Tag Archives: movie-city

Carrie Stage Musical Dies Again

The off-Broadway musical adaptation of Stephen King’s Carrie may have outlasted its 1988 stage predecessor by four times the stage run, but it died nonetheless last weekend — two weeks early! The NYT has the post-mortem: “Several theater producers contacted recently said that Carrie , no matter how well acted and sung, presented far more than the usual share of difficulties, the most insurmountable being that nearly every character is dead at the end….Several reviewers complained about certain songs and a one-note blandness in the high school scenes, but the sharpest criticism was that Carrie had been de-camped to the point of dullness.” Chloe Moretz , you’re our last hope! [ NYT via Movie City News ]

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Carrie Stage Musical Dies Again

GALLERY: The American Pie Cast, Then and Now

It’s hard to believe it’s been 13 years since Jason Biggs first made sweet, sweet love to that apple pie, but with this week’s American Reunion the gang is back, three sequels and four subpar spin-off movies later, to catch up and wax nostalgic about the good old days. Marinate on where all those years went while you catch up with the American Pie gang in Movieline’s Then and Now gallery and inevitably decide — as we all do on occasion while wine-drunk, yearbook in hand — which among them aged the best over the years. The whole gang is back in American Reunion , which sees the return of Biggs, Alyson Hannigan, Chris Klein , Mena Suvari , Shannon Elizabeth , Thomas Ian Nicholas , Seann William Scott , Tara Reid , Natasha Lyonne , Eugene Levy, Jennifer Coolidge, and yes, The Shermanator. More than a decade after their first outing I’d say the entire American Pie cast is looking good. Especially you, Eugene Levy . Rrrawr. Click to launch the time warp to 1999 gallery!

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GALLERY: The American Pie Cast, Then and Now

Doc Peeks Into Ingmar Bergman’s VHS Collection, Finds… Ghostbusters?

Legendary auteurs, they’re just like us! When iconic filmmaker Ingmar Bergman passed away in 2007, he left behind one of the greatest bodies of work known to cinema — and a vast, meticulously catalogued VHS collection, the subject of the upcoming Swedish documentary Bergman’s Video . Among his tapes, somewhere between the Bunuel and the Tarkovsky: Jurassic Park , Ghostbusters , and The Blues Brothers , which at least partially explains the ghosts and Jake/Elwood-esque sibling dynamic in Fanny and Alexander . The dinosaurs, not so much. [ Cineuropa via Movie City News ]

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Doc Peeks Into Ingmar Bergman’s VHS Collection, Finds… Ghostbusters?

VIDEO: ‘Fed Up’ Tony Kaye Wishes He’d Made John Carter, Appeals For Huge Budget

The YouTube hits just keep coming today, with one rare Disney-defying treat giving way to another: Take a break and hear eccentric Detachment and American History X filmmaker Tony Kaye’s candid lament for John Carter and passionate appeal for a huge budget of his own. What’s not to love? “For $250 million, I could make…” Kaye expounds, eyes beaming and hands raised. “People’s minds would explode. I’m good as gold. Fucking trust me. Fucking trust me! You don’t give an animation director $250 million.” Stick around for a wealth of storytelling about Kaye’s near-miss at Disney 40 years ago and subsequent Hollywood misadventures. And maybe let’s start a Kickstarter campaign or something? [via Movie City News ]

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VIDEO: ‘Fed Up’ Tony Kaye Wishes He’d Made John Carter, Appeals For Huge Budget

Congrats, Asylum! Franchise Milestone Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark Is Coming

Exciting news today from the mockbuster mavens at The Asylum : The B-movie specialists have announced their next creature feature, Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark , a sequel to 2009’s Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus and its 2010 follow-up Mega Shark vs. Crocosaurus . This time around the hardy Mega Shark faces the ultimate enemy: Mecha Shark, “her mechanical doppelganger.” Contain yourselves! “The fan response to the Mega Shark franchise has been rabid,” said The Asylum partner Paul Bales in a statement. “In addition to a very persuasive online petition, we found that Mega Shark has taken on a life of her own. We’ve received photos of Mega Shark cakes, toys and games on a near-daily basis, and we thought it was high time she did battle with an iconic Mecha monster.” If you’ve been resistant to the charms of the Asylum’s brand of so bad they’re good genre pics and blockbuster knock-offs, now’s the time to come to terms with the truth: This is the closest cinema has come to replicating Gojira and its kaiju brethren since the golden years of Toho. What’s more, Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark will mark The Asylum’s first-ever trilogy. High five, guys! Let’s have a toast to the franchise contributions of Debbie Gibson and Jaleel White! Someone get me a Mega Shark cake! Take a look back at Mega Shark’s greatest hits and brainstorm: Which former ’80s/’90s idol will lead the cast this time around? Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus : Mega Shark vs. Crocosaurus :

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Congrats, Asylum! Franchise Milestone Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark Is Coming

Decline in 3-D Ticket Prices Predicted for 2012, But There’s a Catch

Good news! Those annoying extra ticket price surcharges you’ve been paying to see movies in the third dimension could wane in the coming year, predicts Spotlight Theatres CEO Joe Paletta. Oh wait, there’s bad news too: Regular old 2-D prices will rise to even things out. “Among the bigger changes will [sic] probably see the 3-D upcharge disappear,” he writes . “3-D charges will help increase the overall ticket-price but, as an industry, I think we’ll see a blend begin to emerge in 2012, where patrons will have a single price for both 2-D and 3-D films. 2-D prices will increase and 3-D prices will decrease.” By my calculation this only benefits 3-D enthusiasts, and punishes anyone who doesn’t want to subject themselves to the stereoscopic experience. And what of the stereo-blind ?? Ready your pocketbooks accordingly. [ Screen Trade via Movie City News ]

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Decline in 3-D Ticket Prices Predicted for 2012, But There’s a Catch

Steven Soderbergh: ‘It’s Always Good to Kill Movie Stars’

Anyone who’s seen Contagion (or, let’s be honest, even just the trailer for Contagion ) knows that Steven Soderbergh is not precious about keeping his biggest stars breathing for the duration of his films. And when you think about it, that is kind of an awesome against-the-tide trend that few directors — okay, few studios — have the wherewithal to attempt. Chatting with the UK’s Independent about Contagion and Haywire , Soderbergh dropped some science on the art of manipulating the very essence of stardom in movies to great effect. “It’s always good to kill movie stars,” he told the Independent. “I think that the two most important things that have happened to that aspect of movies in the last 50 years are Hitchcock killing off Janet Leigh in a way that nobody had ever dreamed of doing – taking his heroine and killing her off after 40 minutes – and… Mike Nichols casting Dustin Hoffman in The Graduate . That changed everything.” “Now it’s back to the way it was before that single decision totally turned the world upside down in terms of what was people’s idea of a movie star. That one stroke ushered in the great actors who followed, De Niro, Pacino and Nicholson.” So how does one shake up audience expectation again in movies chock-full of A-listers? [ Spoilers ] Have them pummeled to a pulp by unknown MMA fighter-ladies! Cut their brains open in the first act! Blame it all on chickens! [ End spoilers ] All hail Soderbergh! Kill your idols! (Figuratively speaking.) [ The Independent via Movie City News ]

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Steven Soderbergh: ‘It’s Always Good to Kill Movie Stars’