Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Magic. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Magic. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 3, 2013

Casting magic gives life to Burt

THE INCREDIBLE BURT WONDERSTONE

Ace in the pack: Steve Carell and Olivia Wilde in The Incredible Burt Wonderstone. Source: Supplied

MOVIE REVIEW: The new comedy The Incredible Burt Wonderstone wants to be to Vegas magic acts what Anchorman was to network television. Or failing that, what Zoolander was to high fashion.

No harm in raising the bar so high. Particularly when most comedies these days aim so low.

No disgrace to fall slightly short of that bar either. While The Incredible Burt Wonderstone is too bitsy to be regarded as a comedy classic, it is still a very funny movie whenever some of those bits come together.

The title character (played by Steve Carell) is a dinosaur of Las Vegas entertainment, an old-school magician with a tan, a hairdo and a fashion sense that can all be seen from outer space.

With ticket sales plummeting, casino boss Doug Munny (James Gandolfini) sacks Burt and his long-time stage partner Anton (Steve Buscemi).

On the way out the door, they are informed they should be more like exciting new "extreme magician" Steve Gray (Jim Carrey).

Only trouble is, no one can be like Steve Gray.

This guy is doing stuff that is not magic as anyone knows it.

Gray can make a card disappear into his face. Then spectacularly retrieve it in a manner that needs stitches afterwards.

A walk across hot coals? That's for wimps. Steve Gray will sleep the night lying across those hot coals.

Therefore if Burt and Anton are to return to their former glory, they're going to have to mount one heck of an attention-grabbing comeback.

They have the trick that will do the trick, a doozy that has long been regarded as the Holy Grail of all Vegas magicians: making an audience disappear. There's just one snag. It has never been attempted successfully.

The casting is the key here. Carell is in his best comic form since he left TV's The Office. Carell's specialty has long been the self-unaware buffoon, and it is definitely a case of the right man for the right part here.

The movie's secret weapon is Carrey. The dude hasn't done a single funny thing since dial-up modems ruled the internet. Suddenly, he's found that missing gear that once put him so far ahead of the pack.

Carrey is used only in short doses, but they do pack a surreal wallop, and contrast pleasingly (and in some scenes, queasily) with Carell's measured brand of comedy.

--

The Incredible Burt Wonderstone [M]

Rating: 3/5

Director: Don Scardino (Me and Veronica)

Starring: Steve Carell, Jim Carrey, Olivia Wilde, Steve Buscemi

"Abracadabra-ha-ha!"


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Mila Kunis casts a magic spell

Mila Kunis

New territory: Mila Kunis isn't used to working on a blockbuster movie. Source: Supplied

MILA Kunis is happy to admit that, yep, she's made a few dud flicks.

"I've done some horrible movies," she says, declining, of course, to say which ones she's referring to.

"For whatever reason, sometimes they just don't work. But every movie that I do, regardless of the outcome, I'm proud of it going in. You can never predict. It's all relative - what I think is great, you might think is horrible, what you think is great, I might think is horrible. It's truly a matter of opinion."

Despite the occasional dud, at just 29, she's already forged an impressive, if eclectic, career. ("Eclectic," she says, "is very polite.") She's been as drawn to darker indie fare such as Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan, as she has been to post-apocalyptic action films such as The Book of Eli, or to light comedies such as Friends With Benefits and Ted (not to mention giving voice to Meg Griffin on the hugely popular animated series, Family Guy).

"If you look at the films that I've done, they don't make any sense," says Kunis, adding that she never sticks to one genre because she doesn't want to "limit" her options.

"They're all over the place. I take roles because I look at the people who are part of it. If they're people I respect and admire, then that informs the choices I make."

Still, Kunis reckons there's a fair bit of kismet in her landing a role in Oz The Great and Powerful. (Based on the books of L. Frank Baum, the film takes place before the events depicted in The Wizard of Oz.)

For Kunis, Baum's books and Victor Fleming's classic had a significant impact on her childhood. She recounts how, after moving to the US from the Ukraine at just seven, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was the first book she read in English, and the classic 1939 film was the first movie she watched.

"It was just so fantastical, so magical. I think that film is part of the reason I went into acting. I wanted to play pretend like that."

At the other end of the spectrum, Pretty Woman had a similar effect on her. "But not the prostitute bit."

In Oz The Great and Powerful, Kunis plays Theodora, a witch who possibly turns into the Wicked Witch of The West, and who possibly turns green. A tight lid has been kept on significant plot details in the lead up to the film's release, and there were no press screenings prior to our interview.

"She is very na adive, very young, and she believes in the good in people, and that the world is a positive place," says Kunis, adding that Theodora, who "has a temper", "ultimately gets her heart broken and goes through a slight transformation".

Directed by Sam Raimi (his first outing since 2009's Drag Me To Hell), Oz The Great and Powerful propels Kunis solidly into the blockbuster realm (James Franco, Michelle Williams and Rachel Weisz also star), an entirely new territory for her.

"It's definitely different," says Kunis of the experience. "I don't come from the world of movies this size. There's a very big machine behind it. It's an experience, that's for sure. I'm not sure how I feel about it yet."

Bigger global exposure also means even more focus on her personal life, something which horrifies her.

Interest in her private life had already skyrocketed thanks to her relationship with Ashton Kutcher (she was previously in a long-term relationship with actor Macaulay Culkin). Still, she zealously guards her personal life and is resolute that if her career impacts too negatively on it, she'll quit the business.

"I've always said - and I constantly remind myself - that what I do and who I am, are two totally different things," she states. "I love my personal life so much more than my career. Choosing one or the other, I'm going to choose my life. I'd give up acting in a second for my personal life."

It is, she admits, a strange business to be in, particularly in Los Angeles, where the spotlight is suffocating.

"I live in Los Angeles where everybody's face is frozen, and where everybody who was the prettiest girl in school, comes to Los Angeles, so you're surrounded by people who are all transplants, and who all think that they're good looking. It's a different world."

She says being judged on your looks is "awful", but recognises it's a byproduct of the industry she's in.

"Looks are so fleeting. You can't beat the ageing process, although some people may try," she laughs.

"A lot of people get so stuck on being a certain age, wanting to look the way that they did at a certain age. My philosophy is, go with it. Of course, I say this now, I'm 29. Get back to me in a couple of years. It's almost like, you're damned if you do, and damned if you don't"

Still, Kunis can't escape the fact that, whether she likes it or not, she is considered a sex symbol. She says she laughed when Esquire magazine named her "The Sexiest Woman Alive" last year.

"Look, I'm human, of course it's flattering, and I can't wait to have grandchildren and tell them that grandma was considered sexy at one point in her life. Here's the proof!"

Kunis may work hard to maintain a work/life balance, but right now, work doesn't look like letting up. Aside from Oz The Great and Powerful, she has three films in the can and a couple more on the horizon.

She's currently filming The Third Person, which teams her again with her good mate, James Franco.

"We just get each other, and we've worked together so many times that we don't know what it's like not to work together," she says.

"If two years go by and we don't work together, we go, 'Oh my god, this is so weird."'

When she gets another break, she plans to indulge in her great love, travel.

Last year, she and Kutcher took a trip to Australia, which they loved ("except for the paparazzi who followed us everywhere").

"I really like the Australian lifestyle," she says. "I like the way people live, I like their attitude. I've realised that people live to work in the States, and in the rest of the world, people work to live. I think it's the one underlying difference."

But probe a bit further for specifics of the couple's trip and there's a significant pause.

"I don't mean to be an asshole," she says, "but I won't talk about him."

Even an innocuous question as to what she does away from work is met with a deep exhale.

"It's a funny question to get asked, I don't think dentists get asked what they do when they're not looking at people's teeth."

SEE Oz The Great and Powerful, opens today


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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 2, 2013

'Magic' pen brings drawings to life

3D-printing pen turns doodles into sculptures

3D printing pen

It's something out of a childish dream about your drawings coming to life. Except it's real. Picture: 3Doodle Source: Supplied

DID you ever have that moment as a kid where you wish your drawings could come to life?

Dream no more. A new company has developed a technology that allows you to do just that.

Enter, the 3Doodle pen that replaces ink with plastic which melts at 270C to create a 3D object instead of just an idea on paper.

The 3Doodle starts out like any other kind of pen, you begin by drawing normally, with the nib pressed to paper, but then you lift it in the air and the pen keeps drawing.

The plastic hardens almost immediately, cooled down by a teensy fan contained in the nib of the pen.

The 3Doodle is incredibly cool but it offers more than just novelty. According to the company it can be used to create jewelry,  pendants, fridge magnets and allows users to personalise things like smartphone cases, laptops and tablets. It  also creates the potential for designers to literally draw a prototype of their idea, allowing them to map it in 3D before it has even gone into production.

The video demonstration (above) showed how one designer 'drew' a model of the Eiffel Tower to scale. The possibilities for this technology are seemingly endless.

And the market seems to think so too. The company has already far exceeded its crowdfunding goal of $30,000 Kickstarter. The pen has earned almost than $1,612,000 in funding.

And 3Doodle aren't just planning to stop with plastics, it is also envisioning a pen that can draw sugary treats in 3D.

You might one day be able to draw your own lollipop!!

"We could in theory use the pen to melt sticks of sugar," 3Doodle spokesman Daniel Cowen told New Scientist.

However he also said they're holding off on the idea due to "food safety issues".

"We will be running some tests soon – and we'd have to lower the temperature in the pen, too," he said.

Needless to say, while the pen creates some awesome 3D doodles, it's not child's play. Given that it heats the plastic to 270C, it's best to keep it away from children.


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