Archive for May, 2006

Kelly, Astaire and Effects in Dance

Posted by Devanshu in Commentary on May 23rd, 2006

Written as a Film Note for Brattle Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly
There is an old Hollywood story that goes something like this. Only three years and six movies into his acting career, Gene Kelly had a novel idea for his next film, 1945’s Anchor’s Aweigh. He wanted to dance with an animated character and his first choice, unsurprisingly, was Mickey Mouse. Kelly and his assistant Stanely Donen brought it before Walt Disney. Walt impressed and encouraging, but Mickey Mouse would never work in an MGM film.

Around the same time, two young men, who arrived at MGM around the same time as Kelly, named William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, had created a comic cartoon cat and mouse duo named Tom and Jerry. In 1944, when Kelly was looking for a dancing partner, the Tom and Jerry series was coming off back to back Academy Award wins in the Animated Short Film category. When Walt turned Kelly down, the other mouse became the obvious choice. Gene Kelly danced with Jerry Mouse in 1945’s Anchor’s Aweigh and made cinematic history as the first dance with an animated character. The animation was a painstaking process, and to his credit, it is said that Disney’s got MGM to take the risk on the sequence. Everything down to Jerry’s dancing reflection was perfected. It proved to be a good career move for all involved. Anchors Aweigh garnered five Oscar nominations. Tom and Jerry went on to win a total of seven. Read More »

On Stanley Donen and On the Town

Posted by Devanshu in Featured Filmmakers on May 22nd, 2006

Written as a Film Note for Brattle Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Stanley Donen and his Oscar
Stanley Donen was never nominated for an Oscar, so in 1998, the Academy did what was right and awarded him an honorary Academy Award. Donen danced with his Oscar on stage before declaring the secret behind his directorial success. “You show up,” he said. “You show up- and you stay out of the way. But you gotta show up or else you can’t take the credit and win one of these.” Read More »

“Art” Films Coming to the Megaplex

Posted by Devanshu in News on May 5th, 2006

Mark Cuban’s Landmark Theatre chain has 57 theatres with 213 screens in the United States which makes it the largest chain that focuses on independent/foreign/art films- until now. According to StudioBriefing AMC is getting in to the game:

Kansas City-based AMC Theatres, the No. 2 U.S. movie chain after Regal Theaters, said today (Tuesday) that it plans to set aside 72 screens in 39 U.S. cities to show traditional art-house fare. The exhibitor said that it planned to introduce independent and foreign film fare under a program dubbed “AMC Select.” Initial films under the program are due to debut this weekend, including the Al Gore global-warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth and Robert Altman’s A Prairie Home Companion.
This is fantastic news. The chains are taking the true cinephiles seriously and that is precisely the right way to go about running their business. We are the people who will spend our money in the theatres for the small films, the big films and everything in between. That’s why Landmark makes money- they, like Apple in the computer business, have a monopoly over people who spend a lot of money on the product, care a lot about it and will be faithful if you treat them well.

Akeelah and the Bee (2006)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on May 1st, 2006

Akeelah and the Bee is one of the great sport movies of all time- except that it does not really a sport. The sport is spelling, but the theme and plot are as old as rooting for the underdog. Read More »