Hero Complex

For your inner fanboy

Category: Guillermo del Toro

'Pan's Labyrinth,' best of the decade?

December 18, 2009 |  3:31 pm

Pan's Labyrinth

Metacritic this week compiled lists of the best-reviewed films released during 2000-2009, and it was a reminder that we live in the golden age of fanboy films -- six of the top 10 films were fantasy or animated features of the sort that we cover right here at Hero Complex. And at the top of the list? The 2006 masterpiece "Pan's Labyrinth" by director Guillermo del Toro, and I can't think of a better film to hold that lofty spot.

-- Geoff Boucher

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READER POLL: 'The Hobbit' will triumph but 'X-Men' and 'Pirates' franchises should quit now

October 12, 2009 |  9:43 am

FOUR FRANCHISES AT A CROSSROADS

Franchises 

Talk about heroic: Four film franchises, one decade, more than $10 billion worth of theater tickets sold.

And more than that, in their very best moments, each of these franchises shown above delivered sparkling adventure and escapism for moviegoers. Now, though, with the decade winding down and all four franchises sitting a nice tidy trilogy, the question must be asked: Isn't three the magic number? Do we really need a fourth movie from any of these aging popcorn enterprises? Clearly, all of them will be written up in the Hollywood history books but right now the indelicate must be asked: "How can we miss you if you won't leave?"

Last week we gave you an in-depth report on this quartet of mega-franchises and their quests for a fourth visit to theaters. We told you how "The Hobbit" must escape the the towering shadow of "The Lord of the Rings," while Sam Raimi's "Spider-Man" series needs to get back to its roots to thrive. We also explained that the "X-Men" future looks especially uncertain while the "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise might be facing a one-man mutiny with Johnny Depp's distress over recent changes at Disney.

We also put the question to you: Which of these franchises is making a mistake by adding a fourth film?

You made it clear that "The Hobbit," with director Guillermo del Toro taking over with a new vision, is in a class by itself -- the other franchises may tack on new editions to cash in, but fans are expecting nothing but magic from Del Toro's arrival in Middle-earth. The remaining three franchises got a frostier reception. For five days last week, more than half of our reader voters named "Pirates" as the cinematic series that should walk the plank. Over the weekend that changed and (with a lot of late-arriving Depp fans?) the surging "X-Men" became the top choice as a franchise hitting bottom.

It's not too late, though, we'll take votes for the next 48 hours before declaring our, uh, winning loser. In the meantime, thanks for reading, commenting and voting.

-- Geoff Boucher

  

VOTE: WHICH FRANCHISE IS MAKING A MISTAKE WITH A FOURTH FILM?

   

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Photos at top, from left, Ian McKellen in "Lord of the Rings," Tobey Maguire in "Spider-Man," Halle Berry in "X-Men: The Last Stand" and Johnny Depp in "Pirates of the Caribbean."  Credits from left: New Line Cinema, Sony Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Studios. Bottom photo of Sam Raimi by Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times


Can 'The Hobbit' escape the towering shadow of 'The Lord of the Rings'?

October 6, 2009 | 10:27 pm

FOUR FRANCHISES AT A CROSSROADS: PART ONE

This week we're taking a look at four major trilogies from this decade that are looking to add a fourth film despite substantial challenges -- not least among those challenges the skepticism of moviegoers who may wonder if some of these Hollywood vehicles are running on empty. You can find the other three installments of the series right here.

Gandalf 

"LORD OF THE RINGS/THE HOBBIT"

The story so far: Director Peter Jackson's majestic and magical interpretation of J.R.R. Tolkien's epic is arguably the gold standard now for fantasy-film franchises. The "Rings" film trilogy piled up a staggering $2.92 billion in worldwide box office (plus more than $3 billion in DVD and others ancillary sales) and also pulled off a magic trick that has eluded the "Star Wars" or "Harry Potter" franchises -- it cast a spell over  voters in the marquee Oscar categories of best picture, best director and best adapted screenplay.

Guillermo del Toro gets a grip The challenge:

The bad news is Jackson won't be directing this time. The good news, though, is that Guillermo del Toro is his handpicked successor. After the twitchy, unsettling and singular fairy visions of the Oscar-winning "Pan's Labyrinth," there's plenty of reason to get excited about the Guadalajara native's mighty imagination coming to bear on, say, the black forest of Mirkwood. Still, "The Hobbit," published in 1937, is considered by some to be Tolkien's literary warm-up act for the his 1950s "Rings" epic, which is more complex, darker and intended for an older audience. Also, off the screen, del Toro has the daunting task of following the crescendo success of "The Return of the King," which on its own racked up $1.1 billion to go with those Academy Awards. The stakes are high: "The Hobbit" will be told over two films with a combined budget north of $300 million.

The status: Work is well underway in New Zealand on "The Hobbit," although principal photography won't begin until April. Major casting announcements are imminent (Ian McKellan, above, is already in, as are Andy Serkis and Hugo Weaving, according to recent comments by del Toro in a BBC interview) and there will be plenty of time for fans to debate them -- the first of the two films isn't due until December 2011, with the sequel to follow in December 2012. Jackson is on board as co-writer and executive producer and, by all accounts, his working relationship with del Toro is a supportive and upbeat one. And, miraculously, the film seems to have finally escaped the dreaded pits of litigation; an ugly dispute with the heirs of the late Tolkien was settled last month and Jackson's bitter, scorched-earth battle with New Line Cinema was somehow resolved in 2007 and now seems like a fading memory -- well, at least to all of us who didn't pay attorney fees.

The prediction: This Friday, when del Toro blows out the candles to celebrate his 45th birthday, I doubt his wish will have anything to do with the box-office performance of "The Hobbit." This is a filmmaker driven by the demands of his imagination, not studio expectations. It's a good thing that del Toro will not obsess about matching "Rings" in commercial success because there's no way it's going to happen. I wonder if these films can match the massive swoon and battlefield sweep of Jackson's trilogy, and while Tolkien fans will likely love them, I suspect that a significant percentage of the American moviegoing public has some Middle-earth fatigue at this point. As for the true Tolkien devotees and fantasy diehards, I'm guessing they become gleefully divided over the Jackson trilogy versus del Toro double feature and inherit a decade of a debate like the Radiohead fans who still bicker about "Kid A" and "OK Computer."

-- Geoff Boucher

LOTR Spider-Man X-Men Pirates 
Four major franchises look to make a fourth film, but should they?

VOTE: WHICH FRANCHISE IS MAKING A MISTAKE WITH A FOURTH FILM?

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QuantcastPhoto at top is Ian McKellen in "Lord of the Rings," Credit: New Line. Guillermo del Toro photo from Universal. Photos at bottom are McKellen again, then Tobey Maguire in "Spider-Man," Halle Berry in "X-Men: The Last Stand" and Johnny Depp in "Pirates of the Caribbean." Credits from left: New Line Cinema, Sony Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Studios.


Four major franchises look to make a fourth film -- but should they? [Updated]

October 5, 2009 |  7:04 am

Franchises

They are four of the biggest franchises in Hollywood history and each is at a major crossroads. This week the Hero Complex will look at "The Lord of the Rings," "Spider-Man," "X-Men" and "Pirates of the Caribbean" and size up their future as they attempt to move past their original trilogies and into a new decade.

Tuesday "Lord of the Rings/The Hobbit": How can Guillermo del Toro possibly match up to Peter Jackson's magical conquests ($2.92 billion in global box office and 17 Oscars including best picture, best director and best adapted screenplay)? At least he has Jackson on his side ...

Wednesday "Spider-Man": Director Sam Raimi and stars Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst are back for more and that's no surprise considering "Spider-Man 3" had the highest-grossing opening weekend of the wall-crawling films -- and went on to make $891 million worldwide. Still, the last film got decidedly mixed reviews, and some fans are wondering if the magic is gone.

Thursday: "X-Men": The summer 2000 release of Bryan Singer's "X-Men" truly signaled the beginning of the modern era of superhero cinema and its new ambitions. While the 2006 release of "X-Men: The Last Stand" led to commercial success ($459 million), the hero-snuffing plot, the finality of the title and those cruel reviews all suggested the run was over. Now, though, producers are looking for a return to the mutant chronicles...

Friday "Pirates of the Caribbean" : The fourth film, "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," hits theaters in 2011, but after a shake-up at the top of Walt Disney Studios, star Johnny Depp said he is feeling glum about the project. If he's not excited, should you be?

Check back to read them all, but in the meantime, give us your opinion: Which franchise would be making the biggest mistake by continuing past the original trilogy? Vote below ...

-- Geoff Boucher

Photos from left, Ian McKellen in "Lord of the Rings," Tobey Maguire in "Spider-Man," Halle Berry in "X-Men: The Last Stand" and Johnny Depp in "Pirates of the Caribbean."  Credits from left: New Line Cinema, Sony Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Studios.

UPDATED: Previous version of this post had an incorrect year of release on one of the X-films.


Guillermo del Toro will take Disney on a scary ride

September 11, 2009 |  2:41 pm
Guillermo Del Toro Walt Disney Studios and filmmaker Guillermo del Toro are forming a production company, Disney Double Dare You, to create animated films with a spooky edge.

Disney Studios Chairman Dick Cook announced the partnership today in a star-studded presentation to the D23 Expo fan convention that brought actors Johnny Depp, Nicolas Cage and John Travolta, and directors Tim Burton and Robert Zemeckis, producer Jerry Bruckheimer and singer-actress Miley Cyrus onstage in a packed auditorium at the Anaheim Convention Center. 

Del Toro, who is in New Zealand doing pre-production on the film "The Hobbit,"  delivered a recorded presentation in which he said he hopes to create animated films in the chilling but family-friendly spirit of one of his favorite Disney theme park attractions, the Haunted Mansion. The filmmaker waxed on about the "immersive" journey to another world that he experienced when four decades ago he stepped into the mansion, which to his young mind was "the most demanded real estate in the whole world."

The first project is called "The Troll Hunters." The filmmaker also said there will be a shared trait among all the Double Dare projects, which will include books, merchandise and films, but he kept that secret to himself on this day.

"I love to take audiences into fantastic new world and provide them with some anxious moments in the process," Del Toro said. "It is part of the Disney canon to create thrilling, unforgettable moments in the process. It is part of the Disney canon to create thrilling, unforgettable moments and villains in all their classic films. It is my privilege for Double Dare You to continue in this tradition."

It is unclear how many films the acclaimed director of "Pan's Labyrinth" and the comic-book-inspired "Hellboy" is committing to make under the partnership with Disney -- or when he'll find the time. He is directing two "Hobbit" films for Warner Bros./New Line Cinema and MGM, which are scheduled for release in 2011 and 2012, and has been linked to half a dozen other projects, including "Drood" and a "Frankenstein" remake.

-- Dawn C. Chmielewski and Geoff Boucher

Photo: Guillermo del Toro with a "Hellboy" hand. Credit: Egon Endrenyi / Universal Pictures

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Prepare for the Guillermo del Toro decade: 'The Hobbit' director is just getting started

July 1, 2009 |  7:50 am

One of the gentle souls in the movie business is Guillermo del Toro, and I always look forward to my interviews with him. This is a longer version of my latest story on Del Toro, which is scheduled to run Thursday on the cover of the Los Angeles Times Calender section. 

The Hobbit Fantasy and horror fans, prepare yourself for the Decade of Del Toro.

On the far side of the globe, in New Zealand, filmmaker Guillermo del Toro is now in his seventh month of labor on “The Hobbit,” a $300-million epic that will be told over two films in 2011 and 2012. But you can also find the Guadalajara native on the shelf of your local bookstore with his just-released debut novel, “The Strain,” the opening installment of a vampire trilogy he already has mapped out.

That’s only the beginning. The 44-year-old Del Toro, who was nominated for an Oscar for the dark fairy tale “Pan’s Labyrinth” and showed his crowd-pleasing sensibilities with the “Hellboy” films, also has plans to reanimate some musty and monstrous literary classics. He plans to make a “Frankenstein” film as well as an adaptation of  H.P. Lovecraft’s epic “At the Mountains of Madness,” a project he breathlessly refers to as “my obsession.”

He would seem to be a full plate but, interviewed by phone recently, he chuckled and added another project to the pile: “I think after ‘The Hobbit,’ my next project may actually turn out to be ‘Drood,’ ” he said, referring to the 2008 novel by Dan Simmons that presents Charles Dickens at the center of an occult mystery in 1860s Victorian London. Those three post-“Hobbit” projects are all for Universal, which also has hopes that Del Toro will continue his library-card approach to filmmaking by taking on “Slaughterhouse-Five,” Kurt Vonnegut’s surreal antiwar tale of time travel.

If you’re keeping track, that would have Del Toro tied up well past 2015 and perhaps into 2017. He also is  flirting with several other projects (“Pinocchio,” “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” and a third “Hellboy” film have Drood been mentioned at various times) but perhaps only as a producer,  as with the acclaimed 2007 Spanish ghost story, “The Orphanage.” He also wants to write more novels and to join in the increasingly popular quest to discover the land of interactive 21st century storytelling, which lies somewhere between Hollywood films and video games as we know them today.

It’s a dizzying career plan for the father of two (his wife and daughters have moved to New Zealand for “The Hobbit”), but in conversation, it’s clear the cheerful storyteller is motivated by his humble, lifelong passion for genre entertainment – he wants to visit the worlds of Tolkien and Shelley, not take them over.

“I love what I do and I feel honored to do it, quite honestly,” Del Toro said.

Right now, no venture has him more enthused than “The Strain,” the 401-page novel that was co-written with Chuck Hogan and released in hardcover this month by William Morrow. The book has gotten generally good reviews (and peer blurbs, too, with novelist Clive Cussler gushing that it “soars with spellbinding intrigue”) and fulfills the earliest ambition of Del Toro. As a boy in Mexico, he  dreamed of being an author long before filmmaking captured his heart. He already has found one major benefit of being a novelist – the absence of Hollywood machinations.

“I have written or co-written 15 screenplays and I have only seven movies,” said Del Toro. The strain “I find it frustrating when you write a screenplay and it lives, but you don’t get it produced – which is a lottery – it exists in a limbo that does not allow it to become public. A filmmaker will never be known by the movies he left in the drawer. Unlike a musician, a painter or a poet, nobody is going to open a box after I’m gone and say, ‘Oh, look, another great movie that he didn’t make.’ ”

“The Strain” presents an unsettling tale of a vampiric virus on the loose in New York City. It was about four years ago that the story started taking shape in Del Toro’s imagination and his inspiration was a surprising one.

“I was watching ‘The Wire’ on cable and I was addicted to it,” the filmmaker said. “I really felt caught up in this idea of doing a procedural, a limited cable series, which married the ideas of biology, of anatomy, of vampirism and evolved through the seasons into the spiritual and mythological aspects of the theme – and always with the everyday details and prosaic settings, and the rhythms of a procedural.”

The plan at first was to present “The Strain” as a television series, limited to three seasons, and Del Toro was gripped with excitement as he got deeper into the tale.

“I prepared a ‘bible’ of the three seasons and went to the network that I had a deal with, which was Fox. They read the bible and listened to the pitch with the opening scene of the 747 stopping mysteriously on the runway at JFK and the mystery that followed, and I was very happy with it.”

And how did the network respond? “They said two things: It’s too expensive, first of all, and what we would really love is a vampire comedy. That was my first and only encounter with television. I retreated quickly.”

Fox later aired a somewhat similar sequence to the airport tarmac scene that opens “The Strain” with the series premiere last year of “Fringe,” the science fiction show from the team of J.J. Abrams, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (the same collective behind this summer’s “Star Trek”). Was that more than a coincidence?

“Knowing J.J.’s imagination — and perverse imagination — I can only chalk it up to the fact that we all seem to walk on a thin line of ideas, one after the other,” Del Toro said. “But when it first was raised, when I heard how ‘Fringe’ opened, I did get a jolt of recognition. Que sera, sera.”

Guillermo del Toro gets a grip Ever the horror scholar, Del Toro said he drew inspiration from Bram Stoker’s “Dracula” but not in the predictable cape-and-fangs way.

“I was trying to re-create the spirit of Stoker’s ‘Dracula’ back in the time it was written,” Del Toro said. “And what I mean is it was a very procedural novel. It was an epistolary novel – it was all written in letters, documents and recordings. It utilized cutting-edge technology for the time with typewriters and voice recorders. It was very much supposed to be ‘on right now’ for readers except now it’s  contemplated as a classic. At the time, it was a very vibrant, almost Michael Crichton approach to the theme. It was a marriage of the old European lore and the modern.”

There’s a surge in vampires in pop culture right now, a sort of crimson wave of interest, with “True Blood” pumping up the ratings on HBO and a second “Twilight” film due later this year. The Swedish bloodsucking romance “Let the Right One In” was a hit at the Tribeca Film Festival last year, and an English-language version will be released next year. There’s also talk of film revivals for both “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Dark Shadows.”  And, on cable and home video, “30 Days of Night” and the “Underworld” films are still in circulation, while bookstores have replaced their “Harry Potter” sales with the melodramatic swoon of Stephenie Meyer’s “Twilight” titles.

“They never go away, it’s a staple in human imagination – the idea of the self-consuming, cannibalistic monster,” Del Toro said. “The consumption of our essence by a human monster lends itself to so many variations. The romantic vampire is right at the Big Bang of the myth in literature. And so is the brutal depiction of the undead corpse that needs to feed, which is the most horrifying one. The romantic one is Slaughterhouse-Five perfectly valid and has produced really good pieces, but that’s not the one I was hooked on as a kid. I was hooked on the idea of an undead creature inhabited by an eternal spirit that hungers for your life. That scared the bejesus out of me.”

The vampires of “The Strain” are no emo pretty boys, not with skin that, on close inspection, reminds one young human character of a “pickled pig fetus” he saw back in science class.

“That’s a scene from the second novel,” Del Toro said with a satisfied giggle. "The idea is to keep reminding people that these are undead things. To start with biology and then also help the audience make sense of all the vampire traits that they already know.”

Don’t expect to see “The Strain” as a film series at any point – Del Toro said it’s not just written for that sort of storytelling — but he is intrigued by the idea of a pay cable series if that ever presents itself. Wouldn’t that be treading too close to the Louisiana turf of “True Blood”? That doesn’t seem to bother Del Toro, and considering his career bravery, that’s no surprise. 

In nine months, he will begin shooting “The Hobbit,” and all he has to do is match the Tolkien achievement of Peter Jackson, the “Lord of the Rings” director whose three films pulled in more than $2.9 billion at the box office worldwide and collected 17 Oscars, including one for best picture and another for director. (Jackson is back as producer on “The Hobbit” and said last year that he “cannot think of a more inspired filmmaker to take the journey back to Middle-earth.”)

Del Toro’s future projects also will be judged against potent history. Vonnegut used the word “flawless” when talking about director George Roy Hill’s 1972 adaptation of “Slaughterhouse,” and recent revivals of Dr. Frankenstein’s patchwork man (“Van Helsing” and the Kenneth Branagh-directed “Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein”) haven’t stirred moviegoers or come close to the towering 1930s work of Boris Karloff and director James Whale.

Frankenstein 1831

“Everything I’m working on is something I love,” Del Toro said of his deep list of projects. “On ‘Frankenstein,’ I think my version would be unique. People forget that Shelley’s creature was an undead mass of flesh and bone. It’s unholy and lumbering not because it wants to be a monster but because it once had a soul and is now looking for it. It’s a profound mediation of man abandoned by his creator in a world he doesn’t understand. It has rarely been explored as such on film. The novel has not been filmed, in my opinion, and I have a very concrete approach, but it would ruin it of I told you.

"I also love this novel ‘Drood’ that deals with Dickens in a very strange way and his relationship with [fellow author] Wilke Collins, and it uses a resource that is used beautifully in literature by people such as Nabakov but it is not very often in film, which is the unreliable narrator.”  

As for “The Hobbit,” Del Toro is in the midst of intense pre-production, doing work with models, script pages, set blueprints and thousands of decisions on details.

Asked about the film and what he wants to avoid with it, Del Toro said: “What I want to do is make the best movie I have ever done. What I want to avoid is to make some fastidious tracing of lines that were established by the ‘Lord of the Rings’ trilogy. We’re trying to be respectful of it, and what was shown in the trilogy is canon, but we are gleefully exploring new creatures, new set pieces, new territory and new avenues.

"As with everything, there is always something new to get excited about.”

-- Geoff Boucher

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H.P. Lovecraft and Hollywood -- an unholy alliance?

June 26, 2009 |  6:51 am

The Los Angeles Times Calendar section recently ran a cover story on the stars and creators in Hollywood who are "heating up" right now. I was one of the contributing writers; I did a piece on Chris Hemsworth (you saw him in "Star Trek" and he will star in the upcoming "Thor" and "Red Dawn") and this short story on H.P. Lovecraft.

HP Lovecraft

H.P. Lovecraft died 72 years ago but he may soon be enjoying quite the afterlife in Hollywood.

Lovecraft's writing, both creepy and cosmic, was not celebrated during his life (far from it -- he died of cancer in his native Rhode Island at age 46, a broken man hovering near poverty), but his ancient-evil concepts and complex mythologies have resonated mightily in recent decades with devotees as diverse as Joyce Carol Oates, Stephen King, Metallica, Jorge Luis Borges, Mike Mignola and Neil Gaiman. Still, the author remains a vague brand name to most genre fans.

That may change in the seasons to come. In March, Universal and Imagine Entertainment announced plans to adapt "The Strange Adventures of H.P. Lovecraft," a graphic novel from Image Comics that weaves a supernatural tale into a fictionalized life story of the author. Brian Grazer is producing with Ron Howard, who may also direct, suggesting that he may have enjoyed his immersion into spooky antiquities with "The Da Vinci Code" and " Angels & Demons."

Lovecraft has no bigger fan in Hollywood than director Guillermo del Toro, who proved adept at channeling Mignola's Lovecraft-esque comic book creations -- shambling beasties, tentacled horrors and eons-old magical lore -- in his "Hellboy" films. Del Toro is now at work in New Zealand on preproduction for "The Hobbit" and its sequel, but he has made it clear that he hopes to tap into Lovecraft's old magic after that with a film version of "At the Mountains of Madness," about an expedition to the Antarctic that uncovers massive and ancient mysteries.

"I would love to do that film, it is my obsession," Del Toro said. "To make a film of Lovecraft at that scale, with that story, it would be very special for me. I would love to bring Lovecraft to the world in that way."

-- Geoff Boucher

Photos, from top: H.P. Lovecraft; Lovecraft devotee Neil Gaiman. Credits, from top; I.S.T.A.; Jennifer S. Altman / For The Times

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Guillermo Del Toro signs 'The Strain' in Hollywood

June 2, 2009 |  2:36 pm

Guillermo del Toro curses a bit -- in Spanish and English -- but his fan friendliness may know no bounds.

The director of the Academy Award-winning "Pan's Labyrinth" and the well-received "Hellboy" films was on hand at midnight last night at Meltdown Comics in Hollywood to autograph copies of his new vampire book "The Strain," co-written by Chuck Hogan. He stated that he would not leave until "every last geek" was satisfied -- and he meant it.  I didn't get to record this bit of video until 3:30 a.m., when he signed his last book.

Throughout the night, the director remained animated and amiable while autographing, taking scores of photos, and giving advice to fans and up-and-coming filmmakers who stood in line.  Some exchanges and words of wisdom from Del Toro included:

- "How come you haven't read more vampire books?  I have a list ..."

- " ... you should go find that DVD.  It's in the Criterion Collection ..."

- "Did you see 'Drag Me to Hell'? No?  Are you gonna go?"

- "Is your short still making the rounds?"

And so on. A person in line commented, "He seems to have something in common with everyone."  That was true, but with his banter, it was more that he found connections with the fans. Despite the popularity of his upcoming project, the director didn't get an overabundance of questions about "The Hobbit." He can think about that later. For now, on to New York, London, back to the States, then out to New Zealand to continue his three-year journey bringing J.R.R. Tolkien's tome to the screen.


-- Jevon Phillips


Hugh Jackman, 'Dragon Ball' and Guillermo del Toro all in Everyday Hero headlines

December 12, 2008 |  2:55 pm

Hugh_jackmanAnd the Oscar goes to ... the fanboys: How's this for an Academy Awards scenario -- Iron Man and the Joker will be competing for an award and Wolverine will be hosting the show. That's the way it could shape up with a possible nomination for Robert Downey Jr. (for "Tropic Thunder"), a seemingly certain nomination for the late Oscar_trophy_2 Heath Ledger and the news today that Hugh Jackman, every one's favorite song-and-dance mutant, will be emceeing the trophy broadcast. Here's the academy press release: "Hugh Jackman will host the 81st Academy Awards telecast, producer Laurence Mark and executive producer Bill Condon announced today.  This will be Jackman’s first time center stage at the Oscar show, although he has previously been a presenter. 'Hugh Jackman is a consummate entertainer and an internationally renowned movie star,' said Mark and Condon in a joint statement.  'He also has style, elegance and a sense of occasion.  Hugh is the ideal choice to host a celebration of the year’s movies – and to have fun doing it.' Jackman stars in the current release 'Australia,' directed by Baz Luhrmann.  He will next be seen in “X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” having portrayed the title character in the previous three smash-hit 'X-Men' movies.  His other film credits include 'The Prestige,' 'Flushed Away,' 'The Fountain,' 'Happy Feet,' 'Van Helsing,' 'Kate & Leopold' and 'Swordfish.' A native of Australia, Jackman won the 2004 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his performance in 'The Boy from Oz.'  He has served as host of the Tony Awards ceremony and won a 2005 Emmy for that assignment. Jackman’s other stage credits include 'Carousel,' 'Oklahoma!' 'Sunset Boulevard' and 'Beauty and the Beast.' [AMPAS press release] What do people think? Well, Mary McNamara, the Los Angeles Times television critic, groaned when she heard the pick but the paper's Hollywood columnist, Patrick Goldstein, likes the notion.

Guillermo_del_toro_with_gun"Sleepless Knights" put to bed? How many movie projects can Guillermo del Toro be associated with? Maybe the list just got shorter, according to Jennifer Vineyard, who reports that the Grant Morrison story "Sleepless Knights" is losing steam: 'Sleepless Knights' was an idea Morrison scripted that would be a sort of fairy tale, which Del Toro was attached to direct. Thanks to a time-machine error, the world gets stuck on Halloween, permanently — kind of like 'Groundhog Day,' but for everyone. Ghosts, goblins, and other creatures think of it as a free-for-all, and start running wild. That is, until a new kind of Ghostbusters, called the Sleepless Knights, start fighting them. Though the premise could work as a creep-out horror movie, Morrison thought it of it as a family-friendly, coming-of-age, fantasy-adventure film, and wrote the lead role as a 15-year-old teenager named Alex Bradbury (a nod to Ray Bradbury). The idea was sold to Dreamworks exec Michael DeLuca, and producer Don Murphy came aboard. And then nothing. Morrison continued plugging away on a second draft, and still nothing. At Comic-Con, he said the project was “resurrected” (apt for a story about the dead). But now, he’s not so sure. 'That was the last we heard, but now it seems to be doing something else,' Morrison told us. 'So it’s no longer, as far as I know. It’s not at Dreamworks anymore, as far as I know. We spoke to some people after the convention, and that aspect seems to have gone quiet again.' No matter — Morrison and Del Toro have plenty of projects to keep them both busy, what with Morrison’s 'Area 51' film and the adaptation of 'We3,' and Del Toro’s work on 'The Hobbit.'" [MTV Splash Page blog]

Speed_racer Wait, there were 83 movies worse than "Speed Racer"? The Times of London staff has put together their list of the 100 Worst Movies of 2008 and a lot of them were fanboy fare. "Star Wars: The Clone Wars," the first animated theatrical release in the George Lucas space opera, finished all the way up (or is that all the way down?) at No. 5. and came with this appraisal: "The latest installment of George Lucas’s interminable franchise has the charm of a cash machine. This noisy animated feature is set in a galaxy that isn’t far away enough." Ouch. Also on the list: "Speed Racer," whose "famous actors look more plastic than the sets" at No. 84; "The Eye," with plot twists "as remarkable as pasteurised cheese," at No. 57; "Babylon A.D.," a "slapdash sci-fi effort," at No. 49;  "Max Payne," a "dull cod-noir fantasy," at No. 41; "Superhero Movie," with "lots of fart jokes" at No. 40;  and"Alien vs. Predator: Requiem," which was "wrist-slittingly awful," at No. 10. Their choice of the very worst movie of the year? That would be the aptly titled "Disaster Movie."

"Dragon Ball" rolling: How popular is the "Dragon Ball" manga adventures? I've seen sales reports that list 150 million copies of "Dragon Ball" volumes being sold -- and that's just in Japan. The massive audience for Akira Toriyama's mystical martial arts tale is the chief motivation for the April 2009 live-action film "Dragonball Evolution" from Twentieth Century Fox. The director is James Wong, who also helmed "The One" with Jet Li and "Final Destination." " Wong was also co-creator of "Space: Above and Beyond" and a writer for "The X-Files" (Do you remember "Home," the creepiest episode ever? Wong co-wrote it.) The "Dragon Ball" script is by Ben Ramsey (who is also working on "Luke Cage") and the producer is Stephen Chow, who is now at work on "The Green Hornet." Sound promising, right? Well, maybe not. Here's a trailer for the film which looks, um, not so great.

Do you have to eat haggis?: Newsarama is having a contest that will send the lucky winner to Scotland for dinner with Mark Millar. The lowdown: "To mark the DVD and Blu-ray release of Universal's 'Wanted' (based on Millar's "Top Cow" series) this month, we're picking one lucky fan and a companion to take an expenses-paid trip to Scotland, which includes a a personal dinner with the writer. Want to ask him whose side of the 'Civil War' he was really on? What’s coming up in 'Ultimate Avengers' or his next wave of creator-owned books? Did he get to meet Angelina Jolie in person? Here is your chance to ask, as well as an opportunity to soak in a European culture to boot. Grand prize includes a four-day/three night trip for 2 to Scotland, including accommodations, round trip airfare for two, airport transportation, and tax, along with $500 spending money that doesn't necessarily have to be exhausted in Scottish comic book shops." [Newsarama]

-- Geoff Boucher

Hugh Jackson at the premiere of "Australia," photo by Carl De Souza AFP/Getty Images. Guillermo del Toro on the set of "Hellboy 2: The Golden Army," photographed by Egon Endrenyi and courtesy of Universal. "Speed Racer" image courtesy of Warner Bros.


Guillermo del Toro: 'Swamp Thing is one of the last Holy Grail projects'

November 12, 2008 |  9:13 pm

EXCLUSIVE The director talks about "The Hobbit," the "Hellboy 2" Blu-Ray and the daydream idea of someday making a Swamp Thing film

Swamp_thing_2I sat down with Guillermo del Toro on Tuesday night and, as usual, the "Hellboy" filmmaker was charming, funny and passionate about film and comics. There was a question I've wanted to ask him since I first saw the beasties of "Pan's Labyrinth": Would Del Toro please make a movie adaptation of Alan Moore's sublime run of stories on "Swamp Thing" in the 1980s?

"Oh, I would love to make a Swamp Thing movie," Del Toro said, smiling broadly at the notion. "Really, Swamp Thing is one of the last Holy Grail projects that is still out there. Those stories were fantastic, with the hallucinogenic feel of that world. I don't think anyone is tackling that one anytime soon. It is one of those Holy Grails that dates back to that same boom as 'Watchmen' and 'The Killing Joke.' For me it would be an honor to do it. Right now, I don't think it's happening. If I had enough time to tackle it. But I will be 50 when I get out of 'The Hobbit'..." In January, the 44-year-old fantasy auteur is moving to New Zealand with his wife and their two daughters to begin work on another J.R.R. Tolkien film series, which "Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson will be executive producer on. "Everything is going great, it's really a dream come true to be part of this," Del Toro told me. "I'm writing every day."

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Greg Nicotero talks about the masters of movie mayhem and 'malicious hysteria'

October 7, 2008 |  7:44 am

GregnicoteroHero Complex brought you an exclusive, in-depth piece yesterday on the future of Stan Winston Effects, the storied special-effects house founded by the late, great wizard of Hollywood. Now Gina McIntyre, who writes about horror for the H.C., brings us a chat with Greg Nicotero, another master of movie mayhem and the executive producer of a new documentary about the artistry of horror that airs tonight on Starz.

If your DVD library contains multiple copies of the "Evil Dead" films, this one's for you. The documentary “Starz Inside: Fantastic Flesh” features interviews with the makeup artists responsible for creating some of the most gruesome moments in horror cinema: Dick Smith, Tom Savini, Rick Baker, Rob Bottin and Howard Berger and Greg Nicotero of KNB EFX, the Van Nuys-based shop that, during its 20 years in business, has amassed a lengthy list of credits that includes “Army of Darkness,” “Kill Bill Vols. 1 and 2,” "Sin City," “Grindhouse” and “The Chronicles of Narnia” films, among others.

According to Nicotero, the idea was to showcase the history of great effects work, dating to the pioneering work of Jack Pierce in the 1930s -– he was the man who transformed Boris Karloff into Frankenstein’s monster. The hour-long documentary includes on-camera appearances not only from the effects mavens themselves, but also the writers, directors and actors responsible for landmark genre films. Nicotero describes the roster as a “who’s who of genre filmmaking” -- George Romero, John Carpenter, Wes Craven, Joe Dante, Simon Pegg and Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino.

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