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The Master (movie) news, photos and video - latimes.com
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Feb 12, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  • Mike Piazza had dreams of using karate to take out Roger Clemens

    So Mike Piazza was planning to go all Ralph Macchio on Roger Clemens? And then when he had the opportunity, decided just maybe it wasn’t his best idea?
    So Mike Piazza was planning to go all Ralph Macchio on Roger Clemens? And then when he had the opportunity, decided just maybe it wasn’t his best idea? Hey, that’s show business, or at least the autobiography business. Piazza’s...
    Highlights
    Feb 12, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  • Mike Piazza had dreams of using karate to take out Roger Clemens

    So Mike Piazza was planning to go all Ralph Macchio on Roger Clemens? And then when he had the opportunity, decided just maybe it wasn’t his best idea?
    So Mike Piazza was planning to go all Ralph Macchio on Roger Clemens? And then when he had the opportunity, decided just maybe it wasn’t his best idea? Hey, that’s show business, or at least the autobiography business. Piazza’s...

    A collection of news and information related to The Master (movie) published by this site and its partners.

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      Mar 21, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    1. Kerouac opus 'On the Road' hits just enough beats ★★★

      An eternal fountain of adolescence, Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" went through many permutations between its point of origin, 1948, and its point of notorious, divisive publication, 1957. The best description of it came from Kerouac himself, in a journal entry written after his first cross-country road trip in 1948. The book he had in mind, he said, was about "two guys hitchhiking to California in search of something they don't really find, and losing themselves on the road, and coming all the way back hopeful of something else." There's a simple beauty to that. The question is: How do you film an extended yearning?
      An eternal fountain of adolescence, Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" went through many permutations between its point of origin, 1948, and its point of notorious, divisive publication, 1957. The best description of it came from Kerouac himself, in a journal...

      Tags: Jack Kerouac, Celebrities, New Year's Day, On the Road (movie), Dizzy Gillespie

    2. Feb 25, 2013 |Column| RedEye
    3. The Oscars telecast's rocky road

      Last night's Oscars were like an emotional roller-coaster at a terrible amusement park--beginning wth Seth MacFarlane's as-bad-as-feared monologue, the show rarely rose above painful and hit few peaks. Allow us to relive some of the night's best and worst moments, not necessarily in that order.
      Last night's Oscars were like an emotional roller-coaster at a terrible amusement park--beginning wth Seth MacFarlane's as-bad-as-feared monologue, the show rarely rose above painful and hit few peaks. Allow us to relive some of the night's best and worst...

      Tags: Religion and Belief, Roger Deakins, Quentin Tarantino, Lincoln (movie, 2012), Argo (movie)

    4. Feb 22, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    5. Overlooked screenplays this Oscar season

      In 1945 Raymond Chandler wrote a screed against Hollywood, and Hollywood screenwriting, for the Atlantic Monthly. "An industry with such vast resources and such magic techniques should not become dull so soon," said the man who later characterized his adopted residence to the south, La Jolla, Calif., as "nothing but a climate." In the Atlantic he vented: "An art which is capable of making all but the very best plays look trivial and contrived, all but the very best novels verbose and imitative, should not so quickly become wearisome to those who attempt to practice it with something else in mind than the cash drawer."
      In 1945 Raymond Chandler wrote a screed against Hollywood, and Hollywood screenwriting, for the Atlantic Monthly. "An industry with such vast resources and such magic techniques should not become dull so soon," said the man who later characterized his...

      Tags: Terence Davies, Django Unchained (movie), Tony Kushner, Quentin Tarantino, Chicago Tribune

    6. Feb 20, 2013 |Column| RedEye
    7. RedEye's 2013 Oscar predictions

      For context about predictions of major entertainment events, Duff Goldman from “Ace of Cakes” correctly predicted the result of this year’s Super Bowl. NFL experts did not.
      For context about predictions of major entertainment events, Duff Goldman from “Ace of Cakes” correctly predicted the result of this year’s Super Bowl. NFL experts did not. Likewise, making Oscar predictions can be a bit ridiculous, as...

      Tags: Lincoln (movie, 2012), Argo (movie), Alan Arkin, Amour (movie), Joaquin Phoenix

    8. Feb 14, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    9. Music Box festival celebrates 70mm projection

      It's how a lot of us got hooked on movies in the first place. When I was 8 or 9 I saw "2001: A Space Odyssey" in 70 mm in Milwaukee with my mother. My memory's fuzzy on the particulars but I recall asking so many questions about the obelisk on the drive back to Racine, she had to pull over and compose herself for a minute and, as the tears streamed down her cheeks, she said quietly: "Michael, I just ... have no idea." It didn't matter. I'd never seen anything like it, and the Star Child never looked bigger, or scarier, or better.
      It's how a lot of us got hooked on movies in the first place. When I was 8 or 9 I saw "2001: A Space Odyssey" in 70 mm in Milwaukee with my mother. My memory's fuzzy on the particulars but I recall asking so many questions about the obelisk on the drive...

      Tags: 2001: A Space Odyssey (movie), Richard Brooks, Festive Events, Music Box Theatre, Arts and Culture

    10. Feb 21, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    11. Someday prints will come, in pink

      "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" was pink. But we'll get to that in a minute.
      "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" was pink. But we'll get to that in a minute. Music Box Theatre general manager Dave Jennings considers himself fortunate to have such a "smart, forgiving audience" for the current and very popular 70mm retrospective. The...

      Tags: 2001: A Space Odyssey (movie), Festive Events, Music, Entertainment, Spartacus (tv program)

    12. Nov 15, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    13. 'Silver Linings Playbook': Humanity in high-maintenance characters ★★★ 1/2

      Hollywood movies, and even off-Hollywood independent films, have long encouraged us to empathize with unstable or psychologically troubled characters only if they're "kooky" for a little while, as a prelude to more palatable, normalized levels of craziness. You know. The charming kind. Happy ending, followed by a fade to a sunny shade of black.
      Hollywood movies, and even off-Hollywood independent films, have long encouraged us to empathize with unstable or psychologically troubled characters only if they're "kooky" for a little while, as a prelude to more palatable, normalized levels of...

      Tags: Mental Health, The Fighter (movie), Silver Linings Playbook (movie), Movies, Paul Thomas Anderson

    14. Sep 8, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    15. Toronto Film Festival Day 2 recap: The Master's domain!

      Here's a Day 2 recap from the Toronto International Film Festival. Everybody sees a different slate of movies each day here. Friday went this way: After the gamer-oriented slaughter of “Dredd 3D,” the fanciful and tricksy theatrics of director Joe Wright’s “Anna Karenina” with Keira Knightley and Jude Law and the Wachowskis’ adaptation of “Cloud Atlas,” which takes place in six different time periods, the mind reeled and the cinematic appetite cried out for something straight and easy.
      Here's a Day 2 recap from the Toronto International Film Festival. Everybody sees a different slate of movies each day here. Friday went this way: After the gamer-oriented slaughter of “Dredd 3D,” the fanciful and tricksy theatrics of director...

      Tags: Festive Events, Entertainment, Joe Wright, Music Box Theatre, Toronto International Film Festival

    16. Sep 10, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    17. Toronto's Hollywood juggernaut can't swamp indie pleasures

      In "Argo," one of the leanest satisfactions of this year's massive Toronto International Film Festival, director and star Ben Affleck anchors a movie based on the true story about how Central Intelligence Agency operative Tony Mendez faked his way into Iran following the 1979 hostage crisis posing as a film producer scouting locations for a Canadian science-fiction film called "Argo." Under that cover story, Mendez engineered the rescue of six American hostages, themselves posing as part of the fake film crew.
      In "Argo," one of the leanest satisfactions of this year's massive Toronto International Film Festival, director and star Ben Affleck anchors a movie based on the true story about how Central Intelligence Agency operative Tony Mendez faked his way into...

      Tags: The Matrix (movie), Sony Corp., Rust and Bone (movie), Zac Efron, Central Intelligence Agency

    18. Feb 15, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
    19. Oscars and American history: True, or true enough?

      A modest proposal: Movies exploring some aspect of American history, such as “Argo,” “Lincoln” and “Zero Dark Thirty,” should leave off the “based on a true story” or “inspired by true events” language and stick to what “Lincoln” screenwriter Tony Kushner advocates: a clear, simple and proud declaration of “historical fiction.”
      A modest proposal: Movies exploring some aspect of American history, such as “Argo,” “Lincoln” and “Zero Dark Thirty,” should leave off the “based on a true story” or “inspired by true events”...

      Tags: Tony Kushner, Lincoln (movie, 2012), Central Intelligence Agency, Argo (movie), Arts and Culture

    20. Jan 18, 2013 |Column| Los Angeles Times
    21. Jim Harbaugh tops list for The Times' Sports Oscars

      Oscars, smoshkers. With his scenery-chewing performance on the sidelines last weekend, Jim Harbaugh has elevated himself to the top of this year’s list of the world’s greatest dramatic actors.
      Oscars, smoshkers. With his scenery-chewing performance on the sidelines last weekend, Jim Harbaugh has elevated himself to the top of this year’s list of the world’s greatest dramatic actors. “Maybe he’s just being himself?&...

      Tags: Les Miserables (musical), Jim Harbaugh, Celebrities, Beasts of the Southern Wild (movie), Flight (movie)

    22. Apr 11, 2013 |Column| RedEye
    23. 'Upstream Color' review: Pretentious hogwash--sometimes literally

      <strong>* (out of four)</strong>
      * (out of four) Forgiving critics and moviegoers often call films without articulate points or well-defined characters "poems." This usually affixes to work by Terrence Malick and will surely be a tag for the frustrating, hollow “Upstream Color,&...

      Tags: Movies, Paul Thomas Anderson, Entertainment, Poetry

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    The Master (movie) Photos
    "The Master" lead actor nominee Joaquin Phoenix.
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