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Why a boutique video label is taking over L.A.'s theaters, plus the week's best movies
Why a boutique video label is taking over L.A.'s theaters, plus the week's best movies

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

Why a boutique video label is taking over L.A.'s theaters, plus the week's best movies

Hello! I'm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies. Among this week's new releases is '28 Years Later,' the third film in the series that dates back to 2002's '28 Days Later.' The new project reunites the core creative team from the first movie: director Danny Boyle, screenwriter Alex Garland, cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle and producer Andrew Macdonald. This time out the 'rage' virus that turns people into crazed cannibal monsters has been isolated to the U.K., which has been quarantined from the rest of the world. A small community of uninfected survivors live on a coastal island and make their way to the mainland to hunt and for supplies. A teenage boy (Alfie Williams), having made one expedition with his father (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), goes back with his ailing mother (Jodie Comer) in search of a doctor (Ralph Fiennes) rumored to be able to help them. In her review of the film, Amy Nicholson wrote that it 'has a dull central plot beefed up by unusual ambition, quirky side characters and maniacal editing. It's a kooky spectacle, a movie that aggressively cuts from moments of philosophy to violence, from pathos to comedy. Tonally, it's an ungainly creature. From scene to scene, it lurches like the brain doesn't know what the body is doing. Garland and Boyle don't want the audience to know either, at least not yet.' '28 Years Later' is the first film in a planned trilogy, with the second film, directed by Nia DaCosta, having already been shot. I spoke with Boyle, Garland, Mantle and Macdonald for a feature story that will be in print on Sunday. Whereas the original '28 Days Later' was notable for its use of consumer-grade digital video cameras, this time the production used modified iPhones to capture most of its imagery. The result is a fresh and distinctive look with both a sense of immediacy and an unexpected beauty. 'What was great about the script is that although you were inheriting some DNA from the original film, it was a completely original story,' said Boyle. 'And deserved to be treated like that.' This week the boutique home video label Cinématographe is participating in screenings all over town, further cementing the evolving relationship between physical media and the local revival scene. Curated and produced by Justin LaLiberty as an offshoot of the Vinegar Syndrome label, Cinématographe is among a handful of companies that create releases meant to look as nice on your shelf as they do onscreen. With beautiful restorations presenting the titles as optimally as possible, the releases come with many extras highlighting their production and what makes them special, alongside new critical essays on the films. Among the titles released by the company so far are John Dahl's 'Red Rock West,' Paul Schrader's 'Touch,' Robert Altman's 'Thieves Like Us' and Martha Coolidge's 'Joy of Sex.' 'Cinématographe has a very specific kind of curatorial approach,' said LaLiberty in a Zoom call this week from his home in Connecticut. 'And it also has a mission in that it's trying to shine a light on these movies that have fallen into obscurity for one reason or another.' Working in conjunction with the local screening collective Hollywood Entertainment in pulling together some of the local events, LaLiberty got a sense of the current repertory scene in L.A. and hopes that putting on Cinématographe screenings here is something that can become a regular occurrence. 'What I like about L.A.'s cinema scene, without being there, is seeing how the spaces cater to different audiences,' said LaLiberty. 'It happens in New York to an extent too, but I've noticed it a lot more with L.A. where I think just by virtue of geography, those theaters have to build a community that's a lot more specific to whatever their mission may be or whatever audience they're trying to cultivate is. So that's what I tried to do with these screenings is kind of hone in on what demographic those spaces are going to reach and what film made the most sense for each one.' On Sunday at Brain Dead Studios there will be a restored 4K screening of the exuberant 1983 remake of 'Breathless' with director Jim McBride in person. That will be followed by the Los Angeles premiere of the 4K restoration of Bob Saget's 1998 comedy 'Dirty Work,' starring Norm MacDonald, in its newly created 'Dirtier Cut,' which restores the film to a version screened for test audiences before it was chopped down to earn a PG-13 rating. Co-writer Frank Sebastiano will be in attendance. On Monday, LaLiberty will be at a pop-up at the Highland Park video store Vidéotheque, selling discs from Cinématographe, Vinegar Syndrome and affiliated titles from OCN Distribution — including some that are out of print. (Discs will be on sale at all the events too.) On Tuesday at Whammy Analog Media, 1994's essential lesbian rom-com 'Go Fish' will show in a 4K restoration with director and co-writer Rose Troche in person. On Wednesday, there will be a 45th anniversary screening at Vidiots of the 4K restoration of Ronald F. Maxwell's 1980 'Little Darlings,' starring Tatum O'Neal and Kristy McNichol as two teenage girls having a private competition at summer camp to lose their virginity. On Thursday, in conjunction with Cinematic Void, the Los Feliz 3 will host a showing of John Badham's 1994 action-thriller 'Drop Zone' starring Wesley Snipes, with the director in person. And while it may seem counterintuitive for a home video label to be encouraging people to go see movies in theaters, for LaLiberty the two go hand in hand. 'My ultimate mission is for these films to find an audience,' LaLiberty said. ''Little Darlings' is one of those movies that was out of circulation for so long that now that it's back and people can find it — to me that's the work. The end goal is that these films are brought back and that they're available for people to see and talk about and share. Theaters can play them and have them look great. I don't see it as cannibalizing. I see it as just being a part of the job.' The American Cinematheque is launching a series looking at films from Southeast Asia made around the turn of the 21st century and shot through with the energy of specific Y2K anxieties. These were films that felt cutting-edge and of the moment when they were released, but now perhaps function at least in part as memory pieces of their time and place. This is a sharp, smartly put-together series that contextualizes a group of films and filmmakers. Kicking off with Wong Kar-wai's 1995 'Fallen Angels,' the series also includes Hou Hsiao-hsien's 2001 'Millennium Mambo,' Tsai Ming-liang's 1992 'Rebels of the Neon God,' Fruit Chan's 1997 'Made in Hong Kong,' Shunji Iwai's 2001 'All About Lily Chou-Chou' Jia Zhangke's 2002 'Unknown Pleasures' and Lou Ye's 2000 'Suzhou River.' Writing about 'Fallen Angels' in 1998, Kevin Thomas called it 'an exhilarating rush of a movie, with all manner of go-for-broke visual bravura that expresses perfectly the free spirits of his bold young people. … Indeed, 'Fallen Angels' celebrates youth, individuality and daring in a ruthless environment that is wholly man-made, a literal underworld similar to the workers' realm of 'Metropolis' — only considerably less spacious. Life proceeds at a corrosive rock music beat.' 'Dogtooth' in 4K Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos' second feature, 'Dogtooth,' was his international breakthrough, winner of the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes and nominated for an Oscar. Yet even its most ardent admirers at the time would likely never have imagined Lanthimos would become the maker of commercially successful, Oscar-winning (and still weird) films such as 'The Favourite' and 'Poor Things.' A new 4K restoration of 'Dogtooth' will screen at the American Cinematheque at the Los Feliz 3 on Saturday, Tuesday and Sunday the 29th. The story feels abstracted and fractured, as a family lives in comfortable isolation, creating their own rules and language as the parents attempt to keep their children, now young adults, in a state of arrested development. When it was first being released, 'Dogtooth' struggled to find screens in Los Angeles. In my January 2011 review, I referred to it as 'part enigma, part allegory and even part sci-fi in its creation of a completely alternate reality.' When the film had its local premiere as part of the Los Angeles Greek Film Festival some seven months earlier, I spoke to Lanthimos, who perhaps pointed the way to some of his future work when he said, 'It's much more important to me for the audience to be engaged and to think about things themselves. If they miss any information, I'm OK with that instead of explaining every little detail and telling everyone what they should be thinking and how exactly things are.' Lanthimos added, 'People ask me if the film is about home-schooling or if it's political, about totalitarian states or the information we get from the media. And of course all those things were not in our minds as we were making the film, but it was intentional to make the film so people can come in and have their own thoughts about it.' 'The Seven Year Itch' 70th anniversary On Wednesday the Laemmle Royal will present a 70th anniversary screening of Billy Wilder's 'The Seven Year Itch' introduced by film writers Stephen Farber and Michael McClellan. Starring Marilyn Monroe and Tom Ewell, 'Itch' was written by Wilder and George Axelrod, an adaptation of the hit Broadway play that also starred Ewell. Though the movie does include the iconic scene of Monroe standing over a subway grate, it deserves to be remembered for much more than that. It's a bracing satire of midcentury masculinity, with Ewell playing a mild-mannered family man who lets himself be taken away by fantasies of what may happen while he is on his own for a summer with a young single woman living upstairs from his New York apartment. Writing about the movie in June 1955, Edwin Schallert said, 'This picture is nothing for the moralists, though it may not quite satisfy the immoralists either, whoever they are.' Tom Cruise, Dolly Parton among honorary Oscar recipients This week the motion picture academy announced four honorees for the Governors Awards in November. Dolly Parton will receive the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, while honorary Oscars will go to actor, dancer, choreographer and director Debbie Allen, production designer Wynn Thomas and actor and producer Tom Cruise. As always, it must be noted how disappointing it is that these awards will be bestowed at an untelevised ceremony and not as part of the Academy Awards telecast itself. The idea of giving an award to Tom Cruise, who has recently refashioned himself as nothing less than an international ambassador for movies and Hollywood in general, and not putting it on TV is just beyond reason. Here is hoping that Cruise will perhaps be able to do what his co-star in 'The Color of Money' Paul Newman once did, which is win a competitive Oscar after already being given an honorary one.

Oppo K13x 5G India Launch: Date, expected price, specifications, camera features & everything you need to know
Oppo K13x 5G India Launch: Date, expected price, specifications, camera features & everything you need to know

Time of India

time11 hours ago

  • Time of India

Oppo K13x 5G India Launch: Date, expected price, specifications, camera features & everything you need to know

Oppo has officially announced that the Oppo K13x 5G will be launched in India on June 23, 2025 at 12 PM IST, with availability via Flipkart, Oppo India's online store, and offline retailers. The Oppo K13x 5G is designed for users who seek a blend of performance, durability, and battery life at a competitive price point. With powerful specifications and AI-enhanced software, it is positioned as a value-for-money 5G smartphone in India's growing affordable smartphone market. Display: A 6.72-inch Full HD+ LCD display with 120Hz refresh rate, up to 1000 nits brightness, and support for Glove Touch and Splash Touch makes it ideal for all-weather usability. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Philippines: Jewelry On Sale For Half Price! (See Price List) Luxury Jewelry | search ads Undo Processor: Powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 6300 5G chipset, built on a 6nm process, delivering efficient performance for multitasking and gaming. RAM & Storage: Available in 4GB and 6GB RAM variants with 128GB storage, expandable via microSD. Live Events Battery & Charging: Backed by a massive 6,000mAh battery, the phone supports 45W SuperVOOC fast charging, with Oppo claiming 5 years of battery health (up to 80% capacity after 1,700 charge cycles). Camera Setup: Rear Cameras: 50MP primary sensor + 2MP depth sensor Front Camera: 8MP selfie shooter. The AI-enhanced camera setup is tailored for social media-ready photos and videos. Durability & Build Quality: AM04 Aerospace-grade aluminium frame 360° damage-proof armour design IP65-rated water and dust resistance Crystal Shield Glass protection Certified with MIL-STD-810H and SGS Drop Resistance Software: Ships with ColorOS 15 based on Android 15, featuring integrated AI tools such as: AI Eraser Reflection Remover AI Summary AI Studio LinkBoost for improved connectivity AI-powered call recorder and Gemini integration Colours: Launching in stylish Midnight Violet and Sunset Peach options. Expected Price in India The Oppo K13x 5G is expected to be priced under ₹15,000, making it one of the most durable and feature-rich smartphones in the budget 5G segment. The official pricing will be revealed at the launch event.

KATSEYE Drops 'GABRIELA' Music Video Starring Jessica Alba
KATSEYE Drops 'GABRIELA' Music Video Starring Jessica Alba

Hypebeast

time11 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Hypebeast

KATSEYE Drops 'GABRIELA' Music Video Starring Jessica Alba

Summary KATSEYEhas just released their new single 'GABRIELA,' produced byAndrew WattandJohn Ryan, with the music video starring actressJessica Albain the titular role. The video has already surpassed 1 million views, further cementing the group's rapid rise to global popularity following the success of their previous hits 'Gnarly' and 'Touch.' Originally formed through a 2023 reality competition show powered by HYBE Corporation and Geffen Records, KATSEYE has quickly established themselves as one of the most diverse and dynamic rising acts in the music industry. Known for their melodic, addictive sound and sharp choreography, the group continues to captivate fans worldwide. 'GABRIELA' marks a bold evolution in their artistic direction. Departing from their signature upbeat pop anthems, the track leans into a sultrier, more vocal-driven style — playing like a Gen Z take on 'Jolene.' Blending haunting synth-pop tunes with Latin-acoustics, the song creates a cinematic, genre-blurring atmosphere. With a hypnotic hook, layered harmonies, and emotionally charged lyrics, it explores themes of obsession, identity, and envy — showcasing a new side of KATSEYE's artistry. Serving as the pre-release single for their upcoming extended playBeautiful Chaos, set to drop on June 27, 'GABRIELA' sets the stage for a compelling new chapter for the rising stars. Check out the official music video above and stream 'GABRIELA' now on Spotify and Apple Music. Explore the fullBeautiful Chaostracklist below. Track Listing –BEAUTIFUL CHAOS

Katseye drops telenovela-inspired 'Gabriela' MV starring Jessica Alba
Katseye drops telenovela-inspired 'Gabriela' MV starring Jessica Alba

GMA Network

time15 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • GMA Network

Katseye drops telenovela-inspired 'Gabriela' MV starring Jessica Alba

Katseye showed off their range in their new single, "Gabriela." After the hyperpop song "Gnarly," the group came out with a Latin-flavored R&B pop track, which got a telenovela-inspired music video. The MV immediately introduced Jessica Alba as the founder and CEO of Gabriela Enterprises, who announces that she'll be stepping down and will need someone to succeed her. In the boardroom, Katseye members Sophia, Manon, Daniela, Lara, Megan, and Yoonchae fight over the position of "next Gabriela." Near the end of the MV, it's revealed that they're merely on set. "Gabriela" is the second single of the group's second EP, "Beautiful Chaos." Aside from "Gnarly," Katseye is known for their songs "Touch" and "Debut." —JCB, GMA Integrated News

Photos of Fife Cubs and Scouts having fun from the 1970s to present day
Photos of Fife Cubs and Scouts having fun from the 1970s to present day

The Courier

time09-06-2025

  • General
  • The Courier

Photos of Fife Cubs and Scouts having fun from the 1970s to present day

Were you in the Scout Movement in Fife? These images from the DC Thomson archive show Cubs and Scouts having fun and doing good deeds including lending a hand during Bob-a-Job week. The Scout Movement was formed in 1907 and has provided young people across the world with the opportunity to learn new skills and build lifelong friendships. Many ex-members will recall their promise to do their best and help other people. Others may have memories of camping under canvas in the great outdoors. Some of these photos have been unseen for years. You may find yourself or someone you know in our nostalgic gallery. A group of Fife Cubs visiting the Lochty Private Railway by Anstruther. For youngsters, many of whom had never been in any kind of train, this was indeed a memorable occasion in June 1976. Scouts from the 12th Fife (East Neuk) were out seeking odd jobs from neighbours to boost funds in the national 'Bob a Job Week' in March 1978. James Russell (left) and Lindsay Jack were car washing in Anstruther. The 26th Fife (Viewfield) Cubs showing off the Mowgli Shield in May 1979. The Mowgli Shield is Dunfermline District's Cub competition. Robert Baden-Powell liked the stories in The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling when he started the Scouting Movement and leaders took names from the characters. Cubs of the 3rd (Fife) Dunfermline Cubs who won the Mowgli Shield in June 1981. Dunfermline has been inspiring generations of Scouts since 1908. The 12th East Neuk Cubs (Cellardyke) had a surprise party to celebrate the 70th birthday of the Cub Movement in March 1986. They were marking decades of fun, friendship and life changing adventures. Scouting was extended to a younger audience in 1916. Scouts from the 40th Fife (Touch) group in Dunfermline in July 1986 were camping at the Grandtully campsite in Perthshire. These Scouts were enjoying pancakes which were cooked on the campfire. The 40th Fife Scouts were learning how to canoe during the camp. Barry Parwell, Scott Liddell, Alex Bell, Catherine Lees (Assistant Scout Leader) and Michael Clifton were pictured sitting on the canoe in July 1986. These Scouts from the 40th Fife were cooking up a storm during the camp. Backwoods cooking is the art of cooking without using pots and pans. Major General Michael Walsh visited the 40th Fife (Touch) group during the camp. Walsh was appointed Chief Scout from 1982 to 1988. He had been a member of a Scout troop and had gained the King's Scout Award. Boys of the 115th Fife Scouts from Kirkcaldy were cooking on an open stove in July 1987 during a camping trip to Croftgarrow farm in Highland Perthshire. They were pictured with leaders Bill Green, Tom Braid and Ken Gilbert. Chief Scout George Purdie opened the new Cairneyhill Scout hall in 2001. The 83rd Fife (Cairneyhill) Scout Group rolled out the red carpet. The hall was built on land which was adjacent to Cairneyhill Primary School. The most famous event in the calendar is the World Scout Jamboree. Scouts from Auchtermuchty, Cupar, Dunfermline and Kirkcaldy were pictured with their counterparts from Japan at the July 2002 event at Blair Atholl. Beavers, Cubs and Scouts from Balmullo marked the Queen's golden jubilee. They buried a time capsule in the garden at the village hall in July 2002 which included Scouting memorabilia over the past 50 years. Scouts, Cubs and Beavers from the 66th Fife (Aberdour) group celebrated the 100th year of Scouting with a weekend camp at Fordell Firs in May 2007. There were international celebrations to mark the centenary. Cubs, Scouts and Explorers from Dunfermline District hosted counterparts from the Netherlands at Fordell Firs activity centre in October 2007. They were celebrating the 50th anniversary of Jamboree on the Air. Cubs from the 81st Fife (1st Broomhall) group were introduced to the raingutter regatta in March 2009 which is a traditional activity for the Boy Scouts of America. The boat can only be propelled by blowing into the sail using a straw. Circus Starr performed two shows of circus skills, magic and comedy at Ardler Complex, Dundee, to raise funds for CHAS in February 2010. Our picture shows the performers with the 15th Fife (Freuchie) Cubs. 'You're going to need a bigger boat…' Ewan Penman from 11th Fife (Burntisland) Cubs won a national competition to name Deep Sea World's latest shark in April 2011 and chose the name Scout. He celebrated with his pals. Scouts from Cupar raised £600 for a trip to Belgium in May 2011. They were given donations in return for helping to pack bags in Tesco. Queen Anne High School was the setting for Dunfermline District Cub Scouts launching a year of celebrations to mark the 100th anniversary of Cub Scouting. Provost Jim Leishman was the honorary guest at the event in February 2016. Explorer Scouts, leaders and volunteers from 8th Fife (St Andrews) spent 10 days in Kandersteg in Switzerland in August 2016. They camped in the grounds of Kandersteg International Scout Centre. Youngsters of the 4th Fife (Cardenden) Scout Group spent a busy summer in 2017 after a fundraising drive paid to insure their minibus. The group received £1,375 from the Co-op as part of a rewards scheme. Kirkcaldy MSP David Torrance alongside Beavers, Cubs, Scouts and fellow leaders from the 5th (Fife) Scout Group in September 2017. Mr Torrance has been attached to the 5th since he was a Cub. Youngsters from the Kirkcaldy Beavers and 11th Fife (Burntisland) Scout Group were among those taking part in a beach clean in November 2018. The event was supported by the Marine Conservation Society. Dunfermline's 44th Fife (St Leonards Church) Scout group and Kirkcaldy's 5th Scout group joined Fife's new recycling campaign in January 2019. 58th Fife (Glenrothes) South Parks Explorer Scouts planting a golden orchard in March 2024 to mark five decades of The Tree Council. It is the final image in our Scouting gallery.

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