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First Image of Ben Affleck as Batman in Batman vs. Superman

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NewsMike Cecchini5/13/2014 at 12:16PM
batman vs. superman

The first photo of Ben Affleck as Batman (along with the Batmobile) from Batman vs. Superman has arrived.

Does this qualify as an "official" image? While not the kind of full color publicity photo that Warner Bros. usually likes to release, Batman vs. Superman director Zack Snyder has unveiled our first look at Ben Affleck as Batman in this image he took on the set.

See for yourself:

Ben Affleck Batman

The image, like yesterday's tease of the Batmobile, was revealed via Zack Snyder's Twitter account:

It had initially been hinted that we would see a more drastic departure from cinematic batsuits of the past, but clearly that isn't the case. The short ears on the cowl (the shortest since the Adam West days) and larger bat symbol on his chest are definitely a nod to The Dark Knight Returns. That is recognizably Ben Affleck under the hood, although he's certainly bigger than we've ever seen him. Obviously, we can't see anything as far as colors go, but it may have some more subtleties to it than the straight black of the Christopher Nolan films. There's still enough room for this to be a black/grey scheme like we see in the comics and Arkham video game series, as well.

As with most superhero movie costumes, the key here will be to see how Mr. Affleck and/or his stunt doubles can actually move in the costume. The bat-suits made famous by Christian Bale (not to mention Michael Keaton and others) were heavy, rubberized affairs that severely limited the range of motion of the actors. Batman needs protection, but he also needs to convince audiences that he can get around effectively. There is a certain "lived in" feeling to this version of the suit, though, and that might indicate a softer material than what we've seen before.

The Batmobile is quite a beast. Certainly sleeker than what we've seen in the most recent Batman films, but plenty intimidating.

Batman vs. Superman is now clearly well underway. We're willing to bet that Mr. Snyder and Warner Bros. will release official photos of other key players before they can get snapped by spies as filming goes on. It opens on May 6th, 2016. You can read everything we know about the project so far right here.

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"Recognizably"? You can't even see his face. There's nothing recognizable that would tell you that was Affleck.

It's recognizably me.

Me too. I can see his chin and jaw line. That is Affleck for sure.

Haters will hate! LOLOLOLOLOL This is so cool.

That is bad azz. This movie is going to kick some and take names. The suit looks amazingly well designed. It really gives that serious "comic" book feel to it. This feels like the Dark Knight Returns to me and apparently lots of other people too!

Snyder LOVES the comic books, it is SO obvious!

Take notes Fox! This is how it is done!

The Batmobile also gives off the comic book feel a lot too. More so than the Tumbler, which to me, never really felt like the "Batmobile".

Bravo DC and Snyder! BRAVO!

Also, what is up with the Joker face reflection on the Batmobile?! What does it mean??????

The Tumbler was never a batmobile, and there is only one spot for a Bat Tank and that was filled in the 80's by Frank Miller.


Batman vs. Superman: Everything We Know

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NewsMike Cecchini5/13/2014 at 12:58PM

Batman vs. Superman is now two years away from release. Here is everything we currently know about the next DC Comics movie.

When Man of Steel arrived, fans were promised the start of a DC cinematic universe to rival Marvel's. At the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con, the announcement was made that Man of Steel 2 would be more than just a sequel, and instead plant the seeds of a Justice League movie. While the film still doesn't appear to have an official title, here is everything we currently know about Batman vs. Superman.


The Story

Zack Snyder is co-writing the story with David Goyer (who will then pen the screenplay), which is said to draw some inspiration from The Dark Knight Returns, the classic story by Frank Miller, Klaus Janson, and Lynn Varley which climaxed with an impressive street fight between Batman and Superman. While there are likely going to be some similarities, Goyer has stated that the film won't be an adaptation of that work. It seems possible that some of their conflict may stem from the controversial ending to Man of Steel, as Mr. Goyer promised, "we will be dealing with this in coming films...He isn't fully-formed as Superman in [Man of Steel], and he will have to deal with the repercussions of that in the next one." 

As for what else Batman vs. Superman has in store, well...it looks like we're going to get a gathering of heroes. The next film after this one has officially been revealed as a Justice League movie, which will also be directed by Zack Snyder. We figure that whatever differences Bats and Supes have with each other in this one should be resolved by the time they get around to Super Friends: The Movie in 2018.


The Cast

Henry Cavill will return as Superman and Ben Affleck will play Batman/Bruce Wayne. Affleck fits the mold of the "older and wiser" Batman who "bears the scars of a seasoned crimefighter" that Warner Bros. was looking for, which neatly sidesteps the need to re-establish Batman's origins on screen once again.

While the first live-action meeting of Batman and Superman is historic enough, Batman vs. Superman goes even further, by introducing Wonder Woman into the mix, played by Gal Gadot. There's no word yet on just how large her role in the film will be, but this will mark the first appearance of Wonder Woman on the big screen, and her first live-action appearance (not counting an unaired NBC television pilot from a few years back) since Lynda Carter hung up her bracelets in 1979.

At least one villain has finally been cast, though. Jesse Eisenberg is taking on the role of Superman's arch-foe, Lex Luthor. David Goyer has stated that "Lex [Luthor] in this world is more a Bill Gates or Rupert Murdoch like character. He's probably a multi, multi billionaire. He's not a crook." While this quote comes from an interview that was conducted well before the Batman vs. Superman announcement, Goyer's vision for Lex would certainly put him in the same social circles as someone like Bruce Wayne. Zack Snyder describes Luthor as "a complicated and sophisticated character whose intellect, wealth and prominence position him as one of the few mortals able to challenge the incredible might of Superman."


Jeremy Irons will play Batman's right-hand man, Alfred Pennyworth. While we don't know how much from previous incarnations of the character Irons will draw on, Alfred is described by Zack Snyder as "Bruce Wayne’s most trusted friend, ally and mentor, a noble guardian and father figure. He is an absolutely critical element in the intricate infrastructure that allows Bruce Wayne to transform himself into Batman."

Recently, the film has added three supporting castmembers in unidentified (but not comic book based) roles. Holly Hunter, Callan Mulvey, and Tao Okamoto have joined the cast in roles created specifically for the film.

The film has apparently also cast Ray Fisher as Vic Stone...who is also known as Justice League member, Cyborg. 

Unconfirmed rumors indicate that the word is out for Dick Grayson, in his secret identity as Nightwing, to make an appearance, with Adam Driver's name initially having surfaced as a contender for the role. However, Driver has denied any involvement with the project, and his current commitments to the new Star Wars trilogy now safely rule him out.

Jason Momoa's name has come up in connection with the film, but it's unclear who he would be playing, with speculation ranging from Doomsday to Hawkman, although Momoa has dismissed all of this talk as rumor and nothing more. Even Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson has seen his name come up, and he's made no secret of the fact that he's meeting with Warner Bros. for an unspecified DC-related project. If either actor is playing another superpowered villain (or hero), it does broaden the scope a little further.

The Rest

Principal photography is scheduled to begin any minute now. However, some second-unit filming has already commenced, including at a football game between rival college teams from Metropolis and Gotham (this might be where Vic Stone/Cyborg is introduced), as well as locations in Illinois which have doubled as the Kent farm. Kevin Smith has seen a photo of Ben Affleck in a Batman costume, which he describes as something "you have not seen...in a movie before." Here's hoping that means it has some blue and grey...and maybe a yellow oval. 

Amy Adams, Laurence Fishburne, and Diane Lane will also reprise their Man of Steel roles. Batman vs. Superman is produced by Charles Roven and Deborah Snyder. Hans Zimmer will return to provide the score for the movie. However, Zack Snyder recently said that they'd want Mr. Zimmer back "as long as he'll have us" but seemed to confirm that Zimmer wouldn't reuse any previous Batman themes, in order to distinguish this version of the character from Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight films, which Zimmer also scored.

Batman vs. Superman will open in the US on May 6th, 2016.

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... Besides the Ben Affleck as Batman part ... It all sounds GREAT!

If they left Batman out and replaced Zack Snyder this would be a great movie!

Agreeing with the "it sounds great except for Ben Affleck" thing. He doesn't fit the mold of an "older and seasoned Batman" let alone just "Batman."

Seriously aren't you people forgetting one thing about Batman. He's a figure that can be constantly reinvented, this version is gonna be different deal with it.

Holy links, Batman!

Zack Syder, please do not change wonder womans origin. Kryptonian amazons is the worst idea. Do not do it. Do not power down wonder woman. Stay true to the comics do not screw wonder woman up. If you want to make the greek gods aliens fine, but not from krypton. Give us the wonder woman we all know and love...if anyone can pull this off it is you, but no kryptonian amazons or de-powered wonder woman. I would rather you not use her than see you screw her whole history up. Stay true to wonder woman.

It's stupid because never ever in her origin has any writer turned her into a Krptionian throughout her 73 something years. I also never ran into any alien versions. That means she would have the same weakness as a Kryptonian same powers and same body structure. No connection to magic and the greek side of DC. ugh smh

True. ZS is pretty flat when it comes to plots and BA isn't great for batman. I personally would build upon the cosmic aspect of DC since Earth was just attacked by aliens. Introduce more of them. Show that Martins and GL were looking at the battle, seeing Earth already has a guardian

it might be a bad version though

a version that has to be able to be on his A game at all times in order to live in a world of aliens and gods? (like the comics) I think we're going to see the best Batman ever in this movie. the world around him is only going to bring out his strengths and true potential

"Here's hoping that means it has some blue and grey...and maybe a yellow oval. " let's hope not. These movies are modern, not Silver Agey.

They wouldn't be Kryptonian Amazons. At best, they could be descendants of Kara Zor-El 18000 years removed from their ancestor. That doesn't make them Kryptonian in the least. Kara's Kryptonian DNA would degrade after 18000 years of mixing with human DNA.

Don't screw up Wonder Woman. Don't screw up Wonder Woman. Don't screw up Wonder Woman.

Even if Batfleck does turn out to be terrible, it won't be as terrible either way because the Nolan trilogy still exists to prove to the general public that Batman can be awesome.

If they mess up Wonder Woman, people will blame it on the character, and that will be the end of DC investing in anything other heroines/female supervillians in future movies.

So don't freaking screw up Wonder Woman please.

WB Dates Harry Potter Spin-Off For 2016

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NewsDavid Crow5/13/2014 at 5:27PM
The Harry Potter cast. Laughing all the way to the Alliance & Leicester

Fantastic Beasts And Where to Find Them, a Harry Potter spin-off, will be here in time for the holidays in 2016.

The story of the boy who lived may be over (for now), but Warner Bros. and J.K. Rolwing are a long way from saying goodbye to the Harry Potter franchise. After all, WB has just recently slated and dated its spin-off based on the wizarding world of witches and wizards: Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them.

Adapted from a 2001 book of the same name, Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them is set for a November 18, 2016 release date just in time for the holiday season.

Intended to be the first act of a planned trilogy, the spin-off follows the fictitious author of a textbook by the same name that’s legendary in Hogwarts, one Newt Scamander, a character who lived in New York some 70 years prior to the boy who lived surviving his first bout with He Who Must Not Be Named. It will feature magical worlds and creatures inherently familiar to fans of the Harry Potter universe.

This will put the new film in direct confrontation with an unnamed Walt Disney Animation Studios film released a week later for Thanksgiving.

Deadline

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I am so looking forward to this. Hope they do it justice and it lives up to the hype. But I have faith in Rowling. And the film will be out just in time for my birthday, so that's those celebrations planned!

New V/H/S Viral (V/H/S 3) Trailer

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TrailerDavid Crow5/13/2014 at 6:31PM

Check out the trailer for this year's newest V/H/S horror and what happens when the evil goes viral....

The only thing scarier than meta-self aware haunted videotape snuff films full of demons, vampires, and succubi is what happens when those videos go viral.

At least that is the gist of this fall’s upcoming V/H/S Viral (also known as V/H/S 3), the sequel that dares to ponder what would happen if these evil tapes hit the Interwebs. We’ll give you a hint: it looks to end worse for folks than Y2K did…

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Trailer for WHITEY: United States of America v. James J. Bulger Presented

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TrailerTony Sokol5/13/2014 at 11:45PM

Trailer for WHITEY: United States of America v. James J. Bulger presents the evidence.

I was lucky to be invited to a screening of WHITEY: United States of America v. James J. Bulger and I promise that this is more than just a historical documentary, it presents a case. It has drama. It has the cold, hard facts, but gives up more. The trailer for WHITEY: United States of America v. James J. Bulgerpresents evidence and I endorse their case. You don’t only get to know the gangsters and the cops, Whitey invites you into the victims’ cars and homes.

WHITEY: United States of America v. James J. Bulger takes a thorough look at the trial of James "Whitey" Bulger and how the Feds and Whitey greased each other’s wheels. It was directed by Joe Berlinger, who has won Oscars, Emmys and a Peabody for his hard-hitting documentaries Paradise Lost and Brother’s Keeper and hard-partying look at Metallica: Some Kind of Monster. Berlinger does his best to take the myth out of Whitey Bulger.

Whiteywas produced by RadicalMedia for CNN Films.

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Godzilla Becomes Socially Conscious: Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster

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ReviewJim Knipfel5/14/2014 at 8:09AM
Godzilla vs Smog Monster

Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster could be seen as the film that breathed a final last sulfuric breath into the iconic dinosaur...

To the uninitiated and the non-obsessive, Godzilla films represent the cheapest of the cheap, the lowest of the lowbrow—stupid kiddie matinée fare consisting of little more than two guys in ridiculous, cumbersome rubber suits wrestling for 90 minutes.

Well, as much as I’d like to say it is, that perception isn’t completely unjustified. By the early 1970s, most of the men responsible for making the Godzilla films of the ‘50s and ‘60s the classic, thoughtful, even at times majestic metaphors they were had left the series. Toho Studios started cutting the budgets. Monster suits that used to be made new for each picture were now being recycled from film to film and started to look pretty ratty. Instead of shooting new special effects scenes, stand-in directors with little money often simply edited in clips from earlier, better films. The sets (especially the miniature cities) became cheaper and far less detailed. Production schedules shrank. And producer Tomoyuki Tanaka asked that the films in the Godzilla series be aimed squarely at a very young audience.

It was the films made during that shabby period that, more often than not, became the movies aired on Saturday creature features, making them the ones most often seen by casual U.S. viewers. Most damning of all, Godzilla vs. Megalongenerally considered the very worst Godzilla film ever made, has been seen by more people than any other thanks to a prime-time airing in 1977 hosted by John Belushi, who provided a snickering pre-MST3K commentary.

But at the very cusp between the classic Godzilla films and the steep decline there rests Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster (aka Gojira tai Hedorah). Depending on your perception, the 1971 picture was either the insulting death-knell of the series as a whole and one of the worst movies ever made, or the film that breathed a final, fleeting bit of strange and psychedelic life into a (at that time) 17-year-old franchise. The Yoshimitsu Banno-directed film was dark. It was at times nasty. It did a few things that hadn’t been seen since the 1954 original, but was still extremely contemporary. It was a picture with an inescapable environmentalist message that at the same time called out the hippies as a bunch of useless hypocrites. It’s the only film of the series in which Godzilla can fly. And it contained the only hallucination sequence ever seen in a Godzilla movie.

You know you’re in for a different kind of Godzilla picture when Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster opens with a psychedelic music video, as a nightclub singer performs the outrageously catchy “Save the Earth” over a montage of images of horrific pollution.

(Tanaka was so displeased with the American version of the song that only the original Japanese version is available on the U.S. home video release, unless you’re willing to shell out big bucks for an old VHS edition.)

 

It seems a giant mutated tadpole resembling a much smaller mutated version recently discovered by a Japanese biologist (Akira Yamauchi), is sinking oil tankers left and right. The local newscasters dub the creature “Hedorah,” and after some experimentation (and a disastrous underwater encounter with the monster), the biologist determines the creature is made of carbonized minerals and can only live in polluted water. His young son Ken (Hiroyuki Kawase), the small boy with short pants and a baseball cap who would become a fixture of the ‘70s Godzilla films, insists that Godzilla is the only thing that can stop Hedorah.

Although Godzilla started life as a symbol of the nuclear threat and the devastation Japan had experienced, by the mid-’60s he had an image makeover, becoming an unstoppable, atomic-powered defender of Japan. Now, five years later, he was as much a hero to children as Superman, and really cool Godzilla toys were readily available in stores. It’s a transition I never fully comprehended.

Anyway, during a psychedelic freakout at a local disco, the now-amphibious Hedorah shambles ashore and grows a pair of legs. And sure enough, Godzilla arrives to stop it. But since the creature spawned by pollution breathes a mist of sulfuric acid, dozens of hippies from the disco die during the film’s first monster battle. It was the first time since the original that any of Godzilla’s city-stomping shenanigans resulted in any (admitted) human fatalities.

It isn’t long before the bipedal Hedorah morphs once again, this time into a lumpy black flying disc with bulbous red eyes, and goes zipping around Japan spreading the acid mist. Thousands more die, and we get shots of skeletal hands, mewling kittens covered in sludge, and wailing infants sitting in piles of garbage. It’s surprisingly harsh material for a dumb kid’s movie.

Meanwhile a bunch of hippies decide to have a pro-environment concert at the top of Mt. Fuji, roaring up there on their motorcycles as Bano makes a point of showing them running over plants and animals and spewing exhaust along the way. But then Hedorah shows up and wipes them all out so there you go.

During the climactic fight, viewers then and now get a big kick out of the fact that Godzilla can use his radioactive breath as a form of propulsion, allowing him to fly (albeit only backwards), and it is a very funny and surprising image. But it’s the end that always gets me. After Hedorah has been destroyed (am I really giving anything away by saying that?), Godzilla plunges his arms into the gooey corpse, fishes around a bit, pulls out an egg, and smashes it. He does this several times until he’s certain there are no eggs left, making this, in a Godzilla film with so many other firsts to its credit, the first Godzilla film to feature an on-screen post-mortem abortion.

Producer Tanaka was, um, not very happy with the picture when he finally saw it. The word “disgrace” was used quite a bit. And that sequel Bano had in mind? Yeah, that wasn’t exactly gonna happen. Instead he put out the word that the series would focus on more basic, kid-friendly themes (i.e. fewer onscreen abortions). What followed for the next several years was a disastrous stretch that forever damaged the reputation of the series. Even when the series returned in 1984 with more energy and imagination, it was too late, the damage had been done and an unshakeable reputation had been established.

But love it or hate it (admittedly far more people hate it than love it), Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster was the last series entry for a good long time with effective special effects, solid camera work, a relevant metaphor, some real imagination, and a twisted sense of humor. And whether in Japanese or English, “Save the Earth” is a heck of a theme song. (That little kid in the shorts still bugs the hell out of me, though.) 

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Yoshimitsu Banno is now the senior Japanese Executive Producer of the upcoming Legendary Pictures Godzilla. The new film was born of his efforts to make his own advanced audiovisual Godzilla film during the past 20 years.

Roberto Orci to direct the next Star Trek film

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NewsSimon Brew5/14/2014 at 8:26AM

JJ Abrams' successor in the Star Trek director's chair? It's Roberto Orci, making his directorial debut...

Not much of a surprise this, given that it'd been rumoured for weeks, but Roberto Orci has landed the job of directing Star Trek 3/Star Trek 13. It sees Orci moving across from his previous writing and directing work to the director's chair for the first time. And it just happens to be on a nine figure blockbuster movie.

Orci's writing credits to date have included both films since Star Trek was rebooted, Cowboys & Aliens, Transformers and Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen, The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and The Island. On the smaller screen, he's been one of the creators of Fringe and Sleepy Hollow. It's been widely reported that he'd been lobbying for the chance to direct the new Star Trek movie, and Variety now reports that Paramount and Skydance have given him the nod.

Orci is also writing the next Star Trek adventure, along with J D Payne and Patrick McKay, and it's expected to be in cinemas in 2016. JJ Abrams will be producing.

Variety.

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So long as he doesn't WRITE it.

The first 2/3rd of the last Star Trek movie was awesome. When it turned into a series of fan-service call-outs to Wrath of Khan at the end it turned from awesome to ridiculously stupid.

Well, so evaporates whatever interest I had left in this project. Ring me up when Trek comes back to television.

Star Wars Storyboards: The Original Trilogy (Abrams) Review

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ReviewChris Cummins5/14/2014 at 9:00AM

A new book provides a stunning look behind the scenes of a galaxy far, far away

If there's an unsung hero in the Star Wars universe, it is Joe Johnston. Although he is best known these days as the director of Captain America: The First Avenger, Jurassic Park III and the underrated gem The Rocketeer, Johnston originally made a name for himself while creating designs and effects for Star Wars. Like his co-workers on that picture, Johnston could not have possibly envisioned how George Lucas' unassuming space saga would forever shape his destiny.

But it did. And for that, filmgoers everywhere should be thankful.

The ways in which Johnston's tireless efforts helped shape the look of the original Star Wars trilogy are immeasurable -- he created the initial design of Boba Fett, for example -- yet his work is still overshadowed by that of late, great conceptual artist Ralph McQuarrie. That should all change with the release of Star Wars Storyboards: The Original Trilogy. The latest Star Wars-themed coffee table book, this weighty tome consists almost entirely of heavily annotated storyboards of key sequences from Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi.

More than anything, it is a showcase of exactly how much Johnston and other forgotten contributors to the mythos like artists Alex Tavoularis, Nilo Rodis-Jamero, Ivor Beddoes and Gary Myers (of which almost nothing is known about) visualized the ever-changing scripts of Lucas and company. Often, looking at their storyboards is akin to glancing upon at black-and-white stills from the completed films. Their mastery of previsualization is a huge reason why we still gasp at these films so many years later.

In his insightful and self-effacing introduction, Johnston declares "I didn't know what a storyboard was when I started working for George Lucas." It's clear that he was a quick learner then, as his material dominates the book's 348 pages. At one point, effects maven Steve Gawley comments on how Johnston once created over 40 storyboards in a single day. Johnston's prolificity speaks to how much he understood the story Lucas was trying to tell, and the characters and environments that populated it. His sketches here serve their purpose as a guide to the filmmakers while also remarkably standing on their own as works of art.

Early in the book there is one of Johnston's storyboards depicting Han, Chewie, Luke and Ben in the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon as they approact the Death Star. It is an illustration designed to be industrial yet it is so alive. You can see the wonder in Luke's eyes, the apprehension on Ben's face and the greed exploding from Han. In one seemingly throwaway panel Johnston has captured the essence of each character. It is a wondrous example of how Johnston is a master of his craft and validates his comment in the intro that these movies were his film school.

Bringing the same efficiency to this book as he did to his essential making of volumes, editor J.W. Rinzler focuses primarily on the most memorable scenes from the trilogy. The downside of this is that you don't get to see Han shooting Greedo first in storyboards from the Cantina sequence, but whatchagonnado? Instead, you'll be treated to storyboards of completed scenes glimpsed on screen like the original Death Star assault, the Hoth battle and the speeder bike chase sharing pages with material that was storyboarded but cut out of the script before camera rolled.

Thus, readers are treated to a glimpse at an alternate version of Star Wars where Darth Vader was a much more ruthless character who utilizes Force screaming and callously rips an arm off of an especially unfortunate rebel. (The latter proving that George Lucas had a fetish for limb removal even in excised scenes). It is worth noting that this book includes never-before-seen material like McQuarrie's visualizations for The Empire Strikes Back that make you wonder what other great stuff is languishing in the Lucasfilm vaults.

Elsewhere, abandoned scenes are unearthed that feature Alderaan looking like an obvious Bespin prototype, Obi Wan surviving his encounter with Vader on the Death Star, Yoda acting like a dick by throwing stun globes at Luke, Jabba forcing Leia to drink and an Ewok straight up killing a stormtrooper with a blaster. It's compelling stuff that will appeal to anyone who ever obsessed over the legendary/infamous early cut of Star Wars and excised scenes featured in the original trilogy's novelizations. There's a certain excitement that comes from suddenly being presented with a new perspective on the familiar, and Star Wars Storyboards: The Original Trilogy is packed with such visceral thrills. 

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Must. Get. Now. If Johnston doesn't end up directing one of Disney's postquels, I'm gonna be super-pissed.


New X-Men: Days Of Future Past Storm Promo

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TrailerDavid Crow5/14/2014 at 10:52AM

Watch the newest promo video of X-Men: Days of Future Past focused on the storm within Halle Berry.

A storm is coming, and even mutant-hunting Sentinel robots should quake in fear.

In the newest promotional video for X-Men: Days of Future Past, audiences are allowed to gleam some of the special effects shots focused on Halle Berry’s Storm while Patrick Stewart’s Charles Xavier waxes poetic about the war between mutant and robot in the upcoming superhero epic.

X-Men: Days of Future Past opens on May 23, 2014. Directed by Bryan Singer, the man who launched the cinematic X-franchise, it will not only reunite the all-important X-Men trinity of Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and Ian McKellen, but it will also team them up with their younger X-Men: First Class counterparts like Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, and James McAvoy. And that's just the start! Plenty of old X-Men favorites, including Shawn Ashmore's Iceman and Ellen Page’s Kitty Pryde are back for this one, too. Whatever X-Men: Days of Future Past may turn out to be, it won't be dull!

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Watch New Trailer For Deliver Us From Evil

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TrailerDavid Crow5/14/2014 at 11:26AM

Watch the first full trailer for the New York cops and demons horror film, Deliver Us from Evil, starring Eric Bana.

Hitting the streets of New York as a cop can be hellacious work. But things appear to be outright demonic for Eric Bana in this summer’s upcoming horror movie, Deliver Us from Evil.

As directed by Sinister’s Scott Derrickson, the picture adapts the “true story” book by Ralph Sarchie and Lisa Collier Cool, Beware the Night.

The story of a cop named Ralph Sarchie (Eric Bana) who runs into a renegade Jesuit Priest named Mendoza (Édgar Ramirez) after a series of strange occurrences causes disbelieving Sarchie that his detective cases or related to demonic activity. The film also stars Olivia Munn and Joel McHale.

Deliver Us from Evil opens July 2, 2014.

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Searching For Sugar Man Review

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ReviewArlen Schumer5/14/2014 at 1:30PM

Late filmmaker Malik Bendjelloul's Searching for Sugar Man was a fan's masterpiece. "The Old New Dylan Lives," indeed.

***With the recent, tragic news of the passing of director Malik Bendjelloul off this mortal coil at only the age of 36, we thought it best to revisit his Academy Award winning documentary from 2012 that is the most enduring of love letters to artists and the fans who worship them.

Searching for Sugar Man is the perfect documentary film for Den of Geeksters to see, because it encapsulates and encompasses everything that makes us geek: it’s about the artist’s life and the fans’ lives, how they intersect (and don’t), and the price we all pay for leading them as devotedly as we do; it’s about the dreams of the artists we follow, and our own dreams of meeting those artists; and finally, it’s about the faith of both artist and fans being rewarded in ways we can never foresee or expect. The fact that’s it’s also a beautifully shot and directed documentary, with flourishes of artistic ingenuity and musical insight, is a bonus.

Sugar Man is the story of Sixto Rodriguez, a singer/songwriter/rock & roller from the streets of Detroit—literally (reports differ as to whether he was actually homeless)—who recorded two albums in the early ‘70s that bombed in America, but found a second life in, of all places, South Africa years later, becoming the soundtrack of its struggle against apartheid, and in the process creating a legend out of the mysterious Rodriguez, of whom nothing was known of his personal life—stories of his suicide by gunshot or self-immolation on stage were the most circulated—save the album cover photos and printed lyrics, runes pored over like the Dead Sea Scrolls for clues to their origins.

That’s where the white South Afrikaner fans come into the picture. Through dogged diligence and a persistence that should be the envy of all fans who’ve ever tried to personally contact their heroes, a record store owner in Capetown and a self-styled “musicologist detective” go on their transcontinental search for “Sugar Man” (named for one of Rodriguez’s signature songs), with the predictable closed doors and dead ends you’d expect to follow their quixotic quest.

But then, in the mid-Nineties, through the miracle of the internet (that had really just begun its ascendancy in world communication and culture), Rodriguez’s grown daughter caught wind of the search and posted about her father on the “Where’s Rodriguez?” website the South Africans had started, setting in motion the dreams of all involved to become tear-jerking reality: Rodriguez emerging from his self-imposed exile, travelling to South Africa and meeting his gob-smacked, stunned fans, and performing the sold-out arena shows in their country that had eluded him for almost thirty years in his own.

Of course, it’s ironic with a capital I that Rodriguez, an Hispanic-American writing from the streets in early ‘70s America, could never be heard on early ‘70s American radio. America wouldn’t allow a black man to be the king of rock & roll back then—as Dave Marsh said in his first Springsteen autobiography, Born to Run, “America couldn’t see that Hendrix was The One”—and certainly a Jose Feliciano-like “new Dylan” (with James Taylor tinges) would never have had a shot either (probably still doesn’t today, even in the age of crossover Hispanic stars Marc Anthony, Ricky Martin, Shakira and J-Lo, none of whom would classify as male rock & rollers).

Yet even more ironic, the streets Rodriguez wrote about in socially-conscious songs like “Inner City Blues” and “Street Boy” (that appear on the film’s soundtrack album along with selections from Rodriguez’s two albums), depressed downtown Detroit, ended up underscoring the streets of Soweto instead, spawning rock & roll reverence of Rodriguez that birthed bands and brought down apartheid—much like the effect the banned Beatles had for decades on Russians living under Soviet censorship, giving succor to the underground pro-democracy movement that eventually melted the iron curtain (there’s a great documentary on that too, How The Beatles Rocked The Kremlin: http://www.thirteen.org/beatles/about/); Rodriguez’s records are shown to have the vinyl grooves of one of his most political songs scratched over by the South African censors.

Rodriguez’s folk-rock sound, abetted by orchestral and string arrangements, forecasts the sounds of Bruce Springsteen’s first two albums (both released in ’73, the same year as Rodriguez’s second), which, like his counterpart’s, were also unheard commercial failures that threatened to send Bruce into the same working class-oblivion of New Jersey that Rodriguez retreated to in downtown Detroit (working construction/demolition jobs).

Springsteen himself (along with Johns Prine and Hyatt) was pegged to be a “new Dylan” in the early ‘70s because, after Dylan emerged from his motorcycle accident in ‘69 and went country with albums John Wesley Harding and New Morning, the rock critic intelligentsia craved a replacement of the “old Dylan” (not even 30 years old at the time)—a new, more rock & roll Dylan they remembered from Dylan’s ’65-’66 rock heyday. Except the early ‘70s was now the era of the confessional, acoustic singer/songwriter, and neither Bruce’s E Street Band brand of rock nor Rodriguez’s Hispanic features fit into that demographic. But Springsteen, unlike his other journeyman band members who took day jobs, never lost faith in himself and his music.

Neither did Rodriguez. Contrary to the Mark Twain paraphrase that reports of his death were greatly exaggerated (from shooting himself in front of an audience to self- immolation on stage), Rodriguez lived on, and lived the ideals of the 1960s he emerged from, becoming involved in community affairs and running for local office, all while raising three daughters, all shown in the film as having become confident adult women, wise beyond their years. And just like their father, still in touch with their roots.

For Rodriguez, that means literally. Though resurrected and recording music like everyone wishes had happened to Elvis, Rodriguez is shown still living in the same downtown Detroit ramshackle apartment he lived in 40 years earlier (having given away all the money he’s earned in concerts and recordings since his rediscovery to family and friends), in between construction jobs still playing the guitar in his darkened room, much like the record producers who first discovered him, in the darkened juke joints on the outskirts of Detroit.

 

Warcraft Movie Will Screen Footage At Comic-Con This Year

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NewsDavid Crow5/14/2014 at 1:58PM

Thomas Tull confirms that the Warcraft movie will be about two tribes and that Warcraft will be present at Comic-Con.

It is good to know that even now partnering with Universal, Thomas Tull’s Legendary Pictures hasn’t skipped a beat in cultivating fan interest. While our own interview with the producer and his approach to this weekend’s Godzillawill be up later in the week, IGN was able to chat with him this month about something of even more forward-looking anticipation: the Warcraft movie.

With Source Code’s Duncan Jones set to direct and a cast that includes Paula Patton and Ben Foster in place, that 2016 release date feels surprisingly close, and Tull was only to happy to share a few details.

Firstly, IGN reports that Tull confirmed San Diego Comic-Con revelers this year will have the chance to enjoy footage from the impending adaptation of the MMORPG that has sold 100 million subscriptions the world over since its inception.

“We show up every summer at Comic-Con,” Tull said. “We really enjoy it, and the fans seem to enjoy taking a look at things, so I wouldn’t be surprised.”

Tull also further teased that the film will be about two tribes.

“We’re very aware of the fact that in the mythology of Warcraft, there are two tribes – two big things to follow. We think you’re going to get a chance to look at both.”

Chances are that when Tull says “tribes” that he is referring to the two factions who define the cultural touchstone that is World of Warcraft. As even any novice mage will tell you, signing onto the online game gives players the immediate choice of joining two opposing factions: the Alliance and the Horde. It sounds like both will be explored in this video game film conversion.

Warcraft opens March 11, 2016.

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New Maleficent Clip Tucks In Sleeping Beauty

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TrailerDavid Crow5/14/2014 at 3:24PM

Check out the newest clip of Angelina Jolie in Maleficent, witnessing Elle Fanning's Sleeping Beauty meeting a needle.

In the newest clip from Disney’s majorly anticipated Maleficent, starring Angelina Jolie, the sorceress’ greatest triumph is recreated in live action: the needle that said goodnight to Sleeping Beauty.

The iconic scene from the 1959 Walt Disney Animation Studios classic is recreated with one curious new wrinkle…Jolie’s Maleficent appears to be riding toward the cataclysmic event with the goal to stop it. Well, that is certainly different.

Maleficent refocuses the narrative of the 1959 Walt Disney Animation Studios classic,Sleeping Beauty, as the journey of their greatest villain, who is in fact an even greater anti-hero. Once her homeland is ravaged by an invading kingdom, Maleficent (Jolie) grows up with revenge in her heart, and she will have it when she damns the king’s infant daughter to an eternal slumber when she reaches adulthood. Yet, as little Aurora (Elle Fanning) grows, Maleficent sees something of herself in the child, but vengeance must be tasted.

And if you like the looks of this film (or not), here is our list of 6 more Disney Villains who could use their own movie.

Maleficent opens May 30, 2014.

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Win a Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie Prize Pack

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NewsDen Of Geek5/14/2014 at 4:46PM

All you have to do to win a Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie is do exactly what we tell you! It's easy!

Snootchie Bootchies, geeks! Den of Geek have a sweet Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movieprize pack for you. Want to win? Of course you do...

Take a break, brace yourselves, and watch the pretty NSFW trailer for Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie, then we'll tell you what you can win and how you can win it.

Here's what you win:

1 Jay & Silent Bob Laptop Cover

1 Jay & Silent Bob T-Shirt

1 copy of American Milkshakeon DVD

We're picking FIVE lucky winners for these. First, you must like our Facebook page, and/or follow us on Twitter or Google+. Preferrably, you will do all three, but we're not keeping score, but you must do ONE. THEN...

Tell us, right here in the comments section on this page, your favorite Jay (or Silent Bob...but there are fewer from him) quote. It can be as NSFW as you please. We won't judge. We're going to give you plenty of time to get your butts in gear for this one. The contest ends at 11:59 pm EST on June 1st. We'll announce one winner a day from Monday June 2nd to Friday June 6th, via our social media accounts...so you'll have to keep an eye on 'em to find out if you've won! 


Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith are back in the hilarious, all-new animated feature Jay and Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie. After winning the lottery jackpot, the dynamic duo use the cash to take on evil as crime-fighting superheroes. Rent it tonight with ITunes. Rated R.

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Disqus - noscript

Holden: If the buzz is any indicator, that movie's gonna make some huge bank.
Jay: What buzz?
Holden: The Internet buzz.
Jay: What the fuck is the Internet?
Holden: The Internet is a communication tool used the world over where people can come together to bitch about movies and share pornography with one another.

Silent Bob: "You know, there's a million fine looking women in the world, dude. But they don't all bring you lasagna at work. Most of 'em just cheat on you."

Hey baby, you ever have your asshole licked by a fat man in a overcoat?

Jay: Get offa me. I wanna see what's up. What the f**k is this shit? Who the f**k are you, lady? Why the f**k did you hug my head?
Metatron: Quite a little mouth on him, isn't there?
Jay: What the f**k is this, The Piano? Why ain't this broad talking?
Metatron: I believe the answers that you seek lie within my companion's eyes.
Jay: What the f**k does that mean? Has everyone gone f**kin' nuts? What the f**k happened to that guy's head? I want some...
[God kisses him on the cheek. Jay faints]

The Immigrant review

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ReviewDon Kaye5/14/2014 at 6:14PM
The Immigrant review

James Gray’s beautifully filmed period piece The Immigrant wastes three great actors on poorly developed characters.

Director James Gray only brings out a film every few years or so, but his steadfastly independent and uncategorizable movies have always been of a generally high quality even if they didn’t work in one area or another. The same can be said about his new film, The Immigrant: the movie is beautifully shot and the attention to period detail truly envelopes the viewer in the world of early 20th century New York City. It’s a shame then that his overly florid, melodramatic script and inconsistently developed characters sink what could have been a compelling tale of one woman’s attempt to find first freedom and then salvation in a country unknown to her.

The Immigrant is very different in many ways from earlier Gray films like We Own the Night and Two Lovers: it is a period piece as mentioned above, and it’s the first movie from the director to center around a female protagonist. That woman is Ewa (Marion Cotillard), a Polish Catholic immigrant who we find on Ellis Island with her sister Magda (Angela Sarafyan) as the two wait to be allowed into the United States. But Magda has tuberculosis and is whisked off to the island’s hospital for at least six months, while reports of Ewa’s questionable moral behavior on the ship over to the States make her a candidate for deportation right away – until a guardian angel of sorts named Bruno Weiss (Joaquin Phoenix) steps in to grease some palms and escort Ewa to New York City.

Right off the bat our feelings about Ewa are confused: is she a woman of “low morals” or a saintly and innocent beauty who just wants to be reunited with her sister and is seemingly afraid of everything around her? The answer sort of becomes clear when Bruno, who runs a downtown cabaret theater that is basically a front for a brothel – quickly drafts Ewa into service as one of his prostitutes. Ewa goes along,  hoping that she’ll earn enough money to help get her sister out of quarantine once she’s recovered. But complicating matters is Orlando (Jeremy Renner), a stage magician whose fondness for and kindness toward Ewa soon tempts her toward breaking away from the unstable Bruno and making a new life for herself.

The Immigrant review

Did I mention that Orlando is also Bruno’s cousin? One of the strange quirks of The Immigrant is how small it seems despite the expansive setting Gray is working with. Gray’s previous films are all more or less intimate character pieces, but here the coziness of the situation seems off. So does Renner’s work, for that matter: his is the most aggressively modern of the three major performances and there is so little real spark between him and Cotillard that you never feel the urgency of either his professed desire for her or her yearning to run away with him.

That leads to the problem I mentioned earlier: all of these characters come off as vaguely suffering from multiple personality disorder. Cotillard, while at first emotionally vulnerable as always, later turns either oddly passive or coldly calculating, depending on the scene, while Phoenix -- a tremendous actor who gives one of his least effective performances here – is all over the map, veering from borderline psychopath to charming salesman to broken-hearted man-boy for no discernible reason. Neither character evolves as much as they simply act out what is required for the scene, with only the movie’s ending – a confrontation between the two in which they both come to a kind of self-realization – providing some glimpse of the more coherent arcs that might have been available.

The Immigrant review

For the 100 minutes or so before that, however, The Immigrant slowly turns into a slog. Ewa ping-pongs for most of the second act between Bruno (somewhat inexplicably, since he just becomes crueler and crueler) and the substance-free Orlando, with Gray piling on a lot of little incidents – an arrest, a fight in the cabaret, a murder, a chase by the cops through the tunnels underneath Central Park – that just pass by without adding much to the main narrative. Yes, it’s lovely to look at (courtesy of DP deluxe Darius Khondji) and Cotillard’s natural beauty is highlighted by the dusky light in which Gray surrounds her, but the situations and the characters don’t resonate like they should.

Perhaps that’s the problem in a nutshell: while Gray has said that The Immigrant, like all his films, is deeply personal (many of the story’s admittedly rich trove of details came from his grandfather, who came through Ellis Island in 1923), he doesn’t seem to connect all that well to his characters – unlike the more contemporary people we’ve met in his other films. Their motivations and inner lives are maddeningly unclear, which makes for an extreme break with their overstuffed, operatic surroundings and story points.  With The Immigrant, Gray attempts to make a half-hearted epic but falls back on some of the devices of his earlier, grittier movies, and both impulses end up fighting each other.

The Immigrant opens on Friday, May 16.

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4

Disqus - noscript

Don Kayne, I think this movie went way over your head. You just don't get it.


New Magneto X-Men: Days of Future Past Clip

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TrailerDavid Crow5/14/2014 at 6:19PM

Magneto raises a baseball stadium in the newest clip from X-Men: Days of Future Past.

It can be difficult to rise high in a cast as big as the one in Bryan Singer’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, but Michael Fassbender does exactly that in the newest clip from the movie. As Magneto, Fassbender proves he can really hit it out of the park in the below clip when his character visits a baseball stadium.

X-Men: Days of Future Past opens on May 23, 2014. Directed by Bryan Singer, the man who launched the cinematic X-franchise, it will not only reunite the all-important X-Men trinity of Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and Ian McKellen, but it will also team them up with their younger X-Men: First Class counterparts like Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, and James McAvoy. And that's just the start! Plenty of old X-Men favorites, including Shawn Ashmore's Iceman and Ellen Page’s Kitty Pryde are back for this one, too. Whatever X-Men: Days of Future Past may turn out to be, it won't be dull!

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New trailer for Transformers: Age Of Extinction

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TrailerSimon Brew5/15/2014 at 8:06AM

The full trailer for Michael Bay's new Transformers movie has landed. See it here...

Pretty much guaranteed to be one of the biggest blockbusters of the summer is Michael Bay's fourth Transformers movie, Transformers: Age Of Extinction. Given that the last film - in the face of poor reviews - grossed over $1bn worldwide, it would be fair to declare this an unstoppable juggernaut.

There have been promising signs from Age Of Extinction though, which seems as close to a change of direction as the franchise can take without a fresh face behind the camera. Shia is gone, of course, with Mark Wahlberg taking on the lead role this time. And we're promised that this film will set up where the franchise is heading next.

That's for the future, though. For now, here's the new trailer for Transformers: Age Of Extinction...

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Jesse Eisenberg on Lex Luthor in Batman Vs Superman

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NewsSimon Brew5/15/2014 at 8:39AM

Ahead of the start of production, Jesse Eisenberg has been chatting a little about playing Lex Luthor in Batman Vs Superman...

For the next few months, Jesse Eisenberg is going to be hard at work filming Zack Snyder's Batman Vs Superman movie, where he's taking on the role of Lex Luthor. He's set to reprise the role of Luthor after that as well, although he's not been chatting about it that much so far.

However, he's now given an interview to IGN, where he was asked what his take on Lex Luthor was going to be. "I don't know the history as well as the people making the movie, so I guess it's up to them to figure out how much they want to separate it from previous incarnations", he told the site, "but I will treat it like it's its own role".

He added that "there's no way to play the history of the character played by other people, unless you do some kind of wink, but that doesn't seem like a responsible way to act. So I will just do it as though it's a character, in the same way you do a movie like The Double".

Whilst noting that there were some things he still couldn't reveal - such as whether he was shedding his hair for the role - Eisenberg did add that "the character's written really well. It's a really great role. The fact that it's in a big movie, you know, it seems like a character that would be in any kind of movie. It just happens to be in a bigger, flashier kind of thing".

You can read the full piece at IGN here.

Batman Vs Superman is due in cinemas on May 6th 2016.

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HR Giger and the making of Alien

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NewsRyan Lambie5/15/2014 at 8:52AM

We pay tribute to the work of the late artist HR Giger, and follow the making of his masterpiece of design, the Alien...

It’s the summer of 1978, and the UK’s Shepperton Studios simmers in the heat. Secreted away in his own personal workshop, a Swiss artist works feverishly on his paintings and sculptures, either fashioning strange shapes from gigantic blocks of styrofoam or spraying them with his airbrush.

This is 38-year-old HR Giger, and he cuts an unusual figure. His shock of black hair is slicked back away from his pale forehead. He refuses to take his leather jacket off despite the searing heat. On a bench sits row after row of human and animal bones - skulls, femurs, vertebrae - plus a weird assortment of ribbed hoses, wires and mechanical parts taken from old Rolls Royce motorcars. Quietly, obsessively, Giger is building his Alien.

The story of Alien had really begun three years earlier, on the production of Chilean director Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Dune. A legendarily ambitious project which roped in artists from all over Europe - among them Chris Foss, Jean Giraud, and HR Giger - it was perhaps doomed to fail from the start. The legendary surrealist Salvador Dali had agreed to appear in the movie for an exorbitant fee. Jodorowsky had never read Frank Herbert’s source novel. The script was the thickness of a telephone directory.

It was here that Dan O’Bannon, who’d made Darkstar with John Carpenter in 1974, first encountered Giger's work. The artist’s airbrushed paintings were like photographs beamed back from another world. In actual fact, they were reproductions of the mysterious things roiling around in Giger’s subconscious.

“About fifteen years ago," Giger explained in 1978, I had a diary, “a dream book. I had been having the same dreams again and again, and they were nightmares. They were horrifying. But I found that when I made drawings about them, the dreams went away. I felt much better. It was sort of self-psychiatry.” 

Within the space of a few months, Jodorowsky’s Dune project fell apart, leaving its artists and filmmakers to float back to their respective countries. O’Bannon, depressed and broke, wound up on the couch of Ronald Shusett, a young producer then in the throes of adapting Philip K Dick’s short story, We Can Remember It For You Wholesale - a project which would one day become Total Recall.

As O’Bannon recovered from the disappointment of Dune, old story ideas began to resurface in his mind. He began working again on a script called Memory, and began collaborating with Ronald Shusett on its ideas. The story gradually evolved into a script first called Starbeast, and then called Alien. Like his earlier Darkstar, Alien would feature an encounter with a xenomorph on a space ship, but this time, he wanted it to be far, far scarier. Subconsciously, O’Bannon may have still been influenced by Giger’s imagery - something he later admitted on the set of Alien in 1978.

“I hadn’t been able to get Hans Ruedi Giger off my mind since I left France,” O’Bannon said. “His paintings had a profound effect on me. I had never seen anything so horrible and yet quite so beautiful in my life. And so I ended up writing a script about a Giger monster.”

Necronom IV

Giger’s impact on the direction of Alien cannot be underestimated. Whether O’Bannon would have come up with the concept for the film without having seen Giger’s work years earlier is debatable, but at the very least, it was Giger’s paintings that ultimately gave the creature lurking in O’Bannon’s head a physical form.

Through a series of fortunate events, the Alien script wound up in the hands of producers at Brandywine - a company owned by David Giler and Walter Hill, who would later extensively rewrite the script - mere weeks before it was due to become a low-budget film at Roger Corman’s New World Pictures. This sent what was originally envisioned as a low-budget B-movie into A-picture territory, which led to a new problem: its title monster had to look convincing. Several other artists had a crack at designing the screenplay’s xenomorph. None were particularly successful.

As documented in Paul Scanlon and Michael Gross'The Book Of Alien, the creature was variously imagined as a giant octopus, a small, goblin-like creature (one was sketched by concept artist Ron Cobb), and what was once described as a 'Christmas turkey', all pink skin and ungainly limbs.

By this time, however, a collection of HR Giger’s paintings had been published under the title Necronomicon. It was this book that O’Bannon handed over to director Ridley Scott, recently appointed by Brandywine following the indie success of his low-budget debut, The Duellists. The book was opened on a specific painting called Necronom IV. It depicted in profile a grotesque creature, insectoid yet also mechanical. Its elongated head described the shape of a phallus. In fact, its entire body appeared to be made either of reproductive organs, or of teeth capable of snapping off the genitals of its prey.

Scott, an artist of considerable skill himself, knew he had an image of supreme power in his hands. “Well," Scott said to O’Bannon; “either my problems are over or they’ve just begun...”

The call of Cthulhu

Hans Ruedi Giger was born in Chur, Switzerland in 1940. He was a shy, awkward youth, and often seemed lost in his own private world. He was obsessed with the darkness of the cellar in his parents' house, and while other children were playing sports, the young Giger was often in his back garden, constructing ghost trains.

A talented draftsman, Giger initially trained to be an architect and industrial designer, before he began to draw and paint the after-images from his dreams, first with inks and oils, and later with an airbrush. The art became the by product of his therapy, gradually emerging in front of him as he sprayed the imagery into life.

“When I begin with the airbrush it’s like a cloud, you know, a cloud that retains more and more substance,” Giger once said. “It grows and suddenly I can see the eye or the nose or something, and then it transforms into a head, and in the end there is a creature.”

It was in this way that Giger painted Necronom IV in 1976 - the image which, very soon, would become one of the most pivotal in the history of science fiction cinema.

Giger was profoundly influenced by the work of the surrealist movement, which swept Europe in the 20s and 30s - the fingerprints of such artists as Salvador Dali and Max Ernst can be seen in his paintings, as well as later artists such as Ernst Fuchs and Francis Bacon. But Giger’s influences also ranged further, from the eerie work of symbolist painter and fellow countryman Arnold Böcklin (Giger even painted a homage to Böcklin's most famous work, The Isle Of The Dead, in 1977) to the seductive curves of art nouveau.

"Sometimes people come and see my paintings," said Giger, "and they only see horrible, terrible things. I tell them to look again, and they may see that I always have two elements in my paintings - the horrible things and the nice things. I mean, I like elegance, I like art nouveau; a stretched line or a curve. These things are very much in the foreground of my work."

The artist also prized the writing of Howard Philips Lovecraft, a master of weird tales who created the Cthulhu Mythos - an uncaring universe where humankind was created by uncaring beings who were both gods and monsters. There’s the same cosmic chill in Giger’s work, and the artist seemed to give tangible form to the slippery, seemingly indescribable creatures which slithered through Lovecraft’s stories. The title of Giger’s book - Necronomicon - was taken from a mythical book in Lovecraft’s weird tales.

The throes of production

Whether they openly spoke about it or not, O’Bannon and Giger appeared to share a common influence in Lovecraft. The Alien script, even in its early drafts, bore faint traces of Lovecraft’s novella At The Mountains Of Madness. A member of the Alien production crew even commented that, with his intense eyes and reclusive, eccentric demeanour, Giger vaguely resembled a character from a HP Lovecraft tale ("I don't think he dares take off those clothes," an anonymous crewmember confided, "because if he did you'd see that underneath he's not human").

In both the art world - who looked on paintings created with an airbrush with sniffy suspicion - and on the set of Alien, Giger remained something of an outsider.

In his corner of Shepperton Studios, Giger single-mindedly worked his black magic. Using his assorted bones, bits of old machinery, Giger painstakingly designed and built what would become the Alien costume: like a vampire, its silhouette was seductive and deadly. He also designed and built the eggs from which the alien, in its fledgling facehugger form, would soon spring, as well as the surface of the planet LV-426, with its horseshoe-shaped ship - dubbed 'the derelict' - its dank, ribbed interior, and its pilot (the 'space jockey'), apparently growing out of its own seat of command.

Giger would sometimes grow frustrated at the restraints of both time and budget. He wanted to build separate set-pieces for the corridor which led into the space jockey’s chamber, and even painted detailed plans for what it should look like. To save money, Ridley Scott took a piece of flooring from a different set, had it turned to a different angle, and used that instead.

"This solution upsets me greatly, like all changes to my designs that have to be made for lack of money," the artist wrote in his book, Giger's Alien."Not so much as a matter of prestige, but because I think it will look cheap."

Production on Alien may have been fraught, but Giger and Scott appeared to have a similar outlook: both were exacting in their craft, and both had a single, clear vision of what they wanted to do.

"I have seen how important it is to have a director who is so versatile that he can step in as top man in any field," Giger wrote. "Only then can you hope for quality."

As early as December 1978, it was clear that 20th Century Fox had something more than just another B-movie on its hands. An assembly cut of Alien, shown with certain scenes missing and most of the sound effects still incomplete, was presented to a test audience, and their response was, to use an appropriately Giger-esque word, visceral. They jumped, they screamed, they spilled beer on themselves.

Even Giger, exhausted and frustrated though he was by the production of Alien, knew that he was in the midst of something special. In a diary entry dated the 6th September 1978, he wrote the following:

"My idealism has slowly ebbed away, and I've begun to count the days before the final take [...] But one thing I know for certain: Alien will be an extraordinary film, possibly a classic among horror science fiction films."

The Alien unleashed

Released on the 25th May 1979 - Fox boss Alan Ladd Jr’s ‘lucky day’ - Alien quickly became the benchmark for sci-fi horror movies, just as HR Giger had predicted. It owed debt to many genre films which came before it, among them It! The Terror From Beyond Space and Mario Bava’s Planet Of The Vampires. But thanks to a confluence of intersecting talents, expertly brought together under the sure hand of Ridley Scott, Alien transcended all expectations of what a genre could be. It was visually daring, psychologically incisive, and as scary as hell.

Most of all, Alien owed a debt of gratitude to HR Giger, who moulded the Alien from his own nightmares, like Frankenstein creating his monster. In his diaries, Giger documented a difficult and tiring process in the making of Alien, from repeated late nights working on the final details of a set before shooting the next day, to arguments over his contract - the artist's employment was even terminated at one point, before he was reinstated a few days later.

Giger deservedly won an Oscar for Best Visual Effects in 1980 - a just reward for his hard work and singular vision. The Alien franchise continued, spawning three sequels, two Alien Vs Predator spin-offs, and the 2012 prequel Prometheus. Giger's involvement in them varied from the minimal to the non-existent.

After Alien, Giger never immersed himself in movie design to quite the same extent again, but he was involved in the production of such films as Poltergeist II, Species and Batman Forever (his unique design for the Batmobile was sadly never used).

Beyond movies, Giger's art continued to infiltrate our collective unconscious, and today, there's scarcely an artist or designer working who isn't influenced or at least aware of his extraordinary paintings and sculptures. Traces of his visual style can be seen in videogames, comic books and movies can still be readily seen - the look of planet Krypton in 2013's Man Of Steel many of the hallmarks of Giger's biomechanical aesthetic.

Giger's death on the 12th May 2014 robbed the world of one of its most unique artists, but his body of work continues to exert its hypnotic sway. Even 35 years later, Giger's Alien still lurks in the shadows of our imagination, waiting to pounce.

See also:The Train - the Ridley Scott-HR Giger movie that never was

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Disqus - noscript

Fusing the erotic, gothic and surreal, Giger was an art movement unto himself. He inspired me from an early age with his fantastic dreamscapes and esoteric imagery. I was compelled to illustrate a tribute to him this week drawing imagery from his own works including Alien and the Birthing Machine at http://dregstudiosart.blogspot... . Drop by and share how his artwork opened your own mind!

Interview: Gareth Edwards on Godzilla

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InterviewDavid Crow5/15/2014 at 9:39AM

We sit down with the director of Godzilla to discuss what the big guy is supposed to mean in the 21st century.

Gareth Edwards’ career in blockbuster filmmaking grew as swiftly as the big guy himself when rising out of the sea after Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures tapped the one-time director to helm a modern 21st century reboot of Godzilla. Then again, it makes perfect sense if you have seen his first film, the dramatic and surprising indie kaiju-meets-natural-disaster flick Monsters (2010).

Thus when we sat down with him shortly after watching his very human take on a Godzilla that is as much tsunami and earthquake-causing bear as he is a giant fire-breathing reptile, it was with an eye to unpack what that creature really means to him. We also discuss how you find the human emotion under 40-stories of kaiju greatness.

I know that you and this film’s marketing team have described Godzilla as a force of nature. Could you describe what aspects of nature influenced both his devastation, as well as his look, appearance and movement?

Gareth Edwards: In terms of his movement, we initially got hold of hundreds of different clips of animals fighting and animal behavior, because I felt the obvious thing to do was to use nature as a reference. We’re going to do this realistically, let’s look at animals, let’s just copy that. “That’s all we have to do!” So we got bears fighting and wolves hunting, and everything, and animated him based on that. We then sat down and watched it, and went, “Hmm, there’s a problem here.” Which is if you watch animal or natural history documentary or wildlife documentary, and you don’t have any narration, you don’t know what the hell is going on. Like animals are very bad storytellers. [Laughs] You can’t tell if that thing’s scared or if it’s gesturing to try and find a better position, or is it trying to leave.

So, we ended up dialing in a lot more human performance to him, and he slowly went incrementally to being animalistic to like a guy in a suit doing a performance, because you need to understand in his body language if he is tired or angry. There was just a more human performance [because] we needed in that.

Along those same lines, you have a background in visual effects. You did Monsters. Now you jump to the ultimate monster movie. What was that like for you?

It was weird. To some extent, when you direct a film, you only really talk to a handful of people. It’s been established over decades. Initially, you’re like “why don’t I ever talk to that guy putting that up? I see him everyday and I never say hello.” And then you realize very quickly that there’s just not time. The way the machine works is you have these heads of departments that you relate to, and then they have the teams who can go and do everything. So, in some ways, you can convince yourself that you’re only making a film with 10 people, because you talk to the production designer, the director of photography, your assistant director, and then the actors.

I can sometimes get to the end of the day and spoken to five people. So, you sort of strain to convince yourself that you’re making a film with five people and there’s 300 spectators holding lights and cables, and just watching. And you can start believing that for quite a while. It’s only when you start doing things like this and walking around New York, and there’s a giant billboard. You’re like “oh shit! It was a big movie after all.”

If Godzilla represents the U.S. and its nuclear policy in the 1954 film, what does Godzilla and his fellow monsters represent in this movie?

He really represents nature in the world. And the MUTOs represent our abuse of nature. So Godzilla is here because of our sins and our misuse of the power of nature, and specifically the power of using nuclear weapons. Hopefully, you can watch this film and enjoy it as entertainment, but I personally like science fiction and fantasy when it has a little meaning behind it. So, there was the idea of man versus nature, which was this dominant theme throughout the movie.

Even when they discover the fossils at the beginning, as opposed to it being like “oh, we found some fossils,” it was “no, we have to find it because we’re doing something wrong to the planet.” So, in the middle of this beautiful rainforest, we carved out this quarry to try and benefit from. I also wanted it to be western companies whose logos were on things, so that it felt like “us” as the West abusing our position. I think horror is best served when there’s guilt. Like in a lot of horror movies, you try to make the characters guilty of something, so they kind of deserve it. It’s then a lot more awkward to watch. It’s not black and white. I always remember Cape Fear, because he kind of deserved it. From one kind of perspective, the retribution was a long time coming. I feel that Godzilla is nature’s retribution of our abuse of our position.

Coming from an independent background on Monsters, did you try to practice restraint on Godzilla?

…I think what I wanted to do—my goal, was to show some restraint where we could. I know that sounds silly, because there’s a lot of spectacle. But when there is spectacle, try and limit it to watching it from this perspective. We’re not going to see all of it, so that you’re using your imagination. So, the audience is a character in the film as well, and they’re having to think and have expectations that get rewarded or twisted. Try to give it a pace where you can think and have a thought—sometime things go so quickly, and you don’t have time to comprehend anything, and it’s just an overwhelming attack on the senses.

So, we were trying to hark back on that style of filmmaking from like the late ‘70s or early ‘80s that we all grew up with that for me made the movies that made me want to get into filmmaking. The restraint they had before they had computer graphics. I’m not saying we did that fully [Laughs], because there’s a lot of that stuff in the film. But at least one foot in that world of leaving some of it to the imagination.  I feel like when you show everything straight away—the excitement I get, and the fear, when watching a film is by not seeing things, and you have to imagine things. The second you show something in all its glory, you can’t get scared of it anymore, because you revealed it.

So, we just wanted to build the film in a way where you incrementally progressed, and we’re always topping ourselves. When we reach that point where “We peaked, can’t do anything more, this is it.” Then we hit the end credits.

Was there anything that you came up with when you were filming where you’re like “Oh my god, this is such a good idea. We do not have the money. We can’t put it in this movie, but maybe down the road…”

The most expensive thing in a film is screen real estate. And it’s never because they can’t afford to shoot it; it’s always because we can’t afford to put it in the two-hour experience. If you go off on too many tangents and do too many things, you distract from the audience.

Thank you.

Thank you, cheers.

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