Showing posts with label rob schmidt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rob schmidt. Show all posts

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.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Scent Of Green Marker Pens Edition

- A Fantastic 4/Silver Surfer ad aired during the Heroes series finale. Now, it's online. Do you see a shadow of Galactus' helmet in it or not?

- Reading between the lines, it seems that Southland Tales may not get a theatrical release, even in it's 'repaired' version. Have any of you seen it? Be honest - is it as outrageously bad as it looks?

- Seems like Soundwave the Transformer will be an iPod or, perhaps more accurately, a similar mp3 player.

- The entirety of Masters of Horror season 1 is available in 2 cheap boxsets here in the UK. The US will be getting their compendium in a single hulking pack this August, and Dread Central have the first look at the eco-unfriendly packaging. I'll split my sides laughing if this is a huge, huge sales winner and IDT are forced to realise what a mistake they've made letting season 3 go to Lionsgate.

- Extra scenes and songs featuring ghosts have been cut from Sweeney Todd, thankfully before they were even filmed. That means Christopher Lee's role no longer exists. The film is now pretty much a straight adaptation of the stage production - at least in terms of story structure and cast of characters. There's no reason given as to why the scenes have been axed, but schedule problems caused by the earlier production hiatus are likely at fault.

- Just Jared has a set of new Ocean's 13 stills. I'll have my up-close-and-personal look at the film's script coming soon...ish. Well, within hours, anyway.

- Only 20 minutes of Death Defying Acts were shown at Cannes, but it has sold very well to distributors worldwide. Lionsgate are my home team, and I hope they'll have it out sharpish.

- Terry Gilliam names The Apartment and Pinocchio as his favourte films in the new Radio Times, and also gives praise to Kung Fu Hustle, Paths of Glory and the paintings of Bruegel. The article isn't on their website, sadly...

- Bob Shaye is sticking to his guns over the whole Peter Jackson/Hobbit issue. Shame he's so utterly wrong.

- Bryan Lee O'Malley has unveiled a single page of Scott Pilgrim's fourth volume. Is the Edgar Wright/Michael Bacall film adaptation still going to happen? I'm starting to doubt it...

- Scorsese, for some reason considered the grand old man of cinema, announced the World Cinema Foundation today. The non-profit's mandate is simple: "to preserve and share films that are no longer shown or available on video". Also on the board of advisers? Variety list Fatih Akin, Souleymane Cisse, Guillermo Del Toro, Stephen Frears, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Abbas Kiarostami, Ermanno Olmi, Cristi Puiu, Walter Salles, Abderrahmane Sissako, Elia Suleiman, Bertrand Tavernier, Wim Wenders and Wong Kar Wai.

- Rob Schmidt's Bad Meat has a vegetarian agenda, and he tells ShockTilYouDrop all about it.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The I'm Half Watching The Tele Edition

- Soundtrack dot Net have some pictures from the scoring sessions for American Gangster. Looks like it's going to sound good.

- Yes, yes, there are pictures of Stallone as Rambo online, I know, I know.

- A clip from the Caveman pilot is now up for your viewing... pleasure? A thought provoking commentary on modern day race relations. Apparently.

- Mischa Barton is in the new St. Trinian's. Confirmation also comes that Russell Brand is playing Flash Harry, and that some filming has taken place in Hawaii. For some reason.

- Almodovar's El Deseo have commenced production of a documentary about El Senor de Sipan, "the ruler of ancient Peru's ruins".

- John Turturro is remaking Theo van Gogh's 1-900.

- The Playstation 3 version of Stranglehold will come with John Woo's Hard Boiled also on the disc. Of course, buying a Wii and a Blu-Ray player, something like Eledees and then also a copy of Hard Boiled on its own would be more satisfying at the end of the day. In related news, Sony are losing money - lots of money - because of the PS3.

- Today's second Rob Schmidt story: ThinkFilm are selling his film Bad Meat at Cannes. I met Schmidt at the London Film Festival years and years ago - at the time, Daniel Waters was a close friend of his. Wonder if they're still chums?

- Grant Morrison gives a very good interview to Wired. It's all Area 51, no mention of We3 - shame.

- VH1 have previewed their top 10 blockbusters of 2008. Maybe I'll try and rustle up a list for 2009 at some point, go one step beyond.