The very first teaser trailer for Skyfall has arrived online, bright and early for the Britons in James Bond's native soil, in the middle of the night for those of us in the colonies. The trailer's coming was announced last week when the teaser poster was unveiled, now it's here to provide our first real look at footage from the twenty-third cinematic outing of Ian Fleming's world-class spy and lover of ladies the world over.
Lawless, the Prohibition-Era Southern drama from director John Hillcoat, is set to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival, which is currently monopolizing the Croisette. With the film finally getting ready for its debutante ball, The Weinstein Company has unveiled seven character posters from movie formerly titled The Wettest Country in the World and the more concise Wettest Country.
These character posters answer a few questions. First is the question, "How do we let audiences know that our movie stars Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Gary Oldman, Jessica Chastain, Guy Pearce, Jason Clarke, and Mia Wasikowska?" Answer: character posters. The second question is, "How do we let audiences know it's a period movie with action?" Answer: Give most of the cast revolvers and make sure there's a tommy gun in there too. The third question is, "How awkwardly can we insert Gary Oldman's face onto a poster?" Answer: Photoshop.
After about seven years during which promises of an imminent Sin City sequel started making co-directors Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller seem sort of like broke dads promising their kids a rollercoaster in the backyard, Sin City: A Dame to Kill For is actually happening. Or at least, it's more likely than it has ever been. Today, Dimension Films officially announced an October 2, 2013 release date for the sequel, and also confirmed that stars Mickey Rourke and Jessica Alba are committed to return.
The very first teaser trailer for the twenty-third cinematic adventure of unstoppable superspy James Bond has arrived online, concisely informing audiences that Daniel Craig is back in Skyfall. Beyond that, it's not exactly revealing, but it does evoke classic Bond to such an extent that you can almost hear that familiar theme playing as Craig struts.
It's Wednesday, May 16th, which means that Sacha Baron Cohen and Larry Charles' The Dictator is opening in theaters from coast to magnificent coast. That, in and of itself would be cause for celebration, since the movie's a fun mixture of intelligent satire and calculated idiocy. But humanity can raise its hands to the heavens in thanks that the first teaser trailer for Anchorman 2 is attached to The Dictator, giving our first taste of the Channel 4 Newsteami n years, like the first taste of coffee after a long sleepless night.
Paramount Pictures has unveiled the final domestic poster for next month's action-figure-based sequel G.I. Joe: Retaliation. The one sheet has the requisite Photoshop effects, three characters holding guns, one character rocking a sword, and one faceless villain who may or may not also be holding a weapon of some sort.
For his third feature as a director, Ben Affleck is getting away from Boston, the vividly-realized setting of his Gone Baby Gone and The Town. Based on the first trailer for Argo, though, leaving Beantown isn't hurting Affleck one bit. Warner Bros released the theatrical trailer and a teaser poster today, and while the latter is pretty standard, the former is outstanding, promising an intelligent, grown-up thriller with a sly, adroit sense of humor.
Universal has released a new official clip and a poster for Snow White and the Huntsman, both of them selling that the film is not exactly what fans of the fairy tale may have been expecting. This take on the familiar story is a big action-adventure with many a surreal, fantastic image against a grim and grimy aesthetic.
The struggles of a normal, insecure, lovelorn guy tend to be pretty universal, especially when he gets bitten by a radioactive spider and throws on a mask to fight crime, all out of a sense of responsibility and guilt. As such, Spider-Man's appeal is global, so The Amazing Spider-Man will be bringing the rebooted hero to cinemas here and beyond the horizon. All this is a roundabout way of saying that there's a new international poster for The Amazing Spider-Man featuring a pretty beat-up Spidey.
It's pretty much standard operating procedure for oppressive totalitarian rulers to plaster their visages over every available surface. The promotional campaign for the comedy The Dictator has adopted the style of repressive egomaniacal dicksplashes by relying on portraits of Sacha Baron Cohen as Admiral General His Excellency Aladeen, overlord of the fictitious Middle Eastern nation of Wadiya. By now, audiences are familiar with the sight of Baron Cohen in his ridiculous beard and sunglasses.