Check Out THE WORLD’S END Trailer Here

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Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost super trifecta! At long last, we finally get our first trailer for Focus Features’ THE WORLD’S END. The film will hit US theaters on August 23rd.

To coin a phrase – smashing! This is what Vince Vaughn’s and Ben Stiller’s THE WATCH (2012) should have been, but unfortunately lacked… humor.

The third installment of director Edgar Wright’s trilogy of comedies starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, following the successes “Shaun of the Dead” (2004) and “Hot Fuzz” (2007). In THE WORLD’S END, 20 years after attempting an epic pub crawl, five childhood friends reunite when one of them becomes hellbent on trying the drinking marathon again. They are convinced to stage an encore by Gary King (Simon Pegg), a 40-year-old man trapped at the cigarette end of his teens, who drags his reluctant pals to their hometown and once again attempts to reach the fabled pub – The World’s End. As they attempt to reconcile the past and present, they realize the real struggle is for the future, not just theirs but humankind’s. Reaching The World’s End is the least of their worries.

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Photos: Laurie Sparham / Focus Features

First Trailer For THE BUTLER Stars Oprah Winfrey And Forest Whitaker

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The Weinstein Co. has released the first trailer for THE BUTLER. The film is due in theaters in the midst of Awards season – October 18.

THE BUTLER tells the story of a White House butler who served eight American presidents over three decades. The film traces the dramatic changes that swept American society during this time, from the civil rights movement to Vietnam and beyond, and how those changes affected this man’s life and family.

Forest Whitaker stars as the butler with Robin Williams as Dwight Eisenhower, John Cusack as Richard Nixon, Alan Rickman as Ronald Reagan, James Marsden as John F. Kennedy, Liev Schreiber as Lyndon B. Johnson, and many more.

Academy Award® nominated Lee Daniels (PRECIOUS) directs and co-wrote the script with Emmy®-award winning Danny Strong (GAME CHANGE).

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Win Passes To The Advance 3D Screening Of STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS In St. Louis

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This summer director J.J. Abrams takes STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS as the young officers of The U.S.S. Enterprise set course for their most epic journey yet.  Abrams reunites with the team that created the fun, the humor, and the spirit of 2009’s acclaimed hit reboot of the beloved franchise.  On this second voyage, they’ve amped the action, raised the emotional stakes and launched the Enterprise into a high-wire, life-or-death game of chess with an unstoppable force of destruction.  With everything the men and women of The Enterprise believe on the line, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn and sacrifices must be made for the only family Captain Kirk has left: the crew he commands.

It begins with a homecoming, as The Enterprise returns to earth in the wake of a controversial galactic incident, its brash Captain still itching to head back into the stars on a longer mission of peace and exploration.  But all is not well on the Blue Planet.  A devastating act of terror has exposed an alarming reality:  Star Fleet is being attacked from within and the fall-out will leave the entire world in crisis. Captain Kirk leads the Enterprise on a mission like no other spanning from the Klingon homeworld to the San Francisco Bay.  Aboard The Enterprise the enemy among them has a shocking talent for destruction. Kirk will lead them into a shadowy mirror-realm of doubts where they’ve never gone before – navigating the razor-thin lines between friends and enemies, revenge and justice, all-out war and the infinite potential of a united future.

For those of you familiar with STAR TREK lore, meet Dr. Carol Marcus.

Returning to The Enterprise is the crew that brought it so viscerally to life in Abrams’ “Star Trek”:  Chris Pine as Captain James T. Kirk, Zachary Quinto as First Officer Spock, Karl Urban as Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy, Simon Pegg as Chief Engineer “Scotty” Scott, Zoe Saldana as Communications Officer Uhura, John Cho as Helmsman Hikaru Sulu, Anton Yelchin as Pavel Chekov and Bruce Greenwood as Admiral Christopher Pike. Joining the cast is Benedict Cumberbatch in the role of the mysterious intergalactic terrorist John Harrison, Alice Eve as ship newcomer Carol Marcus and Peter Weller as the Star Fleet Admiral who comes into conflict with the Enterprise.

Shot with extremely high resolution IMAX® cameras and presented in an expansively detailed 3D conversion that pushes the technology, the film gives audiences a glimpse into the Star Trek universe as it hasn’t been seen before.

STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS opens in theaters everywhere May 16th.

Enter for your chance to receive a pair of passes to a special 3D advance screening of STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS on May 15 at 9:00 PM in St. Louis.

Answer the following questions:

  1. In STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN, what’s the number on the hull of the U.S.S. Reliant?
  2. Who is STAR TREK IV, THE VOYAGE HOME dedicated to?
  3. In STAR TREK VI, THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY, name the Federation ship commanded by Captain Hikaru Sulu.

OFFICIAL RULES:

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

2. SEND YOUR NAME AND ANSWERS TO: michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com

3. YOU MUST SUBMIT THE CORRECT ANSWERS TO OUR TRIVIA QUESTIONS ABOVE TO WIN.

No purchase necessary. Void where restricted or prohibited by law. At the screening seating is not guaranteed and is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Refer to screening pass for further restrictions. Screening pass winners will be drawn at random and notified via email. Limit two (admit-one) passes per person. Must be age 13 or over to enter.

The film is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence.

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STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS

Paramount Pictures and Skydance present a Bad Robot production of a J.J. Abrams film, STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS. The film is written by Robert Orci & Alex Kurtzman & Damon Lindelof based upon Star Trek created by Gene Roddenberry. The producers are Abrams, Bryan Burk, Lindelof, Orci and Kurtzman and the executive producers are Jeffrey Chernov, David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Paul Schwake.

The reuniting behind-the-scenes team includes director of photography Dan Mindel, production designer Scott Chambliss, costume designer Michael Kaplan, editors Maryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey and composer Michael Giacchino – and the film’s interstellar visual effects and animations have once again been forged by the wizards at Industrial Light & Magic, under the aegis of Roger Guyett, who was Oscar®-nominated for his work on “Star Trek.”

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ENDER’S GAME Trailer Hits

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Harrison Ford, Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld and Ben Kingsley star in the first trailer for ENDER’S GAME. Directed by Gavin Hood, the film will be in theaters November 1. Check it out below.

In the near future, a hostile alien race called the Formics have attacked Earth. If not for the legendary heroics of  International Fleet Commander Mazer Rackham (Ben Kingsley), all would have been lost. In preparation for the next attack, the highly esteemed Colonel Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford) and the International Military are training only the best young minds to find the future Mazer.

Ender Wiggin (Asa Butterfield), a shy, but strategically brilliant boy is recruited to join the elite. Arriving at Battle School, Ender quickly and easily masters increasingly difficult war games and simulations, distinguishing himself and winning respect amongst his peersl. Ender is soon ordained by Graff as the military’s next great hope, resulting in his promotion to Command School.

Once there, he’s trained by Rackham himself to lead his fellow soldiers into an epic battle that will determine the future of Earth and save human race.

Based on the best-selling, award winning novel, ENDER’S GAME stars Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld, Ben Kingsley, Viola Davis, with Abigail Breslin and Harrison Ford.

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Photos: Richard Foreman Jr., SMPSP, © 2013 Summit Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

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HARRISON FORD (center) and ASA BUTTERFIELD (right).

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(L-R) HAILEE STEINFELD and ASA BUTTERFIELD.

STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS Moves To May 16; IMAX Showings In Los Angeles, NYC Sold-Out

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IMAX® theatres are reporting sell-outs of its special STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS sneak peek shows on Wednesday, May 15th, with showings in Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Seattle, Austin, San Francisco, Houston, San Diego and Minneapolis now at capacity.

Interest continues to be strong at other IMAX locations across the country, which are offering fans the opportunity to be the first to see the film at 8:00 p.m. that evening. In response, Paramount Pictures has moved the film’s Friday, May 17th release up a day to May 16th.

Tickets are available on the film’s first-of-its-kind movie App, a technology that allows users to delve deeper into the Star Trek universe, and can also be accessed via IMAX.com or through Fandango.com, Movietickets.com, as well as other ticketing platforms and at theatre box offices. While supplies last, all 8:00 p.m. IMAX fan sneak attendees will receive a limited-edition IMAX FANFIX™ “Star Trek” Gallery 1988 movie print by Mark Englert.

The IMAX release of STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS will feature approximately 30 minutes of footage filmed with the extremely high-resolution IMAX® cameras. These specific sequences, which will expand to fill more of the screen exclusively in IMAX, will deliver unprecedented crispness and clarity and a truly immersive experience for moviegoers.

Paramount’s STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS, based upon “Star Trek” created by Gene Roddenberry, is written by Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman & Damon Lindelof and directed by J.J. Abrams. Abrams is producing with Bryan Burk through Bad Robot Productions, along with Lindelof, Kurtzman and Orci. Jeffrey Chernov and Skydance Productions’ David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Paul Schwake are the executive producers.

In the wake of a shocking act of terror from within their own organization, the crew of The Enterprise is called back home to Earth.  In defiance of regulations and with a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads his crew on a manhunt to capture an unstoppable force of destruction and bring those responsible to justice.  As the heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS opens in theaters everywhere May 16th, 2013.

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POPULAIRE Trailer Debuts; Conversations With Director Régis Roinsard & Actress Bérénice Béjo

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In theaters September 6th, here’s the new trailer for POPULAIRE.

Spring, 1958. 21-year-old Rose Pamphyle lives with her grouchy widower father who runs the village store. Engaged to the son of the local mechanic, she seems destined for the quiet, drudgery-filled life of a housewife. But that’s not the life Rose longs for. When she travels to Lisieux in Normandy, where charismatic insurance agency boss Louis Echard is advertising for a secretary, the ensuing interview is a disaster. But Rose reveals a special gift – she can type at extraordinary speed. Unwittingly, the young woman awakens the dormant sports fan in Louis. If she wants the job she’ll have to compete in a speed typing competition. Whatever sacrifices Rose must make to reach the top, Louis declares himself her trainer. He’ll turn her into the fastest girl not only in the country, but in the world! But a love of sport doesn’t always mix well with love itself…

Below are two conversations with director Régis Roinsard and actress Bérénice Béjo.

This is your first full-length feature. What’s your background?

I’ve always wanted to tell stories through images and at school I used to photograph the kids who were considered weird. To be honest, I must have been one of them since I spent all my time recording films from television so I could dissect them later. I studied cinema, then did many different jobs in film: grip, sets, sound, etc. I wanted to confront the technical realities of filmmaking. I shot my first short early on, then three more, then ads, promos and music-related documentaries for singers like Jean-Louis Murat, Jane Birkin and Luke. These were commissions but they became mine, and my intention was always to make a full-length feature film. If I took my time it’s because I was waiting for the right story to come along.

How did the idea of a speed typing competition come to you?

In 2004 I came across a documentary about the history of typewriters, which included a very short sequence showing speed typing competitions. These thirty short seconds were so fascinating that I saw their potential right away. I immediately drafted the main story lines. This world of the typewriter seemed crazy to me. I thought it was incredible that it could have become a sport and I was captivated by the rapport between man and machine. At first I only had the young female champion character; the male character didn’t exist. But I’d already imagined her to be from a small village and had given her the name of one of my grandmothers. I should add that, like Rose, I come from a small town in Normandy and that Paris represented the big metropolis, out of my reach.

How did you gather information from that point on?

I started to research the ‘sport’ of speed typing, and the schools that taught typing and shorthand. This was back in 2004, and it was very difficult as all the schools were closing down and there were hardly any archival documents. I was only able to find short videos showing typing competitions on the Internet. Among the most interesting documents I found was a photo of an American championship happening in a place like a velodrome in front of thousands of spectators. I also found some old advertisements: typewriter manufacturers used to organize speed typing competitions. They had made a census of regional championships and I met exchampions, male and female. They all told me about the mental pressure they’d been under and about destabilization techniques between opponents using the eyes, which confirmed for me the notion that this was a true sport. But at that stage I didn’t know if the film would be a comedy or a drama.

Then you started to write?

Yes, with the idea of finding my own personal tone. First I wrote some thirty pages, creating characters who revolved around Rose, and with my friend Daniel Presley, who is a music producer and great American ’50s comedy movie buff, we created the characters of Bob and Marie. As a result we decided to write the screenplay together. Daniel has very high standards and a Woody Allen kind of humor. We thought we’d write the dialogues in English and that I would adapt them into French so we could have some alchemy between American comedy and the “French touch.” I loved the fact that Daniel made very relevant observations on dialogue and rhythm. We wrote a first draft but were only 60% satisfied with it. We thought that the psychological arc of Rose’s character needed more depth. I had read screenplays by Romain Compingt, who is 26 and a great fan of Britney Spears and Marilyn Monroe. Curiously, I thought he had the right kind of sensitivity needed to enrich Rose’s character. So I called him and three weeks later he produced his version of the screenplay, with which we were 85% happy. He made the love story more daring. The three of us then worked together, wondering if a collaboration between an admirer of young fallen stars, an American musician and me would work – it wasn’t so simple!

At what stage did Alain Attal get involved?

He was the first to read the screenplay. We gave it to him on a Friday and the following Tuesday he told us he wanted to make the film. We met and it became apparent very quickly that his vision of the film was the same as mine. What’s great is that he himself acts like a coach. He gets directors in condition so they can give the best of themselves. Alain is my Louis Echard! He is also driven by a real kind of madness and artistic obsession; he pushed me and encouraged me to question myself, which I love. Furthermore he’s a great film buff and we share tastes and visual references. We were able to talk about Nicholas Ray, or Godard, about whom he knows everything, or the color films of Joseph Losey.

Did the project come partially from a desire to evoke the late ’50s?

That was a part of it, even if it wasn’t my overriding intention to pay homage to that era. In fact the ’50s fascinate me aesthetically: music, literature and film. But I also like more recent films that are set in that time, like PLEASANTVILLE or PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED and I wanted the direction and the editing to be modern.

What do you like so much about the ’50s?

It’s when teenage consumerism began – with the birth of rock ’n’ roll and the evolution of dress codes – and the very beginnings of the entertainment industry and sport sponsorship. In France it’s the post-war boom years (from 1945 to 1975), where there was hardly any unemployment and the future looked rosy, even if the state of the world was a lot darker than anyone wanted to admit. Because it was a strange decade where people who had just emerged from the war preferred to avoid having to face tragic events happening in the world. It is only during the following decade that they had to confront them.

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It was also a turning point on a sociological and cultural level.

Yes, since 1958-59 immediately preceded the beginning of women’s liberation. Two or three years later, skirts will get shorter and women’s position in the workplace will start to change. I like this era because it’s a crucial time that announces the next sixty years. It’s also true regarding fashion: today we still wear the iconic Ray-Bans. It’s also an era obsessed with speed: car speed records are established; the first supersonic planes are developed. The obsession with speed that characterizes the ’50s touches me all the more so since we are still affected by this quest today.

What were you aiming for visually?

We worked on the artistic direction peripherally. We wanted to recreate the ’50s by mixing adocumentary aspect, movies of the era that I love – American movies in particular – and people’s fantasy of that time. Everything to do with the lead characters is inspired by cinema and fantasy, by drawing on the works of Billy Wilder or Douglas Sirk; the further you move away from these lead characters the closer you get to documentary. The supporting roles and the extras for example are more anchored in a realistic vision.

What about the color?

We researched many ’50s American and French advertisements and watched most of the color films that were made at that time in France. It wasn’t easy since most French films were still being shot in black and white and the few that were in color were shot in studios! THE RED BALLOON and ZAZIE DANS LE METRO were a source of inspiration. But we cheated a bit, since we also watched nouvelle vague films like Godard’s A WOMAN IS A WOMAN.

Did you have other references beside cinema?

We had a reference work by Alex Steinweiss, an illustrator who designed many record sleeves of the period. His work encompassed the entire chromatic scale – for costumes and sets – we used for the film. I also provided the artistic team with the names of certain designers and stylists. I insisted that the film be my own aesthetic vision of the ’50s. Most challenging were the exteriors. So we looked at archival color images to stick to the desaturation of the period. We noticed, for example, that cars were always monochromatic since body colors hadn’t yet been industrialized, or were reserved for a rich clientele. We opted for a desaturation while keeping red, green and blue as dominant colors. I wanted the eye to be constantly stimulated.

Jacques Demy comes to mind. Was he also a reference for you?

Absolutely! I love stories that seem rosy but aren’t when you look close-up. That’s probably what links POPULAIRE to a fairytale. And if Demy’s films sometimes have a happy ending you have to be able to detect the irony between the lines. Demy uses magic and illusion to slip in a message deeper than it appears. I love DONKEY SKIN above all, but THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG was also a source of inspiration. That said, POPULAIRE is also a swashbuckler. The last scene was inspired by George Sydney’s SCARAMOUCHE: when Louis arrives in New York we find ourselves in a swashbuckler or gladiator fight.

Why did you give a wink in the direction of VERTIGO?

It wasn’t deliberate at first…the dominant red and blue come from BUTTERFIELD 8 by Daniel Mann, where an adulterous couple goes into a motel. Then we watched A WOMAN IS A WOMAN, which also has a red and blue scene. I was inspired by a fantastical vision of Hitchcock who was influenced by other directors. I play with it of course because when Déborah François comes out of the bathroom, I thought I was seeing Kim Novak. We had our composer listen to the VERTIGO score and it became impossible for him to move away from it.

How did you develop the characters?

When writing Rose, I thought of all the women in the ’50s who wanted to become emancipated, like my mother. She was a farmer’s daughter who left her parents to work in the big city. She met my father who was the director of an insurance company, closer to a country doctor in his relationship to people than to what an insurance man is today. He was a catalyst in his relationship with his clients, and in a way with my mother whom he helped become liberated. When I was born my mother did the same with my father: she became his ‘coach’ when he retired. I like mutually beneficial relationships between people. In POPULAIRE, Louis helps Rose, he has a desire to be her coach, and little by little the roles are going to reverse. I thought I could find a balance in this link between the characters that become catalysts for one another by turns. Besides, I kept telling my crew: “You are both coaches and sportsmen.” I’ve always loved both.

Please tell us how you chose your actors…

I wanted to have a cast where each one would bring his/her own particularity, like a conductor who chooses musicians who will communicate with one another and try to stay in harmony. A little like Tim Burton who blends famous actors, some lesser-known ones and theatre actors. I knew exactly what I wanted since the characters are very well defined and my actors come from diverse backgrounds. Romain Duris was an obvious choice because I’m very impressed by his gift for comedy and rhythm. He got really involved in his character and asked for parts of the screenplay to be re-written to give more depth. He also conducted his own research: he met a football coach who explained what his work was all about to him. Romain constantly looks deeper and ends up knowing more about his character than you do. I love the fact that like Louis is quite mysterious and doesn’t say much about himself. This fuels me and fascinates his partners.

And Rose Pamphyle?

Alain Attal and I thought we needed an unknown actress from the start. But when it came time for casting we decided to keep an open mind. We auditioned about 150 actresses, some of them novices, and Déborah became the obvious choice for everyone. She blends fragility with touching absent-mindedness that can evolve into something glamorous – and that’s exactly what we wanted for Rose, this country girl who becomes a star. I was astounded when she actually blushed during our first tests. She was Rose Pamphyle. We had to be able to place her photo among photos of the stars of that era without it being shocking, so she could become a new icon. I wanted to tremble when I saw Rose Pamphyle. I like Déborah’s independence and resilient character. And we both had in common the fact that POPULAIRE was a chance to work on a big film in which we invested a lot of ourselves.

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How did you direct her?

At times I was a sort of Louis Echard for her, particularly during her training as a typist; then Romain took over from me quite naturally. He even went to Liège to watch her train and learn to type with ten fingers. I asked Déborah to watch Billy Wilder comedies with Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine but I also wanted her to stay close to Marilyn Monroe. I gave her a lot of images of that era so she could understand how women in the ’50s held their bodies, how they kissed, sat on and got up from a sofa, etc. Déborah doesn’t imitate; she absorbs everything you give her and re-interprets it in her own manner while managing to let go entirely. Only her ponytail is directly inspired by Audrey Hepburn. We even stuck a poster of her on her bedroom wall.

Why did you want Bérénice Béjo for the role of Marie?

I discovered her in THE ARTIST. I found her particularly moving when she grabs Jean Dujardin’s coat in his dressing room. I understood you needed to have great sensitivity to succeed in such a scene. I also wanted a beauty, the kind of girl we all admired at school. We had to be able to believe in the relationship between her and Romain, between him and his ideal woman. Even if Romain is totally in love with Rose and Marie is married to Bob, Louis and Marie are together forever. I also knew she was able to play the role of a mother who is perfectly happy, without being duped by the position of women in society of that time. Romain was amazed during their first reading together at how he was able to perceive both her reassuring-motherliness and her ‘ahead-of-her-time sexiness.’ As her shoulder-length hair betrays, she’s a modern woman who is already in the ’60s.

Why did you want Louis Echard’s friend to be American?

In the ’50s, the French used to fantasize about Americans. I also wanted him to symbolize the switch from a consumer society to entertainment industry in France. I was also able, thanks to Bob’s character and to Shaun Benson who portrays him, to highlight the musical comedy side of the film since Shaun reminds me so much of Gene Kelly.

How did you choose the pre-existing music tracks?

First of all I didn’t stick to the year in which the action takes place. I preferred to give myself a margin of about three years before and after 1958. I love American lounge music and light jazz like Les Baxter or Martin Denny. I’m also passionate about ’50s composers who wrote for Sinatra and other crooners. And I wanted to have French songs, but in post-war France the dominant music was Yves Montand, Léo Ferré, Georges Brassens and Edith Piaf. I couldn’t find an equivalent of American popular light jazz. Then I discovered little-known artists such as Jack Ary, who led a cha-cha and mambo orchestra. He released about twenty 45s and that’s how I unearthed “The Secretary’s Cha-Cha.”

What about the original score?

I realized that I needed one, as the pre-existing material wasn’t enough for me. I called Rob, who works with the band Phoenix and who’s great with melodies, and Emmanuel d’Orlando as well. Together they composed an original score that brings great emotional impact to the film. I’ve always thought that if I were going to do melodrama I’d really go for it. I was inspired by ’50s and ’60s recording methods, including the positioning of the microphone. We recorded in France and the musicians who are used to playing opera were delighted to play pop while watching images from the film. The end result is close to a musical and I’m delighted since Stanley Donen and Bob Fosse are favorites of mine.

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Actress Bérénice Béjo

How did you get involved in the project?

When I received the script last September, I didn’t let go of it. It seemed so polished, so sincere and precise. But more importantly, I was moved by the story. At first I told my agent that the part of Marie was perhaps too small. But that same evening I thought how stupid that was, that my reasons for acting are the screenplay, not the size of the role. So I called my agent back to explain that I’d like to be part of this project, even in a supporting role. When I met Régis I was very enthusiastic and wanted him to understand that I was ready to play the part fully, with hair rollers, apron, and rolling pin. I think that might have been what he liked about me. I didn’t try to change the character or smarten her up; I wanted to play her the way she had been written. Then I did some tests – even though I was very pregnant at the time – to convince him. But I had invited him to the press screening of THE ARTIST so he could understand how I acted.

What was your feeling when you read the screenplay?

I was struck by the fact that it was as tight as could be, each scene had been thought through and nothing left to chance. There was a great expectation in the profession. Everyone had heard about this project! It’s very rare to read such a polished screenplay with nothing to add or change.

Marie, your character, is a real emotional catalyst.

That’s what I loved about her. She has only a few scenes but one crucial one, where Romain Duris’ character realizes he can’t miss another opportunity for happiness and living something intense. It’s a strong scene that Régis had, by the way, re-written. When you play a supporting role but you have at least one scene where you have to defend your point of view, it somehow justifies making the film. Marie pushes another character in order for him to find fulfilment. She truly evolves and follows a real journey. That’s what makes her particularly interesting.

Was the work on costumes helpful to build the character?

Charlotte David, the wardrobe mistress with whom I had already worked on OSS 117, imagined Rose Pamphyle wearing pretty, flowery dresses whereas she saw my character very differently. Since Marie is married to an American and lives in a modern house, she suggested I wore trousers and ballet shoes, which was very helpful in creating my character. For me, Marie already belongs to the ’60s. Rose is a young provincial woman and Mary a modern urban woman. It is very important that we can differentiate between them quickly, all the more so since I had only a few scenes and we had to be able to define Marie quickly. The hairstylist opted for a wig since hair at the time was permed and stiff with hairspray so it didn’t move at all. I had already played characters from the ’50s and ’60s so I knew how to hold my body.

Did Régis Roinsard ask you to do any research into the ’50s to help you develop your character?

He sent me photos. For example, in the scene where Déborah François plays the piano, he wanted me to cross my legs the same way he had seen on a photo in a magazine. He wanted me to wear the same shoes and the same trousers that were in the photo. It’s his obsessive side! Every director focuses his anxiety on one thing and Régis needed the atmosphere on set be identical to the ’50s. It reassured him.

How does he direct his actors?

I arrived on set late but I knew the crew quite well and had heard a few bits and pieces from the DP, who also worked on THE ARTIST. I quickly gathered that Régis is meticulous and very precise in his direction of actors, while being a good listener. And since I liked to be directed, we got along fine. We had done some readings early on so we knew where we were going. What I love about Régis is that he intervenes in the actors’ performance, not only on framing or shots. To sum it up, I had a lot of fun.

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Photos:  Jair Sfez © 2013 The Weinstein Company. All Rights Reserved.

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Hyde Park Picks Up International Rights To LEGENDS OF OZ: DOROTHY’S RETURN

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Ashok Amritraj’s Hyde Park International announced today that the company has picked-up international rights to directors Will Finn and Daniel St. Pierre’s 3D animated family adventure film LEGENDS OF OZ: DOROTHY’S RETURN starring Lea Michele, Martin Short, Dan Aykroyd, Jim Belushi and Kelsey Grammer. The film is from a script by Adam Balsam and Randi Barnes, based on the series of books by Roger Stanton Baum. Bonne Radford is producing alongside Ryan Carroll and Roland Carroll of Summertime Entertainment.

The film, scheduled for a May 2, 2014 domestic theatrical release by Clarius Entertainment on a minimum of 3,000 screens, will be introduced by HPI’s President Eric Christenson and will screen at the upcoming Marché du Film. Cannes screenings are scheduled for Saturday, May 18th at 4:00pm at Olympia 2, Monday May 20th at 4:00pm at Olympia 2, and Tuesday, May 21st at 4:00pm at Olympia 8.

The film will also screen in competition at the 2013 Annecy International Animation Festival.  Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment will be handling home entertainment distribution for North America. Sony will be distributing the soundtrack.

LEGENDS OF OZ: DOROTHY’S RETURN is a 3D animated feature film based on the adventure books by Roger Stanton Baum, the great-grandson of L. Frank Baum, and is a continuation of the world’s most popular and beloved fairy tales.  In the story, Dorothy (voiced by Michele) awakens to a devastated post-tornado Kansas, but is soon whisked back to Oz and its new villain in this 3D-animated musical adventure.  There she is joined by familiar faces including the Scarecrow (Aykroyd), the Lion (Belushi) and the Tin Man (Grammer).

Bonne Radford, one-time head of feature animation at Dreamworks and VP of Animation at Amblin, produced THE ROAD TO ELDORADO, as well as executive produced CURIOUS GEORGE. Will Finn is best known for animating such classics as ALADDIN, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST and THE LITTLE MERMAID.  Daniel St. Pierre has worked as a director, production designer and art director on a number of hits including THE LION KING, SHARK TALE and TARZAN.

Hyde Park’s slate of films in production which will be presented at the Marché du film including ELMORE LEONARD’S SWITCH, with a cast led by Jennifer Aniston, John Hawkes and Tim Robbins, EVERY SECRET THING starring Diane Lane, Elizabeth Banks and Dakota Fanning, A FRIGGIN’ CHRISTMAS MIRACLE with Robin Williams, Lauren Graham and Joel McHale, CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR starring Nick Jonas and Isabel Lucas and the Roger Spottiswoode-directed MIDNIGHT SUN.

WAMG At The IRON MAN 3 Press Day – PART 1

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IRON MAN 3 is back, and packed with more excitement than ever! Recently, WAMG was invited to attend the IRON MAN 3 press day where Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle and Sir Ben Kingsley sat down with members of the media for a press conference. Check out some of the highlights below.

Marvel’s “Iron Man 3” pits brash-but-brilliant industrialist Tony Stark/Iron Man against an enemy whose reach knows no bounds. When Stark finds his personal world destroyed at his enemy’s hands, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. This journey, at every turn, will test his mettle. With his back against the wall, Stark is left to survive by his own devices, relying on his ingenuity and instincts to protect those closest to him. As he fights his way back, Stark discovers the answer to the question that has secretly haunted him: does the man make the suit or does the suit make the man?

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This first question for Gwyneth Paltrow. I wanted to talk about the transformation of your character. Within the span of three films she goes from the assistant, a little bit of damsel in distress into like the president of Stripe Industries, and she wears the pants in the relationship. Can you talk a little bit about like the gradual transformation of your character especially in this film where she really takes power?

GWYNETH PALTROW: Sure. Thank you. I feel really, really lucky that I got to play Pepper for that reason because I think very rarely do you start at one such a distinctive place and end up somewhere else. And I really loved their relationship in the first movie when she was a supplicant, and cleaning up his messes and I loved that. It was very specific, and then, you know, to get all the way to where she is at the end of the trilogy, you know, it was a big transformation. And I think one of the things that I loved the most is that she really steps into her power in all areas. And you do see her as a very intelligent articulate CEO. You see her now in an equal relationship with Tony where she wants her needs met as well while still remaining a very supportive woman in his life. And then, of course, she turns into a super hero or sort of. But it was a great transformation, and I felt really lucky to be a part of it.

Robert, Tony gets to interact with a kid for the first time in this film, which is great I thought. I was wondering if you were happy that was in the script, and can you talk a little about interacting with a young Ty?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Ty Simpkins is great and I think we’ll be seeing a lot of him. Shane Black had this idea of this kind of capraesque departure. I mean a lot of things in Iron Man 3 I think we all knew we were taking risks, and we were kind of out of what would have been the familiar territory. And his idea of a super hero running into a little kid in the heartland of America, I think wound up being a wise choice and kind of a calculated risk.

Now, this question is for Sir Ben Kingsley, and obviously Mandarin is a unique villain, something that we’ve never, ever really seen in a movie like this before. How much of the Mandarin is persona, both of them, was already in the script and how many was your invention? How much of it was your invention?

BEN KINGSLEY: It’s all in the script. Drew and Shane presented us with a wonderful document, and there’s very little straying off the written word. improvise it’s minimal, and just to maybe sharpen one or two ideas that we were playing with on the set, but it’s all there. And I do respond to the written word. I love to see it down there on the page, and it was all there. I tried to give the Mandarin in his political broadcasts a rather unnerving sense of righteousness, and make him almost paternalistic, patriarchal. And that’s where the timbre of his delivery comes from, and weird iconography was there to disconcert and completely scatter any expectations of where he might be coming from. I think again the line, “That you will never see me coming” involves … It sort of voices, that unpredictability that he has. It’s a great script. It was a wonderful read, and we stuck very closely to it.

Robert, will you be filming another scene tonight?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Oh, let me explain this to you, my associate. We shoot those Easter eggs, which is after the credits there’s that little piece that gets everyone real

DON CHEADLE: Oh, I never sat through the end of the whole thing. There’s something at the end? [OVERLAPPING] As soon as Rhodey is off the screen I usually walk out.

The movie is pretty funny. Of course, you’re obviously a funny guy and everything. But you talk about that kind of approach where the producers or the director talks of tone before shooting the movie. Was there any changes? Was it supposed to be darker and then it switched to be like more into like comedy?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Well, yeah, but first I’d like to offer a counterpoint what Sir Ben said because he actually when once we let him off the chain, we found that he was a glorious improviser and a lot of ideas without giving his character arc were just flowing out from what was written. But again, you know, Drew and Shane had a good document. The story is really good. The twists are really good. But I would leave it to my other co-stars to describe what working with me on most of our other scenes was like. And they’ve gotten used to it and they’re great at it. Don.

DON CHEADLE: Do you want me to say what you paid to say or just say what I feel? No, it was great to come back this time around and, you know, Shane almost coined and really put a stamp on the sort of buddy action movies where I was clearly in the pocket with Robert. It was great to see the whole movie put together at the end because we’re in such different tracks. I didn’t know what Gwyneth was doing for half of the movie. It was great to see it all put together and say, “Oh, that’s what you guys were doing over there.” You know. I saw Sir Ben twice on the set. So it would be great to have another bite of the apple personally for me to be able to mix with these guys a little bit more, but we had a ball. And Robert is a prince, as you all know. This question is for Don.

Don, so which one do you prefer, Iron Patriot or War Machine? And also how do you think that Rhodey has evolved in this stuff understanding in terms of just being an integral part to himself or just a companion

DON CHEADLE: Well, the Iron Patriot is about three kilos heavier. So I prefer War Machine. But, you know, this iteration of the film really is something that Robert and I talked about after the second, you know. He came to me and said, “Now, let’s try and really kick this relationship off, and really try to see who these guys are.” And a lot of fun for me in this one was being able to do a lot of action outside of the suit, and getting to work with the stunt team and doing a lot of the cable work. That was just a big thrill for me. It was like, you know, I was big kid being able to play with the best toys. So I think you see the relationship has strengthened in this one, and it’s sort of pays off on the promise that I think was made at the end of Iron Man 2 in the Japanese garden where these guys really started busting each other’s chops, and, you know, back-to-back. You know, they’re friends, but they still really help balance one another, and I thought that really came to fruition in this one.

Robert, so there was a definite finality in this movie, but you know you’re never going to get rid of this character. You’re too perfect for it. So how go negotiations for 4…

ROBERT DOWNEY: I’m not at liberty to discuss that. I do want to say that our stunt coordinator, Marcos Rounthwaite came to me at one point and he said, “You see Don just rolled into the room and fired off all those shots miss all these things. Then the guys feel, and then he went exactly where he was supposed to go?” I said, “Yeah, what are you getting at?” He goes, “Nothing.” The future as usual is uncertain, and I think the great thing is that, you know, we never could have known what and who was going to come together for the third Iron Man. And usually the third of anything struggles to even meet the first two, let alone the first one. So in all earnestness, you know, things are very much in flux right now and Marvel has their plans and we’re all living and growing. We’ll see what happens.

My question I have one for Robert and one for Don. For Robert, your character has dealt with so much. He has, you know, betrayal. He’s dealt with blood poisoning, aliens, the destruction and loss of his home. Where would you like to see Iron Man go next emotionally? And for Don, your character he gets to use his suit more in this film, and you also get to see more of his actual military training. Which do you prefer more? Do you prefer being in the suit more or, you know, showing off what a great solider that he is without the suit?

DON CHEADLE: Do you remember the first one for you?

ROBERT DOWNEY: I seem to have wound up with two glasses of water in front of me. So I’m absolutely out of mind right now.

DON CHEADLE: I prefer being out of the suit. The suit is great, and it’s great to be able to achieve all the things that we want to achieve with the CGI and the motion capture and all that. But like I said, I had the most fun running around with Robert, and us actually physically going after it. So that’s my answer.

And Robert?

ROBERT DOWNEY: I don’t know. I mean it’s funny. These things tend to kind of come out of creative discussions, and there’s always something, you know, when we’re shooting we always say, “Oh, wouldn’t it be great …” But a lot of those things have kind of come true already. You know, I was always saying, “God, I just want to see Pepper in the suit. I want to see her experience with what Tony gets from it, and I want her to help him transcend it, and all that stuff. So it’s kind of like the, you know, wish fulfillment happens pretty quick in the Marvel universe, you know. So I don’t have any particular goals with it right now.

You spend a lot more time out of the suit fighting. Was that a plus for you, and then Gwyneth, we’ve seen your transformation. Any chance of you being part of the Avengers on the next one?

GWYNETH PALTROW: You want to go first?

ROBERT DOWNEY: What studio do you work for?

DON CHEADLE: And I think you want to ask me if I want to be in the Avengers. Weren’t you in the Avengers already?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Let’s give a round. There it is public opinion.

GWYNETH PALTROW: I will say that, you know, one of the most thrilling parts of, you know, having gone all over the place in talking about this movie is that people really love to see Pepper in the suit and like kicking ass. And so, I would come back. You know, in the comic she becomes Rescue, her own person.

ROBERT DOWNEY: And she marries Happy Hogan.

GWYNETH PALTROW: Oh, yeah.

DON CHEADLE: It might be for the adult channel.

Talk a bit about the challenges of maintaining all those different story lines and rooting them in this one film. And also, Robert, you had mentioned, you know, three endings are always difficult, you know. We have to really be careful about a guy leaving the franchise. This seems to be a little bit like a back to basics tone because of everything is taken away from him. So it’s much more stripped down in a sense. So if you guys can expand on that and tell me more on that that would be great.

ROBERT DOWNEY: It’s a complex thing, you know, Kevin Feige. The folks weren’t here, you know, Kevin and Shane. I mean they’re the ones who really had to hammer out where do all these strings go and how does everything move something when you

GWYNETH PALTROW: But if I can interject.

ROBERT DOWNEY: I wish you would.

GWYNETH PALTROW: Thank you. You know, the truth is that these movies work because Robert plays Tony Stark, and not only because like of the similarities in their own lives and not because of his specific brand of vulnerability and strength and humor and all those things. But because Robert has a really big picture creative mind about what these movies should feel like. We all know that Marvel are amazing at, you know, the stunts and the CGI and the action and everything. But I think one particular strength of Robert’s that we don’t see on screen is the fact that he’s always asking like what is the big picture here? How can we make it feel real? How can we make it feel like something we care about and we want to watch? I think that’s why the movies keep working, and they’re not sort of like a weaker carbon copy of the one before.

BEN KINGSLEY: Yeah, I’d agree with that. That’s true.

Getting back to the suits, and Gwyneth, was there a little bit of suit envy here?

DON CHEADLE: Well, I know that when–I know in the second one Robert when he was putting his suit on and just had the top of it on, and I was putting mine on and he said, “Yeah, I told them from one to two that they really had to make these changes and this a lot more lightweight.” And I was like, “Mine weights 7,000 pounds. What are you talking about lightweight?”

GWYNETH PALTROW: You guys are wimps. Okay, the suit is not that bad …

DON CHEADLE: You never wore. You never put it on.

ROBERT DOWNEY: You never wore Don’s.

DON CHEADLE: She was a CGI.

GWYNETH PALTROW: I did wear the suit.

DON CHEADLE: You didn’t wear my suit. I’ll bring out the suit.

ROBERT DOWNEY: I admit we’re wimps, in Iron Man 2 Don’s suit was so hard to even pick up to put on him. And the hardest thing about this stuff is really again it’s like any of this CGI stuff or any of like … You know, I mean Ben was essentially in special effects makeup the whole time.

DON CHEADLE: Yeah.

ROBERT DOWNEY: And he would just come on the set, and we’ve all had these moments, but you always wonder where your lot is going to come grab you. And Don has had that for some reason or other. I promise you my dearest brother I will never allow that to happen to you again. I make all of my commitments in public.

DON CHEADLE: Robert was like, “Is that heavy enough?” Robert said, “Well, shouldn’t you have something else on there? It was fun.

ROBERT DOWNEY: And Gwyneth, by the way, she did come in and she was having a ball, and her kids were there and she was in rocking shape. So it was all nice and easy. I think she wore it once or twice. It’s an accumulative issue.

How will people respond to the film in today’s unsafe world?

DON CHEADLE: Well, sure. I think especially with the events of the last week we’ve been asked a lot. I’ve been a lot, anyway, about if there are any sort of, you know, illusions between what’s happening in the real world and what’s happening in the film and are we trying to make a statement. And clearly this movie was in the can before anything happened, transpired in the last week. But as Robert mentioned earlier, the job of this film is to entertain. That’s what we’re hoping to do. If we’re lucky enough to outside of that have someone’s mind changed about something that’s happening in the real world or sensitivity that wasn’t there before or some deeper understanding, that’s some ancillary bi-product that we couldn’t have anticipated. I couldn’t have anyway. We’re really trying to give people I think the ability to go into a darkened room, and have a couple of hours of just pure enjoyment. And if anything else happens outside of that, that’s an unintended consequence, but one that’s a happy one, I guess.

ROBERT DOWNEY: Yeah, and I think Sir Ben will find this really interesting to have an entire generation of just movie going folk, but also just kids identifying Sir Ben with this character slash characters he’s played. But I think you notice once you have that kind of feedback, it’s not like you don’t figure that into what you’re doing. And Disney acquired Marvel, but Marvel was already mindful of this stuff. These aren’t those kind of like PG-13 bordering on how did this ever get past the Ratings Commission movies? You know, we’re really thoughtful about this stuff. And I think even in your character’s transition, there’s something about it that allows the air to be taken out of the darkness that would otherwise be there maybe.

BEN KINGSLEY: Yeah, also, to pursue Gwyneth’s point that it does come from Robert. Whatever the context, whatever the scene, there’s always a quest for sincerity; a quest for the genuine, a quest for putting the human dance on the screen. And all generations will respond to that. Children do respond to sincerity, and Robert as a guiding actor through our experience will always debate where is the sincerity in the scene, where is its heart? And I think that will appeal to children of all ages. To use a rather hackney

GWYNETH PALTROW: And, you know, we do live in an unsafe world. That’s the truth and I’m dealing with this now with my seven-year-old. fact that the world is unsafe, and there are people who do harmful things. And I don’t think there’s anything wrong with presenting that idea. We can’t lie to our children and pretend that the world is perfect and everybody is happy, and everybody is out there to do good. So, you know, it’s just part of a bigger conversation. I know that after my children saw the movie, I had certain conversations with my son about it. And so I think it’s a good sort of contained place to have a conversation.

Robert, since the aftermath of New York has had such an impact on Tony, what was your take on how much you could refer to that in the movie? How much we want to hear about what happened in the Avengers, and how much Tony doesn’t want to talk about it?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Again, we just wanted to play with that in kind of a binary way to be weird. It’s weird when one movie that’s connected to another doesn’t reference that movie at all. You know what I mean? It seems like we were so busy trying to make our thing work that we didn’t have space. So I think it would lack confidence if we didn’t. I thought it would be helpful. I just like the idea of this kid kind of getting under my skin, and I like the idea of kids bringing their parents to the verge of an anxiety attack. And kind of going like, “Oh, what’s wrong with you?” Once they push you there. And I thought that was a nice way to refer back to it. We needed reasons, and sometimes you can just look at the bigger picture of this now kind of like continuance of stories, you He’s sort of grappling with the I was reading this morning about the new Thor and I’m like, “Oh, wow, oh.” You just kind of plug things in like an operator. It’s like, “You know what, that fits here real nice.” And again, we’re always aware. Even more so. You know, Jon Favreau on the first Iron Man we went out and we went to Comic Con, and he had a flip phone in his hand and he goes, “This is how it’s working from now. You know, the filmmakers, the artists, the departments heads they’re all showmen and the audience is talking back, and they’re going to ask you that question. In the post Avengers world, “what was it like for Tony and this and that?” So you kind of have to have thought about, and you have to have addressed it creatively.

I have a question for Robert. You had a pretty fruitful partnership with Shane Black on Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Can you just talk about your relationship with him in terms of your creative relationship with him, what he brings to this franchise?

ROBERT DOWNEY: Well, yeah. Well, I think it would be nice to kind of go down the row here and just use describing words or anecdotes. I’d like to say we’re night shooting and he would tend to when they cut he would like run somewhere. Because it was the only time someone couldn’t ask him a question was if he was in a full out run. And he ran across the street. The next thing I knew he was kind of sitting down on the sidewalk, and I would say there was a cable in front of wherever you’re working and he had hit it at such a clip that it had thrown him on his side, dislocated his shoulder.

GWYNETH PALTROW: This is not a funny story, my friend.

DON CHEADLE: It’s kinda funny.

GWYNETH PALTROW: No.

ROBERT DOWNEY: He’s fine.

DON CHEADLE: I thought it was funny.

ROBERT DOWNEY: You know, you would …

GWYNETH PALTROW: Robert, he had cracked ribs and he was all bloody and blue.

DON CHEADLE: Oh, my God, it gets better.

ROBERT DOWNEY: Anyway. You know, by the way, I have a story … Forget what you asked. Here’s what I will say. Sir Ben is correct in some way and I’ve, you know, tried to be some sort of guiding light. Every bit as often I would go to set and Gwyneth would like, “Oh, my God, what are we doing? What is this scene again this time?” Like, “Shooting Pepper.” And she always points true north, and Jon said from the first time she’s the heart of the movie. And this time I’d be working with Don and he’d be like, “You know that thing where you say something funny and I say something, and then you would answer it and we do that?” I go, “Yeah, yeah, yeah.” He goes, “Okay, can we not do that in one scene?” And I was like, “Oh, yeah, yeah, great idea.” So there was a lot of give and take. Back to Shane. I can’t tell my story so I’ll let the others speak. She’s probably right.

GWYNETH PALTROW: I think the thing is that, you know, at least I can only speak for myself. When I started Iron Man 3 I was very uncomfortable with the fact that Jon wasn’t there directing. And I felt that, you know, Jon cast the movies, and he’s responsible in part for the Avengers. And it was just, you know, and I know lives and everyone is busy, but it was just weird that he wasn’t there directing. But, you know, as we went on and I really warmed to Shane and his terrible outfits. And you know, he is the most–he is so sharp. He is so smart and his dialogue was incredible. And I think what we started with on this movie that we didn’t start with on the first two films was a really excellent finished screenplay. And I think it really shows in the film. I think Shane is really super talented, and he brought something. You know, he took it up a notch, which was really difficult to do. So I ended up having an incredible amount of respect for him.

BEN KINGSLEY: I only remember him being in one terrible outfit. I don’t remember it
being plural outfits.

DON CHEADLE: How bad is that one?

BEN KINGSLEY: He has a great attribute as a director, one of many great attributes is that the director will give you the role and then he will let go. This is a wonderful quality that he has. There are some directors lesser in confidence or skill who make the actor feel very uncomfortable because you feel you’re auditioning for them everyday. And that’s a terrible feeling on the set. But Shane has this wonderful ability in his own confidence, and his ability to cast a movie to say, “There’s your role. I’m just going to film it.” And it’s really good energy to have on the set.

Starring Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle, Guy Pearce, Rebecca Hall, Stephanie Szostak, James Badge Dale with Jon Favreau and Ben Kingsley, Marvel’s “Iron Man 3” is directed by Shane Black from a screenplay by Drew Pearce & Shane Black and is based on Marvel’s iconic Super Hero Iron Man, who first appeared on the pages of “Tales of Suspense” (#39) in 1963 and had his solo comic book debut with “The Invincible Iron Man” (#1) in May of 1968.

Visit the website: http://marvel.com/ironman3 

“Like” IRON MAN 3 on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ironman

“Follow” IRON MAN 3 on Twitter: @Iron_Man

IRON MAN 3 is in theaters now

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Special Effects Pioneer Ray Harryhausen Dead at 92

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Wow – I had planned a Harryhausen-themed Super-8 show but had put it off until the summer. Wish I had scheduled it for tonight. This is a shock and big news though I guess anyone who’s 92 should be expected to pass at any time. I’ve been a life-long fan of Harryhausen and will plan on writing a detailed tribute here soon.

From the The Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation Facebook page:

Raymond Frederick Harryhausen
Born: Los Angeles 29th June 1920
Died: London 7th May 2013.

The Harryhausen family regret to announce the death of Ray Harryhausen, Visual Effects pioneer and stop-motion model animator. He was a multi-award winner which includes a special Oscar and BAFTA. Ray’s influence on today’s film makers was enormous, with luminaries; Steven Spielberg, James Cameron, Peter Jackson, George Lucas, John Landis and the UK’s own Nick Park have cited Harryhausen as being the man whose work inspired their own creations.

Harryhausen’s fascination with animated models began when he first saw Willis O’Brien’s creations in KING KONG with his boyhood friend, the author Ray Bradbury in 1933, and he made his first foray into filmmaking in 1935 with home-movies that featured his youthful attempts at model animation. Over the period of the next 46 years, he made some of the genres best known movies – MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (1949), IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA (1955), 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH (1957), MYSTERIUOUS ISLAND (1961), ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. (1966), THER VALLEY OF GWANGI (1969), three films based on the adventures of SINBAD and CLASH OF THE TITANS (1981). He is perhaps best remembered for his extraordinary animation of seven skeletons in JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS (1963) which took him three months to film.

Harryhausen’s genius was in being able to bring his models alive. Whether they were prehistoric dinosaurs or mythological creatures, in Ray’s hands they were no longer puppets but became instead characters in their own right, just as important as the actors they played against and in most cases even more so.

Today The Ray & Diana Harryhausen Foundation, a charitable Trust set up by Ray on the 10th April 1986, is devoted to the protection of Ray’s name and body of work as well as archiving, preserving and restoring Ray’s extensive Collection.

Tributes have been heaped upon Harryhausen for his work by his peers in recent years.

“Ray has been a great inspiration to us all in special visual industry. The art of his earlier films, which most of us grew up on, inspired us so much.” “Without Ray Harryhausen, there would likely have been no STAR WARS”
George Lucas.

“THE LORD OF THE RINGS is my ‘Ray Harryhausen movie’. Without his life-long love of his wondrous images and storytelling it would never have been made – not by me at least”
Peter Jackson

“In my mind he will always be the king of stop-motion animation”
Nick Park

“His legacy of course is in good hands
Because it’s carried in the DNA of so many film fans.”
Randy Cook

“You know I’m always saying to the guys that I work with now on computer graphics “do it like Ray Harryhausen”
Phil Tippett

“What we do now digitally with computers, Ray did digitally long before but without computers. Only with his digits.”
Terry Gilliam.

“His patience, his endurance have inspired so many of us.”
Peter Jackson

“Ray, your inspiration goes with us forever.”
Steven Spielberg

“I think all of us who are practioners in the arts of science fiction and fantasy movies now all feel that we’re standing on the shoulders of a giant.
If not for Ray’s contribution to the collective dreamscape, we wouldn’t be who we are.”
James Cameron

Bring The Family To The Advance Screening Of EPIC In St. Louis

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EPIC is a 3D CG adventure comedy that reveals a fantastical world unlike any other. From the creators of ICE AGE and RIO, EPIC tells the story of an ongoing battle between the forces of good, who keep the natural world alive, and the forces of evil, who wish to destroy it. When a teenage girl finds herself magically transported into this secret universe, she teams up with an elite band of warriors and a crew of comical, larger-than-life figures, to save their world…and ours.

Beyoncé voices the leader of this magical world – Queen Tara. Beautiful, agile and strong, Tara isn’t just the Leafmen’s Queen; she’s the life force of the forest, which she presides over with respect, compassion and humor.

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Other members of voice cast are Colin Farrell, Josh Hutcherson, Amanda Seyfried, Christoph Waltz, Aziz Ansari, Pitbull, Jason Sudeikis and rock legend Steven Tyler.

EPIC charges into theaters nationwide on May 24, 2013.

Twentieth Century Fox Animation, Blue Sky Studios and WAMG invite you to bring the whole family to see EPIC. Enter to win a Pass (good for 4) to the advance screening on Saturday, May 18th at 10am in St. Louis.

ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTION: Beyoncé starred in what 2006 film?

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. SEND YOUR NAME AND ANSWER TO: michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com
3. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN THROUGH A RANDOM DRAWING OF QUALIFYING CONTESTANTS. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PASSES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED. DUPLICATE TICKETS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.

The film is rated PG for Mild Action, Some Scary Images and Brief Rude Language.

EPIC

Get ready to experience EPIC in theaters May 24th.

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EPIC

Buffo (Pitbull) is a wheeler and dealer tough-guy toad who plays all the angles: he profits no matter which side wins or loses.

EPIC

MK (Amanda Seyfried) encounters a slug named Mub (Aziz Ansari), a self-described “ladies´ man.”

EPIC

Grub (Chris O´Dowd), Mub (Aziz Ansari), Ronin (Colin Farrell) and Nod (Josh Hutcherson) prepare to aid a fallen comrade.

EPIC

M.K. (Amanda Seyfried) doesn´t understand the madcap antics of her father, Bomba (Jason Sudeikis), as he searches for a hidden world.

Photos: Blue Sky Studios – TM and © 2013 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.