Home Blog Page 12698

Third-quarter office market, select East and Southeast Asian cities

151125Building_Rent

Papers, please

151123Asean_Papers

Analysts’ Q3 GDP growth estimates

151123Economies

Total tax rates in Asia-Pacific

TaxCountry

If you do business in APEC economies, how much of your profit would the government take

151120Tax_APEC_FINAL

Heroine Katniss finds her ending as The Hunger Games closes with war

LOS ANGELES — The guns are loaded, the arrows sharpened and the gauntlet has been thrown down — war is coming to the Capitol in the final installment of The Hunger Games, and Katniss Everdeen is going out with a bang.

4ME bets people will watch advertorials on stand-alone site

AUSTRALIA-BASED digital advertorial service 4ME group, in partnership with Media5 Marketing Corp., recently launched an online lifestyle multi-channel network in the Philippines  to “revolutionize the way [people] consume content,” in the words of Mike Constantino, TV4ME.ph managing director.

Bikini ads are out as biggest brewers court women drinkers

BUD LIGHT blew it with #UpForWhatever, the marketing campaign that called America’s most popular brew “the perfect beer for removing ‘no’ from your vocabulary for the night.” Critics lambasted it as tone deaf to issues of sexual assault.

M. Night Shyamalan adds humor to horror

By Angela Dawson

Front Row Features

M. Night Shyamalan, the filmmaker behind such contemporary suspense-horror films as The Sixth Sense and Signs, joins forces with small budget horror franchise master Jason Blum (Insidious, Paranormal Activity) to make The Visit, which blends comedy and horror into a creepy package.

The Philadelphia-based filmmaker says he and Blum first began talking about collaborating four years ago. Blum suggested to Shyamalan how to bring his dark vision to audiences in a cost-conscious way. Blum, through his Blumhouse Productions, serves as producer on the horror flick.

The Visit tells the story of a pair of teens that go on a trip to visit their grandparents, whom they’ve never met before. The older folks seem pleasant enough at first, but then start acting increasingly peculiar. The teens, played Ed Oxenbould and Olivia DeJonge, grow suspicious of their elders, and plot to escape. But can they flee the house before their lives are endangered?

Shyamalan spoke at a press conference about making The Visit, working with Blum and what’s ahead.

The pairing of you and Jason is interesting. What drew you to work with each other?

He’s the perfect foil for me because he’s inspirable. I know this is a business. I know this about art and commerce. But it’s tough because we’re selling art. You can go to extremes and just regard yourself as an artist or go to the opposite end and sell out. To have a partner that’s advising me on the business side and he’s telling me that all he cares about is being inspired, that makes me feel safe. I know he won’t betray the individuality of the movie. He is the champion of movies that people didn’t think would become something. There is something that is universal in their reach. I’m super-confident about creative stuff but not confident about human interactions that he’s very good at. He was always assuring me that everything would be all right. So it’s been a wonderful pairing.

What difference did you notice in making a smaller budget film?

The wonderful part of making smaller movies is that the limitations sometimes create opportunities. You can’t leave locations very often when you’re making a smaller-budget movie so I found this farmhouse. We shot this in Pennsylvania near where I live. It was a farm that was going into foreclosure. I asked the bank if I could rent it for six months before they put it up for auction. I told them once I make the movie, you can sell it for more. And they agreed to it. I had the house from pre-production. I would rehearse the actors in the rooms, on the stairs and in the kitchen.

There were a few times when I went to the house alone — it was really creepy, actually. I’d just sit there and think about the shots. It was really different because I could plan it out and decide where I want to place the camera. I’d take copious notes. That’s how I like to make movies. The challenge for me was to make it look spontaneous.

Did you allow the kids to shoot some of the shots?

There was one part that the kids shot. We had a problem one day where we wanted to shoot grandma chasing the kids in the crawl space under the house. The camera operator was too big to fit in the space. So the grips tried (and failed) to build a contraption. Then, I looked over at Ed (Oxenbould, who plays Tyler) and said to him, “Why don’t you just hold the camera?” And he was like, “Yeahhh!” So he just got underneath the house with it and did all the camerawork on that scene. He was so proud that day.

What was the inspiration for this?

Basically, when I’m writing something I think about what the subject is of the piece. The subject of the piece is our fear of getting old, which is a variation on our fear of dying. I have to think there’s a primal thing that we’re talking about, even though it’s fanciful and we’re doing it in a tongue-in-cheek manor. But what is the thing that makes it scary? What is the psychology behind it?

I met my wife at NYU at an abnormal psychology class because I love psychology and finding out why do we do things, what does the color red do and what does this camera angle do? All of that stuff. That’s the primal thing of it is we’re scared of being old. Playing on that is a powerful conceit.

When you were younger, did you have a fear of old people?

My grandparents have passed away but they were classic Indian grandparents. My grandmother would put so much powder on her face she almost looked like a kabuki player so she was kind of scary looking to me. My grandfather wore dentures so he would take them out sometimes and try and scare me. He was very mischievous too. So I would try to scare them when I got a little older. Now I feel bad about it. My parents, who are now grandparents, haven’t seen the movie yet, and I’m nervous for them to see it at the premiere, I don’t know what they’re going to think about it, like the scene in the shed with the dirty diaper and all that stuff, so we’ll see. (He laughs.)

Peter McRobbie and Deanna Dunagan, who play the grandparents, have extensive stage experience but aren’t well-known movie actors. Were you looking specifically to hire faces that most moviegoers wouldn’t recognize?

We take B-genre movies and treat them like they’re A-dramas. We get top-notch cinematographers, the best actors around, but the story just happens to be about aliens or ghosts or crazy people, whatever it is. My directing style is long takes. The longer take I can do without cutting. I choose whose scene it is and follow that person. So it helps to have a theater-trained actor who is used to getting up on the stage every day and committing to that performance. I need actors who are versed in that style, who don’t edit themselves. Because I do long takes, there’s a trust that happens. Theater actors know it’s working when everyone’s connected in this magic of storytelling. That’s my philosophy. I love stage actors.

How did you find Olivia DeJonge, who plays Becca and Ed Oxenbould, who plays Tyler? How did you get such strong performances from them?

I can’t take too much credit for what they did. We were just very lucky. Interestingly enough, the two kids in this movie are from Australia. It made sense to cast them because US audiences haven’t seen them that much. Australia’s another source of untapped talent. They’re speaking with an American accent was pretty easy for them and they didn’t lose their palate of colors as actors.

Making movies is an act of faith. When I write characters, I simply pray that these individuals exist in the world. I’m not looking for a 12-year-old Daniel Day-Lewis who transforms from one role to the next; I’m looking for these kids to exist somewhere. Their characters are who they are in real life, and they’re going to do a variation on the character for me. I need them to be super-intelligent because we’re going to talk like director and actors.

I also require the families to be healthy, positive families. They’re my co-directors with the kids. Sometimes, when I don’t have the vocabulary to direct the kid, and I need somebody who’s a master of his or her vocabulary to get through, so I’ll call the parent and tell them what I need and have them convey the information to the young actor.

Some of your recent films didn’t connect as much with audiences as your previous films. In linking up with horrormeister Jason Blum, was it a conscience decision to try something different?

I’m a philosophical guy. Each movie is a new relationship. You have to start fresh every time. You can’t look back and analyze what didn’t go right and what went right. As an artist, the second you try to conform and be something other than what you are, your light diminishes. To go and make a small movie, which never strikes me as less than, it’s just the love of cinema. As long as I’m being irreverent, funny and gross and emotional and dark as I am and let it be me, that’s what I want to do. It’s a wonderful thing to walk away and say The Visit is 100% me, and whatever comes from it, comes from it. How can it be wrong? Right? Because it was me. That’s my philosophy.

Even now, as I’m finishing writing my next screenplay that hopefully we will do together with (Jason Blum), some people are asking, “Is it as funny as The Visit?” I have to put that out of my head. The idea behind The Visit, was to strip everything away and just have fun with it. It was the funnest movie I’ve done.

There are certainly a lot more laughs in this one than in your previous horror movies. Was your intention to make a horror-comedy?

Yeah. I did a [horror/sci-fi genre] TV show called Wayward Pines this year, and it went well. People are offering me sci-fi, scary things. And I want to make something like Sex and the City, and nobody’s offering me that. (He laughs.) The Visit is a balance of who I am. I’m mischievous. I’ve written comedy a couple of times, like Signs, there was some comedy. Occasionally, I put it in some of my movies. I enjoy making people laugh. I hope that have that as a thread in my movies. I think it’s a wonderful, great foil.

What’s the status of Wayward Pines. If Fox orders a second season, are you going to direct some of the episodes?

I’m not sure. I’m not sure. We’re just talking now, getting it all together.

The nine lives of Russia’s Hermitage cats

FOR MORE than a century visitors have marveled at the Hermitage Museum’s precious collections, and for just as long dozens of cats have prowled the Saint Petersburg palace’s sprawling cellars.

Critics unhapy with Jolie film

NEW YORK — Angelina Jolie Pitt and Brad Pitt teamed up for the first time on screen in 10 years for By The Sea but Hollywood’s leading power couple on Friday got scathing early reviews for the movie, which some deemed a laborious vanity project.

By the Sea was written and directed by Jolie Pitt and inspired by the grief she experienced over the death of her mother in 2007. It focuses on the stale marriage of former dancer Vanessa (played by Jolie Pitt) and her husband, blocked writer Roland (played by Pitt).

The Hollywood Reporter’s Todd McCarthy called it “the kind of vanity project you don’t see much of anymore.” He wrote that it was a languid attempt at European arthouse cinema that “will prove once again that even the biggest names in the world won’t draw an audience to something that, in and of itself, has no reason for being.”

The more than two hour-long film reunites the two actors as a screen couple for the first time since the flirty 2005 action-comedy Mr. & Mrs. Smith, which brought them together in real life.

By the Sea — Jolie Pitt’s third directorial feature — could hardly be more different.

Alonso Duralde of TheWrap.com bemoaned the movie’s “dreary scenes from a dull marriage,” adding that it was hard “watching these two talented actors play blanks who have no chemistry with each other.”

Critics praised the cinematography as exquisite but said the stunning visuals failed to make up for a weak script and a plot where nothing much happens.

Scott Mendelson at Forbes.com admired the film more than he enjoyed it and said it may appeal to fans of talky, beautiful to look at foreign movies. “For anyone else, it will probably come off like a feature-length perfume commercial punctuated by outbursts of emotion and light kink.”

Fred Topel of the NerdReport.com, was kinder than most of the early reviewers. “Any time you get to see a filmmaker’s soul on display, if that doesn’t intrigue you enough for two hours, you’re missing out,” he wrote.

But Variety’s Justin Chang called the movie “an unabashed vanity project” that is “meandering and overlong in ways that will test the patience of even die-hard Brangelina fans.” — Reuters

MTRCB Rating: R-18

Shoppers choose salons over sweaters, pressuring US retailers

ALIA BARKSDALE says she’s changing the way she shops, and that’s bad news for department stores and other US retailers.