Showing posts with label Penelope Cruz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penelope Cruz. Show all posts

Sunday, January 3, 2010

"NINE"? | Nein! | No Substance Beneath the Eye-Candy! [Review]

Every holiday season I can hardly wait to see movies that dazzle, mezmerize and totally blow you away. Nine is not one of these movies. Nein!

Nine lacks great songs. Even a stellar cast can't save this lame musical based on 7-time Tony-Award winning Broadway musical Nine an adaptation of Frederico Fellini's classic film 8 1/2.

Daniel Day Lewis plays the incredibly sexy celebrity director Guido Contini who around Rome is his Fiat, dark shades and black suits. He sings only two songs in the film, "Guido's Song" and "I Can't Make This Movie". The latter song is probably an inside joke at the production company.
Under Rob Marshall's direction, Nine is segmented: melodrama, song, melodrama, song. The musical numbers clearly take place on a huge stage (at the U.K.'s Shepperton Studios), while the rest of the movie occurs in Italy, though it often looks pretty stage-bound, too.

Despite the English language, the film insists it still is 1965 Rome, where black-and-white, Cinecitta Studios, Vespas, Ray-Bans and all things Italian reign in the world of fashion and Western culture. A new Guido Contini movie is about to start production, but no script exists. In despair, Guido flees to a seaside spa. Within a day, his mistress (Penelope Cruz), demanding producer, production team and then his wife (Marion Cotillard, unable to adapt well to misery) take up residence in the small town.

Sad romantic trysts and unproductive production meetings ensue. In his imagination, all the women of his life materialize. Sophia Loren plays Guido's saintly mother. She is incredible gorgeous for a seventy six year old actress (below).

Stacy Ferguson, better known as Fergie from the Black Eyed Peas, materializes on the beach from his childhood. She belts out "Be Italian" and totally kills it -- breathing some much needed life into this dreary melodrama.

Penelope Cruz and Academy Award winning actress Marion Cotillard (La Vie en Rose) get real characters to play, but they're the stuff of bad soap opera. Cotillard, the only professionally trained singer in the cast, does her best to bring the dull musical number "My Husband Makes Movies" to life. She performs "Take It All" a livelier song in a corset and stockings. Even this song couldn't inject life into the movie. Make no mistake -- this ain't no Cabaret or even Dreamgirls!

Penelope Cruz, as Guido's mistress, gets the best number—a sizzling and sexy little romp called "A Call from the Vatican". She looks the best, and she gives the best performance. In any other movie that would be no small feat, but here she's up against Cotillard, Dench, Nicole Kidman, Day Lewis, and Sofia Loren. Cruz nails it!

Her Carla goes from silly and obtuse to injured and desperate with such a believable ease it doesn't even look like she's acting. Bravo! Now if only the entire movie could uphold her energetic "vibe".
Nicole Kidman as Guido's "muse" gets to do little other than sing the uberdull "Unusual Way". Her ill-fitted bustier takes on an unusual life of its own. It is too rigid and big for her cup size. Speaking of rigid, nothing on Kidman's face above her eyebrows moves, and I mean "nothing"!
Kate Hudson as an on-the-make American journalist sings a lively Madonna-esque version of "Cinema Italiano" on a fashion runway clad in sixties go-go silver lame attire, complete with a male entourage. The role was written for Hudson and does not exist in the original movie. Talk about "target marketing". Too bad the film doesn't have any lively glitzy songs of substance which fit the narrative of the film. Narrative? What narrative? Exactly!

Judi Dench is wonderful and wise as Guido's costume designer and therapist. Fortunately she is not asked to do much in terms of singing and dancing. She sings the predictable "Folies Bergere" number complete with showgirls as only a costume designer stereotypically can. Originally she was to play Guido's producer but there weren't many female producers in the 60's so they changed her role to that of fashion designer.

Script? What script? Exactly! The movie didn't have much of a plot. With Nine, one never gets inside the protagonist's head. So one can't decide whether his problem is too many women or too many musical numbers breaking out for no reason. What about the accents you ask? Well, let's not go there!

Nine is a visually stunning world loaded with lots of stellar eye-candy and breathtaking Rome locations. If you don't expect a whole lot more from the movie, you won't be dissapointed.

Official site: Nine
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

'NINE' New Trailer, Images, and Smouldering Kate Hudson Song

Kate Hudson performing 'Nine' song and dance number

Awards season is in full swing! We recently reported Nine, a musical adaptation the Broadway production (and loosely based on Fellini’s 8 1/2) went live online. The Weinstein Company has stepped up their marketing blitz and released a killer, dazzling new Nine trailer (below). Rob Marshall (Chicago) directed the film set for release on Christmas Day and already garnered plenty of buzz for a coveted chance at “Best Picture” Oscar®.

The incomparable Daniel Day-Lewis plays Italian film director Guido Contini, who struggles to manage the female relationships in his life. His wife (Marion Cotillard), his muse (Nicole Kidman), his mistress (Penelope Cruz), his mother (Sophia Loren), his costume designer (Judi Dench), his prostitute (Fergie), and his next conquest, a Vogue reporter (Kate Hudson).

The director’s guild just had their screening of the film, which means awards season is kicking in. Spy reviewer Tobby for Ain’t It Cool News posted an awesome review of Marshall’s new musical.

In his introduction of the film, Marshall confirmed publicly he’ll be doing Pirates of the Caribbean 4 with Johnny Depp. Then the film started which the critic calls a “curious delight.” Day-Lewis is “masterful” at singing, Cotillard is “spectacular” and deserves another Oscar nod, Dench is a “pleasure to watch,” Cruz is “fantastic” and sexy, Fergie does a “great job” (!), Hudson is the biggest surprise, and Kidman the biggest disappointment. All this and more according to Tobby the spy critic at Tobby at Ain't It Cool News. I can't wait!

The sizzling new musical trailer for the film features Hudson’s singing voice and fresh looks at the production. Scroll further down for nine pictures of the characters:


Kate Hudson, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Kate Hudson again

Marion Cotillard, Penelope Cruz, and Judi Dench

Fergie, Nicole Kidman, and Sophia Loren


Check out Penélope Cruz's Jay Leno Show appearance and sexy clip from Nine !


Will NINE be one of this year's ten Best Picture nominees? You can bet on it!

NINE will have a limited release on December 18th in New York and Los Angeles and will then go on wide release on December 25. Aeroplan members can redeem 5,000 Aeroplan miles for a ticket to an Exclusive Canadian NINE Premiere.

Ooh La La... Be Italian!

Follow Nine on:
Official Site
Twitter

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Ain'tItCool.com

Saturday, October 31, 2009

NINE Launches Official Website

Penelope Cruz as "Carla" in NINE

The brand new website for the upcoming motion picture NINE has gone "live" and you can visit it by clicking here.

NINE will have a limited release on December 18th in New York and Los Angeles and will then go on wide release on December 25. Aeroplan members can redeem 5,000 Aeroplan miles for a ticket to an Exclusive Canadian NINE Premiere.

The big screen adaptation of NINE THE MUSICAL stars Daniel Day-Lewis, Penelope Cruz and Nicole Kidman. The all-star cast is directed by Rob Marshall, who also helmed critically-acclaimed 2002 musical Chicago - which garnered six Academy Awards. Daniel Day-Lewis replaced the previously attached Javier Bardem in the leading role of Guido Contini, Bardem left the project citing exhaustion. Marion Cotillard, Kate Hudson, Stacy "Fergie" Ferguson, Sophia Loren and Judi Dench star in the film as well. Nine is a musical with a book by Arthur Kopit and music and lyrics by Maury Yeston and is based off of Fredrico Fellini's movie 8 1/2. The play tells the story of a highly stressed director living in Venice trying to juggle all of the women in his life.

The Broadway production of Nine, directed by Tommy Tune and choreographed by Thommie Walsh, opened on May 9, 1982 at the 46th Street Theatre, where it ran for 729 performances. The musical won five Tony Awards, including best musical.

Nine revolves around one central character, Guido Contini a film director in the Fellini mold. He is contracted to write and direct a film, but is unable to come up with a suitable plot. After recent box office failures, he finds himself drifting towards a nervous breakdown. Guido finds himself examining his past flawed relationships with the many women who have come through his life and the struggle to act his mature age of 40 as opposed to "nine".

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Source: BroadwayWorld.com

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

TWC's 'Nine' will Kick Some Serious Butt Come Awards Season! [Trailer]

Judy Dench and Daniel Day Lewis in 'Nine'

The New York Times on Sunday published the definitive piece on the bleak state of the union at The Weinstein Company, where morale (and cash flow) remains low, Harvey is struggling to refocus after his mogul-add streak, and theatrical grosses this year are hovering right around $1.3 million. These factors will all likely change this week with the opening of Inglourious Basterds, or at least we should hope they do -- cinema is generally better for having the Weinsteins in it, and they've got to find some way to pay for the release of The Road and Nine later this fall.

Nicole Kidman and Daniel Day Lewis in 'Nine'

Nine is the musical re-telling of Federico Fellini's semi-autobiographical 8 1/2. It tells the story of Guido Contini (Daniel Day-Lewis), a world famous famous film director as he confronts an epic mid-life crisis with both creative and personal problems. He must balance the many women of his life, including his wife (Marion Cotillard), his mistress (Penelope Cruz), his film star muse (Nicole Kidman), his confidant and costume designer (Judi Dench), an American fashion journalist (Kate Hudson), the whore from his youth (Fergie) and his mother (Sophia Loren).

The original 1982 Broadway production of NINE, with music and lyrics by Maury Yeston, won five Tony Awards including Best Musical.

Nine is directed by Rob Marshall (Chicago) and opens in the US on November 25, 2009.

TWC has nothing to worry about. Inglorious Basterds, The Road and Nine will clean up come awards season. Congrats, you've done it again Harvey!

I can hardly wait!



Source: MovieLine.com, IMDB.com

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Pedro Almodovar's 'Broken Embraces' (Los abrazos rotos)

Director Pedro Almodovar, the most internationally acclaimed Spanish filmmaker since Luis Buñuel focuses on love, death, identity, and guilt in his lates film Broken Embraces. His beautiful cinematography can be likened to that of a master painter using sumptuous color palettes and brush strokes of light (All About My Mother, Talk to Her, Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!). Penelope Cruz stars as the film’s female lead.
Penelope Cruz with director Pedro Almodovar
Synopsis
Harry Caine, a blind writer, reaches this moment in time when he has to heal his wounds from 14 years back. He was then still known by his real name, Mateo Blanco,and was directing his last movie.

Broken Embraces U.S. release date is set for November 20, 2009, but only in limited theaters.

For more information about the film visit the Broken Embraces official site (Spanish and French only).


Tuesday, June 3, 2008

All star cast confirmed for "Nine"


All star cast confirmed for the cinematic version of Nine, a Tony-award winning Broadway musical. Daniel Day Lewis, Marion Cotillard (Guido's wife), Nicole Kidman (Claudia, Guido's muse and protege), Penelope Cruz (Contini's sexy mistress Carla), Sophia Loren (Guido's mother) and Judi Dench (Guido's agent) to star.

The 1982 musical, inspired by the film 8½, is about a fictional famous film director Guido Contini savoring his most recent (and greatest) success. He is facing his fortieth birthday and a midlife crisis which blocks his creative impulses and entangles him in a web of romantic difficulties. While trying to complete his latest film, his main problem is that he has too many women in his life.

Kidman is due to give birth in the summer, giving her several months of maternity leave before the film's proposed start date. Her filming also might be scheduled in the latter part of the shoot.

The project was slated to begin principal photography in March but was postponed when the late writer-director Anthony Minghella didn't have enough time to rework Michael Tolkin's screenplay before Hollywood writers went on strike last November. Extra work was needed to coordinate the choreography and Maury Yeston's music and lyrics with a new draft. The musical will be directed by Rob Marshall, who also directed the 2003 hit musical Chicago. Nine rehearsals start in London on July 28 with shooting to commence September 29, with a 2009 release date.

I expect Nine will clean up at the 82nd Academy Awards®!