Showing posts with label grind house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grind house. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Two Special Features For Next Year's Grind House Double Bill DVD Set Confirmed

The Hobo With a Shotgun trailer won the SXSW Grindhouse trailer contest. Not only have its makers now expanded it into a script (and if they can get the budget low enough, I'm sure they'll get the backing) they've also now signed a licensing deal for the trailer to appear on the Grind House 'box set', as they call it, next year.

Robert Rodriguez, on the other hand, calls it a double-disc set. At the end of his ten minute film school on the Planet Terror DVD (which I've had for over a week now but have been in no hurry to review because, while I enjoyed it a fair bit in places, I thought quite a number of its ideas and scenes were quite literally pathetic, and I would very possibly rank the film overall in the bottom two or three of Rodriguez' career) he announces very clearly that the next Grind House release is to feature his ten minute cooking school, in which he'll share the secrets of perfect barbeque.

And, of course, they are simply bound to include the other fake trailers in this set too - and it's probably also where the Ciro H. Santiago interview ended up... but what else will there be to make it worth our dollars? I'm hoping for lots and lots more.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Grind House Double Bill Coming To The UK After All?

There's a lot of talk about cinema releases these days being little more than loss-leading promotions for the DVD and in January, fingers crossed, we'll see a very happy example of this.

Momentum, the UK distributor of Death Proof and Planet Terror are planning on some new year engagements of the Grind House double bill, showcasing the shorter cuts and the full set of fake trailers, as per the initial US release. The only reason this won't happen is if the Weinstein side of the deal won't be haggled down to a less prohibitive asking price.

I can see Momentum coming out on top in these negotiations, however, so I'm pretty confident that the Werewolf Women of the SS and the merry monstrosities of Don't will get their shining moment on British silver screens.

I'd keep an eye on the Prince Charles Cinema as one likely venue, if I were you...

More on this as and when it bubbles up - and you can lend your support in the comments below to give Momentum the extra encouragement to keep bargaining.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Death Proof R1 DVD Review

Go out on Tuesday and buy Death Proof on DVD - or, if you aren't in North America, click over to your favourite site and order it now. Really, do.

There: now you know what I think of the film I suppose you might want to know why.

In traditional narrative filmmaking the most important concern is in creating a believable, immersive universe that the viewer can invest in, a world behind the screen that seems to observe simple standards of space and time. Without this, the events and characters portrayed remain more 'fictional' than ideal. Obstacles between the audience and the people, places and things they see act like a devil sitting on your shoulder, constantly whispering into your ear 'It's only a movie... It's only a movie". Indeed, Tarantino is a master at creating these universes - in Reservoir Dogs, most of Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown and some great stretches of Kill Bill show mastery of techniques in creating fully realised, 3D worlds that we, while 'passively' watching, get lost in. Think back on the scene in Kill Bill vol. 1 in which The Bride and Vernita Green fight in the living room. It's a masterpiece of creating a 'real' illusory space in cinema, hiding the fragmentary nature of how films are, by necessity, filmed, allowing shifting perspectives and an invisible, inobtrusive camera and cuts while maintaining visceral, palpable Experience. And yeah, I meant that capital E.

And while there's work like this in Death Proof - the climactic 'Ships Mast' chase, for example, there's something completely and utterly unlike it too. For much of this film, Tarantino isn't solely concerned with a fictional world on the other side of the screen, but a fictional world on this side of the screen too.

I saw the film at home, on DVD and I still got pricked by it. There's an incredible sense attached to this film of not just the content, but the context. You might swear you're actually in a 42nd street grind house, no matter how clean, tidy and bereft of dodgy practice your DVD room is.

This is much stronger in the first half of the film; later, Tarantino's efforts slip back to the film's universe. By the time we see Kurt Russell's Stuntman Mike on the road and motor-stalking a set of moviemaking gals through Lebanon, Tennessee, we're dealing with a much more traditional film in many regards (still a film rooted in 70s exploitation, but branching out in all kinds of contemporary, recognisably-Tarantino directions) and it's reasonable that the goal might now be in making us care for the characters flat-out, and forget where we are and what that means - or, more to the point in this case, our awareness of where we aren't.

As a result, the first half was much more thrilling for me. The experience of a transformative atmosphere seeping out of the screen is very rare indeed, and is uniquely compelling in this case. I was watching a film, it was damaged, it wasn't perfectly preserved, not perfectly created in the first place (though far better constructed than almost all exploitation films, but not in an obvious way; the obvious elements were the ones allowed to slip). That this film features a character as fascinating as Stuntman Mike ends up feeling like a cherry on the top.

Don't kid yourself that this is a simple case of putting some fake scratches in, playing with the saturation levels willy-nilly and taking less care over the matching of edits. There is some very clever filmmaking at work here. Simply pulling a few stunts over and over, for one thing, would seem ridiculously repetitive pretty darn quickly. More than this, it isn't that Tarantino has constantly reminded us of the artifice of what we are watching (a la Godard, say) he's gone further and created a fully rounded, understandable context for the film and hooked audiences into buying into it.

And credit to Sally Menke who has kept the editing walking the fine line between invisible and gently off-kilter, stepping either side as and when necessary.

After the second clear act begins, the film is clearly more intact, though very suddenly we're plunged into black and white. No dropped frames, no splices or cement joins. It's as though the second act of the film comes from a better print, restored in part from a black and white negative, but much smoother overall. That this fictional context extends over a seemingly 'normal' piece of filmmaking is testament to the pervasive, convincing tricks of the first half. To make things more sophisticated and interesting, we're now dealing with a cast of moviemakers and... well... let's not get too fiddly. I won't spoil it, thinking it through yourself is fun, the way it was sifting through Kill Bill's layers of meaning and inference.

The car chases, it almost goes without saying, are very, very good indeed. The film ends with a protracted sequence showcasing the work of a number of stunt drivers and Zoe Bell, formerly a stunt stand-in for Xena and The Bride, herein playing a version of herself. In a series of incredible shots we see her hanging on for dear life on the bonnet of a careering car, under attack from Stuntman Mike and his death proof weapon-on-wheels. If there was a top ten of car chase moments, at least five of them would come from this film - and as Tarantino himself enthuses about in the special features, there's even a shot featuring four legends of stuntwork, all at once. For the geekiest amongst us, it's a wonderful little crash-up of car cinema history.

Note that Quentin Tarantino served as his own director of photography on this film and he's done a wonderful job. I hope he goes on to shoot more of his own films because, honestly, he's got off to an incredible start. Many shots in this film are as well lit, exposed and controlled overall as anything in his previous collaborations with other DPs.

Even if you like the first half ten times more than the second, the two acts are so clearly divided, you could actually return to the first half over and over as though it is a short in its own right. I'm willing to bet the majority of you will want to see the whole thing every time, but even if you don't, I'll be surprised if most of everybody isn't seduced by the opening act.

Monday, June 11, 2007

The Tarantino DVD Avalanche And The Weinstein Tug Of Love

There's buzzing going on. First of all, it seems that a date has been proposed for the release of Kill Bill: the Whole Bloody Affair, the much sought-after single-movie cut. Secondly, it seems that Death Proof and Planet Terror are being seperated from one another for the first-wave DVD release, if not for all time. Thirdly, that Bob and Harvey might be playing favourites between Quentin and Robert and that's leading to all kinds of discord.

Here's the rumours, one by one.

Whole Bloody Affair is finally due for release later this year. Quite soon, in fact: September 18th. It's going direct to DVD as a 4-disc set. The film will be split across two discs which, to some at least, will strongly dilute the promised 'single film' nature of the enterprise (there are already arguments that this effectively renders it two films, that the changing of the discs is going to cause a break in the flow, no matter that the cut is designed to work best for a single sitting). The other 2-discs are to be stuffed to the gills with behind the scenes materials, of course, but we can apparently also expect material on the film's many predecessors, including a selection of trailers for half-forgotten 'classics'.

Interestingly, September 18th seems to be the release date for Death Proof on DVD also. There's to be two discs - the original double feature edit on one, the extended cut on the other (though, apparently, not exactly the same as the Cannes version). That these two dates are the same either means a big Tarantino push is coming from the Weinsteins or, simply, somebody got confused somewhere along the line and some of this just isn't true. The rumour has come at me from more than one direction, however... so we'll see...

As for the love triangle (quadrangle?) between the Weinsteins, Tarantino and Rodriguez... I'm not entirely sure. It seems like a reasonable assumption. Rodriguez is going elsewhere for his next wave of projects, possibly his entire future career while Tarantino appears to be staying put. And there are an awful lot of people in my address book who insist Sin City sequels will never, ever happen, that the pieces of the puzzle simply won't fit together any more.

All rumours, as reputable as many of the mongers might be, but I definitely know what I believe.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The I Thought Yesterday Was Monday, My Mistake Edition

- The Sun are alleging that Brad Pitt is the front-runner to play He-Man. Sure he is. Their back-up bet is Gerard Butler. The Sun's other Pitt-stop alleges that Angelina and Brad have 'banned their kids from seeing them brandishing guns in movies'.

- Robert Rodriguez may make The Jetsons for Warners. There's a technicality by which he could work around his DGA resignation, apparently - anybody expert enough to know if this renders his DGA resignation hollow? I'm honestly not sure. I'm most interested by the news that he may be sizing up films outside of the Weinstein's shadow - are they going cold on him after his Planet Terror has taken a lot of the blame for crippling Grind House?

- Latino Review are alleging that Jessica Biel will play Chun Li in a Street Fighter film. I'd hope she wouldn't be so silly, even though the character will apparently be the focus of the film. Another casting report in the same place suggests that Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Kenneth Branagh, Stephen Fry and Patrick Wilson are all negotiating roles in Brian Singer's Valkyrie. Sounds like somebody listed every possibility they could come up with, but that somebody might just be Singer or his casting agent.

- Luke Wilson has been quoted in the Brit tabloids as saying the Dallas film is off. This isn't strictly true, I understand - the film is just on a rather remote back burner. I understand that options still exist on Wilson, Shirely Maclaine and John Travolta, and should any of the scripts and treatments that get cooked up in the coming months seem to carry the budget, the switch will be flicked back on.

- Just Jared have snaps and video of Keira Knightley, Sienna Miller and Cillian Murphy on the set of the Dylan Thomas biopic, The Best Times of Our Lives. [EDIT: Which is now called The Edge of Love]

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Eli Roth Hopeful For Second Grind House Double Bill

Speaking to Rotten Tomatoes, Eli Roth has suggested that a second Grind House double bill would feature Thanksgiving and Don't as full length films. Thanksgiving would be easy enough, I'm sure, but the supposed continental European heritage of Don't might cause Edgar Wright some headaches in the adaptation to full length.

Besides, there's really not much chance of a Grind House sequel being commissioned, is there? I doubt we'll ever see Machete completed and there's over a third of that in the can already.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Carnahan Drools Over Sin City 2

Joe Carnahan has seen what may be the teaser for Sin City 2, and he's almost wet himself.

He posted his impressions on his blog.

Robert Rodriguez stopped by the office yesterday and showed me what may become the teaser for Sin City 2 and HOLY SH*T is it something. I don't want to let any cats out of any bags, so all I can say is there's not a hetero male moviegoer alive that's not going to deeply DIG that spot. Remember, he's doing A Dame To Kill For and brother has he got it. That guy's enthusiasm for filmmaking is infectious too. A solid bloke and a good soul.

I think this suggests once again that Rose McGowan has the role of Ava Lord - who else has been at Robert's disposal to shoot teaser material of late? Of course, Angelina Jolie or Rachel Weisz may have stopped by for an afternoon... seems less likely, but really - who knows? Maybe the specific role of Ava Lord doesn't appear and this is just a montage of dames to kill for, ending with a "none as to-kill-for-as-this-one' moment with a silhouette exhaling cigarette smoke. We'll find out sooner or later, I'm sure.

On the Grind House DVDs maybe?

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Fate Worse Than Dreck For Straight To DVD Planet Terror In The UK

According to The Independent, there's a 'very real' prospect of Grind House being released direct to DVD in the UK. They mention the Cannes re-edit that might redeem Death Proof's chances, but there's no hope for Planet Terror mentioned. Could it be we're looking at Rodriguez latest on DVD around Halloweeen, not on the silver screen?

Hit The Weinsteins Where It Hurts

[EDIT: Please read the comments below. They may indeed offer a better way to strike at the Weinsteins. Can anybody else join the debate and clarify the best course of action?]

After the news came last week that Grind House was to be split into two films and released not only some weeks apart but months and months from now, I was fishing around for a suitable protest. What could film ick do that would make much difference?


And then I realised the answer...

Nothing much. But - ! - there was something that could be done, just not directly by me. I fired off a few e-mails to the people who were in a position to do something. Something that would hit the Weinsteins where it hurts them most: in their bank balance.

Only one reply has arrived so far, which I'll post below - and keep you updated on any future response. But this will make it very clear what we can all do to teach the Weinsteins a lesson...

(I've altered this to protect the identity of the individual and the company concerned... at their request, and for now, at least)

Hi Brendon

Thanks for your e-mail regarding the UK cinema release of Grindhouse. I was as disappointed as you and your readers. Don't worry though, the ideas you put in your e-mail were very close to our way of thinking.

Now is when I tell you that this e-mail comes from a well-known, much used and well-respected DVD mail order company here in the UK. As well as selling UK R2 discs, they import and sell a whole warehouse full of R1 titles too. And that's how they can help out.

When the US Grindhouse discs ship, the UK will still be awaiting release. Obviously, a lot of fans will be looking to import the US discs - likely to be COMPLETELY uncut, loaded with features and no more expensive than two, or at most three, tickets to the cinema. We plan to market very agrressively, maybe more aggressively than ever before. This obviously very good for us. I believe it is also very good for fans of Grindhouse.

Like you say, if you want to hit the Weinsteins where it hurts, boycott the UK cinema release of Grindhouse and import the DVDs instead. Find yourself a nice big screen to watch them on, I bet most of your readers have these already, and sit back and enjoy knowing that there won't be anybody talking in the middle of the film or throwing popcorn or answering their mobile.

The exchange rate is such that UK customers purchasing the US equivalent instead of the later released UK discs will really hit the Weinsteins hard. In fact, if every Grindhouse fan follows this plan and imports the DVDs instead of paying the cinema ticket price it will cost the Weinsteins millions upon millions. Best of all - it is traceable. They'll see that the UK imported the US discs. This could even have a powerful effect on the gap between UK and US release schedules. Obviously only if people do this in enough numbers.

So tell your readers to get ready. And when the time comes, give them the links to preorder. We can hit the Weinsteins hard and get our Grindhouse uncut, early and cheaper than they would like us to.

Thanks for your e-mail, keep up the good work and lets hit the Weinsteins hard.

I think this is a pretty good plan. I will, as the man said, market Grind House aggressively as an import DVD option. We really could teach the Weinsteins a lesson, save ourselves money and maybe even strike a blow against really late European releases - if we get our numbers up. So, if you blog yourself, consider spreading this plan there too. Get the word out. Shout it from the rooftops.

And if you have any ideas on how we can be aggressive in this marketing, drop them in the comments below. Maybe making flyers and putting them up near cinemas in our towns? Maybe discussing the idea on forums. Maybe even petitioning.

Oh - and if you want to see the films at the cinema, the solution is simple there. Wait until they are screening at The Prince Charles and treat yourself to a day trip to London. Admission prices at the Charles are very, very cheap - so relatively little goes over to the Weinstein's coffers. And buy a drink and snack while you're there - cheap too, definitely compared to other cinema's prices - and the most direct way to support the cinema.

[EDIT: Now please read the comments below]

Friday, April 27, 2007

Grind House Definitely Split In The UK

The Weinsteins have railroaded Momentum into splitting Grind House in the UK. Death Proof will be released on September 21st while there's no date for Planet Terror set in stone yet - though rumblings suggest late October, in time for Halloween, is the loose plan.

Momentum had recently failed to comment but, not so long ago, seemed quite confident the planned double-bill release could be preserved.

This is yet another decision by the Weinsteins that may make some kind of financial sense but neglects to take film seriously as a medium for artistic expression.

The iron is hot - could another production company tempt Tarantino or Rodriguez to defect?

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Momentum Open Up A Little About UK Grind House Release... At Last

Speaking to relatively minor minions at Momentum, I was assured twice that Grind House would be released as a double feature in the UK. According to The Times today, however, this may not be the case. It may, but it also may not. Here's the official line from Momentum:

We are reviewing the release date and the release plans in the UK. It will definitely be released here but we don’t know in what form.

So, the June 1st release seems to be off the calendar, at least. Worst case scenario? DVD only.

Going beyond the official statement, the article also quotes a journalist from Screen International who seems to have some inside info:

I can’t see them not releasing it but the size of the release will be interesting. The plan is to split it into two and hope that Cannes gives it a push. But they’re running into blockbuster season, have two films on their hands instead of one and no evidence that either is going to be more of a hit than the original.

If they know what they're doing, they'll get a decent mid-sized release out of the double bill. If that version is released to, say, smaller chains like City Screen - the pseudo-independent, pseudo-arthouse circuit - I think they'll do very well indeed. Maybe offering single features simultaneously at the multiplexes is an option?

I do think they may be keeping an eye on Death Proof's Cannes engagement, as the Screen International pundit said. If the film garners huge amounts of praise in a stand alone version, I think that will go someways to forcing a split. On the other hand, word from Cannes may be that the whole experience was missed, that the double feature release has something that the seperate films do not...

That makes sense with a release date roll-back, at least.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Under The Radar

TIME magazine has done a piece on sites like JoBlo, Aint it Cool, Cinemablend and The Movie Blog. Of course, film ick is small fry, comparatively. We flew miles beneath TIME's radar. And, no, I don't like it that way. Why would I bother writing any of this if I didn't want to spread it, for it to be read and passed on, and to become a talking point?

film ick is in the shadow of the behemoths. But that doesn't mean we don't often break the more interesting stories.

Thankfully, The Movie Blog is a shade different from JoBlo, which is a shade different to Aint it Cool - and I think what I'm trying to do here is different again. If too many sites were too similar, then we'd be in trouble. Everything would be Transformers, Scarlett Johansson and Indiana Jones and Most Likely Something Like The City of Gods.

There's a key point early in the TIME piece that interested me particularly. They represent the casting of Peter Cullen in Transformers as a move to keep the fanbase happy and then go on to suggest this proves that the fanbase has power. Surely the 'talking cloud' versus 'biiiiiig camp giant' argument, regarding Galactus in The Fantastic Four, draws a pretty clear line around the limits of fanboy influence? And the box office for Snakes on a Plane, Slither and definitely Grind House seems to suggest that the fanboy point of view is rather more specialist than Peter Cullen's contract might attest to.

Maybe the fan audience is the one that requires the least tending?

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

What's Next For Grind House?

There's been a lot to-ing and fro-ing in the Weinstein camp over Grind House the last week or so. As everybody knows by now, the film was a massive flop - now playing to virtually empty houses less than two weeks before it went onto release. Pretty much straight off of the bat, word got around that the film was going to be split into two seperate features and rereleased. Geeks were not pleased.

And then, small voices started piping up. At various cinemas across the US, the film was either already being screened as two films, or as a double feature where an intermission replaced the fake trailers. Jo Blo reported on this, and did some investigating, coming to the unsurprising conclusion that these were test engagements, being used by the Weinsteins to plan a rerelease.

These tests flopped every bit as much as the initial plan, so it then broke that, actually, the split-release relaunch was nixed.

So what will be next for Grind House? I've been asking around, and this is what I've been told...

This Thursday, Death Proof is to be announced as part of this year's Cannes line-up. Some people are talking about the film's chances for awards, but there's not yet any indication it will be screening in competition. This version of the film will be the 'restored' version, with no missing reel and various other snips reinstated - expect it to run around eighteen minutes longer than the double-feature edit. And expect it to look gorgeous. And expect it to be received rapturously. A Grind House backlash backlash, maybe?

The Weinsteins know that Death Proof would have - and should have - done much better box office if released as a standalone 'New Tarantino Film' so (surprise, surprise) they're going to give that strategy a shot.

Riding on Cannes hype just a little, and with completely un-Grind House marketing, it seems that a scratch-free Death Proof will be arriving in the American multiplexes later this year. Not on a big scale, mind, but targeted carefully and, if everything goes to plan, in a very profitable fashion.

Planet Terror will next be seen on DVD. Despite a number of critics definitely preferring the run-and-gun fun of Rodriguez' installment to the typical Tarantino post-modern games, apparently the film just isn't being seen as worth the expense and effort to resuscitate.

I would suppose - and I'm just making an informed guess here - the big heap of DVD releases are likely to move out of the seasonal peak times, to avoid being lost amidst the more 'mainstream' releases. The Easter Weekend release can't be what killed the film stone dead in cinemas, not alone at least, but it has been blamed and that was probably enough.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

If You Are Thinking Of Watching Edgar Wright's Grind House Trailer On YouTube...

...Don't.
It was filmed illegally from the audience. And by now, actually, it has probably been removed.

Grind House A One Piece In The UK

I'm told that Metrodome are still planning to release Grind House as a double bill in the UK on June 1st. It seems that we will be the only territory to get the film in this format from here on out.

Unless Metrodome wimp out in the next few weeks.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Stupid Bumpkins

Harvey Weinstein has blamed the failure of Grind House at the US box office on the idea that Midwesterners and those from the Southern States failed to understand the appeal and needed 'educating'. Now, I'm sure this is a reason that is used a lot, but to read him using those words..! I guess he's fairly confident nobody from the Midwest or South actually read Nikki Finke's column.

So why the failure? Probably because there was a kind of inner circle that found the films appealing but then a much larger series of outer circles that did not. Any plan to rerelease the project as two films, even with longer running times each, is bound to still fail with the outer circles. There might be repeat business from the already-keens, but not much. If the Weinsteins do try it, they stand a very good chance of looking really quite silly.

I'd have thopught that the way to recoup on this is to offer a series of DVD packages that are truly worth paying for. The inner circle will shell out for a whole string of them if they're significantly different from one another and offer a decent amount of supplementary material. And if they can get Robert to shoot the rest of Machete soon, and very very very cheaply, they'll have a genuine cash-spinner in the direct-to-DVD market. By very very very cheaply I mean no more that $10 million.

But Grind House is never going to fly on the US theatrical circuit. A shame, because Planet Terror looks like great fun and Death Proof appears to be incredible.

Don't expect that Grind House 2 is automatically off the cards though. With a budget of around twenty million for both halves together and a genuinely low-rent approach, by necessity and not just by arch design, they could do very well - and by creating a franchise, catch up a little on the losses from version 1.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

The Public Vote Goes Hi Tech, Not Lo, At The B.O

You probably know by now: Grind House underperformed at the box office this Friday. The weekend estimate is now coming in between 12 and 14 million, massively under the 20 million floor that was expected.

Interestingly, though, the Friday box office for Meet the Robinsons tells a very different story. Taking around 7.5 million last Friday, it's opening day, it has still taken over 7 million on Friday of this week. That is an almost entirely negligible drop in box office terms and is, these days at least, not common at all.

Is this down to word of mouth? More schools being on holiday? The kid-friendly competition running out of steam?

The hi-tech 2.5D world of the Robinsons has beaten the faux-lo-tech conceit behind Grind House. Is this a rejection of this kind of (possibly elitist?) conceit? A simple desire to 'keep moving forward'? Or something else entirely?

Friday, April 06, 2007

Troublemaker Answers Trouble Makers

Below is an official statement from Troublemaker studios, regarding the resurfacing rumours about Robert Rodriguez and his divorce - rumours that still result in me receiving 'news' e-mails from readers.

Elizabeth Avellan and Robert Rodriguez were separated long before the Grind House production began. Their separation and subsequent divorce were very amicable and they opted to continue as planned, and to produce the film together -- a decision they informed Bob and Harvey Weinstein (co-chairmen of The Weinstein Company, distributor of Grind House) about prior to the start of production on Grind House. Robert and Elizabeth plan to produce Sin City 2 together -- with Robert directing -- for Dimension Films in the coming months. The hiatus during the production of Grind House had nothing to do with Robert's personal life. On April 10th, 2006, after shooting for 5 weeks, Robert completed principal photography of the first phase of his segment of Grind House. He took a hiatus from shooting to assemble the footage he had already shot and determine his next steps in the production, which is the same successful approach he utilized with Sin City when he shot the film in two parts.

And now you know. Okay, everybody breathe. Noses out of Robert's and Elizabeth's (and Rose's) lives. And on with ours.

Sin City On TV - Rodriguez Speaks, Video

If you want to see Robert Rodriguez on the Charlie Rose show discussing Grind House and dropping the hot genre-film news story of the night - that after Sin City 2, the franchise will continue on TV - then keep an eye on the Charlie Rose site. The video will be going live there later today.

In fact, chances are, by the time you read this, it will be there, on the front page, waiting for you.

[EDIT: We can now offer you a direct link to the clip. Both Tarantino and Rodriguez talk to Charlie Rose in the second half of the episode]

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Rosario Dawson And Rose McGowan Prove Their Exploitation Cinema Credentials

Well we are big rock singers, we've got golden fingers
And we're loved everywhere we go
We sing about beauty and we sing about truth
At ten thousand dollars a show
We take all kind of pills to give us all kind of thrills
But the thrill we've never known
Is the thrill that'll get you when you get your picture
On the cover of the Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone
Wanna see my picture on the cover
Rolling Stone
Wanna buy five copies for my mother
Rolling Stone
Wanna see my smilin' face
On the cover of the Rolling Stone

I've got a freaky old lady name o' Cocaine Katy
Who embroiders on my jeans
I've got my poor old gray-haired Daddy
Drivin' my limousineNow it's all designed to blow our minds
But our minds won't really be blown
Like the blow that'll get you when you get your picture
On the cover of the Rolling Stone

We got a lot of little teenage blue-eyed groupies
Who do anything we say
We got a genuine Indian guru
He's teachin' us a better way
We got all the friends that money can buy
So we never have to be alone
And we keep gettin' richer but we can't get our picture
On the cover of the Rolling Stone