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82nd Academy Awards: JXM PIck the Winners - Wrap Up
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The little golden boys have been handed out and the worst dressed lists are making their rounds. But check out how we did in our predictions! You may want to consider us for your next Oscar Pool. Er, scratch that, we can't be held accountable for what you do with your money. |
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82nd Academy Awards: JXM PIck the Winners
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Rock Paper Scissors! Rock Paper Scissors! The childhood game of chance comes to life in this mockumentary The Flying Scissors where we watch half a dozen kooky characters compete in the hardcore NRPS tournament. Did you raise an eyebrow? That's what we thought. But we love oddball humour. |
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Drugs, sex and rock n' roll - oh my! UK writer/director darling Richard Curtis graces us with his latest romance *ahem bromance Pirate Radio which tells the story of a crew of misfit radio djs who do everything in their power to stick it to the British man. Chow got the chance to check out the rockin' boat and you can read it all here! |
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The name Quentin Tarantino has quickly become synonomous with blood and the term "cult classic." After his highly praised Kill Bill series, Tarantino returns with his darkly comedic period film slash spaghetti western slash espionage flick Inglourious Basterds. We're tempted to say 'starring Brad Pitt' but that doesn't do Tarantino justice...
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After five days filled with live music and cool flicks, we wrap up North by Northeast for those who missed out. We give you the rundown on what you can do on a budget. And for those with the stamina of a horse, get yourself a wristband and you can bar hop till the break of dawn. Well maybe not dawn literally, but pretty close. Read all of the highlights of the festival here! |
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@ NXNE: City Sonic, Cancer Bats at the Adrift Clubhouse
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NXNE's film festival showcases the Adrift Clubhouse and the Cancer Bats attachment to its DIY punk attitude in this City Sonic episode. Directed by Bruce McDonald who brought us the cult favourite Hard Core Logo, he pushes the height of the City Sonic series with his distinct directing style. |
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@ NXNE: Depeche Mode, The Posters Came from the Walls
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We continue to explore NXNE's film festival portion and came across this interesting UK doc Depeche Mode: The Posters Came from the Walls, focusing on Depeche Mode fans' obsession and fantasy from around the world. Get it? They came from the walls. Depeche Mode did. Nevermind. |
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NXNE's film festival component doesn't fall short, bringing us some of the best and coolest flicks on music. Pavane is no expception, being a unique and weighty short film that was filled with all sorts of surprises. |
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@ NXNE: Low, You May Need a Murderer
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Dutch director David Kleijwegt's Low: You May Need a Murderer is a portrait documentary on Alan Sparhawk, devout Mormon and ever-challenging singer/songwriter. NXNE brings us Kleijwegt's latest to the masses and we have lots to say. |
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@ NXNE: City Sonic - Tyler Stewart, Barenaked Ladies
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We take on Toronto's North by Northeast film and music festival, showcasing some of the best the fest has to offer. We'll be your eyes and ears to the whole experience and we're starting with a short film, following Tyler Stewart of Barenaked Ladies fame as he takes us through the city's landmark hotspots that shaped BNL's music. The City Sonic project debuts at NXNE and we give you the quick rundown. |
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Spiderman director Sam Raimi returns to his roots that made the Evil Dead series a cult hit. With Drag Me to Hell Sam brings back those lost elements that made Hitchcock Hitchcock. |
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Probably one of the most well-known boxers of all time, the life and career of Mike Tyson is without a doubt both a whirlwind of achievement and very questionable behaviour. The limited release Tyson attempts to give us the benefit of the doubt, but is this documentary really a truthful take on a man that we've all come to know as another celebrity trainwreck? |
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We delve into the heart of independent filmmaking with the tiny yet impressive New York Lately written and directed by NY resident, Gary King. Juggling a handful of storylines and even more characters, Chow breaks it all down for you. |
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What would you do if you had one week to live? Its a concept that we see frequently in movies but its an idea that we seldom dare think about. And with two things going against One Week - a "cliché" concept and being Canadian - can it rise above kitschy Canadiana and been there, done that storylines? |
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With the accessability of cameras today, just about anybody can call themselves a filmmaker. So its rare when someone comes along and has the work ethic and attitude of a true artist - getting down and dirty and digging deep into your pockets for the sake of your art. Officially selected for the Big Apple Film Festival, ...Around by true indie filmmaker and graduate of New York's School of Visual Arts, has been gaining speed in the indie film scene and it was a delight for it to cross our path. |
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The 81st Academy Awards: JXM Picks the Winners - Wrap Up
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The highly anticipated 81st Academy Awards were a huge hit and will be Hollywood talk for weeks to come. With Hugh Jackman hosting and amazing musical highlights, the ceremony was far from stiff, and there were plenty of dresses to take up pages in the fashion magazines. But what about the awards? Check it out here! |
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The 81st Academy Awards: JXM Picks the Winners
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Hot on the heels of The Golden Globes, comes the much anticipated Academy Awards among movie (and celebrity) lovers. A-List stars will walk the red carpet on February 22nd, their dresses scrutinized, the jewels bodyguarded, and of course, statues to be handed out. Wait, there are awards at this thing? Read it here to see who JXM picks as the winners. |
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Liam Neeson stars as the ex-CIA agent who is hellbent on recovering his daughter from sex traffickers in Taken. With a mix of Bourne shutzpah and an unlikely hero, is Taken worth your ten bucks at the cinema? Read it here to find out! |
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Kate Winslet took the Golden Globe home for her portrayal of a mid century housewife in the highly praised Revolutionary Road. Director Sam Mendes returns to the theme of suburban angst, after the now classic American Beauty. But will it have the same staying power? Read it here to find out. |
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The 66th Golden Globes: JXM Picks the Winners - Wrap Up
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The dresses glittered, the tuxes pressed and the awards were handed out. So how did JXM do? Check out whether you should be using us a reference for your next award pool here! |
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The 66th Golden Globes: JXM Picks the Winners
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The Globes are upon us again and JXM takes a stab at picking the winners. Or least who we think should win. Check it out here! |
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For the Record: Britney Spears Circus
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After a whirlwhind of erratic behaviour and a failed comeback, Britney Spears returns yet again with a new record Circus and a new MTV documentary - Brtiney: For the Record. Kate reviews both the film and the record and gives you her take on the Britney phenomenon. Will she set the record straight about shaving her head? The stint in rehab and her psychiatric hospitalization? Has she truly come back? Read it here to find out. |
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In the wake of a comatose box office month, Sex Drive opens this weekend among a mass of mediocre films. Halloween month isn't even able to inspire Hollywood to hash out an overload of horror classic remakes. Instead we have another installment of the predictable Saw series and, well there isn't much else. So should you opt out of the Halloween creepy, cheapy flicks for this upbeat teen sex comedy? Check out Kate's review to find out. |
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He's been the manager to a paper supply company, a colourful extra and now he sees dead people. And they annoy him. At least Greg Kinnear does. British (underrated) funnyman Ricky Gervais makes his big screen debut in both a leading role and in the U.S. (took them long enough to catch on) in this unconventional romantic comedy Ghost Town. But do the laughs live up to Gervais' reputation? Jenny took a walk on the dead side to find out. |
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With the neverending focus on beauty permeating our culture, and the endless fixation on "glamour," Hollywood youth, and sexation, its about time that someone stand up and make a documentary with a statement. America the Beautiful by Darryl Roberts does just that and Jenny gives you the scoop whether it serves to make a difference. |
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Movie Madness Month concludes with the musical comedy The Rocker. Starring The Office's Rainn Wilson as a washed up metal drummer returning to stage. Phew, Kate's fingers and eyeballs are tired from all her reviews. She's starting to bite... |
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We continue with our Movie Madness Month with Kate's latest review on the Ben Stiller directed epic war comedy Tropic Thunder. Chock full of A-list celebs and other tabloid favourite faces, the over-the-top, epic comedy is sure to bring in the bucks and the laughs. Right? |
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The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2
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The pants live on in The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 a follow up following the four girls on their summer vacations. Sound pretty tame? You'll be thankful for it like Kate is after the load of the waste she watches. |
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National treasure Guy Maddin returns with My Winnipeg, another oddball, black and white tale delving deep into the memories of Maddin. Jenny concludes her Ode to Winnipeg Trilogy with Maddin's recreation of his memories of 'Winterpeg.' |
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The Rebel, Jock, Nerd, Heartthrob and Princess. We know them all too well. The Breakfast Club made them a staple in our teenage lives and we've all encountered them in our high school. Ok maybe not Kate but we've seen all the movies. Except this movie is about real people who happen to fit perfectly in that mold of teenage archetypes. Scary eh? Welcome to American teenage culture. Welcome to American Teen. |
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We don't need to say it. They've said it. The Canadian government is doing what they can to control it. But we can't stop them. Laws can't stop it. Nothing can stop Young People Fucking. |
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Making Jimmy Choo a household name and single life just as satisfying as marital bliss, Carrie Bradshaw and gang return in the big screen version of HBO's Sex and the City. Picking up exactly where the series ended, Jenny with unbiased eyes - ok not true, she's a self proclaimed addict - checks it out and gives you her take on whether the film version can fill those big Choo's...Yeah that was another bad joke. Minor spoilers ahead. |
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The UK dishes out another heartfelt comedy starring little tykes, Bill Milner and Will Poulter. Kate checked out an early screening of Son of Rambow to dish on whether England lives up to its wicked comedy streak. |
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Its double feature night where we bring you the low down on two of the flicks opening this weekend. Remember to thank Kate for filtering our time.
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Stop-Loss
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Boys Don't Cry director Kimberly Peirce takes on the underrated issue currently affecting thousands of US soldiers fighting in the Iraq war. Stop-Loss follows Ryan Phillipe as a decorated Sergeant who goes AWOL.
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21
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Money, luxury and deceit. The perfect formula for a movie. Or is it? Check out Kate's review on the film about five MIT students who find a way to scam Vegas for millions without doing anything illegal. With Brett Ratner and the ever unlikely intimidating Kevin Spacey behind the card counting 21, find out if it can take the house for millions. |
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In recent celebration of the University of BC's 100th birthday, alumni filmmaker Mina Shum recently held a conference for her hidden Canadian jewel Double Happiness starring fellow Canadian Sandra Oh. Jenny attended the conference for the decade old film that is is sure to remain a classic in Canadian film history. |
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Just when you think horror filmmakers couldn't come up with any new ways to scare us, Michael Haneke may have opened up a whole new definition for "disturbed." Serena checked out a screening of the US remake of the 1997 film Funny Games. Read her traumatized thoughts here! |
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A Light in the Dark: An Interview With Sara St. Onge
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Quirk, humour and off centre are all the rage these days and Jesse got the chance to snag the ever charming and endearing queen of dark humour, Sara St. Onge. The up and coming filmmaker made a splash at this year's Sundance Film Festival with The Funeral and from here on out she's bound to make waves. |
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Review - No Country For Old Men
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In honour of the recently awarded Best Picture at the 2008 Academy Awards, Jenny gives you the rundown on what you've missed out on. Without futher ado: No Country For Old Men. |
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Review - Diary of the Dead
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With the ever growing onslaught of bad horror flicks we face, Serena bravely dives into George A. Romero's latest of his infamous Dead series, Diary of the Dead. Check out if Diary's flesh is fresh! |
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The Savages captured quite the buzz during its festival rounds, and since its limited release in November. Jenny got a chance to check out a screening hot of the tails of the film's recent Oscar nods for Best Actress in Laura Linney and Best Original Screenplay in writer/director Tamara Jenkins. |
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With all the hype surrounding the ubiquitous viral marketing campaign behind producer J.J. Abrams' latest flick, Cloverfield, you know we had to check it out for ourselves. The film opened this weekend, banking in a big $41 million. Guess the hype worked. Liem checked out an advanced screening. |
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Canada's own Jason Reitman (of Thank You for Smoking fame) sees his latest effort, Juno hit theatres everywhere this month just in time for the holidays. Shot in Vancouver, the film is already garnering tons of critical acclaim, Golden Globe nominations, and early Oscar buzz. Liem checked out the flick. |
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With the upcoming release of the remake of Takashi Miike's "J-Horror" film, One Missed Call, in January 2008, Thomas revisits the original. Was the flick worthy of being done all over again? Well see, that really depends on the way you look at it...
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Review - A Tale of Two Sisters
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So you thought the Asian horror craze was over? Looking at the remakes slated for 2008, it seems like the craze has just begun. Before the originals vanish from memory, Thomas thought he'd revisit them for our readers. He looks at A Tale of Two Sisters, just one of the horror remakes set for release. Or should we say "terror"? |
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Having recently played at this year's Toronto International Film Festival with some positive buzz, Kate managed to catch a screening of Weirdsville, starring Scott Speedman, Wes Bentley, and Taryn Manning, by critically acclaimed director, Allan Moyle. What did Kate think? Brace yo'self! |
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Review - The Tracey Fragments
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"An Ode to Winnipeg" continues with Bruce McDonald's follow-up to Hard Core Logo (and yes, it's been almost over a decade), which hits select theatres today. Very positive buzz has been surrounding the film, starring up and coming young Canadian actress, Ellen Page, but Jenny gives us her take of The Tracey Fragments. |
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With all the hype surrounding this year's Toronto International Film Festival, we thought we'd make one of those other great Canadian cities the centerpiece for a change. Jenny writes her own personal love letter to Winnipeg with her three part film review series, "An Ode to Winnipeg". To get the ball rolling, she takes a look at The Stone Angel, starring Ellen Burstyn. |
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The cult webseries phenom, We Need Girlfriends has been making waves all over... MySpace. Yes, MySpace. You know, that other still-popular social networking site? JXM sat down with the show's creator, Steven Tsapelas.
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Review - Eastern Promises
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Recently having won the People's Choice Award at this year's Toronto International Film Festival, David Cronenberg's Eastern Promises hits theatres everywhere today. Jenny checked in to see what all the hype's about.
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