Author Archives: Neil Pond

Seeing Deeper

Examining two centuries of photography and its artistry

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Photo: A History From Behind the Lens

DVD $49.99 (Athena/RLJ Entertainment)

We take it for granted now that cameras are practically synonymous with cell phones, but photography hasn’t been around forever. (Only about 200 years, to be exact.) This 12-part documentary offers an entertaining, enlightening examination of the art form’s past and present and looks ahead to its high-tech future, using playful animation to illustrate complicated concepts and covering its many facets and uses. A companion booklet features a history of cameras and a timeline of photographic breakthroughs. So as you’re taking that next selfie or other snapshot, remember, there’s two centuries of technology, trial-and-error and artistry behind that simple “click.”

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Christmas Grooves

Music to warm your spirits & shake your booty

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It Feels Like Christmas Time

Big Bad Voodoo Daddy

CD, $13.35 (Savoy Jazz)

 

Working their way to national recognition after becoming a L.A. club fixture in the 1990s, this Grammy-nominated swing-revival band—which took its name from an autographed note from blues legend Albert Collins—locks into a hip, happy holiday groove for this collection of traditional favorites flavored with a sprinkling of jazzy, snazzy ’tis-the-season originals. Bandleader and founding member Scotty Morris leads his crew through “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town,” “Jingle Bells,” “Run, Run Rudolph,” “Frosty The Snowman” and seven other tunes guaranteed to warm your spirits as it shakes your booty.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Even More Despicable

Sequel to animated spy romp filled with family-friendly laughs

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Despicable Me 2

Blu-ray $34.99 / DVD $24.99

Children and parents alike will enjoy this clever, laugh-filled follow-up to the original 2010 animated spy romp about the reformed super-villain Gru (Steve Carell), his three adorable adopted daughters and his army of hilarious little yellow helper “Minions.” Recruited by the Anti-Villain League to deal with a new threat, Gru swings back into hilarious gadget-y espionage action to save the world—and his family. Bonus content includes three Minion mini-movies, commentary, and several features that go behind the scenes with the cast and crew.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Make a Joyful Noise

Movie musical puts soulful new spin on familiar Christmas story

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Black Nativity

Starring Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Angela Basset and Jacob Latimore

Directed by Kasi Lemmons

PG, 93 min.  

If you’d like going to the movies to be a little more like going to church, then you’ll probably like going to see Black Nativity.

Based on a 1960s musical by acclaimed poet/novelist/playwright Langston Hughes, it’s a modern embellishment of the Nativity story as told through the converging lives of various characters coming together for the staging of a Christmas Eve pageant at a Harlem house of worship.

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Jennifer Hudson & Jacob Latimore

Writer/director Kasi Lemmons fleshes out Hughes’ stage play with a wider drama about a down-on-her-luck single Baltimore mom (Jennifer Hudson) who sends her teenage son (Jacob Latimore) to live with his grandparents in New York during the holidays while she works two jobs and tries to figure out how to keep her and her son off the streets.

For the displaced teen, Langston (named after the famous poet), it’s clearly not the most wonderful time of the year. Mere minutes after stepping off the bus in downtown Harlem, his backpack’s snatched, he has a run-in with the law, and he meets a toughened street hood (Tyrese Gibson) that we’re sure he’ll come across again. Welcome to the big, bad city, kid!

Langston also bristles at the rigid God-centric rules laid down by his strict pastor grandfather (Forest Whitaker), but warms somewhat to his beaming, gracious grandma (Angela Bassett).

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The original Black Nativity stage production was a rich tapestry of traditional Christmas music and hymns, African-American rhythms, jazz and poetry. The movie version weaves in all of those elements, too, sprinkling throughout its dozen performances some contemporary hip-hop and rap for today’s ears.

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Mary J. Blige

Everybody sings, but it certainly helps that the cast includes a gut-busting tune-belter like Hudson, the Grammy and Oscar-winning American Idol finalist, and  an appearance by Mary J. Blige, the electrifying “Queen of Hip-Hop Soul.”

It’s Whitaker, though, who truly surprises. The Oscar-winning actor doesn’t often get a chance to show off his old college chops as an opera tenor, but he does here when he cuts loose in the “Black Nativity” pageant, as the reverend leads the congregation in a soulful burst of preachin’ and praisin.’

This modest little feel-good movie probably won’t contend for any major awards (unlike Whitaker’s other movie this year, The Butler). It’s pretty basic in its production—although some of the handsome shots by veteran cinematographer Anastos Michos are top-notch—and its drama tends to get a bit syrupy as it’s trying to soar.

But its heart is in the right place. And it can put yours there, too, if this holiday season you’re seeking a wholesome story with a joyous, tune-filled message about forgiveness, second chances and the true, timeless meaning of Christmas.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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’80s Ladies…and Gents

Glamour shots of the era’s top stars in all their glory

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Mario Casilli

By Tony Nourmand & Peter Doggett

Hardcover, 192 pages ($49.95, Reel Art Press)

One of the premier glamour photographers of the ’80s, Casilli started out at Playboy and ended up shooting covers for TV Guide, where he made almost all the stars of the times shine in all their big-haired, shoulder-padded, rainbow-colored glory. This collection of his work, which includes full-page portraits of Joan Collins, David Hasselhoff, Morgan Fairchild, Suzanne Somers, Brooke Shields, Vanna White, The Bee Gees, the casts of Dynasty, Dallas, Miami Vice and  Knight Rider, and dozens of other celebrities, captures the rich, extravagant, enviable beauty of the era’s most elegant pop-cultural ambassadors.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Crime Spree

A monumental tribute to all three ‘Godfather’ movies

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The Godfather Family Album

By Steve Schapiro & Paul Duncan

Hardcover, 600 pages ($39.99, Taschen)

Here’s an offer you can’t refuse: When it was first released, this lavish compendium of some 400 behind-the-scenes, on-the-set photos from all three Godfather movies came with a collector’s-only price tag of $700. Now much more affordably priced, this monumental tribute to moviedom’s most iconic crime trilogy covers the cinematic Corleone crime saga from beginning to end and makes a perfect addition to any wiseguy’s library. Leave the gun, take the cannoli…and get this book.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Honky Tonk Heaven

Country stars take a walk on the spiritual side

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Country Faith

Compiled by Deborah Evans Price

Hardcover, 128 pages ($12.99, Zondervan)

Country music has always walked on both sides of the line dividing the sacred and the secular, and this collection—with a host of country acts each expounding on a favorite Bible verse—digs deep into the format’s deep spiritual roots. As Carrie Underwood, Brad Paisley, The Band Perry, Florida Georgia Line, Hunter Hayes, Lee Greewood, Trisha Yearwood, Alan Jackson, Barbara Mandrell and more than 45 other superstars, veteran performers and hot newcomers each explain why one particular passage from the Old or New Testament has proven to be especially relevant to their lives and careers, you’re immersed in a uniquely all-star Nashville devotional—and might even come to see some well-known stars in a new heavenly light.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Oh, Daddy!

Vince Vaughn goes for warm & fuzzy as a fantastically fertile father

DELIVERY MANDelivery Man

Starring Vince Vaughn, Chris Pratt and Cobie Smulders

Directed by Ken Scott

PG-13, 105 min.

When Brooklyn meat delivery-truck driver David Wozniak (Vince Vaughn) discovers that anonymous sperm donations he made to a fertility clinic some decades ago have resulted in more than 500 now-adult children, he decides to check them out. Not all of them—just the 142 New Yorkers who are suing to find out the true identity of their dad.

So the deliveryman who’s sewn his seeds over the Big Apple goes off to see how they’ve sprouted—without letting any of them know who he really is.

DELIVERY MANThis remake—by the same director—of a 2011 French-Canadian flick called Starbuck (after a champion stud breeding bull) follows Wozniak as he interacts with his offspring. He encourages the street musician, cheers for the historical reenactor, gets a manicure from the salon worker, and subs for the barista at a coffee shop so the aspiring actor can skip work and go to an audition.

He even saves the heroin addict from an overdose.

There’s also a subplot about how Wozniak’s latest get-rich scheme has resulted in a massive debt to some sleazy loan sharks, and about his girlfriend (Cobie Smulders of How I Met Your Mother), who’s pregnant with his baby but not really expecting her screw-up of a partner to be much of a co-parent.

Can “Starbuck” turn his life around and become the man he needs to be—and the father he already is, 500 times over?

Vaughn, whose acting career has generally been defined by playing slouchy, raunchy man-child slackers, takes a decided turn toward the warm and fuzzy here, but still retains enough of his trademark comedic brand to not totally surprise anyone expecting to see a “Vince Vaughn movie.” It’s Chris Pratt, however, a supporting player on TV’s Parks and Recreation, who snatches most of the laughs right out from under him as his best friend and lawyer buddy.

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Chris Pratt, from TV’s ‘Parks and Recreation,’ gets most of the laughs as Vaughn’s best buddy and lawyer.

There’s something creepy about a grown man sneaking around, spying on dozens of barely 20-somethings, sneakily tweaking their lives. There’s something implausible about just how swell, well adjusted and full of sunshine all these kids are, even the heroin addict. And the scenes in which Vaughn interacts with his severely disabled son (Sébastien René, reprising his role from the original movie), meant to show Wozniak’s love for all his kids, instead come off as manipulative and mawkish.

Ultimately, this tall tale of a fantastically fertile lug and his epic leap into the nether-reaches of fatherhood has a message about family, connectivity and belonging that wraps around its comic center like one giant group hug. But Delivery Man makes you slog down a long road of soppy, artificially sweet goop to get to it.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Going Up!

Big book of world’s tallest buildings is shaped to suit its subject  

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Skyscrapers

By Judith Dupré

Hardcover, 176 pages ($26.95, Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers)

A skyscraper of a book itself, this super-tall 9”x18” volume mirrors its subjects: the world’s tallest buildings. With oversize, full-color photos, specs and a history of awe-inspiring vertical masterpieces all around the globe—including such iconic American landmarks as the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building and the Willis (formerly Sear) Tower, plus an array of newer creations in Europe, China, the Middle East and India—it’s an inspiring, eye-popping, soaring architectural tour, one that might just leave you feeling a little bit light-headed.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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Geri-Action Heroes

Bruce Willis & over-50 co-stars return for second espionage romp  

Red2Red 2

DVD $29.95 / Blu-ray $39.95 (Summit Entertainment)

Bruce Willis returns in the role of retired black-ops CIA agent Frank Moses, who must once again re-assemble his somewhat old-school team (John Malkovich, Helen Mirren) to thwart a new international threat in this second installment of the “geri-action” (geriatric + action) formula that proved itself so successful the first time around. Anthony Hopkins, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Mary-Louise Parker round out the cast, and Blu-ray bonus features include gags, goofs and an in-depth, behind-the-scenes look at the film’s characters, boom-boom weaponry, espionage gadgetry and extreme stunts.

—Neil Pond, American Profile Magazine

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