Showing posts with label spider-man 3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spider-man 3. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

The film ick Flashback: Part One

The year is half over, so I thought run a retrospective feature. A number of posts, each one reminding you of some of the bigger, better of more amusing film ick stories of the last six months - in chronogical order. Like Movie Minesweeper with short term memory problems.

This takes us up to January 17th:

- Terry Gilliam mentioned a new Brazil special edition DVD. I'm still waiting for another mention of this one anywhere.

- Some details turned up of Alejandro Jodorowsky's next, King Shot.

- Marc Forster was linked to a US remake of 36 Quai des Orfevres, then expected to star George Clooney and Robert De Niro.

- The Saw IV scribes were named, and rumours circulated about the director of the film. Incorrect rumours, as it happens.

- We found out about De Palma's Redacted.

- Michel Gondry was outed as the director developing the Debbie Harry biopic.

- Ken Russell spent some time in the Big Brother house. Crackers.

- The first No Country For Old Men still turned up here.

- I interviewed David Hewlett about A Dog's Breakfast. That film sounds brilliant and I can't wait to see it.

- Shyamalan signed to make a series of Avatar: The Last Airbender films.

- The MySpace page for Tracy unveiled the film's trailer, and very funny it was too.

- Dr. House played with his Nintendo DS.

- Paul McGuigan's Equalizer film was still moving forward.

- Drive Away Dykes popped up on the radar.

- I snuck a few plugs for this site into a Radio 2 show.

- A series of Spider-Man 3 spoilers were run. Most of them turned out to be true.

- I tipped Son of Rambow as the film to watch at Sundance this year. It went on to be the biggest sale of the festival which made me very happy.

- Jenna Jameson tried to hype a film of her 'life' by suggesting Scarlett Johansson would take the lead role.

- I reviewed the script for Guillermo del Toro's At the Mountains of Madness.

- The Golden Globes happened.

- John Carter of Mars ended up in the hands of Pixar.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

I Don't Really Know How To Review The New Fantastic Four Film

What can I say about Fantasic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer? It wasn't too hot, I can tell you that. You can probably guess the entire plotline from the trailers. And all of the jokes and major character beats. So, was anything unexpected?

Yes - here's the list of surprises I encountered while watching the film on Tuesday night.


I attended a 'regional premiere', starting just ahead of the big deal in London. We had live link up via satellite to the red carpet in London where Edith Bowman struggled to hold it all together. The cinema we were in - the Vue in Oxford - did an embarrassingly bad job with the digital projection of these segments, however. The images were in black and white, there was ghosting, all in all, it looked rather dreadful. Which is a crying shame because, while the Vue's projectionists clearly have no idea how to use the digital projector and were too proud to ask for help and get it right before hand, it is typically the one cinema in Oxford that offers the best presentation of the lot.

After over an hour of red carpet interviews that never quite happened the link up announced that we were now about to see the film. The manager of the cinema disagreed, however - there was to be an intermission of fifteen minutes for us to pop to the loo. This was a very good idea, but a better solution would have been to limit the outside broadcast to ten minutes or so in the first place. There wasn't ten minutes worth of actual content, but I think we could have just about stomached it stretching that far. Over an hour? I'm a little surprised that none of the thirty or so people in the audience snapped and killed the rest of us.

And then, the film and the next surprise: according to the BBFC title card, this film is simply called 4 - Rise of the Silver Surfer. No Fantastic. How prophetic.

The plot is pretty straightforward - Reed and Sue are to get married but Reed is distracted with a Surfer-monitoring project. The Surfer is coming to herald Galactus' destruction of us all. Doom starts knocking about again (his first few scenes were the most empty, boring scenes in an empty, boring film - simply there to remind us he existed and grasp at some kind of suspense). The Surfer is incarcerated by the military, Doom gets his board and powers, Sue bonds with the Surfer, they set him free and then there's a chase about for a bit, he gets his board back, tells Galactus to shove off, the end. Basically.

There's plenty of attempts at comedy but I didn't hear a single laugh from the little audience. Not even the kids. Maybe it 'works better' in a full auditorium. Which reminds me: the effects, particularly in an early 'funny' nightclub dance sequence with a CG Reed, were often sub-Ally McBeal. The rubber Surfer suit - seldom seen as it was, and stiff-faced too - looked fairly good, though.

I was surprised by the sequence in which the Surfer is incarcerated. It seemed like political subtext was bubbling up and that wasn't expected - even such ham-brained dumb-fisted attempts at subtextual relevance as this. It adds nothing and will convince no-one, which makes it seem rather sincere. I'm sorry, but this was probably a genuine attempt by Tim Story and writers to 'say something' - and that's the most damning thing I can say about this film, if you think about it.

There are a few action set-pieces and they're just mediocre, really. Like a late 70s Bond film or an 80s Arnold film that had nought to do with Cameron. The trailer that showed the Johnny/Surfer chase looked to be a bit choppy, and I was surprised to see that, actually, many of the cuts in the film were the same as in the trailer, that it hadn't been hacked down for the promo. Skillfully wrought stuff this was not.

Ultimately, this was an exercise in lowest common-denominator dreck, speckled with the odd attempt to convince the audience that they were watching something slightly
more worthwhile than they actually were (only slightly - they don't even set this fake bar very high).

One final surprise: after the screening, my girlfriend claimed to have enjoyed it more than Spider-Man 3 because Spider-Man 3 'took itself too seriously'. There were countless things wrong with that (surprising) statement, not least that actually, she spent the entire Fantastic Four 2 rolling her eyes, tutting and mocking it with the odd funny comment. During Spidey, she laughed and didn't offer any snarky put downs at all. She must have just been trying to make a point.

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - Sunday Lunch Edition

- Spider-Man 3 is making lots and lots of money. And it is very good, so I'm glad but it is also... well, quite bad. Some all-time classic scenes (such as when Peter and Harry go back to Harry's house after he leaves the hospital - brilliant stuff; and the first time the Sandman tries to form out of grains) but a generally dodgy structure and some rough-and-ready looking scenes leads to a largely embarrassing final act.

- The IESB have some video of the Iron Man suit. Frankly, after the official image was unveiled the other day, the required standard of paparazzi snaps went way up - and this doesn't meet those new, higher requirments.

- Oliver Stone's TV spot that calls for the troops in Iraq to be withdrawn is now online. It probably isn't what you're expecting, and is all the better for it.

- Four Minutes beat bookies' favourite Perfume to the homegrown movie gong at the German Film Awards.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Alphabetti Spaghetti

Some Spider-Man 3 posters have turned up with a very bizarre typographical error...

Monday, April 30, 2007

Spider-Cat


I think Spider-Man appears to be doing his best George Galloway impersonation in this picture. Rula Lenska
would make a good MJ, maybe?

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Put Spider-Man's Starz In Your Eyes

Last night, the Starz channel aired a Spider-Man 3 preview. Somebody caught it and pinned it up on YouTube in three parts - un, dos, tres.

Enjoy.

Yahoo Buzz Boo Hoo

As I saw on SlashFilm, Yahoo's Buzz Log have compiled a countdown of the twenty most searched movie releases due this summer. Unsurprisingly, Spider-Man 3 tops the list, followed by Transformers and Shrek the Third. DOA: Dead or Alive is at number 10 - despite being available on DVD in the UK already. I dare say this is down to quite lascivious intent on the part of the search artists - they should just import the disc and get just what they want from pause, zoom and A-B repeat.

Which reminds me: I need to add it to my rental queue.

Underdog clocks in at 17, above Hostel 2 at 18. That was shocking enough. More surprisingly, Ratatouille has only made it to 19, with Knocked Up coming in at the bottom.

Curious.

As for Google, the two gaining queries in their latest weekly Zeitgeist report (week ending 21st April) that have movie connections are number 9, Alec Baldwin and 10, Shia LaBeouf.

Friday, April 27, 2007

Win 2 Limited Edition Spider-Man 3 Posters



For some reason, Blogger keeps crashing every time I try to post this story - so I'll keep it short. Here's the stripped down, can't-believe-I'm-typing-this-again version:

K-Mart are offering a set of 2 limited edition and eminently collectible Spider-Man 3 posters to one lucky competition winner. If you aren't the lucky winner, you'll have to get to K-Mart in a hurry - the first poster is only available until this Sunday inclusive (29th April), the second only until next Saturday inclusive (5th May). After that... well, you don't really want to be forced to pay e-bay prices, do you? Get your skates on, poster afficianados.

To win a pair of posters, all you have to do is look at the Spider-Man 3-related image at the bottom of this post and then identify the film ick news story it originally appeared in. E-mail me with the headline to that story before midnight next Tuesday, 1st May - and we'll say that's US West Coast Time to give you late risers a chance.

The winner will be announced on Wednesday.


Wednesday, April 25, 2007

What's Actually On Those Spider-Man 3 Pirate DVDs?

Sony have officially denied that Spider-Man 3 has been pirated; the only evidence I can garner actually seems to back them up.

Two film ick readers purchased Spider-Man 3, or so they thought, from their local enslaved illegal immigrant traders. Both ended up with the same thing... a copy of Ghost Rider. Thanks to them both for letting me know.

Of course, there may be actual copies of Spider-Man 3 doing the rounds - Sony have every reason to pretned there isn't. If you happen across or see a copy actually playing, please let us know. For heavens sake, though, don't take this as an encouragement to buy pirated materials. Quite the opposite, in fact.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

What Do John Ratzenberger And Bruce Campbell Have In Common?

Bruce Campbell is playing a snooty Maitre D' in Spider-Man 3, John Ratzenberger in Ratatouille. JV Pixar found out - a superb piece of work from them, it seemed to involve watching Dancing With the Stars - and as a result, we have the below picture to show you. This is how Ratzenberger will look when the film opens in the next couple of months.

Pirate Copies Of Spider-Man 3 Abound

If I am to believe everything I'm told (and I tend to, to a point - at first, at least) the streets of Beijing are flooded with bootleg Spidey discs, your favourite Bit Torrent server can probably broker a deal and pirate copies of Spider-Man 3 have even been seen in London, just as the UK premiere is going on.

Reuters have a piece on the Chinese Pirates.

Do you buy, make, sell or download pirate versions of films? If so, why? I'd love to see your excuses in the comments section below
.

Tokyo Suckerpunch

Tobey Maguire is continuing the Spider-Man 3 world premiere tour at the moment, and answering questions at every turn.

Now he's confirmed some details about the upcoming Tokyo Suckerpunch, which he is producing and will star in.

The project is adapted from Isaac Adamson's novel; Ed Solomon is rewriting his 2005 screenplay right now; no director has yet been attached; the line-up of producers has shifted over the project's development.

Maguire's character would apparently be Billy Chaka, a reporter with a nice line in wisecracks. He heads to Japan, from his native Cleveland, to cover a Martial Arts championship for disabled teenagers but instead is caught up in Yakuza misdeeds, crime and conspiracy.

In the book, I belive, Chaka is an Asian American, so it possible that Maguire has earmarked another role and not yet made that clear in discussing the project. On the other hand... maybe not.

Dunst Confuses Everybody

Kirsten Dunst at last night's London Premiere of Spider-Man 3:

I think it might happen if me, Tobey and Raimi are all on board. I think it'll happen. It'll probably be out in four years at the latest.

That is bound to be taken as some kind of indication that the team are going to sign up for another one. Dunst is such a brilliant interview becasue she always, always, always says something she's not supposed to. And if it happens to be something small and inconclusive like this, it always, always, always ends up getting inflated into a really big deal.

Even More Spider-Man Stills

A rogue film ick agent (of sorts) returned to the fold with the Spider-snaps below. Good work.



Monday, April 23, 2007

The Science Of Sand

Wired have taken a quick look at the FX technology behind The Sandman in Spider-Man 3.

Spider-Suits

Jim Acheson has spoken to Comics Continuum about his work on Spider-Man 3. Acheson is one of the very best costume designers at work, and my number one fave alongside Betsy Heimann.

Click on any of these
suit-flaunting images from Spider-Man 3 for a bigger version.





Peter Parker Kisses Cleopatra Goodbye

Spider-Man 3 appears to have become the most expensive film ever made. Radar have done the maths, and placed Cleopatra in second place with 290 million, after inflations. Spidey has rung up a total of 350 million this time out, they claim.

Can any film be worth that amount of money? Ever? Surely the same levels of relevance, importance, entertainment, clarity, imagination and integrity be reached on a much lower budget?

I think we know the answer is yes. But that doesn't mean I don't want to see Spider-Man 3 right now.

Quality Upswing Predicted For Movie-License Video Games

Scott Steinberg has been speaking to Next Generation about movie tie-in games, why they've typically been so very bad and why this is, apparently, going to change:

Hollywood really can throw a grenade to game companies; they'd throw a license grenade over the wall and game companies would have six months to build a game and market it. No surprise the game might not have been the greatest.

As publishers and the different movie studios are recognizing how important videogames are to the marketing of a film to the demographic, movie studios realise that they can't trivialise the interactive space.

In Iron Man’s case Jon Favreau is absolutely a gamer. They don’t want their property and their efforts to be attached to a trivialized game development effort so they’re very involved. The whole industry, both industries, have coupled together and have evolved or advanced their craft to a point where both are taken extremely seriously and that just wasn’t the case two years ago.

I think that videogames still have a lot to learn from movies. Imagine Spider-Man 3 devoid of 99% of the characterisation, human relatability, subtext, emotional content, thematic purpose and authorial point of view. That's roughly equivalent to what you'd get from a very good Spider-Man video game so far. But I'm hopeful - for games with more taste, better developed aesthetic sense and something to say. While people are still obsessing about existing genres, control systems and mathematical-graphical standards, however, this isn't going to happen.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Spider-Futures

Of course Sony want more Spider-Man. 4, 5 and 6, apparently. But it goes without saying that 6 depends on the success of 5, 5 on the success of 4... and I think we can rest assured that 3 will deliver more than enough the get gears moving on 4.

But not with Sam Raimi. He's not going to sign, I'm sure.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Spider-Man In Cleveland

Last summer, I spent a few days on the set of Spider-Man 3 in Cleveland while second unit work for the Armoured Car chase was filmed. Now, courtesy of the official behind-the-scenes videographers, you can see a little featurette on Spidey's time in the city.