May
30
2009
0

The End In the Beginning - Bones

The End In the Beginningartwork

The End In the Beginning

Bones, Season 4

Bones

Genre: Drama

Album Price: £1.89

Release Date: 14 May 2009

Everyone is a suspect when a body is found murdered at a popular nightclub known as "The Lab." In an unusual twist of storytelling, Brennan, Booth and the Jeffersonian team take on various roles outside their normal duties, including serving as the nightclub staff as well as local law enforcement. A slew of special guest stars, including Max Keenan (guest star O'Neal), Jared Booth (guest star Fehr) and the members of Mötley Crüe, pay a visit.

© 2008-2009 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

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Published by Oliver in: TV Shows |
May
29
2009
0

Toy Story 3 Teaser Hits The Net

 

In the most exciting toy-based event since we got our Ninja Turtle action figures back in 1990, a new teaser trailer for Toy Story 3 has been posted online.

It’s a decade since the first sequel, Toy Story 2, hit screens and since then Pixar has been bought by Disney, and churned out some of the best films of the naughties.

All the Pixar buzz so far this year has rested on the shoulders of the sure-to-be-outstanding Up, which is released in October.

But with debut of this teaser, tongues will surely be wagging in anticipation of June next year, when Woody, Buzz and the gang return for their third outing.

The film, in which the toys are dropped off at a day-care centre as owner Andy departs for college, is set for release June 2010.

We’re not sure how the Toy Story brand fits in with the Pixar stable these days, but will likely see a temporary return to the lighthearted and younger-viewer-aimed origins of the studio. Total Film can’t wait.

 

 

Excited? Not bothered? Let us know your thoughts.

 

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Published by Total Film in: News |
May
29
2009
0

Toy Story 3 Teaser Hits The Net

 

In the most exciting toy-based event since we got our Ninja Turtle action figures back in 1990, a new teaser trailer for Toy Story 3 has been posted online.

It’s a decade since the first sequel, Toy Story 2, hit screens and since then Pixar has been bought by Disney, and churned out some of the best films of the naughties.

All the Pixar buzz so far this year has rested on the shoulders of the sure-to-be-outstanding Up, which is released in October.

But with debut of this teaser, tongues will surely be wagging in anticipation of June next year, when Woody, Buzz and the gang return for their third outing.

The film, in which the toys are dropped off at a day-care centre as owner Andy departs for college, is set for release June 2010.

We’re not sure how the Toy Story brand fits in with the Pixar stable these days, but will likely see a temporary return to the lighthearted and younger-viewer-aimed origins of the studio. Total Film can’t wait.

 

 

Excited? Not bothered? Let us know your thoughts.

 

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
29
2009
0

The Age of Dissonance - Gossip Girl

The Age of Dissonanceartwork

The Age of Dissonance

Gossip Girl, Season 2

Gossip Girl

Genre: Teens

Album Price: £2.49

Release Date: 16 March 2009

The seniors put on a production of "The Age of Innocence." Chuck enlists help from an unlikely source — his nemesis, Carter Baizen (SEBASTIAN STAN - "Kings," "The Covenant").

© 2008 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

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Published by Oliver in: TV Shows |
May
29
2009
0

7 Directors Who Should Revisit Their First Film

Drag Me To Hell is out this week, marking a return to his horror roots for director Sam Raimi.

The film also marks a return to form after the critical drubbing of his last venture, mega-budget three-quel, Spider-Man Tres.

Join us for a look at other directors we think need to get the hindsight checked, and the lessons to be learned from their first features.

Robert Rodriguez

The Present: Planet Terror (2007)

What’s Wrong With It?: An homage to schlocky B-Movie horror it may be, but Rodriguez’ roots as a guerilla filmmaker continue to fade.

The Debut: El Mariachi (1992)

What’s Right With It: Creative, economic, original. A labour of love.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: The non-budget ingenuity that stunned audiences at Sundance.

How To Put It Into Practice: Cut his Predators budget by giving him a handheld camera, a guitar, an octopus and Danny Glover, then stand back and shout action.

 

Steven Soderbergh

The Present: Che: Part One & Part Two (2009)

What’s Wrong With It?: Sure his cinematography is sublime, but this grand-scale storytelling isn’t as accessible and watchable as his debut.

The Debut: Sex, Lies and Videotape (1989)

What’s Right With It: Honest examination of the human condition and sexuality that lets the characters do the talking.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: The small scale, economic approach to the intricacies of human relationships.

How To Put It Into Practice: Soderbergh may have learned this lesson with the upcoming The Girlfriend Experience (2009). Time shall tell.

 

Eli Roth

The Present: Hostel II (2007)

What’s Wrong With It?: Retread of the original which offers few new ideas.

The Debut: Cabin Fever (2003)

What’s Right With It?: Inventive and with gags added the gag reflex, it’s a balanced horror flick that makes you care about the characters.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: That horror is better with both laughs and gasps, and that if you’re planning to go gruesome, do it in glimpses - it’s far more effect than a gawp.

How To Put It Into Practice: A script that isn’t rushed, with real characters and humour balance, without all the mindless torture.

 

Lee Tamahori

The Present: Next (2007)

What’s Wrong With It?: Nonsense actioner that requires the suspension of so much disbelief that you have to be officially gullible to even buy a ticket.

The Debut: Once Were Warriors (1995)

What’s Right With It?: The brutal realities of life in poor New Zealand suburb, where racial, alcohol and spousal abuse are all part of daily life.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: Stories about real, flawed human characters will always make compelling cinema.

How To Put It Into Practice: A ticket to New Zealand, a modest budget and a real story.

 

Baz Lurhman

The Present: Australia (2008)

What’s Wrong with It?: The cinematic equivalent of biting off more than you can chew.

The Debut: Strictly Ballroom (1992)

What’s Right With It?: A warm and inspiring under-dog story with enough feel-good factor to have them dancing in the aisles.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: Less is more.

How To Put It Into Practice: Lose the A-List actors, the jaw-dropping locations and the grandeur aspiration, and make a film that people will connect with. In other words, do a Slumdog Millionaire.

 

George Lucas

The Present: Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005)

What’s Wrong With It?: Apart from Hayden Christiansen, it was the strongest of the three prequels… which is like saying it’s the best type of Hepatitis.

The Debut: THX-1138 (1971)

What’s Right With It?: The unsettling vision of a future where emotion is outlawed. The themes Lucas explores are important, and his stark, sparse visuals serve this brilliantly.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: Cerebral science-fiction is the only science-fiction.

How To Put It Into Practice: A copy of "Rendevous With Rama" by Arthur C. Clarke. Touted as a project for Fincher, could mark a return to form for Lucas.

 

Quentin Tarantino

The Present: Death Proof (2007)

What’s Wrong With It?: If Jazz is the musical equivalent of masturbation, then this is the film equivalent of Jazz.

The Debut: Reservoir Dogs (1992)

What’s Right With It?: The sheer level of filmmaking talent on display is awe inspiring. There are moments of such genius, such technical brilliance on display, it’s easy to see how he became so revered.

Lesson to (Re)Learn: The economy of his style, reigned in from the unadulterated madness of recent years, is a marvel to behold.

How To Put It Into Practice: Confiscate his comprehensive film library, his Blockbuster card and his Netflix subscription and lock him in a screening room with a copy of Reservoir Dogs on DVD.

Any choices you agree/disagree with? Anyone else you think needs to revisit their first film? Let us know in the comments.

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
29
2009
0

When Girl Bands Go To Hollywood

Beyonce Knowles keeps her acting career afloat with dodgy stalker drama Obsessed, which arrives today.

She’s definitely not the first former girl band member to strut her stuff on screen, and she’s had more luck than most.

Here are a few of the ladies who turned up in some decidedly mixed movies…


The Film: Freddy Vs Jason (2003)

The Girl: Kelly Rowland

The Band:
Destiny’s Child, the same warbling group that gave the world Beyonce.

Destiny’s Child has a long and somewhat chequered history, from a difficult birth in the early 1990s, a string of different line-ups and names and their first real success under the Destiny’s moniker in 1996.

They’d go on to create five hit albums, have plenty of top-selling singles, but never quite escaped the in-fighting and problems, going on hiatus in 2002, before returning for a final album, Destiny Fulfilled in 2005.

The Ugly: Rowlands played one of the luckless teens that happen to get in the middle of trouble between Jason Voorhees and Freddy Krueger.

Let’s face it, everyone was focused on the horror icons meeting for the first time and never really paid much attention to who was dying.

Plus, did she really think her Destiny’s fans wanted to see her brutally murderlised by Jason?

Next up: Spice Girls

[Page-Break]


The Film: Spice World (1997)

The Girl(s): Emma Bunton, Victoria Beckham, Geri Halliwell, Melanie Brown and Melanie Chisholm.

The Band: Spice Girls, of course!

Plucked from obscurity in 1994 by Bob and Chris Herbert after a round of open auditions, the fivesome went on to become the most successful British group since The Beatles.

Managed by Simon Fuller, their first album, the creatively titled Spice sold 23 million copies worldwide and got their nicknames – Scary, Sporty, Baby, Ginger and Posh – from Top Of The Pops Magazine.

Halliwell left in 1998 to pursue solo work and the remaining members released a third album in 2000 before splitting to focus on their separate careers. They reformed for a brief reunion tour in 2007, which was cut short in 2008.

The Ugly: Oh, Spice World… Released on Boxing Day at the height of their popularity, the film saw the girls attempting more Beatles-style success by making a Hard Days’ Night-style blend of fiction and reality.

It’s loaded down with cameos, including Elton John and Bob Geldof(!) and despite making $75 million around the world, was slated for being utter pap.

Still, the girls won an award… er… Worst Actress at the 1998 Razzies.

Next up: Rachel Stevens

[Page-Break]


The Film: Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo (2005)

The Girl:
Rachel Stevens

The Band: S Club, one of he more annoying teenie-pop acts of the 2000s.

Created by Spice Girls manager Simon Fuller (who cannily saw a gap in the market for a younger group), they arrived on the scene as S Club 7 in 1999, launched via excitable telly show Miami.

The group went on to have four UK number-one singles, one UK number-one album, a string of number-one singles throughout Europe, and top-ten singles elsewhere in the world.

They recorded a total of four studio albums, released eleven singles and went on to sell over sixteen million albums worldwide.

S Club split finally split in 2003, just after making their first film, Seeing Double.

The Ugly:
It’s the sequel no one but Rob Schneider and his accountants asked for! More hilarity with Deuce and co, this time relocated to Amsterdam.

It’s about as funny as root canal surgery.

Stevens plays Louisa, the “dirty girl”. No, not sexy dirty, literally filthy and covered in mud. Yes, charming.

Since then, she’s worked on one TV movie, but mostly became known for her solo singing career and appearing on Strictly Come Dancing.

Next up: Fergie

[Page-Break]


The Film:
Grindhouse (2007)

The Girl: Stacey “Fergie” Ferguson

The Band: Black Eyed Peas, who – unlike many of the bands here – are still together and performing.

Fergie actually got her start with girl trio Wild Orchid, but in 2003 was invited to try out for one song with the Black Eyed Peas, who were recording their third album.

She did so well and bonded so naturally with the group that she soon scored a permanent position and became one of the driving forces, and as well known as founder Will.i.am.

The group released two more albums and Fergie also span off on her own, successful solo career, while still playing with her band mates.
 
The Ugly: Robert Rodriguez’ contribution to the box office flop that was Grindhouse - Planet Terror - was actually more fun than Quentin Tarantino’s.

Ferguson has a small yet pivotal role as Tammy, the doomed former lover of Marley Shelton’s Dakota. She’s soon attacked and chomped by crazed zombie-alike attackers.

Next up: Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas

[Page-break]


The Film: Ticker (2001)

The Girl: Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas

The Band: TLC, which usually comprised Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins, Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, and Thomas, were originally put together in 1990 after founding member Crystal Jones put out an ad for two girl singers. Sadly for Jones, she was quickly replaced.

They hit it big with singles such as Waterfalls and No Scrubs, and their 1994 album CrazySexyCool was a massive hit.

Tragedy befell the group in early 2002 when Lopes was killed in a car accident. The other two girls continued to perform, though have not released another album since 3D, the disc that was about to drop when Lopes died.
 
The Ugly: When you get a small part in an action movie “starring” Tom Sizemore and Steven Seagal, should you celebrate?

Probably not, since the film in question was little-scene action pic Ticker, in which “Chilli” plays Lily, a prostitute.

She doesn’t get much to do besides grind a little for a client, before being rudely interrupted by Sizemore and his vice cop partner, played by rapper Nas.

Next: All Saints

[Page-Break]


The Film: Honest (2000)

The Girl(s): Nicole Appleton, Natalie Appleton and Melanie Blatt.

The Band: All Saints. Originally formed (with a different line-up) in 1994, the group truly came together in 1995 when Natalie and Nicole Appleton were added to the already teamed Melanie Blatt and Shaznay Lewis.

But it was 1997, and the release of their smash single Never Ever that saw them properly launched on the worldwide music stage.

They had more success with albums and singles, before band arguments saw them split in early 2001, with the various singers attempting solo careers.

They briefly reformed in 2007 and apparently still plan to perform together, though very little has been heard of them since then.
 
The Ugly: Despite being directed by Dave “Eurhythmics” Stewart, black comedy Honest, which saw the Appletons and Blatt as a gang of thieves, never took off at the box office, eventually earning £111,309.

It was better known as “All Saints Exposing Their Boobs Movie”, since both the Appletons expose their lady bumps in the film. Shaznay Lewis smartly stayed well away.

Next up: The 5.6.7.8’s

[Page-Break]


The Film: Kill Bill: Volume One (2003)

The Girl(s): Yoshiko Fujiyama, Sachiko Fujii and Akiko Omo.

The Band: Sachiko and Yoshiko “Ronnie” Fujiyama formed The 5.6.7.8’s in 1986.

After the usual revolving door line-up changes, they’re still going strong after releasing seven albums. The group is best known (at least in the West) for its covers of American garage and surf rock tunes, but they also have plenty of original material.

Their biggest following, however, is still in Japan. They’re the sort of niche appeal group that cult music lovers adore. Which might explain their film appearance…
 
The Ugly: Actually, they lucked out in that they appeared in a mostly great film and were part of one of the iconic set pieces – performing two songs in the House Of Blue Leaves as The Bride arrives for her smack down with the Crazy 88s.

Their cult following and reputation emerged unscathed, since all they had to do was essentially play themselves – and the film launched them to a much wider audience.

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
29
2009
0

Official Avatar concept art online

As the old saying goes: be careful what you wish for… you might just get it. Well, we wanted imagery from Avatar and now we’ve got some. Sort of.

While it’s not final shots of Sam Worthington and co in the film, it is concept art from the film.

We’ll warn those of you wishing to keep everything about Avatar a secret that these pics – the one below and another in our gallery to the right – should be considered mild spoilers.

MarketSaw’s Jim Dorey got studio approval to throw these suckers up online and the first image appears to be the same vehicle we saw earlier this week – a Powersuit being used by Sam Worthington’s character.

The second is a futuristic heli-craft, being pursued by what looks like one of Pandora’s native beasts.

It’s nice to finally see something of the film, even if the fact that they’re concept art means they may already have been abandoned by Cameron and his team as they tweak the film ahead of its release later this year.

Oh, and if you’re eager to see more pics, they’re apparently from tie-in book ‘The Art Of Avatar’, which Amazon claims will be out in October.

And while we worry that all this build up means hype that no film could possibly live up to, we’re still desperate to see some video from this sucker.

[Source: MarketSaw]

What do you think of these new pics? Think they’ll make the final cut?
 

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
29
2009
0

Ha ha! We get to see Tintin before America

While the gap between film releases in the US and UK is getting shorter – and nonexistent with some day-and-date releases – it’s not often we get a big film first.

But not only will UK cinemagoers get to enjoy Steven Spielberg’s 3D take on Tintin before American audiences, we’ll be watching a good month or so before the film hits their shores on December 23rd.

The film, which started shooting in January (and has already wrapped the physical performance capture portion already), stars Jamie Bell, Daniel Craig, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Andy Serkis and Toby Jones, among others.

So now all we have to do is wait until late 2011 to see what Spielberg and Peter Jackson (who plans to direct the second in the series if the first is successful) have cooked up.

On your marks, start waiting… now.

[Source: Variety]

Can you wait that long to experience Tintin? Or could you care less? Speak up!
 

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
29
2009
0

Fox to remake Alien?

We’ll serve one this up straight: a reliable source has tipped off Bloody Disgusting that Twentieth Century Fox is remaking Alien.

Some days, we just wish the world would end to spare us further suffering.

The tipster appears to be reliable, after previously leaking news that Robert Rodriguez would be producing a Predator reboot way back in January this year.

According to him/her, Michael Costigan, Ridley Scott and Tony Scott are on board to produce.

They have even tapped commercial/music video director Carl Rinsch to direct. Rinsch has previously worked at Scott Free Productions on adverts.

The movie would focus on the original concept of Alien; one xenomorph, one ship and half a dozen scared shitless crew.

Update: A separate source has told Bloody Disgusting that this may indeed be an origins story, as opposed to a straight remake.

So remake, origins story, or sequel. Which would you prefer?

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Published by Total Film in: News Feeds |
May
28
2009
0

See the Terminator Salvation Paris premiere live!

The Paris premiere of Terminator Salvation takes place this evening and you can watch it live below!

The event kicks off at 7:30 Paris time (6:30 BST). Rick Edwards of T4 fame will be presenting the webcast straight from the French red carpet.

Rick will be asking the cast and crew of the movie questions sent by Total Film twitter followers yesterday, so if you sent us something watch out for your answer.

During the webcast, viewers will also have the chance to answer trivia questions and have their names read out by Rick.

When you see or hear a trivia question, send a message to @Resistance2018 on Twitter and if you’re the first person to respond, you’ll get your name mentioned during the webcast. 

(Please note: The feed will be inactive until approximately 7:30 Paris Time)

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