Sep 27, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
The Fall 2010 issue of Under the Radar includes a feature on Philip Seymour Hoffman, who has made his screen directorial debut with Jack Goes Boating. The film, written by Bob Glaudini, is an adaptation of Glaudini's off-Broadway play, which was produced in 2007 when Hoffman and John Ortiz were artistic directors for the Labyrinth Theatre Company. Hoffman and Ortiz both starred in the play and reprise their roles on screen. More
Aug 13, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
In Animal Kingdom, writer/director David Michôd's thrilling Melbourne-set family crime drama, Australian newcomer James Frecheville plays 17-year-old Josh Cody, a brooding, taciturn man-child caught between the law and his family's illicit activities. With senior officer Nathan Leckie (Guy Pearce) coercing Josh to spill what he knows about the recent murder of two police officers, and Josh's intimidating uncle, Pope (Ben Mendelsohn), pressuring him to keep his mouth shut, Josh's words remain few throughout the film, but the weight of his fears are readable in his face and body language. More
Aug 02, 2010
By Mike Hilleary (as told to)
Issue #32 - Summer 2010 - Wasted on the Youth
Growing up in Salt Lake City, Utah, I went to a magnet school that was out away from the neighborhood that I lived in, so when I was at home I really didn't have any friends in my neighborhood. More
Jul 28, 2010
By Mike Hilleary
Mary Elizabeth Winstead is most certainly worth fighting over. The actress had a breakthrough year in 2007, appearing as John McClane's daughter-in-distress in Live Free or Die Hard and starring in Quentin Tarantino's Grindhouse segment Death Proof. It was the latter performance that caught the attention of director Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz). In Wright's upcoming Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, the anticipated film adaptation of Bryan Lee O'Malley's acclaimed graphic novel series, Winstead plays Ramona Flowers, a girl with a lot of baggage when it comes to dating— seven exes that the story's titular hero must fight against to win her heart. On a break from shooting scenes for the upcoming prequel to John Carpenter's 1982 horror classic The Thing, Winstead spoke with Under the Radar about screaming and scary movies, evil exes, and what it's like to work with Michael Cera and Edgar Wright. More
Jul 16, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
When Irish writer/director Lance Daly talks about the production of his splendid third feature Kisses, he uses terms such as "magic" and "blind faith." This is not to suggest, however, that he was whimsical in his approach to making the film. Daly was confident enough in his carefully written script, about a boy and a girl who run away from home on Christmas, that he allowed himself to take risks that would lend Kisses both authenticity and a youthful air of enchantment. More
Jun 25, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
In her most recent films, 19-year-old Jennifer Lawrence has portrayed resilient, mature-minded teens who, by default, have assumed the mother role in their respective families. In Winter's Bone, which won the Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic at the Sundance Film Festival in January, Lawrence plays Ree Dolly, an impoverished 17-year-old living in the Missouri Ozarks who is hellbent on keeping her preteen brother and sister out of the hands of unreliable surrogate parents. Though Lawrence is the youngest in her family, she admits that her maternal instincts are evident in real life. "I've always been a babysitter and a nanny," she says. "All my friends call me mom." More
May 28, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
Grégoire Canvel, the lead character in French writer/director Mia Hansen-Løve's second film, The Father of My Children, is based on Humbert Balsan, the French film producer who was chairman of the European Film Academy when he hanged himself in 2005. Balsan intended to produce Hansen-Løve's first feature, All Is Forgiven, but his death left the film in limbo until it was completed with other producers in 2007. It's no accident that The Father of My Children shares a kinship with Olivier Assayas' Summer Hours, which was released to critical acclaim in the States last year. Hansen-Løve, 29, is the fiancé of Assayas, who hired her for her first film work—as an actress—when she was 16 years old. More
Apr 04, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Issue #32 - Summer 2010 - Wasted on the Youth
"I still have an obsession with my bunny," admits 13-year-old actress Chloë Grace Moretz. "I can't sleep without it, and every time I travel, I go with my bunny. It's a stuffed bunny, it's a fake bunny, but it's my favorite thing in the world, basically." More
Mar 26, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
Danish director Niels Arden Oplev didn't seem like an obvious choice to direct The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, the screen version of the first book in Swedish journalist Stieg Larsson's immensely popular Millennium trilogy. Oplev's previous film, Worlds Apart, was an intimate family drama about a teenage girl confronting the doctrines of her religious denomination, Jehovah's Witnesses. Oplev initially declined producer Sören Staermose's overtures to direct the much-anticipated film adaptation, but Staermose's persistence paid off. Prior to its release in the U.S. and UK, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo grossed over $100 million worldwide, easily becoming Sweden's most successful film. More
Feb 11, 2010
By Chris Tinkham
Web Exclusive
In making North Face (Nordwand), an adventure film about alpinists ascending the most dangerous rock face in the Alps, German writer/director Philipp Stölzl and cinematographer Kolja Brandt disregarded such Hollywood films as Cliffhanger and Vertical Limit and aimed instead for the authenticity of the documentary/reenactment film Touching the Void. More