tagged w/ Alice in Wonderland Movie
-
Funny marijuana comedy show. This part includes some stoner music with Boston Smokin', plus a preview of the new Alice In Wonderland movie with Johnny Depp. Then a website link review for potsmokersnet.com and the final thoughts with the show closing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmUxn1XvJQAFunny marijuana comedy show. This part includes some stoner music with Boston... more
-
-
Knowing and loving someone totally different than ourselves with the passion anthropologists dissect "the other", is one of the true nectars of life.
Unfortunately, the meeting and the greeting of new people is one of the greatest sovereign rights of humanity, we take advantage of the least.Knowing and loving someone totally different than ourselves with the passion... more
-
-
An animated film by Dreamworks has topped the Box Office in the USA, taking down Alice in Wonderland which has been holding to spot for weeks now. The film, How to Train Your Dragon has been a success with audiences and keeps climbing box office charts world wide (I'm sure there was a story about it hitting top in Australia)
"The film, about a hapless young Viking who aspires to hunt dragons, ended Alice in Wonderland's three-week run at number one with $43.3m (£29m)."An animated film by Dreamworks has topped the Box Office in the USA, taking down Alice... more
-
-
lady gaga in wonderland! a trailer remade with lady gaga, pretty funny check it out!
http://tinyurl.com/yfggrqulady gaga in wonderland! a trailer remade with lady gaga, pretty funny check it out!... more
-
-
Johnny Depp, arguably one of the best actors ever and personally one of my favorites has done everything from pirate, to gangster, to drag!Johnny Depp, arguably one of the best actors ever and personally one of my favorites... more
-
-
Photos of the trippy “Alice in Wonderland” movie press kit. It’s a fun Russian Doll-effect kit.Photos of the trippy “Alice in Wonderland” movie press kit. It’s a... more
-
-
This is a direct upload of the video for the story previously posted on the Movies page under the title, "MIGHTY MOVIE PODCAST: Tim Burton at MoMA"
=====================
So you go into this room at New York’s Museum of Modern Art’s Tim Burton exhibit, and it’s like striking gold: the Jack Skellington figure is there, along with a choice selection of the replacement heads that were used to animate dialogue; there’s the creepy, completely covered baby Penguin wicker stroller from BATMAN RETURNS; you can see a MARS ATTACKS stop-motion figure and some test footage shot before Burton decided to go CG; plus the headless horseman figure and the EDWARD SCISSORHANDS outfit and ED WOOD’s angora sweater. Film geek heaven — and a must-have for MMP’s second video podcast.
I pull out my camcorder and power up, and am instantly intercepted by a MoMA PR person, who politely but firmly informs me that practically nothing in the room, save for Edward and Headless and a vitrine with some figures from THE CORPSE BRIDE, can be filmed.
“Including,” she points out, “the angora sweater.”
Okay, I can dig that, for whatever reasons legal or contextual, stuff may be off-limits (fortunately, no such prohibitions existed for the rest of the exhibit, and, as you’ll see in the video, it’s a big durn exhibit). But specifically throwing the barbed wire up around the angora sweater? Really? Is there some sort of legal constraint, or is this humble strip of fluff so iconic of… something… that dissemination of its presence here could completely blow the intent of the exhibit?
So sorry, all you PLAN 9 maniacs. You want to worship at the alter of the angora, you’re just going to have to make a pilgrimage to New York. Happily, once you’ve performed your obeisances, you’ll then have an opportunity to drink deeply of Tim Burton’s mad genius. There are tons of concept work here, drawn by Burton’s own hand, plus a stunning variety of original and heretofore unseen artwork, sculptures and installations created specifically for the exhibit, and a copy of the hard-to-see HANSEL AND GRETEL adaptation that Burton directed for Disney in 1982.
A lot of the film stuff — including concept designs for ALICE IN WONDERLAND and the aborted Burton version of SUPERMAN RETURNS — was not verboten, so you get a taste of it in this podcast, along with a good sampling of original art, some thoughts from the exhibit’s curators on the director’s life and work, and some footage of Burton’s very Tim Burtonesque appearance at the press presentation. Click on the player above to get a look.This is a direct upload of the video for the story previously posted on the Movies... more
-
-
So you go into this room at New York’s Museum of Modern Art’s Tim Burton exhibit, and it’s like striking gold: the Jack Skellington figure is there, along with a choice selection of the replacement heads that were used to animate dialogue; there’s the creepy, completely covered baby Penguin wicker stroller from BATMAN RETURNS; you can see a MARS ATTACKS stop-motion figure and some test footage shot before Burton decided to go CG; plus the headless horseman figure and the EDWARD SCISSORHANDS outfit and ED WOOD’s angora sweater. Film geek heaven — and a must-have for MMP’s second video podcast.
I pull out my camcorder and power up, and am instantly intercepted by a MoMA PR person, who politely but firmly informs me that practically nothing in the room, save for Edward and Headless and a vitrine with some figures from THE CORPSE BRIDE, can be filmed.
“Including,” she points out, “the angora sweater.”
Okay, I can dig that, for whatever reasons legal or contextual, stuff may be off-limits (fortunately, no such prohibitions existed for the rest of the exhibit, and, as you’ll see in the video, it’s a big durn exhibit). But specifically throwing the barbed wire up around the angora sweater? Really? Is there some sort of legal constraint, or is this humble strip of fluff so iconic of… something… that dissemination of its presence here could completely blow the intent of the exhibit?
So sorry, all you PLAN 9 maniacs. You want to worship at the alter of the angora, you’re just going to have to make a pilgrimage to New York. Happily, once you’ve performed your obeisances, you’ll then have an opportunity to drink deeply of Tim Burton’s mad genius. There are tons of concept work here, drawn by Burton’s own hand, plus a stunning variety of original and heretofore unseen artwork, sculptures and installations created specifically for the exhibit, and a copy of the hard-to-see HANSEL AND GRETEL adaptation that Burton directed for Disney in 1982.
A lot of the film stuff — including concept designs for ALICE IN WONDERLAND and the aborted Burton version of SUPERMAN RETURNS — was not verboten, so you get a taste of it in this podcast, along with a good sampling of original art, some thoughts from the exhibit’s curators on the director’s life and work, and some footage of Burton’s very Tim Burtonesque appearance at the press presentation. Click on the player above to get a look.So you go into this room at New York’s Museum of Modern Art’s Tim Burton... more
-
-
I was eagerly anticipating my Syfy conference call for Alice with actress Caterina Scorsone and writer/director Nick Willing. I’d prepared dutifully by watching my screener, reviewing Alice for you guys, and drumming up questions I felt wouldn’t be asked of them a thousand times. Almost all of my effort was uh, pretty much definitely wasted.I was eagerly anticipating my Syfy conference call for Alice with actress Caterina... more
-
-
I’ve compiled a list of Alice in Wonderland adaptations with youtube videos for you to reference. Because of recent adaptations and interpretations of Alice in Wonderland being made, I thought it was a good chance for us to get all remembery about the past.I’ve compiled a list of Alice in Wonderland adaptations with youtube videos for... more
-
-
When someone tackles sacred ground, the entire ensemble of people involved have to make the creation near faultless in order to be warmly welcomed. What we have in Syfy’s Alice is something that comes close to that accomplishment. Syfy’s Alice is a champion of production that fuses modern invention and nostalgic resourcefulness.When someone tackles sacred ground, the entire ensemble of people involved have to... more
-
-
Disney has released a couple new Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland” posters and it’s good to see in this first one that someone remembered that the Mad Hatter is not the star of “ALICE in Wonderland.” Alice is. Poor Johnny Depp gets to sit at the head of the table but he’s so far away and so tiny.Disney has released a couple new Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland”... more
-
-
-