Leia is in.
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/61312
Only waiting for Hamill now. Carrie Fisher says Leia will be old
I hope Leia has lots of grandaughters all with bun hairdos. And they all hassle Ghost Yoda.
gamingeek said:I hope Leia has lots of grandaughters all with bun hairdos. And they all hassle Ghost Yoda.
I just hope they CG her face. In fact just create an all CG character for her to voice.
Dvader said:I just hope they CG her face. In fact just create an all CG character for her to voice.
Nice.
An Interesting Look Into How The Disney/STAR WARS Deal Came Together!!
Review: SAVING GENERAL YANG is Solid with Glimpses of Greatness
Journeyman director Ronny Yu (The Bride With White Hair, Fearless) delivers his first film in seven years, a solid if unremarkable retelling of the legendary Yang family, with sporadic visual flourishes but a lightweight script that fails to develop its large roster of characters. Saving General Yang proves a competent exercise in large scale period filmmaking, and certainly more exciting than recent misfires like Andrew Lau's The Guillotines. Had Yu not recently confirmed that he has turned down the chance to direct Silver Vase, Iron Knight, I would be encouraged by what is on display here that he'd do a good job with that (presumably) more substantial material. As it is, the brief moments when Saving General Yang does display genuine visual flair can only tease at what might have been with a better script.
It's kinda astounding that they're managing to make the new films less promising than the prequels...
GodModeEnabled said:Slave Bikini Leia... make it happen it again boys!
HAWT.
At her age I think my eyes might melt.
Review: EVIL DEAD Commits Firmly to Disturbing Brutality
Ultimately, Evil Dead succeeds as a horror film because of its unwavering dedication to the hopeless and devastating violence of its own world. There are moments of sly (and not so sly) fan service that will have devotees of Raimi's original film cheering in the seats, but Alvarez takes great care to never break character, and his film refuses to wink or otherwise draw the audience into a safe place where they are free to distance themselves from the horror unfolding onscreen. Evil Dead is a cruel, nasty, and horrifying piece of cinema, and is as good a horror remake as has existed in the past decade.
Foolz said:Never thought Jin Roh was that great. Great atmosphere; shallow themes.
Saw this recentely, turned it off after 50 minutes. Boring as hell.
gamingeek said:Saw this recentely, turned it off after 50 minutes. Boring as hell.
Exactly.
I want to see the new Evil Dead now, I thought it was gonna suck but it is getting good press.
Foolz said:gamingeek said:Saw this recentely, turned it off after 50 minutes. Boring as hell.
Exactly.
BTW did Guerilla steal the design of the troops for Killzone?
gamingeek said:Foolz said:gamingeek said:Saw this recentely, turned it off after 50 minutes. Boring as hell.
Exactly.
BTW did Guerilla steal the design of the troops for Killzone?
It looks like it. Though in turn Jin Roh stole them from the Russians and the Germans.
"Game On, Cocksuckers" - The Red Band Trailer For KICK-ASS 2 Does Indeed Kick Some Ass!!
You must see this movie below, it's really fun and whimsical, more of a comedy than a drama.
http://www.fareastfilms.com/newsPage/The-Great-Magician-On-US-DVD-And-Blu-Ray-4488.htm
'The Great Magician' On US DVD And Blu-Ray
Well Go USA have announced the US DVD and Blu-Ray releases of 'The Great Magician' for the 19th March, 2013. Directed by Derek Yee ('Triple Tap'), the film is a period drama that stars Tony Leung Chiu Wai as a master illusionist who gets the girl and saves his country with magic tricks.
Stallone Updates on The Expendables 3: No Steven Seagal, Possibly Jackie Chan
South Korean Brawler Fist of Legend Gets a New Action-Packed Trailer
Second Trailer For 'Drug War'
A second trailer has been released for 'Drug War' (AKA 'Dark War'), an upcoming Chinese crime thriller directed by Johnnie To. Written by frequent To collaborator Wai Ka Fai, the film stars Louis Koo as a drug dealer who is caught by police and persuaded to take part in a raid against his own gang.
(Fortunately for all of us, “Stoker” is a fantastic film, one linked to Park’s earlier work in both a thematic and aesthetic sense. Visually, “Stoker” is his most stunning and ambitious number to date.)
There’s always a level of concern when an acclaimed international filmmaker heads to Hollywood for the first time. How often have we witnessed a director who cranks out masterpiece after masterpiece fall flat on his or her face when it comes to their initial English language picture? There are a number of issues to be faced down, including, but not limited to, studio interference, skewed cultural conventions, and working in a language that is not their native tongue.
So, as excited as we all are about South Korean director Park Chan-wook’s (“Oldboy”) US debut, “Stoker,” many of us had serious concerns to go along with our anticipation. His films, while brilliant, are dark, frequently brutal, and quite often deal with subjects that mainstream financiers and audiences don’t necessarily like to deal with head on. There’s a lot of ugliness in his body of work. It’s easy to imagine a team of studio execs hamstringing his efforts at every turn and watering down the content of his film until it becomes weak, tepid garbage.
To a degree you saw this earlier in 2013 with Park’s countryman Kim Jee-woon, and his Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle, “The Last Stand.” Don’t get me wrong, “The Last Stand” is a fun movie, one that I enjoyed, but it isn’t exactly what you want or expect out of the director of such grim, moody fare as “I Saw the Devil” and “A Bittersweet Life.” Even though Kim directed the wild, outlandish action farce “The Good, The Bad, The Weird,” his latest film doesn’t feel like his movie, and he was more of a hired gun making a Schwarzenegger joint.Fortunately for all of us, “Stoker” is a fantastic film, one linked to Park’s earlier work in both a thematic and aesthetic sense. Visually, “Stoker” is his most stunning and ambitious number to date, employing a number of stylized editing techniques like freezing frames to emphasize a moment, and subtle camera moves that don’t even register, drawing you towards characters until you’re placed right there in intimate proximity to them. The entire film echoes with whispers.
When India Stoker’s (Mia Wasikowska) father dies, his long lost brother Charlie (Matthew Goode) comes to live with her and her mother, Evelyn (Nicole Kidman). The Stoker family is a throwback, all appearances, housekeepers, estates, and saddle shoes. An anachronism, they feel unstuck in history, a 1950s family floating in the modern times.Much like the era they emulate, the surface masks a much deeper dysfunction. India is withdrawn and isolated, even before the accident, and her mother has long since retreated into bottles of alcohol and pills to numb herself to the fact that her daughter hates her and to cope with the increasing distance between herself and the rest of her family. Beneath her calm, measured exterior, barely contained by her meticulous hair and makeup, is a seething ocean of rage. Kidman allows drips of this to leak out as, in her quiet, restrained voice, she verges on explosion.
And then there’s Charlie, who India didn’t even know existed until the funeral. Charming and debonair, there’s something off about good ol’ uncle Charlie, something unsettling and sinister. You have nothing concrete to base this on; it’s a feeling, a sensation kicking around at the back of your skull. He has ulterior motives, you can see that he’s playing an angle, but you’re never sure what he’s after, aside from what appears to be an unhealthy fascination with his niece.The layered mystery unravels with a meticulous, deliberate pace, like a hallucination or waking dream, hopping and skipping around in time. Match edits push you forward and back in the chronology until you’re not sure what you’re witnessing for yourself, live, and what is being filtered through India’s memory and perception. Is she an innocent, a modern-day Lolita, or emerging into her fully formed and disorienting sexuality at the same time she deals with a horrific tragedy?
Working from a script by “Prison Break” star Wentworth Miller, Park constantly sets up and subverts audience expectations. You think you see a young India sobbing in the shower, playing a traumatic experience with Uncle Charlie over and over in her head. Turns out that what you think is happening, what your rational mind assumes is going on, couldn’t be further from the truth. As a whole, and in individual pieces, “Stoker” builds in one direction only to veer off in a way you never saw coming. We’re not talking about twists, but moments when you realized that what you thought was completely wrong.Masterful suspense work, quiet grace, and hidden perversions come together into a truly remarkable film. “Stoker” takes you to dark, unsettling places, confusing and confounding your emotional responses at every turn, and toying with your morality in true Park Chan-wook form.
From the director of Oldboy
And this
IRON MAN 3 Trailer Delivers What Has Been Promised
After all the teasing, a full-blown trailer for Marvel's Iron Man 3 has finally arrived, and it fits exactly into the expectations that have been raised: a remorse-filled Tony Stark, a villain bent on revenge, large-scale explosions.
Review: Stephen Chow's JOURNEY TO THE WEST: CONQUERING THE DEMONS Dazzles, Frightens, and Still Tickles the Funny Bone
Frequently adapted for the big screen, the latest version of Journey to the West has quickly become one of the highest grossing films in China's box office history. That's not surprising, really, given the recent penchant for black comedy in..
Review: OZ THE GREAT AND THE POWERFUL Deflates on Arrival
The most magical part of Sam Raimi's Oz the Great and the Powerful ironically doesn't even take place in the titular fantasy-land, but rather in the dreary, black-and-white real world.