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New plot details for Iron Man 3

31 May

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Iron Man 3’s collection of villains appears to be tieing together, with Latino Review revealing some new plot details courtesy of a source at Marvel Studios. Naturally there are potential spoilers ahead, so read on with caution.

First and foremost is the apparent confirmation that Ben Kingsley will be playing The Mandarin, Iron Man’s seminal comic-book nemesis and the scientific genius who eventually gets his hands on the mystical ten rings.

However, while Mandarin’s status in the comic-books is as Iron Man’s most nefarious enemy, in this film he’ll be playing a supporting role to Guy Pearce’s primary antagonist, the scientist Aldrich Killian. Killian is the man responsible for creating the Extremis project which he will use to power hisnew “Extremis Army”.

Said army is where new cast additions James Badge Dale and Ashley Hamilton come in. They will play Coldblood and Firepower respectively, a pair of super-powered individuals who derive their powers from Killian’s pioneering technology.

The final reveal is that the Patriot Armour, a cross between Iron Man’s suit and Captain America’s design aesthetic, will make an appearance in the new film. How exactly it will figure in the story remains to be seen, but leaked on-set images have shown that it will play a role somewhere along the line.

Plenty to digest there then, and plenty of time to do so, as Iron Man 3 will open in the UK on 3 May 2013.

Casino Royale’s Mads Mikkelsen looks set to sign up to do battle in Thor 2

25 May

With production underway on the first Marvel movie of 2013, Iron Man 3, it’s soon going to be the turn of Thor 2 to head before the cameras. Thor 2 arrives half a year after Iron Man 3, with a current release date of November 15th 2013. And already we know that Chris Hemsworth is reprising the title role, and that Natalie Portman, Idris Elba and Jaimie Alexander are all back, too.

But who will be playing the villain? Well, according to Variety, it’s Mads Mikkelsen who is on the project’s radar. Mikkelsen has villainous form, of course, having played Le Chiffre in Casino Royale.

Mikkelsen’s exact role in Thor 2 has yet to be confirmed, however. But we do know that Game Of Thrones’ Alan Taylor is directing the film.

Marvel increases the budget of Iron Man 3

25 May

After the massive success of The Avengers, Marvel stumps up more cash for the upcoming Iron Man 3…

Filming has begun on Iron Man 3, and it appears that the success of The Avengers will have an impact on the production. For starters, after all, it’s the first Marvel movie post-Joss Whedon’s massive hit. Iron Man 3 director Shane Black is thus charged with following that, and delivering the best Iron Man movie to date. No pressure, then.

But he’s getting some extra help from Marvel. Off the back of the succes of The Avengers, Black’s budget has been increased from an already sizeable $140m to $200m. Obviously all the important elements such as script should be in place given that shooting is underway, but the additional budget should enable Black to ensure that things such as the effects deliver in terms of spectacle. It might pay for some better sarnies on set, too.

The Avengers’ box office domination continues

21 May

We don’t usually report on the continued box office of a movie, but it’s a real pleasure to do so in the case of Joss Whedon’s The Avengers movie. Given that the last movies to break $1bn at the worldwide box office included Transformers 3 and Pirates Of The Caribbean 4, it’s a real pleasure to report on a film that actually deserves its success.

In fact, this past weekend, The Avengers edged past the third Transformers movie to become the fourth biggest film of all time. Its current total stands at $457m in the US, and $1.18bn in total takings worldwide.

Where will it end up? Well, there’s still no absolute direct competition until The Amazing Spider-Man pops along in July. This weekend’s upcoming Men In Black 3 release is likely to usurp it from the top of box office charts (although Universal’s Battleship got swept aside on its US bow this past weekend), but by this time next week, The Avengers will be the fourth biggest film ever at the US box office (it’s about to overtake Star Wars, and Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace), and it’ll be closing in on being the third biggest film of all time. At the moment, that honour is held by Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2, with $1.32bn in the bank.

The Avengers is unlikely to jump much further up. Two James Cameron movies cement the top slots on the all-time (non-inflation adjusted) worldwide box office charts. Titanic, courtesy of its recent re-release, is now up to $2.185bn, whilst Avatar stands alone with $2.782bn. The Avengers has an outside shot at being the third film ever to break $2bn, but it’s likely to fall just a little short of that.

You’d hardly call it a disappointment, though. And we live in hope that, as a result, Joss Whedon gets given the keys to the dream project cupboard, and isn’t asked to give them back anytime soon.

Disney confirms The Avengers 2

10 May

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This is no shock, granted, given that the film has been breaking box office records around the globe. But it’s been made official, so we figured we’d best report it: there’s going to be The Avengers 2.

The announcement was made by Bob Iger, the chairman and CEO of Disney, as part of a conference call with analysts to discuss the firm’s quarterly earnings. It sounds riveting, to be honest, but The Avengers news came as part and parcel of that, hence us telling you about it.

No date was announced, though, but the wise money is pointing towards the summer of 2015.

The Avengers scores record-shattering $200.3m US opening weekend

7 May

Well, crikey. We knew Marvel’s The Avengers was going to be big when it finally arrived in American cinemas this past weekend. But this big? A three day take that beats the entire US runs of The Incredible Hulk, Thor and Captain America? It’s fair to say that the film has exceeded some already sky high expectations.

Off the back of extremely strong reviews, Marvel’s The Avengers has taken $200.3m in its opening weekend, according to industry estimates. It comfortably won the weekend battle – second placed Think Like A Man scored a mere $8m (although that film’s already a solid hit, with $73m in the bank to date). But The Avengers also shattered a few records in the process.

The film now has the biggest opening weekend of all time at the US box office, beating by some distance the $169.1m opening for Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2 last summer. It’s also set records in the US for the biggest gross take on a Saturday ever, a Sunday too, and it’s inevitably therefore become the fastest film to pass the $200m mark at the US box office.

The fact that the film’s takings held up over Saturday and Sunday suggests strong word of mouth, too, and just where the final total for The Avengers in the US will end up is anyone’s guess. With no direct superhero competition until Spider-Man arrives in July, a $600m US take would be our provisional estimate.

It is fair to say that Marvel has won its gamble with its Avengers movie strategy. Batman certainly has a bit of a job on his hands…

The Amazing Spider Man – Official Trailer 2

7 May

Guy Pearce Set For Iron Man 3

21 Apr

Guy Pearce is all over our screens this weekend, starring as wisecracking bruiser Snow in Lockout, and all over this site, too as you can hear him chat about it on the latest Empire Podcast. So it only seems fitting that he’s now lining up a big, exciting new job, with Variety reporting Pearce will appear in Iron Man 3.

Before we proceed with any further info, be warned that even knowing who Pearce will be playing could be considered a spoiler, so those who might cry foul should skip away.

Right then… As has been previously talked about, the plot of Shane Black’s take on Robert Downey Jr’s Tony Stark will draw from Warren Ellis’ Iron Man: Extremis six-issue run on the comics. It’s not all that surprising, since Ellis’ work has been running through the cinematic incarnation of Stark since the first movie.

The third film will see Stark dabbling with nanotechnology, which is created by geneticist Aldrich Killian. When it gets into the hands of terrorists (including, presumably, the recently-cast Sir Ben Kingsley) and a new threat is developed, Tony decides to try his own take on it.

Don Cheadle and Gwyneth Paltrow are slated to be back, and Black, who co-wrote the script with Drew Pearce, will kick off shooting in North Carolina next month. The film is set for release on May 3, 2013.

Pearce (Guy, that is, not Drew) is next slated to appear in Prometheus. So at least he’ll know what he’s getting into in terms of having to stay quiet about plot points…

Film Review : The Avengers

21 Apr

Well. Of all the things you can say about Avengers, it only takes one simple sentiment to do it justice: that was totally worth the wait.

Ever since a small but perfectly-formed teaser at the end of Iron Man heralded the coming of the Avengers, it’s been tough to keep expectations reasonable. For every good Marvel film, there was a bad one. For every reason to get excited, there was a reason to be cautious. A complete disaster seemed unlikely, but anything less than genre-defining brilliance was going to be a let-down.

And to Whedon’s credit, he pulled it off. He didn’t just make the best superhero action film that has ever been made, he somehow did it while making a Joss Whedon film – smart, funny and dramatic, but with all the trappings of a sci-fi action movie presented fully intact. Imagine if Transformers 3 had a plot, a script, actors you liked and comprehensible special effects: that’s what Avengers feels like. It’s all so very… big.

Of course, with seven lead characters, a villain backed by an army and a supporting cast pulled from multiple sources, it could never be anything but. Perhaps the hardest challenge Avengers faced was in maintaining its sense of scale: giving the street-level skills of characters like Captain America, Black Widow and Hawkeye’s a place where they could shine even against the larger-than-life exploits of Iron Man, Thor and The Hulk. And yet, somehow, everyone gets their moment. Most get four or five.

To quote Den of Geek’s own Mike Leader, Avengers was far better than it needed to be. The action beats are there. The character beats are there. But there’s so much more than that too. Whedon knows what the audience expects of an action film in this genre, and he uses that knowledge to pull the rug from under us again and again – sometimes for a joke, sometimes as a plot twist, but also without it ever getting old. It even looks fantastic, proving Whedon as not just a distinguished writer, but a distinguished action director. There’s no question that from now on, he’s going to be Hollywood A-list.

And what of its stars? Each one, fantastic. We know by now that Samuel L Jackson is Nick Fury, and Robert Downey Jr is Tony Stark, so there are no problems there. Hemsworth (Thor), Hiddleston (Loki) and Evans (Captain America) reprise their roles seamlessly. Johansson may have felt like an intrusion on Iron Man 2, but here she finds deservedly equal footing as the Black Widow. Ruffalo is a very different Bruce Banner than his predecessors, and yet the character is so embedded in the public consciousness that the Hulk still becomes, if anything, the film’s breakout star.

And what of Jeremy Renner, the man who has to try and make having a bow and arrow look cool next to an indestructible shield, a hammer that can control storms, and a suit of armour that can break the sound barrier? It’s fair to say that he’s the hardest sell, and Whedon, clearly aware of this, finds him a position in the story that lets him show off his skills early and often. He may never be the most iconic hero, but Hawkeye does carry his weight without becoming the butt of any jokes. Of all the film’s likely difficulties, it’s this one which it’s most surprising to see overcome.

There are places where you can pick at the film’s seemingly-perfect veneer. Despite several thrilling set pieces, the middle act’s action sequence can’t help sagging a little as it tries to give the whole cast something to do. Some of the character arcs are weaker than others (but at least everyone has one.) And maybe, if you’re one of the three people on the planet who hasn’t seen at least some of the lead-ins, you’ll struggle to accept the more outlandish concepts. But in truth, it’s all as close to flawless as makes no difference. No one is going to leave thinking about what spoiled Avengers – you’ll all be leaving with grins.

Perhaps the secret to the film’s success is that Whedon doesn’t just re-use the characters, he gives them all a new story, and new triumphs to find. As the film’s final battle reaches its climax, he takes a second to show each struggling with the enormity of their task, and then finding the strength to continue. It’s a small moment, but a key one. It reminds us that even though they’re gods, and super-soldiers, and geniuses, they’re still people like us: flawed, uncertain, and afraid. It’s not their powers and abilities that make them heroes, but their ability to find new resolve even when they’ve given it all. That, right there, is the very essence of the Marvel Universe brought to life. That’s why we love it. It’s why you will too.

There’s a shot near the film’s climax which manages, in one awe-inspiring moment, to perfectly translate what it feel like to be a superhero fan, reading a superhero comic. To say any more would spoil the surprise, but when you get to it, you’ll know. Of all Avengers’ many triumphs, that’s the one that’ll stick for the fans: it’s a movie that finally matches the one you have in your head.

And yes, there is a post-credits scene. But that’s all we’re saying.

Rating : 10/10

source:denofgeek.com
by:james hunt

The Avengers : Thor Vs Iron Man Clip

17 Apr

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