Elsewhere Digital
edited by Moisés Chiullan
The Third Man (Criterion Blu-ray)
This title in particular has been the subject of a good deal of controversy on Elsewhere (among other sites), message boards, and email lists across the web. No one seems to talk about much aside from the "Grain Issue." Since the grain (or overabundance thereof) is the obvious elephant in the room, I'm going to address it before getting on to the additional content on display here, of which there is much to see and thoroughly enjoy. (continued)

Upcoming

December 31

Defiance

Good

January 2

Cargo 200

January 7

Silent Light

January 9

After Dark Horrorfest 2009

Bride Wars

How About You

Not Easily Broken

The Unborn

Yonkers Joe

January 16

Chandni Chwok to China

Cherry Blossoms

Hotel for Dogs

My Bloody Valentine 3-D

Notorious

Paul Blart: Mall Cop

January 21

Of Time and the City




Josh Brolin's "X"

I dropped by Santa Barbara's Marjorie Luke theatre yesterday afternoon to see four short films, but mainly to take a look at Josh Brolin's X, which he directed, wrote and self-produced. A 15-minute piece about a heavily-tattooed criminal dad (Vincent Riverside) and his hard-bitten, Bonnie Parker-like daughter (Eden Brolin) sharing a violent fate in the desert, X is a first-rate effort -- well-shot, nicely paced, engagingly acted. 3 days of shooting, 96 set-ups. It convinces you that Brolin will probably be directing a feature within two or three years.


(l. to r.) X costars Vincent Riverside, Eden Brolin, director-producer-writer Josh Brolin; two guys who directed an alluring short called Elevator People, and a director of another short film -- ready to insert name and title with assistance.

That said, X's like-father, like-daughter theme is depressing. Riverside's character is a low-rent loser who has not only ruined his own life but, it seems, his daughter's. The short has a certain scuzzy integrity, yes, but I wouldn't want to see X expanded into a feature. It's too bleak, the characters too doomed. It left me with nothing except a belief that Brolin can handle himself behind a camera. He's a funny guy. Something tells me he'd be good with a sardonic comedy of some sort.

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on January 30, 2008 at 11:39 AM

comment #1

actionman Author Profile Page says ...

his performance in Flirting with Disaster was hysterical

Posted by actionman Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 11:58 AM

comment #2

AH Author Profile Page says ...

He really is on a roll these days.

Posted by AH Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 1:12 PM

comment #3

alynch Author Profile Page says ...

I'm surprised that Jeff hasn't written anything about that Bush movie he's doing with Oliver Stone. That seems like the type of thing that would be in Jeff's wheelhouse.

Posted by alynch Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 3:19 PM

comment #4

Monument Author Profile Page says ...

Just you wait alynch, just you wait.

Posted by Monument Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 3:24 PM

comment #5

bmcintire Author Profile Page says ...

Just going by noggin size, Brolin is all wrong to be playing Bush2. George is a classic example of a pinhead, while Josh's skull ranks up there with a Macy's parade float.

Posted by bmcintire Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 5:56 PM

comment #6

JosephB Author Profile Page says ...

Is it just me or is Brolin getting cooler and cooler by the week nowadays? Or maybe I have one of those George Costanza-like man crushes on Tony (if you know the episode, bonus points).

Posted by JosephB Author Profile Page at January 30, 2008 8:55 PM

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