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Escobar: Paradise Lost Trailer – Benicio Del Toro & Josh Hutcherson take on the drug kingpin

14th November 2014 By Tim Isaac

While he may not exactly have been the nicest guy in the world, Pablo Escobar is certainly a fascinating figure. He became a billionaire by getting drugs into the US and as a results was one of the world’s most wanted men. However his cash also meant it was difficult to touch him, as he could pay Colombian officials off and have anyone killed he wanted.

He was revered by many in the area he lived as a kind of Robin Hood figure, as he used large chunks of the cash he made to help the local area. Incidentally, he also built a zoo in the compound where he lived, and now there are hippos living wild there, as while the house has fallen into disrepair it’s proved impossible to move the semi-aquatic mammals.

Escobar: Paradise Lost looks at part of the drug kingpin’s story, following young surfer Nick (Josh Hutcherson) who thinks all his dreams have come true when he goes to visit his brother in Columbia. Against an idyllic backdrop of blue lagoons and white beaches he falls madly in love with a beautiful Colombian girl called Maria. It all seems perfect until he meets her uncle, one Pablo Escobar (Benicio Del Toro.

The film will be out in the US on January 16th, but there’s no UK date as yet.

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Michelle MacLaren In Talks To Direct Wonder Woman – She’s the top choice for the job

14th November 2014 By Tim Isaac


Hollywood is general has a hideous record of giving major movies to female directors – even the first female Best Director Oscar winner, Kathryn Bigelow, didn’t find that success until she stepped away from Hollywood and went looking for films in the indie realm. Superhero movies are no exception, as while Thor: The Dark World was nearly helmed by Patty Jenkins, she was eventually replaced by a man, much to Natalie Portman’s annoyance.

However now it may finally happen, as Variety reports that Breaking Bad producer/director Michelle MacLaren is in talks to direct Wonder Woman for Warner Bros. As with many other directors who’ve been inducted into the world of Hollywood special effects tentpoles in the last couple of years, she’s also worked on Game Of Thrones.

There’s no news on the plot of the film, although Gal Gadot will play the role, with the character being introduced in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Although there have been some suggestions the film will take us back to the characters origins, at the moment it’s impossible to say.

Assuming MacLaren gets the job, she’ll be shooting the movie next year, for release June 23rd, 2017.

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Jai Courtney May Join Suicide Squad – He’s linked to the role of Deadshot

14th November 2014 By Tim Isaac

Jai Courtney didn’t hit the big time with A Good Day To Die Hard as many expected, but he’s got another shot at the a-list next year playing Kyle Reese in Terminator: Genisys. Now he’s in the process of booking another major role, as Variety reports he’s in talks to star in Warner/DC’s Suicide Squad.

It’s suggested he’ll be Floyd Lawton, a.k.a. Deadshot, who will be one of the film’s array of supervillains, who have all been captured but are offered the chance for redemption by taking on a mission from which none of them are expected to return alive.

It’s previously been reported that Margot Robbie is being eyed to play Harley Quinn and Jared Leto for The Joker, it’s also suggested Tom Hardy and Will Smith may be involved, with Jesse Eisenberg possibly reprising his role as Lex Luthor from Batman v Superman.

David Ayer is set to direct, with an early 2015 shoot expected. An August 5th, 2016 release date has already been set.

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Will Christoph Waltz Be Bond 24’s Main Villain? – He’s rumoured for the role

14th November 2014 By Tim Isaac

While it can only be treated as a rumour at the moment, numerous sources suggest that the next James Bond movie may have found its villain in the form of Christoph Waltz (although it appears most of those sources are simply quoting the Daily Mail, even if they don’t mention it).

As the makers of Bond like to keep things secret until they make official announcements there’s no info on who he might be playing, although there’s previously been speculation that now they’ve won the rights back, Blofeld and his villainous organization S.P.E.C.T.R.E. may feature in Bond 24.

Hopefully there’ll be more info soon, as the movie is due to start shooting in December, with locations believed to include Mexico, Morocco, Austria, Italy and London. Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Ben Whishaw and Léa Seydoux are all set to star alongside Daniel Craig, with Sam Mendes returning to direct.

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The Imitation Game – Benedict Cumberbatch takes on Enigma as Alan Turing

12th November 2014 By Tim Isaac


Rule one of cinema? Show, don’t tell. This seems to have been totally ignored by Norwegian director Morten Tyldum, who chooses to take one of the most extraordinary British stories of the 20th century and make it in such a dull, flat way it stretches patience to snapping point.

The story itself has been the subject of a West End play in Breaking the Code, and a film already, Enigma, although the central character was fictionalized. Here we get the true story of Alan Turing, the mathematical and linguistic genius who cracks codes for fun. However during WWII the Nazis invent a machine so complex it codes vital messages with 19,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible answers. It’s impossible to crack, right? But with U-boats sinking ships in the Atlantic and the Luftwaffe creating havoc in the skies it’s vital that someone crack the code.

Turing, a genius but loner at school, is the man for the job, although persuading Commander Denniston (Charles Dance) is a tougher ask than breaking the code itself. Funds are limited, so Turing assembles a team, promptly sacks two of them and puts a puzzle in the paper which, if it is cracked in six minutes, will get you the job. Enter posh girl Joan Clarke (Keira Knightley) – yes, a woman!

The race against time is on, but there are two elephants in the room. One is the team clearly has a spy in its midst, and the other is Turing’s personality – he’s rude, abrupt, does not suffer fools gladly and has some very strange tics. The explanation – blurted out halfway through the film with no preamble – is that he is gay, still illegal at the time. Will he win over his team with the help of Joan, and beat the machine – and what will be his reward?

What is desperately missing here is the massive irony of the theme of the film. Turing basically won Britain the War, he saved the lives of millions of people and shortened the conflict by two years. His reward, as we see thanks to time shifts, is to be arrested for his homosexuality and ‘chemically castrated’. It’s an appalling end to the story, but it is telegraphed and never adequately dealt with as a theme. It tells the story but in such a clunky, simple way the depths of the tale are never touched upon. He keeps telling everyone he is homosexual but the film is surprisingly coy about this – he has a crush as a boy which ends tragically, but no liaisons after that. His toe-curling proposal to Joan comes out of nowhere.

All of the clichés are there, present and correct, from Dance’s silly bugger Commander to Mark Strong’s oh-so-mysterious MI6 agent – complete with dreadful wig – to Knightley’s jolly-hockey-sticks Joan. Then there is Cumberbatch’s Turing. He basically reduces this fascinating character to a series of tics, flicks and stammers, from his early OCD at school to his refusal of a sandwich because he is so wrapped up in his work. With his pompous, flat voice and smell under his nose, it’s a performance that practically screams ‘give me an award’. The scene where he proposes to Joan – they could sit and do puzzles together all evening – has none of the comic irony intended, partly because of his over-acting, partly because of the script which is, like the rest of the film, functional.

The only scene which really grabs the attention is where Turing finds the key to the code, runs to his beloved ‘Christopher’ (his machine), and watches in amazement as it finally spews forth vital German messages.

On BBC 4 recently, a TV film called Castles in the Sky was shown, about the eccentric inventor and his team who are given a meagre budget to invent the radar. There was a spy in their midst, the military wanted to pull the plug and they worked all night to work the miracle. In that film there was a real sense of what is at stake here – the future of the civilized world, basically – a quality sadly missing in The Imitation Game. Sure there are the usual shots of Hitler and planes bombing Blighty, but a shot of a Panzer tank crushing an allied helmet pretty much sums it up – this is not a film of any subtlety. Visually the TV film was its equal as well, there is nothing remarkable to look at here, and some of the CGI’d bombing scenes are ropey looking.

Overall verdict: Remarkably lackluster telling of an extraordinary story, which deserves far better. The performances are stilted, the script wooden and the whole thing never comes to life. There is a great film to be made about Alan Turing – this is not it.

Reviewer: Mike Martin

 Gam

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New Mortdecai Trailer – Johnny Depp turns art-dealer and moustache aficionado

12th November 2014 By Tim Isaac


Johnny Depp hasn’t given up on looking eccentric in his movies, as with Mortdecai he gets a little crazy-eyed and dons as much moustache as he can handle.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘Juggling some angry Russians, the British Mi5, his impossibly leggy wife and an international terrorist, debonair art dealer and part time rogue Charlie Mortdecai (Johnny Depp) must traverse the globe armed only with his good looks and special charm in a race to recover a stolen painting rumored to contain the code to a lost bank account filled with Nazi gold.

‘MORTDECAI is directed by David Koepp and stars Johnny Depp, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ewan McGregor, Olivia Munn, Jeff Goldblum and Paul Bettany.

‘MORTDECAI is released in UK cinemas on January 30th 2015.’

The full trailer has now arrived, which you can watch below.

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