Hero Complex

For your inner fanboy

Category: Leonard Nimoy

Hero Complex Film Festival tickets now on sale

May 3, 2010 |  9:24 am

HCFF "Blade Runner," perhaps the greatest science-fiction film ever made.

"The Dark Knight," the pinnacle of superhero cinema and a billion-dollar success.

"Star Trek," the most enduring and successful science-fiction brand name in history.

"Alien," the deep-space masterpiece that changed horror films forever.

Three days of sublime films are presented, with their iconic creators on stage talking about the past, present and future of their heroic franchises.

Leonard Nimoy, Ridley Scott and Christopher Nolan

June 11, 12, 13

Mann's Chinese, Hollywood

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Hero Complex Film Festival takes flight with Ridley Scott, Leonard Nimoy and Christopher Nolan

April 30, 2010 |  5:15 pm

Hcfest2 

Mark your calendars: The first-ever Hero Complex Film Festival will take flight June 11-13 at the Mann Chinese 6 in Hollywood with five amazing films and on-stage appearances by three signature filmmakers.

On Friday, it's "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home," followed by a Q&A session with the movie's star and director, television and film icon Leonard Nimoy. Nimoy has just announced his retirement from acting; for "Trek" fans, this year is the final farewell to the original Mr. Spock, and the Hero Complex Film Festival will be part of that long goodbye. 

On Saturday, director Christopher Nolan goes back to Gotham with "The Dark Knight," the billion-dollar smash hit that many fans consider to be the zenith of superhero cinema. The Batman film is the second half of a Nolan double-feature -- the gripping thriller "Insomnia" opens the program, and the filmmaker will appear on stage between the two films. He will also bring along sneak footage from the highly anticipated July film "Inception."

On Sunday, it's a double feature with two of the most influential science-fiction films ever -- Ridley Scott's "Alien" and "Blade Runner." The Oscar-winning filmmaker will appear on stage between the two classics to discuss the powerful legacy of "Blade Runner" as well as his past (and future) with the deep-space horror franchise "Alien."

Tickets will go on sale at 10 a.m. Monday morning, check back here at the Hero Complex blog for purchase details. Also, this Sunday's edition of the Los Angeles Times will have a full-page ad with more information about the on-sale.

And, finally, if you have some suggested questions you'd like me to ask these amazing creators on stage, leave a message in the comments section below. Thanks for reading, hope to see you in June!

-- Geoff Boucher

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Sherlock Spock? Why, yes. It's elementary, my dear Vulcan.

December 24, 2009 |  1:37 pm

Robert Downey Jr.'s new version of the wicked-smart, pipe-smoking sleuth Sherlock Holmes comes to screens on Christmas Day, but long before Tony Stark wore the deerstalker cap, there was another Hero Complex fave lurking in the alleys of London. Here's a flashback photo of Leonard Nimoy as Arthur Conan Doyle's famous hero. It's from the "Star Trek" icon's 1970s stint of playing the role during a national stage tour. 

Sherlock Spock

Many other actors have played Holmes -- Charlton Heston, Michael Caine, Roger Moore among them -- but with Nimoy's enduring aura of brainy calm from his years as Spock he was an especially, um, logical choice as a detective.

-- Jevon Phillips

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Leonard Nimoy says his 'Fringe' experiment may be coming to an end

October 27, 2009 | 11:03 am
Leonard Nimoy as William Bell 

Leonard Nimoy, who was coaxed out of retirement for "Star Trek" and then lingered in order to portray the mysterious William Bell on "Fringe," says it may be the logical time to say farewell to acting for good -- especially since the Bell role hasn't been a compelling one for him.

"I have such a great life," the 78-year-old actor said at his home last week. "I'm not looking for work."

Nimoy had invited me over to talk about his Halloween night photography exhibit at the Santa Monica Museum of Art (watch for a full story on that event and his photography career here tomorrow), which is just one of the many pursuits that Nimoy would rather focus on these days. "As an actor you're always wondering when you're going to work again, who you're going to work with, what it will be. I don't have that consuming drive," he said. Then he nodded toward an image that will be on display at the exhibit. "This is my creative outlet. This is what I do."

Nimoy was fresh from a trip to the Vancouver set of "Fringe," where he had shot an upcoming episode. He made it sound as if it might have been his final one in the role of Bell, a rarely seen character on the show but one that is, by all appearances, at the very core of the series' mythology. 

"I've done three appearances for them. I don't know if I will do a fourth..."

Leonard Nimoy 2009 

"They've asked me to do more, but we have to talk about where the character is going. So far my character, William Bell, and my appearances have been used to lay in information about this alternate universe and the experience of being in this other world. And that's OK, but I don't know yet what plans they have for really developing a dramatic story for the character. I'm waiting for a conversation about that."

Nimoy said that conversation will be "some with J.J. Abrams" but more so with show runner Jeff Pinkner and series creators Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, the same tandem that came up with the script for "Star Trek," which was good enough to coax Nimoy back into Starfleet service despite his initial resistance to the idea. Nimoy said Orci and Kurtzman are "just terrific, very talented and very smart" but it was quite clear that the actor's goodwill posture toward "Fringe" was earned entirely by the "Trek" experience and that it has its limitations.

Fringe poster "I think they're talking amongst themselves now so they can present some kind of plan, a story arc of some kind."

The sci-fi icon surprised me when he said he signed up for the "Fringe" first-season finale without much knowledge of the series at all.

"I never paid much attention until I was asked to work on it and even then I didn't know a lot. I got the [home video] collection of the first season and [my wife] Susan and I were up in Lake Tahoe and last week we sat there about four or five hours at a time and watched them. And, wow, that show is something. They do a great production job. They have great story hooks, terrific production values and very interesting performances."

He mentioned in particular the work of John Noble, who portrays the wonderfully eccentric Walter Bishop, Bell's onetime colleague in the business of mad science.

"We just met for the first time and it was very enjoyable," Nimoy said, although he was careful not to say whether that encounter was on-screen or off.

For those of you in Southern California, you have a chance to meet Nimoy yourself and even have him shoot your portrait during a photo session. On Halloween, the Santa Monica Museum of Art will be displaying selected works from Nimoy's project "Who Do You Think You Are?" (which will be an exhibit at Mass MoCA next summer); the collection is a series of portraits where Nimoy asked strangers to reveal their secret selves. That "secret self" theme will carry into a costume contest at the Oct. 31 event and there a different price-level tickets. For more details on the event and the possibility of a photo shoot with Nimoy, go right here

-- Geoff Boucher

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PHOTOS: Top, Leonard Nimoy on "Fringe" (Fox) Middle: Nimoy at his home. (Christina House / For The Times)


Leonard Nimoy: 'Star Trek' fans can be scary

May 10, 2009 |  6:33 pm

One of the great things about my job is the opportunity it's given me to sit down for lengthy interviews with true icons of Hollywood, people such as Clint Eastwood, Warren Beatty, Robert Redford and Harrison Ford. Now I can add Leonard Nimoy to that list. And yes, I would put his name right next to those aforementioned cinema heavyweights as far as dazzle quality because I grew up adoring "Star Trek" in its many permutations and admiring his performances in them without exception. A much shorter version of this interview (it's about 40% shorter, in fact) is running on the cover of the Los Angeles Times Calendar section tomorrow -- but if you've followed Nimoy's long and prosperous career as closely as I have, you'll want to read this more in-depth version.

Leonard Nimoy by Anne Cusack It’s still strange to see Leonard Nimoy smile. In five different decades now, Nimoy has been the impassive face of pure alien logic as “Star Trek” icon Mr. Spock, so it’s a bit unnerving to see him flash a big grin while recounting a very special presidential salute.

“During the campaign, Barack Obama gave me the Vulcan greeting at a fundraiser,” the 78-year-old actor said, holding up his palm in Spock’s signature split-finger gesture. “That was pretty memorable. Timothy Leary gave me the salute once, too. It’s something that happens to me quite often, as you can imagine.”

When the interviewer sitting across from Nimoy held up his own hand to answer the salutation, Nimoy shook his head in mock disapproval. “No, no, the thumb goes out. You have to get it right.”

A whole new generation of fans are learning how to pry their fingers apart with the release of the eleventh “Trek” film, which hit warp speed on its opening weekend with a total of $76 million.


For the filmmakers, the 78-year-old Nimoy is a living link to the history of the franchise that began on television in the 1960s as “‘Wagon Train’ to the stars” (as it was pitched) and became much more than that with five spin-off television shows, novels, a Saturday morning cartoon, comics, a Las Vegas attraction and more fan conventions than a Klingon could count.

“'Star Trek’ fans,” Nimoy confided, “can be scary. If you don’t get this right you’re going to hear about it.”

The crew is new and young with 28-year-old Chris Pine as Captain James T. Kirk and 31-year-old Zachary Quinto as Spock, but Nimoy (thanks to a time-travel plot) has a key role as a second Spock, a solemn, grey-haired visitor from the future who is being pursued by a rogue Romulan named Nero (Eric Bana) with face tattoos and a blood quest.

Leonard Nimoy in Trek 11 Nimoy’s presence gives the franchise revival “a very important sort of approval -- there’s a torch being handed off there,” according to Pine, and director J.J. Abrams describes the elder actor’s participation in the film as “essential to our goal to serve and celebrate the history of ‘Star Trek’ with this story and create something new and exciting.”

Nimoy, for one, never expected to put those pointy ears back on again. He was leery when approached by Abrams and screenwriters Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman but, after hearing them explain their vision of the latest chapter of the space epic, he was intrigued. (This Tuesday, by the way, Nimoy also drops in on the first half of the two-part season finale of “Fringe,” the Fox sci-fi series from Abrams, Orci and Kurtzman.)

“This is the first and only time I ever had a filmmaker say, ‘We cannot make this film without you and we won’t make it without you,’” Nimoy said with another one of those startling smiles. “J.J. Abrams said that – that’s a pretty heavy statement. And when you see the film you see how central the character is to the story they’ve told.”

Nimoy stands as “the figure of credibility” for the franchise, as Orci put it, which sounds like an unintended ding on William Shatner, the original Kirk and an actor who publicly lobbied for a role in this new $140-million film. Nimoy and Shatner remain good friends after all these years and one reason is an understanding of the benefits of selective silence.

“Bill and I have spent some time together, we have dinner periodically, and frankly it’s a subject that we avoid,” Nimoy said. “It’s not a fun subject right now. And I sympathize with him because I was left out of the ‘Next Generation’ films. It is what it is.”

Continue reading »

Majel Rodenberry, 'The Wolf Man' and Frank Miller's 'Buck Rogers,' all in Everyday Hero headlines

December 19, 2008 |  1:01 pm

Sorry for the skimpy blog this week! I'm trying to finish up some long pieces for the upcoming 2009 Film Sneaks Issue of the Los Angeles Times and also keep pace with assorted holiday doings. Anyway, here is a two-day edition of Everyday Hero, your roundup of handpicked headlines from the fanboy universe ...

MajelbarrettroddenberryMAJEL B. RODDENBERRY DIES AT 76: One of the signature faces -- and voices -- of "Star Trek" through the decades has died. Majel B. Roddenberry, the widow of "Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry, died Thursday in Bel-Air after a battle with leukemia. My colleague Dennis McLellan has written a fine obituary, here's an excerpt: "'She was a valiant lady,' Leonard Nimoy, who played Mr. Spock on 'Star Trek,' told The Times. 'She worked hard, she was straightforward, she was dedicated to 'Star Trek' and Gene, and a lot of people thought very highly of her.' Once dubbed 'The First Lady of 'Trek'' by the Chicago Tribune, Majel (sounds like Mabel) Barrett Roddenberry was associated with 'Star Trek' from the beginning. In the first TV pilot, she played a leading role as Number One, the first officer who was second in command. But at the request of various executives, changes were made, and she did not reprise her role in the second TV pilot. Instead, she played the minor role of Nurse Chapel when the series began airing on NBC in September 1966. Roddenberry had another distinction: Beginning with the original series, she supplied the coolly detached voice of the USS Enterprise's computer -- something she did on the various 'Star Trek' series. She also was the voice of the Starship Enterprise for six of the 10 'Star Trek' movies that have been released, as well as the 11th, which is due out next year. Roddenberry also played Dr. Christina Chapel in two of the "Star Trek" movies, 'Star Trek: The Motion Picture' and 'Star Trek: The Voyage Home.' And she played the recurring role of the flamboyant Lwaxana Troi on 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' and 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.' Roddenberry, whose pre-'Star Trek' acting career included guest appearances on series such as 'The Untouchables' and 'The Lucy Show,' had no idea she was establishing a career path in science fiction when she took her first 'Star Trek' role. 'Not at all,' she said in a 2002 interview with the Tulsa World. 'I certainly didn't have any idea that I'd be doing it this long, for so many different shows and films -- especially as a product of a series that was a flop. The original was only on for three years. It wasn't considered a success by anyone's standards.'" [Los Angeles Times] ... ALSO: Here's a photo gallery of the actress in various roles.

Goth_hat_2 VAMPING AT THE MUSEUM: It's been a big year for fangs and pierced arteries and now there's an exhibit titled "Gothic: Dark Glamour" (running through Feb. 21) at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan. Critic Karen Rosenberg has written an especially vivid review, here's an excerpt: "Organized by Valerie Steele, the director of the Fashion Institute of Technology’s museum, the show unfolds in a nightmarish mise-en-scène conceived by the British artist and set designer Simon Costin. The clothes have been installed in a labyrinth of haunted palaces, ruined castles and cemetery-gate enclosures. Naturally it all takes place in F.I.T.’s cryptlike basement galleries. The gloom and doom can be overpowering, but Ms. Steele and Mr. Costin understand that too much is never enough for the goth devotee. And it’s impossible to upstage the clothes, with their capes, corsetry and fetishistic hardware. As uniformly macabre as it is, 'Gothic: Dark Glamour' resonates with several groups. Fashionistas will relish the chance to see famous creations by Oliver Theyskens, Ann Demeulemeester and other avant-garde designers. Readers of Poe, Shelley and other Romantic literature will enjoy seeing gothic characters and settings come to life (or undeath). And the eager consumers of adolescent vampire fantasies, from 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' to 'Twilight,' will thrill to the clothes’ sex-and-death subtext...At F.I.T. an antechamber to the main gallery displays fashions representative of three gothic muses: the victim, the widow and the vamp. In the victim category are filmy gowns that could have been worn by the swooning subject of Henry Fuseli’s 1871 painting 'The Nightmare.' (A reproduction is on view.) In the widow category is Victorian mourning dress: suffocatingly high-necked, monochromatic black ensembles. In the most spectacular category, that of the vamp, is a scarlet dress by Eiko Ishioka made for Francis Ford Coppola’s film “Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” Its cascading bustle suggests spilled blood...Also in the show’s first section is a fascinating curio cabinet of gothic accessories, among them a bat-shaped belt buckle, a brooch made from a pigeon’s wing and a bottle of laudanum. Some objects date from the Victorian era, others from current collections; it can be difficult to tell which is which." [New York Times] MORE: You can find the museum's website and info on the exhibit right here.

Buck_rogers_2THE "BUCK" STARTS HERE?: A few weeks ago I met up with Gabriel Macht, the star of "The Spirit," for coffee and he told me that he wants to make as many films as he can with Frank Miller. He would like, in fact, to become the director's on-screen muse, a la Martin Scorsese and Robert DeNiro (or, these, days, Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio). Well, Macht might want to start diving into some old Buster Crabbe movie serials. Why? Here's the story in the trades today by Steven Zeitchik and Borys Kit: "Frank Miller and Odd Lot Entertainment, the creator and production company behind the upcoming comic-book adventure 'The Spirit,' are close to teaming again on the classic sci-fi property 'Buck Rogers.' Odd Lot, the shingle run by Gigi Pritzker and Deborah Del Prete, is in negotiations to option the rights to 'Rogers' from Nu Image/Millennium, which obtained those rights this year from the Dille Trust. Millennium is expected to get a credit on the movie but won't be involved in day-to-day production. John Flint Dille, a friend of Miller's, operates the trust, which may have partly prompted rumors at the time of the Millennium acquisition that the comic auteur-turned-filmmaker might come aboard to direct. But Miller was not attached at the time; he only became involved when Odd Lot entered the picture. Miller will write and direct his own big-screen take on the comic serial; while the creator has only begun to sketch ideas, it's expected to be a darker take, with many of Miller's signature visual elements and themes, such as corruption and redemption. It's likely to be a priority project for Miller, though he has been mulling a 'Sin City' sequel." [The Hollywood Reporter]

Deltorowolf3HOW WILL THE WOLF SURVIVE?: Director Joe Johnston will be bringing Captain America to the screen but first he has "The Wolf Man" next November. Oscar winner Benicio Del Toro will be handling the hairier parts of the script while Anthony Hopkins and Emily Blunt will be the characters looking for a leash. Del Toro talked to MTV and explained that for his research he went back much further than "Teen Wolf": 'I definitely looked at what Lon Chaney Jr. did in the original ‘Wolf Man’ and the movie,' Del Toro told MTV News. “I also looked at the ‘Werewolf of London,’ the Henry Hull movie, which was made maybe 6 years before in 1935, and looked at ‘Curse of the Werewolf’ with Oliver Reed.”  While they are staying faithful to the aforementioned 1941 Chaney Jr. version (generally accepted as the 'classic' Wolf man movie), he notes that there will be some minor deviations from the story that center around actor Sir Anthony Hopkins, who plays his father in the film. He spills some background details on the characters and notes that he and the legendary thespian won’t be playing very nice together either. 'Anthony Hopkins’ role was [originally] played by Claude Rains and the relationship between Rains and Lon Chaney Jr. was a good father and son [relationship]. In [our version], it's definitely fractured, I’m like the prodigal son, I’ve been gone, he sent me away when I was a child and I haven’t seen him in twenty six years and I come home again to visit my brother who’s missing, but I [also play an] actor too which is also different.' Don’t expect other monsters like Dracula, Frankenstein or the Mummy to walk into the frame either. 'You mean, the guy named Dracula waiting in the taxi outside?, Del Toro cracked. 'No, there’s no other monsters coming into play, that’s maybe down the line.' [MTV Movie News]

Rs_1068_69HERO COMPLEX, FOR REAL: Reporter Joshuah Bearman and photographer Stefan Ruiz went around the country visiting with people who dress up in costumes and fight crime. The result is a truly loopy look at a cultural curiosity. An excerpt from Bearman's article, which is in the newest issue of Rolling Stone: "Like other real life superheroes, Master Legend is not an orphan from a distant dying sun or the mutated product of a gamma-ray experiment gone awry. He is not an eccentric billionaire moonlighting as a crime fighter. He is, as he puts it, 'just a man hellbent on battling evil.' Although Master Legend was one of the first to call himself a Real Life Superhero, in recent years a growing network of similarly homespun caped crusaders has emerged across the country. Some were inspired by 9/11. if malevolent individuals can threaten the world, the argument goes, why can't other individuals step up to save it? 'What is Osama Bin Laden if not a super villain off in a cave, scheming to destroy us?' asks Green Scorpion, a masked avenger in Arizona. True to comic-book tradition, each superhero has his own aesthetic. Green Scorpion's name is derived from his desert home, from which he recently issued a proclamation to 'the criminals of Arizona and beyond,' warning that to continue illegal activities is to risk the 'Sting of the Green Scorpion!' The Eye takes his cue from the primordial era of Detective Comics, prowling Mountain  View, California, in a trench coat, goggles and black fedora featuring a self-designed logo: the 'all-seeing' eye of Horus. Superhero -- his full name -- is a former wrestler from Clearwater, Florida, who wears red and blue spandex and a burgundy helicopter helmet and drives a 1975 Corvette Stingray customized with the license plates that read SUPRHRO." [Rolling Stone] Want to read the rest? You'll have to buy the magazine now on the stands, the article isn't available online at this time.

Bday_tigger1 ON THIS DATE: Today, Dec. 19, is the 34th birthday of Takashi Sorimachi, the star of "Great Teacher Onizuka" and "Fulltime Killer" and an actor that some call the "Tom Cruise of Japan"... Also, the great Robert B. Sherman is 83 today. He and his brother, Richard Sherman, are a vital part of Disney's history as the songwriters behind charming classics such as "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious," "Chim Chim Cher-ee," "The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers," "It's a Small World (After All)." To celebrate, let's all get a song stuck in our head today.

Majel B. Roddenberry photo courtesy of the Roddenberry Archives. The bat top hat was made by milliner Justin Smith and the image is courtesy of Museum at F.I.T., which has the headwear on display in "Gothic" exhibit. The image from "The Wolf Man" is courtesy of Universal Pictures. Tigger image courtesy of Disney.


Leonard Nimoy at age 20, an actor ready to live long and prosper

October 10, 2008 |  4:39 pm

FROM THE PHOTO ARCHIVES

Leonard_nimoy_1952

I've been going through the old photo files at the Los Angeles Times library in search of Hollywood artifacts of fanboy interest, and I came across a doozy today. Take a look at future "Star Trek" icon Leonard Nimoy as photographed in the Feb. 18, 1952 edition of The Times.

Mr_spock_2The article that accompanied the photo was an odd one and shows the tone (not to mention the casual sexism) of mainstream Tinseltown coverage of that era. But, of course, it's still far less crass and raunchy than anything TMZ does these days.

The "news" here was a judge approving Nimoy's contract with Jack Broder Productions -- the approval was needed since, by 1952 legal standards, a 20-year-old was considered a minor. After the jump, you can find a portion of the article, which actually uses the word "logically" (Vulcan foreshadowing!) and then goes on to describe Nimoy's female friend in the photo as a "cute tomato" with a "snug skirt."

Continue reading »


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