Category: Movies

  • Who Was Responsible For ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Title?

    Who Was Responsible For ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Title?

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Star Wars fandom cranked up to a new level last week when Disney finally announced the official title to Star Wars Episode VII. The title, in case you’ve avoided the internet in the days since, is Star Wars: The Force Awakens. While fans debated the lack of the “Episode VII” in the title, the more interesting conversation concerns what, exactly, the title tells us about the movie.

    We’ve heard years of rumors about what could happen in the film but we don’t even officially know who each new actor is playing. This title is the biggest and best piece of information yet on what the film holds. A title encompasses a whole film, and for this to be the moniker decided on for the most important Star Wars film yet, is pretty special.

    So who came up with the title? The CEO of Disney Bob Iger revealed that in a new interview. Below, watch that and read more about what The Force Awakens title means.

    Star Wars 7 News noticed the tidbit of news in this interview Bloomberg. The Star Wars talk comes in at 10:26.

    Here’s the quote:

    It was a decision that was made by a few people involved in the process, Kathleen Kennedy who runs Lucas film for us, and J.J. Abrams who is directing The Force Awakens… I was gonna say Star Wars VII but now there’s a new name.

    We are involved in the decision. We feel great about the film. We can’t wait until it comes out. We are only one of many that can’t wait.

    No real surprise that Kennedy, Abrams and Iger were all involved in the decision, and that it was a committee decision of sorts.

    As for the meaning, it’s pretty obvious, don’t you think? Decades have passed since Return of the Jedi. Decades where, hypothetically, only one person had a working knowledge of The Force: Luke Skywalker. (He’s supposedly the last of the Jedi and he destroyed the Sith, making him the last one.) Though the Force is all around us, if it isn’t being used, it’s not something that’s prevalent. The film will somehow show how The Force awakens on both sides, the light and the dark.

    Star Wars: The Force Awakens opens December 18. A trailer may be out before the end of the year.

    The post Who Was Responsible For ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Title? appeared first on /Film.

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  • James Gunn Teases ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Trilogy

    James Gunn Teases ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Trilogy

    James Gunn Guardians of the Galaxy

    James Gunn was set to return for Guardians of the Galaxy 2 before Guardians of the Galaxy 1 even opened. But it seems his vision extends even beyond that. In a new interview he reveals he’s already been thinking about Guardians of the Galaxy 3, and has been since he was working on the first one. Hit the jump for James Gunn Guardians of the Galaxy 3 comments.

    Gunn hinted at his plans for Guardians of the Galaxy 3 while chatting with The Playlist.

    We open up on a Mission: Impossible scenario where all the characters die… No, to be honest, I had the basic story for number two while I was working on number one, and perhaps even beyond that. So it’s gonna answer a lot of questions that are proposed in the first one, and we’ll be able to get to know some of the characters we didn’t get to know in the first one a little bit more, and we might meet a few new characters too.

    While some filmmakers have chafed under the Marvel model, Gunn seems comfortable with the balance he’s struck between his own personal style and the studio’s constraints.

    I very much knew that there were certain things about Guardians that needed to stay the Marvel way, but then figuring out a way around them to do my own thing was I think part of what made me have so much fun with the movie. So there’s always those things, whether they’re budgetary or otherwise. And even on Guardians, there was a lot of budgetary constraints.

    If Gunn really has plans for Guardians of the Galaxy 3 worked out in his head, and if Marvel really lets him bring them to fruition, it could make the Guardians of the Galaxy series a bit unusual for the MCU. While all the MCU movies are connected in some way, the individual franchises don’t really tell a single serialized story in the way that, say, the Hunger Games movies do. No one refers to Iron Man 1-3 as a “trilogy” even though it technically is one.

    But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. As of now, Marvel hasn’t actually confirmed it’s making Guardians of the Galaxy 3, let alone whether Gunn will direct and write it. If Gunn has his way, though, it seems he’ll be sticking around the MCU for a while. He admitted it was “probably true” he wouldn’t return to low-budget or indie filmmaking until he was done with the Guardians universe, though he also reserves the right to change his mind.

    “Here’s the thing,” he said. “I’m driven by ideas. […] So if I’m excited about an idea and it’s a five million dollar movie, I’ll go do it. I’ve always kind of done what I wanted to do.” He’s even open to TV. “I have commitment issues in everything, so I don’t think I could really be a showrunner, but the idea of kicking something off is appealing, or doing a 6-12 episode self-contained series,” he said, citing True Detective as “a great example of one director, one story.”

    Whatever story he winds up telling, you can bet he’ll try to get the ending right. “[S]omething like the last episode of Lost was like a nightmare for me, a real living nightmare,” he said. “It made me realize that for sure I did not ever, ever want to do that to my audience.”

    The post James Gunn Teases ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Trilogy appeared first on /Film.

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  • Interstellar: 15 Huge Differences From the Steven Spielberg-Developed Script to Christopher Nolan’s Movie

    Interstellar: 15 Huge Differences From the Steven Spielberg-Developed Script to Christopher Nolan’s Movie

    interstellar script differences steven spielberg christopher nolan and jonathan nolan

    You can now see Christopher Nolan‘s Interstellar in theaters, but the movie was originally developed by Nolan’s brother Jonathan Nolan for director Steven Spielberg. In fact, I first reported on the project almost eight and a half years ago. As the story goes, Spielberg got the idea for the film after attending a Caltech workshop. There, physicist Kip S. Thorne, an expert on relativity known for his prolific contributions to the fields of gravitation physics and astrophysics, presented his controversial theories about wormholes. Jonathan Nolan was hired to develop the screenplay for Spielberg, which he originally hoped to direct after Lincoln. Of course, that didn’t happen. Christopher Nolan explained how he got involved during a press conference I attended in Beverly Hills:

    [I] was talking to Jonah [Nolan] about the script he was working on with Steven Spielberg at the time. We’d bounce ideas off each other and it sounded incredibly exciting … I had the advantage of coming onto the project late and being able to look at what these guys [Jonah Nolan and Kip Thorne] had done. A lot of my contribution was ripping things out, because they put in more of these incredible mind blowing ideas that, I felt, I could absorb as an audience member. So I spent my time and my work on the script choosing the more emotive and tactile of these ideas to grab ahold of. … [Jonah] got very busy doing other things so I said, ‘Hey can I take this and combine it with some other ideas I’ve been working on’ — it was a bit more like him going ‘okay, take a shot, we’ll see what you do.’ So I showed him what I had done and he seemed reasonably happy with it.

    The reason Christopher Nolan shares the screenwriting credit on the final film with Jonathan Nolan is because he reworked the original script with substantial changes. This left me wondering about the evolution of the project, and how different Steven Spielberg’s version of the film might have looked. Of course, we’ll never see Spielberg’s version but Jonathan Nolan’s 2008 draft of the screenplay has been floating around the tracking boards for some time. Investigating that draft gives us an opportunity to see how the story changed from when Jonathan Nolan was working on it under Spielberg to Christopher Nolan’s final film.

    What are the biggest differences and changes? Find out the 15 biggest Interstellar script differences, after the jump.

    interstellar art

    15 Interstellar Script Differences

    Warning: the following post CONTAINS SPOILERS and should only be read if you have seen the film. If you haven’t seen Interstellar yet, it won’t make much sense as its a comparison.

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    1. Cooper And His Son Murph Find a Fallen Space Probe

    The script originally followed 30-year-old Cooper and his two sons. Chris Nolan, who has a daughter (whom you can see on screen in The Prestige), decided to change the sex of Murph from male to female. Not much else about the character is different other than her sex — she’s still in trouble at school for showing Coop’s old textbooks with the uncorrected Apollo mission “nonsense”.

    The sad minor league-looking New York Yankees game is interrupted not by the dust storm, but instead by a bright blue streak in the sky. A satellite falling to earth while burning up in the upper atmosphere. After attending Murph’s parent teacher meeting, Cooper is called to help a Galveston farmer who needs him to come look at her malfunctioning tractors,  which were originally programed by Cooper. In Nolan’s film it is Coop’s tractors which are malfunctioning, directed to the gravity anomaly inside his farm house.

    Riggs’ tractors are attracted to a newly created crater on the edge of her property. In the crater, Cooper finds an old NASA space probe which has fallen to earth, the same one which knocked the satellite out of orbit during the game. Using his modified equipment on the black orb, Cooper is able to hack into the probe and finds an image of an ice-covered planet surrounded by stars, alongside a bunch of code he can’t puzzle out.

    interstellar Bookshelf Ghost

    2. A Fallen Space Probe Brings Cooper To NASA, Not a Morse-Code Gravity Communicating Bookshelf Ghost

    Before Cooper can scrap the probe for spare parts (he thinks NASA is completely disbanded, so there is no point in trying to return it), the probe begins emitting a loud alarm. They realize that the alarm noise stops briefly when they move the space probe in certain directions. It is quickly realized that the probe is providing directions to its home and won’t stop sounding its annoying alarm until it gets there. In the morning, Coop and Murph take the probe in their small airplane (not the pick-up truck Cooper has in the final film), allowing us to see what California has become in this desperate future.

    The space probe directs Cooper and Murph to a large uninhabited island in Santa Cruz. On the island they discover a underground industrial facility hidden by camouflage. They are quickly detected and detained by Amelia Brand and TARS.

    interstellar Lazarus Missions

    3. The Lazarus Missions Never Happened; This Is the First Manned Mission Through the Wormhole

    In the movie’s storyline, a team known as the Lazarus Mission was sent through the wormhole a decade earlier to find and transmit data back to Earth about candidate planets for humans to live on. In the original screenplay, there were no Lazarus missions. Instead, a series of space probes were sent through the wormhole to gather data. Imagine a more rudimentary version of EVE from Pixar’s WALL-E. The space probe that Cooper discovered was the first one to return to earth after finding good data.

    Cooper helps the scientists unlock the Ice Planet data on the probe, and also warns them about a huge problem with telemetry board he notices they are using for the mission. Because of the assets he has shown the robot commander decides he could be useful to the mission.  Cooper, thinking of his two sons, first turns down the offer and returns home to his farm house before changing his mind. Murph doesn’t lock himself in his room, but instead tries to convince his dad to bring him with him before saying his goodbyes, giving him the watch and promising he will return.

    Its also worth noting that while Professor Brand (played by Michael Caine) is in charge of the mission in the film, in the original script the Brand father/daughter duo reports to an Air Force para-rescue officer named CASE. This is a human-sized robot designed to inspire confidence, to which Professor Brand had delegated leadership duties. Also, Cooper does not have a past relationship with Professor Brand, who is a minor character in the story.

    How Long is Interstellar?

    4. Sphere-Shaped Distortions Visit the Crew While Traveling Through The Tiny Wormhole

    The wormhole is not a gigantic sphere or tube like it is visualized 2001-style in Nolan’s film. To navigate through the wormhole in the original script, the Endurance space station contracts and configures itself into much smaller space, releasing its nuclear engines on a tether. As they travel through the quiet and nothingness of the wormhole, the crew can see images of themselves through the outer hull (“a trick of the narrow collar of space they are sinking through.  Cooper smiles at himself. The experience is unnerving.”).

    It is here where Cooper notices a point of distortion in where it appears that a giant finger is pushing up against the hull, growing in diameter as it pushes against the hull. The distortion them begins to bend the empty space inside the ship for all of the crew members to witness —  a sphere-shaped magnifying glass, like something out of a 1990′s James Cameron movie (Abyss..etc). Doyle sticks his hand up, and as it gets absorbed into the sphere it appears mangled but its really just “bending the space around” his hand. It moves around the ship and appears to be examining the crew members. And then suddenly the distortions disappear as they begin to exit the wormhole.

    After the exit the wormhole the Endurance finds itself pulled toward the event horizon of the black hole which was closer to the mouth than they anticipated. The pull of the black hole is greater than the power of the engines so the crew finds themselves unable to change their course. TARS locks himself into the engine compartment and sacrifices himself to detonate the engine to save the ship from being sucked into the black hole. But if they overshoot the trajectory, they might be pulled into Gargantua, the the much bigger black hole near by. This is TARS fate. Once through the wormhole, they discover all of the other probes are found to be clustered in one spot on the ice planet, but why?

    Hit the jump to learn about the shocking LOST style twist not featured in the finished movie.

    Continue Reading 15 Interstellar Script Differences >>

    The post Interstellar: 15 Huge Differences From the Steven Spielberg-Developed Script to Christopher Nolan’s Movie appeared first on /Film.

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  • Matt Damon Confirms He’s Returning As Jason Bourne

    Matt Damon Confirms He’s Returning As Jason Bourne

    Matt Damon Jason Bourne

    It was a rumor, it was confirmed, now the man himself has made it official. Matt Damon has finally confirmed that yes, he’s returning to play Jason Bourne in a 2016 film directed by Paul Greengrass. Read the official Matt Damon Jason Bourne quote below.

    E! News got the Matt Damon Jason Bourne scoop, but it didn’t seem like something that was supposed to happen. Ben Affleck mentioned that Damon was returning to the role at a Project Greenlight event, so instead of deny it, Damon said the following:

    Yes, next year [we’ll shoot it]. It’ll be in 2016 when the movie will actually come out. Paul Greengrass is going to do another one and that’s all I ever said. I just needed him to say yes.

    If you head to that link, you can watch a video of the exchange too.

    Basically though, this is exactly what we’ve known for years. Damon has long said he’d return to the franchise if Paul Greengrass came back to direct. Latino Review then heard he and Greengrass were coming back, though producers denied it. Deadline followed with a confirmation in September, saying the 2016 slot initially slated to be a Justin Lin directed Bourne film starring Jeremy Renner, was taking a back seat. The question now is, will Renner’s character appear in this Greengrass/Damon film? Initially the news was that the Renner side of the franchise was going to continue in tandem with the Damon films, leading to a showdown/crossover sometime down the road.

    Damon will next shoot The Martian for director Ridley Scott. If Bourne is set to shoot in the Fall, he’d likely be able to fit another movie in the middle such as the recently announced Alexander Payne film, Downsizing.

    The Bourne franchise has grossed over $1.2 billion worldwide, with each installment crossing the $100 million mark at the domestic box office. A return to the roll for Damon is a sure fire hit for Universal.

    The post Matt Damon Confirms He’s Returning As Jason Bourne appeared first on /Film.

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  • ‘Interstellar’ – What Did You Think?

    ‘Interstellar’ – What Did You Think?

    Interstellar

    There’s a moment in Inception when one character encourages another to “dream a little bigger, darling.” Well, it certainly looks like Nolan took that advice to heart with Interstellar. Nolan’s first post-Batman movie is stunningly ambitious, even by his usual bold standards.

    Matthew McConaughey leads the sci-fi epic as an astronaut who travels deep into space in a last-ditch effort to save the human race. That includes his beloved kids Murph and Tom, whom he has to leave behind on their dying farm. Anne Hathaway, Wes Bentley, and David Gyasi play the other astronauts on the journey with him. Michael Caine is the NASA guy leading the charge down on Earth.

    Interstellar is a mind-bender of a journey that makes most of Nolan’s other films look tame in comparison. He clearly has big things to say about the importance of science, the experience of parenthood, the nature of humanity and the value of love. That last bit turns out to be especially unusual, since Nolan tends to be a cerebral, even chilly director. Emotions are not thought to be his strong suit, at least on film.

    So there’s no question Nolan is aiming high. But does he hit his mark? This is your space to discuss all that and more. Spoilers are not just tolerated but actively encouraged.

    Was the emotional angle moving or corny, or kinda both at the same time? Did you pick up on any of the plot holes, and if so did they bother you? Were you wowed by Nolan’s vision of deep space? Did you suffer from any of those sound issues other people were complaining about? How cute were those robots? That third act was definitely bonkers, but was it in a good way or a bad way? And exactly how shocked were you when Topher Grace showed up out of the blue? (My answer to that last one is very. That was way more surprising to me than the movie’s real secret cameo or its twisty ending.)

    The post ‘Interstellar’ – What Did You Think? appeared first on /Film.

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  • Superhero Bits: X-Men Days of Future Past, Batman v Superman, Flash, Arrow, Iron Man

    Superhero Bits: X-Men Days of Future Past, Batman v Superman, Flash, Arrow, Iron Man

    Rage of Ultron

    How many things are wrong with X-Men: Days of Future Past? What does the Avengers: Age of Ultron companion comic look like? Is Anne Hathaway still campaigning to play Catwoman? Do new set photos from Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice reveal new characters and locations? Is there an honest process to cosplay? Should Marvel make a Hawkeye movie? Read about all this and more in today’s Superhero Bits.

    Sad there was no Flash this week? Here’s a new clip from the next episode.

    Marvel confirmed Thursday’s news of a link between Iron Man 2 and Agent Carter.

    Catwoman header

    Speaking to IGN, Anne Hathaway continued to say she’d love to come back and play Catwoman again.

    New set photos seem to confirm the DC character Kahina is in Batman v Superman.

    Rage of Ultron

    Here’s the cover of Avengers: Rage of Ultron, which will be released in tandem with Avengers: Age of Ultron, the movie.

    Watch a new trailer for the remainder of this season of Arrow.

    CinemaSins tackles X-Men Days of Future Past.

    Several superheroes are part of a viral video about the .7% Foreign Aid Initiative.

    Continue Reading Superhero Bits >>

    Due to the amount of graphics and images included in Superhero Bits, we have to split this post over THREE pages. Click the link above to continue to the second page of Superhero Bits.

    The post Superhero Bits: X-Men Days of Future Past, Batman v Superman, Flash, Arrow, Iron Man appeared first on /Film.

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  • ‘Interstellar’ Review: Christopher Nolan’s Latest Might Be Too Ambitious

    ‘Interstellar’ Review: Christopher Nolan’s Latest Might Be Too Ambitious

    final interstellar trailer

    There’s no denying the visceral power and prowess of Christopher Nolan‘s Intersellar. The ninth film from the popular director is his most ambitious, and it looks jaw-droppingly gorgeous. The sets, miniatures, and images of space travel and planets all combine to make a film the scope of which rivals any other space movie.

    Emotionally, the film comes close to achieving a similarly momentous effect. Interstellar follows Coop (Matthew McConaughey), a father forced to leave his family in a possibly mad attempt to preserve the future of humanity by finding another habitable planet. The tale is filled with drama, humor, intense action and surprising plot twists. There’s rarely a dull moment in the movie because the story is so compelling and poignant.

    But maybe it’s all a bit too much. The script, by Nolan and his brother Jonathan, packs ideas and theories in every single scene. Concepts about love, survival, physics, and time burst from the film more prominently than the emotion and visuals. Even with a nearly three-hour runtime, so many ideas are presented that the film rarely has time to focus on one over another. The result is a technical marvel with a powerful narrative that ends up feeling a tad empty because we aren’t sure exactly which point it’s trying to make.

    One of the best things about Interstellar is the manner in which it distinguishes itself from every other space movie. There’s no big training sequence, the shuttle take off sequence is truncated, we don’t get to space for 40 minutes of screen time. Right off the bat Nolan tells us we’re going to see something different. Then once in space (which is where the majority of the movie takes place), everything gets bigger. He’s not interested in our solar system. Nolan is interested in something far beyond it.

    In the same way Intersellar attempts to stand out as a sci-fi film, it works to distinguish itself from a dramatic angle. On its own the story is direct, with good dramatic tension. Clear goals are presented, then attempted, and then either met or failed leading into the next scene. Anything you may think doesn’t match up or feels superfluous eventually pays off in a pretty solid way. Sure there’s a misstep here or there, but at its core, Interstellar is always interesting.

    One of the biggest complaints in Nolan’s earlier films is they rarely include rich female characters. This film has two of them, Coop’s colleague Brand, played by Anne Hathaway, and the grown up version of his daughter Murph, played by Jessica Chastain. Each represents a step forward for Nolan as they’re well-written and strong characters. Unfortunately, the relationships they develop are much weaker. The relationship between father and daughter Coop and Murph is a strained and incomplete one, but that’s demanded by the narrative. Coop and Brand also have a bit of a budding connection which becomes increasingly important as the film goes along. However, it feels like an afterthought as it’s casually dropped in with a few short lines of dialogue and then hardly developed.

    Then, just when you start to scratch your head about Interstellar, it sucks you back in with its intense action scenes. They’re few and far between but when they happen, you’ll be glued to your seat. By taking his time to flesh out the story, Nolan earns lots of good will and you never quote know what’s going to happen. There are at least two big turns later in the movie that really keep you on your toes and divert from some other issues.

    Issues such as the fact he’s provided so many different narrative strings and questions, he’s forced into some convenient narrative choices near the conclusion. These pay off emotionally but when everything else in the film has been pushing toward unpredictability and originality, they’re a little disappointing, albeit understandable.

    McConaughey has a lot of heavy lifting to do in Interstellar and he does it well. Obviously he’s dynamic, charming and confident, but the real surprise is how he hits all the big dramatic peaks and valleys. Hathaway is steadfast with her limited role and Chastain, in an even more limited role, makes Murph the real star of the movie. She’s a force to be reckoned with, infusing multiple layers into the few scenes she has.

    As Interstellar ends, there’s no doubt you’ve been on a ride. A thoroughly enjoyable and memorable cinematic experience that’s well-made and acted. On those notes, Nolan totally succeeds. Afterwards though, you’ll be more inclined to talk about the actions scenes and narrative twists rather than the multitude of themes he’s placed throughout the film. That’s because it’s just too much to talk about. What does love mean? How do we handle time? What does it mean to survive? Is it okay to offer hope when there is none? The film’s questions are endless and overwhelming.

    Which leads to one last question, do we care? That’s a something you’ll have to decide. Interstellar is a good film with big flaws that may or may not matter because everything around them is done so well.

    /Film rating: 7.5 out 10

    The post ‘Interstellar’ Review: Christopher Nolan’s Latest Might Be Too Ambitious appeared first on /Film.

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  • Jared Leto May Join ‘Suicide Squad’ as the Joker

    Jared Leto May Join ‘Suicide Squad’ as the Joker

    Jared Leto joker

    After the defining performance from Heath Ledger as the Joker in The Dark Knight, it’s easy to understand why Warner Bros. and the team assembling DC Comics movies at the studio would be wary about writing a new Joker role for a new actor. But it is bound to happen — in fact, it appears to be happening, but not for the film you might assume. A new report says that the Joker may factor in to Suicide Squad, to be directed by David Ayer. And Jared Leto is the current choice to play him.

    The Wrap reports that Leto is “circling a key role in David Ayer‘s “Suicide Squad” that could prove to be The Joker.”

    (The report mentions that Ryan Gosling was the first choice to play the Joker, but that he wasn’t game for the contract required.)

    Leto hasn’t signed to a new role since winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Dallas Buyer’s Club, and he was in pursuit of the leading role in Doctor Strange for some time. That didn’t happen (Benedict Cumberbatch is linked to the part, though Marvel has yet to formally announce him) and the Wrap says that prompted Leto to move over to Warner Bros.

    Justin Marks wrote the original draft of Suicide Squad, but David Ayer is rewriting the picture, which is set for release on August 5, 2016. In the original draft the Joker did not have a role, but there have been rumors that Cara Delevingne will play Harley Quinn in the film, and that character is intrinsically linked to the Joker. Ayer’s draft is reported to introduce the character to this new conception of the DC universe on film.

    Heath Ledger was seen as a questionable choice when originally cast and we know how well that worked out. While there will undoubtedly be gripes about the concept of Leto as the Joker, a quick glance at his work, in films from Fight Club to Dallas Buyer’s Club, shows his willingness to throw himself into a role. He could be a terrific choice for a new Joker.

    The post Jared Leto May Join ‘Suicide Squad’ as the Joker appeared first on /Film.

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  • Page 2: Doctor Who, BTTF, Star Wars, Cosmos, Avatar, Interstellar, John Oliver, GoT, Star Trek, ET, Nolan

    Page 2: Doctor Who, BTTF, Star Wars, Cosmos, Avatar, Interstellar, John Oliver, GoT, Star Trek, ET, Nolan

    Doctor Who Bookends

    Page 2 is a compilation of stories and news tidbits, which for whatever reason, didn’t make the front page of /Film. After the jump we’ve included 36 different items, fun images, videos, casting tidbits, articles of interest and more. It’s like a mystery grab bag of movie web related goodness.

    Header Photo: Doctor Who Bookends

    The Original Ending Of BEING JOHN MALKOVICH

    Warner Brothers Had So Much Faith in Christopher Nolan’s ‘Interstellar,’ They Gave Up ‘Friday the 13th’ and ‘South Park’ To Get In On It

    Your Halloween Costume Next Year Should Be This Great Hoverboard Getup

    5 Movies With Better Endings Than The Book

    On the Aggressively Masculine Perspective Of INTERSTELLAR

    STAR WARS #1 PARTY VARIANT WITH JAXXON

    STAR WARS #1 PARTY VARIANT WITH JAXXON

    Interstellar is a Better Stephen Hawking Movie Than ‘The Theory of Everything’

    10 Things We Learned After a Weekend With Bill Murray

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    This Cookie Jar Is Perfect For A Sith Lord With A Sweet Tooth

    PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON ON THE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING FILM AS AN OPTION AND WHAT MIGHT GET LOST WITH DIGITAL

    ZZ1789420E

    The Art of the Title of Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey

    AMC Renews Hell on Wheels for a Fifth and Final Season

    "First Date" By JP Valderrama - Fresh Doodle

    “First Date” By JP Valderrama – Fresh Doodle

    10 Magical Harry Potter Facts We Learned From JK Rowling’s New Pottermore Writings

    Continue Reading Page 2 >>

    The post Page 2: Doctor Who, BTTF, Star Wars, Cosmos, Avatar, Interstellar, John Oliver, GoT, Star Trek, ET, Nolan appeared first on /Film.

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  • Exclusive ‘Starry Eyes’ Clip: The Final Interview

    Exclusive ‘Starry Eyes’ Clip: The Final Interview

    Starry Eyes clip

    Starry Eyes is a great independent horror film that follows a young woman who goes further than she ever imagined possible in her quest for fame. Alexandra Essoe turns in a killer performance in the lead role, and we see her character Sarah go through real hell as she abandons all anchors to her past life in the pursuit of her dreams.

    We’ve got an exclusive extended Starry Eyes clip, in which Sarah is invited for a meeting with her producer, and finds that she just might be in over her head. One unwelcome aspect to his overture is not entirely unexpected, but there’s a wrinkle that suggests Sarah is facing a weirder situation than most would be prepared for. 

    Starry Eyes will be on iTunes and VOD, and in theaters on November 14. Here’s the trailer. Clip thanks to Dark Sky Films.

    Determined to make it as an actress in Hollywood, Sarah Walker spends her days working a dead-end job, enduring petty friendships and going on countless casting calls in hopes of catching her big break. After a series of strange auditions, Sarah lands the leading role in a new film from a mysterious production company. But with this opportunity comes bizarre ramifications that will transform her both mentally and physically into something beautiful… and altogether terrifying.

    The post Exclusive ‘Starry Eyes’ Clip: The Final Interview appeared first on /Film.

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