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Michael Keaton is Interested in Beetlejuice 2

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NewsDen Of Geek2/14/2014 at 2:27PM

If Tim Burton is directing, Michael Keaton will come back for the long-awaited Beetlejuice 2

While making the rounds for RoboCop, Michael Keaton has some words about one of his most beloved roles. Beetlejuice 2 has been talked about forever, but now there's one more key piece in place. If Tim Burton is in, so is Michael Keaton. Might Beetlejuice 2 finally happen? This is the most promising it's sounded in years!

"I've e-mailed Tim a couple of times, talked to the writer a couple of times, but all really, really preliminary stuff,"Keaton told MTV. "I always said that's the one thing I'd like to do again, if I ever did anything again. But it kind of required Tim to be involved some way or another. Now it looks like he is involved, and without giving too much away we've talked to each other, and e-mailed each other, and if he's in, it's going to be hard not to be in."

Back in October, Warner Bros. spoke with Burton about coming back to the franchise, and Winona Ryder has seemingly had some kind of Beetlejuice 2 discussions, as well. Whether or not a Beetlejuice reunion is a good idea or not remains to be seen, but it's difficult to not be curious about seeing this one finally come together.

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Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn Get A New Movie…About Them

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NewsDen Of Geek2/14/2014 at 2:55PM

Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn are one of Hollywood's greatest on (and off) screen couples, and are the subject of a new movie.

Throughout the history of great onscreen (and offscreen) romances, few have ever been as iconic as Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. A couple that partnered for nine films over 27 years, but never married due to Tracy’s Catholic guilt (he was already married to Louise Tracy), the subject is just asking for a big screen treatment of its own.

And it may have finally found it as David Permut’s Permut Presentations is teaming with Reunion Pictures to produce David Rambo’s screenplay, Tracy And Hepburn. Rambo, writer on shows that include CSI and Revolution seeks to chronicle the pairing from their earliest meetings when making MGM’s Woman of the Year to their final collaboration on Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner, which wrapped only days before Spencer Tracy’s untimely death.

Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn had an affair that is the stuff of Hollywood legend—see its mythical teasing in Martin Scorsese’s The Aviator for more. Despite being married to Louise Tracy, Spencer lived and worked with Hepburn for nearly three decades, yet would not divorce his wife due to deeply held religious beliefs. When Tracy finally did die, Hepburn was not invited to the funeral by Louise. Hepburn reportedly never watched Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner due to painful memories. But for our memories, there will always be the likes of Adam’s Rib.

SOURCE: Deadline

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Cameron Crowe’s New Film With Bradley Cooper, Emma Stone Opens On Christmas

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NewsDen Of Geek2/14/2014 at 3:23PM

Cameron Crowe's untitled supernatural dramedy starring Bradley Cooper, Emma Stone, and Rachel McAdams has been slated for Christmas.

Despite not yet giving a title for the upcoming film from writer and director Cameron Crowe (Almost Famous, Vanilla Sky), Columbia Pictures has a release date and our first official image in this Air Force-based sci-fi dramedy: it will open Christmas Day. And it looks like it may have holiday appeal with a cast that includes Emma Stone, Bradley Cooper, Rachel McAdams, Alec Baldwin, Jay Baruchel, Michael Chemus, and Ivana Millcevic.


While there is yet to be an official synopsis, it is known to be about a Hawaii-based defense contractor (Cooper) who teams with an Air Force pilot (Stone) to prevent the launch of a military-grade satellite in the face of supernatural powers invested in the island.

Just vague enough to realize that there is more going on than what is being hinted at, the winning cast and always curious filmmaker makes this comedy-drama as one to look forward to unwrapping.

SOURCE: ComingSoon

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Ron Howard Directing The Jungle Book

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NewsDen Of Geek2/14/2014 at 3:37PM
Mr Ron Howard, with his leeetle friends...

Ron Howard is set to direct a WB adaptation of The Jungle Book, which is in direct competition with Disney's own reboot with Jon Favreau.

Warner Brothers is moving hard on revisiting previous fairy tales and children stories for the 21st century. With reboots and adaptations already underway for Peter Pan and Tarzan, the studio’s next move is to push forward a new retelling of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book.

Warner Bros. has hired Ron Howard (Rush, Angels & Demons) to adapt Kipling’s tome to the Indian wilderness for their upcoming slate. This is in direct competition of Walt Disney Pictures’ own planned live-action reboot of The Jungle Book, which last heard was circling Iron Man’s Jon Favreau to direct. That one is already slated for an October 9, 2015 release date.

Kipling’s The Jungle Book was a collection of stories first published in magazines during 1893 and 1894. In 1895, a The Second Jungle Book was produced chronicling the later adventures of an older Mowgli. These stories served as the inspiration for the Walt Disney Animation Classic The Jungle Book in 1967. Disney also distributed a moderately successful adaptation of the books in 1994 directed by Stephen Sommers (yes that Stephen Sommers) starring Carey Elwes and Lena Headey.

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I'd much rather see a Dark Tower movie ....

New 300: Rise Of An Empire TV Clip

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NewsDen Of Geek2/14/2014 at 5:51PM

Watch the latest TV spot for 300: Rise of an Empire, which showcases naval carnage and an ocean of blood between Greeks and Persians.

When 300 Spartans dine in Hell, it is time for the rest of Greece to come to the table with this new TV Spot for 300: Rise of an Empire.

In a production that Warner Bros. has had a long-time coming, the follow-up to 300 is almost upon us, and the new TV Spot for that swords and sandals (and CGI blood) throwback brings Leonidas’ widow, Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) to the forefront when she deals with the loss of her husband by inspiring all of Greece to his cause. Soon Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro) will face the might of thousands of Greeks crashing upon his foreign Persian hordes of even more thousands. Also, at the center of the marketing campaign is franchise newcomer Eva Green as Persian Naval Commander Artemisia. And Hell followed with her.

Impressive looking visuals mark this Noam Murro film from producer and co-writer Zack Snyder, who is off working on Batman vs. Superman at the moment.

300: Rise of an Empire opens March 7, 2014.

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Goosebumps Movie Casts Jack Black, Dylan Minnette

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NewsTony Sokol2/15/2014 at 9:30AM

Sony announces Dylan Minnette and Jack Black will star in the upcoming Goosebumps movie...

Goosebumps are being raised again. R.L. Stine’s slightly spooky stories for Scholastic students is coming to the big screen. Sony announced that Dylan Minnette was been cast in Sony Pictures’ upcoming film adaptation of the widely loved Goosebumps books. Minnette joins Jack Black, winner of many Kids’ Choice Awards.

Minnette will play Zach Cooper, a kid who moves with his family from New York to Greendale, Maryland, where things aren’t quite as ideal as they seem. First off, he lives next to a R.L. Stine, who will be played by Black. Stine’s got secrets, scary secrets. Stine’s got demons in his mind. The writer also has a ventriloquist’s dummy named Slappy. Stine’s niece Hannah, played by Odeya Rush, goes to Zach for help cramming those demons back into Stine’s mind.

The Goosebumps movie will be directed by Rob Letterman, who also directed Gulliver’s Travels which starred Jack Black. The screenplay is written by Darren Lemke and Mike White.

Minnette just finished shooting Alexander And The Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Day with Steve Carell for the Mouse.

Remember the Goosebumps tv show? Those were fun times, weren't they? Let's hope that the Goosebumps movie is more of the same, although the casting choice does have us thinking that the movie might be in trouble...

SOURCE: Deadline

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John Henson Dies at 48

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NewsDen Of Geek2/15/2014 at 8:41PM

Muppets puppeteer and son of Jim Henson has died suddenly at the age of 48.

The Jim Henson Company has just confirmed via their Facebook page that John Henson, puppeteer, performer, and son of Jim Henson died suddenly at the too-young age of 48. The statement reads: "It is with great sadness that we confirm that John Henson, son of Jim and Jane Henson and brother to Lisa, Cheryl, Brian and Heather, died at age 48 of a sudden massive heart attack on Friday, February 14, while at home with his daughter. John served as a shareholder and board member of The Jim Henson Company. He leaves two daughters, Katrina (15) and Sydney (10) and his wife Gyongyi. A private service is being planned."

Mr. Henson spent the last few years as the massive Sweetums in the Muppet crew in addition to his other duties.

We're very sorry to hear about this, and wish the Henson family the very best.

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Man, the Henson family dies too young. RIP, John!

Kurt Russell on Fast & Furious 7 & Expendables 3

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NewsSimon Brew2/17/2014 at 7:56AM

Kurt Russell gives an update on Fast & Furious 7 and 8, and explains why he's not interested in The Expendables...

The mighty Kurt Russell is a busy man at the minute. He's got a new film arriving via video on demand services - that'd be The Art Of The Steal - and he's continuing to work on Fast & Furious 7, which resumed production last month, following the tragic death of Paul Walker.

Russell confirmed in a new interview with IGN that he's still on board the film, and that he has more material to film. "I've been told April, maybe May, maybe Dubai, maybe Atlanta, maybe LA", he said.

Questioned whether his role in Fast & Furious 7 would build to a larger part in Fast & Furious 8, Russell admitted that "the character has been purposely been treated in a certain way so that he can [return] or can't. The 'can' will be an interesting stretch. It works, because I understand what it is and we came up with it. It's like, 'Oh, wow! That's cool!' If he doesn't, then he doesn't. If he gets killed, he gets killed. That will be for them to determine".

Russell continued, saying that "I just wanted to be able to work with them making the best possible character to either be sad he doesn't move on or say, 'Yeah, I want this character to move on - we need this character to move on.' That sort of thing. I don't know what the situation, with Paul dying, does to that. I don't know".

One film that Russell's definitely not involved with - in spite of being on many people's wishlist for it - is The Expendables 3. So why? " I mean, I'm glad Sly's done well with this. He's a great person. The fellas all seem to have a good time. I've never seen any of them. It's not a beat I get. It's like looking backwards to me", Russell told the site.

Fast & Furious 7 is set for release in 2015.

IGN.

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At least someone is smart enough not to star in these ridiculous Expendables movies!


The 2014 BAFTA Film Awards winners

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NewsSimon Brew2/17/2014 at 7:59AM

Gravity, 12 Years A Slave and American Hustle lead this year's collection of BAFTA Film Award winners. Here's the full list...

Last night, lots of people headed off to London's Royal Opera House, where Stephen Fry hosted the British Academy Film Awards. That's the BAFTAs to you and us.

The BAFTAs used to be one of those ceremonies where people sent speeches to be read by other people, but these days, it seems really quite posh. Most of the nominees seemed to be in attendance, even those who didn't win, and if it carries on at this rate, the BBC may actually show us the whole event, rather than editing it down to two hours, to be shown a further two hours after it actually took place.

Anyway, the big winners turned out to be Gravity, which snared six gongs, American Hustle, which got three, and 12 Years A Slave, which picked up a pair. Particular congratulations to Will Poulter on his Rising Star award, a man who looked truly humbled to have won.

Here's the full list of winners:

FELLOWSHIP
HELEN MIRREN

OUTSTANDING BRITISH CONTRIBUTION TO CINEMA
PETER GREENAWAY

BEST FILM
12 YEARS A SLAVE Anthony Katagas, Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen

OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
GRAVITY Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman, Jonás Cuarón

OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
KIERAN EVANS (Director/Writer) Kelly + Victor

FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
THE GREAT BEAUTY Paolo Sorrentino, Nicola Giuliano, Francesca Cima

DOCUMENTARY
THE ACT OF KILLING Joshua Oppenheimer

ANIMATED FILM
FROZEN Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee

DIRECTOR
GRAVITY Alfonso Cuarón

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
AMERICAN HUSTLE Eric Warren Singer, David O Russell

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
PHILOMENA Steve Coogan, Jeff Pope

LEADING ACTOR
CHIWETEL EJIOFOR 12 Years a Slave

LEADING ACTRESS
CATE BLANCHETT Blue Jasmine

SUPPORTING ACTOR
BARKHAD ABDI Captain Phillips

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
JENNIFER LAWRENCE American Hustle

ORIGINAL MUSIC
GRAVITY Steven Price

CINEMATOGRAPHY
GRAVITY Emmanuel Lubezki

EDITING
RUSH Dan Hanley, Mike Hill

PRODUCTION DESIGN
THE GREAT GATSBY Catherine Martin, Beverley Dunn

COSTUME DESIGN
THE GREAT GATSBY Catherine Martin

MAKE UP & HAIR
AMERICAN HUSTLE Evelyne Noraz, Lori McCoy-Bell, Kathrine Gordon

SOUND
GRAVITY Glenn Freemantle, Skip Lievsay, Christopher Benstead, Niv Adiri, Chris Munro

SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
GRAVITY Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk, Neil Corbould, Nikki Penny

BRITISH SHORT ANIMATION
SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES James Walker, Sarah Woolner, Yousif Al-Khalifa

BRITISH SHORT FILM
ROOM 8 James W. Griffiths, Sophie Venner

THE RISING STAR AWARD
WILL POULTER

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Why Gremlins 2 Is Better Than The First One

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FeatureDavid Crow2/17/2014 at 8:27AM

Celebrate the holiday by looking back at one of its most important films, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, and its superiority over the original.

Happy Presidents’ Day! Valentine’s may have arrived with much fanfare this past weekend, but there is still another (actual) holiday that gets less coverage, fortuitously occurring between the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln (Feb. 12) and George Washington (Feb. 22). Originally meant to celebrate the first U.S. president’s birthday, the holiday also grew to accompany Lincoln and all other commanders-in-chief. And if you’re looking to celebrate this passing occasion, might we recommend Gremlins 2: The New Batch? After all, it is the superior Gremlins movie!

Yes, aside from the one truly uncomfortable scene in Holiday Inn (1942), very few films have made mention of Lincoln’s birthday or the eventual holiday in its honor. But like everything else in Joe Dante’s demented Gremlins sequel, the odder the reference, the better the joke. And few things could have been more odd than Phoebe Cates’ Kate Beringer recalling how her father died dressed as Santa Claus upon a Christmas Eve past when he got stuck in her family’s chimney during the first movie’s supposedly spooky third act. But in Gremlins 2, Dante and Gizmo find a way when Ms. Cates hilariously adds a new wrinkle into the sacred Gremlins mythology by recollecting the horrors of what happened to her…on Abraham Lincoln’s birthday! Now did she mean Feb. 12 or Presidents’ Day? Like the movie’s plot, it's is hard to tell the intention other than pure madcap insanity. And as with all madness, there is a certain level of genius at work that elevates The New Batch into the rarified air of being inarguably superior to its predecessor, a fact so few ‘80s nostalgists realize.

There is no denying that the original Gremlins movie is a 1980s Amblin classic with all that it entails. In the aftermath of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), there was no bigger household name than Steven Spielberg, the charming blockbuster auteur who was producing one masterpiece after another with Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Raiders of the Lost Ark (everyone gives him a mulligan on 1941). This string of pure family popcorn bliss was so profitable that he founded Amblin Entertainment in 1981 with Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall to expand his growing name brand to a series of parent-trusted thrill rides, making him that decade’s closest equivalent to a living Walt Disney. Before 1990 rolled around, Amblin would produce The Goonies, Back to the Future, An American Tail, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, The Land Before Time, and a series of other reliably entertaining all-ages flicks. The unofficial member to this list also would include 1982’s Poltergeist, which like E.T., brought the strange and supernatural to an otherwise picturesque image of small-town America, set somewhere between Bedford Falls and Hitchcock’s version of Santa Rosa.


Thus, when Dante was hired to film Chris Columbus’ script based on a World War II era superstition, it became steeped in the kind of storytelling that Amblin was known for, and of which Dante was also a fan. Set in Kingston Falls, likely a few counties over from George and Zuzu Bailey in Bedford, Gremlins is a terrifically touching story of Small Town, USA being attacked by ferocious creatures who do wicked, wicked things. In the midst of it all, young and strapping Billy Peltzer (Zach Galligan) and girl next door sweetheart Kate Beringer (Phoebe Cates) embark on a coming-of-age…let’s cut to what people care about: nasty little critters that do lovably mean-spirited things to the local bumpkins. This free rein is given because nobody exactly knows what a gremlin is. Originally a gallows humor gag about why planes crashed amongst the RAF during the Second World War, the term endured largely thanks to a Roald Dahl book and a hilarious Warner Bros. cartoon short featuring Bugs Bunny from 1943. And it is like a Looney Tune cartoon that Dante approaches these creatures’ logic. Sure, they may start all cute and cuddly like a next-generation ET when in mogwai form—seriously what is cuter than Gizmo?—but add a dash of water and some late night feeding, and you have little monsters that will run you over with a bulldozer and then laugh about it at a screening of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.

Gremlins is at its best when Gizmo is warming audiences hearts by singing for attention or when his own progeny is later throwing darts at him before murdering the mean old female Mr. Potter across the street. The rest of the holiday suburbia they can keep.

…Hence why Gremlins 2: The New Batch is a hidden gem in the wasteland of cash-in sequels. Despite making barely a quarter of the 1984 original’s domestic box office take, The New Batch is the mayhem of choice for any discerning Gremlin voiced by Tony Randall. And that’s probably because there is a Gremlin voiced by Tony Randall doing a solid cover of Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” in this movie! There’s also everything from Leonard Maltin to Hulk Hogan in-between with John Wayne making a posthumous cameo on the VHS.


Gremlins 2: The New Batch has an ever-increasing value nearly 25 years on from its 1990 release because it is a merciless satire of Hollywood sequel formulae. As the entire movie industry continues to build their entire calendar around sequels, prequels, and even side-quels, Dante found himself in a rare position by the time he shot the second Gremlins movie in 1989: he had complete creative control over a sequel he had no interest in making. The story, as thin as it is, of the original movie had a definite conclusion when Mr. Wing (Keye Luke) appears at Billy’s front door to reclaim Gizmo from the lad and all his lazy, American counterparts who lack the responsibility to raise a mogwai. There was no more story for Dante, but Warner Bros. and Amblin were eager to franchise Gremlins even after six years had passed since the original film. Thus, Dante got carte blanche to do whatever he wanted, so he made the ultimate sequel: a self-hating film that is a mockery of not only the first movie, but also of the concept of sequels in general.

If the best part of Gremlins was the nasty affluent neighbor getting hers, then the sequel would be crawling with Mr. Potters. And where could you find a finer collection of scummy, indifferent narcissists just waiting to become mogwai chow than in New York City? By simply relocating the narrative to a state-of-the-art Manhattan high-rise run by a Ted Turner wannabe (John Glover), Dante immediately cultivates an environment to be as wacky and nasty to his characters as possible while maintaining audience approval. Many axes are ground to the sharpest of points, such as Glover’s Daniel Clamp having an incessant obsession with colorizing Casablanca, not unlike the real Turner’s crusade to colorize Citizen Kane (one can also see Glover watching a colorized version of It’s a Wonderful Life when a Gremlin comes to kill him in the film). Likewise, career-oriented business folk also end up on the chopping block for Gremlin attacks in the picture. Even the aforementioned Maltin was obviously game for a joke, as he appears on one of Clamp’s cable shows trashing the VHS release of the original Gremlins for its gleeful violence (much as he actually maligned the picture in real life) before being devoured by the Gremlins themselves.

However, the real heart of the movie is announced early when the WB logo is interrupted for a Chuck Jones animated short of Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny doing battle over starring in the flick. This kind of fourth-wall shattering humor is what Gremlins 2 thrives on. The first movie was a product of the Amblin oeuvre with its heartwarming storybook logic, as epitomized by the three rules of the mogwai: don’t let them into sunlight (it kills them), don’t get them wet, and don’t feed them after midnight. However, the sequel openly mocks these childlike decrees when the Clamp Media control room staff grill Billy about how a creature like the mogwai could exist in a world with shifting time zones. If a mogwai was on a plane between New York and LA, could you feed it at 11pm on West Coast time? If it is jet lagged, is everyone on the plane a goner?


Even Billy and Kate’s story is purely incidental to get straight to the Gremlin mischief. They have moved to New York and conveniently work at the same media empire that is performing nasty experiments on Gizmo when Mr. Wing dies in the first five minutes. This obviously facilitates Billy coming to Gizmo’s rescue by stealing him away from the mad scientists a few floors up…and then immediately getting the world’s cutest would-be muppet wet. Besides still not being married and living in the same apartment—good luck getting that into a family film these days—Billy and Kate have not changed one iota. Instead, they mostly react to Gizmo and get the ball rolling for Gremlin fun. Normally, such lackluster development in a sequel would be a handicap to the film, but it is just clearing the deck for cameos like Christopher Lee as the mad scientist who wishes to play god with Gizmo. Little does he know that Gizmo is this world’s god: a furry creature that is now treated like the merchandising golden goose, dancing to Fats Domino and literally being synergized by Billy’s corporate marketing overlords onscreen, giving audiences their first visible taste of “toyetics.” Plus, by the end of the film, Gizmo is dressing like Sylvester Stallone from Rambo: First Blood Part II and turning paperclips into deadly weapons. Who wouldn’t follow that into battle?

Yet, the best sequence of Gremlins 2, crystallizing its strangeness,remains at the halfway mark when Gremlins literally burn out the movie’s film reel, causing the screen to go blank as they perform shadow puppets on the screen. Apparently a boon with audiences surprised to see the movie “stop” in 1990, at least until Hulk Hogan scares the Gremlins into starting the picture up again, the movie has an even more hilarious little-seen alternate take on this sequence from its original 1991 VHS release. On the cassette, the VCR tracking tape goes haywire and the Gremlins confiscate the TV, changing the channel again and again until they land on a John Wayne movie, and Wayne shoots the little varmints dead, permitting the movie to proceed. Now mostly a YouTube novelty, the sister sequences remain one of the savviest examples of breaking the fourth wall this side of Mel Brooks.

All of these tricks help hide the fact that the movie is essentially the same story as the first film, except now without feeling. Billy takes adorable Gizmo home (or to his office in this case), and sets him off on mischief. But looking back, despite Gizmo’s cuteness, the sentimentality of the first film ranks in a distant last for all that movie’s charms. Rather, the film is remembered for Billy’s mom slicing and dicing Gremlins in the kitchen, and the little suckers singing Christmas carols outside the home of their next intended victim. The feel-good stuff only ever felt serviceable at best. Why feature more family time when we can have Bat-Gremlins and Electro-Gremlins running amok?


Gremlins 2: The New Batch is ultimately pure anarchy, a true descendent to the Warner Bros. cartoons with its unencumbered imagination allowed to run wild. It’s a movie unafraid to stop the climax dead in its tracks for the “New York, New York” musical number that gets mashed-up with a Woody Allen-inspired use of “Rhapsody in Blue,” and a randomly brilliant homage to the 1925 The Phantom of the Opera starring Lon Chaney Sr. A free-wheeling journey into Dante’s mind, the movie feels akin to being trapped inside Arkham Asylum (Batman also gets a shout-out) with Daffy Duck cartoons running on a loop. To list all the meta-hysteria is a fool’s errand, but to notice how unlike its 1984 successor it tends to be is not.

The first Gremlins is a product of a studio system determined to make thrilling, but approachable family entertainment with a slight edge (Gremlins is credited along with Spielberg’s very own Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom for facilitating the PG-13 rating). Dante may have added a tongue firmly in his cheek, which allowed the movie to rise above, say, Harry and the Hendersons (also Amblin), but it also created a movie at odds with itself. When Gizmo and friends are not onscreen, viewers do not know if they should take Phoebe Cates wistfully tearing up about dear old dad being found dead in the Christmas Eve fireplace seriously or not. Purportedly, even Spielberg was perplexed by the sequence and suggested it be removed, but left the decision to Dante. But in Gremlins 2, not only is the audience simpatico with the filmmakers for her Presidents’ Day soliloquy, they should be ready to salute the valor it takes to make a punchline of itself.

So, Happy Presidents’ Day. If you’re lucky, Gizmo will find you before midnight.

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Still prefer the first, but do still adore the second for its inventive weirdness. And the Spider Gremlin. LOOOVE the Spider Gremlin. But FYI - the man and company and tower are CLAMP, not Clam or Camp.

Thanks for the catch. Would you believe that Stripe got into my keyboard? :)

Gravity Composer Steven Price Will Score Ant-Man

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NewsDen Of Geek2/17/2014 at 12:04PM

Edgar Wright has worked with Steven Price before on The World's End, and the award-winning composer will score Ant-Man!

Marvel's Ant-Man has found a composer, and it's Gravity's Steven Price. Price, fresh off his BAFTA "Best Original Music" win for the Gravity soundtrack has worked with Ant-Man director Edgar Wright before, on his recent film, The World's End. Mr. Price's Gravitymusic is also up for a "Best Original Score" Oscar at the 2014 Academy Awards.

Edgar Wright dropped the Ant-Man news via Twitter while congratulating Mr. Price on his BAFTA win.

Ant-Man stars Paul Rudd and Michael Douglas as two different versions of the character. It opens on July 16, 2015.

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Gal Gadot Shows Her Hand At Wonder Woman

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NewsDen Of Geek2/17/2014 at 1:45PM

Gal Gadot reveals muscle gain in preparation for the role of Wonder Woman in 2016's upcoming Batman vs. Superman movie event.

Gal Gadot has rocketed to at least massive Internet recognition since being cast in the coveted role of Wonder Woman for 2016’s upcoming Batman vs. Superman epic. However, there was a small (but loud) group of fans on the Internet questioning whether she would pump up enough muscle to play the role. Well, Gadot has taken to Facebook to ease any fan worry. Having previously written, “Kung Fu, kickboxing, swords, jiujutsu, and Brazilian,” Gadot posted the below picture on Facebook this morning with the caption, “There’s noting like a good workout in the morning. Love it! You?”


gal gadot muscle wonder woman

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.

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Cool to see that she's taking it seriously.

Wow. A few more pounds, and she'll be upgraded to "skinny."

SHE AINT F'ING IT!!!! Work out until the cows come home and she still aint NO F'ING WONDER WOMAN. They messed up the actress choice and they are messing up the costume choice just the same. We waited years for TOTAL F'ING GARBAGE!!!!!!!!!! If this pile goes up in smoke I will be very pleased. ROTT IN HELL WARNER BROS AND DC COMICS. May the last laugh be on ALL OF YOU F TARDS who decided to hand us Nu52 GARBAGE Super Heroes after YEARS of waiting for something good. PISSED OFF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Chill dude.

why the hate?? wait for the movie first.. if you dont want the casting choices then cast your own actors and play the movie in your heads..

New Images From Marvel's Guardians Of The Galaxy

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NewsDen Of Geek2/17/2014 at 6:16PM

While you wait for the first trailer for Marvel's Guardians Of The Galaxy, enjoy three new images!

With the wait for the first Guardians of the Galaxy trailer now well past interminable, it's nice to at least see a few new images we haven't seen before, isn't it? The good folks at USA Todayhave those three images (along with an interview with Guardians Of The Galaxydirector, James Gunn), and we've passed them along to you. Just another 24 hours (or less) until we can finally see the first trailer for Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy!

Guardians of the Galaxy
Guardians of the Galaxy
chris pratt guardians of the galaxy

Guardians of the Galaxy stars Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Vin Diesel, Dave Batista, Bradley Cooper, Karen Gillan, Michael Rooker, Glenn Close, and Benicio Del Toro. It opens on August 1st.

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Star Wars: Episode 7 casting rumour latest

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NewsSimon Brew2/18/2014 at 7:48AM

A new behind the scenes image, and two casting rumours for Star Wars: Episode VII...

Expected to start shoot in May is JJ Abrams'Star Wars: Episode VII, which has been the subject of no shortage of internet rumours over the past few months. Of late, most of those rumours have centred on the casting for the film, and we've got a few bits and bobs for you here.

Firstly, a good source has told us that auditions are ongoing for key roles in the new film, and that more are taking place in the UK at the end of this month. Furthermore, we understand that one of the roles available is Princess Leia - or at least that's what one or two of those auditioning are being told.

Carrie Fisher is pretty certain to reprise the role of Leia in Star Wars: Episode VII, so it may be that a younger version of the character is being cast for a flashback sequence, or perhaps as a daughter of Han and Leia. Obviously, we're speculating there, and it may just be that what those auditioning are being told is a smokescreen of sort. We'll find out in due course.

Furthermore, over at Ain't It Cool, it's being reported that Jack Reynor, next to be seen in Transformers: Age Of Extinction (and recently seen in Delivery Man) has been cast in Star Wars: Episode VII. The specifics of that role are not yet known.

Finally, LucasFilm updated its website over the past few days, and as such has posted a new image of the behind the scenes preparation for the movie. In the foreground of the image? People having a meeting. In the background? That certainly looks like some design work for things that might just feature in the film.

Star Wars: Episode VII is set for release in December 2015.

Ain't It Cool.

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Disqus - noscript

Most fans, I'm guessing, don't want to see the original 3 recast. Imagine the pressure Hayden Christiansen had times a hundred. The casting would have to be spot on to the point where you'd even remotely be able to please the hardcore fans. Good luck with that. You'd be better off writing the character (or characters) out completely, which is what I heard they would do (according to Lucas).

Jack Reynor, not Jack Traynor.

Clancy Brown interview: Warcraft, Nothing Left to Fear

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InterviewLuke Savage2/18/2014 at 7:55AM

Luke chats to the amazing Clancy Brown about working for Slash, Buckaroo Banzai, defining the 80s, and the franchise potential of Warcraft.

He chopped Sean Connery's head off in Highlander. Saved the human race in Starship Troopers. And was really mean to pretty much everyone in The Shawshank Redemption. His name is Clancy Brown – Clarence J. Brown III if you want to get specific - and he is awesome.

Menacing tough guy, loveable nice guy, he's voiced a merman, Sasquatch, Lex Luthor, plus a character called Mr. Krabs. He even squared up to The Statham in last year's Homefront and lived to tell the tale.

In short, he's the best kind of supporting actor. Any film he's in gets better whenever he's on screen. That's certainly the case with Nothing Left to Fear, the film he's on the other end of a phone to promote. Produced by Slash (he of Guns N' Roses), it's a low budget horror that looks like J-horror crossed with Texas Chainsaw Massacre– there's a lot of shaky cam and women with long, wet dark hair. It's also got Anne Heche in it.

Next up, he'll be seen in Duncan Jones'Warcraft, which might just be big enough to contain the man with the mightiest voice in all of Hollywood. Which is where we started ...

I was hoping you'd be talking to us from the set of Warcraft, but you're back in LA right now?

Yeah, I’m back in L.A.

I'll have to ask some questions about that later because that sounds like a fascinating project.

I'll answer as much as I can, which isn’t very much!

Okay, I’ll start with easier ones then. Nothing Left to Fear. How did you get involved? Was it a call from Slash?

Well, I'd done a movie with a friend of his, Clifton Collins Jnr., called Hellbenders. Clifton called me up one day - we'd been having a good time together doing this Hellbenders movie - and he said, 'You know, my buddy Slash is producing his first movie and I think there's a perfect role in it for you'. I can’t remember where I was at the time - I was off doing something else - and I said, 'Yeah, sure, I'd be happy to read it' and all the rest.

I read it and I thought it was a really cool script, actually. I thought it was a great little premise and hit all the points you should hit in a horror movie, but also had a broader meaning to it which I always look for in a film.

You mentioned Hellbenders ... this isn’t your first time playing a up-to-no-good man of the cloth.

No, it’s not the first time in the cloth for me.

You're not doing them the best of favours.

Well, I don’t know … every time I put on the cloth I always interpret whatever I do in the film as the will of God, so there you go. [laughs]

Your character, Pastor Kingsman, is actually quite a charming guy for the most part. Is there an attraction to playing a bad guy by being that charming and nice?

Well, I don’t think he's a bad guy! I think he's duplicitous and he's obviously seducing these people into becoming the food for whatever this demon is but I think he's like most religious leaders. They view the welfare of the flock before they consider the welfare of the individual sheep. And that’s a metaphor that you see almost right off the bat in the movie, where Ethan is killing a sheep and the rest of the flock is around.

It's images like that, kind of on the nose but not obvious metaphors and visual metaphors, that really excited me about the film. It didn’t get treated very fairly here in the U.S. because it had no big stars and it wasn't a huge budget.

You mention the visual aspect of the film. Your character doesn't have any big speeches, where a lot of films about preachers, they have that big, grandstand moment...

There was one exposition moment, in the heat of the moment with Noah where Kingsman says, 'Look there are just no angels and we have to do the best we can'. But, you know, nothing is spelled out. I mean, that spells it out but you don’t know it’s being spelled out. That’s what I loved about the script. There were moments of obviousness that were not obvious in retrospect.

So when you see a big speech or a monologue in a script, how do you feel about that? Do you find that exciting or do you shy away from it?

You shy away from it, especially if it's all on the nose. I mean, there is a certain amount of exposition you have to have in films and how that exposition is handled tells you whether it's a good script or not, whether it's a good filmmaker or not. You know, the more exposition that can be handled without a character speaking it, the more thematic metaphors that you can do visually, to me that’s a better situation.

But, you know, when you get the cop sitting down and recapping the crime and everything that’s happened up to then and all the rest of that stuff, explaining what’s going to go on next, that’s a little boring, that’s a little leading by the nose. I think the best audiences are bored of that stuff.

You can mess that stuff up too. You can have that idea and not do it well. There are plenty of films like that.

I always think of it like the anti-Bond villain in a sense. Characters who don’t have that moment of explaining everything. When you play duplicitous characters or outright bad guys, they're not big talkers and they're better for it.

Yeah, I think so too. But then if you go to a Bond movie you expect that. That’s part of your enjoyment of the Bond picture. You know, horror goes all over the place with its means and its conventions, and you know the old Hammer films, they didn’t necessarily have a lot of talking in them. They would have, like, a lot of talking in the beginning and then whatever they would set up at the beginning would just play out and it was really how they realised what was explained at the top of the film.

And in this, nothing’s really explained, you know? I see this film as really just a first chapter of a horror novel. I don’t know if we’ll get to do another one but it’s really set up for that if anybody would want to come along and want to make another one.

And your director, Anthony Leonardi III, this is his first film as director, while you've got 219 credits on IMDB. So when you work with a first time director do you have that temptation to go up to him and say, 'I think we could do it this way', or 'Here’s what we’ve done before'?

Well part of the reason I have that many credits is I don’t get in my director’s face too much. [laughs] I just do what I’m told. But I’ve also been burned by first time directors. Anthony and I talked about it and, you know, he thought he was picking me and I thought I was picking him and we hit it off. He’s very visual which is exactly what you want for this.

He reminded me a lot of Kathryn Bigelow, when I first met Kathryn Bigelow. The way he thinks about telling a story and the way he visualises a story. Also the way he communicates is very similar to how Kathryn does. I mean, I haven’t worked with Kathryn recently so I’m sure she has changed and gotten better at it.

I’m a big fan of Blue Steel. So how does that work when you have such a visual director? How does that relationship work?

Well you have to trust them a lot, I mean especially nowadays when so many of the elements are added in later. You have to trust them a lot. But Anthony is a terrific artist and so he can communicate the atmosphere, the themes and just what his vision is very effectively by just showing you something that he painted. He had a number of these drawings and I think this is what also caught Slash’s eye, his visual artistry. And so if you have that kind of ideal vision it’s our job to try to realise it as closely as possible and not mess it up by acting badly.

You do seem to have an association with first time directors. The Shawshank Redemption, obviously, was very early in Frank Darabont's career. Do you actively look out for that kind of fresh voice?

Well, you know, there’s all sorts of new and fresh people going through and you just listen to how they communicate and how they choose to tell you how they want to tell the story. And you know, Anthony is very different than J.T. Petty [director of Hellbenders]. J.T. is very, very verbal. He has an encyclopaedic film knowledge and appreciation. He can mention a picture that he sees the scene evoking and it’s a little like how Scorsese used to do it.

He used to just say, you know, 'I see this as Lawrence of Arabia in the sewers' or something and he would mention a specific scene. So he would know exactly what he was going for. So you just kind of figure out what this person’s vocabulary is and how articulate they are within that vocabulary, and then you can understand what train you’re getting on.

But first time directors - they may not make good movies all the time but they are always the best directors to work for because they’re always so excited, always so committed to what they’re trying to do.

I wanted to go back to a few older movies from those 219 credits. Three of them define the 80s for me and are still very fond in my memory. The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension, Highlander, and Moonwalker…

I'm not sure you would have been alive in the 80s to see those!

Oh yeah, I'm a child of '79 so I’m just there. How did you feel making those? Because if you were to pitch those to someone they would sound kind of out there, very bizarre stories. I wondered how it was to work on those.

Yeah, certainly Buckaroo Banzai was out there and I was quite young when that came along. Mac Rauch wrote the script … and that’s the other way it gets communicated, the script. Mac Rauch wrote this script and it was so crazy and off the wall and yet something about the way he wrote it made sense to me, you know, it spoke to me. And I was kind of along for the ride on that one. I was new to L.A. , new to Hollywood, so that was one of the first ones I got cast in having moved here.

So I was kind of along for the ride for that. But I thought it was really going to be something. And it was, it was really something, but it was something that maybe should have been made ten years later. I think it was a little ahead of its time and it was great fun cast, we had a great time. I can’t speak to the vision thing. Ric Richter is a tremendously articulate and calm guy. I thought he was a very good director and he is a terrific writer and so I was in good hands there.

Highlander was another … it was just a great idea, right? It looked like a franchise. It sort of became a franchise but a kind of ruined franchise, if you ask me. It could have been something much more powerful than it became but I loved the idea behind it. I heard about Russell Mulcahy and he’d done a film called Razorback.

Yeah, back in Australia. The killer boar film. That's a good film.

Right, which people at the time were saying, 'It’s Jaws in the outback'. And I remember enjoying it but not quite getting the Jaws comparison. [laughs]

But I thought, you know, this is a guy who clearly knows how to tell a story. He was obviously a visual acrobat because of all the videos, the music videos, he was doing so that was kind of exciting. He was a young guy really having fun with the camera, and I liked the idea. I think I was the second choice for that part. But that’s the story of my life.

Who was their first choice?

I think probably Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Terminator was just out. I think probably that. They got me because I was a lot cheaper. [laughs]

I’m fascinated by IMBD trivia and how accurate some of that is. On Buckaroo Banzai it says you're still contracted to do a sequel. Is that right?

I don’t know. You know, that was back in the day that they were just starting to figure out how to tie people up with sequels because sequels were just kind of starting to ... well, no that’s not true, I guess sequels had been around for a while but everybody was looking for the next Star Wars or Jaws or whatever.

They wanted tie you up, you know? They wanted to pre-negotiate. So I didn’t care at that point, and I thought it would be cool so we all signed up for that and I think we're all still obliged. I may be wrong about that, I'm sure I am because I was certainly nobody then, just a little more of a nobody than I am now. [laughs]

I would heartily disagree with that! I’m running out of time so I have to ask two questions very quickly. First, The Goon has fascinated me for the last couple of years. A trailer came out a few years back, a Kickstarter campaign maybe a year and a half ago. David Fincher and Mike Richardson as producers. You and Paul Giamatti amongst the voice cast. It sounds incredible. Are you any closer to that?

Well, I haven’t heard anything about it. I really don’t know what the status is. I mean I've already told them, I said, you know, 'Whenever you want to do this, count me in'. I think The Goon is a problematic property in the conventional sense because there’s not a lot of call for adult feature animation and you know if there are no songs or toy tie-ins ...

But it is kind of in a great place for the adult animation blocks that we have now over here. But those are very cheap right now. Somewhere in there there’s a business model. Blur [the company behind it] wants to spend some money on it and do it right, wants to make it the right way. There’s no point in doing it if you can’t really realise how the books look. Because that’s what’s so great about the trailers, it’s such a full world and I am sure they want to do it the right way. But the place for it in features doesn’t really exist. It’s never been a very lucrative place. And the place for it is late night prime time animation, and those are notoriously cheap.

So, you know, somewhere in there they’ll find a way to do it. It will either get cheaper to do or someone will throw some money at it. But also Paul is really busy, and David’s really busy and so it’s probably not top of the mind for those guys. But we know that people want to see it, we all want to make it, so I guess it’s just a matter of time before it all comes together. I’ll drop everything to do it. [laughs]

Apart from Warcraft! Which you're on now?

Yeah, Warcraft is interesting, right?

It sounds a huge project.

And Duncan [Jones] is terrific. I've followed the couple of movies that he’s made. It’s an interesting franchise, an interesting thing. If they get it right, if they get the script right and choose the characters to centre the universe around correctly, I think it could be a long-running franchise. You know, it's like Han Solo, Darth Vader, Princess Leia. If they get that right then I think they could be making those for some time to come.

And on a film of that size do you get to mould your character a bit more? Because it must be tough for a director to have complete control over every aspect of a 200 million dollar film...

Well, Duncan does pretty well! But, yeah, absolutely. I think that's incumbent upon the actors to do that. That’s one of the reasons why the first Star Wars are so good is because you can see that the actors are participating. And one of the problems with the later Star Wars is that the actors are being so reverent and demure about the characters that they are playing. It’s kind of like going to church to go to the prequels. Whereas the other ones were just kind of romps where you can see that Carrie and Harrison and Mark were all having a great time.

And so I think everybody’s having a great time right now. We respect the source material and certainly Duncan makes sure of that, but we are also given the freedom to put our own spin on it. So it’s all going to work, I think. If Duncan’s as good as I think he is, and as good as he is, then it’ll be something when it comes out. It'll be a franchise.

Clancy Brown, thank you very much.

Nothing Left to Fear is out now on DVD, Blu-Ray, On-Demand and O-Download.

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Disqus - noscript

Great interview with an amazing actor....thanks for asking about THE GOON as well. A lot of folks would love to see that get made!

Clancy Brown left a lasting impression on me in the 1983 movie "Bad Boys". I was pretty scared of him for a long time - until I saw him pop up again in Shawshank Red... wait.. he scared me in that too. LOL.

Great interview. Wish he stuck around more in Sleepy Hollow! Dude is awesome.


James Cameron on the Avatar sequels

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NewsSimon Brew2/18/2014 at 8:00AM

Work continues on Avatar 2, Avatar 3 and Avatar 4. And James Cameron has given an update on things...

There's no shortage of hard work being done on the trio of new Avatar films that James Cameron is putting together. The first is expected in December 2016, with the others following a year apart each. And Cameron has been chatting to RTL about how things are progressing.

"We're still in the early stages", he said. "Right now we're developing the software. I'm writing the scripts. We're designing all the creatures and characters and the settings, and so on. So, I'm not actually directing yet, but I'm doing all the other creative processes that lead up to that".

Promising that "I think it's going to be spectacular", Cameron teased "new worlds, new habitats, new cultures", and said that "the primary conflict between the human view kind of dominating nature and the Na'vi view of being integrated into nature is the same, but it manifests itself in very different ways".

From a technology standpoint, Cameron hasn't yet made a decision as to whether to use the high frame rate techniques that Peter Jackson has been working with on The Hobbit movies. He is going to film at a native resolution of 4K though, arguing "there should be a lot of true 4K theaters by then".

The full piece can be found here.

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Two new promos for The Amazing Spider-Man 2

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NewsSimon Brew2/18/2014 at 8:02AM

More footage lands as Sony releases a pair of new promo featurettes for The Amazing Spider-Man 2...

Sony is continuing to ramp up the publicity machine for Marc Webb's The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which heads to UK cinemas in April, ahead of its US debut in May.

The film reunites Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone, amongst others, with Jamie Foxx and Paul Giamatti amongst the new additions. And a pair of new behind the scenes featurettes for the movie have been released, unveiling a bit of new footage as they do so.

This first one is entitled The Price Of Being A Hero...

And this second one is called Lights, Camera, Action.

More on the film over the next few weeks...

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The 9 Stages Of Matthew McConaughey's McConaissance

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The ListsDavid Crow2/18/2014 at 8:36AM

From True Detective to Tropic Thunder, we examine how Matthew McConaughey has risen to be the frontrunner for this year's Oscars.

If you watched the Golden Globes last month, there’s a good chance you saw Matthew McConaughey take the prize for Best Actor in a Drama. Then maybe you got tired of all the glitzy fawning of the Hollywood Foreign Press, so you changed the channel to HBO to check out their gritty new crime thriller, True Detective. And there was McConaughey again, stealing every one of his scenes in a superbly cast, hard-boiled character study that includes Woody Harrelson and Michelle Monaghan as his co-stars. Nothing says the golden age of television more than an awards season frontrunner simultaneously chewing up Louisiana scenery like a really big storm.
 
It’s time to face facts. We’re at the peak of the McConaissance: the multi-media rejuvenation of the career of one of Hollywood’s most charismatic leading men.
 
Love him or hate him, like the programming of human consciousness itself, we must accept this next step in (career) evolution. After all, he’s likely about to win the Oscar for Dallas Buyer’s Club, be another frontrunner in September’s Emmys for True Detective, and will soon star inInterstellar, Christopher Nolan’s mysterious sci-fi epic that stands poised to dominate 2014’s holiday movie season. Not bad for a good ol’ boy from Texas whose first big screen role was the moustached high school enthusiast in Dazed and Confused. In fact, when one considers just where his career was only five years ago—somewhere between the Sarah Jessica Parker rom-com Failure to Launch and his second Kate Hudson-partnered rom-com, Fool’s Gold—it is a downright miracle. It’s the McConaughssance.
 
And here are the nine stages that made it possible.
 

Matthew McConaughey Tropic Thunder

Tropic Thunder
Matthew McConaughey’s first step in reminding audiences why he’s one of the best movie stars working today came from a decidedly un-movie star part. It wasn’t even originally his since two previous stars had vacated the role prior to McConaughey signing on as Rick Peck, the TiVo-loving agent of Tugg Speedman (Ben Stiller) in the brilliantly mean-spirited Tinseltown takedown, Tropic Thunder. Another movie star who fell on some rough times in the mid-2000s had originally agreed to do that role, but he later convinced Stiller to re-cast him as the sleazy, overweight studio mogul named Les Grossman. That actor was Tom Cruise. Longtime Stiller collaborator Owen Wilson next took on Peck, but then had to leave the picture all together after a suicide attempt. Thus, it came to McConaughey, who like Cruise and Robert Downey Jr. in that film, was allowed to satirize his movie star persona. McConaguhey’s Peck could have been written off as a minor Hollywood sycophant archetype, but instead found a uniquely laid back quality that made his fast-talking seem strangely sincere, punctuating his business calls with a gingerly Southern drawl (well that, and his competitive Wii Sports regiment). Indeed, McConaughey’s ability to imbue Peck with the faintest hint of sympathy as he struggled with betraying his best friend and owning a Gulf Stream V ultimately rewrote the ending of the picture, as Peck was originally killed off by the film’s villainous Laotian drug cartel. Instead, Stiller reshot an ending where Peck saves his friend and gets his Gulf Stream. It surely made moviegoers h-h-h-h-h-appy.
 

Matthew McConaughey lincoln lawyer

Lincoln Lawyer
McConaughey’s first leading role in recent years as a serious actor was in Lincoln Lawyer, a 2011 film that in retrospect seems like a nifty subliminal suggestion to force audiences to remember McConaughey’s heroic legalese roles from the 1990s. Whether it was as the white lawyer learning a valuable lesson about race in Joel Schumaucher’s A Time to Kill (1996) or as the white lawyer who learned another valuable lesson about race in Steven Spielberg’s Amistad (1997), McConaghey was one gallantly schooled attorney. But this 2011 legal eagle came after a decade of far more cynical studio efforts, and lawyers were back to being the subject of audiences’ least trusted professionals. Thus, McConaughey’s Mickey Haller is every bit the self-aggrandizing narcissist those previous roles implied, but without the real possibility of redemption. McConaughey is allowed to find the grays and cracks in one of his previous well-worn Hollywood images and nearly jumps off the screen with visible hunger when he devours this juicy role so thoroughly that viewers are able to ignore the sparse freshness coming from the rest of the color-in-the-lines picture. This is a star vehicle for McConaughey, one that he gleefully drives off the paved road and into the dirt that his career GPS had long avoided. It’s a blast.
 

Matthew McConaughey Bernie

Bernie
Anytime McConaughey reteams with his Dazed and Confused director Richard Linklater, it is cause to be intrigued. Two Texans who came out of the Austin scene with talent and charisma to spare, they have both seen meteoric rises since that 1993 teaming, albeit for Linklater, it has been mostly on the indie circuit with the revelatory and experimental Before Sunrise trilogy and rotoscoped acid trips like Waking Life. They teamed one more time in the ‘90s with an ambitious star vehicle for McConaughey, The Newton Boys, but their real reunion came in this curiously upbeat 2011 dark comedy, Bernie. As the story of how Bernie (Jack Black), an appealing and seemingly A-sexual Good Samaritan, finally lost his patience with his church’s resident grouch (Shirley MacLaine) and ended her life, Bernie's a true crime tale of Texan justice that's most notable for how much the community accepted Bernie’s little indiscretion. He is just so darn likable, and she kind of had it coming, right? Amusingly, Linklater again casts McConaughey as the creep in the background, except this time he is the justice-minded DA Danny Buck Davidson. McConaughey is once more a lawyer on a moral crusade, so is it bad that we kind of wish he’d leave poor Bernie alone? When Jack Black can win the popularity contest for both the onscreen characters and the audience, it is obvious that both actors are bringing something special to this oddball dramedy.
 

Matthew McConaughey Killer Joe

Killer Joe
As of 2012, McConaughey was subverting his image as a smiling Southern bumpkin with an Ace up his sleeve, but in Killer Joe, he was allowed to burn that image to ashes, and then deep fry it again for optimum flavor. Directed by William Friedkin (The Exorcist, The French Connection, Bug), Killer Joeis one of the most disturbingly lurid films featuring big name stars—McConaughey, Emile Hirsch, Thomas Hayden Church—released in the last several decades. This picture earns its hard NC-17 rating, and McConaughey has never been better than as this toxically charming police detective who moonlights as a low-level contract killer. When Chris (Hirsch), an indebted drug dealer, figures out that the best way he can pay back loan sharks is by having his abusive mother assassinated, he ropes in his deadbeat dad (Church) and his younger sister (Juno Temple) to help him out. However, he won’t have Killer Joe’s five-figure fee until after the job is done, so Joe takes a retainer: Chris’ barely legal little sister as his sexual property. This movie uncomfortably crosses the boundaries of greed, matricide, and sex with shades of pedophilia and definite perversion permeating throughout. It is an art film reveling in bad taste; it’s uncomfortable in the way that only Friedkin can induce, but McConaughey is the most unnerving monstrosity of all, making things totally not “all right.”
 

Magic Mike
Up next on our list of magical Matthew McConaughey movies is Magic Mike. After nearly a decade of the “stripper with a heart of gold” subgenre—dominated by infamous efforts like Exotica (1994), Paul Verhoeven’s Showgirls (1995), and Demi Moore’s equally ill-fated Striptease (1996)—it was only a matter of time before the real ladies got a movie of their own. But who’d have thought it would be director Steven Soderbergh who finally obliged? The artistic filmmaker who likes to weave between genres and budget-sizes like a Hell’s Angel on the interstate during rush hour, there appears to be no subject matter uninteresting for the eclectic auteur, and that includes male stripping. A sleeper hit in 2012 for obvious reasons, Magic Mike attempted to explore the underbelly of seedy male erotica that’s supposedly based on star Channing Tatum’s real-life experiences. However, the true toe-tapping treat for audiences was McConaughey’s club owner and former dancer. Equal parts mentor and nefarious shade of the Ghost of Christmas Future, McConaughey acted as Bette Davis to Tatum’s Anne Baxter. As campy as it is gritty, McConaughey playing the older, grosser side of his rom-com bronze statue from only 10 years prior earned a fervent following that even petitioned for Oscar recognition from its most incredulous of devotees.
 

Matthew McConaughey Mud

Mud
McConaughey started his game-changing 2013 in style at the Sundance Film Festival with this riverboat slice of transcendentalism. When I reviewed Mud last April, I called it a “slowly fried Southern feast of emotion and humanity cooked on the murky banks of the Mississippi,” and that holds true after multiple viewings. There is something timeless about the picture’s folksy charm, which is as much a coming-of-age story on the delta, as it is a crime drama that ends in shattering thunder when the family of a man Mud murders comes calling. But what holds it all together, besides the performance of the young protagonist played by Tye Sheridan, is a very affable and restrained turn from McConaughey as the title character. Mud is the definitive Southern storyteller: a man of tall tales and smiling agony. Young Ellis’ existential need for Mud’s love story to come true, despite its legion obstacles, is as relatable to any audience as our own compulsion to see Mud succeed. This remarkable indie remains one of the brightest spots of 2013’s big budgeted CGI-orgies, and it will motor on for many years to come.
 

Matthew McConaughey Wolf of Wall Street

The Wolf of Wall Street
Sometimes even the smallest hits leave the biggest marks, and Matthew McConaughey’s rhythmic chest-thumping hit so hard that it affected the entire tone of a Martin Scorsese picture. As some of the earliest sequences, shot four days into production, McConaughey’s three-scene cameo as Jordan Belfort’s (Leonardo DiCaprio) mentor into the world of Wall Street, cocaine, and chronic masturbation (jerking off “keeps the blood flowing”) is designed to leave a big impression on Belfort and the audience. However, that extended beyond the camera too. After five takes of the infamous lunch scene were finished, and Scorsese was ready to move on to the next set-up, DiCaprio asked McConaughey about his ritualistic relaxation exercise that he does before every take; his chest-thumping. Amused and intrigued, the two riffed on that energy for one of the movie’s most bizarrely hilarious moments. It even influenced the rest of the picture. Says Scorsese, “I realized that’s the movie! It has to go fast, fast, fast.” When two actors’ rapport in one scene can influence a master like Scorsese four days into shooting, something is going right.
 
 

Matthew McConaughey Dallas Buyers Club

Dallas Buyers Club
Still, McConaughey’s most transcendent 2013 moment is his award-winning role as Ron Woodroof in Dallas Buyers Club. As Den of Geek critic Don Kaye noted in his review, “Movies can show us corners of history that we may not have known about,” and that is exactly what this film does by exploring the less traveled avenues of the AIDS epidemic. Woodroof was given 30 days to live by his doctors when he was diagnosed with HIV, but always the stubborn cowboy, Woodroof beats the spread when he begins smuggling AZT up from Mexico. The U.S. government may abhorrently drag its heels on treating the spreading AIDS virus, but Woodroof will let any desperate person within Dallas survive—for a price. The boldness of Dallas Buyers Clubis its refusal to eulogize Woodroof as a saint or ignore his initially intense homophobic feelings about AIDS and the LGBT community that was so inflicted by it. It is a naturally coarse performance that required McConaughey to lose 50 pounds for the role, but its avalanche of ensuing accolades is truly immeasurable.
 

Matthew McConaughey True Detective

True Detective
So, at the peak of his career renaissance, McConaughey opts to do…television? At the risk of regurgitating a cliché, it’s not TV; it’s HBO. And as this is the network that is also currently producing the staggering fantasy epic Game of Thrones and the Martin Scorsese-produced gangster drama Boardwalk Empire, McConaughey appears right at home with his former EdTV co-star,Woody Harrelson (it also helps that McConaughey enjoyed some brilliant cameos on HBO’s now defunct redneck opus, Eastbound & Down). True Detective is so nihilistic that the detecting is irrelevant; it’s just a pretense to explore the broken lives of two men who have splintered in countless directions to the wind. Harrelson’s repressed “family man” is one nervous breakdown from exploding as a mass murderer himself, and McConaughey’s Rust Cohle imploded long ago. Something is very, very off when a gumbo gumshoe in the heart of Dixie is espousing, “The honorable thing for our species to do is deny our programming. Stop reproducing. Walk hand-in-hand into extinction, one last midnight, brothers and sisters, opting out of a raw deal.”
 
If noir is doom-ridden, then this is wholly a shade blacker than that genre, with McConaughey as its desolate black hole center. Three episodes in, each week has become a waiting game for his next soliloquy about the futility of existence, causing this to be one mystery that audiences should wish to remain unsolved. Because once the story is over, Cohle may finally walk into that goodnight and away from this stunning anthological series. Until then, I would wager between the two, Cohle is the true detective.
 
However, even when True Detectivecloses the book on its first case in five weeks, fans will still have plenty more to appreciate from this thriving McConaughssance. Besides his award circuit rounds that Detectivewill carry over well through the summer, McConaughey is the lead character in Christopher Nolan’s latest original film. It is safe to say that this renaissance period is about to go out of this world.
 
Agree? Disagree? Let us know your thoughts on Matthew McConaughey in the comments section below!
 
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Exclusive: Star Wars: Episode 7, Indiana Jones 5 update

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NewsSimon Bew2/18/2014 at 9:00AM

A full scale Millennium Falcon is being built at Pinewood, as some staff are being offered 7-year contracts, potentially to include Indy 5

Appreciating that there's no shortage of Star Wars: Episode 7 rumors doing the rounds, we've elected not to run the majority of them for reasons of, well, they don't sound too accurate. Likewise, we've been contacted by lots of people who claim to have insider scoops on what's going on, that we haven't run for similar reasons.

This one, however, seems to have more substance to it. It's come from a good, reliable source, and whilst it's still a rumour until all of this is confirmed, we're passing this one on because from what we can tell, there's something to this one.

There's been a security clampdown in the prop shop at Pinewood Studios, but we now understand that work is afoot on building a full scale Millennium Falcon there. Furthermore, model makers are also building lightsaber hilts. This would tie into reports that the emphasis is going to be on practical, rather than computer effects wherever possible with future Star Wars films.

Also, we now understand that model makers on the Star Wars: Episode 7 project are being recruited on up to seven year contracts, which cover three sequels and three spin-offs.

There's one more thing too, and we went back to double check this point with our source. The planning office is listing which stages are booked in advance, and for what film. Listed on those plans - before Christmas at least - was Indiana Jones 5.

To address the Indiana Jones point specifically: work on that has been mooted as a possible job as part of those long-term contracts. It's very much being described as a "possible lead in to another Indy", but nothing more than that.

Just because space has been booked well in advance doesn't mean that the film will happen of course. Still, we've sat on this information since before Christmas, and it would at least tie into what Alan Horn of Disney said in December, that the next Indiana Jones film - to which Disney now holds full rights - is many years off. It would make sense to include it as part of a bulk LucasFilm booking at Pinewood (considering the firm's commitment to and investment in UK facilities), just to be on the safe side (and it'd bring the rate down, we'd imagine).

Thus, six Star Wars films there seems definite (and ties into ILM opening a facility in London, as was reported last week), with Indiana Jones a possibility as part of the LucasFilm investment in the UK.

Regular readers will know we rarely break stories like this, because we do like to tread carefully. All of this may yet be disproved, but it's information we've received and passed on in good faith. More as we get it.

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Disqus - noscript

"This would tie into reports that the
emphasis is going to be on practical, rather than computer effects
wherever possible with future Star Wars films."

What the... ?! Every single Star Wars movie had prop builders, specially for ships and lightsaber hilts. It's nothing new.This misconception that the last Star Wars movies are all CG only shows the amount of ignorance that there is regarding the making of these movies.

no one in this article said no practical effects were used in the prequel trilogy.....

Despite the complaints this is a great piece of news. This is starting to feel more real.

However some fans just will not be happy until an actual stargate is built and JJ and co travel to a parallel universe and actually film THERE

I'm sure some will want to take my head off for this, but I think Jon Bernthal would be a excellent new Indiana Jones.

Watch the First Guardians Of The Galaxy Teaser Here!

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TrailerDen Of Geek2/18/2014 at 10:13AM

Watch the brief, but still very cool, first teaser trailer for Marvel's Guardians of The Galaxy!

Guardians of the Galaxy sure knows how to make fans wait, don't they? We've been waiting for the first proper trailer for this ever since footage was first shown at the 2013 San Diego Comic Con...and it looks like we have to wait just a little longer. Well, hang on to your hats, boys and girls...here's the first official twenty seconds from Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy! Check out a very buff Chris Pratt, some impressive special effects, and a look at most of the film's major players (yes, that includes Groot). We can expect the full trailer to go a little more all-out!

Guardians of the Galaxy stars Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Vin Diesel, Dave Batista, Bradley Cooper, Karen Gillan, Michael Rooker, Glenn Close, and Benicio Del Toro. It opens on August 1st.

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