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DVD Review - Django, Prepare a Coffin (1968)

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Django, Prepare a Coffin (Italian: Preparati la bara!), 1968.

Directed by Ferinando Baldi.
Starring Terence Hill, Horst Frank, George Eastman, Jose Torres and Pinuccio Ardia.

Django Prepare a Coffin UK DVD


SYNOPSIS:

After the cold-blooded execution of his wife, a lone gun-slinger, Django (Hill), becomes a vigilant for a town at the mercy of his wife’s murderer.

Terence Hill in Django Prepare a Coffin

With increasing publicity for the Spaghetti Western genre (specifically those with the name “Django” in the title) thanks to Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained, there has never been a better time to seek out the 60s classics. It is worth noting that despite being advertised as a sequel to the Franco Nero-led Django, Django Prepare a Coffin seems more like a prequel with only a few corresponding features.

Django (recommended viewing before this film) has the essentials of many popular cult films – a cheap yet pleasing tone. Likewise, Ferdinando Baldi’s sequel/prequel is rife with dozens of embarrassing nuances though enjoyable nonetheless. Sound effects, acting and editing are noticeably shoddy, yet are balanced out with entertaining action, a captivating lead and some great set-pieces.

Franco Nero was a brilliant Django though; put his and Hill’s films side by side and you can barely tell the difference between the two actors. Seeing the film as a prequel aids the notion of chronology from one film to the next - Hill great as a slightly younger Nero. The character shares a few similarities with the infamous Joe / The Man with No Name figure in the Dollars trilogy (an icon created by Clint Eastwood). He is mostly silent, chews on a cigarillo and knows how to handle a gun. Much like the Leone’s leading man, Hill is incredibly watchable; a believable hero who gets as many victories as he does defeats.

The villains he faces may not remain in your memory like Lee Van Cleef or Henry Fonda (from Leone’s other Spaghetti Western, Once Upon a Time in the West) but he does have a comic side-kick in the form of Pinuccio Ardia and his parade of pet birds (much like Eastwood did with Eli Wallach). It’s mostly how Django goes about killing the baddies that stays in your mind; without giving too much away, a blazing fire in which an actor is licked by flames from all sides (with obvious disregard to health and safety) is astonishing to watch and a terrific scene in a grand set-piece.

Without being as special as Django (that, with its success, spawned numerous Spaghetti Westerns that included the name 'Django' in them for mere commercial purposes), Django Prepare a Coffin has its moments. Gun fights and horse-back chases are where the obvious strengths lie – competently executed despite the B-movie class.

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

Piers McCarthy - Follow me on Twitter.

New image of Hugh Jackman in The Wolverine

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There's just over six months to go until Hugh Jackman's latest superhero outing in The Wolverine, so it's a little surprising that we're yet to see so much as a teaser trailer for the X-Men solo spin-off. To help tide us over until we get our first look at some footage from the film, 20th Century Fox has released a new image of Logan in his new Japanese surroundings.

Hugh Jackman in The Wolverine

The Wolverine is directed by James Mangold (Knight and Day) and sees Jackman joined in the cast by Will Yun Lee (Total Recall) as Harada (a.k.a. the Silver Samurai), Hiroyuki Sanada (The Last Samurai) as Shingen, Brian Tee (The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift) as Noburo Mori, Hal Yamanouchi (The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou) as Yashida and Svetlana Khodchenkova (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) as Viper. Newcomers Rila Fukushima and Tao Okamoto will potray Yukio and Mariko, while Famke Janssen is also rumoured to reprise the role of Jean Grey from the original X-Men trilogy for a cameo appearance.

Based on the celebrated comic book arc, The Wolverine finds Logan, the eternal warrior and outsider, in Japan. There, samurai steel will clash with adamantium claw as Logan confronts a mysterious figure from his past in an epic battle that will leave him forever changed.

The Wolverine is set for release on July 26th, 2013. 

Giveaway - Win House of Lies - Season 1 on DVD

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Featuring a Golden Globe-winning performance from Don Cheadle, the first season of Matthew Carnahan's US comedy-drama series House of Lies comes to DVD here in the UK on Monday, January 21st, and to celebrate the release we have five copies to give away to our readers courtesy of the lovely people at Paramount Home Entertainment.

Read on for a synopsis and details of how to enter the competition...

"Dive into the House of Lies: a scathing Corporate America-skewering comedy that examines the life of a self-loathing management consultant played by Don Cheadle. While best known for taking down the competition with sex and a smile, he's capable of using any means (or anyone) to get what he wants. Kristen Bell co-stars as the foxy, sharp-tongued team leader juggling her career and personal life. Catch all the sex, lies, and corruption in 12 shocking first season episodes."

To be in with a chance of winning, firstly make sure you like us on Facebook (or follow us on Twitter)...



...Then complete your details below, using the subject heading "LIES". The competition closes at midnight on Saturday, January 26th. UK entrants only please.

 
 By entering this competition you agree to our terms and conditions, which you can read here.

Paul Abbott to produce remake of French supernatural drama Les Revenants

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Paul Abbott
BAFTA award-winning British writer Paul Abbott (State of Play, Hit and Miss) and his AbbottVision Company will produce an English-language adaptation of the French supernatural drama Les Revenants. Deadline reports that the creator of the popular British show Shameless is set to take on the new exciting project. Abbot is also co-creator of the American version of Shameless, which stars William H. Macy (The Sessions).

Originally produced by France’s Haut et Court for Canal Plus, Les Revenants proved extremely popular when aired last year in France, drawing record numbers for the pay-TV channel. The drama centres on a group of men and women in a small Alpine village who find themselves in a state of confusion, trying to return to their homes. What they don’t yet know is that they’ve been dead for several years, and no one is expecting them back. The new adaptation will have the working title of They Came Back.

English language adaptations of foreign dramas are becoming ever more frequent with dramas such as the hit Danish show The Killing having been remade with Mireille Enos (World War Z) and Joel Kinnaman (RoboCop) in the cast. Another popular Danish drama, The Bridge is also currently being remade and is set to star Demián Bichir (Che) and Diane Kruger (Inglourious Basterds).

All female line-up for the X-Men coming this April

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I guess X-Women just doesn't have the same ring to it. It was teased a few weeks back in USA Today that Marvel were planning on putting out an all-female line-up for everyone's favourite team of mutants. Now it has been confirmed that this April, Brian Wood's X-Men will become the third X-Men relaunch in the Marvel NOW! line-up.

In an interview with USA Today, Wood said, "I feel like as far as the X-Men go, the women are the X-Men," he explains. "Cyclops and Wolverine are big names, but taken as a whole, the women kind of rule the franchise. If you look at the entire world as a whole, it's the females that really dominate and are the most interesting and cool to look at."

The new team will consist of Rogue, Storm, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Grey, Psylocke and Jubilee who will be the titles main star. Wood added in the interview that it was an "honour" to work with such a large roster.

"I'm definitely an X-Men fan, but I'm not deep into the world," he continues. "I'm not a writer who's been writing it forever, so my natural instinct is to go basic and simple and to its core.

The title has obviously been planned for sometime to run alongside The All New X-Men and Uncanny X-Men and Wood is glad the news is finally out there, "It's like any second, I'm going to get a call and they're going to be like, 'Oh, no, we're giving it to Bendis,'".

Here's the press release from Marvel:

"An old enemy shows up at the X-Men’s door, seeking asylum from an ancient evil come back to Earth. Meanwhile, Jubilee has come home, and she’s brought with her an orphaned baby who might hold the key to the Earth’s survival…or its destruction! With an imminent alien invasion and an eons-spanning war between brother and sister around the corner, Storm steps up and puts together a team to protect the child and stop a new threat that could destroy all life in the Marvel Universe!"

The ongoing series which reinvents the X-Men comic book franchise is being led by the creative team of writer Brian Wood (Ultimate Comics X-Men) and artist Oliver Coipel (Avengers VS. X-Men).  "This April, double X marks the spot," said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment. "The most popular and powerful female mutants will band together to form a team that's much more than the sum of its parts, battling for stakes that couldn't be higher.  It's a mind-bending, heart-pumping, thought-provoking saga that only Brian Wood and Olivier Coipel could tell."

Brian Wood's X-Men debuts this April. What are your thoughts on the ironically named X-Men line-up?

Batman on horseback in a new clip from The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2

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Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2
Warner Bros. Animation concludes its two-part adaptation of Frank Miller's seminal graphic novel Batman: The Dark Knight Returns later this month, and to whet our appetites for what's sure to be one of the finest animated Batman movies to date (judging by the first instalment, at least), a new clip has arrived online showing the Dark Knight on horseback, inspiring the vigilante gang the Sons of Batman.

Peter Weller (RoboCop) leads the voice cast of Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 as Bruce Wayne / Batman, and he's joined by Ariel Winter (Modern Family) as Carrie Kelley / Robin, Michael Emerson (Lost) as The Joker, Mark Valley (Human Target) as Clark Kent / Superman,  David Selby (The Social Network) as Jim Gordon, Maria Canals (Justice League) as Ellen Yindel, Michael McKean (This Is Spinal Tap) as Dr. Bartholomew Wolper and Paget Brewster (Criminal Minds) as Lana Lang. The movie is directed by Jay Olivia (Man of Steel) from a screenplay by Bob Goodman (Warehouse 13). Sam Register (Young Justice), Bruce Timm (JusticeLeague: Doom), Michael Uslan (The Dark Knight Rises) and Benjamin Melnicker (The Dark Knight Rises) are executive producers.

"The Dark Knight and the brave, young Carrie Kelly at his side as Robin have finally reclaimed Gotham City and allowed a ray of hope to penetrate the reign of terror that The Mutants cast upon their city. With Batman back in the spotlight, the extended media coverage has awoken a far worse evil at Arkham Asylum – The Joker! Destined to be Batman’s mortal enemy, The Joker has a diabolical scheme that may pull Batman down to the darkest levels of insanity.   Meanwhile, on the horizon, a global catastrophe races toward Gotham, and with it comes a familiar face, the Man of Steel, though this time he has Batman in his sights."


Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 is released on January 29th on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD, On Demand and for Download. Watch the trailer here.

Director Pete Travis talks possible Dredd sequels, unlikely to return

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Karl Urban Dredd 3D
During the Dredd 3D panel at the London Film and Comic Con last July, screenwriter Alex Garland (28 Days Later) spoke about the possibility of developing a trilogy around 2000 AD's iconic lawman of the future, stating that the Karl Urban-headlined reboot would need to gross over $50 million in the U.S. for him to get the green light on a sequel. Sadly, despite being well-received by fans, Dredd only managed to pull in $32.7m worldwide, but with the film now enjoying a successful home-entertainment release there's a renewed optimism that Dredd could still go on to do enough business to warrant a follow-up. Director Pete Travis certainly thinks so, but if a sequel does get the go ahead, it's unlikely he'll be heading back to Mega-City One himself.

"I don't think [I'd direct the sequel]," states Travis in an interview with MovieWeb. "I really hope there is a second one. I just feel very lucky to have been involved in the first one. It has been a great experience for me. I read Alex Garland's script two years ago, and I feel in love with it then. I have enjoyed the whole process of working on that with him, and bringing it to the screen. It was extraordinary. I hope they get the chance to make another one. I think Dredd is an extraordinary character. I think Karl Urban captured him so perfectly. I think there is a real beautiful future there."

Garland has already revealed that his plans for a trilogy would see Judge Dreddpaying a visit to the Cursed Earth in the second movie, leading to the arrival of the Dark Judges in the third, and Travis went on to elaborate a little about the possibilities for the potential sequels:

"I think there is a whole exciting journey in front of Dredd if Alex and Karl Urban get to take him on that journey. The future is really exciting for him. Especially in terms of going with some of the other characters from the comic book. Finding out more about where Dredd comes from. I also think its exciting, the possibilities. The first film does go all out as a visual feast. Whoever gets a chance to do the others will take that, and make it even more exciting. I can't wait to see it. I don't really know how the sequel thing works, really. I hope they get another chance to make a second film. I think Karl Urban...He is Dredd. It would be really exciting for them to make another, and go further with that character. I sincerely hope so..."

Dredd 3D was released today on Blu-ray and DVD here in the UK.

My Favourite Tarantino Movie - Pulp Fiction (1994)

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Flickering Myth's writing team count down to the UK release of Django Unchained by selecting their favourite Quentin Tarantino movies; next up is Martin Deer with 1994's Pulp Fiction...

Pulp Fiction movie poster
pulp /'palp / n. 1. A soft, moist, shapeless mass of matter
2. A magazine or book containing lurid subject matter
and being characteristically printed on rough,
unfinished paper.


The reasons I love Pulp Fiction could be explained in depth, with a detailed critical analysis of every aspect of its structure, but all I really want to say is that this is a damn good movie.  I can't recall the first time I saw this film but I know that I have loved it since I was a teenager - I was 10 when it came out - and that I have been a fan of Tarantino ever since.

One of the most appealing aspects of Pulp Fiction is the dialogue - how the characters spend a large portion of the movie talking about, well, nothing.  There are a number of conversations that simply serve to tell us more about the characters' thoughts and feelings on certain matters rather than to advance the plot, which makes every single character a well-rounded, real person, and completely engrossing as a result.  The opening scene alone has become something of a legend - "a Royale with cheese". Pulp Fiction revitalised the career of John Travolta, and with good reason. He is brilliant in this and really has great opportunity to shine.  Where he really gets his moments are in the segment 'Vincent Vega & Marsellus Wallace's Wife', and most notably in one of my favourite scenes of the film when Vincent discovers Mia Wallace overdosing and rushes her to his dealer Lance's house.

The scene is perfectly poised, the tension of a very serious life-threatening situation is broken with some intense comedic back and forth between Lance and Vincent - "'Get the shot', 'I am if you let me', 'I ain't fucking stopping you', 'well stop talking to me and start talking to her', 'GET THE SHOT!'.  Sharing in the moment with him is Uma Thurman as Mia, who I just absolutely love in this film. She oozes this incredible confidence and her character is endlessly charismatic and charming.  She doesn't appear until 20 minutes or so in, but from the opening moments of the film Tarantino builds this huge aura around the character as this women of great power and standing.  When we first meet Mia don't meet her, we meet her lips as she speaks to Vincent over the intercom.  Tarantino builds our suspense at meeting this woman.  Uma does not disappoint.

My favourite part of the film comes in 'The Bonnie Situation', the final chapter of the film, when we finally get to see what happened following the "divine intervention" that took place back at the apartment.  Going back to what I said previously about the dialogue, the conversations between Vincent and Jules are completely engrossing and the banter back and forth, especially in Jimmie's garage ("I'm Superfly T.N.T.") - great, quotable lines - excel and delight.  The climax in the diner is endlessly watchable, and Samuel L Jackson is superb in those scenes, especially when he is delivering his monologue.

I think this is Tarantino's best cast. The pairs and trios all work: Travolta & Jackson; Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames & Travolta; Travolta & Thurman; Travolta, Jackson & Tarantino - everybody bounces off of each other so well and it's so enjoyable to watch. 

Interesting characters spouting witty dialogue and a great use of non-linear storytelling with vivid engrossing stories makes Pulp Fiction not only my favourite Tarantino film, but also one of my all time favourites.  Don't agree?  Then I will strike down against thee with great vengeance and furious anger!

What's your favourite Tarantino movie? Let us know in the comments below...

Martin Deer

Zack Snyder developing a Star Wars movie for Disney?

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Zack Snyder Star Wars
We've been anxiously awaiting the appointment of a director on Disney's Star Wars: Episode VII for a couple of months now, but while we wait to see who'll be handed the reins of the next Star Wars trilogy, Vulture are reporting that Disney has turned to Zack Snyder (300, Watchmen) to direct a standalone Star Wars movie inspired by Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai.

Snyder, who is currently putting the finishing touches to this year's Superman reboot Man of Steel alongside producer Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight Rises), is said to be working on "an as-yet-untitled Jedi epic" loosely based on Kursawa's 1954 samurai classic, "with the ronin and katana being replaced by the Force-wielding knights and their iconic lightsabers." According to Vulture's insider, it's likely that Snyder's Star Wars "will not be considered part of the “numbered” episodes, but rather a stand-alone film set sometime postEpisode VIevents."

According to Disney CEO Bob Iger, the company plans to release a new Star Wars movie every two to three years, with Star Wars: Episode VII arriving in 2015, followed by Episode VIII in 2017 and Episode IX in 2019. So, assuming Vulture's report is accurate, Snyder's either going to have almost a decade of prep on his Star Wars movie, oraudiences are going to have to get their heads around several Star Wars stories running at once ["Daddy, where's Junior Skywalker and Bar-Bar Binks?"].

Unless of course this arrives pre-Episode VII...

Update - Well, that didn't take long... A spokesperson for Zack Snyder has moved to deny the story on the director's behalf, telling The Hollywood Reporter: "While he is super flattered because he is a huge fan, Zack is not involved in any way with the new Star Wars. He is currently in post on his two films, Man of Steel and 300: Battle of Artemisia."

Marvel Thunderstruck by Phil Noto and Daniel Way

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The March 2013 arrival of Thunderbolts #7 sees artist Phil Noto from Uncanny X-Force partnering with writer Daniel Way for the Marvel NOW! series. The official synopsis reads:

The Marvel Universe’s deadliest strike team take on a legion of robot menaces as the Punisher, Deadpool, Red Hulk, Elektra and Venom, paint giant targets on their back! But when the leader of these weaponized Crimson Dynamos has close ties to someone on the team, everyone is a target!


"Get ready for battlefield romance like you've never seen before," said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment. "Hip-deep in dead bodies and empty shell-casings, two of Marvel's fiercest killers — the Punisher and Elektra — will collide like magnets, with serious ramifications for the Marvel Universe's premiere wetworks team. Where sparks fly can fire be far behind?" In an interview with Marvel.com, Daniel Way said, “The level of blowback leveled at the Thunderbolts will soon match the level of blowback occurring within the Thunderbolts. After the events of issue #7 the CIA, in particular, will be more than concerned with their actions. Oh...and The Avengers.”

Each issue of Thunderbolts features special augmented reality content available exclusive through the Marvel AR app– including cover recaps, behind the scenes features and more that add value to your reading experience at no additional cost. 

 

Ultimate Spider-Man season 2 trailer

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Ultimate Spider-Man Season 2
Spider-Man swings back on to TV screens next Monday (January 21st) as the second season of Disney XD's hit animated series Ultimate Spider-Man gets underway, and to promote the new season Marvel Entertainment has just sent over a trailer that sees our friendly neighborhood wall-crawler teaming up with Iron Fist, Power Man, White Tiger, Nova and The Avengers to take on some of his most iconic villains in the Sinister Six.

"On his journey to become the Ultimate Hero, Peter Parker has handled tough challenges. From learning to team up with fellow Super Heroes (including The Avengers!), to fighting baddies from across the Marvel Universe, to remembering to pick up groceries for Aunt May, Spidey thought he had things all webbed up. Now in Season 2, his world's been turned upside down as his teammates become roommates, and they're left to face foes without the help of S.H.I.E.L.D. But when iconic Marvel villains like The Lizard, Kraven, Electro, the Rhino and Doc Ock team up to take on the young heroes, it's time for Spidey to discover the "great responsibility" of being a leader."


Catch the one-hour special primetime premiere of Ultimate Spider-Man Season 2 on January 21st at 7p/6c on Disney XD, and keep up with the team every Sunday at 11a/10c inside Marvel Universe.

Thoughts on... 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, Robert Patrick, Anthony Mackie, Giovanni Ribisi, Nick Nolte and Josh Pence.

Ryan Gosling Gangster Squad character poster

SYNOPSIS:

A 1940s crime tale about the rise and fall of gangster Mickey Cohen.

Gangster Squad

Let me start by saying that I enjoyed Gangster Squad, but it is far from spectacular.  It's not even 'great', it's just... enjoyable.

One of the problems that stuck out to me the most was how nothing was ever given time to develop.  Not a single character, nor plot point, is given room to breathe and develop any substance.  Everything is a shallow caricature of something which should have more substance; Sgt. John O'Mara (Josh Brolin) is a hardened war veteran, Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn) is a vicious man - it's all told and shown to us in quick glimpses, nothing is ever given any depth.

The film seemed to be very quickly edited, and I noted how this really was to the detriment of the story.  There isn't much of a story here and plot points come and go in the blink of an eye, which results in what were presumably very high stakes feeling like minor moments.  I think where this really showed was in the scenes surrounding the destruction of a major heroin shipment; we learn about the shipment and see its destruction in such a short space of time that it never feels like the significant moment in the downfall of Mickey Cohen that it was - "there's a big shipment of heroin coming in.... good job [destroying] it guys". I just wish things were given a little more time to be fleshed out and have meaning.

I particularly disliked the voiceover narration at the beginning and end from Brolin's character, which just didn't feel right.  Brolin himself gives an okay performance. Okay, nothing more.  I know people are praising Penn's performance as Cohen, but to me it really felt like he was chewing more scenery than a Rottweiler puppy.  But maybe that again is down to the writing, and how no one is fleshed out.  Criminally underused is Emma Stone (The Amazing Spider-Man, Crazy Stupid Love) as Mickey Cohen's want-away woman, Grace Faraday.  This is an immensely talented actress and her talents - barring serving as eye candy - are never on display.  It's a shame, and a waste.  She is enjoyable in her scenes with Ryan Gosling (Drive, The Ides of March), who I do enjoy in this film.  Both have such good chemistry that despite the lack of substance they are able to bring something to their interactions together.  Gosling provided a few laughs and was enjoyable to watch, but again a waste of great talent.

The cast is definitely what made this an enjoyable watch; those mentioned plus the rest of the Squad - Robert Patrick (True Blood), Michael Pena (End of Watch) and Giovanni Ribisi (Ted) - create something watchable with what each of them brings to the table.  But unfortunately it could and should have been a lot more.

Gangster Squad potentially could be a film that really bores me on a second viewing at home. However, I did enjoy it for what it is on the big screen, but this was perhaps not the right call, for Ruben Fleischer's direction and Will Beall's story is definitely lacking.

Flickering Myth Rating: Film ★ ★/ Movie ★ ★

Martin Deer

Peter Farrelly on Dumb & Dumber To and Three Stooges sequel

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The Farrelly brothers hit the Hollywood scene back in 1994 with a little comedy called Dumb & Dumber. Many people reportedly turned it down not knowing that it would become a massive hit, but Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels did not and now, 19 years later, it looks like the four of them could be returning to the idea.

In an interview about the upcoming Movie 43 with Coming Soon, Peter Farrelly spoke about the sequel named Dumb & Dumber To, "If we were going to do a sequel it was always going to be Dumb and Dumber," he told them. "There were no other movies we've made that are real sequel type movies - maybe The Three Stooges. We always said that it would be fun to do another one just because it was such a fun experience and we kind of left them off where they started in that movie so it is the kind of thing you could do a couple of them. But over the years, Jim didn't want to do another one, until recently, about a year ago or so, he called us up and he was in a hotel watching TV and Dumb & Dumber came on and he sat there howling and said, 'We gotta do another one!' and I said, 'That's awesome, let's do it.'"

Farrelly is keeping the script details close to his chest, but he is very happy with it, "We have the script and I will say this: I love the script but if I told you about the script, you'd be completely impressed, but if I told you about the first one, 'Well, what's it about?' 'It's about these two guys that find this briefcase and they follow this girl to Aspen.' You'd say, 'Well, where's the movie?' It's not about the plot, it's about the characters. It's a really hard movie to explain to people and make them see it, but I guarantee you that it's sort of exactly like the first one. We pick up from that 20 years later, we explain what they've done for the last 17 or 18 years, we take off from that and it's just a lot of laughs. It's at Warner Bros. and right now it's being financed outside the studio, but it will be released by Warner Bros. knock on wood, and that's all being worked out right now."

"If you liked Dumb & Dumber, you'll like this because it's the same and more. It's really fun," he added.

The Farrelly brothers said that the movie was going to start shooting last September but didn't go ahead, so don't get your hopes up just yet.

He also went on to talk about a possible sequel for The Three Stooges which failed to light up the box office last year, "It's going to make money, but it was disappointing for me because I thought it came out at a really crappy time," he said. "It came out in the middle of April when kids were back in school, they were already back from vacation, so it did really well on the weekend and it did nothing during the week because kids were in school, but I loved that movie and those three guys in it are geniuses. I could not be prouder of a movie than I am of that movie. The casting was unbelievable. A minute into 'The Three Stooges,' you forget it's not Moe, Larry and Curly. I have no regret and yeah, would I do another one? In a heartbeat. It was a ball to make."

Movie 43 will be out in cinemas in the UK on January 25th.

My Favourite Arnie Movie - Commando (1985)

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With Arnold Schwarzenegger returning to the big screen in The Last Stand, the Flickering Myth writing team look back at their favourite Arnie movies. Next up, David Bishop with 1985's Commando...


The 80s were a defining decade for Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Terminator, Predator and Conan all helped to launch his career and make him one of the most recognisable stars in the world. However, there’s one film, one which wasn't anywhere near as ground-breaking as the aforementioned, that is held in the hearts of many Schwarzenegger fans, and for very good reason.

Commando isn’t his best film (Terminator 2: Judgement Day probably gets that accolade), but it’s his most unashamedly entertaining. The ‘plot’, for lack of a better word, begins with John Matrix (yes that is his name) enjoying the wildlife up in his mountain-based home with his daughter. A particular highlight sees them petting a deer. Its Arnie meets Disney way before the likes of Jingle all the Way.

Predictably, it’s not long before paradise is interrupted and John’s daughter is kidnapped by a group intent on revenge. Revenge for what is unimportant and it doesn't matter in the slightest. All that matters is Arnie’s unique method of finding his daughter, which involves jumping out of planes, throwing bad guys off cliffs and lying about who he’s going to kill last.

On paper it all sounds like standard 80s action fare and you’d be forgiven for lumping this in with the straight-to-video Seagal and Van Damme oeuvre. However, there’s something that elevates this above, and out of, the bargain bin. It certainly helps that, at this point in his career, Arnie was at his absolute physical peak. Fresh off the success of The Terminator and, to a lesser extent, Red Sonja, Arnie was quickly building a strong following. You can feel the need to appeal to his fan base, to deliver on what people loved about his previous roles. Here we've got one-liners aplenty, tons of explosions and Arnie single-handedly taking on an entire army.

It’s the constant need to deliver on its premise that sets this film apart. There’s no attempt to take the material seriously, no overly complicated subplots and no unnecessary detours. You could argue that damsel-in-distress Cindy is added just so John has someone to talk to, but she rarely gets in the way or slows things down.

Clearly, this isn’t as nuanced as The Terminator, but what’s surprising is how strong the script actually is. Written by Steven E. de Souza (Die Hard, The Running Man and, err, The Flintstones), Arnie’s one-liners have never been better. Lines such as “I know I said I’d kill you last. I lied.” and “Don’t disturb my friend, he’s dead tired.” are genuinely witty. It’s easy to snigger at such dialogue, but there’s an art to writing the perfect one-liner and Commando does it better than most.

There’s also an economy of storytelling, a variety to the action scenes (one highlight is when Arnie lifts up a guy, while still in a phone-booth, and throws him to the lower level in a shopping mall) and a sense of its own absurdity. Arnie taking down an army, using a gigantic machine gun with one hand, is a great example of the filmmakers simply embracing the outlandish elements and running with it. No holding back, no attempts at realism, just pure escapism.

More so than his work with a certain James Cameron, Commando is the quintessential Arnie film. Director Mark L. Lester knows his audience and takes full advantage of Schwarzenegger’s star power. He’s practically in every scene, given straight-to-the-point dialogue and allowed to do what he does best. There are a lot of ‘better’ Arnie films, but few sum up the great man’s screen persona so perfectly.

David Bishop

Anne Hathaway to star in The Taming of the Shrew

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Anne Hathaway
Riding high from her Golden Globe win for her role as Fantine in Tom Hooper's Les Miserables, Anne Hathaway (The Dark Knight Rises) is due to star in a new adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew.

According to The Wrap the new re-imagining of the classic Shakespeare tale is penned by Abi Morgan (The Iron Lady, Shame) and will be a modern-day retelling of the iconic play set in mid-20th century Italy. The main plot centres on the courtship of Petruchio, a gentleman of Verona, and Katherina, the headstrong, obdurate shrew. Initially, Katherina is an unwilling participant in the relationship but Petruchio tempers her with various psychological torments — the "taming" — until she becomes a compliant and obedient bride.

This is not the first time that The Taming of the Shrew has been adapted for a modern audience as Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight) and Julia Stiles (Silver Linings Playbook) starred in Gil Junger’s 1999 film, 10 Things I Hate About You, which was also loosely based on the play, and it was also adapted in 1967 starring Elizabeth Taylor (All My Children) and Richard Burton (Where Eagles Dare).

Bradley Cooper joins spy thriller Dark Invasion

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After receiving his first Oscar nomination for his role as Pat in David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook, Bradley Cooper's 2013 is off to a great start and there is some more good news for the actor, with Deadline revealing that Warner Bros. has paid a huge six figure sum to get the rights to Howard Blum's forthcoming book Dark Invasion as a vehicle for Cooper to star and co-produce.

The book is in the vein of a true spy thriller and is set in 1915, against a backdrop of war raging in Europe and the U.S. still neutral. Germany decides to send their Secret Service to America to wage a covert war to keep the U.S from helping the Allies. The Kaiser’s spies bomb factories, sabotage ships, shoot JP Morgan Jr (a financier of the Allies), bomb the U.S. Capitol Building, and set up an anthrax lab six miles from the White House. Cooper is attached to play NYPD Captain Tom Tunney, who’s tasked with establishing the team that will bring these German spies to justice.

Bradley Cooper will no doubt be very much in demand in 2013, and we'll also see him in several films this year, including Derek Cianfrance’s The Place Beyond the Pines as well as the final film in Todd Phillips’ comedy trilogy, The Hangover Part III.

Comic Book Review - Mars Attacks The Real Ghostbusters

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Luke Owen reviews the latest in IDW's January series - Mars Attacks The Real Ghostbustes


"Something even stranger is in the neighbourhood when the restless spirits of some merciless Martians are stirred from their slumber to attack again! It's up to the REAL Ghostbusters to save New Jersey from this angry red threat. Well... if they must."

I have been loving this January Mars Attacks series and this current issue may just be the cream of the crop. As anyone who has read my reviews of IDW’s on-going Ghostbusters series will know, I am a huge Ghostbusters fan so this was the issue that I was most looking forward to. However, it wasn’t my love of Ghostbusters that made me smile while reading Mars Attacks The Real Ghostbusters (although it helped), it was the fact that this was a really fun comic.

Erik Burnham has been doing great things with the on-going series as he is someone who is clearly a fan of the franchise. That shines through with Mars Attacks The Real Ghostbusters as he has captured everything that made those characters fun to watch for so many years. Not only does he nail each character individually, but he gets all of their dialogue spot as well as well as drop in some hilariously bad jokes (“Look out! He’s going nuts”, Ray shouts as a nutcracker shoots nuts from his mouth). Even the simple nod to the advert break “we now return you to The Real Ghostbusters” brought out a hearty laugh from me.

I also really loved the idea that, rather than fighting off the Martian invasion as Popeye and Kiss have done in the previous issues, but instead they are after the ghosts of a group of Martians who visited earth back in the 30s. In quite a hilarious turn of events, this group of Martians flew down to earth because they mis-understood a radio transmission of War of the Worlds as a news story and thought their invasion had started early. Now, in the present day, the ghosts of these Martians are causing a ruckus which means The Real Ghostbusters need to jump into action - complete with the occasional dig at New Jersey.

However, I do only have one question to raise that can count as a negative against the issue – why oh why did Jose Holder NOT do his artwork to reflect the classic Marvel Real Ghostbusters comics from the late 80s and early 90s? One of the brilliant aspects of Mars Attacks Popeye is how the comic felt like it was an E.C. Segar original and Burnham and Holder had the chance to replicate that with Mars Attacks The Real Ghostbusters. Aside from the character dialogue and different costume colours, this could have easily been Mars Attacks The Regular Ghostbusters. A missed opportunity, but not one that overly ruins the comic.

As I said earlier, this has easily been the stand out issue from this run of comics by leaps and bounds. Burnham has crafted a fantastic script that will delight Ghostbusters fans and entertain those that aren’t.

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

Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje talks Thor: The Dark World and Black Panther

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Adewale Akinnuoye-AgbajeChris Hemsworth is certainly going to have his hands full this November in Thor: The Dark World, with the God of Thunder going up against his evil stepbrother Loki (Tom Hiddleston), along with two new villains in Christopher Eccleston's (Doctor Who, G.I Joe: Retaliation) Malekith the Accursed and Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje's (Lost, G.I. Joe: Retaliation) dual bad guy Algrim the Strong / Kurse. Speaking to MTV at the Golden Globes this past weekend, Akinnuoye-Agbaje took a moment to discuss the role, telling us what to expect from his character in the Alan Taylor (Game of Thrones) directed sequel.

"I've been a fan of the Marvel Comics and I got a massive opportunity to play two characters in the movie: Algrim and Kurse. You go in thinking, 'Yeah this is great.' But when you get in there, you're like whoa; six hours of makeup, prosthetics, all the physical [stuff]. But honestly, I loved it. It's going to be such an epic. And both of the characters; I have blonde hair, blue eyes, pointed ears, fangs, horns; everything you could want as boy in an action hero movie. It's amazing. The fighting was really demanding. For instance, Kurse is the one that does all the fighting. It's forty pounds of extra weight and the good thing about it is that it's very flexible and elastic. I have a routine before I put it on: I stretch and do all my pilates. You see this big creature doing pilates, it's great. And then we'd have to go fight. Me and Chris [Hemsworth] go toe-to-toe. It was hardcore. But you don't really get into [these kinds of movies] of you're not ready for that kind of thing. You gotta be mentally fit, physically fit because you're going to shoot a scene ten to fifteen different ways."

The British actor went on to give us a little insight into Kurse's fighting style, as well as revealing that his character will also go head-to-head with the God of Mischief: " “[Thor and Kurse] fight differently. Chris has his hammer while Kurse is very animalistic, he's got horns. So I tried to go with that flow. My movements are [basically] like an animal: twisting my body, turning my head, all kinds of things. Kurse is meant to be extremely powerful, nothing can stop him. It's a great ride. There's fights everything in the movie. Loki gets his fair share of fights; [one of which] is between him and I as well. The great thing about Kurse is he is having it with everybody. But yes, Loki has some amazing fights. [Fans] are really gonna be happy with this movie. Everybody gets their little shine. I won't tell you what really happens, but there's some great surprises.”

Meanwhile, Triple A also revealed that he's talking to Marvel about another role in an upcoming movie (presumably Guardians of the Galaxy), as well as expressing his desire to portray the King of Wakanda, Black Panther: "“Who do I want to play him? Myself, let’s be real. I would hope that playing Kurse would ingratiate me to becoming the Panther. You get in and have success in one, and you go and do the next one. [My campaign] is definitely not dropped. He’s one of my faves. I would love to play him.... You have to keep at it, you have to keep your card in the hat and see what comes out but I have to say I’m thrilled, I’ve been able to play two characters in one movie and if [Marvel] likes this and it this does well, it just gives you a better chance.”

Thor: The Dark World is scheduled for release on November 8th, with a cast that also includes Natalie Portman, Stellan Skarsgård, Idris Elba, Kat Dennings, Ray Stevenson, Zachary Levi, Tadanobu Asano, Jaimie Alexander, Rene Russo and Anthony Hopkins.

Roman Polanski BFI Retrospective - Cul-de-sac (1966)

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Simon Columb attends the Roman Polanski retrospective at BFI Southbank...

Roman Polanski remains a fascinating filmmaker to this day. Alongside Andrej Wajda and Jerzy Skolimowski, Polanski came to the fore in the late 1950s in Poland. The BFI in London are screening all of Polanski’s films during January and February 2013 and throughout January, essays on separate films will be released here on Flickering Myth in the hope that you too can join us in reflecting on Polanski’s diverse and ever-expanding career. Next up is 1966's Cul-de-sac...

Cul-de-sac, 1966.

Starring Donald Pleasence, Françoise Dorléac, Lionel Stander, Jack MacGowran, Iain Quarrier, Geoffrey Sumner, Renee Houston, William Franklyn, Trevor Delaney, Marie Kean and Jacqueline Bisset.

Knife in the Water set the standard for Polanski. For his directorial debut, it was nominated for Foreign Picture at the Oscars, losing out to Fellini’s 8 ½. If you lose out to a film considered one of the greatest of all-time, you can go home proud. Suffice to say, Polanski was sought after, eventually turning to England to create Repulsion and Cul-de-sac. A troubled production, Cul-de-sac saw Donald Pleasance turning up in a Lincoln to the blustery, small village, whilst Francoise Dorleac joined the production with a small dog named Jarderane. Hardly small-scale, it remained true to Polanski's roots - claustrophobic, a small three-way cast, use of deep-focus, etc. "Cul-de-sac was decidedly a Roman Polanski film. Its obsessional tone, its fascination with the mechanics of power and humiliation" (Polanski: The Filmmaker as Voyeur by Barbara Learning). On set, Polanski became demanding and brutal – not least because he had clearly based the film on his relationship with Basia Kwiatkowska, which ended four years prior. Though associated with many hallmarks of his films - Cul-de-sac particularly has a deeply personal edge.

The story is set up as two criminals are fleeing the scene of a crime. Akin to Reservoir Dogs, we don’t see or know about the heist or robbery – but for whatever reason, they wind up on Lindisfarne. Albie (Jack MacGowran) has been shot and can barely move, and Richard (Lionel Stander) has been shot in his arm, so he seeks help and finds recently-married couple George (Donald Pleasance) and Teresa (Francoise Dorleac), who live within an old castle on the island. Teresa is unfaithful – our first sighting of her is topless with a neighbour’s son; George is weak and clearly cannot control his considerably younger wife – who we assume has married him for money.

In a direct parallel with The Ghost (titled The Ghost Writer on its US release), the family are isolated, cut off from the outside world as the phone line is disconnected. The marshy landscape and surrounding water combined with an upper-class elitism of the married couple, again connect with the Pierce Brosnan / Ewan McGregor thriller. Unlike The Ghost, though both films have an interest in the role of a powerful female, Cul-de-sac has a clear comedic edge – mocking the childish weakness of Donald Pleasance against the “Lan-dan gangster” of Lionel Stander, who carries a certain Alan Sugar-like charm.

The sexual politics are established early on – from the reveal of Teresa’s infidelities through to the awkward manner that George is introduced, standing as a child carrying a kite. In this opening sequence, we witness the dynamic through the eyes of Richard – or ‘Dickie’ as he comes to be known - as he checks out the building before making his intentions known; again, Polanski places us in the place of the voyeur. But it seems ‘Dickie’ is not seduced by Teresa either – Dickie represents the stronger, dominant male opposed to George who, through the humiliating requests Teresa asks of him, is reduced to a bumbling outcast. Teresa almost becomes an accomplice to Dickie as she assists in digging the grave of Albie after he dies from his wounds – and consequently mocks George, laughing and drinking with Dickie. Hardly an example of the supportive wife. In a similar manner to Repulsion, though a key female-role, Teresa is never supported in her frustration of George. Though we laugh at his fear, her lack of support and ridicule of him ensures that she is never seen in a positive light either.

If the tone is unclear from the outset, when a family unexpectedly visits the castle, the humour is suddenly heightened. From the married man who is flirting outrageously with Teresa through to a change in role as Dickie, to remain in the castle until his “boss” finds him, takes on the ‘Gardener / Butler’ job to keep up appearances. Guns are fired, stained-glass windows are broken. Though tense, we all stifle a chuckle when George fails to even hang his own picture back on the wall after a brief discussion of his artistry.

When researching Knife in the Water, it was clear that his exploration into social issues was a rare theme he tackled in his debut, but I do believe that Cul-de-sac manages to touch upon some basic assumptions between the elitist, ignorant upper-class against the rough, hyper-masculine working class. Dickie manages to mock George tremendously to Teresa’s amusement and, only in the final moments does George manage to re-affirm himself and protect his wife. Of course, it’s too late then, and the guilt, shame and anger at his own initial inaction combined with the self-destructing nature of his flawed attempt at protection (destroying the only way of escape; giving Dickie an opportunity to use the tommy-gun) leads to only further upset. Knife in the Water ended somewhat ambiguously as characters continued their life with no clear change – whilst Cul-de-sac finishes as George, akin to Gollum in The Hobbit, perched atop of the rock, crying out about his own fate. He has lost the love he adored - not through the actions of others – but through his own inaction.

You need only look to the end of Chinatown to see a striking parallel – as Jack Nicholson looks to his love, and sadness overwhelms him. They have lost their love – and they blame themselves. Though Nicholson's Gettes is not alone, George is - and as the credits role on the top of George's misery it would be wrong to let him wallow in his own sadness. We want to comfort him a little and tell him: Forget it George, its Lindisfarne.

For more on the BFI's Roman Polanski retrospective, or to book tickets, visit the official site.

Simon Columb

Five teaser posters for Bates Motel

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With just a couple of months to go until the premiere of A&E's Bates Motel, the network has stepped up the promotional push for the Psycho prequel series by releasing five new teaser posters, which you can check out right here (click for larger versions):

 

Bates Motel is set to deliver a contemporary spin on the Alfred Hitchcock classic and has been created by by former Lost show-runner Carlton Cuse and Friday Night Lights writer Kerry Ehrin, who have assembled a strong cast led by Freddie Highmore (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Art of Getting By) as a young Norman Bates and Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air, Source Code) as 'Mother' - a.k.a. Mrs. Norma Bates. The series is also set to feature the likes of Nestor Carbonell (Lost), Max Thieriot (House at the End of the Street), Mike Vogel (Cloverfield) and Olivia Cooke (The Quiet Ones), and will premiere on A&E on March 18th.
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