Just in
case you haven't gotten your quota of movie-related bizarre today, here's one that's sure to satisfy. The BBC was
videotaping an interview with Wener Herzog about 2005 movie Grizzly
Man, a documentary about how young environmentalists Timothy Treadwell and Amie Huguenard were killed by bears
while attempting to live among them in Alaska. (The
movie was reviewed this past August by our own Ryan Stewart.) Cue the bizarre: while filming an outside scene, some
miscreant shot at Herzog with an air rifle, apparently hitting him in the abdomen. Herzog insisted he wasn't hurt, and
said he didn't want the BBC to try and chase down the offender.The bizarro scene is even more amazing considering the interview that follows. At the interview's 4:00 minute mark, we see Herzog sitting with Treadwell's ex-girlfriend, listening to the tape that Treadwell made during the attack; the lens cap was on Treadwell's video camera, so only the sound was captured. Herzog whispers to the woman: "Julie, you must never listen to this." "I know, Werner," she replies tearfully, "I'm never going to." (Herzog chose not to include the audio in his film.) In another clip, Herzog describes Treadwell's irrational fearlessness of nature, and his belief that the natural world was in "balance and harmony". "I believe the common denominator of the universe is not harmony," intones Herzog, "but chaos, hostility, and murder."
Maybe the shooter was just trying to drive the point home. Read
I loved this article's description of this year's entries at the Berlin Film
Festival as having no consistent theme except "a prevailing mood of harsh reality". Apparently, this year's
lineup at the Fest is marked by " brutal murder, drug addiction, political corruption, exorcism and rape". In
other words, it's a lot like the news - except that it stars Alan Rickman and Heath Ledger. Movies set to screen at
Berlin include
Now that the whole "I hate you, you hate me" venom has been
cleared up between Disney and Pixar - with the former slurping up the latter for a pretty penny - it seems that the
newly-crafted Frankenstein of animation is coming out with fresh news for fans every week. Today brings word that
Disney has announced that Ratatouille, a planned Pixar flick about a rat who lives in a French restaurant,
will release in Summer 2007, which will have it premiering a couple months after the late-spring release of
Mon Dieu! It appears that the French are losing their taste for homegrown
films - just as demand for them outside of the country is growing. According to the AFP, France rode the international
success of films such as
So...what did you do this weekend? If you lived in
Seattle, you likely spent it at a friend's house or in a local bar, filling your Sunday evening with many tears and
much gnashing of teeth. (Of course, if you're the kind of geek who reads Cinematical daily, you likely spent your
Sunday evening finding those people and reveling in schadenfreude. I'm just saying.) If you were George
Clooney, however, you spent the weekend in Santa Barbara, California, where you picked up an award recognizing you as a
Modern Master of film. Clooney is no stranger to the Santa Barbara Film Fest, having premiered his directorial debut,
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, at the festival. Clooney, looking all de-
With
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