For the first time in a while, I don’t have anyone to talk to in the pages of NOW — though I refuse to see that as a problem, since I’ve been going full-tilt since March and could use a couple of quiet weeks, if we’re being honest.

(I’m almost happy that Cannes wasn’t in the cards this year, because I’d be useless.)

((Oh, who am I kidding? I’d totally have gone. You sleep on the plane, after you get where you’re going you take off your shoes and socks and make fists with your toes on the rug, and you’re good for another two weeks, easy.))

Anyway, this week is pretty quiet. Some reviews, which we’ll get to tomorrow, and my contribution to the paper’s Inside Out coverage, a review of Thom Fitzgerald’s “Cloudburst“. And a nap.

 

Sacha Baron Cohen’s new comedy “The Dictator” opens today. Since Glenn went to New York for that junket while I was in Los Angeles doing “Dark Shadows”, he got to write the review, which will run in tomorrow’s edition of NOW.

Me? I liked it a lot more than the repugnant “Bruno”, but it doesn’t touch “Borat” for consistent, convulsive laughter. This is Baron Cohen’s first scripted project since the forgettable “Ali G Indahouse”, and you can feel director Larry Charles struggling to find a rhythm that suits both Baron Cohen’s aggressive approach to his character and the idea that jokes can be built up and paid off over the course of a scene.

It’s messy, but it’s still pretty funny every now and again, particularly when Baron Cohen stops whatever he’s supposed to be doing to lob haughty insults at the perpetually game Anna Faris. “A midget in a chemo wig” shouldn’t be funny — it really, really shouldn’t — but somehow these two crazy kids make it work.

 

This week’s MSN DVD column looks at “Rampart” and “Albert Nobbs”, two films that would be very different if they hadn’t starred Woody Harrelson and Glenn Close, respectively.

I mean, I can see Oren Moverman making “Rampart” with someone else as the intense, highly questionable authority figure Officer Dave — Aaron Eckhart, maybe — but Harrelson puts so much of himself into the role that such thought experiments seem almost insulting.

And as you’ll see, “Albert Nobbs” probably wouldn’t even exist without the participation of co-writer/producer/star Glenn Close … though in the long run, I think I’d probably be okay with that.

 

“The Avengers” showed massive legs in its second weekend of North American release, grossing $103.2 million to retain the top slot on the box-office chart. And that’s just the domestic take; Joss Whedon’s superhero ensemble piece pulled in nearly as much internationally ($95.4 million, to be exact) which means the film broke a billion dollars worldwide gross in under three weeks.

This is unprecedented. But it makes Kevin Feige, the guy behind the whole Marvel Universe project, look like a genius: “The Avengers” constitutes a sequel to four different franchises, each of which was pretty successful on its own (yes, even the Hulk movies), and now he’s proven that combining those franchises for one great big movie is a license to print money.

I’m assuming this will lead to impossible expectations for the individual Marvel sequels already in the pipeline — the third “Iron Man”, and the second “Thor” and “Captain America” features — to say nothing of “The Dark Knight Rises”, which will now be hard-pressed to match “The Avengers”, just because Christopher Nolan didn’t shoot it in 3D.

Whatever happens, Tim Burton’s about to get reined in a little after the piddly second-place $28.8 opening for “Dark Shadows“. That’s got to be good for him; unlimited studio resources are the worst thing that’s ever happened to him. Let’s see what he can do on a mid-budget project with a completed script, shall we?

 

Oh, right, it’s Friday and there are movies upon us. Let’s get to ‘em!

“Big Boys Gone Bananas!*”: Fredrik Gertten’s look at the disinformation campaign mounted by Big Fruit against his 2009 documentary “Bananas” was quite popular at Hot Docs — which is where Susan saw it.

A Bottle in the Gaza Sea“: Fresh from opening the Toronto Jewish Film Festival, Thierry Bienisti’s plea for Middle Eastern understanding gets a theatrical run. The view of Israel as a polyglot nation with as many languages as many political positions is an interesting angle, but the rest of it’s pretty familiar.

China Heavyweight“: Another Hot Docs title, Yung Chang’s artful look at rural Chinese teens who sign on with a boxing trainer in the hopes of escaping their villages, begins its own commercial run. Still not totally sold on it, though.

Dark Shadows“: Tim Burton runs Dan Curtis’ supremely cheesy supernatural soap through his distinctive Gothic sensibility, loses interest about two-thirds of the way through and stands around shrugging while the whole thing falls apart. But we do get to watch Johnny Depp stare down a troll doll, so there’s that.

“Edwin Boyd”: Scott Speedman finally demonstrates some range as a WWII vet turned showboating Toronto bank robber in Nathan Morlando’s impressive true-crime thriller, which is as much about PTSD as it is a study of the perpetual Canadian inferiority complex. Phil liked it, too.

Sound of My Voice“: Brit Marling, who co-wrote and starred in the intriguing lo-fi sci-fi drama “Another Earth”, is once again at the center of a modestly budgeted, carefully constructed and altogether compelling genre effort. It’s already proving divisive, but that’s okay; it’s supposed to be.

There, you’re set. Unless you were just going to see “The Avengers” again this weekend … which I would totally understand.

 

Through the magic of a junket press conference, you’ll find me sort-of talking to Johnny Depp about his remake of “Dark Shadows” in the new issue of NOW. (Be sure to listen to the audio clips for additional input from Tim Burton, Michelle Pfeiffer and Seth Grahame-Smith, as well as more of Depp.)

In more concrete terms, I actually did interview Brit Marling one-on-one about her intriguing new film “Sound of My Voice” last month; that conversation is in this week’s paper, too, along with a look at TIFF’s Next Wave film festival and the usual slate of reviews. Dive in!

 

 

In this week’s MSN DVD column, I try to make sense of a mystery that’s bothered me for nearly a decade now: What the hell is the appeal of the “Underworld” franchise?

I mean, it’s not a total riddle: Obviously, there’s a percentage of the population that just wants to watch Kate Beckinsale jump around in a rubber suit. But surely people want more from their entertainment than that.

Any ideas? The comment section awaits …

May 072012
 

As expected, “The Avengers”  made all the money this weekend … and what a lot of money there was to make.

Predictions have the film grossing about $200 million domestically, which is the biggest opening in the history of ever.

At this point, though, I think it would have been more surprising if the film hadn’t set a new record. Box-office success was encoded in its DNA.

No complaints from me, mind you. If this puts Joss Whedon in a position to make more superhero movies, I’m entirely fine with that. Turns out he’s really good at them.

 

A movie like “The Avengers” practically demands excessive coverage. And for MSN, we came up with something a little different — a gallery about other superhero team-up films we’d like to see, in case anyone was listening.

It practically wrote itself; apparently there’s a lot of comic-book mythology rattling around in my brain. (I do consider it a point of pride that I stopped myself from making reference to the Cosmic Treadmill, though.)

Take a look. And wonder which of the eight feature-film treatments I’ve just put out there will one day find its way onto Wikipedia.

And in more depressing news, the Cumberland Cinemas will be ceasing operations as of Sunday night. No, I haven’t been there in years, but I’ll still miss it.

 

Oh, you know what’s coming.

The Avengers“:  The four-year tease that started with “Iron Man” and “The Incredible Hulk” reaches fruition with Joss Whedon’s tremendously entertaining blockbuster, which functions as an entry in four different franchises and as its own super-sized adventure. Also, Tom Hiddleston should be in everything.

“The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”: Elderly British people are revitalized by the exotic allure of a foreign land in John Madden’s crowd-pleaser. Glenn gives it a conditional pass for the cast, because he’s a generous person.

“Detachment”: Self-proclaimed iconoclast Tony Kaye takes on the American educational system with this drama about a substitute teacher (Adrien Brody) trying to make a difference, or something, in New York. Susan says it’s as compelling as a car wreck, which is how I’d describe Kaye’s first feature, “American History X”.

Headhunters“:  Norwegian star Aksel Hennie (“Uno”, “Max Manus: Man of War”) has a grand time as an art thief targeted by a well-coiffed maniac (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, of “New Amsterdam” and “Game of Thrones”) in Morten Tyldum’s delirious cat-and-mouse thriller. Icky, messy fun.

“Planet Yoga”:  Did you know that yoga is relaxing and fitness-friendly? You did? Good for you, then! Apparently that’s all you get from this feature documentary, which Rad hated with the fire of a thousand suns.

There, that’s everything. Oh, except this: In honor of International Star Wars Day, MSN asked me to rank the very best characters in George Lucas’ epic space opera. So I did. Your mileage may vary, of course.

May the 4th be with you …

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