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DVD Review: Dreamgirls

Filed under: Drama », Music & Musicals », Paramount », DVD Reviews »




I haven't seen Dreamgirls since its release last Christmas, but after sitting down to watch the DVD, which is arriving in stores tomorrow, I pretty much stand by my original opinion -- that the film is a solid B+ as a musical, but didn't exactly have the dramatic heft or originality to be in consideration for the Oscar. Looks like the Academy agreed with me. For those who still haven't seen it, Dreamgirls follows a trio of 60s singers, modeled on The Supremes, as they climb to the top, then fracture over love, money and fame, and then attempt to find success on their own. There are memorable songs, including Jennifer Hudson's signature "I Am Telling You I Am Not Going," and Beyonce Knowles' "Listen" towards the end of the film, and the film finds an interesting way to blend musical numbers together with the traditional style of movie musicals. If you are swept up in the story, you might not even notice the moment when that wall is broken and the actors start communicating to each other through songs instead of words.

Fans will be happy to know that the DVD is no slouch -- it's two discs, packed with a number of behind-the-scenes featurettes, a whole slate of extended and alternate scenes and some more interesting things that you rarely see. My favorite one a series of 'pre-visualization sequences' which means enhanced storyboards that are played in a slide-show sequence along with what I think is an early reading of the script pages. It serves as sort of an animated forerunner to the eventual scene that will be shot, and was probably extremely helpful to the director in setting up some of the musical sequences. In addition to the storyboard-style presentations -- and htere are several of them -- there are also dress rehearsals included, with stand-ins doing the singing and dancing. Some of these sequences even combine the rehearsal with the storyboard sequence, like the one for the "Cadillac Car" number. After watching that one, it seems like most of the hard work of this film was done before the actors even stepped on stage.

Santa Barbara to Celebrate Film with a Festival

Filed under: Other Festivals »

Santa Barbara seems like a pretty cool place to hold a film festival; nice people, fancy cars, great weather, swanky restaurants ... and oh yeah, the movies. The Santa Barabarians are presently gearing up for their 22nd annual film festival, and I'm here to tell you what they'll be playing. Well, some of what they'll be playing. Well, the big titles anyway.

Based on what Variety tells me, the SBIFF will be offering a solid handful of world premieres, including Joel Schumacher's The Number 23 (which stars Jim Carrey and Virginia Madsen), Lake of Fire (a documentary about abortion that comes from the guy who directed American History X) and Christopher Plummer in Man in the Chair, which is a story about the last-surviving Citizen Kane crew member. Interesting.

Not premieres, but potentially quite interesting are "that Dakota Fanning movie" Hounddog, George Hickenlooper's controversial Factory Girl, Michael Apted's Amazing Grace and Sue Kramer's Gray Matters. The fest folks will also take some time from their busy screening schedule to honor filmmakers like Forest Whitaker, Bill Condon, Helen Mirren and Will Smith.

Plus a whole lot more. So if you live within, say, 40-some miles of Santa Barbara and you want to see some interesting flicks between January 25 and February 4, now you have something to do.

Dreamworks Attempted to Woo DGA with 'Dreamgirls' DVDs

Filed under: Music & Musicals », Awards », Celebrities and Controversy », Newsstand », Dreamworks », Movie Marketing »

The award season takes off with a bang. An especially big bang was made today by DreamWorks and everyone in the film industry is shaking from it. In an effort to snag a Director's Guild nomination for Dreamgirls' director Bill Condon, DreamWorks was planning to send out a screener copy to every DGA member. This tactic would have been unprecedented in DGA history. Not because it was against DGA policies -- although many thought that to be so -- but for multiple reasons.

First of all, the DGA discourages their members from viewing DVD screeners because they want members to view films in theaters. This makes perfect sense to me especially, as directors; part of the total experience is being in the theater and not watching it on their television sets. It is would have been a huge expense on the studio's part. An astounding expense to be exact. The DGA has 13,400 members and the cost to print DVDs is seven bucks a pop. I couldn't help but do the math to find out exactly how much DreamWorks paid in order to possibly get a nomination; I can barely breath as I type it: $114,800. The film has already made $360,000 in pre-screening sales so perhaps this effort to get a nomination is a mere dent in their budget.

Other studios were very unhappy with the DGA's approval of the Dreamgirls' DVD screener distribution because not a single studio was notified with any time to put up a fight. Production offices were only notified yesterday of DreamWorks' actions and many felt cheated that they were not notified sooner. The DGA's ballots for 2007's award show are due on January 8. For a rival studio to have produced DVDs alone would take up to that date, never giving them the chance to get copies into voter's hands before they seal their envelopes.

However, this awards-season meltdown was averted -- David Poland's always-excellent The Hot Blog has the skinny -- but still: How insane is awards season getting?

Review: Dreamgirls -- Ryan's Take

Filed under: Drama », Music & Musicals », New Releases », Paramount », Theatrical Reviews », New in Theaters »





For a movie about singing, Dreamgirls is surprisingly shy about also being a musical. Following the highs and lows of a fictional singing trio modeled on The Supremes, the movie spends almost an hour building up steam with musical numbers that are justified by audiences and nearby pianos before the training wheels finally come off. Newcomer Jennifer Hudson does the honors, belting out the first a cappella notes -- "What about me?" -- intended as communication, not entertainment. Hudson plays Effie White, instantly recognizable to us as the singing engine behind her group, The Dreams, even before she sings those notes. Her moderately plus-sized figure would likely preclude her from being part of the group otherwise. The story of Effie and The Dreams will be set in motion when a used-car salesman of a manager, in the form of Jamie Foxx, intrudes on the unsuccessful threesome and begins pouring honey into the ear of the group's honey, Deena, played by Beyonce Knowles. He wants to make Deena a star. If the other Dreams come along for the ride, great.

Dreamgirls is a 'rise and fall' story almost as old as music itself, but it gets a pass for dusting off the musical genre with some inspired performances, including the centerpiece, in which poor Effie is rounded on and attacked for not bowing down and stepping aside in favor of the prettier Deena. She fights back with "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" a wail in the key of pissed-off, as raw and throaty as its title demands. It's so emotional that it eventually descends into some unfortunate American Idol-style theatrics, but since the house is already flattened by that point, it hardly matters. If Hudson has the ability to funnel the closed-fist passion she brings to this role into serious dramatic fare, then we have a new star. Dreamgirls is not the role that will test her, though. It's too much of a comfort zone, and the film itself is not brave. If it really wanted to stun us into silence with its originality, it would have Danny Glover bust out a tune or two.

The Test Screenings for Dreamgirls Have Started: It's Looking Very, Very Good

Filed under: Drama », Music & Musicals », Fandom »

Oh man. Based on the people involved (well, person -- for me it's all about Bill Condon) and the early footage, I was already having a really hard time waiting until Christmas to see Dreamgirls. And now that the test screenings have started, resulting in reviews (from people who don't even like musicals) that say things like "this movie is F*CKING AMAZING. Definitely the best I've seen for a long, long time.", and "Dreamgirls is virtually flawless", and "probably the best movie I've seen in a couple of years", I'm pretty much totally freaking out.

Those quotes comes from the four screening reports that were sent to AICN yesterday, right after the first test screening (those spies work fast). While, yes, the reviews are typically hyperbolic, they also offer a lot of detail to support the raves and are tempered by minor criticism, so I feel pretty confident that they weren't written by Beyoncé's mom, or something. That said, however, the write-ups are so positive that, if you're excited about the movie already, it may be dangerous to read them -- like me, you'll just end up royally pissed off that it's only August.

And the Nominees for Best Picture Are

Filed under: Awards », Oscar Watch », Other Festivals »

With only six months until the 2007 Academy Award nominees are officially announced, it is obviously time to get the Oscar race started already. Movie City News has begun its Pre-Oscar Preview early this year with its The Gurus of Gold feature. Typically the real Oscar watch doesn't begin until the really good movies (or the award-hungry movies, anyway) start showing in Toronto. But just because none of the Gurus (critics and writers from different outlets) have actually seen most of the expected contenders for Best Picture, that doesn't mean they can't make predictions based on film trailers, buzz, etc. So, each Guru picked 10 movies, which they rated from 1 to 10, that they think have the potential to be nominated (and which also serve as a premature top-ten of 2006 for each Guru).

Based on the picks, or votes, it looks like the probable five nominees will be Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers, Bill Condon's Dreamgirls, Steven Soderbergh's The Good German, Alejandro González Iñárritu's Babel (which screened at Cannes) and Oliver Stone's World Trade Center (which some critics have seen). Dark horses include United 93, The Departed, All the King's Men and The Queen (These may change as more Gurus come aboard).

You know the Oscars are getting to be a waste of time when it starts being this easy.

(A Little Bit of) Dreamgirls Debuts at Cannes

Filed under: Drama », Music & Musicals », Cannes », Paramount », Newsstand », Dreamworks », Movie Marketing »

As we reported last month, Dreamworks and Paramount had a big Cannes debut planned for ... 20 minutes of their film version of Dreamgirls. The footage screened on Friday in the South of France and, according the scuttlebutt coming out of the festival (How does "Shouts of 'more' echoed round the room" strike you?), it was mighty impressive -- and if jaded, professional critics are saying good things about a musical, I'm guessing that it might be really is good. Though details on what, exactly, critics saw are frustratingly hard to come by, it appears that at least once music number was included, and stars Jamie Foxx and Beyoncé Knowles were on hand to add a little glamor to the event.

Of course, since the movie isn't even done, it's clearly a little early to get excited about its possible awesomeness and Oscar-potential (though the December release date makes it clear what the studios are thinking). That said, however, director Bill Condon knows what he's doing (in addition to writing the screenplay for Chicago, he directed both Kinsey and Gods and Monsters), and his overt reverence for the classic musicals from directors like Stanley Donen, George Cukor, and Vincente Minnelli is encouraging as well.

DVD Review: Kinsey

Filed under: Drama », DVD Reviews »

Liam Neeson as Alfred Kinsey
Masturbation makes you drool and eventually go blind. Well, it did, until Alfred Kinsey came along.

For a film with a budget of ten million dollars, I'd say they pulled this one off exceptionally well, and the DVD is no exception (excuse the pun). Despite the drama surrounding Alfred Kinsey—he's been called a child-molester and a Nazi—by all indications, film-wise, he was a remarkable fellow, and as Karina has already stated, could very well be responsible for the sexual development of our society, leading all the way to Paris Hilton.

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