Memoirs Of A Geisha, The Movie

One of the movies I got to see in Paris was Memoirs Of A Geisha, a movie I’ve been wanting to see ever since its release and even more after reading the book.

Anyway, even though the movie was a good one, I was a bit dissapointed. Maybe the book is just too good for its magic to be caught on film. I don’t know, but it just didn’t match the way I saw it all in my head while reading the book.

One thing I’m sure of though is that the movie didn’t develop the characters well enough, only giving quick insufficient hints. Ok, I know they can’t get into as much detail as the book, but I think there’s a bare minimum that they didn’t reach.

I also felt that some points were skipped, changed or not given enough importance, minimizing their effect and weakening the story a bit.

Still the acting, cinematography, photography and soundtrack were beautiful, and I truly enjoyed them.

I still would recommend seeing this movie, but I recommend reading the book even more.

Overall I’d give this movie a 6.5/10, although I gave the book a 9.5/10.

Plot for Spider-Man 3 Movie

I just came across this following plot for the next Spider-Man movie on imdb.

Third film in the highly successful “Spider-Man” series sees several new villains and a new woman enter Peter Parker’s life. With his secret now revealed to both Mary Jane and Harry, Peter must face the consequences of his actions and his new life together with Mary Jane as they finally form a relationship.
Yet their newfound open display of love has yielded some unfortunate results, not the least of which is Peter’s upset boss determined to make his life hell for causing his son emotional distress. Not helping is a young investigative reporter named Eddie Brock who Jameson has hired to find out why Mary Jane dumped his son for Peter – what’s Parker’s secrets?

At the same time an escaped prisoner hiding out on a remote beach is caught in a dreadful accident and finds himself turned into a shape-shifting sand creature. Peter’s investigations into the past of this ‘Sandman’ brings him in contact with two very different things that will inevitably alter his life. The first a young woman named Gwen Stacy, daughter of the city’s new police chief who is developing a soft spot for Peter. The other, a black substance from an accident scene which ‘merges’ with Peter’s costume and gives him new found abilities.

Things come to a head however when Harry Osborn, determined to take revenge against Peter for his father’s death and now equipped with what he needs to pull it off, teams with The Sandman in a new variation of his father’s Green Goblin guise and causes mayhem.

In the ensuing chaos lives are lost, including people very close to Peter, whilst the black substance covering his suit separates from him and merges with a distraught Brock to form something else entirely – a creature unlike anything he’s ever faced. A ‘Venom’ that he may not be able to stop.

So it’s looking like we’ll be having 3 villains in this movie: Sandman, Hobgoblin and Venom. Sounds very cool. I can’t wait.

Top 50 Greatest Independent Films

Empire Online have released a list of the Top 50 Greatest Independent Films.

Among the listed movies, here are the ones I’ve already seen:

– Reservoir Dogs (Tarantino’s first, real cool)
– Donnie Darko (Huh? What was that about? Certainly your first reaction.)
– The Terminator (“I’ll be back”… Well you shouldn’t have come back for the 3rd.)
– The Usual Suspects (Great great movie. Love it.)
– Memento (Really cool movie. I truly like.)
– The Evil Dead (Saw this when I was a kid, scared the shit out of me.)
– Lost in Translation (Sofia Coppola’s second, really nice and simple.)
– The Blair Witch Project (Hmmm… Drop the camera, run and spare us.)
– Being John Malkovich (Weird but good movie.)
– Grosse Point Blank (Not John Cusack’s best movie, but ok.)
– The Passion Of The Christ (Just realized I haven’t actually finished this one.)
– Mad Max (Oh well, you know.)

Some of the others have been on my must-watch list for some time, and some of them I didn’t know of.
I hope I get around to finding and seeing all these cool movies here.

[Via: Houssein]

Cinemas in Tunisia

As a cinema lover, it’s really about time I wrote about this. It’s an issue that’s been eating away at me for ages. When the hell are Cinemas in Tunisia going to get their act together?!

Ever since I was a child, the state of cinemas in Tunisia has only been getting worse and worse. Not one new cinema has opened, yet a number of old ones have closed. The only somewhat happy event was the re-opening of a cinema in La Marsa, Al Hambra, in the Zephyr shopping center.

The Habib Bourguiba road in downtown Tunis is lined with a number of cinemas on both sides, the suburbs of Tunis have a number of cinemas, and almost every big city in Tunisia has a few, which is great, but then all you see on them are posters for really old movies, that you’ve already seen a number of times and archived as cinematic history in your brain somewhere.

And when you do venture in to one of these cinemas to watch a movie just for the sake of it, you find yourself in a smelly non-conditioned room, with dirty torn seats. The movie begins and the quality of the picture is really bad and you can barely hear the sound. As if all that is not enough, mobile phones keep on ringing, people keep on talking and laughing loudly and well then you have the people who aren’t really there for the movie, but mainly because it’s cheaper than a hotel room.

Cinema owners complain that satellite dishes and pirated tapes and CDs stole their customers away and that because less and less people are going to cinemas, they can’t afford to renew, bring in new material or show new movies.

On the other hand, if a cinema shows a movie months, if not years, after it becomes old enough to be shown on some free satellite channel, then why would anyone bother to go to the cinema? Especially if the quality is crappier than the worst pirated DivX around?

I am sure that if one of these cinemas invested in creating a great cinematic experience for its viewers, with a great quality huge picture, cool surround sound, really new movies, clean theatre, comfortable chairs, delicious popcorn and what not; then the people would come and they would be ready to pay double, triple, if not more, the price they pay now.
After all, nothing equals the experience of watching a movie on a giant screen with amazing sound while munching away at something delicious. Home Cinema, with all its splendor, barely tries to come close.

Why am I so sure? Because I saw it happen in Jordan.
When I went to Jordan in 1996, the state of Cinemas there was almost worse than in Tunisia, if that is possible. And the cinema owners were saying the same stuff I hear up to now in Tunisia.
But then some people invested in building new cinemas or renewing older ones, offering a great cinematic experience and movies on the day of their international release, and those cinemas got packed with people paying more than triple the price of the old ticket and spending a lot on popcorn, drinks, chocolates and more.

And I’m just stating Jordan as an example because it was very similar to Tunisia. But everywhere around the world, cinemas that offer great entertainment for their viewers are packed even if the ticket price is high, and even though there is piracy everywhere and satellite dishes everywhere.

So why don’t we revive cinemas in Tunisia too?
Why doesn’t someone invest in a new cinema? renew an old one? bring new movies to the country?
Enough of all the caf

Oscars 2006, 78th Academy Awards Winners

So the Oscars are over and the winners in the main categories are:

Actor in a leading role: Philip Seymour Hoffman (Capote)
Actor in a supporting role: George Clooney (Syriana)
Actress in a leading role: Reese Witherspoon (Walk The Line)
Actress in a supporting role: Rachel Weisz (The Constant Gardener)
Animated feature film: Wallace & Gromit in the Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Best Picture: Crash (Paul Haggis and Cathy Schulman)
Directing: Brokeback Mountain (Ang Lee)
Music: Brokeback Mountain (Gustavo Santaolalla)
Visual Effects: King Kong (Joe Letteri, Brian Van’t Hul, Christian Rivers and Richard Taylor )

For the rest, check out the Oscar Winner List.

King Kong totally deserved the best visual effects award, and it’s nice to see Crash took away the best picture award.

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

Last night while zapping through satellite TV channels, I came across this scene in a movie with Dick Van Dyke and Benny Hill.
My wife and I automatically detected it and knew it was from a movie that was a big favourite for both of us in our childhoods: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

It’s a movie we’ve both seen tens, if not hundreds, of times as kids, and it brought back a flood of sweet childhood memories.
We remembered the bits we loved, the bits that bored us and the bits that scared us with that damn childcatcher lollypop man.

I remember when I came to Tunisia, and none of the other kids in the family had seen it, I’d always keep taking the video tape of it around with me showing it to them, until it got lost in my aunt’s house at the end.
I hated her and her son for a long time after that because of it ๐Ÿ˜›

I’m not sure if a movie like this one would work for today’s generation of kids, but for us it was one of the coolest movies around and we greatly enjoyed it.

The story was cool, the songs were great and the acting was good; It was one of the best kid movies of its time.

I guess it’ll live forever in our memories and in the inner child of everyone of us who experienced it.

Long Live Chitty Chitty Bang Bang…

King Kong

King KongLast night, I finally got to watch the new King Kong movie, by Peter Jackson, featuring Naomi Watts, Jack Black and Adrien Brody.

I’ve read a lot of mixed reviews about this movie, some though it was a great movie, and some didn’t like it saying that the only good thing in it was the special effects.

Personally, I really liked the movie and enjoyed it. It was a bit long, but who cares when it’s good. The special effects were amazing, some of the best I’ve ever seen on film.
As for the story, well I disagree with the people who thought it was weak. It’s just a simple, straightforward and clear story with a very obvious meaning, and it was told pretty well.

I didn’t see the original, ok I know that it may seem absurd to some of you that I haven’t seen a classic like that one, but I just didn’t, so I can’t compare. But it’s quite understandable that some people think the old movie is better than the new one, it’s always like that, it’s just like reading a book then watching the movie, the movie never meets your expectations even if it’s really great.

Anyway, to end it all, I really liked the movie and I do recommend watching it for movie lovers.

My score for it is: 8/10.

Flightplan

On Saturday, we watched “Flightplan“, featuring Jodie Foster, Sean Bean and Peter Sarsgaard.

I saw the trailer for the movie a couple of times, and it looked like an ok movie. Anyway, when we were in London, it was playing there, and I didn’t think it was worth paying two cinema tickets for, so I just decided to wait and rent it on DVD.

The movie is a drama/thriller about a bereaved woman and her daughter who are flying home from Berlin to America. At 30,000 feet the child vanishes and nobody admits she was ever on that plane.
I really liked the idea of the movie and how it was brought to life, making this such a better movie than I expected.

Jodie Foster is a great actor, as we all know, even though I think she’s a bit too dramatic in her roles. She does the same in this movie, but it turns out better.

If you like what the idea of the movie sounds like, then I recommend this movie.

My score for it is: 7/10.

Paradise Now Wins Golden Globe

Paradise Now” won the award for the Best Foreign Language Film category in the 63rd Annual Golden Globe Awards, that were held on Monday.

The film was directed by Palestinian Hany Abu-Assad from a screenplay he cowrote with Bero Beyer, the film’s Dutch producer, both of whom ascended to the podium to collect the award.

Paradise Now chronicles the 48 hours before two best friends in Nablus are sent on a suicide mission to Israel. The New York Times said it

Chocolat

Today, I finally got around to seeing “Chocolat“, a movie featuring Juliette Binoche, Johnny Depp, Alfred Molina and Carrie-Ann Moss.

I heard a lot about this movie, and I know that it was nominated for 5 Oscars, and I know that it has great actors in it, but I don’t know why I only chose to rent it yesterday and see it today.

As the name suggests, this is quite a delicious light movie. Very nice story, good acting, cool music and a little lesson behind it all.

The movie is about a woman and her daughter, who open a chocolate shop in a small Catholic French village with a strict mayor, who tries to turn the whole village against them, and how they end up shaking up the village and its community’s rigid morality.

My score for this movie is: 7/10.