Ten January 2011 Posters
I love posters. Here are ten posters listed at the IMP Awards as 2011. Alphabetically~
I love posters. Here are ten posters listed at the IMP Awards as 2011. Alphabetically~
The King’s Speech is a throughly enjoyable movie about King George VI — not yet crowned then — and how he got through his stammering problem with the help of a very unlikely aid… and a lot of work.
For the past two or three years, the race for Best Actress has always been the most interesting. And here there are O’Neil (Gold Derby) and Hammond (Deadline Hollywood) discussing this year’s Best Actress race.
Canadian company Mongrel Media will be releasing their R1 DVD of Mao’s Last Dancer. Directed by Bruce Beresford, it stars Joan Chen, Amanda Schull, and introducing Chi Chao as the lead.
Our latest and last issue as a PDF. This marks a new beginning for us, and marks the actual 2-month countdown for the opening of yam-mag.com. In this issue, McNeil from The Dark of the Matinee gives us a look at what was the Toronto Film Festival this year, and gives his thoughts on Let Me In, Black Swan, and Norwegian Wood.
Early September ranks right up there with Christmas thanks to the cinematic nirvana I experience at the Toronto Film Festival. 2010 marked the festival’s 35th anniversary, and my own ninth go-round of the TIFF experience.
Well, we’ve got reviews for Bright Star, Nine, Princess and the Frog, New York I Love You, Anvil: The Story of Anvil, Sa Dingding’s sophomore album Harmony, SNSD, 2AM, Mosquito-voice Kim JongKook, Modern Family, Nurse Jackie and more!
Plus! We’ve got articles on the direction of Chinese Pop music, our list of actresses that should get a cable show, and our picks that should have been Best Picture nominees at the Academy Awards.
It’s always that time of the year. Nominations are in, and we never seem to be happy… now more than ever, since the Academy decided for ten Best Picture nominees, instead of the usual five.
On this issue we’ve got a special coverage on the Stockholm Film Fest, including a Q&A with Sin Nombre director Cary Fukunaga, and several reviews from the festival’s films like Precious, Up in the Air, and The Cove which will play a big part on the coming award shows…
Mary and Max is a little Australian animated film that tells the story of a little 8-year-old Australian girl who strikes up a very unusual friendship with a 44-year-old Jewish American man living in New York, a relationship that spans 20 years.