Alfred Molina Signs On for ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

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No, it’s not April Fool’s Day, and, no, this isn’t a prank. Â  Disney is making a live-action, big-screen adaptation of ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’, the Mickey Mouse short from ‘Fantasia’. Â  The film is being directed by Jon Turteltaub (‘National Treasure’), produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, and will star Nicolas Cage and Jay Baruchel. Â  Alfred Molina has also just signed on to play the evil sorcerer, Horvath.

The story centers on an average college student (Baruchel) who is reluctantly recruited to work for a sorcerer named Balthazar Blake (Cage). The man gives him a crash course in the art and science of magic to prepare him for a battle against the forces of darkness in modern Manhattan.

The movie begins shooting this month in New York.

While I think this is an atrocious idea, I also remember saying the same thing about ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ back when I first heard about it. Â  We all know how that franchise ended up, don’t we. Â  However, Turteltaub is no Gore Verbinski, and I reiterate my lack of faith in how well this film is going to turn out.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

‘Angels & Demons’ Full Trailer

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The new trailer for ‘Angels & Demons’ will be making its debut this Friday in front of ‘The International’.   However, you can scope it out early right here.   It comes to us today courtesy of our boys over at First Showing.

The book was much better than ‘The DaVinci Code’, so I am interested to see how this one turns out.

Let us know what you think by commenting below!

Source: First Showing

Review: ‘The Pink Panther 2’

Ram Man:

Three years ago the powers that be decided to resurrect the greatest detective in the world (in his opinion)   Lt. Jacques Clouseau. Steve Martin was cast as the bumbling, stumbling Detective made famous by the late great Peter Sellers.   The problem was they didn’t stick to the original, they left out funny gags that were staples with Sellers in the Pink Panther movies. Instead they popped in Beyonce and it was a pop singer with a crime happening. So when I heard there was a sequel coming down the pipe, I became nauseated. Everyone is back from the original except the diva (Beyonce). They have added some A-list supporting actors: Andy Garcia,  Alfred Molina and the lovely Aishwarya Rai (Bollywood hottie).

This time around, Clouseau (Martin) has been relegated to parking meters to avoid destroying Paris. A master criminal called “The Tornado” has come out of hiding and stolen priceless artifacts from around the globe. The Shroud of Turin, The Magna Carta, The Pope’s ring and The Imperial sword of Japan all are missing. The Countries of the world decide to gather together their finest detectives, a dream team of law enforcement, and Paris must send Lt. Jacques Clouseau. Clouseau is apprehensive about leaving France for fear the country’s prize possession, The Pink Panther Diamond, may be stolen next. As soon as Clouseau passes the custom sign that reads “You Are Now Leaving France” a news flash hits the airport terminal… “The Pink Panther Diamond has been stolen by the Tornado”. Clouseau simply responds, “See I Tell You!”

So now the so-called Dream Team Detectives: Vincenzo (Garcia) from Italy, Cyber wiz Kenji (Yuki Matsuzaki) from Tokyo and Inspector Pepperidge (Molina) from London all convene in Paris to be led by Clouseau and his partners Ponton (Jean Reno) & Nicole (Emily Mortimer). There is also a gemologist Sonia (Rai) on the team. After a humorous introduction the group determines that the Pink Panther is the real lead because it is the only item that can be fenced. During the investigation Ponton is booted from his house and comes to live with Clouseau dragging along his two boys. This allows Martin and the crew to reprise one of the classic Clouseau bits from the old films “The Sneak Attack”. Upon entering his home Clouseau must be on alert for Ponton’s kids, karate experts, that protect the house and keep the inspector on his toes.

This is the Pink Panther so expect the typical language problem with Clouseau’s french accent, and the normal bumbling style of detective work made famous by the character. Pink Panther 2 is a  European investigation of laughs that will have you chuckling from France to Rome. Clouseau even dons the Pope’s robes and falls out the Vatican window! That will drop a nun or two. It’s fine for the entire family. The only thing that is still missing is the hat and trench coat that Seller’s made famous as Jacques Clouseau.

I am not going to give you all the details and unlike trailers these days all the jokes either. I’m just going to recommend you go see, Yes I said “Go See” the Pink Panther 2. It took 3 years, 2 attempts and the firing of a diva, but they finally got the formula right. In no way is it better than the original, but it is a valiant effort and has enough laughs to be worth your matinee dollars. Before I forget to mention and lose my Monty Python Fan club card, John Cleese is great as  Chief Inspector Dryfus, Clouseau’s boss. They even have the original music and animation the brings back all of the funny Panther memories.

[Overall: 3 stars out of 5]

Jeremy:

I remember liking the original ‘Pink Panther’. Â  Not the one by Blake Edwards. Â  Everyone likes that. Â  I’m talking about the original, Steve Martin-led ‘Pink Panther’. Â  I tell myself whenever I think about the film that I enjoyed it. Â  However, I can’t remember much of anything outside the “‘amburger” scene. Â  It didn’t take me long to forget about most of the film. Â  Well, I can tell you, if you plan on seeing ‘Pink Panther 2’, no need for an ‘Eternal of the Spotless Mind’-style memory wipe. Â  It’s already here.

‘Pink Panther 2’ is a comedy whose jokes and humor falls flat at pretty much every turn. Â  It is a completely forgettable entry into a wholly forgettable franchise.

Of course, Martin returns as Inspector Jacques Clouseau, the bumbling, French detective who always seems to get his man. Â  Jean Reno, for reasons I can’t fathom, returns as Ponton, Clouseau’s partner, and Emily Mortimer returns as Nicole, Clouseau’s “secret” girlfriend.

This time around, Clouseau is heading a “Dream Team” of investigators who are charged with getting to the bottom of the case of The Tornado. Â  The Tornado is a thief who has stollen a number of priceless artifacts, including the Shroud of Turin, the Magna Carta, and the famed Pink Panther diamond. Â  If you know anything about this series, you know Clouseau bumbles his way to solving the case in the most idiotic manners possible.

This isn’t to say ‘Pink Panther 2’ is completely devoid of humor. Â  There are a handful of genuinely funny moments. Â  Most of them involve Andy Garcia as the suave and arrogant Italian detective on the team or Lily Tomlin as a sesitivity trainer who comes in to keep Clouseau from ogling at beautiful women or being overall racist towards Asian people. Â  Those scenes are funny in the way ‘Gran Torino’s Walt Kowalski is funny, and he and Clouseau probably would have enjoyed a beer or two together if Kowalski could keep from calling the detective a “smelly frog”. Â  They even find a way, crowbarred as it may be, of reprising the old “‘amburger” gag from the first film.

Unfortunately, even those funnier moments in the film are lost amidst the ocean of lame sight gags and pratfalls. Â  Sure, kids will love seeing people getting thrown down flights of stairs or get thrown from cars and get launched literally hundreds of feet into the air. Â  It falls too many times into the “Trip-Yawn-Repeat” humor that has become the staple to so many otherwise forgetttable comedies such as this.

Nothing should be said about the actual plot of the film. Â  It is so predictable who The Tornado is that it probably should have just been revealed to us from frame one. Â  At least then the film wouldn’t have given the impression of being a mystery. Â  But you can’t really fault this kind of family comedy for its irregular and unconvincing plot points.

A note: I don’t know what this says for the film, but you can’t help but notice they use the exact same shot of the Eiffel Tower and the Seine River at least five times. Â  No exaggeration. Â  The exact same shot. Â  I guess you could say the rest of the film wasn’t interesting enough to draw your attention away from that fact. Â  It’s a distraction, nonetheless.

You probably won’t see ‘Pink Panther 2’ on anyone’s “best” or “worst” lists at the end of the year. Â  It is simply a forgettable comedy, harmless as it may be, that doesn’t offer much of anything new to its genre. Â  I’m sure when the inevitable ‘Pink Panther 3’ comes out, I will look back fondly on this film, and I may have even convinced myself by then that I enjoyed it. Â  However, it is now 12 hours since seeing it, and I am struggling to remember it even now.

One last “‘amburger” for the road.

[Overall: 2.5 stars out of 5]

Isla Fisher Adds Voice to ‘Rango’

Isla Fisher has joined the case of Gore Verbinski’s animated film, ‘Rango’. Â  The actress joins the cast as the film’s female voice lead.

Fisher, who can be seen in the upcoming ‘Confessions of a Shopaholic’, will join Johnny Depp and Abigail Breslin in the film, which centers on a household pet who goes on an adventure to find his true self.

Also rounding out the cast are  Alfred Molina, Ray Winstone, Harry Dean Stanton and Ned Beatty.

Source: Variety

Very First Look At ‘Prince of Persia’

A paparazzi site known as Just Jared has scored the very first images of Jake Gyllenhaal all decked out in his Prince of Persia getup.

‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’ is currently filming in Morocco.   It was recently announced that the Jerry Bruckheimer produced video game adaptation had its release date pushed back from Summer 2009 to May 28, 2010.   This was evidently due to the nature of the post-production special effects the film will incorporate.

The film is being directed by Mike Newell and also stars Ben Kingsley and Alfred Molina.   It is being released by Disney.

Review: ‘Silk’

Zac:

Franà §ois Girard follow up to the magnificent Red Violin is a mixed bag that starts of great and slowly devolves into something not quite as great. The film follows Michael Pitt as Hervà © Joncour who decides to take on the job of a silk merchant who travels from France to Japan to get the most pure silk worms possible for local entrepreneur Baldabiou (Alfred Molina). Hervà © leaves behind his new wife Hà ©là ¨ne Joncour (Keira Knightly) for Japan, but when he successfully returns from the first trip he is able to move them into a manor and promises to build her a great garden that she can spend her days in. What Hà ©là ¨ne doesn’t know is that an Asian woman has caught the eye of Hervà © and he eagerly awaits the chance to return to Japan. I will save the story for you to enjoy, but the plot takes some twists and turns throughout that I didn’t see coming.
The look of the film is beautiful. Hervà ©’s journey is just splendid to look at and covers a number of Asian locales as he traverses the long trek to Japan. Girard does a fantastic job technically and his visual eye is just wonderful. The music also works very well with the film and everything thing behind the camera seems to come together, so it’s a wonder why it doesn’t work in front.
The quality of the acting never deteriorates with Molina doing some great work here. I think the Pitt/Knightly romance gets a little to romance novel for me, but also I think the story as a whole is not very grand. A story that spans continents comes across as a bit dull and uneventful with not a lot going on. The story also feels a bit repetitive as Hervà © takes the trek back and forth again and again, and the connection he feels is also a bit hard to comprehend with the lack of good development of the eastern characters.
Silk is an uneven affair, the acting is superb at times, but I don’t know how strong a lead Pitt is here. The supporting role players excel though, and the movie is worth watching for the scenery alone. Fan’s of the Red Violin should check out Girard’s follow up, as should romance fans, but the movie left me wanting more of a complete package over this unbalanced product.

[rating: 3.5/5]