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Heroes & Villains: The Science Fiction Caricature Art of Kevin Greene

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Heroes and Villains: The Science Fiction Caricature Art of Kevin Greene
"I've been interested in doing caricatures for as long as I can remember," states illustrator Kevin Greene as to the origins of his interest in the caricature art form. "I was a huge fan of Al Hirschfeld and Bruce Stark (who recently passed away). They both did TV Guide covers which my parents subscribed to, so I saw a lot of their work. Also, Stark did work for the NY Daily News so I got to see his sports caricatures, which are amazing. I also read Mad Magazine where I saw Mort Drucker's work. Incredible. His ability to do caricatures in a sequential art format is beyond belief. I still look for movie parodies that he's done in Mad back issues and collections."

After graduating from the High School of Art and Design and then the School of Visual Arts in New York, Kevin went on to produce caricature work for several magazines and websites, as well as creating caricatures of iconic science fiction characters, which were posted on his deviantART page. This ultimately led to Kevin compiling a collection of his caricatures in book form for Heroes & Villains: The Science Fiction Caricature Art of Kevin Greene, which was published in October 2012: "The book sort of came about after I realized just how many sci-fi caricatures I had done. I thought maybe I could put them all together but flesh it out a bit with some background on the characters and my recollections. Being a big sci-fi fan I thought this might be a different approach to an art book."

Heroes & Villains contains over 30 colour and black-and-white images of science fiction's best and baddest from the world of television, along with notes and recollections from Kevin on each of the characters. Among the illustrations are Star Trek's Captain Kirk (William Shatner and Chris Pine), Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), Lt. Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) and Khan (Ricardo Montalban); Star Wars' Han Solo (Harrison Ford), Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), Grand Moff Tarkin (Peter Cushing), Qui-Gon Jinn (Liam Neeson) and Darth Vader; and other memorable sci-fi characters such as The Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger), R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell), Superman (Christopher Reeve), General Zod (Terrence Stamp), RoboCop (Peter Weller) and Doctor Who's David Tennant and Matt Smith.

If you're a sci-fi fan, you'll find much to enjoy in Heroes & Villains; my personal favourites include Roy Batty (Rutger Hauer) from Blade Runner, Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) from Aliens, and The Twilight Zone's Rod Serling...




You can purchase Heroes & Villains: The Science Fiction Caricature Art of Kevin Greene via Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk, and be sure to visit Kevin on deviantART for more examples of his work.

New trailer for The Iceman starring Michael Shannon

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Ahead of his turn as General Zod in Zack Snyder's Superman reboot Man of Steel, actor Michael Shannon (Boardwalk Empire, Take Shelter) is set to take centre stage in director Ariel Vromen's crime drama The Iceman, which has just received its second theatrical trailer ahead of its North American release in May.


The Iceman sees Shannon as notorious serial killer and mob hitman Richard Kuklinski, who was believed to have killed over 100 people over two decades. The film features an all-star supporting cast including Christ Evans (The Avengers, Snowpiercer), Winona Ryder (Star Trek, Black Swan), Ray Liotta (Goodfellas, Killing Them Softly), James Franco (127 Hours, Rise of the Planet of the Apes), David Schwimmer (Friends, Madagascar) and Stephen Dorff (Blade, Immortals). Check out the new trailer here:


The Iceman is scheduled for release in the States on May 3rd and will open in the UK on June 7th.

Dominic Cooper to play Ian Fleming

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Dominic Cooper Ian FlemingBritish actor Dominic Cooper (Captain America: The First Avenger) is set to star as Ian Fleming, the author and creator of James Bond. According to Variety, Cooper will play the James Bond writer in a new four-part television miniseries.

The new show, tentatively titled Fleming, will air on Sky Atlantic and is set during WWII and will focus on the time when Fleming was hired by British Naval intelligence as part of its undercover campaign against the Nazis. It was thought that the experiences Fleming gained working for British intelligence provided the inspiration for the iconic British spy James Bond. Like his character, Fleming was well known in English society for his womanizing and taste for alcohol.

Cooper recently starred in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter and will be seen next in Dead Man Down alongside Colin Farrell (Total Recall) and Noomi Rapace (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo). The actor has also signed up for Need for Speed, which is also set to feature Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad) and Imogen Poots (A Late Quartet).

Gremlins to get the reboot treatment?

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Gremlins rebootHollywood is set to reboot a number of 80s classics over the next few years, including the likes of Flight of the Navigator, Highlander, RoboCop and Short Circuit, and now according to Vulture we might soon be able to add another to the list, with Warner Bros. said to be in negotiations with Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment to remake the 1984 comedy-horror Gremlins.

Directed by Joe Dante, Gremlins centres around a teenager (portrayed by Zach Galligan) who receives a rather unusual Christmas present - a 'Mogwai' named Gizmo, who has to be kept away from bright lights and water, and must never, ever be fed after midnight. When Gizmo accidentally gets wet, he spans five 'gremlins' - wicked little buggers who go on to cause havoc around the town of Kingston Falls. A smash-hit upon its release, Gremlins went on to spawn the bonkers sequel Gremlins 2: The New Batch, along with a host of cheap knock-offs such as the Critters and Ghoulies franchises.

Apparantly (and unsurprisingly) this isn't the first time that a studio has tried to secure the rights to remake Gremlins, although Spielberg's deal has always proved too costly. However Vulture's sources claim this latest effort might actually come together, although Spielberg's reps have so far refused to comment.

Uncanny X-Men are not united after all

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There appears to be dissension in the ranks of the Uncanny X-Men as indicated by a teaser released by Marvel.


"The true flagship book of the X-Men returns. In the wake of the Phoenix, the world has changed and is torn on exactly what Cyclops and his team of X-Men are – visionary revolutionaries or dangerous terrorists? Whatever the truth, Cyclops, Emma Frost, Magneto, and Magik are out in the world gathering up new mutants and redefining the name Uncanny X-Men."

Uncanny X-Men #1 is written by Brian Michael Bendis and features the artistic talents of Chris Bachalo as well as Stuart Immonen who created a variant cover, and will be available for sale on February 13th, 2013.

My Favourite Arnie Movie - The Running Man (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, Luke Owen with 1987's The Running Man...

"What's the number one television show in the whole wide world?”

When discussing my favourite movie from everyone’s favourite Austrian, I’m met with puzzled looks when I say The Running Man. It could easily be argued that The Terminator is Arnie’s best movie and Predator is the most enjoyable in terms of action while Kindergarten Cop is high on the ‘guilty pleasures list’, but The Running Man is a different kind of Arnie movie. It has all the clichés associated with his acting career, but it’s surrounded by a movie that is trying to make a bold statement about TV and the media. It doesn’t really work, but it gives it a good go.

Released in 1987 and loosely based upon a novel of the same name from Stephen King (under a pseudonym), The Running Man is an action movie set in the not too distant future (like a lot of movies where in the late 80s) and features Arnie as Ben Richards, a policeman who is framed for the murder of innocent civilians while trying to suppress a food riot. After escaping from prison, he tries to hide low in his brother’s apartment but instead finds Amber Mendez, a composer for TV station ICS who broadcasts the number one television show, The Running Man. He takes her hostage in order to escape to Hawaii but his cover is blown when Amber shouts her mouth off. At the request of TV host Damon Killian (because his viewing number have remained flat), Richards must now take part in The Running Man - a gladiator-style show where “Runners” attempt to avoid being killed by the “Stalkers” to be pardoned of their crime. He is joined by fellow escapees Laughlin and Weiss and eventually Amber (after she discovers Richards’ innocence) as they attempt to survive against colourful killers such as Subzero (a Japanese hockey player who kills people with his bladed stick and exploding pucks), Buzzsaw (a nutter with a chainsaw on a motorcycle) and Dynamo (a fat opera singer with a light bulb Mohawk and a costume covered in red and green LEDs).

What I love about The Running Man is how the film revels in its own absurdity. The script, written by future Die Hard scribe Steven E. Souza, is full of fantastic quips and silly dialogue exchanges and director Paul Michael Glaser (TV’s Detective David Starsky) has so much fun with the wacky premise. The movie does try to make the statement that the media can edit news to tell the stories it wants and how you shouldn’t believe everything you hear, but it’s lost in a sea of bombastic characters and hilariously bad puns from one-liner king Arnie who is on the top of his game. Unlike many other Schwarzenegger movies, The Running Man simply would not work without him. No other actor in this known universe could say lines like "here’s Subzero, now, plain zero!” and make is sound genuine - well, at least as genuine as possible in the insane world of The Running Man. But the brilliance doesn’t stop there, when moaning to Laughlin and Weiss that all they talk about is the resistance’s plan to uplink from the underground resistance he shouts, “If you guys don't shut up, I’m going up uplink your ass and you'll be underground!". Before throwing a match at a petrol covered Stalker named Fireball, he quips, “how ‘bout a light?”. And when threatening Killian that he will get his revenge he shouts into a video feed, “I live to see you eat that contract, but I hope you leave enough room for my fist because I'm going to ram it into your stomach and break your goddamn spine!”. Nothing short of poetry.

However his spotlight is nearly stolen by Family Feud host Richard Dawson who plays a parody of himself in the form of Damon Killian, the host of The Running Man. On TV he’s an old lady kissing darling who gives away fabulous prizes but behind the scenes he is an egotistical money grabbing sociopath who cares about nothing more than the rating his show does. While he is a stock villain and typical Arnie fodder, Dawson clearly loves playing this role and he does so with such gusto and energy. He is a man who looks like he is loving every single of frame of movie he’s in and he even gets to retort against Arnie’s infamous “I’ll be back” line with “only in a re-run”. Had he been up against a lesser screen presence, he would be the stand out performer of the movie.


But it’s not just the idiocy, hilarious script or performances that I love about The Running Man. The action sequences between Richards and the Stalkers are highly entertaining and don’t rely on blood or gore to give the audience its kicks. Much like a video game, Richards has to work his way through each Stalker like an end level boss who he dispatches of in creative ways. Be it strangling Subzero with barbed wire (what a pain in the neck), cutting Buzzsaw in half (he had to split) or blowing up Fireball (what a hothead), the kills never let the movie down and the quips that accompany them are just outstanding. Not many movies can get away with having a fight scene on a hellish hockey rink complete with goals that double as cages, but The Running Man can.

But let’s face facts, The Running Man is a stupid movie with an idiotic plot, stupid dialogue, lame characters and mostly bad acting (Maria Conchita Alonso is less intelligible than Schwarzenegger) and somehow the whole thing just works. Despite its many flaws, the movie is absolutely brilliant and thoroughly entertaining and even influenced one of my favourite games on the Super Nintendo – Super Smash TV (“fabulous prizes!”). There are a lot of movies that get branded with the ‘so bad they’re good’ label, but The Running Man isn’t one of those movies. The Running Man is so bad it’s awesome. Easily my favourite Arnie movie.

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

My Favourite Tarantino Movie - From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)

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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 Rohan Morbey with 1996's From Dusk Till Dawn...

From Dusk Till Dawn movie poster
As part of the Quentin Tarantino filmography, From Dusk Till Dawn is one of the best. Written by and co-starring the man himself and directed by close friend Robert Rodriguez, this is a film unlike any other in QT’s catalogue and is all the better for it.

Made and released in 1996, the film in sandwiched between the period when Tarantino became known the world over (1994) and when he was then expected to deliver all subsequent films to the standard of Pulp Fiction (circa 1997). From Dusk Till Dawn came out at just the right time for writer, director, and star with Rodriguez hot off the success of Desperado, George Clooney breaking into film from the success of TV and Tarantino on his way to Hollywood royalty after Pulp Fiction.

Like Pulp Fiction, Tarantino’s screenplay takes his audience down paths they never thought they’d go down when taking their seat in the cinema, but this may be the only script post-Pulp Fiction where he gets away with including whatever he wants because the expectation wasn’t on him.

At only 103 minutes, the film packs in so much fun, comedy, thrills, and genuinely unexpected twists and turns. From Dusk Till Dawn is the most re-watchable from any of his post-Pulp Fiction scripts because it has nothing to say and is pure entertainment. No statement on human atrocity or power struggles between race, colour, or gender, just humans verses vampires. It’s Tarantino having fun, not trying to mould or force a script to become something more than a film.

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

Visit MyDeals.com for Amazon voucher codes which you can use for discounts on Quentin Tarantino DVDs and Blu-rays.

Rohan Morbey - follow me on Twitter.

Comic Book Review - Batman #16

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Martin Deer on the latest issue of Batman...

"The penultimate issue of "Death of the Family" has Batman face up to The Joker yet again in an emotional fueled showdown between hero and foe."

Last we saw Batman he was heading into Arkham Asylum for a meeting with The Joker, and expectations and suspense were high. Batman #16 does not disappoint.

The story focuses on Batman making his way through Arkham to locate The Joker, and of course, he hasn't made it easy. Numerous tests are put in Batman's way to 'strengthen' him, and we meet a few familiar faces from the Rogues Gallery. They are far too easily dispensed, I thought, however Batman does look like a badass in doing so!

Several times throughout the issue events that take place terrify and shock; a tear on a characters face, some animal cruelty, the anguish and rage on Batman's face as he closing in on the Joker, and a panel that leaves you in absolute fear at events elsewhere out of Bats' control. Scott Snyder writes The Joker at his most vicious here, his most venomous, as the playful court jester routine begins to fade away and the raging monster within begins to seep out like the rotten flesh beneath the make-shift "mask".

It is despairing to see Batman so vulnerable, so at the mercy of the whim of a madman, and Greg Capullo is able to express so many emotions in Bruce through his art - which is particularly stunning in this issue. Snyder's run on Batman has featured some excellent internal monologues, especially in Death of the Family, and this issue continues that trend with some fantastic - and heart wrenching - looks inside Bruce's head as he attempts to bring The Joker down and rescue Alfred.

Jonathan Glapion's inks and FCO Plascencia's colour gives the issue a gorgeous look, the bright colours really popping off the page and making the events all the more powerful. In fact, the two have both done an excellent job, as when the most horrific events occur the panels are at their most vibrant. Which is not unlike The Joker himself, a dark man dressed in colour and warmth.

Next month sees the culmination of what has been a fantastic story line, and whilst we don't want our heroes to come to any harm it would be a shame not to live up to the title, and with what occurs in the back-up story, I can't see it failing to bring death to the family.

So readers, what do you think is in store for Batman inside Arkham Asylum?  And does the Joker really know the Bat-family's identities?

Martin Deer

Marvel NOW! showers April 2013 with Avengers Arena, Journey Into Mystery and Uncanny X-Men

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Today we have a triple threat of Marvel NOW! releases arriving in April 2013 starting off with a murderous story from the creative minds of writer Dennis Hopeless (X-Men: Season One) and artist Kev Walker (Thunderbolts) which commences with Avengers Arena #8.  The official synopsis for the new ongoing series reads:

The stakes have never been higher as the cast of Avengers Arena feel the cold hard reality of Murderworld! It’s only a matter of time before tensions reach their boiling points and the kids turn on one another. What happens when alliances are broken? And who’s secrets are blown wide open? One thing is certain, the outlook is grim!

Avengers Arena is the most controversial launch of Marvel NOW! and is just warming up," said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment. “As the games commence, the Marvel Universe's most popular young heroes now must figure out exactly what they're willing to do to survive the gauntlet of Arcade's new Murderworld.  Pacts will be made, and broken in the blink of an eye.  Blood will be spilled.  And there will be a winner."


Next up is Journey Into Mystery #651 which involves a dangerous rescue mission orchestrated by writer Kathryn Immonen and artist Matteo Scalera.  The official synopsis reads:

The warrior Sif’s might rivals that of the Mighty Thor, but when the ravenous Fenris is awoken by one of her own, even she is outclassed! In order to save her home, she must band together with the Warriors Three and Thor to stop him - but when everything they need to stop the beast never existed – things go from bad to worse!

“In one of their darkest moments, the mighty Sif shows just how dangerous she can be,” said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment.  "And when she has the aid of her brethren at her side, the true power of Asgard won’t ever be clearer!"


And last but not least a master plan devised by Cyclops commences an all-new story arc with Uncanny X-Men #5 which is under the creative direction of writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Frazer Irving.  The official synopsis reads:

Deep in the caverns of the old Weapon X facility, Cyclops is training the next great generation of Mutantkind in the Charles Xavier School for Mutants! With new mutants popping up all across the Marvel Universe, Cyclops and his team must race to recruit. But will there be anyone to turn him down?

“Brian and Frazer are bringing you a whole new take on Mutantkind -- and it will have major ramifications on the Marvel Universe," said Axel Alonso, Editor In Chief, Marvel Entertainment.  "Whether you root for Cyclops, hate him, or a little bit of both, everything you thought about Mutants will be turned on its head."


Looks like April 2013 is going to be an action-packed month for Marvel NOW! comic book fans.


Movie Review - Gangster Squad (2013)

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Gangster Squad, 2013.

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

Gangster Squad movie poster


SYNOPSIS:

A group of incorruptible Los Angeles police officers join together to stop and up-and-coming mafia boss, sparking a violent war for control of the city.


Gangster Squad is an appalling lazy attempt at the gangster genre and falls flat in nearly every department. It’s like watching famous faces playing dress-up for 100 minutes whilst a film student in his first year makes what he thinks is a ‘cool’ take on the genre.

Comparisons to Brain de Palma’s undisputed classic The Untouchables are endless but listing these two films in the same sentence is as pointless as the reason for Gangster Squad ever being made. The story and script is nothing less than the best bits of other genre films cut and pasted together minus the talent behind their greatness; anyone who has seen enough films to know originality when they see it should stay far away. When will studios stop putting money into these woeful screenplays?

The real blame here fall at director Ruben Fleischer, a man who clearly has no understanding or appreciation of the 1940-50s period, for if he did he wouldn’t shoot in slow motion as if he were making the next Resident Evil film. Do you know why some directors choose to slow down their films to super-slow motion? It’s because they haven’t got a single solitary idea in their minds to do anything else. Why try to shoot a film intelligently and have your own trademarks all over it when you can just copy all the other sub-par directors out there? Authentic costumes and set design alone DOES NOT mean your audience will be transported to 1949 if you shoot it like Watchmen and light it like Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow. It tries so hard to be tough and exciting but manages to get very boring, very quickly when you can see straight through its facade.

The usually fantastic cast are all held accountable too, despite having to deliver dialogue that no one could walk away from unscathed. Sean Penn gives it his all but, like Guy Pearce in the similarly flawed but slightly better Lawless, he is too over the top compared to the other actors around him that he might as well be an actual cartoon on the screen. The prosthetics and cartoonish acting worked to great effect in Dick Tracy but it made sense in that world, this is simply overacting from a man who doesn’t need this rubbish on his CV. On the other end of the scale is Emma Stone who never succeeds, not for one frame, to convince as the gangster’s moll and femme fatale. She looks like a 2013 girl in fancy dress and way out of her depth.

The list of failures within Gangster Squad are too numerous to list so stay in and watch [insert and other film of the genre] on DVD instead and save your money. The less tickets that are bought, the less profit it can make. Trust me, you don’t want another film like this being made any time soon.

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

Rohan Morbey - follow me on Twitter.

MGM planning Hot Tub Time Machine 2

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Hot Tub Time Machine
Looks like MGM wants to take another dip in the Hot Tub Time Machine. In 2010, Hot Tub Time Machine was released to moderate success, and surprisingly better-than-average reviews. John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson and Clark Duke made up the main cast from the first film.

Right now sequel talk is still in the early stages but it looks as if Corddry and director/writer Steve Pink are back on board for a second outing. The only actor from the main cast who isn’t even in discussions for a sequel is John Cusack. That’s not to say he won’t return, but as of right now the odds of him returning are slim.

Being a big fan of the first film, a sequel wouldn’t work for me if any of the main cast didn’t return. They all had such great chemistry together and it’s what made the film a surprisingly good comedy. Hopefully they will be able to get everyone to return, possibly even Chevy Chase or Crispin Glover as well, and take another trip back to the 80s or maybe even the 90s this time around.

Comic Book Review - Daredevil #22

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Anghus Houvouras reviews the latest issue of Daredevil...

Daredevil #22 cover
"Daredevil teams up with the all-new Superior Spider-Man! Also: Stilt-Man is back and better than ever thanks to some last minute help from Doctor Octopus!"

As we enter the fourth month of Marvel NOW! I find myself starting to see the genius of this Marvel makeover.  Marvel shook up the books that needed a change up and left what's working alone.  Mark Waid's Daredevil is the finest example of what's working at Marvel: the combination of the right  creative forces steering the book.  Waid is a gifted writer who feels at home chronicling the misadventures of one of comic's most interesting characters.  Chris Samnee's art makes the title feel like a throwback to a more expressive, clean era of comic art.  The title has been on a fantastic run since the title relaunched back in 2010.  And fortunately Marvel editorial was smart enough to realize that the hands-off approach was best for Daredevil.

There's a little Marvel NOW! in issue #22 as the standalone story features an appearance from the Superior Spider-Man.  Like most comic book crossovers, the story involves a misunderstanding, a knock-down drag-out fight, and the two heroes having to set aside their differences to face a common foe.  Fortunately that foe is one of comics' most mocked villains, Stilt Man.

We get a good bit of character building in the issue.  Matt Murdock is down on his luck.  He's lost his job and is flat broke.  Fortunately he's able to cash in on his pseudo superhero celebrity to get by.  His best friend Foggy Nelson has decided to end their law partnership.  The future seems unclear.  Murdock's pity party is interrupted by a stark raving Superior Spider-Man looking to clean his clock and bring him to justice.

Right away Murdock realizes something isn't quite right, even though his heightened senses tell him his opponent is indeed the one and only Spider-Man.  But something just doesn't click.  This Spider-Man isn't making jokes or cracking wise.  Instead he's yelling out things like "THE DIE IS CAST!".  Waid does a downright hysterical job of writing the new Doctor Octopus controlled Superior Spider-Man.  So much so that I almost wish he was writing that title.

I keep trying to talk people off the ledge regarding the current direction of Spider-Man.  His appearance in Daredevil just proves that the character is as entertaining as he's been in ages.  Peter Parker's more snarky attitude has been replaced with the obsessive compulsive mad ramblings of Otto Octavius, and while it might not make him the most heroic Spider-Man, it does make him the most interesting.  I'm loving this Spider-Man, scars and all.

Daredevil #22 is another fantastic issue on what has been, in this reader's opinion. the best run of the character since Frank Miller was steering the boat back in the 1980s.

Anghus Houvouras

First trailer and teaser poster for action sequel RED 2

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RED 2 movie posterBruce Willis (A Good Day to Die Hard), John Malkovich (The Perks of Being a Wallflower) and Helen Mirren (Hitchcock) are set to reunite later this year as the retired and extremely dangerous former black ops operatives Frank Moses, Marvin Boggs and Victoria for Summit Entertainment's action sequel RED 2, which has just received its first theatrical trailer and teaser poster today.

The follow-up to the 2010 hit comic book adaptation sees Dean Parisot (Justified) replacing outgoing director Robert Schwentke, with Mary-Louise Parker (Weeds) and Brian Cox (Rise of the Planet of the Apes) also returning to the cast. Joining them for the sequel are Anthony Hopkins (Thor: The Dark World), Neal McDonough (Captain America: The First Avenger), David Thewlis (Harry Potter), Byung-hun Lee (G.I. Joe: Retaliation) and Catherine Zeta-Jones (Broken City).

In RED 2, the high-octane action-comedy sequel to the worldwide sleeper hit, retired black-ops CIA agent Frank Moses reunites his unlikely team of elite operatives for a global quest to track down a missing portable nuclear device. To succeed, they’ll need to survive an army of relentless assassins, ruthless terrorists and power-crazed government officials, all eager to get their hands on the next-generation weapon. The mission takes Frank and his motley crew to Paris, London and Moscow. Outgunned and outmanned, they have only their cunning wits, their old-school skills, and each other to rely on as they try to save the world-and stay alive in the process.


RED 2 is scheduled for release on August 2nd.

New image of Tom Cruise in Oblivion

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Universal Pictures has released a new photo from Joseph Kosinski’s (TRON:Legacy) upcoming sci-fi thriller Oblivion. The image features a dusty, leather clad Tom Cruise (Jack Reacher) making his way somewhere with great haste, and also gives us a look at his funky-looking futuristic vehicle:

Tom Cruise Oblivion

"On a spectacular future Earth that has evolved beyond recognition, one man’s confrontation with the past will lead him on a journey of redemption and discovery as he battles to save mankind. Jack Harper (Cruise) is one of the last few drone repairmen stationed on Earth. Part of a massive operation to extract vital resources after decades of war with a terrifying threat known as the Scavs, Jack’s mission is nearly complete. Living in and patrolling the breathtaking skies from thousands of feet above, his soaring existence is brought crashing down when he rescues a beautiful stranger (Andrea Riseborough; W.E.) from a downed spacecraft. Her arrival triggers a chain of events that forces him to question everything he knows and puts the fate of humanity in his hands."

Oblivion also stars Morgan Freeman (The Dark Knight Rises), Olga Kurylenko (Quantum of Solace), Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Game of Thrones), Zoe Bell (Inglourious Basterds), James Rawlings (Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning) and Melissa Leo (The Fighter), and is due to be released in cinemas on April 12th.

Anime Giveaway - Win Journey to Agartha on Blu-ray

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Makoto Shinkai's (5 Centimeters Per Second, The Voices of a Distant Star) feature-length debut Journey to Agartha (a.k.a. Children Who Chase Lost Voices and Children Who Chase Stars) is released on DVD, Blu-ray and limited edition three disc collectors box set here in the UK on Monday, January 28th and courtesy of Manga Entertainment, we're giving you the chance of winning this magical film on Blu-ray right here!

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

"Children Who Chase Lost Voices… When she hears a strange song from a crystal radio, Asuna tunes into more than just a magical stream of music. Soon, she is transported to a mysterious world where mythical beasts roam and brave warriors fight for their lives. Agartha is a land of breathtaking beauty and unimaginable danger - a place where, it is believed, even the dead can be brought back to life. But at what cost? The first full length animated feature film from acclaimed director, Makoto Shinkai. "

Pre-order Journey to Agartha on Blu-ray, Blu-ray Special Edition and DVD.

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 "AGARTHA". The competition closes at midnight on Saturday, February 2nd. UK entrants only please.

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

My Favourite Arnie Movie - Total Recall (1990)

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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, Anghus Houvouras with 1990's Total Recall..

Arnold Schwarzenegger existed in an unpretentious era of film. At a time when Hollywood was the personification of the American dream.   Where an Austrian bodybuilder barely capable of stringing together a coherent sentence could become the greatest action star in the world. It was an unpretentious, less cynical age where charisma and a chiseled physique were more important than logic or common sense.

Schwarzenegger's entire career was predicated on the principle that there was no problem too complex that couldn't be solved with brutal violence. Many of his films were cartoonish affairs that were so far removed from reality that they seemed more comparable to a Wile E. Coyote Looney Tunes than a real world action film. His presence often helped sell films with a ludicrous presence simply by being there. Total Recall may the finest example of that axiom.

I love Total Recall. The original that is. Not the white-washed, fun-free remake that plagued cinemas last year. Total Recall is the kind of movie they don't make anymore. Gonzo science fiction bloodbaths where anything and everything happens.  The premise of the film was exceptionally well thought out. An average Joe pines for a more exciting life. He dreams of going to Mars and exploring new worlds, something not possible in his blue collar existence. Then he decides to visit a company that will implant memories into your brain forgoing the need to do anything but sit in a chair and wait for your dream life to be delivered to your cerebellum. This is a movie, so of course something goes horribly wrong. It turns out his mind had already been messed with and soon mild mannered Douglas Quaid has blood on his hands and gun toting killers trying to hunt him down.

Director Paul Verhoeven was in the zone after having released the most subversive action film ever made with RoboCopTotal Recall was his follow up and he took a very high concept story by sci-fi author Phillip K. Dick and transformed it into one of the most fun science fiction thrill rides ever committed to film. 

What works so well about Total Recall is the kitchen sink mentality Verhoeven uses to tell the story. You have the basic set up for a typical action film combined with the constant question of whether or not Quaid is experiencing these events or they are the product of a botched memory implant. He throws in a bunch of science fiction cliches by taking him to Mars with mentions of alien prophecies, then gives us a crazy looking batch of Mars mutants who form a makeshift resistance trying to free their people from tyrannical corporate rule. All of this in a movie that clocks in under two hours. 

Total Recall is fearless in a way many modern blockbusters aren't. Verhoeven dove head first into the crazy social system of Mars and the downtrodden mutant population. He gave audiences three breasted hookers and midgets with machine guns.  There is so much fun to be had in Total Recall. Verhoeven was always a director who knew an appropriate amount of cheese helped audiences digest junk food. He also wasn't afraid to play up the comic elements. There's a scene where Quaid has to remove a tracking bug from his head by inserting a probe up his nose, and he hangs on those visuals endlessly well aware that it's both sickening and highly entertaining. 

And not everything had to make sense. Like when Quaid has to dress up like an obese middle aged woman to get through a checkpoint. After his cover is blown, he removes the mask and throws it at an armed sentry and explodes. His disguise was also a bomb? How does that work exactly? You don't have time to care, because the movie moves at full throttle and doesn't give you a moment to consider the logic or absence thereof.


And like every Verhoeven film, it's violent to the nth degree. Verhoeven works with carnage like other artists work with paint or clay. It is his medium, and he has mastered it. The death of Michael Ironside's scenery chewing villain may be the most hilarious brutal murder in the history of film.  

But it's Arnold that really holds the film together. That wonderful bug eyed expression he has when trying to convey shock. The way he dispatches villains with sadistic vigor. The way he mangles dialogue and spews out potential trailer worthy catchphrases. Is there any other person on the planet that could dispatch an evil mutant with a giant industrial drill while screaming "SCREW YOU BENNY!" and not have it seem implausible?

No, there isn't.  Because Arnold Schwarzenegger is awesome. And Total Recall is Arnold in his most awesome cinematic experience. If you don't love this movie, I pity you.

Anghus Houvouras

Movie Review - V/H/S (2012)

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V/H/S, 2012.

Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, David Bruckner, Tyler Gillet, Justin Martinez, Glenn McQuaid, Radio Silence, Joe Swanberg, Chad Villella, Ti West and Adam Wingard.
Starring Calvin Reeder, Lane Hughes, Mike Donlan, Hannah Fierman and Joe Swanberg.

VHS DVD

SYNOPSIS:

When a group of misfits is hired by an unknown third party to burglarize a desolate house and acquire a rare VHS tape, they discover more found footage than they bargained for.

VHS movie

Living in the UK often means that films come out with a lot of hype surrounding them. If you know horror movie lovers, then you won't have escaped the hype that V/H/S brought last year. It seemed I couldn't go to a social media channel without hearing something about this movie and how it 're-defined' horror anthologies. Sadly, some of these films just don't live up to the hype they get - and V/H/S is one of them.

Clocking in at a staggering 1 hour and 56 minutes, V/H/S is a long, bloated, boring and ultimately headache-inducing movie that offers no scares, no thrills, no excitement and no imagination.

V/H/S is an anthology movie akin to films such as Twilight Zone: The Movie and Trick ‘R Treat but uses the 'found footage' gimmick that has ruined many other horror movies over the last year or so. These five stories are loosely interlinked by a group of youths who film themselves breaking into an old man's house to find a VHS tape (for reasons that are never explained). While there, they find the old man dead and one by one they begin to watch the VHS tapes that he had around or in his VHS player. And here is where the main problem lies.

The first story (Amateur Night) involves a group of horny teenagers who plan on making an amateur sex tape using a pair of glasses with a digital camera installed in them. If the group recorded their footage on a digital camera, why does the old man have it on a VHS tape? The first story isn't the only one to fall for this either and in fact only one of the stories (the last one) actually uses the VHS gimmick with every other story using digital cameras or webcam recording facilities (because when you think VHS, you think Skype). If you’re going to go to the trouble of making an anthology horror based around people watching old VHS tapes, why wouldn't you make the effort to give all your stories that VHS feel or take advantage of the sounds that VHS players made? Each of the directors try to give their stories a grainy effect in post-production, but you can’t get away from the fact these are digitally recorded and therefore would not be on VHS.

Aside from being uncreative with the anthology format, the stories themselves are less than inspired. The first story is far too long and becomes nauseating to watch as the lead character runs at high speed and we view it from a first person perspective. The story does have a nice progression and probably the best ending of the lot, but the characters are highly unlikeable and it never seems to end. Conversely the second story (Second Honeymoon) is far too short but has best set-up of the bunch. A couple on a road trip stop off and get a card from a fortune telling machine which seems to accurately predict their fate. It reminded me of The Twilight Zone episode Nick of Time but this doesn't have the payoff and reward that story gave us and instead cuts off short without giving a satisfying conclusion.

V/H/S
The third story (Tuesday the 17th) appears to be a parody of teen slasher movies of the 80s like Sleepaway Camp and Friday the 13th as it plays to the clichés of the sub-genre. However it doesn't tell its story well and it doesn't really make a whole lot of sense. We’re never told who the killer is or how he operates and because we don’t care about the cut-out characters, we’re not emotionally invested in the tale. From a story and conclusion standpoint, the fourth VHS (The Sick Thing That Happened To Emily When She Was Younger) is probably the best but does come off as a poor Paranormal Activity knock off. Unlike the third story where it doesn't give its audience any information, this story does well in informing its audience of what they are watching and aside from the contrived webcam recording gimmick, this is probably the most effective story.

As previously mentioned, the final story (10/31/98) is the only one (outside of the connecting thread) to take advantage of the VHS gimmick and is probably the most visually impressive story from the collection. The haunted house motif is played quite nicely, the special effects are chilling and the ending is effective, but it’s ruined by the POV self-shot perspective and terrible characterisation. Like the majority of the stories within V/H/S, poor writing and terrible pacing let this story down which does ruin any impact it could have had.

In the last episode of The Flickering Myth Podcast, I mentioned how last year’s Chronicle was a great movie that was ruined by the found footage sub-genre. While I don’t think V/H/S would have been a better movie without the stomach turning shaky cam method of filmmaking, it still would have failed as an experiment because the stories just aren't strong enough. They’re not given enough time to develop character and/or story and just resort to simple scares to try and get a rise from its audience – which, when looking at the running time, seems remarkable.

Sadly, V/H/S does not live up to the hype it received. The found footage method doesn't work within the films rules and becomes infuriating and sickening by the end and the stories themselves are boring, bland and uncreative. The first story is too long, the second is too short, the third makes no sense, the fourth is a Paranormal Activity knock-off, and the fifth comes too late in the day. I know we’re only a couple of weeks into the new year, but I will be amazed if I see 10 films worse than this in 2013. A horrendous movie.

Flickering Myth Rating - Film ★  / Movie  

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

Double Negative partners with Apollo Productions

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To further its ambitions across a range of film production activities, Double Negative has announced a partnership with Apollo Productions and Pinewood Shepperton plc. “With VFX being such a vital story telling partner in so many of today’s movies, production is a very logical next step in furthering our lead role within the British film industry,” stated Double Negative Managing Director Alex Hope in a press release issued by the company.  “Our collaboration with Steve Norris and Pinewood Studios will allow us to build on this heritage and enhance the service that we’re able to offer to the independent film industry.  We firmly believe that we could not have found a more perfect partnership to further our ambition than with Apollo.”


The London based visual effects facility which won both an Oscar and BAFTA for their work on Inception (2010) and received a Special Visual Effects BAFTA for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011) has also formed Double Negative Films to allow for more creative and financial control over future movie projects.  The first project for the newly formed production initiative is the biopic Rush (2013) about the near fatal 1976 Formula 1 World Championship battle between Nikki Lauda and James Hunt.  “Double Negative’s willingness to participate in the film has been fantastic, and they have been collaborative partners throughout,” said the biopic’s producer Andrew Eaton.  “Their work has added a huge amount of excitement to the film and elevated the story.  Costing $38 million to make Rush is a collaboration between Double Negative, Cross Creek, Exclusive, Revolution Films and Working Title, and features the Academy Award-winning directorial talents of Ron Howard (A Beautiful Mind) as well as a cast which includes Chris Hemsworth (Thor: The Dark World), Daniel Brühl (Inglourious Basterds), Olivia Wilde (Deadfall) and Natalie Dormer (Game of Thrones).

Hawkeye gets a new ally in artist Francesco Francavilla

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The Avenger known for his archery skills will be drawn by Eisner Award winning artist Francesco Francavilla.   With the arrival of Hawkeye #10 in April 2013, Francesco will be collaborating with New York Times best-selling writer Matt Fraction (Fantastic Four, FF) which sees Hawkeye in a new story where he “finds himself facing his deadliest opponent yet.”


“On Hawkeye we’ve been blessed with not only one of the biggest writers in comics with Matt Fraction, but also some of the best artists like David Aja, Javier Pulido and now Francesco Francavilla,” said Stephen Wacker, Senior Editor, Marvel Entertainment. “Though he’s only on the series for issues #10& #12, Francesco is going to leave his mark on Clint with some of the most beautiful art you’ll see all year!”

Second Opinion - Django Unchained (2012)

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Django Unchained, 2012.

Written and Directed by Quentin Tarantino.
Starring Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kerry Washington, Samuel L. Jackson, Walton Goggins, James Remar, Dennis Christopher, Michael Parks, Don Johnson and Jonah Hill.


Django Unchained movie poster

SYNOPSIS:

With the help of a German bounty hunter, a freed slave sets out to rescue his wife from a brutal Mississippi plantation owner.

Django Unchained

Quentin Tarantino is not afraid of controversy. Just as he did when approaching Nazism in Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained breaches the delicate issue of slavery with all the subtlety that one would expect from the man that killed Hitler. It becomes clear early on that he is not interested in painting white slave-owners as flawed men, or products of a broken society. They are, instead, entirely malevolent; missing only a twirly moustache and cape. The twisted Calvin J. Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) resides in Candyland, walls red as Hell, and when he’s not spoiling his sister with an affection that borders on the incestuous, he likes to stage fights to the death between slaves. In contrast, those made to work as slaves, with one crucial exception, are good, and rightly vengeful, so when Django whips a former master to death our emotions aren’t conflicted. This is the point of Django Unchained. It is not a character piece, or an introspective reflection on America’s past. It is an unapologetically brash, loud piece of cinema. Django has a theme song (recycled from the *mostly* unrelated 1966 western of the same name). He can hit almost any target, and take not so much as a scratch. His accomplice and mentor, Schultz (Christoph Waltz), can talk himself out of almost any situation. There is no near-death encounter the two can’t seem to escape from. Realism, then, is not Tarantino’s forte.

There’s a widely held criticism of Tarantino’s work that he lost some of his edge after Jackie Brown, and that his work since has failed to match it, that he’s mired himself in exploitation-pastiche and homage. There’s truth to this, of course: Kill Bill, Death Proof, Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained are all of a similar ilk. He may never match Pulp Fiction, and certainly never that film’s impact and influence on Hollywood. But for all it’s flaws, I’d take Inglourious Basterds over Jackie Brown any day. Moreover, I’d take Django Unchained over it too. That’s not to say Jackie Brown isn’t a great piece of work – it is. A surprisingly mature, gently paced film with a great lead performance in Pam Grier - but it’s a style that never really fit Tarantino. Aside from anything else, Pulp Fiction was giddily enjoyable – a procession of over-the-top set-pieces as funny as they were exhilarating.

The thing is, that’s exactly how I would describe Django Unchained. In a sense, Basterds and Django are a quite natural progression from that film. Just because his films have becomes more stylized, doesn’t make them insubstantial. Kill Bill is occasionally guilty of superficiality, and Death Proof, made with noble intentions, basically doesn’t work. But what Tarantino achieved with Inglourious Basterds and now Django Unchained, is a perfection of his style, the way he now makes films. He’ll probably always make films like this.

Once again, Django Unchained is not a perfect film, but it is a very good one. It’s as funny, and as exciting as anything he’s done before. The dialogue, as we’ve come to expect, is uniformly terrific. As well-done as the action is, the scenes that really captivate are those where the characters simply talk. There’s more tension in a scene such as the one at Candie’s dinner table than an armed stand-off in a border town. It is, as many have said, about 20 minutes too long; as satisfying as it is, the climax of the film is over-stretched ,and one or two scenes feel entirely superfluous to the plot (particularly when they seem to exist solely to give the director a speaking part). But it’s testament to Tarantino’s immense skill that there are several points where you feel he’s taken a scene as far it can go, only for him to justify it’s inclusion with the kind of joyous payoff that concludes the aforementioned director’s cameo. It’s almost enough to forgive his attempt at what may or not be an Australian accent.

The cast, particularly the central quartet of Waltz, Foxx, Di Caprio and Jackson, is terrific. Jackson and Waltz are Tarantino regulars now, but it’d be a shame if we never saw Di Caprio work with him again, when the pairing seems so obvious. The aforementioned exception to the rule of slaves-as-good is Stephen, the archetypal ‘Uncle Tom’, and Candie’s head house slave. To Django, he’s a traitor to his people: willingly, almost happily subservient, to his master. He wishes, and perhaps even believes, that he’s white. His loyalty is such that he is considered near-equal by Candie, as suggested in a scene where they share Brandy in a library, sitting by the fire. Stephen advises him, and Candie listens. Jackson’s may be the best performance in the film, Stephen’s intelligence and guile hidden under the act of a dithering old man – as ever, Tarantino brings out his best.

His photography too continues to improve. DP Robert Richardson has been with him since Kill Bill, and the pair seem to have worked out a style that suits the material perfectly – indebted to the films Tarantino loves, but beautiful in it’s own way. The winter scenes and the opulent, red-walls of Candyland being particularly memorable. When dealing with a filmmaker so unafraid to depict violence, you expect you’ll become numb to the almost cartoonish depiction within, so it’s all the more shocking to see a scene as genuinely brutal, almost unwatchable, as the first scene within Candyland, one of the aforementioned Mandingo fights. The violence here does not feel cinematic, but real, and it would seem needlessly cruel were it not so impactful. You realise all the more that these are people; Django’s motives are brought into focus. The film is, as both director and star have said, supposed to make you angry.

Django Unchained could reasonably be considered a more successful version of what Inglourious Basterds was trying to do: History as Spaghetti Western. But where Basterds was driven by wish-fulfillment, a fantasy version of events,‘Django Unchained’s thrust seems to come from a more tender place. Django isn’t driven by his hatred of his former masters, but rather by his love for Broomhilda (Kerry Washington); Schultz helps him not out of financial opportunism, but because he likes him. This isn’t a rewriting of events – slavery isn’t brought to an end by Django. it’s a film instead about a man trying to find his wife, and it gives the film a heart that it’s predecessor never had.

For those that were skeptical about Basterds, Django is enough of an improvement that it may win them over. For those that hated that film however, it’s not unlikely that you’ll feel the same about this. Comparisons can be made, particularly in the early scenes, with Mel Brooks’ great Blazing Saddles, and in it’s depiction of mercenary revenge against racial injustice, perhaps Alan Parker’s Mississippi Burning. But Django is it’s own film. A messy, overstated joy. Self-indulgent, but too enjoyable to dismiss. Whichever side you stand on the debate, if Django Unchained is the work of a filmmaker off-form, then he must be a very fine filmmaker indeed.

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

Jake Wardle
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