Tag Archives: Movies

Megan Fox is Catwoman!

The Sun – who reported last December that Eddie Murphy had been cast to play the new riddler in the third Batman installment – is “reporting” that Megan Fox has been cast as Selina Kyle, aka Catwoman:

…I have a strong feline she is the purrfect choice for the part – and thanks to a spot of computer wizardry here’s how she might look. (you can see their mock-up of Fox in Catwoman mask at the link above)

The Transformers stunner follows in the pawprints of MICHELLE PFEIFFER and HALLE BERRY.

But Megan, who has a slightly darker edge than her two predecessors, will be brilliant as Selina Kyle.

All the other stars who have reinvented the Batman films are back on board – CHRISTIAN BALE, MICHAEL CAINE and director CHRISTOPHER NOLAN.

Shooting starts next year but the film is not expected to be released until 2011.

Not only was that a really douchey way to start a story, it’s more than 99.99% likely to be 100% false. Can’t wait to see what rumor they come up with in another 6 months or so!

Spawn, Batman, & Hancock Movie News & Rumors

Looks like we have a few small stories and rumors that I just wanted to highlight:

McFarlane Writing New Spawn Movie
First off, it sounds like that McFarlane has started writing a script for a new Spawn movie, which I believe is going to be a reboot:

“The story has been in my head for 7 or 8 years,” McFarlane said. “The movie idea is neither a recap or continuation. It is a standalone story that will be R-rated. Creepy and scary.”

He added that “the tone of this ‘Spawn’ movie will be for a more older audience. Like the film ‘Departed.'”

It will be interesting to see where this goes, and if it ever gets off the ground. Don’t realy see any reason why it wouldn’t…

Batman 3 to be Filmed Completely in IMAX?
Next up, we have Ain’t It Cool News reporting a rumor that Nolan’s third Batman film may be being shot entirely in IMAX:

The THIRD chapter of Christopher Nolan’s Caped Crusader’s saga could very well be FULLY shot in IMAX, not IMAX Digital – but the beautiful, stunning IMAX that we saw pieces of THE DARK KNIGHT in.

Now this is something that I’m sure a lot of you will feel is a no-brainer. Nolan blew us away with the IMAX sequences in that film – but it was a very tough process to work in. Mainly due to the limitations of how many available real IMAX rigs there are. Not only that, but lenses had to be created, adapted and god forbid one broke down. Part of the reason that Nolan went forward with INCEPTION first – besides taking a creative break from the cape and cowl adventures… was possibly to create a few new IMAX cameras made to his specs. Once again – the cost of shooting an entire feature film on IMAX… the stock, the time it takes to reset, to load, to move the cameras… Well… it is daunting, but as Nolan proved with DARK KNIGHT – the difference is stunning.

Hancock 2 Has Writers
And finally, sounds like, like it or not, Columbia Pictures is moving forward with a sequel to Hancock. According to The Hollywood Reporter:

Columbia has hired scribes Adam Fierro and Glen Mazzara to pen the sequel to the Will Smith superhero movie, which grossed $624 million worldwide last year. The original producing team is expected to return.

Plot details are being kept under wraps, though the scribes will work with Smith and director Peter Berg to build on the world hinted at in the first movie.

Hancock was a movie that made me extremely upset. It was a movie that played around with what I thought to be some pretty cool mythology and hinted to some awesome ideas, but in the end, just screwed the audience. Supposedly, in the second installment, they will dive more into the mythos that were merely hinted at in the the first film, and while I would love to be cautiously excited about that, the first movie was just so… bad, I have absolutely no hopes for it.

If you interested, you can check out the original script for Hancock, which was originally titled Tonight He Comes. The original draft was a hard ‘R’ rating with lots of extreme superhero violence and sex. But, of course, the studio and star wanted a PG-13 rating, so instead we got the film that was…

DVD Review: The Wild Man of the Navidad

The Wild Man of the Navidad is a film by two students who studied with the writer/producer of the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre from 1974, Kim Henkel. Duane Graves and Justin Meeks recreate in great detail the feel of a creature-based horror movie from the 1970’s. From the way the movie was filmed, to the acting, to the “special effects” – everything about this film screams retro.

This is a really fun film, but I wouldn’t go into it expecting to be scared – at all. It’s funny at times, and maybe a little bit “thrilling”, but at no point during the course of this film was I scared or “creeped out” by any stretch of the imagination. But short-comings or not, Meeks and Graves have done a fantastic job recreating this genre and is worth checking out to anyone that’s a fan of campy b-movies, or the horror genre who appreciates its roots.

You can check out the full review of this film over at Arse-bot’s alter ego on Examiner.com.

The film is mostly based on the journals of Dale S. Rogers (played by Meeks), who lived along the Navidad River near Sublime, Texas in the 1970’s. The film focuses on Dale, his wheelchair-bound wife, and their Mexican care-taker, Mario. After losing his welding job, Dale needs to find a way to make ends meet. After some persuasion from the locals, he opens up his land -that has been closed off for years by his father before him- to the hunters. Dale knows that there is some sort of man-beast out there that’s hungry for blood, but still allows people to go hunting on his property, for the right price. The hunters intruding on it’s land angers the Wild Man and he starts to become increasingly more violent and bold in his attacks. After Dale and the town folk have had enough of the murderous beast, a hunting party is put together to try to rid the area of the beast, permanently.

DVD Review: Audience of One

Audience of One is a documentary that follows Pastor Richard Gazowsky -of the Voice of Pentecost Church based out of San Francisco- as he attempts to produce a movie based on the Biblical story of Joseph.

Wait. Let me back up.

Pastor Gazowsky saw his first movie at the age of 40. Shortly after that he claims that he received a message from God telling him he needs to make a movie about the biblical story of Joseph -told as a sci-fi epic. Charged with this task, Pastor Gazowsky creates the production company What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG for short) out of his congregation and begins production on Gravity: The Shadow of Joseph. This film documents Gazowsky as his attempts to make his vision come to fruition despite not knowing a thing about making movies. What starts out as story about a seemingly misguided Pastor and his congregation who simply want to make a movie slowly turns into a portrait of a dillusional man who borderlines on religious fanaticism and those who follow his word relentlessly.

This really is a great documentary and is interesting as hell. You can check out a more in-depth review of this film over at Examiner.com.

Audience of One is available now on DVD.

REVIEW: Inglourious Basterds

I went to my local Carmike Cinemas to see Quentin Tarentino’s latest opus, Inglourious Basterds, and I must say I was worried going in.  Reviews have been mixed, split right down the middle, but I was determined to see for myself what Tarentino was up to.  He’s easily one of my favorite filmmakers and any new offering from him is a welcome respite from the normal dreck I’m subjected to at the cinema.

Basterds is equal parts Dirty Dozen, Guns of Navarone and, perhaps The Young Lions as well as some French masterpiece about the love of cinema that I’ve never seen but am confident of its existence.   The film  is divided up into chapters that at times can seem disparate from each other, but all tie together nicely by the last couple of chapters of the movie.

The film is gory and fun, well-written and well-acted.  All in all this was a very, very solid entry into Tarentino’s filmography.

One particular aspect of the film that I loved more than most was how Tarentino seemed to pay homage to film projectionists, people who care about film, cinephiles and passionate people willing to battle the Nazi’s for what’s right.  There’s also a bit of a love-letter/history lesson about nitrate film and even the film itself is used in the plot to kill Hitler and his lieutenants.

Which is why it was so disappointing to me that I saw the film in a theatre that was projecting a 35mm print and the projectionists really didn’t seem to care.  From the get-go, the film was blurry at times, the print was scratched in a few key places, there were missplices at the reel changovers, there were missing frames, the credits burned out after 15 seconds and 3/4s of the film was slightly out of frame.  It was so frustrating to watch the film (which I enjoyed very much) run by a group of kids who obviously didn’t care enough about the film to play it properly.  But maybe that’s not fair, maybe Carmike Cinemas is to blame.  I worked as a projectionist for over 10 years and a lot of those were for Carmike Cinemas (I got laid off when they decided that four theatres in one building isn’t enough even though I think it’s two or three too man) and it’s a systemic problem they have.  They make the managers double as projectionists (which I did happily) but they give the management too many screens and things to take care of to truly make the projection top notch.

And as the credits started, the film began to burn, which is a shame, since I love watching credits and doubly so during Quentin Tarentino movies because the music is always so compelling.  (In fact the use of Ennio Morricone in this film made me very, very happy.) I went out in to the lobby to demand a refund for the poor projection and the breaking of the film, but, alas, I saw the last show of the night and the management was stretched so thin that there was literally no representative of the company there to even assuage my anger.

And so here I am, writing this.

If any representative of Carmike Cinemas manages to read this, I would be happy to accept a refund.  And I would also be happy to offer some suggestions to fix the problem.  Namely, hire dedicated projectionists that are cinephiles and actually care about film and make that their ONLY responsibility.  And don’t let them be in charge of more than 5 or 6 projectors at a time.  I know the company has a long history of tripping over dollars to pick up dimes (I saw it everyday as part of management there), but this is something that is too important to worry about the cost.

In the meantime, go find a digital projection version of Inglourious Basterds, or see it at an art house where the projectionists are far more likely to care that the film plays well.

Teaser Trailer: Avatar

The teaser trailer for James Cameron’s Avatar is now live, and you can view it at here. For something that had $10 million in R&D dropped into it just to create the right special effects, you HAVE to download the 1080p trailer.

Avatar will be the first film James Cameron has done (that isn’t a vapid, 3D documentary) since 1997’s Titanic.

It hits theaters December 18th.

New Scott Pilgrim VBlog

Ok, for those of you like me who keep thinking, “Yeah, this Edgar Wright ‘Scott Pilgrim’ adaptation looks brilliant, but I’m still not sure Michael Cera can ditch ‘the awkward’ to pull off the cool-yet-clueless vibe” need to check out the newest video blog from the set of Scott Pilgrim.

Now, one may watch this and think, “So what?  It’s a bunch of idiots trying to use a Hula Hoop 1o years after they last tried…so what?”  But watch towards the end as Michael Cera is so proud of his utterly forgettable accomplishment and how the others (especially the actor who plays Stephen Stills) react to his “antics”.  It looks like Michael Cera is in character, and that character IS Scott Pilgrim.

Hopefully this movie is a lesson to us all, don’t start getting pissy about a movie until AFTER it’s out.  Who knows, maybe despite all of the ‘nets incessant bad mouthing, the director/producers/writers ACTUALLY know what they’re doing…I mean, not every filmmaker tries to fuck up a movie as bad as George Lucas or Uwe Boll does, right?  Let’s be POSITIVE, internet!

Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim!  Go Scott Pilgrim! Go Scott Pilgrim!

This 251 word blog post has been brought to you by BUDGETRON.

John C. McGinley scrubs in as super villain Metallo in Superman/Batman: Public Enemies

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John C. McGinley of Scrubs fame is providing the voice of the super villain Metallo in the next DCAU feature, Superman/Batman: Public Enemies. Warner Bros. has been kind enough to provide us with a Q&A with Mr. McGinley with regards to this latest film!

About Superman/Batman: Public Enemies

Warner Premiere, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation are set to release the all-new Superman/Batman: Public Enemies on September 29, 2009 in a Blu-RayTM Hi-Def edition, a special edition 2-disc DVD, and a single disc DVD. Warner Home Video will distribute the action-packed movie, which will also be available OnDemand and Pay-Per-View as well as available for download that same day.

Superman/Batman: Public Enemies is based on the popular Jeph Loeb/Ed McGuinness comic series/graphic novel. Animation legend Bruce Timm (Superman Doomsday, Green Lantern) is executive producer. Michael Goguen (Justice League: The New Frontier) is supervising producer. Sam Liu (The Batman) is directing a script written by Stan Berkowitz (Justice League: The New Frontier).

In the film, United States President Lex Luthor uses the oncoming trajectory of a Kryptonite asteroid to frame Superman and declare a $1 billion bounty on the heads of the Man of Steel and his “partner in crime,” Batman. Heroes and villains alike launch a relentless pursuit of Superman and Batman, who must unite – and recruit help – to stave off the action-packed onslaught, stop the asteroid, and uncover Luthor’s devious plot to take command of far more than North America.

About John C. McGinley

From the trauma of war in Oliver Stone films to hospital humor on Scrubs, John C. McGinley has covered the acting gamut. But in his latest role – as the voice of Metallo in Superman/Batman: Public Enemies – McGinley finally gets to delve into a characterization he has rarely been offered: pure villainy.

McGinley voices one of the featured villains in Superman/Batman: Public Enemies, a blockbuster blast of super heroes and villains alike that includes the voices of Kevin Conroy (Batman), Tim Daly (Superman), Clancy Brown (Lex Luthor), Allison Mack (Power Girl), Xander Berkeley (Captain Atom), Ricardo Chavira (Major Force), LeVar Burton (Black Lightning), CCH Pounder (Amanda Waller) and a host of others.

McGinley has crafted a well-rounded career in film and television, forcing audiences to instantly take note with his performances in Oliver Stone films like Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July. McGinley has garnered top-notch reviews for his turns in Any Given Sunday, Office Space, Wall Street, The Rock, Nixon and Point Break, and he is instantly recognizable to television audiences for his portrayal of the sarcastic, abusive, hilarious Dr. Cox in 169 episodes of Scrubs. Mc Ginley is also no stranger to animation, having spent significant hours in the sound booth recording for The Boondocks, Justice League (as The Atom), WordGirl (as The Whammer) and in guest
spots on King of the Hill, Kim Possible, Robot Chicken and Spider-Man.

Q & A
QUESTION:
What were the joys and challenges of getting behind a microphone for a character like Metallo?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
It’s a real treat to collaborate with the creative folks once you get in the booth. Ten out of ten times the people on the other side of the glass know the character better than you are ever going to – they have been working on this for months or years. All you can do is try to return serve because you are given all this wonderful, precise direction. I’ve found over the years it is really, really helpful to just integrate and go. It’s also a treat that the people on the other
side of the glass are pretty much the top one percent of their industry, and I get to have this kind of creative input. You get on a lot of film sets and everybody is rolling the dice. Everybody is guessing their best. The people in that booth are not guessing, they know this stuff backwards. That to me is a huge asset.
QUESTION:
What were your impressions of the script for Superman/Batman: Public Enemies?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
The fun part for me showing up on any set is the preparation. A lot of times when you are doing a play or a film, things are going to go wrong. You’re going to lose the light or the sound is going to stop working. Even in a controlled environment like that booth, which lends itself to things going right and to things flourishing, there are sometimes things that can go wrong and, thus, compromises will need to be made. So it behooves the actor to come loaded for bear. If you are 100 percent ready and we have to make 40 percent compromises, then unless you have that other 60 percent ready it is going to kind of just go flat instead of elevating it. My favorite thing, which may sound a little presumptuous, is to try to elevate the material.
QUESTION:
Did you enter the world of super heroes through comic books or otherwise?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
My earliest memories of Batman are watching the live-action series with Batman and Robin. That was the coolest Batmobile and you had Frank Gorshin as the Riddler and Caesar Romero being the Joker. As far as Superman goes, it was more about the Christopher Reeve films. I was not a comic book reader. When we played as kids, we were always acting out stuff we saw Batman doing , or the Green Hornet or Aquaman. But that inspiration came from Saturday morning cartoons and not proper comic books.
QUESTION:
As a non-comics reader, does voicing a comic character still lend itself to some child-like thrill for you?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
Well, of course, it is big fat privilege to work with these characters – and it is really fun now with Hi-Def. It just kind of jumps off the screen, and the transfers (to Hi-Def) are so beautiful now and perfect. It’s completely thrilling because the state of the art has exceeded anybody’s wildest expectations. It is astonishing. It is not as fun to see my voice come out of a character as it is really rewarding. To be a tiny component in the evolution of animation as the voice of a character is thrilling.

My son is old enough to hear and recognize my voice coming out of the characters, but it doesn’t resonate with him yet. My daughter will, and that is pretty cool. Not necessarily to be a killer robot, but we will see how things evolve.
QUESTION:
Actors tend to be very self-critical. Is it easier to watch an animated film with your voice coming out of a character than it is to watch yourself on-screen in live-action productions?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
If I have a script early enough, I have a room set aside in our house as a rehearsal space. I set up a camera and I rehearse in front of the camera, especially for Dr. Cox on Scrubs, who has these long two-page, single-space rants. So it is almost like somebody practicing foul shots. It sounds simple – go to the free throw line and shoot a foul shot. But Larry Bird shot a million foul shots in French Lick before he ever tried for Indiana State or the Boston Celtics. So I
feel like if you have text early enough, it really is in the actor’s best interests to go just hash about in front of a lens.

One thing the lens does is it exposes bad habits. Like an X-ray machine taking a picture of a fracture. We all have nervous ticks, things we do when you can’t remember a line. But if you watch yourself, you can see for yourself – the camera exposes those liabilities like an X-ray machine. So yes, I watch myself on film as much as possible because the learning curve just objectively is through the roof.
QUESTION:
You’ve worked with some impressive live-action directors. What’s it like working with Andrea Romano in the animated realm?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
Andrea Romano is not dissimilar to Oliver Stone in a lot of ways, in as much as they’re both like a thoroughbred at The Kentucky Derby. They both put on creative blinders like a thoroughbred. Oliver and Andrea both put on blinders and invite you into that narrow creative vision which is the perfect division for the piece. So that you don’t have to do anything, you don’t have to guess. Come right inside here and it is going to be good. When you come in there with Oliver Stone or with Andrea, it is Nirvana. You will now shine.
QUESTION:
We’ve heard the expression, but can you define a John C. McGinley “type”?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
The John C. McGinley type usually is one of about seven different things. It is a niche that I fell into, not of my own doing, but it became the part in the films where either you are the best friend, the co-worker, the bad guy, the brother who dies and compels the hero into action in the third act, the boss, now the father of the kids, the head of the hospital usually in a position of authority. For a long time there was a group of us – Ving Rhames, me and about a half a dozen other guys – who would be the component in the story. Who would reiterate the who, what, where, when and how a couple times throughout the movie. You need somebody who can speak the speech without getting in the way of the speech. The hero is not going to do that. So every once in a while throughout the progression of a story, we need to be reminded where the bomb is, when it is going to go off and who the bad guys are. So that the hero can do his job. That “type” has paid the bills for a long time.
QUESTION:
You’re a bit of a super hero yourself as the national spokesperson for the National Down Syndrome Society’s Buddy Walk. What’s the essence of this endeavor?

JOHN C. MCGINLEY:
The Buddy Walk is our national day of empowerment, encouragement and elevation. There are nearly 300 walks that happen in September and October throughout the United States – and these are great, great days. When you have a child born with special needs, a lot of parents think they did something wrong. They beat themselves up and they don’t
realize that there is a much larger community out there who also have kids with special needs. This is a day of inclusion, where we want people to know that you have a chance now to be a great parent, which is what it is going to take. The day is as much about including and loving the caregivers as it is about the kids. We attempt to raise
money, but that is not really my mantra. It is about coming out and just getting the love. It is all about introducing people to nutritional intervention and further education. It’s a short walk – not a marathon, just a mile. And it is a lovely day where we include, elevate and celebrate the similarities that the children and the parents have instead of their differences. It’s a very important cause.

For more information, images and updates, please visit the film’s
official website at www.SupermanBatmanDVD.com.

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Chris Claremont (Part 4)

In Part 4 of our conversation with Chris Claremont turned to his work with George Lucas.  Claremont wrote the sequel trilogy to Willow starting with Shadow Moon and we talked about the process he approached it with and how involved Lucas.  There’s also been talk around the Internet (reliable, I know) about a sequel to Willow and we spoke of that.

He spoke about the reaction to Shadow Moon and the situation of events that lead Lucasfilm to change its mind between concept and execution of the property.  He also talked about what his goals for the books were and how he got the gig.

Be sure to check out Part 1Part 2 and Part 3 and watch out for more parts soon!