Tag Archives: cinema-blend

WATCH: Lizzy Caplan Looks Sad A Lot In ‘Save The Date’ Rom-Com Trailer

The critics blurbs in this clip say “romantic comedy” — as does the purple sex-toy scene — but the melancholy soundtrack and the sad, pensive looks on Lizzy Caplan and Alison Brie’ s faces say bring some Puffs when you see Michael Mohan’s Save the Date . Caplan is fast becoming the go-to girl for indie comedies that scrutinize the meaning of love, particularly as it relates to the institution of marriage. This past summer, she was part of the ensemble in Leslye Headland’s wickedly honest Bachelorette , and in Save the Date she plays Sarah, who learns something about herself when she gets caught up in a rebound romance after turning down her boyfriend’s marriage proposal.   Brie plays Caplan’s sister Beth who is caught up in the details of her own wedding. Hand me a tissue, please. I’m feeling weepy already. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.  Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Read more:
WATCH: Lizzy Caplan Looks Sad A Lot In ‘Save The Date’ Rom-Com Trailer

WATCH: Lizzy Caplan Looks Sad A Lot In ‘Save The Date’ Rom-Com Trailer

The critics blurbs in this clip say “romantic comedy” — as does the purple sex-toy scene — but the melancholy soundtrack and the sad, pensive looks on Lizzy Caplan and Alison Brie’ s faces say bring some Puffs when you see Michael Mohan’s Save the Date . Caplan is fast becoming the go-to girl for indie comedies that scrutinize the meaning of love, particularly as it relates to the institution of marriage. This past summer, she was part of the ensemble in Leslye Headland’s wickedly honest Bachelorette , and in Save the Date she plays Sarah, who learns something about herself when she gets caught up in a rebound romance after turning down her boyfriend’s marriage proposal.   Brie plays Caplan’s sister Beth who is caught up in the details of her own wedding. Hand me a tissue, please. I’m feeling weepy already. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.  Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Read more:
WATCH: Lizzy Caplan Looks Sad A Lot In ‘Save The Date’ Rom-Com Trailer

New ‘Les Miserables’ Trailer: Will Jackman, Crowe, Hathaway Sing Their Way To Oscar?

I’ll admit I was a bit iffy on this whole live singing concept in Tom Hooper’s epic Les Miserables film adaptation… until now. The new international trailer swells with emotion as everyone from Hugh Jackman to Anne Hathaway to Amanda Seyfried , Russell Crowe , and Eddie Redmayne warble Claude-Michel Schönberg’s iconic tunes like their Oscar hopes depended on it. Which they do. Hathaway’s got the showy role in Fantine, whose “I Dreamed A Dream” was one of the first bits to leak onto the internet months back. Thank goodness for the new trailer, which shows that the rest of the ensemble is bringing their singing game to the streets of 19th century France, too. We’ve got Jackman as Valjean, Crowe as Javert, Seyfried as Cosette, all of whom have been known to flex their vocal chords from time to time. Redmayne, who starred most recently in My Week With Marilyn and plays Marius, has yet to show off his pipes but apparently was a chorister at Eton College – not too shabby. Then there’s Samantha Barks as Eponine, who’ll probably blow everyone else in the cast away seeing as she’s an actual West End star. (Remember when we thought Taylor Swift had the role in the bag? Oh, Internet .) In any case, hope! Optimism! I know Les Mis is already going to steal all the Christmas movie-going dollars, but now I’m more convinced it’ll be a repeat-view Oscar contender and not just a must-see for Broadway nuts. Color me a believer. Read more on Les Miserables . Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Link:
New ‘Les Miserables’ Trailer: Will Jackman, Crowe, Hathaway Sing Their Way To Oscar?

Daniel Craig Hints At 007 Exit, While Javier Bardem Turned Down Bond

Ahead of Skyfall ‘s theatrical roll out last month in the U.K. and this week’s release in the U.S., Bond star Daniel Craig has said he’s committed to two more 007. But in a recent interview, Craig held out the possibility he is holding out the possibility of departing the role as the debonaire British operative. The film screened in NYC and L.A. last night to packed crowds. The Secret Screening of the latest Bond packed Grauman’s Chinese Theater Wednesday night at AFI Fest . “I’ve been trying to get out of this from the very moment I got into it,” Craig told Rolling Stone . “But they won’t let me go, and I’ve agreed to do a couple more, but let’s see how this one does, because business is business and if the shit goes down, I’ve got a contract that somebody will happily wipe their ass with.” [ Related: ‘Skyfall’ Premiere Gallery – 007 Mingles With Royalty On The Red Carpet ] It is not quite clear whether his descriptives were said ahead of Skyfall ‘s theatrical release in the U.K. and other territories. The latest installment is one of the most successful in the 50 year-old franchise. The Sam Mendes-directed film also starring Judi Dench and Javier Bardem is expected to pass the $400 million mark internationally and that does not include the U.S. where it’s tracking to have a robust debut. Javier Bardem, who is winning accolades for his role in the latest Bond film playing villain Raoul Silva, told Cinema Blend that he was once offered to play 007, telling the publication, “Years ago, I was. I don’t remember what movie it was for. But yeah, it was just not that time. I didn’t feel it was the time for me to do something like that. And also, I was doing something else, so I passed. This time, when I read it, I felt that it was very powerful material, and I wanted to join.” Bardem said that he doesn’t regret the pass because it gave him a chance to pursue other things, even if some of them weren’t always “beautifully executed.” Given the success of Skyfall , it is highly unlikely anyone will – err – foul Craig’s contract as 007 for at least two more features. But speculation, nevertheless, ratcheted up a couple weeks ago that Bond’s next manifestation may possibly take an ethnic change. Bond girl Naomie Harris recently hinted at the possible news, saying that the next 007 may be Idris Elba. If so, the star of The Wire and films Prometheus and Thor would become the first non-Caucasian James Bond in his 50 years. Harris hinted that Elba met with Bond producer Barbara Broccoli about the possibility. Skyfall had advanced screenings in L.A. and New York Wednesday night. The film packed in a full-house as AFI Fest’s “Secret Screening” at Grauman’s Chinese Theater. Rumors swirled that perhaps some of the cast would make an appearance at the screening since they were in town doing press. The red carpet was seen getting a good vacuuming hours ahead of the screening and the AFI Fest Step and Repeat was in place, but as the 9:15 start-time neared, the photo backdrop was covered up and star-watchers were not gathering behind barricades as they’ve done nightly at the festival ahead of nightly Galas. They will likely return, however, for Thursday night’s Closing Night Gala, Lincoln [ Sources: Rolling Stone , Cinema Blend ]

Continue reading here:
Daniel Craig Hints At 007 Exit, While Javier Bardem Turned Down Bond

Daniel Craig Hints At 007 Exit, While Javier Bardem Turned Down Bond

Ahead of Skyfall ‘s theatrical roll out last month in the U.K. and this week’s release in the U.S., Bond star Daniel Craig has said he’s committed to two more 007. But in a recent interview, Craig held out the possibility he is holding out the possibility of departing the role as the debonaire British operative. The film screened in NYC and L.A. last night to packed crowds. The Secret Screening of the latest Bond packed Grauman’s Chinese Theater Wednesday night at AFI Fest . “I’ve been trying to get out of this from the very moment I got into it,” Craig told Rolling Stone . “But they won’t let me go, and I’ve agreed to do a couple more, but let’s see how this one does, because business is business and if the shit goes down, I’ve got a contract that somebody will happily wipe their ass with.” [ Related: ‘Skyfall’ Premiere Gallery – 007 Mingles With Royalty On The Red Carpet ] It is not quite clear whether his descriptives were said ahead of Skyfall ‘s theatrical release in the U.K. and other territories. The latest installment is one of the most successful in the 50 year-old franchise. The Sam Mendes-directed film also starring Judi Dench and Javier Bardem is expected to pass the $400 million mark internationally and that does not include the U.S. where it’s tracking to have a robust debut. Javier Bardem, who is winning accolades for his role in the latest Bond film playing villain Raoul Silva, told Cinema Blend that he was once offered to play 007, telling the publication, “Years ago, I was. I don’t remember what movie it was for. But yeah, it was just not that time. I didn’t feel it was the time for me to do something like that. And also, I was doing something else, so I passed. This time, when I read it, I felt that it was very powerful material, and I wanted to join.” Bardem said that he doesn’t regret the pass because it gave him a chance to pursue other things, even if some of them weren’t always “beautifully executed.” Given the success of Skyfall , it is highly unlikely anyone will – err – foul Craig’s contract as 007 for at least two more features. But speculation, nevertheless, ratcheted up a couple weeks ago that Bond’s next manifestation may possibly take an ethnic change. Bond girl Naomie Harris recently hinted at the possible news, saying that the next 007 may be Idris Elba. If so, the star of The Wire and films Prometheus and Thor would become the first non-Caucasian James Bond in his 50 years. Harris hinted that Elba met with Bond producer Barbara Broccoli about the possibility. Skyfall had advanced screenings in L.A. and New York Wednesday night. The film packed in a full-house as AFI Fest’s “Secret Screening” at Grauman’s Chinese Theater. Rumors swirled that perhaps some of the cast would make an appearance at the screening since they were in town doing press. The red carpet was seen getting a good vacuuming hours ahead of the screening and the AFI Fest Step and Repeat was in place, but as the 9:15 start-time neared, the photo backdrop was covered up and star-watchers were not gathering behind barricades as they’ve done nightly at the festival ahead of nightly Galas. They will likely return, however, for Thursday night’s Closing Night Gala, Lincoln [ Sources: Rolling Stone , Cinema Blend ]

Continue reading here:
Daniel Craig Hints At 007 Exit, While Javier Bardem Turned Down Bond

Here, Kitty: Puss in Boots Gets New Trailer, New Poster

In high school, my friend Monica would sit behind me in class and draw pictures of cockeyed old men in wizard hats with patchy chest hair and scary, idiotic grins. It was weird and unsettling and hilarious (and I should be ashamed for encouraging it), but that was the point. In the case of the new Puss In Boots poster, we get all of that unrestrained, ambiguous sexuality, but with little of the winking creepiness. It’s just creepy — the way a strutting cat with a sincere stare in jaunty boots ought to be, frankly.

Link:
Here, Kitty: Puss in Boots Gets New Trailer, New Poster

Guillermo Del Toro May Be Too Busy for Hellboy III

Hellboy comic creator Mike Mignola is shedding doubt on the possibility for a Hellboy III , suggesting that director Guillermo del Toro is quite unlikely to get around it. “Last I heard he said he would not make it,” Mignola said at the Calgary Comics Expo. “Guillermo — who I love — in every interview there’s a new story on what his next movie is and he honestly believes he’s going to do all these things….I’m not surprised because he won’t live long enough to do a tenth of the movies he’s told me he’s going to make.” In the immediate future, del Toro will film Pacific Rim . [ Cinema Blend ]

Go here to see the original:
Guillermo Del Toro May Be Too Busy for Hellboy III

‘The Green Hornet’: The Reviews Are In

Movie is ‘as much a comedy as it is an action movie,’ Cinema Blend’s Josh Tyler writes. By Eric Ditzian Seth Rogen and Jay Chou in “The Green Hornet” Photo: Sony Pictures Seth Rogen might be laughing that throaty, unmistakable laugh of his at the end of this coming holiday weekend. After a hellish development process, a troubling game of release-date musical chairs, and the seemingly collective declaration from the Internet that his movie would suuuuuuck, Rogen’s “Green Hornet” is set to win the upcoming box-office crown. Projections put the superhero action/comedy’s opening haul anywhere from the low $30 million range to the low $40 million range. Whether it hits that higher number — making it the first movie to cross the $40-million opening mark since “Tron: Legacy” in mid-December — might well be decided by word of mouth. Thus far, critics seem to be of two minds: those who just don’t dig how Rogen has transferred his slacker-dude comedic stylings to a whiz-bam-pow action flick, and those who, well, totally dig how much fun that transference turns out to be. Which camp do you fall into? Check out what the critics are saying about “The Green Hornet” and decide for yourself. The Story “Rogen plays Britt Reid, a spoiled and irresponsible twenty-something who inherits an independent Los Angeles newspaper after his father James (Tom Wilkinson) dies under mysterious circumstances. Unprepared for the responsibilities of the job, he commiserates with one of his father’s mechanics, the preternaturally gifted Kato (Jay Chou); but when they’re interrupted by real criminals while trying to deface a statue erected in his father’s honor, the duo decides to launch new careers for themselves as superheroes. Branding his alter ego ‘The Green Hornet,’ Reid uses the newspaper to establish himself as a criminal, hoping to protect his real identity from the authorities; but when an actual crime boss named Chudnofsky (Christoph Waltz) believes that the Hornet is horning in on his territory, Reid and Kato find themselves under attack from both crooks and the authorities.” — Todd Gilchrist, Cinematical The Direction “Michel Gondry has crafted an irreverently funny, ultramodern take on the 1930s radio serial, with a vibe so casual you half-expect star Seth Rogen to amble offscreen and put his feet up on the seat next to you. … Gondry is surprisingly well-suited for a big-budget popcorn adventure. While his projects occasionally threaten to float away on a cloud of whimsy, the outlandish requirements of this genre — like explosive action scenes — somehow keep him grounded. At the same time, his sense of humor and acute visual skill turn a cheerfully unfocused superhero flick into an unexpectedly fun ride.” — Elizabeth Weitzman, New York Daily News The 3-D “[A] note on the 3-D. It’s good. Bullet casings rain down on our eyebrows. Kato’s kicks fly past our heads. At times, it seems like every possible object in the frame is rendered in 3-D. Which raises the question: Does the paperweight on Rogen’s desk need to be popping out of the frame? It’s an unnecessary contrivance in a movie that’s already made all the right moves.” — Tom Horgen, Minneapolis Star Tribune The Dissenters “The film’s insurmountable problem is that Rogen and Goldberg are committed to the comic notion that Britt is an idiot. This becomes a box that the character and the movie can’t escape. At no point does Britt’s strategy of doing good while pretending to be evil ever reveal itself to be coherent. On the contrary, Rogen’s Green Hornet doesn’t do anybody any good, not even by accident — he just wreaks havoc. Britt is a joke, a parody of a fatuous rich heir. That provides the occasional laugh, as when Britt comes on to his secretary (the long-suffering Cameron Diaz), who loathes him. But when the violence comes, who cares if this fatuous, ineffectual, trouble-making idiot survives?” — Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle The Final Word “More important than the story being told here, though, is how much fun the film seems to be having in telling it. … The movie’s packed with fun gadgets and crazy visual effects, some of which are so outside the box that in another film they might seem strange. Here though, most of them work brilliantly because Gondry’s movie never takes itself too seriously. When reality gets in the way of having fun with the moment, ‘The Green Hornet’ is more than happy to ignore it. Gondry’s vision is a perfect fit with the comedic tone of the script, written by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. Their film is as much a comedy as it is an action movie — actually it’s better than that, it’s one of the all too rare modern movies which manages to be both.” — Josh Tyler, Cinema Blend Check out everything we’ve got on “The Green Hornet.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘Green Hornet’ Clips

Read more here:
‘The Green Hornet’: The Reviews Are In

Scott Pilgrim’s Been Hiding an Animated Past

Help Caption an Image From John Slattery’s Sterling Mad Men Directorial Debut