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Don’t Spray Idris Elba and 6 Other “Pacific Rim” Scoops [EXCLUSIVE]

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Charlie Hunnam is one funny dude.  The star of the F/X hit series “Sons of Anarchy” has kept audiences and critics alike mesmerized by his…

Don’t Spray Idris Elba and 6 Other “Pacific Rim” Scoops [EXCLUSIVE]

Bossip Giveaway: PACIFIC RIM “MIND MELD” Sweepstakes

Do you want to win a fully loaded XBOX 360, 2 controllers, 12 months XBOX Gold Live membership and games as well as movie passes courtesy of PACIFIC RIM? All you have to do is check out the trailer and answer the question below: Question –  “According to the PACIFIC RIM Trailer, where did the THIRD “Kaiju” attack take place?” Answer the question in the form below: Grand Prize Includes:          1 – XBOX 360 gaming system          1 – Pair of XBOX 360 controllers          1 – 12 month membership to XBOX Gold Live          2-3 – select XBOX 360 co-op games          1 – Pair of passes to see PACIFIC RIM with PACIFIC RIM Hollywood Movie Money                       *  Hollywood Movie Money is a free admission voucher to see a predetermined film (PACIFIC RIM) redeemable nation wide starting 07/12/13 through Wednesday, 08/08/13 in any theater excluding AMC Theaters.          1 – set of exclusive Jaeger Trading Cards   *These cards were created exclusively for the film and NOT available in any stores.  Set of 6 high quality cards that feature the awesome Jaegers featured in the film. pacificrimmovie.com Official Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/pacificrimmovie Official Twitter:  https://twitter.com/pacificrim Official Tumblr:  http://pacificrimmovie.tumblr.com/ Contest ends July 12th at 12:00pm EST

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Bossip Giveaway: PACIFIC RIM “MIND MELD” Sweepstakes

‘Pacific Rim’ Vs. Real World Physics: Giant Robots, Galileo, And The Square Cube Law

Pacific Rim looks awesome and all, but let’s talk about science for a second. Specifically, let’s talk about the science, or lack thereof, behind completely awesome giant robots. Guillermo Del Toro ‘s upcoming sci-fi action pic is probably going to be as awesome as the trailers make it look, unless you’re the kind of person who hates the sight of huge mecha fighting against equally huge monsters, in which case please show yourself out. How could you not love enormous robots punching out enormous monsters who lay waste to entire cities? Giant robots represents 90 percent of what we want the future to be like (the other 10 percent: flying cars, and a male birth control pill.) They’re extremely cool looking, they transform, and for sheer shock factor they’re impossible to beat. We want them so badly, but could we have them in real life? Unfortunately, hell no. Not because of budgetary constraints, frustratingly missing confirmation of alien life, or the lack of a decent fuel source. There’s a bigger problem facing these robots than any alien invasion: Physics. Yes, the terrible dictator that ruins everything from warp drive to immortality also has a bone to pick with Del Toro’s supersized combatants. And unfortunately, as inherently awesome as it sounds, having giant robots brawling with giant monsters in regular ol’ planet earth gravity runs right up against the twin problems of weight distribution and the nefarious square cube law . The square cube law is a paradoxical-sounding mathematical concept, first identified by Galileo, which states that when a given object increases proportionally in size the new surface area is proportional to the square of the multiplier, but the new volume is proportional to the multiplier’s cube. Or restated for those of us whose eyes begin to bleed when the subject of math comes up: When something increases in size, its volume increases faster than its area. If you double the size of an object for instance, surface area increases by four times, but the volume of that object, which is (duh) all the space inside it, increases eightfold. This law has implications for numerous scientific disciplines, including construction and biology. To get an idea of how it works, let’s say you take an average human woman, someone approximately 5 feet, 5 inches tall. Increase her size to 11 feet. You now have a woman whose heart is four times bigger, forced to pump a presumably proportional increase in blood through 8 times the amount of circulatory system her smaller incarnation had. That’s a tremendous amount of stress and likely to kill anyone who grows beyond a certain height*. Of course, animals which have evolved to be big, rather than having had a gene preventing abnormal growth turned off, have developed the respiratory and circulatory systems necessary to handle their needs. But before you break out the snacks for your ‘Yay, monsters for everyone!’ party, bear in mind that all that volume comes with a ton of additional weight. Mice, for example, don’t look like miniature elephants for the very excellent reason that an elephant’s bones have to be much bigger in proportion to its body size than a mouse’s skeleton does, in order to support all that weight. In fact, if you zapped a mouse with magic to increase it to the size of an elephant, its bones would probably be crushed under the weight of its soft tissue within seconds. EEK! And even though the elephant’s bones can support it, it still has to deal with the fact that it’s far easier to break something heavy than something light, which is why a mouse could jump off a waist-high kitchen table with no ill-effect, but an elephant can break a leg simply tripping over something. Complicating things further, all that weight needs musculature capable of dealing with it, and that’s another way the square cube law totally screws over giant animals. It takes considerably more muscles to manipulate the animal’s limbs and moving parts, but those muscles have to deal with a hell of a lot more weight. This means larger animals tend to be slower and less agile than smaller animals and beyond a certain point there’s no amount of naturally evolved biomechanical components that can do the job. In fact, this is why earth’s largest animals are water-dwelling, where buoyancy mitigates a lot of the stressors caused by huge mass and weight. Forget deftly sweeping cars off a bridge with the swipe of a taloned hand; a giant monster like the beasts in Pacific Rim might find it difficult to even stand up. * Read Orson Scott Card’s Shadow series for an excellent depiction of the problem. But ignore his reactionary politics which become insufferable as the series goes on. NEXT: The square cube law and giant freaking robots

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‘Pacific Rim’ Vs. Real World Physics: Giant Robots, Galileo, And The Square Cube Law

WATCH: ‘Pacific Rim’ Trailer Dares Mayan Calendar To End The World

Holy Macross, the first trailer for Guillermo Del Toro’s Pacific Rim is here, and I can’t believe what I’m seeing! Dimensional rifts, enormous monsters, and sweet sweet giant mechs battling it out over the streets of a large city while the helpless populace flees. Someone finally figured out how to update the kaiju genre without ruining it. Glory be! I’ve been keeping my powder dry on this since Del Toro isn’t always 100 percent successful making films that live up to his vision, but you know what? Done. I’m now an extreme religious fundamentalist for Pacific Rim . Watch this trailer and you will be too: “Today, we are canceling the apocalypse!” What a line, and considering the timing of the trailer, what a lovely middle finger to everyone ruining your Facebook feed with nonsense about Mayan calendar realignment. Pacific Rim looks like it lacks even a shred of knowing campiness or edgy BS; it just coasts on a sincere awesomeness of the sort we haven’t really seen since the ’70s, only with funding. It’s The Space Giants with humans controlling the robots! It’s Robot Jox with a budget. It’s the live action Robotech* movie we’ve been dreaming of since the ’80s. It’s anything you want it to be because it loves you more than anyone else ever could, and will probably send you your favorite cupcakes on your birthday. * Yes, we know Robotech was cobbled together from Macross , Mospeda and Southern Cross . If you claim to have seen any of them before you saw Robotech and you aren’t from Japan, I don’t believe you. Pacific Rim hits theaters July 12, 2013. RELATED ARTICLES: Pacific Rim: The Characters and Robotic ‘Engineering Feats’ of Guillermo Del Toro’s Monster Sci-Fi Pic Idris Elba Suits Up in First Image from Guillermo Del Toro’s Pacific Rim Guillermo Del Toro on Pacific Rim Monsters and the Demise of At the Mountains of Madness Ross Lincoln is a LA-based freelance writer from Oklahoma with an unhealthy obsession with comics, movies, video games, ancient history, Gore Vidal, and wine. Follow him on twitter (@rossalincoln). Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: ‘Pacific Rim’ Trailer Dares Mayan Calendar To End The World

Beverly Hills Cop IV Wars, and 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Happy Thursday! Also in this edition of The Broadsheet: A Farrelly-sanctioned Dumb and Dumber sequel gets moving (slightly)… Signs point to Still Seas for Guillermo del Toro… The only defense of Shame ‘s NC-17 that you’ll need… John Carpenter’s first student film discovered… and more.

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Beverly Hills Cop IV Wars, and 5 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Guillermo del Toro and Katie Holmes on R-rated Children’s Horror Flick Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark

When Guillermo del Toro ( Hellboy, Pan’s Labyrinth ) set out to update the scariest movie he’d ever seen as a child — the 1973 made-for-television movie Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark , about inhabitants of a house who discover sinister creatures living in the basement — he intended to frighten and thrill a new generation of youngsters. Even co-star Katie Holmes , who makes a rare genre appearance in the Del Toro-produced and co-scripted horror pic, found the script to so terrifying that she knew she had to do it. But is Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark , as the MPAA deemed, too scary for kids?

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Guillermo del Toro and Katie Holmes on R-rated Children’s Horror Flick Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark

Legendary Pictures to Bring Pacific Rim, Proyas, Paradise Lost and More to Comic-Con

Legendary Pictures — the production company behind Batman Begins , Watchmen , Clash of the Titans , and all the movies you can’t wait to see in 2012 and beyond — will host its first Comic-Con panel later this month, and while footage will likely be scarce, expect a parade of talent to come through Hall H for upcoming films Pacific Rim , Seventh Son , Paradise Lost , and the Mass Effect video game adaptation. Hit the jump for Legendary’s roster of talent!

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Legendary Pictures to Bring Pacific Rim, Proyas, Paradise Lost and More to Comic-Con

Guillermo Del Toro on Pacific Rim Monsters and the Demise of At the Mountains of Madness

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. Or, rather: First came the agony — the surprise shut-down of production on his ambitious At the Mountains of Madness — but now filmmaker Guillermo del Toro is having a ball prepping his next directorial effort, the futuristic alien invasion action movie Pacific Rim . He spoke with Movieline about the two projects while making the press rounds for Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark .

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Guillermo Del Toro on Pacific Rim Monsters and the Demise of At the Mountains of Madness

RZA Negotiating to Join Jon M. Chu’s G.I. Joe Sequel

Jon M. Chu ‘s G.I. Joe 2 is adding a Wu-Tang veteran to its ranks! According to THR , rapper-actor-newbie director RZA is in negotiations to appear opposite Channing Tatum, Dwayne Johnson, and Elodie Yung in the action sequel. More on RZA’ s character and the new actor cast as Flint after the jump.

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RZA Negotiating to Join Jon M. Chu’s G.I. Joe Sequel

Pacific Rim Sets July 2013 Release Date

The summer of 2013 just got a little more exciting: Warner Bros. has announced that they’ll release Guillermo del Toro ‘s sci-fi action pic Pacific Rim on July 12, 2013. The alien invasion film is set to star Idris Elba , Charlie Hunnam , and Charlie Day, and begins filming this November. Del Toro has described the Travis Beacham-penned project as his biggest film to date, so expect a summer monsterpalooza, del Toro-style. [ Deadline ]

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Pacific Rim Sets July 2013 Release Date