Showing posts with label thing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thing. Show all posts

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Seven Psychopaths: Martin McDonagh Shares Love of Cinema Criminals Related Posts No Comments

As clearly seen in the Seven Psychopaths red band trailer, writer-director Martin McDonagh has a thing for killers. “I guess I share Colin Farrell’s character’s feelings towards psychopaths and killers in the film,” he said to Movie Fanatic recently.

Martin McDonagh Directs Seven Psychopaths
“I know how cinematic they are and how interesting films can be with them, but kind of question the morality of only having films about guys with guns. It’s that, playing those two ideas off each other is my interest in them.”

Farrell is a screenwriter who is obsessed with writing a movie about the most violent of people (his screenplay shares the title of the actual movie). His best friend, played by Sam Rockwell, is joined by Christopher Walken in the dog-napping business and everybody becomes involved when it’s learned that the dog at the center of their latest canine escapade belongs to a psychopath of a gangster, played by Woody Harrelson.

Yet, although the film is about violent people, it is incredibly funny… something truly important to McDonagh to work throughout his story, as seen in his previous work In Bruges.

“I think most of my work is that way. In Bruges was probably more sad and melancholic than this, but it’s still hopefully very funny throughout. This was always a black comedy on the page, but I think it’s come out as more outrageously funny because of the actors,” he said.

“It’s the way I kind of think about the world and the way I like to tell stories. I don’t think you should get too heavy, but there’s enough out there in the world, with violence etcetera, that you should question. So I think that comedy leavens the heaviness of talking about those topics.”

The filmmaker has such adoration for the actors he cast in the film, but there was only one that he wrote with someone specifically in mind. “I write with Sam’s voice in my head because I love him as an actor, and I love the way he can go from comedy to darkness on a dime,” McDonagh said. If you had told him while he was penning Seven Psychopaths that he would be working with legends… McDonagh would have scoffed.

“I never dreamed I’d be in a place where I’m doing a film with Christopher Walken or Tom Waits or Harry Dean Stanton, even.”

As we stated in our Top 10 Christopher Walken Movies, the actor gives his best performance in McDonagh’s film and the director marveled at how Walken took the dialogue he wrote and sent it to a whole new stratosphere of resonance.

Poster for Seven Psychopaths
“It’s the periods and the commas that he forgets about,” he said and laughed. “But, conversely, he memorizes the script word for word like six months before hand. And the words never change, the intonations change, and you can never imagine that a line or a word even could be pounced in that way, but it’s still the words you wrote. So there’s a joy and a surprise to all that kind of stuff. He’s really the only one in the world that can do that I think.”

Above all else, the helmer believes he and his cast enjoyed the making of Seven Psychopaths to no end. An aspect of the work he hopes will get his ensemble back in front of his camera in the future.

“I think after Bruges I was really happy with how it went, but I did think it was kind of hard work. After this, it felt more fun. We had an awful lot of fun on Bruges too. But I feel like I love working with these actors,” McDonagh said. “I couldn’t have dreamed working with these kinds of actors. And now I know them and they like how it’s turned out, so I know that they’d be happy to come back and do more stuff with me.”


Source : moviefanatic[dot]com

Movie News Ridley Scott Talks Sequels to Prometheus and Blade Runner ADD COMMENTS

Prometheus was one of the more controversial films of the summer, but for many fans it left them wanting more. While the sequel isn't exactly a sure thing, director Ridley Scott spoke with Metro about what the proposed film would be.

"Prometheus evolved into a whole other universe. You�ve got a person [Noomi Rapace�s Elizabeth Shaw] with a head in a bag [ Michael Fassbender�s David] that functions and has an IQ of 350. It can explain to her how to put the head back on the body and she�s gonna think about that long and hard because, once the head is back on his body, he�s dangerous," he said.

When asked if the film was that easy, he replied,  "I wish it was that easy. They�re going off to paradise but it could be the most savage, horrible place. Who are the Engineers?"

The subject then switched to Blade Runner, which Scott has also been very vocal about sequelizing as well. He said:  "It�s not a rumour � it�s happening. With Harrison Ford? I don�t know yet. Is he too old? Well, he was a Nexus-6 so we don�t know how long he can live [laughs]. And that�s all I�m going to say at this stage."

What do you think? Would you like to see sequels to Blade Runner and  Prometheus?


Source : comingsoon[dot]net

Move review: '3, 2, 1 ... Frankie Go Boom'

The first thing you wonder when faced with “3, 2, 1 ... Frankie Go Boom” is why it’s been saddled with such an unwieldy name. And then you see the movie and realize: writer-director Jordan Roberts believes in unedited excess.

Just like that cumbersome “3, 2, 1 ...” of the title, Roberts adds too many elements to nearly every scene of this insanely frenetic comedy. Lucky for him, then, that his likable leading man is so determined to balance out the madness.

Frankie (“Sons of Anarchy’s” Charlie Hunnam) is a decent, introverted guy who’s been tortured by his obnoxious brother, Bruce (Chris O’Dowd), all his life.

Bruce’s latest instigation is a sex tape he secretly made of Frankie and a new girlfriend, Lassie (Lizzy Caplan). Unfortunately, Lassie’s dad happens to be Jack (Chris Noth), a severely unstable superstar Bruce knows from rehab. So the brothers have to work together to erase all evidence of that tape before Jack finds out about it.

There are a few amusing moments, and Hunnam is particularly well cast, giving Frankie a touching determination to rise above his daily humiliations. But Roberts’ focus is so scattered, and his energy so frenzied, that he fails to build on his own potential. The romance between Lassie and Frankie is barely developed, for example, while gross-out gags and wacky side characters (such as Nora Dunn as the boys’ mother) are excessively indulged.

It’s especially disappointing to see O’Dowd — already hugely popular in the U.K. — so poorly used. His charming supporting performance in “Bridesmaids” set him on the right track over here, but he’ll have to choose projects more wisely if he does not want his promising movie career to implode.

Magic Moment: An unexpectedly effective appearance from Ron Perlman.


Source : nydailynews[dot]com

Thursday, October 4, 2012

‘Jersey Shore’s’ Vinny Guadagnino buys family a house 

“Jersey Shore” mama’s boy Vinny Guadagnino recently bought a new house in Staten Island — that he shares with his mother.

“That’s the funny thing. I got a family house for everybody to live in — my mom, my sisters and I,” he tells The News. “And I made sure that it has a separate apartment downstairs for myself.

“Family is more important than anything. We don’t come from any money. So once I get them settled in, in a nice house, then I’ll branch out and see if I can get something else.”

The last season of “Shore” premieres Thursday at 10 p.m. on MTV.


Source : nydailynews[dot]com