Movies
When a movie makes a billion dollars, what does it truly mean? We believe there is often a disconnect between how much a movie makes and how good it is, but there is something to be said about box office juggernauts that connect with the zeitgeist and audiences around the world.
Here are the top grossing movies of all time, and an opportunity for you to think about your tastes in movies.
Read more »
by Bob August 15, 2011
Tags: Alice in Wonderland, Avatar, Batman, Billion Dollar Movie Club, Harry Potter, James Cameron, Johnny Depp, Lord of the Rings, Michael Bay, Penelope Cruz, Pirates of the Caribbean, Pixar, The Dark Knight, Tim Burton, Titani, Toy Story, Transformers
Movies
We read an article on Cracked.com a little while ago, titled “I can’t tell if movies are being serious anymore” and we agree with it wholeheartedly. Watching really bad movies, or even passive movie watching has become widespread, because – let’s face it – we’re bombarded with so much media every day that we end up simply blindly consuming instead of being selective, engaging with one film and enjoying it to its fullest.
So do yourself a favor and carve out a time to watch a single movie and nothing else that day, and relive the time when you had only a handful of television channels and watching video on the Internet was just a crazy dream of some nerdy programmer (and now millionaire). And if you watch the following films, you may recall what made watching movies so special to begin with.
Read more »
by Bob July 7, 2011
Tags: Amadeus, Ang Lee, Avatar, Cracked.com, Eat Drink Man Woman, James Cameron, John Waters, Milos Forman, Movies, Polyester
Entertainment
With 3D coming back from the dead in a big way this past year, it’s only appropriate to look back at film history and appreciate how the last century (that’s right, film has only been around for 100 years for those who grew up with DVR and YouTube) has produced some significant achievements.
From physical technology to visual language to the marriage of entertainment with intellectual ideas, a lot of stuff went down, and we celebrate them all here in a nutshell.
Read more »
by Maria November 3, 2010
Tags: Akira Kurosawa, Avatar, Battleship Potemkin, Citizen Kane, Epic movies, Filmmaking, George Lucas, Hollywood, James Cameron, Moviemaking, Movies, Orson Wells, Saw, Seven Samurai, Star Wars, Wes Craven
Entertainment
The Hurt Locker director Kathryn Bigelow has made history at this year’s Oscars, becoming the first woman to win an Academy Award for best director. Her film has also been named Best Picture.
Bigelow’s film follows the dangerous daily existence of a US Army bomb squad. It earned six Oscars in total on the night, including one for Mark Boal’s original screenplay, which was based on his time as a journalist embedded with such a unit.
“There is no other way to describe it – it’s the moment of a lifetime,” Bigelow said.
Read more »
by Lana Galea March 9, 2010
Tags: 82nd Academy Awards, Avatar, James Cameron, Kathryn Bigelow, Oscars, The Hurt Locker
Entertainment
Sci-fi epic Avatar and war saga The Hurt Locker earned a leading nine Oscar nominations at Tuesday morning’s press conference announcing the 2010 Academy Award nominees.
Both films are up for Best Film and Best Director in a race that will see Academy awards veteran James Cameron face off against ex-wife Kathryn Bigelow.
For the first time, the Oscars will feature 10 Best Picture contenders instead of the usual five.
Other movies contending for the 2010 Best Picture statue include: Up in the Air, The Blind Side, Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire, District 9, Up, A Serious Man, Inglourious Basterds, and An Education.
Read more »
by Alex Newman February 3, 2010
Tags: 2010, Academy Awards, Avatar, James Cameron, nominations, Oscars, The Hurt Locker
Celebrities
James Cameron’s science-fiction epic Avatar has shot past the $1 billion mark worldwide, making it only the fifth movie ever to achieve such a result at the international box office.
At the number one spot for a third consecutive weekend, 20th Century Fox’s Avatar raised its US domestic total to $352.1 million after just 17 days. The film added $133 million overseas to lift its international haul to $670 million, for a worldwide gross of $1.02 billion.
The latest figures make Avatar - the most expensive film ever made, with a budget of an estimated $300 million - one of only five films to top the $1 billion mark at the worldwide box office. The others are Titanic, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest and The Dark Knight.
With Avatar closing in on number two film The Return of the King, director James Cameron, who also directed Titanic, is in striking distance of having the two top-grossing movies globally.
“This is like a freight train out of control. It just keeps on going,” the BBC quoted 20th Century Fox distribution executive Bert Livingston as saying.
“I think everybody has to see Avatar once, even people who don’t normally go to the movies, they’ve heard about it and are saying, ”I have to see it”.
by Lana Galea January 5, 2010
Tags: Avatar, box-office, James Cameron, world's most expensive film