Film Review : Prometheus
31 MayHe refused to show us an Alien in the sensational trailers (‘Aaaaah! Aaaaah!’), he wouldn’t even use the word ‘Alien’ in the title, but Ridley Scott gives us one almost immediately in Prometheus’ opening scene. Not the kind you’re expecting, mind.
Breathtaking stereoscopic shots swoop across a gorgeous landscape. Black mountains wreathed in volcanic steam, glassy lakes and, at the top of a crashing waterfall, a tiny man. Only he’s not tiny. He’s not a man. Like an extra-terrestrial Greek titan, this tower of muscle flexes inside smooth pale skin. And then dies.
Creation and destruction are the twin-burners of Jon Spaihts and Damon Lindelof’s ambitious screenplay, which bricks up an epic new mythology around the tantalisingly unexplained image of the space jockey in Scott’s original 1979 space-horror.
It’s 2093, three decades before Ellen Ripley’s first bug-hunt, and we’re aboard another starship funded by sinister mega-corporation Weyland Industries. Joining the 17-man crew are scientist couple Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Charlie (Logan Marshall-Green), who’ve discovered that etchings from every ancient civilisation on Earth have all left clues to the same faraway planet.
Their mission: to discover where we come from – and why. Once they touch down, we’re on familiar ground: the crew begin exploring a giant hollow labyrinthine of tunnels and, uh-oh, something sticky leaking from countless cylinders stored deep within one of the chambers…
Game over, man, game over. But if we’re been here before, Prometheus inhabits the host mythology without becoming suffocated by it. Pulling its own twists on many of the queasier elements of the quadrilogy, it tightens its grip slowly, making us wait until what’s out there gets in here.
Proving how wasted she was in Sherlock Holmes: Game Of Shadows, Rapace is a gentle, driven proto-Ripley who mirrors nicely with Charlize Theron’s glacial mission leader Meredith Vickers, strutting tightly in a witty silver-grey suit.
But it’s the brilliantly constructed character of Prometheus’ android – sorry, synthetic person – David (Michael Fassbender) that provides much of the movie’s dramatic frisson. We first discover him alone on the ship, spinning a basketball on his fingertip, bleaching his hair and – in the movie’s loveliest invention – studying Peter O’Toole’s performance in Lawrence Of Arabia.
Owning every scene he steps into, Fassbender once again proves a truly magnetic screen presence, balancing Bishop’s even-mannered likeability with Ash’s unsettling lack of empathy.
Now if only they’d cast O’Toole himself as Peter Weyland instead of Guy Pearce, unrecognisable behind melty-faced prosthetics. “I didn’t think you had it in you,” quips David, in a wry moment that Prometheus could have used more of.
Truth be told, the rest of the cast – Idris Elba’s effortlessly sardonic captain aside – are bug food for the film’s skin-crawlingly effective antagonists. Ooze trickles, tentacles coil and gore splatters, not least in the movie’s standout scene, involving Noomi Rapace and some desperate surgery.
Back in the sci-fi genre for the first time since 1982’s Blade Runner, director Ridley Scott has always been more at home with Big Spectacle than Big Ideas. And sure enough, once people start dying, Prometheus’ ambitious thematic payload goes straight out of the airlock.
But Scott’s movie is flawlessly designed, with the beautiful 3D cinematography contrasting the clean white futurism of Prometheus’ interiors with the black corporeal surfaces of the alien catacombs.
It might not pack the unbearable menace or blazing horror of the saga’s first two movies, but it utterly eclipses the last two. It’s exciting, tense and fully impregnated for sequels…
Rating : 8/10
Source:Totalfilm
By: johnathoncrockers
Release date confirmed for Sin City sequel
20 MayProducton starts this summer on the eagerly-awaited follow up to the first Sin City movie, with Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller once again stepping behind the camera. This time, the film’s going to be called Sin City: A Dame To Kill For, William Monahan has penned the script, and Mickey Rourke and Jessica Alba are the latest faces confirmed to return.
We also, though, have the small matter of a release date for the movie. Dimension Films has put out a statement revealing that Sin City: A Dame To Kill For is set for release on October 4th 2013. We’re assuming that it’s the US release date that’s being referred to, rather than a global roll-out on that day. But we might be wrong.
Kick-Ass 2: Matthew Vaughn To Write & Produce But Not Direct
10 MayUniversal Pictures has given the green light to a Kick-Ass sequel, but the original films’s director Matthew Vaughn will only write and produce the film, not direct, reports Heat Vision.
Instead, Vaughn has “hand-picked” Jeff Wadlow (Never Back Down) to direct the project instead.
Vaughn has written the script for the follow-up, which adapts not only the Kick-Ass 2 comic book storyline but also the Hit-Girl spin-off series that goes on sale next month. The Hit-Girl storyline will be the first act of the movie.
The original Kick-Ass film, which was distributed by Lionsgate and self-financed by Vaughn, was made for $30 million and earned $96.2 million worldwide in 2010.
The film is expected to start shooting in September starts with Aaron Johnson, Chloe Moretz and Christopher Mintz-Plasse all rumoured to be reprising their roles.
Sin City Sequel Finally Swings Into Production
13 AprAfter what seems an eternity in Development Hell, Sin City sequel A Dame To Kill For is finally on the verge of going into production.
A press release from Dimension Films announces, “Filmmakers Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, along with producer Alexander Rodnyansky, have announced that production will commence on the highly anticipated sequel to 2005’s Sin City, entitled Sin City: A Dame To Kill For. The film will be produced by AR Films and Quick Draw Productions, financed through AR Films U.S and released domestically by Dimension Films.”
“The first question I am always asked is ‘When will you make another Sin City?’ says Rodriquez in the press release. “I have wanted to re-team with Frank Miller and return to the world he created since the day we wrapped the original, but have felt a duty to the fans to wait until we had something truly exceptional that would meet and exceed what have become epic expectations. A Dame To Kill For will certainly be worth the wait.”
Sin City creator, screenwriter and co-director Frank Miller adds, “The first Sin City knocked out audiences who had never seen anything like it before. Robert Rodriguez and I are going to shake things up and deliver a ferocious film experience that is going to go even further than the first.”
The script and details of the film’s story are being kept tightly under wraps. Casting will begin next week, with many of the original cast expected to return. Sin City: A Dame to Kill For was developed by Frank Miller based upon his graphic novel, with a screenplay by Frank Miller and Academy Award winner William Monahan (The Departed). The film is expected to begin production this summer at Rodriguez’s Troublemaker Studios in Austin, Texas.
Producer Alexander Rodnyansky says, “We are delighted to continue our relationship with Robert Rodriguez and Quick Draw Productions. It is a rare opportunity to produce and finance a film with the high profile and enormous fan base of the Sin City franchise. AR FIlms will be managing worldwide sales of Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, as well as Robert’s Machete Kills at the Cannes Film Festival in May.”

































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