Friday, June 29, 2012

Film Review - THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN ★★★☆☆

Sam Raimi introduced moviegoers to Marvel Comics' favorite web slinger on the big in 2002's Spider-Man starring Tobey Maguire in the title role. While a solid re-telling of the iconic hero's origin story that clicked with worldwide audiences, the series didn't hit its high point until 2004's Spider-Man 2, and then concluded with the disappointing (and messy) Spider-Man 3 in 2007. When the fourth installment was scrapped in favor of a complete reboot, the initial, obvious, and main concerns were squarely set on the 'too soon?' factor.

Ten years after Spider-Man hit the big screen, to say that this re-telling wipes the slate clean is a pleasant understatement. In The Amazing Spider-Man, director Marc Webb and his team keep Raimi's trilogy reverently preserved while paving the way with this dark alternate approach to the numerous beats expected in any Spider-Man film. To me, what Webb brings to the table with The Amazing Spider-Man is far more his (500) Days of Summer than the recent The Avengers.

First off, the reboot is an edgier take on the popular superhero than you'd expect. The film steps further into The Dark Knight territory than the sheer crowd pleasing rah rah popcorn pep rally that is The Avengers. And I have to say its strengths lie more with the character driven elements over the big budget action 3-D set pieces. It flies high as a plot point paced film first, superhero film second. And that is not meant as a backhanded compliment, but high praise.

There is no apology made in re-tracing all the familiar origin steps we saw in Raimi's Spider-Man. Although it follows a beaten path, conscious changes, some more subtle than others, had to be made to set the two films apart. But as long as Peter Parker get s bitten by a radioactive spider, learns that with great power comes great responsibility after the murder of his Uncle, and fights crime as a masked vigilante known as Spider-Man, we'll all be OK.

Fanboys may nitpick some of the latest adjustments to the mythos, but casual moviegoers won't really have issue with them. Here Peter uses mechanical web shooters (as he does in the comics), whereas Raimi chose to make them organic. Details in the lead up and fall out regarding Uncle Ben's tragic murder, which is what drives Peter to become a masked hero, have been adjusted as necessary. But ultimately the same origin story is being told.

While Norman Osborn (who ultimately becomes the Green Goblin) does not appear in the film, his presence is felt throughout as his Oscorp Tower is a primary setting for numerous crucial plot points of the film. Here the baddie is Oscorp scientist Doctor Curt Connors (Rhys Ifans), also know as the Lizard.

The first hour is methodically paced and centered on developing and re-introducing the characters in this entry. Webb and his excellent lead cast of Andrew Garfield (Peter Parker), Emma Stone (Gwen Stacy), Rhys Ifans (Conners), and Denis Leary (George Stacy) pour more depth into what's going on inside these characters heads than you would ever think a film like this would allow. I found the dialogue driven interactions between Peter and Gwen, Peter's quest for answers regarding his parents abandonment, Peter's relationship with his Uncle Ben and Aunt May, and Peter's ultimate calling to follow his repsonsibility to become a hero more interesting than what was going on with any of the paint by numbers hero versus villain elements concerning the Lizard.

But when it comes to Ifans' Lizard, sometimes the gray area villain who is more victim than pure evil is not as easy to root against as the all out badass is. The simple beauty of Heath Ledger's Joker in The Dark Knight was that there was no origin to the character or any reason to sympathize with his reign of criminal destruction. The Joker was a villain by definition that was meant to be destroyed by Batman. But when the gray area has so many shades, a villain is kept from committing true super villainy.

Don't get me wrong, there are diabolical deeds the Lizard eventually gets around to doing, but Doctor Conners is set up here so much as a victim of his own circumstances and not as a baddie on the level of Doctor Octopus or the Green Goblin, that he falls too far on the side of needing to be helped rather than be defeated. Incidentally, I was surprised to be underwhelmed by the CGI work that brought the reptilian monster to life.

Overall the film looks aesthetically fantastic, shot in 3-D with much fanfare to us filmmaking geeks with the RED EPIC camera rig. Though despite boasting numerous gorgeous hero shots of Spidey in action poses that could leap straight off a comic book panel, I remain a stickler for fast moving scenes in 3-D that are muddled with motion blur (where the action would be clearer minus the third dimension). But for me the film's 3-D truly excels in well paced intimate conversation pieces, notably in the high school hallways between Peter and Gwen. The layered dimensions and gorgeous shallow depth of field makes the dialogue and connection between the actors performances that much more intimate. These days big action set pieces in 3-D are sadly so commonplace with one movie trying to out-D the last one.

The spectacular cast is perhaps the true highlight of the film, and they probably could have pulled this off strictly as a low budget character piece minus lavish SPFX set pieces and battles.

Andrew Garfield simply owns this take on Peter Parker /Spider-Man. His Parker is a true angst ridden outcast, that creepy kid who possibly has a scary dark side under that hoodie and could snap when pushed just a tad too far. He brings to the role both a lot of heart as well as a huge chip on his shoulder, especially in scenes where Peter comes home tired, bloody, and battered every night after his crime-fighting sprees. Garfield's scenes with high school jock and bully Flash Thompson play out as brutal assaults and come off as reciprocally satisfying when Peter uses his powers to even the score. The scenes of discovery as Peter explores his newfound powers are reminiscent of the early parts of Superman: The Movie with the title hero giving his abilities a test run for both himself and the world to witness.

Emma Stone, who never disappoints in any of her big screen performances, brings her A Game sexy, smart, girl charm to Gwen Stacy, and adds believability that she could fall for an odd cat like Pater Parker.

With the front and center absence of the Daily Bugle and its over-the-top Editor-In-Chief J. Jonah Jameson, Denis Leary as Gwen's father Captain George Stacy fills in the gap for spreading the anti-Spider-Man sentiment to the public. Martin Sheen and Sally Field are the true heart and soul of the film as Uncle Ben and Aunt May. Peter's troubled home life is given a solid family stability through Sheen and Field, who play them slightly younger and necessarily narrowing the genration gap in the household. They come across as far more accessible and relatable than the stricter old fogie out of touch versions from the Raimi films.

Despite some nitpicky bumps, overall The Amazing Spider-Man is solid, entertaining, and succeeds as a new beginning for the series. It's an edgy film that ironically wows more with its subtle steps than its obligatory hero versus villain action scenes. Case in point bear witness to truly one of the best hero defining scenes ever on the big screen as Spider-Man saves a child from a car dangling off the edge of Williamsburg Bridge. But by borrowing pages from the playbook of The Dark Knight franchise rather than the majority of the other straightforward Marvel crowd pleasers, the film embarks on a necessary alternate path to set a welcome stage for further, and hopefully spectacular, installments.




The Amazing Spider-Man opens on July 3rd in 3D, RealD 3D, and IMAX 3D.

REVIEW RATING:  ★★★☆☆
Directed By: Marc Webb
Starring: Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Denis Leary, Rhys Ifans, Martin Sheen, Sally Field
Studio: Sony
Rated: PG-13
Running Time: 136 minutes



Thursday, June 28, 2012

Eddie Van Halen On 'Back To The Future' Guitar Riff: "It Was Me!"

In what is the most random of years-in-the-making rumor confirmations, TMZ caught up with (as in ambushed) Eddie and Alex Van Halen at what could be an airport, and besides the typical awkward banter you expect to hear off camera from the show's distinguished photojournalists, I must admit this guy kinda scored a geektastic of a doozy.

He asked Eddie if it was actually him playing the screaming guitar riff in Back To The Future that was heard on the cassette tape Marty cranked via a Walkman for young George McFly in 1955.

You remember, when Michael J. Fox as Marty snuck into his father's bedroom disguised in his plutonium safe suit and revealed himself as Darth Vader from the planet Vulcan...

Anyway, Eddie off handedly confirmed that it really was him who played the guitar riff. All these years I had assumed director Robert Zemeckis and the filmmakers just had some dime-a-dozen 1985 Eddie VH knock-off session guitarist quickly bang out some garbled riffs in post production and called it a royalty free day. Eddie also performed the guitar solo on Michael Jackson's Beat It in a two take favor on the Thriller album. Kinda makes you wonder what else might be out there.



In lieu of yesterday's big internet hoax/sensation/snafu regarding June 27, 2012 as being the day Marty traveled (forward) to the future, and that future being yesterday (sorry, it was actually a doctored screen capture), but score one for TMZ for putting this 27 year mystery to rest (that is if Eddie was actually being serious)...

Doctored photo that made the rounds yesterday...


But Marty, Doc, Einstein, and Jennifer actually travel to October 21, 2015 in Back To The Future II.

TRAILERS: 'Total Recall,' Frankenweenie,' 'Indiana Jones' Blu-ray


Three hot new trailers hit the web this week. The first up is the reboot of Total Recall, starring Colin Farrell, Kate Beckinsale, Bill Nighy, Bryan Cranston, and Jessica Biel. Lots of action and suspense to be seen in this extended spot, but running at over two and half minutes, sometimes less is more and this trailer shows a little too much. Be on the lookout for some nods to the original 1990 version starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, both films based on Philip K. Dick's short story We Can Remember It For You Wholesale. The Len Wiseman (Underworld, Live Free Or Die Hard) directed film hits theaters on August 3rd.


Tim Burton's black & white stop-motion remake of his 1984 classic gothic short Frankenweenie, and featuring the voices of Martin Short, Christoopher Lee, Winona Ryder, and Catherine O'Hara has a brand new trailer. This twisted Burton-esque tale of a boy and his (re-animated) dog hits screens on October 5th in 3D, RealD 3D, and IMAX 3D.


Indiana Jones is finally coming to Blu-ray. Indiana Jones: The Complete Collection will feature all four big screen adventures of the iconic whip cracking fedora sporting archaeologist played by Harrison Ford. While the previous HD transfers on the first three films do their production design an immense world of justice after all these years, in high def Crystal Skull's attempt to look 1950s retro makes the disappointing fourth entry even harder to watch. The 4K Blu-ray transfer will most likely result in the same outcome. The blockbuster films will be packaged together along with a collection of new and old special features. The box set has a targeted street date of September 18th.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Check Out Marc Webb's 'Amazing Spider-Man' IMAX Preview

Spider-Man Week is still in full swing here in NYC with cast members Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, and Rhys Ifans making pre-release media appearances all over town. In the meantime as anticipation builds for the movie, check out the new IMAX poster for The Amazing Spider-Man as well as the new video introduction from Marc Webb.

The director explains the special exclusive presentation that the IMAX screens will be able to showcase for eager fans using the latest cutting edge 3D technology in conjunction with the RED EPIC digital cameras utilized to shoot the film.

From IMAX:
Exclusively for IMAX, Director Marc Webb and the filmmakers have crafted the
climactic finale of The Amazing Spider-Man to take full advantage of the IMAX
canvas and overall experience. The IMAX presentation features a larger aspect
ratio of 1.9:1 versus the traditional 2.39:1 ratio - allowing audiences to feel as if
they were swinging alongside Spider-Man.
The Amazing Spider-Man opens in 3D, RealD 3D, and IMAX 3D on July 3rd.

And be sure to check back here later this week for the NerdyRottenScoundrel.com review of the film.



Film Review - TED ★★★½☆☆

In Ted, Seth MacFarlane takes his entire bag of tricks familiar to all us rabid fans of Family Guy, and lets loose a solid onslaught of no-holds-barred FCC-free hilarity.

The live action / CGI raunchy comedy, and MacFarlane's feature film debut, has all the trappings of the edgy and over the top humor we've come to expect, anchored by a walking talking teddy bear that has distinct voice that falls in between Peter and Brian Griffen.

The plot revolves around Ted, a stuffed toy who became all-too-real in 1985 when a lonely boy wished upon a star for his best friend to come to life. Needless to say, the now living bear became a headlines grabbing pop icon during the '80s, but soon enough saw his roaring celebrity days fast fade away as the years dragged on.

But that lonely boy, John Bennet, remained inseparable from Ted and as the story picks up in present day. Bennet (Mark Wahlberg) finds himself an unmotivated stoner with a dead end job at a car rental company, a gorgeous girlfriend of four years longing for an overdue engagement ring (played by Family Guy's own Meg Griffen, Mila Kunis), and constantly couch sitting with his former celebrity beer guzzling pot smoking potty mouthed childhood slack-happy friend.

The raunchy humor hits hard and fast in the film's first act, with MacFarlane pushing his R-rated big screen freedom to its limits. Gross out sight gags. Check. Foul mouthed lovable characters. Check. Racial stereotype humor. Check. Below the belt raunchy sex humor. Check. Flashback asides. Check. Obscure refrences. Check. Hilarious cameos. Check. 

The adorable Mila Kunis plays it pretty straight as Lori opposite all the wild antics going on, especially in countless scenes with a talking CGI bear and her lovable chowder-head Boston boyfriend. Although Wahlberg isn't stretching his acting chops heavily here as the guy caught between settling in with the love of his life and remaining a man child with his child hood buddy, he conveys a winning balance of heart and humor in the lead human role.

In addition to several memorable self mocking celebrity cameos, the supporting cast of Joel McHale, Patrick Warburton, Laura Vandervoort, Giovanni Ribisi, and narrator Patrick Stewart, offer a solid backbone that builds on the strong performances of the leads.

Much like Family Guy where a sarcastic talking dog interacts normally within society, Ted requires the same suspension of disbelief when it comes to witnessing a magical toy that flawlessly runs about in this film. And if a talking bear were to come to life, albeit here scampering around while swearing, drinking, hanging with hookers, and posing for awkward pictures with adoring fans, chances are it would look like Ted (though there is still a strong place in my heart for Teddy from A.I.).

Though the tangible believability of Ted is never felt more than in a violent hotel room bear versus man drag out fight between the fuzzy toy and Wahlberg. If Superman: The Movie could make you believe a man could fly, Ted will make you believe a stuffed bear can brawl (hint: it's best not to use the name Teddy Ruxpin in certain company).

In addition to a brilliant spot-on flashback tribute to Airplane!, you will be left in the cold if your pop culture repertoire can't appreciate a brilliant subplot and extended cameo by Sam Jones, as in Flash Ahhhhhhhh!! Gordon, the '80's 'It's So Bad That It's Awesome' Queen soundtrack fueled sci-fi classic. In typical MacFarlane manner, he really runs hard and fast with the retro reverence of it all, and the more in-the-know you are with Flash Gordon, the funnier it is.

Also a highlight is the disturbing performance by Giovanni Ribisi as Donny, the Ted-obsessed villain with an equally creepy son. Ribisi provides shards of sheer comedic ewwwww inducing moments that I actually found to be on the playing field with the 'best of' Buffalo Bill from Silence Of The Lambs. Ribisi does a lot with a little in this role.

Ted has it's demographic set in stone. There is little wiggle room available to suddenly figure out if this raunchy comedy is your cup of tea or not, so every Family Guy fan should get out and see it. For every time you wish MacFarlane's breakout animated Fox show could take it a step farther, Ted succeeds in accomplishing that on all levels. MacFarlane makes a seamless leap into feature films here by also managing to not just give fans a lazy big screen version of everything we've seen before. He manages to give us a incredible CGI creation that makes you laugh along with his unabashed frat boy bravado, and then balances it back to tug at you when it's a heartfelt buddy movie. At the core of the story, Ted and John really are lifelong best friends who care deeply for one another.

You could treat Ted as brave and bold first date movie to test the uncomfortable levels of edgy humor your better half will publicly laugh at, or be safe and secure with a group of like-minded obscure reference loving buddies to enjoy a night out with. Either way, there is great time to be had here. And frankly you will be hard pressed to find a more original comedy this year than Ted.


Ted opens on the big screen on Friday, June 29th.

REVIEW RATING:  ★★★½☆☆
Directed By: Seth MacFarlane
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Seth MacFarlane, Giovanni Ribisi, Joel McHale, Sam Jones
Studio: Universal Pictures
Rated: R
Running Time:  106 minutes



Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Angelina Jolie Revealed As The Evil Queen in 'Maleficent'

Disney has released the first official image from Maleficent, and it's appropriately of Angelina Jolie as the evil queen and title character from its live-action adaptation of their classic animated feature Sleeping Beauty.

According to the studio press release, "This is the untold story of Disney’s most beloved villain, Maleficent, from the 1959 classic Sleeping Beauty. The film reveals the events that hardened her heart and drove her to curse the baby, Aurora."



The film began production on June 13th, and in addition to its Academy Award-winning lead, Maleficent also features Sharlto Copley (The A-Team, District 9), Elle Fanning (Super 8), Sam Riley (On the Road), Miranda Richardson (The Hours), and Juno Temple (The Dark Knight Rises, Atonement).

Maleficent is set for release on March 14, 2014 in 3D.  Yes, 2014. So we are a way's away from seeing this on the big screen.



Fourth 'Dark Knight Rises' Trailer Mixes Big Action & Big Plot Points

A fourth trailer to The Dark Knight Rises surfaced today without prior announcement or fanfare.

This new look at the film offers a well balanced sneak peak at the highly anticipated final film in Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy. We get some heavy plot points as well as a lot of action shots. The previous trailers have been very dark and morbid, with mere hints of the action that takes place in the film,

Now that we have been introduced to The Bat, the new flying vehicle the Dark Knight takes to the skies into, the latest TV spots have highlighted more explosions and action. The aren't any punches being pulled in the homestretch of promoting the film regarding dark themes and high octane action, as to be expected from the two previous installments.

Also of note is the hint of the film's storyline echoing the iconic Knightfall plot from the comics where Bane learns that Bruce Wayne is Batman, and proceeds to "break the bat" by snapping the hero's spine over his knee (and putting him out of action for an extended period of time). Bruce Wayne's injuries and imprisonment at the hands of Bane have been already hinted at in previous trailers, and obviously the return of Batman as Gotham's hero  is not so subtlety suggested in the title of the film. The one line delivered by Bane, "Mister Wayne" and the telling imagery that follows say it all. 

Enjoy the latest look at The Dark Knight Rises, set to hit theaters on July 20th...

Monday, June 18, 2012

New 'Dark Knight Rises' Spot: Bane Vs. Batman, The Bat & Batpod In Action

The latest commercial for The Dark Knight Rises packs quite a punch for it :34 running time. Between the quick cuts we get new shots of The Bat flying through Gotham, some new glimpses of The Batpod revving its wheels, and more of the big Bane versus Batman battle.

This isn't much on plot, this one goes all out for action.

The final installment of Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy stars Christian Bale (Batman/Bruce Wayne), Tom Hardy (Bane), Anne Hathaway (Selina Kyle/Catwoman), Gary Oldman (Comissioner Gordon), Joseph Gordon-Levitt (John Blake), Michael Cane (Alfred Pennyworth), Marion Cotillard (Miranda Tate), Juno Temple (Holly Robinson), and Morgan Freeman (Lucius Fox).


The Dark Knight Rises hits theaters and IMAX screens on July 20th.



This spot, released last week, in addition to introducing the Caped Crusader's new aerial vehicle, also hints at Batman's lengthy absence as Gotham's protector, possibly after his defeat at the hands of Bane.




Friday, June 15, 2012

Film Review - ROCK OF AGES ★½☆☆☆☆

If there was but one thing I have said about Rock Of Ages since I saw it on stage in NYC while running off-Broadway in 2008, and that was its the only musical I knew nearly every lyric to every song on the entire '80s set list. Since the show boasted a soundtrack comprised of 'The Greatest Hits of the Sunset Strip,' it struck a major chord with this proud child of the '80s who was easily used to cranking up all the popular hair metal tunes.

In 1988, I was in 8th grade when I went to my first concert, Def Leppard (playing 'in the round' no less), just as 'Pour Some Sugar On Me' was riding high atop the radio and MTV hot play lists, and CD's had started to really take off as a listening format.

When the feature film based on the now long-running hit Broadway musical was announced, I knew if there was only one thing about it I would enjoy, it would be that soundtrack of my youth. And after seeing Rock Of Ages on the big screen, it looks like I was right on the money.

But let's start with the plot. As we begin the film we are taken back to 1987 as Sherri Christian (played to cutie pie pixie perfection by Julianne Hough), an Oklahoma small town gal who hits LA's Sunset Strip to pursue her Hollywood singing dreams. The perky wide & blue eyed blonde is promptly robbed of her luggage, and just as promptly lands a job at the Bourbon Room, a sleezyy '80s metal club run by Dennis Dupree (Alec Baldwin). Since destiny brings together similar souls who share similar dreams, Sherri quickly falls in love with her high spirited bar back co-worker Drew Boley (Diego Boneta), also an aspiring singer.

I suppose I shouldn't waste any further space here without getting to Tom Cruise's much hyped role as rock God Stacee Jaxx. Although Cruise's presence is felt throughout the entire story, he is featured on-screen rather sparingly truth be told. But when he is there, he gives a standout performance that is not to be missed. Give the guy credit for going out on a limb by playing (and nailing) an aging  burnt out shirtless rockstar, and is required to really perform several iconic songs.

Story-wise there is also backdrop drama about financial woes that threaten to close the club, a conservatist PMRC-esque protest movement against the evils Jaxx and his type of music inspire (led by the Mayor's wife played by Catherine Zeta-Jones), a Rolling Stone reporter (Malin Akerman) determined to delve deep into Jaxx's troubled inner demons, and the struggles of the Sunset Strip relationship of Sherri and Drew.

But the flat out problem with the film is that it's simply painfully flat out flat. When your soundtrack consists of some of the best rock pop ballads, stadium anthems, and head banging tunes ever written, you expect to attend a non-stop party (which was my experience seeing it on stage).

Sadly director Adam Shankman finds scant inspiration from the hard hitting drums, fret defying guitar solos, or any of the karaoke classic lyrics, and delivers a static straight-forward paint-by-numbers movie that just happens to have a lot of characters that break into well know songs. Painful dialogue exchanges in between the hits seem to exist merely as a necessary means to get from tune to tune. And when we get one of the rocking songs to follow along to, Shankman chooses to lose interest and use boring near static camera shots where there should be instead fast & dizzying edits, sweeping crane moves, and fancy Steadi-cam work following the characters in and around well choreographed mini-music videos.

The material offers a wealth of prime visual opportunity that's laid wasted by snooze worthy camera setups and execution. Shankman is a now a repeat offender as I felt the same way about his screen version of Hairspray. Watch any musical number from Rob Marshall's Chicago and you'll see what I mean about translating stage to the big screen in a fun way (and that film also earned Zeta-Jones an Oscar).

Sadly the leads offer little excitement as well. As perfect as Hough is to play a small time wish-upon-a-star girl from Tulsa, when cast opposite Diego's bland goody two shoes dreamer Drew, they add up to a couple who possess no balls, bite, or hard edge between them, especially when dropped into a very decadent setting notorious for sex, drugs, and rock and roll. Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand are not only topped off with incredibly unconvincing wigs, but have many useless time killing and sometimes cringe worthy scenes of dialogue. There is little of the brilliance required for Jack Donaghey seen here in Baldwin's Dennis Dupree.

Getting back to Cruise, who gives his all as the eccentric Jaxx, and for all intents and purposes is the shining star of the film. But its interesting to note that Cruise plays it so straight and serious that its almost out of place in this film that never decides if it needs to be darker in tone or amp up the '80s over the top spoof factor. Plus, Cruise still looks half his actual age and no fading rock star would be lucky enough to remain as physically presentable as he is (take note Axl Rose).

But when it even comes to the make or break question of whether Cruise can hold a note, yes he can. Taking to task Wanted Dead Or Alive, Pour Some Sugar On Me and Paradise City, the Stacee Jaxx versions are welcome updates to those songs' legacies. Cruise has a surprisingly good voice. Would I want to hear a vanity album of metal covers from Tom Cruise & The Mavericks? Eh, that might be pushing it. But obviously a big gamble here was taken and paid off.

Next to the soundtrack, Cruise is the rock solid anchor of Rock Of Ages. His scenes with Malin Akerman offer more than any other pairing in the film, In addition, Jaxx travels with a wing man monkey named Hey Man. Sadly I always fall for the monkey humor in a movie. It gets an easy laugh no matter what in my book. Moving on...

While you can't argue with the sheer fun that goes along with the music, and there are a few rousing numbers, especially when you are given a mash up of songs which showcase the entire cast. But even that stunt has already been trumped by Glee, which has made that a near weekly staple.

Rock Of Ages drags overall in its excessive two hour running time. Less talk, more music. Case closed. The original show's book brilliantly linked unrelated songs from an era, and made it work for moving the plot forward. Here it outstays its welcome. For fans of the era, its a fun no brainer. See it and hit karaoke afterwards. But as far as any depiction of the true seedy yet glam atmosphere of Sunset's Whiskey or Roxy hey days that hosted Guns N' Roses, Poison, Motley Crue, and Warrant's transition from small club performers to multi-platinum arena rockers, you're better off with a repeat of any VH1 Behind The Music or even the better than you'd expect Rockstar starring Mark Wahlberg.

Note: Songs titles included in the film's soundtrack like Nothin' But A Good Time, I Wanna Rock, We're Not Gonna Take It,  I Love Rock And Roll, Can't Fight This Feeling, and Don't Stop Believing were purposely not worked or worded into this review in any clever cute way. But... If you are looking for the Heart of Rock & Roll, sadly you will have to search elsewhere. Since that's a Huey Lewis song, it doesn't count...


Rock Of Ages opens in theaters and IMAX on Friday, June 15th.

REVIEW RATING: ★½☆ ☆☆☆
SOUNDTRACK RATING: ★★★★☆
Directed By: Adam Shankman
Starring: Tom Cruise, Julianne Hough, Alec Baldwin, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Russell Brand
Studio: New Line
Rated: PG-13
Running Time: 123 minutes



'Expendables 2' Poster Hits!

They're Back For War!

Sylvester Stallone... Arnold Schwarzenegger... Bruce Willis... Jason Statham... Jean Claude Van Damme... Chuck Norris... Terry Crews... Liam Hemsworth... Jet Li... Dolph Lundgren


SOURCE: Yahoo! Movies


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

'Mockingbird Lane' News: Set Pics, Lily Is Cast & O'Connell Talks Herman

Lots of news regarding NBC's dark reboot of The Munsters. Pics from the set revealing Grandpa and Marilyn Munster's looks have surfaced, Jerry O'Connell talks about what to expect, and the show has found its leading lady Lily.

Portia De Rossi has secured the female lead in Mockingbird Lane, joining Jerry O'Connell (Herman), and Eddie Izzard (Grandpa). True Blood actress Mariana Klaveno was originally set for the part. However, she was cast in a supporting role in ABC's Devious Maids and was not released from her contract to pursue playing Lily for NBC.

The pilot, delayed in production due to late casting, derives its name from the street address the Universal Studios monsters-inspired family lived on in the original show, 1313 Mockingbird Lane. The pilot is being helmed by Bryan Singer (X-Men) and produced/written by Pushing Daisies mastermind Bryan Fuller.

'We want this to be an American Harry Potter," Fuller told Entertainment Weekly in April. "Any story you can tell on Parenthood, we can run through a monster prism and tell in a twisted way. It's an American Horror Story the whole family can watch."

De Rossi, who most recently was seen in ABC's Better Off Ted and the FOX cult phenom Arrested Development, will take over from Yvonne De Carlo's Lily in the '60s black and white comedy show. The character was based on the Bride of Frankenstein, as Herman was modeled after Frankenstein's Monster (with O'Connell filling in Fred Gwynne's iconic big boots).



“It’s gonna be completely different,” Jerry O'Connell recently revealed to Access Hollywood. "It’s a little darker than the original. It really is."

O'Connell also said in addition to his excitement for working with Singer and Fuller, that the new modern take has "a lot of cool special effects." "I can’t wait for people to see it,” he added.


Mason Cook (Spy Kids 4D) has been cast as Eddie, the werewolf son of Herman and Lily, and newcomer Charity Wakefield will play Marilyn, the black sheep cousin who stands out as an actual normal person. Here is a picture of Wakefield from the set of courtesy of Arrow In The Head.


In addition to this picture released from Bryan Fuller of Izzard as Grandpa from a costume fitting, Entertainment Weekly scored a first look a while's back at some of the character designs for Grandpa, Lily, and the iconic family mansion. It remains to be revealed if the Munsters' fire breathing pet Spot will live under the staircase in this version.



And check out here Jerry O'Connell chatting with AccessHollywood.com's Laura Saltman about what he may look like as Herman Munster.


SOURCE:  The Hollywood ReporterEntertainment WeeklyAccessHollywood.comArrow In The Head



Monday, June 11, 2012

Andrew Garfield Talks About Suiting Up For The First Time As 'Spider-Man'

In Part Two of the cast interviews with Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone from this weekend's press junket for The Amazing Spider-Man, the film's star reveals what it was like the very first time he put on the iconic superhero outfit.

While doing the rounds of international press interviews in New York City this past weekend, the cast of the highly anticipated reboot of the popular Marvel wall crawling superhero stopped by the Access Hollywood shooting suite to chat with the show's resident Spidey Expert: Scott Mantz.

A very humble Garfield, a fan of Spider-Man since childhood, had the opportunity to go fan to fan with his interviewer while chatting up the darker big screen spin on the iconic character.


In the interest of full disclosure, I will say I'm a bit partial here with theses interviews as I was shooting Andrew, Emma, and the rest of the cast in the AH Shooting Suite while getting to nerd out with Movie Mantz.

The Amazing Spider-Man swings onto 3D and IMAX 3D screens on July 3rdI have seen the film and NerdyRottenScoundrel.com will have a full detailed review closer to the release date.


SOURCE: AccessHollywood.com



Emma Stone Talks Up Her 'Amazing Spider-Man' Audition

Check out Part One of these interviews with Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone from this weekend's press junket for The Amazing Spider-Man.

While doing the rounds in New York City, the cast of the highly anticipated reboot of the Marvel wall crawling superhero stopped by the Access Hollywood shooting suite to chat with the show's resident Spidey Expert: Scott Mantz.

First up is Emma Stone who plays Peter Parker's high school classmate and love interest Gwen Stacy.


In the interest of full disclosure, I will say I'm a bit partial here with theses interviews as I was shooting Andrew, Emma, and the rest of the cast in the AH Shooting Suite while getting to nerd out with Movie Mantz.

The Amazing Spider-Man swings onto 3D and IMAX 3D screens on July 3rd. I have seen the film, and NerdyRottenScoundrel.com will have a full detailed review closer to the release date.


SOURCE: AccessHollywood.com



Friday, June 8, 2012

First Official Image of The Doctor & His New Companion Revealed

The BBC has released the first official image of Matt Smith and Jenna-Louise Coleman together on set as the Doctor and his new companion Clara.

The Doctor's new time-traveling partner will make her debut in the Doctor Who Christmas Special set to air later this year following the departure of current companions Amy Pond and Rory Williams (played by Karen Gillan and Arthur Darville) in episode 5 of the upcoming new season.



SOURCES: BBC America



Film Review - PROMETHEUS ★★★☆☆

Prometheus, Ridley Scott's long awaited return to science fiction and the much speculated 'is it' or 'isn't it' a prequel to Alien, is finally here. With much anticipation from fans ( myself included), it's a tough act to follow when hopes are riding so high for a film to deliver, and deliver big.

Scott, who directed classics including Alien, Blade Runner, Legend, and Gladiator, has unleashed upon audiences a slick high concept sci-fi thriller, and with no if's and's or but's is firmly grounded in the same Alien universe that he introduced us to in 1979. As for the burning question of how the hell does it connect to the Alien series? Well, ”big things have small beginnings,” says Michael Fassbender as the android David. But more on that and him later.

Following a breathtaking 3D pre-'Dawn Of Man' prologue of a doomed alien humanoid bestowing Earth with the gift of DNA (whether its an intentional gift of life or not is the first of many questions), we jump thousands of years into the future and are are introduced to Dr. Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Dr. Charlie Holloway (Logan Marshall-Green). The pair are archeologists who discover similar ancient cave paintings all over the world which point them to the stars on a quest to the possible home planet of our 'creators.'

On the Prometheus, a trillion dollar space vessel funded and owned by Weyland Industries (remember "The Company" in Aliens?), Shaw and Holloway travel to LV-223  (not to be confused with LV-426, the barren planet seen in Alien & Aliens) along with bitch-in-space corporate suit Merideth Vickers (Charlize Theron), android David (Fassbender), gruff ship pilot Janek (Idris Elba), and a bunch of nameless other crew members along for the ride who will make many qualified piss poor decisions throughout the journey.

Once there, they discover a strange alien temple of sorts, things are quickly deemed as not quite what they hoped for, and all hell breaks loose the closer they get to uncovering the true nature of man's origins. Deadly creatures. Check. Dark creepy corridors. Check. Squirm worthy horror moments. Check. Intriguing sci-fi concepts. Without question.

As a stand alone concept, Prometheus moves along swimmingly for the first hour while waving a tense and constant "what happens next?" flag. But as grand as the concept of discovering "God" is (Shaw wears a cross to remind us of the Heavenly higher beings), and finding the answers to questions like "Why are we here?", can there ever be a satisfying answer to these mysteries?

Prometheus will offer a different experience for those expecting and seeking that Alien tie-in and those for whom all the references and familiar bio-mechanical H.R. Giger xenomorph imagery just fly right over their heads. But among the many high brow concepts of creation and how mankind fits into the grand scheme of things in the universe, the film starts to lose focus when its limited by the plot points it needs to hit by warming up the seat for Sigourney Weaver's Ellen Ripley and the crew of the Nostromo.

Michael Fassbender plays the calculating android David in a standout performance. The presence of a robotic character is of no surprise here. Ian Holm, Lance Henriksen, and Winona Ryder are all illustrious android alumni from the Alien films. The unique cold, creepy charisma Fassbender brings to David's childlike sense of wonder and quest for absolute knowledge at any cost would put the logical Mr. Spock and evil HAL 9000 both to shame. Early scenes that set up his lonely existence watching Peter O' Toole in Lawrence Of Arabia add more depth to him than most of the other human characters will see in the entire film. He pulls off an amazing turn as the film's ultimate anti-hero.

Charlize Theron does well here in both her space age power suits and form fitting cat suits as she twists here evil corporate mustache as the no-nonsense Weyland heavy. Noomi Rapace impresses as the God-fearing archeologist whose faith is tested when confronted with the possibility of meeting her extraterrestrial creators, dubbed the 'Engineers.' She's given a lot to do and follows a fine line of strong female leads for Ridley Scott.

Scott conceived and shot the film in 3D, and the results are not only pleasing (especially for the gorgeous exotic landscape shots), but at times amazing. Sir Ridley proves that in right hands, the now-tired 3D bandwagon can still be a force to be reckoned with in the big screen experience. The added dimension is subtle and never intrusive to the senses, and sucks you in as a natural part of the visuals. There was a conscious effort to not deliver another film that pops out at you every time something suddenly jerks which tends to add nauseating motion blur. Also for a movie with so much set in places with minimal light, the film looked great and showed little sign of the darker picture associated with 3D projection.

Overall, Prometheus boasts a brilliant set-up and never drags along in pacing with its ideas. The concept in theory is the stuff the best sci-fi is made of. But even with a solid cast and mesmerizing visuals (and that impressive unobtrusive 3D), ultimately it buckles under the weight of balancing both its own ambition and the legacy it ends up trying too hard to live up to. Substantial satisfying resolution is not one of the film's finer points.

Needless to say, there is plenty of room left for a sequel. Hell there's enough room for several more installments that could run completely parallel to the established Alien films, and I would welcome the chance to see them all. But by the end credits there were too many open doors left swinging wide open in the wind, and I felt left hanging by many pressing "But what about this?" "And what about that?" issues regarding the whole 'quest for God' journey. And sadly, I hate to say the film's final image manages to destroy any sense of subtlety set up in the preceding two hours, as if we didn't get it already.



Prometheus opens Friday, June 8th in 3D and IMAX 3D.

REVIEW RATING: ★★★☆☆
Directed By: Ridley Scott
Starring: Charlize Theron, Michael Fassbender, Idris Elba, Noomi Rapace, Guy Pearce, Patrick Wilson
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Rated: R
Running Time: 123 minutes