Tag Archives: breck eisner

Witchy Women: Has Summit Found Its Next Twilight?

Summit Entertainment still has the final two installments of The Twilight Saga to bring in untold fortunes , but that doesn’t mean the studio isn’t thinking ahead. The Los Angeles Times reports that Summit is looking to make The Last Witch Hunter its next big franchise. The script — about a man who hunts witches and warlocks — was on the Black List in 2010, and the studio has apparently met with Breck Eisner to discuss directing. No casting yet — though Vin Diesel has reportedly expressed interest — but expect Charlie Sheen to throw his hat in the ring soon. Dude is a real-life warlock hunter. [ LAT /24 Frames ]

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Witchy Women: Has Summit Found Its Next Twilight?

Ouija. McG. And 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: Sad old man threatened by VOD… Bollywood misses an opportunity in Afghanistan, but not with Wipeout … Demi Lovato is an 18-year-old who likes to take flirty pictures. So what?… And more…

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Ouija. McG. And 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

On DVD: Breck Eisner Does The Crazies Once More With Feeling

I know what you’re thinking: At this rate, they’ll get around to remaking even Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things sooner or later. But the new reboot of George A. Romero’s The Crazies is the right kind of remake — the kind that endeavors to squeeze every drop of acid out of its potent scenario, execution-wise, in ways Romero rarely could.

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On DVD: Breck Eisner Does The Crazies Once More With Feeling

Bret Easton Ellis on The Rules of Attraction and Its Sexy, Illicit Spinoff You’ll Never See

Bret Easton Ellis has written six books (his seventh, Imperial Bedrooms, comes out next month ), and all six have been optioned by Hollywood. Of those six, four were made into movies, and they run the gamut from iconic to underseen, acclaimed to lambasted. Each day this week, Ellis will tackle a different adaptation of his books for Movieline, giving his take on what worked, what didn’t, and what went on behind the scenes. When Bret Easton Ellis wrote The Rules of Attraction in 1987, it came burdened with heavy expectations, as his first novel, Less Than Zero , had made him a literary wunderkind two years prior. In a similar way, Roger Avary’s 2002 film adaptation of The Rules of Attraction came two years after the relative success of Mary Harron’s film version of American Psycho , and if ever Ellis were to become a book-to-film crossover franchise a la Stephen King or John Grisham, Rules would serve as a litmus test.

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Bret Easton Ellis on The Rules of Attraction and Its Sexy, Illicit Spinoff You’ll Never See