MSN Movies Blog

Holds America for ransom

By Corwin Neuse Jul 29, 2011 10:55AM
With HBO's "Entourage" mercifully coming to a close after an 8-year run that anybody else would be ridiculously proud of—and happy enough to leave alone—creator Mark Wahlberg and Executive Producer Doug Ellin apparently feel otherwise. 

According to Deadline, Ellin has all but promised that an "Entourage" film will be made, telling the Television Critics Association, "We're going to do it, the [only] question is when and how quickly."

At the same event, "Entourage" creator Mark Wahlberg reportedly continued the psychological assault. "If I had to finance it myself, I would do it," he growled, presumably while scowling at the assembled audience in that singularly menacing, Mark Wahlberg-ian way of his.

Left unsaid in all this is how much money Ellin and Wahlberg want in return to preemptively avoid this cultural catastrophe. Also unmentioned is what creative ground a potential "Entourage" movie could possibly cover. Will Adrien Grenier score a surprise Academy Award nomination for a supporting role in a Martin Scorsese picture? Will he and his crew go to Amsterdam and black out for six days, then be forced to comedically pick up the pieces and/or find the inexplicably AWOL Turtle? And will Ari Gold finally quit being an agent to pursue his first love, musical theater?

What say you, Hitlisters? Are you excited about the prospects of "Entourage" movie? Are our misgivings grievously shortsighted? Or would Wahlberg and HBO be better served developing a spin-off staring Johnny Drama? As always, let us know in the comments. 
 

Directed by Anthony Hemingway; starring Terrence Howard and Cuba Gooding Jr.

By William Goss Jul 29, 2011 10:42AM
For decades, George Lucas has had his heart set on bringing the story of the Tuskegee Airmen to the big screen. Why the project was never made it a priority before his "Star Wars" prequels is anyone's guess, but now, his labor of love is on the horizon. Produced by Lucas and directed by TV vet Anthony Hemingway ("Treme," "Community"), "Red Tails" takes its inspiration from the real-life squadron of black fighter pilots enlisted to escort WWII bombers when no other squadron would or could manage it.

Yahoo! has premiered the trailer for the film. I was going to say that the scenes contending with racism don't seem the most subtle, but -- and this is going to sound corny as hell -- racism at the time was rarely subtle itself. What really stands out are the flying sequences; if anything, I suspect that Lucas was waiting for technology to catch up to his ideal vision of aerial combat.

Starring Terrence Howard, Nate Parker, David Oyelowo, Ne-Yo (!), Method Man (!!) and Cuba Gooding Jr. (!!!), "Red Tails" is due out on January 20, 2012.

 

'1950' budgeted at $100 million, which is a lot in any country

By Corwin Neuse Jul 29, 2011 10:18AM
With such critically-lauded and popular films as "The Fast and the Furious," "xXx," "Stealth," and "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" on his resume, it's somewhat surprising that director Rob Cohen has resorted to making films overseas. That said, it seems only natural and fitting that today's news, courtesy of Deadline, finds him signing on to direct "1950," the biggest budgeted movie in the Korean film industry's history.

"1950" will follow the story of legendary New York Herald Tribune correspondent Marguerite Higgins. Despite acquitting herself well as a wartime journalist in World War II—and memorably covering the liberation of Nazi concentration camps—Higgins had to persistently lobby General Douglas MacArthur for the right to report on the then-burgeoning Korean War from the front lines. The film will presumably detail those efforts, and depict her harrowing first tour across the Korean peninsula embedded with a platoon of Marines.

While the story seems appropriately grand and inspiring, especially for such a proficient action director as Cohen, the real question seems to be why this film isn't being made by America. A compelling, imminently respectable war story starring an intelligent, iron-willed female lead? What's the problem, Hollywood? Not enough opportunities for product placement? The lack of attractive ancillary revenue streams like t-shirts and video games? For shame, Hollywood. For shame.
 

Will show Brett Ratner just how a heist movie is done

By Corwin Neuse Jul 29, 2011 9:29AM
Deadline is reporting that Antoine Fuqua ("Shooter," "Training Day") has signed on to direct an adaptation of John Huddy's ponderously titled non-fiction book "Storming Las Vegas: How a Cuban-Born, Soviet-Trained Commando Took Down The Strip to the Tune of Five World Class Hotels, Three Armored Cars, and Millions of Dollars."

Although book adaptations can run the gamut from doggedly faithful to not so much, it seems a safe bet that this film will at least involve a Cuban-born, Soviet-trained commando taking down the Las Vegas strip, robbing five world class hotels and three armored cars to the tune of millions of dollars. However, with the always-unpredictable Fuqua calling the shots, anything is possible. Could the decidedly un-Cuban Ethan Hawke (Fuqua's "Training Day" and "Brooklyn's Finest") play the film's protagonist? Could its premise and milieu be updated, so it becomes about an Iranian-born, Taliban-trained freedom fighter instead? Only time or a well-informed publicist will tell.

In the meantime, at least one change from the book seems certain: the title has been smartly shortened to simply "Storming Las Vegas."
 

The little blue guys are swarming theatres nationwide

By DannyMiller Jul 29, 2011 7:53AM

Bringing the Smurfs to the big screen must have seemed like a fantastic idea to producer Jordan Kerner. Why else would the man behind the new live action/CG film have fought so hard for nearly a decade to get “The Smurfs” made? Kerner’s credits include a bunch of films aimed at the lucrative family market such as “The Mighty Ducks,” “George of the Jungle,” and “Inspector Gadget” (and all of their attendant sequels) and he hopes to create a trilogy of Smurf films if his blue creatures hit big.

 

And why wouldn’t Kerner be optimistic? The Hanna-Barbera cartoon series ruled the animation world in the 1980s, winning multiple Emmy Awards and even a prestigious Humanitas Prize. The voices on that show included animation legends Don Messick (the voice of Scooby-Doo, Bamm-Bamm Rubble, and Yogi Bear’s sidekick, Boo Boo), June Foray (who voiced both Rocky and Natasha in the fabulous “Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons), Janet Waldo (Judy Jetson, Josie and the Pussycats, and Penelope Pitstop), and an insane number of talented actors from Jonathan Winters and Paul Winchell to Brenda Vaccaro and Ruth Buzzi.

 

What happens when you ask all your friends to, you know, get down?

By Kate Erbland Jul 28, 2011 9:31PM
"A Good Old Fashioned Orgy" is about, well, what it claims to be - but there's more here than just poorly thought-out decisions of the physical variety. The film revolves around a group of friends who pass their summers at one of their pal's parents' house by throwing huge parties, drinking too much, and generally behaving like they're all still teenagers. But when the house gets put up on the market, the close-knit crew decides they need to send out the best years of their lives in the only way they know how - basically, with a party and drinking and terrible life choices. But their de facto leader, played by Jason Sudeikis, gets a truly kinky idea in his head. The last bash will be an orgy - you know, a good, old-fashioned orgy.

But how do you throw an orgy with all your closest friends? Well, according to the trailer, you work out a bunch, say inappropriate things, and still try to start up a relationship with a nice gal. That all aside, "Orgy" looks like it could be strangely sweet, at least in terms of depicting the different elements, dramas, and desires at play within a group of close friends trying to grow the heck up. 

The film is packed with a bunch of up-and-coming comedic talent, including Sudeikis, Lucy Punch, Lindsay Sloane, Tyler Labine, Martin Starr, Will Forte, Leslie Bibb, Nick Kroll, and Lake Bell so it will likely be, at the very least, funny. Who will go through with the orgy? Who will bow out at the last minute? And who will really, really hurt themselves in the process? 

The film will be in limited release on September 2. Check out the trailer for "A Good Old Fashioned Orgy," thanks to Vulture, after the break. 
 

Director asks fans to pick film's first poster

By Kate Erbland Jul 28, 2011 8:57PM
During the Comic-Con panel for his upcoming film, "Twixt," director Francis Ford Coppola surprised everyone by announcing his very unique vision and plan for releasing the film, one of the few Comic-Con reveals that had not even been previously hinted at by any other pre-release materials. Coppola plans on taking 'Twixt" on the road for a month, and each screening of the film will feature live elements - like live music and Coppola editing the film on the fly via iPad, with an eye towards tailoring the film to each screening's audience and their reactions. It's certainly a new way to present a film, and it's interesting that Coppola, such a cherished veteran filmmaker, is the one to put this new school idea into practice. "Twixt," which also feature sequences in 3D, will also reportedly be available in wider, more traditional release.

"Twixt" stars Val Kilmer, Ben Chaplin, and Elle Fanning, and is billed as a Gothic horror film. Kilmer portrays a washed up writer who ends up in a small town on his book tour - a small town in the midst an unraveling mystery revolving around the murder of a young girl (Fanning). 

And Coppola is already putting his money where his mouth is when it comes to audience participation, albeit in a small way. On the film's Facebook page, fans of the project can now vote on the film's first poster. All four of the choices place a heavy emphasis on Fanning's character, and all four make no bones about the film's horror skew. But there also seem to be a number of nods to hands and time. I wonder what that all means... We'll get a (possible) idea why, when "Twixt" shows at this year's Toronto International Film Festival in advance of its release.

Thanks to Bloody-Disgusting for first writing about this cool little bit. Head over to the official Facebook page for "Twixt" to vote. Which one did you vote for?
 

'It was nice to get back on a horse ...'

By James Rocchi Jul 28, 2011 4:44PM
Playing brooding, brutish anti-hero Dolarhyde in "Cowboys and Aliens," Harrison Ford puts some brusque backbone into the film. Much like Tom Hanks's work in "Catch Me if You Can," it's also a chance to see a performer we know as a movie star be liberated from the burden of carrying a film and instead get to actually act and play a part in a supporting role. Relaxed and playful -- and perhaps, considering he defined masculinity on the big screen for two decades, a little unconsciously intimidating -- Ford spoke with us in Montana.

You've said about this character that it's nice to play a part where you don't have to make people like you. How liberating is it to play an anti-hero?

Ford: It was fun to play this one. They have created a story for him that I thought was really interesting and seems worth doing. It was wonderfully written, and I was just glad, literally,  to be part of it. When I first read it, “Cowboys and Aliens” sounded jokey. Tone is not something you can get off the page -- and the trick of this (film was) mastering control of the tone, not letting it become jokey. It depends on an emotional reality that is created by belief in the lives these people are living. The Western frontier is a tough place: People behaved in a way that was not necessarily attractive. I had the opportunity to represent that reality.
 
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