Elizabeth Banks Directing Pitch Perfect 2
Chris Pratt Cast in Jurassic World
Parks and Recreation star confirms he was cast in Jurassic Park sequel.
Chris Pratt from NBC’s Parks and Recreation confirmed that he has been cast in the upcoming Jurassic World, which is being directed by Colin Trevorrow. The Jurassic World casing news was rumored earlier this month after Ron Howard let it out, but who listens to Ron Howard?
In the new film Jurassic World, based on the Michael Critchen book and film Jurassic Park, Chris Pratt will play Owen, an ex-soldier who goes up against a corporate scientist played by Ron Howard’s daughter, Bryce Dallas Howard.
At a recent press event for The Lego Movie, Chris Pratt says he’s “thrilled about” Jurassic World. He was a huge fan of the first movie and has been since he was young. He told Peace River Record Gazette “For me, Jurassic Park was really kind of my Star Wars. I lined up at the theatre to see it, I saw it opening night, I saw every sequel, I’ve seen it a whole bunch of times… for me that was my big movie, I think I was 13 or 14 when it came out. And so it’s a big deal for me to be any part of that, let alone this part I’m going to be playing. I’m thrilled about it.”
We don’t know much about Jurassic World except that it’s not a reboot, it’s a sequel set 22 years after the opening and closing of Jurassic Park. The new film will have a set of characters. According to Trevorrow, Jurassic World will take place in Isla Nubar. According to media reports Ty Simpkins and Nick Robinson have also been cast as a pair of brothers.
Chris Pratt was first noticed on the WB drama Everwood and has since been seen in The Lego Movie and Guardians of the Galaxy.
Jurassic World is scheduled to hit theaters on June 12, 2015.
SOURCE: Slash Film
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Exclusive: Director Ronald Krauss Talks Gimme Shelter
Gimme Shelter's Ron Krauss speaks with us about what draws him to such human interest stories and his research of living in a shelter.
Nicholas Hoult on a possible Warm Bodies 2
There's at least a slight glimmer of hope for a possible sequel to Warm Bodies...
Back at the start of the year, we penned a piece that argued Warm Bodies was one of the 2013 treats that many people overlooked. It stars Nicholas Hoult and was directed by Jonathan Levine (from his own script). Levine had previously made 50/50, The Wackness and All The Boys Love Mandy Lane, with his films getting more and more interesting. With that in mind, and given the growing appreciation of the original, could there possibly be a Warm Bodies 2?
Chatting at the Sundance Film Festival while promoting his new film Young Ones, Nicholas Hoult was asked that question by BBC America, and whilst there's nothing concrete in place, he certainly seems open to the idea.
When asked about a Warm Bodies 2, he said "I'm not sure, it's difficult to say. Obviously we had a great time making the first one, it was a lot of fun, and I loved that character, and it got received well.... But there's no definite plans at the moment. If a good story came along that it made sense to make, then maybe".
We'll keep you posted. With this one, we're happy to clutch at whatever straws we can find...
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Benedict Cumberbatch Heading to Blood Mountain
The Sherlock star will begin filming Blood Mountain this in April.
Benedict Cumberbatch, currently lighting American TV screens on fire as the BBC's Sherlock season three finally airs here, is attached to star in new thriller, Blood Mountain. Sergei Bodrov will direct Blood Mountain from a script by Jonathan W. Stokes and John Romano. According to Variety, Blood Mountain "follows a private military contractor whose special forces team is ambushed and killed during a covert raid, forcing him to personally escort one of the world’s most wanted terrorists over hostile terrain in order to bring him to justice. With a bounty at stake and insurgents and rival mercenaries hunting them, the two find themselves facing not only their enemies, but each other in their fight for survival."
Principal photography will kick off in April in Morocco. There's no word on a release date for Blood Mountain. There's also no word on how this will effect the persistent rumors that Mr. Cumberbatch is going to play a part in Star Wars: Episode VII.
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New trailer for Terry Gilliam's The Zero Theorem
Christoph Waltz stars in Terry Gilliam's upcoming film, The Zero Theorem. Here's the trailer...
The latest film from Terry Gilliam lands in cinemas in March, and unsurprisingly, this new trailer for it isn't shy about telling you who's behind it. Rightly so too. We're doubly excited, because it marks Gilliam's return to science fiction too...with The Zero Theorem.
Christoph Waltz takes the lead this time, with David Thewlis, Lucas Till, Melanie Thierry, Tilda Swinton and Ben Whishaw joining him. And at heart of it is the story of a computer genius who's working on a project that, if all goes to plan, will discover the purpose of existence. If it doesn't? Well, it's Terry Gilliam film. Perhaps, for now, we'll just leave you with the new trailer....
The film is due in UK cinemas on March 14th.
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Sly Cooper Movie Trailer Revealed
Our favorite raccoon is coming to the big screen in the Sly Cooper Official Movie...
Sly and his friends Bentley and Murray will make their big screen debut in 2016. The animated film will also feature the return of Clockwerk, Sly's archnemesis.
The film will be written and directed by Kevin Munroe, the man behind 2007's TMNT. Rainmaker and Blockade Entertainment will handle the animation.
It seems that the film will take place in the early days of Sly's career as a professional thief. According to the film's Facebook page, "In the film, Sly learns of his birth family's secret legacy; that he comes from a long line of talented and international thieves." Sly and his friends must keep Clockwerk from getting his hands on the Cooper Clan's secrets.
Excited for this new Sly Cooper adventure? Let us know in the comments section!
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X-Men: Days of Future Past Sentinels Explained
Learn about the biomechanical horrors in store for the mutant heroes in X-Men: Days of Future Past.
Vin Diesel Says Universal Plans to Develop Another Riddick Movie
Vin Diesel takes to the Internet to celebrate Riddick's DVD and Blu-ray success by sharing good news for the franchise's fans.
Captain America 3 is Being Developed, Russo Brothers Back
Marvel Studios are so impressed with The Winter Soldier that they want Anthony and Joe Russo back for Captain America 3!
Grand Budapest Hotel Gets a New Website
Learn more about the Republic of Zubrowka and its most famous hotel!
Can't wait to book a stay at The Grand Budapest Hotel? Today's your lucky day!
A special interactive website that has just launched in anticipation of Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel. Visit Akademie Zubrowka to explore the history of the Republic of Zubrowka, home of the illustrious Grand Budapest Hotel.
The Republic of Zubrowka possesses a rich heritage known only to the few who have thought to seek it out… until now. For the first time ever, you can explore the detailed political, cultural and artistic world of 20th century Zubrowka at the Akademie's Historical Archive! Learn about the military coup of 1935, the involvement of The Grand Budapest Hotel and the roving cast of characters that make up its intricate past.
The Grand Budapest Hotelrecounts the adventures of Gustave H, a legendary concierge at a famous European hotel between the wars, and Zero Moustafa, the lobby boy who becomes his most trusted friend. The story involves the theft and recovery of a priceless Renaissance painting and the battle for an enormous family fortune -- all against the back-drop of a suddenly and dramatically changing Continent.
The film hits theaters on March 7.
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: First Look at the Turtles and Shredder?
A sneak peek of the character designs for the Turtles and Shredder has surfaced online...
Unfortunately, at the request of Paramont pictures, we had to take down the images of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Shredder. By all accounts, these looked legitimate, and Paramount's reaction to the leak certainly indicates that they are. We are pleased to report, though, that we were more than pleasantly surprised by the look of the Turtles and Shredder, and despite all of the questionable issues that have surrounded this film from the start, these images were rather encouraging. You can read more about the film, including descriptions of the individual turtles, and a close look at the original script here: The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Movie: Everything We Know
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles will be released on August 8th in the US, and October 17th in the UK.
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shredder looks terrifying. but the turtles look like they did in that Out of the Shadows game
I like Shredder, but I am not sure how I feel about the turtles yet. I don't hate it though.
This looks a lot better than I was expecting. Have they said if the turtles are going to be CG or actual costumes?
Pretty sure they're CGI, as some production photos were released a while back showing the turtle actors in elaborate black and grey mocap suits. These small scale maquettes are really cool though!
I gotta say, I fucking hated that leaked halloween costume. It actually made me angry looking at it. But I'm actually pleasantly surprised. I'll reserve judgment for when I see them in action and hear them talk, but these images quell a little bit of my hatred. Shredder in particular looks badass. It's interesting that they chose to go with an american actor and change Oroku Saki's name to the phonetically similar Eric Sachs. I'm not sure why they didn't go with a Japanese actor, but I'm curious to see how the character is portrayed in the film.
Shredder's mask looks like Death from Darksiders 2.
This looks pretty damn awesome! Super excited now!
No, sir! I didn't see you playing with your dolls again.
Vera Farmiga on the state of The Conjuring 2
The star of The Conjuring, Vera Farmiga, has been chatting about The Conjuring 2...
Following the sizeable success of The Conjuring last year, which brought in $318m off a $20m budget for New Line/Warner Bros, sequel plans were pretty much inevitable. And whilst its director, James Wan, has been putting Fast & Furious 7 together since, The Conjuring 2 is still a project the studio is looking for.
Chatting to Ain't It Cool, one of the stars of The Conjuring, Vera Farmiga, has admitted too that "I'm hoping to see Conjuring 2 sooner than later". She added that "there are so many more stories to tell, and obviously it was a vital thing for New Line, and it seems implausible to not go for number two and even number three. But, I don't know anything concrete just yet. I think it’s being figured out right now".
She added that "we’d love to have James Wan at the helm, and he’s experienced a certain measure of…stress recently". That's some understatement: Wan is working on putting Fast & Furious 7 back together in the aftermath of the tragic death of one of its stars, Paul Walker.
It very much seems a case of when rather than if with regards The Conjuring 2. But we suspect it may still be some way off.
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Director found for Choose Your Own Adventure movie
The Choose Your Own Adventure books are heading to the big screen, courtesy of Dodgeball's Rawson Marshall Thurber...
It was revealed last summer that there were plans to adapt the Choose Your Own Adventure series of books into a movie. It wasn't clear which of the many books in the series - there ended up being over 150 of them - would be centred on, nor how the adventure choosing gimmick would translate to the big screen. Yet we might just be finding out soon: it turns out that this is very much an active project.
Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon - who penned the Night At The Museum movies and are also working on the new Naked Gun film - have been hired to oversee the script (and have been involved for a while). And now it's been revealed that Rawson Marshall Thurber - he of Dodgeball and We're The Millers fame - is set to direct.
Now if some enterprising British studio fancies taking a stab at the Fighting Fantasy books too, that'll make for a very satisfactory Wednesday, thank you very much...
Will Sony's plans for a Spider-Man movie universe work out?
Post-Avengers, superhero movies are all about shared universes, but will that work for Sony's Amazing Spider-Man franchise?
Shared universes have been a major feature of superhero comics for almost as long as capes and thought bubbles, but it's only relatively recently that they've become anywhere near as notable a feature in superhero movies. In the first wave of comic book films, 1984's Supergirl was the only example of a spinoff from an existing franchise, while the best-forgotten Batman and Robin hinted at the existence of Superman in what was little more than a throwaway joke.
In the post-X-Men era, meanwhile, the Spider-Man films remained resolutely standalone, while even X-Men Origins: Wolverine was more the only available route for the producers to continue after X-Men 3 than it was a genuinely separate story strand. The fragmentation of Marvel's character rights across various companies, and the stagnation of DC's film efforts (with the exception of Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy, which by its very nature resisted being part of any kind of superhero universe) meant that each individual set of films was very much able to keep itself to itself.
But with the arrival of the Marvel Studios cinematic universe and the buildup to – and eventual payoff of – The Avengers, all of that has changed. The most successful superhero movie franchise of all time, it's not just a possible new approach to the genre: it's practically become a mandatory approach. As such, those studios that only have their hands on a particular set of characters are suddenly chomping at the bit to set up their own shared universes, even if it means thinking creatively about which areas of the property they can exploit.
The current rush to start new movie universes is so frantic that Sony, despite only having kickstarted their Amazing Spider-Man reboot two years ago, has already announced far-reaching plans for a seemingly mammoth slate of films and associated spinoffs. It was already clear that the first Amazing Spider-Man was intended to be the leadoff for a series – hence the hints about Norman Osborn, and post-credits sequence, that bore little to no relation to the actual plot of the main film itself – but the upcoming Amazing Spider-Man 2 seems to be setting up several distinct elements that can be spun off in different directions.
We're still yet to get a clear picture of exactly how The Amazing Spider-Man 2's three villains – the Rhino, Electro and the Green Goblin – will fit into the film, so much so that Sony hasn't even actually officially announced that Dane DeHaan's Harry Osborn is actually going to become the Goblin, merely hinting at it in early-release posters and trailers. It seems unlikely that all three will be focused heavily, however – certainly, most of the pre-publicity seems to centre on Jamie Foxx as Electro – so the likelihood is that the others are in more minor roles, to be set up for future films.
As far as those future films go, despite The Amazing Spider-Man 2 being three months away, a further two films in the main series have already been announced as having ethereal future release dates (3 in 2015, and 4 in 2017). It seems likely that several elements from The Amazing Spider-Man 2 will lead directly into the third film – although obviously we'll have a better idea of exactly which ones once we've seen the movie. The second film, however, even bears the tagline "His greatest battle begins", suggesting that the battle in question won't actually be concluded by the end of its running time. The likelihood would seem to be that the exponential increase in villain activity will have grown yet further by the time the second film ends, creating a threat so large that it'll take a further two films to tell the story of Spidey overcoming it.
Perhaps the most curious aspect of Sony's attempt to build an expanded universe out of the Spider-Man franchise is that, at present, the webslinger and his support cast are the only group of Marvel characters that it actually has the rights to. And while the character has possibly the best rogue's gallery in comics (Batman's enemies might be more famous to the casual punter, but Spidey's are an altogether more fun and rounded set, and almost all relate to him in some way, whether thematically or for direct story reasons), the rights to his world don't really come with a lot of other heroes (although there hangs a question mark over whether characters introduced in the Ultimate Spider-Man comic, like Bombshell or indeed the replacement Spidey himself Miles Morales, are part of Sony's package).
This would explain, at least, why the so-far-announced plan for what we're calling the "Spideyverse" seems to revolve so heavily around villains. The only films that have so far been announced as actually starring a hero are the third and fourth Amazing Spider-Man films, with the other two on the slate being Venom and The Sinister Six.
Let's deal with Venom first. While initially introduced as a Spider-Man villain, the character was popular enough with fans that he was eventually upgraded to "anti-hero" status, even scoring his own occasional miniseries. Spider-Man 3 showed just how difficult it was to convincingly work the symbiotic monster into a movie setting, however – so it's a pretty bold step to announce a solo film even before The Amazing Spider-Man films have successfully brought him to the screen in the first place.
While you would expect Venom to be introduced in one of The Amazing Spider-Man films as a villain before being spun off into his own in a more anti-hero/vigilante kind of role, perhaps one route to go down – if they do indeed want to make him a "hero" capable of leading a film – would be to use the current comics' incarnation, in which Peter's former schoolmate Flash Thompson wears the symbiote and carries out wet work for the government, rather than the traditional Eddie Brock, "grudge against Parker" version.
After all, it seems unlikely that of the four films announced, fully two will have out-and-out villains as their lead characters – and there seems to be no way the Sinister Six film could go other than to present its titular bad guys as… well, as bad guys. Perhaps the bigger question with that film, though, is which characters will be featured. The original Six were made up of Electro, Mysterio, the Sandman, Doctor Octopus, Kraven the Hunter and the Sandman – but it's not unreasonable to suggest that it'll be a different lineup in the movie, as much as we'd absolutely love to see Mysterio finally make his big-screen bow.
It seems a pretty safe assumption that the three villains featured in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 will make up half of the lineup – leaving three further spots to be filled. That's a lot of characters to have to introduce in one or both of the two remaining Spidey films, but a clue as to the fourth member could lie in the casting of Felicity Jones. Her character in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 remains unnamed, but it's hard to shake the suspicion that she might be playing Felicia Hardy – also known as the Black Cat. Having Felicia as one of the Six would bring a much-needed female presence to an otherwise sausage-heavy lineup, and with her more ambiguous moral nature she might also be a useful character to steer the film's narrative in a more sympathetic direction.
It would be astonishing, meanwhile, if Otto "Dr Octopus" Octavius didn't make his way into the new film continuity somehow. As arguably Spider-Man's greatest foe (yes, we said it, ahead of Norman Osborn – after all, did the Goblin ever successfully steal Peter's body for a year, as Ock has done in the recent, and brilliant, Superior Spider-Man series?) Ock is easily a strong enough character to carry a film of his own, and would be a prime candidate for introduction in one of the "main" films before potentially playing a major role in Sinister Six. On the other hand, the fact that he was so strongly portrayed by Alfred Molina in Spider-Man 2 would possibly make it difficult for anyone else to come in with a definitive take – a problem already demonstrated by the fact that the Amazing films have yet to go near J. Jonah Jameson, so great is the shadow cast by J.K. Simmons.
As to the remaining slot, though, it's anybody's guess. We'd bet on a mid- or lower-tier villain like the Vulture, the Sandman or Shocker – someone nice and straightforward who can fill a slot without eating up too much screen time on character development. Of course, it's not beyond the realm of possibility that Rhys Ifans' Lizard will make a reappearance, either – although the lukewarm reception to his role in the first film may count against him.
Whoever ends up being on the Sinister Six team, it's undeniably something of a risk to try and make a superhero film that's entirely based around villains. But it also represents an opportunity to do something new – and as pretty much all the other heroes Spidey tends to hang around with have their rights tied up elsewhere, it's just about the only option. In the meantime, once Amazing Spider-Man 2 is released we'll have a better idea of just how well these assorted villains are being handled – and if they are indeed as sufficiently interesting to carry their own films as Sony thinks they are…
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Studios have always milked the cash cow of their franchises, but there once was a time when they at least waited for some kind of direction or storyline to base the assumption of their future films off of. Now they just say, we're gonna do 7 films, and 4 spin offs. How do you even know there's enough material there?? Fast and Furious movies don't even get made like this.
The Sinister Six? First time I heard this I thought...oh wow thats an instant flop!
Not all first impressions are wrong
10-20-30 years of comic stories to crib ideas/plot lines from?
Based on what?
Dredd: Underbelly (2000 AD) review
Although we’re still holding out hope for another movie, the comic sequel to Dredd is a great looking follow-up.
Dredd: Underbelly by Arthur Wyatt and Henry Flint is 2000 AD’s first attempt at publishing a comic specifically for the American direct market and it’s a solid effort. Aimed at non-2000 AD readers, fans of the movie will find this story an easy transition into other Dredd related comics, while people who didn’t see the recent movie don’t need to know any backstory other than “I am the law.” Billed as a continuation of the 2012 film, what makes the one-shot story part of the movieverse is mostly cursory (character designs, references to slo-mo); otherwise it could probably have easily fit in the 2000 AD timeline, pre-“Mutants in Mega City One.”
Underbelly somewhat falls under the awkward category of a tie-in/sequel copying the original’s formula. The comic focuses on a new drug that’s hit Mega City One (it even hits the “bigger and better” trope when one judge explains that the new drug “makes slo-mo look like candy”) and the Judges have to crack down on a female drug lord. Thankfully there are some twists thrown in that keep it from being a carbon-copy (and justify the longer page count). Unlike the movie, Anderson’s role is rather limited; at first it seemed like an odd choice, given that she was the viewpoint character in the film, but it makes sense that after the film, she isn’t needed to tell the story. It’s disappointing though, since the two best beats (one comedic and one dramatic) are Dredd’s reactions to Anderson.
The art is the highlight of the comic; Henry Flint is an impressive artist with a talent for interesting layouts. Most pages are partial splashes with panels overlapping them. In an amusing twist, the only page to use a normal grid layout is a visualization of the new drug’s effects. Panels are frequently slanted and many of the horizontal ones contract or expand in height from one side to the next. When all that is combined it gives the comic a sense of chaos and momentum that helps propel the story along (and creates a sense of movement that will help transition movie viewers in to comic readers).
The best layout is a two page spread showing the Judges on a raid. The background is a layout of the building, showing the Judges working their way through the guards, with panels and arrows pointing to the map and giving detail to when and what happened in each location; it’s like an R-rated take on Family Circus. The spread looks fine in digital, but it’s probably worth picking this comic up in print just to see the full scale of the assault.
The characters look great, but the comic suffers from being a movie tie-in. With a few exceptions, Anderson looks enough like actor Olivia Thirlby that it’s passable, but Dredd is given a chin the size of a tower block. It makes Dredd intimidating and would be an interesting design for a regular Dredd comic, but it’s not Karl Urban’s chin.
Overall, Dredd: Underbelly is worth checking out, especially for fans of the movie. I mean, it’s not like there’s any other way to see Karl Urban as a gruff futuristic cop working with a gifted partner.
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I ordered mine as soon as I could. A little disappointed in the whole, drug, female crime lord story again.
Surely they could have come up with something different. It's not as if the Hollywood bosses will be looking at this and thinking, "Yes! Here's a great idea for a sequel to Dredd". It has the makings of The Hangover 2. A carbon copy.
They should have made it with the idea in mind to give hollywood some food for thought.
I don't think that's the point. Hollywood doesn't care about ideas and Hollywood didn't make Dredd– a British indie film. It's quantifiable interest/potential audience that matters to them. If Hollywood was interested in stories or ideas, we wouldn't be getting Resident Evil 6.
Besides, there's 37 years of Dredd stories to pick from.
Waiting for Godzilla: The Roots of The King of The Monsters
Godzilla’s origins can be traced back much farther than the atomic bomb.
It was sixty years ago when Godzilla first popped out of the ocean and, given as he’d never been there before, decided to pay a visit to Tokyo. Maybe it makes sense that the aging star should opt to mark the anniversary with a new film directed by hip American Gareth Edwards instead of another Toho contract player. Look at what Blue Velvet did for Roy Orbison’s career and Rick Rubin did for Johnny Cash’s, right?
For as long as he’s been in the public eye, though, in a career that’s spanned 28 films, for all that’s been written, for all the jibes and interpretations, an awful lot of questions remain. Tops among them is where in the hell did he come from originally? That is, where in the hell did the idea for something that looked and acted like Godzilla come from?
It would be very easy to say 1954’s Gojira can be traced back to the fire-breathing dragons of mythology. After all, dragons worked their way into the legends of cultures the world over. China, Japan, Northern Europe and South America all had their own dragons to contend with.
So it's simple, right? Godzilla came to be because fire-breathing dragons were always part of Japanese culture, and a producer at Toho Company, Ltd.—one of Japan’s largest movie studios at the time—decided to make a movie about a new kind of fire-breathing dragon, one that symbolized the dangers of the contemporary world. Simple as pie.
Simple as it is, it wouldn’t be correct. Not exactly, anyway. Throughout the series, Godzilla’s origins have been explained and revised and revised again any number of times. Likewise, the real story behind the birth of Gojira is a complicated, convoluted bit of business. It's in fact a Möbius strip of history, influences and references which, to date, continues to fold back upon itself. Dragons aside, in order to trace the origin and evolution of Godzilla, we need to go back to the first part of the 19th century.
It wasn’t until the early 1800s that people started recognizing dinosaur bones for what they were. Prior to that, it’s entirely plausible to believe misinterpretations of those same bones gave rise to the world’s dragon legends, but finally in 1822 the scientific study of dinosaur bones became a legitimate field of research known as paleontology.
It's no surprise that as paleontologists came to better understand what these dinosaurs were and how some of them behaved, their findings sparked the public imagination. They also inspired writers Jules Verne, Arthur Conan Doyle and Edgar Rice Burroughs, all of whom, in books like Journey to the Center of the Earth, The Lost World, and The Land that Time Forgot, would speculate about what might happen if modern, civilized men were to discover living dinosaurs. The general consensus was things would probably not end well.
The advent of motion pictures at the beginning of the 20th century opened up a whole new world for creative storytelling. As early filmmakers played around with cameras just to see what these new gadgets could do, the results tended to be more experimental than narrative in nature. Although the films were interesting in themselves, they didn’t exactly send mainstream audiences flocking to the local bijou.
It didn't take long, however, for another experimenter named Winsor McCay to come up with the notion of a "moving cartoon." McCay, the newspaper cartoonist who’d created the popular Little Nemo strip, saw the possibilities of film and began conducting a few tests.
He produced a stack of drawings, each only slightly different from the one preceding it, and shot them all in sequence, one frame each. In 1911, he premiered the world's first animated cartoon, which perhaps not surprisingly was based on Little Nemo. Not much happens in the film, but he did prove that a drawing (or in this case 4,000 drawings) could be made to move realistically on the screen. Another, longer film, The Story of a Mosquito (or How a Mosquito Operates), appeared about a year later.
Then one day in 1913, as the story goes, McCay and some friends were in New York when their car broke down in front of the Museum of Natural History. The repairs were going to take some time, so the group decided to explore the museum a bit as they waited.While admiring the mounted skeleton of a brontosaurus, McCay, a wagering man, suggested he could bring the dinosaur to life. One of his friends took that bet (for a fancy dinner), and McCay went to work on the 10,000 drawings required for the job.
With the 1914 premiere of Gertie the Dinosaur in Chicago, McCay won the bet. The short film, which became part of McCay's traveling vaudeville act, was also incredibly popular, despite the early skepticism of some audience members. Never having seen an animated film before, they assumed it was some kind of puppetry or a magic trick.
As was the case with Little Nemo, not much happens in Gertie. She walks toward the screen, looks around, lifts one leg then the other (at McCay’s command during his act), eats some plants, scratches herself with her tail, and that's about it. But it was enough.
One of the most interesting things about Gertie was that, until that time, dinosaurs in popular culture had been portrayed as snarling, vicious monsters that chased people around, much like the dragons who had come before them. McCay's portrayal of a cute, somewhat bumbling, slow moving and gentle creature helped change the public perception of what dinosaurs were. Gertie was more like a golden retriever than a dragon.
Interestingly enough, in Gertie on Tour, a sequel McCay produced sometime between 1918 and 1921, Gertie menaces a passing trolley car, albeit in an innocent and playful manner. It's a scene that would be echoed, though with less playful results, in both King Kong and Gojira.
In 1921, McCay made another film clearly foreshadowing the giant monster pictures to come, both in Japan and the States. His series of shorts, Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend, was, no question, deliriously odd even by modern standards. Each film opens with a man and wife preparing for bed, the man commenting on the rarebit he's just eaten, and complaining that rarebit always gives him strange dreams. Then he closes his eyes and has a strange dream. The formula gave McCay the freedom to get as bizarre as his demented imagination would allow.
In one episode, The Pet, a perfectly normal-looking dog eats a bucket of what appears to be rat poison. Within a matter of moments, the dog has grown to enormous size and begins trotting through the streets of a small town, eating large objects and casually knocking over buildings before being chased by a squadron of zeppelins. It all looks quite familiar, except for the "dog" part and the "zeppelins" part. A few decades later, what McCay considered outrageous would become standard, even clichéd, matinee and drive-in fare.
In 1924 and '25, four films were released theatrically featuring dinosaurs or dragons in pivotal roles. In Fritz Lang's Siegfried, the legendary Nordic hero Siegfried himself does battle with a rather clumsy dragon, Fafner. Douglas Fairbanks fights his own dragon in The Thief of Baghdad. Even the great Buster Keaton tries to come to terms with a few dinosaurs while playing a caveman in Three Ages. The most significant of the four films, given the subject at hand anyway, is The Lost World, directed by William Dowling and Harry Hoyt, and loosely based on the story by Arthur Conan Doyle. The story of an expedition to a forgotten South American island plateau populated by living dinosaurs turned out to be incredibly popular with audiences. Its popularity, however, had nothing to do with the acting, the script, or the direction. Audiences were instead amazed by the special effects.
Willis O'Brien, who like Winsor McCay had been a newspaper cartoonist, decided to take McCay's Gertie one step further. Instead of animating two-dimensional drawings, using the same process he began experimenting with three-dimensional models. Instead of drawing tens of thousands of pictures and photographing each once, O'Brien built jointed sculptures, moving them a fraction of an inch for each frame of film. The process was just as laborious as McCay's, but in the end he only had to build one model, he didn’t waste as much paper, and what appeared on the screen looked like a living creature and not just a sketch in motion. The process came to be known as “stop-motion animation.”
O’Brien had been creating some comic stop-motion shorts about the Stone Age when his dinosaurs caught the eye of the producers of The Lost World, who asked him to create the dinosaurs for their film. The results at the time were astonishing—nobody had seen anything like it before. McCay may have brought a dinosaur to life, but O'Brien made them breathe.
At the film’s climax, the explorers return to London with a brontosaurus in tow, hoping to prove their discovery to the world. Not surprisingly the brontosaurus breaks free and goes on a mild rampage before swimming back home.If you discount McCay's The Pet, this would make The Lost World the first "giant monster on the loose in a major city" movie.
O'Brien then set to work on Creation, an ambitious full-length animated dinosaur epic. He never finished it, but the scenes he did complete were picked up by producer-director Merion C. Cooper for use in his new film, King Kong. He also hired O'Brien to design and animate his leading man.
The similarities between 1933's King Kong and The Lost Worldare hardly coincidental. Both involve a team of adventurers sailing to a remote, mysterious island that turns out to be inhabited by prehistoric creatures. They decide to bring one back to civilization as proof of what they'd seen, but it’s not long before the creature gets loose and starts ruining days. Both films even feature a massive tree trunk spanning a ravine, and some of thee explorers being knocked off the trunk by an enormous prehistoric monster.
Despite all those menacing dinosaurs they find on Skull Island with Kong, at heart King Kong was a simple retelling of the beauty and the beast fable—a point bluntly made throughout the film. After the audience reaction at first screenings, however, a few scenes were cut to make Kong less beastly. In the subsequent wide release of the film, he no longer eats or stomps on people, and he doesn't rip off Fay Wray's dress and sniff his finger.
Of the elements that remained, there are more than a few that would later make the connection between King Kongand Gojira pretty clear. Both creatures are discovered on primitive islands, and are worshipped like gods by the inhabitants. As mentioned earlier, both monsters destroy elevated trains. And Max Steiner's music for King Kong's native dance ritual was all but lifted by the brilliant Japanese composer Akira Ifukube (despite what most people say) for his scores to both 1962’s King Kong vs. Godzillaand 1964’s Godzilla vs. Mothra.
But I'm getting ahead of myself here.
Even though the star of King Kongwas only 18 inches tall and made out of steel, rubber, and hair, Kong exuded more personality and more humanity than any of the actors on screen with him. Although he was essentially little more than a fancy doll, when O’Brien was done with him he was more human than human. Again, because O’Brien was able to bring that doll to life, audiences cared what happened to Kong and the film became an enormous success. A monumental success, even. So much so that a sequel (Son of Kong) was whipped together and released that same year. And Kong itself became the first film in history to be re-released, first in 1938, and later in 1952.
One of the people who saw the film in 1933 was young Ray Harryhausen, who at age eight walked out of Graumann's Chinese Theater in Los Angeles knowing exactly what he wanted to do with his life. Unlike most of us who felt that way once or twice when we were kids, Harryhausen stuck with his initial post-Kong dream.
Like O'Brien, Harryhausen began building dinosaur models and making short stop-motion films. As a teenager filming dinosaur movies in his parents’ garage, he even arranged an audience with O'Brien himself, where he showed off some of his models and screened a reel of his work. O'Brien, Harryhausen would recall years later, was blunt in his criticisms, but supportive of the young animator’s work. O'Brien was apparently more than mildly impressed by what he saw, given that in 1947 he hired Harryhausen to be his assistant on the next of O'Brien's "giant ape with a heart of gold" pictures, Mighty Joe Young.
The film was another big hit, and a few years later in 1953, Harryhausen was given the chance to handle all the special effects on The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms.
As providence would have it, not only was this to be Harryhausen's big break, it also gave him the opportunity to work with an old friend, writer Ray Bradbury. The two had met in school and became lifelong friends after learning they were both King Kongfanatics and both loved dinosaurs.
Based on Bradbury's short story "The Fog Horn" and directed by production designer Eugene Lourie, the plot of The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is a simple one. An atomic blast in the Arctic Circle awakens a giant prehistoric creature that promptly works its way down the East Coast, smashing boats and coastal towns along the way. Once it hits New York, it knocks over some buildings and snacks on policemen until finally reaching Coney Island. There, a sharpshooter lodges a harpoon carrying a radioactive isotope in the beast's throat, and it dies a convulsive death on the Boardwalk.
The film was yet another big hit. A few months prior to its release, King Kong had been re-released for the second time and went on to make more money than it did in 1933.Around this same time, Toho producer Tomoyuki Tanaka was on a flight back to Japan from Indonesia after a movie deal collapsed, trying to figure out how to fill a sudden gap in Toho’s release schedule. At some point during that flight, he decided they’d make a movie about a giant sea monster.
It's not irrelevant that both King Kongand The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms had been in theaters within the past year and both had made lots and lots of money. Even though The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms had not yet been released in Japan, you have to figure Tanaka was aware of it, given the original title he gave the project was The Giant Monster from 20,000 Miles Beneath the Sea. You also have to figure Shigeru Kayama, the writer Tanaka hired to come up with a story, was familiar with the film, too (or at least Ray Bradbury’s story), given that his initial scenario included a scene in which the creature attacks a lighthouse, echoing a scene in both Bradbury’s original story and the subsequent film.
In another interesting parallel, the dinosaur in The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms, along with crushing everything in its path, was also carrying an unknown prehistoric disease, so even those people who crossed the monsters path without getting crushed ended up with a horrible bacterial infection. Godzilla, meanwhile, is of course radioactive, so those people who cross his path without being crushed or burned still end up with radiation poisoning.
In fact, in ways too numerous to list, you could say the original Gojira script was an amalgam of plot points lifted from both King Kong and The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms. You have a prehistoric creature awakened by an atomic blast; you have superstitious natives on an isolated island offering up human sacrifices, you have giant footprints and a rampage in a major metropolitan area.
Toho's special effects genius, Eiji Tsuburaya, whom Tanaka had immediately hired for the project, freely admitted that he—like Harryhausen—had been originally inspired to become a special effects artist after seeing Willis O'Brien's work in King Kong. The very first sketches of what the monster would look like, in fact, were decidedly apelike in nature, but were soon discarded in favor of a more saurian design. Tsuburaya said years later that before being hired for Gojira, he'd been planning to make a stop-motion monster movie about a giant octopus. He was forced to abandon the idea to work on Gojira, but coincidentally a year later in 1955, Harryhausen made his own stop-motion octopus movie, It Came From Beneath the Sea.
Unfortunately making Gojira as a stop-motion film, as Tsuburaya initially proposed, would have taken years to complete. Given they only had a few months to film, he decided to go with a guy in a big rubber suit instead.
There was one major difference between Gojira and its influences. King Kong was a fable. The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms was a simple adventure story. Tanaka wanted his film to be more than that. He wanted his film to be an allegory both about atomic weapons and Japan's recent history. As a result, Gojira was a much darker film than either Kong or Beast. The opening scene of the film, in which the water around a fishing boat begins to bubble, followed by a blinding flash of light seconds before the boat bursts into flames, was a direct reference to an incident still fresh in the minds of Japanese audiences.
On March 1, 1954, the U.S. conducted an H-bomb test on the island of Bikini in the South Pacific. One hundred miles east of the island, the Japanese fishing boat, Lucky Dragon No. 5, found itself in the direct path of the fallout. All the fisherman aboard suffered radiation poisoning, and one died as a result. It was a major news story in Japan at the time, and one that convinced most Japanese (again) that not only were atomic weapons a threat to humanity, but also that the U.S. was being foolhardy and reckless in their testing.
Once more I’m getting a bit ahead of myself.
It’s amazing that in spite of a tight budget and a tighter production schedule, the final film, released in November of 1954, was the masterpiece it was. It was far more than a simple monster movie. Director Ishiro Honda crafted a dark and somber allegory about the horrors of nuclear war. It was nothing to laugh at. The film ended with a sacrificial suicide, Tokyo in ruins, and the streets littered with the dead or dying.
And boy, by some accounts, was Ray Harryhausen pissed—believing correctly he'd been ripped off and that Toho had made a mountain of cash as a result. While he put years of painstaking work into his giant animated monsters, Toho had taken the cheap way out, replacing stop-motion animation with a guy in a suit.
But the Möbius strip of Godzilla's evolution, one that began with Gertie, doesn't stop there. Gojira is merely an axis.
Back in Hollywood, while Harryhausen was averaging one box-office smash per year and Godzilla was becoming a franchise as well as a cultural icon, Willis O'Brien was waiting years between jobs and struggling to find work of any kind. After Mighty Joe Young, it was a full ten years before he was offered some stop- motion work on the giant scorpion movie The Black Scorpion, then another couple after that before Eugene Lourie, the man who directed The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms, brought him in to work on The Giant Behemoth.
O'Brien knew what his real bread and butter was, and so as he waited for jobs he kept writing and shopping new King Kong scripts. Unfortunately every studio he approached took a pass. The problem was that O'Brien's stop- motion technique was too slow and far too expensive. Taking a nod from Toho, American studios in search of giant monsters started using rear projection of real animals or miniaturized sets and stunt men in monster costumes.
One of O'Brien's scripts was called King Kong vs. Frankenstein, and though it had been floating around for years, every major studio passed on it. (You have to admit that at first glance, a battle between Kong and Frankenstein’s monster wouldn’t last very long.)
Then in the early '60s, a mysterious thing happened. The script for King Kong vs. Frankenstein ended up in Japan, on Tanaka's desk. There had been hints from the beginning that Tanaka wanted to bring King Kong (or a version of him) to Toho, and now he had his chance. Another Godzilla picture was due, so with a simple dash of the pen, King Kong vs. Frankenstein became King Kong vs. Godzilla. The 1962 film, also directed by Honda with music by Ifukube and special effects by Tsuburaya, would go on to become the most profitable entry in the Godzillaseries. It would also mark the last film credit the great Willis O'Brien would see in his lifetime. He died the year the film came out.
After that, Tanaka and Honda went a little batty with the giant apes. After King Kong vs. Godzilla, they made a sequel—1967's King Kong Escapes, in which the Japanese version of Kong battles a robot version of the Japanese version of Kong. That film was a co-production between Toho and Rankin/Bass, the same fine folks who gave us Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeerand Santa Claus is Coming’ to Town. The film was based on a then-popular Rankin/Bass Saturday morning cartoon series. This may help explain why Kong bears a certain resemblance to a reddish-brown version of Rudolph's Abominable Snow Monster. Although King Kong Escapes was rated G and aimed at the kiddies, it still ends with a man being crushed by a sliding table and vomiting blood.
Two years after King Kong vs. Godzilla, Toho would go on to film Frankenstein Conquers the World (whose American title strangely parallels a popular giant snail film from 1957, The Monster That Challenged the World), in which "Frankenstein's monster" takes the form of a giant hairy retarded adolescent created by a mad scientist. This led to the sort-of sequel War of the Gargantuasin 1966, which featured two giant hairy ape-like creatures who cause trouble.
To twist the knot of this evolutionary chain one more time, we need to jump ahead to 1998, and the release of Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin's mega-budget, CGI'ed, pop-musicked remake of Godzilla.
Normally, as with The Godfather, Part III and all the George Romero zombie films following Day of the Dead, I prefer to believe the film simply doesn’t exist, and never existed. I bring it up here, however, for one reason. Despite the title and all the hype, Godzilla is not a remake of Godzilla. It's a remake of The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms.
The original Gojira may have been inspired by Beast—may have even lifted a few things from it outright, but in the end Gojira was a unique film with its own identity, its own style, and its own message. This 1998 film is a straightforward remake. It's just The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms with worse special effects and the name "Godzilla" slapped on the poster. As in the original Lurie/Bradbury/Harryhausen picture, the American Godzilla is tracked underwater as he approaches New York. He makes a dramatic entrance on the docks. He walks through a building leaving a monster-shaped hole. He disappears for long periods of time while in Manhattan. Hell, he even looks more like Harryhausen's monster than Toho's—and he no longer breathes radioactive fire.
Instead of dying at Coney, he (or she) dies at Madison Square Garden. I guess that's different.
Interestingly enough, the movie Emmerich and Devlin made which got them the Godzilla job was Independence Day, a hugely successful summer blockbuster about an alien invasion that was at heart a remake of another Ray Harryhausen film, Earth vs. The Flying Saucers—right down to the destruction of Washington D.C.
I probably shouldn’t let movies make me mad like this, but if Harryhausen was pissed at Toho for using a rubber suit to steal his Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, you have to wonder how pissed he was at Emmerich and Devlin for using computer animation to steal two of his movies and make bazillions without giving him a lick of credit.
At this point, things start to get complicated. In the early years of the 21st century, King Kongreturned to America, and Godzillareturned to Japan. Ray Harryhausen received a long-overdue Oscar, and Toho began cranking out kaiju eiga as Peter Jackson once again remade King Kong.
There’s no saying at this point what Gareth Edwards’ upcoming 2014 Godzilla reboot will be, what effect it will have on the King of the Monster’s evolutionary path, or even if it’ll be a remake of Godzilla at all (maybe he’ll grab another Harryhausen film instead), but how we reached this point after all those cloverleafs and loop-de-loops remains reasonably straightforward. If Winsor McCay hadn't made a bet that afternoon at the Museum of Natural History, we wouldn't have Gertie. If there had been no Gertie, there likely wouldn't have been a Lost World. No Lost World, no King Kong (at least not in the way we know it). No Kong, no Beast From 20,000 Fathoms. And if there had been no Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, there would have been no Gojira, and none of its 27 sequels.
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Stephen Root Joins AMC’s Turn
Stephen Root joins AMC's Revolutionary War spy series Turn. No red staplers will be involved, though.
Stephen Root is coming to AMC’s Revolutionary War spy series Turn. Stephen Root played the smoothly duplicitous special investigator for the Department of Justice Gaston Means on Boardwalk Empire and Jimmy James on the TV sitcom NewsRadio, but is probably best known as Milton Waddams in the film Office Space.
Root signed on for a recurring role as Nathaniel Sackett a civilian member of a proto-CIA group the Committee to Detect and Defeat Conspiracies, America’s first spy group, circa 1778. Turnis based on the book Washington Spies by Alexander Rose. It stars Jamie Bell as Abe Woodhull a farmer who gets his friends to together to form The Culper Ring spy group that gathered intelligence during Revolutionary War. AMC’s Turnwas created and is being executive produced by Craig Silverstein.
Root also appeared in Pushing Daisies, Justified, King Of The Hill, Finding Nemoand No Country For Old Men.
Turn premieres on April 6.
SOURCE:Deadline
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The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Movie: Everything We Know
Everything we know about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles reboot, including first images and a look at the original script!
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This movie is going to suck mightily. Songs will be written about how bad it will be. Which sucks in itself, because I love the Turtles and want to see a good, new, live-action movie about them. All the casting aside from the Turtles(we won't know how good/bad they are until we see/hear them) sounds exactly like how SNL would do a parody of a Michael Bay directed or produced Turtle movie.
We should have heeded the Transformers fans warnings. ..
Is it too early to reboot this movie?
your only argument is because michael bay is producing it.. not writing, not directing.. producing.
Throw the baby out with the bath water. The script sounds horrible. How can they be mutants if there are extraterrestrial inter dimensional whatevers? Why would you reboot and change the name to "Ninja Turtles?" Is it really that hard to stay true to the canon of the series? I call it lazy! If your not in love with the story, you should not be involved in the production of this film. Why does hollywood have to keep consistently destroying my childhood?
hello did u really want to act blue film were u can be receive 250 million in ever three weeks u can simple contact on this address drargogo@gmail.com or call +2348101706453
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It's simple! We make Dodgson's BioSyn (the guy with the hat who want the embryo's) the new dino company, which makes sense because they where years behind of InGen (that's why they wanted the embryo's). You can also explain the sudden appairence of the Spinosaurus in JP3, who wasn't seen in 'The Lost World' and who wasn't on InGen's index list, as one of the first cloned dinosaurs of BioSyn.
And there you have it! Connectivity from the first to the fourth JP movie and a lot of possible storylines.