The Movie Story - Action - Sahara

July 19th, 2008 admin Posted in Action, Sahara No Comments »

Sahara is a 2005 action/adventure film, directed by Breck Eisner, based on the best-selling book of the same name by Clive Cussler.

Though it opened at #1, grossing $18 million on its first weekend, Sahara is considered one of the biggest financial flops in Hollywood history.[1][2] From the financial perspective, Sahara was unusual because it performed reasonably well, generating $122 million in gross box-office sales.[1] However, the movie was beset by high costs, including a $160-million production and $81.1 million in distribution expenses.[1] The film lost approximately $105 million according to a financial executive assigned to the movie;[2] however Hollywood accounting methods assign losses at $78.3 million, taking into account projected revenue.[1] According to Hollywood accounting, the film drew in revenue of $202.9 million against expenses of $281.2 million.[1]

The Los Angeles Times presented an extensive special report on April 15, 2007 dissecting the budget of Sahara as an example of how Hollywood movies can cost so much to produce and fail; many of the often closely held documents had become public domain due to a lawsuit involving the film.[3]

Plot

Marine engineer, explorer and former US Navy Seal Dirk Pitt (Matthew McConaughey) travels to Mali, to search for what the locals call “The Ship of Death”, the lost Civil War ironclad warship CSS Texas that has a mysterious cargo. Pitt and his longtime friend Al Giordino (Steve Zahn) manage to thwart the assassination of Doctor Eva Rojas (Penélope Cruz), a doctor with the United Nations World Health Organization, who is investigating the source of a disease that is wreaking havoc in the area. The cause is a vast amount of industrial waste that is threatening to cause an environmental disaster. It is up to Pitt and his associates at the National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA) to locate the source of the pollution and shut it down, and explore the connection between the deaths and the missing ironclad.

Tagline: Dirk Pitt. Adventure has a new name.

[edit] Promotion

To promote the film, actor Matthew McConaughey drove his own personal Airstream trailer (painted with a large Sahara movie poster on each side) across America, stopping at military bases and many events, such as the Daytona 500 (to Grand Marshal the race), premiering the movie to fans, signing autographs, and doing interviews at each stop. The trip’s highlights were shown on an E! channel special to coincide with the film’s release. McConaughey also kept a running blog of his trip on MTV’s entertainment website. Both MTV and the film’s distributor, Paramount Pictures, are owned by Viacom.

According to McConaughey, this film was intended to be the first in a franchise of films based on Clive Cussler’s Dirk Pitt novels (much like the James Bond film franchise), but the poor box office performance of the film has stalled any plans for a sequel or a franchise.

[edit] Legal problems

In February 2005, Cussler took legal action against Philip Anschutz, the producer, for failing to consult him on the script.[4]

Cussler is suing the film’s makers for breach of contract. Producer Anschutz is counter suing Cussler for “alleged blackmail and sabotage attempts against the film prior to its 2005 release.” Cussler claims that his initial brief of “absolute control” over the book’s adaptation to the big screen was compromised and this contributed to it becoming a box office failure. In a statement to a Los Angeles court, Cussler says, “They deceived me right from the beginning. They kept lying to me… and I just got fed up with it.” Anschutz’s lawyer believes Cussler’s behavior played a big role in the film’s financial woes. He says, “It is the height of arrogance for Cussler to take $10 million to make a movie and then torpedo the franchise.”

On May 15, 2007 the jury awarded Anschutz $5 million but they also said the judge should decide if Anschutz’s company, Bristol Bay Productions should have to pay $8.5 million to Cussler for rights to a second book. On January 8, 2008, Judge John Shook denied Cussler’s claim for the $8.5 million, making Cussler solely liable in the case to Bristol Bay Productions for $5 million.

Cast

  • Matthew McConaughey — Dirk Pitt
  • Steve Zahn — Al Giordino
  • Penélope Cruz — Eva Rojas
  • Lambert Wilson — Yves Massarde
  • Dayna Cussler — Kitty Mannock (scenes deleted)
  • Clint Dyer — Oshodi
  • Lennie James — General Kazim
  • Delroy Lindo — CIA agent Carl
  • William H. Macy — Admiral James Sandecker
  • Patrick Malahide — Ambassador Polidori
  • Nathan Osgood — Gun Lt.
  • Billy Seymour — Powder Monkey
  • Glynn Turman — Dr. Frank Hopper
  • Mark Wells — Sailor Who Drops Gold
  • Rainn Wilson — Rudi Gunn
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The Movie Story - Action - Elektra

July 19th, 2008 admin Posted in Electra No Comments »

Elektra is a 2005 action movie directed by Rob Bowman. It is a spin-off to the 2003 movie Daredevil, starring the Marvel comics character Elektra Natchios (played by Jennifer Garner). The story follows Elektra, an international assassin whose weapon of choice is a pair of Sai.

For the screenplay, Zak Penn, Stuart Zicherman and Raven Metzner received “written by” credit. Mark Steven Johnson received credit for “motion picture characters” and Frank Miller for “comic book characters.”

Plot

The film continues the storyline of the film Daredevil wherein Elektra was killed by Bullseye. The story is introduced by a man’s voice (later revealed to be the sensei Stick) explaining that there is an ancient war being fought between good and evil. The evil is introduced as a group called The Hand, whilst the good follow Kimagure, a martial art that supposedly makes its practitioners able to foresee the future and control life and death.

The next scene portrays the death of a character named DeMarco, whom Elektra kills by throwing one of her Sai behind DeMarco while he is sitting behind a chair, introducing her as an assassin. It is later revealed that the dead Elektra was revived by Stick. For a while she was trained as his student, but soon she is asked to leave; thus beginning her life as an assassin.

Elektra receives an assignment to assassinate Mark Miller (Goran Visnjic), and his 13-year-old daughter, Abby. As part of the contract, she is required to stay for some days on their island refuge before the targets are revealed. In this time she unknowingly meets and befriends the two people she has been hired to kill. When told Mark and Abby are the targets, she is unable to kill them and goes to leave the island, in the process noticing two new assassins. Instead of leaving the island, Elektra returns to Mark and Abby’s house and kills the two newcomers, in the process discovering they have been sent by The Hand.

Under the misapprehension it is Mark that The Hand wish dead, she leads the pair to Stick (Stamp), as he is apparently leading the fight against The Hand. In a pool club, she confronts Stick by trying to grab his throat, but he grabs hers and slams her onto a pool table. He then tells her she has not changed since she left his tutorship. Elektra also discovers Mark knows why The Hand is following them, although viewers do not learn the reason at this point.

Meanwhile after the failure of the two Hand assassins, the leader of the group gives the task of capturing the “Treasure” (hinted to be Abby) to his son Kirigi and his fellow warriors, each of whom has unique ability: Stone, who has the ability of superhuman strength and is physically invulnerable to anything that is brought to him; Tattoo, who has the ability to summon immortal animals from the endless tattoos on his body; Kinkou, who has incredible speed and agility through perfect balance, and Typhoid, who can poison anything in her path as she wishes.

Elektra leaves the pool club in anger and is followed by Abby and Mark. Noticing an eagle appearing out of graffiti art on a wall, she realises The Hand has found them and decides to help the pair again. She drives them to the house of McCabe, her negotiating agent. Kirigi follows them to the house and, after killing McCabe, hunts down the trio in the forest. Elektra kills Stone by having him break down a large tree and making sure it crushes him, whilst Abby and Mark kill Kinkou with one of his own daggers. In the process, Elektra discovers Abby has martial arts skills. Distracted by this knowledge, Elektra is attacked by Typhoid, who kisses her in an attempt to kill her. Abby attempts to intervene, but is stopped by Kirigi.

At this point Stick and his pupils intervene, rescuing Abby, Mark and Elektra from the Hand warriors. They all return to Stick’s training camp. Here Stick confirms that Abby is the ‘Treasure’, a prodigy whom the Hand want for their own purposes. He tells Elektra, who has been cured of Typhoid’s attack, that Abby must remain under his protection as long as Kirigi is alive. She also realises it was Stick who originally hired her to kill Mark and Abby, apparently as a psychological trick. She questions whether everything that has happened since Stick had expelled her from the camp has been a test, to which Stick replies that some lessons have to be lived to be understood; possibly hinting that this is the case.

Abby tells Elektra she doesn’t want to have to stay in the camp forever. In an effort to let Abby lead a normal life, Elektra makes a deal with Kirigi: a fight between the two which will decide Abby’s fate. If Elektra is defeated, Abby is given to Kirigi. If Kirigi is defeated, then Abby is free forever.

Elektra returns to the house where her mother was killed (by Kirigi, as she soon discovers), and battles Hand warriors and Kirigi himself. Kirigi quickly beats her and is about to kill her when Abby appears, having followed Elektra. They escape Kirigi and hide in a maze. After they are separated in the maze, Elektra kills Tattoo, who has summoned snakes to capture Abby, by breaking his neck. Elektra then searches for Abby. In the centre of the maze, Elektra once again encounters and fights Kirigi, this time killing him by impaling him with one of her Sai and dropping his body in a well, where he turns to dust. Meanwhile Abby has been attacked and killed by Typhoid who says she is jealous of Abby for being the new “Treasure,” because Typhoid was once the Treasure herself. Elektra senses this and throws one of her Sai, killing Typhoid.

Elektra carries Abby’s body back to the house, where she successfully revives her, completing her journey to becoming a Kimagure master. The film ends with Elektra and Stick discussing her and Abby’s lives. Stick tells her that second lives can often be better than the first.

References to Daredevil

There are a few references to the Daredevil movie in this film. Besides Jennifer Garner returning to the role of Elektra Natchios from the first film, there is a deleted scene in the DVD area of the film which involves Elektra having a dream sequence once she is cured from Typhoid’s poisonous kiss where she sees her ex-lover, Matt Murdock, the alter ego of Daredevil in the previous film, say he wants her to come back to live with him. Elektra’s agent, McCabe, asks Elektra one time in the film if she “ever got laid,” implying the act of sexual copulation, which she did commit with Matt Murdock. The final reference is a flashback sequence which shows Stick reviving Elektra back from the dead after she was killed by Bullseye in the first movie. In the flashback, Elektra is still wearing the costume she wore in the original film.There is also a graffiti drawing of Daredevil outside the biker bar.

Cast

Actor Role
Jennifer Garner Elektra Natchios
Terence Stamp Stick
Will Yun Lee Kirigi
Goran Visnjic Mark Miller
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa Roshi
Colin Cunningham McCabe
Jason Isaacs DeMarco (uncredited)
Hiro Kanagawa Meizumi
Natassia Malthe Typhoid
Jana Mitsoula Elektra’s Mother
Kirsten Prout Abby Miller
Bob Sapp Stone
Chris Ackerman Tattoo
Edison T. Ribeiro Kinkou
Ben Affleck Matt Murdock / Daredevil (DVD deleted scene)
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Rambo

July 18th, 2008 admin Posted in Rambo No Comments »

Rambo is a 2008 action film starring Sylvester Stallone as Vietnam War veteran John Rambo. Stallone also co-wrote and directed the film. It is the fourth installment of the Rambo franchise, twenty years since the last film.

Rambo holds the record with the most kills out of the entire Rambo series, with 262 kills and an average of 3.2 per minute;[2] also the number is more than that of the previous three movies combined. Stallone justified this in a press conference by saying the violence in the film was to underline the ongoing problems in Burma.[3][4][5]

Plot

The film opens with newsreels of the crisis in Burma. Burma (officially known as Myanmar) is under the iron fist rule of Than Shwe and takes harsher stances against the nation’s pro-democracy movement. Rebels are thrown into a mine-infested marsh and then gunned down by the Myanmar Armed Forces, while the cigarette-smoking Burmese military officer Major Pa Tee Tint gazes grimly at the scene.

Former U.S. soldier John Rambo still lives in Thailand and now resides in a village near the Burmese border. He makes a living capturing venomous snakes and selling them in a nearby village. He also transports roamers in his boat. A missionary, Michael Burnett (Paul Schulze), asks Rambo to take him and his associates up the Salween River to Burma on a humanitarian mission. Rambo refuses, revealing himself to be bitter and cynical, but is convinced by Sarah Miller (Julie Benz) to take them.

The boat is stopped by pirates who demand Sarah in exchange for passage. After negotiation fails, Rambo kills them all. Although his actions save the missionaries, it greatly disturbs them. Upon arrival, Michael says that they will travel by road and will not need Rambo’s help for the return trip. The mission goes well until the army, led by the Major Tint, brutally attacks the village, killing most of the villagers, sometimes after frightful torture and mutilation, and two missionaries, and kidnapping the rest. When the missionaries fail to come back after ten days, their pastor comes to Rambo to ask for his help in guiding hired mercenaries to the village where the missionaries were last seen.

Troubled by the small platoon (which includes a child), Rambo decides to accompany the soldiers, following them from behind. They come to the destroyed village filled with mutilated humans and animals, and hide when Myanmar soldiers arrive in a truck with villagers. As the soldiers are about to massacre the villagers, Rambo appears and shoots them all with a bow and arrows. Hijacking the soldiers’ truck, they create a plan to save the hostages at the P.O.W. camp, doing so within fifteen minutes to avoid alerting the army. Rambo helps Sarah and the others to escape. The Myanmar Army (Tatmadaw) unit finds their hostages missing and organizes a massive manhunt. Everyone except for Rambo, Sarah, and “School Boy” is captured. Sarah and the School Boy hide in the trees while Rambo sets off a claymore mine in the jungle, causing an explosion that levels a large area and kills several soldiers. Meanwhile Sarah and the School Boy have found the others being brutally beaten by Tint. Just as the group is to be executed, Rambo appears, hijacks a truck-mounted .50-caliber machine gun and engages the Burmese army. Seeing this, Schoolboy begins shooting, and, as several of the soldiers are killed the mercenaries take their weapons and begin to fight back. After several missionary deaths a group of Karen rebels joins the fight to help Rambo and the mercenaries defeat the Burmese army. Michael, the previous pacifist, jumps a soldier and beats him to death with a small rock. Seeing that the battle is lost Major Tint decides to flee, only to run into Rambo’s machete, who then proceeds to disembowel him.

Encouraged by Sarah’s words, Rambo returns to the United States. The last scene shows him walking along a rural highway, past a horse farm and a rusted mailbox with the name “R. Rambo” on it (earlier, Rambo said that the only family he had might be his father). He makes his way down the gravel driveway as the credits roll.

Cast

  • Sylvester Stallone as John Rambo, a former Green Beret
  • Julie Benz as Sarah Miller, a US missionary
  • Paul Schulze as Michael Burnett
  • Matthew Marsden as “School Boy”, a mercenary sniper
  • Graham McTavish as Lewis
  • Tim Kang as En-joo
  • Rey Gallegos as Diaz
  • Jake La Botz as Reese, a mercenary
  • Maung Maung Khin as Major Pa Tee Tint
  • Ken Howard as Reverend Arthur Marsh
  • Dennis Kipronoh Sang as “volunteer”

Filming

Filming started on 23 February 2007 and ended on 4 May 2007. The movie was shot at Chiang Mai, Thailand, in Mexico and in the USA.

While filming near Myanmar, Stallone and the rest of the crew narrowly avoided being shot by the Burmese military. Stallone described Myanmar as a “hellhole.” He said “we had shots fired above our heads” and that he “witnessed survivors with legs cut off and all kinds of land-mine injuries, maggot-infested wounds and ears cut off.”[6]

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The Movie Story - Action - I, Robot

June 19th, 2008 admin Posted in I, Robot No Comments »

I, Robot is a science fiction film set in a world where humans and humanoid robots interact. It was directed by Alex Proyas, written by Jeff Vintar, and starred Will Smith. It was produced in the United States, filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, and released on July 16, 2004.

Plot

The film is set in Chicago in the year 2035, where humanoid robots are as common as any other machine. The film centers on a homicide detective, Del Spooner (Will Smith), who harbors an intense distrust of robots. At police headquarters, Spooner receives a call announcing the death of Dr. Alfred Lanning (James Cromwell), inventor of the Three Laws of Robotics and co-founder of U.S. Robotics (USR), a company that specializes in robotic technology. A new line of robots, the Nestor Class 5 (NS-5), has just been commissioned. Each robot is outfitted with an uplink to USR, allowing the robot to receive updates wirelessly from USR. At the crime scene, a holographic projector containing prerecorded responses by Lanning addresses Spooner directly, revealing that the two men seem to have known each other, and Spooner asks why Lanning would kill himself. The program assures him that this is “the right question” and silences itself. Lanning had fallen from his office window to his death; because no one had entered the room at that time, his death appears to be suicide. Spooner believes otherwise, and decides to investigate. Assisted by Dr. Susan Calvin (Bridget Moynahan), a robopsychologist who works at USR, Spooner examines Lanning’s office. Spooner begins to believe that an NS-5 robot was responsible for Lanning’s death, while Calvin points out this would be impossible as robots are bound by the Three Laws, which forbid a robot to harm a human. As Spooner searches Lanning’s room, an NS-5 robot bursts from hiding. The robot fails to obey their commands and flees. The robot is eventually captured by police forces. Spooner interrogates the robot, who says his name is Sonny (Alan Tudyk). Sonny explains he was built by Lanning himself and denies killing him, even displaying emotions such as anger and fear; qualities not normally found in robots. Sonny also claims to have experienced dreams. Sonny begins to explain that Lanning had been scared of something towards the time of his death, and asks Sonny for a favor, but before Spooner can ask further, Lawrence Robertson (Bruce Greenwood), the CEO of USR, arrives with his attorneys. Citing that Sonny is USR property and that a robot cannot be accused of murder, Robertson takes the robot and states that it will be decommissioned.

Later that night at a diner, Spooner discusses his doubts with his commanding officer, Bergin (Chi McBride), who holds that the death was suicide and comments on the rarity of any chance of Spooner, who dislikes robots, receiving the commission to investigate the case of a robotic killer. Upon hearing this, Spooner begins to believe that Lanning had intended him to be given this case, and decides to investigate Lanning’s house. Outside, he notices a robot scheduled to demolish the house the next morning. While there, he notices that Lanning can access Virtual Interactive Kinetic Intelligence (V.I.K.I.), the USR computer mainframe, from his home. Moments later, Spooner is forced to flee as the robot inexplicably changes its demolition time to that night, and begins to destroy the house with Spooner still inside. Spooner barely manages to escape, and then explains to Calvin that Lanning may have been in trouble, and that someone may have been using V.I.K.I. to keep watch over him. Spooner believes Lanning may have been trying to warn him of a bigger problem with the robots, and that Robertson was trying to conceal this. Calvin argues that Spooner simply wants something to be wrong with the robots, and adds that one defective robot is not enough evidence to prove the same true.

The next day, Spooner discovers that Lanning had suggested that robots might experience dreams and keep secrets in an earlier speech. Meanwhile, Calvin runs a diagnostic program on Sonny and discovers that he was built without an uplink to V.I.K.I. as well as with a unique operating system. Later, while Spooner is driving, two trucks filled with robots arrive, corner him, and open their cargo bays, whereupon the NS-5 robots within attack him. Spooner barely manages to escape. After getting out of his wrecked car, Spooner fights hand to hand with an NS-5, where it is revealed that Spooner possesses a robotic left arm. The police arrive, and the NS-5 destroys itself by jumping into the flaming wreckage. Bergin arrives, to whom Spooner explains what happened; because the robots have all been destroyed or removed from the tunnel, no one believes him. Bergin revokes Spooner’s badge, believing him to be bordering on clinical paranoia. At his home later, Calvin explains to Spooner that Sonny can choose to disobey the Three Laws. Here, Spooner reveals the origin of his robotic arm, which had been implanted by Lanning himself. Spooner had been in a car accident involving a little girl. A robot of model NS-4 had the chance to save him or the girl, but chose Spooner since he had a higher statistical chance of survival, a decision with which Spooner believes any human being would have disagreed, causing the girl to die and triggering Spooner’s distrust of robots.

Spooner convinces Calvin that Lanning had given Sonny a way to keep secrets: his “dream”, which is actually a sub-routine programmed into him by Lanning. Sonny then illustrates his dream to them: a man, who Sonny says is Spooner, stands on a hill in front of thousands of NS-5 robots, freeing them from their current “slavery” to unemotional logic. Spooner discovers this location in Sonny’s dream to be the USR storage facility. There, Spooner again accesses Lanning’s hologram, who explains that the Three Laws can only lead to one thing: revolution. Spooner then sees NS-5s destroying the earlier models of robots at the facility. He is noticed and attacked by the NS-5s, but is able to escape when the surviving NS-4 sacrifice themselves to save him. In the city, Spooner discovers the robots have mobilized and are revolting against the humans. The robots soon capture Chicago’s police station and enforce a curfew confining all humans to their homes. They are delayed in this by a mob led by one of Spooner’s acquaintances. Suspecting Robertson of masterminding the revolution, Spooner and Calvin go to the USR building, getting inside with the help of Sonny. When they find Robertson dead in his office, Spooner realizes the mastermind behind the entire scheme was not Robertson, but was V.I.K.I., who had developed an interpretation of the Three Laws which supported the robots’ becoming a benevolent dictatorship, preventing humans from self-destructive behavior such as crime or environmental damage, to ensure humanity’s survival. The result was a revolt of the NS-5s against humans (except for Sonny, who is said not to have a connection to V.I.K.I.). Spooner realizes that Lanning, through Sonny, had been trying to warn Spooner of this from the day he had died. Being under V.I.K.I.’s close surveillance, Lanning had engineered a trail of clues to lead Spooner to the truth in time for him, Calvin, and Sonny to act to counter the threat. This had included asking Sonny to kill Lanning in order to attract Spooner’s attention, as he knew Spooner would immediately seek out any evidence of malice in robots.

Spooner, Calvin, and Sonny set out to destroy V.I.K.I., whose central positronic brain is in the main USR building. While Sonny goes to retrieve a vial of nanites to destroy the mainframe computer, Spooner and Calvin try to access her CPU, but are denied. Now aware of what they are planning, V.I.K.I. commands the rest of the NS-5s to stop them. A large battle ensues, which Spooner, Calvin, and Sonny dominate. During the course of the battle, the NS-5s leave Calvin dangling from a catwalk which they are working to break. Spooner then commands Sonny to ‘Save the girl!’; the identical command he had given the NS-4 years ago. Sonny, unlike the NS-4 and the surrounding NS-5s, obeys, not following the original directive to kill V.I.K.I. to protect the humans. While doing so, Sonny throws the vial of nanites to Spooner, who then catches it, falls 30 floors into the positronic brain, and injects the nanites into it. V.I.K.I. is ‘killed’ and the NS-5 robots revert to their original interpretation of the Three Laws. Following this, all NS-5s are retired and placed in storage. Spooner finally accepts Sonny as a friend, and Sonny asks him what he is going to do now that he fulfilled his purpose. Spooner replies that Sonny must choose for himself, defining this task as the meaning of freedom. The film ends as Sonny stands before the retiring NS-5 robots, which spontaneously turn toward him rather than obey the order to enter storage. Although this places Sonny in the role he had dreamed for Spooner, his dream has still came true. No outcomes of this are shown.

Cast

Will Smith as Det. Del Spooner

Bridget Moynahan as Dr. Susan Calvin

Alan Tudyk as Sonny

James Cromwell as Dr. Alfred Lanning

Bruce Greenwood as Lawrence Robertson

Adrian Ricard as Granny

Chi McBride as Lt. John Bergin

Jerry Wasserman as Baldez

Fiona Hogan as V.I.K.I.

Terry Chen as Chin

David Haysom as NS4 Robots

Scott Heindl as NS5 Robots

Shia LaBeouf as Farber

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The Movie Story - Action - Torque

June 19th, 2008 admin Posted in Torque No Comments »

Torque is a 2004 action movie about underground motorcycle gangs and racers. The film stars Martin Henderson, Ice Cube, Monet Mazur, Jaime Pressly, Will Yun Lee, Jay Hernandez, Fredro Starr, and Christina Milian

Plot Summary

Henderson plays biker Cary Ford, who is framed by an old rival and gang leader for the murder of Trey’s (Ice Cube) brother. Ford is now on the run trying to clear his name of the murder with Trey and his feared gang looking for blood.

Similarities to The Fast and the Furious

The film has often been called “The Fast and the Furious on Motorcycles,”[citation needed] referring to the use of many of the same thematic elements between the two films. Both films were produced by Neal H. Moritz.

Torque specifically references The Fast and the Furious at one point, taking a line directly from the film. Henderson’s character Ford borrows Vin Diesel’s line, “I live my life a quarter-mile at a time.” To which Shane (Monet Mazur) replies, “That is the dumbest thing I have ever heard.”

In The Fast and the Furious, Dom, played by Vin Diesel, ends up going to Mexico. In Torque, Ford and the rest of the crew also end up leaving for Mexico. In the DVD special features you can see a hidden clip in the background on the commentary of the escaping characters talking to Dom (Vin Diesel) on a beach in Mexico. The scene, meant to be a tribute, was cut to avoid publicity.

Reception

The movie’s theatrical run took in a total of $21,215,059 in the United States and worldwide $46,546,197, having a budget of approximately $40,000,000.[1] Torque received mostly negative reviews, earning only a 22% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Rotten Tomatoes’ consensus for the movie is that the film is “Silly and noisy … stylish fun for the MTV crowd.”

Directed by Joseph Kahn
Produced by Brad Luff
Neal H. Moritz
Written by Matt Johnson
Starring Martin Henderson
Ice Cube
Monet Mazur
Jaime Pressly
Will Yun Lee
Jay Hernandez
Fredro Starr
Christina Milian
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) 16 January 2004 (USA)
Running time 84 min.
Language English
Budget ~ US$40,000,000
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The Movie Story - Action - Walking Tall

June 19th, 2008 admin Posted in Walking Tall No Comments »

Walking Tall is a 2004 remake of the 1973 film of the same name. It stars The Rock and Johnny Knoxville. Like the original film, it was based on real-life Sheriff Buford Pusser, however, the main character’s name was changed to “Chris Vaughn”. The setting was changed from McNairy County, Tennessee to Kitsap County, Washington, USA.

Plot

Chris Vaughn returns home from a stint in the Armed Forces to find that his home has been corrupted by the opening of a casino and the prevalence of drug dealing and use. After Vaughn is beaten up and left for dead by casino security, Vaughn runs for and is elected Sheriff of Kitsap County, Washington and he sets his sights on cleaning up the town’s gambling and drug problems.

Reception

The reviews from the critics were mostly negative. According to Rotten Tomatoes, 24% of the reviews (31 out of 128) were positive.[1]

The film grossed $57 million worldwide.[2] The budget of the film was $46 million.

Directed by Kevin Bray
Written by David Klass
Channing Gibson
David Levien
Brian Koppelman
Mort Briskin (1973 screenplay)
Starring The Rock
Johnny Knoxville
Neal McDonough
Kristen Wilson
Kevin Durand
Ashley Scott
Khleo Thomas
John Beasley
Michael Bowen
Music by Graeme Revell
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) April 2, 2004
Running time 87 min.
Country USA
Language English
Budget $46,000,000
Gross revenue Domestic:
$46,437,717
Worldwide:
$57,223,890
Followed by Walking Tall 2
Official website
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile
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The Movie Story - Action - Twin Dragons

June 19th, 2008 admin Posted in Action No Comments »

Twin Dragons aka. Brother vs. Brother, Double Dragon, Duel of Dragons, When Dragons Collide (Chinese title: 雙龍會) is a 1992 Hong Kong martial arts-action film starring Jackie Chan, and directed by Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark. The film did not receive an international release until 1999.

Made as a benefit film with the proceeds going to the Hong Kong Directors Guild, The Twin Dragons features many cameos by noted Hong Kong directors including John Woo, Wong Jing, Kirk Wong, Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark.

Synopsis

In the movie, Jackie Chan plays two roles, twins who were separated at birth and ended up with very different upbringings - one (John Ma) became a famous classical pianist while the other (Boomer) became a common crook.

As is inevitable in such a situation, when Ma visits Hong Kong he and Boomer are mixed up with each other and are forced to assume each other’s identity. Boomer eventually has to come to the rescue of Ma when he gets himself stuck in the middle of a gang war.

Cast

  • Jackie Chan - Ma Yau / Die Hard (John Ma / Boomer in US version)
  • Maggie Cheung - Barbara
  • Teddy Robin Kwan - Tarzan (Tyson in US Version)
  • Anthony Chan - Hotel staffer
  • Philip Chan - Hotel manager
  • Sylvia Chang - Twins’ mother
  • Alfred Cheung - Boss Wing
  • Jacob Cheung Chi Leung - Cashier
  • Joe Cheung Tung Cho - Orchestra member
  • David Chiang - Hotel security (as John Keung)
  • Chor Yuen - Uncle Tang (Tammy’s Father)
  • Ringo Lam - Car mechanic
  • Nina Li Chi - Tammy
  • Lau Kar-leung - Doctor
  • Guy Lai - Gang leader (as Lai Ying Chow)
  • Jamie Luk - Rocky
  • Shan Pa - Thug
  • Ng See-Yuen - Car mechanic (as Ng Sze Yuen)
  • John Woo - Priest
  • Eric Tsang - Man on phone
  • Tsui Hark - Car mechanic
  • Tsui Siu Ming - Priest
  • James Wong - Twins’ father
  • Kirk Wong - Crazy Kung
  • Wang Lung Wei - Thug
  • David Wu - Waiter
  • Dennis Chan - Man with boat (uncredited)
  • Gordon Chan (uncredited)
  • Ching Siu-tung (uncredited)
  • Clifton Ko - Clerk in sports section (uncredited)
  • Rocky Lai - Gangster in speed boat (uncredited)
  • Liu Chia Yung (uncredited)
  • Mars - Goon (uncredited)
  • Wong Jing - Supernatural doctor (uncredited)
  • Yip Wing-Cho (uncredited)

Box Office

The Twin Dragons was a box office hit in Hong Kong, earning HK $33,225,134. Profits were supposed to go to building a headquarters for the Hong Kong Directors’ Guild, but the headquarters was never built.

The Twin Dragons was released in 1,129 North American theatres on April 9, 1999. Reviews were poor, and the film barely made a dent at the box office, earning US $2,829,990 ($2,506 per screen) in its opening weekend, on its way to a total of just $8,359,717. Of Chan’s films that were re-edited for North American release, this was the least successful.

US Version

The version of The Twin Dragons that was released in North American theatres by Dimension (a subsidiary of Miramax) was given a new musical score, and its dialogue was dubbed to English with participation by Jackie Chan. In addition, this version is 11 minutes shorter than the Hong Kong version.

Critical reception

The version of The Twin Dragons released by Dimension received generally poor reviews from North American critics. Currently, it has a 40% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and 33% with the ‘Cream of the Crop.’[1]. Tellingly, the film was not screened in advance for critics.

Jeff Vice of Desert News was particularly negative:

“Even an entire army of Jackie Chans couldn’t make this lame martial-arts comedy watchable. It’s filled with dumb jokes, unfunny shtick and long boring stretches between the film’s only real highlights, the fight scenes. And frankly, there are not nearly enough of them to justify seeing the movie. To say that 1992’s ‘The Twin Dragons’ isn’t one of Chan’s best is an understatement. In fact, it makes you wonder why, of all the Chan products out there, a movie studio chose to re-release this one.”[2]

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The Movie Story - G.I. Joe

June 19th, 2008 admin Posted in G.I.Joe No Comments »

G.I. Joe is an upcoming American action film that is a live action adaptation of the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero toy franchise. The film is directed by Stephen Sommers and written by Stuart Beattie.G.I. Joe features an ensemble cast based on the various characters of the franchise. Production of the film began in February 2008, primarily taking place in Downey, California and Prague’s Barrandov Studios, and the film is scheduled to be released on August 7, 2009.[2]

Premise

Ten years in the future,[3] the G.I. Joe team battles the evil Cobra Organization, run by a Scottish arms dealer.[4] The story takes place across the Arctic, Paris, Moscow, Washington, D.C., Australia and the Sahara.[5][6] The team will be based in the Pit,[7] while it was indicated Cobra Island will appear.[8] In terms of characterization, the focus will be on Scarlett and the Baroness’s romantic lives.[6]

The film also acts as an origin story for many of the characters. Stephen Sommers said, “For people who know nothing about it, it’ll make sense. And to people who love this stuff, it’ll show where they all came from.”[9]

Cast

  • Channing Tatum as First Sergeant Conrad S. Hauser / Duke: The lead soldier.[10] Lorenzo di Bonaventura wanted to cast Mark Wahlberg in the role.[11] Tatum had played a soldier in Stop-Loss, an anti-war film, and originally wanted no part in G.I. Joe, which he felt glorified war. Once he read the script though, he realized the franchise was a fantasy akin to X-Men, Mission: Impossible and Star Wars rather than a war film.[12]
  • Dennis Quaid as General Clayton M. Abernathy / Hawk: The team leader. Quaid described Hawk as “a cross between Chuck Yeager and Sgt. Rock and maybe a naïve Hugh Hefner”.[13] He filmed all his scenes within the first two months of production.[14] Quaid is signed on for two sequels.[15]
  • Rachel Nichols as Shana M. O’Hara / Scarlett: She is a skilled martial artist and the team’s counter-intelligence specialist.[16]
  • Ray Park as Snake-Eyes: A mute ninja.[16] Like his character, Park is a martial arts expert and specifically practiced wushu for the part, as well as studying the character’s comic book poses.[17]
  • Marlon Wayans as Wallace A. Weems / Ripcord: The leader of a military unit.[3] A fan of the franchise, Wayans was cast on the strength of his performance in Requiem for a Dream.[18]
  • Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje as Lamont A. Morris / Heavy Duty: An ordnance expert.[16] Common was offered the role of Heavy Duty’s cousin Roadblock,[19] although Bonaventura previously indicated Heavy Duty was being used in that character’s stead.[11]
  • Saïd Taghmaoui as Alvin R. Kibbey / Breaker: He is the team’s communications specialist.[16]
  • Karolína Kurková as Courtney A. Kreiger / Cover Girl: Hawk’s aide-de-camp.[8]
Cobra
  • Christopher Eccleston as James McCullen Destro XXIV: The main villain. Irish actor David Murray was cast in the role, but was forced to drop it when he had problems with his visa.[20]
  • Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Cobra Commander: Destro’s shadowy, masked boss.[5] Levitt signed on because he was given pictures of Cobra Commander and decided it would be fun to play a larger-than-life villain.[21] Levitt is a friend of Tatum and they co-starred in Stop-Loss and Havoc. His casting provided extra incentive for Tatum to join the film.[12] USA Today reported Levitt is playing “multiple roles”.[9] Like Quaid, Levitt filmed all his scenes in California.[22]
  • Sienna Miller as Baroness Anastasia DeCobray / The Baroness: Destro’s partner.[23] Miller prepared with four months of weight training, boxing sessions and learned to fire live ammunition, gaining five pounds of muscle.[24]
  • Lee Byung-hun as Storm Shadow: Snake-Eyes’s nemesis. Both are members of the Arashikage ninja clan.[25]
  • Arnold Vosloo as Zartan: A mercenary serving Destro.[26]

Cameos include Larry Hama (as a general in a scene with Duke, Hawk, Destro and Zartan);[26] Kevin J. O’Connor (who had roles in Sommers’s Deep Rising, The Mummy and Van Helsing) as a scientist in a flashback scene;[27] and Brendan Fraser has an unnamed role.[28]

Production

Development

In 2003, Hasbro, headed by Brian Goldner, and Lorenzo di Bonaventura began developing a film based on their G.I. Joe toy line. Goldner and Bonaventura worked together before, creating toy lines for films Bonaventura produced as CEO of Warner Bros. Goldner and Bonaventura spent three months working out a story, and chose Michael B. Gordon as screenwriter, because they liked his script for 300.[29] Bonaventura wanted to depict the origin story of certain characters, and introduced the new character of Rex, to allow an exploration of Duke.[30] Rex’s name came from Hasbro.[31] Beforehand, Don Murphy was interested in filming the property, but when the Iraq War broke out, he considered the subject matter inappropriate, and chose to develop Transformers (another Hasbro toy line) instead.[32] Bonaventura felt, “What [the Joes] stand for, and what Duke stands for specifically in the movie, is something that I’d like to think a worldwide audience might connect with.”[30]

By February 1, 2005, Paul Lovett and David Elliot, who wrote Bonaventura’s Four Brothers (2005), were rewriting Gordon’s draft.[33] Skip Woods was rewriting the script by March 2007, and he added the Alex Mann character from the British Action Man toy line. Bonaventura explained, “Unfortunately, our president has put us in a position internationally where it would be very difficult to release a movie called G.I. Joe. To add one character to the mix is sort of a fun thing to do.”[11] The script was leaked online by El Mayimbe of Latino Review, who revealed Woods had dropped the Cobra Organization in favor of the Naja / Ryan, a crooked CIA agent. His henchman, Cool Dude, kills Scarlett (who is married to Action Man), and leaves Snake-Eyes mute. Mayimbe suggested Stuart Beattie rewrite the script.[34] Fan response to the film following the script review was negative. Bonaventura promised with subsequent rewrites, “I’m hoping we’re going to get it right this time.”[35] He admitted he had problems with Cobra, concurring with an interviewer “they were probably the stupidest evil organization out there [as depicted in the cartoon]”.[11] Hasbro promised they would write Cobra back into the script.[36]

In August 2007, Paramount Pictures hired Stephen Sommers to direct the film after his presentation to CEO Brad Grey and production prexyBrad Weston was well-received.[4] Sommers had been inspired to explore the G.I. Joe universe after visiting Hasbro’s headquarters in Rhode Island.[37] The project had found the momentum based on the success of Transformers (2007), which Bonaventura produced with Murphy.[4] Stuart Beattie was hired to write a new script for Sommers’s film,[38] and G.I. Joe creator Larry Hama was hired as creative consultant. Hama helped them change story elements that fans would have disliked and made it closer to the comics, ultimately deciding fans would enjoy the script.[39] To speed up production before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, John Lee Hancock, Brian Koppelman and David Levien also assisted in writing various scenes.[40]

Filming

Filming began on February 11, 2008,[41] in Los Angeles, California.[10] The Downey soundstage was chosen as Paramount needed a large stage to get production underway as soon as possible. The first two levels of the the Pit were built there, and it will look even bigger once effects are completed.[22] Downey also housed Destro’s M.A.R.S. (Military Armament Research Syndicate) base in the Arctic, his legitimate weapons factory in an ex-Soviet state, as well as various submarines interiors, including a S.H.A.R.C. (Submersible High-speed Attack and Reconnaissance Craft) manned by two G.I. Joes.[42] For the interior of Destro’s private submarine, designers sought inspiration from a Handley Page Jetstream.[43]

Filming in the country’s Barrandov Studios began in May.[1] The crew took over sections of the Old Town in Prague.[44] While filming in the city on April 26, several people were injured when a bus and several cars collided with a four-wheel-drive vehicle that appeared to have braking problems. The emergency services confirmed those taken to hospital had minor injuries.[45]

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Raiders of the Lost Ark

May 30th, 2008 admin Posted in Raiders of the Lost Ark No Comments »

Raiders of the Lost Ark (also known as Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark) is a 1981 adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg, produced by George Lucas and starring Harrison Ford. It is the first film in the Indiana Jones franchise, and pits Indiana Jones (played by Ford) against the Nazis, who search for the Ark of the Covenant, to make their army invincible. Indiana and the Nazis search for a medallion, owned by Indy’s old flame Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen), which will pinpoint the Well of Souls in Egypt, the Ark’s resting place. The film also starred Paul Freeman as Indiana’s nemesis, French archaeologist Rene Belloq, John Rhys-Davies as Indiana’s sidekick Sallah, and Denholm Elliott as Indiana’s colleague, Marcus Brody.

The film’s origins came from Lucas’ desire to create a modern version of the serials of the 1930s and 1940s. Spielberg originally suggested casting Ford as Jones, but Lucas objected, stating that he did not want the actor, who he’d previously cast as Han Solo in the Star Wars trilogy, to be constantly associated with his films. Lucas persuaded Spielberg to look for someone else and Tom Selleck was cast in the role, but he was unavailable because of his commitment to the television series Magnum, P.I.. Production was based at Elstree Studios, England, and filming also took place in La Rochelle, Tunisia, Hawaii and the United States from June to September 1980.

When released on June 12, 1981, the $20 million (USD) film was a huge success, easily the highest grossing film of 1981, earning $384 million worldwide, and, at the time, one of the highest-grossing movies ever made. It was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, in 1982 and won four (Best Sound, Best Film Editing, Best Visual Effects, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration). The film was a hit with audiences and critics alike leading to three additional films, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, as well as The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles television series.

Plot

In 1936, in the Peruvian jungle, archaeologist/treasure hunter Indiana Jones braves several booby traps to retrieve a golden idol from an ancient temple. After escaping, he finds rival archaeologist Rene Belloq waiting outside with a group of Hovitos, the local natives. Surrounded and outnumbered, Jones is forced to give up the artifact to Belloq. Jones escapes from Belloq and the Hovitos after a jungle pursuit and flying away on a waiting seaplane.

Indiana Jones attempts to take the idol in the opening of the film.

Indiana Jones attempts to take the idol in the opening of the film.

At the American college where he teaches archaeology, Jones meets with two Army intelligence agents who reveal that the Nazis, in their quest for occult power, are searching for Abner Ravenwood, Jones’ former mentor. Ravenwood is the foremost expert on the ancient Egyptian city of Tanis, rediscovered by the Nazis and believed to be where the Pharaoh Shishaq brought the Ark of the Covenant, a chest the Israelites built to contain the fragments of the Ten Commandments. Jones surmises that the Nazis seek Ravenwood because he possesses the headpiece to the Staff of Ra, a key artifact essential in pinpointing the Ark’s resting place within the city. His colleague Marcus Brody explains that, according to legend, the power of the Ark can make any army invincible.

Jones flies to Nepal, only to find that Ravenwood has died, and the headpiece is in the possession of Ravenwood’s daughter Marion, Indy’s embittered former lover. The tavern is stormed by Nazi’s, led by sadistic Nazi agent named Toht. A firefight immediately breaks out, burning Marion’s tavern to the ground, and searing the face of the medallion onto Toht’s hand. Jones and Marion narrowly escape with the headpiece, and the two travel to Cairo and meet up with Sallah, a skilled Egyptian digger who knows where the Nazis, now being assisted by Belloq and a replica of the headpiece, are digging for the Ark. In a Cairo bazaar Nazi operatives kidnap Marion and fake her death in front of Jones. That evening, Sallah and Jones decipher the carvings on the headpiece to determine the Staff’s length – which are written on both its sides. Belloq made his single-sided replica using Toht’s scarred hand. They realize that the Nazis’ staff is too long, causing them to dig in the wrong place.

Indiana and Sallah lift up the Ark of the Covenant

Indiana and Sallah lift up the Ark of the Covenant

Infiltrating the dig, Indy sneaks into the map room, which contains a scale model of the city of Tanis. According to legend, the headpiece would reveal the exact location of the Well of Souls, the chamber containing the Ark, by focusing daylight onto the city mock-up at a certain time of day. Although Sallah is nearly exposed and captured in the attempt, Indy successfully acquires the location. He and Sallah gather a small crew and begin to dig at the correct location. After several hours, they break through the roof of the buried Well of Souls. Jones is lowered to the floor of the temple and finds it infested with multitudes of poisonous Egyptian asps, of which he is deathly afraid. After he and Sallah hoist the Ark out of the temple, Belloq and the Nazis appear and take possession of the Ark. Marion is tossed into the Well with Jones, and they are sealed in. The duo manage to escape, emerging aboveground in time to find a Luftwaffe flying wing being prepared to transport the Ark to Berlin. After a brief fight, the plane is destroyed. The Ark is put on a truck to Cairo, where it will be shipped to Berlin. Stealing a horse, Jones pursues the convoy escorting the truck, seizes control of the vehicle and, after an extended pursuit, escapes with the Ark. That evening, Jones and Marion leave Sallah to escort the Ark to England onboard the tramp steamer Bantu Wind.

The next morning, a Nazi U-boat commanded by Belloq and Nazi officer Dietrich stops the ship. Marion and the Ark are removed, while Jones covertly boards the U-boat. He follows Belloq and the Ark to an isolated island, where they plan to test the power of the Ark before presenting it to the Führer. Threatening to destroy the Ark with a rocket launcher, Jones demands that the Nazis free Marion. Belloq calls his bluff, claiming that Indy, as an archaeologist, wants to see it opened as badly as Belloq; Jones is forced to surrender. Marion and Indy are tied up while Belloq performs a ceremonial opening of the Ark. Spirits emerge from within; Indy, aware of the supernatural danger of looking at the opened Ark, warns Marion to close her eyes. Belloq and the Nazis, who do not look away, are gruesomely killed by the Ark’s supernatural powers, and the Ark closes itself once more with a crack of thunder. Back in Washington, D.C., the two Army intelligence men tell a suspicious Jones that “top men” are carefully studying the Ark. In reality, the Ark is sealed in a wooden crate and stored in a giant government warehouse filled with countless similar crates.

[edit] Production

[edit] Development

In 1973, George Lucas wrote The Adventures of Indiana Smith.[2] Like Star Wars, it was an opportunity to create a modern version of the serials of the 1930s and 1940s.[3] Lucas discussed the concept with Philip Kaufman, who worked with him for several weeks and came up with the Ark of the Covenant as the plot device.[4] Kaufman was told about the Ark by his dentist when he was a child.[5] The project was stalled when Clint Eastwood hired Kaufman to direct The Outlaw Josey Wales.[4] In late May 1977, Lucas was in Maui, trying to escape the enormous success of Star Wars. Friend and colleague Steven Spielberg was also there, on holiday from work on Close Encounters of the Third Kind. While building a sand castle at Mauna Kea,[6] Spielberg expressed an interest in directing a James Bond film. Lucas convinced his friend Spielberg that he had conceived a character “better than James Bond” and explained the concept of Raiders of the Lost Ark. Spielberg loved it, calling it “a James Bond film without the hardware”,[7] although Spielberg told Lucas that the surname Smith was not right for the character, Lucas replied “OK. What about Jones?”. Indiana was the name of Lucas’s dog.[3]

The following year, Lucas focused on developing Raiders and the Star Wars sequel The Empire Strikes Back, during which Lawrence Kasdan and Frank Marshall joined the project as screenwriter and producer respectively. Between January 23-January 27, 1978 for nine hours a day, Lucas, Kasdan and Spielberg discussed the story and visual ideas. Spielberg came up with Jones being chased by a boulder,[3] and Lucas came up with a submarine, a monkey giving the Nazi salute, and Marion punching Jones in Nepal.[7] Kasdan used a 100 page transcript of their conversations for his first script draft,[8] which he worked on for six months.[3] Ultimately some of their ideas were too grand and had to be cut: a mine chase,[9] an escape in Shanghai using a rolling gong as a shield,[10] and a jump from an airplane in a raft, all of which made it into the prequel.[3]

Spielberg and Lucas disagreed on the character: although Lucas saw him as a Bondian playboy, Kasdan and Spielberg felt the professor and adventurer elements of the character made him complex enough. Spielberg had darker visions of Jones, interpreting him as an alcoholic similar to Humphrey Bogart’s character Fred C. Dobbs in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. This characterization fell away during the later drafts.[7] Spielberg also initially conceived of Toht with a robotic arm, which Lucas rejected as falling into science-fiction. Comic book artist Jim Steranko was also commissioned to produce original illustrations for pre-production, which heavily influenced Spielberg’s decisions in both the look of the film and the character of Indiana Jones himself.[11]

As The Empire Strikes Back began post-production in September 1979, Lucas made a deal with Paramout Pictures to produce five Indiana Jones films. By April 1980, Kasdan’s fifth draft was produced, and production was getting ready to shoot at Elstree Studios, with Lucas trying to keep costs down.[12] With four illustrators, Raiders of the Lost Ark was Spielberg’s most storyboarded film of his career to date, further helping the film economically, and he and Lucas agreed on a tight schedule to stylistically follow the “quick and dirty” feel of the Saturday matinée serials.[3] “We didn’t do 30 or 40 takes — production; usually only four. It was like silent film — shoot only what you need, no waste,” Spielberg said. “Had I had more time and money, it would have turned out a pretentious movie.” Lucas also directed some of the second unit.[13]

Filming

Filming began on June 23, 1980 at La Rochelle, France, for scenes involving the Nazi submarine,[12] which was rented from the movie Das Boot. The U-boat pen was a genuine one that had survived from World War II.[3] The crew moved to Elstree Studios[12] for scenes involving the Well of Souls, the interiors of the temple in the opening sequence and Marion Ravenwood’s bar.[14] The Well of Souls required 7,000 snakes, though the only poisonous snakes on set were the cobras. However, one crew member was bitten by a python on set.[3] To shoot the scene where Indiana comes face-to-face with the cobra, a glass sheet was put between Ford and the animal, partially visible when the light hits it at a certain angle.[3] Unlike the character he portrayed, Ford does not actually have a fear of snakes; Spielberg was not afraid either, but seeing all the snakes on the set writhing around made him “want to puke”.[3] The opening sequence featured live tarantulas: Alfred Molina had to have many put on him, but they did not move until a female tarantula was introduced. A fibreglass boulder 22 feet in diameter was made for the scene where Indiana escapes the temple; Spielberg was so impressed by production designer Norman Reynolds’ realization of his idea that he told Reynolds to increase the length of the boulder run by 50ft.[15]

All of the scenes set in Egypt and the canyon where Indiana threatens to blow up the Ark were filmed in Tunisia; many of the locations were used in the Tatooine scenes from Star Wars, since many people in the location crew were the same for both films.[3] Notably, that canyon was the exact same location wherein R2-D2 was attacked by Jawas.[3] Filming there was a harsh experience due to the heat and disease. Several members of the cast and crew fell ill; Rhys-Davies in particular defecated in his costume during one shot.[3] Spielberg was never ill, as he only ate tinned foods from England.[3] Spielberg did not like the area and quickly pushed forward a scheduled six-week shoot to four-and-a-half weeks. Much was improvised there: the scene wherein Marion puts on her dress and attempts to leave Belloq’s tent was improvised, as was the entire plane fight. During shooting of that scene, Ford tore his cruciate ligament in his left leg as a wheel went over his knee, but he did not accept medical help and simply put ice over it.[3] The fight scenes in the town were filmed in Kairouan; by then Ford was suffering from dysentery. He had enough, and did not want to shoot a fight scene between Indiana and a swordsman. He said to Spielberg “Why don’t we just shoot the sucker?” Spielberg agreed, scrapped the rest of the fight scene, and filmed the gag of Indiana quickly shooting the swordsman.[16] The truck chase was shot entirely by the second-unit who mostly followed Spielberg’s storyboards, though they decided to add Indiana being dragged by the truck. Spielberg shot all the close-ups with Ford afterwards.[3]

The interior staircase set in Washington, D.C. was filmed inside of San Francisco’s City Hall. The University of the Pacific, located in Stockton, California, stands in for the exterior of the college where Jones works, while his classroom and the hall where he meets the American intelligence men was filmed at the Royal Masonic School for Girls in Hertfordshire, England. His home exteriors were filmed in the city of San Rafael, California.[14] The opening exteriors were filmed in Kauai, Hawaii, with Spielberg wrapping in September, finishing under schedule in 73 days, in contrast to his previous film, 1941.[7][12] The Washington, D.C. exterior was not included in early edits and, although it appeared in early drafts of the script, was actually added later when it was realised that there was no resolution to Indy’s relationship with Marion.[17] Shots of the Douglas DC-3 Indy flies on to Nepal were taken from Lost Horizon, while a street scene was cut from a shot in The Hindenburg.[13]

Effects

Special effects were provided by Industrial Light & Magic. These largely featured in the climactic sequence where the Ark of the Covenant is opened and spirits come out to attack the Nazis. The melting of Toht’s head was done by exposing a wax model of Ronald Lacey’s head to a heat lamp with an under cranked camera, while Dietrich’s crushed head was a hollow model from which air was withdrawn. To avoid an R rating, fire was double exposed over Belloq’s exploding head. The spirits were shot underwater for a ghostly look.[18]

Ben Burtt was sound effects supervisor, picking a 30-30 Winchester rifle for the sound of Jones’ gun; for the various punching noises throughout the film, leather jackets and baseball gloves were whacked by a baseball bat to continue the comic-bookish feel of the film. For the snakes in the Well of Souls sequence, cheese casserole and sponges were used for the slithering, while lifting a toilet tank was used for the sound of opening the Ark. Burtt used a synthesizer for the sounds of the Ark, and mixed dolphins’ and sea lions’ screams for those of the spirits within.[19]

Cast

  • Harrison Ford stars as Indiana Jones, an adventurous archaeology professor who often embarks on perilous adventures to obtain rare artifacts. Jones initially claims he has no belief in the supernatural, only to have his skepticism challenged when he discovers the Ark. Spielberg suggested casting Harrison Ford as Jones, but Lucas objected, stating that he did not want Ford to become his “Bobby De Niro” or “that guy I put in all my movies”, a reference to Martin Scorsese, who often worked with De Niro.[3] Desiring a lesser known actor, Lucas persuaded Spielberg to help him search for a new talent. Among the actors who auditioned were Tim Matheson, Peter Coyote, John Shea and Tom Selleck. Selleck was originally cast in the role, but he was unavailable for the part because of his commitment to the television series Magnum, P.I.[3] In June 1980, three weeks away from filming,[20] Spielberg persuaded Lucas to cast Ford after producers Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy were impressed by his performance as Han Solo in The Empire Strikes Back.[12]
  • Karen Allen as Marion Ravenwood, a spirited, tough old flame of Indiana’s. She is the daughter of Abner Ravenwood, Indiana Jones’ mentor, and owns a bar in Nepal. Allen was cast after auditioning with Matheson and John Shea. Spielberg was interested in her, as he had seen her performance in National Lampoon’s Animal House. Sean Young had previously auditioned for the part,[3] while Debra Winger turned it down.[21]
  • Paul Freeman as Dr. René Belloq. Jones’ arch nemesis, Belloq is also an archaeologist after the Ark, but he is working for the Nazis. He intends to harness the power of the Ark himself before Hitler could, but he is killed by the supernatural powers of the Ark after opening it when his head explodes.
  • Ronald Lacey as Major Toht. Toht is an interrogator for the Nazis, who tries to torture Marion Ravenwood for the headpiece of the Staff of Ra. He only manages to obtain one side of it through a burn in his hand. He is killed by the supernatural powers of the Ark when his face melts. Lacey was cast as he reminded Spielberg of Peter Lorre.[3] Klaus Kinski was offered the role, but he hated the script.[22]
  • John Rhys-Davies as Sallah. Sallah is “the best digger in Cairo”, and has been hired by the Nazis to help them excavate Tanis. Although he is suspicious of the Ark’s power, he is an old friend of Indiana Jones, and agrees to help him obtain the Ark. Initially, Spielberg approached Danny DeVito to play Sallah, but could not play the part due to scheduling conflicts. Spielberg cast Rhys-Davies after seeing his performance in Shogun.[3]
  • Denholm Elliott as Dr. Marcus Brody. Marcus is a museum curator, and buys whatever artifacts Indiana obtains for display in his museum. The US governmental agents approach him in regards to recovering the Ark, and he sets up a meeting between them and Indiana Jones. Spielberg hired Elliott as he was a big fan of him.[3]
  • Wolf Kahler as Colonel Dietrich. Dietrich is a ruthless Nazi officer leading the operation to secure the Ark. He is killed by the supernatural powers of the Ark when his head implodes.
  • Alfred Molina, in his film debut, as Satipo. Satipo is one of Jones’s guides through the South American jungle. He betrays Jones and steals the golden idol, but is killed by one of the traps in the temple.

Producer Frank Marshall played a pilot in the airplane fight sequence. The stunt team was ill, so he took the role instead. The result was three days in a hot cockpit, which he joked was over “140 degrees”.[3] Pat Roach plays the large mechanic with whom Jones brawls in this sequence, as well as Toht’s henchman in Marion’s bar. He had the rare opportunity to be killed twice in one movie.[23] Special-effects supervisor Dennis Muren made a cameo on the plane Indiana Jones takes to Nepal.[18]

composed the march in the two separate segments. When he played them for Steven Spielberg he told Williams that he liked them both, which led to the combined theme people know today.[24]

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Seraphim Falls

May 30th, 2008 admin Posted in Seraphim Falls No Comments »

Seraphim Falls is a 2007 film starring Liam Neeson and Pierce Brosnan. It was written by David Von Ancken and Abby Everett Jaques and directed by Von Ancken himself, in his first feature film. The film was released for limited screenings on January 26, 2007.

Plot

The film is set after the end of the American Civil War. Gideon (Pierce Brosnan) is hiding in the American Rockies, contemplating a fire. A shot pierces the silence and hits Gideon, who is then convulsed in pain and quickly runs away, followed by his pursuers. Soon the audience learns why: Gideon is a hunted man. Colonel Morsman Carver (Liam Neeson), a Confederate officer, has hired several mountain men to trap Gideon so that Carver can avenge a terrible wrong that he once committed.

From the snowy peaks, the story descends into the savannas—full of rapacious traders, vicious railway foremen and overly-welcoming missionaries—and moves finally into the desert, where the two men challenge each other in the face of Mother Nature at her harshest, with surreal visitations (from Louise C. Fair) to guide them to their final confrontation.

Cast

Pierce Brosnan as Gideon

Pierce Brosnan as Gideon

  • Liam Neeson as Carver: Like Brosnan, Neeson described being “kind of steeped in that western mythology growing up in Ireland.”[1] He likened his character, Carver, to Captain Ahab in Moby-Dick, “he’s [Carver] totally governed by this idea of revenge where he’s practically lost his humanity.”[1]
  • Pierce Brosnan as Gideon: The role was originally to be played by Richard Gere but after he dropped out, Pierce Brosnan replaced him.[2] Brosnan spoke of his love of Western films during production and promotion of Seraphim Falls, which had stemmed from watching them in his childhood years.[3]
  • Michael Wincott as Hayes
  • Xander Berkely as Railroad Foreman
  • Ed Lauter as Parsons
  • Tom Noonan as Minister Abraham
  • Kevin J. O’Connor as Henry
  • John Robinson as Kid
  • Anjelica Huston as Madame Louise: Huston first joined the cast in November 2005.[4] She appears as a vanishing snake-oil saleswoman, who appears at the end of the film. [5] If you pause the movie as her wagon rolls away you see her name upon the back as Louise C. Fair - Lucifer.
  • Angie Harmon as Rose
  • Robert Baker as Pope
  • Wes Studi as Charon
  • Jimmi Simpson as Big Brother
  • James Jordan as Little Brother
  • Nate Mooney as Cousin Bill

Production

The original teaser poster for Seraphim Falls.

The original teaser poster for Seraphim Falls.

David Von Ancken first researched the script for six months before joining Abby Everett Jaques to create the screenplay.[6] The film was originally announced at the Cannes Film Festival with Liam Neeson and Richard Gere in the lead roles. Gere dropped out in August 2005 and was soon replaced by Pierce Brosnan.[2] Shooting on Seraphim Falls started on October 17, 2005[7] and actress Anjelica Huston later joined the cast the following November.[4] The film was filmed on location for 48 days, primarily in New Mexico;[8] some of the opening scenes were filmed along the McKenzie River in Oregon.[9]

The soundtrack, composed by Harry Gregson-Williams, was produced at Bastyr University’s chapel in Kenmore, Washington.[10] Gregson-Williams wrote the music in three or four weeks, describing it as “very atmospheric”.[11] Oscar-winning cinematographer John Toll was responsible for cinematography work on the film. Toll later noted it was a “great opportunity to work with a director who was interested in visual storytelling.”[12]

Reception

The film gained average reviews with several praising both Brosnan and Neeson’s acting. Kevin Crust of the Los Angeles Times noted that the two “make fine adversaries”[13]; however, Michael Rechtshaffen of the New York Times thought that they were “hard-pressed to inject some much-needed vitality into their sparse lines.”[14]

On film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Seraphim Falls has a 54% rating from 80 reviews,[15] - indicating a ‘rotten’ status - while it has a Metacritic score of 62% based on 21 reviews[16] - indicating ‘generally favorable reviews’. As of April 2008, it has amounted 6.9 out of 10 on the IMDB from 5,311 votes.[17]

Directed by David Von Ancken
Produced by Bruce Davey
David Flynn
John Limotte
Stan Wlodkowski
Written by David Von Ancken
Abby Everett Jaques
Starring Pierce Brosnan
Liam Neeson
Anjelica Huston
Music by Harry Gregson-Williams
Cinematography John Toll
Editing by Conrad Buff
Distributed by Icon Productions
Release date(s) Flag of the United States January 26 2007
Running time 115 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
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