Four Eyed Monsters
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Tour Spout | Sign up
Find movies you'll love

SpoutBlog on spout.com

  • Comic-Con 2008: Apatow, Smith, Snyder, Miller––EW’s Visonairies

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Sin City  (2005)

    Watchmen  (2009)

    The Spirit  (2008)

    One of several sponsored by Entertainment Weekly, this panel brings together four filmmakers who will be flogging their upcoming wares on other panels here this weekend: Judd Apatow (producer of Pineapple Express), Kevin Smith (Zach and Miri Make a Porno), Zach Snyder (The Watchmen) and Frank Miller (The Spirit).

    According to the guide, it’ll be an evening devoted to “a free-wheeling conversation on the movie business, their upcoming projects, and what it means—to them—to be a geek.” But mostly, people are probably just anxious to get a seat for Kevin Smith’s annual stand-up comedy session, which begins in the same room immediately after, although if Frank Miller is yet aware of the drubbing The Spirit panel is getting online, things might get interesting…

    Questions from the floor

    5:57 - “Is the pirate story in Watchmen being animated and coming to the DVD?”

    5:55 - “Who inspired you?”

    Smith: “Jim Jarmusch, Spike Lee, Richard Linklater…”
    Apatow: “Well, Kevin Smith laid down the track for me.”
    Smith: “Yes, bitch, yes! Say that shit in print!”

    Apatow: “Also Hal Ashby, and Cameron Crowe…”
    Smith: “**** those guys!”
    Snyder: “I did my Star Wars thing so I’m good.”

    Miller sort of shrugs and says “It would be a really long list, things like Gunsmoke and Astro Boy and Citizen Kane. I’m not even going to try and start that list.”

    5:54 - “Will we ever see a Judd Apatow sci-fi flick or a Zack Snyder feel good family comedy?”

    Snyder: “Yeah, I’m working on a family movie right now… so, okay no. I’m kidding. I have a hard time with PG.”

    Apatow: “I don’t know how to move the camera… that seems to be my issue. I remember when I saw Dawn of the Dead, and about 5 minutes in I turned to Adam McKay and said “Did I just stumble into the coolest fucking movie ever?” which is always followed up with “I am not capable of doing anything like this, ever.” So no, you won’t see a movie with fairies or goblins in it from me.”

    Then question man shouts out “PILLOW PANTS FOR LIFE!” and runs off.

    5:52 - “Do you have a lot of improvisation in Zack & Miri?

    Smith: Smith: “We’ve had some ad-libbing in the movies since Dogma… but I think, and Apatow will back me up on this, Seth Rogen is one of the best improv guys around.”

    Apatow: “Yeah, I’m just glad people think I wrote everything he says. Oh, and plus I think that guy has an erection.” (The question asker, not Seth Rogen)

    5:49 - Now comes the questions from the floor. First up, Apatow says “Hey, I love that t-shirt!”… the kid is wearing an identical Ghostbusters shirt. Apatow: “I guess we both spilled coke on our shirts earlier.”

    “So does the popularity of geek movies allow you to have more creativity? Or do the studios still have you by the balls?”

    Snyder: “By the balls.”

    Apatow: “I think I might have their balls. Maybe I have a little bit of one ball. I have one ball.”

    Smith: “I got no balls to grab. So they got me.”

    Questions from EW readers, from the EW host, courtesy of EW online.

    5:46 - Smith: “We work in an industry where originality is not praised. It’s like ‘What worked last time? Yeah, do that shit again! Only for more money!’ I think geek culture is definitely here to stay. You can thank Quentin Tarantino for that.”

    Marc: Have you all ever had any geeky fanboy moments of your own?

    Smith: “Well, just backstage I met Zack Snyder for the first time, and he came up and hugged me. I hugged him back, but then he pushed back a little bit. It’s like, ‘Hey, it’s not that big a fraternity, fat boy.’”

    Apatow, “Fanboy? Well, I once saw the star of Baa, Baa, Black Sheep, Robert Conrad, and I followed him around on a bike for five miles. Does that count?”

    Snyder, “Well, I was shooting a commercial with Harrison Ford once, and I thought we were like buddies. So, I told him I had a Han Solo frozen in carbonite in my house, like full-sized. He said, ‘Yeah, you probably shouldn’t have told me that.’”

    Miller: “I was on the set of Sin City, and the first time I saw Jessica Alba dance on stage, swinging the whip around, I burst into tears because I realized my dream had come true.”

    5:37 - “What does Rogen taste like?”

    Apatow: “I think you should ask Rogen what Apatow tastes like.”

    Smith: “It’s funny, I tasted both Rogen and Apatow at the same time, and I was like ‘Hmm, that tastes semitic!’”
    “Was The Dark Knight good for comic book movies?”
    Snyder: “Was it? Well… I mean there’s no money left in the economy now. All the Warner Bros. people have it.”

    “How much importance do you give to negative fan’s reactions online?”

    Smith: “I live and die by it. I have no sense of my life, so I go online and read stuff all the time. Then I look in the mirror and I’m like ‘Shit, it’s not getting any better’ then someone online is like ‘You’re great’ and I’m like… I am? Yay!”

    Apatow: “I’d just like to say… my wife is fuckin’ hot.”

    Smith: “Dude, you’re so gettin’ laid tonight. You might have earned yourself a hummer on the way back.”

    Apatow: “Do you check Google Alerts on your own name?”

    Smith: “All the time, I have ‘em sent directly to me. Do you guys know about this? You can set up a Google Alert for your name so they’ll send you an update when you get mentioned. As a result I know a lot about the Kevin Smith who works in the Sioux City parks department. That guy is in the news a lot. Every now and then I get a news alert that says “Clerks guy still sucks,” so then I go back to reading about the other guy.

    Snyder: “Yeah, apparently there’s a Zack Snyder who plays baseball…. baby where is that guy? Sorry, my wife is in the audience, she gets my Google Alerts. I think he’s in Wisconsin.”

    Frank Miller: “What is this about?” *laughter*

    Miller: “Oh, the internet? I just do things the way I want to do them.” He’s like the curmudgeonly neighbor. “GET OFF MY LAWN! GRR!”

    The inane philosophical questions, the non-sequitor banter they inspire.

    5:36 - Smith: “You know, part of why they made the San Diego Comic-Con was so someone would make the Watchmen movie. I swear to god, after I see that movie, I can fuckin’ die. Snyder, if you don’t have the footage, can you just act it out?”

    Snyder: “Yeah, let me go backstage and I’ll just paint myself blue. Then these cups can be the Vietnamese soldiers…”

    Smith: “Ooh, can I be Silk Spectre and you’re Dr. Manhattan?”
    Snyder: “Okay, that’s just not cool.”

    5:34 - Marc wants to know if Kevin Smith and Judd Apatow rely on audience testing and tracking. Apatow comes back with “Well no.. I’m usually tracking like, how much penis we can show in a movie. For Sarah Marshall” — people applaud — “Yes, thank you for applauding Jason Seigel’s penis.”
    Kevin Smith: “Well, I tend to go with my gut. But my gut is prodigious, so that’s good.”

    Apatow: “Well, I remember someone called me “a fart in the face of American culture” online, and that bothered me. But, then I looked at the username, and it was ‘DannyGlover’sDickBlood.’”

    Kevin Smith: “It took me a long time to come up with that username.”

    5:30 - Marc wants to know why some comic book movies go so wrong (”Ghost Rider,” he whispers)

    Snyder “Well, the jury is still out on if that is going to be cool or not… but once we got Nixon back in the film, I started to feel better.”

    Miller says, “Well, there’s a scene in The Spirit where he’s climbing up a big mountain, and he stumbles a little bit. When I saw that I was like, ‘We got it.’”

    Frank is saying “I have a miserable life… I mean, I wake up and I’m like ‘I gotta do this stuff?’”

    He’s now trying to be funny by saying “You know, I grew up as a comic book nut.” *Crickets* “I grew up reading Superboy!” *laughter*.

    It’s a bit weird hearing him talk about work as a “veteran filmmaker” because he’s made half of one film, and The Spirit doesn’t look to be a great follow-up to that.

    5:27 - They’re all answering the question “Why do you do what you do?”

    Apatow tells us about the first time he had sex, he turned to the girl and said “Was it good for you? And she said ‘Well, it’ll get better.’ and then I knew.”
    Snyder says “What’s the question? Why did I want to do this kind of material? What?” He genuinely looks lost.
    “I’ll just come right out and say it. This little movie called Star Wars. It seemed super cool…. and I… that’s it.”

    Kevin Smith: “It’s a good thing your visuals are so cool.”

    Smith follows that up with “Wait, how many of you people were here for Watchmen this morning? Doesn’t it look superfuckin’ cool?”

    The crowd is clamoring for Zack to show the footage again…as if he carries it around in a little bag.

    The Intros

    5:26 - And last, Kevin Smith… the crowd goes nuts for him. Marc introduces him as “Kevin Motherfuckin’ Smith” and boy, he’s gained a lot of weight. Holy moses.

    Kevin says, “On the back of these namecards it says ‘Please be aware that many members of your audience may be under the age of 18.’ I’ll try to abide by it, but my vocabulary isn’t that large. I just wanna get my **** sucked, sir.”

    5:25 - First out, Frank Miller. I wonder if he’s started to hear the bad buzz yet. Next, Zack Snyder, who is “filming the unfilmable.” Judd Apatow, the Tom Clancy of comedy is next, wearing a Ghostbusters t-shirt.

    The Pre-show

    5:24 - Marc Bernardin, a senior editor from EW is here to introduce everyone. He’s talking about how cool “Geek” is. “From comic books to action figures to tv to film to slave Leais, geek is cool.” Isn’t this like preaching to the choir?

    5:23 - The house music continues, and there are giant ads for EW on the screens. Everyone nearby is cramming junk food into their mouths and checking out all of the schwag they’ve acquired over the past two days. The most popular item today: giganimous cloths Watchmen bags given out by Warner Bros.

    5:20 - This panel will include Kevin Smith, Judd Apatow, Frank Miller and Zack Snyder. Sort of an odd combo.

    5:19 - If you want to re-live the glory days of last year’s “Evening with Kevin Smith,” you can listen to the entire audio of the panel here.

    5:17 - Here we are, waiting on the Entertainment Weekly: Visionaries panel. It’s anther packed house, and they’re pumping in some house music. Probably EW’s “Pick of the Week!”

    Literally everyone in line that I spoke to said they were coming to to see Kevin Smith. Smith is on this panel, then his regular Friday night panel, which is from 6:30 until 8. That’s two and half hours of Kevin Smith, folks.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Comic-Con 2008: Kiefer Sutherland on Mirrors and 24

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    24: Season 01  (2001)

    Mirrors  (2008)

    kiefer sutherland

    photo: Kiefer Sutherland and Amy Smart

    The press breakfast for Alexandre Aja’s new horror film Mirrors seemed a bit like an elaborate practical joke. Feed the press a tasty meal, give them access to Aja and stars Kiefer Sutherland and Amy Smart, then attempt to make them lose said meal by showing clips of Amy Smart ripping her own face off.

    They showed five clips in all. The first was the opening scene of the film: a night watchmen in a ridiculously creepy department store is frantically trying to escape. From what, we do not know. Eventually several mirrors turn toward him, he begins to cry, and his sinister reflection then cuts its own throat, thereby cutting the real mans throat as well. The terrifying power of mirrors are revealed. Sutherland later explained that his character, a disgraced alcoholic former police officer, gets the night watchmen job after this initial death.

    The other clips varied between character development scenes and spooks. Sutherland said his interest in the script came from the fact that it’s a character driven drama, as well as a supernatural slasher. He said, “Without any of the horror elements, it’s still a strong family drama.” It’s hard to say whether this will turn out to be a genuine quality of the film, or if it’s just lip service to avoid simply saying, “The movie is about mirrors killing people, enjoy your free breakfast, goodbye.”

    After the jump, what keeps Aja going (hint: it’s gross)…

    Alexandre Aja set up the final clip by saying it was one of those scenes he dreamed about before the story even took shape. One got the picture of him standing in the shower, or driving to work and having a sudden epiphany, filming the entire scene in his mind, and using it to fuel his creative vision through the drawn-out production process. It was inspiring, this was going to be good. Just before the clip rolled, he said the scene was “jaw dropping.” Amy Smart’s character, the sister to Sutherlands drunk security guard, is looking in her bathroom mirror, slowing tying her hair into a bun. She drops her robe to the floor and turns to enter a sudsy bathtub. But wait! Her reflection doesn’t turn with her! The sinister doppelganger stares at the bathing beauty for a moment, before gripping her upper and lower teeth and slowing ripping her own jaw from her skull. Meanwhile, the non-reflection Amy Smart writhes in the tub, her jaw being dislodged by an invisible force, the bubbly water turning dark red. End of scene. That’s inspiring filmmaking for you.

    Amy Smart

    photo: Ouch, Amy Smart with Mirrors poster.

    When asked about 24, Sutherland said it was difficult to stop because of the strike, but carefully avoided placing any blame. He said it was wise of Fox to insist that the show keep with its 24 episode per season running style. Without providing many details, he did confirm that they had just finished shooting a 24 movie in Africa, and enthused that “This new stuff is the best we’ve ever done.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Comic-Con 2008: The Spirit

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Jurassic Park  (1993)

    The Love Bug  (1968)

    Sin City  (2005)

    300  (2007)

    3:55 - Kicking the fans while they’re down:

    Well, that’s all the time they have.

    The poor folks who waited in line to ask questions got nada.

    The end.

    3:54 - The Spirit clip #3:

    They’re introducing yet another clip. Wow, I feel like we’ll get to see the whole movie in bits and pieces.

    Still talking… please just roll ‘em.

    Miller: “Folks, here you go. When Titans clash.”

    The Octopus and The Spirit duking it out in an extremely muddy and watery set. The Spirit gets clocked in the head with a cinder block and quips “You’re giving me a headache, Octopus.”

    Jackson then gives The Spirit a crotchshot with a massive steel wrench.

    The Spirit then pounds The Octopus deep into the mud with punch after punch after punch. Literally, like 20 punches.

    Then The Octopus appears behind The Spirit and crashes a toilet down on The Spirit’s head, pinning his arms in place with the toilet seat. He laughs his ass off (whoops, bad pun) and yells “Come on! Toilets are always funny!”

    I think that clip just provided all the shark jumping I needed. My hopes for this movie just got drowned in mud and toilet humor.

    3:49 - The Spirit setting: a “nevertime” filled with Jews:

    Del Prete: “This movie is set in a time we call ‘nevertime’. There are things from the 40s in the there, the 50s, but there are also cell phones.”

    Miller says “I’ve gotta say there are more Jewish characters in two hours of The Spirit movie than there are in one year of The Spirit comic book.”

    3:48 - The Spirit clip #2:

    Another clip is rolling, The Spirit with the love of his life.

    I just noticed that his mask is painted on.

    The Spirit and his lady love are making out somwhere in the police station.

    Wait, I take that back, it looks like his mask is real, and painted on.

    They make out, and she tells him that he falls in love with everyone he meets.

    Sure enough, a gruff detective comes in and introduces The Spirit to a rookie cop he’ll be working with, who also happens to be hot. They leave the room, and Girl #1 hurls a scalpel at the closed door and calls him a bastard.

    Girl #1 was Sarah Paulson as Ellen Dolan, the police commissioner’s daughter.

    Del Prete says “There’s nothing campy about the movie. You’ll notice that when you see it. It’s just an organic kind of humor.”

    When asked what Will Eisner would have thought about the scene, Miller said “Well, he probably would have said ‘It was good, but Ellen probably wouldn’t have thrown the scalpel, because it would bend the end of it and she’d have to use it later in surgery.’ He was a picky man.”

    3:43 - The Spirit arrives:

    Here comes Gabriel Macht, The Spirit, from… The Spirit.

    Jeff “What’s your take on the Spirit? Is he funny? Is he a tough guy?”

    Gabriel “I think he has a lot of different colors. He can laugh at himself, he can be tough while he’s beating the snot out of Sam Jackson, he loves women… every one woman he meets he just falls in love with.”

    He’s recapping the origin of The Spirit. For those of you who don’t know, Denny Colt was a young detective who got shot, and later awoke from a sort of “suspended animation” in the graveyard. He contacted his friend, police commisioner Dolan, and became a secret masked vigilante. The “eyes and ears” of the City.

    3:39 - The Spirit clip #1:

    Finally, here we go.

    Okay, I’m hoping this footage will get out onto the web, because it looks terrible.

    I mean, really, really, really bad.

    Remember that James Bond movie where they filmed the underwater scenes dry, and just using a blow dryer to move hair around? Well, this footage makes that amazing.

    It doesn’t look like they’re underwater at all, and Eva just squints while her hair whips around.

    They’re about to introduce a new panel member, but I’m still reeling from how bad that footage was.

    Ouch.

    Miller is talking about the challenge of finding a “real man” in Hollywood.

    3:36 - Introducing The Spirit clip:

    They’re going to show us a bit more from the movie, and Frank actually wants to introduce this clip.

    “Sans Saref is a lover of jewelry, and she has a lead on the most unspeakable fantastic treasure of all time. In order to get this, she has to do a lot of swimming, and she’s played by the very gorgeous Eva Mendes. And she’s wearing a very tight swimsuit.”

    Miller: “We have a technical term for filming underwater, and we call it “A fucking nightmare.”

    They’ve filmed all of this dry, with Eva in a very tight wetsuit, using a camera that “films slower than death,” according to Miller.

    They’re speaking a lot about how technically cool this footage will be. So let’s see it already.

    In fact, they’re still talking about it.

    Sam Jackson: “By now you know there’s actually no clip, right?”

    3:33 - The ladies of The Spirit:

    Now they’re talking about the women in the trailer, who all look hot in that noirish sort of way.

    Del Prete “So while Frank was wiring guns together, I was picking out jewelry for all the ladies.”

    Now they’ve brought out Jamie King onstage, and she plays Lorelei, who Frank Miller told her is like “The Spirit of Death”

    She goes from extreme love to extreme rage and anger in regards to The Spirit.

    Miller “One of the ways you realize The Spirit is a noble hero, just take a look at what he’s willing to give up.”

    3:28 - Samuel L. Jackson on The Octopus:

    Jackson talks about the evolution of The Octopus, and how in his mind he’s a man who’s been experimenting with drugs and different concoctions and has lost his mind.

    Jackson: “I’d come in and show Miller some ideas and I’d be like… okay, here’s The Octopus as a black Nazi, and Miller would go ‘Okay, cool.’ So I’m like, wow, I’m a Nazi!”

    Miller “Ain’t it a great country?”

    3:25 - So many Samuel L. Jackson action figures:

    Jeff is asking Sam Jackson “what’s the favorite action figure of you?”

    Jackson: “I think probably Mace Windu, because I have so many different versions of him. There’s small, big, medium, and one that walks across my desk. But, I also have some cool Afro Samurai figures coming out. I remember the first action figure I should have had was Jurassic Park. Everyone except Wayne Knight and me had action figures.”

    “Now I have action figures everywhere, all over my office. Every now and then I catch The Shaft glaring and Mace Windu, I got Frozone sledding through, laughing at everyone…”

    Someone yells out “What about Nick Fury?”

    “Well, you know when I was a kid… Nick Fury was a white dude.” *laughter* “Now I’m glad that he’s evolved into something I can understand! See? You too can grow up to be a black man.”

    3:20 - Samuel L. Jackson as The Octopus:

    Frank Miller wanted the villain to be someone that “Wasn’t very scary… like Herbie.” Does he mean The Love Bug?

    “So… who’d I pick? Mr. Sam Jackson.”

    Sam bounds up on the stage, wearing his official costume of glasses and a Kangol hat turned backwards. And he’s wearing a “Badmofokos” t-shirt.

    Sam is talking about the challenging of auditioning to play The Octopus, since he was only a pair of white gloves in the comic book.

    They had to try and find a huge gun for The Octopus to handle, and Jackson says “We started with the Desert Eagle, and then we went to these .40 caliber pistols that were just huge. Then we started wiring guns together…”

    Miller: “Remember that scene in 2001 with the monkeys and bone? At one point I started stacking one gun on top of another, on top of another, on top of another, and I finally just told the props department to wire them together like that. And when Sam wields them, he looks like a Transformer.”

    Jackson: “Yeah, so I had to work out just to hold these things. Then we had to have wires holding the guns up because they were so heavy. I think I lost some weight that day.:”

    Jackson: “Miller is totally open and without ego, which is a lot different than most directors.”

    3:15 -The Spirit trailer:

    Jeff asks Frank Miller to introduce the trailer, and Miller retorts “Well the whole purpose of a trailer is not to have an introduction…”

    It’s rolling.

    “From writer director Frank Miller, creator of 300 and Sin City.”

    Okay. I am officially freaked out.

    This trailer is extremely strange.

    A tiny man sliding out of a woman’s mouth.

    A collection of female heads, lined up as if they were on a shelf…

    It’s mostly all about the femme fatales.

    Sam Jackson appears on screen and says “What is it with you and women?”

    It looks very comic booky and over the top, but there are guns galore all over the place.

    This isn’t your father’s The Spirit, and definitely isn’t the campy fun comic book that Will Eisner used to write and draw.

    3:11 - More on getting the movie made:

    Deborah Del Prete said she’s “been waiting her entire life” to make this make, which makes me think about a two year old toddler, poring over script notes. She says she’s a major comic book fan, and she speaks a million miles an hour. She’s very excited for this movie.

    Frank and Deborah have both “tried to make this film the way Will would have wanted it made.”

    Deborah: “We got Eisner, and we got Miller. Those are the only two people I wanted working on this movie.”

    Now we’re about to get a trailer for the movie, which I hope is better than the lackluster “My city screams” version that ran recently.

    3:05 - Frank Miller meets Will Eisner:

    Frank Miller tells us how he was introduced to The Spirit, and how he finally got to meet Will Eisner at a party thrown by Neal Adams.

    “Neal Adams used to keep a lot of us comic book artists alive by getting us commercial work while the comic book studios paid us slave wages.”

    Frank Miller is doing an impersonation of Will Eisner, and I can’t quite tell if it’s touching, or vaguely insulting.

    Frank said “He was my mentor, and my friend.” So, okay. Let’s go with touching.

    Frank literally “dropped everything else” to get to work on bringing The Spirit to the screen.

    3:02 - The panel begins:

    I’ve got two names for you…

    Will Eisner and Frank Miller.

    There’s no way you can tell the history of graphic novels without those two names.

    This Christmas, they’ll have an important milestone in that history, on Christmas Day: The Spirit.

    This is Jeff Boucher from the LA Times, “Sorry, I forgot to introduce myself.”

    He’s moderating the panel.

    Frank Miller and producer Deborah Del Prete come out.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Comic-Con 2008: Dr. Horrible Part 4 Plans Confirmed

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]

    Joss Whedon just confirmed here on his Comic-Con panel that he plans to do at least another episode of Dr. Horrible. His relevant quotes after the jump; more details once the panel wraps.

    Updates: Below the jump, details on the Dr. Horrible DVD…

    A questioner asks, “What would a Part Four of Dr. Horrible be like?”

    Joss sort of takes a deep breath. “The idea is that there will be another part –

    (interrupted by huge cheers)

    –so we’re not gonna tell you about it yet.”
    He goes on to talk about why he’s excited to continue the webseries:

    “I’m older, and balder/wiser than when I made Firefly, and I approach things differently. I take it one episode at a time. And any episode we don’t get out…I can make stuff on the internet now!” Cheers.

    “Besides the fact that we all had an enormous amount of fun, this was designed to be a model for a new way to put out media, an artistic community that involves all of you guys, and all of us, and maybe not so much… other people.”

    “I’m not trying to bring down the studios, I do still work there, as we all do, and I’m grateful for it…but things are changing, and its really important that as things change, they change for the better, and Dr. Horrible is about that, its about putting power in differnet hands — THE WRONG HANDS.”

    DVD Details: Jed Whedon (I think–a brother of Joss for sure) said the following: “You’ve probably heard of Commentary: The Musical. If you haven’t, well...Commentary: The Musical. The songs are written.”

    And there will be a conrest. “We will take video submissions for the Evil League of Evil. No longer than 3 minutes, like you’re applying for Survivor or something, We’ll put the 10 best videos on the DVD. We’ve got a couple of things to do first, like the soundtrack…”

    Joss: “Soundtrack should be available for download within a couple of weeks.”

    Also: Nathan Fillion named a site where you can have “your own functional Dr. Horrible van remote.” No, I don’t know what that would actually mean in real life, either, but play around with it and share your findings…


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Comic-Con 2008: The Wolfman

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    Under discussion:

    Star Wars  (1977)

    Norbit  (2007)

    The Wolfman  (2009)

    Legendary six-time-Oscar-winning make-up artist Rick Baker joined stars Benicio Del Toro and Emily Blunt to bring us the first footage of Universal’s new version of The Wolfman. And it’s a period piece.

    Highlights:

    - The origins of the remake stem from Del Toro’s Lon Chaney Jr. fandom.

    - It looks like “Francis Ford Coppola’s The Wolfman

    - Of course, Anthony Hopkins would be more welcome as Van Helsing again

    - At least it will likely be R-rated, as it looks quite bloody

    - Baker honors Stan Winston by labeling his death “the end of an era”

    - Blunt is apparently into two-headed dudes

    Check out the full liveblog transcript after the jump.

    5:31 - Another look at the Wolfman clip:

    They’re rolling the clip one more time, and now I can see how bloody it is.

    Brains, guts, carnage.

    You only see a couple of extremely quick flashes of the Wolfman.

    It’s very gothic looking, lots of blacks and browns. Full costumes, long takes. It’s almost like Francis Ford Coppola’s The Wolfman.

    Anthony Hopkins comes up on his son, post-transformation and rasps “You’ve done terrible things.”

    Apparently he gets caught and is strapped down in a medical observatory while he transforms.

    We’re out, and it’s not even a full moon

    5:29 - Extra guests and more Q&A:

    Rick Baker brings Dave and Lou Elsey up on stage and introduces them, as they helped out with the creature effects. They’ve worked on Farscape and Star Wars.

    A pair of twins (they asked a question during the Watchmen panel) get up and ask what the “most fun part of working on the movie was.”

    Del Toro says, “Uh, the chase.”

    Rick Baker says, “Is that a two headed man?”

    and Emily Blunt says, “Hi… what are you doing later?”

    So now we know all about her secret sexual proclivities.

    5:25 - Regarding CGI and “the end of an era”:

    While it might be del Toro in a costume, it looks like they’ll be using CGI to show the Wolfman’s transformation. Baker is hoping they’ll do something like the physical transformations in An American Werewolf in London.

    Rick Baker is waxing poetic about Stan Winston and all the contributions he made to the art. He calls his death “The end of an era.”

    5:22 - Regarding The Wolfman’s rating:

    “Will this movie be rated R?”

    Del Toro: “I don’t think we know yet…”

    Rick Baker chimes in with “I think based on this trailer it looks like it’ll be rated R.”

    5:20 - The Wolfman Q&A, Question #2:

    Rick Baker gets asked if it’s more challenging to do makeup effects on something like this or working on Norbit, and he said working on human character faces, like Eddie Murphy’s Mr. Wong character, was much more challenging. “But I’ve been making myself up as the Wolfman since I was 10 years old.”

    Rick Baker quips “Look, it’s Criss Angel!” — the next kid asking a question is wearing some sort of street thug wear and a black bandana. And he looks like Criss Angel… at age 10.

    Emily Blunt said “I was really terrified during the chase scenes. I was literally running. While wearing a corset.”

    Del Toro leers: “And I just had to chase her.”

    Del Toro geekily giggles and admits that he’s a big fan of both Lon Chaney and Lon Chaney Jr.’s film roles, and that he watched all of them. He also got into the old Hammer films like “Curse of the Wolfman”.

    5:17 - The Wolfman Q&A, Question #1:

    Q&A’s start, and the first question is “What similarities are there between this movie and the original?”

    Del Toro wakes from his bout with narcolepsy to say “That’s a good question for the director….”

    He’s talking about keeping the movie a period piece, rather than updating it to modern times. “I think you just need to see the picture. I mean, I need to see it too.”


    5:14 - Becoming the Wolfman:

    Benicio said “Putting the makeup on was great, it was building and that was exciting. Taking it off, that was a bit more desperate.”

    “He cried like a baby,” said Baker. “He may look like a big tough guy, but he’s actually a big pussy.”

    Del Toro was asked if he studied any animal behavior in order to get into the role, and he quips “I checked out Emily Blunt.” Clearly it was meant as a joke, but it just came off really creepy.

    Del Toro is talking about how great it was to have Anthony Hopkins on set “Not just as an actor, but as a person.” He literally seems like he’s about to fall asleep.

    5:11 - On the decision to get involved:

    Del Toro is talking about how he loved the Lon Chaney Jr. role in the original movies. Del Toro’s agent saw a poster of The Wolfman in Del Toro’s house, and he said “I’m going to go to Universal and talk to them about this.” So start buying posters, folks.

    Emily Blunt heard Anthony Hopkins and “Benny” were involved in the film, so she said it was pretty easy to make the decision to take the role.

    5:08 - The Wolfman clip:

    Benicio is sleepily introducing a clip of footage from the movie. No one has seen it yet, except del Toro “But without sound! So I want to hear this.”

    Mediocre whoops and hollers.

    Murky shots of a Wolfman running through the woods, and turn of the century townsfolk finding an eviscerated body.

    A man runs home and melts down his mother’s silver spoons and makes bullets.

    Anthony Hopkins walks down the stairs, he’s playing Del Toro’s father.

    Hugo Weaving, better known as Agent Smith, plays the head Wolf hunter.

    It’s all shot in period, and looks pretty good… except del Toro looks oddly out of place.

    This just makes me wish that Hopkins was playing Van Helsing in this. Granted, he’s not in the original, but he’s a kickass monster hunter.

    5:04 - Rick Baker, Benicio Del Toro and Emily Blunt take the stage:

    Universal has brought out Rick Baker, sorry… “the legendary Rick Baker” to talk about Wolfman.

    When Baker heard that Universal was remaking The Wolfman, he called everyone he knew at Universal and said “I have to be involved with this.”

    Two surprise guests, Emily Blunt and Benicio del Toro.

    Baker said what’s important is that they didn’t want to make a CGI version of the Wolfman, but they wanted it to actually be a guy in the suit.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Comic-Con 2008: The Watchmen

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]

    We knew the Watchman panel was going to be insane, but this is … insane. Packed house, hordes of people in costume, the first panel this year where masses of people were turned away.

    The Pre-show:

    11:57 - People are starting to clap, as in the whole “we want the show!” thing. It sounds like thunder in here.

    11: 53 - They keep advertising “Text the word WATCHMEN to 58671 to win a special WATCHMEN themed Xbox 360.” They’re giving away 5 of them and people are going nuts with the texts. I feel like I’m in Asia.

    11:52 - This is the most packed I’ve seen this room. It only holds 6500 people, but it feels like twice that many.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

 


Advertisement