Showing posts with label Game of Thrones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Game of Thrones. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Behold The Massive Iron Throne as George R.R. Martin Truly Envisions It

Do you want to see how George R.R. Martin really envisions the Iron Throne looking like? As bad ass as it is on HBO's Game of Thrones, it pales in comparison to the image the author revealed via his Live Journal blog, Not A Blog.

"This Iron Throne is scary. And not at all a comfortable seat, just as Aegon intended," says Martin.


According to Martin in describing the throne here painted by artist Marc Simonetti:
"The HBO throne has become iconic. And well it might. It's a terrific design, and it has served the show very well."
"And yet, and yet... it's still not right. It's not the Iron Throne I see when I'm working on THE WINDS OF WINTER. It's not the Iron Throne I want my readers to see. The way the throne is described in the books... HUGE, hulking, black and twisted, with the steep iron stairs in front, the high seat from which the king looks DOWN on everyone in the court... my throne is a hunched beast looming over the throne room, ugly and assymetric..."
"From now on, THIS will be the reference I give to every other artist tackling a throne room scene.This Iron Throne is massive. Ugly. Assymetric. It's a throne made by blacksmiths hammering together half-melted, broken, twisted swords, wrenched from the hands of dead men or yielded up by defeated foes... a symbol of conquest... it has the steps I describe, and the height. From on top, the king dominates the throne room. And there are thousands of swords in it, not just a few."
This is the version of the throne that will be seen in the upcoming A World of Ice and Fire.
SOURCE: NOT A BLOG, Blastr



Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Film Review - THE PURGE ★★☆☆☆

Welcome to America in 2022. A nation reborn. Unemployment is down to 1%, people get along just fine, and crime is non-existent. Well that last part has a huge asterisk attached. One night a year, the government sanctions a night for citizens to commit prosecution-free crime, which includes murder, and all emergency services are suspended. By allowing The Purge, as its called, the idea is everyone's pent up agression is permitted for a scheduled release during a 12-hour period, leaving only peace and harmony for the remaining 364 calendar days of the year. Though certain upper classes and government officials are exempt as potential 'victims,' for the most part its the perceived vagrant tier who are the ones used as target practice when the right to "unleash the beast" is savagely invoked.

If you can get past this ridiculous scenario set in a dystopian future, you will be able to hang on board for this tense and bloody home invasion thriller. To be fair though for all you snarky nitpickers, the dystopian future premise here is still not as far fetched than anything presented in The Hunger Games. It's also worth nothing that The Purge is an extremely violent film, with more than a fair amount of bloody graphic gun play. But there is no pretension in the advertising that it would be anything otherwise, so you should know full well what you are setting yourself up for once your ass in settled in the theater.

Ethan Hawke plays James Sandin, a high-end home-security salesman who has made a lot of profit by outfitting his well-to-do gated community with Purge-proof systems. At 7PM on March 21st its Purge night as usual, and he battens down the hatches at his spacious abode for hopefully 12 incident free hours with wife Mary (Lena Headey) and children Zoey (Adelaide Kane) and Charlie (Max Burkholder).


Lockdown is going well as can be until Charlie takes pity on an bloody and battered outsider who has a murderous masked gang hot on his tail. The silly child lets him into the house and things go downhill quickly from there. On this night, its the ominous gang's full legal right to cleanse society of this vagrant. Their leader (a chilling and over the top Rhys Wakefield) demands that the Sadins surrender the stranger for imminent slaughter, or they will use the necessary tools to tear into their home and kill everyone, which is still within their legal Purge night rights.


Hawke's James Sadin is a good family man, and a cog in the futuristic system merely adhering to society's ridiculous set rules when he's thrown into this life or death situation. He is faced with the moral dilemma to save his family by turning over the wounded war vet to die with no legal repercussions or maintain his soul by providing him safety and risking the lives of his loved ones. What digs at you here is the gang falls within their right to commit the reprehensible acts according to the new world order.


There wouldn't be much more movie if the moral high road was the road not taken, so the lights go out and the ultra violent home invasion commences. That said, I was able to disconnect when it came to the scant details provided about the entire inane concept of the Purge and took it as a highly effective thriller from that point on. Director James DeMonaco frames the action mostly in tight shots, and often handheld. By leaving the large house mainly unexplored before the main event, the contant unknown adds to the film's relentless claustrophobic atmosphere. With killers lurking in the shadows at any given moment, the middle act plays out as an effective thriller, capitalizing on sudden booming sound effects.

The Purge runs under 90 minutes, a HUGE plus for one who feels comedies and horror movies are best kept to a tight 90 rather than a bloated 120. The trim running time keeps it pound for pound and bang for your buck moving along constantly. Frankly I found not an ounce of fat in the film's pacing.


I'll say at least the audience I was among last night was way into it, cheering at all the critical hero moments. Hawke gives a solid performance here as a father who does whatever he can to protect his family. Even if the choices aren't entirely morally right, in the film's context, they remain legally right. and any person would probably make the same choices in succesion. But its not to say the film could have benefitted from extra expository screen time to ease the audience into the deeper ramifications behind the Purge itself.

Lena Headey provides as his wife what she does best, a strong and stoic female figure with the subtle frown of heavy burden. Following her roles in 300, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, and Game of Thrones with The Purge, I really do wish for her a rousing romantic comedy lined up sometime in the future. It would be nice to see her smile and laugh incessantly on screen.

The main villain, who does not wear a mask, is a chilling college attired madman courtesy of Rhys Wakefield. At times over the top, but provides a menacing face to the otherwise disguised group of marauders in the film.

The film sticks firmly to its ridiculous moral-less premise, and only once you accept that all forms of extreme violence is legal in the United States for a 12-hour period can you move forward. But they play it correct by their own twisted rule book. But on the surface there is an intense thriller about self preservation that at times delivers edge of your seat scares and suspense. It certainly has its jump out moments at times manages to maintain a non-stop pulse pounding pace that should satisfy the intended audience of this genre. There are less than subtle comments on race, class and the underlying turncoat nature that may exist in a Stepford Wives worthy neighborhood, but all rolled into the film's scant running time, a platform for over analyzing social commentary this is not.



The Purge opens in theaters on June 7th.

REVIEW RATING: ★★☆☆
Director: James DeMonaco
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Lena Headey, Max Burkholder, Adelaide Kane, Edwin Hodge, Rhys Wakefield
Screenwriters: James DeMonaco
Studio: Universal Pictures
Rated: R
Running Time: 85 minutes



Tuesday, April 2, 2013

'Game of Thrones: The Exhibition' Invades New York City

As Game of Thrones roared back onto the airwaves on Sunday night kicking off its third season, HBO has an exciting interactive tour for fans hitting five cities across the world. Game of Thrones: The Exhibition is currently camped in New York City, offering interactive activities and showcasing over 70 authentic props, costumes, and offers an amazing opportunity to sit in the Iron Throne of Westeros for a free professional photo op and take home souvenir. 

I stopped by the exhibit located in midtown Manhattan, which was packed with fans and tourists alike, snapped off some pictures through the crowd, and worked my way to the Iron Throne the relative easy way. Thankfully it takes a lot less political backstabbing and bloodshed at the exhibit to be seated as the ruler of Westeros.

You can check the official website HERE to see if the tour will be stopping in your part of the realm.


Sunday, March 31, 2013

Get Your Geek Easter On With These Nerd Themed Eggs























Sunday, March 3, 2013

TRAILER: 'Game of Thrones' Extended Season Three Trailer


An extended cut of the Season Three trailer for Game of Thrones has been released, showcasing a much better look at what we can expect when the series returns to HBO on March 31st.



SOURCE: Game of Thrones YouTube Channel



Saturday, February 23, 2013

TRAILER: 'Game Of Thrones' Season Three

The long awaited first full trailer for Game Of Thrones third season has finally hit the web. It runs only a minute, but at least we have sixty seconds of some kick ass new footage with peeks at the new and returning cast to keep us at bay for a few more weeks until the premiere episode.

The third season of Game of Thrones is set to hit HBO on March 31 at 9PM.






Wednesday, February 13, 2013

'Game of Thrones' Peter Dinklage Joins Cast of 'X-Men: Days of Future Past'

X-Men: Days of Future Past director Bryan Singer took to Twitter (again) to announce the latest addition to his all-star Mutant cast: Game of Thrones' Peter Dinklage. It is not yet known who the Emmy award winning actor will be playing, or in what era.

The film is set 11 years after X-Men: First Class, which took place in 1960s, and will feature a time travel storyline that will allow the casts of all the X-Men films to share the screen together.

What is known for sure is he will be joining the ever growing cast that so far consists of Hugh Jackman (Wolverine), Sir Ian McKellen (Magneto), Sir Patrick Stewart (Charles Xavier), Anna Paquin (Rogue), Ellen Page (Kitty Pryde), Shawn Ashmore (Iceman), Michael Fassbender (young Magento), James McAvoy (young Charles Xavier), Jennifer Lawrence (Mysitque) and Nicholas Hoult (Beast).

"I wrote the story for First Class and produced it so this is a chance to not do a sequel to First Class or a sequel to X-Men 3 but to do both I guess in a way," Singer revealed to ComingSoon. "In Days of Future Past the story structure is a fantastic way to do that."

Expect more casting announcements in the coming weeks. Singer has not ruled out a return for Halle Berry (Storm) or Allan Cumming (Nightcrawler) for the film. X-Men: Days of Future Past will start production in 3D in April with a targeted release date of July 18, 2014.

“I start shooting April 15th in Montreal, probably until October. It’s a big movie. It’ll be the biggest movie I’ve ever made,” Singer told Collider at the recent junket for Jack the Giant Slayer.




Tuesday, January 22, 2013

New 'Game Of Thrones' Season Three Preview Unleashed

The first teaser to the upcoming third season of HBO's Game of Thrones didn't give us much to talk about except that it revealed virtually nothing. Thankfully we have this new behind-the-scenes Invitation to the Set video which offers us a whole lot more into the adaptation of George R.R. Martin's A Storm of Swords.

In the brand new production video comprised of on the set footage and cast interviews, we meet some of season three's new characters including the Queen of Thorns, Olenna Redwyne (Dame Diana Rigg), Mance Rayder (Ciarán Hinds), Thoros of Myr (Paul Kay), Beric Dondarrion (Richard Dormer) and Jojen Reed (Thomas Brodie-Sangster).

Diana Rigg, who famously portayed Emma Peel in The Avengers (as in the '60s British TV show) joins the cast this season alongside surviving favorites like Peter Dinklage (Tyrion), Natalie Dormer (Margaery Tyrell), Richard Madden (Robb Stark), Michelle Fairley (Catelyn Tully) and executive producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss.

Game of Thrones returns to HBO on March 31st at 9PM.




Thursday, January 17, 2013

Film Review - MAMA ★★☆☆☆

If you are looking for your creepy kid movie fix, look no further than Mama, a little horror thriller from first-time director Andy Muschietti and executive producer Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth, Hellboy).

Based on Muschietti's short film of the same name, Mama stars Jessica Chastain (currently riding high on her red hot Oscar nominated turn in Zero Dark Thirty) and Game of Thrones' Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, and provides enough creeps and chills to secure you to your seat. It's not to say that Mama doesn't a borrow a healthy helping of creepy imagery from Japanese ghost stories like The Ring and The Grudge (and to a certain extent The Exorcist as well), but for this film the less-is-more approach is not really in the cards. You're kinda in the know surprisingly early on as to what's up with the ghostly title character.

When a distraught father murders his wife following a huge financial setback, he flees to a cabin in the woods with his two daughters only to be consumed by a ghostly presence right before he can complete the grisly task of taking out the rest of his family. The girls are left abandoned in the remote forest with only the mysterious apparition to watch over them. Five years later, they are found in none too good shape by a rescue team funded by their starving artist Uncle Lucas (Coster-Waldau). Miraculously alive, but nonetheless detached, filthy and feral, Victoria (Megan Carpenter) and Lilly (Isabelle Nelisse) are brought back to civilization and put in the care of Lucas and his reluctant girlfriend Annabel. And that's when the creepy begins.

The kids may have left the cabin behind, but Mama did not let them go without a fight, and a haunted house custody battle ensues. The convincing young girls provide a solid anchor to the film whose assimilation back into the normal world is impeded by a ghost in the form of a rotting floating corpse. Complete with a chilling spider walk, the younger sibling Lilly has a worse time breaking away from Mama's maternal grip, still attached to the other worldly creature with little fear and a creepy childlike wonder.

Some films choose to keep their monsters in the shadows, but the over possessive Mama is revealed prowling around surprisingly early on. Films like this can sometimes boil down to how complicated they make the villain's motivation before the inevitable climatic showdown. Do you make your antagonist ultimately a sympathetic creature, or are you dealing with pure evil that must be destroyed at all costs? Fans like me prefer their villains to be straight up evil who have no remorse or backstory to justify their actions. Others stick on the side of getting into the 'why?' of it all. Given the film's title and Chastain's Annabel being an inked-up goth rocker with little initial connection to children, an eventual power play on paternal instincts figures high on the agenda.

There is little mystery left to solve by the third act, and by that point you are far more invested in Victoria and Lilly than any of the adults who are reduced to simply reacting to all of the strange goings on. Mama plays it too safe all around, and its PG-13 rating keeps the potential gore quotient to a bare bones minimum.

The genre overall is getting tougher to crack when it comes to standout fare, and sometimes the overall premise here is scarier than the actual execution. There are plenty of boogeyman bumps-in-the-night moments, several cliche horror movie missteps and expendable supporting characters you know have zero chance of making it to the final credits. But with solid performances by the two young leads (Lilly provides more chills than many of Mama's "Hey! Look at me!" CGI sequences), the film just manages to scare up enough haunted house supernatural thrills to keep it afloat.


Mama opens in theaters on January 18th.

REVIEW RATING:  ★★☆☆☆
Directed ByAndy Muschietti
Starring: Jessica Chastain, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Megan Charpentier, Isabelle Nelisse
Studio: Universal
Rated: PG-13
Running Time: 108 minutes



Friday, December 28, 2012

Go Behind-the-Scenes of 'The Avengers' Epic New York City Battle

Of the many memorable sequences that hit the big screen in 2012, one of the hands down highlights was the climatic battle between Earth's Mightiest Heroes and Loki's alien Chitauri army in Marvel's The Avengers.

The wizards at Industrial Light & Magic have shared a fascinating three-minute video that takes us behind-the-scenes and reveals the digital miracles involved in creating the epic final battle in the decimated streets near New York City's Grand Central Station. Joss Whedon's team-up of Marvel's big screen of super heroes is beyond worldwide hit, grossing over $1.5 billion dollars at the box office.

Take a look at how the visual effects team at ILM painstakingly assembled some of the amazing shots that helped bring to life the final exciting half hour of The Avengers.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

TEASER TRAILER - 'Game Of Thrones' Season Three

A fifteen-second teaser promo for the upcoming third season of Game Of Thrones was released today. That just about sums it up.


Monday, July 23, 2012

Behold! Frodo Baggins Sits Upon The Iron Throne of Westeros

This is what it looks like when worlds collide, particularly the mythical medieval lands of Middle Earth and Westeros. Yes, that indeed is Frodo Baggins spotted in a scene from Game Of Thrones. Well, kinda.

While chatting to Conan O'Brien on his late night talk show, Elijah Wood shared some details of his recent trip to Northern Ireland, where as a card carrying member of the geek squad, he knew also happened to be the shooting location for Game of Thrones

Perhaps pulling some of his weight from his Lord of the Rings tenure, Wood managed to not only score a tour of the set, but got to sit upon the Iron Throne, as seen in this pic he snapped.


SOURCE: teamcoco



Saturday, July 14, 2012

WEEK IN GEEK: Comic-Con News • 'Firefly' Reunion • 'Wolverine' • 'Skyfall' • 'Thrones' • 'Walking Dead' • 'Fantastic Four'


Firefly had its long awaited reunion at Comic-Con yesterday, much to the delight of the thousands of rabid Browncoats in attendance. Entertainment Weekly has an exclusive photo shoot with the cast and creator Joss Whedon, CinemaBlend posted a great live blog of the panel, and Collider has a nice wrap up and video of the emotional question that had the crowd on their feet cheering, and brought both Joss Whedon on Nathan Fillion to tears. Science Channel was on hand to cover the event and will air a Firefly Reunion Special on November 11th.
(EWCinemaBlendCollider)

Although Jessica Biel is reportedly set for the female lead opposite Hugh Jackman in The Wolverine as Viper, she held firm at Comic-Con while promoting Total Recall that "It's a little bit too soon for that kind of an announcement," in an interview with Hitfix.
(Deadline, Hitfix)

Game of Thrones will feature 14 new characters next season, and HBO released a video introduction to all the actors joining the cast, which includes Diana Rigg, most famous for her role as Emma Peel in The Avengers (as in the 1960s British spy television show). Season Three will be based on George R.R. Martin's massive A Storm of Swords novel, an adaptation that will run the course of two entire seasons. The hit show is set to return to HBO on March 31, 2013.
(Entertainment Weekly).

Sony released their first official picture of Ben Whishaw as Q from the upcoming 23rd James Bond film Skyfall starring Daniel Craig. CinemaBlend also has a detailed description of the new IMAX trailer that screened at Comic-Con this week.
(NRSCinemaBlend)

AMC released a trailer for The Walking Dead 's upcoming third season following its Comic-Con presentation, and has confirmed its season premiere for Sunday, October 14, at 9pm. The sixteen episodes will be split into two parts, with the show returning on February 13, 2013 for the remaining eight episodes
(AMC).

Following his inadvertent loose lips slip last week of the super secret identity of the villain played by Benedict Cumberbatch in Star Trek 2, Karl Urban revealed to Ain't It Cool News exactly how director J.J. Abrams reprimanded the actor, and what he is is to do if asked anything further regarding the sequel while promoting Dredd at Comic-Con.
(SFXAin't It Cool News)

Here is a hot trailers and clips Comic-Con roundup from Oz The Great And Powerful, Frankenweenie, Dexter, and Dredd.
(NerdyRottenScoundrel)

20th Century Fox is fast tracking their reboot of The Fantastic Four, setting both a director and screenwriter this week. Chronicle helmer Josh Trank has been confirmed to direct the reboot of the Marvel Comics super team. The now done deal follows the rumors regarding Trank inheriting the franchise that started hot on the heels of the success of his found footage 'teens with superpowers who go bad' hit for the studio. In addition, Fox has tapped Jeremy Slater to pen the script.
(CinemaBlendThe Hollywood Reporter).



Sunday, June 3, 2012

'Game Of Thrones' Season Two Finale Tonight!

The Game of Thrones Season Two finale airs tonight on HBO at 9pm. Following the non-stop action of last week's Battle of Blackwater, we have one last night to tie up the ten episode adaption of A Clash of Kings, and must now anxiously wait it our for Season Three.

Entertainment Weekly scored an exclusive preview of the twelve new characters set to appear in the flesh from George R.R. Martin's A Storm of Swords when the show returns to the airwaves. The book, because of it length, will be adapted over the course of both Season Three and Season Four, with each likely to consist of ten episodes each.

Tonight's episode Valar Morghulis, is also scheduled to run past it normal time slot to 10:10pm, so we get a little more bang for our buck with our final fix of Thrones for the year.



Sunday, April 1, 2012

SUNDAY DVR SHOWDOWN: Game Of Thrones v. WrestleMania v. The Killing

It's gonna be one hell of a battle royal tonight on TV. There may not be enough DVR's in the house for some people, with a lot of real heavy hitters all demanding attention.


GAME OF THRONES makes its highly anticipated return to HBO at 9pm, kicking off its second season with "The North Remembers." There really isn't much to add considering how its been near impossible to avoid the buzz on the show's return. Needless to say, I will be re-adding HBO to my cable queue this afternoon.



WRESTLEMANIA 28, headlined by The Rock versus John Cena, hits Pay-Per-View with the first bell festivities scheduled for 7pm from Miami. Considering the very first WrestleMania I ordered as a young pup was WrestleMania IV, when it was still the good old WWF, and Hulk Hogan faced off against his former friend, the late "Macho Man" Randy Savage. Plus seeing numero 28 attached to the grandaddy of all wrasslin' events this year really makes me feel old. Also on the card is Triple H taking on The Undertaker (who has an undefeated WrestleMania 19-0 record), with special guest referee Shawn Michaels.



THE KILLING returns to AMC tonight, kicking off its second season at 8pm with a two-hour premiere,  "Reflections" and "My Lucky Day."




FOX has a new episode of FAMILY GUY lined up for tonight, "You Can't Do That On Television, Peter," at 9pm.


MAD MEN settles back into its normal time slot, after returning to AMC with record ratings last week after a seventeen month hiatus. "Tea Leaves" airs at 10pm following The Killing.


Last but not least is ABC's fairy tale fantasy at 8pm, ONCE UPON A TIME. In tonight's episode, "The Stable Boy," Barbara Hershey guest stars as Regina's wicked mother in flashbacks, teaching the Evil Queen-in-the-making exactly what being wicked is all about.