Sunday, February 28, 2016

2016 Oscars: Final Predictions


Okay, pals, here you go.
Calling 'em as I see 'em - happy viewing!


Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Cinematography - The Revenant

Best Actress - Brie Larson, Room

Best Supporting Actor - Sylvester Stallone, Creed

Best Supporting Actress - Alicia Vikander, The Daniah Girl

Best Original Screenplay - Spotlight

Best Adapted Screenplay - The Big Short

Mad Max: Fury Road will take Editing, Visual Effects and Production Design

The Hateful Eight will win Best Score

Monday, February 15, 2016

The Revenant: harrowing and visionary
















I already thought 2015 had been a pretty great year for film - now I realize it was extraordinary.
As far as films set in the "old west," it's seen quite a resurgence.  The Hateful Eight and Bone Tomahawk were both very different, and very successful on their own terms. Now with The Revenant, we have another unique vision of the period, a descendent of films like Jeremiah Johnson and The Outlaw Josey Wales. 

Set on the American frontier of the 1820s, director Alejandro González Iñárritu’s The Revenant is less a traditional Western and more a gripping blend of wilderness survival and revenge drama, that skyrockets to the top of any list of the year’s best films. There are so many simply jaw-dropping sequences in this film, another stunning collaboration between Iñárritu and his Birdman cinematographer Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki, that it nearly overwhelms in delivering a combination of brutal, visceral hardships, captured with simply mind-boggling visual technique.

 

The Revenant is based on the true story of hunter and guide Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio), leading a group of fur trappers through hostile territory. When Glass and his party are ambushed by a force of Native American warriors, Lubezki and Iñárritu completely immerse the audience, shooting in the first of many long, uninterrupted takes. You’re not consciously aware of it, and it’s impossible to fathom the timing and coordination that must have been involved to pull it off. It’s a staggering sequence – but the filmmakers are just getting started. In a scene of visceral infamy that frankly redefines what’s possible in movies, Glass is subject to a bear attack that’s as convincing as it is graphic. Mauled and filleted, near death, Glass is betrayed and left for dead by his fellows - abandoned, alone and determined to exact retribution. 

 

Iñárritu and Lubezki seemed to have felt they needed to undergo challenges and hardships that were nearly as extreme as those faced by their protagonist. Filming in chronological order and using only natural light, the entire film was shot in harrowing conditions over nine months in frigid wilderness locations of Calgary and Patagonia. Legendary production designer Jack Fisk has created environments that are beyond authentic. The outpost fort of expedition leader Domhnall Gleeson looks like something they found by going back in time. Iñárritu takes the pulp survival scenario and elevates it to an odyssey of mystical and visionary reckoning of man’s will amidst nature. 

 

As amazing as the film is visually, the cast makes it soar. Leonardo has never been better, and undergoes such a grueling series of punishments – largely without dialogue. It’s a painful, aching portrayal and he carries the film in virtually every scene - an incredibly human, poignant performance. As amazing as he is, I was absolutely blown away by Tom Hardy, embodying the most awful villain in recent memory. A wounded sociopath, Hardy channels a backwoods Jame Gumb accent, unrecognizable and unrepentant. I’ll be rooting for him to win Best Supporting Actor, it’s an amazing performance and the perfect dark counterweight to DiCaprio.

 

2015 was a stunning year for cinematography, but Lubezki’s work has to be singled out. Having already won Oscars for Birdman and Gravity (for director Alfonso Cuarón), he seems a shoe-in to take home a third for his work here. He’s done groundbreaking work on films as diverse as Sleepy Hollow, The New World and Children of Men, but he delivers his best work yet here, having just won top honors from the America Society of Cinematographers. Lubezki shot in digital, rather than film, capturing incredible wide images and high resolution depth of field, somehow making the available light work to his advantage. 

 

The best cinema creates an immersive experience, while investing you in the fate of the protagonist. The Revenant is at once both dreamlike and hauntingly real. 

It’s visionary filmmaking and an absolute must-see. 

Toy Fair 2016: Wrap-up

I'm The dust has all but settled, and another New York Toy Fair is in the books.

NECA pretty much ruled the roost with some really nice reveals. Here are a few more detailed official layouts of some of the new items that were on display this year.

The new Alien³ wave...



Ultimate Tech Noir Terminator...

Ash vs. Evil Dead...



Here's another look at the new Funko four-inch Game of Thrones figures. Evidently they are part of their ReAction line, and unless I was completely asleep at the wheel, nary a mention was made of anything new in their Legacy series - either Thrones or Firefly. I have to say Funko has been terrible at answering questions about this line, either via their normal web presence or even during a Twitter Q&A. They could learn a lot from Randy Falk and NECA. Unless I hear otherwise, I'll just assume that the Pop! Vinyl obsessives know best, and that Legacy figures are no more. Thanks for leaving us holding the bag. 































Speaking of no more, I was sad to learn that McFarlane Toys will be stepping away from their terrific 5" line of The Walking Dead figures after the soon-to-be-released 9th wave. We'll apparently be getting a last 5" Daryl with his newer Alexandria motorcycle, then I guess that's about it. This was a great figure line, getting better and better with each new wave. Instead, McFarlane is bumping up the scale to a new 7" "Color Tops" line of more premium renditions, which to me sounds like their bid to have their own Black Series line. I don't know if I'll ever be able to forgive them for breaking off the 5" line without ever producing Lori Grimes.



That's about it for now. If something else drops, I'll be sure to let you know.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Toy Fair 2016: Hasbro's new 6-inch Star Wars Black Series


Here they are - starting with a New Hope Princess Leia. I'm not a big cloth outfit fan, and I'm on the fence about this likeness. We've also got Rebels' Sabine, fan favorite Darth Revan (from the Knights of the Old Republic video game), a Snowtrooper, Rebels' Kanan Jarrus and Farmboy Luke! 









Toy Fair 2016: NECA's Ash vs Evil Dead!

Here they are, in all their glory glory! Great likeness of Bruce Campbell!






Toy Fair 2016: What the?! Funko 3.75" Game of Thrones!?

...and after I was just giving Funko grief for seemingly letting their Legacy Thrones series dry up. Check these out - a little cartoony (is that supposed to be Jon Snow? Jon "Stache?"), but at 3.75" and more detailed than the ReAction figures, I'm definitely intrigued!


Toy Fair 2016: Drool-inducing Reveals of NECA Cinemachines!!!

Holy Cow! Feast your eyes on these babies! They do not disappoint!







Toy Fair 2016: NECA Reveals Alien³!

Saturday kicks off with a new series of Alien figures, this time from Alien³.

We've got Bald Ripley, the Weyland-Utani Commandos, Queen Chestburster and Queen Facehugger:


































NECA also revealed a new Tech Noir Terminator from their Ultimates line, and a Kenner-based Series 16 batch of Predators.





















Have some more coffee and we'll meet back here shortly!

Friday, February 12, 2016

Toy Fair 2016: Dark Horse Thrones Night's King


For a while, Funko was really giving Dark Horse a run for their money in the Game of Thrones department, but it seems that they've really pulled back from their Legacy Collection (prove me wrong, guys - please!) in favor of their cartoonish Pop! Vinyl figures. Meanwhile, Dark Horse keeps 'em coming. We already knew at San Diego Comic-Con that we'd be getting Ygritte, Margaery Tyrell, Oberyn Martell, Grey Worm and Varys, but this reveal trumps them all - the Night King, malevolent ruler of the White Walkers. Hopefully we'll be getting a closer look tomorrow. But this icy bastard's a keeper!

Toy Fair 2016: Let the Games Begin!!!












Grab the women and children - it's HAPPENING!!!
DC is making a big presence for themselves this year, using Batman v Superman as a wedge to steal some of that Marvel spotlight. The new Batmobile itself is on display...


















...and hundreds upon hundreds of BvS related toys, everything from action figures to Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots:

















Mattel also has their new DC Superhero Girls line on display, that's already caught on with generation-spanning appeal.



















So Toy Fair eve is all DC thus-far. The real shrink-wrap gets peeled off Saturday morning, so we'll do our best to keep updating as anything cool is unveiled!

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Trek TV, Invisible Depp, and Player One Flinches

A lot of interesting news nuggets popping up this week.

In what you’ve got to count as a very smart move, CBS has hired Hannibal/Pushing Daisies/Dead Like Me creator Bryan Fuller as showrunner for their new Star Trek series. He’ll produce the show with Alex Kurtzman, and Fuller’s definitely got the cred, having started out writing for Star Trek: Deep Space Nineand Star Trek: Voyager early in his career. We don’t know much about “the who and the when” of this new Trek series yet, but it’s set to debut on CBS’s new digital subscription service, after launching on network broadcast in January 2017. Fuller’s also currently serving showrunner duties on the Starz adaptation of American Gods, from Neil Gaiman. Fuller’s a long-time, self-professed Trek fan, who’s got a solid understanding of the canon and unbridled enthusiasm for the concept, with a solid, creative background in episodic TV. He’s said to have some very specific ideas for a new Trek premiseso with a premiere date less than a year away, expect plenty of additional news to break very soon.

Johnny Depp has signed up to be The Invisible Man, as part of the “shared universe” reboot of the Universal Monsters franchise, shepherded by Alex Kurtzman and Chris Morgan. Having already landed Tom Cruise as the (non-titular) lead in their reboot of The Mummy (June 9th, 2017), Depp’s casting cements the notion that this new series of interconnected films will have a strong star power component. Ed Solomon (Men in Black) is tackling The Invisible Man script. I’m intrigued by this concept while not being entirely sold, but Universal had a pretty spectacular and shrewdly executed year, with films like Jurassic World, Furious 7, MinionsPitch Perfect 2 and Straight Outta Compton. Somebodysure knows what they’re doing over there, and they’ve been particularly strong at marketing. 

You didn’t have to be a genius to see this one coming, but Warner Brothers has blinked, moving Steven Spielberg’s Ready Player One out of the way of Star Wars: Episode VIII, because Steven Spielberg is nobody’s fool. Ready Player One will now debut on March 30th, 2018, staking a claim on the less populated Easter timeframe. It’s possible it will now lock fangs with one of those new Universal Monster flicks, as The Wolf Man is thought to be coming out then, in addition to an as-yet unannounced DC picture, belived to be The Flash. Warner Bros. has a couple of additional untitled “event” films slated for March as well, which will hopefully do better for them than this years’ crop of tentpoles, as films like Pan and In the Heart of the Sea pretty much tanked. 

Things are definitely getting busy out there. Remember that Toy Fair blasts off on Friday, and The Walking Dead returns this Sunday in a big way. 
So check back for more news and raised eyebrows over the coming days. 

Friday, February 5, 2016

NECA unveils Aliens Jorden Tractor and more!

New York’s Toy Fair doesn’t officially kick off until next Friday, but that’s not stopping companies like NECA from ringing some serious Pavlovian bells this week, with some pretty awesome glimpses of what’s to come. 

We already knew that NECA had a brand new vehicle line dubbed Cinemachines, that would depict ships and other means of transport from the Alien and Terminator franchises (at roughly 6" scale). Now we’re getting an even better look at just how deep this line promises to reach. Among the more easily recognizable ships like the Dropship and APC (just to the right of the Nostromo), we saw one of the Aliens Holy Grails – the Jorden family tractor, driven by Newt’s parents at the Hadley’s Hope terraforming colony, as seen in the Aliens Special Edition cut:


















The closest we ever got was back in the nineties, when Galoob’s Action Fleet line showed off a prototype that was never released. Fans have been hoping someone would put out a model of this vehicle ever since – and the time has finally come.

NECA also gave us a peek at a Cinemachines version of the Skynet Hunter-Killer tank from the Terminator films – feast your eyes on this baby:



















If this is only the tip of the iceberg, the mind reels at what we’ll see next week at Toy Fair.

Oh, and one more thing – a tantalizing comment on NECA’s Twitter feed about a mysterious SDCC exclusive that sounds like it’ll take our breath away:
















Randy Falk and the NECA crew are just crushing it!!!

More toy news will be rolling out hard over the next week and beyond, so stay tuned!

Thursday, February 4, 2016

The Greatest Opening and Closing Shots of All-Time!

What’s more important than a good ending? Probably a great beginning. Ideally, you want to have both.

A fundamental screenwriting tenet is that you’d better capture the reader’s attention right out of the gate, ideally with something arresting and intriguing that makes you want to keep reading – that makes you want to know more. 

And the ending of a movie – well, that’s the cement, right? It sets the emotional definition for the audience, that will set their gums to flapping and powerfully influence the word of mouth you’re hoping they’ll spread. Doors ajar, and doors that close. 

When the stars are in alignment, a great director and cinematographer can create a single image that either sets the stage or draws the curtain – a composition that’s engaging and iconic.

The good folks at The Playlist & CineFix recently posted a fascinating pair of video essays that present worthy candidates for the all-time best opening and closing shots in movie history. It makes for fascinating viewing. Feast your eyes:

The Art of the Opening Shot:
Top 10 Closing Shots of All Time:

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Shout! Factory's 2016 '80s Blu-ray Bonanza!

If you love movies, and you’re into blu-ray, you’d better be getting familiar with Shout! Factory
 
An offshoot of the old Rhino label, Shout! Factory has been in the business for over 12 years, and is now on the vanguard of blu-ray restoration, having released jaw-dropping editons of Mad Max, Escape From New York, Nightbreed, The Car and Army of Darkness – and that was just in the last year! Under their Scream Factory brand, they’ve been a champion of John Carpenter films, producing new special editions of They Live, The Fog and Village of the Damned. These cats care about movies (and vintage TV shows), and are particularly passionate about preserving smaller, nearly forgotten thrillers and cultish releases, often giving them a brand new life with director’s cuts (Nightbreed) that had never previously seen the light of day. 
 
With the new year, Shout! Factory is at it again, and today we’re highlighting a trio of great 1980s pulp cinema, now up for pre-order. If you haven’t seen these movies, you’re in for a treat:
 
Nighthawks (1981) – May 3rd release 
 



















Originally planned as The French Connection III, Nighthawks stars Sylvester Stallone and features the American debut of Rutger Hauer as a ruthless terrorist wreaking havoc in New York. Sly’s New York cop (along with partner Billy Dee Williams) plays cat-and-mouse with Hauer across Manhattan, featuring great location work and a fantastic urban crime story with lots of in-your-face suspense. It’s had a checkered home video history, but it’s 80’s action at its best. Looks like it’s getting a proper and long overdue restoration.
 
 
Manhunter (1986) – May 24th release
 



The one that started it all, the very first depiction of a Hannibal Lecter story on film, predating The Silence of the Lambs. Directed by Michael Mann and starring William Petersen as Will Graham and Brian Cox as Dr. Lecter – and I haven’t even mentioned Tom Noonan. Remade as Red Dragon in 2002, Manhunter is lurid and gripping every step of the way. Can’t wait to see what kind of extras they come up with here! Fans of TV’s Hannibal will want to go back and check out the Old Testament.
 
 
The Sicilian (1987) – March 29th release




















A mafia saga written by Mario Puzo as a spinoff to The GodfatherThe Sicilian was severely cut to pieces against the wishes of director Michael Cimino (The Deer Hunter, Heaven’s Gate). Shout! Factory is presenting Cimino’s 146 minute Director’s Cut, and it’s said to be a 180-degrees completely different and better film. Christopher Lambert may be even more stoic than he was in Highlander, but along with 1985’s Year of the Dragon, this represents a wild period of 80’s pulp crime filmmaking for Cimino, one of the most underrated of American directors, thanks to the chaos surrounding Heaven’s Gate. Kudos indeed to Shout! Factory for giving us a shot at seeing the real deal. It’s an offer we can’t refuse.
 

Speaking of blu-ray, Amazon’s Deal of the Day has some spectacular bargains on titles in the Supreme Cinema Series from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
The series (so far) consists of three superb 4K restorations of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, The Professional and The Fifth Element, each featuring 24 page booklet inserts, new blu-ray features and stunning Dolby Atmos sound. These are sensational bargains at $14.99, so grab them today while they’re this affordable.
    



You can order them all at this link!
The enormous Lawrence of Arabia gift set is on sale there, too.