Monday, October 31, 2011

Review: Puss in Boots 3D

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/30/11

Puss In Boots could have just been a 'one-off' picture from the prolific Dreamworks Animation department. As a spin-off for a popular supporting character from the Shrek series, it has arguably more built-in appeal than something along the lines of How to Train Your Dragon or Megamind. The film is already likely to be a big hit no matter how good or bad it is. But the gang at the current House of Katzenberg refuse to take such easy roads to profitability.

What could have been a cheap and easy spin-off is instead a surprisingly engaging and richly constructed adventure film. It is yet another sign that Dreamworks is every bit the equal of the Mouse House and they plan on staying there not by 'having their finger on the pulse of popular culture', but by merely making really good cartoons that respect their audience. And that's what Puss In Boots is. It's not as breathlessly exciting as How to Train Your Dragon nor is it as epic and emotionally profound as Kung Fu Panda 2. With strong vocals, a simple-but-satisfying story, occasionally eye-popping visuals, and another master-class in 3D, Puss In Boots is simply a darn good cartoon.

A token amount of plot: Puss In Boots (Antonio Banderas, obviously having a blast being back in this sand... err... litter box) is an outlaw of sorts, a mercenary for-hire who attempts to maintain a token amount of morality as he goes about his business. But a chance run-in with fellow 'cat-burglar' Kitty Softpaws (Salma Hayek) leads to a reunion with Humpty Dumpty (Zach Galifianakis, in a surprisingly compelling emotional turn), his former best who betrayed him into a life of crime seven years ago. Mr. Dumpty offers a chance at a big score, with a chance for Puss to redeem himself by atoning for the original sin that turned him into an outlaw. But as the trio attempt to steal magic beans from the murderous outlaws Jack (Billy Bob Thornton) and Jill (Amy Sedaris), Mr. Boots finds that redemption is not as easy as he thought, and survival may be the biggest challenge of all.

While technically a prequel to Shrek 2, this picture stands completely alone from the world of Fiona and Donkey. It is merely a fantastical adventure that happens to star a character whom we've met before. The story is relatively simple, while the complexity lies in the character arcs. Despite ads that highlighted the comedic material (and there are several hearty laughs to be had), the film is a generally straight-ahead action picture, with the requisite fights, escapes, and stand-offs.

While the film doesn't approach the tragic pathos of Kung Fu Panda 2, the action sequences are shot and edited for maximum intensity even while the bloodshed and hard violence is kept to a minimum. There are a few frightening moments and scenes of apparent danger, but Chris Miller deftly creates vicious villains that are none-the-less amusing in nature, which should limit the amount of frightened youngsters (my four-year old hid her eyes a couple times, but there was no lasting trauma). The film's morality is a little complex, as our titular hero is clearly doing bad things for clearly good reasons, which is nothing unusual in adult fiction but may need some explaining to the youngest of audiences.

While the film is not a non-stop joke fest, nor (thankfully) is it riddled with pop-culture references, it does earn the laughs it goes for. The comedy is generally either character-based or, um... 'cat-based'. Cat people will frankly adore this picture, as there are any number of clever visual jokes and off-hand bits of dialogue that pay ode to the superior domestic animal (all due respect to my readers, but suck it, dog people!). Kitty Softpaws's explanation for why she has no claws will resonate with cat owners, as will Puss's casual reaction.

After decades of cats being treated as one-dimensional villains (Cats and Dogs, Babe, etc) or being horribly murdered as a means of building suspense in horror films (let's just say there is no way that the makers of The Roommate would have thrown a dog into a dryer), it's a little refreshing to see a movie where the feline is both the star and the hero, and where the makers have a clear understanding of what it's like to be a cat and/or love a cat. Again, I say this with utmost respect for the feelings and intelligence of my readers, but go lick your own balls, ye dog lovers (yes, I'm trying to impress my wife)!

It has become a cliche over the last decade to talk about how visually impressive and/or well-animated the latest big-budget animated feature happens to be. So I'll keep this short. The film is a glorious visual delight. It is richly detailed (quite a bit of it is 'shot' in close-up for extra emphasis on facial features) and splendidly colorful.

If I may pay notice to one specific moment; there is a scene about halfway through the picture where our trio end up climbing 'the beanstalk' up to the giant's tower. Without going into details, this moment is truly awe-inspiring and a wonder to behold. It is for this sequence alone that the film merits viewing in 3D and on an IMAX screen unless you have financial or health-related objections to 3D. Dreamworks has been playing around with 3D long-before Avatar. They are at-this point unmatched when it comes to combining a genuinely immersive environment while providing eye-popping 3D moments that don't feel out of context. Point being, Puss In Boots is a technical marvel in every plausible way.

It is a testament to how committed Dreamworks is to delivering the goods each time out that this seemingly financially-mandated cash-in is as good as it is. While it may not be fair to compare Puss In Boots to Cars 2 (which was part merchandise-bonanza, part Lasseter passion project), the truth is that Dreamworks created a solidly entertaining, visceral exciting, and visually dynamic adventure from their 'one for them' project, while Pixar's latest film, um... did not (it's no war crime, but Cars 2 is indeed pretty bad).

As it stands, the artistic failure of Cars 2 and artistic triumph of Puss In Boots can only be a good thing for lovers of animation. The rare Pixar whiff, combined with Dreamworks being on a two-year hot streak, will only motivate Pixar not to get complacent about their place at the top. And Dreamworks' continual desire for the respect and acclamation that Pixar receives, as well as the automatic cultural acceptance that comes with being a Walt Disney cartoon, will keep Dreamworks pushing ever harder. Puss In Boots is no great artistic achievement, but it's a pretty terrific animated film that shows how far the studio has come in regards to raising their own personal bar. They are a long way from A Shark Tale. -- courtesy of Scott Mendelson.

Murray, Arquette & Winstead Join "Charlie"

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/30/11

Bill Murray, Patricia Arquette, Mary Elizabeth Winstead has signed up to star in Roman Coppola's "A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III" says The International Business Times.

Charlie Sheen plays a successful graphic designer who, when his girlfriend breaks up with him, he begins the hard road of self-evaluation to come to terms with his life.

Aubrey Plaza and Jason Schwartzman are already set for roles in the project. Youree Henley is producing.

"Sin City 2," "Voyage," "300" Updates

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/30/11

A couple of updates on various highly anticipated action tentpole films were published over the weekend thanks mostly to this being a busy time for movie press junkets and presentations:

Sin City 2
With the "Sin City" sequel prepping for a shoot early next year, the question has been hanging over whether Mickey Rourke would be returning for the role of Marv, the character he played in the 2005 film whom also figures into this one.

"It depends. It depends on how bad they want me. You feel me?…I did [like the character]. but I'm claustrophobic, so the the hours of makeup -- You have to keep it on for about 13 or 14 hours a day. It's latex and glue and that stuff that gets my eyes all red" says Rourke. [Source: Coming Soon]

Fantastic Voyage
James Cameron showed off footage from his 3D conversion of "Titanic" late last week and was asked how the planned remake of the 1966 sci-fi cult hit "Fantastic Voyage" is progressing.

Cameron says it’s about two thirds of the way there in the development process and this version will be much more emotionally inclined - “I gave him [writer/director Shawn Levy] my idea about how this should be turned into a love story and he’s really run with it”.

The central story sees a doctor going through troubled times in his marriage who finds himself miniaturised and injected into his gravely ill wife in order to save her life. [Source: Deadline]

300: Battle of Atemisia
With Warners moving forward on "300: Battle of Atemisia", the Noam Murro-directed semi-sequel to "300", the film's producers Mark Canton and Gianni Nunnari have given a brief update on how it's going.

First up the pair have raved about Zack Snyder and Kurt Johnstad's script, saying "They've done a tremendous job making a highly intelligent, epic story that will stand on its own. But it's not a conventional sequel and, for what we do, that's what you hope and pray for. That you can be original and authentic at the same time."

Asked if Gerard Butler will be making a cameo, Nunnari says "It's too early to say. but we know the answer." No production schedule is yet set. [Source: Coming Soon]

Saturday, October 29, 2011

‘ParaNorman’ Teaser Trailer: Laika Crafts a Weird and Super-Cute Kids’ Horro...

via /Film by Russ Fischer on 10/28/11

I’m eager to see anything that comes out of the animation house Laika. The company’s last major production, Coraline, was a beautiful little film. Laika is following that with ParaNorman, a film written by Coraline storyboard supervisor Chris Butler.

The film has a great voice cast – Kodi Smit-McPhee (Let Me In, The Road) in the lead, with Casey Affleck, Tempestt Bledsoe, Jeff Garlin, John Goodman, Bernard Hill (Titanic), Anna Kendrick, Leslie Mann, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, and Elaine Stritch (30 Rock) — and tells the story of a young boy who has to protect his town against a zombie uprising. The first teaser has just been released and it looks like exactly the sort of movie that would have made me deliriously happy between the ages of ten and, well, now. Check it out below.

What a great choice, too, to use Donovan’s ‘Season of the Witch‘ as the score for the trailer. I hear Donovan and think of the opening murder in Zodiac, and that really sets a tone in my mind. Even if that association isn’t what crops up for you, I think the song gives the trailer a feeling that is more complex and suggestive than might have been the case with an instrumental score or a poppier tune.

Yahoo will give you a look at the teaser in HD. ParaNorman will be released on August 17, 2012. Chris Butler and Sam Fell (The Tale of Despereaux, Flushed Away) are co-directing.

In the comedy thriller, a small town comes under siege by zombies. Who can it call? Only misunderstood local boy Norman, who is able to speak with the dead. In addition to the zombies, he’ll have to take on ghosts, witches and, worst of all, moronic grown-ups, to save his town from a centuries-old curse. But this young ghoul whisperer may find his paranormal activities pushed to their otherworldly limits.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Video Blog: ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’ IMAX Footage Reaction

via /Film by Germain Lussier on 10/27/11

Thursday not only brings a brand new trailer for Brad Bird‘s Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol, it brings the permission for me to let you know what I thought of the two full, IMAX action scenes I saw from the film earlier this month. Paramount invited members of the press to the Rave Motion Pictures 18 in Los Angeles to see some of the footage Bird shot in full IMAX and it did not disappoint. It’s massive, it’s epic and it’ll make you hold on for dear life. After the jump, I’ll briefly describe the two scenes before jumping into a video blog reaction to the footage with Alex Billington from FirstShowing.net.

Before the blog, here’s the set up. We were shown two scenes. The first is the one we’ve all been waiting for, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. Minor spoilers from here on out.

Basically, this scene takes place in the middle of the film and features Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his team, played Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton and Simon Pegg, attempting to stop a meeting from happening. Their plan is to have two people think they met each other, but actually not, through the use of the patented Mission: Impossible masks and some clever elevator manipulation. Unfortunately, the only way to control the elevators is in a secure server room and the fastest way into the server room is, you guessed it, from the outside.

The second scene is from a little later in the film and it shows Ethan in a foot chase with a bad guy that, because the scene was shown out of context, shall remain anonymous. The reason this seemingly normal running scene was in IMAX is that it takes place during a totally blinding sandstorm which, eventually, turns into a blind car chase. In the first trailer, if you remember the shot where Ethan narrowly avoids a flying car, that’s this scene.

Enough set up, time for the video blog! Thanks to FirstShowing.net.

Me again. We shoot those things so fast and off the seat of our pants sometimes I’m not sure if want I want to say comes across. To hopefully reiterate, the IMAX scenes in Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol look phenomenal. Of course they do. They were shot on location by Brad Bird with huge IMAX cameras. The real test, however, will be if – once we see these scenes in context – they hold up within a character driven story or just feel like how I saw them two months early, as gorgeous, disjointed, out of context, action. Time will tell.

Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol opens in IMAX on December 16. It’s the only way to see it.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Watch: Official Trailer for Action Film 'Elite Squad: The Enemy Within'

via FirstShowing.net Movie Trailers by Alex Billington on 10/26/11

Elite Squad: The Enemy Within Trailer

His true enemies lie within. An official US trailer has debuted for the Brazilian action film Elite Squad: The Enemy Within, the sequel to the 2007 film Elite Squad. This action-thriller has been receiving rave reviews all over and is indeed the highest grossing film in Brazil, which is pretty damn cool. The action in this looks insane and I've heard nothing but praise from everyone who has seen it at places like Fantastic Fest, Sundance and all over. The Enemy Within is directed by Jose Padilha, who's now setup in Hollywood working on the RoboCop remake. It's a kick ass trailer that will totally leave you excited to see this. Enjoy!

<a href="http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/watch-official-trailer-for-action-film-elite-squad-the-enemy-within/

Brad Bird Talks ‘Incredibles 2;’ Willing to Make a Sequel, But Only With the...

via /Film by Russ Fischer on 10/26/11

The Incredibles is a great movie. It might be the best superhero movie, and it is certainly one of the best Pixar efforts. With Pixar making sequels more often now than in the past, naturally questions arise about a follow-up to Brad Bird‘s story of a super-powered family. But we’ve never heard anything that suggests a sequel is likely to happen.

Brad Bird is starting to promote Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol, his first live-action movie. While talking about that movie last week, he was asked about a possible Incredibles sequel, and his answer was simple. Pretty much the answer I think anyone would hope he’d give: he’s open to doing one, but only if the story is great.

Movies.com talked to Bird, who said that he hasn’t really been pursuing a story for The Incredibles 2, but is gathering ideas and is open to the possibility:

I think the reason it hasn’t [happened] yet is because the studio would like me to do it, if there were another Incredibles. And I’ve told them that I’m not really friendly to have someone else take away my child. I would like to think that I have several good ideas that could be incorporated into a next Incredibles, but I don’t have a whole movie yet, and the last thing I want to do is do it just because it would open big, or something like that.

To get to the bottom line, he says,

I want to do it because I have something that will be as good or better than the original. Toy Story 2 was, to me, a perfect sequel, because it absolutely respected the first film but found new places to go without selling out its characters. So if I could come up with an idea that is to Incredibles that Toy Story 2 is to Toy Story, I would do it in a second.

For what it’s worth, this is probably just becoming his stock answer to the question of a sequel, as it is almost exactly the same thing he said about the possibility way back in 2007. I’d much rather see no sequel than anything that would fall short of the original. It’s too good a movie to exploit just for the sake of doing so, and I’m happy that it is able to be an original, standalone piece of work. If it remains that way, things wouldn’t be so bad.

Sequel Bits: Billy Bob Thornton on ‘Bad Santa 2;’ Plot Details For ‘Zoolande...

via /Film by Russ Fischer on 10/27/11

We’ve got a lot of small sequel talk this week, for films from Bad Santa 2 to Zoolander 2, Transformers 4 and Prometheus, aka the Alien prequel. None of it is massively substantial, but for the fans of each film there are nuggets of info that are worth a look. Bad Santa fans should definitely hit the jump for some of the most refreshingly honest sequel talk you’re likely to hear.

We’ll kick off with Bad Santa 2, for which two screenplays are being written, by Johnny Rosenthal and John Phillips. Neither script is in yet, but of the general idea of the sequel Billy Bob Thornton told The Playlist,

I’m not worried about doing another ‘Bad Santa’ in terms of my career or anything like that. My only worry is, you know, that movie is pretty darn good. I think if you want to do a sequel, you want to at least be on par with that one, if not better. That’s the worry… You know, we’re probably never going to make one that’s exactly what that first one was.

That’s the sort of realism that is pretty refreshing to read. But he’s got the same hopes for the sequel we do: “hopefully we can get close to the first one… But hopefully the fans with at least get a kick out of seeing the character again, and that’s my hope for it – that people will get a charge out of seeing that character doing his thing again.”

The possibility of a Zoolander sequel has grown recently, as Ben Stiller and Justin Theroux (with whom Stiller wrote Tropic Thunder) have written a Zoolander 2 script. As Stiller promotes Tower Heist, he’s talking about Zoolander in additional to appearing on TV as the character. To THR he confirms the plot. The site says,

The story will pick up 10 years after the first film left off and, Derek’s “School For Kids Who Can’t Read Good” has been destroyed, leaving him in charge of its pupil.

Stiller also tells THR that a third Night at the Museum is in the works, with an idea for a story in place, but that there are no plans for a fourth Fockers movie. We dodged a bullet there.

The possibility of fourth and fifth Transformers movies has been discussed recently, with the CEO of Hasbro saying that the company is in talks with Steven Spielberg, Michael Bay and Paramount to make a fourth film, and Bay saying that he’s not part of the talks. Transformers: Dark of the Moon co-star Rosie Huntington-Whiteley has chimed in on the possibility of more films, and she seems to think that both Bay and Shia LaBeouf, who has also said he’s done with the series, will be back.

Keeping in mind that actors are often the last to know about what is really going on with a film’s development, the gossip blog on the LA Times has an interview with Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, saying,

“We’ll see about that,” Huntington-Whiteley told us Monday at the Hollywood Awards, seemingly doubtful about LaBeouf’s statement. Asked if the actor could be persuaded to return for another “Transformers,” she replied: “I think so. He’ll kill me for saying that.”

Here’s the video:

Finally, Rafe Spall, who you can see this week in Anonymous, talks about the relationship between Ridley Scott‘s Prometheus and his landmark 1979 movie Alien. Scott seems to want to distance Prometheus from Alien just a bit, despite the fact that they are clearly connected and, title change notwithstanding, Prometheus is still an Alien prequel. Spall says,

[Ridley Scott] directed the first Alien, and this is… I’ve been sent an e-mail about what I’m allowed to say and what I’m not allowed to say and I haven’t read the e-mail. (laughs). It’s out next June, and it’s part of the Alien franchise. I’m in it, and Charlize Theron, Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender. I think fans of the franchise will love it. Alien is one of the best films ever made, and it’s a real buzz to be in a space suit on an ‘Alien’ set with Ridley Scott coming and speaking to you. It’s incredible. That’s why I wanted to be an actor, to be in a space suit on an ‘Alien’ set.

Here’s that video, via Alien Prequel News:

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

"Tintin" Sequel Is Jackson's Post-Hobbit Film

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/25/11

As has long been discussed, if "The Adventures of Tintin" is a success, filmmakers Steve Spielberg and Peter Jackson very much intend to continue with at least one and possibly two more adaptations of Herge's graphic novel series.

While Spielberg helmed the first film, it's always been pretty clear that Jackson would take charge of the second. With his commitments to "The Hobbit" though, there's been a question as to when would that be.

Now Jackson has confirmed to Playlist) that he'll direct the project once he's finished his commitments to "The Hobbit".

Reviews for the first "Tintin" have been very strong and with the film hitting theaters across Europe over the next few weeks, Paramount is already confident enough that the second film is ready to go should the green light be given.

“[Sony and Paramount] were willing to do one movie with us and then give us the financial werewithal to develop a script, do all the visual storyboards and get it really in launch position. So we can launch pretty quickly on a second movie. The script is already written" says Spielberg.

Anthony Horowitz was reportedly hired to adapt the stories "The Seven Crystal Balls" and "Prisoners of the Sun" for the second film last Fall. Yet when I spoke to Jackson back in August he says while that is the story in mind, he "wants to have the freedom to change his mind again".

The actual main shoot of "Tintin" only took five weeks and was followed by a long post-production schedule during which time Spielberg was able to go off and do "War Horse". Jackson could well shoot the actor elements of his 'Tintin' during post-production on 'The Hobbit' films meaning we could see the next one in theatres as early as late 2014.

As for who would direct the third film, Spielberg admits “we haven’t talked about that.” Nor is there any discussion as to which books to adapt though at this point the best guess remains the "Destination Moon" and "Explorers on the Moon" two-parter.

John Cusack Set For "Numbers Station"

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/25/11

John Cusack is set to star in the thriller "The Numbers Station" for Content says The Hollywood Reporter.

The story follows a disgraced black ops agent charged with protecting a CIA code operator (Malin Akerman). Danish director Kasper Barfoed is helming from a script by F. Scott Frazier.

Cusack is replacing the previously cast Ethan Hawke. Sean Fyrst, Bryan Furst and Nigel Thomas will produce. Shooting kicks off in mid-November.

Summit Sets "Ender's", "RED 2" & More Dates

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/25/11

Summit Entertainment have shuffled around their future film release schedule with half a dozen projects, previously unscheduled, having suddenly scored release dates according to Box-Office Mojo.

First up in 2012 we'll see "Step Up 4" moving its way into theaters on July 27th. Two weeks later on August 10th will be Jonathan Levine's zombie romance tale "Warm Bodies", followed two weeks after that by the Ethan Hawke-led found footage thriller "Sinister" on August 24th.

Then in 2013 comes the ensemble magician heist thriller "Now You See Me" on January 18th, the long-gestating adaptation of Orson Scott Card sci-fi novel "Ender's Game" on March 15th, and finally the sequel to the action comedy "RED" on August 2nd.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Watch: Another Official Trailer for Martin Scorsese's 'Hugo' 3D Arrives

 
Watch: Another Official Trailer for Martin Scorsese's 'Hugo' 3D Arrives
Published on FirstShowing.net Movie Trailers | shared via feedly
Hugo 3D Trailer

"Once upon a time I met a boy named Hugo Cabret..." Haven't seen enough yet? Paramount has debuted yet another official trailer via Apple for Martin Scorsese's Hugo 3D, which is coming down to its final month of marketing before hitting theaters. This trailer is a much more emotional, story-driven look at what makes this look like a wonderful film full of emotion, mystery and adventure. Hugo stars Asa Butterfield and Chloe Moretz. There's less Sacha Baron Cohen in this trailer and more Ben Kingsley, but it still looks great. I'm definitely looking forward to seeing this, even if it looks like a good family film. Take a look!

<a href="http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/watch-another-official-trailer-for-martin-scorseses-hugo-3d-arrives/

Tokyoflash Kisai Seven tells time with Tron design, makes fan dreams come true

 
Tokyoflash Kisai Seven tells time with Tron design, makes fan dreams come true
Published on Engadget | shared via feedly
Tokyoflash has always been more about the showy aspects of time, rather than the practical telling of it. And that trend continues on here with a Tron-inspired schema that's gone from original fan concept to wrist-wrapping product completion. Dubbed the Kisai Seven, this watch takes its cues from the aforementioned Disney flick, and incorporates two pulsing LED rings -- available in blue or white -- that are customizable via three animation pre-sets. Timepiece collectors interested in this bit of avant chronographic kit can snatch it up late night on the 25th when it's set to be released. You might wanna order up quickly, though, as the company's offering a special two-day only price of $99 that'll get a bump to $139 shortly after. Like what you see fellow '80s nostalgist? Then get your credit cards at the ready. Tomorrow's only a day away.

Continue reading Tokyoflash Kisai Seven tells time with Tron design, makes fan dreams come true

Tokyoflash Kisai Seven tells time with Tron design, makes fan dreams come true originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Oct 2011 23:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Two Characters Return In "Sin City 2"?

via Dark Horizons - General Feed by Dark Horizons on 10/24/11

With progress finally happening on the "Sin City" sequel, there's been a question over what characters from the first film in 2005 will be returning says MTV News.

Now, comic creator and co-director Frank Miller says some tinkering is still being done on the script and a more realistic start date would be spring next year rather than at the end of this year as previously mentioned.

Miller also confirmed that the character of Nancy Callahan (Jessica Alba) and Marv (Mickey Rourke) will make appearances, Nancy's mini-story will essentially bridge together both the other stories in this film and this film with the previous film.

Aside from hers, there will be three other stories - one short called "The Long Bad Night", the Marv-centered "Just Another Saturday Night", and the big one that will dominate the film - "A Dame to Kill For" which features several other characters seen in the original.

No word on which actors from the original will be returning for this outing.

Sequel Bits: Drew Pearce Hired to Write ‘Sherlock Holmes 3;’ Fourth ‘Paranor...

via /Film by Russ Fischer on 10/24/11

Can we assume that Robert Downey Jr. has become a fan of Iron Man 3 screenwriter Drew Pearce? Months before Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows opens, Pearce has been hired to write the provisional  Sherlock Holmes 3 for Warner Bros. (Just as the studio hired A Game of Shadows screenwriters Kieran and Michele Mulroney to get to work on the script before Sherlock Holmes opened.) And since Pearce is writing the third Iron Man film, something Downey is likely quite involved in given his admitted disappointment with the second movie, it isn’t difficult to assume that Downey had a hand in suggesting him to pen Sherlock 3. No plot has been revealed for the potential third film at this time. [Deadline]

After the break, one Paramount exec says Paranormal Activity 4 is almost a certainty, and Frank Miller talks Sin City 2.

Paranormal Activity 3 was a massive success this weekend, taking in $54m to score the best-ever opening weekend for a horror movie. And so you can expect that Paramount will quickly get moving on a fourth film. Speaking to the Wrap, Don Harris, Paramount’s head of domestic distribution, said,

I can’t imagine that we wouldn’t make a number four, and I imagine (Paramount Film Group president) Adam Goodman this morning is thinking about the challenge.

That $54m opening was enabled by a $5m production budget for Paranormal Activity 3… well, that and tens of millions in advertising. Even with that advertising overhead, this sort of success on a $5m production budget looks pretty damn good. Not bad for the sequel to a film that Paramount bought originally planning to release in midnight or online screenings.

And then there’s Sin City 2, which is still slowly moving toward shooting. Speaking to MTV, Sin City creator Frank Miller says that he and Robert Rodriguez are finishing up the script, and that the movie could shoot as soon as next year. He also says that Jessica Alba may be back for the sequel, because he’s written her character into a new story for the film:

Sin City number 2 is primarily an adaptation of the book A Dame to Kill For. It also features the short story, ‘Just Another Saturday Night’ and two new stories. One involving Jessica Alba’s character, Nancy Callahan, that I came up with for the movie in order to tie things together and make it be more united with the first.

Friday, October 21, 2011

First Trailer for Zhang Yimou's 'The Flowers of War' with Christian Bale

via FirstShowing.net Movie Trailers by Alex Billington on 10/20/11

The Flowers of War Trailer

"Stop! This is the house of the Lord!" An official trailer has just debuted for Zhang Yimou's The Flowers of War, the Chinese war drama starring Christian Bale about the events that occurred in the city of Nanking during the Japanese invasion in 1937. The trailer, found via WildGrounds, is mostly in English anyway, but includes subtitles for Mandarin and English. This also seems to have a rather epic Spielberg-esque war tinge to it, with all the gritty and massive WWII action scenes, which take up the last half of the trailer. I wasn't expecting it to look this big, but some are even calling it "Yimou's Saving [Private] Ryan?" You must watch!

<a href="http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/first-trailer-for-zhang-yimous-the-flowers-of-war-with-christian-bale/

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Watch: Spike's Action-Packed New TV Trailer for Lucasfilm's 'Red Tails'

 
Watch: Spike's Action-Packed New TV Trailer for Lucasfilm's 'Red Tails'
Published on FirstShowing.net Movie Trailers | shared via feedly
Red Tails

"I'm the best pilot in the whole damn army!" Another new trailer that debuted during Spike TV's Scream Awards last night is for Lucasfilm's Red Tails, the WWII action drama about the Tuskegee Airmen, the first African-American pilots to fly in a combat squad during WWII. We've already seen a lot of trailers for this movie already, but I'm loving this, it has a classic action movie vibe to it and it's packed—and I mean packed—full of awesome moments and some of the greater bits of dialogue. The film stars Cuba Gooding Jr., Terrence Howard, Ne-Yo, Method Man, David Oyelowo and others. Fire it up, this looks great!

<a href="http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/watch-spikes-action-packed-new-tv-trailer-for-lucasfilms-red-tails/

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Watch: Second Official Shorter, Sweeter Trailer for 'The Descendants'

 
Watch: Second Official Shorter, Sweeter Trailer for 'The Descendants'
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The Descendants Trailer

"My friends think that because I live in Hawaii, we live in paradise..." Fox Searchlight has put up a second official trailer for Alexandre Payne's The Descendants, starring George Clooney as a Hawaiian lawyer and land owner who tries to take care of his two daughters when his wife ends up in a coma. The first trailer hit back in May. This one is shorter, but does the perfect job of capturing the tone of the film, and how it balances emotion and comedy, as our friend Peter Sciretta's quote says. Shailene Woodley and Amara Miller star as his daughters, along with Nick Krause as the "'sup bro" kid. I highly suggest checking it out.

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Monday, October 17, 2011

Thirty fantastic prints from Calla Haynes’s spring/summer 2012 show at the R...

via torontolife.com by Fraser Abe on 10/14/11

Calla spring/summer 2012

The second show of the “ShOws” series held at the Ritz Carlton was by Torontonian Calla Haynes and her eponymous line Calla. The 29-year-old was once a Havergal girl, though she has lived in Paris for the past eight years, working with huge names like Olivier Theyskens and Nina Ricci before launching her own line. Tommy Ton, fresh from a gruelling stint covering the myriad fashion weeks before Toronto, was spotted with designer Jeremy Laing, model Coco Rocha, James Conran, style guru and columnist Karen Von Hahn and, obviously, scores of fashion media. Check out Haynes’s amazing prints in our spring/summer 2012 gallery after the jump.

The show kicked off with a sheer lemon-yellow floor-length shirt-dress (complete with detailing on the cuff) that we think will please any modern-day Laura Ingalls Wilder—but what we really dug was the bounty of sheer dresses, including one in pale pink, a trench with yellow back panels, a blue and white sundress with a slight puff at the hips, a silkscreened flower on a simple T-shirt and tuxedo jackets with a floral pattern inside the arm. Haynes designs her own prints, and they were everywhere: striped, vertical lines on the dresses, floral motifs on cuffs and skirts and an almost acid-washed look on a black and grey denim jacket and pant (if it wasn’t denim, Haynes did a very good job of making it look like it was). The sole disappointment was a flouncy yellow top paired with a printed skirt (the skirt, we liked) that looked a little too Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion for us. After the show, we met Haynes’s father, who talked to everyone in the room, from Laing to style scribe Sarah Nicole Prickett, never forgetting to boast that the tie he was wearing was one of his daughter’s designs. Hey, if the girl can get a middle-aged straight dude to wear a dusty pink tie, she’s got to be doing something right.

Click to check out the impressive prints from Calla spring/summer 2012 »

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