Saturday
May082010

Bruckheimer Talks 'Bad Boys 3'

As of just recently there's been a lot of talk about Will Smith returning to some of his most famous franchises as they receive the threequel treatment. It was just this week it was confirmed that Smith would start shooting Men in Black III with Tommy Lee Jones this fall for a summer 2012 release date.

The other blockbuster franchise there's been talk about is Sony reuniting Smith with Martin Lawrence and Michael Bay for Bad Boys 3 with a screenwriter having been hired last summer, although this seemed somewhat questionable when Lawrence confirmed to MTV that the project was "real."

At the UK junket for Prince of Persia: the Sands of Time, ComingSoon asked the Big Kahuna, producer Jerry Bruckheimer, if there was a possibility we'd see him, Michael Bay and Smith working together for the first time since Bad Boys 2 back in 2003, presumably once Bay and Smith finish their current threequels, Transformers 3 and Men in Black III, respectively.

The producer was more prudent with his choice of words on the project than Lawrence, saying, "It's a wish and a hope and a dream. We've been working on a screenplay, which is excellent. It's an idea Will gave us, so hopefully, it will come to fruition, we would love it to."

There are a lot of people that hate Michael Bay, for whatever reason, and could care less if he returns to the franchise. I on the other hand. thought the Bad Boy's movies were awesome, I'm definitely up for another one. With Smith now doing MIB III, and reportedly having pitched the idea himself, I think there's a good possibility this might actually get off the ground. If they were to start filming right after MIB and Transformers, they could have it out for Summer or even winter 2012.

Currently Bruckheimer's summer slate for this year is full with Prince of Persia: the Sands of Time out on May 28 and The Sorcerer's Apprentice out on July 16.

Friday
May072010

New FCC Ruling May Hurt Movie Theaters 

Deadline recently reported on an FCC ruling that could change the way we watch movies. And in effect, possibly kill the movie theater for good.

Here's the FCC press release:

Washington, D.C. — The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), saying it was “in the public interest” today approved a request by the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. (MPAA) to permit recent movies to be sent directly to American households over secure high definition transmission lines from their cable or satellite providers prior to their release on DVD or Blu-ray.

“This action is an important victory for consumers who will now have far greater access to see recent high definition movies in their homes. And it is a major step forward in the development of new business models by the motion picture industry to respond to growing consumer demand.” said Bob Pisano, President and Interim CEO of the MPAA.  “We deeply appreciate the recognition by the FCC that recently released movies need special protection against content theft when they are distributed to home televisions.”

Specifically, the issue before the FCC was a request by the MPAA for permission to use selectable output control (SOC), which would allow televisions with digitally secure interfaces to receive high-definition content from a cable, satellite or IPTV provider, before its release on DVD or Blue-ray. Using SOC protects content because during the broadcast it essentially disables non-secure, analog outputs to avoid illegal circumvention and distribution of copyrighted material.

In its order, the FCC said:  “On balance, this limited waiver will provide public interest benefits– making movies widely available for home viewing far earlier than ever before – without imposing harm on any consumers.”
“The first, and best way to view movies will always be in movie theaters – and nothing can replace the pleasure this brings to millions and millions of people all across our country and the globe,”  Pisano said.  “But for those people unable to make it to the theater and interested in viewing a recently released movie, thanks to the FCC, they will now have a new option.  For other consumers who prefer standard, linear, on-demand or DVD or Blu-ray options, these services will be unchanged."

What specifically this means for the movie theatre business is unclear at this point. How soon after the release of a movie they will be available to at home consumers, has not been determined yet. More importantly what does this mean for the newest trend in cinema, 3D movies.

Friday
May072010

Will 'Iron Man 2' top 'The Dark Knight' Box Office Record?

 

That’s the question on everyone’s mind, Will Iron Man 2 top The Dark Knight box office record this weekend?

Iron Man 2 is set to appear on 4380 screens this weekend, while The Dark Knight only appeared on 4366 screens in its widest release.

The dark Knight set an opening weekend record of $158 million showing on 3000 screens, it’s midnight showing brought in 18.4 million on 3000 screens. Iron Man 2 already has some catching up to do, the midnight showing that appeared on 2500 screens only made 7.5 million. You can make the argument that TDK was released on more screens, but even then the average gross per location is nearly double in TDK’ favour, TDK having earned over $6000 average, while Iron Man 2 was only able to make an average of $3000 per location.

Iron Man 2 has the slight advantage with increased ticket sales and a few extra screens, but will the word of mouth from the midnight and Friday showings transfer into the huge returns they’re looking for, Not likely. This is where The Dark Knight, unfortunately for Iron Man has the upper hand. The Dark Knight’ word of mouth and reviews were over whelming to the point it was able to come in much higher than studio projections ever expected.

Iron Man 2 hasn’t received terrible reviews, but they haven’t come in nearly as positive as its 2008 predecessor. The first Iron Man was a surprise smash hit for most people, a relatively unknown super hero, a comedic director, and Robert  Downey Jr. They brought the character to life, and in turn the movie made an astonishing 585 million World Wide at the box office.

Given the franchises success everyone is expecting to see a huge boost in Box Office numbers coming into this weekend’s Blockbuster sequel. I don’t doubt it will go on to make a substantial amount of money, but the possibility of it beating TDK opening record of 158 million and/ or crossing the 1billion World Wide mark by the end of it theatrical run, like some people have suggested, seems slightly less obtainable, both now that I’ve seen the over hyped product that is Iron Man 2, and the fact of it being well behind already just on the midnight showing alone.

I’m predicting Iron Man 2 will make 150ish million in its opening weekend (slightly less than my original prediction), and it will end its World Wide box office run with $750 million.

Iron Man 2 opens everywhere today, you can check out my review HERE.

Check back to TMT on Sunday to see how Iron Man did over the weekend, and give Mike Shadwick's review a read.

Friday
May072010

Marveling At The Past - Daredevil (2003)

“Trust me Matthew, spend thirty years inside a confessional and there’s nothing I haven’t heard.”

“Well let’s keep it that way.”

I have hated 20th Century Fox for the longest time and my colleagues here at TMT, Peter and Jamie, have often been puzzled as to why.  It started right here with their feature film adaptation of ‘Daredevil’.  After finally being able to compare the theatrical version of the movie to the intended director’s cut (a film for once deserving of that moniker), combined with decisions the studio later made with the ‘X-Men’ and ‘Fantastic Four’ franchises, I came to the conclusion that Fox was purposely ignorant of why these comic properties work and why they have endured.  So focused are they on making 90 minute action films for teenagers with short attention spans that two of Marvel Comics’ greatest sagas, ‘The Dark Phoenix Saga’ and ‘The Elektra Saga’ have crumbled to dust before our eyes.

But my attitude has mellowed over the years and, rest assured, this is not going to be one long rant against Fox and how THEY ruined ‘Daredevil’.  The fact remains that if they put up the money, they are entitled to do whatever they wish.  The fact remains that ‘Daredevil’ was more a victim of the success of Sam Raimi’s ‘Spider-man’ the previous year than anything else and any studio in Fox’s place would probably want to mould this very dark piece into something more commercial.  The fact remains that Fox has not locked the original version of the film away in a vault and looking upon that version we can see that ‘Daredevil’ is still a flawed film.

You can argue (and I am certainly on this side of the fence) that the first act of the film is practically pitch perfect.  The opening reveal of Daredevil, hanging for dear life and bleeding to death on the roof of a church after some brutal battle we can only guess at this point, perfectly dispels any notion that this is another ‘Spider-man’.  In bold and brilliant strokes, we are gradually enticed into the world of Matt Murdock; his accident, his powers, and how he survived and thrived on the streets and rooftops of New York.  In the space of a few minutes we get the downfall and redemption of Matt’s father who sacrifices himself, just to be an example to the boy he loves so much, to keep fighting and never fall down because they tell you to.  We get to see inadequacy of the justice system to protect the underdogs and why Daredevil exists to hand out otherwise undelivered justice.  And we get to see the private hell that Matt’s life really is, a life where fighting crime leaves physical scars, where his solid food diet seems to consist mainly of painkillers to keep him going and where he is forced to sleep in an isolation tank to block out the sounds of the city and its never ending wave of violence that he otherwise hears every moment of every day.

Where things start to unravel is in the film’s treatment of the Matt Murdock/Elektra Natchios relationship and the repercussion it has on the actual plot of the film (or lack thereof) and especially the third act.  In the film, this beautiful, amazing woman is presented as the ray of light Murdock so desperately needs in his otherwise miserable existence and, in that respect, it works very well.  After her father, a powerful shipping magnate with ties to the Kingpin of crime, is assassinated for trying to leave his organization by the deadly hit-man Bullseye, Elektra abandons Matt and a life of happiness to walk the lonely path of vengeance and retribution, leaving Daredevil no choice but to keep walking his own.  This set up leads into the clunker of a third act where Elektra is hunting Daredevil, Daredevil is hunting Bullseye and Bullseye is hunting both of them and, despite who knows how many rooftops there are in New York, they all manage to converge on the same one.  Any tragedy to be mined from this sequence is quickly rushed through so we can watch Daredevil and Bullseye fight each other on the world’s tallest, and least structurally sound, church organ.

The reasons for this not working are two fold.  Firstly, Elektra has not been down the path of revenge long enough for her actions or her death to have the impact it should.  In the comics, she and Matt meet each other as university students and fell in love before being torn apart by the death of her father.  The whole point of the character is that she arrives back into Matt Murdock’s life years later an almost completely changed person, a ninja assassin irrevocably damaged by years of violence.  Matt does everything he can to bring her back to the light over the course of their various encounters but is unable to save her.  By the time Bullseye finally kills her, the reader is actually conflicted as to whether she got what she deserved as she herself has ended so many lives by this point without hesitation. 

Secondly, there is literally no reason why Elektra needs to be a target of Bullseye in the film, save for some tacked on excuse that the Kingpin kills not just his intended victim but their whole family.  In the comics, Elektra is an established force to be reckoned with so far down the path of no return that she takes the mantle as the Kingpin’s top assassin with immediately brings her into the sights of Bullseye, desperate to take that position back and eliminate the competition.

In fact it is the villains which really suffer as a result of the changes to the source material.  Kingpin, despite being the main villain, is barely in the film.  We get no real demonstration of the power he wields, how large his organization is or how dangerous and feared he has become.  When Daredevil faces off against Kingpin at the end of the film, there is no electricity to it because he hasn’t been set up properly as someone to be reckoned with.  You get the feeling the filmmakers realized this as well and threw in the painfully arbitrary “you killed my father” plot device. 

The character is regarded as much of an urban myth in the city as Daredevil and yet the film makes it look like exposing his identity and bringing him down was quite easy.  The irony is you can do a far better job of conveying that mythic status as well as the threat of the Kingpin if you don’t even reveal him in the first film.  Just like Mandarin is the definitive foe of Tony Stark and the ‘Iron Man’ movies are eventually building up to that character’s appearance, Kingpin is at the top of the villain food chain for Daredevil and there is nowhere to go after that.  Kingpin is not just another foe to be conquered either.  Defeating him represents the accomplishment of Daredevil’s mission to bring true justice to the city and that is a struggle which is too epic to be accomplished on one film.

From what Mark Steven Johnson says, the reasoning behind including the showdown with Kingpin was, apart from wanting to cram everything he could as a fan into one film, that the film was about the underdog being able to topple the biggest fish in the city.  Unfortunately, trying to cram that theme into the same film that charges itself with telling the Elektra saga is folly.  There was more than enough story to tell by focusing exclusively on a torturous tale of two soul mates that seem made for one another but force each other apart, dooming themselves to a life of vengeance and violence they feel obligated to because of their fathers.

Imagine a film which takes us straight from Matt Murdock cradling his dead father’s body in Hell’s Kitchen to the brief tranquility of Columbia University where he meets both future law partner Foggy Nelson and the love of his life.  Imagine that the film’s romance scenes such as Matt being able to see Elektra in the pouring rain took place at this juncture.  Imagine that Elektra’s father is assassinated and framed as the mythical Kingpin of crime there and then leading to a parting of the ways, forever forsaking Matt’s chance to live a normal happy life and putting him on the path of Daredevil.  Imagine the real Kingpin off screen pulling the strings of everything that is about to unfold.  Imagine Elektra coming out of nowhere in the middle of one of Daredevil’s standard busts as something he barely recognizes (which goes double for her) and turning his life upside down.  Imagine Murdock and Nelson on their own against the odds trying to crack the real identity of the Kingpin, with Matt feeling that clearing Elektra’s father is the last thing he can do for her.  Imagine Kingpin hiring Elektra to take out these underdog lawyers for that very reason.  Imagine Bullseye being the only visible villain, an obsessive psychopath who turns up at every turn, destroying everything that matters to Murdock and pushing both of them into a grand final battle.  Imagine an epic.

I know it sounds like I’m being a comic book purist in the worse sense but the irony is that it was the Daredevil film that made it happen.  Because of Mark Steven Johnson’s passion project and because of the good things I found in the movie, I started reading Daredevil comics and found a character with a mythology so rich and brought to print by so many talented artists and writers, that he quickly became my favorite Marvel character.

When it comes right down to it that is the highest compliment I can pay him.  When it comes right down to it, ‘Daredevil’ is a film made with love.

As opposed to his next film ‘Ghost Rider’ which was made with something else.

Friday
May072010

Men In Black III coming summer 2012

 

Columbia Pictures announced today that Men in Black III will be released in 3D on May 25, 2012. Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald are returning to produce and Barry Sonnenfeld, who directed the first two installments of the blockbuster franchise, will direct the film from a screenplay written by Etan Cohen, based on the comic book by Lowell Cunningham. Steven Spielberg is set to executive produce.

Deals are set for Will Smith, Sonnenfeld and the producing team to return to the blockbuster franchise with the intent to begin production by this fall and the studio is in advanced negotiations with Tommy Lee Jones to reprise his role as Agent Kay. Josh Brolin is also in talks to star as a young Agent Kay.

Commenting on the announcement, Jeff Blake, Chairman of Sony Pictures Worldwide Marketing and Distribution said, "Sony's summer of 2012 will get off to a red hot start with an incredible new 3D adventure for the Men in Black. We couldn't be more excited that the original filmmaking team responsible for the first two worldwide hits is reuniting for this third installment. We love where the story is taking Agents Jay and Kay and know this new chapter will deliver a fresh fun twist for fans of the franchise while also introducing the Men in Black to a whole new generation of moviegoers."

Friday
May072010

Toby Jones joins Captain America

Toby Jones (Infamous) is in final negotiations to play villainous scientist Arnim Zola in Marvel Studios' Captain America: The First Avenger, reports Heat Vision.

In the comics, "Zola was a genetic engineer who created clones and various monstrosities for Hitler. He also captured his own mental self, inserting it into a robot, and survived the war."

Jones is joining a cast that includes Chris Evans, Hayley Atwell, Hugo Weaving, Sebastian Stan and Samuel L. Jackson. Directed by Joe Johnston, the adaptation starts filming in England this summer for a July 22, 2011 release.

Captain America: The First Avenger will focus on the early days of the Marvel Universe when Steve Rogers volunteers to participate in an experimental program that turns him into the Super Soldier known as Captain America.

Friday
May072010

The A Team character spots

As a child of the 80's the A Team is one of the shows I grew up on and will always have a soft spot for, so far Joe Carnahan's modern movie take seems to hit all the right touchstones and I think it will turn out to be a fun slice of summer action, which in truth is all you can ask for from an A Team movie.

Four Character TV spots have been released and you can check them out below, The A Team opens on June 11th.

Friday
May072010

Next fast & the furious to get rocked!

Fast and the Furious, no one would have expected it to spawn 4 sequels when it was released back in 2001 but here we are on the cusp of "Fast Five"......Yes the titles aren't getting better any time soon.

Anyway we know that Paul Walker and Vin Dieserl are returning because...well lets face it not much else they do would actually be deemed a hit, so this is their bread and butter baby! however the big news is on who might be joining them in the 5th installement. Deadline New York has the scoop!

Is a match-up between action icons Dwayne Johnson and Vin Diesel in the works for the next installment of The Fast and the Furious? Sources tell me it’s not a done deal but that Johnson is eyeing a starring role in Fast & Furious 5.  He's already is driving mode on the CBS Films revenge drama Faster, and here, it appears Johnson's character will be on the right side of the law.  Fast & Furious 4 reinvigorated the franchise with a $155M domestic haul.

They can call him Dwayne all they want be he'll always be The Rock to me jabronis! I am not sure if this is a step back for The Rock after Get Smart and the forthcoming The Other Guys, I see it more as a step sideways and a chance to outshine Vinnie D and show the world who the daddy is when it comes to the quest for Arnie and Sly's one liner spouting muscly throne.

Friday
May072010

Brad Bird takes Mission Impossible

It was announced earlier today that Mission Impossible IV was moving dates to December 16th 2011, now comes news direct from Tom Cruise via Empire, that Brad Bird is definitely directing the 4th installment in the franchise.

 Since Tom Cruise decided to accept another fiendishly-difficult-but-let’s-face-it-not-quite-Impossible-or-there-would-be-no-movie Mission, there’s been speculation as to who would direct the fourth outing in his spy series.

Rumour suggested Brad Bird... Well, it's no longer rumour: it’s Brad Bird.

As previously reported, Cruise – who is producing with part three’s creator, JJ Abrams – was considering both Bird and Blighty’s own Edgar Wright, but Mission: Impossible IV is officially going to The Incredibles writer/director.

Wright, who is still tied up with post-production on his hotly anticipated comic-book adaptation Scott Pilgrim Vs The World, is still on Cruise’s must-work-with list, though.

“I dig Edgar. Very nice guy, very smart, very talented, I’d really like to do something with him,” said Cruise, talking to Empire recently in Los Angeles. “I met Edgar on the set of Mission 3. Simon Pegg and those guys are hilarious. I love Shaun Of The Dead. It’s amazing. But we’re working with Brad right now. I don’t know if I’m allowed to talk about it but everything’s signed... Brad is doing it.”

The Iron Giant, The Incredibles, Ratatouille – Brad is enormously talented and JJ and I are having a blast, cranking away,” Cruise continued. “We’re having a lot of fun. I like working with people I just love hanging out with. You get to hang out and laugh and talk stories and movies and technology: what are we going to do?”

Bird is a great stryteller with an exuberant imagination, this of course will be his first live action outing however I have faith he will knock it out of the park.

Friday
May072010

Inception IMAX POster

Christopher Nolan's highly anticipated Inception is due to get a full trailer with the release of Iron Man 2, in fact if I have my times right many US folks will be enjoying it round about now.

For the rest of us Yahoo Movies has gotten hold of the fantastic IMAX poster. The posters so far have drawn criticism from some for being too similar to the TDK posters but this one is fantastic and represents the gravity defying nature of the film as seen in the prior two teasers.