Archive for the ‘films’ Category
old screen caps …
I can finally add captures from the yogi bear blu ray dvd, now that my new laptop has a bluray player! … let me just say making these screen caps were a b!$%^ ….. but they havent been posted online elsewhere, so I figured it was worth the hassle. Hope you guys enjoy….. also theres a few from the bad teacher bluray disc as well.
enjoy, and please give woj credit if you use!
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Studiocanal rolls out sales on Coens’ ‘Davis’
Euro group to distrib in U.K., Germany, France
Pan-European group Studiocanal has clinched a swathe of pre-sales on Joel and Ethan Coen’s “Inside Llewyn Davis,” which starts shooting Monday in New York.
Studiocanal will distrib the film, which is set amid the 1960s Greenwich Village folk music scene, in the U.K., France and Germany.
The pic, which is being produced by Scott Rudin, has been pre-sold to Scandinavia (Mis Label), Australia/New Zealand (Village Roadshow), Switzerland (Ascot Elite) and Benelux (Belga Films).
Pre-sales also encompass top distributors in smaller territories: Singapore’s Shaw Org., Greece’s Village and Hong Kong’s Golden Scene Co.
Poland’s ITI Cinema, Israel’s Lev Cinemas, and Taiwan’s Blockbuster have pre-bought “Davis.” As have Blue Sky Media for Czech Republic/Slovakia and Blitz for former Yugoslavia.
“Davis” was inspired by singer Dave Van Ronk, a friend of Bob Dylan. The ensemble film stars Oscar Isaac, Justin Timberlake, Carey Mulligan, John Goodman, F. Murray Abraham, Garreth Hedlund and Jeanine Serralles.
Pre-sales are all the more remarkable since struck on the strength of the directors and a pitch, with no script and only a few cast names, said Harold van Lier, who has been upped to the position of Studiocanal head of international distribution.
“The Coens’ films have not been available on the independent market for quite some time. Their latest, ‘True Grit,’ was a career box office best. Distributors know they deliver films which are strong, original, event movies which drive their business and are prestigious for their companies,” Van Lier added.
In his new role, Van Lier’s oversight includes sales on Studiocanal’s library, the largest in Europe.
At Berlin, Van Lier will have a “Davis’” shooting script, a film in production and a full cast to sell off.
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Justin Timberlake Shooting Coen Brothers Flick In EV (Update)
The Coen Brothers are ready to film the 1960s period piece “Inside Llewyn Davis,” and they need your help. As you can see from the flyers that the crew posted yesterday, the production would like to request permission “to temporarily dress several storefronts and buildings” to fit the period here on East Ninth Street.
Per On Locations: “The movie follows a protagonist loosely based on singer Dave Van Ronk, a friend of Bob Dylan’s. Oscar Isaac stars as the title character while Justin Timberlake co-stars as another folk musician, his wife will be played by Carey Mulligan, and John Goodman will play a jazz musician who takes a road trip with Davis.”
The crew will film on Feb. 16 from 1 p.m. to 2 a.m. Expect the color-coded Justin Timberlake sighting-level system to be on Red all that day and night.
**Next week, the crew will be shooting in Woodside, Queens, before moving to East 9th Street on the 16th.**
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IN TIME DVD COVERAGE
as you know the In Time dvd hit stores today!!!!! (go get it)
we have tons of captures and scans for you, so enjoy. just remember to credit worldofjustin if you use.
*** I cant get my capture thing to work on the special features, but when I do I will be adding captures from the deleted scenes and special features that are available on the blu-ray edition.
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Cast Update: Jeanine Serralles Heads Inside Llewyn Davis
The project is based on the life of musician Dave van Ronk, part of the folk music scene that hit Greenwich Village in the 1960′s. The script is said to be based in part on van Ronk’s memoir, “The Mayor of MacDougal Street.”
At a talk they did earlier this year at the Lincoln Center’s new Elinor Munroe Film Center, the brothers told moderator Noah Baumbach that they were working on a musical-based film, which they compared to Baumbach’s own film, Margot at the Wedding, and its dialogue and “music [that's] pretty much all performed live, single instrument.”
Serralles, best known as a stage actress, has appeared in such films as Two Lovers and Across the Universe. Her role in Inside Llewyn Davis is currently unknown.
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Update: FWB DVD Giveaway! (Congrats Mandy!)
*Contest is now closed* Thanks to all for submitting your captions!
There will be more contests in the future. Big thanks to Milakunisweb.org & Sony Pictures!
Congrats to Mandy Amazan!! Enjoy!
Check out her winning captions below:
Mila: Are you sexting my mom again??
Justin: Shit. Yes. Yes I am and I am not even sorry.
Justin: When I look in your eyes I can see my future.
Mila: When I touch you on your chest like this I can feel something that feels like a bra, but I’ll just pray it is your undershirt.
Popularity: 1% [?]
Friends with Benefits Mega Post
Soooo as you know Friends with Benefits came out on DVD yesterday, and if you didn’t SHAME ON YOU!! , just kidding!,….. but seriously, it’s a great movie, go grab it.
Below I have made some screen captures, will finish up tonight, work is hectic at the moment, but I have seperated them so the kiddies don’t see what they shouldn’t (Jt’s Butt lol).
Deleted Scenes Captures
only one scene so far, will get the rest tonight!
DvD Captures
once again, will post the rest tonight!
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The Goodies
These are the Explicit ones…. so Kiddos DON’T LOOK lol, caps from all the not so pg-13 scenes.
will post more tonight when I get home, (shortly after 11 pm est)…. and maybe Ill find a way to post some of the videos from the bonus features.
Popularity: 1% [?]
FWB now on DVD!
The day is here!! You can now buy Friends with Benefits on DVD/Blu-ray. Check out links and video below! Get the shopping!
Links:
Popularity: 1% [?]
Friends With Benefits (Blu-ray) Review
Reviewer’s Bias*
Loves: Justin Timberlake
Likes: Good rom-coms, Mila Kunis, fun cameos
Dislikes: Jenna Elfman (but not here)
Hates: That FWB just can’t work in reality
The Movie
Let’s just get this out of the way: this is the romantic comedy about sex without emotion starring the girl from Black Swan. No, not that one. The other one. The one with the really likable couple in the lead. This is the story of two highly attractive people, Jamie (Mila Kunis) and Dylan (Justin Timberlake) who find it hard to date, but easy to have sex, and make a pact to do just that with each other, while remaining just friends. As anyone who has ever had romantic feelings for a friend could tell you, this just won’t work, and there’s a self-aware element to the movie that lets them understand the tenuous nature of their pairing. But between these sweethearts and Will Gluck’s slick script and stylish direction, the film sure makes it look like fun trying to beat the odds.
Despite some really whip-smart dialogue and a rather impressive cast, the film lives and dies with Timberlake and Kunis, and it certainly lives, as they are a perfect pairing for a romantic comedy. So much of what makes a rom-com work is whether you like the actors and it’s incredibly hard to not like these two. Despite the fact that they could probably coast on their good looks (and when you consider how often they are in the buff in this movie, that would be a pretty smart business plan) they both bring oversized personalities to the proceedings, and keen senses of humor. The dialogue crackles with energy as they bicker and rip on each other, making it feel like they really are friends, rather than just pretty people who are having sex.
The sex that they do have results in one of the all-time best cinematic sex scenes. Note, not the sexiest scene (though no one will look away) but the best, because they capture a bedroom experience possible if both participants are honest and not invested in maintaining a relationship. And thanks to that honesty, many of these moments are simply hilarious, with their first tryst representing a breath of fresh air in the world of sex comedy. Again, much of the credit belongs to what the actors brought to the stage, as Timberlake’s confident silliness and Kunis’ down-to-earth yet exotic sexiness combine to create the perfect bedroom combo.
But they don’t spend the entire movie in bed, as Dylan is seemingly the highest-paid magazine art director in history, and Jamie is an executive recruiter (read: headhunter), and they each have complicated families, which gives the film it’s main subplot, as their backgrounds are used to explain how they got into their relationship mindset. After watching their whirlwind meeting and coupling for the first half of the movie, you risk whiplash from the tone change, as things “get real” rapidly. In the end, these issues work their way back into something akin to the film’s original whimsical, feel-good atmosphere, but it is quite a shift when it happens. It’s not a fatal flaw (the use of flash mobs as a major plot element, dating the film tremendously, is more egregious, along with the strange case of the disappearing ethnic buddies for the stars) but it is abrupt. That said, it does mirror reality crashing down on their sexy fairy tale.
While Timberlake and Kunis are great fun, the cast’s wealth does not end with them. Woody Harrelson, as an editor at Dylan’s magazine, is tremendous fun, playing the most masculine gay best friend seen in a mainstream film, while Jenna Elfman is excellent in a small part as Dylan’s sister, in the first role I’ve liked her in since Keeping the Faith. And as the core duo’s parents, Patricia Clarkson and Richard Jenkins turn in great performances that keep the melodrama of their characters’ situations from overwhelming the film. Even the cameos are loaded in this movie, with Andy Samberg, Emma Stone, Rashida Jones, Jason Segal and Masi Oka making tiny, yet entertaining appearances (along with Modern Family‘s Nolan Gould in a slightly larger role). But the award for scene thievery goes to snowboard champion Shaun White, who gets good laughs playing himself, though, one hopes he’s not.
The Disc
The film arrives on a single Blu-Ray disc, in a standard BD keepcase with a two-sided cover, with an animated menu offering the option to watch the film, select scenes, adjust the subtitles and check out the extras. The disc offers audio in English and French DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1 and an English Dolby Digital 5.1 audio description track, while subtitles are available in English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Chinese (Traditional and Simplified) and Korean.
The Quality
The 2.40:1 1080p transfer is impressive across the board, with appropriate color, a consistently sharp, detailed image and nice fleshtones and black levels. There’s a wide variety of settings in this film, from clear city nights and cloudy days on the Pacific Ocean to ultra-modern apartments and the hills of Los Angeles, and they all look terrific, especially during the New York City scenes. Gluck’s put together some beautiful visuals, and the Blu-Ray brings them home without any noticeable problems like digital artifacts or noise (partially a result of the film having been shot digitally.)
The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track is pretty sweet for a romantic comedy, complementing the clear, center-focused dialogue with some strong music enhancement in the surrounds, and a good deal of atmospheric sound, filling the side and rear speakers with ambient noise from the scenes. Thanks to a light soundtrack (with the exception of a well-used ’90s hip-hop track) it’s not the heaviest presentation, but there’s nothing to really complain about either.
The Extras
Flipping over the box, I was surprised to see how many extras where included here, considering how most movies that aren’t mega-franchises or genre flicks get slim pickings when it comes to bonus features. The biggest extra is certainly the audio commentary, featuring Gluck, Timberlake and Kunis. It’s a fun track, as they get along great, are fast to poke fun at each other and have lots to talk about, with Gluck focusing on technical elements and the actors sharing tales from the set. If only all commentaries were so balanced and entertaining.
Up next is almost nine minutes of deleted scenes, which really should be watched, as some fun moments were left behind, including a look at a Ferris Bueller musical, more with the costumes at Grauman’s Theater, and additional moments with White and Harrelson (who had more stereotypically flamboyant bits that were cut.) You get more cut material in the six-minute outtakes reel, which ironically (if you watch past the credits of the film) make it seem like a very fun set. And for those of you who don’t know, JT does an impeccable Alec Guinness imitation.
The rest of the extras are exclusive to the Blu-Ray release, but DVD buyers shouldn’t feel too bad. “On the Set with FWB” is a five-minute featurette about shooting on-location in New York and Los Angeles, with interviews with Gluck, Timberlake and Kunis, and it talks about the iconic elements used in the film. It’s pretty polished, feeling like an EPK production, much like “In a Flash: Choreographing a Mob” the other nearly-six-minute featurette, featuring the main three and choreographer Ashley Wallen, as they talk about the big dance numbers. It’s good behind-the-scenes info, but your interest will depend on your interest in flash mobs, which for most people has to be waning.
The last BD-only extra on the disc, besides some trailers, is “Bonus Benefits,” a pop-up trivia track that recycles some of the info from the commentary, mixed with plenty of tangential information about things and ideas seen in the movie. If you’re giving the film another viewing, it’s a way to get a bit more out of the movie, so it’s certainly added value, and no one should complain about that.
This disc also offers access to an UltraViolet copy of the film, for streaming or downloading, but be careful, as your code to get that online copy is on the back of a sticker on the plastic wrapping around the case when you buy the disc. If you’re not paying attention to the very small print, you could easily throw this access code away.
The Bottom Line
Neither of the F-buddy films looked all that interesting when they came out, however with Timberlake and Kunis leading the way, this one started out on far firmer footing, and they delivered a fun movie that may be short on realism, but it’s a hell of a good time, thanks largely to the performances of an all-around excellent cast. The Blu-Ray looks and sounds very nice, and for once, a non-genre film gets a decent spread of extras, making this release an easy one to recommend for anyone looking for a bit of breezy, well-constructed entertainment.
Popularity: 1% [?]
beat by a damn cat…
Puss in Boots, the animated Shrek spinoff with Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek in leading voiceover roles, was a box office hit its opening weekend, nabbing the number one spot with $34 million in ticket sales.
The family flick easily beat other new films over the weekend — including the Justin Timberlake sci-fi film In Time, which earned a disappointing $12 million, landing in the number 3 spot. Johnny Depp‘s The Rum Diary flopped with just $5 million and a number 5 ranking its first weekend out
Last week’s huge number one hit, Paranormal Activity 3, earned another $18.5 million, placing it second and bringing its overall earnings so far to $81.3 million; at number four this weekend, Footloose grabbed an additional $5.4 million.
Don’t worry Justin, kid movies always win big, because the kids have to have parental supervision … thats kind of cheating lol
I’m a HUGE horror fan, but after watching the horrible first two attempts, I wont bother with a third Parinormal activety even if the ratings are high!
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Fandango In Time clip
Here is an exclusive interview of Justin from fandango.com
For this and other In Time related materials be sure to check Fandango.com.
http://www.fandango.com/movie-trailer/exclusive:intimecastinterviews-trailer/141345/2158015707
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