Generally speaking, we’re pretty excited about the explosion of films being made in Massachusetts. It’s cool to see the sights we see every day committed to film, and having stars like Kate Hudson and Ricky Gervais in town gives the gossip columnists (and local papers) something to write about.
While I love watching Mayor Tom Meninobike around Boston and talk about what’s loaded onto his iPod, he is not the politician that is closest to my heart. As a native of Rhode Island, I can never get enough of Vincent “Buddy” Cianci.
Much like Amy Winehouse pines for her Blake Incarcerated, I was beside myself while Cianci served nearly five years for corruption. There were no toupee sightings, and my home state’s political scene was woefully dull.
Thankfully, Buddy’s out of jail and is entertaining us once more. And not just with his awesome radio show. The Globe reports that Cianci has inked a deal to make a movie out of his tumultuous political life.
We heard recently that director Brian De Palma, he of Scarface and The Untouchables fame, had signed on to direct a movie based on the notorious Boston Strangler murders of the early 1960s. We were elated because we assumed (incorrectly) that it would be based on Sebastian Junger’s 2006 book, A Death in Belmont, a great read but one which Casey Sherman nevertheless savagely critiques in an article for us.
We’re not sure which executive at Staples, the Framingham-based office supplies retailer, signed on to this scheme, but he or she deserves to spend a week sorting paper clips. Starting this Sunday, Staples will begin carrying “No-Return” DVDs in its 1,500 stores nation-wide.
The DVDs — produced by Flexplay Entertainment, which was founded by MIT professor Erik Brynjolfsson — are rigged so that exposure to oxygen sets off a slow chemical reaction rendering them unusable 48 hours after removing it from the vacuum-sealed package.
Now, we’re not in the business of making predictions about the viability of obviously ill-fated schemes, but back in 2003, Flexplay’s time-limited DVDs popped up in grocery stores, 7-Elevens, and Papa John’s outfits, where they demonstrated a remarkable inability to attract any consumers—and that was before the Netflix boom. What is the appeal of driving anywhere to pay $4.99 for a DVD that will self-destruct? (more…)
While big-budget Hollywood flicks may get all the headlines in the gossip pages, local filmmakers are also thriving in our movie-friendly city. Only a couple of months after local boys Eric Poydar and Brett Portanova showed their first film at the Independent Film Festival Boston, a group of young moviemakers will debut their faux-documentary Flashoverat the Boston International Film Festival.
We talked to Flashover co-director Sean O’Connor about viral marketing, the difficulties of the genre, and why it’s terrifying to collaborate with someone you met on Craigslist.
Like a lot of people we can’t wait to see the Sex and the City movie. It’s all the heavy drinking, frustration with men, and female bonding we crave, except in a different city and dressed in much nicer clothes. (Speaking of the wardrobe, we’re counting down our favorite Carrie Bradshaw ensembles on Bostonista.)
So we’re pretty excited for the movie. Note that we said excited. Not insane. Some Sex fans have crossed into stark raving lunacy in advance of the movie’s release tomorrow.
There have been many benefits to the state’s subsidies of the film industry. We get to see famous people walking among us everyday folk. There’s the delight of seeing the landmarks we know so well featured on the silver screen, sometimes to comedic effect.
While we’re sure Gov. Deval Patrick enjoys a Kate Hudson sighting as much as we do, the state is giving away money in the hopes of bolstering the local economy. But a new study shows that Massachusetts may actually be losing cash on the deal.
Cambridge’s People’s Republik is the unofficial bar of Boston Daily. Whether we’re talking smack over a game of darts or just looking to have a pint without pretension, it’s one of our go-to spots.
We’re not the only ones showing the bar some love. Esquire voted People’s Republik one of the Best Bars in America in its latest issue.
There’s a bit too many CGI effects, and too much Shia LaBeouf, for us to get really excited for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Regardless of our feelings, the hype machine is kicking into full-gear for the film’s release next week, and we couldn’t be happier to see a local organization benefiting from Harrison Ford’s star power.