Three slow news days automatically add up to a slow news week in general. That means shorter entries. Expect short weekend entries if this keeps up. I may just post something in the spin-off instead.
- Lust, Caution's chances at the Oscars has just decreased by quite a bit, as the Academy Awards foreign films committee disqualifies Ang Lee's erotic drama as the Taiwanese entry because it's not Taiwan enough. Essentially, the main gripe is that it doesn't have enough Taiwanese involvement. That must suck for Lee, seeing that his Chinese movie for westerners, also known as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, manages to win best foreign film, while his Chinese movie for Chinese people gets disqualified.
Taiwan will submit Island Etude in its place.
- In another blow to the film (this ought to be the unofficial Lust, Caution blog), Chinese censors have apparently yet to screen the Mainland Chinese-safe version of the film, which means its November 1st opening date may get pushed further back. Meanwhile, pirated copies have finally gotten online, which may hurt the big chunk of change the film expected to make from the region.
- Meanwhile, Twitch has another update for the latest omnibus-film-in-a-city film Tokyo!. Apparently, Korean director Bong Joon-Ho's section is done filming, with Michel Gondry's getting ready to shoot later in the month. No idea when third director Leos Carax will be filming his, though.
Original Tokyograph story.
- Poor Twitch contributor Blake only got two questions with Park Chan-Wook because what was supposed to be a one-on-one interview became a roundtable with people asking about ridiculous rumors such as whether Park took a 5-year break to train being an astronaut. At least now you know he's making a bat film for his next project.
- DVDTalk has a review for the American DVD of Kazuaki Kiriya's Casshern, which boasts a so-called "director's cut" that's 25 minute shorter than the original Japanese cut. According to some poster on imdb, the DVD is missing not only scene selections, but the subtitles are also off-sync, and important bits are cut out.
- It's no news, but Japan's DVD market is still suffering, as sales for the first half year are down 2% from the same period last year.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
The Golden Rock - October 18th, 2007 Edition
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