Tag: Bridge of Spies

  • &Privé HD celebrates the birthday of the Steven Spielberg

    &Privé HD celebrates the birthday of the Steven Spielberg

    MUMBAI: &Privé HD, the English movie channel, presents Club Privé: Spielberg Edition – a curation of five of Spielberg’s best movies exploring different sides of human emotions. The special will air from 18 to 22 December at 11 pm only on &Privé HD.

    A master of emotions and technique, Spielberg is undoubtedly one of the most influential film personalities. Winner of 3 Academy awards and 7 nominations, he is known for his signature filmmaking style with an enviable filmography. Spielberg’s films have been instrumental in revolutionizing the film industry and refining the views of its audience, as each of his movies compels the audience to delve deeper into the lives of theirprotagonists and feel the other side of cinema.

    The Club Privé: Spielberg Edition is in line with the channel’s promise of presenting quality cinema to its discerning non-conformist viewers. Upholding its promise to deliver the finest films to its perceptive audience, &Privé HD celebrates the filmmaker extraordinaire with movies that highlight theintricacies of their characters.Each of the carefully curated films deliver a distinctinsight to the audience, presenting them with multiple layers that appeal to their appetite for cinema that touches the soul. The line-up of movies includes:

    Bridge of Spies (18th December, 2017)

    Starring Tom Hanks as a lawyer (Donovan) tasked with coordinating a prisoner exchange, the film is a Cold War tale of moral principles colliding with the imperatives of national security. It not only unfolds the story behind how Donovan bargains for the exchange, but also entices audiences to root for a soviet spy as he is returned to his country.

    The Terminal (19th December, 2017)

    Starring Tom Hanks and Catherine Zeta Jones, the film depicts heart-warming story of an immigrant, who finds himself stranded in a busy New York airport terminal due to unseen circumstances. Nevertheless, he makes the best of his situation, essentially adopting the terminal as his home, befriending the staff and even falling in love with one of the flight attendants.

    Super 8 (20th December, 2017)

    The cult classic sees six teens making a zombie movie and get caught up in a military cover-up involving a mysterious beast. It projects how the unusual disappearances and inexplicable events begin to take place in town, and the local Deputy tries to uncover the truth – something more terrifying than any of them could have imagined.

    Amistad (21st December, 2017)

    Relating to the American cultural landscape, this courtroom drama is based on the true story of the events in 1839 aboard the slave ship La Amistad, during which Mende tribesmen abducted for the slave trade managed to gain control of their captors’ ship off the coast of Cuba, and the international legal battle that followed their capture by a U.S. revenue cutter.With the justice system and defenceattorneys all presenting a different viewpoint, the film explores the different opinions of each character, and how each is crucial to the final verdict.

    Catch Me if You Can (22nd December, 2017)

    Starring powerhouse performers Leonardo Di Caprio and Tom Hanks, the film illustrates the events of a successful con artist and master of deception. While the film shows Frank as a brilliant forger, whose skill at check fraud has netted him millions of dollars in stolen funds, it also highlights the story of Carl Hanratty (Tom Hanks) as a sharp cop on Frank’s tail.  A deeply moving coming of age black comedy that follows the true story of Frank Abagnale, one of the most famous con-artists in history.

    Since its launch, &Privé HD has presented some of the most-awaited critically-acclaimed movies for its audience. With Club Privé: Spielberg Edition, it’s time to raise a toast to Steven Spielberg and the sheer brilliance of his work.

  • Leonardo DiCaprio wins Best Actor at 88th Academy Awards; complete list of winners

    Leonardo DiCaprio wins Best Actor at 88th Academy Awards; complete list of winners

    MUMBAI: Doesn’t it feel extremely pleasant when you get rewarded or appreciated for your work? That breathtaking moment when you don’t understand whether to weep or be gleeful. And winning an award after waiting for the past six years just makes that win even sweeter.

    With almost the entire world praying for Leonardo DiCaprio to bag his first Oscar at this year’s 88th Academy Awards, the actor and his fans were not disappointed. DiCaprio finally walked off the stage with the coveted golden trophy for Best Actor for his role in The Revenant. In his speech, the actor not only thanked the director Alejandro Iñárritu, but also expressed gratitude to his parents.

    Adding further, the actor said, “Making The Revenant was about man’s relationship to the natural world, climate change is real. It is happening right now. Our production needed to move to the southern tip of this planet just to be able to find snow. Calling 2015 as the hottest year in history he said, “It is the most urgent threat facing our entire species.Let us not take this planet for granted. I do not take tonight for granted.”

    While Mad Max: Fury Road bagged six Oscars, The Revenant grabbed three and Spotlight took away two awards.

    The complete list of winners is as follows:

    Best Picture

    Spotlight

    Best Actor

    Leonardo DiCaprio for The Revenant

    Best Actress

    Brie Larson for Room

    Best Supporting Actor

    Mark Rylance for Bridge of Spies

    Best Supporting Actress

    Alicia Vikander for The Danish Girl

    Best Director

    The Revenant, Alejandro G. Iñárritu

    Best Original Screenplay

    Spotlight, Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    The Big Short, Charles Randolph and Adam McKay

    Best Costume Design

    Jenny Beavan for Mad Max: Fury Road

    Best Production Design

    Mad Max: Fury Road production design, Colin Gibson; set decoration by Lisa Thompson

    Best Makeup and Hairstyling

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Lesley Vanderwalt, Elka Wardega and Damian Martin

    Best Cinematography

    Emmanuel Lubezki for The Revenant

    Best Film Editing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Margaret Sixel

    Best Sound Editing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Mark Mangini and David White

    Best Sound Mixing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Chris Jenkins, Gregg Rudloff and Ben Osmo

    Best Visual Effects

    Ex Machina,  Andrew Whitehurst, Paul Norris, Mark Ardington and Sara Bennett

    Best Animated Short Film

    Bear Story, Gabriel Osorio and Pato Escala

    Best Animated Feature Film

    Inside Out, Pete Docter and Jonas Rivera

    Best Documentary, Short Subject

    A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy

    Best Documentary Feature

    Amy, Asif Kapadia and James Gay-Rees

    Best Live-Action Short Film

    Stutterer, Benjamin Cleary and Serena Armitage

    Best Foreign-Language Film

    Son of Saul, Hungary

    Best Original Song

    Writing’s on the Wall from Spectre; Music and lyric by Jimmy Napes and Sam Smith

    Best Original Score

    The Hateful Eight, Ennio Morricone

  • Leonardo DiCaprio wins Best Actor at 88th Academy Awards; complete list of winners

    Leonardo DiCaprio wins Best Actor at 88th Academy Awards; complete list of winners

    MUMBAI: Doesn’t it feel extremely pleasant when you get rewarded or appreciated for your work? That breathtaking moment when you don’t understand whether to weep or be gleeful. And winning an award after waiting for the past six years just makes that win even sweeter.

    With almost the entire world praying for Leonardo DiCaprio to bag his first Oscar at this year’s 88th Academy Awards, the actor and his fans were not disappointed. DiCaprio finally walked off the stage with the coveted golden trophy for Best Actor for his role in The Revenant. In his speech, the actor not only thanked the director Alejandro Iñárritu, but also expressed gratitude to his parents.

    Adding further, the actor said, “Making The Revenant was about man’s relationship to the natural world, climate change is real. It is happening right now. Our production needed to move to the southern tip of this planet just to be able to find snow. Calling 2015 as the hottest year in history he said, “It is the most urgent threat facing our entire species.Let us not take this planet for granted. I do not take tonight for granted.”

    While Mad Max: Fury Road bagged six Oscars, The Revenant grabbed three and Spotlight took away two awards.

    The complete list of winners is as follows:

    Best Picture

    Spotlight

    Best Actor

    Leonardo DiCaprio for The Revenant

    Best Actress

    Brie Larson for Room

    Best Supporting Actor

    Mark Rylance for Bridge of Spies

    Best Supporting Actress

    Alicia Vikander for The Danish Girl

    Best Director

    The Revenant, Alejandro G. Iñárritu

    Best Original Screenplay

    Spotlight, Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    The Big Short, Charles Randolph and Adam McKay

    Best Costume Design

    Jenny Beavan for Mad Max: Fury Road

    Best Production Design

    Mad Max: Fury Road production design, Colin Gibson; set decoration by Lisa Thompson

    Best Makeup and Hairstyling

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Lesley Vanderwalt, Elka Wardega and Damian Martin

    Best Cinematography

    Emmanuel Lubezki for The Revenant

    Best Film Editing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Margaret Sixel

    Best Sound Editing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Mark Mangini and David White

    Best Sound Mixing

    Mad Max: Fury Road, Chris Jenkins, Gregg Rudloff and Ben Osmo

    Best Visual Effects

    Ex Machina,  Andrew Whitehurst, Paul Norris, Mark Ardington and Sara Bennett

    Best Animated Short Film

    Bear Story, Gabriel Osorio and Pato Escala

    Best Animated Feature Film

    Inside Out, Pete Docter and Jonas Rivera

    Best Documentary, Short Subject

    A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy

    Best Documentary Feature

    Amy, Asif Kapadia and James Gay-Rees

    Best Live-Action Short Film

    Stutterer, Benjamin Cleary and Serena Armitage

    Best Foreign-Language Film

    Son of Saul, Hungary

    Best Original Song

    Writing’s on the Wall from Spectre; Music and lyric by Jimmy Napes and Sam Smith

    Best Original Score

    The Hateful Eight, Ennio Morricone

  • 11 Films You Must Watch Before Tuning In to the Oscars

    11 Films You Must Watch Before Tuning In to the Oscars

    Summer is over, and you know what that means in Hollywood – time to dust off those statuettes and start lobbying. Film festival season is about to kick off in earnest, with Venice, Toronto and New York all taking place back-to-back over the next month, which means that we’ll soon have a clear(ish) picture of the 2016 Oscar race. Specifically, we’ll have a sense of which would-be frontrunners are shaping up to be this year’s Birdman and Whiplash, and which look more like this year’s Unbroken and Big Eyes. Let us take a look at all the contenders of 2016’s best film.

    Carol

    Premiering at Cannes this year to rapturous praise and multiple standing ovations, Todd Haynes’s period romance is already one of the year’s most acclaimed releases. Based on Patricia Highsmith’s long-banned novel of the same name, Carol stars Cate Blanchett as a mysterious married woman who enchants Rooney Mara’s lonely young shop assistant.

    Steve Jobs

    Two years on from the best-forgotten Ashton Kutcher biopic, the life of Steve Jobs has been adapted once again in a much more promising form. Danny Boyle directs Michael Fassbender in the role of Jobs, from a script written by Aaron Sorkin which – much like Sorkin’s Oscar-winning script for The Social Network – weaves together multiple timelines in its portrait of Jobs backstage at three iconic product launches.

    The Danish Girl

    Eddie Redmayne may have won Best Actor for his portrayal of Stephen Hawking last year, but he’s making a strong run at round two with the role of transgender pioneer Lili Elbe, one of the first known recipients of gender reassignment surgery. Directed by Tom Hooper – no stranger to the Academy after The King’s Speech and Les Mis – the film also stars Alicia Vikander as Elbe’s wife, who plays a central role in her husband’s gradual self-discovery.

    Joy

    If you felt like there was something missing at last year’s Oscars, it was probably because Jennifer Lawrence wasn’t nominated for a David O Russell movie, following her two-year hot streak with Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle. But she and O Russell are back in contention for 2016 with Joy, a biopic starring Lawrence as a struggling single mother who went on to invent the Miracle Mop. No, really.

    Macbeth

    He may have been memorably, inexcusably snubbed for Shame a few years back, but Michael Fassbender’s formidable slate this year could put him in line for a double Best Actor nomination. Justin Kurzel’s visceral adaptation of Shakespeare’s Scottish Play stars Fassbender as the conflicted, ambitious anti-hero, and Marion Cotillard as the scheming wife steering him in his fateful plot to kill the King and take his throne.

    Suffragette

    Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter and Meryl Streep lead the cast of this impressive period piece, which tracks the early years of the British women’s suffragette movement. Written by Abi Morgan, who has enjoyed prior Oscar success with The Iron Lady and Shame, this is a long overdue historical portrait that’s sure to be recognised.

    The Revenant

    Coming off Birdman’s unexpected sweep in the major categories last year, director Alejandro González Iñárritu hasn’t been resting on his laurels. His upcoming drama stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a rugged fur-trapper in the 1820s Rocky Mountains, who’s left for dead by his companions after a bear attack. Having survived the mauling, he sets out to wreak vengeance on the friends who abandoned him (Tom Hardy, Will Poulter and Domhnall Gleeson). Could this finally be the year Leo breaks his Oscar curse?

    Bridge of Spies

    Steven Spielberg’s latest historical picture follows an American lawyer (Tom Hanks) who is recruited by the CIA during the Cold War, to help them negotiate the release of a pilot imprisoned in the Soviet Union. Co-written by Joel and Ethan Coen, the film will premiere at this month’s New York Film Festival, but is already attracting a lot of early awards buzz.

    The Hateful Eight

    Quentin Tarantino’s long-delayed Western follows a group of bounty hunters who are caught up in a treacherous plot, after being forced to take shelter together during a blizzard. There are several intriguing possibilities for comeback performances among the cast – the central plot sees Kurt Russell’s “The Hangman” escorting Jennifer Jason Leigh’s “The Prisoner” to face justice for a murder – and the leaked script drama has only heightened anticipation for the finished product.

    Trumbo

    Having deservedly won all of the Emmys for his career-redefining performance as Breaking Bad’s Walter White, Bryan Cranston could now be in line for an Oscar nomination. He plays 1940s screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, whose career came to an abrupt and painful end after he – along with other scribes – was blacklisted as a communist. Previous years have borne out the idea that the Academy loves a Hollywood insider story, and the story of Trumbo’s fight against government officials and studio bosses alike could well strike a particular chord.

    Room

    Abrahamson gets extra points for the degree of difficulty involved in filming an intimate drama, half of which takes place in a 10-by-10 room, with just two performers, relative newcomer Larson and kid actor Jacob Tremblay.

     Other films: Brooklyn, The Walk, Freeheld, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, Black Mass, Genius, The Martian, Inside Out

  • 11 Films You Must Watch Before Tuning In to the Oscars

    11 Films You Must Watch Before Tuning In to the Oscars

    Summer is over, and you know what that means in Hollywood – time to dust off those statuettes and start lobbying. Film festival season is about to kick off in earnest, with Venice, Toronto and New York all taking place back-to-back over the next month, which means that we’ll soon have a clear(ish) picture of the 2016 Oscar race. Specifically, we’ll have a sense of which would-be frontrunners are shaping up to be this year’s Birdman and Whiplash, and which look more like this year’s Unbroken and Big Eyes. Let us take a look at all the contenders of 2016’s best film.

    Carol

    Premiering at Cannes this year to rapturous praise and multiple standing ovations, Todd Haynes’s period romance is already one of the year’s most acclaimed releases. Based on Patricia Highsmith’s long-banned novel of the same name, Carol stars Cate Blanchett as a mysterious married woman who enchants Rooney Mara’s lonely young shop assistant.

    Steve Jobs

    Two years on from the best-forgotten Ashton Kutcher biopic, the life of Steve Jobs has been adapted once again in a much more promising form. Danny Boyle directs Michael Fassbender in the role of Jobs, from a script written by Aaron Sorkin which – much like Sorkin’s Oscar-winning script for The Social Network – weaves together multiple timelines in its portrait of Jobs backstage at three iconic product launches.

    The Danish Girl

    Eddie Redmayne may have won Best Actor for his portrayal of Stephen Hawking last year, but he’s making a strong run at round two with the role of transgender pioneer Lili Elbe, one of the first known recipients of gender reassignment surgery. Directed by Tom Hooper – no stranger to the Academy after The King’s Speech and Les Mis – the film also stars Alicia Vikander as Elbe’s wife, who plays a central role in her husband’s gradual self-discovery.

    Joy

    If you felt like there was something missing at last year’s Oscars, it was probably because Jennifer Lawrence wasn’t nominated for a David O Russell movie, following her two-year hot streak with Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle. But she and O Russell are back in contention for 2016 with Joy, a biopic starring Lawrence as a struggling single mother who went on to invent the Miracle Mop. No, really.

    Macbeth

    He may have been memorably, inexcusably snubbed for Shame a few years back, but Michael Fassbender’s formidable slate this year could put him in line for a double Best Actor nomination. Justin Kurzel’s visceral adaptation of Shakespeare’s Scottish Play stars Fassbender as the conflicted, ambitious anti-hero, and Marion Cotillard as the scheming wife steering him in his fateful plot to kill the King and take his throne.

    Suffragette

    Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter and Meryl Streep lead the cast of this impressive period piece, which tracks the early years of the British women’s suffragette movement. Written by Abi Morgan, who has enjoyed prior Oscar success with The Iron Lady and Shame, this is a long overdue historical portrait that’s sure to be recognised.

    The Revenant

    Coming off Birdman’s unexpected sweep in the major categories last year, director Alejandro González Iñárritu hasn’t been resting on his laurels. His upcoming drama stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a rugged fur-trapper in the 1820s Rocky Mountains, who’s left for dead by his companions after a bear attack. Having survived the mauling, he sets out to wreak vengeance on the friends who abandoned him (Tom Hardy, Will Poulter and Domhnall Gleeson). Could this finally be the year Leo breaks his Oscar curse?

    Bridge of Spies

    Steven Spielberg’s latest historical picture follows an American lawyer (Tom Hanks) who is recruited by the CIA during the Cold War, to help them negotiate the release of a pilot imprisoned in the Soviet Union. Co-written by Joel and Ethan Coen, the film will premiere at this month’s New York Film Festival, but is already attracting a lot of early awards buzz.

    The Hateful Eight

    Quentin Tarantino’s long-delayed Western follows a group of bounty hunters who are caught up in a treacherous plot, after being forced to take shelter together during a blizzard. There are several intriguing possibilities for comeback performances among the cast – the central plot sees Kurt Russell’s “The Hangman” escorting Jennifer Jason Leigh’s “The Prisoner” to face justice for a murder – and the leaked script drama has only heightened anticipation for the finished product.

    Trumbo

    Having deservedly won all of the Emmys for his career-redefining performance as Breaking Bad’s Walter White, Bryan Cranston could now be in line for an Oscar nomination. He plays 1940s screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, whose career came to an abrupt and painful end after he – along with other scribes – was blacklisted as a communist. Previous years have borne out the idea that the Academy loves a Hollywood insider story, and the story of Trumbo’s fight against government officials and studio bosses alike could well strike a particular chord.

    Room

    Abrahamson gets extra points for the degree of difficulty involved in filming an intimate drama, half of which takes place in a 10-by-10 room, with just two performers, relative newcomer Larson and kid actor Jacob Tremblay.

     Other films: Brooklyn, The Walk, Freeheld, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, Black Mass, Genius, The Martian, Inside Out