
As cosplay continues to explode in popularity, I feel like rounding up the “best” cosplay in the world for the year is a task that’s almost impossible. But whatever, that’s not going to stop me from trying.
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As cosplay continues to explode in popularity, I feel like rounding up the “best” cosplay in the world for the year is a task that’s almost impossible. But whatever, that’s not going to stop me from trying.
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Here I am, trying to blip the Week in Games because nothing’s coming out this week except for a couple of Wii U eShop games, and Sony rolls up and drops six titles on Tuesday. Typical.
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When Sony pulled the planned December 25 release of The Interview last week, there was no certain plan about whether or not the film would ever see the light of day. A follow-up message from the hacker group that has plagued Sony for weeks warned the studio against releasing the film in any form, including “DVD or piracy.” Today one of the company’s primary attorneys said there is definitely a plan to release the film.
When and where will the film show up? There are conflicting reports. One anonymously-sourced report says Sony will drop The Interview on Crackle, for free. But official studio sources say that report is incorrect, backing up Boies’ comments, noting that a decision is still being made.
Sony attorney David Boies spoke up this morning on Meet the Press, with transcribed comments coming via THR.
Sony only delayed this. Sony has been fighting to get this picture distributed. It will be distributed. How it’s going to be distributed, I don’t think anybody knows quite yet. But it’s going to be distributed.
That echoes comments from Sony CEO Michael Lynton, who told CNN last week,
We have always had every desire to have the American public see this movie. There has not been one major VOD — video on demand distributor — one major e-commerce site that has stepped forward and said they are willing to distribute this movie for us. Again, we don’t have that direct interface with the American public so we need to go through an intermediary to do that.
Boies also called the hack “a state sponsored criminal attack on an American corporation and its employees” and that “this is not a Sony security problem. This is a national security problem. And the government has got to lead.”
The New York Post claims that Sony will distribute The Interview for free on Crackle, the ad-supported portal similar to Hulu which is owned by the studio. But that report comes with no direct sourcing, and stands in contradiction to Boies’ comments. He could be purposely vague on the idea of how Sony will distribute the movie, of course, and that is even to be expected given the circumstances here.
re/code, meanwhile, passes word from Sony spokeswoman Lauren Condoluci of Rubenstein Communications, who said the Post is not correct, adding that “Sony is still exploring options for distribution.”
The post Sony Lawyer Says Studio Plans to Release ‘The Interview,’ Is Still Weighing Options appeared first on /Film.
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David chats with Drew McWeeny from Hitfix about his new piece on the Sony hacks, “What we lose when we let fear win over art.”
You can always e-mail us at slashfilmcast(AT)gmail(DOT)com, or call and leave a voicemail at 781-583-1993. Also, like us on Facebook!
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Here are some of the other pieces we referred to during this podcast episode:
The post The /Filmcast: Bonus Ep. – The Sony Hack (GUEST: Drew McWeeny from HitFix) appeared first on /Film.
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In the spirit of this festive holiday season, last week I asked our ‘shop-savvy readers to design the most wonderful ugly video game holiday sweater of them all. I’d wear every one of these, all at once, with this Bad Dudes one on top.
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Those of you familiar with The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask will immediately see the problem with Really Freakin’ Clever‘s “Twelve Days At Snowhead.”
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According to the Bureau of Completely Made-Up Statistics, nearly a bajillion games were released in 2014. Of those bajillion, only ten were good enough to make it onto this list.
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Wow. The Legend of Korra really knows how to do a finale. There is so much to talk about between Kuvira and Korra’s final showdown, Team Avatar defending Republic City—and of course, that thing that happened at the very end. We’re sad to see this show go, but we’re delighted with the way it went out.
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Sorry Jon Bernthal of The Walking Dead, your name didn’t fit in the headline, but you’ll surely be there beside Cyrus “The Virus” Grissom, Chet and Paige Matthews battling a new breed of undead in Advanced Warfare‘s Exo-Zombies downloadable content.
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Trailers are an under-appreciated art form insofar that many times they’re seen as vehicles for showing footage, explaining films away, or showing their hand about what moviegoers can expect. Foreign, domestic, independent, big budget: What better way to hone your skills as a thoughtful moviegoer than by deconstructing these little pieces of advertising? This week we get hooked up for an annual plan of domination, grab some corned beef, wonder at a tiger taking down a horse, watch who we kiss in Russia, and see if we can get an early check out at the Marigold Hotel.
R100 Trailer
I don’t know what crazy ass hole this has come out of but I’m all in.
Director Hitoshi Matsumoto who last blew our collective third eyes with Big Man Japan is back with something that seems to embrace a similar gonzo ethos in giving us a story and blowing out any notion of restraint. What I appreciate here about the trailer is that we need no real backstory about our protagonist in order to establish what world we’ve now entered or that as a leg is brought up to kick him in the side of the head it all makes perfect sense with a few seconds worth of explanation. After that, it’s a glorious ride though sights and sounds that you can’t really put into normal classifications. This movie is creating its own language and reality. Through the trailer, though, it is made deceptively simple to understand what brought us here and why we are delighting in this man’s misery. Count this one as a journey I am excited to get started.
Deli Man Trailer
I make no apologies: I love these kinds of documentaries.
There are times when I like my in-depth examinations and ruminations into why the economy collapsed but there are times when I need to know why piling corned beef a half a foot high is a “thing.” In steps director Erik Anjou, to put onto film what people have been responding to for generations: a good deli plate. What’s more, is that this trailer is damn efficient. It cuts to the quick about the role and history of the delicatessen in our culture while also turning to make this a movie about small business owners and their calling in life. I don’t think the subject matter is going to create ripples within anyone’s Best Of list but when a trailer that’s as good as this comes along you have to recognize it’s flavor and give it some attention.
The Taking of Tiger Mountain Trailer
My introduction to director Tsui Hark was 2000′s Time and Tide.
After getting a taste for the man’s aesthetic, and delving into his back catalog, I all but lost touch with his goings on until Detective Dee surfaced four years ago. Fortunately, this now works as his most recent work as it looks like a pastiche of wild action and an unreality that somehow works completely well. There’s a passion for the zaniness of a movie that wants to play in a world where logic, reality, and physics, take on a more elastic meaning. While this may be an adaptation of an adventure novel, and it has all the gravitas of an Indiana Jones movie, I feel like we haven’t had many movies that have pulpy appeal like this does. No, nothing really makes any sense whatsover and, yes, it does feel like all the clips that were available for this trailer were chosen by bingo balls in determining which order they appear but the fact is that I’m entranced by its silliness and welcome its tiger-taking-down-a-horse visions of grandeur with open arms.
Stand Trailer
It’s tough to be in Russia right now.
Whether you’re a journalist who finds themselves on a short list of potential targets, a regular citizen who has seen the value of the ruble drop like a lead BB plunked into a pond, caught in the turmoil of their beef with Ukrane, or a gay citizen who finds themselves a scofflaw based on its laws, it’s not an ideal situation. What I like and find frightening about director Jonathan Taieb’s vision of a Russia where homosexuality is viewed through the lens as something to be hidden knowing full well we’re about to welcome in 2015 is how absolutely claustrophobic it feels. The trailer wonderfully paces itself by meting out information in a way that puts everything into perfect context. We know what we’re dealing with, we understand who is in peril, and the moments we’re given are visceral. I’m anxious for him. We feel like we, ourselves, are in danger. There isn’t much distance at all, literally, put between us and our protagonist which works in this trailer’s favor; without it, you see, it becomes something we can distance ourselves from instead of having to assess, like he does, every moment and whether it’s a threat. Powerful.
The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel Trailer
I didn’t see the first one and I don’t plan on seeing the second.
When I see a director like John Madden, the man who gave us Shakespeare in Love (yet another one of his movies I’ve consciously skipped for better or worse), toiling in work like this I am comforted knowing that there is a segment of the population who responds favorably to it. The favorable reviews the first one received are proof enough that there’s an audience that desires stories like this but I’m not sold on the idea that there’s anything particularly novel or interesting about anything this trailer wants to try and pitch. Again, I realize I’m not the target demo but, it’s just as well, the use of The Spencer Davis Group’s “Gimme Some Lovin’” is intonation enough that this is a Boomer’s world and I’m just living in it, watching their trailers.
Nota bene: If you have any suggestions of trailers to possibly be included in this column, even have a trailer of your own to pitch, please let me know by sending me a note at Christopher_Stipp@yahoo.com or look me up via Twitter at @Stipp
In case you missed them, here are the other trailers we covered at /Film this week:
The post This Week In Trailers: Deli Man, R100, The Taking of Tiger Mountain, Stand, The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel appeared first on /Film.
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