Showing posts with label chris cunningham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris cunningham. Show all posts

Friday, June 01, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Your Name Here If You Want It Edition

- David Greenwalt is to oversee an Angel-like show for CBS. Moonlight sounds enough like Angel that I'd have thought Greenwalt would have run a mile. Maybe he has some tricks up his sleeve to make this entirely different, or maybe he just doesn't care and just wants a job.

- Chris Cunningham's Sheena is a Parasite
video, starring Samantha Morton, has been nominated for the CADS 07 Best Rock Video award.

- Lots of sites have been commenting on who they think should play Death in Neil Gaiman's upcoming film. I don't think any of them have guessed correctly.

- BloodyDisgusting have casting
news for J T Petty's The Burrowers. They name William Mapother, Clancy Brown and Doug Hutchison. I'm still waiting for more on Petty's Faces of Death - anybody got any news on that one?

- Mark Verheiden will
confirm only Nightwing for his Teen Titans film, but promises the rest of the line up won't disappoint.

- JV Pixar News are passing on a
rumour from Miceage that there's a Cars 2 just over the horizon, plus a new Cars short to debut before Wal-E. I can believe the Cars short, at a pinch, but a second Cars film...? And that soon...? I'm not biting.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Big Mistake: Torque Director Handed The Reins To Neuromancer

One of the all-time greatest science fiction books is William Gibson's Neuromancer. If you don't know why, go see Google - better still, buy a copy. All will come clear. And you might just reconsider your love of The Matrix into the bargain (if you're not quite moved to this, then Fassbinder's World on a Wire will seal the deal for sure).

Sadly, it has now been announced that Joseph Kahn has signed on to direct the newly resuscitated movie adaptation. For a while, Chris Cunningham was involved, but that was some years back and, besides, Chris doesn't really seem keen to make a feature film at all, no matter what it is. I bet he could be offered We3 and he'd turn it down.

Joseph Kahn has directed a number of music videos you probably don't like at all - again, go see Google, but brace yourself for an avalanche of Britney Spears and Ashlee Simpson dreck - and his debut feature, Torque, was a rather clear indication of his capabilities, or rather their limits.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Director's Label To End With One More Disc Of Gondry Goodness

A couple of weeks ago, after being privileged enough to see a very early screening of Son of Rambow, I was lucky to be able to share a few words with Garth Jennings, the film's director. As one half of Hammer and Tongs he has been responsible for many of the best music videos of the last ten years, and their work was slated to be the subject of the next Directors Label DVD.

Jennings didn't seem to think it was going to happen. He admitted that he didn't know, but did indicate that things had gone very quiet.

Now it's clearer. The second wave of discs - Mark Romanek, Jonathan Glazer, Stephane Sednaoui and Anton Corbijn - did not acheive anything like the sales of wave one - Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze and Chris Cunningham. Sadly, this has pretty much rang the death knell for the whole project.

As well as Hammer and Tongs, Shynola were due a disc too, alongside Jean Baptiste-Mondino. Instead, it looks like there is going to be only one more title, a second volume of Gondry's work. Without a doubt, Gondry was the biggest draw in the whole series so far - though I do love my Romanek collection in particular. Despite featuring most of his most famous promos, Gondry's first disc barely scratched the surface of his full ouevre so rest assured that there's plenty more good stuff to fill out another installment.

It's good news that there's more Michel to come, but I only hope collections from Hammer and Tongs and Shynola can find their way out through some other means. Any entrepeneurs out there willing to take a punt?

A brief footnote. Visitors to the official Hammer and Tongs website may have noticed the text (working title) popping up everytime the words Son of Rambow are used. I feared that there may be a problem - either with the use of the Rambo copyright, or with the film's distributor Paramount Vantage finding this title unusable in marketing terms - so I e-mailed Hammer and Tongs to find out what is going on. Here's Garth's reply:

"
It is still a working title because we might add a sub-title. We're not sure yet. Nothing sinister though."

The film does have a subtitle on imdb, where it is referred to as Son of Rambow: A Home Movie. I prefer the shorter version, for sure.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Son of Rambow: Why the Silence?


Type "Son of Rambow" into Google and what do you get? Just two pages. And one of them is this one. In some weird amalgam of Googlewhacking and Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, I think I may have just won a gold medal.

The other search result is the official site for Hammer and Tongs, Garth Jennings and Nick Goldsmith's commercial, music promo and feature film production company. They have made one feature film so far (The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy) with another one in the works (the aforementioned Son of Rambow) as well as countless dearly beloved, triple-A music videos. You know their clip for Blur's Coffee and TV, and you love it, I promise. The one with the milk carton that does the funny walk? Yeah? Told you.

The Quicktime cinema of their work is definitely the best thing on the site, and if you are even a little bit interested in moving images, you owe it to yourself to give it a through going over.

With must-own DVD collections of Spike Jonze, Michel Gondry, Chris Cunningham and Mark Romanek's work, Palm Pictures' Directors Label series is incredibly strong, established instantly as a kind of Criterion Collection for short-form and promotional works. The third wave is deep in development and I hope it addresses all of the obvious omissions: Tim Pope, Shynola and Hammer and Tongs.

The fact that I'm the only blogger out here shouting off about Son of Rambow is a little bit disappointing to me. First of all, I'd like to think that there's somebody out there who knows more about what's going on with the film than I do, so they can spill the beans. Secondly, I remember all of the online fuss this time last year, and even the year before, over Guide to the Galaxy. Where's the brouhaha this time?

I'm reminded me of when Fellowship of the Ring was nearing release. Seems that the whole world was waiting to see if the film lived up to the books. I wanted to see if the film lived up to Heavenly Creatures. I was there because of Peter Jackson, not Tolkien. Again, I was interested in Guide because of Jennings and Hammer and Tongs, not really Adams.

(Having said that, Adams was obviously a smart man with lots of very strong ideas, some killer gags and, basically, just a lovely public demeanour.)

When Guide was released, and I rushed off to see it as soon as I could, the preview-screening fuelled two-thirds backlash had already begun. Some very, very critical pieces had been published, one infamous supporter of Adams had caused all manner of fuss, and expectations were being chopped off at the neck. Then the film began, and, frankly, I had no idea what any of them were talking about.

It's not a perfect film. It's not nearly a perfect a film. But it is a great film, and the skill and care with which it was made, not to mention the wild creativity and wit, cannot be underestimated. Remember the airlock scene, where Mos Def and Martin Freeman are ejected from the Vogon ship? A brilliant piece of cinema with set design, sound, composition, performance all putting in a piece of the puzzle. Isn't that how it's meant to be? And just the shape of Marvin, his posture, and his movement - even in silhouette - there's his character, right there. I've got a list of things I love about this film longer than you could ever stand to listen to them.

Jennings is a visionary. That is to say, he has visions that he shares with us and they communicate his ideas very powerfully. The man is a born filmmaker. Son of Rambow, on that evidence alone, is going to be a film genuinely worth looking forward to.

I've made a handful of music videos myself, though certainly not enough, and the budgets I've had have been varied (all the way from none to not much at all). One thing I have always told the bands or their management, though, is that whatever their budget, there will be a treatment that works within it. There always is. Having more money will broaden your options, no doubt about it, but no matter how limited the cash reserves are, a clever, creative director will find a treatment that works within that budget. Every time I've pitched for a video, as long as I knew the restrictions before hand, I was able to offer a treatment that satisfied me, the band and the bursar.

Sometimes, though, coming up with the great idea that works without money can be tricky, and it does often feel dispiritingly impossible to me while I'm sitting there, staring at a blank screen. I have been trapped before, staring at the white nothingness, listening to the track over and over, not knowing what to do.

And then, I remember and watch Hammer and Tongs' video for Big Fan by The Wannadies. It's all the inspiration I need.

Reportedly, the video cost only thirty pounds, spent primarily on ice-cream. My short film Dirty Rotten Double Crosser had even less of a budget - spent on a second hand typewriter and a round of drinks. John vs Laura and Aphrodisiac Casserole were not only made for essentially nothing but also to incredibly short deadlines that can be measured in hours, not days. I'm particularly proud of my promo for How High is Your Waistband by Dan Cairns, which was not only budgeted in the very low double figures and shot on an extremely tight schedule but is also a genuine one-of-a-kind, stop-people-in-their-tracks trick that took a lot of planning to pull off.

All I try to do, you see, is to live up to the spirit of ingenuity and invention, crafstmanship and egoless hard work that I think Hammer and Tongs exemplify.

If only they were hiring...

(There's more on Son of Rambow across film ick)