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Quantum of Solace coming soon! Bond franchise best?

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Quantom of Solace

I've never thought myself to be an avowed James Bond  fan but when I went to 'Casino Royale' (having seen all other versions) I realised that I have been in denial all these years.  I always enjoy the films, as do the audiences.  Story?  Sometimes a bit hollow.  Dialogue?  Often worse than that.  But the package really works.  Probably in the same way as those Buster Crabbe serials of the olden days.  Plenty of hooks, cliff-hangers, interesting locations and great acting.  That is the one thing that Cubby Broccoli always got right and it was the often intriguing people who not just played Bond but surrounded him.  The Dench/Craig combo is darn hard to beat.  

 

 

QOS  opens on Nov. 19th and is General Release which means it may be in more theatres than 'Australia'. 

 

RIGHT:  THIS ACTOR CLEARLY HAS NO RESPECT FOR WARDROBE.  AND IS IT JUST ME OR THOSE SHOES WAY TOO BIG?

 

Security will be tight though I believe there are pirate copies around.

DANIEL CRAIG ON TRAIL BIKE

 HELMET?  AND MESS UP MY BLONDE LOCKS?  MOI? 

Why would you WANT to see a measly pirate copy when you can go to some whopping great theatre with a massive, thumping  souond system and get the whole darn package?

 

More on piracy later as I am watching very carefully the illegal copies of 'Bigger, Stronger, Faster*', Alex Buono, Tamsin Rawady and Chris Bell's doco.  You would be AMAZED if you knew where the copy came from.  It was an incomplete copy submitted ONLY to a very high profile film festival. ie. They have a mole in there. Shocking, eh?

 

 

 

Last Updated ( Monday, 10 November 2008 03:50 )
 

National Punctuation Day. Every nation needs one.

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5th Annual National Punctuation Day®
helps schools and businesses promote
good writing skills and literacy

PINOLE, CA — Why is punctuation important Jeff Rubin the Punctuation Man and founder of National Punctuation Day explains that without punctuation you would not be able to express your feelings in writing not to mention know when to pause or stop or ask a question or yell at someone and without punctuation you would not be able to separate independent clauses and show an example of how a business lost millions because of an errant comma so dont forget the most important punctuation mark $$$$$$ OK so a dollar signs isnt a punctuation mark but its important dont you agree

Jeff the Caped CrusaderNational Punctuation Day®, the holiday that reminds America that a “ semicolon is not a surgical procedure,” celebrates its fifth anniversary September 24. What started as a clever idea to remind corporations and professional people of the importance of proper punctuation has turned into an everyday mission to help school children learn the punctuation skills they need to be successful in life.

Founded in 2004 by former newspaperman Jeff Rubin, NPD is listed in Chase’s Calendar of Events and The Teacher’s Calendar, two directories published by McGraw-Hill. The holiday is celebrated in schools and businesses across the U.S. It reminds people of the importance of proper punctuation for communicating clearly at school or at work.

It’s also a day to remind business people that poor punctuation can cost your business millions of dollars.

Rogers Communications, for example, one of Canada’s largest telecommunications companies, learned the hard way just how important proper punctuation could be, when an attorney misplaced a comma in a contract with a company that agreed to lay Rogers’s cables across the Maritimes. A Canadian court said ignorance of correct punctuation was no excuse and invalidated what was believed to be an ironclad five-year contract. That errant squiggle alone cost Rogers $2.13 million. There’s a link to the newspaper article about this case below.

“Punctuation has been devalued by a generation of computer wizards who ask, ‘What’s the point? Nobody writes in complete sentences anymore,’” says Jeff Rubin, founder of National Punctuation Day. “But the rules of proper punctuation haven’t changed just because of computers.

“Casual shortcuts bred by e-mailing and text messaging have no place in professional business writing. Words have power and help decision-makers form impressions immediately. Clarity and attention to detail remain imperative. Careless punctuation mistakes cost time, money, and productivity.”

The annual event is widely recognized and celebrated. Bank of America in Tampa, FL, for example, commemorates NPD with a week-long array of celebrations and trivia contests. Every year, Jeff is a guest on dozens of radio shows and NPD receives significant newspaper coverage. Businesses, news organizations, and schools around the United States cook Punctuation Meat Loaf and bake cookies and pastries in the shape of punctuation marks.

Playtime in China

But notoriety alone wasn’t good enough for Jeff, who insists, “Creating a holiday on the calendar doesn’t mean much unless you’re willing to do something about the cause it promotes.”

To that end, Jeff and his wife, Norma, created Punctuation Playtime, a 45-minute program for children in grades 1-6. Punctuation Playtime features games, activities, and storytelling — even a rap song — to reinforce important punctuation lessons in an effort to enhance children’s reading, writing and communication skills.

Since premiering Punctuation Playtime in September 2006, Jeff and Norma have been as busy as commas in a Sears catalog. They have facilitated nearly 60 Punctuation Playtime assembly programs in schools and after-school centers in Northern and Southern California. In September 2007, they brought the program to Roundout Elementary School in Lake Forest, IL, just north of Chicago, and exhibited at the Centre East and Premiere Showcase education shows in the Chicagoland area. They were back in Hinsdale, IL, just west of Chicago, for programs at the Oak School in March 2008. They will be performing at the Governor George Clinton Elementary School in Poughkeepsie, NY, on October 23 and 24, 2008.

Jeff and Norma have also produced a 30-minute instructional DVD that trains teachers how to facilitate Punctuation Playtime in their schools. They also conduct 90-minute workshops for elementary school teachers on how to teach punctuation to children in a fun and engaging way.

Today, the metamorphosis from just another funky calendar event to everyday cause is complete — during the assembly program, Jeff appears as “Punctuation Man,” dressed in a blue super-hero costume with a bright red cape.

Teachers love the program and how Jeff and Norma interact with the children.

“Your program completely supports our curriculum content,” said Sally Feldman, a teacher at Washington Elementary School, in Point Richmond, CA. “You have wrapped up the best in teaching to bring to our students. I love the fact that you are not afraid to teach young children great skills!”

“That’s a typical comment we get from teachers after a program,” says Jeff, who works during the day as “The Newsletter Guy,” writing company newsletters for corporate customers out of his office in Pinole, CA.

Jeff founded National Punctuation Day in 2004 to draw attention to the importance of proper punctuation. It’s a day for librarians, educators, and parents — people who are interested in teaching and promoting good writing skills to their students and their children. It’s also a day to remind business people that they are often judged by how they present themselves. “Successful people have good communication skills, and that includes knowing how to write properly,” Jeff says. “Punctuation counts. A misplaced comma can alter the meaning of a message.”

It’s not just school children who need to learn the rules of punctuation.

“I’m stunned at how many executives and CEOs send me articles and correspondence that are poorly written and punctuated,” Jeff says. “Did they miss a year of school? I see billboards that scream to be corrected. Magazines and newspapers routinely make punctuation errors, either in their articles or in their display ads. I recently read a new book about baseball pioneer Branch Rickey and it’s filled with typos, misspelled words, and punctuation errors. It’s embarrassing.

“Poor punctuation knows no sociological boundaries — everyone from high school dropouts to college graduates needs help with punctuation.”

Visit the NPD website regularly at www.NationalPunctuationDay.com for updates and new photos. And check the Punctuation Playtime website at www.PunctuationPlaytime.com for information about bringing our program to your school.

 

Curious Films: competition for Team Dry weeds out the skills (and chooses the drongoes).

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MELBOURNE: The new ‘Team Dry’ campaign for Carlton Dry, directed by Curious Film’s Miki Magasiva, rewards glory where there’s none to be found.

The campaign is based on the idea that the inane, brainless things guys do in their early 20s are probably the most fun things they’ll ever do. As a result, Carlton Dry is offering drinkers the chance to win a year-long pro sponsorship to do dumb stuff full-time, delaying the inevitable disappointment of a ‘real’ job.

Created by Cameron Harris and Seymour Pope at Clemenger BBDO Melbourne, the ‘Team Dry’ campaign offers two lucky bastards a $50,000 sponsorship deal to enable them to live the life of a sponsored star.

The campaign centres on a team of professional misfits including Jimmy, who’s paid to bounce ping-pong balls into cups; and Angus, who’s paid to make his biceps dance. The Team Dry members were cast from auditions of real people with genuinely crappy talents.

TEAM DRY launches with TVCs and a 10-min team film, ‘Tokyo Blitz’, featuring profiles and a team trip to Tokyo. The film shows prospective entrants the mixture of stupidity and brilliance required in their video entry.

The film will be used as online content at TeamDry.com - a virtual team headquarters where auditions to make the team can also be uploaded and viewed. Over 100,000 TEAM DRY ‘Tokyo Blitz’ DVDs (with special features) will also be given away with cartons of Carlton Dry. Point of sale (including a stand with a built-in LCD TV playing the film), print, on-pack and web advertising will also drive people to TeamDry.com.

During the shoot, the crew had to dodge the Yakuza and suffer the stench of hundreds of salary-men, drunk, horny and crammed into tiny capsule motels.

“I don't know what everyone was complaining about. I kind of liked that smell. I found it familiar and comforting. Like something you want to snuggle up to,” says Pete Grasse, producer at Curious Film in Sydney.

“Cameron and Seymour had a very clear vision of where they wanted to take Team Dry, and so the total message is simple and clear: buy a case of beer, sit back, watch a DVD and have a laugh with your mates. But not only that, you can become a part of it,” says Grasse.

Magasiva was inspired by over-the-top Hollywood trailers; reality TV competitions; MTV-style programming, and America’s Funniest Home Videos.

Says Magasiva, “These guys were cast because they have shit skills. That's why I was asked to direct Team Dry.”

Visit www.teamdry.com to see Tokyo Blitz.

Visit www.curiousfilm.com to see Miki Magasiva’s showreel.

All Team Dry TVCs, Films, and special features can be viewed and forwarded with the following links:
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Behind_The_Scenes_Special_Feature_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Bicep_Dancer_30sec_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Bicep_Dancer_Cutdown_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Bicep_Dancer_Special_Feature_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Call_For_Entries_.mpg

http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Cheerleaders_Special_Feature_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Explosion_Special_Feature_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Ping_Pong_Don_30sec_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Ping_Pong_Don_Cutdown_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/TEAM%20DRY_alternate_v_6.6.mp4
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/Team_Dry_Tokyo_Blitz_.mpg

http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/The_Jumpers_Cutdown_.mpg
http://www.curiousfilm.com/TEAM%20DRY%20spots/The_Jumpers_Megamix_Special_Feature.mpg

Last Updated ( Thursday, 06 November 2008 19:43 )
 

THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING…!

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Now in its 5th big year, the 2008 Russian Resurrection Film Festival, proudly presented by BHP Billiton, will
screen 21 films over 18 days in 6 cities, with a vibrant programme that celebrates the many facets of Russian
cinema. In Melbourne, the Festival will screen at Palace Cinema Como from 29 October to 5 November.
Following the success of the 2007 Festival, which recorded a 55% increase in national attendance, this year’s
line-up includes 11 stunning new films and two Retrospectives exploring two very diverse but exciting areas of
Russian filmmaking through the peak periods of soviet and post-soviet production: The Works of Karen
Shakhnazarov, and Russian Fantasia.

The Festival’s Opening Night film will be Karen Shakhnazarov’s masterpiece The Vanished Empire (2008),
the jewel in the crown of one of Russia’s most successful and celebrated directors whose career has spanned
over 25 years. The Vanished Empire is one of his finest films and tells a warm and very real story of young
love set against the backdrop of student life in the 1970’s, at a time when it seemed the USSR would last
forever. At its heart is the classic love triangle, as two friends vie for the heart of one girl. Their lives revolve
around black market Rolling Stones albums, parties, parents and queuing for vodka – ordinary events in the
heartland of communism. Shakhnazarov’s new and rather personal film is a delicate study of this imminent and
irrevocably passing era.

Festival films for 2008 are:

 New Films

• Vanished Empire (2008) Dramatic Comedy Director: Karen Shakhnazarov
• Vice (2007) Dramatic Thriller Director: Valery Todorovsky
• The Banishment (2007) Drama Director: Andrei Zvyagintev
• Simple Things (2006) Character Drama Director: Aleksei Popogrebsky
• Twelve (2007) Courtroom Drama Director: Nikita Mikhalkov
• Captive (2008) War Director: Alexei Uchitel
• Tulpan (2008) Dramatic Comedy Director: Sergei Dvortsevoy
• Travelling with Pets (2007) Romantic drama Director: Vera Storozheva
• Plus One (2008) Romantic Comedy Director: Oxana Bichkova
• Graffiti (2006) Drama Director: Igor Apasyan
• Alyosha Popovich & Tugarin Zmey (2004) Director: Andrei Zvyagintsev

Children’s Animation

Russian Fantasia Retrospective

• Amphibian Man (1962) Directors: Vladimir Chebotaryov & Gennadi Kazansky
• Letters from a Deadman (1986) Director: Konstantin Lopushansky
Karen Shakhnazarov Retrospective
• Zero City (1988) Surreal Black Comedy
• We Are Jazz Men (1983) Musical Comedy
• American Daughter (1995) Dramatic Comedy
• Rider Named Death (2004) Political Thriller
• Courier aka The Messenger (1987) Dramatic Comedy
• The Assassin of the Tsar (1993) Period Drama
• Day of the Full Moon (1998) Short Vignettes

Dates

2008 Russian Resurrection Film Festival National Tour dates:
Melbourne Palace Cinema Como 29 October – 5 November
Canberra Greater Union Manuka 30 October – 4 November
Sydney Chauvel Cinema 31 October – 10 November
Brisbane Palace Centro Cinema 6 – 12 November
Perth Cinema Paradiso 13 – 19 November
Adelaide Palace Nova Eastend 14 – 19 November

Ticket Info

Purchase Festival tickets at Palace Cinema Como in person or via phone on (03) 9827 7533 or
on-line at: www.palacecinemas.com.au
• Opening Night: $40 (Includes Reception)
• 5 Film Pass: $65 (Excludes Opening Night)
• Adult: $16
• Concession $13.50
• Alyosha Popovich Sessions $12.00 (All Tickets)

Visit the Festival’s Website at:
http://www.russianresurrection.com/2008/

Last Updated ( Saturday, 01 November 2008 08:07 )
 

Italian Film Festival starts on Wednesday 17th.

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The Italian Film Festival is, along with the French & Greek fests, the most highly anticipated in Melbourne becasue of our large Mediterranean communities.  Palace Cinemas, the sponsors and presenters of both, have the plushiest General Admission theatres and foyers in town and it is a salubrious experience to attend any of their sessions armed with a fine wine or a really well-made cup of Lavazza coffee.
This year’s festival mixes genres and standards as usual so that it is possible to feel as though one is ust doing what they do in Rome or Milan or Naples - running the whole gamut of film offerings.  It is very Melbourne to cram in this way!  We are such a ’sets’ community.  Almost as if we have been trained from birth to taste this and that, immerse in a culture before moving on to the next.  This is why the Palace festival run (which, if truth be told) spans the year with one after the other and is so effective for the film-going public.

The offerings this year are diverse and the festival includes the genius young writer/actor/director Silvio Muccino’s ‘Parlami d’Amore’, a romance with a dark edge.    The 2008 retrospective is a selection of films from Cinecittà and includes Vittoria de Sica’s ‘Marriage Italian Style’ and Fellini’s ‘Amarcord’.

The full programme can be viewed by picking up the great little booklet available free in the foyer of Palace theatres or online at http://www.italianfilmfestival.com.au/

Enjoy it!

 


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