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Pop Movie Comment - by Craig Hill

offiicial Kitt Kittredge poster


In the first feature film based on the hugely popular American Girl® book series, Oscar® nominee Abigail Breslin (LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE, NIM’S ISLAND) stars as a resourceful young girl whose bravery, compassion and determination help her solve a mystery that saves her family’s home during the Great Depression. KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL is directed by Patricia Rozema (MANSFIELD PARK) from a screenplay by Ann Peacock (THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE).


The film’s all-star ensemble cast includes two-time Oscar® nominee Joan Cusack (IN & OUT, WORKING GIRL), Glenne Headly (DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS), Tony Award winner and Golden Globe nominee Jane Krakowski (“Ally McBeal”), Golden Globe nominee Chris O’Donnell (BATMAN & ROBIN), Julia Ormond (LEGENDS OF THE FALL), Wallace Shawn (THE PRINCESS BRIDE) and two-time Golden Globe winner Stanley Tucci (THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA).

Aspiring reporter Kit Kittredge can’t resist bringing home strays, whether it’s Grace, an abandoned basset hound, or Will (Max Thieriot of JUMPER) and Countee (Willow Smith), a pair of young hobos willing to trade work for meals. Bright, inquisitive and generous, Kit is a natural born leader.

But her happy childhood is abruptly interrupted when her father (Chris O’Donnell) loses his car dealership and must leave Cincinnati to look for work. Kit and her mother Margaret (Julia Ormond) are left to manage on their own, growing vegetables, selling eggs and even taking in an assortment of boarders including an itinerant magician (Stanley Tucci), a vivacious dance instructor on the prowl for a husband (Jane Krakowski) and a zany mobile librarian (Joan Cusack).


When a crime spree sweeps Cincinnati, all signs point to the local “hobo jungle,” where Will and Countee live with a group of their impoverished companions. Kit, who always has her antennae out for a good news story, convinces her new friends to take her to see the hobo camp for herself and writes an article that creates a sympathetic portrait of the camp’s residents.

But when Kit’s mother and their boarders become the latest victims in a string of
robberies, Kit’s loyalties are tested. Will is accused of the crimes and, with all of their savings gone, the Kittredges face losing their house to foreclosure.

Determined to recover the stolen money and believing Will is innocent, Kit recruits her friends Ruthie (Madison Davenport) and Stirling (Zach Mills) to help her track down the real culprit. Together they uncover a plot that goes far beyond Cincinnati!

About the Production

Mention American Girl® to any female aged three to 12 and the reaction may range from a sweet, ear-to-ear grin to a jumping-up-and-down ‘omigod omigod omigod’ frenzy. One of the
top 15 children’s publishers in the nation, American Girl blends historical fact and inspirational
fiction in stories that encourage girls to embrace their dreams.

The company has sold more than 123 million American Girl books and 14 million American Girl dolls since 1986, and its award-winning American Girl magazine has a circulation of more than 620,000, making it the largest publication dedicated exclusively to girls ages eight and up.

But it was more than just that phenomenal success that inspired producers Elaine Goldsmith- Thomas, Lisa Gillan and Julia Roberts to approach American Girl more than six years ago with the idea of bringing the series to the screen. Roberts and Gillan, who are sisters, had learned about the unique appeal of American Girl from an expert: "Our mom—AKA ‘Grandma Betty’— was a regular supplier of American Girl dolls to our niece Emma, who really loved them,” say Roberts and Gillan. “Emma would introduce them to us as the real girls they are, sharing their background stories." "They really are girls, not just dolls,” adds Gillan. “They each have a history, a family, and a point of view. I think girls can relate and learn from each one's story."

For Goldsmith-Thomas, it was the combination of contemporary life lessons and history—and the unique way both are presented—that made the American Girl series such an appealing film project. “They never sugarcoat the girls’ stories,” she says. “Seeing the Depression or slavery or the loss of a parent through the eyes of a nine-year-old makes these stories unique.

Comparing and contrasting life in different points of American history helps girls today understand that they are a part of history, too. The stories don’t make people from the past seem old-fashioned. They help create a connection between the past and the present.

American Girl uses some great tools to teach kids to find the relevancy between their doll’s life and their own. As a filmmaker, that concept makes for compelling and interesting ways to
approach bringing these stories to the audience.”

“We take girls seriously,” says Ellen L. Brothers, president of American Girl and producer of KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL. “All of our stories are told through the eyes of our heroine—a nine-year-old girl who turns ten in the story. In this film, you’re seeing the Great Depression through the eyes of a very confident nine-year-old girl. And that’s what makes this story so special.”

Brothers says the idea of a movie had been percolating at American Girl for several years.

“From the very beginning, we thought it was completely natural to make a feature film, but it was all brand new to us. We felt we had to get our feet wet first. When Elaine, Julia and Lisa came to us, we talked about made-for-television movies as a great first step in exploring whether our audience would like seeing their favorite American Girls in a live action format.

When the success of those three movies proved to us that our audience loved seeing the characters come to life, moving to the big screen was a logical next step.”

The first American Girl movie, “Samantha: An American Girl Holiday,” aired in 2004, followed by two more made-for-television films based on the series. Gillan was an executive producer of all three.

“The success of ‘Samantha,’ ‘Felicity’ and ‘Molly’ made it clear how much girls loved seeing "their girls’" stories come to life and made the transition to the big screen inevitable.”

“Without much in terms of marketing dollars, we did exceptionally well,” says Goldsmith-Thomas. “So after the third one, we started exploring a lot of options and pondering how to
make the transition to theatrical releases.

“We all fell in love with Bob Berney at Picturehouse and Colin Callender at HBO because they were committed to maintaining the same high standards,” continues Goldsmith-Thomas. “They both totally got it. Like us, they realized that American Girl is not simply about selling books and dolls. It is about exposing young kids to beautiful, sincere characters with beautiful, sincere stories to tell.”

Berney was equally enthusiastic about the project.

“We all agreed that Kit Kittredge was the perfect choice for the first theatrical release,” says the president of Picturehouse. “Kit is a wonderful character, a spirited, ambitious young girl living in very difficult times. Her story is inspirational in the way it teaches the importance of giving to those who are less fortunate.”

“It was my two daughters who introduced me to American Girl books, and I was struck by what wonderful stories they were – they were celebrations of different times in our history yet they dealt with real challenges of every day life that young people today can relate to. ” says Callender, president of HBO Films.

“When you combine these great characters and stories with the remarkable marketing machine behind American Girl it seemed like a natural theatrical franchise.”

Once the partnership solidified in February 2007, things began to happen very quickly.

“We were fortunate to have Ann Peacock write a truly heartwarming screenplay that attracted a great group of creative people from the start,” says producer Lisa Gillan. “Once Abigail Breslin signed on, director Patricia Rozema came on board as did the rest of our amazing ensemble of actors. It all came together unusually fast.”

Director Rozema, best known for her acclaimed 1999 film MANSFIELD PARK, has two young daughters, so she was already very familiar with the American Girl books and dolls.

“I loved Kit, this little reporter who wants to write, who wants to express herself, who wants to do good. So many kids’ movies are about, ‘Oh, I can have love, I am a princess, I own the world now.’ There aren’t many that show kids and adults trying to hang on when material goods aren’t flowing their way, and showing that what’s valuable is not material.”

Gillan believes that Kit’s story has a very timely message for modern girls.

“It is a wonderful lesson for young girls who are seeing women doing more and more amazing things, like running for president,” she says. “I think Kit has an almost Churchillian point of view about life. He said ‘Never, Never, Never Quit’, and Kit doesn't seem to know the meaning of the word. Giving up doesn't seem to be at all part of her character.”

For Rozema, the first priority was getting all the characters right. “American Girl isn’t just dolls,” she points out. “It’s characters. The dolls are one representation of those characters.

The books are a representation of those characters. I don’t think kids who know the character already from the books are going to be disappointed at all. There are new elements that you haven’t seen in the books, but this won’t be a situation where people say ‘Hey, the text said this and the movie says that, what’s going on?’ It’ll be more like, ‘Oh, here are all these lovely characters I know and recognize in this new adventure.’

According to Goldsmith-Thomas, the audience for American Girl films “isn’t just little girls and their mothers, as we found out with the three TV movies we made. Every American Girl character has some sort of family element, whether it’s parents or siblings or grandparents or aunts and uncles. An entire family can go to the theater and enjoy tagging along with Kit and her friends as they embark on an adventure.”

Casting Kit

The filmmakers knew that finding the right actress to play Kit was essential to the success of the film. Oscar® nominee Abigail Breslin, who won over audiences, critics and Academy
members as the plucky Olive Hoover in LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE, was everyone’s first choice to play Kit. But she had a very short window of availability before starting another film.

Abigail Breslin in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl© 2008 From HBO Films/A Picturehouse release
Abigail Breslin in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl© 2008 From HBO Films/A Picturehouse release - Photographer: Cylla von Tiedemann


This meant the filmmakers had to finalize the script and cast, prep the movie and shoot it all in the course of about four months.

“We did this feature on a very, very, very tight little schedule with a lot of limitations,” saysRozema. “Every shot had to be completely constructed. You couldn’t just shoot from any angle, because, oh my goodness, there was a satellite dish or something else that would be out of the period.”

To help speed the process, Rozema decided to use three cameras shooting simultaneously.

“If we got that magic moment, it was covered on every side, and we didn’t have to repeat it and repeat it to get it each time,” she says.

This approach gave the director and her cast additional creative freedom.

“The kids didn’t have to think about continuity as much, they didn’t have to remember ‘Oh, I had the fork up to my mouth on this line.’ If the moment was fresh and free, and we caught the spark, we had it on camera at different angles instantaneously.”

Madison Davenport, Abigail Breslin and Brieanne Jansen in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
Madison Davenport, Abigail Breslin and Brieanne Jansen in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl© 2008 From HBO Films/A Picturehouse release - Photographer: Cylla von Tiedemann


Although the expedited production schedule was a challenge at times, the director says it ended up being an extraordinary experience, “The whole enterprise has been so full of
unabashed goodwill. It’s very hard to be really bitter or angry or blaming with little kids around. Their faces teach you things. They teach you things. We think we bring them up; they bring us up.”

Breslin lived up to the filmmakers’ expectations as the perfect Kit, says producer Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas. “We couldn’t have been more thrilled with Abby,” she says. “She brought humor, warmth and intelligence to the role, and an enthusiasm and passion for the project that was simply infectious. “Abby handled the material like such a pro,” she continues. “Right from the beginning she understood the arc of the story. She recognized that Kit’s life was not all on ‘the sunny side of the street’ and that life can be very tough, but making it through the tough times makes everything that comes after even more valuable. Abby understood that within the story, Kit’s whole perspective on life changes, and with that change in perspective comes a change in values.”

Breslin learned some of the history of the Great Depression from her grandmother, who grew up during that era.

“I showed my grandma the doll and the outfit that I wore and she told me that it was kind of like the clothes she used to wear when she was younger,” says the actress. “The Great Depression was when people were buying a lot of things on credit and then they didn’t have enough money to pay it back. And so they stopped buying things, which made the stores and the factories close, until everybody was basically out of work.”

In the movie, Kit is trying to convince the editor of the Cincinnati Register to publish her story so she can begin her journalism career. “She just wants more than anything else to become a reporter,” says Breslin. “That helps when she tries to solve the mystery, because she writes down everything that could maybe be a clue, like somebody had a tattoo or they were wearing boots or they had dark hair.”

Explaining why Breslin was perfect for the title role, Rozema says, “She is a very keen observer and a feeling person, like Kit. And quite daring, in her own quiet way. There is something admirable about Abigail Breslin that’s a lot like the character of Kit Kittredge.”

Madison Davenport, whose young acting career has included television and feature film roles, plays Ruthie Smithens, Kit’s best friend and daughter of the local banker. A self-acknowledged girl’s girl, Davenport says she adored the period costumes. “It's so cool to wear some clothes you don't normally wear. These clothes are so sweet! Why can't girls wear these clothes now? You never find cute dresses like these in normal stores.”

Davenport was decidedly unenthusiastic about the changes the filmmakers had planned for her hair, however. “I dyed my hair brown, and it is normally blond. I was kind of weirded out. But, I mean, I feel exactly the same until I look in the mirror.”

Davenport quickly struck up a friendship with costars Abigail Breslin and Zach Mills. “We made up nicknames for each other and played games, ran around and hung out with each other off set. So even though much of the story is about people losing their money and their homes and stuff, we all managed to have a really good time because everyone was so nice and the set was a lot of fun.”

Mills, who appeared opposite Dustin Hoffman and Natalie Portman in MR. MAGORIUM’S WONDER EMPORIUM, plays Stirling, a boy who comes to live at Kit’s house as a boarder after his parents lose their house.

“My mom and I end up renting a room while my father goes off to look for work. The sad part is he doesn’t write to us like he said he would,” says Mills. “Something I learned about doing this role was that the Great Depression wasn’t all that great and people lost everything they had and sometimes they lost each other, too. Kit’s story is all about overcoming things like that.”

At the center of the mystery is a young hobo named Will, played by actor Max Thieriot, familiar to many young movie fans from his appearances in family films including THE PACIFIER and NANCY DREW. Seventeen-year-old Thieriot, however, admits he had never heard of the American Girl dolls or books.

Max Thieriot in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
Max Thieriot in a scene from Kit Kittredge: An American Girl© 2008 From HBO Films/A Picturehouse release - Photographer: Cylla von Tiedemann


“As a teenaged guy, American Girl was never really on my personal radar,” says Thieriot. “Once I knew that I might be cast in this movie, I went to the American Girl store in Los Angeles just to check it out and I could not believe how popular the place was. It just blew my mind watching these little girls and how they act and react with all the dolls and clothes and books. I realized I was going to be a part of something very, very big and, if the crowds at the store were any indication, a lot of people will be seeing this movie.”

British-born actress Julia Ormand, who plays Kit’s mother, was fascinated by the amount of research that comes with each American girl doll. “It’s really a journey of discovery about what people in America went through in the Depression in the ‘30s—how people as a population faced hardship and social stigma.

“This is a family that starts off pretty sound economically,” she adds, “and a child who has no real awareness of social issues. She’s introduced to people from a social class that she wouldn’t normally have encountered, and instead of coming at it with prejudice she comes at it with a lot of heart.”

Ormond has appeared opposite some of Hollywood’s premier leading men, including Brad Pitt (LEGENDS OF THE FALL), Harrison Ford (SABRINA) and Richard Gere (FIRST KNIGHT). Even so, she found Breslin to be a formidable acting partner.

“Abigail is really remarkable,” she says. “She’s in virtually every single scene. For anyone, but especially a child actor, it’s an incredible amount of pressure. She has an openness that’s completely right for Kit and an easy access to an emotional range that is really quite extraordinary. She also has an incredible comprehension of how things work: camera needs, marks, all those sorts of things.”

Ormond’s leading man in Kit Kittredge is Chris O’Donnell, who plays her husband. He is, she says, “the quintessential American male. Not just in looks, but also in his stoic determination.

He has these very moving scenes where he’s struggling to hold it together, to protect the family from what he’s really going through. It’s kind of a tricky balance of a 1930s male who perhaps would have a different approach to somebody today, but nevertheless really a touching moment for anybody who feels a responsibility of providing for their family.”

For O’Donnell, who is probably best known for playing Robin to Val Kilmer’s Caped Crusader in BATMAN FOREVER and for his starring role opposite Al Pacino in SCENT OF A WOMAN, KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL was a special project. “I really wanted to do something for my daughter and it’s a great script. It’s a great American tale of a time that was really tough in our country, the Depression, and you get a chance to see how families stuck together. Today we’re just super-consumers, and people are buying, buying, buying. But it wasn’t always like this. It really puts things in perspective.”

The actor acknowledges that the quality of the cast says a lot about the script, as well people’s familiarity with American Girl dolls. “Talent attracts talent. When a cast like this gets put together, people start to say, ‘I want to be a part of that, too.’”

“Abigail’s as mature as any adult actor I’ve ever worked with, so that’s been fantastic,” says the actor. “And Patricia Rozema, the director, stays real focused. She keeps people in good spirits and she really listens. I think it’s real easy as a director to sit back and watch the monitor, but she’s always listening. She pays attention and makes sure you hit all the right beats in a scene.”

KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL’s supporting cast is rich with actors known for their commitment and talent. Stanley Tucci, recently seen in THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA plays Mr.
Berk, a boarder in the Kittredge household who is a magician by profession.

“Kids will instantly love the mystery of it,” says Tucci, a two-time Emmy winner. “It’s a wonderful story to be told through a child’s eyes. The story is always pertinent, because there’s always poverty no matter how wealthy a country we are. The moral is everybody pitches in together and does what they have to do to help each other as a community to get through the tough times.”

Tucci came to the set immediately after finishing another film and had little time to prepare. He credits the director and the script with making it easier for him to jump onto the fast moving train that was the KIT KITTREDGE production. “It’s a good script and very clearly written,” he says. “Patricia thinks very quickly and she’s not afraid to change things instantly and be spontaneous. Only a director who thinks that way and takes everything in stride—and also has a great sense of humor, which she does—could make a movie this way.”

Magician David Ben was brought on to teach Tucci the tricks of his character’s trade. Ben says he taught the actor a broad range of things he can do around the dinner table with everyday objects for the people who are living there.

“Part of my own career is reconstructing magic from different time periods, particularly from the ‘20s and the ‘30s,” says Ben. “The filmmakers wanted a period levitation. Magicians have been floating people since around 1900 and you see still Criss Angel and David Blaine do it, but there was a particular style to how people floated in the ‘30s. And that's what the filmmakers wanted to recreate.”

Academy Award® nominee Joan Cusack turns in a memorable performance as Miss Bond, the dizzy mobile librarian who is levitated by Mr. Berk. An admirer of Patricia Rozema since she saw the director’s interpretation of the Jane Austen novel “Mansfield Park,” she was thrilled to work on the project.

“It’s a very empowering movie about little girls and about confidence,” says the actress. “If I was a little girl and there was a little typewriter and a little bed and the little glasses and all the little things they have that go with the doll, I would love it.”

For the role of Miss Dooley, the man-hungry dance instructor who also boards with the Kittredges, the filmmakers brought in Jane Krakowski, who won a Tony Award for her work in the Broadway musical “Nine.”

“They had assembled an amazing cast of people, so I said yes immediately,” she says. “I get to dance a little bit in the movie and it’s been fun to sort of learn all the dances of 1934, like the Shorty George and the Lindy Hop and the Shim-Sham. It’s a little blast back into that time period.”

Dylan Smith, who plays Frederick Burke, calls his role in Kit Kittredge “a dream part.”

“Playing a bad guy is always lots of fun, plus it’s a children’s movie, so there’s room for real colorful imagination. Then there’s the monkey, whose name in the movie is Curtis. I had to work very closely with the monkey.”

Curtis proved to be a temperamental co-star “There was a memo to the cast and crew, outlining all the dos and don’ts with monkeys,” remembers Smith. “Don’t wear a hat around
the monkey. Don’t find yourself in a confined space with the monkey. Don’t stare the monkey in the eyes, and no sudden movements around the monkey.”

The first day of shooting with the monkey, Curtis, Stanley Tucci and Smith were in a car backing up, remembers the actor.

“The monkey’s in a confined space. Stanley’s wearing a hat. He had to turn the car around to back the car out, and when he turned around, he was facing the monkey, wearing a hat, staring at him in the eyes. He panicked slightly, hit the horn and the car sort of jilted back. So it was smooth sailing after that; nothing else really could go wrong.”

Wallace Shawn, who plays the editor of the Cincinnati Register, brings some first hand knowledge to the role. The well-known character actor is the son of William Shawn, legendary editor of The New Yorker.

“I think being a journalist is a great thing to do. If you want to be a reporter, and you want to be a good reporter, you have to be willing face the reality of the world, which can sometimes be upsetting. But it is a great deal of fun to be a reporter because you get to meet all kinds of people and ask them things you would never dare to ask them if you just met them in the street or on an airplane or at dinner. You get to ask them whatever you like really, until they throw you out.”

In addition to the distinguished cast of professional actors, KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL marks the film debut of four very lucky and talented young girls. Jordan Rackley, Elisabeth Perez, Erin Hilgartner and Brieanne Jansen were selected from more than 2,400 fans during a nationwide talent hunt for four “real American girls” to play Kit’s next-door neighbors and classmates.

“We held the open auditions at our three American Girl Place stores,” says producer Ellen L. Brothers. “Two days each in Los Angeles, Chicago and New York. We received thousands of emails and letters from girls saying they would love to be in an American Girl movie. The number of girls who showed up exceeded our expectations. They waited hours and hours just for the opportunity to audition.”

Jordan Rackley, who plays Lillian, came to Chicago with her best friend Haley for the audition. She had previously appeared in community theater productions of “Peter Pan,” “Beauty and the Beast” and “Annie” in her hometown of St. Louis.

“One of my aunts was born during the Great Depression,” says Rackley. “So it’s kind of neat because I feel like this is probably what she felt like in these clothes and stuff. And I feel really different when I’m in them.” Normally poised, Jordan admits that when she got the call to be in the movie, her scream of excitement was so loud her dog barked in celebration, too.

Elisabeth Perez, who plays Eleanor, another one of Kit’s classmates, is ten years old and lives in Napa Valley, California. Even before being cast in KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL, she had written and staged her first play, which was based on the life of Helen Keller. Perez had plans to be a professional actress and was thrilled to launch her career with such a special project.

“It has been a dream to be in a movie and even more of a dream to be in an American Girl movie,” says the youngster. “When I was five, my Aunt Mary gave me my first American Girl doll and when I was even younger, my older sister Madeleine read me the books.”

Just eight years old when she was cast as Kit’s next-door neighbor Florence Stone, Erin Hilgartner lives in Ithaca, New York. When she saw the lines at the open call in New York, she was afraid that she wouldn’t get a chance to audition. “But they saw every single girl who was in line,” she says.

Hilgartner says she enjoyed “absolutely everything” about being in the movie—traveling to Canada, all the special treatment she received from the hair, makeup and wardrobe departments and meeting all the famous Hollywood stars. Now, she can’t wait to see herself on the big screen.

Eleven-year-old Brieanne Jansen surprised everyone in her family when she decided to audition for the movie. After being caught in a frightening hostage situation with her family seven years ago, Jansen had been understandably reluctant to put herself in new situations. This experience has renewed her self-confidence.

“I’ve learned that being myself is the best way to be,” she says. “I was picked for this role because I didn’t try to be something that I’m not. I learned that I can dream as big as possible because dreams do come true.”

“With kids who haven’t acted, you sometimes get something remarkable,” says director Rozema. “Something way better than kids who already have these expectations of how to present themselves. They all brought a passion for American Girl and they took the work very seriously. It was an absolute joy for the entire cast and crew and I think they will all be very happy when they see themselves in the movie.”

Director Patricia Rozema on the set of Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
Director Patricia Rozema on the set of Kit Kittredge: An American Girl© 2008 From HBO Films/A Picturehouse release - Photographer: Cylla von Tiedemann


Recreating Depression Era Cincinnati

In KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL, present day Toronto stands in for Kit’s hometown of Cincinnati more than 70 years ago. Production designer Peter Cosco was responsible for
faithfully replicating the era for the film.

The first step for Cosco was finding the Kittredge home. He was looking for a house built in the mid 1920s, but it also had to be in a neighborhood where everything around it was appropriate.

“So much of the story takes place in the backyard and side yard. Sometimes we’d see a house that looked perfect from the street, but when you went into the back yard, there was a big addition, or the neighbors had a big addition.”

The filmmakers eventually chose a house that backs out onto a ravine, which eliminated the problem of having an apartment building or a modern house across the way. The interior of the Kittredge home was built from scratch on a soundstage.

“You can control everything, you could lay it out for your needs when you build it,” he says. “It gives you the advantage of making it a little bit bigger or just reconfiguring the insides.”

For the homes furnishings, Cosco got help from the American Girl books and accessories.

“Often the best thing is to go to actual source material from the period, like magazines or catalogs of the day, like Sears,” he says. “In this case, American Girl already had a wealth of material. For instance, we knew that in Kit’s attic she’s got a little roll-top desk, a little chair that goes with it and this metal-frame bed that’s got flower stencils on it, so we found the bed and then created the stencils. It was really helpful to have this very specific, and very accurate, source information to work from.”

A serendipitous find at the house translated into an overall decorating scheme.

“We found a coach light on a post, a little leaded glass thing that was original and I decided that it would inform all our decisions,” Cosco says. “The house already had some Arts and Crafts details, so we used that as our starting point and really ran with it, creating an Arts and Crafts theme that was a popular decorative style in the ‘20s.”

For Kit’s hideaway, Cosco needed to fabricate not just the perfect tree house, but the perfect tree, as well. “It’s a refuge for Kit, where she goes to write, and Patricia wanted it to be a very magical space,” the designer says. “We constructed a tree with a steel armature, and welded on the branches. The bark is cast plaster and burlap. The actual tree house was placed onto this structure, and then a canopy of leaves was put on top of that.”

One of the most complex and visually rich settings in the film is the Hobo Jungle, which Kit first visits in search of a story for the newspaper. Cosco found the perfect location under an old bridge by a river.

“It’s an open bridge, so it’s got many of the qualities railway bridges of the time would have had,” he says. “We did a lot of research to recreate what a hobo settlement would have looked like.”

The set included an open fire pit, a cooking area, a laundry area and many tents and sheds. A path that snaked through the woods gave the effect that the hobos had their own individual spaces, which also helped to give the location a real sense of dimension and scope.

The evening before shooting began at the Hobo Jungle, flash flood warnings were issued in Toronto.

“A section of the set literally washed away,” remembers Cosco. “I stood there watching bits of our set dressing floating by in baskets or washtubs. Odetta, our set decorator, jumped in and I followed her. I’ve said to her since that if I didn’t see her jump in, I probably wouldn’t have. The two of us were almost waist-deep in water fishing out these things as they were floating by.”

Kit’s father is a car dealer, so naturally automobiles figure prominently in the film. Beau Boyd, the picture car captain of KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL, was responsible for finding and maintaining a fleet of about 70 vintage cars.

“We had to find pre-1934 cars that run semi-decent and look new,” says Boyd. “Some of them had to seem brand new, because there was a dealership scene with eight brand new cars.”

Finding the vehicles involved a lot of legwork. While there are companies that rent vintage cars to movie shoots, Boyd prefers to work with collectors.

“Collectors generally put more money and time into their car. We go to car shows and meet people, give them a card, and say, ‘I'd like to rent your car for a movie.’ That's the best way to find them.”

The fleet includes Ford Model As, Grahams, a Maxwell, a Peter Witt streetcar, some trucks and a trio of extremely rare cars. “The prize is the 1934 Chrysler Airflow,” says Boyd. “The Air Flow is important to the story because Kit's dad is one of the few people with a very upscale car.

When he loses his dealership and loses the car, it changes the whole tone of the film.

“They only made it one year,” explains Boyd. “And we have three of them. It's a very pretty car, in addition to being very rare. At the time, most of the cars were square-bodied and this was a departure because it was very art-deco and way ahead of its time. It only lasted one year because it didn’t sell well. It was too radical.”

For costume designer Trysha Bakker, the film was a return to familiar territory since she also had served as costume designer on two of the made-for-television American Girl movies. Among the challenges for each film has been replicating the main doll’s signature outfit.

“We have to find the fabric that looks like it, and if we can’t find the fabric then we have it printed.”

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Sundance Channel’s ‘‘The Green’’, presented by Lexus and Citi Smith Barney, returned to US TV for a second season on April 1, 2008 with 13 new episodes of the EMA award-winning original eco-series “Big Ideas for a Small Planet,” new documentaries and new episodes of the interstitial series “Eco-Biz”™ and “Ecoists” ™.

Simran Sethi and Majora Carter return as hosts of ’The Green’ and will present insights into green issues and eco-heroes.

With the launch of ‘The Green’ on April 17th, 2007 Sundance Channel became the first television network in the United States to dedicate a major regularly-scheduled programming destination entirely to the environment.

As it heads into its second season, ‘The Green’ offers viewers a focused, entertaining source of information and inspiration about the planet we call home – an approach reflected in the destination’s new tagline, “Prime Time for the Planet.”



And now, the Sundance Channel invites YOU to share their inspired eco-solutions in the second annual national contest entitled "What’s The Big Idea?" presented by Lexus Hybrid Living.

The contest, in which consumers submit a short film or photo essay demonstrating how they work green, play green, eat green or live green, has a cash prize of $10,000 to help make their “Big Idea” a reality as well as a private green audit by “Big Ideas for a Small Planet” subject Current Energy. Four runners up will receive a Sundance Channel Green VIP Bag.

You can enter by going verview" target="_blank">here

In keeping with Sundance Channel’s commitment to giving flight to new voices and revolutionary new ideas, ‘‘The Green’ presents a lively mix of original series, documentary premieres and interstitial series about the earth’s ecology, always with an eye toward delivering good stories well told.

Its original programs and interstitial segments provide viewers with ideas and tangible opportunities for all facets of their lives, demonstrating how to work green, play green, eat green, dress green and live green. Its documentary presentations survey a broad scope of eco-related topics, from climate change and energy to design, fashion and architecture.

Presented by Robert Redford, ‘‘The Green’’ is hosted by award-winning journalist Simran Sethi and community advocate and MacArthur Fellow Majora Carter, two dynamic leaders who have distinguished themselves by advancing cutting edge ideas in such areas as civic planning and global business practices.

“Big Ideas for a Small Planet” is a documentary series presenting the forward-thinking designers, products and processes that are at the forefront of a new green world.

Each episode revolves around a different green theme as it spotlights three specific innovators or innovations that have the potential to transform our everyday lives. The individuals profiled range from scientists to fashion and product designers, and from entrepreneurs to first-time inventors.

The series also features a cast of recurring expert commentators, including award-winning scientist, geneticist, and author, Dr. David Suzuki, GOOD Magazine Founder Ben Goldhirsh, Deputy Commissioner for Capital Project for the City of New York Department of Parks and Recreation Amy Freitag and former Talking Heads frontman and bicycle advocate David Byrne who all provide the big-picture context to each week’s stories.

“Big Ideas for a Small Planet” is produced by Scout Productions (“Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” NBC/Bravo and The Fog of War). Season 1 of “Big Ideas for a Small Planet” received the 2007 Environmental Media Award for Best Documentary.

Tuesday, April 22
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Gen Y”
Generation Y – the children of baby boomers, now in their late teens to early 20s - came of age to ever-louder warnings of climate change, resource depletion, and species extinction. It’s an eco-aware group, but also one inclined toward buying, eating, traveling and consuming more than any generation before.

By blending environmentalism with consumerism, the life choices Gen Y is making right now – how they party, where they go to college, even how they get married – open a fascinating window onto how future generations will care for the earth.
9:35pm e/p
‘‘The Greening of Southie" – Directed by Ian Cheney. This documentary goes behind the scenes and onto the scaffolds to follow the construction of Boston’s first green residential building, a luxury condominium complex called the Macallan.

Located in the city’s storied working-class neighborhood, South Boston (aka “Southie”), the Macallan was conceived with the ambitious goal of securing a Gold LEED rating from the U.S. Green Building Council. Moving between the idealistic young development team, a wide range of suppliers, and the seasoned union construction crew, ‘‘The Green’’ing of Southie maps each step – and occasional misstep -- on the Macallan’s road to LEED certification and move-in day.

Tuesday, April 29th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Food”
Loss of biodiversity, water depletion, topsoil erosion, carbon emissions: when it comes to conventional farming and industrial food production, the cost goes beyond the supermarket bill. This episode explores the different ways professionals and ordinary people are trying to nourish us with environmentally friendly food and wine.
9:35pm e/p
All in This Tea – Directed by Les Blank and Gina Leibrecht. This documentary immerses viewers in the rich world of Chinese tea while profiling the affable Californian importer who has made it his mission to introduce Americans to the brew’s many pleasures. David Lee Hoffman founded Silk Road Teas tea after spending much of 1970s living among the nomadic tribes and Buddhist monks of Asia, for whom tea is a way of life.

All In This Tea looks at the history, traditions and intricacies of tea and joins Hoffman on a buying trip to China, where he seeks out small, artisanal growers and tries to persuade Chinese officials to turn away from industrial production in favor of handcrafted, environmentally sustainable tea farming. This is the most recent film from the award-winning documentarian Blank (Burden of Dreams).

Tuesday, May 6th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Fashion”
Environmental consciousness has hit the fashion world in a big way; from T-shirts and jeans to haute couture, style is coming to mean sustainable fabric and earth-friendly manufacturing practices. In this episode, we’ll meet several men and women who are bringing green to fashion, clothing stores and to the dry cleaners, too.
9:35pm e/p
Escape from Suburbia – Directed by Gregory Greene. Will the American lifestyle – epitomized by the single family home and two-car garage – remain tenable as we advance into an age of declining oil supplies and rising prices?

Escape from Suburbia considers the possibilities as it examines the burgeoning grass-roots movement to “power down” from energy-intensive habits. Mixing the stories of ordinary citizens with expert analysis, the film offers an inspiring look at how people are changing their lives and their communities by pulling up stakes, organizing conferences, and even re-thinking local economies.

Tuesday, May 13th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Recycle”
Recycling efforts have come a long way since the bottle bills of the 1970s – a good thing, since the U.S. produces 400 MILLION tons of garbage per year. Individuals and organizations are taking on the challenge of recycling everything from computers to medicine bottles to handbags. The methods can be can be as simple as re-use, or as technologically sophisticated as chemically transforming one discarded material to create another.
9:35pm e/p
Burning the Future: Coal in America – Directed by David Novack. This timely documentary takes us to the Appalachian Mountains of southern West Virginia to explore the political, economic and environmental issues surrounding coal, the source of more than half of U.S. electricity.

At particular issue is the controversial above-ground mining technique known as mountaintop removal, which is defended as safe by the coal industry but opposed by a growing number of residents who believe it is a threat their land, their health and their unique way of life. Burning the Future offers a penetrating portrait of the hidden cost of coal as it follows the efforts of those trying to halt mountaintop removal, including an ecology professor and a working mother whose Appalachian roots stretch back to the 1700s.

Tuesday, May 20th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Grow”
Green spaces are essential to the health and welfare of cities and suburbs alike. As urban populations swell, creative environmentalists are scouting surprising spots for vegetation amidst the cement and concrete. Suburbanites lucky enough to have green space are introducing a new level of environmental consciousness to their lawns and gardens.
9:35pm e/p
Off the Grid: Life on the Mesa – Directed by Jeremy Stulberg and Randy Stulberg. Some 400 people make their home on a rugged 15-square mile stretch of New Mexico desert known as the Mesa. Devoid of basic amenities like running water, paved roads and power lines, the Mesa isn’t an easy place to live, but it does offer solitude and autonomy to those who need it, as well as an alternative to contemporary consumer society. This candid documentary captures the tenor of a proudly self-contained and democratic society while profiling several residents, including Maine, a magnetic Gulf War veteran; Mama Phyllis, an even-tempered former psychiatric nurse; and Stan, a kindly pig farmer and father figure to the teenage runaways that have come and gone for years.

Tuesday, May 27th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Transport”
The automobile is still king in America, and it’s the single greatest polluter in most cities. This episode will show us how city governments, private organizations and university scientists are working to get commuters to leave their cars behind for cleaner, more efficient modes of transportation.
9:30pm e/p
Contested Streets: Breaking New York City Gridlock – Directed by Stefan Schaefer. Historians, urban planners and archival footage combine to tell the story of New York City’s chronic gridlock and its concurrent quest for safer, less crowded streets. Beginning its tale at the turn of the 20th Century, the film traces the dangers and developments, perspectives and personalities that have shaped the flow and flaws of Manhattan street traffic to the present day. As New York City citizens and government alike seek to reduce congestion, filmmaker Schaefer travels to Europe to survey new approaches to transportation in three dynamic world capitals: Copenhagen, Paris and London.

Tuesday, June 3rd
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Live”
The recent building boom – one of the biggest in history – used enormous quantities of resources and generated millions of tons of garbage through the demolition of older structures. This episode surveys some fresh ideas for eco-conscious construction and de-construction.
9:35pm e/p
Weather Report – Directed by Brenda Longfellow. There are places in the world where climate change is not an abstract notion, but a factor in the daily weather report. Weather Report journeys to the frontlines of climate change in the U.S., Canada, Kenya, India and China, visiting ordinary people whose lives and livelihoods are being dramatically impacted by persistent droughts, high winter temperatures, dust storms, sudden monsoons and other extreme weather events. The film also looks at how individuals, communities and companies have begun to reckon with the dangers of a warming earth, and are implementing new approaches to energy production, farming and other environmentally sensitive practices.

Tuesday, June 10th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Business”
Corporations have begun embracing green business practices as beneficial to their bottom lines, productivity, and image with consumers. This episode visits companies, large and small, in the eco-vanguard: businesses that are doing well by doing good for the earth.
9:35pm e/p
Crude Impact– Directed by James Jandak Wood. This award-winning film details the many ways that oil has shaped the world by enabling humankind to dominate virtually every other species living on the planet. The film spans over 150 years as it considers the past, present and future of human oil usage, exploring topics including the science of Peak Oil; the human and environmental toll exacted by oil dependency; and the role of oil in geopolitics. Incorporating with expert analysis by scientists, policymakers and activists, Crude Impact delivers a message of hope along with its wake-up call, mapping positive actions that individuals can take right now. Social Justice Award, 22nd Annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

Tuesday, June 17th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Gadgets”
It’s hard to resist the siren call of cutting-edge consumer gadgets, but it certainly mitigates guilt if the shiny new toy in question helps repair the planet. In this episode we’ll preview the technology, the products, and the innovators that may re-write our future, whether through circuit boards made from chicken featers or shopping malls powered by the shoppers themselves.
9:35pm e/p
Strait Through the Ice – Directed by Yves Billy. The melting of Arctic polar ice has led to an unexpected and radical geographic development: the emergence of a new maritime route between the Atlantic and the Pacific that is far shorter than the Panama or Suez Canals. Industrialized nations are keen to exploit the commercial possibilities of the strait, which courses through one of the most vulnerable and biologically unique places on earth. This French documentary explores the critical issues to be resolved by a handful of powerful countries as they weigh economic potential against environmental consequences.

Tuesday, June 24th
9:00pm e/p
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Animals”
Animals don’t generate carbon footprints like we do, but having furry friends living among us is not without ecological impact. From zoos to shelters to pampered pets, this episode will explore how animals’ diets and living environments are increasingly reflecting the “green-ness” of their human guardians.
9:35pm e/p
The Great Warming – Directed by Michael Taylor. Narrated by Alanis Morissette and Keanu Reeves, “The Great Warming” explores how a changing climate is affecting the lives of people around the world. The film taps into the growing groundswell of public interest in climate change to present both an emotional and an accurate picture of the future of our planet. It includes comments from scientists, opinion-makers, and the emerging voice of the American Evangelical community about America’s lack of leadership in one of the most critical environmental issue of the 21st century.

“Eco-Biz”™ - These news segments exploring financial aspects of environmental innovation in business will profile individuals who are visionary in strategy and have worked to establish more environmentally sustainable policies, innovative eco-friendly business tactics, and the subsequent impact to the bottom line. Companies profiled include: New Leaf Paper, Recyclebank, Living Homes, Green Dimes, Plenty Magazine, Ozo Car, G Diapers and Organic Bouquet. “Eco-Biz” is hosted by Simran Sethi and produced by NBC News.

“The Ecoists”™ - Some of today’s most active and recognizable environmental activists share ideas, information and enthusiasm about their cause of choice. Participants include Sheryl Crow, Kevin Bacon, Laurie David, Sam Waterson, Carole King, Billy Baldwin, Stephanie Powers, James Blunt, Ron Livingston, Erykah Badu and Kerry Washington. “The Ecoists” is produced by Kontent Real.

Host Simran Sethi is an award-winning environmental journalist and the Lacey Haynes Professional Chair at the University of Kansas School of Journalism. She is also the contributing environmental correspondent for NBC News. She produced and anchored the news for MTV Asia, co-created the MTV India news division, and developed programming for the BBC through her independent production company SHE TV.

Simran also wrote and hosted "Ethical Markets," the first national program reporting on corporate social responsibility and sustainable business practices that aired on PBS, and is a contributing author of the companion book Ethical Markets: Growing ‘‘The Green’’ Economy. Simran began her television career at MTV News in the United States, where she worked on award-winning productions including "Hate Rock," "Sex in the 90's" and "Help Not Wanted." She holds an MBA in sustainable management from the Presidio School of Management and a BA in Sociology and Women's Studies from Smith College.

Host Majora Carter connects poverty alleviation & the environment in ways that benefit both concerns, demonstrating Clean-Tech solutions for our most persistent urban public health and global climate concerns. By creating positive physical environments, demonstrating cool and green roof technologies, working to replace an under-utilized expressway with local-value driven development, and the Bronx Environmental Stewardship Training program, Majora is creating a skilled green-collar workforce with personal & economic stakes in their urban environment.

Born and raised in the South Bronx, Majora continues to live and work in the environmentally challenged community. She founded Sustainable South Bronx in2001 to fight for Environmental Justice through innovative, economically sustainable projects that are informed by community needs. She is a MacArthur “Genius” grantee, a member of the Clinton Global Initiative, and co-founder of Green For All with Van Jones.

“Big Ideas for a Small Planet” is executive produced by Michael Williams, David Collins and David Metzler from Scout Productions and is overseen for Sundance Channel by Senior Vice President, Original Programming and Development Lynne Kirby and Director, Original Programming and Development Samuel J. Paul.

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Sinatra At The Movies

April 16th 2008 01:38


Frank Sinatra was a titan of 20th Century entertainment, with record-breaking successes in both music and film throughout his legendary career. Capitol/EMI celebrates Ol' Blue Eyes' musical contributions to many of Hollywood's most memorable classic films, in several of which he also starred, with the April 15 release of a new 20-track CD and digital collection titled 'Sinatra At The Movies.'

'Sinatra At The Movies' includes title themes from 'The Tender Trap,' 'From Here To Eternity,' 'Young At Heart,' 'Three Coins In The Fountain' and 'Not As A Stranger,' as well as “Chicago” and “All The Way” from 'The Joker Is Wild,' “I Could Write A Book” and “The Lady Is A Tramp” from 'Pal Joey,' “How Deep Is The Ocean” and “All Of Me” from 'Meet Danny Wilson,' “To Love And Be Loved” from 'Some Came Running,' and more.

Here is a link to "TheLady is a Tranp" :Your text goes here

'Sinatra At The Movies' is one of several high-profile music and DVD releases honoring the Chairman of the Board’s storied career as a pioneering legend of entertainment. Other upcoming salutes to Sinatra include a commemorative U.S. postage stamp to enter circulation on May 13 and special TV programming, co-hosted by his children, through the month of May on Turner Classic Movies (TCM), including more than 30 of Sinatra's films and four of his television specials.

With a career that spanned more than six decades, Frank Sinatra was truly “The Entertainer of the 20th Century.” Also known as “Ol’ Blue Eyes,” “The Chairman of the Board” and “The Voice,” Sinatra racked up 31 gold albums, one gold single, nine platinum albums (including three that went multi-platinum), and two gold and platinum videos in the United States. He won 10 Grammy Awards(R) and when he was awarded the Grammy Legend Award in 1994 he was introduced by U2 singer Bono, who said, "His songs are his home and he lets you in, but you know that to sing like that you've got to have lost a couple of fights. To know tenderness and romance you've got to have had your heart broken."

Here is a link to 'Chicago': Your text goes here

Sinatra appeared in 58 films and won three Academy Awards(R) (including an honorary Oscar(R) for 'The House I Live In'). He also starred in his own television show and in numerous specials, earning Emmys(R) and a Peabody Award(R), and he performed thousands of tour dates around the world. Sinatra was saluted by The Kennedy Center Honors as a cultural icon, and was awarded the Presidential Medal Of Honor and the Congressional Gold Medal (Congress’ highest civilian award).

Born Francis Albert Sinatra on December 12, 1915, Frank Sinatra passed away on May 14, 1998, leaving behind an unparalleled cultural legacy that continues to thrive. Sinatra’s global album sales total more than 150 million copies, and Capitol/EMI’s 2002 release, Classic Sinatra, has sold approximately two million units in the U.S. alone.

SINATRA AT THE MOVIES (CD & Digital Album)
1. (Love Is) The Tender Trap [The Tender Trap]
2. From Here To Eternity [From Here To Eternity]
3. I Love Paris [Can Can]
4. How Deep Is The Ocean [Meet Danny Wilson]
5. I Could Write A Book [Pal Joey]
6. All The Way [The Joker Is Wild]
7. Young At Heart [Young At Heart]
8. Not As A Stranger [Not As A Stranger]
9. All Of Me [Meet Danny Wilson]
10. High Hopes [A Hole In The Head]
11. The Lady Is A Tramp [Pal Joey]
12. Monique [King's Go Forth]
13. Chicago [The Joker Is Wild]
14. Three Coins In The Fountain [Three Coins In The Fountain]
15. I Believe [It Happened In Brooklyn]
16. Wait For Me [Johnny Concho Theme] [Johnny Concho]
17. C'est Magnifique [Can Can]
18. I Couldn’t Sleep A Wink Last Night [Higher And Higher]
19. Just One Of Those Things [Young At Heart]
20. To Love And Be Loved [Some Came Running]
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First it was Vince (McMahan), John (Cena), Big Show, Chris (Jericho) and Triple H on Larry King Live yesterday (3-28).

Next it was my email box filled with links to Electric Artists assets for Sunday's WrestleMania Pay Per View show.

Big money is being spent on promoting this Sunday's show - especially the Big Show vs. Floyd Mayweather bout.

So instead of telling you about it - here are some of the plug ins and links. They speak for themselves.





27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=9,0,115,0" width="" height="">

Sorry but can not seem to get other embeds from Electric Artists to work here on Orble. Next time.....


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The Princess Bride Game

March 21st 2008 12:22
As You Wish…Marking the first time the 1987 classic hit movie The Princess Bride will be brought into the interactive entertainment arena, digital entertainment studio Worldwide Biggies has created “The Princess Bride Game.”

Combining spectacular animation with the best of casual, narrative and adventure gaming experiences, the downloadable Princess Bride Game has been developed for the fast-growing demographic of women gamers and a new generation of tween girl fans.

The downloadable game will launch this summer on the site and on game portals for the suggested price of $19.95.



“The Princess Bride Game” is easy to start, addictive to play and challenging to master. Players will journey through the classic story to help the Princess and her True Love defeat the dastardly villains, survive the Fire Swamp, gather valuable inventory items, concoct miracle remedies, storm the castle, defeat Prince Humperdinck…and win the game!

Along the way, players can act as and interact with their favorite characters from the movie, such as Buttercup, Westley, Inigo, Fezzik, Vizzini and Miracle Max. Additionally, they will compete for high scores and advance through dozens of levels in 5 Game Episodes, including As You Wish, Battle of the Wits, The Fire Swamp, Miracle Max and Storming The Castle.



“Worldwide Biggies is honored to bring one of the most popular romantic adventure movies of all-time to life for the first time as an interactive gaming experience,” said Albie Hecht, founder and CEO of Worldwide Biggies Inc. “We are confident that “The Princess Bride Game” will excite loyal followers as well as a whole new generation of fans, especially the growing number of women and girl gamers. Finally there’s an opportunity to actually play the movie.



The Princess Bride Downloadable Game Trailer from PrincessBrideGame on Vimeo.

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Shutter official poster


A recent poll conducted by CNN revealed that one third of the people believed in ghosts, and that many of those claim they've seen one. At the same time, interest in spirit photography - events in which images of the dead are caught on film - has never been higher.

The phenomenon is as old as photography itself, dating back to the 1860s. Spirit photography has been riddled with controversy and fraud, yet many believe it to be one of the few methods of capturing ghostly phenomenon that approaches scientific methodology. Magazines devoted to spirit photography proliferate throughout Asia, and new internet sites devoted to the subject spring up every day. New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art recently hosted an exhibit devoted to spirit photography, called "The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult."

This intriguing and foreboding subject is a key element of the psychological thriller “Shutter”, from executive producers of "The Grudge" and "The Ring." In “Shutter”, a newly married couple discovers disturbing, ghostly images in photographs they develop after a tragic accident. Fearing the manifestations may be connected, they investigate, only to learn that some mysteries are better left unsolved - and that a past mistake can lead to an eternity of vengeance.

Photo credit: Bill Kaye
In “Shutter”, Joshua Jackson plays Ben, a professional photographer who discovers disturbing, ghostly images in photographs he develops after a tragic accident.


For photographer Ben (Joshua Jackson) and his new wife Jane (Rachael Taylor), his new assignment - a lucrative fashion shoot in Tokyo - was supposed to be a kind of working honeymoon. With this exotic professional opportunity and the limitless possibilities of a new marriage, Ben and Jane arrive in Japan. But as they make their way on a mountain road leading to Mt. Fuji, their new life together comes to, literally, a crashing halt. Their car smashes into a woman standing in the middle of the road, who has materialized out of nowhere. Upon regaining consciousness after the accident, Ben and Jane cannot find any trace of the girl Jane believes she hit with the car.

Shaken by the accident and by the girl's disappearance, Ben and Jane arrive in Tokyo, where Ben begins his glamorous assignment. Having worked in Japan before and fluent in the language, Ben is comfortable there, and he eagerly reunites with old friends and colleagues. Jane, a newcomer to the city, feels very much like a stranger in a strange land as she makes tentative, unsettling forays through the city.

Photo credit: Bill Kaye
Jane (Rachael Taylor) is troubled by a room full of disturbing spirit photography imagery.


Ben, meanwhile, has discovered mysterious white blurs - eerily evocative of a human form - that have materialized on an entire day's work from the expensive photo shoot. Jane's concerns escalate as she believes the blurs in Ben's photos are the dead girl from the road, who is now seeking vengeance for them leaving her to die...
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Pop Movie Comment Topper

March 17th 2008 01:02
Greetings!

Keep watching as this Bangkok based award winning entertainment journalist brings you the latest movie news.

Hurry on back now!

Scott
Yup, that's me at the Oscars (c)
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I don't know why this animated series is appealing to me. Maybe it is because I live in Asia, maybe it is because it is so quirky - who knows.

Anyway, I introduce for your visceral pleasure “Ninjas Love Noodles” and “Kung Fu Kisses” which will arrive on DVD in the USA March 18th courtesy of Shout! Factory.

Pucca


As seen on the Jetix block of shows on Toon Disney, these 2 discs are an unexpected mix of martial arts, Chinese food and comedic quests in the pursuit of love.

Garu


Pucca is an animated series by South Korean company Vooz Character Systems. It started as a series of online flash episodes called "Funny Love."

Pucca is the young daughter of Chinese noodles house owners and is hopelessly in love with the ninja Garu. He tries desperately to avoid Pucca's advances and usually does not return her affection. This results in high comedy as Pucca goes to great lengths to steal a kiss from Garu.

Pucca and Garu at the movies


It airs daily (in the US) in the Jetix block of Toon Disney with Digimon, Power Rangers, Lilo & Stitch and more. Pucca is perfect for boys and girls ages 7-13.

"PUCCA - Ninjas Love Noodles" - A wonderfully weird mix of comedy, kung fu combat & kissing. Special features include a collection of Pucca bumpers. Also has limited-edition ninja license inside!

Pucca


"PUCCA - Kung Fu Kisses" - An unexpected mix of martial arts, Chinese food and comedic quests in the pursuit of love. Special features include a link to a Pucca video game. Also includes a collectible sticker packed inside!

Pucca Kung Fu Kisses


Shout! Factory, in conjunction with Jetix, is releasing two single DVDs simultaneously on March 18, each containing 13 episodes.

Post a comment below and YOU may win a Pucca “Ninjas Love Noodles” or “Kung Fu Kisses” DVD. Special Ops Media, Shout! Factory's pr arm is reserving one just for Pop Comment readers.

Sorry but winners can only be USA residents as pr company can not ship outside USA

Follow the link above to watch the trailer.
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The Hulk is Coming

March 14th 2008 00:47
The Hulk


Just in case you missed the highly anticipated arrival of the Hulk last night... tune in now! Universal Pictures has just debuted the theatrical teaser trailer for the upcoming action-thriller – The Incredible Hulk!! Based on the characters by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, starring Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth, Tim Blake Nelson, Ty Burrell and William Hurt ....The Incredible Hulk is here...in theaters June 13, 2008.

Check out the new trailer in HD on the newly launched film website (link above)

THE INCREDIBLE HULK kicks off an all-new, explosive and action-packed epic of one of the most popular Super Heroes of all time. In this new beginning, scientist Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) desperately hunts for a cure to the gamma radiation that poisoned his cells and unleashes the unbridled force of rage within him: The Hulk.

Edward Norton as The Hulk


Living in the shadows—cut off from a life he knew and the woman he loves, Betty Ross (Liv Tyler)—Banner struggles to avoid the obsessive pursuit of his nemesis, General Thunderbolt Ross (William Hurt), and the military machinery that seeks to capture him and brutally exploit his power.

As all three grapple with the secrets that led to The Hulk’s creation, they are confronted with a monstrous new adversary known as The Abomination (Tim Roth), whose destructive strength exceeds even The Hulk’s own. And on June 13, 2008, one scientist must make an agonizing final choice: accept a peaceful life as Bruce Banner or find heroism in the creature he holds inside—THE INCREDIBLE HULK.

The Hulk


Release date: June 13, 2008

Official site: www. incrediblehulk.com
Genre: Action-Thriller
Cast: Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth, Tim Blake Nelson, Ty Burrell and William Hurt
Directed by: Louis Leterrier
Writers: Edward Norton, Zak Penn
Based on Characters Created by: Stan Lee & Jack Kirby
Produced by: Avi Arad, Gale Anne Hurd, Kevin Feige
Executive Producers: David Maisel, Stan Lee, Jim Van Wyck
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Hollywood, CA March 12, 2008 -- The 12th Annual Hollywood Film Festival and Hollywood Awards presented by STARZ, announced today the launch of their "Hollywood Trailer Festival" and "Hollywood Trailer Awards." This is the first major festival honoring feature film previews.

The announcement was made by Carlos de Abreu, Founder and Executive Director of the festival.

"We are very excited that we will be recognizing the great art form of creation and production of film trailers," de Abreu said.

The "Hollywood Trailer Awards" and "Hollywood Trailer Festival" recognize creativity and innovation in feature film previews and they feature 12 categories: Best Action, Best Animation, Best Comedy, Best Documentary, Best Drama, Best Horror, Best Independent, Best Romance, Best Thriller, Most Original, Best Blockbuster and Best Trailer of the Decade.

A panel of judges comprised of Hollywood notables will select the nominees and winners.

Entries are accepted monthly and the final deadline ifor next year's awards is October 1, 2008. Five nominees in each category will be announced on October 6, and the winners will be honored at a stand-alone event during the 12th Annual Hollywood Film Festival and Hollywood Awards, which take place from October 22 to October 27, 2008, in Hollywood.

The 2008 Hollywood Film Festival and Hollywood Awards will take place at ArcLight Cinemas in Los Angeles. The festival will highlight the films of emerging filmmakers, and the programming will include features, documentaries, shorts and animated films, as well as special events introducing the content for the "Hollywood Trailer Festival" and the nominees for the "Hollywood Trailer Awards."

Last year's industry professionals and Hollywood talent who were honored for their achievements at the 2007 Hollywood Awards Gala Ceremony included Richard Gere, Marion Cotillard, John Travolta, Jennifer Connelly, Ellen Page and Casey Affleck for acting, the cast of "Hairspray" (John Travolta, Michelle Pfeiffer, Christopher Walken, Amanda Bynes, James Marsden, Queen Latifah, Brittany Snow, Zac Efron, Elijah Kelley, Allison Janney, and Nikki Blonsky) for ensemble acting; Ben Affleck and Marc Forster for directing, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron for producing, Christopher Hampton and Diablo Cody for screenwriting, "Ratatouille," directed by Brad Bird, for animation, Mark Isham for film composing, Stephen Goldblatt for cinematography, Joe Hutshing for editing, Scott Farrar for visual effects and Dante Ferretti for production design.

The festival and awards presenter is Starz Entertainment, LLC, a premium movie service provider operating in the United States. It offers 16 movie channels including the flagship Starz and Encore brands with approximately 15.8 million and 28.2 million subscribers respectively. Starz Entertainment airs more than 1,000 movies per month across its pay TV channels and offers advanced services including Starz HD, Starz On Demand and VongoSM.

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LONDON (AFP) — Rock legends Led Zeppelin announced Wednesday they will reform for a one-off concert at London's O2 Arena on November 26.

The three surviving members of the hard-rocking British band will play together for the first time in 19 years in tribute to Ahmet Ertegun, the late founder of the Atlantic Records label, who signed the group in 1968.
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Pavarotti's health deteriorates

September 5th 2007 22:42
Luciano Pavarotti's health has deteriorated and the 71-year-old singer is in a "very serious condition," Italy's AGI news agency reported on Wednesday, citing unnamed sources.
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A killer western ropes them in at Venice

September 4th 2007 00:27
Charlize Theron, in Venice to promote her Iraq war film In the Valley of Elah , sounds like an American now. Those Cape vowels have been erased, despite the fact that she says she feels more South African than ever.
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