Saving Mr. Banks Review
New Star Wars Script Expected in Jan., Indiana Jones 5 Still Coming
Walt Disney Studios Chairman confirms due date for Star Wars screenplay and work on Indy 5.
New Int. Trailer For Amazing Spider-Man 2 Shows More Footage, Humor
The new international trailer for Amazing Spider-Man 2 offers a new look at Peter Parker, Electro and more in upcoming sequel.
Emilia Clarke is Sarah Connor in New Terminator
The Game of Thrones actress has been cast as Sarah Connor in Terminator: Genesis.
The Interstellar Trailer is Here
Watch the out-of-this-world trailer for Christopher Nolan's latest reality bender....Interstellar.
Desolation of Smaug Opens at $73.6 Million, Less Than Last Year
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug took in an impressive $73.6 million, but is down about 13 percent from An Unexpected Journey's record.
Legendary Actor Peter O'Toole Dies At 81
Peter O'Toole dies at 81. An acting legend, an actor's actor.
The legendary stage and screen actor, Peter O'Toole, died yesterday at the age of 81. His agent Steve Kenis told the media that O’Toole was at the Wellington Hospital in London. O’Toole is survived by his two daughters, Patricia and Kate, from his marriage to the actress Siân Phillips, and his son with Karen Brown, Lorcan O'Toole.
When O’Toole retired from acting last year he wrote in a statement, “My professional acting life, stage and screen, has brought me public support, emotional fulfillment and material comfort. It has brought me together with fine people, good companions with whom I've shared the inevitable lot of all actors: flops and hits. However, it's my belief that one should decide for oneself when it is time to end one's stay. So I bid the profession a dry-eyed and profoundly grateful farewell."
O’Toole was working on the third volume of his memoirs, despite having once said ”I have no memories I'm prepared to share with you.”
O'Toole began acting after serving in the Royal Navy. He studied at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He worked as a Shakespearean actor at the Bristol Old Vic and with the English Stage Company and had early stage successes as the lead in Hamlet and Shylock in The Merchant of Venice before moving to television in 1954. His first film role was a bit part in The Day They Robbed the Bank of England in 1959. O'Toole's breakthrough role came in 1962 when he was chosen to play T. E. Lawrence in David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia. Since then he’s played kings, such as in Becket and The Lion in Winter and lunatics, like his role in The Ruling Class. His most recent film was For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada. O'Toole starred in the 1987 Broadway revival of Pygmalion.
O'Toole received Oscar nominations for 1964's Becket, 1968's The Lion in Winter, 1969's Goodbye, Mr. Chips, 1972's The Ruling Class (“When did I realize I was God? Well, I was praying and I suddenly realized I was talking to myself.”), 1980's The Stunt Man and 1982's My Favorite Year and, most recently in 2006 for the British drama Venus, although he has never won the award. He received an Honorary Oscar in 2003. O’Toole has won the BAFTA Award, four Golden Globes, the Emmy and numerous other awards, including, in 2000, the Olivier Award for his performance as Jeff in Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell at The Old Vic Theatre, London.
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Welcome to Middle-earth: Meet The New Hobbit Cast Members
Benedict Cumberbatch, Evangeline Lilly, and Luke Evans offer their thoughts on joining the cast of The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.
Interstellar: Everything We Know
After that crazy trailer, what IS Interstellar? Just like the title says, here's everything we know about Interstellar in one place.
The new script chronicles the adventures of a group of explorers who make use of a newly discovered wormhole to surpass the limitations on human space travel and conquer the vast distances involved in an interstellar voyage.
Contest: Win a Harry Potter Holiday Prize Pack
Looking for the ultimate Harry Potter gift? Enter for your chance to win a holiday prize pack that includes Dumbledore's wand!
22 Jump Street Red Band Trailer is Here
Check out the very NSFW return of Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum as they embark on the best experience of their lives: college.
New Picture of Wolverine in Costume for Days of Future Past
See the newest image of Hugh Jackman as Wolverine in X-Men: Days of Future Past.
Miramax and The Weinstein Company Reunite, Sequels & Spin-Offs to 1990s Classics Imminent
The Weinstein Company will help develop new content for sequels and TV shows based on Miramax's vast library, including Good Will Hunting.
Holiday 2013 TV Schedule and Calendar
Want to know when and where you can watch 'The Muppets Christmas Carol' or 'National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation'--we've got ya covered!
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving | ABC | Nov 28, 8PM | |
Lady Gaga & The Muppets' Holiday Spectacular | ABC | Nov 28, 9:30PM | |
How The Grinch Stole Christmas (1966 cartoon) | ABC | Nov 29, 8PM | |
Mickey's Once Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM |
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Mickey's Twice Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM |
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Santa Buddies | ABCFAM |
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The Family Man | ABCFAM |
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Disney's A Christmas Carol | ABCFAM |
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The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 1, 5PM | |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM |
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Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 1, 9:30PM | |
Winnie The Pooh And Christmas Too | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 6PM | |
Mickey's Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 6:30PM | |
Jack Frost (1979 animated version) | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 7PM | |
A Charlie Brown Christmas/Charlie Brown Christmas Tales | CBS | Dec 2, 8 PM | |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 8PM | |
CMA Country Christmas Hosted by Jennifer Nettles | ABC | Dec 2, 9PM | |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 10PM | |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 2, 12AM | |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 3, 6PM | |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 3, 8PM | |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 3, 10PM | |
Three Days | ABCFAM | Dec 3, 12AM | |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 4, 6PM | |
Christmas In Rockefeller Center 2013 | NBC | Dec 4, 7PM | |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 4, 8PM | |
Deck The Halls | ABCFAM | Dec 4, 10PM | |
A Very Brady Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 4, 12AM | |
Rudolph's Shiny New Year | ABCFAM | Dec 5, 6PM | |
The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 5, 7PM | |
The Sound of Music Live Special Starring Carrie Underwood | NBC | Dec 5, 8PM | |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 5, 9PM |
Frosty's Winter Wonderland | ABCFAM | Dec 6, 6PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 6, 6:30PM |
Frosty the Snowman | CBS | Dec 6, 8PM |
Yes, Virginia | CBS | Dec 6, 8:30PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 6, 8:30PM |
Prancer | ABCFAM | Dec 6, 12AM |
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer And The Island Of Misfit Toys | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 7AM |
Home Alone: The Holiday Heist | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 8:30AM |
Prancer | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 10:30AM |
All I Want For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 12:30PM |
Disney's A Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 2:30PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 4:30PM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 7PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 9PM |
Deck The Halls | ABCFAM | Dec 7, 11PM |
Jack Frost (1979 version) | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 7AM |
Christmas Cupid | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 8AM |
Snowglobe | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 10AM |
Santa Baby | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 12PM |
Santa Baby 2: Christmas Maybe | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 2PM |
12 Dates Of Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 4PM |
The Mistle-Tones | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 6PM |
Holidaze | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 8PM |
Holiday In Handcuffs | ABCFAM | Dec 8, 10PM |
Holidaze | ABCFAM | Dec 9, 6PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 9, 8PM |
Dr. Seuss' The Grinch Grinches The Cat In The Hat | ABCFAM | Dec 9, 10:30PM |
12 Dates Of Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 9, 12AM |
A Chipmunk Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 10, 6PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 10, 6:30PM |
The Year Without A Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 10, 9PM |
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | ABCFAM | Dec 10, 10PM |
Snowglobe | ABCFAM | Dec 10, 12AM |
Holiday In Handcuffs | ABCFAM | Dec 11, 6PM |
Melissa & Joey | ABCFAM | Dec 11, 8PM |
Baby Daddy | ABCFAM | Dec 11, 8:30PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 11, 9PM |
Holiday In Handcuffs | ABCFAM | Dec 11, 12AM |
Baby Daddy | ABCFAM | Dec 12, 6PM |
Melissa & Joey | ABCFAM | Dec 12, 6:30PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 12, 7PM |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 12, 9PM |
All I Want For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 12, 12AM |
Winnie The Pooh And Christmas Too | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 4PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 4:30PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 6:20PM |
Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966 cartoon) | TBS | Dec 13, 8PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story 3 | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 8:20PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story Of Terror! | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 10:30PM |
Chasing Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 13, 12AM |
Winnie The Pooh And The Bluster Day | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 7AM |
Winnie The Pooh And Tigger Too | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 7:30AM |
Winnie The Pooh | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 8AM |
Winnie The Pooh And Christmas Too | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 9:30AM |
Mickey's Once Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 10AM |
Mickey's Twice Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 11:30AM |
Mickey's Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 1PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 2PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 3:50PM |
Disney/Pixar's Toy Story 3 | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 5:50PM |
It's a Wonderful Life | NBC | Dec 14, 8PM |
Disney's The Little Mermaid | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 8PM |
Frosty Returns | CBS | Dec 14, 9:30PM |
Disney's The Little Mermaid (Encore) | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 9:45PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 14, 11:30PM |
Mickey's Once Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 7:30AM |
Mickey's Twice Upon A Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 9AM |
A Christmas Carol | TCM | Dec 15, 10AM |
Disney's Prep & Landing | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 10:30AM |
Disney's Prep's & Landing: Naughty Vs. Nice | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 11AM |
Mickey's Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 11:30AM |
I'll Be Home For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 12PM |
All I Want For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 2PM |
Deck The Halls | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 4PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 6PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 8PM |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 15, 10PM |
Snow | ABCFAM | Dec 16, 7AM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 16, 7PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 16, 9PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 16, 11PM |
Disney's Prep & Landing | ABCFAM | Dec 16, 1AM |
Three Days | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 7AM |
Unlikely Angel | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 11AM |
Prancer | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 1PM |
I'll Be Home For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 3PM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 5PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 7PM |
The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 9PM |
I'll Be Home For Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 17, 12AM |
Holidaze | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 7AM |
Secret Santa | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 9AM |
The Mistle-Tones | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 11AM |
Santa Baby | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 1PM |
Santa Baby 2: Christmas Maybe | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 3PM |
The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 5PM |
Winnie The Pooh And Christmas Too | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 7PM |
Mickey's Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 7:30PM |
CBS' Home for the Holidays hosted by Celine Dion | CBS | Dec 18, 8PM |
Mary Poppins | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 8PM |
Santa Baby | ABCFAM | Dec 18, 12AM |
Eloise At Christmastime | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 7AM |
Mary Poppins | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 9AM |
12 Dates Of Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 12PM |
Holiday In Handcuffs | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 2PM |
The Family Man | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 4PM |
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer And The Island Of Misfit Toys | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 7PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 8:30PM |
Deck The Halls | ABCFAM | Dec 19, 12AM |
Chasing Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 7AM |
Christmas Every Day | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 9AM |
Christmas Do-Over | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 11AM |
The Family Man | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 1PM |
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer And The Island Of Misfit Toys | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 4PM |
Frosty's Winter Wonderland | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 5:30PM |
A Chipmunk Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 6PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 6:30PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 20, 9PM |
Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas Donkey | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 7AM |
The Little Drummer Boy | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 7:30AM |
Pinocchio's Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 8AM |
The Life And Adventures Of Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 9AM |
'Twas The Night Before Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 10AM |
Rudolph's Shiny New Year | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 10:30AM |
Rudolph And Frosty's Christmas In July | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 11:30AM |
The Year Without A Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 1:30PM |
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 2:30PM |
A Chipmunk Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 3:30PM |
National Lampon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 4PM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 6PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 8PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 10PM |
The Mistle-Tones | ABCFAM | Dec 21, 12AM |
The Year Without A Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 7AM |
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 8AM |
I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 9AM |
Unaccompanied Minors | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 11AM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 1PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 3PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 5PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 7PM |
Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (Encore) | ABCFAM | Dec 22, 9:30PM |
I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 7AM |
A Dennis The Menace Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 9AM |
Home Alone: The Holiday Heist | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 11AM |
Deck The Halls | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 1PM |
Disney's A Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 3PM |
Jack Frost | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 5PM |
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 6PM |
The Year Without A Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 7PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 8PM |
Shrek the Halls | ABC | Dec 23, 8PM |
A Chimpunk Christmas | ABC | Dec 23, 8:30PM |
The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 10PM |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 23, 12AM |
CHRISTMAS EVE | ||
A Very Brady Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 7AM |
'Twas The Night Before Christmas | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 9AM |
Scrooged | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 11AM |
The Polar Express | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 1PM |
A Christmas Carol | TCM | Dec 24, 1:15PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 3PM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 5PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 7PM |
Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966 cartoon) | ABC | Dec 24, 8PM |
It's a Wonderful Life | NBC | Dec 24, 8PM |
A Christmas Story | TBS | Dec 24, 8PM |
Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) | ABC | Dec 24, 8:30PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 9PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 24, 12AM |
CHRISTMAS DAY | ||
A Christmas Story all-day marathon | TBS | Dec 25 |
Frosty's Winter Wonderland | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 7AM |
The Year Without A Santa Claus | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 7:30AM |
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 8:30AM |
Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade | ABC | Dec 25, 10AM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 11AM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 1PM |
The Santa Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 3PM |
The Santa Clause 2 | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 5PM |
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 7PM |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 9PM |
The Muppet Christmas Carol | ABCFAM | Dec 25, 12AM |
Surviving Christmas | TBS | Dec 26, 2AM |
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Six Potential Amazing Spider-Man Movie Spin-offs!
How many directions can Sony's expanded Spider-Man film franchise go? We've got a few ideas...
With Sony’s announcement that they're going to shift the focus to Spider-Man’s villains after Amazing Spider-Man 3, it's clear that the studio is looking to create a functional Spider-Man universe to compete with Marvel Studios' Avengers films, Fox’s X-Men (and soon, Fantastic Four) properties, and Warner Bros’ DC Universe. When it comes to superheroes, Sony pretty much only has the Spider-Man family of characters to mine, so if they want to create a sustainable franchise like their competition, they will have to get clever after The Sinister Six and Venom movies. Here are six ways they can grow the Spider-Man franchise and create a shared universe of films unlike any other!
The Black Cat
DC and Marvel are racing to be the first studio to deliver the first female fronted superhero flick and Sony can beat them both to the punch by giving Felicia Hardy, aka The Black Cat time to shine. On the surface, the sexy, cat-loving Felicia is pretty derivative of Selina Kyle, but with her bad luck powers, Felicia can stand on her own. The Black Cat has always been the perfect woman for Spider-Man, but not Peter, and the two person love triangle would be a unique take on the kind of tired super-hero romance we're used to. A Black Cat film would give Sony a chance to delve into the underworld of their Spiderverse, introducing characters like The Rose, Hammerhead, Tombstone, or even Kingpin (if the Sony lawyers can work it out). Since it looks pretty likely that Felicity Jones is playing Felicia Hardy in Amazing Spider-Man 2, this one seems likely.
Spider-Man 2099
With all this competition for the superhero movie market, pretty soon the studios will have to get pretty innovative in order to stand out from the pack. One trick no studio has tried yet is to show the future of their particular universe (seriously Warner Bros...Legion of Super-Heroes!). Imagine the world of Marvel's 2099 comics coming to life! The story of Miguel O’Hara would show the ramifications that a world of superheroes would have on the future. Maybe Sony can present a story where the Oscorp technology introduced in the Amazing Spider-Man franchise shapes a future world that is in desperate need of a hero. With a great supporting cast and an awesome costume, Spidey 2099 would certainly give the fans something they've never seen before.
Superior Foes of Spider-Man
It may seem too close to The Sinister Six to justify a Superior Foes film, until one realizes that while the Six that we're likely to see in the movies are deadly and fearsome enemies that push Spidey to the limit, this other group (there are FIVE of them) are incompetent buffoons, which would make for a supervillain film experience like no other. The Superior Foes of Spider-Man is one of the most hilariously engaging books currently being published at Marvel, and a film would be more Quentin Tarantino or Oceans 11 than superhero drama. Fans have only been treated to competent heroes and villains so far in the modern age of superhero films. What about the less-than-competent miscreants that exist in the underbelly of the Spiderverse? Boomerang, Speed Demon, The Shocker, The Beetle, and Overdrive may not be the biggest names in comics, but that’s the point, as the film would be a street level look at what petty criminals and dirt bags do in a world of godlike beings. The world is ready for a supervillain heist film, and the Superior Foes are just the group of jerkoffs to try and pull it off.
The Green Goblin
The legacy of the Green Goblin, from Norman Osborn, to Harry Osborn, to Phil Urich, to Hobgoblin, to Demogoblin, and every Goblin in between, would take many movies to faithfully cover the tragic story of the Osborns and their legacy. Norman and Harry clearly play a key role in Amazing Spider-Man 2, but there is a danger that the new film will retread the same ground Raimi did in his trilogy. How does Sony they avoid this trap? Give the Goblins their own film to flesh out the family dynamics and conflicts! Imagine a film where Norman or Harry goes up against the Hobgoblin or a film where Harry must decide between a heroic and a villainous path. No studio has had the guts to do a straight up villain film yet, but Sony is ready to go down this road with The Sinister Six and Venom. If villains are really the order of the day at Sony, than Spidey’s greatest foe deserves his (or their) time.
[related article: 22 Amazing Things About The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Trailer]
Miles Morales
Speaking of a new generation, unlike the Sam Raimi films which drew their inspiration from the "traditional" Marvel Universe, Mark Webb’s Amazing Spider-Man borrows many elements from the Ultimate Spider-Man comics. So if Andrew Garfield hangs up his web shooters after Amazing Spider-Man 3, why not go the Ultimate route and have Peter make the Ultimate sacrifice? Film fans would love brave Miles Morales, a young hero trying to live up to Peter’s lessons of responsibility. Using Miles, there is no way the new films would echo anything Raimi did with a new kid wielding the webs. Bendis gave Miles a terrific backstory with a father that hates super-heroes and a rich set of supporting characters. What better way to show what a great man Peter was than to have a new hero live by Peter’s, and by extension, Uncle Ben’s example? Sony doesn’t have to kill Peter, they can shunt him off to another world or the future (let’s say 2099?) to make way for Miles. To stand out in the crowded world of super-hero cinema, upcoming films are going to have to take chances, and Miles is a huge chance with huge rewards. If Sony has the stones, as Marvel publishing did, than Miles would be just what the Sony Spiderverse needs to shake things up.
Superior Spider-Man
Do they dare? Do they dare create a film where Peter is removed from the picture and have the yet-to-be-introduced Doctor Octopus take over Peter’s body and identity to become the Superior Spider-Man? Ock’s arms appear as an Easter egg (Easter tentacles?) in the Amazing Spider-Man 2 trailer, so fans know Otto’s arrival isn't far off. The Superior Spider-Man has been a sales success for Marvel and, like Miles; Ock’s tale has shown how Peter’s legacy and lessons can live on, even in the unlikeliest of places. Sony might want to wait to see how Dan Slott resolves his epic tale before they take this bold move, but the story of a villain that learns to be a hero is almost too good to pass up. If Andrew Garfield is afraid of being typecast as the heroic Peter Parker, this story might be enough to keep him around for future installments...and it would introduce movie fans to a whole new set of rules they might not be ready for. If greenlit, the fanboy message board meltdowns would be worth it alone.
The Wolverine Production Designer Talks Bringing Logan to Japan
Wolverine production designer Francois Audouy on traveling to remote Japanese fishing villages, building the Silver Samurai and more.
You may not know who Francois Audouy is, but if you’re fan of superhero movies, you’ve surely seen his work. Born in the south of France and raised in Los Angeles, Audouy has risen in the Hollywood creative ranks as first an illustrator, then an art director and now as a production designer. Along the way he’s worked on films like Spider-Man (2002), Spider-Man 2 (2004), Watchmen (2009), and Green Lantern (2011), not to mention a slew of other films like Transformers, Men in Black, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Minority Report, and more.
With The Wolverine, his second film as a full-fledged production designer (following Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter), Audouy faced the challenge of taking Logan (Hugh Jackman) out of the hyper-real X-Men film landscape of mutants and super-villains and placing him in the midst of a grittier, more naturalistic world of Japanese criminals, ninjas and corporate intrigue. With the film a success around the world and arriving on Blu-ray/DVD last week (in both theatrical and extended cuts), Den Of Geek got Audouy on the line to talk about taking everyone’s favorite adamantium-enhanced mutant into the East – and out of his natural element.
Den Of Geek: When this project first came to you, what were your initial thoughts about it? You’ve worked on some other comic book based properties -- what made this different for you than some of the previous ones?
Francois Audouy: To be honest with you, what I was excited about was an opportunity to do a movie set in Japan. I didn’t really know much about the project other than it had a Japanese setting. It was always a dream of mine to design a film set in Japan so I jumped at the opportunity. I think the enthusiasm I had for everything that was Japanese really came through when I first met with (director) Jim Mangold. I mean I’m just – I’ve always been such a huge fan of the architecture and the history and the pop culture in Japan. This was an opportunity to sort of become an expert. Every time you're in production on a film it’s kind of an opportunity to learn something and become an expert in a certain topic. So I wanted to become an expert in all things Japanese.
The fact that it was Wolverine was kind of a secondary thing for me but what I found out from Jim was that his vision for the movie was that he wanted to really make a standalone Logan story, sort of a Logan film that hadn’t really been done before. That was incredibly exciting because I’m basically the same age as the Wolverine comic books. I was born in the '70s and in the late '80s it was kind of the golden age, in my opinion, of Wolverine comics. And I was very familiar with those great comic book arcs and felt that none of that had really been exploited in other movies. So it was a great opportunity to try to sort of correct the franchise and do something with this character that hadn’t been done before.
What was the mandate you got from Mangold and how does the relationship between the director and production designer work?
I’ll answer the second part of the question first. The collaboration between a production designer and a director is an incredibly tight one because he has to trust me and I have to trust him. And I have to kind of get inside his head because it’s my job to not only create a look for the film but I have to have his back in that he has to be able to trust me to create settings and find settings that give maximum sort of impact, help the narrative along, and be efficient. It’s really about trying also to keep the movie alive and keep the enthusiasm up and come up with ideas and alternate ideas and problem solving. So it’s a very, very close creative relationship. I mean I’m basically kind of – on a movie there’s kind of a creative core that’s made up of the production designer and the director and the director of photography and sometimes the visual effects supervisor. And so we’re kind of like in that inner circle where we have to listen and then move on and sort of rally the troops and get things happening.
As far as a specific mandate from Jim, what’s really, really helpful is he’s such a movie geek. He has seen so many movies and he’s a huge movie fan. So he was able to sort of pull specific movies for me to look at and that were really kind of inspiring to him. That was very useful because it gave us some inspiration up for the sort of mood or the tone of the film. And then the second thing is he wanted to make a movie that felt true and that felt grounded and that was focused on the characters and the depth of the narrative. He didn’t want to make a light sort of summer comic book movie. He wanted to make a film that was much more grounded and gritty and real than what had come before. I think that we did a pretty good job of doing that.
When you do a film like this where there’s a lot of location work and the locations are so easily identifiable, does that make your job any easier or more challenging?
It’s a mixed bag. When I start a film I really don’t know how the cookie’s going to crumble -- whether it’s going to be a lot of stage work and backlot work or a lot of locations. What we wanted to do with this film is we wanted to shoot in Japan as much as possible and sort of capture real Japan as much as possible because we knew it would be almost impossible to do that in a stage or backlot sort of way. What makes it really challenging is when you have two countries that you’re working on concurrently because for me it meant that I had an art department in Sydney, Australia, and then a separate art department in Tokyo. So it meant flying back and forth quite often and location scouting in Japan because we didn’t really build anything in Japan – it was all locations, but locations all over Japan. And then at the same time we had heavy builds and a much larger art department in Sydney. When you’re working with two different cultures like that and two different countries you have to really kind of adapt to each culture's approach to getting things done. So that’s the biggest challenge.
But one thing that was also on the forefront of my mind was that I wanted to maximize the value every day that we’re shooting in Japan and get these incredible locations that hadn’t been really seen before. When you’re shooting for two weeks every day is so precious. And what I’m really proud of is that we had an opportunity to go down to southern Japan to these little fishing villages that had never been shot before in a western film. It was so remote but I think that they really added something special to the movie. Those are real fishing villages that you’d never expect to see in a summer superhero movie.
So do you now consider yourself an expert in Japanese culture and architecture?
You know, I’ve certainly learned a lot. I think, you know, I think I could hold my own on Jeopardy on that category. But the thing that’s so rewarding and was so fun is that the more you learn, the more you see there is to learn. It’s just endless, just all of the rich history and culture that there is to learn about in Japan. So I think I need to do another couple of movies set in Japan before I’m truly an expert. But I’m working on it.
Can you talk about creating Silver Samurai, which a lot of fans were excited about seeing on the screen for the first time?
That was something that I was really excited about, too, because I thought wow, this is really cool because this is a character that’s never been realized in a live action anything, you know. I mean it’s only been in the comic book and a couple of toys and things. So that was probably the first thing that we focused on early on. One thing that I wanted to do early on is I decided I wanted to try to build something for real and not have it be just this completely CG character all the time. And that’s something that we were able to pull off which I’m really happy about. We made a full size nine-foot Silver Samurai which we see in the movie in all of the non-animated poses when it’s just kind of not moving. It was basically like a full size posable prop. But it helped a lot because it was a very accurate sort of reference for just the surface quality and the materials that it was made out of.
What was really cool, too, is that it’s not totally literal to the comic books. The idea of Silver Samurai’s been tweaked and I thought that was really interesting. But it was also a huge challenge because we wanted to create a design that held its own against all these other incredible robots and armors and things, like in Transformers or Iron Man. There are incredible designs out there. So it was definitely something that was thrilling and terrifying at the same time.
Your next project is a new Dracula movie starring Luke Evans. This is a character we’ve seen so many iterations of before, so what’s your approach with this film and what could we expect to see?
Well, I’ve had a lot of great opportunities to sort of invent or be involved in the very foundations of franchises. And Dracula Untold is an example of that, where it’s an incredibly great idea of doing kind of a Dracula origins film and being inspired by the legend of Vlad the Impaler and 15th century Wallachia or Transylvania as it became known. So what’s interesting also about it is it’s less of a genre film, less of what you would expect as a kind of a light genre vampire movie and much more of an epic historical drama. It’s very, very lush and very sort of big palette, big canvas. And it’s cool, too, because when I read it for the first time I was like, “Holy s**t. Why hasn’t this been done before?” This was a great idea of putting the legend of Vlad the Impaler into a Dracula movie and taking elements that had been hinted at in other movies like Coppola’s Dracula film and expanding it into a two-hour movie. So I’m very, very excited about it.
You worked as an art director on many projects for many years and now you’ve become a production designer on your own. For people who are not familiar with the credits in films, what’s the difference between those two jobs and what the responsibilities are?
That’s a good question. I started as an illustrator and then I worked as an art director and then a production designer. An art director is someone who’s responsible for the how and kind of managing and figuring how they’re going to get things done. So you’re managing a team in the art department and managing construction and also the production designer’s eyes and ears on the ground. Whereas a production designer is really a person responsible for the overall look of the film and being a collaborator with the director to design the production in a way that maximizes the impact. So I’m responsible for defining and creating and inventing the world in which the story’s going to take place. I can dream up these crazy ideas and then I have a team of wonderful people who actually figure out how to do it -- which would be my art directors.
The Wolverine is out now on Blu-ray and DVD.
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How Paul Reiser Changed Film
Barry Levinson's Diner Changed movie dialogue, but it was a noodge from 14th Street that gave it that nuance.
When you think about Paul Reiser, if you think about Paul Reiser, you might not, he doesn’t really come up in a lot of conversations, he’s not doing a lot these days, maybe you talked about him the day after the Liberace movie on HBO, but you probably didn’t. You probably talked about Michael Douglas and oral sex or whatever you might have talked about, it probably wasn’t Paul Reiser. The last time anyone was talking about him was when NBC made him get out of the house and do a show and then pulled it after three episodes. And it was funny. Probably the funniest thing on at the time, Curb Your Enthusiasm on prime time. But even then, you weren’t thinking about him too much. Why would you? He’s not your cousin or anything. You don’t know him, why would he be on your mind?
So when you think about Paul Reiser, the first thing that pops into your mind is probably Mad About You, maybe My Two Dads or maybe you’ll remember that he was in Beverly Hills Cop or the douchebag in Alien, but it’s not. It’s Mad About You. He was pretty much playing a version of himself that he made up in his books, but it stuck and it was actually a very innovative show.
If you’re lucky, when you think about him, the first thing that pops up is Diner. That’s what does it for me. I loved Diner from the first time I saw it. I’ve followed the careers of everyone, well, okay, no. I agree with The Simpsons on Steve Guttenberg when the Stone Cutters taunted “Who made Steve Guttenberg a star?” So, I’ve followed Kevin Bacon, Tim Dailey, and Mickey Rourke. Mainly Mickey Rourke, I’ll admit. He made the most interesting movies and he made one that’s in my top whatever of all time, Angel Heart. But Kevin Bacon? What’s not to like? He’s a great actor who gets swallowed up in his parts, and, according to Tom Hanks, he always smells good doing it. Tim Daley? I didn’t really watch Wings, but I loved it when Christopher Moltisanti went upside his head with his own award on The Sopranos.
These actors came together in 1981 to film 1982’s Diner. Diner changed film. It changed the way people talk to each other in film. John Travolta would never talk about French Big Macs in Pulp Fiction if it weren’t for Diner. With all these successful actors that I mentioned, the reason it became what it was, Diner that is, is Paul Reiser. He wasn’t even supposed to be in it. He just showed up one day on the set and started talking. They couldn’t shut him up. He was there to help out a friend audition for the movie, started a sentence and by the time he got to the period at the end, he had the part.
Then Barry Levinson, the director and one of the great great directors as far as I’m concerned, unleashes the inner standup in Paul Reiser by saying “improvise.” Improvise? Actors? Sure, they had some lessons. They took a workshop maybe in acting school, but Reiser, he’s been doing this all his life. I saw him three times doing standup and can attest to the fact that he can break the number one rule of improv, always say yes, and still make it work. And I am sorry that Steve Buscemi is still pissed at him, but that’s another article. So, this schmuck from 14th Street with the motor mouth breaks up whatever scene he’s working on and the other actors have to keep up. And they have to come up with emotional purity while they’re doing it. They’re actors. Guttenberg lets his own flubs work for him, snorting his lines back into his mouth like the fried baloney his mother’s making. Or not making, no bother, really. Barry Levinson started on the Marty Feldman and Carol Burnett Shows and wound up making such classics as And Justice For All, Sleepers, Bugsy, and Wag the Dog. He made some movies that are even better than those, but they're my favorites.
Ellen Barkin and Daniel Stern, and for that matter her and Mickey Rourke, plumb improvisation for an almost uncomfortable paring of nerves. Sure, they get their laughs, but they go somewhere else. They take Diner out of the diner and Paul’s got to reel them in again within a scene or two. Then you get to see Mickey playfully pouring sugar down this throat or deadpanning Elvis, but he’s got to hit his serious marks with the same casual tapdance.
So, Barry Levinson, he knows what he’s doing. He knows that by siccing the actors after each other, their sense of competition’s going to come out. They all want to shine. They’re actors. The standup is stealing the scenes. Gradually the scenes take on a whole new life beyond the screenplay because these actors have really got to be on their toes because they have to keep the screenplay in line with whatever comes into their heads and out of their mouths. And out of the other actors’ mouths. The competition becomes fun and it infects the rest of film.
Here’s where it’s a shame that the Paul Reiser series got cancelled. It was taking off from where Larry David was having the most fun of his career, improvising within scenes.Diner is a serious, serious what? Coming of age movie? Not really. It’s a movie about nothing. Like Seinfeld. Who ordered his cereal in a diner. Paul Reiser invented Jerry Seinfeld. Put him together at some diner they’d hang out at on New Year’s Day every year. So, the chance that Diner, or Curb Your Enthusiasm, was going to be on network TV would have been a real innovation. Reiser had done it before.
Mad About You was innovative. It wasn’t all that risky, but it flirted, it gestured. It had that nuance that, did I say nuance? I’ve always had a problem with nuance. But Mad About You played with the form as much as NBC would let them. Until they made an episode that didn’t have little blackouts for commercial breaks. Then the network started moving the show around so it would never be found and they’d have an excuse to get rid of it. Reiser’s character, I admit, was the first time I saw a guy playing the husband on a TV show that didn’t make me change the channel. Every TV dad or husband has to be an idiot or something. I never once looked at a sitcom and saw myself in their place. But with Reiser, that was comfortable. That was someone I knew and could identify with. He wasn’t the smartest guy in the room, but really, it depended on the room. This guy did a throwaway joke in season one, about having a thing in his fifties, and committed to the joke in the final episode. He’s not the best actor in Diner, but he was the one who made it swing. He made it about nothing.
That nothing has found its way into film and television and made those characters real. That nothing is the conversations everyone has when they’re with the people they’re comfortable enough with to just ramble. That’s how people talk. They just do. It doesn’t matter what you’re talking about. Most people don’t care when they’re with friends, they’re just talking. When Quentin Tarantino tells a joke about Madonna getting fucked by a guy with the biggest dick she’s ever seen in her life in Reservoir Dogs, he is playing Modell in Diner. When Roberto Benini starts a riot in a cellblock in Down By Law, he is Boogie in Diner, getting his bill paid by Bagel. When Paul Newman gets pissed off at Tom Cruise for scratching his car in Color of Money he’s playing Shrevie. And on TV, when Michael Imperioli is postulating about the inviolability of individual fingerprints at Tony Soprano’s mother’s wake, he’s Fenwick on dope. Martin Scorsese, who’d already plumbed improv in Mean Streets and Raging Bull, let himself loose in Goodfellasand King of Comedy because Diner had opened the floodgates.
But it was Paul Reiser who opened the floodgates in Diner. He changed film. 1, because his ramblings couldn’t be ignored and B. because it was good filmmaking.
He's doing a stand-up tour, by the way, go see him. I am.
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You make Paul Reiser sound better than he seems to me. Interesting discussion of Levinson's work.
This is a terrific article and I agree with everything you said as long as I completely ignore your opinion that The Paul Reiser Show was anything but a train wreck.
I have a thing for TV shows that are cancelled after two episodes
Aliens, not Alien
What's a "noodge"?
Should Disney reboot the Indiana Jones series?
Disney's bought the rights to make more Indiana Jones films. Is it time for a reboot?
Raiders Of The Lost Ark is my favorite movie of all time. It's just as vital and entertaining as it was when it was made, over thirty years ago. While neither The Temple Of Doom or The Last Crusade are up to the standard of the original, they're both almost as good, in different ways, almost serving as a Superman III style split of the darkness and lightness of Raiders, into two separate entities.
I love Indiana Jones so much, I can't even completely hate Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull. To many, that may seem contradictory, but to me, it's a bit like a late-era Roger Moore Bond movie, or Die Hard 4.0 - not an bad movie, just a bad Indiana Jones movie. Even having said all that, it's interesting to play devil's advocate in reaction to recent developments.
On Friday, it was announced that Disney had fully acquired the rights to make future Indiana Jones films, as part of the LucasFilm deal. It's interesting that in all of the talk about Star Wars: Episode VII in the last twelve months, few have asked if there'd be more Indy on the cards. Did we all think that they'd just leave it alone?
Over the weekend, Disney's chairman Alan Horn told the press that a new Indy movie would be at least two to three years away, and added "there will surely be new Indiana Jones movies in the future, be they sequels or reboots, and when they do come to fruition, Lucasfilm will be producing".
The three leading creative talents behind the series - director Steven Spielberg, producer George Lucas and leading man Harrison Ford - have all been talking about another Indiana Jones sequel to some extent or another since the fourth one came out in 2008. If anything, Ford seems much more eager to reprise this role than he is about the possibility of revisiting Han Solo in JJ Abrams' new movie.
Realistically speaking, there are probably executives at Disney who would like to reboot the series, but there won't be many movie fans out there who are interested in the prospect of anyone else playing Indiana Jones while Harrison Ford is still willing and able.
To go back to the Die Hard comparison, a straight-out fifth movie would not necessarily be commensurate with the disaster that was A Good Day To Die Hard. Ford clearly cares too much about the character to ever phone it in like Bruce Willis.
Even if he were further hemmed in by Shia LaBeouf, CGI monkeys and the sheer expanse of time that has gone by since his heyday as a leading man, it's fair to say that most would still prefer another sequel, to a reboot with a younger actor.
On the other hand, revisiting the Roger Moore comparison, Steven Spielberg initially conceived of Indy after the Broccolis spurned his desire to direct a Bond movie. Even if you're the kind of cineaste who believes that Hollywood films have gradually become more creatively bankrupt since the advent of the Lucas/Spielberg-led blockbuster movement, at least there was some innovation there.
One of the problems with originality in current blockbuster movie theater is nostalgia, because Hollywood is unfettered by any kind of deferral of satisfaction. Just as Spielberg couldn't make a Bond movie, George Lucas' difficulty in acquiring the rights to Flash Gordon gave us Star Wars. Nowadays, directors can clamber aboard reboots or belated sequels to films they were watching when they were kids, because they've become properties that studios are eager to monetise again.
However, the Bond films rebooted every few years, in recasting the lead role. Where Indiana Jones has differed from 007, however, is in the same actor playing the role over three decades. It would be much harder to change actors while keeping the same façade of continuity at this point. We all know it; Harrison Ford is Indiana Jones.
As I said though, the prospect of playing devil's advocate is too tempting. If you have to reboot it, and you rule out magically de-aging Ford in some top secret machine at Disneyland, who do you cast as the man in the hat in an Indiana Jones movie for the 2010s?
Even having already acknowledged that Ford's performance is indelible, it's tough to try and recast without looking for someone like him. To think like an executive, and turn around and say “We have the rights to do what we want, let's reboot this”, perhaps the most obvious casting choice would be Hugh Jackman.
In his mid-40s, he's only a little older than Harrison Ford was when he took the role, but he looks the part, and he'd also be coming into the role from another iconic turn in a geek property (Han Solo and Wolverine, respectively.)
We know that Indy would probably be younger in a reboot than he was in Raiders, because it ain't the years, honey, it's the mileage. I've seen some suggest Chris Pine of Star Trek fame, but you probably wouldn't cast William Shatner as Indy either.
Pine's co-star Karl Urban would probably be a better fit for the role. Again, older, but given how the internet response to any attempt at recasting will be roughly a million times more vitriolic than the recent Bat-fleck farrago, a fan favorite like Urban would probably have the most cushion-y landing on fanboy ears.
It's fair to assume that they wouldn't try to outright remake Raiders, because in terms of filmmaking, that's probably the difference between heresy and face-melting sacrilege. A reboot would inevitably tread over some of the same beats from the original trilogy, but there's a plethora of McGuffins from unmade sequel scripts, which could easily lend to new adventures set in the 1930s and 1940s - Excalibur, the Round Table, Atlantis, and the Garden of Eden, to name but a few.
Ultimately, Spielberg and Ford probably have to pass on doing a fifth movie, or actually make it, and properly round off their run, before we see any movement on a reboot. This means we'll probably see Shia LaBeouf in another Indiana Jones movie before we see a new Indy, and which is the less palatable prospect?
In a pre-Crystal Skull universe, a reboot would be unthinkable. Now that the fourth movie exists, we might need a reboot just to be safe in knowing that LaBeouf isn't going to take over the franchise as Henry Jones III. We'll leave that nasty little possibility in the “face-melting sacrilege” pile.
Despite taking its inspiration from James Bond, we have to conclude that casting Jackman or Urban or Andrew Lincoln or Ryan Gosling (etc. etc.) in the lead role of the Indiana Jones franchise would not be the same as Roger Moore replacing Sean Connery. It's not an unthinkable prospect, but Disney can't ignore first refusal on the part of Spielberg, Lucas and Ford.
What do you think? Would you rather see a reboot of Indy, or another sequel? If you had to make Indiana Jones today, who would you cast in the lead role?
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They just need to "nuke the fridge" on any new Indy movies or reboots.
Lets just live with what's there .
Like the Star Wars franchise, Indy has been left in a situation where it would be hard to make a worst film than the last incarnation. Personally, I say give Ford another chance, what do we have to loose? There is the rest of time to reboot and recast. Indy (like Ghostbusters) is just a great concept for a movie and needs to continue beyond Ford and especially Spielberg and Lucas. Seems like most of the problems with Crystal Skull emanated from the filmmakers and not the star.
Whoever wrote this is an idiot. Last Crusade is the best one hands down...and Temple of Doom is also amazing. Raiders is really good too but not the best at all.
Really? I'm the opposite. I think Temple is on par with Raiders and Crusade is good, but kind of boring, it lacks the adventurous fun of the first two. Raiders has the boulder run, the bald nazi fight scene, and the army truck chase, all fantastic and memorable. Temple has, IMO, the most iconic sequences and elements, the heart pull, the snake food, the bugs, short round, the Bond style open, the thuggie fight, the rail car chase, and most importantly the rope bridge show down. To me Crusade just has Connery. All the action scenes are acceptable, but not all that memorable or unique (Maybe the tank chase).
We've already had River Phoenix (teenage), Sean Patrick Flannery (teenage / 20s), Corey Carrier (kid), and George Hall (old) all portray Indy on screen. Phoenix is dead, Hall is dead, Carrier is no longer acting, but Flannery is still alive and acting. At age 48 now (although he looks younger than that), he can easily portray WWII-era Indy.
Tell me why he's an idiot - because his opinion differs from yours? Absurd.
That being said, from this perspective, Raiders is clearly the superior film of the franchise.
Two Words: KARL URBAN.
Why not get another, younger actor to do stories between Young Indiana Jones and Temple of Doom, leaving everything before and after intact?
Joseph Gordon-Levitt to direct and star in Sandman
Neil Gaiman's Sandman is finally coming to the big screen - and Joseph Gordon-Levitt will be in front of and behind the camera...
It looks like we're finally going to see a Sandman film. Neil Gaiman's classic comic book series seems to be moving closer and closer to production, and it looks like Joseph Gordon-Levitt is positioned to star as Morpheus, and potentially direct. Deadline reports that a writer isn't in place yet, but Gordon-Levitt tweeted that he's "incredibly honored to be working with David Goyer" as part of his announcement about the project, which seems to indicate that the Man of Steel writer may be penning the adaptation. That tweet and a follow-up where JGL states he's only producing...but doesn't deny the other buzz...follow below:
And now for some more big news... (big to me anyway)
— Joseph Gordon-Levitt (@hitRECordJoe) December 17, 2013
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm incredibly honored to be working with David Goyer, Warner Bros, and @neilhimself on SANDMAN. #Prelude
— Joseph Gordon-Levitt (@hitRECordJoe) December 17, 2013
Just to clarify, folks. I've signed on as a producer on Sandman. The rest remains to be seen. Delighted you guys are excited. I am too!
— Joseph Gordon-Levitt (@hitRECordJoe) December 17, 2013
Those last two were retweeted by Sandman creator Neil Gaiman, so it looks like this may have his stamp of approval, as well!
Warner Bros. have been trying to bring the lush, literate world of The Sandman to film for nearly twenty years. No fewer than three screenplays have been written by various folks, but none have quite managed to capture the eclectic mix of fantasy, horror, romance, and mysticism that the comics portrayed so well. The sprawling, ten-volume Sandman series defined DC Comics' adult Vertigo imprint in the 90s. It's unclear at this time whether this is a standalone movie, but the world of The Sandman is perfect for multi-film franchise, if not a TV series.
That #Prelude hashtag is a reference to "Preludes and Nocturnes" the first volume of the series, so perhaps they've got their eyes on the big picture, after all!
We'll be keeping a close eye on this one.
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Star Wars Omnibus: Knights of the Old Republic Vol. 2 (Dark Horse) Review
Zayne Carrick continues his war against the Jedi, Mandalorians, and Republic in this prequel to the award-winning video game.
I need to take a deep breath before tackling Dark Horse’s newest Star Wars omnibus, the much-awaited volume that collects more chapters of the Knights of the Old Republic run that set the stage for the events of the critically-acclaimed video game (which is probably my favorite RPG of all-time). There are few things I love more than a Star Wars comic book. KOTOR’s predecessor, Tales of the Jedi, is easily one of the best stories ever told in the galaxy far, far away. There are few tales more tragic than that of Ulic Qel-Droma’s fall to the dark side. It leaves me wondering why no one’s ever asked Kevin J. Anderson to write one of the movies. My point being that a lot of the stuff you see in these beautiful panels is sometimes better than the actual movies (except Empire Strikes Back, of course).
So when I dug my teeth into Star Wars Omnibus: Knights of the Old Republic Volume 2, it was with super high expectations/standards. Volume 1 was a thrill ride filled with the incredible action-sequences and pacing of the best Star Wars stories. We were introduced to the very likable Zayne Carrick, a Jedi padawan framed for the murder of his entire class on Telos IV, and the group of criminal/fugitive friends that tag along with him as he evades galactic persecution. Really, writer John Jackson Miller took a page out of the classic George Lucas handbook of storytelling (nod to Joseph Campbell) and dished out a tour de force about another unassuming teenager getting his life torn apart by forces beyond his control. Not to mention that little Mandalorian threat in the Outer Rim. Thus began this epic coming-of-age tale full of lightsabers, punchy dialogue, and betrayal.
Volume 2 does not disappoint.
We pick up where we left: Miller writes up a web of lies and a Mexican standoff on board the Arkanian Legacy in the Omonoth system, where greedy space mogul Adasca is harvesting huge weaponized space slugs known as exogorths that he plans to sell to the highest bidder. Like a meeting of the five families, all the players are under one roof. We have Mandalore, fallen Republic admiral Saul Karath, the murderous Jedi Master Lucien, the Mandalorian deserter Rohlan Dyre, and, of course, Zayne Carrick, who’s not directly involved but can’t seem to stay out of trouble. Camper, “mad” scientist, and his companion, Jarael, are also thrown in the mix with a much more personal grudge against Adasca than the rest of the cast.
But it’s not all about space politics. As you would expect, KOTOR has a darker agenda behind the veil: the events leading up to the fall of countless Jedi to the dark side in order to defeat the Mandalorians. One thing Star Wars always examines is the hero’s sacrifice. Just how much is too much?
Although Revan, the famous Jedi mercenary who takes center stage in the first Knights of the Old Republic games, isn’t the central character of this series, his tale can be followed through the fall of all the Jedi in this series, primarily Lucien’s, who believes that he must strike down his former padawan, Zayne, in order to prevent the Jedi from falling into darkness. This, of course, is very much the paradox we saw in many of the films, especially in the Prequel Trilogy – only presented in a much less melodramatic way.
The ultimate fall of the Jedi in this series isn’t romantic. The ends that justify the means in this tale are justice and survival. Bloody war-torn terrain replaces a trip to the stars. There is a lot less youthful energy, and a lot more war cries. Defeating the Mandalorian threats will ultimately lead to the spark that ignites the Jedi Civil War, an even bloodier conflict that nearly destroyed the entire Order.
Few writers have the command that Miller has on such an epic scale. But you read every story, every subplot, every little drop of tragicomic dialogue, as an intimate moment within the universe.
To anyone who hasn’t started collecting these omnibuses, there is no better time than the present. The story just got soooo good. Swallow these pages who like an exogorth and wait for the culminating volume due out in April 2014.
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Why are some of the listings in red?