Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

It's Halloween, Isn't It?

Last night, Rachael and I watched quite a bit of Signs, which (like hundreds of the discs piled up behind me right now) I hadn't seen since I first bought the DVD. Not that I want this observation to reflect badly on the film, mind, because there's some brilliant, brilliant stuff in there. The scene in which Graham and Merrill run around the house shouting is particularly great, and if I'd have written and directed as much stuff like that as Shyamalan has I'd probably suffer from ego problems myself. (Come back in a few years to check on my progress in this regard).

We didn't make it to the end of Signs, however - perhaps it would have been more appropriate for tonight, the one night of the year Rachael seems more susceptible to scary fare. I even got her two thirds of the way through Dawn of the Dead a couple of years back (but how she ended up watching Hostel with me on Valentine's day, not to mention walking out of it before it was over, is another story altogether).

So, today being what it is, and all, the horror films are out in force. 30 Days of Night hits the UK today; Saw IV has been around since last weekend and is doing very well, it seems; the BBC are trotting out Carpenter's Halloween once again tonight - though I bet they ingratiously crop it down to 16:9, so don't bother - put the DVD on instead; and there's even a new, splattery clip from Aliens vs. Predator Requiem up for grabs. If you want to download it directly, I can offer you a WMV version, or my preferred Quicktime encode. Exploding heads and acid spurts to the face abound - and this version doesn't have th annoying IGN badge.

Paul W.S Anderson's involvement in this film has probably put most people off, and indeed, I'm epxecting little or nothing from the film. I certainly didn't think much of the first. I've gone into some detail about my feelings for Anderson already, and they haven't changed: he's a pretty capable hack who sets fairly easy targets and hits them sort-of-squarely most of the time. And that's not a bad thing, really - it just isn't a particularly good thing. While I haven't seen There Will Be Blood, I've seen all of PT Anderson's other features and I'll stick with his schlockier namesake, if I may - a fraction less ambition, a great deal less botchery.

I saw the third Resident Evil a week or so ago, and I did enjoy most of it, if only at a pretty low register. The odd bit here and there was even very interesting - the opening sequence that sets an Alice clone loose into a recreation of the first film's opening riffs quite enjoyably on the videogame mechanic of multiple lives/continues and repeatable levels (things we take for granted, they're so commonplace in games - but they didn't have to be). I liked the wireframe transitions from location to location again, which reminded me of nothing so much as negotating the map screen on a latter-day Metroid game. And the end of the film, which saw multiple Alices, ready to awaken and each try to defeat the evil Umbrella Corporation across the world seemed resonant with the myriad players of the games, globally controlling their identical avatars in identical missions.

Probably the film that best speaks to my experience of playing videogames in eXistenz, though this Resident Evil run a fairly close second (though, obviously, in this one respect only - I'm definitely not comparing Anderson to Cronenberg on any other terms).

So, I briefly mentioned the box office success of Saw IV. Looking at those opening weekend grosses, I'd say that every dollar over 20 million was worth another hearty laugh at Nikki Finke and her delusions of having halted the commercial success of so-called torture porn. That's over 11 million laughs, and I'll join you in every one.

On the other hand, each of those dollars is also worth a tear. How can a spiritless film like a Saw be so massively outgrossing Hostel Part 2? It was the angriest, smartest, most worthwhile horrror film since... er... well, at least Hostel Part 1 and it's getting trumped by the latest repetition of boring, witless carnival show.

And here's my prize Halloween link: The living horror of the looming strikes has studio execs and producers running hither and thither trying to put together their slates and sharpish. Variety's round-up does a good enough job of explaining which studio pictures are set to roll in time, so I won't paraphrase it here. Of specific interest to long time film ick readers, however, might be that Wolverine is getting a rewrite from Jamie Vanderbilt and Scott Silver. I say good. Very good. David Benioff's original script was as bad a script as I've ever read. I was concerned about this one because I've really been enjoying Gavin Hood's work so far - Tsotsi and Rendition - and now I'm just glad he looked past Benioff's, ill-structured, cliche stricken, senseless draft in order to sign on to a basic set-up that could so easily soar.

And..er... that's that. That being my first attempt at finding a new way to do this.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Direct Download Links For Three Halloween TV Spots

From the official Halloween 'the rehash' site come the TV ads Beginning, Mask and Reborn.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Direct Download Links For New Halloween Trailer

Another, post-reshoots trailer for Halloween has arrived. Go for 480p, 720p or 1080p. Right-click and rename wescarpentersnewsround.mov or similar to ensure they work.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Trick'r Treat Out Of Season?

This Halloween's great white hope wasn't the Halloween rehash, if you ask me, but Mike Dougherty's Trick'r Treat. According to Box Office Mojo, however, the film may have had it's release bumped into next year.

And that very possibly means October next year - it is called Trick'r Treat after all. Would any studio squander that potential be pushing it out in February, say? Or May?

There's a chance that Box Office Mojo have made a mistake, but in my experience, they're pretty bang on with these things. I suspect Warner Bros. are fearing that Halloween is only big enough for one Halloween picture and that will be... er... Halloween.

I'm feeling a little deflated by this news, I have to admit. I don't want to be left with only 'the rehash' and Saw IV this all hallow's eve.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Smoking Ban Edition

- Christian Bale is hyping the next Batman film, and somewhat preemptively, the following one.

- Flooding has wrecked a location being used in the shoot of Baz Luhrmann's Australia and the schedule has needed some rapid rejigging as a result.

- Richard Roundtree has been cast in Speed Racer as Ben Burns, racing legend turned commentator.
- Joe Carnahan has posted a photoshopped LA picture to his blog, suggesting the look of White Jazz as well as how easy the retrostyling is going to be. Apparently. There's a special star cameo from Gorgeous George in the picture too.

- Rob Schmidt is to direct a feature film adapted from Stephen King's novel Insomnia. I like Schmidt a lot and I hope he can do a great job, something that can stand comparison to, say, Dark City.

- This infamous Cloverfield film - or whatever it ends up being called - is reportedly being directed by Matt Reeves. We already knew Drew Goddard is writing and J J Abrams producing - which gives us a 1-out-of-3 score, by my reckoning. I bet it isn't as good as Diary of the Dead.

- George Wolfe is directing Blood on the Leaves, while Jamie Foxx is to star and co-produce. The film is an adaptation of Jeffrey Stetson's novel about a conflicyed young attorney. He faces off with a black history professor accused of murderous vengeance against white men who were accused of committing racially motivated attrocities during the civil rights conflicts.

- The SciFi Channel's Tin Man has had it's first preview, and several details have been reported.

- Semi Chellas has been recruited to adapt Michelle Redmond's novel The Year of Fog into a screenplay. I'll place an early bet on Sarah Polley directing.

- Cinematographer Phedon Papamichael is directing From Within, a horror yarn about murderous mystery in a small Christian community. Yep - another one of those.

- TV vet Kevin Dowling has signed to (apparently) direct K-Ville, a New Orleans drama about which I know (or at least recall) little else.

- Jeffrey Wells has posted an audio recording of the entire Shock and Awe: New Wave Exploitation panel discussion from the LA Film Festival. Eli Roth, Jack Hill and Craig Brewer? How can you resist.

- As you probably suspected from the Sid Haig story last week, Rob Zombie's Halloween rehash has undergone some reshoots. What surprised me, a little at least, is how extensive these reshoots are: six new kills and an entirely remodelled finale.

- Latino Review are shamelessly hawking The Losers in the guise of a script review. They certainly seem to have some incredible contacts at Latino Review, but their script reviews make me feel ill. They seem to lap up anything as long as it is puerile, juvenile or adolescent and then forego any kind fo meaningful commentary or insight heap nauseating hyperbole all over the script instead. Every crappy comic book adaptation and toy tie-in is labelled 'dope', or 'the bomb'? Shameless.

- Jaime Lee Curtis is to play a human being in South of the Border.

- There's a Star Wars themed burlesque show coming to Dallas in which the performer dresses as Princess Leia in her metal bikini thing. I saw the link at TheForceDotNet.

- Hamas have killed off their Mickey Mouse lookalike. He died 'as a martyr' while 'protecting' his land from and Israeli 'terrorist'.

- The Simpsons' Jay Kogen is in talks to direct a straight-to-TV teen comedy film for MTV. The idea is to create modern equivalents to John Hughes' output, premiere them on the box and then push them to DVD - with even a theatrical release mentioned as a possibility. An incredibly remote possibilty, I imagine.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Bishop Edition

- Jon Favreau is making a cameo in Iron Man, and it was the very last shot of the shoot.

- The Darjeeling Limited is the opening night film of the New York Film Festival.

- A Psycho remake TV series? Yep.

- Randal Kleiser is part of a start-up planning to bring 3D images to mobile devices.

- The odds are in favour of a TMNT sequel, if not the quality of a TMNT sequel.

- Nicholas Sparks' Dear John is to be a feature film, adapted by Jamie Linden and with Channing Tatum attached to star. Okay - but what about John Sullivan's Dear John? You can have that one on me, Mrs. H.

- Uwe Boll has called Postal his 'final statement'. So I assume Far Cry and Bloodrayne 2 and 3 and whatever comes afterwards aren't even supposed to be statements at all.

- Kim Jee-Woon's The Good, The Bad, The Weird (missing an 'and' if you ask me) has changed
financiers mid-production. The new team are CJ Entertainment, also in preproduction on Chan Wook Park's Evil Live.

- Death of a President's Gabriel Range is writing and will direct what sounds like a sort-of-Somersby, sort-of-Six Degrees of Seperation prodigal son drama.

- Mos Def is to produce and star in Bobby Zero. This one's about a social satirist come advertising copywriter (I wonder if he'll have a comic book gossip column too?). I like Mos Def a lot, and if he's that into this film, then I'm very interested.

- George Hickenlooper's next is to be Morning Spy, Evening Spy, an adaptation of the novel about a CIA operative obsessed with hunting down Osama Bin Laden.

- The Conan option has expired at Warners and it seems that New Line are to pick it up next.

- Starbucks are to hawk Arctic Tale in a return for profit points.

- Megan Fox has signed to appear in How to Lose Friends and Alienate People.

- The Franny K. Stein books are to become animated films.

- Michael Gilvary's spec script Transit has been snapped up by Thousand Words. The premise is simple: a fmaily on a road trip through the desert are hunted by criminals who stashed money in the family's car. Apparently, Gilvary did a recent rewrite on Rendezvous with Rama, which suggests that project might not be as conclusively dead as I had been assuming.

- The inevitable 300 spoof is to be 301: The Legend of Awesomest Maximus Wallace Leonidas, so Gladiator and Braveheart have clearly been tossed into the mix too. Rest assured that Troy is on the hit list also, and I assume a series of completely irrelevent films will be too (Borat again? Pirates of the Caribbean?)

- The Wall Street Journal are cautiously predicting big money success for Ratatouille.

- Cameron Diaz is to star in Richard Kelly's The Box. The film is adapted from Richard Matheson's Button, Button which has already been a Twilight Zone episode (in the 80s comeback series) where Mare Winningham had the role - and the story had been given a more satisfying, less daft ending (if you ask me). I've no idea how Kelly can spin this one out to feature length without making it mightily repetitive.

- Kevin Smith wants unknowns for Red State, which might actually really mean unkowns for once.

- The Hollywood Reporter are only just today covering Pool Rats being set up at Disney, despite the Mouse House registering the appropraite domain name weeks and weeks ago. Sigh.

- Carter Blanchard's spec script Near Death is about.... yep, you guessed it: spooky near death experiences. Fox Searchlight have taken the option.

- Marc Forster is developing, and may direct, Land of Roses. The film will be a drama about Ibrahim Parlak, a real-life Kurdsh Immigrant who campaigned to exonerate a falsely imprisoned terrorist.

- Sid Haig has been confirmed as appearing in the Halloween rehash

- Arthouse Films are to release The Cool School: How Los Angeles Learned to Love Modern Art. Jeff Bridges has narrted the film, which sounds just about perfect.

- The Cloverfield site URL is just redirecting to Paramount's homepage as I write, but any minute now (or hour, or day at least) it is going to go live, probably with a teaser.

- Jonathan Jakubowicz is to direct Queen of the South, all about a female, immigrant drug lord - a prettier Scarface. Apparently, Penelope Cruz, Jennifer Lopez and Eva Mendes are circling the lead role - I'd go for Lopez, personally.

- Arielle Kebble has signed to play one of the titular girls in A Tale of Two Sisters.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Palm Tree Peel Edition

- Paramount are to fly solo (distribution wise) in Japan from the start of next year. This pretty much puts the final nail in UIP's coffin.

- Adam Rifkin's an odd one. His Homo Erectus is to be released theatrically as National Lampoon's Homo Erectus this autumn. Meanwhile, his bona fide cult number The Dark Backwards is finally about to hit DVD after months of delays. And, of course, Underdog isn't too far away.

- David MacKenzie's Hallam Foe will be the opening night film for this year's Edinburgh festival.

- Doug Aarniokoski, an old 2nd of Robert Rodriguez, is making his 1st debut with the horror film Animals. Marc Blucas, Nicki Aycox, Andy Comeau and Eva Amurri are to star.

- Iwo Jima is being re-named Iwo To (re-named literally - it is returning to its original name). Clint Eastwood is being credited with reminding people of the misnomer and prompting the change.

- Is there going to be a sequel to 30 Days of Night? Apparently, planning is already underway.

- Peter Medak is to direct Addicted. Addicted to what? Sex, apparently. Might as well be Risk?

- AintItCool have a test screening review of the Halloween rehash.

- The brains behind lonelygirl15 have signed a Neutrogena sponsorship deal. I wonder if there's anybody similar out there trying to get attention on YouTube but, I dunno, possessed of some artistic ambition and integrity. Angling for a film deal is one thing, just wanting fame is another entirely.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

All New Official Sites

Some upcoming films now have wide open official sites. Speed Racer, Halloween, Hotrod and No Country for Old Men to be precise. And I Am Legend is not live as I write, but probably will be by the time you read this.

Good thing, this internet. Particularly for marketing films, it would seem.

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Love The Guru, Michael

Coming Soon have a brief piece on Mike Myer's upcoming Hallo... sorry, The Love Guru (easy mistake). Their reporter doesn't seem to know who The Marx Bros. were, which is a little disappointing.

Myers is quoted as saying:

In the last three years, I've been developing The Love Guru. The average movie takes 6.0 months; for a 'hmm, could this be a movie adapted to the screen?' I tend to take about 36 months - but I am there all 36 months.

He is a Canadian raised in India, becomes a guru, and helps the Toronto Maple Leafs win the Stanley Cup.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Direct Download Link For Rob Zombie's Halloween Trailer

[EDIT: Having trouble? When you right click to save the trailer, rename the file something like anythingatall.mov and it will work fine. Just get the .mov extension right]

A nice, hi-res Quicktime rendering of the trailer for Rob Zombie's Halloween is now online. We're bringing you the direct download link and some still frames. Been a busy couple of days for direct-download links to trailers - come in at the front and browse for more.

What are your thoughts on this one?





Saturday, March 10, 2007

MTV Wrong: Halloween Theme Is At The Ready

Rob Zombie has responded to MTV's story that his Halloween rehash would be missing the John Carpenter theme tune. Apparently, he's only shelved his cover version of it, not the actual theme itself.

That's just going to be weird. Whatever next? David Fincher remaking Brazil and keeping only the title song? Brrrrrrrr. Gives me chills thinking about it.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Teaser Poster For Rob Zombie's Halloween


This is the teaser poster for Rob Zombie's
Halloween rehash.

Zombie's really going for the creepy kid angle here. No surprises that his script spends at least a third of it's running time on events that relate to just the first two shots (turning a blind eye to those 'invisble' edits) of the John Carpenter original.

[EDIT: Please note that this is no fake. A small thumbnail of the image can be found on Sheri Moon Zombie's official site]

[EDIT: Okay, please re-note that it is a fake - just like Sheri Moon Zombie's 'official' site. Don't people have anything better to do?]

[EDIT: And now, if you will, re-re-note that this is neither a fake nor an official poster. It was fan created, sure, but it has been sanctioned by Rob and Sheri Moon. Don't expect to see the Weinsteins use it, however]

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Big Mike, Little Mike



The MySpace page of Rob Zombie's impending Halloween rehash has been update with the above images - your first look at the young Michael Myers and the older, be-masked, Shape-mode version - so here they are, above.

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Halloween Shooting Any Day Now - With A Script Very Much Like The One Slated Online

Rob Zombie doesn't seem to care what online critics think. Either that or he has no choice, because he's going to start filming his Halloween remake any day now. Everybody's saying that the shooting script is unchanged in face of the infamous criticisms that popped up online, and any alterations are part of only Zombie's usual rewrite process. More power to him: as far as I can tell, his script is not a patch on the original and his remake is going to look silly against Carpenter's film, but he has a vision, he believes in it and he's not taking any smack from anybody.

According to a Sheri Moon fansite, his good lady wife will be in the first scenes to be filmed. They'll be flashbacks, and they'll shot on Super 8 - something like Peter Chelsom did in Funny Bones.

[EDIT: Fangoria have now broken the news that filming has already begun, and that some Carpenter fans turned up at the studio and protested outside the soundstage]

Monday, January 01, 2007

Uprising Update And More Myers

The New York Times have run a piece on Mike Myer's upcoming films - and we're not talking Halloween. 1: Yet another vehicle for a Myers-created comedy character - this time, a love guru - that seems set to be a franchise launchpad; 2: A Keith Moon biopic, scripted by the Pulitzer winning playwright David Margulies; 3: A sci-fi comedy derived from jokey guide book How To Survive a Robot Uprising.

I told you about the latter in a previous post, where you can also see a video presentation by the author of the Robot Uprising book, Daniel H. Wilson. At the time, of course, I hadn't seen Night at the Museum, which shares a screenwriting duo with this new project - Thomas Lennon and Ben Garant - but now that I have seen Night, I'm happier than ever that Myers will be rewriting, rewriting and rewriting the script himself before it goes into production.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Walsh, Coens, Mamoulian And Soderbergh Added To US National Film Registry

A list of this year's 25 additions to the National Film Registry (of America, that is) has been run in Variety, and it is a mixed bunch. Of course.

sex, lies and videotape and Fargo are the two higher-profile, recently-made additions, and I love them both dearly (though not as much as the same directors' Solaris and The Man Who Wasn't There, say). A couple of my favourite directors from the first 50 years of cinema scored a film each, too - Rouben Mamoulian's debut Applause taking a seat alongside Raoul Walsh's The Big Trail. I suspect John Wayne's inclusion secured Big Trail a slot, while Applause probably got the nod because of an overall affection for the whole backstage-musical subgenre.

The obligatory Hitchcock was Notorious. Hurrah!

Note that Halloween was also included - and rightly so, it's an A+ graded, bonafide masterpiece of the highest order. I wonder if Rob Zombie's remake will ever be so honoured...

Well, actually, no, I don't wonder that at all. If I'm being honest, I'm sure it won't be.

The Library of Congress are now charged with ensuring these films remain well preserved for all future generations. Hopefully the folk at Criterion Eclipse will take the hint and know where to find some decent prints that won't suffer from their skimping on the remastering.

Mr. Myers

Every site in the world has reported, over my Xmas break, that Tyler Mane has been cast as Michael Myers in the Rob Zombie Halloween. Now you've had a couple of days for that to sink in, let me know: what do you think of this bit of casting?

What I really want to know is: will Shatner still provide the rubbery visage? Will it be an older, blubbier Shatner?

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Even More Halloween Business

Danielle Harris has reportedly won the 'lead role' in Rob Zombie's Halloween remake. Fangoria broke the story, but were not clear if this lead role was Laurie Strode by name, or simply by nature.

Harris has a number of animation voice over credits on her resume, as well as the odd bit of slasher fare - including two of the weaker Halloween sequels.

Malcolm McDowell Is Loomis

Rob Zombie has announced on his My Space page that Malcolm McDowell has won the role of Loomis in the upcoming Halloween remake.

Here's a parlor game you and your geekier family members can play this 'holiday season': Name an actor relegated to B-movie semi-obscurity (in this case, McDowell) and argue out which was their last good role, and if they'll ever have a good role again. Might I suggest Aidan Quinn, Sam Neill and Isabella Rosellini for a few rounds too.

We'll have to see if Loomis is the comeback McDowell is worthy of.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Halloween Stolen

There's a link doing the rounds at the minute, to a a MySpace page hosting video of John Carpenter's Halloween in it's entirety. Plenty of websites and blogs are reporting that this MySpace page is a promotional tool for Rob Zombie's upcoming remake of Halloween but, to be honest, it's pretty obvious right away that this is not the case. The fact that Rob Zombie has another page - and quite a well traficked one at that - is the dead giveaway, but the overall fan-ness of the page should seal the deal for most anyway.

Halloween is being shown illegitimately on that page. Watching it, honestly, would just be wrong. That's why there are no links here, why I'm not playing along. Show your support - for the remake if you wish, or better still for Carpenter's masterpiece - by getting your copy down off of the DVD shelf, or if you don't have it, by ordering one now, and not by supporting this low-quality and stolen copy of it.

And yes, of course, I have reported the MySpace user responsible.