When it comes to studio features, there are few we’re anticipating more this year than Shane Black‘s return to the crime drama/comedy with The Nice Guys. Starring Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe, its red band trailer was a complete delight and today we have the groovy soundtrack from the ’70s-set film.
Revealed over at iam8bit, they’ve shared details on its double LP release, which comes with a 3D centerfold, a pin-up poster, liner notes, and more. Perfectly setting the tone, the 15-track release features Bee Gees, The Temptations, Kiss, Kool & The Gang, Earth, Wind & Fire, Kiss, The Band, and more. Thanks to our friend Drew Morton, who’s put together a playlist on Spotify with all the tracks.
Get listening below as we await the film, which is rumored to stop by Cannes before it opens in May:
1. Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone – The Temptations...
Revealed over at iam8bit, they’ve shared details on its double LP release, which comes with a 3D centerfold, a pin-up poster, liner notes, and more. Perfectly setting the tone, the 15-track release features Bee Gees, The Temptations, Kiss, Kool & The Gang, Earth, Wind & Fire, Kiss, The Band, and more. Thanks to our friend Drew Morton, who’s put together a playlist on Spotify with all the tracks.
Get listening below as we await the film, which is rumored to stop by Cannes before it opens in May:
1. Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone – The Temptations...
- 3/8/2016
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
(For those who thought Snowpiercer wasn't somber enough...) Cee, a young pregnant woman, sits on a giant train which drives through a post-apocalyptic landscape. Nobody knows if the train's destination still exists, or even if there are tracks beyond the horizon, but everybody wants to get away from the blasted and radioactive city it left behind. As her pregnancy evolves, Cee wonders if the baby will be normal, or what future there will be for her anyway... This is the bleak start of John Bergin's animated feature From Inside, and, like the book it's based on, it doesn't exactly lighten up from there. That book was a graphic novel, written and drawn by Bergin himself, which was released in 1991 and won several awards. At...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 11/10/2014
- Screen Anarchy
Score Produced and Performed by: Brett Smith
Release Date: May 22, 2012
Format: Audio CD
Number of Discs: 1 (approx. 1 hour)
Label: Lakeshore Records
From Inside – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack features original music by Brett Smith (the band Caul). Based on the epic graphic novel by John Bergin, From Inside is the story of Cee, a young pregnant woman who finds herself on a damaged train slowly transcribing its way across a bleak post-apocalyptic landscape. Flood, war, starvation and a plague of death threaten the train’s passengers. Cee struggles through these dangers while coping with the memory of her lost husband and the imminent birth of her child.
A post-apocalyptic landscape needs a dark score. Composer Brett Smith found this a particular challenge. He said, “I had to somehow convey the weight of the world, misery and despair that Cee had never been exposed to.”
One such scene is when Cee walks through the packed train,...
Release Date: May 22, 2012
Format: Audio CD
Number of Discs: 1 (approx. 1 hour)
Label: Lakeshore Records
From Inside – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack features original music by Brett Smith (the band Caul). Based on the epic graphic novel by John Bergin, From Inside is the story of Cee, a young pregnant woman who finds herself on a damaged train slowly transcribing its way across a bleak post-apocalyptic landscape. Flood, war, starvation and a plague of death threaten the train’s passengers. Cee struggles through these dangers while coping with the memory of her lost husband and the imminent birth of her child.
A post-apocalyptic landscape needs a dark score. Composer Brett Smith found this a particular challenge. He said, “I had to somehow convey the weight of the world, misery and despair that Cee had never been exposed to.”
One such scene is when Cee walks through the packed train,...
- 6/4/2012
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
Piqued your interested? I bet it has, but no, Giraud isn't directing or writing. He's just involved in design work on this great looking project which apparently mixes animation, cutouts and straight CGI in with a heavy technicolor flare and it reminds me a bit of the style of John Bergin's From Inside. This is the first installment in a planned quadrilogy done almost entirely by director and animator G.B. Hajim out of Hawaii, and musician Shelley Doty. Also, it seems that Lucas Films will be helping them do the final sound mix which will also include existing music from Pink Floyd. Release is scheduled for some winter 2010. I'd tell you about the story, but you can read it below.
It’s the 29th century. We’re on Ganymede, one of Jupiter’s moons. The human race has long since left a decimated Earth. To survive the harsh climates of other planets and moons,...
It’s the 29th century. We’re on Ganymede, one of Jupiter’s moons. The human race has long since left a decimated Earth. To survive the harsh climates of other planets and moons,...
- 8/7/2009
- QuietEarth.us
Here’s a little something interesting by way of Spain ...
While animation is normally very much a team effort recent advances in technology mean that if you’re patient and talented enough it is now possible to go it solo, an apporach demonstrated in recent years by Makoto Shinkai, John Bergin and others. And it was Bergin’s post-apocalyptic opus From Inside - a film animated over the span of three years by Bergin working solo on his home computer and manipulating images from his own graphic novel - that caught the eye of Spanish comic artist Jesus Orellana. Though Orellana had no previous experience in animation the success of Bergin’s film made him want to try something similar himself and so with no budget and no help he spent a solid month preparing the teaser for what he hopes will become a feature length project, the apocalyptic picture Vanitas.
While animation is normally very much a team effort recent advances in technology mean that if you’re patient and talented enough it is now possible to go it solo, an apporach demonstrated in recent years by Makoto Shinkai, John Bergin and others. And it was Bergin’s post-apocalyptic opus From Inside - a film animated over the span of three years by Bergin working solo on his home computer and manipulating images from his own graphic novel - that caught the eye of Spanish comic artist Jesus Orellana. Though Orellana had no previous experience in animation the success of Bergin’s film made him want to try something similar himself and so with no budget and no help he spent a solid month preparing the teaser for what he hopes will become a feature length project, the apocalyptic picture Vanitas.
- 12/14/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
Year: 2008
Release date: Unknown
Directors: John Bergin
Writers: John Bergin
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: Ulises
Rating: 9.5 out of 10
The Bottom Line: A haunting, provocative, and amazing, if unrelentingly bleak, animated movie about one woman’s surreal trek across a barren, post-apocalyptic wasteland.
When you look at the credits for John Bergin’s From Inside, their brevity might surprise you. Aside from Bergin (as writer, producer, director, and animator), and Corryn Cummins (the actress who does the film’s voiceover), there aren’t many other people mentioned. That’s because From Inside is a 70-minute long movie comprised entirely of simple CGI and still-life illustrations with a bare minimum of animation. It looks like the kind of film that only required a handful of people to put together. And while this might sound like a knock against the film’s production values, it’s not. Because From Inside manages to tell an engrossing,...
Release date: Unknown
Directors: John Bergin
Writers: John Bergin
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: Ulises
Rating: 9.5 out of 10
The Bottom Line: A haunting, provocative, and amazing, if unrelentingly bleak, animated movie about one woman’s surreal trek across a barren, post-apocalyptic wasteland.
When you look at the credits for John Bergin’s From Inside, their brevity might surprise you. Aside from Bergin (as writer, producer, director, and animator), and Corryn Cummins (the actress who does the film’s voiceover), there aren’t many other people mentioned. That’s because From Inside is a 70-minute long movie comprised entirely of simple CGI and still-life illustrations with a bare minimum of animation. It looks like the kind of film that only required a handful of people to put together. And while this might sound like a knock against the film’s production values, it’s not. Because From Inside manages to tell an engrossing,...
- 11/27/2008
- QuietEarth.us
We have the full list of the Sitges International Film Festival of Catalonia 2008 award winners. Among those taking home prizes was "Surveillance," a film by Jennfier Chambers Lynch which captured the Best Motion Picture award. Lynch writes alongside Kent Harper, the crime drama/thriller which stars Julia Ormond, Bill Pullman, Pell James and Ryan Simpkins. Also taking significant awards was Brian Cox for his work on "Red," Fernando Meilelles' "Blindness" drama starring Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo and "Let the Right One In." What is Sitges? The number one fantasy film festival in the world and represents, at the same time, the cultural expression with the most media impact in Catalonia. With a solid experience, the Sitges Festival is a stimulating universe of encounters, exhibitions, presentations and screenings of fantasy films from all over the world. As announced, here are the winners announced by Sitges: Surveillance, by Jennifer Lynch, Best...
- 10/13/2008
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Last night the complete list of Sitges award winners was announced, and while a combination of alcohol and air travel has prevented me from posting the news until now, here are my personal highlights. There are several juries on hand and several awards categories at Sitges, so hit the links below to get the complete list of winners from all juries.
There were a few big surprises on the night, the first being that major festival fave Let The Right One In - previously announced as the European Federation of Fantastic Films Festival’s Golden Melies Award as the year’s best European genre film - was completely shut out of the Sitges awards. Instead, Jennifer Lynch’s Surveillance to home the best film prize while Kim Ji Woon took best director for The Good The Bad And The Weird, Brian Cox took best actor for Red and - another surprise,...
There were a few big surprises on the night, the first being that major festival fave Let The Right One In - previously announced as the European Federation of Fantastic Films Festival’s Golden Melies Award as the year’s best European genre film - was completely shut out of the Sitges awards. Instead, Jennifer Lynch’s Surveillance to home the best film prize while Kim Ji Woon took best director for The Good The Bad And The Weird, Brian Cox took best actor for Red and - another surprise,...
- 10/12/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
The mammoth Fantasia Festival has come to an end and you know what that means: prizes! Who’s getting the hardware this year? Ahem ...
Swedish vampire picture Let The Right One In was the clear winner, taking home the jury award for Best Picture while also netting nods for Best Director and Best Photography. A surprising - and Very gratifying - choice was Miki Satoshi winning best script for Adrift In Tokyo while Rule of Three and Shadows in the Palace took home Best Actor and Actress, respectively, and the jury awarded a special prize to Adrift In Tokyo‘s duo of Jô Odagiri and Tomokazu Miura. In the First Features category Koen Mortier’s Ex Drummer edged out Nacho Vigalondo’s Time Crimes and John Bergin’s From Inside, all three of which I truly adore.
Check out all the rest of the winners in the official announcement below the break!
Swedish vampire picture Let The Right One In was the clear winner, taking home the jury award for Best Picture while also netting nods for Best Director and Best Photography. A surprising - and Very gratifying - choice was Miki Satoshi winning best script for Adrift In Tokyo while Rule of Three and Shadows in the Palace took home Best Actor and Actress, respectively, and the jury awarded a special prize to Adrift In Tokyo‘s duo of Jô Odagiri and Tomokazu Miura. In the First Features category Koen Mortier’s Ex Drummer edged out Nacho Vigalondo’s Time Crimes and John Bergin’s From Inside, all three of which I truly adore.
Check out all the rest of the winners in the official announcement below the break!
- 7/22/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
If there is one thing that Fantasia 2008 has taught me, it is that there are so many, many compelling nooks and crannies for the post-apocalyptic film yet to mine despite the slew of them over the past few years. If anything, these films are getting better and better as we go along!
From Inside is a bleak tale of Cee’s journey (heavy with child and the anxieties that that entails) through a post-apocalyptic nightmare-landscape which cannot help but blend in with her own memories of the past and fears of the future. A surreal steam-engine train barrels through the post-nuclear desert away from a non-existent civilization and towards nothing in particular either. The important thing, perhaps, is that the train still running; even if the inhabitants are estranged from the mysterious engineers who run the metal dragon and are possibly future fuel for the fires that maintain forward inertia.
From Inside is a bleak tale of Cee’s journey (heavy with child and the anxieties that that entails) through a post-apocalyptic nightmare-landscape which cannot help but blend in with her own memories of the past and fears of the future. A surreal steam-engine train barrels through the post-nuclear desert away from a non-existent civilization and towards nothing in particular either. The important thing, perhaps, is that the train still running; even if the inhabitants are estranged from the mysterious engineers who run the metal dragon and are possibly future fuel for the fires that maintain forward inertia.
- 7/16/2008
- by Kurt Halfyard
- Screen Anarchy
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