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10 mystifying Razzie nominations

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The ListsRyan Lambie1/22/2014 at 7:57AM

Like any awards ceremony, the Razzies can sometimes make some bizarre decisions. Here's our pick of 10 mystifying nominations...

Established in 1981, the Golden Raspberry Awards have grown from a tiny ceremony hosted in founder John JB Wilson's living room into their own Hollywood institution. Intended as an antidote to the self-congratulation and glitz of awards season fixtures like the Oscars or the Golden Globes, the Razzies aim to single out the worst films, screenplays and performances of the preceding year, serving up an irreverent parody of Hollywood's vanity and excess.

Sometimes, the Razzie choices aren't too far off the mark. Few would argue against Battlefield Earth's 2000 win for Worst Picture, or that the impenetrably murky The Last Airbender didn't deserve the amusingly-titled award for Worst Eye-Gouging Misuse of 3D.

There have been some really worthwhile categories on occasion, too, like Worst Movie Trends of the Year, where the nominations included 'Longer Movies, Shorter Plots' and 'spoiler-filled trailers' ('58-year-old leading men wooing 28-year-old leading ladies' ultimately won).

But like any awards ceremony, the Razzies sometimes makes some mystifying decisions, which appear to be informed either by massive box office success or failure rather than a film's lack of merit. Which might explain the inclusion of the following...

Stanley Kubrick - The Shining (1980)

Mystifying inclusions were ingrained in the Razzies from the very beginning. At the 1st Golden Raspberry Awards, The Shining was nominated for two awards - Shelley Duvall  for Worst Actress and Stanley Kubrick for Worst Director. The nominations reflect the horror film's initially mixed reception, and voters took the opportunity to thumb the nose at a director who'd long since established himself as a master of his medium. And while we should bear in mind that the Razzies still consisted of a relatively tiny group of people at this point, the subsequent reassessment of The Shining as a grand horror classic makes its inclusion in the 1981 list of nominees look all the more glaring.

Michael Cimino - Heaven's Gate (1980)

The second Razzies nominee list was largely dominated by Franco Zeffirelli's Endless Love, a swooning romance that was widely panned by critics. Among the less obvious names on the list were Wes Craven's rural horror Deadly Blessing (Ernest Borgnine was nominated for Worst Actor) and cult horror in the making Hell Night (Linda Blair got a nod for Worst Actress).

The most persistent film on the Razzie list, meanwhile, was Heaven's Gate, Michael Cimino's astonishingly long western which infamously bombed. The passing of time has allowed critics to look on the film more favourably in recent years, and to modern eyes, nominating Michael Cimino for Worst Director (which he subsequently won) seems a touch cruel - and an example, perhaps, of how quickly filmmakers can slide from veneration to ridicule.

Ennio Morricone - The Thing (1982)

Having had one of the best films of his career torn apart by critics and then underperform at the box office, director John Carpenter then had the indignity of having the theme music for The Thing nominated for Worst Original Score.

The nomination seems doubly bizarre when you consider that not only was The Thing's music composed by the great Ennio Morricone, but it was also an absolutely perfect murmuring backwash to Carpenter's flesh-rending horror.

Brian De Palma - Scarface (1983)

Brian De Palma's aggressive, excessive gangster drama received some harsh criticism on release, but like The Shining, it's since been hailed as a classic. The Razzies, cleaving to the weight of critical opinion surrounding Scarface in 1983, promptly nominated Brian De Palma for Worst Director, placing him in the ignominious company of Joe Alves and his tackily entertaining killer shark sequel, Jaws 3-D.

Sylvester Stallone - Rocky IV (1985)

Trawling back through the history of the Razzies, it becomes evident that Sylvester Stallone's something of an easy target when it comes to nominations. Sly was Awarded Worst Actor of the Decade in 1990, was nominated for Worst Actor for his roles in Oscar and Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot, while Cliffhanger was nominated for Worst Picture in 1994.

Stallone has therefore become something of a running joke among the Razzies' voters, with his name appearing to turn up more regularly than just about any other actor. Take a look at the 6th Golden Raspberry list, for example: in total, Stallone's films Rambo: First Blood Part II and Rocky IV were nominated for a startling 15 awards, including Worst Picture and Worst Screenplay.

Now, while we can't argue that Rambo: First Blood Part II or Rocky IV are particularly intellectual, artistic films, they succeeded in what they set out to do: they're both unashamedly loud, populist pieces of entertainment.

Rocky IV, in particular, featured a talking robot, James Brown and some of the most quotable lines of any movie from the 1980s. While we can see why Rocky IV's sheer trashiness would earn it some Razzie attention, we'd argue that it was far from the worst film of 1985 - in fact, it's one of the ones we still return to from time to time, though that's partly because it's on TV so often.

Danny DeVito - Batman Returns (1992)

The list of nominees for the 13th Razzies (held in 1993) contained relatively few surprises, featuring as it did a selection of notorious flops (Christopher Columbus: The Discovery appeared in several categories) as well as one of the year's biggest and most commonly lampooned hits, Basic Instinct. The most curious choice on that list was undoubtedly Danny DeVito's nomination for Worst Supporting Actor in Tim Burton's Batman Returns. Granted, it was a heightened, bizarre performance - and genuinely villainous, we'd argue - but then, Batman Returns was a heightened, bizarre film. Fortunately, sense prevailed and Tom Selleck's rather iffy turn as King Ferdinand of Spain in Christopher Columbus: The Discovery ultimately won.

Sandra Bullock - Demolition Man (1993)

In line with the Razzies' continued obsession with Sly Stallone's action movies, both Cliffhanger and Demolition Man were prominent fixtures on the 1994 list of nominees. But among the understandable mentions for such cheesy erotic thrillers as Sliver and Body Of Evidence, Sandra Bullock got a Worst Supporting Actress nomination for Demolition Man.

Given that Bullock was essentially playing the quirky love interest role in an action vehicle for Stallone and Wesley Snipes, we'd argue that her performance here was perfectly judged: hers is, after all, a deceptively tricky character to get right. Lieutenant Lenina Huxley is a cop in a pacifist future city where guns, sex, alcohol, swearing and caffeine have all been outlawed, yet she harbours a fascination for the tough, brutal cops of 80s and 90s action cinema.

When Stallone's 90s cop and Snipes' 90s psycho are thawed out and wage a miniature war among the squeaky-clean streets of San Angeles, Huxley's thrilled to find herself in the midst of her own geek fantasy. Bullock cheerfully dives right into this knowlingly daft scenario, and her turn as Huxley is just right for the film. The worst supporting actress of 1993? Hardly.

Sandra Bullock won a Golden Raspberry in 2009 for her performance in All About Steve. Given that most actors don't bother to turn up to collect their award in person, Bullock's appearance - and speech - was a truly class act:

 

Heather Donahue - The Blair Witch Project (1999)

Eduardo Sanchez and Daniel Myrick's The Blair Witch Project would go on to define the found-footage horror genre for years to come, and even 15 years later, we're still feeling the ripples from its impact, both in movies and the way they're marketed.

Of the film's small ensemble cast, Heather Donahue was the most prominent, and her terrified, direct-to-camera speech was The Blair Witch's dramatic centrepiece, and one of 1999's most memorable images. In a film that demanded a documentary-like sense of realism (it was originally a hoax, after all) Donahue's performance was extremely convincing. So why did she end up winning a Razzie for Worst Actress? Her big mistake, it seemed, was in happening to appear in a film that ended up grossing almost $250m.

Tom Cruise - War Of The Worlds (2005)

Steven Spielberg's War Of The Worlds was unfortunate enough to coincide with Tom Cruise's couch-jumping antics on the Oprah Winfrey Show, not to mention his public comments about psychiatry (he said it should be "outlawed") and his much-fussed-about relationship with Katie Holmes. Tom Cruise's nomination for Worst Actor could therefore be read as a reaction to his mid-2000s tabloid infamy rather than his work in Spielberg's alien invasion adaptation, which was perfectly serviceable.

Johnny Depp - The Lone Ranger (2013)

There were undeniably problems with last year's The Lone Ranger, but on the other hand, it certainly wasn't the disaster that some of its more aggressive critics suggested, either. The Lone Ranger's slow business at the box office, and its widespread (though not unanimous) critical derision, made its presence on this year's Razzies list easy to predict. But does The Lone Ranger really deserve five nominations, including Worst Picture? We'd certainly argue it doesn't, and neither does Johnny Depp deserve a nomination for Worst Actor.

Once again, it seems as though Razzie voters are simply going for box office failures rather than genuinely bad films. Despite its flaws, we suspect that The Lone Ranger will be one of those movies that is looked back on a little more kindly in a few years' time, and could ultimately make its prominence on the 34th Razzies list almost as mystifying as The Shining's inclusion more than three decades ago.

Honorable mentions:

The Hunchback Of Notre Dame (nominee for Worst Written Film Grossing Over $100m), Richard Pryor in Superman III (Worst Supporting Actor - really?), Kevin Costner in Wyatt Earp (an undeserved Worst Actor win), Zelda Rubinstein in Poltergeist II (Worst Supporting Actress).

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Heaven's Gate is a mess and Cimino deserved to win for being such a temperamental douche-nozzle.

And Hunchback of Notre Dame deserved to be nominated for Worst Screenplay based on the gargoyles alone.

The Shining really? It's one of the best (and creepiest) movies I've ever seen.

Respectfully disagree with your' comment on Heaven's Gate. While Cimino's personality may have made him unpopular with the critics at the time and apparently you. It doesn't take away from the film being well shot, easy to follow with some fine performances.


Exclusive: Rosario Dawson Confirms She’s In Clerks 3

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NewsDavid Crow1/22/2014 at 8:12AM

Star Rosario Dawson confirms to Den of Geek that she'll be returning for Clerks 3.

During promotion for Gimme Shelter, Rosario Dawson confirmed to Den of Geek that she will be in Clerks 3…whenever that is.
 
When I sat down with Dawson earlier this week, a snow storm seemingly threatened to engulf Manhattan whole outside, but the always engaging star of such films as 25th Hour, Rent, and Sin City brought her reliable warmth to the press proceedings. We’ll have the entirety of that interview available later in the week, but inevitably the subject of Clerks 3 came up.
 
At New York Comic-Con last fall, Kevin Smith confirmed to a rapturous crowd that the screenplay for the third Clerksfilm was completed, and that the movie would be next on his schedule after he finished Tusk, which began shooting in November. During that NYCC panel, Smith also stated his plan to have Clerks 3in theaters by November 2014, timed for the 20th anniversary of the original Clerks'theatrical release. He has since posted on his Facebook page that he hopes to begin shooting Clerks 3this May.
 
However, we have not had any confirmations of returning fan favorites for the Quick-Stop threequel until now. Dawson, who played Becky, the effervescent light in sad sack Dante’s (Brian O’Halloran) life during Clerks II, was able to confirm that she will be back for another View Askew adventure, though she does not yet know when it’s shooting.
 
Den of Geek: You mentioned earlier Clerks 3, and I know Kevin Smith said in October that he’s aiming to have it out by this November 2014 for the 20th Anniversary. Do you know if that’s still happening?
 
Rosario Dawson: Well, we haven’t shot it, so I don’t know if that’s possible. [Laughs]
 
DoG: Do you know if it’s shooting this year?
 
Dawson: Don’t know. He just confirmed that I’m in it!
 
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Worlds Collide! 10 Great Movie and TV Shared Universes

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The ListsJesse Mateja1/22/2014 at 8:42AM

When seemingly unrelated movies, TV shows, or novels share certain characters, it's fun to figure out where everyone fits!

While the Marvel Studios movies (and TV shows) have put the concept of a "shared universe" at the forefront of pop culture consciousness, it's not like they were the first. There have been plenty of other film, TV, and literature franchises that quietly occupied the same reality, you sometimes just had to look a little harder to spot 'em. Here are ten of our favorites.

 

10. Ghostbusters and Casper

The Ghostbusters have gone up against specters, gods, a seventeenth-century tyrant, and a giant marshmallow man...and won, so you'd think a haunted house would be child’s play to them. When a rich snob inherits a house that she finds out is haunted by Casper’s three jerky uncles, who’s she gonna call? Well, at least one Ghostbuster. Dan Aykroyd shows up for a cameo as his bustin’ counterpart Ray Stantz (complete with Ghostbusters jumpsuit and proton pack) to rid the house of the annoying ghouls. Unfortunately they’re too much for even him to handle when he comes running out of the house and tells the woman, “Who you gonna call? Someone else.” It’s cute, damn it! It’s not that big of a deal to think Ghostbusters and Casper are in the same universe. The most important thing to take from this is that the Ghostbusters are still working! Even if they did small bits like this in movies every now and then, we wouldn’t need a Ghostbusters 3... especially not after the awful Ghostbusters 2.

9. Scrubs in Cougar Town

Created by Bill Lawrence and produced by the Doozer production company & ABC Studios, Scrubs ran for nine seasons with 181 episodes. With the same companies backing, Bill Lawrence created another sitcom titled Cougar Town, starring Courteney Cox. Cougar Town ran for three seasons on ABC but never quite developed the substantial cult following that Scrubs had over the years. Cable network TBS picked up Cougar Town for two seasons (the show returns for season five in 2014). There have been about ten or so of the same stars from Scrubs to show up in one way or another on Cougar Town, but this clip ends with a great set of references when Ted from Scrubs (who is visiting the Cougar Town group that he met in Hawaii) freaks out thinking there is something familiar about everyone around him. After all of the little hints and references, it’s a smartly done scene to expose the truth about how the two worlds co-exist.

8. The Dukes Are Back

In Trading Places, millionaire Randolph Duke (Ralph Bellamy) and his brother Mortimer (Don Ameche) make a bet (their “usual amount” for a bet is one dollar) to see if they can turn a wealthy man (Dan Aykroyd) into a pauper and turn a criminal (Eddie Murphy) into a high-class citizen. Unfortunately, I have to spoil the end for those who haven’t seen it to tell you that in the end the Dukes lose their vast fortune. In Coming To America, wealthy Prince Akeem (again...Eddie Murphy) comes to this country to try to find a wife for himself. While taking a walk with a woman he's falling for, he comes across a homeless man resting in a pile of garbage. Akeem feels bad for the man, gives him a rolled-up bag, and he and the woman walk off. When asked by the woman, Akeem tells her he gave the homeless man some “pocket change.” Cut back to the homeless man (who turns out to be Don Ameche) as he opens the bag to find it loaded with money. He calls, “Randolph!” and awakens the man lying next to him, who rolls over...and it's Ralph Bellamy. Randolph’s eyes widen, he smiles and says, “Mortimer, we’re back.” Cut to Akeem and the female having dinner by a window when the Dukes knock on the window happily thanking the stranger for the money.

So in this universe, rich jerks who lose everything can trade places again. Thanks, Prince Akeem, for probably making humbled men turn back into terrible human beings.

7. NBC’s Must See Thursday Universe 
 

This probably came about from some executive at NBC thinking these show should be linked just because they were considered “Must See TV” as there's no real reason for any of it. Okay, so in Friends you have Phoebe Buffay, played by Lisa Kudrow. In the episode “The One Where Chandler Can’t Cry” (S6 Ep.14), someone recognizes Phoebe from a porno titled Buffay: The Vampire Layer, starring Phoebe Buffay. It turns out Phoebe did not star in that movie, but her twin sister Ursula (also played by Kudrow) did. Ursula was rarely ever around on Friends since she regularly works in another part of NYC as a waitress at Riff’s Restaurant. Riff’s is the favorite restaurant of Paul and Jamie Buchman (Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt) on Mad About You. Ursula showed up in numerous Mad About You episodes, so we don’t really need to single out any of her appearances. Jamie once even went to Central Perk in a Friends episode and thought Phoebe was Ursula. Then in the Mad About You episode “The Apartment” (S1 Ep.8) we find out that even though Paul and Jamie are married, Paul kept his old apartment but sublets it to someone. When Jamie asks Paul to get rid of the apartment, Paul goes to visit the tenant to offer the lease to him. The tenant: Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards) from Seinfeld. After a brief chat, Paul mentions that he never got along with the comedian who lived next door (Jerry Seinfeld). That’s it. Betcha didn’t see any of that coming, (or really even care to) but it's true!

6. Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein
 

A movie where one of the greatest comedic duos in history goes up against two of, not only Hollywood’s scariest monsters, but literature’s most popular villains. With Abbott and Costello getting top billing, it sounds like it would be a farce, right? But here’s where it gets compelling: Dracula and the Wolf Man are played by Bela Lugosi and Lon Chaney, Jr.: the actors who made the characters famous for Universal. So we have a straight man and a comedian going up against some of the most famous Universal Monsters, and the main thing is that it’s done respectfully. Dracula doesn’t accidently throw a pie in the Wolf Man’s face, they don’t spray seltzer on each other, nor do they do any pratfalls. You can even say Dracula and Wolf Man are the straight men to the team of Abbott and Costello. Yes, Frankenstein’s monster is also in the film and is an integral part of the plot, but Lugosi and Chaney. play it like it’s one of their own horror films, and that’s what makes this a fascinating world. The story isn’t complicated and there aren’t any twists or turns that I have to be careful to not spoil for those reading this, but it’s a great idea executed really well and I recommend it if you’re into classic horror or classic comedies. And speaking of classic horror, the ending has a great cameo by not only a classic character, but a true horror legend!

5. Hunter S. Thompson And Talking Lizards In A Kids Movie

This one absolutely blows my mind. Watch the video clip first and then wrap your mind around the words that you are reading here. Hunter S. Thompson’s fantastic book Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas was adapted into a film directed by Terry Gilliam and starring Johnny Depp as Thompson/Raoul Duke. A decade later you have Johnny Depp voicing the title character in the animated feature Rango, which is about a talking lizard. So not only do we have the Fear and Loathing "universe" mixing with a world of talking (and clothed) reptiles, we also have an animated movie for kids that references drug users who are used to seeing talking and clothed reptiles (of which there is a scene in Fear and Loathing), making this one of the most insanely nonsensical cameos and crossovers in movie history.

4. The Tarantino-verse

This would be a difficult one to sum up in a few words, so for now we’ll just get into the more obvious ones. If you’ve seen at least two of Quentin Tarantino’s movies, you’ve probably noticed something similar here or there: the Red Apple Cigarette brand, a Big Kahuna Burger fast food restaurant bag, or maybe recurring character Sheriff Earl McGraw. Mr. Tarantino neither confirms nor denies that everything he writes takes place in the same universe, though there are plenty of theories out there about the connections, and part of the fun of watching a Tarantino movie is trying to spot a reference to another one. In Reservoir Dogs, Mr. White references a young girl named Alabama that he used to pull cons with; in True Romance (which Tarantino wrote but didn’t direct), the female lead is a girl named Alabama who has some loose morals. Coincidence? Well here is one that Tarantino has admitted to: Mr. Blonde’s name in Reservoir Dogs is Vic Vega, and John Travolta’s character in Pulp Fiction is Vincent Vega, correct? Well Quentin admitted to a link there because he had a story he wanted to film titled The Vega Brothers, which would have been about Vic and Vincent’s earlier days (since Vincent, of course, doesn't survive Pulp Fiction). 

3. Detective John Munch is EVERYWHERE

This one, though it may not be the most incredible, just might be the most vast and varied. Richard Belzer is an actor/comedian who currently plays Detective John Munch on the cop drama Law & Order: SVU. The character originally appeared on Homicide: Life On The Street, but after that show ended Detective Munch was moved to this Law & Order spin-off. One of the coolest aspects of the character of John Munch is that he has now officially appeared on more television series than any other character in television history, and we’re not just talking cop dramas here. Some Detective Munch appearances include: The Wire (S5 Ep.7 “Took”), The X-Files (S5 Ep.3 “Usual Suspects”); in comedies like Arrested Development (S3 Ep.9 “S.O.B.s”, S3 Ep.12 “Exit Strategy”) and 30 Rock (S5 Ep.13 : "¡Qué Sorpresa!", S7 Ep.13 “Last Lunch” as himself playing Munch); and even on musician Paul Shaffer’s album The World’s Most Dangerous Party. He’s even been mentioned on the BBC show Luther as an American contact of the lead character. As of this writing Detective Munch has been on television for 20 years and appeared in 449 television episodes. So by the shared universe theory, Cigarette Smoking Man and the vampire pizza delivery boy from The X-Files live in the same world as Tracy Jordan from 30 Rock. I love it. Detective John Munch is policing the coolest world.

2. Do Androids Dream Of Controlling The Universe?

Okay, if you take this one with a grain of salt, it's pretty damned entertaining. David Peeples, who did some rewrites on the Blade Runner script, also wrote the Kurt Russell starring Soldier, and called it a side-quel to Blade Runner since it does take place in the same universe. In Soldier, we not only see a “Spinner” vehicle from Blade Runner, when Russell’s characters service record is shown, we see he fought in the battles of Tannhauser Gate and Shoulder of Orion, both of which are references to Blade Runner. His weapons training lists the M41A Pulse Rifle and USCM Smart Gun, which appear in Aliens. Also, on the Prometheus (which is, of course, a prequel of sorts to Alien) home video release, there is an easter egg of a message from Sir Peter Weyland (of Weyland-Yutani Corp from the Alien movies) that suggests he knew Eldon Tyrell of the Tyrell Corporation (who was responsible for making replicants in Blade Runner). There is also a set of movies titled Alien Vs. Predator, which really don’t need explanation. So far, those are some good solid links. There's more, though.

Joss Whedon wrote Alien: Resurrection, the fourth film in the series. So from here we go to Whedon’s Buffy: The Vampire Slayer spin-off, Angel, where the law firm of Wolfram & Hart have as a client….Weyland-Yutani. It’s referenced once (S5 Ep.9 “Harm’s Way) but nothing really comes of it. It could have been done as a joke since Joss worked on Alien: Resurrection. BUT, Whedon also created the TV series Firefly, and in the pilot episode, Malcolm Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) uses an anti-aircraft gun that has the Weyland-Yutani logo on the top of its screen. Though they all don’t take place in the same timeframe, if you want to buy into the references being canon, we have all of these in the same universe: Blade RunnerSoldier, the Alien franchise, the Predator franchise, Buffy: The Vampire Slayer (and Angel), and Firefly. In other words, this universe has aliens that burst out of your chest, vampires, vampire slayers, androids, and replicants. “Game over, man! Game over!”

1. It’s Stephen King’s World, We Just Live In It 

Stephen King isn’t just the “Master of Horror”, he’s the master of his own shared universe. For forty years and dozens of books King has kept us looking under our beds for the boogeyman before we go to sleep at night. Not only that, he can link the boogeyman to anything from any of his stories to make you even more frightened. There are so many ways to bridge the areas of Derry and Castle Rock, King’s two most popular settings, that it can't all be outlined here, but let’s list some of the biggest ones. First: Randall Flagg, who first appears in King’s The Stand and is probably the author’s most popular antagonist, appears in at least nine of his books looking to destroy civilizations. Second: Pennywise the Clown may have a major role in It, but in Dreamcatcher someone has spraypainted “Pennywise Lives” on a statue, and in The Tommyknockers a reference is made about a child who sees a clown in a sewer.

At the center of this universe is the Dark Tower series. The Dark Tower itself holds together all of time and space. Characters can enter or leave the Dark Tower and go to any place and/or time they want to…..even supposedly to our universe. There is even a universe you can travel to where Doctor Doom-ish robots fight with lightsabers. You heard me. Randall Flagg has used the Tower to travel to different places. The villains from Hearts In Atlantis come from the Dark Tower, and the Buick in From A Buick 8 is a portal to the Tower. All of that just scratches the surface. Some people find difficulties connecting just a few stories. Stephen King just sits back, watches the pieces fall into place, and then takes notes.

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This may be minor, but R2D2 appears in Close Encounters on the underside of the mothership. In return, Lucas put a group of ETs in Revenge of the Sith in the senate chamber.

And the kids play with Star Wars figures, and a kid is dressed as Yoda in E.T., also.

Avengers: Age of Ultron - Everything We Know

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 8:49AM

New villains, new heroes, and more Joss Whedon, here's what we know about the Avengers: Age of Ultron movie right now.

In the wake of Batman vs. Superman’s release delayAvengers: Age of Ultron is now quite firmly the most anticipated superhero movie of 2015 (with apologies to Edgar Wright's Ant-Man movie and 20th Century Fox’s Fantastic Four reboot). The sequel to the most successful superhero movie of all-time (and one of the highest grossing films ever) will arrive on May 1st, 2015, and will see the return of most of the original cast, director/writer Joss Whedon, and include a host of new characters. So what do we know for certain?

THE VILLAINS

As the title suggests, the primary villain of Avengers: Age of Ultron is...Ultron! Who is Ultron? He’s a malevolent artificial intelligence (created with the best of intentions) that wants to see biological life eliminated. For anyone who has never read an Ultron story, we can refer you to some of our favorites. Basically, imagine something far worse than Skynet, able to produce a limitless number of drones for the Avengers to clobber. And who is going to play Ultron? None other than Red Reddington himself, James Spader, who will not only provide the voice of Ultron, but actually portray the malevolent robot via motion capture. Ultron's origins will be altered slightly for the film, as he won't be created by Hank Pym (who will be played by Michael Douglas in Ant-Man but presumably won't be showing up in Avengers: Age of Ultron). The teaser, which you can watch below, implies that it will be Tony Stark who accidentally creates the technological terror.

But there will be at least one other bad guy joining the proceedings, in the form of Thomas Kretschmann as Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. Baron Strucker is the head of HYDRA, generally known as Captain America and SHIELD antagonists, and since it’s unlikely that HYDRA will be central to the plot of a movie called Age of Ultron, he’ll probably be a quickly dispatched secondary threat.

THE HEROES
 

In addition to the return of the original team, the Avengers are getting some reinforcements in the form of Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch. Elizabeth Olsen is Wanda Maximoff aka the Scarlet Witch, while Aaron Taylor-Johnson will play Quicksilver. Presumably, their mutant roots will be downplayed considerably, since the issue of their parentage (namely, Magneto) is tied up at another studio. We don't yet know exactly how large their roles will be, or even if they'll be full-blown Avengers allies, but these are two characters with deep roots in Avengers lore, so it's safe to say they'll be quite visible.

THE REST

Avengers: Age of Ultron will begin filming soon enough. There’s nothing to indicate that the film will share anything with the comic of the same name (which dealt with time travel, alternate realities, and other heavy subjects that the Avengers film franchise might not be quite ready for) other than the title. Joss Whedon will return to both write and direct. You can even watch the teaser (which was unveiled at SDCC 2013) right here!

Avengers: Age of Ultron opens on May 1st, 2015

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Don't forget war machine. Falcon maybe?

I forgot about war machine the years ago.

It sucks that you're right

can't wait for this movie!

Frankenstein: Comics Greatest Monster

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FeatureMarc Buxton1/22/2014 at 9:14AM

With I, Frankenstein about to hit theaters, we look at the famous monster's comic book adventures!

Dr. Frankenstein’s monstrous creation has a long history in literature and film, crafting an enduring legacy that has informed popular culture since the world’s most famous monster rose electrified off the slab in 1818. Mary Shelley’s classic creature has a long history in comic books as well. Some of the greatest creators comics have had to offer in each era of sequential storytelling have gotten their crack at some iteration of the Frankenstein’s Monster. From classic gothic atmospheric horror, to humor, to adventure, there have been many attempts to find comic book success through the exploitation of the not-so-good Doctor’s creation. Here are some of the more memorable comic series that have featured the most fearsome icon in horror fiction.

Prize Comics
 

In 1940, writer-artist and Will Eisner protégé, Dick Briefer presented a modern day take of Mary Shelley’s legend in the pages of Prize Comics #7. This comic may have seemed like just another of a long line of anthology features to appear in the early Golden Age, but Prize Comics #7 would forever be known as the first ongoing horror feature in comics. Looking back, it is clear that EC Comics’ classic horror titles, Swamp Thing, Vertigo, and even The Walking Dead are all rooted historically in the legacy of Dick Briefer and Prize Comics #7. Briefer took full advantage of Shelley’s Frankenstein public domain status by creating a feature that resembled the creature featured in Universal Picture’s 1931 version of Frankenstein starring Boris Karloff, but not enough to infringe on any copyrights. According to writer Craig Yoe’s intro to IDW’s great Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein Archives, Briefer actually had to convince his publisher that Frankenstein was indeed part of the public domain and no lawyers would get involved upon the publication of Briefer’s strip. Horror fans should be glad that Briefer was convincing, as he crafted an atmospheric thriller that set the standard for early horror comics.

Briefer's Frankenstein strip was set in the New York of the late 1930s and left just enough familiar elements that fans who wanted more after consuming the Universal cycle of Frankenstein films would find it in these pages. In the strip, the creature was simply referred to as Frankenstein rather than Frankenstein’s Monster, perhaps marking the first time the erroneous title was bestowed upon the iconic creature. It is difficult to discover where the titular paradigm shift occurred in popular culture, but it may have been due to Briefer’s comic. Briefer’s early strips are fevered madness with such insane moments as a mutated alligator with human limbs fighting Frankenstein on the roof of a skyscraper, and the Monster stuffing a bunch of little kids into a lion’s cage (the kids survived when the lion attacked Frankenstein instead).  

Briefer’s Frankenstein was immense and would often shift sizes. Sometimes, he was twice the size of a grown man, at other times; an adult was drawn sitting on the Monster’s shoulder. The character burst with a primitive energy and a raw power that evolved beyond the artist’s sometimes quaintly clumsy style. As fans eagerly awaited Universal to churn out another Frankenstein feature, Prize Comics kept the legend in the spotlight, offering up a unique take on the Monster. Briefer’s historical legacy did not stop with the production of the very first ongoing horror comic,as Prize Comics was the first book to feature an intercompany crossover. Decades before Secret Wars and Crisis on Infinite Earths, the pantheon of Prize Comics’ heroes (and now public domain staples) the Green Lama, Black Owl, Dr. Frost, and the patriotic duo, Yank and Doodle teamed up to take on Frankenstein. The Justice Society banded together a few months earlier over at DC Comics, but Prize Comics was the first book to feature guest heroes popping up and uniting in another feature to take down a menace, marking one of the first instances of the idea of a shared comic book universe.

Soon, Briefer’s Frankenstein would follow many other comic characters by joining the fight with the Axis menace, leading the Monster to take on a more heroic role in the still mist-shrouded pages of Prize Comics. The battle with the Nazis did not end Briefer’s run, as an even more beloved era was soon to begin. After the War, Frankenstein became, of all things, a very popular humor feature. The strip suddenly shifted to a light and airy tone about Frankenstein’s adventures with humorous versions of Dracula and the Wolfman in post-War, small town America. In the final issue of Prize Comics and into the pages of a Frankenstein solo book, the newly dubbed Merry Monster delighted readers ready for a contrast from the dark days of World War II. Briefer’s original Frankenstein was a disturbing sight to behold, a deformed mass of strength whose skin barley stretched over his misshapen skull. Briefer’s comical Frankenstein was a cuddly oaf that no doubt informed such humorous approaches to horror icons such as the Munsters, the Addams Family, and the Groovy Ghoulies. Briefer’s funny Frank left as much of a legacy as his horror Frank, and this period of fearsome funnies was the peak of the artist’s comic career. After the EC Comics horror boom, Briefer was forced to return his Frankenstein to its horror roots, but it was clear that the artist’s heart wasn’t in it. With the advent of the Comics Code, this version of Frankenstein was finally laid to rest.

Classic Comics #26 (1945)
 

For a more traditional approach to the Frankenstein legend, the Golden Age featured Classic Comics #26, a straight approach to Mary Shelley’s novel. The issue remains one of the most popular and sought out issues of Classic Comics. Adapted by Ruth A. Roche with artwork by Robert Hayward Webb and Ann Brewster, Classic Comics #26 was a gothic triumph and remains the most faithful sequential retelling of Shelly’s classic.

The Strange and Short History of Dell Comics’ Frankenstein
 

Created by writer Don Segall and artist Tony Tallarico, Dell’s Frankenstein is one of the strangest adaptations of the classic monster in comic history. It started innocently enough in 1964, with Frankenstein #1, yet another adaptation of Shelley’s novel. Three years later, inspired by Marvel’s successful super-hero renaissance, Dell decided they were going to compete with the House of Ideas by by forcing the Universal Horror legends into the roles of super-heroes. They tried with Werewolf, they tried with Dracula, and they tried with Frankenstein. What followed was the comic book version of a Mystery Science Theatre 3000 film. In Dell’s (ahem) classic, the Monster wakes up in the present day to find his gothic castle surrounded by a modern city. Naturally, Frankenstein becomes a crime fighter. Dell’s Frankenstein has a green head but a flesh colored body so he fashions himself a mask to hide his distinctive coloration and ventures out of his castle. Adopting the name Frank Stone, the Monster befriends an elderly billionaire who leaves Frank his fortune upon death.

[related article: It's Alive! 13 Forgotten Frankenstein Films]

Basically, Frank wakes up, makes a mask, saves an old dude, and then becomes Bruce Wayne. Frank’s only ally is his faithful butler William, while busybody Miss Ann Thorpe devotes herself to proving Frank’s identity. So complete with his own Alfred and Lois Lane rip-offs, Dell’s Frankenstein becomes one of the greatest crime fighters of all time. Well, not exactly, the whole mess is cancelled after three issues. Dell’s heart was in the right place, but the Marvel formula was elusive, and their Frankenstein became a footnote in horror history. Oh, yeah...Franks’ arch nemesis was a midget mad scientist named Mr. Freek who rode around on the back of a huge gorilla named Bruno, so Dell’s forgotten Frank had that little bit of awesome going for it.

The History of Frankenstein at Marvel Comics
 

With the loosening of the Comic Code in the early 70s, Marvel Comics was eager to add their own pantheon of monsters to their already growing stable of superheroes. Looking to exploit the marketability of the Universal characters, Marvel turned their attentions to the most recognizable of horror icons, including Frankenstein. The first Marvel character that utilized the Frankenstein name appeared in X-Men #40 by writer Roy Thomas and penciler Don Heck. This version of the classic creature was sent to Earth by aliens in the nineteenth century to scout for an invasion. The X-Men defeated the creature and while this particular battle won’t go down in history as one of the merry mutant’s greatest struggles, it did inform Marvel that their universe was ripe for such classic monster action.

The “real” Frankenstein would pop up via flashback in Silver Surfer #7 by Stan Lee and John Buscema, before Marvel launched The Monster of Frankenstein (later retitled The Frankenstein Monster) in 1973. The newly minted horror title began with a four issue adaptation of Shelly’s novel written by Garry Friedrich and drawn by Mike Ploog. It is Ploog’s art that made Marvel’s early Frankenstein comics examples of Bronze Age perfection. Every line denotes a call back to the character’s gothic roots and the book remains an illustration of the pinnacle of the often overlooked Ploog’s career. After the adaptation, Frankenstein raged and terrified the 1890s before pulling a Captain America and falling into suspended animation and awakening in modern times. Frankenstein’s solo title lasted a memorable eighteen issues and remains one of Marvel’s horror success stories. Frankenstein would again appear in issues of Marvel Team-Up (teaming with Spider-Man), Iron Man, and The Avengers. A clone of Frankenstein’s Monster would be featured as a Nazi tool in a memorable issue of The Invaders while another clone, this one altruistic and intelligent, was created by SHIELD to become part of their Howling Commandoes unit of monster agents. Marvel’s Frankenstein remains a fascinating example of Bronze Age experimentation with some of the era’s greatest art thanks to monster master, Mike Ploog.

The History of Frankenstein at DC Comics
 

While Marvel’s Frankenstein’s glory days were years ago, DC’s Frankenstein is currently a fascinating and vital part of the New 52. Before the modern day Frankenstein, DC had used the creature sparingly over the decades. The classic monster was used for humorous effect in Superman #143 in the tale “Bizarro Meets Frankenstein.” This natural pairing remains a fun Silver Age classic that was a product of the times. DC’s next attempt at Frankenstein, while remaining a bit obscure, was truer to Frankenstein’s roots. In 1973, in a back-up feature in DC’s Phantom Stranger, Swamp Thing co-creator Len Wein and artist Jim Aparo created The Spawn of Frankenstein, a visual departure from the classic hulking creature. This Frankenstein was an emaciated being with a gaunt face and long stringy hair. This was the most deathly-looking Frankenstein featured in a visual media, rivaling even the legendary Christopher Lee’s Hammer monster for sheer cadaver-like appearance. The Spawn of Frankenstein appeared as a back-up for eight issues of Phantom Stranger, never achieving the same brief but memorable success as Marvel’s Monster. But the feature remains a testament to Wein and Aparo’s ability to bend genres and craft a disturbingly lurid horror tale with limited space. The character would pop up one more time in Young All-Stars by Roy Thomas, a writer who had used the Frankenstein concept to battle three of his super-hero teams in three separate decades, the X-Men in the 60s, the Invaders in the 70s, and the Young All-Stars in the 80s.

Another version of the monster would pop up in the Batman Elseworlds story, Castle of the Bat (1995) by Jack C. Harris and Bo Hampton, where Bruce Wayne took the role of Dr. Frankenstein while Alfred became a hunchbacked lab assistant named Alfredo. In this strange take on the Batman legend, the creature is responsible for the deaths of Wayne’s parents. Superman had his turn as Shelley’s creation in 1999’s The Superman Monster by Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning, and Anthony Williams, with Superman cast as the Monster, Lex Luthor as the mad scientist, Lois Lane as The Bride, and the Kents as the kindly couple that raises the Monster (how Bruce Wayne doesn’t pop up as Dracula is anyone’s guess).

No Frankenstein would appear in the DC Universe proper after Young All-Stars until Grant Morrison resurrected the concept in his mega series event, Seven Soldiers in 2005. Morrison introduced a new type of Frankenstein to modern comic book audiences, a globe hopping, Milton quoting badass that was plopped square into the middle of the contemporary DC Universe. This Frankenstein was the classic Monster with a generous helping of Jim Steranko’s Nick Fury thrown in for good measure. Morrison even threw in a character called The Bride loosely based on Elsa Lanchester’s performance in James Whales’ The Bride of Frankenstein, albeit with an extra set of arms and a penchant for assault weapons. The character was chosen to play a major role in the Flashpoint event and Morrison’s Frankenstein was such a strong character, that the creature survived the DC reboot and was granted his own title in the initial wave of the New 52.

This Frankenstein was given a huge role in the current DC Universe history as, with the absence of the Justice Society and other Nazi smashing mystery men, DC revealed that it was Frankenstein that actually killed Hitler. Frankenstein carried his own greatly missed title, Frankenstein, Agent of SHADE, for 16 issues and is currently a member in good standing in the always entertaining Justice League Dark. One imagines that DC’s Frankenstein would be a perfect character for Guillermo Del Toro to utilize in the oft rumored Justice League Dark film project, after all, there is certainly a great deal about this version of Frankenstein that was informed by Hellboy, another creature feature Del Toro is famous for.

In addition to DC’s Frankenstein, there was a Teen Titan named Young Frankenstein who served during the “Lost Year” period of the team during DC's "lost year" title, 52. The young version of the Monster was killed by Black Adam during the World War III event, but was resurrected in the modern day. It is unclear whether the character exists in the post-reboot DC Universe.  

The Matrix Connection
 

In 2004, Geof Darrow, Steve Skroce, and the Wachowski Brothers, creators and directors of the Matrix trilogy, created Doc Frankenstein. Similar in scope and tone to DC’s Frankenstein, Doc Frankenstein presented the adventures of the legendary monster’s ironic adventures as a liberal adventurer throughout history. The book details the creature’s adventurers as a gun slinger and on the frontlines of World War II as well as an advocate for choice and the teaching of evolution. This unique take on the legend is a fascinating read with some truly kickass art by Skroce, an artist who doesn’t do nearly enough comic work these days. Only six issues have been published since Doc Frankenstein’s debut, but they are worth tracking down for the sheer outrageousness of the concept.

Where Frankenstein may rise again in the world of comics is anyone’s guess, but the legacy of the character is almost as old as the super-hero genre. Like film and television, Frankenstein’s comic book legacy has always been and remains very much ALIVE!

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Kevin Hart and Ed Helms Join DreamWorks Animation’s Captain Underpants

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 1:16PM

Children's book series Captain Underpants is being adapted for the big screen with Kevin Hart, Ed Helms, and more to provide vocals.

Kevin Hart is already having a great 2014. After his hit comedy Ride Along rode over the blockbuster competition this weekend, his February laugher About Last Night has scared off competition like Vampire Academy from the Valentine’s Day weekend arena. And now he gets to be the star of his very own animated superhero film, Captain Underpants.
 
Based on the bestselling Captain Underpantsbook series (10 entries since 1997 have sold over 70 million copies worldwide), the animated film will unite Ed Helms, Nick Kroll, Jordan Peele, and Thomas Middleditch for a new vocal adventure from DreamWorks Animation, the studio (now partnered with 20th Century Fox) behind Shrek and fellow superhero comedy Megamind.
 
The movie is to be directed by Rob Letterman (Monsters vs. Aliens) from a script by The Muppets’ Nick Stoller. In the film, Hart and Middleitch will voice a pair of nefarious fourth graders who love playing pranks and writing their own comic book, “Captain Underpants.” However, when shenanigans arise following the meddling of a crazed school principal (Helms), things get a little bit super.
 
SOURCE: TheWrap
 
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Arrow’s Stephen Amell Has Had Justice League Discussions

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 2:14PM

Stephen Amell confirms that there have been talks of merging Arrow's universe with the big screen DC world that began with Man of Steel.

 While Batman vs. Supermanmay have been pushed to 2016, many DC fans’ eyes are still on the future prize of a coveted Justice League movie. And apparently, Warner Brothers’ is as well, as there have been cursory talks with the CW’s Arrow star Stephen Amell about appearing in that movie, albeit any serious consideration is a long way off.
 
While speaking with Fandango, Amell revealed that there has been talk of his Oliver Queen making an appearance in the distant JLA movie.
 
“I have had discussions, but I think the gestation process for this project is a lot slower than most people think. I mean, they haven't even shot the next one. They haven't even shot a frame of the movie before the movie everyone thinks is the Justice League movie!”
 
However, Amell’s focus is still entirely on Arrow. As Amell sees it, as long as they “take care of business” in making Arrowthe premiere superhero TV show, then they will be in a position to expand upon that discussion should the occasion ever come.
 
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First Trailer For Avengers Confidential: Black Widow & Punisher

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 2:39PM

Check out our first footage of Marvel's animated Avengers film, chronicling what happens when Black Widow and Punisher collide.

If you simply cannot wait until April for the return of Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, then Marvel Entertainment has just what is needed to tide you over – Avengers Confidential: Black Widow & Punisher.
 
The upcoming winter release for home video features two iconic Marvel assassins, Natalia Romanova and Frank Castle, joining forces to face a threat more dangerous than either’s gun.
 
 
After interfering with a top secret mission, The Punisher is taken into custody by S.H.I.E.L.D. agent and Avenger Black Widow. At the orders of Director Nick Fury, Punisher and Black Widow are sent on a mission to stop Leviathan, a global terrorist organization that plans to sell stolen S.H.I.E.L.D. technology to the highest bidder. Now, the vigilante and spy must work together to prevent this technology from falling into the wrong hands. The fate of the world, and of the Avengers, hangs in the balance.
 
Avengers Confidential: Black Widow & Punisher will be available on Blu-ray, DVD, and digital download come March 25, 2014.
 
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Gal Gadot Contracted To Play Wonder Woman In Three Films

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 3:25PM

Actress Gal Gadot confirms that she has signed on to play Wonder Woman in three films.

With last month’s announcement that Gal Gadot would play Wonder Woman in Batman vs. Superman, fan curiosity about what this could mean for a shared universe obviously intensified. Besides the apparent retooling of that particular project, as indicated by bringing Chris Terrio aboard to rewrite the screenplay and the recent revelation that Batman vs. Superman, was being pushed to 2016,it not-so-surprisingly also means a lot more Wonder Woman in the possible near future.
 
While speaking with the Israeli entertainment program Good Evening with Gai Pines, native Gadot revealed that she has signed a three-picture deal to portray the Amazonian superhero in three feature length films. However, this is not exactly surprising given the state of most franchise casting in the 21st century. Indeed, considering that likely includes Justice League and a conceivable solo film for the Lady Diana, one might almost wonder why she was not signed for more inevitable installments in the intended shared DC Film universe.
 
Batman vs. Superman,  picks up after the ending of 2013’s Man of Steel as Superman (Henry Cavill) deals with the aftermath of his battle with General Zod, which leaves him still as an alien entity to many Earthlings. Inevitably, his super-status places him on a collision course with the Dark Knight (Ben Affleck). The film also will also feature Amy Adams, Laurence Fishburne, and Diane Lane reprising their roles from the previous Superman movie. Principal photography begins sometime this year in Michigan Motion Picture Studios, as well as in Detroit.
 
SOURCE: ComingSoon
 
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New Clip: RoboCop vs. ED-209s

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 4:09PM

Check out the latest clip of the RoboCop reboot where Murphy takes out TWO ED-209s.

For any lover of the original 1987 RoboCop, the chicken-walking stop-motion monsters of mass death known as ED-209s will always have a soft place in the heart. But they appear a lot less ironic in their mass destruction dispersal in 2014 with the RoboCop reboot, which displays them reigning annihilation upon a shopping mall with maximum mayhem as RoboCop fights to save the day.
 
 
Directed by José Padilha, the reboot will attempt to win over even the most ardent skeptic with a slew of fan favorite castings, including Michael Keaton, Gary Oldman, Jennifer Ehle, Jackie Earle Haley, Michael K. Williams, Abbie Cornish and Samuel L. Jackson. Of course, the real star will be The Killing’s Joel Kinnaman stepping into the titular big metallic boots. The remake clearly wants to make the brand its own by taking a page from the Rolling Stones and painting it black. Fans can decide if it works February 14.
 

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Teaser Poster for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 4:31PM

Check out the first promotional image of The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1.

Still riding high off The Hunger Games: Catching Firebecoming the highest-grossing domestic release of 2013, Lionsgate appears already set-up to launch the promotional countdown for November 2014’s The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1.
 
Below is the teaser poster that announces the fire is rising, and Panem is now fully ablaze.
 

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 adapts the first half of Suzanne Collins' book and boasts the cast of Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Elizabeth Banks, Woody Harrelson, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Natalie Dormer, Julianne Moore, Stanley Stucci and Donald Sutherland.
 
In the future Katniss Everdeen (Lawrence) must fight for her impoverished District 12 in a dystopian North American regime called “Panem.” After several Hunger Games, contests to the death between children, go awry, Katniss finds herself participating in a massive rebellion against the authoritarian government.
 
Directed by The Hunger Games: Catching Fire helmer Francis Lawrence, both Mockingjayfilms are being shot concurrently and are scheduled for a Thanksgiving release in November 2014 and 2015, respectively.
 
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New Trailer Celebrates 90 Years of MGM

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 5:13PM

MGM is turning 90 and is celebrating its history as the studio that has more stars than are in the heavens.

As hard as it is to believe, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer turns 90 in 2014, and its ready to kick-off a global yearlong celebration today, beginning with famed mascot “Leo the Lion” leaving his paw mark at the iconic TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood.
 
Founded in 1924 when theater magnate Marcus Loew bought and merged Metro Pictures Corp. with Goldwyn Pictures and Louis B. Mayer Productions, MGM and its legendary roaring lion logo signify the Golden Era of Hollywood to film lovers around the world.
 
The studio that was once known during that Golden Age for having more stars than there are in the heavens has fallen on rough times over the last several decades. However, they still intend for that legacy to breathe new life into the future, as seen in the below 90th Anniversary trailer, which will run in movie theaters across the country.
 
 
It’s great seeing MGM celebrate its legacy even in films sampled in that trailer: Rocky, Platoon, A Fistful of Dollars, Fargo, Get Shorty, Skyfall, Dr. No, Dances with Wolves, Raging Bull, Annie Hall, The Princess Bride, Thelma & Louise, and more.
 
Yet personally, it is a shame to see the studio afraid to reference the “Golden Age” that it dominated as THE biggest Hollywood studio. Other than a brief clip from Some Like It Hot, you might never guess that this is the studio behind Gone with the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, Singin’ in the Rain, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, The Apartment, North By Northwest, A Night at the Opera, and so many, many more.
 
Still, here’s a toast to MGM.
 
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Disney’s Frozen Goes Multi-Lingual For Let it Go, Announces Sing-Along Re-Release

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NewsDen Of Geek1/22/2014 at 5:46PM

Watch Disney's Frozen "Let It Go" in 25 different languages. Just in time for Oscar Campaign season, no less.

In a charming new video released by Disney, viewers can now enjoy the showstopping “Let It Go” from Frozen in 25 different languages, including of course the soaring English of Idina Menzel’s vocals.
 
The release of this culture-defying showtune likely has something to do with the fact that Frozenwas nominated for Best Song (as well as Best Animated Film) at this year’s Oscars. And what better way to remind viewers about this animated musical’s impressive scope than showing it off in a variety of languages while never losing that robust musicality?
 
 
Of course, we’re just happy to see Frozenagain pop up, as it was one of our Top 10 Films of 2013 and really promises great things to come from the House of Mouse.
 
The songs of Frozenwere written by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, and the picture was directed by Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee. The movie (in English) includes the voice cast of Menzel, Kristen Bell, Josh Gad, Jonathan Groff, Alan Tudyk, and Ciarán Hinds.
 
***UPDATE: This was a prelude to Disney announcing a rerelease of Frozen into theaters that will feature a "bouncing snowflake" to go along with the lyrics that shall appear at the bottom of the screen.
 
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It's Alive! 13 Forgotten Frankenstein Films

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The ListsMarc Buxton1/23/2014 at 8:22AM

Frankenstein’s creation has fought werewolves, vampires, cowboys, masked wrestlers, and rubber suited hellbeasts. Seriously.

Along with Dracula, the most enduring horror icon of horror fiction is certainly Frankenstein’s Monster. When Boris Karloff starred in Universal’s Frankenstein (1931), directed by the great James Whale, audiences were riveted (ahem) by the tale of science gone mad. Karloff’s portrayal of the monster transcended the boundaries of the genre and became one of the most enduring images in the history of film. Universal did not stop there, delivering sequel after sequel, such as 1935’s Bride of Frankenstein (considered by many to be the most complete horror movie ever made), Son of Frankenstein (1939), Ghost of Frankenstein (1942), where Karloff was replaced by Lon Chaney Jr., the immortal 1942 monster mash-up Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman starring Bela Lugosi as the Monster, and finally, House of Frankenstein, a battle between all the marquee Universal monster characters.  

The role was resurrected in Hammer Film’s color dreadful, the Curse of Frankenstein in 1957 starring Christopher Lee as a very different type of Monster. Hammer would continue this series of films that focused on the Doctor (brilliantly played by Peter Cushing) rather than the Monster. These were the films and actors that forged a legend, but they weren’t the only ones...not even close. After Karloff and Lee came many more attempts to bring the Frankenstein legend to life on the big screen both in America and around the globe. There were even a few versions of Mary Shelley’s classic novel before James Whale got his camera rolling. Here are thirteen other versions of the Doctor and his Creation that should not be forgotten.


13. Thomas Edison’s Frankenstein (1910)

Frankenstein is such a gripping legend and timeless masterpiece that one of the first linear films ever shot was based on the creature. In 1910, director J. Searle Dawley shot a fifteen minute short film simply entitled Frankenstein. Dawley worked for the great Thomas Edison who served as a producer for the film. The film does not fully embrace the more horrifically supernatural aspects of the novel but instead, suggests that the Monster that the college age Dr. Frankenstein created was a reflection of his own monstrous subconscious. Rest assured though, that this short film is as unsettling as it gets, as Dawley is literally building a genre with each progressive frame. The Monster, played by Charles Ogle, is a surreal image, plodding around the screen and lurking in every shadow. When the Monster arises from the vat of chemicals that created him, it is a true classic early moment of the horror genre, the wellspring that birthed a myth. For 1910, when the film industry was in its infancy, Thomas Edison’s Frankenstein still  holds up very well and is a harbinger of things to come. Watch the whole thing here! 


12. I Was A Teenage Frankenstein (1956, American International Pictures)

Directed by Herbert L. Strock, I Was a Teenage Frankenstein followed just five months after the successful I Was a Teenage Werewolf starring Michael Landon.  This film is schlock at its finest but still sticks to the science gone mad father/ son themes as established by Mary Shelley and James Whale. The movie follows Professor Frankenstein, a university lecturer who creates a teenage monster out of the corpses of a group of young crash victims. The morbidly engaging story follows the hideously scarred teenager trying to find his way in a world of adolescent angst and rejection. It was as if the filmmakers were trying to shoehorn a tale of modern teenage marginalization into the Frankenstein legend, and against all odds, it worked.  The make-up and presentation is delightfully fifties, and after the film’s opening, many critics attacked this film and its lycanthropic predecessor as a cause of juvenile delinquency. This film is the quintessential Rockwellian America’s portrayal of the Frankenstein legend and really needs to be experienced to be believed.


11. Frankenstein’s Daughter (1958)

Speaking of the '50s, Frankenstein's Daughter again attempts to bring the Frankenstein legend into the modern day while playing a bit of the old gender switcheroo. In this film, ineptly but unintentionally and comically directed by drive-in master Richard E. Cunha, Frankenstein’s grandson, Oliver Frankenstein, builds a female monster out of an innocent teenage girl named Trudy (played by Sandra Knight).  Trudy, neither the daughter of Doctor nor Monster, goes on a killing spree. Later, Oliver builds another monster and...stuff happens. It’s all slapped together, but unlike some of Cunha’s other films, like Missile to the Moon, the film is never boring, instead relying on the Frankenstein legend to keep interest in a movie held together by spit and enthusiasm. And bikini beach parties. Fun fact, Sandra Knight, married none other than Jack Nicholson. He starred in better movies. Watch the trailer here!


10. Horror of Frankenstein (1970 Hammer Films)

The second Hammer attempt at Frankenstein, Horror of Frankenstein holds up pretty well. Firstly, Horror of Frankenstein exists outside the Peter Cushing Hammer cycle of Frankenstein films. Secondly, the movie stars David Prowse, Darth Vader himself, as the large headed and, at times, diapered Monster. Ralph Bates ably plays the Doctor, in a film that seems part parody of Cushing and Lee’s Frankenstein and homage to the same film. Bates is at his womanizing best and the film features that old Hammer atmosphere that makes this film a good Halloween treat...when you get done with Cushing’s films of course. Check out the trailer!


9. Kyoufu Densetsu Kaiki! Frankenstein (1981, Toei Animation)

Why yes Virginia, there is an anime based on Marvel Comic’s Frankenstein Monster series. This wonderful little oddity was the second creature feature Toei Animation produced using Marvel monsters. The first, Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned was loosely based on Tomb of Dracula while this one-of-a-kind Frankenstein took bits and pieces from Marvel’s Frankenstein series. The film saw an extremely limited release on U.S. television in 1984 under the titles Monster of Frankenstein and Frankenstein Legend of Terror. In it, an increasingly paranoid Dr. Frankenstein hunts his creation who has holed up in a cabin with Frankenstein’s young daughter and her blind grandfather. The film chooses to portray the Monster, dubbed Franken, as a more misunderstood creature like the Hulk, rather than a murderous beast. In his confusion, he kills a number of villagers and  is blamed for the murder of the Doctor’s wife and the grandpa. In one of the strangest moments of any Frankenstein series, the Monster is shot in the hand by the little girl that once cared for him. Stumbling into a church, the Monster notices both he and Jesus have holes in their hands and begs God for forgiveness. The whole thing is wonderfully tragic and shows that for a little while the Marvel series was a bit more influential than most people give it credit for. You can watch the whole thing right here!


8. May (2002, Lions Gate Films)

Garnering many awards and considered by many critics to be one of the 21st century’s greatest horror films, May is many things, but at its heart, it is a fascinating take on the Frankenstein legend filtered through the point of view of a very lonely and VERY disturbed young girl. Directed by Lucky Mckee and starring the incredibly versatile Angela Bettis, May also features career defining performances from Jeremy Sisto and Anna Farris. In the film, May is a young girl who just wants a friend. As she deals with rejection and heartbreak, May discovers there are perfect parts to people but not perfect wholes. So she seeks to take the perfect parts of everyone she knows and make one perfect being. As the story’s Dr. Frankenstein, May’s science is sewing and she seeks to knit together a friend like she is able to easily knit limbs back onto animals for the incompetent vet she works for. It is a film that must be experienced more than once. May is a modern day Frankenstein tale that is as sick and twisted as it is warm and sweet.

[related article: 13 Most Bizarre Appearances of Horror Icons in Other Media]


7. Frankenstein and the Monster From Hell (1974, Hammer Films)

A number of the later Hammer films are often overlooked by horror afficionados. In some cases, this is warranted, as in the later years of Hammer, some juice had come off the fastball, but not in the case of Frankenstein and the Monster From Hell, directed by the always classy Terence Fisher, and starring Peter Cushing in his sixth and final Frankenstein film. While as atmospheric and as scary as any Hammer film, the last installment’s most frightening bit is Cushing’s perm (but he’s a legend, so we forgive him). Despite Frankenstein’s June Cleaver locks, the film is tightly plotted, and features Frankenstein setting up shop within an insane asylum. Yeah, that doesn’t end well. He constructs a new, ape-like monster, played again by David Prowse, thus further upping the awesome factor, which goes on a rampage within the asylum. Most Frankenstein films see a regretful Doctor determined to destroy his creations trying to make up for the sins he constructed, but not Cushing. As soon as his latest abomination is brought down by a mob of madmen, Cushing’s Frankenstein rolls up his sleeves and gets his lab ready for more unwilling donors for his next monster. The last Hammer Frankenstein is an appropriate epitaph for Cushing’s Doctor and all things Hammer, as the greatest horror studio that ever stood did not live long after the release of this overlooked gem. Watch the trailer here!


6. Lady Frankenstein (1971, New World Pictures)

A sterling (and possibly the only) example of the feminist mad scientist genre, Lady Frankenstein is often mistaken for a Hammer film, but was in fact, a Hammer homage made in Italy. Directed by Mel Welles and starring Joseph Cotton and the luscious Rosalba Neri, this flesh on flesh thriller took the Frankenstein legend into new depths of sexual depravity. The Lady Frankenstein is not softened by her gender; on the contrary, she is a cruel scientist that takes gleeful pleasure in her myriad of surgical nightmares and forced transplant victims. The film looks, feels, and plays, like a Hammer film with bright crimson blood and more cleavage and mayhem than you can shake a severed limb at. Despite her beauty, this Lady is deserving of the name Frankenstein. See for yourself!


5. Santo Contra la Hija de Frankenstein (1972, Cinematográfica Calderón)

Speaking of lady mad scientists. What is cooler than Frankenstein vs. a masked Mexican wrestler? Answer: absolutely nothing! Santo Contra la Hija de Frankenstein sees the legendary wrestler El Santo, star of about 14 billion films (all awesome) take on the daughter of Dr. Frankenstein and her monster. In the film, Dr. Freda Frankenstein discovers that the blood of El Santo is actually a youth potion (one has to wonder what the Iron Sheik’s blood can do), and the Doctor has kept herself and her henchmen alive for years using blood she wiped from El Santo’s nose (yup) after a match. Instead of just going to his matches and waiting for him to blade again, Freda kidnaps Santo’s girlfriend. The Technicho tracks them back to Frankenstein’s really awesome castle and has to fight a half-man, half-gorilla and the Frankenstein monster himself. Yes, El Santo wrestles Frankenstein’s monster, exactly how Mary Shelley envisioned it back in the day. Really just has to be experienced to be believed.

4. Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966, Embassy Pictures)

This is not so much a genre mash-up but an utter obliteration of genres. Someone, somewhere, namely director William Beaudine, thought it was a good idea to have famed outlaw Jesse James gallop into the Frankenstein legend.  The film starts out with a title misconception as James meets the granddaughter of Frankenstein, Maria, who, with her brother Rudolph travel to the American West to harvest prairie lightning to use in their experiments. Using lightning of the old west, the Frankenstein siblings run afoul of Jesse James after one of his compadres was injured in a shootout.  Trying to mash up the western genre with the gothic terror of Frankenstein is like trying to mate a poodle with a hippo: the process is horrible to watch, but the results are interesting. Somehow, Jesse’s pal gets transformed into a monster named Igor and monstery, westerny stuff happens with guns and lightning. There was also a Billy the Kid vs. Dracula film and I swear I will find a way to insert it in a future list.


3. Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948, Universal)

This movie isn’t really a rarity or forgotten, but it never gets its due for being a great monster film to go along with Lou and Bud’s antics. Yeah, Abbott and Costello are at the top of their game here, crafting a great parody of the Universal horror cycle, but the depiction of the monsters never descends into the wacky. Glenn Strange portrays a splendid Frankenstein; the actor never receives enough credit for filling Karloff’s oversized shoes. It can be argued that Strange’s Frankenstein was far superior to Chaney’s and Lugosi’s. Speaking of Lugosi, this film sees the return of Lugosi as Dracula and the return of Lon Chaney Jr. as the Wolfman. The Wolfman cuts such a tragic figure despite the humorous tone of the movie, and Lugosi is at his scene chewing best. The film is comedy gold, but its respect for the classic monsters, Frankenstein in particular, should not be overlooked.


2. Blackenstein (1973, Exclusive International)

Proving that the Frankenstein legend transcends racial and cultural boundaries, Blackenstein was one of the more memorable blaxploitation movies of the early 70s. Following close on the heels of Blacula Blackenstein sprung off the zeitgeist of the time, playing off racial bitterness and anger towards the Vietnam War. After a black soldier named Eddie Turner steps on a landmine and loses his leg, he visits Dr. Stein to have his lost limbs restored. Eddie becomes a shambling monstrosity with a square afro instead of a Karloffian head. The Monster is torn apart by dogs at the film’s climax, uneasily mirroring images of race riots of the 60s and 70s. The film does not play as well as Blacula nor did it fare as well at the box office, but it remains a cultural anomaly and a fascinating area of study.

1. Frankenstein Conquers the World (1965, Toho Pictures)

Den of Geek has covered this gem before and oh, is it worth covering again. After Godzilla, Toho wanted to expand their range of city stomping monsters. So they just nuked Frankenstein and had him grow to immense size. When the heart of the original Frankenstein Monster is taken by Nazi agents to Japan, of course, it ends up in Hiroshima. Fifteen years later, a feral boy is found on the streets of Hiroshima and taken in by scientists because of his resistance to radiation. The boy grows to immense size and ends up on the run from the authorities. As if that wasn’t complex enough, the kaiju Frankenstein ends up fighting the burrowing lizard, Baragon, before being sucked into the Earth. The film is completely bugnuts, with a plot that dangles by a hair but never stops moving, and really, everyone needs to experience a giant Frankenstein ravaging Japan. Seeing the Frankenstein legend clash with Cold War nuclear paranoia is something to behold.

 

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You forgot Frankenstein 1970, made in the 50s with Karloff as the creator instead of the creation. Actually a real snooze-fest, nothing much really happens.

Music in Film: Inside Llewyn Davis and 12 Years a Slave

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FeatureIvan Radford1/23/2014 at 8:47AM

Ivan's latest column explores what music can tell us about a character through two new UK soundtrack releases

Music is a powerful thing. It can be used to express authority or portray identity. The very act of playing music defines us, as both performers or listeners. That relationship we have with it makes for two extremely powerful soundtracks currently accompanying movies in UK cinemas: Inside Llewyn Davis and 12 Years a Slave.

Inside Llewyn Davis

"Play me something from Inside Llewyn Davis," manager Bud Grossman (F. Murray Abraham) challenges Oscar Isaac's lead in the middle of the Coen brothers' film. Llewyn responds with The Death of Queen Jane, an old ballad from the 1500s that recounts the tale of King Henry losing his wife, Jane Seymour, to gain a son. It's not a happy song.

It's also a clear statement from Llewyn: he's not afraid of sadness. In fact, the first time we see him on screen, he performs Hang Me, Oh Hang Me, another traditional, hauntingly sad, number.

Oscar Isaac is perfectly morose as the withering soloist, whose partner, Mike Timlin, recently killed himself. He plucks sorrow out of the air as fluidly as he does his guitar strings. The fact that he can play in real life also means that we get live performances from our main character; Llewyn Davis fills the screen with long, untampered takes and the accompanying album with a scratchy, analogue realism.

Teaming up again with the legendary T Bone Burnett, the Coens obviously know and love the genre, throwing in tracks from such musicians as The Down Hill Strugglers, Nancy Blake and Dave Van Ronk. Van Ronk is, in many ways, a template for Llewyn. On the scene before Bob Dylan arrived, he found himself overshadowed by the rising star. And so we get Dave's original Green, Green Rocky Road on the CD as well as Oscar Isaac's cover. But Llewyn is very much his own creation - the music in the film makes that clear. After all, every track isn't only a song chosen by the people behind the camera, but also a song chosen by Llewyn; he defines himself as an artist through what he performs.

Dink's Song (or Fare Thee Well) is the headline track. "If I had wings like Noah's dove," goes the verse, "I'd fly up the river to the one I love." It's another song about love and loss. Fittingly, we hear it twice: once at the start, sung by Oscar Isaac and Marcus Mumford (as the duo LLewyn and Mike) and then again, at the end, by Llewyn alone. The difference between the bookends is striking; a perfect demonstration of how Inside Llewyn Davis uses music to tell its story not just accompany it. In between them, Llewyn starts to perform Fare There Well at a dinner party, only for someone else to join in. He stops, shocked at their uninvited appropriation of Mike's part.

You can't blame him. Together, Llewyn and Mike's vocals are a rich pair, the musical double act hitting the high notes of the chorus with a warm harmony. Oscar's live, solo rendition is the opposite: instead of the professional, clean studio recording, LLewyn delivers Dink's Song with a loose, raw edge. He changes the gender in the song, singing it as a man rather than a woman (the Dink of the title), knocks the key up a fourth and changes the time from a clean 4/4 to a swaying 12/8.

It's a fascinating contrast and it has several effects: it's a nod to Van Ronk, who, like Llewyn, recorded the song in triple time in 1961; it also slows it down, leaving Llewyn's strained vocals exposed on those higher notes for a whole second longer. But again, these aren't just calls by Burnett or the Coens to highlight Llewyn's grief - as a musician reinventing a track he's performed many times, Llewyn makes these decisions himself. That new beat to the song gives it a driving energy; a statement of confidence as much as sadness, a screw-you from a artist determined to embrace the change (or, perhaps more accurately, lack thereof) in his life and keep singing the same old song how he wants. "If it's never new and it never gets old, it's a folk song," he deadpans to the audience at the Gaslight Cafe.

Other contributions from Carey Mulligan (who sings as beautifully as she did in Steve McQueen's Shame) and Justin Timberlake (who can pretty much do anything and be brilliant) are just as much a treat for the ears. Faux-novelty pop song Please Mr. Kennedy, featuring Adam Driver on guest shouting, is the only original number in the soundtrack - and it's one of the happiest 120 seconds you'll spend in a cinema this year. But make no mistake: this is Llewyn's gig.

A previously unreleased Bob Dylan recording of Farewell (worth the CD price alone) caps off the album with a reminder of why Davis didn't become famous. But Llewyn wouldn't have it any other way - and frankly, neither would we. Because all of that failure and melancholy makes for a cracking folk song. And that's what the Coen brothers' movie is: a folk song. It's an exploration of an artist's identity and their reliance upon music to express it. It's something from inside Llewyn Davis. And it's breathtaking.

12 Years a Slave

Have you ever stood in a group of people singing and tried not to sing along? It's not easy. By not singing, you mark yourself as different from the others. Conversely, the act of joining in shows you're the same.

Similarity is a big part of the 12 Years a Slave soundtrack. Hans Zimmer's score is essentially made up of a single theme, that of Solomon Northup - and it already bears a striking resemblance to Hans' other work, using the same four chords as Inception's time (the seemingly-everywhere chord progression of Sunshine's Adagio in D Minor by John Murphy, which is, in turn, much like Zimmer's own The Thin Red Line. It's perhaps pertinent to note here that Shame's score by Harry Escott, while effective, was also an echo of the latter.)

It may seem apt, then, that the score for 12 Years a Slave hasn't been released: Zimmer's instrumental work is limited to one track on the album, called Solomon; once you've heard those three and a half minutes, it implies, you've heard the whole score. The rest of the CD is made up of songs "inspired by" the movie, with offerings from Alabama Shakes (the soulful Driva Man) and Chris Cornell and Joy Williams (the solemn Misery Chain) and, most effective of all, John Legend's rousing version of an old spiritual, Roll Jordan Roll - in which he accompanies himself by a nifty bit of multi-tracking. More on that later.

Zimmer's work, instead, can be found on an awards promo release by Fox Searchlight, with 30 odd minutes available to stream on their FYC site. The full array of orchestral tunes reveals how repetitive it is. Solomon Northup introduces the four-chord motif on flute, before moving to strings, with evocative low cellos carrying the tune. That theme is re-arranged to suit different contexts - Eliza Flashback strips down the riff to a simple piano part, as Solomon's fellow captor thinks about her kids, and Letter Writing gives the melody to a humming vocalist, while pizzicato strings stab in the background - but it remains essentially the same.

The tracks that are different are mostly sound effects for ambience. Plantation Life Pt A contains some quite woodland noises, Escape Sequence is nothing more than a wood block metronome and River Rafting Claps is exactly what the name suggests. The only other interesting entry is Boat Trip to New Orleans, a haywire mesh of percussion and horrible synth. Even through that cacophony, though, Solomon's theme gently emerges on a sole violin.

Zimmer's score is, on its own, not all that impressive. But that persistent single melody is key to 12 Years a Slave's power. Chiwetel Ejiofor says little once Solomon's in captivity - he cannot show his intelligence or the fact that he can read - so the music has to convey his emotions for him. Speaking to Steve McQueen at the UK premiere of the film, he told me: "What I was thinking about was silent movie stars - Valentino, Buster Keaton - because when you're on your own and you can't talk to people about who you are, it's all about how you can translate that to an audience."

His theme's repetitive move from minor to major, ending on an unresolved fifth, plays out Solomon's journey from tragedy to hope over and over again for two hours. With no sign of escape, Solomon's resolve and determination keep going like Zimmer's music - with no other characters given a theme at all, 12 Years a Slave's soundtrack is a looping, never-ending reiteration of Solomon's identity.

Here's where 12 Years a Slave gets interesting: that ability of music to establish a person's position within a world. Early on, Paul Dano's foul plantation boss makes the slaves clap in unison. While they obey, he chants "Run N***er Run" at them: "Run, run the patty roller will get you / Run n***er run well you better get away". It's a song that slaves used to sing to each other as a caution for those planning to make a dash for it - now used by their master to remind them of their place. The sequence is cut together with hammering and working, a cruel montage of intimidation, before it finally overlaps with Benedict Cumberbatch's slaveowner Ford, who recites from the Bible, reinforcing that chain of oppression.

Run N***er Run is not included in either of Fox Searchlight's soundtrack releases. The other spiritual in the film, though, appears twice on the commercial album: Roll Jordan Roll. John Legend's rendition is fantastic, but the one with the real weight comes straight from the screen.

Halfway through, the slaves sing and clap together (this time voluntarily) in a scene that shows McQueen's understanding of the importance of music - not just the emotional impact of Zimmer's cyclical dirge but its social function within the story itself. Solomon stands stoically in the choir as the others repeat the chorus, determined to retain his status a free man. But after a minute of being surrounded by the tune, he joins in, a powerful tenor that belts straight from the heart and out of a cracked face.

After two hours of hearing his own individual theme play through thick and thin, Solomon's decision to assimilate, to submit to his enforced role as a slave, is heartbreaking to hear; a fleeting moment where his voice, his identity, can be heard out loud - but for the first time, lost.

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The Assassin's Creed movie might just have its director

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NewsSimon Brew1/23/2014 at 8:53AM

The man who helmed Safe House might just be the one who's going to direct the Assassin's Creed movie...

Since he scored an impressive hit with the Denzel Washington-headlined Safe House, director Daniel Espinosa has found himself linked with more than one project in the Hollywood rumour mill. A year ago, for instance, his name was heavily linked with a movie of the John Grisham book, The Racketeer.

The one film he's taken on since is the movie adaptation of Tom Rob Smith's acclaimed novel, Child 44, and that's due in cinemas later this year. And he might just be following that up with the mooted Assassin's Creed movie.

Assassin's Creed has long had Michael Fassbender attached to produce and star, but Twitch Film now reports that Espinosa is the producers' choice to direct the film. No dotted lines have been signed on as far as we can tell, but as 20th Century Fox and UbiSoft are looking to have the film in cinemas for August 7th 2015, it can't be too much longer until things are formalised.

More on the movie as we hear it.

Twitch.

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The top 25 underappreciated films of 2006

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The ListsRyan Lambie1/23/2014 at 9:06AM

Our series of lists devoted to underappreciated films brings us to the year 2006, and a further 25 overlooked gems...

With all the major films that elbow their way into their cinemas every year, there's bound to be some casualties among the big hits. And just like any other year, 2006 was dominated by the likes of Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, The Da Vinci Code and Ice Age: The Meltdown. But in tandem, there were dozens of lesser-seen films which shuffled in and out of cinemas (or occasionally, didn't get a release in cinemas at all) without very many people noticing.

As we're sure you're aware by now, these lists aim to redress the balance a little, and hopefully introduce a few films from any given year that you may have missed. There are also one or two films that, although they're from well-known directors or got a bit of acclaim at the time of release, appear to have fallen from general conversation since.

So without further ado, here's our selection of 25 underappreciated films from the year 2006. There's animation, science fiction, comedy, drama, and just about every other genre you could care to mention. And to start things off, here's a look at a quintessentially British romantic comedy starring one pre-superstardom Benedict Cumberbatch...

25. Starter For 10

The big screen adaptation of David Nicholls' hit novel One Day really turned out to be something of an unsatisfying muddle. The far more focused adaptation of Starter For Ten, however, came out a whole lot better.

James McAvoy and Alice Eve star, and the film's primarily a romantic comedy about a pair of students in the mid-80s who end up on the same University Challenge team. Eve and McAvoy are a good screen couple, whilst Dominic Cooper chips in with some excellent support. You'll find the likes of James Corden and Catherine Tate in the ensemble, and then geek glee is induced by Benedict Cumberbatch popping up along with Mark Gatiss playing the late, great Bamber Gascoigne. A lot of fun this one.

24. Sleeping Dogs Lie

Also known as Sleeping Dogs, and also known as Stay, Sleeping Dogs Lie is, on the surface, a sweet romantic story. But then you notice Bobcat Goldthwait's name as director and writer. As a result, we get the story of a man and a woman who come together and settle down for the talk about things they've done in their past. Thing is, Amy (played by Bryce Hamilton) confesses to her boyfriend that she once blew her dog. And it takes 0.00001 seconds to appreciate that wasn't the confession he was expecting.

But what makes Sleeping Dogs Lie interesting is what Goldthwait does next. Because he turns this premise into a surprisingly charming, warm film. It's perhaps not got enough to fully make the most of what it sets up, and Goldthwait's subsequent movies are better. Yet it takes risks, goes off where you don't expect it, and warrants a watch.

23. Southland Tales

The first cut of Richard (Donnie Darko) Kelly's Southland Tales was greeted by hoots and jeers at Cannes, while its more concise final cut made almost nothing at the box office. Some reviewers looked favourably on it, while a slightly greater number treated its labyrinthine plot with derision.

Yet for all its flaws - its sometimes infuriatingly opaque story, its awkwardly comedic tone - Southland Tales remains a brave and fascinating sci-fi film. You can try to follow and decipher its plot if you like (it has something to do with a Hollywood action star, terrorist attacks, clean energy fuels and the end of the world), but Kelly's indulgent confection is best enjoyed as a kind of hallucinatory channel-hopping experience.

Southland Tales feels like a portrait of America put together by an alien: Kelly captures the excess of Los Angeles and its glammed-up porn stars, vain actors, massive cars and muscle beaches in a way that is familiar and incredibly weird. It's a satire of Bush-era politics and a bit of mainstream cinema akin to David Lynch's Mulholland Drive, and features a great performance from The Rock as a neurotic stand-in for Arnold Schwarzenegger. Justin Timberlake also lip-synchs to The Killers while showgirls cavort on pinball machines. For these and other reasons, Southland Tales is well worth seeking out.

22. Sherrybaby

Maggie Gyllenhaal's got no shortage of quality performances in little-seen movies under her belt. Sherrybaby is another. From director Laurie Collyer, Sherrybaby sees Gyllenhaal playing a young mother who's just been released from prison after three years (given that her parole officer went on to be Gus from Breaking Bad, there's every incentive to stay in line) and wanting to pick things up with her young daughter.

It's a fairly straightforward premise, and not one that gets too heavily developed beyond that set-up. But the strength of the film is the characters it puts into the heart of it. And, bluntly, the excellent lead performance from Gyllenhaal, which received moderate attention around the time, but was heartily deserving of more. A film with its imperfections, certainly, but with considerable merits too.

21. 16 Blocks

In many ways, this overlooked thriller feels more like a Die Hard sequel than the most recent entries in that ageing franchise. It features a simple, relatively small-scale premise, lots of tension, and Bruce Willis as a jaded New York detective - this time going under the name of Jack Mosley. Assigned to escort a key witness from a police station to a courthouse 16 blocks away, Mosley comes under fire from the bent cops determined to prevent the witness from testifying, and much running, driving and shooting ensues.

Veteran director Richard Donner keeps the tension high and the action tough, while Bruce Willis sparks entertainingly off his supporting stars Mos Def (as the mildly infuriating yet vulnerable witness), and the great David Morse as the main villain.

Bruce Willis seems to be growing increasingly distracted as his Die Hard sequels degenerate into formulaic action movies, but 16 Blocks is a cracking thriller with effective flashes of action - and here, Willis is at his laconic, fully-engaged best.

20. The Hoax

This one got a blink-and-you'll-miss-it release, and deserved the kind of backing that Richard Gere's recent movie, Abritrage, enjoyed. Gere is great here, enjoying a late career resurgence that not many are seeing, taking on the role of Clifford Irving, who's got a fake biography of Howard Hughes to sell. Set in the early 1970s, the movie is based on the book by Irving himself, although he eventually requested his name be removed from the credits.

Thus, whilst there's an argument that it's only so far a true story, The Hoax is nonetheless a pacey, entertaining story of a scam in the world of literature. It has a 70s vibe too it as well, not just in the look, but also in the way that the film was put together. Lasse Hallstrom directed it, and it's some way removed from his run of Oscar films. It's far more fun, for a start. And Gere really is a treat.

19. I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK

Having finished off his blood-soaked, intense Vengeance trilogy two years earlier, Park Chan-wook switched gears for this bewitchingly off-beat comedy drama. Im Soo-jung stars as a young woman who's convinced she's a cyborg, winds up in a mental institution, and finds love in a fellow patient played by Jung Ji-Hoon (also known under his stage name, Rain).

The plot is slight, but Park uses it as a launch pad for his unwavering eye for beautiful, scary and unexpected imagery. Like all his movies (including last year's fabulous Stoker), there isn't a shot in I'm A Cyborg that isn't exquisitely composed. But unlike Park's other films, I'm A Cyborg wasn't a hit, perhaps because it's so unexpectedly off the wall. Its contrast to his much darker work, however, makes it stand out all the more.

18. Idiocracy

Woody Allen's Sleeper and TV's Futurama both took inspiration from HG Wells' 1910 story The Sleeper Awakes, in which a man from the present wakes up in the distant future. Mike Judge's Idiocracy takes the same premise and turns it into a cheerfully profane satire. Luke Wilson plays the everyman who, along with a prostitute (Maya Rudolph) is put into suspended animation and remains there for half a millennium.

The pair wake up in a future where decades of animated gifs have finally taken their toll on the population's intellect: a film called Ass has just swept the board at the Oscars, citizens are all named after famous brand names (such as Justin Long's cretinous Dr Lexus), while Starbucks - well, the less said about Starbucks, the better.

Judge clearly relishes the opportunity to poke fun at modern culture and the pervasiveness of major corporations, and the results are often extremely funny. Unfortunately, the sharpness of the resulting satire clearly made Idiocracy's distributor Fox nervous (or annoyed - according to Judge, Fox News will one day be called Fox News and the Masturbation Channel), since it held the film back for two years before quietly sneaking it into around 130 US cinemas.

Although it's since earned a deserved cult following, we'd still argue that more people should see Idiocracy. Like Office Space, it's another cuttingly-observed film from a great comedy director.

17. Right At Your Door

Although a critical success at Sundance, this indie thriller didn't make much of an impression in cinemas - perhaps because its nightmarish scenario hit a little too close to home. Right At Your Door imagines what would happen if a dirty bomb detonated in Los Angeles, and follows an ordinary couple (played by Rory Cochrane and Mary McCormack) as they deal with the aftermath.

Shot with the immediacy of a zombie horror flick but without the fantastical cushion of flesh-eating ghouls, director Chris Gorak's film is harsh and disturbing, but well worth the effort of tracking down.

16. Flushed Away

At some point in the future, the story of what went on behind the scenes of Flushed Away may yet be told. Because this clearly wasn't a happy ship to sail on. It was Aardman's first CG feature, and it resulted in it parting company with DreamWorks Animation. There's no sign of a Blu-ray release, and the film is rarely talked about.

What a pity too, as it's bristling with wit, style and no shortage of outright fun. The original concept - of a pirate movie - may have been long gone by the time we saw the final cut, but Flushed Away still has fun by flushing a posh rat down the toilet, who then ends up in the sewers with less posh rats. That gives Aardman room to make one or two points too, and as always, there's plenty of detail to enjoy. Mostly though, this is a brisk, funny, hugely entertaining film.

15. Red Road

Andrea Arnold got a lot more prominence for Fish Tank than she did for Red Road, but her 2006 film Red Road stretches a small budget wonderfully well. It centres on Kate Dickie's Jackie, working as a CCTV operator, who one day sees a face she's very much not expecting on the screen in front of her.

It's not always a comfortable film to watch this one, and Arnold draws very natural performances from her cast. Set in Glasgow, Red Road is very deliberately paced, and features characters with their raw edges exposed. Fish Tank remains the first Andrea Arnold film to dig out. But Red Road is firmly in second place behind it.

14. Venus

The late Peter O'Toole secured his final Oscar nomination for this wonderful film, which made some impact on its original release before slipping out of sight. It's from Roger Michell, who we've saluted many times on the site (for films such as The Mother, Changing Lanes and Enduring Love), and it's a typically complex, interesting, and different.

It centres on O'Toole and the brilliant Leslie Phillips, as a pair of actors whose life changes when Jessie, a woman in her late teens (played brilliantly by Jodie Whittaker) comes into their lives. O'Toole dominates, but it's still a strong ensemble here, with Phillips snaring some scene-stealing lines from Hanif Kureishi's screenplay. Strongly recommended.

13. Tell No One

At around the time The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo made the world take interest in European thrillers, along came the brilliantly brisk Tell No One, based on the novel by Harlan Coben. François Cluzet plays a well-to-do doctor whose wife is murdered by an unknown serial killer. Years later, the doctor is just beginning to suspect that his wife is still alive when he's suddenly framed for a double murder - and what follows is a race against time to discover the truth.

Championed by numerous critics (and no less a celebrity than Michael Caine), Tell No One did well in its native France, but remained more obscure elsewhere. But thanks to some solid direction from Guillaume Canet, and some thoughtful performances from Francoise Cluzet and Kristin Scott Thomas, Tell No One emerges as one of the most compelling thrillers of recent years.

12. Running Scared

When news broke about the tragic death of Paul Walker at the end of 2013, Running Scared was one of the films that many cited as a prime example of just what the world was going to miss - and with good reason. Whilst Walker was pigeonholed later in his career somewhat by the Fast & Furious franchise, there was always a bit more to the man's work than he generally got credit for.

Running Scared, directed by Wayne Kramer (we talked about one of his earlier films, The Cooler, back in our 2010 list), sees Walker as Joey Gazelle, low down on the rungs of the Mafia, but suddenly thrust into very real danger thanks to a missing gun, a drug deal going badly wrong, and people getting shot.

No spoilers here, but Kramer's violent crime thriller is a better bet than the original raft of reviews would leave you to believe. Walker's good in it, too, and it deserves a second chance.

11. The Foot Fist Way

It's a bit of a rough and ready film this, with as many people who don't warm to it as do, but if you're on its wavelength, The Foot Fist Way is a hoot. Starring Danny McBride (who co-wrote) as a Taekwondo teacher, and Ben Best as the B-movie action star who happens to be his idol.

Director Jody Hill would go on to make the Seth Rogen-headlined Observe And Report, and as with that film, there's no obvious desire here to get you to like any of the characters. That inevitably isolates some, as does the raw, low budget feel of the production. But then, firmly in its favour is just how funny the film is. The laugh count is high, and it's the kind of movie where if you like it, you're going to be rewatching it a lot...

10. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

In anime and Japanese cinema circles, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time is likely to be a firm favourite. But for a wider movie-going public, it's likely that Mamoru Hosoda's animated feature is largely unknown - and if you haven't seen it, gentle reader, we'd urge you to seek it out. About a teenager who discovers she has the ability to time travel, it's a delightfully light and airy sci-fi romance, full of clever ideas and sweet humour.

The source novel was published in the 1960s and has since been the subject of numerous TV and film adaptations, the most recent being a live-action movie released in 2010. The story works beautifully as an animated film, though, with Hosoda saturating the screen with sun-drenched colour and warmth. If you can, seek it out on Blu-ray for a shimmering antidote to the grim winter weather. (Assuming you're in the northern hemisphere - and also assuming you're in the northern hemisphere. If you're not, buy The Girl Who Leapt Through Time anyway.)

9. The Good Shepherd

Robert De Niro has directed two movies to date, both of them slow, diligent pieces of work with human beings at the heart of them. It's worth digging out A Bronx Tale if you can find it, but we've always warmed to The Good Shepherd, his story of the formative years of the CIA. It's moody, atmospheric and suitably serious, framed through the eyes of Matt Damon's Edward Wilson.

What's particularly pleasing about The Good Shepherd is it assumes you've got a bit of intelligence. Inherently critical, and unwilling to spoonfeed every bit of background on American history that it's talking about, De Niro leaves questions unanswered, but posed in an interesting way.

If you've seen the film once, it's most certainly worth a second run, too. And whilst there are moments when it perhaps gets just a little bogged down, it's absorbing cinema nonetheless. De Niro's a fine director, too.

8. Stranger Than Fiction

Just as Robin Williams did in the 80s and 90s, Will Ferrell went on to prove that there were more sides to his talent than his own brand of comedy. Here, he stars as a rather beige IRS worker who begins to hear an unseen narrator talk through the finer points of his life. Even more worryingly, the narrator happens to mention something about his imminent death.

Having established that he isn't going crazy, Ferrell's character then begins to suspect that his fate is being worked out in real-time by a British author with an acute case of writer's block (brilliantly played by Emma Thompson). The upbeat, seize-the-day stuff in Marc Forster's film may border on the over sentimental at times, but Ferrell is excellent in the lead role, while Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dustin Hoffman round out the sterling cast.

7. Find Me Guilty

Bizarrely, this one's only just had a DVD release in the UK, which is all the more staggering when you consider Vin Diesel is in the lead role, and the late Sidney Lumet - who made his final film, the acclaimed Before The Devil Knows You're Dead afterwards - directed it. For a film to disappear for seven years, you could assume that it's a mess/rubbish/has something horribly wrong with it. But that's not the case. Find Me Guilty is funny, playful, boasts a terrific lead turn from Vin Diesel, and bombed at the US box office. It's based on the longest Mafia courtroom trial in US history, and feels different to the standard courtroom movies we're used to getting.

It's got problems certainly, and Lumet would end his career on a better film. But there's so much to enjoy in Find Me Guilty that it's borderline criminal it's been buried for so long.

6. Apocalypto

Mel Gibson's last film as director to date, Apocalypto is, like The Passion Of The Christ, told entirely in a foreign language. It's also exceedingly violent. But while its use of Mayan language and slavish attention to cultural detail might suggest some sort of worthy historical epic, Apocalypto is really a fast-paced action movie, in which a Mesoamerican trisbesman is captured as a would-be sacrifice by the Mayans, but then escapes into the jungle. As the hero flees his captors and tries to find his wife and son, he witnesses the evidence of a civilisation in terminal decline, and much bloodletting follows.

Apocalypto was a moderate success, but not on the same level as Braveheart or the controversial yet massively popular Passion Of The Christ. But both dramatically and on a technical level, Apocalypto is arguably better than either. Gibson may have fallen from grace since, but the film's a reminder of his talent as a director.

5. Monster House

There's a feel of 80s movies such as The Goonies to the quite wonderful Monster House, one of the very best CG animated movies to never come out of Pixar. Directed by Gil Kenan (who's now hard at work on the Poltergeist remake) and co-written by Community's Dan Harmon, it centres on three teenagers, who find a creepy house in their neighbourhood.

Monster House then succeeds on two levels. Firstly, the bonding between the three teens is really well done. There's a sense of capturing the adventure of youth here, as the trio team together. But then the film also finds interesting things to do with the house itself, and threads a creepy, uneasy tone through what subsequently happens.

With no talking animals, no star names on the poster, and a grounding in sheer talent, Monster House is something really quite special, and one of the most underrated mainstream animated movies of the decade.

4. Black Book

After a couple of disappointments in Hollywood, Paul Verhoeven returned to his native Netherlands, where he made the rip-roaring Black Book. Set in World War II, it's about the incredibly brave resistance spy Rachel (Carice van Houten) and her part in the Nazis' defeat. Both a detailed account of the Netherlands in WWII and a rip-roaring adventure, Black Book is as dark, violent and thrillingly-paced as you'd expect from a Verhoeven film, and it all builds to a satisfyingly sharp conclusion.

A hit at home but relatively overlooked elsewhere, Black Book is arguably an underrated film - Verhoeven's last feature-length project to date, it ranks among the finest of his career.

3. Paprika

We've mentioned the works of Japanese animated filmmaker Satoshi Kon before in these lists, and Paprika is, for us, the finest of the late artist's movies. Like a Philip K Dick novel, it blurs the lines between fiction and reality, and as a companion piece to Christopher Nolan's Inception, it's essential viewing.

In a  future where an experimental piece of technology called the DC Mini allows psychologists to watch patients' dreams, a troubled detective is on the trail of one of the stolen devices. Its misuse sees the realm of dreams and waking life merge, allowing Satoshi Kon's imagination to explode in a riot of surreal and quite frightening images. The story may get a bit lost among the dervish, but there's no denying the power of Paprika's animation - as a collision of hard-boiled mystery, science fiction and gonzo fantasy, Kon's one-of-a-kind film truly stands in a class of its own.

2. Children Of Men

Alfonso Cuaron's adaptation of PD James' sci-fi novel provided the perfect showcase for his filmmaking talents. Clive Owen plays an ordinary guy in a future dystopia where humankind hovers on the brink of collapse - women can no longer give birth, and extinction seems inevitable. Against this gloomy backdrop, a spark of hope emerges: a young woman (Clare-Hope Ashitey) falls pregnant, and since she offers the key to the survival of our species, she becomes the target of some shady revolutionists. Owen is swept up in the whole conspiracy, and Cuaron's camera whirls nimbly around him as he lurches from terrifying set-piece to terrifying set-piece with the woman in tow.

Technically astonishing, superbly acted and hugely affecting, Children Of Men is little short of a genre classic. The praise heaped on the film by critics and awards bodies might imply that it isn't underrated, but it's important to remember that Children Of Men didn't even make its £49m budget back at the box office. As a great piece of storytelling from a hugely talented director, Children Of Men is required viewing.

1. A Scanner Darkly

There have been several attempts to conjure up the hallucinatory worlds of Philip K Dick on the big screen, but none is as faithful or as blackly funny as Richard Linklater's animated masterwork, A Scanner Darkly. Using a type of computer rotoscoping to transform live-action into colourful line work, the film recreates the liquid sense of unreality in Dick's writing, creating a future world where you can absolutely believe that the police wear eye-scorching scramble suits to hide their identities, and that Robert Downey Jr really has just morphed from human to insect before your eyes.

Keanu Reeves stars as Bob Arctor, an undercover cop so anonymous that his own bosses don't even know who he is. As a result, he's given the absurd task of investigating his own activities as both a user and dealer of a dangerously addictive drug called Substance D. And as he delves into his own life and the neurotic druggies that inhabit his derelict house, his mind begins to unravel.

Dick's source novel was partly autobiographical, and Linklater mines its imagery and finest cuts of dialogue to create a bleakly funny film. Robert Downey Jr, Woody Harrelson, Winona Ryder and Rory Cochrane are all fabulous as the various oddball friends of Bob Arctor, and Reeves turns in a sullen, quietly moving narration as the increasingly bewildered protagonist.

Stunning to look at and by turns hilarious, poetic and utterly tragic, it's miraculous to think that Linklater managed to achieve so much on a budget of just $8m. It's also disappointing to note that A Scanner Darkly didn't even make that paltry sum back during its theatrical run. Financial matters aside, A Scanner Darkly isn't just the most underrated film of 2006; it's also one of absolute best.

See also:

The top 25 underappreciated films of 2000

The top 25 underappreciated films of 2001

The top 30 underappreciated films of 2002

The top 25 underappreciated films of 2003

The top 25 underappreciated films of 2004

The top 25 underappreciated films of 2005

The 250 underappreciated films of the 1990s

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Disqus - noscript

Um... ever heard of The Fountain?? Wake up.

It is kind of ridiculous how under-appreciated 'Children of Men' is. Hopefully with the success of 'Gravity' people will check it out. Also, great pick with 'Black Book'

Always enjoyed "A Scanner Darkly". You are so right about this film. I see something different every time I watch it.

Brian K. Vaughan Talks Y: The Last Man, Saga, and Runaways Movies

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NewsJason Tabrys1/23/2014 at 10:49AM

Wondering about the status of film adaptations for Y: The Last Man, Runaways, or Saga? Brian K. Vaughan has a few things to say...

Brian K. Vaughan has made a habit of spinning the kinds of tales that can make a film executive drool, but surprisingly, all of those projects have languished on the vine. In a new interview with CBR, Vaughan doesn’t offer any insight into why that is (dense indie comics with passionate fan bases + pricey production costs to properly develop said dense properties = studio fever sweats?) but he does weigh in on the Runaways and Y: The Last Man adaptations while also talking about why we are nowhere near a Saga… saga.

First, the crushing news: Vaughan assumes that The Runaways is dead, though some may scoff at the use of the word “news” there. Sad as it is to say, The Runaways has been circling the bowl since speculation about a BKV scripted version of the project proved to be unfounded back in 2010. Following that dream crash, Drew Pearce (Iron Man 3) took the reigns, crafting a well received yet ultimately shelved draft, but as of this past September, he still had hope in his heart.

"We were really close to being made, and then this movie started to happen called The Avengers [...] Oddly, it pulled focus from the unheard-of brand Runaways, and it really did kind of consume the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It's there -- maybe it'll be a Phase Three movie. I really hope so. I'm really proud of it and I think it'll be a brilliant film, but I think it all depends what Kevin Feige, the president of Marvel, his master plan is."

That “Master Plan” seems to be working out for Marvel, but with their slavish dedication to their interconnected universe and only releasing two films a year -- allegedly limiting over-exposure and fiscal over-extension -- smaller scale films like The Runaways suffer. Could TV be the port of call for this story about a group of teens who rebel against their supervillain parents, perhaps as a part of Phase 2 of the Marvel/Netflix relationship (assuming there is one)? Maybe, but the tea leaves and BKV seem like they are telling us not to hold our breaths.

Sage advice when it comes to Saga as well. Though still evolving, many have dreamed about an on-screen version of Vaughan and Fiona Staples’ epic sci-fi love story with a civil war backdrop, but while Vaughan has been approached, he appears unmoved.

“Fiona and I get option offers all the time, but I don't think the technology or financial model exists yet to realistically make Saga work as either a television series or a feature. I'm certainly open to being proven wrong though, especially if Paul Thomas Anderson is looking to adapt a pervy space fantasy for his next project. For now, I like comics way more than film and TV, so I'm happy for Saga to remain nothing but a lowly funny book.”

Speaking of things that are unmoved, the latest pulse check on the Y: The Last Man project seems to reveal little thump under the skin, but that could all change in a matter of months according to Vaughan.

“It's my understanding that the rights to Y: The Last Man will revert back to co-creator Pia Guerra and me for the first time in a decade if the planned New Line adaptation doesn't start shooting in the next few months, so I expect there will be some "Y" news in 2014 either way.”

That’s potentially exciting news, but while the thought of Vaughan controlling Yorick Brown’s destiny (and maybe words) once again thrills, that New Line project could, conceivably still happen if you believe David Goyer, who is a producer on the project. Back in June of last year, Goyer talked up the possibility of a 2014 start date after the project added director Dan Trachtenberg to a team that also included writers Matthew Federman and Stephen Scaia.

Mad dashes to save license rights aren’t new (remember the ultimately unsuccessful rush to keep Daredevil at FOX?), but usually there are rumblings and casting rumors and for Y: The Last Man there is only silence. After being knocked around this much (remember, once there were rumors that Shia LaBeouf was in the running for the lead with DJ Caruso directing), though, maybe that is for the best.

I’m not saying that a default back to Vaughan and Guerra would mean an instant greenlight somewhere else, but Vaughan did reveal in that CBR interview that his Under the Dome contract only runs through this next season, so it sounds like he’s gonna need busy work to occupy the time between Saga issues.

Sources: CBRIO9THRCrave

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Godzilla Prequel Comic Coming From Legendary

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NewsDen Of Geek1/23/2014 at 11:41AM

Godzilla returns a little sooner than expected for comic fans, with a prequel to the new movie!

Legendary Pictures (as well as their comic arm, Legendary Comics) are bringing fans a Godzilla prequel in advance of the Gareth Edwards directed, Bryan Cranston starring film. The announcement came via Legendary's official site. "Can't wait to see the King of the Monsters return to the big screen on May 16th? We're excited to announce that you can experience Legendary's Godzilla in the all-new graphic novel Godzilla: Awakening, on sale May 7th."

Ummm...you're darn right we can't wait to see Godzilla return! The first teaser was crazy enough! In addition to the short announcement, Godzilla director Gareth Edwards had a few words for fans on YouTube.

 

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Trailer For The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Game Is Here

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TrailerDen Of Geek1/23/2014 at 1:32PM

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 game features the introduction of a classic Sinister Six big bad...

The upcoming release of Sony’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2is enough to get any old web-head excited, not least of all because it means a new Spider-Man movie game as well.
 
Going back to the 2002 original film, Spider-Man movie games are a staple of every swinging flick and offer the potential to expand upon the theatrical story in all sorts of marvelous ways. Consider this new game trailer for The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which promises the introduction of Kraven the Hunter into the Marc Webb and Andrew Garfield movie-verse.
 
 
Kraven the Hunter is one of the all-time great Spidey baddies, having first appeared in 1964’s The Amazing Spider-Man #15. As a stalwart member of the Sinister Six (an organization we’ll certainly be seeing soon on film), he is also the basis of what is hands-down one of the greatest Spider-Man stories ever told: “Kraven’s Last Hunt.” Indeed, this writer personally would love to see a Spidey movie attempt that story, but substitute Vermin with the Lizard (though not necessarily the version we saw in the 2012 film).
 
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 releases this spring on PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3, Xbox One, Xbox 360, Wii U, PC, and 3DS.
 
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