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Chris Pratt Heading to Jurassic World?

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NewsRobert Bernstein11/13/2013 at 11:36PM

Chris Pratt appears to be circling the lead for Jurassic World...

It looks like Chris Pratt might be heading to Jurassic World.

TheWrap is reporting that the Josh Brolin talks have ceased, and now Chris Pratt is circling the leading role for Jurassic World.

Chris Pratt's only obstacle appears to be the shooting of his TV series Parks and Recreation.  But, according to multiple individuals familar with Jurassic World, Universal is looking to navigate the shooting schedule around NBC.

Pratt stars opposite Vince Vaughn in The Delivery Man, and also voices the lead role for the upcoming Lego Movie--not to mention a major role in Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy.

Take this report with a grain of salt, as Universal is currently refusing to comment on Jurassic World's casting rumors just yet.  But, we'll keep you posted on whether or not this rumor will be confirmed.

Jurassic World is currently slated for June 12, 2015.

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The top 25 underappreciated films of 1998

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Odd ListRyan Lambie11/14/2013 at 7:49AM

The overlooked greats of the year 1998 come under the spotlight in our list of its 25 underappreciated movies...

Dominated as it was by the financial success of two giant killer asteroid movies, gross-out comedy hit There's Something About Mary and Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan, 1998 proved to be an extraordinary year for movie theater.

Okay, so history doesn't look back too fondly on Roland Emmerich's mishandled Godzilla remake, and Lethal Weapon 4 was hardly the best buddy-cop flick ever made, despite its handsome profit. But search outside the top-10 grossing films of that year, and you'll find all kinds of spectacular modern classics: Peter Weir's wonderful The Truman Show, John Frankenheimer's rock-solid thriller Ronin, and Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line.

Then there was The Big Lebowski, the Coen brothers' sublime comedy that has since become a deserved and oft-quoted cult favorite. Below those, there were dozens of movies that, in our estimation, were unfairly overlooked as well - so many, in fact, that we had to think long and hard before we came up with just 25 of them.

So with apologies to the likes of Richard Linklater's The Newton Boys, Bryan Singer's Apt Pupil, and many, many other worthy movies, here's our pick of the unsung greats of 1998...

25. Phantoms

"Hundreds of thousands missing! No bodies, no graves, no witnesses" Peter O'Toole emotes in this unfairly overlooked mash-up of The Blob, The Thing, Invasion Of The Body Snatchers and the cosmic terror of HP Lovecraft. Something evil has wiped out the occupants of Snowfield, Colorado, and whatever it is has designs on absorbing the rest of the planet, too.

The oddly-cast yet entirely welcome O'Toole leads an eclectic cast, including Ben Affleck, Rose McGowan and Liev Schreiber, who encounter something sentient and very oily in the deserted old town. There are few truly original ideas to be found in this adaptation of Dean Koontz's novel (with a screenplay by the author himself), but it's an entertaining, well-paced thrill ride, and genre fans will find much to enjoy in the gooey monsters and O'Toole's deliciously ripe performance.

24. Deep Rising

With the likes of Mimic, The Relic and Anaconda all coming out in the late 90s, this was truly the era of the mid-budget creature feature. Director Stephen Sommers' Deep Rising was one of several swept up in this unexpected wave, and it's a pity that it got lost in the swell: made on a relatively handsome budget of $45m, it only made about a quarter of that at the box office.

Disparagingly described by Roger Ebert as "Alien on a boat", Deep Rising sees a group of mercenaries board a luxury cruise ship with the aim of stealing some stuff from a safe, but instead end up on the wrong side of an ancient predator that has sprung up from the ocean depths for a spot of lunch. Treat Williams, Famke Janson, Wes Studi and Jason Flemying are among the potential snacks, and while the movie's original title, Tentacle, probably gives you a fair idea of the movie's B-movie roots, Sommers keeps the action brisk, while Jerry Goldsmith's score adds a real touch of class.

23. The Negotiator

This simmering, conversation-heavy thriller may be fairly by the numbers in places, but it's enlivened by what is surely one of the coolest casts of 1998. Samuel L Jackson plays a Chicago cop who takes hostages in an Internal Affairs building in order to prove his innocence in a corruption case, while Kevin Spacey plays a police negotiator who gradually realises that Jackson's character isn't as crazy as he initially thinks he is.

Jackson and Spacey add real weight and charisma to a flawed yet brisk script co-written by James DeMonaco (who went on to make this year's The Purge, among other things), while the supporting cast includes David Morse, JT Walsh and Paul Giamatti. With a cast like that, and some decent notices behind it, you'd be forgiven for thinking that The Negotiator's success would be sure fire. Unfortunately, the movie came out in a busy summer season, where it was forced to compete with the big-budget swagger of Michael Bay's Armageddon, and the gross-out romance of There's Something About Mary.

22. Rounders

John Dahl has appeared several times on Den Of Geek of late, thanks to quality thrillers such as Red Rock West and The Last Seduction. His subway poker thriller Rounders isn't one of his flat-out best, but it still has real merit.

Matt Damon and Ed Norton star, with John Malkovich putting in a performance that feels like it's drifted in from another movie. The scenery had to be coated with a special chewing-resistant spray whenever he walked on set.

It's a bit of a distracting performance, but Dahl is too good a director to let it overpower his movie. Thus, as the stakes get raised, the tension follows in its path. Good movie, this one, and better than the initial reaction to it may have suggested.

21. BASEketball

BASEketball was the movie that came in the turning point in David Zucker's directorial career. Before BASEketball, there was Airplane!, Top Secret and The Naked Gun. After it? Er, Scary Movie 3 and Scary Movie 4. Hmm.

But overlook BASEketball at your peril. Starring the South Park duo of Matt Stone and Trey Parker, it's a very funny comedy, centred around a fake sport that's a union of basketball and baseball. The real gold is in the psyche outs that each side uses to put the other player off their shot. They're wildly inappropriate and quite brilliant.

In some ways a precursor to Dodgeball, a movie that would enjoy far greater box office success, BASEketball is a real hoot. Hopefully, David Zucker can relocate his comedy beans again in the near future...

20. Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas

In between bill-paying fair such as Nick Of Time and The Astronaut's Wife, Johnny Depp spent much of the 90s steadily building up a portfolio of superb performances in challenging roles, from his title turn in Ed Wood to undercover cop Joe Pistone in Donnie Brasco. Although a curious choice on paper, Depp is perfectly cast in Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas, and immerses himself entirely in the role of Hunter S Thompson, the great, rambling eccentric of 60s and 70s journalism.

Terry Gilliam applies his own chaotic filmmaking style to Thompson's 1971 book, which completely smudges the lines between reality and drugged-up hallucination. As in the book, Thompson (or rather Raoul Duke, his alter-ego) jumps in an open-top car with his attorney Dr Gonzo (Benicio Del Toro) and a trunk full of illegal pharmaceuticals and booze, and heads off to cover the Mint 400 motorbike race in Las Vegas.

There's little direction to the story, as adapted by screenwriters Tony Grisoni, Alex Cox, Tod Davies and Gilliam, and some critics found the movie's string of trippy encounters too repetitive. But with a terrific central performance from Depp, some skilful weaving of the book's most memorable scenes and lines ("I was just admiring the shape of your skull"), and a real eye for Las Vegas' darker undercurrents, Fear And Loathing is a truly underrated 90s black comedy.

19. The Prince Of Egypt

The Prince Of Egypt was designed to be DreamWorks Animation's maiden movie, before a release date change scheduled Antz ahead of it. And while the hand-drawn animated telling of the story of Moses was a good hit on its initial release, as with all four DreamWorks' hand drawn features, it feels all but ignored since. If you're looking for a Blu-ray release, for instance, you're very much out of luck.

There are problems here, which should be acknowledged. Three music CDs spun out of the movie, and a couple of the songs don't really resonate at all, for instance. But this feels, in large parts, like something of an animated epic.

It deals with the darker edges of the biblical story it's based on, and some of the animation is outstanding (the parting of the Red Sea sequence looked spectacular on the big screen, and still impresses now). But it's the storytelling that shines through particularly: The Prince Of Egypt was always going to be ambitious, but no shortage of pitfalls stood in its way too. The movie, though, turned out be just the kind of movie that they don't - in this form at least - make any more. We dearly wish they would.

18. Fallen

This supernatural thriller was one of those films we stumbled on almost by accident during our regular visits to the local video store. It's sad to think, in fact, just how quietly Fallen managed to slip through theatres in early 1998, since it features a great cast, with Denzel Washington, John Goodman, Donald Sutherland, Elias Koteas and the late, great James Gandolfini, and a plot that keeps twisting and turning to the very end.

At first glance, Fallen's a serial killer thriller in the usual 90s mode: Washington plays John Hobbes, a cop on the trail of a murderer who's soon captured and sentenced to death. But it then transpires that the murderer was merely a puppet controlled by a demon who can pass from body to body at will.

Nicholas Kazan's script takes familiar elements and employs them in unusual ways, and there's much to enjoy in this stylish, well-acted and sorely overlooked 90s movie.

17. Primary Colors

Based on the then-anonymously penned book of the same name (Joe Klein was later revealed as its author), Primary Colors had its moment of infamy for being a fictional account of a man running for political office, that bore very strong parallels to the life of Bill Clinton.

Certainly, John Travolta's lead performance does nothing to shy away from that, and Mike Nichols' big screen adaptation (skilfully shaped by Elaine May's screenplay) also adds Emma Thompson, Allison Janney, Kathy Bates (really good here) and Billy Bob Thornton to its impressive ensemble.

There's a lot of narrative that the movie eats through, and maybe a miniseries would have given more space to spread the story. It's hard to grumble with the quality of what you get, though. It's well worth teaming this up with Wag The Dog, to get a snapshot of how fiction was reflecting American politics at the end of the 90s...

16. Little Voice

Mark Herman followed up the excellent Brassed Off with another superb feature: Little Voice. It's based on a play, The Rise And Fall Of Little Voice, which itself was built around the incredible talent of Jane Horrocks for vocal mimicry. Horrocks takes the lead role in the movie too, as a shy woman who comes to life when belting out the tunes of Judy Garland, Shirley Bassey, Edith Piaf and such like.

Horrocks puts in one of two excellent performances in the movie. The other belongs to Michael Caine, in arguably his best work of the 90s, as music manager Ray Say. Caine would shortly after win his second Oscar for The Cider House Rules, but for our money, Little Voice was the better performance.

With a superb soundtrack, Little Voice has things to say, and doesn't skimp at all on entertainment either. And Horrocks really is something else. The movie simply couldn't work with anyone else in that role.

15. Small Soldiers

One of those family movies that appears quite regularly on television on Saturday afternoons, Joe Dante's Small Soldiers is a pint-sized war movie mixed with the anarchic action of the director's earlier Gremlins movies. A military tech corporation places cutting-edge computer french fries into its new range of action figures, and mayhem ensues when the two factions of toys begin an all-out war in a quiet suburb. Although the clean-cut, all-American miniature soldiers are meant to be the heroes in the toys' view of things, it's the freakish, awkward Gorgonites who emerge as the true good guys, and Dante has great fun with this reversal.

Some reviewers criticised Small Soldiers for being too dark, but then again, would you really expect anything less from a director who put gremlins in microwaves and sent old ladies flying through the air on malfunctioning stair lifts back in 1984? War movie buffs will have great fun spotting the visual references to classic films like Patton, and several cast members from The Dirty Dozen provide voices.

A fun family movie with a great cast (this was, tragically, the last screen appearance from Phil Hartmann) and a truly subversive, mischievous sense of humor, Small Soldiers is a real treat from Dante, and stands up exceptionally well even 15 years later.

14. Croupier

Writer and director Mike Hodges will probably be best remembered for the undisputed British gangster classic that is Get Carter, but he's also deservedly praised for the blackly comic Pulp (1972), his knowingly camp handling of Flash Gordon (1980), and the shamefully ignored 80s thriller Black Rainbow (1989).

Croupier, a movie made in 1998 and gradually shown on limited release across America two years later, is arguably Hodges' best movie since Get Carter. Clive Owen plays a smart, struggling writer who becomes a casino card dealer to make ends meet, and is willingly drawn into a web of cheating, robbery and deceit. Alex Kingston also stars as a gambler who has designs on relieving the casino of its petty cash, and Peter Mayersberg script gives plenty of hardboiled dialogue for she and Owen to relish.

13. Run Lola Run

An Austrian action movie, and a very brief one at that. Tom Tykwer - who would go on to co-direct Cloud Atlas - tells the same story three times here, as Franka Potente's Lola has to find a large amount of money in 20 minutes flat if she wants to save the life of her boyfriend.

There's an urgency underpinning Run Lola Run that's maintained throughout, and that's no small feat, given that you're watching a similar task being performed three times. It's breathless movie theater, throwing in enough tricks to avoid repetition, and leaving you half-tempted to press play and watch the whole thing again once it's done.

12. The Interview

A little-seen Australian drama, and that's a real, real pity. The Interview features Hugo Weaving - in an award-winning role - and takes place almost exclusively in a police interrogation room. There are a few flashbacks, but the bulk of the movie is Weaving's suspected criminal being interrogated by the police. And whilst you don't win prizes for guessing that there might be something a bit more going on under the surface here, director Craig Monahan - who's only directed 2004's Peaches since - ratchets up the tension and tightens his movie to expert effect. Weaving's work too keeps things far less predictable than you might imagine.

It's been a hard movie to track down over its lifetime, if you don't live in Australia, but The Interview is well, well worth the effort. We're not going to spoil it here, so will leave the details out. But may we humbly suggest this is just the kind of movie that you read lists of this ilk to discover.

11. The Opposite Of Sex

Christina Ricci also appeared in Vincent Gallo's Buffalo 66 in 1998. But the movie that arguably migrated here from brilliant child actress to someone who could make a living out of acting in adulthood was Don Roos' The Opposite Of Sex. Here, she plays a teenager who leaves home and moves in with her gay half-brother, seducing his boyfriend and generally causing emotional carnage.

Lisa Kudrow has one of her best movie roles here too, a fair distance away from Phoebe in Friends, with one or two particularly acidic lines delivered with real skill. It's also worth seeing for Ricci's excellent voiceover that narrates the movie.

It's Roos' best movie to date, and comfortably one of Ricci's too. To its immense credit, it takes seconds for you to forget that Ricci was once Wednesday Addams, so strong is her work here.

10. Pecker

John Waters' maverick style of filmmaking may not be to everyone's taste, but his gentle comedy drama Pecker is surely among his most approachable and broadly entertaining. Edward Furlong stars as Pecker, a Baltimore teenager who becomes fascinated by photography, and whose pictures of eccentric people become the toast of New York's trendy art crowd.

Although this central story - and its gentle ribbing of modern art and celebrity - would have been pleasant enough in itself, it's the incidental characters that make Waters' comedy so rich. Whether it's Pecker's grandmother, who's convinced that a statue of the Virgin Mary can talk, or his six year-old sister, who's addicted to eating sugar, the movie's full of colorand warmth.

Oddly, some critics complained that Waters was trying too hard to break into the mainstream, yet Pecker's still full of the director's quirky sense of humor, if not his more outrageous excesses; if you didn't know what teabagging was before watching Pecker, then you certainly will after Martha Plimpton carefully (and hilariously) explains all.

9. Following

Memento may have been the movie that made Christopher Nolan's name in Hollywood, but it was this 1998 thriller, shot for a few thousand pounds on black-and-white 16mm movie, which really began his career. Written by Nolan himself, who also shot the movie and co-edited it, Following's about a dapper young would-be author who begins wandering after complete strangers in search of inspiration. But instead of an idea for his first page-turner, he meets Cobb, an equally well-dressed young thief whose charisma and brazen criminality bewitches the writer.

Nolan's use of grainy stock and monochrome adds to the stark, noir quality, and the plot's as tricksy and ingenious as we've come to expect from this famously cerebral mainstream filmmaker. It's fascinating, in fact, to observe just how much of what we now accept as being part of Nolan's style is already present in his first feature: the unusual narrative structure, the sharp suits, and conflicted central characters are all present. Nolan would even reference Following in 2010's Inception, with the character Cobb (this time played by Leonardo DiCaprio) being a suit-wearing thief of a very different sort.

Although inevitably lacking the dramatic or technical polish of Nolan's later films, Following is more than a calling card or a footnote at the start of a remarkable career - it's a classy thriller in its own right, and shows that, even on the leanest of budgets, Nolan could craft something mesmerising.

8. Happiness

Happiness is in very short supply in Todd Solondz's ensemble drama, which sees a bunch of troubled characters and the complicated interactions between them. It would be fair to say that this bunch of individuals aren't always the easiest to warm to, and Solondz doesn't hold back in exploring the darker sides of them.

That does open the movie up to some excellent performances, with Philip Seymour Hoffman and particularly Dylan Baker emerging in their courageous roles. It brushes on difficult themes, and sees not always likeable people doing not always likeable things. But to Solondz's credit, he always hunts for the humanity in the situation, and more often than not finds it.

7. Orphans

As an actor and a director, Peter Mullan has shown a real conviction in seeking out stories and characters with rough edges to them. As director, The Magdalene Sisters remains superbly made, if horrible to watch (it's an interesting companion piece for Stephen Frears' Philomena, certainly). Orphans, though, is a jet black comedy, demonstrating Mullan's ability to put across subtle shifts in tone, and getting us laughing at things we probably shouldn't.

The premise of Orphans is about four siblings who come together for their mother's funeral in Scotland. Mullan - and he wrote the script as well - spends time exploring the fractured relationships between the characters. It works as drama, it works as comedy, and you'll get one or two really good guffaws out of it too. If you share Mullan's dark sense of humor...

6. Gods And Monsters

Set in the 1950s, writer and director Bill Condon's Gods And Monsters is an unforgettably moving drama. It's about the final days of legendary Frankenstein and Bride Of Frankenstein filmmaker James Whale (Ian McKellen), and his companionship with gardener Clayton Boone (Brendan Fraser). Although Boone, a determinedly straight former Marine, is initially unnerved by Whale's unapologetic homosexuality, a friendship begins to blossom between these two very different people.

Shifting between Whale's younger days as a soldier, then a celebrated director and thrower of wild Hollywood parties and his fragile old age, Gods And Monsters is a warmly told, richly shot drama, and if you're looking for a movie acting masterclass, then the lead performance from Ian McKellen as James Whale is an excellent place to start. Fraser also puts in good work, with a performance of a standard he would match again with The Quiet American. But Lynn Redgrave is the one who comes closest to matching the majesty of McKellen here.

Made with a real affection for Whale's classic Frankenstein films (whose sets are lovingly recreated for the flashback sequences), Gods And Monsters' brilliance is, like those Universal horror pictures, entirely undimmed by time.

5. Pi

It's quite a coincidence that both Christopher Nolan and Darren Aronofsky would make their feature movie debuts in 1998, and that both would make black-and-white thrillers with relatively tiny budgets. The similarities between Pi and Nolan's Following end there, though, and in fact, the films merely underline how different the filmmakers were even at this early stage in their careers; where Following is cool and coiled, Pi is desperate, histrionic and full of psychic torment.

Sean Gullette stars as Max, a mathematician whose computer appears to have figured out the secret string of numbers behind the stock market and all of creation. As Jewish scholars and frighteningly aggressive Wall Street agencies begin vying for Max's discovery, his already tenuous grasp on reality begins to slip.

At once a thriller, a character study about a troubled genius and psychological horror movie, Aronofsky channels elements of David Cronenberg and Philip K Dick-like paranoia into his one-of-a-kind debut. That he crafted an absorbing, even scary movie on such a low budget is a testament to Aronofsky's filmmaking skill. He'd later bring his operatic sense of drama to acclaimed films like Requiem For A Dream, The Wrestler and Black Swan, but Pi remains one of his sharpest and most searing pieces of filmmaking. Look out, too, for some distinctive music from Clint Mansell, whose mail-Pop Will Eat Itself career was also launched by the success of this movie.

4. Pleasantville

Gary Ross doesn't direct many films. He steered the first Hunger Games movie to big success, and his movie before that, 2003's Seabiscuit, got a Best Picture Oscar nomination. His films are a rare treat.

But Pleasantville was the movie that marked him out as a very special filmmaker. It's a lovely movie, following a pair of 1990s teenagers who find themselves in a black and white 1950s sitcom. Ross blends the two visual styles extremely well, and he addresses the inevitable culture clash inherent in the movie without going over the top about it.

Boasting warm and strong performances from Jeff Daniels, Tobey Maguire and Reese Witherspoon (this was at a time before her movie choices became 'less interesting'), Pleasantville is charming, exquisitely told and always worth a revisit. No wonder people get excited when Gary Ross directs a new movie.

3. Dark City

It's little short of astonishing that this gripping science fiction movie barely broke even when it came out in US cinemas in 1998, and that its cult success only arrived long after it left theatres. About a man who wakes up in an unfamiliar hotel room in an eternally benighted metropolis, Dark City is beautifully shot by cinematographer Dariusz Wolski (who is now Ridley Scott's regular collaborator), and full of philosophical ideas as compelling as its mind-bending special effects.

Dark City shares some elements in common with The Matrix, which caused a sensation the following year and, just to rub a bit more salt into the wound, even recycled some of the same sets. But director Alex Proyas' movie eschews flashy, stylised action for an unfolding mystery and a Phildickian sense of existential unease, and as a result, has aged extraordinarily well.

Rufus Sewell plays the ordinary man caught in the middle of a city-wide conspiracy, ably supported by William Hurt, Kiefer Sutherland and Jennifer Connelly, plus Richard O'Brien on perfectly slinky form as a disturbing character called Mr Hand. Proyas also directed such genre films as The Crow, I, Robot and KnowingDark City is arguably his finest work to date.

2. A Simple Plan

Sam Raimi has a couple of underrated movies in his extensive collection of films. The Quick And The Dead is a good, solid western, while baseball flick For Love Of The Game has its moments too. But if you're looking for the absolute gem, then A Simple Plan is most certainly it.

Every time we look back at the years of the 90s, we keep coming back to the raft of terrific thrillers that the decade produced. This dark crime drama is most certainly one of the best. The catalyst is a trio of men who find millions of dollars, and hatch a plan to keep the money for themselves. Throw simmering distrust and an FBI agent into the mix, along with superb photography from Alar Kivilo and a terrific Danny Elfman score, A Simple Plan is a very human thriller, and stands alongside the likes of One False Move, Red Rock West and The Last Seduction in the 90s hall of fame for the genre.

It's one of Sam Raimi's very, very best, and a showcase in how to manage the ingredients of a thriller without ever overplaying your hand.

1. American History X

Director Tony Kaye's very public falling out with the producers of this, his first feature movie, threatened to entirely engulf its release. Furious that the theatrical cut of the movie wasn't his own, Kaye placed full-page ads in Variety demanding that his name be removed from the credits, and famously brought in a priest, a rabbi and a Buddhist monk into a meeting with New Line studio executive Michael De Luca to "lighten" the mood.

Putting all this media hoopla aside, American History X remains a beautifully-shot (with cinematography by Kaye himself) and extremely well-acted drama about neo-Nazis and racial tension in Venice, California. Edward Furlong plays Danny, a teenager living in the shadow of his jailed older brother Derek (Edward Norton) whose horribly cruel treatment of a pair of would-be car thieves leaves him in prison for manslaughter, but hailed as a hero by his racist friends.

While behind bars, Derek's extreme views are continuously challenged, and when he leaves prison a few years later a reformed man, he attempts to bring about the same change in his younger brother. Unflinching in its violence and convincing in its depiction of how racist ideas take hold and spread like a virus, American History X is powerful and provocative, with a superb turn from a beefed-up Norton.

Kaye may have disowned the movie, but whether the cut we now have is as good as the one he envisioned or not, there's no denying that it's a provocative piece of work, and it's a pity that the movie's release was so overshadowed by all the stories surrounding it. But with the passing of time, the quality of American History X has become ever more apparent - and more recently, even Kaye's attitude has changed somewhat.

"It's number 16 on Best Dramas of All Time on the IMDb" Kaye pointed out in a 2007 interview, before rightly adding, "It's become quite a little classic in its own befuddled way..."

See also:

The top 20 underappreciated films of 1990

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1991

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1992

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1993

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1994

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1995

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1996

The top 25 underappreciated films of 1997

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Disqus - noscript

Are you serious? Half the films on this list SUCKED.

Wow. Some bad films in here.

Yeah, but Affleck was the bomb in Phantoms.

Without a doubt the most under appreciated movie of 1998 was Blade

I don't get the hate for this list. Granted I've only seen about 1/2 to 2/3 of the list but enjoyed them all.

If Christina Ricci never made the film The Opposite of Sex the world would be the same place. Vincent Gallo's masterpiece Buffalo 66 however changed everything. This writer Ryan Lambie needs to open his eyes. Buffalo 66 is one of the best films of all time and Vincent Gallo invented the adult version of Christina Ricci. Her best performance by far is in Gallo's film and she will never be better.

I appreciate it. My sister used to scream like Pearl the big fat vampire all the time, it was hilarious

American History X had the curb bite that I've heard so many people call awesome... that was not awesome. It was poignant, it struck a nerve, it was definitely memorable. And the fact that it was not shown proves that the point was, this is too horrible to show. Not because of gore, but because on this instant, racism won. And instead of emphasizing the victim, it emphasized the triumphant neo-nazi at the peak of his white supremacist life.

Which is why it bothered me when people called it awesome. Being a black Cuban, I had friends of all backgrounds in high school. I ate lunch with the black kids but I hung out with the headbangers, the freak on a leash kids, outcasts (hello, I'm a geek), and outcasts know movies. Cult Classics. That's why I like movies so much. Sometimes they were your only friend. Guess what? They liked American History X a LOT, and for all the wrong reasons. Son, you will not CATCH me HUMMING the racist songs on that movie, and these guys SANG em! These guys said the n word liberally. But they liked me. Well I quit hangin with em. AFTER graduation. You never know when being friends with these kids will take your name off a bullet.

Paramount confirms Mission: Impossible 5 for Christmas 2015

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NewsSimon Brew11/14/2013 at 8:42AM

Tom Cruise returns in Mission: Impossible 5 - one week after Star Wars arrives in cinemas...

With the various pieces now falling into place, Paramount Pictures has fired the gun on Mission: Impossible 5, which it's announced will be in cinemas on December 25th 2015 in the US. We'd imagine we'll get it a day later in the UK.

The new instalment in the series has been penned by Drew Pierce (Iron Man 3), and will be directed by Christopher McQuarrie (who previously helmed Jack Reacher, also starring Tom Cruise). Tom Cruise will be reprising the role of Ethan Hunt, although it's not clear yet if the likes of Simon Pegg, Paula Patton and Jeremy Renner will be returning.

Mission Impossible: Ghost Procotol, the last movie in the series, was both the most popular this year, and also the biggest grossing movie of Tom Cruise's career. All concerned will be keen to repeat that level of success.

One point of note: the movie arrives in cinemas one week after Star Wars: Episode VII. And with Kung Fu Panda 3, the adaptation of Dan Brown's Inferno, and Duncan Jones' Warcraft movie all arriving around then too, that's some competition...

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Beware The Night, Sex Tape and 50 Shades Of Grey shift dates

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NewsSimon Brew11/14/2013 at 8:54AM

50 Shades Of Grey becomes a Valentine's movie, Jason Segel's new comedy takes its place, and a promising horror shifts to summer 2014.

Remember when the Valentine's Day movie release tended to be something romantic, the kind of movie that would make a great date movie? Possibly with Hugh Grant in it?

Those days, friends, are long gone. This year, 20th Century Fox released A Good Day To Die Hard in time for February 14th, spoiling the day for any couples looking to see a good Die Hard movie for their big date night. Next year, meanwhile, we get The LEGO Movie. And in 2015? Universal has just shifted the enduring romance of 50 Shades Of Grey there.

The movie had been set to open against Marvel's Guardians Of The Galaxy on August 1st 2014, but it's now going to be out on February 13th 2015.

Moving into its place on August 1st 2014? That'd be the upcoming Jason Segel comedy, Sex Tape. Segel co-stars with Cameron Diaz in the movie, which is being directed by Jake Kasdan.

Promisingly, Scott Derrickson's new horror movie, Beware The Night, has also been moved forward the best past of six months to July 2nd 2014. Derrickson previously made Sinister, and the schedule shift is a sizeable vote of confidence in the movie. Could it repeat the commercial success enjoyed by The Conjuring in a summer slot this year? Quite possibly.

More on all of those films as we get it...

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Watch Batman vs. Superman: Kevin Conroy vs. Tim Daly

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NewsMike Cecchini11/14/2013 at 10:05AM

Need some live-action Batman vs. Superman footage? Well...here it is! Sorta. Check out Kevin Conroy and Tim Daly going one-on-one in this hilarious video.

You may remember Tim Daly as Joe Hackett from Wings...although if you're reading this you PROBABLY remember him as the voice of Superman on the brilliant Superman: The Animated Series. And Kevin Conroy is, well...the greatest Batman in history. And with all the Batman vs. Superman buzz, it was only a matter of time before these titans had to square off.

Mr. Daly's web series, The Daly Show (which he does with his son, Sam), is consistently hilarious and surreal, and often full of references to his superheroic days. But this? This one is special. So yeah, if you've ever wanted to hear Kevin Conroy spout iconic dialogue from The Dark Knight Returns, or Tim Daly say lines from Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight movies, you're in luck. This is golden. See for yourself!

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Man of Steel Blu-Ray Review

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ReviewDon Kaye11/14/2013 at 11:37AM

Director Zack Snyder’s reboot of Superman and the DC Movie Universe is flawed yet compelling viewing in its bonus-packed Blu-ray release.

Man of Steel is a movie that gets as many things wrong as it does right, and as a result is both an exhilarating and frustrating experience. Meant as a reboot of the character after Bryan Singer’s lifeless, disappointing Superman Returns fizzled at the box office seven years earlier, the movie retells Kal-El’s (Henry Cavill) origin story one more time, from the destruction of Krypton to his childhood on Earth to his reluctant but eventual acceptance of his destiny as humanity’s protector when renegade Kryptonian General Zod (Michael Shannon) comes looking for a fight.

What makes Man of Steel different from 1978’s still-classic (and yet to be bettered) Superman is the movie’s tone and esthetic, which are dictated by David S. Goyer’s screenplay and the presence of producer Christopher Nolan (who also worked on the story with Goyer). Of course, these are the two men primarily responsible for the “dark, gritty and realistic” nature of Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy, and they’ve imprinted that same worldview on Superman, with varying degrees of success.

After all, unlike Batman, you can only get so “realistic” and “gritty” with Superman. He’s an alien, for one thing, sent from a planet where the technology is virtually indistinguishable from magic. And while Superman has certainly had plenty of moments of doubt, indecision and suffering throughout his long comic book history, he’s simply not the tortured soul that Bruce Wayne has always been. While director Zack Snyder delivers on epic visuals and some superb superhero moments, the movie only infrequently captures the majesty, fun and awe of Superman the way that Richard Donner’s film (and, to a lesser extent, Superman II) did.

Henry Cavill fills the suit well but only intermittently projects the charisma and good-naturedness achieved so effortlessly by Reeve. Cavill’s Kal-El is another variation on the reluctant hero, in a mythos where reluctance has never really been part of the character before. Shannon is a formidable and more complex Zod than the cartoony Terence Stamp version of the earlier films, while Russell Crowe and Kevin Costner bring wisdom and compassion respectively to Kal’s two fathers, Jor-El and Jonathan Kent. Meanwhile, Amy Adams is confident and attractive, but neither conveys the pluckiness of Lois Lane nor generates real romantic heat with Cavill.

Snyder knows how to deliver on spectacle and imagery – and does well enough on character moments – and provides plenty of both in Man of Steel. A common complaint about Singer’s film was a lack of action; no such worries here. The final third of Man of Steel, if not more, is devoted to an almost non-stop battle between Kal (who is only called Superman once in the movie) and Zod’s refugees, all while Zod’s massive World Engine begins pulverizing Metropolis as part of the general’s plan to remake Earth in the image of Krypton. Fans who wanted for years to see Superman and an equally powerful foe punching each other across the sky and through buildings won’t be disappointed here, even though the battle eventually becomes exhausting.

While Man of Steel is entertaining and occasionally great – if fundamentally flawed – the film’s Blu-ray release is exceptional. The image is razor-sharp and incredibly detailed, despite some slightly off CG here and there (and there is a lot more CG in this film than you may initially think). Man of Steel has what seems to be a deliberately muted color scheme – ranging from the golden hues of Krypton to the grays of Metropolis during the final battle – but all the shades look rich and full despite not being the most eye-popping colors on the spectrum.

As for the sound, better buy yourself a piece of property far away from anyone else before even thinking about cranking up this baby. The DTS-HD 7.1 mix will knock you out of your shoes and chair as if you’ve been punched by Kal yourself, especially during that last act full of destruction and battle. The surround separation is excellent, and even the quieter moments in the film are distinguished by a constant stream of sonic activity, right down to the peaceful sounds of breeze and birds in the scenes set at the Kent farmhouse.

The bonus features fall somewhere in the middle when it comes to being impressive and comprehensive. Included on disc one with the film itself are five features. The 26-minute “Strong Characters, Legendary Roles,” while purporting to be about the history of the Superman mythology, focuses mainly on the actors playing the characters this time around, with a few nods to the past. “All-Out Action” (also 26 minutes) examines the intense training of the actors as well as the work of the stunt team and the execution of several major action sequences. In “Krypton Decoded,” actor Dylan Sprayberry, who plays Clark as a teenager, hosts a seven-minute look at the sequence in which Krypton is destroyed. Also present is a two-minute animated short created by Snyder and Bruce Timm that celebrates Superman’s 75th anniversary with the kind of soaring excitement we’d like to see more of in the film itself.

We did say five features, right? Yes we did, but if anyone can figure out why “New Zealand: Home to Middle-earth” – a seven-minute featurette related to The Hobbit – is included here, please let me know. As reported elsewhere, there is no context and no reason for the piece to be included on the Man of Steel disc, indicating some sort of quality control lapse somewhere along the production line.

Disc two contains “Planet Krypton,” a somewhat amusing History Channel-style documentary on the history of Krypton as if it was a real place. But the centerpiece of the second disc is “Journey of Discovery: Creating Man of Steel,” which is literally a second presentation of the film, only this time interspersed with cast and crew interviews, production featurettes and behind-the-scenes footage that appear in panels next to, above and below the film image. Running nearly three hours, this amounts to essentially a visual commentary track as well as an ongoing documentary that you watch alongside the film. It’s not our preferred way to view a movie, but there is a lot of fascinating and thorough information about the movie’s creation and plenty of surprising tidbits – like the fact that General Zod’s uniform is largely a CG creation – something we still find somewhat astonishing given how realistic it looks.

In the end, Man of Steel is not the amazing new Superman movie we’ve wanted to see for decades, but that film occasionally peeks through. If you enjoyed it on the big screen, and certainly if you are a Superman enthusiast and completist, it deserves its place on your shelf next to the rest of Kal-El’s cinematic adventures.

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Watch The First Full-Length Trailer for Darren Aronofsky's Noah

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TrailerTony Sokol11/14/2013 at 12:11PM

God gets pissed at Russell Crowe and Emma Watson in the new trailer for Darren Aronofsky's Noah!

Paramount Pictures just released their new trailer for Noah and it looks like god is pissed off at everyone but Russell Crowe. It looks like Russell’s not just going to build this arc and take up animal husbandry, he’s going to get to beat people up. This arc looks like it’s going to cause a lot of problems with the locals.

Noah was directed by Darren Aronofsky, who made the ballet thriller Black Swan and Mickey Rourke’s return from boxing in The Wrestler and it costars Anthony Hopkins, Jennifer Connelly, Logan Lerman and Ray Winstone. Emma Watson, Harry Potter’s Hermione is also on hand to add a little magic.

Noah gets visions of an oncoming destruction of Biblical proportions and clears his calendar. He makes sure the water’s off and builds an arc to save mankind. Or at least, his own family and all their pets. And boy do they have a lot of pets. Besides dealing with God as a contractor, Noah also has to deal with the local government and his neighbors, who all want tickets to the ferry at the end of the world. Russell Crow’s Noah stands tall and the rest can all tread water.

Noah comes out March 28, 2014.

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Saving Mr. Banks Review

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ReviewDon Kaye11/14/2013 at 1:13PM

The story behind one of Disney’s all-time classic films is moving and earnest with Emma Thompson practically perfect as Mary Poppins’ creator.

I remember seeing Mary Poppins, the 1964 Disney musical film based on the novel by author P.L. Travers, as a young child at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, where it had been revived for a short theatrical run. It was full of magic and color and fantasy, and was probably a life-changing experience for little me. I wanted Mary Poppins herself to come to my house. But now, having seen the origins of the character in Saving Mr. Banks– which premiered last week at AFI Fest 2013– I’m not so sure.
 
Don’t get the wrong idea: Saving Mr. Banks is an often wonderful film, but the nanny who floated in with the wind in Travers’ original story was not the delightful Julie Andrews that generations of viewers are familiar with. We not only meet a fictional version of the woman who may have inspired the character in director John Lee Hancock’s new film, but we also see the increasingly dark events of Travers’ childhood that fueled both her creativity and her reluctance to hand over the rights to her creation to Walt Disney, who spent 20 years in pursuit of them.
 
That pursuit provides the narrative backdrop of Saving Mr. Banks, which stars Emma Thompson as Travers and Tom Hanks as Disney. Both have emerged from tough childhoods to create their own magical kingdoms of sorts, although the latter’s clearly dwarfs the former’s. But while Disney sees his mission as bringing happiness to children all over the world, Travers has a much more limited worldview. She is aghast at the notion of Disney turning Mary Poppins into one of his “silly cartoons,” but is finally driven by financial need to travel to Hollywood (or more precisely, Burbank) on Walt’s dime and at least give a film adaptation a try.


 
Despite Disney’s charming ways (played perfectly by Hanks whether historically accurate or not), Travers seems resolutely determined to sabotage the project from the start. She makes one demand after another – no songs in the movie, no Dick Van Dyke as Bert the Chimney Sweep, no animation, no use of the color red – driving the writing team (Bradley Whitford as screenwriter Don DaGradi, and B.J. Novak and Jason Schwartzman as composers Robert and Richard Sherman) nuts. Eventually, this makes even the ever-patient Disney crack in exasperation. Yet at the same time, in a series of flashbacks, we learn the source of Travers’ insecurities – as well as her inspiration: Her youth in Australia as Helen Lyndon Goff and her poignant, complex relationship with her imaginative, but deeply troubled father (Colin Farrell in what could be a career-best role).
 
The art of storytelling – and the impulses and experiences that drive the urge to make up stories – are at the heart of Saving Mr. Banks. Both Disney and Travers share that urge, but for different reasons, although it is Disney, in a marvelous speech near the end of the film, who articulates the passion behind the craft. It is in that same scene that Disney finally puts into words the motivation behind Travers’ seemingly whimsical tale and allows her to come to terms with her past, which is also one of the most powerful forces behind the creation of most great fiction.
 
That’s why, despite Saving Mr. Banks being somewhat formulaic—even occasionally skating along the thin edge of being maudlin—it is ultimately both a compelling look at one of Hollywood’s most unlikely collaborations and a moving examination of how we use stories to exorcise our demons. Albeit, the latter of which played a larger role in this relationship’s ultimate outcome than the movie’s happier ending might suggest. Still, the scene where Travers sees and reacts to the finished film – her childhood memories crowding her mind alongside images from the screen – is powerful and unabashedly emotional, and surprised this writer into tears. Travers, as portrayed superbly by Thompson, can be an unreachable and frustrating figure for much of Saving Mr. Banks, yet we share that moment with her, and perhaps our own memories as well.


 
Thompson is fantastic as a woman who has carefully constructed a wall of disdain and self-denial around herself to keep the world from getting in. She and Hanks are also aided by terrific supporting work, as the actors all fight sentimentality, even as it frequently tries to squeeze its way into the story. A scene in which Travers’ driver (Paul Giamatti) discusses his handicapped child could have been a gooey mess but is held in check by the skill of the stars. Even when the script is too heavy-handed, as seen in some of the flashbacks and one late scene where Travers breaks down while dancing to a new tune the Shermans have concocted, the cast still handles it with a graceful touch.
 
Hancock (The Blind Side) keeps the story moving in steady, if unspectacular fashion, and the use of actual music from Mary Poppins can be inspired. The attention to period detail is also impressive, although it did take me out of the movie as a film journalist to see the modern Disney studio lot standing in for, uh, the old Disney lot. Still, what could have been a gratuitous celebration of the company itself – which has become a corporate behemoth perhaps even beyond old Walt’s grandest dreams – is instead an affirmation of the artform that allowed it to come into existence in the first place, allowing the creative mind to seek out the resolution that real life so often denies us. I may watch Mary Poppins with a whole new outlook next time.
 
Den Of Geek Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
 
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8

Yellow Submarine Turned 45 Yesterday

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NewsTony Sokol11/14/2013 at 1:50PM

The Beatles animated classic Yellow Submarine

It was 45 years ago today, well, yesterday, that Old Fred ventured from a war-torn Pepperland to Liverpool to enlist the help of four musicians against the evil music-hating Blue Meanies.

Pepperland had been sieged by anti-music missiles, Apple Bonkers, Butterfly Stomers, Clowns, Snapping Turtle Turks and the dreaded Flying Glove. Their national band, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Heart Club’s Band, was locked in a bubble that could not be breached. The Lord Mayor was at wit’s end. Four score and 32 bars ago, Pepperland was founded by a group of traveling musicians who’d made it there in a Yellow Submarine. That ship would have to save the musical republic again.

Who but who better than The Beatles could rescue the peace loving Pepperlandians from a fate worse than death, life without music. The Beatles were at their peak at the time. They were “the Beatles of popular music.” Even then. They traversed the seas of Green, Time, Science and Consumer Goods, picked up Nowhere Man Jeremy Hillary Boob, Ph.D., in the Sea of Nothing and went to battle with the evil Blue Meanies. Armed only with a little love, the lads from Liverpool passed as Blueish to infiltrate their ranks, let the air out of the bubble by cracking two eggs and stirring light and beat the Blue Meanies back, Only to find there were newer and Bluer meanies still at large. They went out singing.

Yellow Submarine is a classic animation. One of the best ever. Screw Disney. Those stories were too scary. When my kids were born I lived a teletubby free existence by showing them Yellow Submarine, Nightmare Before Christmas and The South Park Movie.

 The Beatles had made the movies A Hard Day’s Night, Help and Magical Mystery Tour and still owed two more films on their movie contract with United Artists. They would end that contract with a documentary on their breakup, Let It Be. Yellow Submarinewas made by the same people who made sixties Beatle Cartoons, Al Brodax and Co. The Beatles themselves only make a cameo appearance a the end, but John Lennon said they were involved enough to do drawings for it. Yellow Submsarine was based on a song Paul McCartney wrote for Ringo to sing and one of the screenwriters was Erich Siegel, who would go on to write Love Story. And not to be confused with Jonathan Livingston Seagull.

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Hugh Jackman Wants Another Wolverine Movie With James Mangold

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NewsDavid Crow11/14/2013 at 2:55PM

Hugh Jackman talks candidly about planning another solo Wolverine movie with director James Mangold returning behind the camera.

X-Men: Days of Future Past is not even out for another seven months, but star Hugh Jackman is already tentatively committing to the idea of doing another Wolverine movie, provided that the circumstances are right.
 
While talking with Entertainment Weekly, Jackman admitted that his contract with 20th Century Fox is up after Days of Future Past, but that this has almost always been a movie-to-movie deal.
 
“I started with a two-picture deal on the first two [X-Men movies], and from that point on, it’s been movie by movie – not just me, but Fox and Jim [Mangold] and everyone,” the actor is quoted as saying. “I do want to do it with Jim and with [producer] Lauren Shuler-Donner because we had such a great experience. I’m really proud of The Wolverine.
 
The Wolverine came about after years of production trouble of restarting the character’s solo career following the less than well-received 2009 entry X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which was directed by Gavin Hood. Following that film, Jackman worked on a stand alone follow-up with director Darren Aronofsky (who dropped out to work on Noah) before finding a collaborator he seems genuinely enthused to work on the character with in Mangold.
 
“I was on the phone with Jim Mangold last night,” Jackman said. “There are some really cool ideas that I’m dying to tell you, but that would be giving away a secret that is not even [fully] formed yet.”
 
Jackman goes on to say in the interview that he is in some ways more excited about the character than ever before. He calls Wolverine as equivalent to a “best friend” to him, and one that he does not want t to take for granted (not to mention the fans). He does concede that it is harder to get into Wolverine shape, but playing an ancient character comes easier with age. Intriguingly, he also states no one really knows how old Wolverine actually is, which would appear to retcon X-Men Origins as much as anything else. Still, it sounds like we shall see those claws slash once more in the not too distant future.
 
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Do it....and for gods sake put a good Cajun beside him.

Looking for Andy Kaufman

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FeatureTony Sokol11/14/2013 at 3:16PM

Andy Kaufman, who died of lung cancer in 1984, has become the Bigfoot of dead entertainers.

A woman claiming to be Andy Kaufman’s daughter who said the eccentric standup faked his death to be with his family, has been exposed as a hoaxster. But she’s only the latest in a long line of people who have claimed that Andy Kaufman’s 1984 death of lung cancer was a fake. How did Andy Kaufman become the Bigfoot of dead comics? Is it because he started his career as an Elvis impersonator and Elvis really is Bigfoot? There are still more people who see Elvis than who spot Andy. They are tied with the people who see Jesus in tacos.

Andy Kaufman, who embodied just the right parts of Mighty Mouse on Saturday Night, played Latka and his multiple personality Vic Ferrari on Taxi, pushed comedy to new highs and lows in his reign as America’s most out-there standup. You never knew when the joke ended. Andy didn’t always let the audience in on the joke. Whether he was wrestling women on Merv Griffin in a chauvinistic guise or sending his stand-in, Tony Clifton, to meetings with TV executives, or pushing Michael Richards to his wits end on Fridays, Kaufman was his own audience laughing in the wings. He set up the audience to be his personal entertainment. What could be more entertaining than letting it out that he was dead and sitting back spending the rest of his watching himself perform without having to leave his chaise lounge? It’s funny as hell.

Andy Kaufman's “daughter” yanked Andy’s brother Michael Kaufman on stage at the Andy Kaufman Awards at New York's Gotham Comedy Club to let everyone know her old man was fine. Look, I got his brother, he just wanted to be a good dad.

She said "He just wanted to be a stay-at-home dad, because that's why he wanted to leave the show biz. I know don't know how much longer he can keep everything away. He was really thinking about coming."

That would have made for a great coming out party. Andy Kaufman appear at the Andy Kaufman Awards to say, hey I’ve been driving a Taxi for the past, what? Thirty years? That’s like Elvis Presley looking for his keys at Graceland or Bigfoot turning himself in at Area 51 (or Studio 54).

Kaufman was born in New York City on January 17, 1949. Kaufman would be 64-years old if he were alive today.  JFK would be in his 90s if he was still alive. George Washington would be over 300 so who are we kidding?  According to legend, Kaufman claimed that if he were to fake his death, he come out of hiding 20 years later. That would have happened in 2004. Of course, maybe he did fake his death in 1984 and died in the meantime.

A few years ago a grey-haired guy was caught on video in Albuquerque that everyone swore was Andy. Years after Andy Kaufman died, Tony Clifton was still performing. Everyone thought Tony Clifton was Andy, but Clifton was actually a character played by Kaufman’s writing partner, co-conspirator, and best friend, comedian Bob Zmuda, who everyone also thought was Andy. Zmuda maintains that, on his deathbed, Andy Kaufman said keep Tony Clifton alive.

There have been dozens of Kaufman spottings in the meantime. Most of them probably go unreported. In 1993, my wife and I got a plane in from New Orleans and took a taxi from JFK to our apartment on 19th Street. The driver looked just like Andy Kaufman. He didn’t say much, so I couldn’t get a take on his voice. When I was paying my fair I was thinking, that would just be too fucking perfect, Latka driving a cab. The cabbie winked before he drove off.

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First off, love the idea of Andy still working us, and great piece, Tony. But here's an update:

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/b...

Charlie Countryman Review

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ReviewDavid Crow11/14/2013 at 3:29PM

Charlie Countryman is a ludicrously paced movie that is a Eurotrip coming of age, gangland drama and romantic noir. But with an appealing cast of Shia LaBeouf, Evan Rachel Wood, Mads Mikkelsen and Melissa Leo, it may just find its perfect audience.

Originally titled The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman, the now informally named Charlie Countrymanproves that there is not really anything necessary about it. Yet, for all of Charlie’s rough-hewn idiosyncrasies, I still find myself glad to have met the curious fellow.
 
As a movie more famous for its behind-the-scenes shuffle than its Sundance debut—actor Shia LaBeouf originally dropped out of the project due to scheduling conflicts before returning, supposedly with a bit of acid for a method take on the film’s drug-addled sequence—Charlie Countrymanmarks Swedish filmmaker Fredrik Bond’s first movie, and it is a trippy dose of wild influences scattered across the Romanian countryside. Feeling like a callback to the 1990s efforts of Tony Scott or a young Danny Boyle, Charlieis so deliriously spastic in his joy for life that both the character and film are sometimes hard to understand. But the kaleidoscopic fury that they find in Bucharest is so intoxicating that one can appreciate the exuberant approach.
 
Opening in Chicago, Charlie (LaBeouf) is a boy trying to act like a man when his mother (Melissa Leo) passes away. It is so haunting for this lackluster observer that he is able to bear witness to something even more wholly unearthly. Leo is given a few moments to shine, because even death cannot hold her down from stealing some of Charlie’s scenes when she returns as a ghostly imprint of maternal kindness to guide and nurture Charlie. One could even say that she is his guardian angel if it were not for the fact that she suggested that Charlie gets away from her demise by traveling to Bucharest. Why Bucharest? Well, besides the absurdly friendly Romanian tax laws and rates of exchange for international film productions, it is quite “specific.” Plus, it is not the overused Budapest.
 
So within a hop and jump, Charlie finds himself on a plane to Eastern Europe where he fortuitously sits next to a kindly Romanian man on the flight. This man then promptly dies leaving Charlie, again, to be the only one to commune with a fellow traveler from beyond the grave. At this point, it might appear as if Charlie’s mere presence is facilitating doom and gloom for all he meets, not unlike a Grim Reaper version of The Sixth Sense (which the script does call out), however it ultimately appears to be more a case of manifest destiny. Sure, that wonderful fate is made whole in ever so many corpses, but without them, Charlie would have never met Gabi (Evan Rachel Wood), a cello player with a dark past who is also the daughter of the recently airborne deceased. Charlie attempts to bond with Gabi over their shared losses, but he finds something much more complicated in this pseudo-femme fatale when she seduces him into the eternal sounds of opera and the probably fatal whispers of the Bucharest underworld. This is represented in the complete reversal of Charlie’s painfully tardy adolescence: Gabi’s husband Nigel. Nigel is played by Mads Mikkelsen, one of the greatest living actors in European cinema, with an overbearing sense of alpha male dominance so intense that it threatens not only to demolish LaBeouf’s timid Charlie, but the entire picture in its wake. So, why is Gabi interested in Charlie again and why is she putting him in Nigel’s path?


 
Set in the seedy shadow land of youth-oriented hostels and Romanian gangsters, Charlie Countrymanis a coming-of-age film, a crime drama, a romantic noir and a surrealistic parody of the “Eurotrip” cliché all wrapped into one project bursting at the seams. All these elements do not necessarily coalesce into something that is either coherent or as solidly memorable in its total sum as it is in the smaller, disparate moments. However, when those elements do work, this first-time feature showcases a lot of promise in visual panache with a reverence for a style that was thought to have died with the ‘90s scene. It also offers one of the better cast indies to come out of the Sundance circuit this year.
 
In a role that LaBeouf apparently fought years to obtain, Charlie Countryman offers the actor all the neurotic ticks and awkward flourishes that he spent a decade carving out in big budget fare. But this time, he gets to invest them in a character who is not intentionally seeking audience sympathy or support. Instead, they serve to paint the portrait of a very, very sensitive soul who gets in way over his head, thereby creating an underdog narrative by which the audience is supposed to cheer for him. While the plot machinations are so fuzzy in the finished film that I am unsure if I ever really rooted for Charlie, there is no denying that LaBeouf has never been better fit for a role and plays perfectly off his opposites. The two most notable are Mikkelsen—who is of course fantastic as the film’s heavy in a part that he so completely owns that we would wish to spend more time with the smiling brute—and, perhaps more intriguingly, Wood’s Gabi.
 
As the film’s mystery girl, Wood imbues her character with an almost duplicitous touch of Romanian Barbara Stanwyck. While it becomes evident she has genuine feelings for Charlie and wishes him the best, her motives and allegiances are never fully defined until the movie’s closing moments, allotting further evidence that Wood, who never approaches any two roles the same way, is a vastly underused talent.


 
The rest of the supporting cast is also fun with Rupert Grint turning in a small performance that is entirely built around smashing down his Harry Potter image. As a fellow hostel resident named Carl, Grint plays a British tourist hellbent on breaking into the German porn industry (his nickname will be “Berlin Pecker”) but otherwise is content at doing ecstasy with Charlie and attending strip clubs when he takes too much Viagra. Strangely, this still feels like a very practical alternative for Ron Weasley if he had never developed magical wizarding powers.
 
The elements are all fun, and the film features a deliciously baroque atmosphere as it careens from a ghostly fairy tale to a guns-and-girls noir that spreads far from America’s shores. But The Third Man this ain’t. Not least of all because it lacks a clarity of focus. Charlie Countrymandoes many things well, especially casting, but the overall film swings wildly between tones and twists through the quick-knit pacing that can become as exhausting as figuring out why exactly characters are doing what they do. Still, the film’s ludicrous charm will likely prove infectious for a certain niche audience on the home market. I can foresee this discovering a cult following on home video, much like many of the ‘90s films it emulates. If that happens, Charlie will be all the happier that they went to Bucharest after all.
 
Den of Geek Rating: 2.5 out of 5 Stars
 
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5

First Behind-The-Scene Look at Star Wars: Episode VII

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NewsDavid Crow11/14/2013 at 4:19PM

Check out the first photo of JJ Abrams and a returning character. Hint: It will be his SEVENTH Star Wars film...

There have been a lot of conflicting reports about what to expect from the hotly anticipated Star Wars: Episode VII, which is to be directed by JJ Abrams. Yet, with a new release date penciled in for December 18, 2015, it looks like things are finally rolling.
 
To boost that confidence for the little Jedi disciples everywhere is this first behind-the-scenes photo released via Bad Robot’s Twitter Feed. In the picture, you can see director Abrams and the new Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy. Standing between them? Why it’s R2D2! While it is not yet officially confirmed that Han (Harrison Ford), Luke (Mark Hamill) and Leia (Carrie Fisher) are fully back, it appears this little pile of rust buckets is. That gives R2D2 seven-for-seven. Not bad.


 
Abrams released it with the message of “Hi from the workshop!” along with the hashtag “StarWarsVII.” Suddenly, I sense a great disturbance in the Force…
 
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Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis Are…The Wonder Twins?!

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NewsDavid Crow11/14/2013 at 5:20PM

In a cryptic new poster, it appears that Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis will be activating their sibling powers in 2014....

In what is either one of the most brilliant bits of viral marketing imaginable—or an unlikely misfire of ghastly proportions on the part of Warner Brothers—Midtown Comics, a popular branch of New York City-based comic book stores, has Instagramed their newest poster from Warner Brothers: The Wonder Twins. And yes, they can prove it is from WB.
 
In the Instagram below, gauge for yourself the validity of this poster, which seems to indicate Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher—Jackie and Kelso from That ‘70s Show!—will be appearing in 2014 as The Wonder Twins.
 
 
Keep in mind that Doug Ellin is set to begin production in 2014 on an Entourage movie, which famously featured an entire season arc about the fictional character of Vincent Chase being cast as Aquaman. Seeing Vinnie, Ashton and Mila having their magic powers activate actually does sound pretty entertaining, now that I actually think about it…
 
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25 Thor Villains Who Deserve to Be in The Movies

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Odd ListMarc Buxton11/15/2013 at 8:26AM

With Thor: The Dark World behind us, we take a look towards Thor 3, and all of the possible villains that it could contain. Here are 25 we'd like to see take on the god of thunder!

The ending of Thor: The Dark World promised that Thor WILL return. Of course he will, and he is going to need someone to fight. Thor has some awesome enemies in his list of mythic, nefarious, and sometimes human rogues, some of them well known, and others (perhaps thankfully) are somewhat forgotten. If Marvel Studios is listening, here is a list for future possible villains to take on Thor, the Warriors Three, the Lady Sif, Heimdall, and the combined might of Asgard united!


25. The Crusader
Created by Alan Zelenetz and Bob Hall
First Appearance: Thor #330 (1983)

Between Loki, Malekith, the Destroyer, and Kurse, Thor has had his hands full with mythic threats from all over the Nine Realms. What he has yet to face is a worthy human adversary. One of the most fascinating aspects regarding Thor is his the perception that he's a god (although Odin is quick to dismiss this in Thor: The Dark World). How would this change established world religious views? Charles Blackwood is a modern day warrior of the Biblical God. He is sworn to protect the world from any and all pagan symbols. Imagine a film Crusader as part of a Westboro Baptist Church type organization sworn to destroy Thor (God hates gods?). Crusader’s power stems from his unwavering faith in his God, a power that diminishes if he ever questions his Lord. How would Crusader’s faith hold against Thor? A cinematic clash of modern day Crusaders and Asgard could be pretty intense if pulled off correctly. The Crusader might not be Thor’s biggest marquee baddie but there is a lot here to work with thematically.

24. Bloodaxe
Created by Tom DeFalco and Pat Oliffe
First Appearance: Thor #449 (1992)

Ah, Bloodaxe, the perennial Thor villain of the 90's where it was a national law that every new character had to have blood, wind, rage, or axe in his name. But Bloodaxe is actually pretty cool with a connection to one of Thor’s greatest foes, Skurge the Executioner (more on him later). The coolest twist surrounding Bloodaxe is that he is actually a she! A woman named Jackie Lucas, lover of mulleted hero Thunderstrike, was secretly cursed by the Axe to become Bloodaxe. The twist of such a testosterone-filled image actually being a woman would be a nice film twist, and the character could be a nice lead in to the coming of Skurge. But it’s probably best to keep Thunderstrike away from the Marvel Movie Universe...the non-geek world is not ready for our 90’s shame.

23. Mangog
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #154 (1968)

While usually a benevolent race, the Asgardians, and Odin’s, past sins are many. Odin himself once committed genocide against the Vanir, a rival race of beings that once warred with the Asgardians. Mangog is a creature made up of the rage of the billions and billions of Vanir that Odin slew. Mangog is Odin’s sins made flesh, and a chance for Sir Anthony Hopkins to shine as Odin’s past crimes come home to roost. Mangog is one of Jack Kirby’s more nightmarish and striking designs and would make a fearsome image on screen. Later on in Marvel lore, Mangog was a minion of none other than Thanos! Hello, Marvel Phase Three, Mangog is waiting.

22. Radioactive Man
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #93 (1963)

One of Thor’s oldest foes, Radioactive Man, aka Chen Lu, is another Earthbound villain. A loyal Chinese soldier, the Radioactive Man purposely exposed himself to radiation in order to serve his country better as a super-agent.  It was established in the Avengers film that the world’s governments started freaking out when Thor arrived on Earth. The Radioactive Man could be China’s response to Thor’s arrival. Radioactive Man can show film audiences the political ramifications of having a being like Thor around and allow the usually fantasy-based franchise to explore some new themes and conflicts. As a recurring Avengers villain and a member of the Thunderbolts, Radioactive Man certainly has the cache to warrant a future film spotlight.


21. Zarrko, the Tomorrow Man
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #86 (1962)

A time-traveling despot from the 23rd Century, Zarrko could introduce the element of time travel into the cinematic Marvel Universe. You just know Kang will show up sooner or later in the Avengers films and Zarrko’s presence can be a precursor to that inevitable main event. Listen, it would be Thor versus an evil freaking Doctor Who, what more do you need to know? He was one of Thor’s earliest villains and has been used to great effect recently by Mark Waid over in the pages of The Indestructible Hulk, proving the villain translates well in the modern era. Thor and Asgard versus an evil Time Lord. Film It!

20. The Mongoose
Created by Tom DeFalco and Ron Frenz
First Appearance: Thor #391 (1988)

Y’know what…no, I can’t do it. I made Zarrko work, but I can’t work miracles.


The Real #20: Fafnir
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #134 (1966)

Another product of Odin’s relentless smiting, Fafnir was the last survivor of an evil race that used a mystic pool to transform himself into a mighty dragon. Fafnir has a power set that sets him apart from more mundane dragon adversaries (I’m looking at you, Fin Fang Foom) as he has the ability to cast illusions and shape-shift. Thor’s encounters with Fafnir as rendered by Kirby resonate to this day with eyeball-punching power and would translate well into film. Fafnir has been a pawn of Loki and Kurse so he does have ties to established film villains. Plus, hello, Kirby dragon!

19. Karnilla, the Norn Queen
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #107 (1964)

A frequent ally of Loki, Karnilla can be a way to finally introduce Balder the Brave into the cinematic world of Thor. Karnilla can kind of be seen as the female Loki (except when Loki is the female Loki), a powerful sorceress with a chaotic nature and a huge ego. She is deeply in love with Balder and would do anything to win his affections while the hapless and innocent Balder is addled by her attentions, an amusing and complex dichotomy between the two Thor mainstays. Karnilla is directly responsible, along with Loki, in granting powers to the villainous Wrecker, another villain ripe for a film appearance. Her cunning, beauty, and love of Balder make Karnilla a multi-faceted threat to Thor and company.

18. The Worthy
Created by Matt Fraction and Stuart Immonen
First Appearance: Fear Itself #2 (2011)

There are seven of them, they all have hammers, and they are all established Marvel badasses working for the Serpent. In the comic crossover event Fear Itself, the Serpent was the daughter of the Red Skull using dark Asgardian magics to bring fear and darkness to Earth in order to punish Odin, and transformed some Marvel mainstays into the Worthy to do it. A familial connection to the Skull is certainly doable in the Marvel Movie Universe and, while not all members of the Worthy would be available to Marvel films, like the Thing and the Juggernaut, the idea of familiar heroes and villains corrupted by dark magic would certainly make for an intense film. Imagine audience reaction when the Hulk is revealed as Nul, Breaker of Worlds and goes hammer to hammer against Thor, and just replace the Thing with the Abomination and we have ourselves a movie.

17. Cobra and Mr. Hyde
Created by Stan Lee and Don Heck
First Appearance: (Cobra) Journey Into Mystery #98, (Mr. Hyde) Journey Into Mystery #99

The dual villainous threat of Cobra and Hyde plagued Thor throughout the Silver Age. Hyde would be a fearsome film foe, playing off the lineage of the name and toying with fan expectations by making a horror staple into a Marvel villain, something comic fans are familiar with, but not something film goers have been able to experience as of yet. Marvel has used classic monsters as heroes and villains for decades, putting a cool pop art, modern spin on them. Hyde’s classic feel and look combined with the pure comic book villainy of Cobra would be a unique evil synergy that can fuel any film plot.  Imagine, the criminal duo wreaking havoc in the Nine Realms or used as earthly agents by Loki to make life miserable for Jane, Darcy, and Dr. Selvig. Hyde and Cobra are classic Marvel gold, and what worked so well in the Silver Age would surely translate well to screen.

[related article: Malekith and Kurse - The Villains of Thor: The Dark World]

16. Grey Gargoyle
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby (are we sensing a pattern here?)
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #107 (1964)

He’s an artist and he’s French. Who hasn’t dreamed of hitting a French artist with a hammer? Seriously, in the pages of his Invincible Iron Man, writer Matt Fraction proved how terrifying a nihilist with the powers of turning someone to stone can be. The Gargoyle received his powers through the ever-popular chemical accident but the film can make him a minion of Loki or any other Asgardian puppet master, or a struggling artist trying to get publicity by turning a god into a statue. As Marvel’s Medusa (but French), the Gargoyle has been a joke for too long and deserves some respect. There’s a worshipping false idol joke here somewhere, but I’m not finding it.

15. Lorelei
Created by Walt Simonson
First Appearance: Thor #337 (1984)

We will, of course, get to the Enchantress later (spoiler), but let us not overlook Lorelei, sister to Amora. Lorelei pines for Thor and is a frequent ally of Loki, who loves to pester Thor by helping Lorelei try to win Thor’s heart. Picture a film with Amora and Lorelei using their powers of seduction to make Thor’s new life on Earth a mess, or the two sisters waging a war on Nine Realms with Thor’s heart as the prize. Lorelei and Loki share a complex backstory as told by the great Walt Simonson and she is an awesomely deep character in her own right. Her presence would make the already complex love triangle between Thor, Jane, and Sif that much more complicated. Or maybe just make her Loki’s lady love, because you just know Loki’s pimp hand is mighty.

14. Pluto
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #127 (1966)

Now that audiences are more than comfortable with the concept of the Asgardian gods existing side-by-side with humanity in the Marvel Universe, it might be time to explore the other pantheons. The Clash of the Titans and Percy Jackson films have certainly primed audiences for more mythology. Now, crossover those Greek gods with Thor and the Asgardians and you have one wholly unique storytelling experience. In the Marvel Universe, Pluto’s status of god of the underworld can bring into play the nature of death in the Nine Realms and allow Kevin Feige and company to bring Hercules into the fold. How about a film where Thor must save Hercules from Pluto’s realm, or Hercules and Thor are forced into a competition by Loki and Pluto? Whatever the case, the Greek gods getting showcased in Thor is a natural progression as each installment branches out into new realms.

13.Mephisto
Created by Stan Lee and John Buscema
First Appearance: Silver Surfer #3 (1968)

Yeah, Mephisto appeared in Ghost Rider, but it doesn’t count because it was Ghost Rider. Mephisto started out as a Silver Surfer villain but has become an all-purpose tempter that has plagued all the heroes of the Marvel Universe, including Thor. What price would Thor pay to make to make Jane immortal? Mephisto has entered into pacts with Loki and Hela over the years, and let’s face it, what fan would pass up seeing Thor versus the Devil versus Loki on the silver screen? A duel of liars with Thor in the middle. Film…This!

[related article: 25 Iron Man Villains Who Deserve to be In The Movies]

12. Wrecker and the Wrecking Crew
Created by (Wrecker) Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, (Wrecking Crew) Len Wein and Keith Pollard
First Appearance: (Wrecker) Thor #148 (1968), (Wrecking Crew) Defenders #17 (1974)

As stated previously, there is a bevy of Earthbound villains waiting for Thor, and judging from that stinger at the end of Dark World, Loki is going to have to keep his brother busy to keep his prying eyes away from the throne of Asgard. The Wrecker and the Wrecking Crew are some of Thor’s greatest Earthbound baddies. They are no strangers to god-bashing as they violently took out Hercules in Roger Stern’s classic Masters of Evil story in the pages of The Avengers, plus they were created by the machinations of Loki and Karnilla, so there is a deep Asgardian connection. There could be drama and infighting between the members of the Crew to give the film an extra edge. Between the crowbar, the wrecking ball, and the hammer, this would be like Bob Villa’s worst nightmare, but pretty awesome for Marvel fans.

11. Ego, the Living Planet
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First appearance: Thor #132 (1966)

Things got pretty cosmically wacky post credits in Dark World didn’t it? With the Guardians of the Galaxy, the Nova Corps, the Kree, the Collector, and more Thanos on the way, Marvel Cosmic is about to hit, and hit hard. Things do not get more trippy and cosmic than a planet with a beard. It might seem silly, but track down Ego’s first appearance, as drawn by Kirby...it is not silly in the least. Ego is scary, an overwhelming cosmic force of pure evil that absorbs anything in its path. It would be tricky, but played right, the way Kirby envisioned him, Ego would bring a threat to Thor like no other. Thor versus a planet, because comics are awesome.

10. Ulik and the Trolls
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #137

Fans just got the Dark Elves, so why not take things in the other direction and go with the Trolls of Nornheim? So the Dark Elves were pretty cool, but they weren’t really much of a physical threat to Thor (‘cept Kurse...Kurse ruled), they were kind of just really aggressive ballet dancers in mime masks. The Trolls are brutish and merciless, and their greatest warrior, Ulik, is the worst of the bunch. For a time, Ulik even replaced Thor on Earth by disguising himself as the god Tanarus when Thor was believed dead. An earthly showdown between Thor and a disguised Ulik would be pretty cool, or just an all-out Troll assault on Asgard while Odin is, erm, otherwise occupied with his more cunning son.

9. Ymir
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #97 (1963)

The legend and history of the Frost Giants are deeply engrained in the cinematic Thor’s mythology. As Loki descendants, the presence of the Frost Giants are never far away and fans know Laufey and his people are just itching for revenge after the way the gods defeated them and Loki used them in the first Thor. Perhaps their Frost Giant god, Ymir, will want revenge for the slight his proud race suffered. Ymir is one of Kirby’s most grandiose creations, a walking, angry glacier fueled by hatred of the Asgardians. The final battle between Frost Giants and Asgard is just an epic waiting to be told, and Ymir could be Thor’s greatest challenge if this conflict comes to fruition.

8. Ares
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #129 (1966)

Where Pluto would provide the master villain for Thor if the Asgardians meet the Greek Pantheon, Ares would provide an archrival, a foil, and possibly a future Avenger if the God of War were to show up in a Thor film. Ares’ 2006 mini-series by Michael Avon Oeming was a critical darling and propelled Ares into a major character, eventually becoming a full-fledged Avenger; this journey could be mirrored in a film. Ares is a complex character with a son that is the center of his world; he is constantly torn by his duties to the gods and his duties as a father. Really, Ares’ story is so gripping it would make a fine movie of its own someday, but until then, the God of Thunder versus the God of War is just too awesome to resist. Ares could be the perfect adversary for Thor, a great anti-hero, and if Marvel is brave, a future film franchise.

7. Absorbing Man
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #114 (1965)

Another human ne’er-do-well gifted with magical abilities by Loki, ‘ol "Crusher" Creel here can be considered Thor’s greatest human adversary. Creel’s powers are visually stunning (just picture the film poster of a giant Creel absorbing a skyscraper, grown to a great height trying to crush Thor with his wrecking ball). Throw in Titania to take on Lady Sif and you have yourself a movie. Again, Loki will need minions on Earth to distract Thor, and what is a better distraction than a giant bald dude in prison pants made out of titanium? You may be thinking that Marvel already covered Absorbing Man in Ang Lee’s Hulk, but clearly you are wrong. It’s time for the real Absorbing Man to kick some Asgardian ass.

6. Surtur
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #97 (1963)

Surtur makes the Balrog look like a Menorah. Fans have seen many realms so far in the Thor films, but they have yet to see Muspelheim, land of the Fire Giants. Surtur is the eternal foe of Odin. Along with Ymir, Surtur is destined to be summoned to end all of reality in the days of Ragnarok. Could Surtur, along with Ymir, be Loki’s endgame, a freezing and burning punishment of Asgard? Or could Surtur arrive seeking vengeance against Odin while Odin…is, umm, busy, causing all sorts of headaches for Loki? The war between Odin and Surtur is the stuff of pure mythic awesomeness, and let’s face it; Anthony Hopkins smiting a giant fire god will never get old.

5. The Midgard Serpent
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Thor #127 (1966)

We already established with Fafnir how awesome it would be if Thor fought a dragon. Well, how about a dragon the size of the entire freakin’ planet? The Midgard Serpent is the monster that is destined to kill Thor and bring about Ragnarok. Now if the third installment of Thor isn’t entitled Thor: Ragnarok, Marvel needs a new marketing department, and if you have Ragnarok you need the Serpent. Smaug? Pshaw! The Midgard Serpent makes the gold hoarding pansy look like Puff. Marvel has not given fans a creature of scope and majesty like the bringer of Ragnarok...just try to envision a 3D Serpent, coiling around the Nine Realms as the galaxy burns.

4. Skurge the Executioner
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #103 (1964)

Just say the name. Skurge, the Executioner. It just rolls of the tongue like 600 pounds of murderous rage with a battle axe the size of a Buick. Skurge is a noble villain, a warrior devoted to the Enchantress and sworn enemy of Thor. He is, pound for pound, a match for any god and has a deep history in the Marvel Universe. Skurge loves Amora the Enchantress, who loves Thor, a situation that Loki is oh-so-keen to exploit. Skurge is an original member of the Masters of Evil, and wouldn’t a Joss Whedon Masters versus Avengers battle be just about the greatest thing ever? The introduction of Skurge could be the first step in getting the Masters together in time for Phase 3, but with or without the Masters, Skurge is a noble and tragic villain…with a giant axe. In his first appearance, Skurge exiled Jane Foster and forces Thor to surrender Mjolnir to get her back which just shows the he is a combination of brains, brawns, and cunning, a perfect antithesis to Thor…with a giant axe.

3. Amora the Enchantress
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #103 (1964)

One of the greatest romances in the Marvel Universe was Skurge and Amora. At first, Skurge seemed like a pawn for Amora to exploit, but in recent years it has been revealed that Amora had deep feelings for Skurge, the only man who ever was truly devoted to her. This star-crossed love would make any movie plot soar as Amora and Skurge’s doomed romance come into conflict with the beguiling of Loki in his bid to rule Asgard. The Enchantress is every bit as cunning as Loki and would be a perfect foil for him. The ready-made love triangle (rhombus, hexagon?) with Thor, Jane, Sif, and Amora’s sister, Lorelei is just too much melodrama to resist. Again, Amora was a founding member of the Masters of Evil and it is about time Marvel focus their energies on a worthy female adversary for their heroes.  It can be argued that she is the greatest villainess in the Marvel Universe and it is time the world came under Amora’s spell. And Loki himself, Tom Hiddleston, wants to see her in Thor 3...so what are they waiting for?

[related article: Loki's 10 Most Devious Moments]

2. Gorr, the God Butcher
Created by Jason Aaron and Esad Ribic
First Appearance: Thor, God of Thunder #2 (2013)

A villain has to be pretty damn evil to jump the list to number 2 when he was just introduced in 2013, and any fan of Jason Aaron and Esad Ribic’s Thor knows that Gor is just that vile. While many on this list are gods, Gorr is devoted to the destruction of all gods. Yes, he is an alien serial killer that preys on gods (take that Dexter). Long ago, Gorr’s family was killed as a result of a battle between the gods on Gorr’s world, after which, he devoted his life to punishing the beings that dare calls themselves divine. In Aaron’s tale, Thor must team with his brash, younger self and his older post-Ragnarok self in order to defeat Gorr, so get ready for a trifecta of Hemsworth...Three Thors versus one bloodthirsty god butcher, just cast Benedict Cumberbatch as Gor and roll camera for the greatest holy beat down in film history. This was the biggest Thor story that did not have the name Kirby or Simonson in the credits and is the standard to which all modern Thor stories will be held to.

1. Hela
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
First Appearance: Journey Into Mystery #102 (1964)

The Asgardian Goddess of Death and ruler of Hel, Hela would thematically and dramatically be the logical choice for Thor’s next film adversary. With Thanos coming up, the nature of death in the Marvel Universe will soon be explored, and by extension the nature of death to the gods. What if Jane died? What lengths would Thor go to get her back? Enter Hela and a film that can center on Thor’s epic quest through Hel to retrieve his lady love. Not dramatic enough for you? Then keep in mind that Hela is Loki’s daughter, which creates an intense layer of familial intrigue. Hela can lead to the introduction of the Valkyries and the realm of Valhalla. Could Hela have played a part in the resurrection of Phil Coulson? Her introduction leads to just too many possibilities not to make Hela the leading candidate for the next Thor villain.


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Rocky Horror Picture Show: The Movies And References Behind Science Fiction Double Feature

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FeatureTony Sokol11/15/2013 at 8:50AM

I love songs that reference movies, "Science Fiction Double Feature" from The Rocky Horror Picture Show names a lot of them.

I have watched, well, not exactly watched, but experienced The Rocky Horror Picture Show over 100 times. I’ve only watched it about 30 times. I saw it in the movies and on HBO about five times before I couldn’t take it anymore and troweled makeup on and ripped up some fishnet stockings and took to a stage myself. Figured I was a natch, had the same hair as Tim Curry and did his voice in a passable mimic, not that I'd need it. I performed in a Friday night cast 72 times from when I was 15 to when I was 17. I started as Dr. Frank N. Furter and when I was replaced by a woman in lingerie, as opposed to a guy in drag, I played Janet for a while. The original Janet wouldn’t kiss the woman playing Frank, whose name was Leslie. I had no problem. She looked better in the corset than I ever would. It wasn't just the movie. It was the music. I bartered rare bootlegs to get Tim Curry's single "Baby Love" and taught my band how to play "Birds of a Feather" and "Sloe Gin" after seeing him play the Bottom Line. Same night I saw Squeeze for the first time.

I still get a thrill from the opening song, “Science Fiction Double Feature,” not just because it’s probably the best song in the movie, one of the only non-rock and roll retro tunes, but also because I have seen every movie mentioned in the song. Some of them I watched because of the song. Most I’d already seen. Too bad the song only referenced science fiction films because Charles Grey, the neckless fuck of a narrator in Rocky Horror, was in the classic Hammer adaptation of Dennis Wheatley’s The Devil Rides Out.

“Science Fiction Double Feature” is bedded on a simple descending chord progression.

          Michael Rennie was ill the day the earth stood still, but he told us where we stand

The Day the Earth Stood Still

Fuck Keanu Reeves. The Day the Earth Stood still will always mean Klaatu for me. Klaatu means The Beatles, Ringo is seen exiting the space ship from the movie on his Goodnight Vienna album and there was a 70s band called Klaatu that was rumored to be The Beatles in disguise. No such luck. Klaatu comes from the phrase “Klaatu barada nikto” which means … whatever you want it to mean. The Day the Earth Stood Still came out in 1951 at the beginnings of the world’s collective nuclear nightmares. It was based on the short story "Farewell to the Master" by Harry Bates. The screenplay was by Edmund H. North. Directed by Robert Wise, The Day the Earth Stood Still starred Michael Rennie as the alien who finds humanity in humanity, only to have humans shoot him in the ass on his way back his planet to say how non-threatening we could become. Oops.

Michael Rennie

 

Michael Rennie was an English actor who started out as an extra on Alfred Hitchcock’s The Secret Agent in 1936. He was Sandman on the Batman series in the sixties. He came up through the York Repertory Theatre. He made The Day The Earth Stood Still under contract for20th Century Fox and went on to play Jean Valjean in the 1952 version of Les Miserables.

          And Flash Gordon was there in silver underwear

Flash Gordon

Flash Gordon was a science fiction film series put out by Universal Pictures starting in 1936. Channel 13 used to run the Flash Gordon series on Friday or Saturday nights. Flash Gordon was played by Larry “Buster” Crabbe, former Olympic swimmer. Buster Crabbe was a Tarzan before he went to space. Flash Gordon, Buster Crabbe went into space again as Buck Rogers. Jean Rogers, no relation to Buck, played Dale Arden. They were grabbed on an unexpected trip to space by Dr. Zarkov, played by Frank Shannon. Charles B. Middleton played Emperor Ming the Merciless, who ruled the planet Mongo. His daughter, Aura, was played by Priscilla Lawson. Richard Alexander played Prince Barin, who ruled Arboria, the planet of the trees. Every episode ended on a cliffhanger. Flash Gordon started out as a comic strip. Flash Gordon was remade in 1980 with stars Sam J. Jones in the title part, Melody Anderson as Dale, Chaim Topol as Dr. Zarkhov, Max von Sydow as Ming, Timothy Dalton as Prince Barin, Brian Blessed and Ornella Muti as Aura. Richard O’Brien made a cameo appearance.

          Claude Rains was the invisible man

The Invisible Man

Yeah, we didn’t see that coming. The Invisible Man was a Universal Pictures from 1933 based on the 1987 book by H. G. Wells. It was directed by James Whale, who directed Frankenstein and The Bride of Frankenstein. The invisible man was Dr. Jack Griffin who developed a formula that rendered himself invisible, but which was driving him slowly mad, running through fields singing “Here we go gathering nuts in May.”   science fiction novel The Invisible Man, published in 1897, as adapted by R. C. Sherriff, Philip Wylie and Preston Sturges, whose work was considered unsatisfactory and who was taken off the project. The film was directed by James Whale and stars Claude Rains, in his first American screen appearance, and Gloria Stuart. It is considered one of the great Universal Horror films of the 1930s, and spawned a number of sequels, plus many spinoffs using the idea of an "invisible man" that were largely unrelated to Wells' original story. In Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, the Invisible Man is played by Vincent Price.

Claude Rains

Claude Rains made his American movie debut in The Invisible Man, but he was also the father who had to kill The Wolfman, Lon Chaney Jr., with his silver wolf-topped cane. Claude Rains was also the poor corrupt cop, Inspector Renault in Casablanca. Claude Rains’ father was the English actor Frederick Rains. He started acting when he was 11. Rains taught at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. One of his students was Laurence Olivier. After The Invisible Man, Rains played in … everything. The Clairvoyant with Fay Wray; Now, Voyager from 1942; Mr. Skeffington in 1944; Lawrence of Arabia from 1962; The Greatest Story Ever Told, The Passionate Friends. Rains was nominated for an Oscar in Smith Goes to Washington. He was a Nazi in Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious and, like Michael Renny, played on Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Rains was Julius Caesar in the 1945 version of Caesar and Cleopatra.  Rains was Prince John in The Adventures of Robin Hood, Rains was the Phantom in the 1943 version of Phantom of the Opera. He was the devil in Angel on My Shoulder.

          Then something went wrong for Fay Wray and King Kong, they got caught in a celluloid jam

 

King Kong

King Kong is one of the greatest motion pictures ever made. It made Hitler cry. Hell, it made me cry and not because I wanted to be dressed like Ann Darrow. Made by RKO Pictures in 1933, King Kong was directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsac and starred Robert Armstrong as Carl Denham, a filmmaker who rips the great and sexy beast from what I always thought of as the Garden of Eden and ships him in chains to civilization, where he gets his big break in New York City. I still look for Kong whenever I see the Empire State Building in all its art deco glory. It wasn’t capitalism that killed the beast. It was…

Fay Wray

Fay Wray made her first movie when she was 16, Gasoline Love. She was also in Doctor X, but we’ll get into that later. She was first noticed in the 1928 film The Wedding March, directed by Erich von Stroheim. She played in The Most Dangerous Game in 1932 with Joel McCrea, The Bowery with George Raft and Mystery of the Wax Museum in 1933 before making King Kong. Fay Wray turned down a cameo appearance in the Peter Jackson remake of King Kong. When she died, in 2004, the lights on the Empire State Building were dimmed for fifteen minutes.

          Then at a deadly pace it came from outer space

It Came from Outer Space (1953)

It Came from Outer Space was the most memorable, the most startling, experience of people’s lives. From the blackness of a hundred million nights, from uncounted millions of light years away but mostly from thousands of dollars through Universal International Pictures, a motion picture that brought the first space invaders in 3D. They landed in Arizona and everyone thought they were a meteor. But no, people are disappearing and coming back like robots, which is only slightly out of place in Arizona. They have these machines that turn them into … really nice people, once you get to know them. Really. You can take these aliens to dinner. It was kind of the flip side to Invasion of the Body Snatchers.  It Came from Outer Space was directed by Jack Arnold. It starred Richard Carlson, Barbara Rush, and Charles Drake. Harry Essex penned the script with Jack Arnold based on a Ray Bradbury screen treatment.  

         And this is how the message ran.

          Science Fiction double feature.

          Dr. X will build a creature

Doctor X (1932)

This was the first Warner Brothers movie made in Technicolor. It was made before the code, so it was a little bit racier than a lot of movies. Doctor X was directed by Michael Curtiz who made Captain Blood with Errol Flynn, Yankee Doodle Dandy with James Cagney and Casablanca with Humphrey Bogart, among countless classic films. Bogart would be sentenced to play his only monster role, the vampire Dr. Xavier in The Return of Doctor X. It had nothing in common with this movie and Bogart snarled if you brought it up. Curtiz was an artist and brought that to this movie. The all-black-background scene with the electrodes and the mirrors is pure suspense. Doctor X was put out by First National Pictures and starred Lee Tracy and Lionel Atwill, a horror master as Dr. Xavier. It also starred Fay Wray, who screams beautifully as Doctor X’s daughter Joan, and John Wray. No, not related, but John Wray was one of the actors up for the part of Dracula that ultimately went to Bela Lugosi. Doctor X is part horror and part crime film. The crime is a murder and the murderer nibbled on the corpse. Heady stuff for 1931, but delicious fare for Rocky Horror. Dr. X didn’t build any creatures though

          Anne Francis stars in Forbidden Planet

Anne Francis

Palomino Blonde Anne Francis is probably best known as Honey West. She started as a model when she was four years old.  Most of Francis’ stuff from Funny Girl was left on the cutting room floor so she wouldn’t steal the movie from Barbara Streisand.

Forbidden Planet (1956)

Fans of Lost in Space owe a great debt to Forbidden Planet, if for nothing other than Robby the Robot. Before C3PO and R2D2 there was Robby the Robot. He didn’t go around yelling “Danger Danger” yet. Forbidden Planet came out of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It  was directed by Fred M. Wilcox and starredg Walter Pidgeon, Leslie Neilsen and, of course, Anne Francis. It was basically The Tempest, Willie Shakespeare’s box office smash, in space. Forbidden Planet won’t take place for another 200 years and it happens on the planet Altair IV in the Altair star system. Get out your telescopes, it’s the one in the corner. The star ship C-57D travels 16 light years to pick up on a lost crew from 16 years ago, they get there at the same time. Or they might as well have, the first crew got vaporized and Robby the Robot says if they don’t their asses out soon, so will the crew of the C-57D.

          I knew Leo G. Carroll was over a barrel when Tarantula took to the hills

 

Leo G Carroll

After fighting in World War I, Leo G. Carroll started performing when he was 16. He came to Broadway  in 1924 and played The Late George Apley. He had an uncredited part in Captains Courageous which won Spencer Tracy an Oscar. Carroll played Joseph in Wuthering Heights against Laurence Olivier. Alfred Hitchcock love Carroll and put him in six films including Spellbound and North by Northwest. On TV he played the ghost on Topper and Alexander Waverly on The Man From UNCLE.

 

Tarantula (1955)

Tarantula is about a realty big spider. Surprised? No, the surprise is that spidey’s taken out by SPOILER ALERT “Dirty Harry.” Clint Eastwood packs his magnum on top of a fighter jet. Tarantula is really about food. Professor Gerald Deemer wants to grow big food. Of course the first thing on the menu is what? Tarantula stew? What’s he thinking here? Start with a fucking carrot or something. Some celery. He’s growing huge rats and spiders. Where the fuck is this guy going to open his restaurant?

           And I really got hot when I saw Janette Scott fight a Triffid that spits poison and kills

Janette Scott

Jannette Scott started in movies when she was four in the 1942 film Went the Day Well, a mouthful if you ask me. She played Cassandra in Helen of Troy, Judith in The Devil's Disciple.  Scott moved to horror in Crack in the World and the William Castle 1963 remake of The Old Dark House. She also played in Bikini Paradise.

The Day of the Triffids (1962)

Vegetarians eat vegetables. Humanitarians, like Doctor X, eat humans. Triffids are vegetables that eat humans, vegetarian or not. Everyone on earth has gone blind because, while they knew enough not to look at the sun during an eclipse, no one bothered to tell them to look away from meteors. The whole world was watching a spectacular shower and they all went blind. And the plants? They walk. The Day of the Triffids was directed by Steve Sekely, and also starred Howard Keel.

           Dana Andrews said prunes gave him the runes, and passing them used lots of skills

Dana Andrews

Dana Andrews could have played Brad Major early in his career. Dana Andrews was an accountant with Gulf Oil and for some reason, I see accountants as wearing Brad Majors eyeglasses. Especially in today’s hipster world. If you take the goofy glasses off Brad Majors, you see Barry Bostwick’s almost-leading-man looks. I mean, this guy got started on Broadway in Grease with a bigger part than John Travolta’s. Dana Andrews started at California’s Pasadena Playhouse in 1935. He moved up through the ranks of Sam Goldwyn and 20th Century Fox studios filling supporting parts left by actors serving in World War II. Dana Andrews got the lead in the classic western hangin’ pic with Henry Fonda, William A Wellman’s The Ox-Bow Incident in 1943 and Otto Preminger’s Laura with Gene Tierney and Vincent Price (how did Vincent Price not get named in this song?) Andrews spoke out against encroaching obligatory sex in Hollywood when he SAG President. In 1957, Andrews starred in the satanic classic …

Curse of the Demon (1957)

I’m sucker for satanic cinema and Curse of the Demon is one of my favorites. Britain does the devil up right. From the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil” and “Dancing With Mr. D” to The Devil Rides Out (book or movie, both classics, Dennis Wheatly wrote the book, Hammer made the movie and it starred Charles Grey as the heroic hedonist to Christopher Lee’s nefarious nag), English artists had sovereign rule through their satanic majesty’s request. Curse of the Demon was based on M. R. James’ 1911 murder thriller Casting the Runes. The demon itself may look cheesy now, well, it looked cheesy then, the director, the renowned Jacques Tourneur, was against it. He wanted to leave it to the imagination, the producer wanted a monster, so they tagged one on in post-production. I kinda like it. It’s become iconic as far as horror images go.

          But when worlds collide, said George Pal to his bride, I'm gonna give you some terrible thrills

When Worlds Collide (1951)

When Worlds Collide should be re-examined today as a forerunner of apocalypse movies. It may not happen in our lifetime, maybe not even in a million years, but the earth is on a collision course and humanity goes apeshit. They don’t party like it’s Y2K. How could they with all those Lego buildings being washed away. My kids made the same volcano for their sixth grade science project that they use in this movie. I kid the director Rudolph Maté. When Worlds Collide won a special effects Oscar and the guy in the wheelchair is wearing the same blanket as Dr. Scott. Producer George Pal wanted to make a sequel called After Worlds Collide, but lost the Conquest of Space.

George Pal

George Pal started out as an unemployed architect. Hey, don’t we all? Joel McCrea was an unemployed architect in Dead End and George Costanza said he was an unemployed architect on Seinfeld. And then of course, there’s Gary Cooper in Fountainhead. Pal designed subtitles for silent movies and then got into stop-motion animation, leaving his native Hungary to produce puppet shorts in the Nethrelands. Pal went to America after making the short film Going to America. It was an anti-fascist film in a pro-fascist society and they chased him out with torches. Pal got Jimmy Durante to dance with a cartoon squirrel in The Great Rupert and announced he was headed for Destination Moon. Pal produced the science fiction classic War of the Worlds before making When Worlds Collide. He also made Houdini with Tony Curtis as the legendary magician; Tom Thumb, The Time Machine and Atlantis the Lost Continent.

George Pal's bride was Elisabeth "Zsoka" Grandjean, who he married in 1931, when he was 23.

          Science Fiction - Double Feature

          Dr. X will build a creature

          See androids fighting Brad and Janet

 

Brad and Janet

Brad is an asshole and Janet is a slut who walks like a chicken.

          Anne Francis stars in Forbidden Planet

          At the late night, double feature, picture show.

           I wanna go to the late night, double feature, picture show by RKO

RKO Double Features

I first learned about Rocky Horror Picture Show because I was a huge fan of Phantom of the Paradise (that link goes to Jim Knipfel's brilliant piece. Bastard got it in first). I was ten or eleven. I saw it a bunch of times in the movies. I bought the album. I learned some “The Hell of It” on guitar. I stole the lobby cards and the movie poster. It made me see every Brian De Palma picture, including the early ones with Robert De Niro. I was primed for Rocky Horror. It was at one point it was the B picture to Phantom of the Paradise.

          In the back row at the late night double feature picture show.

Back Row

The best place to sit no matter what you’re hiding. Everyone is looking the other way.

 

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Disqus - noscript

I'm a sucker for B-horror movies and have always enjoyed the Rocky Horror Picture Show (especially when trannies are trashing it from the back row). So, of course this article is great like a radio tower of cardboard.

50 Dedications at the End of Movies (and What They Mean)

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Odd ListSimon Brew11/15/2013 at 10:15AM

Lots of films are dedicated to, or in memory of someone. But it's not always clear why. We've been finding out...

Back when Breaking Bad returned for its final batch of episodes in August 2013, it had a dedication at the end of it. The card read 'Dedicated to our friend Kevin Cordasco'. As it turned out, Kevin Cordasco was a 16-year old who had been battling cancer for seven years, who had met both Bryan Cranston and Vince Gilligan. Cordasco died before he could ever get to see the episode dedicated to him. I found this such a moving story, that it got me wondering about the dedications that appear on films, and what the story behind them was. After all, the dedications are there for a reason. What I uncovered was some funny stories, mainly extremely sad ones, and some extremely moving dedications. These stories are presented with due respect to everyone concerned.

I've tried to stay clear of the more obvious ones (with one or two exceptions). But here are some of the people whose names will forever be associated with the movies they have dedicated to them.

THE ABYSS: SPECIAL EDITION

The special edition of James Cameron's ambitious 1989 film The Abyss is dedicated, via an on-screen card, to Captain Pierce Oliver Kidd Brewer Jr. He was a professional diver, who died in 1990 at the age of 41. He'd also worked with James Cameron on Piranha Part Two, many years earlier, and the two were friends. He reportedly took his own life.

ADAPTATION

Spike Jonze's brilliant film comes with the dedication of 'In Loving Memory Of Donald Kaufman'. Don't go looking him up, though. Kaufman is a fictional character in the film...

THE ARTIST

Oscar-winning picture The Artist is dedicated to the memory of Kamel Ech-Cheik, describing him as "one of the classiest men in the world". Ech-Cheik was a composer who had put together scores for films such as OSS 117 and Mes Amis. Ech-Cheik was a childhood friend of The Artist's director Michel Hazanavicius. He died in 2011,

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

Towards the end of the credits for Disney's Beauty And The Beast is the following dedication: "To our friend Howard, who gave a mermaid her voice and a beast his soul, we will be forever grateful. Howard Ashman 1950–1991".

This was a dedication to lyricist Howard Ashman, who also served as executive producer on Beauty And The Beast. Ashman was widely credited with being one of the major catalysts behind the Disney animation renaissance, thanks to his incredible work, alongside Alan Menken, bringing the musical side of The Little Mermaid and Beauty And The Beast to life. A notoriously hard man to work with, Ashman died of complications relating to his HIV positive diagnosis in 1991, and never got to see the absolute final cut of Beauty And The Beast, nor the critical outpouring that followed it.

BEFORE MIDNIGHT

The third and thus far final part of Richard Linklater's exquisite Before... trilogy has a special thanks hidden in its end credits to Amy Lehrhaupt. As it turns out, she was the inspiration for the first movie. She and Linklater met and spent a night in each other's company, thus providing the spark that would set Linklater on the path to 1995's Before Sunrise.

Sadly, this story doesn't have a happy ending. Unbeknownst to Linklater at the time, Lehraupt died before she had a chance to see the first film. Her relationship with Linklater had fizzled out after their first night together, and she died in 1994, in a motorcycle accident. She was just 24 years old. Linklater wouldn't find out she'd died for another 15 years or so. Slate reported the story in full, here

THE BLING RING

Sofia Coppola's 2013 drama was the final cinematic work of Harris Savides. Savides' career as a cinematographer included films such as ZodiacAmerican GangsterMilk and The Game. He died of brain cancer at the age of 55, and The Bling Ring is dedicated to him.

CARS

Pixar's 2005 movie Cars was dedicated to the memory of Joe Ranft. Ranft was a major creative force at Pixar, the co-director of Cars and writer on films such as The Lion KingToy StoryA Bug's Life and The Brave Little Toaster. He tragically died at the age of just 45, when his car veered off the road into the ocean. An incredible force in animation, he's sadly missed.

CLIFFHANGER

There are two dedications with Cliffhanger. One is for the mother of Mario Cassar, who funded the movie. The other is Wolfgang Gullich, who worked as Sylvester Stallone's stunt double on the movie. He was killed in an automobile accident unrelated to the movie, once production was over. A dedicated sports climber, he was just 31 when he died, failing to regain consciousness after his car accident, and dying two days after it.

THE CROW

As you might expect, Alex Proyas' 1994 movie The Crow bears a dedication to Brandon Lee, who died during the production of the movie, courtesy of an horrific accident. But the film also features a dedication to Eliza Hutton. She was Lee's fiancée at the time of his death, and they'd planned to marry in 1993. She subsequently left the movie industry after the release of The Crow, and lived a private, quiet life, undertaking a sizeable amount of volunteer and charity work.

THE DARK KNIGHT

There are two dedications in the credits of Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. The credit reads "In memory of our friends Heath Ledger & Conway Wickliffe". The reasons for the Heath Ledger dedication are well known, but Conway Wickliffe was killed during the filming of the movie. He was a special effects technician, who died while filming a car chase on the movie. He was 41.

DRAGONFLY

The Kevin Costner-headlined thriller from 2002 bears a dedicated to Katharine Curtiss. Curtiss was married to Alan Curtiss, who was the assistant producer and first assistant director on the film.

THE EXPENDABLES 2

Come the end credits of Simon West's Expendables sequel is a dedication to the memory of Kun Lui. Lui was working as a stuntman on the movie, and died in an on-set accident that injured another. He was working on the second unit of the film. He was 26 years old.

FLIGHT

Edward 'Ed' Limato died at the age of 73 in 2010, from complications resulting from pneumonia. Robert Zemeckis dedicated his 2012 movie Flight to him. Limato was a long-time talent agent and senior vice president at the William Morris Agency, with a client list featuring Denzel Washington, Steve Martin and Nicolas Cage. There is also a tribute to him in the 2010 movie Unstoppable.

GOLDENEYE

The Pierce Brosnan-headlined resurrection of the James Bond movie franchise has a line in its credits that reads 'To the memory of Derek Meddings'. Meddings died while the film was in post-production, at the age of 64. He was taken by cancer.

He'd had an incredible career, working as a special effects and miniatures designer on Thunderbirds, the first three Superman films, Cape FearKrullBatman and Live And Let DieGoldeneye was his last film.

HELP!

We don't make this up. The 1965 Beatles movie, Help!, sports a dedication to Elias Howe. Elias Howe was the inventor of the sewing machine, and he died in 1867 at the age of 48. His inclusion, as the story goes, came as a result of an on-set discussion that traced back the fashion of The Beatles, concluding that if the inventor of the sewing machine had never existed, they would never have anything to wear.

JOHN Q

The Denzel Washington headlined John Q has a dedication at the end that reds 'For Sasha'. Sasha is the daughter of the film's director, Nick Cassavetes, and she was born with a heart defect. She's healthy now, thankfully, but from reports, she was critically ill at one stage, and underwent more than her fair share of surgery. Cassavetes would go on to direct the movie take on My Sister's Keeper, partly as a result of his and Sasha's experiences.

LETHAL WEAPON

'This picture is dedicated to the memory of Dar Robinson', reads the credits of Lethal Weapon, adding that he was 'one of the motion picture industry's greatest stuntman'. He received similar credits on Cyclone and Million Dollar Mystery, making up his final three films. He was 39 when he died back in 1986, and it was while making Million Dollar Mystery when a stunt finally went wrong for him, leading to him riding his motorbike off the edge of a cliff. He was survived by his three children.

THE LION KING

Disney's biggest grossing hand drawn movie is dedicated to the memory of Frank Wells. Wells was the Disney President and Chief Operating Officer from 1984 through to his untimely death in 1994. He died at the age of 62 in a helicopter crash on his way back from a skiing trip.

His death had ramifications too, causing a power struggle at the heart of Disney between Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg, that ultimately resulted in the latter leaving, and co-founding DreamWorks with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen.

The Lion King arrived the summer after Wells' death, and a building at Walt Disney Studios now also bears his name.

LORD OF THE RINGS: RETURN OF THE KING

There aren't that many nice stories in this article, but this one feels particularly unfair. 17-year old Cameron Duncan was a filmmaker who came to the attention of Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh while making the Lord Of The Rings movies. His life was taken from him at such a young age by a variant of bone cancer. Fran Walsh would write the song Into The West, as used in Return Of The King, inspired by Duncan. You can find out more about him on the extended edition of the film on DVD.

MAD MAX BEYOND THUNDERDOME

"For Byron" reads the card at the end of the third Mad Max movie, released in 1985, and it's in reference to Byron Kennedy, the producer of the first two films, who was killed in a helicopter crash back in 1983. He was only 33 years old.

MULHOLLAND DRIVE

David Lynch dedicated his cinematic puzzle Mulholland Drive to Jennifer Syme. Syme worked for Lynch for a while, and took a small role in Lost Highway. She died at the age of 28 back in 2001, following a motoring accident which killed her instantly. She was driving from a party at Marilyn Manson's house, and he would go on to write the song Just A Car Crash Away about her in 2007.

MIRACLE

Disney's 2004 film Miracle, starring Kurt Russell, was dedicated to the memory of Herb Brooks. Brooks, a prominent US ice hockey play and coach, served as a consultant on the movie (not least because Russell was playing him), and died shortly after it was complete, at the age of 66. As the dedication read, "he never saw it, he lived it".

THE MUPPET CHRISTMAS CAROL

'In loving memory of Jim Henson and Richard Hunt' reads the card in The Muppet Christmas Carol. This was the first Muppet film following Henson's tragically early death in 1990, at the age of 45. Dedications to him appeared at the front of episodes of Sesame Street, Basil Hears A NoiseDinosaurs and The Cosby Show, too.

Richard Hunt was at the time of his death in 1992 a longtime Muppet performer, for characters such as Statler, Janice, Scooter, Beaker and Sweetums. He was one of only five performers to work on all five seasons of The Muppet Show. He died of complications from AIDS, at the age of 40.

PACIFIC RIM

Ray Harryhausen and Ishiro Honda are both given dedications at the end of Guillermo del Toro's Pacific Rim, a fitting tip of the hat to two of cinema's finest makers of monsters. Harryhausen died in 2013, having made an unrivalled contribution to visual effects. Put his work in Clash Of The Titans against the recent, loud remake if you want evidence of that.

If you're not familiar with the name of Ishiro Honda, meanwhile, he's the man who directed the original Godzilla movie back in 1954. Regarded in some quarters as the father of Godzilla, he died in Tokyo back in 1993. Both men left a tremendous legacy, and it seems fitting that del Toro pay tribute to it.

PARKER

The Jason Statham-Jennifer Lopez vehicle was dedicated to the memory of Donald E Westlake. Westlake, under the name Richard Stark, was the man who wrote the novel Flashfire, upon which the film was based. The same novel was also the basis for Payback and Point Blank. Westlake died in 2008, at the age of 75.

HE PEACEMAKER

DreamWorks' first movie, The Peacemaker is to the memory of Paul Leder. Leder died at 70, from lung cancer, and was a writer, producer, director and editor of movies. He was also the father of Mimi Leder, the director of The Peacemaker.

PRETTY IN PINK

Pretty In Pink is in memory of Alexa Kenin and Bruce Weintraub, both of whom were involved with the movie. Kenin had a small role in the film, and died in 1985 at the age of just 23, soon after Pretty In Pink was completed.

Bruce Weintraub, meanwhile, was 33 when he passed. He worked as set decorator on the film, having previously contributed to Blow OutScarfaceThe NaturalPrizzi's Honour and many more.

P.S. I LOVE YOU

The 2007 movie adaptation of Cecilia Ahern's P.S. I Love You is in memory of Windland Smith Rice. She was the sister of the film's producer, Molly Smith. She died in 2005, after building a strong career as a photographer, of a rare heart disorder. She was just 35 when she died.

RED HEAT

Walter Hill's 1988 union of Arnold Schwarzenegger and James Belushi is dedicated to Bennie E Dobbins, who was working as stunt co-ordinator on the film. He's previously worked on the Star Trek TV show, and his extensive film credits covered Dirty HarryThe Towering InfernoTRON and Commando. Dobbins suffered a fatal heart attack while Red Heat was shooting in Austria, back in February 1988. He was 56 at the time of his death.

RISE OF THE GUARDIANS

Before the end credits begin on Rise Of The Guardians, there's a dedication to Mary Katherine Joyce. She was the daughter of William Joyce, the man who wrote the book the film was based on, and its original co-director. Mary died of a brain tumour at the age of just 18 back in 2010, when Joyce took a step back from directing the film (handing it over to Peter Ramsey). The entire film is dedicated, movingly, to Mary.

THE ROCK

Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer produced big blockbuster hit after big blockbuster hit during their fruitful partnership. Top GunBeverly Hills CopFlashdance and Bad Boys were just some of their films together as producers. Simpson died young, though, of heart failure related to drug use (the book High Concept, by Charles Fleming, charts his life and his legacy).

Simpson was 52 when he died, in January 1996. Bruckheimer, fed up with Simpson's increasing drug use, reportedly ended their partnership the month before, with The Rock - released in summer 1996 - to be their last project together. Simpson never got to see it, and the film remains dedicated to him. The card reads 'this film is dedicated in loving memory to Don Simpson'.

SANCTUM

Wesley C Skiles died in July 2010 at the age of 52, whilst on a dive in Florida. A pioneer of cave diving, it was some of the incredible underwater photography of Skiles that would go on to inspire Sanctum, the 2011 movie overseen by James Cameron. Sanctum is dedicated to Skiles' memory.

SCARFACE

Brian De Palma's take on Scarface bears the a dedication to Howard Hawks and Ben Hecht. Hawks was the director of the original Scarface movie, and Hecht was its lead writer.

THE SEA WOLVES

Before his death at the hands of the IRA, Lord Louis Mountbatten was involved in preparatory work for 1980's The Sea Wolves. The final cut of the film is dedicated to him, reading 'This film is dedicated to the memory of the last Honorary Colonel of the Calcutta Light Horse - Admiral of the Fleet, The Earl Mountbatten of Burma, K.G. 1900 - 1979'.

The credits also pay tribute to Commander B.S. Davies, for his contribution to the mission that the film depicts.

SHALLOW HAL

The Farrelly Brothers' Shallow Hal includes a dedication to Charles Seabrook. In his mid-50s when he died, Seabrook worked in the electrical and camera department on the film, as he had done on the likes of Forrest GumpAce Ventura: When Nature Calls and Shadow Conspiracy. He died six months before the release of Shallow Hal.

THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION

There's a unfussy dedication to Allen Greene in the credits of the immortal The Shawshank Redemption. Greene was the agent of writer/director Frank Darabont, and a good friend of his too. Sadly, he died just before the film was finished, as a result of complications related to his AIDS diagnosis.

SPY GAME

Tony Scott's thriller, starring Robert Redford, is 'dedicated to the memory of Elizabeth Jean Scott'. As, incidentally, was Ridley Scott's Black Hawk Down. The connection being, as you might guess, is that she's their mother. She died in 2001.

STUCK ON YOU

The Farrelly Brothers dedicated their 2003 comedy, Stuck On You, to a frequent collaborator of theirs. It's in memory of Herb Flynn, who acted in films such as Shallow Hal and There's Something About Mary for the directors. Flynn died of cancer before Stuck On You was released, at the age of 85.

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES II: THE SECRET OF THE OOZE

In the opening credits of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II, there's a dedication to Jim Henson, and reportedly not one his family were best thrilled with. It was the last film that Henson worked on, but he was reported to be unhappy with the levels of violence in the first movie. Nonetheless, the film bears his dedication.

THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT MARY

The Farrelly Brothers dedicated There's Something About Mary to 17-year old Ryan Mone. The brothers were long-time friends of the Mones, and when Ryan died in a car accident, those chose to dedicate the movie to his memory. A class act.

THIS IS ENGLAND

Shane Meadow's superb 2006 drama gave young Thomas Turgoose an indelible breakthrough role. The final film is dedicated to Sharon, his mother, who died of cancer at the end of 2005. She got to see a short preview of the film before she passed, although never saw the final cut.

TOP GUN

The classic Tom Cruise/Tony Scott blockbuster is dedicated to the memory of Art Scholl. Scholl was a stunt pilot, who died at the age of 53, when his plane went into a flat spin while making the film, and plunged into the Pacific Ocean. The spin was intentional, and designed to get a specific shot for the film, but it became apparent quickly that things hadn't gone to plan.

You can find the Art School Aviation website here, and a memorial field has been named in his honour.

TRANSPORTER 2

The Jason Statham-starring sequel is dedicated to the memory of Michael Stone. Stone was director of photography on the film, and had also worked on the likes of Pearl Harbor, Terminator 3 and National TreasureTransporter 2 was his first director of photography job on the first unit. He died in a car accident in 2005, at the age of 56.

TURBO

Go through the end credits of DreamWorks' Turbo, and you'll get the line 'In memory of Nicholas Sanger Hoppe'. We had the chance to ask director David Soren about the line, and he told us "he passed away. He had cancer. We just wanted to honour him". A computer VFX artist and animator for two decades, Hoppe died a year after his diagnosis, in March 2013. He had worked on the Kung Fu Panda movies, TurboMegamind and more during his time at DreamWorks Animation.

UNFORGIVEN

A fairly obvious one, this. Clint Eastwood adds the words 'Dedicated to Sergio and Don' at the end. That's his nod and appreciation to Don Siegel and Sergio Leone, arguably the best directors he ever worked with. Siegel directed him in Dirty Harry, whilst Leone was the man behind the peerless Man With No Name trilogy.

UNSTOPPABLE

The late Tony Scott's final film, Unstoppable, was dedicated to the memory of Hollie Haines Knowlton. The dedication arises from the true story that inspired the film. The movie, about a runaway train, was based on an event that took place in 2001, and Denzel Washington portrayed Jesse Knowlton (albeit under a different name), one of the men who tried to bring said train to a stop. Hollie Haines Knowlton was Jesse's wife, and she died before the film was released. She shares a dedication in the film's credits with Ed Limato (for more details on him, see the entry for Flight).

THE WAY

Emilio Estevez's The Way, which he wrote and directed, was a personal piece of work, not least because his father was cast alongside him. The movie was released in 2010, and is dedicated to Francisco Estevez. He was Emilio's grandfather, and Martin's father.

THE WICKER MAN

The infamous 2006 remake of The Wicker Man bears the credit 'For Johnny Ramone'. It's not the most beguiling gift that Ramone would have benefitted from, but the late singer was the man who introduced Nicolas Cage to Robin Hardy's original The Wicker Man. Ramone died in 2004, and never got to see the remake.

WIMBLEDON

The Paul Bettany/Kirsten Dunst tennis-centric rom-com Wimbledon is dedicated to Mark McCormack.He was the founder of the Intenational Management Group (IMG), and as such managed names in the sports and movies arenas. The dedication was in recognition of what he contribution to the spots of golf and tennis. McCormack suffered a cardiac arrest in January 2003, and finally died from complications in May 2003. He was 72 years old.

xXx

Skydiver and stuntman Harry O'Connor had worked on films such as The Perfect Storm and Charlie's Angels, and his final film, xXx, is dedicated to him. He died in the midst of performing a stunt on the feature, with a Prague police officer saying that "he was being pulled at high speed on a paraglider and hit a pillar of the Palacky bridge. He died on the spot due to heavy injuries". O'Connor was 45 when he died, back in 2002, and the film's tribute describes him as a "beloved friend".

Also...

STEVE JOBS

The films John Carter and Brave are both dedicated to the late Apple boss. The Brave dedication, particularly poignant given that Jobs was one of the absolute pivotal figures in Pixar's life, reads: "To Steve Jobs, our partner, mentor, and friend".

And there are also some non-person specific dedications...

Oliver Stone's JFK is "dedicated to the young",

Star Trek Into Darkness is dedicated to post-September 11th war veterans. Star Trek IV is dedicated to the crew of the ill-fated Challenger space shuttle, whilst Star Trek VI was in memory of Gene Roddenberry.

The Great Escape is "For the Fifty".

The Towering Inferno, meanwhile, is dedicated to firefighters.

We will occasionally update this over time. Our thoughts are very much with those affected by the losses we've talked about.

Nebraska, Review

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ReviewMatthew Schuchman11/15/2013 at 2:49PM

Alexander Payne's ode to the Midwest takes more than a page from the Coen Brothers book, but Bruce Dern shines darkly.

Hollywood will always maintain kernel of backhanded love for America’s classic Mid-Western culture. While treating the landscape with beautiful black and white photography and its inhabitants with a bittersweet touch of kindness, Alexander Payne’s Nebraska (scripted by Bob Nelson) feels like it gets its kicks from poking fun at a specific image of a simpler life that leaves a very odd taste in one’s mouth.

Elderly alcoholic Woody Grant (the legendary Bruce Dern) refuses to listen to his detractors who say the letter he received claiming he won $1,000,000 is just a scam. Determined to collect his prize, Woody sets out to walk all the way from Billings, Montana to Lincoln, Nebraska. Though he’s stopped multiple times and promises to never try again, it seems Woody will only stop when he actually reaches Lincoln and gets his money. Hoping to put an end to this silliness, Woody’s son David (Saturday Night Live alum, Will Forte) agrees to drive the old man to Nebraska against the advice of his foul mouthed mother (June Squibb) and his local star brother (Bob Odenkirk).

Under the impression that the trip will actually be a great bonding experience for him and his father, David plans a stop off on their trip to Woody’s home town of Hawthorne, Nebraska. During their stay the town’s inhabitants, including Woody’s own family, show their true colors when Woody tells them all he is about to be a brand new millionaire. Letting the charade slip too far out of his hands, David struggles to keep his father’s well being in hand, while fighting off the hordes of mild mannered locals and their greedy ways.

To me, Alexander Payne has always been a film maker who produces dark comedies; a genre that nowadays have become better known as the drama-dy. Nebraska definitely comes of a lot more like a straight out comedy, with heart. The jokes are plentiful, blatantly placed, and at times laughably surreal. There’s certainly nothing unfunny about watching Stacy Keach singing, “In the Ghetto” on a karaoke stand at a local restaurant while the majority of the town’s population chows down on prime rib and baked potatoes, but it is a marginally separate line of comedy than one is used to in a Payne film. This is in no way a negative toward the film or the film maker, but it does act as a courier for what I consider to be the film’s downside.

Nebraska has a very Coen Brothers-esque sense about it. All of the absurd, face value comedy is surrounded by very silent, dry humor about humdrum mid-western life. Where the same style garnered disdain from some when the Coen’s Fargo came out, the character distinction in that film was built in as a praising comparison, a message about the sanctity of a normal life. Nebraska’s comedic stabs about a simple life feel more rude and distasteful. Granted, I personally know nothing about the mid-western life style, but I myself felt offended by the visage of life Nebraska portrays for its characters.  Still, it is not even the fact that I felt ashamed to even laugh at some of the situations presented in Nebraska that bother me most, but that the entire film feels like it was made by other people. Aside from the Coen Brothers style at times, there is a touch of Wes Anderson here and there. A director does not need to present the same film over and over, in actuality they shouldn’t. However, when someone like Alexander Payne breaks slightly away from his traditional style, mimicking that of others is a bad sign.

What will pull people to see Nebraska, though, is Bruce Dern. Younger audiences today may not be familiar with the fantastic lifer’s work beyond his role in The ‘Burbs, but for such a storied actor to take on a lead role of this kind is an automatic ticket seller. Dern is delightful and tender at times and fully sells his crippling deterioration through out the film, even if his current physical state is not that far off from his characters. In many ways, he should have been the only choice for the role as he perfectly exudes the image of man who you can’t help but fall in love with, even though he doesn’t show you enough to earn that love. All that being said, this is not an award-winning performance. The few times he has the chance to show off his subtler, gentler side are too short and too late in the game.

Counteractively, there will be many people who come to see Will Forte in a dramatic role. Yes, Nebraska is a comedy, but Will Forte is definitely the straight man of the piece. He convincingly pulls out the role with no issues, but also does nothing to solidify the performance as a career changing stroke of brilliance. Most audiences will react most of all to June Squibb’s portrayal of the carefree, curse happy wife of Woody, and mother to David. She’s crude, unapologetic, and plain out rude. Her role actually feels like a conduit for cheap and easy laughs, and while I might not agree with taking such an easy road to getting laughs, she will have people rolling on the floor; so, job well done, June.

Older audiences and film centric move goers will probably fall in love with the scenery and cinematography more than the characters. I am not sure if there is still a pocket of stubborn people out there who refuse to watch a movie because it is in black and white or made before 1985, but even those wayward souls have to admit to the pure gorgeous beauty of Nebraska’s sprawling landscapes and fertile plains. Yes, that is accomplished by the true state of the land itself, but you have to be properly schooled and talented to delivery that feeling to audiences thousands of miles away, via a camera and film.

Nebraska is a strange clump of brilliance and disdain. While my laughter was not as loud and uproarious as others, it was hard not to have a smile on my face for most of the film. Still, I felt uncomfortable at the same time and put off by too many other aspects of the finished product. Yet, much like Woody’s clearly fake winnings notice, everyone will see something different in what’s presented to them, and as long as you gain something worthwhile out of it, than even the flimsiest piece of paper, can be gold.

Den of Geek Rating: 3 Out of 5 Stars

 

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I can't wait to see this, mostly because of the writer. He started out on the same sketch comedy show as Bill Nye, and I always loved his work there.

Interview with Charlie Countryman's Evan Rachel Wood

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InterviewDavid Crow11/15/2013 at 3:03PM

We sit down with Evan Rachel Wood to discuss her new movie, Charlie Countryman, as well as her learning the cello, her North Carolinian roots, and family traditions.

Evan Rachel Wood continues to be one of the more interesting actresses of her generation. Despite being in the movie business since she was nine-years-old, she has always skewed away from conventional studio fare, choosing instead more ambitious projects. This of course includes her star-making role as a teenager in Thirteen (2003), but she has also appeared as often the best part of a number of indies, including Pretty Persuasion, Down in the Valley, Running with Scissors and Across the Universe.
 
More recently, she has branched into movies like The Wrestler and The Ides of March (rumors also have it that she will appear in a spin-off of 10 Things I Hate About You), but she can still reliably be found looking for her own off-kilter choices, such as when she played a Vampire Queen for several seasons on HBO’s True Blood and collaborated again with the premium cable giant for her Emmy and Golden Globe nominated performance in Mildred Pierce.
 
In her latest film, Charlie Countryman, Wood once again changes her appearance for a totally unique character, separate from her previous roles: A Romanian cello player with a Pixie haircut and a taste for gangsters (Mads Mikkelsen), as well as sensitive souls (Shia LaBeouf). To promote the film, she was gracious enough to sit down with us only four months after giving birth to her first child (a son with husband Jamie Bell). I was grateful for the kindness, and our conversation spans from the more colorful rumors about LaBeouf’s “method” on set to how she prepared for this movie. But what I was most interested in was asking about her earliest roots in acting with father and North Carolina stage star Ira David Wood, as well as the continuation of that family tradition.
 
Could you describe working with Shia LaBeouf?
 
Evan Rachel Wood: You know, everyone asks, “Oh, what was it like working with Shia?” But I had a great experience working with him! He was insanely dedicated and took what he did so seriously. He was willing to go as far as was needed to go to give a great performance, so I admired him for that.
 
How did you perfect your Romanian accent for this film?
 
I worked on it with a dialect coach for about three months, but before I was even cast in the film, I had to show them some kind of Romanian accent before they would cast me. So, I worked on it for a while.
 
[Did you study with a classical cello musician?]
 
I had a great girl teach me cello once I got to Romania, and it was much harder than I thought it was going to be. Unfortunately, [Laughs] some things got lost in translation while I was having my lessons or when I was given a song to learn. I showed up for the big scene where her father’s just died, and she’s crying, and she’s playing with the orchestra, and I got there on the set one day, and I started playing, and the rest of the band was playing a different song [Laughs]. I had learned the completely wrong theme for the scene, and it was like the last day, and there was no time. We had to do it. And the director looked at me so apologetically and said, “Can you just look out of the corner of your eye at the person next to you and just mimic what they’re doing.” And I’m like, “Are you serious?! This is one of the most important scenes! Really? Okay.” [Laughs]. And somehow it worked. I don’t know how we managed to do that, but we pulled it off.


 
You play such a strong character in this, did you have any preparation with [director Fredrik Bond] prior to filming?
 
Yeah, we talked a lot. But I think the best thing, and I think Shia and Fredrik would agree, was just spending time in Bucharest, and just immersing yourself in the city, getting to know the women there and the people there. It gives you a lot of insight. So, I had a lot to draw from just around me all the time.
 
It must be very different to film there.
 
Yeah, it is. It is. But they were really great to us and our Romanian crew was amazing. Their work ethic is insane. It is a place that has been through a lot. Their history is violent, and I think it’s one of the lines in the movie actually: It’s made them stronger. It’s really given them a lot of character, and the people are really amazing there.
 
Speaking of playing a strong character, I got the sense throughout the movie, at least at first, Gabi might have been using Charlie a little bit. Do you think she was manipulating him early on and when do you think that changed for her?
 
I don’t think she was manipulating him. I think he caught her at a very vulnerable moment, which is why I think she lets him in. Because I think otherwise, she’s too guarded and there’s no way it would have happened. But we were conscious of keeping the audience guessing of what her motivations were. You never really know what side she was supposed to be on. That was on purpose.
 
Her husband is obviously such a different personality from Charlie. What do you think she found interesting in Charlie or how did she compare them in her head?
 
I think for me, I think this is the first time that a man has come along and really showed her tenderness. She’s very hard because she’s had to be. She’s kind of been used and abused a bit, and I just think this guy sees a part of himself in her in that moment, and he doesn’t want anything from her. He just kind of wants to take care of her, and I think that’s news to her. [Laughs].
 
You talked about spending time in Bucharest. So, did you spend a significant amount of time there before filming?
 
No, but it was so helpful to have. I was happy to have that around all the time, especially because usually when you have a dialect coach, they usually stay with you throughout the whole movie and they monitor what you’re doing, but we didn’t have the money for that. So, thank God we actually were in Romania, and it was in my ear constantly.
 
You said you had to audition or show that you could do the accent before. Had you spent much time in Romania before this role?
 
No, no, never been. I just have a great dialect coach [Laughs]. He really helped me.
 
What was your relationship with [director] Fredrik Bond on this film?
 
Fredrik is amazing because he’s so much more than what’s on the page. And I think that is why we all really wanted to work with him, because visually he’s pushing boundaries and trying new things, and he wanted to make the movie kind of wild…But this was also his first time working with actors and working with actors who all had very strong personalities and very strong opinions on what things should be and how things should go. So, I think it was kind of fun for all of us to slightly be in new territory with people. He was a first time director, and the movie was kind of crazy. It was kind of new territory for all of us. So, I think we were all being tested and pushed in a good way.
 
[Given the rumor that Shia LaBeouf dropped acid for one scene] did you go as far as he did in terms of this film?
 
Well, my role didn’t call for it, luckily [Laughs]. But yeah, I wasn’t even there that day. I didn’t even know it was happening. I heard about it afterwards. If he did do that, I think it’s just because he’s a perfectionist. He wasn’t just doing it to “Wooo!” have a good time. I think he was just so nervous and wanted the scene to be as real as possible—and that’s Shia! [Laughs]. He’s dedicated. He’s dedicated.
 
There was so much violence in this movie. Did anyone get hurt?
 
Well, no. Well, yes and no. Again [Laughs], Shia is very method, and a few times I think he really wanted to be kicked or hit. I think he cracked his head open on the camera actually once while filming one of those scenes. And we’re all looking at him going, “Shia, you have to go get stitches.” And he’s like, “No, no. We’re fine. We’re fine. Just keep going.” Because Shia is so tough, I don’t think he wanted stitches.
 
Can you talk about working with Mads Mikkelsen?
 
I adore him, and I think he was so perfect for this role, because it called for someone who was very intimidating and who when they walked in the room, you knew that was a force to be reckoned with and that was the villain. But there also has to be something kind of charming and likeable about him. You have to know why [Gabi] was in love with him. There was something about him that was very alluring. Literally, every woman on this set was madly in love with him. No pun intended, but they were. [Laughs].
 
What are some of your upcoming projects?
 
Next year, the thing I’m most excited about is this movie I just signed on to do with Ellen Page called Into the Forest. It’s based on a really wonderful book, which Ellen found and she’s producing the project. Yeah, we just kind of started collaborating on that, gearing up for filming.
 
And 10 Things I Hate About You?
 
That’s still kind of up in the air.
 
Were you a fan of the original?
 
I was a fan of the original. Yes, definitely. I thought it was great casting. I loved that the main female protagonist wasn’t always likeable and was kind of a badass. I think that’s why a lot of people loved that movie.


 
This is kind of a non sequitur here, but I grew up in Raleigh—
 
Oh my gosh!
 
So, I also grew up with seeing your father play Scrooge—
 
Noooo!
 
Yes.
 
He’s going to love that.
 
So, I saw it several times when I was kid—did you ever perform in that?
 
Yeah! Yeah, for years. My whole childhood I was in that. You may have seen me in the play.
 
That’s what I was wondering.
 
That’s crazy!
 
One of Cratchit’s daughters?
 
Or I was the Ghost of Christmas Past for about three years.
 
It’s a family tradition.
 
It is a family tradition. He’s been doing it for over 30 years. It’s like the most successful show in North Carolina.
 
[Could you see your son doing something like that one day]?
 
If he wants to [Laughs]. I’m not going to push anything. If he shows interest, then sure, yeah.
 
Maybe he can be in A Christmas Carol.
 
He’ll be Tiny Tim or something [Laughs].
 
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Jaimie Alexander Talks Wonder Woman Casting Rumors

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NewsDavid Crow11/15/2013 at 4:15PM

While talking Thor with Jay Leno, Jaimie Alexander finds herself asked about Wonder Woman to which her answer might interest you...

Following a number of reports and rumors that Jaimie Alexander is possibly being considered for the role of Wonder Woman in the upcoming Batman vs. Superman movie, anything the actress says about the character will be severely scrutinized…and for good reason.
 
Just two weeks ago, she admitted to having talked with Warner Brothers about the film and knowing the general plot of the 2015 world’s finest of team ups. Then, it broke that Alexander is on a short list, which also includes Olga Kurylenko, of actresses set to audition for a part in the movie. A wondrous part.
 
So, when pressed on the issue, by Mr. Softball Jay Leno of all people, Alexander had the chance to quell the rumors once and for all. Assuming of course that they are rumors. Instead she said:
 
“It would definitely be a cool job….I was a huge fan growing up. Not just of the show, but the comic books too.”
 
 
This is hardly the answer of someone who isn’t in discussions for a part. In fact, one can easily imagine a PR scenario where such a non-answer bit of praise for the character and her literary roots are an easy non-committal answer.
 
Of course, it is all speculation right now. Yet, for an actress who has often been cast as Wonder Woman by fans countless times to have now been in talks with Warner Bros. about their potentially billion-dollar 2015 tent pole is quite curious. To say the least. As is her warm words about the tiara-heroine.
 
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