Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Hugo

Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Rango - The Dirt Saloon

Outstanding Models in a Feature Motion Picture
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - Driller

Outstanding Compositing in a Feature Motion Picture
Captain America: The First Avenger - Skinny Steve

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Annie Award winners!

The 39th annual Annie Awards were held last night and Rango did extremely well picking up a lot of the big awards.  History was also made as Jennifer Yuh Nelson won for Best Director for a feature film for Kung Fu Panda 2, the first female to do so in this category.  Congratulations!  Rise of the Planet of the Apes and Transformers: Dark of the Moon won in the live-action categories too.  Read on below for the rest of the winners in the feature film categories.



Best Animated Feature
Rango

Best Animated Special Production
Kung Fu Panda - Secrets of the Masters

Best Animated Short Subject
Adam and Dog - Minkyu Lee

Animated Effects in an Animated Production
The Adventures of Tintin - Kevin Romond

Animated Effects in a Live-Action Production
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - Florent Andorra

Character Animation in a Feature Production
Rio - Jeff Gabor

Character Animation in a Live-Action Production
Rise of the Planet of the Apes - Eric Reynolds

Character Design in a Feature Production
Rango - Mark "Crash" McCreery

Directing in a Feature Production
Kung Fu Panda 2 - Jennifer Yuh Nelson

Music in a Feature Production
The Adventures of Tintin - John Williams

Production Design in a Feature Production
Kung Fu Panda 2 - Raymond Zilbach

Storyboarding in a Feature Production
Winnie the Pooh - Jeremy Spears

Voice Acting in a Feature Production
Arthur Christmas - Bill Nighy as Grandsanta

Writing in a Feature Production
Rango - John Logan, Gore Verbinski and James Byrkit

Editing in a Feature Production
Rango - Craig Wood, A.C.E.

Juried Awards

Windsor McCay Award - Walt Peregoy, Borge Ring, Ronald Searle

June Foray - Art Leonardi

Special Achievement - Depth Analysis

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Visual Effects Society's best of the year

Also announcing their top nominated work of the past year were the Visual Effects Society (VES) for their 10th annual awards.  Let's see who got nominated.

Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects-Driven Feature Motion Picture
Captain America: The First Avenger
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Feature Motion Picture
Anonymous
Hugo
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
Source Code
War Horse

Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Arthur Christmas
Kung Fu Panda 2
Puss in Boots
Rango
The Adventures of Tintin

Outstanding Animated Character in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 - Ukranian Ironbelly
Paul - Paul
Rise of the Planet of the Apes - Caesar
The Thing - Edvard/Adam

Outstanding Animated Character in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Puss in Boots - Puss
Rango - Rango
Rio - Nigel
The Adventures of Tintin - Tintin

Outstanding Created Environment in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Anonymous - London
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 - Hogwarts
Thor - Heimdall's Observatory
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - 155 Wacker Drive

Outstanding Created Environment in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Puss in Boots - The Cloud World
Rango - Main Street Dirt
The Adventures of Tintin - Bagghar
The Adventures of Tintin - Docks
The Adventures of Tintin - Pirate Battle

Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Hugo
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Thor
Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in an Animated Feature Motion Picture
Arthur Christmas
Cars 2
Rango
The Adventures of Tintin

Outstanding Models in a Feature Motion Picture
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 - Hogwarts School Buildings
Hugo - Train Crash
Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol - Parking Garage
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - Driller

Outstanding Compositing in a Feature Motion Picture
Captain America: The First Avenger
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Looks like The Adventures of Tintin is leading the pack with both Rise of the Planet of the Apes and the final Harry Potter right behind it.  Good luck to all the nominees, your hard work makes all the wonderful visuals onscreen look so effortless.  The awards will be announced on February 7th, 2012.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

The Best and Worst of 2011

I thought I'd do things a bit differently this time.  I feel I haven't seen enough of the best of the year as they haven't released in this part of the world yet so I don't feel like making a half-heartened attempt at a top ten list.  Instead, I'm just going to randomly name films that I truly felt moved me, made me laugh and made me think.  Without further adieu...

THE BEST:

Heartbreaker (L'amacoeur): While this film released in France in 2010, it got more worldwide release in 2011.  It's your typical French romantic comedy with Vanessa Paradis and Romain Duris as a con man who tries to derail heiress Paradis' upcoming nuptials.  Oh, there is a big Dirty Dancing theme throughout the film.  As the French say, this one was tres charmante.













Rango: What does it say that the best Western this year was an animated one?  Gore Verbinski's take on the Western and its inhabitants was mighty entertaining.  As the titular character Rango, it looked like Johnny Depp was having a lot of fun and his interactions with the rest of the cast was priceless.  Also, I would request that the recordings of the voice talents should be made into a separate film, I would totally watch that.












Source Code: The second film from Duncan Jones (Moon) did not disappoint.  A sci-fi take on Groundhog Day that I wouldn't mind watching again and again.  And, ooh look, it has Jake Gyllenhaal in it.  Sold!















The Adjustment Bureau: This was one of the surprise hits of the earlier part of the year which I enjoyed thoroughly.  The chemistry between Matt Damon and Emily Blunt took us through the journey and I loved the universe the film was set in, it creates such possibilities.














Midnight in Paris: Woody Allen continues to surprise.  While I didn't care much for his last feature, this one I absolutely loved.  Set in Paris, the movie takes us on a wonderful journey that I wouldn't mind taking myself.  Owen Wilson plays a struggling novelist who stumbles back in time to 1920s Paris and meets his literary legends in Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Not only that, he stumbles across a time that he imagines is the perfect era to live in and to be amongst the contemporaries in the fields of art, music and the written word.  Anyone would envy such a choice and this film will turn out to be one of Allen's best so far, a glorious love letter to Paris.  While Woody Allen is known for his New York films, his European excursion is proving to be quite the delight.






Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2: This one was bittersweet.  The last in the world of Harry Potter but it was such a satisfyingly well-done series with characters and worlds we have grown to love over the last decade.  We will definitely miss the countdowns and anticipation of the next films as there are no more Harry Potters to look forward too.  Thank you for a decade of friendship, courage and great movies.












Bridesmaids: The funniest film on female friendships you will see this year.  And we don't see many of them, it's mostly always about male bonding.  Kirsten Wiig and Melissa McCarthy gave fearless performance in a laugh-out loud film about weddings and craziness that goes behind the scenes.














Jane Eyre:  The best and perhaps only period film out there this past year.  Cary Fukunaga's adaptation of Bronte's work was a different, somber take on the subject.  Great casting with Mia Wasikowska as Jane and Michael Fassbender as Rochester.  Bonus for Judi Dench as Mrs. Fairfax.  She makes every film she's in better.













X-Men: First Class: Speaking of Michael Fassbender, because of his and James McAvoy's performances as Magneto and Professor Xavier, this superhero movie was even more interesting.  I only wish they had spent more time on their friendship turned conflicts.














Crazy Stupid Love: Ryan Gosling should act in more comedies.  This was a hilarious all star cast of gigantic misunderstandings and Steve Carell and Gosling made the best odd couple of the past year.  One of the better romantic comedies made in a long while.














The Adventures of Tintin:  The intrepid boy reporter is back but this time the tale is told through the joint effort of Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson.  Not bad, eh?  The real star of the film though is Snowny who is the real right hand of Tintin.  However, this film is only for real fans for the comics, for not everyone "gets" Tintin.














Attack the Block: This film was a real surprise, wasn't expecting to get caught up in the story.  A group of teenagers get caught up in a war of us against them.  Them being the aliens.  A highly entertaining film and for once I was pleased to see an alien film not always located in USA but this time in the tough  neighborhood of London.













Rise of the Planet of the Apes: One of the best films of the past year in every aspect, maybe it may not be on most critics' list but as a moviegoer and fan, I was glued to my seat throughout it.  They've already announced the sequels following the success of the film and its use of motion capture.  Viva la Ape Revolution!














The Help: Now here is a film that can be found on most critics' lists and with good reason.  Based on the novel by the same name, The Help was a deeply moving film dealing with race relations in the South in the 1960s.  Told mainly from the point of view of the maids that worked in the white households, the film showcases the acting talents of Viola Davis as Abileen, Octavia Spencer as Minny, Jessica Chastain as Celia, Emma Stone as Skeeter and Bryce Dallas Howard as Hilly.  Filled with many touching moments, this one should be on your must watch list.











Kung Fu Panda 2: In a year where sequels dominated, so did Po the Panda.  I'm glad that the second time around was just as fun.  With a female director, Jennifer Yu Nelson, at the helm, a rarity in animation, the film dealt with question of Po's parents.  The emotional stuff was very well done and I think and hope the story will be continued into the next film as well.  The goofy yet brave panda has truly won over our hearts.













Limitless: Bradley Cooper completely owned this role about a struggling novelist (are there any other?) who pops a wonder pill that allows him to use his brain to its full potential.  The results are, to say the least, incredibly mind-blowing.  Who wouldn't want to be the person that they were actually meant to be?














Super 8: JJ Abrams and Steven Spielberg got together to produce a film that was an ode to 1980s.  A very impressive young cast who are fully committed to making movies stumble across something much bigger than their film that completely changes all their lives.  Look past the monster flick to the story of little town and its people.













Special Mention: 

Delhi Belly: This Hinglish movie was all kinds of crazy.  Crazy in plot, crazy in the situations the characters found themselves in and yet I couldn't help laughing along.  In fact, I couldn't remember the last time I had such a good time laughing with the rest of the audience in the theater.  We were all horrified and entertained at the same time.














Incendies: The best foreign film I saw this year.  A mother leaves behind a note for her twin children, a young girl and boy, informing them to find their presumed dead father and brother.  Their quest to find their lost relations takes them to the cold hard truth that had been buried for decades.  The ending still haunts me to this day.  What a film!













Honourable Mentions: 

Horrible Bosses: The comedic trio of Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis and Charlie Day combined to bring us a very funny tale of three ordinary workers trying to snuff their evil bosses.

Columbiana: Zoe Saldana was mighty impressive as a ruthless assassin who plans a slow and simmering revenge against her parents' killers

Beginners: Ewan McGregor and Christopher Plummer give award worthy performances as a son and father dealing with their relationship after a life-changing reveal.  Special kudos to the little dog who plays Arthur.  He will steal your heart.

Moneyball: Brad Pitt is the movie; he plays the GM of the Oakland A's who employs a radical new approach to scouting in baseball.  Could this actually change the game?  Watch and find out.  Jonah Hill also impresses in a very serious role as an economics graduate who helps Pitt's character run the numbers.

The Lincoln Lawyer: Matthew McConaughey plays a lawyer who will defend anyone for money but what happens when he suspects that his defendant is actually guilty?  Oh, and his office is his car; therefore the title.

The Guard: Now I get why Brendan Gleeson was nominated for Golden Globe as a racist, immoral Irish cop who might just be the smartest detective in Ireland.  Don Cheadle also stars as an FBI agent.

WORST:

Red Riding Hood: Here's a fairy tale retelling that didn't work. At all.  Produced by Leonardo DiCaprio and directed by Catherine Hardwicke (Twilight), it seemed poised for another gothic retelling.  I felt this one had such potential but it became like the pale cousin of the Twilight series.














Gulliver's Travels: Another disappointment.  Jack Black as the boorish "Gulliver" in the land of the Lilliputians should have drawn huge laughs but no smiles were to be had.  All the best moments were already revealed in the trailer.















Cowboys & Aliens: Joss Whedon tackled this sci-fi meets the Western much much better in long departed yet much missed TV show Firefly.  The movie cast Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) vs. James Bond (Daniel Craig) yet the movie didn't give them much to do except look surly. A truly missed opportunity.














Love Wedding Marriage: I don't why I watched this movie only maybe so I could complain about it later.  The worst movie of the year!  I hated all the characters and whiny problems.
















Just Go With It: Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston were making this movie on auto-pilot, it seemed.  Such a yawnfest and highly unbelievable.

Little Fockers:  There was absolutely no point in this movie anymore.  It's been done to death with the previous two movies.  It's just prolonging the one-note joke.  No more, please!





Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Annie Awards 2011 Nominations

It's that time again!  The Annie Awards, also know as the Animation awards, have announced their nominations for the best of the year in animation.




2011 ANNIE AWARD NOMINATIONS PRODUCTION CATEGORIES

Best Animated Feature
A Cat in Paris – Folimage
Arrugas (Wrinkles) - Perro Verde Films, S.L.

Arthur Christmas – Sony Pictures Animation, Aardman Animations
Cars 2 – Pixar Animation Studios
Chico & Rita – Chico & Rita Distribution Limited
Kung Fu Panda 2 – DreamWorks Animation
Puss In Boots – DreamWorks Animation
Rango – Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies present A Blind Wink/GK Films Production
Rio – Blue Sky Studios

Tintin – Amblin Entertainment, Wingnut Films and Kennedy/Marshall

Full nominations list after the jump

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Best Movies of the Year...so far!

Seven and half months of this year have gone by and while there haven't been any instant successes like Inception last year, there are quite a few movies to talk about.  Keep in mind, I'll be discussing the movies I've seen so far.  There are so many movies pending on my to-see list but I hope to catch up by the end of the year.

So, without further ado...here are the top movies of the year...midway.

1) The Adjustment Bureau - My favorite film so far this year.  I loved Matt Damon and Emily Blunt who totally made us believe in their chemistry and need to be with one another.  Based on a story by Phillip K. Dick, this was masterful storytelling with amazing visuals and great acting.  Another impressive movie by Damon, he CAN do it all.



2) Super 8 - Incredibly nostalgic film about film making and the 80s that totally charmed due to its young cast.  It's not a monster flick at all, it goes much beyond it.  Absolutely loved it.  



3) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2- The final film in an epic storytelling saga that spanned over a decade.  Show me anyone who wasn't moved by the grand spectacle of it all.  It was definitely hard to say goodbye to Harry Potter.



4) Rango - One of the best animated films for adults I have seen.  Loved Johnny Depp's portrayal of insecure and needy iguana Rango who turns out to be a savior/hero of small Westernish town.  This could be the only Western flick this year that worked.



5) Source Code - Sci fi and Jake Gyllenhaal, two of my favorite things in a film, combined.  Second film by director Duncan Jones after his debut Moon that asks what if you could live the final 8 minutes of a person's life.  What would you do?  What would you find out? 



6) Limitless - Yet another thought provoking movie released this year.  What if there was a little clear pill out there somewhere that allowed you to use your brain's fullest potential?  What could you accomplish? What is it that you couldn't do?  This role was absolutely made for Bradley Cooper.



7) Bridesmaids - The feel good female flick of the year! Not really, but it is the funniest.  Kirsten Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne and Melissa McCarthy are absolutely spot on in their portrayal of real women and the way we deal with our friendships.  I laughed until I cried.



8) Kung Fu Panda 2 - Po is back with his awesomeness.  Twice as explosive as the first film, the second film told of the origin story of Po's real parents providing a real emotional touch.  I can't wait to see what happens in the next film in the saga.



9) Rio - While the actual story lacked in several places, the movie will astonish with the different locales it takes you to.  Just kick back, take a seat and go to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in all its animated glory.



10) Trust - Directed by David Schwimmer (yes, Ross from FRIENDS), this is one harrowing look at the dangers of teenagers and cyber chatting.  Emotionally brutal and containing fine performances from actors Catherine Keener, Clive Owen and newcomer Liana Liberato.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Movie Review: Rango


I'm so glad that I could catch this film and see it in theaters.  I kind of always moan that animation films don't get proper respect; they are usually lumped into the category of kiddie films.  But I doubt most people would try to peg Rango as a typical animated feature and for that fact I am most grateful.

Rango is the story of an chameleon (voiced by Johnny Depp) who is thrown into the world of the town of Dirt and its residents from his lonely existence inside of a fish tank.  Rango is good at improvisation and soon a new "Rango" is born, popular and fearless.  In Dirt, Rango gets to be the guy he's always dreamed of in his stories.  Of course, the townspeople of Dirt don't make so easy for him.  They are wary of outsiders and they have a major drought crisis that permeates the mood of daily life.  But when that crisis threatens their daily existence, everyone bands together to find water and leads to the big eventual standoff.  

The film had some weak plot holes here and there and you can find out the main villain easily but Rango rises above the plot holes because of what it attempts to do; present an animated film for grown-ups.  No, this film is not certainly aimed for kids, it's a clever movie about finding yourself and how you can fit in by just being yourself.  It also brings back a genre that is long neglected, the Western.  Back in the 50s and 60s, Westerns were an American tradition, a genre created specifically by the harsh American frontier that had no real rules and survival depended on grit and determination.  Nowadays, you might hardly see a handful of them in a year.  But the fascination of the genre remains, the heroes of these films were called real men who survived when odds where stacked up against them.  You can understand why Rango wanted so much to be like these heroes.  

You root for the underdog here and Rango is a fine, if eccentric hero who goes through the usual cycle of a hero's journey.  I loved the old town of Dirt with its plucky citizens who are basically surviving in the middle of nowhere, these are characters to root for.  I'm so glad to finally have an animated film that was made for grown-ups and no kiddie gags or jokes, just clever humor.  Here's hoping that this will be the first of many such films.  


Directed by Gore Verbinski; Written by John Logan; Story by John Logan, Gore Verbinski, James Ward Byrkit; Music by Hans Zimmer, Edited by Craig Wood; Casting by Denise Chamain

Voice talents of: Johnny Depp, Isla Fisher, Abigail Breslin, Ned Beatty, Alfred Molina, Bill Nighy, Stephen Root, Harry Dean Stanton, Timothy Olyphant, Ray Winstone, Ian Abercromie, James Ward Byrkit

Rating: 

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Around the World with Posters!-

Been awhile since I put some new posters.  Here are some of upcoming movies next year.  



Matt Damon and Emily Blunt are being followed by a mysterious man in a hat.  Run faster!


Vague-ish looking poster for The Battle for LA.  Ominous donut holes in the sky...

More posters of Hop, Rango, The Smurfs and more after the cut.

Monday, December 20, 2010

New Trailers Time: Water for Elephants, Tree of Life, Rango and Pirates 4

Based on Sara Gruen's best-selling novel, Water for Elephants tells the story of a young man Jacob (Robert Pattinson) wanting to be a veterinarian instead gets involved in a circus and falls in love with the head trainer's (Christoph Waltz) wife Marlena played by Reese Witherspoon.  I liked the tone of this trailer, hope it doesn't end up too fanciful.  Twilight fans, are you confused that Edward is playing Jacob?  It's only a role.



Up next, is the very delayed film, Tree of Life, due to be out for this awards season but instead will release sometime May 2011. From director Terrence Malick, the film stars Sean Penn, Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain. I have no idea what the story or plot looks like, it seems to be about disappointments and expectations or something like that or else I could be totally wrong. A very dreamlike trailer.



Gore Verbinski and Johnny Depp are reunited in this out-there animated flick, Rango, and the only traces of the Pirates series character Jack Sparrow that you'll find is Rango's knack of getting into sticky situations just like Sparrow. This is so different that most animated films in the market that its already eagerly awaiting. The more variety the better for animation, I say. The film also has the voice talents of Abigail Breslin, Timothy Olyphant, Isla Fisher, Bill Nighy, Alfred Molina and Ray Winstone.



AND, finally, we do get to see the Jack Sparrow back in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides where this time the quest is for the lost Fountain of Youth! Or is it? Joining him on this quest is a woman from his past (Penelope Cruz), an old frenemy Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) and a new captain of the Queen Anne's Revenge, Blackbeard (Ian McShane). Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) and Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) will be missed for sure but I have a sneaky feeling that they are adding some new younger characters in the film for further movies. Let us see. Meanwhile, enjoy the trailer below!

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