Tag Archives: Movies

DVD REVIEW: Scream of the Banshee


Archeology professor Isla Whelan (Dumb & Dumber’s Lauren Holly) accidentally releases the spirit of an ancient creature with the ability to kill with its scream.

Directed by Steven C. Miller (Automaton Transfusion) from a script by Anthony C. Ferrante (Headless Horseman) Scream of the Banshee is the first of two films co-produced by After Dark Films and Syfy (the other being 51). It’s an odd little film as it tries to creep in a few scares while also playing to the campy sensibilities that Syfy has, for better or worse, made their calling card. The cast, which is as good as could be expected, also includes genre favorite Lance Hendriksen (Alien, Millennium) in a small role and a rare onscreen appearance from voice actor Todd Haberkorn. What does this add up to? A very uneven film that can’t quite decide what it wants to be.

But the real fun of Scream of the Banshee isn’t the film but the audio commentary by Miller and composer Ryan Dodson. Miller makes it quite clear that he didn’t exactly enjoy the experience and while he doesn’t disown the picture he vents a large amount frustration for not having the creative control he would have liked. It’s refreshing and makes for an interesting companion to the audio commentary from B-movie veterans Jim Wynorski and Roger Corman on the recent Blu-ray release of Dinocroc vs. Supergator.

 

COMIC-CON: Andrew Garfield’s Spider-Man Speech

Seen in the above video taking the first spot in the Q&A for the Amazing Spider-Man panel. Andrew Garfield gives a wonderful speech on why he loves Spider-Man, and is honored to play him. This deep connection to the character really makes me more excited for the film. The character Spider-Man means a lot to me, not just because of his quips while he’s fighting, or the great rogue gallery. Instead of me trying to reword it, let me just quote Andrew:

And I think that we all wish we had the courage to stick up for ourselves more, to stick up for a loved one more, or even a stranger you see being mistreated, and Peter Parker has inspired me to feel stronger. He made me, Andrew, braver. He reassured me that by doing the right thing, it’s worth it. It’s worth the struggle, it’s worth the pain, it’s worth even the tears, the bruises, and the blood.

Spider-Man does the right thing when it’s not the popular or easy thing to do. He stands up for those who can’t. He is a character that constantly has the weight of the world on his shoulders, but always finds a way to push through it. And Andrew totally seems to channel that. Hopefully it comes through on screen.

Source: NYMag’s Vulture

Anime Update: 7/23/2011

This week on Anime Update: news from Comic-con, a new Berserk trailer from Japan, and the recently opened Guinness World Record-breaking coaster at Japan’s Fuji-Q!

First up on this week’s update: Viz Media held a 25th anniversary party at Comic-con this weekend and had lots of announcements to share with fans. On top of the news recently shared at Anime Expo, Viz also unveiled their new and improved VizManga.com,which will now support more than just Apple digital content. In their official press release they discussed the following additions:

“With this new expansion of our existing digital platform, fans can browse and access from ANY computer or web-enabled device (Android, Blackberry, etc) the rapidly growing library of the most popular manga in the world on the VIZ Manga App for iOS devices, currently offering 40 series and over 300 volumes, including NARUTO, BLEACH, BLUE EXORCIST, VAMPIRE KNIGHT, and more! And, as before, registered users can view and access their purchased manga on VIZManga.com and through the VIZ Manga App, no matter which device or digital experience they prefer! To celebrate the launch of VIZManga.com, all Volume 1 manga titles will be 40% off through July 31st! The first chapters of all manga titles will also be available as a free preview!”

Next on this week’s update: An amazing new Berserk trailer has just appeared for the upcoming re-imagined series of animated films (originally, the manga was turned into an anime series in 1997). Part one of the upcoming films,  Berserk Golden Age Arc 1: Egg of the Supreme Ruler, is set to premier in Japan in January 2012. This film series is aiming to more closely follow the story in the manga, and director Toshiyuki Kubooka is an excellent choice for the project having extensive experience in the anime and videogame world. He has contributed his many talents to Batman: Gotham Knight, Gunbuster, Giant Robo, several of the Lunar games, and Yamato 2520.

Berserk is a fantasy epic that follows the story of a young mercenary, Guts (Gattsu); a female soldier who has suffered a difficult past, Casca (Kyasuka); and the leader of mercenary group “Band of the Hawk,” Griffith (Grifisu). The story is set in medieval Europe and forces readers/viewers to question the true meaning of humanity, and the places that ruthlessness, compassion, and death take during a violent war.

Let’s hope these new films get picked up for U.S. distribution. So far they look to be quite promising, and the animation quality is stunning.

Last on this week’s update: Fuji-Q Highland in Japan has added another amazing roller coaster to their park – this time breaking the Guinness World Record for World’s Steepest Coaster with the addition of Takashiba. Recently opened on July 16th, Takashiba is 141 feet high with a vertical fall of 121 degrees. The coaster travels up to speeds of 100 mph:

Takashiba isn’t the first amazing and mind-bending coaster to be added to Fuji-Q. Roller coaster lovers around the world travel to Fuji-Q every year to check out their cutting edge rides. Click over here to their website and you’ll see video of some of the most intense roller coasters in the world.

I leave you this week with a Japanese classic I’ve been re-watching (and enjoying tremendously) – Takeshi’s Castle aka Most Extreme Elimination Challenge. It’s great to watch in the original Japanese or the humorously re-written, dubbed English version:

https://youtu.be/SdPWfFsrgf4

MOVIE SERIALS!: Captain America Ch. 14

I was talking to a friend recently, about Captain America and his role in the movies. Can you believe with the new flick by Marvel Studios, the star-spangled avenger has had a total of five live action movies? Sure, they are all critically panned, but it really speaks to the enduring nature of the concept that so many attempts have been made over the years. Early word is that the new Chris Evans film is excellent, but of course this film here is where it all began. I am proud to be able to share it with all of you! So, let’s all gear up for the penultimate chapter of Captain America: The Scarab Strikes!

I don’t have any supplemental stuff for Chapter 14, but I do have one last higher res screenshot, so it’s better than nothing, right? In any case, get out there and watch the new Captain America, in theaters now. I can practically guarantee that the adaptation will be better than this one!

"Well, *I* believe you're innocent. However my partner, Mr. Gun, disagrees with me!"

COMIC-CON: Steven Spielberg and Tintin




Perhaps one of the most exciting things for me to see this year at Comic-Con is Steven Spielberg’s first ever appearance at the San Diego convention. He was presenting his film The Adventure’s of Tintin.

Before he was brought out, a very powerful montage of his best movies (also Hook and The Lost World) was played and he was presented with an Inkpot Award for his contributions in film. During his brief acceptance speech, he talked about how he’s still a kid inside, just like everyone else in the room an he quickly sat down and got straight into the impetus for making Tintin.

He was introduced to Tintin in 1981 when people kept comparing Raiders of the Lost Ark to Tintin and fell in love, even though the copy he got his hands on was in French.

Most of this will read as a Q and A:

Q: Where do you start with casting?

A: The way you’d cast a normal movie, finding the best actor for the part. You don’t identify with Daniel Craig, but you’ll see every nuance of his performance through the thin skin of animation.

6 years ago I asked WETA to see what it would look like to see a digital dog next to a real actor and so I commissioned a test. They sent me back this. We have that video here.

(The video showed was of Peter Jackson playing Captain Haddock, interacting with Snowy. It was a pretty impressive test.)

Then Peter Jackson showed up and joined the panel, talking about how fantastic Spielberg is. Spielberg got the rights to Tintin in 1983 and he was looking forward to Steven’s Tintin movie… for a quarter of a century. “You can imagine the mindblowing moment when Steven asked me to work on it.

Spielberg explained, “We’re both Tintin fans and that’s why we decided to collaborate on this project. We wanted the movie to look like the drawings in all the Herge albums and books. We love art so much we wanted to honor Herge to get characters as close as we could to his art.”

Jackson continued: “We also wanted to make it as much of a hybrid as animation and live action as we could. Even though we have these faces you’d never find in a real human being, that it almost looks like live action. We wanted to create a version of animation and mo-cap to let the filmmaker, Steven, to step into the virtual world. Steven could shoot the movie, but this is like a hybrid and he had a virtual camera and could step in and film it like it was a real film. This is the film Steven personally shot, he had the camera in his hands the whole time.”

Spielberg: “It was like a Playstation controller with a giant monitor in it and I could see a rough animation on the set that the actors were working on.”

He says he felt more like a painter doing this.

‘This is a much more direct to canvas art form.”

PJ asked about the Hobbit: “I’m enjoying it more than anything. I’m having a blast. Done 60 days of shooting, almost 200 to go. They’re resuming in 3 weeks. This break is enforced by Martin Freeman’s Sherlock schedule.”

Steven: “I operate on about 5 or 6 different tracks in the same direction. I find when I do more than one project at the same time, it creates clarity and I can come back and see what I can change and whatnot.”

They showed another clip from the film and to be honest, all of my worries that I had with the motion capture on this film have melted away. We saw Tintin in action with Captain Haddock, Snowy and the rest of the crew. It was cartoony enough to be believable to me, but real enough to be stunning. It was fantastic.

Then it was opened up for audience questions:

First question was asked by Andy Serkis in disguised. He asked if it’s true when Daniel Craig met Clint Eastwood he wasn’t wearing mo-cap tights…. It didn’t make much sense but everyone seemed to laugh.

Question: About Jaws, you had an idea for a scene that might have appeared in a sequel, can you share that?

SS: I don’t want to give Universal any ideas, they’d take it and make it themselves without me.

Q: How did people in your childhood affect your movies?

PJ: How much of your own child do you use to make your films? I’m totally a kid still. Everything I loved from age 6-17, train sets, movie making, Ray Harryhausen, I’m still obssessed by it. I literally haven’t had any new interests since I was 17. When I make movies I make them for the kid I was and still am.

Q: How do you compare the CGI in Beowulf to Tintin

SS: The evolution of this technology is that we can be photorealistic character where the animator can slide the face into position, but they create a musculature and nerves that reacts as we do. It’s exactly lifelike. We have evolved from The Polar Express to the Na’vi in Avatar.

Q: 6 year old asked, “What your favorite movie to make was?”

SS: The most important personal thing to me that happened where a movie was concerned, which makes it my favorite, is ET. When we finish making a movie, we’re like a family with a crew, everybody gets really close and I get to go home alone. When I got to the end of production and I didn’t want to end. I realized for the first time after that film that I wanted to have children. I have seven now, thanks to E.T.

Q: Peter, are you going to make more bloody funny movies?

PJ: I’d love to. I’m in early conceptual design things for the future. So, yeah, aboslutely.

Q: Of all the movies you’ve produced, which one would you have liked to have directed.

SS: Because the second you answer the question the director says, “My god, I didn’t know my job was in jeopardy.” But the one I gave away that I wish I directed was American Beauty. That was the one that got away, but it got away to the right director.

PJ: Tintin. But I’m really happy Steven directed it.

SS: My favorite is producing. I just hire a director and go away. And that’s what producers SHOULD do. My happiest movie producing was Bob Zemeckis’ Back to the Future movies.

Q: What keeps you inspired?

SS: You guys. If it weren’t for you, I’d stop. We cannot make the audience movies we make without the fact you guys like them and see them over again and you’re honest in your feelings about the movies. Take us to task when you feel like it. Please. It keeps us honest.

Q: Jurassic Park 4. Is it happening?

SS: We have a story I can happily announce right now. We have a writer working on a treatment. Hopefully it will be in all of our forseeable futures in the next 3 or 4 years.

Q: What made you film the Secret of the Unicorn instead of the other stories?

PJ: There are 24 Tintin adventures and they’re all different, but we wanted to start the cinematic life of Tintin with a story that brought him and Captain Haddock together. We felt that was important. It was chosen because it was a great plot and great story and we came up with ways to expand it. Also, having developed this relationship, the Secret of the Unicorn goes into his back story and that appealed to us. It just made sense.

Q: What do you think makes a great short film?

SS: I look at a lot of short films. We never had Youtube, so we had to go door to door with an 8mm projector to try to get work. I love the amount of freedom technology gives .

I look for something that isn’t a send up of someone elses stuff. You can’t just believe in movies, but what do you have to contirbute to the conversation. Yes, style, content, telling a story. It’s more than a lot of quick cuts. It’s where’s the beef.

PJ: What you’re looking for is to react to the film in a way that excites you and gives you a sense that the people behind have an ineherent understanding of storytelling. It’s there or not. Or you see a kernel of it, maybe. But the best thing is to make a short film. Over the years, so many people contact to get into the film industry and the only thing I tell them is, “well, make a film.” If you want to become a filmmaker, grab a camera and start shooting.

And then, a fellow came up to ask a question, but was wearing a shirt that read, “If possible, if I met Steven Spielberg, I’d love to shake his hand and say thank you very much.”

At that point, Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg brought him on stage, they all shook his hand and took lots of pictures and that was the end of the panel.

All in all, the movie looks stunning and it was the treat of a lifetime to see Spielberg in person.

COMIC-CON: Twilight in Hall H

Learning their lesson from the last time Twilight was at Comic-Con, the first panel in Hall H this year at Comic-Con was for Twilight: Breaking Dawn.

Director Bill Condon came out and joked that he’d been “imprinted” on the material. Girls started screaming. Then the major cast came to stage and then answered softball questions from the IGN moderator. Kristen Stewart talked about picking her wedding dress and Robert Pattinson spoke of how their honeymoon shoot was a torrential downpour and kind of sucked at the beginning.

They played two clips at the beginning which I will detail below.

First Scene: Jacob has left his pack and joined the Cullen’s, knowing that Bella needs more blood. I have no idea what that means, but it’s a talking scene in a library with Taylor Lautner brooding about something he “has to do”. Cut to the woods at dusk. Jacob is meeting with his old family, who hates him because he left their family and joined a new one. Jacob talks about needing to kill the baby and everyone seems shocked.

Second Clip: Bella and Edward on their honeymoon. It’s a lush hotel in the tropics. He carries her across the treshhold and looks brooding. They come into the bedroom and she gazes longingly at a giant four-poster bed. His heart is clearly racing (implying an erection?) Instead of getting to the sex, he offers to take her for a swim, but she asks for a few minutes on her own. He says “Don’t take too long, Mrs. Cullen,” which elicited SHRIEKS from the crowd. Then she has a montage getting ready for sex, brushing her teeth, hair, washing up. She takes her wedding ring off as she gets ready. She shaves her legs and begins picking lingerie, picking a lacy black nighty. Dressed in only a towel, she seems entirely exasperated by the whole process before telling herself, “Don’t be a coward.” She appears on the beach wearing nothing but the towel, which she drops to the ground and approaches him on the beach. Turns out he’s been skinny dipping alone….

The crowd seemed terribly frustrated when the clip ended there.

They went out to audience questions:

Q: Did you have more fun playing Cedric or Edward?

Pattinson: They were both fun. I didn’t know what I was doing when I played Cedric. I didn’t even know if I wanted to be an actor at that time, so I was just playing around. Twilight has changed my life and it’s allowed me to live in this world. It’s almost impossible to find another way of living in it…. I don’t actually know what I’m talking about.

Q: You have roles that use your Martial arts skills. Do you want to be an action star?

Lautner: I do. It’s not ALL I want to do. What I love about acting is challenge myself. I love Jacob and this has given me an incredible opportunity.

A middle-aged woman just told Robert Pattinson “I was impressed with your back muscles and I think I speak for a lot of people here when I say, ‘Nom nom nom’”. And people wonder why Twilight fans have a bad reputation.

They were then asked about their favorite scene.

Stewart: It was the Birth scene it was a difficult scene to shoot and it took two days to shoot. It completely gives you everything… Bella is a fighter, she fights for everything that she feels destined for her. When you see it so much in your face like that… It’s wow.

She then implies that Bella was able to fight harder than any human could because of the “help literally inside of her” as she gave Robert Pattinson a sideways glance.

Pattinson: My favorite scene to shoot was the birth scene. It was the first time Edward has to deal with a problem on his own. He’s such a helpless character and Bella always saves him, whether he wants to kill himself or whatever. And Bella isn’t saving anybody for the birth.

Lautner: My favorite scene is the birth scene, too. I have to give Bill a lot of credit. It’s stunning. I don’t want to give too much away, so I’m going to stop talking now.

When asked about fight scenes, Lautner says, “Well, I’m usually a fluffy CGI wolf, but Edward does get to punch me in this one.” Then he lowers his head, ashamed… “He punches me just after he finds out that I imprinted on his daughter.”

That’s just wrong. A mother sent her 5 year old daughter up to ask “Did you like making the baby with Bella?”

Pattinson, deflecting it. “Umm…. I do. I like babies. And I like doing scenes with them. It was fun.”

I have to admit, more than anything, I actually WANT to see the birth scene. I’m fascinated by the idea of a vampire toothed C-section and can’t wait to see how Bill Condon pulls it off.

The first few hundred people in the center got tickets and the prize, they announced at the end, was that they and a guest could attend the Summit Entertainment party that night with a guest. No one seemed that enthused until they realized what it was.

Then, they showed the teaser trailer that’s been making the rounds on the Internet once more (you know the funny one where Taylor Lautner tears his shirt off in the rain?). The crowd ate it up as though they hadn’t seen it a hundred times.

BLU-RAY REVIEW: Tekken

 

Following the success of 1995’s Mortal Kombat Hollywood has repeatedly attempted to recapture the film’s box office magic by pumping out numerous videogame adaptations (giving Uwe Boll and Paul W.S. Anderson careers in the process). I don’t need to tell you that while some of the films have made money and a select few have been entertaining the predominant characteristic shared by videogame film adaptations is that they are terrible movies. So sitting down with Dwight H. Little’s Tekken was something I had to talk myself into. After all, this is the man that directed Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, Free Willy 2 and the ill-fated The Phantom of the Opera starring Robert Englund.

When the arcade game Tekken was released in 1994 it was an instant hit. I remember playing it in a multi-level arcade that was located in Piccadilly Circus. I don’t remember it having much of a plot. Not that you need a plot to make a fighting game, but you should have one if you’re making a movie. The film is set in a dystopian future where governments have been replaced by large corporations. The Tekken Corporation with controls North America. CEO Heihachi Mishima rules from Tekken City where he hosts a fighting tournament that promises its victor wealth and fame (but not ownership of the corporation like in the videohame). Jin Kazama (Jon Foo) lives in the slums outside of Tekken City known as the Anvil. Since a young boy his single mother has trained him to be the ultimate fighter. Following her death at the hands of a Tekken kill squad Jin begins to piece together his mother’s true identity and starts down a path that leads him directly to the Iron Fist Tournament.

It’s not exactly an original storyline but considering the plot only exists to justify the various fight matches it would do if the film’s writers didn’t muck it up by adding a romantic subplot between Jin and fighter Christie Monteiro (Kelly Overton) that never works. Still, and this might say something about the genre, as far as live- action films based on videogames go Tekken is better than I expected. It’s a cut above both Street Fighter films, never feels as inane as anything Uwe Boll has spit out and manages to have a certain artistic flare to it. Factor in that the film reported to have cost somewhere around $35 million to make and the results aren’t nearly as impressive. Nonetheless, if you’re a sucker for this sort of genre fluff and can look past the uneven acting talents of the cast and simply enjoy the over-the-top fighting sequences Tekken is worth a look.

Anchor Bay’s Blu-ray release of the film features an above average audio track and a flawed but generally appealing video transfer. The only real bonus feature is a 50-minute look at the stunts of the film. It’s a little longer than I would have liked but far more comprehensive than I would have imagined. It’s definitely not the five-minute throwaway segment that I was expecting.

 

DVD REVIEW: Elvira’s Movie Macabre

In the early ’80s actress Cassandra Peterson invented the character Elvira, Mistress of the Dark after being hired by Los Angeles television station KHJ to host their revival of the weekend horror program Fright Night (which had been hosted by Larry Vincent as the character Sinister Seymour). The new show was called Movie Macabre and Elvira became one of the most iconic characters of the decade. In 2010 Peterson revived the Movie Macabre series and two double feature DVDs from the first season have been released (with plenty more planned in the near future).

The first volume features the films Night of the Living Dead and I Eat Your Skin. To be perfectly honest I wasn’t looking forward to watching Night of the Living Dead because part of Elvira’s role as host is to add a running commentary that often lampoons the various weaknesses of the film being shown. Night of the Living Dead is one of my favorite films and the last thing I wanted to do was hear is someone trying to lampoon it. Thankfully Peterson offers up her least intrusive commentary and spends most of her time redecorating her crypt (basement).

I Eat Your Skin (AKA Zombies, Zombie Bloodbath or Voodoo Bloodbath) is a particularly silly film from 1964 about a novelist that visits a remote island to research voodoo. What he finds is a mad scientist, a beautiful girl and an army bloodthirsty zombies (but no cannibals). There’s a reason why this film sat on a shelf for six years before being pared up with the much more violent I Drink Your Blood (thus the title change) for its theatrical release. It’s terrible, but it is certainly entertaining.

The second volume contains The Satanic Rites of Dracula and The Werewolf of Washington. Frankly neither film, with or without the Elvira commentary, is any good. The Satanic Rites of Dracula (AKA Dracula is Dead and Well Living in London or Count Dracula and his Vampire Bride) is the least appealing film from Hammer Horror despite the fact that it stars Peter Cushing as Van Helsing and Christopher Lee as Dracula. I suppose I should point out that the film’s nudity has been blurred out.

The Werewolf of Washington stars Dean Stockwell as a press assistant to the president of the United States of America that happens to be a werewolf. If you like political satires you might find enjoyment in the film but as a horror comedy it lacks laughs or charm.

 

UPDATED: ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ Teaser Trailer!

It’s been really super-crazy the way comic book movie teasers have been leaking the last few days, hasn’t it? Well, we’ve got another one for you today, I’m not sure which movie this trailer is attached to (one would assume Captain America), but it’s pretty long for a first trailer, clocking in at about two and a half minutes. Have a look at the muffled, slightly shaky footage and I’ll share some thoughts after ward.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWP8TdXdFZg

So, the first obvious thought is: Really? You’re going to tell the origin again? Why? the Raimi movies aren’t that old, everyone and his uncle knows how Spidey got his abilities. If they’re tying it into Curt Connor’s story, or to explain mechanical web-shooters I guess it’s justified, but it shouldn’t take more than 5-10 minutes tops.

Also, we’re actually going to get a glimpse into Peter’s parents? That’s pretty cool. Too bad that Spider-Man is kind of off to the side with other Marvel movies, because using the “Red Skull killed Richard and Mary Parker” would be a cool way to tie them together.

Gwen is brainy Gwen. That’s cool, I suppose.

I know Spider-Man can be a brooding character, but he can also be fun-loving and bombastic. The Raimi movies barely had the type of Spidey-brand humor that I’m talking about, and it seems this one is going to follow suit.

The end sequence is admittedly cool. It’s like an FPS (First-Person-Spidey)! It also is a good way to convey Spider-Man’s moveset without the CGI looking super-fake.

The bottom line of course is that I love Spider-Man and I’ll watch this movie regardless of the quality, but if anything else, I am more cautiously optimistic rather than gung-ho over this movie now.  Who knows? Maybe when it’s officially released, it’ll wow me a bit more. Until then though…

UPDATE: Of course we’ve got the officially released trailer now.

‘The Dark Knight Rises’ Teaser Trailer Now Online!

Warner Bros. Pictures has finally released The Dark Knight Rises reaser trailer to the interwebs for our viewing pleasure! So for all of you out there that didn’t see Harry Potter this weekend (which, judging by the box-office number probably wasn’t many of you) and caught the teaser before the film, here you go!

The Dark Knight Rises hits theaters on July 20, 2012. Directed by Christopher Nolan and written by David Goyer and Jonathan Nolan. Starring Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Gary Oldman, Morgan Freeman, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Juno Temple, Josh Pence, Daniel Sunjata, Nestor Carbonell, Matthew Modine, Tom Conti, Joey King, Brett Cullen, Chris Ellis and Josh Stewart.

Source: SHH!