Tag Archive for 'Mamma Mia'

Does Colin Firth have a point about the plight of gay actors?

Earlier this week A Single Man star and Oscar nominee Colin Firth voiced some long overdue statements about the problem that exists for gay actors in Hollywood. Click here for the full news story.

A SINGLE MAN, COLIN FIRTH

“If you’re known as a straight guy playing a gay role, you get rewarded for that,” he says. “If you’re a gay man and you want to play a straight role, you don’t get cast - and if a gay man wants to play a gay role now, you don’t get cast.”

It’s true. How many big name ‘out’ Hollywood actors can you think of? There are one or two Brits who’ve crossed over into LaLa land (Alan Cumming, Rupert Everett, Ian McKellen, Stephen Fry, Simon Callow), but of the Americans I can think of no big name male actors (the women are few and far between too. With the exception of Cynthia Nixon, they’ve all stopped making movies). So yes, Mr Firth is right, if you’re an out gay man and you want to play ‘a gay role or a ’straight role’, you don’t get cast.

A SINGLE MAN, COLIN FIRTH

Which brings me to my next question - how many mainstream movies can you think of that actually have central gay roles?

Think about it - I’m not talking about those gay characters that pepper the periphery of the action like Julia Roberts’s gay friend (Rupert Everett) in My Best Friend’s Wedding, Hugh Grant’s boisterous pal (Simon Callow) in Four Weddings and a Funeral, or Meryl Streep’s former sweetheart (Colin Firth) in Mamma Mia! No, I’m talking about films with central characters who are gay.

It’s difficult, but I’ve thought long and hard and here is my list of all the mainstream films I can think of featuring central characters who are gay. Its brevity is alarming.

So let’s see if Firth is right. How many of these gay characters are played by ‘out’ gay actors?

Brokeback Mountain: Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal - not gay

Milk: Sean Penn - not gay

A Single Man: Colin Firth - not gay

Capote: Philip Seymour Hoffman - not gay

Infamous: Toby Jones - not gay

Imagine Me and You: Piper Perabo, Lena Headey - not gay

The Birdcage: Robin Williams - not gay. Nathan Lane - yes, he’s gay!

The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert: Terence Stamp, Guy Pearce, Hugo Weaving - none are gay

To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie NewmarPatrick Swayze, Wesley Snipes, John Leguizamo - not gay

Wilde: Stephen Fry - yes gay, Jude Law - no, not gay

Far From Heaven: Dennis Quaid - not gay

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: Kevin Spacey - not gay, he says.

Philadelphia: Tom Hanks - not gay

Maurice: Hugh GrantJames Wilby - not gay

Food for thought eh?

If you’re prepared to stay up into the early hours then you can catch The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert at 1.15am tonight (3rd Feb) on TCM

Or you could stay up even later tomorrow night to watch  To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar at 4am on Sky  Screen 1 HD

Click here to check out more film news.

Noughties Talk | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly according to Couch Potato

Best feelgood movie: Mamma Mia!


Most mouthwatering movie: Julie & Julia

I yearned for Boeuf Bourguignon for days after seeing this film.

Julie & Julia,Meryl Streep

Most pertinent movie for the Couch Potato: About a Boy

Hugh Grant, Nicholas Hoult

Best Love Story: Brokeback Mountain

Brokeback Mountain,Jake Gyllenhaal,Heath Ledger

Worst Movie: The Love Guru


Watch the clip. Need I say more?

Quirkiest movie: Amelie

Amelie, Audrey Tautou

Best of British: Shaun of the Dead

Shaun of the Dead

Mamma Mia Competition Winners

Mamma Mia! Party edition DVD

Our competition to win a DVD copy of the two disc ultimate party edition of Mamma Mia! is now closed.  Thanks to Universal Studios Home Entertainment for supplying the prizes and well done to all the entrants who answered correctly that the happy event on a Greek isle around which the movie is based is a wedding.

The lucky winners who have caught this ABBA-solutely fabulous bouquet are Beverly Daubney, Steven Jones and Helen Tovell. Well done folks, enjoy your prizes!

Small Screen – this week’s top ten DVDs…

  1. Terminator Salvation
  2. Robot wars… Christian Bale attempts to save humanity from being wiped out by intelligent machines – and woe betide any cinematographers who get in his way.


  3. Star Trek
  4. Lost in space… Director J.J. Abrams reboot of the classic sci-fi franchise is set in an alternate reality and features space ships, black holes, phasers and pointy ears.

  5. Night at the Museum 2
  6. Lively display… History comes to life in this adventure-comedy sequel, as museum security guard Larry (Ben Stiller) does battle with more restless exhibits.

  7. My Sister’s Keeper
  8. Family ties… Cameron Diaz, Abigail Breslin and Alec Baldwin star in this adaptation of the Jodi Picoult novel about a young girl suffering from leukemia and the efforts of her family to keep her alive.

  9. Brüno
  10. Camp crusader… Flamboyant Austrian fashion reporter, Brüno Gehard (Sacha Baron Cohen), sets out to make a name for himself in the States in a series of controversial and cringe-inducing stunts.

  11. Four Christmases
  12. Festive friction… Vince Vaughn and Reese Witherspoon play a married couple forced to visit all four of their divorced parents in one day.

  13. Land of the Lost
  14. Step back in time… Will Ferrell heads the cast of this comedy about a paleontologist who is sucked into a vortex and ends up in a parallel universe, where ape men and dinosaurs run riot.

  15. Mamma Mia!
  16. Dancing Queen… Meryl Streep can dance. Meryl Streep can jive. Meryl Streep is clearly having the time of her life in this money, money, money-making film version of the musical inspired by ABBA songs.

  17. Coco Before Chanel
  18. A stitch in time… Audrey Tautou portrays the rise of legendary designer Coco Chanel, from obscure beginnings to the heights of the fashion world.

  19. Moon
  20. Lost in space… An astronaut who has spent three years on the moon with only a robot for company begins to have some unnerving hallucinations.


News Hound | 28 October 2009

Movie Talk sniffs around the back alleys of the internet to bring you the latest showbiz news - because there’s nothing like a juicy bone to get you through the day…

paw-print.jpgAardman Animations have been asked to produce a film for the Tate Galleries. The project is funded by the charity Legacy Trust UK and the end result will be a movie for and by kids, giving British children a chance to get involved in the creative process from start to finish.

paw-print.jpgAmanda Seyfried claims that mega hit musical Mamma Mia! is indeed getting a sequel and that Meryl Streep is up for it. But some wonder what songs would be used as all the best ones are in the first movie.

paw-print.jpgKeira Knightley has informally been linked to the My Fair Lady remake project for a while, but now it’s been confirmed. Apparently, it was a toss-up between Keira and Scarlett Johansson. Joe Wright (Pride & Prejudice, Atonement) has been asked to reteam with Knightley to yet again oversee her feeble attempts at acting.

paw-print.jpgOn 3 November, London will be filled with music as the city hosts three free concerts to coincide with the premiere of Disney’s A Christmas Carol. Check out the line-up and locations.


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

paw-print.jpgClive Owen’s next project will be Trust, a drama about internet grooming. David Schwimmer came up with the story and will also be directing.

paw-print.jpgThe 1980s movie hit Cocktail is to be turned into a Broadway musical to celebrate the film’s 20th anniversary.


29th Cambridge Film Festival

 Movie Talk is happy to invite our correspondent in Cambridge, Jan Gilbert, to give us the low-down on this year’s Cambridge Film Festival. A veritable feast of Independent Cinema, the CFF may be smaller than the sprawling London Film Festival, but it’s also a lot more intimate, making it another must-see event for film buffs to mark in their calendars. Over to you Jan…

As I sit on a comfy sofa in the bar of the Cambridge Arts Picturehouse, sipping cappuccino, with the staff’s eclectic choice of music playing in the background, I’m struck by how lucky we are in this here university city. Well, I say city, but anyone who’s visited Cambridge knows it’s not exactly the sprawling metropolis the word ‘city’ tends to conjure up. But what this former market town lacks in size, it more than makes up for in cultural offerings.

This month’s cultural extravaganza is the Cambridge Film Festival. Micro-budget it may be, but that hasn’t dampened its ambitions during any of its 29 years. With a stack of movies and Q&A events, the difficulty is fitting everything in. Should I choose World War Two tale The Army of Crime, the festival’s opening night feature by Robert Guédiguian, or Dominic Murphy’s White Lightnin’?

Who should win the battle for my attention: Jamie Foxx starrer The Soloist or Atom Egoyan’s 12th feature, Adoration? Will I manage to squeeze in both Jan Dunn’s third film The Calling and Rémi Bezançon’s The First Day of the Rest of Your Life? Decisions, decisions.How to leave enough room for all this and still have time to soak up the buzzing atmosphere of the Picturehouse bar? It’s really one of the joys of this festival as new and established filmmakers share a pint and chat away with cinema aficionados.

jon-amiel-qa-for-creation.jpg

© Tom Catchesides

Only the other night, director Jon Amiel (Copycat, Entrapment) experienced first-hand the enthusiasm of Cambridge audiences after a preview of his Darwin biopic, Creation. Forty-five minutes of Q&A time wasn’t enough for fans of the film who spent another hour in the bar enjoying the laid-back filmmaker’s company.

But the Arts Picturehouse screens and bar aren’t the only place to hang out. The festival believes in getting out and about, beyond the four walls of its city centre base. In the past, we’ve had Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey beneath the stars at Cambridge University’s Institute of Astronomy, and F W Murnau’s The Last Laugh with live accompaniment in a Methodist Church.

mamma-mia-on-grantchester-meadows.jpg

© Tom Catchesides

This year, in a curtain raiser to the festival, we’ve sung and danced the night away on Grantchester Meadows, along the banks of the River Cam, to the first silent disco screening of Mamma Mia! I know, I know, you’re thinking ‘silent’ and ‘disco’ aren’t words normally found together, but it all worked thanks to headphones and tiny radios tuned into a special ‘Mamma Mia!’ frequency. Technology, hey?

riverside-screenings-by-night.jpg

© Tom Catchesides

Continuing the great outdoors theme, we’ve been wrapped in blankets, plied with champagne, and chauffeur punted along the River Cam, all in the dead of night, to watch films on screens set up along the riverbank. Could a cinema event be any more Cambridge?

Back on terra firma, on Cambridge’s oldest shopping street, we’ve been wowed by pianist-composer Neil Brand’s live accompaniment to a Harold Lloyd silent comedy. It’s easy to see why Brand’s become a festival regular.

Tonight I’m returning indoors, though not to the cinema. This time I’m off to Ely Cathedral where the festival’s hosting a BAFTA event during which former Python, actor, author, and professional traveller Michael Palin will be regaling us with tales of his life in pictures. As a friend said to me today, ‘that man’s like a fine wine, he gets better with age’.

michael-palin-bw-copyright-basil-pao.jpg

© Basil Pao

Tomorrow I’ll be returning to the home of the festival, the Arts Picturehouse cinema. And boy am I looking forward to it as comedians and Cambridge graduates David Mitchell and Robert Webb are in town to screen a sneak peek of the next episode of Peep Show, their hit Channel 4 comedy. And they’ll be doing a Q&A with the show’s brilliant writers Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain. Bliss! Or to misquote Webb’s Peep Show character Jez, ‘Is this a terrible idea? It can’t be. It’s in a film [festival]. They wouldn’t put a terrible idea in a film [festival], they’d get sued.’ Absolutely, Jez.

And with British mockumentary Morris: A Life with Bells On, a selection of animated shorts, Gina Birch’s documentary about her 70s punk band The Raincoats, not to mention the festival’s Surprise Film all still to come, there’s plenty to keep me entertained between now and Sunday evening.

Couch Potato Pickings | Chick Flicks for a Girls’ Night In

A couple of days ago, I gave some thought to the ultimate chick flick…

Pretty Woman? When Harry Met Sally? Mamma Mia?

Patrick Swayze,Jennifer Grey

And then, sadly, Patrick Swayze died, and the news reports featured girls of all ages all declaring their love for Swayze and Dirty Dancing and well, I guess that’s the one - there is no question.

Patrick Swayze,Jennifer Grey

But what is it about these movies that make us girls pop open the wine and buy up sections of our local supermarkets (savoury picky bits for me, but I believe ice-cream cabinets are popular with real girlie girls)? What is it that makes us want to pull on our jammies and invite our girlfriends round for a sleepover? What is it that makes a great chick flick?

Bridget Jones Diary, Renee Zellweger

Here are my thoughts:

1. A great chick flick must have strong female leads. We women enjoy watching women who act like we do – people we can relate to, and if all of our friends agree then it makes us feel normal and human.

Sex and the City, Cynthia Nixon,Kristin Davis,Sarah Jessica Parker

2. A great chick makes you laugh and also makes you cry. Again, by laughing at our funny female selves with our female friends we gain a sense of solidarity, and crying together is always a great bonding experience.

Ghost,Demi Moore,Patrick Swayze

3. A great chick flick always has a happy ending. This is almost always the girl ending up with a guy – but occasionally there’s a supporting role gay girl on girl ending for non-heterosexual chicks.

Imagine Me and You,

So, if you hunted out that old copy of Dirty Dancing last night in memory of Swayze, or you’re saving it for the weekend, or you’re waiting for one of the channels to change their schedules and put it on (might happen, I’ll keep my eyes peeled), then you’ll no doubt be in the chick flick mood?

Dirty Dancing

And that’s good news because we’re halfway through the week and there’s a great choice on TV tonight – something for all ages, in fact:

A Cinderella Story

A chick flick for real chicks (ie, young ‘uns) who’ll love this teen romcom starring Hilary Duff. It’s a modern-day Cinderella tale in an American high school setting.

Hilary Duff

Showing on ITV2 at 8pm

Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging

A chick flick for little Brit chicks, this is another teen comedy, but this time it’s in a UK school setting.

Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging: Georgia Groome

Showing on Sky Family at 8pm

Clueless

OK, we’re still at school, but this classic Jane Austen-inspired comedy also works on us older gals. Alicia Silverstone stars as fashion-obsessed Beverly Hills high school girl Cher in this coming of age flick. When she does some well-intentioned meddling into her friends’ lives she learns some important lessons about life.

Alicia Silverstone,Stacey Dash

Showing on E4 at 9pm

Legally Blonde

OK girls, we’ve finally graduated – to college (Harvard Law School to be exact). Reese Witherspoon  - the actress who grew up wanting to be Dolly Parton, inadvertently had a chance to imitate her hero by playing not so dumb blonde Elle Woods in this feelgood comedy.

Legally Blonde, Reese Witherspoon

Showing on BBC3 at 9pm

Sex and the City

Ah yes, one for grown up women. This sitcom spin-off romcom can be watched on its own, but it’s far more fun making a weekend of it and working your way through the series boxset (and a big box of chocolates too, of course).

Sex and the City,Kristin Davis, Sarah Jessica Parker,Cynthia Nixon,Kim Cattrall

Showing on Sky Comedy at 8pm

Breakfast at Tiffany’s

And if none of the above appeals, then you can’t really go wrong with this vintage romcom. It’s got Audrey Hepburn’s 60s style, pre-SATC Big Apple, and the chance to sing along to Moon River

Breakfast at Tiffany’s: Audrey Hepburn

Showing on Sky Classics at 7pm

Couch Potato Paradox: Movies you have to see on the big screen

Public Enemies, Johnny Depp

Well, it seems that my recent post about the benefits of a local cinema hit a nerve with many of you, judging by your many comments. Clearly, I’m not the only one longing for a picturehouse in close proximity to my home.

While some of you would love a movie theatre on your doorstep to relive nostalgic memories, and others of you fancy an escapist sanctuary, most of you simply desire a local place to provide an all-inclusive community hub, and I couldn’t agree more. Click here to check out that post of mine.

But did you notice that there was one rather essential draw of a local cinema that we barely touched upon?

Gone With the Wind

Yes, that’s right… the films!

The Wizard of Oz, Judy Garland

So, here’s a question - what are the movies you just have to see on the big screen?

Since the absence of local picturehouses has over the years forced me to become the couch potato that I am, it’s a rather tricky question for me to answer, so I’m hoping for your help.

But in the meantime, here are my thoughts about the types of films that just don’t work so well on the small screen.

1. Films with epic cinematography.

2. Films with big effects.

3. Films that everyone is talking about.

4. Films that offer big shared laughs.

5. Who’ll jump out of their seat first? movies.

Blair Witch Project

6. Movies that make you mistrust the person sitting next to you.

7. 3D movies.

8. Audience participation movies.

9. Films reliant on a big screen to show off their beautiful and artistic cinematography .

The Fall

10. Cult movies.

Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope, Alec Guinness

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Couch Potato gets all steamed up and asks “how important is a local cinema?”

Rialto Crystal PalaceA local cinema is very important in my opinion.I expect you’re very surprised to hear that statement coming from someone who usually writes on this blog as a lounging vegetable. But, you see, I haven’t always been a couch potato - circumstances have made me that way, and if you read on, you’ll discover why.But first of all, check out the reasons why I think every every community should have its own picture palace:-  It offers a value-for-money night out, and we’re all tightening the purse strings.-  If it’s within walking distance, it’s good for the environment too.- Regular cinema-goers increase the footfall in the local community, and hence trade in neighbouring shops, cafes, bars and restaurants.Jeff Daniels,Mia Farrow-   Both a meeting point and a point of reference, a local cinema encourages social and cultural interaction with fellow residents.Diner-  Local cinemas are great for the film industry. One of the reasons I’ve opted for a life of home entertainment is that I hate multiplexes and to visit a decent cinema of an evening involves compromising my safety travelling home when there are fewer trains.-   Local cinemas are great for local filmmakers because they provide a place to screen their movies and generate a buzz around their work.Bill Milner,Will Poulter- If all the locals are flocking to the flicks nearby, couch potatoes like me will be more inclined to get off their backsides to join them.- And, last but not least, local cinemas offer escapism from today’s harsh economic climate, just like in that Woody Allen classic The Purple Rose of Cairo.I’m sure you can think of many more reasons of your own. What’s most important to you? A chance to sing-along-a-Mamma Mia! with the local traders? The opportunity to discuss the latest Harry Potter movie with your commuting colleagues at the bus stop? The possibility that you might get a chance to enjoy watching that stroppy barmaid  from your favourite pub jumping out of her skin at the latest slasher flick?Mamma Mia! - Meryl StreepWho knows, but, the fact is, it’s all very well me painting a rosy picture of neighbourhood picturehouses, but how many towns these days actually have one?Not many.When I was a teenager, I often used to pop to the cinema during a day pottering around town. That was in my hometown in Lancashire, a town now on its knees, having lost its cinema years ago, as well as everything else that creates a sense of community and keeps locals spending locally. Maybe you’ve experienced something similar in your neck of the woods?Daniel RadcliffeDecent cinemas are few and far between, and like dementors, multiplexes have sucked all the joy out of cinema-going. I hate that multiplex ordeal, involving a depressing car ride or unpleasant bus ride to a faceless retail park with overpriced and oversized refreshments, feral kids with phones, unwelcoming popcorn-scented auditoriums, and no sense of occasion.At present, in my neighbourhood of Crystal Palace in South East London, we have no cinema. To see a film on the big screen involves getting into a car, or onto a bus or train. We residents of Crystal Palace love to support our local shops, bars and restaurants and there’s a great sense of community – unusual for London. However, when we want to go to the pictures, we’re forced to leave our beloved town and inevitably end up spending our ’going out money’ on drinks, meals and such like elsewhere.King Kong It’s incredibly frustrating because we actually have a building in our town centre with planning permission for cinema use and it was recently put up for sale when it finally had its day as a bingo hall.Furthermore, Picturehouse Cinemas were (and still are - check out their Picturehouse Cinemas  blog) very interested in this property, which was originally built as a cinema - the Rialto - back in the 1920s. They put in an offer in fact, but were outbid by a wealthy evangelical church who intend to use the building to serve a congregation living miles away in Wimbledon.Paul BettanyThis is how I looked when I heard this news:Scream 3These canny buyers have to get planning permission for church use first of course, but they may well receive it. If they do, it’s unlikely that their congregation will stick around to eat and drink in the town after attending the services. Furthermore, our already congested high streets will become even more congested, and the environment will suffer from the hundreds of cars travelling the eight miles from Wimbledon to the church every week. And of course the Crystal Palace residents will have to continue to spend their money elsewhere when they fancy a night at the flicks.Not only that, but if the planning permission is granted, the church will become the eighth church in the town – yes, we’re hardly short of churches. The name of the street the building is situated on is Church Road – get the picture?But, it’s all very well me blaaaing on about the benefits of a local cinema, spinning my sob story about how I became a remote control-wielding slob who only watches films on TV, and voicing my desire for a cinema in my area. For all you know, I may well be the only person who actually cares about this issue.Cinema ParadisoBut I can prove to you that I’m not alone in my longings for a local silver screen.”If you build it, he will come.” You remember that classic line from the classic 1980s movie Field of Dreams? It rings so true. Since we Crystal Palace residents got wind of the bingo hall purchase we’ve been lining up to petition for that desired movie house.  Over 1800 of us to date have signed a petition asking the council to consider allowing a cinema at the site and over 1800 of us have joined the Cinema for Crystal Palace Facebook group.Cinema for Crystal PalaceIf you don’t live near London, you probably don’t care too much about my local concerns. But, if you haven’t got a cinema in your town and you’d love to have one, then keep an eye on this issue (you can check out the Picture Palace Campaign website here) because the outcome may well set a precedent for other communities across the UK.What do you think - shouldn’t every  community deserve a cinema if they can prove they want one?Please share your thoughts. It would be great to get a discussion going on this.On Facebook? Connect with Movie Talk on Facebook here.

Couch Potato Pickings | Oliver! A musical movie for the current economic climate

You wouldn’t think it, but this 1968 musical movie with its Dickensian storyline is of surprising relevance today.

Yes, yes, you know what I’m about to say - it stars pretty child star Mark Lester in the title role, and of course we all know now, if we didn’t before, that he is the godfather to Michael Jackson’s children.

However, that’s not the only topical feature of this film. It may be set in the Victorian era, but while you’re singing along (and you know you will) check out how pertinent the song’s messages are within today’s economic climate:

Oliver! Oliver!

Never before has a boy wanted more

Redundancy is rife. Many business are asking their staff to take less money or unpaid leave. It’s not a great idea for ask for more in the current climate.

You’ve Got to Pick a Pocket or Two

Large amounts don’t grow on trees. You’ve got to pick a pocket or two.

Bear this in mind when out in crowded areas. Street theft today is of course better policed and CCTV is a deterrent, but there will still be those determined to have a grab at your wallet.

Oom Pah Pah

There’s a little ditty they’re singing in the city especially when they’ve been on the gin or the beer.

Things are not so affluent in the city these days but budgets are still accommodating bankers’ booze-ups. It’s more champers and cocktails than gin these days but the city celebrating hasn’t ended.

Fine Life

If you don’t mind having to go without things it’s a fine life

Food for thought. And speaking of food…

Food Glorious Food, hot sausage and mustard
While we’re in the mood - cold jelly and custard!
Pease pudding and saveloys!
What next is the question?

Childhood obesity that’s what. OK, it’s more pizza than pease pudding these days, but gorging on any sort of food is never a good idea.

Who Will Buy?

Who will buy?

Communications skills are more important than ever for businesses in today’s economic climate. It’s not just what you sell, it’s how you sell it. That’s the key to winning over customers.

One of two musicals with an exclamation mark showing today (Mamma Mia! is on Sky Movies Comedy at 8pm) you can see Oliver! on G.O.L.D. at 6pm.