Marvel Comics, Wizard World Reveal ‘Wolverine And The X-Men #1’ Exclusive Variant Cover-St. Louis

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Marvel Comics and Wizard World, Inc. has revealed the latest edition of its 2014 series of exclusive variant covers of the best Marvel titles with the unveiling of Wolverine And The X-Men #1, drawn by New York Times Best Selling author and artist David Mack.

VIP attendees at Wizard World St. Louis Comic Con, April 4-6 at America’s Center, will receive a free copy of the limited-edition book at registration.

Mack is scheduled to be on site at the event to sign copies (autograph fees may apply). Leading professional comic grader CGC will also be on hand to accept books for grading and Signature Series.

The colored version of Wolverine And The X-Men #1 will be limited to 3,000 copies and provided free at registration to all Wizard World St. Louis Comic Con VIP attendees, including any celebrity VIP packages.

Mack’s Wolverine And The X-Men #1 follows the first three entries, Miracleman #1 and Miracleman #2, both drawn by Eisner Award Hall of Famer Neal Adams for Wizard World Portland Comic Con (Jan. 24-26) and New Orleans Comic Con (Feb. 7-9), respectively, and Wolverine #1, illustrated by noted cover artist Greg Horn, for Wizard World Sacramento Comic Con (March 7-9). Artwork is also complete for Daredevil #1 by Michael Golden for Wizard World Louisville Comic Con (March 28-30).

“We’re very excited to partner with Wizard to bring this exclusive David Mack cover to Wolverine and the X-Men #1,” says Marvel SVP, Sales & Marketing David Gabriel. “What Jason [Latour] and Mahmud [Asrar] are putting together is a very exciting series that’s sure to be a hit and we’re proud to team up with Wizard to help make the launch of the book extra special.”

Mack is the writer and artist of the Kabuki graphic novels and Daredevil from Marvel Comics and the author and artist of his children’s book The Shy Creatures from MacMillan. His work has garnered nominations for seven Eisner Awards, four International Eagle Awards, and both the Harvey and Kirby Awards in the category of Best New Talent.

“David is a favorite among Wizard World fans, and we’re honored and excited to have his take on the Wolverine vs. X-Men franchise in this collectible.” says John Macaluso, Wizard World CEO. “This series from Marvel continues to produce high-quality books that our attendees have been anticipating at each event.”

Welcome to the Jean Grey School Of Higher Learning! The All New Marvel Now smash hit series schools with Jason Latour (Winter Soldier) and Mahmud Asrar (X-Men) leading the charge with drama, action and homework(?)! World-famous X-Men Wolverine, Storm, and a star-studded faculty must educate the next generation all-powerful, but inexperienced mutants! But with their own lives steeped in deadly enemies and personal crises, how can the X-Men guide and educate–let alone defend–the school?

At the Jean Grey School, you never know who will enroll…or who will lead the class! And what mysterious organization waits in the shadows to destroy Wolverine’s mutant sanctuary? These questions and more are answered in the All-New Marvel Now sure-to-be-smash, Wolverine And The X-Men #1!

For more on the 2014 Wizard World St. Louis Comic Con, visit www.wizardworld.com/home-stlouis.html.

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New JIMI: ALL IS BY MY SIDE Clips Star André Benjamin, Imogen Poots; From Oscar Winner John Ridley

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Andre as Jimi Hendrix. Photo credit: Patrick Redmond

JIMI: ALL IS BY MY SIDE stars André Benjamin (Idlewild, Semi Pro), Imogen Poots (Need for Speed, That Awkward Moment), Hayley Atwell (Captain America: The First Avenger), Andrew Buckley (Borgia), and Ruth Negga (World War Z) and is written and directed by Academy Award Winner John Ridley (12 Years a Slave).

The film’s World Premiere was at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival with stellar reviews. It currently has 100% on Rotten Tomatoes and was Entertainment Weekly’s Top 4 films of the festival.

JIMI: ALL IS BY MY SIDE will have its U.S. Premiere this Wednesday, March 12th at 9:00pm at the Paramount Theater at the SXSW Film Festival. Attendees include John Ridley, Imogen Poots and music supervisor/producer Danny Bramson.

XLRATOR MEDIA will be distributing JIMI: ALL IS BY MY SIDE in theaters Summer 2014

Check out the article on RollingStone.com for more facts on Jimi Hendrix, the production of the film, the music and cast.

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Sam Claflin, Jared Harris, and Olivia Cooke Are Put Into Motion in New Posters From THE QUIET ONES

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See fear in motion with these brand new posters for Lionsgate’s upcoming horror film, THE QUIET ONES.

From the producer who brought you The Woman In Black and Let Me In comes the unnerving tale of THE QUIET ONES.

Tucked away in an estate outside of London, Professor Coupland along with a team of university students conduct an “experiment” on Jane Harper, a young girl who harbors unspeakable secrets. What dark forces they uncover are more terrifying than any of them expected.

Inspired by true events, the film stars Jared Harris (Mad Men and Sherlock Homes: A Game of Shadows), Sam Claflin (The Hunger Games: Catching Fire), Olivia Cooke (Bates Motel), and is directed by John Pogue from a screenplay by Craig Rosenberg and Oren Moverman and John Pogue, and based on a screenplay by Tom de Ville.

Lionsgate presents and Exclusive Media presents in association with Traveling Picture Show Company a Hammer Films production in association with Midfield Films

THE QUIET ONES opens in theaters nationwide on April 25th.

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Watch Eric Bana And Olivia Munn In Jerry Bruckheimer’s DELIVER US FROM EVIL Trailer

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Screen Gems has released the first (and scary) trailer for the upcoming supernatural thriller DELIVER US FROM EVIL starring Eric Bana, Edgar Ramirez, Olivia Munn with Sean Harris and Joel McHale. Turn up the volume for this one – I dare you.

In DELIVER US FROM EVIL, New York police officer Ralph Sarchie (Bana), struggling with his own personal issues, begins investigating a series of disturbing and inexplicable crimes.  He joins forces with an unconventional priest (Ramírez), schooled in the rituals of exorcism, to combat the frightening and demonic possessions that are terrorizing their city.

Inspired by the book by Ralph Sarchie and Lisa Collier Cool, the movie details Sarchie’s bone-chilling real-life cases.

Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and directed by Scott Derrickson, DELIVER US FROM EVIL will be in theaters July 2nd.

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PHOTOS BY: Andrew Schwartz, SMPSP. © 2014 Screen Gems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Go Behind The Scenes With Jake Gyllenhaal In New ENEMY Featurette

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Sit down with Jake Gyllenhaal, Sarah Gadon & director Denis Villeneuve as they discuss Villeneuve’s directing style and their interpretations of the story in new featurette from ENEMY.

ENEMY tells the story of a university lecturer named Adam (Gyllenhaal) who is nearing the end of a relationship with his girlfriend Mary (Laurent). One night, while watching a film, Adam spots a minor actor who looks just like him.

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Consumed by the desire to meet his double, Adam tracks down Anthony, an actor living with his pregnant wife Helen (Gadon) and engages him in a complex and dangerous struggle. The film is a haunting and provocative psychosexual thriller about duality and identity, where in the end only one man will survive.

The film also features Mélanie Laurent and Isabella Rossellini.

ENEMY is available now exclusively on DirecTV, opening in theaters March 14th.

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Win Tickets To The Advance Screening of NEED FOR SPEED In St. Louis

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DreamWorks Pictures’ NEED FOR SPEED marks an exciting return to the great car culture films of the 1960s and ’70s, when the authenticity of the world brought a new level of intensity to the action on-screen. Tapping into what makes the American myth of the open road so appealing, the story chronicles a near-impossible cross-country journey for our heroes — one that begins as a mission for revenge, but proves to be one of redemption. Based on the most successful racing video game franchise ever with over 150 million units sold, “Need for Speed” captures the freedom and excitement of the game in a real-world setting, while bringing to life the passion for the road that has made our love of cars so timeless.

The film opens in theaters on Friday, March 14.

Check out our photos from the Hollywood Red Carpet premiere HERE.

WAMG is giving away free passes to the advance screening of DreamWorks Pictures’ NEED FOR SPEED on Wednesday, March 12, in St. Louis at 7PM.

Answer the following:

This “The King of Cool” film is considered to have the best car chase scene in movie history.

Name the film and the actor.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. ENTER YOUR NAME AND ANSWER IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

3. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

The film has been rated PG-13.

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The film centers around Tobey Marshall (Aaron Paul), a blue-collar mechanic who races muscle cars on the side in an unsanctioned street-racing circuit. Struggling to keep his family-owned garage afloat, he reluctantly partners with the wealthy and arrogant ex-NASCAR driver Dino Brewster (Dominic Cooper). But just as a major sale to car broker Julia Maddon (Imogen Poots) looks like it will save Tobey’s shop, a disastrous race allows Dino to frame Tobey for a crime he didn’t commit, and sending Tobey to prison while Dino expands his business out West.

Two years later, Tobey is released and set on revenge — but he knows his only chance to take down his rival Dino is to defeat him in the high-stakes race known as De Leon. However to get there in time, Tobey will have to run a high-octane, action-packed gauntlet that includes dodging pursuing cops coast-to-coast as well as contending with a dangerous bounty Dino has put out on his car. With the help of his loyal crew and the surprisingly resourceful Julia, Tobey defies odds at every turn and proves that even in the flashy world of exotic supercars, the underdog can still finish first.

NEED FOR SPEED is presented by DreamWorks Pictures and Reliance Entertainment, produced by Patrick O’Brien, John Gatins and Mark Sourian, and directed by Scott Waugh. The screenplay is by George Gatins. The story is by George Gatins & John Gatins, and, based on the video game series created by Electronic Arts.

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LOCKE Trailer Stars Tom Hardy

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Check out the new trailer for LOCKE, starring Tom Hardy. The film opens in theaters April 2014.

Ivan Locke (Hardy) has worked diligently to craft the life he has envisioned, dedicating himself to the job that he loves and the family he adores. On the eve of the biggest challenge of his career, Ivan receives a phone call that sets in motion a series of events that will unravel his family, job, and soul. All taking place over the course of one absolutely riveting car ride, LOCKE is an exploration of how one decision can lead to the complete collapse of a life.

Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Steven Knight (EASTERN PROMISES, DIRTY PRETTY THINGS) and driven by an unforgettable performance by Tom Hardy, LOCKE is a thrillingly unique cinematic experience of a man fighting to salvage all that is important to him.

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WAMG Talks To WES ANDERSON And ADAM STOCKHAUSEN : THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

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Welcome, beloved guests. The time has come to check-in to THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL. Upon arrival, be sure to take in the beautiful world surrounding you, as created by director and co-writer Wes Anderson, as well as the wonderful hotel aesthetic, brought to you by production designer Adam Stockhausen. This week, WAMG and a few members of the press sat down (in a roundtable discussion) with Anderson and Stockhausen to talk about Anderson’s  all new caper THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL. Check  it out below!

THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL recounts the adventures of Gustave H, a legendary concierge at a famous European hotel between the wars; and Zero Moustafa, the lobby boy who becomes his most trusted friend. The story involves the theft and recovery of a priceless Renaissance painting; a raging battle for an enormous family fortune; a desperate chase on motorcycles, trains, sleds, and skis; and the sweetest confection of a love affair — all against the back-drop of a suddenly and dramatically changing Continent.

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You have an amazing cast in this film. How do you go about managing a cast of this size, especially with their schedules and everything else?

Wes Anderson: Well, with the schedules, you’ve just got to figure it out. It’s a puzzle. I don’t really remember anybody who we were really up against it with, like they were only giving us this amount of time and that sort of thing, so it worked out fine. Mostly, people who are going to come, who are well known and have agreed to do a littler part, they just want to know you’re trying to make it. You’re looking after them and trying to get them done in as reasonable timeframe as you can and so on. With this kind of group, it’s not really a big thing of managing them. They’re all people where you bring them together and say, “Please do what you do.” They’re so authoritative and they all have so much of their own processes. We do all kinds of preparation, get everything set, and then they come in and it’s sort of becomes a little chaotic. We work very, very quickly and they just sort of take over.

I love the worlds that you create in all of your films, but especially in this, it’s kind of a culmination. How did you go about collaborating together to create such a rich, lush world?

Adam Stockhausen: It starts with research and with location scouting and things are pulled from the real world from places that we see, even places we don’t end up shooting. But there are always tons of details and amazing things that you see just traveling around and looking at stuff. And so, that’s kind of half of it. And then, I think in this case historical research of hotels and of travel and of all these different things. And then, you take that and Wes thumbnails through the key sequences to begin, and then, more and more and more of the piece as we go. And then, you lay that all out on a gigantic table and start breaking apart what’s a set, what’s a location, what’s a miniature build, what’s a painting, what’s whatever, and work through step by step by step.

Wes Anderson: He does a thing where he just gets millions of images and we start looking at them together and I say, “I like this. I like this. I like this.” He’s great at gathering and shaping those. And then, each day even in the earliest of phases of prepping everything, he’ll usually come to me at some point during the day and say, “Okay. Can we do 45 minutes at 3 o’clock?” We sit down and he says, “Okay. I’ve got this done.” He’s got things in different stages of preparation and different options of ways we can go and that sort of stuff. It goes like that over and over and over again.

Adam Stockhausen: Yeah. It keeps going, because in the process of shooting, there’s new stuff coming every day, and you can’t possibly design all of it at one time at the beginning, so it’s really a rolling process. So, we’ll work all day shooting something, and then it’s like, “Great, but before we relax, we have to talk about what shoots next Wednesday, because we just got brand new sketches for that.” That process goes and goes and goes.

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Was there anything that you brought to Adam and said, “Let’s do this” and Adam said, “No, I can’t make that happen” or that Adam brought to you where you’re like, “No, that’s not quite my vision”?

Wes Anderson: No, because he didn’t really do that. I mean, I won’t say, “Do this impossible thing.” I might say, “Do this almost impossible thing.” But his response to “Do this almost impossible thing” is, “Okay. Let’s look at it and figure it out.” But essentially, he’s going to say, “We’ll do it. We’re going to make it work somehow.” But sometimes that means he’ll say to me, “Okay. I know that here’s what we want to do. If we do it on this day, we can do this. If we can shuffle something around and I can do it two days later, we’ll get the thing from such and such and we’ll be able to do that and we’ll make a choice that way.” Often, it means we find some other approach because of something that’s going to cost this, and we think that’s not really so valuable to us. So anyway, it’s always changing. It’s always evolving. And this thing you were saying about traveling around and discovering things scouting, that’s a huge part of this thing if you just gather all this stuff and we want to share it.

Adam Stockhausen: Because the real items just have their own stories. It’s so nice to have the real thing, not sort of a cardboard version of it that we faked the real thing, but the actual thing.

Wes Anderson: The actual real thing and we’ll see these things and say, “Now why do we keep seeing this? In this part of the world, we keep seeing this happen.” I’ll say, “Well, these things over the doors mean this.” There’s history in all this stuff.

Can you talk a little about how this project first came together, and what inspired this particular story?

Wes Anderson: Well first, it was just this character played by Ralph (Fiennes). And, it wasn’t a hotel concierge. It was just a guy which is inspired a bit by an old friend of mine and my friend, Hugo (Guinness), who wrote it with me. We had written a kind of short story version of a script inspired by our friend, but we didn’t really know what to do with it or where it would go. It didn’t really quite take off and it was short. And then, over the years, I started thinking that I would like to do something related to Stefan Zweig’s work. I started reading this writer who I’d never heard of and I just had this idea of doing something like his work. And then, Mike sort of combined them and in the process of that had this idea of him being a hotel concierge. We always said our friend would be the greatest concierge and he said it. He said, “Oh I’d be wonderful. I’d actually be the very best.” We sort of put that altogether and then we made the script very quickly. After that, we just needed the ingredients.

What was the thing from Stefan Zweig that you wanted to tell on-screen? Was it the storytelling?

Wes Anderson: It wasn’t one thing in the end. The first one I read was “Beware of Pity” and I immediately just loved the way we get into the story in that and it’s something he does over and over again in his fiction. In America, we didn’t really know Zweig until a few years ago. He was just out of print except for some of the biographies maybe. But I loved the way he began a story. I loved his voice and that book was just a favorite of mine. Then I read more of the fiction and I kept seeing this device of somebody would meet somebody else in some settings. Sometimes they’re away from where they live and they meet some mysterious person and then eventually some things happen and eventually that person says, “Well I could tell you my story if you wanted to hear it.” And that’s the thing. That’s the novel. That’s the story. But also, I read “The World of Yesterday,” his memoir which is kind of a portrait. The most memorable thing to me perhaps in it is his description of the Vienna before 1914 and the Europe before 1914 and what it meant to him and what he thought he was participating in and how suddenly and radically it changed and was just obliterated over the continuing years, first nationalism and then these movements of fascism and socialism and how they played out in front of him. His account of that became a kind of backdrop to me for what our story could be, even though our story really has nothing to do with it. The actual story in our movie is not really related to any Zweig story, but it’s that stuff.

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Jeff Goldblum talked about you making other films and books available to them while they were on set. As vibrant as your script is and the set designs and this world that you created, what do you hope that they take from those other sources?

Wes Anderson: Nothing in particular. It’s just that everybody is there together and I’ve got all this stuff that I’ve been looking at. Now they want to just work on their thing and they’ve all got their own process, so I think it’s just for fun. And then, maybe they’ll use it one way or another. I don’t know what they do. It’s just, “Here’s the stuff that relates to the movie that we’ve got if you’re interested.” And literally, it’s sitting on a table there and people come by and take a movie. Sometimes maybe they’ll just like that movie. When you finish work, practically everybody in that place is going to watch a movie at night anyway. They’re tired. They have dinner. They go up to their room. They’re watching TV.

Do you remember what specifically you left for them? I mean, Jeff mentioned some movie titles.

Wes Anderson: Yeah, we had one called LOVE ME TONIGHT. That’s a Rouben Mamoulian [movie]. We had lots of Lubitsch (Ernst Lubitsch) movies: THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER, TROUBLE IN PARADISE, TO BE OR NOT TO BE, DESIGN FOR LIVING… all the Lubitsch musicals. We had lots of ‘30s Hitchcock movies: THE LADY VANISHES, THE 39 STEPS, and also SABOTAGE and YOUNG AND INNOCENT and the Max Ophuls movies: THE EARRINGS OF MADAME DE and LA RONDE maybe we had that. We had Ingmar Bergman’s THE SILENCE because it’s set in a hotel in a made up Eastern European country and a train and all that sort of stuff. In fact, we made their hotel corridors. His are in black and white so we had to guess.

Adam Stockhausen: They’re very similar. All the hotel details are taken from that.

Wes Anderson: Yeah, we just took them from his movie.

How do you bring your audiences into your films? In THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS you have someone narrating the book. RUSHMORE has you opening the curtains and then stepping in. In this film, you have multiple layers. You have a girl with the book, and then that goes to the author (Tom Wilkinson) reading the book, and then going onto F. Murray Abraham who is narrating his own story. Was there anything to bringing more into the different layers that you had in approaching this?

Wes Anderson: Did you ever read Roald Dahl’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Suger”? It’s one of the children’s books but kind of for older children, I guess. That one has a very similar thing: a layer, another layer, another layer. There’s a guy who’s in a house and he finds a book and he opens the book and in the book a guy describes what happened to him and he meets somebody who then tells him a story, so it really does have all those layers like that. And Zweig does this all through his work. I think there’s a mystery about it and there’s sort of a feeling of setting a stage and giving some meaning and some context before you get into things happening in one thing after another. And also, somehow I feel like without me deliberately wanting to say one thing or another about it, it’s something about just storytelling as some kind of thematic whatever-it-is is in there.

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Touching on that and playing off of that, I think that’s so clever that it’s this meta-comment on storytelling and playing around with storytelling devices. A lot of people talk about “save the cat” moments in films, but you have a “kill the cat” moment, and I think that’s so funny.

Wes Anderson: They do that to make you like a character.

Here you have it where you’re already not liking the character, but you really don’t like the character. There’s a visceral reaction to it.

Wes Anderson: Is that right when people kill a cat-like that? I was thinking of it in Berlin and I said, “Why do you kill animals?” and these people said, “Well we don’t kill animals. These are actors.” We feel like what actor doesn’t want a death scene anyway? If I was a cat, I would say, “I would love it if you kill me in this one.” I have a great way I’m going to do this. So, I feel like I’m doing a favor to these animals.

Everybody talked about how on the set you had this great communal atmosphere. Is that something that was particular to this film or is that in all of your films where you bring the cast members together and you all eat together and you have this great atmosphere. Does that aid the shooting process for you? Do you feel like you get more from the talent that way?

Wes Anderson: I don’t know, but it’s definitely this one more than any of the other ones, we were all together. Adam and Bob Yeoman, our Director of Photography, and Milena (Canonero), our Costumer Designer, and the whole cast, we were all together in one little hotel that we took over and we had a cook that we brought in. It was a very comfortable, modest, but just terrific little hotel. In fact, the guy who owned the hotel and his wife, we cast them both in the movie. But we cast him as one of the people in the front of house at the front desk of the hotel and he was in a purple thing and everything. We would leave work and then we would go back to the hotel and he would already be there in his regular clothes. I don’t know how he always got there ahead of us but we’d leave him at one hotel and he’d be waiting at the other hotel. I just think it’s more fun to have everybody together. And also, what I don’t really like is I’ve had this thing where everybody has trailers and nine different people are leaving and they go watch ESPN or something like that, and we need them back on the set, and then one of them says, “Has so and so come back on the set? Well let me know when he’s on his way and then I’ll come.” And you’re just wasting time. I feel like everybody can go home when we’re finished with the whole movie, but until then it’s nice if everybody just stays together and stays in it. I think most actors like that. Most actors want to kind of just commit themselves to it because it’s not a day job for most of these people. They would do it for nothing, and in fact, they have to if they work with us.

Do you have a favorite set or location that you worked on for this film or any of his other films?

Adam Stockhausen: There were tons and tons of really fun ones for this one. The hotel is obvious and it was a lot of fun, but there were some little ones that were a lot of fun. One of my favorite stories from this one is this scene where they’re in a telephone booth in the middle of this snow-covered field and we have these mobile haystacks that you could get inside and walk around. One of my favorite days of shooting it was the day we were marching the haystacks around the field trying to line them up just right.

Wes Anderson: We were talking with them on walkie talkie and there were seven guys inside the haystack and we’re saying, “Go to the right” and the haystack just moved left.

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Were there any particular challenges to playing with the different aspect ratios?

Wes Anderson: The only real challenge was from lawyers who just don’t know. Aspect ratio for whatever reason is like a thing that goes into contracts. You’re required to deliver a movie between 90 minutes and 120 minutes in the 1:85 or 2:35 ratio. And so, the lawyers see this thing. We’re going to do it in a bunch of different things here, and they were like, “What is this?” and they think it’s a problem. For us, after we paid these fees for it to be argued over for a certain period of time, we then just did it and it’s simple enough to accomplish. This sort of square ratio that most of the movie is in, every movie is shot that way essentially. Every movie except for a super widescreen movie is shot this way and then cropped. The negative is this. It’s just using a whole negative, and that’s the way all movies were like up until 1954, I think. And the other formats we’re using are just normal formats. We just shot them each like a different movie, and then it all gets put together. All the prints, almost everything, is done digitally now, so it’s very simple for us to decide how we want to present it. It was a very smooth process.

What are you working on next?

Wes Anderson: Well, I just can’t say. I have this thing I’ve been working on, but it’s so early and I just feel like it’s … Because I’ve just been working on it, I’m kind of inclined that I shouldn’t say anything about that. It doesn’t sound good the way I described it and I could describe it better. I don’t want to put the bad version out there before I’ve had a chance to make a better one.

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Fox Searchlight Pictures in association with Indian Paintbrush and Studio Babelsberg present, an American Empirical Picture, THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, directed and written by Wes Anderson and story by Anderson & Hugo Guinness. The film stars Ralph Fiennes, Tony Revolori, F. Murray Abraham, Mathieu Amalric, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Jason Schwartzman, Tilda Swinton, Tom Wilkinson and Owen Wilson.

The creative team includes producers Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven Rales and Jeremy Dawson, executive producers Molly Cooper, Charlie Woebcken, Christoph Fisser and Henning Molfenter, co-producer Jane Frazer, director of photography Robert Yeoman, A.S.C., production designer Adam Stockhausen, editor Barney Pilling, music supervisor Randall Poster, original music by Alexandre Desplat, associate producer Octavia Peissel and co-producer for Scott Rudin Productions Eli Bush.

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FOR MORE INFO: 

Website: http://www.grandbudapesthotel.com

AKADEMIE ZUBROWKA WEBSITE: http://www.akademiezubrowka.com/

THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL OPENS IN SELECT THEATERS TODAY

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WAMG At The NEED FOR SPEED Red Carpet Premiere

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Tonight, the stars of DreamWorks Pictures NEED FOR SPEED lit up the red carpet at the TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood, CA for the films big-screen debut… and they arrived in style. Director Scott Waugh and stars Aaron Paul, Scott Mescudi, Rami Malek, and Ramon Rodriguez all arrived in cars from the film while eager fans cheered them on. WAMG was on the red carpet, and has a firsthand look at who was there to celebrate the films release. Check it out below.

All photographs are the property of Melissa Howland and We Are Movie Geeks. In other words, don’t steal them!

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DreamWorks Pictures’ “Need for Speed” marks an exciting return to the great car culture films of the 1960s and ’70s, when the authenticity of the world brought a new level of intensity to the action on-screen. Tapping into what makes the American myth of the open road so appealing, the story chronicles a near-impossible cross-country journey for our heroes — one that begins as a mission for revenge, but proves to be one of redemption. Based on the most successful racing video game franchise ever with over 140 million copies sold, “Need for Speed” captures the freedom and excitement of the game in a real-world setting, while bringing to life the passion for the road that has made our love of cars so timeless.

The film centers around Tobey Marshall (Aaron Paul), a blue-collar mechanic who races muscle cars on the side in an unsanctioned street-racing circuit. Struggling to keep his family-owned garage afloat, he reluctantly partners with the wealthy and arrogant ex-NASCAR driver Dino Brewster (Dominic Cooper). But just as a major sale to car broker Julia Maddon (Imogen Poots) looks like it will save Tobey’s shop, a disastrous race allows Dino to frame Tobey for a crime he didn’t commit, and sending Tobey to prison while Dino expands his business out West.

Two years later, Tobey is released and set on revenge — but he knows his only chance to take down his rival Dino is to defeat him in the high-stakes race known as De Leon — the Super Bowl of underground racing. However to get there in time, Tobey will have to run a high-octane, action-packed gauntlet that includes dodging pursuing cops coast-to-coast as well as contending with a dangerous bounty Dino has put out on his car. With the help of his loyal crew and the surprisingly resourceful Julia, Tobey defies odds at every turn and proves that even in the flashy world of exotic supercars, the underdog can still finish first.

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NEED FOR SPEED races into theatres everywhere on March 14

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MR. PEABODY & SHERMAN – The Review

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There’s one name that almost always gets a smile from nostalgic fans of TV cartoons: Jay Ward. After all, he helped to produce one of the earliest cartoon shows during television’s infancy, “Crusader Rabbit”. But it wasn’t until 1959 that Ward unleashed his masterpiece, “Rocky and His Friends”. Each half hours usually contained two short chapters of an ongoing adventure serial starring Rocky the Flying Squirrel and his dimwitted pal Bullwinkle the moose. And in between these installments were classic features often funnier than the show’s title stars. There was the satiric “Fractured Fairy Tales”, the campy “Dudley Do-Right of the Mounties”, the fables of “Aesop & Son”, and “Peabody’s Improbable History” in which the super-genius talking dog Mr. Peabody and his boy, the excitable seven year-old human named Sherman journeyed back through the years via Mr. P’s time travel invention the WABAC machine. After meeting some historical figure, the two would make sure that history was right on track before Peabody ended the segment with a groan-inducing pun (“Sherman, don’t tell me you’ve never heard of chicken catch-a tory?”). When movie studios began mining older TV shows for film properties, the work of Ward was snapped up for several features. The main villains got their own live-action film in 1992 with BORIS AND NATASHA. A post Rocky property, GEORGE OF THE JUNGLE followed a few years later, then DUDLEY DO-RIGHT, and finally in 2000 THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY AND BULLWINKLE with the CG duo being menaced by a live action Robert DeNiro (also the flick’s producer!). Recently Dreamworks purchased Classic Media, home of the Ward library, and now this weekend brings the release of the first full-length animated film based on a Ward TV property, MR. PEABODY & SHERMAN. Can these classic time traveling cut-ups entertain a whole new generation?

As the film opens, Mr. Peabody (voice of Ty Burrell) tells us his origin. Growing up he just wasn’t like other pups. Besides being able to talk, he preferred creating new inventions over fetching sticks and burying bones. He garnered world acclaim and riches which paid for his lavish penthouse home in the middle of the city. But something was missing until he found an abandoned baby in an alley with a scrap of paper pinned to his diaper. On the paper was the name Sherman. After arguing his case in court Peabody was allowed to adopt the lad. As Sherman (Max Charles) grew, Peabody created a time travel device called the WABAC machine. This allowed the boy to learn history as the two embarked on several fantastic adventures, always making sure not to change historical events. Finally that fateful day arrived that Peabody dreaded: Sherman’s first day of school. Things do not go well when the lad gets into a fight in the cafeteria…with a lass, a blonde girl named Penny (Ariel Winter)! Peabody is called into the principal’s office where the school psychologist Ms. Grunion (Allison Janney) insists that she  must visit their home to see whether Sherman has a proper parent. That evening, prior to her arrival, Penny shows up with her parents (Leslie Mann and Stephen Colbert). While Peabody entertains the parents, Sherman tries to impress Penny with….you guessed it, the WABAC. Can Peabody charm the parents and Grunion while preventing the two tots from causing an irreparable rift in the space-time continuum?

Much like the classic episodes, the adults may be entertained even more than the wee ones. Peabody serves up some preposterous puns worthy of anything Ward and his writers (some of them went on to write for classic sitcoms like “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”) came up with. The big difference here is the lavish screen budget. TV could only afford limited cell animation in which the mouths or just a limb would move (and so the writers would have to pack in the verbal gags). Here via computer technology, everyone and everything is constantly on the move with frantic slapstick and pratfalls. But the artists have retained trace elements of design from over 50 years ago. Most of the humans spout bulbous noses with thin legs and tiny feet. Especially pleasing is the look of automobiles that resemble shoeboxes on small wheels with a massive clear bubble on top. The colors are bright (love the look of Tut’s time), the music is bouncy, especially great is the use of a song from a former Beatle. The vocal performances really make these characters compelling. I would have thought that Colbert would be the perfect Peabody, but Burrell brings warmth and whimsy to the usually deadpan dog. Patrick Warburton proves to be a ‘toon MVP as a Trojan commander while Stanley Tucci is a sprightly delight as da Vinci. And kudos to the casting of Einstein (I won’t spoil it!)! The 3D effects are well done (lots of swords and spears!) but the film should be just as enjoyable sans the upcharge. My only complaints are some unnecessary “potty”-type humor (really, another backside bit?), and the attempts at pathos. Those few “warm and fuzzy” moments seems to be shoe-horned into the wacky hi-jinx. These are minor nitpicks. Families (or just any moviegoers really) will be in stitches when they go time-trippin’ with this new spin on our old cartoon pals (and stick around for the nostalgic end credits done in the classic style). Set the WABAC for….fun galore!

4 Out of 5

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