Hey guys, we here at CINSSU are big fans of the various Rep Cinemas in Toronto. At out Cinema Sessions Seminar in March, we had Daniel Demois of Fox Theatre talk to the U of T undergrads. We also have members that work at the Bloor Cinema and we also appreciate a lot of the stuff going on at The Royal.  So it’s a great pleasure to see that former CINSSU member Alex Woodside along with Charlie Lawton and Nigel Agnew are opening a new 700- seat Rep Cinema in Chinatown: The Toronto Underground Cinema. The Underground was formerly known as Golden Harvest Cinema and specialized in Hong Kong movies, but has been defunct now for more than a decade. However these new managers are hoping to bring in cult films and festivals for the whole city. Or as they explain it:

Located at Queen and Spadina, The Toronto Underground Cinema is the city’s newest operating movie house. With 700 seats it is the second largest single screen theatre in town. Run by and for film fans the Toronto Underground Cinema will be the premiere event cinema venue. We will be screening cult classics, seldom seen treasures and popular favourites.

The first two movies shown at the new cinema will be the film adaptation of Clue and, fittingly considering the new theatre’s location, John Carpenter’s Big Trouble in Little China. Both of these films will be shown for FREE this Friday, May 14th. I encourage you all to go and have a good time.

You can find the Facebook Event page for Clue and Big Trouble here, and the Facebook group for Toronto Underground here.

Kevin Smith made his mark in the film community with a series of films full of vulgar dialogue about sex and other bodily functions. Despite a couple of slight excursions, the critically acclaimed Chasing Amy and the critically ridiculed Jersey Girl, Smith’s movies have been pretty similar in tone and content from his ultra-low budget debut Clerks to 2008′s Zack and Miri Make a Porno. But now, partially due the disappointing response to Zack and Miri, Smith is doing things a little different. His new film, Cop Out, is his first studio film (since Mallrats in 1995), and it’s also his first time directing a script written by someone else.

I recently had a chance to talk to Smith in a roundtable setting, and he proved to be just as outspoken and candid as his reputation would suggest. “What do you want to talk about?” he asked almost immediately, “We can talk about the making of [the movie]. We can talk about the theoretical. We can talk about me selling out.” Smith is referring to his switch to Warner Bros. for Cop Out after making every previous film with Weinstein Brothers (with the exception of 1995′s Universal comedy Mallrats), either at the now defunct Miramax or The Weinstein Company. “I had a huge emotional breakdown when Zack and Miri came out, because I was expecting Zack and Miri to do closer to Forgetting Sarah Marshal business… We didn’t do Sarah Marshall business, we wound up doing Kevin Smith business.” The response to Zack and Miri appears to have had a huge effect on the future course of Smith’s career. His point of view immediately following its release was “I’m spinning my wheels here. I’m telling the same stories, apparently. Nobody cares anymore … and I went and shut myself up in the library and started smoking lots of weed.”

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rain

Korean pop superstar Rain is mostly unknown to North American audiences; save for a comedic rivalry between him and TV host Stephen Colbert. The reason for this is fairly obvious, as North American audiences are often afraid to embrace anything not in English. But Rain has a chance to change that next week as his new film Ninja Assassin is being released across the continent. Produced by the Wachowski Brothers (of Matrix fame) and directed by V for Vendetta helmer James McTeigue, Assassin is big budget, violent, and stylish, but most importantly, it’s American and it’s in English.

Rain appeared to be fairly fluent in English when I sat down with him at a roundtable earlier this week, despite the presence of a translator. “It’s a big opportunity for me. You know, if I’ll do my best, Americans will love me to. I believe that.” Despite his ambition, Rain hardly seems arrogant or proud, but rather, charming and self-assured. “You know, it’s hard to even walk in [the] street in Asia. I hope it’ll be the same here.”

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the_box_movie_image_cameron_diaz_and_james_marsden_day_3

Last week, I got a chance to take part in a college conference call with Richard Kelly, the director of The Box, and Cameron Diaz and James Marsden, the two stars of the film. You can read my terribly nerdy review of the film here.

Q: I was wondering if any of you guys had read the short story or seen the “Twilight Zone” episode, which this movie is based on.

James Marsden: Uh, embarrassingly, I never read the short story. Not out of laziness, but because we wanted to focus on our version of what we were doing. But I did see the “Twilight Zone” episode, which… Richard, where are we with that whole mentioning the “Twilight Zone” episode?

Richard Kelly: I’m under the impression that I’m not allowed to mention those words. Legally. But the short story was something that I read when I was young, and it had a huge impression on me, obviously. And I optioned it from Richard Matheson [the original author] and I spent many years trying to figure out how to expand it into a feature film, and here we are. So it was a long journey to get here. The concept of the story was something I felt left a strong, strong footprint in my mind, so to speak.

Cameron Diaz: I agree, my answer’s the same as Jimmy’s [James Marsden’s]. I didn’t read the short story because it was something that I wanted to sort of have in order to focus on our script and how Richard expanded on that concept.

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Camera Stylo 2009

April 16th, 2009

This week we launched volume 9 of the Cinema Studies Undergraduate Journal, Camera Stylo. The launch party was a huge success! Many thanks go out to everyone who was involved in the event and who contributed and helped out with the publication. A special thanks goes out to our co-hosts the Innis Herald who made the party possible. (They also have an issue out so you should drop by the office and pick one up) Camera Stylo will be available for pickup in the Cinssu office Rm 107 of Innis College.

Oh and for the first time ever, it is available for online viewing so either click on the Camera Stylo page or click on the link below to check it out.

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Camera Stylo 2009 / Volume 9

CSCover

(Click on the image to view online)

Camera Stylo Launch Party!

April 7th, 2009

Come party with us at The Boat for our Camera Stylo Launch Party! Check out the details on our event page on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/event.php?eid=76192968880

Stay tuned to the website, because if you don’t get a chance to pick up a copy of Camera Stylo you will be able to check it out online on our Camera Stylo page. So check back after the launch party to see it online!