Tag Archives: Comedy

London Burke and Hare Photos

Blog reader Stefanos sent these:

Stefanos says he did not see these cranes being used. Possibly unrelated construction.


Hearse and Horse (butt)

The scene being shot.

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Life After Cast Away

Found this on Cracked.com and it comes from Space Avalanche

http://www.spaceavalanche.com/2010/03/08/wilson/

Burke and Hare Set Photos: Edinburgh, Day 3

In my previous Burke and Hare post I wasn’t able to get photos despite meeting Simon Pegg and Andy Serkis.

Thanks to blog reader Kristen, however, we now have some photos.  She took these of the Burke and Hare shoot by Edinburgh Castle on Friday.  You can see more at her Flickr page, here

On the set of Burke and Hare, the latest from John Landis

Evidently they brought in real fish for this scene.

Where do you rent these things? Or do they have to make them?

PS

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Burke and Hare: Edinburgh, Day 2

The cast and crew returned from shooting in Sterling for two days to wrap up shooting in Edinburgh, Friday night and Saturday morning before moving to the next location (possibly back to London). Here are the photos (sorry about the quality, extreme low-light conditions)

If you want to find their shooting location, just follow the trucks. I stumbled across these on my way home.

Horse

They were filming on a street that ran beneath the street in the photo. So they had lighting crews set up above the set.

The set of Burke and Hare from above.

Serious lighting. I felt bad for the guy who had to stand in this cherry picker, in the rain, with a very hot, electric lamp.

This tavern is like a VIP club, with a 19th century bouncer that allows Andy Serkis and Simon Pegg inside.

Crew members were running umbrellas to and away from extras as they tried to keep the detailed costumes dry.

Getting ready for the shoot.

In this scene, Serkis and Pegg are in line to get into this exclusive tavern.  The bouncer lets them in as horse drawn carriages and extras pass by.

Wider shot of the scene playing out (camera can’t zoom while recording)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrWqsp0_rvM

I know where they’re shooting tomorrow, so keep checking the blog for updates.

Burke and Hare Photos and Clip (plus Inception Info)

Last night I was on the set for a small scene of John Landis’ latest, Burke and Hare.  The scene feature Andy Serkis and Simon Pegg running down an alley, chasing something, until Pegg notices a strange sound.  In the video below, they turn around and director Landis is the one describing the CGI barrel coming toward them, going over their head (“BOUNCE!”), and crashing behind camera.

Serkis, Pegg, and Landis didn’t stray into the crowd to talk much.  I was behind the crew since I was their first, but I just got a nod from the celebs as they passed by.  Didn’t seem interested in mingling.

It was interesting to see so much money/effort go into such a small scene.  They’re shooting in Sterling today and tomorrow, then returning to Edinburgh to shoot Thursday-Saturday morning.  A friend of mine already knows where they’re shooting on Friday.

I got a lot of  info from a guy on set.  He says it’s a 7 week shoot and they just got back from London.  They’re using two cameras (blurry picture below) to maximize time.

However, more interesting was his comments on Christopher Nolan (a bit chaotic in his shooting style), since he worked with him on Inception and The Dark Knight.  He showed me a video of the rig they used for a hallway scene in the film, which was larger than a semi-truck’s trailer, that completely rotated.  He went on to explain that they rubberized everything inside and painted it so the actors inside could roll around and fight.  They also locked down a camera inside the hallway and used a camera crane that could go inside the moving rig.  Evidently I’m one of the only guys outside of the film industry to see his little cell phone video of this rig.

Trucks and lighting equipment.

This is probably the angle they'll shoot the scene from, since there's a restaurant in the opposite direction.

Dressing the set to hide the new. They also installed old wooden signs.

Rustic carts and hay for that turn of the century look.

This is how you light a set when you can't get a cherry picker lighting kit in: it's a balloon with lights inside.

Waiting for dark with the balloon light rig.

Sorry about the quality. Not enough light and flash wasn't allowed.

[video courtesy of David Law]

Simon Pegg, Andy Serkis, and John Landis Filming Dark Comedy

John Landis (An American Werewolf in London) is filming part of his latest film, Burke and Hare, in Edinburgh this week.  Andy Serkis (Gollum) and Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead) star, with imdb describing the film as:

A black comedy about two 19th century grave robbers who find a lucrative business providing cadavers for an Edinburgh medical school.

Looks like Landis is returning to his roots.  Below are pictures I snapped of the set as they’re getting ready to shoot this evening.

Trucks and lighting equipment.

Rustic carts and hay for that turn of the century look.

Dressing the set to hide the new. They also installed old wooden signs.

This is how you light a set when you can't get a cherry picker lighting kit in: it's a balloon with lights inside.

This is probably the angle they'll shoot the scene from, since there's a restaurant in the opposite direction.

DVD Roundup: Westerns, Spike Lee, and French Hate

Before writing this entry, the idea was to post a blog every week listing all of the films I’ve watched (that I have not previously seen) over seven days.  However, given the length, I don’t know if that’s going to be a constant.  Maybe once a month highlighting the best films I watched.  Anyway, here’s what I saw:

Vinz, Said, and Hubert, the main characters who represent the diverse poverty fo the banlieues.

La Haine (1995)

This was the best film I watched all week.  It reminded me of both Fight Club and Children of Men for specific reasons:  Fight Club because it was speaking to a certain generation-in this case, poor youths  living in the banlieues of Paris;* Children of Men because the camera work is easy-going, not kinetic, but smooth; it lets the film do its thing.  When you watch as many films as I do, you begin to feel worn out by ho-hum films.  This was a good jolt of awesomeness, both for content (you really feel like you’re learning something about this world) and formalist elements.  Please: Watch this.

*The banlieues in France are the suburbs or outskirts.   In contrast to the U.S., these suburbs are the ghettos where the poor and minorities reside.

Cache (Hidden) (2005)

I thought Michael Haneke’s Funny Games (2007)* was brilliant, so I was disappointed by Cache.  Residing on many top film lists, I felt this was heralded by auteur theory slaves or for the formalistic as opposed to the content.  People discuss it in terms of an allegory for French colonialism, but there is nothing in the film that directs you to such a conclusion.  All you have is a French man thinking an immigrant boy he knew in childhood is stalking him.  The film’s purpose is opaque and thus comes off as artistic wankery.  Any time you’re looking at a piece of art and the only way it has meaning is via the titlecard explaining the artist’s purposes, the artist has failed.  I am by no means asking for an artist to shove the subtext down my throat.  However, you need to give clues to your meaning and there are none in Cache.  Don’t bother.

*this was a shot-for-shot American re-make that Haneke, surprisingly, directed himself


A Boy and His Dog (1975)

This is the film that inspired Mad Max, thereby The Road and probably any post-apocalyptic film you’ve ever seen.  The world has been scorched to deserts and a boy and his dog, who are telepathically linked, search for food and women for the boy to rape.  Yes, you read that right: man’s best friend helps a boy with sexual assault.  Things get weird when he meets a girl and goes underground, where the world is frozen as 1950’s America, the townspeople wear creepy clown makeup and the high school band is always in full swing.  This is definitely from the 1970’s (too weird to be from any other decade) and the humor is super black.  Totally worth a watch just for the ending, but watch with friends.  This is too out there to watch without company. Trailer

Malcolm X (1992)

A biopic on Malcolm X . . . where Spike Lee doesn’t know when to be quiet.  Really Spike Lee, did you need Nelson Mandela to hammer your point home after we see X shot a bajillion times?  Denzel Washington is good (of course), but watch Lee’s 25th Hour for something really great.

North by Northwest (1959)

"I'll inn- your -uendo anytime, Mr. Grant."North by Northwest (1959)

I had no idea that a mainstream Hollywood film could have so much sexual innuendo.  I was perpetually waiting for some super sexy music to cut in during the dialogue between Grant and Saint Marie.  Other notable comments: an abrupt ending which transitions directly from Mount Rushmore, straight into a Honeymoon train ride.  Also, you’ll notice any exterior scenes flip back and forth from being on location, to using a green screen (like those of The Daily Show correspondent reports). Something tells me this was the result of keeping dialogue in a studio where audio can be recorded easily, then cutting back to on location when no dialogue was occurring.  It’s interesting to consider how a film’s style is affected by technical issues.  Good little thriller though.

The Searchers (1956)

Since discovering Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) I’ve gone through recommended Westerns I missed during my youth [too busy watching films on TNT, like Night of the Living Dead (1990), The Lost Boys (1987), and The Shawshank Redemption (1994)].  So seeing The Searchers among all the other Westerns put it in perspective.  The film is noteworthy for John Wayne’s role as an anti-hero when he goes looking for girl kidnapped by “Indians” with a young buck who is part Native American himself.  Other than that, the acting and dialogue aren’t the finest.  If you’re new to Westerns, you need to see The Searchers, but I’d recommend High Noon (1952) for higher honors.

Unforgiven (1992)

Along with my comments on The Searchers, Unforgiven is praised for breaking from Western tradition and showing the true consequences of the killin’ life.  Interesting since Clint Eastwood directed Unforgiven, the guy who made killing look cool in the Leone and Dirty Harry films. See my blog entry on Eastwood’s penance for a lengthier treatise.

Flags of Our Fathers (2006)

And finally, this links up with Unforgiven not only due to Eastwood’s directorial role, but for the same act of deconstructing the genre’s mythos of war heroes.  At first, the look of the film might remind you of a tv movie, but I think that’s because Eastwood didn’t want to tart it up with grittiness like Saving Private Ryan (1998).  Better to stay away from stylization and let the film play out in our world, where colors continue to exist despite a war’s occurence.  Again, see my Eastwood blog entry for more.

The Scarlet Empress (1934)

If the earliest films you’ve seen are the Classical Hollywood Films during the Hays Code Era (such as North by Northwest), then this one will surprise you, as German director Josef von Sternberg spins the tale of Catherine the Great of Russia.  The film’s opening montage, in which young Catherine is receiving her education of Russian politics, we see nudity, torture, and beheadings (though on this we only see a man with an ax; the other items, we see it).  The set design of the Russian palace is just as grotesque (very German expressionist), but this little film is interesting for focusing on women, with Marlene Dietrich as the protagonist who has a vareity lover boys, and the tyrannical mother-in-law and ruler of Russia, Empress Petrovna.  Men are idiots or play things in this world and that is just as striking (in a good way) as the opening montage.

Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987)

I hand wrote this review in class: Really funny, but the music designer pushed some scenes into homoerotic territory.  Also, it keeps moving between hilarious and overly dramatic.  It gets so dramatic in fact, that you reasonably expect Del (John Candy) to go in the bathroom, peel open his wrists up with a razor, and be discovered by Neal (Steve Martin) the next morning in a pool of his own blood; this of course occurring as a result of Neal’s ill temper toward Del and adding just another hurdle to Neal quest to get home.

I don’t know why, but I quite literally, laughed through the whole film.  I don’t laugh easy during comedies.  I don’t chuckle at the slightest provocation.  So it might have been due to the pacing: long lingering takes as another annoyance/tragedy plays out, and we feel Neal’s explosive reaction building up.  If the same events happened to Del, the nice chatty guy, it would be sad to see such repeated ailments befall such a nice guy.  But since we know Neal as a tight ass, we can rely on him to freak out and we have to laugh at him.  And in regard to the acting: John Candy can do real, subtle hurt; but Steve Martin does sadness like a second grade actor in the school play.

I thought this might have been John Hughes’ first film he wrote and directed, but imdb tells me this was one of his last major hits.  Surprising.  Certain parts were REALLY serious (only made worse by the music) and this change in tone felt awkwardly abrupt, not like Shaun of the Dead, which snaked its way through scary, sad, and funny with amazing finesse.  I’ve seen Hughes’ other notables, so I know he likes to take us through the funny and the serious, but this wasn’t as well done.

Despite this issue, I’d watch it again.  It was funny and that’s what I was expecting.

The Boys Are Back

About this time of year you have two types of films at the cinema: Oscar Bait and Left Overs.  The first is self-explanatory, the latter is a reference to film distributors releasing their “What the hell do we do with this?” selection between the drama filled fall/winter season and the heavyweight blockbusters of summer.

The Boys Are Back is the Oscar Bait.  Joe Warr (Clive Owen) has recently lost his wife, Katy (Laura Fraser), to cancer.  In the wake of her death, Joe must navigate his relationship with his six-year old son, Artie, and Harry, his son from a previous marriage.

Adapted from Simon Carr’s memoir The Boys Are Back In Town, this tale of a single father juggling home life and his career avoids gender clichés reminiscent of Mr. Mom.  Intriguing is Joe’s “just say yes” parenting style.  In Joe’s house, basic rules such as no swearing, no real fighting, etc. are in place, but Joe drives his 4×4 on the beach with Artie on the hood, sonorous with glee.  He even has water balloon fights – brace yourself – in the house!  If anything, the film’s representation of child rearing that encourages dangerous fun and large doses of freedom  makes it worth a viewing.

Further, as there have been few dramas, but plenty comedies, that focus on male single parents, the film is important for showing male homosocial relationships.*

The unfortunate part of the film is how many relationships are juggled.  Joe is dealing with grief, Artie, and then Harry.  One or even two of these alone could fill a film, but throw in that third ingredient and the film produces so-so results.  Knowing that the film is an adaptation of a book puts this in perspective, as it is definitely structured in a free-flowing way.  By the end you’re not really sure if Joe has really learned anything about his sons or even about himself.

The big pull for this film (if you didn’t figure it out by the film’s poster) is Clive Owen’s star power.  Even I’ll admit, as a fan of Sin City and Children of Men, Owen’s involvement is what pulled me to The Boys Are Back.  Many have stated that Owen’s performance is Oscar worthy and if I were the type of person who didn’t loath the Oscars, I’d like to say the same.  However, Owen does a good job, but is stymied by the film’s lack of focus.

Like so many films flaunting their accolades from the critics and festivals, this isn’t the best movie out now (I’d recommend The Road or Up In the Air), but it isn’t bad either.

*The only other films about male single parents that I can think of include Jersey Girl (2004), Evelyn (2002), and even The Road counts, but isn’t light like the others.

Other Recommendations:

Finding Neverland

Funny People: Quick Review

A lot has been made of this film, as it’s Judd Apatow’s third film, following his successes with 40 Year Old Virgin and Knocked Up, and there’s a lot worth praising. As usual with his work the film walks a fine line between being a comedy or a drama, leaning more for the emotional punches that just happen to be funny. Continue reading