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Entries in Leonardo DiCaprio (122)

Tuesday
Jan192021

Almost There: Leonardo DiCaprio in "The Departed"

by Cláudio Alves

Many actors have long-lasting creative partnerships with their directors, bringing out the best in both artists. Unfortunately, when it comes to Oscar, not everyone gets recognized for these joint efforts. Many thespians don't get that golden recognition for their best work either, adding a tinge of bitterness to their triumph. Leonardo DiCaprio, Martin Scorsese's 21st-century muse, did get nominated for two of the director's pictures, 2004's The Aviator and 2013's The Wolf of Wall Street. However, I'd argue that the actor's best performance in a Scorsese flick got snubbed. In 2006, despite a lot of precursor attention, The Departed failed to secure an Oscar nod for its ill-fated protagonist…

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Tuesday
Nov172020

Linkpack

TFE reminder -- LAST DAY TO VOTE ON THE 1987 SMACKDOWN!
Vanity Fair Dolly Parton might save us all again. She donated to a promising COVID vaccine
• People 80s star Andrew McCarthy is releasing a memoir called Brat. We are so reading this. That 80s run surely has so many stories: Class with Jacqueline Bisset, St Elmo's Fire with uh.... everyone, Pretty in Pink, Less Than Zero, Mannequin
• Vulture Stacey Abrams has a theory on Buffy the Vampire Slayer's perfect boyfriend (no, really!)
• Hollywood Life Leo DiCaprio and Emile Hirsch (hadn't heard their names in a bit) hang out at the beach
Out will reveal their annual Out100 List on Thursday but among the early honorees are Janelle Monae, Joe Mantello, Theo Germaine (The Politician), and the gay couple behind the divisive Antebelllum movie
Variety the longlists for  a few categories in this year's British Independent Film Awards (nominations will come in December)
Deadline Quentin Tarantino has a book deal the first part of which is Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood related
Vox on the National Book Award finalists

Tuesday
Sep152020

The New Classics: The Wolf of Wall Street

By Michael Cusumano  

Scene: Quaaludes
It’s difficult not to lapse into hagiography when talking about Scorsese so I will simply say this and attempt to reign in the fawning as best I can: As much as anyone in the medium’s history he understands that the power of film isn’t in the text. It’s not in constructing an argument like an essay or a speech. It's in the images. 

Like all of Scorsese’s period pieces, The Wolf of Wall Street covers mountains of information in its headlong dash through the years, but what makes these films great are the moments when they distill all that material into a memorable frame. The technical gambling know-how makes you buy into the world of Casino, but it’s an overhead shot of a reckless Sharon Stone making it rain chips at the craps table that leaves a mark on the audience...

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Thursday
Jul162020

Inception's dreamy femme fatale

by Cláudio Alves

It's a bit strange for me to be writing a celebratory piece about Inception on the movie's 10th anniversary. I've always considered the picture to be a tad overrated, undeserving of the titles of life-changing masterpiece or perfect action movie that I've seen people bestow upon it. Aside from a deadening first hour of exposition, my main issue has always been a matter of imagination or lack thereof. The world of dreams and the human unconscious is so rich in possibility, that it's disheartening to see Christopher Nolan bend it to fit the model of a heist picture.

Even the set design reflects that. There's much talk of impossible architecture, but what we get is modernist lines as far as the eye can see, bellicose fortresses and concrete cityscapes without a hint of surrealism. Notoriously, Satoshi Kon's Paprika, an anime hallucination with a lot of similarities to the Nolan blockbuster, is a good example of how the oneiric world of dream-sharing can be used to explode the rules of cinema. Still, has previously stated, this is a celebratory write-up and, while Inception's creative limitations may be frustrating, it would be a lie to say they are devoid of value.

After all, the most interesting character in the whole flick is an archetype of crime pictures and film noir. She's a trope, an old character type that has deep roots in men's fear of complicated women. She is Marion Cotillard's Mal…

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Wednesday
Feb192020

Shutter Island is 10 ... Remember Leo's "Dead Wives Club"?

by Nathaniel R

Ten years ago Martin Scorsese's Shutter Island (2010) opened in movie theaters. Or did it? It did but what if I were an unreliable narrator?!? Once you start worrying about fact versus self-fiction, well, it can drive a person crazy. Curiously given its hit status (though perhaps not so curiously given its release date) this is the only Scorsese film from the 2010s to not receive a single Oscar nomination. 

Are you a fan? What's your most intense memory of it? I'll tell you mine after the jump...

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