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Demographic acronyms reflect holiday choices in Superbreak study
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Shervin Youssefian (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1352346/) is a young 27-year old Armenian filmmaker who took filmmaking to a whole new level. After graduating from the University of Northridge, he immediately founded Miran Films; a Los Angeles...
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Moe, Larry And Curly
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Movie Industry Asks Grandpa for $600,000 for Four Movies
A 67-year-old man was sued by the movie industry for his 12 year old grandson's movie downloads. Apparently, the kid downloaded four movies - three of which they already owned. For this, the movie industry asked for a settlement of four thousand...
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Smart and Smarter
RATING: A
After making a list of fascinatingly simple and moving short films, including Color Blind, Shervin Youssefian (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1352346/) explodes onto the Hollywood scene with this superb low-budgeter that combines film noir with comedy with thriller and manages to still come out as a believable contemporary work of art. The film weaves in and out at a lighting pace and you're out of the theatre before you can release your breath. "The film was packed with twists and humor and it felt more like a 30 minute film because of its pace than the hour and a half film that it is," says Alberto Finna, one of the enthusiastic viewers at a test screening.
Machiavelli Hangman (http://www.hangmanmovie.com) had been buzzing around the internet circuit as the to-beat film of 2006 despite its incredible low-budget of 150k. In a year that produced such major studio films like Batman Begins, War of the Worlds and later Superman Returns, it is refreshing to see that there are smaller films that get some breathing time.
Interestingly enough, Machiavelli Hangman is very much like the popular Crash that starred a list of A-listers like Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle and Matt Dillan. These types of films that tell multiple stories at once and let the audience focus on more than one subplot are becoming increasingly popular because of their interactive value. "Finally, Hollywood is starting to produce films that have
something to say and leave a lot of it for us to interpret," adds Finna.
Memento surprised many studio executives who had doubts about its performance at the box-office when it gained momentum and was head to head with the bigger honchos that year. The doubts were understandable about Christopher Nolan's arthouse film because Memento doesn't have the conventional narrative style as most films. The editor of the film who was later that year nominated for an Oscar chose to present the film backwards. This was a technique that was never attempted before, out of fear of losing the audience's attention.
Another arthouse film that enjoyed much success with audiences domestically and abroad was David Lynch's much acclaimed Mulholland Dr. that many believe is a twisted adaptation of Disney's Alice in Wonderland. The film won Lynch a Director's Award at the Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for an Academy Award for screenwriting.
Modern filmmakers seem to be catching on to the trend and they are offering more material to think about to the audience, instead of simply chewing the information and feeding it to the moviegoers. Audiences are getting smarter and the films have to keep up.
About the author:
Patrick Aleezada is a movie reviewer. He has giving a Rating of "A" to the upcoming movie release called, Machiavelli Hangman (http://www.hangmanmovie.com).
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