When it comes to the postproduction process on movies during a pandemic, much of the work doesn’t have to change dramatically. Film editors, after all, are used to sitting in dark rooms, often by themselves; sound editors and visual-effects artists can also do their work in front of computer screens and share it with co-workers without needing to be in the same room.
But recording a movie’s musical score is different. Unless a composer both writes and performs everything him or herself, a film score involves getting people together to play music — in the case of orchestral scores, getting lots of people together to play music. When George Clooney talked to TheWrap about finishing his film “The Midnight Sky” during the Covid-19 pandemic, for instance, he said recording the music was the single hardest part of the process.
And Trent Reznor, composer of the score to David Fincher’s “Mank” with Atticus Ross,...
But recording a movie’s musical score is different. Unless a composer both writes and performs everything him or herself, a film score involves getting people together to play music — in the case of orchestral scores, getting lots of people together to play music. When George Clooney talked to TheWrap about finishing his film “The Midnight Sky” during the Covid-19 pandemic, for instance, he said recording the music was the single hardest part of the process.
And Trent Reznor, composer of the score to David Fincher’s “Mank” with Atticus Ross,...
- 1/13/2021
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
This is the review of Isle of Dogs, directed by Wes Anderson, and starring Bryan Cranston, Koyu Rankin, Edward Norton, Liev Schreiber, Greta Gerwig, Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum, Bob Balaban, Scarlett Johansson, Courtney B. Vance, Frances McDormand, Tilda Swinton, Harvey Keitel and Yoko Ono. Written by Dan Higgins for Pure Movies. It’s almost like everything has been building towards this. It was surely only a matter time before Wes Anderson brought his artistry to Japan; the most Wes Anderson of cultures. A hybrid of old traditions, technological innovation and ‘kawaii’ meets the stylistic framing which is, at this point, so associated with Anderson it requires a whole new volume on auteur theory in the Cahiers du Cinema. Add dogs into the mix and you might just have - and I don't want to overhype this – a new holy trinity. There must be some underlying scientific or mathematic equation that...
- 3/10/2018
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
Seth MacFarlane makes his Caf Carlyle debut with a one-night only late show on Tuesday, December 19. Perhaps best known as the creator of the television series Family Guy, MacFarlane's talents encompass every aspect of the entertainment industry. He has created some of the most popular content on television and film today while also expanding his career in the worlds of music, science and philanthropy. For this special concert, MacFarlane performs selections from the Great American Songbook, joined by his band, including Tom Rainer piano, Chuck Berghofer bass, Larry Koonse guitar, Peter Erskine drums, Dan Higgins saxophone, and Joel McNeely flute.
- 12/18/2017
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
This is the Pure Movies review of Tickled by Dan Higgins. Tickled is directed by David Farrier and Dylan Reeve. David Farrier usually does “soft news”. The sort of news that provides the light relief to the usual doom and gloom of the rest of it. He interviews lizard eaters, donkey ladies, warlords and Justin Bieber. He’s essentially a Nz-based Louis Theroux during the Weird Weekend years. And one day he is browses across a video and facebook page for competitive tickling organisation Jane O’Brien Media with thousands of likes. He thinks this would make an interesting story and sends them an email. What he receives back is a cease and desist email in the form of a homophobic rant. He is surprised and shocked and continues to look into this unique sport/fetish. The response to his interest is increasingly threatening and he decides there is more...
- 8/17/2016
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
"I've basically gone from hamburger phone to cellphone in eight years."
Director Jason Reitman is back with Men, Women and Children – a film featuring every type of modern consumer technology that you can think of. But as with his other films - Thank You For Smoking, Juno and Up In The Air amongst them – what the film appears to be about isn’t actually the point. Men Women and Children, featuring a cast including Adam Sandler, Ansel Elgort and Jennifer Garner, is about people, relationships, secrets and lies.
He sat down with Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins to talk about technology, Gone Girl, Black Mirror and Ghostbusters!
Is technology ruining everyone’s lives or changing the world for the better?
Jason Reitman: C’mon, who can possibly sit there and say they know for certain that technology is doing good or bad? Fifty years from now we’ll look...
Director Jason Reitman is back with Men, Women and Children – a film featuring every type of modern consumer technology that you can think of. But as with his other films - Thank You For Smoking, Juno and Up In The Air amongst them – what the film appears to be about isn’t actually the point. Men Women and Children, featuring a cast including Adam Sandler, Ansel Elgort and Jennifer Garner, is about people, relationships, secrets and lies.
He sat down with Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins to talk about technology, Gone Girl, Black Mirror and Ghostbusters!
Is technology ruining everyone’s lives or changing the world for the better?
Jason Reitman: C’mon, who can possibly sit there and say they know for certain that technology is doing good or bad? Fifty years from now we’ll look...
- 1/6/2015
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of The Wolf On Wall Street, directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, Margot Robbie, Matthew McConaughey, Kyle Chandler, Rob Reiner, Jon Bernthal, Jon Favreau, Jean Dujardin and Joanna Lumley. Written by Dan Higgins for Pure Movies. McConaughey beats his chest slowly, sporadically emitting sounds from his mouth as he performs a tribal upper body dance fuelled by cocaine, alcohol and who knows what else. Then DiCaprio joins in. Humming and beating their chests in unison. It’s a great scene. The framing, the performances, the dialogue, the action is compelling. It is Martin Scorsese at his best. It is his beating heart, as it were.
- 5/27/2014
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of X-Men: Days of Future Past, directed by Bryan Singer and starring Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, Ian McKellen, James McAvoy, Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ellen Page, Nicholas Hoult, Anna Paquin, Peter Dinklage and Halle Berry. Written by Dan Higgins for @puremovies ‘What have we got that can compete with Avenger’s Assemble?’ I imagine they asked in Fox HQ. ‘Well we have Fantastic 4,’ an executive would reply. ‘We’ve only done two of those…’ ‘Erm…anything else?’ the studio boss would say. ‘We could do another Wolverine. The world needs another Wolverine!’ ‘Would Hugh be available for it?’ ‘Come on! This is Hugh we are talking about.’ ‘How about the X-Men? How about All of the X-Men?’ the boss would posit. ‘All of the X-Men?! But we’ve already done the prequel now and they all play the same characters and, of course,...
- 5/18/2014
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of Blackwood, directed by Adam Wimpenny and starring Ed Stoppard, Sophia Myles, Isaac Andrews and Russell Tovey. Written by Dan Higgins for Pure Movies. When you move into a large empty manor in the middle of the countryside, with a signpost saying Blackwood, you should know that there’s probably going to be some unsettling moments. Unless they bought the house blind, they apparently hadn’t noticed before the four locks on one bedroom door, an eerie figure lurking in a window in a painting of the house on the wall, the clocks not working but still chiming loudly at random and a constant low mist. Then there’s the dishevelled groundskeeper in the woods cooking a rabbit under a full moon. It’s the classic set-up of a horror film. They should’ve seen the signs really. Or at least the signpost.
- 11/6/2013
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of Ernest & Celestine, directed by Stéphane Aubier, Vincent Patar and Benjamin Renner, and starring Anne-Marie Loop, Dominique Maurin and Lambert Wilson. The film was reviewed by editor Dan Higgins for @puremovies at the London Film Festival. It is the simplicity of the film that makes it so enjoyable. Gabrielle Vincent’s children’s books have been brought alive with the same painted tones and styles that first accompanied the series. It is a sweet, quaint and charmingly unusual animation. If you look deep enough beyond the watercolour, you can make links to the need for a more accepting society – where bears and mice can co-exist despite their cultural differences. Okay, some bears *might* eat mice, but there are also some bears that are scared of mice and surely somewhere in between there can be a happy balance? You could perhaps go further and look...
- 10/13/2012
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of Good Vibrations, directed by Lisa Barros D'Sa and Glenn Leyburn, starring Jodie Whittaker, Dylan Moran, Richard Dormer, Adrian Dunbar, Mark Ryder, Andrew Simpson and Demetri Goritsas. Reviewed by Dan Higgins for @puremovies. "New York have the haircuts, London have the trousers, Belfast has the reason" shouts Terri Hooley across a crowded Ulster Hall. The fact that his guest list for the fundraising concert is so big that he's making a loss on the door doesn't affect him. This was the Woodstock of Belfast Punk. When Hooley opened Good Vibrations records on Great Victoria Street a year or so into the troubles in Belfast, he was going against the norm. Everyone was leaving Belfast, nobody was starting up businesses. But Hooley would never have predicted what came next.
- 10/13/2012
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the @puremovies review of Brave, written by editor in chief Dan Higgins. Brave is directed by Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman and Steve Purcell and stars Kelly Macdonald , Billy Connolly, Emma Thompson, Julie Walters and Robbie Coltrane Surprisingly, this is the first Pixar film in which a woman takes the lead. Wall:e, Up, Finding Nemo, A Bug's Life, Cars, Ratatouille and The Incredibles are all dominated by male leads. We've even had male buddy movies (Toy Story and Monsters Inc.) before a female protagonist. The fact that a young audience will look at this film away from the often prevailing heteronormative, princess-finds-her-prince angle is the thing that sets Brave apart. Although overdue, it marks a clear step-change. Radical, refreshing and so very, very important.
- 8/21/2012
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
A new compilation of music centered around Academy Award®-winning composer Hans Zimmer’s theme for this year’s Oscar® telecast is now available on the iTunes Store. Titled “The 84th Academy Awards . Celebrate the Music,” the collection includes the show’s musical theme plus six unique, inventive interpretations of the theme by other artists, and the “In Memoriam” choral rendition of “What a Wonderful World.”
In addition to both of the 84th Academy Awards music directors . Zimmer and musician/producer/composer Pharrell Williams (of The Neptunes) . the extraordinary group of international artists who contributed their talents includes: percussionist/drummer/composer Sheila E.; Grammy®-winning double bass player/singer Esperanza Spalding; guitarist/composer Stephane Wrembel (“Midnight in Paris”); three-time Oscar-winning composer Giorgio Moroder; two-time Oscar winning composer/musician A.R. Rahman; violin/cello virtuosi Ann Marie Calhoun and Martin Tillman; Dutch hit remixer/composer/electronic musician Junkie Xl; and multiple Grammy-winning British musician/producer Peter Asher.
In addition to both of the 84th Academy Awards music directors . Zimmer and musician/producer/composer Pharrell Williams (of The Neptunes) . the extraordinary group of international artists who contributed their talents includes: percussionist/drummer/composer Sheila E.; Grammy®-winning double bass player/singer Esperanza Spalding; guitarist/composer Stephane Wrembel (“Midnight in Paris”); three-time Oscar-winning composer Giorgio Moroder; two-time Oscar winning composer/musician A.R. Rahman; violin/cello virtuosi Ann Marie Calhoun and Martin Tillman; Dutch hit remixer/composer/electronic musician Junkie Xl; and multiple Grammy-winning British musician/producer Peter Asher.
- 2/29/2012
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
This an exclusive interview with Zach Braff by Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins. Zach Braff is the writer and director of Garden State and is currently working on Open Hearts, Andrew Henry's Meadow and another original project. He is best known for Scrubs, in which he starred with Donald Faison and Sarah Chalke. He stars in All New People alongside Eve Myles (Torchwood) in the West End this month. Well, I thought the end of Season Eight was great but, you know, the half-season after with the students was a valiant attempt by Bill [Lawrence] to keep it going. The fanbase was still there, his whole thing was “Look, they do it on Grey’s Anatomy, they do it on House, let’s just bring in the new kids.” But it didn’t take. It was like an organ that was rejected but it was worth a shot, it was worth trying.
- 2/4/2012
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
We ask you ... what better way is there to end a Friday afternoon than to ogle a smokin' hot nude Asian vampire covered in blood? Pique your interest? Yeah, we thought it would!
God bless the Chinese! Below you'll find a new still, the teaser art, and even a trailer for the flick Empress Vampire along with a massive synopsis. For more visit the official Empress Vampire website.
Thanks to DC reader Avery for the directions.
Synopsis
The revelry of an upscale Halloween party is shattered by gunshots as two armed robbers attempt to fleece the well-to-do patrons of their money and jewels. A diminutive, cloaked figure steps out of the crowd of revelers. In a brief display of superhuman powers, the figure effortlessly kills the two robbers, despite being shot repeatedly. When news of these events reaches Washington, DC, FBI agent Dan Higgins is dispatched to track down the...
God bless the Chinese! Below you'll find a new still, the teaser art, and even a trailer for the flick Empress Vampire along with a massive synopsis. For more visit the official Empress Vampire website.
Thanks to DC reader Avery for the directions.
Synopsis
The revelry of an upscale Halloween party is shattered by gunshots as two armed robbers attempt to fleece the well-to-do patrons of their money and jewels. A diminutive, cloaked figure steps out of the crowd of revelers. In a brief display of superhuman powers, the figure effortlessly kills the two robbers, despite being shot repeatedly. When news of these events reaches Washington, DC, FBI agent Dan Higgins is dispatched to track down the...
- 8/20/2011
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
This is the Pure Movies review of Source Code, directed by Duncan Jones and starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga, Jeffrey Wright, Russell Peters and Michael Arden. Written by Pure Movies' editor Dan Higgins. Corporal Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal) wakes up on a train confused. A girl offers a response to a question that he didn’t ask. He has a few arguments with passengers and bursts into the toilet, looks into the mirror and, in the reflection, he sees a different man. He leaves the bathroom, the train blows up and he dies. In most cases, this would count as a spoiler but, as all this features in the trailer, let’s go with it. He dies. He returns to a pod where he’s greeted by a video link of an officer called Goodwin (Vera Farmiga). It is explained to him that the train he was on...
- 8/6/2011
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of The Way, directed by Emilio Estevez and also starring Martin Sheen, James Nesbitt, Deborah Kara Unger and Yorick van Wageningen. Written by Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins. In much of Emilio Estevez’s directorial back catalogue, he has drafted in family members to be the lead name on the marquee. With The Way, there’s this quite weird situation of Estevez directing his real-life father learning to cope with his son’s death. The son, of course, is played by Estevez which must’ve have felt a little bit like watching your own funeral, one in which you control your parent’s feelings, words and movements from beyond the grave. The Way is also dedicated to Estevez’s late grandfather. Let’s just be thankful Charlie Sheen wasn’t involved or things could’ve got really messed up. In The Way, Tom (Martin Sheen...
- 5/24/2011
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
Yes, sparkling vampires suck worse than an 80-year-old Thai hooker with no teeth. Ugly vamps, however, do get our ghosts, if only for the violence they bring. Which brings us to sexy vampires. There's only one thing better ... sexy Asian vampires, and that's exactly what we're gonna get from Phil Condit's Empress Vampire (Huang Hou Xi Xue Gui)!
God bless the Chinese! Below you'll find a still, the teaser art, and even a trailer for the flick along with a massive synopsis. For more visit the official Empress Vampire website.
Thanks to DC reader Avery for the directions.
Synopsis
The revelry of an upscale Halloween party is shattered by gunshots as two armed robbers attempt to fleece the well-to-do patrons of their money and jewels. A diminutive, cloaked figure steps out of the crowd of revelers. In a brief display of superhuman powers, the figure effortlessly kills the two robbers,...
God bless the Chinese! Below you'll find a still, the teaser art, and even a trailer for the flick along with a massive synopsis. For more visit the official Empress Vampire website.
Thanks to DC reader Avery for the directions.
Synopsis
The revelry of an upscale Halloween party is shattered by gunshots as two armed robbers attempt to fleece the well-to-do patrons of their money and jewels. A diminutive, cloaked figure steps out of the crowd of revelers. In a brief display of superhuman powers, the figure effortlessly kills the two robbers,...
- 5/12/2011
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
This is the Pure Movies review of I'm Still Here, written by Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins. The film is directed by Casey Affleck and following Joaquin Phoenix, the Oscar-nominated star of Gladiator, Walk The Line, Two Lovers and Hotel Rwanda. The film also stars Sean Combs, Antony Langdon, Ben Stiller, Jack Nicholson, Sean Penn, Mos Def and Danny DeVito - whether all of them are acting or not is up to you. “Joaquin, I’m sorry you couldn’t be here tonight”. As David Letterman spoke those words, the world contemplated whether Phoenix had tragically fallen from grace or whether, more optimistically, he had been watching the highlights of Andy Kaufman’s back catalogue. Invariably, then, going into this film, the biggest question remains the same. Is this an elaborate practical joke for his own amusement, or the actual direction Phoenix would like his career, and life, to take?...
- 1/13/2011
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review for Scott Pilgrim vs. the World on Pure Movies, directed by Edgar Wright (Hot Fuzz, Shaun of the Dead) and starring Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kieran Culkin, Chris Evans, Anna Kendrick, Brandon Routh, Alison Pill and Jason Schwartzman. Written by editor Dan Higgins. Edgar Wright has always mixed the ‘incredible’ with the ‘mundane’. With Spaced, he turned a story about two friends sharing a flat into a surreal mainstream success. With Shaun of the Dead, the first rom-zom-com, Simon Pegg played a salesman trying to piece his relationship together as Zombies began to take over the world. In his most recent film, Hot Fuzz, Pegg and Frost play policemen in a sleepy Westcountry village stumbling upon a murder spree. In each of these, Wright has the ordinary, extraordinary. Now, it seems he has officially landed in Hollywood (minus Pegg and Frost) with Scott Pilgrim vs. The World.
- 12/21/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of The Expendables, starring Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Randy Couture, Steve Austin, Mickey Rourke, Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger. The review is by Pure Movies editor Dan Higgins. This is a Stallone film. The action is sometimes great but sometimes it drags and becomes tiring. The film itself never really develops but still manages to run too long. There are some great cameos; one jaw-dropping scene with Arnie, Stallone and Bruce Willis altogether but it was scenes like this that defined the film. The great thing about Rocky, Rambo, Die Hard, Speed, Terminator, Predators (etc) is that they were serious (to a point) action films. Sure, they are cheesy but, at the same time, thoroughly enjoyable. The Expendables, however, never really elevates itself away from anything other than ‘We have a load of really famous action stars, how cool is this?...
- 12/12/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review for The American, directed by Anton Corbijn and starring George Clooney, Violante Placido, Thekla Reuten, Paolo Bonacelli, Irina Björklund, Björn Granath, Johan Leysen, Filippo Timi and Samuli Vauramo. Written by Dan Higgins. This is a literary adaptation of Martin Booth’s A Very Private Gentleman and, as the title suggests, Clooney plays a character that is both enigmatic and elusive. In fact, he hardly talks. He has no women in his life and, from the opening scene, it is easy to see why this is the case. A priest attempts to befriend Jack (who now goes by Edward), while he finds company, solace and sex with a local prostitute called Clara. It is evident though that he is being tracked and his past seemingly instructs him to trust nobody and be suspicious of everyone, including people that he starts relationships with.
- 11/27/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of The Karate Kid (Directed by Harald Zwart and Starring Jaden Smith, Jackie Chan, Taraji P. Henson and Tess Liu, produced by Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith). Written by editor Dan Higgins. In The Karate Kid, 12-year-old Dre Parker (Jaden Smith) could've been the most popular kid in Detroit, but his mother's latest career move has taken them to China. Dre immediately falls for his classmate Mei Ying, but cultural differences make such a friendship impossible. Even worse, Dre's feelings make an enemy of the class bully, and kung fu prodigy, Cheng.
- 11/20/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is the Pure Movies review of Get Him To The Greek by critic Dan Higgins. The film stars Russell Brand, Jonah Hill, Rose Byrne, Elisabeth Moss, Sean 'P. Diddy' Combs, Colm Meaney with cameos from Zoe Salmon, Lars Ulrich, Mario López, Pink, Billy Bush, Kurt Loder, Christina Aguilera and is directed by Judd Apatow favourite and Forgetting Sarah Marshall director Nicholas Stoller. Brand’s performance is more than worthy of the lead role and, it is reminder, that he is a very good actor and, along with Hill who deserves his fair share of the plaudits, it is this screwball-buddy-relationship that brings the film above the level of just another gross-out comedy. Brand is wild, rebellious and utterly irrational; every inch of the moral fibre that makes up his rock star. There may be some who will say how close this particular character resembles his true persona but,...
- 10/30/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This the Pure Movies review of The Sorcerer's Apprentice, directed by Jon Turteltaub and starring Nicolas Cage, Jay Baruchel, Monica Bellucci, Alfred Molina, Ethan Peck, Teresa Palmer, Toby Kebbell and Peyton List. Written by film critic Dan Higgins. In 1940, Walt Disney released Fantasia, a film made up of eight short films based on classical music. In one of these shorts, The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, Mickey Mouse chooses to bypass his chores by donning his master’s wizard hat and using spells on various brooms and mops. The sequence is based on a 1797 poem by Goethe and the 1897 symphonic poem by Paul Dukas. In this modern-era of cinema then, where studios attempt to remake everything, Disney have opted to take this sequence and extend a wider story around it.
- 8/15/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
This is an exclusive interview between Pure Movies Editor Dan Higgins and Italian filmmaker Erik Gandini. Listen to it in full by downloading the Pure Movies podcast here. Videocracy stars Silvio Berlusconi, Flavio Briatore, Fabio Calvi, ick Canelli, Fabrizio Corona, Samantha Crippa, Marella Giovannelli, Nina Heric and Lele Mora. With the release of Videocracy, an in-depth look at the Italian television culture that Silvio Berlusconi has presided over, Erik Gandini caused quite a stir. The state broadcaster in Italy banned the trailer and lawsuits were threatened. Gandini talks to Pure Movies about the reaction to Videocracy, Silvio Berlusconi and the problems that are dominating Italian culture.
- 7/7/2010
- by Dan Higgins
- Pure Movies
Oprah Winfrey is making use of Tiger Woods' situation to have him as a guest on "The Oprah Winfrey Show". The daytime talk show queen reached out to Woods to have him candidly talking about his marital problem and the scandal accusation that had been directed to him in the past few weeks. She however, did not personally call Woods like many have reported.
"I do know there was a blog report that Oprah had personally called Mr. Woods himself - that is not true," Don Halcombe, spokesman for "Oprah Winfrey Show" said. Oprah allegedly requested for on-camera interview with his wife Elin Nordegren by his side. "Everyone around him believes it is the only way he will salvage any respect or even attempt to rebuild his family man image," a source told Mirror.
Oprah is not the only one vying to get one of the year's biggest "gets". HBO Sports,...
"I do know there was a blog report that Oprah had personally called Mr. Woods himself - that is not true," Don Halcombe, spokesman for "Oprah Winfrey Show" said. Oprah allegedly requested for on-camera interview with his wife Elin Nordegren by his side. "Everyone around him believes it is the only way he will salvage any respect or even attempt to rebuild his family man image," a source told Mirror.
Oprah is not the only one vying to get one of the year's biggest "gets". HBO Sports,...
- 12/8/2009
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
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