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Third Planet of the Apes movie set for release in July 2016

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Matt Reeves to direct third Planet of the Apes movieThis year, 20th Century Fox has two blockbuster sequels incoming in X-Men: Days of Future Past and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, and the studio is wasting little time in finalising its plans for the next instalments of both series.

We already know that X-Men: Apocalypseis set for release in May 2016, and now Fox has confirmed that the as-yet-untitled third Planet of the Apes movie will hit cinemas on July 29th, 2016. As previously revealed, Matt Reeves has signed on to direct, while he'll also cowrite the screenplay for the simian sequel with Mark Bomback (The Wolverine).

Of course, there's still the small matter of the second movie, which is set for release on July 11th this year with Reeves directing a cast that includes the returning Andy Serkis alongside Jason Clarke (Zero Dark Thirty), Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight Rises), Keri Russell (Mission: Impossible III), Toby Kebbell (Wrath of the Titans), Kodi Smit-McPhee (Let Me In), Enrique Murciano (Black Hawk Down), Kirk Acevedo (The Thin Red Line) and Judy Greer (13 Going on 30).



Special Features - Who Should Take on Marvel's Doctor Strange?

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Anghus Houvouras asks who should take on Marvel's Doctor Strange...

The latest rumors about Marvel's big budget Doctor Strange adaptation have hit the interwebs involving mega-star Johnny Depp as the Sorcerer Supreme. It's an inspired bit of speculation and it got the wheels a turning. Is Johnny Depp the best choice for the dark, brooding mystic master of Marvel? He's certainly got the chops as an actor, but it seems kind of odd given his penchant for over the top characters and relentless mugging. Would Depp be a more restrained Doctor Stephen Strange, or would they rewrite the character to work more for his over the top sensibilities?

If history is any indicator, it feels like it would be the latter. Might as well sign Tim Burton, slap a "3-D" on the end of the title, and make some space in the Disney vault for the untold billion it could potentially reap. However, maybe there's a better potential adaptation that could be produced. I've got some suggestions.

The inspired route: 

Doctor Strange
Directed by Spike Jonze
Starring Joquain Phoenix

Having just seen the fantastic Her, this pairing seems rather timely, and if I may say so, inspired. Jonze is a director who does weird extremely well. Imagine the guy behind Being John Malkovich and Where the Wild Things Are weaving the story of a dark and broken man's descent into the world of Marvel magic. If you really want the lead character to live up to name, cast Joquain Phoenix and bring in a talented actor into a role that would benefit from his eccentricities.


The quirky route:

The Sorcerer Supreme
Directed by Terry Gilliam
Starring Johnny Depp

If we're going for Depp in the lead role, let's embrace a director who could truly make the otherworldly elements pop. I'm talking about Terry Gilliam. He's wonderfully left of center, and there's an outside chance he craters the whole thing in an epic fireball of fuselage. The behind the scenes making of documentary could easily eclipse the finished film in terms of entertainment value. In all seriousness, Gilliam has that kind of eye-popping, mind bending style that would lend itself well to the magical places that Doctor Strange has to travel. With Depp in the lead role and Gilliam behind the camera, we could get a gonzo version of the character that feels removed form reality. A Doctor Strange film that feels like Time Bandits, Brazil, or the Adventures of Baron Munchausen.

Wouldn't that be fun?


The "it doesn't make sense, but roll with me" route:

Strange
Directed by Paul Greengrass
Starring Gael Garcia Banal

The greatest missed opportunity of the last decade was Paul Greengrass not directing Watchmen. An extremely talented director with a unique style and sensibility that you wouldn't necessarily associate with a comic book movie. It's a project that might feel outside his particular wheelhouse, but I'm very interested to see what this guy can do with a comic book property. The fact that this movie is so far outside the real life, pulse pounding thrillers he has become associated with is just another reason to give him a world like this to play in.


The obvious route:

Marvel's Doctor Strange
Directed by Gulliermo del Toro
Starring Idris Elba

When you hear people talk about Doctor Strange, this is the filmmaker you are most likely to hear brought into discussions. But it's so painfully obvious. We've seen Del Toro stomping around this territory before. Movies like Pan's Labyrinth and the Hellboy Uno and Dos have proven that he's capable of working with the weird and otherworldly, but i feel like I already know what kind of movie I'd be walking into. Would Del Toro deliver us anything we haven't already seen? If he was the choice, could we at least get a curve ball in the casting and bring someone like Idris Elba into the mix? Sure, he played Heimdall in Thor, but I'd be more than game for Elba as the brooding Sorcerer Supreme.

So there is some grade A speculation about Doctor Strange. All of them would be interesting choices for one of comic's most dynamic characters. Wait a second. I forgot, this is a Marvel movie which means they're going to bring in a director without a strong personal brand who knows how to color within their we'll established lines. Which means it'll probably be somebody who has directed a few episodes of Supernatural or Once Upon A Time and will be sure to tow the company line.

Still, one can hope.

Who would you like to see directing and starring in Marvel's Doctor Strange? Let us know in the comments below...

Anghus Houvouras is a North Carolina based writer and filmmaker. His latest work, the novel My Career Suicide Note, is available from Amazon.

http://www.amazon.com/My-Career-Suicide-Note-ebook/dp/B00D3ULU5I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1371583147&sr=8-1&keywords=my+career+suicide+note

Thomas Kretschmann cast as Baron von Strucker in The Avengers: Age of Ultron

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Joss Whedon has added another bad guy to the cast of The Avengers: Age of Ultron, with The Hollywood Reporter revealing that Thomas Kretschmann (Wanted, Dracula) has signed on to appear as the HYDRA chief Baron von Strucker. The Nazi agent was originally identified as a secondary villain in the movie by Latino-Review back in December, and he'll join another new evil addition in Ultron, who is set to be portrayed by James Spader (The Blacklist).

The Avengers: Age of Ultron will open on May 1st 2015 with a cast that includes Marvel veterans Robert Downey Jr. (Iron Man), Chris Evans (Captain America), Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Mark Ruffalo (The Incredible Hulk), Jeremy Renner (Hawkeye), Scarlett Johansson (Black Widow) Don Cheadle (War Machine), Samuel L. Jackson (Nick Fury) and Cobie Smulders (Maria Hill) alongside Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene) as Scarlet Witch and Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kick-Ass 2) as Quicksilver.


Comic Book Review - Gateway #1

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Chris Cooper reviews the first issue of Gateway, from IDW....

"In a surreal setting where a red sky burns bright and the blanket of night brings a terror known only as the Dark Souls, ex-cop Jake Ryan struggles to make sense of his surroundings. Gate-Way is a story that weaves a rich tapestry of loyalty, lust, intrigue and betrayal as beggars, thieves, priests, and murderers all vie for power in a world that rewards the bold and enslaves the weak."

Having read through this twice, there is one overriding feeling I'm left with regarding Gateway #1.

What is the point?

I've seen everything here possibly a gajillion times before. The rough cop who trusts his gut. Drug busts gone wrong. A human stronghold holding off evil forces whilst working towards ulterior motives. It's all very samey.

This feeling of a lifted story beats might be alleviated with some cracking art. But we're out of luck on that count. A murky palette, with little variance in facial expressions, does not combine well with a complete lack of imagination when it comes to panel placement. It's as though a simple template has been used, with it all being so square. It's just really dull! Square follows square follows square.

There are loads of panels which just consisted of a face and words too. Not much in the way of action. Back and forth conversations with interchangeable faces do not make for a great page turner. There is a lot of truth in 'show, don't tell'. A lot of the feeling that we have explained could have been shown with better composition and body language.

On the other hand the team did have the balls to shoot a dog and show it. But I rather like dogs so that wasn't a high point for me.

It's just all a bit boring really. Maybe they shouldn't have bothered opening this gateway.

Chris Cooper

Nominations for the 34th annual Razzie Awards

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The Academy Award nominations are imminent, so that can mean only one thing... it's time of courrse for the nominees for the 34th annual Golden Raspberry Awards!

It will come as little surprise to see that Razzie favourite Adam Sandler once again dominates the field with Grown Ups 2 garnering eight nods, including Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay, Worst Actor, Worst Screen Combo and Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel.

Meanwhile, Sylvester Stallone bags a 31st nomination, with Sly up for Worst Actor for Bullet to the Head, Escape Plan and Grudge Match.

Check out the full list of nominees here....

WORST PICTURE
After Earth
Grown Ups 2
The Lone Ranger
A Madea Christmas
Movie 43

WORST DIRECTOR
Dennis Dugan, Grown Ups 2
Tyler Perry, A Madea Christmas / Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor
M. Night Shyamalan, After Earth
Elizabeth Banks, Steven Brill, Steve Carr, Rusty Cundieff, James Duffy, Griffin Dunne, Peter Farrelly, Patrik Forsberg, Will Graham, James Gunn, Bob Odenkirk, Brett Ratner, Jonathan van Tulleken, Movie 43
Gore Verbinski, The Lone Ranger

WORST SCREENPLAY
After Earth, M. Night Shyamalan,Gary Whitta and Will Smith
Grown Ups 2, Adam Sandler, Tim Herlihy and Fred Wolf
The Lone Ranger, Justin Haythe, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio
A Madea Christmas, Tyler Perry
Movie 43, Ricky Blitt, Steve Baker, Will Carlough, Tobias Carlson, Jacob Fleisher, Patrik Forsberg, Will Graham, James Gunn, Claes Kjellstrom, Jack Kukoda, Bob Odenkirk, Bill O'Malley, Matthew Alec Portenoy, Greg Pritikin, Rocky Russo, Olle Sarri, Elizabeth Shapiro, Jeremy Sosenko, Jonathan van Tulleken and Jonas Wittenmark

WORST ACTOR
Johnny Depp, The Lone Ranger
Ashton Kutcher, Jobs
Adam Sandler, Grown Ups 2
Jaden Smith, After Earth
Sylvester Stallone, Bullet to the Head / Escape Plan / Grudge Match

WORST ACTRESS
Halle Berry, The Call / Movie 43
Selena Gomez, Getaway
Lindsay Lohan, The Canyons
Tyler Perry (as Madea), A Madea Christmas
Naomi Watts, Diana / Movie 43

WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Chris Brown, Battle of the Year
Larry the Cable Guy, A Madea Christmas
Taylor Lautner, Grown Ups 2
Will Smith, After Earth
Nick Swardson, Grown Ups 2 / A Haunted House

WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Salma Hayek, Grown Ups 2
Katherine Heigl, The Big Wedding
Kim Kardashian, Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor
Lady Gaga, Machete Kills
Lindsay Lohan, InAPPropriate Comedy / Scary Movie 5

WORST SCREEN COMBO
Entire Cast, Grown Ups 2
Entire Cast, Movie 43
Lindsay Lohan and Charlie Sheen, Scary Movie 5
Tyler Perry and Either Larry the Cable Guy or That Worn Out Wig and Dress, A Madea Christmas
Jaden Smith and Will Smith on Planet Nepotism, After Earth

WORST PREQUEL, REMAKE, RIP-OFF OR SEQUEL
Grown Ups 2
The Hangover Part III
The Lone Ranger
Scary Movie 5
The Smurfs 2

The "winners" of the Razzies will be announced one day before the Academy Awards on March 2nd.


Special Features - Future Cinemas presents Ghostbusters

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Luke Owen reports from Future Cinema's presentation of Ghostbusters...


As Is stood in the queue outside The Troxy in London, chatting away and trying to stay warm on a cold December evening, I was taken away from my in-depth conversation by a siren. It was a siren that I have known since childhood. It was a siren that I probably know better than that of an actual police car. My eyes lit up as I knew what the siren belonged to. I turned around and there in front of me was the Ecto-1, driving down a London street (and blocking the traffic in the process). This was Future Cinema's presentation of Ghostbusters - what they were calling a "live cinema experience".

This was a screening of Ghostbusters like no other. The Future Cinema team had decked out The Troxy to resemble The Sedgewick Hotel (the setting of the Ghostbusters first successful bust) complete with staff who played up to the fact that we were supposed to be in New York. As I was in the queue I was told not to go in by Walter Peck, I had a conversation about my taxes with Louis Tully and as I walked in I was greeted by the mayor of New York looking for my vote during election week. To call it a surreal experience would perhaps be hyperbole, but it was certainly immersive which was really the point.

Giddy as a schoolchild, I walked into the main hall where the screening was to take place. The idea behind the screening was that we were all attending the 1984 New York Fashion Awards (complete with 80s disco), so all the tables were decked out like a gala dinner and they had a roving reporter asking questions about "who we were wearing". At the back of the hall was the Ghostbusters office, complete with working computer, old-school phone and its own Janine Melnitz. That's right, you could sit down and have a consultation with Janine, the faithful receptionist to the Ghostbusters. As you walked round you discovered Dana's fridge which housed Zuul (and smelt rank) as well as the chair she was sat in when the Terror Dogs attacked her. Amused by this, I sat down to have my photo taken only for the arms of a Terror Dog come out and grab me!

Sitting at the desk of the Ghostbusters, seeing Janine, getting attacked by Terror Dogs - this was an incredible experience that the 8-year old me was loving.

Who am I kidding? The 28-year old me was loving it too.

Future Cinemas really pulled out all the stops to make sure you never fell out of the immersive experience. TVs around the bar area were playing American commercials from the time period, they were selling New York deli-style food and they had themed cocktails (the Stay Puft was very nice!). You could even buy tubs of sweets that came in the same Chinese take away boxes purchased by the Ghostbusters with the last of their petty cash. The level of detail involved and the commitment from all actors was so impressive but the key aspect was that their choices were smart. They never once went that step too far into corny or silly. They got it just right.

Which brings us to the actors chosen to play these now iconic roles. Stepping into the shoes of classic characters like Peter Venkman and Dana Barrett cannot be easy, but not only was the casting spot on - they also showed great skill in never breaking character. During the pre-amble before the screening itself, the actress playing Dana came round to have a chat with us, asking us if we'd seen Peter and explaining the issues she was having in her apartment. At no point did it feel phony and she was a pure natural at being this character. While the ghosts were invading the gala, Egon came round to our table to hunt for ghosts and accused one of the patrons of being possessed, informing us to keep an eye on him. And while Egon was perhaps the best example of casting (he looked and sounded just like Harold Ramis), the true star of pitch-perfect casting was Louis Tully. From his bumbling antics outside and during the gala to his transformation to Vince Clortho, this Louis embodied everything that made Rick Moranis' performance so memorable.

While I won't go into much detail about the show itself (long story short, the gala was invaded by ghosts and the Ghostbusters showed up to help), they did re-create some of the more iconic scenes from the movie to get us all in the mood. But once the lights went down and the film started, the show was far from over.

There is a scene at the start of the movie in which our inexperienced (and not yet official) Ghostbusters investigate the New York Public Library only to find a not-so-friendly ghost reading a book. Spooked by the floating phantasm, our heroes run out of the library in pure comedic fashion - and this is where Future Cinemas shines as an immersive Live Cinema Experience. As the Ghostbusters ran out on screen, the Future Cinema counterparts ran out from behind the stage in the same costumes as our on-screen heroes in a near-perfect recreation of what was happening in the movie. The cherry picked their moments to do moments like this, but they were always spot-on.

Throughout the movie, the actors would mimic what was happening on-screen including a superb (and extremely well-timed) light show of the trapping of Slimer at the Sedgewick Hotel. However, the Pièce de résistance was during the climactic battle with Gozer and the destructor was summoned (due to Ray thinking of the most harmless thing). As if from no where, a giant inflatable Stay Puft Marshmallow Man rose up from the floor and towered over our heroes on stage and even the screen itself. It was an incredible sight and the perfect note to end on what had already been the best screening of the movie I'd ever attended.

There aren't many companies that could pull of a screening of this size, scope and imagination. Impressive, mind-blowing and an insane amount of fun, the Future Cinema group are ones you should seek out if they're showing a movie you like. Ghostbusters is my favourite movie of all-time, but this was hands down my all-time favourite screening of the movie. Just when you think you'd seen it all, Future pull out something else to constantly keep you on your toes.

Their next screening is Who Framed Roger Rabbit with The Troxy doubling for the Ink and Paint Club. I love the movie, but I'm more interested in seeing just what these guys are going to do to make it the immersive experience. Sign me up and have my Twinkie Future Cinemas - you... you've earned it.

Here are some other pictures from the event:














Luke Owen is one of Flickering Myth's co-editors and the host of the Flickering Myth Podcast. You can follow him on Twitter @LukeWritesStuff.

First clip from Marvel's All Hail the King features a Defenders Easter egg

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Entertainment Weekly has got its hands on the first clip from All Hail the King, the new Marvel One-Shot set to accompany the home entertainment release of Thor: The Dark World next month, which you can view here (we'll update once an embed becomes available).

As noted previously, the short - which sees Ben Kingsley returning to his Iron Man 3 role as Trevor Slattery - takes place in Seagate Prison, giving us a nod to Luke Cage, who is set to feature in one of four Netflix miniseries building to The Defenders. And it seems that the One-Shot could be employed as a springboard for this latest corner of the Cinematic Universe, with the clip revolving around one Jackson Norriss, a reporter played by Scoot McNairy (Argo), who - in Marvel's comic book universe, at least - is a former associate of S.H.I.E.L.D., who also took over the Nighthawk persona for a spell and fought as a member of The Defenders.

So, does this mean we can expect to see nods to Daredevil, Jessica Jones and Iron Fist in All Hail the King, or maybe even a Power Man appearance? The latter is probably a stretch, but I guess we'll find out when the short arrives on February 25th.


Woody Allen Wednesdays - Radio Days and Bullets Over Broadway

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Every Wednesday, FM writers Simon Columb and Brogan Morris write two short reviews on Woody Allen films ... in the hope of watching all his films over the course of roughly 49 weeks. If you have been watching Woody's films and want to join in, feel free to comment with short reviews yourself! Next up is Radio Days and Bullets Over Broadway...

Simon Columb on Radio Days...

Though Woody narrates Radio Days, unconventionally, he doesn’t appear. The charm in Joe’s (Seth Green) family – comfortably married family members – defies Allen’s usual unfaithful couples who cannot help but stray and play-away. Flitting from this childhood, we see the rise in stardom of Sally White (Mia Farrow) - a waitress who, undergoing elocution lessons becomes a radio celebrity. Steeped in nostalgia, amid mahogany furniture and detailed, delicate lamps, is a thinly-disguised reflection on Allen’s childhood in the early 1940’s. Ending in 1944, the characters hope the war comes to an end. A family gathering around a radio to hear news of trapped child breaks your heart, while a sequence describing specific songs that are inextricably linked to his memory is relatable and personal. Rather than a clear, concise story, Radio Days is a warm series of romanticised vignettes harking back to an innocent time in America when ignorance was bliss.

Simon Columb


Brogan Morris on Bullets Over Broadway...

Woody Allen can alienate through wilful intellectuality – Bullets Over Broadway addresses the criticism, and sees Allen at possibly his most playful and self-deprecating. Here, the Woody surrogate (John Cusack) is another frustrated, misunderstood artist, though slowly the truth outs; writer-director of new Broadway play God of Our Fathers, Cusack’s David Shayne tentatively accepts input from mobster Cheech (Chazz Palminteri), until the work becomes unrecognisably brilliant and David realises he’s vastly overestimated his own genius. As the secretly average David enters collaboration with a subverted version of the dumb gangster archetype, Bullets Over Broadway crucially lacks the superciliousness of some of Woody’s other works. It’s surprisingly sweet (but not without darker moments – Cheech casually offing a key character late in the game is played for laughs), and everyone involved has their guard down, including an over-the-top Dianne Wiest and a fat-suited Jim Broadbent. Palminteri and Cusack, though, have chemistry to spare.


Brogan Morris - Lover of film, writer of words, pretentious beyond belief. Thinks Scorsese and Kubrick are the kings of cinema, but PT Anderson and David Fincher are the young princes. Follow Brogan on Twitter if you can take shameless self-promotion.

New look at Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2

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Sony Pictures has got plenty of mileage out of its main promotional image of Jamie Foxx (Django Unchained) as Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, using the same pose on virtually all of its posters to date, but now thankfully we have another look at the villain thanks to a promo wallpaper from SocialToaster which you can see here (or click the image for higher resolution)....

New look at Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2

We’ve always known that Spider-Man’s most important battle has been within himself: the struggle between the ordinary obligations of Peter Parker and the extraordinary responsibilities of Spider-Man. But in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Peter Parker finds that a greater conflict lies ahead.

It’s great to be Spider-Man (Andrew Garfield). For Peter Parker, there’s no feeling quite like swinging between skyscrapers, embracing being the hero, and spending time with Gwen (Emma Stone). But being Spider-Man comes at a price: only Spider-Man can protect his fellow New Yorkers from the formidable villains that threaten the city. With the emergence of Electro (Jamie Foxx), Peter must confront a foe far more powerful than he. And as his old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, Peter comes to realize that all of his enemies have one thing in common: OsCorp.


The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set for release on April 18th 2014 in the UK and May 2nd 2014 in North America with a cast that also includes Sally Field, Paul Giamatti, Chris Cooper, Felicity Jones, Colm Feore, B.J. Novak, Chris Zylka, Embeth Davidtz and Campbell Scott.

Holy DVD Release, Batman! Complete 60s Batman TV series to get an official release

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Holy DVD Release, Batman! Complete 60s Batman TV series to get an official release
If you're a fan of the 60s Batman TV series starring Adam West and Burt Ward as the Dynamic Duo, then you'll no doubt be delighted to hear that the series is finally heading to DVD this year, at least according to Conan O'Brien, who has revealed the news on Twitter.

Despite being one of the most popular shows in TV history, the Batman series has been unavailable on home video (yes, even VHS) due to complex rights issues between 20th Century Fox, ABC, Greenway Productions and DC's parent company Warner Bros., while it's also been suggested that some of the Bat-cameos weren't cleared for home video release.

Whatever the problems were, these now look to have been cleared, so Bat-fans will soon be able to place the entire 120 episodes next to Batman: The Movie on their DVD shelves.


The CW's Wonder Woman pilot Amazon officially dead

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With Wonder Woman set to make her big screen debut courtesy of Zack Snyder and Gal Gadot (Fast & Furious 6) in the 2015 Man of Steel sequel Batman vs. Superman, it seems we'll have to wait for the Amazon Princess to make her return to the small screen, with The CW president Mark Pedowitz revealing that the Amazon pilot is no longer in development.

"We did not go forward with it," Pedowitz tells The Hollywood Reporter, before revealing that the network is still open to another Wonder Woman series, should the right project present itself: "It all depends on the script. We were very careful with Arrowand we're being very careful with Flash. These are iconic characters so we're going to be very careful with Wonder Woman. You only get one shot before you get bit."

Although Wonder Woman looks to remain absent from television for the foreseeable future DC fans still have plenty to look forward to on the small screen; as well as Arrow and The Flash, The CW has Hourman in development while Fox has Gothamand NBC is working on Constantine.

First clip from the RoboCop reboot

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First clip from the RoboCop rebootIt seems like an age since we caught that first glimpse of Joel Kinnaman (The Killing) suited up in those first RoboCop set photos, but don't have long to wait now until we find out whether director Jose Padilha's (Elite Squad) remake of Paul Verhoeven's 1987 cult classic has been worth it. The reboot is due to hit cinemas in less than a month, and the first clip has now arrived online which sees Alex Murphy taking his new suit out for a field test. Check it out after the official synopsis...

"In RoboCop, the year is 2029 and multinational conglomerate OmniCorp is at the center of robot technology. Their drones are winning American wars around the globe and now they want to bring this technology to the home front. Alex Murphy is a loving husband, father and good cop doing his best to stem the tide of crime and corruption in Detroit. After he is critically injured in the line of duty, OmniCorp utilizes their remarkable science of robotics to save Alex’s life. He returns to the streets of his beloved city with amazing new abilities, but with issues a regular man has never had to face before."


RoboCopsees Kinnaman joined in the cast by Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight Rises), Samuel L. Jackson (The Avengers), Michael Keaton (Batman), Abbie Cornish (Sucker Punch), Jay Baruchel (Knocked Up), Aimee Garcia (Dexter), Michael K. Williams (The Wire), Jennifer Ehle (Zero Dark Thirty), Jackie Earle Haley (Watchmen) and Miguel Ferrer (Iron Man 3). The film is set for release in the UK on February 7th and in North America on February 12th.

New trailer for Bates Motel season 2

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Bates Motel will open its doors once again for the second season of the hit A&E thriller in March, and ahead of the season two premiere a new teaser trailer has arrived online, which we have for you right here...

The second season of Bates Motel sees Freddie Highmore's Norman and Vera Farmiga's Norma returning alongside Max Thieriot (Dylan Massett), Olivia Cooke (Emma Decody) and Nicola Peltz (Bradley Martin), while new additions for the second season include Rebecca Creskoff (Hung), Michael Vartan (Alias), Kenny Johnson (The Shield), Kathleen Robertson (Boss), and Paloma Kwiatkowski (Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters).


Season two of Bates Motel gets underway on March 3rd in the States.


DC animated movie JLA Adventures: Trapped in Time set for DVD on January 21st

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Warner Bros. Home Entertainment has announced the "stealth" release of JLA Adventures: Trapped in Time, an all-ages animated feature which is set to hit shelves exclusively at Target in the States from Tuesday, January 21st before expanding to other retail outlets in the future. Here's the cover art...


According to The World's Finest, the movie will see the traditional Justice League line-up - along with additions such as Robin and Karate Kid - going up against the Legion of Doom, and features a voice cast that includes Grey DeLisle, Dante Basco, Jack DeSena, Diedrich Bader, and Jason Spisak.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 co-writer talks Venom and Sinister Six

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We're just a few months away from the release of The Amazing Spider-Man 2, but Sony has already set out its stall for the future of the franchise, with 2016's The Amazing Spider-Man 3 and 2018's The Amazing Spider-Man 4 set to be joined by spin-offs for Venom and The Sinister Six. Speaking to IGN, Roberto Orci - co-writer of TASM2, TASM3 and Venom - has offered some details on the two spin-offs, revealing that they're still considering how to tackle the films, seeing as they're going to have bad guys as the protagonists.

"That’s the discussion we’re having right now; how exactly do you do that, and how do you do it without betraying the audience and making them all mean? Drew Goddard [The Cabin in the Woods] is going to be writing [The Sinister Six], so it’s kind of his problem. [Laughs.] I’m kidding. We’re all working on each other’s stuff. So we want to be true to it, but there are some anti-heroes in this day and age. There’s been examples of that even on TV – Vic Mackey on The Shield, one of the great anti-heroes of all time. There are ways to milk that story. Audiences have seen everything. They’ve seen all the good guys who never do anything wrong. Is there a story in seeing the other side? That’s the challenge, and that’s the fun. I’m not sure how we’re going to do that yet."

Orci then went on to reveal that Oscorp will play an important role in the creation of the villains for The Amazing Spider-Man 2, hinting that Venom's origin could be getting a revamp in the rebooted movie series: "Oscorp plays an important part in how our villains get created, obviously, in the first one. So because Peter becoming Spider-Man came out of that, rather than saying, ‘And then this alien came from space,’ or whatever, they’re doing human-hybrid, weird stuff at Oscorp. That’s where Gwen Stacy works [...] as well. So the idea of it representing the good and the bad of science, that it can do great things, but it can also mess you up and do weird things and transform people – as all science can be used for good or bad. So it’s nice to have that organizing principal, but it wasn’t like, ‘We must keep it at Oscorp.’ It flowed naturally from the story development."

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 will swing into cinemas on April 18th 2014 in the UK and May 2nd 2014 in North America with a cast that includes Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Jamie Foxx, Dane DeHaan, Sally Field, Paul Giamatti, Chris Cooper, Felicity Jones, Colm Feore, B.J. Novak, Chris Zylka, Embeth Davidtz, and Campbell Scott.


Watch how The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug *should* have ended

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When you're caught in the excitement of a movie, you often miss its plot holes and cliches. "Wow," you think to yourself, "I'm loving how orcs can travel during the day decades before Sauron ever gave them that ability."

Enter YouTube comedy animators How It Should Have Ended, who point that sort of stuff out. In their latest episode, they've remade the end of The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (Martin Freeman, Benedict Cumberbatch). And it goes beyond the standard 'Eagles' solution that characterised the first film.

Watch the video below. And beware, spoilers for the movie lie ahead...


Nice Falcor cameo in there. He would've sorted out those bullying orcs.

Seven new images from The Amazing Spider-Man 2

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Yesterday we brought you a new look at Jamie Foxx's villain Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, and now thanks to Total Film we have a batch of seven new images, which sees Electro joined by Spider-Man (Andrew Garfield), The Rhino (Paul Giamatti), Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan) and Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone); take a look...









We’ve always known that Spider-Man’s most important battle has been within himself: the struggle between the ordinary obligations of Peter Parker and the extraordinary responsibilities of Spider-Man. But in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Peter Parker finds that a greater conflict lies ahead.

It’s great to be Spider-Man (Andrew Garfield). For Peter Parker, there’s no feeling quite like swinging between skyscrapers, embracing being the hero, and spending time with Gwen (Emma Stone). But being Spider-Man comes at a price: only Spider-Man can protect his fellow New Yorkers from the formidable villains that threaten the city. With the emergence of Electro (Jamie Foxx), Peter must confront a foe far more powerful than he. And as his old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, Peter comes to realize that all of his enemies have one thing in common: OsCorp.


The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set for release on April 18th 2014 in the UK and May 2nd 2014 in North America with a cast that also includes Sally Field, Chris Cooper, Felicity Jones, Colm Feore, B.J. Novak, Chris Zylka, Embeth Davidtz and Campbell Scott.

And the nominations for the 86th Academy Awards are...

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A rundown of all the nominees for this year's Academy Awards....

With awards season in full swing, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scienes have revealed the contenders for the 86th annual Academy Awards, with Oscars chief Cheryl Boone Isaacs and actor Chris Hemsworth announcing the contenders this morning.

Leading the pack with 10 nominations apiece are Gravity and American Hustle, with both films contesting the coveted Best Picture award alongside Captain Phillips, Dallas Buyers Club, Her, Nebraska, Philomena, The Wolf of Wall Street and 12 Years a Slave, with the latter bagging a total of 9 nods.

Check out the full list of nominations here...

Best Picture:
"American Hustle"
"Captain Phillips"
"Dallas Buyers Club"
"Gravity"
"Her"
"Nebraska"
"Philomena"
"12 Years a Slave"
"The Wolf of Wall Street"

Best Director:
David O. Russell, "American Hustle"
Alfonso Cuaron, "Gravity"
Alexander Payne, "Nebraska"
Steve McQueen, "12 Years a Slave"
Martin Scorsese, "The Wolf of Wall Street

Best Actor:
Christian Bale, "American Hustle"
Bruce Dern, "Nebraska"
Leonardo DiCaprio, "The Wolf of Wall Street"
Chiwetel Ejiofor, "12 Years a Slave"
Matthew McConaughey, "Dallas Buyer's Club"

Best Actress:
Amy Adams, "American Hustle"
Cate Blanchett, "Blue Jasmine"
Sandra Bullock, "Gravity"
Judi Dench, "Philomena"
Meryl Streep, "August: Osage County"

Best Supporting Actor:
Barkhad Abdi, "Captain Phillips"
Bradley Cooper, "American Hustle"
Jonah Hill, "The Wolf of Wall Street"
Michael Fassbender, "12 Years a Slave"
Jared Leto, "Dallas Buyers Club"

Best Supporting Actress:
Sally Hawkins, "Blue Jasmine"
Jennifer Lawrence, "American Hustle"
Lupita Nyong'o, "12 Years a Slave"
Julia Roberts, "August: Osage County"
June Squibb, "Nebraska"

Best Original Screenplay: "American Hustle"
"Blue Jasmine"
"Dallas Buyers Club"
"Her"
"Nebraska"

Best Adapted Screenplay:
"Before Midnight"
"Captain Phillips"
"Philomena"
"12 Years a Slave"
"The Wolf Of Wall Street"

Best Animated Feature:
"The Croods"
"Despicable Me 2"
"Ernest & Celestine"
"Frozen"
"The Wind Rises"

Best Foreign Feature:
"The Broken Circle Breakdown," Belgium
"The Great Beauty," Italy
"The Hunt," Denmark
"The Missing Picture," Cambodia
"Omar," Palestine

Best Visual Effects:
"Gravity"
"The Hobbit: The Desolation"
"Iron Man 3"
"The Lone Ranger"
"Star Trek Into Darkness"

Best Cinematography:
"The Grandmaster"
"Gravity"
"Inside Llewyn Davis"
"Nebraska"
"Prisoners"

Best Costume Design:
"American Hustle"
"The Grandmaster"
"The Great Gatsby"
"The Invisible Woman"
"12 Years a Slave"

Best Documentary Feature:
"The Act of Killing"
"Cutie and the Boxer"
"Dirty Wars"
"The Square"
"20 Feet from Stardom"

Best Documentary Short:
"CaveDigger"
"Facing Fear"
"Karama Has No Walls"
"The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life"
"Prisoner Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall"

Best Film Editing:
"American Hustle"
"Captain Phillips"
"Dallas Buyers Club"
"Gravity"
"12 Years a Slave"

Best Makeup and Hairstyling:
"Dallas Buyers Club"
"Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa"
"The Lone Ranger"

Best Music (Original Score):
"The Book Thief"
"Gravity"
"Her"
"Philomena"
"Saving Mr. Banks"

Best Music (Original Song):
"Alone Yet Not Alone" from "Alone Yet Not Alone"
"Happy" from "Despicable Me"
"Let It Go" from "Frozen"
"The Moon Song" from "Her"
"Ordinary Love" from "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom"

Best Production Design:
"American Hustle"
"Gravity"
"The Great Gatsby"
"Her"
"12 Years a Slave"

Best Short Film, Animated:
"Feral"
"Get a Horse!"
"Mr. Hublot"
"Possessions"
"Room on the Broom"

Best Short Film, Live Action:
"Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn't Me)"
"Avant Que De Tout Perdre" (Just Before Losing Everything)
"Helium"
" Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa?" (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)
"The Voorman Problem"

Best Sound Editing:
"All Is Lost"
"Captain Phillips"
"Gravity"
"The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug"
"The Lone Survivor"

Best Sound Mixing:
"Captain Phillips"
"Gravity"
"The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug"
"Inside Llewyn Davis"
"Lone Survivor"

The Oscar winners will be announced at the 86th Academy Awards ceremony on March 2nd. Let us know your picks for this year's awards in the comments below...

Exclusive: First Look at covers for Sonic Universe #63

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For those waiting to read Sonic Universe #63, Archie Comics has unveiled the cover for the issue by Tracy Yardley as well as a variant version by Ryan Jampole.




Fly high above the clouds with Knuckles and the Chaotix in The Great Chaos Caper: Part One!  Knuckles the Echidna has been tasked by a mysterious force to fix the shattered planet – but when the Dark Gaia monsters emerge from the word's core, our hero finds himself in a fight for his very life! Luckily the ever-adventuring Chaotix are around to lend a hand, hired by Princess Sally to gather the all-important Chaos Emeralds. But wait, who's that lurking in the dark?

Sonic Universe #63which features some new characters and familiar faces arrives on April 23, 2014.

Interview: A conversation with Jeremy Teicher, writer-director of Tall as the Baobab Tree

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Paul Risker chats with Jeremy Teicher, writer-director of Tall as the Baobab Tree...

It was at the 56th BFI London Film Festival that I first met writer-director Jeremy Teicher who was there to present his film Tall as the Baobab Tree. It remains a startling work, and one which exudes an almost effortless quality, a rare simplicity all too often absent from film. Whilst it is visually and narratively uncomplicated, it conveys a powerful depiction of tradition versus transformation in rural Africa, of which education is the driving force.

Thanks to The Sundance Artist Services and IFFR in the Cloud (via International Film Festival Rotterdam), Tall as the Baobab Tree has finally received an international digital release, included as part of the 2014 Sundance digital distribution slate comprising films selected by The Sundance Artist Services as “their favourite modern work… ground-breaking narrative films and documentaries… that embody the spirit of independent filmmaking.”

Paul Risker: It strikes me that one of the opportunities Tall as the Baobab Tree afforded you, was the chance to witness the impact of change. You talk about the transformation of a society, and so often in our position it is something we read about, that we look back into the past to see. You had the opportunity to witness this transformation first-hand.

Jeremy Teicher: First-hand… Right in the middle of it… Pretty insane. I first went to this village with an educational group, which turned into a longer documentary. Over the course of two and a half years, three by the time we started making the film, I learned that the rural school we were working in had only been built ten years ago. The students I was working with were mostly in their late teens, and were not that much younger than me when I first went out there as a nineteen year old. They were the first people ever from their village to go to school, and so with this first generation, they are breaking through the wall of dealing with the challenges of integrating an ancient culture with a modern world, and that’s what the film deals with.

PR: That theme is a particularly topical one at present, with the relationship between east and west. It feels at least to a point that there are inherent tensions between cultures; especially the modern west in contrast to the east and it’s deep rooted traditions. I’m not sure whether we always understand societies different to our own, but I do think societies are always more complex than the other would like to imagine. So the point you were making in the film is one relevant to the context of the international community to a point. 

JT: I know that’s a large issue in a lot of western European countries, but I can’t speak too much about it. Certainly the core plot of the film revolves round an arranged marriage of an eleven year old girl, and that is a very serious and timely issue that people are dealing with now. What I found when talking about this issue, and many other issues to do with rural Africa and the third world, was that the way these issues can be portrayed in the western media is often ‘othering’ or ‘sensationalising. If you watch a commercial about malaria say, you feel pity, almost as though they are fundamentally different from you, the people on screen. In making this film I wanted to capture reality and put you in their shoes, and look at this issue in a new way, in the context of social change.

PR: You are using cinema as a means to create a window through which we can view another culture?

JT: That’s the word that I use, yeah.

PR: I believe that one of the values of cinema is that it should not be pre-dominantly focused on entertainment, that it should be an entertaining story, but it should offer something more, the exploration of issues, cultures, to open its audience’s minds to the wider world. Cinema can after all quite literally break down boundaries.

JT: I like what you said. The goal of this movie is not to be entertaining. I think it is still a gripping film, but the goal is to put you fully in the shoes of another culture. So if you walk into the cinema with more traditional expectations, you will not get what you want, but if you walk in… Xavier Dolan when he was talking about critics once said that when they are watching a film from their heart, without pre-conceived judgement, which in my experience is what the vast majority of my audience members have done; you are rewarded with this powerful cultural experience that unless you have been there, could have imagined, and you find yourself emphasising with world views that you might have previously found repugnant.

PR: It was an insane situation to find yourself in, probably one I would imagine you would have never have thought you would find yourself in? What emotional and physical challenges did you encounter?

JT: By the time we started shooting the narrative, I had been back and forth to the village for about three years. I knew the village elders, I knew the parents, and everyone knew me, so there was a comfort there and a trust; so that was not a challenge. Also this is a very sensitive and private topic, but the desire to talk about early marriage came from the students I was working with. They made me aware of it; I didn’t know what was going on before. In the documentary (This Is Us) there was a group of girls who said, “We want to talk about early marriage.” It’s obviously very compelling, but it came from them; they wanted this story to be told. There was never any question of pushing people to be uncomfortable because it was the students, the girls in particular who wanted this story told. There were definitely challenges with filming eight hour days in a village with no electricity, but those are more fun and serious.

PR: So the challenges made it a more worthwhile experience?

JT: Yeah, technical challenges always make it more fun.

PR: To go to another country, crossing borders, travelling many miles to discover what is of important to that society, and then give them a tool that is practically alien to them, is a wonderful collaboration between you and these native villagers; a product of collaboration between a technological society and a rural culture; a wonderful marriage one could say. 

JT: We made the documentary with flip cameras, the size of a cell phone, and we used about twenty of them, and actually the way we got the footage was the students took the cameras into the villages on their own. That never could have existed a couple of years ago, and cell phones are everywhere so people were comfortable around the cameras. We shot this on the 5D, and I don’t think we could have done this with any other tool but the DSLR. Even if we shot digital, a RED would not have worked, it was too hot, and it was too big. We were filming in their homes, in huts that were not that much larger than this corner table. You couldn’t have a big camera.

PR: What were the challenges in funding Tall as the Baobab Tree?

JT: Okay, so we had made this documentary (This Is Us). The documentary was nominated for a Student Academy Award, so it got a lot of attention and so using the momentum from that the cinematographer – we went to school together – and I worked to get equipment sponsorship, and so we ended up getting all of our gear for free. That was a big chunk not out of our pockets; so free gear. The most expensive part was probably the aeroplane ticket. Chris the DP and I worked for free. We paid the actors and gave a donation to the local school, but we raised most of the budget through the non-profit organisation that I originally worked with, and people donated. Actually people will be able to buy the film once it is released, but if the film turns a profit, the profit will be donated mostly to the school. So it’s non-profit. People donated to a charity to make the film. It’s all private funding, the way you have to do it in America.

PR: Following on from Tall as the Baobab Tree, what will your next project be, or are you not thinking that far ahead? 

JT: I have a few scripts. Narrative was always my interest, and I studied Theatre, Film and English at school. I never had imagined I’d spend all these years working in Africa making documentaries, but I was very compelled to do it. But it does fit into my interest. My two interests right now in storytelling are coming of age, and social movement. I love reading the news, I read it constantly, so my two scripts, I’ll pick one pretty soon to commit to, deal with similar themes as Tall as the Baobab Tree, but they are set in America.

PR: As a filmmaker, do you see your career being a combination of using fictional narratives inspired by reality, real events, rather than pure documentary form?

JT: I don’t see myself making another documentary, unless I discover something that is really compelling. Certainly having had this experience, I’m aware of cinema’s power to talk about what’s happening now. I love movies like Network, and 1984 which are pure fiction, but you think about your surroundings after you are done with a movie like that. I love those types of films, and then I have a soft spot for melancholic coming of age movies like Wes Anderson’s films. I’m working with a co-writer on a script like that. A lot of my work in college dealt with childhood, and so that’s something that really interests me, and Tall as a Baobab Tree is in a lot of ways about growing up very fast. I feel like I’m discovering what motivates me as an artist.

PR: The film medium then is affording you the opportunity to express yourself, whilst functioning as an important part in your personal growth and development? 


JT: Yeah, as an artist, and in this movie I’m hopefully aware of the social and political implications that it can have in the statements that it is making. Tall as the Baobab Tree probably more than what is probably my next movie has a very clear statement and goal.

PR: Do you regard the importance to try and do a hybrid of the two, documentary but also a narrative piece, because the industry’s preference is for a director to do one thing or the other, making it easier to categorise you.
JT: Making this film was certainly a narrative experience. I directed a lot of theatre in school, and working with these actors was no different. I feel I have some pretty intense training as a director as a result of working with an eleven year old for a month who had never seen a camera before. You had to be very clear in your directing. It was definitely a narrative experience. I had an internship in college at PBS working with this team of documentary filmmakers, and I could see how passionate they were about finding a topic and wanting to get to the bottom of it with the documentary. I don’t have that. I am moved by fiction more and the power of fiction. At the same time I like talking about the real world, and that’s why I chose to make Tall as a Baobab Tree, a fiction film instead of another documentary, because to me what was compelling about the situation were the conflicting emotions that people were going through. Fiction is my tool.

Thanks to Jeremy Teicher for taking the time for this interview. This article originally appeared on EatSleepLiveFilm.

For further information and to watch Tall as the Baobab Tree visit: www.tallasthebaobabtree.com/watch

Paul Risker is co-editor in chief of Wages of Film, freelance writer and contributor to Flickering Myth.

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