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Keanu Reeves hints The Matrix 4 and 5

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The Matrix

Could we be getting a new pair of Matrix sequels? Keanu Reeves apparently says so, with the Wachowskis reportedly even chatting to James Cameron about The Matrix 4 and 5…

Now, here's a franchise we considered done and dusted, having battered itself into the ground with a pair of unnecessarily pretentious sequels (even though there's fun to be had with them).

For The Matrix trilogy never came close to matching the inventiveness, quality and sheer entertainment of the original with anything that followed, and once the back-to-back follow-ups had been and gone, it seemed that few had the inclination to give the Wachowski Brothers any more money to make any more.

Yet, that day may yet happen.

At an event in London to promote his newly released movie, Henry's Crime, Keanu Reeves - according to a report at AintItCool - said that "he met the Wachowskis (no emphasis on the word brothers), for lunch over Christmas and stated that they had completed work on a two picture script treatment that would see him return to the world of the matrix as Neo".

The report continues, suggesting that the Wachowskis had met up with James Cameron, "to discuss the pros and cons of 3D", and "are looking to deliver something which has never been seen again".

Reeves, seemingly acknowledging the problems with The Matrix sequels, also apparently said that "he swears this time that the treatment will truly revolutionise the action genre like the first movie".

That's a fair amount to digest.

Firstly, it should be noted that this is a pinch-of-salt piece at the moment. There's not a whisper of official confirmation, nor have we heard from anyone else at the event where Reeves was reported to utter all of the above.

If it is true, though, then a few things. Firstly, appreciating that it's in vogue to slam 3D at every opportunity, a deployment of the technology in the selective manner of Tron: Legacy might actually serve a Matrix sequel well.

Secondly, why two films? Didn't The Matrix franchise (along with the Pirates Of The Caribbean saga) go off the rails when the people behind it were trying to juggle two massive back-to-back productions?

And thirdly, the Wachowskis. Let's assume that it is the Wachowski Brothers that are being referred to. Since Bound and The Matrix in the 1990s, the problem here is that they've not made a compelling film. We quite enjoyed Speed Racer, and it was visually brilliant, but a proper, interesting three-act movie it was not.

Do the Wachowski Brothers have it in them to make a groundbreaking movie again? Most are lucky to manage to do so once in their lives. We'd be happily surprised if they could do it again.

The full report can be found at AICN here, and we'll be fascinated to read what you make of all of this in the comments below...

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Kick-Ass 2 rumours denied

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Jane Goldman

Jane Goldman isn’t currently writing a screenplay for Kick-Ass 2. Despite what The Daily Mail might have said…

For a newspaper that supposedly vehemently disapproves of Jonathan Ross and Jane Goldman so much, The Daily Mail continues to devote a fair amount of coverage to them. The latest was a piece which it's now uploaded to its website, citing "the bizarre truth about a very peculiar family".

As it turns out, the "bizarre truth" actually sounds like tittle-tattle from one of the neighbours, a "family friend" and "close sources" when you actually read the article. But why let that get in the way of an agenda?

The articles cites the fact that they have a Twitter page for one of their pets, that Ross and Goldman's daughter locked herself out of her flat, that their dogs sleep on the bed and that Jane Goldman sometimes spends the whole day in her pyjamas.

Well, blimey. It's a good job The Daily Mail exists to expose such behaviour. The world would be in real shit otherwise.

Anyway, the point of this story: the article in question says that "she is currently writing the sequel to her controversial film Kick-Ass".

There are two things wrong with that statement. Firstly, Kick-Ass wasn't ‘her' film. She co-wrote it with director Matthew Vaughn, based on the comic book from Mark Millar and John Romita Jr. (The article later notes that Kick-Ass is based on a "cartoon". Sigh).

And then there's the small matter of the fact that she isn't writing it at the moment. Goldman confirmed this on her Twitter feed (ironic, given that The Daily Mail clearly had a lot of fun poking around in it), where last night she wrote, "Saw a few erroneous reports today that I'm currently writing Kick Ass 2 script - sorry if anyone's disappointed, but not true. Currently writing for 2 other projects, then on to lovely Matthew V's next thing (right now, looks unlikely to be KA2) when X-Men post-prod' ends."

(Matthew V being Matthew Vaughn, who is currently finished off X-Men: First Class.)

Kick-Ass 2 is by no means a certainty for the big screen, especially given that Chloe Moretz may yet be too old for the role of Hit-Girl by the time everyone's schedules free up. But here's hoping...

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Joe Manganiello in the Superman running?

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Joe Manganiello in the Superman running?

Could one of the stars of True Blood be leading the Superman race? Joe Manganiello might just be near the front of the race to play the Man of Steel…

Now that we've got the casting of The Dark Knight Rises' villains out of the way, the next big comic book movie casting conundrum centres around who's going to be pulling on the blue tights in Zack Snyder's upcoming Superman reboot.

With the film set to go before the cameras later this year, whoever is the new Superman is likely to need a few months of training, and we'd wager that the casting announcement isn't too far away.

An intriguing Tweet from the usually very-well-connected Los Angeles Times seems to now be pointing in favour of True Blood star, Joe Manganiello, too. He's been one of the candidates for some time now, but the Tweet - which we picked up via Moviehole - says, "Is "True Blood" werewolf star Joe Manganiello a frontrunner to play Superman? That's the rumor du jour in Hollywood #superman."

Read into that what you will. What makes it more intriguing that the usual Internet chatter on this particular matter is the source of it. We'll wait and see whether it comes true...

Moviehole

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The Golden Raspberry Awards 2011 nominations

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2011 Razzie nominations

The Last Airbender leads this year’s Razzie nominations, as Hollywood gets ready to celebrate the worst of 2010’s movies…

On the day before the Oscar nominations, it’s traditional that The Golden Raspberry Awards get in first, and put forward their selection for the very worst movies that 2010 had to offer.

Thus, we’ve got the list for the 2011 Razzies, which don’t make very good reading if your name is M Night Shyamalan, if you’re involved in The Twilight Saga, or if you acted in Valentine’s Day

WORST PICTURE

The Bounty Hunter
The Last Airbender
Sex & The City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck

WORST ACTOR

Jack Black (Gulliver’s Travels)
Gerard Butler (The Bounty Hunter)
Ashton Kutcher (Killers and Valentine’s Day)
Taylor Lautner (Twilight Saga: Eclipse and Valentine’s Day)
Robert Pattinson (Remember Me and Twilight Saga: Eclipse)

WORST ACTRESS

Jennifer Aniston (The Bounty Hunter, The Switch)
Mylie Cyrus (The Last Song)
Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis & Cynthia Nixon (Sex & The City 2)
Megan Fox (Jonah Hex)
Kristen Stewart (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)

WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Jessica Alba (The Killer Inside Me, Little Fockers and Valentine’s Day)
Cher (Burlesque)
Liza Minnelli (Sex & The City 2)
Nicola Peltz (The Last Airbender)
Barbra Streisand (Little Fockers)

WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Billy Ray Cyrus (The Spy Next Door)
George Lopez (Marmaduke, The Spy Next Door and Valentine’s Day)
Dev Patel (The Last Airbender)
Jackson Rathbone (The Last Airbender and Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Rob Schneider (Grown Ups)

WORST EYE-GOUGING MIS-USE Of 3-D (Special Category for 2010!)

Cats & Dogs 2: Revenge Of Kitty Galore
Clash Of The Titans
The Last Airbender
Nutcracker 3-D
Saw 3-D

WORST SCREEN COUPLE / WORST SCREEN ENSEMBLE

Jennifer Aniston & Gerard Butler (The Bounty Hunter)
Josh Brolin’s Face & Megan Fox’s Accent (Jonah Hex)
The Entire Cast of The Last Airbender
The Entire Cast of Sex & The City 2
The Entire Cast of Twilight Saga: Eclipse

WORST DIRECTOR

Jason Friedberg & Aaron Seltzer (Vampires Suck)
Michael Patrick King (Sex & The City 2)
M. Night Shyamalan (The Last Airbender)
David Slade (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Sylvester Stallone (The Expendables)

WORST SCREENPLAY

The Last Airbender (written by M. Night Shyamalan, based on the TV series created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Brian Konietzko)

Little Fockers (written by John Hamburg and Larry Stuckey, based on characters created by Greg Glenna & Mary Roth Clarke)

Sex & The City 2 (written by Michael Patrick King, based on the TV series created by Darren Star)

Twilight Saga: Eclipse (screenplay by Melissa Rosenberg, based on the Novel by Stephenie Meyer

Vampires Suck (written by Jason Friedberg & Aaron Seltzer)

WORST PREQUEL, REMAKE, RIP-OFF or SEQUEL (Combined Category for 2010)

Clash Of The Titans
The Last Airbender
Sex & The City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck!

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10 videogames to look forward to 2011

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There’s an entire army of inbound videogames on the horizon, but which are worth tackling? Here’s Harry’s pick of the 10 games to look forward to in 2011...

Here we are, in the distant future, whizzing around in our jet cars, wearing silver jumpsuits and eating all of our food in capsule form.

Okay, so 2011 may not be quite as exciting as people thought in the 60s, but you know, there are some pretty good games coming out this year. And if you wanted a silver jumpsuit, you could make one out of tin foil and CDs.

Child Of Eden

Tetsuya Mizuguchi, the genius behind Rez, returns to the rhythm action genre with Child Of Eden, a masterful blend of music, sound and waving your arms about. Rez was a hypnotic marvel, a Winamp visualisation brought to life through a few controller presses. Child Of Eden carries on in the same vein, but places you in the centre of the action. It's basically whack-a-mole on acid with a trippy techno soundtrack and utterly beautiful colours. Oh the colours.

The Witness

Jonathan Blow's enigmatic follow up to the brain bending platform puzzler Braid is set to be another head scratcher. Details are sparse, with the game's site consisting of a cryptic poem and a development blog that's well worth a read for anyone with even a passing interest in the mechanics of game design. All we know for sure is that the game is set on an uninhabited island and will feature puzzles. Braid's blend of time manipulation and intense narrative made it a huge sleeper hit in 2008 – expect The Witness to be even bigger.

Brink

Running, shooting, jumping, the holy triumvirate of modern videogames, brought together in a vastly customisable future cops versus rebels setting, and built by a team with vats and vats of multiplayer experience under its collective belt. I mean, fine, it was in the corresponding list last year, but it's not my fault that release dates change, is it? What hasn't changed is how exciting Brink looks. At the 2010 Eurogamer Expo, the queues to get to play the game stretched further than any other. Brink, if it ever comes out, will be something special.

Deus Ex: Human Revolution

A prequel to what is widely recognised as one of the best games of all time, Human Revolution has been wowing gamers ever since it was announced many moons ago. Set to continue the trend set by the original, the game will allow players to choose their own way to play, guiding their super augmented, trench coated spy around a game world that owes a debt to the grim, smog stained vistas of Blade Runner. Deus Ex looks set to be the adult, exciting science fiction title that we've all been waiting for.

LA Noire

Not content with scooping up game of the year awards left, right and centre in 2010 with Red Dead Redemption, Rockstar has got its sights firmly set on the 2011 crown as well. A long time coming, LA Noire takes place in a perfectly realised 1940s Los Angeles, and features some of the most convincing character models that this, or any other generation of games, has ever seen. The game looks to be an evolution of the formula Rockstar has been perfecting since GTA 3, so you can expect a mature thriller, with lots of grizzled men in trilbys saying things about ‘dames’ and ‘broads’.

Portal 2

Multiplayer Portal is the stuff that feverish, brain bending nightmares are made of. The original Portal was a masterstroke of narrative, geek-ensnaring characters and utterly maddening puzzles, and if Valve's track record is anything to go by, we can expect the sequel to be even better. From what we've seen, Portal 2 builds on the rock solid foundations of the original, taking the players out of the testing areas and into a brave new world. And GLaDOS is back, which will probably end in tears.

The Legend Of Zelda: Skyward Sword

It's a new Zelda game – what's not to get excited about? The game sees Link living in the clouds, and using the titular sword to travel between his sky-based home and another world underneath, populated by monsters. 1:1 sword movements are promised, using the Wiimote Plus, and as with every Zelda game, there'll be a compelling story, plenty of goo to fight, things to find in long grass and lots of stylish green hats.

Killzone 3

One of the PS3's killer apps returns for another outing, this time in MIND BLOWING 3D. Or non-mind blowing 2D, if that's more your thing. Killzone 2 was a perfectly crafted console FPS, with some astounding visuals and a multiplayer mode that it was shockingly easy to lose yourself in. The sequel bursts onto the scene promising more bombast, more explosions, more polygons and more manly grunting and gun shooting. If you're looking for subtlety, looking elsewhere would be advisable, but if sweaty men lugging heavy artillery around is your goal, Killzone 3 will sate your lust.

Mass Effect 3

The final act in BioWare's epic space opera, Mass Effect 3, sees Shepard take the fight back to Earth. Details are slim at the moment, with the game only tentatively slated for a holiday 2011 release date. That could mean it'll be on the Games To Look Out For In 2012 list, but hey, if any game's worth two lists, it's going to be Mass Effect 3. There will be tough choices to make, there will be aliens to shoot, there will be treachery and inter-species love making and you may or may not save the universe at the end of it all. Just wait and see.

Duke Nukem Forever

It feels ridiculous saying this, kind of like a grown man admitting that he believes in Santa, but Duke Nukem Forever is actually coming out this year. Personally, I won't believe it until I have a copy in my hand, but box shots exist, a release date has been set and the world will finally see a game that began development over a decade ago. The story of how we got to this point is an article all of its own, but the Duke deserves his place on this list simply because the vast majority of us never thought this game would see the light of day.

Nobody's allowed to mention Too Human though, got it?

Click here for a list of ALL the lists at Den Of Geek...

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Release date and stunning new trailer arrive for Rockstar’s LA Noire

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Rockstar’s long-awaited sandbox thriller, LA Noire, gets a release date, as well as a spectacular trailer, which you can see within…

I don’t normally go weak at the knees over every advance in graphical realism in videogames – let’s face it, such things usually slip by unnoticed after a few minutes’ play – but the quite remarkable digital faces in LA Noire have really got my attention.

Far from the computer-generated, stiff-jawed ghouls we’ve been subjected to in numerous other games, the characters in LA Noire actually look and behave like the actors who play them – Mad Men’s Aaron Staton is immediately recognisable as the game’s protagonist, Cole Phelps, and the other players in Rockstar’s upcoming interactive thriller are all similarly capable of expressing proper, identifiable facial expressions.

The studio’s startling usage of cutting-edge technology would be meaningless without a decent game behind it, and LA Noire looks as though it excels in this department, too, offering a sandbox 1947 LA to explore, and a crazed sociopath to track down.

The new trailer, which you can see below, is made up entirely of in-game footage, and it looks quite brilliant. After almost six years in development, we’re relieved to learn that we won’t have to wait too much longer for the game to appear, either – LA Noire is set for release on 20 May for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.

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How movie posters reflect Hollywood's falling confidence in 3D

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Selling 3D

Just a year ago, 3D was being trumpeted loud and proud on movie posters. But now? Hollywood appears to be less convinced that 3D is the selling point it once was. As these posters show…

3D has, since Avatar put it at the top of movie studios' agenda a little over a year ago, gone on something of a dramatic journey. We've seen studios stumble over themselves to slap 3D on their movies, even if they weren't shot with that in mind. And we've seen sloppily executed 3D, if not murdering the potential golden goose, then at least chopping one of its legs off.

And as such, there's still an ongoing 3D backlash. Cinemagoers have rightly questioned why they have to pay a premium for their ticket for little obvious benefit (latest case in point: The Green Hornet), while sales of 3D televisions have demonstrated little enthusiasm from consumers to bring the technology into their homes (and buy their films again in another format for the umpteenth time).

Hollywood desperately needs James Cameron to get Avatar 2 to cinema screens a lot faster than he is doing (2014 is the earliest we'll see it), to give the chances of 3D a shot in the arm, and pacify the worries of many cinemas that have invested in upgrading their screens to support the technology.

In the meantime, Hollywood has come to slowly appreciate that 3D isn't the selling point it was a year ago. And nowhere is that better manifested than in the changing faces of posters. A year ago, 3D was deemed as a massive selling point. But progressively, it's becoming more and more downplayed.

Let's, first of all, go back to 2009, in the months building up to Avatar. Here, you can see we have DreamWorks pushing the 3D of Monsters Vs Aliens back in early 2009. It might be at the bottom of the poster, but it's bold and obvious. (Fox took a similar approach with the same year's Ice Age: Dawn Of The Dinosaurs.)

Pixar's Up wasn't far behind, and by the time the UK poster rolled around, 3D, which was tucked away in the bottom right hand corner on earlier posters, was now worthy of a poster of its own. (DreamWorks had done a similar thing with the aforementioned Monsters Vs Aliens, incidentally.)

In general, it was animated movies leading the 3D charge here (Disney's Bolt is another example, as is Coraline), along with a couple of purpose-built horror films (The Final Destination, for example).

Thus, as we headed towards the end of 2009, with cinemas upgrading their screens as fast they could to capitalise, Fox rolled out its promotion for Avatar.

And here's the thing. Considering that Avatar has been the commercial poster child for 3D, there's barely a mention of it on the film's posters. Don't believe us? Check out a selection of the posters that were issued for the film. Only when the special edition rolled out in cinemas in the summer of 2010 did 3D make it to any kind of prominence. But here are three different posters for the theatrical release, and 3D gets blink-and-you-miss-it prominence.

Once Avatar started making substantial cash, though, particularly with a high proportion of its revenue coming from 3D screens, other studios weren't shy about capitalising. The film that ousted Avatar from 3D screens was Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland, and as the promotion for that film progressed, so did the focus on 3D. It peaked with the banner you see below.


However, with Alice, the first solid murmurings of 3D dissent were coming. Fitted with a post-production 3D bolt-on, Alice's extra dimension was pretty much non-existent to most, leaving them wondering why they'd spent an extra few quid to wear some silly glasses.

Yet, if there were murmurings with Alice, it got worse with Clash Of The Titans. Identified as a turning point in how many saw big screen 3D, Warner Bros infamously delayed the release of the film by a week or two, and ordered a post-production 3D job to be done in a matter of weeks. The 3D was, inevitably, terrible, and the reaction to it is likely to have been instrumental in Warner Bros' decision not to press ahead with a late 3D add-on for Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1.

Before Clash Of The Titans was released, though, the 3D was still being seen as a massive, massive selling point. Just check out the prominence here.



And here.

As you can see, none of the film's stars can get their name on the poster, let alone above it. 3D? It's being sold as the star of the show.

Paramount's Razzie-magnet The Last Airbender was next to pick up the mantle, ultimately making similar mistakes in the way the film's 3D had been handled. But again, the promotion was pushing it as a major selling point. In this case, it's even presented to appear as part of the film's title:

It's around about there, understandably, that the tide started to really turn. And when you factor in, too, that the summer's biggest films either failed to make convincing use of 3D (Toy Story 3) or avoided it altogether (Inception), the penny had started to drop with audiences. And to some, rather than 3D being a selling point on a poster, they were seeing it as a warning.

This presented a conundrum for Sony. It had Resident Evil: Afterlife coming out, which had been shot from start to finish in 3D, using Avatar's technology. The studio decided to push ahead and sell the film's 3D element hard.

Nobody, outside Lionsgate with Saw 3D, has really tried in quite the same way since. Why? Well, while Afterlife and Saw 3D did solid business, the argument is that both were running as much off the fumes of their respective franchises, rather than bringing in fresh faces due to the 3D itself. That's not to say that 3D didn't give them a revenue boost. Rather that fewer and fewer people are specifically hunting down 3D screenings of films they want to see.

The trend now, as a consequence of the rise and fall of 3D in moviegoers' eyes, is that films that were once trumpeting it as a feature in earlier posters, are now relegating the fact. Appreciating that there are international variations that sell things in slightly different ways, nonetheless, have a look at these earlier posters for Drive Angry and The Green Hornet (the latter being an international poster).

Now take a look at the latest posters, which take into account that the 3D in films such as Chronicles Of Narnia: Voyage Of The Dawn Treader, Legends Of The Guardians: The Owls Of Ga'Hoole, Gulliver's Travels and My Soul To Take have all failed to beat a path to box office glory.



What's particularly interesting is that Drive Angry was actually shot in 3D, and thus, you'd think has the right to call it a proper selling point. Yet, market forces make promoting it that way more of a risk than it was when the film was commissioned. The Green Hornet's 3D, meanwhile, was constantly underplayed in the US and UK.

Just going back for a second to Voyage Of The Dawn Treader, the posters there prove that six months is a long time in movie marketing. The first poster here was released as a teaser in the spring of 2010, while the latter one, which only mentioned 3D if you bother to squint and spot it, was released around six months later.

So, what should we conclude?

Basically, it seems that, while 3D isn't off the radar altogether, those at the promotions and marketing end of the movie business have got the message: 3D just isn't a selling point any more, courtesy both of market saturation and Hollywood's insistence on deploying the technology willy-nilly.

3D is far from dead, and it'd be wrong to write it off. Used effectively, in the likes of Avatar, Tron: Legacy, Coraline, A Christmas Carol and How To Train Your Dragon, it can genuinely work. Slapped on as an afterthought, though, to a production that wasn't designed and shot with 3D in mind, and yet more parts of the golden goose will be carved up.

The year ahead sees no shortage of 3D movies, mind. Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2, The Green Lantern, Cars 2, Thor, Captain America, Spy Kids 4, The Smurfs, Final Destination 5, Piranha 3DD, The Three Musketeers, Alvin And The Chipmunks: Chiprecked, Scorsese's Hugo Cabret And The Adventures Of Tintin: The Secret Of The Unicorn are all leading the charge. But few are screaming about their 3D in the early promotions for them.

Yet the long term future of 3D might just be in their hands. For Hollywood needs 3D to work, to open up a fresh revenue streams and new ways to reissue and sell us the old films.

If it had its way, Avatar 2 would be fast-tracked to give the 3D fad a massive shot in the arm. But that's not going to happen. Instead, 3D's short to medium term future rests of a collection of films, the majority of which have taken the post-production 3D route, rather than committing to it from the start.

It's hard to see, with that in mind, whether the seventy percent-plus of us who sought out Avatar in 3D just over a year ago will be bothering again any time soon, let along buying a 3D telly and 3D Blu-rays when we get home. And it's going to take something really quite compelling to turn the tide back in 3D's direction.

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Paul review

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Paul

Simon Pegg and Nick Frost reunite in Paul, a new comedy about two nerds taking a road trip with an alien. Here's our review...

Ever get the feeling a film's been made just for you? That's the way I felt about Shaun Of The Dead when I first saw it. It hit me at exactly the right time. In my teens I was in the relative twilight of my serious film watching career, and I'd spend a lot of time working through the critical canon. One weekend would be the Scorseses, the next would be the Kubricks.

In the year leading up to the release of Shaun Of The Dead, I'd broadened out into the cult classics, and had watched An American Werewolf In London, Dawn Of The Dead, Suspiria, and the Evil Dead trilogy for the first time in a very short time period. So, when Shaun Of The Dead arrived, my tiny geek brain was completely primed to be utterly blown away by it. And it was.

Then when Hot Fuzz was released, I was so excited to find yet another film that scratched an itch I had that I didn't realise needed to be scratched: an affectionate and impeccably constructed parody-cum-love letter to the brainlessly sadistic and violent action bromances that I would stay up and watch (heavily edited, of course) on late-night ITV as an excitable, hormone-addled 14-year-old boy. Of course, it turns out that, many years later, there's still a hormone-addled 14-year-old boy inside of me.

Yeah, there's probably a better way of saying that.

So, why, in the lead up to Paul, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost's first film together since Hot Fuzz, have I felt so chilly towards it?

Is it because I don't have the affection for the genre its parodying (alien movies) that I do towards eighties action and zombie horror? Is it because the trailers and advance clips have all been decidedly underwhelming? Is it because Edgar Wright wasn't involved? Is it because Simon Pegg's post-Hot Fuzz film career has been a mixed bag? Is it because the premise of two nerds discovering a wisecracking alien and embarking on a road trip sounds like an idea so banal that Rob Schneider would probably turn it down? It's probably a combination all of the above, to be honest.

Maybe this litany of quibbles meant that I lowered my expectations to such a degree that it was always going to be the case that the film exceed them. But even with that in mind, in all honestly, I can say I had a really great time with Paul.

If you're not familiar with the premise of the film by now, it's this: two comic book nerds (Simon Pegg and Nick Frost) on their way back from the San Diego Comic-Con decide to embark on a tour of reputed UFO crash sites. Whilst on their travels, they encounter Paul (voiced by Seth Rogen), an alien who has escaped from Area 51 and is looking to return to his home planet via a pick-up point all the way over on the East Coast. Paul hitches a ride in the boys' RV as they make their way cross-country, whilst dodging FBI agents, religious fundamentalists and crazed hillbillies.

Let's get one thing straight, first of all. It's not in the same league as Shaun Of The Dead or Hot Fuzz. The film references aren't as sharply implemented, the character development is distinctly shallower, with the emotional wallop of Shaun Of The Dead , in particular, being completely absent, and the action scenes definitely miss Edgar Wright's orange Smartie-addled kinecticism, and feel a little bit underdone as a result.

On a purely laugh-by-laugh basis, however, it's easily the equal of the 'Blood and Ice Cream' films. The phrase laugh-a-minute is often used, yet rarely appropriate, but I'd certainly say it's applicable in the case of Paul. From the moment our heroes walk on screen accompanied by a couple of orcs from Lord Of The Rings, to the nicely understated final line that undercuts the bombastic finale in typical Pegg/Frost fashion, there's barely any downtime between the chuckles.

After watching a fair amount of average-to-terrible comedies in recent months (thanks, Den Of Geek!), it was a real pleasure to watch a comedy film with a script that is as impressively tight as Paul's. There are barely any clunkers in the film's 105 minute running time, and all of the best elements of Pegg's previous scripts - the running gags, the wordplay, and yes, the film references - are all present, correct, and brilliantly funny.

The film is R-rated, but never exploits its adult rating by including crude and wilfully offensive content just for the sake of it. It's also a pleasure to see a Hollywood comedy that packs its supporting cast out with funny people (including Jason Bateman, Kristen Wiig, David Koechner, Bill Hader, and Jeffrey Tambor), and then actually gives them funny things to say, rather than saving up all of the best gags for the lead players.

If Paul didn't actually work as a character, then the film would be in big trouble, and I'll admit that when he first steps out of the shadows and speaks with Seth Rogen's voice, I instinctively thought, "This is never going to work." However, due to some impressively emotive CGI (using a Serkis-esque mo-cap performance) and some good writing (Paul is probably the best developed character in the film), it wasn't long before I came around, and Paul is as well realised as you would ever want a foul-mouthed wisecracking alien to be.

Of course, most people won't be going to see this for Paul. They'll be going for Pegg and Frost and their uniquely geeky brand of awkward homo-eroticism. They are both still immensely watchable, and as a double act they have a chummy chemistry that is pretty much unmatched by any screen comedy duo right now.

One thing that I think many people may accuse Pegg and Frost of is that they are playing it safe, that they've begun playing to the gallery with some of the more self-consciously ‘geeky' stuff. Admittedly, they've always been heavy on the film references/fan service, but it's a little more on the nose here than in their previous outings.

Put it this way: pretty much everyone who reads this site will be extremely familiar with all of the films that are parodied in Paul. It's not like it descends into Friedberg and Seltzer territory, but it is a bit less subtle than we've come to expect from them. And while they're as charming and funny as ever here, they have essentially been playing variations of the same characters for three films and a TV series now. It's hard to say whether they will be able to keep it going as it is for many more films.

As a result, it will be interesting to see where they take their double act next, firstly in Spielberg's Tintin and then in The World's End, the third part in Wright/Pegg's 'Blood and Ice Cream' trilogy.

To paraphrase Nigel Tufnel, though, that's just nitpicking, isn't it?

Paul is one of the funniest comedies to hit cinemas in a while, with an enviable gag:hit ratio, great performances and some surprisingly great FX work. Time will tell if the Pegg/Frost double act has the mileage to become one of the great screen double acts, but right now, they're three for three.

4 stars

Follow Paul Martinovic on Twitter @paulmartinovic, or for more film babble check out his blog here.

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Music in the movies: Score round-up

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Music in the movies: film scores reviewed

In this week’s Music in the movies, Glen provides the first in an occasional series of soundtrack round-ups, including themes from Monsters, Brighton Rock and Black Swan...

This is the first in, hopefully, a series of score round-ups that will form entries into this column. It's a slight change of direction from the usual recaps of great composers, but allows me to cover material that may not fit into that format.

Here are reviews for some scores and soundtracks, released over the last month or so,  that I have been listening to:


The Next Three Days - Danny Elfman

I've covered Danny Elfman's collaborations with Tim Burton here and it's his collaborations with the director that have largely defined his career. So, it's always nice to see him break away every now and then and compose material for non-Burton projects.

Like the film for which it accompanies, Elfman's score here is solid, rather than outstanding. It hits the action beats when required, particularly with the track It's On, but largely, this is a moody atmospheric piece that provides moments of introspection and tension to what is essentially a physiological thriller, rather than the action-packed film the promotional material would lead you to believe.

The soundtrack album also features two tracks by Moby, which fit in really well alongside Elfman's score. Be The One was written specifically for the film and finds Mr Richard Melville Hall doing a rather fine Lou Reed impression over the top of his usual electronic backing. It plays out in a key scene in the film and has a similar impact to when his music was used in the Bourne series. The other track of his that features is Mistake from his album Wait For Me.

It's a solid enough release and is available through Silva Screen.

3 stars


Brighton Rock - Martin Phipps

Martin Phipps is a composer whose work I'm not overly familiar with, but have heard pieces on TV and film over the years. His score for the latest adaptation of Graham Greene's novel is very, very dramatic and listened to in isolation seems quite overbearing.

I haven't had the benefit of listening to it accompanying the film to hear how well it works there, but on numerous listens, I'm struggling to understand how it would accompany the 1964 Mods Vs Rockers setting of the picture.

Phipps' score features choral work heavily and sounds as if it would more appropriately accompany a religious epic. Of course, Greene's novel has Catholicism at the heart of the central characters', driving their actions and moral stance, so, in some ways, the religious tone is appropriate. However, I can't help but feel that overall it could have been handled with a little more subtlety.

I'll wait to see how it works within the context of the film before writing it off completely, but as a standalone listen I can't see myself returning to it often.

The score for Brighton Rock is available through Silva Screen from February 7th.

2 stars


Monsters - Jon Hopkins

Monsters is a film that was one of my favourites of last year. Whilst I would acknowledge that it's not a film for everyone, it's a remarkable achievement and a film that I found to be utterly compelling from start to finish.

Going in, I wasn't expecting a great score, having been unfamiliar with Hopkins' work beyond his production on albums for the likes of Eno, Massive Attack etc, but was pleasantly surprised. It's a perfect backdrop to the film, considered, contemplative and really quite beautiful.

However, as good and effective as it is accompanying the film, it's something of an uneven listen away from it. This is largely down to the effective soundscapes Hopkins has created to accentuate the scenes that feature the creatures of the film not making appealing listening, for me at least, removed from the film.

That aside, there are some excellent moments and it plays out like a decent post rock album with an exquisite pay off. Monsters Theme is a fantastic finale that makes everything that preceded it worthwhile. Full of shimmering guitars and delicate melodies, it really does capture the romantic spirit of the film.

Based on this, I hope that Hopkins goes on to score many more films. The dream would be for him to strike up a creative partnership with Gareth Edwards similar to that of Clint Mansell and Darren Aronofsky. Hopkins building on the themes explored here for an Edwards-directed Godzilla is a very exciting prospect.

I couldn't find a physical copy of the score, but it's available on iTunes and is released via Domino Records.

4 stars


Faster - Clint Mansell

Clint Mansell is my favourite composer working today, having produced a number of my favourite scores of the last ten years and all time. I eagerly anticipate the release of new material by him and often have to experience it for the first time without the benefit of the film it accompanies, due to international release dates, as is the case here.

Like the score covered above, this is another that seems to take inspiration from post-rock's big hitters. But, whereas the score above recalled Explosions In the Sky's introspective and emotional sensibilities, this is a different beast entirely and plays out as though Mogwai are covering Drum's Not Dead by Liars, which is most definitely a good thing. Pounding schizophrenic rhythms with heavy rock guitars create a damn exciting, pulse pounding score.

There are milder moments with nice use of strings and piano passages, but it's the all out action pieces that I've returned to the most since owning this release. Perhaps not up there with his work on the likes of The Fountain, Moon and Requiem For A Dream, it offers a nice change of pace and direction. More action scores from Mr Mansell would be greatly appreciated.

The soundtrack for Faster is available now through Lakeshore Records and you should buy it now. It's ace.

4 stars


Black Swan - Clint Mansell

The fifth collaboration between Mansell and Aronofsky has seen another fantastic score, albeit one that won't be rewarded by the Academy because of its basis in Tchaikovsky's music for the classic ballet which forms the foundation for the film itself. Mansell is long overdue recognition, having been overlooked for much of his work to date, so it's a shame that a score of such quality will again be overlooked due to the Academy's prohibitive rules regarding eligibility for the best original score category.

Although the basis for the score is Tchaikovsky's compositions, there is plenty of originality here. Mansell has created a much darker, ominous, tone to the existing pieces, as well as composing a number of original cues. This isn't simply a case of taking existing work and appropriating it wholesale. This is undeniably a Mansell score from start to finish.

What starts off as a quite delicate and light score soon develops into a work of foreboding and menace which unsettles and delights in equal measure. There were moments on my first listen that I jumped out of my skin, which is a little embarrassing, considering I was at work at the time.

Diehard fans of Tchaikovsky's and the ballet Black Swan may not be fully taken by this reimagining, but for fans of film scores and Mansell's, this should prove to be an absolute delight. It further solidifies Mansell's standing as one of the finest composers working today.

The score for Black Swan is available through Sony Masterworks and is a must buy.

5 stars


If you feel that there are any scores that have been released or are coming out that should be included in future entries in the series, please comment below..

Or, you can reach Glen on Twitter @GlenTChapman or find him here.

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New trailer arrives for Unknown

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Unknown

Liam Neeson’s lost his identity in the forthcoming thriller, Unknown. You can see the new trailer right here…

"I am Martin Harris!" Liam Neeson gruffly announces, in the new trailer for his forthcoming thriller, Unknown. Sporting a strikingly similar haircut and leather jacket as he did in Pierre Morel's 2008 action flick, Taken, Neeson stars as a doctor who, after emerging from a nasty car crash in Berlin, finds that his wife (Mad Men and X-Men: First Class' January Jones) doesn't recognise him, and that a group of shadowy assassins are out for his blood.

Unknown has the kind of scenario that you'd expect to find (albeit with a narcotic, sci-fi twist) in a Philip K Dick novel, or in quiet TV movie mysteries such as Vanishing Act (a surprisingly effective little film starring Elliot Gould, Margot Kidder, and the late, great Fred Gwynne), but Spanish director Jaume-Collet Serra's thriller appears to place far more emphasis on action than paranoid angst.

That's the impression we get from the trailer, at least, though this could be merely down to a cunning pair of hands in the editing suite. Whether Unknown is as action-filled as it looks or not, we're quietly enthusiastic about seeing Neeson in another thriller. A reliably entertaining screen presence, he's as adept at delivering crisp, terse lines of dialogue as he is at breaking bad guys' noses.

Unknown is due for release in UK cinemas on 25 February.

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Peter Morgan interview: Hereafter, working with Eastwood and Spielberg, writing James Bond

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Peter Morgan

As Hereafter prepares to haunt UK cinemas, we met with its writer, Peter Morgan, to discuss his involvement in the film, and working with Clint Eastwood and Steven Spielberg…

Cast your mind back to Thursday December 2nd. The UK is gripped by two momentous events. It's snowing, something which never happens, ever, around these parts, so everything grinds to a halt. But, more importantly, it's the day of the World Cup bid announcement.

It's 3:30 in the afternoon, and I'm sat in the Charlotte Street Hotel. It's a nice place, but the staff don't seem with it. When I say I'm here for Peter Morgan, they look at me with a blankness that wouldn't look out of place on Steven Seagal if he worked in Woolworths. It's then that the news comes trickling in. The dream is over. England's bid has failed.

It's a crushing blow, but I'm buoyed by a long chat with the Warner Bros. PRs and the reminder that I'm here to speak with Peter Morgan. He wrote The Last King Of Scotland, The Queen and Frost/Nixon, don't you know?

Morgan is in town to promote Hereafter, a film he wrote, Clint Eastwood directed, and Steven Spielberg produced. If it never takes off as much as you might hope, it's still fascinating, as is Morgan's experience making it.

So, where do you start with someone like Morgan? What's it like to work with Eastwood?  Or Spielberg, for that matter? Is he still writing Bond? Well, first things first...

Have you been following the World Cup decision hoopla at all?

No. What's happened? Did we get it?

Russia got it.

Russia!

I was thinking on the way over, it's been quite a story. We've had corruption, a slow-burning build up, a thrilling climax. Could you see yourself writing a film about it all?

Somebody rang me about it today. Probably not, because there are too many public faces in there and some conversations I can't even imagine. The behind-the-scenes politicking, if there is any, it would have to come out. But I can't see it myself, not at the moment. But then, you never know.

You mention too many real people involved, and in Hereafter you've gone the other way. It's a more personal film than the kind you've written before.

Yes, and like a number of others since then. I've done a couple of other projects which are pure fiction. You do mix it up, you keep yourself fresh, keep yourself interested and you have to reserve the right to fail and get some right and get some wrong. Otherwise, if you keep repeating yourself, it's just too awful.

And this film poses that big question: what happens when you die? But it also felt like a very close-knit drama about loneliness, about someone needing to be with someone.

That is definitely what I felt it was. I felt that, yes, it touched on afterlife issues, but to me it was always a love story and that there is a really strong correlation between grief and love. You know, that grief is effectively just loving someone who is just not there.

And that I thought, "Ooh, grief and romance feel like the same muscle." And so I was really searching for something in that with the first draft. And then Clint Eastwood shot it! I kept thinking, "Well, we must go on and do some more work and der-de-der-de-der." But he really wanted to shoot it as unrefined and as un-thought through as possible, because he felt it was instinctive and all its integrity came from that.

So, is he a screenwriter's dream then?  Because he has that no nonsense reputation: shoot it, get it done and move on.

Yeah. I asked a room full of writers at the Writers Guild in America, I was doing a Q&A on this film. I said, "I want a show of hands," - there must have been 300 writers in the room - "is Clint Eastwood your idea of the perfect writer's director or is he the ultimate non-writer's director?"

Clint feels a lot of creative energy is neurotic and that is what he doesn't like. He likes it uncomplicated and confident, even if it means that it's clunky or misshapen in places. When it's too refined and too honed, it's too obviously a piece of art, you know? Contrived art.

And it was very interesting. In this room I got a pretty much 50/50 response. Some people felt that, wow, what a privilege to have a director come in and shoot everything, every apostrophe and every comma. And other people felt, no, actually for a writer to be involved right the way through to the end -

Because Clint, he never asked my opinion on anything. So, is that a great thing or a bad thing? So, I think if you were to get a line of 10 writers you'd get a 50/50 response.

But you were involved in a Executive Producer capacity as well?

Well, I wasn't really. They were very kind to give me a credit, but I didn't do a bloody thing. [laughs]

So, you didn't have discussions with Clint? Because there are some weighty themes in there, big questions about what happens when you die.

I agree and, probably, I think it's fair to say he knows this, I think my preference, even though it's more painful and harder and more sweat, is probably to work something through deliberately. With Stephen Frears, Tom Hooper, Ron Howard, people like that, I've always ground something out, really done a thousand drafts. It's been blood from a stone.

In the end, whether it's for better or for worse, that's what I know. With Clint, this idea of he just takes it and shoots it, I felt very like, "Oh goodness, really? Can't we do anything? Can't we have a conversation?" [laughs] And nothing.

The first time I really talked to him about it was at the press conference after the movie came out.

Really?

Hmmm.

And you've got other people like Steven Spielberg in there as well.

Huge. And these people don't need to be told anything, you know what I mean? If anyone could get up and make a movie, it's those two.

So, on the one hand I thought, "Wow, I kind of want to watch this to see how this unfolds and to see whether it was a vindication either of their method or my method."

And has it changed the way you work now?

No, I think I would still prefer to work the old neurotic way. I can't help it. That is just the way I am. [laughs]

What I found interesting was how much the Matt Damon character resembled a role Clint Eastwood would have played. He's a man who's alone because of what he does, ostracised from society because of what he does.

That's a very interesting observation. He really related to that character. When I asked him - I did get to the shoot once and I bought him lunch - "Which of the three characters do you most relate to?" And he said, "Oh Matt. That story. That's why I wanted to make the movie."

And that's interesting because I wanted to make the movie because of the boys, that was my way in. That's what I cared about. And Kathy Kennedy wanted to make it because of the French journalist. She thought the other two were just like ornaments and that it was really all about this poor woman who was just, like, you know, found out and was being silenced and the conspiracy of silence and denial around the whole subject. She thought that was what the movie was about.

So, there you have three radically different -  I said, "Is that going to make for a satisfying audience experience or an unsatisfying audience experience, that three of us would think so wildly differently about it?" And the answer is this has always been a film that has slightly divided people. People either really connect with it or they really don't.

And obviously Clint profoundly -  There was one time where he couldn't cast someone to play the Matt part to go at a certain time. Matt was only available much later. It would have involved Clint waiting six months, which he doesn't like to do. And on that flight, I think he was coming back from South Africa - I never knew about this, they never told me - Apparently when he couldn't cast the Matt role, he said to his producer, "Let's get all the scripts out."

And he read the twelve or fifteen scripts he'd been sent that he liked, to work out which one he was going to do. And he re-read Hereafter and said, "No. That's the only one I want to do. I'll wait six months."

So, he clearly deeply connected with this in a way that's powerful.

When I watched it I thought Cécile de France's character, the journalist, was almost like a proxy for you. She's someone whose life has been rooted in fact-based work and then suddenly she embarks on something much more personal.

That could be. There could be some truth in that. Because there's certainly nothing in the twins' story that I would personally relate to. But that felt to me like the heart of the film. But what you are saying about that makes perfect sense.

Can I ask a very quick question about Bond? I'm a guy in a room with you, I can't leave without asking this. Are you still attached to writing the next Bond?

No. Because of the delay and we all had to - There came a moment where we either had to say, "I'll stick with the ship or I'll go off." And I went off and wrote Freddie Mercury, I'm afraid, so I'm a whore. No, I'm not a whore! [laughs]

I felt a burning need to write the Freddie Mercury story, I really did. And when Sacha Baron Cohen rang me up to do it, I just couldn't say no. So, I excused myself from the - whatever the word is - the shackles.

Also, somehow you know when you say yes to something, it needs to go with the momentum, and then in this appalling delay of a year, a year and a half, the whole process of Bond, the fantasy, the dream, the sort of fairytale part of writing one, the reality, it's never quite the - and then [clicks fingers] there was a real moment of momentum on The Queen thing. And I think I made the right decision.

Peter Morgan, thank you very much

Hereafter is released in cinemas on Friday, January 28th.

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Episodes episode 3 review

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Episodes

It’s episode three of Episodes, and Matt LeBlanc’s causing quiet chaos between Sean and Beverly. Here’s Ryan’s review…

"Hockey works. We could call it Pucks." So ended the previous instalment of Episodes, as producer Merc Lapidus and actor Matt LeBlanc continue to run roughshod over Sean and Beverly's television comedy.

Given the overall excellence of episode two, I was left wondering, as the credits rolled last week, just how the sitcom could scale the same heights a week later. Perhaps sensing that the momentum of last week's show was impossible to replicate, writers David Crane and Jeffrey Klarik appear to have intentionally eased off the throttle for episode three. The result is an episode that's less consistently funny, but nevertheless has plenty of great, isolated lines of dialogue.

Taking place a few days after Merc and Matt had decided to change the name of Sean and Beverly's sitcom from Lyeman's Boys to the crass-sounding Pucks!, episode three opens with the newly rechristened show in production. Lapidus noisily eats fruit all the way through a read-through of the revised script, and LeBlanc appears in his tailor-made role as a womanising hockey coach.

Already hinted at last week, there's a simmering sexual tension building between Beverly and Matt LeBlanc, in episode three. This is illustrated in a scene where Matt tries to talk Beverly into changing one of the show's characters from lesbian to heterosexual (a suggestion Beverly tersely rejects), which, in turn, sets the scene for a singularly awkward confrontation at the episode's conclusion.

If Sean appears to be entirely oblivious to the frisson of attraction between Matt and Beverly, that's because he's developing a bit of crush on the former Friends actor himself. The pair end up on an impromptu boys' outing in Las Vegas, and just as Sean's about to confront Matt about the character changes he suggested earlier, he's distracted by the svelte allure of a white Italian sports car.

LeBlanc (the actor) plays up to his alpha male, womanising image in his fictionalised role here, and it's evident that he's as much of an enemy (at least to Sean and Beverly's career and marriage) as Merc Lapidus. Slyly hiding behind his jock persona, his more conniving side comes out now and again, utters an observation of surprising insight, before popping back into hiding.

The two-faced nature of both LeBlanc and Lapidus is simultaneously one of Episodes' best assets, yet potentially its long-term stumbling block. While both LeBlanc and John Pankow are great value in their respective roles, the show's central joke, that Hollywood is a snake pit where creative people will inevitably find themselves covered in bites, is already showing signs of wearing thin, such is its repeated use.

There are parallels, in fact, with the show-within-a-show, Pucks!, and Episodes itself. One of episode three's key exchanges, between Sean and Matt, is on the topic of comedy and longevity. Matt's argument for changing a key character from a lesbian to a heterosexual is to give the show more scope for future stories. "You've got to give yourself places for stories to go," he says, summoning up some of that wisdom he keeps carefully hidden. With four more shows to go in Episodes' current run, it, too, needs to start finding new ways for its story to go, you might argue.

Yet, as predictable as episode three is, there are still some entertaining moments and great lines of dialogue this week. There's a great line from Merc that succinctly epitomises his lack of interest in television ("Remind me. Who's running that shitty talking dog show?" asks Merc. "We are," says his weary assistant). And while a running gag about the size of Matt LeBlanc's penis isn't particularly funny for the most part, individual exchanges regarding it are ("It's like a sea creature. Like something out of Jules Verne."), leading to a denouement that's frustrating and awkward for Beverly, but quite amusing for the rest of us.

Read our review of episode 2 here.

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The Cape episode 4 review: Scales On A Train

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The Cape: Scales On A Train

Vinnie Jones does The Cape few favours, but James finds the show endearing in spite of - or even because of - its problems...


This review may contain spoilers.

3. Scales On A Train

Yes, Scales On A Train. That is the actual title of this episode. A reference as timely as it is hilarious, I'm sure you'll all agree.

In this episode, Vinnie Jones returns to justify his cameo early on in the series and redeem himself for being physically bested by a midget. As a villain, Scales is precisely the kind of pulpy, Dick Tracy-esque character that fits in the show, although it probably helps that he has almost exactly the same gimmick as Killer Croc (he's a huge burly guy with lizard skin). No news on whether he'll grow the fangs and compound eyes, but part of me wouldn't be surprised.

As one of the more visually interesting villains in The Cape, it's a shame he has to be played by Vinnie Jones. Under better writers or a better actor, Scales could be almost tragic. But when he's being portrayed by someone who struggles to get his lines out, any chance of seeing beneath the surface is lost, particularly when he gets locked in a cage. We catch a flashback to some of his traumatic, circus freak past, and he expresses that by headbutting the bars until the door inexplicably falls off. Okay, then.

The plot sees Chess, in his civilian guise, Peter Fleming, holding a masquerade event on a luxury train. In an attempt to get Scales onside, The Cape explains that Fleming is extorting him in both of his identities, leading Scales to pay a visit to the shindig in his own legitimate identity as, er, a construction magnate.

Rebuffed in his attempts to supply the mayor with cheap copper pipes (I swear it's true), Scales publicly ‘outs' Fleming as Chess. No-one believes him. And then fighting ensues.

Stuff happens with the train becoming decoupled, then something about a brake cable, and eventually The Cape and Fleming work together to stop the runaway locomotive. You can fill in the blanks yourself. It's all pretty straightforward.

There are a couple of interesting things in the episode. Scales' outing of Chess actually serves an useful purpose. It explains why Faraday can't just go to the press with his knowledge. It's already been quite publicly discredited. Similarly, the idea that The Cape might have to work with Fleming, however briefly, is made more interesting when he finds himself at odds with his mentor, Max, after the Carnival of Crime actually remembers to go out and do some crime.

As it turns out, the world of The Cape isn't quite as black and white as it might have initially seemed

The ongoing plots also get a little look in, although, as is typical, they take a back seat to the episode's central story and set pieces. There are some amusing scenes with Faraday's kid, but the only real moment of character tension comes when Orwell and Chess have a brief, face-to-face interaction.

If Orwell is, indeed, Chess' daughter (as hinted strongly in both last week's episode and this one), then it'll now take some serious fudging to explain how they could speak to one another without him realising. Unless, of course, we're expected to automatically transpose the comic book logic of ‘she was wearing a mask that covered her eyes', meaning ‘she was unrecognisably disguised'. Either way, it was enough to make me wonder what the situation there was.

The episode's weakest spot came in the form of the CGI. External shots of the train looked like an unfinished cutscene from a PS2 game. The worst part is that it wasn't really even necessary for the storytelling.

Here's a little advice for the people making The Cape: don't try to show off your CGI budget when you haven't got one. Even Lost had trouble making grand gestures look believable, and you can't compete with that. You can barely compete with Babylon 5. Thanks for listening.

After four episodes, it feels more than ever like The Cape is kept running on its sheer refusal to acknowledge its own failings. Surely, Summer Glau is better than this? Vinnie Jones is almost better than this!

And yet, somehow, The Cape is so unflinchingly sincere in its awfulness that you actually want to come back and watch more. It's cheesy, poorly made, and I still can't tell if it's supposed to be taken seriously, and yet I'll gladly come back to watch more next week. It makes more sense than Heroes, it's more fun to watch than Caprica, and it's more original than either of the Stargate spin-offs.

I hate to admit it, but if The Cape has anything going for it, it's that somehow, despite its flaws, it's actually managing to be entertaining.

Read our review of episode 3, Kozmo, here.

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The Lazy Geek's Guide to Alias

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Alias

We take a fond look back at Alias, the JJ Abrams show that made a star of Jennifer Garner...

Before Fringe, before Star Trek and Lost, J.J. Abrams created Alias, a show whose success catapulted its creator and star into the celebrity stratosphere. Jennifer Garner's ill-fated movie career? All the fault of Alias. That big red ball of liquid in Star Trek? Alias. Lost's seat of the pants plotting? Alias did it first. This post-Buffy spy romp lives on in DVD and download form, and is long overdue a bit of appreciation.

The Premise

At its peak, J.J. Abrams' Alias was a show about all-American college girl and super-spy, Sidney Bristow, living a triple life as a double agent. Struggling to keep her career a secret from friends and family, the drama came from her losing battle to keep all the threads of this convoluted existence separate.

As the series continued and Sydney's secrets became less secret, a secondary arc moved into pole position: the continuing search for the inventions of a fictional, 15th century inventor named Rambaldi.

Though Sydney is often sent on missions to retrieve these artefacts, only one character in the narrative knows why they're worth chasing, Bristow's boss (and later, nemesis), Arvin Sloane.

Main Characters

Sydney Bristow - Played by Jennifer Garner, toothy girl-next-door, Sydney (if you live next door to a perky supermodel) is the show's indisputable heart. Although the settings, villains and even the agencies she works for change from season to season, an average episode involves Sydney putting on a wig and breaking into a warehouse, embassy, top-secret base or stately home. She gets in, she kicks ass, she gets out again. Except, when she gets captured, in which case the ass-kicking is slightly delayed.

Arvin Sloane - Beginning the series as Sydney's boss, Sydney soon discovers that slimey, Hans Moleman look-alike Arvin Sloane actually works for a shadowy, apparently criminal organisation. And so does Sydney. It's not too much of a spoiler to say that this sets up about five seasons worth of conflict between Sloane and Bristow. Or should I say, Bristows...

Jack Bristow - Alias is something of a family affair. In some episodes Sydney, her dad, her mother, and even her sister gallivant around on improbable missions together. That is, when they're not trying to incarcerate, double cross or kill each other. Anyway, Jack Bristow is Sydney's dad, a fellow agent, the moral centre in Sydney's world and a bit of a boring git.

Michael Vaughn - Every kick-ass female TV lead needs a slightly less effective love interest who's in the same line of work. Michael Vaughn is the CIA agent assigned to Bristow during season one's convoluted double agent plot. Later, Vaughn works alongside Sydney as her mission handler in a variety of precarious situations. Their budding romance is continually interrupted by periods of incarceration, being double crossed and one (or both) of them getting killed. Temporarily.

Marshall Flinkman - Our favourite character is the Q to Bristow's Bond. A clear precursor to Simon Pegg's Benji in Mission Impossible 3, Flinkman is an electronics and computer genius whose gadgets save Sydney's shapely tuckus on more than one occasion. 

Julian Sark - Like Spike in Buffy, Sark is the charming bit part villain fans loved so much that he had to be brought back and given, you know, an actual personality. A mercenary rogue spy for hire, Bristow and Sark eventually spend the best part of five seasons trying to incarcerate, double cross or kill one another, and each other's loved ones.

Marcus Dixon - Starting out as Sydney's partner and ending the series as her sort of boss, Marcus is a recurring, major character so boring that I completely forgot he was in Alias at all until I checked the back of my boxset.

Irina Derevko - I could tell you who Irina Derevko is, but then I'd have to incarcerate or kill you.

Why We Like It

Alias is the product of the same pop culture addled imagination that brought you Lost and the new Star Trek, J.J. Abrams. So, there are lots twisty turns, lots of explosions and many, many large red balls made of liquid. Some of them enormous.

Like Lost, it's difficult to predict. We suspect that's because, like Lost, they were making it up as they were going along, throwing in crazy Macguffins (like the Rambaldi devices) to lull you into thinking there was an overarching plan when there definitely wasn't. 

The series' main strength was its willingness to reconfigure itself every so often, even though it did so within fairly narrow parameters and out of a desire to maintain continuity of character.  It's never less than fun, though,channelling the best of the classic Mission Impossible at its apogee.

So brilliant was it during those early seasons, that it attracted the very highest wattage of guest star. Christian Slater, Ethan Hawke, Roger Moore, Quentin Tarantino and even Ricky Gervais put in appearances.

Also, the various versions of the title sequence rank among the funkiest every shown on telly, particularly the Jennifer-tastic season 4 incarnation. 

Why It Sucks

While most shows start weak and get better, Alias set off at Formula 1 speed, but spent most of the last two seasons in the pits. The series was always a bit daft but, by season four, a series of improbable and convoluted coincidences took the place of actual plotting. No one is what they seem, everyone's a double agent, blah, blah, fricking blah.

Then, just before season five, Jennifer Garner (and her character) got pregnant, thus obviating the show's major selling point, watching Jennifer Garner kick ass.  Fortunately, she was back in fighting form in time for the show's brilliantly conceived and superbly silly finale.

Incidentally, the proto-sprog baking in Garner's lady-oven was half Ben Affleck, continuing the Alias tradition of high profile cameos...

Best Episodes

The Box (Parts 1 and 2)

Alias deviates from its case-of-the-week formula as Sloane's headquarters face invasion from a mysterious character seeking revenge. Essential to the building of the Alias mythology, the revelations come thick and thicker in this two-part action adventure, guest starring Quentin Tarantino. No, really.

Phase One

Alias peaked with this extraordinarily cinematic offering from season two. Rutger Hauer replaces Sloane as head of SD-6, the evil espionage agency Sydney Bristow is working for as a double agent. Pivotal changes to the entire premise make this a telly event to remember. The fact that you have to watch the preceding 34 episodes to know what the hell is going on is no bad thing. But the pickings get slim from here until the final third of season five now.

The Two

If we tell you too much about this episode, the first of season three, we'll spoil the whole series. Suffice to say, it's a game-changer on a par with Battlestar Galactica's second season ending, and it would be the last time such a twist in Alias would be truly effective.

Before The Flood

In this season four finale, the entire Bristow family unite for the last time in an episode that deftly balances peril, action and humour. The cliffhanger ending will have you reaching immediately for the next boxset. It's also one of the only episodes worth watching from the entire season.

All The Time In The World

The final third of the often derided (often derided by me, that is) season 5 has some of the show's best episodes, culminating in this epic two-parter that explains everything. If Lost had finished half as well, we'd be very happy geeks.

Jump The Shark Moment

Sidney Bristow gets pregnant. In an action show with a female lead, the inability for the female lead to do any action sequences is pretty much the kiss of death.

What Happened To It?

Like Buffy, Alias died an ignominious and lingering death, routed in formula for many of its last two seasons episodes. And, like Buffy, all the stops were pulled out to give the series a proper ending during the final half dozen episodes. 

You'll like Alias if you like:

Mission Impossible (the original series and J.J. Abrams' Mission Impossible 3, which is essentially 'Alias the Movie')
Dark Angel
The Bionic Woman
Dollhouse

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The Terrible Axe-Man Of New Orleans review

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The Terrible Axe-Man Of New Orleans

Writer and Illustrator Ricky Geary’s The Terrible Axe-Man Of New Orleans is based on a true series of crimes that occurred in the 20th century, and it’s a gripping tale, writes Chris...

As a comic reader, I am used to the books I read featuring wild action-packed frames with voluptuous lycra-clad women and fierce brute men fighting to save humanity from intergalactic threat. So, I started reading Rick Geary's latest true life crime graphic novel with a little trepidation, as it features neither of these.

What it does feature is an incredibly detailed, almost CSI-like account of the events in America' most colourful city from May 1918 to October 1919,when the titular Axe-man stalked the streets searching out victims.

The book starts with a potted history of New Orleans, city of mystery, detailing its birth and influence on culture focussing on Mardi Gras, Creole and, of course, jazz and the blues. With an amazing flair and visual style, Geary lures you into this fascinating city at its inception, but always with a sense of impending doom, almost a Grand Guignol-esque creeping dread, as the first killing abruptly appears in the second chapter.

The killer chose his victims from the immigrant community that thrived at New Orleans' birth. His methods were bizarre, using the victims' own hatchets against them and gaining access to the house through a small panel removed from the front door. In an almost X-Files-ian trick, the panel was usually far too small for an average man to fit through. 

No money or valuables were taken and the murder weapon and entry tool were always left on the scene, showing that the killer had little regard for the law leaving such important evidence at hand. In fact, each killing looked to be totally unplanned, as many of the victims were hacked several times or even survived his frenzy (if only for a short term in one instance), suggesting a lack of regard for his own wellbeing.

The book is not just adept at telling the story, but at setting the scene and atmosphere at the time of the killings too. Whole chapters show how the community went from a comfortable easygoing neighbourhood to a place of fear and paranoia. Friends viewed each other with suspicion. Strange notes scrawled in chalk suggested who the next victim will be.

It also details the process the police used to try to identify this serial killer, who always seemed at least one step ahead of them. The fact that the murderer was never found or identified, much like the Ripper crimes before it, makes the story all the more chilling.

The book goes through the suspects and the victims, whilst always staying unbiased and with no tabloid fascination over the killings themselves.

In fact, the book frequently asks the reader questions without providing answers, suggesting the reader is intelligent enough to have their own opinion, a refreshingly adult approach.

As I mentioned before, the style of the comic is phenomenal, its artwork clear and crisp with amazing use of each frame almost looking like they were drawn from photo evidence. The black and white artwork makes the images more powerful.

There are no gloriously gory full page spreads of innocent shopkeepers with heads cleaved in. Instead there are chilling shots of the poor family member who discovered them, or shadowed faces drenched in blood of the few survivors staggering out to get assistance. Whilst still very striking, they are all the more frightening for what they don't show you, as always the mind conjures up far more vivid images than screen (or in this case, paper) can.

Geary has worked for some of the comic world's biggest names (MAD Magazine, Dark Horse Comics, DC and even The House of Mouse), so its unsurprising that his work is as polished and professional as it is.

What is surprising is how the book draws you into this history of crime, urging you to read on, to find out what the next stage was, what twist or turn may show up to throw the police (and the reader) off the scent. The tale grips you from start to finish. If only all police reports were done this way!

The author has visited the places he has shown to ensure the most vivid and authentic vision of this city drips from every page. Some have criticised him, as using each lurid tale (for this book is one of many true crimes he has documented, including the shooting of Abraham Lincoln) as an excuse to be paid by the publisher to take a holiday. Whilst this may be true, he clearly has researched the area whilst being there and has created an evocative eerie atmosphere rather than a trashy travelogue with extra blood.

Whilst it is a little known crime in the UK, the story of the terrible axe-man of New Orleans is certainly a page turner. The book itself is lavishly presented in hardback, which gives it an even more adult look.

Whilst reading it, I imagined there being many British crimes that could be covered in the same format. The Ripper crimes have been well documented in all media, but stories like Dr Crippen could easily be dealt with in this way. I'm not sure how many people would read it, but if it was done in the same assured and professional manner as Geary's work, I am sure it would sell to the true life crime and comic book-reading public alike.

I guess comics are no longer just pecs and violence.

4 stars

The Terrible Axe-Man Of New Orleans is out now and available from the Den Of Geek Store.

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The Other Guys Blu-ray review

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The Other Guys Blu-ray

Adam McKay’s buddy cop comedy The Other Guys arrives on Blu-Ray. But is it worth a purchase? Here’s Ryan’s review…

Director Adam McKay and actor Will Ferrell have already proved to be a superb big-screen double act with such hits as Anchorman and Talladega Nights. Following the rather less successful Step Brothers, the pair returned to cinemas last year with The Other Guys, a bombastic, endearingly ridiculous send-up of buddy-cop movies such as Lethal Weapon.

Danson and Highsmith (a perfectly cast Samuel L. Jackson and Dwayne Johnson) are New York's toughest alpha male cops, and famous for their daring crime fighting abilities and an uncanny knack for destroying entire buildings in the process.

Lurking in the background, meanwhile, are the Other Guys of the title, Gamble and Hoitz (Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg). Chained to their desks and filling out paperwork, they do all the mundane, unglamorous work while Danson and Highsmith are out on the streets, breaking things.

But when New York's finest police partnership is suddenly (and hilariously) put out of action, there's suddenly an opening for a new pair of heroic law enforcers to fill, and Gamble and Hoitz - one willingly, the other reluctantly - shuffle into the foreground.

Like most of McKay and Ferrell's comedies, even their very best one, AnchormanThe Other Guys is full of isolated moments of brilliance rather than sustained amusement. The plot, which concerns a crooked billionaire (Steve Coogan), groups of Chechen and Nigerian capital investors, a wooden gun, and a group of randy hobos called Dirty Mike and the Boys, could almost slip by unnoticed, such is the avalanche of action and quotable lines, sight gags and mildly puerile jokes.

There's a genuine chemistry between Ferrell and Wahlberg, the latter displaying a surprising aptitude for comedy. Unusually, it's Wahlberg who, for the most part, plays the film's most noisy and aggressive character, with Ferrell willing to take a back seat as an affable, gullible computer geek with a bad taste in novelty coffee mugs.

There are great appearances, too, from Eva Mendez as Ferrell's statuesque wife, Michael Keaton as gentle, somewhat ineffectual Captain Gene (a strikingly similar character to the captain Alan Arkin plays in So I Married An Axe Murderer, in fact), and Brit actor, Ray Stevenson, as a granite-faced hired mercenary.

McKay also proves to be an adept action director, and The Other Guys contains some genuinely great practical stunts, with cars flying gracefully into buses and buildings, while Wahlberg reprises many of his balletic gun-fu moves last seen in Max Payne.

How much you'll enjoy The Other Guys as a whole is, of course, down to personal taste. Even after a third viewing, I'm not sure I particularly like the sudden left turn Ferrell's character takes towards the end of the film, and Steve Coogan's oleaginous billionaire doesn't exactly leap from the screen, even if he does get one classic line ("We were going to do a Chechen version of Dora The Explorer, but it went terribly wrong.").

Nevertheless, The Other Guys is filled with enough quotable lines, unforgettable moments, bizarre, improvised exchanges and unhinged action to make it worthy of repeated viewings.

The Disc

As well as the theatrical version of The Other Guys, the Blu-ray contains an extended cut with a few extra minutes' comedy. Given that the cinematic cut was, perhaps a quarter of an hour too long, the extended version tends to drag somewhat. Though there are some scenes here that are genuinely worth seeing, including a strange quarrel at an art exhibition, and an extended fight scene inside the confines of Gamble's Toyota Prius.

The picture quality is sparkling throughout, and while an Adam McKay comedy may not be at the top of your wish list for a Blu-ray purchase, The Other Guys' numerous action scenes look great in HD.

The two versions of the movie aside, the disc comes with a generous number of other extras, some good, some less so. The alternate and deleted scenes, which show Will Ferrell and his fellow actors improvising for all they're worth, are occasionally brilliant, and there's a great, if brief feature called Why Are There Brits In This Movie, in which Adam McKay and Steve Coogan play up to UK and US stereotypes in the style of a junket interview.

Elsewhere, there's what the disc's producers call a "mom-mentary", in which the lead actors' parents provide a rambling feature commentary track. This is amusing for approximately five minutes at the most. Similarly, the features, Everybody Hates The DVD and Mark Wahlberg's Eating Contest Entourage are mostly extraneous snippets of on-set footage, and were probably far more amusing for the actors than the viewer.

Nevertheless, there's plenty of other stuff on here to round out the disc. A series of clips called Flash-Forwards provide a greater, and sometimes very funny, added insight into some of the characters' backstories.

The absence of any additional Danson and Highsmith scenes are, perhaps, the disc's most glaring omission. In fairness, this is probably because Adam McKay didn't shoot any, but  they're such a genuinely great pairing that I'd happily watch an entire feature devoted solely to them. Maybe The Other Guys 2 could take the form of a prequel?

Film: 4 stars
Disc: 3 stars

The Other Guys is out now on Blu-ray and available from the Den Of Geek Store.

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Weekend US box office report: No Strings Attached marks 2011 as the year of Natalie Portman

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No Strings Attached

Natalie Portman tops the US box office with her new comedy, No Strings Attached. Black Swan isn't doing too badly, either...

There was only one big release this weekend, and it topped a pretty dead box office weekend. In spite of the glut of these sorts of movies lately, No Strings Attached rode the wave of positive publicity for Natalie Portman to the top of the weekend box office. No Strings Attached picked up $19.65 million at theaters, pushing it to a number one debut. Box office is down from last year, but can you really expect anything to match Avatar frenzy? Not really.

The Green Hornet is now the highest grossing live-action superhero comedy on record. Surprised? Well, you shouldn't be. Consider the fact that it's a pretty narrow genre known for huge flops rather than successes. Also consider the fact that The Green Hornet stars one of the most consistent box office stars since Adam Sandler, Seth Rogen. Hornet's second weekend picked up $17.6 million over the weekend, pushing its total to $63 million in two weeks. The previous high was Kick-Ass, which took in $48 million for its complete US run.

Holding on to third is The Dilemma. I'm not sure how or why, but the movie picked up another $9.1 million this weekend, despite getting horrible word of mouth (at least from me). I'd imagine some people still think Vince Vaughn and Kevin James are funny in this and haven't read any of the horrible reviews. I feel sorry for those people and wish they could have two hours of their life back.

All the positive praise and publicity for Colin Firth seems to be doing The King's Speech good. It had the lowest box office gross of any movie in the top ten, added theaters when comparative films are shedding them, and held onto fourth place this weekend with $7.8 million. So far, the $15 million movie has taken in 57 million bucks in nine weeks in the US box office. Look for that total to jump at Oscar time, should he bring home a statue.

In what is shaping up to be a pretty interesting race, True Grit and The Fockers both came out five weeks ago and are neck and neck when it comes to total box office grosses. The Fockers started out faster, and has a lead with $141 million, despite flagging business (seventh place this weekend, 4.3 million bucks), but True Grit is holding its audience a lot better (fifth place this weekend, $7.33 million) and is slowly gaining grown with $137.9 million over the same time frame. True Grit will pass The Fockers, but the question is, by how much?

Black Swan finally sinks out of the top five, down to sixth on a take of $5.8 million. It added some theaters this week, which is good, and the attention it has been receiving lately is great news for the flick, which is still one of the most incredibly visceral experiences I've seen at a movie theater. It was like being punched in the gut. Needless to say, I loved every second of its sensory intensity.

The Fighter and Yogi Bear swap spots yet again this weekend. This time, The Fighter fights its way back up to eight, while Yogi sinks down to ninth in the top ten. The Fighter brought in $4.16 million versus Yogi's $3.8 million. Yogi still leads in overall box office, with $88.6 million versus The Fighter's $72.6 million, but Yogi also cost about $80 million to make, so it kind of balances out.

Rounding out the top ten this weekend is Tron Legacy, which sinks to tenth from seventh last weekend. Tron's brought in $163 million, and added $3.64 million this weekend to help nudge that total slightly higher.

What's out next weekend, you're asking? Well, the world's favorite creepy grandpa is back. Sir Anthony Hopkins makes his return to the horror genre with a demonic possession flick called The Rite.  If frightening 80-year-olds aren't your thing, then perhaps you might enjoy Jason Statham and Ben Foster shooting people in the face? If that's up your alley, then check out The Mechanic, which also opens this weekend.

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Simon West teases Con Air 2

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Con Air

Get the bunny back out of the box: there’s a sliver of hope for a Con Air sequel…

Back when we counted down the finest action movies of the 1990s, it was the gloriously bonkers Con Air that walked away with the crown. More than any action movie of the 1990s, it mixed in excellent set pieces, quotable dialogue, and a cast of characters that has been pretty much unrivalled in the genre since.

Plus, it had Nicolas Cage in his best ever blockbuster performance. "It's your barbecue Cyrus, and it tastes good," he spouts out to lead villain Cyrus The Virus at one point, and he's damn right too.

This week, Con Air director Simon West returns to the action genre with the Jason Statham vehicle, The Mechanic. And while he was promoting that film in a chat with Crave Online, he was asked what film would be a dream project for him.

The answer, friends, was Con Air 2.

If you just heard a little squeal, that was us. But it's inevitably a tempered squeal, for a few reasons.

Firstly, the decision as to whether there's a Con Air 2 is presumably down to Jerry Bruckheimer rather than Simon West. That's stumbling block number one. Stumbling block number two is getting together a cast of the magnitude of the first film again. Not least because, er, not everyone made it to the end of the first film.

Less of a stumbling block, we suspect, is Nicolas Cage, who's currently shooting Ghost Rider 2, and is committed to National Treasure 3. It's not going out on a mighty limb to suggest that Nicolas Cage's movie choices tend to be a bit erratic - Season Of The Witch, anyone? - and so at the least, there's unlikely to be an instant block on the idea of a Con Air sequel.

The most logical way forward for the film would be to treat it as the further adventures of Cameron Poe, and just sticking him back on a plane would be a problem. But if you call the film Con Air 2, there aren't many other places you can go. They've got to be in the air somewhere.

Still, Simon West is keen, and that's a starting point for a project we'd dearly like to see.

"It'd be great," said West. "It's a matter of getting everybody together. There's so many people involved and it's about getting everybody to agree. But I'm going to bring it up to Nic. I'm going to put a bug in his ear about it. If the two of us want to do it, we'll go after the others."

We'd be amazed if it happened. But it might just be one of the finest pieces of movie news of the year if it did...

Crave Online

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Avatar 2 not due until 2014

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James Cameron

James Cameron is writing Avatar 2 and Avatar 3 right now, and he’s revealed we’re not likely to return to Pandora until Christmas 2014 at the earliest…

At the Producers Guild Awards, which took place over the weekend, James Cameron gave an update on the two planned Avatar sequels, to which he's committed as his next project.

Chatting to Entertainment Weekly at the event, Cameron confirmed, "I am in the process of writing the next two Avatar films now."

He went on to say, "We are planning to shoot them together and post them together, and we will probably release them not quite back to back, but about a year apart."

So, when can we expect to see Avatar 2 and Avatar 3? According to Cameron, "Christmas '14 and Christmas '15 is the current plan". He also added that "Basically, if you survived the first film, you get to be in the second film, at least in some form."

So, there you have it. While it's not concrete, as things stand, we're three and a half years away from Avatar 2, and the best part of five years from Avatar 3.

More at Entertainment Weekly, here.

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Video: Kevin Smith’s post-Red State Sundance Film Festival speech

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Kevin Smith’s post-Red State Sundance Film Festival speech

Kevin Smith bought the rights to distribute his movie, Red State, at the Sundance Film Festival. Here's the video of it, along with his speech about the film distribution business that accompanied it…

There's a sporting chance that you're already aware of this, but after premiering his latest film, Red State, at the Sundance Film Festival, Kevin Smith bought the rights to distribute the film himself for $20, and spent the best part of half an hour talking to the assembled crowd about the film distribution business, and the problems within it.

As such, Smith is taking the film on the road around the States between now and October, when it gets its formal release. And the Internet seemed to go into meltdown as a result. It's fair to say that his move has proved divisive, but he's also firmly putting his money where his mouth is.

What's now appeared on YouTube, then, is the full post-Red State speech, so you can find out for yourself exactly what he said. It's quite a long video, but it's worth taking a look at.

To find out more about Red State, visit www.coopersdell.com.

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