By The Eye Of Agamoto! Who Should Play Dr. Strange?

Ioan Gruffud as Lancelot in "King Arthur" (2004).

Screenphiles Has A Few Thoughts …
… on which Hollywood actor would be best suited to bring Marvel Comics’ hero Dr. Strange to the silver screen. But actor Simon Baker (“The Mentalist“) is not one of them.

Here’s what they have to say:

“According to Collider, some say that Simon Baker, of “The Mentalist” would make a good Doctor Strange. While I am sure that he could handle the role–after all, he’s a decent actor–there’s no way that he is a good fit for the character.

Mainly because he looks nothing like him.

In the past, I have suggested Ioan Gruffudd, because he has experience working with Marvel (he played Mr. Fantastic in “The Fantastic Four” films and we have seen that Marvel is not above using actors from one of their films in another, witness Chris Evans) and most importantly, he actually looks like the good Doctor.”

Gruffud, a Welshman, played Reed Richards in the “Fantastic Four” movies. And though it was a critical and commercial flop, he made a terrific Lancelot in 2004’s “King Arthur” starring Clive Owen and Keira Knightley. He’s dark-eyed and dark-haired and has just the right amount of mystery and danger to play the Sorcerer Supreme.

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Happy Belated Birthday, Princess Leia.

Wow … Where Does The Time Go?
Star Wars” actress Carrie Fisher rang in her 55th birthday on Friday.

It was a long time ago and in a galaxy far, far away that Fisher’s Princess Leia first told Obi-Wan Kenobi that he was her only hope. And I don’t even need to mention that “Slave Leia” has now become a fanboy and Halloween costume favorite. So much so, in fact, that it’s almost kinda cliche.

To celebrate, here’s Fisher’s original “Star Wars” audition tape.

(h/t Hero Complex)

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“Paranormal Activity 3” On Track For $50 Million Opening.

Who’da Thunk It?
The third installment of the “Paranormal Activity” is on pace for a $50 million opening, The Wrap reports. With Halloween just about a week away, it’s a reminder that studios rarely lose with a good scare.

Here’s the nut graf:

“Paranormal’s” $8 million in midnight sales is a franchise record — 30 percent higher than the $6.3 million “Paranormal Activity 2” took in at midnight shows in its opening weekend last year.

The weekend’s other debuts aren’t faring so well: Estimates have “The Three Musketeers” grossing just short of $3 million on Friday. If trends continue, the film will be in fourth place for the weekend, behind “Paranormal” and carryovers “Real Steel” and “Footloose.” Estimates don’t have “Musketeers” cracking double-digits for the weekend.

Read the full story here.

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Six Reasons To Love Motion Capture

With the release of “The Adventures of Tintin” upon us, The Guardian makes the case for why you should love motion-capture cinema.

Here’s one reason:

“Eerie Resemblance
Characters should look a bit – but not quite – like those playing them. Results vary: Grendel’s mother in Beowulf is a good Angelina Jolie, but Tom Hanks in The Polar Express looked like a haunted pillow filled with raisins.”

Read the full story here.

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Joe Queenan: Hollywood Is A Lousy Geography Teacher.

A scene from "Contagion." Photo from The Guardian.



Writing In The Guardian …
… the eternally cranky Joe Queenan has a bone to pick with Hollywood over its mastery of geography and why it insists on doing stuff like dropping the comma separating “Minneapolis” and “Minnesota” so a location looks like “Minneapolis Minnesota” in a film scene.

There’s a kind of “Hey Kids, Get Off My Lawn!” vibe here, but it’s a fun read:

“Lately, I have noticed the comma between the city and country or city and state has been dropped. Thus, in Contagion, the action is identified as taking place in “Minneapolis Minnesota” or “Chicago Illinois” or “Geneva Switzerland”. That looks a bit stupid, suggesting the graphics person has either not yet finished school, or never seen a high-class movie. But even more worrying is how confusing all this might be to callow, impressionable youths. Children growing up in rural Florida could easily get the idea that “Geneva Switzerland” is the name of one of the characters in the film and not the name of a famous European city. The same goes for “Paris France” and “Florence Italy” and even “London England.” Paris and Florence are first names for girls, and London is the name of a character in The Suite Life of Zack and Cody.”

Read the full story here.

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HQ “Ghost Rider” Clip From This Week’s “Scream Awards.”

Why?

You can ask yourself all you want whether the world needs another “Ghost Rider” movie.

You’re getting one whether you want it or not. Here’s a clip of the Nicholas Cage-starrer that debuted at the Scream Awards on SpikeTV earlier this week.

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Battlestar Galactica Gets A Film Reboot: To Be Set In Show’s New Universe?

With “Anonymous” Writer John Orloff …
… signed to pen the screenplay, it looks like the film reboot of everyone’s favorite space opera could be set in the continuity created by Ron Moore, and not the discotastic continuity of the original 1970s TV show.

Speaking to HitFix, Orloff let this drop:

“I’m a huge fan of the original series and of the second show, too. But I always thought the first show was a little too heavily reliant on Star Wars, you know? Whereas I think the second show was really original and really cool.

And I think I’ve come up with a way to write this movie that won’t [frack] any of that up. I’m not sure how much they want me to talk about it. Let’s just say it’s not what you expect. It will all work in the universe that exists. It will not conflict with anything Ron Moore has done. I don’t think you can compete with what he’s done. “

X-Men director Brian Singer is set to helm the film version of “Galactica.”

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Anime Classic “Akira” Remake Gets The Greenlight.

Unbelievable.
Warners has green-lighted a live-action, English language remake of the legendary Japanese anime flick “Akira,” Cinema Blend reports.

My friends and I used to watch the flick obsessively during our undergraduate years, committing whole sections to memory, even as we wore down our treasured VHS copy of the adventures of Kaneda and his pals in a post-apocalyptic Tokyo. Here’s the nut graf:

“Variety has learned that Warner Bros. has given the greenlight to the live-action remake of Akira. The project will move forward with a budget of $90 million and will try to begin production early next year. The new movie will move the setting from futuristic Tokyo to a futuristic Manhattan, where the leader of a biker gang tries to save his friend with psychokinetic powers from the government. Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Davisson Killoran, Andrew Lazar and Katsuhiro Otomo, who directed the original film, will serve as producers and Steve Kloves, best known for his work on the Harry Potter franchise, wrote the script. Furthermore, the site has also learned that Garrett Hedlund – who audiences saw riding enhanced motorcycles in last year’s Tron Legacy – is a favorite to take the lead role of Kaneda.”

I know there are fans out there who are even more obsessed with this movie than my friends and I were back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The filmmakers may have to tread carefully to keep audiences happy. It’ll be interesting to see how this proceeds.

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The Daily Dark Knight: Blue Bloods Actor Will Estes Talks Batman Role.

Will Estes, a star of the CBS cops-and-family drama Blue Bloods, talks to 411 Mania about his small turn as a cop in “The Dark Knight Rises.” He doesn’t give too much away, but it’s enlightening nonetheless:

Q: Alright, now suckas gots to know. What is going on with your shooting on The Dark Knight Rises? What is going to happen to Batman? What is going on with Catwoman? Do you get a makeout scene with Anne Hathaway as Selina Kyle? What is going on, we got to know.

A: If they gave me a cat, no pun intended, to let out of the bag, I would do it. I had a blast. I worked a couple days. I’m supposed to go back and do some more. I’m playing a police officer, but I’m a huge fan of the Dark Knight series, especially Chris Nolan​’s work on it. I’m a huge Christian Bale​ fan. He looks incredible in the suit. I got to actually see the Bat-pod go by, the motorcycle with the huge tires. It’s been a blast and there’s no cat for me to let out of a bad, but I’m looking forward to seeing the film myself.

Q: So you’re not going to put on a mask and red suit and become Robin? Or perhaps become Nightwing?

A: You know I was talking to Chris about that. I suggested it, but he didn’t seem fired up about it.

Q: It seems Nolan does a good job of giving even some minor and incidental characters in his Batman movies some presence and screen time. Do you know what type of character you will have and will you get some lines on film?

A: Yeah, I’ve got a few lines. To be totally clear, they didn’t sit down and break down a whole script for me. And that day, on the day, things got added a little bit. And I’m excited about it. I think frankly between you and me, it’s a part that could get cut out of the film and it would still be a complete movie. But I had a blast working on it. And if Chris Nolan says, “Would you be in my movie?” I got to say yes. I had a great time and I look forward to seeing it.

Q: If you got cut out of the movie, we’d have to start an online campaign to make sure you stay in.

A: I’ve just been telling all my friends that I’m Batman. It just sounds better.

(Via ComicBookMovie)

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Critic: Whatever Happened To Kevin Smith?

Director Kevin Smith

Writing in Salon, film critic Andrew O’Hehir asks a question I’ve been asking myself for a while now: What’s become of “Clerks” Kevin Smith?

Smith was the first director of my generation to really make a smash, and, with “Clerks” he channeled the uncertainty that a lot of those in my generation felt as we were leaving college and starting our adult lives at the dawn of the 1990s.

His film offerings since have been wildly uneven — “Mallrats” was riotously funny and “Dogma,” for all its controversy, was a touching lover’s quarrel with the Catholic faith that Smith and I share. But for all those, there was “Jersey Girl,” and the less said about “Clerks II,’ and “Zack & Miri Make a Porno,” the better.

I should add that I desperately want Smith to make the great movie that I know he has in him. His success would be an artistic validation for my generation — the one the media used to call GenXers — and it would provide nice validation as we ease our way into middle age.

Here’s the nut graf from the Salon piece:

“But Kevin Smith has left the days when he was primarily known as the director of “Clerks” and “Chasing Amy” and other shambling indie comedies far behind. He’s arguably way better at his other job, as a relentless self-promoter and Twitter humorist, a subculture brand name and signifier of working-class suburban authenticity, a bush-league hipster blend of Bruce Springsteen and Michael Moore. Consider the performance-art masterwork that was his premiere of “Red State” at Sundance last January. Smith somehow coaxed the anti-gay fundamentalists of Fred Phelps’ odious Westboro Baptist Church — who are lampooned in the film — to show up in Utah to picket him. (Smith’s subsequent encounters with the Phelps clan have had the flavor of a scripted pro-wrestling feud, or maybe even George Bernard Shaw’s reputed practice of writing anonymous withering reviews of his own plays.) Then, having lured various distribution bigwigs to the Eccles Theatre with the promise that he’d auction off the rights to “Red State” onstage after the screening, he announced that he was buying the movie himself, for 20 bucks.”

Read the full piece here.

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