James McTeigue Quoting ‘The Raven’ Next

poe the raven

/film had a chance to speak with director James McTeigue about his upcoming film, ‘Ninja Assassin.’   As with all good interviews, the question of what is next came up, and the director spilled the beans about his adaptation of Poe’s ‘The Raven.’   More than just an adaptation, the film will tell a fictionalized account of Edgar Allen Poe joining a manhunt for a serial killer who is inspired by the poet’s works.   The film will also delve into the five, final, mysterious days of Poe’s life.

It’s like the poem, The Raven, itself, crossed with Se7en. It should be pretty cool. The script is really good and everyone responds to it really well. I’m in the middle of casting.

Screenwriters Hannah Shakespeare and Ben Livingston wrote the script McTeigue will be working from.   Until recently, Brad Anderson was attached to direct.

Source: /film

Larry Fessenden Directing ‘Orphanage’ Remake

larry fessenden

Let’s take a little stroll through the works of one Larry Fessenden.   In 2001, he directed a film called ‘Wendigo,’ a psychological horror film about the legend of the Wendigo, a half-man, half-deer creature who can change its appearance at will.   In 2006, Fessenden directed ‘The Last Winter,’ which also touched on the Wendigo mythology.   Fessenden’s contribution to “Fear Itself” was an episode called “Skin and Bones,” which centered on the Wendigo.   Luckily for us, or not depending on how you feels about remakes, Fessenden’s next project is likely to be 100% Wendigo-free.

Fessenden has been tapped to helm New Line’s remake of ‘The Orphanage,’ the Spanish-language horror film that made audiences scream a few years back.   While this isn’t your typical Hollywood remake (Guillermo del Toro, who served as producer on the original, is working with Fessenden on the screenplay for the remake) it still bites into any fan of the original and their love for the film.

The original film, written by Sergio G. Sanchez and directed by Juan Antonio Bayona, centers on a woman who moves with her family into an abandoned orphanage.   Things begins taking a turn for the worse when her son tells her about his five, invisible friends.

No casting has been done, and del Toro is serving as producer once again.   Besides the Wendigo trio of films, Fessenden also serves as an actor.   He can currently be seen on the festival circuit in ‘I Sell the Dead.’

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

Full Trailer for ‘The Lovely Bones’

lovely bones

It’s a day earlier than expected, but the full trailer for Peter Jackson’s ‘The Lovely Bones’ is available for viewing.   Paramount has debuted the trailer for the film starring Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Susan Sarandon, Stanley Tucci, and Saoirse Ronan over at Apple and on the film’s official site.

The visual style is incredible, and, judging how powerful the novel by Alice Sebold, this is going to be one emotional powerhouse come the end of the year.

‘The Lovely Bones’ is set for release on December 11th.

‘Ong Bak 2: The Beginning’ Trailer Released

ong bak 2
Reactions to Tony Jaa’s latest martial arts, kick in your face were pretty mixed at the South by Southwest midnight series this year. It was the opening night, so some may have been kinder to it than others. Whether you thought it was an epic punch to the head or meaningless fight scenes after another, there was no doubting that it had some amazing choreography.

‘Ong Bak 2: The Beginning’ gets a limited release on October 23rd, so you can judge it for yourselves then. Until that day, though, you can gaze at the trailer, which was just released from Magnet Releasing.

Here’s the description of the film:

Martial arts superstar Tony Jaa stars in and directs this epic tale of revenge set hundreds of years in the past. Featuring a huge cast and hordes of elephants, this prequel takes Jaa’s skills to the next level, showcasing him as a master of a wide range of martial arts styles – while proving him to be a promising director as well.

You can check out the trailer right here:

Source: Apple

Badass Geek Stuff: Dutch Southern Stock Carpenter T-Shirt

stock carpenter

If you know anything about me, then you know that I am a huge John Carpenter fan.   Everything the guy has done, I have to watch and I’m predestined to enjoy it.   Even schlock like ‘Ghosts of Mars’ and miserably directed pieces of work like ‘Pro-Life,’ I can’t help but enjoying on a principle level.

So you can imagine the tears of joy when I was directed to the new t-shirt from Dutch Southern.   It honors some of the best of Carpenter’s work, and creates the basis for what I think would be the perfect movie.

Here’s the description:

And they’re off.   A stock car race with some of the best from John Carpenter’s cannon.

1st Place: Dr. Loomis driving Burton’s rig, MacReady riding shotgun, Nada and Burton standing guard, and Lo Pan just seconds away from eating the Pork Chop Express.

2nd Place: the Duke in his Lincoln, Starman serving as co-pilot, and Snake surfing.

3rd Place: Christine, manned by an Alien and a Thing with Michael Myers making an escape from Smith’s Grove.

And if you look close enough in their dust you’ll see The Fog people, the Statue of Liberty, The Three Storms, and a jack-o-lantern.   Get your motor running and your very own Stock Carpenter today.

The shirt is designed by Ray Frenden and comes in sizes small to 3XL for guys, small to XL for girls.   They run $20 and come printed on American Apparel tees.   Check out the official site for ordering here, and thanks to our boys over at Cinematical for giving us the heads up.

Oh, and by the way, my birthday is only five, short months away.

Early Footage for ‘The Lovely Bones’

the lovely bones

Working backwards from the end of the week to today, we know that the trailer for ‘The Lovely Bones,’ Peter Jackson’s latest film, will be attached to prints of ‘Julie & Julia’ this Friday.  Anyone heading out to scope out Meryl Streep’s latest Oscar-nominated performance will have that treat before the film starts.  This means that, likely, the trailer will be debuting online one day prior.

However, Entertainment Tonight will be featuring the trailer on their program Tuesday night.  I don’t consider this the debut, because they’ll probably be talking over the beginning and end, and won’t let the entire thing play out as it should.

To get prepared for this footage being shown, ET has this 30-second promo clip for their Tuesday night show, which features our first look at footage from the film.

Check it out:

‘The Lovely Bones’ is set for release on December 11th.

Source: YouTube

Movie Melting Pot…’Pusher’ (Denmark, 1996)

pusher

Director Nicolas Winding Refn is becoming a name around the world for his unflinching blow to your visual sense with ‘Bronson.’   Many will look back in years down the road and look at that film that launched Refn’s career as a mainstream filmmaker.   However, ‘Bronson’ is far from Refn’s debut as a director.   It has been 13 years since his first film, ‘Pusher,’ and, though he has grown more confident as a filmmaker, his debut is just as riveting and stark as anything he has done since.

Kim Bodnia stars as Frank, a mid-level drug dealer on the streets of Copenhagen.   Frank wants to make it big, and he sees his opportunity for great things when he is confronted by a former cellmate.   The two set up a large deal, and Frank must go to a local supplier, Milo, to get the drugs.   Frank owes Milo money from previous deals, and he does not have the money to cover what he is about to take from Milo.   Milo, being the generous drug supplier that he is, gives Frank the drugs on the condition that Frank returns with the money as soon as possible.   All seems to be going well, until the police intervene, and Frank is forced to throw the drugs into a local lake.

What follows is an intense ride through Frank’s life as we witness him doing everything he can to get back the money he owes Milo.   Things go from bad to worse to even worse as Frank’s window of time begins to close in on him.

While there is so much to like about ‘Pusher,’ Kim Bodnia really is the star of the show here.   Frank is in every scene of the film save for one, and even moreso than being a drug dealer, he is a despicable man.   Never thinking about plans for the future, Frank does exactly what is necessary to get him from situation to the next.   He has a girlfriend, a prostitute named Vic, who has deep-rooted feeling for Frank.   Frank only uses Vic for his own purposes, and the only times he makes any indication of having a life with her is when it suits needs first and foremost.   He won’t even have sex with the Vic, because her profession disgusts him so much, yet he keeps going back to her, dragging her along just to get what he needs from one moment to the next.

This level of egoism is made all the more evident when Frank breaks down and goes to his mother for help.   Having not seen her son for years, she wants to know that he is okay, that he is taking care of himself.   All Frank wants is money, and, when he realizes she has none to give, he turns on her, shutting her out of his life once again.   It is a hard moment to watch in a film full of them, and Refn’s implacable sense of place and movement projects the viewer into Frank’s world.

Despite the aversion one might, and probably should, have for Frank, you cannot help but hope he makes it through this situation unscathed.   You keep thinking maybe, just maybe, he’ll come around, find a way to pay off Milo, and run off with Vic to some secluded part of the world.   Most of this level of hope stems from Bodnia’s performance.   Bodnia is extremely likable, almost sympathetic in his portrayal.   You believe Frank, because you want to believe Frank, and you want to believe Frank, because you believe Bodnia’s sincerity in the performance he gives.

You believe the character, also, due to the incredible style Refn gives the film.   Like an unstopping train through the streets of Copenhagen, Refn shoots the city with a vitality that makes the city come alive, the streets Frank must work become a character unto themselves.   Mid-way through the film, you almost begin to believe that the story is Frank against the city, but it becomes all the more evident as time passes that this is a story of one man against himself.

And that is what ‘Pusher’ truly boils down to.   Frank is an addict, but his drug is not anything you can buy or steal.   It’s chaos, and it follows Frank wherever he goes whether he is the source of it or not.   Even when things are beginning to take a turn for the better, Frank finds a way turn it on its ear and come out the worse for it.   He pushes away anyone who might care for him, anyone who might love him, and that alone gives the film’s title a shadowy, comfortless dual meaning.

As absorbing as ‘Pusher’ is, it didn’t find release in the United States until a limited release in 2006.  By that time, the film had spawn two sequels, each delving a little deeper into a secondary character.  ‘Pusher II,’ released in Denmark in 2004, follows Frank’s former partner, Tonny, played with colorful fascination by Mad Mikkelsen.  Mikkelsen is probably the most recognizable of the actors in the ‘Pusher’ trilogy, as he went on to play the villain, Le Chiffre, in 2006’s ‘Casino Royale.’  ‘Pusher III’ follows the Serbian drug lord Milo, whose story comes full circle in this final chapter of the ‘Pusher’ saga.  Each film opens with each of the lead actors standing against a dark background, hard music driving the beat and bottom-running subtitles giving their names.  Each film is a powerhouse from Refn, but it is his first that is the most memorable.

That goes for all of Refn’s films.  Even the inescapable power from ‘Bronson’ isn’t told with as much raw nerve as ‘Pusher.’  The director has become more polished in his later years, but it is still his first film that remains his crowning achievement.  Told with a cutting style and cinema verite at its grittiest, ‘Pusher’ is a film that, 13 years later, is just as staggering and as weighty as it ever was.

‘Cliffhanger 2’ to be Written by Fred Dekker?

cliffhanger

Let’s see the possibilities here.   A UFO crash-lands on a mountain, and killer slugs turn a snowboarding crew into zombies.   It’s up to Gabe Walk to climb up the mountain and take out the zombies one-by-one.   Or, Dracula, Frankenstein, the Wolfman (got nards), and Gillman build their new fortified castle up on Gabe’s mountain, and it’s up to the Ranger Walker to stake, shoot, destroy, and wipe out the monsters once and for all.

Those are just some of the possibilities Fred Dekker could come up with for ‘Cliffhanger 2,’ as, evidently, the screenwriter/director is working on the project.

Our buddy, Alex, over at First Showing, was in attendance last night at a screening for ‘Monster Squad.’   Director Dekker and screenwriter Shane Black were there providing live commentary.   In the Q&A afterwards, the inevitable question of what the two were working on came up.   Dekker claimed that he is currently writing ‘Cliffhanger 2.’   Apparently, he didn’t sound like he was joking, and Alex seems to think this is a sincere announcement.

Word on the sequel project has been fairly quiet since it was announced in May that StudioCanal was planning a ‘Cliffhanger 2.’   Dekker hasn’t had a film he’s written released since 1993, ironically, the same year ‘Cliffhanger’ tore it up at the box office.

We’ll keep you updated as the story progresses.

Source: First Showing

Renner Could be ‘Max Max 4’

jeremy renner

After watching ‘The Hurt Locker’ a second time, it seems star Jeremy Renner is poised for the A-list.  After bumping into him at CineVegas, he certainly has the entourage to prove it.  Well, that move up to super stardom looks to take its next step, as Renner is attempting to fill the role left open by Mel Gibson.

In a recent interview, Renner says he is screen testing and meeting wiht George Miller about starring in ‘Mad Max 4.’  In fact, Renner says he is “fighting” to do the film.  Renner also said this would be next Summer, so ‘Mad Max 4’ might be coming our way sometime in 2011.

The next installment in the ‘Mad Max’ franchise, which, when last we heard, was still titled ‘Mad Max 4: Fury Road,’ has gone through several iterations under director Miller.  Earlier this year, it was announced the film would be done using 3D stereoscopic anime.  No word has come down to the contrary, and what we see when it finally comes out could be a digitized version of Renner.

Source: Modesto Bee

First Look at Paul Bettany as ‘Priest’

priest

Screen Gems has given us our first look at Paul Bettany in the upcoming adaptation of the comic book ‘Priest.’  It looks like a poster is in order with the same graphic you see above.  Bettany looks creepy, and the movie looks to be quite the capper for next Summer.

Bettany plays a warrior priest living in a world that has seen centuries of war between man and vampires.  The priest disobeys church law in order to save his niece from these vampires.  Cam Gigandet also stars with Scott Stewart directing.

‘Priest’ is set for release on August 13th, 2010.

Source: Official Site