Tag Archives: nicolas-cage

REVIEW: Drive Angry 3-D Is Disreputable Fun, Until 3-D Fatigue Sets In

Patrick Lussier and Todd Farmer’s exploitation extravaganza Drive Angry 3-D is not recommended for the squeamish, the highly suggestible, or children under 40. It should be OK for everyone else, though, particularly those with a high threshold for disreputability and a fondness for ’70s-era drive-in caliber action junk. Its hero, played by Nicolas Cage, is a vigilante from hell; his mission, or at least one of them, is to tell the world to eat his dust.

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REVIEW: Drive Angry 3-D Is Disreputable Fun, Until 3-D Fatigue Sets In

Friday Box Office: Hall Pass Wins A Tepid #1; Drive Angry Goes Off The Cliff

While everyone gets ready for a dose of Hollywood glamor at the Oscars this weekend, old-fashioned gross-out kings Peter & Bobby Farrelly ruled the box office as their horny man-child comedy Hall Pass weakly won Friday night. Ass-kicking Liam Neeson dropped down to number two, and speaking of number two, Nicolas Cage’s Drive Angry opened in ninth place. Your Friday box office is here.

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Friday Box Office: Hall Pass Wins A Tepid #1; Drive Angry Goes Off The Cliff

‘Hall Pass’ Leads Friday Box Office

Comedy bags $4.6 million; Nic Cage’s ‘Drive Angry’ flops in ninth place. By Shawn Adler Jason Sudeikis and Owen Wilson in “Hall Pass” Photo: Warner Bros. Oscar weekend is typically a time for movie insiders to recognize high-brow, dramatic fare. But no matter who takes home the statues Sunday night, it’s the raunchy, hilarious team behind flicks like “There’s Something About Mary” and “Kingpin” who are taking home the gold. “Hall Pass,” starring Owen Wilson and Jason Sudeikis, topped all comers at the Friday-night box office with an estimated $4.6 million from 2,950 screens. If form holds, it will be the first # 1 opening for writing/directing duo Peter and Bobby Farrelly since 2000’s “Me, Myself and Irene.” Not far behind in second place, Liam Neeson’s “Unknown” managed to punch up nearly $3.9 million from 3,043 screens in its second week of release. Two years after dominating the February box office with “Taken,” the secretly badass star should push “Unknown” past $40 million total by the end of the weekend. While America’s love affair with Neeson waxes, however, its relationship with Nicolas Cage may have waned irrevocably. New release “Drive Angry,” featuring the Oscar winner turned action star’s latest wackadoo performance , was good enough for only $1.6 million and ninth place. The weak opening is the latest in a string of recent flops for Cage, including “Season of the Witch” and “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” In third place, “Just Go With It” starring Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston pulled in $3.3 million. Rounding out the top five, “Gnomeo and Juliet” and “I Am Number Four” earned $3.16 million and $3.14 million, respectively. With a new “Director’s Fan Cut” , out this weekend only, Justin Bieber managed to hold strong at sixth place, as his 3-D concert flick “Never Say Never” scored $2.7 million. The flick’s cumulative gross should breeze past $60 million this weekend. Among Oscar hopefuls, “The King’s Speech” (eighth place) continued its impressive run. The presumptive favorite at the Academy Awards brought its total to $108 million with a $1.9 million Friday haul.

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‘Hall Pass’ Leads Friday Box Office

Billy Burke on His ‘Tasty’ Turn in Drive Angry 3D and the Red Riding Hood/Twilight Connection

Twilight fans who flock to see Drive Angry 3D this weekend in support of Billy Burke are in for a bit of a surprise, as the actor — who plays the calm, mustachioed father to Kristen Stewart’s Bella in Summit’s Twilight Saga films — swaggers his way through the South as a sexually-charged Satanic cult leader. To put it plainly, Burke’s Jim Jones-meets-Jim Morrison villain gives co-star Nicolas Cage a run for his money in the anti-subtlety department, and Burke clearly relished every second of the departure from Charlie Swan.

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Billy Burke on His ‘Tasty’ Turn in Drive Angry 3D and the Red Riding Hood/Twilight Connection

‘Drive Angry’: The Reviews Are In!

Should you hit the road with Nicolas Cage? See what the critics have to say. By Eric Ditzian David Morse and Nicolas Cage in “Drive Angry” Photo: Summit Publicity “Drive Angry” marks three-straight supernatural films for Nicolas Cage, though each could not be more different. “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” was a Disney-driven tale of magical realism. “Season of the Witch” dove into the intersection of medieval black magic and campy B-movie wackiness. And “Drive Angry” literally begins with Cage driving a muscle car straight outta hell with the devil’s henchman fast on his heels and doesn’t slow down as it splashes blood and fire across the screen. All three flicks share something else in common: below-average reviews. “Sorcerer’s” and “Season” each went on to conjure up lukewarm box-office receipts. Can “Drive Angry” break the spell? Check out what the critics are saying and decide if the new 3-D film is the right choice for you this weekend. The Story “[It] may be a bit too slickly self-aware for its own good, but it’s also rivetingly paced, outrageously funny and makes retina-scorching use of the new 3D technology. Nicolas Cage is on teeth-baring, eye-rolling form as John Milton (nice), the deceased felon who busts out of hell to track down the Southern death cult who kidnapped his baby granddaughter. Hooking up with mouthy muscle-car-driving white-trash waitress Piper (Amber Heard), Milton sets off in pursuit, all the while attempting to avoid the attentions of Satan’s right-hand man, The Accountant (a majestically arch William Fichtner).” — Tom Huddleston, Time Out Crazy Nic Cage “A little respect, if you please, for His Satanic Majesty Nicolas Cage. Nobody goes off the deep end like Nic. Nobody gives better value in bad movies than the sleepy-eyed Oscar winner with a gift for picking bad movies. ‘Drive Angry’ is a very entertaining B, C or D-movie, an over-the-top and in-your-face grindhouse gore, guns and ‘Gun it’ picture that’s about epic shootouts, bone-snapping brawls, bare breasts and muscle cars. The gunplay is funny and the sex hilarious in this ‘Ghost Rider is Gone in 60 Seconds’ mashup.” — Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel The 3-D ” ‘Drive Angry’ is intensely bloody, violent and carries quite a few payoffs that are well delivered. It’s also a movie you’d actually want to see in 3-D, unlike so many frauds in the marketplace these days. In fact, Lussier, who directed ‘My Bloody Valentine 3D,’ shows his growth as a 3-dimensional director by taking ‘Drive Angry’ to new heights. Seeing it in Real D, the depth was astounding, and Lussier throws a few CGI tricks right in the viewer’s face. Even more impressive was his flashback sequence that could easily become one of the most influential in the 3-D age (the way he layers three ‘thoughts’ at once is mind-blowing visually). In short, it’s worth the extra few bucks.” — Brad Miska, Bloody Disgusting Going Grindhouse ” ‘Drive Angry’ is loud and busy, and it’s rarely boring. But it’s also never really good. ‘Drive Angry’ comes at the tail end of the grindhouse revival trend, and while it’s better made than films like ‘Machete’ or the scores of indie films that followed in Quentin Tarantino’s wake, it succumbs to the same problem so many of those movies do: it’s a movie about the things that the filmmakers think are cool, and that’s never cool. ‘Drive Angry’ isn’t about anything, it’s just a series of ideas that struck Lussier and Farmer as awesome, strung together at feature length. There’s a lot of balls in Drive Angry, and even some brains, but no heart.” — Devin Faraci, Badass Digest The Final Word ” ‘Drive Angry’ is, in the end, a genre romp. It’s not aiming any higher than that. But it is made with real skill and style, and there’s such knowledge of genre in the way they have built the script and both embraced and avoided certain conventions that it makes me feel like we’re just seeing Farmer and Lussier warm up. Hopefully they’ll keep working with collaborators as game as their partners in this particular crime, because ‘Drive Angry’ is a white-knuckle ride worth taking.” — Drew McWeeny, HitFix Check out everything we’ve got on “Drive Angry.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Drive Angry’: The Reviews Are In!

‘Drive Angry’: The Reviews Are In!

Should you hit the road with Nicolas Cage? See what the critics have to say. By Eric Ditzian David Morse and Nicolas Cage in “Drive Angry” Photo: Summit Publicity “Drive Angry” marks three-straight supernatural films for Nicolas Cage, though each could not be more different. “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” was a Disney-driven tale of magical realism. “Season of the Witch” dove into the intersection of medieval black magic and campy B-movie wackiness. And “Drive Angry” literally begins with Cage driving a muscle car straight outta hell with the devil’s henchman fast on his heels and doesn’t slow down as it splashes blood and fire across the screen. All three flicks share something else in common: below-average reviews. “Sorcerer’s” and “Season” each went on to conjure up lukewarm box-office receipts. Can “Drive Angry” break the spell? Check out what the critics are saying and decide if the new 3-D film is the right choice for you this weekend. The Story “[It] may be a bit too slickly self-aware for its own good, but it’s also rivetingly paced, outrageously funny and makes retina-scorching use of the new 3D technology. Nicolas Cage is on teeth-baring, eye-rolling form as John Milton (nice), the deceased felon who busts out of hell to track down the Southern death cult who kidnapped his baby granddaughter. Hooking up with mouthy muscle-car-driving white-trash waitress Piper (Amber Heard), Milton sets off in pursuit, all the while attempting to avoid the attentions of Satan’s right-hand man, The Accountant (a majestically arch William Fichtner).” — Tom Huddleston, Time Out Crazy Nic Cage “A little respect, if you please, for His Satanic Majesty Nicolas Cage. Nobody goes off the deep end like Nic. Nobody gives better value in bad movies than the sleepy-eyed Oscar winner with a gift for picking bad movies. ‘Drive Angry’ is a very entertaining B, C or D-movie, an over-the-top and in-your-face grindhouse gore, guns and ‘Gun it’ picture that’s about epic shootouts, bone-snapping brawls, bare breasts and muscle cars. The gunplay is funny and the sex hilarious in this ‘Ghost Rider is Gone in 60 Seconds’ mashup.” — Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel The 3-D ” ‘Drive Angry’ is intensely bloody, violent and carries quite a few payoffs that are well delivered. It’s also a movie you’d actually want to see in 3-D, unlike so many frauds in the marketplace these days. In fact, Lussier, who directed ‘My Bloody Valentine 3D,’ shows his growth as a 3-dimensional director by taking ‘Drive Angry’ to new heights. Seeing it in Real D, the depth was astounding, and Lussier throws a few CGI tricks right in the viewer’s face. Even more impressive was his flashback sequence that could easily become one of the most influential in the 3-D age (the way he layers three ‘thoughts’ at once is mind-blowing visually). In short, it’s worth the extra few bucks.” — Brad Miska, Bloody Disgusting Going Grindhouse ” ‘Drive Angry’ is loud and busy, and it’s rarely boring. But it’s also never really good. ‘Drive Angry’ comes at the tail end of the grindhouse revival trend, and while it’s better made than films like ‘Machete’ or the scores of indie films that followed in Quentin Tarantino’s wake, it succumbs to the same problem so many of those movies do: it’s a movie about the things that the filmmakers think are cool, and that’s never cool. ‘Drive Angry’ isn’t about anything, it’s just a series of ideas that struck Lussier and Farmer as awesome, strung together at feature length. There’s a lot of balls in Drive Angry, and even some brains, but no heart.” — Devin Faraci, Badass Digest The Final Word ” ‘Drive Angry’ is, in the end, a genre romp. It’s not aiming any higher than that. But it is made with real skill and style, and there’s such knowledge of genre in the way they have built the script and both embraced and avoided certain conventions that it makes me feel like we’re just seeing Farmer and Lussier warm up. Hopefully they’ll keep working with collaborators as game as their partners in this particular crime, because ‘Drive Angry’ is a white-knuckle ride worth taking.” — Drew McWeeny, HitFix Check out everything we’ve got on “Drive Angry.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Drive Angry’: The Reviews Are In!

‘Drive Angry’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know!

MTV News has been on the road with the Nicolas Cage flick since the start. By Eric Ditzian David Morse and Nicolas Cage in “Drive Angry” Photo: Summit Publicity “Drive Angry” is perhaps the Nicolas Cage-iest Nicolas Cage movie ever. The ever-unpredictable, often wacky, potentially out-of-his-gourd actor stars as a man who literally breaks out of hell to exact a bloody, muscle-car-assisted revenge plot … in 3-D. It’s deeply weird stuff, and yet, with Cage at the center of it all, it makes a whole lot of sense. MTV News, it should be said, has been at the center of “Drive Angry” coverage, securing the very first interview about the project and continuing to track it from the first trailer to the brink of opening weekend. Read on for everything you need to know about the movie before it hits theaters Friday (February 25). Going on the Road Coming off the $100 million success of 2009’s “My Bloody Valentine,” director Patrick Lussier and his writing partner, Todd Farmer, asked themselves one question: “What movie do we want to see and what movie do we want to shoot in 3-D?” as Lussier later explained to us . “We didn’t really have anything in mind beyond that,” he added. “We started writing an opening scene about a guy named Milton killing these three guys called the F—ers, who are totally scared sh–less and totally deserve it. From there, ‘Drive Angry’ was born. We wanted to come up with something that wasn’t a horror movie but was just a hard-R, action-driven road movie, because that would be a great film to see in 3-D.” Ditching any notion of converting the film to three dimensions during post-production, Lussier hauled 3-D cameras down to Shreveport, Louisiana, and began shooting in the spring of 2010. To share the screen with Cage, Lussier hired Amber Heard to play a sassy waitress who gets pulled into Cage’s scheme and William Fichtner as the agent of the devil’s evil agenda. 3-D, From Scratch When we caught up with Cage in the spring at Wonder-Con , he joked that the pollen in Louisiana made him sound like an “old blues singer” and raved about how the flick would meld an old-school cinematic vibe with cutting-edge technology. “It’s like if you got to see an old ’70s action movie, but in 3-D,” he explained. “We’re doing something semi-historical, because it’s the first 3-D movie shot [in the] style of a ’70s action film. You could see Charles Bronson or [Clint] Eastwood [starring in a film like this] in those days.” Months later, with the shoot behind him and his voice back to normal, Cage marveled at how he escaped the production injury-free. “In this case, I did quite a few stunts with people literally on the hood of the car driving at very high speeds, so it reminded me of those old movies where you have people on top of the wing of a biplane,” he said. “It was a little intense. That was definitely new to me and I was always very concerned about the stunt people I was working with.” Hell on Earth The film’s first trailer popped up online in October and featured everything we could have hoped for: big guns and fast cars, Cage walking slowly away from explosions without looking back, and fab lines like, “Hell already is walking the Earth.” Months later, a Super Bowl ad delivered further peeks at the hard-R craziness. There’s action aplenty, and that’s exactly how Lussier planned it. “We have this great car chase with Nic’s character chasing after Amber Heard’s character, who’s in the middle of a fight inside this RV,” he teased of one scene. “You’re in this claustrophobic space, and suddenly you’re outside with Nic in hot pursuit. There’s all sorts of gunplay on the road. It’s spectacular.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Drive Angry.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Drive Angry’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know!

HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS — Wednesday Edition

http://www.youtube.com/v/cCzEm4TStnY?f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

It’s HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS – Wednesday Edition! In this episode you’ll find Nicolas Cage, Frankie Muniz, The Situation, Greg Jennings, Tony Hawk, Rick Thorne, Drew Brees, Terrell Owens, Joe Johnson and Landon Donovan.

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HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS — Wednesday Edition

The Wicker Tree Trailer: More Nudity, Fire and Animal Masks in Sequel to Original Wicker Man

These days, The Wicker Man probably makes many think of derisive laughter, elated confusion and Nicolas Cage getting attacked by bees . But the original 1973 cult film still holds up as a chilling, uncomfortably funny horror movie about the power of fear, desperation and faith. Its director Robin Hardy has been struggling for years to make a companion-piece, and now, more than 30 years later, the trailer for The Wicker Tree has arrived. Those scared of naked women wearing horse masks may want to look elsewhere today. Ah yes, it’s probably NSFW.

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The Wicker Tree Trailer: More Nudity, Fire and Animal Masks in Sequel to Original Wicker Man

‘Drive Angry 3D’ Super Bowl Commercial

http://www.youtube.com/v/6wzZuMxZXPE

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Not only are people who are watching the Packers play the Steelers in Super Bowl XLV on Sunday going to see a (hopefully) great game, they’re going to see Nicolas Cage return from hell for 3D revenge [1]. Summit purchased a coveted spot for the upcoming action film Drive Angry 3D and one of the quotes used in the trailer just happens to be from our fair leader, Peter Sciretta, who calls the film “Insanely… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 04/02/2011 21:07 Number of articles : 2

‘Drive Angry 3D’ Super Bowl Commercial