As the Covid-19 crisis still roils around the world, Movistar Plus’ new banner series, Enrique Urbizu’s “Libertad,” opened day and date on March 26 in both Spanish theaters as 135-minute movie and on Movistar Plus’ pay/SVOD platform as a five-part series.
Handled by A Contracorriente Films, the film’s broad release is less of marketing ploy, more of a drive to boost Spain’s theatrical business over Holy Week and a response to a potential film version detected as Urbizu and fellow creatives were editing.
“Libertad” continues Movistar Plus’ large bet on its talent. The title could apply to both its characters as its creators. Renowned for the impact on his movies of classic cinema, Urbizu has finally been given the tools to make a title which enrolls Western tropes in a violent adventure set in the Spanish wilds that bears witness to the twilight years of Spain’s...
Handled by A Contracorriente Films, the film’s broad release is less of marketing ploy, more of a drive to boost Spain’s theatrical business over Holy Week and a response to a potential film version detected as Urbizu and fellow creatives were editing.
“Libertad” continues Movistar Plus’ large bet on its talent. The title could apply to both its characters as its creators. Renowned for the impact on his movies of classic cinema, Urbizu has finally been given the tools to make a title which enrolls Western tropes in a violent adventure set in the Spanish wilds that bears witness to the twilight years of Spain’s...
- 3/29/2021
- by Emiliano Granada
- Variety Film + TV
Every week, IndieWire asks a select handful of film and TV critics two questions and publishes the results on Monday. (The answer to the second, “What is the best film in theaters right now?”, can be found at the end of this post.)
This week’s question: In honor of the bone-crunching “Atomic Blonde,” what is the greatest movie fight scene?
Read More‘Atomic Blonde’: How They Turned One Amazing Action Scene Into a Seven-Minute Long Take Erin Oliver Whitney (@cinemabite), ScreenCrush
I’ve got a soft spot for wuxia so the “best fight scene” immediately evokes Zhang Yimou in my mind. I could list every fight in “Hero,” sequences so spellbindingly beautiful and graceful you forget you’re watching violence. The bamboo forest battle from “House of Flying Daggers” is another all-timer, a mesmerizing fight that almost entirely takes place in the air. And the bone-crunching, table-smashing...
This week’s question: In honor of the bone-crunching “Atomic Blonde,” what is the greatest movie fight scene?
Read More‘Atomic Blonde’: How They Turned One Amazing Action Scene Into a Seven-Minute Long Take Erin Oliver Whitney (@cinemabite), ScreenCrush
I’ve got a soft spot for wuxia so the “best fight scene” immediately evokes Zhang Yimou in my mind. I could list every fight in “Hero,” sequences so spellbindingly beautiful and graceful you forget you’re watching violence. The bamboo forest battle from “House of Flying Daggers” is another all-timer, a mesmerizing fight that almost entirely takes place in the air. And the bone-crunching, table-smashing...
- 7/31/2017
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Wow! Fritz Lang's second western is a marvel -- a combo of matinee innocence and that old Germanic edict that character equals fate. It has a master's sense of color and design. Robert Young is an odd fit but Randolph Scott is nothing less than terrific. You'd think Lang was born on the Pecos. Western Union Blu-ray Kl Studio Classics 1941 / Color /1:37 flat Academy / 95 min. / Street Date November 8, 2016 / available through Kino Lorber / 29.95 Starring Randolph Scott, Robert Young, Virginia Gilmore, Dean Jagger, John Carradine, Chill Wills, Slim Summerville, Barton MacLane, Victor Kilian, George Chandler, Chief John Big Tree, Iron Eyes Cody, Jay Silverheels. Cinematography Edward Cronjager, Allen M. Davey Original Music David Buttolph Written by Robert Carson from the novel by Zane Grey Produced by Harry Joe Brown (associate) Directed by Fritz Lang
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Darryl Zanuck of 20th Fox treated most writers well, was good for John Ford...
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Darryl Zanuck of 20th Fox treated most writers well, was good for John Ford...
- 11/1/2016
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
One of Disney’s greatest treasures has been with us for 22 years. It was on June 24, 1994 that The Lion King opened in theaters across the country. The tale of a Simba stepping into the light and into his father’s footsteps was an instant hit with both audiences and critics, and it earned four Oscar nominations for its breathtaking music, winning two of those — one for Hans Zimmer’s score and one for Elton John and Tim Rice-penned song “Can You Feel the Love Tonight.” The Lion King has remained one of Disney’s most celebrated and beloved films, and that was clear when its 3D re-release hit theaters in 2011, becoming a box office juggernaut as parents who were young upon the original release of the film towed their young ones to the theater for the treat of seeing the beauty of the animated savannah on the big screen again.
- 6/24/2016
- by Emily Rome
- Hitfix
As a supplement to our Recommended Discs weekly feature, Peter Labuza regularly highlights notable recent home-video releases with expanded reviews. See this week’s selections below.
Two playful journeys into women’s lives — one a mystery forged in darkness, one an adventure-turned-ritualistic-requiem. Jacques Rivette’s Duelle and Noroît originally set up a four-part circle of films that were never finished. But these never-released-in-America masterpieces comprise his most wondrous ode to classical Hollywood, each based on a forgotten text. In Rivette’s own obsessive mise-en-scéne, their fantasies are grounded through realism, constructed worlds where the camera simply documents performance.
The streets of Paris remain conspicuously quiet through Duelle, a noir-fantasy modeled off Rko’s The Seventh Victim. The frizzle-haired ingénue Hermine Karagheuz balances on a ball before coming crashing back down, and suddenly a woman gives her the task of finding a missing man (encouraged by the booming sounds of the...
Two playful journeys into women’s lives — one a mystery forged in darkness, one an adventure-turned-ritualistic-requiem. Jacques Rivette’s Duelle and Noroît originally set up a four-part circle of films that were never finished. But these never-released-in-America masterpieces comprise his most wondrous ode to classical Hollywood, each based on a forgotten text. In Rivette’s own obsessive mise-en-scéne, their fantasies are grounded through realism, constructed worlds where the camera simply documents performance.
The streets of Paris remain conspicuously quiet through Duelle, a noir-fantasy modeled off Rko’s The Seventh Victim. The frizzle-haired ingénue Hermine Karagheuz balances on a ball before coming crashing back down, and suddenly a woman gives her the task of finding a missing man (encouraged by the booming sounds of the...
- 2/17/2016
- by Peter Labuza
- The Film Stage
Close-Up is a column that spotlights films now playing on Mubi. The Big Heat is playing on Mubi in the UK through January 3.Glenn Ford and Gloria Graham in a promotional still for The Big Heat.There's a moment about an hour into The Big Heat that, if you're lucky enough to be watching it in a theater, will still make the audience gasp. It's an act of violence that seems both impossible and, given the direction of the story, inevitable. It sends everything reeling. One of the silliest biases that many modern moviegoers have to overcome is the idea that Old Hollywood movies were safe: that they come from such a repressed, naive, and censored era that nothing too dangerous, worldly, or subversive could ever end up on screen. Few films can blast aside that misconception quite like The Big Heat. This is a Fritz Lang film, and...
- 12/15/2015
- by Duncan Gray
- MUBI
Close-Up is a column that spotlights films now playing on Mubi. The Big Heat is playing on Mubi in the UK through January 3.Glenn Ford and Gloria Graham in a promotional still for The Big Heat.There's a moment about an hour into The Big Heat that, if you're lucky enough to be watching it in a theater, will still make the audience gasp. It's an act of violence that seems both impossible and, given the direction of the story, inevitable. It sends everything reeling. One of the silliest biases that many modern moviegoers have to overcome is the idea that Old Hollywood movies were safe: that they come from such a repressed, naive, and censored era that nothing too dangerous, worldly, or subversive could ever end up on screen. Few films can blast aside that misconception quite like The Big Heat. This is a Fritz Lang film, and...
- 12/15/2015
- by Duncan Gray
- MUBI
'Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl': Johnny Depp as Capt. Jack Sparrow. 'Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl' review: Mostly an enjoyable romp (Oscar Movie Series) Pirate movies were a Hollywood staple for about three decades, from the mid-'20s (The Sea Hawk, The Black Pirate) to the mid-to-late '50s (Moonfleet, The Buccaneer), when the genre, by then mostly relegated to B films, began to die down. Sporadic resurrections in the '80s and '90s turned out to be critical and commercial bombs (Pirates, Cutthroat Island), something that didn't bode well for the Walt Disney Company's $140 million-budgeted film "adaptation" of one of their theme-park rides. But Neptune's mood has apparently improved with the arrival of the new century. He smiled – grinned would be a more appropriate word – on the Gore Verbinski-directed Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,...
- 6/29/2015
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Film history frequently offers two versions of Fritz Lang: A maker of epic German tragedies and melodramas prior to Nazism’s rise, and a creator of lean, tight Hollywood noir films after leaving Germany in 1933. Yet this division placed within the great Austrian director’s half-century-long film career should be challenged. One reason why is that it overlooks the outliers, such as Lang’s lone film made in France, the splendidly gentle and sad supernatural romance Liliom (1934); his nineteenth-century adventure tale Moonfleet (1955), a CinemaScope work shot on the MGM backlot with an almost entirely British cast; and his final films, realized after he left Hollywood to return to Germany. Another is that it ignores other major binaries and shifts in Lang’s practice.>> - Aaron Cutler...
- 9/8/2014
- Fandor: Keyframe
Film history frequently offers two versions of Fritz Lang: A maker of epic German tragedies and melodramas prior to Nazism’s rise, and a creator of lean, tight Hollywood noir films after leaving Germany in 1933. Yet this division placed within the great Austrian director’s half-century-long film career should be challenged. One reason why is that it overlooks the outliers, such as Lang’s lone film made in France, the splendidly gentle and sad supernatural romance Liliom (1934); his nineteenth-century adventure tale Moonfleet (1955), a CinemaScope work shot on the MGM backlot with an almost entirely British cast; and his final films, realized after he left Hollywood to return to Germany. Another is that it ignores other major binaries and shifts in Lang’s practice.>> - Aaron Cutler...
- 9/8/2014
- Keyframe
The stars of Sky1's new drama Moonfleet talk smugglers and stunts in a new interview with Digital Spy.
The legendary Ray Winstone and rising star Aneurin Barnard team up for an action-packed adaptation of John Meade Falkner's classic novel - one of the highlights of Sky1's Christmas schedule.
The pair talk about the origins of Moonfleet, the dynamic between their characters - Barnard's John Trenchard and Winstone's Elzevir Block - and putting stuntmen out of work.
"He reminds me a lot of me when i was a young actor," Winstone says of his co-star. "[Except] he's better - take it from me!"
Moonfleet begins on Saturday, December 28th at 8pm and concludes on Sunday, December 29th at 8pm on Sky1.
Doctor Who, Downton, Sherlock: Digital Spy's 12 TV Picks of Christmas
Trollied, Moonfleet, Mad Dogs: Sky1 unveils Christmas, New Year listings...
The legendary Ray Winstone and rising star Aneurin Barnard team up for an action-packed adaptation of John Meade Falkner's classic novel - one of the highlights of Sky1's Christmas schedule.
The pair talk about the origins of Moonfleet, the dynamic between their characters - Barnard's John Trenchard and Winstone's Elzevir Block - and putting stuntmen out of work.
"He reminds me a lot of me when i was a young actor," Winstone says of his co-star. "[Except] he's better - take it from me!"
Moonfleet begins on Saturday, December 28th at 8pm and concludes on Sunday, December 29th at 8pm on Sky1.
Doctor Who, Downton, Sherlock: Digital Spy's 12 TV Picks of Christmas
Trollied, Moonfleet, Mad Dogs: Sky1 unveils Christmas, New Year listings...
- 12/23/2013
- Digital Spy
Odd List Louisa Mellor 19 Dec 2013 - 07:00
We’ve scanned the UK TV schedules over the next fortnight and circled a few new Christmas programmes you may enjoy…
Despite this being the time of year when television repeats aren't just tolerated, but welcome (if at no point in the next fortnight does Dermot Morgan get lost in a department store underwear aisle, or a snowman ride a motorbike through a Sussex field, then it just won't feel like Christmas), we've gone for brand new shows in the list below.
There's a selection of new drama, comedy and a few other bits and pieces you may wish to circle in your festive TV listings magazine... Merry Christmas.
Drama Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor
What is it? It's Doctor Who. Do you need to know anything else?
What’s this one about? This one-hour special is Matt Smith's farewell episode as the Doctor,...
We’ve scanned the UK TV schedules over the next fortnight and circled a few new Christmas programmes you may enjoy…
Despite this being the time of year when television repeats aren't just tolerated, but welcome (if at no point in the next fortnight does Dermot Morgan get lost in a department store underwear aisle, or a snowman ride a motorbike through a Sussex field, then it just won't feel like Christmas), we've gone for brand new shows in the list below.
There's a selection of new drama, comedy and a few other bits and pieces you may wish to circle in your festive TV listings magazine... Merry Christmas.
Drama Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor
What is it? It's Doctor Who. Do you need to know anything else?
What’s this one about? This one-hour special is Matt Smith's farewell episode as the Doctor,...
- 12/17/2013
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
God rest ye merry schedulers - your work is done for another year and now us lucky lot have a plethora of fantastic telly to enjoy over the Christmas and New Year period.
But if you're looking at your TV listings mags and finding it all a bit overwhelming, then don't panic... Digital Spy presents The 12 Picks of Christmas - a duodecuple of December (and early January) shows!
1. The Muppets and Lady Gaga at Christmas - Sunday, December 22 at 5.25pm on Channel 5
The festive telly season kicks off with Channel 5's flagship show for the holidays. Originally aired on ABC in the Us in November, this 75-minute special sees Gaga perform songs from her latest album Artpop and also features Elton John, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Kristen Bell, RuPaul and - of course - Kermit, Miss Piggy and co. Sounds utterly bonkers - so a perfect vehicle for Gaga then.
2. Call the Midwife - Christmas Day (Wednesday,...
But if you're looking at your TV listings mags and finding it all a bit overwhelming, then don't panic... Digital Spy presents The 12 Picks of Christmas - a duodecuple of December (and early January) shows!
1. The Muppets and Lady Gaga at Christmas - Sunday, December 22 at 5.25pm on Channel 5
The festive telly season kicks off with Channel 5's flagship show for the holidays. Originally aired on ABC in the Us in November, this 75-minute special sees Gaga perform songs from her latest album Artpop and also features Elton John, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Kristen Bell, RuPaul and - of course - Kermit, Miss Piggy and co. Sounds utterly bonkers - so a perfect vehicle for Gaga then.
2. Call the Midwife - Christmas Day (Wednesday,...
- 12/17/2013
- Digital Spy
Trailer Louisa Mellor 26 Nov 2013 - 06:39
Ray Winstone and Aneurin Barnard feature in Sky One's adaptation of smugglers' adventure, Moonfleet...
Ray Winstone in a tricorn hat growling about diamonds to an orphan? That's my idea of a Christmas drama. Sky One evidently agrees, so is serving up this new adaptation of J. Meade Falkner's nineteenth century adventure novel Moonfleet as part of its festive line-up.
Aneurin Barnard (The White Queen) plays lead John Trenchard, a young man who gets caught up in a smuggling adventure with local landlord Elzevir Block, played by Ray Winstone. See what you think of the trailer below:
Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.
MoonfleetRay WinstoneAneurin BarnardSky One...
Ray Winstone and Aneurin Barnard feature in Sky One's adaptation of smugglers' adventure, Moonfleet...
Ray Winstone in a tricorn hat growling about diamonds to an orphan? That's my idea of a Christmas drama. Sky One evidently agrees, so is serving up this new adaptation of J. Meade Falkner's nineteenth century adventure novel Moonfleet as part of its festive line-up.
Aneurin Barnard (The White Queen) plays lead John Trenchard, a young man who gets caught up in a smuggling adventure with local landlord Elzevir Block, played by Ray Winstone. See what you think of the trailer below:
Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.
MoonfleetRay WinstoneAneurin BarnardSky One...
- 11/26/2013
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Vikings
Alexander Ludwig and Linus Roache have joined the second season of History Channel's "Vikings" as series regulars. Shooting begins this summer for a 2014 return.
Ludwig will portray Bjorn, the intelligent and bold warrior son of Ragnar Lothbrok (Travis Fimmel). Roache will play Ecbert, King of Wessex. [Source: The Live Feed]
Critics Choice Awards
"Breaking Bad" and "Game of Thrones" tied to win Best Drama Series at the 3rd annual Critics’ Choice Television Awards held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last night.
"The Big Bang Theory" won in the Best Comedy Series category, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" was honored as Best Talk Show, "Archer" was honored as Best Animated Series, and "Behind the Candelabra" was honored as Best Movie/Miniseries. [Source: TV Line]
Someday Someday Maybe
Actress Lauren Graham has closed a deal with Warner Bros TV and A Very Good Production for an hourlong drama series adaptation of her new book "Someday, Someday,...
Alexander Ludwig and Linus Roache have joined the second season of History Channel's "Vikings" as series regulars. Shooting begins this summer for a 2014 return.
Ludwig will portray Bjorn, the intelligent and bold warrior son of Ragnar Lothbrok (Travis Fimmel). Roache will play Ecbert, King of Wessex. [Source: The Live Feed]
Critics Choice Awards
"Breaking Bad" and "Game of Thrones" tied to win Best Drama Series at the 3rd annual Critics’ Choice Television Awards held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last night.
"The Big Bang Theory" won in the Best Comedy Series category, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" was honored as Best Talk Show, "Archer" was honored as Best Animated Series, and "Behind the Candelabra" was honored as Best Movie/Miniseries. [Source: TV Line]
Someday Someday Maybe
Actress Lauren Graham has closed a deal with Warner Bros TV and A Very Good Production for an hourlong drama series adaptation of her new book "Someday, Someday,...
- 6/12/2013
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
Aneurin Barnard is set to star alongside Ray Winstone in Sky1's brand new family drama Moonfleet, a two-part adaptation of the much loved John Meade Falkner novel, written by Ashley Pharoah.
Aneurin (represented by Ken McReddie Associates), won an Olivier award in 2010 for best actor in a musical for his West End debut as Melchoir in musical Spring Awakening after graduating from Rwcmd in 2008. He will next be seen as the lead in feature film Mariah Mundi and the Midas Box and on TV as the Duke of Gloucester in BBC One's The White Queen.
Set in the small Dorset village of Moonfleet, Aneurin plays young John Trenchard who is desperate to join the local band of smugglers led by Elzevir Block (Winstone). Together they embark on an adventure full of action, friendship and humour, and hunt for a fabled lost diamond. Their journey takes them from 18th Century Dorset,...
Aneurin (represented by Ken McReddie Associates), won an Olivier award in 2010 for best actor in a musical for his West End debut as Melchoir in musical Spring Awakening after graduating from Rwcmd in 2008. He will next be seen as the lead in feature film Mariah Mundi and the Midas Box and on TV as the Duke of Gloucester in BBC One's The White Queen.
Set in the small Dorset village of Moonfleet, Aneurin plays young John Trenchard who is desperate to join the local band of smugglers led by Elzevir Block (Winstone). Together they embark on an adventure full of action, friendship and humour, and hunt for a fabled lost diamond. Their journey takes them from 18th Century Dorset,...
- 6/11/2013
- by noreply@blogger.com (ScreenTerrier)
- ScreenTerrier
Sky1 HD‘s latest original drama is a two-part adaptation of the John Meade Falkner adventure novel, Moonfleet. Ray Winstone will play Elzevir Block, the leader of a band of smugglers in 18th century Dorset, England. He’s joined by Aneurin Barnard (The White Queen, Emanuel And The Truth About Fishes) who plays a young newcomer to the smuggling crew as they embark on the hunt for a lost diamond. Ashley Pharoah, creator of the original Life On Mars, wrote the adaptation that also stars Ben Chaplin, Omid Djalili and Sophie Cookson. Shooting starts this summer in Dublin. Company Pictures, producer of Starz/BBC series The White Queen, is producing Moonfleet in association with Ireland’s Element Pictures. Bletchley Circle‘s Andy de Emmony directs and Endeavour‘s Dan McCulloch produces. Exec producers are Huw Kennair-Jones, John Yorke, Claire Ingham, Pharoah and Patrick Spence. Winstone is up next in Darren Aronofsky...
- 6/10/2013
- by NANCY TARTAGLIONE, International Editor
- Deadline TV
Sky1 has announced a new drama, starring Ray Winstone in the lead role.
Based on the classic John Meade Falkner novel of the same title, Moonfleet is a two-part series penned by Life on Mars writer Ashley Pharoah.
Winstone stars as Elzevir Block, the head of a gang of smugglers in 18th Century Dorset, who recruit young John Trenchard, played by The White Queen star Aneurin Barnard. Together they go on a journey "full of action, friendship and humour, and hunt for a fabled lost diamond".
Winsone said of the role: "I'm incredibly excited to be working with Sky - I can't wait to start filming and it's a real honour to be bringing such an epic adventure story to life."
Comic and Gladiator actor Omid Djalili stars as diamond merchant Aldobrand and Mad Dogs star Ben Chaplin will play the town's anti-smuggling Magistrate.
Inbetweeners actor Martin Trenaman, Silent Witness's Lorcan Cranitch,...
Based on the classic John Meade Falkner novel of the same title, Moonfleet is a two-part series penned by Life on Mars writer Ashley Pharoah.
Winstone stars as Elzevir Block, the head of a gang of smugglers in 18th Century Dorset, who recruit young John Trenchard, played by The White Queen star Aneurin Barnard. Together they go on a journey "full of action, friendship and humour, and hunt for a fabled lost diamond".
Winsone said of the role: "I'm incredibly excited to be working with Sky - I can't wait to start filming and it's a real honour to be bringing such an epic adventure story to life."
Comic and Gladiator actor Omid Djalili stars as diamond merchant Aldobrand and Mad Dogs star Ben Chaplin will play the town's anti-smuggling Magistrate.
Inbetweeners actor Martin Trenaman, Silent Witness's Lorcan Cranitch,...
- 6/10/2013
- Digital Spy
William Friedkin's 1975 interview with Fritz Lang
If you happen to be in the market for Fritz Lang Christmas ornaments, they do exist, though they don't come cheaply. At any rate, much of the third issue of Movie: A Journal of Film Criticism (the successor to Movie, the print journal Ian Cameron edited from 1962 to 2000) is given to the second part of its Fritz Lang dossier featuring — and I should mention before you start clicking that these are PDFs — Stella Bruzzi on Fury (1936), Vf Perkins on You Only Live Once (1937), Edward Gallafent on The Return of Frank James (1940), Adrian Martin on Scarlet Street (1945), Peter William Evans on The Big Heat (1953), Deborah Thomas on Human Desire (1954) and Peter Benson on Moonfleet (1955).
Also in this issue: Christian Keathley on Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Alex Clayton on Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) and Gus Van Sant's 1998 remake and John Gibbs on Jamie Thraves's...
If you happen to be in the market for Fritz Lang Christmas ornaments, they do exist, though they don't come cheaply. At any rate, much of the third issue of Movie: A Journal of Film Criticism (the successor to Movie, the print journal Ian Cameron edited from 1962 to 2000) is given to the second part of its Fritz Lang dossier featuring — and I should mention before you start clicking that these are PDFs — Stella Bruzzi on Fury (1936), Vf Perkins on You Only Live Once (1937), Edward Gallafent on The Return of Frank James (1940), Adrian Martin on Scarlet Street (1945), Peter William Evans on The Big Heat (1953), Deborah Thomas on Human Desire (1954) and Peter Benson on Moonfleet (1955).
Also in this issue: Christian Keathley on Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Alex Clayton on Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) and Gus Van Sant's 1998 remake and John Gibbs on Jamie Thraves's...
- 12/24/2011
- MUBI
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