Geek For E!

McG gears up for a new comedy-thriller

Time to gear up for new films, y’all. McG (Supernatural, Terminator: Salvation) is gearing up as well, and casting for his newest film is wrapped up, with filming already going on in Paris.  Ahh, Paris.

Looks like this will be a fun thrill ride kinda film, with Kevin Costner playing a retired Secret Service agent that goes out for the ever-popular “one last mission”.  The twist?  The agent will get a drug that can save his life.  Naturally, the drug has side-effects…and I’m sure hilarity ensues.  Let’s hope Costner can play the funny fall guy.  Hey, he was great in Tin Cup, so fingers crossed.

IMDb has this film listed as being titled Three Days to Kill, but that’s always subject to tweaking.  The film is slated for release in 2013, but exactly when is still up in the air (which isn’t surprising, given the usual sturm und drang of production).

More info — including the full press release — after the jump!


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Beautiful Creatures to open Valentines Day

Fans of the Caster Chronicles series will be in love this Valentine’s Day, as the film version of the first book, Beautiful Creatures, is moved to a Valentine’s Day opening.  The series (written by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl) — about a young girl who must choose between good and evil, and the boy who has a haunting connection to her  — has been called “The Next Twilight”, but I’d rather just call it a great new series for fans of gothic/paranormal YA fiction.

There are high hopes for the film franchise, but with the final book of the series, Beautiful Redemption, recently published, I’ll bet there will be a stampede of fans to the theaters.  But with Beautiful Creatures and Safe Haven both coming out on the 14th of February, what’s a romance fan to do?  Maybe it’s double-feature time?  Because as pretty as Josh Duhamel and Julianne Hough, I’m looking forward to seeing Emily Rossum, Emma Thompson and Jeremy Irons unleash some witchy whup-ass.

Read on for the full Beautiful Creatures press release!

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Movie Review: Not Fade Away

That ain’t workin’.  That’s the way you do it.  You play the guitar on the MTV.  But back in the 60s, long before music videos claimed the airwaves, Rock-n-Roll was claiming the hearts and minds of the Baby Boomers.  As the Beatles, The Rolling Stones and others climbed up the charts, countless teens decided they were going to try for a piece of stardom.  Not Fade Away looks at a group of teens and lets us follow them through their successes and failures.  It’s a moving look at how the 60s influenced not only the young, but the generation before them.  And it shows that David Chase (The Sopranos, Northern Exposure) can easily make the leap from TV to film.  Y’know, if there was ever any doubt.

Not Fade Away is an intriguing look at the changes that America went through in the 60s, from the vantage point of teenagers going through their own changes.  It reminds me of another well done film about that era, Tony Goldwyn’s A Walk On The Moon.  Except this time instead of a stir-crazy housewife, it’s stir-crazy teens that want to reach beyond their seemingly dead-end lives.  Both give a real-life vantage point look at the tumult and creativity that was going on at the time, and Not Fade Away manages to open itself up past the lead actors and take a peek at what that youthquake must have been like for the “other side”; their parents.

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Abracadabra — it’s The Incredible Burt Wonderstone!

Who didn’t want to be a magician when they were a kid?  Oh come on; you know you wished you’d gotten a letter from Hogwarts, or at least received a magic tricks box for your birthday.  The Incredible Burt Wonderstone is a film about two kids that got that birthday present…and cranked it to 11.

What really makes me want to see this is the fact that they’ve cast Steve Carell and Steve Buscemi as the grown-up kids that find their Sigfried & Roy-like Vegas life in jeopardy when young upstart Steve Gray (played by Jim Carrey) comes to town.  So basically you know you’ll get to see all three of these guys off their leash.  Which should be awesome.

Take a peek at the trailer and tell me what you think.  The Incredible Burt Wonderstone opens March 15th, 2013.

 

The Ghastly Awards: vote for 2012 winners, nominate for 2013!

Hi all!  Okay, I promised more info on the Fan Favorite award and how you could vote.  Ready?  O-kay!

Fans can vote for ALL categories, and have the final say in who gets the award for Best New Series.  If you need a refresher, here are this year’s Best New Series nominees:

Remember, I’m a judge for the awards, so I can’t help but love the Ghastlies.  But I promise not to try to sway your opinion.  (Mostly because I’m such a fan of all the nominees….)

More info on voting for the 2012 Awards, and how to nominate for 2013 after the jump!

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Free Screening passes: Zero Dark Thirty, 1/9

Hi everybody, and Happy New Year!

Let’s get this 2013 party started by dropping some free passes, hmm?  We’ve got 50 Admit-Two passes for this particular screening.  Here’s the info:

Zero Dark Thirty

Wednesday, January 9th, 7:00 pm

STUDIO: Columbia Pictures
GENRE: Thriller / Action / Drama
RELEASE DATE: 12/19/2012 LIMITED RELEASE – 1/11/2013 WIDE RELEASE
RATING DETAILS: This film has been rated R by the MPAA for STRONG VIOLENCE INCLUDING BRUTAL DISTURBING IMAGES, AND FOR LANGUAGE.
SYNOPSIS: For a decade, an elite team of intelligence and military operatives, working in secret across the globe, devoted themselves to a single goal: to find and eliminate Osama bin Laden.  Zero Dark Thirty reunites the Oscar® winning team of director-producer Kathryn Bigelow and writer-producer Mark Boal (The Hurt Locker) for the story of history’s greatest manhunt for the world’s most dangerous man.

Get the GOFOBO code after the jump!

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2012 Ghastly Award nominees announced!

Hey everyone, and happy almost-2013!  You know what that means; tons of award-type thingies.  And so, without further ado, here’s the list of the nominees for this year’s Ghastly Awards (which I always want to call The Ghastlies, because I’m ever so hip.  Stop laughing.)

The Ghastly Awards celebrates achievements in horror comics, and they’re voted on by professionals in the biz.  This coming award season there will be a new Fan Favorite category, which should be a lot of fun to peek at.  (NOTE: Yours Truly is now a judge for these awards.  So yes, I “have to” read comics now.  Oh the horror.  The wonderful, awful horror!)

The full list of nominees after the jump!

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Movie Review: Parental Guidance

Okay, it’s Christmastime.  Everyone’s running amok in the malls, or avoiding their embarassingly drunk family members (I know that’s not just me.)  You’re trying to figure out what to see at the multiplex for two or more hours of blessed silence.  So I’ll be brief; Parental Guidance should be your last choice.  All in all, it’s a sweet little film that tries hard to rise above it’s desperate slapstick and rehashed jokes, but fails in the attempt.  Sure, it cleans itself off during the last third of the film, but by then the damage has been done.

I really wanted to like this movie: Bette Midler!  Billy “I Own The Oscar Show” Crystal!  Marisa Tomei, who is under-appreciated comic gold in my humble opinion.  And yes, these stars do wonderful work here.  But it’s like gilding a dandelion; why bother adding to something you don’t want around anyway?

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Movie Review: Les Misérables

Les Misérables (or Les Miz, as all the cool kids call it) has been one of my all-time favorite musicals, and my absolute favorite stage musical.  From my first time at the West End Theater to my most recent viewing in DC, Les Miz stays just as relevant today as it did when Victor Hugo penned the original novel on which this musical is based.  Known for it’s amazing set design, breathtaking musical numbers and gorgeous songs that are like earworms to the soul (okay, you try to get “At The End Of The Day” out of your head once it’s in there.  Thought so.) Les Miz is pretty much tailor made for a sweeping, epic movie musical.  Add on megawatt stars Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway, Russell Crowe and fannish heartthrob Eddie Redmayne (My Week With Marilyn), and it’s understandable that everyone — myself included — has been chomping at the bit to grab a seat at the local multiplex and get their French Revolution on.

But then.  When director Tom Hooper (The King’s English) should pull away to show the awesomeness of the production, he instead focuses in on faces.  Thanks, but as beautiful as Hugh Jackman is, I’d rather not count the hairs in his beard, thanks everso.  It’s not that the entire film is shot at an eye-level close up, but it sure feels like it.  Strangely, this served to not draw me closer to the characters, but to pull me out of the story altogether.  It reminded me that I was indeed watching a film, rather than letting me become one with the people and places.

But let’s get into the pluses of the film, ‘cause there’s a lot of ‘em.  First off, art direction, props and set design are off the hook y’all.  This Les Miz is richly detailed, historically accurate — yes, there really was a huge plaster elephant in the middle of Paris — and paints a vivid picture of Parisian life at the time.  All this painstaking detail is one of the reasons why I wish Hooper would have pulled away from his cast a bit more often.  Because when he does go wide?  It’s breathtaking.

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Nominations Announced for the 3rd Annual Streamy Awards

I know; I hadn’t heard of these awards either.  But hey, they’re honoring “excellence in original online video programming”, and that’s always a good thing.  Gotta say I’m already rooting for a few of my favorites, like My Drunk Kitchen, The Walking Dead’s webisodes Cold Storage, and of course the awesomeness of The Guild.

Wanna learn more about the best of the best online?  read more about the honorees after the jump!  It’s a long list y’all….

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