by Douglas Barnett, Sep 26 2011 // 10:00 AM
This week’s pick is the HBO film By Dawn’s Early Light (1990), directed by Jack Sholder. The film stars Martin Landau, Powers Boothe, Rebecca De Mornay, James Earl Jones, Darren McGavin, Rip Torn, Jeffery DeMunn, Peter MacNicol, and Nicolas Coster.
By Dawn’s Early Light was based on the novel Trinity’s Child that depicts a full nuclear exchange between the U.S. and USSR. The film is set in 1991 as the Soviet Union is undergoing radical political change (when the film was produced, the Soviet Union was in fact beginning to collapse).
A group of Soviet brass launches a nuclear strike with a stolen missile against the Soviet city of Donetsk. U.S. forces track the trajectory of the missile from allied Turkey. This act makes the Soviet Première and Soviet forces think it was a surprise attack from the U.S. and NATO forces. The Soviets launch a retaliatory strike which threatens U.S. land based bombers and many key points of communication such as the NORAD facility, SAC headquarters in Omaha, Nebraska, Washington D.C., and Andrews AFB in Maryland which is where the president would be evacuated from.
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Posted in: Drama · DVD · DVD Reviews · Emmy Awards · HBO · Movies · Netflix · Reviews · Thriller · War · War Movie Mondays · Warner Bros
Tagged: Darren McGavin, Jack Sholder, James Earl Jones, Jeffrey DeMunn, Martin Landau, Nicolas Coster, Peter MacNicol, Powers Boothe, Rebecca De Mornay, Rip Torn
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by Matt Raub, Jan 18 2011 // 7:30 AM
Quite a week for horror trailers, and we’re only two days in. First, we got the first official look at the upcoming fourth film in Wes Craven’s Scream franchise, and now things are turning over to the maternal side of the genre, with Darren Lynn Bousman’s remake of 1980’s Mother’s Day.
The film has been in production and under a bit of wraps for quite some time, but now we’re finally getting a glimpse at actress Rebecca De Mornay’s stoic performance as the titular mother, and no–this isn’t the type you’ll want to introduce your new girlfriend to. Here’s the official synopsis.
After a bank robbery gone wrong, three brothers head for home, hoping their MOTHER (Rebecca De Mornay) can provide them with a getaway. The youngest brother, JOHNNY (Matt O’Leary), has been shot, and their back-stabbing former partner has gotten away with all the cash.
But when the brothers get home, they find that all their stuff is gone and Mother is nowhere to be found: She lost the house months ago in a foreclosure. The new owners, BETH and DANIEL SOHAPI (Jaime King and Frank Grillo), and their guests, gathered for an ill-timed birthday party, become the brothers’ unwitting hostages.
Not long after, Mother arrives, along with the boys’ sister LYDIA (Deborah Ann Woll), and it soon becomes clear that Mother will do absolutely anything to protect her children. In one terrifying evening she brilliantly takes control of the situation and masterminds her sons’ escape from the law.
With the man behind most of (the good) Saw films, you can expect this flick to fall on the side of the gory and tortuous. Definitely not one to take the kids to. Check out the trailer after the jump, and catch Mother’s Day in theaters on 11/11/11.
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Posted in: Cult Cinema · Drama · Exploitation · Horror · Movies · News · Reboots and Remakes · Trailers · Video
Tagged: Darren Lynn Bousman, Deborah Ann Woll, Frank Grillo, Jaime King, Matt O'Leary, Mother's Day, Rebecca De Mornay, Saw
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by Jane Almirall, Oct 8 2010 // 9:00 AM
Mother’s Day, directed by Darren Lynn Bousman (Saw II, III, IV), is loosely based on a horrific, true story that took place in Wichita, Kansas 10 years ago – as well as the 1980 Charles Kaufman film by the same name. The setting changes from an ill-fated camping trip to a tale of home invasion in the remake – we meet the Koffin brothers when they return to their mother’s house after their attempt to rob a bank goes horribly wrong, leaving the youngest brother seriously injured from a gunshot wound.
Upon their arrival to their childhood home, they quickly discover that their mother is no longer living there (having lost her house to foreclosure) and end up crashing what will become The Worst Birthday Party Ever, which is being thrown by the new inhabitants, Beth and Daniel Sohapi.
The brothers hold the home-owner’s and their guests hostage – alternately beating them, threatening to rape them and robbing them of their money, belongings and dignity as they attempt to gain control of their situation. It doesn’t take long for Mother (Rebecca De Mornay) and their little sister to arrive on the scene, at which point things swiftly make the shift from being merely terrifying to unfathomably shitty.
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Posted in: Drama · Fantastic Fest · Film Festivals · Filmmaking · Horror · Horror Reviews · Movies · Reviews
Tagged: Darren Lynn Bousman, Fantastic Fest, Horror, Jamie King, Mother's Day, Movies, Rebecca De Mornay, Shawn Ashmore
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by Shannon Hood, Sep 26 2010 // 8:00 AM
By Shannon Hood and Jane Almirall
On day two, we got several screenings in, and an interview. Here’s how it all went down.
Mother’s Day Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman. Starring Jaime King, Rebecca De Mornay, and Deborah Ann Woll.
Jane’ thoughts: Mother’s Day is an interesting remake of the 1980 Charles Kaufman feature. Bousman updates the original by changing the story from a camping trip gone wrong (in which several campers are held hostage and terrorized by a criminally insane family) to a horrifying tale of home invasion – based on actual events – (in which friends at a birthday party are held hostage and terrorized by a criminally insane family).
Mother’s Day maintains a palpable tension throughout it’s running time as the party-goers turned hostages are humiliated, tortured and killed by this extremely dysfunctional family. There are several nods to it’s roots in Troma – particularly Rebecca De Mornay’s performance, which is peppered with camp – though for the most part the torture and kill scenes play without a wink. This film went on a little bit long for my tastes, but to it’s credit kept my heart rate up for it’s entirety.
Interview: Edward Norton
Shannon: I got to attend a round table interview with Edward Norton, who was in Austin to promote Stone, co-starring Robert De Niro and Milla Jovovich.
Edward was charming and intelligent, and gave us some insight into how he prepared for his role as an inmate, why ambiguity is not a bad thing in movies, and gave us some details regarding the creative process that director John Curran worked through to bring the movie to fruition. Interview is forthcoming.
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Posted in: Cult Cinema · Fantastic Fest · Movies · Reviews
Tagged: 30 Days of Night: Dark Days, Ben Ketai, Darren Lyn Bousman, David Dorfman, Diora Baird, Edward Norton, Fantastic Fest, Jaime King, Kiele Sanchez, Mother's Day, Rebecca De Mornay, Stone, Thomas Haden Church, Zombie Roadkill
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