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Idris Elba to make directorial debut with The Pavement Psychologist

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From Hackney to Hollywood, Idris Elba has certainly established himself as an A-List actor having starred in blockbusters such as Thor and Prometheus, as well as Guillermo del Toro’s much-anticipated Pacific Rim. Elba also enjoys a successful television career with his hit TV show Luther, but not being satisfied with being a star of the big and small screen, the British actor is now set to step behind the camera.

According to a Sky TV report, Idris will make his directorial debut with a script also written by himself for a Sky Arts Playhouse Presents... feature called The Pavement Psychologist. The 30-minute drama will chronicle the intriguing relationship between an affable businesswoman and a charismatic homeless man, played by Anna Friel (Public Enemies) and Nonso Anozie (Game of Thrones) respectively. Steven Mackintosh (Luther) is set to star as an office colleague of Anna Friel's character and Reggie Yates (Doctor Who) will also feature as Friel's stylish assistant.

The Pavement Chronicles joins a host of other acclaimed Playhouse Presents... dramas and comedies that have seen talents like Emma Thompson portray Queen Elizabeth II in Walking the Dogs, as well as Jon Hamm and Daniel Radcliffe appearing in the miniseries A Young Doctor's Notebook.

The Pavement Psychologist will be broadcast later in the year.

Josh Brolin and Chris Meloni join Sin City: A Dame to Kill For

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Josh Brolin Sin City A Dame to Kill For
Hot on the heels of the recent news that Joseph Gordon-Levitt (The Dark Knight Rises, Looper) has joined the much-anticipated Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, we have some further casting news on the Robert Rodriguez (Machete Kills) and Frank Miller (The Spirit) directed sequel.

Dimension Films has now announced that Academy Award nominee Josh Brolin (Gangster Squad, Milk) has also joined the cast and will play Dwight. Brolin will replace Clive Owen, who portrayed the character in the 2005 original.

"Dwight is a constant character throughout the Sin City world and 'A Dame To Kill For' is a defining episode in his life. We're looking forward to Josh's take on Dwight," said Rodriguez and Miller.

Meanwhile, according to Deadline, Chris Meloni (Law & Order: SVU) is also joining the cast; however, no official announcement has been made as of yet and no specifics have been given as to his purported role, except that he is set to play one of the leads and that his character is a police officer.

Sin City: A Dame to Kill For is scheduled for release on October 4th.

Special Features - Looking back at The Muppet movies

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David Bishop looks back at the Muppet movie franchise...

The Muppets

It’s hard to imagine now, but The Muppets started on television way back in the 1970s. The fact that it has endured for this long is a testament to just how timeless these loveable bits of felt and fur are. Between 1979 and 2011, no less than eight Muppet movies were released, with another one now on the way. Having watched all of these back-to-back, it’s surprising just how well they have stood the test of time. The humour is by turns silly, anarchic, ironic and dry as a bone. It really does appeal to both adults and children and not in any ironic way either. It seems everyone can genuinely love the Muppets.

In 1979, The Muppet Movie was the first in the series to be released and still remains one of the best. While singing away in his natural habitat, a swamp, Kermit the Frog is approached by a Hollywood agent and convinced to go to the Land of Dreams and become a huge star. Along the way, he picks up Fozzie Bear, Gonzo the… whatever (with Camilla the Chicken) and, of course, Miss Piggy. Crazy hijinks ensue as they are chased by Doc Hopper, a fast-food restaurant tycoon, intent on using Kermit the Frog to promote his new frog’s legs restaurant chain.

The plot is immaterial; what you’re watching The Muppet Movie for is the gags, and they come thick and fast. The film is very aware of its own absurdity and isn’t above going for the cheap gags (a fork in the road). That the jokes are pretty much spot-on each time is a testament to the quality of the screenplay and the enduring nature of the characters. Gonzo and Fozzie, as always, are the highlights.

The second film, The Great Muppet Caper, isn't quite in the same league as its predecessor. The plot, involving Kermit and Fozzie as newspaper reporters trying to figure out who is going to steal a precious diamond, ties itself in knots. While the story of The Muppet Movie allows the Muppets to get involved in increasingly stupid situations with plenty of jokes, Muppet Caper is a bit more plodding. There’s a constant need to move the plot along, which isn't helped by a lag in the middle with far too much time spent on the Kermit/Miss Piggy romance. The Muppets partly worked due to the sheer onslaught of gags but this one gets a bit bogged down. It’s not that it’s a bad film, just a bit of a misstep.

The Muppets take Manhattan is a return to form. While not as ground breaking as the first film, the story is better suited to the Muppets style of comedy than Caper. This time Kermit and Co go to Manhattan in an attempt to put on a Broadway Musical. However, they find the task a lot more difficult than they imagined. Soon they run out of money and the friendships within the group become increasingly strained.

This one has a lot of similarities with the new Muppet film, with the gang in a race against time to put on a performance. This actually works very well, providing some great character moments, particular with the Muppets splitting up and attempting to make it on their own. Rowlf running a dog kennel and Fozzie trying to hibernate for the winter are particular highlights. It also has a brilliant gag about 3D, courtesy of the Swedish Chef and some popcorn.

The next one is probably the most well-loved and enduring of the series and it’s easy to see why. The Muppet Christmas Carol is, probably, the only Christmas movie to rival It’s a Wonderful Life.  A perfect re-telling of the Charles Dickens classic, with Kermit as Bob Cratchit and, a rarely better, Michael Caine as Scrooge. The songs are memorable, the dialogue spot-on and the direction faultless. It’s also the most visually ambitious of the Muppet movies, from the opening shots of London to the scenes of the Ghost of Christmas Future in the graveyard, there’s a real cinematic sheen at work here.

Director Brian (son of Jim) Henson did such a good job with Christmas Carol that he was hired for The Muppets next adventure, Muppets Treasure Island. Good thing too because this is every bit as entertaining as the previous entry. As with Christmas Carol, this is mainly down to some inspired human casting in the form of Tim Curry who hams it up nicely and almost runs away with the entire film.

There’s a great sense of adventure and ambition with this one. Instead of treading on water and phoning it in with cash-in sequels, the filmmakers are genuinely attempting to do something different with each instalment, and the love and attention to detail is evident in every frame. Again, we’re treated to memorable songs, a pacey script and plenty of gags which work for both children and adults.

Sadly, things take a slight downward spiral with the next instalment. While not as bad as it sounds, Muppets From Space does feel a bit cheap and lazy, especially compared with the previous two instalments. There’s a real sense that the popularity of the Muppets is dwindling and not as much money is being thrown at the productions. It doesn't help that Jeffrey Tambor is not the greatest bit of casting in a Muppet film. However, the biggest problem is the explanation of what Gonzo is. One of the greatest running gags of the series has been that no one, not even Gonzo, knows what he is. Having this explained (guess what, he’s from space), does kind of ruin this. It’s best to ignore this entry in all honesty, even if it is mildly diverting.

However, it’s nowhere near as awful as the made for TV oddity, The Muppets' Wizard of Oz starring Ashanti and featuring a bizarre cameo from none other than Quentin Tarantino. It’s badly filmed, not in the slightest bit funny and has a nasty, cheap feeling which is in complete contrast to the rest of the series. Avoid this at all costs.

By this point the franchise was pretty much dead. Thank heavens for How I Met Your Mother star Jason Segel. Making this his pet project, and co-writing the film with Nicholas Stoller, Segel brings the Muppets into the 21st Century in fine style and produces one of the best entries in the series.

Everything about this is spot-on, with Bret McKenzie writing the songs (there’s a very Flight of the Conchords vibe about this, which is perfectly in synch with the humour of the Muppets) to the casting (Amy Adams, Chris Cooper and Segel are all perfect). There’s a clear love of the characters, and even if you’re not laughing, you’ll have a huge grin on your face. If it couldn't get any better, there are also fart shoes.

Thankfully with huge box office success and winning an Oscar for best original song, the Muppets are well and truly back. Director James Bobin is back for the sequel, with Ricky Gervais taking over the human lead role. Long may the Muppets continue.

David Bishop

Comic Book Review - The Hollows #2

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Luke Owen reviews the second issue of The Hollows...

"When living above the chaos and soul-stealing “hollows” is no longer an option, can Kobayashi manage to rise above the impending doom that surrounds he and his loved ones…?"

I was highly praising of Chris Ryall and Sam Keith’s first issue of The Hollows as it was by far one of the best comics I had read all month. So it was with great anticipation that I got my copy of The Hollows #2 to see if it could maintain its brilliance.

While certainly not as good as the first issue, The Hollows #2 is a really great read with a compelling story (what little there is of it) and some unique and interesting artwork. Keith’s sketch style drawing really adds to the world that Ryall has created with beautiful landscape shots of the tree-based cities as well as the lower ground slums and The Hollows that surround it. However it doesn’t always work as some panels just end up looking unfinished with a lack of colour or definition which does distract from what is otherwise a faultlessly drawn comic.

I mentioned earlier that there is little story in this issue and that really did hamper my enjoyment of it. Whereas the first issue had some intricate backstories, good character and plot development, The Hollows #2 sort of meanders along to its closing panel which sets up (what I imagine will be) the more exciting third issue. We get a brief glimpse of Kobayashi’s relationship with his wife and his children before being flung back into his friendship with Lani, which in turn also doesn’t get a lot of panel-time. Aside from that, there really isn’t a whole lot more to The Hollows #2.

There was a lot missing, but The Hollows #2 still had me until the final panel and left me wanting more. I can’t quite put my finger on what makes this comic so enticing just yet, but I’m sure by the final panel of The Hollows #3, I should know. Not the greatest comic you’ll ever pick up, but definitely worth a read.

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

First look at Katniss and Finnick in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

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Hunger Games fans will be very much looking forward to the forthcoming release of The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, the hotly-anticipated sequel to the 2012 blockbuster, and thanks to the new issue of Entertainment Weekly we now have a couple of first look images featuring two of its stars, Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook) and Sam Claflin (Snow White and the Huntsman), as Katniss Everdeen and Finnick Odair:

Jennifer Lawrence and Sam Claflin in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire



The sequel begins with Katniss having returned home safe after winning the 74th annual Hunger Games along with fellow tribute Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson). Winning means that they must turn around and leave their family and close friends, embarking on a "Victor's Tour" of the districts. Along the way Katniss senses that a rebellion is simmering, but the Capitol is still very much in control as President Snow (Donald Sutherland) prepares the 75th Annual Hunger Games (The Quarter Quell) - a competition that could change Panem forever.

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is directed by Francis Lawrence (I Am Legend) and boasts an impressive cast including Josh Hutcherson (The Kids are All Right), Liam Hemsworth (The Last Song), Lenny Kravitz (Precious), Elizabeth Banks (Man on a Ledge), Stanley Tucci (The Lovely Bones), Donald Sutherland (The Italian Job), Toby Jones (The Girl), Woody Harrelson (Rampart) and Philip Seymour Hoffman (The Master). The sequel is due to be released on November 22nd.

Movie Review - Lincoln (2012)

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Lincoln, 2012

Directed by Steven Spielberg.

Starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, David Strathairn, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, James Spader, Hal Holbrook, Tommy Lee Jones,John Hawkes, Jackie Earle Haley, Bruce McGill and Tim Blake Nelson.

Steven Spielberg Lincoln movie poster

SYNOPSIS:

President Abraham Lincoln attempts to amend the American Constitution to abolish slavery before the Civil War comes to an end.

Daniel Day-Lewis in Lincoln

Long in development, Steven Spielberg finally brings his Abraham Lincoln project to the big screen with Daniel Day-Lewis (My Left Foot) playing the title character rather than the originally attached Liam Neeson (Taken).  Rather than cover the entire life of the 16th President of the United States, Spielberg has elected to explore the last six months before he was assassinated.  Hired to write the screenplay was playwright Tony Kushner who first collaborated with the Academy Award-winning filmmaker on another historical picture Munich (2005).  Serving as the main source material for Kushner is the biography Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln authored by Doris Kearns Goodwin which chronicles the political deal-making orchestrated by the leader of the White House.

Central to the story is the struggle to pass in the House of Representatives the 13th Amendment to the American Constitution which would legally abolish slavery.  Complicating matters is that the Civil War is drawing to a close.  If a peace treaty is signed before the legislation comes into the law the political willingness to do so will be lost as it was based on the fact that bringing about the freedom of the Negroes in the South would end the bloody conflict.  Troubled by a son (Gordon Joseph-Levitt) who wants to enlist for military duty before the fighting is over, a wife (Sally Field) who is haunted by the public duty that goes along with being a presidential spouse which she holds responsible for fatally neglecting a sick child, and a divided political party which sees him foolishly jeopardising his public popularity, Abraham Lincoln navigates these obstacles with a penchant of telling stories and a gravitas of a self-educated man who has never forgotten his humble beginnings.

While acclaimed actors like Anthony Hopkins (Instinct), Sean Penn (Shanghai Surprise), and Robert De Niro (City by the Sea) have gone on automatic pilot for some of their performances over the years, the same thing cannot be said of Daniel Day-Lewis who becomes a chameleon with every cinematic character he portrays; the British thespian literally looks and acts like Abraham Lincoln by the imitating the tone of his voice and the physical mannerisms.  I have my doubts that Liam Neeson could have completely inhabit the role as Day-Lewis is able to achieve.  Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive) also stands out for his part as the crafty and wry witted Radical Republican Congressional leader Thaddeus Stevens.  Sally Field is good but saddled with the typical role of the disgruntled wife or girlfriend whose purpose is to add trouble on the home front for the protagonist.  Also the storyline featuring Gordon Joseph-Levitt could be easily extracted without the viewer noticing.  

What really works well is the storyline featuring John Hawkes (The Sessions) and his colleagues who are responsible for procuring the necessary votes to pass the 13th Amendment; their misadventures provide much need comic relief to movie.  To his credit Steven Spielberg, like his leading man, shows restraint by letting the action come to the camera rather than making dramatic sweeping shots.  The action is dialogue driven and the majority of the scenes take place indoors which greatly benefits from theatrical stage experience of Tony Kushner.  Whereas Amistad (1997) became bogged down by the heavy subject matter of slavery, Lincoln is liberated by it as the cinematic chemistry between Spielberg and Daniel Day-Lewis is truly an Oscar-worthy affair. 

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


Arnold Schwarzenegger talks The Legend of Conan and Triplets

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Arnold Schwarzenegger King Conan
After a supporting role in last year's action ensemble The Expendables 2, Arnold Schwarzenegger's screen comeback steps up a gear this month with the release of Kim Jee-Woon's The Last Stand. The action icon has several original projects on his upcoming slate (including The Tomb and Ten), after which he's due to head back to the Hyborian Age, reprising the role of Robert E. Howard's Conan the Cimmerian for the fantasy sequel The Legend of Conan. During a press conference for The Last Stand, I Am Rogue caught up with Arnie and managed to grab a few words about how The Legend of Conan has come about.

"Let me just say that a lot of it has to do with timing. That's what show business and politics have in common. It's a lot of it is timing, and I think that I would've chosen to do Conan already if it would've been ready, but the Universal studio just bought the rights to Conan, they have an executive over there that happens to be a big believer in bringing back that character, and Universal was the first one to do the movie with Dino DeLaurentiis, and now they want to be back and do a bunch of Conan movies, but do it high-quality, not as a B-movie, to do it high-quality like the first one was John Milius directed and Dino DeLaurentiis produced and Universal has presented. So they want to go back to that. So that will be ready by sometime this year."

While it's expected that Schwarzenegger will eventually reprise his signature role of the Terminator for Terminator 5 (assuming it ever gets off the ground), there's another sequel that seems to be high on his list of priorities - that of Triplets, the follow-up to the hit 1988 comedy Twins. The film would reunite Arnie with Danny DeVito (Batman Returns) and director Ivan Reitman (Ghostbusters), with Eddie Murphy (Beverly Hills Cop) set to join the 'fun' alongside Julius and Vincent.

"I have been trying to get Universal Studios to do [Triplets] for ten years," said Schwarzenegger, who surely should have been more concerned about governing California over the past decade. "The studio executives that were there up until recently did not see the value, but now the new leadership sees the value and says, 'This is a brilliant idea, why haven't they done it? We want to do that.' And so they hire the writers and they are full-blast ahead. And that's a movie that we will be doing. So it depends on the timing. Sometimes there's projects that are not available and then other times they are. But I would say in general you always kind of make decisions based on what movie would be interesting for people to see, what is it that the audience out there wants to see me do. And based on that you make decisions."

Okay then, hands up - who wants to see Triplets?

Deirdre O'Kane to star in British biopic Noble

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Irish stand-up comic and actress Deirdre O'Kane (Intermission, Inside I'm Dancing) is set to star in the British biopic Noble at Destiny Films. Itfocuses on the life of Christina Noble, who overcame a harsh childhood in Ireland to set up a children's foundation and help street children in Vietnam and Mongolia.

The film is being directed by Stephen Bradley (Boy Eats Girl, The Tale of Sweety Barrett) from his own script and he is also producing along with Melanie Gore-Grimes and exec producer Michael J. Hunt.Production begins on Noblethis week in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. It will shoot there for four weeks before moving to Liverpool until March.

The biopic also stars Liam Cunningham (Safe House, The Guard), Brendan Coyle (The Raven, Perrier's Bounty), Ruth Negga (Breakfast on Pluto, Twelve Years a Slave), Nhu Quynh Nguyen (Pearls of the Far East) and Sarah Greene (The Guard).

Movie Review - Gangster Squad (2013)

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Gangster Squad, 2013.

Directed by Ruben Fleischer.
Starring Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, Sean Penn, Michael Pena, Anthony Mackie, Giovanni Ribisi, Robert Patrick, Nick Nolte and Josh Pence.

Gangster Squad movie poster

SYNOPSIS:

Based on a true story, Gangster Squad follows an off-the-books team of LAPD officers trying to take down a ruthless mobster, Mickey Cohen (Penn), in 1949 Los Angeles.

Gangster Squad

There is an eternal air of interest in the mob story. Back in the 1930s and ‘40s the gangster genre was a booming success at the box office. Citizens (mostly those in America) still tackling the crippling debt of the Depression found some odd solace in watching an anti-hero take what everyone wanted – money. The likes of Scarface (the Howard Hawks version), Little Caesar and The Public Enemy highlighted this new breed of man - they were exciting, taboo and fresh. As cinema changed so did the crime film, constantly changing focus from police to the thieves. Gangster Squad is the latest attempt at cashing in on cinemagoers' fascination with cops and criminals and, more specifically, the familiar flashes of Tommy-gun shots and Art Deco backdrops of the City of Angels.

Visually the film is dazzling – exuberant colours, tarnished sets and alluring costumes. Director Ruben Fleischer has clearly studied the aesthetic of these films (from the early classics, the Hollywood Renaissance’s Chinatown to the early ‘90s masterpieces such as L.A. Confidential) and brings a stylish showmanship to the project. Some issues arise in how much Fleischer enjoys brandishing said style; a superfluous Snyder-esque obsession with slow-motion and “interesting” camera angles/set-ups often distract from the story at hand. The scenes that play best are the static shots showing pure violence. If the 1930/40s films had to shy away from brutality and sleaze, Gangster Squad in the 21st Century takes great pleasure in its freedom to do just the opposite. When the butt of a gun is pummeled into a mobster’s face or a round of ammo pounds through a goon, it makes an impact, in frame and out. However, presenting these moments in slow-mo (as Fleischer habitually does) extracts that visceral element and implants a feigned quality.

Buying into the plot is never difficult, though there are moments where capturing the essence of that era requires outdated dialogue. For some these may prove too jarring for a contemporary audience, not wholly aware of the meaning behind such lingo. What’s more, the sheer bravado on show may, at points, appear laughable; a montage scene midway through that boasts unbridled masculinity seems both fun and funny.

Sean Penn as the villain suffers the worst of the script, with lines such as “back home I was a gangster, now I'm GOD”. Despite getting the short end of the straw with the screenplay, Penn does a fantastic job at playing the hot-headed hustler. With sunken eyes that appear to blacken completely, like a great white ready to kill, Penn comes across as a truly malicious figure. Characterised as a man with an army of henchmen, there has been some effort put into the presentation of his men, too. Troy Garity as the snake-like Wrevock earns enough attention to make the Cohen troupe very formidable.

The villains are strongly outfitted, perhaps more so than the leading men – the eponymous Gangster Squad. Josh Brolin as the protagonist has no faults; he fits into the world with perfect ease. His rugged, grizzled manner makes for a great contemporary Bogart. Less can be said for his company, predominantly made up of cliché stock characters. Ryan Gosling, Hollywood’s main man, whilst providing a pretty face to the picture, and some decent quips, meanders through the narrative with a two-dimensional character. The remaining players, such as the token black guy (a charismatic Anthony Mackie), the Mexican half-wit (Michael Pena), the nerdy wire-tapper (Giovanni Ribisi, imbuing the film with some humanity) and the crotchety sharp-shooter (Robert Patrick, still a commanding presence), are given little-to-no introduction and are left with the dreaded omen of “which one will become the victim that pushes these guys to fight for all their worth” hanging over each of their heads. A final mention must go to Emma Stone who blazes up the screen with a fiery magnetism, though sadly that’s all she gets to do. Her chemistry with Gosling is still potent (see Crazy, Stupid, Love for the previous example) but the two share very little screen-time together.

Very glamorous though sometimes tawdry, it has sincerely exemplified the quality of the classic gangster film. Whilst characterisation and script are poorly executed, Gangster Squad is an entertaining piece of cinema. More of a guilty pleasure, it’ll never garner the praise of Fleischer’s muses (unabashedly hinted at throughout, including one scene literally lighting up the frame with a “Chinatown” sign), and will doubtfully gain those films’ immortality.

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

Piers McCarthy - Follow me on Twitter.

George R.R. Martin releases a new chapter from The Winds of Winter

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George R.R. Martin has delivered a treat for fans of his fantasy epic A Song of Ice and Fire by releasing a new sample chapter from the sixth instalment of the series, The Winds of Winter, which you can read over on his website.

"For all of you who have been clamoring, I have a somewhat belated Xmas/ New Year's gift, a new sample chapter from THE WINDS OF WINTER. This one features Arianne Martell, Princess of Dorne," states the author on his LiveJournal. "Read, enjoy, discuss, and speculate to your heart's content... but not here, please, there are better places for that, like the forums at Westeros and Tower of the Hand. Me, I have a lot more writing to do. On WINDS, and half a dozen other projects."

If you're a fan of HBO's Game of Thrones and have been contemplating getting into the books, then you'll have plenty of time to get yourself up to speed before The Winds of Winter hits the shelves. The fifth instalment, A Dance with Dragons, took the best part of six years to arrive, so we should probably expect this next one some time around 2017. Maybe...

The Killing III: Escaping and Entering the Shadow of a Phenomenon

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Paul Risker discusses the third season of the hit Danish crime drama The Killing...

During the latter part of last year, the end seemed to arrive a little sooner than what I was accustomed to. Two foreign crime dramas which had become an integral part of BBC Four’s Saturday evening foreign crime line-up concluded in quick succession. Inspector Montalbano, or the ‘Italian Morse’ finished its run in November, followed in the run up to Christmas by The Killing III. In just over a month, British audiences were forced to say their farewells to two memorable detectives of the crime genre.

Sarah Lund’s departure means that all eyes should now turn to Prime Minister Birgitte Nyborg, the central protagonist of Danish political drama Borgen; the second season of which began airing on BBC Four this previous Saturday. Nyborg is perhaps Lund’s successor, a strong female Dane to follow in the footsteps of the introverted detective, this time in the world of politics that like Lund’s world was one usually male dominated. For the future at least, detective is transposed for politician, ironic in light of Lund’s habit to expose the skeletons and secrets of Denmark’s politicians; one of her many irksome habits to the shows assortment of characters.

Within the context of contemporary television drama, Sarah Lund served as the female protagonist who proudly flew the flag for feminism, asserting that female protagonists could be complex and intriguing characters, anchoring intelligent, at times dark and immersive drama. It would be wrong to suggest that Lund has been a lone example, when in fact she has been supported by Borgen’s Nyborg, The Bridge’s intriguing and socially inept detective Saga Norén, and French television’s inspector Laure Berthaud and lawyer Joséphine Karlsson from Spiral

A short list perhaps, but it does serve to suggest that our Scandinavian neighbours more so than most, are bucking the trend by anchoring their dramas with an array of intriguingly individual female protagonists.

So, Nyborg will be required to simultaneously serve the feminist cause whilst also helping us move on as January gets firmly underway - both as a drama, and as a woman, following Montalbano and Lund’s departure.

In what is a case of coincidence, Borgen serves to remind us of Sarah Lund’s three thrilling cases; instead of helping us retire them to a settled and distant memory. Borgen stars at least four prominent characters that span The Killing’s three seasons: Theis Birk Larsen, the father of season ones murdered girl Nanna Birk Larsen; Lund’s two partners from the first two seasons, actors Søren Malling and Mikael Birkkjær, here playing media editor and Nyborg’s husband; and the incumbent Prime Minister of The Killing III, Kristian Kamper.

The first season of The Killing was a phenomenon, whose narrative of the impact of Nanna Birk Larsen’s murder on an entire community made for compelling television. The expectations for the second season were therefore high, and whereas The Killing had arrived under the radar a surprise hit, it would now have to contend with the challenge of either placating or exceeding expectation for its second run.

I’m reminded of the sports analogy that the greater challenge is sometimes overcoming a memorable victory and not a difficult loss. Whilst full of the twists and turns inherent to a Sarah Lund investigation, and in moments compelling television, season two with its focus on the war abroad and military life struggled to strike the same note as the first series had done through the intimate themes of the impact of a death of a young girl on both the immediate family and the community as a whole; despite a bold and original effort.

In contrast to the fortunes of The Killing II, enough time had passed for what was to be the third and final season to escape the shadow. It seems however that it was never the intention of creator-writer Søren Sveistrup to step away from the first series, but rather step partially into it. Not that it was necessarily his intention to remake season one, so much as it was to reimagine it, to commit an act of self-borrowing, of returning the series to its roots, away from the military and war abroad honed in on in season two, back to the home front.

Parallels between the inaugural and final seasons are there to be drawn. First we have the election, the outcome of which is directly impacted by the investigation. Inevitably the outcome is placed on a knife-edge as the direction of guilt towards incumbent and opposition swings back and forth. Further, the identity of the killers share striking similarities. Both are close family friends, and the relationship to the respective fathers of the murdered Nanna and kidnapped Emilie, leaves one to conclude a lack of originality in the choice of cold blooded killer, the one a re-imagining of an earlier incarnation, builder Vagn Skærbæk transposed for high powered businessman and philanthropist Niels Reinhardt.

However, unlike in season one, it is the incumbent government whose fate lies with the success or failure of the investigation. Whereas season one looked at the impact of the murder of Nanna Birk Larsen on a whole community, season three raises the stakes to explore how a kidnapping impacts not just the outcome of an election, but consequently a country’s economic plan to curb the recession. In The Killing III, the consequences of a present day kidnapping which is motivated by a years old murder, spirals outward to engulf an entire country, decidedly expanding the narrative ambitions of the first season.

Self-borrowing is no great crime. American director Howard Hawks frequently admitted to it, and the re-imagining of plot elements of season one depicts a show discovering its peak at its very end.

The investigation into Birk’s murder spanned twenty episodes, an expansive number compared to ten episodes apiece for the following two seasons. Season one could be accused of struggling to cut to the chase, the writer’s obsession with exploring the impact of a murder on a community, in which they use the continued twists, turns, and red herrings to draw in a wide range of characters, was in hindsight indulgent; themes overriding narrative consideration.

In contrast the finale was an example of mature and succinct storytelling, the creation of a narrative of a wealth of drama across a ten day period, crammed into ten perfectly structured episodes, twisting, turning and throwing us the usual red herrings; lacking the grand indulgences of season one.

One of the strengths of The Killing’s storytelling was its employment of characters to enrich the drama and vice-versa. The melodrama of the personal lives never intruded on the detection side of the narrative, but rather served to enhance it, giving the characters and events an emotional weight, from Birk’s parents’ grief to the revelations of Kamper’s son and his failings as a father.

Lund’s fate it seems shocked many people. Perhaps it always seemed logical that they would kill her off, where she would ascend to the heavens to join the company of numerous iconic fictional characters.

In that singular moment Sveistrup’s heroine shows her moral conviction, when trapped within the constraints of a justice system that fails, she is willing to do the right thing, to ensure an end to a man’s potential for evil. Lund was always a character obsessed with the answer to the puzzle, not dissimilar perhaps to Gregory House. Between her puzzles she had a chance for peace, of building a stable home life, more extroverted than introverted, but her addiction to the puzzle, of ensuring the questions that led to justice or rather the truth were answered, was her ultimate downfall.

In a touch of shocking brilliance, a moment in which I doubted that Sveistrup would commit to such a bold fate for Lund, she circumvents the very system she has endorsed, exiling herself to the cold, left with only her searching mind from afar to possibly uncover the evidence of the guilt of Reinhardt; the man she shot in cold blood. In so doing she relinquishes what was within her grasp: family, a granddaughter, a fresh start with her son and daughter-in-law, and a future with her season three partner, Special Branch’s Borch, who it turned out she had once let get away; not unusual when it comes to our Sarah. The balancing of character and drama which made the show rich across its three seasons is evident in Lund’s awkward relationships with her family, colleagues, partners, all building to a perfect crescendo. Lund goes through hell to not get to paradise but a dark self-exile.

But the end? Something tells me we will be spending many more evenings in the company of Sarah before we reach the end of her story. Just a hunch, but somehow, someway, Borch’s plea to her to uncover the truth of Reinhardt’s crimes will play a big part in any future return. But then again, maybe I just can’t let go of Sarah yet. 

Paul Risker is a freelance writer and contributor to Flickering Myth, Scream The Horror Magazine and The London Film Review.

Christopher Nolan in talks to direct Interstellar

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Christopher NolanNow that Christopher Nolan has completed his Batman trilogy with the release of The Dark Knight Rises, the acclaimed director is wasting little time in securing his next project, with several sources reporting that Nolan is in negotiations with Paramount Pictures and Warner Bros. to produce and direct a sci-fi project entitled Interstellar.

Written by Jonathan Nolan (The Prestige, The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises), Interstellar is said to revolve around "time travel and alternate dimensions, and sees a group of explorers travel through a wormhole." It is based upon a scientific theory by Kip S. Thorne, a physicist at Caltech who proposed a theory that wormholes can be used for time travel.

Steven Spielberg (Lincoln) was previously attached to Interstellar back in 2006 and according to The Hollywood Reporter, it's unclear at this point whether he will remain involved in some capacity following the delay of his own sci-fi project, Robopocalypse. There's no word yet on a possible release date, although expect the project to come together quickly should Nolan finalise a deal with the studios.

Steven Spielberg's Robopocalypse placed on indefinite hold

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Despite the movie being slated for 25th April 2014, Steven Spielberg's Robopocalypse seems to have hit a few major road blocks. The Hollywood Reporter is claiming that the movie has been put on indefinite hold.

According to Martin Levy, speaking on behalf of Spielberg, the project is "too important and the script is not ready, and it's too expensive to produce. It's back to the drawing board to see what is possible."

Earlier last year, Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Anne Hathaway (The Dark Knight Rises) and Ben Wishaw (Skyfall) were all cast in the adaptation of Daniel H. Wilson's science fiction novel. The book, released in 2011, was met with praise from writers such as Stephen King and Clive Cussler. Here's the synopsis:

"Not far into our future, the dazzling technology that runs our world turns against us. Controlled by a childlike—yet massively powerful—artificial intelligence known as Archos, the global network of machines on which our world has grown dependent suddenly becomes an implacable, deadly foe. At Zero Hour—the moment the robots attack—the human race is almost annihilated, but as its scattered remnants regroup, humanity for the first time unites in a determined effort to fight back. This is the oral history of that conflict, told by an international cast of survivors who experienced this long and bloody confrontation with the machines."

We will post more news on Robopocalypse when it comes in, but for now it looks like this one could join the ranks of the Greatest Science Fiction Movies Never Made.

Update - According to Spielberg, reports of Robopocalypse's 'indefinite delay' have been exaggerated, with the director telling EW to expect the film to be pushed back around six to eight months: "We found that the film was costing a lot of money and I found a better way to tell the story more economically but also much more personally. I found the personal way into Robopocalypse, and so I just told everybody to go find other jobs, I’m starting on a new script and we’ll have this movie back on its feet soon."

New poster for the return of The Walking Dead

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AMC has released a poster for the second half of season 3 of The Walking Dead, which returns in the U.S on Sunday, February 10th. Coming Soon debuted the poster, which shows a rather bruised and battered looking Governor (David Morrissey; The Other Boleyn Girl) facing off against Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln; Love Acually):

The Walking Dead Season 3

As if you didn’t already know, The Walking Dead follows the story of a group of survivors after a zombie apocalypse led by police officer Rick Grimes. The series also stars Laurie Holden (Silent Hill), Norman Reedus (Blade II), Chandler Riggs (Get Low), Melissa McBride (The Mist), Lauren Cohan (Death Race II) and Danai Gurira (Ghost Town).

Season three has already seen a number of amazing twists and turns, as well as some very unexpected departures. The summary for the second half of the season is as follows:

With his group in tatters, his sanity in question, and his own son questioning his every move, Rick must somehow pull everyone together to face their greatest challenge -- the Governor. In order to survive, he must risk everything, including the group's very humanity.

So Rick and the rest of the group not only have to contend with flesh eating zombies trying to take eat them for breakfast, but now have a new threat in the form of the Governor. All will be revealed when the new season of The Walking Dead resumes next month!

Dan Trachtenberg to direct Y: The Last Man

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New Line Cinema is pushing ahead with the big screen adaptation of the cult classic comic book series Y: The Last Man. According to Deadline, Dan Trachtenberg is set to direct the film, after generating his own buzz in a creative way in 2011 by creating an online trailer for a faux movie based on the videogame Portal. Matthew Federman (Human Target) and Stephen Scaia (Warehouse 13) have also been brought on board to write the script.

Y: The Last Man is a dystopian science fiction comic book series by Brian K. Vaughan (Lost) and Pia Guerra, published by Vertigo beginning in 2002. Here's a synopsis:

A mysterious plague has killed every man on earth except Yorick Brown, who was somehow spared. The sole Y-chromosomed survivor is an amiable, headstrong young man, the son of a U.S. congresswoman and, as it happens, an amateur escape artist. He spends most of the story on the run from a tribe of self-styled Amazons bent on eliminating the last vestige of patriarchy. He is also trying, with a bioengineer who may be responsible for the worldwide "gendercide," to figure out why he survived; hoping to reach his girlfriend in Australia; and, of course, contemplating the repopulation of the planet.

Y: The Last Man has a very interesting concept and its one that I’m sure female film fans will be looking out for with much anticipation.

First look at Halle Berry in The Call

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Courtesy of Indiewire, we have the first look at Halle Berry (Monster's Ball, X-Men: The Last Stand) in her new thriller The Call, with the clever people at Sony / TriStar releasing an image of the beautiful actress performing duites that you would expect from a film entitled The Call:

Halle Berry in The Call

Directed by Brad Anderson (The Machinist, Session 9), the thriller focuses on a 911 operator, Jordan (Berry), who takes a life-altering call from a teenage girl played by Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine) who has just been abducted, which causes Jordan to confront a killer from her past in order to save the girl’s life.

Also featuring in the cast are Justina Machado (Final Destination II), Jose Zuniga (Twilight), Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos), Morris Chestnut (Ladder 49) and WWE star David Otunga.

The film was orginally called The Hive, however this was subsequently changed; there's no obvious reason from the film's summary as to how this could fit in to the plot, so perhaps this mystery can provide some added drama as audiences try to figure out the reasoning behind the initial title.

The Call is due for release in North America on March 15th.

Mark Millar on Josh Trank's Fantastic Four reboot

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Fantastic Four After his breakthrough success with last year's found footage hit Chroncile, director Josh Trank has now turned his attention to Marvel's First Family for 20th Century Fox's Fantastic Four, which is due to arrive on screens in 2015, and speaking to SciFiNow, Fox's Marvel creative consultant Mark Millar (Wanted, Kick-Ass) has taken a moment to hype the reboot, stating that the young director is set to take the superhero movie to another level with his first big-budget offering:

"From what I’ve seen and from talking to him – he and I have had dinner a couple of times and we talk quite regularly as well – he’s contemporarising it," says Millar, whose creative duties also extend to James Mangold's The Wolverine and. Bryan Singer's X-Men: Days of Future Past. I think he’s just making it work for the screen – he’s a great storyteller. Chronicle, if you think about it, was similar to Fantastic Four in that it was a bunch of people who were transformed into something more than human – that turned out almost his calling card to come and do something like Fantastic Four.

“What I wasn’t expecting actually was just how funny and likeable he could make this as well as getting the more awesome moments on screen – I use awesome in the traditional British sense and not the California sense awesome, you know? The Ridley Scott moments, and the Fantastic Four really are jaw-dropping in the same way you feel when you saw Alien for the first time. There’s some moments in this – not to be specific – that are actually gonna be phenomenal on screen and stuff you haven’t seen in a superhero movie before.”

Fantastic Four is currently slated for release on March 6th, 2015.

Comic Book Review - Mars Attacks Kiss

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Luke Owen reviews the second issue of IDW's January Mars Attacks series...

“In 1970s New York, four teens are handed the power to become godlike figures… unless some attacking Martians find a way to steal that power for themselves! A tale torn from the original 1976 Kiss comic, courtesy of Chris “God of Thunder” Ryall and Alan “War Machine” Robinson!”

As some of you will recall, I absolutely loved the first issue of IDW’s January Mars Attacks series. Martin Powell’s realisation of the Popeye world invaded by Martians was pitch perfect and it was always going to be hard for Chris Ryall (who is currently writing one of my favourite comics at the moment) and Alan Robinson to follow that up. Can he continue the magic with Mars Attacks Kiss?

Well, suffice to say, they did a great job. Ryall and Robinson have created a fantastic spoof of one of the original 1976 Kiss comics. Not only is this great if you’re a fan but the comic, it also works if you’re not familiar with it. As someone who isn’t a big fan of Kiss’ music, I wasn’t overly into the idea of Mars Attacks Kiss thinking there were other properties that would have been better (Godzilla for example), but I have to say that this is a really funny comic with plenty to like and even more to admire.

Alan Robinson’s artwork is fantastic and the design of the Kiss Martians is hysterically funny. Ryall has crafted a really funny script that, unlike Mars Attacks Popeye, gives the Martians a lot of panel time to establish them as credible villains. The shots of the Martians obliterating people was such a welcoming change from the ‘Martians as goofy sidekicks’ attitude the Popeye comic had. Not that this is to say that Mars Attacks Kiss is a better comic as they’re trying to accomplish different things, but as someone who wanted more Martian action in last week’s issue, this was right up my alley.

As I said last week, I didn’t like IDW’s previous Infestation storylines, but this Mars Attacks series has been great so far. I don’t think Mars Attacks Kiss was better than Mars Attacks Popeye, but with Ghostbusters and Transformers still to come, we may not have even seen the best stuff yet.

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

Comic Book Review - Transformers: Robots in Disguise #13

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Luke Owen reviews the latest issue of Transformers: Robots in Disguise...

Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #12
“ON THE PROWL! It’s “no more mister nice guy,” as CYBERTRON burns and one AUTOBOT is all that stand between order and anarchy. Meet the new PROWL—deadlier than ever, colder than any other AUTOBOT, and ready to end the DECEPTICON threat—forever.”

I came under fire last month with my review of Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #12 because I lambasted it and said reading it gave me a headache. While many of the comments were a little ‘on the nose’, the point still remains that I was in the minority of people who didn’t like it. I stand by my comments of the series and praise Prime that we thankfully we have the Robots in Disguise run to ease the pain.

Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #12 was a badly written and badly paced comic that was a complete mess, which is a stark contrast to Transformers: Robots in Disguise #13 which is a totally different kettle of fish. The writing is streamlined and tight, the artwork is smooth with good definition and the pacing is note-perfect bringing you to a fantastic conclusion. It doesn’t have the same baggage that More Than Meets The Eye #12 has and it’s all the better for it.

However I can see there being some problems arising from this issue. John Barber bringing back Megatron to lead the Decepticons raises concerns that the comic series will return back to its classic ‘Autobot vs. Decepticon’ roots whereas the previous instalments had been taking the series down a different and more political route. For me personally, I love it. I’ve always liked Megatron as an antagonist and the dialogue exchange (although only one way in terms of speech) between Starscream and the battered Megatron reminded me just how great of a character he is. Their relationship has always been a strong glue for the Transformers franchise and it’s great to see more of this highly engaging and gripping dynamic. The re-design of Megatron as this battered and withered being is very imposing which adds a lot to his newly revived character. In fact, a lot of Andrew Griffith’s artwork in this issue is fantastic with a lot of moody shots of a devastated Cybertron along with the awesome battles really couple well with the well-crafted plot threads.

Transformers: Robots in Disguise has never been the best comic money can buy, but it’s a lot better than its sister More Than Meets The Eye series. Transformers: Robots in Disguise #13 is a prime example of this and with the cliff-hanger we get at the end, I’m sure it will continue.

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

Cartoonists take centre stage with the arrival of Comics About Cartoonists: The World’s Oddest Profession

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Taking the cartoonist from behind the drawing table and dropping them in the middle of their own comic strip is exactly what Eisner-winning editor and designer Craig Yoe has done for IDW Publishing.  Serving as the story protagonists in the autobiographical and fictional comics are industry legends Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, Wally Wood, Frank Frazetta, Charles Schulz, Jack Cole, Dick Briefer, Winsor McCay, Chester Gould, Sheldon Mayer, Milton Caniff, Ernie Bushmiller, Basil Wolverton, B. Kliban, Rube Goldberg, Jack Chick, Milt Gross, Siegel and Shuster, Will Eisner, Elzie Segar, and Harvey Kurtzman.

"Cartoonists are my heroes," declared Craig Yoe when discussing the creative inspiration for Comics About Cartoonists: The World’s Oddest Profession.  "That makes this book featuring comics about the ink-slingers themselves drawn by the cartoonists themselves my very favorite book I've done. Cartoonists and the people that love them are going to go ape-poop over this one!"  Every genre is represented in the full-colour, hardcover collection from superheroes, science fiction, crime, funny animals, romance, war comics, teen-age humor and lots of horror.

Comics About Cartoonists: The World’s Oddest Profession is out in book stores now!
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