June 30th, 2007

Get Lost in the UK First!

     Usually when a hit TV show or film that hails from the US comes onto DVD it is inevitable that it will be released there first. But that has changed, at least with the release of Lost Season 3 on DVD. According to Play.com and various other online DVD retailers the Season 3 Box Set of Lost gets released in the UK almost 2 months prior to it being released in the US. The official release date for the UK is 22/10/2007 (check it out here) where as the US release date says 11/12/2007 (check it out here).

                                                   Lost Season 3 Box Set

     Now since I hail from the UK myself this is obviously great news for me (us). We usually have to wait months for the release of a DVD to make it’s way over here. Why do you think they have decided to release Season 3 of the show in the UK first this time round? Does numbers show that the show is more popular over here? Surely not…

June 30th, 2007

Iron Man Poster

     Vic over at Screenrant just sent me this new poster from John Favreau’s new movie, Iron Man (is it two words or one?). Over there, he explains how he manipulated an image of this poster taken at a gallery screening to create this much more “webfriendly” version. Pretty cool Vic. Check it out…


Iron Man Poster

     I gotta be honest, I still have no idea what the hell Iron Man is. Everysite on the internet has been posting news and rumors about it for months. I’ve still never heard about Iron Man or even know who or what he is. Comic book movies suck 99% of the time, so I’m not holding my breath on this one either. To be honest, I don’t even know when it comes out; not do I really care.

     Having said that, after Ross posted the first casting photo on here a few days ago, I have to admit I’m at least intrigued by Bridges’ Lex Luthor hair job.

June 30th, 2007

The Return of Pearl!

     You may have seen part one (which was much funnier). But Pearl is back and she’s kickin ass and taking names…


June 29th, 2007

A Watchman Website?

Watchmen

     Dtheatre posted up a link to a new Watchmen (IMDB) site (actual site) earlier today. I’ve also done some browsing around and a few other sites are reporting this story.

     I did a little investigating around on the site. Currently the site is just a black screen with a full version of the image I posted above on it. It has a link that goes to an email address of rorschach@rorschachsjournal.com. Nothing too interesting so far. By digging into the source I discovered that the page is actually just a framed page that contains another page. That page reveals some interesting things. First the page title and the alt tage for the image is as follows:

-.– — ..- / .-. . — .. -. -.. / — . / — ..-. / .– . .- - …. . .-. -… . . .-.-.- / .. / -.. — -. .—-. - / .-.. .. -.- . / -.– — ..-

     It took me a couple of seconds but I realized this is probably morse code. Sure enough when I headed over to an online morse code generator I discovered that it says

YOU REMIND ME OF WEATHERBEE. I DON’T LIKE YOU

     I still haven’t read (it is on my list) Watchmen so I can’t comment on what that actually means. Hopefully someone else can who has read the comic.

Okay now the important stuff.

     The background music for the site is located at: theonering.net and the image is actually sitting on the type40marketing.com server. If you click the links and contact link you’ll see that the site is run by Michael Regina out of Kirkland Quebec and that he links to a bunch of fan sites (including TheOneRing).

     I hate to say it but I’m thinking rorschachsjournal.com is just a fan site getting some early publicity.

June 29th, 2007

Joel Siegel (1943-2007)

from the AP and Newsday.com:

Joel Siegel (dead at age 65)     ABC’s most recognizable film critic, Joel Siegel of Good Morning America died Friday after a bout with Colon Cancer. He was 63.

     Siegel had a bunch of Emmy awards for his journalism and he’s been around forever. He’s one of those critics that I remember from when I was a kid; back when there was only a handful of critics and you had to choose one of them. There were Siskel & Ebert, Gene Shalit, Leonard Maltin and Joel Sigel. Sure there were more, but these were the ones everybody paid attention to.

     What I remember most about Siegel (unfortunately maybe) is his spat with Kevin Smith a year or two ago in which Siegel stormed out of “Clerks II” shouting expletives that it was the worst movie he’d ever seen and was the first film he’d walked out of in 20 years - or something to that effect. Smith discussed it with him on a live radio broadcast later on and the moment is pretty much gold. Here’s the audio from that broadcast:


icon for podpress  Joel Siegel vs Kevin Smith [15:03m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

     As much as he kind of came off like an ass in that whole debacle, his reviews were taken pretty seriously and he definitely carried some clout in the world of critics. His stories were witty and his critiques relentless. He seemed like a naturally decent guy and this news is just… too bad. It’s truly sad especially in the critics world, so hat’s off to you sir - you were one of a kind and wil be missed by many.


June 29th, 2007

New Shoot ‘Em Up Posters

     I won’t go into the synopsis or give the trailer or anything as a previous post by Andrew has taken care of that for us (click here to view) but I just, not five minutes ago, came across three new posters for the film (was there any to begin with?) and they look kick ass. Thanks to MovieOnline.ca you can check them out below:

Shoot ‘Em Up Poster 1

Shoot ‘Em Up Poster 2

Shoot ‘Em Up Poster 3

Personal one-word thoughts on each poster and the look of the actor/character:

Poster 1 (Cliver Owen) -Cool

Poster 2 (Paul Giamatti) - Badass

Poster 3  (Monica Bellucci) - There are no words…

June 29th, 2007

War

     A new poster for the upcoming Jet Li and Jason Statham action movie War has just come online. Now for those of you who don’t know about the film below is a reminder of the synopsis, then below that is the poster (thanks to ComingSoon.net) and trailer. Enjoy:

     “After his partner is killed by Rogue (Li), the infamous assassin who has recently set off a bloody crime war between two rival Asian mobs, FBI agent Jack Crawford (Statham) starts a deadly game of cat and mouse to settle the score.”


War poster

Trailer:

     Now the action fan in me is absolutely dying to see this film. I am a massive Jason Statham fan (ever since I saw him in Snatch) and I am a pretty big Jet Li fan also. So to see these two literally face-off is very exciting for me. Now don’t get me wrong, this movie may in fact suck but I can tell right now that I am going to enjoy this film just because of the pairing. The main reason for this post, as I know this film was announced quite a while ago, is the new poster (shown above) that has just been released. Like always; what are your thoughts on the poster and the film in general?

June 29th, 2007

Is This Real?

     A shitty video-taped shot of “The Dark Knight” Trailer. It doesn’t show anything and the morons filming it can’t even hold the camera even close to still. But hey, here it is if you care…



     I’d be more impressed if this were fake. The “directors” in that case made it seem like it was real by the crappy way they captured it. If it is real, at the very least, hold the bloody camera still!

June 28th, 2007

100 Films Part 1 (Die Hard)

     So I decided I’m going to do something similar to Dave at filmrot.com when he did his 100 Days of Snark Feature. I’m not prepared to do anything that gruelling or probably that well written, but I’ve decided I’m going to review 100 different movies over the next… well, however long it takes. This won’t be a daily thing, just whenever I feel like it.

     These may be short reviews, they be long reviews. Some will be really old films and others fairly new. It will just be whatever I feel like that particular day. So today is part one and since this week saw the opening of Die Hard 4 (our review), I thought I’d open this series with Die Hard - the original film that started it all…

Click the following link for my review of Die Hard
UNWRAP TEXT or SHOW **SPOILER**

June 28th, 2007

Comments for Lazy Asses

     MoviePatron Blog has installed a new feature: Click Quick Comments. For those that don’t want to write a bunch and just wanna say good job or whatever, they can click on one of the buttons below and tally a comment for each post. A commenter can click more than one button per post. You can still leave regular comments as always, but now you don’t have to leave your email address or type anything if you just wanna say, “I was here.”

     Is this stupid, cool or neither? Leave some “real” comments or click a button below.

June 27th, 2007

Women’s Rebuttal to AFI

Sally Field in Norma Rae     After the release of AFI’s Top 100 list last week, lots of discussion and debate kicked up surrounding the AFI’s final results. Though mostly predictable and somewhat obvious, it’s still fun to argue about and question.

     One group that really got into the question was The Alliance of Women Film Journalists (I didn’t know there was such a thing). The AWFJ got together and concocted their own list of films they thought were of a standard high enough to be included in a top 100 of all time list. Apparently, they didn’t have any rules like women directors only or feminist films, they just wanted to see what would happen when they put their favorites together. Would it automatically include more films directed by and starring strong females or have more of a feminist plotline? You decide…

     Thanks to Kurt for pointing me to the story. Here’s the list via Cinematical.

THE ACCUSED (1988): Somewhat based on the true story of a 1983 gang rape of a woman at a New Bedford, Mass., bar, the movie stars Jodie Foster (her first Oscar) as the sexually provocative and damn near indomitable working-class victim who refuses to go whimpering into her trailer and pretend it never happened. Her performance is both vibrant and vitriolic, while still conveying, in the film’s bleakest moments, the embers of fear and resignation that remain after white-hot anger fades. (Eleanor Ringel Gillespie)

ADAM’S RIB (1949): Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy triumphantly play out the battle of the sexes, as lawyers with gender inflected ideas about the law. (Martha P. Nochimson)

THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951): Quintessential Hepburn/Bogart matchup in a leaky steam vessel on the Lumbasi River. Not only can Kate’s classic Presbyterian spinster, Rose Sayer, hang with the toughest of men, her wit and intelligent determination lift the level of discourse. Despite the leeches and broken props, Sayer never compromises her personal beliefs. (Sheigh Crabtree)

ALL ABOUT EVE (1950): Fasten your seatbelts for Bette Davis as the aging Broadway diva who has everything but wants more, balancing love and work as her conniving protégée Anne Baxter makes life turbulent. (Carrie Rickey)

ALL ABOUT MY MOTHER (1999): All the world’s a stage in Pedro Almodovar’s Oscar-winner, which represents the full flowering of his trademark “screwball melodrama” style as he weaves wildly disparate elements into a hilarious, compassionate and utterly unforgettable whole. (Carol Cling)

ALICE DOESN’T LIVE HERE ANYMORE (1974): Scorsese’s rare moment of being in touch with his feminine side. (Susan Wlosczyzna)

ALIEN (1979): Still the reigning action film that neither exploits nor over-feminize its no-nonsense, take-charge heroine (SW)

AN ANGEL AT MY TABLE (1990): Stunning biopic of New Zealand’s Janet Frame, misdiagnosed as a schizophrenic, who emerges as her island nation’s literary eminence in Jane Campion’s portrait, prickly as it is plush — just like its subject. (CR)

AN UNMARRIED WOMAN (1978): Almost laughable in some ways now (really, she LEAVES the wonderful Alan Bates?) but a groundbreaker in taking women’s issues seriously at the time. (SW)

AMELIE (2001): Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s aggressively sunny romance pits a quirky wallflower (Audrey Tatou, Olive Oyl’s flesh-and-blood cousine) against the troubles of the world and the wallflower wins, brightening the lives of her Montmartre neighbors and even finding a love as eccentric as she. Gloriously nutty valentine to oddballs everywhere or sickeningly sweet French pastry? Count me among the besotted: Jeunet’s digitally tweaked and sweetened Paris is whimsical perfection and Tatou’s crooked smile could turn vinegar to honey. (Maitland McDonagh)

see the rest of the list by unwrapping the text…
UNWRAP TEXT or SHOW **SPOILER**

     You’ve still got the obvious choices in here like Casablanca, Citizen Kane and E.T., but clearly the list is full of stories that revolve around women standing up for themselves or who play a strong part in the story. I think that’s great and not really surprising.

     I sort of like the fact that its in alphabetical order too and not ranked; so no film is really considered greater than another (though many clearly are). Still, I would’ve liked to see what they consider the best, or at least given us the top ten. I make lists for everything and would like to see what they think.

     As for the specifics of the list, it’s hard to argue with most of the titles on here as film is subjective and it was put together by a lot of X chromosomes working overtime. I especially appreciate (and was a little surprised by) great foreign films like Raise the Red Lantern and Volver (among others) included here. I have to take a little exception though, with films like Bend it Like Beckham and A League of their Own. Really!? I mean, I like these movies (actually, I like A League quite a lot) but in the 100 GREATEST films of all time? Clueless? C’mon, there’s something more going on here than creating an honest list. There’s obviously an agenda here. Sure they’re female journalists, but to me this list seems a little “over the top” in its feminist ambition. Not that I’m opposed to that, but I wish it was just made clear and they were a bit more truthful about it.

     Admittedly there’s a bunch of films on here I’ve not seen, but I know what great cinema is and what isn’t. Nearly all of the films on here are wonderful films and I (personally) think about 50% of them are worthy to be on a Top 100 list. But no Kubrick films? No Kurosawa? Whatever. It’s an interesting list to be sure, but not one I’m going to rely on as difinitive (nor did they intend it to be).

     What do you think? Am I totally wrong here?

June 27th, 2007

Hitchcock’s “Lodger” is set for a Remake

Alfred Hitchcock     Alfred Hitchcock’s first film is set for a remake by David Ondaatje. My first question upon hearing this was just who is Ondaatje. So far he has written a documentary on Hitchcock called Undressing Hitchcock and a short dark comedy called Waiting for Dr. MacGuffin.

     I’ll have to head out and check out Lodger now. It has definitely been long enough for there to be a remake, the original was filmed in 1927 and even though I’m not huge Hitchcock buff I hadn’t heard about this one before now. I’ll be interested to see how this comes out.


Reuters via Yahoo! News
has a brief synopsis of the movie:

     ”The Lodger” was based on the true story of the hysteria caused by the Jack the Ripper’s killing spree that took place over several weeks in 1888. Ondaatje’s adaptation is broken into two converging plot lines set in present-day Los Angeles. The first involves an uneasy relationship between a psychologically unstable landlady and her enigmatic lodger, and the second is about a troubled detective engaged in a cat-and-mouse game with an unknown killer.

June 27th, 2007

The Brave One

     A film which has been on my radar, ever since the gigantic Lost fan in me read that one of it’s stars Naveen Andrews (who plays Sayid on the show) is going to be starring in a movie during the long between-season break, is The Brave One. But Andrew’s character I have learned is fairly minor and in fact the lead is played by the hit-and-miss (for me) Jodie Foster. The film also co-stars one of the most talented actors working today (in my opinion), Terrence Howard, in a supporting role as a police officer. Check out the synopsis (thanks to ComingSoon.net), the poster and the trailer below:

     “In the psychological thriller, opening September 14, New York radio host Erica Bain (Foster) has a life that she loves and a fiancé she adores. All of it is taken from her when a brutal attack leaves Erica badly wounded and her fiancé dead. Unable to move past the tragedy, Erica begins prowling the city streets at night to track down the men she holds responsible. Her dark pursuit of justice catches the public’s attention, and the city is riveted by her anonymous exploits. But with the NYPD desperate to find the culprit and a dogged police detective (Howard) hot on her trail, she must decide whether her quest for revenge is truly the right path, or if she is becoming the very thing she is trying to stop.”


The Brave One

Trailer:


     Now my first thoughts of the trailer was that I am definitely looking forward to it, but I am not dying to see it. The trailer is done well enough but I have some gripes with the latter part of it and in particular the quick flashes and “in-and-outs” of action that you can (barely) see. I think this ultimately falls fault to the maker of the trailer and not the actual film itself. But I can see that there is something worth spending your time watching here.

June 27th, 2007

Cinecast Episode 53


icon for podpress  Cinecast Episode 53 [120:04m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

this episode:
A Mighty Heart, 1408, Paprika, Once plus DVDs of the week.
…and as always our signature tangents.

Unwrap the complete Show Notes by clicking on this link…
UNWRAP TEXT or SHOW **SPOILER**