Tag Archives: Actors

RoboCop Remake Gets Fan Service Out of the Way Early in Viral Video

Paul Verhoeven and Ed Neumeier’s dystopian action-adventure flick RoboCop (which I was too young to realize was a satire upon release) rolled off the assembly line before viral videos had been invented. Just imagine if these. . .marginally clever distractions had existed back in 1987. Heck, I’m sure we’d all be offering bids on lots in Delta City “for a dollar!” The forthcoming remake of RoboCop (here you can take a pause to sigh, wonder why you are surprised that there’s a RoboCop remake coming, then continue on) launched its fake corporate site recently, hawking the wares from Omni Corp. Omni Corp – called Omni Consumer Products in the original – is the privatized company contracted with cleaning up the streets of Detroit using whatever bloody, brutal means necessary. RoboCop’s most famous scene is the presentation of the robot ED-209 in the OCP board room, wherein a computer glitch makes swiss cheese out of a poor schnook named Mr. Kinney. The producers of the new RoboCop , who’d’ve had nerds with pitchforks at the studio gate if ED-209 wasn’t in the pic, have included a version in the new continuity and are wisely revealing him now so we won’t have to sit and wonder when it will happen during the film. (Oh, if only Rise of the Planet of the Apes had thought of this before Draco Malfoy nearly gaffed-up the film with is “madhouse” and “damned dirty” line readings.) The design of the new ED-209 looks like a sleeker, pointier version of the original – like ED Senior mated with a Lamborghini. The video itself is on par with what we have come to expect from fanboy movies’ viral vids, but only teases what RoboCop himself will look like. All said, whoever came up with the line “we’ve got the future under control” definitely earned their pay that day. Previously: New RoboCop Joel Kinnaman discussed the “gritty” reboot with Movieline . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Here is the original post:
RoboCop Remake Gets Fan Service Out of the Way Early in Viral Video

The Amazing Spider-Man Rules the Box Office, Spinning Impressive Numbers; Ted Holds Firm: Weekend Receipts

As expected, The Amazing Spider-Man spun up impressive numbers over the Friday – Saturday weekend, adding to its totals since rolling out in the U.S. on Tuesday ahead of the Fourth of July holiday. The film topped the overall box office and had one of the largest per screen averages in release, though the top PSA went to specialty release Beasts of the Southern Wild in its second weekend, though its screen count is still very limited. Last weekend’s number one Ted held steady in second place on the b.o. rankings, while Brave and Savages came in third and fourth respectively. 1. The Amazing Spider-Man (3-D) Gross: $65 million (Cume: $140 million) Screens: 4,318 (PSA: $15,053) Week: 1 Worldwide, the latest Spidey pic has grossed $341.2 million. It has picked up $14.3 million from 307 IMAX theaters, about 10% of its North American box office. Spider-Man had the biggest Tuesday launch ever, taking in $35 million its first day. 2. Ted Gross: $32,592,560 (Cume: $120,239,905) Screens: 3,256 (PSA: $10,010) Week: 2 (Change: -40%) Strong word-of-mouth maintained momentum into the film’s second weekend. 3. Brave (3-D animation) Gross: $20,162,000 (Cume: $174,519,000) Screens: 3,891 (PSA: $5,182) Week: 3 (Change: – 41%) Brave ‘s global cume is now at $211.1 million. 4. Savages Gross: $16,162,200 (NEW) Screens: 2,628 (PSA: $6,150) Week 1 The opening is solid considering it’s an adult crime drama with an R-rating. 5. Magic Mike Gross: $15,610,000 (Cume: $72,797,000) Screens: 3,120 (PSA: $5,003) Week: 2 (Change: – 60%) 6. Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Witness Protection Gross: $10,200,000 (Cume: $45,845,955 Screens: 2,161 (PSA: $4,720) Week: 2 (Change: -60%) 7. Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted (3-D animation) Gross: $7.7 million (Cume: $196.02 million) Screens: 2,861 (PSA: $2,691) Week: 5 (Change: – 35%) 8. Katy Perry: Part of Me (Documentary/3-D) Gross: $7,150,000 (Cume: $10,250,000) Screens: 2,730 (PSA: $2,619) Week: 1 (The film opened Thursday) 9. Moonrise Kingdom Gross: $4,641,580 (Cume: $26,892,860) Screens: 884 (PSA: $5,251) Week: 7 (Change: – 6%) 10. To Rome with Love Gross: $3,502,143 (Cume: $5,261,353) Screens: 806 (PSA: $4,345) Week: 2 (Change: + 367%) 777 theaters were added in the second weekend of Woody Allen’s latest film after opening in only 29 locations last weekend.

More here:
The Amazing Spider-Man Rules the Box Office, Spinning Impressive Numbers; Ted Holds Firm: Weekend Receipts

The Amazing Spider-Man Rules the Box Office, Spinning Impressive Numbers; Ted Holds Firm: Weekend Receipts

As expected, The Amazing Spider-Man spun up impressive numbers over the Friday – Saturday weekend, adding to its totals since rolling out in the U.S. on Tuesday ahead of the Fourth of July holiday. The film topped the overall box office and had one of the largest per screen averages in release, though the top PSA went to specialty release Beasts of the Southern Wild in its second weekend, though its screen count is still very limited. Last weekend’s number one Ted held steady in second place on the b.o. rankings, while Brave and Savages came in third and fourth respectively. 1. The Amazing Spider-Man (3-D) Gross: $65 million (Cume: $140 million) Screens: 4,318 (PSA: $15,053) Week: 1 Worldwide, the latest Spidey pic has grossed $341.2 million. It has picked up $14.3 million from 307 IMAX theaters, about 10% of its North American box office. Spider-Man had the biggest Tuesday launch ever, taking in $35 million its first day. 2. Ted Gross: $32,592,560 (Cume: $120,239,905) Screens: 3,256 (PSA: $10,010) Week: 2 (Change: -40%) Strong word-of-mouth maintained momentum into the film’s second weekend. 3. Brave (3-D animation) Gross: $20,162,000 (Cume: $174,519,000) Screens: 3,891 (PSA: $5,182) Week: 3 (Change: – 41%) Brave ‘s global cume is now at $211.1 million. 4. Savages Gross: $16,162,200 (NEW) Screens: 2,628 (PSA: $6,150) Week 1 The opening is solid considering it’s an adult crime drama with an R-rating. 5. Magic Mike Gross: $15,610,000 (Cume: $72,797,000) Screens: 3,120 (PSA: $5,003) Week: 2 (Change: – 60%) 6. Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Witness Protection Gross: $10,200,000 (Cume: $45,845,955 Screens: 2,161 (PSA: $4,720) Week: 2 (Change: -60%) 7. Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted (3-D animation) Gross: $7.7 million (Cume: $196.02 million) Screens: 2,861 (PSA: $2,691) Week: 5 (Change: – 35%) 8. Katy Perry: Part of Me (Documentary/3-D) Gross: $7,150,000 (Cume: $10,250,000) Screens: 2,730 (PSA: $2,619) Week: 1 (The film opened Thursday) 9. Moonrise Kingdom Gross: $4,641,580 (Cume: $26,892,860) Screens: 884 (PSA: $5,251) Week: 7 (Change: – 6%) 10. To Rome with Love Gross: $3,502,143 (Cume: $5,261,353) Screens: 806 (PSA: $4,345) Week: 2 (Change: + 367%) 777 theaters were added in the second weekend of Woody Allen’s latest film after opening in only 29 locations last weekend.

More here:
The Amazing Spider-Man Rules the Box Office, Spinning Impressive Numbers; Ted Holds Firm: Weekend Receipts

Hunger Games: Jena Malone Cast As Johanna Mason in Catching Fire

Jena Malone, seen kicking all sorts of ass last year in Sucker Punch , has nabbed the role of Johanna Mason in the Hunger Games sequel Catching Fire , THR reports. Malone is in negotiations to play the crafty and ruthless past Games winner from District 7, who forms an uneasy friendship with Katniss Everdeen as they, along with Peeta and fellow previous victors, are forced back into the arena to fight to the death. Approve, Mockingjays? Sound off below. [ THR ]

Visit link:
Hunger Games: Jena Malone Cast As Johanna Mason in Catching Fire

Sharon Stone Joins Mothers Cast and the Comic-Con Party/Events Grid: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday afternoon’s round up of news briefs, Susan Sarandon will lend her voice to an R-rated stop-motion comedy; Marvel moves the dates of its untitled 2014 super-hero juggernaut and Hollywood production stays flat. Sharon Stone Joins Mother’s Day She joins Andie MacDowell and her real-life daughter who joined recently . Fittingly, the film is about the relationship between 12 mothers and their daughters, Deadline reports . Susan Sarandon Joins Hell & Back Sarandon will voice the role of Barb the Angel in the R-rated stop-motion comedy. The pic stars Nick Swardson and TJ Miller as friends who go down to rescue their pal who was accidentally dragged to hell, Deadline reports . The Complete Comic-Con Party Grid Parties, exhibitions, band performances, major geek-out sessions. They’re allegedly all here with times and locations nicely organized into a grid. Go get ’em. The Tracking Board has the info . Marvel Moves Untitled 2014 Superhero Pic from May to August Details about the project will be unveiled at the upcoming Comic-Con in San Diego. It is believed to The Guardians of the Galaxy , THR reports . Hollywood Production Flat with TV Decline A 9.1% increase in features and a 28% gain in commercial activity augmented a 15.4% drop in TV production in Los Angeles in the second quarter. Advocacy group FilmL.A. blamed state government for the decline in TV production, Variety reports .

Read the rest here:
Sharon Stone Joins Mothers Cast and the Comic-Con Party/Events Grid: Biz Break

Andre 3000’s Jimi Hendrix Biopic Can’t Use Any Jimi Hendrix Songs

Oops! Might have been a good idea to settle the legality of using Jimi Hendrix songs before launching into production on a Hendrix biopic , but anyway: The filmmakers behind the Andre Benjamin-starring ’60s-set pic announce that the rapper-actor will instead cover a greatest hits of period rock, including ditties by the Beatles, for the flick. “The film – set in London in 1966 and 1967 – will include Benjamin’s new versions of covers that Hendrix performed during those years, shortly before the release of his landmark debut, Are You Experienced ,” reports Rolling Stone. “Audiences will see Benjamin singing ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ (which Hendrix famously performed in a London club with members of the Beatles in the audience), ‘Wild Thing,’ ‘Hound Dog,’ Muddy Waters’ ‘Mannish Boy’ and Elmore James’ ‘Bleeding Heart,’ plus two songs, ‘Future Trip’ and ‘Driving South,’ that Hendrix played as a backup musician for Curtis Knight and the Squires.” [ Rolling Stone ]

Here is the original post:
Andre 3000’s Jimi Hendrix Biopic Can’t Use Any Jimi Hendrix Songs

REVIEW: Madea’s Witness Protection Proves It’s Time for Tyler Perry to Hang Up the Dress

With Tyler Perry gradually segueing toward non-drag leading man status with Good Deeds and the upcoming James Patterson thriller  Alex Cross , his latest appearance as the sassy, wisdom-dispensing matriarch of the title in Madea’s Witness Protection has an aura of fatigued reluctance to it, as does the film itself. Perry mentioned to  Movieline that while he planned to keep with the character as long as there was demand from audiences, he “would be pretty good with passing it on,” and certainly in her franchise’s seventh installment Mabel Simmons, better known as Madea, seems ready to do the same, unable to summon the usual levels of outrageousness as she once again plays magical mender of other people’s problems. In this case, those people are the Needleman family, who are forced to leave New York after George Needleman (Eugene Levy) gets set up as the fall guy after discovering his company has been operating on a Bernie Madoff-style Ponzi scheme that’s resulted in the ripping off of multiple charities. The mafia is also somehow involved, and the case for whatever reason has to be tried in Atlanta — all contortions needed to land five wealthy white people in the house Madea shares with her brother Joe (Perry) after her nephew Brian (also Perry), who’s prosecuting the case, offers her $4,000 a month to keep them as part of a temporary witness protection arrangement. By the time the film arrives at this setup — which it does laboriously, forcing Levy to struggle to carry the action for a good while by sputtering and acting flustered — you know exactly the type of humor that’s in store. The film dutifully works the cultural/class differences between the Simmonses and the Needlemans, with Madea referring to the morning routine of wife Kate (Denise Richards) as “yoda” instead of yoga and Kate bemusedly looking over the butter-heavy Southern breakfast Madea prepares and observing, “It’s a lot of carbs.” George’s senile mother Barbara (Doris Roberts) turns out to have had a past with Joe, a storyline that largely exists to allow Joe to explore the oblivious George’s possible biracial heritage by asking him if he can swim, if he likes soul music and whether he prefers a “butt” or a “booty.” But most of the scenarios  Madea’s Witness Protection  sets up don’t actually come to much of a punchline. Brian talks about how Madea’s “packing,” which makes her a good choice to protect the Needlemans, but there’s no armed stand-off between her and mafia goons or anyone else. Madea rips into Brian for how impossible it’ll be for her to hide white people in her all-black neighborhood, but we hardly see them step outside, much less struggle to fit in. And after setting up teenage daughter Cindy (Danielle Campbell) as a massively sulky, entitled brat, the film preps us for a rewarding Madea smackdown that, when it comes, is practically mild. I, frankly, was hoping for at least some hair-pulling. Scenes run loose and long in the film, up to and including the should-be climax in which Madea gets on a plane for the first time and travels to New York with George and neighborhood boy Jake (Romeo Miller), who invested his father’s church’s mortgage money with George’s company. The trip turns out to have only been included to allow us to see Madea navigate airport security and nervously order a lot of drinks on the flight — neither of which is a memorable spectacle — allowing the film to end on such an anticlimactic note the cast comes across as in a hurry to move on to future gigs. As is, apparently, Perry, whose entertainment empire continues to impress in its scale, but who also seems ready to hang up the giant dress and grey wig and move on to something — anything — new. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

See the article here:
REVIEW: Madea’s Witness Protection Proves It’s Time for Tyler Perry to Hang Up the Dress

REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

Take This Waltz is an unusually kind film about infidelity — not because it sidesteps or shortchanges heartbreak, but because it doesn’t let any one of its characters bear the full burden of blame. That such a thing needs to or should even be assigned in this scenario is beside the point, as the film defers to the vagueries of the human heart and the way we can, despite our better judgment, form a connection with someone that can’t easily be set aside. It’s tempting to glibly connect this clear-eyed empathy with the fact that  Take This Waltz is Canadian and somehow inherently prone to niceness — it’s set in a rosy version of Toronto in which the characters all live in charmingly shabby chic houses and sporadically work in quirky jobs. But what it actually comes from, I think, is that the film is the sophomore feature of actress-turned-director Sarah Polley, who constructs her central love triangle with a determinedly feminine perspective and places all of the choice on her female protagonist Margot, played with typical grace by Michelle Williams. Margot wants anything but to have to make a difficult call, especially one that will result in someone getting hurt. One of the film’s first scenes finds her visiting the living history museum of the Fortress of Louisbourg for work and getting pulled in front of a crowd by costumed, in-character staffers to help with a flogging. “Put your back into it!” yells a man from the crowd when she ineffectually flails at the prisoner, clearly mortified. Later, she ends up sitting next to the heckler on the plane. His name is Daniel (Luke Kirby), and he’s just watched her board in a wheelchair despite not having needed one before, leading her to confess that she pretends at airports because of her terror of missed connections, something born not out of a need not to miss a flight but because, as she puts it, “I’m afraid of wondering if I’ll miss it. I don’t like being in between things.” Margot will, however, spend the movie in between things — between Daniel, who turns out to live across the street (“Shit!” she mutters when she finds out), and Lou (Seth Rogen), the husband of five years with whom she shares a loving if childlike and seemingly no longer passionate relationship. Margot loves Lou — the two tussle like kids and talk adoring about the terrible violence they’re going to do one another (“I’m going to put your spleen through a meat grinder,” Lou sighs) — but she may not be in love with him any longer, and she has an undeniable heated spark with Daniel, an artist who pulls a rickshaw and who watches her with guarded longing. Take This Waltz , which was also written by Polley,   has moments of overdetermined dialogue — the line about airport connections is one, and another finds Margot describing Lou, who’s a cookbook writer, as “a really good cook, if you like chicken.” It’s stronger in its moments of wordless sensuality, from its opening scene in which Margot makes muffins, the camera drifting to her bare feet and then her face as she leans it against the over glass. Daniel offers to take Margot and Lou downtown in his rickshaw when they’re headed out to celebrate their anniversary, and we track her gaze across the muscles of his arms and back, catching his eye in the side-view mirror. The draw of the flesh is not inconsiderable, and  Take This Waltz doesn’t make it so easy as being a kind of passing temptation, an indulgence to be resisted. Margot and Lou have a stable and relatively happy life together — we see them at home and in the company of their friends and family, including Lou’s sister Geraldine (a memorable Sarah Silverman), a recovering alcoholic. It’s a lot to trade for attraction, no matter how significant, but the film feasibly puts the two on a level, leaving Margot to navigate the decision with growing distress as she tries to avoid Daniel, only to go out of her way to run into him, and then flees back to Lou professing her love and fear. Kirby makes his improbable swain just dangerous enough, the embodiment of the promise of the new, while Rogen shows off his dramatic chops as a man who’s obviously never given thought during his time with Margot of what things would be like without her. But the weight of the film rests on Williams, and she finds a poignant and quiet agony in her character as she realizes she’s the only one who can make this decision and must deal with the consequences either way, after time and again trying to push it off or onto other people. It’s a world of bittersweet sophistication from Polley, and one that accepts that, as a stranger reminds Margot at a swim class, “new things get old,” but that doesn’t make them any less appealing.

Read more from the original source:
REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

Take This Waltz is an unusually kind film about infidelity — not because it sidesteps or shortchanges heartbreak, but because it doesn’t let any one of its characters bear the full burden of blame. That such a thing needs to or should even be assigned in this scenario is beside the point, as the film defers to the vagueries of the human heart and the way we can, despite our better judgment, form a connection with someone that can’t easily be set aside. It’s tempting to glibly connect this clear-eyed empathy with the fact that  Take This Waltz is Canadian and somehow inherently prone to niceness — it’s set in a rosy version of Toronto in which the characters all live in charmingly shabby chic houses and sporadically work in quirky jobs. But what it actually comes from, I think, is that the film is the sophomore feature of actress-turned-director Sarah Polley, who constructs her central love triangle with a determinedly feminine perspective and places all of the choice on her female protagonist Margot, played with typical grace by Michelle Williams. Margot wants anything but to have to make a difficult call, especially one that will result in someone getting hurt. One of the film’s first scenes finds her visiting the living history museum of the Fortress of Louisbourg for work and getting pulled in front of a crowd by costumed, in-character staffers to help with a flogging. “Put your back into it!” yells a man from the crowd when she ineffectually flails at the prisoner, clearly mortified. Later, she ends up sitting next to the heckler on the plane. His name is Daniel (Luke Kirby), and he’s just watched her board in a wheelchair despite not having needed one before, leading her to confess that she pretends at airports because of her terror of missed connections, something born not out of a need not to miss a flight but because, as she puts it, “I’m afraid of wondering if I’ll miss it. I don’t like being in between things.” Margot will, however, spend the movie in between things — between Daniel, who turns out to live across the street (“Shit!” she mutters when she finds out), and Lou (Seth Rogen), the husband of five years with whom she shares a loving if childlike and seemingly no longer passionate relationship. Margot loves Lou — the two tussle like kids and talk adoring about the terrible violence they’re going to do one another (“I’m going to put your spleen through a meat grinder,” Lou sighs) — but she may not be in love with him any longer, and she has an undeniable heated spark with Daniel, an artist who pulls a rickshaw and who watches her with guarded longing. Take This Waltz , which was also written by Polley,   has moments of overdetermined dialogue — the line about airport connections is one, and another finds Margot describing Lou, who’s a cookbook writer, as “a really good cook, if you like chicken.” It’s stronger in its moments of wordless sensuality, from its opening scene in which Margot makes muffins, the camera drifting to her bare feet and then her face as she leans it against the over glass. Daniel offers to take Margot and Lou downtown in his rickshaw when they’re headed out to celebrate their anniversary, and we track her gaze across the muscles of his arms and back, catching his eye in the side-view mirror. The draw of the flesh is not inconsiderable, and  Take This Waltz doesn’t make it so easy as being a kind of passing temptation, an indulgence to be resisted. Margot and Lou have a stable and relatively happy life together — we see them at home and in the company of their friends and family, including Lou’s sister Geraldine (a memorable Sarah Silverman), a recovering alcoholic. It’s a lot to trade for attraction, no matter how significant, but the film feasibly puts the two on a level, leaving Margot to navigate the decision with growing distress as she tries to avoid Daniel, only to go out of her way to run into him, and then flees back to Lou professing her love and fear. Kirby makes his improbable swain just dangerous enough, the embodiment of the promise of the new, while Rogen shows off his dramatic chops as a man who’s obviously never given thought during his time with Margot of what things would be like without her. But the weight of the film rests on Williams, and she finds a poignant and quiet agony in her character as she realizes she’s the only one who can make this decision and must deal with the consequences either way, after time and again trying to push it off or onto other people. It’s a world of bittersweet sophistication from Polley, and one that accepts that, as a stranger reminds Margot at a swim class, “new things get old,” but that doesn’t make them any less appealing.

Read more from the original source:
REVIEW: Take This Waltz Hums to the Conflicts of the Heart

Going Digital, Does Martin Scorsese Have it Right?

Healthcare is grabbing the headlines and the Chattersphere today, but one thing appears to be certain: It’s curtains for film. OK, maybe a stretch of a segue, but here’s the thing. Sure, there are some high profile holdouts and even digital-converts will attest to the quality and feel of film. But when Martin Scorsese is ready to make the perma-switch, then the slow inevitable demise may have just been given an extra boost. Scorsese will go digital for his next film and appears resigned to the format going forward. Speaking with Empire at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, the director’s longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker said, “It would appear that we’ve lost the battle,” confirming his next film, The Wolf of Wall Street would be shot digitally. “I think Marty just feels it’s unfortunately over, and there’s been no bigger champion of film than him.” Of course Scorsese’s last film Hugo won an Oscar for Best Cinematography. It is also a de facto call for film preservation, something near and dear to the filmmaker’s heart. “It’s a very bittersweet thing to be watching films with him now that are on film,” said Schoonmaker. “We’re cherishing every moment of it. The number of prints that are now being made for release has just gone down, and it would appear that the theaters have converted so quickly to digital.” Scorsese and Schoonmaker get to work on The Wolf of Wall Street starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill and Jean Dujardin the second week of August. And what do you think about the switch to digital? [Source: Empire ]

See the original post here:
Going Digital, Does Martin Scorsese Have it Right?