Friday, December 24, 2010

We still love you too Joe Camel

It's that most wonderful time of the year. I hope all our readers are ready for the holiday, and excited to spend time with friends, family, and the like. Our son has had me calling Santa nonstop, but not to ask for more presents, for some reason to take them back. Maybe it's the start of a new tradition, where we do the returning before Christmas. I know a semi-lost tradition for Lawren's family was going to the movies on Christmas day, so if you're looking for a new one of your own to start, I can't think of a better place to go than a cute little arthouse on 4th street in downtown Winston-Salem. We're excited to be open for the holidays, still sharing the beautiful chaos that is Black Swan and opening the film I Love You Phillip Morris.

Before the town of Joe Camel gets bent out of shape, this isn't a documentary about the Marlboro man, although the lead character may have his cool and gumption. I Love You Phillip Morris is the improbable but true story of a spectacularly charismatic conman's journey from small-town businessman to flamboyant white-collar criminal, who repeatedly finds himself in trouble with the law and on the lam, brilliantly escaping from the Texas prison system on four separate occasions - all in the name of love. Jim Carrey is the conman who falls for Phillip Morris, played by Ewan McGregor. To put a pretty little bow on the Christmas theme, the movie was written and directed by John Requa and Glen Ficara, who became famous for Bad Santa.

Part of the entertainment from watching this film is knowing there was a guy out there who did in fact do this. Peter Travers of Rolling Stone agrees in his review, calling the movie "all over the place. But it's also outrageously funny." Check out the trailer below:



Just your typical love story, right? We're skipping our normal 12pm shows on Saturday so everyone can enjoy present unwrapping in peace, but it's a normal day after that. If it's not a white Christmas, at least come to a/perture for a black and white Christmas!

Happy holidays everyone!

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Like this (thumbs up)

If there's one thing I'm actually given credit for (still on rare occasions), it's my impeccable timing. Once again, I'm delivering here for you when we open The Social Network this Friday. Now this is a movie that has been out there for a little bit, and it's safe to say a few people saw it back then, but it's the last movie Lawren and I went to see at a place not called a/perture cinema. So when we were given the chance to show it, we jumped on it. And what happens after we announce it? Six golden globe nominations, including best drama, best actor and supporting actor, best director, and best screenplay. Oh, and Mark Zuckerberg is now Time's "Person of the Year." All because we booked the film. Christmas we'll put the theory to the test when we open Carrot Top's new movie...crap, my wittiness has been absconded just by typing the evil red head's name.

Wait a second, he looks a little like Jesse Eisenberg, no? The hair at least. Few people know this, but Carrot Top invented Myspace. That explains a lot.

So everyone knows that The Social Network is Ben Mezrich's adaptation of the story of how Facebook was founded. So is it all completely factually accurate? Probably not. Is it a great film? Absolutely. And it features a score from Trent Reznor (also a Golden Globe nominee - when did anybody think they would read that?). Here's the trailer:



Few things are creepier than a chorus of kids singing Radiohead. Now go become our fan on FACEBOOK!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Bring on the SWAN

With the tame and family-friendly UNCSA production of The Nutcracker having just excited after another crowd-pleasing run, it's time to bring on Darren Aronofsky's interpretation of Swan Lake, otherwise known as (dum, dum, dum)... BLACK SWAN!!!


Many of you have been waiting patiently for this film and we are so excited that our release date was bumped forward a couple of days and will be hitting our screen this FRIDAY (12/17). It is worthy of the wait as evidenced by the numerous Golden Globe nominations it picked up early this morning...

BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS - NATALIE PORTMAN
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS - MILA KUNIS
BEST DIRECTOR

Not to mention AFI picked BLACK SWAN as one of the ten best films of 2010! In case you have missed all of the buzz and the increase in TV trailers over the past week (since the film blew the pants of NY and LA), here is a brief synopsis:

Nina (Natalie Portman) is a ballerina in a New York City ballet company whose life, like all those in her profession, is completely consumed with dance. She lives with her obsessive former ballerina mother Erica (Barbara Hershey) who exerts a suffocating control over her. When artistic director Thomas Leroy (Vincent Cassel) decides to replace prima ballerina Beth MacIntyre (Winona Ryder) for the opening production of their new season, Swan Lake, Nina is his first choice. But Nina has competition: a new dancer, Lily (Mila Kunis), who impresses Leroy as well. Swan Lake requires a dancer who can play both the White Swan with innocence and grace, and the Black Swan, who represents guile and sensuality. Nina fits the White Swan role perfectly but Lily is the personification of the Black Swan. As the two young dancers expand their rivalry into a twisted friendship, Nina begins to get more in touch with her dark side - a recklessness that threatens to destroy her.

Check out the trailer below:



Another bonus, for those of you out of school or taking a holiday vacation, we've added in a matinee to our schedule for Monday thru Thursday of next week (12/20-12/23) AND we will be open both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Check out our website for our holiday showtimes!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Tamara who? Tamara DREWE!

Get ready for a romp in the British countryside! Along with the seriously dramatic Client 9 and Fair Game, we will be screening Stephen Frears' riotous new comedy Tamara Drewe. Tamara Drewe is based on the graphic novel by Posy Simmonds, a famous cartoonist across the pond.

Tamara Drewe is a witty modern take on the romantic English pastoral of Tom Hardy, but the present-day English countryside—stocked with pompous writers, rich weekenders, bourgeois bohemians, a horny rock star, and a great many Buff Orpington chickens and Belted Galloway cows—is a much funnier place. When Tamara Drewe sashays back to the bucolic village of her youth, life for the locals is thrown upside down. Tamara—once an ugly duckling—has been transformed into a devastating beauty (with help from plastic surgery). As infatuations, jealousies, love affairs and career ambitions collide among the inhabitants of the neighboring farmsteads, Tamara sets a contemporary comedy of manners into play using the oldest magic in the book—sex appeal. Having seen this film a few months ago in Toronto, it really is quite amusing. For more insight into director Stephen Frears (My Beautiful Laundrette, The Queen, High Fidelity) and his take on Tamara Drewe and filmmaking in general check out this interview in FilmIndependent.

Trailer below:

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

We're continuing our fired up streak...

It seems like we've been on a string of movies that tell a good story, but leave you a little angry afterwards. Waiting for Superman, Inside Job, Fair Game, and now we can add Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer. Documentary specialist Alex Gibney, who gave us Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and Oscar winner Taxi to the Dark Side has hit another home run here. Opening Friday for an abbreviated term, just like Spitzer's stint as governor, we'll have to say goodbye to this one on Sunday. We've timed the run to coincide with the amount of time call girl Ashley Dupre was actually relevant. Obviously Mr. Spitzer has no one to blame but himself for his problems, but Gibney's story makes some observations that are a little more than just fishy. This movie is on the short list for the Best Documentary Oscar, and Amy Biancolli's review in the San Francisco Chronicle makes me think Gibney could get his third nomination. Check out the trailer below.






Thursday, December 2, 2010

Are movie titles really fair game?

Wow. If you could only see through your computer screen and truly picture the excitement as I write about the next movie coming to a/perture. How often do you get a movie that is so socially relevant and buzzed about like Fair Game? Throw on top of that the film is celebrating its 15 year anniversary of proving that Cindy Crawford was just a pretty face and Billy Baldwin had more up his sleeve than Sliver....wait a second, Lawren's trying to tell me something. What do you mean there are two movies called Fair Game? Isn't there some sort of rule that once a movie reaches a certain level of awesomeness, no one else can use that name? I'm working on a script right now, then. My movie is going to be called Star Wars. I can almost hear George Lucas's lawyers stampeding across the central United States to ring my doorbell right now.

Well, putting that minor embarrassing confusion aside, it does appear that the 2010 version of Fair Game is actually more socially relevant, given the hubub around this whole WikiLeaks thing, and a far superior movie (2010 - 80%, 1995 - 13% on Rotten Tomatoes...ouch). Naomi Watts plays outed CIA operative Valerie Plame, revealed by officials looking to discredit her husband Joe Wilson (not the "YOU LIE" one, but a former diplomat) played by Sean Penn. Yeah, I guess that cast is better than Baldwin-Crawford. Ann Hornaday of The Washington Post is a fan of how the story is told, more of a look at the toll Valerie's work takes on their marriage and home life instead of a blow 'em up spy affair, that director Doug Liman is more well known for (The Bourne Identity and Mr. & Mrs. Smith). In her own words..."Quality-starved audiences should flock to it, if only to ensure more of them get made." Methinks Ms. Hornaday would not have said the same about the previous one. Trailer below: