THE HOBBIT Goes Before the Camera in July

It was reported back in November that production on the two-part prequel to LORD OF THE RINGS, THE HOBBIT, had been pushed back to mid-2010, possibly July.  Well, according to Ian McKellan’s official site, those reports are 100% accurate.

THE HOBBIT’s, two films, start shooting in New Zealand in July.  Filming will take over a year. Casting in Los Angeles, New York City and London has started.  The script too proceeds.  The first draft is crammed with old and new friends, again on a quest in Middle Earth.

The director Guillermo del Toro is now living in Wellington, close to the Jacksons’ and the studio in Miramar.

Nothing official has come from New Line, yet, as reported by Variety.  A spokesperson even went so far as to outright say they had not set a start date on production.  The biggest elephant in the room here is what is going on with MGM.  Their restructuring is moving slowly, and no one seems to know what will happen to their side of the financing once all the movement dust settles.

It is looking more and more likely that we won’t be going back to the shire until, at least, December 2012.

SCOTT PILGRIM Poster Rocks ShoWest

ShoWest in Las Vegas has officially kicked off, and, with it, comes a slew of new posters, theater lobby standees, trailers, and even reviews for upcoming films.  Coming Soon.net was on hand, and they caught a shot of this teaser poster for Edgar Wright’s SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD.

The tagline is:

An Epic of Epic Epicness

I couldn’t agree more, and this sweet poster proves it.  I’m not one who knows much about the Scott Pilgrim universe, so my anticipation for the film is based solely on the extremely cool premise and Edgar Wright’s spotless track record.  The early stills from the film were incredible and this new poster seems to continue on those feelings.  It is only a matter of time, now, before we find a trailer unleashed on us.

Check out the poster in all of its glory over at Coming Soon.net.

SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD rocks the planet on August 13th.

KICK-ASS Hyperbole to Spill Over Into a Sequel

Some people can’t get enough Ass-Kick.  Cue Nic Cage’s giggly hiccup here.

The highly anticipated KICK-ASS has debuted at SXSW.  You can check out our very own, Travis’, review right here.  But, it’s not so much KICK-ASS premiering to hundreds of adoring fans (most of whom, I’m sure, were saying the film “kicks ass” all throughout the Texas night) that is causing buzz now some 48 hours later.  What is getting the buzz are the reports coming from the red carpet, wherein just about everyone involved in the film was talking sequel.

As evidenced by red carpet reports from Coming Soon.net and Film School Rejects, Mark Millar, John Romita, Jr., Aaron Johnson, and Christopher Mintz-Plasse all confirmed a KICK-ASS 2 is coming, and it could be coming soon.  How soon we can only assume at this point, but, once the film is released on April 16th, we may have a better idea just how quickly Lionsgate will want a sequel served up.  I’m sure, as soon as it is announced, it will already be dubbed as the “greatest superhero sequel in the history of the world.”

…or something like that.

PAWNs and DRAGON TATTOOs in David Fincher’s Future

Any project director David Fincher steps on board immediately jumps up a few notches on the anticipation chart, the guys is simply that gifted as a film maker.  Whether one of his films are among favorites (SE7EN and FIGHT CLUB) or just missed the mark on the side of heart-filled story-telling, the man has undeniable talent, and it is easy to see why he is considered one of the greater, American film makers working today.

So it interests me even more to hear about his next, two, possible projects.  According to Variety, Fincher has stepped in to direct PAWN SACRIFICE, a film about the life story of chess master Bobby Fischer.  If you don’t know much about Fischer’s lift outside of the chess world, you are missing half the story.  Of course, much of this came in his later years after Fischer became a recluse.  Unfortunately, PAWN SACRIFICE won’t be dealing with these years, but the years leading up to his 1972 match against Boris Spassky.

The other project Fincher is looking at is an American remake of THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO.  The original, Swedish film is currently playing at SXSW, and tells the story of a journalist and a teenage girl who team up to solve a 40-year-old murder.

Without Fincher’s name attached to either of these projects, one might easily discard them, a biopic of a chess champion and a US remake of a Swedish film that hasn’t even gotten a proper release in the states.  If it were just any director attached or even eying either of these films, they would be scoffed at and looked at as typical, Hollywood hack.  With Fincher on board, a man who takes any and every project with the utmost sincerity and puts every fiber of his talent on display, it propels these films way up in terms of their potential quality.

We’ll have to wait and see if we are right about this.

SXSW: PREDATORS Looks Like Anything but One Ugly Mother…

Last night, South by Southwest attendees were shown a first look at the Robert Rodrigeuz-produced/written, Nimrod Antal-directed PREDATORS.  Judging from early word, it was something to behold.  Our very own Travis Keune will be back later in the day for a complete rundown along with footage from the press conference.

However, for those of you chomping at the bit to get your PREDATORS fix on early, Rodriguez and crew were kind enough to launch the film’s official site yesterday.  There, you can check out a first look of your own, which shows some of the behind-the-scenes work along with some actual footage of the film.

To put it bluntly, this film looks like it is going to blow your face off. It seems, just judging from what little we see in the actual film, that Rodriguez is a huge fan of the original, John McTiernan-directed film, and wanted to make a film for similar fans.

The official site also gives us a first glimpse and some concept art of a new creature we are going to be seeing on the Predator’s home world.  The Predator Hound looks like something that could be the star of its own horror movie.

Check it out:

The thing looks a bit like the Kothoga from THE RELIC with a Predator’s face.  Very cool.

But, what are you waiting for. If you’re anything like me, and Mr. Rodriguez, you can’t wait to get your first glimpse of PREDATORS. Go check it out.

Word from the site, also, is that we can expect an official trailer released on March 18th. Check back then for more Predator action.

DVD Giveaway: THE HOST

Some called it on par with JAWS.  Others said it was, and still is, the greatest monster movie ever.  Now, in honor of Bong Joon-ho’s MOTHER hitting theaters today, March 12th, we have copies of his 2008 film, THE HOST, to give away, copies of the 2-disc Collector’s Edition no less.

What do you have to do to win one of these bad boys?  Glad you asked.

Follow these simple rules:

  1. Follow this link to Ernest Woo’s review of Bong’s newest film, MOTHER, over at The Korea Society.
  2. In that article, Woo feels he hears inflections of a certain type of music in the score for the film.
  3. Send an email to me at kirk@wearemoviegeeks.com with what type of music Woo is talking about.  Don’t forget to include your home address, so I know where to send your prize.

The winners will be chosen at random from the list of correct answers.  And, if you’re not one of the lucky winners, you can pick up the DVD at DVDEmpire or over at Amazon.

And be sure to check out MOTHER hitting theaters on March 12th.  You can check out the film’s trailer over at YouTube or learn more about the film at it’s official site.

Review: GREEN ZONE

At the beginning of Paul Greengrass’ new, action extravaganza, GREEN ZONE, we are quickly introduced to Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller, played by Matt Damon.  Set in 2003 in the days after the US coalition invaded, Miller and his troops are set with the task of going to locations which they are told house weapons of mass destruction.  In the opening moments, we watch Miller lead his troops down a narrow alley, towards a building where a sniper is aiming for them.  They, eventually, get past the sniper but not without careful planning, swift execution, and a bit of luck.  What they find in the building, in the room where the materials are supposed to be housed, is absolutely nothing.

This opening segment establishes very well the painstakingly harsh task set before these soldiers and the payoff involved at the end of that tunnel.  Pointless is a hard word for it, but if the shoe fits, as they say.  It is with this last outing and coming up empty, along with the three that came before it that we don’t see, that Miller decides enough is enough.  Thus begins a film that, despite its awkward sentimentality in many of the scenes and the way in which digs a little too pointedly, it ends up being a very enjoyable action thriller that, if for nothing else, makes you think a little bit.

The first issue that comes from GREEN ZONE stems from how fast-paced and action-driven the film is.  We know Miller is a soldier who works hard, but here is a man who would rather do some good than be a brainless cog in a machine.  He questions authority.  When the opportunity arises for him to investigate a potential meeting of some of Saddam’s higher ups, he steps away from the task he has been handed to follow his own instincts.  Why?  We are never told.

Point of fact, we know as much about Roy Miller as Jason Bourne knew about himself in the opening of that film.  It is this lack of context for this character that never allows us to fully believe in his purpose.  Sure, once the action starts, we want him to fight back, we want him to take out the bad guys and run, jump, and shoot with the best of them.  But, when it comes time to understand why he is so dead-set on uncovering the truth about the WMDs, we are given nothing.

He simply is, and this could very well be what Greengrass and screenwriter Brian Helgeland were going for, a nameless soldier who should have, could have, and did step up when it was found out he and the rest of his country were being lied to.  It might have worked better were we given anything about his character outside the war, but we aren’t ever even made aware of if this man is married or not.

Much of Helgeland’s work here is reasonably heavy-handed, as well.  There are moments here and there throughout the film that serve as cheap, reaction getters from the general audience.  Watching as a group of soldiers and Washington suits are having dinner in the middle of Saddam’s emptied palace as the “Mission Accomplished” footage plays in the background is one such scene.  Other moments scream pure Hollywood as people, usually Miller, show up right at the perfect time, usually to take out a bad guy before the bad guy can take out someone important to the story.

Nonetheless, the film serves itself to action more than any, other genre, and even the more chintzy or cliched sections are surrounded by hard-pressing and non-stop action.  Greengrass’ shaky camera work, made famous from the second and third film in the Jason Bourne Trilogy, is the best of its kind, always moving, always curious of the action going on around it, but, somehow, never blurred or jumbled.  Despite its constant movement from left to right, bobbing up and down as it follows soldiers running down darkened alleyways, it rarely loses you in what is going on.  There are pieces here and there throughout the action that lose you just for a bit, especially in an end chase scene that, for me, was served too dark for its own good.  Regardless of these moments, Greengrass always has a way of pulling you right back into the middle of the action and without feeling like you’ve missed much of a beat.

And what action it is.  Every moment of action, whether you are fully invested in who Miller is, what he is doing, or why, is unbelievable crafted, shot, and edited together.  It starts early, and much of the rest of the film is a string of events that lead you from one action piece to the next.  It is all absolutely suspenseful, as well.  Much of it is aided in Greengrass’ amazing ability to recreate the bombed out streets and palaces of Baghdad, particularly Saddam’s palace, which is beautifully crafted here (much of the film was shot in Spain and the UK).  Greengrass and his team spare no detail in the handwork that went into creating these elaborate and complex palaces, and the rubble that remained after they had been devastated.

At the heart of GREEN ZONE is Miller, and, whether we know much about him or not, he is brought to equally believable life by Damon.  Damon is becoming a powerhouse actor in action film such as this, and his talents make him just as believable when he is taking on someone in a knife fight than when he is getting into a verbal spar with the film’s, lead, political villain, played by the always impressive Greg Kinnear.  Also along for the ride are Brendon Gleeson as a CIA chief and Amy Ryan as a foreign correspondent.  Each of them are effective in their prospective roles, even if those roles are a bit, too been-there-done-that.  Really?  A female journalist covering the action?  Not exactly groundbreaking character establishment there, Helgeland.

And so it goes with GREEN ZONE, a film that succeeds on so many levels yet falters on a few others, notable falters that take you out of the story at hand even if ever so slightly.  Luckily, even thankfully, Greengrass is always there with a net to catch you after Helgeland knocks you out of the roller-coaster with those moments that have their finger on their nose instead of on the pulse.  GREEN ZONE ends up being a grand feast of exciting action, a striking wick of dynamite that holds you in its grasp, even if the frayed ends leave you wanting for more in other departments.

Overall Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

DVD & CD Giveaway: STINGRAY SAM

You like new and different movies.  We like new and different movies.  That’s why it is such a privilege to be allowing a handful of you the chance to see on of the most innovative and fun films I saw all of last year.  As my CineVegas review can attest, Cory McAbee’s STINGRAY SAM is not only the best sci-fi/western/musical/comedies out there, it’s one of the best times you’ll have with independent cinema.

And, not only are we giving the DVD away to a lucky few of you, we are also throwing in the film’s highly original soundtrack on CD to boot.

Here’s all you have to do:

  1. Follow this link (STINGRAY SAM) to Cory McAbee’s official “about” page.
  2. In the player that pops up on the right side, play the song “Fredward” from STINGRAY SAM.
  3. Leave us a comment below with your favorite “name combination” from the song.

We’ll pick the winners at random and contact you via email for your address to ship your prizes.  And, if you’re not one of the lucky winners, you can purchase the DVD, CD, or any number of other STINGRAY SAM goodies at the film’s official site.

Too Much Shirt in the new TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE Teaser

It’s been four, long months since NEW MOON, nearly a lifetime in the world of a teenage girl wanting her Edward/Jacob fix.  And, judging from what I’m hearing, that 10-second clip from yesterday didn’t offer too much in the form of appeasement.  What could?  How about a full, 90-second teaser for the David Slade-directed ECLIPSE?

Now, I know what you’re saying.  “Shut up, Mr. Talky Man, and let’s see this thing.”  Well, if you really didn’t care about what I had to say, you would have scrolled down and watched it by now.  For the rest of you, there is a fair warning going into this trailer.  Not that I was paying all that close attention, but, from what I gathered, there’s a lot more of this…

…than there is of this…

Until the final, few frames of the trailer, Taylor Lautner keeps his shirt on while Robert Pattinson looks like he’s trying to keep from getting sick all over the flighty Kristen Stewart.  Some of you may see this lack of skins in favor of shirts a hindrance, while others might be more inclined to watch the new trailer now.

Nonetheless, to the rest of us, those who really don’t care either way, this looks like more of the same, more bothersome drama in the love triangle between a teenage girl, a vampire without fangs and who can go out in sunlight, and boy whose character was, evidently, ripped off by some Benicio Del Toro film.

Courtesy of Yahoo! Movies, here is that new trailer.  Enjoy!

THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE hits theaters on June 30th.

New ROBIN HOOD Trailer Says More in Opening 5 Seconds Than We Needed to Hear

The new (and, seemingly, final) trailer for the latest Ridley Scott/Russell Crowe collaboration, ROBIN HOOD, has been released courtesy of Yahoo! Movies, and that opening shot might be a little too telling.  No, I’m not talking about the guys on horseback charging across a sandy beach towards a grounded ship.  I’m talking about the actual green band that accompanies the trailer.  It divulges that the film has been granted a PG-13 rating.

Suddenly, the thought that this would be GLADIATOR with arrows has slipped away.  That idea, actually, sounded pretty cool.  When I first glanced at Brian Helgeland’s first draft of the film, I noticed how savage it was, how authentic and brutal the violence felt on the page.  Alas, that was a few years ago, and the film has gone through some major rewrites.  Evidently, the savagery has been completely excised.  Now, I fear, we are left with just another Hollywood rendition of the classic tale of Robin and his merry men.

I could be wrong.  I hope I’m wrong.  This new trailer certainly doesn’t do much to tell me I’m wrong, though.  It does, however, give us our first good looks at Kevin Durand as Little John and Mark Strong, who, I fear, is getting to be typecast in these villainous roles, as Sir Godfrey.  It’s also nice to see Maid Marion, played by Cate Blanchett, taking bow and arrow in hand and doing some damage of her own in this one.

See for yourself:

ROBIN HOOD hits theaters on May 14th.