Your Two-Face minute
It comes around once a year. And lord knows, Aaron Eckhart won’t be getting any respect today…


Artwork by TotenVeloren on deviantART.
It comes around once a year. And lord knows, Aaron Eckhart won’t be getting any respect today…


Artwork by TotenVeloren on deviantART.
Well, now we know what Catherine Hardwicke meant when she said she turned down directing the sequels to Twilight because of a "punishing schedule".
Twilight opened on the pre-Thanksgiving weekend last year and will do the same this year with sequel The Twilight Saga’s New Moon (yes, that’s what they’re named now) but The Twilight Saga’s Eclipse is now scheduled to open Wednesday, June 30, 2010, laying claim to the 4th of July weekend. That’s a fast production schedule for theatrical movies.
On the other hand, maybe they just don’t want the actors– or the target audience– to outgrow the films in the time it might normally take to make them.
Today’s list of quick items that don’t fill a full post on their own:
Since it’s second-hand, the selection is kind of catch-as-catch-can, but this reporter always ends up walking out of the store with SOMETHING cool. Just make sure you give yourself a strict spending limit…this reporter also has been known to get a little carried away with the bargains.
Anything else? Consider this an open thread.
Wayne Enterprises has another billion in the bank.
According to Box Office Mojo, The Dark Knight has officially reached $1 billion in worldwide box office revenue, distributor Warner Bros. announced today. The Batman sequel is the fourth movie in history to hit the mark, right behind Titanic, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest:
Breaking the worldwide gross down, The Dark Knight has made a phenomenal $533.1 million domestically and $468 million overseas. It’s the only movie in the Top 20 of the all time worldwide chart where the domestic gross exceeds the foreign gross, which is a common trait among comic book-based pictures. On the all time domestic chart, The Dark Knight ranks second to Titanic, while it stands at No. 22 on the all time foreign chart. Warner Bros. noted that The Dark Knight‘s total includes the highest-grossing two-dimensional re-mastered IMAX release ever at $49.6 million domestic and $15.3 million overseas.
For another point of comparison, this year’s five Oscar nominees for Best Picture, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Slumdog Millionaire, Milk, Frost/Nixon and The Reader ,have only grossed $481,205,302 worldwide combined so far. Gee, why would Warner Bros. announce that the day before the Oscars…?
Today’s list of quick items that don’t fill a full post on their own:
Anything else? Consider this an open thread.
It’s our Official Toy Fair 2009 debriefing with some of the finest action figures we’ve seen yet including Strangers in Paradise, Dick Tracy and even The Wolfman. And by the way, someone out there forgot to buy their comics in January and the numbers showed it. Even the President couldn’t stimulate this,
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When Sean Cunningham and Victor Miller concocted the story for Friday the 13th, they were merely trying to cash in on the success of John Carpenter’s [[[Halloween]]]. The seasonality for horror and the death of the promiscuous were copied along with the plucky virginal heroine.
What they did, though, was layer it with an interesting story of a mother’s grief for her son, the only thing to sustain her for two decades. Betsy Palmer gave a nice performance as the murderous mom, grounding the story more than it probably deserved. The movie, shot on a shoestring budget, went on to become a major hit and an unexpected series for Paramount Pictures.
With Platinum Dunes, Michael Bay’s schlock remake arm, striking fresh gold with the remake this month, Paramount Home Video released the first three films in the series as deluxe editions. Under the snazzy lenticular covers are the same quickly made, poorly acted and over scored films, with a smattering of extras.
The first film told a story with a beginning, a middle, and an end as a group of teens attempted to reopen Camp Crystal Lake, long closed after two counselors were brutally murdered in 1958. “Camp Blood”, as the locals called it, needed some TLC and they were readying it a new summer but one by one, the teens vanish, killed by an unseen assailant. Along the way, we get our requisite one scene with a bare boob, lots of talk about sex, and a group of under-developed characters headed by the heroine, Adrienne King.
When we learn that the grieving mom was behind the deaths, blaming careless counselors on her son’s death, you feel something for her. And once she’s dispatched, of course, you get the shock ending straight out of Carrie.
The second film picks up immediately after, just months after the first ends. Adrienne King is still recovering from the emotionally difficult period but gets one final shock at finding Betsy’s severed head in her refrigerator (starting the whole women in refrigerators trend, I suppose) and Jason actually alive and seeking his own revenge.
Today’s list of quick items that don’t fill a full post on their own:
“Cops were called to the scene after receiving a flurry of calls from gridlocked commuters near the Rosh Ha’ayin intersection who reported a man in a Spiderman costume throwing ropes at cars, the improvised lassos presumably meant to substitute for the web-crawler’s famous mechanical web-shooters.”
When the individual woke up in the hospital, he said that he had no idea where the costume came from.
Clearly, this is going to be the evil costume’s fault. Via Haaretz
Anything else? Consider this an open thread.
Yes, I have a bit of history with comic books and condoms. (Go ahead, Google my name with "condom". I’ll wait.)
But even I wouldn’t have thought of this one.
Lord help us, it’s the Dr. Manhattan condom.
No, I don’t know if it glows in the dark.
And we hear another scream from Northampton, England…
Hat tip: Valerie D’Orazio’s new Comic Book Junction.
NY-based web producer For Your Imagination announced a major marketing deal with Warner Bros. theatrical arm to promote Watchmen. As part of the 6-figure deal FYI will integrate the movie into the storylines of a quartet of shows including Abigail’s Teen Diary, The Retributioners, HungrymanTV’s Phistophicles and the latest installment of Kyle Piccolo: Comic Shop Therapist. Take a look at the first of three new episodes:
Michael from FYI mentioned to us: "As part of our integrated sponsorship with Warner Brothers new film ‘Watchmen’ we have embedded easter eggs throughout the video that will lead viewers to more cool Watchmen content. The easter eggs, powered by Innovid, appear throughout the episode and are the beginning of what we think will be a revolution in terms of how we create video for the internet. Of course the show itself includes all sorts of Watchmen references and images too."