Quantcast
Channel: Movies – Den of Geek
Viewing all 23983 articles
Browse latest View live

Michael Dougherty To Direct Krampus For Legendary

$
0
0
NewsDavid Crow5/9/2014 at 2:51PM

X-Men scribe and Trick 'r Treat director Michael Dougherty signs on for Christmastime horror, Krampus.

It’s been a long time coming, but it appears that Michael Dougherty is finally being recognized for the holiday horror guru he’s been since the 2007-directed (but 2009 DVD released) Halloween instant-classic Trick ‘r Treat.

Yes, as reported in Deadline, Dougherty is now teaming with Thomas Tull’s Legendary Pictures to bring a different kind of festive monster to life…Christmas’ Krampus. A film about the European-famed holiday monster who feasts on the blood of naughty children come every Christmas Eve. The project is co-written by Todd Casey and Zach Shields.

Dougherty has come back into vogue with not only Legendary (who he previously worked on for 2006’s Superman Returns) but also at 20th Century Fox where he co-wrote X2: X-Men United and has been brought back onboard to help write 2016’s slated X-Men: Apocalypse.

Krampus marks the second project about the Yuletide killer to recently go into production since Kevin Smith also recently announced his intention to direct a horror movie about the critter late last month.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!


300: Rise of An Empire Blu-Ray And DVD Release Details Announced

$
0
0
NewsDavid Crow5/9/2014 at 3:25PM

Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures have announced the Blu-ray and DVD release date, and details, of 300: Rise of an Empire.

Like the glorious field of battle, 300: Rise of an Empire is an experience to remember for this day and all the ones to come. And Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures want you to do so with your very own Blu-ray or DVD copy of the Spartan and Sandals blood odyssey, which has now been announced for release on June 24, 2014.

With the June release date just around the corner, the Noam Murro directed sequel that is based on a screenplay from the 2007 film’s Zack Snyder looks to carve out its name for the ages with a victor’s spoils worth of special features that celebrate the Eva Green starring bloodbath. Below are the specific details on the film that dared chronicle the rise of Xerxes and his malevolent kingdom….

BLU-RAY COMBO PACKS, AND 2-DISC DVDS WILL INCLUDE:

  • The 300 Effect
  • 3 Days in Hell
  • Brutal Artistry
  • A New Breed of Hero
  • Taking the Battle to the Sea
  • Real Leaders & Legends
  • Savage Warships
  • Becoming a Warrior

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Sigourney Weaver To Transform in Avatar Sequels

$
0
0
NewsTony Sokol5/9/2014 at 5:20PM

Just when you think you know Sigourney Weaver, she transforms in Avatar sequels.

Sigourney Weaver, we’d hardly know you. The next three installments of the Avatar franchise, Avatar 2, Avatar 3, and Avatar 4 are in pre-production. Now that that’s out of the way, director James Cameron figures why not get it all over with and shoot them all at the same time.

Sigourney Weaver’s character died in the first movie, but that’s not going to keep her out Pandora. Weaver will be in in all three Avatar sequels, but  her character might not be instantly recognizable.

Weaver told Vulture "It will be challenging for me. I can't talk about it, but my part is a little different in each one. I'll transform somewhat. We'll have to talk again when I survive this. For now, I'm going to skittle around and enjoy this leisure time."

Weaver said "It's going to be an adventure. It will be awesome. I can't even imagine what I am taking on —  and what James Cameron is taking on — with filming three Avatars at once, but ... Peter Jackson did it with the Hobbit films, so we have that to look to."

SOURCE:  Vulture

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing.

Neighbors Interview: Ike Barinholtz

$
0
0
InterviewDon Kaye5/10/2014 at 10:56AM

Mindy Project star Ike Barinholtz helps Seth Rogen battle his frat-house enemies in Neighbors.

In Neighbors, Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne play new parents with a new home in the suburbs who have still not quite adjusted to leaving behind their days of partying. Not helping matters is the college fraternity that has moved in next door, and when the relationship with frat president Zac Efron goes sour, Rogen and Byrne go into battle to defend their turf.

Director Nick Stoller’s comedy has it all: sharp comic moments, gross-out jokes and even heartfelt themes about responsibility and getting older. Along for the ride as Rogen’s divorced and somewhat unstable best friend Jimmy is Ike Barinholtz, a Chicago native whose resume includes MadTV, Eastbound and Down and, most recently, The Mindy Project, where he is both a writer and also stars as Morgan Tookers. Barinholtz shines in Neighbors -- as does the entire cast -- and Den Of Geek got on the phone with him to talk about his own neighborly experiences, doing improv with Seth Rogen and more.

Den Of Geek: Let’s get this out of the way first. What’s the worst neighbor experience you’ve ever had in your life?

Ike Barinholtz: I’ve been pretty lucky with neighbors. But back in 1998 I lived like literally next door to Wrigley Field in Chicago. And I had like 50,000 bad neighbors spread out over the course of one summer. I’m a diehard Cubs fan but living right next to the ballpark it’s just -- as you’re trying to go to sleep, you can just like hear urination. You can hear like, you know, just like big fat Chicago guys f**ing with each other, you know what I mean? Just constantly having an influx of incredibly drunk Cubs fans was pretty intense.

I can’t even imagine what that must have been like.

It was rough. It was brutal.

How would you rate yourself as a neighbor? Did you ever intentionally mess with anybody?

You know, I do feel like you want to keep close quarters comfortable. And if you have bad neighbors and you exacerbate the situation you’re gonna make yourself miserable. They’re gonna get you back. So I am very Games of Thronesian about it. That way if I do have a party or are too loud one night they instead of calling the cops will just kind of be cool and knock on the door. Keep your enemies close.

There’s something about every character in this film that viewers can relate to. Did that stand out to you when you first got the script?

Yeah. I think that the writers, Andrew (J. Cohen) and Brendan (O’Brien), did such a great job at taking what could be kind of generic characters like a married couple with a baby -- we’ve seen versions of that and we’ve seen frat boys. And it would have been easy to make them all just kind of one note, but they made them all really singular. You have Efron’s character, who on the surface is just like this alpha male party boy but as you scratch away the layers it’s like, oh, he’s scared. He’s very scared of what’s gonna happen to him in two months. And then you have Dave Franco’s character, who likes to have fun but underneath it all he’s very smart and he’s probably gonna be in politics. Do you know what I mean? So I think they’re really did a good job with that. My character, at first he’s just kind of like a divorced dips**t. But then you’re kind of like, "Oh no, he’s like a really damaged version of me." So yeah, I think those guys did a great job at creating the base. And then I think Nick did a great job at casting and also giving us freedom to discover a lot of stuff on set.

How did Jimmy evolve from the first time you read the script to the point where you were shooting the film?

Well at first when I read the script he really kind of seemed just angry. And I think the thing Nick Stoller wanted to make sure to layer in was not just anger but sadness with him. Nick was very hands-on with my wardrobe -- all my clothes were incredibly torn and stained and just like, you know, you’ve seen the character in movies where the guy gets divorced and he’s hooking up every night and he's got a bachelor pad. But this is another aspect of it where it’s like, "Oh, I’m living in this insanely sad studio apartment and I’m really lonely." So I think it was kind of just creating layers for him and making him not your angry guy but also sad.

He’s kind of romantic in his own twisted way with his ex-wife.

Yeah, he is. He loves her very much and definitely is trying to overcompensate for the fact that she’s gone. But yeah, they still are very much in love.

[related article: Interview with Christopher Mintz-Plasse about Neighbors]

I read a quote from Evan Goldberg in which he said that you blew him away on the day you came in for your audition. What do you remember about that day and what you did?

I remember coming in and being really excited. I had known Seth because we had met when he did Eastbound and Down and also he had done an episode of The Mindy Project. I’d never met Evan or Nick and I’m a huge fan of both of them. I remember getting there and I did a good job of preparing when I got there and they were like, "Hey, we have totally new sides (pages) for you to read. I’m really sorry." So I remember there were some pretty different scenes than I had been rehearsing. So right away I read them and I thought okay, I’ve got a handle on this. And very quickly I started improvising with Seth and just playing Jimmy, very vulnerable and damaged but at the same time aggressive about it. I just started getting really big laughs in the room. And I remember Adam at one point after I had done my first two scenes, he was like, “You should just leave now. (laughs) The going’s good, just leave now.” And I left the thing very happy. Still not expecting that I would be in the movie but, you know, it was good.

How did the improvisation process develop on the set?

We had such a great base with the script that a lot of it was there. And the way you do it is you get there and you do the scripted lines as tightly as possible two or three times. And then you kind of start deviating a little bit and going into different areas and improvise. And then Nick and Seth have that kind of whole Apatowian feeling where it’s like oh, some friends of ours are on set today and we’re going to just throw crazy lines at you. So you’re just having to kind of work on the fly, but they’re very supportive and really love moving into crazy areas.

Is it easy to bring other actors into that who maybe don’t have an improv or comedy background?

You know, at first I feel like an actor, like, say, Chris Messina on The Mindy Project who is not used to that crazy improv world, has some trepidation and at first is maybe like, “That’s not the way I kind of worked on it and I’ve done my job and I’ve rehearsed these lines perfectly.” But right away they kind of fold into it and accept it and love it. I mean there’s always gonna be actors that are like, “Yeah, I don’t work that way,” but I feel like great actors -- ones that have comedic ability, understand that a big part of comedy is spontaneity and have the willingness and ability to work on the fly and adapt is what separates people like Chris Messina and Rose Byrne from other actors who aren’t as agile.

Have you seen the final cut of the movie and any scenes of yours not make it in?

I have seen the final cut. They shot many hours of film and at the end of the day Nick's correct theory is 90 minutes is a really good length for a comedy. You know, after that you’re pushing your luck with your audience. So a lot of kind of little weird tangents and little B-story points ended up just getting left on the floor because we just didn’t have time. I’m sure a lot of them will be in the Blu-ray and stuff. But there was a kind of subplot that was kind of a war between me and Chris Mintz-Plasse’s character. It’s still in the movie but it was a lot heavier when we shot it and it kind of culminated in this really grotesque three-way sex scene between me and his parents who were played by Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman. It was so gross and so funny but it ended up just not making the cut because it was a little too off-story and too intense.

You are a relatively new parent and I guess maybe that’s something that you could relate to in the film. How has that maybe changed you a bit?

When we were shooting the film my wife was pregnant and there were scenes about the parents that I knew were funny because Seth and Rose were being funny, but it didn’t resonate as much with me. And now having a kid, a little 10-month-old baby, and going to the premiere with my wife there were scenes where we were like, "Holy s**t, it’s like watching a documentary." It’s like, "We’re gonna go to a cafe for one hour so I’m gonna pack two suitcases." (Note: he’s referencing a scene where Rogen and Byrne are packing all kinds of gear to take their baby out) So I do feel like that’s a great thing. This movie, I think, really does appeal to young college kids who just like to get fucked up and party, but I also think it does appeal to those people who are 37-year-old parents that are like, “Okay, my baby just ate a condom. Obviously she’s going to die.” So I feel like they did a great job showing both sides of this coin.

Neighbors is in theaters now.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Watch a New Clip From Godzilla

$
0
0
TrailerMike Cecchini5/10/2014 at 11:59AM

Get a glimpse of Godzilla in an aquatic environment in this latest clip from this summer's largest film.

While this clip is less spoiler-y than some of the other Godzillamaterials that have been hitting the web in the last week or so, if you feel you've already seen too much, now is the time to leave. But if you want yet another indication of exactly how large Godzilla is in this movie compared to some of his predecessors, well, then this is the clip for you.

Watch Godzilla take on the Navy in this new clip from Gareth Edwards' reboot of the most popular kaiju of them all...

I mean, not that anyone expected Godzilla to be small or anything, but...he's a big boy. That bit with the battleship snapping in two is kind of crazy. It's almost what you'd imagine sequences from a GI Joe vs. Transformers movie might be like...but we're getting ahead of ourselves.

Our complete Godzillareview will wade ashore tomorrow. You can read our review of Legendary's Godzillaprequel comic right hereGodzillahimself will be here on Friday.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Disqus - noscript

That's it. I can't wait. Film of the Year right here right now!

I don't see any battle ships snapping into two

Godzilla review

$
0
0
ReviewDon Kaye5/11/2014 at 8:08AM
Godzilla Review

The king of the monsters returns in the Godzilla movie we’ve been waiting for. Here's our review...

Gareth Edwards’ Godzilla establishes its tone right from the opening credits, which play out over a montage of redacted military documents and classified film footage that hint at something unnatural afoot back in the 1950s. It’s all very ominous and mysterious, a mood that the director -- whose previous film was the startling 2010 indie Monsters -- maintains through much of the first hour of his movie even though we all know what is eventually coming.

That Edwards keeps his star attraction -- the majestic 350-foot-tall reptile that has been the subject of 30 movies over 60 years -- offscreen for nearly half its running time is one of the calculated risks that this often awe-inspiring movie and its creator take. Even when we finally meet Godzilla in all his building-sized glory, it’s only for a brief moment at first. Edwards, who applies a very effective old-fashioned sensibility to his movie, slowly builds toward a third act that is truly jaw-dropping both in its scope and its ability to channel the classic kaiju battles of old in a modern cinematic context.

Edwards’ approach could test the patience of audiences conditioned by most modern blockbusters, which feel the need to pummel you over the head with an action sequence every five minutes and employ the most hyper, incoherent editing while doing so. But viewers willing to go along with the director’s gambit will be richly rewarded: the scenes in which Godzilla battles not one but two monstrous beasts known as M.U.T.O.s (Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organisms) with San Francisco as their boxing ring made me both smile with giddy monster-fan delight and grip the arms of my chair in terror and suspense.

Godzilla Review

Following the opening montage, the movie first introduces us to Ken Watanabe as Dr. Serizawa (a nice nod to the original 1954 Gojira) and Sally Hawkins as Dr. Graham, who in 1999 discover a vast underground cavern housing the remains of some ancient creature and what appears to be its eggs. One of the latter, however, not only survived but hatched, and whatever was inside makes a beeline for a nuclear power plant in Janjira, Japan. Its arrival there precipitates a disaster in which American plant chief Joe Brody (Bryan Cranston) loses his wife, the plant and the surrounding city in an incident that is quickly covered up by the government.

Fast forward 15 years and Joe is still living in Japan, although he’s now in a hovel of an apartment and obsessed all these years with finding out what really happened. His estranged son, a military bomb disposal expert named Ford (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), arrives to bail him out of jail after Joe makes an attempt to access the quarantined ruins of Janjira, only to join him on a second attempt. This time, Ford realizes that Joe is not as crazy as he seems: father and son find themselves at the center of events that Joe has been ranting about for more than a decade, and Ford barely has time to acknowledge that his father was right all along before he is swept up himself into the heart of what is unfolding.

Luckily, Drs. Serizawa and Graham pop back in to explain it all to both Ford and Admiral Stenz (David Strathairn), who is in charge of the Navy’s efforts to contain the growing menace. The M.U.T.O.s, it seems, feed on radiation and have been reawakened by the lure of a snack at both active power plants and atomic waste sites. Since there are two of them, a male and female, they’re also looking to spawn. Dr. Serizawa determines that another prehistoric creature has been summoned from the depths to stop the M.U.T.O.s: “We call him Godzilla.”

As he did in Monsters, Edwards wisely decides to shoot everything from the human characters’ point of view. This both grounds the movie in a sense of realism and gives it some emotional weight, particularly in the scenes carried by the excellent Cranston. While Godzilla might not be as overwhelmingly somber as the 1954 classic -- which served as a collective howl of grief by the Japanese people over the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear attacks -- or as its own initial teasers hinted, the movie still attempts to explore our own relationship to nature and how we deal with forces we cannot control. It feels like the filmmaker cares and has something to say, which is a lot more than I can attribute to most summer tentpoles and the soulless Michael Bays behind them.

Godzilla Review

Edwards continues to subvert expectations throughout: one character takes over from another in a pivotal role, while the first big battle between Godzilla and one of the insect-like M.U.T.O.s at an airport in Hawaii is only glimpsed through news footage on a T.V. screen. But Edwards is also a fan with a deep respect for the basic appeal of kaiju movies, and the main event between Godzilla and the M.U.T.O.s is not only awesome but beautiful to watch. No machine-gun editing here: Edwards lets us see everything destructive turn of the battle clearly, finally giving us a more omniscient view of the action while never letting us forget there are small humans underfoot as well. The fight itself is just one amazing image after another, frightening in a primal way and also thrilling as old-fashioned monster spectacle.

Godzilla does fall short in some areas, primarily casting and character development. Cranston and Watanabe are both solid, gravitas-supplying presences, yet end up feeling as if they were shortchanged. Most of the narrative weight of the movie’s second half falls on the shoulders of Johnson, who simply comes across as stiff and charmless in the tradition of Taylor Kitsch in John Carter and Charlie Hunnam in Pacific Rim. His plight, however, may be more the result of the script (credited to Max Borenstein, although both Edwards and Frank Darabont worked on it), as any complexity hinted at in his character early on is dropped later. Most wasted in the film are Hawkins -- I can’t recall hearing her utter a single line -- and Elizabeth Olsen as Ford’s wife, an emergency room nurse who mainly gets to look worriedly at a TV, her son or a phone. Surely she could have been better employed, especially when she and a number of other civilians are forced to head into the subway tunnels once the battle comes to the Bay Area.

Even with these weaknesses, Godzilla is engaging, chilling and, when the action kicks in, tremendously exciting. It plays differently from and looks bigger than any film of this scale I’ve seen in a while, and is thoughtful in a way that most large-budget extravaganzas are afraid to even attempt. Unlike Roland Emmerich’s unwatchably awful 1998 version, and even many of the Japanese films in the series produced over the years, this Godzilla feels worthy of the original -- which is the highest compliment I can give it.

Godzilla is out in theaters Friday, May 16.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

8

Disqus - noscript

is Biolante in this?

Star Wars: Episode VII news round-up

$
0
0
NewsSimon Brew5/12/2014 at 7:36AM
Den of Geek Star Wars

Shooting begins on Star Wars: Episode VII in the desert this week. Plus some more details on the cast...

With the big casting announcement now out of the way, production on Star Wars: Episode VII is set to begin in earnest this week. The National reports that shooting will start in the Abu Dhabi desert tomorrow, which is expected to double for Tatooine in the new movie.

It's being reported that a city has been constructed in said desert for the film, including a house, plenty of vehicles, a "big, centuries-old looking market" and a "shuttle-like" spacecraft. Shooting is set to take place there for the next few weeks.

The latest issue of Entertainment Weekly, meanwhile, has revealed that the return of Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher to Star Wars had been sorted out even before Disney bought Lucasfilm back in 2012. Furthermore, building on earlier reports, EW reckons that Han Solo will be one of the lead characters, alongside three of the new additions to the cast. Ford, Hamill and Fisher will all have "significant" roles in Star Wars: Episode VII.

The delay in casting the film's other roles, meanwhile, was due to the overhauling of the original screenplay to the movie, that had been penned by Michael Arndt. JJ Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan's shooting draft is notably different, hence the hold up.

Finally, with casting yet to be complete on the new movie, Michael Fassbender has been the latest to be coy of potentially being involved. When asked by Latino Review if he was in Star Wars, Fassbender replied "wouldn't you like to know". However, lest we all read too much into this, we suspect that it was a retort more in the spirit of the conversation than anything more than that.

Star Wars: Episode VII is in cinemas on December 18th 2015.

Jedi News.
The National.
Latino Review.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Interview: Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen Talk Godzilla

$
0
0
InterviewDavid Crow5/12/2014 at 8:14AM

We sit down with the stars of Godzilla to talk about sharing screen with the big guy and re-teaming again in Avengers: Age of Ultron.

This Friday Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures’ Godzilla reimagining threatens to overshadow the entire summer with its gargantuan size—and hype. Yet, under the watchful gaze of the big guy, it is the leads who are meant to give the film its heart and soul—the people who lift up Godzilla even before the kaiju makes landfall.

And both certainly leave an impression. Playing the husband and wife duo of Ford and Elle Brody, two young parents separated by a tidal wave of monster mayhem, are Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen. Taylor-Johnson already has his geek bonafides for playing the titular Kick-Ass in two movies, but the part that really should capture any filmgoer or music lover’s attention (including Godzilla director Gareth Edwards’) is Nowhere Boy. In that movie, Taylor-Johnson played a young John Lennon, the survivor of a different kind of monstrous wave. Meanwhile Elizabeth Olsen won over the entire independent world with her mesmerizing turn in Martha Marcy May Marlene, and she has gone on to impress again and again in films as varied as In Secret and Spike Lee’s Oldboy remake.

And oh yes, they play the brother-and-sister team of Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch in Joss Whedon’s upcoming Avengers: Age of Ultron. You can bet that that movie, along with everything else in relation to the King of the Monsters, came up in our lovely interviews with them last week.

Could you talk a little bit about how things changed from when you got this project and the script to the finished film?

Aaron Taylor-Johnson: I first got involved because of Gareth. Before that, it was like “why would they make Godzilla again?” If it was another monster movie, I would probably try to stay away from it, until they said Gareth. Because I loved Monsters [Gareth Edwards’ first film] so much, I thought it was really beautifully shot, and it’s a story about these two characters that come together, and the monsters are like a natural disaster. I just [thought], “Wow, I’m intrigued how he might take this story, now.” What his vision might be. And truly enough, he told me everything about how he wanted to do it. Looking back now, he was right on the money. Nothing really changed; his whole heart and soul is in it. It’s got a real emotional journey throughout this big major catastrophe.

There really wasn’t a script at that time, so it was really Gareth—he’s someone who really collaborates. I think everyone on this film really collaborated. Bryan [Cranston] brought a lot to his role, and I think [we] tried to figure out a lot about the family. He wanted a whole sort of backstory that the marriage was on the rocks, and [the character] couldn’t quite come to terms with being a father who is around for his child, because he couldn’t figure out how to accept his father. So there was a lot of backstory for the characters. A lot of that got condensed down, but I think the undertones are kind of there, so that’s great.

Elizabeth Olsen: When I met Gareth for the first time, they were still playing around with the script really, so he showed me the Comic-Con teaser from two years ago with the Oppenheimer quote and the voiceover about “I created a monster.” That was the thing that first really drew me into making a Godzilla film. I didn’t quite understand what Godzilla actually represented in the original Japanese version. So, just that large concept, and him trying to explain to me that we wanted to have this uprooted family, and basically the whole point was to get them back together at the end [got my interest].

While Aaron and I were signed on to it, we would talk to Gareth about it, read different drafts, and it’s always been what they said it was going to be—which is quite phenomenal! [Laughs] It’s always what you hope happens, and it was actually far more collaborative than I assumed a big film like this would be. If there’s dialogue that maybe Aaron or I didn’t quite grab onto, we would workshop it. And all of that was good to go, and you didn’t have to wait for approval from far beyond from somewhere else. It was a really awesome process.

You and Aaron have to really establish the emotional core of the movie. But you don’t have all that many scenes together in the scope of the film. How did you guys work together to get that?

EO: I think that was the whole point of us workshopping, really. I think as an actor, you also know what it’s like to go away and come back. And [Aaron] has children, so we pulled from our own experiences in trying to root that in this specific relationship. And Aaron and I just really get on well, and trust each other. There’s a comfortablility, so there’s nothing awkward, really.

Could you talk a bit more about working with Gareth? It’s a big step up from Monsters to Godzilla.

ATJ: Yeah, he took on a monstrous project, but you know instantly with Gareth that he will deliver. He’s the sweetest guy, and I’d work with him again in a heartbeat. He’s someone who understands actors and gives them the time, and gets great performances because he really collaborates, and gives great ideas, and doesn’t really stop experimenting until you have so many variations. It was a big step up from him, but he’s someone that’s got real strong visions and ideas, and can work well with a group of people. And I think Legendary had a huge part of that as well with a body of work in the last two, three, five years with great directors, big movies, but with such heart and soul. Gareth is someone you put that risk on. He gives it that naturalistic look and feel, and it always [works] from an emotional standpoint.

EO: He’s amazing. What’s phenomenal about Gareth is he comes from a special effects background, which is what I think is happens with these big films is studios are trying to get these really great storytellers, these great smaller film directors, into these bigger movies. But sometimes, maybe they don’t have the language to speak with special effects or understand the larger world of it. And he understood that off the bat. But what he’s focused on is story-driven films, so working with him is incredibly collaborative. He’s very specific at what he needs you to do. And I told him, like I try to tell most people, like tell me straight up. You don’t need to talk around anything. And that’s how he likes to work, so it was a really great match for me.

Was he in the workshop with you guys?

EO: Yeah, it was just the three of us. It was just Aaron, Gareth, and I kind of improvising what was on the script. It’s not like we wrote it, but it was just us playing around with what was already there in that construct.

In a movie with so much CG, which you probably won’t see until a year later, how do you prepare for that?

EO: Before we shot anything, Gareth showed me Previz, which I learned about. It’s basically these funny cartoons, and these funny cartoons making terrible reactions at things. But you understand what they’re looking at, and what the angles are. That was what was so exciting to me about doing a project like this, that imagination aspect of just the make-believe [Laughs] like full make-believe. And it’s difficult, because you think it’s going to be full make-believe, and then it’s pouring rain, and you have to walk seven steps this way and three steps that way, and then you have to get a verbal cue when you know the camera guy is like panning down from whatever is going to be there and back to you, so you can turn. It’s very technical, so it was definitely something I’ve never done before. You still have to hit your marks and all that stuff, but it surprisingly looks easy to me. I think that is what I was surprised by when I saw it. And I think now that I’ve done it once, I have more confidence in knowing that “oh, I understand how it’s going to be edited.” Because it’s scary when you’re a fish in new water.

When you saw the finished film was there anything that struck you?

EO: I was actually shocked that I wanted to cry like twice in the film. [Laughs] And usually, I’m quite removed from the films I watch, and I’m very critical if I’m in them. But I was amazed by how moved I was and so quickly, especially with Bryan Cranston and Juliette Binoche. I think that shocked me. I never really worked with anyone except Carson [Bolde] who played my son and Aaron, very briefly—and this other actress Jill [Teed] who played one of the nurses—and so, it’s just nice to see what everyone else is doing. There’s a part of me that thought I should have seen what everyone else was doing…But it’s good that I didn’t, because I’m not seeing everything they’re seeing. I’m seeing it from a very different perspective, and it’s just eye-opening to see what everyone else did. And I just really loved it. I saw it with one of my best friends, and we were so excited afterward. We’re like “a good one!” [Laughs]

[related article: Godzilla Review]

Speaking of Bryan, I feel like your [Aaron’s] relationship with him in the film really slingshots you through the rest of the film. What you’ve learned and experienced with him. Actor-to-actor, how did you get that process where you went from estranged to believer of what he’s been espousing?

ATJ: I guess he ends up passing the baton on to me, and I have to finish off his dirty work. [Laughs] I think it’s a beautiful moment in which my character, who kind of by that point understands that family is the most important thing of all—and I think that becomes clear in a natural disaster when everything is in chaos. If he was going to die tomorrow, what was it all about? What does it all mean? I think he knows about having the ones that you love there and protected. For him it’s his family and knowing that he needs to be a better father and a husband…He didn’t have that kind of bond [with his father] and he doesn’t want to give that to his son. It’s a beautiful realization that he needs to keep that going.

It’s interesting that Godzilla is a catalyst to all of this.

ATJ: I didn’t know much about Godzilla before, as well. But in this case, he’s our hero; he’s our mascot.

Was it strange going from playing husband and wife in this film to playing brother and sister in The Avengers?

EO: I feel like that’s the way it’s supposed to be. [Laughs] Because you’re supposed to know your twin super well, so I feel really lucky that we have one film on us in order to start with Avengers. So, it worked out pretty amazingly.

ATJ: I think we created the two characters next to be very different. But it was funny when I was talking to Thomas Tull the other day. He was saying he saw Captain America and he saw us two, and he was like “What are my actors doing in this?” And I said, “Oh, that’s funny, Marvel actually beat you to it. Now we’re brother and sister before we were husband and wife!” But it’s good, she’s a great actress, and I really like working with her. She’s super brilliant. And in the Marvel comics, it’s slightly a bit incestuous anyway—not that we’re going to do it that way. [Laughs]

Did Joss shoot the end bit of Captain America?

EO: Yes.

How long ago did you shoot that?

EO: I don’t even remember. It was earlier this year.

Thank you so much.

Thank you.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!


Dave Bautista and Georges St-Pierre Join Kickboxer Reboot

$
0
0
NewsMike Cecchini5/12/2014 at 10:45AM

The Kickboxer reboot starring Alain Moussi has just added some in-ring firepower.

The Kickboxerreboot has a couple of strongmen in its corner. WWE superstar Dave "Batista" Bautista and MMA master Georges St-Pierre have signed on to the film, which will star stuntman Alain Moussi. Kickboxer, a remake of the 1989 film of the same name that helped propel Jean-Claude Van Damme to action movie nirvana, is directed by Stephen Fung with Ted Field and Radar Productions producing.

Dave Bautista can next be seen as Drax the Destroyer in Marvel's upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy movie. You can currently see him getting booed regularly on various WWE programming as part of the re-formed Evolution stable. 

Mr. St-Pierre was most recently seen on the big screen going toe-to-toe with Captain America in Captain America: The Winter Soldier. While his role as Batroc was typical, disposable movie heavy fare, he definitely displayed some screen presence, and (of course) his fighting skills were second to none.

This sounds like it's still quite a ways off from actual production, but we'll keep an eye on it nonetheless.

Source:Variety

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

New poster for Transformers: Age Of Extinction

$
0
0
NewsSimon Brew5/12/2014 at 12:54PM

We've got an exclusive first look at the latest Transformers: Age Of Extinction poster. Right here!

Oooh look. We've got an exclusive poster for you, although the way the internet works means that it will be exclusive for a matter of seconds. Nonetheless, you have to give us points for trying.

It's for Michael Bay's upcoming Transformers: Age Of Extinction, which stars Mark Wahlberg this time around. The movie is heading into UK cinemas on July 10th 2014, and we're promised both an extension of the series to date, along with things that set it off in a new direction.

So then: to whet your appetite, here is that brand new poster. Were we betting people, which we're not really, we'd suspect that a new trailer for the new Transformers can't be too far behind as well...

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Zack Snyder Teases Batman vs. Superman Batmobile

$
0
0
NewsMike Cecchini5/12/2014 at 1:17PM

You can almost see the Batmobile from Batman vs. Superman in this picture. Almost.

Say what you will about Zack Snyder, but you can never doubt the guy's enthusiasm. He's a fan of the material he's working on, that's for sure. And, as a fan, he knows what fans want. In this case, what fans want is ANY kind of official image from Batman vs. Superman. We may get one. Very soon. This one sorta counts.

Speaking from his Twitter feed, Mr. Snyder teased fans with an image of the film's Batmobile, obscured by a tarp.

This does look a bit more sporty than the functionality first aesthetic of the Tumbler from the Nolan Batman movies. The profile even recalls the Batmobile from Tim Burton's 1989 Batmanfilm.

So, when he says "time to pull the tarp" does he just mean on the Batmobile...or does he also mean on the guy who drives it? We'll know tomorrow. Maybe.

The extraordinarily secretive Batman vs. Superman movie opens on May 6th, 2016.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Disqus - noscript

You should probably change your feature pic. The movie's releasing in 2016.

Check Out The New Enhanced Trailer For Edge Of Tomorrow

$
0
0
TrailerDavid Crow5/12/2014 at 1:30PM

Watch the new enhanced trailer for Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt in The Edge of Tomorrow right now...

Dying is easy, but war is Hell. And for better or worse, Tom Cruise’s Lt. Col. Bill Cage is going to experience both horrors over and over again until he can get things right in Edge of Tomorrow, a sci-fi alien invasion movie by way of Groundhog Day. Check out the new enhanced trailer released by TNT for the high-concept summer actioner below.

In the future, an inexperienced military commander (Tom Cruise) must lead his men into a suicide mission of a battle…resulting in their instant deaths. But when Lt. Col. Bill Cage wakes up, he is alive and forced to relive the battle again. Each day brings a new challenge as he fights to stay alive. Also starring Emily Blunt as Special Forces officer Rita, the film is directed by Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, Mr. & Mrs. Smith).

Edge of Tomorrow will be released on June 6, 2014.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Fantastic Four Might Not Be Part of X-Men Universe

$
0
0
NewsDavid Crow5/12/2014 at 3:11PM
Fantastic Four

Writer and producer Simon Kinberg is not so sure that the Fantastic Four and X-Men will share a universe...

Ever since X-Men: First Class, Fox’s superhero movie universe has been on an upswing in quality that continued through The Wolverine, and very well may crescendo into this month’s fantastic looking X-Men: Days of Future Past. Thus, as the studio looks poised to build a movie universe as wide and varied as their Marvel cousins at Disney, the general assumption has long been that next year’s Fantastic Four reboot would be part of that larger X-verse.

Well, not so fast. As it turns out, attempting to thread the needle between the X-Men and Fantastic Four is something that’s weighed heavily on X-Men: Days of Future Past producer and screenwriter Simon Kinberg’s mind. The man who also penned the script for the Fantastic Four reboot seems wary of just yet putting them in the same timeline, and given the continued mixed reaction to Sony’s own recent superhero reboot is even more aware of the obstacles facing another big screen debut for the FF.

While speaking with Screen Crush, Kinberg said on the prospect of a multi-franchise crossover that “it’s complicated. Because none of the X-Men movies have acknowledged the notion of a sort of superhero team — the Fantastic Four. And the Fantastic Four acquire powers, so for them to live in a world where mutants are prevalent is kind of complicated, because you’re like, ‘Oh, you’re just a mutant.’ Like, ‘What’s so fantastic about you?’”

Kinberg also acknowledged the dangers of retreading an origin story with a reboot, as seen in the diminishing box office returns for The Amazing Spider-Man films. However, Kinberg makes an important distinction between the franchises.

“People have a very different relationship to the Fantastic Four movies than they had to Raimi’s Spider-Man movies,” Kinberg said. “And Raimi’s Spider-Man movies — and that first Spider-Man movie — is a beloved movie that sort of redefined, tonally, sort of what comic book movies could do. There had been other superhero movies, like X-Men, but Raimi’s Spider-Man had a joyfulness to it that was unique, I think, to the genre. So, rebooting a movie that was beloved less than ten years after it had come out is challenging. So, we approach Fantastic Four with a different set of challenges.”

Kinberg also acknowledges that tonally their Fantastic Four movie will be less goofy than the Tim Story movies of the last decade and located somewhere more along the spectrum between Sam Raimi’s take on the web-head and what Josh Trank did previously with Chronicle.

Head over here to read the rest of the intriguing interview.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Million Dollar Arm Review

$
0
0
ReviewDon Kaye5/12/2014 at 4:21PM

Million Dollar Arm almost overcomes a predictable story arc thanks to its initial set-up and Jon Hamm’s charisma. Almost.

Million Dollar Arm adapts the true story of struggling sports agent J.B. Bernstein, who makes a Hail Mary pass (yes, I know I’m mixing sports here) to keep his fledgling agency open by going on a search through India to find cricket players who can also throw a baseball, thus opening up the country to Major League Baseball and in turn potentially attracting millions of new fans to the sport. I like it when movies show me something new, and I honestly knew nothing about the real-life Bernstein and his exploits until I watched this film, so the premise alone was interesting – until the movie gets bogged down in one formulaic turn of events after another.

The first half of the movie is the better one. Bernstein, who comes across as crabby and self-absorbed yet still charming thanks to the inescapable charisma of Mad Men’s Jon Hamm, loses a big football client and is facing the end of the firm he and partner Ash (Aasif Mandvi) launched just two years prior. Flipping through channels one night, he keeps switching between Susan Boyle singing on Britain’s Got Talent and a cricket match – and inspiration hits.

Taking a semi-catatonic scout (Alan Arkin doing his usual shtick) with him, Bernstein heads to India with the backing of his sole investor on a three-month tour to find the “Million Dollar Arm,” as the national contest is called. After a slow start – his local organizer does not exactly get things moving smoothly at first – and the typical acclimations to the country’s customs, Bernstein heads off into the countryside. After a long search, he finally hits pay dirt and comes home with not one, but two contenders: Rinku Singh (Suraj Sharma) and Dinesh Patel (Madhur Mittel) – neither of whom, ironically, play or have much interest in cricket.


While not particularly surprising, Bernstein’s trip through India is the most captivating and entertaining portion of the film, as we get to see both the country’s beauty and poverty and also a look at a number of different locales. The scenes where Bernstein must communicate with the young athletes’ families also feel natural, and there’s a moment or two of genuine poignancy as the two boys say goodbye to their families and the culture they’ve known their whole lives.

It’s when the gang gets back to Los Angeles that Million Dollar Arm starts to ossify into a ho-hum series of plot turns and contrived emotional epiphanies – not quite enough to derail what is essentially a harmless piece of entertainment, but enough to ultimately lessen its value. The two boys – along with countryman, interpreter and videographer Amit (Indian star Pitobash) – are of course befuddled and dazzled by life in the fast lane of Hollywood, agents, celebrities and parties, to the point of annoyance. Yes, Dinesh and Rinku barely speak English when they first get here and yes, this is unlike anything they’ve ever experienced before, but come on – the movie paints them as almost utterly ignorant. Setting off a hotel fire alarm lands them in the spare bedroom at Bernstein’s place, where he doesn’t take too kindly to having a houseful of charges to oversee.

Naturally, the pressure to perform gets to the lads as well, and a rushed, poorly planned audition for scouts from most of the MLB’s teams goes disastrously wrong. But a movie like this doesn’t exist without second chances, and not just for our two potential baseball stars: the model-dating, commitment-avoiding Bernstein finally learns about love from the woman who rents his guest bungalow (Lake Bell) – just as we knew he would from the first moment they interact in the film.


Look, you could do worse than pass two hours with Million Dollar Arm; it’s reasonably well-made (by Lars and the Real Girl and Fright Night director Craig Gillespie) and it’s bolstered by its cast considerably. Hamm is believably gruff yet capable of warmth, while Bell does her quirky-sexy thing quite well. Sharma and Mittel also acquit themselves with dignity except for a handful of moments when they are required to act like buffoons. I kind of wish we saw more of iconoclastic coach Tom House (Bill Paxton), who Bernstein hires to train the boys, and could have done with less of the irritating Ash – who is either complaining or dealing with his two screaming kids – and Arkin’s been-there-done-that Ray, but their screen time is limited anyway.

Ultimately, the movie lacks any real teeth. You know exactly what is going to happen almost every step of the way, and the story beats have played out before in a hundred other movies, sports dramas or otherwise. The story does have a certain comfort and appeal – and I’ll mention again that those opening scenes in India have at least some unique flavor – but the more predictable it gets, the more forgettable it becomes. Yet, I was still entertained by it, so Gillespie, Hamm and the rest do manage to keep the movie engaging. All right, I guess I’ll end with a baseball metaphor: Million Dollar Arm is far from a home run. Let’s call it a single -- with the runner managing to steal second base as well.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

6

New Stills From The Giver

$
0
0
NewsDavid Crow5/12/2014 at 5:24PM

Check out three new images from this summer's The Giver adaptation, starring Jeff Bridges, Katie Holmes, and Taylor Swift.

The Young Adult craze that is sweeping through Hollywood at the moment is seeing many recent best-sellers hit the big screen at an impressive rate, but it’s also allowed the first big screen adaptation of one of the genre’s all time classics.

The haunting story of a society that chooses a person’s worth and duty as an adolescent “gift,” The Giver from author Lois Lowry has haunted young readers for decades and it’s ready for its big screen debut. Below, we get a good look at Jeff Bridges, Taylor Swift, Brenton Thwaites, Katie Holmes, and Alexander Skarsgard in the anticipated movie.

The haunting story of The Giver centers on Jonas, who lives in a seemingly ideal, if colorless, world of conformity and contentment. Not until he is given his life assignment as the Receiver of Memory does he begin to understand the dark, complex secrets behind his fragile community. The film is based on Lois Lowry’s beloved young adult novel of the same name, which was the winner the 1994 Newbery Medal and has sold over 10 million copies worldwide. The Giver will be in theaters everywhere August 15, 2014.  

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!


Michael Giacchino Scoring Jurassic World

$
0
0
NewsDavid Crow5/12/2014 at 7:19PM
Jurassic World

Michael Giacchino, the composer of Up, has been tapped by Universal Pictures to score Jurassic World.

Undoubtedly, some will always miss John Williams’ participation in the Jurassic Park franchise, but it is impossible to fault Universal Pictures’ new choice for the musical maestro with Michael Giacchino.

As reported at ComingSoon, the Oscar winning composer who scored the emotional rollercoaster Uphas been tapped to provide a new ode to the dinosaurs in Colin Tervorrow’s Jurassic World.

The respected musical composer, whom also provided the scores to The Incredibles, Lost, and Let Me In, joins an impressive team for the fourth trip to the park in the iconic series. With Steven Spielberg still producing, Jurassic World also enjoys a cast that includes Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jake Johnson, Ty Simpkins, and Omar Sy. Giacchino previously got to (less overtly) sample a Williams sytled sound in J.J. Abrams’ E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind reminiscent Super 8.

Jurassic World opens June 15, 2015.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Disqus - noscript

I wonder if he'll be able to use John Williams' original score for inspiration? I would imagine the studio owns the original score, not John Williams himself, right?

In memoriam: artist HR Giger

$
0
0
NewsRyan Lambie5/13/2014 at 8:20AM

We're sad to report that the Swiss artist HR Giger, creator of the Alien, has died at the age of 74.

In 1979, the cinema-going public reeled at the arrival of Alien. Its title creature, although conceived on paper by writers Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett, was brought vividly to life by the Swiss artist Hans Rudolf Giger.

For many, Alien was their first introduction to Giger's nightmarish and surreal art. During the 70s and 80s, he was extraordinarily prolific, producing not just the Alien design, its accompanying eggs, the celebrated Space Jockey, his extra-terrestrial craft and planet, but also a huge range of other sculptures, illustrations and paintings.

Giger's must familiar work was achieved with an airbrush, and it was his 1977 book of paintings, entitled Necronomicon, which brought the artist to the world's attention, and in particular the creators of Alien. When director Ridley Scott set eyes on painting named Necronom IV, with its now familiar lithe alien creature viewed in profile, he'd found the creature he was looking for. Giger's largely monochrome, often disturbing images were inspired by the writer HP Lovecraft and the occult, but also his own nightmares.

Giger continued to work sporadically in the movies through the rest of his career, on both the Alien franchise and the 1995 film, Species, as well as providing smaller pieces of work for Poltergeist II, Future-Kill (specifically, its poster) and the Japanese horror, Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis. The artist's final screen credit would be Prometheus, which would reunite him with director Ridley Scott - albeit briefly - one final time.

Although he'll long be associated with his work in Alien, Giger's biomechanoid art style has inspired, and is sure to continue to inspire, other artists and filmmakers for decades to come.

Giger sadly passed away on May the 12th at the age of 74. The artist has gone, but his astonishing body of work, mined from the darkest reaches of his subconscious, will always remain.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

 

Disqus - noscript

Sad sad day in the world we have trully lost one of last great artist of 21st century

Interview: Ken Watanabe Roars About Godzilla

$
0
0
InterviewDavid Crow5/13/2014 at 9:13AM

We sit down with Ken Watanabe to discuss the nuclear implications of Godzilla and why the big guy is still relevant.

Ken Watanabe does not grace enough American movies. As the charismatic actor who broke out memorably in Western cinema with his regal but wounded performance in Edward Zwick’s otherwise familiar The Last Samurai, Watanabe has spent the last decade appearing in either Western viewpoints on Japanese culture—such as Clint Eastwood’s most recent great movie, Letters From Iwo Jima—or in genre films that need a certain gravitas and elevation, such as Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins and Inception.

With this Friday’s Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures reboot of Godzilla, Watanabe gets to play both roles in a surprisingly strong summer popcorn flick that also delves into one of Watanabe’s homeland’s national treasures.

Thus we were very grateful when Watanabe took a moment to sit down with us last week in anticipation of the Gareth Edwards helmed monster movie that aims to make Godzilla as wonderfully adored in the U.S. as he is in Japan. Always the showman, Watanabe even let me hear his own resounding Godzilla roar while discussing the big guy’s importance in both Japan and in the modern 21st century world.

How much changed along the way from when you got involved with the project to the finished film?

Ken Watanabe: [Something I said] to Gareth is why do we make Godzilla, right now? This year marks the 60th anniversary of Godzilla. The first original is 1954. The first one is after World War II, and Godzilla was born out of fear [because] people were fascinated by nuclear weapons and the nuclear tests. Then three years ago, we had an experience in Japan, the collapse of a nuclear power plant due to a major earthquake and tsunami. After 60 years, even after 60 years, people are still fascinated by Godzilla. Why? The people are still fascinated because the nuclear power terrifies us, the fear of nuclear energy. It is something of a curiosity for me, and as a Japanese actor, I wanted to join this project.

Then Gareth has a great vision of the same thing between the original and now.

Your character is a champion for Godzilla in this film.

[Laughs] He’s a scientist!

Why do you think he is so supportive of Godzilla?

His father was a survivor of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima in 1945. Because of that background, he wound up studying nuclear power, nuclear energy, in hopes of doing something meaningful for mankind. Then, he discovered the existence of Godzilla during the investigation of something and he comes to believe and fear the power of nature, which man cannot control. He admires nature.

In the movie, he says it’s about maintaining the balance of nature. So, he has faith that Godzilla is the overseer of nature, and that he can handle it better than we can. Is that right?

I’m going to ask you. Is Godzilla hero or villain in this?

He’s a hero in this.

Really? When I saw the movie, I became so excited whenever he let’s out his roar. [Watanabe really roars]. It’s really strong! But it’s also a scream of sadness, I felt. His screaming is like he’s schooling us for humanity’s foolishness. Godzilla could symbolize man’s conscience and is going on a rampage of the city, that gets destroyed—so many buildings, streets, and Golden Gate Bridge, and the airport at Honolulu—but the human being believes we can stand up and rebuild. That the city hasn’t been destroyed. Perhaps there’s a slight, but certain, hope there. I think Godzilla is like man’s conscience.

Who do you think is responsible for maintaining the balance of nature in reality?

…It’s a tough question. Nobody can control—nobody can take a balance. Then, we need to imagine something like Godzilla and we hope something to take that [role].

You talked about the original Godzilla before. Did you borrow anything from the two scientist characters in that movie in developing your character?

No, the original one, Dr. Serizawa, is a little mad. [Laughs] But it’s just spirits of the storytelling.

I know you didn’t see the original until later in life, but what impact culturally did you see, if any, of Godzilla when growing up in Japan?

Of course, I didn’t see the first one at the time, as it came out just seven or five years before I was born. The first Godzilla [I saw] is just some fight another creature version. It’s just some curiosity for kids, a monster fight with a barrel or something. Then, I became an adult and felt some different feelings from Godzilla. It is a good thing for the kids, just at the time. Nobody can understand about the whole thing, but it’s after 10 years or after 15 years, I can capture different feelings from this.

Thank you for doing this.

Thank you.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Confirmed: Channing Tatum is Gambit in the X-Men Movies

$
0
0
NewsMike Cecchini5/13/2014 at 9:30AM

Remember all that buzz about how the producers wanted Channing Tatum as Gambit in an X-Men movie? They got him.

With X-Men: Days of Future Paststill over a week away from release in the USA, we now know of at least one mutant who will see screen time very soon, as well as who will be playing him. It should come as no surprise to anybody that it's Channing Tatum, the man that X-Men producer Lauren Shuler Donner was quite vocal about wanting in the role.

Speaking with Total Film, Ms. Shuler Donner said, without question that "It is Channing Tatum." Whether this means Mr. Tatum will carry a Gambit solo film or whether he might function as the charismatic central figure of a future X-Men film once Hugh Jackman has moved on from Wolverine remains to be seen. Perhaps we'll see him introduced in 2016's X-Men: Apocalypse.

She also makes it sound like a Deadpool solo film is still very much a possibility and describes the X-Force movie as "fascinating, because it allows us to be a little grittier."

You can watch the whole interview over at Total Film.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Disqus - noscript

Wasn't Gambit in X-Men Origins: Wolverine?

John Carpenter Loves Borderlands 2

$
0
0
NewsJohn Saavedra5/13/2014 at 10:47AM

Didn't think John Carpenter was a gamer? Think again!

In a recent issue of Esquire, legendary filmmaker John Carpenter told the magazine how much he loves video games, especially Borderlands 2.

"There's no better game on the face of the earth," Carpenter said. Take that as your official review if you haven't bought the game yet, which why wouldn't you?

How did he get into video games?

"My son, growing up, got into video games and I got addicted along with him. He left and went off on his own and I kept playing. They're just so much fun. So I've kept abreast of everything over the years. I have four systems here in the house. The old Xbox and the new Xbox and the old PlayStation and the new one. So I play all the new games. I'm not a big fantasy gamer, like Skyrim kind of games where you have to buy stuff and talk to people. I don't know, I like to shoot things."

Which makes sense, if you look back at some of his films. A lot of them pretty much play out like shooters. Escape from New York, Assault on Precinct 13, Halloween, The Thing, and Big Trouble in Little Chinacould all be shooters. In fact, some of these movies have been adapted into video games already.

I never thought of John Carpenter as much of a gamer, which is absolutely shame on me. The guy's films are full of video game tropes that have either spawned direct game adaptations or inspired hit game franchises.

First and foremost, Metal Gear. Riffing off of John Carpenter's famous character Snake Plissken from Escape from New York, Solid Snake is a man sent on infiltration missions in enemy territory, and is often times manipulated by the very government he's working for. Carpenter's famous film features an oppressive government that will sacrifice anything to keep the order intact. It's no accident that the oppressive government in both the film and its video game spiritual successor is the United States. These are both works that examine how power deteriorates a system's willingness to serve the common good. Also, the main threat (at first) in both works is nuclear.

Although the "Snake" moniker is enough to turn your head and make you picture Kurt Russell fighting off a giant nuclear robot, Metal Gear Solid 2 had a direct nod to the John Carpenter films. Solid Snake, now in hiding after being framed for a terrorist attack on New York City, must hide under the codename "Iroquois Pliskin" (Iroquois is a "Francofied version of the Algonquin word for rattlesnakes" in case you were wondering). Obvious enough for you?

Carpenter's 1982 remake of The Thing got a video game sequel in the form Computer Artworks' same name video game, which is pretty comical to look at today but looked really good back in 2002. I mention this game because The Thing is probably my favorite Carpenter movie (I go back and forth between The Thingand Halloween).

And who can forget the classic Halloweenvideo game for the Atari 2600:

It's quite interesting that no one else has ever dared to make a Halloween game. Probably because Rob Zombie broke the franchise forever? Woops.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that's your thing!

Viewing all 23983 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>