Jack Black Is Back As Kung Fu Master Po In New KUNG FU PANDA 3 Trailer

KUNF FU PANDA 3

DreamWorks Animation and 20th Century Fox have released a new trailer for KUNG FU PANDA 3.

Check out the trailer below and get ready for the return of Jack Black as Po and his fun-loving band of friends, voiced by Bryan Cranston, Dustin Hoffman, Angelina Jolie, J.K. Simmons, Jackie Chan, Seth Rogen, Lucy Liu, David Cross, Kate Hudson and more.

In 2016, one of the most successful animated franchises in the world returns with its biggest comedy adventure yet, KUNG FU PANDA 3.

When Po’s long-lost panda father suddenly reappears, the reunited duo travels to a secret panda paradise to meet scores of hilarious new panda characters. But when the supernatural villain Kai begins to sweep across China defeating all the kung fu masters, Po must do the impossible – learn to train a village full of his fun-loving, clumsy brethren to become the ultimate band of Kung Fu Pandas.

The movie is directed by Jennifer Yuh Nelson and Alessandro Carloni and produced by Melissa Cobb.

KUNG FU PANDA 3 hits theaters everywhere on January 29, 2016.

KUNF FU PANDA 3

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STEVE JOBS – The Review

Steve Jobs

By Cate Marquis

With Danny Boyle’s  STEVE JOBS, there will now be three films on the late founder of Apple Computers, the man who put portable computers in eveyone’s hand, as this film notes at one point. A few years back, there was the biopic JOBS starring Ashton Kutcher, who has a striking resemblance to Jobs and this year, an excellent documentary by the Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney, called “Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine.” Steve Jobs is a man whose fans admire him with almost cult-like adoration (and just to be clear, this writer is not among them), yet none of these films have presented him in a very flattering light- least of all Boyle’s film.

Director Boyle’s STEVE JOBS is not a biography, and Aaron Sorkin’s script does not even focus on Job’s two most significant contributions to the world, making computers personal and then putting computer-based devices like the iPod and iPhone in everyone’s pocket. Instead, STEVE JOBS focuses is on his treatment of people, particularly his young daughter Lisa, during a kind of low point in Jobs’ career. Unlike THE SOCIAL NETWORK, Boyle’s film seems to assume that viewers already know a great deal about Jobs and his contributions to the world. If you are interested in getting a fuller picture of who Steve Jobs was, as a public figure, tech game-changer or as a person, Gibney’s documentary is a better choice.

STEVE JOBS covers the  years from Apple’s famous 1984 Superbowl ad, which won awards but left viewers unsure what was being advertised, through his firing as the head of the company he founded, his faltering launch of a new company Next, and then his return to Apple and the launch of the iMac. The film ends before the introduction of Apple’s most iconic innovations – the iPod, the iPhone, the iPad.  The film covers the least productive part of Job’s career but that it is not the film’s point anyway. The major focus of the film is Job’s treatment  – mistreatment, really – of people around him, particularly his daughter Lisa, whose parentage he denied despite a court-ordered blood test, in the years from when she was five until age 19. The film also deals with Job’s treatment of all the people working for him around him generally, particularly Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, the real programming genius behind the company, and whose products Jobs, a marketing and image-making genius, promoted and seemed to take credit for. Jobs’ magical, brilliant marketing captured the public imagination, and made them both wealthy, but Jobs also gave the impression he was the tech genius behind them as well when he was not.

Michael Fassbender plays Jobs, with a bristling energy that radiates off the screen. The film begins at the production launch of the Mac computer, one of three product launches in the film. As Jobs prepares for the debut, the team is frantic because the computer is not actually ready and is balking at doing the one thing Jobs deems critical to his presentation – saying “hello” on cue. Backstage, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend Chrisann Brennan (Katherine Waterston) is there with their five-year-old daughter Lisa (Makenzie Moss), asking for the financial support that the court ordered following a paternity test and also informing him they are now on welfare. Jobs berates her and screams like a madman when she refers to Lisa as his daughter. His treatment of Chrisann is appalling but his treatment of the little girl is worse. When Lisa asks the man she is not allowed to call father if the precursor of the Mac, named Lisa, was named for her, Jobs coldly denies it. Jobs’ nastiness is not just limited to his ex-girlfriend but extends to his confrontation with his longtime friend and co-founder of their company, Steve Wozniak (Seth Rogen) who very modestly asks Jobs to publicly acknowledge the tech team that worked on the Apple II, the computer that had been paying the company bills for years. Jobs stubbornly refuses.

This rest of the film follows this pattern, with the egotistical Jobs ripping through various people around him. As one character points out, being a genius and being a human being are not mutually exclusive, although maybe not if you are Steve Jobs. The acting in this film is outstanding, with a cadre of battered people surrounding this massive ego. Fassbender’s performance is electric and likely to gain hims an Oscar nomination. Kate Winslet plays long-suffering Joanna Hoffman, Jobs’ assistant who has the thankless (literally) job of following him around and trying to keep him on track. Michael Stuhlbarg plays programmer Andy Hertzfeld, whom Jobs threatens in the minutes before the product launch. Lisa is played by different actresses at ages 5, 9 and 19, Moss (age 5), Ripley Sobo (age 9) and Perla Haney-Jardine (age 19), and all do well. Curiously, the only person that Jobs treats with any respect is John Sculley (Jeff Daniels), the CEO who took over Apple after Jobs, although Sculley comes in for some tongue-lashing too.

However, as a piece of cinema, the film is brilliantly made, with striking photography and impressive performances. Shots are beautifully framed and one sequence, where we move back and forth in time in recapping the events between Sculley and Jobs is inspired. Seth Rogen as Wozniak is amazing and delivers one particular speech directed at Jobs that should garner him an Oscar nod on its own. All the acting is strong, and is a major strength of the film. The structure of the film is masterful but throughout, the one question that most likely will pop into one’s head is why – why anyone would tolerate being around this monster. For an answer to that, audience’s can look to Alex Gibney’s insightful documentary – you won’t find the answer in this film.

STEVE JOBS is no SOCIAL NETWORK, despite its polished production and wonderful performances, and does not offer the same kind of insights on this culturally significant person and his work.

STEVE JOBS is playing in theaters now

OVERALL RATING: 3 OUT OF 5 STARS

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Check Out The New STEVE JOBS Featurette

Steve Jobs

Opening on Friday is the new STEVE JOBS movie starring Michael Fassbender.

Set backstage in the minutes before three iconic product launches spanning Jobs’ career – beginning with the Macintosh in 1984, and ending with the unveiling of the iMac in 1998 – STEVE JOBS takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

Watch this new ‘Look Inside Steve Jobs’ featurette where the cast and filmmakers discuss the man behind the movie.

The drama is directed by Academy Award winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award winner Aaron Sorkin, working from Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder.

The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin, Boyle, and Academy Award winner Christian Colson.

Michael Fassbender plays Steve Jobs, the pioneering founder of Apple, with Academy Award®-winning actress Kate Winslet starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh. Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley.

The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

Visit the film’s official site: www.stevejobsthefilm.com

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Here’s The New Poster For THE NIGHT BEFORE With Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen And Anthony Mackie

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Hitting theaters on November 20, here’s the new poster for director Jonathan Levine’s THE NIGHT BEFORE starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen and Anthony Mackie.

Levine is the director of 50/50, THE WACKNESS and WARM BODIES.

Ethan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), Isaac (Seth Rogen) and Chris (Anthony Mackie) have been friends since childhood, and for a decade, their yearly Christmas Eve reunion has been an annual night of debauchery and hilarity.

Now that they’re entering adulthood, the tradition is coming to an end, and to make it as memorable as possible, they set out to find the Nutcracka Ball – the Holy Grail of Christmas parties. (Red Band Trailer)

The film also stars Lizzy Caplan, Jillian Bell, Mindy Kaling and Michael Shannon.

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Photo Credit: Sarah Shatz - © 2015 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Photo Credit: Sarah Shatz – © 2015 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Listen To Composer Daniel Pemberton’s STEVE JOBS Score

steve jobs cd

Back Lot Music has released the soundtrack album for STEVE JOBS, the new film from Academy Award-winning director Danny Boyle and Academy Award-winning writer Aaron Sorkin. The album is available now on iTunes and Amazon.

The STEVE JOBS Original Motion Picture Soundtrack features new music by Award-winning composer Daniel Pemberton, as well as two iconic tracks from Bob Dylan, and songs by The Libertines and the Maccabees.

Universal Pictures’ STEVE JOBS, which stars Michael Fassbender as the pioneering founder of Apple, was released in New York and Los Angeles on October 9.  The film will expand to additional North American markets on October 16 and wide on October 23.

“Fassbender’s Jobs is a tornado of roaring ferocity and repressed feeling.” – RollingStone.com

Enter to win passes to the St. Louis screening HERE.

Director Danny Boyle says, “The first act was influenced by the early sounds of computers. The vast majority of the audience – and this is more and more the case with every year that passes—are digital natives. They don’t remember what it was like in the early days of the digital revolution, at the birth of a digital sound that – at that time – seemed almost futuristic. That notion interested me, and Daniel made use of that sort of retro sound beautifully.”

Prior to the beginning of principal photography, Pemberton worked alongside the filmmakers to develop a unique approach to composing the music for the three distinct periods of time depicted in STEVE JOBS. What they’ve created is a symphonic tour de force with three distinguishable aural points of view to complement the film’s narrative arc:

The first movement, set in 1984, expresses the optimism of Jobs’ first product launch, the Macintosh. Restricting himself to equipment of the time and embracing their limitations, Pemberton utilized what is now technology of the past – synthesizers such as the Yamaha CS-80, Roland SH-1000, Roland Juno-60, and Moog Minimoog – to reflect that era’s visions of the future, while still creating a sound world that would sit comfortably alongside Sorkin’s dialogue and Boyle’s direction.

The second movement, set in 1988 at the San Francisco Opera House, sees the unveiling of the NeXTcube with a theatrical orchestral fantasia.  With composed, large-scale operatic pieces, elaborate emotional transformations of a simple tuning-up sequence, and a dramatic symphony, the score reflects both Jobs the conductor and ringmaster – as well as a man focused on revenge.

The more reflective, internal, and emotional third movement takes us to 1998 with Jobs’ unveiling of the iMac, and echoes the various ways in which we utilize computers as we know them today.  “Today, I write pretty much everything I do on an Apple machine descended, in part, from that iMac,” said Pemberton.  “I use a piece of Apple software called Logic.  I can write music, manipulate sounds, produce recordings, and express myself as an artist without ever leaving the computer.”

This year has seen the release of Pemberton’s acclaimed soundtrack to Guy Ritchie’s THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. Read my interview with the composer HERE.

Steve Jobs

What impact did the screenplay for Steve Jobs have on you, and what were your initial thoughts about scoring?

I read it in one sitting – it was so compelling. I was buoyed along by this current of amazing dialogue. I did hear scoring possibilities as I read it, but I knew that I didn’t want to detract from all that was being said. Film composers instinctively look for places where music can expand the story during wordless scenes, action sequences, things like that. In this, every page is driven by dialogue.

Then I began thinking of the dialogue as the soprano of the score, in certain ways. It’s a fast, constantly flowing stream of information, and I felt it demanded some space to breathe. But at the same time, we didn’t want the music to become so nondescript or anonymous that it had no identity. So the challenge became how to compose music, with a unique identity, that would support the dialogue and allow it to “sing” on top of it.

As a musician and a composer, how have Jobs and his accomplishments impacted your life?

In some ways, an orchestral score is one of the oldest pieces of computer code. Computer code is instruction. But with an orchestra, you have the most amazing computer that’s ever been made – 74 human beings responding to what is, in effect, code, and bringing their own personality and emotion to that code. That’s why they still exist, because no one has ever beaten that effect.

The impact that he’s had on me as a composer means I can be writing opera music one minute, and then suddenly switch to designing electronic sounds or composing for synthesizers. Now, alone, I can dream up and compose anything – and then play it and hear it, every single note, without having to involve anyone else and never having to leave my room. Don’t get me wrong – there is nothing like hearing your music being played by 74 musicians. But it’s great not having to rely on them to listen to your latest composition, especially when you’ve just completed the work and it’s 3:30 in the morning. That’s freedom in composition.

Steve Jobs

Set backstage in the minutes before three iconic product launches spanning Jobs’ career – beginning with the Macintosh in 1984, and ending with the unveiling of the iMac in 1998 – STEVE JOBS takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

STEVE JOBS is directed by Academy Award winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award winner Aaron Sorkin, working fromWalter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder.  The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin, Boyle, and Academy Award winner Christian Colson.

Michael Fassbender plays Steve Jobs, the pioneering founder of Apple, with Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh.  Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley.  The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

www.stevejobsthefilm.com

Track List (all tracks by Daniel Pemberton, unless otherwise noted):

  1. The Musicians Play Their Instruments…
  2. It’s Not Working
  3. Child (Father)
  4. Jack It Up
  5. The Circus of Machines I (Overture)
  6. Russian Roulette
  7. Change the World
  8. The Skylab Plan
  9. Don’t Look Back Into the Sun – The Libertines
  10. …I Play The Orchestra
  11. The Circus of Machines II (Allegro)
  12. Revenge
  13. Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 – Bob Dylan
  14. It’s An Abstract
  15. Life Out of Balance
  16. The Nature of People
  17. 1998.  The New Mac.
  18. Father (Child)
  19. Remember
  20. Grew Up At Midnight – The Maccabees
  21. Shelter from the Storm – Bob Dylan

Order the album: http://smarturl.it/SteveJobsOST

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Watch The New Clip And Featurette For STEVE JOBS

Steve Jobs

“Steve Jobs is a dazzling artistic interpretation of one of the modern techno-giants and a terrific piece of filmmaking, led by a never-better Michael Fassbender in the lead role. It’s The Social Network 2.0 and one of the year’s best films.”IGN

Universal Pictures has released a new clip, plus new featurette, for director Danny Boyle’s highly anticipated STEVE JOBS.

Set backstage in the minutes before three iconic product launches spanning Jobs’ career—beginning with the Macintosh in 1984, and ending with the unveiling of the iMac in 1998—Steve Jobs takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

STEVE JOBS is directed by Academy Award winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award winner Aaron Sorkin, working from Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder. The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin, Boyle, and Academy Award winner Christian Colson. (Trailer)

Steve Jobs

Michael Fassbender plays Steve Jobs, the pioneering founder of Apple, with Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh. Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley.

The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

The film’s score, a retro soundtrack of synthesized sounds of the period, is from composer Daniel Pemberton (THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.)

STEVE JOBS opens in select theaters Friday, everywhere October 23.

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Universal Pictures’ NEIGHBORS 2 On Snapchat – In Theaters May 20, 2016

neighbors snapchat

Universal Pictures has announced that NEIGHBORS 2, the follow-up to 2014’s most popular original comedy, is now on Snapchat.

Follow “NeighborsMovie” to get the latest photos and videos from the production, plus watch special takeovers from cast members including Seth Rogen, Zac Efron, and Chloë Grace Moretz.

Join Zac Efron TODAY, as he will be taking over the “NeighborsMovie” Snapchat to start bringing exclusive updates from the set.

Returning stars Seth Rogen, Zac Efron and Rose Byrne are joined by Chloë Grace Moretz for NEIGHBORS 2, the follow-up to 2014’s most popular original comedy. (Trailer)

The film took in at the domestic box office $150.1 million; worldwide $268,157,400 million. (box office mojo)

Also back in the same duties are director Nicholas Stoller and series producers Evan Goldberg, James Weaver and Rogen, who produce under their Point Grey Pictures banner.

Andrew Jay Cohen and Brendan O’Brien serve as executive producers alongside Good Universe’s Nathan Kahane and Joe Drake. The comedy’s writers include Rogen, Stoller, Goldberg, Cohen and O’Brien.

NEIGHBORS 2 opens in theaters May 20, 2016

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Michael Fassbender Is Compelling In New STEVE JOBS Trailer

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“Fassbender spits out Sorkin’s dialogue like an ice cube maker — each withering insult sticking its landing.” – Sasha Stone (Awards Daily), Telluride review.

Watch the latest trailer for Universal Pictures’ STEVE JOBS.

Set backstage in the minutes before three iconic product launches spanning Jobs’ career—beginning with the Macintosh in 1984, and ending with the unveiling of the iMac in 1998—Steve Jobs takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

STEVE JOBS is directed by Academy Award winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award winner Aaron Sorkin, working from Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder. The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin, Boyle, and Academy Award winner Christian Colson.

Michael Fassbender plays Steve Jobs, the pioneering founder of Apple, with Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh. Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley.

The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

STEVE JOBS opens in theaters October 9, 2015.

http://www.stevejobsthefilm.com/

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Jonathan Levine’s THE NIGHT BEFORE Red Band Trailer Stars Seth Rogen, Anthony Mackie And Joseph Gordon-Levitt

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From Jonathan Levine, the acclaimed director of 50/50, comes the new NSFW trailer and poster for THE NIGHT BEFORE.

Ethan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), Isaac (Seth Rogen) and Chris (Anthony Mackie) have been friends since childhood, and for a decade, their yearly Christmas Eve reunion has been an annual night of debauchery and hilarity.

Now that they’re entering adulthood, the tradition is coming to an end, and to make it as memorable as possible, they set out to find the Nutcracka Ball – the Holy Grail of Christmas parties.

The two funniest moments from the trailer without a doubt: re-enacting the scene from BIG and the blink-and-you’ll-miss-it cameo from Miley Cyrus singing “Wrecking Ball.” Hilarious stuff!

Also starring Lizzy Caplan, Jillian Bell, Mindy Kaling and Michael Shannon, THE NIGHT BEFORE opens November 25, 2015.

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Summer Of Sony Pictures Entertainment 2015 - Day 2

(L-R) Writer Evan Goldberg, actors Anthony Mackie, Seth Rogen, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and director Jonathan Levine attend the “X-Mas” photo call during Summer Of Sony Pictures Entertainment 2015 at The Ritz-Carlton Cancun on June 13, 2015 in Cancun, Mexico. (Photo by Andrew Goodman/Getty Images for Sony Pictures Entertainment)

Michael Fassbender Is STEVE JOBS In New Trailer

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Opening in cinemas on October 9, here’s you first look at the new trailer for Universal Pictures’ STEVE JOBS.

Set backstage at three iconic product launches and ending in 1998 with the unveiling of the iMac, Steve Jobs takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

STEVE JOBS is directed by Academy Award winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award winner Aaron Sorkin, working from Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder. The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin, Boyle and Academy Award winner Christian Colson.

Michael Fassbender plays Steve Jobs, the pioneering founder of Apple, with Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh.

Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley. The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

https://www.facebook.com/stevejobsfilm

http://www.stevejobsthefilm.com/

https://twitter.com/SteveJobsFilm

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