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Link of the day: Yet another Christmas movie list

The reason I think I enjoy this article from Katey Rich over at Cinema Blend.com is because of her very last choice for the best movies you’ll ever experience during Christmas as an adult, and it’s Billy Wilder’s The Apartment:

The Apartment is all about extramarital affairs, drinking problems, suicide and unbearable urban loneliness, but it’s also one of Billy Wilder’s funniest, and best, movies. It’s Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine before they become “old coot” icons, Fred MacMurray at his most corporate evil, and great one-liners and running gags… comedy-wise, that is.

In other words, it’s a Christmas movie for those of us who enjoy a bit of cynicism with their heart-warming stories, and that’s perfectly okay with me.

New York director Robert Mulligan dies at 83

robert-mulliganHollywood Reporter and several news outlets overseas have published the news that director Robert Mulligan died at his home in Connecticut on Friday from heart disease.

Mulligan started out as a TV director, but moved over to film with great ease. After two Rock Hudson movies and some other films, Mulligan hit the big time with his direction of To Kill a Mockingbird, for which he received his only Oscar nomination.

In fact, a lot can be said for the fact that during the course of his career, Mulligan directed five Oscar nominated performances (Gregory Peck and Mary Badham in Mockingbird, Natalie Wood for Love with the Proper Stranger, Ruth Gordon in Inside Daisy Clover (which also starred Wood), and Ellen Burtsyn in Same Time, Next Year). His last film was 1991’s The Man in the Moon, a coming of age story that helped launch Reese Witherspoon’s career.

The fact that Mulligan was able to work with such dramatic material with ease and a sense of heart is something that’s missing from a lot of today’s directors, I think, who are more concerned with either making bank, blowing things up, or making statements.

I wish more directors worked the way Mulligan did.

Frank Miller may—or may not—have next sights set on Buck Rogers

buck-rogers-tvReversing a trend that started this year in May, once again the idea of Frank Miller directing a feature film-version of the Buck Rogers comics and/or TV series has raised its ugly head.

All of this speculation comes courtesy of Hollywood Reporter, who really should know better than to print something like this:

Odd Lot, the shingle run by Gigi Pritzker and Deborah Del Prete, is in negotiations to option the rights to “Rogers” from Nu Image/Millennium, which obtained those rights this year from the Dille Trust [emphasis mine].

When you work in the kind of industry I do during the day, you tend to know that just because someone’s “in negotiations” or has “accepted an offer” doesn’t mean that a contract is going to be signed. I mean, for crying out loud… the AMPTP and SAG were “in negotiations” right around the same time as the last furor over Buck Rogers started and now the actors are duking it out over whether or not they should go on strike!

The rest of the article contains a bit of an idea about what a Miller-esque Buck Rogers would feel like:

[Miller] has only begun to sketch ideas, it’s expected to be a darker take, with many of Miller’s signature visual elements and themes, such as corruption and redemption.

Of course, comics artist-turned-indie director Matt Haley couldn’t resist creating a promotional poster for such a movie as well, based on an idea by Thomas Gerhardt:

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With that kind of tagline, aren’t you sold?

Two women named as first cast for Tron sequel

Wilde Garrett Tron2While Hollywood Reporter and Variety may disagree on what the film’s actual name is at this stage, the sequel to Disney’s 1982 Tron film has two of its roles officially cast.

Olivia Wilde (who is best known for her work on leading role on “House” as a doctor who doesn’t even have a first or last name) will play the female lead, a worker in the digital world who helps out in the fight against the Master Control Program, a role that sounds similar to the role that was played by Cindy Morgan in the original.

The other announced cast member is Beau Garrett, a model-turned-actress whose first film role was in Turistas—which coincidentally starred Wilde as well. There are very few details about her character as well, whom HR is only calling “a siren in the digital world.” Considering that it’s computers we’re talking about, this could mean that she’s either been signed to be a femme fatale-kind of character or she could actually play the role of an holographic announcement program.

The last bit of news about Tron 2 (or TRON 2.0 or Tr2n) comes from the gang at AICN, via their source that they’ve code-named “Ford Fairlane”:

If there has ever been a world that 3-D would totally embrace, I think it would be the world of Tron. Specifically, we are going to get a first person view from inside of a light cycle in the film [emphasis mine].

If that isn’t enough news to keep the slavering fanboy base at bay for a while, I don’t know what is.

Whoa… part 2: Keanu Reeves lets Cowboy Bebop plot details slip, wants to be Spike

keanu-reevesListen, it’s not that I particularly have it in for Keanu Reeves. He’s a decent actor when he’s given stuff that requires him to be very stoic, and I was actually surprised and pleased by his work in A Scanner Darkly.

But once again, I am forced to do the Luke Skywalker scream when faced with the news that Reeves is lobbying to get the lead role in the live-action adaptation of the 1998 anime series Cowboy Bebop.

From the MTV.com article:

Reeves revealed that this outline for the flick is currently focusing on the origins of the fictional “Bebop” drug developed by the military, which provides its users with a brief surge of superhuman reflexes and awareness. “We’re taking the Red Eye [story], the beginning part of the series,” he explained, “and then we’ll deal with the end of the series. We’re trying to figure out [the time frame]. We’re looking at the story right now.”

Already, my hackles are being raised, because even though he acknowledges that the drug seen in the first episode is called “Red Eye” Reeves says that the outline for the script as overseen by producer Erwin Stoff is calling the drug “Bebop.” Who the hell names a drug “Bebop”? Are they doing that in order to make the series name make sense to a mainstream audience? Why the hell would you want to do that, when the “Bebop” part of the name refers to the fantastic jazz soundtrack to the film?

And as for Reeves wanting to play Spike Spiegel, I have to say that if you do have to pick a half-Asian man to play him, why not choose one that has closer ties to the anime world, who actually does know how to do stuntwork well, and already has an established geek fan following?

Yes, I’m speaking of former Power Ranger, Johnny Yong Bosch who currently does ADR work for several popular anime series and whose stuntwork can be seen here in the trailer to Broken Path, a movie he screened all over the U.S. at anime conventions last year:

Am I right?

SAG vs. SAG 2: The battle of the words

fight-bear-cubsPreviously, I said that I’d wanted to hear about how the average actor is affected—or shafted—by the AMPTP’s stalling of the resumption of negotiations over residuals for new media projects. Leave it to super-awesome child actor-turned-writer-and-blogger Wil Wheaton and the actors who follow his blog to grant my wishes:

From Wil:

Allow me to give a little perspective on where I’m coming from: I’m a former member of SAG’s Hollywood board of directors. I’ve chaired committees, and I’ve sat in on negotiations. I’m about as pro-union and pro-actor as you can get, and I hate the insulting offer the AMPTP has given us. But I’m also a realist. If we go on strike in February, we won’t hurt the moguls enough to force them to negotiate with us, they’ll just fill up on “reality” programming and produce new works under the disastrous contract those idiots at AFTRA agreed to, while SAG’s health and pension plans are destroyed. We’ll definitely hurt our own members, and all of our friends from other departments who work with us on the set. Yeah, I realize that SAG’s first responsibility is to its own members, but we don’t exist in a vacuum, and we have to acknowledge that fact.

A commenter on this post linked to a letter of disagreement from actor Eric Bogosian (who recently appeared in the Golden Globes-nominated Cadillac Records), which has been reprinted on Deadline Hollywood Daily:

Firstly, we are a union, we are a voting membership. The producers are a commercial entity. The people with whom we negotiate are hired guns. They can be replaced if they don’t do their job. And up to now they haven’t done a very good job finishing this contract and their bosses know it. There are major motion pictures waiting to start shooting. They cannot proceed until there is a contract (and no possibility whatsoever of a strike). AMPTP is threatening us with a punitive situation. But the sword cuts both ways. This is our strength.

Secondly, the Internet is going to be vastly profitable to the AMPTP on a scale never before seen. The costs of doing business will go way down. The middle-men in foreign markets will disappear (you don’t need a distributor when you do down-loads and streaming). And the “units” will be exactly accountable. The advertisers will know exactly how many viewers will watch the TV shows and movies downloaded or streamed. And if we do this right, so will we. Our contracts have established that we should receive a percentage of revenue as “residuals,” why are we giving that up now?

Keith Coogan (one of Wheaton’s co-stars in Toy Soldiers) himself showed up in the comments to disagree with Wheaton:

The economic situation is not likely to improve significantly in the next three years. Now is the time to fight for a fair wage and working conditions.

Is S.A.G. there to worry about the public, the producers, the studios, or their performer members? Then let’s stand tough and resolute that these terms need to be met today. There will just be another excuse to not stand tough three years down the line.

What haven’t we learned from past negotiations with producers for VHS and DVD residuals? We got punked then, and we are getting punked now.

What would the motivating factor be for those 130 actors to ask us not to authorize a strike? Maybe they aren’t actually affected by these low level deals, and rarely ever work for scale or have to rely on residuals to pay the bills.

And finally, an airman who is also an actor joined in the fray:

I’m a military man, but I’ve done some acting on the side. I’m SAG-eligible from my work on ARMwSL (Alien Robot Movie [aka the live-action Transformers movie]with Shia LeBeouf). I’ve done stage and television as well. If I had the spare cash, I would absolutely join SAG. However, I’m with [the commenter named VDO Vault] on this.

Years ago, AMPTP swore that if actors took the home video residuals at the rate they were given, they would be readdressed in the next contract. Never happened. AMPTP in the WGA negotiations asked the writer’s to take the DVD residual increases off the table and didn’t offer a SINGLE thing in return. So, my currency with believing the AMPTP is spent. They say, sure we’ll talk more about new media next time around… but in the meantime, we’d like to take force majeure away from you. It’s hard to know which direction to be facing when you bend over because there is no shortage of studios who want to frak actors in the arse.

Now, if only someone could get me those actual numbers

Australian director to carry on purple Phantom's legacy

thephantombillyzane_lWho says MySpace is irrelevant these days?

For it was Australian director Tim Boyle’s MySpace brief blog post from the wee hours of Tuesday morning that refuted an Associated Press story (which is no longer online) that trumpeted the announcement of a sequel to the 1996 movie called The Phantom was going to be made.

This fim is NOT a ‘Sequel’. It is a ‘re-luanch’ [sic] or ‘re-boot’ of the comic franchise to the big screen. This film has nothing to do with the 1996 movie.

His subsequent blog post elaborated on the film’s details:

Yes, this is a new look at the comic book hero, but rest assured – He wont be ‘heavily gadget man’ (as that is another comic book hero named Batman) and he wont be an ‘angry mob killer’ (as The Punisher -Frank Castle has been made into a film 3 times – remember the Dolph Lundgren film – that too was shot in Australia… old skool). He will be, without doubt “The Phantom.” A man who has sworn an oath to protect – but at what cost?

Garth Franklin at Dark Horizons was able to score a brief interview with Boyle, who mentioned that the plot of the film—which will be called The Phantom: Legacy—would involve two villains and star the Phantom, his love-interest Diana Walker “and their kids.” The 1996 film’s executive producer Bruce Sherlock is returning, with the rest of the production staff hailing from Sherlock’s Australian-based Sherlock Symington Productions.

Reaction to the news in the blogosphere has been to trash the idea of making a movie about The Phantom citing such facts as the film only making $17 million in the U.S. I couldn’t rightly remember the film myself, so I checked out the Tomatometer and found this very dismissive review from an unnamed writer at Rolling Stone.com:

Don’t they ever learn? every summer, Hollywood drags another hero out of comic strips, pulp novels, radio shows or video games in the hopes of creating the next Batman or Superman franchise. The result is usually something silly like The Shadow, with Alec Baldwin lurking behind a cloak. Billy Zane looks even sillier in The Phantom. We’re talking real silly, “Mighty Morphin Power Rangers” silly, “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” silly.

Personally, I don’t remember much about the original movie, but I do remember that I saw it and was entertained. Oh, and one of the tie-in promotional items was a skull ring, just like the Phantom’s and I owned two of them, one for each hand. Luckily for my sense of needing to be right all the time, I’m not the only one who remembers them.

In any case, I “friended” Boyle on MySpace, which means I’m actually going to have to start using the site again, aren’t I?

SAG vs. SAG: To strike or not to strike?

lolcat-fightIt’s getting really ugly out there—and I’m not just talking about the weather.

Over 130 of the Screen Actors Guild’s members, including heavy-hitters like George Clooney, Alan Alda, and Helen Mirren, have come out against asking for a strike authorization of the 110,000 dues-paying members, citing the unstable economy as a reason to hold off on the vote via a letter that was sent to SAG’s leadership on Monday, reports Variety.

We feel very strongly that SAG members should not vote to authorize a strike at this time. We don’t think that an authorization can be looked at as merely a bargaining tool. It must be looked at as what it is—an agreement to strike if negotiations fail.

This came right before a disastrous townhall meeting for SAG president Alan Rosenberg who was in New York City speaking to several hundred members and representatives. Board member Paul Christie told Variety:

They already realize how hard they’ve been hit financially, and the idea that we’d be asking them to go out on strike, and the idea that they’d be asking the IATSE guys, the craft services people, AFTRA guys and everybody else to go on strike at this point, we think, is just insane. I haven’t run into one person here who’s in favor.

However, lining up on the “Yes” side of the strike authorization vote question are about 31 stars, including Hal Holbrook, Mel Gibson, Martin Sheen, and Holly Hunter. This divide parallels the conflict earlier this year between the old Membership First guard and the new Unite for Strength sub-group that won 18 of the 33 board seats in the guild’s elections this summer.

The SAG Watchdog has some very interesting articles talking about these latest developments, but I have to admit that reading them without any context at all is like reading a computer software manual in in Klingon.

*sigh* When will this be over?

Official photos released for Sherlock Holmes

As seen on sites like Slashfilm and elsewhere, feast your eyes on the first two official photos from Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes, starring Robert Downey, Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as Watson.

sherlockholmesoff2
While the first one doesn’t reveal enough to speculate on the plot, this next one does, in a very obvious way:

sherlockholmesoff1
Holmes in a bare-knuckle boxing ring? What kind of case would he be on that would lead him there? This would mark the second film Ritchie’s done that involves boxing; are we going to see a thinly veiled version of Brick Top somewhere in there? I can’t wait to see more.

Relaunch of The Crow franchise to be less gothic, more documentarian

brandon-lee-the-crowIn 1994, goths and wannabe-goths flocked to the movie The Crow and made wearing eyeliner and cutting yourself cool. Over a decade and a few bad direct-to-DVD films later, Relativity Media and director Stephen Norrington are looking to resurrect the franchise with another feature film outing.

Variety has the story, which includes some details:

[Relativity production chief Tucker Tooley and original producer Ed Pressman] embraced Norrington’s vision of the antihero, which Norrington said will be different than the film [original director Alex] Proyas made.

“Whereas Proyas’ original was gloriously gothic and stylized, the new movie will be realistic, hard-edged and mysterious, almost documentary-style,” Norrington told Daily Variety.

Having enjoyed the original, I do hope they don’t mess with the story or the style too much because the source material that is James O’Barr’s comics series is dripping in bathos, which is part of the appeal of the story. You want this character to get his revenge because of how much pain he’s in.

And considering that Norrington’s last project was The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, you’d think he’s learned his lesson about straying too much from the original material by now, right?

Trisha’s Link of the Day: How to make the perfect global disaster film

With the success of Roland Emmerich’s The Day the Earth Stood Still this weekend and his upcoming 2012 focusing on the apocalyptic end of the Mayan calendar, Paul Owen from the Guardian’s Filmblog thought it would be a most excellent time to dismantle the global disaster movie genre to find out what makes it tick.

It is crucial at [the midpoint of the movie] to destroy an iconic building in a breathtaking scene you can feature in the trailer. A lot of New York’s most famous buildings have been used before, however—some more than once—but how about the Guggenheim museum? You could have it flip on to its side and roll all the way down Fifth Avenue like a wagon wheel.

The Last Airbender gets cast of unknowns

avatar-the-last-airbenderAfter an open casting call and what must have been numerous auditions from almost every kid actor to grace the Disney Channel, EW.com reported that M. Night Shyamalan has found the cast for The Last Airbender, his live action adaptation of the Nickelodeon animated series Avatar: the Last Airbender. (The “Avatar” was dropped so as not to be confused with James Cameron’s Avatar, out next Christmas.)

Taking the lead role of Aang—the 112-year old kid who has to save the world—will be an unknown named Noah Ringer who studies karate. Rounding out the cast will be Jackson Rathbone (Twilight) as Sokka, the 15-year old Water tribe warrior; Nicola Peltz (Deck the Halls) as Katara, the 14-year old Waterbender; and Jesse McCartney (former boyband member, now solo R&B musician) as Zuko, the 16-year old exiled Fire Nation prince bent on capturing Aang.

Already, there’s some Internet uproar over a predominantly Caucasian cast for the live-action adaptation of an animated series that many have claimed is “just as good or better than anime” and has many Asian themes to it. For some reason, I’m not as bothered by this as I am the Keanu Reeves story and that’s because I never became an “Avatard” like many of my friends did.

At least Shyamalan cast a kid who knows martial arts as the lead?

Related Posts: (Avatar:) The Last Airbender to hit screens in 2010

Whoa… Keanu Reeves to star in 47 Ronin

47roninI don’t know how to say this without coming across as a stereotypical knee-jerk blogger, but here goes: Keanu Reeves is going to ruin the classic Japanese legend by starring in 47 Ronin.

Damn, and I was so close…

Anyway, Variety reported that Reeves is set to star in the Universal Pictures period film set during during the Tokugawa shogunate in Japan. For those of you who have been living under a cultural rock, the tale of the 47 ronin who plotted for two years to avenge the death of their master, only to then turn around and commit honorable seppuku is a story that is based on true events and has been a part of Japan’s literary, cinematic, and television history ever since the 18th century (and is colloquially known as the Chūshingura).

Here’s the part of the Universal story where my sense of historical and literary accuracy goes haywire:

The film will tell a stylized version of the story, mixing fantasy elements of the sort seen in The Lord of the Rings pics, with gritty battle scenes akin to those in films such as Gladiator.

[Wanted screenwriter Chris Morgan] is writing the script and tailoring it so that Reeves—who’s half-Asian—can fit the role as one of the swordsmen. The intention is to begin shooting next year after a director is hired.

Fantasy elements in something that’s based on documented historic events? Changing a real person’s history just so a half-Asian man can play him in a movie? There is loads wrong with both of those statements, and I for one am not going to be a party to this.

Peter Fonda, Judd Nelson join cast of Boondock Saints 2

fonda-nelson-boondock-saints-2A press release that the Geeks of Doom obtained from DCP Boondock II Productions announced that film legend Peter Fonda and former Brat Pack-er Judd Nelson have roles in Boondock Saints 2: All Saint’s Day.

Fonda will be playing The Roman, and Nelson will be playing Concezio Yakavetta, with speculation running rampant over how Nelson’s character is related to the Mafia family that died at the hands of the two Irish brothers whose vengeance spree was being investigated by Willem Dafoe. Dafoe isn’t back in the sequel, but both Norman Reedus and Sean Patrick Flanery are, and isn’t that all that matters to the fangirls and fanboys who love this cult film? Also previously announced was the addition of Julie Benz (“Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) as a female lead, which may enrage those same fangirls who write slash fanfic about the brothers.

I haven’t been watching the Boondock Saints 2 production diaries, but I will note that they’re actively engaging the fanbase with a regular segment called “Fan Questions.” Check out the latest one with Billy Connolly, who plays the brothers’ father below:

The film’s last day of shooting was December 5.