Home Blog Page 1607

Robert Kirkman Signs Overall Deal With AMC

Monkeys Fighting Robots

According to The Wrap, the creator of The Walking Dead has signed an overall deal with AMC.

Robert Kirkman is a remarkable creative talent, a partner and a friend,” Charlie Collier, president, AMC and SundanceTV. “We at AMC feel so fortunate to be working with him in-house and — beginning this summer, among other shared endeavors — extending our fight against the zombie masses to another major metropolitan area.

Are we going to get Super Dinosaur?!

Battle Pope would be insane and Invincible would be amazing to see on the
television.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Bryan Singer Shows Us Cerebro From “X-Men: Apocalypse”

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Brian Singer the director of X-Men: Apocalypse loves his Instagram accounts as he gives fans a glimpse at Cerebro.

The film stars Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, James McAvoy and Nicholas Hoult, Oscar Isaac (Apocalypse), Sophie Turner (Jean Grey), Tye Sheridan (Cyclops), Alexandra Shipp (Storm) Lana Condor (Jubilee) and Kodi Smit-McPhee.

X-Men: Apocalypse opens in theaters on May 27, 2016.

Cerebro is Spanish for brain. #Xmen #XmenApocalypse

A photo posted by Bryan Singer (@bryanjaysinger) on

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Watch The Full-Length Trailer For Robert Zemeckis’ ‘The Walk’

Monkeys Fighting Robots

The full-length trailer is here for The Walk, Robert Zemeckis new biopic starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as high wire daredevil Philippe Petit. Petit was the subject of the 2008 documentary Man on Wire, and Zemeckis and Gordon-Levitt are giving the material a dramatization.

Here it the trailer for The Walk:

Here is the official synopsis for The Walk:

“Twelve people have walked on the moon, but only one man – Philippe Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) – has ever, or will ever, walk in the immense void between the World Trade Center towers. Guided by his real-life mentor, Papa Rudy (Ben Kingsley), and aided by an unlikely band of international recruits, Petit and his gang overcome long odds, betrayals, dissension and countless close calls to conceive and execute their mad plan. Robert Zemeckis, the director of such marvels as Forrest Gump, Cast Away, Back to the Future, Polar Express and Flight, again uses cutting edge technology in the service of an emotional, character-driven story. With innovative photorealistic techniques and IMAX 3D wizardry, The Walk is true big-screen cinema, a chance for moviegoers to viscerally experience the feeling of reaching the clouds. The film, a PG-rated, all-audience entertainment for moviegoers 8 to 80, unlike anything audiences have seen before, is a love letter to Paris and New York City in the 1970s.”

Today has been a day for new trailers, and The Walk looks to have stunning visuals on par with Everest, another film that released its trailer this morning. It’s nice to see Zemeckis steering solidly back into live-action filmmaking with The Walk and 2012’s Flight.

Aside from Gordon-Levitt, The Walk stars Ben Kingsley, James Badge Dale, Ben Schwartz, Charlotte Le Bon, Clément Sibony and César Domboy.

The Walk will open the New York Film Festival this year and is scheduled to hit theaters October 2.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

‘Everest’ Official Trailer – It’s Going To Take All We Got

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Inspired by the incredible events surrounding an attempt to reach the summit of the world’s highest mountain, Everest documents the awe-inspiring journey of two different expeditions challenged beyond their limits by one of the fiercest snowstorms ever encountered by mankind. Their mettle tested by the harshest elements found on the planet, the climbers will face nearly impossible obstacles as a lifelong obsession becomes a breathtaking struggle for survival. The epic adventure stars Jason Clarke, Josh Brolin, John Hawkes, Robin Wright, Michael Kelly, Sam Worthington, Keira Knightley, Emily Watson and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Everest is directed by Baltasar Kormákur (2 Guns, Contraband) and produced by Working Title Films’ Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner, Cross Creek Pictures’ Brian Oliver and Tyler Thompson, as well as Nicky Kentish Barnes and Kormákur.

Universal Pictures and Cross Creek Pictures’ presentation of Everest—in association with Walden Media—is adapted for the screen by William Nicholson (Gladiator) and Oscar® winner Simon Beaufoy (Slumdog Millionaire).

The film was shot on location in Nepal on the foothills of Everest, the Italian Alps and at Cinecittà Studios in Rome and Pinewood Studios in the U.K. Universal will distribute Everest worldwide.

Source: Universal Pictures Media

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Retro Review: ‘Big Trouble In Little China’ (1986)

Monkeys Fighting Robots

With all news about Dwayne Johnson signing on to do a remake of John Carpenter’s Big Trouble In Little China, it seemed like the right time to revisit the original 1986 film and see if it holds up today. It had been years, decades, since I sat down and watched Big Trouble In Little China, almost to the point where I was coming in fresh to the material. It was still a great entertainment in the end.

Big Trouble isn’t any sort of award-winning masterwork, it isn’t even in the upper tier of classic 80s films as far as I’m concerned. But what it is is a time capsule of 1986, existing strictly as a relic of the decade in which it was produced for a myriad of reasons. It is also a movie filled to the brim with an adventurous spirit which, these days, is often stripped away from the typical Hollywood remake in lieu of CGI overload. If “The Rock” is going to got through with this remake, my only requests is that he have fun.

Big Trouble In Little China 2

Would Big Trouble In Little China exist were it not for the oddly unhinged and borderline idiot savant performance from Kurt Russell? After collaborating on an Elvis biopic, The Thing and Escape From New York, Russell and Carpenter had a strong working relationship and they teamed up to create Jack Burton, an everyman truck driver swept up in the fictional underworld of San Francisco’s Chinatown. Russell is key to the film’s satirical success, playing Burton as a prideful leader loaded with false bravado and many flaws, but nevertheless willing to flex his biceps in the face of danger. He is a mix of John Wayne, Han Solo, and Charlie Brown.

Jack is dragged into danger by his buddy, Wang (Dennis Dun), who implores him to go to the airport and pick up his “girl,” a green-eyed Chinese woman named Miao Yin. Miao is immediately kidnapped at the airport, and the entire plot revolves around Jack and Wang revering Miao from the clutches of Chinese gangsters, mystics, and a 2,000 year-old sorcerer named Lo Pan who wants to use Miao’s green eyes to rejuvenate his body and continue his run of immortality.

Big Trouble In Little China

Along for the ride are Gracie Law (Kim Cattrall) and Margo, a plucky reporter played by Kate Burton. The group encounters one obstacle after another, from warring gangs on the streets of Chinatown, to mystical bodyguards, to troll-like beasts and floating monstrous orbs… Carpenter and his special effects team throw everything at the screen, leading to the final showdown at what clearly looks like a mall. But, hey, I’m not here to be overly critical, and nobody who sees Big Trouble In Little China should go into this film trying to pick it apart on a cinematic level.

Big Trouble In Little China is an “onion story,” one that peels apart layer by layer from one predicament to another until we reach that final showdown, at the mall (I mean, that is clearly an escalator!). Kurt Russell owns the film as Jack Burton, outshining everyone else who is simply along for the ride, and his performance only emphasizes the point that the world needs more of Kurt Russell in prominent film roles. For 1986, the special effects in Big Trouble In Little China are quite impressive, especially the creature creations.

Something else that might be hard to do in this current climate is portray the Asian characters in the same way. Big Trouble In Little China is a sendup of the Charlie Chan adventures from the 30s, and it is unabashedly stereotypical in its portrayal of Chinese mystics and villains. It might be tough to pull this off in 2015 and beyond, but in 1986 John Carpenter made sure to go way ver the top in his portrayals in order to draw attention to the fact the Chinese were much more caricature that actual character.

Big Trouble In Little China holds up on a nostalgic level, and the spirit at its core works to disguise any flaws. Maybe a remake will serve the source material well, and if anyone is capable of keeping the fun and adventure in the story it is Dwayne Johnson. But, at the same time, I can almost guarantee the remake will suffer without the presence of Kurt Russell in the Jack Burton role.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Second ‘Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation’ Trailer Adds Some Led Zeppelin

Monkeys Fighting Robots

The second trailer for Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation has been released, and it adds a little flavor of Led Zeppelin to the action. The trailer itself has an interesting structure, with Tom Cruise and Simon Pegg doing one thing while everyone else does something different.

Here is the second trailer for Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation:

The addition of Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” is a nice touch to switch up what are usually cookie-cutter action movie trailers.

Director Christopher McQuarrie is hit and miss in his career, and his last collaboration with Cruise, Jack Reacher, was a definite miss in my book. Regardless, these Mission: Impossible films seem to have fallen into a groove as far as the structure and action are concerned, so just about anyone halfway competent could churn one of these out and make it entertaining.

Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation hits theaters July 31.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

See Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard In First ‘Macbeth’ Trailer

Monkeys Fighting Robots

The first international trailer for Macbeth has been released, with Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard in the lead roles. Shakespeare’s Scottish play is one of magic, horror, and brutality, and this first trailer seems to understand the nature of the story.

Here is the Macbeth trailer:

Macbeth had its debut at Cannes last month, as well as the release of two film clips. It was met with generally positive reviews. Some complained that the dialogue was difficult to hear, and from this trailer I can see how that might be a problem. Regardless, director Justin Kurzel seems to have gone all in with his adaptation.

Aside from Fassbender and Cotillard in the lead roles as Macbeth and Lady Macbeth (which I can’t wait to see Cotillard tackle), the adaptation also stars David Thewlis, Paddy Considine, Sean Harris, and Elizabeth Debicki. One thing I didn’t see ,except maybe a brief glimpse, were the witches that frame Shakespeare’s story. I’m sure they are prevalent in the film, but it was surprising to not see much of them in the trailer.

Macbeth will be released in the UK in October. No domestic release date has been scheduled yet.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Tension Is High In Boom! Studios’ Broken World #1

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Title: Broken World Issue 1
Publisher: Boom! Studios
Writer: Frank J. Barbiere
Artist: Christoper Peterson

Broken World #1 is the story of the Earth’s last days and how Humanity reacts to the impending apocalypse.

BrokenWorld_001_PRESS-3-e1433353572419

Imagine if “Armageddon” or “Deep Impact” were a comic. Now imagine if those movies actually held a semblance of emotional resonance and you get Broken World; a sci-fi thriller and survival series from Frank J. Barbiere (Five Ghosts, Avengers World) and Christopher Peterson (Grindhouse, Mayday).  When an extinction level event, an asteroid, threatens the planet it seems that the end of days is upon us. Humanity has begun to evacuate the planet through the cheekily codenamed Exodus project (the first of many religious references in the book).  However, not everyone is granted sanctuary aboard these Arks. Elena Marlow, college professor and mother of a young boy, is denied salvation when the seemingly shady Government rejects her application due to her mysterious past. As Elena struggles to find a way onto the last ship, we see a society slowly reacting to the oncoming apocalypse.  Some turn to religion, some struggle to maintain their ordinary lives and others are not so willing to die.

BrokenWorld-001-PRESS-4-9a753 (1)BrokenWorld-001-PRESS-5-47c16 BrokenWorld-001-PRESS-6-df187 (1)

Stories about the apocalypse are nothing new; indeed, they have seen resurgence in recent years. The post-apocalyptic survival genre was granted a new lease of life following the success of the Walking Dead. The particular threat; an asteroid, is certainly an old foe, but unlike many stories that have come before it, Broken World is a very personal story. It’s the story of one woman and her final days on Earth. Barbiere and Peterson expertly craft an intriguing protagonist in Elena. While her past may be the initial impetus for the plot, it’s her present that is far more compelling and her future that she seeks to ensure. Elena desires nothing more than to be with her family, but her concern about her future with them is constantly on her mind. In this regard, Barbiere and Peterson excel showing us a woman who puts up a strong face for her son and husband, but is visually distraught at the very thought that she might lose them.

To say any more would thread into spoiler territory and this is an issue you will want to experience yourself.

Tension is kept throughout the book via a countdown which signals the asteroid’s impending impact. An all too present reminder that time is running out for both Elena and the world. Elsewhere exposition is kept to a minimum; though do expect the odd necessary set-up and world building spiel does crop up from time to time.

Peterson bookends the issue with fantastic paralleling splash pages that tug at the heartstrings. His interiors are simplistic, but full of emotion, with subtle changes in glances and body language telling more than a thought balloon over could. Barbiere and Peterson are a perfect creative couple, each understanding the other and playing to their strengths.

If this is how the world ends, then it is going out in style.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Indie Comics Spotlight: Providence and Material

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Hello and welcome to the Indie Comics Spotlight. We are all certainly crawling out under the mountain of Battleworld-related crossover titles and still making that face at Ultimate Reed’s helmet with Secret Wars, so why not add a few more titles to the mountain. You need a break from the Battleworld, and there are a lot of great indie titles waiting to help you recover from crossover mania. Here are a few stellar indie titles you may have missed that you should pick up at your local comic book shop.

Providence Comic

Providence Alan Moore, Jacen Burrows

Providence serves as both a prequel and a sequel to Alan Moore’s four-part series Necronomicon from 2010. Once again, Moore delves into Lovecraft’s world, but this time the story is set in 1919 Providence, Rhode Island (birthplace of the horror king). The book is the first of a twelve-issue series, so Moore works to set up the characters and the world more slowly and more meticulously than he did in Necronomicon. Alan Moore, because he is Alan Moore, uses many references to Lovecraft’s work, like the consistent calling to Lovecraft’s story “Cool Air” (which you can read online.) Though the first issue is a lot of set-up, the tone is cold and eerie, and the world Moore and Burrows construct is a stage now perfectly set for whatever Lovecraftian horror is about to ensue. This book is perfect for Alan Moore devotees, H.P. Lovecraft devotees, historical horror fiends, Necronomicon, and those of us who prefer our horror to have an octopus-like god waiting in his house at R’lyeh dreaming.

 

Material-1

Material – Alex Kot, Will Tempest, Clayton Cowles, Tom Muller

I picked up Material on a mad dash of indie title grabs not knowing a thing about it. When I finished it, I closed the comic and sat in quiet for a long time, staring forward, reflecting on myself and the world around me. Material is marvelous because in a genre dominated by super powers, super heroes, monsters, aliens, robots, and other out of this world, supernatural tropes, Material is a comic book that takes a chance on being brutally human. The first issue does not really have a story, but it has four (thus far) unconnected characters. The story is told in vignette form and focuses on a disillusioned professor who may have encountered self-aware artificial intelligence, a washed-up actress who is in-demand for an important film director, a fifteen-year-old African-American boy who is detained at Chicago’s Homan Square black site after being arrested at a protest, and a man struggling to adjust to his family and life after leaving Guantanamo Bay. The bottom of the pages have references to books, films, quotes, and people that pertain to the specific story being told which helps the story ripple out into reality. I have never read a comic book that has affected me like this, and I am interested in what the next issue will hold. This book is perfect if you like Optic Nerve, pre-Punch Drunk Love Paul Thomas Anderson films, and comics without superpowers.

Grab these comics at your local comic book shop. The Indie Comics Spotlight returns next week in it’s regular Tuesday night time slot. What indie books are you reading? (One of them had better be Bitch Planet.)

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Film Review: “Spy”

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Writer/director Paul Feig has a ton of fun with the character archetypes, exotic locales, and other expected tropes of the spy film genre in his latest collaboration with Melissa McCarthy, simply entitled Spy, and thanks to game turns by McCarthy, Jude Law, Rose Byrne, and the surprisingly hilarious Jason Statham, audiences should have a lot of fun with it, too. It’s a smart, brisk, laugh-out-loud globetrotting action comedy with a great message tucked subtly between the frames, a perfect alternative to any summer action blockbuster that makes the mistake of taking itself too seriously.

McCarthy plays CIA analyst Susan Cooper, once a promising candidate for field agent, but who chose instead to devotedly run comms and support for “field man” Bradley Fine (Law), the kind of super-agent that can beat up a score of henchman, save the world and get the gorgeous girl (or girls) all without his tux and bow tie getting so much as a wrinkle. Fine tremendously values Susan, or “Coop” as he calls her, because he knows he couldn’t possibly do what he does without her near eidetic memory and problem-solving ability in his ear and at his disposal, but he’s completely oblivious to the fact that Coop does what she does for him because she’s very awkwardly pining for him.

When Fine’s latest mission to track down a rogue nuclear bomb appears to end not only with Fine’s demise, but also with the identities of the CIA’s other top field operatives compromised and the bomb still in play, Coop volunteers to carry on with the mission. Her boss, Elaine Crocker (Allison Janney), and Fine’s former peers, especially the hyper-intense and loud-mouthed Rick Fox (Statham), are all skeptical, but since Coop has never been in the field, it’s far less likely the targets she’d be tracking would see her coming, as opposed to any other more experienced option.

After a peek into Coop’s past record, Crocker relents and send her into the field with orders to track and monitor only, which, of course, completely go out the window once things start to go awry. With her best friend and fellow analyst Nancy (Miranda Hart) squawking in her earpiece, some unwanted help from Fox, who quit and went rogue in order to finish the mission his way, and her own quick mind and quicker mouth, Coop finds herself taking on some serious international baddies, the nastiest of which is Rayna Boyanov (Byrne), the insufferably-entitled daughter of the arms dealer who planned to sell the nuke to the highest bidder before his untimely demise. Rayna wants to take her father’s place at the top of his criminal empire, and doesn’t care how many poorly-dressed and intellectually-inferior people have to die in order for her to get there, which puts Coop and the CIA square in her sights as she seeks to carry out her late father’s plans.

spy-SPY_VerA_PosterR2_sRGB_rgb

What makes Spy work as well as it does is mostly attributable to Feig and his cast’s seeming commitment to not steering this film into spoof or farce territory. There’s clear reverence for both classic 007-style and more contemporary Bourne-style espionage thrillers in just about every shot here, but Feig in his script takes every opportunity in those shots to look for opportunities for humor. The cast, in turn, takes the great material and runs with it, and though McCarthy delivers her trademark amiability and ability to deliver rapid-fire zingers to her portrayal of the earnest, capable, plucky and occasionally potty-mouthed Coop, it’s the supporting players here who really bring the laughs. Law is simply perfect as the stalwart yet hopelessly self-absorbed Bradley Fine, who puts his hair back into place after every bone-crunching fistfight and death-defying gun battle, and Byrne once again shows her versatility and her talent for comedy as the snobbish and humorless Rayna, whose almost every line is an insult to whoever she might be addressing at the moment.

But the absolute scene stealers are UK sitcom star Miranda Hart as the well-meaning but clumsy and socially-inept Nancy and Statham, who talks and walks like Jack Bauer but has more in common with Inspector Clouseau. Statham delivers his lines the way he delivers punches and kicks in his other straightforward action work, which makes it all the funnier once it’s clear that the man is more a danger to himself than to any international evildoers he might be taking on. Other fun cast members to look out for here are Bobby Cannavale (Chef, HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire) as an impeccably stylish broker of all things illegal and dangerous working for Rayna, and Peter Serafinowicz (Shaun of the Dead) as Coop’s driver in Italy, Aldo, who just can’t seem to keep his hands off her regardless of whatever predicament they might be in. There are some really clever running gags to enjoy here, too, from digs at Rayna’s impossibly bouffant hairstyle, Coop’s progression of unflattering cover identities, and the alarming rodent problem in the basement at CIA headquarters where Coop and Nancy normally work, just to name a few.

But in reality, the appeal in Spy aside from the glamorous locations, the well-choreographed action sequences, and all the great gags and verbal jabs traded by the cast is the idea that drives the film, that it’s not just the bold and the beautiful people in the world that are capable of saving it when needed. Feig and McCarthy, who are on their third collaboration after Bridesmaids and The Heat, lock on to a very real truth here that audiences far and wide should identify with readily, that sometimes the most difficult obstacle people face on the road to success is underestimating themselves, especially when their outward appearance invites others to underestimate them, as well.

That truth applies in a way to the film itself — the way it’s being marketed, focusing on the physical comedy and easier jokes that come from McCarthy in a “fish out of water” role, it might be easy for people seeing the trailers and commercials to underestimate just how enjoyable this film might be, perhaps likening it to Tammy, McCarthy’s comedy from last summer that bombed spectacularly despite the presence of some very talented and funny women in its cast. If that’s the site-unseen conclusion you’ve come to about Spy, put it aside, go see the film, and then try not to admit you were wrong. It make look like spy movies played purely for laughs, but it has more in common with Kingsman: The Secret Service from earlier this year in terms of what it has going for it, and that’s a very, very good thing.

Spy
Starring Melissa McCarthy, Rose Byrne, Jason Statham, Miranda Hart, Bobby Cannavale, Allison Janney, and Jude Law. Directed by Paul Feig.
Running Time: 120 minutes
Rated R for language throughout, violence, and some sexual content including brief graphic nudity.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube