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Archive for January, 2009

Polytechnique – Poster

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

A dramatization of the Montreal Massacre of 1989 where several female engineering students were murdered by an unstable misogynist.

The École Polytechnique Massacre, also known as the Montreal Massacre, occurred on December 6, 1989 at the École Polytechnique in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Twenty-five year-old Marc Lépine, armed with a legally obtained semi-automatic rifle and a hunting knife, shot twenty-eight people, killing fourteen and injuring the other fourteen before killing himself. He began his attack by entering a classroom at the university, where he separated the male and female students. After claiming that he was “fighting feminism”, he shot all nine women in the room, killing six. He then moved through corridors, the cafeteria, and another classroom, specifically targeting women to shoot. He killed fourteen women and injured four men and ten women in just under twenty minutes before turning the gun on himself.

Directed by Denis Villeneuve

The song in the trailer is Everloving by Moby (album: ‘Play’)
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The Objective – Special Op guys find Evil in the desert

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

The Objective is a supernatural thriller from Daniel Myrick, award winning co-director of the cult classic The Blair Witch Project. In The Objective, a team of US Special Ops forces is dispatched with the ostensible orders of locating an influential Muslim cleric. Instead, they find themselves lost in a Middle Eastern ‘Bermuda Triangle’ of ancient evil, faced with an enemy that they could never have imagined. Apparantly, it premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival to critical acclaim.

Official Site.

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Cold Souls – Paul Giamatti has his soul extracted. …with hilarious consequences!

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

The Samuel Goldwyn Company has acquired the US distribution rights to Cold Souls. The film is written and directed by Sophie Barthes and stars Paul Giamatti as himself.
In the film, Giamatti plays an actor that during an existential crisis decides to explore “soul extraction” as a relief from the burdens of daily life.
Sundance programmer Caroline Libresco says of Cold Souls: “Sophie Barthes’s debut feature is strikingly original, not only for its haunting concept but for its poetic execution. Inspired production design and lyrical cinematography create a melancholic, heightened world. Perfectly cast, Giamatti and a gifted ensemble maneuver seamlessly through shifting ontological landscapes without ever betraying the surrealism. With this dazzling accomplishment, Barthes establishes herself as an auteur to reckon with.”



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GI Joe – Superbowl Trailer

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

Paramount Pictures premiered a 10 second preview of the G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra Super Bowl commercial during Friday’s Entertainment Tonight.


What do you reckon? Looks better than I thought it would

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Transmission – What happens when the screens stop?

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

The story is a tragicomic, absurd film set in a world where all the screens and means of telecommunication have inexplicably stopped working. Accustomed to spending hours in front of their screens, the characters suffer withdrawal symptoms.

When the pictures were gone, life stopped. A few people stayed in the city. Three brothers try to stay alive.

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Terminator Salvation concept art and McG speaks about the film

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

McG has been chatting to Wired magazing (who also posted these lovely pieces of concept art).

Getting the Robots Right: “The first film shows Schwarzenegger’s T-800 coming from 2029 back in time,” McG said. “Salvation takes place in 2018, so you see the R&D that went into the T-800. It’s like the polio vaccine: You’ve got to go through a lot of lab rats to get to vaccine. In this film, humans are the lab rats. Skynet is testing on us to figure out how to make a photorealistic, leaner, smaller, more capable machine — the T-800.”
Post-Apocalyptic Cinematography: “We talked to the people who monitored Chernobyl about what the world would sound and look and taste and feel like after the bombs have gone off,” said McG. “Then we got a dead Kodak stock. We baked it in the sun a little bit too long to damage the film, and then we shot on uncorrected Panavision lenses that flare more easily and aren’t quite as sharp as Primo lenses but have an interesting patina. Most importantly we added three times as much silver in the processing than one traditionally would to a color stock. Add it all up and you get this otherworldly, desolate feeling.”
Calming James Cameron’s Skepticism:I didn’t want to feel like the guy who gave birth to the Terminator is against what we’re doing, so I go to see James Cameron to kiss the ring and tell him what I was trying to do,” McG said. “He’s cordial but says, ‘I’m not going to endorse your movie. I reserve the right to hate it. But I wish you well, and if you’re going to make a Terminator I’d prefer you make a good one to a bad one.’”

The Quest for Credibility: “To get some credibility back into the Terminator mythology, we had to show the fans we really mean business by getting a great John Connor,” McG said. “To me the choice was very simple: Christian Bale.”

Bale Just Says No: “I met Bale at a pub in England while he was shooting Dark Knight,” McG said. “He said, “I’m not interested in action, I’m not interested in pyrotechnics, I’m interested in story. If you can get the script to a place where actors on stage could just read it, naked, and it would be compelling for two hours because the characters change and evolve, then we’d have something to talk about.” We had a respectful conversation, I gave him Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? to read but his answer was: “Until it’s on the page, I’m not doing it.”

Connor’s Story: “John Connor doesn’t come into the picture saying, ‘Follow me and everything’s going to be cool,’” said McG. “He’s just one of many soldiers when we meet him. It’s like [Spider-Man] where you’re Peter Parker: ‘Hey I’m just a lowly high school photographer,’ and he learns with great power comes great responsibility. Or the hacker [in The Matrix]: ‘They call me Neo, who cares?’ ‘quot;No man, you’re the one, you’re going to lead us!’ Of course Luke Skywalker, on and on, all those Joseph Campbell archetypes. So this is the story of how John Connor becomes leader of the resistance. He has to earn it.”

Machine Music: “I wanted the sound of the resistance to be very delicate, reminiscent of Gustavo Santaolalla’s analog guitar, so I thought of putting Gustavo together with Thom Yorke of Radiohead for the machine sound,” said McG. “But their schedules were too tough, so then Danny Elfman articulated his sonic vision for the picture. He’s a huge Terminator fan. I wish I could show you his house. Elfman lives in a haunted house that has strange prosthetic limbs from the turn of the century hanging on the wall.”
Flesh-and-Blood Robots: “A lot of people make CG movies where actors are emoting to poles with tennis balls on top of them,” said McG. “That’s the last thing I wanted to do. I don’t like dealing with cartoons, so to speak. I wanted real robots for the actors to interface with so you could get that grittiness and realism. There’s an archetype shape to the T-800. We needed body types to suggest the robot that would combat John Connor, and Roland Kickinger is a good body type. His shoulders are huge, his waist is narrow. The [Industrial Light & Magic] guys used their calipers to measure shoulder spatial differences and said he’d make a good body double. Roland as an individual is not in the movie.”

The Third Act: “Is Skynet smart enough to use the best parts of ourselves against ourselves? Can we trust the machine?” Mc G asked. “Therein lies the rub and that’s what act three is all about. The ending of this film is elliptical. It’s going to make a lot of people mad and you’ll see lot of people scratching their heads. It’s not disposable, where you forget about it before you even get to the parking lot. It’s going to make you think.”
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Crossing Over – Poster for Harrison Ford film

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

Bad, bad photoshopping to stick the four faces together on the top of the poster and what’s with Jim’s stubble? Like on of those iron filing magnet game things. Finally I think Harrison Ford has just smelt something bad.

Crossing Over is written and directed by South African filmmaker Wayne Kramer (The Cooler, Running Scared). The film also stars Sean Penn, Ray Liotta, Ashley Judd, Alice Eve, Alice Braga, and Jim Sturgess.

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Mickey Rourke to go gangster in Broken Horses

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

Mickey Rourke is set for an Indian filmmaker’s Hollywood debut. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Mickey Rourke will star in Broken Horses, the Hollywood debut for Indian filmmaker Vidhu Vinod Chopra.

Plot details haven’t been revealed as of yet, but the film is said to be a gangster caper. Chopra will direct from a screenplay by Abijhat Joshi and script consultant Jason Richman (Bangkok Dangerous), based off an idea from Chopra.

The film is set to shoot in New Mexico and New York, although a production start-date has not yet been revealed.

Source: Movieweb

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The Hunt for Gollum – Full trailer for fan film

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

I really like the look of this.

Aragorn sets out to hunt for Gollum in this independent Lord of the Rings tribute film. The creature must be found not only to discover the truth about the Ring, but to protect the Ringbearer himself from the dark lord of Mordor…

The Hunt For Gollum is an unofficial not for profit short film by a group of enthusiast filmmakers. As a Lord of the Rings Fan Film, it is not affiliated with the Tolkien Estate or New Line Cinema and is being produced for noncommercial use and viewing over the web.

Official Movie Website

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Watchmen: Tales of the Black Freighter – Details of the DVD and screen shots

Posted by LiveFor on January 31, 2009

Warner Bros have now announced the release of Watchmen: Tales of the Black Freighter on DVD and Blu-Ray.

Tales of the Black Freighter was the comic book within the Watchmen comic. All very meta plus it was very dark and twisted – lots of dead bodies, insanity, sharks and nastiness. The reasoning behind having a pirate comic in the Watchmen Universe was simply because in a world of superheroes why have superhero comics?

The image below shows what’s one the disc along with some screenshots. Looks very, very nice and Gerard Butler has provided his voice.

“Theyre in the book. And on this disc. From the director of Watchmen and 300 come two tales from the celebrated graphic novel that do not appear in the extraordinary Watchmen Theatrical Feature. Tales of the Black Freighter (featuring the voice of 300s Gerard Butler) brings to strikingly animated life the novels richly layered story-within-a-story, a daring pirate saga whose turbulent events may mirror those in the Watchmens world. Stars from the Watchmen movie team in the amazing live-action/CGI Under the Hood, based on Nite Owls powerful first-hand account of how the hooded adventurers came into existence. Two fan-essential stories. One place to watch the excitement. Watching the Watchmen begins here.”

Also on the DVD/Blu-ray is Hollis Mason’s tell-all live-action expose on the MAsked Men of Watchmen titled Under The Hood, a featurette titled “Story Within A Story: The Books of The Watchmen” which takes a look at the comic book within the comic book, and a first Look at DC’s Animated Green Lantern DVD. The Blu-ray release features additional content including a featurette called “The WHY of Watchmen” featuring director Zack Snyder and The Two Bernies, a deleted scene from Watchmen which was not included in the theatrical cut of the film, and a digital copy of the film.

Personally I’ll probably hold out for the all singing all dancing Watchmen DVD which will no doubt show up with the Black Freighter tale mixed in with the full film.

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