All Posts Tagged With: "Cloverfield"
Reeves takes Woman over Cloverfield
With MTV Movies Blog, Matt Reeves shares the news that his Cloverfield sequel has been placed on the back burner. Instead, the director will focus on The Invisible Woman. “It’s kind of a Hitchcockian thriller, in the vein of Marnie, about this woman that gets so desperate to save her family, that she goes to crazy lengths and enters a life of crime. It’s a very, very psychological thriller, but then it’s a lot of fun,” elaborates Reeves.
Cast revealed for Vacancy 2
Moviehole unveils the cast for Vacancy 2, a prequel to the 2007 thriller starring Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale. Joining the project are David Moscow (Big), Agnes Bruckner (Blood and Chocolate), Nelson Lee (Blade: The Series), Brian Klugman (Cloverfield), Gwendoline Yeo (The Jane Austen Book Club) and Lola Davidson (The Caretaker). Directed by Eric Bross, Vacancy 2 “sees a new bunch of characters – including a bride and groom - booking rooms at the motel from hell.”
Giacchino talks “Cloverfield Overture” release
Ain’t It Cool News points to Film Score Monthly, where word arrives from composer Michael Giacchino on when his “ROAR! (Cloverfield Overture)” will be available to own. Giacchino comments, “We’re working on that now…there are a bunch of legal knots that need to be tied…” He admits that had he and and the studio foreseen the demand for the piece, they would have had it available to purchase “months ago.”
Cloverfield DVD set for April arrival
The Cloverfield DVD has been scheduled for release on April 22. Bonus features for the package will include: a commentary by Director Matt Reeves, 4 featurettes (”The Making of Cloverfield“, “Cloverfield Visual Effects”, “I Saw It! It’s Alive! It’s Huge”, and “Clover Fun”), 6 additional scenes (”Congrats Rob”, “When You’re in Japan”, “I Call That a Date”, “It’s Going to Hurt”, “Alt Ending #1″, “Alt Ending #2″), and multiple easter-eggs. Word has yet to arrive about a Blu-ray release for Cloverfield. DVDActive has the specs and cover artwork for the DVD.
Big Screen Roundup: 1/30/08 Edition
Ain’t It Cool News has an update on the news that Mark Romanek is no longer directing The Wolf Man. According to the site, Breck Eisner and Matt Reeves are now being considered to helm the picture. However, Reeves may not be able to take the job, due to his involvement with a Cloverfield sequel and The Invisible Woman.
Christopher Plummer tells People Magazine that, for The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, director Terry Gilliam is “trying to work out at this moment how to continue on. Fortunately, because the film deals with magic, there is a way, perhaps, of turning Heath into other people and then, using stills and I think they call it CGI.”
Coming Soon has acquired the poster for Leatherheads. The one-sheet features the humorous tagline, “In the beginning, the rules were simple. There weren’t any.”
Phillip Noyce confirms to Moviehole that he is no longer directing a film about American aviator Amelia Earhart, still set to star Hilary Swank in the lead role.
The Hollywood Reporter shows that Kevin Nealon will play Stuart Pearson, the dad of Ashley Tisdale’s character in They Came From Upstairs.
Coming Soon has learned 11-year-old actor Jimmy Bennett will play a young James Kirk in J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek.
Gerard Butler will star opposite Katherine Heigl in The Ugly Truth, reports Variety. In the “battle of the sexes” comedy, Butler will play Mike Alexander, who hosts a TV segment titled “The Ugly Truth.”
The official website for Jumper is hosting a contest in which folks can submit a video inspired by Jumper comic pages. The winner will receive a trip for two to Los Angeles to meet director Doug Liman, as well as a MacBook Pro with Final Cut 2 editing software.
IFC.com presents an interesting list titled “Forgotten, But Not Gone: 10 Directors Overshadowed By Their Collaborators.” From Cloverfield to Superbad, the article spotlights films that audiences seem to mistake who directed them.
DVDActive has the specs and artwork for the home entertainment release of Lions for Lambs. The disc will contain an audio commentary by director Robert Redford, a “The Making Of Lions For Lambs” featurette, a “Script To Screen” featurette, a “United Artists Legacy” featurette, and the theatrical teaser and trailer.
30Jan2008 | Josh E Armstrong | ContinuedWeekend box office estimates: 1/25-27/08
From Box Office Mojo:
1) Meet the Spartans - $18,725,000 ($18,725,000 total)
2) Rambo - $18,150,000 ($18,150,000 total)
3) 27 Dresses - $13,600,000 ($45,347,000 total)
4) Cloverfield - $12,700,000 ($64,294,000 total)
5) Untraceable - $11,200,000 ($11,200,000 total)
6) Juno - $10,300,000 ($100,152,000 total)
7) The Bucket List - $10,210,000 ($57,684,000 total)
8) There Will Be Blood - $4,887,000 ($14,764,000 total)
9) National Treasure: Book of Secrets - $4,664,000 ($205,421,000 total)
10) Mad Money - $4,610,000 ($15,284,000 total)
Big Screen Roundup: 1/25/08 Edition
The official website for The Dark Knight has been updated with a memorial for Heath Ledger. In addition, the Why So Serious promotional site now features a black ribbon in remembrance of the deceased actor.
The title of the latest entry in the James Bond franchise has been revealed: Quantum of Solace. As explained by The Associated Foreign Press, the name is taken from the title of a short story in Bond creator Ian Fleming’s 1960 anthology For Your Eyes Only. Latino Review has a video and poster for the announcement.
Moviehole broadcasts that the next movie for director David Zucker will be a comedic take on A Christmas Carol, set at Independence Day rather than Christmas.
Variety notifies that Sam Mendes is preparing to direct an untitled contemporary comedy, previously known as This Must Be the Place, for Focus Features. The screenplay for the film was written by the husband-and-wife team of Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida.
Ain’t It Cool News clears up the rumor that the next project from Paul Thomas Anderson will be a horror film. When asked by the site’s owner, Harry Knowles, about the speculation, the director commented, “News to me. I thought I just made a horror film… Wish I had something to report, but I’m dry as a bone…”
Laurence Fishburne, Jean Reno and Milo Ventimiglia have joined Screen Gems’ heist action flick Armored, indicates Variety. The movie centers on “a young armored car guard who is persuaded by his veteran cohorts to empty a truck of its $10 million cargo.”
The Writers Guild of America has reached an interim agreement with Marvel Studios and Lionsgate. The two companies are the latest to reach such an agreement, following WGA deals with The Weinstein Company, United Artists, Worldwide Pants, Spyglass Entertainment, MRC, Jackson Bites, Mandate Films and Sidney Kimmel Entertainment.
A possible early description of the Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull trailer has been posted at Ain’t It Cool News.
TheBadandUgly.com spreads the word of a film adaptation for the 1934 comic strip Mandrake the Magician, directed by Chuck Russel and to be released this year. Apparently, UFC fighter Randy Couture will appear in the motion picture.
The Boston Herald notes that the title of director Martin Scorsese’s adaptation of Shutter Island is now Ashecliffe, inspired by the name of the mental institution where much of the story’s action takes place.
The London Times devotes a piece to the creation of the Oscar-nominated The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. Screenwriter Ronald Harwood and Janusz Kaminski, director of cinematography, provide their thoughts on the film’s making for the article.
In a report containing spoilers, JoBlo summarizes possible hints found in Cloverfield that suggest a sequel to the hit monster movie is being considered.
Ain’t It Cool News speaks with Colin Hanks about The Great Buck Howard as well as a documentary Hanks will be directing that spotlights “the demise of the music industry.”
Coming Soon presents six TV spots for Warner Bros. Pictures’ epic adventure 10,000 B.C.
The Digital Bits offers the newest info on home entertainment releases for No Country for Old Men (3/11), The Wiz: 30th Anniversary Edition (2/12), Moondance Alexander (4/29) and Radiant City (3/4). Meanwhile, Sony is planning a Blu-ray debut for The 6th Day (4/8), as Paramount is bringing back its Jack Ryan Collection HD-DVD box set (3/25).
Trademork.com writes that Hasbro, Inc. have filed to protect the trademark Stretch Armstrong in relation to “production and distribution of motion pictures, television programs, television games shows and cartoon series; on-going television programs in the nature of children’s game shows and animated television cartoon series[…]” This development has fueled speculation that a Stretch Armstrong film or television project could be on the way.
25Jan2008 | Josh E Armstrong | Continued