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Recent Headlines
a la Mod:

Domino is
a "disarmingly
straight-forward"
work that "pushes
us to reexamine our
relationship to images
and their consumption,
not only ethically
but metaphysically"
-Collin Brinkman

De Palma on Domino
"It was not recut.
I was not involved
in the ADR, the
musical recording
sessions, the final
mix or the color
timing of the
final print."

Listen to
Donaggio's full score
for Domino online

De Palma/Lehman
rapport at work
in Snakes

De Palma/Lehman
next novel is Terry

De Palma developing
Catch And Kill,
"a horror movie
based on real things
that have happened
in the news"

Supercut video
of De Palma's films
edited by Carl Rodrigue

Washington Post
review of Keesey book

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Exclusive Passion
Interviews:

Brian De Palma
Karoline Herfurth
Leila Rozario

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AV Club Review
of Dumas book

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De Palma interviewed
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De Palma discusses
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A note about topics: Some blog posts have more than one topic, in which case only one main topic can be chosen to represent that post. This means that some topics may have been discussed in posts labeled otherwise. For instance, a post that discusses both The Boston Stranglers and The Demolished Man may only be labeled one or the other. Please keep this in mind as you navigate this list.
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Wednesday, August 17, 2016
'SCARFACE' POSTER IN 'WAR DOGS'
AND TWO OTHER DE PALMA FILMS IN FILMS




Previously:
Scarface Poster A Key Part of Trainwreck Joke


Posted by Geoff at 9:10 PM CDT
Updated: Wednesday, August 17, 2016 9:13 PM CDT
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Tuesday, August 16, 2016
FREE DE PALMA SERIES IN MADISON THROUGH SEPT.
DOUBLE FEATURES ON FRIDAYS BEGINNING AUGUST 26, PLUS 'DE PALMA' DOC, ALL FREE


Cinematheque at University of Wisconsin has scheduled a Brian De Palma series around a September 2 screening of the De Palma documentary. Four tantalizing double features are included: Dressed To Kill and Blow Out (both from DCP) on Friday August 26th, Sisters and Raising Cain (both in 35mm) on Friday September 9th, Obsession and Body Double (both from DCP) on Friday September 16th, and Mission: Impossible and The Untouchables (both in 35mm) on Friday September 23rd. Also included is Scarface (DCP), doubling as part of the Cinematheque's "Marquee Mondays" series on Monday September 19th. All screenings will be free of charge.

Posted by Geoff at 11:57 PM CDT
Updated: Wednesday, August 24, 2016 8:36 PM CDT
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Monday, August 15, 2016
T&M TUMBLR JUXTAPOSES DE PALMA / SPIELBERG
LIQUID DROPS IN 'MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE' AND 'MINORITY REPORT'
The tumblr Tea and a Movie ("Watching movies, drinking tea") has posted a series of juxtaposed frame captures from Brian De Palma's Mission: Impossible (1996) and Steven Spielberg's Minority Report (2002). The presence of Tom Cruise in both scenes perhaps makes it clear that these two film scenes are in dialogue with each other. However, this is a dialogue that began (perhaps) with the drops of water in Spielberg's Jurassic Park (1993), which was adapted by David Koepp, who adapted Carlito's Way for De Palma that same year, and who went on to be De Palma's choice for screenwriter on Mission: Impossible. Following that, Spielberg and Koepp kept the dialogue going a year later with a wild scene in The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) that, short of having a Tom Cruise stop just shy of hitting the floor and setting off the alarm of a CIA vault, had Julianne Moore fall and smash face-down, spread eagle onto the rear window of a trailer that has been pushed over a cliff. Spielberg mines the suspense in this scene as a direct "check-this-out" homage to his friend, De Palma, as Moore tries delicately to remove herself from the shattered glass with minimal movement. Koepp included a similar suspense scene in one of his Sam Raimi-directed Spider-Man movies, and in Minority Report, Spielberg also borrows a visual idea from De Palma's Snake Eyes (1998) (which again had a screenplay written by Koepp) by having the camera track through a building overhead, moving from room to room with a "God's eye" view.

Check out the full tumblr juxtapositions at Tea and a Movie.

Posted by Geoff at 11:58 PM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, August 16, 2016 12:30 AM CDT
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Saturday, August 13, 2016
TARANTNO / DE PALMA LAP DANCE COMPARISON
VIDEO ESSAY BY CANDICE DROUET SUGGESTS HOMAGE TO 'FEMME FATALE' IN 'DEATH PROOF'
When I first saw Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof in 2007, I recall thinking it was interesting that Tarantino had included a lap dance in the film, after Brian De Palma had recently included one in his 2002 film, Femme Fatale. Both scenes take place somewhat spontaneously in a bar. Now, Candice Drouet, described by IndieWire's Kate Erbland as "an actress who also routinely crafts some stunning video essays," has created a video essay comparing the two scenes.

Also of note: in Death Proof, Tarantino includes at least one other De Palma homage when he uses Pino Donaggio's "Sally And Jack" theme from De Palma's Blow Out to score what becomes a tender texting scene.

Watch Drouet's video essay below:


Posted by Geoff at 7:44 PM CDT
Updated: Saturday, August 13, 2016 7:46 PM CDT
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Wednesday, August 10, 2016
NOW FUQUA IS IN TALKS FOR 'SCARFACE' REMAKE
AS LARRAIN'S "DREAM PROJECT" IS SUDDENLY OUT OF HIS HANDS
The Scarface remake just got a lot less interesting. When it was reported in March 2014 that Pablo Larraín was in negotiations to direct Universal's new remake of Scarface, this blog's ears perked up. And then this past March, Larraín told The Guardian's Danny Leigh that the Scarface remake was his dream project. Leigh states in the article that the film "would be set in Los Angeles, with a Mexican kingpin replacing the Cuban Tony Montana." Larraín also told Leigh that the project was, at that time, stuck in development.

Well, "stuck in development" in this case appears to mean "we're looking for a new director." Today, Deadline's Mike Fleming Jr. reports that Antoine Fuqua is now in talks to direct the "re-imagining," as Fleming puts it. The film will still be set in Los Angeles, according to Fleming, but his article today says nothing about the character being Mexican, though it still seems a likely possibility, as Jonathan Herman is still mentioned as the latest screenwriter on the project (Herman was hired in March 2015 on the heels of writing the screenplay for Straight Outta Compton). The initial draft of this new Scarface was written by David Ayer, the writer of Training Day, which was directed by Fuqua. In between Ayer and Herman, Universal brought in Donnie Brasco screenwriter Paul Attanasio to do a rewrite on Ayer's draft.

And so that's where it stand for the moment. Fuqua is gearing up for the release next month of yet another remake, The Magnificent Seven, which will also be the opening night film at next month's Toronto International Film Festival.

And lest we forget to mention, twelve years ago, Fuqua was gearing up to direct Capone Rising, a prequel to Brian De Palma's The Untouchables. De Palma eventually decided that he wanted to direct that one, after all, but then that project got mired in red tape. In any case, here's a fun item from June 30, 2004:

Posted June 30 2004
FLASHBACK - 2004
FUQUA WANTS SEAN PENN FOR UNTOUCHABLES 'PREQUEL'
One of the Hollywood projects Brian De Palma was considering taking on last fall was Tru Blu, the biopic of heroin smuggler Frank Lucas. But De Palma signed on for The Black Dahlia, and while he was working on that film, Antoine Fuqua, director of the upcoming King Arthur, signed on to direct Tru Blu. According to IESB.net, Fuqua mentioned at the King Arthur press junket that he will also be working on a prequel to The Untouchables. The prequel will focus on a young Al Capone, and Fuqua says his ideal choice of actor for the role would be Sean Penn. (Isn't Penn about the age right now that Robert De Niro was when he played Capone? The magic of movies.) Penn pal Benicio Del Toro will star opposite Denzel Washington in Fuqua's Tru Blu. But the intertextuality of Penn playing a younger version of De Niro after De Niro, early in his career, played a younger version of Marlon Brando in The Godfather: Part II is intriguing. Speaking of which, Fuqua also mentioned that he wants to direct a Godfather film.

Posted by Geoff at 6:30 PM CDT
Updated: Thursday, August 11, 2016 1:05 AM CDT
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Tuesday, August 9, 2016
KUSAMA'S 'INVITATION' INSPIRED BY EARLY DE PALMA
AS WELL AS 'ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN' & 'THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR'
Bloody Disgusting's Chris Webster posted an article a couple of weeks ago in which he extracts five interesting facts from the audio commentary track of the newly-released Blu-ray edition of Karyn Kusama's The Invitation. One of those facts is that "Kusama was inspired by 70’s thrillers"...
While All the President’s Men, Three Days of the Condor and the early work of Brian De Palma don’t share a similar narrative to The Invitation, they set the stage for Kusama’s approach to the style of her film. Even The Invitation‘s simple title card, which Kusama describes as 'spare and offset,' gets attributed to All the President’s Men and other films of the era that she says took a radical approach at the time.

Back in 2009, Kusama introduced her film Jennifer's Body at the Toronto Film Festival, naming De Palma's Carrie as an inspiration, along with Heathers and A Nightmare On Elm Street.

Posted by Geoff at 11:57 PM CDT
Updated: Wednesday, August 10, 2016 12:11 AM CDT
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Monday, August 8, 2016
ARROW POSTPONES 'RAISING CAIN' TO JAN 2017
ON THE HEELS OF SCREAM'S BLU-RAY EXCITEMENT, PROMISES "YOU WILL BE PLEASED"
Arrow Video posted the following message today on its Facebook page:
***RAISING CAIN RELEASE DATE UPDATE***

Unfortunately we are having to postpone our release of Raising Cain to January 2017 whilst we continue to work on our release. We are very sorry for any disappointment this will cause but we are sure you will be pleased with the final package once it arrives.

Previously:

SHOUT'S 'RAISING CAIN' BLU TO INCLUDE GELDERBLOM RE-CUT


Posted by Geoff at 9:53 PM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, August 9, 2016 7:35 PM CDT
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Sunday, August 7, 2016
'CARRIE' & 'THE FURY' ARE SOME 'STRANGER THINGS'
ALSO 'BODY DOUBLE', AS NETFLIX HIT SERIES SAID TO PAY HOMAGE TO '70s & '80s GENRE FILMS


The juxtaposition above comes from a video assembled by Ulysse Thevenon, titled "References to 70-80’s movies in Stranger Things." Stranger Things is Netflix' latest series, which has become a hit since premiering on the streaming site last month. Several have noted an obvious nod to Brian De Palma's Carrie, as well as a thematic similarity with De Palma's The Fury. Here are some links to explore:

Brian Lowry, CNN

"Press materials describe the series as a 'love letter to '80s supernatural classics that captivated a generation.' Clearly, there are touches of Poltergeist and The Goonies baked into the idea, as well as The Fury, Brian De Palma's 1978 psychic thriller. Still, Stranger Things ultimately has to stand on its own. And too often the pacing just limps along -- spooning out story in a way that practically demands bingeing, and even then never really disgorging all its secrets."

Scott Tobias, Vulture

Every Major Film Reference in the Show, From A–Z

Body Double (1984)
Brian De Palma’s deliciously pervy riff on Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window plays with voyeurism and murder, casting Craig Wasson as a house sitter who uses a telescope to spy on a beautiful woman and witnesses a murder. In Stranger Things, Jonathan scours the woods with his camera in search of his missing brother, Will (Noah Schnapp), but pauses to catch some shots of his crush, Nancy, as she’s partying at her boyfriend’s house. The image of Jonathan peering through the blinds with telephoto lens as Nancy is about to lose her virginity recalls Body Double and its poster."

Carrie (1976)
Elle is a hybrid of two Stephen King stories about girls with telekinetic power, Carrie and Firestarter. Of the two, Stranger Things owes a little more to Carrie, if only because Elle and Carrie White (Sissy Spacek) have a broader range of skills and a similarly sheltered upbringing. Though Carrie’s age feeds into a more meaningful and excruciating story of her coming-of-age as a woman, the two characters are products of needy, controlling parents — Piper Laurie’s religious zealot in Carrie; Matthew Modine’s experimental scientist in Stranger Things — who don't allow socialization with other kids. And while Elle and Carrie are fundamentally sweet-natured, they’re capable of startling violence when provoked. (When they’re flashing trance-like stares, look out.) Stranger Things also includes a nice homage to the famous stinger that closes Carrie: Just as Carrie’s hand reaches through the soil at her gravesite — Nancy’s hand punctures through the goo when she climbs out of the Upside Down in episode six."

Vulture's Scott Tobias on Episode 6

"The Monster" makes a hard shift toward supernatural horror, with two serious jump-scares in the pre-credits sequence alone, so I'm going to make a hard shift toward talking about Stephen King, whose influence on Stranger Things I haven't mentioned to this point. The shot of Nancy's outstretched hand puncturing through the portal to the netherworld is a nod to the closing scene in Brian De Palma's adaptation of King's Carrie, one of the all-time-great stingers in movie history. And both are premised on reversing the same false assumption: Once you cross over to the Great Beyond, there's no coming back.

Yet the differences between the two are telling. In Stranger Things, the outstretched hand is a simple misdirection, shocking the viewer into thinking the creature is grabbing at Jonathan when, in fact, it's Nancy emerging from the portal. In Carrie, it's a nightmare, fueled by a teenager's guilt over her role in ostracizing one of her fellow students. One is an effective scare that dissipates; one is an effective scare that lingers. And that, in a nutshell, is the significant flaw in this otherwise entertaining series. There's nothing in the Duffer brothers' nostalgia trip that's uniquely resonant or built to last. It's a temporary endorphin rush.

Consider the biggest King connection here: Eleven, or Elle, whose telekinetic powers bring her in line with the heroines in King's Carrie and Firestarter. I haven't read Firestarter — which, given the girls' ages, may be the more appropriate comparison — but Carrie is essentially a coming-of-age scenario tweaked into a horror novel, expressing the dramatic swings of adolescent emotion as a violent flurry of psychic activity. Carrie becomes dangerous when she no longer has control of her feelings, and thus, no longer has control over her powers. It's an extreme version of the growth that confuses and torments all teenagers: Our bodies betray us at the most vulnerable time, and for Carrie, that betrayal is devastatingly complete.

There are flashes of Carrie's third-act aggression in "The Monster," which finds a distressed Elle turning her stress and anger on the manager of a grocery store and the bullies who force Mike to jump off a cliff. We've seen it before, in the flashback where Elle fatally smashes one handler into a tiled wall and snaps the neck of another like a twig. In the last episode, she knocked Lucas unconscious while trying to break up a fight, which led to a temporary rift between close friends. Elle's power is always a lingering threat, particularly when she gets upset or feels under attack.

But Elle's telekinetic abilities aren't really a metaphor for anything. They're a storytelling device — an effective one, to be sure — meant to recall the childhood stolen from her. Stranger Things doesn't register the trauma of that as much as it should, but "The Monster" does explain how she got to this point, far enough to make you marvel that she has a shred of humanity remaining. It turns out that Elle has been property of the Department of Energy since birth, when Dr. Brenner and company swiped her from her mother, then claimed the baby had died in the third trimester. The show has consistently doled out scenes from Elle's childhood under Brenner's watch, which has required a push-and-pull between emotional manipulation and ruthless weaponization. She's been built to fight the Soviets. And she has, improbably, remained an empathetic child, if not a joyful one.


Sean Hutchinson, Inverse

"Netflix’s newest hit, Stranger Things, is a treasure trove of 1980s genre references, but what separates it from a fan film that simply makes Steven Spielberg and John Carpenter references is the way it incorporates those nods into the texture of the show itself. These references go deeper than just superficial winks to some of the most iconic books and movies of the decade.

"Sure, it’s a nice visual callback, Nancy Wheeler’s outstretched hand from the Upside Down giving us a flashback to Brian De Palma’s adaptation of Stephen King’s Carrie, but more importantly, Matthew Modine's sinister government scientist in Stranger Things is in the same vein as the similarly controlling parent played by Piper Laurie in De Palma’s film. And while it’s obvious that the main characters tearing around their suburban neighborhoods on BMX bikes with a supernatural being in tow is a shout at E.T., the truly important aspect they borrow is that Joyce Byers (Winona Ryder) is the same single mother trying to make ends meet as Dee Wallace’s parent in the Spielberg classic. It’s not just that a group of kids go on a huge adventure like in The Goonies, it’s that the adventure tests and strengthens their friendship in the movie and the Netflix show as well."

Ashley Hoffman, TIME

"In the movie Carrie based on the Stephen King novel, Carrie White (Sissy Spacek) has telekinetic powers that she sometimes uses for violence. Sound familiar? Carrie and Eleven are both total goody two shoes who wouldn’t harm a fly. Unless they’re provoked, in which case they would totally harm several flies, household objects and people. But it’s the sixth episode that has the most blatant Carrie callback when Nancy’s hand bursts through the portal to the Upside Down. It resembles the scene when Carrie’s hand pops out of the dirt covering her grave."


Posted by Geoff at 11:59 PM CDT
Updated: Monday, August 8, 2016 12:21 AM CDT
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Thursday, August 4, 2016
RARE MAKING OF 'HI, MOM!' VIEW FROM RESIDENT
MOVED OUT FOR 24 HOURS TO ALLOW FILMING IN HIS APARTMENT
The New York Times has a "Metropolitan Diary" column in which people are encouraged to send in submissions about life in the city. Dr. Stanley Shapiro sent in the following entry, which was posted to the NY Times August 1st:
Dear Diary:

Recent news coverage regarding a documentary about the film director Brian De Palma reminded me of the day in 1970 when he and Robert De Niro came to our I.M. Pei faculty/grad student building at New York University on Bleecker Street (now called Silver Towers).

The film, called “Hi, Mom,” continued the story of the antihero in “Greetings,” who was now a peeping Tom. My apartment was the object of his obsession, since it was opposite their other site on Greene Street.

Mr. De Niro was handsome and polite and smiled at our 6-month-old. Mr. De Palma shrugged around our place checking camera angles. I think we got $100 and moved out for 24 hours.

When we came back, they were still working on a scene with the actress Jennifer Salt, who was in a flimsy robe and getting ready to reshoot a nude scene in our bathtub. She was apologizing/explaining to my young wife about how acting and real life were not necessarily the same.

Maybe we should find a DVD of this film to revisit our cheap Danish Modern furniture. I seem to remember an orange foam rubber couch.


Posted by Geoff at 2:45 AM CDT
Updated: Thursday, August 4, 2016 2:48 AM CDT
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Tuesday, August 2, 2016
REFN PRESENTS 'BODY DOUBLE' IN U.K. FRIDAY
SERIES OF MOVIES THAT INSPIRED REFN INCLUDED 'CARRIE' LAST MONTH


Picturehouse cinemas in the U.K. are hosting a series called "Nicolas Winding Refn Presents…" It began July 15th with Brian De Palma's Carrie ("Nicolas Winding Refn’s verdict: ‘a visual feast.’"), and from this Friday (August 5th) will be De Palma's Body Double ("Nicolas Winding Refn’s verdict: 'They should make more movies like this nowadays.'"). The other films in the series are David Cronenberg's Videodrome, Jonathan Glazer's Under The Skin, David Lynch's Mulholland Drive, and Dario Argento's Suspiria.

Previously:

'NEON DEMON' REVIEWS OFTEN MENTION DE PALMA

CAHIERS DU CINEMA ON 'NEON DEMON'


Posted by Geoff at 11:45 PM CDT
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