Win Tickets To The Advance Screening Of 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE In St. Louis

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300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE told in the breathtaking visual style of the blockbuster “300,” is a new chapter of the epic saga, which takes the action to a new battlefield—the sea.

The story pits the Greek general Themistokles against the massive invading Persian forces, ruled by the mortal-turned-god Xerxes, and led by Artemisia, the vengeful commander of the Persian navy.

Knowing his only hope of defeating the overwhelming Persian armada will be to unite all of Greece, Themistokles ultimately leads the charge that will change the course of the war.

The action adventure stars Sullivan Stapleton (“Gangster Squad”) as Themistokles and Eva Green (“Dark Shadows,” “Casino Royale”) as Artemisia. Reprising their roles from “300,” Lena Headey stars as the Spartan Queen, Gorgo; David Wenham appears as Dilios; Andrew Tiernan plays Ephialtes; Andrew Pleavin plays Daxos; and Rodrigo Santoro returns in the role of the Persian God-King, Xerxes. The main cast also includes Hans Matheson as Themistokles’ closest friend and advisor, Aeskylos; Callan Mulvey and Jack O’Connell as father and son soldiers, Scyllias and Calisto; and Igal Naor as the Persian King Darius.

The film was directed by Noam Murro, from a screenplay by Zack Snyder & Kurt Johnstad, based on the graphic novel Xerxes, by Frank Miller.

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE opens nationwide Friday, March 7, 2014 in 3D, 2D and IMAX

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WAMG invites you to enter for your chance to receive a pass (Good for 2) to the advance screening of 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE –  Monday, March 3rd at 7PM in St. Louis.

ENTER YOUR NAME AND EMAIL ADDRESS IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. WE WILL NOTIFY YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

for “strong sustained sequences of stylized bloody violence throughout, a sex scene, nudity and some language”

The behind-the-scenes creative team includes director of photography Simon Duggan, production designer Patrick Tatopoulos, editors Wyatt Smith and David Brenner, costume designer Alexandra Byrne, and visual effects supervisors Richard Hollander and John “DJ” Desjardin. The music is by Junkie XL.

http://www.300themovie.com/

Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures present, a Cruel and Unusual Films/Mark Canton/Gianni Nunnari Production, 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE.

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Janelle Monae Sings In New Year’s Eve In New Clip From RIO 2

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“Welcome To Rio!”  Bring in 2014 with this new clip from RIO 2 featuring music by Janelle Monae.

The entire cast of the animated smash RIO returns in RIO 2, and they are joined by a new flock of top actors and musical talents.

Rich with grandeur, character, color and music, RIO 2 finds Jewel (Anne Hathaway), Blu (Jesse Eisenberg) and their three kids leaving their domesticated life in that magical city for a journey to the Amazon.

They encounter a menagerie of characters who are born to be wild, voiced by will.i.am, Jemaine Clement, Tracy Morgan, George Lopez, Leslie Mann, Rodrigo Santoro, Jamie Foxx, Andy Garcia, Bruno Mars, Kristin Chenoweth and Oscar/Emmy/Tony winner Rita Moreno.

RIO 2 lands in theaters April 11, 2014.

Check out the music-fueled website: riomovies.com

Facebook: facebook.com/RioMovies

#Rio2

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

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Watch The Brand New Trailer For RIO 2!

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Flying into theaters everywhere on April 11, 2014, check out the brand new trailer for director Carlos Saldanha’s RIO 2.

It’s a jungle out there for Blu, Jewel and their three kids in RIO 2, after they’re hurtled from that magical city to the wilds of the Amazon. As Blu tries to fit in, he goes beak-to-beak with the vengeful Nigel, and meets the most fearsome adversary of all – his father-in-law.

All our favorite RIO characters are back – I love it!

The cast includes Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg, will.i.am, Jemaine Clement, Tracy Morgan, George Lopez, Leslie Mann, Rodrigo Santoro, Jamie Foxx and they’re joined by Oscar nominee Andy Garcia, Grammy winner Bruno Mars, Tony winner Kristin Chenoweth and Oscar/Emmy/Tony winner Rita Moreno. I can’t wait for this!

RIO 2 also features new Brazilian artists and original music by Janelle Monae and Wondaland.

Be on the look for RIO 2 in theaters this coming Spring.

Facebook: facebook.com/RioMovies

Official site: riomovies.com

#Rio2

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RIO 2

Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Jewel (Anne Hathaway) and their three kids are joined by Rafael (George Lopez), Nico (Jamie Foxx) and Pedro (will.i.am) on their Amazon adventure.

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In Rio, (left to right) Luiz (Tracy Morgan), Rafael (George Lopez), Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Pedro (will.i.am) and Nico (Jamie Foxx) discuss their plans for the future.

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Jewel (Anne Hathaway) is wary of the attentions of her ex-beau Roberto (Bruno Mars).

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Nigel (Jermaine Clement) is indifferent to the amorous feelings of his acolyte, a poisonous frog named Gabi (Kristin Chenoweth).

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Tulio (Rodrigo Santoro) and Linda (Leslie Mann) make a startling discovery in the Amazon jungle.

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Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Jewel (Anne Hathaway) and their music-loving daughter, Carla (Rachel Crow) enjoy the exotic sounds of the jungle.

Catch A First Look At RIO 2 In New Trailer

RIO 2

Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Jewel (Anne Hathaway) and their music-loving daughter, Carla (Rachel Crow) enjoy the exotic sounds of the jungle in this brand new trailer for Blue Sky Studios RIO 2.

The entire cast of the animated smash RIO returns in RIO 2, and they are joined by a new flock of top actors and musical talents. Rich with grandeur, character, color and music, RIO 2 finds Jewel (Anne Hathaway), Blu (Jesse Eisenberg) and their three kids leaving their domesticated life in that magical city for a journey to the Amazon.

They encounter a menagerie of characters who are born to be wild, voiced by Oscar nominee Andy Garcia, Oscar/Emmy/Tony-winner Rita Moreno, Grammy winner Bruno Mars, and Tony winner Kristin Chenoweth.

Brazilian music legend and RIO executive music producer, Sergio Mendes returns along with composer John Powell. RIO 2 will feature new Brazilian artists and original music by Janelle Monáe and The Wondaland Arts Society, who also voices a role in the film. Soundtrack will be released on Atlantic Records.

Released worldwide in April 2011, RIO’s global box office tally is $486 million.  It also was a huge hit on DVD and Blu-ray disc.

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Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Jewel (Anne Hathaway) and their three kids are joined by Rafael (George Lopez), Nico (Jamie Foxx) and Pedro (will.i.am) on their Amazon adventure.

RIO 2

In Rio, (left to right) Luiz (Tracy Morgan), Rafael (George Lopez), Blu (Jesse Eisenberg), Pedro (will.i.am) and Nico (Jamie Foxx) discuss their plans for the future.

RIO 2

Jewel (Anne Hathaway) is wary of the attentions of her ex-beau Roberto (Bruno Mars).

RIO 2

Nigel (Jermaine Clement) is indifferent to the amorous feelings of his acolyte, a poisonous frog named Gabi (Kristin Chenoweth).

RIO 2

Tulio (Rodrigo Santoro) and Linda (Leslie Mann) make a startling discovery in the Amazon jungle.

From director Carlos Saldanha, the cast includes Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg, will.i.am, Jemaine Clement, Tracy Morgan, George Lopez, Leslie Mann, Rodrigo Santoro, and Jamie Foxx. Andy Garcia, Rita Moreno, Bruno Mars, and Kristin Chenoweth.

From Twentieth Century Fox, the celebration begins on April 11, 2014 when RIO 2 is released in theaters.

http://www.riomovies.com/index.html

https://www.facebook.com/RioMovies

https://twitter.com/riomovie

https://plus.google.com/117551138616415932105/posts

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

Noam Murro, Sullivan Stapleton, Rodrigo Santoro And Eva Green Talk 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE : Comic-Con 2013

Still from the 300: Rise of an Empire trailer

Last Saturday at Comic-Con 2013, Noam Murro, Sullivan Stapleton, Rodrigo Santoro and Eva Green sat down with a small group of press to talk about 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE, a Warner Bros. Pictures/Legendary Pictures film set to release March 7, 2014, and WAMG was there. Check it out below.

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Based on Frank Miller’s latest graphic novel Xerxes and told in the breathtaking visual style of the blockbuster “300”, this new chapter of the epic saga takes the action to a fresh battlefield – on the sea – as Greek general Themistokles (Sullivan Stapleton) attempts to unite all of Greece by leading the charge that will change the course of the war. “300: Rise of an Empire” pits Themistokles against the massive invading Persian forces led by mortal-turned-god Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro), and Artemisia (Eva Green), vengeful commander of the Persian navy.

300: BATTLE OF ARTEMESIUM

How difficult was it inching away from 300 and making your own movie with 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE without harkening back to Zack Snyder’s style too much?

Noam Murro: I think the idea for that was that Zack [Snyder] had Frank Miller in the back of his head in the movie 300, and this was very similar in that way. The idea was always to take that DNA from that movie, and being able to look back on it and put it as a reference really, and built upon it. There is enough DNA in RISE OF AN EMPIRE, enough 300 DNA, but I think there’s a lot of new stuff in it. The goal and the challenge is how do you give enough of it, and create something original?

I would like to talk about the cast about how they first came to come onto the project and what kind of affection do you all have for the Frank Miller comics and the Zack Snyder film?

Sullivan Stapleton: It was a real honor to be asked to make a film such as that. We’ve all seen the first one and I love it. I auditioned like everyone else, I think. I auditioned and luckily enough I got the gig. It’s an honor to be a part of it. It’s an epic film.

Eva Green: And for me, it’s my kind of first action film so that was really cool. I’ve done serious films before and it was all kind of pretty much in my head so that was kind of a challenge to kind of be violent, cut people in half, kill lots of people. Lots of fun.

Rodrigo Santoro: Well for me they thought I looked like the guy who played the first one. (Laughs) Just kidding. I was part of the first one and when I heard that they were doing the second one I was very excited. Actually in this one, there’s a little bit of Xerxes’ back story, so it was really cool to bring some humanity to this character and I was really excited about it.

With the first 300 movie people had various reactions to it. Some people found some humor in it, some people thought it was ultra-violent while other people just enjoyed it for pure entertainment. Can you tell us a little bit about the armies. Do you continue on that path or do you go a little more practical. And for Eva [Green], where does your character rank? You’re so good at playing intimidating women and where does your character in 300 rank in terms of the sheer fear that she inflicts on other people?

Sullivan Stapleton: She scares the shit out of me.

Eva Green: Yea, watch out!

Noam Murro: From a storytelling point of view, we kept the same mythology as you will as to how make this film in the sense that it was all done on green screen. And a lot of the imagery is about creating these massive, epic scenes in post. So we certainly kept that, but there was a very important character here, which was the water, which wasn’t ever created in the original 300, because it was all a land battle.  So that was the challenge but to create the opportunity to take the water and radically manipulate it to do what you want to do stylistically and thematically as you will. I think this is really what the wonder is. The sheer idea is this is all naval, it’s a naval movie really because it happens in the water. The complexity of telling a story in the water and navy battles was fantastic. I think we had the tools to do it now which I don’t think six years ago we could. There was a little bit of the underwater stuff. Some of it we did in London and we were able to shoot practically or some what practically. All the water, we shot it completely dry. I think all the water we had on set were things like this. [Holds up a water bottle] We did it intentionally and stylistically. It really allows you to create the world that you haven’t quite seen.

I’m a huge fan because I always think that you’re terrific in every movie that you’re in. Can you take us a little bit further into the character that you play?

Eva Green: It’s great because as an actress, it’s hard to find strong roles. You’re kind of offered the love interest or the boring girlfriend. In here she is full-on, she doesn’t do anything halfway. She’s an extreme character and completely obsessed with vengeance. I enjoy playing evil, but not kind of one-dimensional evil characters. I like when they have some cracks in the armor. She’s ruthless and badass.

Noam Murro: She’s badass, yea. The beauty of it is that there’s really a complexity there to her character and unapologetically so. A lot of roles in the strong women feel like they need to apologize. I think they feel like men don’t need to apologize for being ruthless and women somehow do. I think that’s what’s so nice here is, really we’ve talked about it from day one, is having a female role that’s not apologetic, and that’s pretty cool.

This question is for Sullivan. The original cast was subjected to physically grueling training regime before 300. Did you actually do that as well?

Sullivan Stapleton: Nah. I was already like this. [laughs] Of course I did it. It was ten weeks before shooting, they came into Africa and I was working on another show So I left that set and I was going to the gym. it was an hour and a half of swords, that was a warm up. That was hour and a half of weights. When I first saw it, you do this exercise, there was a couple of exercises, the training and you think that that was the workout, and that was the warm up. We went into the workout and it went on and on and on. When we were shooting, I thought how are we going to maintain this? I found out how to maintain that. While everyone else was at lunch, I was at the gym. Actually Noam decided to work out as well.

Noam Murro: You can see it on me. [laughs]

Eva, I wanted to respond to your comment that you haven’t done an action film before. You did do Casino Royale and I understand that your character wasn’t in action for most of it, but there was some pretty intense scenes like the sinking house. Does 300 make all of that look like a piece of cake?

Eva Green: I mean the scene when she’s drowning and all that, I had a bit of training underwater and it’s so different. Here I had to train double swords for two months before the shoot. It was very empowering. It’s kind of liberating. I surprised myself.

How close to the story is to the actual historical stats as far as the sea battles?

Noam Murro: I think that generally speaking we did our research and Zack’s story did when they wrote it, but the beauty of this is this is a movie being told through a storyteller’s point of view. So like any group of stories is going to be hyperboles, and there’s going to be exaggeration, and the historical accuracy, we’re going to get a couple of letters that’ll challenge the historical accuracy of this film. I think that’s the liberating thing about doing a movie like that, is that you’re not making the history channel documentary. You’re telling a story based on the history. There’s certainly a history there and it’s certainly based on the history, but like any good story it takes off.

I would love to hear the perspective of the director and also the actors about the trailer for this movie which I believe is one of the most popular trailers when it premiered. It blew up all over the internet, twitter and youtube. From a director’s point of view, we know that directors sometimes may or may not have a role in what gets in the trailer. Can you tell us a little bit about that, and for the actors, are you on social media and what are some of the things you experienced from your perspective after the trailer came online? Or maybe just feedback from the fans even if you’re not on social media.

Noam Murro: I saw the trailer. The Warner Bros. family is wonderful, and its one of those things where you get the trailer, you look at it and you think “I did this?”. You need to know when to shut up. So I looked at it before it came out and it was just awesome. It was incredible. So there was no real, nothing to say other than to go “Okay, that’s great.” Then when it broke… I didn’t quite understand the power of it until I really saw it. There was no marketing on it, it kind of came out and then all of a sudden exposed on the internet… somebody told me it was the most tuned subject for four days or some crazy thing, I may be exaggerating. I think it was really beloved. First there’s the power of that on one hand, and the second thing is really understanding how many people are really invested in the story of the movie and the mythology and how good it was.

Sullivan Stapleton: Facebook. I saw it on Facebook when it came out. My friends had found it, put it all over my page, so I returned the favor, posting myself in front of a blood wave saying “who wants to go to blood beach?”

Eva Green: I’m not into social media. I’m in another century so… (laughs) Two friends of mine saw the trailer so maybe this is a question for my friend next to me!

Rodrigo Santoro: I’m probably from the same century. I got emails and it was great feedback from friends who said “Did they shoot that back then? Six years ago? It looks like the same character.” I was like “Yea man, I got back in that shape! We did it again!” The response was really great. I wasn’t surprised that it was going to look great but I was excited when I saw it. It looks really good.

You talk a little bit about using the visual DNA from the first film and from the book. Can you talk a little bit about the music choices that you made, what you carried over and what you have added?

Noam Murro: I think that there is two things here. There is an operatic quality to a movie like that, and really that is at the heart of the music choices. I think that there’s a couple of components here, one is an ethnic component that’s going to be dominating here but also there’s a tempo and there’s a dramatic thing. There’s also… it’s a rock opera. it’s going to be something different. I think really that’s the heart of it to give it a point of reference musically that is ethnic but also give it tempo and feeling.

How foregone a conclusion was it to make this film told through the eyes of a storyteller? And how much of that theme sort of run through underneath the story?

Noam Murro: I think that’s really the heart of it. This is again, in that way I think it is close to 300 in a sense that somebody is telling you the story, the history is being told through somebody. In that way it’s not just a linear sort of exposition of the story but through somebody’s perspective, so it’s gonna be subject and eventually the beauty of that is. So I think there’s a conscious decision right when writing the script and obviously shooting it, but that’s really the freedom that really is what allows you to create something that is exciting because who knows what’s true. Nobody was there.

This is an interesting take because it’s not like a lot of other prequels or sequels out there because you don’t have a lot of cast return. You don’t have the same director this time. I’m curious about how much Zack Snyder was involved in the day-to-day production because obviously he was off making Man of Steel.

Noam Murro: Well preproduction, I think the fact that he wrote it. He wrote it with kirk, so he was pretty involved with that I would say. Certainly in that component he was really involved, but I think the really great thing working with Zack is that he’s a filmmaker, and at time was a busy filmmaker. So really what allows it.. it’s a graceful operation because it allows you to have an access to him or his knowledge or his instinct or whatever you needed, but also he allows you to have the freedom or the hands-off when you need that. So that is really the best way, that’s all you really can ask for. That really was the nature of the cooperation and it was incredible.

Sullivan Stapleton: Vincent Regan and he just told me evil stories. You’re gonna get hurt. Vincent actually, he was one of the most successful, one of the biggest success stories of all the guys training. He was apparently quite a lot bigger, and they used him as an example, so as far as his development. I heard about that. Then I heard Dave Wenham, I heard some stories from him as well, and then I got to work with him which was kind of a highlight as well.

Did you use any of the same crew that worked on the first film?

Noam Murro: We used some of the same crew. We kept some key people on with the cinematographer, the costume designer, but there are some people that we kept because of their knowledge and the fact that we wanted to have some of the DNA from the first one and their experience. Also the good thing they go “Yea, we’ve done that and let’s do this now.” It allows you to really understand how to push it sometimes. It was a strategical decision all around.

Rodrigo, you’re the only one up there who’s done this twice now. Was it any easy the second time or was it even harder the second time around?

Rodrigo Santoro: Not eating ice cream. That was hard again, harder this time. I kind of knew… I’ve played the character before, but the interesting thing for me was that six years later, I got to revisit a character and there’s some of his back story. How can I make this a fresh experience? And now I know the process of working against the blue screen which is a very particular way of working. Again, it was challenging. Makeup was still a long process and I was just trying to hold time to work little details and try to bring more and more humanity to Xerxes. At first you see him as the god-king but in this one you see how did he become the god-king. What was behind it. That was an exciting part for me especially.

I would say that Zack Snyder in the original 300 set this trend of slowing down action sequences. He does that several times in the original movie. Was that something you were mindful of when you made this movie?

Noam Murro: Look, I love 300. To me I never felt that really. I think this has a different trajectory in terms of fights, and they’re very different. They’re very distinct fighting styles and battles in this movie. They were designed to be that. They’re really four very distinct battles, actually five, that are in the movie and they are specifically tailored, both in the way that the fighting is happening, the action is happening, and weather/time/day/time. Really we’re cautiously trying to create a rich palette not only in the way that the movie looks but the way it progresses from an action point of view, how do you create interest that is not just repetition.

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300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE hits theaters March 7, 2014

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First Trailer For 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE Is Here

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More death and destruction await in this first, Spartan-fuelled preview for 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE.

Based on Frank Miller’s latest graphic novel Xerxes, and told in the breathtaking visual style of the blockbuster 300, this new chapter of the epic saga takes the action to a fresh battlefield – on the sea – as Greek general Themistokles attempts to unite all of Greece by leading the charge that will change the course of the war.

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE pits Themistokles against the massive invading Persian forces led by mortal-turned-god Xerxes, and Artemisia, vengeful commander of the Persian navy.

300: BATTLE OF ARTEMESIUM

Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures present, a Cruel and Unusual Films/Mark Canton/Gianni Nunnari Production, 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE.

The action adventure stars Sullivan Stapleton (“Gangster Squad”) as Themistokles and Eva Green (“Dark Shadows,” “Casino Royale”) as Artemisia. Lena Headey reprises her starring role from 300 as the Spartan Queen, Gorgo; Hans Matheson (“Clash of the Titans”) stars as Aeskylos; David Wenham returns as Dilios, and Rodrigo Santoro stars again as the Persian King, Xerxes.

The film is directed by Noam Murro, from a screenplay by Zack Snyder & Kurt Johnstad, based on the graphic novel Xerxes, by Frank Miller. It is produced by Gianni Nunnari, Mark Canton, Zack Snyder, Deborah Snyder and Bernie Goldmann. Thomas Tull, Frank Miller, Stephen Jones and Jon Jashni serve as executive producers.

The creative filmmaking team includes director of photography Simon Duggan, production designer Patrick Tatopoulos, editors Wyatt Smith and David Brenner, and costume designer Alexandra Byrne. The music is composed by Junkie XL.

Opening in 3D and 2D in select theatres and IMAX on March 7, 2014, the film will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

http://www.300themovie.com/index.html

https://www.facebook.com/300Movie

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE First Look Images

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE

Sullivan Stapleton is Themistokles in 2 first look photos from Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE.

Based on Frank Miller’s latest graphic novel Xerxes and told in the breathtaking visual style of the blockbuster 300, this new chapter of the epic saga takes the action to a fresh battlefield – on the sea – as Greek general Themistokles (Sullivan Stapleton) attempts to unite all of Greece by leading the charge that will change the course of the war. 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE pits Themistokles against the massive invading Persian forces led by mortal-turned-god Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro), and Artemesia (Eva Green), vengeful commander of the Persian navy.

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE

300, released in March 2007, was an visual attack on the senses and a live-action/CGI animation combo that brought story-telling to previously unrealized heights in movie making. Starring Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham, Rodrigo Santoro, Dominic West, Vincent Regan, and Michael Fassbender, director Zack Snyder’s adventure was the retelling of the ancient Battle of Thermopylae. It depicted the titanic clash in which King Leonidas (Gerard Butler) and 300 Spartans fought to the death against Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro) and his massive Persian army.

300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE features Lena Headey, Hans Matheson, David Wenham, Igal Naor, Callan Mulvey, Jack O’Connell, and Andrew Tiernan.

Directed by Noam Murro (SMART PEOPLE) with a screenplay by Zack Snyder & Kurt Johnstad, based on the graphic novel Xerxes by Frank Miller, 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE will be in 3D and 2D in select theaters and IMAX® on August 2.

Photos: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. ©2013 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. and Legendary Pictures Funding, LLC.

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Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg And The Rest Of The Original Gang Back For RIO 2

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The starring voice cast of Twentieth Century Fox’s 2011 animated smash RIO is reuniting for the follow-up, RIO 2, and they are joined by a flock of top actors and musical talents new to the franchise. The film is now in production at Blue Sky Studios. Twentieth Century Fox’s international rollout begins March 20, 2014, followed by its domestic release on April 11, 2014.

Returning to RIO 2, a world rich with grandeur, character, color and music are Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg, Jemaine Clement, will.i.am, Tracy Morgan, George Lopez, Leslie Mann, Rodrigo Santoro, Brazilian singer Bebel Gilberto, Jake T. Austin, and Jamie Foxx.

Carlos Saldanha, who was inspired to create RIO based upon his experiences growing up in that city, is back as director, as are producers John C. Donkin and Bruce Anderson.

In RIO 2 we find Blu, Jewel and their three kids living the perfect domesticated life in that magical city. When Jewel decides the kids need to learn to live like real birds, she insists the family venture into the Amazon. As Blu tries to fit in with his new neighbors, he worries he may lose Jewel and the kids to the call of the wild.

Joining the RIO 2 team are Oscar® nominee Andy Garcia, Grammy® winner Bruno Mars, Emmy®/Tony® winner Kristin Chenoweth, Oscar®/Emmy®/Tony®/Grammy® winner Rita Moreno, “The Hunger Games'” Amandla Stenberg, singer/actress Rachel Crow, “Looper’s” Pierce Gagnon, and “Today” news anchor Natalie Morales.

Brazilian music legend and RIO executive music producer Sergio Mendes returns along with composer John Powell. RIO 2 will feature new Brazilian artists and original music by Janelle Monáe and The Wondaland Arts Society, who also voices a role in the film. Soundtrack will be released on Atlantic Records.

Released worldwide in April 2011, RIO’s global box office tally is $486 million. It also was a huge hit on DVD and Blu-ray disc.

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THE LAST STAND – The Review

Schwarzenegger is back, baby!

THE LAST STAND is the movie you didn’t even realize you wanted to see. With his return to motion picture stardom, after a decade of “favor to a friend” cameos in movies like THE RUNDOWN and THE EXPENDABLES 1 and 2, this is the action superstar’s first leading role, having left acting to serve as the “Governator” of California, and while it may not have occurred to you to miss him during that time, it’s still surprisingly good to see him on the big screen again. Korean director Kim Jee-Woon’s, working from a script by Andrew Knauer, Jeffrey Nachmanoff and George Nolfi, keeps things moving quickly in his American film-making debut turns out to be an extremely Schwarzeneggerish Schwarzenegger film, full of big, violent set pieces and broad comedy. Now he’s not exactly pushing himself here and he may look a little out of it these days, but Arnold proves he’s still game for the mayhem as he fires off rounds and tosses off one-liners, and the movie at least has the decency to acknowledge that it knows that you know that he’s old, he is 66 after all.

Schwarznegger stars as Ray Owens, a former L.A. narcotics cop who left the big city long ago to settle in as sheriff of Summerton Junction, a tiny town on the Arizona/Mexico border. With the local high school football team off at an away game and basically the whole town follow suit to cheer them on, Ray looks forward to a quiet weekend. Yeah, fat chance on that. Drug lord Gabriel Cortez (Eduardo Noriega) gets sprung from U.S. custody in an elaborate escape in Las Vegas, taking off in a Corvette with kidnapped federal agent Ellen Richards (Genesis Rodriguez) at his side. As FBI Agent John Bannister (Forest Whitaker, who seems one dimensional through out the film), tries and fails to capture or even tail the car, a group of suspicious characters turn up in Summerton led by the icy Burrell (Peter Stormare). By the time Ray and his motley bunch of deputies (including Jamie Alexander, Zach Gifford and Luís Guzman) figure out what’s going on, it’s clear that Summerton Junction’s police force are the only thing standing between Cortes and the border. Strapped for manpower, Ray is forced to deputize local gun nut Dinkum (Johnny Knoxville) and war-veteran-turned-town-drunk Frank (Rodrigo Santoro).

It’s like director Kim Jee-woon knew we’d been waiting to see Arnold Schwarzenegger kick butt for a decade, and decided to wait until the very last minute to actually deliver. But THE LAST STAND gets away with this because the cast is lovable enough to maintain our interest and when the time comes for the big showdown, everything goes absolutely insane for a whole third of the movie. I mean Luis Guzmán gets to fire an old-fashioned Tommy gun at Peter Stormare because, well, why the heck not?!

As for Schwarzenegger himself, he’s practically a visual effect here and the fact that we’re seeing him at all is a tiny wonder in and of itself. THE LAST STAND gives him the opportunity to flex his action muscles a bit, and while he goes through an unrealistic amount of punishment for a man his age by the end of the movie, the script also gives him an opportunity to crack jokes, impart wisdom and even express a modicum of vulnerability right when the stakes need to be raised. It’s not his finest role, but Schwarzenegger does at least prove that he still has a place in pop culture history and that he has a decent understanding of what audiences expect from him, as well as what they can realistically get from a 66-year-old actor with more precedent on his side than actual, plausible action movie ability. He’s a big action star now because he was a big action star then, and it works, at least this time, because his very casting imbues the main character in THE LAST STAND with godlike abilities fueled by memories of CONAN THE BARBARIAN, PREDATOR, and of course TERMINATOR.

The shootouts and showdowns are muscular, high-energy and consist of an insane amount of gunfire, although there are some bursts of squirm-inducing, creative carnage. Much of the hand-to-hand combat is shot and edited in a way to obscure what Schwarzenegger is actually doing while creating the illusion that he’s kicking all kinds of butt. And no matter how shameless a product placement it might be, the car stuff is so exciting, you’ll wish there was more of it, heck the car chase through a cornfield somehow alternates between being thrilling and quietly suspenseful.

I totally recall better Arnold Schwarzenegger movies than this, but I wouldn’t say we got a raw deal either, I mean this is no TRUE LIES but at least it’s no COP LAND either. Arnold Schwarzenegger may still have new and interesting tricks up his sleeve as he commences the twilight phase of his screen career but with a fleet of Schwarzenegger movies in the pipeline, those afraid THE LAST STAND indeed would be Arnold’s last stand can breathe a sigh of relief.

He’ll be back.

3.5 Out Of 5 Stars

Lionsgate’s Lastest THE LAST STAND Trailer Is Here

THE LAST STAND is bringing out the big guns when Arnold Schwarzenegger and Johnny Knoxville EXPLODE on to the big screen in this shoot em up trailer. Director Kim Jee-woon’s action-packed film has it all…escaped fugitives, explosions, car chases. Catch the guys on the big screen, along with Forest Whitaker, Eduardo Noriega, Rodrigo Santoro, Jaimie Alexander, Luis Guzmán, Peter Stormare, Zach Gilford and Genesis Rodriguez, when THE LAST STAND hits theaters nationwide January 18, 2013.

After leaving his LAPD narcotics post following a bungled operation that left him wracked with remorse and regret, Sheriff Ray Owens (Schwarzenegger) moved out of Los Angeles and settled into a life fighting what little crime takes place in sleepy border town Sommerton Junction. But that peaceful existence is shattered when Gabriel Cortez (Eduardo Noriega), the most notorious, wanted drug kingpin in the western hemisphere, makes a deadly yet spectacular escape from an FBI prisoner convoy.

With the help of a fierce band of lawless mercenaries led by the icy Burrell (Peter Stormare), Cortez begins racing towards the US-Mexico border at 250 mph in a specially-outfitted Corvette ZR1 with a hostage in tow. Cortez’ path: straight through Summerton Junction, where the whole of the U.S. law enforcement, including Agent John Bannister (Forest Whitaker) will have their final opportunity to intercept him before the violent fugitive slips across the border forever.

At first reluctant to become involved, and then counted out because of the perceived ineptitude of his small town force, Owens ultimately rallies his team and takes the matter into his own hands, setting the stage for a classic showdown.

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