Pusha T Sends Shots at Drake & Birdman on DAYTONA

Venom raps, over Kayne soul beats, has Pusha T sounding his best in years on his project DAYTONA. Within the first seconds of the album, Pusha explodes out the gates with hard hitting bar after bar. On the intro track, If You Know You Know, he asks "Where were you when Big Meech brought the tigers in?" Reminiscing on a drug dealers paradise in Atlanta, while also claiming his long time involvement in the game.

Epic drops and transitions within songs like Santeria, free Pusha to focus on the lyrical content. He addresses, Drake, Birdman, Lil Wayne, and others, while still showing homage to rap legends Jay-Z and Eazy-E.

On the outro, Infrared, Pusha states he is aware of the fakes in the industry that others are blind to. "How could you ever right these wrongs? When you don't even write your songs?" The highly anticipated response to Drake has many fans seeing Pusha as one of the kings of rap.


Geoff's Top 10 Films of 2014

Boyhood

As I mentioned in my Top 10 Trailers of 2014 list yesterday, I didn't watch as many films this year as I normally do. It's a travesty, to say the least, but I'd be lying if I said it didn't help make my list of Top 10 Films of 2014 easier to write. Featuring independent releases, Hollywood blockbusters, sports documentaries, family-friendly CGI-animated films, foreign films, and festival favorites, I believe my list of my favorite films from 2014 runs the gamut of modern cinema... with the exception of horror films, but you all know by now they're not really my cup of tea, right?

Read on as I share my list and help explain why they deserved being remembered.


Miles Teller and J.K. Simmons in Whiplash

Geoff's Top 10 Trailers of 2014

Miles Teller and J.K. Simmons in Whiplash

2014 was one of my favorite years of moviegoing, played in no small part by attending my first Sundance. While I watched less films this year overall than I have in my four years of officially being part of the film community, I still watched more than my fair share of trailers. I know people that live for trailers; I also know people who refuse to watch them. Both groups have very valid reasons, with the former embracing the snippets of story and style to help determine their film choices amidst the world of ever-increasing ticket prices, and the latter wanting to enter the film experience full of surprise and intrigue. Listed over the next few pages are some of my personal favorite trailers of 2014. I hope you enjoy watching them as much as I did.


Birdman

[Review] Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)

In my line of work, I hear of dozens of new films each week. On the one hand, it's great to have an insider, early look at a lot of the films coming out in the calendar year. On the other hand, it takes away from the intrigue and spectacle that films used to have before I decided to follow this career path. It's rare, but every once in awhile, a film will seemingly come out of nowhere and retrieve those lost feelings of awe and wonder. Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) was that film for me.

In saying that, I subconsciously set a high bar walking into my screening of the film. Considering the cast and crew (Babel and Amores Perros writer/director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Michael Keaton, Edward Norton, Emma Stone, et al), how could I not? After a year full of festivals and amazing film premieres, would Birdman be able to rise above all of them and surpass my exceedingly high expectations? Spoiler alert: Yes and no.

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Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
Rating: R
Release Date: October 24, 2014

Riggan Thomson (Michael Keaton) found success in the '90s portraying the superhero Birdman in a blockbuster franchise that is still remembered fondly to this day. Feeling artistically empty and desperate to affirm his talent as not only an actor but as an artist, Thomson is writing, directing, and starring in a Broadway play based on Raymond Chandler's short story, "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love." After the lead actor is viciously injured by a fallen stage light, Riggan implores his producer, Jake (Zach Galifianakis), to get Mike Shiner (Edward Norton), the most talented current Broadway actor. However, after Mike joins the cast, tensions rise between he and Riggan as control over the play ultimately falls out of Riggan's hands.

Through this, Riggan must also contend with the contentious relationship with his daughter, Sam (Emma Stone), a recovering addict fresh out of rehab, his relationship with girlfriend and co-star Lesley (Naomi Watts), the strong friendship with his ex-wife and Sam's mother, Sylvia (Amy Ryan), and a New York Times critic and close friend of Mike's who promises to bury the play in her review due to her perceptions of Riggan as a Hollywood hack simply extending his 15 minutes of fame. Of course, there's also Riggan's growing pangs of a midlife crisis breakdown and the eponymous Birdman manifesting itself within Riggan's psyche.

Birdman

There are so many elements playing both in concert and conflicting one another in Birdman that it'll take multiple viewings to dissect and analyze the full depth of the film. For the sake of this review, I'll focus on the biggest and most apparent elements: the difference between theater and cinema and Birdman's attempt to create a dichotomy of the two and the dissection of art/entertainment. Birdman is screened to seem like it was all one long take with no edits (there are edits made through deception, i.e. dark shadows in corridors, etc.). This visual element gives the audience the notion that you are watching one long sprawling play about a cast of characters putting together a Broadway play. The characters themselves (both actors and supporting characters) always give off this notion of acting, creating the illusion that the characters are always "on stage," with lines delivered much like soliloquies found more within theater than in films.

The combination of the two may disarm viewers expecting a traditional film, and the effect may not carry the same esteem for everybody. Others may not like how much of the dialogue is delivered as if every actor had a spotlight shining on them as they stood upon a soap box and recounted personal, emotional stories about their characters. But for myself, somebody who has dedicated a growing number of years to analyzing and critiquing films, I absolutely loved Inarritu and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki's approach to Birdman. I'm a sucker for film visionaries that aren't scared to experiment with their craft. What's more, I think they truly pulled off creating the idea of Birdman, the film, being representative of a film of a play presented as a play through film.

What's more, it's hard to ignore the metafictional crux of the film of Michael Keaton playing the lead role, given his memorable performances as Batman during the early '90s. Without his past, would a film like Birdman even exist to this level? Probably not. Keaton truly is the heart and soul of the film, and not only does he knock it out of the park, each and every supporting actor from Norton to Stone to Ryan to Galifianakis help ensure Birdman reaches the levels Inarritu intended when putting the film together. Hell, even the jazz-influenced drum score by Antonio Sanchez helped ratchet up the faux-appearance of tightly-written improvisation.

Birdman

Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) was everything I wanted it to be and more. Even as I write this, I'm making plans to view it for a second time. As the awards season begins and many highly-regarded films will be released into theaters for Academy Award consideration, Birdman currently flies above the potential of any film scheduled for release through the end of the year. However, its experimental nature might not be for everyone, and while it may collect a multitude of critic awards and Top Ten list considerations, I'll be disappointed (but unsurprised) if it doesn't capture the amount of Oscar nominations it should. For the average weekend moviegoer, if you want to see some of the year's best cinematic performances and watch the vision of one of Hollywood's true visionaries, take it upon yourselves to find a theater that is screening Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance).


Michael Keaton in Birdman

[Trailer 2] Birdman

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The first trailer for Birdman came out of nowhere last month and instantaneously wowed me and the majority of the film community. Co-written and directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, the creative mind behind Amores perros21 Grams, and BabelBirdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) stars Michael Keaton as Riggan Thomson, a washed up former superhero actor attempting to find success in his later life by writing and directing a play based on his experience. However, as can be seen in this new trailer, Riggan begins a mental downward spiral as the pressures of living up to his past success begin to get the better of him, possibly manifesting into the Birdman character serving as a negative conscience manipulating Riggan.

Fans of Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan will probably gravitate to Birdman, but with the added elements of dark comedy, a stellar cast that features Emma Stone, Edward Norton, Zach Galifianakis, Amy Ryan, and Naomi Watts alongside Keaton, and Inarritu's proven filmography add up to Birdman easily becoming my most anticipated film of the year. Birdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) will be in theaters on October 17th.


Curren$y: "442" (Feat. Lil' Wayne & Birdman)

It's been a minute since Weezy and Spitta got together for a track. Regardless, the pair teamed up with Birdman for "442". Staying true to his New Orleans roots, Curren$y got the pair together and dropped the soulful jam on local radio station Q93 late last night. Take a listen here below.

[via MissInfo.tv]