Posts Tagged ‘clint eastwood’

goodman

The cast for the baseball drama Trouble with the Curve just got another dose of awesome with John Goodman joining.  We know that Clint Eastwood is set to play a baseball scout going blind who decides to take his daughter (played by Amy Adams) on one last scouting trip. Justin Timberlake also signed on to play a former pitcher and current scout who takes a liking to Adams.

Variety reports that Goodman has signed on to play “an old-school scout and long-time friend of Eastwood’s character who still believes in the man’s ability to spot talent”.  I like the sounds of that; while a legend in his own right, Goodman is no stranger to working along side icons such as Al Pacino (Sea of Love) and Denzel Washington (Fallen).  It’s always a pleasure to see John Goodman on screen, as you may have seen him recently in The Artist and he’s currently working on the sequel to Monsters Inc. with Billy Crystal.

Today's LinksA collection of links from across the web that may be film, TV and or entertainment related.

  • Stallone, Schwarzenegger and Willis on the Set of The Expendables 2, awesome.   Schwarzenegger tweeted the image with the following message: Back in action for The Expendables 2! I’m having a fantastic time on set with Bruce and Sly in Bulgaria. [image]
  • Jim Carrey to join Steve Carell in ‘Burt Wonderland’. [deadline]
  • Steven Soderbergh’s Liberace biopic picked up by HBO. [reuters]
  • Sandra Bullock to Join Clint Eastwood in ‘Trouble with the Curve’. [twitch]
  • James Cameron Talks about Bringing Back Sigourney Weaver in Avatar 2. [nymag]
  • The Walking Dead Mad Magazine Cover. [image]

Here is a trailer for THE DIVIDE, a post-apocalyptic thriller with Michael Biehn, watch it below:

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Today's LinksA collection of links from across the web that may be film, TV and or entertainment related.

  • So there’s a Zorro reboot happening, ok speak up, who asked for this? *crickets* [deadline]
  • Robert Zemeckis developing “Period Ghostbusters” film called ‘Charles Fort’ [ComicBookMovie]
  • Warner Bros. has released two new posters for the upcoming Clint Eastwood film ‘J. Edgar’, and Leonardo DiCaprio looks pissed. [here and here]
  • Billy Ray Writing ‘The Thin Man’ for Johnny Depp and in more Depp news, he’s going to play Dr. Seuss [THR1, THR2]

James Cameron’s Movie Voice Cameos, watch below:

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Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar Trailer Has Arrived

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

j-edgar

We have the first trailer for Clint Eastwood’s next film J. Edgar, and it looks as good as I had hoped (it made my top 5 to see for the fall/holiday season).  Leonardo DiCaprio, Naomi Watts, Judi Dench, Armie Hammer, Josh Lucas and Ken Howard are all here for Eastwood.

DiCaprio stars, Eastwood directs and Dustin Lance Black (Milk) wrote the script.  I can’t wait to see how DiCaprio and Eastwood work together; Scorsese as we know would have nothing but great things to show for their collaborations together.  Watch out for this one.

The film is set to be released on November 9th 2011.  Watch the trailer below:

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Trailer: Clint Eastwood’s Hereafter

Monday, September 13th, 2010

hereafterClint Eastwood has made some of the best movies of the last decade (i.e. Mystic River, Million Dollar Baby) and shows no signs of stopping at 80 years of age.  He’s a great actor yet I find his strengths to be behind the camera as the man certainly knows how to tell a story.  The work he puts into his pictures is astounding (i.e. composing scores for the films).  So it brings me to his latest effort, Hereafter is due out this holiday/award season.

Watch the trailer after the jump and leave your thoughts.  The official synopsis is below as well. (more…)

Today’s Links

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Today’s Links are brought to you by: TWIN PEAKS.  Created by David Lynch and Mark Frost the series was set in the fictional town of Twin Peaks in northeast Washington state and tells the story of FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper and his investigation of the murder of a popular local teenage schoolgirl, Laura Palmer.

Twin Peaks became one of 1990s’ top-rated shows, a critical success both nationally and internationally. Reflecting its devoted cult fan base, the series became a part of popular culture, referenced in other television shows, commercials, comic books, video games, films and song lyrics. In 2007 Twin Peaks was listed as one of Time magazine’s “100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME.”

Pictured to the left is the Twin Peaks: The Definitive Gold Box Edition DVD which I picked up last year after a small price drop.  Worth every penny just to see David Duchovny in drag. Click to see the links, you know you wanna…

Review: Invictus (2009)

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

invictusClint Eastwood plays it safe with this tale of Mandela and his idea to bring unity to South Africa through rugby. Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon provide the acting clout while Eastwood shapes the direction of the film. I loved Eastwood’s previous outings; Gran Torino, Changeling, Million Dollar Baby and Mystic River – perhaps for the darker side of filmmaking Directed with each.  INVICTUS is a modest, self-effacing movie about extraordinary events that chronicles one battle in Nelson Mandela’s war against the past and his journey to reconstruct a brighter future for his people.

The movie’s plot sounds clichéd, and while the film is a lot of the time, the good news is that it’s not overwhelmed by it.  I found it bland and slow; the movie will win audiences with the charm of Mandela, but descends into a film about rugby.

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10 things: golden globe nominees

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Ten things you should know about Golden Globe nominees
by Andy Goldberg

Most people have more important things to do this time of year than ponder the significance of the Golden Globe nominations announced Thursday at the unheard of Hollywood hour of 5 am.  But in case you are a movie awards junkie or need some conversation topics for your holiday parties, here are ten vital facts you should know about the main nominees:

Slumdog Millionaire: A Mumbai-based tour de force t cultural, national and cinematic boundaries, this movie is the first India-based film about Indians ever to garner such high accolades and achieve breakthrough status in the US. Directed by Danny Boyle(Trainspotting, 28 Days Later), written by Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty) and starring Dev Patel as a brilliant pauper who wins an Indian game show, this movie could pull a few surprises this award season.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: How good can a movie about  a man who ages backwards really be? Plenty good if it stars Brad Pitt in one of his best roles, is based on a classic story by F Scott Fitzgerald and features quixotic director David Fincher (Zodiac, Fight Club). No wonder it’s one of the leading nominees this season with five Globe nominations.

Frost/Nixon: In these left-leaning times, what do you get when you put together one of Hollywood’s most admired directors and a searing takedown of notorious Republican president Richard Nixon? A handful of award nominations. Director Ron Howard has done a great job converting an award-winning play into a movie that exposes the manoeuvring that helped British interviewer David Frost reveal the real Richard Nixon in a series of interviews three years after Nixon left office.

Happy-Go-Lucky: Mike Leigh, the British director regarded as one of the best film-makers of our times, has done it again with this sensitive, amusing and poignant look into the life of a perpetually perky primary school teacher in north London. Nominated for best comedy and for best actress in a comedy for Sally Hawkins, this film’s presence at top award shows represents a deserved tribute to Leigh’s collaborative style of filmmaking in which he starts without a script and the actors improvise all their lines.

Mickey Rourke: This leading man of the 1980s is re-establishing himself as a Hollywood anti-hero with his role as a washed-up wrestler. The role has particular relevance to Rourke, 56, who quit acting in the 1990s to return to his first love – boxing.

Heath Ledger: One likes to think that Ledger would also be the certain favourite for the best supporting actor role even if he hadn’t died from an accidental drug overdose last year. Even before his death, Ledger had been earning acclaim for his role as the psychotic criminal, the Joker, in the brooding Batman movie, The Dark Knight. What’s surprising is that the box office hit didn’t yield any other nominations.

Clint Eastwood: The undisputed awards king of Hollywood, everything Eastwood does usually fills his many mantelpieces with trophies. Although he had two acclaimed movies in the running, and even acted in one of them, all he got was a best actress nomination for Angelina Jolie in Changeling and a nod for best score. Gran Torino, in which he played a grouchy old bigot, yielded nothing.

Meryl Streep: Usually the presence of Streep in a list of acting nominees means the other contenders needn’t bother preparing acceptance speeches. But despite being nominated in the drama section for Doubt and in the comedies for Mamma Mia, this might not be Streep’s year. Most critics feel the dramatic actress prize will go to Kate Winstlet in husband Sam Mendes’ Revolutionary Road, while the comedy prize is Sally Hawkins.

Revolutionary Road: If a drama about the troubled world of some 1950s suburbanites fails to get you inspired, remember that former theatre director Sam Mendes blew away the competition with a similar setting in American Beauty. The film also features former Titanic teen couple Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in possibly the best roles of their lives.

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association: The 90-member body that picks the awards is unrepresentative of the foreign media who  cover Hollywood. But the show, to be broadcast live in dozens of countries on January 11, still remains the second most prestigious prize in Hollywood after the Oscars.

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