Exclusive interviews: Duncan Jones (Director of Moon) - Andrew Barker (Director of Straw Man) - Tony Grisoni (Screen Writer of Red Riding Trilogy, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas) - Michael Marshall Smith (author of Spares, Only Forward, The Straw Men etc) - Alejandro Adams (Director of Canary) - Ryan Denmark (Director of Romeo & Juliet vs The Living Dead) - Neal Asher (author of the Cormac series, The Skinner etc) - Marc Robert & Will Stotler (Able) - Kenny Carpenter (Director of Salvaging Outer Space)

Press Conference - Public Enemies - Johnny Depp, Michael Mann, Marion Cotillard

NEWS - REVIEWS - TRAILERS - POSTERS - INTERVIEWS - FORUM - CONTACT


FEATURED REVIEWS - Public Enemies - Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - Moon - The Hurt Locker

LFF is on Facebook - Twitter - Friend Feed

Showing posts with label Fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fox. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 July 2009

The Predators have a leader

Robert Rodriguez is producing the new Predators sequel/reboot. News was he had seven directors in mind including Neil Marshall (Doomsday, Dog Soldiers, Descent), but most recently we had the news that Nimród Antal was the favourite for the job.

Turns out that the favourite is the winner. Rodriguez spoke to AICN and confirmed that Antal will be directing Predators. This is what Rodriguez had to say about him.
First of all, on a personal level I found him to be an outstanding presence, a great communicator full of ideas, and upon meeting him you can immediately understand how he is able to wrangle cast and crew and get the best out of everyone. I always loved Kontroll, where he proved himself to be a very resourceful and original filmmaker. When I saw Armored, I could tell he's also great with action and has a keen eye for casting. He reminded me of Quentin with how he was able to work with a group of very strong, singular actor talents and make it look effortless. I know he'll be able to get the most out of what we want to be an outstanding cast. We really want to go with a character driven action movie, because that's what we all remember about the original Predator, and we want to take it even further with this.
He also gave us an idea as to what we can expect to see in the film.
I can't go too much into the story right now, because we're still writing. But it still involves a very intense group of people stranded on a Predator planet discovering unspeakable horrors (that are not always from outside their group). So like the original movie, the title does have a double meaning.

Aliens was a different take on the Alien idea, and an original movie in it's own right, and that's what we want to do with this.

As to how this movie will be viewed, one of the guys at Fox told me "No one is ever going to talk about AVP again after this film, I will stake my life on it."

And he's a really nice guy, so I don't want to see him dead. Now that lives are at stake, it's no longer a job it's a mission.

Failure is not an option.
HOME

Tuesday, 2 June 2009

Nightbreed - Do you want a director's cut?

Do you remember Clive Barker's Nightbreed? It was a great film. It had quite a few faults but it had a cool story and some creepy character designs. Plus David Cronenberg was in it as a serial killing psychiatrist.

The movie centers around Aaron Boone (Craig Sheffer), a young man plagued by dreams of a city called Midian, populated by bizarre creatures and deviants of all types who refer to themselves as the "Nightbreed". Aaron is framed for several murders by his psychopathic therapist, subsequently killed by police and resurrected by the magic of Midian. Boone joins forces with the other monsters to defend themselves from the true monsters of the story: humankind.

For many years there has been talk of a director's cut, rumors that the version of Nightbreed that hit theaters wasn't Barker's preferred vision. Rumors of 25 minutes of deleted scenes. However, rumours also went round saying that all extra footage had been deleted.

Now, according to CHUD a fan named Mark Miller made some phone calls to some people and got some interesting new info. This is what he found out.
"One fan set out in search of the truth, armed only with a few phone
numbers and the power of a name...


"On one call I was transferred to a production executive. You already
know what I told him, so let me tell you what he told me: He Can Access The Lost
Nightbreed Footage At Any Time.


"My jaw dropped. Struggling to remember my already limited vocabulary,
I asked what had to happen in order for the footage to see the light of day. He
explained to me that someone, namely one of the higher ups, had to have a good
reason to pull it out of storage. I, having that good reason, nodded and thanked
him. He couldn't have been a nicer guy.


"Excited, I pictured myself walking through large dusty warehouses
filled from floor to ceiling with ancient reels of arcane footage. I’m sorry to
report, that's not what happened.


"Shortly after, one of said higher ups was gracious enough to give me a
moment of his time. I was shocked when he told me there wasn't a big enough
audience for the film and that the answer to my request must be no.'Not even
worth the cost to upgrade to Blu-ray,' he said.


"Ouch."

It does seem a bit odd that the studio are acting like this (although it is Fox so it's not that odd).

Truly awful films are being released on Blu-Ray, yet here is a true cult classic sitting there with previously unseen footage. They could really push the fact it has material that had long thought to have been deleted.

However, you can make a difference. If you want to see a director's cut of Nightbreed on wonderful Blu-Ray then e-mail cliverbarker.info here or speak to the them on Twitter - @philandsarah).

Tell them Live for Films sent you.


Spread the word people. The monsters are getting restless.

Discuss in the forum or leave a comment below.

HOME

Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Deadpool movie is good to go


Fantastic news about fans of the Merc with a Mouth - that includes me (the image above is via Geek Tyrant).

Twentieth Century Fox has begun development on Deadpool, an "X-Men" spinoff that will be crafted as a star vehicle for Ryan Reynolds, who played the character in X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

The character is one of the most popular in Marvel Comics' X-Men universe. Deadpool is Wade Wilson, a mercenary who, dying of cancer, submits himself to the Weapon X genetic alteration experiment and emerges as an indestructible semi-sane anti-hero.

Reynolds seemed destined to play the character. In one reference in the Marvel Comics, Deadpool is described as a mix between "a Shar Pei and Ryan Reynolds."

In one of the "Easter egg" endings of "Wolverine," Deadpool is seen rising from the rubble and whispering "Shhh" to audiences. The Deadpool we saw in the film is not quite like the one we saw at the end of the Wolvie film.

The film will be produced by Lauren Shuler Donner and Marvel.

According to a source close to Fox, the Deadpool spin-off film “a complete exploration of this unique character."

Fox is also in the formative stages of a "Wolverine" sequel that will encompass the samurai storyline that was hinted at as Wolverine sat in a bar in Japan as the film concluded.

Separately, Fox is developing Magneto, a film about the X-Men villain with a script by Shelton Turner, and X-Men: First Class, which Josh Schwartz is penning.

Great news about the Deadpool film (Check out my review of the Wolverine movie). I really hope they keep it close to the comic book character. I want to see him break the fourth wall and know he is just a comic book movie character. What do you want to see in a Deadpool film?

Leave a comment on this post below.

Source: Variety
HOME

Tuesday, 17 March 2009

In the Blacklight everything is clear....Kill 'em all!


Fox Atomic has acquired the rights to turn Zombie Studio’s original action property Blacklight into a feature film, comic book series and video game.

It is described as “a covert military action epic set twenty-five years in the future.” Both the game and movie will be written by Jason Dean Hall (Spread)

This concept art should help you get a feel of the kind of thing they are going for.


According to the official press release, everything will be intertwined. The movie, , video game, and comics will feature “the same characters and high caliber military action, but with unique, intersecting storylines that complement each other.”


I like the idea of this being connected through all the different media, but it just seems like a generic shoot 'em up at the moment. What's the betting that the Blacklight is either the name of the military unit you fight with or something that turns people into zombie monster creatures when it shines upon them. I think we need to hear a little more of the plot before excitement can commence.

Source: /film

Leave a comment on this post below.

HOME - Discuss in the Forum

Monday, 9 March 2009

Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson / Deadpool - New Photo


20th Century Fox has provided Superhero Hype! with an exclusive new photo of Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson / Deadpool in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, opening in theaters on 1st May.

HOME - Discuss in the Forum

Friday, 27 February 2009

Eddie Murphy to play Richard Pryor. Who'll play Gene Wilder?

Some news from Entertainment Weekly.
Writer/director Bill Condon, who just completed his debut run as producer of the 2009 Academy Awards, is shopping his script Richard Pryor: Is It Something I Said? to the studio subsidiaries and independent distributors around town. Eddie Murphy is attached to star. Sources tell EW.com that Fox Searchlight, the studio behind this year's big Oscar winner Slumdog Millionaire, is interested in the film. The studio, which declined comment, has a relationship with Condon, having partnered with the director on his 2004 feature Kinsey. Condon, who most recently wrote and directed Dreamgirls, had the Pryor biopic set up at The Weinstein Company but was able to pull it out when the indie outfit put it into turnaround. He initially was hoping to secure $30 million to produce the film, but that number, sources say, has dropped down to $25 million. Murphy, who has featured Pryor impersonations in his act as far back as the 1987 concert movie Raw, seems a likely choice for this role.
Is Eddie Murphy the right choice to play Pryor? Murphy was great in Dreamgirls, but his track record recently hasn't been so good.

HOME - Discuss in the Forum

Thursday, 29 January 2009

Predator Reboot - Robert Rodriguez says so

A reliable source got in touch with Bloody Disgusting to tell them that Robert Rodriquez and his Troublemaker Studios will be producing the Predator reboot for 20th Century Fox.

The pitch being sent around town implies that the reboot will have more than one predator. "In the reboot a team of commandoes face down a mysterious race of vicious monsters." No writer has been attached yet - and there is no script. No word on whether or not Rodriquez will direct, but it seems highly unlikely considering how many projects he has in development.


I hope it's better than the two Alien vs Predator films. I love me some Predator.

Discuss in the Forum

Tuesday, 13 January 2009

Watchmen - Are Fox and Warner Bros ready to settle this?

Some more good news regarding the fate of the Watchmen film from MTV.

The New York Times’ Carpetbagger blog noticed Fox Chairman Tom Rothman and Alan Horn of Warner Bros “down among the superstar seats, smiling and back-patting — each other, not the superstars — just before the show began. A public display of affection between studio chiefs, along with those pricey ‘Watchmen’ ads on the National Football League playoff games this weekend, would add up to a message as big as the Hollywood sign: The talks between hitherto warring Fox and Warner over a settlement of Fox’s lawsuit over rights to ‘Watchmen’ must be on track.”

Home / Forum / Guestbook

Saturday, 10 January 2009

Watchmen talks going well...Can you feel the love?

It seems that a nasty lawsuit that threatened the March 6 release of Watchmen might be settled out of court. According to Associated Press, attorneys on both sides of the Fox/Warner Bros. lawsuit over the upcoming Watchmen film say that settlement talks have been quite productive.

A hearing was scheduled for today, but attorneys for both Fox and Warner Bros. asked U.S. District Judge Gary Allan Feess to delay the hearing so settlement talks could continue over the weekend. Feess agreed, but did indicate that a January 20 hearing is still scheduled to determine if the March 6 release will be blocked or not.

Fox lawyer Lou Karasik said that the delay would be "very very helpful" to the settlement talks, which he said were "productive." Fox originaly brought the lawsuit up in February, claiming that the studio still had rights to the film which Warner Bros. is releasing. Feess agreed last month that Fox still seemed to have the rights to distribute the film.pix10687

Source: MovieWeb
Home / Forum / Guestbook

Friday, 9 January 2009

Watchmen: An Open Letter by Producer Lloyd Levin

I know many of us are frustrated with the whole Watchmen court case between Fox and Warner Bros. I for one just want it all sorted and the film to be released. Well now the Producer, Lloyd Levin, has sent an open letter to Motion Capture regarding the whole mess and his frustration with Fox. Basically it looks as if Fox initially wanted nothing to do with making a Watchmen film. However, now it has been made and they realise how popular it may be, they have spat their dummy.

Have a read of Lloyd's letter and feel your anger rise!

"Watchmen. A producer's perspective.

An open letter.

Who is right? In the Watchmen dispute between Warner Brothers and Fox that question is being discussed, analyzed, argued, tried and ruled on in a court of law. That's one way to answer the question - It is a fallback position in our society for parties in conflict to resolve disputes. And there are teams of lawyers and a highly regarded Federal Judge trying to do just that, which obviates any contribution I could make towards answering the "who is right" question within a legal context. But after 15 plus years of involvement in the project, and a decade more than that working in the movie business, I have another perspective, a personal perspective that I believe important to have on the public record.

No one is more keenly aware of the irony of this dispute than Larry Gordon and I who have been trying to get this movie made for many years. There's a list of people who have rejected the viability of a movie based on Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon's classic graphic novel that reads like a who's who of Hollywood.

We've been told the graphic novel is unfilmable.

After 9/11 some felt the story's themes were too close to reality ever to be palatable to a mainstream audience.

There were those who considered the project but who wished it were somehow different: Could it be a buddy movie, or a team-up movie or could it focus on one main character; did it have to be so dark; did so many people have to die; could it be stripped of its flashback structure; could storylines be eliminated; could new storylines be invented; did it have to be so long; could the blue guy put clothes on... The list of dissatisfactions for what Watchmen is was as endless as the list of suggestions to make it something it never was.

Also endless are the list of studio rejections we accrued over the years. Larry and I developed screenplays at five different studios. We had two false starts in production on the movie. We were involved with prominent and commercial directors. Big name stars were interested. In one instance hundreds of people were employed, sets were being built - An A-list director and top artists in the industry were given their walking papers when the studio financing the movie lost faith.

After all these years of rejection, this is the same project, the same movie, over which two studios are now spending millions of dollars contesting ownership. Irony indeed, and then some.

Through the years, inverse of the lack of studio faith has been the passionate belief by many many individuals - movie professionals who were also passionate fans of the graphic novel - who, yes, wanted to work on the film, but more for reasons of just wanting to see the movie get made, to see this movie get made and made right, donated their time and talent to help push the film forward: Writers gave us free screenplay drafts; conceptual art was supplied by illustrators, tests were performed gratis by highly respected actors and helped along and put together by editors, designers, prop makers and vfx artists; we were the recipients of donated studio and work space, lighting and camera equipment. Another irony, given the commercial stakes implied by the pitched legal dispute between Fox and Warners, is that for years Watchmen has been a project that has survived on the fumes of whatever could be begged, borrowed and stolen - A charity case for all intents and purposes. None of that effort, none of that passion and emotional involvement, is considered in the framework of this legal dispute.

From my point of view, the flashpoint of this dispute, came in late spring of 2005. Both Fox and Warner Brothers were offered the chance to make Watchmen. They were submitted the same package, at the same time. It included a cover letter describing the project and its history, budget information, a screenplay, the graphic novel, and it made mention that a top director was involved.

And it's at this point, where the response from both parties could not have been more radically different.

The response we got from Fox was a flat "pass." That's it. An internal Fox email documents that executives there felt the script was one of the most unintelligible pieces of shit they had read in years. Conversely, Warner Brothers called us after having read the script and said they were interested in the movie - yes, they were unsure of the screenplay, and had many questions, but wanted to set a meeting to discuss the project, which they promptly did. Did anyone at Fox ask to meet on the movie? No. Did anyone at Fox express any interest in the movie? No. Express even the slightest interest in the movie? Or the graphic novel? No.

From there, the executives at Warner Brothers, who weren't yet completely comfortable with the movie, made a deal to acquire the movie rights and we all started to creatively explore the possibility of making Watchmen. We discussed creative approaches and started offering the movie to directors, our former director having moved on by then. After a few director submissions, Zack Snyder came onboard, well before the release of his movie 300. In fact, well before its completion. This was a gut, creative call by Larry, me and the studio... Zack didn't have a huge commercial track record, yet we all felt he was the right guy for the movie.

Warner Brothers continued to support, both financially and creatively, the development of the movie. And eventually, after over a year of work, they agreed to make the film, based on a script that, for what it's worth, was by and large very similar to the one Fox initially read and deemed an unintelligible piece of shit.

Now here's the part that has to be fully appreciated, if for nothing more than providing insight into producing movies in Hollywood: The Watchmen script was way above the norm in length, near 150 pages, meaning the film could clock in at close to 3 hours, the movie would not only be R rated but a hard R - for graphic violence and explicit sex - would feature no stars, and had a budget north of $100M. We also asked Warner Brothers to support an additional 1 to 1.5 hours of content incurring additional cost that would tie in with the movie but only be featured in DVD iterations of the film. Warners supported the whole package and I cannot begin to emphasize how ballsy and unprecedented a move this was on the part of a major Hollywood studio. Unheard of. And would another studio in Hollywood, let alone a studio that didn't show one shred of interest in the movie, not one, have taken such a risk? Would they ever have made such a commitment, a commitment to a film that defied all conventional wisdom?

Only the executives at Fox can answer that question. But if they were to be honest, their answer would have to be "No."

Shouldn't Warner Brothers be entitled to the spoils - if any -- of the risk they took in supporting and making Watchmen? Should Fox have any claim on something they could have had but chose to neither support nor show any interest in?

Look at it another way... One reason the movie was made was because Warner Brothers spent the time, effort and money to engage with and develop the project. If Watchmen was at Fox the decision to make the movie would never have been made because there was no interest in moving forward with the project.

Does a film studio have the right to stand in the way of an artistic endeavor and determine that it shouldn't exist? If the project had been sequestered at Fox, if Fox had any say in the matter, Watchmen simply wouldn't exist today, and there would be no film for Fox to lay claim on. It seems beyond cynical for the studio to claim ownership at this point.

By his own admission, Judge Feess is faced with an extremely complex legal case, with a contradictory contractual history, making it difficult to ascertain what is legally right. Are there circumstances here that are more meaningful, which shed light on what is ultimately just, to be taken into account when assessing who is right? In this case, what is morally right, beyond the minutiae of decades-old contractual semantics, seems clear cut.

For the sake of the artists involved, for the hundreds of people, executives and filmmakers, actors and crew, who invested their time, their money, and dedicated a good portion of their lives in order to bring this extraordinary project to life, the question of what is right is clear and unambiguous - Fox should stand down with its claim.

My father, who was a lawyer and a stickler for the minutiae of the law, was always quick to teach me that the determination of what is right and wrong was not the sole purview of the courts. I bet someone at Fox had a parent like mine who instilled the same sense of fairness and justice in them.

Lloyd Levin"

Interesting stuff isn't it.

Home / Forum / Guestbook

Wednesday, 7 January 2009

Judge to rule on whether Watchmen will be released

20th Century Fox and Warner Brothers have agreed to allow a federal judge to decide whether or not Watchmen will be released on March 6, as was originally planned by Warner Brothers. The studios made a statement, as reported by the LA Times, where they agreed to allow U.S. District Judge Gary A. Feess to make a final decision, forgoing a jury trial that could have put the film into limbo for an even longer time.

In a preliminary ruling issued December 24, 2008, Feess said that Fox owned the right to distribute Watchmen, and not Warner Brothers. In that same ruling, Feess urged the studios to negotiate a settlement, rather than to bring the case to trial. Any potential trial on remaining parts of the lawsuit will be postponed until after the January 20 hearing about the film's distribution.

"We are gratified by the recognition of our rights in the judge's order, which speaks for itself," Fox said in a statement Tuesday.

Warner Bros. said in a statement: "We will continue to pursue all of our legal options to defeat Fox's meritless claims and remain confident that we will ultimately prevail."

Fingers crossed we got to see the film!

Home / Forum / Guestbook

Wednesday, 31 December 2008

Watchmen featurette - Zack Snyder tells us more about the film in 4 minute featurette

This is really cool - more footage, Zack Snyder telling us stuff and it all looks amazing. Sad to think that it will probably be delayed more and more as the Fox / Warner Bros legal battle rumbles on.
Director Zack Snyder introduces the story, characters and stars of Watchmen, starring Jackie Earle Haley, Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Carla Gugino, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Patrick Wilson, Matthew Goode and more.

Home / Forum / Guestbook

Monday, 29 December 2008

Watchmen film could be delayed further

From /film - An attorney for 20th Century Fox told AP that the studio is planning to continue to seek an injunction to prevent the release of Watchmen. U.S. District Court Judge Gary Feess ruled last week that Warner Bros had infringed on 20th Century Fox’s rights to develop and distribute a movie adaptation of Alan Moore’s Watchmen graphic novel.

A Warner Bros.’ attorney told the AP that hhe believes “a trial is necessary and a settlement unlikely.” As of right now, a trial is still scheduled for January 20th to decide the remaining issues. If Warners and Fox can’t reach a settlement before that date, it is likely that the Judge will grant the injunction which will at very least push back the release date of the comic book movie adaptation until a settlement is agreed upon.
Home / Forum / Guestbook

Thursday, 27 November 2008

Watchmen Legal Battle Update

Filmstalker have got the latest on what is happened in the courts with Zack Snyder's Watchmen movie.

Previously we heard that the worst case scenario was that 20th Century Fox would halt the production and distribution of Watchmen and perhaps even can it, returning to make their own version.

However, it could mean a huge delay with Watchmen and a huge financial blow to Warner Bros. who have invested all the money and talent into making Watchmen, and unlike Fox, have had the drive and the stomach to make the film that they couldn't and wouldn't.

While Warner Bros. have announced that Fox are merely trying to attach themselves to a film that looks like it will be a major hit, they are willing to accept a partial settlement. What that exactly means we don't know, but it will most likely mean a percentage of takings or a big one off payment.

Now that sounds like Warner Bros. are stepping back from the personal side of the issue and being rather pragmatic. Sure they could sit there and fight, but it would be quicker and easier for them to recoup the money they've invested in the film by getting it out there for the audiences, even at a lesser return for them. Remember, they are a business.

Business yes, but they seem more ethical too. Fox is still asking for the sole right to produce and distribute the film throughout the world.

Now does that mean that they'd start their own version up if they won? Or does it mean that they could take the film from Warner Bros., pay them all the money invested to date, and just walk away with it?

According to amlawdaily through Filmonic the judge will make his decision next month. Let's hope he sees sense and thinks about what this is all about, not just business but a film for the audience. Settle like adults and let the film free, don't bicker and have the audience turn away from it over a studio who couldn't make the film for years through fear and lack of creativity.


How do you feel about the news?
Home / Forum / Guestbook

Friday, 21 November 2008

The Wrestler Teaser Trailer - Mickey Rourke in lycra

Back in the late '80s, Randy "The Ram Robinson" (Mickey Rourke) was a headlining professional wrestler. Now, twenty years later, he ekes out a living performing for handfuls of diehard wrestling fans in high school gyms and community centers around New Jersey.

Estranged from his daughter (Evan Rachel Wood) and unable to sustain any real relationships, Randy lives for the thrill of the show and the adoration of his fans. However, a heart attack forces him into retirement. As his sense of identity starts to slip away, he begins to evaluate the state of his life -- trying to reconnect with his daughter, and strikes up a blossoming romance with an aging stripper (Marisa Tomei). Yet all this cannot compare to the allure of the ring and passion for his art, which threatens to pull Randy "The Ram" back into his world of wrestling.

Director Darren Aronofsky presents a powerful portrait of a battered dreamer, who despite himself and the odds stacked against him, lives to be a hero once again in the only place he considers home ­ inside the ring.

HOME / FORUM.

Thursday, 20 November 2008

Wolverine and Deadpool news - Violent by all accounts

MTV have some news on the Wolverine movie and the possible Deadpool spin-off.

X-Men Origins: Wolverine” isn’t out in theaters until May 1, 2009, but there’s already been plenty of talk about a potential spin-off film focusing on Marvel’s “Merc with a Mouth,” Deadpool. (In this case, a “spin-off of a spin-off” is more accurate, given the move from team-oriented “X-Men” movies to “Wolverine” solo — but you get the idea.)

During a recent “Comic Book Club” chat session between comedians and comics creators in Manhattan, former 20th Century Fox Studio Exec Jeff Katz (who had returned from the set of “Wolverine” just a few months ago) offered up his own thoughts about the potential for a “Deadpool” movie — as well as what you can expect to see in “Wolverine,” bub.

“The film nicely tees [Deadpool] off for his own spin-off film,” said Katz, who raved about Ryan Reynolds‘ portrayal of the wise-cracking mercenary. In Marvel’s comic book universe, Wade Wilson (a.k.a. Deadpool) is a product of the same “Weapon X” experiments that Wolverine was subjected to by the Canadian government, but the experiments left him disfigured and mentally unstable.

Katz’ comments seemed to reiterate those of Fox Chairman Tom Rothman, who previously addressed the possibility of a “Deadpool” spin-off and commented on the tone of “Wolverine.” According to Katz, “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” is “certainly the most violent” of the X-Men movies thus far, with a darker tone and significantly more action than its predecessors.

Of course, before “Deadpool” gets the go-ahead, there’s still another X-Men character likely to take a solo turn on the big screens: Magneto. With yesterday’s report of an official plot synopsis for “Magneto” hitting the ‘Net, it looks like “The Merc with a Mouth” will have to get in line behind “The Master of Magnetism.”

Anyone reading the new Deadpool comic? Who here wants a Deadpool movie? Will Ryan Reynolds be nice and disfigured as Wade Wilson is in the comic?
HOME / FORUM.

Monday, 17 November 2008

Watchmen news on the legal proceedings - Fox and Warner Bros are after sequels?

This from The Playlist.

The L.A. Times has a lengthy and in-depth article on the ongoing, 20th Century Fox Vs. Warner Bros. legal battle over "Watchmen" - the lawsuit of which is due in courts January 6, 2009.

We haven't had time to really parse the article (LAT calls it a "super battle") however, one quote jumped out at us immediately.

"They are not just fighting over 'Watchmen,' " entertainment attorney Mel Avanzado, who is not involved in the litigation, said of the duel between Fox and Warners. "They are also fighting over sequel rights. Whoever controls the franchise probably controls quite a bit."

Again, with the sequels. There is no sequel to "Watchmen" at least not one written by the comic creator, Alan Moore. Hell, even the cast and director (Zack Snyder) have said it'd be pretty much impossible to do a sequel or a prequel (Snyder for one has already said he's have nothing to do with either). Then again, this lawyer isn't part of the case, but sequels have obviously been mentioned before. It's a silly plan, but there's a lot at stake and more $$ to be made.

What else is new here, well Fox is still trying to block the film's release, and a lot of hinges on producer, Lawrence Gordon who may have not have done his legal due diligence and that could cost WB.

It's a long read, but two more good graphs that are telling.

U.S. District Court Judge Gary Feess isn't so [Gordon had all his ducks in a row]. In denying a Warners motion to dismiss the case last August, Feess said a key Warners argument "ignored a number of facts" and that "nothing on the face of the complaint or the documents . . . establishes that Gordon . . . ever acquired any rights in 'Watchmen.'

"Fox executives and lawyers point to another chain-of-title case they say proves Warners plays fast and loose with its movie rights. In a dispute before Feess over 2005's "The Dukes of Hazzard," Warners failed to get the underlying rights to the obscure movie (1975's "Moonrunners") upon which the TV show was based. Warners settled the case for $17.5 million after Feess said he would block the movie's release.

Interesting news. I think it will still be released but all this talk of sequels is a bit worrying. What do you think of all this legal wrangling?
HOME / FORUM.

Wednesday, 12 November 2008

Baz Luhrmann speaks about the Australia ending - He wrote 6 endings and shot 3


Baz Luhrmann has revealed that despite a week to go before Australia is to première, he hasn't yet finished it and that after speaking at a film benefit he was honoured at, he would be heading back to the mixing desk to get on with it.

What's more he refutes the recent speculation in the media and film sites that Twentieth Century Fox had forced him to change the ending are untrue.

Baz Luhrmann was speaking at the Museum of Modern Art's Film Benefit in New York which was honouring him and revealed that the film was unfinished. The BBC says that he had just a day spare to complete the film. Luhrmann said:

“We're right up against it, I literally have to on Friday night push that button...going back to the mixing desk to finish it in 24 hours.”

Australia leads with Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman and tells the story of an English aristocrat who arrives in Australia to find the cattle ranch that she has inherited. During hard times she has to move her entire cattle heard across Australia in order to keep the ranch alive, and at the same time encounter the beginnings of World War II. She wins over her rugged ranch hand, and on the journey the two fall in love. It promises to be set against stunning Australian backdrops.

However it looks tight to complete the film, and that's not the only pressure he's up against. According to recent reports his original film had an ending that was rather sad and negative. The studio hated this and requested that he change it to something happier, something that was a bit stronger than a request.

Baz Luhrmann won't have any of this though and said on the matter:

“You really think that on my films people tell me what to do? I don't think so - on my films I decide...I wrote six endings and I shot three...”

He also goes on to say that the ending of the film will be a surprise.

Source: Filmstalker

I think the ending will have aliens landing in the outback, Hugh Jackman will pop his claws and go snikty-snikt on the skrull faced monsters, then Nicole Kidman will unleash her botox forehead and head butt them all to kingdom come. Once that's done they'll then be joined by Rolf Harris and end the film with a big musical number of "Two Little Boys". That's a surprise ending.

To be honest the whole plot sounds like a revamped Crocodile Dundee set during World War II with a bit of City Slickers thrown in. What's your take on this?

HOME / FORUM.

Thursday, 6 November 2008

James Cameron’s Avatar to Be Released in IMAX(R) 3D

James Cameron’s Avatar to Be Released in IMAX(R) 3D on December 18th 2009

Twentieth Century Fox Enlists IMAX 3D to Complete Format Menu for
Moviegoers

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 6 - IMAX Corporation (NASDAQ: IMAX; TSX: IMX) and Twentieth Century Fox today announced that they have reached agreement on material terms to release the highly anticipated 3D motion picture Avatar in IMAX(R)3D simultaneously with the motion picture’s premiere in conventional 3D theatres on December 18, 2009. Avatar is directed and written by Academy Award Winner James Cameron and stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Stephen Lang, Michelle Rodriguez and Sigourney Weaver. Cameron will also produce with his Lightstorm Entertainment partner, Jon Landau. Avatar will be digitally re-mastered into the unparalleled image and sound quality of The IMAX Experience(R).

“Our goal with Avatar is to revolutionize live-action 3D moviemaking, and I have no doubt that it will look and sound incredible in IMAX 3D,” said director James Cameron. “The larger field of view and powerful surround sound of an IMAX(R) theatre will completely immerse the audience in a way that cannot be experienced anywhere else.”

HOME / FORUM.

Thursday, 16 October 2008

Deadpool spin-off? Tim Rothman talks

MTV spoke to the Fox Chairman, Tim Rothman, about the new Wolverine movie and the possibility of a Deadpool spin-off. Here's what Tim had to say.

“Yes and no, I mean, Deadpool is an integral part of ‘X-Men Origins: Wolverine,’ we are in the process now, of doing all the CG work to create that character at an A +++ level,” said Rothman in the IESB story. “It’s a high level endeavor because he figures importantly in the movie, so whether he’ll spin off into his own movie, if that’s what you’re asking, I don’t know the answer. We will have to see.”

Rothman was also asked if, given the recent trend of “dark” superhero films, if “Wolverine” would be taking a cue from “The Dark Knight,” to which he couldn’t comment on (given that he had yet to see the final cut of the film), but assured fans that it’s, “thematically a very dark story, so it is not ‘Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.’”

HOME / FORUM.