[Trailer] Draft Day

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Sports films are always a mixed breed. On the one hand, there are the super dramatic Oscar bait films (re: The Blind Side); on the other, there are laughable jokes of films (re: Thunderstruck)... of course, on the proverbial other other hand, there's Space Jam, which was cinematic perfection. Striking a balance between drama and comedy in a critically-acclaimed sports film can be hard, and I've personally yet to see one that captures the full effect.

Draft Day is being billed as a dramedy, but this first trailer definitely paints it more as a suspenseful drama than anything, akin to films like Margin Call. Kevin Costner stars as Sonny Weaver, the general manager for the Cleveland Browns. With the NFL Draft approaching and all hopes for the Browns' future in his hands, Weaver must do everything in his power to ensure the team's long-term success. Unfortunately, the Browns' coach doesn't see eye to eye with him as they are shown to be constantly butting heads.

Draft Day will be in theaters on April 11th.


[Video] The Save Money Christmas Cypher + New Songs

Few collectives in music had a bigger rise in overall reputation than Chicago's Save Money team. In honor of a 2013 that saw projects from Vic and Chance, as well as Brian Fresco's Mafioso, a Save Money compilation and a steady slew of singles that increasingly unique. In honor of all this and Christmas, some of the team got together for a special cypher video just for the holidays. Joey Purp starts things off before handing off to Kami De Chukwu, Tokyo Shawn and Vic Mensa, who caps off the short video, shot by the girls of Verluxe.

In other Save Money news, we also got new tracks from both Vic Mensa and Dally Auston that can be heard below. Vic's "Crazy" is a lost cut from his 2010 Straight Up EP and was released around Christmas as a loosie single, as is Auston's "Great Gatsby".

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TIME Names David Guttenfelder Instagram Photographer of the Year

Photos by David Guttenfelder

When it comes to Instagram, you will find photos of just about anything you can imagine. There are those that really push the boundaries of mobile photography; then there are those that document their lives to share with the world, as is the case with the Associated Press's Chief Asia Photographer, David Guttenfelder, who gives us a look at life in North Korea. He was recently titled the Instagram Photographer of the Year by TIME magazine for documenting his life in North Korea, giving us a glimpse into a country so many in the outside world have not seen. Here are a few images that he has captured, and if you'd like to see more of his journey, check out his Instagram account here.

[Via Time]


[RH Review] The Wolf of Wall Street

The Wolf of Wall Street is the fifth collaboration between director Martin Scorsese and actor Leonardo DiCaprio. With every subsequent film made together, the two have grown increasingly comfortable with one another with DiCaprio becoming Scorsese's contemporary muse akin to his previous collaborations with Robert De Niro. However, it's with The Wolf of Wall Street that the two have achieved a heightened level of comfort and accomplishment that has been building up since the duo's first film, The Gangs of New York.

To call The Wolf of Wall Street the two's best film is an easy statement to make. To call it Scorsese's best film, however, is a sentiment that carries almost five decades' and more than 20 films' worth of accolades, awards, and accomplishments. Yet, here I am right now telling you with a bold face: The Wolf of Wall Street is Martin Scorsese's best film to date.

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The Wolf of Wall Street
Director: Martin Scorsese
Rating: R
Release Date: December 25, 2013

The Wolf of Wall Street is an adaptation of Jordan Belfort's memoir of the same name. During the late '80s and early '90s, Belfort and his partner Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill) ran a brokerage firm, Stratton Oakmont, that took Wall Street by storm. Over years, the firm grew exponentially, bringing in riches for everybody in the company. Of course, their practices were less than legal, but when money talks, you listen, right? It all comes to a head when a federal agent begins to investigate the company following an expose on Belfort in Forbes.

This is the bare-bones summary of the film's narrative. However, like any great film (let alone a Scorsese-directed one), there's so much more to it, and to delve deeper would honestly spoil the experience for all of you reading this. Instead of digging deeper into the narrative, let me expound on why this is both Scorsese's best film and DiCaprio's best role to date. It's twisted, manic, eye-opening, and everything you may ever want in cinema.

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One of the most primary and prominent themes carried through Scorsese's filmography is his analysis of machismo and masculinity, and The Wolf of Wall Street may be the most eye-opening of his films in this regard. While the film carries a dark comedy tone through its entirety, it's through this warped lens of humor. Belfort's story is one full of extravagance, and Scorsese exploits and perhaps even exaggerates this all to a grandiose scale. Everything from hills of cocaine snorted from a hooker's butt crack to awkward S&M scenes to midget tossing is in The Wolf of Wall Street. Take the most ridiculous scene from every late-'90s/early-'00s rap video, mix them together, and you have a framework for The Wolf of Wall Street's abundance.

Yet, it all fits together and makes sense. The Wolf of Wall Street is so much more than a memoir adaptation; it's more than just an analysis of masculinity in the face of young money. Much like Harmony Korine's Spring Breakers, which itself was a film embodiment of the "spring break experience," Scorsese's latest opus is the embodiment of nihilistic hedonism, not just in narrative terms, but in the way Scorsese's cast has never previously explored, which alone serves as the film's highest point.

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DiCaprio and Hill serve as the film's nucleus, and the chemistry between the two is amazing. Drop any preconceptions you may have about Hill as an actor - Hill's time to truly shine has finally arrived, and it's through Scorsese's masterful direction that Hill can finally shed his past as a one-note funny man. Sure, he was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Moneyball, but most crowds will still remember him from Superbad. Given some time, The Wolf of Wall Street will prove to be the benchmark for his career thus far. Hill's Donnie Azoff is still essentially the same character he's played for years (i.e. Jewish comedic foil), but he takes the character to new heights through a mixture of his comedy past and Scorsese's ability to simultaneously reign him in and let him go.

The same thing can be said about DiCaprio's performance, albeit at a larger scale. Simply put, you haven't seen a Leonardo DiCaprio role like this. Keeping in line with the film's theme of nihilistic hedonism, DiCaprio lets loose in a way I have never seen from him; it's like he completely sheds who he once was and becomes Belfort. This comes off as a film cliche about actors losing themselves in their roles, but DiCaprio's transformation is so brilliant and near-perfect. DiCaprio's Belfort is manic, self-serving, nihilistic, sexist, but at the same time, he's caring, protective, and giving. It's this balance of portraying a lovable drug addict, a caring sexual deviant, a money-obsessed Robin Hood, a by-the-books walking contradiction that sets this performance above all of the rest.

The Wolf of Wall Street is full of risks (and rewards), and it's the comfortability between Scorsese and DiCaprio that allows the film to even indulge in such risks (further pushing along the theme of hedonism). There's one particular sequence towards the end of the second act where you can just tell Scorsese, DiCaprio, and Hill were just feeding off of one another's energy. I don't want to spoil it, but you'll know it when you see it, and you'll leave the scene never looking at old Popeye cartoons the same way again.

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The majority of the supporting cast is full of archetypes that, for better or worse, fulfill these roles as they were needed, but don't stick out beyond that initial need. For instance, Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights) is the hard-nosed federal agent, Jon Bernthal (The Walking Dead) is the badass enforcer, Brian Sacca is the mousy junior partner, etc. In a very minor, yet important role, Matthew McConaughey sets the stage for the film early on, acting as Belfort's mentor.

As you may remember, The Wolf of Wall Street faced some editing problems a few months ago, pushing its original November date to Christmas. It clocks in at almost three hours (2 hours, 59 minutes to be exact), but you don't feel its longevity throughout the film. Instead, you're carried through an abundantly entertaining film that keeps the energy high from start to finish. With that said, some fat could have been trimmed, especially when the film slightly hurtles to a conclusion in the last 30 minutes or so.

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The Wolf of Wall Street carries everything you love from Martin Scorsese (modern crime, analysis of masculinity, overabundance of profanity, the "American Dream,"etc.), but with a focus on exploring the comedy genre. It's over the top, but not cheesy; grandiose, but refined. The Wolf of Wall Street is overindulgent in its riches, its drugs, its sex, and it's everything you never knew you wanted in a film. If, heaven forbid, this is the final film between DiCaprio and Scorsese, know that they're going out on top.


[Video] Pharrell Interviews Leonard Nimoy for ARTST TLK

Pharrell Williams returns for another episode of his interview series ARTST TLK featuring actor, director, poet and photographer Leonard Nimoy. The two sit down and talk about a variety of topics such has how the character Spock was created, how the character evolved, and the trouble Nimoy had taking on the role. We also learn the background story of the now iconic Vulcan salute. Another topic that was brought up was Nimoy's love for photography, and the interview shined light on some of the great photography projects he's created. Looking at Pharrell's body of work, it's apparent that he has been inspired by Nimoy, and by watching the interview you get some insight into how much he's gone through in his career.

[Via Reserve Channel]

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The Raid 2 raiding theaters on March 28

The Raid 2 will be making its premiere next month during Sundance, and it's safe to say that it's the one film I'm looking forward to the most during the film festival. However, festival premieres are typically met with a months-long wait until general audiences can see the film themselves, usually due to final editing/production or the search for a proper distributor. The Raid 2, however, won't have to go through either of these as a firm release date has been announced.

Our return to the wonderful world of pencak silat will take place on March 28, 2014, with waves of releases across the country to follow. The Raid: Redemption is one of my favorite action films in recent memory, and with the first teaser trailer hitting on all the right notes (figuratively and literally), I have high hopes for The Raid 2: Berandal.

[via Collider]


[Video] The DIY Leica Camera Assembly Kit That Never Was

For Leica's 100th anniversary, designer Marcelo Ribeiro under F/Nazca Saatchi & Saatchi was to create a DIY Leica camera as a gift to Brazilian store customers who had purchased any M camera during the year. This kit is truly DIY giving the lucky owner a taste of what it is like to make a real Leica camera. It would come with an acrylic sheet where you could just punch out pieces and combine it to the body one piece at a time. The kit never made it into production because the costs were too high, but it was a pretty cool idea, and it was unfortunate that Leica couldn't pull it off. Check out the video about the DIY Leica camera that never became a reality.

[Via Leica Rumors]

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[Trailer] Transcendence

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Technology is getting to a point where what was once thought impossible isn't that far off from becoming real. As the ever-growing threat of Skynet or a technological takeover by artificial beings increases with every advancement, we can't help but at least acknowledge how cool the future is going to be.

Wally Pfister, Christopher Nolan's long-time cinematographer, is taking a stab at directing with the upcoming Transcendence. Starring Johnny Depp, Rebecca Hall, and Paul Bettany, the film takes place in a world where Dr. Will Caster (Depp) is a primary researcher of artificial intelligence with plans of creating a sentient machine that holds all of the world's knowledge and the ability to have human emotions. While the prospect is exciting, it draws a lot of ire from anti-artificial/technology groups. When Caster is gravely-injured, his wife Evelyn (Hall) and partner/best friend Max (Bettany) are faced with the option transfer Caster's thoughts into a machine to "save his life." However, not all goes well when Caster's thirst for knowledge and power grows to an almost supervillain-like obsession.

Transcendence will be in theaters on April 17, 2014.