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.
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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 Douglas Barnett, Dec 26 2011 // 10:00 AM
Merry Christmas to all the fans of Monday Picks. This week’s pick in celebration of the holiday season is Scrooged. Richard Donner (The Omen, Superman I & II, Lethal Weapon series) directs this modern comedy version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.
Bill Murray stars as media mogul Frank Cross, the head of IBC Networks who has risen to the top of the company by being a cynical, conceited, and cruel individual. Frank is in charge of a forty million dollar production of a live television broadcast that is to air on Christmas Eve.
When company executives show Frank the latest commercial for the broadcast, Frank belittles and insults his staff and shows them an incredibly offensive and violent commercial he has produced for the broadcast, which he plans to air in place of the original. Corporate executive Eliot Loudermilk (Bobcat Goldthwait) confronts Frank on the commercial saying that the ad is in poor taste and will frighten people. Frank goes along with Loudermilk’s suggestion and then has him fired just days before Christmas.
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Posted in: Blu-Ray · Classics · Comedy · DVD · DVD Reviews · Holiday · Monday Picks · Reviews
Tagged: Alfre Woodard, Bill Murray, Bobcat Goldthwait, Brian Doyle-Murray, Carol Kane, David Johansen, John Glover, John Murray, Karen Allen, richard donner, Robert Mitchum
by Chris Ullrich, Dec 21 2011 // 10:30 AM
Lists are fun. Lists are, at least in some cases, easy to create. In this case, the list in question for today is The Five Best Movies Adapted From Comics.
I know what you’re thinking. Why five? Well, it sorta works with the word “Flickcast” and we’re fans of alliteration around here, so that’s one reason. Of course, it also means I only need to come up with five items to fill the list, so that might have something to do with it too. I’ll never tell.
I’m also in the process of preparing a list of the worst movies adapted from comics as well because what’s a “best” list without a “worst” list, right? Right.
However, in this case, we’re talking best. And do we have a lot of great “best” ones to choose from. That’s not a question, we do.
The ones I’ve chosen are not only great examples of comic book adaptations done right, they’re also great movies too. From a clever screenplay to expert direction, exciting visuals, to compelling characters and performances, these five films deliver on many levels and also manage to demonstrate a real love for their source material.
Okay, enough setup. On with the listing of the things.
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Posted in: Comics · Flickcast Five · Movies · News
Tagged: Captain America, Chris Evans, Christian Bale, Christopher Nolan, Christopher Reeve, Edgar Wright, Gene Hackman, Heath Ledger, Hugo Weaving, Iron Man, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Michael Cera, richard donner, Robert Downey Jr., Sam Raimi, Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World, Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, Superman: The Movie, The Dark Knight, Toby Maguire
by Sebastian Suchecki, Jul 29 2011 // 7:00 AM
Tales from the Crypt, the campy-yet-excellent horror staple of the early 90s television, is back in news as producers are hoping to reignite that spark once again with a modern reboot. After 15 years of being off the small screen, the horror series will be returning to television.
The new series is being developed by Gil Adler, a producer on the original HBO series, and Andrew Cosby, best known for his work on Eureka. The hour-long series will be based on the comics. Unlike it’s predecessor, the new series will not follow the anthology format, but will follow a standard series format using the characters in an ongoing storyline format.
Those of you who read the original comic books will see this is a strange turn of events as the comics didn’t have much in the way of returning characters. Other than The Crypt-Keeper, The Vault-Keeper and The Old Witch, all other characters and the “victims” of the stories always changed. It is also being reported that The Crypt-Keeper, The Vault-Keeper and The Old Witch are not going to be part of the new series.
The original HBO series, which spawned collectibles and movies through out the 90s, ran for seven seasons. It attracted an impressive stable of directors and actors including Robert Zemeckis, Dan Aykroyd, Steve Buscemi, Tim Curry, Whoopi Goldberg, Teri Hatcher, Kirk Douglas, Joe Pesci, Brad Pitt, Ewan McGregor, Malcom McDowell, Bob Hoskins, Brooke Sheilds, Benicio Del Toro, Demi Moore, Martin Sheen, Richard Donner, Walter Hill, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tom Hanks, William Friedkin, Tobe Hoober and Michael J. Fox.
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Posted in: Announcements · Comedy · Horror · Movies · News · Reboots and Remakes · Sci-Fi · TV
Tagged: Andrew Cosby, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Benicio Del Toro, Bob Hoskins, Brad Pitt, Brooke Sheilds, Dan Aykroyd, Demi Moore, ewan mcgregor, Gil Adler, Hank Azaria, HBO, Joe Pesci, Kirk Douglas, Malcom McDowell, Martin Sheen, richard donner, Robert Zemeckis, Steve Buscemi, Tales from the Crypt, Teri Hatcher, The Crypt-Keeper, The Vault Keeper, Tim Curry, Tobe Hoober, Tom Hanks, Walter Hill, Whoopi Goldberg, William Friedkin
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 1 2011 // 12:00 PM
Look, up in the sky! It’s a bird, it’s a plane, no it’s…a definitive blu-ray collection of Superman movies?
2011 is a year filled to the brim with superhero cinema and the folks over at Warner Home Video think that now is the perfect time to roll out the most comprehensive high-definition collection of Superman films of all time. Combining all four movies with Christopher Reeve and 2006′s reboot-ish Superman Returns, this set promises to be the ultimate collection of Superman’s first cinematic era.
Boasting both Donner extended cuts of the first two films and over 20 hours of special features, this release is as stacked as could possibly be. There is a lot of similarity in this Blu-Ray’s feature list and the Ultimate Collector’s DVD set that came out in 2006, however, several of the key features have been converted to HD, including the Donner cuts and the wonderful Look, Up in the Sky! documentary.
A full list of features and the Blu-Ray anthology’s trailer can be found after the jump.
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Posted in: Action · Blu-Ray · Comics · DC · DVD · Movies · News · Trailers · Warner Bros
Tagged: brandon routh, Bryan Singer, Christopher Reeve, richard donner, Superman, Superman 2, Superman 3, Superman 4, Superman Returns, Warner Bros