Posted Nov 27th 2009 3:15PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Fandom, Trailers and Clips, Scenes We Love
My love of dance movies, especially
crappy dance movies, could probably all be traced back to
Breakin'. In 1984 I wasn't exactly the hippest girl on the block (after all it isn't easy to be hip when you're nine years old), but when my dad took me to see
Breakin' I thought this was the beginning of a long and industrious career as a B-girl. So, as you can probably guess, it didn't quite work out that way, but thanks to
Breakin' I still listen to
Rufus'
Ain't Nobody featuring R&B legend Chaka Khan (which first appeared on Rufus' album Stompin' at The Savoy) .
Breakin' was directed by Joel Silberg and centered on the dancing duo of Turbo (
Michael Chambers) and Ozone (
Adolfo Quinones), who team up with Kelly, a pampered jazz dancer (played by
Lucinda Dickey) in a battle with a rival dance crew by the name of Electro Rock -- and if you remember your 80s movies then you know that most disputes can be solved with a dance off. Rufus' #1 R&B hit accompanied the all-important musical montage where we see white-bread Kelly learning to pop and lock...badly.
Breakin' wasn't the first break dancing movie to come along, and if I had to choose,
Beat Street would go down as my personal favorite. But, for better or for worse,
Breakin' is still one of the best remembered movies of that brief fad of b-boys on the big screen, and it may not be a great movie -- as a matter of fact it's kind of a terrible movie, but this is definitely a great song.
After the jump: Kelly gets down and some cross promotion with Turbo and Ozone...Continue reading Scenes (Songs) We Love: Ain't Nobody From 'Breakin'
Posted Nov 24th 2009 10:32AM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Casting, RumorMonger, Fandom
In the past couple days some news reports have surfaced that would make it seem as if Robert Zemeckis has begun the casting process for his
Yellow Submarine remake, which is apparently going under the name of
The Fab Four Project or
The Untitled Fab Four Project for reasons we do not know (perhaps to either mask the real production or perhaps they've decided to go in a different direction and are between titles).
Jim Hill noted that they're holding open auditions at a Beatles convention in Stamford, Connecticut this weekend, and
The Sun already claims actor Stephen Graham has landed the part of Ringo in the mo-capped feature (though I'd take that piece of news with a huge grain of salt).
It also looks like Zemeckis is considering a wide range of folks for the role of John Lennon, including one of our favorite up-and-coming actors,
Gabe Sunday. I first saw Sunday in the buzzed-about indie flick
My Suicide and instantly knew he was heading in the right direction. The guy isn't just another wannabee actor -- he's a true artist and collaborator who likes to be involved in the entire filmmaking process. Not only is he working on a narrative film about the great Daniel Johnston, but he apparently threw together a John Lennon audition tape for Zemeckis that's pretty spot-on in terms of becoming the young, experimental Lennon who pals around with buddies and enjoys impromptu jam sessions. No doubt Sunday's usual cronies are behind the look and feel of this audition tape since it squarely belongs in their wheelhouse, and I hate to say it but I'd rather see more of this than whatever colorful mo-capped version Zemeckis has planned.
Either way I truly hope he gives Sunday a shot. The guy is ready to explode onto the scene; he just needs more opportunities to do just that. Watch the video after the jump. Good luck Gabe!
Continue reading Gabe Sunday's John Lennon 'Yellow Submarine' Audition Tape
Posted Nov 23rd 2009 3:02PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Movie Marketing, Images, Trailers and Clips, Posters
Cinematical has just received this sexy new poster for the upcoming movie-musical
Nine, directed by Rob Marshall (
Chicago), and starring ... well, who isn't starring in this film? We've got the sensational, bound-to-be-nominated-for-Best-Actor-again
Daniel Day-Lewis, followed by a plethora of gorgeous female co-stars like
Nicole Kidman,
Penélope Cruz,
Kate Hudson,
Marion Cotillard,
Judi Dench and
Sophia Loren.
Based on the popular Broadway show,
Nine follows a famous film director named Guido Contini (Day-Lewis) who's struggling to juggle all of the different dysfunctional personal and professional relationships in his life. You'd be hard-pressed to find an Oscar-related list that doesn't already include
Nine as a shoe-in for multiple nominations, including Best Picture. Early reviews are already touting it as a must-see, and I can kinda see why -- this poster alone gives us at least five reasons right off the bat.
Nine is set to roll out into theaters in limited release on December 18th and nationwide on December 25th. Click on the image below to view the full poster, then head after the jump to watch the film's trailers.
Continue reading Exclusive 'Nine' Poster Premiere!
Posted Nov 23rd 2009 12:02PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Drama, Music & Musicals, New Releases, Fandom, Home Entertainment
Cinematical has just received the following title track for Nick Cave and Warren Ellis' original and haunting film score for
The Road. It's simple and chilling -- just as any accompaniment to a post-apocalyptic world should be -- full of violin and piano tunes, some wind instruments and sound loops. The soundtrack is being released digitally today over at
Amazon, with further digital retailers tomorrow and a CD release to follow on January 12, 2010.
We first alerted you to the score
back in March, and then to the duo's Soundtrack Collection
in September. As you might have gathered, some of us are big Cave & Ellis fans. And rightly so. They provided an award-winning score for John Hillcoat's earlier feature
The Proposition (which Cave also wrote), and also scored
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. And of course, that's besides their work in Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, which has
memorable cinematic ties to Wings of Desire (before Ellis teamed up with Cave).
Too often these days it's easy to get pulled out of movies due to overly imposing and grandoise film scores desperately trying to yank at emotions, rather than just lightly coaxing the right feel for a particular scene, and Cave and Ellis definitely know how to let simplicity reign. Check out the clip and track list after the jump and grab it over here at
Amazon.
Continue reading Exclusive: Title Track for 'The Road' Soundtrack
Posted Nov 20th 2009 8:15PM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Fandom

We're doing something crazy, and launching another little series here on
Cinematical: Serious Scores. You're a smart bunch, so I imagine you've already figured out that the goal isn't to highlight our favorite bank heists, but to praise the
creme de la creme of cinema's soundtracks. Hopefully, you'll find something new for your iPod, rediscover a lost favorite, or appreciate a piece along with us.
Technically,
Werner Herzog's Aguirre: The Wrath of God doesn't have an official soundtrack. The entire score was recorded by the German progressive band Popol Vuh (the first of many collaborations they did with Herzog), and was released as an album in 1975, with a 2004 re-release. Only two tracks were actually used in the film:
Aguirre I and
Aguirre II. If you disdain the rest of their Krautrock, the magic of
iTunes and
Amazon allows you to buy them individually. Now you can put them on a playlist, set them to repeat, and go as mad as Aguirre himself.
Hints of madness aside,
Aguirre I and
II are pretty incredible pieces of music and were raved about in the 1970s. I think the music is just as powerful today, even if Moog synthesizers seem to have fallen out of favor. It's hypnotic and eerie, and so very evocative of that torpid jungle journey. Never have native panpipes sounded as frantic and terrified. I've embedded Aguirre I below the jump, but I highly recommend spending the $0.99 so you can download it to something hand-held and listen to it in the dark.
Continue reading Serious Scores: 'Aguirre: The Wrath of God'
Posted Nov 18th 2009 6:03PM by Cinematical staff
Filed under: Horror, Music & Musicals
By Alison Nastasi
With the
announcement of
Carrie making a return to the Broadway circuit after a short-lived disastrous first go-round, I'm left holding my head and wondering, "Why?" Horror musicals are like your socially awkward cousin. You know, the one who talks too much and quite possibly bears an uncanny resemblance to Franklin from
Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
Is it fair to hold the horror musical to the same standards as the dastardly horror film remakes that seem to be happening in droves? I don't think I can help it. Few horror musicals have been born from an original idea which leaves me with the same funny feeling. I'm well aware that remakes have been happening since the dawn of time but this kind of remake is worse. When you add the word 'musical' to
anything it evokes a horrible visceral reaction within many people. Adding it to the word horror just seems like a bastardized and shrieking kind of wrong.
Isn't the comical genius of
Young Frankenstein and
Evil Dead perfect as is?
Young Frankenstein was a parody. So, is a mugging Dr. Frankenstein belting out a song called
Transylvania Mania anything other than pointless and silly? The film
Cannibal! The Musical, another intentional parody by beloved low-budget Troma Entertainment, has more class by comparison. Even Cronenberg's
The Fly has been made into an
opera, but they don't have me fooled. Adding the smooth vowel-ridden word to the title doesn't soften the blow. In fact, it's almost more cruel. However,
Repo! The Genetic Opera would probably disagree with me.
Read the rest at Horror Squad!
Posted Nov 17th 2009 2:45PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Music & Musicals, New Releases, Nicole Kidman, Trailers and Clips
I may not be the biggest devotee of movie musicals, but I've been keeping an eye on Rob Marshall's adaptation of
Nine (the Tony Award-winning musical) since the production was first
announced back in 2007. The thought of some of the coolest chicks in Hollywood with
Daniel Day Lewis in a musical about
8 1/2? Well, count me in. Despite early casting changes and rumblings about Lewis' singing abilities, I've held out hope for the flick, and now that the film's Christmas release date is a little over a month away the early reviews are trickling in. First up is AICN who scored an
early review from a source going by the name of Tobby (You can read the entire review over there, but be warned, it's a little spoilery)
So let's start with the good news: according to this review, the film is pretty darn good. The reviewer had nothing but praise for
Marion Cotillard as Lewis' wife, and even
Fergie gets some love as the prostitute, Saraghina. As for Lewis in the role of the troubled director Guido Contini, it turns out those rumors of his lack of singing ability were just rumors, and he makes out pretty good in the review for the limited singing he does in the film (two songs) -- and I think we all knew his acting was never going to be the problem.
Of course, the film is far from perfect and there are some rough patches according to this reviewier. Most of the scorn was directed towards Nicole Kidman's performance as Contini's muse, and unfortunately one of the other problems with the film is
Kate Hudson (who plays an American Vogue reporter) in what was described as a throwaway role. Bad timing, perhaps, now that Hudson's musical number,
Cinema Italiano, is the bulk of the latest trailer for the film.
After the jump: Hudson's Go-Go debut and a musical layman's review of Cinema Italiano...Continue reading 'Nine' Buzz: Kate Hudson Music Video, Early Review
Posted Nov 16th 2009 10:32AM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Documentary, Music & Musicals, Deals, Scripts

Remember that super-cute and super-rocking senior documentary
Young@Heart, which hit screens last year? It's becoming a feature film, and
The Hollywood Reporter posts that Working Title has found a new scribe in
Will Reiser (
I'm With Cancer). The rights had originally been bought back in 2007, and writer Bob Nelson had written a draft, but now, much like their senior subjects, the project is getting a new jolt of life.
As I hope you know by now, the film follows a chorus of senior citizens (average age of 80) who came together and toured -- not singing "old folks" songs for retirement homes, but all-out mainstream concerts featuring modern hits and classics from the likes of The Clash, Coldplay, and James Brown. The documentary dipped into their performances and their lives (some passed away during production).
Can you think of any movie that could be more fun on the big screen? Think about the senior-aged talent and Hollywood, and then imagine them rocking out. It would make that scene in
The Wedding Singer look like nothin'. Betty White. Cloris Leachman (and
New York, I Love You co-star Eli Wallach). Andy Griffith. Adam West. Anne Meara. The list goes on and on. This could be epic, and of course, I'm probably getting my hopes up way too high, but just think of the possibilities. What older stars would you like to see on the big screen, belting out rock tunes?
Rock out to this clip and weigh in below.
Posted Nov 15th 2009 2:03PM by Scott Weinberg
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Remakes and Sequels

This is what we call a slow news day. Even for a Sunday. But then a casual glance through
The Hollywood Reporter yielded some huge sequel news! The sequel to
Stomp the Yard has begun shooting in Atlanta! Since I don't think I've ever seen the first
Stomp the Yard, I'm going to assume it's the tragic story of an ill-fated cement technician who is killed while paving a new schoolyard, thereby prompting the local dance team to "stomp" that beloved yard and win the fancy cheerleading trophy.
And get a load of these funky names! "Collins Pennie ... Pooch Hall, Terrence J, Lil Duval, Tika Sumpter, Kiely Alexis Williams, Keith David, rapper David Banner and music artist Teyena Taylor join "So You Think You Can Dance" runner-up Stephen "tWitch" Boss in the cast." (I love that the rapper has the plainest moniker.) Rob Hardy will direct (he probably is at this very moment, actually) from a script by the guy who penned
Feel the Noise. Hey, writing feature-length rock videos is a specific skill.
The title for the upcoming sequel is (spoiler alert)
Stomp the Yard 2: Homecoming. And yes, I think they're shooting for a theatrical release on this one. For more on what's sure to be the biggest sequel since
Return of the King, stomp your mouse
right here.
Posted Nov 13th 2009 1:33PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Comedy, Music & Musicals, New Releases, Theatrical Reviews, Focus Features

Tethered to reality by only a slender thread, Pirate Radio quickly cuts loose and floats off into its own imaginary layer of the Earth's atmosphere, where only good-hearted, pleasant-thinking, die-hard romantics can survive. Welcome home, Richard Curtis, where have you been?
Writer/director Curtis rose to fame on the basis of his screenplay for Four Weddings and a Funeral, featuring an ensemble of quirky yet appealing men and women chasing love and happiness, followed, notably, by his script for Notting Hill, but he's been writing off-kilter comedy sketches and episodic television for many years. Pirate Radio proves that his gift for writing witty one-liners and creating funny situations remains intact. His skills as a film director and shaper of material are a little more fuzzy and undefined, however.
As with Love, Actually, his previous directorial effort, Pirate Radio (AKA The Boat That Rocked) is filled with episodes that feel randomly assembled, knit together by proximity and happenstance more than narrative necessity. For all the laughter and positive feelings that Pirate Radio generates, it's a lightweight treatment of a potentially heavyweight subject.
Continue reading Review: Pirate Radio
Posted Nov 12th 2009 5:15PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Fandom, Lists

I've always been drawn to radio on the big screen. It seems antithetical -- a sound format being so perfect for a medium full of sound
and imagery. Video killed the radio star ... right? Nevertheless, radio leads to wonderfully aural expression that gives film that extra little something, whether that be the perfectly pitched voice of a radio DJ delighting in word play or the perfectly placed song that evokes any number of emotions. Word play and great music -- they've always been my weakness.
Therefore, naturally, I'm all sorts of excited for this week's cinematic slate, which not only includes disasters, tough women, and fantastic foxes, but also a little flick called
Pirate Radio. This ensemble comedy has been a
long time coming. In fact, it's been
almost a year since we first got to see a trailer for the film that not only features a cast including Nick Frost and Bill Nighy, but also marks the return of Philip Seymour Hoffman to the retro radio seat. Oh yes, Lester Bangs is back, only this time he calls himself The Count.
To get you in the mood for true pirate radio living on a tried and true ship, check out five great on-screen radio moments after the jump. (Warning: Some are NSFW.)
Continue reading Five Radio Flicks That Rocked the Big Screen
Posted Nov 12th 2009 1:32PM by Jenni Miller
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Fandom, Tech Stuff, Distribution

AEG and Action 3D are betting on music lovers that will want to catch their favorite performers in a movie theater -- on the screen, that is. According to
Variety, the two companies have already been getting footage from different festivals for their limited-run, 3D-only concert movies, which will be offered in a similar manner as
U2 3D. The first series of movies will be footage of concerts from Dave Matthews (yay?), Relentless7, Ben Harper, and Gogol Bordello. The only group that sounds like it would wow music fans in 3D is
Gogol Bordello, a gypsy punk band known for their outrageous live shows and songs like "Start Wearing Purple."
However, AEG is also behind the recent release of Michael Jackson's film
This is It, along with Sony, which has made $186 million worldwide so far. While concert movies with built-in audiences like the
Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: The Best of Both Worlds have been similarly successful, I'm not convinced that semi-random concert series will really put bottoms in seats. And for all you Phishheads, AEG has apparently already "filmed several 3D live sets of Phish from Festival 8 in Indio, Calif., in late October. According to [John Rubey, president of Network Live, a division of AEG Live], the company plans to roll out 'best of' edition from Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits as followups to the Matthews feature in 2010." So get your Birks and tie-dye ready to jam out, man!
I think it's a cool idea to offer people the chance to see their favorite bands up close and personal if they can't see them live, but there isn't anything to rival the actual live experience. Granted, you're not usually that close to the stage and some jerk just spilled beer on your shoes and someone else is singing along to every song and/or shouting "WOO!" in your ear, but that's all part of the concert experience, right?
Posted Nov 11th 2009 8:15PM by Matt Bradshaw
Filed under: Action, Music & Musicals, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Box Office Predictions
Christmas came a little early allowing the animated 3D film
A Christmas Carol to lead the box office, but not by as large a margin as many had expected.
The Box was the only one of last week's wide releases to miss the top five, landing in sixth place. Here's the top five:
1. A Christmas Carol: $30 million
2. Michael Jackson's This Is It: $13 million
3. The Men Who Stare at Goats: $12.67 million
4. The Fourth Kind: $12.2 million
5. Paranormal Activity: $8.2 million
We've got two new flicks fighting for your dollars this week:
2012
What's It All About: They say the world will end with not a bang but a whimper, but director Roland Emmerich seems pretty sure it will happen with several kabooms and a motherload of digital effects. John Cusack stars as a man determined to keep his family alive during a global cataclysm predicted by the Mayan calendar.
Why It Might Do Well: Emmerich has already destroyed the world in
Independence Day and
The Day After Tomorrow, so he must be getting pretty good at it by now.
Why It Might Not Do Well: Maybe Emmerich has played his apocalypse card once too often.
Number of Theaters: 3,000
Prediction: $54 million
Pirate Radio
What's It All About: In the 1960s eight DJ's set up shop on a ship off the coast of England and broadcast rock and roll to the masses, much to the chagrin of the British government.
Why It Might Do Well: Phillip Seymour Hoffman is joined by Nick Frost and Bill Nighy, and the classic rock soundtrack sounds amazing.
Why It Might Not Do Well: It's a smaller release, so it won't be breaking the bank.
Number of Theaters: 900
Prediction: $6 million
Here's how I think next weekend will go:
1. 2012
2. A Christmas Carol
3. Michael Jackson's This Is It
4. The Men Who Stare at Goats
5. The Fourth Kind Continue reading Box Office: 2012 Pirates on a Dead Man's Chest
Posted Nov 11th 2009 12:45PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Horror, Music & Musicals, Fandom, Remakes and Sequels, Trailers and Clips, Scenes We Love
I have to tell you that this installment of
Scenes We Love was a close one, because the more I searched for the scene in question from
A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 4: The Dream Master, the more I realized that it was a pretty terrible movie. The fourth installment of the horror franchise saw Freddy looking for some fresh meat after he had worked his way through the original "Elm Street brats". But like I said, this is about the song as well as the movie, so
Dream Master (despite it's failings) lived to earn its very own Songs We Love thanks to
"Anything, Anything", by Dramarama.
Now, no one would blame you if the name isn't ringing a bell, but
Dramarama was an LA-based power pop band that made some inroads to fame before fading into obscurity in the early 90's -- with the exception of an appearance on a VH1 reality show, which seems to be the fate of most 80's bands. The song was used during a scene in which one of our young victims is practicing a martial art that will be utterly useless against Freddie, but one look at
Andras Jones as Rick Johnson and this 13-year-old was in love (although I chose to overlook the
Karate Kid headband). So even though "Anything, Anything" never really became a huge hit for the band, according to legend it is still one of "the most requested songs in KROQ [LA Radio] history" -- which I guess means I'm not the only one with fond memories of this tune.
After the jump: Dramarama's contribution to the Canon of Freddie...Continue reading Scenes (Songs) We Love: Anything, Anything 'Nightmare on Elm St. 4'
Posted Nov 11th 2009 9:48AM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Disney, The Weinstein Co., Movie Marketing

We learned
in October that
Nine was getting pushed back to a Christmas premiere. Since
The Road was already slated for release on the same date, it sounded like this was nothing more than a move to make the film's box office grab as smooth as possible. But maybe it was to plan the massive marketing push.
Variety reports that the Weinstein Company have partnered with Disney/ABC Unlimited to market the film. This "megapact" will mean that
Nine-flavored content will get infused into "a wide variety of shows, including ABC's
Dancing with the Stars." For the dance-centric show, there will be a themed dance number on November 17 with songs and outfits from the film. The push will also work its way into the soaps on ABC -- the big trio of
All My Children, One Life to Live, and
General Hospital. Then there will be a "road-block" style trailer on the 22nd, making it's way onto a bunch of channels, a microsite on ABC.com, and late-night integration.
Inclusion on dancing reality shows make sense, but the rest is a little ridiculous -- both for the potential for over-saturation and this idea of market-injected content. I bet they're just ruing the fact that series get written well in advance and that they couldn't get
Nine-themed fare into the likes of
Grey's, Cougar Town, Lost, etc. And here we used to make fun of obvious product placement. At this rate, I wonder if we can come to expect films to be advertised
in each other, like
Spider-Man trying to make it to Mary Jane's
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows premiere or somesuch.
Do you enjoy big marketing pushes, or does it all get real old real fast?
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