Number23 Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Review Roundup: Weekend of 2/23/2007
Filed under: Theatrical Reviews », Review Roundup »
Five wide releases this weekend, and perhaps the final frame in which we're offered little but studio holdovers and lost causes. Dig into a haunted house story, a historical drama about abolitionists, a family-friendly inspirational piece, a Jim Carrey psycho-thriller and the big-screen debut of some very silly police officers. (And don't forget about the Oscars tonight!)The Abandoned -- 3 positive / 8 negative at RottenTomatoes.com.
Pro: "Rallies in the end and has a satisfying, fittingly unsettling conclusion." -- Staci Layne Wilson, Horror.com
Con: "A punishing dose of zombie Chekhov for lifetime Fangoria subscribers." -- Jim Ridley, L.A. Weekly
Pro: "It's the pervasive sense of fatalism and decay that saves Cerda's debut feature from being yet another poky haunted-house chiller." -- Ken Fox, TV Guide
Con: "Reflects a filmmaker so lost in the details of his creation, he's neglected his obligation to forward momentum." -- Brian Orndorf, eFilmCritic.com
Bonus! "A fairly uninteresting story told in exceedingly spotty fashion." -- Scott Weinberg, Cinematical
Amazing Grace -- 52 positive / 23 negative at RT.com.
Pro: "This biopic of abolitionist crusader William Wilberforce gains much of its own force from the supporting characters." -- Josh Larsen, Sun-Times
Con: "A movie about the slave trade with hardly an African face in sight." -- Michael Booth, Denver Post
Pro: "As a portrait of political engagement, the movie is substantial and absorbing." -- Gary Thompson, Philadelphia Daily News
Con: "It's hardly compelling viewing." -- Desson Thomson, Washington Post
The Astronaut Farmer -- 61 positive / 40 negative at RT.com.
Pro: "Shows just how much you can accomplish with $12 million and more imagination than most big-studio releases can muster these days." -- Lou Lumenick, New York Post
Con: "Should be grounded for the twisted lesson it tries to impart." -- Claudia Puig, USA Today
Pro: "Works precisely because it's bereft of modern cinema's cynicism." -- Robert Wilonsky, Village Voice
Con: "It's one of those movies that yearns for a time that never really existed and ends up a chilly museum exhibit." -- Bill Muller, Arizona Republic
Bonus! "What makes the movie special are the personal touches." -- Jeffrey M. Anderson, Cinematical
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.
Carrey Goes Spooky on The Number 23
Filed under: Thrillers », Mystery & Suspense », New Line »
Y'know how sometimes a funny actor will get hold of a creepy script and envision it as his next step on the way to dramatic credibility? (It happens to Robin Williams a whole lot.) Well, it looks like Jim Carrey's been bitten by the Psychological Thriller Bug, and he's bringing Virginia Madsen along for the ride.From first-time screenwriter Fernley Phillips and the consistently inconsistent Joel Schumacher, The Number 23 is about a likable schmo who acquires a very rare book, only to discover that -- uh oh -- it's actually the story of his own life! (Dun dun dunnnnnn!) Even a brief and inattentive glance at the trailer will tell you the "the number 23" has a whole lot to do with the spooky goings-on, although I think the flick will stop short of bringing Michael Jordan in for a cameo.
Co-starring Danny Huston, Rhona Mitra and Mark Pellegrino, the New Line release is presently scheduled for a February 23rd release. Yes, 23. Creeeeepy!









