The Last Godfather Movie 2011

last_godfather_movie_2011Movie: The Last Godfather
Release Date: April 1, 2011 (limited)
Studio: Roadside Attractions
Director: Hyung Rae Shim
Screenwriter: Hyung Rae Shim
Starring: Harvey Keitel, Hyung Rae Shim, Michael Rispoli, Jason Mewes, Jocelin Donahue, Jon Polito
Genre: Comedy
Official Website: LastGodfathermovie.com

Summary: In 1951, Don Carini (Harvey Keitel), the mafia’s most powerful godfather, gathers his followers to announce the heir to the family. Each expects to be crowned the next Don, but they hear a shocking story from Don Carini. During his travels in Asia, he fell in love with an Asian woman who bore him a son. His now adult son Young-gu (Shim Hyung-rae) is anointed the next boss. Bonfante (Michael Rispoli), the betrayer in the outfit, wants Young-gu and the aging Don out, and with his minions, relentlessly tries to sabotage Young-gu’s training and take out the boss. Will Young-gu overcome each obstacle and rise to become the next godfather and lead his new “family?”

Wrecked Movie 2011

wrecked-movie2011Movie: Wrecked
Release Date: April 1, 2011 (limited)
Studio: IFC Midnight (IFC Films)
Director: Michael Greenspan
Screenwriter: Christopher Dodd
Starring: Adrien Brody, Caroline Dhavernas, Ryan Robbins, Adrian Holmes, Jacob Blair
Genre: Thriller

Summary: Adrien Brody stars as a man who awakens in a mangled car-wreck at the bottom of a steep cliff. Injured and trapped inside, with no memory of how he got there or who he is, he must rely on his most primal instincts to survive. But as he attempts to free himself from the carnage and escape an impossible situation, a darker side is revealed. Even if he manages to survive, the man may have to face the horrible consequences of an earlier, forgotten life.

Two Gates of Sleep Movie 2011

TwoGatesofSleep-Poster2011Movie: Two Gates of Sleep
Release Date: April 1, 2011 (NY)
Studio: Borderline Films
Director: Alistair Banks
Screenwriter: Alistair Banks
Starring: Brady Corbet, David Call
Genre: Drama

Summary: A luscious widescreen meditation on nature, death and Southern discomfort. Somewhere on the Mississippi-Louisiana border, brothers Jack (Brady Corbet, “Funny Games”) and Louis (David Call, TV’s “Gossip Girl”) prepare for their mother’s imminent death. Their communication limited to glances, they hunt a gorgeous animal, cook a special meal and share last moments of quiet intimacy with the woman who bore them. Once she succumbs, they ignore society’s expectations and undertake an arduous journey to bury her along the riverbank.

The film shuns narrative conventions through exactingly spare techniques that magnify the tension and melancholy in every frame. Ants swarm in the dirt, trees form a green cathedral, and the brothers step deeper into the muddy river. Evoking the elemental themes of Faulkner’s “As I Lay Dying,” “Two Gates of Sleep” is a film of rare beauty that calls attention to seldom seen customs of the rural South, and paints a shattering portrait of a family overcoming extraordinary circumstances to honor a final request.

Blank City Movie 2011

Blank City Movie 2011Movie: Blank City
Release Date: April 6, 2011 (NY)
Studio: Insurgent Media
Director: Céline Danhier
Screenwriter: Not Available
Starring: Jim Jarmusch, Debbie Harry, Steve Buscemi, John Lurie, Fab 5 Freddy, Thurston Moore, Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Amos Poe, Eric Mitchell, James Nares, Maripol, Ann Magnuson, James Chance, Beth B, Scott B, John Waters
Genre: Documentary

Summary: Before there was HD there was Super 8. Before Independent film there was Underground Cinema. And before New York there was…well, New York. Once upon a pre-Facebook time, before creative communities became virtual and viral, cultural movements were firmly grounded in geography. And the undisputed center of American – some would say international – art and film was New York City. In particular, downtown Manhattan in the late 1970′s and 80′s was the anchor of vanguard filmmaking.

“Blank City” tells the long-overdue tale of the motley crew of renegade filmmakers that emerged from an economically bankrupt and dangerous period of New York History. It’s a fascinating look at the way this misfit cinema used the deserted, bombed-out Lower East Side landscapes to craft daring works that would go on to profoundly influence Independent Film today. Unlike the much-celebrated punk music scene, this era’s thrilling and confrontational underground film movement has never before been chronicled.

Directed by French newcomer Céline Danhier, “Blank City” captures the idiosyncratic, explosive energy of the “No Wave Cinema” and “Cinema of Transgression” movements. Stark and provocative, the films drew name and inspiration from the French New Wave; as well as Film Noir, and the works of Andy Warhol and John Waters. Filmmakers such as Jim Jarmusch, Eric Mitchell, Beth B, Charlie Ahear, Lizzie Borden and Amos Poe showcased the city’s vibrant grit and bore witness to the rising East Village art and rock scenes and the birth of hip hop. Short, long, color or black-and-white, their stripped-down films portrayed themes of alienation and dissonance with a raw and genuine spirit, at times with deadpan humor blurring the lines between fiction and reality.

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