Showing posts with label MUD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MUD. Show all posts

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Halftime

The first half of the year usually is devoid of Oscar-y titles-- typically a dumping ground for product and the hopeful launch of things big and shiny-- but nonetheless we are well behind the first six months of 2013 and a short time ahead of the fall festival circuit when things start getting wonky.  Are there any takeaways thus far that may have any impact on the 2013 Oscar race?

It's true that Best Picture winners and nominees typically are introduced in the latter part of the calendar year-- since 2000 only three eventual Best Picture winners were released in the first half (The Hurt Locker, Crash, Gladiator) and only a handful of nominees (Up, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Midnight in Paris, Moulin Rouge!, Erin Brockovich) have managed that feat.  Still at this stage of the game when all is mere speculation and all in the movie awards land still feels pure and innocent, it's fun to ponder the playful possibilities.

The only Best Pictures winners since 2000 to be released before July.

BEST PICTURE
Last year, the winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance was a plucky bit of poetry called Beasts of the Southern Wild which managed the nearly unbelievable task of netting four Oscar nominations including Picture and Director-- it became just the third Sundance to Oscar translation in history following Precious (2009) and Winter's Bone (2010.)  This year Sundance bestowed its top prize (as well as the Audience Award) to Fruitvale Station, Ryan Coogler's feature debut about the 2009 BART shooting of Oscar Grant.  The Weinstein Company hopes magic strikes again for the well-received film.  It opened last week in limited release to one of the biggest per-screen averages of the year (third to only Spring Breakers and A Place Beyond the Pines) and may very well enter the zeitgeist due to the sense of urgency bestowed due to the Zimmerman verdict (also last weekend.)  The key, of course, will be the position the great Harvey puts the film in towards the end of the year (remember, he's got a lot of awards potential set to come at the end of the year including August: Osage County, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom, Philamena and Grace of Monaco.)

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Weekend Box Office

Horror entry The Purge surprised many with its top placement of the box office charts this weekend.  The micro-budgeted scarer revolving around a lawless period where all crime is legalized starred Ethan Hawke (who may be having a banner year with this little bit of nonsense as well as Before Midnight, in selected theaters) and Lena Headey (Game of Thrones.)  Produced by Michael Bay and Jason Blum, who notably shepherded the Paranormal Activity saga, the film cost approximately $3 million to make and was put under a tightly managed and thrifty promotional budget that apparently worked wonders.  In other news, this was just an appetizer of cinema weekend before S comes and makes everything all glittery again.


  1. The Purge- $36.3 million ($14,000 per screen) new
  2. Fast & Furious 6- $19.7 million (-43%) ---> $202.9 million total
  3. Now You See Me- $19.5 million (-33%) ---> $61.3 million total
  4. The Internship- $18.1 million ($5,000 per screen) new
  5. Epic- $12.1 million (-27%) ---> $84.1 million total
  6. Star Trek Into Darkness- $11.7 million (-30%) ---> $200.1 million total
  7. After Earth- $11.2 million (-59%) ---> $46.5 million total
  8. The Hangover Part III- $7.3 million (-55%) ---> $102.3 million total
  9. Iron Man 3- $5.7 million (-31%) ---> $394.3 million total
  10. The Great Gatsby- $4.2 million (-35%) ---> $136.1 million total
  11. Mud (the little engine)- $1.2 million (-0.7%) ---> $18.6 million total

Notables further down:
Frances Ha- $0.5 (+11%) ---> $2.3 million total
Before Midnight- $0.5 (+44%) ---> $1.5 million total
The Kings of Summer- $0.2 (+273%) ---> $0.3 total
Much Ado About Nothing- $0.18 ($36,000 per screen / 5 screens) new
Stories We Tell- $0.1 (+37%) ---> $1.1 million total

What did you see this weekend?  

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Mud

There's such a sense of nostalgia that rails through Mud-- writer-director Jeff Nichols third film-- that it might be easily confused as a period piece.  If nothing else the film expertly infuses a bygone time period look as it wades across the river banks of the small Arkansas town in which it is set.  Meditatively paced, and harkening to a mythic style of storytelling, one of which that not just recalls the literary facets of Mark Twain, but also the cinematic beats of the Old West infused with the convention of ones coming of age, Mud, in its best stretches, lulls with a powerful beatific pull.  Unfortunately, the surface is whats coded with a special and enticing gloss, that the more you get to the bottom of the enchanting playground on which Mud is set, there is sadly not too much there.  But that gloss is dreamy and Nichols, if nothing else, proves a more than confident filmmaker with a flourish and sweep of the cinematic realm.  He shoots he a gracefulness and an economy, making no shot seem wasted or overly fussed about.  It's that confidence and ease of control that shapes this imperfect American film as something notable and refreshing.

Mud tells the tale of two young boys-- Ellis (a terrific Tye Sheridan, who was one of the sons in The Tree of Life), a sensitive, searching young lad and Neckbone (Jacob Lofland, making his acting debut), the more pragmatic and cynical of the two.  On a seemingly routine, boys-will-be-boys type of adventure, the two find a boat wedged in a tree on a nearby island off their riverbed shanty homes.  It's a beguiling and nearly poetic image from the start.  A relic likely transplanted there after a storm, but a perfectly engaging and surreal setup for a playtime adventure.  The mood and danger of Mud arises upon the arrival of Matthew McConaughey who plays a fugitive (referred to as "Mud") who has sought solace on the island and has claimed the boat as his own.  Afraid, but also intrigued, the boys wage to help the man.

Mud showcased another exciting entry in the journeyman rebirth of Matthew McConaughey.  As Mud, he is asked to be calming, romantic, fatherly and dangerous in the same breath.  It's a testament to his last minute resurgence as a serious and convicted performer that the once eternally trapped movie star of banal romantic comedies, feels and reads perfectly in sync with his character.  It's further testament, that within the stretch of a calendar year, the actor has travailed through fascinatingly imperfect films such as Magic Mike, The Paperboy, Bernie and this one, and seemingly revitalized all of them by his mere presence and sense of discovery throughout them. 

He invests more than anything a thoughtfulness to Mud as a lovestruck loner as he relays the story of his doomed love Juniper (Reese Witherspoon.)  This appeals mostly to Ellis who comes from a home that is one edges of coming apart and his teenage impulses are starting to coalesce.  Thus a plea is drawn-- the boys will help Mud in gathering food and spare parts to repair the boat in the tree-- Neckbone is drawn in more so because Mud promises him a pistol in exchange and as second fiddle to Ellis.  The most industrious and beguiling portion of Mud is in inception as the film delves into more conventional Old West terrain with a noisy and trigger-happy conclusion, nearly devoid of catharsis.  The overall tidiness of the conclusion seems a bit false in the onset of story built from the intriguing messiness of its premise and all the stretched truths and tall tales it tells.  But in the journey, Nichols creates a memorable and interesting mood study.  The supporting players are aces as well including unshowy, but tenderly drawn showcases for Sam Shepard, Sarah Paulson and Michael Shannon.

It's nearly novelistic by design, but Nichols has a sweeping flow of the rhythms of character and intrusive visual scheme that is lovely to look at times.  If perhaps it feels a bit of come down from the bravura metaphysics he was playing with in his last film in the mesmerizing 2011 indie apocalypse tale Take Shelter, the promise and intrigue of an American journeyman filmmaker still looms strong.  Mud is certainly a film worthy of a look and a thought, I just wished it lingered a bit longer.  B-        
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