by Joe Gillis, Mar 16 2012 // 7:30 AM
Even though there’s a lot of movies being made from TV shows these days, that doesn’t mean we don’t have room for one more. That’s especially true when you combine the talents of Johnny Depp, Michelle Pfeiffer, Eve Green, Chloe Moretz and Tim Burton.
In fact, that’s just what Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow have done with the upcoming film Dark Shadows. Based on the popular 70s TV series of the same name, the film features Depp as vampire Barnabas Collins and his re-emergence in 1972.
We’ve got the first full trailer from the film to share with you today. Watching the trailer it seems Burton has decided this is more of a comedy than the original series, which may or may not please fans. However, whatever Burton and company end up doing, you can be sure there’s going to be a lot of black, a lot of pasty people and probably some snow.
Check out the trailer after the break. Look for Dark Shadows to hit theaters on May 11.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Movies · News · Trailers · Video · Warner Bros
Tagged: Chlöe Grace Moretz, Comedy, Dark Shadows, Eva Green, Horror, Johnny Depp, Jonny Lee Miller, Michelle Pfeiffer, Movies, Tim Burton, Trailers
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Mar 15 2012 // 3:00 PM
There are few long form comic book stories that really feel like a single cohesive whole. It is just hard to maintain total continuity in style and storytelling over more than a half a decade’s worth of single issues.
Brian K. Vaughn and Pia Guerra were able to accomplish that difficult feat with their epic series Y: The Last Man. A tale told over several years and 60 total issues, that details the last male on earth, and his pet monkey. The comic series is one of the great achievements in comic book storytelling, and is ripe for an adaptation.
The problem is that such an large tale needs more than two hours to tell, and that has slowed the adaptation process down considerably. New Line has been reluctant to sign off on a trilogy of films, but they are still very eager to move forward with a single Y: The Last Man film.
The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that New Line has brought in two new writers to take a new stab at the adaptation:
Writing duo Matthew Federman and Stephen Scaia are in final negotiations to write New Line Cinema’s adaptation of the acclaimed Vertigo comic book… The duo is somewhat new to the feature world but are hot out of the gate – Y is the second studio job in five months after booking Sony’s untitled Zorro origin project — but they have plenty of genre TV credits. Federman and Scaia were writer-producers on Charlie’s Angels, Human Target, Warehouse 13 and Jericho.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Action · Adaptation · Announcements · Comics · Movies · New Line · News · Vertigo · Warner Bros · Writers
Tagged: Adaptation, Brian K. Vaughn, Comics, Matthew Federman, Movies, News, Pia Guerra, Stephen Scaia, Vertigo, Writers, Y: The Last Man
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Mar 15 2012 // 1:45 PM
Big franchises have a unique set of problems. Shepherds of large, established franchises have to worry about their brand and how it is exposed to the world.
One of the biggest global franchises is The Lord of the Rings, or more specifically the whole of Middle-Earth. It is such a huge franchise there is an entire division of The Saul Zaentz Company set up devoted to Middle-Earth. The division, Middle-Earth Enterprises, is in charge of the license, and it is up to them to maintain it’s integrity.
That’s all well and good, but some times the desire to protect the franchise ends up hurting it. One such instance is the recent attempt by Middle-Earth Enterprises to shut down a popular pub in Southampton, England called The Hobbit.
This Tolkien themed bar is a long established pub that was set up as an homage to the works of Tolkien. The intention was to bring positive new attention to the work in it’s own small way. The folks over at The Saul Zaentz Company have decided enough is enough and wants the bar to stop using the likenesses or pay up.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Fantasy · Movies · New Line · News · The Hobbit · Warner Bros
Tagged: England, Franchises, Middle-Earth Enterprises, Movies, News, Pub, Saul Zaentz Company, The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, Warner Bros
by Sebastian Suchecki, Mar 13 2012 // 7:30 AM
When Universal Studios decided to back out of making three feature films and two limited-run TV series based on Stephen King’s mammoth post-apocalyptic Western The Dark Tower back in July, many thought it was the end of the project. Luckily for fans of the series of books, the partners in the film all pledged they were going to find a way to get a movie made. Now, the films and television series may indeed become a reality thanks to Warner Bros.
According to reports, the company is very close to a deal that will give Ron Howard (Apollo 13, Frost/Nixon) the chance to direct at least the first feature. They are also in talks with Javier Bardem (No Country For Old Men) about starring as the gunslinger Roland Deschain.
In the story, Roland Deschain is the last living member of a knightly order known as gunslingers and the last of the line of “Arthur Eld”, his world’s analogue of King Arthur. Politically organized along the lines of a feudal society, it shares technological and social characteristics with the American old west but is also magical.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Adaptation · Books · Comics · News · Universal Pictures · Warner Bros
Tagged: Akiva Goldsman, Apollo 13, Brian Grazer, Dark Tower, Frost/Nixon, Javier Bardem, No Country for Old Men, Ron Howard, Stephen King, The Dark Tower
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Mar 9 2012 // 3:00 PM
One of my favorite things to cover in my weekly film score review is compilations. These sets are the most easily digestible forms of film music, and represented my entry into the world. It was the combined ‘Best Of’ albums of John Williams, James Horner and Danny Elfman that captivated me so much as a child. Now I take great pleasure in shining a light on these sets today, hoping that some non film score fans give them a shot.
In the world of film music compilations there is a top dog who has been releasing stellar sets over and over again. Silva Screen Records has been nailing it with re-recorded compilations of some of today’s most recognizable franchises. Mostly using the excellent City of Prague Philharmonic, these sets have been some of the most fun I have been able to review in my many months of writing about film music.
Today’s set is no exception, The Complete Harry Potter Film Music Collection is a well crafted, well performed and generally a great listen from start to finish. The set smashes together musical highlights from the eight film series that takes you on a journey from the optimistic sense of wonder in the first film all the way through the dark and dangerous end. It is a musical time-capsule that follows the decade long franchise.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Fantasy · Film Music Reviews · Film Score Friday · Harry Potter · Movies · Music · Reviews · Warner Bros
Tagged: Alexandre Desplate, Fantasy, Film Score Friday, Harry Potter, Harry Potter Complete Film Music Collection, John Williams, Movies, Music, Nicholas Hooper, Patrick Doyle, Reviews, silva screen records, Warner Bros
by Sebastian Suchecki, Mar 8 2012 // 7:30 AM

According to Deadline, Alexandre Aja is in talks to direct Undying Love, an adaptation of the Image Comics title. Since making his way to the states following the success of 2003′s High Tension, Aja has directed The Hills Have Eyes, Mirrors, and Piranha, three films based on projects that have been previously made. Fortunately it looks like that part of his career is over, as he takes on this gritty noir-horror adaptation.
The comic was originally written and illustrated by Tomm Coker and Daniel Freedman. The comic is a horror-action tale that mixes vampire mythology and Chinese folklore. The tale, set in modern day Hong Kong, follows ex-soldier John Sargent who has has fallen fin love with a beautiful Chinese woman named Mei. Unfortunately for Sargent, Mei has a secret that keeps them apart, in that she is a vampire. In order to free Mei from the vampiric curse, Sargent must destroy the vampire that made her. The only problem is that Mei was turned by one of the most powerful vampires in history who is protected by an underworld army of monsters.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Adaptation · Comics · Movies · News · Rumor · Warner Bros
Tagged: Alexandre Aja, Chris Bender, Daniel Freedman, High Tension, J.C. Spink, Mirrors, Piranha, Sid and Nancy, Stephen L'Heureux, The Hills Have Eyes, Tomm Coker, True Romance, Undying Love
by Sebastian Suchecki, Mar 6 2012 // 7:30 AM

It looks like CBS’ drama pilot Quean is over before it began. According to inside sources at Warner Bros TV, which produces the project with Joel Silver’s Silver Pictures, the decision has been made to pull the plug upon the advice of an outside legal firm.
Quean was supposed to be a crime procedural which centers on an edgy and independent hacker girl who teams up with a police detective to solve crimes. The pilot secured Jaume Collet-Serra (House of Wax, Orphan) as director, was written by The L Word creator Ilene Chaiken, and was moving to the casting stage when Warner Bros TV received a letter from Sony Pictures threatening a lawsuit over alleged similarities to The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Action · Announcements · Business · CBS · Legal · Movies · News · Sony · TV · Warner Bros
Tagged: David Fincher, House Of Wax, Ilene Chaiken, Jaume Collet-Serra, Joel Silver, Orphan, Quean, Snow White, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The L Word
by Nat Almirall, Mar 2 2012 // 4:15 PM
Roger Ebert once wrote of Fellini’s La Dolce Vita that when he first saw it as a young man, he wanted to be Mastroianni in the film, living it up at parties, drinking exotic booze, and traipsing with potent women. Years later, he felt pity for the empty, carefree life of the character Rubini – that’s the right mindset for something like Project X.
It’s certainly not as great a film, but I imagine the idiot kids going in will identify with the three characters Thomas, Costa, and J.B., even envy them, in a similar manner, while fogeys such as myself will see them for the mongoloid no-good-niks that they are.
The movie doesn’t take a position, or even focus on the kids that much. They’re simply the vessels that wade through escalating nonsense. The party itself is the real protagonist, and director Nima Nourizadeh just wants to see how far it can go, to the point where if they didn’t stuff that midget into the oven, it’d be a tragic loss.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Comedy · Movies · Reviews · Warner Bros
Tagged: Alexis Knapp, Jonathan Daniel Brown, Matt Drake, Michael Bacall, Nichole Bloom, Nima Nourizadeh, Oliver Cooper, Silver Pictures, Thomas Mann, todd phillips, Warner Bros
by Douglas Barnett, Feb 13 2012 // 1:00 PM

This week’s pick is the adventure-comedy classic The Goonies (1985). Richard Donner (Superman I, II, Lethal Weapon series) and Steven Spielberg craft this cult classic, which has entertained countless fans for over twenty-five years.
The Goonies centers around a group of seven outcast teens from Astoria, Oregon whose homes are about to be demolished due to a real estate venture to expand the ritzy Astoria country club into their neighborhood. Facing their last weekend together, Mike Walsh (Sean Astin) and the rest of his friends rummage around his father’s attic and uncover a map, and a Spanish doubloon.
Mikey begins to tell the story of a Seventeenth Century Pirate known as One-Eyed Willie who stole a large assortment of treasure from the English back in 1632, and it was rumored to have been buried somewhere along their coastline. At first, Mikey’s friends seem reluctant to go on one last Goonie adventure but change their minds when they realize that if they were to find One-Eyed Willie’s treasure, they and their families wouldn’t have to leave Astoria.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Action · Blu-Ray · Comedy · Cult Cinema · Directors · DVD · DVD Reviews · Monday Picks · Movies · Netflix · Reviews · Warner Bros
Tagged: Corey Feldman, Jeff Cohen, Jonathan Ke Quan, Josh Brolin, Kerri Green, Martha Plimpton, richard donner, Sean Astin, Steven Spielberg
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Feb 9 2012 // 10:30 AM
The second stretch of filming for the two-part Hobbit adaptation is set to begin later this month. Even though there has already been over one hundred days of shooting, the final roles are still being cast for parts in the later portions of movie two.
Deadline is reporting that the great Billy Connolly has been cast as Dain Ironfoot, the leader of a fierce band of Dwarf warriors and cousin to Thorin Oakenshield:
We could not think of a more fitting actor to play Dain Ironfoot, the staunchest and toughest of Dwarves, than Billy Connolly, the Big Yin himself. With Billy stepping into this role, the cast of The Hobbit is now complete. We can’t wait to see him on the Battlefield!
It is hard to call this perfect casting before we see Connolly in action, but if it is possible we here at The Flickcast are somehow now even more excited for the final Hobbit film. The next two years are going to be very big for Billy Connolly who has yet to really break out here in the states.
Aside from his role in 2013′s Hobbit finale he will also be providing a pivotal voice in the next Pixar film, Brave.
Posted in: Adaptation · Announcements · Casting · Fantasy · Movies · News · Warner Bros
Tagged: Billy Connolly, Casting, Dain Ironfoot, Dwarves, Fantasy, News, Peter Jackson, The Hobbit, There and Back Again, Warner Bros
by Matt Raub, Feb 1 2012 // 12:00 PM

Just when you thought DC would calm down after the backlash of their drastic logo change earlier this month, they’re here to alter more of your childhood favorites by bringing us a series of prequels to Alan Moore’s epic Watchmen series from decades ago with their Before Watchmen line of books.
Catchy name, right? That’s about the caliber of originality you can expect to see with these books, with the major saving grace being the talent that DC has gathered for the event. Here’s what they had to say.
Stepping up to the challenge is a group of the comic book industry’s most iconoclastic writers and artists – including Brian Azzarello (100 BULLETS), Lee Bermejo (JOKER), Amanda Conner (POWER GIRL), Darwyn Cooke (JUSTICE LEAGUE: NEW FRONTIER), John Higgins (WATCHMEN), Adam Hughes (CATWOMAN), J.G. Jones (FINAL CRISIS), Andy Kubert (FLASHPOINT), Joe Kubert (SGT. ROCK), Jae Lee (BATMAN: JEKYLL AND HYDE), J. Michael Straczynski (SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE) and Len Wein (SWAMP THING).
BEFORE WATCHMEN includes:
- RORSCHACH (4 issues) – Writer: Brian Azzarello. Artist: Lee Bermejo
- MINUTEMEN (6 issues) – Writer/Artist: Darwyn Cooke
- COMEDIAN (6 issues) – Writer: Brian Azzarello. Artist: J.G. Jones
- DR. MANHATTAN (4 issues) – Writer: J. Michael Straczynski. Artist: Adam Hughes
- NITE OWL (4 issues) – Writer: J. Michael Straczynski. Artists: Andy and Joe Kubert
- OZYMANDIAS (6 issues) – Writer: Len Wein. Artist: Jae Lee
- SILK SPECTRE (4 issues) – Writer: Darwyn Cooke. Artist: Amanda Conner
Take a look at some of these titles after the jump, and expect to grab these books when they hit this summer.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Action · Announcements · Comics · DC · DC Entertainment · News · Sci-Fi · Warner Bros
Tagged: Adam Hughes, Alan Moore, Amanda Conner, Andy Kubert, Before Watchmen, Brian Azzarello, Comedian, Dan DiDio, Darwyn Cooke, Dave Gibbons, dc comics, DC Entertainment, Dr. Manhattan, J. Michael Straczynski, j.g. jones, Jae Lee, Jim Lee, Joe Kubert, John Higgins, Lee Bermejo, Len Wein, Minutemen, Nite Owl, Ozymandias, Rorschach, Silk Spectre, Watchmen
by Sebastian Suchecki, Feb 1 2012 // 9:00 AM
Coming a few weeks before the major DVD and Blu-Ray release of DC Animated and Warner Premiere’s latest release, Justice League: Doom, comes yet another awesome clip, to continue the story that left us off in the last one.
Last time, the Royal Flush Gang just got a special visit from Batman as they were attempting a routine diamond robbery. Now, we’re getting a bit more of the full team, as the rest of the Justice League shows up to take down the gang.
It’s moments like this that make you wonder why heroes as powerful as Superman or Green Lantern bother with dramatic entrances and quips when, in that time, they could have sent those villains to the moon by now. It’s one thing for Spider-Man or Batman to have quips or one-liners, but Superman? Come on…
Take a look at the clip after the jump and decide for yourself. Grab the flick on DVD and Blu-ray on February 28th.
Continue Reading →
Posted in: Action · Animation · Comics · DC · DC Entertainment · Movies · News · Trailers · Video · Warner Bros
Tagged: Alexis Denisof, Justice League: Doom, Kevin Conroy, Michael Rosenbaum, Nathan Fillion, Phil Morris, Superman, Tim Daly, Warner Premiere