Showing posts with label Movie News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie News. Show all posts

Karen Gillan & Robert Sheehan are star-crossed lovers


Actress Karen Gillan (Doctor Who) has signed to star in Romeo And Brittney, the follow-up movie from comedian David Baddiel (The Infidel). The current Doctor Who companion will play Brittney, a high school student from New Jersey who finds herself in the 13th-century, stuck in the plot of William Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet as the female lead.

Gillian Anderson (The X Files) will be playing both Gillan's mother and a nurse in 13th-century Verona, while Robert Sheehan (Misfits) has been cast as a nerdy student and Romeo.

The $7 million movie, summarized as "Shakespeare In Love meets Clueless", starts shooting next May.

Arvind Ethan, producer:

"[David Baddiel and I] love literate teen comedies and we wanted to do our own version. After all, 10 Things I Hate About You was based on The Taming Of The Shrew just as Clueless was based on Jane Austen's Emma and Easy A is inspired by Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. And what is Twilight if it's not Romeo & Juliet with vampires and werewolves?"
This is certainly exciting news, particularly if you love Karen Gillan and Robert Sheehan -- who's particularly charismatic as Nathan in Misfits. The premise doesn't sound like a simple case of time-travel (as a few actors are playing dual roles), more like a reality-bending fantasy similar to Lost In Austen (the ITV miniseries where a modern woman was transported into the novel Pride & Prejudice). Agree?

My only reservation is the involvement of David Baddiel; a decent comedian back in the early-'90s and a talented writer, but his recent movie The Infidel was toothless and a tedious disappointment, with limp direction. Will he fare better with a more imaginative concept and a bigger budget?

Read more...

Back To The Future: Scream Awards


To promote the 2010 Scream Awards and 25th Anniversary of Back To The Future, Michael J. Fox has reprised his iconic role of Marty McFly for the above Spike TV teaser. A real treat for BTTF fans, as Fox's health issues with Parkinson's Disease means he's understandably not as prevalent with reunions/conventions these days. But Fox will apparently be joining his fellow BTTF cast members at the Scream Awards on 19 October to celebrate the movie's quarter-century anniversary. Excellent news for all BTTF fans!

Read more...

The Last Exorcism: best viral ever?


This is the best viral advertising idea I've ever seen. If you've visited Chat Roulette, you'll know that it's a free site where strangers with webcams are randomly connected to each other. Usually this means a lot of nudity and masturbation from single men, and nothing much else of interest. But to advertise their movie The Last Exorcism, Lionsgate had the superb idea of playing a pre-recorded video of a sexy teenage girl, who looks like she's about to expose her breasts, but who ends up being possessed by a demon! And now Lionsgate have uploaded some of the best reactions their little viral has elicited from unsuspecting Chat Rouletters. I hope there's more to come, before the viral itself becomes too well-known. Enjoy!

Read more...

Superhamm?

There are unconfirmed reports that Mad Men star Jon Hamm is being seriously considered for the Christopher Nolan-produced Superman reboot. I just wondered what everybody thinks about this. Personally, I think Hamm is a fantastic choice, if slightly too old (in an ideal world). But maybe Nolan's reboot is factoring in the idea of a middle-aged Superman, or it will be an interesting new wrinkle.

At the very least, we know Hamm's a wonderful actor, he'd look great in a suit as Clark Kent, and he reminds me of the Max Fleischer-style Superman in physicality. I think he'd be a very interesting choice and I'd love to see him get the job. The only way this could get better would be setting the film in the 1940s.

And why not add some other Mad Men cast members into the mix? January Jones as Lois Lane? Vincent Karthesier as Jimmy Olsen? John Slattery as Perry White? C'mon, you know that sounds brilliant!

Read more...

FilmFour HD launches 8 July

Film Four's HD channel will launch exclusively with Virgin Media on 8 July, located on channel 429, at no additional cost.

Incidentally, there's still no word on when Virgin customers can expect Sky 1 HD, Sky Arts HD, Sky News HD, Sky Sports HD and Sky Movies HD to arrive on the platform, but there are murmurings that "XL" subscribers will also receive those channels at no extra cost.

BBC1 HD is expected to arrive in the autumn, while rumours persist that Five, ESPN America, History, Food Network, Bio and Bravo will all launch HD channels on Virgin Media before the year's out.

Read more...

Tennant's Fright Night

I don't post a lot of movie news, but the fact this involves former-Doctor Who star David Tennant makes it an exception. Tennant has been added to the cast of the Fright Night remake, along with Christopher Mintz-Plasse (Superbad, Kick-Ass), both joining Colin Farrell, Toni Collette and Anton Yelchin.

The film will follow the plot of the 1985 horror hit, where an average boy called Charlie (Yelchin) realized his next-door neighbour is a vampire (Farrell). Tennant will play Peter Vincent, a Las Vegas magician and vampire expert whom Charlie recruits to help him. Collette will play Charlie's mother, with Mintz-Plasse as Charlie's best friend "Evil Ed", who joins a vampire coven.

Obviously, this is interesting for those following Tennant's post-Who career and wishing him well in his endeavour to "crack America" (in the wake of his NBC comedy-drama Rex Is Not Your Lawyer not being picked up), but I'm also particularly interested because Fright Night was the first ever horror/vampire movie I saw as a kid. And it terrified me. I've never actually sat down and watched it again all the way through, as a few sequences are burned into my psyche and I fear a relapse, but I sometimes catch a few moments on late-night TV. And those '80s-style exaggerated fangs still give me the creeps, so I never watch it all the way through.

Anyway, despite my irrational fears, I always thought Fright Night had a great premise behind it, and it's a remake I'm excited to see. Even with the bizarre decision to set it in Vegas, because a lot of the power with the original was the feeling this could happen to any unassuming neighbourhood, not a glittering playground of lights and showbiz.

Fright Night will be directed by Craig Gillespie (Lars & The Real Girl, Mr. Woodcock), which isn't especially promising but I'm ready to be surprised... and scared witless again.

Read more...

TRAILER PARK: Predators


Alien and Predator were my generation's Mummy and Wolf Man, in terms of iconic monsters that dominated playround discussion in the '80s and early-'90s. Both creatures suffered the ignominy of partnering for two "versus" movies (best forgotten about), so I'm glad they're going their separate ways and looking for solo redemption. There's an Alien prequel in the pipeline which sounds promising, mainly because it's being produced by the original's director, Ridley Scott, whom I refuse to believe would attach his name to a cynical, pointless cash-in. More pressingly, Robert Rodriguez's Troublemaker studio is behind a second sequel to Predator, based on an unmade script he wrote in 1994...

Predators, directed by Nimród Antal (Vacancy, Armored), revolves around a dispirate group of criminals and killers abducted from Earth and dumped on the Predator homeworld. Once there, they've essentially become "game" to the legendary vagina-faced alien hunters and must survive the ensuing blood sport and find a way to escape. What's surprising is the calibre of talent assembled in the cast: Laurence Fishburne (The Matrix), Adrien Brody (King Kong), and Topher Grace (Spider-Man 3), which I'm taking as a promising sign. The first trailer has been released (embedded above), and actually looks decent -- although, admittedly, trailers can be very deceptive for films of this type. But I do like the feel of the location, the overall vibe harkens back to John McTiernan's original, and the Predators themselves look far better than they did in those godawful "versus" movies.

Did I mention how bad they were?

Predators is released in the US on 7 July 2010.

Read more...

Odeon drop Alice boycott


I guess it had to happen with a projected £40m at stake for Disney, so here comes news that Odeon have reached an agreement with Disney to show Alice In Wonderland. Odeon's statement:

"Odeon and UCI Cinema group is pleased to announce that, following detailed negotiations with the Walt Disney Company Ltd, an enduring agreement has been reached encompassing all the different aspects of both companies' commercial relationship. Odeon is pleased to announce that it will now be showing Alice in Wonderland beginning March 5 in its cinemas in the UK, Ireland, Italy, Germany, Portugal and Austria."

"As a result of this agreement, Odeon is pleased to confirm that it will be able to continue with its plans for significant investment in new cinemas, in digital technology in 3D capability and the other exciting developments designed for the increased enjoyment of all its customers."
I have no idea what what caused this U-turn, as I assume Disney still intend to fast-track Alice's DVD/Blu-ray release, but they must have offered Odeon some kind of financial sweetener. A bigger cut of theatrical revenues to compensate for the loss of five weeks business, perhaps? We can only speculate. But it's great news for your average moviegoer who just wants to see the film as quickly as possible, in 3D.

Read more...

David Goyer writing The Man Of Steel


David Goyer (Blade, The Dark Knight) recently turned his back on the TV show FlashForward he co-created, and has just landed a job writing the new Superman movie! This new project, working-titled The Man Of Steel, is being touted as a reboot of the movie franchise. Latino News' spies have heard it won't be another origin story, Brandon Routh won't return in the lead role, Bryan Singer won't be directing, the villains will be Lex Luthor and Brainiac, The Daily Planet will be shown struggling to compete with online journalism, it sets up a huge Kryptonian mythology, and Goyer's apparently going to approach things using comic-book writer John Bryne's take on the character...

If the latter is true, then that means Superman will assumedly be far less powerful (for added plausibility and to maintain a sense of concern over his safety that's often missing without the ol' kryptonite standby), Clark may be be more of an extrovert, both his adopted human parents will be alive, and the fact nobody ever recognizes the similarities between Superman and Clark Kent will be explained by the fact Supes vibrates his face at super-speed to ensure blurry photographs of his features. Well, let's hope Goyer doesn't use that last part of Byrne's work, because we're fine suspending our disbelief over the Clark/Superman resemblance, thank you.

Clearly, they want Goyer to inject Superman with some of the realism he bestowed on the Batman franchise, but I hope they don't try to turn Superman into a dark, moody piece. It should be more in the Spider-Man colour spectrum, if you ask me. Don't suck the fun and optimism out of the character, please.

Read more...

Odeon boycott Alice, as expected

According to the BBC, Odeon have gone through with their threat to boycott Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland when it's released on 5 March in the UK, Ireland and Italy. Cineworld and Vue, who were also expected to embargo the 3D fantasy movie, have apparently backed down after reaching an unspecified agreement with Disney.

The furor arose because Disney want to cut the cinema-to-DVD release "window" from 17 weeks to 12 weeks in some territories, supposedly in an effort to curb illegal downloads. However, Odeon are worried this would result in a loss of revenue for them if too many people opt to wait for the earlier DVD release. This income is particularly important to companies like Odeon right now, because they've invested heavily in 3D screens and want to recoup costs. So, shorter theatrical runs for popular kid-friendly movies is the last thing they need.

Read more...

BAFTA 2010: The Winners


The British Academy Film awards were held last night. The full list of nominees/winners are listed below, together with a reminder of my predictions from a month ago. Were there any surprises for you? Quite why Kristen Stewart was nominated in a public vote category Twilight fans would fix is anyone's guess, as she's not even a newcomer as the term "rising star" suggests. Heck, even she looked embarrassed to be up there because the Twi-hards went on a mission. The ceremony's best moment, for me, was seeing Duncan Jones get overdue recognition for his overlooked Moon, mainly because his tearful acceptance speech spoke volumes about how much a BAFTA really meant to him. Anyway, here's the full list if you missed the show:

Best Film
Avatar
An Education
The Hurt Locker - WINNER! PREDICTED!
Precious
Up In The Air

Outstanding British Film
An Education - PREDICTED!
Fish Tank - WINNER!
In The Loop
Moon
Nowhere Boy

Outstanding Debut by a British writer, director or producer
Lucy Bailey, Andrew Thompson, Elizabeth Morgan Hemlock, David Pearson (Mugabe And The White African)
Eran Creevy (Shifty)
Stuart Hazeldine (Exam)
Duncan Jones (Moon) - WINNER! PREDICTED!
Sam Taylor-Wood (Nowhere Boy)

Director
James Cameron (Avatar)
Neill Blomkamp (District 9)
Lone Scherfig (An Education)
Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker) - WINNER! PREDICTED!
Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino)

Original Screenplay
Jon Lucas, Scott Moore (The Hangover)
Mark Boal (The Hurt Locker) - WINNER!
Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino)
Joel Coen, Ethan Coen (A Serious Man) - PREDICTED!
Bob Peterson, Pete Docter (Up)

Adapted Screenplay
Neill Blomkamp, Terri Tatchell (District 9)
Nick Hornby (An Education)
Jesse Armstrong, Simon Blackwell, Armando Iannucci, Tony Roche (In The Loop) - PREDICTED!
Geoffrey Fletcher (Precious)
Jason Reitman, Sheldon Turner (Up In The Air) - WINNER!

Film Not In The English Language
Broken Embraces
Coco Before Chanel
Let The Right One In - PREDICTED!
A Prophet - WINNER!
The White Ribbon

Animated Film
Coraline
Fantastic Mr Fox
Up - WINNER! PREDICTED!

Leading Actor
Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart)
George Clooney (Up In The Air) - PREDICTED!
Colin Firth (A Single Man) - WINNER!
Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker)
Andy Serkis (Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll)

Leading Actress
Carey Mulligan (An Education) - WINNER! PREDICTED!
Saoirse Ronan (The Lovely Bones)
Gabourey Sidibe (Precious)
Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia)
Audrey Tatou (Coco Before Chanel)

Supporting Actor
Alec Baldwin (It's Complicated)
Christian McKay (Me And Orson Welles)
Alfred Molina (An Education)
Stanley Tucci (The Lovely Bones)
Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds) - WINNER! PREDICTED!

Supporting Actress
Anne-Marie Duff (Nowhere Boy) - PREDICTED!
Vera Farmiga (Up In The Air)
Anna Kendrick (Up In The Air)
Mo'Nique (Precious) - WINNER!
Kristin Scott Thomas (Nowhere Boy)

Music
Avatar
Crazy Heart
Fantastic Mr Fox
Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll
Up - WINNER! PREDICTED!

Cinematography
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker - WINNER!
Inglourious Basterds
The Road - PREDICTED!

Editing
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker - WINNER!
Inglourious Basterds
Up In The Air

Production Design
Avatar - WINNER! PREDICTED!
District 9
Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince
The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus
Inglourious Basterds

Costume Design
Bright Star
Coco Before Chanel - PREDICTED!
An Education
A Single Man
The Young Victoria - WINNER!

Sound
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker - WINNER!
Star Trek - PREDICTED!
Up

Special Visual Effects
Avatar - WINNER! PREDICTED!
District 9
Harry Potter And The Half Blood Prince
The Hurt Locker
Star Trek

Make Up & Hair
Coco Before Chanel
An Education
The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus
Nine
The Young Victoria - WINNER! PREDICTED!

Short Animation
The Gruffalo - PREDICTED!
The Happy Duckling
Mother Of Many - WINNER!

Short Film
14
I Do Air - WINNER!
Jade
Mixtape
Off Season

Outstanding Contribution to Cinema
Joe Dunton - WINNER!

The Orange Rising Star Award (voted for by the public)
Jesse Eisenberg
Nicholas Hoult
Carey Mulligan
Tahar Rahim - PREDICTED!
Kristen Stewart - WINNER!

Read more...

UK cinemas to boycott Alice In Wonderland?


Do you remember when Odeon refused to show Rambo a few years ago? Well, the same treatment could be in store for Tim Burton's upcoming Alice In Wonderland adaptation (released 5 March), as Odeon, Vue and Cineworld are all set to boycott the movie. Adding salt to the wound, this would mean Tim Burton's latest will only be available to 5% of British cinemas with 3D screens.

So what's going on? Well, basically, Disney want to lower the time gap between a movie's theatrical premiere and its DVD/Blu-ray release. Disney say this is to help curb piracy (as audiences will be more willing to wait for a legal disc if they're available quicker), and the company also believe that it makes the majority of its box-office profits in the first 8 weeks of a film's release, so there's not much point keeping films around in cinemas after two months.

Currently, movies are released on DVD about 17 weeks after their theatrical release, but Disney want to lower that to 12 weeks. Unfortunately, while that makes good business sense for studios (who tend to make more money from DVD sales these days), cinema chains understandably prefer films to exist for about 4 months in the theatre so they can make money off ticket sales themselves. They're concern that too many people will prefer to wait 12 weeks and buy a DVD rather than go out for the big-screen experience.

Disney were hoping to make a projected £40m from Alice In Wonderland's UK run, as it's the first blockbuster of 2010 and significant 3D release post-Avatar, so there will certainly be a big financial loss if three prominent cinema chains refuse to show it. Disney have apparently flown in distribution bosses from the States to try and solve this standoff, but in the meantime publicity material for Alice In Wonderland has been taken down in Odeon and Vue's multiplexes and both chains aren't taking preorders for ticket.

So, it's a very interesting situation. In the case of Rambo, Odeon stood firm and Sylvester Stallone's action movie had its UK box-office performance significantly dented as a result. But will Disney allow a worse situation to arise, with £40m at stake? Also, do they genuinely believe British consumers would prefer to get Alice In Wonderland on DVD/Blu-ray quicker, rather than get to see the film in 3D at the cinema?

I can understand Disney's thinking with traditional movies, perhaps, but I would have thought they'd be eager to let Alice soak up money on 3D screens for as long as possible -- particularly in the wake of the all-conquering Avatar and buzz surrounding the 3D filmgoing experience. But hey, what do I know.

Read more...

Film 24

There was a time when mere speculation about a 24 movie would get me jiggling in my seat and grinning like a loon, but I'm having trouble getting excited by news a 24 film's actively being developed now. Maybe it's because the idea has been left to percolate for five years already, so it feel like it's been stuck in "conceptual hell" for too long. But then there's the fact 24's no longer the sleek, agile, shocking, gripping action-adventure series it was in its first five seasons. Sure, season 7 repaired the damage done by the season 6 debacle, but the current eighth season just feels over familiar and, strangely, less of a successful "revamp" (despite a relocation to NYC, new characters, and a brand new CTU set.)

Anyway, they've already hired Billy Ray (Breach) as screenwriter for 24: The Movie, which is a promising sign. I mean, they could very easily have just given some of the TV show's many writers a promotion to mastermind the big-screen version, which was what most people assumed would happen. But hiring someone from outside of the 24 "family" should bring a fresh perspective to things. Ray has form writing political thrillers (State Of Play), dumb action (Volcano), corporate drama (Shattered Glass) and a tense mystery (Flightplan), and 24 is essentially a mix of all those things.

It also sounds likely they're going to send Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) to Europe for his cinematic debut, as has been rumoured for years, which still sounds like a great idea. It's a traditional playground for espionage movies, it's feasible to get to many different countries in a relatively short span of time (America's so massive the longest distance Jack ever covered was L.A to Mexico, which ate up too much time.) I confidently predict a lot of the action will take place in London, too. It's just a gut feeling based on what Sutherland's said in countless interviews.

Of course, the big question has always been: will 24 translate to a movie? The show's primary selling point has been the "real time" format (that 24 episodes equal 24 hours in Jack's life), which will obviously be impossible to replicate in film. They appear to have two options open to them: (1) Tell a story that takes place over exactly 24-hours, but forget about the real-time element and just include lots of countdowns and ticking clocks to crank up tension; (2) ignore the relevance of 24 as a title and tell a story in strict real time that lasts two hours, a la the 24: Redemption special. The latter may limit what kind of story they tell, though -- as even a trip from London to Paris on the Chunnel would eat too much time (unless a significant part of the plot took place on the train), so I'll assume they'll either ditch the real time element entirely, or possibly the second half of the movie will dovetail into real time after an hour's setup?

Anyway, this is pure speculation on my part. I think the larger issue is: do people care enough about 24 to make this a hit? Well, yes -- the prospect of a big-budget action film with Jack Bauer still has its appeal, no matter how strained and repetitive his small-screen adventures have become in recent years. It may also attract audiences who haven't even seen the TV series, because Kiefer Sutherland starring in a good action thriller has its own appeal, and 24's concept needs no big explanations.

Still, I hope there's a sizeable gap between the TV series ending (well, we assume it'll end...) and the film hitting cinemas. Part of the reason why season 7 did well was because fans had been starved of 24 for over 18 months, wasn't it?

How do you feel about Jack Bauer belatedly hitting the big screen? Is it five years too late, or the best way to keep the flame alight?

Read more...

TRAILER PARK: Alice In Wonderland



I'm always interested in whatever Tim Burton turns his hand to, although I'm a little wary of Alice In Wonderland because, like Charlie & The Chocolate Factory, on the surface it sounds like perfect material for the director, but it could still disappoint like his Roald Dahl adaptation did. Lewis Carroll's book has also been adapted and reinterpreted countless times already, too, so it's hardly fresh material for audiences.

But this trailer certainly looks like a sumptuous feast for the eyes, and I can already sense that Burton's vision is going to far more fantastical than anything we've seen from Alice's previous film/TV adventures. I particularly like the "bobbleheads" of certain characters, particularly Helena Bonham Carter's Queen of Hearts, and Mia Wasikowska looks absolutely perfect in the title role. That shot of Alice shrinking into her blue dress is an immediately iconic image, too. I'm less excited by how everything looks geared towards its IMAX 3D presentation, with people poking and throwing things at the camera. Hopefully the actual film will be more subtle and visually engrossing. And if it's a hit, there's an obvious sequel to explore...

Released: 5 March 2010 (US & UK)

Read more...

TRAILER PARK: Michael Jackson's This Is It



Here's the trailer for Michael Jackson's "This Is It", the documentary created using rehearsal footage for his O2 gigs by Kenny Ortega (High School Musical). I'm surprisingly excited about this, how about you? I'm just not sure I'm excited enough to go to the cinema to see it -- but that's definitely the next best thing for Jacko fans who'd intended to see him live. This Is It will be in cinemas for a limited two-week period from 28 October, so I'm guessing the DVD/Blu-ray will be out for Christmas.

Read more...

TRAILER PARK: Trick 'R Treat



Here's a tale to chill your blood: the frustrating politics behind the making of Trick 'R Treat, a horror movie from screenwriter Michael Dougherty (X-Men II) that has been sitting on the shelf for two years. It's finally being released on 6 October as a staight-to-DVD feature in the States, so I implore everyone to track it down and make it a surprise success hit to make studio bosses think twice in future. Come on, it's bound to be better than cinematic Halloween fare like Saw VI.

Trick 'R Treat is an anthology of five Halloween-themed stories: a school principal (Dylan Baker) moonlights as a serial-killer; a girl dressed as Red Riding Hood costume (Anna Paquin) is stalked by a hooded figure; pranksters investigate an urban legend about a school bus massacre; and a hermit (Brian Cox) is visited by a vengeful trick 'r treater. Ooooh.

Despite its problems securing a theatrical release, Trick 'R Treat has been wowing horror festivals and already has a 100% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes (admittedly from just 5 reviews, at time of writing), but still. The trailer looks like a lot fun and perfect viewing for a hopefully chilly 31 October night...

HD Downloads: 480P (45MB) | 720P (110MB) | 1080P (161MB)

To play: right-click, Save As..., rename file "whatever.mov" and double-click.

Read more...

The Time Traveler's Wife: The TV Show?



I finished reading Audrey Niffenegger's excellent sci-fi romance earlier this summer, but probably won't see the just-released film version (starring Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams) until it's released on DVD. The reviews have been mixed, but most people seem to have enjoyed it, while many critics claim it's improved if you've read the book (which fills gaps in its logic.) It's also made a decent splash at the box-office amidst big blockbusters (debuting at #3 with $18 million), which has no doubt encouraged the next twist in the tale: The Time Traveler's Wife is set to become a television series!

Wait, didn't that already happen with Journeyman? Well, yes, that cancelled show stole elements from Niffenegger's book, Quantum Leap, and many others. But this will be intentionally based on the book, created by Marta Kaufman (Friends, Veronica's Closet), who has apparently been trying to get a TV adaptation made for years.

What do you think? Will the story make a better TV series than it did a movie? Did you love the movie? Or will the book always stand apart as superior to its adaptations? It seems to me that any TV version can't blindly follow the book's decades-long story, but will have to change various aspects to make fulfilling individual episodes possible. And with a knotty thing like time travel involved, I don't envy anyone having to plot its long-term arc!

Read more...

Avatar: first official photo and James Cameron interviewed



/Film have the first official photo of James Cameron's upcoming Avatar (see above). The 3D sci-fi epic isn't due for release until 18 December in the US, but there's a special "Avatar Day" on 21 August where they'll be showing 15-minutes of footage and releasing the trailer. Exciting! The LA Times also have a nice, short interview with the writer-director:

"We aren't going to get prejudged like Watchmen or even a Batman or Spider-Man movie because you don't have all that history and that huge, brand-based mythology that you have to live up to. We aren't going to piss anybody off because they don't know what this thing is. Nobody read the novel, nobody read the graphic novel, we're not going to be playing against expectation. They aren't going to be viewing us as a disappointment or letdown before the movie even starts. This is a doorway and they don’t know what's on the other side. We're going to open it for them." Continue reading...

Read more...

My Ping in TotalPing.com

  © Sexy Nude Celebrity