January 2011 Archives

'Mortal Kombat' to return with new live-action digital series, video game

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Mortal Kombat: Rebirth - Promo Feature
 
Editor's note: Intense violence in the above video, however, the text below is safe.

Director Kevin Tancharoen's "Mortal Kombat: Rebirth" promo film took a familiar franchise and remixed it into a dark, gritty YouTube sensation.

The self-produced $7,500 short film hit the Internet like a deadly blow from a martial arts master surpassing 10 million online video views.

Last week, Warner Bros. announced a new live-action digital series (inspired by the young filmmaker's vision) to debut this Spring in conjunction with a new video game release.

Tancharoen (2009's "Fame") will helm the series project which will delve into the histories of a number of popular Mortal Kombat characters, including Liu Kang, Scorpion and Johnny Cage.

The promotional film featured actors Michael Jai White (Black Dynamite, The Dark Knight), Jeri Ryan (Star Trek Voyager) and Ian Anthony Dale (The Event). Shadow and Act reports White will appear in the new digital series as well. An official announcement of the cast is expected in the coming weeks, Warner Bros. said in a statement.

The series will be distributed through several "digital retailers" (which may include iTunes, Amazon) and will also offer insight into the gaming universe to be developed by NetherRealm Studios and Kombat creator Ed Boon.

From the Jan. 24 press release:

...a new Mortal Kombat game will be coming out April 19, 2011 on the PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system and the Xbox 360® video game and entertainment system from Microsoft.

 









Henry Cavill cast as Superman

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Superman_casting.jpgNEW YORK (AP) -- British actor Henry Cavill is going up, up and away.

Cavill will star as Superman (and, obviously, Clark Kent) in the next installment of the movie franchise. Warner Bros. Pictures announced the casting Sunday.

The film is to be directed by "300" director Zack Snyder, who says in a statement Cavill is "the perfect choice to don the cape and 'S' shield."

No title has been announced for the film, which is intended to reboot the franchise after its latest incarnation fizzled. The 2006 movie "Superman Returns" was directed by Bryan Singer and starred Brandon Routh as the Man of Steel.

Cavill is relatively unknown. He had been considered for the blockbuster roles of Batman, James Bond and even the previous version of Superman. He co-starred on Showtime's "The Tudors."

Warner Bros. is targeting December 2012 for release.

A finale for one of the Fantastic Four (spoilers)

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Fantastic Four No Mor_1.jpgMore than a few folks were picking on the press for exposing the surprise demise a day ago. That's fair. However, pretty much everyone I spoke to from fan to retailer had already guessed the outcome. Nevertheless, read on. Associated Press reporter Matt Moore talks with Marvel Comics chief creative officer Joe Quesada about the nature of a comic character's death.

-- Robert Meeks  


MATT MOORE
Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) -- It's a Fantastic Four farewell with the revelation Tuesday of who among them has been selected to be written out of the super hero team.

While Marvel Entertainment has made no secret that a member of the quartet, which was introduced in August 1961, would die, exactly who among the group would fall has been a closely held secret, until the release of issue No. 587.

It's the Human Torch, leaving teammates Mr. Fantastic, Invisible Woman and the Thing to pick up the pieces and move forward.

Fifty years after cosmic rays transformed him into a man ablaze, the Human Torch will burn no more as the pop culture purveyor of super heroes and villains embarks on an ambitious story line that ends the Fantastic Four.

In the newest issue of one of the company's longest-running comic books, Johnny Storm's life is taken amid a massive battle that writer Jonathan Hickman has been scripting for a year-and-half. Illustrator Steve Epting did the art.

Hickman, along with his editor, Tom Brevoort, have been unsurprisingly mum on what the future may hold for the characters, but one thing is certain, the end is nigh for the Fantastic Four next month.

Brevoort, senior vice president for publishing at Marvel told The Associated Press that "588 is the final issue of the Fantastic Four. Beyond that, we're not ready to say exactly what we're doing. There won't be an issue 589."

All he would say about the future was that the various subplots and threads that Hickman has written "will converge in a new thing that will be exciting and different and yet, very familiar and very much the same."

Hickman told the AP that the death is part of the natural evolution of his ongoing story line.

"In doing this, we're going to elevate the other three and the family in general and going forward with the story that we want to tell," he said. "I think it makes complete sense. It's kind of a logical move."

Readers have weighed in online, on Twitter and in comic shops about the buildup to the new issue, debating about who should die and who should live.

"Our readers get heavily involved in the lives of these characters. They fight alongside them, they share their triumphs and pitfalls," he said. "They live with them and they grasp them very tightly to their breast. They take them on in a very one to one, very personal sort of way."

But is death really the end and, more so, will it be permanent? After all, death has previously visited the Fantastic Four, which was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

Sue Storm, the Invisible Woman, supposedly died, but that was just a ruse. Similarly, her husband, Reed Richards, aka Mr. Fantastic, was thought dead after being caught in a blast with his archenemy, Dr. Doom. Instead of death, however, Richards and his nemesis were snatched away to another dimension.

Indeed, death is not uncommon in comic books. DC killed Superman in the 1990s, only to bring him back. At Marvel, Captain America was assassinated on the steps of a court house and returned, while Marvel's mutant band of X-Men know death so well that the Grim Reaper is on speed dial -- Thunderbird, Phoenix, Nightcrawler and others have been felled.

Roy Thomas, who was a writer and assistant editor at Marvel in the 1960s and, later, its editor-in-chief from 1972-1974, said that since comics try to mirror real life, death is always a specter.

"The thing that is the most unrealistic is that so few people (have) died, good, bad or otherwise," he said. "If they did, they always managed to come back."

Thomas said he hated to see a member of the Fantastic Four die, but the Human Torch may not be gone forever.

"Whether it's Superman, the Thing or Bucky, if someone wants to bring them back to life later, you can't bury them deep enough or tear them into enough pieces" to keep that from happening. "Death is not a permanent condition in the comic book universe."

Joe Quesada, Marvel's chief creative officer, recognized that death, while potent, is not necessarily lasting and that the death of a character in comics has turned out "to be very cliche" in plot developments.

"Whether the human torch comes back or not is really a question that will be answered in time," he said.

"While I will never discount that a character can come back from the dead because it is one of the staples of comic book story telling . I'm not going to tell you if he will, or when he will and if he does, how he will, but I can assure you that it's going to be very, very interesting and not what anyone expects."

Long Beach main library showing 'Sengoku Basara: Samurai Kings' Saturday

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Set in an "over-the-top" feudal Japan and adapted from the Capcom series of games, "Sengoku Basara: Samurai Kings" will air Saturday from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. for the Teen Anime Club at the Long Beach main library.

Every third Saturday of the month, the library shows an Anime film for free to attendees geared to teens from grades 6 - 12. Library reps said this month's event was moved up a week due to the holidays.

"It's been around for about three years. The previous teen librarians started and we just kept it up," Youth Services librarian Catherine Rayel said.

According to Amazon.com reviews, the series (directed by Itsuro Kawasaki and written by Yasuyuki Muto) takes a fantastical turn with the depiction of historic Shogun warlords, machine guns that fire without end and the attire of the female ninja warriors.

See a trailer to the DVD series above.

The film airs Saturday in the Children's Story Theater. Light snacks will be served.

The Long Beach main library is at 101 Pacific Ave., Long Beach. 562-570-6937.


animeweekend.jpg


 

Anne Hathaway cast as Catwoman in Christopher Nolan's 'The Dark Knight Rises'

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TV Golden Globes Gerv_Meek.jpgActors Anne Hathaway and Tom Hardy will join the cast of Christopher Nolan's upcoming Batman film "The Dark Knight Rises," Warner Bros., said today.

Hathaway ("Get Smart") will play Selina Kyle (Catwoman) and Hardy ("Inception") will battle Christian Bale's Batman in the role of Bane. Readers familiar with the drug-pumped super villain will remember the crippling blow he dealt to the Dark Knight in the comic books.

Fans can also expect more of Nolan's "realistic" film aesthetic to be applied to the characters in this, his third installment to the Batman movie series.

"I am delighted to be working with Tom again and excited to watch him bring to life our new interpretation of one of Batman's most formidable enemies," the filmmaker said in a statement released today.

102877103A.jpgAlso, expect the film (written by David S. Goyer, Jonathan Nolan and Christopher Nolan) to act as a kind of bookend to this trilogy; something Nolan seems to confirm.

"I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with Anne Hathaway, who will be a fantastic addition to our ensemble as we complete our story," he said.

"The Dark Knight Rises" will open in theaters July 20, 2012.



TOP: Anne Hathaway (Evan Agostini/Associated Press) and BELOW: Tom Hardy (Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images) 


Teaser Trailer: HBO's 'Game of Thrones'

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While I can't yet claim to know everything about HBO's latest series effort "Game of Thrones," as an avid TV watcher I can attest to the cable network's commitment to quality original programming.

One would be hard-pressed to sway me from the small screen on Sundays when it was time for the next episode of "The Sopranos" or "The Wire" (or the NFL playoffs).  Now, it's all about "True Blood."

Knowing talents such as writer David Benioff ("25th Hour," 'Troy") and Sean Bean ("Lord of the Rings") are involved has me interested enough to give the first few episodes a try. Can this epic fantasy project cast its spell on a big viewing audience?

Its got a shot.

From what I understand, "Game of Thrones," based on the popular novels by author George R.R. Martin, is in the tradition of great HBO television; twisty, multiple-character conflict, drama and intrigue. The swords, capes and dire wolves are a bonus.

We'll see what happens. If WIFE starts talking to me about the show then HBO may have another hit on its hands (P.S. she loved Sean Bean in "The Fellowship of the Ring")

"Game of Thrones" premieres April 17, 2011 on HBO.       

'Green Hornet' stings competition

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Film Review The Green_Meek.jpgBOX OFFICE: Superhero flick debuts at No. 1, capturing $34 million.


By Derrik J. Lang

The Associated Press


LOS ANGELES -- "The Green Hornet" is buzzing away with the top spot at the weekend box office.

The tongue-in-cheek superhero film starring Seth Rogen as a play­boy- turned-crimefighter earned $34 million during its opening weekend, according to studio esti­mates released Sunday. Sony Screen Gems' "Green Hornet," which was directed by indie auteur Michel Gondry, shot down Paramount's "True Grit," the West­ern that reigned supreme the pre­vious weekend.

"As we moved down the road, it got a lot of love, the love that it deserved," said Rory Bruer, Sony's president of worldwide distribu­tion. "I think everything worked really well for the film: the timing, the release date, the marketing, and, most importantly, the film itself. It all gelled in a terrific way. We're very pleased with the results."

The weekend's other major new release, Universal's "The Dilemma," opened in the No. 2 spot. The comedy starring Vince Vaughn and Kevin James as part­ners at an automobile design firm earned $17.4 million. Despite driv­ing away with the top two spots at the box office, Hollywood's first major new releases of the year didn't help to rev up ticket sales. Hollywood's overall revenues this weekend continued the slump that's persisted through the fall and holiday season. Ticket sales this weekend totaled $115.2 million, down 25 percent compared to the same period last year, when the sci-fi epic "Avatar" continued to dominate at the box office with $42.7 million. Atten­dance was also down by 27 per­cent.

Potential Oscar contenders "True Grit," "The King's Speech" and "Black Swan" respectively fol­lowed behind "Green Hornet" and "The Dilemma." Both the royal saga "King's Speech" and ballet thriller "Black Swan" were up for several awards, including best drama motion picture and best supporting actress, at Sunday's 68th annual Golden Globes cere­mony.

"I think the lack of an 'Avatar' this season has given an opportu­nity to films like 'True Grit,' 'King's Speech' and 'Black Swan'
to draw audiences to the theater who are looking for something that's getting great reviews and who are maybe wanting to watch the Oscars or the Golden Globes with an informed mind," said Hol­lywood. com analyst Paul Dergara­bedian.


Top 10 movies

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will be released Tuesday.

1. "The Green Hornet," $34 million

2. "The Dilemma,"
$17.4 million

3. "True Grit,"
$11.2 million

4. "The King's Speech,"
$9 million

5. "Black Swan,"
$8.1 million

6. "Little Fockers,"
$7.1 million

7. "Tron: Legacy,"
$5.6 million

8. "Yogi Bear,"
$5.3 million

9. "The Fighter,"
$5.1 million

10. "Season of the Witch,"
$4.5 million


Trailer: 'Battle: Los Angeles'

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Thanks to the internet, preview clips of a film can travel everywhere and be sort of old news by the time it debuts during the Super Bowl.

Wherever it airs, I think we'll still be talking about the trailer for Battle: Los Angeles.

We've seen big world-ending-invasion style special effects before but this clip also suggests a film that may have some really terrific combat sequences. So credit director Jonathan Liebesman, writer Christopher Bertolini and the cat who cut the trailer, but it looks nice.

Hopefully, the movie delivers.

Battle: Los Angeles opens March 11, 2011.

Mobile video link.


First Look: Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man

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garfield-Spider-Man2.jpgImage released by Sony Pictures / Getty Images

Just about every person in my immediate vicinity alerted me to this. 

So believe me when I say I'm acting as quickly as possible to pass this Sony Pictures photo release of Andrew Garfield (The Social Network) in costume as Spider-Man to you.

The leaner look of this Spider-Man (compared to the muscled-up Tobey Maguire portrayal) coupled with Garfield's youthful face evokes images of Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley's Ultimate Spider-Man.

...Or maybe that's just me.  

Mobile users view the image here.

POLL: What do you think about comic book prices?

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299.jpg
Whether you get a thumbs up or thumbs down on current comic book prices depends on who you ask.

Some retailers I've spoken to aren't bothered much by prices for monthly or bi-monthly issues -- which hover around $2.99 and $3.99 per issue -- because some regular customers are still buying.

Still, Comics Beat's analysis of the charts say 2010 comics sales were down 3.4% from 2009.  

Last week, DC Comics touted their Drawing The Line At $2.99 campaign. The publisher says they will lower the $3.99 price of several books and keep most of their comics at $2.99 per 32-page issue.

"For the long term health of the industry, we are willing to take a financial risk so that readers who love our medium do not abandon the art form."
                                           -- Jim Lee, DC Comics Co-Publisher


As a comic shop regular I tend to adjust to the rates. If trying a new or quasi-new comics title means plunking down $3.99 to give it a go, then it better have a recognizable creative team (John Byrne's Next Men #1, for example).

Also, I'm willing to try a book if one of my favorite comic news sites gives a good review (this led me to pick up Morning Glories #1 and I wasn't disappointed).  

So what do you think?

 

Archie Comics to release digital and print versions on the same day

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ENT-ArchA.jpgMATT MOORE
Associated Press


PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The company behind Archie, Jughead, Betty and Veronica is expanding its reach by making its comic-book titles available for digital download the same day their printed counterparts go on sale.

Archie Comics said Wednesday that starting in April, several of its titles featuring the gang from Riverdale will be released simultaneously in print and digital versions, including "Archie & Friends," ''Jughead" and "Betty & Veronica."

That decision makes the privately held Archie Comics Publications Inc. one of the first major comic book publishers to do that and reflects what co-chief executive Jon Goldwater called the goal of making Archie stories available to everyone everywhere.

"Digital provides us with the tools to reach out to a whole new readership, and we're excited and emboldened by the opportunities" presented by the simultaneous print and digital releases, Goldwater said in a statement of the titles, which will retail for $1.99, a dollar less than the newsstand versions.

Like other publishers, including Marvel and DC, Archie has made several of its titles available through apps for the iPhone and iPad, but often after the print editions had been on the stands.

Now, in a nod to the growing use of such devices by not just comic fans but a wider audience, many of whom like the convenience of reading digital offerings and are not collecting the books, the industry is giving digital platforms more credence.

Earlier this month, the first issue of DC Comics' "Batman Beyond" was made available digitally on Comixology, the PlayStation Network and DC's website the same day it went on sale.

"Batman Beyond was a critically acclaimed, fan favorite animated series that still has a large number of fans to this day," said Hank Kanalz, senior vice president for digital at DC Entertainment of the decision. "By releasing the ongoing comic series digitally, we're hoping we reach that audience and bring back any fans of the show who may be lapsed comic readers."

And Marvel has done the same thing with "Ultimate Comics Thor" and "Ultimate Comics Captain America." It also plans to release every issue in its story arc about the death of Ultimate Spider-Man digitally the same day it goes on sale in shops starting in February.

Archie's iVerse Media apps have proven popular for the company. By the end of 2010, it had sold more than 1.7 million copies of new, recent and classic issues and collections. Plans are also in the works to bring a similar app to users of Android-powered tablets and cell phones, too, by March.

"We saw that there was an interest in our products digitally and we knew we had to capitalize on it," Goldwater told The Associated Press. "We have to really make sure Archie Comics are made available to anyone who's interested in reading them, whether they're hard copies in a shop or on the newsstand or through a mobile phone or tablet."

ABOVE: A library of Archie Comics on the iPad.

Trailer: 'Thor' video game teaser trailer

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I believe there should be more to this teaser trailer. However, the idea that you get to impose order on the forces of evil as Thor, God of Thunder is still enticing.

Marvel Studios' Thor: The Video Game hits just about every gaming device I can think of Summer 2011.

If you're reading on a mobile device, see the video here.


Meet Marvel's new editor-in-chief, Axel Alonso

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Marvel New Editor_Meek.jpgMarvel Entertainment's new Editor-in-Chief Axel Alonso will oversee all of Marvel's publishing aspects and will advise on their creative direction, as well as help develop new story lines and new initiatives for the heroes and villains that make up Marvel's roster. (AP Photo/Marvel Entertainment)

MATT MOORE
Associated Press


PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- After more than a decade spent guiding several of Marvel Comics' biggest characters as an editor, Axel Alonso has been promoted to editor-in-chief, Marvel Worldwide Inc. said Tuesday.

Alonso will oversee all of Marvel's publishing aspects and will advise on their creative direction, as well as help develop new story lines and new initiatives for the heroes and villains that make up Marvel's roster, including the Avengers, Spider-Man, Punisher and Dr. Doom, among others.

Alonso replaces Joe Quesada, who was Marvel's editor-in-chief for a decade and its chief creative officer since 2010.

As the company's chief creative officer, Quesda oversees its creative endeavors in film, television, publishing and online, too. Marvel has expanded beyond the printed page in recent years, mounting film adaptations of Iron Man along with planned releases this year of Thor and Captain America.

Marvel also promoted Tom Brevoort, another longtime editor, to senior vice president of publishing.

Quesada lauded Alonso's uncanny ability to shepherd titles from simple idea to printed product.

"For over a decade, Axel's been instrumental in bringing fresh new voices to Marvel and reinventing our biggest characters like Spider-Man, the X-Men, Wolverine and so many more," Quesada said in a statement. "He's fought to create unique imprints like Marvel MAX while also bringing fresh new voices to the Marvel family."

Alonso joined Marvel in 2000 as a senior editor and helped oversee critically lauded runs of Amazing Spider-Man and the X-Men, along with revisioning western character Rawhide. He was promoted to vice president and executive editor in 2010.

Alonso also oversaw cross-promotional projects, including the recent mashup that saw several notable NBA athletes reborn as super heroes in "ESPN The Magazine."

Alonso said he was prepared to step up to his new role, which comes in a year when the company has said it will kill off a member of the fabled Fantastic Four and is unveiling a new event series called "Fear Itself" that will play on contemporary concerns and fears in its comic books.

"Marvel has a great history of the most dynamic and memorable (editor-in-chiefs) in comics history and I'm honored to step into this role," Alonso said. "I've been blessed to work with some of the most creative men and women in the world, bringing to life some of the most compelling stories you'll find in any medium. This new role provides me with exciting challenges and prospects I've never encountered before, but I know one thing-Marvel's getting even bigger in 2011."

Online

http://www.marvel.com

VIDEO: Injured Spider-Man actor talks to CBS News

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The fourth actor injured in the Broadway production "Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark" opened up about his injuries in an exclusive interview with CBS News on Monday.

Actor and stunt man Christopher Tierney, one of the performers who portray Spider-Man,  was injured in a 30-foot fall during a matinee performance last December. He was rushed to the hospital in serious condition.

Tierney spoke to reporter Dana Tyler and detailed his injuries, which included broken ribs, some broken vertebrae and a fractured skull. He also described the seconds of his plunge and the actions he took to protect himself.

"Once I hit the darkness of the stage, I had to just turn it real quick so I wasn't going to fall on my head," Tierney said.

If this video segment is any indication, Tierney's enthusiasm for returning to the stage doesn't appear to be dampened by the injuries he sustained.

"Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark" is scheduled to open Feb. 7.

  

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This page is an archive of entries from January 2011 listed from newest to oldest.

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