********** BRWC is on hiatus until late January 2012. Things will be better then! Watch this space… **********

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Recast For The Twilight Saga: Eclipse


The fangs come off and the claws come out
Shocking news for Twilighters!

Rachelle Lefevre who plays Victoria in Twilight, New Moon has been cut from Eclipse (which sadly she has her biggest part in) she will be replaced by Bryce Dallas Howard (Terminator Salvation). This news will no doubt shock and anger fans that would have wanted a consistent line up of stars for the saga.
Here is how it all went down according to uk.eonline.com it makes for some interesting reading.

Earlier today, the deposed Rachelle Lefevre revealed that she was "stunned" and "greatly saddened" by Summit Entertaniment's decision to recast Bryce Dallas Howard in the role of villainous Victoria in The Twilight Saga: Eclipse.

And now Summit has fired back, saying the Canadian actress failed to inform the studio until July 20 that she was planning to be in Europe shooting an indie film when the Twilight gang was convening for rehearsals.

"We at Summit Entertainment are disappointed by Rachelle Lefevre's recent comments which attempt to make her career choices the fault of the Studio," reads a statement released by Summit late Wednesday.

"Her decision to discuss her version of the scheduling challenges publicly has forced the Studio to set the record straight and correct the facts."

"It was not until July 20th that Summit was first informed of Ms. Lefevre's commitment to Barney's Version, a commitment we have since been advised she accepted in early June," the statement continued. "Summit had acted in good faith that she would be available to fulfill her obligations both in terms of rehearsals and shooting availability for The Twilight Saga: Eclipse. We feel that her choice to withhold her scheduling conflict information from us can be viewed as a lack of cooperative spirit which affected the entire production."

Lefevre, who appears in the second installment of the franchise, New Moon, said today that she only needed 10 days off to work on Barney's Version.

"Never did I fathom I would lose the role over a 10-day overlap," she said.
Believe us, neither did Twilight fans, who, despite Howard's decent thespian pedigree (not to mention her pale visage and fiery red hair) are up in arms over the casting switcheroo. And, sure enough, there's an online petition to get Lefevre reinstated.But Summit maintains that Lefevre left 'em high and dry in their hour of need. Or was going to, anyway
.
What are your opinions on the cast change half way through the saga?

Anthony Allen's Review Of The Taking Of Pelham 123

My jobless, Skol drinking friend of mine watched the film last night and felt compelled to write this review in between visits to the bookies and jobcentre.

"... typical Tony Scott, He's more like Michael Bay's brother than Ridley's!... It made me motion sick. If The Prodigy turned their hand to remixing films they would look like 'Pelham', John Travolta is not as annoying as he was in Broken Arrow, Swordfish and Battlefield Earth. Denzel is not as good as he was in Training Day, Malcolm X and erm, The Bone Collector! Haven't seen the original but I know without watching it it's better.
3 out of 5."

Cheers Ant.

Guilty Pleasures: Monkeybone


Henry Selick is the director of The Nightmare Before Christmas, a truly classic film, with excellent songs, story, delicious animation and style. From moderate success and a gradually expanding cult following it's gone on to become a genuine Christmas favourite and has provided clothing for emos up and down the country. Nightmare was the first full length stop motion film to be produced by one of the major studios. Selick's follow-up was an adaptation of Roald Dahl's James and the Giant Peach, combining some live-action with stop-motion it captured the dark and imaginative world of Dahl's writing vividly and though the songs - by Randy Newman - sat uneasily (padding out the book's thin plot) the film was critically well-received, but something of a box office dissapointment.

For his next project Selick would expand his use of live-action even further, and as a result created his most critically derided and biggest box office loss to date. Monkeybone was inspired by the graphic novel Dark Town by Kaja Blackley and adapted by Sam Hamm, who had written Tim Burton's Batman movies and an unproduced script of Watchmen for Joel Silver. The film version tells the tale of Stu Miley (Brendan Fraser), an off-beat cartoonist who finds his anarchic creation Monkeybone becoming increasingly popular, his agent Herb (Kids in the Hall alumnus Dave Foley) is eager to market the character for all he's worth but Stu is reluctant and eager to propose to his girlfriend - and sleep researcher - Julie. However Stu becomes involved - via a giant inflatable Monkeybone - in a car crash and falls into a coma. He soon discovers than when you're comatose you wind up in a place called Downtown, a strange Coney Island-like part of the afterlife, inhabited by a series of strange, absurd and oddball creatures, along with other comatose people awaiting their passage to the land of death or back to life. Here Stu finds that his creation Monkeybone exists for real (and is voiced by John Turturro, after an originally cast Ben Stiller dropped out) and the little critter finds increasing pleasure in irritating his creator. Ultimately Monkeybone and Stu head into the land of Death (Whoopi Goldberg) to steal an exit pass and get Stu back into the real world.

Now there's something a little off about Monkeybone from the start, it feels oddly cheap looking for a movie with a budget of $75 million and there are rather a lot of scenes that either appear without explanation or get cut short quite suddenly. There is definitely the whiff of conflicting visions about this movie. Lord knows what the suits at 20th Century Fox were expecting but Selick, on his commentary track, does seem a light dismayed at how people were reacting to his vision. Indeed, throughout the deleted scenes - and some making of footage - you get a glimpse at a slightly purer version of Monkeybone. Brendan Fraser notes*; 'I don't know what happened, they gave the keys to the inmates of the asylum. We went nutty and we made a movie. The studio saw it and went, "Huh?"'

The character of Monkeybone is basically, as the opening cartoon sets up, a euphemism for Stu's horny side, and there's a lot of juvenile, but funny, deleted animation of Monkeybone exhibiting his baser urges; in reference to Stu, Monkeybone remarks 'My castrator... I mean creator.', this line was ultimately cut from the film, along with shots of Monkeybone making thrusting gestures with his tail acting as his Monkeyboner. Elsewhere footage of Stu in Downtown meeting the 'cheap and cheerful' inhabitants was trimmed down as the studio found it too weird, and Selick bemoans how that was the stuff he'd want to see in this film. Indeed, the early poster for Monkeybone was filled with these weird characters and is one of the few film posters that I've actually bought.


Monkeybone, like Southland Tales, is one of those films I love more for what it could have been, rather than what it is. I like the little hints we get at this grander, weirder vision that Selick envisioned; on the commentary he talks of scenes never filmed where the crummy looking creatures of Downtown enter the 'dream' world and become the truly magical, terrifying versions they long to be. We do get a couple of glances into these dream visions and they are some of the film's visual and comedic high-points, the dog dream being a particular stand-out, followed by a somewhat disturbing deflating Stu nightmare.

The film ends with Monkeybone betraying Stu, stealing his exit pass and taking over Stu's life, with Stu then bargaining with Death and being granted a chance to put things right. The good Stu ends up in the body of a recently deceased Olympic gymnast (Chris Kattan) and heads out to confront his evil counterpart. It's at this point, in the third act, that the film actually manages to hit its stride, balancing its slapstick, purile humour perfectly with a dark, quirky edge. The finale where the reanimated corpse and Stu/Monkeybone fight hanging from a giant Monkeybone balloon flying over the city is wonderful, with the corpse chucking his own internal organs at his rival.

But, it's not hard to see why this film only grossed $5 million at the U.S. box-office and ended up straight-to-video over here. It is messy, uneven, childish at times, but in that respect it appeals to the rather silly side of me, I can't help but grin watching Brendan Fraser take off after a stop-motion animated character in a dodgem shouting; "I'll be right back after I choke my monkey!" Plus, I just love watching stop-motion animation, even if it is as sparingly used as it is here.

Fortunately beyond Monkeybone Selick got his mojo back, providing the beautiful undersea creatures for Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic and creating the world's first 3D stop-motion feature film with his adaptation of Neil Gaiman's Coraline; a film that has proven to be successful both critically and commercially (also, the eagle eyed may have noticed that Coraline's Other Father sports Monkeybone slippers).

* Quote from: http://www.avclub.com/articles/brendan-fraser,14267/

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

The Fall

Tarsem's The Fall is possibly one of the best films ever made. And I'm not just talking about the mind exploding visuals, this re-make of a little seen Bulgarian film entitled Yo Ho Ho directed by Valeri Petrov, is very beautiful: in art and soul.

The film, shot in over 20 countries around the globe, and took over 4 years to make, concerns a Hollywood stuntman named Roy (Lee Pace), who in a silly attempt to impress a girl, jumps off a bridge riding a horse...and ends up breaking his back; and the girl breaks his heart by running off with the leading man.

In a Los Angeles hospital, Roy befriends a five year old misfit with a broken arm named Alexandria (Catinca Untaru). In a cunning attempt to provide him with morphine pills with which he wishes to end his life, he tells Alexandria a story about five heroes in a mythical land who are out to revenge themselves against the evil Governor Odious. Alexandria, hooked by the story ventures off to fetch the pills little realising the tragedy in Roy's heart. As the story progresses and a friendship blooms, little Alexandria acts as Roy's saviour in the darkest of times.

Tarsem Singh is a music video and commercials director...but he's also a maverick film director. His debut, the rubbish Jennifer Lopez-starring The Cell, had amazing set designs and costumes...but had a dreadful story.

In his second feature, he chose not to compromise and raised the money mostly from taking commercials and music videos and plowing them into a personal movie. Tarsem saw the Bulgarian original, and saw something he identified with, but make better.

To say there are jaw-dropping moments in this film is a great understatement. Far from being an aesthetic exercise in beautiful long shots, this film packs more heart and brilliantly nuanced performances than most films could ever dream of managing.

The opening title sequence is a bit too slick, but the scene of an elephant swimming underwater is something I'd never even dream of seeing in a movie...that's real and not CGI shows the imagination and sense of challenge enjoyed by Tarsem Singh.

On its release, this film received mixed reviews. Talk about short-sightedness...it is a masterpiece in every way imaginable.

Monday, July 27, 2009

A Lazy Blog Post Involving Twitter

A quick blast for (almost all) film related shit from that twatter thing...

TrailerAddict
Red band trailer for The Goods makes us laugh! http://bit.ly/R9VOT Video is now there (sorry)

FilmDrunk Apatow and Ansari working on a Raaaaaaaanday movie question mark? http://bit.ly/HOZNw

Live_for_Films BLOG: Machete - Lindsay Lohan may be in it?: Who would have seen this one coming for the cool looking Mache.. http://bit.ly/fq1td

Glinner A playlist for you! http://bit.ly/x9keb

danadearmond Boys are so annoying :(

A Tale Of Two Zombies



Colin - the £45 ($70) zombie film - trailer of the forthcoming feature film, about a zombie (Colin) who makes his journey into an apocalyptic suburban London. It's soon the hit the cinemas.




New trailer for Zombie Girl: The Movie - a documentary on 12-year-old Emily Hagins who wrote, produced, directed and edited a feature-length zombie movie called Pathogen. Emily's website is: www.cheesynuggets.com

9 Pieces...

Look at the pic.

Focus Features introduces a new contest today in support of Shane Acker's 9 (opening 9/9/09) and has provided AWN with an exclusive Talisman Challenge clue. One ripped up image fragment will be revealed to each of the 9 partner sites for readers to find and piece together. The pieced-together image will have a code which activates the decoder on www.9experiment.com.

There will be one Grand Prize winner selected who will win a pair of the limited edition Pony shoes created exclusively for 9 and eight runner ups that will receive promotional prize packs of movie-related merchandise. The winners will be randomly selected based on their entries to www.9experiment.com once they've solved the pieced-together images and visited the site.Mo

More here...

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Adam Movie Trailer

video

Following up my previous post here is the trailer for Adam.

DeNiro/Pacino

There's a copy of Righteous Kill sitting in my house right now and I have no desire to watch it. It's not a rental, it's there to stay, I could put it on whenever I felt like it, no pressure. I could take any 90 minutes out of my procrastination filled lifestyle and sit down to watch Robert DeNiro and Al Pacino as cops working together. Yet I feel no strong leanings towards, not even mild leanings actually, I might just watch Mystery Men again or something.

Is it sad that a film featuring two of cinemas greatest leading men fails to ignite any passion in me as film-fanatic, it even fails to ignite morbid curiosity based upon the flick's lacklustre reviews. Heck, I went to see Year One* at the cinema despite terrible criticisms, yet I just can't be bothered with this. How is it that a pairing so magnetic and exciting in their brief shared screen-time in Michael Mann's Heat - a film I sometimes watch just so I can see them in the coffee diner exchange - don't hold the same fascination when sharing the screen for the full running time of a movie?

People criticise DeNiro a lot for just not being very good anymore, but is he actually not good or (a) are people judging him too harshly based on a string of stellar performances earlier in his career or (b) there just aren't roles out there for an actor like DeNiro at present? And what about Pacino, how come he escapes the kind of stick that is regularly used to beat DeNiro's efforts round the head? Has Pacino's recent output been any better than DeNiro's?

DeNiro came to prominence really off of the back of three films; Mean Streets, The Godfather Part II and Taxi Driver, though - in my opinion - better performances were to come with Raging Bull and The King of Comedy. DeNiro continued to impress from the late seventies into the early eighties, taking more diverse choices; Brazil, Midnight Run and his wonderful turn as Al Capone in The Untouchables. It was around 1990 after his excellent performance in Goodfellas that things got a bit stale, sure he still got to show off in the likes of Cape Fear, but the movies themselves weren't great. In fact in the five years between Goodfellas and its spiritual sequel Casino, DeNiro's finest portrayl was playing starkly against type as a meek crime scene photographer in the over-looked rom-com Mad Dog and Glory, most notable for Bill Murray's incredible performance as a wiseguy.

But, really, five years of being good in poor films is nothing for a guy like DeNiro, most actors would kill to have just one of his lesser roles on their C.V. He hit another peak with Casino then Heat, and gave great - diverse and against type - performances in Wag the Dog and Jackie Brown, which showed off his gift for comedy, reaching its peak with 1999's Analyze This and then 2000's Meet the Parents. It's here where I guess you could say the slump starts.


Despite playing against Ed Norton and Marlon Brando in Frank Oz's entertaining romp The Score the rest of DeNiro's output ammounted to soggy action thrillers like 15 Minutes and lame sequels like Analyze That and Meet the Fockers, most of which saw DeNiro coast along in auto-pilot.

Pacino's career hasn't exactly fared much better of late, and it seems to move through similar peaks and troughs. His work in The Godfather films, Serpico and Dog Day Afternoon put Pacino on the map as both a nuanced and explosive screen presence. But Pacino didn't diversify as much as DeNiro did, sticking to tough guy roles in controversial films like Cruising and Scarface. It wasn't until after lampooning himself wonderfully in Warren Beatty's brilliant Dick Tracy and the dissappointing critical reception of The Godfather Part III that Pacino began embracing the lighter side.

Though Frankie & Johnny and Scent of a Woman aside Pacino always kept a toe in the tough guy world, with Carlito's Way and the role of a top salesman in the masterful Glengarry Glen Ross. Along came Heat and Pacino followed it with, what is - in my opinion - his greatest performance to date, the role of 'Lefty' in Donnie Brasco. Pacino chose projects carefully, hamming it up in The Devil's Advocate but getting to work with Oliver Stone, Michael Mann and Christopher Nolan as well.


However post-2002 things got wobbly, he had a supporting role in uber-flop Gigli, was in some vanilla thrillers like The Recruit and 88 Minutes (from the director of Righteous Kill) and popped up in the third Ocean's movie. In my opinion what is less commendable about Pacino's lacklustre output of late is that it displays a lack of guts and diversity, whereas DeNiro appeared in a string of flops or critical duds at least he has been inventive and interesting with his choices; often inspiring more hope in the audience that the next DeNiro film will be that glorious 'return to form'. Pacino on the other hand coasts through roles that employ his usual tics, and so therefore could be more to blame when a Pacino movie is pretty dull.

Like DeNiro Pacino's most recent completed credit is Righteous Kill, a film that ultimately seemed to squander in its advertising the impact of having these two legendary actors together on screen, or perhaps, the film is just so poor that no matter how it's sold it only disappoints.

I think in the end there just aren't many roles for actors like DeNiro and Pacino these days, and they bring a weight of past glory to any new projects that perhaps, sometimes raises people's expectations about the film and their performance a bit too high. With both actors I've always enjoyed the performances and the films that didn't make big impacts and feel that - given the right material - they are capable of greatness still. But I still don't really fancy watching Righteous Kill...


*It was awful.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Adam - In Cinemas August 7th

I just wanted to draw your attention to a film that is being released in cinemas on August 7th.

Adam, starring Hugh Dancy and Rose Byrne, is the first romantic comedy to revolve around a man with the condition known as Aspergers Syndrome and, as someone who experiences the condition, i would like to raise some awareness for this film which may well slip under the radar without being noticed by many people.

It has already won the Alfred P. Sloan Award at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival.

Plot Summany

Soon after moving in, Beth, a brainy, beautiful writer damaged from a past relationship encounters Adam, the handsome, but odd, fellow in the downstairs apartment whose awkwardness is perplexing. Beth and Adam's ultimate connection leads to a tricky relationship that exemplifies something universal: truly reaching another person means bravely stretching into uncomfortable territory and the resulting shake-up can be liberating.

Web Links

http://www.adammovie.co.uk - Official UK Website
http://www.foxsearchlight.com/adam/ - Official US Website
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1185836/ - IMDB Page

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Robert Mann BA (Hons)

The Week in Film by Robert Mann - Week Starting 24/7/09

The Proposal **½

2009 is turning out to be a great year for Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman. Not only did the duo write two of the summer’s biggest blockbusters (Star Trek and Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen) but they have also produced The Proposal, a film which is fast becoming one of the surprise sleeper hits of the summer, having already been a huge success at the US box office. Of course the film’s success is not really attributable to them but rather its stars with the casting of Sandra Bullock, in her first romantic comedy role in quite some time, and Ryan Reynolds who, following a role in this summer’s X-Men Origins: Wolverine and the announcement that he is to be the lead in upcoming superhero movie Green Lantern, is now officially one of the biggest stars in Hollywood, making for a film that has plenty of box office appeal. Of course, though, box office success doesn’t always reflect quality so will you say yes to this proposal or this one film that is going to be left standing alone at the altar?

When high-powered book editor Margaret Tate (Sandra Bullock) faces deportation to her native Canada, the quick-thinking exec declares that she's actually engaged to her unsuspecting put-upon assistant Andrew Paxton (Ryan Reynolds), who she's tormented for years. He agrees to participate in the charade, but with a few conditions of his own. The unlikely couple heads to Alaska to meet his quirky parents Joe (Craig T. Nelson) and Grace (Mary Steenburgen) and grandmother Annie (Betty White) and the always-in-control city girl finds herself in one comedic fish-out-of-water situation after another. With an impromptu wedding in the works and an immigration official on their tails, Margaret and Andrew reluctantly vow to stick to the plan despite the precarious consequences. However, as they spend time together over the long weekend they learn things they never knew about each other and it soon transpires that they may actually share real feelings for each other.

As romantic comedies go The Proposal has shown more potential than most. Director Anne Fletcher previously helmed such enjoyable romances at Step Up and 27 Dresses, Sandra Bullock has always been very likable in romantic roles and Ryan Reynolds has also proven himself to be very capable as a romantic lead, as evidenced in Definitely, Maybe. However, despite all this potential The Proposal never quite takes off. Maybe it is just me - after all many of the other people at the screening I attended seemed to love the film - but everything came across as being very by-the-numbers and not all that entertaining. Obviously I can’t speak for the other members of the audience so I can only give you my opinion and that is that this is a film that is rather lacking in laugh out loud moments, although there a few, although several gags are clearly aimed squarely at the ladies so I might not be the right person to comment. The storyline is also extremely predictable, although this is expected of many romcoms nowadays, but unlike many other romcoms, particularly Anne Fletcher’s previous films, there really isn’t that much charm to anything that happens either. There are several reasons for this, firstly that for the most part there really isn’t much romance actually going on. More importantly, however, is the fact that the romance just isn’t convincing. Despite good performances from both the leads (Sandra Bullock is suitably overbearing as the boss but gradually humanises as the film progresses, and Ryan Reynolds is suitably cast as the long suffering assistant, being quite charismatic in the role) there just isn’t a good enough chemistry to really make us care about the relationship or believe in it as it develops. This is really because the characters just don’t fit together, a reflection on the way in they have been written and the way they are developed. If we can’t believe in the romance we can’t care about it and if we can’t care about it the heart of the film is missing, a major problem for a romantic comedy. The film is extremely hit and miss in other areas too with a very promising cast being wasted, with the likes of Craig T. Nelson and Malin Akerman having largely redundant roles to play. Betty White, as the grandmother of Reynolds’ character, however, is very amusing. All in all, The Proposal is a film that fails to live up to its promise. It does have its moments but if you want to see a truly memorable romcom I doubt you will find it here (although, I do suspect that female viewers will be far more receptive to it). So, this is one proposal you may say yes to but I wouldn’t count on a long lasting marriage.

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Review by Robert Mann BA (Hons)

Friday, July 24, 2009

Quote Of The Week : The Thing (1982)

"I know I'm human. And if you were all these things, then you'd just attack me right now, so some of you are still human. This thing doesn't want to show itself, it wants to hide inside an imitation. It'll fight if it has to, but it's vulnerable out in the open. If it takes us over, then it has no more enemies, nobody left to kill it. And then it's won."

R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell) telling his thoughts to the men who remain after an alien life form is taking them over one by one, in John Carpenter's iconic horror film set in the Antarctic. Paranoia raised to the highest level.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Guilty Pleasures: Southland Tales


I thought I'd begin writing a quite possibly regular ramble about films that I might possibly classify as 'Guilty Pleasures', they might also be called 'Bad Movies' or 'Cult Films'. Anyway, I'm going to begin by waffling on about what is probably the Guiltiest of all my Guilty Pleasures, because, well, it's not a very good film at all yet I am continually oddly compelled to watch it. Repeated viewings have not diluted my dislike for it, but there's some sort of strange germ of an idea here, some sort of vision gone awry that keeps pulling me back.

Southland Tales was Richard Kelly's long-awaited follow up to his cult classic Donnie Darko. Darko did little business in a small cinema run in the U.S. but quickly found a large cult audience in the UK. Aided by a Christmas number one with Gary Jules' cover of Tears 4 Fears 'Mad World' the film began to grow in popularity, with Prism releasing a vanilla DVD at bargain bucket prices around the same time. The film was given a second cinema release again with the eventual director's cut where Richard Kelly added 20 minutes of pointless footage and changed the perfect soundtrack to more expensive but not as good songs.

Whilst all this was happening tidbits of information about Kelly's Darko follow-up began appearing, it was, according to initial reports, going to be a apocalyptic musical set around a big July 4th beach party. Whilst aspects of that can be found in the final film the storyline is a lot more convoluted and 'symbolic' than that, and is both a draw and a wall for me as a viewer.


Southland Tales primarily concerns the disappearance of Boxer Santaros (Dwayne Johnson), his last movements saw him in the desert, travelling with another when their vehicle was caught in a strange explosion. A few days later Boxer re-surfaces and has been staying with entrepreneurial porn star Krysta Now (Sarah Michelle Gellar). Boxer was, prior to this, engaged to a senator's daughter and a group of Neo-Marxists plan to use a connection they've made with Krysta to frame Boxer. The machinations of their scheme are to give Boxer a ride-a-long with police officer Roland Taverner (Sean William Scott) as part of the research for his new movie 'The Power', but Roland has been replaced by his twin brother Ronald, who has been instructed to act like a fascist and set-up a (staged) shooting of a mixed race couple.

And that's where things start to get really complicated, but the problem with the complications is that - unlike Darko - there is no real through-line to (a) the narrative of the movie or the arcs of the characters and (b) what Kelly is trying to say as a writer/director. Sure you can read in plenty of pseudo-religious allegory into the events played out in the film, this is made blatant by a character called Private Abeline (Justin Timberlake) who sees fit to quote from Revelations throughout the film's awkward narration. The film also ties into Donnie Darko's theme of parallel universes and time travel, but despite Kelly's over-complicating (see; over-thinking) of Darko's multi-planed existence there was always something fundamentally simple to the story, something that an audience member could follow on any level. Southland Tales doesn't have that.

So, why is it a guilty pleasure if it is such a terrible mess? Well, it benefits from having two absolutely charming lead performances (or three); Dwayne Johnson is quite wonderful as Boxer, displaying a klutzy Hollywood lunk naivety, a smart-mouthed James Bond-like side and a jittery, neurotic cartoon character side when he has a nervous breakdown. Sean William Scott takes his image as American Pie's Stifler and shoves it firmly in the bin playing the dual roles of Roland and Ronald, his character is the real heart of the film and he carries many difficult and frankly silly moments with skill and presence; in fact he completely sells the film's finale where he confronts himself in the back of Christopher Lambert's flying ice-cream truck (yes, you did read that right).

Elsewhere the cast is peppered with the good (Wallace Shawn in full The Princess Bride mode, Mandy Moore's surprisingly fun as Boxer's estranged fiance), the okay (Sarah Michelle Gellar never quite fits her role, though has some mildly amusing moments) and the 'What the!?' (Jon Lovitz as a racist, Philip K. Dick quoting cop, Kevin Smith as an ancient ZZ Top bearded font of exposition, Eli Roth as a guy on a toilet and Janeane Garafolo in a 'my part was cut out of the movie' blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo). It's clear that there was so much good will placed into Kelly as a result of Darko that he could just fulfill a lot of eccentric casting fantasies, and, likewise, he convinced Moby to do the soundtrack purely on the musician's love for Frank the Bunny.

And this is also where I can excuse Southland Tales, but more specifically Richard Kelly. As someone who often wonders about what I would do if given carte blanche as a film-maker I do indulge ludicrous fantasies about making highly inaccessible, lengthy, bizarre films with surreal pseudo-sci-fi plotlines, with a vein of humour running through it that is at times unfunny or at odds with the film's seeming intent, all soundtrack by an erratic collection of songs I like. It's movie-making by mix-tape mentality; I like this actor and this actress, I'll put in this reference to this film and have this poster on the wall while this song plays. I want a bazooka and a zeppelin and a scene where two cars have sex. I'll throw in enough easy symbols so that people can divine their own meaning in it all and I'll say it has something to do with taking a satirical look at a post-9/11 world. And, y'know, maybe it does all make sense to Richard Kelly, but it just doesn't hold up under any real scrutiny. Yet these are all things that kind of appeal to me about it.


Southland Tales is a bad film, but it seems to be made to the exact specifications of why I would want to watch a bad film. It just has so much thrown at it with the hopes that some of it will stick that I find myself wanting to watch it fall apart again and again, and instead of sitting here thinking 'Oh this is rubbish', I keep re-watching it almost willing it to actually work this time and get its act together. It never does though, because it's a bad film. Even Kelly's original Cannes cut (20 minutes longer with a more sarcastic narration) has all the same problems. There is just no hope for Southland Tales, it will never be a good film, but, it is a curious film and will continue to draw in viewers thanks to its sheer eclecticism and the fact that you can tell Kelly is trying so hard, and like the films of Ed Wood it's that sheer, wide-eyed effort that makes it work even when the gravestones are wobbling.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Semi Exclusive Saw VI Poster

I say semi-exclusive. It's on a few other sites, but not many...

Just The Snicket


Well, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is out there now and it's made all the money in the world over its opening weekend, and we've got the happy treat of the final movie being released as two movies before the whole sorry saga can be put to bed and the good actors in the cast can stop slumming it and the child actors can begin appearing in 'Where Are They Now?' columns.

If it's not obvious, I don't like Harry Potter. But I'm not going into that here. What I am going to talk about is my dismay that of all the films made in the wake of Harry Potter that tried to tread similar ground (The Spiderwick Chronicles, The Dark Is Rising, etc.) there was one that was actually truly brilliant and far more deserving of huge box office numbers than the boy who lived.

That film was Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. A delightfully dark and funny children's yarn that was quirky and off-key, with three great child performances (interestingly Liam Aiken who plays Klaus was originally cast as Harry Potter), an arch but pleasingly evil turn from Jim Carrey as the villainous Count Olaf and a diverse supporting cast that included Billy Connolly, Catherine O'Hara, Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep. It was beautifully photographed (by Spielberg regular Emmanuel Lubezki) and designed, using sets on sound-stages for every single scene brilliantly to really create a slightly askew fantasy world filled with Gothic and macabre design that puts all Tim Burton films since Sleepy Hollow to shame (they shared the same production designer). In short, though slightly episodic in its story-telling (combining the first three books by Daniel Handler aka. Lemony Snicket) into one, the film was a marvellous, old-fashioned, witty romp.

Unfortunately the film didn't do Harry Potter-like business, despite the books being consistently popular with both children and adults, it seemed the market just wasn't there. The film raked in $209million worldwide and reportedly cost $140million to make, and so, unlike Potter, no sequels was fast-tracked. As time has gone by my hopes to see a continuation to the genuinely mysterious and tragedy-filled tale of the Baudelaire orphans on screen has faded, and I'd nigh on dismissed the possibility of the final books being adapted.

Bizarrely it was Harry Potter that lead me to the news. I was reading the box office report for this weekend and the extraordinary ammount of money the new film took, and decided to find out how much the first film took overall; just to see how far Potter had smashed the law of diminishing returns. Whilst on the IMDB page I thought I'd have a quick scan through the trivia, as I am prone to do and saw that little tidbit on Liam Aiken; curious I clicked to find out what else he'd done and saw that there were rumours of the final Lemony Snicket books making it to the screen, but, worryingly with the words 'in a different medium'.

Fortunately my fears of CGI Snicket were quickly quashed by the words 'stop-motion', my favourite form of animation and a type of animation that could perfectly fit the words and style of Snicket. Indeed the look that Brad Silberling had created for the first film was heightened and hand-made, with the actors performing in nothing but sets, as if they themselves were the stop-motion puppets of some giant over-sized Henry Selick production. This same world would work perfectly on a miniature scale, and continuity could be maintained if they manage to net the same recurring actors for voice-work. It's a rare occasion that a potential sequel that would effectively require 'down-sizing' to animation seems to burst with potential, but, if handled with the same kind of off-beat care of films like Coraline or Wes Anderson's upcoming The Fantastic Mr. Fox could become a bigger hit than its live action predecessor.

Ironically, Lemony Snicket could become the film that lived?!

Sunday, July 19, 2009

More Detailed Mr Fox

What do you think? Looks good eh?

Poster 2; Toy Story 1 & 2

A lovely lady in San Diego emailed me this beaut last night. A simple poster methinks. It works.

Poster 1; The Box

A lazy poster for an (hopefully) interesting film.

9; Comic-Con & A Brand New Clip

If youre about at Comic-Con on Friday, July 24th look out for a panel in Hall H with Shane Acker, Tim Burton, Timur Bekmambetov, Elijah Wood and Jennifer Connelly. Who wants to buy me a plane ticket and pass then?

Below is the Comic Con bumpf provided by the lovely Victoria.

Take a ride on the 9 San Diego Pedicabs and be the first to see exclusive videos and content for 9 when you unlock the QR code. Make sure you find all of them, there are different codes which will unveil unique content, not to be missed! To prep for a QR sighting, text READER to 4FOCUS for instructions on downloading our preferred reader so your phone is QR-ready.

Special Edition Collectible Cards from 9 will be distributed daily throughout the San Diego Gaslamp District. The first 100 people to find the 8 character cards plus 1 exclusive machine card and bring their completed set (9 cards total) to NECA (booth # 4345) will win a guaranteed place in line to receive an autograph by Timur Bekmambetov, Shane Acker, and Elijah Wood.

Check out NECA (booth #4345) for the latest 9 news.


9 PANEL: FRIDAY, JULY 24TH:

2:30PM- 9 Panel in Hall H with filmmakers Shane Acker, Tim Burton, Timur Bekmambetov and stars Elijah Wood and Jennifer Connelly.

Also, check out the new Radio on 9Experiment.com, and stay tuned for upcoming fan challenges in the coming days! Hope you & your readers enjoy!



I've also been given permission to release this fantastic video clip, which features
the Stitchpunk Beings being attacked by "The Winged Beast."
http://fif.s3.amazonaws.com/1247769724-f9499f75b5ca51a4477ebe2332e95f1e.480x270.mp4

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Scream 4

It's official! David Arquette and Courtney Cox have signed on to reunite with the Ghostface killer.

"We are going to be doing Scream 4," Arquette just told me from New York City, where he's hanging out in plastic box over Madison Square Garden for Feeding America "Kevin Williamson is writing the script at this moment, and hopefully Wes Craven is going to direct."

In the original horror trilogy, Arquette played Deputy Dewey Riley with Cox as a tabloid television reporter Gale Weathers...

Rumors began several months ago that the two were in talks for the fourth installment.
"I fell in love with my wife on Scream, so the opportunity to bring [Dewey] back to life and for my wife to play that really bitchy character again, it's just going to be really fun," Arquette said. "It's just great."

While Williamson recently revealed that Neve Campbell has turned down the chance to reprise her role as Sidney Prescott, Arquette said, "I hope Neve does it. I really hope so."
As for a new storyline, Arquette laughed: "Kevin has sort of put out the broad strokes, but I don't think I'm at liberty to share any of that."

Any thoughts on this guys?

The Week in Film by Robert Mann - Week Starting 17/7/09

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince ****

Harry Potter fans, the wait is finally over. The highly anticipated sixth film in the series has finally hit cinemas after its release was postponed by eight months from its original release date in November 2008, despite the film actually being completed on schedule. As angry and frustrated as many fans have become because of this, however, the delay has only heightened excitement surrounding the film’s eventual release. But with this eight month delay (on top of all the time that fans had already waited) having set anticipation to such a sky high level, does the film actually manage to live up to expectations and does it manage to restore some of the magic that many (although not this critic) felt was missing from the last instalment of the series? The answer will likely vary from person to person but for this critic is it mostly yes.

Emboldened by the return of Lord Voldemort, the Death Eaters are wreaking havoc in both the Muggle and wizarding worlds and Hogwarts is no longer the safe haven it once was. Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) suspects that new dangers may lie within the castle, but Professor Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) is more intent upon preparing him for the final battle that he knows is fast approaching. He needs Harry to help him uncover a vital key to unlocking Voldemort's defenses critical information known only to Hogwarts' former Potions Professor, Horace Slughorn (Jim Broadbent). With that in mind, Dumbledore manipulates his old colleague into returning to his previous post with promises of more money, a bigger office and the chance to teach the famous Harry Potter, who finds himself in more trouble than ever before when he gets hold of a potions books belonging to someone calling himself the Half-Blood Prince. Meanwhile, the students are under attack from a very different adversary as teenage hormones rage across the ramparts. Harry's long friendship with Ginny Weasley (Bonnie Wright) is growing into something deeper, but standing in the way is Ginny's boyfriend, Dean Thomas (Alfie Enoch), not to mention her big brother Ron (Rupert Grint). But Ron's got romantic entanglements of his own to worry about, with Lavender Brown (Jessie Cave) lavishing her affections on him, leaving Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) simmering with jealousy yet determined not to show her feelings. And then a box of love potion-laced chocolates ends up in the wrong hands and changes everything. As romance blossoms, one student remains aloof with far more important matters on his mind. He is determined to make his mark, albeit a dark one. Love is in the air, but tragedy lies ahead and Hogwarts may never be the same again.

With David Yates once again behind the camera (and apparently also helming the two remaining films in the series), Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince gets off to a thrilling and eye-popping start with an opening sequence featuring an attack by Death Eaters on Muggle London, notably the Millennium Bridge. From this point onwards there is a sense of impending doom that is present throughout the entire film making it abundantly clear that dark times are approaching and setting the mood and atmosphere effectively. If you’re worried that the film is going to be all doom and gloom, though, then fear not as Yates effectively balances all the darker elements of the film with some light and humorous whimsical moments, many coming from the developing romances of many of the central characters. The growing relationship between Harry and Ginny is extremely sweet and convincing, although it isn’t really explored in enough detail, with Ginny not even appearing after the kissing scene. The love triangle between Lavender, Ron and Hermione, however, is handled much better, setting up for future relationship developments in the coming films. The triangle works particularly well thanks to the performance of Jessie Cave who convincingly and entertainingly portrays her character’s infatuation with Ron. The romances are given greater emphasis than in previous films but of course still take a backseat to the primary storyline events. This is where there are some significant flaws in the film. While the film does manage to entertaining and interesting for the most part, at times it is very talky and viewers may just wish for a bit more excitement, especially younger ones, and on occasions there is also a feeling that too much from the book may have been left out of the script as the narrative flow isn’t as good as in previous ‘Harry Potter’ movies and, in some ways it just feels as if the film is setting up for the final chapter (or should I say chapters - the final book is being made into two movies), rather than serving as a film in its own right. It is very likely that younger viewers may find the film too long and slow paced to hold their attention although more mature viewers will find it considerably more engaging, particularly as the dialogue heavy sequences are of great importance to developments in the plot. While the film is very talky at times, however, this isn’t to say that it isn’t doesn’t have action packed sequences, and these do deliver for the most part, helped by visual effects that are very good, if not the best you will see at the cinema this year. Another area where the film delivers successfully, almost faultlessly in fact, is of course the acting, and as with all the films in the series to date it is first rate across the board. The impressive cast of British thespians (Michael Gambon, Alan Rickman, Maggie Smith, David Thewlis, Natalia Tena, Robbie Coltrane, Warwick Davis, Helena Bonham Carter, Julie Walters, Mark Williams and Timothy Spall) gets even bigger still with the addition of Jim Broadbent, and all the young actors manage to stand up to their older co-stars, with great performances from Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Evanna Lynch, Bonnie Wright and Tom Felton, although it is a shame to see co-stars such as Matthew Lewis and William Melling, not to mention countless others, relegates to such small roles. Also, worth noting is a suitably creepy performance from Frank Dillane as a young Tom Riddle, a.k.a. Voldemort. All in all, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is a film that certainly has its flaws but nonetheless it stands as another great addition to the series. In this critic’s opinion it is inferior to some of its preceding franchise entries but I suspect that some may well view this as being considerably better. Whatever your opinion, however, there is no denying that this is a very well made film that is both entertaining and interesting and well worth the price of a cinema ticket.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review by Robert Mann BA (Hons)

Depp Sh*t?


Having just got back from watching Public Enemies I can happily say that it's the best Johnny Depp film for about eight years. Sadly, this isn't saying much anymore. There once was a time when I regarded Johnny Depp as one of the finest and most versatile actors around, every film he appeared in - whether good or bad - was at least worth watching for his performance alone, but, surprisingly, he seemed to have a keen eye for a great script and a smart director, so there wasn't much chaff to sort through.

He was also one of the most under-appreciated actors around, consistently great but always operating under the radar of Hollywood super stardom, though he had appeared in a number of cult classics pre-2000. However, as was inevitable for a man of his talent, Hollywood finally took notice and Gore Verbinski (director of the brilliant kid's flick Mousehunt) cast him in his Jerry Bruckheimer produced Disney theme park ride inspired adventure film - and hideous Monkey Island rip-off - Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.

Nobody knew that this film would become a humongous box office smash, pirate movies have never fared well in the charts and Depp was unproven and playing an eccentric role. His co-stars Orlando 'Blandy' Bloom and Keira 'Blandy' Knightley were not exactly big names, one was an elf, the other a waif. And despite being an Oscar winner and formidable character actor not many people rush out in their millions to see the latest Geoffrey Rush picture. Nevertheless, POTC:COTBP (as it's known) was a massive success and prompted the relatively hasty task of franchising.

Between this and its sequel came the last burp of Depp's indie-flavoured output, and it was messy at best. Robert Rodriguez's Once Upon a Time in Mexico (as I've previously blogged) is a shambolic affair, unfocused and choppy, never ammounting to the sum of its parts; Secret Window is a Stephen King adaptation not directed by Frank Darabont and thusly it's shit; Finding Neverland won Oscars but is - in my opinion - a little too rose-tinted and whimsical in its story-telling and The Libertine is Depp channeling Withnail in a sometimes amusingly raunchy but ultimately indulgent romp.

Before finally re-donning the tresses and quaffing the rum, Depp re-imagined (the P.C. term for remake) Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory with long-time collaborater Tim Burton. Unfortunately they mangled Dahl's wonderful text (and even botched up just remaking the great 1971 version) into a hideous day-glo, plasticy nightmare of vomitous CGI and gratingly OTT performances. The film was a huge success.

More huge successes followed in the shape of both Pirates sequels, which somehow managed to push Depp's Jack Sparrow into the background of a horribly convoluted plot that saw everyone come back from the dead at least twice and tried to convince us that Keria Knightly could become 'King of the Pirates', or something. Then there's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, another re-teaming of Depp and Burton, that took as its inspiration the awful musical of the same name but decided to leave out its best musical motifs in favour of Burton doing a pale imitation of the hammer horror style he perfected in Sleepy Hollow, in fact, the entire film felt like a Tim Burton fan-made tribute and was probably marketed entirely at the people who wear nothing but Nightmare Before Christmas merchandise and don't realise that Tim Burton actually didn't direct that film (much like the makers of Trivial Pursuit).

In fact the only truly worthwhile contribution Depp had made to cinema during all this salty nonsense was his appearance in Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe's documentary Lost in La Mancha, which told the tale of the tragic un-making of Terry Gilliam's The Man Who Killed Don Quixote. A film that Gilliam may be about to get back on track, but unfortunately due to commitments with The Lone Ranger and the mooted Pirates of the Caribbean 4 Depp may not be able to reprise his role. Now, I don't begrudge Depp any of his financial success with these insipid movies, but it's a shame that it prevents him from working on a truly interesting project (from an audience member's perspective). Fortunately - though tragically as well - Depp did get to work with Gilliam on his upcoming The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, but this was in the wake of Heath Ledger's death mid-way through filming.

Public Enemies, whilst a good film, seems to merely showcase Depp's departure from his unique, character actor days of yore, with the film feeling more like Christian Bale chasing Johnny Depp than Merlvin Purvis chasing John Dillinger. So, the future for Mr. Depp may be blighted by yet more blockbuster shenanigans, the one diamond in his upcoming slate (outside of Gilliam) seems to be his return to the work of Hunter S. Thompson with Bruce Robinson's The Rum Diary. There's also Tim Burton's upcoming adaptation of Alice in Wonderland, but that could go either way.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Put It On Indeed

The lovely Sarah sent me this, so I'd thought I'd share it with you...

Hello!

I wanted to write and tell you about a new website for artists,
musicians, fashion designers, and filmmakers: www.PutItOn.com. I've
been using the site as an artist and have my work there, and am trying
to support it because I believe in it. Basically, the site allows
artists from all over the world to connect, display their portfolios,
and sell their work (with NO commission taken!). The site gives
artists a FREE gigabyte of space to showcase their portfolios, allows
you to stream audio and video works, lets you create live personal
broadcasts, and translates any writing into ten different languages.
If you could take the time to visit the site, and if you like it too,
let your readers know about it, and even sign up yourself or link to
it on your site it would be greatly appreciated! We are trying to make
a go of helping out artists everywhere and are trying to get the word
out, so please help us out if you like the site after checking it out!
Thank you!

Moviedrone: Stallone

Film critic Mark Cousins interviews Hollywood icon Sylvester Stallone in this ground-breaking new series:

Monday, July 13, 2009

Bruno 15/18

UK cinema-goers are to be presented with two alternative versions of hit comedy film Bruno from Friday, 24 July.

A 15-rated edit of the movie will be distributed alongside the original cut, which has an 18 certificate.

It is the first time alternate versions of a film have been released in the UK at the same time.

Universal Pictures said it had re-cut the film after cinemas reported turning away large numbers of teenagers during the opening weekend.

Only 1 minute 50 seconds had been lost from the original, it said.

Sacha Baron Cohen's mock documentary went straight to number one in the US this weekend. It is expected to achieve a similar feat in the UK, despite its restrictive certificate.

Universal said the movie had taken an estimated £5m at the UK and Ireland box office since it opened on 12 July.

If that figure is verified, Bruno will have achieved the biggest opening weekend of all time for an 18-rated film.

Some scenes were shaved in the US to stop the film being given a restrictive NC-17 rating, which would have banned anyone under the age of 17 from seeing it.


From the BBC.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

How Do You Interview A Terrorist ?



Sacha Baron Cohen tells Mr Letterman how he tracked one down for Bruno.

Wes Anderson's Foxy 1st Pic

Here it is, the first pic from Wes Anderson's Fantastic Mr. Fox. What you do you think?
This is quite a departure Ol' Wes. Still, I’m curious to see how this one will turn out.

Nicked from here.

Best Movie Gangs

Its good to have friends, so I wanted to pay some respect to some of the best groups of friends/gangs in movies. Here are just a select few of my personal favorites.

We start back in 1985, with a group of loser, nobodies who have only got each other to rely on. The Goonies work so well as a gang because they have the ability to add new members, enter older brother Brand, love interest Andy and too ugly for film Stef. The Goonies beat the bad guys, save their homes and prove the legend of One Eyed Willy. Not bad for a bunch of kids.


Keeping it with the 80's vibe, the next bunch of kick ass dudes will strap on their proton packs and send you to hell. That's right, the Ghostbusters don't take no crap from no one, not even Gozer. When these guys hit the streets, you know somethings going down. Complete with brown jumpsuits and some of the best Bill Murray moments, the Ghostbusters deserve a salute. Who you gonna call?




Lets fast forward to 2009 shall we? To a sleeper hit of the summer that caught everyone off guard. The Hangover contains some of the funniest movie moments of the year and that's all thanks to the great cast brought together including man of the moment Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms and comedy genius Zack Galifianakis (try and say that five times fast). This group of rag tag buddies really know how to party.




Stepping into the realms of blockbuster, we have 1998's Armageddon. This Michael Bay mega hit has one of the best group dynamics I've seen. Headed by Bruce Willis (need I say more?) this gang of oil drillers is asked to save the world, and boy do they step up to the plate. Owen Wilson and Steve Buscemi provide some great laughs but the bit when Will Patton's kid runs towards him at the end, gets me every time.



I have a problem with this next one, because they are both so good and of the same genre, I'm having to put them side by side. Here we have Tombstone and Young Guns. Both westerns, both featuring gun tooting, straight shooting legends of the west. These are guys that you would not mess with, unless you wanted a bullet in your skull.



From gangs of the past, to gangs of the future. Ripley leads a group of the toughest SOB's in the galaxy to battle a bunch of Aliens that really messed with the wrong woman. Complete with flame throwers, rocket launchers and some big ass guns, this gang really owns some xenomorph ass. With Michael Biehn and Bill Paxton being a match made in James Cameron heaven.

Clearly there are other gangs that deserve a mention, such as Anchorman's Channel 4 news team, the genetic weirdos the X-Men and the classic coming of age kids from Stand By Me.

Respect has been paid, so until next time my minions.


Ryan Reynolds Syndrome


Stephen Norrington's Blade is a brilliant film, Guillermo Del Toro's Blade II is Aliens to Blade's Alien and then along comes Blade: Trinity, directed by David S. Goyer (screenwriter on all three films), playing the Batman Forever card and guffing up a perfectly good franchise. What Blade 3 (Trinity's an awful subtitle) did have though was the presence of one great performance, Ryan Reynolds as Hannibal King - seemingly channeling Jason Lee but in a rather ripped action star body, Reynolds gave far better than the movie deserved stealing the whole show from the likes of Snipes, Kristoffersen, Parker Posey and Jessica Biel.

Reynolds was no stranger to acting as lifeguard to drowning pictures, he single handedly made the absolutely bland Van Wilder: Party Liason very entertaining with his expert comic timing, delivered with perfect dead pan and his rogue-ish good looks. Similarly he made the totally risible Just Friends watchable, he popped up in Joe Carnahan's messy Smokin' Aces, he took an interesting - if flawed - project in the shape of The Nines, and most recently has acted in the so-so Adventureland and the terrible X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

Now after much industry talk about the comic book spin-off Deadpool, Reynolds has been snapped up to star in Martin Campbell's adaptation of The Green Lantern. Neither project particularly excites me on its own merits, though Reynolds' Deadpool stole the entire film from Hugh Jackman's Wolverine (despite only being on screen for about three minutes). It seems that Reynolds is finally getting his bid for super-stardom, but does this usher in a change for his career, will Reynolds now be head-lining bigger and better projects, or will this strange phenomenon of great performance, poor film continue?

Are there other actors out there who suffer from Ryan Reynolds Syndrome? And have I over-looked a film starring Reynolds that is actually as good as his performance in it?

Saturday, July 11, 2009

5757 By David Berry

Crude home movies from the 1970s depicting activities at a certain location in the San Fernando Valley.

Green Deadpool

Ryan Reynolds has been cast as The Green Lantern in a new comic book adaptation.

Reynolds, 32, recently played the character Deadpool opposite Hugh Jackman in X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

If the new deal goes ahead, it would make Reynolds the only actor to have played heroes for comic rivals Marvel and DC.

Reynolds married actress Scarlett Johansson in 2008.

He is currently starring opposite Sandra Bullock in The Proposal, which topped the US box office.

Bradley Cooper, who stars in The Hangover, and music star Justin Timberlake also did a screen test for the role of the superhero who is armed with a magical ring.

The film is being directed by Martin Campbell, who was at the helm of 2006's Casino Royale.

A spinoff movie for Reynold's Deadpool character is also in development.

Generous Jennifer Aniston

She made sure the recent Independence Day weekend was a blast for the crew of her new movie The Bounty by paying them to have a day off.

The star opted to shut down the movie a day early on 2 July, so staff on the set could start their Fourth of July weekend celebrations early - and she paid everyone's one-day wages so they weren't left out of pocket.

One crew member tells People.com, "How many people in this world would pay for an entire movie set to have the day off...? We're talking big bucks."

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

9 Stitchpunks, etc.

In case you haven't already seen the newest wave of character posters from 9 I wanted to share them with you.
Below are downloadable links of pics of 9 of the stitchpunk beings along with their character descriptions.
Each image will soon be released as special edition collectible cards, strating at Comic-Con.
The accompanying descriptions are at the bottom of this here post.

For 1: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708773574/2ff4ea3eca72a7c0ef18fa3e6b665d5c
For 2: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708773784/8e77330cb3ba776a20787fed699cb560
For 3 & 4: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708773876/3ddd5f18407f12fd0e96e1508af5f4ef
For 5: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708773948/0f2f5bc4d7664fd6dfb49d749efd637f
For 6: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708774160/f6986304bda3a161b0acea8dcecde292
For 7: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708774226/8c328169b7945a5466f6336aeed093e4
For 8: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708774388/1594b6caab369ae0662b140201376f80
For 9: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/708774462/876b025b5beda4b03f0970b6e83cdab0

Thank you for Victoria for the heads up. mwah.

Character Descriptions

1
-Voiced by one of the world's most respected actors, Christopher Plummer, 1 is the Scientist's first creation. As the elder, he is the self-declared leader of the group. He is clever and sly, but also domineering, quick-tempered, and threatened by the new arrival of 9, whose higher intellect leads him to question authority.

2
-Voiced by Academy Award Winner Martin Landau, 2 is a kindly but now frail inventor and explorer who embodies the Scientist's strong creative spirit. An inquisitive personality, 2 is fearless. Director Shane Acker affectionately describes him as a 'salty old dog'.

3/4
-Communicating visually, not verbally, 3 and 4 are the scholarly twins who voraciously catalogue everything they can see and find, recording and building a massive database for the group of the world that surrounds them and the history that led up to their creation.

5
-Voiced by Academy Award nominee John C. Reilly, 5 is a caring, nurturing engineer -- the loyal, big-hearted 'common man' who always tries to play the peacemaker. He is also an apprentice of 2, with whom he shares a special bond.

6
-6, the group's visionary is voiced by Crispin Glover. Although reclusive and eccentric, his bursts of artistic inspiration through drawings made from his pen nib hands may be keys to help his fellow stitchpunk beings navigate their darkest hours.

7
-A brave and self-sufficient warrior, 7, voiced by Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly, is the group's sole female. A fiercely independent adventuress she has been out patrolling the wasteland. To survive, she has adapted, finding the bones of a deceased bird and crafting her signature skull helmet.

8
-Armed with a giant kitchen cleaver and half a scissor blade, the none-too-bright muscle and enforcer of the group, 8, is created to help the others physically survive the dangerous post-apocalyptic world.

9
-To voice the lead role of the newly born -- and aborning hero -- 9, Acker couldn't help but have in mind an actor who was so central to the film set he had worked on years earlier in New Zealand -- The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King star Elijah Wood.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

The Week in Film by Robert Mann - Week Starting 3/7/09

Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs 3D ****
Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs 2D ***½


Palaeontologists beware! If you want to see a film that accurately reflects prehistoric times then this is definitely not a film for you. After all, since when were there dinosaurs after the Ice Age? Chronological inaccuracies aside, though, Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs is a film that cannot fail. Coming after two hugely successful movies, it is without a doubt the most heavily promoted movie of summer 2009 and it certainly won’t chill the current hot streak at the box office. As for quality, however, there is of course the issue of the third movie curse (where the third film in a series is considered to be greatly inferior to its predecessors) but with the edge of 3D this film does at least have one advantage over its predecessors.

Since the events of the last Ice Age movie life has begun to change for Manny and his friends. Squirrel Scrat (voiced by Chris Wedge) is still on the hunt to hold onto his beloved acorn but must face off a rival for its possession from female squirrel Scratte (voiced by Karen Disher). Mammoths Manny (voiced by Ray Romano) and Ellie (voiced by Queen Latifah), having since become an item, are expecting a baby, which leaves Manny anxious to ensure that everything is perfect for when his baby arrives. Tiger Diego (voiced by Denis Leary) is worried that he is losing his touch as a hunter having being too laid-back and considers leaving the group. Sloth Sid (voiced by John Leguizamo) begins to wish for a family of his own, and so steals some dinosaur eggs which leads to Sid ending up in a strange underground world where his herd, which also includes possums Crash (voiced by Sean William Scott) and Eddie (voiced by Josh Peck), must rescue him, while dodging dinosaurs and facing danger left and right, and meeting up with a one-eyed weasel known as Buck (voiced by Simon Pegg) who hunts dinosaurs intently.

Right from the clever spin on the 20th Century Fox logo at the start, Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs makes effective use of 3D to enhance the viewing experience of the film, even if it doesn’t quite utilize the format to its fullest. The animation maintains the standard of its predecessors, although it fails to raise the bar much, but it is greatly enhanced by the addition of 3D to the equation. At times the animation is quite beautiful although understandably it never reaches the heights soared to by Pixar and DreamWorks, not being the most textured animation, being more cartoony in its design rather than photo-realistic (although there are a few bits that move towards the latter). This isn’t a problem though, as for the purposes of the film the animation does exactly the job it needs to, with all the critters being just as adorable as ever, making it impossible for you not to care about the characters. This is also helped thanks to the strong vocals delivered by the entire cast which really help to add personality to the characters. And this personality is a key reason why much of the humour works. The attempts don’t hit the mark as much as in some animated movies but there are more hits than misses and all the gags are of the good clean and innocent variety, with no resorting to pop culture references or crude gags for the laughs. If the film is let down by any element it is the story which lacks the strength of plot possessed by the film’s predecessors, but this doesn’t stop the film from being an extremely fun ride. Altogether, Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs isn’t one of the most engrossing family movies of 2009 but it is still very watchable and the kids will love it. To get the most enjoyment out of it the film is best viewed in 3D.

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Public Enemies ***

Following in the footsteps of Ridley Scott’s 2007 film American Gangster, Public Enemies is another drama/thriller inspired by the life of a legendary American crime figure. This time it is the turn of bank robber John Dillinger to get the big screen biopic treatment, and the man behind the camera is Michael Mann, who has shown himself to be very adept at directing crime orientated thrillers, even if his recent track record has been a bit hit and miss (2004’s Collateral being the hit and 2006’s Miami Vice being the miss). Regardless of the capabilities of the director, however, no fault can be found in the casting department with the always excellent Johnny Depp taking on the Dillinger role and the supporting cast including such names as Christian Bale and Marion Cotillard. Does such great acting talent mean that Public Enemies impresses, however, or will you leave the cinema feeling that Dillinger has committed another act of robbery - that of the price of your cinema ticket?

Public Enemies is the incredible and true story of legendary Depression-era bank robber John Dillinger (Johnny Depp), the charismatic bank robber whose lightning raids, with associates Baby Face Nelson (Stephen Graham) and Pretty Boy Floyd (Channing Tatum) made him the number one target of J. Edgar Hoover's (Billy Crudup) fledgling FBI and its top agent, Melvin Purvis (Christian Bale), and a folk hero to much of the downtrodden public. As Dillinger pursues a romance with waitress Billie Frechette (Marion Cotillard) his bank robberies become increasingly dangerous and he finds his once easy profession becoming increasingly difficult as he must not only contend with the FBI agents determined to catch him but also former associates who no longer consider it worth being associated with him.

If there is one area where Public Enemies delivers on an exemplary level it is the acting, which is of a consistently high standard throughout. Johnny Depp is superb as John Dillinger, delivering a charming and charismatic performance of a criminal who is not without a conscience and has a distinctly pleasant element to his personality. We are shown an extremely humanised portrayal of the man that is so convincing that we can quite easily forget that he is supposed to be the bad guy. I guess that this was the aim of Mann, to make us care about the man who we would normally be encouraged to despise. Conversely, Christian Bale’s character, who is supposed to be the good guy, is represented in a wholly less flattering light. It’s not that we are encourage to hate his character in any way as we know well that he is trying to stop a criminal but next to Dillinger, Purvis just doesn’t seem like as nice a guy. The reversal of roles is quite an effective one, allowing us to see things a bit from Dillinger’s perspective than Purvis’. As for Bale’s performance, he convinces in the role but is completely outshone by Depp at every turn. Viewed on its own terms, however, the performance is likely to receive a more overtly positive response than the rather mixed opinions regarding his performance in this summer’s Terminator Salvation. The rest of the cast is also of a high standard, although it is a shame that more isn’t really made of Marion Cotillard, whose character could have been utilized to a much greater extent. A performance that is really of note, however, is not from one of the primary cast members but from one of the supporting performers. Billy Crudup, who impressed earlier this year as Dr. Manhattan in Watchmen, once again delivers an extremely impressive performance as J. Edgar Hoover. This performance shows that he is quietly becoming an actor to really watch out for. The film also impresses in another area, that being its historical authenticity. The actors contribute to this authenticity with some very convincing accents but the realism is created through a number of means. An authentic sense of history is created through sets, costumes, cars and even little visual details that all work together to create the look and feel of 1930s America. Even the shootouts, which are very well staged, seem to ring true to the time and period. However, while the historical authenticity of the film is a strong point, so much effort seems to have been put into it that the film suffers severely in other ways. Notably, the storyline fails to be compelling enough, a particular problem considering the long running time, and the result is that the film ends up outstaying its welcome, being far too long and not nearly interesting enough. The film also suffers because of some of Michael Mann’s filming techniques. He has been using high definition cameras in his film for some time now and while they certainly create a distinctive look for his films they come with just as many bad points as good ones. The high definition cinematography often proves counter-effective, serving to make the picture too dark at times and highlighting unnecessary details at others. At the same time, however, it does at least serve to enhance the realism, as does the shaky hand held camera style, which itself comes with its own problems, often being rather distracting and irritating, making it harder to appreciate what is being shown on the screen. Thus, with both positive and negative points Public Enemies stands as a film that has its merits but certainly isn’t one of the summer’s must see movies.

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Reviews by Robert Mann BA (Hons)