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This award-winning documentary does a lot more than preach to the choir

Acclaimed environmental photographer James Balog was once a skeptic about climate change, but no more. As a result of his his multi-year Extreme Ice Survey project, he has documented irrefutable proof of the changes that global warming is wreaking on our planet. In Jeff Orlowski’s new documentary, “Chasing Ice,” Balog’s revolutionary time-lapse photography records what is happening to the world’s glaciers. His hauntingly beautiful images compress years into seconds and capture ancient mountains of ice in motion as they disappear at a breathtaking (and terrifying) rate.
Traveling with a team of young adventurers across the brutal Arctic, Balog relentlessly pursues one of the biggest stories facing humanity, a story that has polarized many in this country. I sat down with Balog and Orlowski in a Los Angeles hotel room, far from the life-threatening environments where they’ve spent the past several years working on this powerful film.
MSN Movies: It must have been so incredible to spend time in these far-flung and beautiful locations—not to mention insanely dangerous and terrifying!
Jeff Orlowski: Oh, but that’s the fun stuff!
James Balog: I know! Some of that seems like a distant memory now and I’m grieving the fact that we’re not still out there in the field!
James, when you started your Extreme Ice Survey, was it always in the back of your head that this might make a good film?
James: Absolutely not! It was not part of the mindset at all.
Jeff: I really had to twist his arm!
Why?
James: We had enough to worry about just getting out there to do our work. I didn’t want to think about another camera crew or any additional fundraising. We were already financially stretched to the limit!
Jeff: It took a while to win him over, but when I realized we had a really compelling story, I brought a team on including the producer who did “The Cove.” And I told James that we’d do all the fundraising, he wouldn’t have to think about any of that.
James: I thought he was smoking dope at the time…but he’s a confident devil and manages to pulls things off that seem pretty impossible!
That sounds like a good description of you, too! Jeff, filming in those harsh environments had to be one of the biggest challenges. Did you call on James’ expertise as an environmental photographer?
Jeff: Oh, certainly. And there were a lot of days where the weather was so bad we didn’t even try to go out there.
James: Yeah, in some of those storms, if you tried to go out and shoot, the cameras would be ruined in about twenty minutes.
I assume you’ve ruined your share of cameras over the years?
The Coen Brothers' latest film brings the '60s NYC folk scene back to life with a lot of love
Rating: 4/5 starsFive features celebrating the glories of French silent cinema
"French Masterworks: Russian Émigrés in Paris 1923-1928" (Flicker Alley) presents of the DVD debut of five silent classics from Film Albatros, a French studio founded by Russian artists: "The Burning Crucible," "Kean," "The Late Mathias Pascal," "Gribiche," and "The New Gentlemen."
Three of the films star Ivan Mosjoukine, the great Russian actor who fled the revolution and landed in Paris, and the other two are directed by Jacques Feyder. All of them are examples of the sophisticated filmmaking coming out of France in the twenties.
Which is not to say that they are all masterpieces -- "The Burning Crucible" (1923), which not only stars Mosjoukine but is written and directed by the actor, is inventive and full of lively images and playful techniques but is all over the place and jumps willy-nilly through styles and episodes -- but they are all tremendously entertaining and full of filmmaking energy. Mosjoukine plays eleven roles in "The Burning Crucible," including the leading role of Detective Z, a man of many disguises, and Mosjoukine the director rolls Russian formalism, German expressionism, and French surrealism together in a simplistic but richly imaginative story that at times borders on craziness of Louis Feuillade's serials of the previous decade.
Mosjoukine also stars in "Kean" (1924) as the great 19th century stage actor Edmund Kean and in "The Late Mathias Pascal" (1926), the fantasy epic directed by Marcel L'Herbier that Flicker Alley released on Blu-ray earlier this year. I reviewed it for Videodrone here.
The final pair of films in the set are from Jacques Feyder.
Continue reading at Videodrone
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for week of May 14
The fest's first full day offers tricks, teens, trains and technological wonderment
Another colleague -- a different one from he of my first dispatch -- had greeted me at the Nice airport earlier in the week with a smile and a word of warning: "Everything in Cannes is hard." I suppose that a reality check might be better appreciated by a first-timer than delusions of convenience, but as the days went on, each new hurdle only seemed to further validate that notion.Sofia Coppola takes on the kid crooks who both exploited and embraced tabloid culture
Rating: 3.5/5 starsOf course it will be in 3D

Sony Pictures Entertainment announced this week via press release that they've picked up the worldwide distribution rights to the "eagerly anticipated" film from Rovio Entertainment, which will unsurprisingly be an animated 3D feature (want to get us interested in an "Angry Birds" movie? make it live action). The film does not yet have a writer, director, or voice cast in place, but while we'll make fun of such a film until the pigs come home, Sony has certainly had great luck with their other animated properties, including "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs," "Arthur Christmas," and "The Pirates! Band of Misfits," so they will likely trot out some big name talent to puff up their new prize property.
Bing: More on Rovio Entertainment
There's also no word on the finer plot details of the film, but we can only assume that it will center on some pissed off birds, desperate to exact revenge on the green pigs who have stolen their eggs. Perhaps the film will be an origin story of sorts, one that explains why the pigs are green and why they would steal oodles of eggs from some birds with anger issues. There's so many questions to answer!
Remember all the good times? And also that other movie?
Let's all take a moment to remember the first "Hangover" film, a relatively simple story about three idiots, a tiger, a naked man, a baby, a stripper, Las Vegas, and a quest to find a dear friend. Remember how things seemed so innocent back in 2009, when the worst thing that could happen was that dear friend Doug (Justin Bartha) wouldn't be found in time to make it to his own wedding? Remember how shocking things like Mike Tyson and an abandoned baby and a visit to a strip club were back then? Remember the singing? Oh, the good old days.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.movie news
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