Showing posts with label theaters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theaters. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Man of Steel Will Be Released in 3D

Superman's going to do something Batman's never done before on the big screen: 3D.

Warner Bros. announced today that Man of Steel will be available in 3D in select theaters, as well as in 2D and IMAX, when it opens June 14, 2013.

"The film is going to be a visually exciting experience in all formats: 2D, 3D and IMAX. Anticipating how audiences today embrace 3D, we designed and photographed the movie in a way that would allow ‘Man of Steel’ to captivate those movie goers, while respecting fans who prefer a more traditional cinematic experience. We’ve taken great measures to ensure the film and the story come first, and 3D is meant as an enhancement," said Man of Steel director Zack Snyder in a statement.


Source : ign[dot]com

Friday, 28 September 2012

Level Up With These New Wreck-It Ralph Images

Check out these all new images from Wreck-It Ralph, Disney's animated tribute to video games that hits theaters November 2!


Source : ign[dot]com

Thursday, 27 September 2012

Friday, 7 September 2012

John Carpenter's Halloween Will Return to Theaters

In anticipation of the slasher classic's 35th anniversary next year, director John Carpenter's Halloween will be re-released into theaters this October. The announcement was made at Halloween's official Facebook page.

In addition, Justin Beahm's new mini-documentary You Can't Kill the Bogeyman: 35 Years of Halloween will screen before the film. More details on the re-release will be posted down the line at Michel Myers' official site.

Thanks to Shock Till You Drop for the heads-up!


Source : ign[dot]com

Thursday, 30 August 2012

Wanna See The Avengers Again?

Yeah, yeah, yeah -- you've already seen it 16 times. But that doesn't have to stop you from checking out The Avengers again now that it's returning to theaters for a special Labor Day engagement.*

The film's Facebook page says Avengers will be back from August 31 to September 6, which should tide you over until it hits Blu-ray on September 25… But just in case it doesn't, check out old Thanos in the clip below:

*Of course, technically speaking, Avengers is still playing in a handful of theaters, many of them of the lower-end, mom-and-pop variety. But this special run will presumably return it to the big multiplexes of the world, where you can pay 50% more but also not have to worry about sticky floors (or seats).

Talk to Movies Editor Scott Collura on Twitter at @ScottIGN, on IGN and on Facebook.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

Dredd Prologue Comic Cover Debut

We're drawing ever closer to the release of Dredd 3D in theaters next month (though we've already reviewed -- and loved -- the movie), but that doesn't mean Judge Dredd die-hards have to wait until release day to get their fix. Lionsgate will be debuting a brand new Dredd prologue comic next week with some top-notch 2000AD talent -- it's written by Matt Smith with art by Henry Flint, Chris Blythe, and Simon Bowland -- that will explore the background of the film's villain, Ma-Ma.

We're excited to bring you the very first look at the book's cover, drawn by frequent Judge Dredd artist Greg Staples, which features the badass likeness of Dredd star Karl Urban. Check it:

Alongside the reveal of the cover, Lionsgate has launched a brand new app for fans to create their very own covers for the Dredd comic. You can select from a bunch of pre-made images and combine them into your own justice-inducing scene. Be sure to give it a whirl at www.dredd3dcomiccovercreator.com!

Stay tuned for more on the official Dredd prequel comic and much more from Mega-City One right here at IGN Comics.

Joey is IGN's Comics Editor and a comic book creator himself. Follow Joey on Twitter, or find him on IGN. He loves superhero pets so hard.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

What Other Spielberg Films Could Go IMAX?

Following the exciting announcement that Raiders of the Lost Ark is now set to debut in IMAX theaters next month, director Steven Spielberg revealed that he might someday work the same mojo on another film from his past:

"I think the only other movie I would ever think about going out on an IMAX screen would be Close Encounters of the Third Kind," Spielberg said in a new interview. "Forty percent of that film was shot in 70 millimeters, so the conversion would look extraordinary if we ever did put it up on an IMAX screen."

Nevertheless, the filmmaker seems confident about the transfer for Raiders -- although he did admit to his initial skepticism. "I didn't know if the 1981 print would stand up to a full IMAX transfer, so I came expecting a sort of grainy, muddy, and overly enlarged representation of the movie I had made [31] years ago," he said. "And I was blown away by the fact that it looked better than the movie I had made [31] years ago... All the shadows in the earlier scenes that we shot in Hawaii [were] always kind of muddy anyway on 35mm, because we couldn’t schlep all of our big arc lights down into this valley. Suddenly, there was definition in the shadows, which I had never seen before. And the shadows weren’t murky and washed out; they were sharp as a tack."

As for future projects, Spielberg added, "I'm going to do an IMAX camera test, [both] a 2 and 3D test for my next movie Robopocalypse, and I haven't decided whether I'm going to use the IMAX cameras. I haven't decided whether it's going to be 2D or 3D yet, but I am in September going to start doing some tests."

Via The New York Times and Yahoo

Max Nicholson is a writer for IGN, and he desperately seeks your approval. Show him some love on Twitter and IGN.


Source : ign[dot]com

Friday, 3 August 2012

Lundgren Returns for Universal Soldier 4

Magnet Releasing announced today via Twitter and Facebook that they will be distributing Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning On Demand and in theaters.

The fourth installment, which stars Jean-Claude Van Damme and Dolph Lundgren, picks up where the third film, Regeneration, left off. The franchise centers on Luc Devereaux (Van Damme) and Andrew Scott (Lundgren), two soldiers who kill each other in Vietnam but are subsequently reanimated through a secret government project along with a large group of other once dead soldiers.

John Hyams, who wrote Universal Soldier: Regeneration, has co-written and directed this latest film.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Watch the Paranormal Activity 4 Trailer

Check out the first trailer for Paranormal Activity 4, hitting theaters October 19:

Also, check out the new poster for the sequel:


Source : ign[dot]com

Thursday, 26 July 2012

Bringing Christopher Nolan's Batman to Comics




This article contains spoilers for The Dark Knight Rises. You've been warned.


After four years of waiting, Christopher Nolan's final Batman film has hit theaters. The Dark Knight Rises serves as the final part of a trilogy that explores the rise and fall of Gotham's greatest hero. And unlike last time, Nolan has made it clear that he won't be coming back for a fourth outing.


WB has yet to announce what the future holds for Batman's Hollywood career, but it seems almost certain that they'll reboot the Caped Crusader and deliver a new take that moves away from the gritty realism of Nolan's movies and towards something that allows for team-ups with Superman and the Justice League. Does that mean we've seen the last of Nolan's Batman in any medium?


It doesn't have to be that way. Just as DC has continued the Smallville saga in Smallville: Season 11, the potential exists for a comic book-based continuation or spinoff of Nolan's Batman. Mind you, there's been no announcement or rumors to suggest such a thing is happening, but we thought it would be fun to explore the possible angles a Dark Knight Rises spinoff might take. In this feature we break down five ways that DC could expand on or continue Nolan's storyline.


One more time: Spoilers ahead.





Bruce Wayne's Global Adventures



Perhaps more than anything, what set Batman Begins apart from the various Batman films of the past was its in-depth look at the journey Bruce Wayne took to becoming Batman. The first half of the movie follows his childhood trauma, his intensive training with the League of Shadows, and the formative events that shaped him as a hero. Bruce doesn't actually don the Batman costume until the second hour of the movie, and there was nary a complaint from fans.


Even so, we feel there's plenty more material to explore during this flashback time period. A Batman isn't made in a day, or even over the course of a few months. Bruce already showed himself to be a pretty competent fighter during the opening prison sequence. No doubt he trained with other teachers and mentors before throwing his lot in with Ducard. Perhaps there's a good story worth telling about a more inexperienced and less worldly Bruce. This could even be a way of introducing other DC martial artists into Nolan's universe, such as Lady Shiva or Richard Dragon.


Regardless of whether it's actually set in this particular Bat-verse, we really would like to see a comic devoted solely to exploring Bruce's pre-Batman travels. The comics have been less interested in mining this material than you might think. Detective Comics #27 essentially suggested that Bruce lifted a lot of weights and poured some chemicals back and forth between beakers until he evolved into some sort of mutant hybrid of Achilles and Sherlock Holmes. Even dedicated Batman origin stories, like Batman: Year One and Batman: Earth One, tend to gloss over this portion of the saga and skip to when Bruce returned to Gotham.


We almost got a live-action TV series devoted to this concept, until WB canned the idea in lieu of Batman Begins. We can't complain about the outcome, but that doesn't mean there aren't still good stories to tell in Bruce Wayne's chaotic early years.





After Batman Begins



There's a better part of a year separating the events of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. In that time, Batman continues waging his war on crime while Harvey Dent rises to power as Gotham's new D.A. Surely there are at least one or two interesting stories worth being told in this time period. The Gotham Knight animated DVD attempted to fill the gap. Unfortunately, nothing about the segments in that collection particularly felt like Nolan's version of Batman. They could just as easily have been new episodes of Batman: The Animated Series with unusual art design.


We wouldn't mind seeing a comic that strives to explore this murky time period and chronicle Bruce's early struggles as Batman. Despite his early victories over Carmine Falcone and the League of Shadows, Batman has a long road ahead of him gaining control of the streets and spreading his legend. As we saw from Christian Bale's scarred body in The Dark Knight, plenty of mistakes were made along the way.


This approach would also allow the creative team to induct new Batman villains into Nolan's universe. Gotham Knight introduced Deadshot. Perhaps there are other minor rogues who would fit well into this period – Black Mask, KGBeast, Ventriloquist, etc. Whatever the case, there's far more worthwhile material in this period than Gotham Knight was able to mine.





After The Dark Knight



As is made clear from the first shot of an aging, hobbling Bruce Wayne, eight years have passed between the conclusion of The Dark Knight and the opening of The Dark Knight Rises. As far as the latter film would have you believe, nothing much transpired during that long stretch. Batman took the fall for Two-Face's murders, the Dent Act kept organized crime off the streets, and Gotham enjoyed eight years of relative peace.


That said, eight years is a long time. And as one of the characters pointed out, there were no “confirmed sightings” of Batman during that time. That doesn't mean the Caped Crusader couldn't have undertaken a few stealthy missions. Perhaps the aftermath of Joker's rampage left Gotham vulnerable to crime sprees. Maybe a new villain or two cropped up before the Dent Act took effect and took its giant bite out of crime. Maybe there's a more significant story behind Bruce's leg injury than just him suffering the toll of his battle with Two-face and Joker.


One potentially interesting story to explore involves the Joker himself. The Dark Knight gives viewers almost no insight into who this villain is, where he came from, or what sort of life he led prior to ripping off the Gotham mob and beginning his reign of terror. Joker was a man who somehow managed to exist completely off the grid, without even fingerprint or dental records to offer some clue as to his real identity.


That being said, no one in the 21st Century can live their entire life without leaving traces. Furthermore, we know Joker was active at least as far back as the conclusion of Batman Begins (and based on the “Joe Kerr” name tag, he may even have been disguised as the cop to whom Gordon handed the evidence bag in that final scene).


With Joker in more permanent custody after The Dark Knight wraps, the opportunity is there for an intrepid detective to dig into the character's past. What if Batman's final mission before his self-imposed retirement is to investigate Joker's life? The book could offer framing sequences set in the present, with flashbacks that shed as much or as little light on Joker's past as the creators deem necessary. Maybe fans could finally learn how he actually got those scars.


Obviously, there are a few problems with this approach. Joker has rarely been given an origin story in any medium. For many, the character's mystique is inevitably more interesting than whatever actual details might be revealed about his past. The other problem is that an attempt to further explore the specific version of Joker seen in Nolan's films could be seen as disrespectful to the memory of Heath Ledger. We doubt Nolan himself would lend support to the project given his insistence on keeping Joker's presence out of The Dark Knight Rises. DC would need to maintain a delicate balance with this option.


But whether or not Joker is a factor, the murky post-Dark Knight time period leaves ample room for new stories of some sort.





The Origin of Bane and Talia



Nolan hasn't been afraid to make significant alterations to iconic Batman villains in these movies. One of the more notable changes introduced is the linking of Bane to Talia and Ra's al Ghul. Comic fans know the story of how Bane was born in prison and doomed to serve out his father's life sentence. But in The Dark Knight Rises, Talia is the one condemned to this fate, while Bane is her loyal protector and, later, her enforcer.


Bane and Talia's harsh life in the Pit was conveyed through a series of brief flashbacks. We'd like to see this story more fully explored in the form of a comic book mini-series. The series could open with Ra's al Ghul youthful dalliance with Talia's mother and continue up until her ascension as leader of the League of Shadows. Readers would see more of the bond between Bane and Talia. They would learn what sort of role Bane played in the League of Shadows and what exactly caused him to be excommunicated.


One of the more common complaints regarding The Dark Knight Rises is that Talia's betrayal came too late in the film and thus, she wasn't developed well enough as a villain. An origin series could go a long way towards rectifying that flaw and fleshing out the surprisingly tender relationship between her and Bane. Meanwhile, Bane can always use a quality comic book appearance in general. Gail Simone's Secret Six aside, the character has often languished in the regular DC Universe since his heyday in Knightfall. Maybe the solution is to offer readers an entirely different version of Bane.





John Blake's Batman



One of the big mysteries surrounding the Dark Knight Rises was Batman's final fate. Would Bruce Wayne be killed in his final battle with Bane? Would John Blake or another Gothamite take up the mantle in Bruce Wayne's stead? The answer to both questions proved to be yes (from a certain point of view). The film ended with Bruce and Selina seeking happiness in obscurity while Blake confronted his new destiny in the Batcave.


A comic book follow-up could address the many burning questions still remaining from The Dark Knight Rises. Will Blake become Batman? Robin? Nightwing? What sorts of challenges will Gotham's new protector face as he establishes his reputation? How will characters like Gordon, Alfred, and Lucius Fox react to the idea of a new Batman? Do the deaths of Bane and Talia mean the end of the League of Shadows, or could a new foe emerge to continue Ra's al Ghul's work?


Blake's journey would no doubt be an interesting and chaotic one. The Dark Knight Rises established that he has the childhood trauma and the drive to be Batman, but not necessarily the training he needs to survive the worst Gotham has to offer. Will Blake embark on his own worldwide journey of study and self-discovery or just throw himself into the job and learn through experience?


And for that matter, what role would Bruce Wayne and Selina Kyle have in a sequel? These two characters are nothing if not restless, and they may both realize that peace and quiet aren't all they're cracked up to be. Their globe-trotting adventures could offer a nice counterpoint to Blake's trials in Gotham. We could even see a situation where Bruce quietly returns to Gotham and mentors Blake in a Batman Beyond-esque dynamic. Another option is for the comic to draw in Barbara Gordon. Now a young adult, Barbara could move to Gotham to live with her estranged father and subsequently join Blake in his nightly escapades.


Perhaps more than anything, a true sequel to The Dark Knight Rises is the most obvious route to take if Nolan's films are to make the jump to comics. While there's always the possibility that WB would pursue an actual movie sequel with Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the lead, it's more likely the studio will opt to reboot the Batman franchise with a more colorful, Justice League-friendly approach. A comic book follow-up could be the only way to see this particular take on Batman continue.


What would you like to see in a theoretical continuation of The Dark Knight Trilogy in comics? Sound off below!







Jesse is a writer for IGN Comics and various other IGN channels. Follow Jesse on Twitter, or find him on IGN.



Source : ign[dot]com

Friday, 20 July 2012

Warners Pulls Gangster Squad Trailer

Warner Bros. is pulling the trailer for its upcoming release Gangster Squad from theaters following today's shooting massacre in Colorado because the trailer features a sequence where gunmen open fire in a movie theater, killing audience members.

The trailer is playing before some prints of The Dark Knight Rises, another Warners movie and the film playing when the massacre occurred.

"A spokeswoman for Warner Bros. could not say whether the trailer will be re-cut to eliminate the offending footage," according to TheWrap. "Though the trailer had run prior to screenings of The Dark Knight Rises, it did not play before the Aurora screening."

The trailer remained widely available online at time of publish.

Gangster Squad is slated for release September 7, but it remains to be seen whether that will now be changed in light of today's tragedy.


Source : ign[dot]com