Tag: Kirsten Dunst

  • Alex Garland’s ‘Civil War’: Provocative action epic unveils turmoil in near-future America

    Alex Garland’s ‘Civil War’: Provocative action epic unveils turmoil in near-future America

    Mumbai: Alex Garland’s latest endeavor seeks to engage audiences worldwide in 2024, a year marked by significant political milestones. The film presents the USA at war with itself, in which ordinary citizens take up arms against each other and blood runs in the streets. ‘Civil War’ imagines America’s worst-case scenario right around the corner.

    In India, amidst a surge of political cinema (i.e. The Kashmir Files, The Kerala Story, Article 370, JNU, etc), ‘Civil War’ promises to fuel a thought-provoking conversation as we approach the 18th Lok Sabha elections.

    America is in a rough place right now — Right vs. left, blue vs. red, blind faith vs. biased truth. What was once an ideological divide now seems like an unbridgeable chasm. Imagining a not-so-distant future that you might accidentally mistake it for the present, in which the USA is once more at war against itself. The premise is a perfect opportunity to take a cold, hard, genre-inflected look at the American experiment’s current slouching toward self-destruction.

    By exploring the unwavering commitment to truth through the lens of journalism, “Civil War” has the potential to spark vital discourse and inspire viewers to critically evaluate the information they encounter.

    Alex Garland’s latest which is a wholly consuming thought-provoking war epic, is a deeply fascinating intimate piece that uses the experience and motivations of a group of military-embedded journalists to highlight the chilling reality of living in a world that never learns.

    Academy Award nominee Kirsten Dunst plays a jaded photojournalist documenting the end of democracy as we know it in what’s sure to be one of the year’s most controversial films. This gritty, war-torn film boasts an impressive ensemble cast, including Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, and Jesse Plemons.

    One of the most anticipated movies in a contentious Red vs. Blue election year, A24‘s Civil War made its grand splash Thursday night in the Texas democratic stronghold of Austin.

    If one is to engage honestly with “Civil War,’ one must also engage with the state of journalism. It is impossible not to in a country that has seen fascism rear its ugly head and reactionary conspiracies take hold in response to cascading existential crises. In the case of “Civil War” it culminates in violence that consumes the country.

    The dystopian future movie depicting the harrowing & senseless realities of war is set in the U.S. in which a three-term demagogue president rules (sound scary familiar? He’s played by Nick Offerman). Civil War follows a war journalist, played by Kirsten Dunst, as she traverses a very hostile America.

    Given the election year we’re in and the feeling that we’re about to reprise a truly contentious contest for the country’s highest office, however, it’s hard not to think we’re on the brink of a second conflict between citizens on our own soil. It can happen here. It can happen again.

    There Garland said he wanted to make journalists the heroes in Civil War because in “every democracy they aren’t a luxury, but a necessity.”

    “Civil War” follows a group of journalists. At the center of this is veteran war photographer Lee, played by an understated yet completely enthralling Kirsten Dunst, who has seen more death than many would in a lifetime. Now, she must cover a conflict in her own country and grapple with what this means. She takes aspiring young photographer Jessie (Cailee Spaeny) under her wing as she plans to travel across the country with her colleagues Joel (Wagner Moura) and Sammy (Stephen McKinley Henderson) to interview the president (Offerman) before what is believed to be the violent end of his regime.

    While political films often touch upon pressing social issues, they frequently oversimplify the role of journalists. However, Alex Garland’s “Civil War,” backed by A24 as their most ambitious project yet, courageously confronts this flawed narrative.

    The film delivers a raw portrayal of the physical and psychological hardships journalists endure in conflict zones – risking their lives amidst bullets, shelling, kidnappings, and death threats to uncover the unvarnished truth.

  • &pictures to telecast superhero film ‘Spiderman 3’

    &pictures to telecast superhero film ‘Spiderman 3’

    MUMBAI: ‘Spider-Man 3’, the American superhero film is all set to air on &pictures this Sunday, 23 November.  The final installment of the Spider-man trilogy starring mega Hollywood stars surrounds the life of Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) – a young high school student who gets bitten by a spider only to develop super-powers and get onto the good scheme of things – saving the planet and its citizens. But being a superhero means much more than merely having superpowers – it’s about sacrifice and responsibility.

     

    However, Peter is grown up now in the third installment of the three-movie series and his relationship with his one true love Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst) hits rock-bottom. On the other hand, a strange entity with dark powers takes control of him and enhances his power, but in return, Peter has a price to pay. The movie truly stands by its name – ‘Spiderman 3’ as Peter has to overcome three equally strong villains – his black suit, Sandman and Venom who are all ready to rise up to destroy him and everyone he holds dear. Will Peter be able to overcome all three evils? Will he be able to save his relationship with Mary Jane?

     

    Tune-in to Spiderman 3 this Sunday, 23 November at 12 noon only on &pictures!

     

  • Kirsten Dunst’s film to open 57th San Francisco International Film Festival

    Kirsten Dunst’s film to open 57th San Francisco International Film Festival

    MUMBAI: In a statement released this week, the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival (SFIFF) held from 24 April – 8 May, announced its highly-anticipated Opening Night and Closing Night selections.

    SFIFF kicks off with the Opening Night presentation of Hossein Amini’s (The Wings of the DoveDrive) gripping adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s bestselling novel, The Two Faces of January starring Oscar Issac (Inside Llewyn Davis), Viggo Mortensen (The Lord of the Rings trilogy) and Kirsten Dunst (Spiderman trilogy) gorgeously filmed on location in Greece and Turkey. The film is set in 1962 where a well-heeled couple (Mortensen and Dunst) come to know an American expatriate acting as an Athens tour guide (Isaac). But an incident at the couple’s hotel puts all three in danger and creates a precarious interdependence between them.

     

    The Festival will come to a stirring conclusion with Chris Messina’s (The Mindy Project, Argo) drama Alex of Venice, starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), Messina and Don Johnson (Django Unchained). With this film, Messina creates a winning mix of wistful comedy and heartfelt drama in this tale of accepting the unexpected. The film revolves around Alex (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), an environmental lawyer whose job often keeps her away from the home she shares with her son, husband (Messina) and actor father (Don Johnson). When her husband rebels against being a stay-at-home dad and takes a time out from the marriage, Alex’s world quickly becomes very complicated.

     

    “We are delighted to offer these exceptional films by first-time directors who are best known for their work in other areas of the film world,” said San Francisco Film Society Executive Director Noah Cowan in the statement. “Championing talented artists who aren’t afraid of taking risks is at the heart of the Film Society’s mission and our ongoing support of filmmakers around the world. I can’t think of a better pair of films to kick off and wrap up what is going to be an amazing festival.”

    The 57th San Francisco International Film Festival, organised by the San Francisco Film Society, runs at the Sundance Kabuki Cinemas, Castro Theatre and New People Cinema in San Francisco and the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley. Held each spring for 15 days, the festival is an extraordinary showcase of cinematic discovery and innovation in one of the country’s most beautiful cities, featuring 200 films and live events, 14 juried awards and nearly $40,000 in cash prizes, upwards of 100 participating filmmaker guests and diverse and engaged audiences with more than 65,000 in attendance.

     

  • Melancholia is NCFC’s best film

    Melancholia is NCFC’s best film

    MUMBAI: The National Society of Film Critics (NCFC) has named apocalyptic psychological drama Melancholia as the year‘s best film.

    The Society has also chosen Kirsten Dunst as best actress and Brad Pitt as best actor for the baseball drama Moneyball as well as The Tree of Life.

    Though Lars von Trier lost out as the best director award for his work on Melancholia to Terrence Malick for The Tree of Life, his film‘s big win bolstered the offbeat film‘s chances for the upcoming Academy Awards that will announce nominees later this month.

    Set against the backdrop of a country wedding, the dark film explores the strained relationship of two sisters, one a bride played by Dunst, while a strange planet threatens to collide with Earth, wiping out all traces of human existence.

    Pitt, already a strong contender for the Oscars, was honoured for his roles as Oakland A‘s manager Billy Beane in Moneyball as well as a strict father in The Tree of Life.

    Critics‘ awards are important in helping build momentum heading toward the Academy Awards, or Oscars, which are the world‘s top film awards given out on the final Sunday in February by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

    The NSFC includes 58 members from major newspapers in Los Angeles, Boston, New York, Chicago and other cities as well as from Time, Newsweek and The New Yorker and newspapers The Village Voice and the Boston Phoenix.

    The Real Millionaire by Piyush Thakur will be screened in International Competition at 34th Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival.

    This is his story and that of his family and the villagers‘ journey towards realizing the actual meaning of the word “winning”, reads the synopsis of the film on the festival‘s website.

    The festival will be held from January 27-February 4,2012.

    The film is a story of a farmer Vishnu, who‘s life changes after he gets a call from the reality game show,KBC (Kaun Banega Crorepati). This is his story and that of his family and the villagers‘ journey towards realizing the actual meaning of the word winning.