Thursday, October 22, 2015

'Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse' Trailers

Today I’m giving the residents of Elm Street a two-for-one deal: two trailers; a Green Band trailer that is safe for work, and a Red Band trailer that is definitely NOT SAFE FOR WORK, both for the upcoming horror comedy Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse starring Patrick Schwarzenegger (yes, Arnold’s son).




Originally titled Boys Scouts Vs. Zombies, then Scouts Vs. Zombies, Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse is about three lifelong friends that are boy scouts who are preparing for their last campout the night after teaming with a cocktail waitress to take on a horde of zombies at a strip club.

I’ve been keeping a close eye on this one. As I’ve stated numerous times that I am tired of the zombie genre, I can’t resist this one. When it was first announced, I expected something more along the lines of The Monster Squad since it was said to be in the same vein of The Goonies. Of course, that peaked my interest because who doesn’t love The Goonies? However, I should have known it would be somewhat different since neither Monster Squad or The Goonies received an R-rating.

After viewing the trailer, I’m even more interested. Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse could be the best Zom-Com since Zombieland. Trust me: I do not say these words lightly. Now feast your eyes on the green band trailer for Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse.

Now, for those residents of Elm Street with a stronger stomach and want to see a bit more of the violent zombie carnage, here is the very NOT SAFE FOR WORK red band trailer for Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse.


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Source : http://1428elm.com/2015/08/26/scouts-guide-to-the-zombie-apocalypse-trailers

The Last Witch Hunter - Full Movie

Early on in The Last Witch Hunter, Kaulder (Vin Diesel) hotwires a series of ancient runes in order to prevent a suddenly conjured thunderstorm from tearing the plane he’s on out of the sky. You did not misread this; in the film’s universe, weather runes should not be concealed together in close quarters, lest sky tornadoes suddenly erupt. Were The Last Witch Hunter the kind of film that ran with this sort of outlandish idea, following an immortal being through various misadventures in the world of ill-applied magic, it might have proven more engaging than the film that ensues instead, one that’s every bit as generic as its misnomer of a title.




The Last Witch Hunter is ostensibly accurate (and also a commentary on the film’s likely prospects that we’ll leave to you), but then in this world it would appear that Kaulder has been the only witch hunter on Earth for quite some time. In prologue, we learn that Kaulder was one of a number of warriors tasked with destroying the queen of all witches, 800 years ago. They succeeded, but not before the queen transferred the curse of immortality to Kaulder. The Axe & Cross, a brotherhood of priests, was tasked with protecting their unkillable asset, allowing him to live through countless times in the pursuit of witches. However, there’s also an armistice between his group and the witches’ governace that allows them to live in secret, with Kaulder as their known punishment for transgression.

And that’s barely the half of it. To work through the many layers of exposition that The Last Witch Hunter unloads would take longer than this review has to get to why the film isn’t very good, so in brief: Kaulder’s latest Dolan, the title given to each priest who must protect Kaulder until their time is over, is the 36th (Michael Caine), who appears to helpfully explain the complicated universe of witch-priest relations until such time as he must perish to set the plot in motion. Once he does, the 37th (Elijah Wood) takes over, and together they set out to discover who cursed the 36th, and before long, to stop the resurgence of the Witch Queen before it can start. Joining them is Chloe (Rose Leslie), a “dreamwalker” who can enter others’ minds and…well, it’s kind of variable what happens from there, to be perfectly honest.

That’s to say nothing of the various powers and potions that end up involved, or the endless turnarounds and deceptions the film employs to cover for the very simple fact that it’s the same sort of franchise-launching, CG-heavy morass of go-nowhere incidents and overcomplicated storytelling that’s existed ever since Underworld proved that all enterprising studios need to launch a fantasy franchise is a darkened visual palette and a handful of recognizable performers. It’s a shame, too, because at the center of the fiasco is a Vin Diesel performance that serves as a reminder of how oddly charismatic the actor can be in even the most flaccid material. His one-liners, over-excessive line readings, and moments of banter with Caine enliven what’s otherwise a fairly soulless enterprise.

Aside from Kaulder it’s all the same: plot threads that go nowhere, effects setpieces that mean nothing from a “sentinel” of the witches’ prison that resembles a gigantic burning anus made of sticks to a terrifying swarm of insects that seemingly nobody in New York City has any concern about, and a plot that crumbles under even the slightest scrutiny. (A late character betrayal is such nonsense that it’s virtually impossible to avoid at least a chortle of derisive laughter, especially when it’s the second one that character commits within roughly 20 minutes of screen time.) The Last Witch Hunter is bold enough to end on the sort of note that would suggest further adventures yet to come for Kaulder, but it’s hard to imagine that much demand will follow it.

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Source : http://consequenceofsound.net/2015/10/film-review-the-last-witch-hunter

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Jack Black's 'Goosebumps' Dominates at Box Office, Weekend Number 1 Movie Earns $23.5 Million

Jack Black's 'Goosebumps' Dominates at Box Office, Weekend Number 1 Movie Earns $23.5 Million
by Wanda J Coppage   Oct 19, 2015 20:38 PM EDTShare on FacebookShare on Twitter




Jack Black's new film, Goosebumps, dominated the box office over the weekend pulling in $23.4 million as the number one movie.

The film described by UPI as a "family-friendly fright fest" tells the story of a young teen who moves to a new city and meets the girl next door, whose father turns out to be the bestselling authour R.L. Stine, known for his Goosebumps series. The storyline seems pretty normal until it's learned that Stine comes with a bit of a secret. He keeps the books that he's written concealed and locked away because when opened, the monsters in the story escaped and entered the real world. Stine, his daughter and neighbor go on mission to get the monsters back into the books so they can be forever locked in.

During an interview with ET to promote the film, Black spoke briefly on why he chose to do the chilling movie. "The script is really funny and scary and cool and awesome, and I wanted to be a part of it. I really connected with the character, R.L. Stine," he shared.

The film was released on Friday Oct. 16 and is a bit out of character for Black's usual roles, where he takes on the role of the "funny guy." For this flick, he went a little darker according to USA Today, or in his own words - "full creep." Black spoke of his past characters, comparing them to that of Stine and reportedly stated, "I've always been snuggly, the lovable loser but, this is the first time I've gone full creep."

The 46-year-old Shallow Hal actor believes that everyone has a dark side and he had to tap into his to be able to portray this character.

The film's weekend totals beat out The Martian with $21.5 million, Bridge of Spies at number 3 with $15.4 million, Crimson Peak at number 4 with $12.8 million and Hotel Transylvania 2 at number 5 with $12.3 million, according to UPI.

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Source : http://www.musictimes.com/articles/51466/20151019/jack-blacks-goosebumps-dominates-box-office-weekend-number-1-movie.htm

Sunday, June 21, 2015

'Ted 2' Releases New Family-Friendly Trailer Featuring The Thunder Buddies

The hilarious comedy Ted 2 Full Movie doesn't need much introduction. After all, the film was the 12th highest grossing movie of the year when it was released in 2012. The story of John Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) and his foul-mouthed teddy bear (Seth MacFarlane) completely charmed audiences despite its R-rating.

The film was such a commercial success that a sequel was inevitable. The raunchy sequel 'Ted 2' already has several redband trailers that were all decidedly NSFW, but Universal decided to release a more family-friendly teaser to reach a wider market.

The synopsis reads as follows:

[Seth] MacFarlane returns as writer, director and voice star of Ted 2 Online Movie, Universal and Media Rights Capital's follow-up to the highest-grossing original R-rated comedy of all time. Joined once again by star [Mark] Wahlberg and fellow 'Ted' writers Alec Sulkin & Wellesley Wild, MacFarlane produces the live action/CG-animated comedy alongside Bluegrass Films' Scott Stuber, as well as John Jacobs and Jason Clark.

'Ted 2' will mark the return of Giovanni Ribisi, Jessica Barth and Patrick Warburton. The film also stars Amanda Seyfried as Ted's lawyer, to whom he warns, "I just don't want my lawyer to be singing 'Frozen' songs during the opening argument." Other cast members include Morgan Freeman, Liam Neeson, Curtis Stigers and David Hasselhoff. MacFarlane has always expressed interest in making a 'Ted' sequel, even to the point of bypassing other animated projects. The director has famously put the 'Flintstones' reboot on hold due to several projects, one of which was 'Ted 2.'

The director did assure fans of the Hanna Barbera series that the project is not dead, but simply put on hold for the meantime. "It's been put on the backburner, so we don't know when it is going to happen," MacFarlane said. "There's no exact schedule."

“It was awkward,” Ms. Barth says. “Where should my hands be? Does my mouth need to be open, do you want to see my tongue?”

“Ted 2,” which opens June 26, demanded more. Tami-Lynn and the wisecracking Ted, now married, have arguments and emotional scenes together as they try to have a baby.

“There’s nothing there when I’m acting opposite Ted,” says Ms. Barth. “We can rehearse with a stuffed animal, or with an eye-line, which is a stick with two eyeballs on it. But when it comes time to film, they take that out, then there’s nothing.”

It’s one of the biggest changes in the acting profession since the advent of talkies. Actors must constantly summon dramatic performances while looking at scenery and co-stars that aren’t there. Directors are routinely placing actors into simulated backgrounds (replacing green or blue screens on the set) and adding digitally animated characters into filmed scenes.

An entirely new vocabulary has arisen: “Monster sticks,” “motion reference” and “consistent eye lines” are now common. Players often ply their thespian trade opposite tennis balls on a stick.

Giving convincing performances amid digital effects is essential to the success of the movie industry’s biggest blockbusters like last weekend’s Download Ted 2 Full Movie, the first film ever to sell more than $500 million in tickets in its opening weekend. Last summer’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” grossed nearly $774 million world-wide.

While expensive visual effects are a big part of these films’ global success, the stars still need to do their jobs. Pretending is what actors have always done, of course, and movies have always relied on fakery and illusion. But the sheer volume of the tricks these days is new.

Mike Chambers, chairman of the Visual Effects Society, estimates 95% of movies today employs some digital imagery. “It’s not just the big comic book, action, science fiction, disaster movies. There’s a lot of subtle things going on in a lot of movies,” he says.

In “The Social Network,” for instance, Armie Hammer appeared as both twins Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss. But during filming, another actor, Josh Pence, played a twin. Then they swapped roles and did the same scenes again. In postproduction, Mr. Hammer’s face was digitally copied onto Mr. Pence’s body to make the twins look completely identical. Mark Wahlberg, when walking alongside an animated Ted that would be added later, had to take extra-small strides to maintain the pace that a stuffed little bear would have.

Actors on soundstages often perform in front of vast sheets of green screen (sometimes blue), pretending they’re on the streets of 1920s New York, in Ancient Rome, or on another planet.

“They stand on a patch of dirt in the foreground and we put something in the background,” says Peter Baustaedter, who has created background art for films including “Watch Ted 2 Full Movie” and “Avatar.” The director can advise actors: “You’re in this beautiful valley, or you’re coming up to a Roman villa” Mr. Baustaedter says. After that, the actors are on their own: “Here’s more green for you—hope that helps.”

“You’ve just got to dig deep and really imagine it,” says Jason Clarke, who stars in “Terminator Genisys,” opening July 1. Playing John Connor in the film, Mr. Clarke has a change come over his body that he couldn’t see while he was acting the scene. He had to ask visual effects people how pained he was supposed to look.

His character in last year’s “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” confronted an army of primates.

“I’m imagining 80 apes there,” says Mr. Clarke. His strategy: “You have to go much stronger with your conviction. I find myself with the director saying, “Look, I’m gonna go big.’”

Some drama schools are adapting, adding green-screen training to the curriculum. “Actors need to be able to go onto a set and know exactly what to do. There’s no time to teach them there,” says Penny Templeton, who runs a studio in New York.

At a recent Monday night class, two actors sat on chairs on a bare stage, vivid green sheets hung behind them, reciting movie dialogue while piloting a spaceship through an asteroid field. Instructor Hank Schob, videotaping the exercise, yelled instructions like “zooming left!” and the students craned their necks, not always in sync, to watch imaginary objects fly by. “If you don’t see it, the audience won’t see it,” he told the students. Later he would insert their performances into an asteroid-field animation using off-the-shelf PC software.