Posts Tagged ‘The Magnificent Seven’

1045 CHUM FM: RICHARD TALKS TIFF ON THE ROGER & MARILYN SHOW.

Screen Shot 2015-10-21 at 3.03.37 PMFrom chumfm.com: Movie Critic Richard Crouse joined us this morning after arriving back to Toronto from a trip out east! The Toronto International Film Festival is just around the corner and there’s nobody better to keep us in the loop than Richard! Ever wonder what its like to review movies? Richard says he will screen 4 or 5 movies per DAY for the festival. It’s the main way he preps for reviews, interviews and panel discussions. Tonight he’s going to see Sausage Party, which by the way is NOT recommended for children – for Richard it’s part anticipation part dread. ‘The Magnificent Seven’ will open the festival, be excited for this new version of an old flick starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke and more. Closing night will feature a sort of John Hughes coming of age feature, ‘The Edge of Seventeen’ may sound a little corny but have a look at the trailer. Richard and Caitlin agree that by the end of the trailer it makes sense why they wanted to close the festival with a nice “palate cleanser.” Richard’s online at www.richardcrouse.ca (Starts at 19:17)

CTV NEWSCHANNEL: Richard and host marcia mcmillan talk tiff announcements

Screen Shot 2016-07-27 at 12.33.25 PMRichard sits in with CTV NewsChannel host Marcia McMillan to discuss the opening and closing night films at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival and some other highlights!

Watch the whole tying HERE!

CP24: RICHARD AND HOST George Lagogianes talk TIFF 2016 ANNOUNCEMENTS!

Screen Shot 2016-07-26 at 1.23.42 PMRichard stops by CP24 to talk about the first Toronto International Film Festival announcements with host George Lagogianes.

They talk about the opening night film, “The Magnificent Seven,” starring Ethan Hawke and Denzel Washington, the closing night film, “Edge of 17” starring Woody Harrelson and Haley Stansfield and how TIFF has remained “the people’s festival.”

Watch the whole thing HERE!

Hollywood’s long history of looking to Asia for inspiration. Metro. Nov. 27, 2013

OLDBOY1Everyone knows Godzilla was a superstar in Japan long before he went Hollywood and started stomping American landmarks into matchsticks. Despite making his debut in 1954 The King of the Monsters had to wait until 1998’s Roland Emmerich film Godzilla to be to be fully reimagined by an American studio.

So you knew of Godzilla’s roots, but did you also know The Magnificent Seven and A Fistful of Dollars were remakes of Asian films?

Add to that list this weekend’s Oldboy, a Spike Lee re-creation of a violent Chan-wook Park film. Josh Brolin plays a man searching for answers as to why he was kidnapped and held in solitary confinement for twenty years.

Spike Lee says the original director only offered up one piece of advice. “Josh went to Park and asked for his blessing,” he told MTV. “Park gave it, and the one thing he said to Josh — which Josh related to me — was ‘make a different film; don’t do the same thing I did.’ [So] that’s the way we did it.”

Hollywood has looked to Asia for inspiration for years.

Akira Kurosawa’s films provided fodder for two redone classics. The epic Seven Samarai became the Wild West gunfighter flick The Magnificent Seven and the director’s Yojimbo provided the backbone for A Fistful of Dollars, starring Clint Eastwood.

Once again old west gunfighters subbed for samurai but the premise of one man playing rivals off one another remains. Since the movie was an unofficial remake Kurosawa sued, won and later bragged he made more money off of Fistful of Dollars than Yojimbo.

At the turn of the millennium Japanese movies like Ringu, Ju-on and Geoul Sokeuro helped reinvent Hollywood horror. The best known of the Asian horror remakes was The Ring, an unlikely story of a cursed videotape that caused the viewer to die within a week of watching it. Roger Ebert called the movie boring and “borderline ridiculous” but it was a huge hit and paved the way for others like The Grudge and Dark Water.

Hollywood has often looked to Asia for inspiration, but sometimes it has worked the other way round.

Saidoweizu is a Japanese version of the wine soaked romantic dramedy Sideways, director Toshikazu Nagae put his own spin on Paranormal Activity 2: Tokyo Night and A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop transports Blood Simple’s action from 1980s Texas to 19th century China.