Strap on your sandals for the next Sundance Classics series

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Billy, do you like movies about gladiators? If so, you’re in luck, as Sundance Cinemas’ next round of Sundance Classics features more swords, Romans, and sun-baked flesh than you could shake a pointed stick at.

It all begins next Wednesday with “The Ten Commandments,” Cecil B. DeMille’s bigger-than-life 1956 Biblical epic with Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, and Edward G. Robinson. Screenings are at 1:15 p.m. and 8 p.m.

Then we really hit the coliseum for some bread and circuses:

April 30 — “Gladiator” — Russell Crowe oils up and practices his patented scissor cut in this 2000 Ridley Scott Oscar winner.

May 7 — “Ben-Hur” — Heston’s back as a Jewish prince framed for murder and sold into slavery, who claws his way back for revenge with the help of one mother of a chariot race.

May 14 — “Spartacus” — Kirk Douglas is the rebellious slave turned master gladiator in Stanley Kubrick’s 1960 epic, which of course has been turned into a Starz original series.

All kidding aside, these four films are epics in every sense of the word, and should be pretty awesome to watch on the big screen.

 

 

UPDATED: 38 sellouts at this year’s Wisconsin Film Festival

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Today’s the last day to buy advance tickets for the 16th annual Wisconsin Film Festival through wifilmfest.org. Starting Thursday, the first day of the eight-day festival, tickets will be available for a film at the venue on the day of the screening (meaning you can buy a ticket for an evening show that morning, which is a smart strategy). Even for the films below, which sold out all their advance tickets, a limited number of rush tickets will likely be available — just get in line at least an hour before the screening and cross your fingers.

Hopefully this list of advance ticket sellouts will help you plan out your fest. 

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“Enemy,” “The Past” kick off next Sundance Screening Room calendar

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Madison film fans, don’t expect to get a break after gorging yourself on great movies at the Wisconsin Film Festival. On April 11, the day after the festival ends, Sundance Cinemas is jumping right into a new Screening Room calendar of independent, foreign and documentary films. And several weeks they’re booking two films a week instead of one. So no slacking.

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Unwrapping the layers of “The Grand Budapest Hotel”

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The movie at the creamy center of the confection that is “The Grand Budapest Hotel” is perhaps the most purely fun film Wes Anderson has ever made, outside of “Fantastic Mr. Fox!” Stolen paintings! Shootouts! Ski chases! It’s an unabashed yarn, with Ralph Fiennes as the elegantly flappable hotel concierge at the center of it all; Basil Fawlty, Man of Action.

 

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Chat about “Stranger by the Lake” at Sundance Tuesday night

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It’s still a pretty cold March in Wisconsin. Wouldn’t you rather spend a couple of hours on a French lakeside beach, with the sun, and the sand, and the . . . murder?

“Stranger by the Lake” has all this and more — and by “more,” I mean “explicit sex scenes.” So the faint of heart might want to skip this one. But for those who aren’t deterred, “Stranger by the Lake,” set at a secluded sliver of beach frequented by gay men, is an engrossing and chilling psychological drama about desire and self-destruction. My full review is here. 

I’m hosting a post-show chat after the 7:05 p.m. show on Tuesday, March 25 at Sundance Cinemas, 430 N. Midvale Blvd. We had a lot of fun talking about “The Great Beauty” last month and I’ m thinking “Stranger” will foster some interesting convo as well. Just attend the screening and meet me in Sundance’s Overflow Bar (across from the box office) afterward — probably around 8:45 p.m.  Hope to see you there!

Wisconsin Film Festival Spotlight: “Happy Christmas”

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Tickets for the 2014 Wisconsin Film Festival went on sale Saturday, and each day between now and the start of the festival on April 3, I’ll be zooming in on one of the more than 140 films playing at the festival. If you have suggestions about films you’d like to know more about as you’re planning your festival experience, let me know in comments.

Happy Christmas” (6:45 p.m. Friday, April 4 and 2:45 p.m. Saturday, April 5, Sundance Cinemas)

In the time it takes me to write this blog post, Joe Swanberg will have made another movie.

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Wisconsin Film Festival Spotlight: “Obvious Child”

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The 2014 Wisconsin Film Festival schedule went live on Thursday, and each day between now and the start of the festival on April 3, I’ll be zooming in on one of the more than 140 films playing at the festival. If you have suggestions about films you’d like to know more about as you’re planning your festival experience, let me know in comments.

Obvious Child” (Tuesday, April 8, 2:30 p.m. and Thursday, April 10, 8:45 p.m., Sundance Cinemas) — I was all alone on this one at the Sundance Film Festival.

Audiences, and most critics, loved this debut film from Gillian Robespierre and agreed it would be a breakout film for Jenny Slate, so good on “Saturday Night Live” and as Jean-Ralphio’s sister on “Parks and Recreation.” And I’m with them there — Slate is very funny as a fearlessly raunchy stand-up comedian working New York clubs. She’s so relentlessly, unabashedly raw, but in such a sweet way, like she doesn’t get what the fuss is about.

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Wisconsin Film Festival Spotlight: “Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter”

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The 2014 Wisconsin Film Festival schedule went live on Thursday, and each day between now and the start of the festival on April 3, I’ll be zooming in on one of the more than 140 films playing at the festival. If you have suggestions about films you’d like to know more about as you’re planning your festival experience, let me know in comments.

Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter” (Sunday, April 6 at 8:30 p.m and Monday, April 7 at 8:30 p.m., Sundance)

Of all the films I saw at the Sundance Film Festival in January, the one that immediately leaped out at me as a perfect fit for our own Wisconsin Film Festival was — well, it was “Life Itself,” the Roger Ebert documentary. But the distributor seems to be keeping that one off the festival circuit in advance of a summer theatrical release.

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2014 Wisconsin Film Festival schedule is just 24 hours away!

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I was going to write a “Twas the Night Before Christmas”-style introduction to this post in order to capture the excitement Madison film fans are feeling on the eve of the 2014 Wisconsin Film Festival schedule going live. But then I looked out at the snow coming down outside, and it just hit a little too close to home. Weather gods, seriously? It’s March.

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The most unpredictably predictable Oscars ever

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In the end, the Oscars that many anticipated to be one of the most unpredictable in memory, with three films neck and neck for Best Picture, turned out to be highly predictable.

If you were filling out your Oscar ballot, a few rules turned out to be ironclad. Give every technical award to “Gravity,” except for the theatrical ones like Costume and Production Design, which go to “The Great Gatsby.” “Frozen” gets everything it’s up for. “American Hustle” gets nothing. Give the frontrunners all the acting awards. And, for Best Picture, rely on Oscar voters fearing the logic that host Ellen DeGeneres offered up at the start of the show: “There are two possibilities. 1. ‘12  Years a Slave‘ wins Best Picture. 2. You’re all racists.”

Even though “Gravity” was my favorite movie of 2013, I was not at all disappointed that it lost Best Picture to “12 Years.” I’ve long given up on the idea that the Oscars honor the best picture of the year. More often, it’s the Best Picture That They Know They Ought to Honor. “Ought” sometimes means it’s such a massive box office hit that it can’t be ignored, or that it’s such an “important” film that it can’t be ignored.

The thing about “12 Years a Slave” is that it’s an “important” film that’s also a great work of art, and an Oscar win means that more people who sat on the fence about seeing it because of its powerful and disturbing subject matter will give it a chance. So that’s about the best you can hope for.

My favorite award of the night was Spike Jonze getting a Best Original (and how!) Screenplay win for “Her,” my second-favorite film of the year. My favorite moment of the night was Bill Murray going off-script to honor the late Harold Ramis. I didn’t see it coming, especially given that Murray and Ramis had been estranged for years (although the two did apparently reconcile), and it really moved me.

Other than that, I thought it was a good if overlong show. I really like DeGeneres as a host, because she’s so comfortable winging it in front of the camera and not relying on pre-scripted bits like a greener host does, like Seth MacFarlane. In fact, she probably should have done the entire show from the aisles, cutting up with celebs, serving them pizza, taking part in the World’s Most Expensive Selfie (which had just as many stars in, and was more dramatically involving than, “The Monuments Men.”)

There were the thuddingly bad moments, like Bette Midler’s straight-outta-1988 cheesy performance of “Wind Beneath My Wings” that stretched the “In Memoriam” segment even longer. Or John Travolta’s bizarre reading of “Idina Menzel” off the cue card. Or Goldie Hawn’s strangely perky way of saying the Best Picture winner’s title (“12 Years . . . a SLAVE!”)

But the speeches were mostly strong, including Lupita Nyong’o’s tearful statement that the joys in an actor’s life are often rooted in the pain of others. And while we may be approaching a saturation point for Matthew McConaughey, you have to love how he turned his speech into sort of a one-man show and worked in his own catch phrase. And I loved Cate Blanchett’s brassy challenge to make more films about interesting women (“The world is round, people!”)

That equality didn’t seem to extend to the ceremony’s shaky “theme” of “movie heroes,” which seemed to focus mostly on male action stars uneasily edited in with the usual clips from “Casablanca” and “To Kill a Mockingbird.” Maybe they’re doing “movie heroines” next year, ladies?