sponsorlink
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Movies
  • TV
  • New Media
  • Comics
  • Games
  • Tech
  • Geek
  • About

Posts Tagged ‘mark ruffalo’


The Flickcast Presents: Shannon’s Top 10 Movies of 2010 – Part 1

by Shannon Hood, Jan 5 2011 // 9:00 AM

I was surprised at how much trouble I had narrowing down my top ten movies this year.  My top 20 were all very close, but here are the movies that I ultimately enjoyed the most. I readily admit that I did not see near as many foreign films as I would have liked, but by the time I cover most of the mainstream fare, there is simply no time left.

Honorable Mentions: Fair Game, Tiny Furniture, Greenberg, Cyrus, The Tillman Story, The American, Mother and Child, Scott Pilgrim.

10. Waiting for Superman
This Documentary was equal parts frustrating, inspirational, and heartbreaking. Director Davis Guggenheim (No End in Sight) sheds light on the dismal state of our public school system. He follows the plight of several children who live in various geographic regions who are placing all of their hope for an decent education into lottery systems for charter or private schools. Guggenheim relies on their compelling stories for a narrative, while interspersing lots of graphics and cartoons illuminating some pretty harrowing statistics.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Best of 2010 · Exclusive · Features · Flickcast Presents · Movies
Tagged: 127 Hours, Aaron Eckhart, Aaron Sorkin, Amy Adams, Annette Bening, Aron Ralston, Ballet, Barbara Hershey, Ben Affleck, Blue Valentine, Chris Cooper, Christian Bale, Danny Boyle, Darren Aronofsky, David Fincher, Davis Guggenheim, Debra Granik, Facebook, hailee steinfeld, James Cameron Mitchell, James Franco, Jeff Bridges, Jennifer Lawrence, jesse eisenberg, Julianne Moore, Justin TImberlake, Lisa Cholodenko, Maria Bello, mark ruffalo, Mark Wahlberg, Matt Damon, Melissa Leo, Michelle Williams, Natalie Portman, Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole, Revenge Movies, Rosemarie DeWittBlack Swan, Ryan Gosling, Swan Lake, the Coen brothers, The Company Men, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The Social Network, Tommy Lee Jones, Trent Reznor, true grit, Waiting for "Superman", Westerns, Winter's Bone


First ‘Avengers’ Teaser from Comic-Con Makes it Online

by Chris Ullrich, Aug 5 2010 // 8:00 AM

In a lot of cases I wouldn’t bother with something like this. It doesn’t really show anything nor does it give us any clues to the story, villains or much of anything else about the movie. So why show it at all? Well, because it’s for Marvel’s upcoming Avengers movie and I think it will be awesome. Also, why not?

In this very early teaser made especially for Comic-Con, we get Samuel L. Jackson narrating and telling us that on a certain day earth’s mightiest heroes decided to team up, form the Mother F***ing Avengers and kick some considerable ass. Obviously, if you know anything about comics you probably already know that. Plus, as we’ve been following this story for quite some time, you also know most of the actors in the film as well as the writers and director.

Still, the idea of  Joss Whedon directed Avengers movie featuring Scarlett Johansson, Robert Downey Jr., Clark Gregg, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Samuel L. Jackson, Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo is just too great an idea to pass up on any information, no matter how slight.

So, enjoy the teaser after the jump for what it is and expect a heck of a lot more info from this movie, and all the Marvel properties, as soon as it becomes available.

The Avengers assemble in theaters on May 4, 2012.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Comic-Con · Comics · Marvel · Marvel Studios · News · Trailers · Video
Tagged: Captain America, Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Clark Gregg, Iron Man, Jeremy Renner, Joss Whedon, mark ruffalo, Marvel, Movies, Robert Downey Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, Scarlett Johansson, SDCC10, The Avengers, Thor


Indie Review: ‘The Kids Are All Right’

by Grace Suh, Jul 30 2010 // 12:00 PM

The Kids Are All Right opens with shots of 18-year-old Joni (a wonderful Mia Wasikowska) playing scrabble with friends and 15-year-old Laser (Josh Hutcherson) sniffing a crushed Sudafed with his skateboarding buddy Clay, all to Vampire Weekend’s “Cousins.” Joni and Laser are gorgeous, smart and nice. Despite the minor drug use and usual teenager angsts, they are, for the most part, very much all right.

But this movie is really about their parents—their mother Nic, a perfectionist, workaholic OB-Gyn (played by Annette Bening, who has made a career specialty out of wound-tight women), and their other mother, easy-going, nurturing earth girl Jules (a very fine Julianne Moore), who has maybe let her life slide past her. A long-married couple, Nic and Jules have, as parents do, put their kids first for so long that they have lost touch with themselves and each other.

And yet they remain very self-aware and caring people. When they question Clay’s rightness as a friend, it comes couched in a language of earnest self-actualization and higher consciousness that is both insightful and ridiculous: “It’s just that he seems… untended.” And “Is he the kind of friend who will help you grow?”

Untended Joni and Laser certainly are not. Nic and Jules are extremely conscientious parents, and a great deal of the humor in the early part of this film comes from the overmothering Joni and Laser endure. Nevertheless, Laser feels the lack of a male role model and it is at his urging that Joni, having recently turned eighteen, the age at which she can legally request contact, learns the identity of their sperm donor and gets in touch with him.

The sperm donor is Paul, played by the miraculous Mark Ruffalo, who can shade a dozen layers of feeling and thought into a single moment. I’ve sometimes found that his extraordinary openness can come off as ambivalence, but his characterization of Paul is founded on a bedrock of emotion. Paul is not only open to contact with Joni and Laser, he welcomes it.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Indie · Movies · Reviews
Tagged: Annette Bening, Comedy, Focus Features, Josh Hutcherson, Juliane Moore, Lesbian, Lisa Cholodenko, mark ruffalo, Mia Wasikowska, The Kids Are All Right


Mark Ruffalo To Be The New Hulk In ‘The Avengers’

by Shannon Hood, Jul 24 2010 // 2:30 PM

We sat on this news yesterday (and even speculated about it previously), because it did not appear to be confirmed, but several outlets are now reporting that Mark Ruffalo is confirmed as the new Hulk.  The beloved Marvel character experienced a setback when it was announced that Edward Norton would no longer be playing the character.

This week has been filled with lots of conjecture over who would reprise the role. Late yesterday, it was announced that Mark Ruffalo would take over the role. Ruffalo has been a strong character actor in Shutter Island, You Can Count On Me, Blindness, and Zodiac.

He will  be playing the role for the upcoming Avengers movie, featuring Chris Evans as Captain America, Robert Downey Jr. as Ironman, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow, Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury, Jeremy Renner as Hawkeye, and Don Cheadle as War Machine.

The Avengers is scheduled for May 2012.

Posted in: Casting · Marvel Studios · News
Tagged: mark ruffalo, The Avengers, The Hulk


Mark Ruffalo May Be Bruce Banner/The Hulk In Whedon’s ‘Avengers’

by Chris Ullrich, Jul 15 2010 // 7:00 AM

Well, that didn’t take very long, did it? No sooner did Ed Norton get the boot off of Marvel Studios’ The Avengers (or left for “creative differences”) we already have a strong contender to take over the role. His name is Mark Ruffalo and you may know him from his many appearances in films such as The Last Castle, Zodiac and the recent Shutter Island.

According to the report, the deal is now in “late-stage discussions” between Marvel and Rufflo’s brand-new agency United Talent for the actor to play this key member of The Avengers. Like Norton, Ruffalo is a very capable actor who brings something extra to each role he plays. But unlike Norton, he isn’t a movie star but more like an accomplished character actor. This may actually serve the film better.

Even though I enjoyed Norton’s work in The Incredible Hulk, his on-set reputation isn’t one of collaboration. Instead, most reports paint him as quite the diva and “difficult” to work with. Not something you want on a big budget ensemble film as important as The Avengers.

Ruffalo, in contrast, is almost universally regarded as a “good guy” and easy to work with. With the actors being relatively equivalent talent-wise, why wouldn’t Marvel want to work with the nice guy? Seems like a solid decision to me.

Posted in: Casting · Comics · Drama · Marvel · Marvel Studios · Movies · News
Tagged: Business, Casting, Edward Norton, Joss Whedon, mark ruffalo, Rumors, The Avengers, The Incredible Hulk


Review: ‘Date Night’

by Shannon Hood, Apr 9 2010 // 1:00 PM

I had a great time at Date Night. You would be hard pressed to find more likable leads than Tina Fey and Steve Carrell, who have great chemistry together as boring New Jersey couple Claire and Phil Foster. Stuck in a serious domestic rut that many of you will recognize all too well, the two decide to shake up their usual date night of frequenting the same restaurant and ordering the same dishes on the same night every week.

They get dolled up and head to Manhattan to the über trendy seafood restaurant, “Claws.”  A rude host scoffs at their hopes for getting a table, and the two head to the bar.  Just as they are getting ready to leave, another hostess goes through the bar, calling out for “Tripplehorn, party of two.”

Phil decides to seize the moment and do something spontaneous for once in his life, and he says that they are the Tripplehorns. The two enjoy a fancy dinner with wine, delight over a Will.i am celebrity sighting and make fun of stuffy restaurant patrons.

They are approached by two strange men who approach the table and tell the couple that they have something to discuss with them.  Outside the restaurant, Claire and Phil immediately discover that the real Tripplehorns are messed up with some bad people, and those bad people want a flash drive that belongs to them back.  Guns are drawn, and the Fosters try to explain that it’s a case of mistaken identity, but the thugs don’t believe them, and the Fosters have to improvise their way out of the predicament.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: 20th Century Fox · Action · Comedy · Movies · Reviews
Tagged: 30 Rock, Action, Comedy, Common, Date Night, James Franco, Jimmi Simpson, Kristen Wiig, Leighton Meester, mark ruffalo, Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Ray Liotta, Steve Carell, Taraji P. Henson, The Office, Tina Fey, William Fichtner


Review: ‘Shutter Island’

by Shannon Hood, Feb 19 2010 // 10:00 AM

Martin Scorsese’s latest potboiler bears the unmistakable markings of a classic film noir. Cigarette smoke  hangs heavy in the air  and tendrils about the characters, almost taking on a life of its own. Dream sequences become engulfed in flames and smoke. The camera lingers on one character taking a drag off of a cigarette and inhaling the smoke directly into his nostrils.

The smoke  is so pervasive that I kept thinking there has to be a reason for it, beyond atmosphere.  My conclusion is that the smoke is an allegorical symbol for “smoke and mirrors”, quite apropo because on Shutter Island, nothing is as it appears.

Leonardo DiCaprio (with a thick Boston accent) plays Teddy Daniels, a U.S. Marshal who has been summoned to the mysterious Shutter Island, a foreboding chunk of land surrounded by rocky precipices. This makes the island ideal for housing dangerous and severely disturbed psychiatric patients. The movie takes place in 1954, when psychiatric patients were routinely given lobotomies, and other “treatments” were inflicted that are considered unethical and inhumane today.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Drama · Movies · Mystery and Suspense · Paramount · Reviews
Tagged: Ben Kingsley, Emily Mortimer, film noir, Jackie Earle Haley, Leonardo DiCaprio, mark ruffalo, Martin Scorsese, Max Von Sydow, Movies, mystery, Patricia Clarkson, suspense


First Trailer for Steve Carell and Tina Fey in ‘Date Night’

by Sebastian Suchecki, Nov 12 2009 // 9:00 AM

datenight-thumb-500x694-1895Fans of comedy and episodic TV have nothing but good thoughts come to mind when they hear the names Steve Carell and Tina Fey. Both The Office and 30 Rock have dominated comedy on network TV for quite some time now, so it would only make sense that a film showcasing both of them together would be epic, no? Probably not, after seeing the trailer for their newest film, Date Night.

The film is about a bored and boring married couple who decide to spice things up by lying to a hostess at a restaurant about their reservations, thus taking another couple’s name and table. One crazy happenstance after another then occurs, and our beloved couple is now on the run from gangsters. Add to that premise the reluctant hero from Get Smart and the neurotic lead from Baby Mama and you’ve got this 90-minute comedy.

The film is padded with a pretty big supporting cast, hoping to drag the audiences in. Mark Wahlberg, James Franco, Ray Liotta, Mark Ruffalo, Mila Kunis, Leighton Meester, and even Olivia Munn are all in the film, with Shawn Levy, director of the Night At The Museum films, sitting in the director’s chair.

Check out the first theatrical trailer after the jump, Be sure to catch Date Night in theaters on April 9th, 2010.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: 20th Century Fox · Casting · Comedy · Movies · News · Trailers
Tagged: Date Night, James Franco, Leighton Meester, mark ruffalo, Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Olivia Munn, Ray Liotta, Shawn Levy, Steve Carell, Tina Fey


DVD Review: ‘The Brothers Bloom’

by Cortney Zamm, Oct 2 2009 // 11:30 AM

brothers-bloomDirector Rian Johnson hit it out of the park with his first film Brick (2005), a small, quirky indie film with a grade-A cast and some amazing style. The Brothers Bloom looked just as good, but unfortunately had a small run and I was unable to see it in theaters.

The film centers around two brothers, Stephen and Bloom, who after being orphaned and shuffled between various foster homes, become con men to make it in the world. They’re rather good at it, but after having made a name for themselves, Bloom decides he wants out. The two brothers, along with their sidekick and explosives specialist Bang-Bang, plan the perfect con to go out on: showing a reclusive but beautiful heiress, Penelope, a good time on a  journey across the globe. Problem is, Bloom can’t con a woman without falling in love in the process.

This film’s story makes it stand out. Because it’s a movie about con men, it’s hard to know when to trust what’s going on as the absolute truth. The movie will trick you, but that’s what makes it great to watch for the first time. You’ll be guessing the brothers, especially Stephen, at every turn.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Comedy · Drama · DVD · DVD Reviews · Movies · Reviews
Tagged: adrien brody, mark ruffalo, Rachel Weisz, rian johnson


New ‘Wild Things’ Poster and Banners

by Cortney Zamm, Sep 10 2009 // 3:30 PM

wild-thingsWe’re very excited here at The Flickcast for Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are. While the film is still a month away, we’ve brought you featurettes, trailers, and more coverage for the film than you could shake a stick at. Now, four new character banners and a new poster just debuted on Myspace’s blog for the film!

The new banners showcase three “Wild Things” Judith, Carol, KW, and Max, the main character as played by Max Records. In addition to Records as “Max”,  the film features James Gandolfini, Catherine O’Hara, Lauren Ambrose, Mark Ruffalo, and Forrest Whitaker. Where The Wild Things Are hits theaters and IMAX October 16th.

You can view the four character banners and poster after the jump.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Movies · Photos · Posters · Warner Bros
Tagged: James Gandolfini, Lauren Ambrose, mark ruffalo, Max Records, Spike Jonze, Where the Wild things Are


New Trailer for ‘Where the Wild Things Are’

by Sebastian Suchecki, Aug 7 2009 // 10:30 AM

wildthingsareNow that the Summer blockbuster season has settled down and most of the tent pole films for the year have been put to bed, it’s time for the sleeper hits of 2009 to shine. The Fall is a pretty big time for films like District 9, Gamer, and of course Where the Wild Things Are to take over the box office in a substantial way.

The first trailer for Where the Wild Things Are hit a few months back, and didn’t show us very much. Still, we knew that director Spike Jonze, who was the mastermind behind this stroke of genius, would do the children’s book classic. We now get a new trailer filled with plenty of footage of the titular “wild things” and surprisingly lots of James Gandolfini.

Also starring Forest Whitaker, Catherine Ohara, Lauren Ambrose, Mark Ruffalo, Catherine Keener, and Max Records, Warner’s Where the WIld Things Are hits screens October 16th nationwide.

Check it out the brand new trailer after the jump.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Comedy · Drama · Filmmaking · Indie · Movies · News · Trailers · Warner Bros
Tagged: Catherine Keener, Catherine Ohara, Forest Whitaker, James Gandolfini, Lauren Ambrose, mark ruffalo, Max Records, Spike Jonze, Warner Bros, Where the Wild things Are


Review: ‘The Brothers Bloom’

by David Press, May 18 2009 // 8:49 AM

the brothers bloom poster

“I think you’re constipated in your soul,” Rachel Weisz says to Adrien Brody before going into an orgasmic fit at the oncoming thunderstorm in Rian Johnson’s second film, The Brothers Bloom. That was the peak of Weisz’s eccentric and electric role as Penelope, the mark of Adrien Brody’s Bloom and Mark Ruffalo’s Stephen Bloom.

Ruffalo’s Stephen Bloom is the storyteller, the man with the set-up, writing all the key roles and setting up the players. Brody plays Bloom, (Bloom?), the heartthrob, the bait if you will, that gets the women the men con. Tired of having a scripted life setup by his brother Stephen, Bloom sets off to live “a life that is unwritten.”  Just to be lured back into one final con: to get what everyone really wants.  The mark is Weisz’s Penelope a shut-in “rich bitch from New Jersey,” as Brody says.

The con is to swindle Penelope out of her bottomless treasure trove of riches in the name of getting a priceless book, which is really mostly scrap paper. The plan is to include her in the action. Through this, Stephen the storyteller introduces us to the world that he and his brother interact with including a cast of colorful characters such as Robbie Coltrane’s farting Belgian The Curator, and Maximilian Schell’s Diamond Don, and the brother’s nitroglycerin expert Bang Bang played with Chaplin-esque silent comedy by Babel‘s Rinko Kikuchi.

That setup really is just a con to get everyone involved. The perfect con, or as Ruffalo likes to say, is “to give everyone what they want.” To give Penelope an adventure, to live a life to which all of her separate and unique abilities can be put to use, and to give his younger brother a good life with a woman he can live with.  This is literally the sole purpose of Stephen’s final con-to give everyone what they want, including himself with heart breaking results.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Reviews
Tagged: adrien brody, mark ruffalo, Rachel Weisz, rian johnson, the brothers bloom



Newer Entries →

Lijit Search

Follow us @TheFlickcast
Find us on Facebook


rss Subscribe via RSS
microphone Subscribe via iTunes

Recent Articles

  • The First Teaser for the Next James Bond Flick, ‘Skyfall’
  • Monday Picks: ‘The Warriors’
  • Box Office Report: ‘The Avengers’ Sunk Peter Berg’s ‘Battleship’
  • Check This Out: ‘Lazy Sunday 2′ From SNL
  • Movie Review: ‘Battleship’
  • Movie Review: ‘What to Expect When You’re Expecting’
  • Check This Out: ‘Game Of Thrones’ Theme Done Entirely by Floppy Drives
  • More articles ...

Podcast Episodes

  • The Bitcast: Episode 10 – Games of the Year: 2011
  • The Bitcast: Episode 9 ‘The Few. The Proud’
  • The Bitcast – Episode 5: “Mario Kills Tanooki!”
  • The Bitcast – Episode 2: ‘The Beancast’
  • The Bitcast – Episode 1: ‘Welcome to the Bitcast’
  • Exclusive: Jason Mewes Talks Comic-Con 2011, Live Podcasts, & ‘The Book of Pure Evil’
  • The Flickcast – Episode 99: 99 Problems
  • The Flickcast – Episode 98: Django!
  • More episodes ...





3D 20th Century Fox ABC Action Activision AMC Android Apple Avatar Avengers Batman Blu-Ray Box Office Call of Duty Capcom Captain America Casting Chris Evans Chris Hemsworth Chuck Comedy Comic-Con Comics Community DC Deadpool Disney Drama DVD E3 Fox Games Google Green Lantern Harry Potter HBO Horror iOS iPad iPhone iPhone 4 Iron Man Iron Man 2 iTunes J.J. Abrams James Cameron Joel McHale Joss Whedon Kick-Ass Lost Marvel Marvel Studios Matt Fraction Microsoft Movies Music NBC Netflix News Nintendo Paramount PC Games Playstation 3 Podcasts PS3 Reviews Robert Downey Jr. Ryan Reynolds San Diego Comic-Con Sci-Fi SDCC SDCC09 SDCC10 SDCC11 Smallville Software Sony Spider-Man Star Trek Star Wars Superman SXSW SyFy Tech The Avengers The Office The Walking Dead Thor Trailer Trailers TV Twilight Video Video Games Warner Bros Wii Wolverine X-Men Xbox 360 Zombies






Advertising and Sponsorship

If you have a product or service you'd like to advertise on The Flickcast website or podcast or want to sponsor one or more episodes of the show, please contact us via the info below.


Contact Us

Got questions, comments, suggestions or just need attention?
info [at] theflickcast [dot] com

Got tips on upcoming events, casting news or other tidbits you're dying to share?
tips [at] theflickcast [dot] com

Got a gadget, game, movie, comic or TV show you want us to review?
pr [at] theflickcast [dot] com

For more contact methods, go here.


Copyright © 2009-2012 The Flickcast and 1222 Studios, LLC. All rights reserved.


Designed by Robert Palmer | Powered by WordPress | Hosted at Media Temple

Who We Are

The Flickcast is about movies, TV, comics, games, tech, pop culture and all things geek. From Star Wars to BSG to Star Trek, Citizen Kane, The Dark Knight, X-Men, Avengers, Green Lantern, Call of Duty, Assassin's Creed, Apple, the iPhone, iPad, Android, gadgets and more, The Flickcast team will discuss, debate, entertain and enlighten with critical and insightful commentary on entertainment and pop culture of the past, present and future. Find out More.