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Showing posts with label Real3D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real3D. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Justin Bieber: Never Say Never 3D [3Dvideo]


In case you couldn't tell from the talk-show appearances and the TV spots, from the billboards and bus ads, from the ceaseless chatter on Twitter, Justin Bieber's "Never Say Never" has finally arrived in theaters after a seemingly endless promotional push that left no channel or digital sphere Bieber Fever-free.

And in case you weren't sure, most everyone who's already seen it seems to agree: The movie is pretty dang good. And that's coming from critics and reporters who don't likely hum "One Less Lonely Girl" in the shower. Whether you're begging your parents for — or are being begged by your kids about — a trip to the multiplex this weekend, check out what reviewers are saying about "Never Say Never."

The Story
"A fairly intimate look at Bieber's life on the road and his beginnings as just another talented kid growing up in small-town Canada, the movie is part-documentary and part-concert film that both embraces and pokes fun at the teenybopper mania that Bieber and his handlers have created. There's a loose countdown structure as Bieber prepares for his first concert at Madison Square Garden, but director Jon Chu is mostly content to zip around Bieber's life and the people who surround him, mixing in live performances with the interviews and fly-on-the-wall recordings. He doesn't exactly pander to the audience, but it's probably no coincidence either that Bieber takes off his shirt twice in the first 10 minutes." — Katey Rich, Cinema Blend

Meet the Real Bieber
"Bieber is a mix of intuitive performer and apparent quick study. As a dancer, his style is endearingly awkward, as if the 16-year-old still has not quite figured out how his body works. ... Yet beneath his polish there is still something unpracticed and a bit goofy to Bieber and his ever-present team of handlers. When a random girl is plucked night after night from the audience for him to serenade onstage, he hands her a big bouquet of roses; as he sings a solo acoustic number, he hangs over the crowd seated in a giant heart. Bieber seems to sit at some rare intersection of the newfangled and the traditional, where camera phones coexist sweetly with swooning romance." — Mark Olsen, Los Angeles Times

The Visuals
"Director Jon Chu has done a nice job of building this as a film, as a solid documentary, with a heavy side order of self-aware image-building. It is revealing in ways it may not have been intended to be, but it is crafted well, and the 3-D concert footage is designed to be very experiential. Chu wants you to see how hard the people on stage are working, how crazy it is behind the scenes, and just how much that audience feeds on it and then feeds it back in crazy prepubescent emotional hypermedia." — Drew McWeeny, HitFix

The Dissenters
"While the film makes clear Bieber is a wunderkind who wants to be seen more as a Justin Timberlake than a Rick Astley, his movie retreats from anything near the portrait that Michael Jackson's 'This Is It' posthumously became. That's a shame, because there was drama in Bieber's life. He grew up poor to a single mom in Ontario, Canada, and became a sensation only after posting his second-place finish in a singing competition on YouTube. 'Never,' though, touches only briefly on that childhood. And though Bieber taught himself to play several instruments, the film whisks past his talents to get to his bangs — and does nothing to risk 'Never' 's G-rating." — Scott Bowles, USA Today

The Final Word
"Though anyone who needs convincing won't touch this one with a 10-foot pole, 'Justin Bieber: Never Say Never' makes a persuasive case for its titular star as a far more talented-than-usual teen idol. As much a legitimate documentary as it is a 3D concert film and teen girl squeal-delivery device, the film possesses surprising moments of candor on the toil of teenage superstardom, even if the overall effect is purely promotional. Provided it skirts the curse of the Jonas Brothers (who released a similar film just as their popularity began to flatline), it should go over like gangbusters." — Andrew Barker, Variety

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Friday, July 29, 2011

Smurfs 3D 2011 [3Dvideo]


For the uninitiated, the thought of spending of an hour and 45 minutes with those cuddly little blue creatures known as The Smurfs in 3D on the big screen in a live action/animated family comedy might not exactly appeal.

But as someone who wasn't on the planet when Belgian artist Pierre "Peyo" Culliford first created them for a comic book in the '50s -- and who was too old (read: cool) in the '80s to be watching the Hanna-Barbera cartoon version, I can tell you the end result is pretty cute.

Mind you, the filmmakers could have trimmed off about 15 minutes of it.

However, Neil Patrick Harris (How I Met Your Mother) and Jayma Mays (Glee) are cute as the New York City couple -- he's a cosmetics company marketing executive, she's a craft furniture artist -- expecting their first child when their lives are invaded by six equally cute Smurfs.

There's Papa Smurf (voiced by comic legend Jonathan Winters), Smurfette (pop star Katy Perry), Clumsy Smurf (Anton Yelchin), Brain Smurf (SNL's Fred Armisen), Gutsy Smurf (Alan Cumming of The Good Wife) and Grouchy Smurf (George Lopez) who are all on the run from the evil wizard Gargamel (Hank Azaria) and his sidekick cat Azrael (half real, half animated when it comes to the kitty's facial expressions) after escaping Smurf village via a magical portal that lands them in The Big Apple.

That's where the cute ends.

Azaria has uglied himself up -- think Abe Vigoda in a monk's robe -- in his scene-stealing role as Gargamel, with big ears, nose, eyebrows, buck teeth, and a receding hairline as he runs around New York City trying to catch the smurfs in order to take "their essence" to make his spells more powerful.

He has some of the movie's best lines and is great at slapstick, particularly during a memorable scene set in famed toy store FAO Schwarz and to his credit, director Raja Gosnell (Home Alone 3, Scooby-Doo and Scooby-Doo 2, Big Momma's House, Beverly Hills Chihuahua) makes great use of that and other New York City landmarks including Belvedere Castle in Central Park and Rockefeller Plaza's rooftop garden.

Unfortunately, Gargamel hooks up temporarily with Harris' equally evil boss Odile (Sophia Vergera of Modern Family), who becomes fascinated with his "magic" ability to make her mother look younger in a weakly written sidebar, while others making appearances in smaller roles include Project Runway's Tim Gunn, who plays Odile's right-hand man.

For the most part, it's a pretty simple plot fleshed out by appealing performances by Harris and Mays, nifty voice work by Winters, Perry and Cumming in particular and Azaria -- who is a gifted comic. The animated smurfs are also easy on the eyes even if the 3D hardly seems necessary.

And for those of you who were around for either the comic book or the Saturday morning cartoon, your nostalgia for one or the other or both will go rewarded in this big screen version of The Smurfs.

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(This film rated G)
THE SMURFS ***
What: Live action animation directed by Raja Gosnell
Starring: Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays, Hank Azaria
Classification: G
Where: Mustang Drive-In, Rainbow Cinemas, SilverCity, Wellington 8, Galaxy Cinemas, St. Thomas
 
SOURCE:
http://www.lfpress.com/entertainment/movies/2011/07/28/18481236.html

SOURCE 3DVIDEO:
http://www.youtube.com/toyin3d

SOURCE 3D PHOTO:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/toyin3d/


Labels: Real3D,Sony Pictures,Sony,Pitufos,Smurfs,Peyo,Smurf,Winters,Smurfette,Azrael,Apple,cartoon
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