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“WHATEVER GAME YOU’RE PLAYING, TEAMWORK MAKES THE DIFFERENCE”

List of winners at the 79th annual Academy Awards February 26, 2007

Filed under: MOVIE REVIEWS — hahnoda @ 1:30 pm

List of winners at the 79th annual Academy Awards, presented Sunday, Feb. 25 at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles:

Picture: “The Departed

Director:  Martin Scorsese, “The Departed”

Actor: Forest Whitaker, “The Last King of Scotland

Actress: Helen Mirren, “The Queen

Film Editing: “The Departed”

Original Song: “I Need to Wake Up” from “An Inconvenient Truth,” Melissa Etheridge

Original Screenplay: Michael Arndt, “Little Miss Sunshine

Original Score: “Babel,” Gustavo Santaolalla

Documentary Feature: “An Inconvenient Truth

Supporting Actress: Jennifer Hudson, “Dreamgirls

Foreign-Language Film: “The Lives of Others,” Germany

Visual Effects: “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Cinematography: “Pan’s Labyrinth

Costume Design: “Marie Antoinette

Adapted Screenplay: William Monahan, “The Departed

Animated Feature Film: “Happy Feet

Documentary Short Subject: “The Blood of Yingzhou District”

Supporting Actor: Alan Arkin, “Little Miss Sunshine”

Art Direction: “Pan’s Labyrinth”

Sound Mixing: “Dreamgirls”

Sound Editing: “Letters From Iwo Jima

Makeup: “Pan’s Labyrinth”

Animated Short Film: “The Danish Poet

Live Action Short Film: “West Bank Story”

 

The Departed or Infernal Affairs ?? February 11, 2007

Filed under: MOVIE REVIEWS — hahnoda @ 4:23 am


Sudah nonton The Departed (Hollywood version) atau Infernal Affairs (Asia version) belum ?? Dua film ini sama saja kok. The Departed memang diadaptasi dari film Infernal Affairs. Keren banget ceritanya, begitu pula permainan / akting pemainnya. Gak rugi untuk sejenak menyempatkan waktu nonton film ini. Genre film ini drama action.

Infernal Affairs bercerita  tentang seorang polisi (Tony Leung, sebagai Yan) yang menyamar menjadi anggota Triad (geng Hong Kong) dan seorang anggota Triad yang menyamar menjadi seorang polisi (Andy Lau, sebagai Ming).

Keduanya adalah mata-mata dan masing-masing dikirim oleh kedua organisasi yang saling bermusuhan tersebut untuk mendapatkan keuntungan intelijensi di lain pihak masing-masing. Akhir ceritanya lebih baik nonton sendiri yach, hehehe.

Disini saya hanya membandingan kedua film tersebut. Kalau boleh memilih saya pilih versi  Infernal Affairs (I-A). Baik segi original ceritanya ataupun akting pemainnya. Konfilk di I-A lebih menyenangkan ceritanya untuk diikuti. Saya inget banget waktu adegan/scene Antony Wong tewas karena jatuh dari gedung karena dikejar pihak lawan tepat di depan Tony Leung. Sampai tercekat ketika melihat adegan itu. Kita akan ikut merasakan apa dalam hati Tony Leung dan menangkap kepedihan dimatanya yang dibuat tidak berdaya menghadapi situasi tersebut. Di film ini permainan Tony Leung bagus, Leonardo DiCaprio kalah jauh dech :D *sorry to say*… Saya tidak bisa menangkap kepedihan itu di mata Leo. Tapi bagaimanapun saya respect dengan dibuatnya film ini versi Hollywoodnya (the departed).

Tokoh Frank yang diperankan Jack Nicholson akan lebih bagus bila dimainkan Robert De Niro (menurut saya lochh).  Tapi Jack juga bermain bagus disini,  akting Matt Damon cukup lumayan menurut saya. Namun kurang begitu menjanjikan di banding Andy Lau pada I-A.

Anyway… mending nonton sendiri aja dech untuk bisa menmbandingkan dua film di atas. Selamat nonton !!…

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Berikut synopsis singkat dalam bahasa Inggrisnya :

Venomously delivered by Jack Nicholson’s character in “The Departed,” this line was cut from the film but remains a deadly wake-up call for an unsettling number of the characters. Now that “The Departed” is nominated for five Oscars, including best picture, it’s worth discussing the most troubling part of Martin Scorsese’s morbid crime drama: the ending.

(That also means it’s time to put up the yellow police caution tape marked “spoiler alert” around this article.)

Scorsese finishes his tale of false identities and informants in a sudden, bloody fury, making the deleted “coffin” statement the “definitive line of the movie,” according to screenwriter William Monahan, who’s nominated for best adapted screenplay.

“Nobody gets forgiven in this one. Nobody!” Scorsese told The Associated Press, reveling in the gory ending.

A remake of the 2002 Hong Kong thriller “Infernal Affairs,” “The Departed” draws heavily from the original. They both center on mirror-image moles: a crooked cop (Matt Damon) spying for the gang of Frank Costello (Nicholson), and an undercover officer (Leonardo DiCaprio) deeply embedded in the gang.

The final scenes of “The Departed” make a notable addition to the denouement of “Infernal Affairs” — adding one more murderous twist to a film already full of them. Then, on the last shot, the camera pans away from the final corpse, catching a lone, symbolic rat scampering through the final frames.

“A lot of people don’t like the rat at the end,” says Monahan, 46, who was a successful novelist (“Light House: A Trifle”) and journalist (as an editor at Spy magazine) before dedicating himself to screenwriting. “In the Jacobean stage, you’d have this tremendous bloodbath at the end of a work, and then the next thing that would happen is the clown would come out. And everyone in the theater would laugh and it would take the edge off the intense experience.

“I tell ya, people would leave the theater feeling a lot different if it wasn’t for that rat.”

Still, some have lamented the rapid double-crossing and vengeful murders that precede the final flourish. New Yorker film critic David Denby wrote of the quick disposals: “shock gives way to disbelief and even laughter.” AP critic Christy Lemire said the film “nearly morphs into self-parody, with characters literally standing around, waiting to get shot in the head.”

Says Monahan: “In an alternate universe, I’m teaching Shakespeare.” Thus his adaptation accentuated the tragedy of “Infernal Affairs” with a bloody climax, followed by a comic, cathartic rodent.

The reasons for this approach extend from Monahan’s original intentions for “The Departed” — to present a larger story about South Boston. Having grown up in and around the city, he immediately knew he wanted to set the film in his hometown and infuse it with Irish Catholic culture.

“The Chinese story sort of clicked really well with the known culture of corruption in Boston,” says Monahan, who worked on his adaptation only from a translation of the “Infernal Affairs” script. (His perfectly accented dialogue and memorable one-liners can be dissected on the DVD for “The Departed,” due out Feb. 13, including deleted scenes like Costello’s “coffin” line.)

Nicholson’s mob boss character was partially modeled on James “Whitey” Bulger, a mobster who controlled much of the criminal activity in Boston for decades. Like Costello, he was eventually revealed to be an FBI informant. Bulger has been on the lam since 1996 and is currently listed alongside Osama bin Laden as one of the FBI’s most-wanted men.

This era of corruption is what “The Departed” seeks to repudiate in a domino-effect massacre. It’s not unlike the violent finale of Scorsese’s classic “Taxi Driver,” when Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro) goes on a deranged spree out of disgust for 1970s New York.

Little wonder Scorsese was convinced to make “The Departed” by Monahan’s script.

“There’s a sense of a kind of post-Sept. 11 despair about the film, which is very interesting, countered by this extraordinary humor,” the director says. “And primarily it’s all about loyalty and betrayal — every scene is about loyalty and betrayal. And they’re all lying. And their lives depend on it. Their lives depend on it!”

In the end, the only man left standing is Dignam (Mark Wahlberg). Now, Scorsese and Monahan are considering a sequel that will focus on the foul-mouthed cop.

“It’s a strong possibility,” says Monahan. “This is really a world I kind of established and like to write about. There are further things I’d like to explore about Boston. As `The Departed’ was sort of a departure from the material, I think if it came about, (the sequel) would be a departure from `The Departed.’”

 

D’BiJiS …Ya gitu dech ! January 27, 2007

Filed under: MOVIE REVIEWS — hahnoda @ 2:19 pm

Ini cerita tentang film musik. Tapi sayang penggambaran tentang musiknya sendiri kurang diperhatikan detailnya. Bingung ngeliat dan dengerin untuk mastiin jenis musik D’BiJiS. Sampai akhir ceritapun saya masih sibuk mencari tahu jenis musiknya :D :D…

Dibanding GARASI ini menurut saya kalah jauhhh. Di Garasi masih diceritakan proses musikalitas-nya. Baik itu cari ide untuk lagu maupun lyricnya. Di film D’Bijis agak kurang. Standar aja… gak ada gregetnya. Kalaupun yang menjadi benang merah cerita adalah persahabatan, itupun juga tidak begitu kena dari jalinan cerita. Biasa aja.

Yang lumayan menghibur adalah akting Gary Iskak yang memainkan karakter bencong Krisdayanti. Lucu banget !!! Saluuttttt… Saya selalu menunggu scene dia. Gesture Gary meranin KD hampir sama. Apalagi ditambah mas Anang-nya :D :D…. sumpah lucu banget. Akting Tora, Indra, Rianti masih seperti biasa. Darius.. masih standar menurut saya.

Overall.. untuk sajian film awal tahun, film ini lumayan menghibur. Dialog-dialognya juga lumayan asik. Yang agak kurang cuma jalan ceritanya. Standar banget. Gak ada kesan khusus yang didapat setelah nonton film ini. Pokoknya setelah nonton film ini komentar saya cuma satu kalau ditanya …. YA GITTUUUU DECHH !!

 

The King and The Clown October 27, 2006

Filed under: MOVIE REVIEWS — hahnoda @ 12:39 pm

Blockbuster Korean movie “The King and The Clown” broke all previous movie records to become the all-time number-one hit following 112 days at the box office. By the final screening on April 18, 2006, The King and The Clown had drawn close to 4 million viewers in Seoul and over 12 million people nationwide. Compared to Silmido and Taegeukgi, the first to attract 10 million viewers, The King and The Clown is truly remarkable because it was only screened in 300-400 theaters nationwide.
Box-office records aside, the movie also gained rave reviews for its visual production. And although it featured no major stars, actor Lee Jun-ki emerged as a screen icon overnight for his role as Kong-gil. On April 14, 2006, the movie received the Daesang Award (Best Prize) at the 42nd Baeksang Arts Awards Ceremony held at the Haeoreum Theater in Seoul.
Based on an acclaimed play titled “Yi”, The King and The Clown, is set in the Joseon Dynasty. What makes the film unconventional is the central focus on male court jesters as leading characters, since, until this film, the public knew little about their place in history.
Great attention went into costume production. Not only were the stars’ costumes custom-made, even those of the extras were painstakingly sewn. In all, 600 costumes were completed over the course of a year. In the Korean classical opera scene, the jesters wore colorful paper costumes.
The paper costumes were constructed using fabric for lining and hanji paper for the outer layers, which were lavishly painted in bright colors. Three designers worked day and night for a full month to produce just one costume. The producers’ efforts are seen in the props as well. They were assembled over the course of a year, and some pieces cost tens of millions of won. The masks and hand puppets, the royal palanquin, royal bedding and cushions, fans, and furniture were all made based on thorough historical research. Another realistic touch was the stunt work. In order to perform their own stunts, the leading actors learned tightrope dancing and other tricks before filming began.

※ Synopsis
The story is set in the Joseon Dynasty during the reign of King Yeonsan, an infamously tyrannical monarch. Jang-saeng, a member of the Namsadang Troupe, comes to Hanyang (currently Seoul) with Kong-gil to escape the abuse of powerful aristocrats. After arriving in the capital, Jang-saeng and Kong-gil perform a skit satirizing the King and his concubine Nok-su, quickly attracting attention. The palace learns of it, and they are arrested. While enduring excruciating torture, Jang-saeng raves that if given the chance, he could make the King laugh. Fortunately, he is given the chance to prove himself.
Performing before the ruler makes the jesters nervous, and despite Jang-saeng’s best efforts, the King doesn’t laugh. But when Kong-gil appears in drag, playing the role of a shrewd woman, the king cannot control his laughter. The two are appointed as royal jesters, and from then on, live a life of luxury.
Their parodies satirize the corruption of public officials, which keeps the King in a jovial mood. On the other hand, members of the court who are depicted in the jester’s skits are severely punished. At a royal banquet, the jesters perform a Korean opera depicting feminine rivalry. This awakens in the King painful memories of his mother, and he puts all of his late father’s royal concubines to the sword. Troubled that their comedic skits invariably lead to bloodshed, the jesters decide to leave. For some reason, however, Kong-gil wants to stay.

 

The Departed August 18, 2006

Filed under: MOVIE REVIEWS — hahnoda @ 2:21 pm

Ini film seru banget…. adaptasi dari film Hong Kong yang udah kita tonton sebelumnya *sorry kalo ada yang belum nonton* Infernal Affairs*….. moga-moga gak telat tayangnya di Indonesia.

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Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, and Mark Wahlberg
Directed by: Martin Scorsese

In an act of multicultural hop-scotch, Martin Scorsese takes a 200-mile trip northeast from his native Little Italy to adapt the 2002 Hong Kong crime thriller Infernal Affairs, setting it in the Irish underworld of South Boston. “A gangster is a gangster,” says producer Graham King. “It’s a genre he knows like the back of his hand.” The original story line intact, The Departed is about gangland chief Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson), who has an operative (Matt Damon) in the police force working for him. But when it becomes clear that the cops have their own mole (Leonardo DiCaprio) in Costello’s organization, the two men have to hunt each other out. For Scorsese, the biggest difference between depicting Irish and Italian criminals wasn’t so much their mind-set as it was the physical settings—gritty pubs rather than family restaurants. Authenticity came both from Massachusetts locals Damon and Wahlberg and technical adviser Tom Duffy, a retired Boston detective who spent 30 years fighting organized crime, particularly the Southie gangster Whitey Bulger, who is one source of inspiration for Nicholson’s Costello. Though this is Scorsese’s third film in a row with DiCaprio, it’s the first time the director has worked with Nicholson. “When Marty talks, everyone listens,” King says of the momentous collaboration. “And when Jack talks, everyone listens.”