Subtitrare Movie 43 Romana. Subtitrare Movie 43 Romana Download,2,5,Stiinta,Secreta,A,Islamului,Subtitrare,Lb.romana, destvideo.net. Synopsis: Watch Movie 43 online free. In Movie 43 2013 Putlocker Full Movie, A series of interconnected short films follows a washed-up producer as he pitches insane story lines featuring some of the biggest stars in Hollywood.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Film/Movie43
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Movie 43 is a 'comedy' Anthology Film, comprising 12 skits directed by Peter Farrelly, Elizabeth Banks, Steven Brill, Steve Carr, Rusty Cundieff, James Duffy, Griffin Dunne, Patrik Forsberg, James Gunn, Bob Odenkirk, Brett Ratner and Jonathan van Tulleken.
It features an insane All-Star Cast including Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry, Kate Winslet, Emma Stone, Naomi Watts, Richard Gere, Anna Faris, Uma Thurman, Chris Pratt, Kristen Bell, and Chloë Moretz.
The 12 skits are:
- The Pitch: A fallen from grace film director (Dennis Quaid) pitches a risky idea to a producer...
- The Thread: In the international release, a different Framing Device is used - three teenagers (Adam Cagley, Devin Eash and Mark L. Young) search the internet for a banned movie called Movie 43, and come across quite a bit of Filth in the process...
- The Catch: A gorgeous couple (Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet) are dating, until the man shows a weird behavior...
- Homeschooled: A boy's parents (Liev Schreiber, Naomi Watts) homeschool him, up to the point of bullying him...
- The Proposition: A young woman (Anna Faris) asks her boyfriend (Chris Pratt) to perform a disgusting sexual fetish on her...
- Veronica: A girl (Emma Stone) and her boyfriend (Kieran Culkin) discuss their sexual relationship in public and in detail...
- iBabe: A Steve Jobsexpy (Richard Gere) is evaluating the troubles his new kinky iProduct is having with his team...
- Super Hero Speed Dating: Some superheroes and supervillains (Justin Long, Jason Sudeikis, Uma Thurman, Bobby Cannavale, Kristen Bell, John Hodgman, Leslie Bibb, Will Carlough) troll each other in flash dates...
- Machine Kids: A Public Service Announcement promotes better treatment of the kids that live in the machines we abuse when they don't function properly...
- Middleschool Date: Two young boys (Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jimmy Bennett) and their young girl friend (Chloë Grace Moretz) panic over her first menstrual period...
- Happy Birthday: Some dude (Johnny Knoxville) catches a leprechaun (Gerard Butler) as a gift for his best friend's (Seann William Scott) birthday...
- Truth or Dare: The most outrageous truth or dare game ever between two grown-ups (Halle Berry, Stephen Merchant) is about to begin...
- Victory's Glory: A basketball coach (Terrence Howard) motivates his high school team to blast an all-white team...
- Beezel: A woman (Elizabeth Banks) discovers that her boyfriend's (Josh Duhamel) cat is not what it seems...
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The Blu-Ray adds a deleted one:
- Find Our Daughter: A mother (Julianne Moore) and a father (Tony Shalhoub) hire a private eye to find their missing daughter, despite her only reference footage being unorthodox...
This film provides examples of:
- After the End: In the international release, uncovering Movie 43 causes the detonation of various Cold War-era nuclear weapons, turning the world into a wasteland.
- Black Is Bigger in Bed: Pretty much the whole selling point of Terrence Howard's inspirational speech to his basketball team.
- Brick Joke: In the international version, the framing device is originally supposed to be a distraction while one of the older brothers revenge-pranks the youngest by taking their laptop and infecting it with viruses from porn sites. In the end, those viruses thwart their last-minute attempt to stop the apocalypse their search for Movie 43 caused.
- Cluster F-Bomb: Courtesy of Kate Winslet in the trailer; it doesn't actually appear in the film.'This is fucked up!'
- Cringe Comedy: A heavy dose of it.
- Critical Research Failure: In-Universe, during the iBabe bit:Arlene: Teenage boys are physically attracted to naked women.
- Homeschooled Kids: One skit involves a teenager being homeschooled by his parents, who want to give him an authentic high school experience. This involves being bullied by his own family, being ostracized in parties and his own dad calling people to look at the boy's 'weird pubes'.
- Instant Turn-Off: One of the characters has been watching porn on his little brothers laptop for the sake of revenge. Along the way he comes across this porn star who he feels a deep connection with, towards the end of the film his Mom comes in wearing the same outfit as the porn star was earlier. He realizes that he has most likely been jacking off to his Mom, goes into shock and tries to rip off his own penis, months later he has lost his ability to walk and is only capable of endlessly repeating the words 'I'm sorry'.
- Is This Thing On?: The premise of 'The Proposition', as they're having that discussion while standing in front of the grocery store intercom.
- Minor Flaw, Major Breakup: Discussed by the director after pitching 'The Catch', stating that it's meant to be an exaggeration of the trope.
- Missing Trailer Scene: Several. The trailer shows more footage of The Catch (see above), as well as an entirely new scene involving a man motorboating a dead woman's breasts in the morgue (cut out from the film but occasionally shown at film festivals, director doesn't show it much anymore after Anton Yelchen's death)
- No Ending: 'The Pitch', which is the closest thing this film has to an actual plot, ends with the whole thing turning out to just be a movie being made when a Special Effects Failure occurs. The story itself gets no actual conclusion.
- 'The Thread' from the international release also doesn't have a noteworthy conclusion; instead, the world ends, one of the surviving older brothers finds the youngest's laptop and can't reset the world so instead watches the second-last skit, and then the credits roll (with 'Beezel' interrupting them midway).
- Only Sane Man: Kate Bosworth in the iBabe skit.Robert: None of this could have seen this one coming.Boss: Take it easy, Erin Brockovich.
- Playing Cyrano: Batman's attempt to help Robin speed-dating. Robin namechecks Cyrano de Bergerac. Batman doesn't recognise it, instead referring to Roxanne.
- Quote Mine: Somehow averted; the DVD/Blu-Ray cover doesn't have any positive blurbs from any critics, nor does it have anything taken out of context to even look positive.
- Refuge in Audacity: Each story just raises up how offensive it is from a coach telling his black basketball team they will win the game against a white team because they are black to two boys not knowing how to handle their female friend's period.
- Roger Rabbit Effect: Beezel, the last skit, is shot in live action, while Beezel, the titular cat, is animated.
- Schmuck Bait: Invoked by Richard Roeper in his review:As the ads for 'Movie 43' promised (threatened?), you can't un-see this thing, so please: Stay away.
- Spiritual Successor: The Groove Tube and The Kentucky Fried Movie.
- Threatening Shark: The fake Tampax commercial.
- Trailers Always Spoil: Most (if not all) of the movie's best jokes were given away by the trailers.
- Up to Eleven: In Truth Or Dare, the game is taken much, much further than just up to eleven, involving horrifying plastic surgery for Halle Berry, a penis being tattooed on Stephen Merchant's face, and listening to Snooki read Moby-Dick cover to cover.
- Vulgar Humor:
- Every single skit in the film is extremely vulgar and offensive in some way or another. Among all of them, arguably every trait of R-rated raunchiness is in here somewhere and used to its full potential.
- The one exception is the spoof Public Service AnnouncementMachine Kids which employs a heavy dose of surreal Black Comedy but no gross-out or sexual humour.
- You Can't Fight Fate: In 'The Thread', the titular Movie 43 is actually a message from After the End by the youngest brother, about how their searching for Movie 43 is about to trigger the end of the world. Which ends, because the older brothers' main motivation for finding Movie 43 in the first place was to distract the youngest while they ruin his laptop, the only thing that could've possibly prevented the apocalypse.
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Index
Every director dreams of being compared to Orson Welles. But having your new film labelled 'the Citizen Kane of awful' might not be quite what Peter Farrelly had in mind. Movie 43, which opened worldwide last Friday, wasn't actually screened for critics before release. Yet a handful braved the multiplex and paid anyway. Unbuttered by PR largesse, few resisted the chance to unleash both barrels.
'There's awful and THEN there's Movie 43,' wrote Richard Roeper in the Chicago Sun-Times. For Peter Howell of the Toronto Star, it is the 'worst film ever', and 'biggest waste of talent in cinema history'. David Edelstein offered cheery counterpoint to the chorus. 'It's rare to see a piece of shit that actually looks and sounds like a piece of shit,' he wrote in New York magazine. 'It's kind of exciting!'
Such a pitch of criticism is proportionate to the expectations one might entertain for a film made by the man behind There's Something About Mary and fronted by a cast which includes two of this year's Oscar nominees – Hugh Jackman and Naomi Watts – as well as the master of ceremonies (Seth MacFarlane). Other big hitters beaming from the poster include Kate Winslet, Uma Thurman, Terrence Howard, Richard Gere, Emma Stone, Liev Schreiber, Gerard Butler, Anna Faris, Johnny Knoxville, Chloë Moretz, Seann William Scott and Jason Sudeikis.
Movie 43 unfolds as a series of skits strung together as pitches presented by a desperate screenwriter (Dennis Quaid) to a producer (Greg Kinnear). Winslet plays a woman dismayed when her date (Jackman) reveals a pair of genitals swinging from his chin. Real-life couple Faris and Chris Pratt share a sex scene in which he defecates on her face. Stephen Merchant and Halle Berry's intimate supper involves breasts plunging into guacamole. Moretz's character has her first period, which alarms her companions so much they call 911. Then a cartoon cat urinates on Elizabeth Banks.
That the bottom has fallen out of the grossout genre is not news; what might have felt edgy in small doses in 1998 inevitably seems stale now. Likewise, ensemble comedies (remember Valentine's Day? Rat Race?) offer a notoriously dodgy template. So it's no surprise Movie 43 is no masterpiece. What has stunned critics, however, is the depth reached, and the star wattage of those plumbing it. Asks Edelstein: 'Was someone holding Kate Winslet's children hostage? Threatening to release compromising pictures of Emma Stone? Did Richard Gere or Hugh Jackman have gambling debts?'
Yet in theory you can see the logic in signing up. Many big names enjoy their biggest pay days from back-end contracts, which involve them taking a percentage of the film's profits in return for equity rates up front, and a small initial commitment (in this case, a couple of days, for about $800). If the film flies, they clean up. If it doesn't, it'll probably be buried anyway.
It also gives A-listers the chance to show they've still got their finger on the pulse. Catching the eye of a generation more accustomed to short-form online comedy was, Farrelly has said, one of the film's aims. 'With [online comedy site] Funny or Die, there are certain limits. And we just wanted to do that kind of short and go much further.' (Although as box office expert Jeff Bock has said, expecting the target market to pay for such content when it's available free online is optimistic.)
Plus, of course, metaphorically or literally strapping balls to your face helps cultivate the impression of a good sport. Industry analyst Charles Gant compares signing up to Movie 43 to showing up in person to collect a Golden Raspberry. 'You don't want to get too snooty. The equivalent would be Judi Dench, who has done a bag-lady cameo for the upcoming Run for Your Wife film, which otherwise stars non-Oscar-winning Danny Dyer, Denise Van Outen and Neil Morrissey.'
The casting process for a film such as Movie 43 uses a domino effect, with stars signing on once peers have done so. Here, Winslet and Jackman were apparently first on board, shooting their scene more than four years ago. This footage was used as a calling card by producer Charlie Wessler to bag the rest. 'The truth is,' he told Hollywood Reporter, 'I had a lot of friends who were in this movie. And if they didn't say yes, this movie wouldn't have got made.'
It does seem that many of the stars tried to jump ship. Farrelly's strategy was aggressive accommodation. 'Wait them out. Shoot when they want to shoot. Guilt them to death.' While the canny – Colin Farrell, South Park's Trey Parker and Matt Stone – managed to wriggle out, and others resisted altogether ('Fuck off' was reportedly George Clooney's response), some could not escape. Production was moved 3,000 miles to convenience a sceptical Gere.
Strange as it may seem, the inadvertent – or even fraudulent – bagging of a big name is not so unusual. In 2001 Keanu Reeves claimed he was press-ganged into starring in serial-killer thriller The Watcher after a friend forged his signature on the contract. Unable to prove it, he agreed to take the role rather than face a long legal battle. Bill Murray famously signed up to voice slothful puss Garfield under the mistaken impression it had been scripted by a Coen brother.
None of its stars have helped plug Movie 43, but as one insider said, it's unlikely any would have agreed to promotional duties. 'When you make an ensemble movie like this, none of the cast agree to support it, as they all hate doing PR, and if they only have small roles, there's no obligation to do it.'
Of those we contacted, only Stephen Merchant was willing to share the trauma of making Movie 43: 'I had to spend two days looking at Halle Berry. It was a living hell.'
The only person who has consistently defended the film is Farrelly, who earlier this week fired back at his critics on Twitter, saying: 'Movie 43 is not the end of the world. It's just a $6m movie where we tried to do something different. Now back off … '
The strategy is smart. By focusing attention on its small budget, he can highlight the ease with which it will make money. Such comedies aren't just critic-proof; their prospects are actively boosted by mainstream condemnation. Already in the US, the film has taken $4.8m – not the jackpot, but not peanuts. In Russia, the figure is $8.5m.
And yesterday, figures for the UK came through to reveal a weekend total of £787,648, and a screen average of £2,875. Zero Dark Thirty's, for the record, is £2,426.