Warner Bros. Pictures Releases New Trailer For Brad Bird’s THE IRON GIANT: Signature Edition

File_462001_121558_927_1

Watch the trailer for what many consider to be one of the best animated films in cinema history, THE IRON GIANT.

Warner Bros. Pictures and Fathom Events have announced that tickets are now on sale for the movie, being re-released in theaters for a limited engagement this fall, remastered and enhanced with two all-new scenes as THE IRON GIANT: Signature Edition.

This special screening comes to U.S. movie theaters on Wednesday, September 30 at 7:00 p.m. local time, with an encore event in select markets on Sunday, October 4 at 12:00 p.m. local time. See this one on the big screen!

Tickets for THE IRON GIANT: Signature Edition can be purchased online at www.FathomEvents.com, or by visiting participating cinema box offices. Fans throughout the U.S. will be able to enjoy the event in more than 500 movie theaters through Fathom’s Digital Broadcast Network. For a complete list of theater locations visit the Fathom Events website (theaters and participants are subject to change).

When THE IRON GIANT arrived in theaters, it was hailed as an “instant classic” (Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal). “Imagine E.T. as a towering metal man, that’s the appeal of this enchanting animated feature” (Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times). And the world soon learned another “giant” had arrived as well: filmmaker Brad Bird, who made his stunning directorial debut with this film and has gone on to win two Oscars, as well as worldwide acclaim for his work on both animated and live-action features.

Winner of nine Annie Awards, THE IRON GIANT is the tale of an unlikely friendship between a rebellious boy named Hogarth (voiced by Eli Marienthal) and a giant robot, voiced by a then little-known actor named Vin Diesel. The voice cast also included Jennifer Aniston and Harry Connick Jr.

IGSC-330

Directed by Brad Bird, THE IRON GIANT was produced by Allison Abbate and Des McAnuff, adapted from poet Ted Hughes’ book, The Iron Man, with the screen story by Bird and the screenplay written by Tim McCanlies and Brad Bird. “The Iron Giant” was first released in the summer of 1999 by Warner Bros.

Following the re-release in theaters, a high-definition version of THE IRON GIANT: Signature Edition will be available to purchase from digital retailers in the fall of 2015.

Txtd Fathom Events 1sht IRNGT

DOLPHIN TALE 2 – The Review

dolphin2

The entire cast of DOLPHIN TALE is back for the sequel to continue the inspiring story of Winter, whose miraculous rescue and recovery—thanks to that prosthetic tail—made her a symbol of hope and perseverance to people around the world. Kids who haven’t been exposed to too many cinematic clichés may be satisfied with more heart-tugging mix of family drama and playful dolphin-human bonding, but any adult watching DOLPHIN TALE 2 should be able to predict the bland story’s events before the tide ever changes. As with most unnecessary sequels, DOLPHIN TALE 2 takes a similar plot and spreads it thin. It’s been three years since young Sawyer Nelson (Nathan Gamble) and the dedicated team at the Clearwater Marine Hospital, headed by Dr. Clay Haskett (Harry Connick, Jr.), rescued Winter, the unfortunate dolphin with the mangled tail. With the help of a unique prosthetic they were able to save her life. The sequel opens with the death of the elderly dolphin Panama, the only poolmate Winter has ever known. The loss of Panama may have greater repercussions for Winter, who cannot be housed alone, as dolphins’ social behavior requires them to be paired with other dolphins. Time is running out to find a companion for her. Will Sawyer have to postpone his ‘semester at sea’ educational opportunity before Winter can rally? Will Winter be forced to leave Clearwater?!? Will Winter die?!?

Each setback in DOLPHIN TALE 2 provides a new opportunity for gooey feel-good life lessons about friendship, family and resilience. Having stacked the deck against the animal, the script engineers a series of miracles, from a conveniently-timed beaching of yet another injured dolphin to more aid offered by prosthesis specialist Dr. McCarthy. “I’m about to get a lesson here, aren’t I?” Sawyer says when Morgan Freeman shows up in full twinkly platitude mode to share wisdom like “When one door closes, another opens” (uttered twice!) Director Charles Martin Smith casts himself as a USDA stooge who threatens that the government will take away Winter and transfer her to a marine park…..“in Texas” (!!!). Rachel Portman’s soaring, heavy-handed score swells through one feel-good scene after another. The first movie appealed to me because I bought into the characters and the situation. Because DOLPHIN TALE 2 offers the same characters and similar situations, only less believable (true story or not), I became aware of the manipulation. Of course it’s easy to be cynical about a movie like DOLPHIN TALE 2. It’s a sincere and slick production with its heart in the right place and it may win over undemanding audiences. The characters, who are unilaterally impossible to dislike, are so darned well-meaning and saintly they may as well be wearing halos around their heads – even Rufus the pelican chips in to help find injured critters.That the film manages to be not insufferable while still being so predictable is a small tribute to its cast and crew (A minor point but a big distraction: Sawyer and his precocious girlfriend Hazel (Cozi Zuehlsdorff) rescue a wounded sea turtle they name Mavis after “the character from the Andy Griffith show”. Odd that a script throwing out so much scientific jargon would blow it on Andy Griffith trivia – there was no recurring AGS character named Mavis!) DOLPHIN TALE 2 really soars in a brief scene where Bethany Hamilton, the one-armed SOUL SURFER chick, takes a swim alongside Winter, momentarily transcending the mawkishness. They should team that pair up as aquatic crime fighters for a second sequel.

2 1/2 of 5 Stars

dolphin tale 2 poster

DOLPHIN TALE 2 International Poster

DLPN2_1SHT_TSR_INTL_ONLINE

The adorable first poster for a DOLPHIN TALE 2 is here.

The movie opens in US theaters September 19 and in UK cinemas on October 17.

Warner Bros. Pictures and Alcon Entertainment’s DOLPHIN TALE 2 continues the story of the brave dolphin Winter, whose miraculous rescue and recovery – thanks to a groundbreaking prosthetic tail – made her a symbol of hope and perseverance to people around the world and inspired the 2011 family hit movie DOLPHIN TALE.

The film reunites the entire main cast, led by Harry Connick, Jr., Oscar winner Morgan Freeman (“Million Dollar Baby”), Ashley Judd, Kris Kristofferson, Nathan Gamble, Cozi Zuehlsdorff, Austin Stowell, and, of course, the remarkable dolphin Winter as herself. Charles Martin Smith, who directed DOLPHIN TALE, wrote the sequel and is again at the helm.

It has been several years since young Sawyer Nelson (Gamble) and the dedicated team at the Clearwater Marine Hospital, headed by Dr. Clay Haskett (Connick, Jr.), rescued Winter. With the help of Dr. Cameron McCarthy (Freeman), who developed a unique prosthetic tail for the injured dolphin, they were able to save her life. Yet their fight is not over.

Visit the film:

https://www.facebook.com/dolphintalemovie

https://twitter.com/dolphintale

Photos:  ©2014 Alcon Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Photo Credit: Wilson Webb

DOLPHIN TALE 2

DOLPHIN TALE 2

DT2-07050-final

Watch The First Trailer For DOLPHIN TALE 2

DOLPHIN TALE 2

The new trailer for Alcon Entertainment’s family adventure DOLPHIN TALE 2 has come online.

Warner Bros. Pictures will release the film on September 19th.

Warner Bros. Pictures and Alcon Entertainment’s DOLPHIN TALE 2 continues the story of the brave dolphin Winter, whose miraculous rescue and recovery—thanks to a groundbreaking prosthetic tail—made her a symbol of hope and perseverance to people around the world and inspired the 2011 family hit movie DOLPHIN TALE.

The film reunites the entire main cast, led by Harry Connick, Jr., Oscar winner Morgan Freeman (“Million Dollar Baby”), Ashley Judd, Kris Kristofferson, Nathan Gamble, Cozi Zuehlsdorff, Austin Stowell, and, of course, the remarkable dolphin Winter as herself. Charles Martin Smith, who directed “DOLPHIN TALE, wrote the sequel and is again at the helm.

It has been several years since young Sawyer Nelson (Gamble) and the dedicated team at the Clearwater Marine Hospital, headed by Dr. Clay Haskett (Connick, Jr.), rescued Winter. With the help of Dr. Cameron McCarthy (Freeman), who developed a unique prosthetic tail for the injured dolphin, they were able to save her life. Yet their fight is not over.

https://www.facebook.com/dolphintalemovie

https://twitter.com/dolphintale

Photos:  ©2014 Alcon Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Photo Credit: Wilson Webb

DOLPHIN TALE 2

DT2-07050-final

DOLPHIN TALE 2

Kristin Chenoweth And Harry Connick Jr. In GRB Entertainment Films In Cannes; QUEEN FREAK And WHEN ANGELS SING Are First Two Titles On Inaugural Slate

Gary R. Benz (President & CEO) of long established TV company GRB Entertainment announced today the official launch of the company’s international feature film division which will be selling rights to two films at this year’s Marche du Film.  GRB’s expansion into feature theatrical films began last year when Benz set up the feature division and brought Todd Olsson on board.  The company has been looking for high quality commercially viable features that are a cut above the usual fare.

“We’ve been working hard to find the right films to get off to a great start, and both of these films are extraordinary,” said Benz.

The company will bring QUEEN FREAK, which stars Matthew Modine, Kristin Chenoweth, Joey King, Shirley Jones, and a relatively new-comer in the lead, Olesya Rulin.  It’s a wickedly sharp tale about a dysfunctional family, where the kids take matters into their own hands to “re-educate” their eccentric and distant parents (Modine and Chenoweth), in an attempt to form an actual family, very much in ‘Wes Anderson-style.’  The film was directed by Benjamin Epps and produced by Adam Saunders and Chris Aronoff, through their Footprint Features banner, in association with The Bedford Falls Company.

WHEN ANGELS SING is a unique Christmas film, produced by the iconic producer of the SPY KIDS franchise, Elizabeth Avellán, and producer Shannon McIntosh.  They bring an ensemble cast led by Harry Connick Jr.  and Connie Britton and including Chandler Canterbury, Fionnula Flanagan, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson,  and Lyle Lovett.  Tim McCanlies directs from a script based on the Turk Pipkin novel of the same name.  The film is about Michael (Connick) who got the ‘Christmas kicked out of him’ and now avoids it in every way possible.  But when a mysterious man ‘Nick’ sells him a very special house, he soon finds out he now lives exactly in the heart of Christmas central.

Todd Olsson, VP Feature Films, and Joey Sabella, Director of International for GRB will be selling both films at Cannes.

Said Olsson, “We have two really phenomenal films coming out of the gate.  Both will have their World Premiere in Cannes.  It’s a nice bonus they’re screening at the first market we’re presenting them.  It gives buyers a great opportunity to really know what the film is, and how strong it plays.”

Both films will screen several times during the market and are currently available for all international territories.  Domestic distributors have been circling the films, and will have a chance to see the titles for the first time in Cannes.

Watch The New DOLPHIN TALE Trailer

Morgan Freeman, Harry Connick Jr. and Ashley Judd star in the trailer premiere for DOLPHIN TALE (via Yahoo! Movies). Inspired by the remarkable true story, the film is about a courageous dolphin named Winter and the compassionate people who banded together to save her life.

Synopsis:

Based on true events DOLPHIN TALE is a family film about Winter, a young dolphin who loses her tail in a crab trap and Sawyer, the introverted, 11-year old boy who befriends her. Sawyer meets the rescued dolphin at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium, a marine rehabilitation center where she lives. Sawyer rallies friends and family alike to save Winter by convincing a pioneering doctor to create a unique prosthetic attachment to restore the dolphin’s ability to swim. Winter the dolphin will play herself in the movie.

From director Charles Martin Smith, the film stars Morgan Freeman, Harry Connick Jr., Ashley Judd, Kris Kristofferson and Nathan Gamble. DOLPHIN TALE hits theaters in 3D and 2D on September 23, 2011

Review: ‘New In Town’

Ram Man:

‘New In Town” the new romantic comedy from Danish director Jonas Elmer. If this film was a recipe and Jonas was creating a great meal… he just gave everyone food poisoning by including Renee Zellwegger in the dish. Renee still doesn’t realize she isn’t funny and in ‘New In Town’ she has slimmed down so much she resembles a human bobble-head. I guess the next fateful “ingredient”   would be Harry Connick Jr. That is the team to get me out to the theater… NOT!

Zellwegger plays Lucy Hill a Miami beach resident and executive for Food manufacturing company that sends her (kicking and screaming) to frigid Minnesota to restructure a processing plant to manufacture energy bars. The locals meet Lucy with an equally frigid welcome and began to wager on how long she will actually last in the great white north.   Lucy fist hurdle with the plant is winning over the Union rep (and love interest in the film) Ted Mitchell (Connick, Jr).

‘New InTown’ features all the usual fish-out-of-water humor you might imagine dropping someone from Florida in Minnesota in November. Lucy even gets her car stuck in a snow drift and is forced to raise her red nightie as a distress flag. Thankfully we never see her in it or the crowd would be distressed. Connick’s character of Ted Mitchell is the same guy he played in Hope Floats, backwards country guy going to tame the city-slicker. The bright spot of the film that makes it viewable is the townspeople. The people in Minnesota lead by the great character actor J.K. Simmons as the plant foreman, who constantly mess with Lucy until she ends up firing him. Talk about wrongful termination!

Ads are saying ‘New In Town’ is the first really good comedy of 2009…I guess those folks missed Paul Blart:Mall Cop. ‘New In Town’ has a few laughs and is a valid reason to make a trip to the video store. But the is nothing “new” about ‘New In Town’ to make you throw down $10+ to see it at the cinema.

[Overall: 1.75 stars out of 5]

Jeremy:

Renee Zellweger is not an actress who is easy to hate. Her cherub-like facial features give off a radiance that could melt even the most frigid, wintry locale. However, with ‘New in Town’, we are supposed to hate her. Okay, maybe “hate† is a strong word. We aren’t supposed to care much for her in the early parts of the film. It’s only late in the game, when the woman’s heart begins to turn from cold to luke-warm, that we are allowed to look upon her with any kind of acceptance. Unfortunately, by that point, we’re already so involved in not liking her that not even Ms. Zellweger’s squinty eyes dripping tears can win us back.

Zellweger plays Lucy Hill, a big-city consultant who is sent to a small town in Minnesota by her corporate bosses. She is sent to oversee the restructuring of a food-manufacturing plant, and, if necessary, trim the fat of the employee list. It’s a thankless job, and Lucy isn’t exactly welcomed with opened arms. The only one who seems to enjoy her presence in the town is Blanche Gunderson, played by Siobhan Fallon Hogan.

Among those who aren’t exactly thrilled to have Lucy in town are Stu Kopenhafer (J.K. Simmons), the plant supervisor, and Ted Mitchell (Harry Connick Jr.), the union rep. Ted, rustic and unshaven as he is, is the hottest guy in town, so, naturally, Lucy will eventually fall head-over-heels in love with the guy.

The film, directed by first-time feature director Jonas Elmer, doesn’t exactly have anything new to say. There’s a nice correlation between the literal thawing of the town as it goes from winter to spring and the thawing of Lucy’s emotions towards the town. Like any good city-slicker-in-a-small-town comedy, Lucy turns from a fish out of water to a local yokel in no time. However, without much substance behind her character or much of the town itself, any naturalistic sense of the story is completely squandered. Eastwood’s character transformation in ‘Gran Torino’ was more believable than this, and that’s saying something.

There are a few moments of genuine comedy. Whether you like her character or not, there’s no denying Zellweger’s ability to perform physical comedy. In fact, she probably does so better than any other leading lady out there. One scene involving a hunting outfit and a broken zipper is quite hilarious.

However, the film takes so much time in presenting Lucy as an unlikable, corporate shill that, by the time she falls for Ted, we don’t care any more. We just want her to leave town, with or without the factory intact.

There are numerous things that could have made the story or the characters involved more interesting. This kind of paint-by-numbers storytelling isn’t even interesting enough to bash on any more. Once you realize how modular everything is going to play out, the film becomes dull almost to the point of mind-numbing. Lucy’s character becomes headache-inducing, and the filmmakers don’t even bother to remedy this. They just feel that if you throw a cute guy her way and film her falling in love, we’ll follow through right along with her. It doesn’t work that way.

Connick, Jr. and Simmons play their parts splendidly. Simmons has really come into his own these past few years, and it’s great to see his acceptance among the best character actors. However, it is Siobhan Fallon Hogan who gives, by far, the best performance in the film. She seems so sincere even if the direction involved seems to have been the director plopping her in front of a showing of ‘Fargo’ and saying, “Here. Imitate that.† At times, her character even lets us like Lucy’s character a little bit more. It’s a character as likable as Lucy is not, but Hogan still pulls off a masterful job at acting it out.

There is nothing new to be found in ‘New in Town’, a comedy that is, for the most part, completely void of veritable humor. It’s standard, romantic comedy filmmaking that, given the characters and the setting, could have been so much more. From concept to execution, it all comes off as flat and unflinchingly convention. Soap operas aren’t this formulaic.

[overall: 2.25 stars out of 5]