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‘Arrested Development’ Season 5 Coming To Netflix in 2016

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A fifth season of Arrested Development is coming to Netflix some time in the middle of 2016, according to producer Brian Grazer. Grazer confirmed the news on Adam Corolla’s podcast.

“Netflix is determined to do more episodes, so we’re going to do more episodes,” Grazer said on Carolla’s show. He also said that the new season would go from 15 in season four up to 17 for this new season.

Netflix brought Arrested Development back in 2013 after it had been canceled on FOX a few years previous. Fans wanted more, and so Netflix stepped up and brought the show back, albeit with a different twist.

The fourth season of Arrested Development had the different members of the dysfunctional and idiotic Bluth family appear in their own individual episodes, with the other members floating in and out like satellites. The gimmick felt like nothing more than just a gimmick, and it really stole a lot of the charm and energy from the episodes in the first two seasons. Season three felt like desperation, but it still worked better than the Netflix rebirth.

Hopefully, Grazer, Mitch Hurwitz and Ron Howard won’t resort to that technique again and will simply let the Bluth’s work their magic all together.

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When Marnie was There – Studio Ghibli’s Last Movie

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If anyone has kept up with the academy awards in the last decade of longer, they have probably seen a Studio Ghibli film featured. In 2015 it was The Tale of Princess Kaguya, and in 2014 it was The Wind Rises. Both magnificent films by two great directors (Hayao Miyazaki, Isao Takahata). Unfortunately Ghibli movies haven’t been able to accomplish anything in the academy since Miyazaki’s masterpiece Spirited Away won best animated picture in 2003. When Marnie was There is supposedly the last feature film to come out of this legendary production house. And boy does it not disappoint.

When Marnie was There is based of a book of the same name by English author Joan G. Robinson. Hayao Miyazaki has for years made this book required reading for anyone who works for him at Studio Ghibli and in their seemingly last days made a wonderful adaptation of said book.

As for the movie itself, well it has the same lovely Studio Ghibli art/animation style that has become world-famous and recognizable. The music is classic Ghibli with lullaby like piano tracks that let you become enraptured into the world that is being created. These elements firing on all cylinders is what can make a movies atmosphere seem real, even though its animated.

The story follows Anna, a young girl from the city who is leaving her foster parents for the summer because of her asthma as she heads to live with some relatives in the country to get some fresh country air. It is there where she sees a wonderful lake side mansion and meets its keeper, an equally young blonde girl named Marnie.

When Marnie Was There

 

Anna is voiced by Hailee Steinfeld and she does a great job of portraying all of Anna’s self loathing and the doubts she is having as a child dealing with foster parents and the feeling of not being wanted. Which I think is something everyone has felt at some point in their childhood. And although it may seem annoying and whiney at first I truly came to relate and sympathize with this little twelve year old girl.

Marnie is voiced by Kiernan Shipka and has the tough job of keeping a light hearted mood in spite of the constant angst and depression Anna is facing. And she does an excellent job as well. She’s the friend you had when you were little who would always help with your problems but still be playful and have an upbeat attitude. They wouldn’t get down in the dumps with you, they would raise you out of the dumps and Kieran brings that across as Marnie perfectly.

There are other side characters like Anna’s aunt and uncle and this chubby girl Anna scuffles with plus a fisherman who only says like one line, but none of them really matter. Don’t get me wrong they are crucial to creating the mood and environment of this small country town. But they are dwarfed by the developing relationship of Anna and Marnie.

When Marnie Was There

While not impossible it can be very challenging for adults to relate to the existential struggles of children, but this movie does it all in a way that I really haven’t seen before. Instead of making you feel for the child, it takes you back to when you were a child and thats where the emotions hit. When you have been caught off guard and have returned to your pre-teen self and are faced with the things you feared and hated back then. Then quickly takes those emotions and brings it back to your adulthood. With the combination of these two different world views colliding so suddenly its enough to make anyone feel the emotion. And Precilla Anne’s Fine on the Outside insert song is enough to push you over the edge to waterworksville.

Studio Ghibli has always been a go-to for me if I want something that I know, no matter what its about, I will enjoy it. And When Marnie was There is no exception. I am thoroughly looking for its home video release so I can pick up a Blu-ray copy. And hope that it will make its way to next years academy awards and bring home that trophy for Studio Ghibli one last time.

Due to the slow and limited release its getting in the states I’d be surprised if many people have seen it (let alone knew about its existence). But it is picking up steam in the states releasing in more and more theaters each week. So if it isn’t in a theater near you, request it!

 

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Arcadia #02 – The Rabbit Hole Deepens

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Arcadia #02
Writer: Alex Paknadel
Artist: Eric Scott Pfeifer

In Arcadia, a child psychologist assesses Giacomo, the son of the digital Lee and Sam, and discovers there’s something very different about him. Lee is pulled out of a plastic surgery procedure by officials and flown to Beijing to examine a Homesteader’s corpse. Officials believe that the real world is conspiring to introduce death into Arcadia. In the real world, Valentin confronts Lee about his illegal midnight calls to his suicidal daughter Coral in Arcadia.

Alex Paknadel layers on the mythos in the second issue of Arcadia. In a monthly book this is very hard on the reader. I’m not saying that comic book readers are lazy, just busy with sensory overload from other sources. Do you remember what you did 30 days ago?

Since Paknadel starts issue two drastically different from issue one, it messes with the senses of the reader and keeps you off-balance. The questions are starting to mount without the presence of answers showing up anytime soon.

The first issue was compelling enough to want to read issue two, the second issue continues the complex story and begins to feel like an episode of Game of Thrones with snips of the different plot threads. Additional characters are introduced and the reader might be closing in on who the main villain is in the book. There are several “grey” characters in story so far and you wish that the issue was longer so that these characters could be flushed out more.

Artist Eric Scott Pfeiffer gets in my head by the second page and I will have that image stuck in my brain for the rest of the week. Who or what was that? This image motivates and frustrates me for the rest of the issue as I wanted to see more of this inside world. Pfeiffer’s work excels on the darker panels and adds to an already tense feel.

Arcadia #02 evoked a frustrated emotion as I didn’t get all the answers or enough plot progression as I wanted. The art of storytelling in a six issue mini series is tough because you have to entertain your reader month to month, but you also need to save some story for a big payoff in the final two issues.

Did issue two entertain, yes. Will I read issue three, yes. Would I like more answers about the universe that Paknadel created, absolutely!

Read our review of Acadia #1 – The Concept Captivates You

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Stephen King’s ‘The Dark Tower’ Is Still Alive, Seeking Director Nikolaj Arcel

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The adaptation of Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series is alive and kicking, and looking to add director Nikolaj Arcel (A Royal Affair) to the project.

Nikolaj Arcel

The Dark Tower will most certainly be a series of films and maybe even an accompanying TV show, but the adaptation has gone through a number of starts and stops. Most recently Ron Howard dropped out of the project (though he and his Imagine Entertainment will stay on board to produce), and Sony turned their attention to Arcel. While Arcel, who also co-wrote the Swedish adaptation of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, is a relative unknown as far as big-budget franchises are concerned, everyone started somewhere. And, according to the report from Deadline, Arcel’s dedication to learning the source material was what impressed Sony execs:

“Arcel, when he was getting going in Denmark, taught himself to speak and read English in order to consume Stephen King’s books in the writer’s native tongue. Arcel is a huge fan of The Dark Tower and knows the series well. That impressed the studio, and he showed with Dragon Tattoo that he could go dark, which is important in this series.”

The Dark Tower series has potential to be a lucrative series for Sony, and if down right the stories are rich with world-building detail. The first story in the series, The Gunslinger, is some of King’s most fantasy-laden work, and Arcel appears to have the dedication to the source material to do it justice. If Arcel does a good job with The Gunslinger, he will certainly have a chance to direct the other two films in the series, The Drawing of The Three and The Waste Lands.

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Dwayne Johnson Attached To ‘Big Trouble In Little China’ Remake

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Big Trouble In Little China is getting a remake, as studios continue to mine nostalgic 80s and 90s films to make an easy buck. Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is attached to star, which almost guarantees a windfall at the box office.

According to The Wrap, Johnson is working with screenwriters Ashley Miller and Zack Stentz (X:Men, First Class) to write a new version of John Carpenter’s cult film starring Kurt Russell. Johnson will take over Russell’s role as Jack Burton, a truck driver who becomes a hero when he gets pulled into an age-old battle in San Francisco’s Chinatown.

Dwayne Johnson

While the original Big Trouble In Little China didn’t receive positive reviews and failed at the box office in 1986, in typical cult classic fashion the film took on a life of its own in video rentals and TV syndication to the point where it is one of the more admired 80s movies for a wide swath of fans.

Having Johnson on board for the Big Trouble In Little China remake will certainly do this new version some good, as his box-office clout seems untouchable at this point. It also helps that according to Johnson the original is one of his favorite films, so perhaps he will be able to do a remake some justice.

Are you excited to see a remake of Big Trouble In Little China?

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Retro Review: Point Break (1991) Is Better Than Some Want To Admit

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Last week, the trailer for the Point Break remake surfaced online, and it shows promise on some levels as the action expands to a global stage and the stunt work gets the typical CGI treatment. Some people were disgusted, but the overwhelming responses to said disgust were “hey, the original Point Break wasn’t that great anyway.” This preposterous stance seemed to gain traction in the hours and days after the new trailer hit, and it left me at a loss.

Kathryn Bigelow’s original Point Break is not only a fun and entertaining film, but one of the finest action films ever made. People who do support the film still do so with an asterisk: it’s good but not anything special. I disagree. Point Break was, and is, a special film in regards to its action filmmaking, perfect casting, and in the way it has infiltrated the fabric of pop culture. It’s legend has grown in the last twenty-four years, and to see it marginalized is a shame.

Point Break Reeves and Busey

Keanu Reeves, a sadly marginalized action star himself, plays the legendary Johnny Utah, a former college quarterback star turned FBI agent who is brought into the bank robbery center of the So-Cal Bureau. Utah’s task is to bring down “The Ex-Presidents,” a slam-bang team of robbers who wear rubber masks of former free-world leaders and are in and out of a bank in a flash. He is teamed up with Special Agent Pappas, played by Gary Busey, who has a theory that these ex-presidents are surfers. His theory generates chuckles from most of his peers, but Utah is game, and the two begin their investigation on the beaches of California.

Before long, Utah has infiltrated a tight-knit group of thrill seekers, led by Bodhi, a mystical adrenaline junkie played by Patrick Swayze in one of his finest roles. Bodhi lives for the rush and not much else, but he sees the spiritual side in his surfing and his addiction to the natural high. It is absolutely imperative that Swayze sells the mystic aspect of Bodhi, so when Utah is pulled into this world it is validated through Bodhi’s magnetism. What Utah doesn’t realize, but the audience does, is that Bodhi and his gang of renegades are the bank robbers.

Along the way, Utah’s loyalties begin to blur, and he romances Tyler, a groupie of Bodhi’s clan played by Lori Petty. Everything changes once Utah exposes himself as a Federal agent as he and Pappas try and stop a robbery. This leads us to one of the film’s signature action set pieces, a foot chase through the streets and homes of a neighborhood. The chase weaves in and out of alleyways and through living rooms with dizzying efficiency, and is one of the best of its kind:

Point Break lives on adrenaline, and Kathryn Bigelow understands this. Aside from this spectacular foot chase, the film has some awe-inspiring aerial scenes of the group skydiving, including one late in the film when Utah, in a fit of desperation, chases Bodhi in mid air by jumping out of an airplane without a parachute. The surfing scenes are sharp and intimate enough to buy into, and the typical action fare has a spatial intelligence which is rare these days. One scene in particular, the bust of a drug house full of violent thugs (including Anthony Keidis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers), has incredible ferocity on an intimate level.

From top to bottom, Point Break hits every intended note. Kathryn Bigelow is what makes the film work, because she never once takes the story lightly. A film about bank robbing surfers and an FBI agent named Johnny Utah could have easily fallen into farcical territory, therein ruining the texture of the action. Bigelow stays deadly serious, and it allows her actors to give everything to their roles. Had she made the entire thing an inside joke, even for a second, everything would have fallen apart.

Point Break Reeves and Swayze

The chemistry between Reeves and Swayze is undeniable. Reeves’ dry persona and dark features are a deliberate attempt to make him stand apart from the blonde, electric-eyed Bodhi. The best moments in their relationship come in the scenes following Utah’s exposure. When Bodhi shows up at his door to take him skydiving, everything has been laid out, and everyone knows who everyone is. And yet, the allure of Bodhi convinces Johnny that skydiving is a wise choice. It speaks to the power Bodhi holds over Utah, and these scenes are also the most perfectly tense scenes in the film. And any respectable action film deserves a respectable sidekick for our hero, and Busey’s Agent Pappas is a perfect mixture of comic relief, grizzled veteran wisdom, and reliability.

It seems like revisionist history to watch the new Point Break trailer and say to yourself that Bigelow’s original was some sort of throwaway summer popcorn flick, the equivalent of cake for dinner. It is much more than that when considering where it stands in the genre of pure action. The new film might be entertaining in its own right, but it will certainly be more homogenized than Bigelow’s vision, and it will never have that allure of the late, great Patrick Swayze.

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Neil Gaiman Responds to Lucifer Petition

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When Fox unveiled its plans to produce a TV series based on DC Comics’ Lucifer; itself a spin-0ff of the seminal Sandman by Neil Gaiman, it was inevitable that there would be a certain level of backlash. However, this is not the kind of backlash that is expected of a comic book property i.e. that of your standard fanboy purist, but rather the religious kind. Last week, a group called One Million Moms, a subset of the American Family Association, launched an online petition calling on Fox to cancel the series stating; “[t]he program previews mischaracterize Satan, departs from true biblical teachings about him, and inaccurately portrays the beliefs of the Christian faith”.

The series which sees Lucifer Morningstar (played by Tom Ellis) retire from ruling the underworld and set up shop in Los Angelos. When he is witness to the brutal murder of a young women, Lucifer uses his ability to draw out people’s secrets to team up with homicide detective Chloe Dancer (played by Lauren German) in order to solve the mystery of her death. All the while, Lucifer is confronted with the reality of what happens to the underworld when its master abandons it.
The petition recently came to the attention of Lucifer’s co-creator; Neil Gaiman himself, who took the opportunity to respond on his Tumblr account;

“Ah. It seems like only yesterday (but it was 1991) that the “Concerned Mothers of America” announced that they were boycotting SANDMAN because it contained Lesbian, Gay, Bi and Trans characters. It was Wanda that upset them most: the idea of a Trans Woman in a comic book… They told us they were organising a boycott of SANDMAN, which they would only stop if we wrote to the American Family Association and promised to reform.

I wonder if they noticed it didn’t work last time, either…”

This, ladies and gentlemen, is why Neil Gaiman is king. Lucifer is set to premiere on Fox this Autumn.

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Check Out This Perfect Mashup Of ‘The Shining’ And ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’

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Steve Ramsden has produced one of the better movie mashup trailers I have seen in a while, a perfect mixture of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining and Wes Anderson’s The Grand Budapest Hotel. Titled The Grand Overlook Hotel, Ramsden edits the two films into one and shows just how similar they look at times.

Here is the video for The Grand Overlook Hotel:

What stands out here are the color palette similarities, especially in the opening shots of the Budapest intercut with Jack Nicholson’s first interview in The Shining. Also, the symmetrical blocking of scenes and the texture of the hotels fit together seamlessly.

Kudos to Steve Ramsden on The Grand Overlook Hotel. You can check out his channel here.

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Box Office Report: June 2015

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The Monkeys Fighting Robots movie critic is on the line! Felix Albuerne chats with Matthew Sardo about the summer blockbuster schedule and the duo looks back at the films that defined the month May.

What was your favorite film from May 2015?

Summer 2015

MAY 2015
May 1 (Friday)
Avengers: Age of Ultron (in 3D)
Far from the Madding Crowd (Limited)
Ride (Limited)

May 8 (Friday)
The D Train
Hot Pursuit
5 Flights Up (Limited)
Maggie (Limited)
Welcome to Me (Limited)

May 15 (Friday)
Mad Max: Fury Road (in 3D)
Pitch Perfect 2
Area 51 (Limited)
The Connection (Limited)
Good Kill (Limited)
Slow West (Limited)

May 22 (Friday)
Poltergeist
Tomorrowland (in 3D)
Aloft (Limited)
Sunshine Superman (Limited)
The Vatican Tapes (Limited)
When Marnie Was There (Limited)

May 29 (Friday)
Aloha
San Andreas
Barely Lethal (Limited)
Survivor (Limited)

JUNE 2015
June 3 (Wednesday)
Entourage
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence (Limited)

June 5 (Friday)
Insidious: Chapter 3
Spy
Love & Mercy (Limited)
The Nightmare (Limited)

June 12 (Friday)
Jurassic World (in 3D)
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (Limited)
The Wolfpack (Limited)
The Yes Men Are Revolting (Limited)

June 17 (Wednesday)
The Tribe (Limited)

June 19 (Friday)
Dope
Inside Out (in 3D)
Eden (Limited)
Infinitely Polar Bear (Limited)
Manglehorn (Limited)
The Overnight (Limited)

June 26 (Friday)
Max
Ted 2
Batkid Begins (Limited)
Big Game (Limited)

JULY 2015
July 1 (Wednesday)
Magic Mike XXL
Terminator: Genisys

July 3 (Friday)
Jimmy’s Hall (Limited)

July 10 (Friday)
The Gallows
Minions (in 3D)
Self/less
Tangerine (Limited)

July 17 (Friday)
Ant-Man
Trainwreck
The Look of Silence (Limited)
Mr. Holmes (Limited)

July 24 (Friday)
Paper Towns
Pixels
Southpaw
American Heist (Limited)
Irrational Man (Limited)

July 29 (Wednesday)
Vacation

July 31 (Friday)
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation
A LEGO Brickumentary (Limited)
The End of the Tour (Limited)

AUGUST 2015
August 7 (Friday)
Fantastic Four
The Gift
Ricki and the Flash

August 14 (Friday)
The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Straight Outta Compton
Underdogs
Mistress America (Limited)

August 19 (Wednesday)
Masterminds

August 21 (Friday)
American Ultra
Hitman: Agent 47
Sinister 2
She’s Funny That Way (Limited)
Z for Zachariah (Limited)

August 28 (Friday)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: The Green Legend (IMAX Only)
Regression
We Are Your Friends
War Room (Limited)

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John Oliver Versus FIFA: Round 2

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After the arrests of numerous top officials, John Oliver decided to give an update on the state of FIFA.

“To kill a snake, you need to cut off his head,” Oliver said in reference to Sepp Blatter the president of FIFA.

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