Videodrone's take on the biggest, best, coolest and culty-ist releases of the week
New Releases:
"Cloud Atlas" (Warner), the sprawling, dazzling, ambitious collaboration between "Matrix" makers Lana and Andy Wachowski and Germany's Tom Tykwer weaves together the six distinctive stories in six different eras with a cast that reappears throughout the timelines. At once literal and evasive, this is a film that wears its heart on its beautifully stitched sleeve and its meaning in its design and yet finds so many facets in which to mirror its ideas throughout its incarnations. It failed to connect with audiences on its initial release, but gets a second chance on home video, where its 170-minute length may not be such an issue. Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand. Videodrone's review is here.
Check out MSN's exclusive "Cloud Atlas" infographic and enter to win a Blu-ray combo pack from MSN and Warner Home Video.
"A Glimpse Inside the Mind Of Charles Swan III" (Lionsgate), the first feature from Roman Coppola since "CQ" more than a decade ago, stars Charlie Sheen as a hedonistic, ego-fueled graphic artist facing an early-life crisis. Blu-ray and DVD, also at Redbox.
"Frankie Go Boom" (Universal), a comedy about sibling rivalry and practical joking gone awry starring Charlie Hunnam and Chris O'Dowd "possesses a surprisingly sweet heart," recommends MSN film critic Kat Murphy. Blu-ray and DVD
Plus: the latest reboot of the landmark horror film titled simply "Texas Chainsaw" (Lionsgate, Blu-ray, Blu-ray 3D, DVD, On Demand and at Redbox) and the historical epic "Back to 1942" (Well Go, Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand) from China.
Most releases are also available as digital download and VOD via iTunes, Amazon, and other web retailers and video services.
Browse the complete New Release Rack here
TV on Disc:
The central conflict of "Dexter: The Seventh Season" (Paramount), Showtime's blackly-comic series about TV's favorite serial-killer hero, isn't with another killer. This season Dexter's (Michael C. Hall) adoptive sister Debra (Jennifer Carpenter), who happens to be a police detective, discovers his secret and has to come to terms with the fact that her brother is the killer she's been hunting all these seasons. Family secrets can be so divisive. Blu-ray and DVD. Videodrone's review is here.
"The Bletchley Circle" (PBS) is a self-contained British mystery mini-series set in 1950s London, but it could easily launch a continuing series based on the strength of its characters, a quartet of women who were code breakers during World War II, and its setting. Blu-ray and DVD. Reviewed on Videodrone here.
Film stars Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Kline, and Michael Douglas
Call this "The Hangover" for the AARP set. Starring Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Kline, and Michael Douglas—Academy Award® winners all—"Last Vegas" at least has a prestigious pedigree going for it. Timeliness? Not so much. Nor does it's target audience usually leave the house. For anything except groceries. Or damnably serious Oscar-bait like "The Artist" or "The King's Speech." So, while "Last Vegas" might be a hoot and a half, and will certainly garner massive ratings whenever it premiers on CBS or Turner Movie Classics, a shoe-in for massive box office returns it is not.Mostly silent clip shows off the film's more cinematic aspects
Disney released a promising new teaser for its upcoming "Cars" spinoff "Planes" today, giving us hope that the Dane Cook-led animated flick might not be all that bad. Sure, it still seems primarily designed to sell a boatload of toys—and, hmm, speaking of which, could a Disney's "Boats" be that far off?—but the action sequences are sumptuous enough, and certainly justify the studio's decision to release the project theatrically instead of sending it straight to DVD.Plus Lars von Trier's 'Antichrist,' the original 'The Corsican Brothers,' classic film noir and more
Horror films take top honors in the Netflix new releases this week.
Newly-anointed Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence takes a detour into horror in "House at the End of the Street" (2012), playing the new girl in a neighborhood where a grisly crime wiped out an entire family except for the enigmatic teenage son. Ill-advised curiosity ensues. In words of MSN film critic Glenn Kenny, "originality, or lack thereof, isn't really the movie's problem. Execution is."
"Dead Snow" (2009) – There's blood on the snow when Nazi zombies rise from the powder of the Norwegian Alps to feed on the flesh vacationing innocents in this dryly hilarious horror comedy. Writer/director Tommy Wirkola gives it a macabre sense of splatter humor a la "Evil Dead 2" (complete with zombie hunters armed with chainsaws and other deep woods implements of destruction) without self-conscious wisecracking of the genre, and accomplishes it all with a crisp professionalism.
"Kill List" (2011) is a British hit-man thriller that swerves into a jangly horror film. Directed by Ben Wheatley ("Down Terrace"), the film is "harrowing, inventive, disturbing and shudderingly brisk," in the words of MSN film critic Glenn Kenny. It's also pretty darn dark and very unsettling as it takes viewers down unexpected alleys.
For fans of extreme cinema, here are a couple that will shake up even the hardiest souls. Lars von Trier's "Antichrist" (2009) with Willen Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg is a harrowing portrait of marriage and mourning as a morass of anger, suspicion and power in a diseased world, a vision both beautiful and sour, serious and seriously screwed up. Gaspar Noe's violent "Irreversible" uses the cinema as an assault weapon to tell the story of a loving couple (Monica Bellucci and Vincent Cassel) destroyed by a random rape and the rage-fueled revenge, in reverse: a fever-induced nightmare reimagining of “Memento.”
On the lighter side is "Lagaan" (2001), a sweeping epic-length Bollywood musical that spins romantic triangles, solidarity through teamwork, and simple melodramatic clashes of good and evil into explosions of color, song, and happy endings and climaxes with a three day long cricket match (!) between arrogant British colonial rulers and a scruffy team of underdogs in 19th century India.
Dax Shepard writes, co-directs, and stars in "Hit & Run" (Universal), and action comedy with Kristen Bell, Kristen Chenoweth, and Tom Arnold. MSN film critic Glenn Kenny calls it "one of the summer's most enjoyable surprises, a consistently disarming romantic comedy…"
More recommended new arrivals at Videodrone
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for week of May 14
The Noah Baumbach film follows the exploits of a floundering 27-year-old woman in Brooklyn who is trying to grow up

Frances (Greta Gerwig) lives in New York, but doesn’t really have an apartment. Frances has a best friend named Sophie (Mickey Sumner) but they aren’t really speaking. Frances throws herself into her dreams even as their possible reality dwindles. Frances wants so much more than she has, but lives her life with unaccountable joy and lightness. “Frances Ha” is a modern comic fable in which director and co-writer (with Gerwig) Noah Baumbach explores New York, friendship, class, ambition, failure, and redemption. Filmed in glorious black and white, “Frances Ha” evokes the best of Woody Allen with a little Lena Dunham thrown in for good measure. The film also stars Adam Driver, Charlotte d’Amboise, and Grace Gummer. I spoke with Greta Gerwig in Los Angeles.
MSN Movies: This is such a great character and the film seems like it is a very personal project for you.
Greta Gerwig: It is, and it’s very exciting to finally be able to show it to people. Usually when I’ve acted in things I’ve come to it much later in the process so it’s not as long as a wait until it gets out there. But writing it and casting it and getting it into production and acting in it and the whole editing process—I feel like I’ve lived with it for so long now. So when people like it, you think, “Thank God, because that was two years of my life!”
When you co-write a character like this and then play that character, are there times on set where you think, “Hold it, Frances wouldn’t do that!” Did you and Noah Baumbach have discussions about what was right for Frances while you were making the film or were you always on the same page?
Well, when we were writing it, I actually had to not think about playing the character at all. I just removed myself from that completely otherwise I would have felt very self-conscious and creatively blocked. But once we were on set, we both kind of knew when it was working and when it wasn’t. There were days when it took me a second to find exactly how I needed to do it and to feel Frances’s rhythms and the way she should look and sound but other times it was there very quickly.
It must feel different when you’re the writer and the actor. I’m sure there are times on other movies when you’re struggling a little bit and find yourself thinking, “Who wrote this thing?” But here the answer is, “Oh crap—I did!”
(Laughs.) Yes, there were definitely moments like that! Especially because Noah and I were very specific about words and word order. We didn't really do any improvisation in this movie or changing of lines. People on this movie didn’t “make the lines their own.” We worked really hard in the writing stage to make the script as specific as possible. We had very specific rhythms and sometimes I would get so frustrated because I would be tripping over something that I had written and I would be like, “What does it matter if she says it this way or that way?” And then the writer in me would say, “It does matter! You don’t want other people to mess it up, so now you have to treat it with the same respect.”
Bing: More on Greta Gerwing | More on 'Frances Ha'
I mean this as a total compliment, but it wouldn’t have surprised me if you said, “We had the basic idea for certain scenes but then we just let the actors go.” The dialogue just sounded that natural. But on the other hand, it makes sense to hear that you had a very tight script because some of those scenes could never have seemed as “real” and as uncomfortable if you were improvising that dialogue.
No, and it’s also much easier to disguise certain plot points if you have a solid script. I think that when you’re improvising, you’re not clever enough in the moment to finesse those moments but as writers, you can say, “Okay, this information needs to come out but it has to feel like they're not broadcasting it.” I like to improvise in my actual life, but I’ve gotten to a place with acting where I really enjoy sticking very close to a script. I find it’s more fun to work with actors that way. There are such great actors in this movie and they really get to show what they can do with text.
And obviously there are so many different ways you can approach a line, so I guess as actors you’re always improvising to some extent.
Her personal exploration of her own family's secrets is the subject of a riveting new documentary

What can’t Sarah Polley do? She was a beloved child star in the TV series “Road to Avonlea,” graduated to adult roles in acclaimed indies such as “The Sweet Hereafter,” “Last Night,” and “My Life Without Me,” achieved cult status with her starring role in Zack Snyder’s remake of “Dawn of the Dead,” and got an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay for “Away from Her,” her directorial debut that starred Julie Christie. Last year I spoke to Polley about her second film as writer/director, the poignant “Take This Waltz” starring Michelle Williams and Seth Rogen, and now she's back with “Stories We Tell,” a truly remarkable and very personal documentary about her quest to uncover a big family secret, namely, the identity of her biological father. While her four siblings often joked that Sarah didn’t look that much like them, it was only as an adult that Sarah learned the truth—that her vivacious actress mother, Diane Polley, who died when Sarah was 11, had conceived her during an extramarital affair when she was on the road with a play. But “Stories We Tell” is far more than a talking heads exposé—all of Polley’s family members participate in the film in a big way telling their understanding of the story along with other family friends who knew her mother. Polley weaves this material together with “home movie” footage and excerpts from an explosively honest memoir written and read by Michael Polley, the man she grew up thinking was her biological dad. In giving voice to the ephemeral nature of family truths, Sarah Polley has created an unusual and masterful new documentary. I talked with Polley in Los Angeles.
MSN Movies: I loved this film so much that I can’t stop talking about it. It’s come to the point where people I know are saying, “We get it and we'll go see it. Now shut up already!”
Sarah Polley: That’s awesome! I did that with “There Will Be Blood.” I never stopped talking about it and I kept running into Paul Thomas Anderson because it was the same year that “Away From Her” was nominated and there was a moment where he'd had enough and actually said to me, “Sarah! I get it--you like the film more than ANY-body else in the world!” It’s really great to know that someone’s doing that with my movie!
I think everyone will resonate with the themes of family secrets and the different ways we tell family stories. My sister and I are constantly fighting about “it didn’t happen that way, it happened this way.” Your siblings are all so great in the film. What would you have done if one of them had been like, “Ugh, you can’t make this film! I refuse to participate!”
I think that if any of them had had serious objections, I probably wouldn’t have made it. To be honest, I was amazed at how agreeable and open to it they all were. That was a really amazing advantage to have.
Bing: More on Sarah Polley | More on 'Stories We Tell'
You seem like a fairly private person—is doing press for this film difficult? I mean, how can we NOT ask questions that are really personal when we’re talking about this film?
I think that’s part of the deal. I think when you open up a film like this, anything that’s in the film is fair game to talk about. I’ve actually strangely enjoyed this process. Usually I kind of dread promoting a film because it feels like you’re selling something—it feels very separate from your job and you end up answering the same questions over and over. But with this one the questions are never the same. It feels like an ongoing part of the process of the film—it’s about storytelling, it’s about different versions of the same event, it’s about interpretation and misinterpretation. I think it’s very interesting to see the different perspectives that people take away from the film and how they project their own family lives onto it. I love that I’m hearing as much about other people’s families, like what you just told me [Sarah and I had just had a long discussion about the personal connections I felt to the film based on my own family story] than I'm talking about my own. To me, those exchanges are such a gift!
Well, speaking of very personal questions, when you found out about your biological dad, did you have any resentment toward your mother for not telling you about it when she knew she was dying?
I’m not sure she did know that she was dying. She probably did, but I was only eleven at the time and I’m not sure how you’d talk to an eleven-year-old about this stuff.
Do you think she mostly kept it a secret to protect your dad?
Yes. To be honest, I really think it was the right decision to not tell me. I think it’s great when people know from the beginning of their lives who their biological parents are, obviously, but I also think it’s fine to not know. I don’t know what it would have added to my life as a child except confusion. I think as an adult it was really interesting information to discover. Maybe she would have told me as an adult, I do wonder about that. But I think to put that on a child at the age of ten or eleven would be kind of an odd decision.
Was she ever part of the joking about your parentage that your family members did? Or did that all happen after she died?
That was after she died. I don’t know if any of this information would have ever come out if she had lived.
Have you thought about what her reaction would be to the film?
On fight-scene envy, the future of science, technobabble and comic relief.
As physician Leonard 'Bones' McCoy and Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott, Karl Urban and Simon Pegg get to provide the Enterprise with its brainpower -- and, as actors, provide the film with more than a few sidelong laughs and moments of meta-commentary. We spoke with Urban and Pegg in London about jargon, fusion, fights, accents and more.
MSN Movies: Playing Scotty and Dr. McCoy, do you guys ever get fight scene envy? You get great lines, you get great action bits, but you two don't exactly get to turn the five into one and put that fist into anyone's faces.
Karl Urban: (Laughs) I like that. That's a good one.
Do you have fight-scene envy?
Urban: No I don't, actually, and it's because I've done quite a few films where I get to do that. So for me it's a real pleasure to play a character that's based partially in comedy and in medicine.
Simon Pegg: I actually got to deliver what's called a 'Glasgow kiss' in this film.
A head-butt.
BING: More on the 'Glasgow kiss' l BING: More on the National Ignition Facility
Pegg: Yeah.
Urban: You did. You get to fight in this film.
Pegg: I had a fight sequence, which was a lot of fun.
Urban: I'm so envious.
Pegg: So you do get it! So that was nice, but Kirk in the end is the real brawler. So yeah, we all look at Chris, although Zach gets some extraordinary fight scenes.
He also has that great action run like something out of "Terminator 2," the whole stiff-elbow ready-to-kill.
Urban: The Tom Cruise action run!
The fest kicks off with an okay 'Gatsby' and the button-pushing 'Heli'
Having endured wintry delays which would ultimately cancel his plans to attend Sundance last year, one colleague tweeted (and I'm paraphrasing): "Why couldn't Robert Redford have been into water-skiing?" The Cannes Film Festival seems to answer that question; after all, where better to spend hours upon end within dark rooms than in the sunny south of France?movie news
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