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Film Peek - May 2008

spencer maybee interview
SG-1 continued its explorations in Stargate: The Ark of Truth and the fanbase rewarded it with solid critique. A good ending to the great series. The Canadian actor Spencer Maybee is part of this adventure, recognized as Captain Binder, which we got the chance to interview.


"I grew up playing guns with my brother in High Park, shaking a plastic Uzi at imaginary bad guys, making ch-ch-ch-ch-ch noises and diving behind bushes to dodge return fire, coming up with 'wounds' (A.K.A. poison oak)", Spencer Maybee remembers in his interview with us. "S:TAoT wasn't that much different. The guns were real -- that was cool -- and half-load blanks make a way more realistic sound than I could ever make spitting fricatives, but the bad guys were imaginary, just like when I was a kid."

On making films in contrast to theatre he says: "It's a funny thing about acting for film -- it was a year ago that I worked on Stargate: The Ark of Truth, but it only came out a couple of months ago. It's such a contrast to working on stage, which I haven't done a lot in my career, but which I did most recently, working on a stage adaptation of Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window called High Rise. In theatre, the curtain goes up, you show/tell your story start to finish and then the audience laughs, cries, boos, and/or hisses and you hear it. You know right away if you've connected with your audience."

It's popular with actors taking on different roles in the filmmaking process lately, and Spencer Maybee has credits as a director, producer and writer as well. "At the root, my passion isn't for one role in particular, but rather for storytelling", he tells us on that matter. "I used to have a hard time trying to figure out which role was really my preference so I could focus on that and be more efficient about building a career, but I'm addicted to learning and my learning and development in each role is exponentially increased by my experiences in the other roles. I get on set more than if I only did one job. I also see the whole shooting match from a different perspective. One thing I love about acting is being IN it. You're IN the moment with the other character, you're dealing with the drama, you're fighting the fights, loving the loves, dying the deaths. It's pretty amazing. I'm not a very dramatic person in my personal life -- I like to keep the drama to a minimum. So it's fun to jump in and let the instincts run wild. All three roles for me are inextricably linked. I love the back and forth. I think if I were to do just one for too long, I might either go crazy or, worse, go stale."

And we can believe that's his aim, since he'll be soon do the Director's Lab at the Canadian Film Centre from July to December this year and therefore be full-time focusing on directing. "It's a great opportunity for me to develop and hone my craft as a filmmaker and it will mean a hiatus from acting."

Maybe it's a preparation for some of his own exciting projects that he is looking forward to execute when the circumstances are right. "I'm writing a feature that's at the outline stage that I want to make, another low-budget feature that I might want to act in, a two-part epic that I want to direct and which will probably have to sit until I've got enough biz cred to do it, another project that could go feature or TV movie that's got lots of violence and a Canadian history connection, a bio-pic of a con man, and a bunch of other projects, and those are just the feature length ones. There is one project that I want to direct that looks like it has wheels, only they aren't my wheels. Ever since I read The Collected Works of Billy the Kid: Left-handed Poems by Michael Ondaatje I've had really strong ideas of how it should be done as a film with a fierce loyalty to the imagery in Ondaatje's exquisite poetry, and an even more savage and mechanical loyalty to its themes of machinery, technology, the animal kingdom, and the human place in relation to those things. It's about Billy the Kid, so a lot of Americans will want to see it just by that virtue. Essentially, it uses certain details and moments of Billy the Kid's life and story as the lense through which to explore these themes. I heard that Bruce McDonald and Don McKellar optioned the book to make a movie out of it. So my mission now is to convince them that I'm the person who should direct it. The other thing I love about the project is that it's a cowboy movie. It's always been a dream of mine to play a cowboy."
spencer maybee interview

In any case, he is slowly but steadily becoming a recognizable face by participating in a variety of different movies, some of them being cinematic big productions. Not least in the up-coming The X-Files: I Want to Believe, a movie highly anticipated by a great amount of fans from the series and sci-fi lovers. "I'm really excited for the worldwide theatrical release of X-Files: I Want to Believe on July 25th, mostly because I want to see the movie, but also because it's an opportunity for me to reach a broader audience compared to TV. My head is bigger. Seriously, in theatres it's WAY bigger than on TV. I'm just kidding. In the movie I play a very different character from Eric Lenihan (the supporting lead in the movie "Ice Blues") and any of the other characters I've played on TV. One of the joys of working on feature films is that the directors are usually deeply invested in the material and tend to put just a little bit more into cultivating the kinds of performance they want than you often get with TV. In TV, the directors are hired by the producers and they've got a job to do and if they do it well, they just might get hired back. No working director is going to put up a fight for a creative idea on a TV show. She'll save it for her feature. Fewer risks are taken in TV, in my experience, than on feature films. There's a kind of magic that you only get when you try new things and that's what I love about feature films and why I want to work in more of them."

Even if it's still a supporting role as Blair Finch, Spencer isn't bothered by that fact. "There are some leading roles that I would love to play. One thing you get with traditional storylines, though, is sometimes the lead characters can be cookie-cutter heroes. This is the character that people are supposed to like, so you don't have as much room to play and try new things as you do with a supporting role, for instance. Look at Fenster in The Usual Suspects. Benicio Del Toro probably wouldn't have had the chance to play Fenster like that if Fenster was the lead. Too weird. But for a supporting role? Sure. Then you get some great roles where you have room to play and you're expected to, like the Joker. I would love to play the Joker. Bad guys have more fun. In movies."


Getting to the end of the interview, Spencer Maybee shares with us a list of directors he actually dreams and probably hopes to work with. "Terrence Malick, Terry Gilliam, pretty much any director named Terry, the Coen Brothers, Haneke, Gondry, Mamet, Lars Von Trier, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Sean Penn, Miranda July, Fernando Meirelles, Pedro Almodóvar, Sam Shepard, Soderbergh, George Clooney, Iñárritu, Cuarón, Sarah Polley... Each of them would direct one scene. It would be a long dream and the movie would be released to mixed reviews, but someone -- at least one person -- would be profoundly moved. It might even save a life."

Sounds like an amazing idea to me - I could easily be the person profoundly moved by it, that's for sure. But even if it's probably severe wish-thinking, we hope and believe in a great continued carrier for Spencer Maybee and thank him for his time in giving us inspirational answers and insight into a rising actor's mind!


Words by: peeker, filmpeek ©
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JUMPER - MINI REVIEW

May 28th 2008 20:11
Jumper review
Since there are a lot of movies and we're a small team of writers, I thought of introducing something I call "Mini Review". I know, it took a lot of imagination to come up with a title like that. I'm sure you understand the point of it, to keep it short and simple. This way, we'll be able to have more reviews and guidance to what movies are excellent, worth seeing, or awesomely bad.

This is a mini review of Jumper, the action/adventure movie a lot of people saw the trailer of and thought "wow, this looks really cool!" Of course I had some female friends just saying "I don't care what it is, Hayden Christensen is really hot!"

It's about David Rice (Hayden) finding out he is a "Jumper", which means he can transport himself to different places just by thinking about them. There are also the "Paladins", who are hunting them down to kill them since they believe only God should have the power to be everywhere.

At first I was excited - in the trailer the story seemed original and the effects did amaze me. And then time went by, the movie was released, and the first reviews came in. What a disappointment to read that so much had gone wrong! But I didn't care, after all I enjoy making up my mind after I've seen myself first as well.

So that's what I did few weeks later. Being warned about it and everything I ignored a lot of annoying scenes, ending up in a braindead state, where I watched just to have something to do while finishing up my popcorns. I don't like being braindead. I get bored.

The effects were great, but after seeing the same ones 500 times over and over again it felt seriously low budget. The actors were good, but having no challenging characters to play, they felt wooden and plain. Samuel L. Jackson, who is a Paladin, has very little dialogue of which saying "Only God should have this power" more than once seems like a serious overkill. And when thinking about it, it's an embarrassingly bad reason to hunt down and kill Jumpers for hundreds of years. This alone removes the reason to the whole movie instantly.

All in all, if you invite people over to a movie night, and you know there will be some talking and not much concentration anyway, Jumper could be a suiting choice. If your purpose is to actually watch a movie, no. DVD is available June 10.

6.5/10

Watch the trailer and poster of Jumper.
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prince of persia jake
That's right folks, it's announced that Jake Gyllenhaal will star in Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, the movie based on the popular video game.

This is unexpected news, as Jake would probably the last actor I would guess for such a role, but when I think about it, why not? The guy shares the same facial characteristics, he's a talented actor, and I'm sure they will prepare him in the best ways for the movie.

The companies behind are the same that made Pirates of the Caribbean, Disney and Jerry Bruckheimer Films. Hopefully it will keep the dark edge and not become a kids movie, with mild action and ridiculous jokes.

An actress is also ready for one of the leading roles, Gemma Arterton. She's less experienced than Jake, but is on her way up with participation in the new James Bond movie amongst others.

Most importantly, Prince of Persia is on the go and at this stage all we can say is "good luck" and "it better not follow the trend of all the other game-to-movie adaptations, full with awfulness".
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RAMBO (2008) - REVIEW

May 18th 2008 19:05
rambo review
Soon to be released in DVD, I guess it's time to have a review of this new movie with a cult character - John Rambo.

PLOT
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TOM CRUISE'S NEW FILM

It looks like Tom Cruise is entering the onscreen political world. I guess it was bound to happen.

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Keira Knightley

The Edge of Love, Keira Knightley's next film is written by Sharman Macdonald, Knightley's mother. Fame is definitely running in the family. Another period piece, it stars Cillian Murphy (The Dark Knight, The Wind That Shakes the Barley, Sienna Miller (Stardust, Alfie), Matthew Rhys (Virgin Territory, Love and Other Disasters) and singer Lisa Stansfield. The cast is massive, even including the lead singer of 80s band, Madness, Suggs McPherson.

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CRUZ - VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA

Woody Allen’s’ new film, Vicky Cristina Barcelona will debut at the Cannes Film Festival in the next few days and its trailer has just been released.

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SPEED RACER - TRAILER

May 13th 2008 20:57
speed racer trailer
This is a movie worth mentioning and since we haven't had the chance to talk about it yet, here it is. Speed Racer is originally a Japanese story/animation by Tatsuo Yoshida, that now will turn into live action by the Wachowski brothers. [IMDB]

If you're a fan of either Matrix or V for Vendetta, Speed Racer is probably already marked with high expectations. I'm one of them (at least if we only count the first Matrix). The movie has already had its premiere, gaining mixed reviews. I guess it's a perfect example of the "you'll either love or hate it" situation


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IGOR JOHN CUSACK

The Igor trailer has just been released and it’s appealing. It seems to have some grit and unusual quirkiness that many other films in the same genre don’t have. The world is purple, dark and rampant with mad scientists and evil inventions.

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JAVIER BARDEM PULLS OUT OF ‘NINE’

A while ago I did a post on Nine, the musical loosely based on Federico Fellini's 81/2. The film tells the story of the director and the women in his life. Nicole Kidman was to be joined by Javier Bardem creating an appealing cast and film premise.

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KIDMAN TO PLAY DUSTY

It seems that Nicole Kidman has scored another interesting role, playing Dusty Springfield in a film chronicling her life.

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