Right now the answer is not entirely clear. The Xbox One, which was unveiled in a presentation last week, represents Microsoft’s latest bid for domination of the living room through a single multipurpose device. It’s not a complete reinvention of the Xbox brand, but it integrates and advances several technologies Microsoft has been working on over the years. Microsoft’s accompanying efforts to expand away from hardcore gaming into other areas of entertainment such as streaming video make it a viable contender to the PS4, Apple TV, and other devices/platforms. Here’s the video of the device’s entire reveal. The discussion of […]
by Randy Astle on May 30, 2013A few years ago, I made a feature documentary about rock posters, Died Young Stayed Pretty, which premiered at SXSW Film Festival. Cartoonist Ward Sutton did a great 12-panel comic strip review of the film in the Village Voice, and Filmmaker Magazine did an awesome interview. My new film, Dead Zoo, is finally off the ground, after six years of sweaty script development and countless hours with amazing collaborators like Oscar-nominated character developer Julianna Kolakis (District 9), 2D animator Philip Piaget and musician Com Truise. Dead Zoo is inspired by recent conversations revolving around the merging of the body with machines — a prosthetic love story about what it means to be human, and what […]
by Eileen Yaghoobian on Oct 2, 2012Independent film, depending on how you define it, has had many births. But for the purposes of this blog post, let’s consider the one in the 1980s, just before the launch of this magazine. She’s Gotta Have It, Parting Glances, Poison, True Love — these were narrative features made by lone filmmakers with a mixture of private money and, sometimes, foreign TV deals, and they were released into the marketplace after being acquired by independent distributors who catered to arthouse audiences. More films followed — Clerks, El Mariachi, The Blair Witch Project — and the idea that one could possibly […]
by Scott Macaulay on Jan 27, 2012A quick, commentary-lite version… Joseph Conrad wrote a science-fiction novel. “Young and Restless Never Gets Old” — Dennis Lim in the Times on Gregg Araki. Big tech news this week: Google announces that it won’t support the H.264 codec and the HTML5 video tag in its Chrome browser in favor of its own WebM codec. It’s all very complicated and tech-y, but Google’s argument is that they’re supporting “open standards” by backing a codec without royalty issues. Problem is, Apple’s Safari and Microsoft’s IE both use the H.264 format and the short-term victor is likely to be Adobe, whose Flash […]
by Scott Macaulay on Jan 16, 2011