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Hercules: The Legend Begins Moved to January

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NewsDavid Crow11/15/2013 at 4:38PM

Hercules: The Legend Begins moves away from RoboCop and instead picks an early January spot for the New Year.

Fans who were worried that they’d be forced to choose between RoboCop and Hercules can rest easy now. Summit Entertainment has moved Hercules: The Legend Begins to January 10, allowing fans to no longer have to choose between their favorite potential reboot.
 
 
Hercules: The Legend Begins is directed by Renny Harlin (Exorcist: The Beginning, Die Hard 2) and stars Kellan Lutz as the legendary demigod of Greek mythology. In this version, the son of Zeus is betrayed by his king and sold into slavery, from which he must wage battle for the freedom to return to the woman he loves, Princess Hebe of Crete (Gaia Weiss). And if that doesn’t sound enough like Starz’s take on Spartacus to you, keep in mind that they have cast the network’s second Spartacus, Liam McIntyre in the film! Action geek icon Scott Adkins is also in attendance for the Greko throwdowns.
 
Hercules: The Legend Begins truly begins on January 10, 2014.
 
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The First 47 Ronin Clip is Here

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NewsDavid Crow11/15/2013 at 5:00PM

Check out Keanu Reeves in the new 47 Ronin clip, which features a bewitching new enemy.

Check out the first clip to 47 Ronin, the new kung-fu adaptation starring Keanu Reeves. In this clip, a black widow of a seductress shows Keanu that love can come with a bite. Over 20 years after Dracula Keanu, and this is still happening to you?
 
Directed by Carl Rinsch, 47 Ronin chronicles the story of Kai (Reeves), a half-breed samurai once rejected by this sacred community, as he is forced now into leading a group of 47 homeless Ronin warriors after an evil warlord kills their master and banishes them from their land. Together, they shall combat witches, monsters and mythical wonders both inspiring and terrifying.
 
47 Ronin also stars Iroyuki Sanada, Ko Shibasaki and Tadanobu Asano. The picture opens on December 25 in the U.S.
 
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X-Men's Famke Janssen Cast For Kickback

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NewsRobert Bernstein11/16/2013 at 1:06PM

X-Men's Famke Janssen has been cast for 'Kickback'...

X-Men's Famke Janssen has been cast to join John Cusack and Sean Astin in the crime thriller Kickback. 

Janssen is best known for her role as Jean Grey in X-Men, X2, and X-Men: The Last Stand, but is also coming off a role in Hemlock Grove.

Kickback will sport an ensemble cast that also includes Mischa Barton, Michael Beihn, John Hannah, Rutger Hauer, Stelio Savante, Tom Sizemore and Sean Young.

The film is written and directed by Raza Mallal, and follows a renegade Moscow detective whom is investigating the murder of a female war journalist.

Kickback will begin shooting in March.

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Batman vs Superman: Adam Driver Circling Dick Grayson as Nightwing **Updated**

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NewsRobert Bernstein11/16/2013 at 9:09PM

'Girls' star Adam Driver's name has been mentioned in connection with the Dick Grayson as Nightwing role. UPDATED with new information.

Dick Grayson aka Nightwing (formerly Robin) will probably be appearing in Batman vs. Superman, and Girls star Adam Driver has emerged as the frontrunner for the role. According to TheWrap, two unnamed sources told the media outlet that Nightwing will play a role in Zack Snyder's film, and the 29 year old Adam Driver might just be the guy to step into Dick Grayson's tights. Driver has a recurring role in Girls, but has also appeared in Inside Llewyn Davis and Lincoln, to name a couple of major films.

UPDATED 11/16/13In an interview with Collider, Adam Driver flatly denied any involvement with the role or the project, but he described the buzz connecting his name to Batman vs. Superman as "intensely flattering."

More on Batman vs. Superman as news comes to light, but for now, check out our Everything We Know About Batman vs Superman.

What are your thoughts on Adam Driver as Dick Grayson?

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Disqus - noscript

I still hope this isnt true. Or hes in one scene, as a flashback of Bruce.
IFFFFFFFFFF it is true....

They could not have picked a goofier looking SOB to play him holy fuck.

No Robin, please.

After they cast Ben Affleck they just kinda said F**K IT!

really?

giant earls....

A mask could only improve his looks.

they should get mark whalberg to play robin

No they should get Matt Damon to play him. Would be funny as hell.

they should get carlos mencia to play the joker, hes so funny.

and jeff dunham to play scarface

What if this whole production was a giant hoax? Like they string people along and then say, "Syke! We were just messin' with ya! Like anyone in their right mind would plan a movie that sounds as ridiculous as 'Batman Vs. Superman', and cast that goofy looking dude form 'Girls' as Nightwing."

Might as well get Chris O' Donnell to play Robin while they're at it. Certainly couldn't make things worse than casting horseface as Nightwing.

This move is looking worse each time I hear something new about it.

hahahaha priceless

They should choose ben stiller as nightwing

Interview with Fredrik Bond, Director of Charlie Countryman

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InterviewDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 8:17AM

We sit down with Fredrik Bond to discuss working on his first feature, whether Shia LaBeouf really dropped acid for a scene, how Rupert Grint about playing with his Harry Potter image, and how close he came to directing Youth in Revolt.

Fredrik Bond has just made his dream project. After years of working in Hollywood on a series of shorts and other ventures, the first-time Swedish director has produced his throwback to 1990s-styled neo noir post-modern slickness, Charlie Countryman.
 
 
The is the story of a boy (Shia LaBeouf) who flees to Romanian Bucharest to escape the death of his mother and then falls in love with a beautiful local cellist (Evan Rachel Wood) who also happens to be the wife of a notorious gangster (Mads Mikkelsen). Charlie Countryman is a madcap adventure of youth, romance, violence, and all the tumultuous emotions in between. It also includes in its cast Melissa Leo and Harry Potter’s Rupert Grint. In our interview, Bond and I discuss how this movie came to be, how he almost directed Youth in Revolt and just how “in the zone” Shia LaBeouf was for the scene where the actor is rumored to have method-ly used actual acid for simulating a cinematic trip.
 
So, why Bucharest?

Fredrik Bond: I came to Bucharest in the middle of winter two years ago, and I just saw a beautiful city that hadn’t been explored in cinema that much. I needed a place that didn’t feel like people had a relationship to. I wanted to find an exotic place. I wanted to find the wild east, which hadn’t been seen on cinema before.
 
So, the script was originally written for Budapest, but it was written with a Budapest that was sort of early ‘90s, based on [screenwriter] Matt Drake’s own travel to Budapest in the early ‘90s. So when I came to Budapest, I didn’t see the same city that the script sort of required and that the story required. So, I just came to Bucharest and I was blown away. I loved the city.
 
So, I know that it said Budapest, and that was a great line that came up again and again in the movie. Did you know when you read the script you wanted Bucharest or—
 
No, I explored both big cities really. I just felt like the quality of the city was so much more intriguing for this movie. I love Budapest too. Budapest is an amazing city, but I felt for this story, I needed something that was more ravaged and a little more patterned.
 
Could you talk a little about the process of casting Shia LaBeouf? Because I know at certain points that it wasn’t clear if he’d be in the movie or not.
 
Yeah, exactly. He actually had read the script really early on like I did and wanted to do it and was attached to play the lead, but had to jump off because of scheduling reasons. Then I came onboard and I was trying to make it with another actor, and we couldn’t get it going for a bunch of different reasons. By the end of that, Shia called me up and said, “I can’t stop thinking about this script that I want to do. So, would you like to meet me? I would love to see if we could do this together.”
 
Once you did cast him, it’s been publicized that in the scene where his character drops acid, Shia was very method in that scene. So, whose idea was that exactly?
 
You know, in the crazy process, whose idea becomes a muddle box of ideas. I don’t know who picks up the little piece of paper where it says whatever it says on there [Laughs]. But the drug scene is something me and Shia talked a lot about. We looked at other movies, we looked at “how do we make a scene that doesn’t feel like a fake drug scene.” For six months, this was an ongoing conversation and researching and talking, and like the way we work, sometimes we talked A LOT, like an hour or two hours before doing a certain scene. Other days, I could just see Shia was in the zone. And then you don’t want to mess. You see that he has his moments, and you just want to start shooting. And this was one of the days. I came to set first thing and I saw Shia was sitting by himself in the corner in the zone [Laughs].
 
You knew he was in the zone, but did you know that he would be in THAT zone when you came to set that day?
 
I didn’t know. Everyday was somewhat of a surprise, because he goes really to an extent and a length to get there with his character, which is very challenging for a director, but also a gift. You have an actor who throws himself completely into pouring his gut out. And I think that was beautiful to see. I trusted that he would prepare correctly and do his uttermost for the scene, which he did. Yeah.
 
This is a question I like to ask first-time feature filmmakers. You obviously were looking a while for what your first feature would be. What attracted you to this material? What drew you to want this to be the one to commit all your effort to?
 
I think it was a movie that really fit my temperament. I always really loved movies that throw themselves between the humor and darkness, and exhilarating moments, and love to be honest with you. So, movies like After Hours, Trainspotting, True Romance have always been movies I’ve loved. And there’s very few of those projects around [Laughs], of those scripts around. I wanted to make a movie like that as my first film. I was trying to write, but it never became something I was ready to go out with financiers with. At one point, I was set to direct Youth in Revolt with Michael Cera. That also has—it may be a bit more innocent, you know?—but it also has a sort of wildness tone to it. That was getting close, and then I found this, and I just loved this script. So, I said this is the one I really wanted to do.
 
 
Just out of curiosity, how far did you get into Youth in Revolt?
 
We were really on the finishing line with Michael Cera about to come on, and I had met him. Stuff like that. But I think I wanted to make slightly the Charlie Countryman version of that movie if that makes sense. So, I think it was better that I didn’t do it, because I think Miguel Arteta did an amazing job on it.
 
One thing I really appreciated is that it’s left somewhat ambiguous if Charlie is really communing with the dead. For you personally, if you don’t mind saying, do you think Charlie was actually speaking with the dead in this story?
 
I think that he does speak—he can communicate with things that aren’t necessarily the Undead, but I think he’s just a very sensitive, reactive character. I think he can pick up things from a lot of different people who are alive too in the room. I think he has a sensibility, and he can read things. He sees something in Gabi that a lot of people don’t see. She’s a very hardened character. But he sort of the one who pursues her, and sees something, and goes for it. That goes the same way with [the dead]. He picks things up.
 
But what does Gabi see in Charlie? I got the sense that up until a certain point in the story, she might have been using Charlie.
 
Yeah, absolutely. I think for a long time, she’s using Charlie, because she’s naturally prone to darker, more masculine characters. She finds those kind of guys more appealing to her. But in the end, she gets so intrigued by how much he goes through to get her. He seems like a softy, and sort of a much more vulnerable, not a typical guy for her. But going through this journey, she realizes what an incredible power he has, and how forceful he is. But yeah for me, I don’t think they stay together for the rest of their lives. I think this is a moment in life, and then they move on.
 
Charlie is very sensitive. How did you work that out in casting Mads [Mikkelsen] into the role of Gabi’s husband and Charlie’s rival?
 
Me and Shia talked a lot about that. Who would scare the shit out of Shia? Ands Mads was both on my list and Shia’s list from the very beginning. Shia said, “That’s the guy I’m totally terrified of.” [Laughs] So we approached him, and Mads had actually read the script a few years back and remembered loving it, so he jumped onboard with us.

 
He’s a terrific actor, and you get Evan Rachel Wood and Melissa Leo, and this is your first feature, how did it feel getting all this amazing acting talent onboard for these supporting roles?
 
It was incredible. They were so supportive, and they really gave me amazing advice and supported me through the whole way. It was a treat. It was an incredible treat. Totally professional people that gave everything. It’s a small movie, so everybody goes in loving the project, and for me that was a gift.
 
One casting that I thought was interesting was when you cast Rupert [Grint] as this spirited youth. In the movie, he’s dropping acid and walking around with all these naked women. Was he excited or a little nervous given his public image about doing a role like this?
 
I think he was a little bit nervous. He’s had an amazing life with the Harry Potter franchise, and I think he wants to throw himself out of his comfort zone, and wanting to take on the more challenging parts and roles. This was something that he really felt inspired to be doing.
 
A funny thing is in the original script, his character was German. So for the longest time, I remember us meeting in my office in London and us sitting for a few days with doing him as a German—a German aspiring porn star. But what happened was I think because people do have a relationship with him, it was a little too much of a stretch. He did it amazingly, and we were like “this is incredible.” But it just felt like being a little closer to his origin being from Britain made a little more sense. Plus, I felt in a lot of these hostel movies, there’s always a German for some reason.
 
I think you’re right.
 
It just feels somewhat familiar. So in the end, we felt like it feels very nice that they’re both British.
 
So you changed his nationality in the process. What is your process directing actors? Because the cast you have all have such different approaches. How do you as a filmmaker like working with actors, working with your casts?
 
I think my method is to see how each actor works in his best ability. I think I’m pretty good at adapting—I see myself as some sort of conductor that has all these amazing instruments, but every instrument is played differently with different slight tempos and works at its best ability slightly differently. So Shia has his way; Shia has a sort of method-y way. Evan is much more technical; she wants preciseness. “Do you want it louder or thinner or do you want it fatter?” So, she crafted very technically. Mads is more of a sort of “we can try this or what about this?” It’s a much more fluid process. That’s what I’ve always loved about the process. You have these incredible artists in their own right. For me, creatively, that’s really fun. That’s really fun to work with the actors in slightly different ways and then try to make them work together.
 
With your first feature out the way, do you know what you want to work on next?
 
Yeah, like this was a labor of love, so I took my time to feel the script out. I don’t mind doing that process again. I think it’s important to choose the right project. So, I have one bigger project, kind of more of a studio project. And I have another smaller movie, on a Caribbean island, which I really love. So, we’ll see. Might be either one of those or a completely different one. You really got to love the material and work 24/7.

Well, thank you very much for doing this today.
 
Thank you so much, thanks for coming.
 
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August: Osage County Review

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ReviewDon Kaye11/18/2013 at 8:21AM

Tracy Letts’ Pulitzer Prize-winning play comes to the screen as little more than a semi-campy showcase for some serious scenery chewing.

August: Osage County practically screams “prestige picture” (and that’s just the beginning of the screaming, trust me). Based on a Tony-and-Pulitzer-winning play by the red-hot Tracy Letts (who also authored the plays on which Killer Joe and Bug were based), it stars Julia Roberts, Meryl Streep, Chris Cooper, Sam Shepard, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ewan McGregor, Juliette Lewis and more in a story that seems on the surface at least to be almost straight out of Tennessee Williams. But as directed by John Wells (The Company Men) from Letts’ own screenplay, it ends up being Williams by way of The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
 
When a sudden tragedy reunites the three Weston sisters at their Oklahoma family home, the women find themselves confronting their own pasts – and possibly their futures - in the form of their monstrous, drug-addled mother Violet (Streep).  Barbara (Roberts) and Karen (Lewis) have both moved away; Barbara is married, but separated from college professor Bill (McGregor) with whom she has a 14-year-old daughter named Jean (Abigail Breslin). Karen is the youngest of the sisters and the wild child, having gone through a succession of men only to land with sleazy Steve Heidebrecht (Dermot Mulroney). And middle sister Ivy (Julianne Nicholson) has stayed in Osage County to care for Violet and their father, Beverly (Shepard), whose disappearance triggers the unexpected family reunion.
 
Also present are Violet’s sister Mattie Fae (Margo Martindale), her kindly husband Charles (Cooper) and their clumsy, weak-willed son “Little” Charles (Cumberbatch), there to provide support and comfort to Violet as Beverly’s fate becomes clear. But Violet is long past mourning for her alcoholic husband. Suffering herself from mouth cancer, she is pumped full of all kinds of painkillers and narcotics yet still possessed of a wicked tongue and – in her more lucid moments – a shrewd knowledge of the family’s secrets and an ability to manipulate them for her own ends.

 
I have not seen the play, but understand that this is an extremely faithful adaptation. Frankly, that shows. August: Osage County (which I saw at this week’s AFI Fest 2013) is mostly housebound (in the dark, drab Weston residence) and much of its dialogue stylized and arch. Every character gets at least one showstopping speech that’s guaranteed to bring applause in a theater setting but doesn’t sound natural translated to film. Despite the intimacy of the setting, director Wells has his actors playing to the cheap seats at the very top of the house. There are several all-out screaming matches in the movie- including a knockdown catfight starring Streep and Roberts – and most of the time the actors, especially the leads, chomp down on the scenery with much gusto and unintentional hilarity that could make this erstwhile tragedy into a camp classic.
 
The result is a lot of sound and fury that really does signify nothing. We don’t like many of these people at all (Cooper’s compassionate – if somewhat dim -- Charlie excepted) and don’t care why they hate each other so much. We’ve seen this kind of dysfunctional family many times before on screen and on the stage. All August: Osage County adds to that canon is an escalated rate of yelling and plate-smashing. There are also individual moments and character reveals that simply don’t make sense, such as Charlie’s long, bumbling saying of grace (which seems to come from another film entirely) and Ivy’s bizarre love for Cumberbatch’s “Little” Charles, who is so emasculated that Ewan McGregor’s bland professor looks like George Clooney by comparison.
 
Streep has the best and most hilarious lines and remains watchable even if she’s ramping up the histrionics, but unfortunately Roberts’ face is permanently fixed in a sneer and her line readings are either flat or roared like King Kong. The prize for best and most controlled acting probably goes to Cooper, whose Charlie at first seems as passive as the other men but eventually shows some backbone and spirit, and Martindale as his wife, who perhaps gives the most naturalistic performance and also hints at a more complicated inner life. As noted, McGregor is understated to the point of vanishing into the furniture, a fatal flaw in a movie where everyone else is shouting at the top of their lungs.

 
Even the “shocking” twist (which one may or may not see coming) is more exhausting than startling after nearly two hours of watching this gruesome collection of genetically linked monsters verbally and emotionally slice and dice each other with no discernible endgame in sight. People just gradually leave, until only Streep and her loyal housekeeper (Misty Upham) are left. But there’s no transcendent moment or great final punchline. Even though August: Osage County is occasionally funny and the cast lights up like an out-of-control fireworks display, its overt theatricality makes the movie itself fizzle out.
 

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Gravity passes big box office milestone

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NewsSimon Brew11/18/2013 at 8:46AM

Gravity overtakes The Wolverine and Star Trek Into Darkess to become one of the biggest films of the year at the box office...

We'd never sit here and pretend that box office takings are the be all and end all of any movie. Quite the contrary. Yet there's something immensely gratifying about the huge audience that Alfonso Cuaron's labor of love, Gravity, has found.

The movie, based on a simple premise of stranding George Clooney and Sandra Bullock in space, has become one of the very biggest hits of the year, with its takings now eclipsing the likes of The Wolverine and Star Trek Into Darkness. Over the past week, Gravity has now passed the $500m mark at the global box office, and right now, it's still got some road ahead of it too. The movie only made it to the UK last week, for instance, where it promptly knocked Thor: The Dark World off the top spot.

It seems that there's a good chance of an Oscar run for Gravity too, which will keep the movie in cinemas longer (although The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is about to eat up some of its screen space). The worst case scenario now though is that a standalone science-based movie has become one of the top films of 2013 in box office takings. We'd have gladly taken that at the start of the year. So, we bet, would Warner Bros...

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50 year battle over James Bond rights comes to an end

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NewsSimon Brew11/18/2013 at 8:47AM

Kevin McClory's remaining rights to James Bond 007 elements have been bought up by MGM and Danjaq...

It's been revealed that MGM and Danjaq have finally acquired the rights to certain elements of the James Bond series, that had been held first by Kevin McClory, and subsequently by his estate.

McClory was one of the co-writers of a Thunderball script back in the 1950s, and claimed that he introduced characters and elements into the series, that would go on to be part of the movies.

McClory won partial copyright to Thunderball back in 1961, and that was a decision that led him to put together a remake of Thunderball in 1983. That movie was Never Say Never Again, the high profile 'unofficial' Bond movie that brought Sean Connery back to the role.

McClory had been trying to get a further remake of Thunderball made, and in the late 1990s, Sony bought McClory's rights with the idea of a parallel Bond franchise in mind. That was before Sony bought into the official 007 series itself.

McClory died in 2006, but it's only now that a deal has been agreed, that sees his rights now in the hands of MGM and Danjaq, for an undisclosed settlement. It ends any possibility - as if there was one left - of another 'unofficial' Bond movie.

The next Bond movie heads into production next year, with Sam Mendes returning to direct.

Source.

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Terrence Howard on being "pushed out" of Iron Man 2

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NewsSimon Brew11/18/2013 at 8:49AM

The original big screen Rhodey, Terrence Howard, has been talking about why he wasn't back for Iron Man 2...

Back when the first Iron Man came out, and when the whole Marvel experiment was seen as a very, very big gamble, the role of James 'Rhodey' Rhodes was played by Terrence Howard. But Howard didn't return for Iron Man 2 onwards, with the role being taken on by Don Cheadle instead.

Howard has discussed what happened before, but while on the promotional circuit for his new movie, The Best Man vacation, he's pointing the finger a little bit firmer. Admitting that the comment is going to get him into trouble, Howard said that "the person that I helped become Iron Man, when it was time to re-up for the second one took the money that was supposed to go to me and pushed me out".

He's not naming names, but you don't need to give Angela Lansbury a call or anything to get to the bottom of who he's talking about.

"We did a three picture deal", he continued. "A certain amount for the first one, For the second a certain amount. For the third.... They came to me for the second one and said 'we will pay you an eighth of what we contractually had for you, because the second one will be successful with or without you'. And I called my friend who I helped get the first job and he didn't call me back for three months".

Ouch. There's been no comment from anyone associated with Marvel, and nor, in truth, should we expect one.

Bravo.

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Pacific Rim and Guillermo del Toro's world building

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FeatureRyan Lambie11/18/2013 at 8:54AM

With Pacific Rim out now on disc, we look at director Guillermo del Toro's talent for creating rich fantasy worlds...

His films may be varied in subjects and themes - from vampire tales to dark childhood fantasies to subterranean mutant insect movies - but if there’s one thing that unites all the films of Mexican director Guillermo del Toro, it’s their immaculately-crafted worlds.

From his first feature, Cronos (1993), to his most recent, this year’s Pacific Rim, del Toro’s films create their own perfectly-realised reality that gives the impression of more things occurring beyond the confines of the screen. Even his two celebrated Spanish-language fantasy dramas, The Devil’s Backbone (2001) and Pan’s Labyrinth (2006), although set during the turbulent period of the Spanish Civil War, fuse a sense of historical realism with del Toro’s own appetite for exotic fantasy.

The Devil’s Backbone takes place in a remote orphanage, which provides the backdrop for wartime intrigue and a starkly effective ghost story; Pan’s Labyrinth is about a young girl who retreats into a world of fantasy to escape from the horrific reality of war. In both instances, del Toro moves between these two realms so effortlessly that we can barely see the join - in Pan’s Labyrinth, in particular, the world of giant frogs and enigmatic fauns is as threatening and believable as the world of civil war and vicious generals. 

Even in a movie like Mimic, del Toro’s 1997 creature feature which was sadly hampered by studio meddling, we can see this same effective world-building at work: a distorted reflection of our real world which slips effortlessly into the utterly fantastical. For much of its first act, Mimic begins in del Toro’s version of New York - a claustrophobic city of seemingly eternal nighttimes and murky alleyways. Something large and scary is scurrying around in the shadows, moving in and out of a church, and seen only by a young boy who describes the entity as “Mr Funny Shoes”.

It’s through scientist Susan Tyler (Mira Sorvino) that del Toro gradually leads us through the story’s world. Having established New York at street level, we’re then taken down into the city’s subways, where we become aware of tall, apparently cloaked beings capable of moving among ordinary people as trains clatter in and out of the stations.

Tyler - and the audience - soon learns that these cloaked beings are in fact giant, mutated cockroaches, and unforeseen offshoot of a genetically-altered insect Tyler herself once created. Following a stunning reveal - where a cloaked figure flutters into life, revealing that its cloak is actually a pair of giant wings - del Toro takes us to the third layer of his unreality - the dark tunnels, sewers and disused subway buildings that lie beyond the well-lit subway platforms, where the cockroaches have made their nest. 

Although Mimic revels in its B-movie, creature-of-the-week roots, the way it gradually draws us into its fictional reality is what lifts it from the status of mere schlock; del Toro’s eye for creature and set design is evident everywhere, and like so many of his films, Mimic tells so much through images and not words.

This approach is evident in something like Cronos, where the design of even something as small as its central clockwork device tells us more than a page of exposition ever could. A centuries-old mechanical oddity discovered by an antiques dealer named Gris (Federico Lippi), the device looks at first like a beautifully-adorned fob watch case, before closer inspection reveals a set of claw-like legs and a vicious-looking spike which jabs into the skin of its possessor and injects them with a mysterious solution.

The Cronos device is at least two things at once: an item so elaborate and tactile that it seduces people into picking it up and handling it, and also an object of absolute loathing - an insectoid trap that bestows its own kind of curse on its victims. 

Details like this are vital to del Toro’s films, such as Blade II, with its gothic streets populated by mutant vampires whose strange configuration of jaws are almost as elaborate as those in Cronos. The same can be said of Hellboy (2004) and its sequel Hellboy: The Golden Army, with their breathtakingly elaborate machines and creatures.

In all these films, del Toro finds a means of tying these fantastical things back to a form of reality, whether it’s the Spain of the 40s in Pan’s Labyrinth, or the America of the present in the Hellboy movies - part of the reason, perhaps, why del Toro’s cinematic worlds feel so believable. They may be a fantasy, but there’s always something linking them to the ground. Whether they're science fiction, horror or comic book fantasy, del Toro brings the same fairytale sense of realities running in parallel.

In terms of world-building, Pacific Rim is arguably the most expansive movie del Toro’s yet created. Set in a near future torn apart by giant beasts which have, for reasons initially unclear, emerged from our oceans to wreck havoc on our cities, it sees a dwindling defense force gather together a handful of skyscraper-sized, human-driven robots to repel the incursion. 

Proudly inspired by Japanese giant monster movies and anime, Pacific Rim creates its own realm of fantasy logic. We come to accept the strange, majestic movements of these towering robots, whose limbs move in time with the pilots’ own. Like all of del Toro’s films, it communicates so much through images rather than words; Pacific Rim’s designers draw from the symbolism of World War II tanks and submarines to give the machines a rusted, battered, lived-in sense of history, while the screeching kaiju have their own unique markings and individual videogame-like killer moves.

Like Mimic, Pacific Rim isn’t at all ashamed of its own inherent goofiness, and del Toro pulls off an impressive high-wire act of giving the movie both a sense of violent impact and also a childlike, playful sense of awe.

It’s this child’s eye perspective, perhaps, that is also key to the director’s world-building. Not all of his films are literally seen through a child’s eyes (though several of his best are), but they are all invested with the same childlike fascination for minute details and exotic, surreal images. Take, for example, a location somewhere in China, where an ad-hoc city has been arranged around the gargantuan bones of a fallen kaiju. 

It’s a detail that is largely incidental to the plot, but it’s an idea that tells us so much about the history of this world without anyone uttering a word: the corpses of the kaiju are so utterly enormous that they’ve simply been assimilated into the landscape, and formed the part of a new and strangely beautiful place. 

Things like this abound in Pacific Rim, and if you take the time to see them, they add depth to a story that is constantly thundering along like an untethered beast. Look how the little blue highlight in heroine Mako Mori (Rinko Kikuchi) precisely matches the colorof the coat she was wearing when she was almost killed by a kaiju as a child - a little bit of her traumatic past still clings to her as an adult.

Sure, Pacific Rim can be enjoyed purely on the level of a larger-than-life monsters-versus-robots beat-down, but as with all of del Toro’s films, it’s invested with far more thought and care than a single viewing would necessarily divulge. Once again, it’s the director’s immaculately-conceived world that makes Pacific Rim so visually intoxicating.

Pacific Rim is out on DVD and Blu-ray now.

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Colin Farrell Talks World of Warcraft Movie Rumors and Script

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NewsDen Of Geek11/18/2013 at 10:12AM

Colin Farrell chats about his possible (likely) involvement in Duncan Jones' upcoming World Of Warcraft movie!

Colin Farrell's name has been mentioned in connection with Duncan Jones' World of Warcraft movie, but for now, the actor isn't confirming anything. Then again, he isn't actually denying anything, either. Mr. Farrell spoke with IGN about the project and makes it quite clear that there is indeed some kind of connection between himself and Duncan Jones' first foray into mega-budget franchise territory.

Speaking to IGN, Mr. Farrell confirmed that "I read the script, if that’s any use to you, and it’s amazing." When pressed about what role he might be playing, he was evasive...but denied nothing! "I probably shouldn’t. I don’t even know, actually, I’ll just say that! I don’t even know." 

World of Warcraft opens on December 18th, 2015...putting it in direct competition with Star Wars: Episode VII

You can read more details about the World of Warcraft movie right here!

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New Full-Length Need For Speed Trailer is Here

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 1:00PM

Check out the first full trailer for the New Need For Speed adaptation with Breaking Bad's Aaron Paul!

In what increasingly looks like the potential film to break the video game movie curse, Need For Speed has had a new trailer released by DreamWorks and Touchstone, and it looks as slick as a bat out of hell. Of course, a Muse song and Michael Keaton reveal makes everything cooler.
 
 
The film centers around Tobey Marshall (Aaron Paul), a blue-collar mechanic who races muscle cars on the side in an unsanctioned street-racing circuit. Struggling to keep his family-owned garage afloat, he reluctantly partners with the wealthy and arrogant ex-NASCAR driver Dino Brewster (Dominic Cooper). But just as a major sale to car broker Julia Bonet (Imogen Poots) looks like it will save Tobey's shop, a disastrous race allows Dino to frame Tobey for a crime he didn’t commit, and sending Tobey to prison while Dino expands his business out west.
 
Two years later, Tobey is released and set on revenge — but he knows his only chance to take down his rival Dino is to defeat him in the high-stakes race known as De Leon — the Super Bowl of underground racing. However to get there in time, Tobey will have to run a high-octane, action-packed gauntlet that includes dodging pursuing cops coast-to-coast as well as contending with a dangerous bounty Dino has put out on his car. With the help of his loyal crew and the surprisingly resourceful Julia, Tobey defies odds at every turn and proves that even in the flashy world of exotic supercars, the underdog can still finish first.
 
The movie blazes into theaters March 14, 2014.
 
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Christian Bale Gives Batman Advice to Ben Affleck

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 1:47PM

Christian Bale, still the iconic face of the Dark Knight, speaks about what one nugget of honest advice he has given Ben Affleck about assuming the role. He also reflects on the meaning of the character in lieu of the Make-A-Wish San Francisco Batman.

While promoting Out of the Furnace, which also features Casey Affleck, Christian Bale was asked about his co-star’s older brother taking on the role of Batman by Access Hollywood.
 
As seen in the below interview clip, Bale talked candidly about the fluidity of passing the mantle of the Bat on from one actor to the next. Still, he also had one specific piece of advice that he admits he already shared with Ben Affleck.
 
“I wish him all the best. He's a very experienced actor and filmmaker and he'll make it his own. Our thing's finished, we've always declared it was finished and it should be passed on to another actor and it will be again after him… The only thing I said to him is just make sure he can take a piss without anyone having to help him. Because it's a little bit humiliating, at least what I went through, when you have to have someone help you out of the costume. That was my main piece of advice for him.”
 
Holy urinals, Batman that sounds taxing! Depending on the look of the suit, we will likely soon have an answer.
 
However, the video also contains a more reflective and sweet note as Bale talks about Make-A-Wish’s San Francisco Batkid celebration:
 
“I just think it's great. It's a great day for the little guy. I just think Make-A-Wish and San Francisco did such an amazing thing to organize that. You just think of the delight in that little fella's heart, running around doing that. Then also as someone who has played Batman, it's great to see that the symbol of Batman is so much bigger than any one person, than any film, than any comic book, any TV series, that's really what it's all about. It's irrelevant which actor is playing it, we're irrelevant in that sense. But for little Miles to have such a great day is just delightful.”

 

 

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X-Men: Days of Future Past Returns to Montreal For Additional Filming

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 2:11PM

The biggest X-Men movie gets even bigger as Bryan Singer's Days of Future Past returns to Montreal for additional photography.

Despite being trumpeted as 20th Century Fox’s second biggest production ever (right behind Avatar), it seems that Bryan Singer’s X-Men: Days of Future Past is not done yet.
 
As reported in The Calgary HeraldX-Men: Days of Future Pastis returning to Montreal for additional photography. According to the paper, the deal was made when Quebec Film Commissioner Hans Fraikin met with Fox executives last week to make the deal.
 
“A couple of weeks is a big reshoot,” Fraikin said, who admittedly could be emphasizing the size of the reshoots more for its impact on Montreal commerce than necessarily the film’s production.
 
It is unclear who will be back, but as actor Daniel Cudmore (Colossus) tweeted last week that he is returning to Canada, more scenes for the film’s futuristic side are probably a good bet.
 
Director Bryan Singer of the first two still-loved films is back, along with most of the cast from those flicks. Also returning are Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy and Jennifer Lawrence from the groovy 2011 prequel, X-Men: First Class. But best of all, everything in between those films, including two or three clunkers nobody can truly remember, are about to get erased from continuity with a time travel story based on the much-lauded Chris Claremont and John Byrne comic book that is still revered by fans to this day. If you’ve seen the viral marketing for the Sentinels, the alternate timeline and especially Peter Dinklage rocking a ‘70s ‘stache as the big bad, you know that we are in for a treat that could rival anything coming from the House of Mouse.
 
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New Electro Pic From The Amazing Spider-Man 2

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 2:37PM

See new picture of Jamie Foxx as Max Dillon, aka the villainous Electro.

With all this talk of mutants and Avengers, sometimes the old Web-Head needs to shout above his Parker Luck to get recognition. And so The Amazing Spider-Man 2 has with a new photo below.
 
In this new picture, central big baddie Electro is shown in his pre-transformation form of Max Dillon (Jamie Foxx). However, if you notice those eels, it appears likely that he will not be “normal” for very much longer.


 
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 follows Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) aka the Amazing Spider-Man as he graduates from high school with his first love, Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone) just in time to go head-to-head with Electro, the Rhino (Paul Giamatti) and a new Osborn Legacy in the guise of Norman (Chris Cooper) and Harry (Dane DeHaan). Also featuring Colm Feore as Adrian Toomes, Sally Field as Aunt May, and Felicity Jones and Sarah Gadon as a mysterious question marks, this film weaves a tangled web, indeed.
 
Marc Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2 swings into theaters on May 2, 2014.
 
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New Trailer and Poster for The Nut Job

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 3:24PM

The Nut Job trailer is here, which features Will Arnett as one nutty squirrel with a genius plan to store up for the winter.

Winter is coming, and that means furry little critters better scurry for the holidays. And that is exactly what Open Road’s upcoming animated family film, The Nut Job is about.
 
Set for release in January, the trailer will show you what surprising lengths that a squirrel and a rat will go for a couple of nuts.
 
 
In animated 3D, THE NUT JOB is an action-packed comedy in fictional Oakton that follows the travails of Surly (voiced by Will Arnett), a mischievous squirrel, and his rat friend Buddy, who plan a nut store heist of outrageous proportions and unwittingly find themselves embroiled in a much more complicated and hilarious adventure.
 
The Nut Job cracks into theaters on January 17, 2014.
 
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For Mickey Mouse's 85th Birthday, Disney Releases Vintage-Style Cartoon

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NewsDen Of Geek11/18/2013 at 3:41PM

Watch Mickey Mouse in his new cartoon...which looks a lot like his very first cartoon! And while you're here, watch Mickey's first cartoon, Steamboat Willie!

It isn't "Steamboat Willie" but it sure looks like it! 85 years ago today, the first Mickey Mouse cartoon premiered. In honor of this, Disney has released a clip from a brand new Mickey Mouse short that does its very best to mimic the animation and musical stylings of that 1928 short. "Get A Horse" will premiere with Frozen on November 27th, but you can watch a couple of minutes of it right here!

The short, directed by Lauren MacMullan, nicely captures the frenetic energy of those early 'toons. "I re-watched a lot of the old black & white cartoons," MacMullan told the Huffington Post, "and I just loved how Mickey could do anything in those shorts. How -- if he wanted to tip his hat to Minnie but Mickey wasn't actually wearing a hat at that time -- he'd just lift his ears clean off his skull. I wanted to tell a story that was set in that anything-is-possible universe. So I came up with a premise that I thought was kind of unusual." Although after this clip, things go full-color, 3D, and a bit more modern. You'll just have to buy a ticket to Frozen to see the rest! 

And, for the sake of history and comparison...not to mention the fact that it's worth observing Mickey's 85th birthday...here's Mickey's first ever cartoon, "Steamboat Willie" in full. That's Walt Disney himself doing Mickey's voice!

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It's A Wonderful Life Gets A Sequel

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 4:04PM

It's such a wonderful life that it has been anounced there will be a 2015 sequel following the grandson of George Bailey as an angel shows him the error of his ways.

It’s A Wonderful Life is one of the all-time Christmas classics. Despite being viewed as a box office disappointment in 1946, the Frank Capra directed masterpiece about Yuletide good cheer that brought James Stewart back from World War II has since become a timeless classic watched every December by millions of families.
 
So, of course it has a built-in audience ready for it to be franchised.
 
Variety is the first to report that Star Partners and Hummingbird Prods. Has signed a deal to produce It’s A Wonderful Life: the Rest of the Story. Yep, though the 1946 film ends pretty conclusively on what is considered by many to be one of the all time great feel-good closers, it turns out that there is more. Indeed, Karolyn Grimes, who said one of the famous final lines from that ending of “every time a bell rings, an angel gets its wings” will be returning as an angel in the new film. It will be she who prods George Bailey, the GRANDSON of the Jimmy Stewart character, into realizing what a terrible person he is when she shows him how better the world will be without his existence.
 
See? They FLIPPED IT! Genius.
 
It is unclear whether Grimes’ angel will still be Zuzu Bailey from the original film, returning beyond the grave to haunt a relation. But the film, which will be financed by Allen J. Schwalb of Star Partners, is definitely set for a release during the 2015 holiday season.
 
Bob Farnsworth, who is also producing the film alongside Schwalb, is co-writing the screenplay with Martha Bolton. He said to Variety, “The storyline of the new film retains the spirit of the original – every life is important as long as you have friends.”
 
That is an important message…one that is told perfectly in the original. I usually do not editorialize these kind of stories, but making a sequel toIt’s A Wonderful Life is akin to having a follow-up to Casablanca or Gone With the Wind. The. Story. Is. Over. It ended in one of the best final scenes in movie history. Just do what every other Christmas movie does these days and rip it off. Otherwise, it feels like Potter won.
 
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Disqus - noscript

BULL$HIT

The only thing beyond the film version ending that should be enjoyed is the Saturday Night Live "lost ending" where they discover Mr. Potter had the $8,000 that Uncle Billy lost. They then hunt him down, discover he isn't even crippled, and beat him to death.

Christian Bale Explains Bat-Voice

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 5:30PM

More video of Bale is released where he explains the origin of the Bat-voice.

Thank goodness for Out of the Furnace press, because it is also apparently serving as a "State of the Union" on all things Batman for Christian Bale.

Having already openly discussed his advice for Ben Affleck taking on the role, he has now been confronted by MTVabout his Bat-voice. When requested to reflect upon his audition, which is now avaiable on Blu-ray with the latest edition of The Dark Knight Trilogydiscs, Bale both smiled and cringed at recalling how he appeared in that 2003 video while wearing the Batman Forevercostume.
 
"I got there--they put me in Val Kilmer's suit. It didn't even fit properly, and I stood in it and I went, 'I feel like an idiot.' What kind of guy walks around, dressed like a bat? And is then going to go 'Hello, how are you? Just ignore that I'm dressed as a bat.' Of course, he's meant to be doing this...If you look at the history of the guy and the pain that he went through. I went 'I can't do this in a normal voice. I have to become a beast in order to sell this to myself. I went home that evening. My wife said, 'How'd it go?' I went, 'I kind of did this.' And I showed her, and she went, 'You fucked that one up, didn't you?' Thank God they went for it. It ain't for everybody.Ben's obviously going to have to do his own thing, but it was the only way that I could find how to get into that and to justify wearing the fricking Batsuit. Otherwise, he's just loopy beyond belief. He's loopy, but he's loopy with a method to his madness."
 
 
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Ashley Green Anton Yelchin and Alexandra Daddario are Burying The Ex

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NewsDavid Crow11/18/2013 at 5:53PM

Gremlins director Joe Dante is assembling young Hollywood for his newest horror comedy.

Joe Dante, the director of Gremlinsand Small Soldiers, is dead set at Burying The Ex, and he has assembled a young group of talent to do just that. Assembling the talent of Ashley Greene (Twilight), Anton Yelchin (Star Trek) and Alexandra Daddario (Texas Chainsaw 3D), Burying The Ex aims to pile on with up-an-coming talent.
 
Nicholas Chartier’s Voltage Pictures is going to finance the horror comedy from a screenplay by Alan Trezza. In the story, young couple Max and Evelyn (Yelchin and Greene) experience a rocky road when Evelyn moves in, and Max learns how controlling she can be. Terrified to break up with her, Max would seem to have been given a new lease on life when Evelyn dies in a freak accident, allowing him to woo Olivia (Daddario). Of course, things start to get a little weird Evelyn rises from the dead.
 
Production starts next week.
 
SOURCE: The Wrap
 
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