Happy Birthday: Judy Garland (1922–1969)

judygarland.jpgHappy Birthday Judy Garland (1922–1969)

Born: Frances Ethel Gumm
June 10, 1922 in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, USA

Died: June 22, 1969 (age 47) in Chelsea, London, England, UK

Married to: Mickey Deans (15 March 1969 – 22 June 1969) (her death)

Mark Herron (14 November 1965 – 9 January 1969) (divorced)

Sidney Luft (8 June 1952 – 19 May 1965) (divorced) (2 children)

Vincente Minnelli (15 June 1945 – 29 March 1951) (divorced) (1 child)

David Rose (28 July 1941 – 8 June 1944) (divorced)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

THE WIZARD OF OZ 1939The Wizard of Oz
1939
dir. Victor Fleming
Starring
Garland
Frank Morgan

MOVIE POSTERA STAR IS BORN
1954
dir. George Cukor
Stars:
Judy Garland
James Mason

SEE TOP 100 JUDY GARLAND PHOTOS

1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
and Anne Hathaway
and Barbra Streisand
and Burt Lancaster
and Carnegie Hall
and Children
and Clark Gable
and Frank Sinatra
and Fred Astaire
and Gene Kelly
and Liza Minnelli
and Lorna Luft
and Marilyn Monroe
and Mickey Deans
and Mickey Rooney
and Mother
and Shirley Temple
and Sid Luft
and The Hoodoo Costume
and Toto
and Tyrone Power
and Van Johnson
and Vincent Minnelli
Andy Warhol
Art
as a Child
as Betsy Booth
as Dorothy
as Esther Smith
as Ginger Gray
as Jean Hansen
as Veronica Fisher
as Vicki Lester
Beautiful
Black and White
Breasts
Cartoon
Cleavage
Close Up
Color
Cosmopolitan
Costume
Curly Hair
Dancing
Dress

Earrings
Eyebrows
Eyes
Face
Fashion
Gorgeous
Gown
Grave Stone
Hair
Hairstyle
Headshot
in A Star is Born
in Annie Get Your Gun
in Babes on Broadway
in Blackface
in Everybody Sing
in Girl Crazy
in I Could Go On Singing
in Meet Me in St. Louis
in The Good Old Summertime
in The Wizard of Oz
in Till The Clowds Roll By
in Ziegfeld Girl
Jewelry
Last Role
Legs
Life Magazine
Lips
Lipstick
Measurements
Model
Nightgown
Nose
Older
On Drugs
Photo Shoot
Pigtails
Pose
Poster
Record Albums
Red Dress
Screen Album
Sexy
Shoes
Singing
Smile
Style
Teeth
TV Guide
Walk of Fame
Wallpaper
Young

Happy Birthday: DJ Qualls

djqualls.jpgHappy Birthday actor DJ Qualls

Born: Donald Joseph Qualls
June 10, 1978 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA

QUOTES:

You know, so many people say TV makes you stupid. But it had the complete opposite effect on me. It kept me from having a really bad Southern accent.

The idea of sitting in a booth, and having someone pay me to sign autographs, seems so gross to me.

My face is distinct. It’s hard to confuse me with anyone else.
I’ve lived so frugally for so long. I have to have that financial security or the world feels out of control for me.

Celebrity is a gift. I’m very lucky.

I have been to Graceland a hundred times. Every kid in middle Tennessee has this night where it hits midnight, and they are like, ‘Let’s go to Graceland!’ It’s a rite of passage. I did it.

I grew up in a town with no movie theater. TV was my only link to the outside world. Film wasn’t such a big deal to me. It was TV. So much so, that when I meet TV stars now… Not my co-workers, but real TV stars, I get nervous. I freak out around them.

I grew up in a rural area. I grew up in deep southern middle Tennessee, probably about thirty miles from the Alabama border. There’s nothing there, really. And the TV was my link to the outside world. It’s what kept me from going into factory employment. It’s what made me want to go to college. It was really inspiring.

Happy Birthday: Gina Gershon

ginagershon.jpgHappy Birthday actor Gina Gershon

Born: Gina L. Gershon
June 10, 1962 in Los Angeles, California, USA

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

movie posterFACE/OFF
1997
dir. John Woo
Stars
John Travolta
Nicholas Cage

THE INSIDERThe Insider
1999
dir. Michael Mann
starring
Russell Crowe
Pacino
P.S. I Love You
2007
Directed by Richard LaGravenese
Starring
Swank
Gerard Butler

MOVIE POSTERKILLER JOE
2012
dir. William Friedkin
Stars:
Matthew McConaughey
Emile Hirsch

MOVIE POSTERMAN ABOUT TOWN
2006
dir. Mike Binder
Stars:
Ben Affleck
Rebecca Romijn

Happy Birthday: Elizabeth Hurley

elizabethhurley.jpgHappy Birthday actor Elizabeth Hurley

Born: Elizabeth Jane Hurley
June 10, 1965 in Basingstoke, Hampshire, England, UK

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

AUSTIN POWERS MOVIE POSTERAustin Powers: International Man of Mystery
1997
dir. Jay Roach
Starring
Mike Myers
Hurley

AUSTIN POWERS 2Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
1999
dir. Jay Roach
starring
Mike Myers
Heather Graham
The Weight of Water
2000
dir. Kathryn Bigelow
Starring
Sarah Polley
Sean Penn

 Best of GOSSIP GIRL
Sexy Teen TV SHOW

PERMANENT MIDNIGHTPermanent Midnight
1998
dir. David Veloz
Cast
Ben Stiller
Maria Bello

Happy Birthday: Shane West

shanewest.jpgHappy Birthday actor Shane West

Born: Shannon Bruce Snaith
June 10, 1978 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA

QUOTES:

(On girls) ” The first thing I notice is their eyes and smile. I’m not a big make-up fan; I like them to be natural.”

(On moving when he was younger) ” My sister and I were the only white people in school. It was the nicest group of kids I’ve ever run into.”

While watching the New Orleans Saints (on television), I got angry and punched my bed, and then my remote control flew up and hit me in the head. My girlfriend didn’t stop laughing for an hour.

What’s not to love about Maggie? I mean, she’s the consummate professional, and she can kick some serious butt. She has something that’s real- she’s very caring. And she brings those emotions to her character.

Happy Birthday: Leelee Sobieski

leeleesobieski.jpgHappy Birthday actor Leelee Sobieski

Born: Liliane Rudabet Gloria Elsveta Sobieski
June 10, 1983 in New York City, New York, USA

Married to: Adam Kimmel (31 August 2010 – present) (2 children)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

POSTERMAX
2002
dir. Menno Meyjes
Starring:
John Cusack
Noah Taylor

MOVIE POSTERTHE WICKER MAN
2006
dir. Neil LaBute
Stars:
Nicolas Cage
Ellen Burstyn

88 Minutes
2008
Directed by Jon Avnet
Starring
Al Pacino
Alicia Witt

PUBLIC ENEMIES Movie PosterPublic Enemies
2009
dir. Mann
Starring
Johnny Depp
Christian Bale

Today’s Birthdays: June 9th

Happy Birthday Today; James Newton Howard, Robert Cummings (1910–1990), David Koepp, Keesha Sharp, Josh Hamilton, Danielle Chuchran, Gloria Reuben, Aaron Sorkin, Michaela Conlin, Michael J. Fox, Johnny Depp, Natalie Portman, Mae Whitman

Movie Review: CHEVALIER (Greece 2015) ***

chevalier.jpgCHEVALIER (Greece 2015) ***
Directed by Athina Rachel Tsangari

Starring: Efthymis Filippou, Athina Rachel Tsangari

Review by Gilbert Seah

Greek director Athina Rachel Tsangari broke into the art-house cinema circuit in 2010 with her feminine study in ATTENBERG. Like ATTENBERG, CHEVALIER is a deadpan comedy of manners, so deadpan that much of the humour may be missed. However, the females in her previous films are now replaced by six males – all stuck on a yacht in the Aegean Sea, playing an absurd game in which the winner gets to wear the CHEVALIER ring as a reward. What the game requires is each member to grade every other on personal mental and physical challenges, that are determined by the grader himself. So, hilariously, each go about with a notebook taking notes on every other. The winner is the ‘Best in General’.

CHEVALIER has a good premise judging from the popularity of reality shows like BIG BROTHER these days. The difference is that CHEVALIER is a fictionalized reality show but one in which the director allows her assemble cast to react with each other. The fact that all the participants are constantly being scrutinized on what they don’t know makes it all the more hilarious. The difference between this and Big Brother is that no one gets voted out, they cannot form alliances and the prize is one of ego.

Tsangari’s last two features were about women. Her decision to make a film on men instead of women as well as to include a gay couple makes her film even more relevant. The chevalier game is proposed by the men out of boredom. One immediately wonders what would come to mind if the participants were female. Men have been known always to be competitive and the film shows males in their extreme. When watching the film, it should be borne in mind that the film is a look at men from a feminine perspective.

The Aegean sea and the rocky landscape of the surrounding islands make stunning cinematography. The modern yacht with all the amenities is also gorgeous to be on.

Tsangari’s ATTENBERG was really slow, artsy and about women. I could not get into that feature and was not looking forward to CHEVALIER. CHEVALIER took me my surprise. Absurd, hilarious, relevant and absorbing, Tsangari has proven herself apt at films dealing with the nature of human beings.

A contest among males would inevitably lead to a segment with a contest of cock size. This truth occurs in one funny segment ins which a contender argues that his non-erection that morning could be a result of a bad dream in which his accuser was murdered, and that accuser could have vouched for his big dick in another instance when he had screwed someone in front of him.

All the characters are equally interesting. It takes a while for the audience to be able to identify each character as being different from another. As far as who will win the contest or which character is the most interesting, viewers will likely not pick the same person. The film does not give any real reason for the six assembling in the yacht except for a few like one older bullying brother, Yannis (Yorgos Pirpassopoulos) allowing his younger brother Dimitris (Makis Papadimitriou) out of feeling sorry for him.

Like the other Greek film auteur Yorgos Lanthimos’ THE LOBSTER, Tsangari offers audiences another society within our living one. Perhaps this is a reflection of what is desired as a result of what’s happening with the Greeks current economic crisis. CHEVALIER won Best Film at the London Film Festival.

Movie Review: THE STEPS (Canada 2015)

the_stepsTHE STEPS (Canada 2015) **
Directed by Andrew Currie

Starring: Emmanuelle Chriqui, James Brolin, Jason Ritter, Christine Lahti, Kate Corbett

Review by Gilbert Seah

THE STEPS of the movie title to the members of a step-family. There is every variation from stepmother, stepfather to stepmothers and stepsisters in this comedy about a dysfunctional step-family.

The setting is the family’s reunion at a lake house in picturesque Parry Sound, a small town in Northern Ontario. The patriarch, wealthy publishing magnate, Ed (James Brolin) has married the love of his life, a lovely, bubbly good-berated Sherry (Christine Lahti) and wants everyone over in order to convince a social worker that the happy family is perfect for the adoption of a Chinese girl.

The story’s main focus could be any member of the family, but it chooses failed investment banker, Ed’s son, Jeff (Jason Ritter) as the one. Whether this is the correct choice makes no difference, as long as the story has an anchor that puts everyone else into perspective. Jeff arrives with his party animal sister, Marla (Emmanuelle Chriqui). They meet Sherry’s children, pot-smoking half-East Indian Samir (Vinay Virmani), David (Benjamin Arthur) and Keith (Steven McCarthy). They do not get along.

Director Andrew Currie directed the zombie comedy FIDO a decade or so back – another family based comedy in which zombies could be trained as a pet. His comedy sense seems largely muddled in THE STEPS – a pity as FIDO was a very well received and hilarious comedy.

The script by Robyn Harding contains lots of potential for comedy. The fact that half of the siblings are American (Ed’s kids) and the other half Canadian (Sherry’s kids) opens humour to be poked at the different cultures. Jeff knocks over a stuffed moose in one scene and David angrily complains that the national animal is not respected. The many siblings from different backgrounds also offer other avenues for humour. The pot smoking allows Jeff to get very high; the party animal Marla is caught giving Keith a blow-job and David blasts Jeff with 7 hits of paintballs. Still, it is a disappointment then that Currie’s film is hardly funny. The jokes are mildly funny at best and the laugh-out loud segments are very few and far between.

Performances are largely wasted. Christian Lahti, so good in her early films like HOUSEKEEPING has nothing much to do here but to smile, complement everyone and lead silly ice-breaker games. The segment on paintball, the greatest potential for humour hardly generates any laughs at all.

When Ed tells Sherry at the film’s mid-point,that his children will come through at the end, the film really dips into predictability. Jeff turns into the perfect son, bringing the family together (literally) into getting the Chinese girl adopted.

The question is whether an audience wishes to see a dysfunctional family of Americans and Canadians eventually come together with silly jokes and pointless humour? The answer is one big ‘no’. But if the film turned out as funny as Currie’s last film FIDO, all might have been forgiven.

Movie Review: Warcraft: The Beginning (2016)

warcraft.jpgWARCRAFT (USA 2016) ***
Directed by Duncan Jones

Starring: Travis Fimmel, Paula Patton, Ben Foster, Dominic Cooper, Toby Kebbell

Review by Gilbert Seah

The phrase ‘based on a video game’ should scare serious movie goers from this CGI blockbuster extravaganza. Based on the Blizzard Entertainment Warcraft series which consisted of 5 core games, this film is actually based just on the first one. WARCRAFT is set in the human Kingdom of Azeroth, threatened by an Orc invasion before Azeroth was expanded into new continents of Kalimdor, Northrend and Pandaria, allowing the introduction of new characters like the Night Elves.

The story in nutshell involves humans fighting against the Orcs as they invade through a portal. The battle lasts from the start to the end of the film. There are several main characters, humans and good Orcs to distract audiences from a basically non-existent story.

The Orcs come from another world called Draenor to invade Azeroth. The warrior Lothar (Travis Fimmel) fights for his king (Dominic Cooper) who relies on the suspicious Guardian, Medivh (Ben Foster) who has taken to the dark side, and is responsible for opening the dreaded portal. Meanwhile, the young warlock Khadgar (Ben Schnetzer) lands a hand. The Orcs are led by an evil Gul’dan (Daniel Wu), that a good Orc chieftain recognizes should be stopped. The characters help to liven the video game movie up several notches.

The film is best watched in IMAX 3-D – forget the small extra cost. It is difficult not to get into the action on a film in 3-D IMAX. The special and video effects, production design by Gavin Bocquet) and costume design all look the more convincing. This is director Duncan Jones blockbuster directorial debut after making small films like MOON and SOURCE CODE.
I entered the screening with the lowest expectations after all the bad hype about the movie. But truthfully, WARCRAFT is not bad. It is better watching an expensive blockbuster that is difficult to make than a well reviewed low budget film with maybe just two characters. On has to give credit for effort put in.

WARCRAFT ends with the obvious set-up for a sequel. Judging from other critic reviews so far, WARCRAFT has been panned. But for video game fans, this might be the fun film summer has promised. The film has already made $45 million in China on opening day breaking all records for a weekday opening day. So it looks like a sequel will likely be in the making with Night Elves.

See WARCRAFT for what it is – guilty entertainment with super special CGI effects. And Remember – to see it in 3-D IMAX.