Archive for the Hollywood news Category

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The geek cred of Jeff Bridges has skyrocketed this year. I can’t really think of a time when he wasn’t adored by film fans, but he’s got a special place with the fanboys these days thanks to his turn as Obadiah Stane in Iron Man. I was present for the Tron 2/Tr2n (do I really have to spell it that way?) footage at ComicCon this year — and it was one of those moments that will forever hold a place in nerd legend; the first glimpse of Bridges’ face caused the walls of Hall H to shake with howls of glee. And that was just a teaser filmed purely for the convention — heaven knows what emotions the actual trailer will prompt.

The Guardian had the chance to sit down with Bridges, who happily chatted about revisiting his Tron role — and the uncertain possibility of having to don a “neon mankini” again. (”Ah, the G-string. You’ve got to love it. I’m wearing one now!”) But despite the potential for skimpy underthings, Bridges felt the chance of doing a new Tron movie was too good to pass up. “[It’s] another unique, wild experience that was too good to turn down. Engaging in that world again feels just like it did all that time ago. Basically, I’m still a child, I love being childlike, and here was another chance to play with these crazy toys. And the cutting-edge technology makes it exciting. Doing the teaser trailer for Comic-Con, I had my first experience of motion capture. And that’s turning the industry on its head. It’s amazing being part of that.”

Continue reading Jeff Bridges Talks About the Cutting Edge of ‘Tron 2′

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So last week, the official theme song for Quantum of Solace — y’know, that new James Bond flick — was formally released online, and above is the music video for Jack White and Alicia Keys’ “Another Way to Die.” This managed to slip past us, probably because we were all still drooling over Erik’s chance to comandeer an Aston friggin’ Martin (no, no, ‘jealous’ isn’t quite the word…), and now that it’s out, opinions are becoming considerably divided.

On his personal blog, Bond devotee David Cornelius of eFilmCritic.com said “it’s, um, not good. Really, really not good. The Coke commercial focused on the catchy hook, which was good. But the rest of the song? Not good. We’re talking “Die Another Day” not good. Argh.”

Devindra Hardawar of /Film feels a little less harsh about it: “It’s not a terrible song (see Madonna’s for Die Another Day for a good example of that), but it certainly doesn’t feel like anything new for the series. It seems as if it tries to do way too much, and the song ends up feeling overstuffed in the process.”

Left in the apparent, admitted minority is Devin Faraci over at CHUD.com, who likes the song, if not the video.

As for me, I dig the thing, though it’s stuck stubbornly in my head over the past couple of days, but I rarely think that’s a bad thing. What say you guys? Is “Another Way to Die” worthy of our favorite double-0 agent? Or would you rather they had just adopted “Something of Boris” instead?

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Here’s the setting: You just arrived home after saving a country from an evil mastermind hell-bent on taking over their supply of chewing gum and using it to create mayhem. During that time, however, you missed your Cinematical and all the stuff that happened during the week. Well, you showed up at just the right time — may we now present [drum roll please] … Cinematical’s Stuff That Happened This Week!

Fanboy Stuff

Kenneth Branagh is Directing Thor
Transformers 2 is Shooting in IMAX
Eagle Eye Writer Wants to Make a Blade Runner 2?

Zack Snyder Talks 300 Sequel
But Then Jon Favreau Talks Iron Man Sequel
Check Out Early Art for Pixar’s The Incredibles
Star Wars Steampunk and Reservoir Dogs = Hella Cool!
Are They Rebooting Daredevil?

Exclusive Stuff
Bolt Poster Premiere
Pray the Devil Back to Hell Poster Premiere
Clip from Bill Maher’s Religulous

Stuff to Talk About
Will Smith vs Will Smith
Five People Who Should Star in PG Porn
Who’s More Uncomfortable with Onscreen Nudity?
Which Upcoming Marvel Film Shows the Most Promise?
How Saw V Could Actually Be Good
Is Roku’s Netflix Player Tempting You Yet
When Talking Animals Attack
Horror Remakes That Don’t Suck

Reviews and Stuff

How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
Beverly Hills Chihuahua
Religulous
Rachel Getting Married
Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist
Flash of Genius
Appaloosa

An American Carol
Indie Spotlight: New Releases for Oct. 3

More stuff after the jump

Continue reading Cinematical’s Stuff That Happened This Week

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The Rebel on DVD from Dragon DynastyImagine Spider-Man murdering a young boy. The Rebel isn’t a revisionist superhero movie, but it does star Johnny Nguyen, who was the masked stunt double for Spider-Man and Green Goblin in two of Sam Raimi’s web-spinning adventures. Here Nguyen plays Cuong, an enforcer for the French exploiters in 1920s Vietnam. Anti-colonial protests have been gaining force and exerting pressure upon the ruling French, and Cuong is expected to help put them down. Caught up in his violent duties, Cuong kills a boy almost without realizing what he’s done. He feels instant, piercing regret, as though the guilt for all his sins has come crashing down upon him. His remorse becomes a galvanizing force that pushes him to stop shedding the blood of his own people.

To begin, he tries to help a young rebel escape torture and certain death. The beautiful Thuy (Veronica Ngo, AKA Ngo Thanh Van) is important to both sides: her father is leader of the anti-government movement. She is understandably wary about Cuong’s true intentions. Just as he’s making headway in convincing her of his sincerity, his cynical, ambitious overlord Sy (Dustin Nguyen, of 21 Jump Street fame, who’s never been better) appears. Sy is less interested in Cuong’s allegiance than in the possibility that he can lead him to Thuy’s father.

While the story is riddled with contrivances and genre conventions, the action sequences set the film apart. Johnny Nguyen is flat-out amazing in his grace and control, while Dustin Nguyen more than holds his own in close-quarters fighting. Floating like a butterfly but stinging like a bee, Veronica Ngo, a dancer/model/singer/actress, looks extremely convincing as she fiercely defends her friends and her honor. Oh, and she’s a babe and a half.

Continue reading Don’t Fear the Subs: Stunning Vietnamese ‘Rebel’ Action

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Early last month, Variety published a rather scathing look at 20th Century Fox’s summer receipts and mentioned the studio was digging through its collection of superheroes with an eye on getting some of that blockbuster mojo back. It wasn’t surprising to see more X-Men spin-offs and sequels being talked about — but what did raise a few eyebrows was the inclusion of Daredevil. The Man with No Fear had a pretty disastrous debut in 2003, and his girlfriend/nemesis Elektra fared even worse.

IESB caught up with Fox’s co-chairman, Tom Rothman, and pressed him on the subject of revisiting Daredevil. It’s more than a passing fancy in the trades — Fox is thinking “very seriously” of a reboot. Says Rothman: “I think that the thing the Hulk showed, although it did what it did, is that it is possible that if you really do it right the audience will give you a second chance. That it is possible. And I think that you see that when they did Batman Begins, the first Nolan movie, that you can have made some mistakes along the way or movies that the audience wasn’t that crazy about and then given the proper amount of time and the right creative vision behind it, you can, to use your word, reboot.”

Continue reading Tom Rothman Talks ‘Daredevil’ Reboot

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Bonjour! Buenos dias! Whassup! It’s diversity week here at the Trailer Park and we’re looking at previews for films from our about different cultures.

Dragonball
I’ve seen only a a few episodes of the Japanese cartoon on which this live action film is based, but I’m not seeing a whole lot here that reminds me of the anime. Frankly it reminds me more of Mortal Combat Kombat. Like the original, this is a martial arts fantasy with prophecies, super powers, lots of action and a hero with preposterously spiked hair. Chow Yun Fat is in there to add some action movie cred, but will that be enough? From what I’ve read the anime fans are not thrilled with this one, and it’s not doing a lot for me either. I don’t think this one if for me.

Amexicano

Here’s a charming looking indie about a friendship between and Italian American and an illegal immigrant from Mexico. Bruno (Carmine Famiglietti) is behind on his rent and reluctantly goes into the construction business, hiring Mexican day laborers to help him. When he hires Ignacio (Raúl Castillo) the two forge a bond despite the fact that Ignacio does not speak English. I’m looking forward to this one.

Continue reading Trailer Park: Diversity Edition

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Click Erik Davis’ beautiful face above to head straight to our Aston Martin hi-res gallery

“Now this is a fun one — when you get to 100mph, just slowly take your hands off the wheel and watch what the car does …” — Aston Martin Instructor #1

You may remember how last month Cinematical was invited to travel to London for something called “The James Bond Experience.” Part of this “experience” included a chat with Bond himself, Daniel Craig, and Quantum of Solace director Marc Forster. (You can read all about that over here.) Now, however, we’re finally allowed to tell you about some of the activities that took place during our four days across the pond — and how do I not start with the awesomeness that was driving an Aston Martin — a car, mind you, that’s worth more than my life — at well over 100mph. But let me back up.

Never sit at the back of a bus for more than an hour and a half. By the time our small group of online writers arrived at the Millbrook test track, I felt like I was ready to puke. Millbrook is literally in the middle of the English countryside — an hour or so out of London, in Bedfordshire, England — and it’s the sort of place that calls for an escort to be with you at all times. See, Millbrook is where they test all sorts of cars and military vehicles before they’re called into action. Thus, cameras are everywhere, the public is not allowed in and security is tighter than a seat belt around Santa.

Continue reading Cinematical’s James Bond Adventure: Driving the Aston Martin

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Sometimes I oooh over talk of re-energizing an old franchise; sometimes I cringe and sometimes, like today, my brow is so damned furrowed that I probably have about 20 new wrinkles. The Hollywood Reporter posts that Warner Bros. is going back to Yogi Bear and YellowJellystone Park.

Oh yes, the Hanna-Barbera classic is getting developed into a big-screen feature by the pens of Joshua Sternin and Jeffrey Ventimilia, with Ash Brannon attached to direct. That means a mixture of That 70’s Show exec producers and the co-writer and director of Surf’s Up. It will be live-action with a CG Yogi and Boo Boo.

Now sure, the chipmunks made a comeback, but at least they have an uber popular Christmas song that keeps them in the memory banks. Something like Speed Racer had the effects going for it. Will kids go wild for a character from the ’50s that gets into good-natured fun at a park? And who would voice them? Better yet, simply: WHY? Maybe I’m in the minority, but this doesn’t seem like the best idea.

What do you think? Weigh in below …

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There’s no question Appaloosa is a Western. It’s set in 1882 in the New Mexico Territory, it has tin-star-wearing city marshals getting into gunfights with ornery cusses, it includes some scenes involving problems with Indians — the whole nine yards. But underneath all that, it’s really just a buddy movie, a rough-and-tumble, no-girls-allowed, steak-and-potatoes romp that happens to be set in the Old West. It’s as much Don Quixote and Sancho Panza as it is Butch and Sundance.

The buddies are Virgil Cole (Ed Harris, who also directed) and his sidekick, Everett Hitch (Viggo Mortensen), an inseparable pair of freelance peacekeepers and expert gunmen. At the film’s outset, they are hired by the dusty frontier town of the title to protect it from Randall Bragg (Jeremy Irons), a devious rancher whose band of ne’er-do-wells occasionally murders local citizens, including the previous city marshal. With Cole as the new marshal and Hitch as his deputy, the two set about enforcing law and order.

One of the town’s new ordinances, under Cole’s direction, is that you can’t bring guns inside the city boundaries. He informs a couple of Bragg’s men of this when they show up at the saloon one day.

“That’s the law,” Cole says.

Your law,” replies one of the men, scoffing.

“Same thing,” Cole says. OH SNAP!

Continue reading Review: Appaloosa

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I already smell Oscar nominations for this one. According to Variety, Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro are re-teaming for I Heard You Paint Houses, based on Charles Brandt’s book. And another Scorsese alumni is writing the script — Steve Zaillian, who not only scripted Gangs of New York, but won an Oscar for Schindler’s List. See what I mean? A contender for Best Picture, and it isn’t even filmed yet.

The topic is familiar stomping ground for Scorsese and De Niro — organized crime. De Niro will play the main man of Houses, Frank ‘the Irishman’ Sheeran, who reportedly committed more than 25 mob murders. One of these was supposedly Jimmy Hoffa, who he confessed to killing and dismembering on the orders of mob boss Russell Bufalino. And if you’re wondering about the title, it has a wonderfully gruesome origin: it’s mob slang for a contract killing, due to the mess left behind on walls and floors when you carry one out.

Sheeran confessed all to Brandt, who befriended him before his death in 2003. While this seemed to clear up the mystery surrounding Hoffa’s disappearance, controversy still reigns. Other hitman have confessed to the crime since Sheeran, and lacking conclusive DNA evidence or a body, nothing can be proved or denied. The FBI stopped looking for Hoffa’s body in 2006. But Hoffa’s fate is like the identity of Jack the Ripper — no one will ever stop confessing, wondering, or looking.

As I said at the start, this movie has a perfect pedigree. But for the sake of argument, do you think it’s just too safe? We all realize Scorsese knows a mob thriller like the back of his hand, and we know De Niro can play a guy who, well, paints houses to chilling perfection. I’d love to see Scorsese court some of that Last Temptation of Christ controversy again, but perhaps that’s just too cocky of me to question.

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