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  • Exculsive: Every E3 Title Reviewed! Video Gamer TV has the Scoop on all the Hottest Unreleased Titles!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6wV4twnMew

    Here at NerdRating, we do our absolute best to bring you news and reviews in a timely fashion. Unfortunately, our lack of a time machine prevents us from reviewing games that we haven’t actual played, especially the ones that haven’t even been released yet. However, I’m sad to say that we’ve apparently been going about this whole thing back-asswards, as Matt Lees and the team at Video Gamer TV have devised a solution that I would have never thought of. You see, they’ve uncovered the ability to review games based solely on their respective E3 trailers, and I have to say, they’ve pretty much nailed it. So things around here will be pretty quiet from this point forward, as there’s hardly a reason for us to continue reporting news and previews on games that you already know the score for. Hopefully we can get in ahead of the curve next year, and bring you hard-hitting reviews based on leaked pieces of possible concept art.

    Lastly, I’d like to throw my hat in the ring by giving Half-Life 3 – a title that is so completely new Valve still denies it exists – a Nerd Rating of 10/10. Will it live of to the hype? Of course it will; it’s a #*@&ing Half-Life game.

  • Will Smith will not be returning for Independence Day 2

    Director Roland Emmerich has confirmed that Will Smith will not be continuing his role for Independence Day 2, mainly due to the fact that “he’s too expensive.”  Personally, I was a big fan of the original movie, but perhaps Smith’s recent box offices catastrophes show that this is for the best.

    Read the original article here.

  • Review: World War Z

    Photo courtesy ew.com
    Photo courtesy ew.com

    If you keep up with any kind of movie news on a regular basis then you have at least heard some horror stories about the filming of World War Z. Brad Pitt’s production company gained the rights to the Max Brooks book in 2007 and quickly hired J. Michael Straczynski to bring the zombie apocalypse to the big screen. To make a long story short, Straczynski’s script was re-written by Matthew Michael Carnahan and filming began in 2011. The budget blew up way beyond the $125 million the studio handed out and production even ceased at one point. Damon Lindelof was brought on to rewrite the last third of the script, but due to scheduling conflicts could not, so his Lost co-scribe Drew Goddard finished it up and Brad Pitt and company went back in the fall of 2012 for seven weeks of reshoots.

    With the film’s budget creeping near $200 million and press for the zombie flick not exactly on the positive side, one would easily write this off as another big budget disaster that a star could not escape, but a weird thing has occurred.

    World War Z is actually entertaining.

    Now I have not read Max Brooks’ novel, but I am dating a certified zombie lover and fan of his work so I did not go into this movie blind. The way World War Z is written does not lend itself to a movie narrative well so we get a singular story starring Pitt as former U.N. worker Gerry Lane. He has been out of work for three years and is a stay at home dad with a working wife. One day as they are stuck in Philadelphia traffic on the way to school all hell breaks loose. They narrowly escape the city and, using Gerry’s connections in the U.N., secure themselves a spot on an aircraft carrier.

    Gerry is recruited to go out with a SEAL team to try and track down the genesis of the disease and by “recruited” I mean the government tells him he has to go or his family gets a one-way ticket back to the mainland. A dick move, for sure, but when you think about it, not that far-fetched for a government fighting against the end of the world. Gerry then begins a jet-setting adventure all over the world trying to discover what was the cause of the outbreak.

    During these sections to South Korea and Israel, World War Z moves along at a brisk pace. It will feel a little “by the numbers”, but it did not distract me from the overall scope of the movie. Pitt is believable as the reformed family man who is trying to do his best to get back to his wife and kids while having the weight of the world on his shoulders. It won’t win any Oscars, but it is good for the material presented.

    world-war-z-scene

    When the around the world trip stops is when you can tell Drew Goddard came on to help with the rewrites. If you did not know about all the production problems going into this then you will not pay this a second thought, but knowing made me get a distinctly different feel from the movie and the weird part is that it actually kind of works. World War Z goes from a quick pace to a tense, slow moving corridor explorer like Resident Evil (the game, not the movie). That is just one of the many things that confounds about this flick. This should not work! To completely change directions and stick the main star in a zombie filled lab instead of using the $12 million big battle in Moscow that was thrown away? Let’s just call it one of Hollywood’s great mysteries like, “why do people complain about Bane’s voice not knowing what an idiot he would have sounded like Mexican?” or “why were all the characters in The Last Airbender the wrong race?”.

    I do wish World War Z would have upped the jump scare quotient and been a bit more gory. I will admit to having a small jump to begin the movie, but there were none to speak of after. Maybe that was because of the giant scope of the movie where zombies are seen in such great numbers that they do not hold the same scare as a one on one (or two or three) encounter in a confined space, which does happen in the final act of the movie as I said. As for the gore, don’t get me wrong, I am not asking for Saw levels of blood spillage here, or hell, even The Walking Dead but even for a PG-13 movie this is an almost bloodless affair.

    When all is said and done, World War Z is a tale of everything going wrong in every way and ending up with the best possible results. This was a passion project for Pitt and while it may not be on par with a lot of the zombie fare that is saturating the market, it does have a big movie feel and is the very definition of a “popcorn flick”. Just go and have some fun with it…even though the world is ending.

     

    NERD RATING- 7.5/ 10

     

     

     

     

     

  • 2K Sports Picking One Fans Design For WWE 2K14 Alternate Cover

    wwe_2k14_wallpaper_1_gfx_entry_by_accidentalartist6511-d608rva

    Do you not want The Rock on the cover of 2K Sports first entry in the WWE game universe, WWE 2K14?

    Well then, do something about it!

    2K Sports is giving fans a chance to design an alternate cover for this years game and submit them on Twitter by using the hashtag #WWE2K14COVER. All you have to do is go here and download the art elements and assets and then pick your favorite superstar and create a cover then submit your entry.

    I will be creating the Daniel Bryan “YES” Edition, so if you want to, make all the Bryan covers you can and maybe he will get the nod. You can create one cover per day to enter into the contest.

     

  • Weekend Box Office- June 21-23, 2013

    Photo courtesy facebook.com
    Photo courtesy facebook.com

    Monsters University took the top spot at the box office this past weekend. That was expected. What was not expected was that the long-suffering Brad Pitt zombie flick World War Z would blow away expectations in its opening. The $200 million dollar film which went through multiple delays and re-shoots was only expected to bring in about $40 million. After a solid $25 million Friday it went on to gross $66 million, which is the largest opening in Pitt’s career.

    Man of Steel fell off steeply, but still managed $41 million and has already passed Superman Returns gross in only two weeks.

    1. Monsters University- $82.0 million/ $82.0 million

    2. World War Z- $66.0/ $66.0

    3. Man of Steel- $41.2/ $210.0

    4. This Is The End- $13.0/ $57.7

    5. Now You See Me- $7.8/ $94.4

    6. Fast & Furious- $4.7/ $228.4

    7. The Internship- $3.4/ $38.3

    8. The Purge- $3.4/ $59.4

    9. Star Trek Into Darkness- $3.0/ $216.6

    10. Iron Man 3- $2.1/ $403.1

     

  • Jim Carrey Speaks Out Against The Violence In Kick-Ass 2, Mark Millar Responds

    Photo courtesy independent.co.uk
    Photo courtesy independent.co.uk

    Kick-Ass 2 is only a few months away from release and now its biggest star is speaking out against the amount of violence in the movie.

    Jim Carrey, who plays Col. Stars and Stripes, posted a tweet that shows that he has had a change of heart since filming the sequel to the 2010 film.

    He followed it up with this:

    Now no one can really blame Carrey if he feels this strongly, but there is always the thought that could be simply a PR move to distance himself from any possible backlash when the movie is released.

    In response, Mark Millar, creator and writer of the Kick-Ass comics, took to his blog to write a response to Carrey’s back down.

    “As you may know, Jim is a passionate advocate of gun-control and I respect both his politics and his opinion, but I’m baffled by this sudden announcement as nothing seen in this picture wasn’t in the screenplay eighteen months ago. Yes, the body-count is very high, but a movie called Kick-Ass 2 really has to do what it says on the tin. A sequel to the picture that gave us HIT-GIRL was always going to have some blood on the floor and this should have been no shock to a guy who enjoyed the first movie so much. My books are very hardcore, but the movies are adapted for a more mainstream audience and if you loved the tone of the first picture you’re going to eat this up with a big, giant spoon. Like Jim, I’m horrified by real-life violence (even though I’m Scottish), but Kick-Ass 2 isn’t a documentary. No actors were harmed in the making of this production! This is fiction and like Tarantino and Peckinpah, Scorcese and Eastwood, John Boorman, Oliver Stone and Chan-Wook Park, Kick-Ass avoids the usual bloodless body-count of most big summer pictures and focuses instead of the CONSEQUENCES of violence, whether it’s the ramifications for friends and family or, as we saw in the first movie, Kick-Ass spending six months in hospital after his first street altercation. Ironically, Jim’s character in Kick-Ass 2 is a Born-Again Christian and the big deal we made of the fact that he refuses to fire a gun is something he told us attracted him to the role in the first place.  Ultimately, this is his decision, but I’ve never quite bought the notion that violence in fiction leads to violence in real-life any more than Harry Potter casting a spell creates more Boy Wizards in real-life. … Jim, I love ya and I hope you reconsider for all the above points. You’re amazing in this insanely fun picture and I’m very proud of what Jeff, Matthew and all the team have done here.”

    What do you think? Does this feel like a heartfelt move or a bit of damage control?

  • Become an Executive Producer for the Zombie Musical

    photo-main

    For those of you who (a) like me, are addicted to Kickstarter, or (b) like me, enjoy musicals (particularly funny ones), or (c) unlike me, have not yet grown tired of this zombie craze, then this is for you.

    Ryan McHenry, the man who brought us Ryan Gosling Won’t Eat His Cereal, has decided that a full-feature Zombie Musical is his next goal, and is using Kickstarter to raise just over $150,000 for the job.  For as little as $1.50, you can become an executive producer or even have your own “____ won’t eat his/her cereal” clip made exclusively for you.

    This is exactly what I look for from Kickstarter — fun ideas and fun incentives, and this campaign will definitely get some of my money.

    Click here for the Kickstarter page.

  • “It was Only a Duck Pond”: The Ocean at the End of the Lane Review

    Ocean

     

    Friday night, I picked up my copy of The Ocean at the End of the Lane, after which I was fortunate enough to be entertained by the author, Neil Gaiman, and then get my copy autographed. After getting off work yesterday afternoon, I sat down with nothing on my agenda except to enjoy this tale at my own pace. Even still, the reading didn’t take very long, partially because it’s not a very long book, and partially because it flows so well. Length notwithstanding, it left enough of an impact that I didn’t want to dive directly into my review; I wanted to spend a little more time letting my mind wander around the novel’s world, and get a better sense of it all.

    According to Mr. Gaiman, this novel originated as a short story for his wife, who usually doesn’t go in for “all that fantasy stuff.” It was intended to be a story about the world as he saw it when he was a small child, and that still remains; most of the story is told from the perspective of our unnamed narrator when he was a seven-year-old. The more the author worked on the piece though, the longer it became; he writes everything by hand, and was still convinced it was just at “novella” status until he typed it up. Then, in his own words: “I sent a very surprised email to my editor with the subject line, ‘I appear to have written a novel’.”

    The end result was a work that is chock-full of “that fantasy stuff,” but deals with it from the perspective of a young boy who is dealing with the struggles of growing up (his parents’ financial woes, a few untimely deaths, bookworm loneliness, etc) every bit as much as he is dealing with strange creatures from other worlds. More than once was I reminded of my own childhood, which was lived as much inside books (any I could get my hands on) and within my own version of the world (complete with talking orcas and velociraptors) as it was in what adults like to call the “real world.”

    The main thrust of the novel begins with our narrator meeting a young girl named Lettie Hempstock, who lives on a farm down the lane form his house with her mother (Mrs. Hempstock) and grandmother (Old Mrs. Hempstock); think the three fates (youth, adulthood, and old age) but with a fair amount of old European witchcraft and nature worship thrown into the mix. The three of them are concerned by strange happenings in the area, and this only deepens when our narrator receives a silver shilling from within a dream in “a most uncomfortable fashion,” as Neil put it during the reading.

    Lettie sets out to find the cause of the disturbance and takes our protagonist with her, and what follows is an adventure that any imaginative child would be very familiar with: strange plants grow deep within forests; rows of tails like corn line fields where the Hempstocks “get cats the normal way”; children’s songs and nursery rhymes hold great power; and ancient things without form lurk under dark skies. The sense of childlike wonder is very real, as is the fear and frustration of knowing something vitally important and being worried that adults won’t believe you; or worse, that they’ll be angry and somehow think the bad things are your fault. It also deals with the inevitable transience of childhood loves and friendships, such as the sting of saying goodbye to a friend met at camp in an era before cell phones and social media.

    The novel is book-ended by narration from the protagonist on a return trip to his home town, which is why these old thoughts and memories are stirring. I found these parts of the novel especially difficult, mainly because they evoke a sense of change that grows in my adult heart and mind with each passing year. When the narrator finally returns to the “ocean” – a duck pond at the rear of the Hempstock property – his adult self finds little more than a muddy pond. I can’t help but remember how huge and full of adventure my grandparent’s backyard seemed when I was a child; the last time I saw it, while helping my grandmother move out just a few years ago, it seemed heart-breakingly small and ephemeral.

    I’m not going to give this novel a “score,” nor do I know that I will ever be able to do so with any book review I write. I dislike it enough with games and movies, but I can still dredge up a number; that just feels wrong with books. What I will say is that if you ever lost yourself in an afternoon of imagination as a child, [amazon_link id=”B009NFHF0Q” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]The Ocean at the End of the Lane[/amazon_link] is probably the closest you’ll come to getting to do it as a “grown-up.” Just remember that some things, once they are opened, can’t ever be closed again; and some things, once lost, may never be found in this life.

  • Nintendo’s E3 Direct Gets Equally Funny Treatment

    presentation

    Just because Nintendo did not have a big, bright and flashy press conference does not mean that they are exempt from the funny brought to you once again by Matt Lees at Videogamer.com. Just like with the Microsoft and Sony press conferences he skewers everything about Nintendo’s announcements which underwhelmed to say the least.

    http://youtu.be/xFDthoYQr4E

  • “Stuff and Nonsense” : An Evening With Neil Gaiman

    Gaiman

     

     

    Last night, I was lucky enough to attend the DC event for Neil Gaiman‘s reading / signing tour for his brand-new novel,[amazon_link id=”B009NFHF0Q” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ] The Ocean at the End of the Lane[/amazon_link]. It was presented by the Politics & Prose bookstore, and was held at the GW Lisner Auditorium.

    The first thing I can tell you was that the place was PACKED; just in case anyone was under the impression Neil had faded into the background, let me rectify that belief for you right now. There were 1000+ people, all carrying various works ranging from Sandman trades to Coraline, American Gods to Doctor Who shooting scripts. There was even a rather awesome, rather creepy Neil Gaiman Muppet, which he declined to pose with because he was “certain it would end up being some bizarre meme.”

    That statement right there should tell you all you need to know about his personality, but I’ll throw in a few of my favorite parts as well. He discussed being bad with feelings, because he is both male and British; he revealed that working on Doctor Who was, in a word, “fun”; he told a charming tale about working with Harlan Ellison on a collaborative piece, which after many years and two writing sessions at conventions has been whittled down from five pages to a much more manageable three pages; and he lamented a lost short story that never saw completion because he was trying to write it in a journal a fan hand-made for him, only to discover that fountain pens and paper containing rose petals are incompatible.

    He also did a reading from the novel, which was one of the most wonderful things I have ever experienced. Not wanting to only read the same first chapter during this entire tour, he instead read from the fourth chapter, which no one else had gotten to hear him do yet. Although, “read” is maybe not the correct word, since it was more akin to being told a story by someone who had been telling it for a long time, and yet never gotten bored with the telling. I can say that the experience left me even more convinced that he is just some aspect of Dream of the Endless; I mean, just look at the resemblance!

    GaimanDream

     

     

    For those who are interested, the audiobook is actually read by Gaiman himself; after last night, I am certain I will find the time to experience it this way at some point. I gave the novel my full attention this afternoon, and am both pleased and saddened to say I have already finished it. A full review will be forthcoming this week, but I urge you to pick up a copy at the first opportunity. As for myself, I’m going to gets tarted on my favorite piece of advice from last night: When asked if he had anything useful to tell up-and-coming authors who wanted to make a living from it, his response was simply “Write things, and then sell them to people.”