Category: Movies

  • New Cosmos Trailer Is Awe-Inspiring

    Photo courtesy facepunch.com
    Photo courtesy facepunch.com

    If one person could do justice to Carl Sagan’s Cosmos, it would have to be Neil deGrasse Tyson. This new trailer for the reboot of the classic series proves just that and Tyson doesn’t even speak a word. I won’t be comparing this to the original when I watch it, rather I am going to just enjoy the fact that Sagan’s dream will live on for yet another generation to discover.

    Cosmos premieres in 2014 on Fox and National Geographic Channel.

  • Avengers 2 To Feature New Ultron Origin Story

    Photo courtesy filmschoolrejects.com
    Photo courtesy filmschoolrejects.com

    Joss Whedon has shed some light on his just announced sequel to The Avengers, Age of Ultron. Once again, Whedon makes us internet guessers look foolish by saying that this will be a completely new origin for the character of Ultron. His script is going to bring in the robotic terror in a new way. So no Hank Pym…yet. Whedon also said that since this will be a new story that this past years Age of Ultron story will have no bearing on the next Avengers film.

    Check out the interview he gave for Marvel at Comic-Con just after the announcement:

  • Weekend Box Office- July 19-21

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    Two big bombs this weekend would normally be a cause of worry, but when a small film hits it big, it eases the news. James Wan’s The Conjuring hit it huge over the weekend raking in $41 million. Wan has become the go-to director for small budget horror. The director of the original Saw and last year’s Insidious has another low risk/high reward winner on his hands. His next film will have a bit more at stake because he will take over the director chair for Fast & Furious 7.

    It was a double bad break for Ryan Reynolds this weekend. He had two huge movies that both failed to reach even low expectations. Turbo, the DreamWorks animated feature, only managed $21.5 million which is one of the lowest totals ever for a DreamWorks animated feature. Then we have R.I.P.D. which cost $130 million to produce and it seemed like the writing was on the wall before the movie even released. The comic -based film could only bring in just over $12 million and will probably be a movie you see on TNT on a week to week basis before you know it.

    1. The Conjuring- $41.5 million/ $41.5 million

    2. Despicable Me 2- $25.1/ $276.2

    3. Turbo- $21.5/ $31.2

    4. Grown Ups 2- $20.0/ $79.5

    5. Red 2- $18.5/ $18.5

    6. Pacific Rim- $15.9/ $68.2

    7. R.I.P.D.- $12.7/ $12.7

    8. The Heat- $9.3/ $129.2

    9. World War Z- $5.2/ $186.9

    10. Monsters University- $5.0/ $248.9

  • The Avengers Will Enter The “Age Of Ultron”

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    You knew Marvel could not leave San Diego Comic-Con without something pertaining to The Avengers right? At the end of the panel which featured Thor: The Dark World, Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Guardians of the Galaxy, Joss Whedon came out on stage and announced the title for his follow-up to the second biggest movie of all time.

    The Avengers: Age of Ultron.

    Not exactly what anyone was expecting huh? I think most thought that Thanos would be the big bad in the second Avengers film, but this tells me that he will most likely be held off until #3. Why would you have him be the villain in the second film where he doesn’t even have top billing?

    The title does (possibly) reveal a few things about the upcoming Marvel cinematic universe. We know that Vin Diesel has been teasing his future work with Marvel and the fact that Ultron will be the villain in Avengers 2 almost guarantees that he will be cast as The Vision, who was created by Ultron. The villain also may be the segue into the Ant-Man movie with the robotic terror being a creation of Hank Pym himself.

    Marvel certainly got a lot of people talking now about the next Avengers, but was it enough to trump the DC announcement of the Batman/Superman movie?

  • Batman/Superman Movie Official For 2015!!!

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    Marvel’s Comic-Con panel isn’t until tonight, but Warner Bros. may have just won Comic-Con with their HUGE announcement today.

    Their two greatest heroes, Batman and Superman, will be heading to the big screen together in the summer of 2015. Zack Snyder will return to direct with a script by Man of Steel writer David S. Goyer. Christopher Nolan will serve as executive producer and presumably head up the entire project. Henry Cavill will return as Superman and a search will begin for a new Batman.

    Snyder surprised everyone by showing up at the Comic-Con panel and had an excerpt from The Dark Knight Returns read and the Superman logo was shown on screen then a new Batman logo appeared behind it.

    NERD FEELS….EVERYWHERE!!

    On the heels of this big event, it is also being rumored that Warner is prepping a Flash movie for 2016 which will lead into a 2017 Justice League film.

    Here is the official statement from Warner Bros. on the massive team-up of the two biggest superheroes in the world:

    On the heels of the worldwide success of Man of Steel, director Zack Snyder is bringing together the two greatest Super Heroes of all time —Batman and Superman —for the first time on the big screen.  The announcement was made today by Greg Silverman, President, Creative Development and Worldwide Production, and Sue Kroll, President, Worldwide Marketing and International Distribution,Warner Bros. Pictures.

    The current hit, Man of Steel, has taken in more than $630 million at the worldwide box office to date, and climbing.  Along with its star, Henry Cavill, the upcoming film brings back Amy Adams, Laurence Fishburne and Diane Lane.  The new Batman has yet to be cast.

    Snyder is co-writing the story with David S. Goyer, who will then pen the screenplay.  Production is expected to begin in 2014, with an anticipated release date in Summer 2015.”

     

  • Warcraft Teaser Trailer Shown At Comic-Con. Movie To Begin Shooting Early 2014.

    wow-logo

    A mystery trailer was shown at Hall H today at the San Diego Comic-Con which turned out to be the first teaser for the movie based on the World of Warcraft franchise simply entitled Warcraft. Descriptions were of a knight and an orc going to battle and the screen going black as the death blow comes revealing the movie’s logo.

    Director Duncan Jones, who directed the wonderful Moon, came on stage and told everyone of his love of the franchise and announced that the movie would begin production in early 2014.

  • Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes Website Opens, Prequel Comic Included

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    Dawn of the Planet of the Apes will have a big panel at this year’s Comic-Con and to get ready, a new website has opened titled “Before the Dawn”. It features a great new banner for the movie, which you can see above, and also has a short prequel comic embedded on the site when you scroll through.

    It does not go into great detail about the years between the films, but it does get you back into the universe of Caesar and the apes rise against humanity.

    Check out the site here. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes releases on July 18, 2014.

  • Pacific Rim Review: “We win by cancelling the apocalypse on our independence day, Gracie!”

    PR Main

    I grew up watching shows, cartoons and movies about gargantuan creatures and giant robots. Sometimes they fought each other, sometimes they fought with each other, and sometimes they just sat around while their teenage pilots whined about how hard it was to be the only ones gifted enough to use the giant *!&^ing death machines; thanks, Evangelion, Z.O.E. and every Gundam series except 08th MS Team. The end result is a deep and abiding love of watching as one 60-foot-tall thing punches another one in the face, so long as it’s not directed by Michael Bay (The Devil).

    You can imagine my excitement, then, when it was announced the Guillermo del Toro was making Pacific Rim, a film about giant monsters and robots, all of which would have his signature artistic style. I went and saw it this weekend in IMAX 3D with my friend Adam, who is my preferred film companion for such cinematic ventures. What followed was a little over two hours of raw, childish glee, interspersed with moments of trying not to think too hard about what was going on.

    Pacific Rim is essentially Cloverfield Part Deux, to the point where J.J. Abrams should have an acknowledgement in the credits. Giant creatures called kaiju start coming out of an inter-dimensional tear called “The Bridge” in the Pacific and wreaking havoc on coastal cities, while the military desperately tries to stop them. Eventually, it becomes apparent that the attacks aren’t going to stop, and so the world comes together to create an international guard team of giant robots known as jaegers.

    PR Jaegers

    The jaegers prove to be exceptional at stopping the kaiju, but the strain of using the neural interface that controls them proves too much for a single pilot. To overcome this, a system (the drift) is developed that allows two pilots to access each other’s minds and control the jaeger in unison. This requires that the pilots be compatible in fighting technique, and pilots who share the same memories gain an exceptional advantage.

    All of this happens in the first ten minutes of the movie, while the main character Raleigh Becket narrates, leading up to the deployment of the jaeger that he and his brother Yancy pilot: Gipsy Danger. Their objective is to patrol the waters ten miles out from Anchorage and be ready to protect in from a category three kaiju – categories indicate the level of combat evolution and theoretical danger – that has been detected nearby. Instead, they decide to face it head-on when they detect a fishing boat about to fall victim; the resulting fight is a sight to behold, but doesn’t go quite as planned, setting up one of the movie’s key conflicts.

    At this point, the story jumps ahead another five years, and the jaeger program is being scrapped; governments have grown weary of the costs, and so are trying to tout a guard wall project that will supposedly keep the kaiju at bay. The head of the program, Marshal Stacker Pentecost, knows that this won’t be enough, and so recruits Raleigh and the other three remaining jaeger teams to attempt an attack on the Bridge that will hopefully seal it shut. The three jaegers other than Gipsy Danger are from China, Russia, and Australia respectively: Crimson Typhoon is an agility-focused, three-armed model piloted by triplets; Cherno Alpha is a heavy-hitting juggernaut whose pilots patrolled Siberia for six straight years; and a father-son team operates Striker Eureka, the newest and fastest model, with the highest kaiju kill count on record.

    PR Dead Kaiju

    That leaves Raleigh and Gipsy Danger, both a little worse for the wear, and generally considered the most unpredictable in the field. There’s also the issue of Raleigh needing a co-pilot (remember that key conflict from before?) and not necessarily being in any shape to drift with someone new. The best bet is Mako Mori, a female Japanese pilot with outstanding scores, but who has a tragedy in her memories that makes her a wild card while interfaced. She also shares some sort of connection with the Marshal which makes him reticent to let her pilot and keeps her from challenging him on the issue directly.

    There’s also a duo of scientists trying to understand the kaiju, the Bridge, and their connection, albeit in completely separate ways: One is a biologist and “kaiju groupie,” who is obsessed with the creatures and thinks that he might be able to learn more by drifting with a living kaiju brain; the other is a stoic, introverted mathematician, whose predictive analysis of kaiju attacks shows it’s only a matter of time before we are completely overrun.

    Sounds like a fairly decent set-up for a movie about big things punching other big things, right? Yes, for the most part, but the problem is that it never really becomes more than a backdrop. I’d be surprised if this all didn’t sound familiar; this movie has a lot of Independence Day and Armageddon running through its veins. Where those movies succeed in making me care about the characters, Pacific Rim gives me too many faces and names, without any reason to genuinely care about them. For instance, this global-disaster-level action movie features a heroic sacrifice (Spoiler warning? I guess if you don’t watch movies.), but it lacks the impact of Russell Casse or Harry Stamper’s last moments.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Vc_MNJj67A

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pILXoPluHtw

    The few story moments that stand out are genuinely great, I’ll admit. The rivalry between Raleigh and the younger Striker pilot Chuck Hansen hits a few good notes, culminating in a very satisfying fist-fight between the two. There is also a fantastic sequence in which Raleigh experiences Mako’s tragic memory first-hand via the drift; in fact, everything with Mako is slightly better than the rest of the movie. This is ultimately due to the fact that we’re given a genuine piece of history relating to the character that almost doesn’t exist for any of the others.

    Herein is my biggest complaint with Pacific Rim: The whole thing feels a bit rushed, and I’m asked to care about too many people without any reasons. I can get past plot holes, hokey dialogue, and bland acting if the story being told is a compelling one. In this case, the most compelling parts of the concept – the first devastating kaiju attacks, the rush to develop jaegers, the sacrifice and losses that would make the victories seem worthwhile – are taken care of in that first ten minutes I talked about.

    PR Sacrifice

    I mulled it over, and what I decided is that Pacific Rim feels like the final movie in an awesome trilogy we never got to see: The first film would cover the initial kaiju attacks, the race to develop jaegers, and the first big victory; in the second film, humanity would be winning left and right, and people would be lining up to be pilots, but the governments would be getting complacent, and the movie would end with the incident in Anchorage; and then this movie would be the finale, with everything that happened before reinforcing its climax.

    What we get instead isn’t terrible, but the lulls between kaiju fights tended to be when I would get distracted and start thinking too much about the plot. That being said, the fights themselves were almost completely worth the price of admission; if you’re going to see this film, see it in IMAX 3D. The sense of size on the jaegers and kaiju is impressive, and each blow rattles your teeth. There are jaw-dropping moments on each side; once when a lizard-like kaiju reveals a new mutation, and once when Gipsy Danger absolutely destroys a sea-serpent-type beast. There are a handful of smaller moments that are equally awesome, and my inner ten-year-old wanted all of the action figures for these things the moment we left the theater.

    Ultimately, though, that can’t be everything a movie is; remember when I mentioned the Director Who Must Not Be Named above? Pacific Rim is far-and-away better than the garbage known as Transformers, but I honestly don’t know that it’s any less forgettable. For me, the difference is this: I enjoyed watching Pacific Rim on a “giant things hitting each other” level, and wanted to enjoy it more on a story level. I could never manage that with Transformers – those films are garbage, and I guarantee you I will win this argument – but I can now relate better to the concept of enjoying them.

    PR Fight

    I honestly don’t know if I will own Pacific Rim; I might just spend that money on an awesome statue of a jaeger and put it next to me on the couch while watching Big O reruns. I’m not unhappy I saw it, by any means, and I firmly believe it wouldn’t have been worth it on the small screen. If you’ve gotten several of the references I’ve made, grab a friend and go cancel the apocalypse. Otherwise, just grab copies of Cloverfield and The Iron Giant and rotate scenes from each one.

    Honestly, just go watch [amazon_link id=”B00009M9BK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]The Iron Giant[/amazon_link] anyway, because that movie rules.

    *Nerd Rating while Watching – 9/10

    *Nerd Rating after Thinking 7/10

  • Is This The Script To Star Wars: Episode VII?

    Bad Robot tweeted out this picture of a red-paged script with the Bad Robot logo on the front asking if people could guess what is behind the cover. Could this possibly be the finished script for the J.J. Abrams directed Star Wars: Episode VII which is scheduled to start production next January? Our magic 8-ball says “YES” unless it is either a secret sequel to [amazon_link id=”B004EPYZQ2″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Super 8[/amazon_link] or that long lost Felicity movie that we have all been waiting on.

  • The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Comic-Con Teaser “I Am Electro”

    http://youtu.be/_wCj9qxbp6g

    Here is a short teaser for The Amazing Spider-Man 2 shown at Comic-Con to get fans ready for the panel for the film which will be in Hall H on Friday at 4PM PST.

    We have seen plenty of images of Foxx’s Electro, but what I am waiting on is the full reveal of Paul Giamatti’s Rhino.

    The Amazing Spider-Man 2 releases on May 2, 2014.