CITY MAGAZINE Page One

View in all it's  glory at http://www.city-magazine.com/pageone/editions/2008/08/

February 2008
Vol. 4, Issue 8


AND THE WINNER IS . . .
Oscar celebrates his 80th birthday this Sunday when Hollywood gathers for the once-strike-threatened Academy Awards (8 p.m. EST on ABC). Most of this year’s best pictures are not yet available on DVD, so instead of catching up this weekend with an a last-minute movie marathon, take a listen to our favorite big screen soundtracks from 2007:


THERE WILL BE BLOOD

Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood composed a score of harsh and inharmonious strings performed by the BBC Concert Orchestra that more than matches the intensity of Daniel Day-Lewis’s Oscar-nominated performance.


JUNO

This Best Picture nominee is filled with tunes that reflect its quirky storyline. Listen to Cat Power’s version of “Sea of Love” and Sonic Youth’s “Superstar,” plus a smattering of Kimya Dawson ditties, and, of course, (spoiler alert!) the sweet Moldy Peaches song on which Ellen Page and Michael Cera duet to end the film.


LA VIE EN ROSE

The great French singer Edith Piaf’s melodious ballads on this album transport you to a 1930s Parisian nightclub. Marion Cotillard’s performance as the troubled Piaf has earned her a nomination for Best Actress.


SWEENEY TODD

As the Demon Barber of Fleet Street in this adaptation of Steven Sondheim's Tony Award–winning musical, Johnny Depp shows off his singing voice in between some awfully close shaves.


ATONEMENT

An intense and beautiful score by Dario Marianelli has earned the composer a second Best Score nomination, having previously accompanied Keira Knightly in Pride & Prejudice.


I'M NOT THERE

This all-star, all-cover soundtrack is surprisingly consistently good, and features more versions of Bob Dylan than Todd Haynes' movie. Standouts, including Yo La Tengo and Stephen Malkmus, give Cate Blanchett's nominated performance a run for its money.


INTO THE WILD

Somehow the Academy passed over Eddie Vedder's haunting, stirring ode to Christopher McCandless's journey into the Yukon. Don't you do the same.



CITY PRESENTS SPRING FASHION 

In CITY's new Spring Fashion issue, on newsstands everwhere, we travel from London to New York, Paris to Milan for an in-depth look at the stalwart designers and rising stars in the world’s four great fashion capitals. Plus, we get a behind-the-scenes look at the perfume industry with New York Times scent critic Chandler Burr, search the country for the best places to shop for vintage couture, and snuggle up with Dylan Lauren in her candy-coated bedroom.
city page one
eboost
CITY Magazine: Issue 54
February 2008 Vol. 4, Issue 8
Oscar

AND THE WINNER IS . . .
Oscar celebrates his 80th birthday this Sunday when Hollywood gathers for the once-strike-threatened Academy Awards (8 p.m. EST on ABC). Most of this year’s best pictures are not yet available on DVD, so instead of catching up this weekend with an a last-minute movie marathon, take a listen to our favorite big screen soundtracks from 2007:


THERE WILL BE BLOODTHERE WILL BE BLOOD

Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood composed a score of harsh and inharmonious strings performed by the BBC Concert Orchestra that more than matches the intensity of Daniel Day-Lewis’s Oscar-nominated performance.



JUNOJUNO

This Best Picture nominee is filled with tunes that reflect its quirky storyline. Listen to Cat Power’s version of “Sea of Love” and Sonic Youth’s “Superstar,” plus a smattering of Kimya Dawson ditties, and, of course, (spoiler alert!) the sweet Moldy Peaches song on which Ellen Page and Michael Cera duet to end the film.



LA VIE EN ROSELA VIE EN ROSE

The great French singer Edith Piaf’s melodious ballads on this album transport you to a 1930s Parisian nightclub. Marion Cotillard’s performance as the troubled Piaf has earned her a nomination for Best Actress.




SWEENEY TODD
SWEENEY TODD

As the Demon Barber of Fleet Street in this adaptation of Steven Sondheim's Tony Award–winning musical, Johnny Depp shows off his singing voice in between some awfully close shaves.



ATONEMENT
ATONEMENT

An intense and beautiful score by Dario Marianelli has earned the composer a second Best Score nomination, having previously accompanied Keira Knightly in Pride & Prejudice.

 



I'M NOT THERE
I'M NOT THERE

This all-star, all-cover soundtrack is surprisingly consistently good, and features more versions of Bob Dylan than Todd Haynes' movie. Standouts, including Yo La Tengo and Stephen Malkmus, give Cate Blanchett's nominated performance a run for its money.



INTO THE WILD
INTO THE WILD

Somehow the Academy passed over Eddie Vedder's haunting, stirring ode to Christopher McCandless's journey into the Yukon. Don't you do the same.



CITY PRESENTS SPRING FASHION
SPRING FASHION: CITY Magazine Issue 54In CITY's new Spring Fashion issue, on newsstands everwhere, we travel from London to New York, Paris to Milan for an in-depth look at the stalwart designers and rising stars in the world’s four great fashion capitals. Plus, we get a behind-the-scenes look at the perfume industry with New York Times scent critic Chandler Burr, search the country for the best places to shop for vintage couture, and snuggle up with Dylan Lauren in her candy-coated bedroom.

 
CITY Store


Subscribe to CITY ezine icons
Main Page Photo Credit: Todd Wawrychuk / ©A.M.P.A.S.

Edited by: Alex Garinger, Renee Lucas, Anthony Cross, and Alexander Wolf
View this email online at http://www.city-magazine.com/pageone
Slugs The Omen Ernest Scared Stupid The Birds The Descent Flowers In The Attic The Evil Dead Halloween Stephen King's It