
One of the big questions that has plagued cutie funny guy Michael Cera is whether he'll be able to find a career outside of his bumbling, awkward, mild-mannered roles. While that question is currently left unanswered, we will get to see if the guy on the screen is the same guy backstage.
The Hollywood Reporter posts that he's part of a "semi-secret" project called Paper Hearts. Why semi-secret? This sucker, which is being described as part-documentary and part-scripted comedy, has already been made and will debut soon at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. It seems this new film will follow his real-life relationship with Charlyne Yi (the stoner girl from Knocked Up, who you can see above), and like his recent Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist, be greatly influenced by music.
I can't imagine how they'll meld the real and the fictional, but it should make for an interesting experiment. Will this secrecy pay off and help Paper Hearts explode during its debut in Park City? Or will it succumb to the woes of other struggling indie films? Stay tuned!

Tokyo seems to be the place for confused foreigners. I can't even begin to count the number of people I've known who weren't sure what they wanted to do with their lives, so they went to Tokyo, or neighboring Japanese cities, to teach English for a while. I'm not quite sure why the foreign city has gotten the rep of "city where you can figure out your life," especially since every person that I've seen return was still confused, but maybe this next flick will help.
As people begin to head out of Sundance in droves, the honors are starting to pour in. Although the awards won't be handed out until a ceremony on Saturday night, Sundance Institute has released a statement listing the winners of the 2008 Sundance/NHK International Filmmaker Award -- an honor that highlights new projects from Europe, Latin America, the United States, and Japan. Four winners were selected, one from each region, from a jury that included Gregg Araki, Anand Tucker, Jeremy Pikser, Erin Cressida Wilson, Martin Rejtman, Andrucha Waddington, and Shekhar Kapur.
Some indie nibbles for the new week:
Netflix has been looking to the future and exploding with possibilities -- this year alone, there's already been news of a streaming
When juries are put together for these film fests, chances are the everyday person wouldn't have the slightest idea who most of the people are -- perhaps they make ultra-arthouse films, or they work behind the scenes in some capacity. But for Sundance, they've collected a bunch of names that are pretty recognizable -- coming from both the world of big-budget film and indie wonder.
Things are looking promising for the little horror film known as
One day, two people meet. They fall in love and delight in the perks of romance. With Cupid's large arrow implanted deeply in their sides, the woman gets pregnant and the duo gets engaged. Emotions rise as pregnancy wreaks havoc on the soon-to-be-mom's hormones. What do the couple, who happen to be
Being a few years into the twenty-first century, animals and humans have been through a lot. Our poor animal friends have dealt with clubbing, being used for
Here I sit, nestled in Utah, a short drive from Provo Canyon and Sundance. I had never realized that some of my family relocated just south of the soon-to-be-filled-with-film town, and in no time, I wondered if I could get together enough airmiles so make the trip again in a few weeks. Unfortunately, that isn't looking likely, and it's particularly painful between the Slamdance release of the
Maggie Gyllenhaal is my type of actress. I started following her when she was an ever-lovable Satanist make-up artist in 






