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Movie Review - Seven Psychopaths (2012)

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Seven Psychopaths, 2012.

Written and Directed by Martin McDonagh.
Starring Colin Farrell, Sam Rockwell, Woody Harrelson, Christopher Walken, Tom Waits, Abbie Cornish, Olga Kurylenko, Gabourey Sidibe, Željko Ivanek, Michael Pitt, Kevin Corrigan, Michael Stuhlbarg and Harry Dean Stanton.



SYNOPSIS:

A struggling screenwriter inadvertently becomes entangled in the Los Angeles criminal underworld after his oddball friends kidnap a gangster's beloved dog.


Before we begin, I have to confess – I didn’t really “get” In Bruges when I saw it at the cinema. I liked it don’t get me wrong, but I didn’t love it. It wasn’t until I saw it on DVD a few years later that I finally understood what the fuss was about. I get the feeling Seven Psychopaths will have the same effect on a lot of people because it’s a film where you get more out of it the more you think about it.

Explaining the intricacies of Seven Psychopaths is an incredibly hard job and one that I am not taking lightly. I have been staring at my laptop screen now for a good 20 minutes trying to surmise in words why this movie is subtle genius. What you get with Seven Psychopaths is a movie about a script that is being written but is playing out the same way the script is being penned (confused yet?). This isn’t an existential thing, this is how the film works (the scriptwriter character is Marty, the writer of the movie Martin McDonagh). The movie only really changes in pace and tone when one of Marty’s friends tells him how he thinks the movie should go. All the while there is a main plot that sort of acts like a sub plot at times involving Christopher Walken and Sam Rockwell stealing the Shi-Tzu of crime boss Charlie (played by Woody Harrelson). It’s an incredibly bizarre and odd movie that will keep you thinking long after the movies credits have ended.

However this also makes it very hard to criticise because all of the things wrong with the movie are intentional. You could argue that the female characters are pointless and underplayed, but this is because Marty doesn’t know how to write female dialogue and it’s a trait of the genre he’s writing. The plot takes a little while to get going and find its feet, but this because Marty hasn’t written anything but the title and we only get new characters when he starts to write about them. The argument could also be made that the ending is a little lacklustre and it’s just three guys sitting in the desert talking – but that’s the ending that Marty wanted for his movie. Now, this could very well be this critic reading too much into the movie, but I’d like to think that this is subtle genius on the part of Martin McDonagh.

Seeing as though I can’t criticise the movie, I shall praise everything that I loved about it – mainly the cast of characters and the actors who play them. I’ve always been a defender of Colin Farrell and think that he just picks poor movies to star in, but here he shows just how great he can be with a decent script and a good director. His performance is so good that it seems a shame that it’s overshadowed by Sam Rockwell’s superbly crazy performance of Billy and Christopher Walken’s off-kilter-but-sweet-yet-still-nuts Hans. These two make such a great team-up that I sort of wish they had their own movie. Woodly Harrelson is fantastic as Charlie and it seems like a stroke of luck that Mickey Rourke had a falling out with the production team and left the movie because I couldn’t seem him doing as good of a job as Harrelson. And for only getting a couple of scenes, Tom Waits is awesome as the insanely mad Zachariah who, again, I wish was given more screen time.

McDonagh hasn’t just created a script that is genius in testing the attention levels of its audience, but also one with very well-written dialogue. It reminds me of the early days of Quentin Tarantino with its quick witted, snappy exchanges. It draws you into each and every scene and you find yourself hanging onto every word uttered by the characters. This, along with the wonderful performances, is just a great compliment to the intricacies of its bizarre plot.

Seven Psychopaths will not please everyone. I can imagine those who are just expecting a funny dog stealing romp (and who wouldn’t given the promotional material) might find certain aspects of the story to be fairly boring (even though its intentional), but those who want to get more from their movies will find a lot of entertainment here. You may not enjoy it straight from the outset, but repeat reviewing will reveal more and more of McDonagh’s genius. It’s not a perfect movie, but it’s certainly one of the most interesting pieces of cinema I’ve ever seen.


Flickering Myth Rating - Film: ★ ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★

Luke Owen is a freelance copywriter working for Europe’s biggest golf holiday provider as their web content executive.

Seth MacFarlane to direct and star in A Million Ways to Die in the West

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Seth MacFarlane (Family Guy) is planning a follow-up to his feature-length directorial debut Ted. A Million Ways to Die in the West has been described as a Blazing Saddles-style film that will look at how dangerous life really was in the late 1800s.

The script, written by MacFarlane and his Ted co-writers Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild, is said to feature MacFarlane's trademark racy humour. He will both direct and star in A Million Ways to Die in the West, which is set to start shooting next summer. Media Rights Capital and producer Scott Stuber are behind the Western comedy.  

A sequel to MacFarlane's successful first film Ted is also currently in early development, and he will be hosting the Oscars ceremony in February.

Special Features - The Big Questions of 2013

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Anghus Houvouras tackles the big questions of 2013...

2013 is almost upon us, and there's a lot to look forward to.  It's going to be hard to top 2012, a year that gave film geeks so much to be thankful for.  The Avengers, The Dark Knight Rises, Dredd, Skyfall, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey and The Amazing Spider-Man among others... it was a landmark year for geek cinema.  As we close out this wild and wonderful year, I think it's a good time to ask a few looming questions about the cinematic landscape that is 2013....


1.  Are we finally going to get a good Superman movie?

This one's been a long time coming.  After the long wait for a modern era Superman film, audiences were punished with the Bryan Singer directed exploits of an emo, absentee parent Superman and an anorexic Lois Lane.  We were all very forgiving at the time because the film was so reverent to the Richard Donner original.  But let's face the facts: Superman Returns was a disappointing wreck.  I was more than nervous when I heard the words 'A Superman film directed by Zack Snyder', a director who has gotten progressively worse with each subsequent film.  However, under the watchful eye of Christopher Nolan, there's hope that we may finally get a Superman movie that's worth the price of admission.


2. Just who the hell is Benedict Cumberbatch playing in Star Trek Into Darkness?

This one may get answered before 2013 with the first nine minutes of Star Trek Into Darkness screening in a few weeks.  There's been rampant speculation on which villain he's playing.  Some people claim he's taking on a reworked version of Khan.  Others are speculating he's playing a reworked villain from the original series, Gary Mitchell.  For the record, Gary Mitchell may be the least menacing villain name in the history of film.  "BOW BEFORE THE POWER OF GARY MITCHELL!"  Not exactly a fear inducing moniker.  Whoever he's playing, J.J. Abrams has done a masterful job of keeping this one under wraps and keeping the film sites rife with debate. 


3. Is M. Night Shyamalan capable of making another good movie?

Few directors have achieved the dizzying heights and the fiery descents of M. Night Shyamalan.  Once a filmmaker of such promise, his recent output has gone from the laughable (The Happening) to the misguided (Lady in the Water) to the almost unwatchable (The Last Airbender).  2013 sees the release of After Earth and what might be Mr. Twists' last chance at mainstream redemption. 


4. Was 9 months enough to save G.I. Joe: Retaliation?

Never have I seen a film yanked from the release schedule with such reckless abandon.  Mere weeks before launch, the G.I. Joe sequel no one was clammoring for was pulled and sent back in for some 'reworking'.  The blame was laid on needing time for a 3D conversion.  Though there were many reports that test screenings were toxic and that Channing Tatum's early departure was a bad choice given his current career trajectory.  Now, with nine moths of tinkering and reshoots, we'll finally get to see if this franchise has any ammunition left in the chamber.


5. Does the world really need a third Hangover and a sixth Fast and the Furious?

Franchise milking is nothing new.  I liked the second Hangover and the fifth Fast and Furious just fine.  But at some point you have to start wonder if creatively were starting to enact the law of diminishing returns. 


6. Is World War Z salvageable?

The most trouble production of 2011 became the most reworked production of 2012.  Thanks to massive rewrites and reshoots, no one knows exactly what we'll be seeing next June other than Brad Pitt running from super fast zombies.  Once again the theory will be tested: can deep pockets save a wayward production?  I'm guessing no.  This one might be the bullet to the head of the current zombie fad.


7. Is Marvel's Phase Two ready for launch?

After the massive success of The Avengers, all the pressure is on Marvel to continue an extremely impressive track record.  In May, we get Shane Black's Iron Man 3.  The trailer is impressive, but it cribs a lot from The Dark Knight Rises.  Mandarin looks and sounds like a more laid back version of Bane.  And the whole 'let's break the hero' premise isn't exactly minty fresh.  Still, it's Shane Black and Robert Downey Jr., so nothing less than genius will do.  Which is kind of needed after the stale pile of garbage that was Iron Man 2.  Meanwhile, November gives us a second Thor film which looks extremely promising.  Marvel's entire Phase Two lineup is set.  There's no going back.  Hopefully these new crop of comic book adaptations will be able to keep up the manic level of enthusiasm generated by The Avengers.  It's not that I have any real concern about the continued success of these films, but I am starting to wonder if two films a year isn't going to eventually cause some burn out.


8. Will the One Direction movie make me want to kill myself?

Yes. 


9. Is there a market for big budget kaiju?

This is one of those questions I've been pondering for awhile.  Guillermo del Toro's next feature Pacific Rim features giant robots and irradiated monsters.  There's a lot of curiosity surrounding this project and interest from the online film community.  But is the city stomping monster movie poised to out asses in seats?  Del Toro is well loved by the online media but is still an unknown quantity to mainstream audiences.  After a string of minor hits and artistic successes, 2013 may finally be the year we find out if Del Toro is capable of generating a crowd pleasing original property and has the kind of massive financial success required to be a major player in the studio system. 

Well there you have it.  Nine big questions for 2013.  What big questions do you have?

Anghus Houvouras

Skyfall overtakes Avatar to become the highest grossing UK release of all time

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Having toppled The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 to climb back to the top of the UK box office chart this past weekend, the James Bond franchise has celebrated its 50th anniversary in style with 007's 23rd official screen adventure Skyfall surpassing the £94 million haul of James Cameron's Avatar to become the UK's highest-grossing film of all time.

Directed by Academy Award-winner Sam Mendes (American Beauty), Skyfall sees Daniel Craig reprising the role of 007 for a third time after Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace, and features a supporting cast that includes Judi Dench, Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Wishaw, Albert Finney, Naomie Harris, Bérénice Marlohe and Ola Rapace.

Globally, Skyfall has amassed $870 million to date to shatter the previous franchise high of $599 million set by Casino Royale back in 2006, and it is currently the fourth biggest film of 2012 behind Ice Age: Continental Drift ($874.9m), The Dark Knight Rises ($1,081m) and The Avengers ($1,511.8).

You can read our reviews of Skyfallhere, here, here and here

Christopher Nolan talks Man of Steel

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To promote the arrival of The Dark Knight Rises on Blu-ray and DVD earlier this week, The Playlist sat down with Christopher Nolan to discuss his acclaimed Batman trilogy. As well as reiterating once more that TDKR wraps up his Dark Knight saga - "I'll say definitively again, I am done with the Batman films, the trilogy is completed. It ended in the manner we had envisioned" - the conversation shifted towards DC Comics' other iconic superhero, with Nolan taking a moment to comment on director Zack Snyder's upcoming Superman reboot, Man of Steel:

"I wouldn’t want people to think we're doing for Superman what we did for Batman... [Man of Steel] is very much Zack’s film and I think people are going to love what he's done. I think it's really remarkable to take on that character. Superman is a completely different character than Batman. So you can't in anyway use the same template. But David Goyerhad this, I thought, brilliant way to make Superman relatable and relevant for his audience. Zack has built on that and I think it's incredible what he's putting together. He's got a lot of finishing to do on that. Superman is the biggest comic book character of them all and he needs the biggest possible movie version which is what Zack's doing. It's really something."

Man of Steel sees Nolan serving as producer alongside Batman veterans Emma Thomas and Charles Roven, while the cast includes Henry Cavill (Immortals) as Clark Kent / Superman, Amy Adams (The Fighter) as Lois Lane, Russell Crowe (Les Miserables) as Jor-El, Michael Shannon (Boardwalk Empire) as General Zod, Kevin Costner (Hatfields & McCoys) as Jonathan Kent, Diane Lane (Secretariat) as Martha Kent, Laurence Fishburne (Contagion) as Perry White, Ayelet Zurer (Angels & Demons) as Lara Lor-Van, Antje Traue (Pandorum) as Faora, Christopher Meloni (True Blood) as Colonel Hardy and Tahmoh Penikett (Battlestar Galactica) as Henry Ackerdson.

Man of Steel is set for release on June 14th, 2013, while a new trailer will arrive in cinemas next week with The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.

Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing the Caped Crusader to the Screen - Available now via Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.    

Dark Knight: Lee Smith talks about Christopher Nolan

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To mark the arrival of The Dark Knight Rises on Blu-ray and DVD, Trevor Hogg chats with film editor Lee Smith about working with Christopher Nolan on the blockbuster trilogy...


“My memory of it was I had just finished Master and Commander [2003] and I waited another couple of weeks [in Los Angeles] for an interview with Chris [Nolan who was in London at the time] because my agent had inquired as to whether they would meet me for the film,” recalls film editor Lee Smith as to how he became associated with Batman Begins (2005).  “Very uncharacteristic of my good self I decided to wait.  It was costing me a lot of money to stay here, my home awaited in Australia and I had been gone a long time; I was keen to get back to it.  I met with Chris and we chatted away for quite some time.  I eventually said I had to go because I had to go pick up my kids from somewhere.  I had no idea the job interview was going to last as long as it did and flew back to Australia the next day.  Literally as we were putting our bags down in Australia the phone rang and my agent said, ‘Guess what?  You got the job.’”  The native of Sydney was not previously familiar with the British filmmaker.  “I hadn’t seen Memento [2000] or Insomnia [2002] but my agent rang and talked about it.  Also, I wasn’t a great comic book person or of that sort of genre of moviemaking but through my agency they basically said, ‘This is talented director.’  I went out and watched both Memento and Insomnia and I went, ‘Geez.  Why haven’t I seen these movies?’  I said, ‘I’d be privilege to meet him.’  We got on well in the interview and the rest is as they say is history.”




“There are a lot of similarities and then there are little differences,” states Lee Smith when comparing frequent collaborators Peter Weir (The Way Back) and Christopher Nolan.  “The similarities are they are both super prepared. By the time the camera rolls both of them would know their material inside out and upside down.  In Chris’ case he has written the material.  In Peter’s case he has either written or rewritten it.  They’re so knowledgeable about the film they are about to make.  There is no rushing into it.”  Both Nolan and Weir like to keep their cinematic stories grounded in reality.   “Part of his whole keeping the CG minimal mentality works well much like Peter Weir in that respect.  Peter didn’t ever want anything to remotely look like a visual effect or even if it was something you would quote as a good visual effect, both Peter and Chris want the audience not to be taken out of the movie.  They want to watch something and believe that you’re watching something that has happened in this real world.  Both of them are good at creating that.”  Smith observes, “The differences I would say are during the filmmaking process.  Peter is organic and will change as the film progresses.  Whereas Chris has made the movie [in his head] and then makes the movie in the camera.”  When asked what it is like working with writer-directors, Lee answers, “It is a different animal working on a film where the director isn’t the writer.  It’s another interpretation of someone’s work.  If the director is the writer or someone who has rewritten it, the ownership is more profound.”



“I felt like I wasn’t worthy in some ways simply because I didn’t have a comic book history,” confesses Lee Smith.   “You do talk to a lot of people who work on these films who have grownup with reading comic books and profoundly knowledgeable about the arena that they are working in.  Sometimes I would feel a little on the edge about it and didn’t follow that.  You can’t possibly put a lifetime worth of history into you just before you make a film. Interestingly as it went on I’ve done films as I said like Master and Commander where I read some books Patrick O’Brian had written, and loved the topic and enjoyed the process.  Similarly with Batman it evolved as I was working on it. A good film is a good film.  I’m happy to work on a good film based on pretty much any topic as I long as I don’t’ find it personally offensive.”  Smith adds, “I can’t help but like the films I work on; even subconsciously you’re making them for yourself but you can’t help that.  You’re cutting and editing a movie to please yourself.  You have to.  If you do it to please someone else it becomes not really true.  Sometimes they looked to me as if I was someone walking into a cinema, not necessarily a Batman fan or a fan of this kind of movie, and ask, ‘Would they enjoy it?  Would they walk out thinking, ‘Wow, that’s cool!’”




“The standard practice for feature films is that you’re editing the whole way,” explains Lee Smith who assembles the footage while the principle photography is taking place. “You have to be quite up with the camera because there is not much point on a $250 million film to sit there when the director comes in at the end of the shoot and say, ‘This scene and that scene don’t work.’  People do a lot of reshooting in post but it is to be avoided at all costs.  I would only draw to the attention of a director a scene that I thought was either lacking on a shot or simply was not cutting with another sequence in a fashion that I know they’d be happy with.  I’ve got to say with guys like Peter Weir and Christopher Nolan that is a rarity for that to happen.  They know what they want.  They’re very knowledgeable about coverage. There’s always a thing. There’s always a moment and you think, ‘Wow, if I had a close-up of that.’  If I was watching a scene and could imagine being in an audience screening in ten months time and the audience would be saying, ‘We didn’t notice that the briefcase was unlocked.’ Things like little story points that you don’t want to miss; they’re simple to pickup while you’re shooting and expensive when the shoot is over.”  Nolan does not limit himself to shooting only with the principle cast members.  “Chris does his own second unit and that makes it a lot easier for all of us.  Though they do their best and try there is quite often times where it’s not the same.  I’d hate to say this for second unit directors but in an ideal world I would have the main unit shoot the second unit.  Sometimes it’s not practical and if you don’t have the speed of operation of someone like Chris who also has a profound sense of the schedule then that would be a disaster unto itself.”


  
“We watch the dailies every night,” states Lee Smith.  “We’re both great believers in that because it’s not just the notes; it’s a time where we can chat and I can talk about what I’m doing while the dailies are rolling.  It’s one of the few times you can actually sit down and have a conversation because of the speed and intensity of shooting a movie.  On occasion Chris would give a note to me on something that he thought weren’t obvious. Sometimes there would be a shot when something happened in a take early on and he’d say, ‘That never happened again.’ It might be something incredibly subtle so Chris would point that out to me as we were rolling through. And of course that would definitely help in the assembly as I would use the takes he preferred because in the end you’ll be going back to them anyway.  As far as picking takes he often leaves that to the secondary process.  There were just a few times Chris would point out something which was a change from the script that they had come up with on the day; he would make a note to me so I wouldn’t look at the dailies and think, ‘I wonder why they did that?’”  



“When I first started putting Batman Begins together he asked me to do it without ever using any kind of temp music,” remarks Lee Smith.  “Up until then I would and wouldn’t.  I couldn’t say I was someone who used a lot of it because I had learned early on if you extensively layer a film early on with music you get a false reading of the movie you’ve got because it’s not ready for music.  You haven’t done the hard yards yet to analyze your film and get it down to a reasonable length.  Chris was much more absolute about it; he wanted to sit with me when we were doing all of the first passes with a completely naked film.  He said, ‘In that way all the warts and rough edges are going to show.’  That was the first time I ever presented a cut where there was not one note of music.  Although I had smoothed out the sound; I’ve got a big sound history so I certainly made it watchable. It’s different when you’re watching if you can imagine watching a summer blockbuster movie without music; it’s like the world’s most expensive art house movie.”  As for when Nolan joins him in the edit suit, Smith says, “They give me a week to tidy up the last of the footage that comes in and then he’s in.”  The picture takes on several iterations.   “You begin the work by going through, tuning it up, taking out or reducing it in length if anything is obviously over lengthened. With some of the bigger action sequences you make sure that you’ve got all of the beats and story points in the correct order.  They’re the things that tend to evolve a little bit when they’re shooting because it is difficult on the page to write an action sequence. It’s more about when they get there and realize that the car can’t flip there; it has got to flip here. They can’t do this.  They have to do that.  You start reordering everything and checking that you’ve got everything that was shot because there is a huge amount of coverage.  It is always quite easy for me to miss something that he was thinking of at the time that would be good for a particular moment.”



“The first pass you’ve done the heavy lifting in constructing the movie and sequences,” explains Lee Smith.  “Past that point you’ve got a ten week director’s cut where you review, refine and pack the film down into a reasonable length.  There are literally thousands upon thousands of changes occur in that process because every time you tighten something or lose a moment that affects the next moment and the next moment. It is always a tricky house of cards.”  Pacing becomes an issue.  “Every time you tighten something then the next scene seems slow and that requires tightening and then the next scene.”  Despite the changes the shooting draft of the screenplay tends to match the final cut.  “In Chris’ films I would say that is reasonable true although there are always things that are juxtaposed and moved around. Sometimes we would play with the timelines so if you were reading a script you notice that scene has moved three scenes down.”  When it comes to keeping track of multiple storylines, Smith says, “It’s inherent in your mind; sometimes those points are obvious and sometimes you have to look a little harder for them.  It’s one of those things sometimes you’d try and then roll back, watch it and go, ‘It seemed good at the time.’ Once we started cutting every Friday we would run the entire movie.  That keeps us aware because each of these little changes can have profound affects on the rest of the movie.  Even though it might seem like a laborious process to watch the entire film every week it is important because you can quickly watch something that’s destabilized the film.   You can go back and say, ‘We made a fairly quantum change there. We moved those three scenes and though it worked well with the reel, it hasn’t worked well in the movie.’”




In response to the criticism that the movies made by Christopher Nolan are clinical and lacking in emotion, Lee Smith replies, “I think that’s unfair. A lot of it is misconstrued with the complexity of the story and complex stories sometimes can seem less emotional because your mind is working at a much higher rate to keep up.  For example, both Inception [2010] and The Dark Knight Rises [2012] have got a lot emotion in them more than the other films.  The emotion comes through by the nature; it is harder to gauge with different films.  Chris is also juggling a blockbuster which the audience is going to expect to be entertained, and have action and emotion at the same time.  We’re both emotion junkies and that’s the strength of the film. That’s what you want is some emotion.”  Timing was a big factor for the last instalment of The Dark Knight Trilogy.  “The Dark Knight Rises’ biggest challenge was getting it down to two hours and forty-five minutes because it was an epic shoot.  Unless we were really regimented that film could have run super long. Some people might say that it runs too long now.  We don’t think so.  That’s as tight as we could possibly get it.”



When the suggestion is made that Inception has influenced the storyline for The Dark Knight Rises, in particular with the opening plane hijacking sequence resembling the rotating hallway scene in its predecessor, and Marion Cotillard (Rust and Bone) getting the opportunity to stab the leading man again, Lee Smith laughs, “I don’t know what that’s about.  Whatever is successful and directors’ love you’ll see it repeat in many movies; that’s like listening to music from the same composer.  You can tell it’s that composer because it’s in them and I don’t even know if it’s a conscious or subconscious thing but they’re the things they like doing or think works. Chris never talked about it as a conscious rift on the other movie.”  Smith does agree that the portrayal of Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) as a billionaire recluse was influenced by an aborted project about Howard Hughes.  “There are a lot of similarities in that.  He did work on a script at the same time the one with Leonardo [DiCaprio] came out back in the day.”  A problem that needed to be addressed was the muffled and distorted dialogue of the mask-wearing villain portrayed by Tom Hardy (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy).  “Bane’s voice was a complicated process and took a long time to get right.  We definitely did get it right but we were certainly mindful of it.  That’s the reason you keep screening it to people to make sure everybody is on board with what you’re doing.  We were confident when we finished that we had that right.”



“I try to read less now on the Internet other than high quality reviews because you can get lost in it,” states Lee Smith.  “I’d rather talk to people and get feedback in that respect because a lot of times the bloggers are so into it either in a positive or negative way.  It can be slightly misleading for the vast majority of people.  Also, when you’re reading stuff you have such a love of the film when you finish it’s hard to read any nasty or harsh words about the project. For all of us who worked on it, it was a labour of a lot of hours and love.  It’s like one of your children. You don’t want to hear anything bad about them.”  Tragedy has surrounded the acclaimed trilogy; Heath Ledger (Brokeback Mountain), who won an Oscar for his performance as The Joker in The Dark Knight [2008], died from an accidental drug overdose, and there was a fatal mass shooting at a screening of The Dark Knight Rises in Colorado.  “It’s a crazy world.  If I had an answer I would be a really wise person. I don’t know.  It’s the world we live in at the moment.  If I could fathom a way around these horrible tragic events I would let you know but unfortunately I’m not that guy.”  Regarding future projects for himself and Christopher Nolan, the two-time Academy Award nominee reveals that he is teaming with another veteran Nolan collaborator.  “I’m going to do a film for Wally Pfister [The Prestige].  I figured after sitting together in a trailer watching dailies on five films and going through the whole process with Wally, we deserve each other.  With Chris’ blessing we’re off to do this film [Transcendence] and he is having a break.   But when Chris says he is having a break that just means he is formulating something more complicated than we could ever think.”



Production stills © 2012 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

Many thanks to Lee Smith for taking the time for this interview and to learn more make sure to read his Cutting Edge profile as well as Theatre of the Mind which explores the career of Christopher Nolan.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.



Special Features - Is Cloud Atlas the Worst Movie of the Year?

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As Time Magazine selects its worst movies of 2012, Anghus Houvouras asks whether Cloud Atlas is worthy of its place at the top of the list...

There was a time when there was a very clear and defined line between online film sites and the mainstream media.  On one side you  had the unorganized snarky bloggers prone to fits of fanboy narcissism and possessing a wicked sense of entitlement.  On the other you had the very metered, traditional, cerebral film press who traditionally rose above the more juvenile bile spewing tactics in favor of a more educated approach to criticism. 

The line has become blurred over the years as mainstream press outlets have been hemorrhaging readership and the online film websites have slowly gone from guerrilla journalism into a more publicist friendly outlet for studio shills hawking their product at attending press junkets.  As the line between professional film writer and online blogger became blurry, there were still those mainstream outlets that tried to maintain a sense of dignity when their online peers were employing tabloid tactics hacking television executive websites for academy award nominees or trying to sell their screenplays.

Credibility is all these mainstream film outlets had going for them.  Like many publications, the mainstream press are abandoning logic and common sense in favor or tabloid style writing guaranteed to elicit a reaction.  And using that logic it's easy to understand why Time Magazine named Cloud Atlas the Worst Movie of 2012.

First off, let me declare that I was no fan of Cloud Atlas [read my review here].  I thought it was mediocre, uneven, and a tragically over produced piece of unintentionally amusing tripe.  I struggled to maintain focus while watching it.  I marveled at the hilariously terrible make up and grade school philosophy being spoon fed to me.  And yet, I think I can think of films that were worse than Cloud Atlas.

If nothing else, Cloud Atlas should be spared for the effort to create something unique. It's the product of lofty goals and a grand design that ultimately falls flat.  The same could be said of Time's choice for the second worst film of the year: John Carter.  Another overpriced, empty epic that failed to ignite.  There are many, many criticisms that could be launched at these two films.  But 'Worst of the Year'?  Time film critic Mary Pols is just the latest writer to abandon logic and reason in favor of grand, sweeping statements guaranteed to stir the pot.  This is the kind of grandstanding usually reserved for the fanboy sites like Ain't It Cool News or Badass Digest.  These are not the musings of a film writer with any level of respect for cinema as an art, or cinema as a craft.  These are the kind of poorly thought out shock statements of someone desperate to remain relevant as the print medium dies a slow and painful death. 

I don't know how many movies Mary Pols saw this year.  I'm guessing it was a pretty significant number.  Can Cloud Atlas really be worse than Adam Sandler's woeful comedy That's My Boy? Or the found footage awfulness of The Devil Inside? The anemic thriller The Cold Light of Day? I mean, if you're going to rough up a Taylor Kitsch film, couldn't you have gone with the truly terrible BattleshipAtlas Shrugged II: The StrikeOne for the Money

Picking Cloud Atlas and John Carter feels so ridiculously easy.  Populist choices for an out of touch publication that has seen far better days.

It pains me because I have to sit here and defend Cloud Atlas, and I didn't even like it.  Still, I'm smart enough to know the difference between 'truly awful' and 'well intended', even if Mary Pols and Time Magazine isn't.

Anghus Houvouras

Video trailer for Marvel NOW!'s Avengers #1

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Following the conclusion of Avengers vs. X-Men, the Marvel Universe is receiving a makeover with the Marvel NOW! initiative, and today sees the arrival of one of the highest profile titles, Avengers #1, from the creative team of team of writer Jonathan Hickman (Fantastic Four) and artist Jerome Opena (Uncanny X-Force). To promote the release, Marvel has debuted a video trailer for the hotly-anticipated series via Bleeding Cool, and you can check it out below...

It’s a new day and a new beginning for the Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, with a brand new team that’s bigger and better than ever before! And they won’t just be ‘Earth’s Mightiest Heroes’, either – when the galaxy is in danger, the Avengers will answer the call!

The greatest heroes in comics together on one unbeatable team! Now shipping twice a month, the Avengers “go large,” expanding their roster and their sphere of influence to a global and even interplanetary level. When Captain America puts out his call - who will answer? Big threats, big ideas, big idealism - these are the Avengers NOW!




IDW Limited releases first Transformers Collection

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Transformers: The IDW Collection, Volume 1 Deluxe Limited Edition is being released making use of the multi-tiered rarity approach featuring Red, Black and Blue Label editions signed by  E.J. Su, Casey Coller, Alex Milne, Marcelo Matere, Simon Furman and Shane McCarthy. For those who buy the Black Label Edition they will be able to choose their own original artwork from Milne, Matere or Coller.  10 Blue Label copies will include full-colour illustrations from E.J. Su.

“Fans of the Transformers brand are going to be blown away at the lengths we’ve gone to for this special edition,” says Jerry Bennington, the IDW Limited Director. “Red Label buyers will be happy to know that every copy of this book is signed by six highly talented Transformers artists and writers. There’s no other way to own something that’s been touched by all these influential and talented creators. And the art on display here is absolutely top notch. These guys have outdone themselves, any piece in these Black and Blue Label editions would be right at home on the cover of the next Transformers comic.”

Transformers: The IDW Collection, Volume 1 Deluxe Limited Edition is now available for pre-order at http://idwlimited.com/series/transformers.html. In addition to the IDW Collection series, deluxe limited edition versions of Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers and Transformers: The Art of the Fall of Cybertron are in development for early 2013.

Skyfall climbs back to the top of the UK box office chart

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UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 30th November to Sunday 2nd December 2012...

In its sixth weekend of release, Skyfallovertook The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 to return to the top of the UK box office with £2.28m for a grand total of £93.77m at the close of play on Sunday. 007's latest adventure has subsequently surpassed James Cameron's Avatar to become the highest-grossing film of all-time here in the UK with £94,277,162 after just 40 days in play. At this rate, Skyfall looks set to become the first film to crack £100m on these shores and could go on to top $1 billion globally, which would make it only the fourteenth release to do so (and the third this year after The Avengers andThe Dark Knight Rises).

Despite being knocked down into second, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 also broke a record of its own, with a three-week take of £31.37m setting a franchise high. The final instalment in the vampire romance series has also become the sixth film to top £30m in the UK this year after The Avengers, The Dark Knight Rises, Ice Age: Continental Drift, Skyfall and Ted.

In third place is the first of three newcomers, with the CG animated adventure Rise of the Guardians opening with a decent enough £1,968,984 and knocking Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger! and Silver Linings Playbook down one spot apiece to fourth and fifth respectively. Mike Newell's Great Expectations underperformed in sixth, pulling in just £544,636 in its opening weekend, although it wasn't quite as bad as the returns for fellow new releases Alex Cross (£226,780) and Trouble with the Curve (£41,316), neither of which managed to make an impact in the chart.

In seventh place is another new arrival, the Bollywood neo-noir thriller Talaash, which debuted with an impressive £389,522 from just 79 screens. Ben Affleck's Argoheld firm in eighth, while cop thriller End of Watch fell two places to ninth, leaving the animated sequel Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted to round out the chart in tenth in its seventh weekend.

Number one this time last year: Arthur Christmas

1. Skyfall, £2,275,469 weekend; £93,769,331 total (6 weeks)
2. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2, £2,180,909 weekend; £31,373,440 total (3 weeks)
3. Rise of the Guardians, £1,968,984 weekend (New)
4. Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger!, £1,204,066 weekend; £3,165,716 total (2 weeks)
5. Silver Linings Playbook, £749,055 weekend; £2,705,416 total (2 weeks)
6. Great Expectations, £544,636 weekend (New)
7. Talaash, £389,522 weekend (New)
8. Argo, £338,545 weekend; £4,538,400 total (4 weeks)
9. End of Watch, £306,005 weekend; £1,356,870 total (2 weeks)
10. Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, £263,163 weekend; £21,755,873 total (7 weeks)

Incoming...

Today saw the release of director Martin McDonagh's (In Bruges) latest, Seven Pyschopaths (cert. 15), which features Colin Farrell, Sam Rockwell, Christopher Walken and Woody Harrelson [read our review here], while Friday's newcomers include The Man with the Iron Fists (cert. 18), The Oranges (cert. 15), So Undercover (cert. 12A), I, Anna (cert. 15), Confession of a Child of the Century (cert. TBC), Celeste and Jesse Forever (cert. 15) [read our review here] and a limited reissue of the 1984 classic Gremlins (cert. 15).

A new poster for G.I. Joe: Retaliation arrives online

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Having being unceremoniously pushed back from its original summer 2012 release date, the newly-converted-to-3D G.I. Joe: Retaliation is now just under four months away from release and Paramount Pictures has now resumed the marketing campaign for the action sequel by debuting a brand new theatrical poster via the official Facebook page:


Directed by Jon M. Chu (whose credits include Step Up 2: The Streets, Step Up 3D and Justin Bieber: Never Say Never), G.I. Joe: Retaliation sees Channing Tatum (Duke), Ray Park (Snake Eyes), Lee Byung-hun (Storm Shadow), Arnold Vosloo (Zartan) and Jonathan Pryce (The US President) all reprising their roles from 2009's G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. Newcomers to the cast include Dwayne Johnson (Journey 2: The Mysterious Island) as Roadblock, Bruce Willis (The Expendables 2) as Colonel Joseph Colton, Elodie Yung (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) as Jinx, D.J. Cotrona (Dear John) as Flint, Adrianne Palicki (Red Dawn) as Lady Jaye, Ray Stevenson (Thor) as Firefly, Stephen Martines (General Hospital) as Cross-Country, RZA (The Man with the Iron Fists) as Blind Master, Eddie Hargitay (The Superagent) as Tunnel Rat, Joseph Mazzello (Jurassic Park) as Mouse and Walton Goggins (Django Unchained) as Warden Nigel James.

G.I. Joe: Retaliation will hit cinemas on March 27th, 2013... unless Paramount decides to upconvert it to 48fps at the last minute.

First look at Harrison Ford in Ender’s Game

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Director Gavin Hood (X-Men Origins: Wolverine) has recently given an interview to EW about his forthcoming film Ender’s Game, which is based on Orson Scott Card’s very popular 1985 sci-fi novel. Set in the future, Ender's Game finds Earth at war with an insectoid race named the Formics and follows Ender, a very gifted and talented child who is one of a group of children being trained at a battle school in the arts of war through increasingly difficult games.

The film stars Harrison Ford (Raiders of the Lost Ark) as Colonel Graff and rising star Asa Butterfield (Hugo) as Ender, one of the new recruits due to be trained. Thanks to EW, we have our first glimpse of the two characters in action:


Bearing in mind the popularity of the novel, there are high expectations in Hollywood for the adaptation of Ender’s Game and a key element of the story will be the relationship between Graff and Ender. “The relationship between [Harrison] and Asa was very close,” explains Hood. “But he didn’t overly befriend him off the set. He helped Asa by allowing that slight sense of intimidation to be there.”

Ender’s Game also stars Ben Kingsley (Iron Man 3), Viola Davis (The Help) and Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine), and is due to be released in cinemas on November 1st, 2013.

New buddy cop TV drama from Jamie Foxx announced

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Jamie Foxx is certainly having a good year; his new film, Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained, is due to be released this month, and he has also been confirmed as Electro in  The Amazing Spider-Man 2 from director Marc Webb. We still have to wait a while to catch a glimpse of Foxx as the Marvel villain, with the Spider-Man sequel scheduled to be released on April 18th , 2014, but in the meantime Deadline has revealed that the actor has found time to develop a new TV show with TNT called Hit.

Co-written by Foxx and Robert Port (Numbers), the new show centres on two former high school football teammates and best friends — one a QB, one a WR -– who years later are “drafted” by the Miami P.D. and assigned to the High Impact Team (H.I.T). The same shorthand that made them unstoppable on the gridiron makes them great partners taking down the most dangerous criminals in the city.

The versatile singer/songwriter, actor and comedian is no stranger to television having started his career on the small screen in shows like In Living Color and Hangin' with Mr Cooper, as well as his own comedy TV series The Jamie Foxx Show. Foxx and Port will serve as executive producers on Hit, but there's no news as to whether the actor will make an appearance in the new show.

Wonder Woman and Superboy captured on DVD

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The Warner Archive Collection is hoping to lasso Christmas shoppers on December 11th, 2012 by releasing a pair of fanboy-centric DC Comic properties on DVD.

Though many associate Lynda Carter as the small screen incarnation of Wonder Woman, a tennis pro pursuing her acting ambitions starred in the original 1974 television pilot; Cathy Lee Crosby portrayed the Amazon Princess as superspy rather than superhero who seeks to thwart Richardo Montalban (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan) from stealing ultra-secret code books resulting in her discovering an Amazon sister-in-exile played by Anitra Ford.

Superboy: The Complete Second Season (1989 to 1990) features the adventures of Gerard Christopher as the younger Kal-El who has to battle villains Metallo, Bizarro, Mr. Mxyzptlk, Yellow Peri and Lex Luther who marries the Kryptonian's high school sweetheart Lana Lang.  The cast of guest stars includes 007 veterans George Lazenby (On Her Majesty’s Secret Service) and Britt Ekland (The Man With the Golden Gun) as Jor-El and Lara; Philip Michael Thomas (Miami Vice) as Brimstone; Michael Callan (Cat Ballou) as Metallo; Michael J. Pollard (Bonnie & Clyde) as Mr. Mxyzptik; as wellas Key Luke (Kung Fu), George Chakaris (West Side Story), Richard Kiel(The Spy Who Loved Me), Gilbert Gottfried (Aladdin) and George Maharis (Route 66).

Presented in their original 4x3 1:37 aspect ratio both titles can be purchased via warnerarchive.com and other major online retailers.



The most overpaid actors in Hollywood

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After a string of flops such as Imagine That, A Thousand Words and Meet Dave, Eddie Murphy has found himself in the unenviable position of being named 'Hollywood's Most Overpaid Actor', topping Forbes magazine's list of low-to-no-value-for-money A-listers.

The magazine has gathered box office data for the last three non-animation movies for each actor over the previous three years and divided this by their upfront and backend fees to calculate a "return on investment" number, which shows how much a studio earns for each dollar invested.

According to this formula, Murphy has made $2.30 for every $1 he's been paid - in fairness, that's still a pretty healthy profit, and probably goes some way to explaining how Murphy is still finding work, despite the fact he's only made a couple of decent films since his heyday in the 1980s.

Here's the top ten in full...

1. Eddie Murphy - $2.30
2. Katherine Heigl - $3.40
3. Reese Witherspoon - $3.90
4. Sandra Bullock - $5
5. Jack Black - $5.20
6. Nicolas Cage - $6
7. Adam Sandler - $6.30
8. Denzel Washington - $6.30
9. Ben Stiller - $6.50
10. Sarah Jessica Parker - $7



First teaser trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness

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Paramount Pictures has released the first footage from J.J. Abrams' hotly-anticipated and hugely-secretive sci-fi sequel Star Trek Into Darkness, with iTunes debuting a rather splendid one-minute 'online exclusive' teaser trailer which should leave both Trekkers and non-Trekkers giddy with anticipation for the film's arrival this coming May.

Star Trek Into Darkness reunites Abrams with the cast of his 2009 reboot, with Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Karl Urban, Zoe Saldana, Simon Pegg, John Cho and Anton Yelchin all returning to crew the USS Enterprise as they square off against Benedict Cumberbatch's (Sherlock) as-yet-unrevealed villain. Also joining the cast of the sequel are Alice Eve (Men in Black 3), Peter Weller (RoboCop), Nazneen Contractor (24), Noel Clarke (Doctor Who) and Nolan North (Young Justice).

A new theatrical trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness is set to accompany The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey in cinemas next week, while the first nine minutes of the film will be attached to IMAX prints of Peter Jackson's epic fantasy. Perhaps one of those will answer the question that's on everyone's lips - just who the hell is Benedict Cumberbatch playing?


Update - Here's a Japanese version of the trailer, which features an extra snippet of footage very reminiscent of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan:


Star Trek Into Darkness is set for release on May 17th, 2013.

Casey Affleck set for Boston Strangler

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It appears that Ben Affleck’s love affair with his hometown of Boston has rubbed off on his younger brother Casey. According to Deadline, Warner Bros. have acquired Boston Strangler based on a pitch by Casey Affleck and writer Chuck Maclean (Storming Las Vegas).

Affleck will serve as executive producer and likely star in the true story of the serial murders that claimed more than a dozen women's lives in Boston in the early 1960s. Albert DeSalv, was later arrested and confessed to the crimes, although there's significant doubt as to whether or not he was the only party involved.

The film follows an ambitious detective who is willing to risk career and life in a race to bring down the most notorious sexual predator of the day, while battling a political cover-up by corrupt politicians and lawyers trying to save their careers.

Ben Affleck’s affinity with Boston is clear, with the actor / director having directed Gone Baby Gone and The Town, both of which were set in his birth place of Boston. Casey Affleck also starred in Gone Baby Gone and will now make his return to Boston with this new thriller.

Kristen Wiig in talks to join Anchorman: The Legend Continues

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Comedian Kristen Wiig (Bridesmaids) is in talks to join the cast of the much anticipated comedy sequel Anchorman: The Legend Continues.

According to The Wrap, the actress is in talks to play a new love interest for Ron Burgundy, and would join Will Ferrell (Step Brothers), Steve Carell (The 40 Year Old Virgin), Paul Rudd (This is 40) and David Koechner (Get Smart) who are all returning to reprise their roles as the news men at a San Francisco TV station. The much anticipated return of Ron Burgundy and his band of merry men is set for next year with Adam McKay (The Other Guys) returning to helm the film and Judd Apatow (Knocked Up) producing.

Wiig has a busy schedule of her own and will soon be seen in the forthcoming The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, directed by and starring Ben Stiller. The film centres on a timid magazine photo manager who lives life vicariously through daydreams, but then one day embarks on a true-life adventure when a negative goes missing. The actress also stars in The Skeleton Twins alongside Luke Wilson and will lend her voice to two animated sequels, Despicable Me 2 and How to Train Your Dragon 2.

Thoughts on the first teaser trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness

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Luke Owen discusses the first teaser trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness...

It’s a real testament to J.J. Abrams and his team that in this day and age they have managed to keep so much of Star Trek Into Darkness shrouded in secrecy. Even after the announcement of his casting many moons ago, we’re still really unsure just who Benedict Cumberbatch’s (Sherlock) character is. Is he Khan? Is he Gary Mitchell? Well, with the release of the trailer today, we still don't know.

The Star Trek Into Darkness trailer is what I would call a pretty generic teaser trailer that is very similar to the Iron Man 3 trailer (which in itself was very similar to The Dark Knight Rises trailer). Benedict Cumberbatch’s deep voice looms over footage from the film promising Gotham’s reckoningthe end of superheroes vengeance on the world, while we are treated to some pretty spectacular and stunning visuals. It may be becoming a standard forumla for trailers, but you can't argue when Cumberbatch's voice sounds that cool.

While the trailer has given us no more clues to plot or character, it has shown that the film will not be short on action. Not a single shot goes by where something isn’t blowing up or people are flying across the screen from something blowing up. Cynical though I may be about the format of the trailer, when it works it works - and here it really works. We know little of who he is, but we do know that Benedict Cumberbatch means business.

J.J. Abrams surprised a lot of people with his pseudo-reboot of the Star Trek franchise back in 2009 which left a lot of fans begging for more. From looking at the reactions on YouTube (the place to get some great insights), fans are loving this trailer and loving Cumberbatch. It’s almost amazing to think that his name could have more marquee value than the Star Trek title.

You could say that the trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness offers nothing new and is incredibly generic, but you could never say that it’s low on action or awesome looking visuals. I guess we’ll have to wait until the full trailer is released to get some of our unanswered questions, but this does what it needs to do – tease us.


Luke Owen is a freelance copywriter working for Europe’s biggest golf holiday provider as their web content executive.

Dennis Haysbert joins Sin City: A Dame to Kill For

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Dennis Haysbert (24, The Unit) is set to replace the late Michael Clarke Duncan, who sadly passed away in September, in the Robert Rodriguez directed sequel Sin City: A Dame to Kill For. The majority of the original cast are set to reprise their roles in the film, which is based on the comic series by Frank Miller. Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler), Jessica Alba (Fantastic Four), Jaime King (Pearl Harbor) and Rosario Dawson (Seven Pounds) are amongst the stars that have signed up for the much anticipated sequel.

One of the storylines being adapted is A Dame to Kill For, which was originally published in 1993 and sees Dwight (portayed by Clive Owen in Sin City) entangled in a complicated and deadly relationship with a femme fatale named Ava. Haysbert will be stepping into the role of Manute, the brutal and seemingly unstoppable right-hand man of Ava’s husband, who was originally played in Sin City by Michael Clarke Duncan

In a statement to THR, Rodriguez commented:-

"Manute is a character that has been part of the heart of the Sin City tales, and the late Michael Clarke Duncan beautifully established that role onscreen... We could not tell the story of Sin City: A Dame to Kill For without Manute and are thrilled to welcome Dennis Haysbert to the cast."
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