Showing posts with label death proof. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death proof. Show all posts

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.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

No Go Go

Almost a month ago I wrote a post called Go Go Cirio Santiago announcing that the Death Proof DVD was to include an interview with Cirio H. Santiago, conducted by Quentin Tarantino. Well, now I actually have my advance copy of the DVD in hand I can sadly say the interview isn't on there at all. Not even as an Easter Egg (trust me, I bust my way into every last title, track and chapter encoded on each disc just to check it wasn't hiding from me).

I'll shortly be consoling myself by actually watching the film - the full unrated, no-missing-reel cut, as I'm sure you know by now, not that I've even seen the double bill version, being here in the UK - but I'm quite disappointed by the omission.

Anybody out there have any idea why it was shelved?

Oh, and by the way... the sleeve also advertises a Spanish soundtrack, but that's missing too - though there are Spanish subtitles.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Go Go Cirio Santiago


Davis DVD have reported that the R1 US DVD of Death Proof is to feature Quentin Tarantino interviewing Cirio H. Santiago, aka Leonard Hermes. Not only has Santiago directed countless cheap exploitation films - including 20 or so for Roger Corman - he's now the president of the National Cinema Association of the Phillipines.

A whole slew of Santiago's films are clearly Road Warrior derivatives, which may explain the inclusion of the interview on this disc in particular; also important clues, however, would be the films Foxforce (heard that somewhere before?) and The Expendables which has fed, no doubt, into Tarantino's long-gestating Inglorious Bastards.

As if the Death Proof DVD wasn't an absolutely essential purchase already, I think this interview will convince a few more to shell out. Not many at all, of course, but a few nonetheless.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Direct Download Link For Standalone Death Proof Trailer

The US R1 DVD is out before Death Proof reaches most of the UK's cinemas. That's not good.

You can download the trailer for the standalone Death Proof cinema release.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Which Death Proof Is Set For UK Cinemas?

Death Proof has been passed by the BBFC for its UK theatrical release so, finally, there's a hard fast answer for how how long a cut we'll be getting (of course, there's still no concrete news about Planet Terror at all).

The 'good news' - and some people won't be pleased with this at all - is that the version of Death Proof released in the UK will run to 113 minutes and 32 seconds. The film was given an 18 certificate and passed without any cuts.

There's tree months until the currently scheduled release date, however.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

From Screen To Page: The TV Shows And Movies That Are Becoming Comics

Joss Whedon is one of the greatest television writers that ever worked for the big Networks. He's also one of the greatest writers to pen mainstream superhero titles for the big two comics publishers. No surprise, then, that his Buffy 'Season 8' comic book series is proving successful - in just about every sense of the word.

And it may prove to be setting a new par
adigm.

Talking to The Toronto Star, Rob Thomas has let on that DC Comics want to publish a 'Season Four' of Veronica Mars. The Buffy model must have been in mind - there's a common conception, anyway, that Mars is the new Buffy (but if that were entirely true, surely it'd swap networks for a few more seasons before heading to print?)

Looking at Rich Johnston's Lying in the Gutters yesterday, I saw a piece of art created for a proposed Reanimator comic book. House of Reanimator has had some famous trouble in finding funding, so maybe the route to the printed page has been similar here also - a makedo or an attention spinner when the cash for a screen hasn't been forthcoming.

What's more, there's the prospect of Virgin Comics producing a series of graphic novels (at the very least) based upon unproduced Terry Gilliam projects. Oh... and more Star Trek: Original Series... and the countless projects that have already happened in synch with still ongoing series, from Alias to 24 to CSI.

All in all, it looks like comicbooks are becoming a kind of Limbo for rejected film and TV projects. And let's face it, that's what these projects are: rejects. Buffy Season 8 on TV: rejected. Veronica Mars Season 4: rejected. More Reanimator: rejected. The Defective Detective, Time Bandits 2, The Minotaur: rejected, rejected, rejected.

The potential audience for a comic book is massive, but any realistic projection is not. Has any given issue of Buffy Season 8 been read by anything like the number of people who saw any given episode of the TV show? Of course not. So, the die-hards amongst the numbers, the web-savvy, forum trawling, Browncoat wearing, comic-friendly geekcore, they're going to prove big enough a potential audience base to give comics a shot.

When comics make the transition to the big screen, more often than not there's a kind of smoothing down - which is not necessarily to say a dumbing down. It seems like the geekcore are more open to the idiosyncratic (say, a big purple man with a funny helmet instead of a cosmic cloud of black and grey dirt) and even, it seems to me at least, they expect, want, and sometimes plead for this kind of wild, abandoned fantasy. As such, going from TV to comics, I think, might afford some previously off-limits 'craziness' to occur. Veronica Mars Season 4 might just go into some uncharted territory, push its own limits a little more readily, be less concerned with wide audience expectations and just play into the hands of the geekcore more.

So, perhaps, in a parallel universe Slither wasn't a movie but a comic book, Snakes on a Plane was a comic book, Death Proof and Planet Terror were comic books, Serenity was a comic book and they each did very, very well. They'd each be seen as far greater successes.

But I don't like that universe so much. I like the one where they are all movies just fine thankyou - most of them are very fine films indeed. I can cope with them being not that popular - in fact, I'd expect some of them to be downright unpopular - but I wouldn't want them to stop being films and get forced into a comic book just so they'd be less of a commercial viability.

But, on the other hand, I'm glad that comics have helped people like Greg Pak get attention where their films didn't.

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.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The New Music Edition

- There was a clip from Harry Potter 5 on Ellen t'other day and HPana are hosting it on their site. Download the WMV file directly or settle for YouTube.

- There's a big screen version of Mama, I Want to Sing! coming and so far signed to appear are Patti LaBelle, Lynn Whitfield and Ciara. Two out of three 'aint bad.

- Nuri Bilge Ceylan's next film is to be Daydreams, a crime thriller. Climates is just coming out here on DVD in the UK, so go, queue it now if you haven't seen it already.

- Richard Gere is to produce and take the lead human role in Hachiko: A Dog's Story. A remake of a 1987 Japanese film (with a title that translates to approximately the same thing) the story's origins are apparently some true events - though beyond 'man takes in a dog, they bond', I have no idea what these events are. Can anybody shed some light?

- Tim Rice is setting lyrics to Tchaikovsky for Nutcracker - The Untold Story. And it gets worse: Elle Fanning is the lead, backed up by John Turturro (as the Mouse King) and Nathan Lane, while Andrei Konchalovsky is directing. This one runs an icy finger down my spine.

- Back From Hell at last, the Hughes Brothers are lugging about an increasingly full diary. The latest addition is The Book of Eli, a post apocalyptic yarn about a man who may somehow be able to save humanity with the titular book - this could be The Postman, could be Escape From New York... let's face it, it's erring towards The Postman on current evidence. Their other projects (if you want a reminder) include a film version of Kung Fu and The Ice Man, about a serial killer who fits snugly into a new role as a mafia hitman.

- Brett Ratner is to film lots of carnival jollity in 3D. Waste.

- Lucasfilm deny any plans to issue the Star Wars trilo... er... trilogies (?) on either Blu-Ray or HD-DVD.

- CHUD have pretty much confirmed that Karen Allen will be in Indiana Jones and the Most Likely to Be City of Gods... and that - SPOILER ALERT - she's the mother of Indy's son.

- Ken Branagh has indeed joined the cast of Valkyrie. Meanwhile, that film's co-scripter Christopher McQuarrie will see his World War I script No Man's Land go before cameras couretsy of Mark Cuban and 2929.

- Aint it Cool are hosting one Transformers ad, IESB are hosting the other. Yaaaaaaaaaaawn.

- The NY Times seem to believe the Tintin trilogy will be released in 3D. I mean, I assumed as much, but this is the first real suggestion that it has been somehow announced to somebody somewhere. They also tell us that Jackson is directing the first film in the sequence, Spielberg the second and... the third? Well, will it be Frank Darabont? Only time will tell.

- Nintendo have lined up a truly amazing list of composers for their upcoming Smash Bros. Dojo game.

- Some new, some old, some spoilery, some not safe for work - more images from Hostel 2 have turned up.

- Sony are to co-produce a whole new slate of films with Stephen Chow.

- Rachel McAdams lies about her age. Why? In a few years, it's only going to make it look like she's aging prematurely. Silly girl.

- Glen Kenny quite liked Bouelverd de la Morte. Best of all, he's quite clear on how it differs from Death Proof.

- There are more No Country For Old Men clips out there. Gotta catch 'em all.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The I Have To Rush Off To Work Edition

- The Red Ballon is headed back to Cannes. Lovely.

- 5 full minutes of Hostel 2 are to play before Bug in American cinemas.

- Jon 'Duckie' Cryer is to star in Tortured, a thriller to be directed by Nolan Lebovitz.

- Scott McCloud is to speak at Siggraph this year. Understanding Comics is the one book I recommend without fail to each and every one of my film students.

- There's a nice Magicians featurette online now.

- Stuntman Mike's Death Proof car is for sale on e-bay.

- Time Out have some 28 Weeks Later clips. In case you were thinking of going to see it, these should put you off.

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?

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.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Cannes Competition Films

Here's the list of films in the official competition selection at Cannes this year:

My Blueberry Nights - opening night film.
Auf der Anderen Seite
Un Vielle Maitresse
No Country for Old Men
Zodiac
We Own the Night
Le Chansons D'Amour
Magori no Mori
Breath
Promise Me This
Secret Sunshine
4 Luni, 3 Saptamini si 2 Zille
Tehilim
Stellet Licht
Persepolis
Le Scaphandre et le Papillon
Import Export
The Man from London
Paranoid Park
Izgnanie

This is the full list of films in competition. My early pick for the Palm? Bela Tarr's The Man from London. More Cannes to follow...

[EDIT: You can see the page from the press release below for more info. Click it to make it big enough to read]


Thursday, April 12, 2007

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.

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

The Missing Death Proof Jigsaw Piece

When you go out tonight to see Grind House at a late screening, and Death Proof throws that missing reel at you, you're going to wonder what you're missing.

Wonder no more. I've got the answer for you. Below are two semi-pages from the script that cover the entire missing reel. It will make sense after you've seen the film.

Of course, this material is to be reinstated in the cut of the film that will play at Cannes. Poor Rodriguez - Tarantino's film is getting taken very seriously while his is being treated like a bit of a joke. That's just harsh.



Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Rolling Stone Interview Thing With Grind House Trailer Directors

While flicking through the magazines on my virtual coffee table I stumbled across an excellent article in Rolling Stone. Quentin, Rodriguez, Eli, Zombie [EDIT: What's his name Zombie Rob? Hey! You have a point! That's a much better name] and Edgar chin wag about the inspirations behind their fake trailers, as bookended by Planet Terror and Death Proof. It's a six page beast and an entertaining read. Knock yourself out.

Monday, April 02, 2007

Grind House DVD Plans

So, at some point later this year (and all signs are pointing to late July, currently) Planet Terror and Death Proof will hit DVD. Unlike their cinematic incarnation, however, they will not be packaged together in the one set (excluding retailer-specific slipcase promotions and the like). Each film is going to be given it's own DVD release, the Planet Terror one containing the program from beginning until the end of that film's credits, Death Proof picking up with the set of half-time trailers and running through 'til the bloody end.

And then, closer to the end of the year - though this might slip into 2008 easily - the two films will be reissued. Still not in a joint package. The idea this time is that these will be faux Criterion releases, loaded to the gills with extra features and blessed with 'remastered prints'. Simply put, the films are going to be colour graded 'properly' and all of the scratch and flicker effects will be turned off. And at least one of the missing reels will be reinstated.

The un-de-restored Death Proof is going to be ready in time for Cannes, so don't expect any hold up on that front.

Each of these many DVD sets is to come with exclusive extra material - and if the plans go really well, around the time of the second pair of releases, Machete is going to come to DVD as a full length feature too.

It's taken quite a bit of effort to compile and cross-reference all of this info from interviews (with Tarantino, Rodriguez, Rosario Dawson and Kurt Russell) and a couple of in-the-know tipsters, but I think you'll appreciate being forewarned about the double dip before it comes.

Of course, this is one (two?) double dip(s) worth taking: each release will be significantly distinct from the other and offer a markedly different experience. American audiences might be getting 2-for-1 this weekend, but the true fans will make up the shortfall in the end.

Next question: when do we get Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair?