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Archive for the 'Upcoming Movies' Category

Jul 24 2009

Johnny Depp Ignites Fan Frenzy With Surprise Comic-Con Appearance

SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Johnny Depp sent fans into a frenzy with a surprise appearance at Comic-Con in San Diego on Thursday.

“Alice In Wonderland” director Tim Burton was on stage in Hall H at the San Diego Convention Center when he reportedly said he wanted his “imaginary friend” to join him on the stage.
First Look: Tim Burton’s ‘Alice In Wonderland’ >>
Depp then appeared and the crowd erupted with cheers and screams of joy.
The actor only stayed for a brief moment, waving at the screaming crowd at the Disney 3-D panel.

Depp’s appearance flooded Twitter with excited Tweets from inside the crowd.
“Tears wiped over Johnny Depp. Decibel level to 11. This is CRAZY fandom,” one user wrote. While another claimed, “Women are chanting ‘I love you Johnny!’ Men are chanting ‘I love you

Source - www.AccessHollywood.com

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Jul 06 2009

T.J. Hooker to hit the big screen

“T.J. Hooker” is headed for the bigscreen as an action comedy with David Foster, Ryan Heppe and series creator Rick Husky producing. Chuck Russell (”The Scorpion King,” “The Mask”) is in talks to direct. The writing team of Brent Maddock and S.S. Wilson will script the story, which focuses on the relationship between the title character and his father.

No actors have been cast yet for the feature.

The TV series, produced by Aaron Spelling, debuted in 1982 on ABC and ran for five seasons, the last on CBS. William Shatner starred as a no-nonsense patrol sergeant, with Adrian Zmed, Heather Locklear, Richard Herd and James Darren as co-stars.

Husky has long retained the feature rights to the project, according to Heppe.

“The series was the poster child for cop TV shows in the 1980s with great stunts, so we think there’s a fun movie to be made from it,” Heppe said.

Foster and Heppe are producing a remake of “Short Circuit” with Maddock and Wilson having written the first version of the script. The scribes have also teamed on “Wild Wild West” and several “Tremors” pics.

Source - www.variety.com

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Jul 06 2009

When Sylvester Stallone brings an explosive movie called ‘The Expendables’ to New Orleans, there’s nothing small about it

The bullet casings littering the New Orleans-area set of the Sylvester Stallone action flick “The Expendables” didn’t seem quite right.

They were strewn across the deck of a faux cargo freighter dominating a significant chunk of the 500,000-square-foot Louisiana Film Studios facility in Elmwood. To the untrained eye, they appeared to be .22-caliber shells or something similarly small, littler than the tip of a man’s pinkie finger.

And in this movie — built around an oversized cast, shot upon oversized sets and utilizing oversized weapons — .22 caliber is unacceptably puny. Because the $80 million “Expendables” is not small. It’s really big.

“It is very, very, very hard,” writer-director-actor Stallone said, describing the shoot during a recent break, still wearing the black fatigues his character wears in the movie. “This is the hardest film — and I know everybody says that — (but) this is unbelievably difficult. It’s just tough. There’s just so much action.”

Coming from a pedigreed action-film veteran with such titles as “Rocky” and “Rambo” under his belt — not to mention their combined eight sequels (so far) — those words mean something.

On this particular hard day’s night — which started about 8 p.m. and was still going strong at 3 a.m. — Stallone already had overseen the near-hanging of one bad guy, a scripted fist fight between martial artists Jet Li and Dolph Lundgren, a bit of comedic improvisation with Lundgren, and a handful of increasingly jarring explosions that echoed through the studio complex while most of the cast was grabbing a 2 a.m. “lunch.”

So the action star, who turns 63 today, can be excused for propping himself on the front of a golf cart to chat with pasty reporter-types.

“This started out as a dark comedy; it started out as a satire,” Stallone said. “Then we thought, ‘Let’s make a really hard R’ — then I go back. It constantly was being just brutally changed. It wasn’t until a week before filming that I said, ‘Let’s just make it this kind of movie.’”

And what is “this kind of movie”?

It’s a high-adrenaline, well-muscled buddy picture in which Stallone, Jason Statham, Li and their team of mercenaries — which includes Lundgren, mixed-martial-arts champ Randy Couture and NFL-player-turned-actor Terry Crews — tackle the types of missions normally reserved for people whose combat boots and MREs come compliments of Uncle Sam.

Their missions come to them through a grease-monkey intermediary named Tool (played by Mickey Rourke).

“Let’s say we dug up ‘The Wild Bunch’ and gave them one more shot,” Stallone said. “These guys don’t fit in this kind of world. They are ‘The Expendables.’ That’s why they’re called that.”

Before the production wrapped late last week after two months in the New Orleans area, the sets for “The Expendables” sprawled all over the Louisiana Film Studios complex, a former Winn-Dixie grocery warehouse that saw its conversion into a film studio rushed along to accommodate Stallone and company.

In one section of the warehouse was the aforementioned cargo freighter deck, perched atop a 10-foot wooden platform. In another area was a set constructed to resemble the ship’s cavernous cargo hold. There’s also a wingless military plane somewhere, painted in the logo of the ornithology outfit that serves as the cover for the movie’s mercenary characters. And, looming in the darkness outside, there’s an expansive palace complex that had taken a pyrotechnic beating on previous nights.

Impressive stuff, to be sure — but nowhere near as impressive as the film’s alpha-male cast. In addition to Stallone, Statham, Li, Lundgren, Crews, Couture and Rourke, it also includes former pro wrestler Steve Austin and Oscar nominee Eric Roberts. There are plans for a cameo by Arnold Schwarzenegger, as well as a double-secret cameo from another action star whom the producers are playing coy about naming (*cough*cough*Bruce Willis*).

“We’ve got some tough men in this movie,” Stallone said. “I mean some bad-asses, trust me. The extras — you think I’m joking? — we’ve got extras in this movie that could conquer countries. I went to Brazil and got the baddest, toughest mercenary group. .¤.¤. It’s staggering. Every one of them would just take all of us and snap us like spaghetti — and they’re extras.”

Earlier in the night, and for much of the previous one, Stallone spent time choreographing the film’s action-packed opening sequence, in which his titular team of mercenaries settles a hostage crisis with Somali pirates in the only way their know how: loudly.

(”Don’t be scared of the pirates,” unit publicist Sheryl Main whispered unconvincingly to a group of set visitors.)

A motley band of mahogany hulks wearing tattered shirts and permanent scowls, the pirates are presumably among the bad-asses to whom Stallone was referring. When the cast and crew sat down for lunch, these guys had a table to themselves.

Even Crews — who spent seven seasons as an NFL defensive end and linebacker — found himself wide-eyed at the sheer scope of the action in “The Expendables.”

“Everything is intimidating, dude,” Crews said. “This is crazy.”

Courtesy of Lionsgate

“This started out as a dark comedy; it started out as a satire,” Stallone said of “The Expendables.” “Then we thought, ‘Let’s make a really hard R’ — then I go back. It constantly was being just brutally changed. It wasn’t until a week before filming that I said, ‘Let’s just make it this kind of movie.’” In a neck-and-neck race with Li for the title of most congenial member of the “Expendables” cast, Crews might also be the biggest. On one biceps is the skull-and-raven tattoo worn by all the members of Stallone’s fictional mercenary team. Statham jokes that the version on Crews’ supersized arm is the one that usually goes on others’ backs.

Those biceps weren’t of much use, however, when the movie’s pyrotechnics experts placed explosive charges throughout the palace courtyard, a duplicate of a real complex in Brazil at which the production filmed.

“When they blew this whole set up, I swear it looked like 9/11. It was scary,” Crews said. “I was really concerned about everybody on the ground. You start to worry, when the dust settles, ‘Is everybody going to be OK?’ I mean, that was a major, major thing. That was so huge. It was bigger than anybody thought it was going to be. .¤.¤. It was like, ‘Oh, wow. OK, I think we overdid it this time.’”

Overkill — that seems to be a common theme on “The Expendables” set. It’s the word Crews uses to describe his character’s trademark weapon, an AA-12 semi-automatic shotgun. (”When I tell you it’s the most insane thing you’ve ever seen — each bullet, it arms itself with its own grenade,” he said. “It’s the king of overkill.”)

It’s also the word used by Lundgren, who’s working with Stallone for the first time since playing rival boxer Ivan Drago in 1985’s “Rocky IV,” to describe his character. (”His special skill is overkill,” Lundgren said. “He’s got the biggest knife — here’s the sheath — the biggest gun, which fires tank grenades that sort of vaporizes the person, liquefies them. When you hit him, it’s game over.”)

Stallone’s character carries a pair of .45-caliber handguns. Statham’s is a knife man. Li arms himself with steel-toed boots, which become lethal weapons when attached to his lightning-fast feet. And Couture’s weapons are his hands.

Beneath it all, however, Stallone knows there has to be more than bloodied baddies to keep audiences engaged.

“Like ‘Rocky,” he said, referring to the career-defining 1976 movie that earned him Oscar nominations for acting and writing. “The whole thing about ‘Rocky’ wasn’t about him boxing. It was about aging — that was what made the movie. It wasn’t him. It was about her — him finding love, him making someone’s life better — and, before you know it, the audience identified with it.”

In “The Expendables,” he said he has created a group of characters who are hardened, heartless and invulnerable in combat. Off the battlefield, however, each is deeply flawed. “Every one of them has feet of clay,” he said.

Strapping Statham’s character , for example, has trouble relating to women; Stallone’s has trouble relating to everybody; and Lundgren’s is a homicidal maniac.

Although the movie, with its big action, big cast and sense of humor, is meant to be fun, Stallone hopes the undercurrent of vulnerability he’s written into the major characters makes audiences connect with them. “If it’s just about muscles and bullets, then it’s a pretty limited thing,” he said.

If such a connection is made, you can expect to see “The Expendables” back for more adventures.

“Definitely. We already have got some ideas about ‘Expendables No. 2,’ ‘No. 3,’¤” said Millennium Films’ Avi Lerner, a producer on the film. “Definitely, it’s a franchise movie.”

The cast’s principals would jump at the chance to crack more skulls in a sequel — assuming their characters are still around when the final credits roll on this first installment. The movie is called “The Expendables,” after all.

Some even divulged that their characters survive the action.

And just like that, these “Expendables” don’t seem very expendable after all.

“That’s what I’m saying!” Crews said. “‘The Renegotiatables’ — let’s make that happen.”

 Source - www.nola.com

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Jul 03 2009

‘Asteroids’ to hit the big screen

Universal has won a four-studio bidding war to pick up the film rights to the classic Atari video game “Asteroids.” Matthew Lopez will write the script for the feature adaptation, which will be produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura.

In “Asteroids,” initially released as an arcade game in 1979, a player controlled a triangular space ship in an asteroid field. The object was to shoot and destroy the hulking masses of rock and the occasional flying saucer while avoiding smashing into both.

As opposed to today’s games, there is no story line or fancy world-building mythology, so the studio would be creating a plot from scratch. Universal, however, is used to that development process, as it’s in the middle of doing just that for several of the Hasbro board game properties it is translating to the big screen, such as “Battleship” and “Candyland.”

Senior vp of production Jeff Kirschenbaum will oversee the project for Universal.

Di Bonaventura’s next outing is “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra,” which Paramount is set to open Aug. 7.

Lopez came out of Disney’s writing program and worked on that studio’s recent movies “Bedtime Stories” and “Race to Witch Mountain.” He also wrote the most recent draft of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” currently in production with Nicolas Cage and Jay Baruchel starring.

Source - www.hollywoodreporter.com

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Jul 01 2009

Transformers top UK box office for second week

LONDON (Reuters Life!) - “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” stayed top of the British box office for a second week, having set a 2009 UK opening record on its debut.

The effects-rich, alien vs robot war movie took 4.3 million pounds to add to the 8.3 million it collected last week, according to Screen International on Wednesday.

Booze-soaked lads’ comedy “The Hangover,” was unchanged in second place.

“Year One” was new at three with Jack Black and Michael Cera as a Pythonesque Stone Age pair in search of love and adventure while Cameron Diaz and Alec Baldwin came in at four with tangled tear-jerker, “My Sister’s Keeper”.

Ben Stiller in “Night at the Museum 2″ was down at five from three, with “Terminator Salvation,” the fourth film in the franchise and the first not to star Arnold Schwarzenegger, slipping two places to six.

Samurai slasher, “Blood: The Last Vampire,” made its debut at seven while “Angels and Demons,” the follow-up to “The Da Vinci Code,” was down three places at eight.

Bollywood movie “New York,” set against the background of the 9/11 Twin Towers attacks came in at nine, while the story of two women searching for a new start in life, “Sunshine Cleaning,” made its debut at 10.

Source  - http://in.reuters.com

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Jun 11 2009

Mickey Rourke As Whiplash In ‘Iron Man 2’

LOS ANGELES, Calif. –
Paramount has released the first peek at Mickey Rourke as Whiplash, and he’s geared up to wreck havoc for Tony Stark in “Iron Man 2”

The actor is seen sporting a partial exoskeleton with a power pack on his chest reminiscent of Iron Man’s own.

The character’s alter ego, Ivan Vanko, is a Russian who “has constructed his own version of a suit,” director Jon Favreau told USA Today. He also wields a pair of whips, which are powered by his exoskeleton and should make him a formidable foe for the armored superhero.

Rourke told the paper that Whiplash “is going to light them up.”

Whiplash, along with The Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) will take on Iron Man in the eagerly anticipated sequel, due in theaters May 7, 2010.

Source - http://www.accesshollywood.com/first-look-mickey-rourke-as-whiplash-in-iron-man-2_article_19048

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Jun 09 2009

Kirsten Dunst Returning For ‘Spider-Man 4,’ Villain To Be Chosen Soon

NEW YORK, New York — Kirsten Dunst will return as Mary Jane Watson, “Spider-Man 4″ producer Todd Black told the New York Post.

The star will rejoin director Sam Raimi and star Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker’s love interest in the latest installment in the popular superhero franchise, which is slated for May 6, 2011.

However, don’t expect wedding bells for Mary Jane and Peter - Black told the newspaper that he was unaware of such a subplot. At the close of “Spider-Man 3,” the two had an emotional - but ambiguous - reunion after the film’s events drove the lovers apart.

Additionally, Black hinted at the film’s villain, shooting down online rumors that pegged comic book character Morbius the Living Vampire as the latest member of Spidey’s rogue gallery.

Instead, the producer told the Post that the villain had a significant connection to the Big Apple.

“We’re just coming up with who the villain is now,” he said. “We’ll be shooting in New York again. Trust me, people will appreciate who we pick, because it’ll be a big part of New York.”

In past films, Spider-Man has faced off with the Green Goblin, Dr. Octopus, Venom and Sandman, leaving a number of famous villains who could make their silver screen debut in “Spider-Man 4.”

Among the popular options are Kraven the Hunter, Chameleon, the Hobgoblin, Mysterio, Venom offspring Carnage and the Lizard, whose human alter-ego, Dr. Curt Connors, had a role in the previous two movies.

Another potential foe could be New York crime boss the Kingpin - however, the character appeared in 20th Century Fox’s “Daredevil” and would likely require a rights acquisition by Sony Pictures.

But the crime lord would give the film a New York connection - and would also be Access Hollywood film critic Scott Mantz’s top choice.

“The Kingpin is grounded in reality, and that’s the appeal of Spider-Man,” Mantz said, adding another suggestion to the mix - femme fatale the Black Cat. “I’d like to see the Kingpin and the Black Cat, to stir the pot with Peter’s relationship with Mary Jane.”

Source  - movies.yahoo.com

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Jun 09 2009

Cam Gigandet Sinks His Teeth Into Another Vampire Role

LOS ANGELES, Calif. –

“Twilight” villain Cam Gigandet won’t be putting away his fangs anytime soon.

The “Twilight” star will be playing a sheriff who is part vampire in the TokyoPop comic book adaptation, “Priest,” according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The movie takes place in a world ravaged by a war between men and vampires. Cam’s character partners with a warrior priest (Paul Bettany) to save the girl he loves.

In addition to “Priest,” Cam has signed on to appear alongside Emma Stone and Amanda Bynes in “Easy A,” a comedic version of “The Scarlet Letter.”

He is also currently filming the thriller “The Roommate” with Leighton Meester and Minka Kelly.

Cam recently won the MTV Movie Award “Best Fight” for his battle with Robert Pattinson’s character, Edward Cullen, in “Twilight.”

Source - www.accesshollywood.com

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Jun 05 2009

Sam Worthington to star in Clash of the Titans remake

Aussie Sam Worthington, who plays Terminator Salvation’s Marcus Wright, is currently filming a Clash of the Titans remake (scheduled to premiere March 2010) in the Canary Islands with The Incredible Hulk director Louis Leterrier. Even though Worthington is starring as the ancient Greek hero Perseus (opposite Liam Neeson and Ralph Fiennes), he’s got a more modern inspiration: ”He’s Charles Bronson in Death Wish,” says the actor of his revenge-seeking character. ”That’s how I’m playing him.” And his skirt? ”We’re trying to make it as manly as possible,” he laughs.

 Source - www.ew.com

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Jun 03 2009

Third ‘Twilight’ Film, ‘Eclipse’, Begins Casting

Casting directors for the third installment of the ‘Twilight’ series are seeking for the Clearwater siblings as well as Riley, giving away the casting breakdowns for each of the characters.

Moments after “The Twilight Saga’s New Moon” unleashed its first official trailer, news are coming out that the casting for its follow-up movie, “Eclipse”, has begun. First to break down the report is E! Online, noting that they got a hold of a casting notice of at least three characters for the third “Twilight” movie.

One of the characters is Riley. He is described to be “a handsome, blond, clean-cut college boy who falls victim to Victoria [and] plays an integral role in Victoria’s attempt to murder Bella Swan.” The other two are the Clearwater siblings, Seth and Leah. Seth, a member of the La Push werewolf clan, is a “tall, gangly-limbed boy with a huge, happy grin [who] idolizes Jacob,” while his sister is the only woman in La Push.

Leah is further described to be “tall and slender with beautiful skin and short cropped black hair.” The casting notice also read that “she would be considered gorgeous if not for the perpetual scowl she carries due to a broken heart and her anger issues.” For the roles Seth and Leah, the casting directors reportedly seek for Native American or First Nations actors to fill in, similar to what they’ve done with “New Moon”.

“Eclipse” is the third novel from Stephenie Meyer’s “Twilight” series. The big screen version will be penned by Melissa Rosenberg and directed by “30 Days of Night” helmer David Slade. Set for June 30, 2010 U.S. release, it will follow Bella Swan as she once again finds herself surrounded by danger. Now, she is forced to choose between her love for Edward and her friendship with Jacob, with the knowledge that her decision has the potential to ignite the ageless struggle between vampire and werewolf.

Source - www.aceshowbiz.com

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