Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Newsbites: Mary! Worlds! R.I.P. VHS!

Just a handful of news items.

1. And now for the meta-Jesus movies (or should that be Jesus meta-movies?)! IndieWIRE says Abel Ferrara's Mary, which premieres in Venice and Toronto next month, will also open the San Sebastian Film Festival's Zabaltegi section: "The film is a tale of the filming of a movie about the life of Jesus and how it draws the actress (Juliette Binoche) playing the part of Mary Magdalene into a spiritual crisis of profound consequences involving the director of the film, (Matthew Modine) and a New York journalist (Forest Whitaker)." Hmmm, I wonder how it will compare to Pasolini's La ricotta (1963) or Arcand's Jesus of Montreal (1989), which admittedly was about a play and not a film, but still...

2. Having finished War of the Worlds, Steven Spielberg is now going to re-make another 1950s disaster movie. FilmStew.com and E! Online report that he has taken over the producing chores on a remake of When Worlds Collide (1951) -- a film which, incidentally, inspired one of my favorite Daniel Amos songs, albeit in title only. But wait -- didn't Spielberg pretty much already do this with Deep Impact (1998), which he executive-produced?

3. The Washington Post, Video Business and Studio Briefing all have items up now on the demise of the VHS format. The latest development? Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith will be released on DVD only. Ah, brings back memories of how the "director's cut" of Lawrence of Arabia (1962/1989) was one of the very first major studio films not to be released on Beta.

2 Comments:

Blogger The Cubicle Reverend said...

Heard your comments on NPR about The 40 Year Old Virgin. I greatly appreciated hearing you say it (being the tender age of 32). I recognized your name from Looking Closer and seeing your posts on his sight and was pleased by what you had to see. There is a strange identity with being an older virgin!

Dave

8:14 AM  
Blogger Peter T Chattaway said...

Thanks, Reverend. :) FWIW, I link to that NPR piece here.

2:05 PM  

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