Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Neuromancer movie moving forward with Liam Neeson and Mark Wahlberg

The movie version of William Gibson's ground-breaking book Neuromancer is apparently moving forward — the production company GFM Films has devoted an entire page to the film:

http://www.gfmfilms.co.uk/films/pre-production/neuromancer/

The other piece of info on the page? A news item confirming that Liam Neeson has been offered the role of Armitage, and Mark Wahlberg has been offered the role of Case. These are both "pay or play" offers — apparently meaning that if the film doesn't get made, Neeson and Wahlberg still get money.

For those unfamiliar with the novel, it's a staple in the cyber-punk genre, crossing the Blade Runner distopian society with Johnny Mnemonic/Ghost in the Shell net intergration. Its a massive work, setting the standard for the next 30 years in the cyber punk ethos.


Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Robot and Frank - Sundance Sleeper Hit of the Year

Frank (Frank Langella) a retired jewel thief gets a new lease on life when he is introduced to a surprising new companion. With the help of his new friend, he attempts to woo a local librarian (Susan Sarandon) and resume his criminal escapades. ROBOT & FRANK is directed by first time filmmaker Jake Schreier, written by Christopher Ford (TVs "Atom TV"), and produced by Galt Niederhoffer, Sam Bisbee, Jackie Kelman Bisbee and Lance Acord.

New Total Recall trailer - 3 Breasted Prostitute Included

Mutant Short "The Gate" Gets Full Length Treatment

From I09:

What it's about: The redundant genes in your body get activated, and mutant freaks roam the streets, thanks to pharmaceutical companies, in this weird and alarming short movie.


Status: As we reported recently, Wayfare Entertainment picked this film up for a full theatrical version, with the same director on board.

Prognosis: Just watch the original short for yourself. It's pretty nuts.



Thursday, May 24, 2012

Godzilla + Voltron – Cats = The Official Synopsis of Pacific Rim

From i09
The first official synopsis for Guillermo del Toro's monsters versus robots movie Pacific Rim is out. Boiled down, the whole thing is about giant robots piloted by different teams of humans struggling to fight strange monsters funneling out of the sea. This movie is going to be massive:

When legions of monstrous creatures, known as Kaiju, started rising from the sea, a war began that would take millions of lives and consume humanity's resources for years on end. To combat the giant Kaiju, a special type of weapon was devised: massive robots, called Jaegers, which are controlled simultaneously by two pilots whose minds are locked in a neural bridge. But even the Jaegers are proving nearly defenseless in the face of the relentless Kaiju. On the verge of defeat, the forces defending mankind have no choice but to turn to two unlikely heroes-a washed up former pilot (Charlie Hunnam) and an untested trainee (Rinko Kikuchi)-who are teamed to drive a legendary but seemingly obsolete Jaeger from the past. Together, they stand as mankind's last hope against the mounting apocalypse.

Oscar® nominee Guillermo del Toro ("Pan's Labyrinth") is directing "Pacific Rim" from a script by Travis Beacham ("Clash of the Titans"). Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni and Mary Parent are producing, with Callum Greene serving as executive producer.

The film stars Charlie Hunnam (TV's "Sons of Anarchy"), Idris Elba ("Thor"), Rinko Kikuchi ("The Brothers Bloom"), Charlie Day ("Horrible Bosses"), and Ron Perlman (the "Hellboy" films). The ensemble cast also includes Max Martini, Robert Kazinsky, Clifton Collins, Jr., Burn Gorman, Larry Joe Campbell, Diego Klattenhoff, and Brad William Henke. Del Toro's behind-the-scenes team includes Academy Award®-winning director of photography Guillermo Navarro, production designer Andrew Neskoromny, editor Peter Amundson, and costume designer Kate Hawley.

This could very well be the bigger, better, and more heartfelt Transformers. Pacific Rim is slated to come out July 2013.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Red Band Trailer: TED - (Definitely not the Ideas Worth Sharing TED)

Seth MacFarlane, Mila Kunis and a white-trash name-knowing Mark Wahlberg. This looks epic.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Bourne Legacy Official Trailer

Release Date: August 3, 2012
Director: Tony Gilroy
Screenwriter: Tony Gilroy, Dan Gilroy
Starring: Jeremy Renner, Rachel Weisz, Edward Norton, Albert Finney
Genre: Action, Thriller
Studio: Universal Pictures

The Amazing Spider-Man Trailer #2

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Archetype by Aaron Sims

The Aaron Sims Company has designed such celluloid creatures as the aliens from Green Lantern, the simians from Rise of The Planet of The Apes, and the samurai with the chain gun from Sucker Punch. Now, as a labor of love with no funding, Sims has directed Archetype, a short film about a battlefield robot whose programming is on the fritz. It's an absolutely stunning nugget of cinema.

We heard about this project, which stars Robert Joy (Land of the Dead, CSI:NY) and David Anders (Heroes, 24), several months back. What's more, he's planning a feature-length version. Here's a plot synopsis:

RL7 is an eight-foot tall combat robot that goes on the run after malfunctioning with vivid memories of once being human. As its creators and the military close in, RL7 battles its way to uncovering the shocking truth behind its mysterious visions and past.


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Friends with Kids - Kristen Wiig and Jon Hamm Comeding Again

Seriously, is there anyone not in this movie?







Thursday, January 12, 2012

Best Sci-Fi At Sundance

Safety Not Guaranteed
This film is entirely centered around the amazing internet meme of one man, a mullet and a personal ad seeking a partner for time travel. It also stars Aubrey Plaza (love her!).

Here's the plot:
Three magazine employees are sent to investigate a personal advertisement placed in the newspaper: guy seeking partner for time travel. They venture to the coast and set up a haphazard surveillance. Darius is recruited as the shill; her dry wit and cynical nature are perfectly suited to trap this enigmatic oddball, Kenneth, and get a good story. But it is she who first sees past the paranoid loner façade to the compelling person inside. The drawback? This still doesn't rule out the possibility that he just might be crazy.

Check out a behind-the-scenes with Director Colin Trevorrow:

Beautiful People - How this Sci-Fi Mashup of Caprica and Stepford Wives could Save NBC

Thought-provoking science fiction is in short supply on network TV in the U.S. — so it's a hopeful sign that NBC has ordered a pilot for Beautiful People. In this near-future-set show, human-appearing robots live among us, as the perfect slaves. What could possibly go wrong?

Here's everything you need to know about NBC's dystopian Beautiful People. Spoilers ahead...

We managed to score a look at a couple different drafts of the script of Beautiful People, which was written by former MadTV castmember Michael McDonald. Here's what we've learned.

First of all, Beautiful People is really dark, and more than a little sadistic at times. It's not at all subtle, though — it's in the grand tradition of dystopian "what if" scenarios in which a terrible injustice is being perpetrated throughout society, but somehow most people don't see it. The audience will be left in absolutely no doubt, at the end of a single episode, that these androids, or "Mechanicals," are people who deservehuman rights.

And Beautiful People manages to be a fun mashup of several other stories about artificial intelligence and society — we compared it to Caprica in our first write-up about it. But there are also echoes of Blade Runner, with a whole division of cops assigned to chase down "defective" Mechanicals who develop feelings. There's a healthy dose of Stepford Wives, as people feel free to use the beautiful, perfect-looking Mechanicals for their most obvious purpose.

The pilot begins with a long tease, in which you see a family eating breakfast, and you realize that something is weird about them but you don't know what. There's a long, slow build-up, in which we mostly follow the daughter of the family, Tina. She's an adorable little girl, who dreams about being a ballerina and picks up acorns, imagining them turning into beautiful trees.

So it's a huge shock when Tina's hit by a car, towards the end of the opening teaser. And an even bigger shock when everybody acts as though the biggest problem is that her head left a dent in the car's front bumper. What an inconvenience! "I'm worried about the car," says Tina's mom Susan afterwards. "She was pretty small. She couldn't
have caused much damage," says Tina's dad, David. Later, Susan goes to wash the blood and hair off the car's front bumper, and apologize to the driver for the accident.

This shocking event — a bright little girl being hit by a car, and everybody treating it as a minor inconvenience to the driver — resonates through the rest of the pilot, as we see how the Mechanicals are enslaved. They're constrained by Asimov's good old Three Laws of Robotics. They're destroyed if they show the slightest sign of emotion. They're even given a weird drug, called Compliance, to prevent them from having any nasty mood swings. They all have bar codes on the backs of their necks.

And yet, they're clearly people in every way that matters. They have family units, like Tina and her parents. They respond to things with real emotion. Their children have to go to school, so they can learn all the nuances of human society. (The high-end "Mechanicals" like Tina and her family have no metal parts — instead, they're more like cyborgs, with some silicon chips and plastic, but also organic parts grown from the DNA of John Does, and possibly federal prisoners as well.)

We won't give away any major spoilers about Beautiful People here — pretty much all the plot information we're mentioning was included in the first press reports about the show. But based on the pilot script, it's a fascinating dystopian thought exercise, and we'd love to see more.