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Les Miserables breaks records at the UK box office

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UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 11th to Sunday 13th January 2013...

Boosted by £1.38m from two days of preview screenings, Tom Hooper's adaptation of the musical extravaganza Les Miserables debuted in first place at the UK box office this past weekend, pulling in £8.12m to shatter the previous record opening for a musical held by Mamma Mia! on £6.59m, as well securing the biggest January release on these shores. Meanwhile fellow new release Gangster Squad could only manage third place with £2.09m as Ang Lee's Life of Pi climbed one place to second in its fourth weekend on screens.

Having dominated the chart for the past few weeks, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey slipped three places to fourth, the fantasy epic having banked a total of £48.49m to date, while The Impossible also fell three to fifth in its second weekend. Thanks to four days of preview screenings, horror sequel Texas Chainsaw 3D posted a solid £1.25m opening in sixth place, with Quartet, Jack Reacher, Pitch Perfect and Parental Guidance all dropping three spots from last week to fill out the rest of the top ten.

Number one this time last year: War Horse

1. Les Miserables - £8.12m weekend (New)
2. Life of Pi - £2.33m weekend (4 weeks)
3. Gangster Squad - £2.09m weekend (New)
4. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - £1.86m weekend (5 weeks)
5. The Impossible- £1.86m weekend  (2 weeks)
6. Texas Chainsaw 3D - £1.25m weekend (New)
7. Quartet - £891,829 weekend (2 weeks)
8. Jack Reacher - £690,043 weekend (3 weeks)
9. Pitch Perfect - £453,205 weekend (4 weeks)
10. Parental Guidance - £401,627 weekend (3 weeks)

Incoming...

This Friday sees the release of Quentin Tarantino's Spaghetti Western homage Django Unchained (cert. 18) [read our review here], along with horror anthology V/H/S (cert. 18) and indie drama The Sessions (cert. 15). Meanwhile, there's also a limited 3D re-release for Pixar's animated classic Monsters Inc. (cert. U).

Indestructible Hulk is all the rage for Marvel NOW!

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The world will be turning green this April 2013 when the creative team of Eisner Award-winning writer Mark Waid and legendary artist Walter Simonson unleashes Indestructible Hulk #6 to commence a new epic adventure for the Angriest Avenger.  The official Marvel NOW! synopsis reads:

It’s off to Jotunheim, the land of the Frost Giants as Bruce Banner and his lab team embark on an all-new secret mission for S.H.I.E.L.D! Caught trespassing by the local natives, they’re going to need the help of the mighty Avenger, Thor!

“The Marvel Universe's two most powerful heroes — the Hulk and Thor — join forces to quell a centuries-old war between Godlike forces,” says Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment. “But first, they'll throw down in a slugfest to prove who's more worthy to wield that pesky hammer.  It's an epic tale featuring two of Marvel's most popular characters, told by two creators at the top of their craft."  Speaking with Marvel.com, writer Mark Waid said, “Banner claims that he's taking his crew to Jotunheim in search of a specific element that exists only at Frost Giant temperatures.  But Bruce has a hidden motive, as well. The real fun of it is how Bruce and his team get to Jotunheim in the first place; it's a nifty piece of applied science, if I do say so myself.”

Each issue of Indestructible Hulk includes a code for a free digital copy on the Marvel Comics app for iOS and Android devices. Additionally, each issue of Indestructible Hulk 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.

For more on Marvel NOW!, please visit now.marvel.com and join the conversation on Twitter using #MarvelNOW.

HMV Sprees and Fopp Drops

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Simon Columb on the demise of the high street entertainment store...

HMV
When I was 16 a friend and I were keen to go to the cinema. Checking our change, we were short by mere pennies and were mortified at the prospect of spending another two hours simply hanging about the shopping centre - something we had already spent the morning enjoying. I had an idea: Let's go to HMV and meet someone. We didn't know who, but we knew for sure that at 16, on a Saturday, someone we knew was bound to be in HMV. Lo and behold, barely 10 minutes into browsing the store, we spotted friends and convinced them to (a) spot us the ten pence and (b) join us to the cinema.

Only a few years ago, a friend and I decided to use an afternoon wisely and take advantage of an offer at HMV. We would both purchase a DVD, and watch the two back-to-back in the afternoon. They had to be films which we had not seen before and, after a good hour of discussion, we settled on Sexy Beast and THX 1138.

These experiences cannot be replicated in the online, digital age. These shops were physical spaces where people met and argued their appreciation of cinema and music. The 'random' selection - and enjoyment through comparing the potential double-bill is not as much fun staring at a computer screen. The argument over the physical product - holding one next to the other and arguing which would be the honourable purchase ("I know it'll go down in price... but it's numbered, so it won't lose too much value..."). Holding the special editions and personally seeing the value in the extra few pounds to justify a tin box. HMV will not just spell the end of the historic brand itself - it also marks the end of a High Street entertainment specialist. If I suddenly have an urge to appreciate art-house or independent films - I cannot pop down the shops to buy the product - Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's simply don't stock it. I could download it; I could buy the film from an online-retailer; I could watch a low-standard version on YouTube. There is no need to leave the house now.

But I like to leave the house. I don't like staying at home moving between the PC and the TV to enjoy cinema. I like to watch films at the cinema and I like to browse in HMV for too long - and I like to pride myself on finding the strange-shaped case of a Band of Brothers box-set (especially when I know that this particular version is hard to find and worth paying a little bit above the odds.).

I don't believe this is the end of the entertainment store - though it may be the end of HMV. Second-hand shops like CEX are appearing everywhere. But the joy of browsing pristine copies - and knowing that the store will stock the copy you want, is over. Second-hand stores sometimes stock them; sometimes they don't. Sometimes they exclusively deal with games and mobile phones; rarely do they stock CDs.

I appreciate the frustration many had with HMV - and considering it had a monopoly over High Street entertainment specialist stores for the last five years, you would imagine it could have prospered if it was managed better. It is not just a loss to the employees of the store, but it is a loss to the high street. No more "HMV sprees" or "Fopp drops" - now we shall merely buy online, directed by flash graphics and algorithms attuned to our previous visits. Something about that seems robotic and cold - His Masters Voice, calling us into the warmth of the shop, has been silenced.

Simon Columb

Stranger Than Fiction: William Goldenberg talks about Argo

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Trevor Hogg chats with film editor William Goldenberg about working with Ben Affleck and the challenges of assembling Argo...


“Ben [Affleck] was a much more sophisticated director on Argo [2012] than he was on Gone Baby Gone [2007],” observes William Goldenberg who assembled the directorial debut as well as the third effort from the Hollywood actor who is becoming more comfortable sitting in the director’s chair. “I don’t think Ben felt that he had a true understanding how to tell the story with a camera like he does now.  It is interesting to watch him direct himself.  I asked him about it.  It comes from a certain amount of experience before he ever got behind the camera and directed.  Ben has done a lot of movies as an actor and was a real student of film and directing before he ever directed.”  The Academy Award nominated film editor explains, “What he does is after every three or four takes go behind the monitor and watch playback of his own performance.  When he’s doing that it’s as if he’s looking at a stranger.  He’s incredibly objective about himself and incredibly accurate as far as I can tell.”  Goldenberg states, “Ben loves movies and has seen everything on how these things are done and that’s what the great directors do; they see what other people are doing.”


The two collaborators reunited to tell the story about six American embassy workers in Iran who find refuge in the Canadian ambassador’s residency while the rest of their workers are held hostage by Iranian dissidents.   “It was 1979,” recalls William Goldenberg.  “I was 20 so I was aware of what was going on at the time.  I certainly know a lot about it now than I did then.  I was like everybody else following it on Nightline every night and getting my information that way.”  Additional research was required when piecing together the protest which turns into a hostile takeover.     “You see the first guy who goes over the wall; there is some newsreel footage of that. There isn’t a tremendous amount of footage of the embassy compound but I did want to get the feel of it.  I watched a lot of newsreel footage eventually leading up to it to get the sense of what the crowd was like, how angry they were, and how organized it was.”  There was a lot of back and forth discussion between Ben Affleck and Goldenberg about the protest which sparked an international incident.  “Early on I talked to him about not having music in the embassy takeover and having it all be real sounds, and hard edge cuts sonically and pictorially; that created a sense of urgency and panic.”  Archival footage was to be used in the sequence.  “The original intention of the script was that we would be cutting from the real newsreel shot of a guy scaling the wall.  Then it was described in the script you come from the newsreel footage and come around 180 degrees to the other side through our real 35mm footage where you’d be seeing a part of it you had never seen before.” The plan had to be changed.  “When we did that in the opening it pulled us out of it and we felt instead of being in it you were an observer.  We went with the stuff they had shot which made it much more visceral and real.”


William Goldenberg
“Ben is computer and editing savvy so he has an Avid at his house and in our cutting room,” remarks William Goldenberg.  “There was a tremendous amount of footage in 45mm, 16mm, and 8mm.   Ben would go into his room and cull through the dailies and find pieces that he liked.  We had a working cut by that point but Ben would be constantly bringing in new pieces and ask what I thought about what he had found. There are three or four cut sequences in a row Ben had put together that are in the movie.  He was a great part of it in that way because he understands the editing process as an art form and also understands it technically.”  The two men live close to each other so Goldenberg would go to Affleck’s house on Sundays to review the edited material.  “It was more of a discussion than it was a bunch of notes of what we thought was working and what things weren’t.  When Ben was done [shooting] we were in the edit room together.  He’s very hands on.  Ben is in the room a lot with me but there are times I’ll make it clear, ‘Let me have some time alone with this.’  Sometimes when you’re by yourself in a room you allow yourself to make more mistakes and try things that you might not try with someone else in the room.  When the director is sitting there and there is a big screen in front of him and you’re trying things their instinct is to react to everything.”  At the heart of the creative partnership is a friendship.  “We can be honest with each other with no bullshit and not have to worry about hurting someone’s feelings or being careful because somebody’s ego is too big.  We would be really comfortable so the tendency was for us was to be in a room together.  We were having a good time and the movie kept getting better.”


“In the body of the movie there were several times in the script that [Chris] Terrio referred to specific pieces of newsreel footage with when it aired, what time, what network, and who the reporter was; he had done a fair bit of research himself,” says William Goldenberg.  “About half or more of the newsreel pieces in the body of the movie are in the script.  As Ben and I went through we watched hours of newsreel stuff from the day and added stuff of our own and layered it with where it was in the screenplay.”  Not all that much was required to blend the archival and principle photography footage together.  “I’ve done this before on another movie.  I found that if your audience is engaged in the story and the characters it doesn’t matter.  We didn’t touch it at all.  We added little extra sound.  Somebody was lighting a flag on fire in the newsreel footage and it’s the real newsreel sound.  We didn’t want any kind of interpretation of having somebody kicked in the street and adding a sound effect.  It was the sound that was recorded at the time.  The art of it is to tell a great story.  In terms of the technical art of it Ben was worried about it and I kept saying, ‘This isn’t going to be a problem.’

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“Ben shoots a lot of footage in general but most takes were on him because what he told me was when he started to direct he went to other actor-directors.” Ben Affleck consulted legendary industry veterans such as Warren Beatty (Reds) and Clint Eastwood (Million Dollar Baby).  “There is a tendency to shoot yourself last and the entire crew is sitting there looking at you and they think you’re the vainest in the world.  ‘Let’s move on and go to the next set-up.’  They all told him don’t short change your own performance.   Make sure that you shoot enough of yourself because there is a tendency to short change it.  Consequently there was a lot of it; he is obviously the lead in the movie.”  The seasoned cast members such as Affleck, Bryan Cranston (Drive), John Goodman (Sea of Love) and Alan Arkin (Wait Until Dark) varied their performances but not to the extent Goldman experienced while working on Heat (1995) and The Insider (1999).  “The most varied actor I have ever been able to edit is Al Pacino where in take one he’d be whispering and take twelve screaming with spit flying out of his mouth.  Not like that but enough variations if the scene needed to be shaded one way or the other I always had the material.”


With the CIA declassifying the material about the rescue operation it was revealed in an article by journalist Joshuah Bearman that the six embassy workers led by an extraction specialist sent by the government agency left Iran under the disguise of a Canadian film crew scouting locations for a science fiction film to be shot in the Middle Eastern country.   The absurdities of the movie industry and spy trade provide a satirical edge which adds much needed levity to the historical thriller.  “We embraced it,” states William Goldenberg who had to balance the comedy with drama.  “What we didn’t try to hide that. We wanted to make sure that the jokes were organic to the movie.” Discretion was required.  “You don’t want to cut from Alan Arkin saying, ‘Argo fuck yourself.’ to a guy getting gunned down on the street by the Iranian Republican Guard. There were times where we said, ‘Lets not cut here because tonally it is too hard edge.’ Sometimes we put in an establishing shot or move the placement of a scene around so tonally it wasn’t such a bump that we would lose our story and emotion.”


“The dialogue [scenes] were interesting, especially, in the Canadian ambassador’s residence,” states William Goldenberg.  “What Ben did was he had the actors all live together for a week before filming started in that house, in their period clothes, no cellphones, no computers, no access to the outside world, thereby, putting them in there as if they were really stuck there like the real house guests were.  It gave the actors a familiarity and rapport that was crucial to the tone of those sequences. When Ben shot it he did a lot of improv and some of it is in the movie.” A lot of cameras were used and allowed the freedom to capture verity pieces such as landing on an actor in the middle of his line.  “Making everything feel coherent was a real challenge.  What is the story we’re telling in a scene?  What’s the emotional story?  What’s the subtext of each scene?  A lot of times it’ll take care of itself in a dialogue scene so what I’m trying to edit for is what the subtext of the scene is. What are people feeling emotionally?  What’s Ben’s underlying emotional feeling and how do I bring that out with all the other characters as suppose to just cutting the words?” When it comes to art of knowing when to insert reaction shots, Goldenberg notes, “That’s the difference between a good editor and someone who is not because there is a feel. When I was an apprentice I worked for an editor named Sean Barton who cut Jagged Edge [1985] and the third Star Wars movie [Return of the Jedi].  He said to me, ‘It’s simple.  As an audience what do you want to be seeing at that moment?’”


“It took weeks because it was shot over a series of weeks,” remarks William Goldenberg when discussing the Airport Chase Sequence.  “My favourite part of it even when I read the script was when they first leave the house to go to the airport and are driving.  Ben is talking and telling them what to expect at each checkpoint; you were intercutting between that and the CIA in the background scrambling because they are on the way to the airport and their tickets have been cancelled.  I love the way we play around with time there.”  The initial design of the scene was altered.  “There were a lot more exterior shots of that little van driving around the streets in Turkey which was doubling for Tehran. We found that staying with the faces of our house guests and Ben amped up the tension because the actors were so good at looking appropriately scared and not over-the-top.” The movie industry veteran reveals,     “When I’m cutting sequences like that I wouldn’t even call it action. We call that a hugely long tension piece until the end when they’re on the tarmac and the police are trying to run down the plane.  I learned that early on when I was cutting stretches of it.  I was trying to put music into it and see what felt right.  I tried some action music and it all felt stupid. It felt like I was trying to impose a pace on it.   It was a weird feeling so I pulled all that out and put in low tension beds, and all of a sudden it came to life.  It felt like now I found the right musical architecture for it and also an editorial architecture for it.  It wasn’t fast cuts and action.  It was about tension and holding moments.”  Goldenberg recalls a conversation he had while cutting a picture which resulted in him receiving his second Academy Award nomination.”   When I did Seabiscuit [2003], Gary Ross and I used to talk about that the key to action sequences is the story.  There is not a moment of action for the sake of a moment of action.”


When informed I had received an email from a film extra inquiring about his performance as an Iranian Republican Guard stationed at the airport in Tehran who becomes bewitched with the movie storyboards given as a gift by the departing fake film crew, William Goldenberg chuckles, “It’s a great moment.”   He continues, “I changed those shots probably more than any shot in the movie.  It was important to Ben that the storytelling aspect of the movie was coming through.  Ultimately, the movie is about the stories parents tell their kids, and the stories governments tell their citizens.”  The scene was to put the situation in the proper context.  “It was important to him that those guys who are trapped in that world too are enthralled by that as well.  Ultimately, they are 20 year old kids with guns and they’re like, ‘This is cool.’ And they’re into it.  We worked hard on getting those moments right.  It was all improv stuff.  They were speaking Farsi and Ben didn’t know what they were saying so later we had it translated to make sure what they were saying was appropriate for the movie.  Ben would keep giving them direction about what to do in terms of interacting with the guy next to him.”


“For the most part I would say it was what he originally intended,” states William Goldenberg.   “There was a little bit more stuff with his family that got cut out of the movie.”  The issue was to do with the overall focus of the picture as suppose to performances of Taylor Schilling (The Lucky One) and Aidan Sussman as the wife and son of the CIA extraction specialist portrayed by Ben Affleck.  “It felt like we were taking a left or right turn at those times.  One screening we were having for some friends and families we said, ‘Let’s try this without these scenes and see how it plays. When we ran the movie for 30 people and it clicked.  We knew we had found the movie.”  Upon further reflection, Goldenberg remarks, “Maybe it was too much of it.  We got as much out of him sitting with Alan Arkin talking about his family as we did by seeing and hearing him talk to his wife and maybe have an argument with her. What the audience imagined his relationship to be with her was in a way better than what was by seeing it.  Not because of what we had done wasn’t good.   We decided to let the audience to fill in the blanks for us.  We realized that we had a lot of references to his family and his family situation but it was within the context of his mission we were finding out about it and not going off into a slightly different movie.”


“The comedy versus the human drama was the big [overall] challenge,” reflects William Goldenberg who upon looking back at the Embassy Takeover Sequence remarks, “The trick was to let the audience play catch up a little bit.  Not to spell everything out. There was more material where you saw the ABC’s of how it all happened.  Our intention was to have the audience feel breathless at the end of it.”  A particular section of Argo stands out to Goldenberg.  “One of the things I was looking forward to when I read the script was the script read through they did at The Beverly Hilton Hotel where they are reading through the screenplay and you’re seeing what happening with the hostages in the embassy, the house guests and politically around the United States. The combination of all of those tones, things and the mock execution of the hostages in the embassy go through in that sequence is probably my favourite editorially and was one of the two or three, I was most looking forward to when I read the screenplay.  It came out great and I worked really hard in getting that right because it was a lot of different things to juggle.”


Argo has become an international awards darling on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and is considered to a major contender to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards.  “It’s hard to know about those things.  It’s a great piece of entertainment that also has something to say” states William Goldenberg who went immediately from Argo to co-editing Zero Dark Thirty (2012) which has resulted in him competing against himself at the BAFTAs and Oscars.  “As an editor when the time comes that you get to work on movies like that you relish every moment of it. We all thought that the movie had potential to be something special and I feel that we did it justice.  It’s a great thing when people you went to high school with and some friends I haven’t seen for a long time have wonderful things to say about the movie. These are people who aren’t in the movie business; they go to the movies because they like movies.”


Argo production stills © 2012 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

Many thanks to William Goldenberg for taking the time for this interview.

Make sure to visit the official website for Argo as well as read Classified Material: Matt Dessero talks about Argo.

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

New Iron Man 3 image released

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Director Shane Black (Kiss Kiss Bang Bang) will kick off the 2013 superhero movie season off this spring when Phase Two of the Marvel Cinematic Universe gets underway with the arrival of Iron Man 3, and Marvel Studios has now released a new image featuring the Armored Avenger (Robert Downey Jr.) and Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow):

Robert Downey Jr. Gwyneth Paltrow Iron Man 3

Robert Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow are joined in the cast of Iron Man 3 by the returning Don Cheadle (War Machine) and Jon Favreau (Happy Hogan), while newcomers to the MCU include Ben Kingsley (Hugo) as The Mandarin, Guy Pearce (Prometheus) as Aldrich Killian, James Badge Dale (The Lone Ranger) as Eric Savin / Coldblood, Ashley Hamilton (Sunset Beach) as Jack Taggert / Firepower and Rebecca Hall (The Town) as Maya Hansen.

"Iron Man 3 pits brash-but-brilliant industrialist Tony Stark/Iron Man against an enemy whose reach knows no bounds. When Stark finds his personal world destroyed at his enemy's hands, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. This journey, at every turn, will test his mettle. With his back against the wall, Stark is left to survive by his own devices, relying on his ingenuity and instincts to protect those closest to him. As he fights his way back, Stark discovers the answer to the question that has secretly haunted him: does the man make the suit or does the suit make the man?"

Iron Man 3 will be released in the UK on April 26th and opens in North America on May 3rd.

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My Favourite Arnie Movie - Predator (1987)

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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, Chris Cooper with 1987's Predator...


"Run! Go! Get to da choppah!"

"Stick around."

"If it bleeds, we can kill it."

"Come on... Come on! Do it! Do it! Come on! Kill me! I'm here! Come on! Do it now! Kill me!"

Phew, now that I've got that out of the way…

With Arnie soon making a comeback, the team here at Flickering Myth started picking out their favourite films, and the only choice for me was his turn as Major Alan 'Dutch' Schaefer in Predator. I love both Terminator films (yes two!), Commando and many others; but nothing else comes close for me in terms of writing, action, machismo, and entertainment.

The premise is simple. An elite group of soldiers enter the Central American jungle on a rescue mission. Things turn sour when they find out that mission is part of a cover up. It gets nastier when an extra-terrestrial hunter picks them out as worthy prey.

I've already covered how quotable the film is (and saved you from attempts at shoe-horning them into this article), which goes to show how sharp a script was written by Jim and John Thomas. Most films hope for one good line that will be remembered, whereas this one has several from each character! Like the muscle bound actors within, it is very direct, doesn't outstay its welcome and does exactly what it needs to do. It’s a fantastically well rounded action film. In fact, I’d go as far to say that the film is stronger in the first half when we have the whole group together, just doing their thing whilst we get fleeting POV shots from the Predator. The second half, with a game of cat and mouse being played between Dutch and The Predator (an imposing Kevin Peter Hall, who had just played Bigfoot in Harry and the Hendersons) is still fantastic but loses something in comparison.

What a cast. Though each character is very thinly written, they all have strong characterisations. Dutch, Billy, Dillon, Hawkins, Poncho, Blain and Mac have got to be the manliest group of men ever to grace celluloid. Poncho and Hawkins aren't even in amazing shape (in comparison to the body builders and wrestlers they are stood next to) but get their own memorable moments. I never did understand Hawkins' (Iron Man 3 director Shane Black, who was on set to keep an eye on first time feature director McTiernan) jokes when I was younger, but just like Billy in the film, they eventually clicked. Their strong presence is felt both on and off camera with Carl Weathers (Dillon) explaining how he would never work out in front of the other actors, and swear that his freshly pumped physique was natural. A bodyguard was hired to work on the set, not to keep any one actor safe, but to keep all of them safe from Sonny Landham (Billy). You couldn't write this stuff!

In a film filled with brilliant set pieces, two stand out. The first is the teams assault on a Guerilla compound nearer the start of the film. Following some improvisation by Dutch, the whole team attacks (show time!) and we get to see just how good they are, as does the Predator. The scene moves between the team as they seemingly invincibly take down the large group of cannon fodder. It only briefly slows at times to allow some great one-liners.

The second is Mac's sighting of the Predator for the first time. Quite rightly, spotting a pair of glowing eyes on a nearly invisible 7 foot+ humanoid completely freaks him out. So picking up Blaine's minigun, he proceeds to fire, with the team soon joining in. No questions, just about a minute of guns firing. I'm pretty sure not one leaf makes it out of that scene intact. They probably deserved it.

Look at the image below. Surely anyone who sees this would need to go and see the film immediately? I swear I've grown more chest hair each time I watch it.


Although I prefer the first half, the latter stages of the film with Dutch on his own versus the Predator are rather cool. For a start, he figures out how (well, he was lucky but we'll forgive that) to turn the tables and become invisible himself. Then we are treated to what always strikes me as the most hardcore bit of Boy-Scouting ever, with Dutch crafting weapons and traps in a last stand. We also get to see the Predator in all his glory, and what a handsome chap he is. The design is impressive, as are the costume and animatronics involved. It's an iconic design, brought to life by Hall with his impressive physicality. With his team decimated and only his wits to rely on, can Dutch defeat an alien whose life is based around a culture of hunting? I think you know the answer!

I could write for days about how I love this film, but I'll leave it at this. Predator has a much stronger idea at its core than most of its contemporaries and is a true classic, with a fantastic setting, strong cast and many memorable sequences/scenes. Arnie himself is fantastic with his physique and line delivery making him the perfect leader of a such a group of bad asses. So run! Go! Watch it!

Chris Cooper

Comic Book Review - The High Ways #1

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Luke Owen reviews the first issue of John Byrne's The High Ways...


The High Ways #1
“Humanity has not yet reached for the stars, but the Solar System is still a busy, exciting, and sometimes very dangerous place, as young Eddie Wallace is about to discover, when he joins the crew of a freighter that hauls cargo along THE HIGH WAYS. John Byrne’s all-new, space-faring series begins here!”

“This evolved into something a bit more like Dan Dare, the British sci-fi strip so beloved from my childhood and early teens” writer and artist John Bryne told IDW back in November when hyping the first issue of this new comic. And to be honest, it really does feel like that. From its artwork to its pacing, The High Ways often feels like a comic I would have picked up when I was a youngster for 50p at my local newsagents.

While that sounds like I’m damning it with faint praise, The High Ways is actually quite a good little comic book. It certainly isn’t the best title in the IDW line-up and it’s easily not the best released today, but it’s certainly worth a look at if you fancy a nostalgic trip.

The story focuses on Eddie, a young and spirited man who wants to see more of the solar system so he joins a rock-hopping freighter who is on an eight-month mission to one of the outer planets. However upon arrival it turns out their mission was bogus and now they’re on a planet that is 8 months away from anywhere – and that’s where things go wrong.

The only downside to this plot is that the last sentence in that paragraph happens within the last few pages - making this issue nothing more than a trailer for the next one. This means that the majority of the comic is spent setting up the space world they live in with exposition dialogue. It does feel quite heavy at times which can make it boring but it will keep you interested enough to get to the last panel – where the comic gets really interesting. The second half on the book (once they're on this ship) is a lot better than the first half and Byrne has worked really hard on creating a believable world of space travel. I would have liked to have seen more of Eddie's shift outside of his sleep stasis, but the banter between all three characters is really well written that it didn't hamper my enjoyment.

The artwork is good, the dialogue is interesting enough (if overly-wordy) and the whole thing comes together quite well. The High Ways is by no means a perfect comic, but it is a nice step into your childhood comic past. It's done enough to make me want to read the next issue.

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


Will Jack Reacher get a sequel?

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Tom Cruise Jack Reacher
It could all be over before it's even really begun for the big screen run of Lee Child's Jack Reacher character with The Hollywood Reporter claiming that the franchise is unlikely to get a sequel.

The film drew a lot of criticism in the early stages with a lot of fans angry at the casting of Tom Cruise and it could be argued that this outrage has caused its somewhat poor box office takings. However, as things stand, Jack Reacher has taken $150 million worldwide - more than doubling its $60 million budget. So what's the problem?

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the magic number Jack Reacher needs to achieve to get another movie is $250 million, with only three key territories left to be released in - North Korea, China and Japan. The shining light for the franchise is the last Tom Cruise movie in this situation, Knight and Day, brought in $50 million from each territory - so there is still a chance.

Tom Cruise will be back on the big screen this year in Oblivion and then All You Need Is Kill. He will be teaming again with Jack Reacher director Christopher McQuarrie for the fifth Mission:Impossible movie which could press ahead this year or early 2014.

Marvel's Jeph Loeb teases a Heroes for Hire movie

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Luke Cage and Iron Fist
Following the blockbuster success of Joss Whedon's The Avengers, Disney and Marvel Studios are set to embark on Phase Two of the Marvel Cinematic Universe this year with the release of Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World, with Captain America: The Winter Solider and Guardians of the Galaxy both arriving next year as we build towards The Avengers 2 in 2015. However, despite having their hands full with Phase Two, plans all already afoot for the third stage of the MCU; Edgar Wright's Ant-Man has been announced as the first Marvel release post-Avengers 2, and now Marvel's Head of Television Jeph Loeb has revealed that a Heroes for Hire movie could also be on the cards:

"Just like we just announced Guardians of the Galaxy, we are certainly looking at the Heroes for Hire franchise which is Luke Cage and Iron Fist," said Loeb during an interview with Buzzfeed about the latest season of the Ultimate Spider-Man animated series, which features both Luke Cage and Iron Fist as part of Spidey's S.H.I.E.L.D. team. While Loeb's comments shouldn't be taken as an official announcement on a Heroes for Hire movie, it won't come as a surprise to learn that Marvel are discussing the possibility of bringing the duo to the screen, with both characters previously mentioned as possible candidates for the feature film treatment alongside other Marvel Studios properties such as Black Panther and Doctor Strange.

Would you like to see a Heroes for Hire movie, and if so who would you cast as Luke Cage and Iron Fist?

A Helluva Deal for Deadpool

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Deadpool MarvelApril sees an all-new arc for Wade Wilson under the direction of writers and comedians Brian Posehn (The Sara Silverman Program) and Gerry Duggan (Attack of the Show!, Infinite Horizon), and artist Mike Hawthorne (Conan).  The official synopsis for Deadpool #8 reads:

The Presidents are dead (again) but that doesn’t mean Deadpool is done with the re-animated! When Wade makes a deal with a demon to collect souls of the damned, he finds himself in a precarious situation because if he does not complete what’s asked of him – one his closest friends will be taken FOREVER!

“Brian, Gerry and Mike are cranking up the volume way past 10 for this one,” said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment.  "You scream, I scream, we’ll all be screaming for more Deadpool when you see just how much we’re letting them all get away with!"

Each issue of Deadpool 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.

For more on Marvel NOW!, please visit now.marvel.comand join the conversation on Twitter using #MarvelNOW

New clip from Ultimate Spider-Man season 2

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Curt Connors Ultimate Spider-Man
Earlier this week we brought you a trailer for the second season of Ultimate Spider-Man, and now Marvel has released a brand new clip from the new batch of episodes, which sees Spidey (voiced by Drake Bell) meeting with Dr. Curt Connors (Tom Kenny) about a new serum based around animal DNA; check it out below...

"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.

My Favourite Tarantino Movie - Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003)

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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 Kirsty Capes with 2003's Kill Bill: Vol. 1...

Kill Bill Vol 1 movie poster
Kill Bill: Vol. 1 is a bit like a bull in a china shop. There is supposed structure in the narrative form, with each incident of the plot boxed neatly in a "chapter", but somehow Tarantino weaves an engaging and cohesive story amid chaos. The jumps and swings in plot, typical of Tarantino's style, which has been well established in his previous three films by this point. The conception of the plot in Kill Bill is so careful and articulate, yet witty and aggressive that it demands attention. And that's what it gets.

Although by no stretch of the imagination is Kill Bill Tarantino at his best, it was one of the Tarantino films that demonstrated him to be a consistent director. The first Tarantino film of the new millennium, Kill Bill brought fans into a new era in colour and style. With homage to older works, particularly 70s and 80s martial arts films and TV shows, Kill Bill feels like an old school samurai film for the twenty first century. There are fight scenes that last for ten-plus minutes, but Uma Thurman is wearing canary yellow bike leathers, and she's fighting a suburban soccer mom in what looks like the town in Edward Scissorhands. An hour later, she's in a Japanese tea house taking off Lucy Liu's scalp. And let's not forget those fantastic blood splatters. I'm not a fan of gore films or, particularly, violent films. But the hilarity of the special effects in this film, the deliberate parody of Japanese filmmaking is so juxtaposed that one can't help but laugh. Gogo Yubari and the rest of the Crazy 88 are also a study of racial stereotypes. Gogo herself wears a schoolgirl outfit throughout and has a thirst for both sex and blood. The rest of them are hyper-violent and super-fashionable in their matching suits. O-Ren Ishii's childhood reads like a hentai gore anime.

Uma Thurman and Lucy Liu in Kill Bill: Vol. 1Uma Thurman is fantastic as the vengeful bride. Her affinity for acting Tarantino characters and understanding exactly what he wants from his cast is blatant as she creates the perfect balance between a vulnerable and heartbroken mother, and a ruthless assassin. Tarantino explores the theme of revenge and its every facet. Each character is given depth beyond necessity. The female dominated ensemble is refreshing compared to the likes of Pulp Fiction which was on the whole a male dominated film. To have a female lead whose badassery outweighs her feminine vulnerability tenfold, is an absolute delight for the feminist viewer. See also, Lucy Liu's O-Ren Ishii (head of Yakuza, need I say more.) Other examples are Elle Driver and Gogo Yubari. After seeing Kill Bill, for a long time Gogo was my personal idol. Powerful women in film and literature always attract my interest. Kill Bill is far from disappointing in that respect. It's a shame that it is a necessity for the plot to have Bill as the overseer and puppeteer of these women, perhaps a stumble on Tarantino's part, even if he does describe the movie as a 'feminist statement'.

However, having said that, having girls doing stuff that boys would usually do isn't really enough to describe Kill Bill as feminist. Replace every main female character with male ones and subtract the baby - and Kill Bill barely changes. Unfortunately, I think a lot of the critical acclaim and attention Kill Bill attracted at the time of its release was due to the fact that it wasn't men chopping people's heads off and biting out their tongues. We've seen male actors do that a thousand times. Kill Bill has been described as one of the most gruesome films of its time. It's far from it - it just appears more shocking to an audience who have not experienced women committing the violence that they have been desensitized to when it is performed by men. I feel that this lack of characterisation is the major flaw of the film. On the whole though, Kill Bill is fantastic, and bloody good fun.

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

Kirsty Capes

Russell Crowe talks Man of Steel

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Being only the second actor to take on the role of Jor-El, Russell Crowe has a big task on his hands as the father as Superman. He took the time to speak to Reelz about the upcoming Zack Snyder directed Man of Steel and their take on the classic DC Comics creation.

"It's very complicated, it's really complex" Crowe said. " I don't think anybody has really tried to get into the psychology of what it must be like to be Superman and what people would really respond like in a modern society if somebody like that just popped up. I think Zack Snyder was given a great deal of responsibilty because when it comes to comic book heroes and superhero films the top of the food chain is Superman. I think the biggest indicator for me of how it's looking is that the financier of the film has sent me gushing emails, he just loves it."

While the financier may be over the moon with the movie, Crowe himself has yet to see it. However he does give us some teases of what we can expect: "I'm really looking foward to seeing it, it's a massive undertaking. It takes you on the ground to Krypton, it takes you to a planet where the sun is four times larger than ours and you get to experience that stuff and if you've seen the trailers you realize that this Superman is not just floating through the air held up by a wire, this Superman is super sonic. I'm really looking forward to the way that people will respond to it."

Man of Steel will be out June 14th 2013 with Henry Cavill (Immortals) taking on the role of Clark Kent/Superman. The film will also star Amy Adams (The Muppets) as Lois Lane, Michael Shannon (Take Shelter) as General Zod, Lawrence Fishbourne (The Matrix) as Perry White, Kevin Costner (Waterworld) as Jonathan Kent and Diane Lane (Jumper) as Martha Kent. You can read the Flickering Myth writing team's reaction to the trailer here.

DC Comics is GLAAD about Batwoman and Earth 2

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The reinvention of a camp character who had a love triangle with the Caped Crusader and Robin into the first lesbian superhero with an ongoing series from a major mainstream comic publisher is being recognized again by the gay and lesbian community.

The nominees for the 24th Annual GLAAD Media Awards were announced today and DC Comics has two contenders in the category of Outstanding Comic Book.

Batwoman written by W. Haden Blackman and co-written and with art by J. H. Williams III.  This is the second nomination for Batwoman which won the 2012 GLAAD Award.

Earth 2 written by James Robinson and with art by Nicola Scott and more.

For the full post, head on over to The Source.



Dane DeHaan to star in new Metallica movie

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Dane DeHaan (Chronicle, Lawless) is set to star in the first film from the newly relaunched marketing and distribution company Picturehouse. Metallica: Through The Never, written and directed by Nimrod Antal (Predators), will feature the rock band and focus on DeHaan as a member of their crew. He is sent on an urgent mission while they play to a sold-out crowd and unexpectedly finds his world getting turned upside down.

Picturehouse's boss Bob Berney said in a statement: "Nim and the band have made a film that really captures the spirit of Metallica and their millions of loyal fans. It's an entertaining genre film with a concert inside it, a fun ride featuring an exciting young actor, Dane DeHaan. It's a very cool project to reboot Picturehouse with."

Metallica: Through The Never will be released on August 9th. DeHaan has just completed Kill Your Darlings with Daniel Radcliffe andDevil's Knot with Reese Witherspoon and Colin Firth. He has also joined the cast of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 as Harry Osborn.

Peter Weller, Michael Emerson and Mark Valley discuss Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2

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As we approach the release of Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 Warner Bros. has been steadily increasing the promotion for the latest entry in the ongoing direct-to-video DC Universe Animated Original Movies series. Now comes three video interviews featuring Peter Weller (Batman), Michael Emerson (The Joker) and Mark Valley (Superman) discussing what it's like to play a superhero (or, in Emerson's case, a maniacal supervillain), along with brand new images of each of their respective characters...

Peter Weller on playing Batman in The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2:

Batman in Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2


Michael Emerson on playing The Joker in The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2:

The Joker in Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2


Mark Valley on playing Superman in The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2:

Superman in Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2


With Gotham City back under his watchful eye, and accompanied by able sidekick Robin, Batman continues to battle crime – but his resurgence awakens a far worse evil at Arkham Asylum: The Joker. In the meantime, Superman has been dispatched by the President to halt Batman’s unsanctioned reign by whatever means necessary. Between the Joker’s diabolical scheme to drag Batman to the darkest levels of insanity, and the Man of Steel’s seemingly invincible physical presence, the Dark Knight must confront adversaries and allies simultaneously while maintaining the peace in Gotham City. 

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 is directed by Jay Olivia (Man of Steel) from a screenplay by Bob Goodman (The Zeta Project), which is of course based upon the classic 1986 graphic novel from Frank Miller (Sin City). Also featuring in the voice cast are Ariel Winter (Modern Family) as Carrie Kelley / Robin, 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, Paget Brewster (Criminal Minds) as Lana Lang and Radio Hall of Fame member Michael Jackson as Alfred Pennyworth.

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 is set for a Blu-ray and DVD release in North America on January 29th.

Thanos gets a rise out of Marvel NOW!

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Building upon the reveal at the end of The Avengers (2012), Marvel NOW! explores the origins of the "most villianious force" who be featured prominently in the cinematic sequel with the April release of Thanos Rising #1.  Creative duties for the all-new limited series have been given to writer Jason Aaron (Thor: God Of Thunder) and artist Simone Bianchi (Wolverine).  The press release from Marvel declares:

"Prepare for a visceral tale of tragedy, deceit and destiny like you’ve never seen before as readers dive into the shrouded history of the most talked about villain of the Marvel Universe. Who is Thanos, and where did this demi-god of death and destruction come from? And how does this story set up one of the biggest events in Marvel history?"

"The story of Thanos' rise to power would make Shakespeare shudder," said Axel Alonso, Editor in Chief, Marvel Entertainment.  "The epic saga of a young boy, born in blood on a planet far, far away, who grows to become one of the most powerful and terrifying forces in the Marvel Universe, Thanos Rising takes a cold, hard look at the eternal question: Are some people just born evil?"  Writer Jason Aaron explains, “This is without a doubt one of the creepiest stories I've ever gotten to write for Marvel. It's the origin of an outer space serial killer, the story of the universe's weirdest romance and a grand cosmic tragedy, all wrapped up in one.  This is me taking five issues to really dig into the head of a space-faring world conqueror, mass murderer and hopeless romantic. I love writing stories with villains as the main character, and this book is about Thanos all the way.”

March 2013 marks the arrival of the Age of Ultron

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Marvel Now! presents "the darkest days of the Marvel Universe" with the first issue of Age Of Ultron #1 with the creative help of Brian Michael Bendis (All New X-Men, Avengers VS. X-Men) and Bryan Hitch (Ultimates, Fantastic Four).  The official synopsis reads:

Evil has triumphed over good and leading this new age is none other than Ultron, the deadly sentient robot created by founding Avenger Hank Pym who turned on his creator to achieve his twisted  objective…the utter destruction of humanity. Now, it’s up to the few remaining heroes to band together and find any way to topple their new monarch. Can Wolverine, Emma Frost, Invisible Woman, Taskmaster, Beast, She-Hulk, Luke Cage, Spider-Man, and Moon Knight turn the tide?

A unique cover with foil treatment and design is packaged with Age of Ultron #1 and to whet the appetites of comic fans further the comic publisher has released some preview artwork.





A new behind-the-scenes video from Game of Thrones season 3

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The epic fantasy series Game of Thrones returns to TV screens in just over six weeks time, and while we're yet to see a trailer for the hotly-anticipated third season, HBO has delivered a brief glimpse at some behind-the-scenes footage and dialogue from the upcoming episodes courtesy of a new 'Making Game of Thrones' Vlog.

Entitled 'Molding The Book Into A Series', the featurette sees executive story editor / writer Bryan Cogman (My Own Worst Enemy) explaining the process of adapting George R.R. Martin's A Storm of Swords... well, the first half of it, at least. Take a look...


Game of Thrones season three sees the return of familiar faces such as Peter Dinklage (Tyrion Lannister), Kit Harington (Jon Snow), Lena Headey (Cersei Lannister), Richard Madden (Robb Stark), Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Jaime Lannister), Jack Gleeson (Joffrey Baratheon) and Stephen Dillane (Stannis Baratheon), while newcomers to the huge ensemble cast include Diana Rigg (The Avengers), Mackenzie Crook (The Office), Clive Russell (Thor: The Dark World), Thomas Sangster (Nowhere Boy) and Ciarán Hinds (The Woman in Black), who will portray Mance Rayder, a.k.a. the King Beyond the Wall.

Season three gets underway in the States on March 31st on HBO.
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