Tag Archives: sequel

‘Star Trek’ Reboot Almost Returned With A ‘Vengeance’

J.J. Abrams reveals to MTV News that ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ could have been named after a giant black ship in the sequel called Vengeance. By Todd Gilchrist, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Benedict Cumberbatch in “Star Trek Into Darkness” Photo: Paramount

Read the original post:
‘Star Trek’ Reboot Almost Returned With A ‘Vengeance’

Justin Timberlake Announces ‘The 20/20 Experience’ Tour Dates!

Continue reading here:

This past weekend must have been a good one for pop superstar Justin Timberlake. After announcing the sequel to his smash hit album “The 20/20…

Justin Timberlake Announces ‘The 20/20 Experience’ Tour Dates!

Justin Timberlake Announces ‘The 20/20 Experience’ Tour Dates!

Continue reading here:

This past weekend must have been a good one for pop superstar Justin Timberlake. After announcing the sequel to his smash hit album “The 20/20…

Justin Timberlake Announces ‘The 20/20 Experience’ Tour Dates!

Thor Battles Darkness Old And New In ‘Dark World’ Trailer

Sequel’s first teaser is packed with moments worthy of following up last year’s blockbuster of blockbusters, ‘Marvel’s the Avengers.’ By Brett White

See more here:
Thor Battles Darkness Old And New In ‘Dark World’ Trailer

The Croods Sequel: It Will Happen

The Croods has done very well in its opening weeks in theaters. So well, in fact, that a sequel has just been greenlit. DreamWorks Animation has announced that it will move forward with  The Croods 2 , with original writer/director duo Kirk De Micco and Chris Sanders signed on to work on it. The Croods stars Emma Stone, Nicholas Cage, Ryan Reynolds, Catherine Keener, Clark Duke, and Cloris Leachman. It follows a family of Cavemen who venture out into the world after an earthquake destroys their cave. The studio is currently in negotiations to bring back the voice cast for the sequel. No production or release schedule has been released. Read this  The Croods review for more information about the film, in theaters now.

Originally posted here:
The Croods Sequel: It Will Happen

Will Someone Die In “The Best Man” Sequel? [EXCLUSIVE]

More:

One thing you can say about Terrence Howard, he never gives a boring interview.  The Oscar nominated actor sat down with writer JasFly for a…

Will Someone Die In “The Best Man” Sequel? [EXCLUSIVE]

REVIEW: Psycho Killer, WTF? You Better Run, Run Away From ‘The Collection’

Strictly for auds who enjoy the grisly Grand Guignol spectacle of the Saw franchise but could do without the moral lectures and melodramatic mythology, The Collection is an energetic but utterly weightless exercise in slice-and-dice cinema. This sequel to 2009 chiller The Collector is in many ways bigger (more characters, more locations, more carnage), but in no way better than its predecessor. Theatrical is merely a pit-stop on the road to home viewing for a product with niche appeal even among horror buffs. Picking up where The Collector left off, The Collection establishes an anonymous urban locale terrorized by a psycho killer with no method to his madness. Without the luxury of the first film’s slow-burn opening act, the sequel leans on pre-existing iconography to build tension: the Collector’s black mask obscuring everything but his beady eyes and predatory mouth; the red trunk he uses to “collect” a lone survivor of each massacre; an ominous tripwire connected to something sharp and lethal. Once filmmakers (and Saw sequel alums) Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton hurriedly introduce new protagonist Elena (Emma Fitzpatrick), it’s off to the races for nonstop, nonsensical brutality. Elena and pals head to a secret underground club (the password is “nevermore,” natch) where the Collector waits in the shadows with a plan to orchestrate mass murder. In what should be one of the film’s standout setpieces, dozens of clubgoers are simultaneously slaughtered by a massive combine-harvester blade rigged to descend from the ceiling. But the sequence is little more than a jumble of frenetically cut-together closeups, and the first of many examples of the film’s “more is more” philosophy coming into conflict with the constraints of a low budget. While Elena is dragged off to the villain’s secret lair, the pic reintroduces the first film’s scrappy survivor, Arkin (Josh Stewart), who manages to break free only to be recruited by Elena’s mysterious protector, Lucello (Lee Tergesen). Lucello has assembled a team to hunt down the Collector and rescue Elena, and they need Arkin’s help. But this time he’s on the Collector’s home turf: The rundown Hotel Argento (wink, wink), a more elaborate version of the booby-trapped mansion from part one. If The Collector was inspired by the suspenseful setup of Wait Until Dark , Dunstan and Melton take their cues this time from one of the great genre sequels: James Cameron’s Aliens , with its team of tough-talking grunts navigating perilous terrain as they battle an unstoppable foe. Still, the raison d’etre remains gore, gore and more gore. There’s no attempt to explain how the Collector sets up his elaborate traps, and only the vaguest speculation as to what motivates his insatiable bloodlust, which could be frightening if his actions weren’t so preposterous. Performance and tech credits are adequate by genre standards, though the only imaginative contribution comes in the design of the Collector’s depraved displays of disemboweled victims and stitched-together body parts. He’s quite the interior decorator. Pic manages to end on a satisfying note that may or may not lead to a third installment. Perhaps the limited amount of title variations — The Collected “? The Collectors ? — will spare everyone the unnecessary trouble. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

Read the original here:
REVIEW: Psycho Killer, WTF? You Better Run, Run Away From ‘The Collection’

‘Empire Strikes Back,’ ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith’ Scribes Reportedly Set For New ‘Star Wars’ Sequels

Although Disney and LucasFilm remain officially mum, The Hollywood Reporter says Empire Strikes Back / Return of the Jedi screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan and X-Men: The Last Stand / Sherlock Holmes scribe Simon Kinsberg have signed on to write Star Wars sequels following Michael Arndt ‘s Star Wars Episode VII . Deadline first posted the rumor of Kasdan and Kinsberg’s involvement, but THR confirms with more from unnamed “sources.” Per THR , “the pair will write either Episode VIII or Episode IX — their exact division of responsibilities is yet to be determined — and they will also come aboard to produce the films.” One of these two hires gives me great confidence in the future of the Star Wars franchise; the other one is more of a question mark. (Guess which is which?) Not only did Kasdan co-write Episodes V and VI , he also nabbed sole screenwriting credit on Raiders of the Lost Ark , went on to write and direct Body Heat , The Big Chill , and Wyatt Earp , and gave us the gift that was The Bodyguard script, for which we should all be forever grateful. Kinsberg, in a ten-year career so far, has earned sole screenwriting credits for Mr. and Mrs. Smith and xXx: State of the Union , and his most recently produced project was Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter — a decent-enough resume by Hollywood standards, but we’re talking Star Wars here. There’s a legacy at stake. That said, if Kinsberg can get Tom Hardy, Chris Pine, Brad Pitt, and Angelina Jolie to don Jedi robes, I’ll consider the slate wiped clean for This Means War . [via THR ]

Here is the original post:
‘Empire Strikes Back,’ ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith’ Scribes Reportedly Set For New ‘Star Wars’ Sequels

Friend Or Foe: Evelyn Lozada Posts Throwback Pics Of Her And Jen Before The Bottle Busting And Slap Sessions

Evelyn Lozada Reminisces About Her Friendship With Jennifer Williams BBW castmates and former BFFs Evelyn Lozada and Jennifer Williams just might be ready to kiss and make up for good. In addition to Jen reaching out to Ev during her domestic drama with ex-hubby Chad Ochostinko and their memorable embrace on the BBW reunion show earlier this year, Ev has seems to be jogging back on memories of the good old days when she wasn’t trying to bust Jen in the head with a bottle. She shared the picture above yesterday with the caption: Aww how sweet. Evelyn went from calling Jen a “bum beyotch” back to an almost-bestie all in a year’s time. Do you think Ev and Jen can still be friends after everything that’s happened? Check out more pics from Evelyn’s stroll down memory lane below Twitter

Read the original post:
Friend Or Foe: Evelyn Lozada Posts Throwback Pics Of Her And Jen Before The Bottle Busting And Slap Sessions

In White Folks News: Joaquin Phoenix Talks Racism Against Blacks In Hollyweird With Interview Magazine

Preach white man, preach… Joaquin Phoenix Talks Racism In Hollywood With Interview Magazines Via Interview Magazine Joaquin Phoenix has been known to be a bit of a fawking weirdo, but in his latest chat with Interview Magazine he takes on an issue that he feels strongly about, racism against African-Americans in Hollyweird. After briefly describing his childhood troubles, Joaquin asks the writer about his concern over racism in the film industry. PHOENIX: Yeah. So I don’t experience any of that. I mean, dude, how can you work in film and still see the overt racism that exists in film and not just be furious all the time? MITCHELL: You know what? As a black person, you see so much racism. Films are no different than the government, politics—it’s everywhere. It’s not exclusively film. It’s infuriating to see it in film. But my being in film changes things. PHOENIX: Yeah, but there’s all of this horrible racism that white people don’t even recognize. Did you see Jumping the Broom? MITCHELL: I’m a black person. Of course I saw it. PHOENIX: I feel like all white people have to see the film just because I’ve never seen a movie in which most of the white characters in the movie were just working. It was fucking great. It was almost comical. There was a scene during the wedding reception, and there are, like, eight white people just carrying stuff. The main white character with some dialogue was the ditzy, stupid assistant. I enjoyed it so much because you never see that. But that’s something that I think white people don’t notice. They don’t notice that the fourth character is black and that’s what it always is. It’s always happening. It’s just the assumption that, “Well, that’s just a representation of life.” Joaquin also talks about a run-in he had with some movie producers who were totally oblivious to the racist undertones of their films. PHOENIX: You know, I got this script a while ago for this thing. It was kind of like an action movie, and it definitely dealt with race in a big way. But then it didn’t. Without getting into specifics . . . MITCHELL: Did the film get made? PHOENIX: Oh, it got made. But you could not believe that this thing actually got made, because it seemed like it was from the 1940s or something. It’s got this black character in it who was literally always being saved by the white dude because he was, like, cowering in the corner. So I went in and met the director and producer and I said, “You guys realize that your only black character is this guy, and it’s like the most clichéd thing we’ve seen in movies forever.” And they were like, “What do you mean?” And I was like, “You mean you’re not even aware of it?” They didn’t even realize what they were doing. So I said, “Look, I’ll give them a read if the black character doesn’t get killed and is going to make it into the sequel. They have to put him in their sequel, the black character.” So I spoke to the writer and was like, “Dude, be a hero. When this movie comes out in the summertime, give black kids a character they can see themselves in.” But it just didn’t occur to them, and I realized what a battle it is when people aren’t even aware of what they’re doing. I know what that battle is. I’ve done battles like that before, and you lose. So I didn’t do the movie . . . They did keep the black character alive, though. He’s in the sequel-at least, that’s what I’ve heard. MITCHELL: Was it a successful movie? PHOENIX: I don’t think it’s come out yet. It’s one of those big action movies. Interesting, you don’t often hear white actors/actresses stand up and speak out against the foul industry practices that they KNOW are going on. This interview doesn’t make Joaquin Malcolm or Martin, but it is kind of refreshing to hear. How do you feel about Mr. Phoenix’s comments? Image via

See the original post here:
In White Folks News: Joaquin Phoenix Talks Racism Against Blacks In Hollyweird With Interview Magazine